Member Wire Transfer Request to UKREXIM Bank Proxann] Pro

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Member Wire Transfer Request to UKREXIM Bank Proxann] Pro Ukrainian Selfreliance Michigan Federal Credit Union 26791 Ryan Road, Warren, MI 48091 Phone: 586-756-3300 – Fax: 586-756-4316 – email: [email protected] Member Wire Transfer Request to UKREXIM Bank Proxann] pro Peresylku Hro‘ej na Ukra\nu Requested by Date Osoba ]ka perekazu= hro‘i Data Amount Currency Type Debit Account Suma Nomer raxunku z ]koho robyt/s] perekaz I hereby authorize Ukrainian Selfreliance Michigan Federal Credit Union to transfer funds to Ukraine per the following instructions: Cym ] doru;a[ Ukra\ns/kij Mi;igans/kij Federal/nij Kooperatyvi perekazaty vyqevkazanu sumu za adreso[ : First Name Father’s First Name Last Name Im’] Po bat/kovi Prizvyqe Street Name and Building/Apartment Number Nazva vulyci ta nomer budynku Oblast Region Oblast/ Rajon Village City Selo Misto Country Zip Code Kra\na Po‘tovyj Indeks Passport Number Account Number Nomer Pasportu Nomer Raxunku v Banku Telephone Number Nomer telefonu Funds are routed to Kyiv and transferred to one of the branch cities: (please check to which city the final transfer is to be made) Bud/laska, vkawit/ do ]koho z nyw;e pere;yslenyx mist robyt/s] perekaz : Armyansk Ivano-Frankivsk Lysychansk Shostka Berdychiv Izmail Luhansk Simferopol Berehovo Kalush Lutsk Storozhynets Brody Kamyanets-Podilsk. Lviv Sumy Cherkasy Kharkiv Mariupol Ternopil Chernivtsi Kherson Mukachevo Truskavets Chernihiv Khmelnytskyj Mykolaiv Tyachiv Chortkiv Kirovohrad Netishyn Uzhhorod Chuhuiv Korostyshiv Novoselytsya Vinnytsa Dnipropetrovsk Kramatorsk Odesa Voznesensk Donetsk Kremenchuk Poltava Yalta Drohobych Kryvyj Rih Rivne Yavoriv Illichivsk Kyiv Sarny Zaporizzhya Zhytomyr US Wire Transfer Fee: $ 35.00 Purpose: Komisijnyj zbir Kooperatyvy Samopomi; Receiving bank determines their fee USMFCU Staff Signature Sign Here USMFCU Member Signature Date Sent Office Use Only: Warren .
Recommended publications
  • Human Potential of the Western Ukrainian Borderland
    Journal of Geography, Politics and Society 2017, 7(2), 17–23 DOI 10.4467/24512249JG.17.011.6627 HUMAN POTENTIAL OF THE WESTERN UKRAINIAN BORDERLAND Iryna Hudzelyak (1), Iryna Vanda (2) (1) Chair of Economic and Social Geography, Faculty of Geography, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, Doroshenka 41, 79000 Lviv, Ukraine, e-mail: [email protected] (corresponding author) (2) Chair of Economic and Social Geography, Faculty of Geography, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, Doroshenka 41, 79000 Lviv, Ukraine, e-mail: [email protected] Citation Hudzelyak I., Vanda I., 2017, Human potential of the Western Ukrainian borderland, Journal of Geography, Politics and Society, 7(2), 17–23. Abstract This article contains the analysis made with the help of generalized quantative parameters, which shows the tendencies of hu- man potential formation of the Western Ukrainian borderland during 2001–2016. The changes of number of urban and rural population in eighteen borderland rayons in Volyn, Lviv and Zakarpattia oblasts are evaluated. The tendencies of urbanization processes and resettlement of rural population are described. Spatial differences of age structure of urban and rural population are characterized. Key words Western Ukrainian borderland, human potential, population, depopulation, aging of population. 1. Introduction during the period of closed border had more so- cial influence from the West, which formed specific Ukraine has been going through the process of model of demographic behavior and reflected in dif- depopulation for some time; it was caused with ferent features of the human potential. significant reduction in fertility and essential mi- The category of human potential was developed gration losses of reproductive cohorts that lasted in economic science and conceptually was related almost a century.
