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         Levytsky Volodymyr:     more detail

41. About Journal "Bulletin Of The University Of Kiev. Series: Physics & Mathematics
Kirichenko volodymyr V., Doctor of Sciences (Physics Mathematics), Full Professor(Faculty of Mechanics Mathematics);; levytsky Sergiy M., Doctor of
http://bulletin.univ.kiev.ua/eng/mainpage.html
About journal "Bulletin of the University of Kiev.
  • Algebra, geometry and discrete mathematics;
  • Applied mathematics and mechanics;
  • Computer science and informatics;
  • Radiophysics;
  • Modern physics.
The original results are accepted for printing in the above mentioned fields. Works of the leading scientists of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kiev are widely presented in the journal. Ukrainian and English versions of journal web-site are available. The following information is submited about each paper: author(s), title of paper, numbers of pages, author's abstract and key words. There are links on web-pages of some authors. Numbers since 1999 are presented now. Addition to the site with information about previous years is planned to be attached. Editorial board:
  • Executive secretary - Anisimova Tetyana Kh., Senior Scientific Researcher.
Members of editorial board:

  • Garashchenko Fedir G., Doctor of Sciences (Technics), Full Professor (Faculty of Cybernetics);
Up ASoft Group , 1999-2000 Last updated on November 29, 2000.

42. UBC - Kobzars
Petro Honcharenko, V. Kachurak, Zinovij Shtokalko, V. levytsky, V. Lutsiv H. HnatiukivskyKubijovyc, volodymyr (Ed) Encyclopedia of Ukraine (Toronto 1988
http://www.bandura.org/kobzari.html
BRAMA - Ukrainian Server BRAMA Homepage UBC Homepage
Kobzars
Kobzars kobzari ). Wandering folk bards who performed a large repertoire of epic-historical, religious, and folk songs while playing a kobza or bandura . Kobzars first emerged in Kyivan-Rus and were popular by the 15th century. Some (e.g., Churylo and Tarashko) performed at Polish royal courts. They lived at the Zaporozhian Sich and were esteemed by the kozaks, whom they frequently accompanied on various campaigns against the Turks, Tatars, and Poles. The epic songs they performed [ duma ] served to raise the moral of the Kozak army in times of war, and some (e.g., P. Skryaha, V. Varchenko, and Mykhajlo 'Sokovy's son-in-law') were even beheaded by the Poles for performing dumas that incited popular revolts. As the Hetman state declined, so did the fortunes of the kobzars, and they gradually joined the ranks of mendicants, playing and begging for alms at rural marketplaces. In the late 18th century the occupation of kobzar became almost the exclusive of the blind and crippled, who organized kobzar brotherhoods to protect their corporate interests. A few performed at the Russian courts of Peter I, Elizabeth I, and Catherine II (e.g., H. Lyubystok and O. Rozumovsky). In the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly from the 1870's, the kobzars, including the virtuosos

43. UCCLA: "Famine Monument Unveiled In Calgary"
by Marco levytsky. volodymyr's Ukrainian Orthodox Parish (who also represented ArchbishopJohn Stinka, who could not attend due to recent eye surgery), Rev.
http://www.uccla.ca/issues/genocide/i_gncd_028.html
ABOUT THIS SITE UCCLA ISSUES PRESS RELEASES POSTCARDS ... LINKS
YOU ARE CURRENTLY IN: UCCLA : ISSUES : The Great Famine of 1932-33 in Ukraine: A Politically Engineered Genocide PREVIOUS NEXT ARTICLE TYPE: UCCLA Reprinted Article SOURCE: The Ukrainian News DATE: May 5, 1999
Famine monument unveiled in Calgary
by Marco Levytsky C anada's third - and Alberta's second - monument to the victims of the 1932-1933 Famine-Genocide in Ukraine was unveiled in Calgary, April 25. Over 350 people attended the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, Calgary Branch-organized unveiling of the monument, located along Memorial Drive, between the north and south bound Edmonton Trail bridges. The locations is a green area between the two bridges, the trees of which symbolize Canada's dead soldiers in World War I. It has a lot of foot traffic. In 1933 a Genocidal Famine raged through Soviet Ukraine. This resulted in the death of between 7 to 11 million people. This genocide was instigated by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin whose main goal was to break the spirit of the Ukrainian farmer/peasant and to force them into collectivization. The famine was also used as an effective tool to break the renaissance of Ukrainian culture.

