Carmen Alexander Romanovich (1941-2013)
Born in 1941 in Moscow. Graduated from the Faculty of International Relations at MGIMO University of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1967).
After graduating from the institute, he worked in the foreign department of the newspaper Izvestia (1968-73), art. correspondent of the foreign department of the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda", the newspaper's own correspondent for countries Latin America- with residences in Havana (Cuba) (1974-77) and Lima (Peru) (1977-85). Since 1986, he has been a consulting editor of the Main Editorial Office of the Latin American News Agency (now RIA Novosti).
From 1988 to 1995 - APN's own correspondent for the countries of South America, based in Montevideo (Uruguay).
Since 1995 - correspondent and columnist for the international department of the magazine “New Time”, head. department “Abroad” of the newspaper “Vek”, correspondent of the international department of the newspaper “Vremya MN”.
From 2004 to 2009 - deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine "Latin America" of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Since 2002 - lecturer at the Department of International Journalism, Faculty of Journalism, MGIMO (U) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.
Main topics of publications - foreign policy, history, culture and social problems of Latin American countries, Russian-Latin American relations.
Author of four essay-journalistic books, illustrated with his own photographs, about Latin American countries. Author of a book of memoirs about his father, an outstanding documentary filmmaker of the 20th century, “The Unknown Wars of Roman Carmen”, awarded a 20th diploma
II Moscow International Book Fair (2009).Winner of the Artyom Borovik Prize (2010) “Honor. Courage. Mastery", prize of the Union of Journalists of Moscow and the Yulian Semenov Cultural Foundation (2012) "For great creative contribution to the development of extreme geopolitical journalism", special award of the Union of Journalists of Russia "Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism" (2012). He has diplomas of “Recognition of Merit” from the National Union of Journalists of Peru and the Prensa Latina Agency (Cuba) for his contribution to the development of relations with these countries.
The book of essays “The One and Only”, published as a textbook for student journalists, was awarded the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia (2011).
Kirinitsiyanov Yuri Ivanovich
Born on March 5, 1949 in Semipalatinsk, in a family of employees. Graduated with honors in 1971 from the Faculty of Journalism of the Kazakh State University. S.M.Kirova. By assignment, he started at the regional newspaper “Avangard” (Dzhetygaru, Kustanay region). Since 1972, he worked in the republican newspaper “Leninskaya Smena” - as his own correspondent in the Kustanai and Turgai regions, head of the rural youth department. From March 1974 to September 1975 - editor-in-chief of the newspaper “Leninskaya Smena” at the student construction site” (supplement to “Leninskaya Smena”). Then - in Komsomolskaya Pravda, as its own correspondent for the Kazakh SSR (1975-78). Then there was Pravda, Stroitelnaya Gazeta and Rabochaya Tribuna. Rossiyskaya Gazeta has its own correspondent in Kazakhstan (1995-2009). In October 2002, he established the monthly international newspaper “The Whole World”, which is published in Russian and printed in Kazakhstan (Almaty). Circulation up to 5,000 copies, distributed in 22 countries. The main topics are the commonwealth of Kazakhstan and Russia, Eurasianism, politics, economics, education, science and culture. Among the authors are journalists of all generations of the Communist Party.
Awarded the Soviet medal "For Labor Valor". Laureate of the Union of Journalists of Kazakhstan and Russia, the highest award of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation - the Badge of Honor "For Services to the Professional Community". Marked with gratitude by the Secretary General of the Eurasian Economic Community, Grigory Rapota, for his great creative contribution to the development of partnership and mutual understanding between the EurAsEC states. (Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan). Noted with gratitude from the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan N. Nazarbayev for “active coverage of the processes of integration and development of the Eurasian Economic Community.”
Honored Worker of the Republic of Kazakhstan.
Knyazeva Marina Leonidovna
She published her first poem in Komsomolskaya Pravda, in Scarlet Sail, and later worked at the newspaper as an intern in the information department. After graduating from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University (1976) and graduate school, defending the title of Candidate of Philological Sciences, she worked as a correspondent for the magazines “Youth” and “Student Meridian”, while simultaneously teaching, and still teaches a special course at the Department of Periodicals of her native faculty.
Participated in politics. movements “For a Healthy Russia” (1996; director of the “Culture” program), “For Civic Dignity” (1998; member of the presidium).
Member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR , Union of Russian free verse, Union of theater workers. Member of the editorial board of the newspaper "Literary Fair".
Kovalevsky Vladimir Alexandrovich
Born on June 5, 1948 in Kazakhstan, on virgin lands (Dzhetygara, Kustanai region). He published his first notes and stories in the regional newspaper Avangard.
He studied at the journalism department of the Kazakh State University in Almaty and at the same time worked in the republican youth newspaper “Leninskaya Smena”.
At the age of 23, he received a government award for organizing the virgin lands expedition “Bread of the Decider.”
In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1975-84) - special correspondent for the Turkmen SSR, head of the department of morality and law (since 1981). For participation in Komsomolskaya Pravda campaigns in the virgin lands and on the BAM, he was awarded the “Labor Valor” badge of the Komsomol Central Committee.
Then he worked at the newspaper Izvestia (1984-99) - as a special correspondent, executive secretary of the weekly Soyuz, columnist for Financial News. After 2000, he was vice president of the auditing and consulting company Ekfi, then advisor to the president and editor-in-chief of the corporate newspaper at TransTeleCom.
Kozhevnikova Kapitolina Vasilievna
Born on September 26, 1925 in the village of Ivanovka, Sterlibashevsky district, Bashkiria. Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of the Ural State University (1948). She worked for ten years at the newspaper “Soviet Moldavia” (1948-58). Since 1958 - Komsomolskaya Pravda's own correspondent for Moldova, since 1960 - the newspaper's staff correspondent in Voronezh. Since 1965 in Moscow. As a special correspondent for the newspaper, she traveled to many regions and republics of the country. The range of journalistic interests is the protection of people from arbitrariness, injustice, violence; national characteristics, life, way of life, history, economic, social problems of different peoples of the USSR. Favorite genre: essay. The famous essay “Bashkir Honey” tells about the history of beekeeping in Bashkiria, its problems at that time, about his father, a collective farm beekeeper, about his childhood spent in the apiary. In 1975, she moved to the editorial office of Literaturnaya Gazeta, where she was a columnist on agrarian problems for 19 years. Winner of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of the USSR for 1984. Author of the journalistic books “Signals of the Soul” (1972), “The Warmth of Your Hearth” (1975), etc.
Kozhukhov Mikhail Yurievich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1982 to 1989. Correspondent of the foreign department, own correspondent in Afghanistan. Then - Izvestia correspondent in South America, editor of the international department of Izvestia. Further biography is related to television: author and presenter of the programs “International Panorama”, “Take a Step”, “Old Apartment”, “True Friends”, “In Search of Adventure”, “Far and Even Further” and many others.
Currently he runs his own television company, Contrast. Co-author and producer of several dozen documentaries and television programs.
For his work in Afghanistan he was awarded the Order of the Red Star. Winner of the national television award TEFI in the category “Best Presenter of Entertainment Programs”, the National Tourism Award named after Yu. Senkevich, the Union of Journalists Award “Golden Pen of Russia”.
Kozlova Svetlana Mikhailovna
In Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1975, she worked in the literature and art department.
Since 1978 - head of the department of a literary magazine, member of the editorial board of an industry publication, press secretary of the first deputy mayor in the Moscow government.
Kolesnikova Natalya Vasilievna
Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University in 1976. She worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1973-76 as a courier and secretary. Author of memoirs about the people of Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Further work in the magazine “Student Meridian” (1976-78), the newspaper “Soviet Russia” (1978-86), the magazine “Young Artist (1986-2002), and currently in the magazine “An Hour for You”.
Member of the Union of Journalists and the Union of Artists of Russia.
Korneshov Lev Konstantinovich (1934-2005)
The first publication in Komsomolskaya Pravda was when he was secretary of the Kirovograd regional committee of the LKSMU. He worked in the apparatus of the Central Committee of the Komsomol, was the editor-in-chief of the magazine “Young Naturalist”, and deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine “Young Communist”.
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1970 to 1978 - deputy, first deputy editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief. Then - deputy editor-in-chief of the Izvestia newspaper, columnist for the Rossiyskaya Gazeta, employee of the Voskresenye State Journal of Public Relations.
Author of seventeen books, four feature films and about thirty documentaries.
Member of the Union of Writers and Cinematographers, Secretary of the Union of Journalists of the USSR. Winner of awards from the Union of Journalists of the USSR, the Moscow Journalistic Organization, the KGB of the USSR, the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR, and a number of foreign creative awards.
Awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor.
Korsakova Tatyana Alexandrovna
Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. From December 1974 to December 1999 in Komsomolskaya Pravda - its own correspondent, head of the student department, special correspondent.
Then - editor of the letters department and special correspondent of the Tribune newspaper. (2000-02), deputy editor-in-chief of the monthly “Practical magazine for teachers and school administrators” (2002-2014)..
Winner of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Moscow, the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “For Merit” (2011).
Kostenko Kim Prokopyevich (1923 - 1990)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1950 to 1969 - special correspondent for the Stalin region, head, editor of the working youth department, member of the editorial board, executive secretary, deputy editor-in-chief.
Later - deputy executive secretary of the newspaper "Pravda", executive secretary of the newspaper " Soviet culture", head of the bureau in Czechoslovakia of the magazine "New Time".
Front-line soldier, participant of the Great Patriotic War. He was awarded two Orders of the Patriotic War, the Order of Alexander Nevsky, the Order of the Red Star, medals “For the Defense of Stalingrad”, “For the Liberation of Prague”, and other government awards.
Kotenko Irina Ilyinichna (1941 - 2009)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1964 to 1997 - secretary, assistant of the student youth department, correspondent of the letters department, correspondent of the inspection bureau department. Awarded the Certificate of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation.
Active organizer and participant of such branded editorial and club events as “Frontline Countrywoman”, “Writing Hour”, “Book Salon”, “Anniversaries”, “Thursdays”.
Krasnyansky Eduard Vladimirovich
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1968 to 1974 he was an intern and news department correspondent. Then - correspondent, first deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Soviet Trade" (1975-95).
Member of the Board of Directors, director of public relations of SBS-AGRO Bank, press secretary of the First OVK Bank (1995-2003), general director of the Alexander House company (2003-04). Currently, he is a member of the Board of Directors of the Capital Credit Partnership Bank, the Alexander House company and other organizations. Recipient of government awards. Author of documentary and fiction books.
Krivomazov Nikolay Pavlovich (1947-2012)
Born on the Don. After graduating from Kamensky Pedagogical School, he worked as a teacher in Yakutia.
Graduated from Irkutsk State University and the screenwriting department of VGIK.
Since 1968, he has been a professional newspaperman: he started in the regional Yakut newspaper “Lena Mayaktary”. Then the Irkutsk regional newspaper “Soviet Youth” (1969 - 77) - literary staff member, staff correspondent for the North: Bratsk, Ust-Ilim, Boguchany, BAM.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1977 - 82) - staff correspondent for Eastern Siberia. Then a staff correspondent for the newspaper “Socialist Industry” (1982-87), the newspaper “Pravda” (1987-88), and later - deputy. department editor, executive secretary of the Pravda newspaper (1988 - 95), columnist for Rossiyskaya Gazeta (1995 - 98).
Founder and founder of the Publishing House "Citizen" (1998), publisher and editor-in-chief of the magazines "Citizen" and "Russian Vodka". Author of the two-part film “The Crazy Bus” (1990).
Winner of the V. Gilyarovsky Prize.
Krylova Zoya Petrovna (1944-2017)
Worked as a teacher kindergarten, accountant, secretary of the people's court. Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. The first publications appeared in 1961. Since 1965 - correspondent for the newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets.
From 1966 to 1981 at Komsomolskaya Pravda - trainee, literary staff member, head. department of student youth, editor of departments of student, student and scientific youth, member of the editorial board. Graduated from graduate school at the Academy social sciences. Candidate of Philosophical Sciences.
Author of a book on folk pedagogy.From 1983 to 2009 she headed the magazine “Rabotnitsa”. She was a member of the board of the Soviet Women's Committee. Editor of an Orthodox newspaper for prisoners (2012-16). Compiler of the encyclopedia (volume 2) of the Union of Journalists of Moscow "Journalism at the turn of the century." Creative activity awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples, medals, and awards from the Union of Journalists.