    [Show full text]
  • Lviv Region : Facts and Figures
    MAIN LRSA CONTACT en LVIV REGION : FACTS AND FIGURES Regional centre Region’s total population Lviv 2530.0 thousand inhabitants, (5.9% of Ukraine’s general The region is located in three zones: forest, steppe, foothills population) including: 978.0 thousand inhabitants living in rural and mountainous areas of the Carpathians. Forests cover areas, 1534.0 thousand inhabitants livingin cities almost a one third of the total region area.. The flat part of the region is famous for its lakes. The main European watershed between the basins of the Baltic and Black seas passes through Currency territory of the region.. The Western Bug river (one The Ukrainian Hryvnia is the currency of Ukraine Ukrainian currency is of its tributaries is river Poltva), carries water to the Baltic Sea. the hryvnia (UAH),. The hryvnia comprises 100 kopiykas Paper, metal, Rivers Dniester, Styr and Ikva flows into the BlackSea. old and new banknotes are one UAH comprisesone hundred kopiykasin circulation. Contents Region’s largest cities Lviv (756.0 thousand inhabitants), Drohobych (95.0 thousand Working hours inhabitants), Chervonohrad (81 thousand inhabitants), Stryi Most institutions, both public and private, work eight hours per day (59 thousand inhabitants), Sambir (34,8 thousand from 9:00 to 18:00, with lunch lasting from 12:00 to 13:00. Saturday inhabitants), Boryslav (33.8 thousand inhabitants),Truskavets and Sunday are official daysoff. (28.8 thousand inhabitants). Region’s area Public holidays 21.8 thousand square kilometres January 1-New Year, January 7-Christmas, March 8 - International Women’s Day, Easter, May 1and 2 - International Workers’ Day, May, 9-Victory Day, Holy Trinity, June 28 - Constitution Day, August 24- Independence Day, October 14 - Fatherland Defender’s Day.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    Syracuse University SURFACE Religion College of Arts and Sciences 2005 Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine Samuel D. Gruber United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/rel Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Gruber, Samuel D., "Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine" (2005). Full list of publications from School of Architecture. Paper 94. http://surface.syr.edu/arc/94 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts and Sciences at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Religion by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Introduction
    State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES For map and other editors For international use Ukraine Kyiv “Kartographia” 2011 TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES FOR MAP AND OTHER EDITORS, FOR INTERNATIONAL USE UKRAINE State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Prepared by Nina Syvak, Valerii Ponomarenko, Olha Khodzinska, Iryna Lakeichuk Scientific Consultant Iryna Rudenko Reviewed by Nataliia Kizilowa Translated by Olha Khodzinska Editor Lesia Veklych ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ © Kartographia, 2011 ISBN 978-966-475-839-7 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction ................................................................ 5 2 The Ukrainian Language............................................ 5 2.1 General Remarks.............................................. 5 2.2 The Ukrainian Alphabet and Romanization of the Ukrainian Alphabet ............................... 6 2.3 Pronunciation of Ukrainian Geographical Names............................................................... 9 2.4 Stress .............................................................. 11 3 Spelling Rules for the Ukrainian Geographical Names....................................................................... 11 4 Spelling of Generic Terms ....................................... 13 5 Place Names in Minority Languages
    [Show full text]
  • Contemporary Socio-Economic Issues of Polish-Ukrainian Cross-Border Cooperation