44. A Skewed Intellectual History Of Ukraine
essays by Ivan Nechuilevytsky and Stepan Kachala seems to indicate it was thelatter. The absence of the prominent bio-geologist volodymyr Vernadsky, the
http://archive.tol.cz/transitions/askewed1.html
A Skewed Intellectual History of Ukraine
The first English-language anthology of Ukrainian intellectual history is distorted by the editors' patriotic preferences
by Oleksandr Hrytsenko
Until the 1990s, Ukrainian studies in the West focused foremost on the country's literature and history; with rare exceptions, everything else was relegated to the domain of Soviet studies. Ukrainian-language publishers in the West had broader interests, but their audiences were limited mostly to emigres and were therefore tiny. Today, every other historian in Ukraine has the three-volume collection Ukrainska suspilnopolitychna dumka v 20 stolitti (Ukrainian Sociopolitical Thought in the 20th Century) in his or her home library, and Western historians who don't read Ukrainian are the ones who are feeling cut off. With the West's interest in Ukraine increasing because of the country's independence and geopolitical importance, an English-language text on Ukraine's intellectual history has been notably missing. That considered, George Luckyj and Ralph Lindheim's

45. Towards An Intellectual History
life are represented, with the exception of volodymyr Antonovych, for of Kostomarov,Shevchenko, Kulish, Drahomanov, Kachala, Nechuilevytsky, and Hrinchenko
http://www.utpjournals.com/product/utq/671/intellectual13.html
Published in University of Toronto Quarterly - Volume 67 Number 1, Winter 1997/98- Letters in Canada. To see more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS online at UTPJOURNALS.com Towards an Intellectual History of Ukraine: An Anthology of Ukrainian Thought from 1710 to 1995
Ralph Lindheim and George S.N. Luckyj, editors. University of Toronto Press in association with the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
xii, 420. $65.00 cloth, $24.95 paper Reviewed in University of Toronto Quarterly Volume 67, Number 1 Winter 1997/98- Letters in Canada 1996 Frank E. Sysyn Over twenty years ago, Omeljan Pritsak presented his plan to translate sixty volumes of Ukrainian historical texts to his colleagues at the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. As with many projects of that visionary organizer of scholarship, some more modest part of his plan has been fulfilled. Six volumes of translations of medieval and early modern texts have already appeared in the excellent Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature. Modern Ukrainian history has not been as fortunate, despite the increasing interest in Ukraine and teaching of courses in the field.
The anthology will serve those who wish to gain a general view of Ukrainian intellectual life and those who teach Ukrainian and East European intellectual history. Although one may regret that the editors did not provide a bibliography of other texts available in English translation, they have already done much to make modern Ukrainian intellectual history accessible to the English-language reader.

