Wednesday Journal 051221

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W E D N E S D A Y

May 12, 2021 Vol. 41, No. 41 ONE DOLLAR @oakpark @wednesdayjournal

JOURNAL of Oak Park and River Forest

Elegant’s quarter-century resuscitation of Rush Oak Park CEO retiring with once ‘broken’ hospital in strong shape By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter

Bruce Elegant, CEO of Rush Oak Park Hospital since 1997, remembers his arrival at an institution he said was “broken.” He’ll retire this June with the Rush outpost in Oak Park at the top of its game with a new $30 million ER completed and the burden of the COVID pandemic easing. In the mid-1990s, Oak Park Hospital, sponsored by the Wheaton Franciscan sisters, was failing. It had a poor reputation for its medical care and had not been invested in by the religious order. A pact was made for the Rush University medical system to take over full operation and financial control of the hospital without having ownership. Elegant arrived to resuscitate the institution and he has been working at it with steady successes since then. The hospital has expanded its patient base and campus, made clinical advancements and key technology investments and most recently navigated the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccination effort. “It’s time to pass the torch,” Elegant told Wednesday Journal. Elegant’s successor will be Dr. Dino Rumoro, chairperson of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Rush University Medical Center. Rumoro will take over July 1, while Elegant will focus on teaching graduate students in the university’s health system management program. See ELEGANT on page 16

ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer

HOLIDAY OF ATONEMENT: From left, OPRF students Madeleine Niewoehner, Eva Spangler, Zoe Klein, Ania Sacks and Tim Mellman lobbied to add Yom Kippur to OPRF High School’s holidays.

With student urging, OPRF may recognize Yom Kippur

Jewish holiday may be added in 2022-23 school year By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter

Last September, Madeleine Niewoehner was in a bind. Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism, fell on a Sunday, and 16-year-old Niewoehner sought to spend that day attending services with her family. But the weight of a hard math test

hung over her. “I just don’t have time to try to study on top of also going to services all day long, having lunch with my family and dinner with my family,” recalled Niewoehner, a junior at Oak Park and River Forest High School. Niewoehner said her teacher planned to give the test the Thursday before Yom Kippur but decided to move it to Monday, so she and her classmates had more time to study. While Niewoehner was happy her teacher pushed the test back, she now faced another issue: the exam was now set for See YOM KIPPUR on page 16

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