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Marcos Jewels Could be Sold after Court Rules 'Ill-Gotten'

A jewellery collection owned by former first lady Imelda Marcos was "ill-gotten", a Philippine court has ruled, potentially paving the way for an auction of millions of dollars worth of seized treasures.

The anti-graft Sandiganbayan court decided on Monday that the Malacanang Collection, the smallest of three confiscated from the Marcos estate and worth some $150,000, was rightfully owned by the government.

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Rio Museum Receives Neo-Realist Portinari Works

Rio's National Museum of Fine Arts (MNBA) Monday received 200 paintings and engravings by neo-realist Brazilian painter Candido Portinari, giving the museum the largest public collection of his work.

"We wanted these Portinari works to be on show for the public at large. More than 95 percent of his works are privately-owned", said the artist's son Joao Portinari, during a ceremony to mark the gallery's 77th anniversary.

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India Eyes Return of 'Buddha Begging Bowl' from Afghanistan

Two Indian archaeologists are being sent to Kabul to study a "begging bowl" thought to have been used by Buddha in a first step to bringing the artifact back to India, an official said.

The huge stone vessel, weighing nearly 400 kilograms (880 pounds), is currently displayed at the National Museum of Afghanistan and is regarded as important in the Buddhist religion.

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Pope Warns Future Cardinals to Avoid Partying

Pope Francis has written to the cardinals he is preparing to appoint next month, warning them to steer clear of "worldliness" and "celebrations" and telling them they should retain "a simple and humble heart".

Francis has repeatedly warned clerics against being ambitious and has curtailed the use of honorific "monsignor" titles as part of his plans to revamp the Vatican's scandal-tainted bureaucracy and finances.

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Gunter Grass Hangs up Novelist Pen

Nobel prize-winning German writer Gunter Grass, author of "The Tin Drum" and one of Germany's most influential if controversial intellectual figures, has said he is unlikely to write another novel.

"I'm 86 now. I don't think I will manage another novel," Grass told the regional daily Passauer Neue Presse in a pre-released interview to appear on Monday.

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U.S. Museum Awarded Stolen $7 Renoir

A Renoir painting that was allegedly picked up at a flea market for $7 was stolen from a museum more than 60 years ago and must be returned, a United States federal judge ruled.

Eastern District of Virginia Judge Leonie Brinkema awarded ownership of the disputed 1879 oil painting on linen to the museum in Baltimore, ruling it had been stolen from there in November 1951.

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Hardline Monks Rally Sri Lanka as Buddhist Front

With a bloody civil war over and a cautious peace at hand, a group of hardline Buddhist monks is rallying Sri Lankans against what they say is a pernicious threat: Muslims.

In just over a year, the saffron-swathed monks of Bodu Bala Sena — or Buddhist Power Force — have amassed a huge following, drawing thousands of fist-pumping followers who rail against the country's Muslim minority.

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Historic U.S. Gold Coin Fetches $4.6 Million at Auction

Two antique American gold coins sold for more than $7.8 million when they went under the hammer in Florida, auction organizers confirmed Friday.

The first gold coin ever made for the United States -- a "Brasher Doubloon" struck in 1787 by a neighbor of George Washington -- fetched $4,582,500, Heritage Auctions said.

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Greek Bronzes Raise Hope of Revival in Southern Italy

Two remarkably life-like Greek bronze statues have gone on show in the same Calabria region in southern Italy where they were found by an amateur diver 42 years ago.

The impoverished region -- notoriously the bastion of the 'Ndrangheta mafia -- is hoping that the rare sculptures of two warriors, one younger and one older, will restore its image and help boost tourist numbers. Preparations to display them were painstaking and long-delayed.

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U.S. Govt to Recognize Same-Sex Marriages in Utah

The United States government said Friday it would give full federal backing to more than 1,000 same-sex marriages in Utah which the socially conservative state has refused to recognize.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said gay and lesbian couples who married in Utah after a judge struck down a state law banning same-sex marriage would be eligible for federal benefits enjoyed by other couples.

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