.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Chukars hire new broadcast director

Alex Cohen at his last job, in Melbourne, Australia. Cohen has joined the Idaho Falls Chukars broadcast team for the 2015 season.
Alex Cohen has joined the Idaho Falls Chukars as the newest member of its broadcast team. He will be with the team for all its road games and join John Balginy in the booth for all Chukars home games this season, according to a news release from the club.

A native of Philadelphia, Cohen has six years of experience in professional baseball. In 2014, he worked for the Oakland Athletics in the team’s media and broadcasting department. Last fall, he traveled to Australia to serve as the play-by-play broadcaster for the Melbourne Aces of the Australian Baseball League. In addition, he served as the play-by-play broadcaster for 2015 ABL All-Star Game.

Balginy will once again be heard through the airways this summer for all Chukars home broadcasts. All games will be broadcast on ESPN 980 AM, 105.1 FM, 94.5 FM (Pocatello), and online on either www.ifchukars.com or MiLB.com.

For a look at Cohen’s resume and examples of his work, follow this link: Sportscasters Talent Agency of America.  He can be found on Facebook here and his Twitter feed is here.


Monday, April 13, 2015

Idaho Falls Civitan Club seeks to recruit new members

Idaho Falls Civitan Club is hosting a “seek event” April 21 at Catered Your Way, 2161 E. 17th Street, to recruit and educate anyone interested in learning more about the Civitan Club. The event is from 6 to 8 p.m.

In Idaho Falls, the Civitans are best known for fund-raising events such as Alive After Five and the Annual Indoor Pub Golf, with all funds going toward projects benefitting the community.

Civitan International is an organization of community service clubs with roughly 40,000 members across four continents. Each club works to help others and fulfill needs in their community, with a special emphasis on helping people with developmental disabilities. Civitans also continue this mission through fund-raising for the UAB Civitan International Research Center, a world-class medical facility dedicated to researching developmental disabilities and other cognitive disorders.

For more information, visit our local Web site http://ifcivitan.wix.com/ifcivitan and the International Web site, www.civitan.org, or call 1-800-CIVITAN.

Advertising Federation to host speaker on Web site upkeep

Brittany Hargis
In real estate, there’s a euphemism called “deferred maintenance,” and it applies just as much to a business’ online presence.

Plenty of Web sites are out of date or tired looking, taking up space and not doing the owner a whole lot of good.

At its monthly Lunch and Learn session this Thursday at Dixie’s Diner, the Idaho Falls Advertising Federation will hear from Brittany Hargis, general manager of Manwaring Web Solutions. Based in downtown Idaho Falls, her team specializes in Web design, development and marketing. For more than 15 years, the company has designed custom Web sites that are functional and easily found online.

First impressions are critical. What do your potential customers see when they end up on your website?

Sign-in is at 11:30 a.m. and the program runs until 1 p.m. Cost is $12 for IFAF members and $15 for non-members and includes lunch!

To RSVP follow this link to the Facebook event posting: https://www.facebook.com/events/1391506907837415/

The following week, on April 23, the Advertising Federation will hold its annual mixer and media auction at the Willard Arts Center. This is a great opportunity to buy advertising packages and expertise, with proceeds going to help the Idaho Falls Soup Kitchen.

Cost of admission is three cans of food or $5. Hors d'ouevres will be served. The silent auction begins at 7 p.m. Follow this link to the Facebook event posting: https://www.facebook.com/events/1642578275970818/

Friday, April 10, 2015

EIRMC announces Frist award nominees

Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center announced Thursday this year’s nominees for the Frist Humanitarian Awards, given annually in recognition of the humanitarian spirit and philanthropic work of the late Dr. Thomas Frist, Sr., a founder of Hospital Corporation of America, EIRMC’s parent company.

For years, each HCA hospital nominates an employee, physician and volunteer. New this year is the Excellence in Nursing Award.

The EIRMC nominees are:

Tim Schwartz, employee, physical therapy

Schwartz has been with EIRMC for more than 14 years. On the job, colleagues in Wound Care say he always has a smile and a kind-hearted way of putting patients at ease.  He’s a Boy Scout leader, volunteer ski patroller, a supporter of Idaho Falls Lacrosse, and even volunteers at football games to move the chains on the fields. Tim also works with youth in his church. Tim was nominated by his colleagues in Wound Care. As a Frist Award nominee, EIRMC will make a donation in Tim’s name to his charity of choice, Livestrong.

