![]() ![]() Organizations, buildings, government, and businesses in Cache Valley. Photographs from this collection document accidents, social and public events, These batches are usually of an event, person,Īctivity, or organization from which one or two was selected to print in the For most of the batches from 1978-1988 there are also proof The Herald Journal photograph collection consists of 67 boxes with 92,694 negativesģ5mm and 120mm black and white and color negatives and 187 prints taken between 19. Languages English Sponsor Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008 Content Description Return to Top No restrictions on use, except: not available through interlibrary loan. Repository Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives Division Scenes from Utah State University and public schools. Also included are scenic views of the area and Photographs from this collectionĭocument accidents, social and public events, organizations, buildings, government,Īnd businesses in Cache Valley. Taken between 1969-1990 and from 1978-1985 as well as prints and proof sheets. Of 67 boxes with 2,997 batches of 35mm and 120mm black and white and color negatives He didn’t take anything for granted.1969 1996 Quantity 67 Boxes, (36.75 linear ft.) Collection Number UUS_P0001 Summary The Herald Journal photograph collection consists “I get up every morning, and I just thank the universe for everything I’ve got,” he said. Nuxhall was also a gracious man, a character trait Phil and Kim say they carry with them today. Phil also inherited his dad’s love for adventure because he loves to “travel and explore, getting out into the world and stepping outside the box. And life became easier as Phil and his dad shared a passion for music, and cherished their trips to concerts at Cincinnati’s Emery Theater. Then he learned he didn’t have to measure up. And that was a struggle for a long time.” “Then, as you get older, you realize you don’t have to. “When you grow up with someone like him, you constantly feel like, ‘How can I even begin to measure up,’” said Phil. It was interesting because his dad was a professional ballplayer - and intimidating - because his dad was a professional ballplayer. The elder Nuxhall died in November 2007 from complications of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a blood cancer he had battled for years.īeing Joe Nuxhall’s son was both interesting and intimidating, said Phil. “He looked at all people the same way, whether it was President (George) Bush he met in the clubhouse or the cab driver in New York. “I think what stands out to me is how he treated people no matter who they were or what importance they were,” he said. Though Joe Nuxhall was the epitome of a man of character, one of the most prominent qualities Kim said his dad possessed was humility. And his dad had many of those qualities, like honor, loyalty, compassion, and generosity. Kim, who taught gym for decades in the Fairfield City Schools, focused in his latter years on character education (and he can recite by memory an alphabetical listing, in order, of character qualities). “He, in essence, when he passed, gave us the torch to do something good, to keep doing the good.” “What a simple philosophy for life,” said son Kim Nuxhall, who, with his brother Phil Nuxhall, continue to carry on their father’s legacy of doing good nearly after Joe’s death nearly 16 years ago. That’s where he learned his life’s philosophy, which was encapsulated by a Joe Burrow Foundation t-shirt: Do Good. His salt-of-the-earth philosophy was because of his dad, Orville, and his community, Hamilton’s North End, a neighborhood known for its blue-collar residents. ![]()
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