Armed conflicts in Abkhazia, Ingushetia, and Tajikistan; a state of emergency in Chechnia; the Russian navy blocked at the Poti base; the fall of the Russian ruble; the willingness of Ukraine to eliminate nuclear weapons; a meeting of the Russian Constitutional Court on the "Case of the Communist Party"; the decision of the Anglican church to ordain women as priests.
Contributors: Mishina, Irina (Anchor)
Series description: A program of Channel One, broadcasted since February 10, 1986. It surveys the information from the passed part of the day, including sport news and weather forecast. Broadcasted several times a day with the interval 2-3 hours. Until October 14, 1990, the program was called "News." Before 1991 the program was produced by the Studio of information programs of the Central Television, and from 1991 - by the newly crated Information Tevevision Agency. In 1986-1994 the program's timing was from 6 to 21 minutes. From October 1991, evening broadcasts were anchored by Tatiana Komarova, Sergei Medvedev, Irina Mishina, and Pavel Kasparov, and the night broadcasts were anchored by Mikhail Osokin and Dmitrii Kiselev. From February 1992 to September 1993 Sergei Dorenko was the anchorman of the evening issue instead of Pavel Kasparov.
Armed conflicts in Abkhazia, Ingushetia, and Tajikistan; a state of emergency in Chechnia; the Russian navy blocked at the Poti base; the fall of the Russian ruble; the willingness of Ukraine to eliminate nuclear weapons; a meeting of the Russian Constitutional Court on the "Case of the Communist Party"; the decision of the Anglican church to ordain women as priests.
Contributors: Mishina, Irina (Anchor)
Series description: A program of Channel One, broadcasted since February 10, 1986. It surveys the information from the passed part of the day, including sport news and weather forecast. Broadcasted several times a day with the interval 2-3 hours. Until October 14, 1990, the program was called "News." Before 1991 the program was produced by the Studio of information programs of the Central Television, and from 1991 - by the newly crated Information Tevevision Agency. In 1986-1994 the program's timing was from 6 to 21 minutes. From October 1991, evening broadcasts were anchored by Tatiana Komarova, Sergei Medvedev, Irina Mishina, and Pavel Kasparov, and the night broadcasts were anchored by Mikhail Osokin and Dmitrii Kiselev. From February 1992 to September 1993 Sergei Dorenko was the anchorman of the evening issue instead of Pavel Kasparov.