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Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/16/2012

10/07/2005

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Founded in 1922, the satirical magazine Krokodil provided comic, although ideologically pure, views on everyday life.

Global Eye

No ruling class that was actually serious about governing would ever countenance the pair of jokers whom Bush has just foisted on the Supreme Court.

Relative Values

In ""Roots,"" a con artist arrives in a small Ukrainian town to unite Jewish emigres with impoverished locals posing as their long-lost relatives.

Wanted

It is difficult work to make oak barrels, Victor admitted, although he sounded like a man who was not scared of work.

Troublemaker

In his turbulent career, dissident author Andrei Sinyavsky made plenty of enemies in the Soviet establishment -- and among his fellow liberal intellectuals as well.

Drama on the Cutting Edge

Praktika, the latest addition to city's theater scene, plans to fill its repertoire with new and controversial plays.

Russian Invasion

With hundreds of events planned for the next four months, the Europalia festival is set to give Belgium a hefty dose of Russian culture.

Spirit of Sundance

Making its first appearance in Moscow next week, the IndieVisual festival presents rarely seen gems from the U.S. independent film scene.

Salon

It is often forgotten how important translators are for the popularity and readability of works by foreign authors.

Intelligence Design

Stalin's failure to predict Hitler's 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union was a classic mistake of 20th-century intelligence: the projection of one's own values upon an opponent.

A Modern Path to Sainthood

Ilya and Emilia Kabakov's stage designs for ""St. Francis of Assisi,"" the challenging opera by 20th-century composer Olivier Messiaen, go on display at Stella Art Gallery.

Art in the Flesh

In his lavish new book, performance artist Andrei Bartenev traces the brief but colorful history of Russian body art.


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