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Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/19/2012

05/17/2002

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Cook's Corner -- Rhubarb Muffins

Living in Germany my list of unattainable groceries gets shorter every year, though it's still amusing to note which foods still resist universal distribution.

When We Last Saw Our Heroes ...

The fact that the latest prequel, ""Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones,"" is a bit better than its predecessor makes it clear how lacking in the things that matter these newcomers are.

Using the Past to Dance Into the Future

Choreographer and two-time Golden Mask winner Sergei Vikharev speaks about his approach the task of restoring great dance steps from the past and his plans for the future.

Cafes, Cupolas and the Roots of the Rus

Known as the mother of all Russian cities, Kiev was the capital and spiritual heart of Kievan Rus, the first great Eastern Slavic civilization.

Global Eye--General Principles

Quietly, without fanfare, in a bland statement issued by its most ""moderate"" frontman, Colin Powell, the Bush Regime crossed another moral Rubicon last week.

He Laid the Foundation for the Latin Alternative

Manu Chao, the politically outspoken French musician who helped found the Alternative Latin Music movement, makes his Russian debut this week with his seven-piece band, The Manu Chao Radio Bemba Sound System.

Fifth Annual Stunt Festival Set to Start

The Fifth Annual Moscow Festival of Stunt Art, which begins Thursday and runs to May 26, aims at showing just how special stuntmen really are.

Doctors Mark Date With Music, Charity

This week, clean out your closet, take in a rock concert and help Medecins sans Frontiers, or Doctors Without Borders, in their decade-long campaign to help Moscow's homeless.

Politics and Film Cozy Up at Cannes

Politics at frivolous, fun-loving Cannes? Don't be surprised. Serious matters have always been woven into the tapestry of European film in general and the Cannes Festival in particular.

Death & Suffering as a Literary Device

Helen Dunmore's The Siege is one of those books you're supposed to love. Regrettably, it falls short of attaining the distinction (that of Great Literature) that it might have achieved.

A Free Thinker, But No Spy

That the FBI spied on Albert Einstein has been public knowledge for two decades, but fuller details of its failed effort to prove the famed scientist was a communist agent are described in Fred Jerome's new book ""The Einstein File.""

Turning Your Place Into a Green Space

First-time visitors to Russia might arrive knowing something of the pervasive nature here of vodka and cold weather, but they will probably have heard nothing of the significance of flowers.

In Two Shows, the Ladies Take the Lead

Two recent productions of contemporary plays -- one, already an American classic and the other a new Russian work -- offer meaty roles for women.

Good Eating That Goes Beyond Goulash

Sadly, when it comes time to choose a restaurant, ""Let's eat Hungarian"" isn't a suggestion that typically pops up.

Where They Dance Down Memory Lane

The recent opening of Morrisville seems to indicate that some people have become nostaligic for the first years of the Russian clubbing scene in the late '80s.


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