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...lose. Last week, however, they too served notice that they would leave New York. Beginning in 1975, the Giants will play their home games in a 75,000-seat football stadium that will be the core of a new $200 million sports complex in the Hackensack Meadowlands of northern New Jersey, an area currently composed of swampy, smelly mud flats dotted with dumps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: A Move to the Meadowlands | 9/6/1971 | See Source »

...fellows are: James F. Ahearn, Hackensack Record; Frederick V. H. Garretson, Oakland Tribune; Jerome G. Kelly, Baltimore Evening Sun; Michael

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: News Briefs: Woman Named Muslim Culture Professor | 6/29/1970 | See Source »

Perverse Insurance. Doctors are partly to blame, sometimes allowing patients to go to the hospital when they might be treated or operated on just as well in the doctor's office. Indeed, Administrator Martin Ulan of New Jersey's Hackensack Hospital goes so far as to estimate that 50% of the patients in his hospital might be treated at home. Under many private insurance plans, however, the policyholder gets no payment unless he has been hospitalized. According to Dr. Ray Brown of Duke University, "insurance actuaries have been the architects of the medical care system...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Costs: Up, Up, Up | 7/28/1967 | See Source »

...From Hackensack to Pottstown, Lock Haven to Dover, the power lines went dead for up to nine daylight hours throughout a 15,000-sq.-mi. chunk of the East. More than 13 million people, living in three-quarters of New Jersey, much of eastern Pennsylvania, eastern Maryland and northern Delaware, were caught last week in the nation's second great power failure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The East: Darkness at Noon | 6/16/1967 | See Source »

...inspectors following, the trail led through Manhattan's afternoon rush-hour snarl, through the Lincoln Tunnel (no radio reception there), down the New Jersey Turnpike to Newark Airport. All evening and most of the night, the tailing went on, from scruffy diners to B-girl bars, across Hackensack Meadows on Fish House Road, around rail-truck terminals. In the long hide-and-seek, the cars got separated, and the chief feared for Wally's life. But Wally played his part well. He later emerged with a carton of counterfeit drugs, evidence for which he had paid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Drugs: Counterfeit Prescriptions | 6/2/1967 | See Source »

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