Mindblown: a blog about philosophy.

  • Jerome Winegar: The rise and fall of South Boston High School

    Jerome Winegar: The rise and fall of South Boston High School

    Jerome C. Winegar sat at his desk in St. Paul, Minnesota when his phone rang. He was weeks away from taking over as headmaster of South Boston High School. It was Federal Judge W. Arthur Garrity, and he had specific instructions for Winegar. “Mr. Winegar, I don’t care, whatever you say you need. I’m going…

  • Charles Willie: A life’s work tearing apart educational inequity, starting in Boston

    Charles Willie: A life’s work tearing apart educational inequity, starting in Boston

    Charles Willie stepped into the crowded city bus, paid his fare and walked past all the white people in the front. It was 1943 in Dallas and Willie had to make his way to the back of the bus with the rest of the black passengers. Dressed in peg-leg trousers, high-top shoes and a straw…

  • Raymond Flynn: The South Boston insider who struggled to keep his alma mater open and ascended to political prominence

    Raymond Flynn: The South Boston insider who struggled to keep his alma mater open and ascended to political prominence

    During four days of violence in October 1979, bands of boycotting high school students roamed the streets of Downtown Crossing, attacking and intimidating black workers and students. One of the groups had just chased away some black youths near the Common. Two black teens, Allen Moore, 19, and Denise Smith, 16, were having lunch nearby…

  • Nathalie Hills: The Charlestown High Student who became responsible for her own education

    Nathalie Hills: The Charlestown High Student who became responsible for her own education

    Photo: InSaphoWeTrust Nathalie Hills sat on a cold bus seat bound for Charlestown High School in fall of 1979. The bus crossed over the Charlestown Bridge, revealing a crowd that had gathered to greet the students from the South End. Boston Police officers formed a protective barrier around the bus. Parents and children lined the…

  • Theodore Landsmark: The beating that turned a son of Harlem into a prominent voice that led Boston out of the busing era

    Theodore Landsmark: The beating that turned a son of Harlem into a prominent voice that led Boston out of the busing era

    Photo: StanleyFormanphotos.com, Pulitzer Prize 1977, “The Soiling of Old Glory” Theodore Landsmark was used to being the only black person in the room by the time he was an undergraduate at Yale University’s Davenport College in the winter of 1968. But he was unprepared to confront the blatant racism he heard in a seminar room.…

  • The Project: About The Avoidable Crisis

    The Project: About The Avoidable Crisis

    Photo: StanleyFormanphotos.com, Pulitzer Prize 1977, “The Soiling of Old Glory” The Avoidable Crisis is a project conducted by the Emerson College Journalism Department. Three journalism students, one recent graduate and two faculty members researched Boston’s busing crisis during Summer 2014. Over a three month period, the team examined 5,000 documents, including articles, books and reports.…

  • Winter in Boston

    Winter in Boston

    I’m tired of winter in Boston this year because it seems like it’s a totally different season from the ones we endured when I was a child growing up in Avon, Massachusetts. Back when I was a kid, winter was fun, but now it’s lost it’s flavor. It’s no longer fun to build snowmen, snow…

  • Lieutenant governor opens women’s substance abuse program at Taunton State Hospital

    Photo: WikiCommons Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito unveiled a new program to help women who have been civically committed for drug treatments avoid going to prison earlier this month, Governor Charlie Baker’s office said. Polito and Human Services Secretary Marylou Sudders and Department of Mental Health Commissioner Joan Mikula opened the new Women’s Recovery from Addictions…

  • Voices from the Streets: A Book Addiction

    Voices from the Streets: A Book Addiction

    Instead of writing a novel today, I have decided to write to you. Sorry it took me so long to respond, but I am basically out of sorts. The emotional windmill has taken me for quite a spin and I don’t know if it’s wind-driven or driven by the demons in my mind. Yes, I…

  • Horizons for Homeless Children Appoints New CEO

    Horizons for Homeless Children Appoints New CEO

    Horizons for Homeless Children, a New England non-profit dedicated to combating family homelessness, appointed a new CEO on February 2. Kate Barrand, who has served on the company’s board of directors for over 15 years, began as an early childhood educator. She then led Marketing and Strategy teams at Bank of Boston, and went on…

Got any book recommendations?