Ministry of Construction Materials Industry

The Ministry of Construction Materials Industry (Minstroymaterialov; Russian: Министерство промышленности строительных материалов CCCP) was a government ministry in the Soviet Union.

Originally established in 1939: disestablished in 1957; reestablished in 1963 as State Committee and renamed Ministry of Construction Materials Industry in 1965.[1] The ministry was responsible for state production of construction materials.

List of ministers

Source:[2][3]

  • Leonid Sosnin (24.1.1939 - 21.12.1944)
  • Lazar Kaganovich (21.12.1944 - 12.3.1947)
  • Semjon Ginzburg (12.3.1947 - 29.5.1950)
  • Pavel Yudin (29.5.1950 - 10.4.1956)
  • Lazar Kaganovich (3.11.1956 - 4.7.1957)
  • Ivan Grishmanov (2.10.1965 - 4.1.1979)
  • Aleksei Jasin (24.1.1979 - 15.7.1985)
  • Sergei Voyenushkin (15.7.1985 - 17.7.1989)
gollark: MEMS accelerometers and gyroscopes are in every phone and basically never fail. It's probably fine.
gollark: (explanation: ||BERT is a language-modelling neural network from 2019. One common illustration of problems which could happen with sufficiently powerful AI (there's even a great game about it at https://www.decisionproblem.com/paperclips/index2.html) is a "paperclip maximizer", which is programmed to make paperclips for a factory owner or something, and eventually attempts to convert the entire universe into paperclips to maximize an objective defined as "have as many paperclips as possible".||)
gollark: https://ia802706.us.archive.org/33/items/TedChiangSeventyTwoLetters/Ted_Chiang_72_Letters.pdf
gollark: There was a Ted Chiang story about that actually.
gollark: Consciousness is handled by the soul, which is stored in the appendix.

References

  1. Directory of Soviet officials. National organizations. National Foreign Assessment Center. February 1989. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  2. "Governments of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 1917-1964". Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  3. "Governments of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 1964-1991". Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2017.


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