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Henry Gass

Journalist/Photographer

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To reunite a family kept apart, a wedding on a cross-border bridge

By Henry Gass February 7, 2020 Articles, Photography
To reunite a family kept apart, a wedding on a cross-border bridge

The year-old “Remain in Mexico” policy has created a new kind of family separation. Some committed couples are getting legally married at the border to try to help their asylum cases.

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As Roberts enters fray, legacy of judicial independence at stake

By Henry Gass January 15, 2020 Articles

Presiding over an impeachment trial, Chief Justice John Roberts will seek to embody the judicial independence he often promotes. But the remainder of the Supreme Court term may be a tougher test.

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Trump presidency’s most lasting impact? A transformed judiciary.

By Henry Gass December 19, 2019 Articles

Should judicial appointments be a political tug of war? The impact of the transformation of the American judiciary under President Donald Trump is likely to play out for decades, legal scholars say.

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When red and blue agree to meet – and not change each other’s minds

By Henry Gass December 2, 2019 Articles, Photography
When red and blue agree to meet – and not change each other’s minds

Groups that facilitate civil discourse abound, post-2016 election. The challenge is learning to talk with your political opposite outside the structured settings of workshops and classrooms.

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Houston, we have a solution: How the city curbed homelessness

By Henry Gass November 18, 2019 Articles, Photography
Houston, we have a solution: How the city curbed homelessness

Who deserves a home? To tackle homelessness, one city is rethinking that question. Houston has taken a “housing-first” approach in which a home is seen as a vital first step toward stability.

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Supreme Court conservatives poised to make their mark in new term

By Henry Gass October 7, 2019 Articles

Into an especially volatile political environment, a coming wave of hot-button Supreme Court decisions is set to crash. The cultural impact may extend to the institution itself.

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Houston’s pocket prairies: Natural solutions to unnatural flooding

By Henry Gass October 1, 2019 Articles, Photography
Houston’s pocket prairies: Natural solutions to unnatural flooding

Humans are innovators and tend to look to technology to solve problems. But increasingly, people are turning to the natural world for solutions as well. For Houston, that means reintroducing the prairie.

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What it means to be ‘coach’ in Texas. Art Briles’ return to football.

By Henry Gass September 25, 2019 Articles

What does it mean to be a good coach? Is it winning games, molding young characters, or both? A small town in Texas considers after it hires a controversial coach.

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Democratic debate: The biggest winner was clear from the stage

By Henry Gass September 13, 2019 Articles

The biggest winner from Thursday night’s Democratic presidential candidate debate in Houston may have been the diversity of the candidates.

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‘Texodus’: Why the Lone Star State might turn blue for real this time

By Henry Gass September 12, 2019 Articles

At the Monitor Breakfast, GOP Sen. Ted Cruz predicted Texas will be “hotly contested” in 2020, thanks to the growing clout of suburban voters – particularly women – who have been moving to the left, politically.

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