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

05/30/2003

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Cook's Corner -- Coconut-Raspberry Tartlets

""Let the buyer beware!"" should be posted above the entrance to my local supermarket here in Tashkent, or over their cookie counter at least. From now on, I?m sticking to baking my own.

Season Opens at Moscow's Beaches

The city's most popular Moscow River beach, Serebryany Bor kicks off the season Sunday with a program that targets the smallest beachcombers: the kids.

Estate is Alive With the Sound of Music

A popular form of summertime entertainment in pre-Revolutionary Russia -- open-air concerts of light symphonic music -- is being revived over the next three months on the grounds of the princely Yusupov family's former estate of Arkhangelskoye.

New Time Zone, Same Great Ska

Washington D.C.'s top ska-jazz band, Eastern Standard Time, performs two local shows this week, after shows at St. Petersburg clubs last weekend.

Gorbushka Is Down With the PE

Muscovites will have a chance to bum rush a show Tuesday when U.S. rap pioneers Public Enemy perform at the Dom Kultury Gorbunova, popularly known as Gorbushka.

A Literary Legacy for Dostoevsky Relation

There was a time when Dmitry Dostoevsky used to curse the memory of his famous great-grandfather, Fyodor Dostoevsky, the 19th-century author of such literary classics as ""The Brothers Karamazov"" and ""Crime and Punishment."" But things are different today.

Rare Malevich Works Stir Controversy at Guggenheim

This summer, 90 works by Kazimir Malevich -- paintings, drawings, architectural models and porcelain cups -- are on display at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.

Cutting-Edge Copenhagen

The Danes sell Copenhagen as the crossroads of cute. Come see the cute Little Mermaid, gazing wistfully out to sea! Come see the cute little boys in their jaunty uniforms and bearskin hats, playing soldier at Tivoli! Come see the armadas of bicycles, with their own cute little traffic lights! Come on.

Shifting Sands & Rare Light in Denmark

There is enough to see in Copenhagen -- the canals, the Italianate piazzas, the breadth of architectural detail -- to fully occupy the traveler. But nudging yourself to get out to the countryside brings you to an equally rich Denmark.

Documenting the Lives of the Party

Hollywood has always been fertile ground for political activism. In the 1930s, the Communist Party began to see the film capital as prime territory for recruitment. By the end of World War II, Party members were active in many of the unions.

Substance Wins Out Over Sex in JFK Book

The New York Times reported last November that Robert Dallek's forthcoming biography of U.S. President John F. Kennedy would disclose, based on newly opened medical files, that the president had suffered far more dire health problems than voters and previous biographers had ever known.

Hard Lessons in a Devilishly Devious CIA

The Recruit"" takes place within the shadowy world of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, where, we are repeatedly told, nothing is what it seems.

Put Your Hooves Together for the Horses

You cannot argue with Bartabas. You can take his Zingaro equestrian theater or you can leave it, as you can his newest production, ""Loungta,"" the world premiere of which took place a week ago here in Moscow.

Arabian Treats to Enchant Even Aladdin

So, having been asked at short notice to review the new Lebanese restaurant Shafran, it was no bother for me to head off on my own, mainly because I of course have no friends.


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