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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW: ON
'LEANING IN'
by Paul C. Pribbenow March 15, 2023
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW: ON
'LEANING IN'
by Paul C. Pribbenow March 15, 2023
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One of the great misperceptions of American higher ed ucation
is that colleges and universities are detached from the · real
world," ivory towers not concerned about the communities and
neighborhoods t hat surround t heir campuses. I am not here to
defend all of higher education- though there is p lenty of
evidence to rebut that misperception. Instead, I want to declare
that for Augsburg University, there has never been a question of
our commitment to what we ca ll "leaning in" to the pressing and
complex issues of our neighborhood, our country, and indeed
the world.
It's a commitment articulated in our Augsburg1 SO strategic
vision. which states: "As a new k ind of urban, student-centered
DF
university. w e are educating Auggies as stewards of an inclusive
democracy, engaged in their commun ities and uniquely
equ ipped to navigate the complex issues of our time." Leaning
in so that our students are educated and equipped for the world
that so needs their intellects, their passions, and their skills.
Sur ely this issue of Augsburg Now powerfu lly demonst rates an
array of ways in which this commitment to "leaning in" is lived
President Paul Pribbenow (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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out by our student s. faculty. staff, alumni. and allies. From
Associate Professor Katie Cla rk '10 MAN, '14 DNP and alumna Emily Bastia n '07 MSW, and t heir groundbrea king
w or k serving those exger iencing homelessness; to our new data science major with its strong focus on equity and
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social j ustice; to the contr ibutions of our colleague, Minnesota First Lady Gwen Wa lz, helping us to prepare more
teachers of color for our public schools; to t he resea rch of Assistant Professo r Kao Nou Moua, shedding light on t he
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experiences of Hmong entrepreneurs.
And t he list could go on and on with the da ily ways in which the Augsburg community- in its curriculum. community
engagement and public advocacy- is working to be good neighbors, to uncover and address systemic injustices. and
to support a more robust democracy.
El I]
In 2019, as part of Augsburg's 150th anniversary celebrations, Auggie alumnus and poet ext raordina ire Donte Collins
'18 penned a powerfu l ode to their alma mater, entitled ·we Are Auggies," which concludes with these lines:
"When shored, when sharpened. Guided. Here o system of roots. Strong. Striving. A system of roots weaving o new world.
Auggie, you ore called into the world.
Into your wonder. Your why. To wrestle
with reason. To spot the problem. And propose new ports. To walk toward your fears. To find the heart.
We ore Called. We ore Auggies."
May we all continue to lean in, to make our world
more j ust fair. and compassionate, to find the heart. I know we
will. because we are called Auggies!
Faithfu lly yours,
Paul C. Pribbenow, PhD
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Au~ burg alumna lands tOP. role at MPR News
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AUGSBURG ALUMNA LANDS TOP ROLE AT MPR
NEWS
by CharlK Hal ey
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Jane Helmke '83 was named executive edit or of Minnesota Public Radio News in
November 2022.
"I'm so honored to be a part of the inspiring team of exceptional journalist s at
MPR News at this point in my career," Helmke said . "Every day, we are wor king to
include and inform all of our audiences across Minnesota, including today's
Auggies! I'm excited to learn how w e can connect w ith and serve these thriving
young adult s w ith the news they want and need each day:
Prior to taking on this lead role at MPR, Helmke wor ked at NBC affiliate KARE 11
New s for 35 years. She st art ed t here as an int ern during her senior y ear at
Augsburg. and she left as the TV st ation's news direct or.
With her move t o MPR, Helmke jo ined two other Auggies in key roles at one of
Minnesot a's largest media organizations.
Jane Helmke '83, executive editor at
Jean Taylor '85 was named the CEO of Amer ican Public Med ia Group, the parent
company of MPR. in 2021. Before her work w ith MPR. Taylor was t he board chair
Minnesota Public Radio News
(Courtesy photo)
of Star Tribune Media. an executive consu lt ant for the Platinum Group, and the
CEO of Taylor Corporation.
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Andre Griffin '20 is t he commun ity engagement specialist for Carbon Sound, a new music stream from MPR t hat
launched in June 2022 in partnership w ith KMOJ radio. Carbon Sound, which also includes a website and app. is
ded icated t o celebrating the w ide-ranging influence of Black musical expression.
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For Helmke, jo ining MPR feels like "a wonderful, full-circle moment."
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"Every day now," she sa id, "I carry w ith me the Auggie pride of serving the great er good in our community. MPR News
is a place that allows me t o live this important value:
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Top image: Minnesota Public Radio News building. d o wntown St. Paul (Photo by Minnesota Public Radio)
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Uncovering the ex~riences of Hmong entreP.reneurs
Notes from President Pribbenow: On 'leaning in'
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Notes from President
Uncovering the exJleriences of
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Pribbenow: On 'leaning in'
Hmong entreJlreneu rs
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UNCOVERING THE EXPERIENCES OF HMONG
ENTREPRENEURS
On the Spot Q&A with Assistant Professor Kao Nou Moua
by CharlK Holey March 15, 2023 • Around the Quad
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For Kao Nou Moua, research is about storytell ing. The
Augsburg assistant professor of social w ork spent a yea r
gathering stor ies from Hmong business owners and
entrepreneurs to find trends in their experiences and to help
public and fi nancial agencies better serve the Hmong business
community. After present ing this research at t he first-ever
nationa l HMong Econo mic Advancement, Research. and Equ ity
(HERE) Conference late last year. Moua reflects on what she's
learned and what she's plann ing to study next.
Q : Tell us about your latest research, the HMong Economic
Advancement and Capacity Building Research Project.
Augsburg Asstscant Professo r of Social Work Kao Nou
Moua (Photo by Courtney Perry)
A: For that pa rticular project, I wor ked with a national
organization based in Eau Claire. Wisconsin, called HMong America n Leadership and Economic Develo pment
(HALED). While w orking at a d ifferent institution. I had started to build relationships wit h people in Eau Claire.
pa rticularly in the Hmong community there. They w ere really interested in looking at economic development among
Hmo ng Americans and t rying to und erstand the barriers to becoming a business owner based on the different
organizations. agencies, and fina ncial institutio ns that w ere supporting entrepreneurs.
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We had all of these anecdotal stories about Hmo ng business owners not being
able to access services. but there w asn't really any research. Being in the w orld
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that w e are in. in terms of needing research or data to support these stories. w e
w anted to be really mindful of being able to go to lawmakers and policymakers
and say, "These are the barriers that people are exper iencing, and these are the
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actual numbers of people who are experiencing these things: And so. that's
what we did . My research partners and I secured a grant from the state of
Wisconsin to do this economic project. By that time, I had transitioned to
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Augsburg. so I hired a social work student to w ork with me, to mentor them in
the social w ork research pro cess. I was w orking with students at t he University of
Wisconsin- Eau Claire as w ell.
We interviewed about 20 Hmong entrepreneurs in Minnesota and Wisconsin. We
did focus groups with Hmong farmers, w omen entrepreneurs, and young people
who were interested in ent repreneurship. It w as a wide range. And t he thing is.
I'm not a businessperson. I'm a social wo rker. So. it w as really kind of a leap for
me to put my mind in th is world of economic d evelopment. But my particu lar
Kao Nou Moua teaches her social wor k
class. (Photo by Court ney Perry)
lens as a social w orker w as: 'What are the barriers in o rganizations?" It's always
been my w ork to think about how w e can build culturally grounded services-in this case. w orking with banks and
state agencies and orga nizations.
Q : What were the results of this research?
A: The year lo ng project of data collectio n culminated in the HERE Conference in Eau Claire last September. It w as a
nationa l conference, the fi rst of its kind. to bring together Hmo ng entrepreneurs, lawmakers. other business owners.
and fi nancial institutions to really think about and look at the data.
There w ere a co uple of importa nt findings. One w as that Hmong women entrepreneurs have a v ery different
exper ience than what w e think of when w e think about ent repreneursh ip. Even within the Hmong community. there
are cultural barriers t hat exist for Hmong w omen entrepreneurs. That's something w e want to explore a little bit
more.
Another important find ing was that it wasn't so much about having translated materials or th ings like that; it really
w as a need for a sense of belonging in those institut ions so people could feel like they w ere w elcomed. Some of the
most heartbrea king stories that w e heard w ere people sharing about how they've been denied mult iple t imes (for
loa ns) fro m fi nancial institutions. but o nce they w ere able to have a wh ite colleague come and vouch for them. then
people at the bank w ere like. "Okay. I can trust t his person because they had a white person vouch for them." Those
w er e so me of the really hard stories.
Kao Nou Moua presents her research findings at the 2022 HERE Conference in Eau Clair e, Wisconsin. {Photo by
HALED)
Q : While you were conducting this research, was there anything that surprised you?
A: One t hing that did surprise me. especially when w e did the focus group with young people. was that they all talked
about the id ea of financial literacy. In high schoo l. they learn how to balance a checkbook. but t hey're like 15- they
don't have a checkbook. But now. here they are as college students, and t hey're like. "I would li ke to lea rn that now."
And w e had older adults who w ould say, "I want to lea rn more about inv est ments or the stock market." So. w e
learned that fi nancial literacy is something that needs to happen multigenerationally or intergener ationally. It is
something that needs to happen ov er time.
That was really important learning for the orga nizatio n that I w as w orking wit h. HALED w as able to shift their
prog ramming to be multigenerational. And the g reat thing was that also aligned with Hmong cultura l values. A lot of
the commun ity celebrations are also multigeneratio nal. So, this programming became culturally grounded all of a
sudden because we centered Hmong values in terms of learn ing about economic development.
Q: What comes next?
A: We got a really great response fro m the HERE Conference.
Many lawmakers or policymakers w ere super interested in us
coming into their individua l agencies to present o ur data. The
next phase is to continue to get mo re funding so t hat w e can do
more. Al ways in research, there's more research to be done,
and part of t hat is to continue to really focus on some of our key
findings and really expand on them. The other pa rt of it. for me
as a social w ork professor, is to always t hink about
opportunities to mentor student resea rchers.
Kao Nou Moua speaks with city of Eau Claire policymakers
at the 2022 HERE Conference. (Pho,o by HALED)
And then, we did ta lk quite a bit about this idea t hat Hmong
have a v ery entrepreneurial spirit. Because of their experience
of being persecuted and having to move fro m country to co untry and having to adapt. Hmong people have learned
how to be entrepreneurs and business owners. You ca n go to China and find Hmong people, you can go to Laos and
Thailand and Vietna m, and you can go here in St. Paul. Hmong have always figured out ways to be entrepreneurs. So.
I think that's the other line of resea rch that w e w ant to explore-what does a history of tr auma and w ar do to a
people? How do they adapt in new spaces? Entrepreneurship is o ne of those w ays that they've learned how to make
sense of their lives.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Top image: Kao Nou Moua sp eaks wit h students during her socio/ work class. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE SPOT ON CAMPUS?
by CharlK Haley March 15, 2023 • Auggies Connect
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"One of my f avorit e places to be w as at the benches in front of Hagfors." -Wyatt Vessey '22 v ia email
"Basem ent of t he Lindell Library! Best place t o study!" -Stephanie Quick Espinoza '01, '20 MBA v ia Faceboo k
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~
-"My favorit e place at Augsburg? The penalt y box at Ed Saugestad Rink. especially an hour before an Auggie
men's or w omen's hockey game. It 's quiet and peaceful (and. admittedly. cold!). Definit ely d ifferent than during
the exciting actio n of a ga me." -Don Stoner, Augsburg sports information director. via Tw itter
"Tw o of my favorite spots (are in Murphy Squa re). Taken at the beginning of f all sem est er '22." -Luke Schoper
'23 v ia Tw itter
"The quad" -Emily (O'Connell) Mireault '18 v ia Twitter
"Augsburg Men's Hockey l ocker Room. Second favorit e: Smiley's working for Don St oner late nights during w eb
1.0. Th ird: Commons between Urness and Mort. Fourth: Missy Strauch's training r oom. Fifth: John Cerrit o. Milo
Sch ield, Nora Brau n. and others' offices. Need I continue?" -Paul Putt '99, '15 MAE via Tw itter
"Easily the Hagfors Cent er hands down!" -Ethan Croll '23 v ia lnstagra m
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M cNair Scholars Program wins coml:!!lti tive renewal grant
Uncover ing the exl:!!lriences of Hmong entreP.reneurs
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In Memoriam, Winter 2022- 23
2022-23
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MCNAIR SCHOLARS PROGRAM WINS
COMPETITIVE RENEWAL GRANT
by Farrisr
March 15, 2023
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Augsburg's TRIO McNair Scholars Program r ecently secured a S1 .3 mill ion, five-year federal gra nt to support
operat io ns through 2027.
Named for Ronald E. McNair, an astronaut and physicist who w as among the fi rst Africa n Amer ica ns in the U.S. space
program, McNair Scholars is one of eight feder al TRIO programs fund ed by the U.S. Department of Education to
increase access to higher ed ucation for economically disadvantaged students.
McNair Scholars specifically aims to increase g raduate degree awards fo r first-generation college students w ith
financial need and/or members of traditionally underrepresented groups in graduate education, as defined by
federal gu idelines.
With the s1.3 million grant, Augsburg will continue to support a cohort of 26 McNair Scholars each y ear. Students
apply d uring their sophomore year to participate in the progra m as j uniors and seniors.
The hallmark of Augsburg's program is MCN 301: Research in
the Disciplines, taught by Associate Professor Amanda Case
and McNair Assistant Dir ector Cruz Rodriguez. In this 2-credit
course, students complete a research proposal under the
guidance of a faculty mentor. They spend 400 hours collecting
data. analyzing findings, and pr eparing a forma l presentation
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fo r a natio nal McNair r esearch confer ence in July.
The students also underta ke sign ificant preparation fo r
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graduate school outside of resea rch, from GRE study to an
intensive •boot camp" to develo p their applicatio n statements.
Amanda Case teaches her class. (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
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"McNair is a r igorous comm itment • said "Tina" Maria Tavera,
program director. •Each TRIO McNair progra m is designed for a particular population. We are fortunate our
programming is designed specifically for Augsburg students. Our numbers prove that our program at Augsburg
w orks."
El I]
In a highly competitive funding landscape, Augsburg's program has received continuous federal support since 2007.
Many of Augsburg's McNair alumn i have successfully gone on to graduate school. Twenty-one have completed or are
enro lled in a PhD program, 58 have completed o r are enrolled in a master's degree program, and 12 have completed
or are enrolled in other advanced degree programs (includ ing MD, MBA, Pha rmD. and PsyD).
Top image: 2022 Fall McNair Scholars: front row (left to right): Hafsa Hassan; Edward Stockard; Cynthia Faber; Logan
Br adley; back row (left to right): lfrah Edow; Jose Orozco Islas; Theo Wayo; Natnae/ Mu/u; Leeroy Doe; Alex Hernandez
Olivera; Drew Gross (Courtesy photo)
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Au~burg awards King Harald V of Norwav. honorarv.
degree
What's Y.Qur favorite SP-Qt on camQus?
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Uncovering t h e ex12eriences o f
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role at MPR New s
Hmong entr e12ren eurs
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AUGSBURG AWARDS KING HARALD V OF
NORWAY HONORARY DEGREE
by Sten.henjendraszak March 15, 2023 • Around the Quad
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l ate last y ear in Oslo, Augsburg Presid ent Pau l Pribbenow conferred upon King
Harald V of Norway the degr ee of Doct or of Humane l etters. hono ris causa .
"We are d eeply g rateful for Your Majesty's abid ing support of Augsburg
University and our sist er Norwegian-American colleges and universities
throughout t he more than t hree decades of your reign," Pr ibbenow sa id in his
ceremonial remarks. ·we share bot h a common heritage and profound
commitments t o peacemaking and global citizenship."
His Maj esty King Harald V of Norway acceded to the throne January 17. 1991 . The
king and his w ife. Queen Sonj a. visit ed Augsburg in 2011. This recogn itio noriginally scheduled for 2020 but delayed by t he pandem ic-w as part of
Augsburg's sesq uicentennial anniversary celebration.
Top image: An Augsburg student porticipoting in the Nor way_ Hub wears o Norwegian
King Harald V of Norway (left) and
flog while walking through campu s. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Augsburg's p, esident, Paul
Pribbenow, meet in Oslo. (Photo
by
Queen Sonja)
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M cNair Scholars Program wins com11etitive renewal grant
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role at MPR News
Hmong entre12reneurs
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ALUMNI CLASS NOTES, WINTER2022-23
by !Johnson March 15, 2023 • Auggies Connect. Class Notes (f',lumni/
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1960s
1962
On Nov ember 23. 2022. WCCO-TV ran a story on Augsburg football coach Jack Osberg '62. "Augsburg football
legend Jack Osberg.Qgens ug about life wit h wife's Alzheimer's disease." Osberg w as featured in the Winter
2021-22 issue of Augsburg Now.
1980s
1984
Paul Mueller '84. regional vice president for Mayo Clinic Healt h System in Sout hwest Wisconsin. Augsburg
regent emeritus. and current chair of Augsburg's Great Returns campa ign. participated as a pa nelist in a virtual
community forum. "A Tale of Two Viruses." hosted by Mayo Clinic in September 2022. The d iscussion focused on
the contrast between monkeypox and COVID-19.
1989
"Sister Novelists: The Trailblazing Porter Sisters. Who Paved t he Way fo r Austen and the Brontes," by Devoney
Looser '89. was published in October 2022. The book w as on Apple's list of t he "Most Ant icipated Fall Books" in
nonfictio n. and it received a starred r eview from Kirkus. Looser was featured in the Fall 2018 issu e of Augsburg
Now.
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1990s
1991
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Carla Steen '91 was resident d ramaturg for Guthrie Theater's w orld premiere of "Sally & Tom."
1999
Real estate dev eloper Devean George '99 plans to build a modular-housing plant in Minneapolis' North Loop.
The plant. which will manufact ure mod ular units for multifamily housing. will create hundreds of jo bs from 2023
to 2025 paying S30 or more per hour.
Cheri Johnson ·99 is autho r of "Ann ika Rose: a novel manuscript that wo n the 2021-22 Wo men's Prose Prize
from Red Hen Press in Pasadena. California. In 2022. she also published "The Girl in Dulut h." a literary mystery.
under the pen name Sig rid Brown. Publishers Weekly selected the book for review. ca lling it an "affecting debut."
2000s
2000
Ross Murray ·oo. ·09 MBA. vice president of GLAAD Media Institute. led a training tour in Australia. Offerings
included a master class o n LGBTQ advocacy and support for leaders looking to make t heir o rganizatio ns more
LGBTQ-w elcoming and inclusive. Murray also met with the Aust ralian Film Television and Radio School to spea k
with faculty about teach ing students the impact of LGBTQ inclusivity in media representation.
2004
Mary Taris '04. founder and CEO of Strive Publishing and Str iv e Bookstore. w as one of the business owners
featured in a KARE 11 story about a 2022 holiday pop-up ma rket in downtown Minneapo lis.
2005
Eddie Frizell 'OS MAL w as confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2022 as the U.S. marshal for Minnesota. The first
Black U.S. marshal in Minnesota history. he leads the U.S. Ma rshals Service for the state.
2006
Wendi Wheeler '06, '13 MAL. spoke with a reporter about how a man holding a "You Ar e Loved" sign in
Moorhead. Minnesota. gav e her hope when she w as contemplating suicide. The sto ry. "A college stud ent ho ld ing
a sign on a Moorhead st reet corner saved her life." appeared in several Minnesota newspapers.
2009
Marette Hahn '09. directo r of academic and career excellence at Grand Ca nyon University. was nominated for
the Athena Valley of the Sun Founder's Aw ard.
Rachel Stud ier '09. ·12 MBA. chief operations officer of Mayo Employees Federal Credit Union. was na med a
Top Wo man in Finance by Finance & Commerce. wh ich cov ers business news in Minnesota.
2010s
2013
For the past three years. Kacie Butcher '13 has been director of the Public History Project at the University of
Wisconsin-Mad ison. a multiyea r effort to uncover and give voice to histories of discriminatio n and resistance at
the university. The project has resu lted in a physical exhibitio n. a digital exhibitio n w ebsite. curricu lar materials.
an event and lecture ser ies. and a final report. The proj ect is the fi rst of its kind in the nation in regards to scope
and its focus on public engagement.
2014and 2019
Sisters Fa iso Abdu lle '14. '20 DNP and lkraan Abdu lle '19 DNP are two of four nurses who founded Our Place
Residential Services. The business provides integrated support services to clients. including medical care. stable
housing. and the supportiv e ad ministrative and coach ing services needed to stabilize d isabled and ho meless
patients. The nurses and their business w er e featured in the August 28. 2022. Star Tribune story. "Four firstgeneration Somali American nurses started business to care for i;iatients in need."
2015
Alisha Esselstein '15 joined The Manely Firm. P.C.. as an associate attorney.
2018
Chung Lip '18 recently published "Hers." a memoir which reflects on his child hood experience growing up in
Cambod ia. Lip wrote the memoir to share his personal experiences growing up as an orphan. to inspire others.
and to promote resiliency among young people around the w orld .
2020s
2022
Tucker Robinson '22 is program coordinator for Change the Outcome. Robinson's story is part of a September
23. 2022. story in the Star Tribune. "After the loss of her son to the oi;iioid egidemic, a Minnesota mother seeks
to cha nge the outcome for others."
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Health Commons receives $SOK ~ui!Y.,grant
Augsburg awards King Harald V of Norwav. honora!Y.
degree
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HEALTH COMMONS RECEIVES $SOK EQUITY
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by CharlK Hal ey March 15, 2023 • Aroun d the Quad
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Augsburg Hea lt h Commons has received a $50,000 grant to
continue its work in advancing health equity thro ugh nursing.
The Health Equ ity Innovation Fund grant, awarded in early
January, came from AARP and the Center to Cha mpio n Nursing
in America, a j oint initiat ive of AARP Foundat io n, AARP, and t he
Robert Wood Johnson Foundatio n.
Augsburg Hea lt h Commons will use this funding to deepen its
w ork of providing free services to marginalized com mu nities.
The grant also allows Health Commons to consider expansio n,
including a possible new locat io n in North Minneapolis.
Executive Directo, Katie Clark (middle) and other
Augsburg faculty members pass out supplies co Health
Commons visitors. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
·we are moved beyond wo rds to be selected fo r this
opportunity," said Katie Clark '10 MAN, '14 DNP, associate professo r of nursing and executive director of Health
Commons. "These funds will not only help relieve some of the suffering people are forced to endure in the immediate
term, but will also help cult ivate ideas and solut io ns for the lo ng term in ca ring for people who experience
ma rginalization."
The first Augsburg Hea lth Commo ns drop-in center opened at Central Luthera n
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Ch urch in downtown Minneapolis in 1992. Most people seeking ca re there are
unhoused o r ma rgina lly ho used. In 201 1, a second location opened in Ceda rRiverside in response to a need for accessible health care services identified by
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members of the East African immigra nt commu nity.
Both locations center commu nity vo ices and are o perated by Augsburg nursing
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faculty, nursing and physician assistant volunteer s, students, and community
members. Everyone is w elcome, and all services are free.
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With this gra nt Health Commons will continue provid ing services at both
locat io ns as w ell as at local homeless encampments. Faculty will explore new
partnerships at other locations including in North Minneapolis in collaboration
with Augsburg's physician assistant program.
The grant will also support the educational m issio n of Health Commo ns by
providing paid research and pract ice internships fo r graduate nursing students.
Augsburg Physician Assistant Program
Director Vanessa Bester checks a
visitor's blood pressure at Health
Commons. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Augsburg H ea It h Commons is one of 16 organizations nat io nally to receive a
Health Eq uit y Innovatio ns Fund award for 2022.
Find out more about the grant or visit the Augsburg Health Commons w ebsit e.
Read more about the wor k at Augsburg Health Commons in this issue of Augsburg Now.
Top image: An Augsburg nursing faculty member sorts t hrough donated supp lies at Health Commons. (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
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AT 25, STEPUP LOOKS TO THE FUTURE
by Farrisr
March 15, 2023
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StepUP® at Augsburg Univ ersity is one of the origina l handfu l of
collegiate recovery programs in the United States. At its 25th
anniversary, it's also one of the largest and most
comprehensive.
Several factors account fo r the program's success over time,
including the residential facility in Oren Gateway Center, on-staff
chemica l dependency counselo rs, and strong connections to
Minnesota's recovery netw orks. But ask students, staff, and
supporters what makes StepUP more t han the sum of its parts,
and o ne answ er comes up ev ery time.
Interior lobby of Oren Gateway Ce mer (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
The magic is in t he community.
The number of U.S. collegiate recovery progra ms has grown to nearly 150 in the years since Augsburg jo ined Rutgers,
Texas Tech, and Brown University in starting its own program. But it's still unusual for an institution of Augsburg's size
to operate a program o n t he scale of StepUP. Rarer still is the level of fi nancial support donors have provided to
ensure the program's sustainability.
Early on, StepUP leadership set an ambitious goal to ra ise a $1 O
million endowment to provide funds fo r staff salaries and
programming costs into the future. Augsburg reached this
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fund raising milestone in 2022 thanks to the generosity of
supporters and alumni. Now, staff are focused on expand ing
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philanthro pic suppo rt for critical student needs, includ ing
tuition and housing.
"For young people in r ecovery, living in a residential commun ity
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like StepUP ca n make all the difference, but it's a big financial
commitment," said Martha Truax '16 MAL, director of
StepUP students give Oren Gateway Center dorm tours
leadership gifts fo r StepUP. "Going forward, w e w ant to be able
during their holiday party, December 2022. (Photo by
Courtney Perry)
to provide mo re tuition support and housing stipends so that
El I]
students don't have to face a choice between paying fo r college
and staying sober."
Director Ericka Otterson '1S MSW returned to Augsburg to lead StepUP in Janua ry, having previously w orked as a
StepUP administrato r and chemical dependency counselor from 2007 to 2014. Under her leadership, the program
will also explo re new pa rtnerships with local colleges and universities-including the University of Minnesota-to
reach mo re students.
"Despite increasing need, not
every school can afford to bu ild its
own collegiate recovery program fro m scratch," Otterson said.
"For institutions in the metro area, StepUP ca n help."
A recently fi nalized agreement wit h t he Univer sity of St. Thomas
allow s students to live in Oren Gateway Center and participate
in StepUP programming while still attending classes at their
home instit utio n. With a ca ring support netw ork on Augsburg's
campus and mo re tha n 800 program alumni, t hey'll be in good
compa ny.
StepUP alumnus Chris Allen '02 live paints a charity piece
at the StepUP Gala in 2021. (Photo by Rebecca Slater)
"A lot has changed in 25 y ears," sa id Nell Hurley, recruitment
and outreach manager. "But StepUP is stil l doing what w e set
out to do: To create a community of students who are in this together and supporting each other . That's what makes
it wo rk."
StepUP will hold its 25th anniversary ga la w ith emcee Don Shelby on May 13 at t he Radisson Blu hotel in
Bloomington. For tickets and more information, visit the StelJUP w ebsite.
Top image: StepUP students pose in Murphy Squore. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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PRIBBENOW NAMED TO NATIONAL HIGHER ED
ENGAGEMENT ADVISORY GROUP
by Sten.henjendraszak March 15, 2023 • Around the Quad
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In the fall, the U.S. Depa rtment of Ho using and Urban Development and Campus
Compact announced the HUD + Higher Ed Engagement Network, a new
collaboration to strengthen higher ed ucation community action. Augsburg
President Paul Pribbenow was one of three college presidents named to a 30member think tank of strategic leaders that will gu ide net work activities.
"Augsburg has long been engaged in vital placemaking w ork with our neighbors,
our students, and o ur employees," said Pribbenow, who also chairs the Central
Corridor Anchor Part nershiP- in Minneai;iolis. "It's an honor to be able to sha re
what we've learned about mutually sustaining partnerships in an urban setting
wher e w e have deep institutiona l roots."
The think tank will collaborate with HUD leaders to dev elop and disseminate
strategies for campuses to engage with HUD field offices and initiatives
nationwide. Member institutions wil l put these plans into action at the local level,
with the goal of build ing inclusive. sustainable. and thriving communities
Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow
through increased civic and community engagement. Focus areas will include
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
w orker empowerment materna l and infa nt health, evictio n prevention, landlord
out reach, housing security and access, broadband access and d igital literacy, and cultural competency.
"We are thrilled to partner with Campus Compact o n th is initiative," sa id Michele Perez. HUD's assistant deputy
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secretary for field policy and management, in announcing t he program. "Th is pa rtnership will bolster HUD's and the
members of the Higher Ed Engagement Netw ork's ability to serve our most vulnerable populations through the
higher education space. Together, w e will leverage our strong connections in our respect ive industries to enable a
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j ust equitable, and sustainable future:
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Top image: Downtown Minneapolis as seen f rom Augsburg's camp us (Photo by Mark Chomberloin)
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W omen's hockev. travels to Euro11e for games and growth
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WOMEN'S HOCKEY TRAVELS TO EUROPE FOR
GAMES AND GROWTH
by Douachee Lee March 15, 2023 • Around the Quad
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We'll sing the Auggie War Song,
We'll shout the battle cry,
We'll fight the Auggie battles,
Auggies ever, do or die!
Augsburg's school song could be heard overseas t his past Decem ber as the w omen's hockey t eam t raveled fro m
Helsinki, Finland, t o St ockholm, Sw eden, t o play t hree exhibit ion gam es against int ernat ional t eam s.
"We are grat eful and excit ed t o cont inue t he t rad it ion of an int ernat iona l t rip; said head coach M ichelle McAteer.
"Players often say it 's one of t heir best experiences to t ravel and com pet e overseas. It is t he ult im at e road t rip!"
Th is w as t he fifth int er national t r ip for Augsburg w om en's hockey. The t eam t rav eled w it h a group of m ore t han 70
people including coaches, st aff, and fam ily mem bers.
The Auggi es played ga mes against HIFK and Hollola from
Helsinki and Hammarby fro m Stockho lm.
Winn ing two of t he t hree gam es w as great , but t he r eal highlight
of t he t rip was int eract ing w it h players and coaches fro m other
count ries. After ev ery ga me, t he Auggies jo ined t he host t eams
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w it h a shared m eal t o connect about hockey and life.
Add it ionally, they to ured t he cit ies, visit ing local and fa mous
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sit es like t he Nobel Prize M useum and St ockholm City Hall. At
t he Vasa M useum, t hey saw a preserved w arship from 1628 and
learned about its history.
The Augsburg women's hockey team at a ski jump at ISKU
arena in Lahti, Finland (Coun:esy photo)
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"Int er nat io nal t ravel broadens our perspective as w e navigat e differ ent cultures, languages, and experiences. Doing it
t ogether creat es lifelo ng m em ori es and strengt hens our bond as a team," McAt eer said.
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Top image: The Augsburg women's hockey team at Stockholm City Holl, Sweden (Courtesy photo)
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An educator and catal~t for changg
Pribbenow named to national higher ed eng~gement
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AN EDUCATOR AND CATALYST FOR CHANGE
Minnesota First Lady Gwen Walz focuses on equity and civic engagement in he r
partnership with Augsburg.
by Kate H. El/iorr
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In 2019. Minnesota First Lady Gwen Walz j oined Augsbu rg University as special
assist3nt to the pres ident for strategic partnerships and 35 a fe llow in th e Sabo
Cen ter f or Dem ocracy and Cit ize nsh ip.
But Walts co nn ection to ca mpus bega n long before she was born . whe n her
mother steppe d out of ru ra l life in ce nt, 31Minnesota and onto a bus destined for
Augsburg. Li n nea (Wack er) Whi ppl e '60 was t he f irst person in her fa m ily t o
graduate from high schoo l. Why stop there?
·one of the most signifi cant indic;at ors of chil dren's future educational
atta inment is th e e du cat iona l ;attainm ent of their mothers." Walz said . "My mom
st;a rted co untry school at four yea rs of ;age because her brother wouldn't go to
school wit hout her, ;and she gra du;ate d fro m high schoo l at 17. I am gratefu l s he
ha d the d rive to lea ve her fa mily life and that Augsb urg- t hro ugh its fa ith a nd
alumni conn ections- fo und my mother in he, small town of 600."
Minnesma Fi,sc La dy Gwen
Walz (Photo oy Courmey Pe.ry)
And Augsbu rg didn't let Whipp le go . Wa lz sa id college advisors checke d in on he,
mother, who worked m;any hours to pay for sc hool. Professors encour;aged
Whipple. whose early educ;ation was in a one-room schoo lho use. to app ly for a postg,;ad u;at e teac hing position in
Hawaii.
"Th ey sa w her potential, a nd t hey didn't li mit my mother at ;a time when women had lots of limits." Wa lz a dd ed . "I
grew up he;a ring about that level of persona l support and Augsbu rg's drive to deve lop inform ed cit izens. th oughtful
steward s, critica l th inkers, ;and respo nsible le;ade, s. "
Whipple's tenure in Hawaii ended abruptly wh en her brother died in a fa rm accident. Deeply invested in family.
Whipple return ed to Minnesota. where she cont inued to teac h. met he, hu sba nd- also an e du ca tor- and r;a ise d four
da ughters.
Equity work with Pribbenow 'changed everything'
Li ke her parents. W;a lz became an educator ;an d marrie d an
educator. Tim Walz. Prior to being elected Minnesota's 41st
governor, Tim served from 2007 to 2019 as the U.S. House
represe ntative for the state's 1st cong, essional dist, ia. which
includ es the Ma nkato schoo l district wh ere the W;a lzes taught.
Tim and Gwen Walz spea k rn scudems as a part of the
Augsbu,g B~ld Spea ker Series, Occober 20 20. (Phom by
Rebecca Slace,)
"As educ;ators, ;and with Tim's role in governme nt. we were
brought into conversations about diversity and equity in the K12 system ," Walz sa id. ·we wanted someo ne to facilitate
disc uss ions in a way t h;at would honor a ll voices. and without
t hink ing twice , we reache d out to Augsburg President Pa ul
Pribbe now . We had see n and he;a rd that he is a m;an of the
mo ment wh o gets things done and achieves meaningful
outcomes."
The W;a lzes aske d Pribbe now to join a t;ask force to ;ad dress issues relate d t o diversity, equ ity. and incl usion in
Rochester schools. This experie nce. Walz sa id. "cha nged everything. " It's why she overlooked ot her job offers to
accept Pribbenow's invit;at ion to work for Augsb urg in 2019.
·we spe;a k t he sa me l;anguage," W;a lz sa id . "President Pribbenow is focused on t he right priorities. and he approaches
work with integrity and ;a coll;aborative, empowering spirit He's not afraid to take crea tive risks. and he embodies
wha t makes Augsb urg so inc,e dibly special."'
When Pribbenow as ked Walz to consider working for Augsb urg, he hadn't settled on a job title. He told her: 'There is
nothing you ca n't do. but you will figure it o ut wh en you get here. I ha ve some ide;as, but I ;am confident you will see
and do the work in front of you:
"His behef in me re minded me ofthe belief Augsburg had in my moth er. and I w;as sold."Walz said. "He and I both
knew we had ;a lot to work out. but he kn ew I ha d so mething to offer the un iversity, ;a nd I was eager to continu e t o
serve and work as ;an educ;ator.
"My mom always used t o sa y. 'Do the work t h;at is in front of you.' ;and as a ch ild. I th ought s he me;ant the dis hes."
Walz laughed . "H ere. I have ;an opport un ity to do tha t work ;a longside le;ade, s wh o aren't afraid to take on diffi cu lt
conversations ;and opportun it ies ."
The Augsburg commun ity. Walz said. is ma de up of administra tors. faculty. st;aff, a nd stud ents wh o s;ay. '"We are not
go ing to just ta lk about th e work. we a, e going to do the work, ;and not on ly do the work but lea d t he work.' The
un iversity e mpowers stude nts and rem inds us there is not always one way to do things."
Gwen Walz (ba ck row, second f<om right), Paul Pribbenow (back rnw, center). Abigai l Pribbenow (back row, second
from leIT), and o,her members of the Augsourg community gachere:l a, che MNU DL Mayors Challenge 10ch
Anniversa ry Fund.a iser in September 20 22 . (Photo by Cou.1:ney Per,y)
A 'confident disruptor'
Walz said he, work- both ;at Augsburg and ;as first lady of Minnesota- is not about power; it's about respo nsibil ity.
"My fi rst question to myse lf ;and ot hers is ;a lways. 'Wh om do we serve?' The ;answer ca n change. but in my work at
Augsburg, it's mostly focused on students. My ro le ;afford s me t he ability to m;a ke connea ions for people and to cut
t hrough re d t;ape." Wa lz sa id.
She w;as integral in implementing th e Auggie Pass. an a ll-you-can ride transit pass for e ligible Augsbu rg stude nts to
access the city's buses a nd light -r;a il tr;a ins. even during breaks. She has ;a lso helped build co nnections between
campus progra ms and st;ate age ncies t o offer internships and experie ntia l lea rning opportun ities .
·one effort I a m particularly excited about is my work with t he provost to encourage voting among ou, stud ents and
t o educate the m about t he safety of our voting systems.'' Walz said. "The Higher Educa tion Act of 1965 requires
un iversities to ha nd out vot er registr;ation card s, but there is no fund ing o, enforceme nt mechanism. We are looking
t o weave these and other civic engagement a nd education efforts into th e Augsburg experie nce:
As d irector of the Sa bo Center, Elaine Esche nbacher works directly with W;a lz to
integ, ate civic and community e ng;ageme nt. experiential education. and
democ,;acy bu ilding into th e Augsburg experie nce.
"I appreci;at e and ;ad mire Gwen's capac ity a nd interest in going deep on a topic.
She is ;a le;a rn er who a ims to kn ow more tha n s urface-leve l information."
Esc henbacher sa id. "She encourages us to be "confident disruptors' of systems
t hat d on't serve peop le. particularly the most vulnerable. I wrote tha t term on a
note and ha d it on my des k for a long time :
Esc henbacher adde d t h;at W;a lz inc, eases th e university's access to peop le ;and
syste ms. "People answer her phone calls." Eschenbac her sa id . "But more
importa ntly. Gwen brings deep knowledge of education that empowers students
to fu lly realize the ir potential. She brings rich experience in navigating and
c,e;at ing cha nge. and she brings a deep co mm itm ent and clear vision for equ ity
in educa tion ."
Elaine Eschenba cher, dioec:or of ,he
Sa bo Cemer (Photo b'/ Coun:ney Perry)
Equity in the classroom
Walz's work ;a lso focuses on teac her educa tion . One of her first meetings at Augsburg was wit h Audrey Le nsmire. an
assoc iate professor of education a nd t he founding director of the form er East Afric;an Student to Teacher Program
{EAsn. now kn own as th e Th rive Progr;a m. W;a lz w;anted to le;a rn m ore about the program's work to e mpower E;ast
Africa ns and other BIPOC stude nts to become lice nsed teachers. More t h;an 100 stud ents have be nefitted from the
progra m since 2013.
Lensmire refl ected on that first meeting: 'Wh en I wa lked into her a/flee. I was shak ing a bit. I didn't know wha t to call
her. It see med so weird to call someone 'first l;ady.' but s he told me t o ca ll her Gwen . She as ked great qu estions.
liste ned carefully. a nd t ook lots of notes. and I quickly re;a lize d how lucky Augsbu rg is to have her.... I introduced her
t o scholars a nd teachers beca use she wanted to hear their stories a nd needs. We bega n t o sha re ou r own histo ries
and expe rie nces. and we beca me friends."
The two d eve loped a gra duate course ca lled Connecting Policy. P, aa ice. and Advocacy for Ed uca tiona l Equ ity . It
combines th eir shared loves of writ ing, te;acher empowerm ent. a nd po licy ch;ange. In 2020. Le nsmi, e and W;a lz bega n
co-teaching the course. wh ich has become ;a core class in the Maste r of Edu cation program .
Lensmire s;a id Wa lz has taught her a lot about resea rch. a dvocacy. and complications wit hin government systems.
Walz is honest and thoughtful. Lensmire sa id. and has even given her daughter. a second-year Augg ie. lot s of ;advice
and green Jolly R;a nchers.
'A remarkable advocate'
Pribbenow sa id it s impress ive how Wa lz gracefully ba lances her dual roles at the un iversity. while ;a lso investing and
connecting personally with students in the classroo m. He benefits from he, "keen eye" in na viga ting complex politic;a l
circumstances to adv;ance the un iversity"s vis ion.
"Gwen h;as proven to be a remark;ab le advoc;ate for our students
and ou, miss ion.'' he sa id. "Her work on co mm un ity engage ment
projeas is always insightful and focuse d on moving work
forward . Her partnership with ou r education department to
prepare te;achers of co lor fo r ou, pub lic schools brings both he,
educational experience and he, advocacy skills to bear on this
c,itica l effort."
Gwen Wal, with members of <h e ~.ugsbu,g community
aITer hosting an on-campus e-ve m, A Conversation with
Fi,sc La:ly Gwen Walz and Gay Righcs Advocate Randy
Florke, in Ma.en 20 19 . (Fhoto oy Courmey Pe, ry)
He r prese nce. Pribbenow sa id. is a m ode l for the Augsbu rg
comm un ity . Walz is un like any ot her first lady in state history,
with an offi ce in the C;ap ito l and ;a robust policy portfolio
focused on e duc;at ion. Yet she keeps he, faith in foc us, ;and she's
maintained a "Minn esota nice· that often emerges from the
oven.
"Fou r d;ays before the election. we took a bus around to various stops to thank peop le wh o worked on the campa ign .
I didn't have ;a spe;a king role ;at these stops. but I wanted to convey my perso n;a l thanks ;and hono r their time and
ha rd work," Walz said. "I rolled up my sleeves and c;a lled all my volleyba ll moms ;a nd friends over to t he reside nce.
and we baked 1.400 gingersnaps fro m my g, a ndm othet s recipe and packaged the m with a note fro m me . Sma ll
gestures matte,. and I love sharing a bit of myse lf with ot hers."
Walz said she hopes her persona l ;app roach to leadership shows students they c;an ac hieve profess ion;a l success
while also prioritizing fam;ly and fa ith. Those priorities brought her to Augsburg, ;and th ey will continu e to drive her
work for the university .
"I c;an fa ll into the trap of always wis hing I could do more. give more. or be better. But I w;a ke up each morn ing with
devotions to center myse lf and ack nowledge that I ;a m doing wh;at I can. with what I h;ave. to the best of my ;ab ility.''
Walz said. "It's a privilege to be here now. working with Augsbu rg to he lp e du ca te students to ach ieve their potential
and- together - make a difference in this worl d. "
That is work worth doing, she s;a id. and it's right in front ofus.
Top image: Gwen Walz to /ks with the Augsburg comm unity. January 2013 (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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New data science major gives students an opportunity to make sense out of copious
amounts of complicated information.
by Lisa Renze-Rhodes March 15. 2023 .. Featured Stodes
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Driv ing d irections o n a cell phone. coupons for 25 cent s off pret zels at the grocery store. and w eather alert s w ar ning
of pot entially ser ious st or ms sha re one common thread: dat a.
From where people d rive. to what t hey buy. to w here they live. nea rly ev eryth ing in lif e is connected to the evercollect ed. extremely valuable info rmation that is gathered and int erpret ed t hrough data science.
But beyond giving businesses clues about when a f amily is r eady to replace a refrigerato r or t ake a tr ip t o the Grand
Canyon. dat a science ca n also be used in ways that bring equity and justice t o underserved and marginalized
communities.
It's w ithin that fram ew ork that faculty at Augsburg University
began piecing t ogether w hat is now a full-blow n dat a science
majo r. John Zobitz. professor of mathematics and data science.
said the new majo r- officially a Bachelor of Science in dat a
science launched in f all 2022- is a response to requests by
alumni and students for m ore oppo rtunities t o expa nd o n w hat
they w ere already lea rning in m ath and comput er science
classes. Student s can now minor in dat a science. t oo.
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"When we designed this m ajor. we tried to m ake it as flat as
John Zobitz, professor of m athem atics and data scien ce
possible. relative to prer equisit es." Zob it z said . "Student s ca n
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
st art the m ajor w ith either an introduction t o dat a science
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course. a comput er science course. or a mat hematics course.
That m akes it o pen t o first -year students and has r eally helped attract m ore students."
The m ajo r also draws students w ith a w id e range of int erests. Zobitz said. While data science can help consum ers get
free shipping on their dog's mo nthly food delivery. it ca n also be used to identify societ al challenges and inequities.
And mo re importantly. it can help find solutions t o specific pro blems.
Making a difference
There are m any w ays that dat a science m akes a concr ete differ ence in people"s lives. such as gather ing and
disseminating info rmation about pot ent ially da ngerous w eather. The Federal Em ergency Management Agency
estimat es that since 1997. dat a collect ed by aircraft w ith special storm predicting t echno logy and eq uipm ent have
improved predict io ns about hurr icane st o rm and landfall patt erns by 20%. Those life-saving ear ly warnings give mo re
people more t im e t o t ake necessary st eps to evacuat e o r prepare befo re a st o rm h it s.
And in issues of social justice. dat a ca n com e r ight alo ngside community organizers and other change agents.
prov iding real numbers t o bolst er t heir rationa le.
"A focus on equity. inclusion. and j ustice is built t hroughout the major.• Zobitz said. "How data influences how you
see the w orld- w hether it"s algorithm ic bias. why som e families get picked f or a loan and others don"t, o r in a
pa ndemic. how one"s pre-existing conditions ma ke them more susceptible t o ill ness."
Data t ells great st ories fo r people pay ing attention. he said.
John Zobitz talks with his data scien ce students. (Ph oto by Courtney Perry)
In a class that introduces the id ea of dat a science as a tool f or social j ustice. Zobitz has st udents consid er
transport ation availability in the Twin Cities. Suddenly. hist orical patterns of racism and inj ustice leap int o st ark
moder n-day relief. Redli ning-the discriminat ory pract ice of w it hhold ing fund ing t o purchase homes in so-ca lled "at risk" neighbor hoods that began in the U.S. in the 1930s and d isproportionat ely impacted Black f am ilies-continues t o
affect people. The practice ensured that f amilies of color. m any of who m w ere mov ing int o new areas as part of the
country"s Great Migration. w ere relegat ed t o less desirable neighbo rhoods. As a result. ma ny had t o liv e f ar aw ay
from w ork. decreasing their quality of life because of the sheer amount of tim e it t ook t o get t o and fro m t heir j obs.
Despit e a 1977 f ederal law that w as int ended to quell the practice of r edlining. the harm ful effects linger t oday.
"Student s st art t o translat e what they"re learning into w hat they're living: Zobitz said. "You st art t o hear st o ries like.
' My m om has t o take five buses t o get her w ork do ne.' They talk about their exper iences. and they st art having
conv ersat io ns w ith each other about w hat inform ation is needed t o ma ke educat ed recommendations fo r change."
Student stories
The int ersection of that inf or mat io n is what lured Dij one
Mehmeti "24 to the maj or.
"What drew m e into data science w as the connect io n betw een
dat a and social life." she said. "Applying those t wo t ogether
really made me int er est ed in it - that connection that you see
something. and it helps you d ig int o i t ev en more.
"Learn ing about redlining. crim e. t hen yo u dig into mo re
reasons why that happens ... t hat's w hy it"s so pow erful."
M ehmeti said . "The infor matio n could be considered hidden.
but it's not. It's int erconnected in so many d ifferent ways:
John Zobitz sp eaks with a stu dent during data science
class. (Ph oto by Court n ey Perry)
Students also lear n about the import ance of ethics in dat a collectio n. In that v ein. Ly Xiong '24 hopes t o o ne day
focus her w ork not necessarily o n what the dat a rev eals. but where it"s coming from.
"For m e. t he most important part is t he dat a itself - who is collect ing the dat a." Xio ng said. "The results w ould be
different if I'm collecting data in my community; they w ill trust me. But if I'm collecting dat a in another community.
they m ay not trust m e. So. it goes back t o: how are w e collecting the data?"
A lack of trust can y ield incomplet e dat a. Xio ng sa id. Her long-t er m goal is t o educate people about how t o creat e
dat a sets that better represent an issue and communities affect ed by it .
Those real-world applications are specifically driv ing Ridwan
Abdi '24.
"l"m Som ali." Abdi said . "I w ant to use data science t o do
st orytelli ng. The problems w e hav e in our community are that
so many young adults and t eens are st ruggling w ith drugs. So.
maybe I can use dat a t o educat e and partner w ith universities.
t o creat e someth ing that could help people t ake action."
All three it erations of the majo r are. in m any ways. exactly what
Zob it z ho ped fo r.
Stu d ents listen to Pro fessor John Zobitz's lect1.1re. {Pho to
by Courtney Perry)
"I like t o say that if you put your whole self in there. and br ing
your ow n experiences t o it. when you creat e a visualizatio n and see the power dat a has. people pick up on that. I
think it eliminates some of t hat ·1do n't believe you· that "s bound t o come from data." he said . · connecting it t o people
gives it pow er. instigat es change:
Alumni success
Alumni are responding t o the new major w ith excit em ent- and a little e nvy.
Nhu Putnam '12 graduated w ith ho nors in her double-m ajo r of fi nance and m athematics w ith an em phasis in
proba bility and applied mathem atics. She spends her days in data. doing r isk ana lysis and data analytics fo r WTW. an
insurance advisory firm headquart er ed in Lo ndo n.
"It's good f or Augsburg t o launch these programs. I really liked the d epartment of m athematics. and t his is the right
direction fo r Augsburg t o go," Putnam said. "Math is good. but applied math is w ay m ore pow erful. And dat a science
is one of the m ost pow erful w ays w e ca n use math in an applied way:
She sa id one gr eat example. fro m a corporat e perspect ive. is t hat data science can prov ide the evidence that
persuades a company t o invest in a particular social mov em ent.
"How can you use data science t o help a community? It's about : here's a t opic. what ever might be im portant t o your
community. and here"s what we've lea rned. What ca n you do w ith those r esult s? Can you get companies t o invest in
your project? Dat a science will be the future. If you"re good at it. and passionat e about it. you w ill be able t o effect
real change." Putna m said .
Bjorn Melin "20 agreed. Like Put nam. he double-majored. sp litting his tim e at Augsburg pretty evenly in the
mathematics and comput er science departm ents. Today. he"s a data engineer w ith 3M.
"I t ook the dat a v isualization class. and a big f ocus of it was on the ethics behind it. It's someth ing rve t alked about
w ith all my t eammat es in every prof essional setting I've had.... If som eone doesn"t understand t he ethical
implications behind this. ther e can be serio us repercussions. That's another reason t o support the m ajor. getting
people out t here w ho can com e in w ith a solid baseline of know ing how t o be safe and ethica l." he said.
"I was so excit ed w hen I f ound out they got this m ajo r launched." M elin said. "'I'm hopeful for them t o be able t o t each
the curriculum they've w ant ed t o. and what I'm really excit ed fo r is the •official" m erger bet ween comput er science
and t he m ath departm ent. It's exact ly w hat I w ish I could have taken back w hen I was ther e."
To lea rn m ore about Augsburg"s dat a science major. visit augsburg.edu/mscs.
Top image:John Zobitz teaches his data science class. (Phot o by Courtney Perry)
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1940s
Raymond C. Anderson '49, Minneapolis, age 96. on Sept em ber 18. 2022.
1950s
Garfield Q. Hoversten 'SO, Ed ina, Minnesota, age 96. on January 22. 2023.
Vincent W. Hoversten 'SO. San Rafael. Calif ornia, age 94. on Novem ber 23, 2022.
Ellen M. (Stenberg) Erickson '51 , Blaine, Minnesota, age 94, on July 28, 2022.
Robert D. Oudal '51 , Oro noco. Minnesota, age 93, on October 13. 2022.
Eleanor M. (Baker) Dahle '53, Cathlam et, Washington, age 91 , in December 2022.
Norman F.Johnson '53, Bloomington. Minnesota, age 91. on Oct ober 11, 2022.
Leland E. Evenson '54, M onticello, Minnesota, on December 2, 2022.
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Alan Mathiason '54, St. Pa ul, Minnesota, age 92. on July 16, 2022.
Arvin H. Halvorson '55, St. Paul. Minnesot a, age 91, on July 24, 2022.
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Norman E. Anderson '56, M aple Grove, Minnesot a. age 89, on October 8, 2022.
Robert D. Norby '56, Naples, Flo rida, age 90, o n Sept ember 5, 2022.
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Philip W. Heide '58, Rosemount. Minnesota, age 86, on October 30, 2022.
El I]
June A. (Aaskov) Griffin '59, Falmouth, Maine. age 87, o n August 4, 2022.
Delores M. Grupp Christianson '59. Mahom et, Il linois. age 86, on October 30. 2022.
Luther E. Romo '59. Braham, Minnesota, age 85, on October 1, 2022.
1960s
Donald A. Anderson '60, Nisswa, Minnesota, age 88. on August 12, 2022.
Jon R. Ellefson '60. Rosemount, Minnesota, age 87. on November 18. 2022.
Marjorie A. (Moland) Flom '60, age 84, o n November 22, 2022.
Lawrence E. Gallagher '61 , Crystal, Minnesot a. age 82, o n November 6, 2022.
Leroy C. Holmes '61 . Forest Lake, Minnesot a, age 88, o n November 5, 2022.
Paul R. Grover '62. Belvidere, Illino is, age 83, on December 14, 2022.
William O. Cowan '63, Dassel, Minnesot a. age 84, on June 6. 2022.
Charlotte A. (Gerdeen) Fruehauf '64, Maple Grove, Minnesota, age 80. on Sept ember 4, 2022.
William F. Strom '64, Hast ings. Minnesot a. age 82, on July 19. 2022.
Paul E. Larson '65, Bloomington, Minnesot a, age 79, o n October 3, 2022.
Sylvia M. (Johnson) Strand '65, Sta nchfield, Minnesota, age 79. on Oct ober 22, 2022.
Gary Viken '65, Mound, Minnesota, o n August 17. 2022.
Russell H. Johns '66, M elbourne, Florida, age 84, on December 22, 2022
Martha E. (Weimer) Keaton '66. La Cr osse, Wisconsin, age 78, on July 21 , 2022.
John K. Meland '66, age 78, o n December 13, 2022.
Myrtis M. Ska rich '68, St. Paul, Minnesot a. age 76, o n July 24, 2022.
Patricia Piepenburg '69, Grov e City. Minnesota, age 75, on February 9, 2023.
1970s
Kenneth G. Casperson 70, Buffalo. Minnesota, age 78, on December 16, 2022.
Rosalee D. (Lyng) Vind '71 , age 73. on Oct ober 13, 2022.
Alice M. Johnson '72, Minneapolis, age 72, o n Sept ember 7, 2022.
Lee S. Lind '72, Rosemo unt. Minnesota, age 72, on Nov ember 28, 2022.
