08/12/2004
Paid access archivePress Review
A brief look at the stories making headlines in the Russian-language press
Najaf Fighting Persists for 7th Day
U.S. jet fighters flew overhead and Iraqi police manned checkpoints cutting Najaf into two as battles between U.S. forces and a radical Shiite militia persisted Wednesday for a seventh day.
UN: Sudan Militias Use Helicopters
A UN-brokered agreement that requires Sudan to create safe havens in Darfur within 30 days came into effect even as UN officials said that Arab militias pressed their attacks on black villages, with helicopter gunships joining the fighting.
Travel Executive Finds All the World's a Stage
For theater buff and travel executive Steven Caron, Russia has become home after his aspiration to become an actor brought him to the country 14 years ago.
Appointments
Brunswick has appointed Ed Nicholson chief executive to replace Jeffrey Costello.
Washington Is Turning Into a Fortress of Fear
Washington, D.C., as designed by the French artist and engineer Pierre L'Enfant, was meant to be a city of grand open spaces, with wide, tree-lined avenues flowing into graceful circles.
- News in Brief
- Deputy Governor Held in Bribe Case
- Moscow Police Officers Jailed
- Business in Brief
- Gazprom, Ukraine Trade Debt for Fees
- Rebel Region Still Pulling Tourists
- Ukraine to Review Mobile Sale to MTS
- Foreigners Line Up to Buy Russian
- Big Prize Money Awaits Victorious Athletes
- Ukrainian Mayor Offers Apartments
- 8 Federal Troops Killed in Chechnya in Rebel Raids
- Belarussian Authorities Refuse to Grant U.S. Senators Visas
- Kalashnikov Film Shoots
- High Expectations for the Olympics
- Sukhoi Is the Star of a New Action Flick
- Khodorkovsky Has Scored a Moral Victory
- Law Needed to Prevent Insider Trading
- Menatep Says Yukos in Default
- Cocaine Smugglers in a Pantyhose Plot
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