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Armed Robbers Steal 1.8 Million Worth of Artwork in South Africa

Three armed robbers stormed into the Pretoria Art Museum Sunday and made away with around 15 million rands ($1.8 million) worth of artwork, South African media reported.

"They pulled out a list and said they were looking for so and so painting which is our old masterpieces," Daywood Khans, a museum employee who was held at gunpoint, told radio 702.

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Russia Weighs Brezhnev Legacy 30 Years after Death

Russia on Saturday quietly marked 30 years since the death of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, an enigmatic figure whose era of "stagnation" witnessed repressions and a massive nuclear arms drive.

The burly and chain-smoking World War II veteran served from 1964 until his death in 1982 at a time when Moscow and Washington were churning out weapons of mass destruction and carving up the globe for spheres of influence.

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French Bishops Sound Alarm Over Rising Islamophobia

Leading bishops have voiced alarm at a rise in anti-Islamic sentiment in France and admitted that hardening attitudes within the Roman Catholic church are fueling the trend.

In comments that will add to pressure on President Francois Hollande to respond to demands from France's large Muslim community to speak out on the issue, the Bishop of Angouleme, Claude Dagens, said he was profoundly concerned by recent developments.

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Italian Anthem to be Taught in all Schools

Italy's parliament has passed a law making it compulsory to teach the national anthem in schools, angering the Northern League federalist party which has long campaigned against national symbols.

"Imposing something is a sign of weakness because it means that it is not felt in the hearts of the people," Northern League boss Roberto Maroni told the party's radio station Radio Padania on Friday after the law passed on Thursday.

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Bridget Jones Set to Return in Third Novel Next Year

The accident-prone British thirty-something Bridget Jones is to return in a third novel next year, her creator Helen Fielding announced on Friday.

Fielding's first two books about Jones, written in the form of diaries chronicling the heroine's failed efforts to find love, lose weight and quit smoking, have sold more than 15 million copies.

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Study: Collapse of Maya Civilization Tied to Drought

A long catastrophic drought led to the collapse of Maya culture, a new study said Thursday, confirming a controversial hypothesis linking its demise to climate change.

The study, published in Friday's issue of the journal "Science," involved an international team of researchers.

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Writer's Epic Journey Gets 'Ulysses' to Dublin Stage

Dermot Bolger was commissioned in 1993 by a U.S. museum that holds the original manuscript of James Joyce's famed novel -- which chronicles a day in the life of a Dublin man -- to adapt the book for the stage.

After one performance in the United States, the play was left to languish when EU copyright laws suddenly changed and Bolger gave up hope of persuading the protective Joyce estate to let it be performed.

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Picasso Sells for $41.5 Million in New York

An erotically charged Picasso oil painting of his mistress alongside tulips and fruit sold Thursday for $41.5 million on an otherwise anemic night for high-end art in New York.

"Nature morte aux tulipes," painted in 1932, was the star of Sotheby's Impressionist and modern art sale in Manhattan. The pre-sale estimate for the work had been between $35 million and $50 million.

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Australia Inquiry into Church Child-Sex Cover-Up Claims

The Australian state of New South Wales Friday announced a special inquiry to look into claims the Catholic Church covered up for paedophile priests, silenced investigations and destroyed evidence.

The inquiry, announced by state Premier Barry O'Farrell, will examine the allegations made by a senior police investigator who outlined his charges in a letter published in the Newcastle Herald newspaper.

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Archaeologists Explore Site on Syria-Turkey Border

Few archaeological sites seem as entwined with conflict, ancient and modern, as the city of Karkemish.

The scene of a battle mentioned in the Bible, it lies smack on the border between Turkey and Syria, where civil war rages today. Twenty-first century Turkish sentries occupy an acropolis dating back more than 5,000 years, and the ruins were recently demined. Visible from crumbling, earthen ramparts, a Syrian rebel flag flies in a town that regime forces fled just months ago.

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