About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 57. Chapters: University of Innsbruck alumni, University of Innsbruck faculty, Ivo Sanader, Roland Benedikter, George Bornemissza, Willibald Jentschke, Otto Bradfisch, Anton Zeilinger, Erhard Busek, Kurt Diebner, Ludwig von Pastor, Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk, Leopold Kohr, Ekkehard von Kuenssberg, Andreas Maislinger, Fritz Sauter, Horst Schumann, Victor Francis Hess, Michael Hagemeister, Hugo Rahner, Peter Zoller, Donald Walter Trautman, Torsten Oltmanns, J.D. Trout, Irmfried Eberl, Wolfgang Dietrich, Johann Radon, Rainer Blatt, Rudolf Grimm, Meinhard Moser, Fritz Schulz, Lawrence Eugene Brandt, Hans Fischer, Clarence Edward Elwell, Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus, Joseph A. Burke, Julius von Ficker, James Edward Quigley, Anton Kerner von Marilaun, Beda Weber, Joseph Henry Leo Schlarman, Herwig van Staa, Gerald Steinacher, Sebastian Gebhard Messmer, Engelbert Muhlbacher, Henry Joseph Grimmelsmann, Andreas von Ettingshausen, Gabriel Anton, Thomas H. McLaughlin, Toussaint Ho evar, Egon Schweidler, J. Donald Freeze, Ignatius von Weitenauer, Heinrich Lammasch, Joseph Maria Pernter, Henry J. Althoff, Andreas Kobler, Innsbruck University Botanic Garden, Friedrich Schauta, Gottfried Munzenberg, Adolf Jarisch, Hermann Schloffer, Herbert Mayr, Carl Nicoladoni, Karl Matthaus Woschitz, Jacob Anton Zallinger zum Thurn, Viktor von Hacker, Camill Heller, Gero Miesenbock, Erika Cremer, Emil Johann Lambert Heinricher, Johann Joseph Peyritsch, Cuno Tarfusser, Franz Weitlaner. Excerpt: Ivo Sanader (Croatian pronunciation: born Ivica Sanader; born 8 June 1953 in Split) is a Croatian politician who served as the Prime Minister of Croatia from 2003 to 2009. Sanader obtained his education in comparative literature in Austria, where he also later worked in the 1980s. He worked as a journalist, in marketing, publishing and also as a private enterpreneur. In th...