The Ukrainian Weekly 1995, No.13
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Hockey Club to Be Called 'Komets;'
Fort Wayne Komets est. 1952 Official Guide and Record Book 20152015 Fort Wayne Komet Hockey Club 1010 Memorial Way Fort Wayne, Indiana 46805 www.Komets.com TABLE OF CONTENTS Page All Time Records -- REGULAR SEASON 40 Directory, Fort Wayne Komets 3 Season-By-Season Records 40 Affiliations announcement 4 Home and Road Records 41 Affiliates Directory/Colorado Avalanche (NHL) 5 Head Coaching Records, Season-By-Season 42 Afflates Directory/San Antonio Rampage (AHL) 6 Opening Game Records, Season Openers 43 ECHL Directory/Mileage Chart 7 Opening Game Records, Home Openers 44 Welcome From ECHL Commissioner 8 Thanksgiving Day Games 45 Directory, Fort Wayne Area Media 9 New Year’s Eve Games 46 Komet History 10 Team-Vs-Team, Active Teams Records 47 Komet History -- BIrth Of Komet Hockey 11 Regular Season Championships 47 Komet History -- What’s In A Name 12 Playoff Championships 47 Komet History -- First Finals Berth 13 Attendance records, regular season, playoffs 47 Komet History-- George’s Charlie Ryan Story 14 Top 10 Longest Overtime Games 47 Komet History -- 50-Goal Scorers 16 Most Home Wins in a Season 47 Komet History -- Tribute 17 Komets 0-0 Games (after regulation time) 47 Komet History -- Billy Richardson/Beliveau’s Stick 18 Top Point Leaders 48 Bio, Stephen Franke 20 50-Goal Scorers 48 Bio, Michael Franke 21 Goaltender Best Goals-Against Averages 48 Bio, David Franke 21 100+ Point Seasons, Individuals 48 Bio, Scott Sproat 22 Most Career Games Played 48 Bio, Chuck Bailey 22 Komets TEAM Regular Season Records 49 Bio, Bob Chase 23 Komets -
Geologists of Russian Origin in Latin America
REVISTA DEL MUSEO DE LA PLATA 2018, Volumen 3, Número 2: 223-295 Geologists of Russian origin in Latin America P. Tchoumatchenco1 , A.C. Riccardi 2 , †M. Durand Delga3 , R. Alonso 4 , 7 8 M. Wiasemsky5 , D. Boltovskoy 6 , R. Charrier , E. Minina 1Geological Institute, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Acad. G. Bonchev Str. Bl. 24, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria, [email protected] 2Museo de La Plata, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina, [email protected] 3Passed away August19, 2012 4Universidad Nacional de Salta, Argentina, [email protected] 581, Chemin du Plan de Charlet, F-74190 Passy, France, [email protected] 6Dep. Ecologia, Genetica y Evolucion, Fac. Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Univ. de Buenos Aires, Argentina, [email protected] 7History of Geology Group, Sociedad Geológica de Chile, Santiago de Chile, [email protected] 8State Geological Museum “V.I.Vernadsky”, Mohovaya ul. 11/11, Moscow 125009, Russian Federation, [email protected] REVISTA DEL MUSEO DE LA PLATA / 2018, Volumen 3, Número 2: 223-295 / ISSN 2545-6377 ISSN 2545-6377 UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE LA PLATA - FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS NATURALES Y MUSEO Revista del Museo de La Plata 2018 Volumen 3, Número 2 (Julio-Diciembre): 223-295 Geologists of Russian origin in Latin America P. Tchoumatchenco1, A.C. Riccardi2, †M. Durand Delga3, R. Alonso4, M. Wiasemsky5, D. Boltovskoy6, R. Charrier7, E. Minina8 1 Geological Institute, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Acad. G. Bonchev Str. Bl. 24, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria, [email protected] 2 Museo de La Plata, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina, [email protected] 3 Passed away August19, 2012 4 Universidad Nacional de Salta, Argentina, [email protected] 5 81, Chemin du Plan de Charlet, F-74190 Passy, France, [email protected] 6 Dep. -
Olena Fedyuk Marta Kindler Editors Lessons from Migration Studies
