Posted 4:34 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1, 2018

UWL pioneer encouraged university, community to embrace an emerging technology that transformed the world.
UWL pioneer encouraged university, community to embrace an emerging technology that transformed the world
In the mid 1960s John “Jack” Storlie was a UWL assistant professor and doctoral student studying chemistry at UW-Madison when he learned about something amazing. It changed his life direction, influencing him to turn in his chemistry books and quit the program. That something was the potential application of computers. [caption id="attachment_8355" align="alignright" width="364"]
Jack “tricked” his daughter Chris into doing games that were really math problems. But those early experiences with technology and math paid off later on as she excelled in computer science in high school. Barb Cooper, another daughter, recalls fixing computers with her father together growing up. Today she is the go-to person for trouble shooting problems at her work place. Likewise, his daughter, Cindy Patza, applied her UWL computer programming coursework to a job she held as an undergraduate working in UWL’s Grandview Building, which housed UWL’s health center and staff offices for Business and Education at the time. Working under UWL's Business Services Controller, she wrote her own payroll program to prepare the payroll for UWL's custodial and administrative staff much more quickly. Jean agrees that, because of her father, she too has always leaned into technology. “As a father of four daughters, he didn’t want us to believe we had limitations,” says Barb. “He wanted us to know we could do non-traditional things. He was ahead of his time in that way.” And because of his profession, Storlie could leave that impression on many more people beyond his family. “I still meet people who say your dad was my favorite teacher,” says Cindy. Because of his love for teaching, Storlie turned down multiple job offers in the computer industry to continue to work in the academic setting. His wife, Lois, recalls how hard it was for her husband to decide to take on more administrative roles in the Computer Science Department. “He missed teaching always,” she says. But Storlie would be happy to know that because he chose to lead that charge — UWL has a longstanding Computer Science Department today. It currently has 312 Computer Science majors, 46 minors, and 28 graduate students. And students are benefiting from his legacy in more ways than one. More than $23,000 in scholarships have been awarded to students through the John and Lois Storlie Scholarship Endowment Fund in Computer Science since 1999.“He was interested in going outside the walls of this institution and creating a corporate- academic relationship,” recalls Jean. “That was a huge passion for him. He was an evangelist. He felt this was going to transform the world.”