46. Famous Ukrainians
The site provides links and comments to famous people of Ukrainian ancestry, particularly those known Category Regional Europe Ukraine Guides and Directories...... I am still looking for web pages on Kost SzonkRusych, Myron levytsky, and HeorhiyNarbut. SCIENCE, MEDICINE; Igor Sikorsky. volodymyr Drinfeld. Mathematician.
http://www2.uwindsor.ca/~hlynka/ukfam.html
Famous Ukrainians List
The Famous Ukrainians List is a list of over three hundred people with links discussing their contributions. The people listed were either born in what are today's boundaries of Ukraine, or were/are of Ukrainian ancestry. The emphasis is on people who would be known OUTSIDE Ukraine within their particular area of specialization.
This list is maintained by Dr. Myron Hlynka , Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada. hlynka@uwindsor.ca
If you are interested in the Mathematics and Statistics program at the University of Windsor, click HERE. The concept for The Famous Ukrainians Web Page came from the Montreal ukemonde (www.ukemonde.com) list of Montreal famous Ukrainians and from the nomination form of Dr. Roman Yereniuk for the World's hundred most important Ukrainians, as suggested in the Ukrainian Voice newspaper in December, 1999. In addition, an article in the Spring, 2000 issue of FORUM: A Ukrainian Review, (Number 101), written by Andrew Gregorovich, is titled "Hall of Fame of Ukraine." It is highly recommended. For general information on Forum magazine, see http://www.angelfire.com/folk/ufa/forum.html

47. LITOPYS UPA - Related Materials: Ukrainians In World War II Military Formations:
volodymyr. Pochatky Ukrainskoi dyvizii 'Halychyna'. Visti Bratstva kolyshnikhvoiakiv Ioi Ukrainskoi dyvizii UNA, nos. 3-4 (41-2) (1954) 2-5. levytsky,
http://www.infoukes.com/upa/related/military.html
Related Materials
Ukrainians in World War II Military Formations: An Overview
by
Peter J. Potichnyj
There is a great deal of confusion about the behaviour of Ukrainians during 1939-45, and it is not limited to non-Ukrainians. Forty years after World War II, some Ukrainians are themselves unclear on issues that affected them four decades ago and have influenced their thinking to this day. The common view of the war is that of an enormous struggle between the forces of good and evil, in which the former triumphed. It follows from this view that the nations and individuals who were not on the side of the Allies (except, of course, for the neutral countries) must have been on the side of the Axis powers or, worse still, on the side of the Nazis. Whatever does not fit this neat pattern is either overlooked or misunderstood, and so it has been with the present debate over collaboration and war criminality among Ukrainians. During World War II Ukrainians collaborated with all sides, for two main reasons. First, as one of the world's largest national groups without a sovereign state, Ukrainians did not control their destiny at a crucial time in world history. Second, not unlike Jews, Ukrainians were - and still are - scattered throughout the world; thus in 1939-45 they could be found in all kinds of places and situations. Since the war's fiercest battles were on Ukrainian territory, it is not surprising that Ukrainians fought in various armies and military formations, in large numbers and on all fronts. In the Soviet army alone were 4.5 million citizens of Ukraine. According to Soviet statistics, 409,668 Ukrainians were awarded medals for bravery in the war; 961 became heroes of the Soviet Union; and 60 per cent of the 250,000-strong Soviet partisan force in Ukraine was Ukrainian.

48. Soviet Genocide And Mass Murder: References
New York Praeger, 1960. Kosyk, volodymyr. CONCENTRATION CAMPS IN THE USSR. 6066.levytsky, Boris. THE USES OF TERROR THE SOVIET SECRET POLICE 1917-1970.
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/USSR.REFERENCES.HTM
defaultStatus = "Democracy (Freedom) is a Method of NonviolencePower Kills."
Other References on This site
References On Democide To: China's Bloody Century Democide: Nazi Genocide.... Death By Government Statistics of Democide References On Theory/Conflict/War To: Vol. 2: The Conflict Helix (entire) Vol. 3: Conflict In Perspective Vol. 4: War, Power, Peace (entire) Vol. 5: The Just Peace (entire) References On The Democractic Peace To: Bibliography on Democracy and War The Miracle That Is Freedom (entire) Power Kills
REFERENCES*
to R.J. Rummel,
Lethal Politics: Soviet
Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1917
New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publications, 1992
"Afghanistan: Six Years of Soviet Occupation." United States Department of State Special Report No. 135, Washington, D.C., December 1985. THE WORLD ALMANAC AND BOOK OF FACTS 1986. New York: Newspaper Enterprise Association, 1985. Ambartsumov, Yevgeny. "Remembering the Millions that Stalin Destroyed." MOSCOW NEWS, (July, 1988), p. 12. Ashton, D. L. W. "Communist Concentration Camps-Today." EAST-WEST DIGEST, Vol. 9 (September, 1973), pp. 664-676. Backer, George. THE DEADLY PARALLEL: STALIN AND IVAN THE TERRIBLE. New York: Random House, 1950.

