User talk:Superzohar
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[edit] Welcome from Wikipedia team
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=KiteString= 20:22, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
If you need to get a chunk translated, you might want to try WP:TIE first. Try to make pasting huge chunks of text onto user pages a last resort. =KiteString= 20:22, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Stalinist Architecture
Take no personal offence but such moves have to have a consensus via WP:RM, otherwise it will only create a useless edit war. Please follow the wiki guidelines if you wish to move the page and use the talk page of the article to discuss the reasons. --Kuban Cossack 19:53, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
- Second that. There are very few cases when you can move articles without discussions. Talk pages are there to raise your conserns. --Irpen 08:00, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Re: question
Hi, I don't quite understand it. Maybe you mix together democracy and freedom? If you go to the street, you are free to do many things :) nobody cares. Some Americans stay here for quite a long and believe here is more freedom. Anyway there is no police regime here, like that in North Corea. Even in the time of SU it wasn't. Maybe there in Moscow, but Siberia was always more liberal place.
As for democracy, it hasn't yet exist in Russia. The West has delusions about the regime in 1990s, now they're gone, and that's all. There have been many political changes, but everything is much more complicated, not just democracy+freedom=on/off. --Ъыь (mailbox) 13:41, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
For me it's interesting if you feel ok to walk in the street in Isreal at this time. Does the war affect your everyday life? --Ъыь (mailbox) 14:21, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
hi. now the war has ended and we are feel better. anyway, i don't live in north israel but in the center so it didn't affect me anyway.
and for russia, i know you are not like north korea, but in TV and newspapers or internet i always read that now russia is more authoritarian, and that putin takes to himself more and more power, there is no free media (all main tv channels are in state control), putin re-nationalize companies, izvestia which is very important newspaper- the state bought 51% of it's shares. governors are now elected by president, and the first gay's demonstration in moscow was suppressed. by the way i'm doing my english project on the GULAG. Superzohar 18:25, 17 September 2006 (UTC)
one more thing translate me this please:
- ордена Святого апостола Андрея Первозванного (order of St. Andrew the First Called)
- ордена Святого Георгия I степени (order of St. George, 1st degree)
- Орден «За заслуги перед Отечеством» (order "for the accomplishments for the homeland")
- Орден Мужества (order of courage)
- Орден «За военные заслуги» (order "for military accomplishments" or "for military merits")
- Орден «За морские заслуги» (for naval accamplishments)
- Орден Почёта (order of honour)
- ЗАСЛУЖЕННЫЙ ВОЕННЫЙ ШТУРМАН (this is order or medal?) (this is just a title and a prize. Honoured military navigator. Wow, see it for the 1st time)
- За спасение погибавших (медаль) (medal for saving of dying [people])
- Защитнику свободной России (медаль) (medal "to the defender of the free Russia")
- Yes, the centralization of media and taking control over private TV worried us too. As for Izvestia and Sibneft nationalization, any intelligent Russian knows that they had been privatized in 1990-s for ridiculously little sums of money, and now in 2005-2006 they have been bought much overpriced. That's a financial machination.
Well, we care more about the corruption which is persisting and is a part of the political establishment. It's a mode of existence of the governing clan. --Ъыь (mailbox) 12:19, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
--Ъыь (mailbox) 12:19, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
you know, i'm very intersting in the russian military orders and medals. important to say- not red army but the russian federation orders and medals. they are on the principles of the red army's one but they did change no? for example order of lenin doesn't exist today. Орден Почёта wasn't in red army. i have one more question: the famous Victory Order does exist today? and Order of Glory? if it is so i allmost sure that i changed little because there is CCCP on the top of the star of the victory order.
can you please give me the full list of orders and medals just of the russian federation military not the soviet one, i want to know exactly what is left from the soviet period and which new orders and medals came in. Superzohar 12:58, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
you know what are the two symbols on his jacket? http://www.awards-orel.ru/img/baluevskiy.jpg Superzohar 16:45, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
- How would I?! I'm a civilian. No idea absolutely, and I see this man for the first time. Try to search for sites/forums on these topics, there may be people who can help you, in English. --Ъыь (mailbox) 17:11, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
have you born in akademgorodok?? it's very nice town. Superzohar 18:40, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] hoeryong
it seems you are interested in hoeryong. I would like to help translate the text that you asked to be translated on Komdori's talk page.
I'll come back to the text soon. Good friend100 01:54, 22 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Marshal's Star
I don't know, sorry. I would guess not, though, since the article says it was used during the Soviet Union and does not mention anything about continued use in modern Russia. Hope you are able to find out somewhere, Dar-Ape 00:50, 31 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Onsong
I have added some more information at Onsong, mostly from the Korean Wikipedia article ko:온성군 and with a few facts from the external encyclopedia articles under External Links. Is there other specific information you're looking for: Also, it's helpful if you sign your messages on talk pages using four tildes, like this: --~~~~. Thanks. --Reuben 20:04, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] hi
hi, how are you? thats great that you openned an English page! but you should link it to the hebrew page as well. how do you like the "Lenin order"?--Holod 21:48, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
- hi, why writing in english? i changed the order of lenin to a wikipedia barnstar in order the wikipedia awards system. Superzohar Talk 13:36, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Image tagging for Image:Vaterlaendischer Verdienstorden.jpg
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[edit] Hoeryong
Hi Superzohar, Thanks for your interest in Hoeryong. I don't have much time to work on it at the moment. However, there are some good articles in the references section of Hoeryong concentration camp. I added one to a description by a former guard, Ahn Myong Chol, that you may find useful. As for the city itself, there's not that much info available unfortunately. The Hoeryong article has links to Korean encyclopedias, which are about the only real source I know of, although I don't know where their information comes from or how old it is. You might try asking at Wikipedia:WikiProject_Korea as there are several Korean speakers there who could help with the translation. --Reuben 23:31, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] NK / Russia border
The link is on border towns, but it's in Japanese, so I can only pick out bits and pieces. It seems to describe Ussuriysk, Zarubino, Slavyanka, Posyet, and Khasan. You can also read about a battle there in Battle of Khasan. "Tumangan" is the Russian transliteration Туманган of 두만강, Tuman-gang, i.e. the Tumen River. The railroad bridge between Russia and North Korea runs between Khasan and the Tumangang Workers' District, Sonbong County, Rason Directly Governed City. In the Khasan article you can find map coordinates that will help you get a Google map of the area, and you can see the railroad depot in Tumangang. See also the Tumen River Area Development Project [1], the goal of which seems to be to get more direct access to the sea for Chinese export goods. It's a mystery to me how Mongolia comes into it. Also see some articles about the proposed rail link between Russia and South Korea through North Korea: [2], [3]. It seems to at a perpetual standstill, but the idea's still around. --Reuben 01:24, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, Tumangang Workers' District is right at the border, on the other side of the rail bridge. I'm not sure if it's correct to call it a "town" or not, since it's technically part of a city; but from the satellite image it does look like a town. There appear to be several clusters of houses with a very regular, rectilinear pattern right next to the depot, and farther away there are some more scattered villages near the fields. I'm not really qualified to interpret satellite images beyond that level of sophistication. :-) Here's an interesting article with some background: [4]. --Reuben 18:55, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Interesting edit
Please read it carefully :) [5] -- Heptor talk 16:31, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry for the mistake :-) Superzohar Talk 19:45, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Moscow
You are a member of WikiProject Russia. I wanted to let you know the article Moscow is in Wikipedia:Featured_article_candidates/Moscow list now. --Hirakawacho 10:55, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Image tagging for Image:100_years_to_trans_siberian_railroad.jpg
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