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FRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrest HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMIC The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and SAMALAYUCA RESIDENTS DELAY COPPER MINE OPENING, CONTINUE SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO — Residents of this small farming town in northern Mexico petitioning authorities to stop a copper mine from opening have managed to temporarily halt the project. They started protesting last August after the Canadian mining corporation VVC Exploration announced plans to open the mine ‘La Gloria’ in theSamalayuca desert.
DIAGNOSING CRIME: THE FAILURES OF REHABILITATION IN THE EL PASO, Texas — “When you’re through changing, that’s when you’re through” reads a motivational poster hanging in the main hall of the Education Building of the Rogelio Sanchez State Prison, El Paso’s largest state correctional facility. It is a sinister wink at the failing system of reform that classes taught in that building aim 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
DIABETES RAMPANT AMONG HISPANICS IN EL PASO By Nicole Revilla Diabetes is on the rise nationally and in El Paso, where healthcare workers and patients are taking on the chronic disease that has been especially devastating for Hispanics. El Paso is ranked No. 1 with the highest number of adults living with diabetes among 100 cities, according to a statistics compiled by BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no oneFRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrest HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMIC The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and SAMALAYUCA RESIDENTS DELAY COPPER MINE OPENING, CONTINUE SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO — Residents of this small farming town in northern Mexico petitioning authorities to stop a copper mine from opening have managed to temporarily halt the project. They started protesting last August after the Canadian mining corporation VVC Exploration announced plans to open the mine ‘La Gloria’ in theSamalayuca desert.
DIAGNOSING CRIME: THE FAILURES OF REHABILITATION IN THE EL PASO, Texas — “When you’re through changing, that’s when you’re through” reads a motivational poster hanging in the main hall of the Education Building of the Rogelio Sanchez State Prison, El Paso’s largest state correctional facility. It is a sinister wink at the failing system of reform that classes taught in that building aim 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
DIABETES RAMPANT AMONG HISPANICS IN EL PASO By Nicole Revilla Diabetes is on the rise nationally and in El Paso, where healthcare workers and patients are taking on the chronic disease that has been especially devastating for Hispanics. El Paso is ranked No. 1 with the highest number of adults living with diabetes among 100 cities, according to a statistics compiled by DOW JONES MULTIMEDIA TRAINING ACADEMY 2021 GOES ONLINE Two journalism students and nine journalism instructors from U.S. Hispanic Serving Institutions explored stories of children of immigrants for the 2021 Dow Jones News Fund Multimedia Training Academy June 5 - 10 hosted virtually by Borderzine through the University of Texas in El Paso. Thanks to a grant provided by the Dow Jones News Fund, Borderzine organizes this annual training CULTURE SHIFT: LOOKING AT IDENTITY IN THE BORDERLAND In this episode of Our Border Life we talk about those moments when people realize they’re in a culture shift – that something fundamentally has changed about their identity. Specifically, the growing awareness of the multi-layered identities among people living in the U.S-Mexico borderland region of El Paso and Ciudad Juarez. Wemeet with Gustavo
THANKS TO LESSONS LEARNED IN A FAMILY OF NURSES, 2ND When Noelle Mongcopa was a young girl, she felt compelled to draw and create art, spending hours copying her favorite images of Dragon Ball Z and Pokemon characters. Today, she has channeled her creative force into her career as a toy designer and product manager. However, the choice to pursue an artistic career wasn’t an JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMIC The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and GARDENING KEEPS FAMILY TRADITIONS ALIVE ACROSS GENERATIONS Cindy Vasquez is a second-generation Mexican American who lives in Oakdale, California. She graduated from Enochs High School in 2019. Her grandparents migrated to the U.S. from Mexico, when her mother was a young child. Her grandfather, Paul Velasco, learned to garden from his father and continued after the family moved to California. CindyVasquez
