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...humans, where do we find the division between comedy and insanity?” John Macey poses this question in his director’s note for The Boiler Company’s current evening of three one-act plays which explore the issue with mixed results...

Author: By Benjamin W. Olson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Boiler Offers Uneven Triple-Decker | 11/2/2001 | See Source »

Macey founded The Boiler Company in 1998, and since then the group has boldly tackled modern plays by the likes of Sam Shepard and Harold Pinter. The young company, which is composed mostly of students and recent graduates of Clark University, seems on the verge of coming into its own. While growing pains are sometimes evident and company members can seem unsure of themselves, in its best moments, the evening of one act plays seethes with the group’s experimental energy...

Author: By Benjamin W. Olson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Boiler Offers Uneven Triple-Decker | 11/2/2001 | See Source »

...manufacturer who installed the boiler system was scheduled to repair the system Thursday evening, said Scott Heywood, the superintendent for Kirkland House who oversees the maintenance of three of the river Houses, including Eliot House...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Eliot Takes Cold Showers | 10/29/2001 | See Source »

...dangerous legacy, coal is what fuels China. While most other nations ended coal dependence years ago, China is still both the world's largest producer and consumer. Chairman Mao linked his country's future success to the cheap fuel, and from the hearth of the tiniest hut to the boiler rooms of big state-owned factories, coal is king. But decades of overuse have left sooty skies, polluted streams and eroded topsoil levels. Despite a pledge to cut down its contribution to global warming, China is the second-largest producer of greenhouse gases behind the U.S., with a far smaller...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Dies Beneath | 9/3/2001 | See Source »

...examine, just for fun, the choices each of these guys has made after their phenomenal breakthrough just a few years ago. Matt signed on for "Rounders," "The Talented Mr. Ripley" and "Saving Private Ryan." Ben, on the other hand, was tapped for such gems as "Phantoms," "Boiler Room" and "Forces of Nature." They both appeared in "Dogma," which I firmly believe is one of the worst movies ever made. So they both lose points on that one. To be absolutely fair, Ben did show up in "Shakespeare in Love," but his performance was eerily similar to Keanu Reeves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Unsolved Mystery: Just What Is the Allure of Ben Affleck? | 5/25/2001 | See Source »

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