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Subject:
From:
Roger Smith <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:22:48 +0800
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Welcome back to GLOBAL MUSEUM, your award-winning & free webzine compendium, 
read weekly by 7,400 readers in more than 176 countries.

***   "As far as I am concerned it is the best source for museum 
professionals in search of employment "  ***

Free Online subscription.  http://www.globalmuseum.org

The international headlines (FOR THE FULL STORY VISIT THE WEBZINE at this 
address  http://www.globalmuseum.org and click on the NEWS button) in this 
week's edition include:

**  Getty Museum Agrees to Return Aphrodite, Other Artwork to Italy
The J. Paul Getty Museum agreed to send back to Italy a statue known as 
Aphrodite along with 39 ancient artworks, ending a dispute over stolen 
relics that threatened the reputation of the world's richest art institution

**  Sunken treasures
Albania is surveying the seabed along its coastline to help plot the 
positions of ships that went down centuries ago

**  Ancient Scots Mummified Their Dead
Initial evidence for Scottish mummies was announced in 2005, when 
archaeologists unearthed three preserved bodies - an adult female, an adult 
male and an infant - buried underneath two Bronze Age roundhouses in South 
Uist, Hebrides, at a site called Cladh Hallan

**  Rare manuscript, textile from Northeast holed up in museums abroad
A number of objects from Northeast India, much more ancient than Mahatma 
Gandhi's handwritten letter recently recovered from a British auction, are 
preserved in museums and private possessions in Europe and Southeast Asian 
countries

**  Museum staff suffer
The Fiji Museum Board of Trustees chairman, Winston Thompson said staff pay 
was cut by 50 per cent because income from admissions had dropped to almost 
zero after the coup

**  Etching tackles history on origins of Australian footy
The black-and-white image, created from observations made by Victorian 
scientist William Blandowski in 1857, precedes Australia's first known 
football game - a match between Scotch College and Melbourne Grammar in 1858
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**  Sotheby's Aims to Sell Van Gogh's `The Fields' for $35 Million
The unidentified owner loaned it to Amsterdam's Van Gogh Museum from 2001 
until this year, when it went on show in Madrid

**  Mysterious squid to make a splash at Seattle museum
After fuelling myth and nightmare for more than two millennia, one of the 
ocean's biggest mysteries is finally yielding a few of its secrets to 
science

**  Fresh brew at Starbucks site in Forbidden City
A new cafe has opened in Beijing's Forbidden City where Starbucks once had a 
controversial outlet that was shut down amid media criticism two months ago

**  Berliners to pass judgment on museum
A ceremony to present the unfinished Neues Museum lifted the veil on what is 
arguably the country's most debated construction project, and one that has 
placed David Chipperfield, its British architect, at the centre of a bitter 
controversy

**  Mystery boy in iron coffin identified
Smithsonian scientists led by forensic anthropologist Doug Owsley set about 
trying to determine who was buried in it, so the body could be placed in a 
new, properly marked grave

**  Museum Can Show Disputed Artwork, Judge Rules
A federal judge ruled yesterday that the Massachusetts Museum of 
Contemporary Art has the right to display an immense unfinished installation 
by Christoph Büchel, a Swiss artist whose relationship with the museum fell 
apart early this year, leading to a bitter public battle over control of the 
work and over artists' rights in general

**  Bad arguments on display in museum debate
From the rhetoric being tossed around the last couple of weeks, you'd think 
the Chicago Children's Museum was some cultural temple our city's children 
must experience to claim a complete childhood
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**  Photos show Nazis relaxing at Auschwitz
Before the former spy died, he wanted to donate an album of photographs of 
Auschwitz, which he discovered in a bombed-out building 60 years ago in 
Frankfurt, Germany

**  Fujitsu's Enon is your robotic museum guide
The droid in question, a friendly helper named Enon, will autonomously move 
to the entrance of the museum to greet guests, will guide visitors through 
the exhibits by using gestures (and its chest-embedded LCD screen), and will 
play video greetings from Mr. Nishimura, amongst other tasks

**  Remains of Kenyan lions 'too fragile' to repatriate
A US museum will not return the remains of two infamous man-eating lions to 
Kenya because they are too fragile to travel, the museum's president says

**  Macau Casino Mogul Buys Stolen Relic
Macau casino mogul Stanley Ho has paid $8.9 million for a bronze horse head 
stolen by French troops 147 years ago from China's imperial palace and plans 
to donate it to a Chinese museum

**  Penn Museum puts Panamanian treasures on display
When the Rio Grande de Cocle changed course in the early 1900s, a 
tantalizing cache of golden beads and pottery pieces washed upon its banks

**  Scientists get DNA from mouldy old mammoth hair
Scientists who pulled DNA from the hair shafts of 13 Siberian woolly 
mammoths say it may be possible to mine museums for genetic information 
about ancient and even extinct species

**  Migration exhibition opens at National Museum of Australia

**  Tales of the Unexpected: the Future of Curating Contemporary Craft

**  Grant Information Session - Creative Capital Foundation

All this and more for you at Global Museum - See the latest museum JOBS, 
BOOKSHOP, RESOURCES, PODCASTS, HOT JOB TIPS, great people posting their 
RESUMES, FORUM, Cheap and reliable WORLD TRAVEL, Podcasts, Museum Accredited 
Courses, Products & Services.

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strong!

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