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2005 Hall of Fame
Biographies written by Sue (Klausing) Gerker, Class of
1992
Professional
Achievement
Dr. Joe Scherger, Class of
1968
Joseph Scherger, M.D., M.P.H., has received
numerous accolades for his professional accomplishments, but he says
none are more special than being inducted into the St. John’s Hall of
Fame for Professional Achievement.
“What a great honor. I have such fond memories of
growing up in Delphos that to receive this seems more special than if it
were some national award,” he said.
Scherger graduated from St. John’s in 1968. He went on to graduate from
the University of Dayton in 1971, then the UCLA School of Medicine in
1975. He completed a family Practice Residency and received his Masters
of Public Health from the University of Washington in 1978 and then
served in the National Health Service Corps in Dixon, Calif., as a
migrant health physician.
Dr. Scherger served as
the President of the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, was elected
to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and has
worked on numerous professional boards. He was named the Outstanding
Clinical Instructor in the School of Medicine at the University of
California, Davis, three times. In 1989, he was named Family Physician
of the Year by the American Academy of Family Physicians and the
California Academy of Family Physicians. In 1994, he received the Thomas
W. Johnson Award for Family Practice Education from the American Academy
of Family Physicians. In 2000, the UC Irvine medical students nominated
him for the AAMC Humanism in Medicine Award.
From 1988-91, he was a Fellow in the Kellogg
National Fellowship Program, a part-time leadership development
fellowship in which he focused on health care reform and quality of
life. From 1992-1996, he was Vice President for Family Practice and
Primary Care Education at Sharp HealthCare in San Diego. From
1996-2001, he was the Chair of the Department of Family Medicine and the
Associate Dean for Primary Care at the University of California Irvine,
College of Medicine.
Currently, Dr. Scherger is Clinical
Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the
University of California, San Diego School of Medicine (UCSD). He is
Director of the San Diego Center for
Patient Safety, and Director of Quality Improvement in Correctional
Medicine at UCSD. From 2001-2003, he served as founding dean of the
Florida State University College of Medicine. He is a member of the Harvard
Kennedy School of Government Health Care Delivery Policy Project. His
main focus is on the redesign of office practice using the tools of
information technology and quality improvement.
Dr. Scherger was Editor-in-Chief of
Hippocrates, published by the Massachusetts Medical Society, from
1999-2001. He was the first Medical Editor of Family Practice
Management. He has authored more than 300 medical publications and
has given over 700 invited presentations.
“St. John's, along with my parents and the Delphos
environment, made me who I am,” Scherger said. “At St. John's you feel
like you are capable of doing and becoming anything and anyone. Everyone
is so supportive. I was in high school from 1964 to ’68, a turbulent
time for young people in America and the early days of rock ‘n’ roll,
such as the Beatles. In Delphos, it all seemed fun and innocent.”
He and his wife Carol live in Del Mar, Calif., and have
two sons, Adrian and Gabriel. He has
completed 18 marathons.
Athletic Achievement
Tom Nomina, Class of 1959
The 2005 recipient of the Hall of Fame honor for
Athletic Achievement played football at the college and professional
level after leaving the halls of St. John’s in 1959.
Tom Nomina played Blue Jay football from 1955
through 1958. After graduation, he played tackle for Miami University in
Oxford, where he was First Team All-MAC in 1961 and 1962. He was
Co-Captain of the 1962 team, which went 8-2-1, including a 10-7 win over
Purdue, and gained a victory in the Tangerine Bowl over Houston. He was
a member of the 1963 College All-Stars.
Nomina played professional football for the Denver
Broncos in 1963 through 1965 and the Miami Dolphins from 1966 until
1968.
His college career was recognized in 1987 when he
was inducted into the Miami University Hall of Fame.
Nomina said he was surprised about the most recent
nomination.
“There have been numerous excellent athletes who
graduated from St. John's and to be chosen to be inducted into the St.
John's Hall of Fame is a tremendous honor,” he said.
Following his football career, he spent 30 years in
the communications construction business before retiring in 2000.
“The guidance and discipline I received while
attending St. John's instilled a good and stable moral and religious
background, one that remains with me through all phases of my life,” he
said. “I could go on forever with mentioning all of my teachers and
coaches at St. John's who influenced my life. Thanks to all.”
Nomina lives in
Estero, Florida, with his wife, Liz (Beecher) Nomina. They have been
married for 43 years and have three children and eight grandchildren.
They spend the summer months in Colorado where they spend time with
their family and Tom helps with his son’s tree farm.
Service to Mankind
Mike Wilson, Class of 1962
Mike Wilson says all of the success he has had in
his life can be traced back to the foundation that was built while he
attended St. John’s. That sentiment is great praise from a former senior
executive in the Department of Defense. However, it’s because of his
work with the migrants near Plant City, Florida, that he enters the St.
John’s Hall of Fame as the recipient of the Service to Mankind award.
Following graduation in 1962, Wilson graduated
from the University of Dayton with a degree in business administration
and was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army. He
earned his MBA from Bowling Green State University in 1968 and received
a teaching fellowship. He later worked for the Haskin & Sells CPA firm
for two years in Detroit and Dayton.