HOW THE IMMIGRANT FOUNDER OF A PRESCHOOL BUILDS COMMUNITY Mi Escuelita Maya is in a working class neighborhood at the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Chico, California. A mural on the building depicts children from diverse backgrounds flying kites in open spaces. One of the founders, Maria Trenda, helped build the preschool in 2007, just before the Great Recession, on a corner lot CHANGING TIMES, SUPPORT RAISE ASPIRATIONS FOR YOUTH IN THE On the glass coffee table, with her favorite issues of the Golf Magazine, she finally finds the book. “It focuses more on the now. Some people I recognize, some people I don’t”, said Maria Guerrero, whose dad immigrated from Mexico. “It gives you a start FROM BORDERLANDS OF BROWNSVILLE AND TUCSON, CHICANX ARTIST Artist Alejandro Macias was born, raised and lived for more than three decades in Brownsville, Texas, communicating the borderlands experience through visual art as a second-generation Mexican American. In 2019, he moved hundreds of miles west to the borderlands city, Tucson, in Arizona, to continue working on his art and to teach at TheUniversity
MUSICIAN DRAWS ON DIVERSITY OF INFLUENCES AS A TEACHER Christian Cruz, 30, is a musician, composer, and second-generation American who lives in Los Angeles. When not teaching guitar lessons or playing gigs, Cruz, who holds two master’s degrees in the field (USC and Fresno State), finds his talents best satisfied with project-based music composition. He also looks forward to teaching this fall withLead
DAUGHTER OF SALVADORAN IMMIGRANTS CULTIVATES INCLUSIVE Steffi Puerto is double majoring in journalism and Critical, Race, Gender, and Sexuality at Humboldt State University. Steffi is an upcoming junior and a reporter and a photographer in El Leńador Humboldt State Student run bilingual paper. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no oneCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days.FRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMICAUTHOR: HERIBERTOPEREZ
The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL Fort Bliss-stationed service members and their families are equal to just under 10 percent the population of El Paso. The 2010 census states the population living on Fort Bliss was 8,591. Borderzine reached out to soldiers who were stationed at Fort Bliss in the past five years to talk about their experiences with the Sun City. 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
THE CHICANO MOVEMENT The Chicano Movement — alive and evolving. EL PASO, Texas — El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 60s and 70s. Almost a half century later, Chicanos, Latinos and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle, but at times it does not have the same clout as it once did. HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no oneCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days.FRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMICAUTHOR: HERIBERTOPEREZ
The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL Fort Bliss-stationed service members and their families are equal to just under 10 percent the population of El Paso. The 2010 census states the population living on Fort Bliss was 8,591. Borderzine reached out to soldiers who were stationed at Fort Bliss in the past five years to talk about their experiences with the Sun City. 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
THE CHICANO MOVEMENT The Chicano Movement — alive and evolving. EL PASO, Texas — El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 60s and 70s. Almost a half century later, Chicanos, Latinos and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle, but at times it does not have the same clout as it once did. HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no one UTEP HELPED PARENTS FROM MEXICO ATTEND OUR GRADUATION, BUT For the first time in more than a year my Mexican parents will able to cross the border from Ciudad Juárez using a special waiver to attend my commencement ceremony at University of Texas at El Paso. Since March 2020, crossing the border has been restricted to essential travel including crossing for work, medical or POKÉMON CARD FRENZY DURING PANDEMIC HAS BORDERLAND Pokémon card frenzy during pandemic has Borderland collectors clearing store shelves. Collector David Flores holds up one of his Pokémon cards during a recent interview. Photo credit: Oscar Gonzales. EL PASO, Texas – Local trading card stores have seen a spike in demand for cards that were popular in the late 1990s and early 2000s as videos BORDER TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS IN DETROIT AND EL PASO SHOW THE Total COVID-19 cases were 150 percent higher on a per capita basis in El Paso County than in Wayne County, and total COVID-19 deaths were 20 percent higher. This is a simplified comparison because Detroit is a multi-county urban area. However, because Wayne County had a more severe COVID-19 toll than other suburban counties in Detroit, the PHOTOJOURNALIST HAS UNIQUE VIEW OF BORDER LIFE AS A NON Briana Sanchez frowns at the images on her computer screen. “I need to add some happier photos in here,” she says. Sanchez, lead photojournalist at the El Paso Times, knows better than anyone the difficult times that the border has been through in the last two years. After spending eight years away, first in college HOW THE IMMIGRANT FOUNDER OF A PRESCHOOL BUILDS COMMUNITY Mi Escuelita Maya is in a working class neighborhood at the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Chico, California. A mural on the building depicts children from diverse backgrounds flying kites in open spaces. One of the founders, Maria Trenda, helped build the preschool in 2007, just before the Great Recession, on a corner lot FROM BORDERLANDS OF BROWNSVILLE AND TUCSON, CHICANX ARTIST Artist Alejandro Macias was born, raised and lived for more than three decades in Brownsville, Texas, communicating the borderlands experience through visual art as a second-generation Mexican American. In 2019, he moved hundreds of miles west to the borderlands city, Tucson, in Arizona, to continue working on his art and to teach at TheUniversity
DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrestCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days. DANZA CULTURAL HELPS BUILD IMPORTANT LIFE SKILLS IN RURAL Children wearing masks stomp their feet on concrete as they watch the new baile folklórico teacher nod her head and gesture the beats: right, left, right, left. The students are gathered on this Sunday evening in June at the local park in Humboldt County, California and show their excitement with this fun, social activity. The BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no oneCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days.FRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMICAUTHOR: HERIBERTOPEREZ
The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL Fort Bliss-stationed service members and their families are equal to just under 10 percent the population of El Paso. The 2010 census states the population living on Fort Bliss was 8,591. Borderzine reached out to soldiers who were stationed at Fort Bliss in the past five years to talk about their experiences with the Sun City. 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
THE CHICANO MOVEMENT The Chicano Movement — alive and evolving. EL PASO, Texas — El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 60s and 70s. Almost a half century later, Chicanos, Latinos and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle, but at times it does not have the same clout as it once did. HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no oneCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days.FRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMICAUTHOR: HERIBERTOPEREZ
The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL Fort Bliss-stationed service members and their families are equal to just under 10 percent the population of El Paso. The 2010 census states the population living on Fort Bliss was 8,591. Borderzine reached out to soldiers who were stationed at Fort Bliss in the past five years to talk about their experiences with the Sun City. 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
THE CHICANO MOVEMENT The Chicano Movement — alive and evolving. EL PASO, Texas — El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 60s and 70s. Almost a half century later, Chicanos, Latinos and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle, but at times it does not have the same clout as it once did. HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no one UTEP HELPED PARENTS FROM MEXICO ATTEND OUR GRADUATION, BUT For the first time in more than a year my Mexican parents will able to cross the border from Ciudad Juárez using a special waiver to attend my commencement ceremony at University of Texas at El Paso. Since March 2020, crossing the border has been restricted to essential travel including crossing for work, medical or POKÉMON CARD FRENZY DURING PANDEMIC HAS BORDERLAND Pokémon card frenzy during pandemic has Borderland collectors clearing store shelves. Collector David Flores holds up one of his Pokémon cards during a recent interview. Photo credit: Oscar Gonzales. EL PASO, Texas – Local trading card stores have seen a spike in demand for cards that were popular in the late 1990s and early 2000s as videos BORDER TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS IN DETROIT AND EL PASO SHOW THE Total COVID-19 cases were 150 percent higher on a per capita basis in El Paso County than in Wayne County, and total COVID-19 deaths were 20 percent higher. This is a simplified comparison because Detroit is a multi-county urban area. However, because Wayne County had a more severe COVID-19 toll than other suburban counties in Detroit, the PHOTOJOURNALIST HAS UNIQUE VIEW OF BORDER LIFE AS A NON Briana Sanchez frowns at the images on her computer screen. “I need to add some happier photos in here,” she says. Sanchez, lead photojournalist at the El Paso Times, knows better than anyone the difficult times that the border has been through in the last two years. After spending eight years away, first in college HOW THE IMMIGRANT FOUNDER OF A PRESCHOOL BUILDS COMMUNITY Mi Escuelita Maya is in a working class neighborhood at the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Chico, California. A mural on the building depicts children from diverse backgrounds flying kites in open spaces. One of the founders, Maria Trenda, helped build the preschool in 2007, just before the Great Recession, on a corner lot FROM BORDERLANDS OF BROWNSVILLE AND TUCSON, CHICANX ARTIST Artist Alejandro Macias was born, raised and lived for more than three decades in Brownsville, Texas, communicating the borderlands experience through visual art as a second-generation Mexican American. In 2019, he moved hundreds of miles west to the borderlands city, Tucson, in Arizona, to continue working on his art and to teach at TheUniversity
DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrestCORRIE BOUDREAUX
Corrie Boudreaux is a lecturer in the Department of Communication at The University of Texas at El Paso and a photojournalist in the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez border region. She holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Studies from Tulane University. Corrie is originally from Louisiana but has loved learning about Latin America and the Spanish language since her high school days. DANZA CULTURAL HELPS BUILD IMPORTANT LIFE SKILLS IN RURAL Children wearing masks stomp their feet on concrete as they watch the new baile folklórico teacher nod her head and gesture the beats: right, left, right, left. The students are gathered on this Sunday evening in June at the local park in Humboldt County, California and show their excitement with this fun, social activity. The BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no one DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrestFRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMIC The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and DIAGNOSING CRIME: THE FAILURES OF REHABILITATION IN THE EL PASO, Texas — “When you’re through changing, that’s when you’re through” reads a motivational poster hanging in the main hall of the Education Building of the Rogelio Sanchez State Prison, El Paso’s largest state correctional facility. It is a sinister wink at the failing system of reform that classes taught in that building aim 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
DIABETES RAMPANT AMONG HISPANICS IN EL PASO By Nicole Revilla Diabetes is on the rise nationally and in El Paso, where healthcare workers and patients are taking on the chronic disease that has been especially devastating for Hispanics. El Paso is ranked No. 1 with the highest number of adults living with diabetes among 100 cities, according to a statistics compiled by HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDERZINE | REPORTING ACROSS FRONTERASMULTIMEDIAVOCES&BLOGSART & CULTURANEWSIMMIGRATION & FRONTERASDIVERSITY & IDEAS By René Kladzyk and Maria Ramos Pacheco/El Paso Matters and Veronica Martinez/La Verdad. First of a three-part series. Running children and crying babies create a cacophony at El Buen Samaritano shelter, but in a far corner, Carmela holds her 2-year-old in silence. She can’t communicate with anyone — she doesn’t know Spanish, and no one DELTA-8 GAINING INTEREST IN BORDERLAND AS LEGAL Delta-8 – a legal compound similar to THC from cannabis – has arrived in the Borderland and one CBD shop owner says its popularity is sure to rise among El Paso-area residents seeking to explore its medicinal qualities. May Leach, owner of Whole Health CBD, says the compound is thought to relieve pain, emotional unrestFRANK HERNANDEZ
Frank Hernandez – A short story of the COVID-19 pandemic in my life. A laptop has the ZOOM software open during a Friday afternoon work meeting due to social distancing on April 3. As the COVID-19 pandemic was declared by the World Health Organization on March 11, I knew my life would dramatically change. I just didn’t know how much. HOW POLICE WORK FOR WOMEN IN EL PASO HAS CHANGED OVER THE The history of women on El Paso’s police force dates back to 1913, but much has changed over the years. “Women were seen more as social workers than police officers because it was a very male-dominated occupation,” said Egbert Zavala, an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Texas at ElJOURNALISM IN JULY
Journalism in July, also known as “JIJ,” is a free summer program that recruits 20 students from high schools in the El Paso-Las Cruces area to train them in the basics of journalism and how to use digital tools to tell stories on the web. During the 7-day residentialworkshop, high
JUAREZ NIGHTLIFE TRYING TO ADAPT TO CHANGING PANDEMIC The COVID-19 pandemic affected a wide range of businesses during the past year, especially nightclubs in Ciudad Juárez but some businesses found ways to reopen and adapt. Now, they’re faced with a new health order limiting hours and capacity and forcing some to close their doors once again as cases and hospitalizations spike. Nightclubs and DIAGNOSING CRIME: THE FAILURES OF REHABILITATION IN THE EL PASO, Texas — “When you’re through changing, that’s when you’re through” reads a motivational poster hanging in the main hall of the Education Building of the Rogelio Sanchez State Prison, El Paso’s largest state correctional facility. It is a sinister wink at the failing system of reform that classes taught in that building aim 8 EXAMPLES OF THE PROBLEM HOLLYWOOD HAS PORTRAYING MEXICO 8 examples of the problem Hollywood has portraying Mexico and Mexicans. By Zelma Rios | April 26, 2015. Fun with Dick and Jane. He lives in the desert or in a dangerous place, wears a big hat, sports a mustache, and sleeps under a cactus bush. She cleans fancy houses, takes care of Anglo children and lives in a drug-infestedneighborhood.
