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Blazers stun Spurs after Wemby injury, Lakers down Rockets
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Chinese carmakers aim to build up presence in Europe
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Maoist landmine legacy haunts India
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Fiji villagers reject plan for 'Pacific ashtray' in beach paradise
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India orders school water bells to beat heat
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Japanese minnows one win from fairytale Champions League title
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Rugby Australia eyes brighter future as Lions tour brings cash windfall
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Blazers rally stuns Spurs after Wembanyama injury
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Young Chinese use AI to launch one-person firms over job anxiety
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Delicate extraction: Malaysia offers rare earths alternative to China
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Oil, stocks fall as traders weigh outlook after Trump extends truce
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Pope to visit prison on final leg of Africa tour
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US military says key weapons system staying in South Korea
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India strangles final Maoist bastion as mining looms
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AI-powered robots offer new hope to German factories
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Indonesia orangutan forest cleared for 'carbon-neutral' packaging firm
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PGA Tour mulls pathway back for golfers as LIV plots survival
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Questions about Tesla spending binge ahead of earnings
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Rome summons Russian ambassador over insults against Meloni
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US tells Afghans to choose Taliban home or DR Congo: activist
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John Ternus to lead Apple in the age of AI
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SpaceX partners with AI startup Cursor, may buy it for $60 bn
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Rosenior blasts Chelsea flops after 'unacceptable' Brighton defeat
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Inter roar back to beat Como and reach Italian Cup final
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Lens sweep past Toulouse to reach French Cup final
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Brighton crush Chelsea to pile pressure on under-fire Rosenior
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Strait of Hormuz blockade drives up costs at Panama Canal
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Trump extends ceasefire, says giving Iran time to negotiate
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Michelle Bachelet hopes the world is ready for a female UN chief
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Stocks fall, oil climbs amid uncertainty over US-Iran talks
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Iran war means more orders for US defense giants
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Maker of Argentina's first Oscar-winning film, Luis Puenzo, dies at 80:
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Arrests, hangings, blackout: Iran cranks up wartime repression
Israel to spend millions on Einstein museum
The Israeli government decided on Sunday to allocate millions of dollars for a museum to house the world's largest collection of Albert Einstein documents, the Hebrew University said.
It will be built on the university's Givat Ram campus in Jerusalem, with the government committing to approximately $6 million and the university raising another $12 million.
Einstein, one of the founding fathers of the Hebrew University, was a non-resident governor of the institution.
Lauded as one of the greatest theoretical physicists of all time, Einstein died in 1955 aged 76.
He bequeathed his archives to the university, and curator Roni Grosz said its 85,000 items make it the world's most extensive collection of Einstein documents.
The museum will house the entire Einstein archive, and serve as an "innovative space for scientific and technological education", the university said.
"With cutting-edge exhibition techniques, scientific demonstrations, and original documents, the Museum will present Einstein's contributions to science, the impact of his discoveries on our lives today, his public activity and involvement in key historical moments during his lifetime," a statement said.
Einstein's theories of relativity revolutionised the field by introducing new ways of looking at the movement of objects in space and time.
He also made major contributions to quantum mechanics theory, and won the Nobel physics prize for 1921.
Einstein also became a pop culture icon because of his dry witticisms and trademark unruly hair, moustache and bushy eyebrows.
Original papers written by Einstein sell for millions at auction to this day.
U.AlSharif--SF-PST