Wilson left the private sector and served in the
Army for three years, nine months and one day, achieving the rank of
Major. He worked for the Department of Defense for 30 years and was
named a senior executive in 1989. He worked with former Presidents
George H. Bush and Bill Clinton before retiring.
Wilson was working as an adjunct professor at a
community college in Nevada when he felt the call to do something more.
He and his wife moved to Plant City and Wilson entered the deacon
program at a nearby church. He has been praised for his involvement with
the Legion of Mary and he evangelizes to the Spanish community. His
primary work includes getting basic necessities to families at a local
Mission.
“Although I didn’t immediately understand or know
how to apply all the lessons that I learned at St. John’s, I began to
realize the many gifts of knowledge and of positive influences given to
me. In some cases, it took several years for me to realize the great
foundation that I got at St. John’s,” Wilson said.
Former principal Fr. Kuhn was a tremendous
influence for Wilson.
“Fr. Kuhn called me into his office to tell me
that I was destined to be a leader and he was going to mentor me,”
Wilson recalls. “Thirty-eight years later I was in the West Wing of the
White House being sworn in as a senior executive. Fr. Kuhn was right,
and I thank God for his insight, encouragement and friendship.”
Wilson says Plant City is much like his hometown,
and he is using the principles he learned in Delphos to help his
community in Florida.
Last year, Wilson rallied 60 volunteers to visit
migrant families and deliver 530 pair of children’s shoes. He also led a
campaign to find household goods for farm-working families.
“Fr. Ottenweller’s religious lesson about our
migrant farm workers being our brothers and sisters in Christ is another
memory I have of St. John’s,” Wilson said. “I never imagined fifty years
later my life would be dedicated to their spiritual and temporal
well-being.”
Wilson lives in Florida with his wife, Joyce (Turnwald)
Wilson, who he describes as “the love of his life.” They have eight
children and 10 grandchildren.
Service to St. John's
Bob Arnzen, Honorary Class of 2000
The 2005 recipient of the Service to St. John’s
award may be one of the best-known Blue Jays in history. Former teacher
and boys basketball coach Bob Arnzen is being honored for his devotion
to the school he called home for more than 40 years.
Born in Newport, Kentucky, Bob came to St. John’s
after getting his own education from St. Xavier High School in
Cincinnati and the University of Dayton. His first teaching experience
was at St. John’s. He was one of two lay teachers in the school at that
time.
“Principal Fr. Herr and Pastor Monsignor Reineck
kept a close eye on me and taught me how much time was needed to put
into teaching and coaching to be successful,” Arnzen said. “Fr.
Ottenweller, an associate pastor at the time, helped me tremendously
with basketball. They taught me that if you want to be successful, you
must work hard to accomplish it.”
Most people who know Bob call him coach. The title
is one of endearment and is well deserved.
Arnzen was head baseball coach from 1950 to 1962.
He was the first head football coach in 1955 when the program was
started at the high school. He remained the assistant football coach
from 1956 until 1965. He was the first head cross country coach in 1972
and stayed at the post until 1976. He coached that sport again in 1979
and 1980. He also served as athletic director in 1969 and 1970.
While he influenced many sports at the school, he
is most remembered for his decades-long leadership on the basketball
court. While at the helm of the boys basketball team from 1950 through
1993, Bob notched 676 wins and 291 losses and titles that included: 11
conference championships, five state tournament berths, two runner-up
finishes and one Ohio High School Athletic Association Class A
Championship.
“Any success I’ve had in teaching and coaching is
due to being surrounded with good staff and good players. The kids
learned to play as a team and always played hard,” Arnzen says. “I will
never forget how hard the basketball players always played. No teams in
the area had players who played that hard. It was our trademark.”
Being inducted into the St. John’s Hall of Fame is
the most recent of many honors bestowed on Arnzen. He became an
honorary graduate of St. John’s in 2001; his high school alma matter
inducted him into its Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000; he was enshrined
into the Ohio High School Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame in
1995; and into the National High School Sports Hall of Fame in Colorado
in 1998; he was given the University of Dayton Sports Achievement Award
in 1984; and Newport inducted Arnzen into its Northern Kentucky Sports
Hall of Fame in 1988. He was selected Ohio Coach of the Year twice and
was named National Catholic Coach of the Year in 1976. The OHS
Basketball Coaches Association presents the Bob Arnzen Longevity Award
annually to a person who has coached at the same school for more than 20
years.
When he wasn’t leading his players, Bob was
teaching driver’s education, a position he held for more than 40 years.
He was also instrumental in initiating many recreational programs at the
city parks while he served as Recreation Director from 1951 until 1986.
He also started the St. John’s basketball camps and organized the
District 8 Coaches Association in 1966.
After 42 years of teaching and 43 years of
coaching, Bob retired in 1993. St. John’s honored him by naming the gym
the Robert A. Arnzen Gymnasium.
He still lives in Delphos with his wife, Alice.
They have five children and nine grandchildren.
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