Kulikov Yuri Petrovich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1975 to 1982. Since 1982 - in Literaturnaya Gazeta: first deputy. executive secretary, own correspondent in India, countries of South and Southeast Asia, executive secretary, deputy editor-in-chief. Then the editor-in-chief of the city newspaper, magazine, special correspondent of the Gazeta newspaper, columnist for Izvestia. Author of several books-dialogues - with E. Primakov, A. Volsky, A. Shokhin and others. Twice winner of the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia, including in 2012 in the category “Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism” for the book “One Cannot Be Counted” . The temptation of conversations."
Kulikova Albina Ivanovna
In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1961 to 1987 (with a break for study) - assistant. In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1961 to 1987 (with a break for study) - department assistant, deputy executive secretary.
In the future - deputy. executive secretary, executive secretary, art editor, art editor, head of the design department, chief artist (together with artist Viktor Skrylev) of many publications - “Medical Gazette”, newspapers “Culture”, “Litera Gazette Internaithle”, “Federation”, “Superman”, magazines “Peasant Woman”, “Foreigner”, “Autograph”, “Tobacco Shop”, “Medical Bulletin”, etc. Awarded the Badge “Excellence in Printing”.
Kupriyanov Alexander Ivanovich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1978-92) he was its own correspondent for the Khabarovsk Territory and the Magadan Region, head of the department of Komsomol life, deputy editor-in-chief of the weekly Sobesednik, executive secretary and own correspondent in England. For his work at the newspaper he was awarded medals and the Order of the Badge of Honor.
After Komsomolskaya Pravda, he worked as first deputy editor-in-chief of Rossiyskaya Gazeta, editor-in-chief of Express Newspaper, Stolichnaya evening newspaper, editor-in-chief of the Izvestia newspaper, editor-in-chief of Rodnaya Gazeta, General Director of the National News Agency, is a book publisher.
Returning to Komsomolskaya Pravda, he became the organizer of radio and television of the KP (2009-2011). Currently, he is the editor-in-chief of the newspaper “Evening Moscow”.
Author of stories and novels, poetry collections.
Kushnerev Sergey Anatolievich
Since 1982 - in the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda": intern, correspondent, head of the student youth department, executive secretary, member of the editorial board (1988-93).
One of the founders of Novaya Gazeta. Worked at the Moscow News newspaper (1994-1996).
Since 1994 - editor-in-chief of the Vzglyad program. From 1996 to the present, he has been the editor-in-chief of the VID television company.
Television projects of Sergei Kushchnerev:
Scandals of the week (1995-2001, TV-6); Take a step (1996-1999, TV-6); How it was (1997-2002, ORT); Wait for me (1998 - our time, RTR, then Channel One); Another life (2000, Channel One); Testament of the 20th century (2000, Channel One); The Last Hero (2001-2008, Channel One); 12 Little Indians (2004, TNT); Incredible stories about life (2008 - our time, Channel One).
Producing documentaries about Chechnya:
“Dreams of War” (1996); “Demobilization album” (1997); " New Year in Chechnya" (1997); "Soldiers of Love" (1999).
Member of the jury at the Festival of Television Programs in Monte Carlo (1997).
Member of the Academy of Russian Television (1001). Winner of the TEFI-2002 award in the category “Best Producer”.
Awarded the medal “For Labor Valor” (1990), the Order of Friendship (2006).
Kuchkina Olga Andreevna
At Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1957, he has been an intern, literary contributor, traveling correspondent, and deputy editor of the literature and art department. Currently, he is a columnist at the main editorial office.
Member of the Moscow Writers' Union, member of the Russian PEN Center, academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.
Playwright, poet, prose writer. Author of the book of plays “White Summer”, collections of poems “The Communicating Vessel”, “Italian Butterfly”, “Leap Age”, novels, and other books of prose, including the memoirs “Slanting Rain”.
Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.
Lavrova Kira Nikolaevna
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1964 to 1992. Own correspondent in Kuzbass, then in Samara. Since 1972 - Deputy Executive Secretary of the Editorial Board. She led the personal column "Street. Company. Teenager." Author of many publications in magazines and collections. Honored cultural worker. Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism".
Lapin Alexander Alekseevich
He came to Komsomolskaya Pravda as a special correspondent for Kazakhstan. For 15 years (1986-2000), he went from journalist to deputy at the newspaper general director newspapers. Under his leadership, a regional network of Komsomolskaya Pravda was created.
In 2000, he created his own newspaper business and moved to Voronezh. The publishing house of Alexander Lapin “EURASIA-PRESS - XXI CENTURY” operates at 8 major cities Central Russia.
Member of the Union of Writers and the Union of Journalists of Russia.
Larin Vladimir Alekseevich (1957-2008)
He worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda for fifteen years, from 1986 to 2001. He started as a correspondent for Orenburg, Bashkiria and Northern Kazakhstan, and wrote excellent essays. A year and a half later he was taken to the floor - he was a special correspondent, deputy. editor of the propaganda department, in the most difficult, turning-point times - in the late 80s and early 90s - he headed the department of the republics, responsible for “hot spots”, many of which he personally visited. Then - first deputy. responsible secretary, executive secretary, deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper.
After KP, he worked for several years as editor-in-chief of Soviet Sport. For the last two years, he has been the executive secretary of the weekly Rossiyskaya Gazeta-Nedelya.
Levina Alevtina Yakovlevna (1935-1987)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1965 until the end of his life, he was an intern, a literary employee in the information department, and a special correspondent.
Participant in mountaineering, including Everest, parachutist. Author of the journalistic book “A Thousand and One Doors,” compiled posthumously by colleagues from Komsomolskaya Pravda. Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize.
Lipatov Viktor Sergeevich (1935 - 2007)
Historian by training. Journalist and editor by profession. Essayist and poet by vocation.
He started at the newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1966 to 1986 - head, editor of the Komsomol life department, columnist, editor of the literature and art department, member of the editorial board.
Since 1986 - editor-in-chief of the magazine "Youth". Author of books on art: “Colors of Time”, “Color, Light, Life”; series "World of Masterpieces". Poetry collections were published: “The Secret of a Discreet Heart”, “The Legionnaire’s Step”, “On the Heights”, “Midnight Cross”, “Eight Candlestick”, “Light in the Palms”.
Winner of literary prizes, as well as the Nikolai Ostrovsky and Lenin Komsomol prizes.
Lyubitsky Vladimir Nikolaevich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from the beginning of 1977 to the end of 1978, color:#(color);laquo;Old apartmentraquo; (1977 yes - staff correspondent for the Belgorod, Kursk, Oryol, Voronezh, Lipetsk, Tambov and Ryazan regions, deputy editor for the Komsomol life department of the editorial office.
For the next twelve years at the Pravda newspaper - special correspondent, deputy department editor, editor, member of the editorial board. Editor-in-chief of the magazine “Illustrated Russia” (1991-96), head of the press service of the Provisional Administration in the zone of the Ossetian-Ingush armed conflict, head of the press service of the Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation (1996-2000), deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper “Vek” (2000- 04), executive editor of the newspaper “Moskovskaya Sreda”. Poet, writer, playwright.
Makarov Sergey Sergeevich
He started at the newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1971 to 1975, he was a correspondent for the rural youth department. Then - traveling correspondent for the magazine “Rural Youth”. Author of essay books.
Diploma winner at the Moscow International Book Fair (2008) for the book “Crane Cries”.
Makartsev Yuri Dmitrievich
After graduating from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University, he worked in the Sakhalin press, from where he was transferred in 1969 to the working youth department of Komsomolskaya Pravda. He worked his way up from a literary staff member to a member of the editorial board, editor of the working youth department, and was his own correspondent in Germany until 1981. Upon his return, he worked for the Smena magazine, and from 1985 to 1988, he was a special correspondent for Sobesednik.
Then - first deputy editor-in-chief of the Rabochaya Tribuna newspaper and currently at Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “For Merit” (2011). Diploma winner at the Moscow International Book Fair (2009) for the novel “The Undiplomat”.
Marina Lyudmila Vasilievna
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1959 to 1999 - secretary of the military sports department, correspondent of the letters department, head of the editorial office's economic department. Awarded the Veteran of Labor medal.
Marinicheva Olga Vladislavovna
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1973 to 1993, she started as a school department assistant and ended up as a newspaper columnist. After and until now - special correspondent for the Teacher's Newspaper. Winner of awards from the Union of Journalists of Russia. Author of prose books.
Marshkova Tatyana Ivanovna
Born and raised in Moscow. Graduated from the faculty
Journalism of Moscow State University. The first publications in Komsomolskaya Pravda appeared in 1970
year, even before entering university. In 1971-1981 - trainee, intern,
correspondent of the department of literature and art. Worked in a publishing house
“Sovremennik” (editorial criticism and literary criticism), in the magazines “Otchizna” and “Ochag”, in the “Parliamentary Newspaper”,
"Literary newspaper". Since 2006 - leading editor of the Algorithm publishing house.
She constantly presented materials on issues of Russian culture; her main creative passion was and remains musical theater. Author of many conversations with artists, published in central publications.
Culturologist, biographer, critic. Author and compiler of the books “Alexander Vedernikov. So that the soul does not become impoverished”, “Yesenin and Isadora Duncan”, “Yesenin in Konstantinov”, “Mikhail Evdokimov. No time to live”, “Tchaikovsky. Last years". In co-authorship with L. Rybakova, she wrote the book “Bolshoi Theater. Golden Voices" about the masters of the Russian opera stage (M., 2011). Editor of more than two hundred books on culture, literary criticism and socio-political topics.
Member of the Union of Journalists. Member of the Russian Writers' Union.
Mikhalev Pavel Filippovich
Graduated from Leningrad State University. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1958 to 1987 (with interruptions) - literary staff member, deputy editor of the physical education and sports department, member of the editorial board, editor of the foreign department, own correspondent in the UK, columnist.
Since 1987 - Deputy, since 2011 - Advisor to the General Director of TASS. Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.
Murtazaev Akram Kayumovich
Laureate of the sign of the Union of Journalists of Russia "Golden Pen".
Mussalitin Vladimir Ivanovich
From 1969 to 1974 - Komsomolskaya Pravda’s own correspondent for the Orenburg region, Western Kazakhstan, and Bashkiria. Then - special correspondent and columnist for the Izvestia newspaper (1974-80). After graduating from graduate school at the Academy of Social Sciences, he was deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine “Our Contemporary” (1984-88), editor-in-chief of the publishing house “Soviet Writer” (1988-90).
Currently, he is the Secretary of the Board of the Union of Writers of Russia, the editor-in-chief of the international magazine Forum. Ph.D.
Winner of a number of international and Russian literary prizes, including the Bunin Prize and the International Prize of Saints Cyril and Methodius.
Nedoshivin Vyacheslav Mikhailovich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1977 to 1986. The last position was a member of the editorial board, editor of the department of morals and law, letters and popular work. Then - postgraduate study at the Department of Theory and History of Culture of the Academy of Social Sciences under the Central Committee of the CPSU, defense of a dissertation on literary dystopias (he published several editions of J. Orwell's novel and fairy tale in his own translations), teaching work at the department (course on the history of literary criticism).
Candidate of Philosophical Sciences, Associate Professor.
In 1991 he left the CPSU. Worked as press secretary of the Russian Secretary of State (1991-93). Organizer and head of one of the first PR agencies in Russia (1993-97).
In recent years, he has been a historian of literature, in particular, of Russian poetry of the Silver Age. Author and presenter of 60 episodes of the television series “Nameless Houses. Unknown pages of the Silver Age" (2001-02) for St. Petersburg TV, a 40-episode documentary and artistic television series dedicated to the 860th anniversary of Moscow "Nameless Houses. Moscow of the Silver Age", television films about M. Tsvetaeva, F. Tyutchev, D. Davydov, A. Kuprin (2003-04), A. Green and others for TVC and the Culture channel.
Author of several editions of the book “Walks in Silver Age. Very personal stories from the lives of great poets.”
Winner of the “Golden Pen” award of the St. Petersburg Union of Journalists, the All-Russian Television Film Competition of the Media Union (2003). The highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “For Merit” (2010).
Oberemok (Lipatova) Elena Eliseevna
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from his student days (from 1970 to 1999) - from intern to head. department. She hosted the author’s strips “Literary Cabaret” and “Treat Your Health.”
In 1999 she moved to Literaturnaya Gazeta. She was the editor-in-chief of the socio-political supplement “Characters” and at the same time the first deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine “Youth”. In current deputy editor-in-chief of the socio-political publication, daily newspaper "Stoletie.ru", expert of the Historical Perspective Foundation Natalia Narochnitskaya.
