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                <text>2. Artek. The children live in summer cottages and tents, spread out along the shore of the Black Sea. The rooms and halls in the cottages are bright and cozy.</text>
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                <text>Here and There in the Soviet Union. Baku. Geologist Sadykh Jafarov is shown here examining a survey map together with his assistant, Valentina Sozina, a participant in geological surveying expeditions. Jafarov recently shared a Stalin Prize with another geologist, Baba Baba-Zade, for the discovery of a major oil field of great importance in Azerbaijan.</text>
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                <text>19. 29th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution (Science) In Soviet times some 380,000 lines of the Kirghiz folk epic, Manas, have been recorded. Before the revolution these poetic tales were preserved only in the memories of the bards. The Kirghiz Branch of the Academy of Sciences is now completing the recording of the third part of the epic. This is the folk bard and story teller, Sayakbai Karalayev (left) whose verses are being recorded by Tashim Baijiyev.</text>
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              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                  <text> Harvard Library does not claim to own copyright in material in this digitized collection and therefore cannot grant or deny permission for reproduction, publication, or other uses. It is the responsibility of scholars using this material to determine whether or not an item is protected by copyright or in the public domain.&#13;
Before the Decree of March 31, 1959, issued by the Presidium of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet, copyright in photographs was covered by the previous law: Section 12 of the Federal Copyright Act of 1928. This previous law required a special notice for photographs to maintain copyright. According to Section 12, “to maintain his copyright to photographs, the photographer shall mark each copy with the firm name or the personal name and address of the photographer, as well as with the year of publication of the photographic work.” [From Gsovski, V. (1949). Soviet civil law: v.2, Translation. P. 406] Photographs published without this notice either lost the copyright from the publication or forfeited an already complete right. See Levitsky, S. (1964). Introduction to Soviet copyright law: Status juris, end 1962 (Law in Eastern Europe ; no. 8). Leyden: Sythoff.</text>
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                <text>baku port 1</text>
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                <text>Azerbaijan</text>
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                <text>11. Baku, Capital of Soviet Azerbaijan. A view of the bay from the Fortress.Kyz-kala(Maiden Tower) is seen on the left and the minaret of the Mosque of Synyk-kale on the right. The latter bears an inscription carved out in 1077.</text>
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