IMISCOE Research Series Olena Fedyuk Marta Kindler Editors Ukrainian Migration to the European Union Lessons from Migration Studies IMISCOE Research Series This series is the official book series of IMISCOE, the largest network of excellence on migration and diversity in the world. It comprises publications which present empirical and theoretical research on different aspects of international migration. The authors are all specialists, and the publications a rich source of information for researchers and others involved in international migration studies. The series is published under the editorial supervision of the IMISCOE Editorial Committee which includes leading scholars from all over Europe. The series, which contains more than eighty titles already, is internationally peer reviewed which ensures that the book published in this series continue to present excellent academic standards and scholarly quality. Most of the books are available open access. For information on how to submit a book proposal, please visit: http://www. imiscoe.org/publications/how-to-submit-a-book-proposal. More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/13502 Olena Fedyuk • Marta Kindler Editors Ukrainian Migration to the European Union Lessons from Migration Studies Editors Olena Fedyuk Marta Kindler Marie Curie Changing Employment ITN Centre of Migration Research University of Strathclyde University of Warsaw Glasgow, UK Warsaw, Poland ISSN 2364-4087 ISSN 2364-4095 (electronic) IMISCOE Research Series ISBN 978-3-319-41774-5 ISBN 978-3-319-41776-9 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-41776-9 Library of Congress Control Number: 2016953852 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2016. This book is published open access. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 1997, No.46
www.ukrweekly.com INSIDE: • Ukrainian community life in Russia — page 3. • Veterans’ Day/Remembrance Day features, reports on Ukrainian-American • Military Association, Ukrainian American Veterans — pages 8-11. HE KRAINI A N EEKLY T PublishedU by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profitW association Vol. LXV No. 46 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1997 $1.25/$2 in Ukraine UNA General Assembly holds October Revolution Day marked by clashes by Roman Woronowycz With more than 80,000 people taking pre-convention annual meeting Kyiv Press Bureau part in various demonstrations and com- memorations throughout Ukraine, some to by Roma Hadzewycz gates (who must ratify any changes by a KYIV — Nationalists and Communists commemorate the Bolshevik October two-thirds majority); clashed in Lviv on November 7 during KERHONKSON, N.Y. — The Revolution and others the slaughter of thou- • adopted a budget for 1998 of demonstrations and rallies on the 80th sands of Ukrainians during the 1930s in Ukrainian National Association’s General $10,774,000 in income and $11,024,000 anniversary of the October Revolution. Assembly met here at the UNA estate, what is called the Fusilladed Renaissance in expenses; Five people were injured and five others Soyuzivka, on November 6-8 for its annual (Rozstriliane Vidrodzhennia), the violence • confirmed the Executive Committee’s have been arrested. meeting — its last before the regular con- in Lviv was relatively minor. However, it acceptance of a request made by Treasurer The violence began when some 300 vention of the largest Ukrainian fraternal caused an outcry from Communists in the Alexander Blahitka for a leave of absence Communists and Socialists veered away Verkhovna Rada, who refused to register benefit society, which is scheduled to take for medical reasons, effective immediately place in May of next year in Toronto. -
Folklore and the Construction of National Identity in Nineteenth Century Russian Literature
Folklore and the Construction of National Identity in Nineteenth Century Russian Literature Jessika Aguilar Submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Columbia University 2016 © 2016 Jessika Aguilar All rights reserved Table of Contents 1. Introduction……………………………………………………………………………..…..1 2. Alexander Pushkin: Folklore without the Folk……………………………….20 3. Nikolai Gogol: Folklore and the Fragmentation of Authorship……….54 4. Vladimir Dahl: The Folk Speak………………………………………………..........84 5. Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………........116 6. Bibliography………………………………………………………………………………122 i Introduction In his “Literary Reveries” of 1834 Vissarion Belinsky proclaimed, “we have no literature” (Belinskii PSS I:22). Belinsky was in good company with his assessment. Such sentiments are rife in the critical essays and articles of the first third of the nineteenth century. A decade earlier, Aleksandr Bestuzhev had declared that, “we have a criticism but no literature” (Leighton, Romantic Criticism 67). Several years before that, Pyotr Vyazemsky voiced a similar opinion in his article on Pushkin’s Captive of the Caucasus : “A Russian language exists, but a literature, the worthy expression of a mighty and virile people, does not yet exist!” (Leighton, Romantic Criticism 48). These histrionic claims are evidence of Russian intellectuals’ growing apprehension that there was nothing Russian about the literature produced in Russia. There was a prevailing belief that -
