DATA ON USSR LIGHT INDUSTRY, MAY - JUNE 1953
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP80-00809A000700150090-4
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RIPPUB
Original Classification:
C
Document Page Count:
10
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 13, 2011
Sequence Number:
90
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 20, 1953
Content Type:
REPORT
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SUBJECT INFORMATION 1940 - 1953
Economic - Light industry, cotton ginning,
HOW textiles, clothing, footwear
PUBLISHED DATE DIST. -2 0 Nov 1953
Daily newspapers; monthly, bimonthly periodicals
CLASSIFICATION CONNFFIDEENNTTIAL f ppNN
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE ~CY REPORT
INFORMATION FROM
FOREIGN DOCUMENTS OR RADIO BROADCASTS CD NO.
COUNTRY USSR DATE OF
WHERE
PUBLISHED USSR
DATE
PUBLISHED 1 May - 28 Jun 1953
NO. OF PAGES to
SUPPLEMENT TO
REPORT NO.
THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION
5his report presents information, from May and June 1953 Soviet
newspapers and periodicals, on the fulfillment of light industry
plans for the first 6 months of 1953, particularly for the textile,
clothing, and footwear industries. Some information is given on
fulfillment of or failure to fulfill 1952 plans. Other data in-
cludes above-plan pledges made by certain enterprises and the
proposed expansion and mechanization of others.
Cotton-Ginning Industry
The ginneries of the Uzbek SSR pledged to fulfill the 1953 plan by
25 December and to produce by the end of the year 18,000 metric tons of
cotton fiber above plan.(1) The Kermine Ginnery pledged to fulfill the 1953
plan by 20 December and to produce 600 metric tons of cotton fiber above
plan.(2) The Naryn Cinntry pledged to fulfill the 1953 plan by 25 December
and to produce by the end of the year 250 metric tons of fiber end 150 metric
tons of cotton linters above plan.(3) The Khiva Ginnery shipped to textile
enterprises of the USSR nearly 1,000 metric tons of cotton fiber above the
plan for the first 4 months of 1953?(4)
The Kerki Ginnery in the Turkmen SSR fulfilled 110 percent the plan for
the first 4 months of 1953?(5) The ginnery produced more than 30 metric tons
of liter above the plan for the 4-month period.(6)
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Textile Industr
1. Cotton
In 1953, production of cotton printed fabrics in the USSR is to in-
crease by 100 million meters and of sateen by 50 million meters, as compared
with 1952.(7)
Raw material utilizaticn is steadily improving in the USSR cotton
industry. For example, in 1951, as compared with 1946, the average yarn count
increased from 32.67 percent to 38.99 percent, and output of yarn from cotton
from 88.8 percent to 93.1 percent. Consumption of yarn per 100 meters of gray
goods was lowered during this period from 13.57 kilograms to 12.29 kilograms.
Consequently, in 1951 alone, workers of the cotton industry saved nearly
5,000 metric tons of cotton and yarn.(8)
In 1952, cotton enterprises of the Estonian SSR produced 117.3 percent
more cotton fabrics than in 1950?(9) LA later source states that in 1952, pro-
duction of cotton fabrics in the Estonian SSR increased 41 percent as compared
with 1950.(10] During the first quarter 1953, cotton enterprises of the re-
public produced 23 percent more cotton fabrics than during the corresponding
period of 1952. By the end of the Fifth Five-Year Plan, production of cotton
fabrics in the republic is to have become 2.3 times as great as in 1950.(9)
The Krengol'mskaya Manufaktura Combine in the Estonian SSR pledged to
produce by 1 May 200,000 meters of fabrics above the plan for the first 4 months
of 1953. As of 30 April, the combine had produced 310,000 meters of fabrics
