Arts and Culture
Ivory Poachers Will Kill Off Earth's Giants: Interview With Cyril Christo From green-suited Babar to sweet,
soaring Dumbo, people love elephants, ascribing to them
qualities of wisdom and compassion. Weighing up to 26,000
pounds, these largest and most powerful of land animals have no
natural predators, except, of course, for human beings, who are
destroying their habitats and using automatic weapons to
slaughter them for ivory.
Chinese Crickets Train, Have Pre-Bout Sex, Ferocious Fights: Lewis Lapham The combatants were strong, well-
matched and ready to go. One zoomed in for a quick assault only
to be rebuffed by a fierce lunge from his opponent, making
onlookers collectively gasp. Circling, they locked and wrestled,
repeatedly flipping each other over. After a heroic battle, one
cricket finally went off in defeat, and the money changed hands.
Nixon, Bare Flesh on Fifth, Addams Family, Honey Vodka: Great N.Y. Weekend Peter Strauss does a terrific
impersonation of legendary Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee in
“Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers.”
`Twilight' Star Mourns Brother's Suicide; Hamm's Cold Case: Rick Warner Near the end of “Remember Me,”
there’s a lingering shot of the Twin Towers on the morning of
Sept. 11, 2001, just before they were destroyed by terrorist-
piloted jets. Like much of the movie, the symbolism is heavy-
handed.
How Annie Leibovitz Found New Partner to Handle $24 Million Debt, Archive Late last summer, Richard Nanula, a
principal at private-equity firm Colony Capital LLC, met
celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz in New York as she was
struggling to repay a $24 million loan.
Mexican Street Food, Fine Dining Win Over Sun-Starved Londoners: Interview Mexican food had barely made its
presence felt in London until recently, unless you count
tourist joints where the fare bears as close a relation to the
cuisine as Walkabout bars do to fine Australian dining.
Nazi-Looted Corot Painting of Woman to Be Auctioned by Sotheby's in June Sotheby’s will offer a painting by
the French artist Jean Baptiste Camille Corot in an auction of
19th-century art after a Dutch museum returned the work to the
heirs of a Jewish banker persecuted by the Nazis.
Kim Cattrall Flirts, Clowns in Noel Coward's `Private Lives': London Stage Kim Cattrall transformed the
monochromatic role of Samantha in “Sex and the City” into a
portrayal of sexual self-confidence. Maybe any actress with a
certain va-va-voom could have done the same. Va-va-voom will
never be enough to tackle Noel Coward’s “Private Lives.”
See Nicole Kidman Sulk, Hear Chopin Play, Rea Warble: Great London Weekend Steal a glimpse of a sulking
Nicole Kidman as the Friday stop on your weekend in London.
Michael Lewis Paints Risk-Eating Short-Sellers as Slump's Heroes: Review Twenty years ago, when I worked at
Salomon Brothers, every person on Wall Street had read two
books: Frank J. Fabozzi’s “Fixed Income Analysis” and Michael
Lewis’s “Liars’ Poker.”