    Center of European Projects European Neighbourhood Instrument Cross-border Cooperation Programme Poland-Belarus-Ukraine 2014-2020 Publication of the Scientifi c Papers of the International Research and Practical Conference Contemporary Socio-Economic Issues of Polish-Ukrainian Cross-border Cooperation Warsaw 2017 Center of European Projects European Neighbourhood Instrument Cross-border Cooperation Programme Poland-Belarus-Ukraine 2014-2020 Publication of the Scientifi c Papers of the International Research and Practical Conference Contemporary Socio-Economic Issues of Polish-Ukrainian Cross-border Cooperation Edited by: Leszek Buller Hubert Kotarski Yuriy Pachkovskyy Warsaw 2017 Publisher: Center of European Projects Joint Technical Secretariat of the ENI Cross-border Cooperation Programme Poland-Belarus-Ukraine 2014-2020 02-672 Warszawa, Domaniewska 39 a Tel: +48 22 378 31 00 Fax: +48 22 201 97 25 e-mail: [email protected] www.pbu2020.eu The international research and practical conference Contemporary Socio-Economic Issues of Polish-Ukrainian Cross-border Cooperation was held under the patronage of Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Economic Development and Finance Mr Mateusz Morawiecki. OF ECONOMIC The conference was held in partnership with: University of Rzeszów Ivan Franko National University of Lviv This document has been produced with the fi nancial assistance of the European Union, under Cross-border Cooperation Programme Poland-Belarus-Ukraine 2007-2013. The contents of this document are the sole respon- sibility of the Joint Technical Secretariat and can under no circumstances be regarded as refl ecting the position of the European Union. Circulation: 500 copies ISBN 978-83-64597-06-0 Dear Readers, We have the pleasure to present you this publication, which is a compendium of articles received for the Scientifi c Conference “Contemporary Socio-economic Issues of Polish-Ukrainian Cross-border Cooperation”, which took place on 15-17 November 2017 in Rzeszów and Lviv.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel Liberman Research Director Brookline, MA Katrina A. Krzysztofiak Laura Raybin Miller Program Manager Pembroke Pines, FL Patricia Hoglund Vincent Obsitnik Administrative Officer McLean, VA 888 17th Street, N.W., Suite 1160 Washington, DC 20006 Ph: ( 202) 254-3824 Fax: ( 202) 254-3934 E-mail: [email protected] May 30, 2005 Message from the Chairman One of the principal missions that United States law assigns the Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad is to identify and report on cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings in Central and Eastern Europe associated with the cultural heritage of U.S. citizens, especially endangered sites. The Congress and the President were prompted to establish the Commission because of the special problem faced by Jewish sites in the region: The communities that had once cared for the properties were annihilated during the Holocaust.
    [Show full text]
  • City Size and Functional Specialization As Factors of Smart Management: a Case of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine”
    “City size and functional specialization as factors of smart management: A case of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine” Roman Lozynskyy Oleh Hrymak Lesya Kushnir AUTHORS Oksana Terletska Myroslava Vovk Roman Lozynskyy, Oleh Hrymak, Lesya Kushnir, Oksana Terletska and ARTICLE INFO Myroslava Vovk (2021). City size and functional specialization as factors of smart management: A case of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. Problems and Perspectives in Management, 19(2), 384-397. doi:10.21511/ppm.19(2).2021.31 DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.19(2).2021.31 RELEASED ON Monday, 28 June 2021 RECEIVED ON Monday, 22 February 2021 ACCEPTED ON Thursday, 10 June 2021 LICENSE This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License JOURNAL "Problems and Perspectives in Management" ISSN PRINT 1727-7051 ISSN ONLINE 1810-5467 PUBLISHER LLC “Consulting Publishing Company “Business Perspectives” FOUNDER LLC “Consulting Publishing Company “Business Perspectives” NUMBER OF REFERENCES NUMBER OF FIGURES NUMBER OF TABLES 48 3 5 © The author(s) 2021. This publication is an open access article. businessperspectives.org Problems and Perspectives in Management, Volume 19, Issue 2, 2021 Roman Lozynskyy (Ukraine), Oleh Hrymak (Ukraine), Lesya Kushnir (Ukraine), Oksana Terletska (Ukraine), Myroslava Vovk (Ukraine) City size and functional BUSINESS PERSPECTIVES specialization as factors LLC “СPС “Business Perspectives” Hryhorii Skovoroda lane, 10, Sumy, 40022, Ukraine of smart management: www.businessperspectives.org A case of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine Abstract The process of understanding the factors that affect the implementation of smart man- Received on: 22nd of February, 2021 agement in cities is pivotal for using this concept to improve the well-being of the Accepted on: 10th of June, 2021 population.
