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COMMUNITY OPPOSITION to Harvard's Medical Area Total Energy Plant (MATEP) began even before ground was broken at the corner of Boston's Brookline Ave and Francis St. in 1976. Fearing community disruption and health hazards stemming from diesel exhaust, residents of the middle-and lower-income towns surrounding the site took action. They vowed to fight every step of the way the diesel plant designed to fill all the energy needs of Harvard's medical schools and facilities...

Author: By Thomas H. Howlett, | Title: Making Energy and Enemies | 3/10/1982 | See Source »

...presumably makes key sectors of the economy more easily controllable. But aside from transferring an additional 900,000 workers to the government payroll and costing taxpayers an estimated $8 billion in compensation to private shareholders over the next 15 years, the precise workings of nationalization remain shrouded in locomotive exhaust. A government task force has produced a vague "letter of mission," which was given last week to each new company boss. Among other things, the letter calls for efforts to increase employment, encourage investment and compete in both the domestic and the international marketplace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Familiar Faces | 3/1/1982 | See Source »

...Georgia, one of the four friends, near the film's end, and the audience feels the same way. Throughout, scenes malinger like the last couple to leave a cocktail party. You know what they're talking about, where they're headed, and the harder they try, the more they exhaust your interest. Penn forces the audience into active participation to keep track of characters and motivations, and consequently loses all control. Four Friends is the celluloid equivalent of a Jackson Pollock painting, splashing everything about the sixties--sex, drugs, rock, JFK, the moon shot, draftcard burnings, racial tension, etc--into...

Author: By David M. Handelman, | Title: The Sixties Reinvented | 2/4/1982 | See Source »

Five members and an attorney for the Mission Hill Planning Commission (MHPC) told the Boston Redevelopment Authority that the research tower's size will induce a "down-wash" effect, deflecting downward hazardous nitrous oxide exhaust from Harvard's Medical Area Total Energy Plant (MATEP), two blocks away...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Community Organization Protests BWH Expansion | 1/8/1982 | See Source »

James Crawford, a Mission Hill resident and a member of the MHPC ad hoc committee that wants to reach a negotiated settlement with BWH, testified yesterday that MATEP's exhaust could create an obvious health hazard if it were directed toward the community. Crawford added that chemical damage could occur to buildings, specifically a local church that already suffers from industrial pollution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Community Organization Protests BWH Expansion | 1/8/1982 | See Source »

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