‘Jesus Discovery’ has Web abuzz


Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press
James Tabor, co-author of "The Jesus Discovery," looks toward a replica of a bone box found in a Jerusalem tomb during a New York news conference on Feb. 28, 2012.
A new book called The Jesus Discovery is setting popular imaginations aflame while triggering academic disputes.The work - the top trending topic on Yahoo! this morning - contends that two Jerusalem tombs beneath a condominium complex can be traced to Jesus of Nazareth, his family or his followers.
One tomb, found in 2010 under a patio, "is directly connected to Jesus' first followers, those who knew him personally, and to Jesus himself," according to authors James D. Tabor and Simcha Jacobovici.
Exploring the tomb with a robotic camera, they found two bone boxes, or ossuaries, with an image and an inscription that suggest early Christian ideas about resurrection.
The inscription could be translated as "Divine Jehovah, raise up, raise up."
"The discovery provides the earliest archaeological evidence of faith in Jesus' resurrection from the dead, the first witness to a saying of Jesus that predates even the writing of our New Testament gospels, and the earliest example of Christian art, all found in a sealed tomb dated to the 1st century," according to the book.
In turn, that discovery may have shed new light on a second tomb, discovered in 1980, that lies under a garden just 200 yards away.
"A compelling argument can be made that the Garden tomb is that of Jesus of Nazareth and his family," the authors write. ". . . Both tombs are most likely located on the rural estate of Joseph of Arimathea, the wealthy member of the Sanhedrin who according to all four New Testament gospels took official charge of Jesus' burial."
The publisher's description of the book at amazon.com leaves even less doubt as to what's being claimed: "The new discovery increases the likelihood that the 'Jesus Family Tomb' is, indeed, the real tomb of Jesus of Nazareth."
The book is already the top-selling religious book on Amazon.com.
These conclusions have not exactly generated acceptance, since they seem to rest on interpretations of imagery and artifacts.
In just the first 24 hours, the book has prompted "heated" responses, and such skepticism is understandable, blogs Tabor, chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
"The very notion of 'finding the tomb of Jesus' rightly smacks of cheap sensationalism to most academics - akin to bogus claims of locating the ark of the covenant, the holy grail, pieces of the true cross, or Noah's ark."
Many of the Christian faithful also resist the idea because they believe Jesus ascended bodily to heaven, "precluding the possibility of his earthly remains ever turning up," Tabor wrote this morning at www.jamestabor.com.
Strong dissent is easily found on posts at the blog of the American Schools of Oriental Research (www.asorblog.com), where experts dispute claims that the authors found Christian-related fish imagery.
"I absolutely refute any claim that I concur with the interpretation of any first-century ossuary iconography as depicting Jonah," writes Vanderbilt professor Robin Jensen, who was asked to examine artifacts for a film on the discoveries by National Geographic. "Nor do I believe that 'first-century visual evidence of Christian belief in the resurrection' has been discovered to date."
Co-author Jacobovici is an award-winning filmmaker and journalist.
A so-called fish image might really be a tower, several academics state, including Robert Cargill of the University of Iowa.
Tabor countered in a comment: "You really have to be kidding Robert . . . you really think there is a resemblance . . . and you would need to put the monument upside down? . . . This is really too much."
But Tabor acknowledged on his own blog the discussion has only begun:
"Since even the executive director of ASOR, my friend Andy Vaughn, declared yesterday that the claims of our book had a 'zero percent chance of being correct,' it seems, from my standpoint at least, there is a lot that needs to be said."

Facebook's photo guidelines are 'revealed'

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Facebook now has more than 800 million users around the world
A set of guidelines on which types of images are acceptable for publication on Facebook has reportedly been leaked.
According to the Gawker.com website, the rules tell staff specifically what should and shouldn't be removed when content has been flagged.
Images likely to be removed include those showing "female nipple bulges", "naked butt cracks" or women breastfeeding without clothes on.
However, same sex kissing, "groping" and "foreplay" is allowed.
The leak follows protests from women unhappy that images of breastfeeding were removed.
The site was also accused of homophobia after a picture of two men kissing was taken down.
Gawker.com said the document was leaked by a disgruntled employee at a third party company used by Facebook to moderate users' content.
Protests and Controversy Despite the recent controversy users were unaware of exact guidelines used by Facebook to decide which pictures should be taken down.
Images must first be flagged by users before they are brought to moderators' attention.
The document goes into specific detail about dozens of examples of images which should be removed.
Urine, faeces, vomit, semen, pus and ear wax are all banned.
Although cartoon faeces, urine, and spit are allowed.
Snot, both real and cartoon, would also escape the censors, as would deep flesh wounds and excessive blood.
Images of bone, muscles and tendons would be likely to go.
In a statement Facebook said: "In an effort to quickly and efficiently process the millions of reports we receive every day, we have found it helpful to contract third parties to provide precursory classification of a small proportion of reported content.
"We have, and will continue, to escalate the most serious reports internally, and all decisions made by contractors are subject to extensive audits".

Valentine's Day 2012 Google Doodle is a Tony Bennett love note

Valentine’s Day 2012 is celebrated with a video-animation Google Doodle that also showcases the tender crooning of Tony Bennett at age 25, sweetly hitting the high notes of “Cold, Cold Heart.”
The song was written by country boy Hank Williams, who said on “The Kate Smith Evening Hour” in a 1952 appearance that “Cold, Cold Heart” had “been awful kind to me and the boys,” providing them with “quite a few beans and biscuits.”
It was a moneymaker. And it also was kind to Bennett. His version, with an orchestral arrangement by Percy Faith, spent 27 weeks on the U.S. Billboard chart.
But Bennett, a self-described “city boy,” had his qualms about singing a country ballad.
In an appearance on “Imus in the Morning” in 2006, Bennett recalled saying at the time that it was a great song -- “Hank Williams knows how to write songs. But I’m a city boy, and I wouldn’t be able to sing a country song.”
Bennett did record “Cold, Cold Heart,” and -- as they would say on “American Idol” -- he made it his own.
The Google doodlers continue to make their piece of the search engine giant their own too. With this Valentine doodle, the team adds another video doodle to a growing collection.
The team’s creations have become increasingly sophisticated in the years since 1998, when it all began with a stick figure by Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin.
Over time, the doodles have become “more and more involved and complicated,” team member Sophia Foster-Dimino said in a December interview with The Times. “More like works of art than fun gags.”
Among the team’s favorites are other video doodles: For the Charlie Chaplin video, "everyone took on a role as someone in the movie and worked with a video crew," Foster-Dimino said. The elaborate Halloween 2011 doodle involved time-lapse video, and the interactive Gumby doodle was done in the style of Art Clokey with his son, Joe Clokey, among supervisors on the project.

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The concept drawing for the Gumby doodle.
Gumby-lineup
  • The concept drawing for the Gumby doodle.
  • One of the Gumby figures. Puppet maker Nicole La-Pointe McKay says three to six puppets were used for each figure.
  • One step in creating the segments of animation, which were assembled by Google.
  • A Pokey figure rears back with the help of a metal arm.
  • A still from the finished doodle.
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-- Amy Hubbard+