Sutter ’76 appointed Chief Innovation Officer

Carle appoints Innovation Officer. Michael Sutter has been appointed Chief Innovation Officer for Carle. His responsibilities will be to develop partnerships and provide the health system with new health care technologies.

“Having an expert committed to evaluating technological advances will be vital for Carle, and we’re pleased to be among the early adopters of this model.” said Jon Snyder, Carle’s executive vice president and chief operating officer.

Sutter was most recently executive director of information technology. Before that, he was clinical director of Epic Electronic medical record systems and helped initiate the first electronic medical records for Carle’s physician practice.

He has a clinical background as a certified registered nurse anesthetist.

Stew Salowitz ’76 Earns Honors

Stew Salowitz Honored

Stew Salowitz Honored by CoSIDA

Illinois Wesleyan University has a history of winning sports programs and no one can tell you more of that history than Stew Salowitz. Stew has been associated with Titan athletics for 42 years, the last 25 as the school’s sports information director.

A native of the twin cities of Bloomington-Normal, Stew grew up in a family linked with sports. His mother was a golfer and bowler and his father the director of the heath center and a team physician at Illinois State. He got to ride the team bus occasionally and the family would regularly have members of the Redbird baseball team over for home-cooked meals.

His dad was also a friend of Fred Young, the sports editor of the Bloomington Pantagraph and an Illinois Wesleyan booster. Prior to playing in the state-of-the-art Shirk Center, IWU basketball teams were tough to beat in the iconic tight quarters of Fred Young Fieldhouse.

“Fred Young got me into sports, keeping score at games and was instrumental in telling me from a young age that I have to go to Illinois Wesleyan,” Stew said. “It has been a good fit for a long time.”

Stew graduated from Central Catholic High School in 1972 and followed Young’s persuasion by enrolling at Illinois Wesleyan that fall. A year later, so too did arguably the most recognized athlete IWU has produced in 14-year NBA veteran Jack Sikma. Fresh out of college, Stew began a 12-year radio career in 1976 by calling every game of Sikma’s senior year for WAKC Radio.

“We played Bradley and at Jacksonville and Florida,” recalled Salowitz. “It was fun traveling around with those guys who I was in school with the year before.”

From 1977-88, Salowitz’ afternoon show on WJBC radio was consistently one of the highest rated in the nation, but after spinning records and broadcasting high school and college games for more than a decade, he was again lured back to his alma mater in 1988 to replace the legendary CoSIDA Hall of Famer Ed Alsene in the university’s communications office as sports information director.

In the early days, the job also entailed writing general news stories and editing the Alumni Magazine, but with the advent of technology and the increasing success of IWU’s athletic teams, his responsibilities have shifted to sports full time.

Over the years, Stew has handled media relations for two national NCAA Division III women’s basketball championships (2010 & 2011), two national D-III volleyball championships (2007 & 2008), two national D-III indoor track championships (2000 and 2005), the 2000 NCAA Division III women’s golf championships, 43 regional tournament games for men’s and women’s basketball, six regional baseball tournaments, four D-III softball regionals, four D-III football playoff games, and the 2013 Division III women’s soccer first and second round games.

Stew Salowitz

Stew Salowitz

“Having a person with the depth of experience and the sense of history at our school and a sense of what building on our history means is really important.” said Dennie Bridges, IWU athletic director and the winningest basketball coach in Division III history. “But Stew has also done a great job of adjusting to the modernization of the job with the Internet, all the social media and with the addition of sports.”

Randy Kindred, a long-time sportswriter for the Pantagraph, agreed. “It’s incredible everything he’s able to do in terms of their website. I would put it up against many Division I web sites in terms of the information that is there and how easy it is to access. I don’t know how he does it to be honest because he doesn’t really have a full-time staff.”

Salowitz explained his goals of providing information. “I think I benefitted from being in the media all those years. I try to provide the kind of information I would have wanted if I were going to broadcast a game. I try to give people interesting notes or tidbits. I have always looked at it from the perspective of how I can make this game more interesting.”

Responsible for publicizing all 22 IWU sports, Salowitz also has a reputation for doing the job well while keeping it in perspective.

“Stew has the demeanor during stressful times that I think we would all like to emulate,” said Dave Wrath, CoSIDA Hall of Famer and long-time SID at conference-rival Augustana College. “He doesn’t ever seem to let the pressures of the job get to him. He always keeps a smile on his face and a joke on his lips. He keeps it light, while at the same time, maintaining the utmost professionalism.”

Salowitz was inducted into the media section of the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2012. He is the author of four books, a nationally published book on collecting sports memorabilia, two on McLean County sports, and “Chicago’s Personality Radio” about WLS radio in the 1960s. He enjoys riding his motorcycle, following the San Francisco Giants, and working on the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle. Stew Salowitz – Illinois Wesleyan – press row

He takes that passion into the office where in slower days his student workers compete against the clock to solve word jumbles and find the difference games.

“Stew is one of the funniest, smartest guys you’ll ever meet,” said Brett Moore, who was a student worker under Salowitz for four years and is now an assistant SID at Stanford. “His wit is better than anybody that I’ve ever met.

“It was always fun to go to work, not just because I liked the work I was doing, but just being around him brightened my day. I got such a knowledgeable foundation for the industry from him. There is no way I’d be in the place I am now without the things that he taught me.”