49. Levytsky Portrait
volodymyr levytsky. ©ICHB 2002 By GSK. © Copyright information. levytsky.html.
http://math.ichb.ro/History/PictDisplay/Levytsky.html

50. National Academy Of Sciences Of Ukraine Marks 80th Birthday
Dmytro Bahaliy, Mykola Kaschenko, Ahatangel Krymsky, Orest levytsky, Stepan Tymoshenko medicalmen Kyrylo Zabolotny, Oleksandr Bohomolets, volodymyr Filatov and
http://www.dlab.kiev.ua/uanc/1-31-112.htm
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Marks 80 th Birthday. On November 27, 1998 the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) of Ukraine will be eighty. It was born in the turbulent time following the revolution of 1917 as the realisation of a coveted dream by numerous generations of progressive Ukrainian intellectuals. The legal foundation for creating the Academy was a relevant law passed by the Council of Ministers and endorsed by Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky. Among the NAS founders and its first academicians were such prominent scientists as Dmytro Bahaliy, Mykola Kaschenko, Ahatangel Krymsky, Orest Levytsky, Stepan Tymoshenko, Mykhailo Tuhan-Baranovsky, Pavlo Tutkovsky and others. The world-renowned scientist in geology and geochemistry became its first president. Attainments and Losses The scientific potential of the young Ukrainian Academy, if assessed in modern dimensions, was rather modest and was based in three departments: historico-philological, physico-mathematical and socio-economic. Those were united in three institutes, 26 chairs and 15 commissions staffed with only 140 researches and 115 auxiliary workers (for comparison: currently the National Academy of Sciences runs 13 affiliates and close to 170 scientific institutions staffed with more then 13,000 researches.) The chief creative resources of the Academy were concentrated on researches in the humanitarian area. But already then priority was given to those branches of science which essentially influenced the development of industry, construction and agriculture.

51. Ukraine The Country
century heritage were such writers as Ivan Nechuilevytsky, Pavlo Hrabovsky, et Manywriters-patriots - among them volodymyr Vynnychenko, Pavlo Tychyna, Ostap
http://www.ukraineembassyindia.com/Government/ukrainre Govt/uk_country.html
UKRAINE -THE COUNTRY
LAND AND RESOURCES
ART AND ARCHITECTURE CURRENCY AND BANKING RIVERS AND LAKES ... SPORTS
Ukraine, country in eastern Europe, and the second largest country in Europe after Russia. Ukraine is bordered on the west by Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary; on the southwest by Romania and Moldova; on the south by the Black Sea and Sea of Azov; on the east and northeast by Russia; and on the north by Belarus. The Crimean Autonomous Republic—encompassing the Crimean Peninsula, or Crimea, in the south—is included in Ukraine's borders. The capital and largest city is Kyiv.
Much of Ukraine is a fertile plain suited for agriculture. Ukraine is rich in natural resources, and has a developed economy with significant agricultural and industrial sectors. The country has a democratic form of government headed by a president.
From the 9th century AD northern Ukraine was part of Kyivan Rus, the first significant East Slavic state, which succumbed to the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Ukraine was for centuries thereafter under the rule of a succession of foreign powers, including Poland and the Russian Empire. In 1918 a Bolshevik (Communist) government was established in Ukraine, and in 1922 the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) was one of the four founding republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Ukraine is entering the new millennium as an independent state having nearly a decade of experience in formation of the state. It has used to the fullest its historic chance of national rebirth, consolidated by the Act of Independence of August 24, 1991 and supported by the nationwide referendum of December 1, 1991.

