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...Solo Pianos, illustrated just how recalcitrant Stravinsky can be: Martins' formidable clarity and order were exhausted by the endless drill of notes. Jacques d'Amboise's Serenade en la had one irresistible sequence: a lighthearted duet for two very short girls (Stacy Caddell and Nichol Hlinka), in which the arms are usually joined but the steps are almost never the same. Taras produced, as usual, a well-made piece (Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments) notable mostly for its near veneration of Kyra Nichols, a young dancer whose purity, both in technique and presence, stands in eloquent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance: Stravinsky II: A Hit Sequel | 6/28/1982 | See Source »

...demand for a spot in the Head is any indication, then many others apparently share Nichol's affection for the race...

Author: By George P. Bayliss, | Title: The Head: Action on the Charles | 10/17/1981 | See Source »

William R. Grant, education writer for the Detroit Free Press, and Michael J. Kirk, public affairs director for Seattle television station KCTS will also spend next year at Harvard, as will Lynda M. McDonnel, a business and labor reporter for the Minneapolis Tribune, and Judith Nichol, Maryland editor of the Washington Post...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: New Crop of Nieman Fellows Includes Photographer Forman | 6/7/1979 | See Source »

Right at the outset, a veteran charter fisherman, Nichol Dance (Warren Gates), threatens to kill his upstart competitor Tom Skelton (Peter Fonda). The remainder of 92 in the Shade is spent waiting for this inauspicious event to occur. Neither Dance nor Skelton pays any mind to fate or fortune, an attitude that makes for short suspense. This did not matter quite so much in Thomas McGuane's novel, which went heavy on atmosphere, but it pretty thoroughly confounds any movie adaptation, including, sad to say, the author...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Sunstroke | 2/16/1976 | See Source »

Rather Ashamed. Last week Nichol did what he had earlier threatened to do: he dismissed all charges (three of assault, one each of larceny and conspiracy) against the two defendants. "It's only fair to say I am now over the brink," declared the exasperated judge. What pushed Nichol over was Kurd's refusal to allow the case to be decided by only 11 jurors after the twelfth became ill. "I'm rather ashamed that the Government was not represented better in this case," said Nichol in the course of an hour-long denunciation of the prosecution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIANS: Over the Brink | 9/30/1974 | See Source »

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