
Folk Alley
Saturday at 10pm on WPSU2
Folk Alley brings you the best in singer/songwriter, Celtic, traditional bluegrass, American acoustic, and world music.
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In New York City, an undocumented man was mugged. Police detained and charged him instead. He was found innocent, but waited in prison for a trial for over a year. Now, he's high priority for removal.
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Singer Dalea Rundblad was told that it would be better to say she had cancer than to tell people she was an intersex woman. Today, she is confident and is serving as the role model she wished she had.
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In northern New Mexico, Reies López Tijerina transformed the issue of land rights into an issue of civil rights. We take a look at the legacy of López Tijerina and his work.
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African-Americans weren't the only group of people segregated in U.S. history. We hear from a Mexican-American who was prohibited from attending white schools in the Southwest.
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Bill Carrigan, history professor at Rowan University, shares his knowledge about the history of Mexican lynchings in the Southwest.
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Otura Mun has been a central figure in the Puerto Rican independent music scene for over two decades, yet he was born with a different name, in an African-American Mennonite family in Indiana.
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National Park Service law enforcement are trained for many tasks, but they are not often trained on the one thing they find themselves doing on a surprisingly regular basis: immigration enforcement.
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Last year, he called Donald Trump a "buffoon." Now, he's working with him. Is Javier Palomarez trying to change the Trump Administration from the inside?
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Latino USA goes behind-the-scenes with Rogue One's Mexico City-based team to find out what the process of translating and dubbing a Star Wars film is like.
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In order to better understand the obstacles they face, we gathered the few Latino creators who had their projects accepted into this year's Sundance Film Festival.