above the plan for the 4-month period.(9) During the first 4 months of 1953,
the combine increased production of fabrics 17.8 percent and of yarn 8.8 per-
cent over the corresponding period of 1952.(11) As of 11 May 1953, 25,000
twisting spindles had been installed in the new twisting shop of the Ioal'skaya
Spinni- Mill of the Krengol'mskaya Manufaktura Combine. New ring-spinning
frames replaced old frames in spinning shops of the mill; productivity of the
new machines is 25 percent higher than that of the old ones. From the beginning
of the Fifth Five-Year Plan up to 11 May 1953, the combine increased production
of cotton fabrics more than 90 percent. Weavers of the combine were producing
as much in one day as they produced in a month during the second year of the
Fourth Five-Year Plan; as compared with 1950, average daily production per
weaver had increased by more than 45 meters of fabrics The new weaving mill
under construction is to go into operation in 1953.(12)
In 1953, the Bol'shevichka Textile Combine in the Latvian SSR is to
produce more than 500,000 meters of staple-fiber linen heavy cotton cloth used
for bed and table linen7.(13)
During the first quarter 1953, the Kirovabad Textile Combine imeni
S. Ordzhonikidze in the Azerbaydzhan SSR produced 117 metric tons of yarn and
642,000 meters of fabrics above plan.(l4)
The Barnaul Mixed-Yarn Combine in Altayskiy gray produced 136 metric
tons of yarn and 510,000 meters of fabrics above the plan for the first 4 months
of 1953.(15)
From 1 January to 14 May 1953, the Kineshma Mill No 2 in Ivanovskaya
Oblast produced 500,000 meters of fabrics above the plan for this period.(16)
During the first 4 months and 25 days of 1953, the Ivanovo Weaving Mill imeni
Kirov produced more than 500,000 meters of prime-quality fabrics above pl.an.(17)
From 1 to 23 May 1953, the Sosnevskaya Finishing Mill in Ivanovskaya Oblast
produced 130,000 meters of cotton fabrics above plan.(18)
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than 20,000 meters of fine fabrics weaving mill in Leningrad produced core
the May .
the mill had produced more than 300,000 me
ters of prime -plan e-qu 4usit lit) BY 3 fabrics June,
s above
plan in 1953.(20) bove
The Orekhovo Cotton Combine in Moskovskaya Oblast pledged to produce
850,000 meters of gray goods and 1,200,000 meters of finished fabrics above
the 1953 Plan.(21) During the first 4 months of 1953, the combine produced
more than 500,000 meters of finished fabrics above plan.(22) The Weaving Mill
No 2 of the Orekhovo Cotton Combine pledged to produce 400,000 meters of
fabrics above the 1,53 plan.(23).
During the first quarter 1953, 7,099 meters of the 44,794 meters of
fabrics produced by the Trekhgornaya Manufaktura Combine imeni Dzerzhinskiy in
Moscow were changed to lower grades after inspection; for example, in March,
of 1,885 meters of colored woven zephyr fabric (No 221) inspected, 1,019
meters were changed to second grade and 490 meters to third grade. The sit-
uation did not change in April: of 11,036 meters of fabrics inspected-'17;1428
meters were changed to lower grades.(24)
By 20 June 1953, the Zanarskaya Spinning and Weaving Mill in
Serpukhov, Moskovskaya Oblast, had exceeded the plan for the first 6 months
of 1953 by 300,000 meters of fabrics.(25)
The Krasnyy Profintern Weaving Mill in Vladimirskaya Oblast pro-
duced 402,400 meters of fabrics above the plan for the first 4 months of
1953.(26)
The Tashkent Textile Combine in the Uzbek SSR pledged to produce
one million spools of thread and one million meters of fabrics above the
1953 plan.f27)
During the first 2 years and 3 months of the Fifth Five-Year Plan,
the Ashkhadbad Spinning and Weaving Mill imeni Dzherzhinskiy in the Turkmen