DIABETES RAMPANT AMONG HISPANICS IN EL PASO By Nicole Revilla Diabetes is on the rise nationally and in El Paso, where healthcare workers and patients are taking on the chronic disease that has been especially devastating for Hispanics. El Paso is ranked No. 1 with the highest number of adults living with diabetes among 100 cities, according to a statistics compiled by HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. DESERT DRIVERS COME TO THEIR OWN RESCUE IN EL PASO’S OFF The sounds of off-road vehicles grinding through the desert in east El Paso County are mostly just a memory now. The sprawling dunes area known as Red Sands is closed and Sheriff’s patrols are turning off-road enthusiasts away to limit the potential for public contact over coronavirus concerns. But, before the closure, the sounds of LOCAL BUSINESS IN JUAREZ ADAPTS TO BORDER SHUTDOWN CIUDAD JUAREZ -- Months after the U.S.-Mexico border was closed to all but essential travel as a COVID-19 precaution, small businesses have been forced to find ways to new ways to cope. “Many of our clients are from El Paso, so at first, they didn’t come as often because the situation was difficult,” said Natalia Briceño, 23, creative director for the nail salon Durazno Claro. SAMALAYUCA RESIDENTS DELAY COPPER MINE OPENING, CONTINUE SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO — Residents of this small farming town in northern Mexico petitioning authorities to stop a copper mine from opening have managed to temporarily halt the project. They started protesting last August after the Canadian mining corporation VVC Exploration announced plans to open the mine ‘La Gloria’ in theSamalayuca desert.
FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL Fort Bliss-stationed service members and their families are equal to just under 10 percent the population of El Paso. The 2010 census states the population living on Fort Bliss was 8,591. Borderzine reached out to soldiers who were stationed at Fort Bliss in the past five years to talk about their experiences with the Sun City. HOW TO SET UP A HOME RECORDING STUDIO WITH THESE 5 BASIC EL PASO — Before digital, building a quality music recording studio meant spending tons of money for gear or paying professional studios $1,200 a session, but advances in recording technology have made it easy for anyone with a computer to create affordable professional recordings at home. “It’s amazing what you can do with today’stechnology,”
THE CHICANO MOVEMENT The Chicano Movement — alive and evolving. EL PASO, Texas — El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 60s and 70s. Almost a half century later, Chicanos, Latinos and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle, but at times it does not have the same clout as it once did.SUMMER MASOUD
El Paso zoo creating $3 million home for threatened species. By Summer Masoud | October 12, 2018. The El Paso Zoo will soon become home to a colony of Magellanic penguins – a species listed as threatened by an international organization – in a new multi-million dollar HOW WORKING NIGHTS AT AN ADULT VIDEO STORE TURNED INTO A Editor’s note: This blog is part of a series of first person essays about identity written by UTEP Liberal Arts Honors students during the spring 2013 semester. EL PASO – “You’re not taking that job,” my father said to me before slamming the door in my face. It was a Friday night and I was on my way to an interview at an adult video store on the east side of El Paso. BORDER CATTLE CROSSING GIVES NEW MEANING TO ‘WHERE’S THE SANTA TERESA, N.M. – Life in the borderland, as the greater El Paso-Ciudad Juárez area is called, isn’t always easy. But there’s a place west of the metropolitan area along the U.S.-Mexico border that has found a balance. It’s the rare kind that involves a lot of dirt, a little political red tape and a SPANGLISH WORKS AGAINST PRESERVING CULTURAL HERITAGE BY Spanglish is a linguistic phenomenon that occurs by taking parts of English words and mixing them with parts of Spanish words. The overlapping of these two creates variations in grammar because not everyone use it the same way. This phenomenon is not an official language and it lacks specific structure and rules and is thereforeused informally.
