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Today’s videos from Tribune News Service

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Tribune News Service

Tribune News Service is proud to announce that we are now distributing video. These are some of the videos that are available today for use on subscribers’ websites. Some customers are excluded from using some videos. For help with a video, please contact our newsroom at 312-222-4196 or email tcavideo@tribune.com. To become part of the Tribune Content Agency Video Network, please contact Art Bushnell at abushnell@tribpub.com or 703-361-9817.

Amed Mohamed, from Irving, Texas, left school in handcuffs on Monday after his English teacher told him and the school’s principal that his homemade clock looked like a bomb.

An appeals court has agreed to halt the execution of Richard Glossip, an Oklahoma man who claims he was framed for the 1997 beating death of his boss.

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Residents begin to return to towns severely damaged by wildfires in Lake County, Calif.

Dozens of refugees threw stones, sticks and water bottles at police, according to a correspondent. Officers started using pepper spray and tear gas.

Some of the hundreds seeking an alternative route to the Schengen Zone have started to arrive in Croatia. Many are likely to head to Slovenia.

NASA announced on Wednesday that the Orion spacecraft project has crossed an important milestone. The capsule has been designed to carry humans deeper into space for the exploration of other celestial bodies.

The best catch of Week 1 didn’t come from a wide receiver or tight end; it came from Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Kiko Alonso.

After taking home the Grand Jury and Audience awards at this year’s Sundance Festival, indie drama “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” is hitting screens in Europe.

A new trailer for “Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2” has been released. Bradley Hasemeyer has facts you probably didn’t know about the series.

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With the help of costume designer Salvador Perez, Mindy Kaling has become one of the most stylish women on television.

Pablo Picasso’s sculptures take center stage.

The latest reductions are expected to be global and come on top of 55,000 layoffs previously announced.

As the Federal Reserve decides whether to raise interest rates, Wall Street’s top economists are on unfamiliar ground. For the first time in years, they are deeply divided on what will happen.

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said on Tuesday that the social network is working on a ‘dislike’ button.

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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