
Mask mandates continue to spark outrage as virus vaccine trials ramp up
While Planet Fitness joined the number of companies now requiring face coverings, nationwide the controversy won't go away.
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Manuel Bojorquez is a CBS News national correspondent based in Miami. He joined CBS News in 2012 as a Dallas-based correspondent and was promoted to national correspondent for the network's Miami bureau in January 2017. Bojorquez reports across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms.
He has covered major news events in Texas and throughout the South and was one of the first network news correspondents on the scene of the Dallas police ambush in July 2016. In 2015, Bojorquez was part of the team awarded the Edward R. Murrow Award for a report about a tornado that devastated parts of an Arkansas town.
Bojorquez has also reported extensively from Latin America for CBS News, most recently following Pope Francis' visit to Mexico in February 2016. His travels have also taken him to Argentina, Cuba, El Salvador and Guatemala.
Previously, he was a general assignment reporter at WSB-TV in Atlanta. While there, he covered a number of important stories, including Tropical Storm Fay, the 2008 presidential elections and the first Sunday service at Ebenezer Baptist Church after President Obama's victory. In 2011, he was awarded a NATAS Southeast Emmy for Live Reporting.
Prior to his tenure at WSB-TV, Bojorquez had served since 2002 as a general assignment reporter for KNXV-TV in Phoenix, Arizona. In both 2004 and 2005, he won The Associated Press award for best live reporting for his coverage of the state's wildfires. In July 2006, he traveled to Mexico City to cover Mexico's presidential election, and also provided daily online articles and photo essays of the election.
Bojorquez began his career in journalism in 2000 as a general assignment reporter for KESQ-TV in Palm Springs, California, immediately after he graduated magna cum laude from the University of Southern California, where he was named Outstanding Broadcast Journalism Student of the Year.
While Planet Fitness joined the number of companies now requiring face coverings, nationwide the controversy won't go away.
Officials on Friday announced an 8 p.m. curfew along South Beach, as Florida topped 10,000 single-day cases for the tenth time.
With infections spiking in 41 states, hospitals are facing a crisis with ICU beds, along with doctors and nurses in short supply.
The trends there are part of a larger picture: The U.S. is seeing a dangerous increase in COVID-19 cases across the South and West.
Dairy farmers in Pennsylvania are pouring milk down the drain because of dried-up demand from closed restaurants and schools, while others stand by helplessly as their crops rot in the field.
The docking of Zaandam and Rotterdam — part of Holland America — ends a nightmarish odyssey for some on board. But for others, the journey is far from over.
Alex Friedmann has been a high-profile voice against private prisons.
Heavy rain even caused a rock slide, resulting in a train wreck in Kentucky.
Unlike some in Washington, there's no name-calling or grandstanding.
Four people were killed, including a UPS driver who was taken hostage and an innocent bystander.
"I wouldn't miss a class for a broken bone."
The murder rate in Mexico is on pace to reach a record high this year thanks in large part to drug cartels
Rhonita Miller and her four children were buried, including her 8-month-old twins
The baby girl, named Faith, was found 11 hours after her mother, who had hidden her, was shot and killed
Daryl Paul first started turning strips of hose into stars and stripes in 2015