52. Ukraine: Introduction
the late 18th century, many Ukrainian painters, such as Dmytro levytsky, moved to placesbecame popular, such as the statues of Saint volodymyr (Vladimir) and
http://ukraine.uazone.net/article1.html

Ukrainian Banner Network
Ukraine   Ukraine, country in eastern Europe, and the second largest country in Europe after Russia. Ukraine is bordered on the west by Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary; on the southwest by Romania and Moldova; on the south by the Black Sea and Sea of Azov; on the east and northeast by Russia; and on the north by Belarus. The Crimean Autonomous Republic—encompassing the Crimean Peninsula, or Crimea, in the south—is included in Ukraine's borders. The capital and largest city is Kyiv. 
Much of Ukraine is a fertile plain suited for agriculture. Ukraine is rich in natural resources, and has a developed economy with significant agricultural and industrial sectors. The country has a democratic form of government headed by a president. 
From the 9th century AD northern Ukraine was part of Kyivan Rus, the first significant East Slavic state, which succumbed to the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Ukraine was for centuries thereafter under the rule of a succession of foreign powers, including Poland and the Russian Empire. In 1918 a Bolshevik (Communist) government was established in Ukraine, and in 1922 the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) was one of the four founding republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Ukraine's declaration of independence, approved by a popular vote on December 1, 1991, was a major factor in the USSR's collapse later that month.  Land and Resources    The total area of Ukraine is 603,700 sq km (233,090 sq mi). The country extends 1316 km (818 mi) east to west and 893 km (555 mi) north to south. Much of the country is a rolling upland plain, with the highest elevations in the western half of the country and the southeastern Donets'ka region. A lowland region of wooded bogs and swamps, called the Poles'ye (Pripet) Marshes, is located in northern Ukraine, although much of this region has been drained and cleared for agriculture. Low-lying plains are found in southern Ukraine in the lower Dnieper (Dnipro) River Basin and the Black Sea coastal region. Ukraine's coastline, including Crimea, extends about 1050 km (about 650 mi). The Carpathian Mountains in the extreme west and the Crimean Mountains in the southern end of Crimea take up about 5 percent of Ukraine's territory. Mount Hoverla in the Carpathians is the country's highest peak at 2061 m (6762 ft). 

53. Home
Former presidents of the Ukrainian National Republic (UNR), Andriy levytsky andStepan the wife of the chief ideologue of the UAOC, volodymyr Chechivsky.
http://www.saveouruoc.com/disruptiveconduct.html
Back to: Front Page Back to: Articles “Conduct That is Intentionally Disruptive and Egregious, Longstanding, Willful and Deliberate.” Judge Roger F. Mahon Superior Court of New Jersey
Part I of III
The photograph shows a young woman, in uniform, with a machine gun strapped over her right shoulder. Maria Krotiuk. The December 15, 2000, issue of Svoboda carried an in memoriam article about her. It wrote how she fought with the OUN, making no distinction between the “Melnyk” and “Bandera” factions, and then how she continued the struggle in the DP camps of Germany. She started a new life with her husband in Minnesota, then Colorado, all the while yearning for an independent Ukraine and Church. She dedicated her new life to those goals, funding innumerable church and community projects. She died on July 15, 2000, and was buried next to her husband, in South Bound Brook, N. J., the administrative center of the “Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA” (UOCUSA). Maria had traveled a tortured path from Ukraine to her final resting place in the “Ukrainian Jerusalem.” And that’s how the center at Bound Brook is known the world over.

