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Two U.S. soldiers were killed and nine wounded yesterday in a traffic checkpoint ambush, bringing the U.S. death toll from attacks or accidents to eight this week. The latest incident - in Fallujah, where factions remain loyal to the Baathist regime of deposed dictator Saddam Hussein - occurred shortly after midnight at a roadblock set up by the Army's 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment. Two heavily armed assailants stepped from a car and opened fire, killing two soldiers and wounding nine before U.S. troops hit back with Bradley fighting vehicles, machine guns and small-arms fire, killing two Iraqis and capturing six, the U.S. Central Command said. During the evacuation of the casualties, a Bradley accidentally hit an Army medical helicopter, damaging it so badly it could no longer fly. Parts of the copter had to be trucked away. The Fallujah incident was the latest in a series of assaults on U.S. troops since Sunday, including a land mine attack on a Baghdad airport road and an ambush near the northern town of Hadithah. Eight U.S. troops have been killed and at least 23 wounded this week, Central Command said. Since President Bush's May 1 declaration that major combat in Iraq had ended, 26 U.S. soldiers have been killed and more than 40 injured in attacks or accidents, according to Central Command figures. "The bottom line is you can't protect yourself against everything," said Sgt. Keith Russell, 33, a regiment member in charge of nine soldiers guarding the Fallujah mayor's office. Checkpoint confusion At checkpoints, "I don't know what the driver is doing when he rolls down the window," Russell said. "Is he going to throw a grenade or just say hello?" Despite the mounting casualty toll, Army Maj. Gen. Buford Blount, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, said the attacks appeared to be random incidents by irregulars loyal to Saddam and that security is improving overall. "Every week we've had some kind of attack, whether it be a drive-by shooting" or a rocket-propelled grenade, Blount said. Mohammad Youssef, 33, of Fallujah said he is against the attacks but expected them to continue to protest the U.S. presence. "The people want them to leave," Youssef said of the U.S. troops. "There will be more attacks. Why? Because the people don't like them," he said, pointing to a passing U.S. convoy.
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The cops accused of slaying Amadou Diallo were arraigned amid extremely tight securitya cloak-and-dagger operation in which hundreds of cops worked to get the defendants to court in secrecy. In an apparently unprecedented move, the four officers were booked outside the borough in which they were charged with crimes. There even was an escape route set up to help them elude demonstrators and the media after arraignment, but it wasn't used. Instead, the cops and their lawyers spoke with reporters outside after the hearing. Although police said there were no threats made against the defendants, cops were posted atop the Bronx Supreme Court building and buildings along the Grand Concourse near 161st St. They said they were on the lookout for rock throwers. At the direction of the Internal Affairs Bureau, the four officers arrived at Highway Unit No. 3 on the Grand Central Parkway in Queens early yesterday with their lawyers. They were met by a large contingent of Internal Affairs brass, including Inspector Kevin Gilmartin, the commander of the unit involved in the probe of the Feb. 4 Bronx shooting. The cops turned over their badges and ID cards as they were formally suspended. "It was calm and businesslike," said a source who was present. "No one got emotional. No one made cheap-shot remarks." After paper work was filled out, the cops were whisked in a caravan of unmarked sedans to the Queens Central Booking facility in Kew Gardens, about five minutes away, where they were fingerprinted and photographed. They had no contact with civilian prisoners. The accused officers then were transported to the Bronx courthouse wearing grim faces and business suitsbut no bulletproof vests. Each of the white officers was escorted by a black cop. To assure the indicted cops hit no roadblocks going into court, judges were asked to finish work by the early afternoon and leave the building. Although it was a balmy bright day, the mood around the courthouse had the darkcast of an armed camp. Traffic was barred for two blocks on 161st St., and cops closed four blocks of the Grand Concourse service road to set up a mobile command center and provide parking for their vehicles. A crowd of at least 1,000 demonstratorscop supporters and shooting protesters alikewas split by metal barriers. But the two sides were close enough to hear each side chanting ugly slogans at the other.With Joe Calderone
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Heeeeeeere's Katie! Katie Couric's sexy one-night stand as host of NBC's "The Tonight Show" on Monday was a ratings bonanza that put Jay Leno to shame. Capitalizing on her feminine assets, the sweetheart of morning TV drew 42% more viewers than Leno usually gets. Meanwhile, the "Today" show's ratings barely budged as Leno sat in for Couric as part of the NBC ratings stunt. Wearing a slinky black dress that showed more than a little leg, Couric shed her demure image by pointing at her breasts and cracking wise. "For all you people from L.A. who have never seen them before, these are actually real," she told the studio audience. It was a performance that would make Leno or David Letterman - or even Johnny Carson - blush. And the public loved it. Preliminary ratings for her stint in late-night land were the highest for "Tonight" since May 2000, according to Nielsen Media Research. With Couric, "Tonight" averaged a 7.1 overnight rating and a 17 share, which measures the percentage of TV sets in use. Leno's average for a Monday is a 5.0 rating and 12 share. While Couric held court, CBS' "Late Show with David Letterman" averaged a 4.0 overnight rating, down from 4.8 a week earlier. Leno's "Today" appearance boosted the ratings by 9%. So, "Today" co-host Matt Lauer's job is safe - but could the Couric shuffle be more than just a one-time deal? Hollywood came calling Before she signed her $16 million-a-year NBC contract, Couric was wooed by Hollywood producers who wanted to give her a syndicated talk show. Yet NBC insiders said Monday's swap was nothing more than a sweeps gambit that might be repeated next year. "This was really well promoted, really well publicized. This is what we hoped for," said NBC Entertainment President Jeff Zucker. "We're thrilled." It was Couric's idea to trade places with Leno, and she showed viewers the difference between night and day. She ditched her staid morning attire for a vampy dress with a dipping neckline and daring hemline. And workers cut away the front of her desk to expose her legs while she interviewed "American Idol" judge Simon Cowell and "Austin Powers" star Mike Myers. "Look at you," Myers marveled approvingly. The morning after, Couric had no reason to be embarrassed. "I'm glad it's over, I think I need a cocktail," she told the newsmagazine "Access Hollywood" after the taping.
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