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Austria Decides on Restitution of Nazi-Looted Klimt Masterpiece

Austria could find itself Friday facing the loss of one of its most treasured artworks with an expert body due to make a recommendation on whether to return it to the descendants of its Jewish former owners.

If Austria's Art Restitution Advisory Board decides Gustav Klimt's monumental "Beethoven Frieze" should be given back, it would mark one of the most spectacular art restitution cases for works looted by the Nazis.

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IS 'Bulldozes' Ancient Assyrian City of Nimrud in Iraq

The Islamic State group began bulldozing the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud in Iraq on Thursday, the government said, in the jihadists' latest attack on the country's historical heritage.

IS "assaulted the historic city of Nimrud and bulldozed it with heavy vehicles," the tourism and antiquities ministry said on an official Facebook page.

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Algeria Passes Law Banning Violence against Women

Algeria's parliament passed a law on Thursday criminalizing violence against women, in a move criticized by both Islamist lawmakers as well as Amnesty.

The law makes inflicting injury on one's spouse punishable with up to 20 years in prison, and allows a judge to hand down life sentences for domestic violence resulting in death. 

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Skeleton Statue unveiled in London's Trafalgar Square

A sculpture of a strutting horse skeleton was unveiled in London's main Trafalgar Square on Thursday -- wearing a London Stock Exchange prices ticker in an allusion to the City's financial power.

Entitled "Gift Horse", the riderless bronze sculpture, by 78-year-old German-US artist Hans Haacke, is in residence on the empty fourth plinth in the British capital's central square.

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Elizabeth McCracken Wins $20,000 Short Story Prize

Elizabeth McCracken, a fiction writer praised for her sharply detailed stories of grief and disaster, has won a $20,000 prize.

McCracken won the Story Prize for her collection "Thunderstruck," award officials announced Thursday night. Her other books include the novel "The Giant's House" and the memoir "An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination."

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Swedish Art Museum Uses Romanian Street Beggars as Props

By putting two Romanian beggars on display in their latest show, Swedish artists meant to raise questions about global inequality but instead find themselves accused of exploiting the poor.

For the street beggars, from Europe's oppressed Roma minority, it was an offer they could not refuse.

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New York Public Schools Add Two Muslim Holidays to Calendar

New York public schools will add two Muslim holidays to their vacation calendars, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Wednesday, a promise he made during his election campaign.  

Two of the most sacred holidays in the Islamic calendar, Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, will be observed. 

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Egypt's Dar al-Ifta Warns Women against Marrying IS Fighters Online

Egypt's state-sponsored Islamic authority warned women Wednesday against marrying fighters from the Islamic State group online, saying such unions would push them into a "circle of terrorism."

Dar al-Ifta, the body that issues rulings on Islamic sharia law, said it made the warning after noticing several IS calls on social networks for girls to marry its jihadists "through video conferences."

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Bjork Museum Retrospective Tests Boundaries of Music

In one of its most complex and ambitious exhibitions, the Museum of Modern Art has designed a career retrospective on Bjork that probes the question -- just how does one put music on a wall?

The New York institution hopes that its approach not only does justice to the wildly experimental Icelandic singer but also provides a model for other museums through its fluid synthesis of various media forms and its priority on making the audience feel connected.

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Iberia Festival in U.S. Spotlights Picasso Ceramics

More than 140 ceramics by Pablo Picasso, many rarely seen in public, are the star turn at a month-long festival in Washington celebrating Spanish and Portuguese culture that opened Tuesday.

The Iberian Mix "remix" at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, running through March 24, gives Americans a window on modern and contemporary dance, theater, music, film, food and art from the Iberian peninsula.

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