Prose writer. Published in magazines: “Posev”, “Continent”, “Friendship of Peoples”, “Literary Studies”, “Youth”, etc. Laureate of prizes named after. Boris Polevoy and Vl. Maksimova.
Author and presenter of a series of lectures on emigrant Russian literature of the early 20th century at European universities.
Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia and the International Literary Fund.
Ovchinnikova Lyudmila Pavlovna
Born in the Stalingrad region. Graduated from Moscow State University. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1959 to 199laquo;Evening Moscow alt=7 years (with a break in the early 60s) - literary staff member of the student youth department, letter department, special correspondent for the Volgograd region, literary staff member of the department of working youth, military-patriotic education, special correspondent Department of the Republics
Since 1997 - in the newspaper "Tribuna".
Member of the Russian Writers' Union. Author of the books “The Bell on the Long Meadow”, “Women in Soldier’s Greatcoats”, “Stalingrad. 164 days in war”, etc.
Awarded the Veteran of Labor medal. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism" (2007), prize from the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation for the collection "Children of Stalingrad" (2010).
Oleynikov Nikolay Fedorovich (1943 - 2011)
Born on the Don. From the age of fifteen he worked as a carpenter, fitter, and instructor of the district Komsomol committee. Served in the army. I went through the school of district and regional youth newspapers.
In 1974-77 - Komsomolskaya Pravda correspondent for the Rostov region, organizer and editor of the visiting editorial office of Komsomolskaya Pravda at the shock Komsomol construction project - the construction of the Atommash plant. In 1977-79 - head of the Komsomolsky Projector department of the editorial office.
Later he worked in the magazines “Dialogue”, “Political Education”, “Peasant Woman”, and the newspaper “Chimes”. IN last years- Associate Professor of the Russian State Trade and Economic University.
Candidate of Economic Sciences. Author of a number of journalistic books and scientific works.
Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia (1992).
Ostroukhov Anatoly Alexandrovich
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1973 to 1988 (courier, letter department employee, secretariat trainee, issuer, deputy head of the illustration department, head of the artistic design department).
Then: deputy executive secretary of the newspaper “Soviet Culture”, executive secretary of the magazine “Capital”; build editor, executive secretary, editor of the photo department of Ogonyok magazine; deputy executive secretary of the newspaper Izvestia; executive secretary of the newspaper “Vremya MN”; Executive Secretary of the World Energy magazine; Executive Secretary of the National Banking Journal.
Developed and implemented printing design for several publications.Member of the Union of Journalists.One of the founders of this website of the Club of Journalists of All Generations of Komsomolskaya Pravda, its first designer and publishing director.
At the beginning of the week, the Komsomolskaya Pravda website published a column by Ulyana Skoybeda with the subtitle “Sometimes you regret that the Nazis did not make lampshades out of the ancestors of today’s liberals. There would be fewer problems." The text was about the words of oppositionist Leonid Gozman, who in his blog equated the Soviet counterintelligence service SMERSH with the Nazi SS troops. Gozman was outraged by the series about the valiant employees of SMERSH, and Skoybed, in turn, was outraged by the fact that “liberals are revising history in order to cut the ground from under our country’s feet.”
Words about lampshades from the ancestors of liberals caused a scandal on the Internet, which resulted in calls to boycott KP. The provocative statement was later removed from the site. Chief editor of the newspaper Vladimir Sungorkin named the phrase “ugly”, but referred to the fact that Ulyana Skoybeda “blurted it out in an emotional frenzy.” Sungorkin added that he would reprimand the journalist, but at the same time noted that the words of Gozman, whom he called “an ideological madman,” still seemed offensive to him. The State Duma has already taken up the oppositionist’s statements; Komsomolskaya Pravda has so far escaped with a warning from Roskomnadzor for violating laws on the media and on countering extremism.
Lenta.ru asked several well-known journalists who once worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda to talk about how a column with anti-Semitic statements could appear in the newspaper, what has changed in the newspaper in recent years and how it stands out from other Russian press .
Olga Bakushinskaya, columnist, worked for Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1995 to 2006
When I started working at Komsomolskaya Pravda, such things could not even appear there. But the newspaper gradually changed - this became especially noticeable when Yeltsin resigned. The press began to change in principle, but Komsomolskaya Pravda, in my opinion, especially. It was in the early 2000s that people with extreme right-wing nationalist views came to it. I can’t say that this has never been felt in Sungorkin. Another question is that he would never give out his views in the words of Skoybeda - simply because he is a good journalist and a fairly smart and careful person.
The readership has also changed a lot in recent years, because what kind of food is posted - those are the consumers who will come. I think that the person who is now reading Komsomolskaya Pravda likes everything, and he fully supports Skoybeda’s position. In this sense, the newspaper satisfies its reader. Sungorkin is also a very good businessman, and partly he is doing this now because it is profitable.
Komsomolskaya Pravda always had a lot of emotions from journalists, and this was its big plus. Your opinion, if you knew how to express it well, was highly valued. But before, at least, you had to confirm your emotions with actual events. I'm afraid the balance has now shifted.
I cannot say that Komsomolskaya Pravda was or is now in any special position. The point, rather, is that now you can publish something like this in any publication and there won’t be a big scandal - marginality is not only allowed, it has become a thing of its own general line. Look at what statements deputies allow themselves. In any normal frame of reference, this is a criminal case and rejection by society. But here you can say whatever you want, and they’ll also give you an order. So Sungorkin is not the only one here - he is like everyone else.
Many journalists who once worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda do not really like to talk about the modern publication. Frankly speaking, we are quite pained that this happened. Previously, when you said that you worked at KP, everyone understood that you had a strong school and that you were a real journalist. And now it’s becoming increasingly awkward to mention it. But I am still proud that I worked at KP - it was a good newspaper.
Alexey Sinelnikov, editor-in-chief of the newspaper “My District”, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1995 to 2007, at the time of leaving he headed the editorial office of the site
I don’t really follow what Komsomolskaya Pravda writes now, but I can’t say that I’m very surprised. Ulyana Skoybeda is such a big woman by nature, who waves her sword at every occasion. In addition, a biting manner is, in principle, cultivated in Komsomolskaya Pravda - it is important that the articles are sincere and reach the audience. Sungorkin is generally careful about the ability of journalists to express what is in their hearts. “Komsomolskaya Pravda” is valuable for the mass reader because it is so unkempt.
But, in my opinion, there was an overkill with this column, as with some of Ulyana’s previous columns. Unfortunately, this story reflects the state of society as a whole. We do not know how to stop in time, we do not know how to negotiate - the nature of the discussion has acquired sick features on both sides. For me, both points of view are unacceptable: Ulyana committed obscenity, but I am just as disgusted by Gozman and his position. My grandfather ended up in a penal battalion, probably behind him were the same machine guns of people from the NKVD. I have no complaints against them, it was a war, there were completely different conditions.
There is an opinion that Komsomolskaya Pravda is forgiven a lot. But in the case of this column, I would not talk about power, but about society. Most people will not rebel against the newspaper, will not boycott it, not a single advertiser will refuse to cooperate. If such a story had happened in Europe, the state there would not even have to intervene in the situation - there ordinary readers would have told the newspaper: “That’s it, goodbye.” We ourselves are quite inert, so you don’t have to pay attention to us - to the Internet community as part of the residents of Russia. We will now shout about this on the Internet and switch to the fact that the Americans beat us 8:3.
At the same time, I don’t think that Sungorkin is completely indifferent to the public’s reaction. The people working at Komsomolskaya Pravda are not beast-like people, they can apologize, they can explain how this happened. But it seems to me that a newspaper with such a huge audience still needs to be more careful.
Valery Simonov, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1988 to 1997, went from first deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper to chairman of the Board of JSC Komsomolskaya Pravda, and then editor-in-chief of the publication
I don't want to comment on this scandal because I don't think it's particularly remarkable. In my opinion, this situation has often been happening in various media outlets lately, so I don’t want to get into a pose and judge an individual journalist or publication. There is already such a genre in journalism - raising a scandal. In Komsomolskaya Pravda this story was simply heard so loudly because it suddenly touched upon such a sensitive topic.
When I headed the newspaper, there were different laws of journalism. At that time, the responsibility of the publication for publications and the personal responsibility of the journalist for his words were incomparably higher. Of course, there were scandals and high-profile materials in KP - without this, the newspaper could not exist at any time, and Komsomolskaya Pravda, frankly speaking, was always allowed a little more than the other monsters of the newspaper market. But those scandals were more significant, interesting, or something. The current “Komsomolskaya Pravda” has retained many of its generic traits, including a penchant for shocking behavior and a desire to be a pioneer in those topics that society usually does not discuss out loud.
During my creative biography my attitude towards the newspaper “Komsomolskaya Pravda” changed a lot. I probably experienced the whole spectrum of feelings that exist between people and newspapers - from great love to hatred. Now I treat my colleagues from KP with quite friendly interest. I won’t say that Komsomolskaya Pravda is the publication with which I start my whole day, but I follow it. There are a lot of old guard names there that interest me.
Azer Mursaliev, editor-in-chief of the Kommersant publishing house, was a correspondent for Komsomolskaya Pravda in the 1980s
I haven’t read Ulyana Skoybeda’s article, so it’s difficult for me to judge this scandal. Now I hardly read Komsomolskaya Pravda, since our publications and KP occupy completely different niches. The newspaper in which I worked was completely different - it was designed for what is now called the elite, for an intelligent reader. It was, of course, a mass newspaper; it even entered the Guinness Book of Records as the largest circulation publication. But now mass publications have become different; they imply a different level of audience development. Now its readers are people who watch NTV and TNT television channels. Perhaps the fact is that society has changed a lot over the years, it has become stratified.
I worked at a newspaper in the last years of the Soviet Union and the first years new Russia, then she did not strive for such scandalousness. But in general, Komsomolskaya Pravda has always published polar opinions, harsh, resonant articles. In Soviet times, Komsomolskaya Pravda really was in a special position: it was allowed a little more than other major publications, or it allowed itself what others could not afford. But I don’t know what’s happening with the newspaper now.
I have a good attitude towards Vladimir Sungorkin, I think that he is a talented and successful media manager. I worked with him for many years and I think that this clever man with a balanced position. He never held radical or extremist views. I don’t think that Sungorkin gave the assignment to write such a column, and the fact that he later removed the phrase that caused outrage speaks rather in his favor.
Vladimir Mamontov, president of OJSC Publishing House Izvestia, worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1990 to 2005, at various times holding the positions of first deputy editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief, and then editor-in-chief of the publication
I think Sungorkin didn’t see this [Skoybeda’s article]. In any case, this is unacceptable and needs to be clearly explained to the public. There cannot be two or three opinions here. I remember that I myself wrote that many critics of Russia would not have existed in the world if the Russian and Soviet “peasant”, “cattle” had not saved Europe. He simply took some out of the oven. Managed. But here’s something else: this is mockery. As well as Gozman’s comparison of Smersh with the SS. Ulyana succumbed to provocation, but this is impossible. And you can’t write like that without provocation.
Our columnist Evgeniy Chernykh (the same one who tested the popular Kremlin diet) decided to regain the body of a 17-year-old boy and started with vision [video]
Photo: RUSSIAN LOOK
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Last week we announced the start of a global campaign to restore youth. Our journalist Evgeny Chernykh (the same one who tested the popular Kremlin diet) decided to go to the end. Namely, to regain the body of a seventeen-year-old guy. And the first step on this long path is getting rid of glasses. So, over to him...
I'm lucky! My consultant was Professor Vladimir Zhdanov, the best in Russia, and perhaps in the world, a specialist in getting rid of glasses without medical intervention.
- Where do we start, Vladimir Georgievich?
With the desire to take off your glasses!
- I have it! I want to give myself a gift for my 60th birthday.
What glasses do you wear?
- Plus 3. Help cure sore eyes, professor!
You're wrong, Evgeniy! Your eyes are not sick!!! The great American ophthalmologist William Bates proved back in 1901: all four vision disorders - myopia, farsightedness, strabismus and astigmatism - are associated with improper functioning of the extraocular muscles. Some muscles are overly tense, others are overly weakened. Therefore, some people develop myopia, others develop farsightedness, and almost everyone develops astigmatism. Bates developed a system of exercises. We relax tense muscles, train weak ones. And vision is restored without surgery.