    [Show full text]
  • Ukrainian Energy Market Pagina 1 Van 58
    //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 4.07.2018 Ukrainian energy market pagina 1 van 58 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// UKRAINIAN ENERGY MARKET Overview of the sector and future projects Publicatiedatum / 4.07.2018 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 4.07.2018 Ukrainian energy market pagina 2 van 58 ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS BCM Billion Cubic Metres CHPP Combined Heat and Power Plant EPC Engineering, Procurement, Construction GDP Gross Domestic Product GCal Gigacalorie GTS Gas Transportation System GWh Gigawatt-hour HPP Hydro Power Plant HPS Hydro Power Station HPSPP Hydroelectric Pumped Storage Power Plant IRENA The International Renewable Energy Agency kW Kilowatt kWh Kilowatt-hour MJ Megajoule MW Megawatt MWh Megawatt-hour NEC National Energy Company NEURC National Energy and Utilities Regulatory Commission of Ukraine NNEGC National Nuclear Energy Generating Company NPP Nuclear Power Plant PSPP Pumped Hydroelectric Energy Storage PV Photovoltaic RE Renewable Energy RES Renewable Energy Source SE State Enterprise
    [Show full text]
  • Polish-Ukrainian Borderland Cultural Heritage Bridges—Lesson Drawn from Forced Population Relocation
    sustainability Article Polish-Ukrainian Borderland Cultural Heritage Bridges—Lesson Drawn from Forced Population Relocation Bohdan Cherkes ,Józef Hernik , Karol Król * and Magdalena Wilkosz-Mamcarczyk Department of Land Management and Landscape Architecture, University of Agriculture in Kraków, Balicka 253c, 30-198 Kraków, Poland; [email protected] (B.C.); [email protected] (J.H.); [email protected] (M.W.-M.) * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: Due to the turbulent history, unstable political situation, and the diverse ethnic composition of the population, there are numerous and varied cultural heritage objects in the Polish-Ukrainian borderland area, which has also developed characteristic landscape forms. The aim of the paper is to identify the elements of Polish cultural heritage that have remained in the collective memory of inhabitants of the Ukrainian side of the Polish-Ukrainian borderland 75 years after the forced relocation. The questionnaire survey was carried out in 2019 in selected cities of Eastern Galicia, namely, Zhovkva, Mostyska, Horodok, and Rava-Ruska. The study demonstrated that even 75 years after the forced relocation, Polish cultural heritage is still alive and has an effect on the development of the border towns and cities of Eastern Galicia. It is the elements of non-material culture, including the gastronomic culture of relocated nations, that have been preserved the best in the collective memory of borderland inhabitants. The Ukrainian population also demonstrated a good knowledge of Polish traditions and Catholic feasts as well as folk songs and Christmas carols. These are “cultural heritage bridges” that may serve as both a forum for mutual understanding and a platform for a Citation: Cherkes, B.; Hernik, J.; dialogue and cooperation.
    [Show full text]
  • Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337783495 Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine Research · December 2019 DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.11468.36485 CITATIONS READS 0 229 2 authors, including: Dmytro Khutkyy University of California, Riverside 16 PUBLICATIONS 19 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Dmytro Khutkyy on 06 December 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine Dmytro Khutkyy, Kristina Avramchenko Kyiv 2019 Reference Khutkyy, D., & Avramchenko, K. (2019). Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine. Kyiv. Authors Dmytro Khutkyy, PhD in Sociology, independent expert www.khutkyy.com, [email protected] Kristina Avramchenko, independent expert [email protected] Acknowledgements Reviewing Kateryna Borysenko, Product Manager, Tech NGO “SocialBoost” Oleksandra Ivanenko, Business Analyst, Tech NGO “SocialBoost” Serhii Karelin, E-democracy Component Coordinator, the Swiss-Ukrainian program E-Governance for Accountability and Participation (EGAP) Kostiantyn Ploskyi, PhD in Public Administration, Deputy Director, Polish-Ukrainian Cooperation Foun- dation PAUCI Proofreading Orysia Hrudka Design Denys Averyanov Funding This research has been conducted with the support of the Open Society Foundations. All thoughts, conclusions and recommendations belong to the authors of this publication and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the project donor. Copyright Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ Contents Summary 4 1. Introduction 6 1.1 National context 6 1.2 Impact model 7 1.3 Research methodology 12 2. The overall impact of participatory budgeting in Ukraine 15 2.1 Participatory budgeting trends 15 2.2 The factors of participatory budgeting impact 18 3.