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* Life on the Borderline * Special Report Pope Visits Juarez * Multimedia Training Academy * Journalism In July * Election 2016 Latino Vote * Beto O’Rourke Presidential Run SAMALAYUCA RESIDENTS DELAY COPPER MINE OPENING, CONTINUE PROTESTS TO PRESERVE FARMS AND FAMOUS DUNE FIELDS BY FRANK HERNANDEZ |APRIL 8, 2020
SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO — Residents of this small farming town in northern Mexico petitioning authorities to stop a copper mine from opening have managed to temporarily halt the project. They started protesting last August after the Canadian mining corporation VVC Exploration announced plans to open the mine ‘La Gloria’ in the Samalayuca desert. A district judge on March 5th ordered the suspension of the mining project for at least five months, according to a report from El Diario de Juarez newspaper. But opponents know the fight is far from over in Samalayuca, a small agricultural town in Chihuahua about 35 miles south of El Paso-Ciudad Juarez border. RUIDOSO’S PEAK SEASON A BUST AS TOURISM FROM MEXICO, TEXAS COLLAPSESOVER CORONAVIRUS
BY FABIOLA TERRAZAS
| APRIL 11, 2020
RUIDOSO, NM — In this town where tourism is one of the biggest sectors of its economy, not having visitors can become a real problem. Ruidoso has experienced a huge drop in tourism because of COVID-19 concerns beginning with spring break, one of the village’s busiest times of year after the winter season. FEAR MAY KEEP UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS OUT OF 2020 CENSUS, HURTCOMMUNITIES
BY THE CONVERSATION
| APRIL 4, 2020
By Mary Lehman Held, University of Tennessee The United States might not be able to get information about more than 10 million people in the 2020 census. That’s the number of undocumented immigrants living in the United States. ALL LATINOS DON’T VOTE THE SAME WAY – THEIR PLACE OF ORIGINMATTERS
BY THE CONVERSATION
| MARCH 19, 2020
By Eliza Willis, Grinnell College and Janet A. Seiz, Grinnell College Joe Biden won Florida’s 2020 Democratic primary, capturing a majority of the state’s Latino voters. Polls have been tracking the Latino vote in Democratic presidential primaries, and many analysts are trying to predict which candidate Latinos might favor in November.MORE HEADLINES
CHILDREN OF COLOR ALREADY MAKE UP THE MAJORITY OF KIDS IN MANY USSTATES
FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL PASO CROSS-BORDER HOME OWNERSHIP RATE REFLECTS EL PASO, JUAREZ BINATIONALCOMMUNITY DYNAMIC
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CORONAVIRUS THREATENING SEASONAL FARMWORKERS AT THE HEART OF THE AMERICAN FOOD SUPPLYBy The Conversation
By Michael Haedicke, Drake University Many Americans may find bare grocery store shelves the most worrying sign of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their food system. But, for the most part, shortages of shelf-stable items like pasta, canned beans and peanut butter are temporary because the U.S. continues to produce enough food to meet demand – even if it sometimes takes a day or two to catchup.
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SOCIAL DISTANCING TO SLOW CORONAVIRUS IS HARD FOR A BORDER CULTURE USED TO HUGGING, TOGETHERNESSBy Angela Kocherga
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SANDERS WOWS CROWD DURING EL PASO STOP AMID TEXAS EARLY VOTINGBy Frank Hernandez
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ENTREPRENEURIAL SPIRIT FLOURISHES AT EL PASO’S FARMERS MARKETSBy Jared Carver
ART & CULTURA
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EL PASO IS HOME TO THRIVING ELECTRONIC DANCE MUSIC SCENEBy Issac Vara
El Paso is a huge hotspot for EDM music and DJs, with fans packing clubs and music festivals. EDM is short for Electronic Dance Music, a genre produced electronically, instead of with musical instruments.*
BOOK REVIEW: KAFKA IN A SKIRT: STORIES FROM THE WALL, BY DANIELCHACÓN
By Special to Borderzine*
KIKI’S – HOW A LITTLE NEIGHBORHOOD RESTAURANT GREW TO BE ACOMMUNITY TRADITION
By Amanda Pracht
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HOW EL PASO’S THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE COMES TO LIFEBy Brianna Perez
IMMIGRATION & FRONTERAS*
FAMILY, FOOD AND SHOPPING BIGGEST REASONS FOR EL PASOANS TO VISITJUAREZ
By Grecia Sanchez
Ciudad Juarez is known as a sprawling border city with a strong economy thanks to the proliferation of of over 300 hundred maquiladoras, factories that assemble parts for a variety of items from car radios to windmill blades. Less well known is that the desert city of 2 million residents draws many El Paso residents to visit each day to patronize a variety of Juarez businesses from restaurants toclothing boutiques.
