An advertisement for a dance production by the Toronto Dance Theatre. Event takes place at the Horowitz Theatre, SUB, at the University of Alberta.
This is a photograph of a dance at the Ukrainian Hall in Newcastle, Alberta.
Department of Dance Faculty of Fine Arts York University.
Faculty of Fine Arts Department of Dance York University.
Department of Dance Faculty of Fine Arts. York University Burton Auditorium.
UNF Hall, music by Night 'n motion; doors open at 8 pm, party at 9 pm.
A comparison of dances of Hungary and Ukraine through analysis of influences on dance, dance forms, and costumes. bib.
Ewanshyna, Cynthia"V" Recording Co. Artists, Specialize in: Polka, Handzia, Fox Trot, Kolomayka, Waltz.
Wally Yanchycki (Guitar and Vocals), Billy Kuz (Fiddle), Joe Rozdeba (Drums), Alex Tokaryk (Accordion and Cymbaly) in Manitoba
Poster advertising for the "Ranch Boys". According to the advertisement, they received radio play. Wally Yanchyski (steel guitar), Al Tokaryk (accordion), Mike Chwaluk (fiddle), Hank Norman (rhythm guitar), Joe Rozdeba (drums). Poster includes a photograph of the band.
Choreographers: Paula Moreno, Chiat Goh, Douglas Dunn, Kelly Hogan, Peggy McCann, Dennis Michaelson, Joysanne Sidimus.
Abstract painting of a dancer surrounded by colours.
Part 1: Born on January 11, 1913 in Stryi, Alberta; his father came to Canada “na stolittia” and mother came later, in about 1907. He is Orthodox. Went to a Ukrainian school. Finished school in Edmonton, then studied at the Alberta College. Worked in a bank in 1929. Same year he went to the USA to study at a University. Catholic Ukrainian church in Stryi; Communists-Ukrainians; Instytut Hrushevs’koho in Edmonton; Petro Zvarych. Studying at the largest Catholic University in New York (graduated in 1935); life of Ukrainians in the USA vs Canada; Kyslevs’kyi; Kosar; a talk with Konovalets’; in 1937 went to England and Rome to work for a Ukrainian Bureau; a meeting with Colonel Mel’nyk; Stepan Pavliuk; Dr. Kyslevs’kyi and the Ukrainian Bureau (sponsored by Makohin); Ukrainian National Information Service; Dokovych (???); Voyt (??), Editor of Nineteen Century and After.
Part 2: Publishing his articles in journals; Kosar and Hranovskyi (???); Meeting with Mel’nyk; contacts with UNO; Karpats’ka Ukraina; Fr. Voloshyn; Konovalets’; Chris Phillips (???) from English intelligence; CUC; in 1941 Davidovich was conscripted in the Canadian Army while in England; in 1948, he returned to Canada; a meeting with Skoropads’kyi; Davidovych became a research officer upon his return to Canada; a rift between Banderivtsi and Mel’nykivtsi; signing a petition to Mrs. Roosevelt RE returning the DPs to the USSR.
Part 3: No Ukrainian Informational Service in USA; deepening understanding of Ukrainian reality for the outer world.
Part 1: Financing Ukrainian and Jewish collections at the National Library of Canada (??), rare books.
Part 2: Born in Canada in 1908 (??). Parents went to the USA. Then returned to Toronto in 1939 (??). Wrote a book - was well received. His relations with Ukrainians. Ukrainian Famine.
Part 3: Stalin; he went after the WWII in Moscow as a Canadian correspondent; his visit to the USSR and Ukrainian SSR; McKenzi (???); Communists; DPs; antisemitism; characteristics of the interwar Ukrainian situation in Canada .
Based on Kotsiubynsky’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors and Klymasz’s Funerary rhetoric among Ukrainians in western Canada
Slipchuk, Michael