SSR produced 1,740,000 meters of fabrics above plan. In 1952, the mill in-
creased production 41.7 percent, as compared with 1950, and produced 1,300,000
meters of fabrics above plan. In 1953, the mill is to increase production
of fabrics 15.4 percent and yarn 2.8 percent. The mill produced 471,000
meters of fabrici above the first-quarter 1953 plan.(28) The mill had ful-
filled the plan for the first 6 months of 1953 by 13 June and pledged to
produce by the end of the month one million meters of fabrics and 80 metric
meters of yarn above the 6-month plan.(29) By the beginning of the first
quarter 1953, all picking machines of the mill had been replaced with new
ones, 24 new looms had been received, and 16 new carding machines, two
spinning machines, a twisting frame, and other machines had been installed.(28)
2. Wool
In 1953, production of wool suit fabric, in the USSF is to increase
25 percent qnd of wool coat fabrics 40 percent, as compared with 1952.(7)
The Sortavala Wo1 Fabric Mill in the Karelo-Finnish SSR produced
3,500 meters of 9s Zbove the April 1953 plan.(30)
Enterprises producing wool fabrics in the Estonian SSR fulfilled
the plan for the first 5 months of 1953 by 101.6 percent.(10)
The Minsk Fine-Wool Fabric Combine in the Belorussian SSR produced
32,000 meters of fabrics above the April 1953 plan.(31)
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CONFIDENTIAL
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In 1953, enterprises of he Ministry of Light and Food Industry
Ukrainian SSR are to produce 100,t000 meters of wool fabrics shove the 1953
Plan. The Odessa Wool Fabric Mill pledged to fulfill the 1953 plan by
18 December and to produce 41,000 meters of fabrics above plan.(32)
The Tbilisi Worsted and Wool Fabric Still is to produce 50,000 meters
of fabrics above the 1953 plan.(33) During the first 5 months of 1953, the
Tbilisi Worsted and Wool Fabric Mill produced 45,869 meters of unfinished
fabrics above plan-04)
The Krasnyy Azerbaydzhan Wool Fabric Mill in the Azerbaydzhan SSR
produced 3,400 kilograms of yarn, 3,000 meters of unfinished fabrics, and
4,200 meters of finished wool fabrics above the plan for the first 4 months.
of 1953.(35)
At the beginning of 1953, the Krasnokholmsk Worsted Combine in Moscow
pledged to produce 200,000 meters of wool fabrics above the 1953 plan. After
exceeding the first-quarter 1953 plan, the combine pledged to produce' 245,000
meters of fabrics above the second-quarter 1953 plan, thereby more than ful-
filling during the first half of 1953 the pledge for the entire year. The
combine pledged to produce an additional 185,000 meters of fabrics above plan
during the second half of 1953.(36)
The Kupavna Fine-Wool Fabric Mill in Moskovskaya Oblast is to produce
6.5 metric tons of yarn, 12,000 meters of unfinished fabrics, and 24,000 meters
of finished fabrics above the 1953 plan.(37)
The Moscow Fine-Wool Fabric Mill imeni Petr Alekseyev produced
30,000 meters of finished fabrics above the May 1953 plan.(38) By 23 May,
the mill had produced a total of 40,000 meters of finished fabrics above
plan in 953.(39) During the first 2 years and 5 months of the Fifth Five-
Year Plan, the mill produced 400,000 meters of fabrics above plan.(40)
3. Silk
In 1952, production of silk fabrics in the USSR was three times as
great as in 1940; in 1953, it is, to be four times as great as in 1940.(7)
In 1952, production of silk fabrics in the Estonian SCR was 70 Par-
cent greater than in 1950.(10) By 1955, it is to have become trice as great
as in 1950.(9)
In 1952, enterprises of Ukrainian light industry produced 89.7 per-
cent more silk fabrics than in 1951. In 1953, republic silk enterprises are
to produce 500,000 meters of silk fabrics above the 1953 plan.
