Art
has been a licensed Real Estate Broker since 1975, buying and
selling all types of Real Estate and holds the ABR
Certification as an "Accredited Buyer Representative." He
specializes in property management, sales of investment
properties, as well as residential sales. His long time
moniker has been, "helping my friends with their real estate
needs," because that's exactly the reputation he's earned in
his 25+ years in the profession.
Art has one of the most extensive
backgrounds in the field and has been awarded the highest
honors that even his peers can bestow: Year 2000
"Distinguished Service Award" from the Wisconsin Realtors
Association, and "Year 2000 Realtor of Distinction" from his
local Madison Board.
Art is also Wisconsin's longest
designated "Certified Apartment Manager" (CAM) by the National
Apartment Association (since 1978). He is an active member of
the Greater Madison Board of Realtors, where he was President
in 1992, the Madison Area Apartment Association, where he was
President in 1978, and the Wisconsin Apartment Association,
where Art was it's first President, in 1982. Let Art's
professionalism, integrity, and dedicated service to his
clients, work for you in fulfilling your real estate needs.
Here's what the Wisconsin State
Journal printed in the peers selection for their industry's
service award.
Awarded
Year 2000 "Realtor of Distinction"
Honored Year
2000 "Distinguished Service Award"
| From the Board of Realtors of
South-Central Wisconsin and The Wisconsin Realtors
Association. Thanks for your 25 years of dedicated
service and commitment to the real estate industry; For
all the housing legislation that you spearheaded to
passage to make Wisconsin a better place; For your
enthusiasm and integrity; For your leadership as
President of the Madison Board of Realtors ('92), the
Wisconsin Apartment Association ('82), and the Madison
Apartment Association ('78). This, along with 15 years
as Chairman of the Freddy Gage Charity, 30 years of swim
officiating, 16-time Badger State Games Masters Swimming
Gold Medallist and record holder, 2000 World Masters
Championships 5-event qualifier in Munich, Germany;
Another softball league championship, and for saving a
handicapped lad in a wheelchair at the bottom of a
pool. |
 Art
receives honor with daughter,
Jessica. |
Art
Luetke Realtor Luetke Investments and Faircrest Management
Art with son
Trevor and daughter Jessica, his two most important things in
life.
2002
World Masters Championships.
Art Luetke Medals in all 5 events
and sets 4 new Wisconsin Master records.
Art Luetke competed March
24-30, 2002 in Christchurch, New Zealand at the World Masters
Swimming Championships along with almost 3,000 competitors
from 61 different countries. The World Masters Swimming
Championship is a bi-annual event and the top ten places
medal.
Art
competed in the 55-59 age bracket, medaled in all 5 events he
swam and set 4 new Wisconsin Master records. He took 4th in
the 50 meter freestyle (:29.58) which broke the 1980 record.
He took 6th in both the 100 meter freestyle (1:07.65) and the
200 meter freestyle (2:33.36), and broke the 1981 records for
both events, plus 8th in the 400 meter freestyle (5:37.52),
which broke the 1988 record, and 10th in the 50 meter
Backstroke (:40.42).
Art's
good friend and 1976 Montreal Olympic Gold Medalist Jim
Montgomery also competed and won his specialty, the 100 meter
freestyle, with a time of :54.22 in the 45-49 age group. He
also won the 200 meter freestyle and took second in the 400
meter freestyle. Art says of
swim coach, Dave Diegel (shown here), "I owe him a lot. While his
3,000 yards-a-day workouts were some real gut-busters, he got
me in the best shape of my life."
