Jean Grueter and Tom Niccolai
Graduated: 1976
Job: Anesthesiologist
Company: Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare
From medicine to music, this couple wears lots of hats.
When you hear the term "multi-tasking," you might envision a person talking on the phone, doing laundry, paying bills and checking e-mail all at the same time.
When Tom Niccolai ('75 biological sciences) and Jean
Grueter ('76 biological sciences) speak of multi-tasking, their version
is a bit more extreme. For the couple that found romance at UW-Parkside
in the mid '70s, multi-tasking involves raising a family, performing
surgery, administering anesthesia, helping to run a restaurant, and
assisting the startup of a community center.
Niccolai is an orthopedic surgeon with Aurora Health
Care in Burlington, Wis., while Grueter is an anesthesiologist at
Wheaton Franciscan Healthcare in Racine. Niccolai and Grueter first met
at Kenosha's Bradford High School, but reconnected while pre-health
students at Parkside. Professor Emeritus Dr. Anna Maria Williams
remembers catching them "necking behind their biology textbooks" in a
carrel on the third floor of the library when they should have been
studying.
Niccolai thought he might want to pursue a career in
nursing, but a part-time job at the former St. Catherine's Hospital in
Kenosha piqued his interest in becoming a doctor. His original plan
called for two years at Parkside and then a transfer to UW-Madison. "It
didn't take me long to realize that the pre-health program at Parkside
was every bit as effective as any place else in getting you into
medical school," Niccolai said. Between living at home and working at
St. Catherine's he was able to save enough money to pay for school
himself.
"Parkside was a place that gave me the opportunity
to do what I wanted - it opened up a completely different life for me,"
he said
Grueter was an excellent student, winning the Harlow
B. Mills academic science scholarship her junior year. She wasn't sure
which career path to take, but knew that she enjoyed the sciences.
"There were some incredible teachers here in the science department,
they made it really fun," she said. "Dr. Williams grabbed me one day
and basically told me, 'You're going into medicine.'"
Grueter, a first-generation college graduate, is the
oldest of five siblings. Brothers John and Richard, and sister Sharon
all followed in her footsteps as Parkside graduates. "It was Parkside
or nothing," Grueter said. "It was just an incredible opportunity. I
wouldn't have been going to college anywhere else because I wouldn't
have been able to afford the living expenses."
Niccolai and Grueter were both accepted at the
Medical College of Wisconsin via early decision. They felt well
prepared for their rigorous courses, primarily due to professors
Chong-maw Chen, Eugene Goodman, Ben Greenebaum and Williams. "I
remember thinking to myself that it seemed like they had stacked this
place," Niccolai said. "I couldn't believe these guys were teaching me,
as opposed to some teaching assistant. The fact that you could go sit
in their offices and work directly with them was amazing."
After two years of medical school, the high cost of
tuition was becoming a burden. Niccolai had previously toyed with
accepting a Navy scholarship, and was now anxious to take advantage of
the tuition reimbursement opportunity offered in exchange for a
two-year commitment of service. Grueter joined as well, and they were
married during their third year of medical school.
The old TV ad proclaimed: Join the Navy, see the
world. Following medical school, Niccolai and Grueter did just that.
They spent six years training and working in hospitals in Oakland,
Calif., and Bethesda, Md. In between they spent two years as general
medical officers in Sardinia, Italy. Their first son was born in Italy,
and their second in Bethesda. Niccolai enjoyed the Navy and the
prospect of international travel. However, when he asked Grueter about
a long-term commitment, she said: "If you want to stay by yourself
you're more than welcome to!"
In 1989, as they were pondering their next move,
they received a letter advertising an orthopedic practice in a "nice
little town" in Wisconsin. The town turned out to be Burlington, the
birthplace of Grueter's father. The timing was right, and the appeal of
returning to an area filled with friends and family was stronger than
the draw of the exciting yet frenzied pace of life in the Washington,
D.C., area. Luckily, they enticed Niccolai's mother into living with
them to assist in raising their three sons.
Once in Burlington, and with an established
practice, Niccolai parlayed his passion for cooking into a partnership
in a cafe. He can sometimes be found at 4 a.m. helping out in the
kitchen at Veronico's preparing his famous cinnamon buns for breakfast.
Another opportunity arrived in the form of a
Burlington community center. The CATHE (Community, Art, Technology
Health and Education, Inc.) Center was created when a friend approached
Niccolai to partner in the purchase and renovation of the old United
Methodist Church. The center has become an incubator for small artistic
ventures, including studios for piano, voice, cheerleading, judo
taekwondo, and sewing. In addition, the center houses a Montessori
school and 100-seat performance hall. The center recently hosted a
production of "Les Miserables, School Edition," produced by none other
than Niccolai himself.
When the couple was asked where Niccolai's diverse
interests come from, Grueter jokingly answers, "He bounces from one
activity to another." Niccolai adds, "I'm a dabbler, and I'm fascinated
by creative people. I'm not very creative myself, but I do like to act
and sing." He performs with a local choir and with The Haylofters
acting troupe.
Grueter's self-reported strength lies in "holding it
all together," this in addition to her career as an anesthesiologist.
She gives an example of the frenetic life they lead by telling the
story of a past holiday party. Niccolai had invited the operating room
staff from his hospital to their home for their annual holiday party.
That year, however, he was not only covering the surgical call for his
own practice but had volunteered to fill in for a fellow orthopedic
surgeon who had returned to active duty in Iraq. Just as the guests
were walking in the door, Niccolai was on his way out to the hospital
for an emergency surgery. Grueter stepped in without skipping a beat as
the gracious solo host, accustomed as she is to her husband having too
much on his plate.
She quickly follows with a second story, where
Niccolai had volunteered to help a friend in the Racine Chapter of
Vietnam Veterans of America with their annual pasty sale during the
Green Bay Packer-Chicago Bears game. His role for the sale, which
benefits the Racine food pantry, was to make all the dough for the 500
pasties. After only two-thirds of the batches were prepared, he again
was called in for an emergency. Grueter was left to finish the job.
"She does that all the time," Niccolai said.
"Yeah," Grueter replies with a laugh, "I bail him out from his ideas."
Niccolai
concurs. "What can I say? We're fortunate to live in such a great
place, and it's hard not to pitch in and make it better. Luckily, I met
someone who feels the same way."