Julianne M. (Carlson) Pederson '73, age 71, Stillwat er, Minnesota, on Janua ry 3, 2023.
Laura H. Sutton '77, Hudson, Wisconsin, age 79. on July 10, 2022.
Mary K. (Hill) Walker 77, Northfield. Minnesot a. age 67, on July 16. 2022.
1980s
Gayle J. (Taylor) Stiller '81 , Longmont, Colorado, age 64, o n July 24, 2022.
Dawn C. (Jared) Robinson '85, Rockford, Minnesota, age 60. on Oct ober 19, 2022.
Nicole F. Hertzberg '86, St. Paul. Minnesota, age 61, on October 11, 2022.
Mark P. Limburg '89, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 59, o n November 15. 2022.
1990s
Peter T. Vedell '90. Rochest er, Minnesota, age 54. on November 25, 2022.
Kerry V. Owen '91 , Waldpo rt. Oregon, age 54. on December 24. 2022.
Terence J. Acers '92, Stillwat er, Minnesot a. age 53, on Nov ember 14, 2022.
Beryl J. Deskin '95 MA, Minneapolis, age 76, o n November 7, 2022.
Harry W. Lockrem '97, Roseville, Minnesot a, age 73, o n December 3, 2022.
2000s
James R. Erickson '00, Andover. Minnesota, age 55, on November 9. 2022.
Glen D. Meyer ·os, Byron, Minnesota, age 67, o n December 8, 2022.
Thomas M. Driscoll '07 MBA. Rosemount, Minnesota, age 50, o n Sept em ber 22. 2022.
2010s
Linda K. (Simmons) Berglund '22. Shoreview, Minnesot a, age 68, o n January 1, 2023.
2020s
Alexander C. Baker'26, Lakeville, Minnesot a. age 18, o n January 14, 2023.
Donors, Faculty, Staff, and Board of Regents
Sylvia A. Sabo, Minneapolis, age 85, o n October 26, 2022.
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Auggies work to serve Twin Cit ies residents wit hout homes
by CharlK Hol ey March 15, 2023 • Featured Stories
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In separate efforts to help unhoused people in Minneapolis, two members of the Augsburg
community take a similar approach.
They ask a simple questio n: "What do you need?"
Then, they w ork to provide services based o n people's self-id ent ified necessities.
"It's about meeting people where they're at." said Katie Clark '10 MAN. '14 DNP, associate
professor of nursing and execut ive d irector of Augsburg Health Commons. which provid es
free supplies and nurse consultations to anyone in need. Many peop le who access these
Katie Clark, associate
professor of nursing
and executive d ir ector
services are unhoused o r exper iencing housing insecurity.
"Oftentimes. health ca re providers are not trusted by people living on the st reet who feel like
they mig ht be st ereotyped or j udged when they enter a facility." Clark sa id . ·w e need to ask
people what their experiences are, what they deem necessary, and why t hey aren't able to
of Augsburg Health
Commons (Photo by
Courtney Perry!
get what they need:
Emily Bastian '07 MSW w orks wit h a similar philosophy- she led the creation of an entire
homeless shelter based on asking people about their specific needs. Aviva Village, wh ich
opened in December 2020, has received widespr ead attention because of its unique concept.
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Bastian. who is t he nonprofit Aviva's vice president of ending homelessness. said she and her
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tea m w ent to an encampment in a Minneapolis par k. "We asked them. what would it take for
them to come indoors? And many of the things that they sa id are things t hat w e are able to
put into practice at Avivo Village."
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Emi ly Bastian '07 MSW
(Courtesy photo!
Creating a shelter
Unlike most traditional ho meless shelt ers, Avivo Village lets
residents come and go as t hey please. Resid ents are not
separated by gender; they ca n have pets. and they can drink
legally. All these th ings are allow ed in response to Bastian's
conversatio ns with people living outdoors.
·we want people to know that we care about them and that
we're not shaming them for the choices that they're maki ng.
because t hey are t he ones living their life, not
us: Bastian said .
Avivo Village is made up of 100 tiny homes meant to be
The Avivo Village team (Courtesy photo)
tempora ry housing as residents w ork to find a mor e permanent
place to live. So fa r, mo re than 11 O people have successfully
moved on from Avivo Village into perma nent housing.
In additio n to temporary shelter. Aviva provides tho rough case
ma nagement to help people find housing. This includes services
aimed at addressing some of t he root causes of homelessness.
Avivo offers transitional recovery housing, which houses people
who are enrolled in the organization's chemical dependency
treatment program . Avivo also provides mental health services.
·case management supports people through all the bumps in
the road as t hey're lea rning to be a rent er o r as they're
......-.,,.~--
exper iencing some other trauma or barriers," Bastian said,
"because we truly, truly. truly believ e that everyone deserves
Avivo workers visit an encampm ent. (Courtesy photo)
housing and everyone is housable:
A range of services
While Hea lt h Commons does not provide housing. it offers ma ny services to support unhoused people. Like Bastian.
Clark wor ks to create a place wher e people feel accepted and safe wh ile asking for help.
Sometimes. people simply ha ng out at the Hea lth Commo ns locatio n in downtown Minnea polis' Cent ral Lutheran
Church.
"If you're experiencing ho melessness. oftentimes you can't go places and hang out without showing proof of why you
need to be ther e or without being harassed," Clark said. •so. sometimes peop le need a place where they can j ust sit
down. take their shoes off. and be part of what's happening."[/vc_column_text ][/vc_column][/vc_row)
a saf e space to
Graduate nursing student Claudia
Heal:h Commo ns is
Heal t h Commons v i sitors pick up
Rubio-Mendoz.a d istributes d iapers at
m eet and sp end t im e wi t h frien ds .
donated item s . {Photo by Courtney
H eal th Commons. (Photo by Courtney
(Photo by Cou rtney Perry)
Perry)
Perry)
The free supplies offered at Hea lth Commo ns include socks, hygiene products. and d iapers. Visito rs can meet
with Augsburg nursing students for basic healt h services such as having their blood pressure checked o r asking
questio ns about medical condit io ns.
"We're not providing clinical care or d iagnosing. but more just bridging t he gap bet ween meeting peop le where
they are and connecting them with services if they d eem it necessa ry." Clar k said .
A place to learn
Health Commo ns is not o nly a place where people ca n go to learn about
health ca re-it's also a place where any Augsburg student can learn about
serving a wide range of needs. including the needs of unhoused people.
More t han 1.600 students have volunteered at Health Com mons in the 30
y ears that it's been o pen.
"Health care providers often begin to have biases o r might act ually
stereotype people who are unhoused. So, Healt h Commons is r eally a first
step for nursing. physician assistant, or other students to unpack those
moments and cha llenge biases: Clark said .
"The complexities of peoples' circumst ances are better understood as
students bu ild relationships with people living on the st reet s," she said.
"And it's facult y-led. Students say having those real-life experiences has
been v ery meaningful, especially when t hey see faculty model it as well."
Amy Nelson, assistan t pr ofessor of
nursing, helps a Healt h Commons
visitor with a hand inj ury. {Photo by
Clark encourages students to pract ice compassio n in all their interactions
with people who visit Health Commons. She has ev en talked with some
Courtney Perry!
student vo lunteers who have experienced ho melessness t hemselves. "They
often share t hat they fi nd value in the approaches here, that shared
community." she said .
As a former Augsburg student. Bastian sa id her educatio n in the university's social w ork program informs the
w or k that she does today.
"(One) thing that Augsburg really d rilled into my head, and the master's of social w ork program very much so. is
the conversation around privilege, t he willingness to do that to ugh w ork personally to recognize what my own
privileges are, how that impacts how I see the world and how the w orld sees me, and in tur n my responsibil ity
based on that." she sa id .
Katherine Martin, assistan t professor of nursing (left), and Ph ysician's Assistan t Program Director Vanessa Bester
{m iddle) help visitors with foot care at Healt h Commons. {Photo by Courtney Perry)
Getting involved
Both Clar k and Bastian shared w ays that people ca n get involved in serving t he Twin Cities' unhoused
population.
Anyone is w elcome to volunteer at the Health Commons Cent ral Lut heran Church locatio n. but prio rit y is given
to Augsburg students. Vo lunteers can sign up o n the Health Commons w ebsite.
Health Commo ns also takes mo neta ry d onations on line. To do nate supplies. contact Clark at
clarkk@fillgsburg.edu.
Information about volunteering wit h o r donating to Avivo ca n be found on the organization's w ebsite.
"If people don't feel comfortable or don't know what to do, donating is a good w ay to st art " Bast ian said. •1
w ould also say that volunteer ing somewhere you can have interact ions that feel at a safe level for what yo u're
ready for is also a great w ay to get involved and to help."
Top image: Katie Clark and graduate nursing student Claudio Rubio-Mendoza help Health Commons visitors p ick out
free items that th ey need. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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Au~burg leads with direct admissions
In Memoriam, Winter 2022- 23
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AUGSBURG LEADS WITH DIRECT ADMISSIONS
by Farrisr
March 15, 2023
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Augsburg's w ork at the forefront of a movement to tr ansfo rm
college admissions has ga rnered national media attention .
l ast fall, the un iversity moved to a "direct admissions" approach
fo r undergraduate enrollment. In this mod el, known as
Augsburg Applies to You, students who meet a certain GPA
thresho ld are automatica lly offered admission. Most students
can complete the streamlined application fo rm in less than 10
minutes.
Ninety-nine percent of students offer ed d irect admissio n w ould
The admissions office at Augsburg University {Photo by
have been admitted under Augsburg's previous criteria. Now,
Courtney Perry)
they ca n move through t he process faster and take advantage
of d eeper pre-enrollment connectio ns.
Why flip the scr ipt? A simpler process benefits both st udents and staff. Under d irect admissions, the traditiona l roles
of applicant and gatekeeper are intentionally reversed to change the power dynamics in enrollment ma nagement.
In an interview with Inside Higher Ed, Robert Gould, vice presid ent for st rategic enro llment management sa id t hat
direct ad missions is "a d ream come t rue• for admissions staff, whose attention has shifted from reviewing paperwork
to connecting with students about Augsburg and what they hope to accomplish. "Those are the discussio ns that
motivated many of them to become admissions counselors'' in the first place, he said .
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Drawn by its promise to reduce barriers and promote equit y, many colleges and universities are beginning to explo re
direct ad missions through pilot programs. Augsburg is participating in tw o such pilots through the Commo n
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Application and the state of Minnesota.
But as reported by Inside Higher Ed, Augsburg's own streamlined application shows that the university "isn't w aiting"
on pilot progra ms to fully embrace the new model. In Nov ember, the Wall Street Journal noted t hat Augsburg's mov e
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toward a radically simpler process contrasts with ot her inst itutions whose more complex applications may undercut
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the goal of d irect admissions.
Augsburg's enrollment management divisio n has been wo rking to reduce barriers for sev era l y ears. Recent changes
to simplify the applicat io n- including test-free admissio ns, sho rt-answ er essays, and o ptional letters of
recommendation- hav e accompanied Augsburg's largest and most d iver se fi rst-year classes in history.
Top image: Augsburg students on campus (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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Au~burg named top_P.roducer of Fulbright Scholars
Meeting the needs
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by CharlK Hal ey March 15, 2023 • Around the Quad
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Augsburg University has aga in been named a Fulbright Top-Producing Inst itution fo r U.S. Scholars.
This designation w as announced by the U.S. Department of St at e's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs o n
February 10. It recognizes the colleges and universities that had the hig hest number of applica nt s select ed for the
2022-23 Fu lbright U.S. Scholar Program.
Each y ear, this elit e program select s approximat ely 900 facult y members or administrat ors fro m across the country
t o lecture. conduct research, or pursu e short - o r long-t erm professio nal proj ects abroad.
In the 2022- 23 academic year. Augsburg faculty members George Oierberger, Thomas '72 and Karen How e
endow ed professor for ent repreneurship, and Joseph Erickson, professor of education, w ere named Fu lbright
Scho lars. Dierberger's Fulbright took h im t o Letterkenny, Ireland, while Erickson is spend ing the spring in Lj ubljana.
Slovenia.
"The fact that w e hav e so many Augsburg professors w ho hav e been select ed t o participat e in t he program speaks t o
the q uality of our faculty and the support of the ad minist ration," said Dier berger, who serves as one of Augsburg's
faculty liaisons for Fulbright Scholars.
Augsburg has also been named a toR,.i;iroducer of Fulbright students am ong U.S master's institut ions, w ith three
student s receiving scholarships t o t each English abroad in 2021-22.
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"It is such a great achievement bot h faculty and student Fulbright awards, and it should be celebrat ed," sa id John
Zobitz, professor of mathematics and dat a science. Zobit z serves as Augsburg's other faculty liaison for Fu lbright
Scholars and w as a Fu lbright Scho lar him self in 2021.
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The Fulbright Program has been a cornerstone of int ernational education and cultural exchange for the Unit ed St at es
since 1946. The purpose of the program is t o inspire, innovat e. and contribut e to fi nding solutions for commun it ies
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and the w orld .
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Top image: The Quad at Augsburg's campus (photo by Courtney Perry)
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW-MULTIPLY
YOUR MIND BY GIVING IT AWAY: SHARING THE
GIFT OF VOCATION
by Paul C. Pribbenow Se12tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad. President's Letter
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW-MULTIPLY
YOUR MIND BY GIVING IT AWAY: SHARING THE
GIFT OF VOCATION
by Paul C. Pribbenow Se12tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad. President's Letter
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A few years back. I happened upo n the w ork of Mark Fed erma n.
a Canad ian scho lar whose writings o n innovation include th is
provocative suggestion: "Multiply your mind by giving it
away:
And Fed erman mea ns exactly what he says: be genero us. be
charitable. give instead of always taking. Because when you are
generous with your mind- with your knowledge and educatio n
and other gifts-you help to create organizations.
neighbo rhoods. agencies. churches. and schools t hat are
marked not by the scarcity of t he w orld. but by the abundance
of what is possible.
I w as thinking about Federman's challenge while serving on a
pa nel about how Lutheran colleges and universities might apply
•-~
lessons lea rned about vocation fro m w ork with o ur
D
T 1
r
~~!~~~o-:.J
undergraduate students to other impo rtant constituencies. The
following three themes emerged fro m o ur conversatio n:
v_.,
On our campuses, beyond
undergraduates
GREAT RETURNS AD
'
ST . 186 9
- - - """"---
President Paul Pribbenow (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Many coll eges and universities hav e g raduate progr ams in
professio nal disciplines like nursing. ed ucatio n. and social w ork.
wher e the concept of vocatio n can play an important role in shaping a professio nal career and life. At Augsburg. w e
created V-Portfolio. an online vocat io n portfolio for undergrad uate and graduate students to share artifacts from
their personal. academic. and professional j ourneys. V-Portfolio has prov ed a helpful tool for students to narrate the
many facets of a vocationa l journey. In addition to academ ic w ork. students share experiences as parents. as citizens.
as neighbo rs. and as professionals-creating that many-layered story of a life.
Across the vocational lifespan
Other important constituencies for our ca mpuses include prospective students and alumni. For exa mple. Augsburg
has hosted an annual Youth Theology Institute for high school students. Over the summer. these student learning
communities explo re pressing issues in the wo rld through a theological lens.
Alumni are another importa nt audience for our vocation lessons. At Augsburg. w e organized the Center ed life Series.
led by Jack Fortin. whose book. "The Centered life." has inspired many of us in our own vocatio nal w ork. Fortin
curates a series of sessio ns each semester (in person before the COVID-19 pandemic. but even mo re well-attended
online during the pandemic) that address a particular vocational theme. For example. o ne ser ies focused on the
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vocation of caregiving fo r a spouse with memory loss; another shared the concept of interrogat ing our institutiona l
saga. the w ork of appreciation and accountability for what German theologian and pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer ca lled
our histo rical legacy.
Accompanying our faith communities
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We also have shared our vocat io n lessons with faith commun ities. in some w ays coming full circle to the traditions
that hav e given us the gift of vocat io n. Many of those fa ith communities are now seeking new ways to support the
vocational j ourneys of their members.
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The w ork of t he Riverside Innovation Hub. an initiative of Augsburg's Christensen Center for Vocation. comes
alo ngside local congregatio ns seeking to become public churches. A public church is committ ed to place-based
vocational discernment in the public square for the common good. In other w ords. the partner churches are pursuing
God's call for them to be in relationship with their neighborhoods in w ays that bring flourish ing and life. The Riverside
Innovation Hub explo res how the many resources of a college or university ca n be brought to bear in helping faith
communities be more responsive to the vocatio nal pursuits of their members. For example. leaders found that many
young people ca re deeply about environmental issues and don·t feel that their faith communities offer them
resources to pursue those commitments. The innovation hub brings scientists and artists and writers and
theologians fro m t he Augsburg faculty into conv ersat io n with fait h communities to help expand their understanding
of how they might accompany those young people in their passions for God's creation.
Alumni living out their vocations
Multiply your mind by giving it away. In this issue of Augsburg Now. you'll find stories of Augsburg graduates do ing
j ust that. Keenan Jones '13 is d riv en to emgow er and educate Black boys, who fall beh ind in every category the
United States uses to determine academic success and w ellness. After 13 years in the classroom. he started a
nonprofit for Black boys in grades 5-12 that focuses on literacy. empow erment. social justice. and social/emotional
healt h. Other Auggies' t ime and talents are focused on environm enta l justice: M aria Belen Power ·07 is an advocate
and o rganizer for Green Roots. an o rganization in her Boston-a rea suburb of Chelsea. Massachusetts. and w as
recently named to the White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council. Elan Quezada Hoffman '22 pursues his
calli ng thro ugh w ork as an environmental inspector for the City of Minneapolis.
We're fi nding new ways to share the gift of vocation and those lessons w e have learned with our undergraduate
students with others at all stages of life. We all are enriched by the joy of lives fa ithfully led.
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CamP.uS Welcomes Executive Director of Interfaith.
Celebrates the Life of Fuad EI-Hibri
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CAMPUS WELCOMES EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF
INTERFAITH, CELEBRATES THE LIFE OF FUAD ELHIBRI
by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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Najeeba Syeed joined Augsburg as the inaugural EI-Hibr i
endow ed cha ir and executive d irect or of Int erfaith at Augsburg
in ea rly August . Syeed is an aw ard-w inning educator and expert
practi tio ner in the fields of confl ict resolutio n, mediation, and
int erfaith studies. Previously, she held faculty positions at
Claremont School of Theology, St arr King School for the
Ministry. and Chicago Theological Seminary, as w ell as execut iv e
leadership roles at the West ern Justice Center Foundation and
the Asian Pacific American Disput e Resolution Center.
In this new position. Sy eed will serve as a nationa l ambassador
for the int erfaith movement and w ill partner w ith ca mpus
leaders as a change agent for int er religious lear ning and living.
Her appointment fuels one of the goals of the Augsburg150
strat egic plan: t o advance the public purposes of an Augsburg
ed ucatio n by enhancing int erfaith leadership o n campus and
nationa lly. Interfaith at Augsburg: An Institute to Promot e
Interfaith Lear ning and Leadership was est ablished in 201 9 t o
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further the belief that r eligious diversity can be a constr uctive
force for the common good .
El·Hibri endowed chair and executive director of lnterfarth
at Augsburg, Najeeba Syeed. {Courtesy photo)
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In 2021, a significant gift from Fuad and Nan~ El•Hibri allowed
for the creation of the EI-Hibri endow ed chair and executive
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directorship for the institute. Fuad EI-Hibri d ied in Agr il 2022
after a battle w it h pancreatic cancer. A longtime friend of the
universit y. he made a tremendous mark o n Augsburg during the
past two decades.
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The EI-Hibris lea rned of Augsburg in t he ea rly 2000s, when their
son. Boa rd of Regents member Karim El•Hibri '06, participat ed
in the St egUP® Co llegiat e 12rogram. They served as t he
inaugural co-chairs of Augsburg's Presid ent's Council and,
Fuad and Nancy EI-Hibri. {Courtesy photo)
among other generous gifts t o the university, annually
sponsored lftar d inners for the campus during Ramadan.
President Paul Pribbenow r eflect ed o n the family's scope and sign ificance: "Fuad and h is family have been generous
w ith their time, w isdom, and gifts to support me and our community as we advance Augsburg's deep commit ment s
to collegiat e recovery. interfaith dialogue. and student success. Fuad was a role model for our student s as he
combined his faith, his business acumen. and his love for his family in all that he pursued. I will miss h im and know
that his legacy w ill live on at Augsburg and beyo nd ."
A business leader and ph ilanthropist Fuad w as the founder and executiv e chair man of Emergent BioSolutions
Corporatio n. chairman of East West Resources, and chairman of Aptevo Therapeutics. He also served as the founding
chairman of the EI-Hibri Foundat io n. which the family founded in 2001 to hono r Fuad's father . Faud said he w as
inspired by the univ ersal values of Islam and supported the foundation in its visio n of build ing an inclusiv e society
w her e everyone ca n t hrive in a diverse and inclusiv e world. He is survived by his w ife. Nancy; son. Kar im; daught ers.
Yusra and Faiza; and three grandch ildren.
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Notes from President Pribbenow- MultipJv. Your Mind b.v.
Giving It Awav.; Sharing the Gift of Vocation
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1960-69
1965
Marcia Schne ider '65 m et w it h Prof essor Emerit3 Kathryn
Swanson and her hus band . Jack, wh il e they were in Arizona .
M3rci3 was a part of a trip to Tha il3nd and Ca mbod ia that the
Swansons led in 2017.
1966
David Johnson '66, wh o received a doctorate in the histo,y of
religion from the Un iversity of low3, retu rn ed from te3ching as 3
vi sit ing prof ess or in Ch ina. His books include "West ern Thought
for Asian Rea ders" and " Ind ian Thought Bet wee n Tr3dit ion and
Marcia Schneider '65, Prolessor Cmerica Kathryn
Swanson, and her husband, Jack, in .¼izona. (Co un:esy
photo)
the Cultur e of Technology."
1967
Denn is M iller '67, prof esso r em erit us of food science and nutrit ion at Co rn ell Un iversity. i s one of th e part icipant s in
a r ese;arch proj ect t o t ransform nut r it i on and w;ate r use i n the poultry indu st ry t o improve its environmental impact
and enh;ance hum;an he;a lth . Th e U.S . Depa rtm en t of Ag,i cult ure fund ed t he resear ch through a $9 .95 m i llion gran t,
one of the largest grants ever award ed by t he USDA.
Thad Dan iel son '67 h;as r et ired from his boat shop and now te;aches a t wo-week cl;ass, The Fundam enta ls of
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Boat bu ildi ng, at t he Woo den Boat Schoo l i n Brookli n. Mai ne. He also wrote t he book, "An Int rodu ction t o Wood en
Boat Building: Alw ays M ore t o Le;arn."
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1969
Janis Mathison '69 was indu ct ed int o the At hlet ic H;a ll of Fam e at Shaw;a no Commun ity High School in Shaw;a no,
Wisc onsin . The honor rec ognizes her w ork as a coach and pioneer of w om en's ;at hl et ics at th e sc hool.
1970-79
1972
After 26 year s, Robert Engelson '72 has reti red from his r ole as a professor in th e Col lege of Arts and Sci ences at th e
Univer sity of Arizona Global Campus.
1973
She ldon Anderson 73 published a m emoi r, "Jum p Shooti ng to a Higher Deg, ee." whi ch chronicles his basketbal l
car eer in Mi nnea polis. West Ge rm any. and Poland, wh ere he did r esea rch fo r hi s doctorate.
1979
With more th;an 500 w ins in hi s prep coac hing ca ree r, Dougl as Greseth '79 h;as been nam ed boys basketbal l he;ad
coach ;at Bisho p M cL;a ugh lin Ca th olic High School in Spring Hil l, Fl or ida.
1980-89
1983
In November 2021, Luverne Seifert '83 directed a m elod,am;a, "The L;ast Tr;a in t o Wi nn ipeg." fo r t he Lyric Center for
the Arts in Vi rginia. Minnesota. The Arrowhead Regional Arts Co un cil supported t he pl ay w it h Rur;a l ;a nd Commun ity
Art Pr oj ect gr;ant fund ing .
Brian Hoffman '83 . associat e professor of anthrop ology at H;a m line University in St. Paul, M inn es ota, w as f eat ured in
an M PR st ory about th e exca v;ati ons he leads on ca m pus- m ost recent ly. th e r em ai ns of ;a St P;au l home nea r th e
corn er of Hew itt Avenu e and P;asca l St reet .
1984
Anne Mari e Erickson '84 has cr eat ed ;a website wit h ex ce, gts from essay.a she's written abou t livi ng wit h her
husband's 17 yea rs of dem entia.
1985
Jean Tay lor '85 w as na m ed t he CEO of Afll eric;a n Public M ed ia Group. th e paren t company of M inn esot a Publi c
Rad io, in 2021.
1988
Da llas M ill er '88 was indu ct ed into the At hlet ic Hall of Fam e for playing hockey ;at Kenn edy High Sch ool in
Bl oomi ngt on, Mi nn esot;a . Mi ller was indu ct ed int o Augsburg Univer sity's H;a ll of Fam e for his awar d-winn ing hockey
car eef.
1990-99
1994
M ichelle Steever '94 rece ived th e Outst and ing Librar ian Award from t he Rh ode Island Library Associ;at ion in 202 1.
She is t he school library m ed ia spec ialist for t he J;a m est own Sc hool Distr ict in Rh ode Island .
Jude II Anderson '94 ret ir ed after l eadi ng the Al liance of Auto Service Pr oviders-MN for near ly 26 yea rs.
1998
Rollo,s. a lawn ga m e by Matthew Butler '98, was fe;at ured i n th e Rol ling St on e article "Fro m Grill s t o Boombox
Speakers, These Are t he Pr odu cts We'r e Using L;abo r D;ay Weekend" (Se pte m ber 2, 202 1).
1999
Ka le Henry '99 was nam ed th e he;ad coac h of t he Forest Lake High School basebal l program. He is a previous wi nn er
of t he Mi nn esot;a St at e High School Base ball Coaches Assoc iat ion's Rob Forn;asiere Assista nt Co;ach oft he Ye;ar Award .
2000-09
2000
The Christ ian Cent ury i nte rvi ew ed Ross Murray '00, '09 MBA about his found ing of th e Nam ing Project . an ELCAbased camp for LGBTQ youth. Murray wrote t he book "M ade, Kn own, Loved: Devel opi ng LGBT-lnclu sive Yout h
M inist ry," and he is th e di rect or of news and fa it h i nit iat ives fo r t he Gay & Lesbian Al liance Ag;a inst Defa m;ati on
(GlADD).
Nathan Budde '00 completed the Iron m an Wisconsi n in 202 1. He f inished 77th out of r oughly 1,8 00 compet it ors ;and
seventh amon g t he 180 peo pl e in his age bracket .
2003
Kar i Luci n '03 has ret urned to The Globe newspaper in Wort hingto n. Minnesota. as commun ity ed it or. She w as
previously t he Globe's educ;at ion reporter and online content coo rd inat or.
Keneesh i a Williams '03 , MD , g;ave a TEDx t alk. "The Pro sperit y of Invest m en t A Journ ey From Murder Wit ness t o
T, aum;a Surgeon ." th;at uses he, life ex perience ;and m edi ca l expertise t o offer non-divi sive, proven solutions t o gun
vi ol ence in Am eri ca . Wil liam s is an assist an t professor of surgery ;at Emory Un iversit y in Atl;anta and d irect o, of
m ed ic;a l student ed ucat ion at Grady Memorial Hospital.
2005
Eddie Frizell 'OS MA L w as nom inated by Pres ident Joe Biden ;and con f irmed by t he U.S. Senat e ;as U.S. Mar sh;a l for
the District of M inn esot a. He pr evi ously served ;as chief of police for t he M et ro Tr;ansit Police Departm ent in
M inneapolis and St. Paul.
Christe Singleton '07 MBA was nam ed vice pres ident of Mi nn esot;a Gas at Center Point Energy. Minnesota's l;a rgest
natura l gas ut i lity .
2007
Travis Paul '07 MBA is t he regi on;a l ch;a ir of adm inist rat ion for Mayo Clinic He;a lth System i n Southw est M innesot a.
P;au l h;as 26 yea rs of prog, essive hea lt h c;are exper ience at M ayo Cli nic, includ ing 18 year s i n le;ade, ship rol es and
numerous ye;ars as ;a front-line nu rse.
Emily Bast ian '07 MSW, Aviva's vi ce presi dent of en ding homelessness, w as in terviewed by the Sta , T, ibune about
A vivo Vi llage in Mi nn ea polis. an indoor group ing of t iny houses offering s;af ety. com fo rt. and dignit y to 100 r esi dents.
2008
Anthony V ici no ' 08 is a found ing partner of lnvictus Ca pit al and co-;a uthor of "Passive Investing M;ade Simp le."
Nicholas Zeimet ' 08 MSW i s an assi st;ant professor of soci;a l work at Bethel Universit y in Arden Hills. Minnesota . He
has served ;as t he Mi nn esot;a Chapt er Pres ident of Syrian Am eri ca n Medical Society and h;as l ed a m en t al healt h
m iss ion t o Leba non and Jordan. He hol ds a volunt ee r posit ion w ith Mt. Sinai's Human Righ t s Pr ogram as a remot e
m ental hea lt h eval u;ator for th ose seeking ;asylu m o, ot her immigrat ion m att er s.
M ichael Henr ichsen '08 is l ead vocalist and rhythm gu itar pl;ayer for '80s cove r band Nile Wave, wh ich w as recently
f e;atured i n an ;article in 425 Magaz ine. The band has produ ce d a live album and h;as perform ed wit h Bil ly Idol three
t im es .
Katherine La Grave '08, digital fe;at ures ed it or fo r AFAR M ed ia, was named Lowell Thom;as Travel Journalist of t he
Year by th e Society of Americ;an Travel Writ ers in 2021.
Nicol e Richards '08, a certified pub lic account ant. w;as prom oted t o principal at Boeckerm ann , Graf strom & Mayer in
Bl oomi ngt on, Mi nn esot;a .
Dianna Rob inson '08 w;as promot ed t o m arket pres ident and director of private banki ng, communit y m ar kets at
Assoc iat ed Bank in Rochest ef. Minn es ota.
M ichael Graber '08 MBA has been ;appo inted pres ident and CEO of Toyo Ti re U.S.A. Corp.
2010-11
2011
Kyle Potswa l d ' 11 w as pro m ote d to vi ce president of commerci;a l l end ing ;at the Cit izens Ba nk Minn es ota L;akevi lle
branch .
Ell e Thoni '11 wrote t he mu si c;a l, " Queen B: A New Work of Hon eyb ee Fut ur ism." which t oured Mi nnesota farms ;and
green spaces in August 202 1.
2012
Emily Nicho ls '1 2 i s ge neral m anager of th e Ki m pt on Alt on Hotel in Sa n Franci sco's iconic Fisherman's Wh;ati
neighborh ood.
2013
As execu t ive di rect or ;and founder of M N Renewabl e Now, Kr istel Porter '1 3 i s working toward th e inst;a llati on of
solar syst ems in North M inn ea polis, among other envi ron m ental just ice projects.
2013 and 2019
Da ley Knochar Farr '13 ;and Maxim illian Bray '19 m arri ed Jun e
11. 2021, in New Or lean s. Connor Krenik '1 3, Kacie Lucchin i
Butcher ' 13. Kevi n Butcher '13, Morgan Thompson '09, and
Gabr ielle M ill er '09 wer e i n attenda nce.
2016
Rayna Lindsey '16 ;ap pears in season 9 of "Bel ow Deck" on
Br;avo.
Li sa Archer ' 16 MAN has been named ch ief nursing a/fleer fo r
Da ley Knochar Farr '1 3 and Max Bray '19 on t heir
we:lding day. (Courtesy pho:o)
M;ayo Clini c Hea lt h Syst em in Southwest Wi sconsin.
2019
Jeffrey Bol dt '19 MFA published hi s debut novel, " Blue L;ake." i n M;arch 2022 . Bol dt drew from his l egal and
environment al backg,ound t o writ e t he Wisconsi n-b ased thrill er.
2020s
2020
Ali son Uselman '20 w on the Wi sconsin Academy of Sci ence, Arts & Letters' 2021 Wisconsi n Peop le & lde;as Fiction
Contest for he, short st ory. "Honor Cord ."
2021
Isaa c Tade '21 st arted dem;a l scho ol at t he Univer sity of M inn esot a, wh er e he received t he Xhonga Scholar sh ip and a
N;at ion;a l Hea lth Service Corps Schol;arshi p.
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Environ mental act ivism takes many forms for Auggie advocates
by Lisa Renze-Rhodes
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Wildfi res raging across hundreds of t housands of acres cause devastating environmental and property damage. No
matter if someone is watching from the next town or fro m thousands of miles away. the destructio n is unmist akable,
unden iable, and gut-wrenching. Floods. fires, oil spills. and extreme heat grab head lines and attention- it's easy to
see the damage, to see the victims, to rally neighbo rs and st rangers ali ke for help.
But what happens when the threat isn't as o bvious? When there
aren't ma ny, if any, headlines? When strangers don't
understand, let alo ne lend support for the cause?
For Auggies w orking in environmental activism fields, the
challenges and w ork take o n many forms.
M aria Belen Power '07 is an advocate and orga nizer for
Green Roots, an enviro nmental j ust ice o rganization in her
Boston-a rea suburb of Chelsea, Massachusetts. Belen Pow er's
days are fi lled with educating fellow commun ity members. That
includes helping them questio n and hold accountable elected
leaders and other officials.
"It's very much a story w e see playing out all ov er the country;
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said Belen Power. "Enviro nmental justice is about protecting the
most vulnerable resid ents ... it's crucial to protect the
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communities where Black and brown and low -income residents
live.
"There's a direct correlatio n betw een access to g reen space and
Maria Beien Power '07 associate executive d irector at
blue space (sky), and hea lth care and q uality of life.•
Green Roois. (Ph oto courtesy o f Jesse Burke)
A member of the White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council. Belen Pow er said climate and environmental
injustices hav e been occurring in the United States · ever since Europeans arriv ed on this land ." But as a modern
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movement, environmental justice has been present and recognized in some communities much longer than in
ot hers.
The Environmental Prot ect ion Agency notes that one of t he first moder n actio ns of the movement began in Memphis,
Tennessee. with t he Memphis Sa nitation Strike in 1968. Calls fo r fair pay and better w orking cond it io ns for the city's
w aste w orkers, most of whom were Black, marked o ne of the first times people of colo r fo rmally o rganized to oppose
w orkplace inequalities.
But the issue extends w ell beyo nd the w orkplace. Redlining.
which is the discriminato ry. government-sa nctio ned practice of
refusing mortgages or insura nce to home buyers in or near
African-Amer ican neighborhoods, occurred across the country
from the m id -1930s until it w as outlaw ed with the 1968 Fair
Ho using Act . Despite t he cha nge in the law, the damage w as
already done and remains an issue today, Belen Pow er said.
One of the more infamous examples of a public health
emergency was the water crisis in Flint Michiga n. There, starting
over the pasc 20 years, GreenRoots has restored more
in 2014 and stretching more than five y ears, Flint residents-
than two acres of urban salt marsh; created new parks;
and advocated for and overseen the development of
w aterfron t w alkways, educational signage, and p ub lic
access co th e w ater's ed ge. (Courtesy p ho to)
nearly 60 percent of whom were Black- couldn't care for their
pets. bathe. drink. or cook with the w ater flowing from faucets.
It w as contaminated with lead and possibly Legionella bacteria.
"The fact that there w as intentional misma nagement of public
w ater resources and that it had to do w ith certa in companies saving money, and people living in communities
drinking w ater that w as completely polluted, makes it o ne of the most prominent environmental j ust ice issues: she
said.
Problems facing t he Chelsea, Massachusetts. area wher e Belen Pow er and her neighbors wo rk and live include things
like the fight she and her o rganization have been invo lved in for six y ears and counting about where an electr ical
substation will be located. Other work includes continuing the organization's response to COVID-19, creating urban
ga rdens. and other long-term legislative issues like fighting fo r the right to secure energy from more economical
sources. These and other environmental j ustice issues are not unique to Chelsea; they are the unsung bat tles being
w aged across the nat ion.
Belen Power cred its her undergrad exper iences. and living in
the Twin Cit ies. for how she landed at GreenRoots.
"The education that I got at Augsburg r eally shaped who I am
and what I do," Belen Power said. "My political awareness was
f™tR ~~
shaped by my professors and the community- Augsburg has a
special place in my heart:
\(\ CPP1 .
The w ork is ha rd, and success looks different to t hose who are
""
in the midd le of changing how entire cultures and generations
consid er long-held beliefs.
5
• -
.orn Gordon!
GreenRoois actively organizes protests of power plants
"There are some really crappy days. r ea lly crappy weeks. but you
think about the victories." Belen Pow er said . "You j ust stay
that are detrim ental to their neighborhoods in
M assach usetts. Th ey successfully th w arted th e pr op osal
of a diesel power p lan t on the banks o f th e Chelsea Creek
in 2006. (Courtesy photo)
focused every day, build ing up power and event ually sh ifting
that pow er.
"Justice is not really w on; ev ery generation has to fight for it . We ca n have victories, and yet t hose victories hav e to be
re-w on with every generation," Belen Pow er said. "My kids are an amazing inspiratio n for me. I hope we are w ork ing
toward a society they can build on and make better."
Consider the why
An ey e toward future generatio ns motivates Elan Quezada
Hoffman '22, an environmental inspector for t he City of
Minneapolis.
Even though Hoffman is one of t he y oungest and new est in the
climate crisis fight, h is focus is on who and what is to come.
"The beginnings of the call to urgency for the climate w as
something I started learning about in high school. The urgency
Etan Quezada l-loffman '22 (back row, second from r ight)
and Augsburg's Environm ental Stewardship Committee.
w as communicated to me clearly, and I thought there's no point
(Courtesy photo)
in doing anything else: Hoffman said. "If someone doesn't take
responsibilit y for this and do the w ork that has to be done,
w e're all going to be lost ."
To improve the urban landscape, Hoffman sa id he and his colleagues respond to any pollution or sim ilar issues that
might arise- anything fro m no ise pollution, to water qua lit y testing, to erosion control. His agency also helps protect
the environment with tree distributio n and pollinator pro motion efforts.
But he said much of what he focuses o n is education. at his day
job and through the volunteer w ork he continues to do with
groups like Augsburg's Enviro nmental Stewardship Committee.
"Climate educat io n is a massiv e part of addressing the climate
crisis," Hoffma n said . "If you have a population of people who
don't care. noth ing will change."
How t hat education is offer ed, Hoffman said. is an importa nt
piece to sustainable action.
Members of Augsburg's Environmental Stewardship
Committee in their community garden plot outside the
Hagfors Cen ter. (Photo by Rebecca Stacer )
"When you hav e a one-on-one conversation wit h someone.
you're creating a relatio nship," he said . "Dialogue is happening
and t he message hits home. As environmentalists, w e need to
do a better jo b of getting into communities- not just preaching (through pamphlets and PSAs)- but having an actua l
conv ersat io n with someone."
The Environmental Stew ardship Committee at Augsburg is an effo rt nea r to Hoffman's heart . Like many t hings,
COVID-19 affected the team's ability to move some initiatives forward. But Hoffma n, who began working with the
group as an undergrad. is ho peful t he committee's outr each ca n begin again, especially on a long-range solar and
carbon neutra lity plan.
"It's o ur responsibility as students. faculty. and staff to say, 'We need to do better.'" Hoffman said. "It req uires a shift
in how w e th ink about w ellness, our economy, and society."
Encircling all of those issues is t he environment.
"It comes down to awareness. then actio n. All of us working together."
Read more:
Sowing seeds fo r tomo rrow
Student-led efforts to reduce, reuse. and r ecycle
Top image: GreenRoots is a comm unity-based organization dedicated t o improving and enhancing the ur ban envir onm ent
and public health in Chelsea and surrounding com munit ies. It does so through deep comm unity engagement and
empowerment youth leadership, and implementation of innovative proj ects and campaigns. (Courtesy photo)
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Many alumn i focused on environmental j ustice credit their d epth of understanding to opportunities they receiv ed at
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Augsburg.
Monica McDaniel, Augsburg's sustaina bility officer. said the
university community uses a multi-faceted approach to
intersectional environmentalism. which challenges advocates to
protect people as w ell as the planet. The un iversity does this
w ork through committees. including the student-led
Environmental Action Committee and t he Environmental
Stew ardship Committee. which includes st udents. faculty. and
staff.
How that plays out at Augsburg. McDa niel said. is through
holist ic programs o n campus and in surround ing
neighbo rhoods t hat consider not only what is needed now. but
how needs and protections can be ca rried out in the future.
Origina lly dev eloped by Bemidji State Universit y. the university's
·wellness model" derives from ancient Oj ibw e teachings that the
environment is the foundation that holds w ell ness. social health.
and economic health in place. Think of it like a solar syst em.
with the environment being the sun around which w ell ness.
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social health. and econo mic health orbit.
Augsburg's sustainability officer, Monica McDaniel.
(Photo by Rebecca Slater)
McDaniel sa id Augsburg's focus is on three areas: food
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sov ereignty (mak ing sure people have un impeded access to
healt hy nutr itio n). a mutua l aid circular economy. and renew able energy.
Augsburg supports more tha n 1OD commun ity garden plots and an indigenous med icina l garden. These gardens
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reflect the commun ities they serve. and every aspect is intentional- from the types of items planted. such as rue. a
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common herb used in East African cooking and medicine. to the ways each ga rden is tended.
"It's o ne w ay that w e've been trying to move beyo nd j ust
planting food and eating it." McDa niel said. ·we w ant a space
wher e people can see themselves represented. too."
On campus. the ShareShop supports the circular econo my
component. Made by students for students. the shop is a place
wher e small kitchen and other househo ld items ca n be
borrowed. swapped. or taken for use.
Each semest er. McDaniel sa id. the ShareSho p saves at least a
Augsburg's Environmental Stewardship Committee shows
the vegetables harvested from che communrty garden.
dumpster"s worth of items fro m being t hrown out . The lasting
effect. tho ugh. is about changing behavio rs.
(Photo by Rebecca Slater)
Some of that lasting impact is in the interest new students have
fo r a living and learning committee that focuses o n sust ainability. More t han SO students applied for 14 spots in t he
fall. McDaniel said.
"That demonstrates to me that this gener ation genu inely cares about these issues," she said .
Work continues on renewable energy efforts underway at the
university. From replacing less-effective light bulbs wit h LED
lighting and upgraded HVAC systems. to maj or initiativ es like
studying the possibility of o n-campus solar. the renewable
energy conversations invo lve all members of the Augsburg
community.
Across all fronts. McDa niel said. she t ries to keep one ey e on the
present and the other on what"s coming.
"Programm ing helps because it giv es us an immed iate win." she
said. "The challenge is looking at the systemic change w e're
Monica McDaniel and Environmental Stewardship
Committee students organize ShareShop donations.
(Photo by Rebecca Slater)
trying to implement."
Top image: Monica McDaniel ond students i n Augsburg's Environm ental Stewardship Com mittee discuss the plants in th e
comm unity garden plots outside t he Hagfors Center. (Photo by Rebecca Slater)
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Public phase of comprehensive fundraising campaign a success
by Norland SeJ2tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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On May 6, Augsburg University held an event to launch the public phase of its comprehensive fundraising ca mpaign.
Great Returns: We're All In. At t hat t ime. t he campaign had received mo re than 40,000 gifts from nearly 1 5.000
donors to r each approximately $105 mill ion of its $125 million goal. Today, the total raised has exceeded $112
million.
•
...
r'
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Great Returns Campaign Chair Or. Paul Mueller '84 speaks at the public launch of the Great Recums: We're All In
campaign on May 6. (Pho,o by Courtney Perry)
As a comprehensive campaign. Gr eat Returns: We're All In st rengthens Augsburg and supports current and future
students in numerous w ays. So far. do no rs have contr ibuted more than $26 mil lion toward creating or strengthening
139 endow ed scholarship funds and establishing five endowed professorships. Mor e than S10 million has been
raised for t he StepU P® Collegiate program Growth Endowment which provid es ongoing support for Augsburg's
recovery program.
Benefacto rs have also contributed more than $16 million to the
Augsburg Fund, which allocates unrestr icted. discretionary
dollars to improve t he student experience through academ ic
programs. technologies, student aid, and more. "These have
been a tough couple yea rs for all of us," said Pr esid ent Paul
Pribbenow. • s ut t he hardships of these years o nly remind us
that t he core of Augsburg to educate students as st ew ards of an
inclusive democracy is all the more important and all the more
critica l."
Great Returns: We're All In campaign public launch event
Endow ed funds can support specific scholarships,
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
professorships, o r specific programs. The univ ersity d raw s from
these inv estments every year. currently at a rate of 4.5%, which
ensures a steady str eam of funding that allows Augsburg to build programs and make mult i-y ear commitments.
A university with generous endowments is able to offer fi nancial aid and lear ning opportunities that better prepare
students to pursue their callings.
These are just a few of the w ays Augsburg's alumni and friends
have d emonstrated that they are "all in" to ensure a vibrant
future fo r Augsburg University. Campaig n gifts can enhance the
student experience by providing funds for hands-on resea rch
opportunities, st udy abroad experiences, or improvements to
the facilities wher e Auggies study, research, live, eat, relax. and
train. After celebrating Augsburg's sesquicentenn ial in 2019 and
20 20, Augsburg's community- "faculty, staff. students, alumni.
parents, friends, all who ca re d eeply about this place"-a re
setting the univ ersity up to thrive for another 1 50 years, said
Pr ibbenow.
Great Returns: We're All In is also the theme of the All-School
Reun ion to be held during Ho mecoming o n Friday. October 6Sunday. Octo ber 8. Co-chaired by Jeff Nodland '77 and Becky
Bjella-Nodland 79, t he celebratio n will include a gathering of
Auggie affinity groups and an award ceremo ny fo r the
Dist inguished Alumni Awards in the Hagfors Center.
The w eekend will also include the traditional Taste of Augsburg.
a ho me football ga me against St. John's University. a celebration
of 50 }'ears of Augsburg women's intercollegiate athletics and
All-School Reunion co-chairs Jeff Nodland 77 and Becky
Bjella-Nodland '79. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Title IX, and the dedicatio ns of t he renovated Si Melbywomen's
locker room (funded by a donatio n fro m Patricia Piepenburg '69), and the updated Si Melby w eight room. d edicated
to Donny Wichmann '89.
l ea rn more about Great Returns: We're All In and do nate to Augsburg's futur e.
Top image: Great Returns: We're All In wot erdrop. The water drop sculptures were given t o the first 150 benefactors who
chose to invest in on endowed scholarship during the Great Returns campaign.
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
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In summer 2021. Augsburg University launched t he Sankofa Circle FellowshiP- f or junior and sen io r st udent l eaders.
The f ellow ship is inspired by four Adinkra symbols that originat ed in Ghana. These symbols stand f or concept s such
as greatness. cha risma, and leadership; end urance and resourcefulness; unity and responsibility; and hope.
Through t he fellow ship, student s grow t heir networks. connect
w it h BIPOC ment ors, strengthen t heir leadership skills. and
benefit from a supportive. mot ivating cohort. Fellows receive up
to $5,000 f or t u it io n and $500 for books each yea r and
participate in a nat ional conf er ence about raci al and social
j ust ice.
In 2021- 22. 1 O Augsburg juniors participated in the f ellow ship.
Eight of those st udents w ill continue to participate as seniors.
The tw o open slots, one of w hich w as vacated by a student w ho
Fellows and mentors share a meat during a Sankofa Circle
Fellowship dinner in October 2021. (Courtesy photo)
graduated early, w ill be filled by seniors o n a wait ing list for t he
init ial cohort. Ten new j uniors w ill also join t he program.
Four Augsburg staff m embers support the f ellow s: Joanne
Reeck, vice president f or equity and inclusion; Chris Dixon.
athletic diversity and inclusion d irect or; Kate Gray, career
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services and alumni connections m anager f or t he St rommen
Center fo r M ea ningful Wo rk; and Kezia Burrows, Pan-Afrikan
Student Services program manager.
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Students formed meaningful connectio ns w it h the m entors and
each other over t he course of t he program's first year . By the
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end of the year. student f ellows described their relat ionships
w it h o ne another as familial. The init ial cohort's mentors
included the vice president of a bank, a nurse practit ioner, an
assistant principa l, a retired judge who f ounded a nonprofit. and
Kate Gray, center, and Joanne Reeck, left, help students
sign in at the Sankofa Circle Fellowship Kick-Off event in
September 2021. (Courtesy photo)
Augsburg's university past or. Alumn i and communit y members
w ho are interested in m entoring can em ail inclusion@augsburg.ed u.
To apply f or a f ellowship fo r t he 2023- 24 school year or learn more, visit t he Sa nkofa Circle FellowshiP- w eb page or
em ail inclusion@augsburg.edu.
Top image: Sonkofo fellows visited the YMCA Equity Innovation Center i n Morch 2022. (Courtesy photo)
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STUDENT-LED EFFORTS TO REDUCE, REUSE, AND
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Campus program s like Campus Cupboard and ShareSho p
reflect the university's environment al st ew ardship and social
consciousness.
Campus Cupboard is Augsburg's food shelf, wh ich provides
student s and recent alumni w ith access t o free food and other
essentials like t oilet paper and shampoo. The cupboard is open
fo r in-person sho pping in the basement of Anderson Residence
Hall, but the staff also make cont actless curbside and offcampus deliveries.
Augsburg students help gather donations for Campus
Cupboard during Athletics Day, 2018. (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
Serving students since 2013, Campus Cupboard is an essential
part of Campus Kitchen, wh ich ma nages more than 80
community ga rden plot s and delivers meals-made from d ining
services' surplus-to area youth programs, seniors, and community cent ers. Ca mpus Kitchen also hosts food demos,
shares recipes, and d istribut es excess produce fro m area farmers. Learn more about t he Ca mpus Cupboard and
w ays to donat e to this and other Ca mpus Kitchen initiativ es o n t he Ca mgus Kitchen w ebgagg.
Students creat ed the ShareShop in 2019 t o help the Augsburg community sav e mo ney and reduce consumptio n of
mat er ial goods, wh ile provid ing a space that fost ers community and informal learning about sustainable practices.
Locat ed in the basement of the Science Building, t he shop features free clothes and household goods such as kitchen
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appliances, furniture, sheet sets, and more. Some items are free wh ile others are available to check out .
The shop, which is open year round, expanded in 2021 t o offer a
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pop-up location in the Strommen Cent er for Meaningful Work.
Partner ing w it h Campus Cupboard, the satellit e location offers
nonperishable food, school supplies, clothes, and professio nal
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attire.
In spring 2022, t he shop held the inaugural M oveOut effo rt in
partnership w ith Residence Life. The partnership made it easy
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fo r students moving out of t he dorms to donat e small
appliances, furniture, fans, ki tchenware, clothes, and mo re t o
Items set out in ShareShop, which are free for all students
to keep and borrow. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
the ShareSho p rather than tossing unwanted it ems into
dumpsters. Donat e item s and lea rn more about Shar eShog.
Top image: Augsburg students help sort item s d onated to Sha reShop. (Photo by Rebecca Slot er)
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AUGGIE PODCASTS
by Briana Alamilla '17
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"Reth inking Manhood" by Destyn Land '1 9
"Rethinking Ma nhood" brings men t ogether to unlearn patriarchal masculinity and
int entionally makes space for men t o heal. grow. and learn in community.
"Stream of Life" co-hosted by Cassie Dong '18
"Str ea m of life" tells insp irational stories and offers insights about peace. conflict, and social
j ustice. Hear from leaders, advocates. and scho lars w ho hav e worked around the w orld t o
build sust ainable, positiv e peace.
"Beyond Friends" co-hosted by Mai Xee Vang '18, Pang Xiong '17. and Sunny Thao '19
A group of Augsburg friends started "Be)'ond Friends" to t ell their st ories. rooted in their
refugee and immigrant backgrounds. and reflect on how t hese identities are currently
helping them navigate ad ulthood.
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Global Harmo!!Y. Choir takes notes from musicians around
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WELCOMING PROVOSTO'LAUGHLIN; BOARD
GRANTS EMERITI STATUS TO RETIRING FACULTY
AND STAFF
by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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In early July, Augsburg welcomed Paula O'Lough li n as the
universit y's provost and sen io r vice president following the
ret irement of Karen Kaivola. O'Loughlin previously served as
provost and dean of t he faculty at Coe College in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa, and in leadersh ip roles at Gustavus Adolphus College and
the University of Minnesota-Morris. As the university's secondranking officer after President Paul Pribbenow, O'Loughlin
holds a critical leadership position, with responsibility for the
institution's largest divisions, academic affairs and student
experience and success.
Provost Paula O'Loughlin. {Courtesy photo)
"When we ensure access to higher education, we support social
mobility in t he aggregate and the opportunity to write one's own
story for the ind ivid ual," O'Loughlin sa id . "Augsburg's well-known intentional pursuit of t hese values calls me to jo in
this community. The university is doing amazing work, and I'm excited to become a part of it."
Although she had yet to formally j oin the university, O'Lough lin attended the May meeting of Augsburg's Board of
Regents. During the meeting, the board approved faculty emeritus status for :
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•
Carol Enke, instructor of health. physical education, and exercise science;
•
W illiam Green, M. Anita Gay Hawthorne professor of critical race and ethnicity studies and professor of
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history;
•
Tom Morgan, professor of business administration and leadership stud ies;
•
Diane Pike, professor of sociology; and
•
Ph il Quanbeck II, associate professor of religion.
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Sarah Griesse, who retired as d ean of students earlier th is year, was granted staff emerita status. The board also
recognized four outgoing regents and thanked them for their d istinguished service: the Honorable Lajune Lange
'75, Toby LaBelle '96, Rev. Dr. David Tiede. and Steven Larson '71 .
President Poul Pribbenow and Provost Paulo O'Loughlin at Augsburg's 2022 opening convocation. (Photo by Rebecca Slater)
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FACULTY MEMBERS APPOINTED TO NAMED
PROFESSORSHIPS; NEWSATEREN CHAIR OF
MUSIC
by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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Jeremy Myers, associate professor of r eligion and executive
director of the Christensen Cent er for Vocation, was appoint ed
the Ber nhard M. Christensen professor of religion and vocation
in July. He succeeds Professor Emerit a Martha Stortz, who
retired in 2020. A d istinguished scholar in vocation and
congr egational ministry, Myers joi ned Augsburg in 2006 and has
facilitated t he Theology and Public Leadership d egree program,
the Youth Studies m inor, and the Augsburg Youth Theology
Institut e. The Christensen Chair was est ablished in 2005 t o
honor the legacy of Bernhard M. Christensen, w ho served as
president of what was then known as Augsburg College and
Seminary from 1938-1962. The chair provides public leadership
Jeremy Myers, Bernhard M. Christensen professor of
religion and vocation. {Photo by Courtney Perry)
in int erpr eting and advancing Augsburg's educat ional m ission,
pursues scholarship and teaches in the religion d epartment and serves as counsel t o the president and Board of
Regents.
