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Australian football legend Jesaulenko heads mission to aid Chornobyl's victims
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Ukrainian Weekly, The
02-17-2002
ESSENDON, Australia - Australian Football League legends Alex Jesaulenko
and Ron Barrassi flew out to Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, on February 2 as a
team to hand over $250,000 worth of aid to children suffering from the
effects of the Chornobyl disaster.
The aid campaign spearheaded by the Sunday Herald Sun brought out the best
in Australians; 12 tons of medical supplies and equipment together with
children's cl...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Leadership Conference focuses on building Ukraine's future
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; ... editor in chief of UNIAN, a recently established independent news agency in Ukraine, characterized the Ukrainian press as "provincial ... work in it try to profit from it. There have been instances of news reporters accepting "gifts" in return for a favorable mention ...
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Ukraine's "challenging decade" is topic of annual Shevchenko lecture
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; Balan, Jars Ukrainian Weekly, The 04-29-2001 Ukraine's "challenging decade" is topic of annual Shevchenko lecture by Jars Balan EDMONTON - When Ukraine became an independent state in 1991, it was believed by some that the young country would quickly manage to shed the negative political and
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U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DOUG BEREUTER (R-NE) CHAIRMAN U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DOUG BEREUTER (R-NE) HOLDS HEARING ON UKRAINE
Washington Transcript Service
; ... country because Radio Liberty was really seen as an independent news source. And we think having this kind of source is important ... and explained to the press how they are to report and spin the news. Intimidation of the opposition continues. I'd just like to highlight ...
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Eurasia letter: will Ukraine return to Russia?
Foreign Policy
; Leonid Kuchma's July 1994 election as president of Ukraine is a chance for the country to step back from the brink of self-destruction. During the first two and a half years of independence, Ukraine's citizens watched domestic policies erode the county's sovereignty and undermine its prospects for
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Interview: An academic and professional viewpoint of Ukraine
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; Nynka, Andrew Ukrainian Weekly, The 08-19-2001 INTERVIEW: An academic and professional viewpoint of Ukraine On August 24, 1991, Ukraine stepped, albeit hesitantly, onto the international stage, for the first time in over 80 years, to create its own independent future. Its rich natural resources and
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Ukraine-U.S. relations: Washington experts offer their assessments
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; WASHINGTON - The worsening state of relations between Ukraine and the United States has been the subject of much discussion here in recent weeks. While visiting here at the end of January Ukraine's Minister of the Economy Valerii Khoroshkovskyi spoke about a "cooling" in the relationship; a week
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Ukraine to open Embassy in Australia
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; ESSENDON, Australia - Ukraine will strengthen diplomatic ties with Australia and will open an Embassy of Ukraine in Canberra, reported the Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organizations. Charge d'Affaires Oleksander Mischenko was to arrive from Ukraine in Canberra on April 9 to make the necessary
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Ukraine's foreign affairs: a sullied image's effects
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; ... leaders who are responsible for the worst abuses against the news media. Mr. Kuchma joined such notorious figures as Liberian President ... the two countries is completed. The TU-154 incident was in the news again when Israel's Prime Minister Shimon Peres visited Ukraine ...
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In other developments from Ukraine...
Ukrainian Weekly, The
; ... of them would need parliamentary approval. Also in the news, and a subject of controversy, during 2004 was the Odesa-Bro ... industry expanded by 25.1 percent. There was more good news in early August when the International Monetary Fund said ... The controversial sale of Kryvorizhstal remained in the news ...
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A new nuclear state: Ukraine.
The Economist (US)
; UKRAINE may be about to become an independent nuclear power by announcing a deal under which it will offer to ratify the first strategic-arms reduction treaty (START-1), while retaining 46 sophisticated SS-24 missiles that are in Ukraine now but are controlled by Moscow. That, at any rate, seems a
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