In 1952, the Kiev Silk Combine produced 170 times as many meters of
silk fabrics as in 1947, its first year of production.(32) The combine pledged
to produce 45,000 meters of silk fabrics above the 1953 plan. The Darnitsa
Silk Combine pledged to produce 700,000 meters of silk fabrics above the 1953
plan.(41)
The Beriyevskaya Silk-Weaving Mill imeni Shaumyan in theArmenian. SSR
is to produce 117,000 meters more fabrics in 1953 than in 1952.(42) It pledged
to produce 48,000 meters of silk fabrics above the 1953 plan -- 15,800 meters
of unfinished fabrics and 32,200 meters of finished fabrics.(43)
In 1953, light industry enterprises of the TJzbek SSR are to produce
10 percent more silk fabrics than in 1952.(44)
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The Ashkhabad Filature in the Turkmen SSR fulfilled the plan for the
first 4 months of 1953 by 107.3 percent and produced 120 kilograms of raw silk
instead of 75 pledged.(5)
In 11953, the Osh Silk Combine in the Kirgiz SSR is to produce twice as
many silk fabrics as in 1951.(45)
4? Other Textiles
Lint a enterprises of the Estonian SSR fulfilled 102.2 percent of the
plan for the first 5 months of 1953.(10)' The Pyarnu Flax-Spinning and Weaving
Mill pledged to fulfill the plan for the first 7 months of 1953 ahead of
schedule and to produce 60,000 meters of prime-quality fabrics and 20,000
kilograms of yarn above plan.(46)
During the first 2 years of the Fifth Five-Year Plan, 48,000 new
spindles were put in operation in textile enterprises of the Latvian SS:1.(47)
During the Fourth Five-Year Plan, the Sosnevskaya Finishing Mill in
Ivanovskaya Oblast produced more than 41 million meters of fine fabrics above
plan. The mill was 200 years old on 22 May 1953?(48)
The Leningrad Curtain Fabric Factory imeni Samoylova recently re-
ceived 25 weft knitting machines for the production of new curtain mesh
material. By 27 May 1953, 200,000 meters of curtain material had already
been produced with these machines.(49)
Innovators of the Dedova Cord Factory in Moskovskaya Oblast are to
increase spindle speed to 12,500 revolutions per minute. Even 3 years ago, a
speed of more than ll,000 revolutions in producing yarn No 37 was considered
impossible, byt is now common in leading mills. As a result of higher speeds,
productivity of the cord industry has increased 21 percent during the last 3
years.(8)
The Podgornaya Spinning and Weaving Mill in Orekhovo-Zuyevo,
Moskovskaya Oblast, produced 126,500 meters of fabrics above the plan for the
first 4 months of 1953?(50)
In 1952, gross production of the Kommunisticheskiy Avangard Mill in
Sobinka, Vladimirskaya Oblast, increased 11.8 percent over 1951; production of
yarns increased 9,.7 percent and production of gray goods 25.7 percent. During
the first quarter 1953, average daily production of yarn increased 12.6 Nr-
cent and of gray goods 24.9 percent, as compared with the fourth quarter 1952.(45)
In 1952, production of the Chardzhou Artificial Fur Factory in the
Turkmen SSR increased 150 percent as compared with 1949. The factory ful-
filled the 1952 production plan 121.6 percent. During the first 5 months of
1953, the factory produced ,05O meters of unfinished fabrics and 6,460 meters
of artificial fur.(51)
The Sayat JuLe Phut in the Turkmen O SR produced 8 metric tone of jut
fiber above the May 1953 plan.(52) `
In 1953, plants of the Kirgiz Bast Fiber Trust are to process 10,000
more metric tons of kenaf stalks than in 1952.(53)
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Clothing Industry
In 1950, production of hosiery was almost five times as great as in 1940
in the Urals, 5.3 times as great in Eastern Siberia, and 50 times as great in
the Far East.(54)
In 1952, production of hosiery in the Estonian SSR was more than twice
as great as in 1950.(10) During the first quarter 1953, light industry enter-
prises of the Estonian SSR produced 14.2 percent more knitwear than during the
first quart e r a 1952. By 1955, knitwear production in the republic is to have
s
become the plan greathasfins l950.(9) Sewing enterprises of the republic ful-
5 months of 1953 by 105.3 percent.(10)
