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tv   [untitled]  BELARUSTV  August 9, 2024 8:05pm-8:55pm MSK

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yakub kolas. my sincere gratitude to all of you who paid me your attention. museum of advertising elders.
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bssr. mikhas tsikhanavich lynkov was awarded the title of people's writer of belarus. yes, mikhas tsikhanavich often visits the state with tall and small children. the dukes have the first tortures of a madman, like paravoz's father. not only the director, but also the author, andrei yagoravich makaenak, helped us understand and reveal the characters of the song. what kind of goodness is there, only lushka needs, lushka pavinna gavarits great courageous tricks, great yago there.
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so who invented the radio? the former soviet union for popov, europe and the americans for marconi. and you wouldn't be collectors if you didn't leave a radio point and a radio museum in your apartment. and where could you? in siberia, take a copper coil like this, in some parts palladium, silver, gold, i heard, i thought, no, guys, you have to get out of here , in order to become a radio amateur, you have to pass a special exam, there are few indians, many indonesians, cambodia, vietnam, south korea, you lived in siberia, in kazakhstan, in karili, in the gdr, and how did you end up in zhodino, i saw a grundik satellite 3400 receiver, oh, i fell for it.
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hello, you are watching the program "say ne molchi", in the studio victoria popova and tatyana shchyurbina, and today our guest, radio amateur, collector, alexander dashkevich, hello! you lived in siberia, in kazakhstan, in karili, in the gdr, and how did you end up in zhodino? well, siberia, this is childhood, youth, was brought up in school , the internet, from the fourth to the ninth grade inclusive, well then... parents moved
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to kazakhstan, well, naturally, after the ninth grade i also moved to kazakhstan, but i didn't live there for long, because the time came to serve, they called me up. i spent 4 years in the navy, but before the army i had already become acquainted with radio engineering, firstly, when i was in a boarding school, i went to a radio amateur club, there i learned the ropes of radio engineering, that is, i experienced what a crystal receiver and other tube receivers were, when i came to kazakhstan to the city of rudny, in the kosnazhskaya region, this city is famous for the fact that it was the first kamkovaniya factory built in the former soviet union ore. that is, they made akatysh from the concentrate, this is iron ore, in general, there is a high iron content in these akatysh stones, which then went to metallurgical plants, and where they were smelted from it there was already metal, so there i got a job as a student of a television repairman and little by little,
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little by little they taught me how to repair receivers first, then televisions, let's do it little by little, you were in a boarding school, why, after all , you had a family, a lot of relatives, why? we were brought up in a boarding school, i don't have, i didn't have a father, it was me very brought up, we lived in seber, a very poor family, there are four of us children, i was the oldest, after me there was my sister nina, she is still alive today, lives in chelyabinsk, my brother victor was in the north, but there was an accident there , he is no longer alive, well, and a year ago my younger sister passed away, so let's show your relatives, here i am on the left, the oldest, this is the younger sister, she passed away, this is vitya, the marriage, which is unhappy, and this is my sister nina. this photo was taken in 1955, yeah, and someone came, we lived on a state farm there, well, you see stove, everything and father zatochima some comrade was a camera, well he says take a picture of my family - that's why he took a picture of us, you see the first priority and how shabby we
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are standing on the internet to many things that they taught to photography i was taught to take pictures this is in the boarding school this is the morning how is this awakening see? they don't recognize me here, there on the internet you have already fallen in love with the radio, yes, yes, i somehow got used to it, but i can still do the past, then, when we had a receiver there, i went to the hostel receiver brought it, it is without a case, just like that, and what did it look like, here i have a photo, let's see, you say, did it look like that or not, well yes, but yes, it is a crystal receiver, on the right a blocking capacitor is connected to the headphones, on the left an oscillatory circuit, a coil, so to speak. it is called and also a capacitor is connected in parallel, well , at the top there is a detector and which means it switches or is adjusted there so that it is loud, so, well, this is the very one, well, in principle, it is the same, and where could it be in siberia take such a copper coil explained,
