Issue #1596 (57), Friday, July 30, 2010 | Archive
 
 
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LOCAL NEWS

BUDDING ARTISTS SEEK INSPIRATION FROM PETERSBURG

Ten British schoolchildren visited St. Petersburg this week as part of a program for budding artists organized by British portrait painter Alexander Talbot Rice.

The artists have been attending lectures and anatomy classes at the Repin Institute of Arts as well as visiting the city’s celebrated museums, including the Hermitage and the Russian Museum, to get acquainted with Russia’s cultural heritage.

 

KHABAROVSK COURT BANS YOUTUBE FOR ‘EXTREMISM’

MOSCOW — A Far East court has banned YouTube and four other web sites for “extremist” content in a ruling that promises to raise new worries about free speech.

Spanish Star Choreographer Joins Mikhailovsky Theater

The internationally renowned Spanish choreographer Nacho Duato has been appointed creative director of the Mikhailovsky Theater ballet troupe. He was previously at the helm of the National Spanish Dance Company.

“Once Duato said he was giving up that job, he was invited to take charge of four or five ballet companies around the world,” RIA Novosti reported.


All photos from issue.

 

NATIONAL NEWS

YOUTH CAMP BRAWL FUELS ETHNIC UNREST

MOSCOW — A brawl at a youth camp near the site of the 2014 Winter Olympics has turned into an ethnically charged battle pitting Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov against Krasnodar Governor Alexander Tkachyov.

What exactly happened on Sunday night at the Don camp in the Krasnodar region’s Tuapse district remains a matter of dispute, but the incident serves as an embarrassment for Tkachyov, who is overseeing preparations for the Sochi games.

Prosecutors said the fight broke out after a deputy camp director saw three Chechen campers arguing with a 14-year-old girl from the Rostov region and asked them to back off.

Fists started flying, and the deputy director, Boris Usoltsev, suffered a broken nose and an injured leg, the Prosecutor General’s Office said in a statement.

 

Alexander Belenky / The St. Petersburg Times

German soldiers at the Sologubovka Cemetery, 80 kilometers east of St. Petersburg, fill in the graves of German World War II soldiers discovered in the Leningrad Oblast during recent searches. The cemetery celebrates its 10th anniversary on Sunday.

COURT DECLARES POET MILITANT LEADER

MOSCOW — A Moscow region court ruled Wednesday that an amateur poet crossed the line between art and crime by turning a youth commune into an illegal militant group and abusing several of its members.

But Yulia Privedennaya, 34, who was handed a 4 1/2-year suspended sentence, said the commune’s goal was only to educate the young through poetry.

Privedennaya was convicted of being the leader of a militant group, as well as depriving people of freedom and torturing them.

TWO MEN IMPRISONED FOR PAYING HOMELESS ‘SLAVES’ WITH ALCOHOL

MOSCOW — Two men from the Perm region were sentenced Wednesday to jail terms for holding 11 homeless people captive for up to five years at a scrap metal processing plant and plying them with alcohol in lieu of salaries, prosecutors said.

A jury convicted Alexei Kiselyov, 32, and Vyacheslav Bobchikhin, 30, of kidnapping, false imprisonment, using slave labor, and battery and sentenced them to eight and six years imprisonment, respectively, the regional prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

 

RUSSIANS DISLIKE ‘RICH’ PR PEOPLE

MOSCOW — Russians think that public relations jobs are prestigious and profitable, but immoral, and do not want their own children to take up the line of work, according to a new survey released Wednesday in celebration of PR Specialist Day.


 

LOCAL BUSINESS

STARBUCKS POSTPONES PLANS TO OPEN IN CITY BY TWO YEARS

The opening of the first Starbucks coffee shop in St. Petersburg has been postponed by two years, while its fellow popular American cafe chain Cinnabon is due to open two outlets in the city this fall.

“Now I can say for certain that a Starbucks cafe will not open in St.

 

HAYWARD NOMINATED FOR SEAT ON TNK-BP BOARD

MOSCOW — Former TNK-BP chief Robert Dudley, forced from the post in 2008, will take the helm at BP in October, while outgoing CEO Tony Hayward will be nominated for a board seat at Russia’s third-largest oil producer, BP said Tuesday.


 

OPINION

BP’S FUTURE MAY BE DECIDED IN RUSSIA

As BP CEO Tony Hayward clears his desk from St. James’s Square in London, Robert Dudley is getting ready to take his place, effective Oct. 1. The rationale is clear: BP wants an American to take care of its U.S. assets. But in the end, this could prove to be misguided.

 

THE MOLE WHO GAVE AWAY RUSSIA’S SPIES

During his visit to Ukraine on Saturday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin told journalists that he met with the 10 Russian “illegals” — who pleaded guilty in a U.


 

CULTURE

SUMMER SURREALISM

The artistic life of St. Petersburg is not losing ground, even during the summertime. New exhibitions of modern art are currently on display at 5 Etazh studio, Art re.Flex gallery and Al Gallery.

At the 5 Etazh (Five Floors) studio, an art photography exhibition titled “On the verge of reality” has opened in conjunction with the KOPPA advertising agency and photo center.

“Originally we had an idea to organize a series of exhibitions,” said Yulia Povorotnaya, head of the KOPPA advertising agency. “For the initial exhibition, we have chosen the genre of artistic photography because it seemed the most interesting today.”

Thirteen photographers are taking part in the project, including two artists from Belarus and the participants of the first Russian Museum Biennial, Arseny Semyonov and Pavel Kuznetsov.

 

A. Sazonov / For The St. Petersburg Times

The Boris Eifman Ballet Theater will perform its latest production, ‘Onegin. Online’ at the Alexandriinsky Theater on Friday.

WORD’S WORTH

Ðàé: paradise

Goooood morning, Moscow! You’re listening to Radio TMT, and it’s time for the weather report. Looks like it’s going to be another beautiful day: temps in the 30s, clear blue skies and humidity at 33 percent. It’s another day in paradise!

Wait a minute … How come weather that would be heavenly in New York or London is hellish in Moscow? As we pause to ponder yet another mystery of Russian life, this is a good opportunity to consider Russian notions of heaven and hell.

SING WHEN YOU’RE WINNING

Choirs from around the world will flock to St. Petersburg this weekend for the Singing World international festival of choral art, which runs from Friday to Wednesday.

Every year, professional and amateur choirs appear on the city’s leading stages, including the State Academic Cappella, Kazan Cathedral, Alexander Nevsky Monastery and other churches of different confessions for the festival.

“Our main objective is to unite people of different religions and from different countries,” said Yelena Bizina, the festival’s director and producer.

 

IN THE SPOTLIGHT: TWITTER

Last week, President Dmitry Medvedev tweeted about a visit to Finland, the blast in a hydroelectric power station in Kabardino-Balkaria, oh and a rather impressive rain storm in Moscow.

Stellar service

With attentive wait staff, a relaxed atmosphere, simple yet chic d?cor and an extensive menu offering a variety of classic Italian dishes, the owners of the old-standing favorite Da Albertone on Millionaya Ulitsa seem to have come up with another winner with this new offering on Zagorodny Prospekt — dining at Portobello is a pleasant experience that will satisfy taste buds and surpass expectations of service.



 
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