As of 28 May, the Rigas Apgerbs Sewing Factory had produced more than
13,000 children's dresses, suits, and coats in 1953?(55)
Enterprises of the Ministry of Light and Food Industry Ukrainian SSR are
to produce 130,000 wool suits above the 1953 plan.(56) Knitwear enterprises
of the ministry are to produce 720,000 of knitted viscose underwear above the
1953 plan.(32)
Chernovtsy Knitwear Factory No 1 fulfilled the first-quarter 1953 plan
107.8 percent and the April 1953 plan 114.9 percent. The Chernovtsy Glove
Factory fulfilled the first-quarter 1953 plan 112.1 percent and the April
1953 plan 122.9 percent., Chernovtsy Stocking and Knitwear Factory No 3
fulfilled the April 1953 plan 113.4 percent. Chernovtsy Stocking Factory
No 5 fulfilled the April 1953 plan 107 percent. The Balashikhskaya Spin-
ning Mill and the Glukhovsk*iy Combine in Noginsk were to supply Chernovtsy
Stocking Factory No 5 with yarn; however, both enterprises were not de-
livering on their commitments.(57)
In 1953, sewing factories of the Georgian SSR are to deliver to trade
organizations 60,000 rayon and staple-fiber linen dresses and 168,000 men's
shirts. Production of trousers and other clothing is to be 50 percent
greater in 1953 than in 1952.(58) In 1952, sewing enterprises of the
Georgian SSR received 728 machines of a new type. By the end of 1953, the
Batumi Sewing Factory is to be fully converted and the Kutaisi Sewing Factory
pertly converted to the conveyer method of operation' up to 50 electric
presses and several hundred small machines are to be installed in these
factories.(59)
As of 9 May 1953, sewing enterprises of Leningrad had already produced
more than 50,000 suits, coats, dresses, and other sewn articles above plan
in 1953.(60) The Sewing Factory imeni Volodarrkiy in Leningrad produced
more than 6,000 wool suits and top coats above the plan for the first
4 months of 1953.(49)
The Komsomolka Sewing Factory in Moscow produced 1,600 pairs of
pajamas, nearly 6,000 summer dresses, and 2,500 pairs of underwear above
the plan for the first 4 months of 1953.(24) Moscow Sewing Factory No 5
imeni Profintern had fulfilled the plan for the first 6 months of 1953 by
23 June and pledged to produce 2,000 men's suits and 1,600 trousers above
plan by the end of June.(61) The Moscow Stocking Factory imeni Nogin had
fnifil_led the piF nor the first 5 months of 1953 by 28 May and plle ged to
produce 360,000 pairs of hosiery above the plan by the end of the month.(36)
The Krasnyy Vostok Knitwear and Glove Factory in Moskovskaya Ob""st pledged
to produce 200,000 pairs of gloves above plan during the first 18 days
of
June 1953.(60)
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CONFIDENTIAL
In 1953, the Semipalatinsk and Chimkent stocking factories in the Kazakh
SOP, are to produce several million pairs of children's hosiery, which represent
400,000 more pairs than were produced in 1952.(63)
In 1953, light industry enterprises of the Uzbek SSR are to produce 21
percent more hosiery and 12 percent more knitted underwear than in 1952.(44)
In 1952, the Tashkent Stocking and Knitwear Factory increased production 28.7
percent, including production of stockings alone 55.4 percent. Except for
above-plan stoppages due to raw materials shortages, the factory could have
produced an additional 66,000 pairs of stockings, 11,000 women's combinations,
and 10,000 men's undershirts. The factory fulfilled 108.5 percent the plan
for the first 4 months 1953; except for stoppages, the factory could have
produced an additional 10,000 pairs of stockings, 25,000 women's combinations,
and 8,000 men's undershirts.(64)
The Ashkhabad Knitwear Factory in the Turkmen SSR fulfilled the first-
quarter 1953 plan only 90.1 percent.(65)
Footweae Industry
In 1952, production of footwear in the Estonian SSR increased 31.6
percent, as compared with 1950.(10) During the first quarter 1953, leather
footwear production in the republic increased 8.9 percent, as compared with
the first quarter 1952. .By 1955, footwear production in the republic is. to
be twice as great as in 1950.(9)
The Erglis Footwear Factory in the Latvian SSR produced more than 10,000