Andy Aoki, professor of politica l science, was na med the M.
An ita Gay Hawthorne professor of crit ical race and ethnicity
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studies in June. He succeeds Professor Emeritus William Green,
who retired ea rlier this year. Aoki, w ho joined t he Augsburg
faculty in 1988, is a prolific writer and speaker about Asian
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American id entities and racial politics. During his t enure, Aoki
has served as chair of the depa rtment of political science, senior
fellow in the Sabo Center for Democracy and Citizenship, Faculty
Senate president and, most recently, cha ir of the department of
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critica l race and ethnicity studies. The Hawthorn professorship
honors the legacy of Margaret Anita GaY. Hawthorne, w ho
drew upon the concept of Pan-Afrikanism t o create a progra m
Andy Aoki, M. Anita Gay Hawthorne professor of critical
race and ethnicity studies. (Courtesy photo)
at Augsburg un ique t o any college in the country.
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Mary Elise Lowe, professor of religion, w as named the Bata ld en
faculty scholar in applied ethics in Spring 2022. A member of
Augsburg's faculty since 2003, Low e's w ork focuses on new
understandings of the human person w ith special attention t o
the doctrine of sin, the image of God, and human sexuality. Her
focus as Batald en Scholar w ill be on "embod ied ethics•- an
expa nsive cat egory that includes t raditional sexua l ethics as w ell
as questions of em bod iment that are often excluded from
traditional Christian eth ics. She w ill also focus on int ersectional
t opics, including d isability/ability, race, body image, and human
relationships. Funded by an endowment established by Abner
Batalden '36 and supported by his fa mily, the Batalden Faculty
Mary Elise Lowe, Batalden faculty scholar in applied
ethics. {Photo by Courtney Perry)
Scholar Progr am in Appl ied Ethics is designed to str engthen the
infusion of ethics and valu es on campus, so that ethical d iscourse and practice is enhanced as a hall mark of
Augsburg's student s, faculty, staff, and alumni.
A t ransformational gift from Board of Regent s member John
Schwartz '67 w ill creat e the Leland B. Sat eren '35 professor and
chair of music, a new endow ed professorship t o be held by t he
chair of the music department. An alumnus of the Augsburg
Choir barit one section and a steadfast supporter of Augsburg
student s. Schw artz has maintained a passion for choral music
throughout four decades as a healthca re executive and into
retirement. With 12revious gifts, he est ablished an endowed
choral professorship. a fund for chora l music, and an endow ed
scholarship. This latest gift w ill help advance the music
department w ith inclusion. access. equity, and belonging and
Board of Regents membe<, John Schwart z '67. {Photo by
advance t he department's work locally, regionally. and
Rebecca Stacer)
nationa lly among diverse const ituent s. It w ill also bring
expertise in music from beyond the Euro-Classical canon and/or in ethnomusicology.
The endow ed chair honors renow ned Augsburg chora l conductor and composer Leland Sateren '35, who d ied in
2007 at age 94.
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Min d bY. Giving It AWaY.: Sh aring
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THE URCHINS OF HAGFORS
by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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Blue tuxedo sea urchins glist en w ith brill iant red spines
that alt ernat e w ith iridescent blue bands. Their stunning
appeara nce and habit of grazing on algae m ake them
highly sought -after for coral reef aquariums, where they
are harmless to delicat e corals-"perfect herbivores," says
Bill Cap man, associat e prof essor of biology. Unfortunat ely.
w ild ocean collection typically involves a mort ality r at e of
upw ards of 75% for t hese delicat e invertebrat es.
Ent er Augsburg's marine fish and invertebrat e breeding
lab.
Bill Capman in Augsburg's marine fish and invertebrate
breeding lab. (Photo by Bill Capman)
Ov er t he past four summers, Ca pman and his
undergraduat e student researchers, including Kayla Cross ·21, Andrew Grace '24. and Grace Adams '23, have
develo ped a precisely calibrat ed m ethod fo r breeding urchins in captivity, from initiating spawning via mild heat
shock t o using round, black vort ex tubs t o simulat e t he w ay urchin larvae d rift in the o pen ocean. The students
ba lance indiv idual research projects w ith lab t asks, caring for d iver se marine life and grow ing phytoplankton on
sit e f or the urchin larvae t o eat.
Tucked away in a custom space on the second floor of the Hagfors Cent er, Capm an and his t eam have becom e a
m ajo r source of captive-bred urchins f or the aquarium trade. l ast yea r the lab held an exclusive supplier
contract w ith one of the w orld's largest m arine fish breeders. shipping hundreds of urchins at a time via a
collaboration w it h local m arine fish breeder Chad Vossen. Vossen Aquatics has been marketing. selling, and
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shipping m ost of the animals produced in Augsburg's marine breeding lab for several years. The m oney from
the sales supplem ents grant funding t o support lab o perations. including pumps, fish food. light s- and always
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m ore salt mix.
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300 p lus third generation urch ins sent
Red spine blue tuxedo u rchin April
Red sp ine b lu e tuxed o urchins June
to Biota, June 2022. (photo by Sill
Capman)
201 9. {photo by Bill Capman}
2020, day 108. (photo by Bill Capman)
Th is y ear's urchins are the great-great -great -grandchild ren of the initial bat ch shipped fro m Bali in 201 8. The
operat ion's success has attract ed significant int erest in t he w orld of marine breeding. and has environm ent al
ramifications as w ell. The mortality rat e am ong the thousands of urchins shipped from the lab has been nearly
zero, a subst antial conservation benefit compared to w ild harvest.
But for Capm an, it all comes back t o t eaching science and biodiversity. •our goa l w ith the breed ing lab is for
students t o have experience do ing research, from hypot heses, t o experim ent al design, t o dat a collectio n and
analysis. to presenting t heir find ings. And w ith o ur coral reef t anks, student s and visit ors observe a w id e
diversity of species and int eresting behav iors t hey would nev er otherwise encounter in Minnesot a."
Top image: Bill Copmon tends to Augsburg's sea urchin raising tubs. (Photo by Bill Capman)
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New Sateren Chair of Music
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Great Returns: We're All In
Pribbenow- MultiP-!Y. Your
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- on September 14, 2022
Mind bY. Giving It AWaY.: Sharing
Celebrates the Life of Fuad EI-
the Gift of Vocation
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CONGRATULATIONS, CLASS OF 2022
by Briana Alamilla '17
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Augsburg University celebrat ed t he Class of 2022 in a com m encem ent ceremony at U.S. Bank St adium in
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downtown M inneapolis-hom e t o t he Minnesot a Vikings. The ceremony recogn ized 382 undergraduat e
st udent s and 229 adult undergraduat e, mast er's, and doct oral st udents.
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Top image: Graduates outside U.S. Bonk Stadium ofter comm encement (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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On the SP.Qt: Ellie Olson
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• on September 14, 2022
Mind bY. Giving It AWaY.: Sh aring
Celebrat es t he Life of Fuad EI-
t h e Gift o f Vocation
Hibri
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ON THE SPOT: ELLIE OLSON
The director of Augsburg's Center for Wellness and Counseling stresses that meaning and
motivation matter now more than ever
by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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Ellie Olson w as making an impo rtant point when an off-screen request
demanded her attention. "One mo ment," she said, briefly d isappearing from
Zoom to deal with what turned o ut to be a d ead bug emergency.
like so many people in the summer of 2022, Olson's family was ho me under
COVID-19 restrictions, requiring her to j uggle remote wor k and child care. "What
w ere w e saying about the effects on focus and concentration?" she laughed.
retracing her train of thought. "It feels like w e really need to be having t his
conv ersat io n right now:
Olson directs the Center for Wellness and Counseling, which pr ovides counseli ng
to Augsburg students and promotes well-being across campus. She and her
tea m have witnessed firstha nd the mental and emotiona l effects of the last two
y ears. Those experiences. Olson said, shape her recommendations for meeting
our current moment with g race-ongoing d isruptions, new variants. and all.
Q: As a mental health professional, how would you describe this stage of
the COVID-19 pandemic? How are people responding to it?
Ellie Olson, director of Augsburg's
Cen ter for Wellness and Counseling.
(Pho to by Rebecca Slater)
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A: One of the th ings I r eally think is important to acknowledge is the level of energy that has been drained from us as
a result of the trauma of COVID. As w e move out of that trauma stage and what some researchers and the media
have call ed the "langu ishing'' phase, I always remind people t hat energy d rain is not j ust about the physical. It's
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emotional, it's cognitiv e, it's spiritual, it's social. And there's been so much drain. All the energy that's gone into
reth inking how we live our lives has had a huge impact o n where w e are now. It's still impacting how much energy w e
have to give to our lives and our responsibilities.
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I frequently present on this topic, and when I name this lack of energy and suggest that w e need to do less. I get a
sense of relief from a lot of people. We're not in th is fight-or-flight trauma like w e w ere during t he first mo nths of the
pa ndemic. but many of us don't feel a lot of energy o r engagement. and I think that's no rmal right now given what
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w e've been thro ugh. We need to giv e space to honor how hard people have been w orking, and to acknowledge that
the wo rk w e put in while st ruggling is meaningful, even apart fro m productivity and outcomes.
Q: How does this play out in your work with students and campus partners?
A: One t hing that has consistently become more present is the impo rtance of meaning. Being forced out of "normal"
over the past two y ears has really given people an opportun ity to tune in to what is and is not meaningfu l. If w e're
going to give our limited sources of energy to someth ing, it needs to have value; people w ant to engage, but t he
"budget request" has to eit her be high in meaning or low in energy.
Here's an exa mple: We have a counselor who facilitates a group about understand ing and w orking wit h emotions
that has been very w ell-receiv ed in years past. But this year, students just weren't engaging with it in the same way.
Instead of continuing to offer an experience that was kind of like a class. w e started a w alking group instead. We j ust
said, hey, come over to t he ewe, and w e're going to go fo r an hour-long walk in the neighborhood to explore and
connect, and then w e're going to come back and have dinner together. Maybe students don't have the mental
headspace to engage in ext ra lear ning after class, but they ca n go for a walk. This was a better fit fo r our students'
energy; it was better attended and a mo re connecting experience.
How else can w e adj ust t he things that w e're offering, so that they don't require as much energy or risk-taking as
some of what w e w ere doing in the past? We see mental hea lth and w ellness as not j ust the business of the ewe. It's
the business of everyone on ca mpus, and how w e st ep into that business differs by role.
Q: As we head into the fall, what are some strategies or techniques that can help people thrive right now?
The first thing I wou ld offer is not to go into this phase of life with the goal of retur ning to "no rmal," or t hat the people
around you will behav e like they did before COVID. I think w e hav e to go into this phase thinking about what our lives
are like now, and how w e can best create a structure t hat takes into account where w e've been as opposed to what
things used to be.
This is not going to feel good to the perfectionists in the w orldand I'm one of t hem-but part of this is lowering expectations of
yourself and the people around you. When we don't set realistic
expectatio ns that take into account where w e are now, then w e
j ust create more burnout, more stress, mo re self-cr iticism, and
less motivation. People are motivated when they feel like they
can meet o r exceed expectatio ns. It's important for us to
remember that in low ering expectations now, we're creating a
groundwork for people to be more productive in the future.
It's also important to acknow ledge that motivation is sometimes
created; it doesn't j ust arriv e. This is where setting low er
expectatio ns is really important. because some of us w ait to feel
like w e w ant to do a th ing instead of trying to create motivation
The Center for Wellness and Counseling hosts a var iety of
events, like Auggie Ooggie Days, which gives studen ts the
opportunrty to meet, pet, and des-cress with therapy dogs.
(Pho to by Courtney Perry)
by taking small actions. I tell students to set a really small goal.
and if you can't meet t hat goal, cool: that's data that w e need to set a smaller o ne. As we start to do that w e create
motivatio n rather than w aiting for mot ivation to find us.
l astly, have grace wit h yourself and others r ight now. Honest ly, grace is always important, so this is a trait t hat w e
could stand to utilize now and forever. Just to recognize that people are juggling a lot, that w e all have limited
capacity-and while w e may regain some capacity, we are still limited at th is point. To own that and give yo urself
some grace, and to give grace to t he people aro und you. Having grace and compassion for all that w e have been
through and are st ill going through can go a lo ng w ay in t his moment.
Top Image: Ellie Olson, director of Augsburg's Center for Wellness and Counseling. (Photo by Rebecca Slater)
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Global Education Site in Northern Ireland to O~n in
Si;iring 2023
Congratulations, Class of 2022
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GLOBAL EDUCATION SITE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
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by Farrisr
Sef.1tember 14, 2022 • Around the Quad
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M any schools and organizat ions have been f orced to scale back or eliminate st udy abroad opt io ns si nce t he COVID19 pandem ic. But w ith a commitm en t to int ernat ional educat io n t hat is un ique amo ng M idwest universit ies,
Augsburg's Center for Globa l Educatio n and Exper ience didn't just preserve existing offer ings- it's set t o expand
t hem.
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Students meet with and learn from people involved with the conflict and peace process in Northern Ireland.
(Courtesy photo)
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In Spring 2023, CG EE w i ll welcom e its first coho rt of st udent s t o
El I]
a new semest er-long program in Northern Ireland . Based at
Ulst er University in t he vibrant city of Derry- Lo ndonderry, t he
Conflict. Peace, and Transit ion i;irogram w ill crit ically exam ine
t he wo rk of j usti ce, reconciliat ion, and repair in relat ion t o the
hist ory and legacy of violen t conflict in the regio n. Coursew ork
w i ll focus on underst andi ng t he polit ics of t he Northern Ireland
conflict and t he t ra nsit io n to a sust ainable dem ocracy. St udents
w i ll also part icipat e in int ernshi ps at local peacebui ld ing
organizat ions and engage i n field visit s t o Belfast. the A nt r im
Coast. and t he border count ies of Fer managh, Tyro ne, and
A rmagh.
The Northern Ireland sit e adds a Europea n locat ion t o CGEE's
portf olio of glo bal program s in Mexico, Cent ral Am erica. and
Southern Afr ica . Each program offers a un ique model of handson lear ning rooted i n social j ustice and focused on d irect
Students pose at Ulster University's Magee campus, where
they will be IWing and spending a lot of their social time.
(Courtesy photo)
community engagem ent.
Top image: Students enj oy t he landscap e during on extended trip to rural ar eas in Northern Ireland. (Courtesy phot o)
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW: ON A
LEGACY OF HOSPITALITY AND LEADERSHIP
tty.Paul C. Prib/::t.enow
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW: ON A
LEGACY OF HOSPITALITY AND LEADERSHIP
tty.Paul C. Prib/::t.enow
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My wlfe, A biga il, and I lrst m et Anne Frame and Bill Frame, Augsburg's ni nth
president, so me 18 years ago wh en w e were chosen t o be p art of a new
program, sponsored by t he Council ofJ ndependent Colleges and designed by
Bill, that helped college presidents and t helr pa rtners to explore t he links
betw"ee n th eir ca llings or vocatj ons and the missio n,; of the instit uti on s t hey
served . At t hat point, I w as pn:'sjdent of Rockford Coll ege in Ill ino is, and o f
course, Bill and An ne were at Augsburg. It was a ren1arkab le exp erien ce for all of
us involved, and we remain friends and colleagues with many of those who
shared th e program w ith us. It w as during t hls ti me that we first witn essed t he
delightfu l partnership that Ann e an d Bill had created- in their m arriage, in t hei r
lead ershl p of the progr am, and in th eir wo rk at Augsburg. Tho see of us in th e
program came t o count on Bi ll for th oughtful and weighty treati:ses (0 11e of us
o nce exclaimed , · Give me a th esau rus!" w hen BHl"s vocabulary got to be a bit
m uch), whi le Anne's gr aciou s and cai rn presen ce brought u.s back to th e joy of
Pres;dent Paul Pribbenow (P oto by
Courtney Pe rry]
rhe work a1 hand.
Little did w e know that just a few m ont hs after the progr am con cluded , Abigail
an d I would be elected as An ne and Bill's successor s at Augsburg. It was during t he leadership transition an d over t he
past 15 years t hat I have co me to know t he many w ay s in wh[ch Anne's presence an d engagem ent wit h , he Augsburg
commun [ty during Bill's pres idency have made a lasting impact
Anne Fr am e passe d away t his past summer, but her legacy lfves o n in th e many ways her lffe an d wor k have graced
i:h e Augsburg co mmunity. I wouJd highllghtju st a few :
Ann e an d Bi[I m ade t'he case for and ,h en crea ted a place of w onderful hospitality and fe l[owshlp at Augsburg House,
the resfd ence for Augsb urg's president and f ami ly, but more importantly a place at wh ich t o gather st udents, fa cu lty,
staff. alu mni, and friends to ce lebrate a11 d build community. In fact, Anne and Bi ll set im porta nt trad it io ns at t he
house that we still ce lebrat e, incl udin g a fe.stive holiday party for n eighbors who are often inconvet1i em:ed by al l t he
ca rs pas ked alo ng West River Par kway f or our ga therings!
Ann e loved to engage wit h stud errts, participat ing in activit fes li ke Late Night Breakfasts at the end of each semester
and City Engagem ent Days at th e beginni ng of ea ch academic year. It was deeply m eani ngful to :students to see the
president and f amlly involved in t he lffe oft'he ca m pus.,
Ann e also served as a boa rd m ember for the Augsbu rg i\ssoclates, a group o f committed vo lu nteers wh o organized
furrdraising events to support student scholarshi ps. The annua l Vel kommen Yul celebr ations remain a highl ight of tn e
acad emic yea r, liftl11g up our Norwegian her it age.
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Fin ally, Ann e accompanied Bi ll on m any intern a1iona l tri ps-to Augsburg's sites in South Africa and Nami bl,a, 10
Norway as fXirt of our re[atio11shi p with t he Norwegian No bel Instit ute, and p erhaps most m em or ably to China with a
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group of M innesota prlvate col lege presi dents and part ners to e xplore a relationshlp wit h a n ewly f ormed liberal arts
college on t he mainl an d, now know n as United Inte rnatio nal Co.liege.
After Bill and Anne reti red from Augsbu rg in 200 6, they co ntinued t o be engaged in t h e Augsburg comm untty,
CONN ECT W ITH US
atte nding events, visit ing donors, cheeri ng us o n in our variou s efforts to m ake Augsbu rg t he remarkably diver ,;e
inst[tution it is t o day. At th e s,a m e t ime, it w as a joy for me to see t he mean in g that .t...n ne found in r et urnin g t o her
chose n prof ession- her calli11 g- as an accou11ti nt for vari ous orga rii zation s in th e Tacoma, Vllashington, area . In ,.hat
way, Arm e corrt inued to model fo r all of us w hat it m ea ns to follow t he divine ca!I, wh erever it leads us- even w hen
II
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the cal l l s surprising and un expected.
We celebra te t he w ays in which preslden1ial leadership over 150 yea rs-sha red in part ne rshi p with r emarkabl e
spouses-sets a foun dation fo r the work we do today!
Faithfu lly you rs,
Pau l C. Pri bbenow, President
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Provost !Ka ivo la to ret~re; Boardi ofi Regents BP..P.:roves
emeriU status fo r reUring Augg ies
Augsburg introduces .American Indian Recognition
Full Tuition Program
Augsburg int ro dllces Amer1ican
Pr ovost Ka ivola to r etire; Board
Student-created salads are
lrndian Recogn it ion Full Tu it ion
of Regents aP.:Qroves emeriti:
he!FJ:ing Augsburg !build a mor,e
Program
st.at us for ret irin g Augg ies
sustainab /le local economY.
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AUGSBURG INTRODUCES AMERICAN INDIAN
RECOGNITION FULL TUITION PROGRAM
by Kate Norlander
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Au,gsburg University is la unching one of the nation's first comprehensive fu ll-tuition program5 at a private institLJtion
to support and recogn ize the imp ortance of American Ind ian s within higher education.
In this context. Augsburg defin es "American Indi an" a.s an enrolled member of a federally recogfl ized American Indian
tribe, Alaskan Native Village, or Canadian First Nation; a di rect descendant of a parent or grandparent wh o is an
enrolled member of the above; or a direct desce11dant of a tribally verified m ember of the above.
Unlike programs in many public institutions, Augsburgs program doe5 not li mit el igibility to Am•erican Indian students
who live in th e 5tate. In addition , t he Augsburg American lndian Reo::ogn ition Full Tuition Program provides access for
both full-tim e undergraduate students as well as adult learners in any of the university's degree completron
bachelor·s programs. This new program wi ll begin ln the Fall 2022 semester for both new and contlnu [ng eligible
students.
"O ne of our commitments at Augsburg is to bri11g an equity lens to affordability." said Augsburg President Paul
Pribbenow. "This orogram is one step toward recogn izing the profound cont ributions American Indian stuclet1ts and
,he ir commun [ties make to t he univers ity and w ithin higher edtJcatton more broadJy."
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Regent Eric JollY. described th e program as "groundbreaking am ong pr ivate unrversities nationwide.n He added, "At
the sa me t i111e, it is abs-olut-ely in liTie wfth A.ugsburgs long-sta nding commitments to intentiona l diversity and
incl usrve excellence. J hope t his is just the first of m any i nstitut ion s designi ng creative and equitable paths to
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education f or native an d First Nati ons people."
Students who apply for t he program do not need to be enrolled as an American lndia11 trib al member, establ ish
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residence on trust land, or be Min nesota residents.
Through th is program, Augsburg seeks to support and promote American Indians with in t he Augsburg i::on1n1u11 ity.
"My mom and dad told me my whol e life, you're going t o co llege. It was a 'where' and not an 'if.' What I needed from a
II
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school- the main thing t hat was going to make or break it-was if I cou [d afford it" said Reuben .K itto Stately'22. a
student from both t he Red Lake Nation and Santee Sioux Nation. "But the cu lture of the ca mpu s, the way t he Native
students support each other. was also a big se lli ng paint. Th is part af th e .south s[de of Minneapol is Is t he most
conce ntr ated urban Native population in the whole country."
"The system ic injustices that have limited access to higher ed ucation for many American In dian students need
5tru ctural solut ions; .said Vice President for Equity and Inclusion Joanne Reeck. "This program is one step that we as
a n institution can ta ke."
Lear n m are about the Am erican Indian Recogn ition Full Tt.1 ttlon Pr ogram.
Top image: Reuben Kitto Stately '22 is an Augsburg student from both the Red Lake Nation and Santee Sioux Nation.
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
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Notes from Preside tit
Pr ovost Ka ivo la to re t ire; Board
St udent-c reated sa liads are
Pribbenow: oin a legacy of
of Regenits aJ:):groves emerit f
he lQing Augsburg b uild a more
hosgita litY. and leadershiR
status for retir.ing Auggies
sustainable loca l economy
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PROVOST KAIVOLA TO RETIRE; BOARD OF
REGENTS APPROVES EMERJT1 STATUS FQ,R
RETIRING AUGGI.ES
by 5te1J_hen lendraszak
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Karen Kaivo la. Augsburg's provost and senior v ice presi-den of acad emic and
student affairs, will reti re at the end of 2021-22 acade m ic year. Si ri ce Kaivo la
joined Augsburg in 2013, her leadership of the facu lty has consistently reflected
unw av eri ng comm itme nts to teaching and [earn i11,g. In late 2019, Kaivola stepped
into an expanded role overseeiI g bot academic affairs ,;md student affairs-,
seeking new alignments and center ing both on a holistic view of student learning
and development ,I!., committee chaired by Timi Pieeert, Joel Torstenson
endowed pro essor of sociology, is in the midst o r a nationa l search to i dentify
her successo r .
At its October meeting. th e Augsburg University Board of Regents approved
acuity emeritus status for Milo Sch ield , prof essor of busi ness admin istration;
regent em ertta status for Ann Ashton-Piper, who r etired ··.-on t e board .a ter
12 years of servi ce; and staff emerit i stat s or [ong-serving employees Nancy
Prnvo:st Kat'len Kaivo la (Ar
Giuilbeault, James Trelstad-Porter. and M ary Laurel True.
ive
p, oto)
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At its February meeting, th e board approved faculty em eri ta status for Laura Boisen, professor of social w ork; and
staff emer[t [ statu s for Dianne Detloft Ann Garvey, and Mark Lester.
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Stucle nt-,c reat ed salads are rieiP-ing Augsburg bu ild a
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Notes from Presi dent Pribbenow: On a !egag.' of
hosgitalit]I. and le·adershiP-
YOU M .I GHT ALSO LIKE
Augsb urg introduces America n
Notes f r om President.
Student-created saiads are
Indian Recogn'itiori Full Tui:t ion
Prib benow: On a legm of
he lP-ing Augsb urg bui ld a more
Progr am
hosRltal ity and leadershiP-.
susta inable local economy
- on February 22, 2022
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STUDENT-CREATED SALADS ARE HELPING
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In Fall 2020, the 5,;Jbo Cent er for Democracy and Cit ize nsh ig launched Augsburg
loca l, an ef fort t o leverage Augsburg Un iversity's purchasing power to support
local bu sinesses. Through a partnership with Augsburg's dining services,
students and staff involved wrth Augsburg Local began conversations about
reimagining sustainabi lity, representation. cultur al competence, and bein g a
good neighbor by servin g healthy dishes featuri ng foods sourced fron1
environmentally susta inable loca l vend ors. A salad creation team was born in an
effort to support this tran sition.
The Sabo Center's sa lad creation tean1
includes staff and students from the
Environmental St eward ship Comm ittee,
Cam1;1 us Kitchen, and Augs.burg Local. The
team has drawn on the work of young
peopl.e from community partners. including
Stu de cs crea1ed salads wi,11 seasoriar,
lllcal~J s.ourced ingred ienss. [Courtes y
Pills.bury Unjted Commun ities· Waite House
photo)
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(in the Philli ps neighborhood in South
Minneapolis) and th e local nonprofi t Roots for the Home Team. which focuses on
mentoring teens t hrough community gardening and hands-on learning wi th
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chefs.
Augsburg's sa lad creation team r esearched
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,:i nd developed signature sa lads that were
Students partnered witn Ioca1
organizations rn source and creaire
fi rst sold in The Comn1on s last fa ll. The
salads. (Courtesy pnom)
development of seasonal . locally sourced
II IJI Iii
salads occurred through a seri es of
w orkshops during Summer 2Cl21 w ith participation from students, staff, faculty.
and community members with experti se from loca l vendors, farmers. and dining
services staff. Tri al in gredients came from The Good Acre (a Twirr Cities food
hub), the 5eward Commun ity Co-op, and other loca l vendors and far.mers to
support and develop their capacity to supply Augsburg dining services in the
long term .
Tllis co-cr eated sa lad projed serves as a stepping stone toward a gr eater
commitment to local and susta inable food procurement at Augsburg. A shift
toward loca l food purchilsing at Augsburg will help build a more sustalnab le local
Staff se ive suden,-<:reatecl sa lads in
The Commons for on-::-cmpus di ners .
economy.
(Court esy pnoto)
FoJlow @sustainable augsburg!d and ~gsburgloca l on lnstagram to see t he proj ect in action.
Lea rn more about Augsburg l oca l.
Tap image: Student-created salads were offered in The Com mons for on-campus diner;. (Courtesy photo)
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Sustai nability
\!Vi m,er 2021-.22
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Provost Kaivola t o r etire; Boar d of Regent s aggroves
em er it i status f or r etir ing Auggies
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A UG.SBURG'S INTERFAITH INSTITUTE ADDS NEW
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by Kate- Norlander
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In 2021 . Fuad and Nancy EL-Hibri gave a significant gi
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to Augsburg Unrversity to create the El-Hibri Endowed Chair
and Executive Directorship for the Interfaith Institute.
lnte aitll .at Augsburg: An Instit ute to Promote fnt erre[iglous Leadershi P-. WilS established in 2019 as part of
Augsburg's commitment to interfaith learning arid l eadership. The newfy endowed pos.ition will al low the university to
hrre a strategic lead er and distinguished schofar to provide directio
or the institute and serve as a member of the
acuity. The El-Hibr i chair wi ll seNe as a national ambassador ·or the intetia ith movement and wi ll partner w ith
campus leaders as a ch;:;nge agent for interreligiouo; learning and living.
The EI -Hibris' gift will help to f1Jlfi ll one o· tile go.:1ls of Augsburg1 50, the univer5ity's sesquicentennial strategic plan, to
advance the publ ic purp,os:es of an Augsburg education by enhancing interfaith leadersnip on campus and
,hroughout the nation.
~we live in a world that i5 religiouo;ly diverse, and allowi11g religions to thrive is a step in the right direction." said f1u ad
EI-Hibri "But it is not enough. Interfaith dia logue, l ea rning from one another, and engaging together in meaningful
work is what it's tru ly all about. The timing now is critical , and we hope thrs i5 just the beginning."
~we
ave a unique oppoitunity to burld an interfaith learning comm1Jnity that wi ll be a mode[ for all of igher
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education," Silid President Pa ul Pribbenow, ''The combination of Augsburg's interreHgi ous student body, with Fuad
and Na,
cys support and
coLmsel, wi ll create 1: e so
of academic and comm unit,; l eadersh ip the world needs today."
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Top i.mage: [L to RJ filancy and Fuad EI-Hibri (Courtesy photo)
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2021 St e•pUP Gala raises more than $425,0-00 for oncamQUS recovery_P- rogram
Student-created sa lads are hel P-iing Augsburg bu rid a
more susta in ab le local economy:
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2021 STEPUP GALA RAISES MORE THAN $425,000
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On Novembtei 1 3. a bout 300 In-p erson and 11ir.ual at;:en d ees ra ised more rha n 542.5,000 at Augsbur g"s annua l
Stee1UP® Psc,gram Gala. This year"s til e me, Now More Than Ever. emphasi;:ed t h e im portance of
,h-= su pp or>: Step UP
has provided for stud ents in recovery during a time when ma ny people h ave been isolat,ed an d In dang<=r oi r<'lapse.
Th e eve 11t was hosi-ed at Quincy Hall in Northea:.c Mirrn,;,apolis.
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Retired journalise De•1e N'mm e r se rved as the g,,le"s e mcee. IPh o 0 b)" R~b~cca Slace,)
0
James Augre '72 {left) and Bre nda Gauvin-Ch , dwO:I< l nN prese nt) received the 201 1 Toby Pipe r LaBelle Award for the s gnificant
1r:1pact triey have mcele ""rhe reY:.ove ry communr:y. To~y LaBelle "96 1, ,gr,,1 ;>"=<ented me ,ware!. [Ph~,o by Res0e~,~ Staterl
Augsburgs Seep UP Program ha,s coo.JCh ed many Iii-es s mce
It
began 111 7 gg; !Phom oy ~e~~cce 513ter)
Th: live «rttion olor,o roi ,od :a 15,500 fo r 5i,pUP. {Pt,o, o by Ro~«ca Slorer)
Ent icing Entmainme~, prnV<ded a fiery conclusion to rhe =m. (Ph~rn by Rebecca s ia,er)
Renee Mo st, dkecwr of cfle SeepU P Pru.gr<am, pos,es w"th Tu.e ke, Robinson 'l2. ,r,e gala's s:ud em: speaker. {Photo oy R~becca Slater)
Chris Al len '02 creacecl a worl< of an a, the es·em for the second wnsecm"" year_ Ttlis year's artwort was included in ch, aucrior,,
an □ Bo~rd of R•genc< m•m ~•• Cyru, B8th,j8 '09, '11 MBA'"~ B•cky Bsth•j• wc,n ,,,, 8rcwork, ,r,~nl;cs ro, ~•neM•Js dnna<lon
{l'hoco t,y Rebecca Slater)
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AUGSBLJR,G'S RECENT AWARDS AND RANKI .N GSWINTER 2021!-2.2
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This year, Augsbu rg is horiored to receive a var iety of awards and rarikings, includi ng new accolades for prod ucing
even 1nore Gi lman Scholars and for being .a religious universlty living up to LGBTQIA+ incl usive values.
Augsburg's r-ecent aw ards and r anki ngs in clude:
20-Year Top :P roducer of Gilman Scholars
Augs burg University was recogni zed by t he U.S. Departm ent of State's Bure aLr of Education al and Cu ltural Affa ir s for
having produced th e most Gilm an recipients over th e past 20 y ear s in t h€ sm all institu tions category. Si nce 2001, 77
Augsburg students. h ave been offered t he Be rijamin A. Gilman International Scholarsh ip, w hich enables stu den ts to
st udy abroad .
2021 Top 10 Re]igious Colleges Living Up to LG,BTQlnclusive Values by Camipus Pride
NBC News rer:io rted t hat Augsburg was one of only t hree rel igiously affiliat ed univers iti es th at received the highest
score of 5 on th e Lndex of si:hools r e,::ogn ized by Ca mpus Pride fo r be in g rel igi □ Lfi unjver sities t hc1t are LGBTQ--
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fr iendly.
Top 40 LGBTQ Friendly College·s and Univers.iti,es
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Augsburg w as agai n nam ed to CamQU S Pnde's list of the top 40 LGBTQ~riendly co lleges and universities in 2021.
Can1pus Pride is t he !ea ding national organization fo r creating safer, m ore LGBTQ-fri end ly co!leges and universities,
2021 Best in the Midwest by The Princeton Review
Augsburg w as again nan1ed to The Prin[eton Review's list of t he best colleges c1nd un iversities in the Midwest base d
CO NN ECT WITH US
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0 11 academic excel lence.
2021 Best Regional Universities b,y U.S. News &
Worlld Report
•
4th in Best Undergradua t e Teaching
•
24th in Regional Univ er sities- Midwest
•
38th in Suppo rt fo r Vet erans
Vi ew m ore of Augiburg'.s c1w ards and ranking~.
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Musician and r;ioet D11.1a Saliehi '17 breaks boundaries
with ro le on Netflix.'s ·sex Edu cation'
2021 .Ster;iUP Galla ra ises more tha n ~425,000 for oncamt;iu s recovery grogram
YO U Mll GHl ALS O l l KE
1
1
Allgsburg intr oduces Amerkan
Notes from President
Provost Ka ivola to retire; Boaird
Indian Recogn it ion Fu l l Tu it ion
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MUSICIAN AND POET DUA SALEH '17 BREAKS
BOUNDARIES WlTH ROLE ON NETFLIX'S 'SEX
EDUCATION'
oy Briana AJamiffa '17 February 22, 2022
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Dua Saleh '17 plays t he new character Cal Bowman in the third season o the awa rd-winn i11g Netflix show"Sex
Education," a British teen comedy-d ram.a series. 5a leh's character is a11 American student from Minne.;ipofis whose
parents moved them to the United Kingdom. Like Ca l, the fi rst nonbinary character on the show·, Saleh is nonbrflal)'
and uses they/t hem pronouns. Saleh a d a non bin ary cons:u ttanr assisted Neftlix with t he scri pt.
The Sudanese-American musician, poet and actrvi5t began writing poetry their second year at Augsburg and
performed .at open mic events. Seeing people's positive responses encouraged Saleh to write songs and make music,
which led to the eventual release of two EPs. Previously, Saleh perforn1e<l in an underground theater in Minneapol is.
The Netflix show is their first pro essio11al acting role.
"I want people to eel v;;il idated," sareh told Netflix . "Cal ls a nonbinary, Black character, and I want people to th in ,
'O ,
my gosh, I can befi eve I've seen n1ys,elf on t is seri.es. I can believe I've seen myseff represented [n mainstream
media.'That's what I wan the most."
Read more alumni news, arid submit vour own l ife UR dates.
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Top image: Netflix subscrib ers con stream u5ex Education." a British teen comedy-drama. (Courtesy photo)
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Re,c ord -breaking number of.Augsburg donors rai,s e
nea rly $420,000 during Give to the Max Da)i'. 202 1
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Record-breaking number of
A lumni Class Notes,...S,Qring::
In Memoriarn,..SP-ring-Sumrner
Augsburg donors r aise nearly
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In November, Augsburg University p;irticipated [n a not er successful Give to the Max Day. The Auggie
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education for students today and into the future. The campaign concluded at the end of the ca lendar year.
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40% of projects were fully funded, while others came very close to
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At .Augsburg, we continue to focus on our students and make sure they have
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Thank you to everyone who helps to provide a solrd found.,tion of support for
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You can give to the Augsburg fund all year round. Each gift makes an impact
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Can a smartri hone api;i de-escal ate traffic :stop
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Mus idar11 and P-,o,et Dua Sa leh
Give to the Max DaY. reean and
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AUGSBURG NOW
Augsburg Associates’ roots and
decades of service
A smartphone app aims to
de-escalate traffic stops
INSIDE
Photos: Augsburg then and now
SPRING–SUMMER 2021 | VOL. 83, NO. 2
Student-athletes advocate for
causes beyond the sports arena
Vice President, Operations
Rebecca Jo...
Show more
AUGSBURG NOW
Augsburg Associates’ roots and
decades of service
A smartphone app aims to
de-escalate traffic stops
INSIDE
Photos: Augsburg then and now
SPRING–SUMMER 2021 | VOL. 83, NO. 2
Student-athletes advocate for
causes beyond the sports arena
Vice President, Operations
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
AUGSBURG NOW
Associate Vice President,
Marketing and Communication
Stephen Jendraszak
Spring–Summer 2021
Director of Marketing
Laura Swanson Lindahl ’15 MBA
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
On the “new normal”
Director of Public Relations
and Internal Communications
Gita Sitaramiah
Assistant Director of
Marketing Creative
Denielle Stepka ’11
Creative Associate
Hayley Selinski
As we enter a new phase of the COVID-19
pandemic and plan for our return to campus
for our 152nd academic year at Augsburg, I
am often asked what we have learned during
the past 16 months that will be part of a
“new normal” for our community.
Certainly there is much that we have
learned about the use of technology for
teaching and learning, and for doing our
administrative work—technology that will be
an abiding and effective tool for the ways we
work into the future. We also have learned
important lessons about public health and not
taking for granted our individual and common
well-being. And then there are lessons about
the fragility of our economic lives and the
need to be laser-focused on our mission as we
make decisions about revenue and expenses.
But perhaps the most important and
striking lesson we learned during the
pandemic is that all of the work we have done
the past few years to chart a strategic path
for Augsburg—work that culminated in the
creation in Fall 2019 of Augsburg150: The
Sesquicentennial Plan—provided us with a
framework for both navigating through these
unprecedented times and for pursuing a
sustainable future for our university. In other
words, our planning deliberations, grounded
in Augsburg’s mission to educate students to
be “informed citizens, thoughtful stewards,
critical thinkers, and responsible leaders,” got
it right as we named our highest aspirations
and our strategic priorities.
In particular, I am proud of the vision we
cast for our future, which says that “As a new
kind of urban, student-centered university,
we are educating Auggies as stewards of
an inclusive democracy, engaged in their
communities and uniquely equipped to
navigate the complex issues of our time.”
Consider the claims we make in this vision
statement: to embrace our urban setting, to
keep students at the center of our lives, to
pursue democratic engagement, and to equip
our students to take on the most complex
problems we all face. And we honored those
claims as we lived through the pandemic:
responding to the many needs of our students
and neighbors as we kept each other safe
and healthy; focusing on the flexibility our
students required as they pursued their
education primarily online; working together as
a community of faculty, staff, and students to
navigate an uncharted path; and leaning into
the incredibly complex issues raised by the
pandemic so that we might all learn from them.
As I begin my 16th year as Augsburg’s 10th
president, I am so proud of our community
and excited about the future we will create
together. It may not be normal, but it will
be grounded as always in our mission and
vision. Enjoy this issue of Augsburg Now with
its engaging stories that make my case for
Augsburg’s future.
Senior Marketing Copywriter
and Editorial Coordinator
John Weirick
Communication and
Social Media Specialist
Briana Alamilla ’17
Communications and
Social Media Consultant
Kate Norlander
Project Manager
Juli Kramer
Web Manager
Nick Huseby
Web and Email Coordinator
Jennifer Thiel
Advancement Communications
Specialist
Cara Johnson
Contributors
Kate H. Elliott
Lisa Renze-Rhodes
Stewart Van Cleve
PAUL C. PRIBBENOW, PRESIDENT
Augsburg Now is published by
Augsburg University
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Opinions expressed in Augsburg Now
do not necessarily reflect official
university policy.
augsburg.edu/now
Around the quad
The Auggies who refuse to
‘keep politics off the field’
How Augsburg’s student-athletes use their training and
platform to advocate for causes beyond the sports arena
12
Senior Communications
Specialist for Principal Gifts
Amanda Symes ’09, ’15 MFA
ISSN 1058-1545
Faithfully yours,
02
06
The Scandinavian work ethic that inspired
the Augsburg Associates’ decades of service
Though the Augsburg Associates group has ended, the impact of
volunteer work over 37 years resonates
16
Can a smartphone app de-escalate traffic
stop encounters between drivers and police?
Auggie-created TurnSignl app provides an attorney on demand
so everyone gets home safely
20
Augsburg then and now
26
28
31
Auggies connect
A photo essay
Alumni class notes
In memoriam
Augsburg MBA alumni created an app to make
traffic stops safer. See the story on page 16.
On the cover: Augsburg University
celebrated graduates with an in-person
commencement ceremony Tuesday, June 8,
at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. Read
more on page 2.
All photos are by Courtney Perry unless
otherwise indicated.
Send address corrections to
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu.
Send comments to
now@augsburg.edu.
URBAN
ARBORETUM
VISIT AUGSBURG’S
GRANT-FUNDED
PROJECTS
BENEFIT AUGSBURG AND
THE ENVIRONMENT
Grants help shape Augsburg’s
teaching and learning community
In late 2020, the Council of Independent
Colleges’ NetVUE program awarded a two-year,
$40,000 grant to Augsburg President Paul
Pribbenow. The grant will help the university
explore whether and how the academic, faith,
and moral commitments that have shaped
its identity inform and reflect its aspiration
to be anti-racist and inclusive. The project
will engage 12 members of the community—
students, faculty, and staff—who will write a
collection of essays that will be a blueprint for
AUGSBURG CELEBRATES GRADUATES
with virtual and in-person commencement ceremonies
On Monday, May 3, Augsburg University celebrated
commencement virtually with the release of a prerecorded
video ceremony. The event included remarks from several
presenters and personalized slides for graduates displaying
photos and messages that the students submitted. The
viewers posted comments to the videostream as they watched
the event, and students took to social media to share their
graduation posts using the hashtag #AuggieGrad.
On Tuesday, June 8, Augsburg held an in-person
commencement for the classes of 2020 and 2021 at
U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. Because the 2020
commencement ceremony was virtual in alignment with
public health guidelines designed to prevent the spread of
COVID-19, many graduates from the Class of 2020 opted to
participate in the 2021 in-person ceremony, where attendees
were asked to wear face masks and stay physically distanced
from guests of different households.
Visit YouTube.com/AugsburgU to find video recordings of Augsburg’s virtual
and in-person events.
2
AUGSBURG NOW
DID YOU KNOW?
The traditional undergraduate Class of 2021 is Augsburg’s most
diverse graduating class with 45.6% Indigenous students and students
of color, an increase of more than 20% over the past three years.
moving forward in these efforts.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s
Toxicity Reduction program awarded Michael
Wentzel, associate professor of chemistry, a
grant of nearly $15,000. The grant will be used
in a two-year project to develop green chemistry
as a unifying theme throughout Augsburg’s
chemistry curriculum. While a number of
green chemistry principles are woven into
the curriculum, this work will coalesce these
principles into a clear message across
multiple courses, including courses taken
by non-majors. Chemistry majors will end
their studies with a new capstone course on
green chemistry and toxicology.
In addition, David Hanson, assistant professor
of chemistry, is now in his third year of a
four-year project funded by a $384,080 grant
from the National Science Foundation (Award
Number 1761638). Hanson is studying the
formation and growth of new particles in the
atmosphere. The results of his experiments
are expected to lead to improved accuracy
in predicting the influence of new particle
formation on climate, health, and visibility.
A GREEN OASIS
IN THE CITY
See the Augsburg University campus transition
from summer to fall
With the widespread availability of vaccines and effective public health
measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, many students, faculty members,
and staff are returning to on-campus activities with modified operations.
Augsburg invites you to visit our beautiful Minneapolis campus to experience
the diverse array of trees on a self-guided tour, complete with a map and
descriptive signs, or a guided tour.
The urban arboretum was made possible by generous donors and continues to
provide environmental benefits, educational opportunities, and aesthetic appeal
for Augsburg and the surrounding community.
• Find a list of trees and a self-guided walking tour map, covering
Augsburg’s campus and Murphy Square, at
augsburg.edu/arboretum.
• Want an in-person walking or golf cart tour of the
urban arboretum, Hagfors Center, or other campus
features? Contact Interim Vice President for
Advancement Amy Alkire at alkirea@augsburg.edu.
Board of Regents approves
PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW’S
CONTRACT through 2027
In its March meeting, the Augsburg University Board of Regents’
executive committee unanimously approved a multiyear contract
renewal for President Paul Pribbenow, who joined the university in
2006 as its 10th president.
“In an era when five- or six-year presidencies are common in
higher education, President Pribbenow’s long-term leadership of the
university has enabled Augsburg to achieve remarkable things,” said
Matt Entenza, chair of Augsburg’s Board of Regents. “The university
has become one of the most diverse private institutions in the Midwest
during his tenure and has welcomed record-breaking first-year classes in
the past two years. The university is fortunate to continue to have Paul’s
transformational leadership through 2027.”
Pribbenow is recognized as a leading
Learn more about Pribbenow’s
figure among the nation’s higher education
work and presidency at
augsburg.edu/president.
private institutions and is an engaging
teacher on ethics, philanthropy, and
American public life.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
3
$
BUY
$
$
$
$
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Q:
SELL
Meme stocks, Robinhood, and what to know about the stock market today
In early 2021, stocks of the companies AMC, BlackBerry, and GameStop made
headlines—but not just for performing well. In a matter of days, some of these stock
values increased by up to 30 times their previous price before a smartphone app
called Robinhood restricted trading, angering some investors and propelling the
situation into greater media attention. What happened, and what could that mean for
people interested or invested in the stock market?
Augsburg University’s Associate Professor of Business Marc McIntosh brings his
financial expertise to help us understand some of these rapid changes and see the
big picture of today’s stock market.
COURTESY PHOTO
funds. There has been a democratization in stock
market investing. The bad news is that there
are now lots of ways to lose money in the stock
market if you or your financial advisor don’t have
a fundamental knowledge of accounting and
finance. Finally, the ugly part is that not only
are gains magnified in a short period of time but
losses are as well. If used wisely, Robinhood can
be a tremendous way to build wealth through
stock market investing.
What are reliable principles or tactics for
people just beginning to get involved in the
stock market?
A:
Many famous investors such as Warren
Buffett and John Bogle have argued
convincingly that it’s very difficult to pick
stocks that will outperform the overall market.
In fact, there are several academic studies
that prove that it’s almost impossible for the
average mutual fund manager to “beat” the
overall market. So, the sensible strategy is
to put long-term savings into a broad-based
market index fund. Many retirement plans have
fund options indexed to the S&P 500 or the
total stock market.
Q:
Q:
A:
What are “meme stocks,” and why have
they become notable lately?
A meme stock is any stock that’s seen
its price skyrocket due to excessive
trading volume from retail investors, mostly
fueled by people on social media (primarily
Reddit, TikTok, and Twitter). There are
a lot of reasons why meme stocks have
been so popular. It’s partly pandemicrelated, since some people had more time
to gamble and speculate and may have
extra money on hand due to government
stimulus payments. Also, social media
forums have made it a lot easier to follow
trends. In the case of GameStop, the price
had a tremendous run almost solely due to
Reddit posts.
4
AUGSBURG NOW
Q:
What can we learn from what happened
with AMC, BlackBerry, and GameStop
stocks? What does that tell us about the
stock market and how people are interacting
with it?
A:
It’s important to distinguish between
gambling and investing. The vast
majority of people buying these stocks
are gambling that their price will go up
based on rumors and social media posts,
which can be very dangerous. It’s really the
equivalent of going to the racetrack and
betting on horses or going to Las Vegas to
play the slot machines. Investors, however,
do much more research based on the
fundamental financials of the company
and assess the potential of the company
based on either their analysis or input from
What should Augsburg Now readers keep in
mind about the stock market today and in the
near future?
a trusted, professional financial advisor. In
other words, it’s OK to invest in a meme
stock, but make sure you’ve done your
due diligence on the company’s growth
prospects. For example, does GameStop
really have cutting edge technology, or is
its business model antiquated?
Q:
Are tools like the investing app
Robinhood (which offers no-fee stock
trading) just a trend or an indication of a
new direction for the world of investing?
A:
Robinhood is here to stay. The good
news is that the app is extremely userfriendly, and the average investor can now
make money in the stock market in ways
that, until recently, were only available to
institutions like pension funds and mutual
A:
First: On average, investing in the S&P
has delivered returns higher than 10%
since 1929. This dwarfs the returns you get
by putting money in a savings account or
investing in high-quality bonds. For the long
haul, it’s important to have this return to retire
comfortably. Second: The time people spend in
retirement is getting longer as life spans have
expanded due to health care improvements,
so people need a huge nest egg to live
comfortably—possibly into their 90s. Third:
Due to the magic of compounding and starting
earlier in one’s life, achieving this nest egg can
be relatively simple. If average 25-year-olds
invest $2,000 in the stock market a year (such
as in an index fund that achieves 10% average
returns), they could have more than $1 million
when they retire at age 65. Wow!
AROUND THE QUAD
AUGSBURG STUDENTS EARN
FULBRIGHT AWARDS
This year, three Augsburg students earned Fulbright awards, and
one has been named a Fulbright alternate candidate.
Citlaly Escobar ’21 and Ciashia Shiongyaj ’21 both won Fulbright
English Teaching Assistantships to Taiwan. Shamsa Ahmed ’21
won a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to South Korea.
Terrence Shambley ’21, an alternate Fulbright English Teaching
Assistant candidate, will teach English in Laos if additional funding
becomes available.
The Fulbright Program was created to increase mutual understanding
between the people of the United States and the people of other countries.
This year marks the 75th anniversary of the program.
Augsburg to launch
CRITICAL RACE AND
ETHNICITY STUDIES
department, major
Augsburg University is developing a new Critical Race and Ethnicity
Studies Department.
The new department aligns with Augsburg’s mission and responds to
a proposal developed by a group of students, faculty, and staff that was
presented to the administration and approved by the faculty this year. A
group of students, led by Black women, made similar (as-yet unrealized)
demands after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968.
The department aims to meet the needs of today’s students with
culturally relevant courses and pedagogy that both centers and equips
them to think critically about their experience in the world. It will advance
the university’s public mission through connections with the community.
This year, the plan is to hire three new faculty in Pan-African, Latinx,
and Asian American studies. Once they’re hired, Augsburg will review next
steps, as well as how other departments can connect their own courses
and faculty to the new department.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
5
PHOTO BY WARREN RYAN
THE AUGGIES WHO REFUSE TO
‘KEEP POLITICS OFF THE FIELD’
How Augsburg’s student-athletes use their platform
to advocate for causes beyond the sports arena
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
6
AUGSBURG NOW
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
7
PHOTO BY WARREN RYAN
Forward/midfielder
Olivia House ’20
IN 2016, FIRST-YEAR STUDENT
Olivia House ’20 kneeled during the national anthem before
one of her first Auggie soccer matches. She was alone—the
only Black person on the team, and the only person kneeling
on either side of the field. For four years, House continued
to kneel as a respectful gesture to highlight pervasive racial
injustice. Fans and opposing players ridiculed her, she
was the first on the bus after away games, and teammates
unintentionally bruised her with microaggressions: “You’d look
so pretty if you straightened your hair.” “So-and-so acts way
Blacker than you.” “I always forget you’re Black.”
“Even though I was vocal and open about what I stood for,
my teammates didn’t see even half of who I was. I left so
much of my identity at the door because there would be too
many questions, too many things I’d have to explain about
my identity and community,” said House, a designer and art
director for a creative agency in Chicago. “Having to code
switch from diverse classrooms and social advocacy groups to
being the lone Black person on the team was exhausting.”
Augsburg is among the most diverse private colleges in the
Midwest—with students of color making up the majority of
the last four incoming undergraduate first-year classes. On
campus, House said she found her vocation: “to demonstrate
the power of design to communicate stories and create a
platform for voices who haven’t been heard.” And yet, her
experience demonstrated more work is needed, even at
the most equity-minded of institutions, and particularly in
athletics, where 71% of student-athletes are white, according
to a 2020 Augsburg internal survey.
“Me simply stepping onto a soccer field as the only Black
player is political in and of itself, without me saying a single
word,” she said. “Had I ‘just played the game’ and ‘kept
politics off the field,’ I would have perpetuated the myth
that athletes’ sole purpose is to entertain. You can’t ask us
to put all of our lives on display except for our thoughts and
opinions. It doesn’t work like that.”
Since House’s first year, the women’s soccer team has
welcomed other student-athletes of color, and multiple soccer
players and coaches have begun kneeling during the national
anthem as matters of diversity and justice have remained
prominent in conversations both on campus and across the
United States.
Augsburg Women’s Soccer Head Coach Michael Navarre
watched House address a crowd on the quad in September
2020 as a speaker at Augsburg Bold, a series of presentations
for students to hear about important topics for the broader
community. After House detailed a summer of racial justice
protests and rubber bullets, of murals and oral history
projects, Navarre commended House as the spark that ignited
the team and inspired other student-athletes to take a stand.
“At the time, we felt as though we were supporting Olivia
and our other players of color, but it wasn’t until the killing
of George Floyd—just a few miles from Augsburg—that
we truly began the difficult work that needed to be done,”
said Navarre, who has led the women’s soccer team for 23
seasons. “That self-reflection and education illuminated how
much more we could have been for Olivia and others, and how
much more we are now because of her. Our team is driven to
be leaders for social justice advocacy and action.”
‘An age of athletic activism’
Days after the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police,
Navarre asked the women’s soccer players to connect virtually
each week to discuss topics and resources shared on what
has become an 11-page document of articles, podcasts,
self-assessments, and videos to spur awareness, community
engagement, and education.
Midfielder Jenn Bobaric ’22 designed a Black Lives Matter
patch, and the team collaborated to design a warm-up shirt
that read “Auggies against injustice.” The team supported
several fundraisers and donation drives in honor of Floyd and
Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old biracial Black man who was
fatally shot by police during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center,
Minnesota. Molly Conners ’22 led a collection of personal
items and clothing for neighbors who frequent Augsburg’s
Health Commons locations, which are nursing-led drop-in
centers that offer resources and support.
