Челове́чка нарисова́л я (It Was I Who Drew the Little Man)
83 in x of animated feature film history Release: 1960 Country: Soviet Union Director: Valentina Brumberg, Zinaida Brumberg, Valentin Lalayants
“It Was I Who Drew the Little Man is an expanded remake of Fedya Zaytsev, a 1948 21-minute film by the same directors.
On the first of September, Fedya Zaytsev is the very first student to arrive at school. In his joy at realizing this, he draws a little man with an umbrella on the wall of his classroom with a piece of charcoal, realizing too late that this is against the rules. He lets his best friend take the blame. The little man Fedya drew comes to life and follows him home. He urges Fedya to confess. Instead, he is tempted away to the Kingdom of Lies, becoming the queen’s page. The queen releases soap bubbles into the air, telling her citizens that, if they catch one, their dreams will come true––a complete lie. Fedya disproves this lie, returns home, and confesses to his crime.”
August 23, 1918 – Semyonov Becomes Bandit-King of Baikal
Pictured – Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov, the Japanese-supported White warlord who controlled much of the southeastern Siberian steppe.
The Russian Revolution brought a host of colorful characters to the forefront of history, many of them unsavory. A chief example was Grigory Mikhaylovich Semyonov, a Cossack cavalryman who established himself as a major warlord throughout the Russian far east. The outbreak of the Czech Revolt in May 1918 liberated much of Russia from the Bolsheviks, and allowed new political movements to organize behind the shield of the disciplined Czechs. Some of these were principled groups with ideological aims, like politicians who gathered in Omsk to discuss Siberian independence.
Semyonov was not one of them. A minor figure in the Russian war effort posted near Lake Baikal, the 28-year old Cossack sensed an opportunity amid his country’s chaos. Although a monarchist who hated the Bolsheviks, Semyonov cared more about plunder than ideology, and although Semyonov became a satrap of the White Siberian leader Admiral Kolchak, he was essentially a bandit chieftan of Transbaikal. He owed his success to Japanese arms, which the Tokyo government was happy to supply, hoping to keep Russia in a state of anarchy while they stripped it of its eastern resources. In August Semyonov drove Red troops out of Transbaikal entirely, shoring up his rule. It lasted until the very end of the civil war, after which Semyonov fled for exile in China, only to be captured finally by the Red Army and executed in 1945.
Russian underwater nuclear missile “Dmitry Donskoy” project 941, view from the stern.
Russian underwater nuclear missile “Dmitry Donskoy” project 941, view from the stern.
Wikipedia :
Dmitriy Donskoy (TK-208) is a Russian Navy nuclear ballistic missile submarine, designated Project 941 Akula class (NATO reporting name Typhoon). With the decommissioning and scrapping of her Typhoon sister boats (TK-202, TK-13, Simbirsk, Arkhangelsk, Severstal, and TK-210), she is the largest submarine in the world in active service.