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Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/17/2012

04/04/2003

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Global Eye -- Hell for Leather

The Regime's postwar plans seem to indicate that the Bushists plan to turn Iraq into an American protectorate -- a supine dependency like Guam, Puerto Rico or Britain.

Stuck Between Soccer and Spaghetti

Sports bar or restaurant? Balikoti may have to sort out its identity crisis if the owners really want to pack in the fans on game day.

Club's Success Not Quite Set in Stone

Having spent two years at the center of some pretty outrageous gossip, Stone has done well to exceed the expectations of even the most optimistic of Moscow's magpies.

Cartoonist Collective Opens Show

Showcasing the work of the St. Petersburg cartoonist collective Nuance, the exhibition ""cartoon.spb.ru"" opened earlier this week at Association of Free Artists.

Capital's First IMAX Opens at Ramstore

On April 4, the first IMAX theater in the Commonwealth of Independent States, Nescafe IMAX, opened in Ramstore City.

A Winding Path to St. Pete's Golden Mask

Operatic director Alexei Stepaniuk is nominated for a Golden Mask award this year -- and he has ""Carmen"" to thank for it.

Complacent Constituents and Political Power

""Elections Without Order"" asserts that though Russia may look democratic from a distance, society lacks the rule of law, which is key to achieving democracy in substance as well as style

Cook's Corner -- Caucasian Burrito

This month, add a Caucasian roll-up to your lunch or dinner menu -- springtime, as vegetables and herbs come into season, is the perfect time of year for dishes like this one.

Golden Mask Continues in St. Pete

Since its creation nine years ago, the Golden Mask Festival has become a national forum that brings together Russian theaters from all over the country on a yearly basis.

Rachlevsky Masterful at New Venue

Misha Rachlevsky and his Kremlin Chamber Orchestra took an unaccustomed excursion into the world of opera with a pair of short comic works by noted rivals Mozart and Salieri.

Echoes of Stalin, Subversion and Heartbreak

The National Youth Theater's staging of Alexei Arbuzov's ""Tanya"" seems too forced and unconvincing to compare with earlier revivals of this ""official"" Soviet playwright's work.

They Fled the Holocaust, Only to Find It Waited at Sea

On Feb. 24, 1942, a ship crowded with Jewish refugees fleeing Romania sank in the Black Sea. Of the nearly 800 men, women and children on board who had hoped to reach Palestine, only one man, a 19-year-old named David Stoliar, survived.

Spies, TV Shows & the Curse of Ambition

A screenwriter's own particular brand of self-disgust is combined with the germy self-hatred of the game-show creator and host Chuck Barris in ""Confessions of a Dangerous Mind.""

Global Eye -- Hell for Leather

The Regime's postwar plans seem to indicate that the Bushists plan to turn Iraq into an American protectorate -- a supine dependency like Guam, Puerto Rico or Britain.

Stuck Between Soccer and Spaghetti

Sports bar or restaurant? Balikoti may have to sort out its identity crisis if the owners really want to pack in the fans on game day.


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