Description: Jon Parker & AIDS Brigade give out clean needles in Mission Hill. Addict deposits used works, gets kit w/alcohol wipes & condom. Neighborhood residents protest.File of Parker's fight w/Graylan Ellis-Hagler.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 01/30/1991
Description: Intersection of Summer and Washington Streets in downtown Boston. Lots of shoppers and pedestrians around Jordan Marsh store. “1873” inscription on building. Winter Street sign.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 01/21/1976
Description: Tale of interrelationships in New England organized crime wars, and what lead to the murder of Joseph Barboza Baron. Angiulo family, Ilario Zannino, Raymond Patriarca. Newspaper photos, courtroom drawings. File of Patriarca on stretcher. Gennaro Angiulo gets on elevator, looks straight at camera. La Cosa Nostra (mafia).
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 10/30/1985
Description: Joseph Jordan, Boston Police Commissioner. .
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 07/18/1980
Description: Photographs of Boston police commissioner Joseph Jordan between 1946 and 1977.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 06/16/1977
Description: JOE KENNEDY ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY FOR EIGHTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. A LOOK AT THE FAMILY LEGACY.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 12/04/1985
Description: Harpsichordist Joseph Payne plays Bach on Bach's 300th birthday, and explains counterpoint.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 03/21/1985
Description: Carmen Fields interviews three Northeastern journalism students on the coverage of the Persian Gulf war. Two students are impressed with the immediacy of the coverage provided by television (CNN and the networks), but the other thinks that it is "not as in-depth as it could get." Fields contrasts the commitment to "the people's right to know" of Watergate-era journalists with the students' views regarding the importance of censorship to protect national security and the lives of individual soldiers. The students also discuss the missing CBS news crew led by Bob Simon, and question the news team's decision to report in a war zone without a military escort.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 02/18/1991
Description: Panel of journalists at Kennedy School discuss political coverage. Walter Cronkite, Cokie Roberts, Bernard Shaw. Michael Dukakis bowling.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 11/16/1990
Description: First seven minutes are shots of photographs of community activist Mel King throughout his life. Then Christopher Lydon interviews his wife Joyce King in the kitchen of their home. Joyce says that Mel's parents taught him the importance of sharing with others, and adds that he was very proud of his father, who was active in a union. Joyce talks about Mel's generosity. Lydon asks about the West Indian background of Mel's family, and about his formative years. She says that Mel's family was proud of their West Indian heritage and discusses his experiences while attending college in South Carolina. Joyce says that he learned about racism and oppression while living in South Carolina.
1:00:02: Visual: Shots of black and white photographs of Mel King throughout his life; of Mel King's high school yearbook photograph. 1:06:55: V: Christopher Lydon interviews Joyce King (wife of Mel King) in the kitchen of her home. Lydon asks Joyce King about Mel King's family. Joyce King says that Mel King's family always shared what they had with others; that Mel King's mother was able to make do with the few resources she had. Joyce King says that Mel King's father was active in a union; that Mel King is very proud of his father. Joyce King tells a story about the generosity of Mel King's father. Joyce King says that Mel King has an "open door policy"; that Mel King is not protective of his privacy. Joyce King says that Mel King often brings people to their home. Joyce King says that Mel King often gives clothing or money to those in need; that he does it in a quiet manner. 1:15:06: V: Lydon asks about the West Indian culture of Mel King's family. Joyce King says that Mel King's family is proud of their heritage; that his parents grew up in Barbados; that the family has strong connections to their heritage. Lydon asks about Mel King's formative years. Joyce King says that Mel King's membership in the Church of All Nations was important in his younger years; that Mel King attended a church-sponsored school in South Carolina; that the public school system discouraged African Americans from attending university. Joyce King says that Mel King learned a lot about race and oppression when he was at college in South Carolina; that Mel King traveled through the South as a member of the sports teams at his college. Joyce King says that Mel King returned from South Carolina with ideas about race and the fight against oppression.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 11/06/1983