Description: Clips of recent gubernatorial candidacy announcements show that all use similar clichés and devices.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 01/11/1990
Description: Mission Hill residents gather to discuss the real character of their ethnically mixed, stable neighborhood. Mission Hill streets and triple deckers. Children on playground.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 01/12/1990
Description: Profile of Henry David Thoreau as naturalist and respecter of Walden Pond. Likenesses of Thoreau. Walden environs. Moss.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 04/17/1990
Description: David Boeri reports that Mayor Ray Flynn is considering a curfew for teenagers in the city of Boston, in the wake of the murder of Kimberly Ray Harbor on Franklin Field. Review of the details of Harbor's murder and scenes of the murder suspects entering a courtroom. Boeri notes that the curfew would prohibit teenagers from being on the streets after 11:00 pm on weeknights and after 12:00 am on weekends. Interview with a group of pre-adolescent African American boys about the curfew. The boys are playing basketball on an outdoor court. They discuss gang activity and violence in their neighborhood, and say that the curfew is a good idea because it will protect people from violence on the streets. Boeri notes that many teenagers declined to be interviewed for the report.
1:00:11: Visual: Shots of a color photo of Kimberly Ray Harbor (murder victim); of a group of police and city officials gathered on Franklin Field. Shot of a Boston Herald newspaper with a headline reading, "Eight teens charged in brutal 'wilding' murder." David Boeri reports that Kimberly Ray Harbor was murdered on Franklin Field in Dorchester on the evening of October 31, 1990. Boeri notes that Harbor was robbed, raped, cut, and stabbed over 100 times. Boeri reports that the suspects are teenagers and gang members; that five of them are under the age of sixteen. V: Shot of three teenagers entering a courtroom. Shot of a group of teenagers playing street hockey outside of a housing development. Boeri reports that Ray Flynn (Mayor of Boston) is considering a curfew for teenagers in Boston. Boeri reports that the curfew would prohibit teenagers from being on the streets after 11:00 pm on weeknights and after 12:00 am on weekends. V: Shots of a group of African American kids playing basketball on an outdoor court near the Franklin Field Housing Project. Boeri notes that many teenagers declined to be interviewed for this report. V: Footage of Boeri interviewing a group of pre-adolescent African American kids. Boeri asks them about the problems in their neighborhood. The kids answer as a group. They talk about fights between gangs, vandalism, and violence. Boeri reports that the kids are afraid of gang members; that the kids go home early each night. V: Footage of Boeri interviewing the kids. Boeri asks how many teenagers in the neighborhood are gang members. The kids answer as a group. The kids says that most of the teenagers belong to gangs. Boeri reports that the kids told him that teenagers are asked to join gangs at age sixteen; that gangs sometimes recruit teenagers under the age of sixteen. Boeri reports that the kids he spoke to were around the age of thirteen. Boeri notes that the group of kids liked the idea of a curfew. V: Footage of Boeri talking to the kids. One of the boys says that a curfew is a good idea. Boeri asks if people get into trouble if the stay out too late. The boy says yes. Another boy says that gang members will shoot you for no reason if you walk by them at night. The boy says that the gang members will think that you belong to another gang. Boeri asks them if they will obey the curfew in three or four years. One of the boys says yes. Another boy says that he will be out playing basketball; that he and his friends will mind their own business. Shots of the boys playing basketball. Boeri notes that it is a short distance from the basketball court to the street corner; that it is a short distance from safety to trouble. Boeri reports that proponents of the curfew are trying to protect younger children from the violence of the streets.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 11/21/1990
Description: Tibetan monks create a mandala, intricate design of colored sand, at Museum of Fine Arts.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 01/19/1990
Description: Biggest investors in tobacco companies are banks, universities, insurance companies and pension funds. Harvard will divest of tobacco stocks. File of tobacco harvest, cigarette manufacturing.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 05/22/1990
Description: Jan von Mehren talks to members of the racially diverse Boston Student Advisory Council. Von Mehren notes that these high school students grew up in integrated schools. The students discuss school desegregation and today's integrated schools. The students discuss racial tension in the schools today. Several of the students say that racial tension does exist in today's schools. One student says that the actions of a few students can create an atmosphere of racial tension. One student recalls his memory of the busing crisis. Another says that she has friends of all ethnicities and races. One adds that integrated schools can conquer ignorance. The students discuss the benefits of attending integrated schools. Von Mehren's report is accompanied by a clip from Eyes on the Prize II.
1:00:05: Visual: Footage of Ted Donlan (student from West Roxbury) imitating an Eddie Murphy comedy routine in front of other members of the Boston Student Advisory Council. The students are of mixed races. The students laugh at Donlan's routine. Jan von Mehren reports that the Boston Student Advisory Council is a group which represents students in the Boston Public School System. Von Mehren reports that students today are educated in a desegregated school system; that the students do not know a lot about Boston's experience with school desegregation in the 1970s. V: Footage of South Boston High School in 1974 from Eyes on the Prize II. Von Mehren reports that Donlan remembers a photograph. V: Footage of Donlan speaking in front of the other members of the Boston Student Advisory Council. Donlan says that he remembers a photo of a white man battering an African American man with the American flag. Donlan says that it is horrible to see the American flag used as a weapon; that the American flag is a symbol of equality and racial peace. Shot of another student in the group. Footage of Thembi Costa (student from Roxbury) says that administrators always talk about the racial breakdown of the student population. Costa says that she never understood why it was important. Shots of other students in the group. Von Mehren reports that the busing crisis seems like ancient history to these students; that they go to school in desegregated classrooms every day. V: Shot of von Mehren sitting with the students. Footage of Benitha Harris (student from Dorchester) says that she has friends of all races and ethnicities; that she never knew South Boston existed before she went to her present school in 1987. Shots of other students in the group. Footage of Alfred Esposito (student from Brighton) saying that one Latino student was able to create a war within the school a few years ago. Esposito says that the student has left the school; that the school is now peaceful. Esposito says that one person can create a lot of strife. Footage of Walter Bonilla (student from Roslindale) says that there is tension in the air; that "there is more talk than action." Footage of Donlan saying that racial tension is never out in the open; that it is apparent when students divide up into groups. Donlan says that white students stick together; that African American students stick together; that there are whispers of tension. Footage of Costa saying that she once saw some white supremacist graffiti; that she was frightened. Footage of Harris says that she was once insulted by a carload of whites while waiting at a bus stop. Shots of the group of students; of individual students. Von Mehren reports that the students do not want to return to segregated schools. V: Footage of Costa saying that ignorance causes fear. Costa says that students need to learn about other races and cultures. Footage of Donlan saying that he recently acted in a play with a racially diverse cast of performers. Donlan says that integrated schools are working; that there is still some work to be done. Shots of the students.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 03/20/1990
Description: Rep. Thomas McGee announces he will run for reelection. Challengers for his seat: Edward Clancy, Kim Simone.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 05/01/1990
Description: The Bob Bachelder Big Band will reunite for a recreation of the Totem Pole Ballroom, formerly in Newton. Archival visuals of ballroom and Norumbega Park sign and fire. Band rehearsing.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 10/18/1990
Description: John DeVillars and wildlife commissioner Walter Bickford track bear by radio signal finding only her cubs. Budget cuts eliminated some game wardens, making it harder to police open space. Snowmobile.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 02/23/1990