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and it was just like that, they found it from electricians, asked for a wire, found a wire, subscribed to magazines, got it, well, through the head of the radio club. that's all he helped and taught us, then amateur radio was very popular, yes, you are right , there in the radio club there was a small radio station and the main thing was a map of the world from a point, it was the city of tatarsk, where the boarding school was located in the novosibirsk region from this point and the lines went, they drew in red with a pencil, with whom they contacted, well, let's say magadan, there kamchatka, there at lannude and so on, but mainly there were connections with the soviet union, at that time, as if... it was forbidden to work with foreigners, it was taboo, well, and you, when you first established contact with this board, with whom you connected, don't you remember, no, then, it means, i didn't connect with anyone then, i just walked, my eyes were so big, oh, how so, with
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someone, from some other city, i heard our comrade talking, how is that i was interested, i looked at what kind of receiver it was, in general, well, i... they didn't let me work on it, because i was still a minor , these goals, but i was interested, and with this interest i met a radio amateur, an adult, but he was really disabled in a wheelchair, he had a rotating antenna, he had a huge transmitter, he had a receiver like this, and it was an american receiver, i remember it was called the ar-88, which i have in my collection, they were supplied to us during the war under lend-lease, for me this is also i was shocked. he gave me all this to listen to, taught me how to conduct a conversation, like on the air, well, what sequence, reception, transmission, everything in general, so to speak, i got into this business, well, i got into it, i got into it, school ended, i had to go
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to my parents, i came to my parents, and there was no one there, radio amateurs, then a radio club appeared in the same city, there were some where they taught on the key, and so, when i left for the army already... there was a radio workshop repairing one radio station, and there was an amateur radio range, i started to twist and turn, i heard radio amateurs, i remember this, a radio amateur, approximately, this is vladivostok, and this... somewhere the salon is still a bit far away and i , breaking the army law and generally ordelyusky , remembered the call sign of the collective radio station of the city of rudny, i went on the air with the same call sign and said attention, attention, there is al7, there is the seventh district, this was kazakhstan then and then letters, a pause on the air, i am silent, i became wary, then these two radio amateurs say to each other, listen, kazakhstan has passed , well, he says something suspiciously, he says can't he? no, guys, we need to get out of here,
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legs, and what did you do after serving in the navy, after serving in the navy, went to work, a master of electrical and radio equipment, since i knew electrics, already knew radio engineering, i was accepted as a master in the trekolastroy , i worked there, well, in general, it was servicing urban networks, that is, electrical, so they were a welcome guest, i think, in any apartment, because they could fix it and the tv, yes, since i already knew how to take pictures, i had a good camera, zenit, i bought it with different lenses, wide-angle, the world is one with difficulty, then a telephoto lens, jupiter 11, that 's it, a portrait lens jupiter 9, well, comrades know, our cameramen, what it is, that's it, i also... then, well, it happened by chance, i went in, photographed weddings, alexander ivanovich, you liked to moonlight,
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as i understand it, well, it worked out, no, i didn't go anywhere, i didn't beg for this business, some kind of fame went around, something like there is a photographer, well , and i even went to exchanges too, well, and what about the price, i say, guys, how much will you give, well, you have to buy photo paper, there is a developer, a fixer, all these are chemicals, well, they are at least... they weren't cheap, especially the ruler, and the paper was more expensive, but nevertheless people paid me themselves, i didn't name the price, i remember that i didn't name the price, people were happy, of course, it was at home and it was necessary to do the glossing, so that the photo was beautiful and the format and how many pieces they ordered there, well especially the wedding, the wedding i these old photo labs of ours, where you had to develop under the light of a red lamp, and i closed myself in the bathroom and at night. that's it, let's get back to the retro museum, do you have such a rarity in your collection,
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a 6n1 receiver, a tube receiver, a folk receiver, yes, it was manufactured in 1939, it was licensed by the american company rkk, so at one time, evostich stalin gave the order to engineer levitin, and he took another one, they went from the kozitsky plant in leningrad to america for six months for six months they studied all these things and receivers and then bought a production line they were produced, the parts were american radio tubes , only the american cases were our wretched soviet ones at that time, as they say, and i like it so much why are they poor in my opinion , they are good things and there are speakers with magnets at my place and i turn it on every evening. because on medium waves you can still listen to some foreign stations, on short waves only china,