pairs of men's, women's, and children's footwear above the plan for the first
4 months of 1953?(66)
In 1952, Ukrainian light industry enterprises produced
styled footwear and 63.9 56-7 percent more
percent more rubber footwear than in 1951.(32)
The Kishinev Footwear Factory imeni Sergey Lazo in the Moldavian SSR
produced 13,000 pairs of footwear above the May 1953 plan.(67)
During the first 5 months of 1953, Baku Footwear Factory No 2 of the
M17liStry of Light and Food Industry Azerbaydzhan SSR produced 25,300 pairs of
footwear above plan.(68) Footwear Factory No 2 of the ministry had fulfilled
the plan for the first 6 months of 1953 by 26 June and had produced 2,720 pairs
of footwear above the plan.(69)
In 1953, footwear enterprises of the Kazakh SSR are to produce 230,000
more pairs of footwear than in 1952.(63)
In 1953, light industry enterprises of the Uzbek SSR are to increase
production of leather footwear 13 percent, as compared with 1952.(44)
The Tashkent Footwear Factory No 1 produced more than 20,000 pairs of
footwear above the plan for the first 5 months of 1953.(70) The Chirci'i.k
Footwear Factory fulfilled the plan for the first 6 months of 1953 by
17 June and pledged to produce 8,000 pairs of footwear above plan by
1 July.(71)
In the fourth quarter 1952, the Ashkhabad Footwear Factory in the
Turkmen SSR returned to the Mary Tannery 3,413 kilograms of hard leather
goods and 186,500 square decimeters of other leather goods as defective.(65)
Frunze Footwear Factory No 1 in the Kirgiz SSSR had fulfilled the plan
for the first 6 months of 1953 by 18 June and pledged to produce 15,000
pairs of footwear above plan by the end of June.(72)
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SOURCES
1. Tashkent, Pravda Vostoka, 23 Jun 53
2. Ibid., 18 Jun 53
3. Ibid., 16.J%in 53
4. Ibid., 9 May 53
5. Ashkhabad, Turkmenskaya Tskra, 1 May 53
6. Ibid., 4 May 53
7. Moscow, Izvestiya, 10 May 53
8. Moscow, Voprosy Ekonomiki, No 5, 1953
9. Tallin, Sovetskaya Estoniya, 1 May 53
10. Ibid., 16 Jun 53
11. Ibid., 23. May 53
12. Riga, Sovetskaya Latviya, 12 May 53
13. Ibid., 14 Jun 53
14. Baku, Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 6 May 53
15. Moscow, Pravda, 11 May 53
16. Izvestiya, 15 May 53
17. Sovetskaya Estoniya, 29 May 53
18. Izvestiya, 24 May 53
19. Frunze, Sovetskaya Kirgiziya, 16 May 53
20. Kishinev, Sovetskaya Moldaviya, 5 Jun 53
21. Moskovskaya Pravda, 24 May 53
22. Ibid., 22 May 53
23. Ibid., 27 May 53
24. Moscow, Vechernyaya Moskva, 13 May 53
25. Moskovskaya Pravda, 26 Jun 53
26. Moscow, Trud, 6 May 53
27. Kiev, Pravda Ukrainy, 17 Jun 53
28. Turkmenskaya Iskra, 6 May 53
29. Ibid., 25 Jun 53
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30. Petrozavodsk, Leninskoye Znamya, 1 May 53
31. Pravda, 15 May 53
32. Pravda Ukrainy, 22 May 53
33. Tbilisi, Zarya Vostoka, 19 May 53
34. Ibid., 13 Jun 53
35. Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 24 May 53
36. Vechernyaya Moskva, 29 May 53
37. Moscow, Komsnmol'skaya Pravda, 22 May 53
38. Vechernyaya Moskva, 23 May 53
39. Moskovskiy Komsomolets, 24 May 53
O. Ibid., 28 Jun 53
41. Izvestiya, 12 Jun 53
42. Yerevan, Kommunist, 16 May 53
43. Ibid., 19 Jun 53
44. Turkmenskaya Iskra, 22 May 53
45. Izvestiya, 14 May 53
46. Sovetskaya Estoniya, 20 Jun 53
47. Sovetskaya Latviya, 10 May 53
48. Trud, 23 May 53
49. Ibid., 28 May 53
50. Kommunist, 12 May 53
51. Turkmenskaya Iskra, 24 Jun 53
52. Ibid., 10 Jun 53
53. Sovetskaya Kirgizia, 1 May 53
54. Moscow, Planovoye Khozyaystvo, No 3, 1953
55. Sovetskaya Estoniyn, 30 May 53
56. Pravda Ukraine, 18 Jun 53
57. Ibid., 21 May 53
58. Zarya Vostoka, 20 May 53
59. Ibid., 16 Jun 53
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60. Sovetskaya Moldaviya, 12 May 53 L
61. Moakovskaya Pravda, 25 Jun 53
62. Ibid., 3.6 Jun 53
63. Alma-Ata, Kazakhataaskaya Pravda, 4 Jun 53
64. Pravda Vostoka, 3 Jun 53
65. 'P rkmenskaya Iskra, 16 May 53
66. Sovetskaya Latviya, 8 May 53
67. Pravda, 21 Jun 53
68. Bakinskiy Rabochiy, 9 Jun 53
69. Ibid., 27 Jun 53
70. Pravda Vostoka, 24 Jun 53
71. Ibid., 27 Jun 53
72. Sovetskaya Kirgiziya, 19 Jun 53
I
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