No. 50-[84/85] published 1929-193[1] numbered also within the year. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Sistematicheski-predmetnyĭ ukazatelʹ: No. 1 (1921)-73 (1931). (includes index to: Istoriko-revoli͡ut͡sionnyĭ bi͡ulletenʹ, no. 1-6; and; Istoriko-revoli͡ut͡sionnyĭ vestnik, no. 1) 1 v. ; Reprint. Originally published: Moskva : Obshchestvo byvsh. politicheskikh katorzhan i ss.-poselent͡sev, 1921-1924; Vsesoi͡uznoe obshchestvo politicheskikh katorzhan i ssylʹnoposelent͡sev, 1925-1935.
Originally published: Moskva : Moskovskoe Imperatorskoe Russkoe voenno-istoricheskoe obshchestvo, 1911-1913. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Catalog description may not match actual item. For assistance please contact a reference librarian.
In Cyrillic characters. ; Reprint of the 1907 ed. published in S. Peterburg. ; Bibliographical footnotes. ; Photocopy. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 14
Russian Orthodox; Roman Catholics; Jews; Bentecostals; Initsiativniki; Baptists; Underground periodical publication Express-Information. Bulletin "V." Issue 94-95. Retyped from Samizdat Archive № 4905 ; Reports about arrests, incarcerations and interrogations of dissidents; use of psychiatric facilities, labor camps; censorship of publications and culture; ban on immigration;
Pentecostals; Underground periodical publication Express-Information. Bulletin "V." Issue 96. Retyped from Samizdat Archive № 4973 ; Archive "V": Open letter in defense of V. Gershuni; Jewish culture trial; G. Barats-Kokhan's open letter to V. Grishin; Appeal of the Committee for rights to emigrate from the USSR; V. Fast's trial; B. Kanevskii, V. Senderov, "Intellectual Genocide."
Russian Orthodox ; Protest against illegal violation by heads and representatives of the Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox Church of the principle of Socialist law and the basic legislative settings of the Soviet power, which determine the Soviet state's relations with the church ; A copy of the appeal circulated in Samizdat
The problem of training scientists in librarianship has lately acquired additional importance. The more sophisticated needs of the age of scientifical-technical revolution require a qualitatively higher stage in the development of librarianship and therefore profound studies and revised definitions of its characteristic regularities and organizational forms. This new scientific approach to the problems of librarianship has to be implemented not only by scientists doing library research, but also, and in no less degree, by practical workers, organizers of library services. The organizers and engineers of library development at this new and complex stage should not only be experienced practical workers and administrators, but they should be able to study and solve all the emerging problems with the insight and methodical approach of a scientist.The principal form of training scientists and research personnel in the USSR is "aspirantura" (post graduate studies). At present there are more than 100.000 aspirants, apart from the considerable guantity of specialists writing their thesises independently, without the "aspirantura". A successful completion of aspirantura training (full time aspirantura duration – three years, and by correspondence – four rears) is crowned with the presentation and the defense of a candidate dissertation (thesis) which must show the applicant's apritude for research. The degree of candidate of science is equivalent to the degree of doctor phil. in the USA. As to the doctoral dissertation, it must prepresent an independent research paper, containing theoretical analysis and conclusions and suggesting solutions of significance for the general development of the branch of science as well as for immediate practical application. The aspirantura to train scientific library personnel was first established in 1930 at the Leningrad N. Krupskaya political-educational Institute (now Institute of Culture). Later – in 1934 – at the Moscow Institute for Librarianship.According to the data presented by the All-Union Book Chamber, during the period of 25 years (1945–1970) in the field of bibliology only 11 dissertations have been granted the doctoral degree and 290 the degree of candidate of science. The majority of these dissertations deals with problems of traditional bibliology 50 treat problems of the history of book and printing, 77 – problems of bibliography, 101 – those of librarianship. Besides the Leningrad and Moscow Institutes of culture, a significant contribution to the training of scientists in the field of bibliology has been made by the Moscow Poligraphic Institute, the Moscow Historical-Archival Institute, the All-Union Institute of Scientific and Technical Information, some universities (Moscow, Vilnius, Tbilisi) etc. As to the topics of the dissertations we can witness a growing interest in the problems of information science, automation and mechanization of library work and similar actual topics.One of the main problems on which largely depends the training of scientific library personnel is the "doctoral" problem, for the possibility to have as aspirantura at a certain research institute or establishment of higher education depends upon the number of doctors of science they possess.In the coming 2–3 years we can expect from 10 to 12 doctoral bibliological dissertations to be presented at the Leningrad and Moscow Institutes of Culture and the Vilnius university and elsewhere. This will make the conditions for the training of scientific library personnel even more favourable.
Pentecostal; Protestant; Evangelical ; Underground Pentecostal periodical publication published between 1977 and 1978 ; Contains report on government persecution of Pentecostal believers in the Far East (Nakhodka), Krasnoiarskii Krai (Chernogorsk, Starotitarovskaia), Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Ukraine, Byelorussia, Western Ukraine, Georgia (Sukhumi), Moscow, Kiev, Leningrad, Tallinn, and Riga. Includes reports on persecution of Baptists and Methodists and arrest of two Swedish Pentecostals
Unregistered Baptists; Initsiativniki; Evangelical Christians; reform Baptists ; Letter to the Soviet government about the state's increasing repression of unregistered Baptists signed by 18 individuals from different parts of the country ; Facts of persecution and discrimination against members of unregistered Evangelical Christian Baptist churches and lists of persecuted individuals ; Copies of the document were sent to the USSR Committee on Human Rights, Amnesty International, UN General Assembly, and the Council of ECB Churches in the USSR
Unregistered Baptists; Initsiativniki ; Documents of the Second All-Union Congress of Relatives of Evangelical Christian Baptist Prisoners in the USSR which was held on December 12-13, 1970 in Kiev ; Agenda; greetings; report of the Council; open letters, appeals to the Soviet government and the world political and religious leaders; criticism of the All-Union Council of Evangelical Christians-Baptists; reports on religious persecution; resolutions; lists of prisoners of conscience; and a list of individuals serving multiple sentences
Pentecostal; Protestant; Evangelical ; Underground Pentecostal periodical publication published between 1977 and 1978 ; Contains reports on government persecution of Pentecostal believers in Ukraine, the Far East (Nakhodka), Lithuania, Estonia, Krasnodarskii Krai (Starotitarovskaia) and other regions of the Soviet Union