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  1. The bald, broad-shouldered cyclist has spent years remembering a nighttime road in a faraway city. He can still describe the city’s narrow streets and crushing heat. He talks about the dead end that forced his convoy turn around. And the explosion.

    Tom Davis wipes sweat from his forehead after riding his bicycle as part of his daily training in Fremont, Ind., Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2021. If he hadn’t lost his leg, “I would never have grown into the person I am now,” he said. “Not even just racing a bike or whatever, but as a human being and as a husband and as a dad. ... I wouldn’t give all that back. Just to walk?” (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
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  3. "This is a story about a curious boy with no name — at least, no name that I ever came to know. It was 2013, more than a decade after the 9/11 attacks. I was a Marine then, back in Afghanistan for a second time."

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  4. An ambitious project, months in the making, reveals the cost to one family and their neighborhood in the aftermath of the fourth Gaza war since 2008, vividly presented in a bold visual format.

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  5. Read the story of Emilio Morenatti, AP photographer and 2021 Pulitzer winner, who lost his leg in a bomb blast in Afghanistan in 2009, and who crossed the United States to talk with five former soldiers turned Paralympians.

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  7. Over two decades, the United States and its allies spent hundreds of millions of dollars building databases for the Afghan people. But in the Taliban’s lightning seizure of power, most of that digital apparatus apparently fell into Taliban hands.

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  8. View a monthly gallery featuring some of the top photojournalism by AP photographers documenting Asia during the month of August:

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  10. Starting now: Join academics, journalists and religious leaders for a discussion on the politicization of the Muslim faith community and how it has impacted daily life in the last 20 years. Register here:

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  11. Read how AP reporters investigated a controversial tool favored by police, an algorithm-powered gunshot detection system they learned was being used as evidence in criminal trials that helped send innocent people to prison.

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  12. The Associated Press announced today that AP Assistant Managing Editor and Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace has been named the global news agency’s senior vice president and executive editor, effective immediately.

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  13. AP video journalist Ahmad Seir and photographer Rahmat Gul, both based in Kabul, persevered through checkpoint beatings and engaged with the Taliban to create and deliver video and photos of the militants in control of Kabul.

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  14. An AP review of court documents in more than 300 federal cases stemming from the protests sparked by George Floyd’s death last year shows that dozens of people charged have been convicted of serious crimes and sent to prison.

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  15. AP staff took close look at the impact of the four wars between Hamas and Israel, revealing the daunting challenges for any Gaza rebuilding plan.

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  16. Aug 27

    The Associated Press historic photo archive, which dates back to the 19th century, contains a wealth of iconic imagery from around the globe.

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  17. Join academics, journalists and religious leaders for a discussion on the politicization of the Muslim faith community and how it has impacted daily life in the last 20 years. Register now:

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  18. A team of AP reporters created an all-formats exclusive on climate-fueled wildfires flaring up on tropical Pacific islands from Hawaii to Micronesia, causing some islands may burn as much as 10% of their land base annually:

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  19. To celebrate AP's 175th anniversary, the AP Corporate Archives has assembled a concise visual history of the organization, offered in an a monthly blog. “AP at 175, Part 7: Speed, 1976-2000" is the seventh of eight installments.

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  20. In exclusive footage obtained by AP, graphic body camera video kept secret for more than two years shows a Louisiana State Police trooper pummeling Black motorist Aaron Larry Bowman 18 times with a flashlight.

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