08/03/2004
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Olympiisky Touchdown
The 2004 European Junior Championship in American football wrapped up Sunday at Olympiisky Stadium with France edging out Germany 17-14 in the final.
EU Should Be Courting the Kresy
The Poles call them kresy, lands on the edge, and Russians the ""near abroad."" Belarus and Ukraine have traditionally existed in a political and geographic limbo between East and West from which more than a decade of independence, and the highest of hopes, have not liberated them.
Geneva Talks Inspire Hope for the WTO
The weekend agreement on a negotiating framework for the Doha trade round is a modest and belated advance in the long march toward liberalizing global markets.
News in Brief
174 Foreigners Ill MOSCOW (MT) -- A total of 174 foreign workers, including dozens of Turkish citizens, were hospitalized over the weekend with food poisoning in the western Siberian city of Surgut, Interfax reported. The employees of Turkish construction firm Komtek have been diagnosed with salmonella, Nail Kashapov, the chief health official of the Khanty-Mansiisk autonomous district, told Interfax. They are believed to have fallen ill after eating catered food. The hospitalized workers include 122 Turks and citizens of Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Komtek is building a business center in Surgut for oil major Surgutneftegaz. Putin Gets a Book MOSCOW (MT) -- Acting Chechen President Sergei Abramov gave President Vladimir Putin a newly published photo book about Chechnya on Monday that had been ordered by slain Chechen leader Akhmad Kadyrov, RIA-Novosti reported.
Moscow's Learning Oases for Tongue-Tied Expats
Tongue-tied at the market? Suffering from a language barrier with your Russian co-workers?
Apartment Price Growth Fell in July
For the first time in two years, growth of real estate prices in Moscow fell to practically zero last month.
Baghdad Realty Flourishes Even as Iraq Is Still Inflamed
On the east bank of the Tigris River, a house is for sale. An ad for it might read something like this: 10-bedroom, 14 1/2-bath riverfront beauty. Swimming pool, servants' quarters, secure parking for eight cars. Some bullet damage on third floor. Spotty electricity. Baghdad schools. Asking $4 million.
Las Vegas Comes Up Trumps
Real estate developer Donald Trump has filed plans to build what would be the tallest hotel on the Las Vegas Strip.
- 256 Die in Paraguay Supermarket Blaze
- Feminists Criticize John Paul II
- Pirate Clinton Memoirs Surface in China
- MSF Calls For More Sudan Aid
- U.S. Warns of Detailed Terror Threat
- Putin Praises 1944 Warsaw Uprising
- Russia Still Has Not Atoned
- The Times May Change but Mops Stay the Same
- Yanukovych: Cut Iraq Troops
- Kyrgyzstan's Ex-Communist Leader Masaliyev Dead at 71
- Too Much Order Can Be a Bad Thing
- HBOS Mulls Abbey Counterbid
- HSBC Profit Smashes Market Expectations
- WTO Deal Is Short on Hard Details
- Durex Makes Headway in China Market
- Business in Brief
- African Murder Trial Starts
- Chechen Newspaper Closed Down Over Critical Articles
- Maskhadov Vows to Kill Election Victor
- Trial of Uzbek Militants Delayed
- Moscow Tailors Come in All Shapes and Sizes
- Ask a Stupid Question
- TUI Makes Bid for Russian Tourists
- Oil Output Breaks Post-Soviet Record
- Crude Hits New 21-Year High
- Yukos Faces New Tax Probe for 2002
- Many Deputies in Dark About Bill
- A Guidebook to Having Sex in the Office
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