IAWM Leadership Breakfast, 3/21/2019
Andrea Pactor, Interim Director of the Women's Philanthropy Institute at the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, said, 'Philanthropy is a journey. We contribute time, talent, treasure, and testimony. Women have been very active on this stage for a long time. Each of us in this room has the power and potential to be a leader in this field for the causes we care about.'
'People ask me all the time, 'what does a president do?' I travel the country, I tell stories, I listen, and I ask people for money,' joked Wabash President Greg Hess. 'There is a time, a magic moment, that transitions from 'what does he want' to 'what do Wabash students need.' That makes the job so rewarding. Every Wabash man I've ever met has a rich and wonderful story to share.'
Brian Shelbourne '12 (right) introduces his father, Dr. Don Shelbourne '72, as the IAWM Man of the Year. The speech, which ran the gamut from funny to emotional, wasn't an easy one for the younger Shelbourne. 'It was weighing on me for sure,' he said, 'just trying to do him justice. You think about doing this and you want to do it right. It’s a special opportunity.'
Shelbourne began his orthopaedic sports medicine career in 1982, and his practice concentrates on the treatment, rehabilitation, and research of ACL (knee) injuries. Dating back to 1982, Shelbourne established a research department and database for continually recording and evaluating patient outcomes after surgery.