A small but growing global community of people who once had DACA are giving up on a country that has struggled to pass comprehensive immigration reform for a generation. They're moving abroad instead.
New Orleans if a fusion of cultures, a little bit French, a little bit Spanish, a little bit Caribbean and a little bit Cajun. Perhaps nothing embodies that more than gumbo, which is literally a fusion of foods and flavors. But even the word gumbo is a bit of a fusion.
Ray Manzarek, keyboard player and founding member of the 60s rock band The Doors, has died aged 74. Marco Werman gives Manzarek a send-off with some of the sounds he helped influence from Togo, Nigeria and Cuba.
This year is the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps. President Kennedy started the program March 1st, 1961. Since then, more than 200,000 Americans have served. The World's Marco Werman is a veteran. Were you a Peace Corps volunteer, too?
Two members of Togo's football federation are in trouble for faking a recent soccer match against Bahrain. They sent a group of unknown players to the match. Anchor Lisa Mullins finds out more from Gabriele Marcotti.
The answer to today's Geo Quiz is Togo. A few months back, Togo took out an ad in the New York Times, saying it was open for business for tourists. But what would a tourist go to Togo to see? We hear in a report from Anna Boiko-Weyrach.
Musician Massama Dogo is originally from Togo. He now lives in Washington DC where he fronts the band Elikeh. Anchor Marco Werman tells us more.
Today's answer is the capital of the West African nation of Togo -- Lome. The city is one of the stops on a British tourism agency excursion called the Cradle of Voodoo Tour. Anchor Marco Werman speaks with Mike Carter, a travel writer who went on the tour.