Dr. John Miller, physician

Miller is a critical care medicine physician who works in EIRMC’s Intensive Care Unit. He has a reputation as a great supporter of nursing and has been very generous with the local chapter of the American Association of Critical Care Nurses, sometimes teaching at educational events for the organization. His nomination said, “He is a true humanitarian and puts needs of others above his own consistently. He is an exceptional physician. He is kind and compassionate and generous. He is a great human being who truly loves his fellow man.”

As a Frist Award nominee, EIRMC will make a donation in Miller’s name to his charity of choice, Hospice of Eastern Idaho.

Judy Osborne, volunteer

During her five years at EIRMC, Osborne has volunteered more than 1,500 hours. She works at the information desk and in the surgical waiting room seeking out ways to make a difference and provides comfort without being asked. Marchelle Jensen, manager of volunteer services, called Osborne “an inspiration and a remarkable person who is loved by patients, families, employees, and her fellow volunteers.”

As a Frist Award nominee, EIRMC will make a donation in Osborne’s name to Habitat for Humanity.

Cindie Larsen, R.N., Excellence in Nursing Award Winner

Larsen is a nurse on the fifth floor. One of her nominators said this about her: “She is so positive with her interactions; she brings everyone together in a common friendship.” She also gives dancing lessons to cancer patients, a reflection of her steadfast compassion and commitment to patients. As a Frist Award nominee, EIRMC will make a donation to the American Cancer Society.

Portrait of an artist of a different time

Henry Allen Nord's painting "Labor at Rest," donated to the Idaho Falls Municipal Library in April 1940, still hanging in the Museum of Idaho. Another mural was hung at the same time, but has gone somewhere else in ensuing years.
While researching a writing this week’s “Looking Back” column for the Post Register, I came across a name I didn’t know, Henry Allen Nord, an Idaho Falls native most famous for his mural work in the 1930s and the artist responsible for the largest piece of public art produced by the New Deal.

Born in 1904, Nord left Idaho Falls as a young man to attend the Art Institute of Chicago and later Yale University. After graduating, he moved to Southern California, where he did his work an taught.

His parents, Nels and Hannah Nord, remained here, however, and in April 1940 he returned to Idaho Falls to donate two large paintings to the Idaho Falls Municipal Library, which at that time had been significantly remodeled and expanded (it is now part of the Museum of Idaho.)

One of Nord’s paintings, “Labor at Rest,” still hangs above an office door at the museum’s south end. The other larger painting, the mural “Men and Horses,” is no longer hanging and its whereabouts are unknown, said Museum Curator Claire Smith.

I got interested in Nord, and discovered that after graduating from college he moved to Long Beach, Calif., where his most famous work still exists, a tile mosaic entitled “Recreations of Long Beach.”
Nord's mosaic mural in Long Beach, Calif.

Celebrating Long Beach's love of recreational living, this was the largest piece of public art to emerge from the New Deal. Nord started it in 1936 and, with assistance from Albert Henry King and Stanton MacDonald-Wright, finished it in 1938. It graced the facade of the old Long Beach Municipal Auditorium until the building was torn down in the 1970s. In 1982, it was relocated to its current space at 3rd Street and Promenade, where it now caps off the north end of the popular strip.

Plenty of people today have strong views about the government’s role in funding art projects, but I think it is interesting to go back 80 years to the Depression and look at attitudes then.

As administrator of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, the Civil Works Administration and the Works Progress Administration, Harry Hopkins noted that “artists were starving the same as everyone else.” He believed that paid work was psychologically better for unemployed people than simply giving them money, and the Public Works of Art Project was established in December 1933. Over six months, $1.3 million was spent, employing 3,749 qualified artists, resulting in more than 15,000 pieces of public art.
In his 1934 report “Implications of the Public Works of Art Project,” Program Director Edward Bruce wrote, “It has, as many of the artists expressed it, broken down the wall of their isolation and brought them in touch and in line with the life of the nation.”

A few other things about Henry Allen Nord: When World War II started he enlisted in the U.S. Army. Too old to serve in combat, his mission was to help design camouflage.

He died in 1981 and is buried in Idaho Falls’ Rose Hill Cemetery along with his parents; his wife, Dorothea, and daughter, Carolyn, both of whom died in 1969; and his older brother, Lawrence, who died in 1904.