(1932-33 Oil) (with) (1932-33 Chemistry)

Left Side (1932-33 Oil) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: In the five-year plan, we will build new steam engines and launch them on railroads. Full trains of tractors will be sent to collective farm fields. Steam engines and tractors will shout: "More oil! More gasoline!" Many mach...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laptev, A.M.
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: GIZ (State Publishing House) 1930
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~361676~90129131
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Summary:Left Side (1932-33 Oil) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: In the five-year plan, we will build new steam engines and launch them on railroads. Full trains of tractors will be sent to collective farm fields. Steam engines and tractors will shout: "More oil! More gasoline!" Many machines need oil. Workers will give the country oil. The oil output will increase by three and a half times. At the end of the five-year plan, 42 million tons of oil will be produced per year. Right Side (1932-33 Chemistry) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: At the end of the five-year plan, chemical plants will provide much more fertilizers. Not twice, not five, not ten times, but twenty-five times more fertilizers than before. 15 million tons of fertilizers will be produced annually by chemical plants. Fertilizers are needed for the fields of collective farms. Chemical defense is the protection against pests. The Red Army, armed with chemicals, will protect the USSR! "A fine copy of this rare complex Constructivist panorama produced by A.M. Laptev, a gifted Soviet avant-garde graphic artist and graduate of VKhUTEMAS-VEKhUTEIN. Created to promote the vast industrial progress of Stalin's Five Year Plan through maps, charts, "Isotypes" and flaps that fold out to form an engaging visual essay on the then current economic state of the USSR. The panorama can be read in two directions: "The reader finds three maps: one for the electrification of the country, the second for the construction of factories, and the last for the collectivization of farms. Through these maps, young readers become familiar with a synchronic view of the Five-Year Plan . Turning the book over and starting from the back cover, the reader is presented with targets for ten aspects of Soviet industry: electricity, factory construction, iron, coal, oil, the chemical industry, bread production, forestry, transportation, and culture. Laptev illustrates the situation before the implementation of the 1927-28 Five-Year Plan with both the text and pictures. The ...