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In 2018, the venue changed its name to the Count Basie Center for the Arts. The name of the theater itself was purchased and renamed the Hackensack Meridian Health Theatre. The building was designed by architect William E. Lehman and has a seating capacity of 1,568.
Hackensack: HackensackUMC 781 Acute care: Flagship of Hackensack Meridian Health, ranked #2 in NJ Jersey Shore University Medical Center: Neptune: Meridian Health 646 Acute care Flagship of former Meridian Health, ranked #5 in NJ JFK Medical Center: Edison: 499 Acute care Acquired in 2016 Joseph M. Sanzari Children's Hospital: Hackensack ...
On September 9, 2020, American Dream and Hackensack Meridian Health announced a ten-year partnership. The partnership includes opening an urgent care center at the complex, helping the complex reopen during the COVID-19 pandemic, and having pop-up events at American Dream about health and wellness. [102]
Edison-based Hackensack Meridian is one of the state's biggest health care companies with 36,000 employees at 18 hospitals, including Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, Bayshore ...
Hackensack Meridian Health, which operates 18 NJ hospitals, sued the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, saying they owe nearly $600,000.
Hackensack map c. 1896. The earliest known inhabitants of the area were the Lenni Lenape, an Algonquian people who became known to settlers as 'the Delaware Indians.' They lived along a river they called Achinigeu-hach, or "Ackingsah-sack", which translates to stony ground—today this river is more commonly known by the name 'the Hackensack River.' [29] A representation of Chief Oratam of the ...
Hackensack Meridian Health, locked in a contract dispute with Aetna, has sent letters to the insurer's customers warning them that they may lose in-network coverage if the two sides can't reach a ...
The amphitheatre was originally called the Garden State Arts Center. The 1954 legislation that created the Garden State Parkway (at whose Exit 116 the Arts Center is located) also called for recreational facilities along the Parkway's route, and in 1964 Holmdel's Telegraph Hill was chosen as the site for "a cultural and recreational center ... that would be developed as a center for music and ...