2012 Hockey Conference Program
Putting it on Ice III: Constructing the Hockey Family Abstracts Carly Adams & Hart Cantelon University of Lethbridge Sustaining Community through High Performance Women’s Hockey in Warner, Alberta Canada is becoming increasingly urbanized with small rural communities subject to amalgamation or threatened by decline. Statistics Canada data indicate that by 1931, for the first time in Canadian history, more citizens (54%) lived in urban centre than rural communities. By 2006, this percentage had reached 80%. This demographic shift has serious ramifications for small rural communities struggling to survive. For Warner, a Southern Alberta agricultural- based community of approximately 380 persons, a unique strategy was adopted to imagine a sense of community and to allow its residents the choice to remain ‘in place’ (Epp and Whitson, 2006). Located 65 km south of Lethbridge, the rural village was threatened with the potential closure of the consolidated Kindergarten to Grade 12 school (ages 5-17). In an attempt to save the school and by extension the town, the Warner School and the Horizon School Division devised and implemented the Warner Hockey School program to attract new students to the school and the community. By 2003, the Warner vision of an imagined community (Anderson, 1983) came to include images of high performance female hockey, with its players as visible celebrities at the rink, school, and on main street. The purpose of this paper is to explore the social conditions in rural Alberta that led to and influenced the community of Warner to take action to ensure the survival of their local school and town. -
Ukrainians in Russia: a Bibliographic and Statistical Guide
Research Report No. 55 Ukrainians in Russia: A Bibliographic and Statistical Guide Compiled by Serge Cipko Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press University of Alberta Edmonton 1994 Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press Occasional Research Reports The Institute publishes research reports periodically. Copies may be ordered from the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, 352 Athabasca Hall, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E8. The name of the publication series and the substantive material in each issue (unless otherwise noted) are copyrighted by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press. PRINTED IN CANADA Occasional Research Reports Ukrainians in Russia: A Bibliographic and Statistical Guide Compiled by Serge Cipko Research Report No. 55 Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press University of Alberta Edmonton 1994 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/ukrainiansinruss55cipk Table of Contents Introduction 1 A Select Bibliography 3 Newspaper Articles 9 Ukrainian Periodicals and Journals Published in Russia 15 Periodicals Published Abroad by Ukrainians from Russia 18 Biographies of Ukrainians in Russia 21 Biographies of Ukrainians from Russia Resettled Abroad 31 Statistical Compendium of Ukrainians in Russia 33 Addresses of Ukrainian Organizations in Russia 39 Periodicals and Journals Consulted 42 INTRODUCTION Ukrainians who live in countries bordering on Ukraine constitute perhaps the second largest ethnic minority in Europe after the Russians. Despite their significant numbers, however, these Ukrainians remain largely unknown to the international community, receiving none of the attention that has been accorded, for example, to Russian minorities in the successor states to the former Soviet Union. According to the last Soviet census of 1989, approximately 4.3 million Ukrainians live in the Russian Federation; unofficial estimates of the size of this group run considerably higher. -
Geologists of Russian Origin in the Francophone Countries
