01/16/2004
Paid access archiveGlobal Eye – Organ Grinders
Now, after the murder of thousands of innocent people including almost 500 American soldiers, the truth re-emerges -- from the mouths of George W. Bush's own hirelings.
Updating Acoustic
He might have a shaved head and booming voice, but Alexander Sklyar isn't afraid to perform ballads, and his band Va Bank brings fresh life to classic Russian songs.
Truth-Telling On the Road
Two Czech writers gained fame with their best-selling travel books, but caused a stir when they tried to publish a candid account of a trip across the Soviet Union.
Fans on Filming Tolkien
As the final episode of ""The Lord of the Rings"" opens in Moscow, Russian tolkienisty use the web to express passionate views on the movie version of Middle Earth.
Children's Filmmakers Seek Moral Support
Is there separation of Church and arts in Russia? Support for a new Orthodox children's film studio marks a recent trend toward religious and political involvement.
Cook's Corner – Lemon Chess Pie
There's no denying facts: My husband is not a redneck. This is fine by me. I actually prefer intellectual Germans to rural Southerners.
A Life (And Death) Shrouded in Utter Secrecy
In 1941, high-ranking Soviet spy Walter Krivitsky was found dead in Washington -- an apparent suicide. In his new book, Gary Kern considers whether the suicide was ""forced.""
Relics of Ancient Burial Rites Reveal Siberian Trade Route
In a medieval Siberian graveyard a few miles south of the Arctic Circle, Russian scientists have unearthed mummies roughly 1,000 years old, clad in copper masks, hoops and plates -- burial rites that archaeologists say they have never seen before.
Cranking Out a Poet on the Rumor Mill
Mikhail Levitin's quirky new play ""The Degenerate"" zeroes in on Idaliya Poletika, a relative of Alexander Pushkin's wife, and her malicious efforts to blacken the poet's name.
Triumph Mixed With Regret in Middle Earth
After the galloping intelligence displayed in the first two parts of ""The Lord of the Rings"" trilogy, your fear may be that the director, Peter Jackson, would become cautious and unimaginative with the last episode, ""The Return of the King.""
Global Eye – Organ Grinders
Now, after the murder of thousands of innocent people including almost 500 American soldiers, the truth re-emerges -- from the mouths of George W. Bush's own hirelings.
- Updating Acoustic
- Truth-Telling On the Road
- Fans on Filming Tolkien
- Children's Filmmakers Seek Moral Support
- Cook's Corner – Lemon Chess Pie
- A Life (And Death) Shrouded in Utter Secrecy
- Relics of Ancient Burial Rites Reveal Siberian Trade Route
- Cranking Out a Poet on the Rumor Mill
- Triumph Mixed With Regret in Middle Earth
- Press Review
- Bush Announces Mars Initiative
- U.S. Airline Pilot Jailed in Brazil
- Residents' Woes, Kyoto and Putin's Paternalism
- Russia's 'Curse'
- Khakamada's Game Plan Confounds
- Taking Plunge Into Plumbing Nightmare
- News in Brief
- Warming Themselves With Hope
- Cabinet Looks at ID Numbers
- Rogozin Acknowledges Differences, Denies Split
- Security Headquarters Opened By the Shanghai Six in Beijing
- Rocket Scientists Eager for a Piece of Bush's Space Action
- Business in Brief
- Kasyanov Pushes Healthcare Plan
- Domestic Carriers Buck International Downturn
- Alimony Share Freeze Muddies The Waters
- Enforce the Law Fairly, Putin Warns
- What Forces Want: More New Weapons
- Kadyrov Touting for Saudis' Cash
- Plush Toys Sing Putin's Praises
- EU Urges Russia to Leave Georgia
- Yukos Goes on the Sibneft Offensive
- U.S. Judge Questions Russian's Detention
- Conscripts Forced to Stand in the Cold
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