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[[Category:1934 establishments in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Towers built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:1936 establishments in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Buildings and structures built in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:1966 establishments in the Soviet Union]]
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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...ale figures, symbolizing the success, industry, agriculture and the Soviet Union. Decorative objects were made by [[Czechoslovakia|Czech]] sculptor Bogomil
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In Soviet times, the palace was owned by the government. Since the collapse of the US
...|date=1983 |title=Alma-Ata Encyclopedia |url= |location= |publisher=Kazakh Soviet Encyclopedia |pages=221–222 |isbn=}}</ref>
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...Kazakhstan, which for rest of the period until the collapse of the Soviet Union, served as a place for mass demonstrations, celebrations, festivals, milita
...te = 2015-02-10}}</ref> On May 23, 1990, the Supreme Council of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic adopted a resolution to rename New Square to Republic Sq
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...In the early years of staged performances, reflecting the establishment of Soviet power, multiple plays were created which these were "Red Falcons" by Seiful
...he basis of the acts of performances devoted to the heroic struggle of the Soviet people: "In the hour of trial" by Auezov, "Guards of honor" by Auezov and A
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...remonies and state receptions. Later after the establishment of the Soviet Union, the building was used as the House of Officials until 1980 which after the
[[Category:1980 establishments in the Soviet Union]]
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...ibi Zhangildinu], a politician and military leader who helped to establish Soviet control in Kazakhstan, stands outside the station.
...the station was hailed as one of the most modern facilities in the Soviet Union, and seen as a 'ceremonial gate' to Almaty. The terminal building was dedic
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:1968 establishments in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Hydroelectric power stations built in the Soviet Union]]
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...edeu switched to its current system of artificial ice in 1972 by a team of Soviet engineers.
...a (bandy club)|Dynamo Alma-Ata]] played its homegames at Medeu and won the Soviet Championships in 1977<ref>[http://akzhajik.ucoz.kz/_nw/5/11184970.jpg Team
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...]. The [[Palace of Sports|sports palace]] was renamed after [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] and [[Kazakhstan]]i [[ice hockey]] player [[Boris Alexandrov]] in 2010. I
...ion. It was also the first [[ice hockey]] [[indoor arena]] in the [[Soviet Union]] to be built with a training ground. Initially, the main arena accommodate
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...communication|speech]]. Living in a zoo in [[Kazakhstan]] in the [[Soviet Union]], Batyr was reported as having a vocabulary of more than 20 phrases.<ref n
...give" was played on Kazakh state radio and on the First Programme of the [[Soviet Central Television|Central Television]] of the [[USSR]] — [[Vremya]], in
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[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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...raft possible and opened the door to many new destinations in the [[Soviet Union]].
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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...ى; formerly known as '''Uralsk Ak Zhol''' and '''Podstepnyy''' during the Soviet era) {{Airport codes|URA|UARR}} is an airport in [[Kazakhstan]] located {{c
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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...on}} north of [[Arkalyk]]. It is a small civilian airport built during the Soviet era, and has a sizeable asphalt apron and passenger terminal. The terminal
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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...documents indicated that in the late 1960s during the height of the [[Sino-Soviet split]] this airfield was a bomber staging base for Chinese targets and at
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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...The airport started operations in 1993 after the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] and bears the name Shevchenko-Central.
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[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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{{Airports built in the Soviet Union}}
[[Category:Airports built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Energy in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures built in the Soviet Union]]
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[[Category:Energy in the Soviet Union]]
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|operator = [[Soviet space program]], [[Russian Space Agency]]
...a launch site at [[Baikonur Cosmodrome]] in [[Kazakhstan]], used for the [[Soviet space program]] and now managed by [[Roscosmos State Corporation]].
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...which is still in use. It has been the launch site for all [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] and [[Russia]]n government Zenit launches, along with a commercial launch
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| pushpin_map = Soviet Union#Russia#Kazakhstan
...the [[Soviet Union]] in the late 1950s as the base of operations for the [[Soviet space program]]. Under the current Russian space program, Baikonur remains
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...mplex was built in the 1960s as part of the [[Soviet manned lunar programs|Soviet manned lunar programme]], for use by the [[N1 (rocket)|N1]] rocket.
...rogram|Buran]]'' [[spaceplane]]. Following the [[dissolution of the Soviet Union]] the Energia and [[Buran program]]mes were cancelled, and the complex was
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* Harford, James. ''Korolev – How One Man Masterminded the Soviet Drive to Beat America to the Moon''. [[John Wiley & Sons]], Inc., New York,
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| residence = {{flag|Soviet Union|size=23px}}{{RUS}}
| occupation = Soviet and Russian [[rocket]] scientist and engineer
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...– October 25, 1971), was a leading missile designer in the [[Soviet Union]].
A [[minor planet]] [[3039 Yangel]] discovered by [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] astronomer [[Lyudmila Zhuravlyova]] in 1978 is named after him.<ref>[http
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|death_place=[[Baikonur Cosmodrome]], [[Kazakh SSR]], [[Soviet Union]]
|allegiance={{flag|Soviet Union}}
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| organisers = [[Strategic Missile Troops|Soviet Strategic Missile Troops]]
...}}), who was killed in the explosion. As commanding officer of the Soviet Union's [[Strategic Missile Troops|Strategic Rocket Forces]], Nedelin was head of
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|death_place=[[Moscow]], [[Russian SFSR]], [[Soviet Union]]
|occupation = Rocket engineer, Chief Designer of the [[Soviet space program]]
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| residence = [[Soviet Union]]
...end of the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|war]] remained in the [[Group of Soviet Forces in Germany|occupation]] of [[Germany]].
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