Tchoumatchenco, P., Durand-Delga, M., Ricour, J. and Wiazemsky, M., 2016. Geologists of Russian origin in the francophone countries. Boletín Geoló- gico y Minero, 127 (2/3): 711-738 ISSN: 0366-0176 Geologists of Russian origin in the francophone countries Platon Tchoumatchenco(1), † Michel Durand-Delga, Jean Ricour(2) and Michel Wiazemsky(3) (1) Geological Institute, Institute “Acad Str. Dimitrov”, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Acad.G. BonchevStr., 24, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria [email protected] (2) Résidence Valmante F1, 13009 Marseille, France. [email protected] (3) 81 chemin Plan Charles, 74190 Passy, France [email protected] † décédé le 19 août 2012 ABSTRACT Many ethnic Russian geologists have lived and worked in Francophone countries. We describe in this paper the life and career of geologists (i.e. all Earth scientists - geologists, mineralogists, tectonicians, geophysi- cists, geochemists, paleontologists, mining and drilling engineers, hydrogeologists, cosmos - geologists, etc.), regardless of their original nationality (Russians, Ukrainians, Tatars, Germans, etc.) born in the terri- tory of the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union or the Russian Federation. Key words: Russian geologists, Francophone countries, the History of Geology Geólogos de origen ruso en países francófonos RESUMEN Muchos geólogos de etnia rusa han vivido y trabajado en países francófonos. En este trabajo describimos la vida y la carrera de geólogos (esto es, científicos de la Tierra: geólogos, mineralogistas, tectónicistas, geofí- sicos, geoquímicos, paleontólogos, ingenieros de minas y de sondeos, hidrogeólogos, geólogos planeta- rios, etc.) sin tener en cuenta su nacionalidad original (rusos, ucranianos, tártaros, alemanes, etc.) nacidos en el territorio del Imperio Ruso, la Unión Soviética o la Federación Rusa. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 1993
INSIDE: • Kravchuk denies media reports of change in no-nukes policy — page 2. • New chief of Freedom House promotes engaged' foreign policy — page 3. • The Ukraine Famine Commission: a look at its beginnings — page 7. THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association Vol. LXI No. 43 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1993 50 cents Chornobyl plant to stay open RFE/RL announces cutbacks, layoffs by Marta Kolomayets reactors at the Khmelnytsky, Rivne and (BIB), which oversees RFE/RL and the Kyyiv Press Bureau Zaporizhzhia power plants, as soon as six Munich Research InstituteU.S . Information Agency, which has months from now and no later than in control of Voice of America (VOA). KYYIV — Motivated by Ukraine's two years. All of these stations have to close, at least for now Initially, the president wanted to end all energy crisis, lawmakers here abandoned VVER-1000 reactors, which are consid budgeting for the radios, but after much safety concerns, voting on Thursday ered safer than the RBMK model at the by Roman Woronowycz protest by the Congress and national and morning, October 21 to keep the Chornobyl plant. international leaders, he backed down. It JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Radio Free Chornobyl nuclear power station open Ukraine's environmental lobby con eventually was decided to combine Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) and to lift a moratorium on the construc demned the decisions, and Green World RFE/RL with VOA under the oversight President Eugene Pell announced in tion of new nuclear plants. distributed a leaflet in Parliament that of a new board. -
University of Florida Thesis Or Dissertation Formatting
ETHNIC WAR AND PEACE IN POST-SOVIET EURASIA By SCOTT GRANT FEINSTEIN A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2016 © 2016 Scott Grant Feinstein To my Mom and Dad ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In the course of completing this monograph I benefited enormously from the generosity of others. To my committee chair, Benjamin B. Smith, I express my sincere appreciation for his encouragement and guidance. Ben not only taught me to systematically research political phenomena, but also the importance of pursuing a complete and parsimonious explanation. Throughout my doctoral studies Ben remained dedicated to me and my research, and with his incredible patience he tolerated and motivated my winding intellectual path. I thank my committee co-chair, Michael Bernhard, for his hours spent reading early manuscript drafts, support in pursuing a multi-country project, and detailed attention to clear writing. Michael’s appreciation of my