02/06/2008
Paid access archiveA Green Winter Wonderland
By John Wendle
Searching for winter houseplants, mysterious greenthumbs make Moscow's Botanical Garden as unique as an orchid.
Ask the Chef
Kirill Karmalov is head chef at Bocconcino.
Enter Noodle Territory
By Nathan Toohey
Menza is the first in what is to be a new chain of noodle houses -- in fact, the restaurant is subtitled ""territory of noodles."" Given that it was created by the restaurateurs behind the Gi-No-Taki and Yakitoria chains, it's not surprising to discover that Menza is simple and democratic like a noodle house should be -- although the only other Moscow eatery that it can really be compared to is the Udonyasan chain, which debuted near Novoslobodskaya in September. But while at Udonyasan guests place orders at the counter and then wait for their meal to be brought out to their table, Menza has a more novel system: Customers take a seat and order by filling out a form, ticking boxes next to the dishes they want. The wait staff collect these questionnaires from diners' tables and promptly bring the food out.
A Lot of Doom About Nothing
By Bret Stephens
In 1788, Massachusetts playwright Mercy Otis Warren took one look at the unratified U.S. Constitution and declared, ""We shall soon see this country rushing into the extremes of confusion and violence."" This, roughly, is the origin of American declinism -- and it's been downhill ever since.
The News That Doesn't Get Reported
By Yulia Latynina
There is something very strange about the way news is presented in Russia. On one hand, there is news that we are all aware of -- news of Medvedev meeting with dairy farmers, for example, or Medvedev outlawing inflation and increasing pensions.
Putin's Jewish Anomaly Comes as a Surprise
By Vladimir Shlapentokh
Josef Stalin and President Vladimir Putin epitomize the type of leader who is ready to sacrifice the country's interests to maintain his power. Of course, Stalin and Putin used ideologies extensively for propagandistic purposes and for the legitimization of their personal power. But given the fact that they were concerned only about personal power, these two leaders were extremely flexible and open to the idea of changing the country's ideological course in any direction.
Business in Brief
Health Care ReorganizationCitibank Told to Rehire 6Ministry Safe Until ElectionsLUKoil Seeks Russneft AssetNabucco's One-Year DelayNord Stream AlternativeChemezov Requests CopperGazprom to Prepare ExclavePulkovo Traffic Up 20%Inflation AcceleratingFire Near Nuclear StationNanotechnology Sales PlanFor the Record
24 States to Choose Party Candidates
Reuters
The biggest day ever in U.S. presidential nominating contests was underway on Tuesday with Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in a close fight and Republican John McCain aiming for a knockout blow against Mitt Romney.
- Mediators Awaited in Chad
- Mugabe Will Face First Major Challenge in March Election
- Iraq Raises New National Flag in Step Toward Reconciliation
- Prince Andrew Scolds U.S. on Iraq
- U.S. Wary of Russian Finance
- Terminal-3 Seen Ready a Year Late
- Gazprom, SUEK Value Power Venture
- Kremlin Aide Sechin to Run Again for Board of Rosneft
- BP Says Kovykta Talks May Take Longer
- Russians Push Up Prices of Rare Icons
- Ukraine Accepted Into WTO
- Auditors Could Be Asked to Snitch
- $13Bln Chelyabinsk Refinery Planned
- MICEX and RTS Retreat
- Putin Calls for Success in Sochi
- Different Traditions Meet in Army's New Look
- OSCE Balks at Sweetened Proposal
- Kasyanov Loses Case on Appeal
- Dispute in Mens' Bathroom Line Leads to Brawl
- 8 Suspects Arrested in Race Murders
- One Dead, 2 Injured in St. Pete Blast
- NATO Gets KGB-Trained Hungarian
- News in Brief
- Moscow Lawyer Seeks U.S. Asylum
- Karimov Gives First Visit to Kremlin
- Reiman Wants Free Home to Cell Phone Calls
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