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Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/20/2012

03/14/2003

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Cook's Corner -- Winter Chicken in Wine

You might not have any homemade wine for this recipe, but it's worth a front-page headline in your recipe file.

Global Eye -- Last Orders

As the last hours of peace slip away, the ideals upon which this country was founded will be given a final blow by George W. Bush -- the gravedigger of the American Republic.

A Holey Haven for Lovers of Cheese

Syrnaya Dyrka is a relaxed basement restaurant, with white walls, plenty of pillars and an abundance of beautifully prepared dishes made from every sort of cheese imaginable.

Star's Snug Fit Sags in All Wrong Places

Ben Affleck is the most perplexing of movie stars: The parts he's been in haven't necessarily suited him or made him seem comfortable. Until now.

Shared Spotlight Results in Stunning Show

Kama Ginkas' newest production, ""Dreams of Exile,"" is an ironic, comical and loving look at the Jewish way of life -- its humor, its songs, and its incongruities.

A Local Debut for New England 'Witches'

Moscow's love affair with Western musicals burns ever brighter this week with the opening of ""The Witches of Eastwick,"" an important new show even New York hasn't seen.

The True Giant of Soviet Brinkmanship

Khrushchev, who had been a protege and henchman of Josef Stalin's, used the power he inherited from the dictator to proclaim a policy of de-Stalinization and experiment with liberal reforms.

The Costs & Consequences of The Cold War

In ""The Fifty-Year Wound"" Derek Leebaert makes liberal use of hindsight to gives readers all and sundry aspects of U.S. political history from the last five decades.

In Dublin, on the Frothy Trail of Pubs & Poets

The Celtic Tiger may have come and gone, but in its wake it left Dublin a vibrant, cosmopolitan city of 1 million people coming from all corners of Ireland and the world.

Splicing Cells for Frankenstein Art

Dmitry Bulatov is one of a small, but growing, number of artists around the world who are using genetic engineering to create a new form of art known as Ars Chimera.

Circus Welcomes Purim Celebrants

Although many of the calendar's Jewish holidays are sober observations of historical events, the two-day Purim festival is one of cheer: of donning masks, using noisemakers, eating, drinking and generally making very merry.

At Vanil, Six Days of Croatian Cuisine

If you've got a craving for spicy sausage casserole, Podravina pork, Dalmatian fritters or Slavonian carp, center-city restaurant Vanil has good news for you: a week of Croatian food at its first-ever Croatian Days food festival.

Hollywood to Host Russian Film Fest

The Russian International Film Festival, which takes plae in Los Angeles next month, will showcase a number of new Russian films, and include the U.S. premiere of Andrei Konchalovsky's critically acclaimed ""Dom Durakov.""

Exhibit Has Country's Soul Exposed at Table

Throngs of people filed past the photographs, learning about themselves and their history through pictures of one of the most familiar Russian traditions: gathering at table.


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