Taylor Greathouse, women’s soccer volunteer assistant
coach and human resources assistant, said the team took to
social media as a way to educate and advocate for others.
“Instagram, in particular, was a way for our players and our
program to demonstrate our alliance to diversity, equity, and
inclusion,” Greathouse said. “For example, we have studentathletes personally impacted by the unrest in Myanmar
and Colombia, and we wanted our shirts, statements, and
discussions to address issues of injustice around the globe.
“I have learned more in the last two years about my own
privilege than I have in my lifetime. It’s not enough for
individuals to view diversity merely as racial diversity. We are
doing ourselves and our students a disservice if we do not first
educate ourselves about intersectionality,” Greathouse said,
referring to the study of intersecting identities and dimensions
of social relationships.
Across the Athletics Department, teams created T-shirts,
facilitated discussions, visited memorials, and engaged in
community activism. Augsburg Athletics partnered with
Augsburg Day Student Government to hold a town hall
featuring the voices of student-athletes of color and other
members of the Augsburg community. Chris Dixon, the
university’s first director of athletic diversity and inclusion,
facilitated this and other discussions and opportunities for
community engagement.
“When I arrived in 2019, I knew my position was an
important one, but little did I know just how vital it would
be to help our student-athletes, coaches, and staff process,
learn, grow, and begin to heal—together,” said Dixon, who
also serves as assistant coach for the men’s and women’s
track and field teams. “We are in an age of athletic activism,
and Augsburg is invested in this work to bring awareness and
take a stand. We empower our students, coaches, and staff to
have difficult conversations and use their status as leaders to
advance causes that matter.”
‘We can’t wait for the tide to shift’
To focus the department’s efforts and conversations, Augsburg
Athletics formed a Diversity and Inclusion Task Force in Fall
2020. The group of coaches and staff works closely with
university administration and student-athlete advisory groups.
Major initiatives include rewording of the national anthem
introduction, offering training sessions, and developing a
self-reported race survey of Augsburg student-athletes that
revealed 71% of student-athletes are white, 12% are Black,
8% are Latinx, 5% are multiracial, and 4% are Asian. Results
from a similar survey of coaches and staff are pending.
“We didn’t need surveys to point out that we lack diversity
in athletics, but we wanted to get a self-reported baseline
to assess how our students perceive themselves and the
department,” Dixon said. “This work is personal to me
as a Black father the same age as George Floyd when he
died. Athletics has always been a battleground for people
to advance causes. We reach audiences who might not be
exposed to these issues otherwise, both in the locker room
and in the stands.”
Dixon said that, although it’s difficult to turn inward
and recognize gaps, Auggies are eager to learn and adopt
best practices in recruiting and building inclusive team
cultures. “We celebrate diversity efforts at the national and
international levels of these sports, but we can’t wait for the
tide to shift. We are striving to be more present in diverse
neighborhoods and partner with programs that introduce
these sports to people with a range of backgrounds.”
In Fall 2020, the women’s hockey team gathered at
George Floyd Square, where 38th Street and Chicago
Avenue intersect in Minneapolis. The 24 student-athletes,
coaches, and staff walked around in silence as they took
in the flowers, pictures, and artwork that Michelle McAteer,
women’s hockey head coach, described as “a mix of pain,
sorrow, and inspiration.”
“Our players were shocked at the long lists of African
Americans killed by police, going back 20 years. We huddled
and listened to each other, and the athletes’ perspectives
were so powerful,” McAteer said.
The team also gathered on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in
January. Alongside McAteer, Assistant Coach Ashley Holmes
shared information she learned during a diversity, equity, and
inclusion training.
“We recognized we are two white women, and it
was not easy or comfortable, but that is the
reason why we should be doing this,”
McAteer said. “We need to make
these types of discussions more
natural and ongoing. Avoiding
talk and action because it’s not
natural or easy is a big part of
the problem. We’re not trying
to lecture or convince but share
information we’ve learned in a
meaningful way.”
McAteer said players have begun
kneeling for the national anthem, sharing
information on social media, and educating
family members and friends. The team routinely partners with
the DinoMights, an organization that mentors Minneapolis
youth through hockey.
Women’s hockey forward Lilia Scheid ’22 said this year
changed her. “I’ve learned that I need to make my voice
heard in the community because making change takes
every single one of us,” she added. “I’ve learned what it
means to be ‘not racist’ versus ‘anti-racist.’ Staying silent
only hurts marginalized groups even more, so it’s important
to have these tough conversations and speak out against
10
AUGSBURG NOW
racial injustice.”
Women’s lacrosse has been equally engaged. Teammates
wore rainbow jerseys in support of a transgender player, who
helped lead a discussion about transgender issues and terms.
Augsburg Women’s Lacrosse Head Coach Kathryn Knippenberg
said the team is working to be more than performative allies.
“If one of my athletes feels called to protest but doesn’t
have a ride, I will pick them up or find them a ride. If they
want to kneel or don’t want to kneel, they know they have my
support,” she said.
“Yes, we are here to win, but we are also here to equip
student-athletes with valuable life skills, to prepare them
for conversations and experiences they are facing and will
continue to face,” she said. “We want them to live out
Augsburg’s mission to be informed citizens, thoughtful
stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders who are
engaged in meaningful, transformative work.”
Allowing vs. actively supporting
All Augsburg teams agreed to adopt new wording to introduce
the national anthem before each contest: “Augsburg
University Athletics would like to recognize that the American
experience has not been the same for everyone under the
flag. As we continue the fight for equality and justice for all,
we now invite you to respectfully
express yourself for the playing of
our national anthem.”
“It’s not easy getting an
entire department and body of
student-athletes to agree on
wording, but it was an important
initiative of our Diversity and
Inclusion Task Force,” Dixon
said. “By having these words in
front of the national anthem, we
are acknowledging that we—as
a university—actively support
people in how they want to express themselves. There’s a
difference between this statement and simply ‘allowing’
people to kneel or whatever.”
Coaches and staff are expected to complete the Augsburg
Diversity and Inclusion certificate program, which requires 18
credits of specified training and encourages additional training
for advanced standing each year. In 2020, coaches and staff
completed the NCAA Division III’s LGBTQ OneTeam Program,
which stresses the importance of LGBTQ inclusion in college
athletics and provides an overview of common LGBTQ terms,
definitions, and concepts. The peer-driven educational
program, which Dixon facilitated, also shares best practices to
ensure all individuals may participate in an athletics climate
of respect and inclusion, regardless of gender expression,
gender identity, or sexual orientation.
“Social justice issues are incredibly important to us in
the Athletics Department, and when our student-athletes
are actively engaged in educating themselves about the
current and historical context of what is happening and they
are attempting to use their platform as student-athletes
to create awareness and positive change, I feel incredibly
proud of them,” said Kelly Anderson Diercks, who served as
associate athletic director and director of compliance until
July 2021. “Our student-athletes bring many identities and
intersectionalities to Augsburg and their respective teams. To
be the best we can be, we need to be able to show up fully
as our true selves. This means we need to have spaces to talk
about all those identities and intersectionalities and how the
events facing our world play out differently for us all.”
Recognition of these different identities and experiences
led to Dixon’s position; Augsburg hired him as part of a 2019
NCAA Ethnic Minorities and Women’s Internship Grant, which
the university also received in 2012. In 2014 and 2021, the
department received the NCAA Strategic Alliance Matching
Grant, which also supports the
hiring and mentorship of ethnic
minorities and women in athletic
leadership positions.
Alicia Schuelke ’20 MAE, former
assistant coach for men’s track
and field, said students are thrilled
with Dixon’s enthusiasm and vision
for the role.
“In a world where, many times,
the odds are stacked against us,
leaders of color provide hope
and strength,” said Schuelke,
a physical education teacher at Columbia Academy Middle
School in Columbia Heights, Minnesota. “I came to Augsburg
for the MAE program, but I was pleasantly surprised to find
how diverse the campus is, and it is my absolute favorite part
of my learning experience.
“If we can move the needle toward a more diverse group of
leaders that better represent our country’s demographics, then
students of color will begin to understand that the sky’s the
limit in terms of their own hopes, dreams, and aspirations.”
House said she is encouraged by the department’s work to
advance equity and inclusion. She appreciates the university’s
willingness to be vulnerable and invite her and other people
of color to share their experiences during this raw, unsettling
time. But, as any athlete knows, one must dedicate lots of
hours and effort to see results.
Augsburg Athletics is putting in the work.
“Yes, we are here to win, but we are
also here to equip student-athletes with
valuable life skills, to prepare them for
conversations and experiences they are
facing and will continue to face.”
—Kathryn Knippenberg
Kathryn Knippenberg (right) has served as head coach
of Augsburg University Women’s Lacrosse since 2014.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
11
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
PROJECTS FUNDED OR SUPPORTED BY
AUGSBURG ASSOCIATES
•
Trash and Treasure Sales
•
Welcome party for the 2011 visit of Their Majesties
King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway
•
Velkommen Jul buffets and boutique sales
•
Norwegian coffee at Taste of Augsburg
Homecoming events
•
Christensen Center’s welcome desk construction
•
Foss Center’s Green Room renovation
•
Christensen Center’s Augsburg Room and Marshall
Room renovations
•
Lindell Library’s special collections room creation
•
Hoversten Chapel’s Dobson pipe organ purchase
•
Christensen Scholars program funding
•
Various scholarships
Augsburg Associates fostered community connections and raised
funds to support the university’s work.
THESCANDINAVIAN WORK ETHIC
that inspired the Augsburg Associates’ decades of service
Though the Augsburg Associates group has ended,
the impact of volunteer work over 37 years resonates
Community volunteerism is so much a part of the fabric
of Norwegian life that they have a special name for it: dugnad.
Pronounced doog-nahd, it’s the tradition of neighbors
gathering for all kinds of communal pursuits—planting and
tending to a community garden, spending time chatting
with elders at a senior center, or painting a school building.
Dugnads are something everyone not only plans for, but looks
forward to.
12
AUGSBURG NOW
By Lisa Renze-Rhodes
Since the mid-1980s, Augsburg University has been home
to a team of women who drew on their Norwegian or broader
Scandinavian heritage to create their own dugnad. The group
became known as the Augsburg Associates and helped to raise
significant funds for their community.
Now, after 37 productive years of service, the Augsburg
Associates are disbanding. But their legacy will live on for
decades to come.
THE SOUNDS OF SERVICE
“The intent, when it started, was to help out on campus
where they needed help,” said Eunice Dietrich ’65. “The
original Associates were spouses of faculty members and
other women who had an ear to what was going on.”
Dietrich, a former Associates board chair who earned a
degree in home economics at Augsburg, said assistance
was needed across all facets of campus life. From stuffing
envelopes for alumni and donor mailings to setting up a
“nice meeting space” for the university’s Board of Regents
when they gathered, the Associates saw needs and then
filled those voids.
But it didn’t take long for the work to morph from
occasional events to addressing a situation requiring a
sound solution.
“The Associates came out of the Lutheran tradition
of ‘We’ll do anything for service,’” said Jerelyn Cobb ’63.
So in the 1980s, when an idea began to circulate about
bringing an organ to campus, the Associates orchestrated
a plan.
“In those days, people still didn’t have a lot of money,
but they could give us donations of goods,” Cobb said.
That’s how Trash and Treasure Sales began. Dishes,
linens, and other household items were packed into boxes
and readied for sale. Sporting goods and games were
brought in. And furs, jewelry, and even gowns from the
Dayton’s department store’s prestigious Oval Room were
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
13
President Paul Pribbenow (center) talks with King Harald V and Queen
Sonja of Norway during their visit to campus in 2011.
But before Their Majesties graced the campus, the
Associates had already begun making sure the heritage of the
school’s founders was celebrated and remembered.
Velkommen Jul, an annual celebration welcoming the
seasons of Advent and Christmas, took hold with attendees
donning thick, gorgeous Norwegian sweaters and sampling
delicious traditional foods including krumkake cookies. The
celebration has become a loved tradition in the Augsburg
community, even among students who don’t necessarily have
Scandinavian heritage.
Money raised at Velkommen Jul and through estate sales
and other efforts ultimately went to fund scholarships as well
as the Christensen Scholars, a cohort of students who explore
theology, faith, and vocation while engaging in communitybased learning experiences.
That, said Augsburg University President Paul Pribbenow,
is a lasting legacy for the organization: “Over many years,
the Augsburg Associates have been faithful and generous
supporters of Augsburg. Through their tireless efforts, the
Associates have raised scholarship funds and have helped
countless students pursue an Augsburg education.
“The annual Velkommen Jul celebrations, graciously
hosted by the Associates, highlighted our Norwegian roots,
cleaned, pressed, and readied for a chance at a new life.
The items were enough to fill a semitrailer, then
eventually two.
“Every Wednesday night, I’d have people come over,
and we’d sort everything,” Cobb said. “All the dishes in
one box, all the clothes in another, the sporting goods in
another corner.”
Then when the date of the sale neared, items were
transferred from the trucks to the site of the sale.
“The football team would come, and for two blocks we
would line up next to each other and pass boxes into the
gymnasium.”
The first sale raised $600, Cobb recalled. The next year:
$4,000. Then $10,000, $15,000, and $28,000.
When everything was done and counted, the Trash and
Treasure Sales netted a quarter of a million dollars. And
Augsburg got its organ.
WELCOME KING, QUEEN,
AND CHRISTMAS
Norwegian words echoed off the walls of classrooms and
hallways when Augsburg was founded, so there was little
surprise, though great delight, when King Harald V and
Queen Sonja of Norway visited campus in 2011. The
Associates were there to mark the day with special care—
while wearing traditional Norwegian bunads, the proud
folk outfits worn by men, women, and children on such
occasions of cultural significance.
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
Augsburg Associates oversee food and drinks at Velkommen Jul in 1992.
DID YOU KNOW?
•
The Augsburg Associates have raised about
$400,000 through their group initiatives.
•
Members of the Augsburg Associates
and their spouses have given more than
$50 million to the university as a whole.
•
Within their 600-person membership, there
were 38 households that were members of
the Sven Oftedal Society, a group of some
of Augsburg’s most generous donors.
even as they welcomed new generations of diverse students,
faculty, and staff. Personally, I am deeply grateful for the
members of the Associates who have supported me and
my family over the past 15 years as we worked together to
advance Augsburg’s mission,” Pribbenow said.
Though the time of the Associates’ dugnad has come
to a close, some of the group’s members are continuing
their volunteerism with another group: Augsburg Women
Engaged. Since it was formed by a group of Auggie women
in 2009, AWE has strengthened connections in the Augsburg
community and encouraged philanthropy to keep the
university’s hands-on education accessible to a broad range
of students. These overlapping commitments shared by AWE
and the Augsburg Associates demonstrate the deep-seated
commitment to service that is so emblematic of Auggies of
all stripes.
For the women doing the work, the Associates were more
than a service organization—they were family.
“You give and you get, you feel good about what you’ve
done. You don’t start out for that reason, but oftentimes when
you’re volunteering, you get more out of it than what you
give,” Dietrich said. “These women were so dedicated and
did this work with such joy.”
Anne Frame (left), the late spouse of Augsburg’s ninth president, Bill Frame,
was also a member of the Augsburg Associates. Read more about Anne’s life
and work on page 32.
Augsburg Associates roll lefse, a traditional Norwegian potato flatbread, for Velkommen Jul in 2011.
14
AUGSBURG NOW
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
15
Can a smartphone app
DE-ESCALATE TRAFFIC
STOP ENCOUNTERS
between drivers and police?
BY GITA SITARAMIAH
Auggie-created TurnSignl app
provides an attorney on demand
so everyone gets home safely
Childhood friends and Augsburg University Master of Business Administration
alumni Andre Creighton ’19 MBA and Mychal Frelix ’19 MBA understand the
fear of driving while Black and being stopped by police.
They both grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota, and knew the family of Philando
Castile, a Black man who was fatally shot by an officer during a 2016 traffic
stop in nearby Falcon Heights.
“The interest in creating change started with Philando Castile. That was
the initial gut punch,” Creighton said. “Flash forward to George Floyd in
2020, and it was like ripping off a Band-Aid to a wound that hasn’t healed.
We decided we had to do something.”
Creighton, an accountant, and Frelix, who was in sales for Sony
Electronics, left their stable day jobs in 2020. They teamed up with attorney
Jazz Hampton, who is also an adjunct professor at Mitchell Hamline School
of Law, and the three Black men launched a new company providing a
technology-based solution to de-escalate traffic stops by police.
Andre Creighton ’19 MBA (left) and Mychal Frelix ’19 MBA
to leave
18were motivated
AUGSBURG
NOWtheir stable jobs in 2020 to focus on
launching the TurnSignl app.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
17
Timely launch
The motto says it all: “Drive with an
attorney by your side.”
TurnSignl provides real-time,
on-demand legal guidance from
attorneys to drivers, all while drivers’
smartphone cameras record the
interaction. The mission is to protect
drivers’ civil rights, de-escalate roadside
interactions with police, and ensure
both civilians and officers return home
safely at the end of the day.
As is true of many startups, the
three co-founders wear multiple hats.
Hampton serves as CEO and general
counsel. Creighton is the chief financial
officer and chief operating officer while
Frelix is the chief revenue officer and
chief technology officer.
When Daunte Wright was shot and
killed by a police officer during a traffic
stop in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota,
in April, that only accelerated their
pace to bring the app to market. “This
has been an issue plaguing Black and
brown communities,” Frelix said. “We’re
thankful to have the ability and skill sets
to get this off the ground.”
They introduced the TurnSignl app in
May after they were able to leverage the
public awareness of police stops ending
tragically to raise more than $1 million
to bring the app to market.
How TurnSignl works
Users open the app and immediately
get connected to an attorney vetted
by TurnSignl to guide them in order
to de-escalate the encounter. Service
launched in Minnesota and will be
expanding to 10 states by the end of
2021. The founders also have created a
foundation to provide service for those
unable to pay for the app, which is
available on the Apple and Google app
stores. They expect the foundation to
support 25% of the app’s user base.
While the app is intended for anyone,
there is increasing attention to how
Black drivers are treated by police.
Twin Cities NBC affiliate KARE 11
reported in May that new data shows
that the majority of drivers pulled over
this year by Minneapolis police for
minor equipment violations are Black:
Black drivers accounted for more than
half of those stops despite making up
only about 20% of the city’s residents,
according to city data.
In St. Paul, Black drivers were almost
four times more likely to be pulled over
by police than white drivers, according
to a Pioneer Press analysis of data
from 2016 to 2020. Asian, Latino, and
Native American drivers were stopped at
roughly the same rate as white drivers,
the Pioneer Press reported.
The TurnSignl founders say their
product is more than just an app. It’s
a signal for change. “There’s no better
opportunity to impact change than this
moment, now,” Creighton said.
Defense attorney Taylor J. Rahm
is one of the lawyers who has joined
TurnSignl to be on call for motorists.
“Anything we can do to make sure
these situations are safe and that no
one gets harmed is something I hope
any lawyer would want to get involved
with,” he said.
Sometimes, a motorist making sudden
movements is interpreted as cause
for alarm and can be construed by an
officer as the driver going for a weapon
or drugs, leading to potential conflict.
“With TurnSignl, you have a lawyer on
the phone to help individuals know their
rights but also importantly know how
to handle the situation so nothing goes
wrong,” Rahm said. “The benefit is that
the officer knows that there’s an attorney
on the phone telling the person, ‘This is
what you should do during the stop.’”
The TurnSignl app has the potential
to make traffic stops safer for police as
well as motorists, said Mylan Masson,
retired director of the Hennepin
Technical College law enforcement
program and a former Minneapolis Park
Police officer. “Every traffic stop can be
dangerous for police officers,” said the
police training expert. The TurnSignal
app “could give someone a calming
sense that, ‘I’m not here alone.’”
Business owner Phil Steger offers
the app as an employee benefit for
TurnSignl co-founders [L to R] Mychal Frelix ’19 MBA,
attorney Jazz Hampton, and Andre Creighton ’19 MBA
plan to expand the app’s services from Minnesota to
10 more states by the end of 2021.
his 14-person Brother Justus Whiskey
Company in Minneapolis, believing
TurnSignl’s attorneys can act as
mediators to keep a traffic stop from
escalating into danger.
“If you think you’ve been stopped
unlawfully, most people don’t know
that they still have to cooperate,” said
Steger, who was previously an attorney
for law firm Dorsey & Whitney. “You can
still be taken to jail.”
A TurnSignl attorney can advise in real
time: “Every defendant has the right,
if they think they have been stopped
unlawfully, to challenge the case in
court later,” he said.
Business project for
‘the times we’re in’
As the TurnSignl founders prepared to
launch the company, they turned to
Augsburg’s MBA program to assist them
in developing the business plan.
“A key part of the Augsburg MBA
experience is that we want students
to have practical experience and
apply critical thinking,” said George
Dierberger, associate business professor
and director of the MBA program.
Students in the MBA program grapple
with real-world challenges faced by local
businesses via a management consulting
project, which supported TurnSignl’s
launch. This is just one of the many
MBA program experiences in which
students collaborate on projects, case
studies, presentations, and simulations.
The TurnSignl project represents
Augsburg’s goals to be socially
conscious, said Mike Heifner ’21 MBA,
who worked on the pricing strategy of
the TurnSignl business plan. “This was
a good example of how capitalism could
bring social value to society,” he said.
Augsburg graduate student Stephanie
Oliver ’21 MBA hopes the TurnSignl app
will open new conversations and foster
a different way of thinking about how
police and civilians interact during
traffic stops.
“This project was my first choice
because of the times we’re in,” she said.
Oliver’s role in the MBA group was
to analyze the research and data
about traffic stops nationally by race.
What she found was a system with
inconsistent reporting about race and
traffic stops across states. What was
clear was that even after accounting for
those inconsistencies, the disparities
were apparent in stops involving people
of color.
One of the studies she reviewed was
the Stanford Open Policing Project,
which analyzed data from nearly
100 million traffic stops and found
significant racial disparities in policing
and, in some cases, evidence that bias
also played a role.
This didn’t surprise Oliver. Her
husband is Black and was frequently
pulled over when they first moved to
their Twin Cities suburb years ago. Once,
the police even questioned her then
5-year-old daughter about whether he
was actually her father.
“I ask why I’m being pulled over
when officers approach my vehicle,
and they get angry at me,” Oliver said.
“But I have a right to know why I’m
pulled over.”
She worries about her two young
Black sons but is optimistic that the
TurnSignl app can start to change the
dynamics during a police stop. “I know
when my daughter goes to Augsburg this
fall, I’m going to get this app for her.”
The TurnSignl app is available on
the Apple and Google app stores.
Data on drivers and
police traffic stops
Key findings from the national data research
Stephanie Oliver ’21 MBA gathered for the
TurnSignl business plan:
• On average, legal intervention death rates
for Black men were 4.7 times higher than
those of white men from 1979 to 1988, and
3.2 times higher from 1988 to 1997. (2002
American Journal of Public Health study)
• Black men are 3 times more likely than
other races to die from the use of police
force. Oliver said this was particularly
alarming as Black males make up only
about 6% of the total U.S. population.
(2016 Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s National Vital Statistics Data
2010–14)
• When driver race/ethnicity was visible,
Black drivers were nearly 20% more
likely to be the subject of a discretionary
traffic stop than were white drivers. (2014
San Diego State University research)
• Among males aged 10 years or older who
were killed by police use of force, the
mortality rate among non-Hispanic Black
and Hispanic individuals was 2.8 and
1.7 times higher, respectively, than that
among white individuals. (Racial/Ethnic
Disparities in the Use of Lethal Force by
U.S. Police 2010–14)
• Search rates for whites are significantly
lower, at around 18% of the traffic
stops, while search rates for Blacks and
Hispanics total about 82%. (Compiled from
Stanford Open Policing Project data for
Connecticut; Illinois; North Carolina; Rhode
Island; South Carolina; Texas; Washington;
and Wisconsin; and municipal police
departments in Nashville, Tennessee; New
Orleans; Philadelphia; Plano, Texas; San
Diego; and San Francisco)
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
19
ARCHIVE PHOTO
ThenNOW
&
AUGSBURG
A photo
essay
ARCHIVE PHOTO
BY JOHN WEIRICK AND
STEWART VAN CLEVE, DIGITAL ARCHIVES AND
RESEARCH SERVICES LIBRARIAN
Augsburg women’s basketball plays against the College of
Saint Benedict in Si Melby Hall, 2018.
or 152 years, Augsburg has both
changed and remained the same. Though
the Augsburg community looks much
different outwardly—campus layout and
buildings, student body demographics and
style of clothing, technology and teaching
methods—the Auggie spirit continues to
inspire faculty and staff to cultivate a vibrant
learning environment in which students can
engage in meaningful hands-on experiences.
Enjoy these glimpses into the Augsburg
of the past and the university of today.
An image of Augsburg’s campus and the Minneapolis skyline in 1967, stitched together
from three frames of an aerial camera shot in a promotional film.
Part of Augsburg’s campus—including Old Main, two residence halls, and the Norman
and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion—in 2018.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
PHOTO BY TOM ROSTER
Auggies shoot hoops in Old Main gymnasium,
circa 1945.
F
The Augsburg community poses in front of Old Main in 1931.
20
AUGSBURG NOW
The Class of 2023 gathers in front of Old Main in 2019. This fall, group photos are
planned for the Class of 2024 and the Class of 2025.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
21
COURTESY PHOTO
ARCHIVE PHOTO
COURTESY PHOTO
ARCHIVE PHOTO
The camera club in 1957 included [L to R] Jerry Matison ’59,
Stan Quanbeck ’59, and James Nichols ’58.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
An Auggie wears virtual reality goggles in a new media class
in 2019.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
Students work in a television studio, possibly in the
basement of Memorial Hall (above, 1976), and at a
video shoot in Foss Center (right, 2019).
Georg Sverdrup and Sven Oftedal, who each served as
Augsburg’s president, speak at a gathering of students in the
first Old Main building (which was demolished to build Science
Hall and Sverdrup Hall), 1897.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
PHOTO BY DON STONER
A procession in a chapel service January 24, 2020.
Students attend a Pan-Afrikan Student Union cookout in Murphy Square (left, 1998) and an event in the park to
welcome students back to campus (below, 2019).
Augsburg women’s track and field student-athletes prepare for a race (left, 1985) and hit the track (right, 2021).
22
AUGSBURG NOW
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
23
AUGGIES CONNECT
AUGGIES CONNECT
ALUMNI BOARD
FRENCH HOUSE
The Augsburg University Alumni Board
is an opportunity for alumni from all
programs and class years to build
relationships with each other and the
university today. Members connect with
institutional leaders, faculty, students,
and staff to better understand and
support Augsburg’s mission. We are
excited to welcome the newest members
to the board!
Dave Stevens ’90
Navid Amini ’19 MBA
Willie Giller ’19
Arianna Antone-Ramirez ’20
Berlynn Bitengo ’21
Learn more about the alumni board.
augsburg.edu/alumni
In 1966, seven women moved into French
House, a Minneapolis building adjacent
to Augsburg’s campus that housed the
remaining incoming first-year women who
could not be accommodated in the residential
housing on campus. They called themselves
“the leftovers” and became fast friends who
still get together at least once a year.
The French House Friends traveled twice to
Washington, where Linda Larson ’70 lives, and
Larson has traveled annually to Minnesota,
where the other six women live. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, the group has gathered
monthly via Zoom videoconferencing, and
they are eager to gather in Minnesota this fall.
“Augsburg fostered quality friendships that
have remained with me today,” said Mary
(Loken) Veiseth ’70.
$
WHERE THERE’S A WILL, THERE’S A WAY
$
In 2020, Augsburg University’s Institutional Advancement
staff sponsored a series of virtual financial conversations
hosted by Augsburg alumni with expertise in constructing
a will and financial planning. The virtual events—called
Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way—had such positive
engagement from alumni that the events were hosted again
this summer.
ON THE HORIZON VIRTUAL EVENTS
STRENGTHEN AUGSBURG COMMUNITY
Last year, On the Horizon virtual events with President Paul Pribbenow
engaged more than 500 Auggies and raised generous support for the
Student Emergency Fund, the President’s Strategic Fund, student
scholarships, and other key university efforts. This virtual event series
was created to keep the Augsburg community up to date with the
university’s ongoing work and adjustments during the pandemic. Five
more On the Horizon events in the series were hosted during Spring
2021 with specific groups, such as retired faculty, former regents and
regents emeriti, and current and former alumni board members.
Find video recordings of the events
at YouTube.com/AugsburgU.
COURTESY PHOTO
100
Pictured in 2018 [front, L to R]: Diane Lempke ’69, Mary
(Loken) Veiseth ’70, Linda (Radtke) Karkhoff ’70, Paulette
(Olson) Odegaard ’70. [Back, L to R]: Susan (Olson)
Williams ’70, Mary Ellen Buss ’70, Linda Larson ’70.
Want to learn more about making a will and financial plans?
Visit augsburg.edu/alumni/blog and search for “Where There’s a Will.”
24
AUGSBURG NOW
NEW ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
FOR AUGSBURG STUDENTS
As part of Augsburg’s ongoing Great Returns fundraising campaign,
the university set an ambitious goal of establishing 150 new endowed
scholarships. As of Spring 2021, the university had received 100 new
endowed scholarships! Augsburg is presenting water droplet sculptures
to the first 150 donors who establish new endowed scholarships. These
handmade sculptures represent the impact that donors make in the
Augsburg community. When a water droplet hits the surface of a pond,
the droplet causes a ripple that continues to expand.
COURTESY PHOTO
$
COURTESY PHOTOS
Pictured top to bottom:
•
•
•
•
•
A private Facebook group
FRIENDS
WELCOMES NEW MEMBERS
JUST FOR
AUGGIES
Be a part of live virtual events, and interact
with alumni, faculty, staff, students, and
university leaders.
1.
Log on to Facebook.
2. Search for
“Auggie Connections.”
3.
Select “Join group.”
4. Answer membership
questions so we
know it’s you.
5. Create a post to
introduce yourself.
Join the Auggie Connections
private Facebook group.
facebook.com/groups/auggieconnections
To learn more about establishing
a scholarship, contact:
Amy Alkire
Interim Vice President for Advancement
612-330-1188 | alkirea@augsburg.edu
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
25
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
ANNA COX ’22
Augsburg Now staff asked the university’s Instagram followers for the resource they most
appreciated as a student. Here are a few of their responses, edited for length and clarity.
Student government! I
learned how to advocate
for myself and others.
TRIO/SSS and Multicultural
Student Services.
BRITTANY KIMBALL ’13
The CLASS office helped me
to be successful while [I was]
undergoing cancer treatment.
DESTYN LAND ’19
MARGARET ALBERS ’21
The openness and willingness
of professors to help students
along the way.
Residence Life. Shoutout to
the best supervisors ever,
Eric, Ryan, and Seth.
EVE TAFT ’18
Center for Wellness and
Counseling. I’d probably never
have gotten mental health
treatment otherwise.
Follow @augsburguniversity on Instagram.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
ARIANNA ANTONE-RAMIREZ ’20
NIKKI DARST ’15
The wonderful librarians!
The 1947 and 1948 MIAC championship
baseball teams were recognized at a Hall of
Fame banquet in 1985. Pictured are [front,
L to R]: Charles “Chuck” Bard ’50, Ken
Walsh ’48, Art Marben ’47, Roger Leak ’50,
Marvin Johnson ’49, Jennings Thompson ’51,
Jeroy Carlson ’48. [Back, L to R]: Edor
Nelson ’38 (coach), Ralph Pearson ’49,
Duane Lindgren ’48, Arnold Henjum ’49,
Robert Howells ’50, Bobb Miller ’48.
1974
SAVE THE DATE:
ALL-SCHOOL REUNION
Mark your calendar to join us for the All-School Reunion in Fall 2022.
Read more Class Notes online
and submit your alumni news.
26
AUGSBURG NOW
augsburg.edu/alumni
Charles “Chuck” Bard ’50 has always been a sports enthusiast. At
Augsburg, Bard played football and baseball, notably serving as
the second baseman on Augsburg’s 1947 and 1948 MIAC
championship teams. However, the sport that Bard loved
most—and the sport that brought him the most notoriety—
was one he never played: hockey.
Hockey wasn’t played widely when Bard was in school. By
the time he started college, Augsburg had a hockey team. However, Bard already played
football and baseball, and student-athletes were limited to participating in only two sports.
Bard attended as many Auggie hockey games as he could and enjoyed watching the
players out on the ice.
After graduating in 1950 with a degree in physical education and a minor in journalism,
Bard continued his passion for sports by co-founding the Decathlon Athletic Club in the
late 1960s. Located in Bloomington, Minnesota, it was the first private athletic club in
Minnesota outside of downtown Minneapolis or St. Paul.
By 1978, Bard was still an avid hockey fan and a proud owner of Minnesota North Stars
hockey season tickets. But he noticed that hockey didn’t have an award to honor the best
collegiate players in the nation like other sports, so he decided his athletic club would
start a nationally recognized hockey award. After consulting with the Los Angeles athletic
club that started the John Wooden Award for outstanding collegiate basketball players,
Bard established the Hobey Baker Award, named after a hockey legend. In 1981, the first
Hobey Baker Award was given to Neal Broten. Broten played center for the University of
Minnesota and the “Miracle on Ice” U.S. Olympic hockey team, which took gold at Lake
Placid, New York, in 1980.
Since that first award, the Hobey has honored 40 hockey players from around the
United States. The award is given to a player who best demonstrates “teamwork,
dedication, integrity, exceptional play, humility, and above all, character.”
In 2007, Bard visited Augsburg’s campus to recognize longtime men’s hockey coach,
Ed Saugestad ’59, who was a Hobey Baker Legends of Hockey honoree.
COURTESY PHOTO
1950
You chimed in:
Auggie launches national hockey award
Augsburg alumna and former regent joins University of
Minnesota’s Board of Regents
COURTESY PHOTO
AUGGIES CONNECT
Ruth Johnson ’74, MD, was elected to the University of Minnesota’s
Board of Regents 1st Congressional District seat. Johnson studied
chemistry and biology at Augsburg, where she earned a bachelor’s
degree with summa cum laude honors; graduated from what is now
Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine; and completed her residency at Mayo Graduate
School of Medicine. She served 16 years on Augsburg’s Board of Regents, was the chair of
academic and student affairs, co-chair of the campaign cabinet, co-founder of the science
advisory board, and vice chair of the regent’s committee. In 1996, Johnson was named a
distinguished alumna of Augsburg.
Read the full story on the aumni news blog: augsburg.edu/alumni/blog.
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
27
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
COURTESY PHOTO
1986
Tamra (Pederson) Pyrtle ’86
and her horse, Bravo.
28
AUGSBURG NOW
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
‘Underestimate me; that will be fun’
Tammera Diehm ’93 ranked as a leading attorney
Tamra (Pederson) Pyrtle ’86 excelled in school and in her career, yet she always made
time for the playfulness of science and math.
At Augsburg, Tamra pursued a chemistry degree. This was a significant challenge,
particularly for a student with a double minor in mathematics and German. But Tamra’s
persistent nature helped her earn a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, graduating with
honors in 1986.
“Obviously she was not afraid of a challenge. There is a saying of which she was
particularly fond: ‘Go ahead, underestimate me; that will be fun,’” said Brett Pyrtle,
Tamra’s husband.
Tamra’s exceptional knowledge wasn’t always reserved for schoolwork. One
night in 1983, she and her friends convinced members of the Augsburg football
team to carry a Volkswagen Beetle into the student center. Tamra was able to
direct the crew so they could do this without taking the doors off the entry. The
geometry of this feat was lost on the maintenance staff, who had to remove the
entrance doors to get the vehicle back out.
In her first professional job, Tamra was hired as a lab supervisor for BuckbeeMears St. Paul. She was the first college graduate to hold the position, and she
learned quickly how to balance her academic knowledge with practical skills
required to meet the fast-paced demands of metal-etching production. She also
learned how to stand up for herself in a plant where she was the only woman in
technical management.
After a few other positions handling instrumentation in a consulting lab, supervising
etched metal operations, providing quality assurance analysis, and teaching advanced
placement chemistry, Tamra joined Medtronic’s neuromodulation division as a senior
quality engineer. She was quickly promoted to principal quality engineer and developed a
reputation as the go-to resource for tough quality engineering and analytical challenges.
Despite her technical jobs, Tamra continued to pursue fun applications of science,
and she particularly loved how science and nature intersected. It was no surprise to her
family when she sold her collector car to buy a thoroughbred horse named Bravo. Tamra
learned as much as she could about veterinary care and medicine so that she could
regularly administer Bravo’s shots herself.
The communication between Bravo and Tamra was something special, said her
parents, Wayne and Lynette Pederson. Bravo perked up when he saw Tamra coming
and even recognized her vehicle. They had conversations and seemed to know what the
other was saying.
On December 13, 2018, Tamra passed away at the age of 55 after battling cancer for
more than two years. She left behind her husband of 24 years, Brett; her parents, Wayne
and Lynette; her brother, Carey Pederson ’88; and her sister, Kristin (Pederson) Merkel ’91.
“All three of our children are Augsburg graduates, and our family ties to Augsburg run
deep,” said Wayne. “Augsburg was a significant contributor to Tami’s success. We wish
for other students to have the opportunities Tami had, and what better place to provide
some assistance than at Tami’s alma mater.”
Wayne and Lynette, along with Brett, established the Tamra Lynn Pederson Pyrtle
Endowed Scholarship at Augsburg. This scholarship will be used to support students
interested in pursuing a major in chemistry and who maintain a minimum GPA of 3.0.
Tammera Diehm ’93 was recognized as a distinguished leader in her field by
Chambers USA, one of the world’s leading guides to the legal profession. Diehm’s
work encompasses numerous aspects of real estate transactions, including buying,
selling, leasing, development, and financing. She helps local and national clients of
varying sizes navigate the complexities that come with owning and occupying real
estate, such as zoning, land use, government approvals, and regulatory compliance.
Like a true Auggie, Diehm aims to unlock the full potential of her team through
motivational coaching and support.
“I want to give our firm members the ability to build their own careers, offering
flexibility and support while maintaining our firm’s core values and commitment to
client service,” Diehm said.
Accounting roles add up for Paula Diaz ’03, Northview Bank CEO
Paula Diaz ’03 has been named president and CEO of Northview Bank, which
has branches across Minnesota. After graduating from Augsburg with a degree in
accounting, Diaz has enjoyed a robust career in finance. Starting out as a public
accountant, she went on to become the finance director of Cummins NPower. She
has been at Northview Bank since 2014, where she was the CFO prior to stepping
into her new role.
“Paula is prepared to be the new leader for Northview Bank. Her experience,
knowledge, and people skills make her the logical choice,” said Ron Carlson, former
president of Northview Bank.
Trailblazing Auggie Abdulkadir Sharif ’20 continues geopolitical studies
at Georgetown
Abdulkadir Sharif ’20 studied political science and international relations at
Augsburg and became Augsburg’s first student to win the Pickering Foreign Affairs
Fellowship. He also received a Fulbright Scholarship, a Boren Scholarship to study
Swahili in Tanzania (which he accepted instead of a Critical Language Scholarship,
which he also won), and a Gilman Scholarship from the U.S. Department of
State to study in Namibia and South Africa. Sharif also participated in Princeton
University’s Public Policy and International Affairs Fellowship. He planned to teach
English in Malaysia through the Fulbright program before travel plans were affected
by the COVID-19 pandemic, and he was reassigned to the Netherlands. He is
pursuing a master’s degree in global politics and security with a full scholarship to
Georgetown University.
1993
2003
2020
Read more Class Notes online
and submit your alumni news.
augsburg.edu/alumni
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
29
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
IN MEMORIAM
Recently published Auggies
Augsburg alumni, faculty, and students have published
literature and earned the public’s attention during the past year.
•
Lowell “A.L. Shane” Ziemann ’60—“Alex, Hank & Hawk:
Cowboys, Gunmen & Road Agents: A Novel of the
American West”
•
David Nash ’06—“The Man in the Pines,” a novel
and soundtrack
•
Joshua Phillip Johnson ’17 MFA—“The Forever Sea,” a novel
•
Robby Steltz ’18 MFA—“Nellie,” a short play that earned
second place in the Virginia State One Acts competition
•
Khadijo “JoJo” Abdi ’19 MFA—One of the main authors that
participated in the first Somali Community Book Fair in
Burnsville, Minnesota
Remembering and
honoring Auggies
1950s
Below we recognize the
individuals whose notifications of
death Augsburg received between
January 1 and July 14, 2021.
Alfred M. Sannerud ’50, Ham
Lake, Minnesota, age 97, on
June 28.
1940s
•
Tracy Ross ’19 MFA—“James Dean and the Beautiful
Machine,” a book of poetry
Hazel (Soiseth) Durfee ’41, Tampa,
Florida, age 102, on March 10.
•
Kristine Joseph ’20 MFA—“Simply Because We Are Human,”
a memoir
Ebba A. (Johnson) Brooks ’42,
Duluth, Minnesota, age 101,
on January 12.
•
•
Cole W. Williams ’22 MFA—Poems published in “Intima: A
Journal of Narrative Medicine” and “Sh!t Men Say to Me: A
Poetry Anthology in Response to Toxic Masculinity”
Faculty member Anika Fajardo—“What if a Fish,” a novel that
won the Minnesota Book Award for Middle Grade Literature
• “Murphy Square 1975–2020: A Sesquicentennial Sampler
of Literature by Augsburg Students”—Professor Emeritus
Doug Green said, “More than 40 recent students from 2016
through 2019 served as co-editors, haggling over selections
drawn from the entire digital archive of Murphy Square
[Augsburg’s student-created literary and visual arts journal].
Megan Johnson ’19 designed the volume.”
Evelyn H. (Sonnack) Halverson ’43,
Edina, Minnesota, age 100, on
February 14.
Helen D. (Arnseth) Torvik ’44,
Moorhead, Minnesota, age 98,
on April 29.
Marilyn L. (Rykken) Michaelson ’47,
Coralville, Iowa, age 94, on
June 10.
Mildred A. (Thorsgard) Strand ’47,
Remer, Minnesota, age 95, on
March 28.
Marian J. (Halverson) Tilleson ’48,
Orfordville, Wisconsin, age 94,
on March 6.
Gloria V. (Swanson) Duoos ’49,
Cambridge, Minnesota, age 94,
on January 19.
Read more Class Notes online
and submit your alumni news.
Robert S. Duoos ’49, Cambridge,
Minnesota, age 97, on January 11.
Emmet T. Oein ’50, Alexandria,
Minnesota, age 93, on May 14.
Dorothy E. Twiton ’50, Sturgeon Bay,
Wisconsin, age 92, on April 27.
Robert L. Boxrud ’51, Hettinger,
North Dakota, age 92, on
March 18.
Valborg Huglen ’53, Newfolden,
Minnesota, age 96, on January 15.
Harland P. Danielson ’58, Cadott,
Wisconsin, age 89, on June 6.
John R. Lingen ’53, Brooklyn Park,
Minnesota, age 90, on April 28.
Richard L. Feig ’58, Minneapolis,
age 84, on February 1.
Vernon S. Stenoien ’53,
Woodstock, Illinois, age 89,
on March 4.
Bonita M. (Griep) Ram ’58,
Timberon, New Mexico, age 84,
on February 20.
Maryan A. (Knutson) Froland ’54,
Granite Falls, Minnesota, age 88,
on April 26.
Curtis M. Lake ’59, Waldport,
Oregon, age 90, on March 10.
Edward O. Nyhus ’54, Minneapolis,
age 88, on April 30.
Allard J. Christenson ’51,
Mahnomen, Minnesota, age 92,
on February 25.
Merton C. Phillips ’54, Salem,
Oregon, age 88, on January 28.
Merlin A. Johnson ’51, Grantsburg,
Wisconsin, age 90, on February 2.
Louis P. Rolf ’54, Faribault,
Minnesota, age 91, on March 22.
LaWayne N. Morseth ’51,
Minneapolis, age 93, on
January 10.
Jerome C. Trelstad ’54, Santa
Maria, California, age 89, on
April 24.
Donald C. Thorson ’51, Chippewa
Falls, Wisconsin, age 92, on
January 9.
Norma J. (Sorenson) Fretheim ’55,
Federal Way, Washington, age 87,
on April 30.
Marjorie A. (Haley) Eliason ’52,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 90, on
January 29.
James A. Johnson ’55, Sun City,
Arizona, age 88, on June 21.
Astrid (Braaten) Ongstad ’52,
Devils Lake, North Dakota,
age 91, on April 10.
James S. Hamre ’53, South
Pasadena, Florida, age 89,
on January 3.
Harriet R. (Bruder) Holtmeier ’53,
Waconia, Minnesota, age 91, on
May 29.
Rodney O.J. Erickson ’56,
Moorhead, Minnesota, age 86,
on March 16.
James W. Wennerlind ’59,
Minneapolis, age 89, on March 12.
1960s
Marlene L. Studlien ’60, New
Hope, Minnesota, age 82, on
June 17.
Darrell G. Wiese ’60, Northfield,
Minnesota, age 84, on January 9.
Dennis J. Johnson ’61, Minneapolis,
age 81, on March 26.
Bruce W. Abrahamson ’62, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 80, on April 28.
Donald E. Brynildson ’62, Garrison,
Missouri, age 85, on May 6.
Ingolf B. Kronstad ’62, Kirkland,
Washington, age 80, on
February 10.
Lucile M. (Kunkel) Matison ’56,
Glenwood, Minnesota, age 88,
on April 1.
Bonnie E. (Lassila) Curtin ’63,
Minneapolis, age 79, on January 3.
Thomas M. Warme ’57, Moneta,
Virginia, age 85, on March 17.
Gloria J. (Odegaard) Schlechter ’63,
Sioux Falls, South Dakota,
age 79, on January 13.
Elyce E. (Lundquist) Arvidson ’58,
Minneapolis, age 84, on April 1.
Robert F. Soli ’63, Coon Rapids,
Minnesota, age 83, on January 10.
augsburg.edu/alumni
30
AUGSBURG NOW
SPRING–SUMMER 2021
31
IN MEMORIAM
Charles M. Piper ’64, Northfield,
Minnesota, age 85, on March 27.
Charlotte M. (Nordmark) Sween ’71,
Plymouth, Minnesota, age 81, on
May 2.
Carolyn I. (Raymond) Vickers ’85,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 79, on
January 21.
William K. Ogren ’73, Minneapolis,
age 70, on March 10.
Stanley L. Hjermstad ’88, Sanford,
Florida, age 88, on January 23.
Dennis B. Reiman ’66, Farmington,
Minnesota, age 78, on April 19.
Derrell C. Wistrom ’74, Austin,
Texas, age 74, on February 22.
1990s
Steven L. Erickson ’67, Stanchfield,
Minnesota, age 76, on June 28.
Kathlyn H. (Faber) Norum ’75,
Alexandria, Minnesota, age 80,
on June 26.
Tamera K. (Fillips) Shreve ’90,
Chanhassen, Minnesota, age 54,
on June 21.
Richard G. Johnson ’76,
Minneapolis, age 72, on April 23.
Brenda K. Quade ’91, Rockford,
Illinois, age 53, on February 4.
1980s
Dawn C. Van Tassel ’95,
Minneapolis, age 46, on April 7.
Carol R. (Strand) Pattee ’66,
Silverton, Oregon, age 78, on
February 8.
Duane M. Ilstrup ’68, Rochester,
Minnesota, age 74, on February 9.
Suzann B. (Johnson) Nelson ’68,
Grand Rapids, Minnesota, age 74,
on March 14.
Judi E. (Romerein) Tsudo ’68,
Minneapolis, age 74, on March 18.
Erland J. Nord ’69, Elbow, Canada,
age 91, on January 5.
1970s
Ross L. Jacobson ’70, Janesville,
Wisconsin, age 72, on June 7.
Bonnie K. (Rosvold) Risius ’70,
Bricelyn, Minnesota, age 72, on
March 3.
Vivian M. (Shannon) Holman ’80,
Minneapolis, age 78, on
February 15.
Maureen T. (Conroy) Kurtz ’80,
Shell Lake, Wisconsin, age 63,
on July 6.
James M. Ruud ’80, Minneapolis,
age 78, on June 26.
Lorraine G. (Herman) Bergquist ’82,
Minneapolis, age 87, on March 4.
Darrell C. Wistrom ’99, Austin,
Texas, age 74, on February 22.
2000s
Christian H. Anderson ’01,
Shakopee, Minnesota, age 47,
on April 11.
Whitney J. Anderson ’09,
Minneapolis, age 34, on June 17.
2010s
Kevin P. Ehrman-Solberg ’15,
Minneapolis, age 33, on June 12.
Elizabeth (Quackenbush) Harper ’15,
New Orleans, age 39, on March 3.
Cole A. Linnell ’15, Rogers,
Minnesota, age 29, on March 14.
Faculty, staff, and friends
Department of Languages and
Cross-Cultural Studies Adjunct
Instructor James Frankki,
Minneapolis, age 59, on March 21.
Professor Emerita of Nursing
Beverly J. (Swenson) Nilsson,
Minnetonka, Minnesota, age 89,
on November 10.
Center for Global Education
and Experience Mexico Site
Staff Member Moisés Rios Bello,
Cuernavaca, Mexico, age 50, on
February 23.
Center for Global Education and
Experience Mexico Site Staff
Member Maria “Isabel” Sanchez
Hernandez, Cuernavaca, Mexico,
age 48, on February 21.
LONG-TERM STABILITY FOR
LIFE-CHANGING EDUCATION
SUSTAIN AUGSBURG’S MISSION THROUGH A CHARITABLE GIFT ANNUITY
What is a charitable gift annuity?
A charitable gift annuity is a “split gift.” Part of your gift is used by Augsburg immediately to support our mission of
educating students, and part of the gift is set aside to be invested to support future fixed payments to you.
ARCHIVE PHOTO
Benefits of a charitable gift annuity:
Anne Frame, 84, passed away July 13, in Red Wing, Minnesota. She was the spouse
of Bill Frame, Augsburg’s ninth president who served from 1997 to 2006. They were
a part of Augsburg’s Sven Oftedal Society, a group of generous donors who have
arranged a deferred gift to the university to provide student scholarships.
Anne was involved in many parts of the Augsburg community, including as a
member of the Augsburg Associates (see story on page 12). She welcomed students,
faculty, staff, alumni, and friends to Augsburg House. She sang a folk song with
Bill during a 2004 Auggie Variety Show, engaged with students at Augsburg’s Late
Night Breakfast during finals week, and participated in a trip to China with Bill and
other Minnesota private college presidents to increase the number of undergraduate
student exchanges between the United States and China. Anne will be remembered
for her Auggie spirit of dedication, generosity, and service.
Submit address changes and nominations for
remembrances to alumniupdate@augsburg.edu.
•
•
Added source of income—You will receive fixed annual
payments for your lifetime.
Long-term support to Augsburg—Unlike an immediate
income annuity, the remaining value of your annuity will
go to Augsburg instead of an insurance company after
you pass away.
“
•
•
Highly appreciated asset value—By donating assets
in-kind, you preserve the full fair market value of the
assets, rather than reduce it by selling it and paying
capital gains taxes.
Tax deductions—If you itemize deductions on your tax
return, savings from the federal income tax charitable
deduction of the gift portion reduce your gift’s net cost.
Ron and Linda Ott ’85 chose to give a charitable gift annuity to Augsburg.
I was always grateful for my time at Augsburg. A charitable gift annuity is a way for us to do something now that
ensures Augsburg has funding. It also provides tax advantages and a little income back to us each year. Augsburg
made the whole process very easy, even splitting our gift between a few different programs we want to support.
We want to work with you to create a gift that best fits your circumstances.
Contact us to learn more about supporting Augsburg students through a charitable gift annuity.
32
AUGSBURG NOW
”
—Linda Ott ’85
Amy Alkire, Interim Vice President for Advancement | 612-330-1188 | alkirea@augsburg.edu
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
New mural welcomes Auggies back to campus
A group of students from an Augsburg graphic systems class created a mural, “Divine Unity,”
in the tunnel between Old Main and Science Hall. The mural represents unity existing
among differences and unique individuals creating a space of community and happiness.
Twin Cities, MN
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WHAT IT TAKES TO FIGHT A PANDEMIC:
COMMUNITY COLLABORATION AND
MUTUAL AID (PART 1)
From parking lots and phone calls to hospitals and research labs, Auggies
use a multifaceted approach to confront the global crisis of a lifetime
by Kate H. Elliott
Share this:
February 22, 2021
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One November afternoon, Natalie Jacobson,
coordinator of Augsburg’s Campus Kitchen, opened an
email from someone she didn’t recognize. It was short
and to the point: First-year Auggie Sam Kristensen ’24
explained that he had collected 17 bags of canned and
nonperishable food items from those who dared to enter
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his Halloween yard maze through a fog-lit skeleton shack
and animatronic troll swamp. The business major said he
was glad his ghoulish creativity could feed dozens of
Submit Your Alumni News
Augsburg students and residents in surrounding
Minneapolis neighborhoods.
“The email made my week,” Jacobson said. “We’ve been
CONNECT WITH US
consumed with coordinated relief e orts; Sam’s email
was a great reminder that everyone and anyone can
Natalie Jacobson joins Nick Keener ’20, Campus
Kitchen student leadership team member. (Courtesy
photo)
make a di erence.”
Kristensen is one of hundreds in the Augsburg
community who have come together in both planned and unplanned ways to support those in need during
the COVID-19 pandemic, which to date has infected an estimated 28 million and killed more than 500,000
Americans. From sta and students sewing and donating face masks to medical personnel advancing
policies and caring for patients, members of the Augsburg community are making a lasting impact on the
front lines of disease prevention and support. These are a few of the many stories of Auggies combating the
virus and its e ects with compassion, faith, and ingenuity.
Serving up hope
Jacobson manages donations like Kristensen’s o ering while working with a team of students and
volunteers to facilitate integrated food access programs to address hunger on and near campus. According
to the National Association of Student A airs Administrators in Higher Education, more than 38% of
students at four-year institutions are food insecure, and 15% are homeless.
Before the pandemic, Augsburg students accessed free food at the Campus Cupboard in the basement of
Science Hall. Students could stop in ve days a week to select a bag of fresh and non-perishable items, no
questions asked. The Campus Kitchen also made outreach e orts to support community gardens and
meals, rescue unsold produce at farmers markets, and educate the public about food as wellness.
Yamile Hernandez ’22 works in the Campus Cupboard. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
When the pandemic hit, Campus Kitchen turned up the heat. The team moved its refrigerators, freezers,
and shelves of food to a large conference room in Augsburg’s Sabo Center for Democracy and Citizenship.
Campus Cupboard transitioned to an online order form, with student workers, like nance major Yamile
Hernandez ’22, delivering orders on campus or making contactless deliveries to students living in the Twin
Cities. The cupboard serves between 25 and 75 students each week.
