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"Ihor Mykhailovych Miroshnychenko () is a Ukrainian sports journalist and far- right politician. Merited Journalist of Ukraine (2006). He was Member of 7th Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian Parliament) till 27 November 2014.CEC registers 357 newly elected deputies of 422 , National Radio Company of Ukraine (25 November 2014) Parliament to form leadership and coalition on November 27, UNIAN (26 November 2014) Biography Miroshnychenko was born in Lebedyn on February 20, 1976. He worked for several Ukrainian television channels and was a spokesman for the Ukrainian national football team in 2004–2008. Miroshnychenko became famous for his critical response to Mila KunisScandal with Miroshnichenko and Kunis: on Facebook do not cease passion . polittech. November 29, 2012 who said that she felt to be discriminated while living in Chernivtsi and the city is almost a village.Mila Kunis offended Chernivtsi with stories about the persecution of the Jews. TSN. May 24, 2012 On a facebook page he argue that Mila Kunis is not Ukrainian, but rather a Jew using a controversial word zhyd. On February 15, 2013 a group of Okhtyrka locals led by Miroshnychenko brought down the Lenin monument in the city.In Sumy region Svoboda brought down statue of Lenin, the police instituted criminal proceedings. Mirror Weekly. February 16, 2013 On 18 of March 2014 Miroshnychenko entered by force into the office of the National Television Company of Ukraine together with other members of Svoboda party. There he assaulted the head of the company Oleksandr Panteleymonov and forced him to write a letter of resignation. Video of this event was published by the Svoboda party press-secretary Alexandr Aronets in his videoblog.Oleksandr Panteleymonov beaten up by Svoboda party members, Aronets Live .Oleksandr Panteleymonov talks to Svoboda activists after assault In the 2014 parliamentary election Miroshnychenko was 10th on the election list of his party; since the party came 0,29% short to overcome the 5% threshold to win seats on the nationwide list he was not re-elected into parliament.Poroshenko Bloc to have greatest number of seats in parliament , Ukrainian Television and Radio (8 November 2014) People's Front 0.33% ahead of Poroshenko Bloc with all ballots counted in Ukraine elections - CEC , Interfax-Ukraine (8 November 2014) Poroshenko Bloc to get 132 seats in parliament - CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (8 November 2014) Party list All-Ukrainian Union "Freedom", Ukrayinska Pravda (3 October 2014) References External links *Biography Category:1976 births Category:Living people Category:People from Lebedyn Category:University of Kyiv, Journalism Institute alumni Category:Ukrainian sports journalists Category:Seventh convocation members of the Verkhovna Rada Category:Svoboda (political party) politicians Category:People of the Euromaidan Category:Far- right politics in Ukraine Category:Ukrainian nationalists "
"The Columbia University Partnership for International Development (CUPID), is a student-led initiative across Columbia University to facilitate multidisciplinary dialogue, awareness and action in the field of international development and relief. History In the Fall of 2004, two social work students from the Columbia University School of Social Work began generating interest for a Columbia-wide conference on multidisciplinary perspectives on issues pertaining to international development. This resulted in the 2005 conference titled "Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Armed Conflict and Forced Migration". The conference was coordinated by a multidisciplinary team of student leaders from the Columbia University School of Social Work, Columbia University Law School, and the Mailman School of Public Health. This collaboration led to the inception of the Columbia University Partnership for International Development. Student representatives across the ten Columbia graduate schools were recruited in order to establish an academic partnership across fields that would continue to inform their work as they became professionals. The underlying hypothesis of this assumption was that the experience would better equip students to develop and implement effective, innovative, and holistic approaches to challenges faced in international development. Within a year, CUPID organized twelve multidisciplinary forums, co-sponsored six events, facilitated a conference on "Urbanization in the Developing World", sent five students to Central America as part of a multidisciplinary community development team, and coordinated 20 internships with the United Nations Development Programme. Influential organizations that helped found the Columbia Partnership for International Development included: The Earth Institute, The Africa Institute, The Columbia Alumni Association, The President and Provost's Student Event Fund, and the Open Society Foundations. Activities = Online Journal = The CUPID Online Journal is a creative space for students to publish original poetry, photographs, scholarly articles, blog-style posts, opinion pieces and field notes pertaining to international development. = Development Dialogues = Monthly events hosted by various Columbia graduate schools and colleges on rotation with the purpose of encouraging collective awareness, understanding and action. The Development Dialogues are informal and stimulating conversations regarding contemporary issues. The events usually take place in the form of an expert panel, followed by conversation between panelists and students, practitioners, professors and members of the community. = Annual Conference = Each Spring, CUPID coordinates a multidisciplinary conference pertaining to important and timely topics in the field of international development. The conference gathers professors, practitioners, students and others and provides a space to discuss important perspectives, lessons learned, best practices, and ways forward. Upcoming Conference March 2014 "Reframing "Freedom": A Critical Approach to Modern Slavery" Previous Conference Topics: *2013: "Millennium Development Goals. Mission Impossible?" *2012: "In a State of Transition. Locating the Role of the International Community." *2011: "Internal Displacement. Unsettled. Uncertain. Unseen." *2010: "Health. A Universal Dialect(ic)? Access to Health in the Developing World" *2009: "Development Without Borders. Is Migration Good for Development?" *2008: "Beyond Polar Bears. Looking Past the Environmental Impacts of Climate Change." *2007: "Philanthropy, Profits and Progress. The Role of Private Actors in International Development." *2006: "Urbanization and the Developing World. Perspectives on the Individual." *2005: "Armed Conflict and Forced Migration. Push and Pull Factors of Resettlement." = Community Initiatives = Each summer, CUPID collaborates with organizations around the world to provide students with an opportunity to participate in international development partnerships. Previously, CUPID fellows have worked on projects in: *China *Dominican Republic *Guatemala *New York City *Nicaragua = Networking and Social Events = Alumni Networking Event: An opportunity for CUPID members to meet with Columbia alumni currently working in the field of international development. External links *Columbia CUPID *Institute for the Study of Human Rights * *The President and Provost's Student Event Fund *The Earth Institute *Columbia University School of Social Work *Open Society Foundations References Category:Columbia University Category:Student organizations by university or college in the United States "
"Ilja ZeljenkaIlja Zeljenka (21 December 1932 – 13 July 2007) was a Slovak composer. Born in Bratislava, Zeljenka studied music with Ján Cikker from 1951-1956.Jurík and Zagar (1998), 289. During the 1970s his more experimental idiom was suppressed by the Communist regime in Czechoslovakia, and he produced music based on folk music and neoromantic styles.Jurík and Zagar (1998), 290. His very large output includes three operas (including Bátoryčka (1994), based on the story of Elizabeth Báthory and Posledné dni Veľkej Moravy [The Last Days of Greater Moravia] (1996)), film music, piano works (including two pieces for piano and bongos), fourteen string quartets, nine symphonies, theatre music and electronic music. Among his vocal compositions is the cantata Oświęcim (1959), about the Auschwitz concentration camp.Jurík and Zagar (1998), 290-295.Ilja Zeljenka (1932-2007): A Worklist, Art-Music Forum website, accessed 7 March 2014 References ;Notes ;Sources * Jurík, Marián, and Peter Zagar (1998). 100 slovenských skladateľov (in Slovak). Bratislava: Národné hudobné centrum. . Category:People from Bratislava Category:1932 births Category:2007 deaths Category:Slovak composers Category:20th-century classical composers Category:Slovak opera composers Category:21st-century classical composers Category:Male classical composers Category:20th-century male musicians Category:21st-century male musicians "