Job announcement


Center for Civil Society International ([email protected])
Tue, 10 Jan 1995 12:55:21 -0800 (PST)


     
     The Eurasia Foundation, a privately managed, nonprofit grantmaking
     organization funded by USAID, seeks to fill the following three
     positions.
     
     Kiev Regional Director. Serves as the Eurasia Foundation
     representative, decision maker, and spokesperson in Ukraine, Belarus
     and Moldova. Previous professional, managerial and analytical
     experience in the former Soviet Union, fluency in at least one NIS
     language, and strong computer skills required. Salary negotiable.
     Must be U.S. citizen or legal resident
     
     Moscow Regional Director . Same as above for Central and Western
     Russia. Must be U.S. citizen or legal resident.
     
     Program Associate for Washington office to develop, research and
     evaluate project proposals, monitor grants. Previous experience with
     projects in the NIS, excellent analytical skills, knowledge of at
     least one NIS language, and strong computer skills required. Salary
     in the 30s. Must be U.S. citizen or legal resident
     
     Send resume and salary history to: Personnel Manager, The Eurasia
     Foundation 1527 New Hampshire Ave, NW, 3rd Floor, Washington, DC
     20036. Email address: 20036. Email address: [email protected]. Closing date January 16,
     1995.
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Date: Tue, 10 Jan 1995 14:50:48 -0800 (PST)
From: Center for Civil Society International <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Ukrainian Weekly Year in Review
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Excellent 1994 Year In Review Published by The Ukrainian Weekly

The Ukrainian Weekly, an English-language publication of the
Ukrainian National Association (UNA), published on December 25,
1994, a comprehensive review of events in 1994, from the point of
view of both those inside Ukraine and those outside ("the
diaspora"). Copies of the document are available for $2 each from
the address below. Among the many interesting items contained in
the 18-page review are:

  * a detailed analysis of the evolution of U.S. policy toward
     Ukraine in 1994 (said to have become less Russocentric).

  * a story on the Ukrainian National Association, which
     celebrated its 100th anniversary on February 22, 1994. As
     it moved into its second century of activity, the UNA
     approved a budget of $11.8 million in expenditures and
     debated the future of its newspaper, Svoboda, "the oldest
     continually published Ukrainian daily in the world."

  * news of the formation in April 1994 at Columbia University
     of the Ukrainian Student Association in the USA (USA/USA).

  * highlights in the cultural field, such as the April premiere
     in Kyyiv of Bohdan Diatsenko=FEs documentary film "I Bude
     Novyi Den" (And a New Day Will Come), a study of
     Ukrainian/Jewish relations through history.

  * the launching in February of a national Federation of=20
     Ukrainian American Business and Professional Associations,
     uniting eight formerly unconnected organizations. The new
     federation, headed by Lydia Chopivsky Benson of Washington,
     DC, represents more than 1,000 individuals.

  * a report on the formation in Kyyiv of the independent
     Ukrainian Psychiatric Association, a far cry from the Soviet
     operation that used to diagnose dissidents with "sluggish
     schizophrenia" and put them away for years. Dr. Semyon
     Gluzman, one of the psychiatrists to expose this practice
     (and spend ten years in jail for doing so), was an organizer
     of the new association and attended its opening meeting May
     5-7 at the Pavlov Psychiatric Institute. =20

  * news on the activities of the UNA-funded Kyyiv Press Bureau,
     and the various exchanges carried on during the year between
     its staff and the staff of The Ukrainian Weekly.

  * and a lot more.

In connection with the fifth item above, the subsequent issue of
The Ukrainian Weekly (Jan. 1) reported on the formation of a new
organization, Ukrainian Professionals of Northern California,
composed of physicians, artists, journalists, business people,
scientists, etc. interested in helping "develop Ukraine's proper
place in the international community," in the words of Orest
Kulewicz, a journalist recently returned from nearly a year's work
with radio and TV in Kyyiv. =20

For further information on the Northern California group, send e-
mail to [email protected] or call Olenka Steciw, (415) 473-
1163.

To obtain a copy of the December 25 issue of The Ukrainian Weekly
with its year-end review, send $2 and your request to:

     The Ukrainian Weekly
     30 Montgomery Street
     Jersey City, NJ 07302
     Tel. 201-434-0237, -0807, or -3036



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