2003’ Maui Channel Relay Swim
Swimmers Take a Grumpy Ride
Courtesy of On
Wisconsin Magazine (winter, 2003)
There are a
number of ways to traverse the nine-mile stretch of
crystal-blue ocean that separates the Hawaiian islands of
Lanai and Maui. Some people scoot across the waves in
motorboats. Others take planes or passenger ferries. But for
Brad Harner ’77 MS’80, MS’83, MBA’90, there’s only one way to
go in style: Freestyle. Horner, a three-time All-American
Badger swimmer from 1974 to 1976, is also a three-time
participant in the Maui Channel Swim, an annual test of will
in which more than three hundred of the world’s top
competitive swimmers stroke their way across the Au’au Channel
from Lanai to Maui. Billed as the greatest weekend in
open-water racing, it’s fast becoming the world’s biggest
Wisconsin swim party.
The forty-nine-year-old Horner, an
associate partner with IBM Business Consulting Services,
organized the Grumpy Old Badgers, a group of intergenerational
former UW and Madison-area swimmers who first competed at the
Labor Day weekend event two years ago. With career achievement
as bright as their Badger-red T-shirts, the teammates have
made quite a splash at the event, which usually attracts a
galaxy of former Olympians and record setters. This year,
twenty-five men and women with Wisconsin ties made the trip to
the islands for what Horner describes as "about forty minutes
of torture combined with three days of a heck of a lot of
fun."
 |
| 2003' Maui Channel Relay Swim. |
Let’s start with
torture. In the race’s team division, six-person teams trade
off for half-hour segments legging it out toward Maui, a
journey that can take anywhere from three to seven hours
depending on conditions. A few true sadists tackle the
distance on their own, completing what amounts to about 290
lengths of an Olympic-sized pool. Except that this pool comes
with strong currents. And big waves. And sharks. "I’m used to
swimming in pools, where the lanes are marked and you can see
the bottom," says Art Luetke ’68,
a fifty-seven-year-old Madison property manager and Big Ten
swimming official, who competed for the first time this year.
"There, I’m looking down and seeing all this clear blue water,
and I’m wondering where Jaws is."
 |
|
From left
to right: Rick Brent, Dave Tanner, Art Luetke, Brad
Horner, Scott Findorff, Kevin
Swoboda.
|
"It’s a completely different kind of swimming," Horner
says, "and a completely different kind of test of your body.
It can be like swimming in a washing machine." That’s what
drew Horner to the race. A former world record holder in
masters swimming competitions, he hadn’t experienced
open-water racing until 1997, when Madison native and
three-time Olympic gold medallist Jim Montgomery talked him
into joining his Maui relay team. After a successful and
shark-free race (there are always sightings, but never
attacks, Horner says), he was hooked.
With family and friends along, the Badger contingent was
one of the largest groups at the event which drew fifty-seven
relay teams and fifteen individual competitors. The four
Grumpy Old Badgers team boats, each flying a red Bucky banner,
were so noticeable that one opposing boat captain shouted out
scores of the Wisconsin-West Virginia football game, which was
running concurrently on ESPN.
Wisconsin's imprint on the race results has been equally
hard to miss. Badgers have also fared well in the
relays, where they've gone stroke-for-stroke with teams
featuring 2000 Olympians Amanda Beard and Klete Keller.
This year, Sorensen, Montgomery, Phillips, Seversen, Cris
Williams '83, PhD'90, and former Hungarian national champion
Valter Kalaus '96 won the championship among teams totaling
240 years of age.
"We weren't there to take a bath," says Luetke, whose team
finished fourth in the senior division, where racers average
at least fifty years of age. "Swimming is an individual
sport, and you don't get many chances to swim with
teammates. And that's where all the pressure lies.
You don't want to let anyone down."
"This is the start of [UW swimming and diving alumni]
getting a lot closer," he says. There's only one
problem: with their spirit and competitive success, the
Grumpy Old Badgers aren't living up to their name. They
don't swim like they're old, and in Maui, it's pretty hard to
be grumpy.
30 year avid whitewater canoeist with good friend and bowmate, attorney John Rashke.
North Dakota pheasant hunting. Greg Drewsen, Butch Sobus and me.
30 years of hunting together and we finally hit something.
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