- Isn’t it too late to train? 60 years is just around the corner!
Academician Fyodor Uglov wore glasses +2.5 for half a century. At the age of 95, I took my courses for 4 days, trained on my own for another three weeks, and restored my vision. And for the last 8 years of his life, Fyodor Grigorievich read, wrote and performed complex operations without glasses.
- Convinced, professor! Where exactly do we start?
From palming.
The warmth of your palms
PALMING(from the English palm - palm) - the most important exercise for relaxing the oculomotor muscles. Performed WITHOUT GLASSES.
Everyone knows that our palms have some kind of radiation unknown to science, but very healing,” says Professor Zhdanov. - We involuntarily put our palms on sore spots - the stomach, forehead, ear, tooth... They also help the eyes.
Rub your palms together until warm. Place the fingers of each hand tightly together. As if you want to water the birds from your palms, and so that the water does not spill between your fingers. The fingers of one palm overlap the fingers of the other at right angles. And we put this design on our eyes instead of glasses (see photo in a circle), so that the crossed fingers are in the center of the forehead, the nose sticks out between the bases of the little fingers, and the eyes fall exactly in the center of the dimples of your palms. The nose breathes freely and is not pinched. Eyes closed. The palms are pressed tightly to the face - no gaps so that the light does not reach the eyes. Place your elbows on the table or press them to your chest. The main thing is that the elbows are not suspended, and the head is a direct continuation of the back.
Calm down, relax, take a comfortable position. We say out loud (or mentally, to ourselves): “My eyes are good, wonderful, thank you, eyes, for giving me joy and happiness to see all the colors of this world in all its glory... My eyes will see better and better every day.” . And similar kind self-hypnosis under warm palms.
Then the nearsighted people imagine how their eyes become round again, like balls, in order to see perfectly into the distance without glasses (their transverse muscles relax).
And farsighted people imagine how their eyes easily stretch forward, like cucumbers, in order to perfectly SEE the smallest letters CLOSE without glasses (the longitudinal muscles of the eyes relax).
At first, for some time eyes closed, covered with palms, residual light images will loom: a TV screen, a light bulb, a piece of window, some kind of fog, a cloud... This indicates overexcitation of the optic tract - the light does not reach the eyes, but it seems to us that we are seeing something . To remove residual light images, imagine a black velvet curtain in a theater every time you palm the palm. He is so black, black, big, big... And then the lights in the hall go out, and he gets blacker and darker. Or imagine black mascara that you spilled in front of you and cover these luminous places with it.
Another important palming exercise is a pleasant memory.
Every time, think about something good, something good that happened in your life. (My memories under warm palms are like dragging my first three-kilogram pike caught on a spinning rod, a first date... but you never know what pleasant things each of us had! - E. Ch.).
Exit from palming. Sit up straight, under your palms closed eyes Squeeze your eyes slightly - loosen, close your eyes - loosen, close your eyes - loosen. The palms were removed. With eyes closed, we shook our heads slightly and restored blood supply to the brain. Like children, they gently “wet” their eyes with their fists and wiped them. We sighed. We exhaled. And we open our eyes, blinking quickly.
Whenever you feel tired, eye strain when reading, working on a computer, watching TV, etc., put everything aside, rub your palms until warm and do palming. Three to five minutes.
Ideally, every hour when working on a computer.
Palming can and is beneficial for EVERYONE!
Well, after palming, Professor Zhdanov taught me eye gymnastics.
EYE EXERCISES FROM PROFESSOR VLADIMIR ZHDANOV
Attention! It is categorically prohibited for those who underwent ANY eye surgery less than six months ago. Wait six months for everything to heal and heal. It is also CONTRAINDICATED for those with retinal detachment. You can provoke further detachment. Go to the doctors, now there are techniques for “welding” the retina. After welding, wait six months for everything to take root. And proceed with charging carefully.
We do all exercises WITHOUT GLASSES! Smoothly, without any jerks or sudden movements. The head is STILL. Only one eye works! After every exercise we blink!
1. Raised our eyes up, down, up, down, up, down. Blinked, blinked, blinked.
2. They squinted their eyes to the right, left, right, left, right, left. They blinked.
3. "Diagonal". We look up right - down left, up right - down left, up right - down left. They blinked. Reverse "diagonal". Left up - right down. The same 3 times. They blinked.
4. "Rectangle". We raised our eyes upward, “drew” the top side of the rectangle, the right side, the bottom, the left side, the top again, and so on 3 times in a row. They blinked. In the opposite direction, we “draw” a rectangle (counterclockwise). Top side, side left, bottom, right. 3 times. They blinked.
5. "Dial". Imagine there is a huge dial in front of you. You look around it clockwise. We raised our eyes to 12 o'clock - 3 o'clock, 6, 9, 12. And so 3 circles. They blinked. In the opposite direction “Dial”. We looked up at 12 o'clock, 9, 6, 3, 12... 3 circles. They blinked.
6. “Snake”. Let's start drawing from the tail. Eyes left down - up, down - up, down - up and head. They blinked. Back. From the head of the "snake". Down - top, down - up, down - up and tail. They blinked.
Professor Zhdanov warns!
NO FANATISM!
Do eye exercises 3 times a day - before breakfast, lunch, dinner in the amount recommended by me, otherwise your eyes will hurt.
Do not hurry
1. Do all exercises very smoothly, slowly, without tension or sudden movements. There is no need to “tear the traces.” The extraocular muscles are one of the most delicate muscles in our body; they are very easy to strain, tear, or damage with stupid, sudden movements.
2. For those who have severe myopia (greater than minus 4), do the exercises very, very carefully! Your eye is stretched forward, so the retina is stretched, tense, and there is a danger of rupture or detachment of the retina during sudden movements and stress.
3. Special caution for those who have had retinal detachment. We recommend that you take a full-time course under the guidance of an experienced specialist.
Before starting classes, ALWAYS go to a doctor and have your vision checked. Find out the condition of the retina. Are you farsighted or nearsighted (its degree), astigmatism?
Go!
FIRST WEEK
My eye problems started when I was 40 years old. It became difficult to read. The doctor diagnosed presbyopia (senile farsightedness). Prescribed plus reading glasses. Fair warning, this is forever! From time to time I had to prescribe increasingly stronger glasses. In recent years I wore plus 2.5. But there was already discomfort in them. In the summer I bought two pairs of +3. One for home, the other for work. A journalist has to read a lot and type on a computer. Without glasses - nowhere. There are no problems with the retina. That's what I told Professor Zhdanov.
He asked me to immediately forget about +3. Return to those that are weaker. + 2.5. “Not for long, Evgeniy! For two or three weeks. Then buy weaker ones.” I agreed, although it was difficult to read with my old glasses. But I unconditionally believed Professor Zhdanov. It is very important, by the way, to believe in your mentor and to achieve your goal - to remove points (why I chose Vladimir Zhdanov - I will explain next time). If you doubt that you can restore your vision without surgery, it is better not to undertake it. Personally, I firmly believed and knew that I would definitely throw off the eye “crutches” that I had been carrying for 20 (TWENTY!) years.
✔ I did palming for the first week 5-6 times a day. We'll see how it goes. In the morning, at work, before bed.
✔ Eye exercises (see diagram on the next page) - in the morning before breakfast, in the afternoon, in the evening. Monday - Wednesday: 3 repetitions of each of the first FIVE exercises. The sixth - “Snake” - is always performed only ONE time (back and forth). Thursday - Saturday - already at 4. Sunday - day off.
✔ No fanaticism, as the professor prescribed. Although, I confess, I had the desire to do it 6-10 times at once. I really wanted to throw off those hated glasses as quickly as possible. But he restrained his impulses. I wore them for twenty years. I'll wait a few more weeks.
✔ I do exercises like this. I sit down on a chair, an armchair, and look forward at the wall. Floor, ceiling, side walls. Between them I draw diagonals with my eyes (from the upper right corner to the lower left and vice versa), rectangles, snakes, circles of the dial. The condition of the eyes allows. For those with weaker eyesight, it’s hard to “draw” an entire wall at once; take a piece of the wall, a carpet on it, a poster, a closet, a door... By the way, at my work, the wall is lined with cabinets, and I “draw” on them.
Why am I afraid of operations
The first question from friends who learned about the experiment: “And why did you train for seven whole weeks, waste time, “break” your eyes, if you can quickly do surgery, laser correction? Medicine is at its best now!”
I shake my head no (it's good for the eyes!):
No, guys, I have sad examples before my eyes. In the late 80s, on my street Mnevniki in the neighboring house, a man decided to improve his vision in a fashionable surgical center and completely lost it. I remember this blind man well.
Uncle Vasya Vaselik lives in my village. He received his nickname for his cheerful disposition. He always helped his fellow villagers with carpentry and plowed their gardens. A reliable person. I began to see worse - I went to the regional eye center. After the operation I became blind in both eyes. And Vaselik wilted! Now he doesn't leave the house.
A few years ago, a terrible story thundered in the media: a whole group of patients at a commercial laser clinic in Kharkov went blind. The wrong liquid was injected into the eyes of the poor fellows.
I understand well that such tragedies are extremely rare. But what if I’m the one who gets dealt the fatal card during the operation? In my profession, blindness is a DISASTER!
By the way, I'm not the only one who is so fearful. A colleague once wrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda about a loud conflict in the famous eye center. She told me that what struck her most was not the conflict: many surgeons, eye doctors, who put operations on stream, themselves... wear glasses. Like the world's eye luminary Ernst Muldashev, who works miracles.
The other day I read that one of the American inventors of the progressive LASIK laser correction technology wears glasses himself. Apparently he doesn't want to take risks. He who has eyes, let him see this! But it’s difficult to operate with glasses. Sweat floods the glass.
An American journalist, having met a bespectacled laser inventor, changed his mind about using a laser to correct his myopia.
So I didn’t take any risks. Moreover, there is a way to restore vision naturally, without any risk. And cheap, unlike operations. In seven weeks I spent only 1,450 rubles. I had to buy three pairs of weaker glasses, which I gradually changed during the training process. And it takes little time to train the eyes.
WHO IS WHO
Vladimir Georgievich Zhdanov, 64 years old. Optical physicist, psychoanalyst. Chairman of the All-Russian public organization"Union of struggle for national sobriety." I started this fight together with Academician Uglov back in 1983, for which I had many problems. She has been involved in natural vision restoration professionally for 19 years. After I got rid of the +2 points myself. Lives in Moscow . But it rarely happens in the capital. He travels a lot around the country and the world giving lectures and courses.
The story of how a Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist got rid of glasses in 7 weeks will be continued in the next issue of the KP weekly and on our website.
Professor Vladimir Zhdanov: “You can get rid of glasses and regain your vision at any age. Even at 95 years old!”Ruslan RAKHMANGULOV
Agafonova Tatyana Vladimirovna (1930-1994)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1957 to 1976 - correspondent of the letters department, traveling correspondent of the information department, special correspondent of the newspaper. After the publication of an interview with People's Artist of the USSR Galina Ulanova, he becomes her close friend and assistant. Author of a multi-part television film about the great ballerina.
ANDREEV Nikolay Alekseevich
Born on April 11, 1947 in the city of Sol-Iletsk, Orenburg Region. He graduated from the Trinity Energy College and worked as an electrician. He studied full-time (1969-71) at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. M.V. Lomonosov. Then in Komsomolskaya Pravda: intern, intern, correspondent for the working youth department (1971-84). After that, he worked at Literaturnaya Gazeta, the weekly Novoye Vremya, the Izvestia newspaper, and Obshchaya Gazeta.
From 1998 to 2002 - at the ViD television company, author and presenter of the historical program “How It Was.” Later he switched to independent literary work. Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia and the Union of Writers of Moscow. Author of the biographical novels “The Life of Sakharov” (M., 2013, prize of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation in the category “Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism”) and “The Life of Vysotsky” (M., 2014). Laureate of awards from the Moscow Union of Journalists (1988), the Union of Journalists of Russia (1999, 2003, 2014). Currently lives and works on his estate near Kaluga.
Andriyanov Viktor Ivanovich (1936 - 2009)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1967 to 1986: own correspondent for the Chelyabinsk and Kurgan regions, then in Vladivostok, Czechoslovakia, deputy editor, editor of the propaganda department, member of the editorial board.
After Komsomolskaya Pravda - in the newspaper Socialist Industry (now Tribuna) - department editor, deputy editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief, columnist.
