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Germany to Put Online 590 Works from Nazi Art Trove

Germany will catalogue online from next week 590 artworks thought to have been looted by the Nazis, part of a vast art treasure trove found in a garbage-strewn flat.

Publishing images of the paintings, watercolors, drawings and prints on www.lostart.de aims to help identify the rightful owners of the masterpieces from the spectacular find of more than 1,400 works.

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Athens to Begin Building first Mosque after Years of Delay

Work is finally set to begin on Athens' first mosque, 13 years after plans were first announced, the Greek government announced on Thursday.

A Greek consortium has been chosen, the infrastructure ministry said, after five previous attempts to find a business group to lead the project failed.

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Assassinations, Suicide, Overdose: a Kennedy Curse?

"The Kennedy Curse Strikes Again," British newspaper the Independent declared when a daughter-in-law of Bobby Kennedy committed suicide last year.

It was a nod to the idea that the most closely-watched American family -- sometimes likened to American royalty -- have been struck by enough calamities that they could star in a Greek tragedy.

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Take a Book, Leave a Book: Tiny Libraries Thrive in U.S.

Technology has given readers new ways to curl up with a good book, but the latest trend in Washington is surprisingly old-school: "little libraries," stuffed with paperbacks, cropping up on front lawns.

There's no card catalogue or late fees. The informal lending libraries work under a simple principle: "take a book, return a book."

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Glut of Malaysian Royal Titles Dims their Lustre

For centuries, the Malay royal title "Datuk" -- Malaysia's equivalent of "Sir" -- was a high honor that unlocked doors to the elite. But Datuks like K. Basil don't feel so special these days.

"Just throw a stone in the street and you'll hit a Datuk," complains Basil, a policeman-turned-politician and one of many who feel the awarding of the coveted titles has got out of hand in a status-obsessed Malaysian society.

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South Korea's Growing 'Kimchi Deficit'

It's kimchi-making season in South Korea, with households across the country preparing and laying down stocks of the ubiquitous spicy side-dish for the coming winter.

But many foreign visitors, including the most intrepid foodies, will probably leave without ever tasting a Korean-made version of the national dish of fermented, chili-soused cabbage.

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Nude Paintings Blocked in German School Spark Debate

An adult education center in Berlin has hung a collection of nude paintings days after censoring them out of deference to Muslim immigrants in what critics Wednesday called an overzealous bid at cultural sensitivity.

The paintings' exclusion from an exhibition Friday met with public outcry in a neighborhood where tensions were already running high after demonstrations against a new refugee center earlier this year.

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Villa that Inspired Pinocchio for Sale in Italy

A villa near Florence that inspired the author of Pinocchio is on the market for 10.5 million euros ($14 million) -- a world away from the humble workshop where the marionette is born in the book.

The 3,000-square-meter (32,000 square feet) mansion has three hectares (seven acres) of garden including a lawn known as the "Field of Miracles" where a gardener famously found a hoard of coins in the 19th century -- a story that was included in "The Adventures of Pinocchio".

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Historic Face-Lift Falls Flat in Seoul

South Korea's botched attempt to restore a burned-out national treasure to its 600-year old glory has triggered a bout of national hand-wringing over cultural mismanagement and the loss of traditional skills.

The destruction of the 14th century Namdaemun Gate in an arson attack in February 2008 was viewed as a national tragedy.

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Bacon Work Sets New $142.4 mn Art Record

A triptych by British painter Francis Bacon -- "Three Studies of Lucian Freud" -- sold for $142.4 million on Tuesday, smashing the world record for the most expensive piece of art auctioned.

The work by the 20th century figurative artist, who lived from 1909 to 1992, had never before been put under the hammer until Christie's flagship evening sale. It was bought by a New York gallery.

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