54. MERRSU Consistency List
c.60c.130) paraman patriarch's breastplate Parfenius levytsky, archbishop of Repta,Vladimir , metropolitan of Bukovina (volodymyr, 1902-1925) requiem
http://www.stetson.edu/~psteeves/merre/merrsu_consistency.html
MERRSU CONSISTENCY LIST
The following list gives the forms used in MERRSU, including hyphenation and capitalization. A B C D ... Z
A
Aaron (1688-1726?)
Aaron, secular name Andrew Zhukov (d. 1789), leader of Aaronites
Aaron Moriakin (1780-1844)
Aaron Nartsissov (1771-1841)
Aaron ben Meir of Brest, (d. 1807)
Aaron of Pinsk (d. 1841)
Aaronites
Abadzeg
Abbas I (1571-1629; r. 1587-1629)
abbot: there are several categories of abbot in the Russian Orthodox church:
archimandrite (arkhimandrit); hegumen (igumen); and others that may be named "father superior," "superior," or "abbot" (namestnik, nastoiatel', stroitel')
abdication of Nicholas II (2/15 March 1917)
Abdulhamid II (r. 1876-1909)
Abel (Vasily Vasilev) (1757-1841)
Abgar V (d. A.D. 56), king of Edessa
Abkhazians
about= c. with space after c. but no comma (c. 1406)
above-cited
Abraham (d. 1375)
Abraham-Abele Posveler (1764-1836)
Abraham ben Elijah (1750-1808)
Abraham ben Joseph Solomon (1792-1855)
Abraham ben Josiah (c.1685-c.1735)
Abraham ben Veniamin (d. 1700)
Abraham of Chukhloma (d. 1375)

55. Statistics Of Genocide And Mass Murder References
Kosyk, volodymyr. CONCENTRATION CAMPS IN THE USSR. Washington, DC Carnegie Endowmentfor International Peace, 1944. levytsky, Boris. THE USES OF TERROR.
http://www.hri.org/docs/Democide/sod.ref.html
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STATISTICS OF DEMOCIDE
REFERENCES
By R.J. Rummel
Note that this is not a bibliography. The items included here are usually only those cited in this book. Books, articles, and other works used for background or otherwise consulted are not listed. In a few cases, references are still given even though their estimates may have been eliminated from tables as redundant against other estimates or from the same source. References given in Lethal Politics China's Bloody Century , and Democide , are not repeated here unless also cited in this book.
  • Adalian, Rouben. "The Armenian Genocide: Context and Legacy." SOCIAL EDUCATION 55 (February 1991): 99-104.
  • Adamic, Louis. MY NATIVE LAND. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1943.
  • AFGHANISTAN: SIX YEARS OF SOVIET OCCUPATION. United States Department of State Special Report No. 135, Washington, D.C., December 1985.
  • THE AFTERMATH: ASIA. Alexandria Virginia: Time-Life Books,1983.
  • 56. Levytsky20010417.html
    member Dr. William Zuzak briefed Grey on the volodymyr Katriuk case FOR MORE INFORMATIONCONTACT Marco levytsky, Vice President and Chair, Government Relations
    http://www.telusplanet.net/public/mozuz/odynsky/levytsky20010417.html
    UCC_AB meeting with DEBORAH GREY
    UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CONGRESS ALBERTA PROVINCIAL COUNCIL
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    UCC - APC GREATLY ENCOURAGED BY MEETING WITH GREY "The key criterion in all these proceedings is the existence of some evidence of individual criminality. If that cannot be proven, no proceedings will be considered." Yet proceedings were started against Toronto resident Wasyl Odynsky even though the government hadn't even bothered to charge him with any war crimes. The delegation noted that in the recent ruling on the Odynsky case, Justice Andrew MacKay found that:
  • "Mr. Odynsky did not voluntarily join the SS auxiliary forces, or voluntarily serve with them at Trawniki or Poniatowa, or later with the Battalion Streibel";
  • "There was no evidence of any incident in which he was involved that could be considered as directed wrongfully at any other individual, whether a forced labourer-prisoner, or any other person";
  • "No evidence was presented of any wrongdoing by Mr. Odynsky since he came to Canada, now more than 50 years ago." The delegation said that what the UCC is asking is that in all cases where there is no evidence of any war crimes, no proceedings should be started, and in all cases where the judge has ruled that there was no evidence of any war crime, all further actions against the respondent should be terminated immediately.
  • 57. FC Tryzub
    Thanks to archives, we can compare the team of Trener volodymyr Barabakhto a team built on veteran leadership and talented youth. Read more
    http://www.ukrainianstudents.org/fctryzub/
    Ukrainian Version Menu Navigazione Sponsors Time is Ticking
    Top stories
    Players and fans of FC Tryzub - click image to practice your penalty kicks
    Board of Directors says yes to stadium