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there is nothing else now, and i listen to it with pleasure, it still works, it still works, well , all of alexander ivanovich's equipment works, he has 700 exhibits in his collection, he tries to bring everything to mind, so that everything does not just stand there, everything should work, you have such a principle, yes alexander ivanovich, and there is also such a handsome festival, let's talk about it, what is remarkable about it, it is... the first radius with remote control, on the right is the remote control, the cable is 6 m long, a finger thick, here is the box, the remote control, it is light, imagine, well, let's say, you are sitting somewhere in the room, in another, in the hall or in the bedroom, and this remote control, you press the buttons, it automatically presses the button on the receiver, on the left is the handle back and forth, just don't go all the way there, just a little bit down or a little bit up, will increase the technology of the fifty-eighth year, by the way, it was released in honor of the first festival in the soviet union in honor
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of it at the beginning they began to produce in the city of leningrad, the receiver is rare today and it was rare then, and it was very expensive. at that time, when our engineers received within 110-140,000, oh, rubles, thousands, it cost 280 rubles, well, it was necessary to collect at least six months for such a festival, but in my opinion it was the first with a remote control. and the last one is more precisely cable ones , it seems to me that they don't produce cables anywhere else, tell me, am i right or not, that the apartments were small at that time and we had remote controls. there were a lot of children, so the issue was resolved by myself, there was an extra item in the wardrobe, but it was difficult to buy, this extra item, alexander ivanovich, well, it turns out that in each of these receivers you can see some signs of the era, yes, that is, both the year and from the time of popov's invention of radio to the present day, and tell me, in your opinion, are you such in this
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the topic is enlightened after all marconi or popov invented the radio, you know, today there is still a controversy between. engineers, collectors, but i have books on radio engineering, there is such a collector, a famous collector in moscow, shapkin, vladimir ilyich, only not lenin, but shapkin, so, he, i was in his museum, he has a huge hangar, imagine some huge metal hangars, there, well , why are there more than 500 copies, because , let's say, if i have one copy, and he there may already be 10 festivals and so on
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, i got acquainted, i was already familiar with them, i went there for work, i say, guys, i arrive, i say, commander, so, so how many times have we offered you, i say, you shouldn't have done that, now, well, now it's difficult, well, we'll help, and why do i say difficult, but because they were assigned to hand over for drakmetals, there are still some drakmetals there, at least drakmetal, they were all usually made not from iron cases, but from duralumin or sellumin, well, that's it yes, you can recycle it, that's right, and also some small parts. they switched to some parts, palladium, silver, gold, so who invented radio? there's a book on the history of radio technology, it's called that way, the former soviet union is for popov, europe and all the americans are for marconi, but there's this thing going on here, that although popov supposedly invented the first wired,
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that is, but not wired, communication with an island in the baltic sea, with ships in mordzianki there, but he... was poor, and marconi had a priest there, a rich man there, he was like macinate and so on, so it was easier for him to patent it, and he came out ahead, and we didn’t have time, well, this is also a sign of that era, we were often late for these very reasons, because of our poverty, we saw a photograph of your family, with which we all started, many, because how i got it, how i restored it, i bought something, something was given to me somewhere, and that means... well , i have it in my home collection, but it’s small, but somewhere within 100 pieces, that means american equipment that was supplied to us during the war under lend-lease, it and in the collection of the knighton there is also lend-lease equipment, but such a receiver as the famous 5, so american, air-88, so
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bc348, bc3 312, well, let's say, bc 312 340. especially 348, we, as they say, copied one to one, you made the uz9 receiver, and it was decoded as universal aircraft, nine nine-tube, well, there was such a story when the american b-29 aircraft landed in the far east, stalin gave the order to tupolev there, so, let's go, disassemble the whole aircraft, bring it to moscow here design, assemble everything else. radio engineers the same and radio engineers brought this receiver bc 30, which means the radio station released us9 well, everything is one to one inside, everything is one to one and even the bolts and nuts of the american standard, though the handles and switches of the americans were duralumin and ours were carbolite, that's the only
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difference well, and they did the right thing by climbing over , you must agree, we didn't have it firstly, how can it be to search. uh, the old man makes bases nothing, after all, after the war and so on and so forth, therefore, how do you determine which of receivers remain in your home collection, and which one should take its place in the museum? i have guests who come to sit on the air once and work, well, and he says, and what do you have here before, well , please, i say, look in my room, and yes, they say "ooh", and there is an abundance and so on this, let's talk about...