“It’s rewarding to know we’re helping others, especially in such hard times, and we’re using up food that
would have gone to waste.”—Yamile Hernandez ’22
“Many people have found themselves without a job or having less work, which makes it di cult to keep up
with expenses,” said Hernandez. “Having access to healthy, free food helps alleviate a bit of that stress.”
Campus Kitchen intensi ed e orts to address health and
wellness disparities in neighborhoods surrounding
Augsburg. Because so many organizations and
community centers were already in partnership with
Augsburg, Jacobson said, they were quick to respond to
increased needs during the pandemic.
“We heard about an opportunity to apply for CARES Act
grant funding on a Tuesday, and the application was due
that Thursday. Campus Kitchen rallied together with the
Health Commons, West Bank Community Development
Corporation, and the People’s Center to pull an
application together, and we received $22,000, which we
spent in a week on nonperishable food items, personal
and household cleaning products, as well as food storage
equipment, including refrigerators and freezers. The
Campus Kitchen volunteers [L to R]: Hank Hietala,
Ellen Finn, and LaToya Taris-James (Courtesy photo)
grant will enable us to provide students and neighbors
with access to healthy foods on a regular basis and at an increased capacity.”
In March, the Sabo Center launched the Neighborhood Food Initiative in partnership with M Health
Fairview. The initiative brings together a variety of community partners to support collaborative
approaches that increase access to healthy food in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood.
“Since the summer, we have distributed food weekly to the West Bank CDC and People’s Center,” Jacobson
said. “Many households in Cedar-Riverside now see this service as a key piece of meeting their basic food
needs.”
Drives of support
Augsburg parking lots have been preferred drop-o locations for food and supply drives. In June and again
in late September, Augsburg Women Engaged supported weeklong drives to support the Campus
Cupboard and ShareShop, which provides students with free or for-rent bedding, games, clothing,
kitchenware, appliances, and other home goods. The group collected 400 pounds of food and household
supplies, plus $5,405 for the Campus Kitchen.
On June 1, Steve Peacock, community relations director at the Sabo Center, and a cadre of masked
volunteers lined up in a parking lot near the edge of campus. The group collected donations from an
estimated 550 cars that drove through during a two-hour drive to collect a number of items, mostly
personal hygiene products and diapers, for the Brian Coyle Neighborhood Center nearby.
“We were absolutely overwhelmed by the outpouring of
support and donations,” Peacock said. “While we were
out there, collecting items, we saw athletic teams lined
up to collect supplies on the other side of the athletics
complex. It’s a testament to the innovative, communityfocused, and generous spirit of Augsburg.”
“Our mission to support students and be an anchor for
the community seems relevant and central to our lives
now more than ever.”—Steve Peacock
Augsburg has also encouraged donations to the Student
Emergency Fund, which was established last March to
support students with nancial hardships and provide
relief for basic needs, including food, rent, transportation,
and medication.
Auggies gather donations for the Twin Cities
community outside Augsburg’s Kennedy Center.
(Courtesy photo)
In the wake of George Floyd’s death in May, Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church in the Longfellow neighborhood of
Minneapolis has distributed food to hundreds of
neighbors each week. This summer, Augsburg Pastor
Justin Lind-Ayres showed up with more than 25 Auggie students, sta , and faculty, most of whom didn’t
know each other, to serve food. “This was just one microcosm of the work Auggies have and continue to do
across the Twin Cities,” Lind-Ayres said. “The student body inspires and teaches me what it means to be
‘informed citizens.’”
‘Auggies are resilient’
Lind-Ayres and the Campus Ministry team have worked to provide moments of hope and belonging
throughout the year. They shared prayers on their blog once a day from March to May and now post
prayers weekly as a way for Auggies to lift up concerns and hopes for people and situations. On Fridays, the
team has hosted 8 minutes and 46 seconds in chapel and on Zoom for “Silence, Prayer, and Pastoral
Presence” to remember George Floyd and others and to focus on the call for racial justice. The Muslim
Student Association, under the direction of Fardosa Hassan ’12, has provided opportunities for safe,
socially distanced Friday prayer.
In addition to leading reduced-capacity in-person worship in Hoversten Chapel, recorded worship, and
virtual discussions, Lind-Ayres and University Pastor Babette Chatman ’06 serve on the COVID-19
Response Team. This diverse group of sta members gathers up to ve times each week to review COVID19 cases on campus, engage in contact tracing, provide support for students in quarantine or isolation, and
gure out ways to keep the community safe.
“We spend a lot of time on the phone or texting with students o ering words of encouragement, answering
questions, and troubleshooting issues together as we manage the realities of COVID-19 on campus,” said
Lind-Ayres.
Assistant Athletic Director Melissa Lee ’04 serves on the COVID-19 Task Force. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Melissa Lee ’04, assistant athletic director and softball head coach, serves on the COVID-19 Task Force. Lee
is one of several sta members responding to the helpline set up for Auggies to access the latest
information and resources. In the spring, she and others were answering helpline phone calls and emails in
shifts seven days a week. As tra c has decreased, phone calls go directly to voicemail. Team members
respond to messages and emails as soon as possible.
To parents, students, faculty, and sta , Lee said, “Continue to be gritty. Continue to be safe. We can and will
all get through this together. Auggies are resilient.”
Augsburg stories on COVID-19:
What it takes to ght a pandemic, part 2: Research and health care
Augsburg’s in-house epidemiologist guides Auggies through the COVID-19 pandemic
Top Image: Auggies gather and distribute food and donations through programs like Campus Kitchen and
Campus Cupboard. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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RESEARCH AND HEALTH CARE (PART 2)
From parking lots and phone calls to hospitals and research labs, Auggies
use a multifaceted approach to confront the global crisis of a lifetime
by Kate H. Elliott
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February 22, 2021
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Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP sees resilience every day as executive
director of Augsburg’s Health Commons, which are drop-in health
centers led by the nursing program with a model focused on caring
for those in the community who are marginalized. Guests are not
required to show identi cation, and medical professionals don’t wear
scrubs or stethoscopes in order to increase relatability and public
trust in health care workers.
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Her focus at the Augsburg Central Health Commons is with
individuals who are experiencing homelessness or who are
marginally housed in Minneapolis, and the Health Commons in the
Submit Your Alumni News
Cedar-Riverside neighborhood provides care for residents, many of
whom are East African immigrants. As an assistant professor of
nursing, Clark teaches primarily in the graduate nursing program
Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP
(Courtesy photo)
through courses that emphasize social justice, health disparities, and
civic engagement.
CONNECT WITH US
The Augsburg nursing program, Clark said, is unique because faculty and students are embedded in
the community. Other schools often see that work as “extra service” and send students to nonpro ts,
but Augsburg considers place-based work as central to the educational experience.
Hospitality and healing
“We help students serve and explore the world we live in,
and we’re with them when they do it,” Clark said. “They get
uncomfortable and lean into the biases they may have and
really get involved in a community to understand the
issues from the people who experience them.”
“You can’t come up with answers if you don’t know the
problems.”—Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP
When COVID-19 hit, the Health Commons at Central
Lutheran Church in downtown Minneapolis was one of the
Augsburg’s Health Commons received
donations from the community, including
27,200 bottles of water from UP Co ee
Roasters and a grassroots fundraising
campaign organized by Bethany Johnson ’19,
’23 DNP, whose family owns the business.
Johnson (left) delivered water to the Health
Commons with husband, David Chall
(middle), and daughter, Olivia Chall, in April
2020. (Courtesy photo)
only drop-in health centers that continued to stay open. At
the height of the pandemic, Clark said staying open meant
standing outside, passing out hygiene kits, and bringing
meals and supplies to encampments of unhoused people.
“Many of our students are adult learners seeking
bachelor’s, master’s, and doctorate degrees. Some of them
have dealt with furloughs or are at the bedsides of
patients, holding up the [touchscreen] tablet for family members to say goodbye, and adapting to
constant changes in health care environments. Then they have school in addition to their own
stressors at home, like juggling kids or responding to family members who say, ‘COVID isn’t real.’ These
students want to get involved and tackle the issues in their communities, and they are doing it! I get
chills talking about it.”
Ellen Kearney ’23 DNP is one of Clark’s students in the Doctor of Nursing Practice: Family Nurse
Practitioner program and also a registered nurse at a Twin Cities intensive care unit. Kearney admitted
that despite extensive safety measures, it was scary to be indoors at the Health Commons with
patients early in the pandemic. But the work—her passion—is critical, she added.
Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP (left) and President Paul Pribbenow at an Augsburg Bold event in the fall.
(Courtesy photo)
“Before COVID-19 we were able to serve between 50 and 100 people each Monday and Thursday,” said
Kearney. “Now we can only see 12 people each day we are open. But because our hours have not
changed, it has been nice to have a longer period alone with each guest if they chose to stay and talk.
I’ve been able to learn about one guest’s upcoming trip to her home country in Africa and her worries
about traveling, and I have been able to follow up with one older man while I do his foot care. It has
been hard to not open the doors fully, especially now that the weather is colder and knowing there are
so few public spaces open, though it is clear that we need to stay capped for everyone’s safety. While
the scale of the Commons is small, the impact is large.”
When Augsburg temporarily restricted students from working at the Commons, volunteers and
Augsburg alumni, like Emily Pierskalla ’20 DNP, stepped in to keep doors open. The most challenging
aspect of working as a registered nurse is ricocheting through stages of grief, which Pierskalla said is
emotionally, mentally, and physically exhausting. She avoids news about COVID-19 and social media
because it can trigger haunting memories.
“I have ashbacks of the faces of patients I’ve seen die while their loved ones cry watching through an
iPad or seeing my own co-workers struggling to breathe after getting sick,” said Pierskalla, who has
worked for eight years at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis. “It has taken a lot of
therapy, self-care, and e ort to keep the burnout from causing me to become bitter and angry, or
worse, apathetic to the world and society.”
She has also worked as a nurse practitioner at CVS MinuteClinics, administering COVID-19 tests and
helping people understand their test results and quarantine recommendations—e orts that have
immediate practical e ects.
“When I’m at the Commons or out in the camps, I actually feel like I’m helping to create the world I
want to live in.”—Emily Pierskalla ’20 DNP
Ray Yip ’72 has extensive global health experience, including work in Qinghai, a sparsely populated Chinese
province. (Courtesy photo)
Advocates for change
Auggies are working across the globe to create policies and medical
solutions to realize that better world. Dr. Ray Yip ’72 is a global
health specialist serving as special advisor to the Gates Venture on
China Partnership Development. For the past 22 years, he has
assisted the Chinese government in improving its public health
system, with a focus on disease control and response capacity. When
COVID-19 began spreading in January, Yip was in Beijing.
“I was impressed with how aggressive the outbreak was in Wuhan,
and I predicted that China would be able to get it under control by
April. To my pleasant surprise, China achieved that seemingly
impossible task by mid-March.”
In February, he returned to his home in upstate New York, from
Ray Yip ’72 (Courtesy photo)
which he has advised several organizations about COVID-19-related
issues and provided a range of companies with updates about the
progress of vaccine development worldwide.
“This pandemic, which we knew would happen sooner or later, requires strong government
leadership as well as commitment and partnership with the private sectors for the solutions.”—Ray
Yip ’72
“More than 23 years with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told me the United States
had the know-how and capacity to contain this epidemic. After all, I was sent to China to help them to
build such capacity. My prediction was so o , I hate to admit it. We all su er dearly from the dire
consequence of horrible mismanagement, which largely has to do with leadership failure. It was
particularly painful to watch the CDC get sidelined, and public health measures became politicized.”
The heroes of the pandemic, Yip said: health care workers.
“Most people do not realize the risk and danger of those health care workers taking care of the COVID
patients, especially in the early phase when protective gear was in short supply. A disproportionate
number of them got infected and died. If I were my younger version, I would not hesitate to join them
in on the front lines. I am grateful for their service and sacri ce.”
Interview with Dr. Ray Yip '72
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Dr. Paul Mueller ’84, regional vice president for Mayo Clinic Health
System’s Southwest Wisconsin region, oversees thousands of such
workers attending to patients in two hospitals and eight clinics. He
manages COVID-19 response through policy decisions and exploring
new treatments while treating the disease in his own patient panel.
“It is weighty from a psychological standpoint, as you try to be a
leader in such an ever-changing, high-stakes environment, knowing
the lives you impact,” said Mueller, who has served as an Augsburg
regent and as the campaign chair of Great Returns: Augsburg’s
Sesquicentennial Campaign. “But every day I walk the halls of our
hospitals and clinics and see the resilience and ingenuity of our sta
who have delivered on the promise of medicine. Nurses greet me
with a smile behind personal protective equipment. They are busy
Paul Mueller ’84 (Courtesy photo)
but feel called and up to this work. With a can-do attitude, we are
caring for patients in the darkest of times, administering novel
treatments, and preparing to safely roll out vaccines.
“We’re still in the thick of it. If you think of it like a marathon, we are at mile marker 19. But if we can
maintain resilience and hope, we will nish the race and be better for it.”—Paul Mueller ’84
“This pandemic has shown us that we all breathe the same air, and it is the one thing that is unifying
our entire planet. While the virus rages on killing people, we continue to see the brilliance of the human
spirit—beacons of hope and optimism, compassion and resilience, integrity and ingenuity.”
Caring for patients, fueling research
Brittany Kimball ’13 is a third-year resident at the
University of Minnesota in internal medicine and
pediatrics. The pandemic has taken its toll on her and
other residents, as expectations are in ux and
workloads are stressful and exhausting. Virtual visits are
di cult because of a lack of internet and personal
connectivity, Kimball said. Loneliness has infected the
hospitals. Last week, Kimball watched a nurse gently care
for a patient isolated from visitors, playing his favorite
music as he died.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has certainly compounded
patients’ conditions. Children are missing well visits and
Brittany Kimball ’13: “Getting my rst COVID-19
vaccine at Masonic Children’s Hospital—which I
encourage everyone to do as soon as it
becomes available to them!” (Courtesy photo)
immunizations. Cancer patients require COVID-19 tests
prior to chemotherapy, sometimes missing a treatment
because they have the virus. Many of my primary care
patients with diabetes are wary of clinic visits, thus
making it harder to [measure doses of] their medications,” said Kimball, who earned a bachelor’s
degree in biology from Augsburg.
“Most troublesome, the pandemic has compounded inequities for already marginalized people. Some
of my patients don’t have internet, while others don’t have access to a regular phone. For some
patients, limited English pro ciency can make getting set up on a virtual platform more di cult.
Brittany Kimball ’13 (left) and her co-resident work at the Minneapolis Veterans A airs Health Care System.
(Courtesy photo)
“Patients dealing with addiction and trying to maintain sobriety have told me that their usual coping
mechanisms—like getting together with other people who are sober or participating in a faith
community—have become inaccessible. For patients living in poverty, balancing virtual school and
frontline jobs has been incredibly stressful and sometimes impossible. It’s often people living in
poverty that are doing frontline work that makes them more likely to be exposed to the virus, like
working in a restaurant, public transit, or in a store.”
“We need to gure out how to make telemedicine more equitable.”—Brittany Kimball ’13
Her dream has long been to be a doctor, so despite the challenges, she pushes on—driven to pursue a
fellowship in hematology-oncology. As a Hodgkin’s lymphoma survivor, Kimball is particularly
interested in caring for adolescents and young adults with cancer and blood diseases. “As an 18-yearold in my rst semester at Augsburg, I was guring out dating while bald, chemo after classes, and
trying to study when my brain felt foggy and my body felt sick,” she added. “Sometimes I needed a bit
more guidance and support than a typical adult patient, but not in the same way that a much younger
child might. Teens and young adults don’t t neatly in the pediatric or adult-centered models of care,
and I hope I can make that better.”
Hamdi Adam ’18 is similarly driven to make a di erence. As a
doctoral student of epidemiology at the University of Minnesota,
Adam followed his bachelor’s in biology from Augsburg with a
master’s degree in public health at the University of Minnesota.
Adam studies cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and neurocognitive
disorders. He is focused on investigating the impact of COVID-19 on
chronic conditions, which can lead to higher risk of mortality,
especially among people with existing risk factors, like high blood
pressure and diabetes.
“At some point down the road, I’ll probably get the chance to utilize
COVID-19 data to assess the relationship between COVID status and
various chronic disease conditions in population-based research
studies and hopefully add valuable and timely information to the
Hamdi Adam ’18 (Courtesy photo)
base of existing literature,” said Adam, who—as a rst-generation
Oromo American—is interested in applying his research to address
health disparities a ecting people of color. “It feels good to know that your studies and work are for
the betterment of people. With research, sometimes you feel like your work is so detached from the
true health problems you are attempting to address, but I like to think that epidemiologic research
provides the basis for informing more direct actions, such as health policy development and e ective
community-based interventions.”
Another researcher, Will Matchett ’13, earned a
doctorate in virology and gene therapy from the Mayo
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. He works as a
postdoctoral fellow at the University of Minnesota, where
he will spend up to ve years acquiring training that will
allow him to run his own lab. Between April and August, his
research focused exclusively on developing a SARS-CoV-2
test to measure the speci c antibodies that block the virus
from entering cells. Since September, his focus has shifted
to testing a COVID-19 vaccine being developed at the
University of Minnesota.
Will Matchett ’13 used a plaque assay to
quantify the amount of SARS-CoV-2 virus in a
sample at the University of Minnesota
biosafety lab in August 2020. (Courtesy photo)
Increasing and diversifying COVID-19 testing
Does all the medical terminology sound like a foreign language?
That’s how Elaine Eschenbacher ’18 MAL described her rst few
weeks as the higher education operations lead for Minnesota’s
COVID-19 Testing Work Group. Since 2009, she has worked at
Augsburg, the last six of those years as director for the Sabo Center
for Democracy and Citizenship. But since June, the Sabo Center has
put her “on loan” to Minnesota’s State Emergency Operations Center
to work with a team of experts to launch Minnesota’s testing plan in
collaboration with colleges and universities. Subgroups are assigned
to areas such as long-term care, child care and schools, community
testing, hotspots, case investigation and contact tracing, research,
data, purchasing, and contracts.
Elaine Eschenbacher ’18 MAL
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
“My work at Augsburg prepared me for this role in a variety of ways.
The role is necessarily collaborative and involves recognizing that
di erent people have di erent roles to play and respecting those
di erent perspectives and sets of expertise.”—Elaine Eschenbacher ’18 MAL
“Civic engagement work is like that, too. I’ve also been thinking a lot about the Master of Arts in
Leadership program, which I completed in 2018. This work is like having a master class in leadership
and public health every day.”
In April, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced a “moonshot goal” of 20,000 tests per day in the state, at
a time when only about 2,000 tests were being performed daily, Eschenbacher said. The testing work
group increased capacity and made that moonshot goal by the end of June.
“Since then, we’ve been continuing to increase and diversify COVID testing, and make sure that the
people who most need it have access to it. During the week of Thanksgiving, our daily average for
testing across the state was more than 57,000,” she added. “Testing is an important tool in controlling
the spread of COVID-19, and making testing accessible regardless of income or location is an important
equity issue.”
Eschenbacher has spent her days planning and data-modeling as it relates to higher education,
consulting with speci c institutions in the wake of outbreaks, guiding higher education testing, and
organizing partnerships for case investigation and contact-tracing. She facilitates webinars and other
information pieces about saliva testing, serves as state incident commander for community testing
events, and helped coordinate mass testing of 18- to 35-year-olds prior to Thanksgiving. More recently,
she has served as incident commander for a community vaccination site.
“It feels like a cliché to say this, but it is an absolute honor to do this work. We talk a lot about vocation
at Augsburg, and I guess I would say that vocation can sneak up on you. I never would have dreamed
of doing the work I’ve done since June, but it feels like purpose.”
These are only a handful of the Auggies who are living out their passionate purpose to bring an end to
this crushing pandemic and, in the meantime, to soften the blow.
Augsburg stories on COVID-19:
What it takes to ght a pandemic, part 1: Community collaboration and mutual aid
Augsburg’s in-house epidemiologist guides Auggies through the COVID-19 pandemic
Top Image: Augsburg’s coronavirus guidelines, including face coverings and physical distancing in
classrooms and public places, helped protect Auggies from COVID-19. Professor and Chemistry
Department Chair Joan Kunz instructs in the Hagfors Center. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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CONFRONTING THE MINNESOTA PARADOX
Signi cant racial disparities exist in a state with a liberal reputation, but
some are seeking ways to close the gaps
by Gita Sitaramiah
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February 22, 2021
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Robert Harper ’16 remembers the rst time he was called the nword.
His family had moved to Minnesota from the South Side of Chicago,
seeking a better life. Since then, he’s achieved that better life, earning
an undergraduate degree from Augsburg University and a master’s
degree from the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of
Public A airs. He is now a supplier diversity director for the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system.
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“I think I’ve had a unique experience escaping poverty on the South
Side of Chicago and North Minneapolis, only to be confronted with
the daily decisions made by white people that only re-create those
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circumstances of oppression,” Harper said.
Robert Harper ’16 (Courtesy photo)
While he’s now a working professional in a state that prides itself on
being “Minnesota nice,” Harper never gets too comfortable, recalling that painful moment when he
was walking to middle school and a passing driver shouted the racial epithet at him. More recently, on
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a trip to northern Minnesota, Harper was told while visiting Gull Lake, ‘You don’t belong here,’ by a
white man.
“It’s moments like that when you’re trying to do better, ‘pull yourselves up by your bootstraps,’ that
society reminds you that there’s a glass ceiling for some,” Harper said.
“Some people constantly remind you that they decide how far you go, what rooms you enter, and in
the case of George Floyd, whether or not you live.”—Robert Harper ’16
Exposing the paradox
George Floyd’s murder three miles from Augsburg University put an international spotlight on not only
the experiences of Black people at the hands of the criminal justice system but also the reality of the
disturbing “Minnesota paradox.”
That’s how University of Minnesota Professor Samuel Myers
describes how Minnesota has such a high quality of life and a history
of progressive politicians but is one of the worst places to live for
Black people.
“Measured by racial gaps in unemployment rates, wage and salary
incomes, incarceration rates, arrest rates, home ownership rates,
mortgage lending rates, test scores, reported child maltreatment
rates, school disciplinary and suspension rates, and even drowning
rates, African Americans are worse o in Minnesota than they are in
virtually every other state in the nation,” Myers said.
The numbers illustrate the bleak story:
Samuel Myers (Courtesy photo)
Only 25.3% of Black households in Minnesota own homes
versus 76.9% of white households, according to census data, a
stark divide given that home ownership is considered the leading contributor to household wealth.
The median household income for Black households in the state is the lowest of any group at
$41,570, about half of what Asian and white households earn.
In the Twin Cities, African Americans represent 9% of the overall population, but are incarcerated
at 11 times the rate of whites who represent 76% of the population, the NAACP reported last year.
Only 21.7% of Black people hold bachelor’s degrees or higher versus nearly 40% overall.
Meanwhile, between 2010 and 2018, the fastest growing racial group in Minnesota was the Black
population, which grew by 36%, adding more than 96,500 people.
Many are immigrants but face the same backdrop of a state that hasn’t historically acknowledged that
discrimination plays a role in the Black story here, Myers said.
“When it comes to race in the Twin Cities, in Minnesota, there was this instinctive belief that we already
know what the problem is, that it’s not really a problem, and since it’s not a problem, we don’t need to
nd answers,” Myers said.
The COVID-19 pandemic compounded the inequities. The unemployment rate for Black Minnesotans
in the aftermath of pandemic shutdowns rose to 15.3% last July, up 9 percentage points from a year
earlier, versus 6.3% for white workers, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic
Development reported. According to a Pew Research report published in December: “Among Black
Americans, 71% know someone who has been hospitalized or died because of COVID-19.”
Kevin Ehrman-Solberg ’15 (center right) and the Mapping Prejudice Project team found inequities in housing
documents throughout Minneapolis’ history. (Courtesy photo, 2017)
The path to today’s Minneapolis
High pro le police killings of Black men in this region—including George Floyd, Philando Castile, and
Jamar Clark—have heightened the protests and urgency for change. The viral video of Floyd’s murder
with his neck under the knee of a Minneapolis police o cer seemed to dawn a new era in the ght for
justice.
Protesters took to the streets for weeks around the globe. Gra ti images of Floyd sprang up
worldwide, even on a West Bank barrier in the Middle East. CEOs of Fortune 500 corporations in
Minnesota wrote an open letter of outrage. Athletes of all races took the knee before matches to show
their support for racial equity.
In the city of Minneapolis, at the center of the controversy, there was swift action against the o cers,
something unprecedented.
“Despite decades of police incidents that resulted in the deaths of
people of color, today’s actions by the mayor represent the rst time
in modern history that Minneapolis police o cers were red within
24 hours for unjustly murdering a citizen,” said Michael Lansing,
associate professor and chair of Augsburg’s history department, in a
May 26 series of tweets about the Minneapolis Police Department.
(Lansing’s comments on the history of uprisings and Minneapolis
police were also carried by The Washington Post and Mother Jones.)
Now, many are acknowledging the systems that are behind today’s
Minneapolis. Even the South Minneapolis street where George Floyd
was killed is in a historically Black working-class and middle-class
neighborhood created by housing segregation, Lansing said in his
tweet series.
Indeed, Mapping Prejudice Project, a team of community members,
Associate Professor Michael
Lansing (Photo by Stephen Ge re)
geographers, and historians based at the University of Minnesota,
have unearthed thousands of racial covenants in Minneapolis that reserved land for the exclusive use
of white people.
Those restrictions served as powerful obstacles for people of color seeking safe and a ordable
housing. Racial covenants, dovetailed with redlining and predatory lending practices, depressed
homeownership rates for Black residents. They also limited access to community resources like schools
and parks.
While contemporary white residents of Minneapolis like to think their city never had formal
segregation, those racial covenants did the work of Jim Crow in the Twin Cities, said Kevin EhrmanSolberg ’15, a co-founder of Mapping Prejudice.
“The reputation of Minneapolis is that it’s a liberal bastion, yet there’s a racist reality that people live
in.”—Kevin Ehrman-Solberg ’15
Professor William Green (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Looking forward with a pragmatic lens
While the period following George Floyd’s murder looked like a change moment, Augsburg University’s
M. Anita Gay Hawthorne Professor of Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies William Green worries that
the momentum started to diminish as the summer progressed. “The challenge that we face is to do the
hard work to de ne what change means, and second, how to get at the root of the problems that lead
to disparities in society.”
Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce President Jonathan Weinhagen
looks ahead to the one-year anniversary of George Floyd’s murder
and to the question of how much progress has been made in raising
awareness about and working to eliminate the disparities
experienced by people of color.
“[Closing the racial divide] is not going to be resolved in a year. It’s
going to take more time, but it’s going to have to be far more rapid
than anything we’ve done to date.”—Jonathan Weinhagen
The implications of these disparities are wide-reaching, with
government o cials and the business community concerned that a
growing population that isn’t able to fully participate in or bene t
from the economy will threaten the vitality of the state as a whole.
Jonathan Weinhagen (Courtesy
photo)
“To have a large and growing part of our economy be marginalized is a huge disadvantage to all of us
because it takes a huge part of the population out,” said Susan Brower, Minnesota’s demographer.
The NAACP’s 48-page Twin Cities Economic Inclusion Plan issued in 2019 calls for a comprehensive,
multi-pronged policy agenda anchored by ve basic principles: economic sustainability, education,
health, public safety and criminal justice, and voter rights and political representation.
The role of education
Many are looking to young people to be the lasting change.
The nonpro t Generation Next in Minneapolis has emerged to support children from “cradle to
career,” envisioning a future in which “every child has the academic, social, and emotional skills to
thrive in a globally uent world.”
Alan Page, retired Minnesota Supreme Court justice, and Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, proposed in 2020 amending Minnesota’s constitution to give every child
a civil right to a quality public education. They de ne the current approach as a system that works well
for children from well-to-do families but fails children from low-income families.
“A quality education is without question the most powerful tool we have to break the cycle of poverty
and create a society in which everyone can fully participate,” Kashkari and Page wrote in the Star
Tribune. “It doesn’t just change one child’s life. It has the potential to improve the future for
generations to come and lead to a more productive, vibrant society for all of us.”
Meanwhile, Augsburg University is positioned to be a statewide leader in the turnaround, with years of
intentional work on diversity, equity, and inclusion. “I certainly feel that higher education is the clearest
path to a middle-class life or better,” Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow said.
Augsburg University's Hagfors Center. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Augsburg’s e orts to address disparities and work
toward equity
After the murder of George Floyd only a few miles from campus, Augsburg University introduced in
June the Justice for George Floyd Initiatives to focus on working to heal the community, creating
leadership and structures that make tangible change, and ensuring accountability for the work of
undoing racist systems.
New e orts were introduced to combat systemic racism, including a critical race and ethnicity studies
department; diversity, equity, and inclusion training; and a requirement that all faculty and sta
complete antiracism training. Augsburg also canceled classes and suspended operations June 4 and 5
so students, faculty, and sta could have an opportunity to grieve.
“We acknowledge the pain, fear, and trauma faced by the Augsburg community—especially our
students, faculty, and sta of color—remain a lived reality every day,” Pribbenow said. “This work by
Augsburg will be persistent, resolute, courageous, and integrated into everything the university does.”
This ongoing work includes several components:
Augsburg named William Green, professor of history, the inaugural holder of the M. Anita Gay
Hawthorne professorship of critical race and ethnic studies.
The university is employing new accountability for inclusive, antiracist leadership across the
institution and reviewing Augsburg’s major academic and administrative policies and practices with
a special focus on undoing bias and discrimination and enhancing student success.
Augsburg created a scholarship in memory of George Floyd and established a fund that matched
donations from students, faculty, and sta for organizations doing important work, especially for
Black-owned businesses and nonpro t organizations.
Augsburg appointed the rst Chief Diversity O cer, Joanne K. Reeck, in 2016 and became home
in 2019 to The Forum on Workplace Inclusion, the nation’s largest workplace diversity, equity, and
inclusion conference.
These moves are an important continuation of Augsburg’s e orts to build and maintain an equitable
and inclusive campus that became a strategic focus in 2006, resulting in Augsburg welcoming its most
diverse incoming rst-year class ever in 2017. Students of color are now in the majority of traditional
undergraduates, making Augsburg one of the most diverse private colleges in the Midwest.
As Augsburg is learning in its own community, Minnesota’s multifaceted disparities require a
multifaceted approach that summons individual and collective willpower to align impact with intent.
Despite Harper’s success after graduating from Augsburg, he views the disparate outcomes as a call to
action, even forming his own economic development consulting rm, R.D.T.H Consulting, focused on
social impact in addition to his day job. “It doesn’t have to be this way.”
Top Image: Minneapolis is a city with a liberal reputation, but racial disparities persist. (Photo by
Courtney Perry)
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STAY THE COURSE: OFF-AND-ON SPORTS
SEASONS PROVE AUGGIE STUDENTATHLETES’ RESILIENCE
After a pause on competitions due to COVID-19, Auggies are ready to get
back in the game
by Kate Norlander
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February 22, 2021
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The COVID-19 pandemic put a major pause on 2020’s athletic competitions. The Minnesota
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference postponed the fall sports season. In January the league announced
plans for a modi ed winter season for basketball, hockey, indoor track and eld, and swimming and
diving (though it’s not o cially part of the MIAC, wrestling will follow the same guidelines). Auggies
can’t wait to get back in the game.
Many student-athletes have been practicing their sports since elementary school. During the past year,
the pandemic disrupted participation in activities that have been important to their lives. But
Augsburg’s Athletics sta and student-athletes have met this challenge with a commitment to the
health and safety of the community. This willingness to put safety rst means that student-athletes
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are now able to compete.
In order for student-athletes to participate in sports this year, the NCAA created rules designed to
promote safety. Augsburg Athletics also made sure that strong safety measures were in place, which
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has helped students feel a bit more at ease during an anxious time.
Devon Hannah ’21, a guard on the men’s basketball team, said,
“We have the freedom to decide whether or not we feel comfortable
with an activity. The Athletics Department is handling this well,
keeping us safe physically and mentally, too.”
Coaches play an important role in student-athletes’ lives, which
means they are often among the rst people to learn when a
student receives a positive COVID-19 test result. This means that
they are not only helping students develop skills in their sport; they
are also watching out for the safety of their team.
Devon Hannah ’21 (Courtesy
photo)
Corrina Evans ’21, a middle blocker on the women’s volleyball team,
said, “The coaches and trainers are sharing campus resources like
the Center for Wellness and Counseling. They have check-in times
when we can talk about anything, and they will call or text us: doing
contact tracing, helping us understand how to quarantine correctly
if we have to do that, and making sure we have everything we need.”
Changes to practice and
competition
Corrina Evans ’21 (Courtesy
photo)
Even with precautionary measures in place, there are times when
teams have to pause their practice, whether a teammate tested
positive for COVID-19 or a rising number of cases in Minnesota required universities to temporarily
close workout and sports facilities, which occurred in the fall and early winter.
Read more about Auggies ghting the pandemic.
When they’re able to practice, Augsburg’s student-athletes gather in pods that have gradually
increased in size as they were safely able to do so. While the smallest pods have allowed students to
practice their sports safely and to control the spread of the virus, they’ve also presented a challenge.
“It’s di cult to get to know each other and to gel as a team,” Hannah said.
“Practices are very di erent,” said Evans. “You can’t see people’s faces because of the masks. But we’ve
been able to move up into bigger pods, which gives us a more normal team chemistry and allows us to
have a full team practice and do some scrimmaging. The challenges are more mental than physical.”
In early January, the MIAC gave teams the go-ahead to compete again, although competitions are
limited and spectators are not allowed. (Augsburg has o ered free livestream viewing for all home
events and some road events.) Students in sports that present a higher risk for COVID-19 transmission
must get tested three times each week in order to practice and compete—measures well worth it for
eager players and coaches. “It’s exciting to be able to get back to playing and feel in the groove again,”
said Colleen Enrico ’14, assistant athletic director, volleyball assistant coach, and Student-Athlete
Advisory Committee advisor.
Melissa Lee ’04 (left), assistant athletic director and softball head coach, leads softball practice in Augsburg’s
dome in February 2021. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Prioritizing mental health
Augsburg Athletics had already begun addressing the mental health of student-athletes before the
pandemic. In the summer of 2019, all coaches and sta took an eight-hour course in mental health rst
aid, which can provide support for student-athletes and coaches until they can speak with mental
health professionals.
Mark Wick, men’s hockey assistant coach, has recently taken on new, temporary duties at Augsburg
as he sets up a mental health advocacy program for Augsburg Athletics. “We need to know how to deal
with what is happening now, but in ve to 10 years, people still will be dealing with losing jobs or loved
ones,” Wick said. “Hopefully it won’t be as bad as it is now, but how we use this time can help prepare
us for growth.”
Augsburg University
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September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month and
@AugsburgU Assistant Hockey Coach @coachwick23 will
hold a golf tournament to raise awareness, as this
subject is very personal to him. “It’s OK to reach out and
ask for help,” Wick told @WCCO.
Augsburg Assistant Hockey Coach Mark Wick's Push For Suicide Awa…
September is Suicide Awareness Month. And on Tuesday, Augsburg
University assistant hockey coach Mark Wick will hold a golf …
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Fostering the Auggie Experience
Enrico reported that in past years, student-athletes met with the entire team sta on a weekly basis,
but this year they are meeting with a di erent coach each week. This allows them to be more open and
build better relationships with their coaches. As in past years, coaches touch base with students about
their lives outside of their sport so that, for instance, if they are struggling with classes, the coach can
suggest resources for help. This year coaches are also making a point of paying attention to upcoming
events so that they can suggest activities that might help student-athletes better connect with their
fellow students.
It’s been a tough year for everyone, and that has been particularly true for rst-year students who
were unable to participate in many traditional activities at the end of their senior year in high school
and now have begun their college experience under di cult conditions. For that reason, Enrico said,
coaches have made a point of connecting third- and fourth-year students with rst-year and other
new students.
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Di erent teams have di erent approaches to these connections. In volleyball, coaches have suggested
podcasts that each student can discuss with a di erent teammate each week. “We want them to get
outside of volleyball, so the podcasts might be on topics such as banking or racial diversity,” Enrico
said.
Fostering these connections—between teammates, between each student-athlete and coach, and
between student-athletes and the wider Augsburg community—is, perhaps, one of the most
important things coaches can do for their student-athletes this year. All of them help these students
feel a sense of community. In Enrico’s words, “the Auggie experience is community.”
Top image: The COVID-19 pandemic has required temporary closures and reopenings of workout
spaces, including Augsburg’s weight room, with students’ health in mind. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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AUGSBURG’S IN-HOUSE EPIDEMIOLOGIST
GUIDES AUGGIES THROUGH THE COVID-19
PANDEMIC
On the Spot Q&A with Associate Professor Alicia Quella
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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Remember those days of uncertainty in March 2020, when we had
more questions than answers, and before most of us used terms like
“coronavirus” and “social distancing”?
The United States saw an increase in COVID-19 infections, and some
states—including Minnesota—applied stay-at-home orders to mitigate
the spread. Weeks before that in ection point, Augsburg University
administrators, faculty, and sta convened a COVID-19 task force.
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Not all educational institutions have an epidemiologist on sta , but
Augsburg is fortunate. One of the task force’s principal leaders is Alicia
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Quella, associate professor and director of Augsburg’s physician
assistant program. As an educator with a PhD in epidemiology and
experience in public health settings around the world, her expertise
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has proved invaluable for the university’s grasp of the evolving global
crisis and Augsburg’s response to maintain the health and safety of
community members.
Associate Professor Alicia Quella
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
Between elding student questions about the coronavirus, volunteering at COVID-19 testing sites, and
ensuring the Augsburg community can trace contacts and reduce transmission on campus, Quella shared
some perspectives on her work and where we go from here.
Q: How have you been involved in Augsburg’s outbreak planning
and COVID-19 response?
A: I serve on the pandemic task force, a university-wide team of people that assembled after it was
apparent that COVID-19 would signi cantly a ect institutions of higher education across the United States.
We collaborate regularly with epidemiologists from the Minnesota Department of Health to implement
public health guidelines for campuses. We started to meet daily to coordinate issues involving classrooms
and labs, athletics, residence halls, dining services, facilities, and global education. We started a COVID-19
Response Team, which comprises sta and faculty across campus who implement health protocols and
support students and personnel who have illness, have COVID-19, or have been exposed to it.
R.John
@raccajohn
Neither rain nor SNOW can keep @AugsburgU's Dr. Alicia
Quella from working the walk-up/drive-up COVID-19
testing location @PeoplesCenter Cedar Riverside Clinic
1:50 AM · Oct 21, 2020
3
See the latest COVID-19 information on Twitter
Q: What were your rst thoughts when you heard about COVID19 and considered its implications for the Augsburg community?
A: When news of a novel coronavirus was circulating in China, I was immediately concerned because I had
studied the epidemiology of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV-1) during my doctoral work
through the University of Iowa Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases. In 2003, SARS quickly spread to 29
countries, so I knew that this would be a major issue in the United States.
Q: At this stage in the COVID-19 pandemic, what are the most
important things for the public to understand and do?
A: To reach herd immunity [when a signi cant portion of a community is immune to a disease and thereby
makes spread unlikely] we all need to continue to ‘bubble’ and limit the number of close contacts, wear face
masks, socially distance, and get vaccinated.
I also encourage the students and my patients to be creative and nd ways to keep active and engaged—
start a new hobby, do something outdoors, and reach out to relatives and friends who may be isolated
right now.
Q: What do you see in the post-COVID-19 world?
A: Colleges and universities have seen a rapid di usion of innovation in how they are using technology to
deliver curriculum, participate in athletics, and maintain operations. This energy and innovation will have to
continue to promote widespread vaccine uptake. Vaccine hesitancy is an issue, especially in communities of
color that have been disproportionately a ected by COVID-19 because of structural racism. Augsburg will
need to make this a top priority moving forward.
Q: What’s a memorable moment of the past year that made an
impact on you?
A: As an epidemiologist and a physician assistant, I’ve had the opportunity to continue to see patients and
work with Augsburg students, sta , and faculty. I recently received the COVID-19 vaccine and have felt
humbled and honored to now be able to continue to work more safely in the community.
Top image: Associate Professor Alicia Quella’s experience as an epidemiologist has helped maintain the health and
safety of the Augsburg community. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
Read more Augsburg stories on COVID-19.
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NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW:
COME AND SEE!
by Paul C. Pribbenow
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February 22, 2021
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In the Christian church, the liturgical season before Lent is called
Epiphany, a time when we re ect on the good news that God has
broken into human history and that we are called to share that good
news with all of creation. There is a wonderful invitational character to
Epiphany, in which we ask each other and our neighbors to “Come and
see” all that God is doing in our midst.
In that spirit, this issue of Augsburg Now invites all of us to come
and see what the Augsburg community is doing in its 151st academic
year, in the midst of a global pandemic, to live out our mission. In
these pandemic times, Augsburg students, faculty, and sta have
brought great imagination, resilience, and courage to our work
together. I am so proud of what they have accomplished, and I invite
you to come and see …
Come and see the gift of the surprises we found in how we teach and
learn, how we keep our community and neighborhood safe and
President Paul Pribbenow (Photo by
Courtney Perry)
healthy, how we live out our most deeply held commitments and
values, and how we are open to new and innovative ways of living and working.
Paul Pribbenow
@paulpribbenow
I’m out and about, delivering yard signs to the
@AugsburgU Class of 2024! Here’s Vanessa - a proud
new Auggie. #augsburgbold #auggiepride
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4:13 PM · Jun 30, 2020
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Come and see how we answered the call to serve our neighbors even when we must navigate the
challenges of a virus, economic disruption, and racial reckoning. Our focus on supporting local businesses,
meeting the needs of those experiencing homelessness, ensuring that all of our students have the
resources they need to be successful, and nding ways to feed the hungry—all these illustrate how our
community embraces its commitments to our neighbors.
Come and see the promise of abundance in a time and world too often characterized by scarcity. We believe
deeply in what the late U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone proclaimed: “We all do better when we all do better.”
Our abiding commitments to equity and inclusion—and our aspiration to be an anti-racist university—lead
us to robust engagement with each other and with the wider community so that all will do better.
Augsburg University is a distinctive community, de ning in its life and work a vision for higher education in
the 21st century. I am deeply grateful for the support of alumni and friends, whose generosity and
engagement help us live into our vision to educate Auggies as stewards of an inclusive democracy. Come
and see.
Faithfully yours,
Paul C. Pribbenow, President
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AUGSBURG BOARD OF REGENTS WELCOMES
NEW AND REELECTED MEMBERS
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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The Augsburg University Board of Regents meeting in October 2020 included celebration of the
election of new and continuing regents.
James Hereford and Veena Iyer were elected to their rst four-year terms.
Nick Gangestad ’86, Marlene Whiterabbit Helgemo, Jill Nelson Thomas, and Noya
Woodrich ’92, ’94 MSW were elected to second four-year terms.
Pam Moksnes ’79 was elected to a third four-year term.
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Finally, Bishop Laurie Skow-Anderson and Bishop Ann Svennungsen were appointed to serve
three-year terms as ex o cio members of the board.
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Nick Gangestad ’86
James Hereford
Veena Iyer
Pam Moksnes ’79
Jill Nelson Thomas
Laurie Skow-Anderson
Ann Svennungsen
Marlene Whiterabbit
Helgemo
Noya Woodrich ’92, ’94
MSW
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AUGSBURG’S RECENT AWARDS, RANKINGS,
AND RECOGNITION
by Briana Alamilla '17
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Each year, Augsburg University is recognized for its academic excellence, student-centered community, and
commitment to educating students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and
responsible leaders.
Augsburg’s recent awards and rankings include:
2020 Best Colleges by Money
Most Transformative Colleges
2020–21 Military Friendly® School by Military Friendly®
2020 Best of the Best LGBTQ-Friendly Colleges and Universities, Midwest region by Campus Pride
Top 30 in the Country
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2020 Best Colleges For Financial Aid by LendEDU
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79th in the United States
2nd in Minnesota
2020 Best Value Colleges and Universities in Minnesota by BestValueSchools.com
2021 Best Universities, Midwest region by U.S. News & World Report
3rd in Most Innovative Schools
4th in Campus Ethnic Diversity
7th in Undergraduate Teaching
14th in Best Colleges for Veterans
15th in Best Value
Accredited by the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs
Augsburg University’s Department of Business Administration was recently accredited for the
undergraduate and Master of Business Administration programs.
View more of Augsburg’s awards and rankings.
Top image: Augsburg’s Hagfors Center. (Photo by Courtney Perry)
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PLAYWRIGHTS’ CENTER PARTNERS WITH
AUGSBURG TO OFFER COURSES WITH
LEADING PLAYWRIGHTS
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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The Playwrights’ Center and Augsburg University announced a new partnership to o er accredited courses
taught by the nation’s leading playwrights. Through online courses, students connect with peers and faculty
members from across the United States. The courses, o ered through Augsburg’s Center for Global
Education and Experience, are guided by Augsburg’s Theater Department in conjunction with the
Playwrights’ Center.
“With these courses, students will learn with and from writers at the top of their eld, seeing what it takes to
have pieces published and performed,” said Patrick Mulvihill, Augsburg’s assistant provost for global
education and experience, in an interview with Broadway World.
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Top image: An Augsburg student tours the Orpheum Theatre in Minneapolis. (Photo by Stephen Ge re)
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30th NSF grant, continues space weather study
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PROFESSOR EMERITUS MARK
ENGEBRETSON RECEIVES 30TH NSF GRANT,
CONTINUES SPACE WEATHER STUDY
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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Mark Engebretson, Augsburg University professor emeritus of
physics, received a ve-year grant totaling $805,744 from the National
Science Foundation (Award Number 2013648).
This grant supports the continued operation and data analysis of the
Magnetometer Array for Cusp and Cleft Studies, which is used to study
near-Earth space weather, such as solar winds that may disrupt
communication and navigation systems. It represents the 30th
research study on which Engebretson has served as the principal
investigator through NSF funding.
Engebretson has led several research projects—including some with
Augsburg student-researchers—studying ionospheric and space
physics in collaboration with European and NASA satellite programs.
Nearly 100 Augsburg students have gained paid research experience
working on these research projects.
Professor Emeritus Mark
Engebretson (Photo by Stephen Ge re)
Engebretson has authored or coauthored more than 300 scholarly
research articles on topics related to space weather.
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Tribune, and Minnesota Urban Debate League
cosponsor justice reform essay contest
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MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES AND LYNX,
STAR TRIBUNE, AND MINNESOTA URBAN
DEBATE LEAGUE COSPONSOR JUSTICE
REFORM ESSAY CONTEST
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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In Fall 2020, Augsburg University’s Minnesota Urban Debate League joined the Star Tribune news company
and the Minnesota Lynx and Minnesota Timberwolves professional basketball teams in cosponsoring a
youth essay contest focused on criminal justice reform.
Minnesota students ages 10 to 18 were invited to submit a written essay, video, or audio recording that
described local or national changes that could reduce racial injustice and inequities in the criminal justice
system. MNUDL determined the top 10 entries, which were judged by a panel of coaches from the
Timberwolves and Lynx and representatives from local organizations, including MN Rise and The
Minneapolis Foundation.
Editor’s note: Winning submissions were announced February 27 in the Star Tribune.
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AUGSBURG AWARDED $10,000
MINNEAPOLIS FOUNDATION GRANT
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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In September 2020, the Minneapolis Foundation announced that it would award more than $500,000 in
grants to 40 organizations in the Twin Cities. Following the increased public dialogue about public safety
after the killing of George Floyd, the grants aim to reduce violence, address systemic inequities, and provide
community support.
The Minneapolis Foundation’s Fund for Safe Communities awarded $10,000 to Augsburg University to
elevate the voices of middle- and high-school students through debate on the topic of criminal justice
reform. Other grant recipients are organizations working to support art projects, mediation, mental health
services, civil rights education, and community healing while addressing police violence and public safety.
Top image: Demonstrators in Summer 2020 marched with a banner that was created as a part of Augsburg’s
One Day in May art campaign. (Photo by Leon Wang)
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AUGSBURG LAUNCHES THE CENTER FOR
INNOVATION & ENTREPRENEURSHIP
by Kate Norlander
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This fall, Augsburg University launched the Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship, which advances
education and support for Augsburg students and alumni in the disciplines of innovation,
entrepreneurship, and leadership.
The center’s focus is on the practice and psychology of innovation and entrepreneurship. Cory Erickson, an
instructor in Augsburg’s Master of Business Administration program, leads the center.
The center provides practical educational material for Augsburg students and alumni through a variety of
events and activities. These opportunities include:
a speaker series
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cooperative projects between student teams and local companies
support for students who are building organizations that impact social causes through innovation
and entrepreneurship
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support for student entrepreneurs
the creation of student teams drawn from the science and business departments to solve problems
for new startups
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student contests o ering awards and potential funding for new ventures
research and scholarship through a think tank
the promotion of internships for students in the for-pro t, nonpro t, and government sectors.
Top image: Instructor Cory Erickson leads the Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship. (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
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FACULTY MEMBERS WILLIAM GREEN AND
TIMOTHY PIPPERT ASSUME NEW
PROFESSORSHIPS
by John Weirick
February 22, 2021
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Professor of History William Green was named the inaugural M. Anita
Gay Hawthorne Professor of Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies, e ective
September 1, 2020. The position was created on the recommendation of a
working group of students, faculty, and sta who developed a vision for a
new academic department in critical race and ethnicity studies at
Augsburg University.
Related: Professor William Green comments on “Confronting the Minnesota
paradox”
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Professor of Sociology Timothy Pippert was named the inaugural holder
of the Joel Torstenson Endowed Professorship, e ective September 1,
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2020. This professorship is made possible through the generosity of Mark
Johnson ’75, who also supports the university’s Torstenson Scholars
program.
Top image: Professor Timothy Pippert teaches a sociology class in
Hagfors Center. (Photos by Courtney Perry)
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Augsburg awarded $10,000 Minneapolis
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NSF GRANTS AUGSBURG $3 MILLION FOR
STEM STUDENTS
by Kate Norlander
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Augsburg University will receive $3,075,000 of a $5 million grant award from the National Science
Foundation to support the retention and graduation of high-achieving, low-income students who are
pursuing bachelor’s degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (often referred to as
STEM).
The project will provide scholarships, internships, and research experiences for nearly 200 students over a
ve-year period beginning in the 2020–21 academic year at Augsburg, Century College, Minneapolis College,
and Normandale Community College. These institutions will work together to provide seamless pathways
for students to transfer from two-year to four-year STEM programs.
Scholarships of $7,500 to $10,000 will be awarded to students pursuing majors in biology, chemistry,
computer science, engineering, food science, mathematics, and physics. These students will be connected to
internships and research experiences through partner organizations SciTech, UpTurnships, and MnDRIVE,
as well as through Augsburg’s undergraduate research programs.
This is the third phase of a program initiated by Augsburg and funded by the NSF. Grants in the prior phases
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funded scholarships for 111 STEM students, 100% of whom graduated and went on to pursue careers or
continue their education in STEM elds.
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The project will be led by Rebekah Dupont, Augsburg’s director of STEM programs and associate professor
of mathematics, working in collaboration with principal investigators from the other participating
institutions.
Top image: Associate Professor Rebekah Dupont is director of STEM programs at Augsburg. (Courtesy
photo)
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AUGSBURG HOSTS BOLD NEW SPEAKER
SERIES
by Stephen Jendraszak
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February 22, 2021
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Augsburg Bold is a series of initiatives designed to help Augsburg University students continue to
thrive during the pandemic and to enjoy the distinctive experience o ered at Augsburg.
As part of that work, during Fall 2020, the university quad was set up as a physically distanced outdoor
seminar room, enabling up to 60 attendees to take part in a series of remarkable presentations. All
presentations were also livestreamed via Zoom.
R.John
@raccajohn
Thank you, @GovTimWalz and @GwenWalz for
sharing your thoughts on servant leadership with
@AugsburgU today. #AugsburgBold
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5:15 PM · Oct 5, 2020
7
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Students had the opportunity to hear from several speakers:
Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP spoke about her work building relationships with those in our
community who are experiencing homelessness and helping to ensure that their basic needs for
food, shelter, and health care are met.
Olivia House ’20 discussed the summer of resistance by Black youth.
Jodi Harpstead, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Services, spoke about
what she’s learned through her work during the pandemic.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Gwen Walz discussed their experience in education and
leadership.
Watch recordings of selected speakers at augsburg.edu/bold.
‹
›
Augsburg Bold speakers included Katie Clark ’10 MAN, ’14 DNP, and Gov. Tim Walz and Gwen Walz.
Students, sta , and faculty attended the socially distanced events on Augsburg’s campus or watched
the livestream online. (Photos by Rebecca Slater)
Top image: Augsburg’s quad was decorated for the Augsburg Bold speaker series. (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
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FORUM ON WORKPLACE INCLUSION TO
HOST FIRST VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
by Stephen Jendraszak
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The Forum on Workplace Inclusion, based at Augsburg University, will host its 33rd annual conference as a
virtual event March 8–12, 2021.
Workplaces have struggled during the past year to navigate a digital, distanced work environment brought
on by the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, social protests centered around racism and the unjust
deaths of Black people at the hands of police have also brought greater attention to overwhelming
disparities in economics, education, health care, housing, and public safety.
This year, the forum asks: What will it take to start a workplace revolution that moves us from talk to
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action?
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Learn more and register to attend at forumworkplaceinclusion.org.
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AUGSBURG HOMECOMING (AT A DISTANCE)
by Briana Alamilla '17
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February 22, 2021
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Homecoming 2020 celebrations looked a little di erent than previous years. Though social gatherings were
restricted, the Augsburg Student Activities Council found creative ways to celebrate with a series of events
during the week of September 21—some virtual and some physically distanced:
Cider and canvas: Spread out in the quad, students created paintings in the style of artist Bob Ross.
Create your own PopSocket: Participants made their own Augsburg-branded phone grip accessories.
Drag and lip sync battle: Students competed by submitting videos of themselves lip-syncing to a song.
Movie night: The lm “Queen & Slim” was screened in the quad.
Homecoming royalty coronation ceremony: Homecoming court members were announced and
royalty were crowned.
Top image: Students participate in an outdoor event sponsored by the Augsburg Student Activities Council.
(Photo by Courtney Perry)
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Cedar-Riverside supply drives support
neighborhood
Forum on Workplace Inclusion to host rst
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CEDAR-RIVERSIDE SUPPLY DRIVES SUPPORT
NEIGHBORHOOD
by Briana Alamilla '17
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February 22, 2021
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The COVID-19 pandemic, combined with the damage some businesses experienced following the murder of
George Floyd, put a strain on Augsburg’s Twin Cities community as many local stores temporarily closed
and access to public transportation was reduced. In June and August, Augsburg University organized supply
drives in partnership with the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood.
