Guys, an interview with Lyudmila Pavlichenko from 1973 was recently published here. I think you know perfectly well who she is. You can use subtitles. Very rare and valuable information.

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Soviet soldiers liberate Auschwitz camp

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The man in the hat is Alexei Alekseevich Bashmakov, a military technician of the 2nd rank of the 404th rifle regiment of the 176th rifle division, who became a partisan. In the center is Varvara Petrovna Vyrvich, assistant commissar of the Komsomol brigade and secretary of the underground district committee of the Komsomol. Filmed in the 43rd near Gomel.

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Yak-3 in the new exhibition "Falcons of the Motherland" at the Vadim Zadorozhny Museum of Technology. The history of the car began in 1944, when the Saratov beekeeper Ferapont Golovaty raised money for the second plane for his fellow countryman, Boris Eremin (I talked about the donations of the Soviet people to the needs of the front). Prior to that, the Yak-1B, which is now located in Saratov, was transferred to him. The fighter was solemnly handed over in May 1944, it survived the war, and Eremin shot down 6 more German aircraft on it. Further, the fighter became an exhibit of the Central House of Aviation named after M.V. Frunze. In the late 50s, the plane was transferred to the Yakovlev Design Bureau Museum, where he lost his dedication. Justice was restored by the aviation technician of the pilot Eremin, who in the 60s turned to Brezhnev. The inscription was returned to the plane, so it lived until 1991. Then he SUDDENLY ended up in the United States, where he was until 2014. With the assistance of the Vadim Zadorozhny Museum of Technology, the plane was returned to Russia.
At the moment, work is underway to restore and restore this aircraft.

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The Soviet T-34-76 tank was hit by the gun's mask, after which it may have lost the ability to shoot. After that, the driver decided to ram the artillery gun. A similar case was described in the book "The capture of Velikoshumsk", when the tank commander and loader were killed by a shell hit.

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Yak-3 in the new exhibition "Falcons of the Motherland" at the Vadim Zadorozhny Museum of Technology. The history of the car began in 1944, when the Saratov beekeeper Ferapont Golovaty raised money for the second plane for his fellow countryman, Boris Eremin (I talked about the donations of the Soviet people to the needs of the front). Prior to that, the Yak-1B, which is now located in Saratov, was transferred to him. The fighter was solemnly handed over in May 1944, it survived the war, and Eremin shot down 6 more German aircraft on it. Further, the fighter became an exhibit of the Central House of Aviation named after M.V. Frunze. In the late 50s, the plane was transferred to the Yakovlev Design Bureau Museum, where he lost his dedication. Justice was restored by the aviation technician of the pilot Eremin, who in the 60s turned to Brezhnev. The inscription was returned to the plane, so it lived until 1991. Then he SUDDENLY ended up in the United States, where he was until 2014. With the assistance of the Vadim Zadorozhny Museum of Technology, the plane was returned to Russia.
At the moment, work is underway to restore and restore this aircraft.

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