Bushehr Launch Boosts Rosatom
Colonel Cleared in Chubais Attack
2 Pro-Kremlin Parties Square Off Over Popular Blogger
Farmers Get Rain, But Still Not Enough
Watchdog Opens Cases Against Bread Makers
Officials Waste $13.5Bln in 2009, Putin Says
3,000 Praise Forest, Assail Putin at Rally
More than 3,000 people crowded into Pushkin Square on Sunday evening to denounce the authorities' plan to cut down an ancient forest north of Moscow. The rally lasted three hours and ended peacefully, though police detained three prominent activists.
- Putin Fires Top Forest Official After Fires
- 3,000 Rally in Kaliningrad for Putin's Ouster, Popular Vote
- Khodorkovsky's Mother Says Putin Blocking Son's Release
- A Big Break for U.S. in Case of Viktor Bout
- Transneft Complains About Shoddy Contracting
- Heat Wave Dents Hopes of Climate "Winners"
- Suspected Organizer of Moscow Metro Bombings Killed in Dagestan
- Nuclear Submarine 'Handed Over' to India
- Chechen Women Without Headscarves Targeted During Ramadan
- Military Seeks Bids to Supply 2 Helicopter Ships
- Ministry Says No Grain Imports in 2010
- Medvedev Secures Long-Term Foothold in Armenia
- LUKoil to Get $438M in Kazakh Settlement
- Egypt's Sawiris, VimpelCom Said to Discuss Merger
- Power Returns After St. Pete Blackout
- E.On Asks for Lower Gas Prices
- Heat Bites Into Sales of Summer Sweets
- Rosneft to Invest $630M in Crescent Venture
- Bank of Moscow Faces Luzhkov Risk
- Catherine’s Maidens – Beautiful, Plain, Noble
Russian Blogs Are Harmful to Your HealthIn Russia, Web 2.0 services like LiveJournal are virtually the only way to keep informed and definitely the best way to get a sense of people’s reaction to the news. But bloggers by definition concentrate on the negative, which can leave readers yearning for a good old, politically correct and mentally stable newspaper.
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Catherine’s Maidens – Beautiful, Plain, NobleSeven portraits of young noblewomen who studied at the Smolny Institute — Russia's first educational institute for women — in the late 18th century are now on display at the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg. The portraits, which helped create the role-portrait genre, capture the feminine ideal of Catherine the Great's Russia.
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Theater Plus: Theater, Social Commentary and the Paradox of Moscow TrafficOur theater critic interviewed Thomas Irmer, a German journalist and theater critic, who had a keen outsider's view of a controversial play performed in Moscow.
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