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  1. Ivan Mikhailovich Sidorenko (Russian: Ива́н Миха́йлович Сидоре́нко; 12 September 1919 – 19 February 1994) was a Red Army officer and a Hero of the Soviet Union, who served during World War II. He was one of the top Soviet snipers in the war, with five hundred confirmed kills.

    • 1939–1945
    • Major
  2. Knyaz Ivan Mikhailovich Obolensky ( Russian: Ива́н Миха́йлович Оболе́нский ), or Prince John Obolenski (1853 – 28 February 1910), was an Imperial Russian Lieutenant-General . Early life and ancestry. He was a member of a Rurikid princely Obolensky family, whose ancestors once ruled one of the Upper Principalities.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ivan_MaiskyIvan Maisky - Wikipedia

    Ivan Mikhailovich Maisky (also transliterated as "Maysky"; Russian: Ива́н Миха́йлович Ма́йский) (19 January 1884 – 3 September 1975) was a Soviet diplomat, historian and politician who served as the Soviet Union's ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1932 to 1943, including much of the period of the Second World War.

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  5. Ivan Mikhailovich Sidorenko was a Hero of the Soviet Union and one of the best snipers in the Red Army. He is credited with 500 confirmed kills, and is another sniper who was mostly self-taught and did not go through Soviet sniper training.

  6. Abstract. Contribution of the outstanding russian physiologist Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov to establishment and development of neurophysiology and psychophysiology is considered. Analysis is presented of I.M. Sechenov’s fundamental discoveries that laid foundation of the modern neurophysiology.

    • I. E. Kanunikov
    • 2004
  7. Abstract. Presents biographic information about Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov (1829-1905), a Russian physiologist, who is regarded as the founder of the science of psychology in Russia. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)

  8. theories of thought processes. In thought: Elements of thought. …three scholars—the 19th-century Russian physiologist Ivan Mikhailovich Sechenov; the American founder of behaviourism, John B. Watson; and Piaget—independently arrived at the conclusion that the activities that serve as elements of thinking are internalized or “fractional ...

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