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                <text>"Финский военный музей Sotamuseo." Финский военный музей Sotamuseo. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://miniaviamodel.ru/museum/sotamuseo.php&gt;&#13;
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"Friends of Refugees." Friends of Refugees. N.p., 4 June 2012. Web. 30 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://forefugees.com/tag/molotov-cocktail/&gt;.&#13;
&#13;
"The Molotov Cocktail." The Molotov Cocktail. Freedom Manual, 28 Dec. 2009. Web. 30 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://freedommanual.blogspot.com/2009/12/molotov-coctail.html&gt;.</text>
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                <text>Linda Buehler</text>
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                <text> 1936-09-01</text>
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                <text>© 2003–2009 PunBB. &#13;
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© 2014 YouTube, LLC.&#13;
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                <text>Existing first as a makeshift, anti-Soviet bomb, the Molotov cocktail has taken on meaning as not only a material weapon of guerilla warfare, but also an international symbol of resistance. As an explosive device, the Molotov cocktail has a long history of deployment by revolutionary, ironically anti-soviet, forces. This tradition carries over into the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and contemporary crisis in the Ukraine. Beyond that, the Molotov cocktail also holds meaning as a cultural object of resistance, seen in its idiomatic appropriation by agents of the American media and entertainment culture.</text>
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                <text>Autostat Analytic Agency. http://www.autostat.ru/news/view/1242/</text>
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                <text>The Lada 2100 (“Zhiguli”) was a type of car produced in the Soviet Union by the Lada company. The car, modeled after the Fiat 124 and marketed as the “people’s car” became available for purchase in 1970 in the Soviet Union. However, a commercial agreement with the Italian-maker Fiat restricted exportation until the Fiat 124 was no longer on the market. Therefore, after distribution of the Fiat 124 ceased in 1974, the Lada 2100 became available in Europe and Latin America. Although the car sold poorly due to its primitive construction, its production represented the advent of Soviet industrialization.</text>
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                <text> The Museum of Russian Art. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Apr. 2014. &lt;http://tmora.org/exhibition/matryoshka-the-russian-nesting-doll/&gt;. &#13;
&#13;
Terletski, Michael. Matryoshka Nesting Dolls." Nesting Dolls History. N.p., n.d. Web. 29 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://russian-crafts.com/crafts-history/nesting-dolls-history.html&gt;</text>
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                <text>Flourishing under Stalin-era reinvention of Russian national culture, Russian lacquer crafts were creations of  a Tsarist age. In fact, it was from Japanese toys and boxes that Russian craftsmen took inspiration, so it is on a borrowed canvas that this new mythology of Russian folk culture is displayed. The biography of Russian lacquer crafts is the story of an invented tradition, bridging both Russia’s relationship to the East and the Soviet relationship to the culture of pre-revolutionary Russia.</text>
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1900 - Nesting doll first presented at World Fair in Paris&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The Website contains intellectual property copyright materials and works belonging to the Trustees of The Tank Museum and others, from whom the Trustees have made all reasonable efforts to obtain full consent to publish their works and materials on the Website [and to permit their use as hereinafter specified].&#13;
&#13;
Your right to access, use, print and download from The Tank Museum website is subject to your strict compliance with the terms and conditions as set out below:&#13;
&#13;
Definitions&#13;
The "Materials" means any information, artwork, text, video, audio, animation or picture files contained and comprised in the Website in whole or any part thereof and the "Museum" means The Trustees of The Tank Museum.&#13;
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However, the following acts are prohibited, without the prior written consent of the Museum. To:&#13;
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1. copy, reproduce, publish, post, transmit or distribute the Materials in any kind of medium;&#13;
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7. commercially publish or exploit the Materials in any manner.&#13;
&#13;
In using the Materials you warrant to the Museum that you will not knowingly infringe its intellectual property rights nor will you knowingly breach the intellectual property rights of any third party and you will comply fully with the terms and conditions contained herein.&#13;
&#13;
To request the Museum's written permission to use the Materials for any prohibited purposes or any purpose other than the purpose permitted hereunder, you must send an e-mail to the Librarian@tankmuseum.co.uk. Please note that the Museum is not obliged to give you any such permission.&#13;
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                <text>http://www.tretyakovgallery.ru/ru/calendar/exhibitions/exhibitions2334/</text>
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                <text>http://www.mintorgmuseum.ru/vocabulary/84/ -- Sturgeon caviar, from the Russian Museum of Trade website</text>
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