Drivers in more than 550 cars participated in the supply drives, and their donations were delivered to the
Brian Coyle Center through several dozen trips.
“This is our community; this is our neighborhood,” one volunteer said. “So when our neighbors are hurting,
we step forward and do what we can to help.”
Read more about Auggies’ e orts to support the community: “What it takes to ght a pandemic.”
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Augsburg’s supply drive was a success! Thank you to all
who donated and volunteered to help out our so loved
Cedar-Riverside community. It is in times like these
where we must all come together as the thoughtful
stewards that we are. #AuggiePride
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9:51 PM · Jun 1, 2020
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Top image: Auggies collected donations for the Twin Cities community in Summer 2020. (Photo by Joe Mann)
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Scholarship recipients
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AUGSBURG NAMES GEORGE FLOYD
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS
by Briana Alamilla '17
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Augsburg University created the George Floyd Memorial Scholarship, which is designed to support
outstanding third- and fourth-year students who have a strong understanding of Black experiences
and U.S. history while showing leadership in advancing racial justice e orts. Each selected student
received a $5,000 scholarship.
Augsburg named the ve inaugural scholarship recipients:
Aisha Abdi ’21 is majoring in management information systems and marketing.
Quran Al-Hameed ’21 is majoring in psychology.
Mallory Ferguson ’21 is majoring in communication studies.
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Kaltun Hassan ’22 is majoring in computer science.
Nadirah McGill ’21 is majoring in music business.
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Aisha Abdi ’21, management
information systems and marketing
Quran Al-Hameed ’21, psychology
Kaltun Hassan ’22, computer science
Nadirah McGill ’21, music business
(Courtesy photo)
Mallory Ferguson ’21, communication
studies
Read more about Augsburg’s Equity and Inclusion Initiatives.
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with virtual campus tour
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PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS AND THEIR
FAMILIES ENGAGE WITH VIRTUAL CAMPUS
TOUR
Multimedia platform o ers a glimpse of Augsburg from afar
by Laura Swanson Lindahl '15 MBA
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For the past year, Augsburg University’s virtual tour has
showcased the Minneapolis campus’ facilities and resources as it
has been challenging to conduct in-person visits due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. As a multimedia interactive map with
photos and videos, the virtual tour simulates an on-the-ground
campus experience. The virtual tour o ers a look at Augsburg’s
residence halls and athletic facilities, details about academic
buildings and green spaces, and a peek inside performance
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venues and practice rooms. The virtual tour launched in March
2020 to help out-of-state and international populations visualize
the campus.
From its launch in March,
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2020, through February 1,
Check out the virtual tour at augsburg.university-tour.com.
2021, the virtual tour has
had 32,421 visitors. The top
states visitors are from are
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Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Illinois, Iowa, Texas, and
California.
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Augsburg TRIO/Student Support Services earns
fth consecutive U.S. Department of Education
grant
Augsburg names George Floyd Memorial
Scholarship recipients
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AUGSBURG TRIO/STUDENT SUPPORT
SERVICES EARNS FIFTH CONSECUTIVE U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION GRANT
by Laura Swanson Lindahl '15 MBA
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The U.S. Department of Education announced that Augsburg University was awarded a federal Student
Support Services ve-year grant of nearly $300,000 annually to help more students succeed in and graduate
from college. This is the fth TRIO/SSS grant awarded to Augsburg, which has hosted the project since 2001.
Each year, Augsburg TRIO/SSS serves about 160 undergraduate students.
The TRIO/SSS program is designed for students who are the rst in their families to attend post-secondary
education, students who are low income, or students with disabilities. The grant funds an array of services
including academic skill development, academic advising, tutoring, nancial aid advice, and nancial literacy.
“Augsburg TRIO/SSS has established a reputation for helping students navigate
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higher education to achieve their academic goals,” said Aly Olson, director of
Augsburg TRIO/SSS.
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“Students know their TRIO advisor is looking out for their best interests and
helps them through the tough decisions of college life. We are thrilled to be able
to continue this important work at Augsburg.” —Aly Olson
Aly Olson (Photo by Courtney
Perry)
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The federal government contributes about 70% of the funds needed to
support Augsburg’s TRIO/SSS project. The university contributes the remaining program funds.
Top image: Brooklyn Jones ’22, clinical psychology major and sociology minor, attends a Summer Bridge
class in 2019. (Photo by Bob Stack ’71)
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Augsburg receives grants for equity in education
and remote learning
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AUGSBURG RECEIVES GRANTS FOR EQUITY
IN EDUCATION AND REMOTE LEARNING
by Laura Swanson Lindahl '15 MBA
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This fall, Augsburg University received $250,000 in grant funding from the State of Minnesota to address
equity in education and remote learning needs among students of color, Indigenous students, and those
who are disabled or low-income.
The funds came through two awards under the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief grant. One award
provided direct aid to teacher candidates who needed to pay unexpected costs posed by the pandemic
during their student teaching semester and coursework.
The second award was geared toward making hardware and software available to more students to
support them in their switch to online learning. This support included additional laptops for checkout,
noise-cancelling headphones, digital tablets for art and math courses, training resources for successful
online learning, new digital video resources in the library, and captioning of instructional videos to increase
accessibility. The GEER grant program was a redistribution of federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic
Security Act funds.
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View more grants news.
Top image: A redistribution of federal CARES Act funds provided support for Augsburg students’ online
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In memoriam, Winter 2020–21
Augsburg TRIO/Student Support Services earns
fth consecutive U.S. Department of Education
grant
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IN MEMORIAM, WINTER 2020–21
Remembering and honoring Auggies
by Amanda Symes '09, '15 MFA
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Below we recognize the alumni and friends whose noti cations of death were received between March 1,
2020, and January 1, 2021.
1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970| 1980 | 1990 | 2000 | 2010 | 2020 | Faculty
1940s
Fern L. (Hanson) Gudmestad ’41, Minneapolis, age 101, on June 3.
Wayne E. Peterson ’43, Palm City, Florida, age 99, on November 14.
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Thelma I. (Erickson) Mckenzie ’44, Hollandale, Wisconsin, age 96, on July 1.
Helen V. (Odden) Pederson ’45, Spooner, Wisconsin, age 96, on May 5.
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Doris K. (Larson) Walen ’45, Alamo, North Dakota, age 97, on October 3.
Martha E. Fosse Palmquist ’46, Lakeville, Minnesota, age 96, on November 22.
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Lowell O. Larson ’47, Claremont, California, age 95, on May 10.
Arnold J. Oie ’47, Glencoe, Minnesota, age 96, on August 1.
Margery A. (Manger) Torgerson ’47, Circle Pines, Minnesota, age 94, on March 30.
Esther P. (Bakken) Crosby ’48, Moorhead, Minnesota, age 95, on June 19.
John E. Hanson ’48, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 93, on October 1.
Jean A. (Tibke) Vane ’48, Visalia, California, age 93, on October 20.
John F. Anderson ’49, Minneapolis, age 96, on December 22.
June (Carlson) Gustafson ’49, Lincoln, Nebraska, age 92, on September 28.
1950s
Louis L. Ennen ’50, Dublin, Ohio, age 94, on July 7.
Lilian J. (Johnson) Ingersoll ’50, Lexington, South Carolina, age 96, on June 5.
Phillip A. Quanbeck ’50, Maple Grove, Minnesota, age 93, on December 1.
Mary L. (Johnson) Froiland ’50, Iron River, Wisconsin, age 91, on October 22.
Orville E. Meland ’51, River Falls, Wisconsin, age 93, on October 27.
Caroline J. (Borsheim) Melhus’ 51, Minneapolis, age 90, on May 31.
Arvid D. Dixen ’52, Minneapolis, age 89, on May 20.
Harold J. Hansen ’52, Normandy Park, Washington, age 90, on April 17.
Luther J. Larson ’52, Sparta, Wisconsin, age 89, on July 6.
Mildred A. Nelson ’52, Minneapolis, age 91, December 5.
Alvin H. Nygard ’52, Fargo, North Dakota, age 96, on July 31.
Yvonne M. (Bagley) Olson ’52, Burnsville, Minnesota, age 88, on March 16.
Orville L. Olson ’52, Burnsville, Minnesota, age 89, on June 6.
Ronald A. Berge ’53, West Fargo, North Dakota, age 88, on March 15.
Robert O. Bruder ’53, Minneapolis, age 91, on August 9.
Donald V. Dillon ’53, Minneapolis, age 89, on July 17.
Kent B. Quanbeck ’53, McVille, North Dakota, age 90, on April 6.
Gloria M. (Halverson) Boyum ’54, Kenyon, Minnesota, age 88, on December 19.
George W. Fisher ’54, Lexington, South Carolina, age 88, on May 11.
Wallace L. Hafstad ’54, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 88, on March 30.
Janis R. (Larson) Hanson ’54, Canby, Minnesota, age 92, on October 2.
Vivian (Waisanen) Ryden ’54, Northglenn, Colorado, age 87, on May 4.
Richard M. Hagestuen ’55, Bismarck, North Dakota, age 87, on October 28.
Robert M. Herman ’55, Minneapolis, age 86, on June 8.
Vicent Peterson ’55, Hutchinson, Minnesota, age 87, on November 11.
Richard H. Stensrud ’55, Mesa, Arizona, age 87, on August 25.
LeRoy E. Nevin ’56, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, age 86, on June 7.
R. Luther Olson ’56, Tucson, Arizona, age 84, on August 27.
Bruce W. Rorvig ’56, Kalispell, Montana, age 85, on August 18.
Duane J. Solem ’56, Edina, Minnesota, age 91, on May 2.
Elizabeth A. (Mortensen) Swanson ’56, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 86, on November 6.
Robert Jeska ’57, East Grand Forks, Minnesota, age 85, May 21.
Erwin J. Moe ’57, Plymouth, Minnesota, age 88, on April 28.
Robert C. Oslund ’57, Silver Bay, Minnesota, age 89, on December 4.
Ronald B. Welde ’57, Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, age 86, on September 4.
Ardis H. (Lee) Zunich ’57, Miles City, Montana, age 82, on July 18.
Robert L. Bagley ’58, Cottage Grove, Minnesota, age 84, on November 23.
Bonnie (Sandvig) Erickson ’58, Canton, South Dakota, age 83, on May 9.
Alice M. (Lindell) Lindgren ’58, Bemidji, Minnesota, age 83, on September 11.
Marlene (Hegg) Ridens ’58, Montevideo, Minnesota, age 85, August 19.
Donald J. Hagestuen ’59, Aitkin, Minnesota, age 83, on October 29.
Arlene B. (Selander) Hill ’59, Allegan, Michigan, age 82, on September 11.
Rhoda M. (Monseth) Huglen ’59, Roseau, Minnesota, age 83, on August 19.
Heinrich Kopka ’59, Staples, Minnesota, age 85, on November 28.
Walter W. Lundeen ’59, Minneapolis, age 89, on December 20.
Richard G. Sletten ’59, North Oaks, Minnesota, age 82, on August 13.
Peggy K. (O’Neil) Swensen ’59, Fargo, North Dakota, age 82, on April 11.
Sharon K. (Grodt) West ’59, Chisago City, Minnesota, age 83, on March 16.
1960s
Gordon Grinely ’60, Eau Galle Township, Wisconsin, age 82, on June 25.
Marcia S. (Refsal) Sanders ’60, Chandler, Arizona, age 81, on October 13.
Kermit L. Valleen ’60, Cambridge, Minnesota, age 83, November 16.
Paula J. Bjorkley Carlson ’62, Madras, Oregon, age 80, on December 5.
Allan P. Tveite ’62, Lakeville, Minnesota, age 80, on November 18.
E. Nelvin Botten ’63, Stanwood, Washington, age 91, on September 16.
Bernard E. Debar ’63, Minneapolis, age 89, on May 11.
Helen A. (Anderson) Gildseth ’63, Duluth, Minnesota, age 78, on March 17.
Lois J. (Bailey) Parson ’63, Braham, Minnesota, age 80, August 19.
Clarice A. Sta
’63, Minneapolis, age 84, on April 9.
Patrick J. Sullivan ’63, Miltona, Minnesota, age 79, on June 26.
Lannette Y. (Haire) Reshetar ’64, Andover, Minnesota, age 77, on April 8.
Lesley K. (Schwarten) Schmid ’64, Blaine, Minnesota, age 78, on June 12.
Joyce M. (Nelson) Schrader ’64, Friendswood, Texas, age 77, on June 28.
Susan L. Kyllo ’65, Spring Park, Minnesota, age 78, on December 16.
Sharon (Tofte) Taeger ’65, Camrose, Canada, age 77, on April 4.
Sharon L. (Wagner) Johnson ’66, Atikokan, Canada, age 76, on November 29.
Sandra (Johnson) Kotval ’66, Spring Valley, Wisconsin, age 76, on October 15.
Irene (Seltvedt) Yost ’66, Dickinson, North Dakota, age 77, on July 21.
David E. Sylvester ’67, Cloquet, Minnesota, age 81, on October 29.
Ruthe M. (Tollefson) Enstad ’68, Prior Lake, Minnesota, age 75, on October 15.
Marvin J. Haara ’68, Hutchinson, Minnesota, age 76, on August 26.
Ellen M. (Larson) Johnston ’68, Mankato, Minnesota, age 73, on August 16.
Merrill D. Ronning ’68, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 75, on August 18.
John P. Weinard ’68, Bloomington, Minnesota, age 81, on December 12.
Douglas S. Anderson ’69, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 72, on April 10.
Mervin F. Larson ’69, Excelsior, Minnesota, age 73, on August 30.
1970s
Gloria J. (Wohlers Livingston) Hutchinson ’70, Falcon Heights, Minnesota, age 71, on July 1.
Kathy J. (Kropelin) Cracraft ’71, Minneapolis, age 70, on July 13.
Michael J. Hostetler ’71, Andover, Minnesota, age 71, on August 7.
Joann S. Bell ’72, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 70, on August 9.
Vicki C. (Linder) Lind ’72, Rosemount, Minnesota, age 70, on November 4.
Je rey P. Ross ’72, Sheburn, Minnesota, age 64, on April 26.
Jean L. (Bridges) Wachs ’73, Minneapolis, age 68, on June 4.
David W. Finson ’75, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 67, on June 17.
Douglas A. Fish ’75, Hastings, Minnesota, age 68, on November 24.
Lois B. Wattman ’76, St. Paul, Minnesota, age 66, on September 28.
Gregory J. Bannon ’77, Albertville, Minnesota, age 66, on August 15.
1980s
Sandra J. Holm-Cyr ’82, Rich eld, Minnesota, age 72, on April 15.
Arlene D. Hiles ’86, Stillwater, Minnesota, age 87, on September 11.
1990s
Richard A. Gillitzer ’91, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, age 53, on May 24.
Judith A. Francis ’92, Mound, Minnesota, age 80, on October 12.
John S. Austin ’93, Minneapolis, age 70, on December 1.
Debra J. Clark-Corley ’93, Gary, Indiana, age 65, on April 6.
Nancy C. Sallman ’93, Minneapolis, age 65, on September 14.
Violet E. (Schmitz) Rocek ’94, Minneapolis, age 85, on December 6.
Eileen J. (Bridgeman) Biernat ’98, New Brighton, Minnesota, age 74, on September 4.
2000s
Dylan E. Cook ’00, Christchurch, New Zealand, age 44, on September 7.
Kelly A. (Duncan) Norden ’00, Minneapolis, age 42, on October 3.
Philip R. Johnson ’04, Nisswa, Minnesota, age 56, on April 11.
Michael R. Kuhlmann ’04, Minneapolis, age 39, on August 11.
Christopher R. Hunnicutt ’08, Green Bay, Wisconsin, age 35, on March 27.
Barton M. Lund ’08, Stuart, Florida, age 56, on December 12.
2010s
Quinten P. Bissonette ’12, Spring Valley, Minnesota, age 43, on May 5.
Shane M. Potter ’15, Garrison, Minnesota, age 31, on December 13.
J. Parker Foley ’16, Duxbury, Massachusetts, age 27, on October 21.
Maricio M. Mata-Thelen ’17, Minneapolis, age 26, on October 31.
Kevin J. Baxter ’19, Burnsville, Minnesota, age 29, on November 2.
2020s
Abdirizak A. Abdullahi ’21, Minneapolis, age 21, on April 26.
Faculty
Augsburg University’s Center for Global Education and Experience Guatemala Site Director Fidel Xinico
Tum, San Lucas Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, age 60, on September 12.
Submit address changes and nominations for remembrances to alumniupdate@augsburg.edu.
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EDGE®
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AUGSBURG RECEIVES $50,000 GRANT FOR
TRAVELERS EDGE®
by John Weirick
February 18, 2021
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The Travelers Companies, Inc. gave a $50,000 grant to Augsburg University in September 2020 to
support Travelers EDGE. The program—which stands for Empowering Dreams for Graduation and
Employment—provides scholarships, internships, job shadowing, professional development
opportunities, and career advice. More than 100 Augsburg students have participated in the program
since 2007.
“There is much more to be gained from Travelers EDGE than solely professional development,” said
Ann A. Ulring, program manager at Augsburg’s Strommen Center for Meaningful Work. “By the time
scholars graduate, they are con dent, career-focused, and empowered to share who they are and
what they have to o er.”
EDGE scholar Samantha Lopez ’22, who completed a summer internship at Travelers, said, “Travelers
has opened so many doors for me. It was amazing to learn rsthand what goes on inside a corporation
and nd out I can do the work. Travelers provided me with the support, skills, and con dence I need to
pursue a business career.”
2020–21 Recipients
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Aaron Davis ’24, Business Management
Yer Her ’23, Marketing
Pa Houa Lee ’23, Marketing
Hamza Jamari ’22, Marketing
Duaa Katabay ’23, Business
Management
Curtis Love ’23, Marketing
Samantha Lopez ’22, Communication
Studies
PangDao Xiong ’24, Marketing
View more grants news.
Top image: Samantha Lopez ’22 is one of several Travelers EDGE scholars at Augsburg. (Photos by
Courtney Perry)
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GIVE TO THE MAX DAY RECAP AND
SUSTAINING AUGSBURG’S FUTURE
Thank you for supporting Augsburg during Give to the Max Day!
by Amanda Symes '09, '15 MFA
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January 26, 2021
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CONNECT WITH US
This November, Augsburg had a record-breaking Give to the Max
Day in terms of donor participation and dollars raised. Here are the
highlights:
• $531,704 was raised across 41 projects, setting a new record.
• 1,898 total donors gave, the most we’ve ever seen.
• Gifts came from 41 states.
• 56% of our 41 projects (23 projects) were fully funded, and many others were very close to fully
funded.
• One couple gave to 17 projects.
This day continues to energize our students, faculty, and sta every
year, and we can’t wait to see what we can accomplish next year.
Watch this video from our students who would like to say a quick
thank you.
Make a di erence all year round
Each year, 20% of the annual gifts to the Augsburg Fund come during Give to the Max Day. But giving
to the Augsburg Fund matters all year round: We use these dollars to make a di erence for Auggies
right away through scholarships, instruction and academic support, student programs, and other
areas of the largest funding needs at Augsburg.
Gifts to the Augsburg Fund touch the life of every student, faculty member, and sta member. More
than 1,000 donors contribute to the fund each year, and you can join them.
Make a di erence today. Give to the Augsburg Fund.
Giving creates a ripple e ect for the future of
Augsburg
When a water droplet hits the surface of a pond, it causes a ripple much larger than the original drop.
This is how your gift a ects Augsburg.
Glass water droplet sculptures, created by Rhode Island artists, represent the expanding e ect that
donors provide for the Augsburg community. Learn more about these water droplets and how
endowed scholarships propel Augsburg’s work into the future.
Lisa Smith and Dave Smith
Sharon Mortrud ’64 (Courtesy
Dennis Meyer ’78 and Bev ’78
(Courtesy photo)
photo)
Meyer (Courtesy photo)
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NOTES
FROM
PRESIDENT
PRIBBENOW
As we concludeour
yearlongcelebration
of Augsburg's150th
anniversary,
in the midst
of thesehistorictimes, I havebeenreflectingon someof
the mottosand slogansAugsburghasusedthroughoutits
history.Fromour foundingscripturalmotto-"And the Word
becamefleshand live...
Show more
NOTES
FROM
PRESIDENT
PRIBBENOW
As we concludeour
yearlongcelebration
of Augsburg's150th
anniversary,
in the midst
of thesehistorictimes, I havebeenreflectingon someof
the mottosand slogansAugsburghasusedthroughoutits
history.Fromour foundingscripturalmotto-"And the Word
becamefleshand livedamongus" (John1: 14)-to the
familiar "Educationfor service,"to the morerecent"We
believewe arecalledto serveour neighbor,"to the iconic
phrasefirst usedas part of Augsburg's100th anniversary
and nowfeaturedon our universityseal,"Throughtruth to
freedom,"eachphrasepointsto abidingvaluesthat are at
the heartof the educationAugsburgoffersto its students.
I am particularlystruck by the claim madein that
centennialmotto,and I wonderwhat it might mean
to explorehow"Throughtruth to freedom"shapesour
teachingand learningcommunityin the midst of these
pandemictimes.
In a recentpresentation,Professorof ReligionMary
Lowe
offereda provocativechallengewhensheaskedus
what it might meanto educateour studentsfor freedom.
Whata counterculturalnotion! Educatedfor freedomfrom
ignorance,from oppression,from divisionand hatredand
violence.Educatedfor freedomto makethe worldmorefair
and just and healthy,to be goodneighbors,to take careof
creation.Educatedfor freedomfor the sakeof the world,for
the goodof others,for the promiseof wonderand creativity.
At Augsburg,the possibilityof this educationfor freedom
is groundedin claimsof truth. Aboveall, a theological
claim of the truth of the gospelof JesusChrist-stated so
powerfullyin that foundingscripturalmottofrom the first
chapterof John'sgospel-a truth that makesall things
possiblein our livesandwork in the world.At the same
time, it's the truth wefind in our commitmentto a liberal
arts education-to the belief in scientificknowledge,in
socialanalysis,in artistic expression,in culturalwisdom.
Andfinally, it's the truth we find in the livedexperiences
of
our studentsand the communitiesfrom whichthey come,
truths that residein rituals andtraditionsand practicesthat
invite us into worldsrich in knowledgeand wonder.
"Throughtruth to freedom"strikesme as a compelling
responseto this momentwhenwe find ourselvesliving
at the intersectionof three pandemics.TheCOVID-19
pandemichasdisruptedall aspectsof howwe live and
work,and it haspointedlyi11ustratedthe tensionbetween
public healthand economicwell-being.Followingin the
wakeof that pandemic,an economicpandemicthreatens
our socialfabric with massiveunemployment
and business
closuresworldwide.And, mostrecently,the racial inequities
exacerbated
by the senselessmurderof GeorgeFloydby
Minneapolispoliceofficers-along with countlessBlack,
Indigenous,and otherpeopleof colorwho'veexperienced
similar racismandviolence-havecreateda third pandemic
that threatensto tear our countryapart.Surelythis
unchartedintersectionof crisespresentsuniquechallenges
for all of us as citizens,tryingto imaginehowwe will
navigateto someas yet unknownfuture.
The questionwe will ask at Augsburg-a questionat
the heartof our academicmissionand our commitment
to socialjustice-is, "Whereis the truth in the midst of
thesepandemics?"
Whatis the truth aboutkeepingeachotherhealthy
in the face of a novelcoronavirus?
Whatis the truth in
an economythat, moreand more,deepensremarkable
inequities?Whatis the truth in centuriesof systemic
racismand oppression?
Andthe truths we will find, always
evolvingand emergingand transforming,will free us for the
workwe are calledto do as "informedcitizens,thoughtful
stewards,critical thinkers,and responsibleleaders"Augsburg'smission!
Let us go forwardtogetherinto the next 150 yearsof
Augsburg'slife recommittedto educationguidedby the
beliefthat throughtruth there is indeedfreedom.I can only
wonderwhatsucha counterculturalbeliefwill meanfor
storiesyet to be told.
Staystrong,safe,andwelI.
Faithfullyyours,
PAUL
C.PRIBBENOW,
PRESIDENT
AUGSBURG
NOW
Spring-Summer
2020
VicePresident
and
Chief
Operating
Officer
Rebecca
John'13MBA
Associate
VicePresident
and
Chief
Marketing
Officer
Stephen
Jendraszak
Director
ofMarketing
Laura
Swanson
Lindahl
'15MBA
Director
ofPublic
Relations
andInternal
Communications
GitaSitaramiah
Assistant
Director
of
Marketing,
Creative
Denielle
Stepka
'11
Marketing
Copywriter
John
Weirick
Communication
and
Social
Media
Specialist
Briana
Alamilla
'17
EDITOR'S
NOTE
Whenwe beganmakingthis magazinein early2020, the worldwas markedlydifferent
than the onewe inhabit today.AugsburgNowstaff delayedthe magazine'stimeline due
to the impactof the COVID-19 pandemicon the university'soperations.
Mostof the storiesand eventsdescribedhereinoccurredbeforeit becamenecessary
to shift to manyworkingfrom home,online gatherings,and other modifiedoperations
to slowthe spreadof the virus.
Becausewe wantedto sharetheseremarkablestoriesand Auggieaccomplishments
as soonas possible,our team decidedto releasethis issuein digital-onlyformat, a first
in the magazine'shistory.
-John Weirick,editor
Project
Manager
JuliKramer
Communications
and
Social
Media
Consultant
KateNorlander
Advancement
Communications
Specialist
KaiaChambers
Senior
Communications
Specialist
forPrincipal
Gifts
Amanda
Symes
'09,'15MFA
WebManager
JoeMann
Contributing
Writer
KateH.Elliott
Augsburg
Nowis published
by
Augsburg
University
2211Riverside
Avenue
Minneapolis,
MN55454
Opinions
expressed
inAugsburg
Now
donotnecessarily
reflect
official
university
policy.
ISSN
1058-1545
02 AROUND
THE
QUAD
AWOMEN'S
WRESTLING
10 HOWTOBUILD
PROGRAM
FROM
SCRATCH
18 MISTAKEN
IDENTITY
24 HONORING
AUGGIES
25 AUGGIES
CONNECT
28 CLASS
NOTES
32 INMEMORIAM
Onthecover:
Augsburg
commemorates
aneventin
itshistory
andreflects
onits
significance
fortoday.
See
page2 andpage8.
Allphotos
byCourtney
Perry
unless
otherwise
indicated
Send
address
corrections
to
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu.
Send
comments
to
now@augsburg.edu.
COMMENCEMENT
2020
On Friday, May 29, and Sunday, May 31, Augsburg University celebrated commencement virtually.
Taking precautions to slow the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19, Augsburg was among
numerous institutions nationally that hosted virtual celebrations to recognize graduating students. The
streamed online event opened with speeches from Provost KarenKaivolaand President PaulPribbenow.
Personalized slides for graduates included photos and messages that the students submitted.
Friends and family posted comments to the video stream as they watched the event. Students took
to social media to share their
graduation posts using the hashtag
#AuggieGrad.
Once it's again safe to host
large gatherings, Augsburg wi 11
plan an in-person ceremony
for the Class of 2020 that will
include many more familiar
commencement traditions.
ONE
DAY
INMAY
This year's commencement celebration featured a central theme, chosen in April, that connected
defining moments in Augsburg's history with its contemporary reality. Uplifting the university's
longstanding commitments to equity and inclusion, the theme "68/20: One Day in May" called
the university community to explore the actions and outcomes of events in 1968 to consider their
relevance for 2020.
Following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Augsburg canceled classes on May 15,
1968, and hosted a series of workshops and lectures. Augsburg faculty and local Black community
members led conversations focused on racism, politics, power, education, and violence-significant
tensions in American life in 1968. This year, Augsburg presented honorary degrees during the virtual
commencement, recognizing two leaders of the historic One Day in May in 1968: the Hon. LaJune
ThomasLange'75 and MahmoudEl-Kati.
Augsburg owes a debt of gratitude to the leaders of One Day in May, an event that continues
to inform and inspire the university community to engage in efforts for equity and justice. Their
contributions to our society and to Augsburg resonated strongly in the virtual commencement
ceremonies, which took place just days after George Floyd's murder by Minneapolis police.
Blackartists,alongwith Indigenous
andotherstudentsandcommunity
members
of color,ledanart campaign
to upliftOneDayin Mayduring
Augsburg
's sesquicentennial
celebration.
e
Hearaudiorecordings
fromtheeventin 1968,andseemoreOne
I Dayin Mayart, includinga bannerthat appeared
in TheNew
Yorker,
at augsburg.edu/now.
rt at
u s ur
Fac
ulty,
vvorkS
1
prese
nt
g.StgJl
SERIES
SPEAKERS
THE
ART
OFAUGSBURGCONVOCATION
The Augsburg University Convocation Series is an annual
As part of the university's yearlong celebration of its 150th
speaker series that includes long-standing endowed and
anniversary, KristinAnderson,
professor of art history and
special programs. Recent presenters included:
archivist, curated an exhibition of works by Augsburg art faculty
dating back to the origin of the department in the 1950s. The
exhibit included works by early department members, such as
HansBergand IvanDoseff,former longtime faculty members,
including NormHolenand PhilThompson,
and current faculty
members Stephen
Geffre,ChrisHoultberg,
DanIbarra,roberttom,
LyzWendland,and others.
1. DeAnna Cummings, chief executive officer of
Juxtaposition Arts, who shared a presentation at
the Horbal Lecture in November called "Putting
Creativity to Work 2025: Stronger Communities
Through Local Art and Design"
2. John S. Wright, professor emeritus of English
and African American and African Studies at the
University of Minnesota, who delivered "Where Do
,,1.··.f
,.
..
>
•
"
-~
We Go From Here: Chaos or Community" at the 32nd
annual Martin Luther King Jr. Convocation in January
3. Kwame Anthony Appiah, professor of philosophy and
law at New York University, who presented "Ethics,
Identity, and Cosmopolitanism"
at the Batalden
Seminar in Applied Ethics in March
Thefacultyartexhibitwasdisplayed
intheChristensen
Center
ArtGallery.
4
AUGSBURG
NOW
AROUND
THEQUAD
Hearst
Foundation
awards
Augsburg
I
Lto R:President
PaulPribbenow,
PeterHeegaard,
andMikeChristensen
$75,000
FOR
LEAD
FELLOWS
PROGRAM
URBAN
INVESTORS
FINDSNEWHOME
ATAUGSBURG
Last November,Augsburg University's Sabo Center for Democracyand
Citizenship and the Strommen Center for Meaningful Work welcomed
a new campus partner: Urban Investors. Formerly known as Urban
Adventure, this program helps bankers understand the challenges and
opportunities within cities through experiential learning opportunities.
The program also facilitates partnerships between public, private, and
LEAD Fellows, a program of Augsburg
University's Sabo Center for Democracyand
Citizenship, this winter received $75,000
from the Hearst Foundation, Inc. to support
students as they pursue in-depth, long-term,
community-based work at paid internships.
The program name stands for Leaders for
Equity, Action,
and Democracy.
nonprofit groups and promotes investment and community development
Students spend
that move families out of poverty, revitalize neighborhoods, improve
two to four
years engaged
schools, and build economic opportunity.
in public work
projects that
address social
/i: THE AUGSBURG
~iPODCAST:SEASON3
issues such
Augsburg
's LEAD
Fellows
program
is affiliatedwiththe
far-reaching
Bonner
Program
that aimsto transform
students,
communities,
andcampuses
throughservice.
as education,
homelessness,
racial justice,
and poverty
while also
The first two seasonsof the
participating in a peer learning cohort.
The LEAD Fellows program is unique in
Augsburg Podcastfeatured
that it offers students a pathway to generate
faculty and staff sharing stories
income while also making a difference and
growing as leaders. The program is cohort-
of their work with students. The
third season, launched in March,
based with a strong support framework that
takes a new approach and invites
helps students to develop connections with
students and a recent graduate
peers and mentors, build their sense of
MIDCO
to discuss their experiences
with internships and the ways
belonging, and hone their leadership skills.
The Hearst Foundation award will fund
in which Augsburg has helped
the pay students receive for their internships
support their personal and
educational goals.
and will enhance cohort activities, including
semiannual retreats and biweekly gatherings.
Listentothenewseason
at
•
I augsburg.edu/podcast
or
inyourpodcast
app.
Barclay
Bates'18
SPRING
SUMMfR
?020
5
AROUND
THEQUAD
HONORING
RetiringFaculty
Several faculty members are entering
retirement following years of dedicated
service to Augsburg University. Augsburg is
grateful for their commitment to advancing
the university's mission and supporting
TheDoctor
ofPsychology
inClinical
Psychology
degree
launches
to meetgrowing
demand
This past November, the university introduced its second doctoral
program: a Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology. Augsburg's first,
the Doctor of Nursing Practice, began in 2010.
Augsburg worked with former Minnesota School of Professional
Psychology faculty and staff to provide continuity for students who were
student learning within and beyond the
classroom.
JOHN
CERRITO
AssistantProfessor
, Department
of Business-joined
Augsburgin 1983
MARGARET
FINDERS
Professor
, Department
of Education-joinedAugsburg
previously enrol led in the program housed at Argosy University. After
in 2014
the closure of Argosy in March 2019, Augsburg
earned accreditation to become Minnesota's only
MARK
FUEHRER
university offering an in-person PsyD program in
A
9'
clinical psychology.
Augsburg
is now
accepting
applications.
augsbu
rg.edu/psyd
Professor
, Department
of Philosophy-joined
Augsburgin 1971
Employment of Iicensed psychologists and
related occupations is projected to grow 13. 7% from 2016 to 2026 in
DAWN
KADERABEK
'18 DNP
the United States.
"We are pleased to offer this PsyD program as a way to meet the
in 2015
growing demand for mental health services statewide," said Monica
VIRGINIA
MCCARTHY
Devers,Augsburg University dean of professional studies.
Associate
Professor
, Department
of Nursing-joined
Augsburgin 2011
Instructor
, Department
of Nursing-joinedAugsburg
NANCY
RODENBORG
Augsburg
winsCampus
Compact
ImpactAward
Professor
, Department
of SocialWork-joined
Augsburgin 2000
Campus Compact, a network of universities across the United States
MICHAEL
SCHOCK
that are committed to public engagement in higher education, honored
Associate
Professor
, Department
of SocialWork-
Augsburg University as an inaugural
joinedAugsburgin 1993
recipient of the Richard Guarasci
Award for Institutional Transformation.
NANCY
STEBLAY
Augsburg was selected for its work
Professor
, Department
of Psychology-joined
Augsburg
in developing partnerships with
the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood
on page18.)
in 1988(Readaboutherresearch
MARTHA
STORTZ
and advancing environmental
BernhardM. Christensen
Professor
of Vocation
and
Religion-joinedAugsburgin 2010
sustainability, interfaith leadership,
and equity and racial justice .
6
AUGSBURG
NOW
•
Watchthevideousedto introduce
Augsburg
at
theawardceremony
at augsburg.edu/now.
MARK
TRANVIK
Professor
, Department
of Religion-joinedAugsburg
in 1995
At a specialchapelservice
duringtheJanuary2020
AugsburgUniversity
Board
of Regentsmeeting,Bishop
AnnSvennungsen
of the
Minneapolis
AreaSynodof the
Evangelical
LutheranChurch
in Americaofficiallyinstalled
BabetteChatman
'06, left,
as
andJustinLind-Ayres
Augsburg's
universitypastors.
Augsburg
community
launches
on-campus
lending
shop
to reduce
wasteandpromote
reuse
Augsburg's Environmental Stewardship
Committee and Campus Cupboard food
pantry collaborated in Fall 2019 to pilot a
President
PaulPribbenow
shares
Augsburg's
storyat ~ the
~r~~~::~i•i:~:::~~:
~~~:i~~~®
the
O
new resource: the Share Shop, which offers
a wide variety of items for free, short-
Augsburg story during a session
called, "Hospitality is Not
term checkout. The Share Shop currently
Enough: An Institutional Journey From Diversity to Inclusion and
Equity" at The Forum on Workplace Inclusion conference.
features board games, small appliances,
office supplies, sewing kits, sports
equipment, tools, and much more.
Augsburg, home of The Forum on Workplace Inclusion since
last summer, is "proud to partner with the forum to help expand
The Share Shop follows the same hours
of operation as Augsburg's Campus
diversity, equity, and inclusion skills, so our students can fully
participate and succeed in the workforce," Pribbenow said.
Cupboard and is located in the lowest
level of Science Hal I, adjacent to the
university's longstanding "free table,"
where Auggies place items they no longer
need and wish to offer to new owners.
For Fall 2020, the Campus Cupboard will
relocate to the Sabo Center for Democracy
and Citizenship in the lower level of
Anderson Residence Hall to accommodate
new operations during the COVID-19
pandemic. The Share Shop will remain
in Science Hall, and the two student-run
The 32nd annual, three-day conference attracted more than
1,500 people from around the world and across sectors.
TheStarTribunerecentlypublishedan
article featuringSteveHumerickhouse
,
executivedirectorof the forum, in which
he explainedthe importanceof creating
safe placesfor diffic uIt conversations
.
A
VI
Visit augsburg.edu/now
to
readthe article: "Howthe
TwinCities becameoneof the
largesthubsfor workplacediversityand
inclusion."
initiatives wi 11 continue to work together.
•
Visit augsburg.edu/green/shareshop
and
inside.augsburg.edu/foodshelf
to learnmore.
SPRINGSUMMrn
20?0
7
ONTHESPOT
How One Day in May in 1968 forced Augsburg to reevaluate
its posture and practices regarding racism and education
HanaDinkuserved as director of Augsburg University's Pan-Afri kan Center
from March 2019 to July 2020. Her most recent project at Augsburg, "One
Day in May," was featured on WCCO-TV this spring, prior to Augsburg's
virtual commencement
(see page 2). Between her work leading programs and
supporting students, she out Ii ned the importance of Augsburg's history and
present moment.
Q.
Whywas OneDayin May sucha pivotalmoment
• for the Augsburg
community
in 1968?
the story and understood the significance of One
Day in May, it took on a life of its own. Directors
A.
of International Student Services, LGBTQIA+
mission and values. In the wake of Dr. Martin
and the administration to build and promote a
Luther King Jr.'s assassination, higher education
sesquicentennial campaign about One Day in May.
One Day in May forced Augsburg to recognize
• all the ways it had failed to live up to its
Student Services, and Multicultural
Student
Services worked with faculty member LeonWang
institutions across the country saw a wave of
protests and a demand for structural change. One
Day in May was Augsburg's response to the moment.
The community speakers, Augsburg students, staff,
and faculty who participated shed light on systemic
white supremacy in the Augsburg community and
the nation. This public acknowledgment created a
What is onecomponent
of OneDayin Maythat
; is especiallyrelevantfor ourcurrentsocialand
politicalenvironment?
Q
A.
All aspects are relevant, but if I had to identify
• one particular component, it would be the
level of transparency and accountability that helped
demand to decolonize the curriculum at Augsburg.
move Augsburg in the right direction.
The Eurocentric core of the education system is
Q.
the clearest example of how our institutions are
Howdidthe reintroduction
of OneDayin May
• ariseand becomethe themeof this year's
commencement
ceremony?
A
When I started my job at Augsburg, one of my
; mentors, community elder MahmoudEl-Kati,
embedded in white supremacist ideology. This is
why we gathered this year to begin the creation of a
Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies department.
Q.
Whatdo youhopeis accomplished
throughthe
• reintroduction
of OneDayin May?
told me the real history of Black folks at Augsburg.
Elder Mahmoud was one of the community speakers
at One Day in May and spent years working closely
with the Pan-Afrikan Center. Very few people on
A
My goal for this campaign was to help Black
; students understand and appreciate the battles
fought by those who came before them. I want Black
campus knew about One Day in May and the
students and other marginalized students to know
contributions of Black students, staff, and faculty.
that we are a part of Augsburg history; we are not
After learning that Augsburg's sesquicentennial
guests at this institution. When the whole Augsburg
book, "Hold Fast to What is Good," didn't mention
community understands this, we will see the kind
it, I worked with other Augsburg leaders to make
of institutional changes that marginalized students,
One Day in May the theme for the university's
staff, and faculty have demanded for years.
2020 M LK Day celebration. As more people heard
AROUND
THEQUAD
newest
trip:
RickStevespartners
withAugsburg'sParticipateinCGEE's
Centerfor GlobalEducation
andExperience
Hunger
andHopeinGuatemala
non-essential
travelresumes,
travelers
Planaheadfortravelto Guatemala When
will getan insideglimpseof Guatemala
and
When well-known travel author, activist, and media personality Rick Steves went
to Central America to film segments for his new public television special, "Hunger
and Hope: Lessons from Ethiopia and Guatemala," he called on Augsburg staff
to provide expert guidance and introductions to community leaders and regional
organizations committed to ending hunger and extreme poverty. That's because
Augsburg's Center for Global Education and Experience has a vast network in
Guatemala and has offered educational programming in the country since 1985.
visit manyof the sameplacesdepictedon
"RickStevesHungerandHope:Lessons
from
EthiopiaandGuatemala."
Fromthe charmingcolonialcityof Antigua,
to LakeAtitlanandits surrounding
volcanoes,
to the colorfultapestryof Mayanhistory,there
is an abundance
of thingsto do,see,andlearn.
One of the key people Steves spoke with during the production of his television
special was FidelXinico,director of Augsburg's CGEE Guatemala programming.
Xinico set up Steves' trip logistics from Guatemala and served as a cultural guide
and language translator. He is a trilingual Guatemalan citizen of the Kaqchikel
Maya ethnic group. SusanPeacock,a CGEE program coordinator based out of
Registration
openfor:
Tripl: April 11-18,2021
Trip2: June13-20,2021
Trip3: August8-15, 2021
Minneapolis, connected Steves and Xinico and helped shape the direction of the
television show. Augsburg is now planning a travel program for the general public
that will take participants to inspiring destinations in Guatemala.
Augsburgsenior
scholar published in
A
V
1
Visitgo.augsburg.edu/hope
to learnmoreandregister.
HarryBoyte,senior scholar of public work philosophy at Augsburg's Sabo
Center for Democracy and Citizenship, co-wrote an article that was
published in Time magazine. Boyte's piece offered an analysis of the 2020
United States presidential race and suggested that a compelling campaign
TIME
MAGAZINE
would appeal to Americans as engaged citizens rather than disgruntled
consumers: "Emphasize a citizenship
A
W
Finda link to the article
at augsburg.edu/now.
message for government to be a
partner, not a savior."
SPRING-SUMMER
2020
9
A WOMEN'S
WRESTLING
PROGRAM
FROM
SCRATCH
BYKATE
H.ELLIOTT
Augsburg
Athletics
continues
trailblazing
trendwithMinnesota's
onlycollegiate
women's
wrestling
team
"I already feel bad for my future children," joked Bel
Snyder'23. "They are going to have to hear the story of
Minnesota's only collegiate women's wrestling team over
and over again."
Snyder is one of 10 women wrestlers who made
history at Augsburg during the 2019-20
year-a
academic
quarter century after the university founded
the NCAA's first women's hockey team in the Midwest,
followed by Minnesota's first varsity women's lacrosse
team in 2014 . That pioneering spirit drew Snyder to
Augsburg, which received a Breaking Barriers Award in
February at Minnesota's National Girls and Women in
Sports Day event at the Minnesota History Center.
"I have never felt such close bonds or such support,"
added Snyder, who's an elementary education transfer
student. "I am going to bleed maroon and gray for the
rest of my Iife."
SPRING-SUMMER
2020 11
GREEN
BUT
GREAT
It's a youngteamwith sevenfirst-yearand three
transferstudentswho had neverwrestledfor an alIwomanteam until now.Therosterincludessomeof the
nation'stop competitors,includingEmilyShilson
'23,
who'sconsideredthe top womanrecruit in the country
by somewrestIing newsoutlets.The 19-year-oldfinance
studentqualifiedto wrestlefor a spot in the 2020
TokyoOlympicGames(whichhavebeenrescheduledfor
2021 becauseof the COVID-19 pandemic).
Howdid a buddingteamrecruitsuchchampions?
MeetWomen'sWrestlingHeadCoachMaxMejia,a
formerHarvardwrestlerwhobecamea women'sand
skills coachfor Arizona'sSunkistKidsWrestlingClub,
whichproduced55 Olympicmedalistsin both men'sand
women'swrestling.
"In wrestling,youcancontrolyourdestinymorethan
othersports.It's not aboutheightor speed.Champions
havementaltoughness,diIigencefor detaiI, anda
hungerto win," he said. "My goalis to producethe best
womenleadersin the world.Whentheygraduate,I want
themto understandhowthesetraits convertto success
in the realworld.And I wantthe employersto gobble
them up becausethey recognizewhatcomesfrom that
levelof leadership,dedication,andgrit," he said.
Mejiafocuseson process,knowingresultswill follow.
Heseeksto understandeachathletes'hopesand
motivationsso he can helpthem playto their strengths
for bothathleticsand careersuccess.
Mejiaempowers
eachwrestlerto set herowngoals:"I
knowI havethe disciplineto do anythingI put my mind
to, and I'll havea greatmindsetwhiledoingit," said
kinesiology
majorSavannah
Vold'22.
"He doesn'tseeus as weare but as we couldbe,"
saidVayle-rae
Baker'23, whoranksat the top of her
weightclass."Thenhe pushesus throughself-doubtor
whateveris holdingus back.I take morerisks,and I'm
seeingthe rewards."
Thosestrengthsareshowing.Withan overallrecordof
4-2, AuggieWomen's
Wrestlingrankedamongthe top
10 programs
in the NCAAasthe teamheadedintothe
inauguralCliff KeenNationalCollegiate
Women's
Wrestling
Championships
in earlyMarch.Augsburg
finishedin ninth
placeasa team,whileShiIsonclaimedthe nationaltitle to
closeout herinauguralcollegiateseason.
"My
goalistoproduce
t ebest
women
leaders
inthewofd."
12
AUGSBURG
NOW
NCAA
NAMES
WOMEN'S
WRESTLING
AN'EMERGING'
SPORT
In January,NCAADivision11 and
Division111 votedto addwomen's
wrestlingto its list of Emerging
Sports
for Women;in June,DivisionI voted
in agreement.
Thenextmilestone
for the wrestlingcommunitywill be
to reachat least40 NCAA-affiliated
varsitywomen'swrestIingteams, which
is requiredto achieveofficial NCAA
Championship
status.At present
, about
35 NCAAschoolssupportwomen's
wrestlingteams.
Augsburg
AthleticDirectorJeff
Swenson
'79 is optimistic."Wehaveno
doubtwomen
's wrestlingwill buildon
our reputationas a 'wrestlingschool,'
with our men'steamhavingsecuredits
13th nationaltitle in 2019.
"In 1995, Augsburgmadehistory
with the region'sfirst women'sice
hockeyteam,and nowyou're uniqueif
youdon't offerwomen'shockey.Then
in 2014, Augsburg
startedthe NCAA's
first varsitywomen'slacrosseteamin
Minnesota,
and now,herewearewith
women'swrestling,"hesaid."Augsburg
continuesto be a pioneerfor women's
athletics,andwe'reinvestedin the
successof women'swrestling."
Men'sWrestlingCo-Head
CoachJim
Moulsoff
is thriIledthat Augsburgis
creatingopportunities
for womento
wrestleat the collegiatelevel.Girls'
wrestlingis the fastestgrowinghigh
schoolsport,accordingto the U.S.
WrestlingFoundation,
yet Minnesota
andWisconsin
areamongthe 30 states
that haven'tmadegirls' wrestlingan
officialsport."
"Forthe past18 years,I havehelped
out at juniorfreestylesummertrainings,
and it's beenamazingto seethe growth
of women'swrestlingfromnogirls in
attendance
to hundredseachyear,"said
Moulsoff,the 2015 and2019 National
Wrestling
Coaches
Association
Division111
NationalCoachof the Year.
TEAM
OF'FIRSTS'
MENTORS
YOUNG
GIRLS
Members
of the women'swrestling
teamalsoaredrivento sharetheir
knowledge
andpavethe wayfor the
nextgenerationof womenwrestlers.
Everyoneof the student-athletes
has
liveda first-the first girl on a high
school'swrestlingteam,the first match
a competitorforfeitedbecausehe
"didn't wantto wrestlea girl," the first
time shesawwomen'swrestlingat the
Olympics(in 2004). Theyembracethe
strengthgainedfromthosemoments,
but it is ti mefor morewomento have
opportunities
to wrestle.
Nineyearsago,MinnesotaUSA
WrestIing beganhostingopengymsat
AugsburgeverySunday,andfourgirls
attendedthe first session.Earlierthis
year,about60 girls showedup every
week,evenwith weekendtournaments
pullingsomeaway.Bakersaidsheand
herteammates
consistentlyvolunteered
to coachand mentorthe girls,who
rangedfrom6 to 18 yearsold.
"I startedwrestlingwhenI was9,
and I wasthe onlygirl on that team
andthe onlygirl on my middleand
highschoolteams,"Bakersaid. "I
SPRING
SUMVER
7020 13
look forward to coaching and connecting with the girls each
week. My teammates and I want to show them they can do
this, and show them there will be teams for them when they
go to college."
ChadShilson'93, women's wrestling director and coach
for Minnesota USA Wrestling, said lifelong friendships seem
to emerge at every practice, as girls experience wrestling
with those who are similar in strength, weight, flexibility,
size, and goals. "They get to be the iron that sharpens other
iron," he said.
The result: some of the top women wrestlers in the country,
if not the world, have come out of the open gyms-"hungry
for the sport and everything it has to offer," added Shi Ison,
the father of top-ranked Augsburg wrestler, Emily Shi Ison.
Coach Mejia hopes to collaborate with USA Wrestling and
other organizations to offer even more camps and open gyms
(when it's safe and appropriate for public health regarding
the coronavirus) for the estimated 300 girls who are wrestling
at some level in the state. When they graduate from high
school, Mejia said, "I want them to have no doubt that
Augsburg is the place to be."
~i
ti,\
'WEKEEP
PLAYING.
WEPERSIST'
Word has gotten out. Alumni and friends of the university
AR "'1S
fjJ DEFENSE
SOAP
Augsburgplacedseventhin the NCAA
women'sdivisionat the Multi-Division
NationalDualMe
are tweeting their praises and sharing news coverage of the
historic team. Children's book author and public speaker,
ShellyBoyum-Breen
'97, said the university's investment in
women's wrestling is also an investment in girls and women
in general.
"I was fortunate to be at Augsburg when women's hockey
started, and I saw lives
changing before my eyes. I
know firsthand the impact that
continues to make on those
women's lives," said BoyumBreen, who taught physical
education and coached
women's basketball at Augsburg. "When we invest in women
and our diverse communities, we invest in what's possible.
We have to show it in action through media coverage. Kids
need to hear these stories-boys
and girls.
"Look at the decision-makers, the percentages of coaches,
the funding gaps, and the near media blackout of women's
professional and collegiate sports. And yet, we keep playing.
And people keep watching. Because of the support that
exists, we persist," said Boyum-Breen,
also established grants to pay sports
"When
weinvestin females who
fees and equipment costs that functioned
andourdiverse
communities,as barriers to participation for some
Minnesota girls.
weinvestin what's
possible." Augsburg women's hockey coaches
14
AUGSBURG
NOW
know better than most the kind of
investment and persistent leadership required to create and
sustain a vibrant women's athletics program.
"To be a leader-it's
scary," said founding Women's
2020
USMARINE
CORPS/NWCA
MUL Tl DIVISION
IATIONAL DUAL MEET
7'ff PLlfC=.
WOMENNCAA
et in Louisville,Kentucky,in January.
Hockey Head Coach Jill Pohtilla. "I've seen Augsburg, time and
time again, make bold moves based on what makes sense and
what is right," said Pohtilla, who was inducted into the Women's
Hockey Association of Minnesota Hall of Fame in 2006.
The women's wrestling program has made an immediate
impact in the Athletics Department and has increased
expectations for success, said Michelle McAteer,Augsburg's
women's hockey head coach.
"Coach Mejia was able to bring in a large and talented class
for the inaugural season, and it's clear how skilled, determined,
and committed these women are," she said. "They are
representing Augsburg and our Athletics Department with great
pride, and growing the profile of their sport at the same time.
"They are making history, living history," McAteer added. "It's
a special team doing very special
things." ■
Seepage16 for a brief historyof
women'sathleticsat Augsburg.
ABRIEF
HISTORY
OF
WOMEN'S
ATHL
16
AUGSBURG
NOW
TICS
ATAIJGSBIJRG
SPRINGSUMMER
2020 17
REAL PEOPLE IN
REAL CASES
computers with a software program
Eyewitness identification of criminal
perpetrators is a staple form of evidence
San Diego; and Tucson, Arizona.
in courts of law.
developed specifically for the field
"Think of eyewitness memory like
audio transcripts to examine the
855 I ineups in four cities: Austin, Texas;
association between witness comments
Charlotte-Mecklenburg,
and lineup selection, finding that an
North Carolina;
cities provided lineup photos and
eyewitness identification decisions,
instant identification
by an eyewitness
was less likely to produce an error than
when the witness was deliberative.
NatalieJohnson
'18, who's pursuing a
residue, or other physical evidence,"
investigator reports, and audiotapes of
master's degree in counseling psychology
Steblay said. "You don't want to
the verbal exchange between the I ineup
at the University of St. Thomas in St.
contaminate it."
administrator and eyewitness during
Paul, Minnesota, was one of the students
each lineup procedure. A startling
who listened to police audiotapes and
the top national experts in eyewitness
discovery emerged from a pattern of
coded them based on whether the
identification.
cases when lineup administrators, who
decision-making process was immediate
social psychologist who has conducted
were also the case detectives, knew who
or deliberative.
research on eyewitness memory, pol ice
the suspects were and behaved in a
procedures, and eyewitness evidence
leading fashion with the eyewitnesses.
Steblay, along with Wells, is among
As an experimental
for 30 years, she is often cal led upon
by defense attorneys to testify when
they believe a suspect is being wrongly
accused based on faulty identification.
Her abi I ity to speak with authority
on the subject has been reinforced
She and other students were startled
to realize that the police push for a
conviction could, in some cases, influence
LEARNING E'ROM
LINEUPS
Augsburg student researchers
by her research findings. Assisted by
collected data and assessed 190
Augsburg student researchers, Steblay
real lineups for fairness or bias. "It's
and Wells led studies that, for the first
powerfu I to bring students into research
how criminal cases are pursued.
"Doing the work on police lineups
made me realize how flawed our
system can be," she said. "It made me
realize our criminal justice has a long
way to go."
SeanAdams'17, who is currently a
legal assistant, said he was shocked by
time, sought to understand and predict
by saying, 'Here's the problem of
how poorly some of the lineups were
eyewitness identification errors using
wrongfu I convictions, and let's figure out
constructed.
actual I ineups.
how to solve them,"' Steblay said.