Laureate of the Union of Journalists of Russia, the Fuchik Prize, the Kosygin Prize and others. Author of documentary books. Among them are “The Tale of the Miners’ Regiments”, “People from the Report”, “Wormwood of a Foreign Land”, “Way of the Cross”, “Kosygin”, “Heydar Aliyev” (the last two in the Young Guard series “ZhZL”) and others. The books have been translated into English, Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, and Slovak.
Allahverdova Nina Grantovna
Born in 1938 in Uzbekistan. I spent my childhood and youth in Baku. She worked as a senior pioneer leader and headed the department of schools and universities of the district Komsomol committee. Since 1959 in Moscow. She studied at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University and worked at the Pioneer magazine (1960-65). In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1965-69) she ran a page for high school students, “Scarlet Sail,” and published essays.
She graduated from the Higher Screenwriting Courses at the USSR State Cinema Committee (1969-72). She worked at the Mosfilm, Gorky, Lenfilm, Odessa Film Studio, and Ekran film studios. She taught screenwriting at the Higher Directing and Screenwriting Courses (1983-85). He is one of the founders (2000) and artistic director of the Patmos film studio. Author of 2 feature film scripts, 17 documentaries, 3 published feature film scripts, as well as 10 unproduced feature films. Documentary films "Prayer" (1999). " Forgiveness Sunday"(2001), "Today there is fog outside the window..." (20010), "Common Meal" (2010) were awarded a number of film awards.
Author of pedagogical and art history books and articles, a collection of poetry. Member of the Union of Cinematographers, the Union of Journalists of the USSR. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism" (2008). Winner of the diploma of the 11th National Exhibition-Fair “Book of Russia-2008” for the film script “Garlic, Onions and Peppers”.
Arich Leonid Fedorovich
A native of the Donetsk region. Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. Lomonosov (1980). At Komsomolskaya Pravda - intern, correspondent, head of the Komsomolsky Searchlight department, special correspondent for the working department, staff correspondent in Mongolia (1979-90), deputy. editor of the department of regional publications (1993-97).
Over the years he worked at the Tribune as editor of the letters and morals department, and chief editor of the information service. In recent years, he has been editor-in-chief of the weekly Business Tuesday. Since 2012 - founder and publisher of the newspaper “New Tuesday”.
Awarded the Badge of the Komsomol Central Committee “For participation in the construction of the BAM.”
Laureate of the Badge of Honor of the Union of Journalists of Russia “For services to the professional community” (2008).
Afanasyev Alexander Vasilievich (1954-2002)
In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1979 to 1997 - trainee, own correspondent on In "Komsomolskaya Pravda" from 1979 to 1997 - trainee, own correspondent on Altai region, deputy editor of the department of literature and art, deputy. editor of the working youth department, political commentator, member of the editorial board. Organizer of the country's first alternative election of the director of an enterprise (RAF plant, Latvia). Organizer and executive director of the international literary and public association “Club of Rome”. He was the only Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist to interview the President of the United States (George Bush, May 1, 1995).
On the Rossiya TV channel, he is the creator and presenter of the television program “I am a Leader”, the author of the series of documentaries “My War” (1995).
Publicist, prose writer, author of the story “Seven Miles to Heaven” and journalistic books. Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize (1987).
Barkhatov Alexey Alexandrovich
Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1972-74) - correspondent of the department of propaganda, military-patriotic education. Then in “Moskovsky Komsomolets”, “Literary Russia”, editor-in-chief of the magazines “Soviet Literature” and “Lepta”, deputy editor-in-chief of “Literary Newspaper”. Since 2002 he has been teaching.
Writer, critic. Member of the Russian Writers' Union. Candidate of Philology.
Winner of the M. Gorky Prize.
Berezhnoy Yuri Nikolaevich
A graduate of the Bauman Moscow Higher Technical School, he has been published in the central press since 1954. A graduate of the Bauman Moscow Higher Technical School, published in the central press since 1954.
Transferred to Komsomolskaya Pravda by A.I. Adzhubey from an internship at the newspaper Pravda, where he ended up following the decision of the CPSU Central Committee to attract engineers to the industrial departments of newspapers. Since 1957 he worked in the information department of the Communist Party. Repeatedly named among the best reporters in Moscow. One of the award-winning reports (1961) has not yet been repeated: the journalist, having undergone parachute training, received a unique permit from the Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force and independently flew on a MIG-23 PF twin aircraft with maximum acceleration - twice the speed of sound - at maximum altitude (20 km ).
Later, the manager worked in Cuba for many years. TASS department.
Author of more than 600 materials in central newspapers and magazines, ten books and brochures.
He was awarded the Certificate of Honor of the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “For Services to the Professional Community” (2010).
In recent years, he has been the president of the Pharmstroy - Unionstroy group of Russian-Belgian-South Korean companies engaged in the construction of pharmaceutical enterprises.
BERSHACHEVSKY Yuri Vladimirovich (1948-2001)
Born on August 20, 1948 and grew up in the city of Lugansk (formerly Voroshilovgrad). In 1973, as a third-year student at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University named after M.V. Lomonosov, he was hired as an intern, then as a correspondent for the department of Komsomol life of Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Since 1975 - employee of the scientific information sector of the department of socio-economic problems of the scientific and technological revolution of the INION of the USSR Academy of Sciences, executive secretary of the abstract journal "Socio-economic and ideological problems of scientific and technological revolution" (based on foreign materials).
Since 1978, leading employee of the Laboratory of Scientific Information of the Academy National economy under the Council of Ministers of the USSR, author and editor of textbooks.
Since 1989 - head of the department for work with letters of the journal “Economy Issues”, organizer of an intensive and resonant public discussion on economic and social problems of perestroika of the USSR.
Since the end of 1990 - head of the apparatus of the Committee on Economic Reform and Property of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. Prepared and edited materials of the Committee, draft laws and Resolutions of the Supreme Council, press releases, organized and held press conferences. During the days of the August 1991 coup, he was and worked in the White House, and was one of its active defenders. At the end of 1991, he headed the secretariat of the Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation, and then (until December 1993) - the Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation.
From 1994 until the end of his life on December 23, 2001 in the apparatus of the Federation Council Federal Assembly RF: in the secretariat of the Chairman of the Federation Council, head of the protocol department of the International Relations Department, consultant-expert of the Federation Council Committee on International Affairs.
He had the qualification rank of 1st class adviser to the Russian Federation.
He was married, the father of five daughters.
Blagodareva Ekaterina Konstantinovna (1925-2004)
Graduated from the Moscow Regional Pedagogical Institute in 1952. From 1948 to 1995, she was the head of the shorthand bureau at Komsomolskaya Pravda.Led a big one social activities in the field of military-patriotic education, organizer of a school museum. Author of a number of publications dedicated to the memory of front-line soldiers and fellow villagers.
Blagodarov Sergey Vladimirovich
He started as a turner at the AZA plant (Altai Aggregates Plant), worked in a large-scale factory; After serving in the army, he graduated from the journalism department of Moscow State University. Lomonosov (1984).
He was a correspondent for the newspaper “On a Combat Post” (the organ of the Moscow Air Defense); special correspondent of the newspaper "Soviet Russia". In Komsomolskaya Pravda - special correspondent of the department of socio-economic problems (1988-2002).
Winner of the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia for the “Best Journalistic Investigation”, the title of “Best Journalist of the Year” (1999).
In recent years, he has been a political strategist and organizer of election campaigns at various levels.
Blatin Mikhail Anatolievich
Born in 1935. Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University (1958). At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1960 to 1986 he was an intern, a literary staff member, and in the seventies he was the editor of the military sports department, a member of the newspaper's editorial board. From 1980 to 1985 - own correspondent in Hungary. Then - work in the magazine " Soviet Union”, the newspaper “Business World”, the newspaper of the older generation “Dignity”, in the newsletter “ZOZH”.
Author of journalistic books. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism".
Honored Worker of Culture of Russia. Awarded the medal "For Labor Valor". He was awarded the titles “Excellence in Soviet Police” and “Excellence in Physical Culture.”
Bodnaruk Nikolay Davydovich (1942 - 2009)
Born in 1942, in the village of Bukatinka, Vinnytsia region.Graduated from art school in Chernivtsi. After military service he entered theFaculty of Journalism. WITH 1969 year - in Komsomolskaya Pravda. Trainee, correspondent, member of the editorial board, editor of a group of departments. Executive secretary, correspondent in Australia, deputy editor-in-chief.
From 1985 to 1996 - deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper Izvestia, then first deputy editor-in-chief of the Obshchaya Gazeta"(1996-97), editor-in-chief of Literaturnaya Gazeta (19 97-98).
In recent years - advisorChairman of Vneshtorgbank.
Bocharov Gennady Nikolaevich
From 1967 to 1984, he was a special correspondent and columnist for Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Then - a columnist for Literaturnaya Gazeta (1984-94), a political columnist for the general director of TASS, a political columnist for the Izvestia newspaper.
As a special correspondent, he visited more than fifty countries of the world, including all its “hot spots”. Awarded with orders and medals of the USSR, including the Military Order of the Red Star, honorary badges named after. Yu. Gagarin, Academician S. Korolev and others.
Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize. Recipient of the highest professional awards: the Prize of the Union of Journalists of the USSR, the Prize named after. Mikhail Koltsov, prize named after. Vladimir Gilyarovsky, the “Golden Pen” sign of Russia (2011), etc. Author of many documentary books with a total circulation of one and a half million copies. Most have been translated into the main languages of the world. The book "Russian Roulette" became a worldwide bestseller. Member of the Moscow Writers Union.
Bulgakov Nikolai Alekseevich (priest)
Born on May 6, 1950 in Moscow. Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. M.V. Lomonosov, Literary Institute.
The first publication in Komsomolskaya Pravda was on October 14, 1966 in “The Scarlet Sail” (the story “The White Crow”). Together with I. Zyuzyukin and A. Ivkin, he prepared the AP strip issue “Normal School Day” (1967). Then he was an intern at the department of feuilletons and everyday culture of the KP, and edited the humorous section “Smile” (1968-69). Dismissing him from the editorial office, one of the then leaders of the newspaper prophetically formulated: “For the Christian pallor on his face.” He served in the army (1975-76) as a soldier in Leninakan (now Gyumri).
He worked in the editorial offices of Literary Newspaper, Literary Russia, the magazine Literary Education, published in Yunost, in other magazines, newspapers, collections, wrote for radio and television. In 1976, the publishing house “Young Guard” published the first book of prose “I’m going for a walk” (reprint - M., “Pilgrim”, 2007). In 1985, in “Moscow Worker” - a book of prose “Love”, in 1989 in “Children’s Literature” - a book of stories for children “Anya and Katya”. Member of the Russian Writers' Union (1992).
Since the late 80s he has been an Orthodox publicist. Author of the first Orthodox articles in Komsomolskaya Pravda (1989-90): about N.V. Gogol (“Contemporary” and “Unknown Russia”), about St. Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia (“Patriarch”), about the revival of Optina deserts (“Save and Preserve”). Regular author and contributor to such publications as “Russian Herald”, “Rus Derzhavnaya”, and Orthodox websites. A literary recording of conversations with the children's doctor-priest Alexy Grachev (1960-1998) “When Children Get Sick,” published as a separate edition (1992), was reprinted many times. The publishing house of the newspaper “Russian Herald” published a collection of articles “Orthodoxy. Army. Power" (1993), written jointly with Hieroschemamonk Moses (Bogolyubov; 1915-1992), a resident of the Holy Trinity Sergius Lavra, and A.A. Yakovlev-Kozyrev, which was later republished under the title "This way you will win!"
In 1981 he was baptized by Archpriest Valerian Krechetov; On April 2, 1995, he was ordained to the rank of deacon, and on April 16, 1995, to the rank of priest by Metropolitan Juvenaly of Krutitsky and Kolomna. Served as rector of the Church of St. Archangel Michael in the town of Zhukovsky near Moscow. Since 1998 - simultaneously rector of the Church of the Sovereign Icon Mother of God in the village of Kratovo. In 1999, a new six-altar Sovereign Church was founded here from scratch. Since 2000, he has been the rector of only this church, where services have been held since 2002.
The established parish publishing house published the book “The Soul Hears the Light.” N.V. Gogol - about us" (2003), expanded edition of the book of stories "Anya and Katya" (2007). He is the editor of the books “Uninvented Stories” by L.S. Zaparina (from Orthodox samizdat; 3rd edition - 2004), about Blessed. Ksenia of St. Petersburg, a collection of sermons by Archpriest Valerian Krechetov “Mary and Martha” (2006), co-author of a collection of interviews with the same clergyman “How to live by faith today in Russia?” (2009), as well as educational “Sovereign leaflets” and the parish website www.derzhavnaya.info.