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the program say don't be silent is on the air again, and today we have a collector, radio amateur, alexander dashkevich as our guest, and you would not be a collector if you had not left a radio outlet and a radio museum in your apartment, as you told us, before the pause, i wanted to ask you, does it exist? still in digital form of communication, that is , today our airwaves are dirty, why from cellular phone chargers, from these
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lamps, which are led today, the airwaves are noisy, we used to interfere with television, when there was antenna television, and today it is already easier for us, for us radio amateurs, to communicate on the air, that's it, that's why there is a difficulty in this, that's why today we switched - no, well, i can't, i won't call them amateurs, here are two friends of mine, uh-huh, and so, this zhenya, who is sitting, alferov, yeah, he is a very competent radio engineer in
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computer matters, so here he is at my house, they came, and so he, as if to say, consults me, helps with the setup, yes, in this, and this comrade is a radio amateur, well, he works in the kgb service, a good service, and his knowledge is useful, he follows what is being said. yes, yes, yes, that's absolutely right, there is a receiver there, at the top, a small sign, this is just an american receiver ashiro5, on the left above the head of this one is volodymyr, so, this is a svd receiver, so tell me on the phone, why don't you like to talk, so they even come to me and say, why do i need you, here i took the phone, now with america a friend or with whomever there, from asia and video and photos, what? not only we russians there or belarusians well slavs so i want to say that
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now i work a lot-a lot for some reason indonesian indonesian connections a lot of indians few indonesians a lot cambodia there is vietnam there is south korea in north korea there is not a single station but they have they are not in north korea. and how do they not have, do they jam or do they not have, do not jam, they simply do not have radio amateurs, they simply do not, do not give permission, in order to become a radio amateur, you need to pass a special exam, pass, that is, know the morse code there, then, that is, electrical engineering, radio engineering, be able to work on the air, a whole list, there are 30 questions, then a call sign is assigned, so my karelian call sign was roman nikolai, so that means it is written in latin now i at the beginning when i arrived, i did not have a belarusian call sign, i there was a call sign through a fraction, we have the right
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to work, i can, here i had the first letter of the call sign belarusian, ev-2, two - this is our district region, let's say, if i went to grozno, there was a four there, the number four, what and so on, if i went to germany, then it would be, let's say, dm, a fraction, my call sign rn1. no, this is an exit like at sea, yes, that is, you must be a detected object, you must be registered somehow, the jump that passes you at sea, stabs, then here it also stabs, well there was also one interesting page in your biography, you already talked about what you were filming,
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you were amazed, and he says, so go ahead and take a picture, take photos, i'll look, i say, so i don't have anything here, i'll call now, i called somewhere in the lab, there was an example of such and such, give him everything he needs, well, i took some pictures, came to the guys, to the soldiers, developed the film, printed it, they gave me paper, that's all, and the army paper is silver bromide, there's a lot of silver in it, high quality, the gloss is gorgeous and the contrast of the image is very good, i printed 18x24 photos there, that he... and
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where i allowed it, oh, he says, and now you, he says, got there, i say, how did you get there, and in my service, there were six military airfields that i provided, my subordinates, superiors were there too, well, also civilians, i was spinning, spinning, the closest one near berlin was, this is the city of ranenburg, where the former concentration camp jackenhausen is, he says, it doesn’t matter where you are on a business trip, if some events are taking place at this airfield, this... that’s the case, and i i had to be there, take pictures of all these, this one, which is there and hoffman and that means, ivan ivanovich yakubovsky, former chief of staff of the warsaw pact countries and shtymenko, who is there, who was stalin's cartographer, and i am very interested
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in how fidel was, did you like him? a healthy guy, with a beard, i liked him, well, i already spoke about him, i'll peek there with a translator, everything else, and alexander ivanovich, and tell me, your daughter has remained in germany since then, yes, that's how i understand it, no, it was i who came to them, i i've been there to see her three times already, she lives near hamburg, 60 km from hamburg, the city of lunenburg, her granddaughters already live there, they're adults, already in hamburg, and you didn't want to stay there, they offered me to sign a contract for another year, well, and i... missed my daughter, then all this, my wife, everything, i, you see, refused, half a month passed, somewhere, my wife sent a paper, we're getting a divorce, i go to the chief of staff, i say, that's a lieutenant colonel, i've matured, he says, i've matured for a long time, all the documents have already been sent to moscow, he says, that's it, i can't do anything, and she didn't stand the test these separations, yes, oh, not for the air, but
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there was... alexander's second wife, yes, the second wife, with whom i lived, she left me eight years ago, she left me for another world, true, unfortunately, but this is zhodino, i understand correctly, we just study your crazy geography and do not understand how you ended up in zhodino, and zhodino turned out to be also just a simple, in the north of korelia a small town was being built, it was built by finnish builders 400 peaks, their builders.
