Terry Logue

Terry Logue

Longtime administrator Terry Logue is the sixth individual from Westminster College to enter the SLIAC Hall of Fame. Logue, who graduated from Westminster in 1976, began his affiliation with the conference as information director in 1992 and oversaw the establishment of the first SLIAC web site. He returned to Westminster as sports information director and radio voice of Blue Jay football in 1995, before being named the director of athletics in 1998. He continued editing the SLIAC History and Records Book until 2006.

While at Westminster Logue put together the foundation of the Blue Jay athletic department, doubling staff size and heading up the renovation of the field sport facilities, including the installation of lights and irrigation. He was responsible for the creation of Westminster's booster clubs and Athletics Hall of Fame. He established the first student-athlete advisory committee (SAAC) and founded the school’s chapter of Chi Alpha Sigma (National College Athlete Honor Society). During his tenure as athletics director, seven of the coaches he hired earned conference coach of the year honors and guided their teams to 20 conference titles, with the men’s soccer, men’s tennis, women’s tennis and baseball teams making their first-ever NCAA tournament appearances. Blue Jay athletes earned national accolades, including the school’s first-ever CoSIDA Academic All-American, an NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarship recipient, and a CoSida Post-Graduate Scholarship winner. Additionally, Westminster received a series of educational enhancement grants from the NCAA and was recognized by the NADIIIAA for community service. Logue also served a term as the SLIAC President as well as a term on the NCAA Division III Budget Committee. 

Logue left Westminster in 2012 after 17 years of service as a publicist, administrator and assistant professor of sports management. He returned to his high school, Missouri Military Academy, and served as Alumni Relations/Annual Fund Manager for three years prior to his retirement in 2015. He was inducted into the Westminster Athletics Hall of Fame in the fall of 2015.