Burkov Boris Sergeevich (1908 - 1997)
Born on May 11, 1908 in the village of Kurkino, Tula region.Since 1925 - at Komsomol work. After graduating from the All-Union Agro-Pedagogical Institute (1933), he worked as an agronomist in Kyrgyzstan, and then taught in Ryazan.In January 1938, he was appointed executive editor of the Ryazan regional Komsomol newspaper "Stalinets".At Komsomolskaya Pravda (1939 - 48) - deputy editor-in-chief, executive secretary, editor-in-chief of the newspaper (February 1942 - January 1948).After graduating from graduate school at the Academy of Social Sciences under the CPSU Central Committee, he was executive secretary, member of the editorial board of the Bolshevik magazine (1949-51), deputy editor-in-chief of the Ogonyok magazine (1951-54), editor-in-chief of the Trud newspaper (1954-60), Deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Pravda" (1960-61). For 10 years from its founding (in May 1961), he was chairman of the board of the Novosti Press Agency (APN, now RIA Novosti).Candidate of Historical Sciences, author of a large number of articles, essays, books: "In China. Notes of a Journalist" (1955), "Friends Everywhere. Travel Notes" (1957), "America Remained One-Storey. Notes of a Journalist" (1962), "Two Latin America" (1966), "Land of People. Notes from a Journalist's Notebook" (1970), "Meetings on Five Continents. Travel Notes of a Journalist" (1973), "Komsomolskaya Pravda" in an Overcoat" (1975), "Lines Scorched by War" ( 1987).Awarded two Orders of the Red Banner of Labor and the Order of the Red Star, medals.
Vesensky Vladimir Petrovich (1934 - 2009)
He graduated from the 1st Higher Baltic Naval School of Diving (navigation department), MGIMO, and later studied at the Nieman Foundation at Harvard University.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1970 to 1979, he was his own correspondent for Latin American countries, in the Republic of Cuba, correspondent for the department of foreign information and the international youth movement.
Then - Literaturnaya Gazeta's own correspondent for Latin American countries, editor-in-chief of LG on English language, LG columnist. Since 1994 - in business. Currently representative of the Telos Foundation for thin technologies in Latin America.
Author of the journalistic books “Following Legend and Reality”, “Lights of Big Cities”, “In the Dark of Day and Light of Night”, “Searching for a Common Platform to Combat International Terrorism” (co-authored with American and Russian experts) and others.
Posthumously, the KP Journalists Club and the KP International Club of Staff Correspondents published the film script “I’ll be back!”
Volodchenko Valery Yurievich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1974 to 1979 - his own correspondent in Kazakhstan. He was part of the pool of “space” journalists.
In 1980 he moved to the press sector of the Komsomol Central Committee. Then - the publishing house "Young Guard". In recent years, he has been a columnist for the Rossiyskaya Gazeta and the Parliamentary Gazette. Currently engaged in writing.
Member of the International Society of Writers' Unions.
Voronov Yuri Petrovich (1929-1989)
At Komsomolskaya Pravda, after graduating from Leningrad University and working as editor of the newspaper Smena, from 1954 to 1965 - member of the editorial board, deputy editor-in-chief, first deputy editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief.
Then - a member of the editorial board - executive secretary of the newspaper "Pravda", head of the newspaper's bureau in the GDR, editor-in-chief of the magazine "Znamya", head of the Department of Culture of the CPSU Central Committee, editor-in-chief of the "Literary Newspaper".
Poet, member of the USSR Writers' Union.
At the age of fourteen he was awarded the medal "For the Defense of Leningrad", has the Order of Lenin and other orders and medals of the USSR.
Vyzhutovich Valery Viktorovich
Graduated from Ural State University. At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1974 to 1980 - intern, correspondent, deputy. editor of the propaganda department.
Then - columnist for the Literaturnaya Gazeta (1980-88), editor of the journalism department of the Ogonyok magazine (1988-89), columnist for the Izvestia newspaper (1989-2000), Moscow News newspaper (2000-05), Rossiyskaya newspapers" (currently).
Winner of the Golden Gong award (1998), the Golden Pen sign of the Union of Journalists of Russia (2002), the Friendship of Peoples magazine award, etc.
Author of non-fiction books that have won professional awards.
Ganyushkin Vitaly Alexandrovich (1930-1998)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1954 to 1977 - literary staff member, head of the student youth department, traveling correspondent, editor of the working youth department, member of the editorial board, and own correspondent in Poland.
From 1978 until the end of his life - deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine "New Time".
Awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor.
Geiko Yuri Vasilievich
Born on August 28, 1948 in Moscow. Graduated from the Moscow Automechanical and Literary Institute. Gorky Institutes. Worked for 10 years as a tester at AZLK. , hereinafter - KP.? In Komsomolskaya Pravda for more than two decades (1982-2005): correspondent of the working youth department, editor of the literature and arts department, member of the editorial board, columnist. He was elected chairman of the trade union committee and the housing commission.
Member of the Union of Writers and the Union of Cinematographers of the Russian Federation.
Participant and organizer of two round-the-world car rallies - on Moskvich-2141 (1989) under the name “Columbus Caravan”, for which he was awarded the title “Honorary Citizen” of the city of Columbus, the capital of Ohio (USA); and on a KIA Spectra car (2006).
Golovanov Yaroslav Kirillovich (1932-2003)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1958 until the end of his life, he was a literary employee of the science and technology department, head of the information, science and technology departments, traveling correspondent, member of the editorial board, columnist.
Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize. He was also awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor and the Order of Friendship of Peoples.
Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR. Member of the USSR Writers' Union. Author of many popular science books, scripts, films, television shows, incl. - KVN. Creator of a fundamental work about S. Korolev and others key figures Soviet cosmonautics, about the history of the formation of the industry. Last work- diaries “Notes of your contemporary”.
Goncharenko Alexandra Alekseevna
Master of Sports of the USSR in athletics.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1964 to 1990, he was a correspondent in the letters department. She carries out extensive activities to perpetuate the memory of her husband, a multiple world champion and Olympic Games in speed skating Oleg Goncharenko. Veteran of labour. Repeated thanks to the Komsomol Central Committee
Gorbuntsov Dmitry Gerasimovich
Graduated from the Faculty of Philology of Moscow State University. On a Komsomol ticket he went to build the Norilsk Mining and Metallurgical Combine. He worked as a concrete excavator at a construction site, a coal mine miner, a correspondent for the editorial office of the Zapolyarnaya Pravda newspaper, city radio and the Norilsk television studio, then as a department head for the regional newspaper Youth of Altai.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda (1971-1982) - correspondent for the Altai Territory, Gorno-Altai Autonomous Region, Tuva Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Khakassia and East Kazakhstan, head of the department. Special correspondent, head. department of culture of the newspaper "Pravda" (1983-1997). He was the editor of the public opinion analysis department at Rossiyskaya Gazeta, and the editor of departments at the Factor and Oil of Russia magazines. Currently - General Director of the Voskresenye Publishing House.
Member of creative unions - writers of Russia, artists of Russia, journalists of Russia, as well as a member of the Russian Geographical Society. Author of several books of prose and journalism, scripts for documentaries and satirical films, including stories in the All-Union satirical film magazine “Fitil”. Winner of Komsomol, journalistic and literary awards. There are state awards and awards from public organizations.
Gorlov Viktor Nikolaevich
Born on May 24, 1953 in the village of Oskolkovo, Altai Territory.
Graduated high school. He served in the ranks of the Soviet Army (Air Defense). After service, he worked at the Barnaul Boiler Plant.
He studied at the Barnaul Pedagogical Institute. By education, he is a teacher of Russian language and literature.
He worked at the Barnaul television studio, at the regional newspaper “Leninskaya Pravda” (p. Topchikha), and the regional newspaper “Altaiskaya Pravda”. He headed the sports departments in the newspapers “Komsomolskaya Pravda”, “Izvestia”, “Trud”.
In Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1982. Own correspondent for the Altai Territory, East Kazakhstan Region, Tuva Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Since 1985 - staff correspondent in Kazakhstan (Alma-Ata). Since 1986 - deputy. editor of the sports and news department, department editor, member of the editorial board of KP. In 1990-1992, staff correspondent of the Communist Party in Yugoslavia (during the Balkan war). Recognized as the best foreign correspondent of Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1991.
While working at Komsomolskaya Pravda, he proved himself to be an outstanding organizer. From his suggestion, the idea of reviving the Nizhny Novgorod Fair (the prologue took place in 1990), creating the USSR Mini-Football Association (first president), holding the first commercial mini-football tournament in the USSR “Honor of the Brand” and the national championship among fans ( More than 40,000 teams participated, which remains a record).
In 1991, president of the USSR Futsal Federation (under the auspices of FIFUSA).
Since 1994 - President of the Regional Public Organization "Children's Football League". Coaches L. Slutsky, I. Osinkin, A. Vasilenko, players A. Anyukov, R. Adamov, D. Kolodin, M. Izmailov, A. Dzagoev, A. Kokorin, I. Gorbatenko and many others began their careers in DFL competitions Russian football stars.
Every year, more than 70,000 young players under the age of 13 from all regions compete in competitions under the auspices of the Children's Football League Russian Federation and more than 20 foreign countries. The largest of them is the international festival “Locoball - Russian Railways” (46,000 participants).
The international festival “Big Stars Shine on Small Stars” is unique. His main message: don’t forget the place where you were born and raised, remember your first coach, first team, know that today’s boys need your help. More than 80 famous players and coaches in Russia, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Estonia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan conduct festival tournaments in their small homeland.
Member of the Bureau of the Federation of Sports Journalists of Russia, member of the Technical Committee of the RFU
He was awarded the medal “For Labor Distinction”, the Badge of Honor “For Merit in the Development of Physical Culture and Sports”, the Nikolai Ozerov Medal, the Badge of Honor “For Merit in the Development of the Olympic Movement in Russia”, and a UEFA bronze medal.
Winner of the international Fair Play award.
Goryunov Dmitry Petrovich (1915-1992)
Born in the city of Kovrov, Vladimir region. Graduated from the Higher Party School under the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks (1949). In his youth he worked as a turner, planner, and executive secretary of a factory newspaper. Then - executive secretary, editor of the regional newspaper in Ivanovo(1934-40), Secretary of the Kovrov city, Ivanovo regional committees Komsomol (1940-42), responsible employee of the Komsomol Central Committee (1942-46).
After graduating from the High School, he was sent to Komsomolskaya Pravda as editor-in-chief (1949-57). Then - deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Pravda" (1957-60), General Director of TASS under the Council of Ministers of the USSR (1960-67), at the same time - member of the CPSU Central Committee, deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR.
After journalistic work, he was transferred to diplomatic work, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the USSR to Kenya (1967-73) and Morocco (1973-78).
Belongs to the galaxy of leading media managers of the Soviet period. As the editor-in-chief of Komsomolskaya Pravda, he pursued an anti-dogmatic ideological line, returned the newspaper to the sharpness and integrity of its publications, and raised a galaxy of journalists, the so-called. the “sixties”, who subsequently succeeded each other as editors-in-chief of Komsomolskaya Pravda - Alexei Adzhubey, Yuri Voronov, Boris Pankin.
Member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR. Author of journalistic books “Return to Africa”, “Kenya”, “Roads”.
Awarded the Order of Lenin and other orders and medals of the USSR.
Grafova Lidiya Ivanovna
Special correspondent of Komsomolskaya Pravda (1960-79).
Columnist for Literaturnaya Gazeta (1979-2003).
Currently published in Izvestia, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Novaya Gazeta"and in other publications. Since 1990, he has been working with migrants, heading the public human rights movement “Forum of Migrant Organizations,” which unites 168 organizations created by migrants in 43 regions of Russia. Since 2000, he has been the head of the Migration Information Agency. Organizer and editor-in-chief of the magazine “Migration. XXI century."
Member of the Expert Council under the Commissioner for Human Rights in the Russian Federation.
Nominated for the A.D. Sakharov Prize “Journalism as an Act” (2002), awarded the title “Best Journalist-Human Rights Defender of the Year” (2003).
Grigoryants Ervand Gevorgovich (1930-1982)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1964 to 1972 - head of the student youth department, deputy. Head of the Institute of Public Opinion "KP", Deputy Executive Secretary of the newspaper.
