YourList
  ARTS (441)   BUSINESS (92)   EDUCATION (36)   HUMANITIES (540)   MASSACHUSETTS (392)   SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY (108)   SOCIAL SCIENCE (602)  
RECORD
Andrew Young endorses Mel King for mayor
People who watched this also watched

Jesse Jackson's domestic platform

Meg Vaillancourt reports that Jesse Jackson (Democratic candidate for US President) has released position. . . > more

Students at Joseph Lee School and Roxbury High School

Footage of racially integrated, open classrooms at the Joseph Lee School in Dorchester. The teachers. . . > more

Interview with Kathleen Sullivan, tape 3

Pam Bullard interviews Kathleen Sullivan (Boston School Committee) about the quality of education in. . . > more
   
 

Series: The Ten O'Clock News
Date: 1983-09-22
Duration: 00:19:04

People: King, Jim; King, Mel; Young, Andrew;

Clip Description
Andrew Young (Mayor of Atlanta) endorses Mel King (candidate for Mayor of Boston) at a press conference at Northeastern University. Jim King (Senior Vice President, Northeastern University) introduces Young. Young talks about King's candidacy for mayor of Boston. King says that he and Young have discussed ideas for local job creation and for trade between local businesses and third world markets. In response to audience questions, Young talks about his recommendation that King set up a trade mission to export local manufactured goods. King discusses the value of his endorsement of King and the differences among the political situations in Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Young says that he does not consider Boston to be a racist city. Young talks about the potential impact of the African American community on the election outcome. Young refuses to comment on the the presidential campaign of Jesse Jackson (African American political leader).

Series Description
A local program aimed at the Boston audience, The Ten O'Clock News debuted on January 15, 1976. Its two immediate predecessors were The Reporters and Evening Compass. A news and public affairs show focusing on neighborhood, local and state issues, The Reporters was produced and broadcast on WGBH from 1970 to 1973. The Reporters was then replaced by Evening Compass, which expanded into a twice-nightly news broadcast during the tense moments of Boston's busing crisis. On the air from 1973 to 1975, Evening Compass found an audience through its in-depth coverage of school desegregation in Boston, which began in 1974. The Ten O'Clock News stood out as an in-depth news program. It strove for a balance between local and national stories, between politics and the Arts. The last The Ten O'Clock News program was broadcast on May 30, 1991.

See also: http://main.wgbh.org/ton/programs/2483_02

 

No transcript is available for this record.