I retired in December of 2014 after 30 years with the State of Illinois, 25 of those years with the Department of Public Health, the last 10 as the agency’s Administrative Rules Coordinator. I am enjoying reading, quilting, race-walking, singing in local choral groups, and participating in DAR. Retirement will also allow us to visit our daughter, Dr. Katherine Meister Cheng (IWU 2004), who is a dentist in the US Navy, stationed in Okinawa. She and her husband Jerry have a daughter, Julia, who was born in December of 2013.
Quadrangle Dedicated in Honor of Egbers Family
The redeveloped quadrangle north of State Farm Hall, which includes a stainless steel water sculpture entitle Aspiration, has been named Egbers quadrangle in recognition of a major gift from Jan Egbers of Bloomington and her family. Jan Egbers was interested in a project that would, in part, pay tribute to the relationship between her family and IWU and to the significant service of her late husband, Gary Egbers, a 1972 Illinois Wesleyan graduate. Gary Egbers was an active member of the Illinois Wesleyan Associates Board and member of the Board of Trustees.
Peter Matson ’71
Peter Matson ’71 passed away on May 16, 2015.
You can view his obituary here.
Edward Rust Jr. ’72
Edward Rust Jr. ’72 is stepping down as CEO of State Farm Insurance after 30 years, to be succeeded by another alum of Illinois Wesleyan University, Michael Tipsord ’81. Under the leadership of Rust, State Farm Insurance has been a generous supporter of education – including his alma mater.
Wayne Forbes ’71
Wayne passed away in 2013 at his home in Pleasant Hills, PA, after being in ill health for a few years.
Wayne Forbes of Dillon rests his arm on a wood sculpture he calls ‘Clone Fix II.’ Forbes credited his personal art therapy for his survival of renal failure, dialysis treatment and a successful kidney transplant.
Debra Burt-Frazier ’75
Judith Schulz ’71
Judith Schulz ’71 has established two non-profit, educational hands-on museums: the Spinning Top & Yo-Yo Museum and the Logic Puzzle Museum, both located in Burlington, Wisconsin. The Logic Puzzle Museum was featured recently in the national magazine Games-World of Puzzles in April 2015! The Logic Puzzle Museum is “one-of-a-kind” with its 90 minute, hands-on session with up to 60 different hands-on brainteaser puzzles to try. Visitors ring bells when they solve a puzzle, adding to the “I did it!” fun; plus make a puzzle to keep. The exhibit surrounds the hands-on area with hundreds of vintage and antique puzzles. You can visit their website at www.logicpuzzlemuseum.org.
Katherine James ’73
Muse Me, a play by Katherine James ’73, was a semifinalist in Little Black Dress INK’s Female Playwrights ONSTAGE project, and was featured as part of a Stripped Scripts reading in Santa Barbara, California.
Let’s Move the Tommymometer to the Top!
Illinois Wesleyan’s fiscal year end is quickly approaching on July 31. Have you shown your Titan Pride by making a gift this year?
Check out the new Tommymometer to see where we stand by clicking here.
If you have already made a gift this year, thank you! If you have not yet made your gift, there is still time for you to make a difference this year.
By making your gift before July 31, you will not only add to the Tommymometer for alumni donors, but you will help to keep current Illinois Wesleyan students enrolled and our alma mater strong. The percentage of alumni donors is important to IWU because outside organizations view it as a metric to measure alumni satisfaction. It affects Illinois Wesleyan’s rankings, bond rating, and ability to earn grants.
Thank you for doing your part to fill the Tommymometer before July 31 and keep Illinois Wesleyan moving forward!
Coach Don Robinson ’76 Retires
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Longtime Prophetstown coach Don Robinson ’76 is retiring after 38 years. Don became the seventh high school coach in state history with 700 girls’ basketball wins this year. Placed in the spotlight, the longtime Prophetstown coach was not seeking the limelight.
(The athletes) were the ones who deserve the credit,” Robinson said last week. “It wasn’t about me. It was trying to get the best out of them. I’ll be honest — I really had fun. The effort the girls put forth made it fun. Thirty-eight years went by fast.”
Don started his trek a few months after graduating from Illinois Wesleyan in 1976. The first job was at Dixon-based Jefferson Elementary School as a science teacher. A year later, he went to Prophetstown as a science teacher and girls’ basketball and girls’ track coach.
Being a basketball coach always was the plan, but “I didn’t know it would be girls’ basketball.” The title remained the same for 38 seasons. Coaching track continued in the spring throughout his tenure, too. Upon reaching Prophetstown, Don built both programs into consistent winners. The secret was creating an enthusiastic environment that was fun and positive.
Memories came from all the games and meets, making it easy for Don to reflect on the moments. Not once did he take credit for all the wins and hardware. The players were responsible for the 705 wins and four State trophies. Of the four State trophies two were in track, 2nd in 2000 & 2013. The other two State trophies were in basketball, 2nd in 2A 2014 & 3rd in 1A 2015.
All Don did was relish the ride. Looking back, it was a good one.