Before these studies, scientific
Psychology majors made up the
The tests were designed to include
fake witnesses, and these mock
psychology's understanding of
research team at Augsburg, adding
witnesses in Augsburg's laboratory
eyewitness identification accuracy was
laboratory skills to what they learned in
studies represented the worst possible
based almost exclusively on controlled
the classroom. Steblay and 27 student
scenario: a witness with no memory of
the offender. Mock witnesses shou Id
laboratory
researchers
studies that
conducted
not be able to pick the pol ice suspect
the first and
from a lineup at a rate higher than
second studies
chance. "The worst lineup I saw had
across multiple
such a leading description that the
simulate
eyewitness
experiences.
Steblay and
Wells were
awarded a
"It's powerful to bring students
into research by saying, 'Here's
the problem of wrongful
convictions, and let's figure out
how to solve them."'
National Science
20
The Augsburg students coded 102
experiment. Data was collected from
The field data collected in these
trace evidence, such as blood, gunshot
existed unti I th is study.
semesters.
[laboratory] witnesses picked the pol ice
Verbal
suspect 80% of the time," Adams said.
exchanges
"That shou Id have statistically
less than 20% of the time."
been
Lineups
Foundation grant to pursue a four-phase
between pol ice
lineup administrators and eyewitnesses
should be constructed so that the
study from 2014 to 2018. The research
to crimes were audio-recorded. There
suspect and the fillers (innocent people
followed up on their prior work, in which
police lineups were presented to real
had never been an analysis of recorded
added to the lineup) match the suspect
verbal comments from actual witnesses
description.
eyewitnesses by detectives using laptop
because such recordings had never
AUGSBURG
NOW
RELEVANT
RESEARCH
Along with stunning insights into eyewitness
identification,
these studies brought to light
more questions worth exploring. The research
resulted in 12 conference poster presentations
involving 23 students, and it fostered two
student honors projects and spinoff projects
that are ongoing.
"It was time-consuming,
important.
but it was
I think the student researchers
had a sense of the importance,"
Steblay said.
"It was really fun to work with them. Their
work enabled me to complete the project."
Augsburg student researchers saw the
subject material's importance for effective law
enforcement practices as well as its resonance
with people beyond their research group.
When AustinConery'17 began researching
how to predict eyewitness identification errors,
he discovered that his Augsburg University
research project was a hot topic with friends
and family.
"Every party or every family event, someone
would ask what was going on at school, and
I could talk about the research for hours
because it was so relevant," Conery said.
Besides a view into a major criminal justice
system issue, students said the research
opportunity gave them practical experience.
Conery said the research gave him the
confidence to read, understand, and apply
studies in his current job as a site director at a
children's mental health provider, PrairieCare.
"It was a great way to implement the
things I was learning in class," he said. "It
gave me the place to think critically
in a
control led environment."
As Adams considers his future work, he's
looking back to his time at Augsburg. "I've
been thinking of what I enjoyed in college,
and a lot of it was the work I did with Nancy,"
he said.
TURNING RESEARCHrlNDINGS
INTO PRACTICALPOLICIES
Steblay'sinfluencemaynot makeher a householdname,but her researchfindings
are beingput to practicaluse in a varietyof ways.
Minnesotajudgesviewa webinarmoduleshecreated,"EyewitnessScience:
Protectionand Evaluationof EyewitnessIdentificationEvidence,"as part of their
judicial e-learning program.Steblayalso pubIisheda chapterin the 2019 book,
"PsychologicalScienceand the Law."
Thefindingsof the researchby Steblay,Wells,and Augsburgstudent
researchers
are leadingto majorreformsnationally.The best practices
includecritical stipulations:that lineupsmust be double-blind,meaning
the administratingofficerdoesn'tknowwhothe suspectis, and that the
non-suspectfillers in the lineup must resemblethe suspectand match
the descriptionof the offenderthat wasprovidedby the eyewitness.
"Thereare hundredsof thousandsof policeofficerswho are using
theseeyewitnessidentificationprotocolsthat we didn't use20 years
ago,and they don't knowNancySteblay'sname,"said William Brooks,
a policechief in Norwood,Massachusetts.
Brookstravelsthe countrytraining policeon what he regardsas
groundbreaking
science-backed
best practicesfor lineups."I don't
think there'sbeenas wide of an impact in otherareasof investigation
as in howwe dealwith eyewitnessmemory,"he said.
In mid-May,MinnesotaGov.Tim Walzsignedbipartisanlegislation
that requiresuniformscience-backed
eyewitnessidentificationpractices
for all law enforcement,which goesinto effect in early2021.
Sti11, the eyewitnessidentificationbest practicesface resistance."Some
of it is individualpolicejurisdictionsjust not wantingto be told howto do
things," Steblaysaid in an interviewwith YahooNews."Sometimespolice
or prosecutorssaythey don't want rulesto be so rigid, becausethen if we just
violateoneof the rules,then that ruins our prosecutionor we can't catch the bad
guysor whatever.Sothey feel like it's underminingtheir ability to do the goodjob
that they shoulddo.
"I don't seeit that way," Steblaysaid. "I just think theseare not difficult
changes."Steblayviewsthe recommendedlineup reformsas a meansto strengthen
eyewitnessevidenceand reducethe likelihoodof a mistakenidentification.
The InnocenceProject,a nonprofitfoundedin 1992 to exoneratethe wrongly
convictedthroughDNAtesting, hasworkedto passlawsthroughoutthe countrythat
embracethe scientificallysupportedbest practicesadvancedby Steblayand Wells.
"Whenwe beganour work,a handfulof stateshadembracedbest practices.
Todaymorethan half of the statesin the countryhaveadoptedkeyeyewitness
identificationreforms,"said RebeccaBrown,the nonprofit's policydirector.
Steblayhopesmorepolice departmentswi11 enactthesereforms."Wehave
at leastpart of the answerto howpolicecan reducemistakenidentificationand
wrongfulconvictions."■
22
AUGSBURG
NOW
States where c:ore eyewitness reforms have been
implemented through legislation, c:ourt action, or
substantial voluntary c:omplianc:e:
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Georgia,
Louisiana,
Maryland,
Massachusetts,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Montana,
Nebraska,
Nevada,
New
Hampshire,
NewJersey,
NewMexico,
North
Carolina,
Ohio,
Oklahoma,
Oregon,
Rhode
Island,
Texas,
Utah,Vermont,
West
Virginia
andWisconsin
viaInnocence
Project
SPRING-SUMMER
2020 23
The Gage tam i ly is part of a legacy
Skip and Barbara have supported many campus projects
that has supported valuable
throughout the years, including Anderson Plaza, the Gage Center
student services that are crucial to
for Student Success, the Gage Family Art Gallery, the James G.
Augsburg University's
identity and
community.
Lindell Library, and the Scandinavian Center, which cultivated
knowledge and interest in Scandinavian culture on campus for
Edwin"Skip"Gagepassed away
Wednesday, February 26, 2020. Skip and his wife, Barbara
CarlsonGage,have been integral to the Augsburg community
Piper LaBelle Award for their consistent support of young people
for many years. Al I four of their children attended Augsburg,
In his professional life, Skip built what came to be known as
15 years. In 2016, the Gage family was honored with the Toby
in recovery.
including alumni GeoffGage'89 and Rick Gage'96. Barbara
the Carlson Marketing Group. He served as chair and then chair
served on the Board of Regents, including four years as
emeritus of the lnnerCity Tennis Foundation and worked with
chair of the board and as co-chair of Augsburg's Access to
Barbara in many community efforts with the Banyan Community,
Excellence campaign.
Northside Achievement Zone, and Urban Ventures.
Skip and Barbara initiated the Center for Learning and
Skip's vision aligned with Augsburg's institutional
calling and
Accessible Student Services and contributed substantial time
reinforced the university's commitments to global perspectives,
and gifts to the StepUP ® Program. Skip believed the values
living faith, active citizenship, and meaningful work. Skip and
taught as part of the fabric of Augsburg's community have been
Barbara's gifts and leadership over the years have sustained
as important as the educational experience and the culture of
Augsburg's commitment to serve its students and neighbors.
family and service that is imparted to all of Augsburg's students.
Through the Gage family's leadership, CLASS was established.
"The Gage family has and continues to have a significant
impact on the Augsburg community," said DonnaMclean, former
In 1989, Skip and Barbara commissioned the first study that
Augsburg director of leadership gifts. "Thanks to the generosity
evaluated learning disability programs at the college level. They
of the Gage family, the lives of so many students have been
partnered with Augsburg faculty to build a learning disability
meaningfully enhanced through CLASS and other campus
endowment program, and Skip led the drive to raise $500,000
programs that provide impactful learning experiences." ■
in addition to $500,000
24
AUGSBURG
NOW
his family pledged.
THE
STAGE
Sesquicentennial
project
shares
story
through
song
The Augsburg University Department of Music had a unique opportunity to produce
Other
sesquicentennial
projects
and perform "Tienda," a new chamber opera by Augsburg Assistant Professor of Music
To commemorate Augsburg's 150th
ReinaldoMoyaand opera lyricist Caitlin Vincent, which premiered February 21 and 22.
anniversary, the university invited faculty
This production, presented as a part of Augsburg's sesquicentennial celebration, was
performed in Foss Center's Hoversten Chapel and included a cast of student singers,
and staff to apply for funding to support
unique projects that aligned with their
the Augsburg Choir, and the Augsburg Orchestra. The opera tells the story of Luis
interests and expertise while uplifting
Garzon, a Mexican musician who immigrated to Minneapolis in 1886 and opened a
Augsburg's mission, academic excellence,
small Mexican grocery store, or tienda, in St. Paul, Minnesota, in the 1920s. Garz6n's
and traditions. These projects showcased
store served as a community hub for new arrivals from Mexico, many of whom had
the university's history, its distinction in
fled the Mexican Revolution and found work toiling on the sugar beet farms of rural
the arts, and its high-quality scholarship.
Minnesota. "Tienda" explored the immigrant experience: what must be left behind-
Learn more about sesquicentennial
and what cannot be forgotten-on
.
projects at augsburg.edu/150
the journey to a new home.
STUDENT
EMERGENCY
FUND
A Student Emergency Fund was established in March to support Augsburg students
with financial relief as we al I grapple with the challenges of COVID-19. In these
disruptive times, many students are experiencing the loss of income and jobs
as segments of the economy shut down, struggles to provide for their families,
obstacles in returning home to out-of-state residences, and uncertainty about their
ability to finance their Augsburg education.
With this fund, students are able to request emergency funding for basic needs,
including food, rent, transportation,
funding for academic materials-such
Giveto the StudentEmergency
Fundat
augsburg.edu/giving
.
and wireless internet-to
and medication. They may also request
as books, supplies, laptop computer rentals,
ensure their education is not impacted by a lack of
attainable resources.
SPRINGSUMMfR
2020 25
AUGGIES
CONNECT
AUGGIES
IN
NATION'S
CAPITAL
BEGIN
SERIES
OFALUMNI
GATHERINGS
Last October, a group of Augsburg alumni gathered in Arlington, Virginia, for a
dinner and reception hosted by JeffPeterson'63. At the end of the gathering,
JessicaSpanswick'10 suggested the group should spend more time together.
AUGGIES
whatprogram
doyouwanttolift
upforGiveto theMaxDay2020?
Spanswick coordinated the group's next gathering for a social hour and trivia
in Washington, D.C., the following month. That's how the informal OMV-area (the
district,
Maryland, and Virginia) Augsburg alumni group was born. With help from
Augsburg's Institutional
Advancement team, they were able to invite even more
Auggies in the area to attend social hours, networking events, and dinners.
In February, Augsburg staff met with
Give to the Max Day 2019 was a huge
success for programs across campus!
$421,000 RAISED
1,656 DONORS
the group to discuss how to increase
alumni involvement across the country
Auggie passion is the fuel that drives
and support the university through Give
strong donations on Give to the Max
to the Max Day 2020.
Day, and that's why it's Augsburg's
Want to plan an alumni gathering in your
biggest fundraising
area when pandemic health precautions
allow? Email alumni@augsburg.edu
to
receive help reaching out to fellow Auggies.
day of the year.
It's exciting and inspiring to hear your
personal stories about Augsburg and
Auggiesmeetin the Washington,D.C.,area.
why you're passionate about supporting
a particular
project.
What do you want to I ift up at
Augsburg? Send in a 45- to 90-second
video of yourself sharing what you were
most passionate about at Augsburg,
and you might be featured in the next
Give to the Max Day campaign.
0
Sendin a video,volunteer,or hel~ lead
a projectin Novemberby contacting
ChrisBogen'09,campaigncoordinator,at
bogen@augsburg.edu
by September1, 2020.
Lto R: ChrisBogen'09, RobynHiestand
'98, KariArfstrom
'89,Jonathan
Chrastek
'10,Jessica
Spanswick
'10,KatiePendo'10, KaiaChambers
26
AUGSBURG
NOW
AUGGIES
CONNEC
LIFELONGAUGGIE
FRIENDSHIPS
Connections
that flourishedat
Augsburgspanacrossyearsand miles
[L to R]: DerekFrancis'08, BryanLudwig
'08, Greg
Hildebrandt
'08,andSamaSandy'08 broughttheir families
togetherfor an eveningof fun earlierthis year.Thegroup
members
tout themselvesas the "1107Family,"namedfor the
numberof the roomtheysharedin Mortensen
Residence
Hall.
TheFacebook
postfromtheir meetupshowshowa friendship
betweenfourAuggiesbecamea close-knitgroupof 17.
A groupof Auggieswhocelebratelife milestones
togethergatheredfor the
70th birthdayof SueGibbons
Casey'71 [front,center].She'ssurrounded
by[clockwise]Pam(Hermstad)
Santerre(attendedAugsburg1968-69),
Ginny(Dahlen)Baali'72, Kris(Parbst)Rohde'72, KathyQuick'72, Nancy
'72.
(Olson)Hrdlicka'72,and Linda(Engstrom)
Akenson
TheseAugsburgalumniand "5th FloorGirls"of UrnessTowerinitially reunitedafter
their graduationat mini-reunionsand holidays.In recentyears,theytooktrips to
destinationslike Boston;MyrtleBeach,SouthCarolina;andStillwater,Minnesota.
Picturedare[front, L to R]:Stacy(Waterman)
Newton'01, SaraThedinga
'01,
Merry-Ellen
(Krcil)Bryers'01, andAnn(Peterson)
Fisher'01. [Back,L to R]:Amy
Carlson'01, LauraWaldon'01, Emily(Brinkman)
Waldon'01,JaimeKingsley
Loso'01,and EricaHuls'01. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
SPRING-SUMMER
2020 27
ALUMNI
CLASS
NOTES
The MinnesotaIntercollegiate
AthleticConferencefeatured
EdorNelson'38 in the LegendaryLeaders
seriesreleasedon its websiteand social
media. Nelson, who passedawayin 2014,
wasan instructorfor the healthand physical
educationdepartmentfor 32 years, coached
Augsburg'sbaseballteam from 1946 to 1979,
and led the programto sevenMIACtitles. He
alsowasAugsburgfootball'sheadcoach, and
he helpedstartthe men'swrestlingprogram
and relaunchmen's hockey.
1938
LelandFairbanks
'53, MD, was
selectedas the Commissioned
OfficersAssociationRetireeof the Yearby
the United StatesPublic HealthService.
The award, which recognizesexcellence
in serviceand volunteeractivities, was
presentedduring a virtual meetingin June.
Fairbanks'career has includedwork focused
on family health, holisticcare, smoke-free
communities, and training other health
professiona
Is.
1953
of Fame in 1988 and created an athletic
lettering programfor female student-athletes
in 1989.
&
Augsburg
AthleticDirector
JeffSwenson
'79
,;;, shares
hisoptimism
aboutAugsburg's
new
women's
wrestling
program.
Seestoryonpage10.
& ChadShilson
'93comments
onAugsburg's
,;;, women's
wrestling
program,
inwhichhis
Emily
ShiIson'23,competes.
Seestoryon
daughter,
page10.
& ShellyBoyum-Breen
'97connects
thelaunch
,;;, ofAugsburg's
women's
wrestling
withtheneed
totell moresportsstories
thatinclude
females
and
diverse
communities.
Seestoryonpage10.
CanisiusCollegein Buffalo, New
York, hired MartinHlinka'99
as an assistantcoachfor its men's hockey
program. After his work as an assistant
coach with the SalzburgRed Bulls junior
program, Hlinka servedas a lead on-ice skills
instructorwith SynergyHockeyin St. Louis.
The MinnesotaIntercollegiate
Hlinka scored 125 points in 85 gamesfrom
Athletic Conferencefeatured
MarilynPearsonFlorian'76 in the Legendary 1995 to 1999 while on Augsburg'shockey
team, and he also playedfootball, earning
Leadersseries. PearsonFloriancoached
All-Americanstatusas a kicker. Hlinka
women's basketballand volleyballat
playedprofessionalhockeyfor 15 years in
Augsburgand also was the women'sathletic
director. During her tenure, Augsburgadded the American HockeyLeague, United Hockey
League, and Germany.
four MIACwomen'ssports, including cross
country, golf, ice hockey, and swimming
and diving. She also initiated the induction
NickRathmann
'03 completed
of women into Augsburg'sAthletic Hall
his final term on the Augsburg
1999
1976
2003
Alumni Boardof Directors. He has been on
the boardfor the past sevenyears, serving
in executiveleadershiprolesfor four years,
including a two-yearterm as board president.
Rathmannnow continuesvolunteeringhis
time by servingon the A-Club board.
JasonEdwards
'04 has been
teaching sixth grade science
and readingat DiscoveryMiddleSchoolin
Fargo, North Dakota, for 11 years. He also
coachesgirls crosscountryand track and
field at FargoDaviesHigh School.The USA
Trackand FieldAssociationchose him as
the Coachof the Yearfor Girls CrossCountry,
and he is the North Dakotarepresentative
for the "40 under 40" coachingawardfrom
Coachand Athletic Directormagazine. While
at Augsburg, he competedin crosscountry
and track and field, earningschool recordsin
the indoor600 meterdash and indoor4x400
meter relayteam.
2004
Andr~a(Ladda)Brown'05
receivedan awardfor
her accomplishmentswith the City of
Minneapolis'PoliceConductOversight
Commissionregardingthe body-worncamera
policy, which led to the discoveryof ketamine
abuse by paramedicsand policeofficers.
Her work also led to the creationof the MPD
dashboard, where race disparitiesstatistics
and officer misconducthave been made
public and searchable, and the co-responder
model-mental health professionals
accompanyingpolice officersrespondingto
2005
AUGGIE
SNAPSHOTS
28
AUGSBURG
NOW
ALUMNI
CLASS
NOTES
calls-which startedas a pilot programin
Minneapolisand is now used in NewYork,
Texas, and Utah. [Editor'snote:Theseevents
occurred prior to the murder of GeorgeFloyd
by Minneapolispolice.]
Artist AlisonPrice'08 was
featured in the Minnesota
Women'sPressregardingher new series
of art, "WitnessingWaves." Price, a child
of two immigrantparents, talked about
a stump alongthe MississippiRiverand
howthe river'swatersaided migrationto
the region.This pieceof nature influenced
Price'scollection, which startedduring her
time at Augsburg. "The seriesis imbuedwith
symbolism. DNAstrandsweavealongthe
riverbanksand through the rootsand ground,
reminding us of our interconnectedness
with all, reinforcingthe ideathat we are
fundamentallytied to each other and the
planet," Pricesaid.
2008
TannerWiseman
'15 and friends
from Lakeville, Minnesota, filmed
the series"DestinationFear," which aired on
the TravelChannellast fall. The showfollows
the group'scross-countryroad trip where
they stayedovernightin 10 haunted places.
The group beganmakingvideostogetherfor
YouTubein middle schooland high school,
and this show indulgestheir passionfor
exploringabandonedplaces.
2015
~
Legalassistant
SeanAdams
'17researched
~ eyewitness
identification
procedures
withan
Augsburg
facultymember.
Seestoryonpage18.
McCleave
, who outlinedthe organization's
effortsto highlightthe historyof Native
boardingschoolsand the impact they had on
Nativecommunities.
~
Austin
Conery
'17researched
thereliability
~ ofeyewitness
testimonies
andnowuseshis
experience
to understand
andapplystudiesin hisrole
at a mentalhealthprovider.
Seestoryonpage18.
2018
ChungEangLip'18 wrote
about his career path in the
public healthfield for ColumbiaUniversity's
MailmanSchoolof Public Healthstudent
voiceswebpage.He focused on the
importanceof kindnessand storytellingon
his journeyto becominga public health
professiona
I.
DianaPierce'16 MALnarratedand produced
a documentary, "CountryMusic: Made in
Minnesota," which aired on PioneerPBS
last September. The half-hourdocumentary
toucheson storiesabout artistsfrom the
Minnesotacommunitiesof Alexandriaand
Dovray; as well as the WE Festin Detroit
Lakes, Minnesota, and the FlameBar in
Minneapolis.The programfeaturesinterviews
with artistsfrom DetroitLakes, Minneapolis,
and Pipestone, Minnesota, plus otherfigures
who contributedto the developmentand
popularityof country music in the state.
~
Natalie
Johnson
'18contributed
to National
~ Science
Foundation-funded
research
that
evaluated
thereliability
of eyewitness
identification.
Seestoryonpage18.
GRADUATE
PROGRAMS
Christine
DiindiisiMcCleave
'13 MALis the
executivedirector of the NationalNative
American BoardingSchool HealingCoalition,
formed in 2012 , which seeksjustice and
healingfor NativeAmericanchildren and
their descendants. The organizationrecently
receiveda $10 million grant from the
KendedaFundthat will support a new 10year plan focused on education, advocacy,
and healing.MPR NewsinterviewedDiindiisi
~ SUBMIT
A
~ CLASS
NOTE
Tellusaboutthenewsinyourlifeyournewjob,move,
marriage,
and
milestones.
Visitaugsburg.edu/now
to submityourannouncements.
&
W
EricArlein'12 and Theresa(Bulger)
Arlien'14 welcomeda daughter,
Cora, last July.
Jenessa
(Payano)
Stark'07 graduated
from YaleUniversitywith her Masterof
•
Sciencein Nursingwith specialtiesas a
certified nurse midwifeand women'shealth
nurse practitioner. Tofulfill the health
professionalshortagearea serviceobligation
of her NationalHealthServiceCorps
scholarship, she is movingto NavajoNation
to work as a full-scope midwifeat a tribally
run Indian HealthServicehospitalin
Arizona.She will be accompaniedby her
husbandand children, includinga son,
Zaiel, whom the family welcomedin January.
Kristin(Daniels)
Overton
'09 and
husband, Jesse, welcomedthe birth of
•
twin boys, Mattisand Henry, lastSeptember.
Reginaldo
Haslett-Marroquin
'03
•
delivereda convocationaddressat
CarletonCollegein Northfield, Minnesota,
last October. He is a founding memberof the
NationalFairTradeFederation, startedthe
fair-tradePeaceCoffeeCompany, and is
presidentand CEOof Regenerative
AgricultureAlliance, a Minnesota-based
nonprofitorganizationthat worksto develop
regenerativefood supply chains and to
advocateagainstextractiveagriculture.
Haslett-Marroquinis alsothe author of "In
the Shadowof GreenMan," in which he tells
storiesfrom his upbringingin Guatemala
and shareshis visionfor regenerative
farming practices.
A
SylviaBull'10 (pictured on the right)
•
was ordainedas an Evangelical
LutheranChurch in America pastor in 2017
and has servedas associatepastor of Faith
LutheranChurch in Bismarck, North
Dakota, for three years.
SPRING
SUMMER
2020 29
ALUMNI
CLASS
NOTES
Augsburg University Men's Wrestling hosted an
alumni night in February, celebrating the national
championship anniversariesof the teams from 1970,
1980, 1990, 1995, 2000, and 2010 before a wrestling
match against Concordia College-Moorhead . Photo
by Caleb Williams.
ChrisStedman'08 wrote
a new book that will be
published in October.
The book, "IRL: Finding
Realness, Meaning, and
Belongingin Our Digital
Lives," explores being
human in our increasingly
digital world and is
availablefor pre-order.
AugsburgUniversityMen's
Basketballhostedan alumni
reunion in Januarythat included
a pick-up game, lunch, watching
the men'steam take on Concordia
College-Moorhead, and a
social hour. Auggiesfrom several
generationsjoined in the festivities.
Auggiealumni leadthe men's
basketballprogramsat both
Augsburgand Concordia. Assistant
CoachCharlieScott'07, '15 MAL
and the Auggiesdefeatedthe
Cobbers, who were led by Head
CoachGrantHemmingsen
'07.
Adrienne
KucklerEldridge
'02
joined the staff of Augsburg's
ChristensenCenterfor Vocation.
She coordinatesthe theologyand
public leadershipundergraduate
program, is the program director
for the AugsburgYouth Theology
Institute, and is the director of the
Public Church Scholars program,
an accelerateddegree pathway
that allows students to complete
a Bachelor of Arts degree in
theologyand public leadership
and a Master of Divinity in
five years.The program is a
partnership betweenAugsburg
and LutheranSchool of Theology
at Chicagofor students who are
called to ministry and public
leadershipas an ordained pastor.
AUGGIE
SNAPSHOTS
JoeSeehusen
'00 married
Kathryn Tighe on a ranch
in Grand Lake, Colorado,
in September. The couple
resides in the Denverarea,
where they work in real
estate. Seehusenencourages
his Auggie friends to reach
out the next time they're in
Colorado.
30
AUGSBURG
NOW
ToriBahr'09, a medical doctor at
the complex care clinic of Gillette
Children's Hospital in St. Paul,
Minnesota, was presentedwith
Augsburg University's2019 First
DecadeAlumni Award in January.
Bahr previouslyworked at the
Universityof MinnesotaMedical
Center's InternaI Medicine-Pediatrics
Program, where she becamechief
resident. Bahr's new position at
Gillette Children's Hospital includes
treating patientswith medically
complex diseases, using advanced
technology, and championing
transition care.
BrentStolle'03 and Bethany
(Schneck)Stolle'05 welcomed
their second son, Isaac, in
February 2019. Isaacjoined his
three-year-old brother, Weston.
Bethany is the design research
lead for Blackboard, an education
technology company. Brent
works for Nvidia as a software
engineering manager. The family
lives in Kirkland, Washington.
DerrinLamker'97 was named Augsburg Universit
Footballhead coach in December. Lamker played
baseball, basketball, and football as an Auggie
student-athlete. During his football career, he wa<
the MinnesotaIntercollegiateAthletic Conference
MVPand led the Auggiesto a MIACtitle in 1997,
the same year he received KodakAll-American
Honors. Lamkerwas named the Northwest
Suburban ConferenceCoach of the Year in 2007,
2013, and 2014 during his tenure as head coach
of OsseoHigh School, where he coached for 11
years and won a class 6A state championship.
Beforetaking the head coach position at
Augsburg, Lamkeralso servedas offensive
coordinatorand head coach at Edina High
School. Augsburg University Footballhosted an
alumni gathering in Januaryto hear from Lamker
and to meet the incoming coaching staff, which
includes GregClough'86, defensivecoordinator,
and JackOsberg'62, volunteer coach. Alumni
who graduated between 1971 and 2019 attended
y
I
The City Pagespublication
featured the work of Jose
LuisVillasenor'99 and the
nonprofit organizationhe
founded, Tamalesy Bicicletas,
which existsto empower
youth, develop healthy Latinx
and immigrant communities,
promote sustainable
transportation, increase
accessto healthyfoods, and
improvethe environment.
The organization'scommunity
garden in south Minneapolis
providesspace to teach urban
farming and lay the groundwork
for sustainablelocal food.
/
In September, City Pages
featured DuaSaleh'18
for their work in poetry,
rapping, and singing.
Saleh released"N0r" in
2019, and "ROSETTA"
in 2020, EPsproduced
by Psymun, the St. Paul,
Minnesota, producer
whose connectionswith
mainstreamhip-hop
provide broader exposure
for Twin Cities performers.
As the recipient of the
Cedar Commissions
emerging musicians
program, Saleh performed
"Strings and Heart Beats,"
a project described as "an
immersiveAfrodiasporic
experience."
AlissaNollan'09 marriedJames Nystromin
St. Anthony, Minnesota, lastJuly.The wedding
party includedJennifer
Nollan'89, Whitney
(Holman)
Mead'10, and KatiePendo'10.
MarkMuhich'89 was
hired as managing
attorneyto supervise
public defender services
in Minnesota'sCarlton
and St. Louis counties.
Muhich is a Hibbing,
Minnesota, nativewho
has been a part-time
public defender at the
St. LouisCounty
Courthousein Virginia,
Minnesota. Muhich
previouslytaught politicaI
science and criminal
justice at Mesabi Range
Collegeand taught in the
law enforcement program
at VermilionCommunity
College.
MikePolis'10 welcomed
a second child, Sophia
June, in January.His
first child, LydiaMae,
lovesbeing an older
sibling. Polis is in his
secondyear of real
estateand is excitedfor
anotheryear of selling
and buying homes.
KelseyCrockett'06 and
wife, Stacey, welcomed
a child, MasonAvery
Crockett, into their family in
January. Kelseycontinued
his software management
work when the family moved
from Nashvilleto Dallasfor
Staceyto begin a doctoral
programat the Universityof
Texas-Southwestern.
In December, Michelle
Basham
'00 was elected
as the new presidentand
CEOof YWCAMinneapolis.
Bashampreviouslywas the
executivedirector at The
Bridgefor Youth, servedas
CEOof YWCADelaware, and
held leadershippositionsat
CommonBondCommunities,
FamilyWise
, and the
MinnesotaDepartmentof
Human Services.She also
co-foundedthe Nonprofit
EmergingLeadersAcademy.
P.C. Hillstrom'07, director of
educationaI equity at OsseoArea
Schools, received two statewide
honors this year: the Outstanding
Administrator of the Year award
from the Minnesota Indian
Education Association and the
Ron McKinley "All My Relations"
award from the Minnesota
Education Equity Partnership.
Hillstrom has worked for Osseo
Area Schools since 2015.
BrothersDaveKerkvliet'95 and TimKerkvliet
'01
were featured on the EducationMinnesotawebsite
when they introducedfour band studentsof Sebeka,
Minnesota-where Daveteaches-to the rock band
311 at a performanceat The Armory in Minneapolis.
Davehastaught band for 24 yearsand is a lifelong
musicianand fan of rock bands. He connected
those passionsand organizedthis meetingbetween
his studentsand lead singerand guitarist Nick
Hexumand drummer ChadSextonprior to 31 l's
performance.
SPRING
SUMMER
2020 31
ClarenceT. Hoversten
'41 ,
HerbertW. Chilstrom
'54, Green
Valley, Arizona, age 88, on
January 19.
M. KennethGjerde'61 ,
MarilynJ. Gisselquist
'73,
Fairfield, Montana, age 83,
on December 22.
Minneapolis, age 90, on
February 21.
DonaldJ. Dill '54, Eau Claire,
Wisconsin, age 86, on
December 15.
Ruth(Stenson)Kalpin'61,
Falls, South Dakota, age 95, on
January 27.
Alexandria, Minnesota, age 80,
on November 10.
Zee AnneA. (Zimmerman)
Reishus'73, Wood Lake,
DorothyC. (Quanbeck)
Johnson
'48,
BeverlyM. (Jorgensen)
Olander'55,
DonaldN. Myhres'61, Lee,
North Branch, Minnesota, age 92,
on February 18.
Rochester, Minnesota, age 86, on
November 18.
Illinois, age 95, on November 13.
HenryW. Roufs'49, San Diego,
WandaE. (Warnes)Olson'56,
RobertJ. llstrup'62, Minneapolis,
age 82, on September 25.
age 97, on October 10.
Lewiston, Minnesota, age 84, on
November 14.
EllenA. (Paulson)Keiter'64,
Minnesota, age 91, on January 29.
GlennC. Thorpe'56, Mendota
Charleston, Illinois, age 77, on
December 10.
RusselM. Smith'50,
Heights, Minnesota, age 85, on
February 8.
JeanneS. (Wanner)Morreim'66,
Lakeville, Minnesota, age 91,
on November 21.
RobertG.Jamieson
'57, Edina,
Cloquet, Minnesota, age 76, on
January 26.
Hendricks, Minnesota, age 101,
on November 6.
EileenM. Quanbeck
'46, Sioux
KermitF.Hoversten
'50, Austin,
PhyllisG. (Knudson)
Seim'58,
MarjorieK. (Danielson)
Johnson
'53,
Stillwater, Minnesota, age 83, on
January 24.
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 88, on
December 4.
JosephP. Nystuen'59, Cold
WilmerJ. Oudal'53, Eagle River,
Spring, Minnesota, age 82, on
November 10.
Alaska, age 88, on February 2.
MargaretA. (Lundahl)Ruesch'59,
32
AUGSBURG
NOW
WalterJ. Bradley'78, Davenport,
KatharineE. Skibbe'79,
Minneapolis, age 62, on
October 7.
IreneW. (Waslien)Stemmer'88,
Wayzata, Minnesota, age 93, on
November 8.
JaniceK. (Thompson)
Crockett'68,
age 91, on December 29.
Rochester, Minnesota, age 88,
on December 17.
DianeL.Loeffler'75, Minneapolis,
age 66, on November 16.
Iowa, age 63, on February 9.
Minnesota, age 86, on January 16.
Raymond
P.Strot'51, Minneapolis,
LeroyM. Petterson'53,
Minnesota, age 68, on
January 24.
Worthington, Minnesota, age 83,
on December 30.
Shakopee, Minnesota, age 73, on
January 15.
BruceA. Vassar'93, Edina,
age 57, on December 6.
ThomasL. Docken'69, Stacy,
LouJean
J. (Gulbransen)
Reid'94,
Minnesota, age 73, on
December 9.
Austin, Minnesota, age 73, on
January 20.
VirginiaK. (Golberg)Baynes'70,
Lee(Gilbert)Schotzko'04, Afton,
Portland, Oregon, age 71, on
September 14.
Minnesota, age 49, on October 1.
BenjaminM. Blair'14, Decorah,
Iowa, age 31, on January 26.
The "In memoriam" listings in this publication
include notifications received before March 1.
AuGSBURG
UNIVERSITY
®
DIGITAL-ONL
ISSUE
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Pieces
ofhistory
After the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police and protests calling for justice in Minneapolis and around the nation,
MollyMontana'23 went to Lake Street to capture the work of local artists that emerged on walls and plywood boards covering the
windows of numerous businesses. "I wanted to tell the story of the pain and rage that people of color have felt," she said about
the images she captured for a photography class project. "I wanted to capture something meaningful, and these displays were
just that. They are a piece of history."
augsburg.edu/now
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Augsburg Now Fall-Winter 2019:
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Alumni Magazine Collection
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BEFORE TODAY
BEYOND TOMORROW
FALL–WINTER 2019 | VOL. 82, NO. 1
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President and
Chief Operating Officer
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Associate Vice President and
Chief Marketing Officer
Stephen Jendraszak
jendra@augsburg.edu
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
On s...
Show more
BEFORE TODAY
BEYOND TOMORROW
FALL–WINTER 2019 | VOL. 82, NO. 1
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President and
Chief Operating Officer
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Associate Vice President and
Chief Marketing Officer
Stephen Jendraszak
jendra@augsburg.edu
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
On seeing and being seen
We see you!
This summer, Assistant Professor Joaquin
Muñoz from our education department
greeted our incoming students with a
powerful message. He said that every one
of them deserved an adult who loved them
unconditionally. He then looked out at our
remarkable students and told them that he
loved them. He said, “I see you,” and “I will
do all I can to ensure that you are successful
at Augsburg and beyond.”
Joaquin was speaking to students of color
and indigenous students in particular, but
this is our promise to all our students: “We
see you” is at the center of Augsburg’s
commitment to meet students where they are
and walk alongside them as they pursue their
educational goals. What does it mean to say
that “we see you”? It means that your life
experience, your vocational journey, your path
to Augsburg is important to us and will be
taken seriously as we work together to ensure
your success.
It seems especially fitting as we launch our
150th anniversary—our sesquicentennial—
that we renew our promise to meet our
students where they are, to see them in all of
their astonishing and diverse life experiences,
and to accompany them as they pursue an
Augsburg education.
Our promise to see our students is evident
in all of our celebrations of our 150th
anniversary. For example, the remarkable
“Each, Together” art project—part of an
international initiative known as “Inside
Out”—is featured in this issue of Augsburg
Now (see page 16). More than 1,200
photographs are displayed on buildings
across campus: images of current students,
faculty, staff, and alumni alongside those of
historic figures like Bernhard Christensen ’22,
Augsburg’s fifth president, who looks at me
each day as I pull into my campus parking
spot! Every time I look at those photographs, I
think about how they reflect our commitment
to seeing each other, to recognizing that our
various journeys to Augsburg and beyond
are part of a remarkable narrative that has
unfolded over the past 150 years.
Since our founding in 1869 and through
the decades that followed, our institution has
grown and changed, yet our commitment to
our foundational promise has remained the
same. We see you, we love you, and together
we will fulfill our abiding promise that
Augsburg is “small to our students and
big for the world.”
Faithfully yours,
PAUL C. PRIBBENOW, PRESIDENT
Director of Marketing
Laura Swanson Lindahl ’15 MBA
swansonl@augsburg.edu
Director of Public Relations
and Internal Communications
Gita Sitaramiah
sitarami@augsburg.edu
Assistant Director of
Marketing Creative
Denielle Stepka ’11
stepkad@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Elizabeth Kästner
kaestner@augsburg.edu
Marketing Copywriter
John Weirick
weirick@augsburg.edu
Communication and
Social Media Specialist
Briana Alamilla ’17
alamilla@augsburg.edu
Advancement Communications
Specialist
Kaia Chambers
chamberk2@augsburg.edu
Web Manager
Joe Mann
mannj@augsburg.edu
Contributors
Kate H. Elliott
Jen Nagorski ’08
Lisa Renze-Rhodes
Augsburg Now is published by
Augsburg University
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Opinions expressed in Augsburg Now
do not necessarily reflect official
university policy.
ISSN 1058-1545
AUGSBURG NOW
Fall–Winter 2019
During Augsburg’s annual community
engagement and service event—now
known as City Engagement Day—first-year
students volunteer at Twin Cities-based
organizations at the start of the academic
year. On September 3, more than 650
students in Augsburg T-shirts worked
alongside faculty and staff. Some sites
included community gardens and a river
cleanup with the National Park Service.
The Class of 2023 is Augsburg’s largest ever.
See the back cover.
02 Around the quad
16 Face value
08
Annual report to donors
22
10
A September to remember
26 Auggies connect
12
Building on an early lead
15
Honoring Auggies
Balancing the books
28 Class notes
32 In memoriam
On the cover: Portraits of community
members—past and present—create a
tapestry of faces that celebrate, recognize,
and honor the individuals who have
contributed to Augsburg University during
the past 150 years. Read more on page 16.
All photos by Courtney Perry unless
otherwise indicated
Send address corrections to
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu.
Send comments to
now@augsburg.edu.
PHOTO BY REBECCA SLATER
AUGSBURG’S LARGEST CLASS KICKS OFF
ACADEMIC YEAR WITH VOLUNTEERING
PHOTOS BY SHAWN NIELSEN
AROUND
THE
QUAD
Augsburg launches
TRANSIT PASS FOR UNDERGRADUATES
Augsburg University now offers the Auggie Pass, a universal transit
pass that gives undergraduate students unlimited rides on buses
and light rail in a first-of-its-kind partnership between Metro Transit
and a Twin Cities university.
Augsburg’s student government approved increasing the green
fee by $5 to $20 per semester to pay for the Auggie Pass in order
to reduce students’ out-of-pocket costs while improving their
chances of accepting jobs and internships that involve a commute.
Day Student Government is officially responsible for overseeing the
green fee that supports sustainability efforts.
The Auggie Pass is valid throughout the school year and is paid
for from both the student green fee and university operating funds.
All traditional undergraduate students who pay the semester green
fee are eligible for the pass at no additional cost.
“As someone who uses the bus every day, it’s great not to have
that financial burden,” said Skye Ryge ’20, who advocated for the
pass. “It’s really economically advantageous to students who pay
for school, like me, to not have to choose between textbooks and
bus fare.”
2
AUGSBURG NOW
President Paul Pribbenow named
FUNDRAISER OF THE YEAR
Augsburg University President Paul
Pribbenow was named an Outstanding
Fundraising Professional for his effective,
creative, and inspiring leadership.
The highest honor bestowed upon one of
its members, the award was presented by
the Association of Fundraising Professionals
at the International Fundraising Conference
in San Antonio this spring. “The impact
of Paul Pribbenow on the organizations
he has served is only exceeded by the
impact he has had on the entire fundraising
profession,” said AFP President and
CEO Mike Geiger. “It is fair to say that
fundraising—and how we look at ethics
and philanthropy—would look differently
without the contributions of Paul. His work
will serve as one of the cornerstones of the
profession for years to come.”
QUIZ:
OLDER OR
YOUNGER
THAN AUGSBURG?
VARSITY WOMEN’S WRESTLING TEAM
Augsburg announced earlier this year the addition of a varsity women’s
wrestling team.
This new team continues the pioneering tradition in women’s athletics
at Augsburg, which now has the only varsity women’s wrestling team in
Minnesota. In 1995, Augsburg became the first college in the Midwest
to sponsor a varsity women’s ice hockey team. Then, in 2014, Augsburg
became the first collegiate institution in Minnesota to sponsor a varsity
women’s lacrosse team.
The women’s wrestling team is competing this academic year under
head coach Max Mejia, who most recently served as women’s and
developmental coach at the Sunkist Kids Regional Training Center in
Tempe, Arizona.
Mejia, a 2015 graduate of Harvard University, has helped coach a
World Team Trials champion and another finalist; two senior national
team members; a U.S. Open champion, finalist, and placewinner; and
four Arizona high school state champions.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
The first recorded baseball
game occurs.
Abolitionists Frederick Douglass
and Harriet Tubman are born.
Leaders sign Norway’s constitution.
Abraham Lincoln serves as
president of the United States.
Victor Hugo publishes the novel
“Les Misérables.”
Pharmacist John Pemberton invents
Coca-Cola.
The first automobile with an
internal combustion engine is
invented.
Answers: 1. Older; 1846. 2. Older; 1818 and 1822.
3. Older; 1814. 4. Older; 1861–65. 5. Older; 1862.
6. Younger; 1886. 7. Older; 1807.
MINNESOTA’S ONLY
In honor of Augsburg’s founding in 1869,
the university is celebrating the past and
the present with sesquicentennial events
all year long. Think you know history?
Test your knowledge: Identify whether
each of the events below is older or
younger than Augsburg.
German scholars and artists join
RIVER SEMESTER
PHOTO BY STEPHEN GEFFRE
Augsburg University’s third River Semester launched in August as part of
a prestigious German initiative to explore the Mississippi River.
“Mississippi. An Anthropocene River” is a German research project
involving many communities and initiatives along the river with a focus
on climate change. Joining Augsburg students are German travelers,
including artists, authors, journalists, and scholars from the Max Planck
Institute and the Goethe Institute.
This year’s River Semester voyagers departed from Lake Itasca in
northern Minnesota and, for 100 days, are paddling portions of the
Mississippi River to reach New Orleans. The students will earn 16 to
19 credits.
FALL–WINTER 2019
3
AROUND THE QUAD
NEW AUGSBURG
BOARD OF REGENTS MEMBERS
At its annual September meeting, the Augsburg Corporation
elected four new members to the Board of Regents and
re-elected three members.
Elected to their first term on the Augsburg Board of Regents:
•
Sylvia Bartley, senior global
director, Medtronic Foundation
•
Ellen Ewald, co-owner and
executive advisor at Tysvar LLC
and mobileAxept in Minneapolis
•
John O’Brien, president and chief
executive officer of Educause;
former president of North
Hennepin Community College in
Minneapolis
•
John Schwartz ’67, retired hospital
administrator at Advocate Trinity
Hospital in Chicago and former
general manager of SmithKline
Beecham Clinical Laboratories,
Schaumburg, Illinois
Sylvia Bartley
Upgraded training room
boosts athletes’ efficiency
Augsburg’s athletic training room has moved to a larger,
substantially upgraded space in Si Melby Hall.
In this new space, sports medicine support staff from on
and off campus—including team physicians, chiropractors,
physical therapists, and dietitians—can work collaboratively
with athletic trainers to better serve Augsburg’s more than
500 student-athletes from 22 varsity sports. Philanthropic
gifts paid for the upgrades, with student-athletes gaining the
benefit of more efficient scheduling.
“The ability to serve multiple teams at the same time in
the larger space, with state-of-the-art equipment, will be the
biggest advantage and benefit for the student-athlete,” said
Missy Strauch, Augsburg’s head athletic trainer.
Ellen Ewald
Augsburg hosts inaugural
HUMAN RIGHTS FORUM
Elected to a third term:
•
Karen Durant ’81, retired vice
president and controller of
Tennant Company, Golden Valley,
Minnesota
•
Matt Entenza, attorney in private
practice in St. Paul, Minnesota,
and former Minnesota state
representative
•
Jeff Nodland ’77, retired president
and chief executive officer of KIK Custom Products
John O’Brien
The Human Rights Forum at Augsburg University welcomed
about 800 students, thought leaders, global changemakers,
and activists this fall. In partnership with the Human Rights
Foundation, which also produces the Oslo Freedom Forum,
the two-day event at Augsburg brought together participants
from a variety of institutions and locations around the world.
The first day explored human rights issues in authoritarian
regimes, and the second day focused on racial justice,
indigenous rights, and environmental sustainability.
John Schwartz ’67
See the full list of Board of Regents members
at augsburg.edu/about/leadership.
4
AUGSBURG NOW
2019 Media Sponsor
Learn more at augsburg.edu/humanrightsforum.
OREN GATEWAY CENTER
lobby renovation provides
aesthetic convenience
The Oren Gateway Center lobby and adjoining Nabo cafe were redesigned and
renovated during the summer, creating more inviting campus meeting spaces.
The Nabo security gate was relocated to allow access to the bookstore and seating
area beyond the cafe’s hours of operation. Key pieces of kitchen equipment also
were upgraded. This project was funded by A’viands, Augsburg’s food service
provider, as part of its most recent dining contract with the university.
Augsburg names inaugural
Augsburg welcomes
Sundquist Endowed
Professor of
Business Administration
This fall, Augsburg named Business Department Chair Jeanne Boeh the
Sundquist Endowed Professor of Business Administration.
The Sundquist professorship supports business administration,
Augsburg’s largest academic department with the most undergraduate
students on campus. Boeh, a professor of economics, has been teaching
at Augsburg since 1990 and often appears in media interviews and on
business panels using her talent for bringing complex business concepts
to life.
“Jeanne Boeh will lead Augsburg’s efforts to attract top business
faculty, thanks to this generous endowment,” said Augsburg
University President Paul Pribbenow. “She is known as a faculty
leader on campus and for her strong commitment to students as they
prepare for careers in business.”
This endowed professorship is named for alumnus Dean Sundquist ’81,
an Augsburg Board of Regents member and chairman and CEO of
Anoka, Minnesota-based Mate Precision Tooling. Sundquist and his
wife, Amy, have made several major investments in Augsburg.
The Forum on Workplace Inclusion has a new
home at Augsburg University. Previously based
at the University of St. Thomas, the forum is the
nation’s largest workplace diversity, equity, and
inclusion conference designed for national and
global audiences.
The forum has served as a convening hub for
those seeking to grow professional leadership and
effective skills in the field of diversity, equity, and
inclusion by engaging people, advancing ideas,
and igniting change.
“The Forum on Workplace Inclusion is excited to
begin a new chapter at Augsburg University,” said
Steve Humerickhouse, executive director of The
Forum. “We look forward to the amazing things we
can create with our new Auggie family.”
FALL–WINTER 2019
5
ARCHIVE PHOTO
From disease to remedy: How
nostalgia offers a psychological boost
A special vacation with family members you miss. That unforgettable meal at your
favorite restaurant with your favorite person. The album you used to listen to nonstop
during the ups and downs of high school. You’re happy you have those pleasant
memories, but you’re also sad they’re over. You are experiencing nostalgia.
Throwback TV shows, retro fashion, and reboots of toys, trinkets, and stories from decades ago have people wondering
if American culture is at its peak in terms of nostalgia—and how long it can last. Bridget Robinson-Riegler is a professor
of psychology at Augsburg University. Taking a moment between writing a cognitive psychology textbook, research, and
teaching and learning with her students, she explores what psychology can tell us about nostalgia’s appeal.
Q:
A:
What is nostalgia? How does it
relate to memory?
Nostalgia is a sentimental longing
for one’s past. The emotion is deeply
social and bittersweet but predominantly
positive. Nostalgic memories are
recollections of atypical life events (e.g.,
vacations) that involve close relationships
(e.g., family, friends) or events from
childhood. We view these experiences with
rose-colored glasses so negative aspects
are often not remembered. We miss those
experiences and yearn to relive them.
Q:
A:
Where did the idea of
nostalgia originate?
The word “nostalgia” is a compound
of two Greek words that essentially
mean a sad mood originating from a
desire to return to one’s native land. The
word was coined in the 17th century
by a medical student who was helping
Swiss mercenaries working in France.
He observed symptoms of sadness,
loss of appetite, insomnia, cardiac
6
AUGSBURG NOW
palpitation—things we would diagnose
as post-traumatic stress disorder today.
Much of the early interest in nostalgia
focused on how to stop these thoughts
because it was considered a disease
and the resulting symptoms prevented
individuals from performing at their
military best.
Q:
A:
How does nostalgia affect people
psychologically?
Nostalgic remembering is
most likely to occur in times of
loneliness, negative moods, or feelings of
meaninglessness. It is basically a coping
mechanism to deal with distress. Rather
than being the problem (the disease, as
it was conceptualized when the term was
first coined), it is the way we cope (more
like the remedy or cure). Even if we may
feel bad and disconnected in our current
life, we can “relive” a time when we felt
good and were not lonely. Reconstructing
memories and projecting ourselves into
the future are interdependent cognitive
processes that share a system in the brain.
So, when we think about a time when
we were socially connected and at our
“personal best,” these feelings stretch out
into our future, and we become hopeful
and consequently feel better.
Q:
A:
How is nostalgia active in
society today?
Given the state of the world—
climate change, ups and downs in
the economy, racist acts, problematic
government leadership—it is not surprising
that nostalgic thinking is common.
This type of societal distress can lead
to personal nostalgia and to collective
nostalgia in which people long for a time
when they viewed the world as a better
place, even if it wasn’t. So there is a
resurgence of old TV shows, vinyl records,
throwback uniforms for athletic teams,
retro clothes, and other products. We
seek comfort with familiar products from
childhood or from a time when the world
was viewed as “better” or “easier.”
Visit augsburg.edu/now to read more
about nostalgia.
COURTESY PHOTOS
2019–20 CONVOCATION SERIES
Augsburg University’s annual convocation series provides
dedicated time during the academic year to hear from
outstanding leaders and visionaries.
In October, this year’s series kicked off with the Bernhard
Munib Younan
M. Christensen Symposium featuring Munib Younan,
retired bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan
and the Holy Land and former president of the Lutheran
World Federation, and Hamdy El-Sawaf, founder and
psychotherapist at the Family Counseling Center and imam
of Masjid Al-Iman in
Hamdy El-Sawaf Minneapolis. Through
their presentations, each shared personal
experiences and religious perspectives
Join us January 20, 2020
on hope, reconciliation, and resiliency
for the Martin Luther King Jr. Convocation.
All convocation events are free and open to
in the midst of suffering and struggles
the public. Visit augsburg.edu/convo.
that often are intensified by religious
convictions and differences.
SAVE THE DATE:
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT STUDIES PROGRAM
moves to new Minneapolis location
The physician assistant studies graduate program moved into a renovated, leased
space in the Riverside Park Plaza building.
The building’s location, at 701 25th Avenue South in Minneapolis, puts it
among the medical facilities of the University of Minnesota Medical Center
and the Masonic Children’s Hospital and just a short walk from the Augsburg
University campus. The program’s move in August came after four years at
Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota.
The new space, which features an increased footprint for classroom and clinical
lab instruction, supports potential future departmental growth and allows the
program faculty, students, and staff to engage with Minneapolis campus activities.
“The curriculum was redesigned to be more case-based and hands-on, and this
new space will allow for a more creative and innovative learning environment,”
said Alicia Quella, the physician assistant studies program director and
department chair.
AROUND THE QUAD
AWARDS AND HONORS
Best Regional Universities by
U.S. News & World Report:
U.S. News & World Report again
named Augsburg one of the Best
Regional Universities in the Midwest in
2019. This year, Augsburg is No. 13,
which makes it the top Minnesota school
on the list. Augsburg is also ranked ninth
for undergraduate teaching, eighth in its
support for veterans, top in the state and
sixth overall for innovation, and fourth
in promoting social mobility. Rankings
are based on average first-year retention
rates, graduation rates, class sizes,
student-to-faculty ratios, and
other information.
Best in the Midwest by The Princeton
Review: The Princeton Review
again named Augsburg one of the Best
in the Midwest for academic excellence
this year.
25 LGBTQ Friendly Colleges: College
Consensus, a new college review
aggregator, recognized Augsburg in its
survey of 25 LGBTQ Friendly Colleges of
2019. College Consensus works to bring
attention to schools that other ranking
publishers overlook.
Top Schools for Indigenous Americans:
In 2019, the American Indian
Science and Engineering Society’s Winds
of Change magazine selected Augsburg
as one of the Top 200 Schools for
Indigenous American and Alaska Native
students pursuing degrees in science,
technology, engineering, and math.
Top Military Friendly School:
Augsburg was again named a
Military Friendly® School, a list compiled
through extensive research and a free,
data-driven survey of more than 10,000
Veterans Administration-approved
schools nationwide.
FALL–WINTER 2019
7
2018–19 AUGSBURG UNIVERSITY
ANNUAL REPORT
TO DONORS
You are a part of a large
community of Augsburg donors.
We are so grateful for the
generosity of this community of
people who support our mission.
AUGSBURG BY THE NUMBERS
ACADEMICS
STUDENTS
16.2 average class size
13:1 student-to-faculty ratio
50+ undergraduate majors
10 graduate degrees
2,005
traditional undergraduate students
76%
of traditional undergraduate
first-year students live on campus
Data from 2018–19 academic year
27%
of Augsburg undergraduates
are first-generation college students
47%
of traditional undergraduates
are students of color
38
U.S. states represented by the
undergraduate student body
44
countries represented by the
undergraduate student body
97%
of traditional undergraduates
receive some form of financial aid
AUGSBURG DONORS ENSURE OPPORTUNITIES
Parents:
Hazen and Kathy Graves
• Hazen: Retired partner at Faegre Baker Daniels
law firm
• Kathy: Principal for communications and
planning firm Parenteau Graves
• Priority: Support higher education institutions
that serve students with physical disabilities
When Hazen and Kathy Graves toured Augsburg with
their son, Sam Graves ’16, they found that it offered
the unique assistance Sam needed as a young man
with cerebral palsy who uses a power wheelchair. “As
we learned more about the support Augsburg offers
to students with various kinds of challenges, we
came to understand that Augsburg had been doing
this for a long time,” said Hazen.
