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...small farm and generates only 2 kw of power. But when the wind is right (about 15 m.p.h.), he has electricity to spare. So in 1977, Greenwald, 36, an assistant professor of industrial technology at Montclair State College, offered to sell his excess power to Orange and Rockland Utilities, which generates 695,000 kw of power...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Tilting at Utilities | 4/2/1979 | See Source »

...racing experience began at Sugarloaf in Maine, where her family took regular inland trips from their home in coastal Rockland. There she participated in Eastern threes and fours races with skiers up to 13 years...

Author: By David A. Wilson, | Title: Crimson's Kris Hodgkins Skis Little, Regularly Records Top-Ten Placements | 2/23/1979 | See Source »

...fossils of the Age of Wood. By now, Nevelson is a scavenger on a nearly industrial scale, given to buying up whole demolition contracts to secure material. It is possible that some of the wood sold by her father, an emigre from Kiev who started a lumberyard in Rockland, Me., in 1905, has found its way back as table legs or broken newel posts into Nevelson's sculpture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Night and Silence, Who Is There? | 12/12/1977 | See Source »

...ocean bathing, others have been more generous. After reading the corrosive chapter on his own specialty, Heart Surgeon Denton Cooley, himself a target of a few Berman barbs, commented: "A lot of fun." A plastic surgeon said that "anyone who is upset does not have a sense of humor." Rockland State Hospital's Dr. Nathan Kline, who is twitted along with other psychiatrists for pushing pills, perhaps provided the most perceptive analysis: while Berman's book is "outrageously provocative" and sometimes "pure Paul Bunyan," there is behind the barrage a serious intent-not to destroy U.S. medicine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dr. Berman's Spleen | 11/8/1976 | See Source »

...creator-producer of the Maude series, developed the simplistic two-part story because a member of his family took lithium for manic-depression "and I have personally seen the results." Lear had the scripts checked by Harvard's Dr. Marcia Guttentag and by the director of research at Rockland State Hospital, Dr. Nathan S. Kline, a lithium enthusiast who has treated some 2,000 patients with the drug. Kline's book on depression, From Sad to Glad, was plugged on the Maude show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Maude's Mania | 2/9/1976 | See Source »

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