06/01/2004
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Suffering Safin Falls to Nalbandian
After reaching the fourth round of the French Open with two draining five-set wins, Marat Safin was knocked out of the tournament by Argentina's David Nalbandian 7-5,6-4,6-7,6-3 on Monday afternoon.
Russian Is NHL's Most Wanted
If Russian teenager Alexander Ovechkin is not the next big deal in ice hockey, then many NHL scouts may be looking for jobs in a few seasons.
Azeri Village Poised on the Edge of the Abyss
Hussein Ali is not a happy man.
Reading Between the Lines
President Vladimir Putin's state of the nation address last week was a mixed bag.
Putin and the Mythical NGO Conspiracy
Back in 1990-91, the United States and Europe were terrified at the prospect of the Soviet Union collapsing.
Billions Down the Drain
In his state of the nation address a year ago, President Vladimir Putin announced that military modernization was a national priority, and ordered the creation of a corps of professional sergeants or noncommissioned officers.
Istanbul Bombing Trial Suspended on First Day
The trial of 69 suspected members of a Turkish al-Qaida cell charged in a string of November suicide bombings in Istanbul opened Monday, but the court quickly ruled that it did not have the authority to hear the case and that any judgment would have to come during later hearings before another court.
Saudis Comb Kingdom for Al-Qaida Militants
Saudi forces combed the kingdom Monday for suspected al-Qaida militants who killed 22 civilians and took dozens of foreigners hostage in a daring attack on its globally vital oil industry.
Glasnost and Growth Go Hand in Hand
During his first term as president, Vladimir Putin used his power, his popularity and his secret police connections to ensure that his political opposition would effectively cease to exist.
Marshals Struggle to Keep Low Profile
As they settled into first class on American Airlines flight 1438 from Chicago to Miami, they were supposed to be the last line of defense against terrorists -- two highly trained U.S. air marshals who would sit unnoticed among the ordinary travelers but spring into action at the first sign of trouble.
Pakistan Fears Revenge Attacks
Thousands of police and paramilitary troops were deployed at Shiite mosques in Pakistan on Monday to prevent revenge attacks after the killing of a senior pro-Taliban Sunni cleric over the weekend.
- Clashes Continue in Najaf
- Asian Shares Drop After Saudi Attack
- Terror Target Was Oil Industry
- Fiat Faces Chaos in the Wake of Agnelli's Death
- Foreigners Buy 18% of Chinese Bank
- Western Europeans Watch Jobs Go East
- Report: Halliburton Contract Arranged by Cheney's Office
- Boeing Shows Confidence on Winning Pentagon Deal
- City Woos High-Rise Investors With Auctions
- Architect: Make Malls User-Friendly
- News in Brief
- Preservationists Take Fight to the Wider World
- Source: Kremlin Set Up Payout for Erkel
- Apartment Building Fire Kills 7
- Putin Plucks an Ally From St. Pete for a Kremlin Post
- Sex, Spies and Mini-Mikes Bug Canadian Military
- Putin Joins French Students at the Ballet
- Silk Road Spice Girl Has Gabriel's Ear
- Business in Brief
- LUKoil Wants Bigger Role on World Stage
- Georgia Cranks Up Tension on South Ossetia's Border
- Russia Teams Up With Bush on WMDs
- Kadyrov's Eldest Son Dies
- Mezhprom to Create $2Bln Conglomerate
- Execs: Russia as Pretty as France
- Yukos Leaves Analysts Guessing
- Yukos to Lose Majority in Sibneft
- FSB Takes a Look at Secrecy at TNK-BP
- NTV Bars Chechen Widow's Interview
- Court Clears $1.3Bln Sale of Top Turkish Refiner to Tatneft
- Israel Courts Gazprom's Network, Gas
- Ministry: Economy Up 7.5%
- EU Agrees to Buy More Russian Steel
- Manufacturing Growth Slows
- History Curriculum Opens Eyes on War
- Next Generation Sees Some Virtue in the Past
- A Teacher Encourages Independent Thinking
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