03/07/2003
Paid access archiveCatherine the Great's St. Petersburg Resurrected in Art
French portrait painter Marie Louise Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun, a favorite of Marie Antoinette, knew a sophisticated city when she saw one.
In Athens, Potent Ouzo Sweetens Life
Here are five perfect ouzeri for travelers who want to become more familiar with what the Greeks call the ""drink of revolution and freedom.""
The Illustrated Tale of a Race of Warriors
John Ure's ""The Cossacks"" is a book in the lavish tradition of popular ""illustrated"" histories and biographies, at once pleasing to look at and to read.
It's Not Fosse's Town, but it Still Has Kick
Ever since she landed in Hollywood a few years back, Welsh-born actress Catherine Zeta-Jones has been playing the part of an old-fashioned star with a vengeance.
Global Eye -- Gangs of D.C.
The ultimate goal is not Iraq, but domination of the world's oil supplies in the coming century, when the surging nations of China and India will reach their economic peak.
Women's Day: From Revolution to Revelry
March 8 it's the year's only holiday dedicated to dames, matrons, chicks and lasses: International Women's Day.
NB Has Work by Women Artists of Northern Capital
A local gallery celebrates International Women's Day with the work of Russia's female artists this week with ""Venice of the North: The Women"" at the NB Gallery.
Dining in the Underground at Dell 'Opera
While the service a Dell 'Opera just crosses the fine line from civility to servility, the food will certainly please even the most discriminating diner.
The Marvels of Music and Misunderstanding
""The School of Fools"" -- a challenging mix of physical, musical, poetic theater -- is undoubtedly one of the most unique shows we will see this season.
Cook's Corner -- Orange Gelee
Happy International Women's Day. Here's a quick quiz to test your knowledge of male-female behavior.
All That Jazz and More at JVL Art Club
Moscow's newest jazz bar, the JVL Art Club, differs from its Russian predecessors in every way that matters.
Mariinsky Performs at Bolshoi Exchange
Next Friday St. Petersburg's Mariinsky Theater comes to Moscow, bringing along a triple bill of two very early ballets by French choreographer Roland Petit.
Punk in Trouble: The Battle of the Dead Kennedys
The Dead Kennedys, scheduled to play their first-ever Russian shows this week, are a legendary punk band without a legendary punk.
- Catherine the Great's St. Petersburg Resurrected in Art
- In Athens, Potent Ouzo Sweetens Life
- The Illustrated Tale of a Race of Warriors
- It's Not Fosse's Town, but it Still Has Kick
- Global Eye -- Gangs of D.C.
- Women's Day: From Revolution to Revelry
- NB Has Work by Women Artists of Northern Capital
- Dining in the Underground at Dell 'Opera
- The Marvels of Music and Misunderstanding
- Cook's Corner -- Orange Gelee
- All That Jazz and More at JVL Art Club
- Mariinsky Performs at Bolshoi Exchange
- Punk in Trouble: The Battle of the Dead Kennedys
- Press Review
- Blix Puts Positive Spin on New Report
- Hundreds of Russians Fleeing Iraq
- Vivendi Posts Record $25.6Bln 2002 Loss
- German Firm Hit With U.S. Boycott Over Iraq
- Argentina Overturns Peso Policy
- Jet Crashes in Algeria, 102 Dead
- 11 Dead, 100 Wounded After Israel Storms a Refugee Camp
- Orchestra Brings Music and Veggies
- Business in Brief
- The Race for Seats at Table of Power
- Corporate Raiders Divvy Up Moscow
- A Female Bodyguard Fights Back
- Armenia's Kocharyan Wins 2nd Term
- Additional Checkpoint Closures
- Singing Competition Brings Convicts to the Stage
- New Health Rule Limits Recruits
- Kuchma Eyes Deep Reforms
- News in Brief
- Britain Open to Amended Draft
- U.S. Threatens Trade War Over Meat
- Kempinski Plans Chain of Its Own
- 24-Hour Russian Business TV Debuts in May
- CPI Target 'Difficult'
- Ruhrgas Raises Stake In Gazprom
- BA's Flight Indicates the Way Forward
- UN on Brink of Paralysis Over Iraq
- Municipal Deformation
- On Felgenhauer, Frolov and Nikonov on Iraq
Most Read