02/04/2008
Paid access archiveRestaurant News
By Nathan Toohey
Valentine's Day promotions are already being offered for those wishing to sign up early.
Chinesean at Chin Chin
By Nathan Toohey
Chin Chin serves ""Chinesean"" food, or at least that's what's written on the front of the menu. Other than this amusing orthographical error, however, Chin Chin tends to get things right. It may be located on the basement level of a shopping center, but it does have its own separate entrance. And as the main dining hall is almost entirely separated from the rest of the arcade, it doesn't feel like you're eating in a food court. In fact, considering that Chin Chin would seem to be counting on attracting the weekday lunchtime crowd, it doesn't strike you as a typical lunch spot -- though it does offer free Wi-Fi. Its large main room is dark but cozy, with the bar area bathed in deep red lighting -- quite the opposite of a Pret a Manger-style place.
The Legacy of a Dean
By Anna Tsvetkova
Though he never sought the position of dean, Yasen Zasursky's impact on Moscow State University endures.
Pop Music as Key Tool in Armenian Elections
By Matthew Collin
As the race for Armenia's presidency heats up, with candidates hurling abuse at each other and gunshots fired outside campaign offices, pop music has emerged as a propaganda tool in this increasingly fierce struggle for power. Last week, Serzh Sargsyan, the current prime minister and the favored candidate of the political establishment, deployed Armenia's 2008 Eurovision Song Contest hopeful, Sirusho, as he chased the youth vote.
Useless Dudes in Cyber Era
By Mark H. Teeter
February is National Reading Month in the United States -- and not a moment too soon. Last November, the U.S. National Endowment for the Arts issued ""To Read or Not to Read,"" a sobering report detailing how American youth have been reading progressively less and worse, with both frequency and proficiency declining at ""troubling rates."" Once American kids enter adolescence, the NEA intoned, ""they fall victim to a general culture which does not encourage or reinforce reading ... [so] they do more poorly in school, in the job market and in civic life."" Yikes.
$32Bln Fund Must Go the Extra Mile
Most countries with sovereign wealth funds say they are only investing their windfall profits for future generations. If only it were so simple for Russia.
Match Made in Heaven
By Vyacheslav Nikonov
President Vladimir Putin's decision to serve as prime minister should First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev become the next president has made the duo's electoral success in March a virtual certainty.
Clinton's Politics of Soul Is Bad Taste
By Richard Lourie
Mentioning Senator Hillary Clinton's name in an e-mail to a Moscow friend evoked a fury in the reply that caught me off guard. Though counting herself no great follower of President Vladimir Putin, my friend was still put out by Clinton's comment that he had no soul. She was offended both as a patriot and as an Orthodox believer.
Russia Beats Israel in Fed Cup
HE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Maria Sharapova and Anna Chakvetadze both won their reverse singles matches in straight sets Sunday, and Russia also won the doubles match, giving Russia a 4-1 victory over Israel in the Fed Cup World Group first round.
2 Plutonium Reactors Will Close Early
The Associated Press
wo of Russia's plutonium-producing reactors may be closed six months ahead of schedule, a major milestone in U.S. nuclear nonproliferation efforts, a senior Energy Department official said.
- U.S. Signs Kazakh Army Deal
- More Uranium for U.S. Nuclear Power Plants
- A Canadian Mogul, Clinton and a Kazakh Pact
- Central Bank Moves to Combat Inflation
- Lithuania to Merge Energy Companies
- Poland Seeks Cheaper Pipeline Route
- Manufacturing Hits August 2006 High
- CTC Buys 20% of Kazakh TV Firm
- January Closes With An 'Irrational' Selloff
- Business in Brief
- Workers Vote on Ford Offer
- Ports Bidding for Upgrade Tax Breaks
- Levitin Seeks $860Bln for Transport
- St. Pete Oil Terminal Plans to Modernize
- Race Too Close to Call as Serbia Votes
- Chad Says It Repulsed Rebels
- Microsoft Tries to Snap Up Yahoo for $42Bln
- Egypt Closes Last Gap in Border With Gaza
- Opposition Seeks Peacekeepers as Youth Gangs Clash in Kenya
- Medvedev Courts Farmers and War Veterans
- Aleksanyan Denied Release for Illness
- Milosevic's Wife, Son Get Asylum
- Russia Rejects OSCE's Ire As 'Games'
- Rights Group Calls Putin a 'Brutal' Leader
- Kasyanov to Take His Bid to Court
- News in Brief
- Bolshoi's Opening Delayed By a Year
- Nashi Says It's Healthy and Planning to Double in Size
- Air Force Sends Planes to Arctic and Atlantic
- Tajikistan's Flagship Air Carrier Banned
- Prosecutors Ask Britain to Turn Over 5 Suspects
- Ukraine Seeks to Simplify Gas Trade
- Poland Agrees to Host U.S. Shield
- The Deadly Case of 9 Fleeing Skiers
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