12/06/2000
Paid access archiveCourt Calls Salvation Army Security Threat
The Moscow City Court has ruled that the organization that brings lonely pensioners together each afternoon — the Salvation Army — is plotting the overthrow of the government.
A Stock Policy That Keeps Investors Away
Gazprom trades shares on the Moscow Stock Exchange at one price, and on foreign exchanges at a second price. Now, company officials are floating a plan for a third tier.
Soccer Tale of Guns, Ransom, Fear
CSKA Soccer Club managers say they were threatened with imprisonment and death by a secret service agent in an all-out battle for control of the Russian Premiere League team.
Let's Heed Illarionov This Time
With all the good news about the Russian economy, local complacency has become a serious obstacle.
Lots of Time to Think About the Rule of Law
For the last decade, the rule of law has been touted (and fairly heavily funded by Western assistance organizations) as the panacea for what ails Russia.
PM Opts for Wrong Way To Cut Taxes
With new income from the high global energy prices, Russia's choices in fund allocation are questionable.
Zoo Puts Giraffes, Lions, Beavers Up for Adoption
Have you ever wished for your own gangly giraffe or sleek jaguar that you could feed and, perhaps, pet? For 1,000 rubles to 300,000 rubles a year you can.
Visa Regulations Slapped on Georgia
Already stretched relations are being tested as a new rule requiring Georgian citizens to get Russian visas came into affect on Tuesday.
Duma Set to Revive The Soviet Anthem
Delight and despair filled homes Tuesday as Russians reconciled themselves to the possibility the music of the former Soviet national anthem will become Russia's as well.
Pitching Silk and Salmon to Aid Orphans
Walking into the International Women's Club's Winter Bazaar is comparable to strolling into a fairyland, said the wife of Iceland's ambassador to Russia.
Radiation Leak Spotted At Voronezh Region Plant
Radiation levels in the soil at the Novovoronezh nuclear power plant, about 475 kilometers south of Moscow, were higher than normal Tuesday.
- Chernobyl Safety Risk
- News in Brief
- Party Boy Picks Up the Gauntlet as Cybermonk
- Kasyanov Looks for Debt Revamp Deals
- City Hopes to Spark Small Business Boom
- Getty Rejects Bid By LUKoil Rival
- Goods Things Come in More Than Small Packages
- U.S. Steel Firm Plans $205M Tallinn Plant
- Car Importers Elude Customs Net
- St. Pete Plans $60M Reconstruction of Pulkovo
- Business in Brief
- Lyon Stuns Spartak, Leeds Lashes at Lazio
- Sergeyev Urges ABM Treaty to Remain
- Commercial Imaging Satellite Launched
- Investigators Search Television Offices
- Kasyanov Promotes Stock Swap for Russian Debt
- Funding Freeze Threatens Chemical Weapons Treaty
- Croatian Foreign Minister Visits Moscow
- Police Free Georgian Hostage
- Khazak Air Jet Makes Emergency Landing
- Literary Prize Winner Unlikely Best-seller
- Iranian Arms Trade Discussions
- Pope Gives Final Statement to Moscow Court
- World Bank Says 2001 Loans to Match Hopes
- Russia to Provide Military Aid to Angola
- Envoy to Freezing Far East
- Gunmen Attack Publisher in Vladivostok
- Russia Assures U.S. on Arms Sales to Iran
- Pope Found Guilty
- Chernobyl Reactor in Emergency Shutdown
- U.N. Urges Tajikistan to Admit Afghans
- Still No Moldovan President
- Georgian Crime Rate Rises
- Questions Arise Over ORT Raid
- Uzbek Borders Curb Rural Life
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