dissertation vision and capacity gave this research project its legs. Ben and Michael provided me exceptionally valuable advice. I am also indebted to the help provided by my other committee members – Conor O’Dwyer, Ingrid Kleespies and Beth Rosenson – who inspired creativity and scientific rigor, always provided thoughtful and useful comments, and kept me searching for the big picture. Among institutions, I wish to gratefully acknowledge the support of the Center of European Studies at the University of Florida, IIE Fulbright Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, IREX, the American Councils, and the Department of Political Science at the University of Florida. -
Ukrainians in Russia Fee...\222S Annexation of Crimea
Ukrainians in Russia feel chill after Russia’s annexation of Crimea April 8, 2014, 5:42 p.m. | Ukraine — by Nataliya Trach Russia is home to more than 3 million Ukrainians, some of w hom are now feeling ostracized because of the crisis in relations betw een Ukraine and Russia after the Kremlin annexation of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula. The threat of a Russian military invasion of Ukraine and dismemberment of the former Soviet republic remains. In the photo, a view of the Kremlin along the Moscow River in Moscow . © Ukrainian New s The lives of two million Ukrainians in Russia have become more difficult after Russia’s seizure of Crimea and a new government in Kyiv that the Kremlin does not recognize as legitimate, after the EuroMaidan Revolution toppled pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych on Feb. 22. But some Ukrainians in Russia say that life was never easy for them. Ukrainians constitute some 3 million – or roughly 2 percent – of the Russian Federation’s 143 million people. While everyday life and communication with friends and relatives has not changed much, some Ukrainians say they face negative attitudes toward Ukraine as a sovereign nation. The animosity is fueled by unrelenting Kremlin propaganda that is anti-Western and anti-Ukrainian and reflected in Russia’s state- controlled or state-censored news media. Nowadays in Russia, Ukrainians have neither national schools nor any Ukrainian press. “While we are the largest diaspora in Russia, the attitude towards us has always been the worst,” says Victor Hirzhov, an executive secretary of the Ukrainian Congress in Russia, co-chairman of the regional public organization Ukrainians of Moscow. -
Dissertation Final Aug 31 Formatted
Identity Gerrymandering: How the Armenian State Constructs and Controls “Its” Diaspora by Kristin Talinn Rebecca Cavoukian A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Political Science University of Toronto © Copyright by Kristin Cavoukian 2016 Identity Gerrymandering: How the Armenian State Constructs and Controls “Its” Diaspora Kristin Talinn Rebecca Cavoukian Doctor of Philosophy Department of Political Science University of Toronto 2016 Abstract This dissertation examines the Republic of Armenia (RA) and its elites’ attempts to reframe state-diaspora relations in ways that served state interests. After 17 years of relatively rocky relations, in 2008, a new Ministry of Diaspora was created that offered little in the way of policy output. Instead, it engaged in “identity gerrymandering,” broadening the category of diaspora from its accepted reference to post-1915 genocide refugees and their descendants, to include Armenians living throughout the post-Soviet region who had never identified as such. This diluted the pool of critical, oppositional diasporans with culturally closer and more compliant emigrants. The new ministry also favoured geographically based, hierarchical diaspora organizations, and “quiet” strategies of dissent. Since these were ultimately attempts to define membership in the nation, and informal, affective ties to the state, the Ministry of Diaspora acted as a “discursive power ministry,” with boundary-defining and maintenance functions reminiscent of the physical border policing functions of traditional power ministries. These efforts were directed at three different “diasporas:” the Armenians of Russia, whom RA elites wished to mold into the new “model” diaspora, the Armenians of Georgia, whose indigeneity claims they sought to discourage, and the “established” western diaspora, whose contentious public ii critique they sought to disarm.