LC control no. | nr 89004607 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Shushkevich, Stanislaŭ |
Variant(s) | Shushkevich, S. (Stanislaŭ) Shushkevich, Stanislav Stanislavovich Schuschkewitsch, Stanislau Stanislawowitsch Шушкевіч, Станіслаў |
Birth date | 1934-12-15 |
Death date | 2022-05-04 |
Place of birth | Minsk (Belarus) |
Place of death | Minsk (Belarus) |
Field of activity | Belarus--Politics and government Engineering Physics |
Profession or occupation | Politicians Engineering teachers Physics teachers |
Special note | Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project. Non-Latin script reference not evaluated. |
Found in | Drei GUS-Führer : Portraits von Jelzin, Krawtschuk und Schuschkewitsch, 1993: p. 30 (Stanislau Stanislawowitsch Schuschkewitsch; b. 12/15/34 in Minsk) p. 39 (Stanislav Shushkevich) Wikipedia, February 10, 2015: (Stanislav Stanislavovich Shushkevich; Belarusian: Станіслаў Станіслававіч Шушкевіч; romanized: Stanisłaŭ Stanisłavavič Šuškievič; Russian: Станислав Станиславович Шушкевич; born December 15, 1934 in Minsk; a Belarusian politician and scientist) <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Shushkevich> Washington post WWW site, viewed May 4, 2022 (in obituary dated "today": Stanislav Shushkevich, who steered Belarus to independence during the breakup of the Soviet Union and served as its first leader, died May 4 in Minsk. He was 87. Mr. Shushkevich, a university professor of engineering and physics, became a lawmaker in Belarus during Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's political reforms. After a botched hard-line coup against Gorbachev in August 1991, he was elected to lead the then-republic as the speaker of the Belarusian legislature. Mr. Shushkevich was born in Minsk on Dec. 15, 1934) |