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  • Also: China launches a mission to the moon; officials in the Philippines increase the typhoon's death toll; Thailand's prime minister won't resign in face of continued protests; and the 12 Days of Christmas are more expensive thanks to the pricey "nine lords-a-leaping".
  • Also: The Supreme Court reviews buffer zones around abortion clinics; more West Virginia residents get their water back; a 12-year-old boy is in custody after a New Mexico school shooting; and blizzard conditions are forecast in the upper Plains.
  • Also: The Supreme Court will hear arguments over the limits of the President's authority to make recess appointments; Dennis Rodman apologizes for his comments on an American jailed in North Korea; a Southwest jet lands at the wrong Missouri airport; and the Golden Globe Awards are announced.
  • Also: Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits Jordan; Beijing's smog becomes "Airpocolypse"; Ohio will execute a condemned man with a new drug method; soaring heat causes match delays at the Australian Open; and the Razzie nominations for last year's worst films are out.
  • Also: A federal judge overturns Chicago's ordinance banning gun purchases; the Senate is scheduled to vote on extending unemployment benefits; mining deaths increased in the U.S. last year; and furious French tire plant workers barricade their managers in their office.
  • Also: The U.S. embassy in South Sudan withdraws more personnel; the Senate will vote Monday on Janet Yellen as the next Federal Reserve chair; Snapchat will fix its app but doesn't apologize for lax security; and one of the rescue icebreakers in Antarctica may need to be rescued.
  • Also: The White House urges colleges to stop sexual violence; NBA commissioner Adam Silver holds a news conference on L.A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling; and a Rosie the Riveter factory could close.
  • Also: Despite an international agreement in Geneva, Ukrainian separatists won't give up; an arrest in the Missouri freeway shootings; and Nik Wallenda aims to walk between Chicago skyscrapers.
  • Also: Russia says Ukraine is violating terms of the new accord to lower tension; Sherpa guides could strike on Mt. Everest; and a teen stows away in a plane's wheelwell and arrives safely in Hawaii.
  • Also: Human rights groups urge the U.S. to examine how many civilians have died in foreign drone strikes; Hurricane Raymond stalls off Mexico's Pacific coast; a new survey indicates consumers may spend more this holiday shopping season; and a thief returns a boy's prized pumpkin.
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