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because we had nothing there, there were tents, everything else, uh, they started to build, build finns, at one of the veterinkas with my wife at her friends, doctors, we sat, walked, drank, then you know, we went, the women started to set the table for dessert, for dessert, and the men started to smoke, but i'm not a smoker, i haven't been and now, well, i went to stand with the company, we come, there at that time, meanwhile, the table was being set on the box, that is, on tv,
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in leningrad there was just on april 21st lenin's saturday, well, they were cleaning the milli, but there was no snow, petroazov arriving snowdrifts of snow, cold, awful. i get to this kostomuksha by some night train, ledmozero station, nights, a small train station, no hotels, nothing, the whole crowd is some kind of bus, in general, i somehow got in there, standing in this little bus, we arrive at 80 km of the way, where are the guests, what hotel, where is the hostel, there, that is, if there are places, well, i go in.
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the matter is different, that means, well, that's it, i 've endured these 2 years, then to this director, when we, i say, nikolai petrovich, let's do it this way, since there is no workforce, the plant is the city-forming plant, i say, give me a list of workshops, how many people, that is
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, workers of this force, and i will count and give layout of the block block or street or there or something else, approve, and we divided the city into blocks for each workshop and each. the workshop was responsible for order in the city, for planting, for small forms for children, everything else and there was order, somewhere we need these paths, like asphalt or not to lay tiles, at first we let people lay paths on foot , walk, so now this is happening, you see mathematical thinking, so it is easier for you to navigate when everything is structured, but look, you have already lived in petrozavodsk for a huge number of years and the collection was collected there? directly, and it turned out to be in zhodino, that moment, i read your interview ten years ago, where you said, petrozavodsk residents, here is my collection, take it and make some kind of museum, only in zhodino to realize this blue dream of yours, yes, you
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are right when you say that i tried in petrozavodsk, i still lived for many years in dosav, in the radio, i went to the museum, and even went to the city committee, everything else, no one needs it. museum workers say: and i would like irons, spinning wheels, all that stuff, folk art, and me your radio, he says, i well, i say, here is the reorientation, all by hand, but also, it means, i am because of my wife's illness, nikolai petrovich, so and so, and so, and i came to him after work with a bottle, chocolate, lemon, well, we drank, he says, i have a friend of mine in zhodino, we are in kovdor. we worked together, and he is my director, he used to be the chief engineer in kavdor, and he was sent to build kostomoksha as a director, he says, here i will give you a note, a gift, you will find it all the questions will be resolved, well i find, this was such a decree of arrest - a note, he
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i am satisfied with two two-week courses on cars, to study belaz, all that other stuff, i received a certificate, i come to the director, he says, and now he says you will be my representative, then i got it, that's how it is... it turned out, it turns out i lived on two fronts, karelia, as you like, well i traveled, yes i had to get to know the world, so now i still live, my wife is sick here, i live there, then you know, uh, you know, she was already alive, i told her stepson i don't have a son of my own, only a daughter, i say, and i say, i'll go to my mother, well i have an apartment everything i say is warmer, tastier, at daddy's. lukashenko is not what i say in karelia everything is frozen and not in the first freshness, i came here, i needed some parts there, i went to see a friend at eton, he worked at eton, i arrive
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, so he says, come tomorrow, i will collect everything you need for you, i arrive tomorrow, a woman is sitting in her office, that is, irina mikhailovna, then, and she says, and you know how to solder, i say, it depends on what, i don’t even take on microcircuits, and so i am a radio amateur, how is that possible, well i say, and you you can look on the internet, there is an article about me, yes, that's it, she calls, says, come to work, how...
