AP in the News

Adam Schreck
In this Sunday, March 22, 2015 photo, Associated Press Dubai Bureau chief Adam Schreck poses for a photograph, at the Marina district in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Schreck, who has covered terrorism, armed conflict and upheaval in the Middle East, as well as sweeping economic changes reshaping the region, has been named as Gulf news director for The Associated Press. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

AP in the News

AP names Adam Schreck as news director for the Gulf region

APRIL 1, 2015

Karin Laub
In this Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015 photo, Karin Laub poses for a photograph in Gaza. The Associated Press has named Laub, a veteran Middle East correspondent, as its chief of bureau for Jordan. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

AP in the News

AP names Karin Laub as Jordan bureau chief

APRIL 1, 2015

Gary Pruitt
President and CEO of the Associated Press Gary Pruitt delivers a speech at the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents’ Club Monday, March 30, 2015. The Associated Press is calling for changes to international laws that would make it a war crime to kill journalists or take them hostage, the news agency’s president said on Monday. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

AP in the News

AP president Killing of journalists should be a war crime

MARCH 30, 2015

Kathy Gannon, Anja Niedringhaus
In this photo taken in October 2012, Associated Press reporter Kathy Gannon, second from left, and photographer Anja Niedringhaus pose for a photo with Afghan police recruits at the main police training academy in Kabul, Afghanistan. Gannon spoke Oct. 9, 2014, during her first interview since she and Niedringhaus were attacked on April 4, 2014, by a gunman in Khost Province in eastern Afghanistan as they prepared to cover the presidential election the next day. Niedringhaus was killed in the attack and Gannon is recovering from multiple gunshot wounds. (AP Photo)

AP in the News

Afghan court sentences AP journalist’s killer to 20 years

MARCH 28, 2015

Heidi Levine
This handout photo provided by the International Women's Media Foundation shows Heidi Levine in Jerusalem. A women's media group will honor freelance photographer Heidi Levine as the inaugural winner of an award for courage named for Associated Press photographer Anja Niedringhaus, who was killed on assignment in Afghanistan. The International Women's Media Foundation in Washington announced Tuesday that Levine will be awarded the Anja Niedringhaus Courage in Photojournalism Award. Levine is an American and is based in Jerusalem. (AP Photo/Warrick Page, International Women's Media Foundation)

AP in the News

Women’s media group to honor photographer Heidi Levine

MARCH 24, 2015

Gary Pruitt
Gary Pruitt, CEO and president of The Associated Press, speaks to the Newspaper Association of America Tuesday, March 17, 2015, in Nashville, Tenn. Pruitt said the AP has taken steps to beef up its staff, increase the number of stories it puts out on the wire and improve its news coverage as well as invest more in video, a burgeoning need in a digital world. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

AP in the News

AP to bolster coverage, offer more affordable rates

MARCH 17, 2015

Travis Morgan
Travis Morgan sits with a newspaper outside a coffee shop in Grants Pass, Ore. on Thursday, March 12, 2015. Morgan, 33, a pilot, says he still likes reading a printed newspaper, watching the news on his television, and using a search engine to dig more deeply if he wants to know more. He is among the majority of young adults in a survey who say they consult sources of news regularly. (AP Photo/Jeff Barnard)

AP in the News

Survey Young adults do consume news, in their own way

MARCH 16, 2015

Jason Parsley
ADVANCE FOR RELEASE FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 2015, AT 12:01 A.M. EDT AND THEREAFTER - In this photo taken March 9, 2015, Jason Parsley, executive editor of the South Florida Gay News, poses for a photo at his office in Wilton Manors, Fla. The public's right to see government records is coming at an ever-increasing price, as authorities set fees and hourly charges that often prevent information from flowing. Broward Sheriff's Office told Parsley last year that it would cost $399,000 and take four years to provide every email for a one-year period that contained certain derogatory words for gays. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

AP in the News

Big bills to view public documents discourage public access

MARCH 13, 2015

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AP in the News

Cost-related access challenges, solutions in 18 states

MARCH 13, 2015

Hillary Rodham Clinton
FILE - In this Sept. 12, 2012 file photo, then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at the State Department in Washington. Clinton used a personal email account during her time as secretary of state, rather than a government-issued email address. Deputy State Department spokesperson Marie Harf says the department asked former secretaries of state last year for records that should be preserved. In response to that request, Clinton provided emails from her time as the nation's top diplomat. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

AP in the News

AP sues State Department, seeking access to Clinton records

MARCH 11, 2015

rubinsky

AP in the News

AP names Cara Rubinsky to bolster Europe leadership team

MARCH 4, 2015

John Shurr
John Shurr, long time South Carolina Associated Press bureau chief, is seen in a 2004 photo. Shurr, a longtime journalist and open government advocate who was The Associated Press' bureau chief in South Carolina for 20 years, died Sunday morning, March 1, 2015, said Bill Rogers, executive director of the South Carolina Press Association, and a longtime friend. He was 67. (AP Photo)

AP in the News

Longtime South Carolina journalist John Shurr dies

MARCH 2, 2015

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