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"Nichols, Michele"
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Angels take Oshawa women's fastball league title
2005
The Angels, who finished second during the regular season, jumped out to a 3-1 lead in the second inning but trailed 8-5 by the ninth. Rather than simply conceding a rubber match, the Angels scrapped back to tie the game in the ninth, then moved ahead by a pair of runs in the 10th. Rawn, Cucinato-Buxcey and Dawn McGee led the Angels offence with three singles each. [Michele Nichol] and Margaret Andrews chipped in with a double and single apiece. The Angels, who finished second during the regular season, jumped out to a 3-1 lead in the second inning but trailed 8-5 by the ninth. Rather than simply conceding a rubber match, the Angels scrapped back to tie the game in the ninth, then moved ahead by a pair of runs in the 10th. Rawn, Cucinato-Buxcey and Dawn McGee led the Angels offence with three singles each. [Michele Nichol] and Margaret Andrews chipped in with a double and single apiece.
Newspaper Article
Experience in nursing, administration helps exec lead health system's school
2007
So instead of studying nursing after high school, [Michele Nichols] took a series of office jobs and began working toward her education degree at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. While in school, Nichols landed a job in the office of UNLV's nursing department. Her interest in medicine freshly piqued, Nichols looked into what it would take to earn her nursing degree. Convinced she could succeed in nursing school, Nichols - who had completed 70 credits toward her education degree - switched majors. Answer: Working as a manager in an emergency department was both the most fun and the most challenging experience. You just don't know who's going to come through the door and with what complaint. You probably don't experience in most areas the team work that comes from an emergency department when there is a code called. Emergency departments are full of great people. I call them adrenaline junkies because that's what they have to be to work in an emergency department. There are no more-dedicated nurses than those who work in high-risk areas. Answer: Interaction with the patients. In every aspect of nursing I've been in, I have always tried to find ways to interact with patients. This will be the first time that I have not worked in a hospital. I'm going to find ways that I can get back into the hospital and interact with patients. But right now, this (university) is my passion, and I want to see it successful. The sky is the limit on the things we can do here. We can think out of the box and do things a typical university can't.
Newspaper Article
Rachel Alexander, Max Nichols
2001
Rachel Michele Alexander, the daughter of Jane and Ronald Jacobs of Potomac, Md., and [Max Nichols], a son of Annabel Davis-Goff and Mike Nichols, the film and stage director, both of New York, were married in Venice on Friday. Zafiro Alessia, a state registrar, officiated at the Venice city hall. This evening, Rabbi Joui Hessel will perform a religious ceremony, also in Venice.
Newspaper Article
It's 2001, do you know where your suburb's clock tower is?
2001
From the old clock towers in Elgin and Wheaton to the recent timepieces erected in Glen Ellyn and Grayslake, at least a dozen suburbs are basking in their admiration for new community clocks, or have plans to build such clocks to meet their future basking needs. \"With the millennium, people became more aware of time,\" suggests Michele K. Nichols, acting curator of the National Watch and Clock Museum in Columbia, Pa. Nichols figures that is one of the reasons why her hometown of Arlington Heights included a 130- foot clock tower as the centerpiece of its recent municipal facelift. You don't have to build a timepiece as tall as a stack of a dozen Starbucks to be part of the community clock craze. The 16- foot street clock unveiled a week ago in Prospect Heights cost private donors 20 grand and looks as if it has been there for decades. A public clock is a simple way to turn back the clock.
Newspaper Article
Experience in nursing, administration helps exec lead health system's school
2007
So instead of studying nursing after high school, [Michele Nichols] took a series of office jobs and began working toward her education degree at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. While in school, Nichols landed a job in the office of UNLV's nursing department. Her interest in medicine freshly piqued, Nichols looked into what it would take to earn her nursing degree. Convinced she could succeed in nursing school, Nichols -- who had completed 70 credits toward her education degree -- switched majors. A: Working as a manager in an emergency department was both the most fun and the most challenging experience. You just don't know who's going to come through the door and with what complaint. You probably don't experience in most areas the team work that comes from an emergency department when there is a code called. Emergency departments are full of great people. I call them adrenaline junkies because that's what they have to be to work in an emergency department. There are no more-dedicated nurses than those who work in high-risk areas. A: Interaction with the patients. In every aspect of nursing I've been in, I have always tried to find ways to interact with patients. This will be the first time that I have not worked in a hospital. I'm going to find ways that I can get back into the hospital and interact with patients. But right now, this (university) is my passion, and I want to see it successful. The sky is the limit on the things we can do here. We can think out of the box and do things a typical university can't.
Newsletter
At River Ridge, pieces fall into place
1993
\"I really think that we've finally got enough of the pieces back together again,\" said NG Development president Lisa Fisher. \"Now we can get back to being a normal development again.\" Tangled history \"It was one of those business-school problems,\" Fisher said. \"How do you market property without owning what's in front of it?\" \"I always knew all that project needed was a little more attention and a little professionalism when it came to marketing,\" [Dara Khoyi] said. \"It's a sleeper. It's just waiting to happen.\"
Newspaper Article
At River Ridge, pieces fall into place
1993
\"I really think that we've finally got enough of the pieces back together again,\" said NG Development president Lisa Fisher. \"Now we can get back to being a normal development again.\" Tangled history \"It was one of those business-school problems,\" Fisher said. \"How do you market property without owning what's in front of it?\" \"I always knew all that project needed was a little more attention and a little professionalism when it came to marketing,\" [Dara Khoyi] said. \"It's a sleeper. It's just waiting to happen.\"
Newspaper Article
STUDENT NEWS Derived Headline
2007
To qualify, applicants had to be seniors in Seneca Valley or Mars Area school districts, or adult residents of those school districts, or immediate family of chamber members. * Mars Area High School's Mixed Chorus and Chamber Ensemble each earned a Superior rating at the Music in the Parks Festival in Hershey Park, Hershey, Dauphin County, on May 5.
Newspaper Article
The Herald, Rock Hill, S.C., Business Briefs Column
2003
[Lynn Carrouth] offers hair styling and coloring services. She has 22 years of experience in the field. [Lynn Prater] offers European-style facial services, body treatments and waxing services. Baxter Village is a1,033-acre traditional neighborhood that blends residential and commercial development. Located off Interstate 77 at exit 85, the community has 1,500 home sites, an elementary school, a public library and more than 500 acres of open space. Fax news to Caroline Brustad at 329-4021; mail it to The Herald; Business News; P.O. Box 11701; Rock Hill; SC 29731; call 329-4082; ore-mail cbrustad@heraldonline.com.
Newsletter