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how is everything fine with us in belarus and the car and the rack, everything is fine, they allocated me two large rooms, bought racks, thanks to two directors, zaichenko sergei ivanovich, the director and general director of tumakhi, yuri siliversovich, who gave the go-ahead to preserve the heritage for the future generation, because this is something, it was done by our, our grandfathers, grandmothers, parents, they make equipment and military. living on two fronts, going back and forth, i
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always came, i was always surprised by the cleanliness, beauty - the city of minsk, when i went to minsk on weekends, as a rule, to the field of miracles, i also chose something there to buy, i won’t buy anything once, but i ’ll go to a museum, i’ll stay, imagine, for me it’s like seeing, someone sells samovars there, someone sells figurines there, well , and so on and so forth, but i also bought some things, field of miracles, who doesn’t remember, it’s still in my opinion... so that means beauty, cleanliness, the stores have everything, yes, i didn't say why i moved here, i changed my apartment because i was on a business trip in volgograd, then i think that i'll fly to minsk, back, i think, i'll have a look at minsk, in volgograd at the end of april there was such a snowfall, i was surprised, the south and snowfall, volga, i fly to minsk. the grass is green, warm, sunny, i take a taxi, i'm looking for this zhodino, i arrive at this
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zhodino, then only to have a look, then we can with the director, then we decided that i would be a representative, i went into the store, i have an abundance, oh my, i only saw him then, well true, three-liter jars of different juices, sausages, cheeses, your head is spinning, absolutely right, then my drivers, truckers really did pick up these cured sausages. these circles of these cheeses, and what year was this, alexander ivanovich, it was about eighty-seventh, in the sixth year chernobyl exploded, in 87 i already came here to work, i was in karelia 2 years ago, on an excursion, it's 100, i went to ruskiala, it's 100 km from st. petersburg, but it's simply unimaginable in the 20th century such roads, such stores, such toilets. excuse me, well then there is a lack of order there, that's why i
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said, we should have lukashenko then, i lived there then, that's why i say, lukashenko would have brought order, honestly, well and today i 've driven a lot around belarus in my car in brest, in grodno, in gomel, and that means in the castle, the world is stale, that means, well here nearby i have lagoisk, well i'm already half of belarus. we're waiting for a train, that means we're going to st. petersburg, i tell him, look, a man is smoking, he 'll come up to you now, he won't throw away his cigarettes, ashes, come on, what are you saying, i'm watching, i say, indeed a man has already come up to the trash can ash with... i say: and you
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would throw it away like that now, well, you see, the worst thing is that they throw it into the rivers like that, into the natural beauty that exists in russia and at the same time, the same canyon that i saw in petrozavodsk also leaves much to be desired, the environmental situation, that's what 's a pity about nature, thank god, at least the roads, which are a federal highway, from st. petersburg to murmansk, at least these roads now, it used to be terrible there, well, and we... now we'll take a short break, after a short break we'll return to this studio again, for now subscribe to our telegram channel, say don't be silent, look for all our releases on the belarus 1 youtube channel . this is the say don't be silent program, in our studio we have a collector, radio amateur, alexander dashkevich. alexander ivanovich, you once said that your granddaughter
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doesn't give a damn about amateur radio, these are your words, yes, well, like most young people, do you easily accept this fact, or do you still feel pain for radio, well... you have to accept it as it is, but really, well, i regret that i don't have a boy, maybe it's it would have happened, although i have, like, from my wife, well, i have a stepson, and he also like this, he tells him, girls, they are like, girls, girls, but he doesn’t, he’s dad says, i don’t need this, and just like that, although he’s an electrical engineer, he studied in st. petersburg and everything else, he’s far from this business, well, and few people really are interested in this, i can say, well, you can count them on your fingers, and before it was easier to get equipment, somehow from someone, well, even when i started getting it, well, i work on the air, i could tell by the call sign that this person was already an adult, that is, by well, a call sign, that is, well , if we had an ending after the number, three
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letters there, and then there are two two-letter numbers, you are already a two-letter number, here is an experienced person, already elderly, that means, well, i no longer... i addressed him as, listen, respected nikolai there , alexander there, maybe you have old radios with your friends in the attic, in the basement in the garage, there or something like that, that's how i and they brought me, sent me, sent me even from novosibirsk, from belovo, the kemerovo region, can you imagine, from those parts, well i remember the story, how you and the finn were haggling for a long time through. so i went with a friend to helsinki on the way it's about 800 km we passed before reaching helsinki about 80 kilometers on the right side i see no house the house is beautiful and a row of the road straight ahead a small house and antennas good antennas let's go and stop and he has a good antenna who