    [Show full text]
  • WEST-UKRAINIAN ORNITOLOGICAL STATION 79005, Lviv
    WEST-UKRAINIAN ORNITOLOGICAL STATION 79005, Lviv, Grushevskogo Street 4, tel. (032) 239 45 48 www.http://bioweb.franko.lviv.ua/zoo/wuos05/index.php APPROVED Chairman of the Board of the West Ukrainian Ornithological Station, Candidate of Biological Sciences I.V.SHYDLOVSKIY _________________ Stamp Signature Additional Report ESTIMATES OF THE POSSIBLE IMPACT OF THE PLANNED CONSTRUCTION OF A WIND POWER PLANT IN THE YAVORIV DISTRICT OF THE LVIV REGION ON THE “CHOLGINSKY” EMERALD NETWORK (UA0000178) Lviv-2019 Prepared by: Position, scientific degree or rank Research topics Name\Surname Associate Professor, Candidate of Changes in ornithofauna and I.V. Shydlovskiy Biological Sciences, Ornithologist impact of wind power plant Signature Leading Researcher, Environmental assessment of I.M. Danylyk Doctor of Biological Sciences the vegetation cover within Signature the scope of wind power plant ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT OF THE POSSIBLE IMPACT OF THE YAVOROV WIND POWER PLANT (TERNOVITSA-ZALUZHYA) ON FAUNA The territory of the Cholginsky Emerald Network (UA0000178) is located within the boundaries of the technogenic territory of the former state-owned “Sulfur” mining and chemical enterprise, which produced sulfur in an open (quarry) way. It required the accumulation of deep maternal rocks, like heaps around the quarry itself. The solid that was amassed was not fertile and had not been inhabited by plants for a long time. Over time, the successions began to appear, which were formed very quickly, and the loss of moisture contributed to this. Therefore, there was a change of habitats and the loss of attractive breeding sites for birds, as well as places for their rest and concentration during their migration (Shydlovskiy, Lisachuk, Bilonog, 2002, 2003).
    [Show full text]
  • Analysis of Military Landscapes in Lviv Region (Ukraine)
    Ukrainian Journal of Ecology Ukrainian Journal of Ecology, 2020, 10(6), 305-309, doi: 10.15421/2020_297 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Analysis of military landscapes in Lviv Region (Ukraine) V.I. Mokrуy1, O.V. Mudrak2, I.M. Petrushka1, G.V. Mudrak3, O.G. Chayka1 1National University “Lviv Polytechnic” 12 Stepana Bandera St., Lviv, 79000, Ukraine 2Public Higher Educational Establishment "Vinnytsia Academy of Continuing Education" 13 Hrushevskyi St., Vinnytsia, 21050, Ukraine, 3Vinnytsia National Agrarian University, 3 Soniachna st., Vinnytsia, 21008, Ukraine *Corresponding author E-mail: [email protected] Received: 19.11.2020. Accepted 21.12.2020 The article analyzes the military landscapes, and a special role is given to the monuments of the military group of Lviv region. The role and significance of military landscapes in the formation of the historical and cultural heritage of Ukraine, which reflects the peculiarities of the formation of modern natural conditions of its specific regions, are considered. A chronological table is formed, their classification according to the time of origin, formation and origin of military landscapes of Lviv region. Key words: military landscapes; fortifications; natural landscapes; defensive towers; defensive shafts; mounds; wall; Lviv region. Introduction Military landscapes include complexes of military origin - ancient fortified settlements and fortresses, ditches and ramparts, mounds and more. Over time, the number of landscapes of military origin becomes smaller, which gives fewer opportunities to study their impact on nature and assess their historical value (Antonyuk, 2010). It is in Ukraine that the densest network of long-term border fortifications (SFS) built between the First and Second World Wars, known as the “Stalin Line” (old border) and the “Molotov Line” (new border), has been preserved.
    [Show full text]