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U.S. 'Phenomenally Thirsty' for Wine, Say Experts

The U.S. wine market, already the world's biggest, still has "phenomenal" potential for growth if handled with care, U.S. wine professionals said this week at the world's leading wine fair, Vinexpo.

"We are a young thirsty nation," one expert said, referring to the 370 million cases of wine guzzled in 2014 -- 25 percent of them imported -- as well as the steady growth in wine consumption in the last two decades, which is expected to see an 11 percent hike between 2014 and 2018.

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Collectors, and Bankers, Flock to Art Basel in Search of a Bargain

The halls of Art Basel, the world's largest contemporary art fair, brim with elegantly dressed collectors all searching for something special -- and, increasingly, financial investors just after a good deal.

The event opens to the public on Thursday, but special VIPs got an advance peek at the vast array of artworks by 20th century masters like Picasso, Calder and Warhol, mixed in with today's cutting edge creations, on Tuesday.

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China Restricts Ramadan Fasting in Far Western Region

China has banned civil servants, students and teachers in its mainly Muslim Xinjiang region from fasting during Ramadan and ordered restaurants to stay open, official websites showed as the holy month began on Thursday.

Most Muslims are required to fast from dawn to dusk during the month but China's ruling Communist party is officially atheist and for years has restricted the practice in Xinjiang, home to the mostly Muslim Uighur minority.

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Renowned Indian Architect Correa Dies Aged 84

World-renowned Indian architect Charles Correa has died at the age of 84 after a short illness, an industry group said Wednesday.

Correa, who designed a number of landmark buildings in India including a memorial to Mahatma Gandhi, died in hospital in the western Indian city of Mumbai late on Tuesday.

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Turkish Shop a Symbol in Berlin's War on Gentrification

After decades of quietly selling fruit and vegetables, a family-run Turkish grocery shop has become the unlikely flashpoint in a Berlin culture war pitting a neighborhood against property developers.

No-one is more surprised than its owner, Ahmet Caliskan, 55, who received an eviction notice in March but has since been heartened by an outpouring of support from the people of his colorful, bohemian district of Kreuzberg.

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South Korean Court Overturns Ban on Gay Pride Parade

South Korean rights activists on Wednesday celebrated a court's decision to overturn a ban on a gay pride parade in Seoul, but conservative Christians denounced the ruling as encouraging "evil" behavior.

Police had cited public safety concerns and traffic disruption as the reasons behind the ban imposed last month, but the Seoul Administrative Court on Tuesday ruled in favor of the parade. 

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China 'Hogwarts' Students Embrace Ancient Tradition at Graduation

A Chinese university has earned comparisons with Harry Potter's Hogwarts due to its bizarre castle campus, but local traditions supplied the magic at a Confucian-style ceremony for its degree graduates.

The gigantic grey towers, stone walls and turrets of the Hebei Academy of Fine Arts' castle complex dominate surrounding wheat fields near Xinle city in northern China.

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Wine from Unexpected Places? Raise a Glass to Syria

A lone Syrian winery behind "the world's most harrowing wine to produce" is seeking to break into new markets at the world's leading wine show, Vinexpo, this week.

"I haven't been able to visit the vineyard in four years since the conflict began," said Sandro Johnny Saade, one of two Lebanese-Syrian brothers who set up the Domaine de Bargylus domain near Latakia on Syria's north coast in 2003.

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200 Years after Waterloo, Britain still Battling Napoleon

Two hundred years after the Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon is still under attack in Britain, where the image persists of a military genius consumed by a fanaticism comparable with Hitler or Stalin.

The Emperor of French revolutionaries and regicides continues to strike fear in his neighbors across the Channel, long after his death on the South Atlantic island of St. Helena, according to British historian and author Andrew Roberts.

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Pakistan's Struggle to Rein in Rogue Seminaries

Pakistan pledged to crack down on religious seminaries suspected of fostering extremism following a Taliban school massacre in December that left more than 130 children dead, but the move faces stiff resistance from conservatives.

Amid a wave of outrage after the attack at the school in the northwestern city of Peshawar, the government announced a "National Action Plan" to fight back against the militants.

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