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HUGS NOT WALLS EVENT GIVES FAMILIES LONG DIVIDED BY BORDER PRECIOUSMINUTES TOGETHER
By Dino Chiecchi
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THE SUPREME COURT AND REFUGEES AT THE SOUTHERN BORDER: 5 QUESTIONSANSWERED
By The Conversation
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FAR FEWER MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS ARE COMING TO THE US — AND THOSE WHO DO ARE MORE EDUCATEDBy The Conversation
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GROWING UP ALONG WITH THE RISE OF EMOJIS AND GIFSBy Aaron Prieto
If there is one thing that I have noticed about my life, it is that language has been changing. Being part of a generation practically obsessed with social media has made me and millions of others aware that these platforms are no longer just about posting that perfect selfie or unfriending that one person because you feel petty.*
6 BANDS TO SEE IN THE BORDERLAND BEFORE THEY’RE GONE FOR GOODBy Corey Bailey
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A BORDERZINE APPEAL, A SO LONG, BUT NOT A FINAL ADIOS AS OTHER NEWSROOM CAUSES BECKONBy Zita Arocha
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BORDERZINE PLEDGE: ENHANCE OUR BORDER REPORTING WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS AND NEWSMATCH 2019By Zita Arocha
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POSTPONED – APPLICATIONS OPEN FOR 2020 MULTIMEDIA TRAINING ACADEMY FOR HISPANIC-SERVING INSTITUTION COLLEGE FACULTY AND STUDENTSBy Borderzine Staff
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TRIBUNE EN ESPAÑOL, AN ALTERNATIVE AFTER HOY’S SHUT DOWN INCHICAGO
By Borderzine Special ReportsMEDIA
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ADDING RATINGS ON SOURCE RELIABILITY HELPS LIMIT SPREAD OFMISINFORMATION
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U.S.–MEXICO BORDER BECOMES MULTIMEDIA JOURNALISM CLASSROOM FOR CAL STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS REPORTING FROM BOTH SIDES By Special to BorderzineOFFBEAT & UNICO
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FORT BLISS SOLDIERS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS ON LIVING IN EL PASOBy Jared Carver
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SISTERHOOD OF THE TRAVELING BOOTS THAT BEGAN AS BETO O’ROURKE PROMOTION ‘ABSOLUTELY THE FUNNEST THING’By Nicole Madrid
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JUAREZ DINING SCENE GETS CUBAN TOUCH AMID MIGRANT SURGEBy Valeria Olivares
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UTEP LEGENDS HONORED AS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM CELEBRATES 45THANNIVERSARY
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CON SUS NARICES ROJAS ‘A LA ORDEN,’ DOCTORES DE LA RISA OFRECEN APOYO A NIÑOS Y ANCIANOS DE JUAREZBy Maria Gutierrez
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PHOTO GALLERY: MIGRANT CHILDREN DRAW THEIR GRATITUDE FOR EL PASO’SKINDNESS
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PHOTO GALLERY: MARCH FOR TRUTH IN EL PASOBy Borderzine Staff
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PHOTO GALLERY: TRUMP RALLY IN EL PASOBy Borderzine Staff
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LIFE ON THE BORDERLINE * AN ONGOING SERIES - The U.S.-Mexico border is a special, but misunderstood place. This reporting project gives voice to the people and reality of the region. MULTIMEDIA SKILLS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY Since 2008, the Dow Jones News Fund Multimedia Training Academy based at UT El Paso has helped journalism educators acquire new skills in digital storytelling that they can use to help prepare the next generation of Latino and African-American college journalists. Professors from Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Hispanic-serving institutions spend a week at Borderzine learning multimedia skills and covering real stories of the borderlands. See a collection of their stories here.SPECIAL PROJECTS
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