Moore also played for one of Salowitz’ most memorable teams, the 2010 national championship baseball squad, that made an incredible run despite finishing just over .500, barely qualifying for the College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin (CCIW) tournament, and needing a conference tournament title just to make it to the NCAA regional. Salowitz also has fond memories for the Titans’ 1997 men’s basketball team, which claimed the national title after finishing third the year before.

Stew said his secret to his easy-going personality has a lot to do with working in his hometown.

“I have a great network of friends that I have had forever, guys I went to high school and college with,” Salowitz quipped. “If I start thinking that I’m bigger than who I am, they could bring me down in an instant and make me realize that there is nothing special about me at all.”

Stew Salowitz at a basketball game at the Shirk Center

Stew Salowitz at a basketball game at the Shirk Center

 

Dr. Thomas Logsdon ’77

Thomas has recently been named Director of Connectional Ministries for the Illinois Great Rivers Annual Conference of The United Methodist Church. An IWU graduate in Religion, he has spent most of his career as a United Methodist pastor in Central Illinois, but has also served as a United Methodist mission executive in New York City from 1992-2000 and taught for a year at Illinois State University while earning his doctorate in History.

Congratulations, Thomas!

David Wilkins ’74

david wilkins 19974

David was named chief compliance officer at Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin, a leading international engineering and construction group.

“Having witnessed the rapid progress SNC-Lavalin has made over the past year to strengthen its ethics and compliance framework, I am thrilled to be on board,” David told the Wall Street Journal. “SNC-Lavalin’s employees have shown the world that they have turned the page. I want to help this remarkable Canadian company reach its true potential.”

Read more about David, here.

Congratulations, David!

’70s Classmates Named to IWU Board of Trustees

At Illinois Wesleyan University’s final 2013-14 Board of Trustees meeting on May 16, the following current officers were re-elected to serve for the coming 2014-15 academic year.

Those members re-elected include: Richard S. Ames, Thomas C. McKinney, Jr. ’76, Phyllis Barker ’73, Thomas L. Brown ’79, John S. Esch ’79, Robert E. Field ’67, Steven A. Ring ’79, Ronald L. Ruecker ’66, James A. Shirk and Timothy J. Szerlong ’74.

Board of Trustees officers that were re-elected for the 2014-15 academic year include: George A. Vinyard ’71, chair; Herbert A. Getz ’77, vice chair; Willie G. Brown, vice chair; Thomas L. Brown ’79, vice chair; Jean M. Baird ’80, secretary; and Robert E. Field ’67, treasurer.

Congratulations to you all!

Karl Bruhn ’72

Back in ’72 I graduated from IWU’s School of Music where I got a great education. In fact, my wife and I will be visiting Minnesota, where our son will be graduating from grad school. While there, we will visit Dr. David Gehrenbeck and his wife, Helen. He was my organ teacher at IWU that many years ago! We still keep up, and see each other once or twice a year.

Since graduating from IWU, I have been very active in the “organ world”. I have been the dean of the Fox Valley AGO (American Guild of Organists) Chapter, been the Illinois Chairman of the AGO, been on one national convention planning committee (2200+ organists attended); and quite recently I was elected to the post of Regional Counselor for the Great Lake States for the AGO.

I have given organ lessons to kids at my church for over 30 years and this summer I plan to teach at an AGO summer camp for young students!

Shirk Center to be Enlarged

shirk-300

The Shirk Center

In September, expansion of Shirk Center will begin.  The expansion is to meet the growing needs of students.

“It’s not just for the athletes. It’s for all the students,” Athletics Director Dennie Bridges said.  “The present fitness center is about half the size we need.”

When Shirk Center opened in 1994, personal fitness wasn’t a huge deal among students, Bridges said, noting that female students almost never went to the old Fred Young Fieldhouse. Now both genders are regular users of the fitness facilities and at times they have to wait a while to use the machines, he said.

In addition, the number of student athletes has grown from 294 to 520 in the past 20 years.  The growth in number of student athletes is due to the addition of men’s and women’s soccer and men’s and women’s lacrosse.

A two-story expansion of the building is planned.  It will extend 75 feet into the parking lot on the east side of the building.  The second floor of the addition will feature a fitness center with two multi-purpose rooms. The first floor will have five new locker rooms, a satellite training room, and space for storage.  The current fitness area is to be converted to weight training.

“It’s been in the dream process for about five years,” Bridges said. “We just got serious about it in the last year.”  Bridges hopes the project can be done with minimal disruption with the new area ready for use in November 2015.

 

Mark Whitaker ’76

 

Mark Whitaker of Mundelein, Ill., passed away November 6, 2013. He was 59.

He studied music education at IWU and went on to earn a master’s degree from Southern Methodist University.  

He spent 26 years at Medline Industries, most recently as senior vice president of textile sales. He was active in the industry, serving on the Textile Rental Services Association’s Healthcare Committee and writing articles for trade magazines.

Survivors include his wife Pam, daughters Sarah (Whitaker) Solomon ’12 and Molly Whitaker ’16, his parents, a brother and a sister.

I remember Mark from our classes together in Presser Hall.  We would cross paths many times when practicing.  Even though it has been years since we practiced together, it seems like yesterday.  I hope his family are all well.