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Where there is no law, but every man does what is right in his own eyes, there is the least of real liberty
Henry M. Robert

This week in history

30 January, 2007 - 00:00

Jan. 30 1868: A music school opens in Kyiv, now known as the Gliere Music College.

1992: In Helsinki, Ukraine becomes a member of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe.

Jan. 31 1920: The first Ukrainian daily newspaper in the US, Ukrainski shchodenni visti, is launched in New York City.

1966: The Council of Ministers of the USSR passes a resolution establishing the Trade and Economics Institute in Kyiv.

Feb. 1 1945: The Sergo Ordzhonikidze Tractor Works in Kharkiv start mass-producing tractors.

1993: Ukraine’s Ministry of Justice registers the Narodnyi Rukh (Popular Movement) of Ukraine.

Feb. 2 1902: A 15,000-strong demonstration of workers and students under the slogan “Down with Autocracy!” is held in Kyiv.

1930: The Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine circulates a directive to all oblast and raion party committees, entitled “On Measures Aimed at the Liquidation of Kulak Farmsteads in Raions Subject to All-Out Collectivization.”

Feb. 3 1940: The Ukrainian Canadian Committee is founded in Winnipeg.

1997: The Nuclear Insurance Pool of Ukraine is officially registered as a volunteer organization uniting a number of Ukrainian insurers, aimed at ensuring against nuclear risks.

Feb. 4 1648: The liberation war in Ukraine begins with a rebellion organized by the Zaporozhian Cossacks.

1945: The Yalta Conference begins in the Crimea, during which the the Allied leaders (UK, USSR, US) consider the question of the postwar world order.

Feb. 5 1919: The Sich Rifleman Corps, the only remaining military unit of the Ukrainian National Republic, retreats from Kyiv. The city is occupied by Mykola Shchors and Vasyl Bozhenko’s regiments.

1977: Helsinki Committee members Mykola Rudenko and Oleksa Tykhy are arrested by the KGB.

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