    FC Tryzub three year anniversary approaches
    Rostyk Demtsyo awaits verdict

    FC Tryzub Football Academy voted best in Ukrainian Village

    Yavorsky bids to make mark !

    Up front and personal as only LA PARATE can be !
    ...
    Looking for New Talent
    The cash-strapped situation, in which FC Tryzub finds itself today, will not stop the Ukrainian Giants from signing some of the greatest players in the world. FC Tryzub President, "Yoshi", has said, "Top Serie A clubs such as Juventus, Roma, Lazio, and Milan have debts in the $120 million range, and they continue to purchase world class players. We actually have a $2 surplus, so we are way ahead of our competition."
  • Click here to read the rest of this announcement
  • Tryzub charges into new season Vashchur hunting for Tryzub players Lions' Manager Roman Vashchur, has repeatedly turned to FC Tryzub superstars to improve his feeble side. A team of impotent footballers, Levy AC failed to win a single game, outright, during the entire duration of last season.

    58. Brama, Gateway Ukraine Forum
    ALREADY GRANTED CHECH Markian 150631 12/17/01 (0) Elections - Marco Levytsky1408 Re Putin, Kuchma - volodymyr 135821 12/16/01 (0) Fake áîðîòüáà
    http://www.brama.com/survey/npbb66.html
    BRAMA News Calendar BRAMA Forum
    BRAMA Forum Saturday, March 29, 2003, 20:48 EST @this topic ... NY Times Op-Ed:
    Tom Friedman
    A War for Oil?

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  • 59. Yurkevych
    Later he joined the UPA. In Germany he performed in a trio with VolodymyrMaliutsa and Shtokalko. He also performed in a quartet with R. levytsky.
    http://www.globalserve.net/~victormishalow/Performers/BANDURISTS/Yurkevych.html
    Volodymyr Ivanovych Yurkevych
    (Kobzar Yurchenko)
    (2/XII/1912 -7/V/1985)
    Yurkevych was born December 2, 1912 in Lviv. He met up with Yuri Singalevych and began to take lessons from him. Together with Shtokalko they organized a bandura trio. Later they were joined by S. Hanushevsky and S. Lastovych. Photo: Lastovych, Shtokalko, Singalevych, Yurkevych, Hanushevsky His original bandura was made for him by S. Lastovych based on an instrument made by K. Misevych During the war he enlishted into the 1st Ukrainian Division and fought at Brody. Later he joined the UPA. In Germany he performed in a trio with Volodymyr Maliutsa and Shtokalko . Later he joined an ensemble with D. Kravchenko and Hr. Bazhul In 1950 he emigrated the United States. He performed in an ensemble directed by S. Hanushevsky which recorded an album of UPA songs. in 1952. Photo: Yurkevych with his 36 string diatonic Hlad bandura. In 1972 he organized a Bandurist Chorus made up of members of the First Ukrainian Division who lived in NY. He also performed in a quartet with R. Levytsky Moved to NY where he became director of the New York School of Bandura.

    60. Ukrainian Soccer News B Font Color= Red VIDEO /font /b
    Ukraine Shovkovsky (levytsky '90), Starostiak (Luzhny '46), Parfenov, Holovko, Vaschuk VolodymyrVeremeiev, UNT Coach We can only fight for second place.
    http://www.ukrainiansoccer.net/news/news_article.asp?ID=8058&offset=40

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