Then - at Literaturnaya Gazeta, deputy executive secretary.
Prose writer, author of parables. The collection (posthumously) “Truths for Every Day” was published.
Awarded the medal "For Labor Valor".
Gromova Tamara Vladimirovna
In 1954 she graduated from the journalism department of Leningrad University. She worked for the newspapers “Altaiskaya Pravda” and “Aktobe Pravda”. Then - Moscow, freelance collaboration on radio, in the magazines "Znamya", "Communist", with the publishing house "Children's Literature".
From 1962 to 1976, at Komsomolskaya Pravda he was a correspondent for the propaganda department, literary group of the letters department. 1977 - Deputy Head of the TASS Culture Department. From 1978 to 1990 - head of the editorial office of book science and bibliophilia at the Kniga publishing house. 1991 - editor-in-chief of the Dom publishing house at the Children's Fund. From 1992 to 1999 - director of the Rudomino publishing house at the Library of Foreign Literature.
Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.
Currently lives in Canada.
Grushin Boris Andreevich (1929 - 2007)
Graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University. From 1956 to 1966 (with a break) - in Komsomolskaya Pravda. Founder of the Institute of Public Opinion "Komsomolskaya Pravda". Initiator of the creation of the Center for the Study of Public Opinion of the USSR Academy of Sciences. One of the organizers and leaders of the All-Union Center for the Study of Public Opinion. Creator of the country's first private public opinion service - “Vox populi”.
Doctor of Philosophy, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Education.
Author of the multi-volume publication “Four Lives of Russia. Essays on the mass consciousness of Russians during the times of Khrushchev, Brezhnev, Gorbachev and Yeltsin.”
Gubarev Vladimir Stepanovich
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1960 to 1975, he was a literary employee, head of the science department, and deputy editor-in-chief. Then he worked at the newspaper Pravda (1975-91). Now he is an advisor to the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences for the promotion of science.
Writer, playwright. Member of the Russian Writers' Union.
Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize, State Prize of the USSR, prizes of the Union of Journalists, Olof Palme, Laurence Olivier, twice - the RAS Prize.
Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism”, the “Golden Pen of Russia” sign.
Gutiontov Pavel Semenovich
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1975 to 1985 - correspondent of the department of students and pioneers, deputy editor of the department of young scientists and specialists, correspondent of the department of internal information.
Then - work at the Izvestia newspaper.
Currently - Secretary of the Union of Journalists of Russia. Author of journalistic books and memoirs “Marzan is almost invisible.” Laureate of the sign of the Union of Journalists of the Russian Federation “Golden Pen” of Russia.
Danilin Yuri Valerievich
Graduated from the Ural State University and the Academy of Social Sciences. He worked for youth newspapers in Siberia, and since 1975 he has been Komsomolskaya Pravda’s own correspondent for the Omsk and Novosibirsk regions. Since 1977 - head of the department of scientific and student youth of Komsomolskaya Pravda, then member of the editorial board, editor of the departments of scientific, student and school youth, first deputy editor-in-chief. From Komsomolskaya Pravda he became a member of the editorial board, editor of the science department of the Izvestia newspaper. He headed Russia's first popular science newspaper, Eureka, a supplement to Novaya Gazeta. He worked as deputy editor-in-chief of Literaturnaya Gazeta.
For the last twenty years he has been teaching at VGIK, where in 2005 the first scientific film directors' workshop, revived with his participation, took place in 2005. The diaries of Faina Ranevskaya he prepared and published became a bestseller. He writes scripts for documentaries and television films about science and music, collaborates with many newspapers and magazines in Russia.
Organizer and executive director of the Vera Lothar-Shevchenko International Competition for Young Pianists.
Demidov Nikita Pavlovich
Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. In Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1978 - an intern, on staff (1980-86) - an intern, crime correspondent in the news department. Then at TASS (1986-90) - special correspondent for “hot spots”.
Founder of the information agency "Crimpress" (1991-93), "Demidov Publishing House" (1992 - to present).
Depsames Rafail Abramovich (1913-1980)
At Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1944 to 1980, he was deputy editor of the KP traveling editorial offices in the Donbass, in the city of Krivoy Rog, and in Stalingrad. In the editorial office he worked as a literary staff member, deputy head of the department of students and physical education, feuilletonist, and executive secretary of the press bureau. He was responsible for the publication of the Komsomolskaya Pravda Library.
Awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor, VDNKh medalist for organizing visiting editorial offices of Komsomolskaya Pravda in the post-war years. Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR.
Didurov Alexey Alekseevich (1948-2006)
The first publications in Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1964, from 1966 to 1972 - trainee, correspondent for the information and military-patriotic education departments.
From 1972 to 1975 - correspondent for the magazine “Youth”, then collaboration with radio, television, theaters and cinema. Creation of the musical and poetic association “Cabaret” (1980) and its constant management for more than twenty-five years.
The author of ten of his own books, several albums of songs, plays and film scripts, songs for performances and films. Compiler of two anthologies of Russian rock poetry, two anthologies of singer-songwriters. The book of prose and poems “Legends and Myths of the Ancient Sovk” (1995) was included in the top ten best books in Russia according to the rating of Ogonyok magazine. Based on the results of the All-Russian competition “Artiada-99”, the anthology of literary rock cabaret “Sunny Underground” received the status of the best domestic book of the year.
Dobryukha Anna Nikolaevna
She came to Komsomolskaya Pravda immediately after school - as an assistant in the department of socio-economic problems (1996). The first publication - “17 years plus a telephone - work for yesterday’s schoolchild (tested on myself)” allowed me to move into the journalistic workshop. She went from an intern to a special newspaper correspondent.
At the same time, she graduated from the Faculty of Law of Moscow State University. Lomonosov (department of “constitutional law”), hosted a program on consumer rights on TV. Currently, she is a presenter of legal consultations for readers, listeners and viewers of Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Secretary of the primary journalistic organization CJSC "ID KP".
Dolgopolov Mikhail Nikolaevich (1901-1977)
One of the founders of the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda" in 1925. He worked there until 1938 as a special correspondent for the culture department.
Then he moved to the same position at the Izvestia newspaper, working until the end of his life.
Participant of the Civil and Great Patriotic War. The only Soviet journalist was present at both the signing of the act of surrender of Germany in Karlshorst and at the Nuremberg trials.
Author of many books and feature film scripts. Member of the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR.
Dolgopolov Nikolay Mikhailovich
After graduating from the translation department of the Maurice Thorez Moscow State Pedagogical Institute, he worked in Iran. In Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1973 (freelance), from 1975 to 1997 - correspondent, head of the sports department, editor, member of the editorial board, own correspondent in France (1987-92), deputy. chief, first deputy editor-in-chief.
In 1993 he completed postgraduate courses at the University of STRASClyde in Glasgow (Scotland). From 1997 to 2007 - executive secretary of the Trud newspaper.
Currently - Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
Winner of the prize “For courage and skill shown in covering events in the Chernobyl region” (1986), the International Fair Play Award (the first Russian to receive this award (1992), Mayor of Moscow (2002) . Awarded the personalized gold medal of Yuri Andropov (2004).
Chairman of the Federation of Sports Journalists of Russia, Vice-President of the Sports Press Association, member of the Council for Physical Education and Sports under the President of the Russian Federation.
Member of the Russian Writers' Union and the Interregional Writers' Union.
Author of fourteen documentary books, including biographies of “Abel-Fischer” and “Kim Philby” in the “ZhZL” series.
Drozdov Alexander Alekseevich
Born in Moscow, in the family of a military man. Great-nephew of the hero Born in Moscow, in the family of a military man. Great-nephew of the hero Civil War, Army Commander Nikolai Shchors. Graduated from the faculty international law MGIMO with a degree in international law (1974).
From 1979 to 1990 - at Komsomolskaya Pravda - trainee, correspondent of the international department of the newspaper, then - own correspondent in Tokyo (1981-87), member of the editorial board, editor of the international department (1987-89), executive secretary (1989-90) . Since September 1990 - assistant to the First Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR, executive director of the weekly Rossiya, member of the editorial board of the magazine Japan Today. Editor-in-chief of the weekly "Russia" (1991-96), host of the weekly journalistic program of the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company "Don't cut it off!" (1995-97).
He was the founder of MNVK (TV-6), the Party of Beer Lovers, the Komsomolskaya Pravda Veterans Club, the Komsomolskaya Pravda Golden Feathers Club - “6th Floor”.
He was a member of the management of the Trading House “Descendants of the supplier of the EIV P.A. Smirnova" (1990-2000).
Currently - Chairman of the Board, Executive Director of the Presidential Center B.N. Yeltsin.
Dudintsev Vladimir Dmitrievich (1918-1998)
Essayist of Komsomolskaya Pravda (1946-1951). Began publishing in 1933. He fought on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War. In 1956 in the magazine " New world“Dudintsev’s novel “Not by Bread Alone” was published, which was declared “slander” by the officialdom. After the magazine publication of the philosophical and allegorical “New Year's Tale” (1960) and the publication of the collections “Tales and Stories” (1959) and “Stories” (1963), the writer was actually sentenced to a publication ban.
Only in 1987 did Dudintsev’s second long-term work appear in print and immediately become a milestone in the history of modern Russian literature - the novel “White Clothes” (USSR State Prize, 1988), based on a documentary narrative created by the author during his years of work at Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Dyunin Viktor Mikhailovich
He worked in the editorial office of Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1958 to 1970 - a staff correspondent for Kazakhstan, a literary staff member, a deputy editor, editor of the working youth department, and a member of the editorial board. He also worked in the newspapers “Socialist Industry”, “Workers’ Tribune”, magazines “Communist”, “People’s Deputy”, as a staff consultant for the International Information Department of the CPSU Central Committee. Currently, he is an employee of the large-circulation newspaper of the ITAR-TASS state agency “Tassovets”.
For direct participation in the creation of the country's first scientific and technical youth team (NTTM) at the Moscow Automobile Plant named after I. S. Likhachev, he was awarded the Lenin Komsomol Prize. Winner of awards from the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the Moscow Journalistic Organization. Winner of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism" (2011).
Author of eight collections of journalistic articles and books (the documentary story “Step First” about the legendary hero of the Soviet five-year plans, miner Alexei Stakhanov - co-authored with former Komsomolskaya Pravda correspondent for the Donbass Vyacheslav Proskura).
Honored Worker of Culture of the Russian Federation.
E strandedYanov Sergey Mikhailovich
Born in the village of Sura, Pinezhsky district, Arkhangelsk region, on May 15, 1957. Graduated in absentia from the Faculty of Journalism of Leningrad State University. He worked for the regional newspaper Pinezhskaya Pravda and was editor of the regional newspaper Severny Komsomolets.
In 1988, he was invited to work in the press sector of the Komsomol Central Committee. Then he worked as first deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine "Young Russia", head of the sports department at Novaya Gazeta, 1994-2003 - head of the sports department, editor of the news department, deputy. executive secretary, member of the editorial board of Komsomolskaya Pravda. From January 2004 to 2014 in the newspaper "Soviet Sport", first deputy editor-in-chief, chief editor of the weekly magazine "Soviet Sport - Football".Currently - employee of Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
Zhavoronkov Gennady Nikolaevich (1941 - 2006)
Graduated from the Moscow Pedagogical and Literary Institutes. In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1975 to 1983 - head. department of student youth. Then - first deputy. executive secretary of the newspaper "Soviet Russia", head. department of the newspaper “Moskovskie Novosti”, political commentator for “Obshchaya Gazeta”, later “Literaturnaya Gazeta”.
Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences.
Member of the Moscow Writers' Union. Winner of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of the USSR, twice winner of the Presidential Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia.
Awarded the Polish Order of the Two Swords for his investigation of the Katyn tragedy.
Zhadan Oleg Lvovich (1943 - 2001)
Born in Tatarstan. From 1960 to 1962 - radio operator.
Studied at the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. Lomonosov.
At Komsomolskaya Pravda (1966-85) - intern, literary employee, correspondent for the working youth and news departments; since 1976 - head of the internal information department.
Then - head, editor of the feuilleton department of the Trud newspaper (1985-2001).
He considers his main publications to be a series of reports from the ship "Arktika", which reached the North Pole (1977), and a series of feuilletons "About the glorious city of Volosolapsk" (90s).
A collection of feuilletons “And we came with Zhadan...” was published posthumously.
Winner of the Golden Pen of Russia award (2002).