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pays attention to what and he speaks finnish maybe speaks through a translator well that's all we men oh, i fell for him, i spent six months persuading him, with calls through translator, so that he would sell it to me, well, in the end i spoke it and he sold it to me, at that time, i paid 1,600 marks, it was expensive, well, that's crazy, alexander ivanovich, that's the question. there are crazy people who really give up for some things like that, so explain to me where this passion comes from, why do people start collecting something, well, probably because just what we were talking about during the break, what people need so much money for, yeah, and i want my own passion, that is, someone for money, someone i want
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to collect and even a rare collection, maybe someone does not, so well here you bargain and everything else. i really won’t give that kind of money today, i’m surprised, i go out there once on these market sites, you look, there’s a zvezda receiver, i have it in my collection, they’re asking 180,000 russian for it, that’s a lot of money, that’s a huge amount of money, if the average pension for russians is 20 thousand rubles, well 25 there depending, and for grandmothers it’s even less, it’s 25-3000, that’s for northerners, and how... and have you tried to estimate your collection, how much is it worth approximately? you know, i haven't tried yet, but it's expensive, and don't you want to sell it and buy yourself a house? well, i could buy a house anyway, but i was thinking about it, i have a three-room apartment in the city center, who would live in it in a house alone,
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you have to, yes, i would happily dream, in the morning i would not get up on the third floor, but would go out into the yard with a rake. in the fresh air , we would brush the dust and patina off the pool, splash in it, then drink a cocktail, i had a house in petrozavodsk, and a nice, beautiful one a small house, lots and lots of flowers and lots - i brought here bought just like that in vdanovichi at the market in the nursery went cherry and belarusian apple seedlings and they took root with difficulty, well, of course, not the same fruits, because there is no such warmth and the earth, but nevertheless... and i was afraid to part, i dug a pond there, but i did not hire the equipment, 15 long, three wide, 2.5 deep, pumped water, i had a river nearby, pumped, bought... these crucian carp, launched the crucian carp, that's it, well , you miss that house, well, i don't have it anymore those years were not that rich, so to speak, well
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, how about me, i also think, oh my god, i’m even looking at it now, not only in zhodino, everywhere people have built mansions, many floors, three there, and i live with two people, and for what purpose, if i were to build i would only build a one-story house, like the finns, i ’ve been to finland many times, they are one-story, they don’t build two-story houses, they don’t even have houses that are state-owned, above the third floor, three floors, that’s it, well, okay, here’s this museum in zhodino, but where is it, first of all, located, let’s tell our we will tell the viewers where it is, whether it is possible to get there from the street, or only the plant employees can see it, the city of jodina is located towards the east, well , towards smolensk, along the highway, if from minsk - it turns out, well, somewhere from the center of 50 kilometers, 45 km from the end of the city, they call it. from belas, which is famous throughout the world, produces heavy equipment, well, earlier they produced twenty-five-ton trucks, then twenty-ton trucks, today they already produce
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380-ton trucks, and belazs will become popular all over the world, the city of belaz, nearby at the end of the city, although it means the plant was built by the chinese and the chinese geely, which produces luxury cars, today they are popular in belarus and in russia they also buy a lot. they are pretty jeeps and as if a jeep in comparison with there, let's say, branded brands, it is much cheaper, so your museum is located between these two giants where no, no, my, my museum, i just advertised go, my museum is located, there is an organization called ton that produces electrical equipment, this is to go again, well, on the right side, we pass to the belas plant, so further we drive towards borisov. on the right side kuznechina 20, a three-story building, white and blue, the plant behind our building
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is a forge, a forge woman kaztsha, a forge plant, heavy shtampov from the street we can go along the highway to get to your museum, no problem, you can not only you, who wants to visit, i have already told everyone, call the administration, call the guard, call me at home, i could come at any time of the day or night, i will open, show everything, because. that the greatest pleasure is of course to go with you on this excursion, so that you they told me personally, that's right, schoolchildren come to me and bring teachers from colleges and so on, and not only from colleges, when many guests come to ours, to our organization, the director brings naton, there is a book of reviews, everyone is interested, everyone writes, well, this brings you joy, aleksandrova, it's really like a balm, that's how visitors are interested, that is... they admire, are surprised, what questions do they ask? it starts with me, when i invite everyone and say: so, guys, my entire personal collection is collected here,
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all my personal, except for the shelves of the room, everything else is mine, i'll start the story in order, there starting with such and such a receiver, then on tv 49, then how when was born everything, everything, everything else stories and so on, well, briefly, if i went through, if someone there says the director quickly and... for children a little longer, but i want to say that adults are interested, yes, they ask questions, and...

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