Laura Wagner
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Also this week: the virtual reality stories of three displaced children.
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The French capital was rocked by shootings and an explosion in six locations on Friday. French police stormed and took control of one location. At least five attackers have been killed.
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Max Geller led a small crowd in protest of the fact that paintings by renowned French Impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir hang in Boston's Museum of Fine Arts.
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On Friday the president will travel to the town and meet privately with the families of the victims of the shootings at Umpqua Community College.
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Banksy's "bemusement park" in England has closed. All of the structures from the park will be sent to a refugee camp in Calais, France, to help build shelters, according to the website.
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Also this week: How Iran's supreme leader controlled domestic criticism of the nuclear deal, and the parallel to debate over the deal in the U.S.
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A Charleston, S.C., judge ruled that Michael Slager will have to remain in jail. Slager, then an officer, was caught on video, shooting Walter Scott in the back during a traffic stop in April.
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Vanessa Williams was forced to resign as Miss America in 1984 after nude photos of her were published in a magazine.
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The arresting officer, James Frascatore, has a history of excessive-force allegations and is named in two civil rights lawsuits.
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Around the newsroom and around the world, here's what we're reading this week.