Zhitomirsky Vladimir Alexandrovich
Born on January 3, 1941 in Moscow in the family of a famous graphic artist, People's Artist of the RSFSR, author of political photomontages. First publications (in large circulation of the Moscow Institute foreign languages) date back to the late 50s. Subsequently, he received a journalism diploma. After graduating from In"Yaz, he was a translator in India. He worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1964-66, as a correspondent for the department international life. Then an employee of the magazine "Journalist" created by Yegor Yakovlev (1967-74). columnist and department editor of the weekly "New Time" (1974-93), editor of the Russian-South African newspaper "New Bridge". (1993-96). Then, as an independent journalist, he collaborated with travel magazines and translated books from English. The author of eight documentary and journalistic books, including “A Book of a Father in a Book about a Father” (based on his illustrated diary of the war years) and the memoir “Less foam!! Or more?..” (2017).
Member of the Union of Journalists since 1969. He was awarded numerous diplomas for essays based on business trips to foreign countries.
Zavada Marina Romanovna
After graduating from the Faculty of Journalism at Moscow State University, she came to Komsomolskaya Pravda, where she worked for fourteen years. She was a correspondent, Art. correspondent, special correspondent. In 1987-1991 she worked at the Literary Newspaper bureau in India. Returning to Moscow, she headed the press service of the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company. Member of the Russian Public Relations Association, member of the Expert Council of the National Silver Archer Award. Four years later, she was appointed director of the public relations directorate of the TV Center, a member of the board of the television company. In the late 90s she returned to the print media: editor-in-chief of the magazine “Modern Domestic Notes”, special correspondent for the newspaper “Gazeta”, columnist for “Izvestia”. Author of several books-dialogues - with E. Primakov, A. Volsky, A. Shokhin and others. Twice winner of the prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia. In particular, in 2012 - for the book “One cannot be counted. Temptation of Conversations” in the “Golden Shelf of Russian Journalism” category. In the Non-fiction category, the book was included in the “25 books of the year” rating.
Zagalsky Leonid Matveevich
Graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. Lomonosov. Simultaneously with his studies, he worked at Komsomolskaya Pravda. He started as an intern at the Scarlet Sail (1973), then until 1984 - a correspondent for the school, student, and scientific youth departments. After Komsomolskaya Pravda - columnist for Literaturnaya Gazeta (1984-89).
In 1989 he left for the USA. Studied at Stanford University. Worked at the California Committee to Protect Journalists, head of the country department of Eastern Europe and countries of the former USSR. Since 1994 - exclusive representative of CTW (Children's Television Workshop, New York) in Russia and the CIS and Baltic countries. He was involved in the production of the Sesame Street program (NTV, ORT).
General Director of Endemol Moscow LLC. Projects “Star Factory”, “Big Brother”, “Fear Factor”, “Deal”, etc. Producer, screenwriter of feature films, documentaries, television programs. The assets include the American feature film “Out of the Cold”, Russian films “Signs of Love. A fairy tale for adults,” “Playing the Victim,” “Canned Food.” He took part in the creation of the documentary film “Russia for sale”, aired on US television. Together with Semyon Livshits, he was the author of the script for the feature film “White Bone”, the first Soviet video film “Risk Group”, documentaries (“Talented Children”, etc.), television dramatizations (“Blue Cup”, etc.). Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia.
Zlobin Viktor Andreevich
Own correspondent for Komsomolskaya Pravda in Kazakhstan (1970-1980). Later - correspondent of "Soviet Russia" in the Volga region ((1980-1992), editor of the all-Russian newspaper "Federation" (!992-1993), consultant of the newsletter "Presidential Control" of the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation (1993-2003).
Author of poetry and journalistic collections. Member of the Union of Journalists of Russia.
Zyuzyukin Ivan Ivanovich (1932-2015)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda from 1960 to 1971 - staff correspondent for Far East, Head of the Department of Student Youth. One of the creators of the page for high school students of KP - “Scarlet Sails”.
From 1972 to 1973 - special correspondent for Literary Gazette. In other years he is a free artist.
Author of novels, stories, essays, scripts. Winner of the “Golden Pen” award of the Union of Journalists of Russia. Diploma winner at the Moscow International Book Fair (2007).
Member of the Russian Writers' Union. Honored Worker of Culture of the Russian Federation. Laureate of the highest award of the Union of Journalists of Russia - the Badge of Honor “Honor. Dignity. Professionalism".
Ivanova Maya Mikhailovna
Graduated from the Faculty of History of Leningrad State University. She came to Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1960, in the letters department, then moved to the secretariat - secretary on duty, deputy executive secretary for production. In January 1977, she went to work at Literaturnaya Gazeta. Awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor.
Ivashchenko Anatoly Zakharovich (1925-2004)
The first entry in the work book in December 1950 - “appointed as a special correspondent for the editorial office of “Bolshevik Smena” (Salsk). In 1954, he was released from work at the editorial office of the newspaper “Komsomolets” (Rostov-on-Don) due to a transfer to work for Komsomolskaya Pravda, as his own correspondent for the Kazakh SSR. Since 1955 - in the editorial staff, since 1960 - its traveling correspondent.
Since 1971 - columnist for the magazines “Journalist”, “Ogonyok”, and the newspaper “Izvestia”. TV program presenter. Member of the Russian Writers' Union. Winner of the Lenin Komsomol Prize and creative prizes.
Ivkin Alexey Nikolaevich
From 1965 to 1972 - in the department of school youth and pioneers of Komsomolskaya Pravda, responsible for the release of The Scarlet Sail.
Then - service in the USSR Armed Forces, from 1974 to 1979 - deputy executive secretary of "KP").
Later, an employee of the international magazine “Problems of Peace and Socialism” (Prague, 1979-84), the department of international problems of the Pravda newspaper (1984-86), staff correspondent of the Pravda newspaper in Australia and Oceania (1986-91), deputy executive secretary, executive secretary of the newspaper Izvestia (1991-2002), director of the Information and Analytical Center of the State Fisheries Committee of the Russian Federation.
Since May 2003, head of department, editor-in-chief of the corporate newspaper Gosstrakh.
Ignatenko Vitaly Nikitich
At Komsomolskaya Pravda, after graduating from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University, from 1963 to 1975 - from an intern in the working youth department to a member of the editorial board, first deputy editor-in-chief.
Then - editor-in-chief of the magazine "New Time", General Director of TASS, now ITAR-TASS, Deputy Prime Minister of the Government of the Russian Federation, member of the Federation Council of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation.
President of the World Russian Press Association. President of the Union of Asian News Agencies and Pacific Ocean. Member of the Writers' Union, Cinematographers' Union. Author of more than twenty films.
Laureate of State and journalistic awards.
Illesh Andrey Vladimirovich (1949 - 2011)
In Komsomolskaya Pravda since 1969 - intern, correspondent, acting. news editor. Since 1977 - editor of the department of the newspaper "Soviet Russia".
Since 1984, at the Izvestia newspaper - member of the editorial board, deputy. editor-in-chief, editor-in-chief of the weekly "Nedelya", member of the board of directors of JSC "Editorial office of the newspaper "Izvestia". Since 1997 - editor-in-chief of the information service of CJSC "TV Company "REN TV", deputy general director of REN TV for socio-political broadcasting. Since 1999 - Deputy General Director of ITAR-TASS.
In 2003, he founded the Publishing House “Business Media”, which owns the magazines “Manager”, “Career Formula”, “Vestnik Florist”.
Author of more than a dozen documentary books published in Russia, the USA, Germany, Japan and Turkey, and two collections of short stories - “Notes of a Free Rider” (2009) and “A Lonely Catcher Against the Background of Swift Water” (2011).
Twice laureate of the Union of Journalists of Russia award, laureate of international professional awards. For participation in rescue work(Pamir, Barents Sea, Kamchatka) and in the liquidation of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was awarded Russian and foreign orders and medals.
The seventh - last - week of vision restoration using the method of Professor Zhdanov. I didn’t relax, on the contrary, I increased the load! Exercise for the eyes - 7 times a day. I repeat the first FIVE exercises 10 times. Exercises 6 - 12 - ONE time. Palming (eye massage with palms) - as you get tired.
Finish
I can already calmly read newspapers and texts on the monitor with the naked eye. And I even type. But the hand still reaches for the glasses. Apparently, he became close over 20 years. I see, I understand that these “crutches” are no longer needed, but I just can’t part with it at all. I’m looking for excuses to rant for another day or two: I urgently need to submit an article, maybe I won’t be able to do it without them, I’ll be typing slowly. Another treacherous thought spun around in my head: maybe I should extend the slightly planned period, smoothly move from +1 to +0.75, and only then... Professor Zhdanov explained the “oddities” of my behavior. People who decide to restore their vision develop a psychological inferiority complex towards the end of their studies. Especially for nearsighted people. It seems that without glasses you cannot see something very important in life. “Experience shows that at the finish line you must decisively take off points. You will suffer psychologically for a week or two, and then you will forget about them. Vision will be restored."
He decided to “suffer himself up” away from his spectacled temptress, Klava. Computer keyboards. I took two weeks off. And on Sunday, September 22, on the day of his 60th birthday, he left for his small homeland, 400 km from the capital. I left my laptop at home. And to avoid temptation, I decisively broke the +1 glasses I had recently bought. Although back in July it was problematic to read the +2.5 prescribed by the doctor and I wore +3.
Why do I need them now? The experiment is over!
In recent years, about a hundred kilometers from my father’s house, constant fixation of the situation on a difficult route caused strong tension to appear in my eyes. I had to slow down, break my eyes sharply, and rotate to remove the glazing. Now, for the entire 400 km, my eyes looked at the track tirelessly. No glazing. (Over the past three months, I’ve covered 400 km back and forth three times, and the effect is still there.)
The second discovery was made the next morning in the village, going into the forest. I've picked mushrooms without glasses before. But now I was surprised to note that the grass, foliage, and needles looked brighter and more alive than before. I thought that it was the night rain that washed the forest. However, on the following trips, nature looked much more colorful. Not to mention the fact that he brought home more mushrooms than in previous seasons. (Although this fact, if desired, can be attributed to the rich boletus harvest.)
It turns out that in just seven weeks I not only got rid of my senile presbyopia, began to read, work on a computer without glasses, as planned, but also improved my vision qualitatively. A pleasant surprise.
As Zhdanov predicted, during these two weeks I completely lost my spectacled inferiority complex. Returning to Moscow, I didn’t even remember about the eye “crutches”. It’s as if I haven’t worn it for two decades.
If I had immediately taken a vacation for a month, then in the village, deprived of the opportunity and RESPONSIBILITY to type on a computer, I would have achieved the goal of a week in 4, maximum 5. Law: the less you wear glasses, the faster your vision is restored! But I conducted an experiment in real conditions big city. In working mode. Without changing anything in your schedule, lifestyle, habits, nutrition.
Don't waste your time!
Perhaps the main question for beginners and those who are just planning to train using the Zhdanov method is where to find the time to train? So much, they say, was written in the newspaper! Don't worry, friends. The professor and I specifically gave detailed descriptions of the training so that everyone could understand what and how to do. It takes little time to complete. If you have a passionate desire to get rid of glasses, is it really difficult to allocate 5 to 7 minutes several times a day for palming and exercise?
Think better about how much time you spend aimlessly every day on planning boards, meetings, meetings, smoking breaks, in queues, commuting, etc. Use these lost hours and minutes wisely. Draw with your eyes on walls, windows in meeting rooms, offices, savings banks, hospitals, shops, hairdressers, bus interiors, subway cars... One colleague said the other day that in the gym he manages to train his eyes at the same time as his muscles.
Watch your favorite movie or show in the evening - bam! - an advertisement popped up at the most interesting place. Calm down, citizens! Don't click the remote control - it's useless. TV bosses agreed to launch commercials simultaneously on different channels. Rub your palms until warm, close your eyes and indulge in palming. Let your eyes rest from the flickering screen. You can also do eye exercises during TV commercial breaks.
Again, remember - eye training must be strictly performed incrementally until you lose your glasses. Don't stop halfway. After a seven-week experiment, to consolidate the success, I continued to purposefully do eye exercises and other exercises for another month. Gradually reducing the time and number of classes. Now I don’t do anything special anymore. Tired eyes at the computer - three-minute palming! I’m on the subway or minibus, and I automatically do Zhdanov exercises to keep in shape and not waste time. Not every day anymore. If the weather is clear, I do solarization in the sun. I really like this main exercise for relaxing the eyes (alas, Moscow rarely indulges in on sunny days). That's all my current activities.