These Are Only AP Headers For Articles Published. These are manually updated by me. If you wish to read the complete article, use the header title/information to do a web search.
Some Headlines Of Today
Wednesday December 3, 2008
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US Cmdr: Attacks at lowest level since 2003 12/3/2008, 12:55 p.m. PST BAGHDAD (AP) — Attacks fell in November to their lowest monthly level since the Iraq war began in 2003, despite recent high-profile bombings aimed at shaking public confidence, a top U.S. commander said Wednesday. |
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US soldier faces hearing in 2007 deaths of Iraqis 12/3/2008, 12:48 p.m.
PST VILSECK, Germany (AP) — A military court heard conflicting testimony Wednesday about whether a U.S. Army sergeant helped kill four Iraqis who were bound, blindfolded, shot and dumped in a Baghdad canal last year. |
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Reconciliation needed in Iraq's most violent city 12/3/2008, 10:26 a.m.
PST MOSUL, Iraq (AP) — It's a dirty, numbing, dangerous job in Iraq's deadliest city, and pays a modest $500 a month. But when the police department recently advertised for college graduates to fill 200 positions as traffic policemen, it was deluged with 2,000 applications. |
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Journalist jailed in Iraq over homosexuality story 12/3/2008, 8:06 a.m.
PST SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (AP) — International media watchdog groups called Wednesday for the release of a freelance journalist jailed in northern Iraq for violating a public decency law by writing a story about homosexuality. |
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US Cmdr: Iraq attacks at lowest level since 2003 12/3/2008, 5:24 a.m.
PST BAGHDAD (AP) — The number of attacks in Iraq has dropped to the lowest level since 2003 despite a recent spate of high-profile bombings, the No. 2 U.S. commander in Iraq said Wednesday. |
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Journalist jailed in Iraq over homosexuality story 12/3/2008, 4:55 a.m.
PST SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (AP) — International media watchdog groups called Wednesday for the release of a freelance journalist jailed in northern Iraq for violating a public decency law by writing a story about homosexuality. |
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Iraq's president steps up row over PM's councils 12/3/2008, 1:50 a.m.
PST BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq's president is going to the country's federal court to try to stop Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki from establishing tribal councils — a move that major political parties fear is aimed at bolstering the Shiite leader's stature ahead of elections next year. |
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The Above Headlines were gathered from various news sites. |
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