Sam graduated with a degree in psychology.
The idea of supporting Augsburg financially
occurred to both Hazen and Kathy independently,
and they decided to donate $50,000 to endow a
scholarship. “Access to higher education is a big
issue,” Hazen said, “and we’re just doing our
little part.”
Find more donor stories at
augsburg.edu/giving.
AVERAGE GIFT SIZE
$2,565
NUMBER OF DONORS LAST YEAR
9,966
Alumni:
Brian Anderson ’82 and
Leeann Rock ’81
• Brian: PhD in physics at the University of
Minnesota, taught at Augsburg, joined Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
• Leeann: MD from the University of Minnesota,
pathologist at Frederick Memorial Hospital
• Priority: Expand students’ academic
opportunities and multidisciplinary efforts
Husband and wife Brian Anderson ’82 and
Leeann Rock ’81 are donating $50,000 to endow
the Raymond E. and Margaret J. Anderson
Scholarship in honor of Brian’s parents’ legacy, as
well as in honor of Brian’s brother, Augsburg Physics
Professor Emeritus Stuart Anderson ’78.
Brian’s father, the late Raymond E. Anderson,
joined Augsburg in 1949 as a speech and
communications professor. Brian’s mother, the late
Margaret J. Anderson, came to Augsburg in 1967
and became library director.
Endowing a scholarship is “a formal way of
maintaining our relationship with Augsburg while
ensuring more opportunities for students in the
future,” Brian said.
• Retired clinical psychologist who studied at
the State University of New York—Buffalo and
Michigan State University
• Priority: Equitable representation of women in
education and leadership, including in faculty
roles, administration, and political offices
Linda Giacomo was the first in her family to attend
college. She empathizes with immigrant struggles,
recalling impoverished grandparents who left
southern Italy to become naturalized U.S. citizens and
parents who could not afford their children’s college
tuition despite holding four jobs combined.
“Education is transformative in a way that gives
you so much power and choice. People should not
be denied that opportunity because they have no
money,” she said.
Noting that women earn 26% less than men but
carry two-thirds of the nation’s college debt, Giacomo
designated a $30,000 outright gift to the Augsburg
Women Engaged Scholarship as well as a generous
estate gift.
“To not be generous, to not share what you have
with those in need, is heartbreaking,” she said. “In
making these gifts to Augsburg, my heart is full.”
ENDOWMENT MARKET VALUE
$48.1
May 31, 2019—$49,644,712
$40.5
$38.3
$32.4
$31.5
$28.2
$49.6
$43.9
$39.4
$34.6
$33.3
$29.8
$24.5
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
REVENUE BY SOURCE
EXPENSES BY SOURCE
39% Salaries and benefits
34% Financial aid
19% Operating expenses
3% Utilities and insurance
2% Debt services
2% Student compensation
1% Capital improvement
Friend:
Linda Giacomo
WHERE GIFTS ARE FROM
72.57% Individuals
14.70% Corporations
12.73% Foundations
79% Tuition
8% Room and board
6% Gifts and private
grants
3% Government grants
2% Endowment income
2% Other
GALA AT A GLANCE
• 1,000 Auggies attended the gala.
• Thanks to our generous guests, we raised a total of
$1.4 million in support of Augsburg’s mission.
• Paul Mueller ’84 and Nancy (Mackey) Mueller ’85
issued a challenge and pledged to match every gift
at the $1,000 level dollar for dollar up to $100,000.
1
A SEPTEMBER
TO REMEMBER
2
SESQUICENTENNIAL GALA
It wouldn’t be right to mark 150 years of Augsburg with a
small affair—so we threw a huge, once-in-a-lifetime party.
On Friday, September 27, Auggies of all kinds dressed up
and headed to Renaissance Minneapolis Hotel—The Depot in
downtown Minneapolis for the Sesquicentennial Gala, a night of
dinner, dancing, revisiting the university’s history, and rallying
support to propel Augsburg into the next 150 years.
10
AUGSBURG NOW
3
1) Gala attendees pose for a photo.
2) Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a guest speaker for the evening,
takes a selfie with Augsburg Day Student Government leaders
Arianna Antone-Ramirez ’20 and Lucia Davila ’20.
3) Provost Karen Kaivola and students dance to live music.
PHOTO BY LAUREN FALK
HOMECOMING 2019
Auggies continued the celebration Saturday, September 28,
with a full day of Homecoming festivities, including Taste
of Augsburg, a chapel service, the football game, and the
Augsburg Music Department Collage Concert. The classes
of 1969, 1979, and 2009 celebrated milestone reunions.
Donte Collins ’18 embraces
English Professor Doug Green.
“Auggie, you are called into the world.
Into your wonder. Your why. To wrestle
with reason. To spot the problem. And propose new
parts. To walk toward your fears. To find the heart.
We are Called. We are Auggies.”
—from “We Are Auggies,” a spoken-word piece
written and performed by Donte Collins ’18
PHOTO BY BOB STACKE '71
Campaign Chair Paul Mueller ’84 joins
President Paul Pribbenow on stage.
“Augsburg is astonishing. Which is really to say that
the people of Augsburg are astonishing—Brilliant.
Committed. Resilient. You might try to hide it or
downplay it, but it is undeniably, unequivocally,
tangibly bursting forth from everything you do. It has
been nearly 15 years since I first stepped on campus.
And, today, the world is noticing Augsburg, what it is,
and does, and stands for. Not just in the Twin Cities,
but nationally and internationally.”
—from President Paul Pribbenow’s gala remarks
FALL–WINTER 2019
11
BUILDING ON
AN EARLY LEAD
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
Athletics secures NCAA grant to fund first-of-its-kind position supporting culture of inclusion
Hop, step, and jump. Hop, step, and jump.
Training for the 2004 Summer Olympic Games, Chris Dixon
could think of little else than the triple jump cadence.
Hop, step, and jump. Hop, step, and jump.
Then at practice, hop, step, and crack—followed by intense
pain, doctors, and confirmation that his Olympic dreams
shattered along with his ankle.
Dixon spent the next few years figuring out who he was off
the field—the place where athletic ability and subsequent
praise had become closely linked to his sense of identity. It was
a journey as difficult—if not more so—than his climb to peak
performance. During that dark, confusing time, he promised
himself: If I’m ever in a position to help others transition to life
after sports, I will.
Since July, Dixon has served as Augsburg University’s director
of athletic diversity and inclusion and assistant coach for the
men’s and women’s track and field teams. He is eager to return to
the field as a coach, and he has a game plan to use the new role
to promote a culture of inclusion. This job is personal, Dixon said.
“I was one of only a few African American kids in elementary
school. People would ask to touch my hair, and I felt different
until fifth grade, when I performed in front of my peers and
teachers at a district track meet,” he said. “For the first time, I
felt accepted and embraced, and from then on, my identity was
as an athlete. I loved it, don’t get me wrong, but it was difficult
to adjust once I left the arena.”
Dixon never had an African American teacher or coach other
than a friend’s dad who, after selling insurance all day,
volunteered for Dixon’s high school track and field team.
“I had amazing coaches and teachers, but I never saw
myself in those roles,” he said. These and other life
experiences inform his outlook on this new role
and emphasize the importance of his presence at
Augsburg, where he also teaches Introduction
to Kinesiology.
“I am meeting student-athletes and talking
with them about the challenges they face. I
am working to be a presence on campus—
to break down stereotypes for some and
to be a role model for others,” he said.
“Alongside student-athletes and our athletics
administration, I want to create or enhance
academic resources, life-skills development,
and networking opportunities.”
Personal connections and consistent,
centralized support are critical to the
success of underrepresented studentathletes, Dixon said. “Augsburg is already
ahead of the game. The student body is
diverse, and there are many resources across
campus that support inclusion. I plan to work
with and build on what’s already there.”
A plan—starting with breakfast
Student-athletes attend a networking event hosted by Chris Dixon.
12
AUGSBURG NOW
As the sun rose on the second Thursday in October,
Dixon greeted several tables of student-athletes seated
in The Commons in Christensen Center. The young men
of color connected with each other over breakfast before
hearing advice from Jareck Horton, district sales manager
at PDC IDenticard, and Augsburg Football Assistant Coach
Keanon Cooper. Dixon plans to invite successful men of color
from a range of professions to these monthly networking
socials, and he will hold similar events with other groups.
Alicia Schuelke ’20 MAE, graduate assistant coach for track
and field, said she and other students are thrilled with Dixon’s
enthusiasm and vision for the role.
“In a world where, many times, the odds are stacked
against us, leaders of color provide hope and strength,”
said Schuelke, a student in the Master of Arts in Education
program. “I came to Augsburg for the MAE program, but I was
pleasantly surprised to find how diverse the campus is, and it
is my absolute favorite part of my learning experience.
“If we can move the needle toward a more diverse group of
leaders that better represent our country’s demographics, then
students of color will begin to understand that the
sky’s the limit in terms of their own hopes,
dreams, and aspirations.”
athletics
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INCLUSION
and netwo
RSITY AND
—CHRIS
ECTOR
DIXON, DIR
E
IC DIV
OF ATHLET
FALL–WINTER 2019
13
AUGGIES
Position the result of
NCAA diversity grant
Dixon’s position is largely made
possible through a two-year NCAA
Ethnic Minorities and Women’s
Internship Grant, which provides
financial assistance to member
institutions who create full-time,
entry-level administrative positions
for people who identify as an ethnic
minority and/or a woman, according
to federal guidelines. The grant also
supports professional development and
formalized mentoring.
Augsburg was one of only 20
institutions and conference offices
selected to receive the grant this cycle,
and it is the third award for Augsburg
in the past decade. The university first
secured the Ethnic Minorities and
Women’s Internship Grant during the
2012 to 2014 cycle to fund Jennifer
Jacobs’ role as assistant director
of NCAA compliance and assistant
volleyball coach. In 2014, Augsburg
received the NCAA’s Strategic Alliance
Matching Grant, which funds fulltime, mid- to senior-level athletics
administration positions during a fiveyear commitment. Jacobs’ role then
evolved into assistant athletic director
of external relations and diversity and
inclusion, in addition to her role as
assistant volleyball coach. She is
now head volleyball coach at
Augustana University.
Augsburg’s Associate Athletic
Director Kelly Anderson Diercks said
the department is driven to advance
diversity and inclusion. “Embracing
and connecting students of all
backgrounds and experiences is the
right thing to do, but it is also smart,”
she said. “More diverse teams are
often stronger teams. They produce
student-athletes who are better
prepared to excel in play and in life.”
Anderson Diercks is a product of
the NCAA’s diversity grants, first as an
intern for the Minnesota Intercollegiate
14
AUGSBURG NOW
Athletic Conference and then as an
assistant director. The experience,
Anderson Diercks said, transformed
how she operates as a leader in a maledominated profession. More than a
decade has passed, but she remains in
contact with the mentor assigned to her
during the internship.
“These are critical opportunities for
women and minorities to enter into
leadership positions with tremendous
personal and professional resources
designed to equip them with the tools
and outlook to navigate difficult roles,”
said Anderson Diercks, who formerly
served as chair of the NCAA Ethnic
Minority and Women’s Internship
selection committee. “We are
particularly excited about Coach Dixon’s
position because, to our knowledge, it is
the only role of its kind.”
Augsburg is ‘ahead of the game’
Ali Spungen, associate director of
Division III for the NCAA, said that
about 130 positions have been
awarded through diversity grants during
the past five years—that’s more than
$36 million in funds for positions and
professional development. Augsburg,
Spungen said, stands out as a leader in
the division, which is well positioned to
meet the needs of diverse populations.
“Division III allows student-athletes
to play the sports they love within
departments also focused on their
academics and social engagement,”
said Spungen, also a past grant
recipient. “These positions empower
leaders like Coach Dixon to thrive,
which inspires and encourages
students. Augsburg clearly cares for
its student-athletes and is willing to
dedicate time and resources to ensure
they are successful and well-rounded.”
Dixon is ready and grateful to come
full-circle—to be the coach and teacher
he never had and to prepare others for
the transitions he never saw coming.
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
IN MEMORIAM
Merton Strommen ’42 and
Gladys Strommen ’46
Merton Strommen ’42 and Gladys Strommen ’46 were a part of a
family legacy at Augsburg that has spanned generations. The
Strommens have widely shared their gifts and talents with the
university, and their impact on the Augsburg community will be
felt for many years to come.
Mert Strommen died September 2. Youth ministry was the core
of his life’s work—as campus pastor at Augsburg and founder of
Search Institute, which has an international impact on youth work
through research. Mert and his wife, Irene (Huglen) ’44, started the
Youth and Family Institute at Augsburg and also created the David
Strommen Endowed Fund for youth ministry. Mert also served on
Augsburg’s Board of Regents, founded and directed the Augsburg
Centennial Singers, and was awarded Fellow status by the
American Psychological Association for his pioneering research in
psychology and religion.
Gladys Boxrud Strommen passed away May 26. Gladys and
husband, Clair ’46, who passed away in 2001, have served and
supported Augsburg in many significant ways over their lives
and created a lasting legacy through their work and dedication.
Gladys was a supportive partner to Clair in developing his career
in business and leadership with Strommen & Associates and
Lutheran Brotherhood, now known as Thrivent Financial. Gladys
served on the Board of Regents, co-founded the Augsburg
Associates, and hosted many alumni gatherings in her homes in
Minnesota and Florida.
Through a generous gift, the family established the Clair
and Gladys Strommen Center for Meaningful Work in 2014 in
recognition of their personal commitment to create meaning and
purpose in work and life.
“Clair and Gladys Strommen are forever woven into the
fabric of Augsburg through their commitment to lives filled with
purpose and meaning,” said Lee George, executive director of the
Strommen Center. “Through the Strommen Center for Meaningful
Work, Clair and Gladys’ legacy is realized in students who commit
themselves to exploring their values, passions, and skills and
understanding how they can be put to use in the world.”
The Strommens also commissioned a sculpture in front of
Christensen Center and have two endowed funds: a scholarship
fund and a program fund for the Strommen Center.
As President Paul Pribbenow said in his campus announcement
of Gladys’ passing, “Her loss is a big one, but her legacy will
continue to be felt by generations of Auggies to come.”
FALL–WINTER 2019
15
Face Value
BY LISA RENZE-RHODES
Dakota and Ojibwe.
Norwegian and Irish.
Art installations celebrate
individuals, expound on
Augsburg’s history, and
expand the boundaries
of community.
Somali and Ethiopian.
On and around the land that today houses Augsburg University’s
Minneapolis campus, they celebrated births and mourned deaths.
They spoke languages of love and laughter, stress and sorrow. They
built families, businesses, and dreams.
They were here and many are gone, at once everywhere and
nowhere because in the blistering pace and abundant distractions
of the human ecosystem we all inhabit, it’s natural that we forget
who came before us.
But what if—even for a moment—we turned our attention to
who we were and who we are right now? To who worships next to
us, or walks by us in the grocery, or shares an apartment wall?
“On This Spot” and “Each, Together”
bring into focus the history of the campus
and the surrounding neighborhood, and
the people who are the Augsburg of
yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
What would we discover if we intentionally took notice of who
we are and where we’ve come from?
This idea is at the core of new art and historical exhibits that
cover collectively four city blocks on 12 of Augsburg’s building
facades and 37 window panes around campus. As part of
Augsburg’s sesquicentennial celebration, artists and designers at
the university wanted to give the community a chance to reflect on
their history and their people. So the works, dubbed respectively
“On This Spot” and “Each, Together,” bring into focus the history
of the campus and the surrounding neighborhood, and the people
who are the Augsburg of yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
FALL–WINTER 2019
17
‘Humans at the center’
Photographers capture portraits at Augsburg events to use in
“Each, Together.”
“Each, Together,” the larger of the two projects, is a Group Action of
the international “Inside Out: The People’s Art Project” initiative that
launched in 2011 after a French street artist, known only as JR, won
that year’s TED Prize. First awarded in 2005, the TED (Technology,
Entertainment, and Design) Prize has become synonymous with
visionary thinking meant to spark change throughout the world.
Winners of the award—including educators, artists, chefs, journalists,
and even former President Bill Clinton—have used the $1 million
prize to fuel specific community projects, like healthy food initiatives
and educational innovations. The winning projects all have one
thing in common: They are designed to make people engage in
their communities.
In the case of artist JR’s project, his vision was to create works
that “shine a light on the unsung and give everyone the dignity they
deserve.” And he hoped that beyond his capacity as one artist, people
around the world would join in the celebration of others.
To date, more than 260,000 people in 129 countries have
participated in different versions of the project featuring faces
displayed on billboards, buildings, sidewalks, and in digital
collections. Augsburg is one of the latest communities to answer the call.
“We saw that invitation, that there was a related, common ethos to
what we have here at Augsburg, and that the project was similar to
public works we’ve done here,” said Christopher Houltberg, Augsburg
associate professor of art and design. “It’s really about putting
humans at the center.”
SOCIAL MEDIA
Spotlight
My former college roommate had
eagle eyes today and found me!
Responses edited for length and clarity.
—ERICA HULS ’01
Hey, look who I found! #AugsburgFamous
—SETH RUETER
Look ma I made it!!!!! @AugsburgU
wahooo!!!! #sesquicentennial
—APRIL JOHNSON ’18
18
AUGSBURG NOW
So a team that included a curator, nine photographers,
and three designers—Houltberg, Maggie Royce ’15, and
Indra Ramassamy ’18—worked for several months between
Fall 2018 and Summer 2019. The photographers attended
between 15 and 20 campus events, all working to capture as
many faces as possible to best tell the Augsburg story.
“The way we went about it was really organic,” Houltberg
said. “We started going to events around campus in Fall 2018
and then in the springtime, trying to get to as many different
ones as possible. There’s a really big holiday event called Advent
Vespers, and a lot of alumni come to that.”
All told, the group took more than 900 photos and gathered
about 300 additional images of historic Auggies.
“It’s very democratic; everyone is given the same amount of
space,” Houltberg said. “From our president, Paul Pribbenow, to
people who work on our janitorial staff, to our students, to our
former mayor, R.T. Rybak.
“As we were defining the parameters [of the ‘Each, Together’
project] it was a fun surprise for us to see who self-identified as
part of Augsburg.”
Bigger dose of Augsburg
R.T. Rybak, current president of the Minneapolis Foundation,
was the mayor of Minneapolis from 2002 to 2014. He said it
would be impossible to think of the growth and development of
the city without considering the role Augsburg has played in
that history.
“I’ve conservatively said 1,000 times in public speeches
that the neighborhood where Augsburg is, is our Ellis Island.
One wave after the other washes in and the next wave builds on
top, and it’s something that no one wave could have created in
isolation,” Rybak said.
That’s most certainly the story of the Cedar-Riverside
neighborhood that surrounds Augsburg and the story of
Minneapolis as a whole.
“... I often think we just need a bigger dose
of Augsburg. We need to realize that offering
that ladder of opportunity to someone else
makes all of us able to climb higher. We are
better together.”
—R.T. Rybak, former Minneapolis mayor
“Augsburg is a shining example of the very best parts of
Minneapolis’ history. The university represents opening doors to
people with strange names like Johnson or Anderson or Rybak,
and keeping those doors open for people with names that come
from Africa, Asia, and places across the globe.
“When I get down about what’s fracturing our deeply divided
country and world today, I often think we just need a bigger
dose of Augsburg. We need to realize that offering that ladder
of opportunity to someone else makes all of us able to climb
higher. We are better together.”
Houltberg said the “together” ideal is at the heart of the exhibit.
“As individuals we are showing up, and collectively we can do
something greater than what we can do on our own,” he said. “I
loved seeing the portraits blocked together, seeing people stop and
take selfies. There are people who say, ‘I recognize who that is!’”
Forward facing, historic reflections
Kristin Anderson, a co-creator of these projects as well as a
professor of art history and Augsburg archivist, said she’s only
heard good things about the exhibit.
“I have seen emails and tweets—sometimes emotional—with
people responding to the wall as a whole, as well as to their
individual images,” Anderson said.
The community is responding to the historical revisit that
“On This Spot” installations provide, too, she said.
That exhibit features enormous panels that share Augsburg
moments that photographers captured decades ago. The campus
life of yesteryear includes images of young bobby soxer women
from the 1940s in saddle shoes and flowing skirts in contrast
with men wearing formal suits while tramping across a snowcovered campus.
I’m so proud to be part of the @insideoutproject at
@augsburguniversity in honor of the Sesquicentennial!
—NIK LINDE ’15
FALL–WINTER 2019
19
“It has been a fun way to bring some old photographs to life
and to show how the campus is layered on the site. Those ‘lost’
buildings displayed on the walls of the current buildings help
to connect us to our past, reminding us of the imagination and
commitment of our predecessors,” Anderson said.
The two exhibits are being admired by community members
who see the campus regularly and by those who keep up with
Augsburg from a distance.
Killa (Martinez Aleman) Marti ’08 came to Augsburg from her
home in Honduras. Marti said she brought her own values with
her when she enrolled, “but Augsburg put them to work. The
Auggie community showed me that I wasn’t crazy to want a
career with meaning.”
“Those ‘lost’ buildings displayed on the walls
of the current buildings help to connect us to
our past, reminding us of the imagination and
commitment of our predecessors.”
—Kristin Anderson, university archivist
For Marti, “Each, Together” perfectly sums up her experience
at Augsburg.
“My career is an intersection of what I love to do with the
opportunity to serve,” said Marti, an attorney in Atlanta. “To
think critically, to be socially and community-minded—all of the
things I exercise in my life were supported and further developed
at Augsburg.”
Houltberg said it’s difficult not to consider the greater impact
that art, especially a work like “Each, Together,” has.
“Having a group of artists, designers, and photographers come
together to make something this beautiful and to see it up and
fully functioning is pretty great,” he said.
“It has created a tangible thread between all of us, which
transcends 150 years and all our history,” said Ramassamy, who
worked with the team to design “Each, Together.”
“We live in a visual world yet we can be unaware of each
other,” she said. “This project is making us aware of one
another, making us pay attention, making us curious about the
person in the portrait above or to the left or right of us.”
“I love watching people who are walking down the streets
looking at the portraits,” Houltberg said. “There’s an element of
surprise to it that’s really fantastic. Sometimes the tendency is
to put people in big groups. But if you look at these portraits, look
at the eyes, and look at the humans who are represented here, you
see just how wide a spectrum of humans we are. Anytime we can
show the humans and not the institution, we win.”
“On This Spot” installations show how Augsburg’s landscape, architecture, and people have changed in the past 150 years.
20
AUGSBURG NOW
BY THE NUMBERS
Each, Together
A crew works to install a portion of the 1,246 portraits
that make up “Each, Together.”
302
HISTORICAL
143
STAFF
1,246
PORTRAITS
517
STUDENTS
103
ALUMNI
92
FACULTY
29
COMMUNITY
MEMBERS
installations
37
photographers
60
INCOMING
FIRST-YEAR STUDENTS
3,475 1
2
building facade
SQUARE FEET curator
window
panes
9
3
10
building facades
3
designers
12,710
SQUARE FEET
1
curator
BY THE NUMBERS
On This Spot
designers
Members of the university’s faculty and staff launched a
number of special projects, including “Each, Together”
and “On This Spot,” to commemorate Augsburg’s
anniversary year.
See other sesquicentennial projects at augsburg.edu/150.
Catch a glimpse of the Augsburg of yesteryear, thanks to “On This Spot”
displays on window panes around campus.
FALL–WINTER 2019
21
Mary Taris ’04 is a graduate of Augsburg’s Adult
Undergraduate program, which was ranked ninth in
Best Colleges’ 50 Top Colleges for Older Students.
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LIOTT
BY KATE H. EL
Augsburg alumna starts a publishing
company, creates the diverse book list
she wished she had
Y
oung Mary Taris ’04 was so
thankful to be a girl. The Minneapolis
Public Housing Authority required children of
different genders to have separate bedrooms, so
while her brothers had to share a room, Taris had
her own. Through reading, her bedroom walls grew
into a mythical grove where she’d encounter a
prince or sit for tea with Frog and Toad.
“I escaped into books. Or maybe,” she said, “I
disappeared in them.” Books gave her the life she
longed for, but those beloved tales were someone
else’s story. She was 20 before she read a book with
black characters.
Now 55, the retired teacher is driven to change
that narrative. Last August, at the historic James
J. Hill Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, Taris stood in
front of family and friends to voice her dream, Strive
Publishing, into existence. The startup—based out
of her Twin Cities home—supports emerging authors
of picture books and young adult novels that are
culturally relevant, contemporary, and relatable to
kids of all shades, abilities, and experiences.
“Everyone has a story, and those stories build
bridges to connect us all,” said Taris, a graduate of
Augsburg University’s Adult Undergraduate program,
a flexible degree program that pairs on-campus
FALL–WINTER 2019
23
classes with online coursework
in a dozen undergraduate
majors. “Too often, authors
conform to narrow industry
standards driven by profit, but I
refuse.” At Strive, Taris and her
team work to create pathways
for writers and artists from all
backgrounds to write about
their own experiences and a
wider array of identities.
Publishing stories that
represent and connect
Strive Publishing has released
three titles by local African
American authors, and several
more books are in the works
with upcoming launch dates.
Taris’ efforts have been featured
nationally and celebrated
locally, with invitations to
conduct workshops at schools,
partner with established
publishing companies, and
co-sponsor the inaugural African
American Voices in Children’s
Literature Contest in partnership
with Free Spirit Publishing.
“Strive is more than a
company; it’s a mindset,” she
said. “I was a runaway teen
mom who finished high school
while striving to raise a son
and work for a better life.”
That determination led her to
enroll in Augsburg’s elementary
education program. Juggling
work and family, it took Taris
eight years to graduate,
but she walked across the
commencement stage and into
the classroom where she taught
a range of grades and subjects
(mostly English) for 15 years.
“I became the first person in
my family to earn a college
degree,” she said. “It had been
my dream since childhood.”
Augsburg left a mark on
Taris, as classes exposed her
to inequities in education and
literature. Taris reframed those
inequities as opportunities.
Now, years later, Barbara West,
director of student teacher
placement at Augsburg,
recalled Taris’ embrace of
story-filled, relevant learning.
While student-teaching, Taris
invited a Japanese friend to talk
with students who were reading
a novel about a Japanese girl
during World War II. On her
lunch hour, Taris met with
eighth-graders to advise on a
student-produced newsletter.
She sought to incorporate
diverse voices and stories into
the curriculum.
“Augsburg taught me to
consider the whole child and
to understand the classroom as
a life-giving space where you
can listen and let people tell
their stories,” she said. “As
a teacher, I struggled to find
diverse texts.”
Taris also struggled when
administrators brought speakers
and books that reinforced
cultural stereotypes and
limited experiences rather than
providing real cultural and
ethnic diversity. “I wish they
would have, instead, given kids
diverse books or brought in
local authors who looked like
the students.”
Celebrating voices that
defy stereotypes
Taris launched Strive in 2016
while teaching full time, but
three years later, she took early
retirement to dedicate herself
fully to the publishing company.
Taris remains an educator,
though, as a mentor to young
authors and as an advocate
for change. She challenges
communities, schools, and
publishing houses to invite new
titles that can find their way
onto more readers’ nightstands.
Ricardo Peters is among
Strive’s “founding authors,” as
Taris calls them, and he
says he is indebted to “Miss
Mary” for her guidance and
encouragement. Peters’ book—
the first in a fantasy series—
sold out within months. The
35-year-old stands out, Taris
said, because he is a black man
who loves and lives the arts like
few others.
“Plenty of black men are
deeply connected to their
artistic side, but society doesn’t
celebrate that expression,” Taris
added. “Our sons are not all
basketball and hip hop. Ricardo
defies that stereotype, and his
work will lead others to do the
same.”
Peters had been dreaming up
stories since he filled stapledtogether notebook paper
with “Transformers” stickers.
Publishing a book remained
his dream, but it wouldn’t have
happened without Taris.
“I had been working on
this series for nine years and
likely would have sat on it
forever,” said Peters, who
works as a reading instructor
at Kumon Math and Reading
Center of Maple Grove. “But
Mary presented me with this
opportunity, she believed in me,
and I am eternally grateful.”
Strive Publishing’s Book List
“Under a Cloven Sky” and
“A Wild Nature Embraced”
by Ricardo Peters
Books one and two in the
young adult fantasy series,
“The Scorched Heavens,” in
which the fate of two nations
rests on the city’s young
princess and her protector.
“Red’s Adventures: The Egg
Pie” by Donna Gingery
The hilarious first book in
a picture book series for
children, this story follows
the precocious Red, who
grows up in Alabama under
the watchful eye of her
grandmother.
“Story to Story: A Strive Short
“Isaiah’s Sunglasses”
Story Series,” Volume 1
by Linda Miller
This collaborative book
A short, rhythmic story for
project aims to celebrate and
children about family, hope,
empower emerging authors
acceptance, and learning
about different types of people. and illustrators.
“Who Can I Be?” by
Arielle Grant
Created by Strive’s founding
illustrator, this is a story of
a girl who sees her potential
through the example of women
in her community.
Representation in
literature on the rise
but has ‘a long way to go’
Mary Taris ’04 with two of her children, Jermaine Taris and LaToya Taris-James, who both work with
Strive Publishing.
Making stories more accessible
runs in the family
This sentiment is shared among the
authors who work with Taris. Her
children are equally inspired by her,
so much so that they joined the Strive
team. Her oldest son, Jermaine Taris,
is a book illustrator. Her 16-year-old
daughter, Grace Taris-Allen, serves
as “quality control,” happily reading
manuscripts; and her eldest daughter,
LaToya Taris-James, assists with
marketing and social media.
“My mom makes things happen,”
said Taris-James, a student leadership
program coordinator for Augsburg’s
Sabo Center for Democracy and
Citizenship. “She is resourceful and
passionate, with a unique way of
connecting with and inspiring others.
“When I was 12, she introduced
me to ‘Things Fall Apart’ by Chinua
Achebe. It was the first piece of African
literature I had read on my own, and
it shaped my view of black people
across the African diaspora and helped
connect me with my heritage.”
Through Strive, her mother is
making those connections on a broader
scale, said Taris-James, who hasn’t
fallen far from the tree. Along with a
friend, Taris-James created a social
impact initiative known as Rooftop
(or RFTP) that uses storytelling to
engage communities in dialogue
around difficult, often polarizing,
issues. Mother and daughter are both
driven to make stories of all kinds more
accessible and communal.
“I felt called to create Strive, and to
be honest, it’s been difficult to wear so
many hats and break through,” Taris
said. “Where I have come to see the
greatest need is for a safe space for
all people to tell their stories, whether
they get published or not. I’m working
with PopUp Think Tank to gather ideas
for how Strive can make the greatest
impact, and it’s feeling more like a
social enterprise than trying to operate
as a traditional publishing house.
Whatever Strive looks like in a year—
or five years—I know it will be moving
the dial.”
The Cooperative Children’s Book Center
researched and compiled statistics about the
number of children’s books and young adult
literature published by and about people of color,
American Indians, and those of First Nations.
“Every year, we see amazing books by and
about people of color and first/native nations.
There just aren’t enough of them,” CCBC Director
Kathleen Horning reflected in the ongoing study’s
abstract. “The more books there are, especially
books created by authors and illustrators of color,
the more opportunities librarians, teachers,
parents, and other adults have of finding
outstanding books for young readers and listeners
that reflect dimensions of their lives and give a
broader understanding of who we are as a nation.”
1985
2,500
Children’s books published in the United States
0.72%
Children’s books written or illustrated
by black people
2018
3,312
Children’s books published in the United States
17.8%
By or about Asian Pacific people
17.5%
By or about black people
12.8%
By or about Latinx people
1.6%
By or about American Indians/First Nations
FALL–WINTER 2019
25
AUGGIES CONNECT
ARCHIVE PHOTO
Create inclusive and engaging
experiences for fellow Auggies
The Alumni Board is
the governing body of
the Augsburg Alumni
Association. The board
exists to guide the Office
of Alumni and Constituent
Relations in serving the
valued alumni, parents, and
friends who make up the Auggie community.
All alumni are welcome and encouraged to join the
Alumni Board. See the job description and apply at
augsburg.edu/alumni under “Leadership Boards,” or
contact Katie (Koch) Code ’01 at codek@augsburg.edu.
New video available: MARTIN SABO ’59
Video of an interview with late Congressman Martin Sabo,
whose rise to politics was supported by Augsburg University
students, will be available later this year at the Sabo Center
for Democracy and Citizenship website, augsburg.edu/sabo,
thanks to an Augsburg Sesquicentennial Project award that
paid for an updated video description and closed captioning.
One year after graduating from Augsburg, Sabo —then 22—
was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives.
During his tenure, he became the first member of the
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party to serve as Speaker
of the House, and he went on to the U.S. House of
Representatives, retiring in 2007. Sabo died in 2016.
COURTESY PHOTO
COURTESY PHOTO
Serve on Augsburg’s Alumni Board
Augsburg’s first
ALL-SCHOOL REUNION
Mark your calendar for the All-School Reunion
during Homecoming: September 26, 2020.
More than 150 enthusiastic Sesquicentennial Stewards have
committed to help plan Augsburg’s inaugural All-School
Reunion. Volunteers are the heart of this sesquicentennial
year of events, and this work is not only more fun but is
strengthened by their participation and input. Volunteers
assist with the All-School Reunion’s schedule, entertainment,
venues, and marketing.
Visit augsburg.edu/150.
26
AUGSBURG NOW
YOU CHIMED IN:
SESQUICENTENNIAL
FAVORITE
FACULTY
IN FOCUS
HERITAGE TRIPS
Augsburg Now staff asked the
university’s Facebook followers for
their most memorable professors.
Here are a few of their responses,
edited for length and clarity.
NORWAY ARTS AND CULTURE
May 8–18, 2020
$4,800
“Mary Lowe—I had a lot of memorable professors, most of them
dear to me, but she and I worked so closely together in my last years of
my degree that I cannot think of Augsburg without thinking of her. She
is a wonderful, insightful, funny mentor who held me accountable and
helped me reach heights I wouldn’t have dreamed of initially.”
—TIMOTHY PAUL BISHOP JR. ’18
GERMANY
July 15–26, 2020
$5,300
“Merilee Klemp ’75—So many lessons learned from her, both
music and life. It’s impossible to forget those in your life who have taught,
pushed, encouraged, and mentored as well as she does. She’s an incredible
human being with such a kind, wonderful soul. Thank you for everything!”
—JENNIFER SCHMITT ’04
Hosted by Religion Department
faculty Lori Brandt Hale and
Hans Wiersma
Oberammergau, Germany
COURTESY PHOTOS
“Oh, do I have to choose? Matthew Maruggi in the Religion
Department—he completely changed how I looked at religion, opened my
mind to new perspectives, and taught me the meaning of ‘vocation.’”
—GINA MARIE GAINOUS ’15
CAMPUS TOUR
Hosted by Theater Professor
Darcey Engen ’88 and
Luverne Seifert ’85
National Theater, Norway
“Kristin Anderson—I wouldn’t be where I am in my career without
her! She taught me how to think critically about the built environment, ask
the hard questions, and think about all of my research from the standpoint of
race, class, and gender. She’s one of the smartest women I’ve ever known.”
—KACIE LUCCHINI BUTCHER ’13
Take a limited-edition
In honor of Augsburg’s 150th
anniversary, three trips hosted
by expert faculty guides will
celebrate the university’s
heritage in Germany and Norway.
NIDAROS PILGRIMAGE
August 4–13, 2020
$3,300
Hosted by Vice President for Mission
and Identity Sonja Hagander
Nidaros Cathedral, Norway
Learn more at augsburg.edu/alumni/travel or contact
Katie (Koch) Code ’01 at codek@augsburg.edu.
Two walking tours are available on campus this year: “Augsburg Nooks and
Crannies” and “Augsburg Campus: Past and Present.” Led by Kristin Anderson,
university archivist, each tour lasts one hour and is limited to 20 people. The tours
move through indoor and outdoor spaces to learn about the evolution of the campus
from 1872 to the present. The Nooks and Crannies tour includes a visit to the old
chapel and gymnasium in Old Main, the Old Main attic, an Art Deco filling station,
and other little-known spots of interest.
Augsburg Campus: Past and Present
Augsburg Nooks and Crannies
•
•
•
•
•
•
Wednesday, April 8
Wednesday, April 22
Tuesday, May 5
Wednesday, April 15
Wednesday, April 29
Wednesday, May 6
Save your spot on a tour.
RSVP required: eventrsvp@augsburg.edu or 612-330-1104.
FALL–WINTER 2019
27
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
1961
Jim Holden ’61 wrote a new
book called “Heron Thieves,
a Bat Out of Hell, and Other Flyfishing
Stories, Essays, and Poems.” Holden
has been a fly fisherman for more than
40 years, and the book highlights his
experiences on trout streams.
1965
Dwight Olson ’65 presented
President Paul Pribbenow a
copy of his book “Northern Lights: The
Beauty of the Forgotten Scandinavian
Enamel Artisans” for Augsburg’s
library in celebration of the university’s
sesquicentennial.
1969
Cheri (Kraskin) Best ’69,
Pam (Fredrickson) Gunderson ’69,
Sue Kelly ’69, Linda (Stewart) Miller ’69,
Margi Ness ’69, and Anna (Stivland)
Olsen ’69 celebrated the 50th anniversary of
their graduation from Augsburg with a trip to
Boulder, Colorado, in May.
1973
David Colacci ’73 and partner
Susan Ericksen, both classically
trained theater professionals, were featured
in a Star Tribune news story that detailed
their success as audiobook narrators. The
couple records their audiobook narrations in
their St. Louis Park, Minnesota, home. They
have each narrated more than 500 titles.
1978
This year,
Augsburg’s
Excellence In
Coaching Award
recognized Ken
Novak Jr. ’78.
Novak led high
school boys basketball teams at Blaine and
Hopkins to 17 state tournaments, the most
of any boys basketball coach in Minnesota
history. After winning three consecutive state
titles and seven in a 10-year span (2002–
11), Novak was named ESPN RISE National
Coach of the Year. He was inducted into the
Minnesota Basketball Coaches Association
Hall of Fame in 2013, and in 2019 he was
inducted into the second class of the
Minnesota High School Basketball Hall
of Fame.
28
AUGSBURG NOW
1987
Andrew Altenburg ’87 joined
KPMG in a senior associate
role in May 2019. He previously worked
as an events manager for The Bank of
Tokyo for three years. As a freelance event
planner, his clients included MNG, Louis
Vuitton, Colgate-Palmolive, and The Carlyle
Group. From 2005 to 2015, he produced
and emceed 470 bingo events, which
raised $250,000 for dozens of LGBTQIA+
organizations. He also is a wedding
officiant and cartoonist, posting his work
at jumpingforjoy.net. He lives with his
partner, Matthew, and their parrot, Lulu,
on Manhattan’s Upper West Side in New
York City.
Minasie
Theophilos ’87
received the
Distinguished
Athletic Service
Award in honor of
his decades-long
support of
Augsburg’s
student-athletes and coaches. A custodian
in Augsburg’s athletic facilities, Theophilos
has grown close to many people in Auggie
athletics including the men’s hockey team.
He came to Augsburg as a student in 1983
from Ethiopia and had not been able to
return to his home for more than 30 years.
In 2017, after the death of his mother, the
men’s hockey team raised more than
$7,500 to fund a trip for Theophilos to see
his family, who now live in Norway.
1993
Tanya Schwartz ’93 was named
the seventh police chief of
Burnsville and is the first woman to hold
the post. Schwartz has been with the police
department for 23 years, beginning as a
patrol sergeant and then serving as detective
sergeant and captain.
1994
Lori Higgins ’94, ’12 MAL
became president of Augsburg’s
Alumni Board. She currently serves on
several boards including the Minnesota
Amateur Sports Commission. She joined the
Alumni Board in 2016 because of her deep
connection to the university and support of
its mission.
1999
The first NCAA
Division III player
to be selected in
the first round of
the NBA Draft,
Devean George ’99
was inducted into
the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame. George
led the Auggies to two Minnesota
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
championships and berths in the NCAA
Division III national playoffs, earning
conference MVP honors both times. He
finished his college career with 2,258
career points and 868 career rebounds,
both second in school history, and a 23.5
points-per-game average, the best in school
history. George has played with three NBA
teams and works to develop affordable
housing in North Minneapolis.
Augsburg Athletic
Hall of Fame
inductee Scott
Hvistendahl ’99
was Augsburg
baseball’s starting
centerfielder as
well an AllAmerican wide
receiver on the football team. He was the
first player to break the NCAA career
receiving yardage record held by NFL
legend Jerry Rice, finishing his career with
285 receptions for 4,696 yards. He now
stands 14th in NCAA all-divisions history in
career receiving yardage. Hvistendahl was
named Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference Player of the Year, twice earned
CoSIDA Academic All-America honors,
and won the Gagliardi Trophy for his
performance in academics, athletics,
and community service.
Qiuxia (Xia) Welch ’99 and Kevin Welch,
co-founders and owners of Boom Island
Brewing, hosted Augsburg’s first “beer
choir” in the spring. The couple started
their company in 2011 focusing on
Belgian-style beers, and they recently
relocated the business to a new space in
Minnetonka, Minnesota.
2002
Crescent Cove, a hospice
home for children founded
by Katie Lindenfelser ’02, was featured
in a New York Times story. Lindenfelser,
the executive director and an Augsburgtrained music therapist, opened the
St. Louis Park, Minnesota, care facility
in 2018. Crescent Cove offers respite
and hospice care to children and is the
only facility of its kind in the Midwest.
2003
Kristen Opalinski ’03
began a new professional
chapter as the manager for Ecumenical
and Inter-Religious Relations for
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America. This role includes managing
communications, providing staffing for
EIR committees and events, extending
hospitality to ecumenical and interreligious partners at the Lutheran
Center in Chicago, and serving as the
ELCA representative at various EIR
meetings held both domestically and
internationally. This is a new position
designed to meet the needs of the everchanging ecumenical and inter-religious
landscape and the expansion of the
church’s ecumenical and inter-religious
commitments. Opalinski also serves as a
writer for Living Lutheran Magazine.
2004
Max Langaard ’04 was
featured on “Good
Morning America,” where he shared
his journey as a teacher and also
his time as a mentor and coach at a
nonprofit called Playworks in Oakland,
California. Playworks helps schools and
youth organizations create a place on
the playground for every child to feel
included, be active, and build valuable
social and emotional skills. Langaard
also received NBA Finals tickets from
the television show.
Adam Langer ’12 and wife, Alyssa,
welcomed their first child, Addison, in
November 2018.
Dual sport
athlete Kristen
Lideen ’04 was
inducted into
the Augsburg
Athletic Hall of
Fame. As
softball
shortstop,
Lideen was the lone Auggie to hit better
than .400 in their career (.444). Her 38
career doubles remain a school record,
while her 18 doubles and 89 total bases
in 2003 are both single-season school
records. In soccer, Lideen played as a
sweeper for an Auggie defense that
recorded a 1.04 goals-against-average in
her four seasons. Lideen earned
All-MIAC Honorable Mention honors
three times as a soccer athlete and
earned All-MIAC first-team honors four
times as a softball player.
2008
Greg May ’08 was hired
by the University of
Minnesota’s hockey program as the
new director of hockey operations.
May spent the previous three years as
the hockey head coach and associate
athletic director at the Blake School
in Minneapolis. While playing hockey
during his time at Augsburg, he was a
MIAC All-Conference honoree.
AUGGIE
SNAPSHOTS
Christina Olstad ’00, ’05 MSW began her new
role as dean of students at the University of
Wisconsin—Madison in July. Olstad previously
was the interim assistant vice president for
student affairs, housing, and residence life at
Towson University in Maryland. She has worked
in higher education administration for nearly
two decades, beginning with her time
at Augsburg.
2009
Caitlin (Hozeny) Lienard
’09, ’16 MSW passed her
Licensed Independent Clinical Social
Worker exam in April.
The late Donny Wichmann ’89—a three-time
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
champion, a national tournament All-American,
and a longtime assistant coach who was a part
of 10 NCAA Division III national championship
teams with the Auggies—was inducted into the
National Wrestling Coaches Association Division III
Hall of Fame in August.
Augsburg Men’s Wrestling Co-Head
Coach Tony Valek ’12, ’14 MAL and wife,
Kassi (Goranowski) Valek, welcomed a
son, Hudson Ricke, in June.
Denielle (Johnson) Stepka ’11 and Timothy
Stepka welcomed a daughter, Halle Jo Jean,
on September 30.
FALL–WINTER 2019
29
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
Bobby Rose ’16 married fiancée, Amber, in Cottage
Grove, Minnesota, in May.
Mara (Breczinski) Barrozo ’14 and
Enrico Barrozo ’14 welcomed a
daughter, Ryna, in June.
Carlson Inc. announced the
appointment of Richard “Rick”
Gage ’96 as its non-executive
chair of the board in August.
Gage is the founder and
former CEO of YourMLSSearch.
com, a director of the World
Childhood Foundation, and
is on the board of the Carlson
Family Foundation, where
he has served for more than
20 years.
Tyler Heaps ’13, manager of
analytics and research for U.S.
Soccer, was on the staff of the
USA national women’s soccer
team that celebrated a World
Cup Championship victory in
July. Heaps, who helped play a
part in the team’s seven-game
win series to clinch the title,
said it was “one of the most
challenging and rewarding
experiences” of his life. Heaps’
work in data analysis and use
of video coverage enhances
skills on the field and helps
athletes better prepare for their
competition.
Read more of this story at
augsburg.edu/alumni/blog.
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
Hayley (Thomas) Ball ’12 and Emerson
Ball ’14, ’19 MSW welcomed a
daughter, Zara, on March 13.
Jessica Barker ’97, Amy (Bowar) Mellinger ’97, Tara
(Cesaretti) McLeod ’97, Christa Winkelman ’97, and
Jane (Ruth) Zirbes ’97 gathered for their annual girls’
trip in Las Vegas. Since their days at Augsburg, they’ve
planned yearly trips and remained close friends.
30
AUGSBURG NOW
Two rural Osakis, Minnesota, churches—with roots dating
back to the early days in the state’s history—are thriving
with the help of their new intentional interim pastor John
Douglas Hopper ’68. Hopper, who lives in Delano, Minnesota,
and spends weekends at Salem and Sauk Valley Lutheran
churches. He began a one-year pastorate on October 21, 2018.
Stephanie Putzier ’16 MBA serves
Minnesota Women of Today at
the state level as the internal vice
president, a position in which she
oversees the organization’s internal
programming. Putzier received the
Programing Award of Excellence for
her commitment and efforts. She
has been an active member of the
organization since 2002.
Ross Murray ’00, ’09 MBA
received the Living Loehe
Award at Wartburg Seminary’s
commencement in May. The
award was given in recognition
of the 50th anniversary of the
Stonewall uprising, the 10th
anniversary of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America’s
steps toward inclusion for
LGBTQIA+-identified people, and
his calling as a deacon to engage
in LGBTQIA+ advocacy in the
church and the world. Murray is
the senior director of education
and training at GLAAD Media
Institute and is the founding
director of The Naming Project.
Read more of this story at
augsburg.edu/alumni/blog.
K. Marshall Williams Sr. ’78 received the Herschel
H. Hobbs Award for Distinguished Denominational
Service from Oklahoma Baptist University. Williams,
who has served as pastor of Nazarene Baptist Church in
Philadelphia for more than 35 years, accepted the award
on June 10 during the Southern Baptist Convention’s
annual meeting in Birmingham, Alabama.
SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE
Tell us about the news in your life—your new job, move,
marriage, and milestones. Visit augsburg.edu/now to
submit your announcements.
Kristy Millering ’06 became
the new director of finance at
Winona Area Public Schools.
Millering began this role after
eight years in finance at Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota,
most recently as a senior internal
auditor. She also worked as an
accountant for McNeilus Truck
and Manufacturing and owned
her own dance studio.
Jason Oare ’05 and wife, Erin,
welcomed a daughter, Remedy
Faith, in April.
Amber (Stransky) Caswell ’07 and husband,
Tavid, welcomed a daughter, Olivia Sandra
Donna, in June.
Mary Christine Kane ’94
released her first book
of poems, “between
the stars where you
are lost.” Kane also
works in marketing and
volunteers for the arts and
animal rescue initiatives. Her poetry and nonfiction
works have appeared in journals and anthologies
including Bluestem; The Buffalo Anthology, Right
Here, Right Now; Ponder Review; and Sleet.
FALL–WINTER 2019
31
IN MEMORIAM
Gladys I. (Boxrud)
Strommen ’46, Edina,
Minnesota, age 93,
on May 27.
Gladys H. I. (Vigen)
Hallstrom ’56, Thief River
Falls, Minnesota, age
87, on March 27.
Omar N. Gjerness ’47,
Fergus Falls, Minnesota,
age 97, on July 19.
Sylva M. (Dahl) Kubicek ’56,
Lake Crystal, Minnesota,
age 83, on March 18.
Prudence V. (Hokanson)
Nystuen ’47, Lakeville,
Minnesota, age 93,
on July 3.
Mary J. (Christiansen)
Meyer ’56, Miami,
age 84, on April 7.
Barbara (Ekse) Carlson ’48,
Minneapolis, age 92,
on April 1.
Catherine A. (Mork)
Kordahl ’48, Fertile,
Minnesota, age 96,
on June 28.
Lorraine W. (Weltzin)
Peterson ’49, Hastings,
Minnesota, age 94,
on May 28.
Sheldon L. Torgerson ’49,
Minneapolis, age 92,
on May 26.
Gordon N. Berntson ’50,
Fargo, North Dakota,
age 93, on April 25.
Wayne H. Wickoren ’50,
Fargo, North Dakota,
age 92, on July 7.
Elizabeth A. Becken ’51,
Shoreview, Minnesota,
age 90, on June 3.
Harriet M. (Haller)
Brown ’52, Hastings,
Minnesota, age 89,
on May 11.
Evonne L. (Emerson)
Johnson ’52, Faribault,
Minnesota, age 88,
on March 9.
Duane L. Addison ’53,
Minneapolis, age 88,
on April 18.
Robert L. Lindquist ’53,
Worthington, Minnesota,
age 87, on April 28.
Arthur V. Rimmereid ’53,
St. Paul, Minnesota,
age 87, on June 24.
Jeannine L. (Torstenson)
Blanchard ’54, Fresno,
California, age 86,
on March 6.
Oliver K. Vick ’54,
Lancaster, Wisconsin,
age 88, on March 22.
32
AUGSBURG NOW
Marvin L. Dooley ’59,
Eagle Grove, Iowa,
age 95, on July 20.
Edean A. Berglund ’73,
Lacey, Washington,
age 67, on April 11.
Nancy J. (Thompson)
Peterson ’75, Minneapolis,
age 65, on May 27.
Bonnie M. Goetzke ’76,
Memphis, Tennessee,
age 65, on April 19.
Pamela S. Slette ’76,
Albert Lea, Minnesota,
age 65, on June 21.
James A. Hanson ’59,
Dodge Center, Minnesota,
age 88, on July 6.
Marcia G. (Thompson)
Turcotte ’78, Chanhassen,
Minnesota, age 97, on
July 19.
Donald E. Jorenby ’59,
Woodbury, Minnesota,
age 81, on March 19.
Michael J. Riley ’84,
Brainerd, Minnesota,
age 58, on July 25.
Bonnie J. (Martinson)
Storley ’59, Minneapolis,
age 81, on March 31.
Donald D. Wichmann ’89,
Minneapolis, age 53, on
July 16.
Arden S. Flaten ’60,
Hastings, Minnesota,
age 82, on May 4.
Thad D. Firchau ’92,
Mankato, Minnesota,
age 48, on March 23.
Marlin B. Aadland ’62,
Delta, British Columbia,
age 82, on May 30.
Marna R. Brown ’93,
Fergus Falls, Minnesota,
age 49, on March 28.
Jerome C. Barney ’62,
Fergus Falls, Minnesota,
age 81, on July 9.
Theresa D. (Holt)
Wimann ’94, Baraboo,
Wisconsin, age 60,
on May 7.
LeRoy E. Lee ’63, Solon
Springs, Wisconsin,
age 79, on March 25.
Gerald A. Carlson ’64,
Pine, Arizona, age 78,
on June 19.
Lennore A. (Bylund)
Bevis ’66, Minneapolis,
age 75, on July 28.
Verland E. Kruse ’66,
Stillwater, Minnesota,
age 83, on March 23.
Richard E. Andersen ’68,
Phoenix, age 73, on
June 2.
Russell K. Jones ’69,
Mercer, Maine, age 71,
on May 9.
Raymond J. Wesley ’69,
Maple Grove, Minnesota,
age 77, on July 27.
Daniel L. Knak ’72,
Hastings, Minnesota,
age 69, on July 19.
Mary S. (Wozniak)
Sergeant ’99, Kansas
City, Kansas, age 61,
on May 25.
Mauris N. De Silva ’00,
Jackson, New Jersey,
age 46, on July 31.
Robin A. Olsen ’01,
St. Paul, Minnesota,
age 48, on April 28.
Amanda J. Kelley ’09,
Ave Maria, Florida,
age 38, on May 25.
Patrick J. Inman ’11,
Rochester, Minnesota,
age 41, on July 9.
Matthew C. Blackburn ’15,
Plymouth, Minnesota,
age 36, on August 19.
The “In memoriam” listings
in this publication include
notifications received
before September 1.
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
Augsburg community – 1931
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Twin Cities, MN
Permit No. 2031
Augsburg enrolls historic first-year class
A record-setting 636 undergraduate first-year students started at Augsburg University this fall. The Class of 2023 marks the
third year in a row in which a majority are students of color. All told, the university now has 2,159 students in the traditional
undergraduate program, which is also a record for Augsburg.
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Auggie friendships
Learning across abilities
Sesquicentennial preview
The new age of artisans
SPRING–SUMMER 2019 | VOL. 81, NO. 2
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Spring–Summer 2019
Director of Mark...
Show more
Auggie friendships
Learning across abilities
Sesquicentennial preview
The new age of artisans
SPRING–SUMMER 2019 | VOL. 81, NO. 2
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Spring–Summer 2019
Director of Marketing
Stephen Jendraszak
jendra@augsburg.edu
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
Augsburg at 150
It is indeed remarkable for any of us today to
stand in the shadows of an institution that
has existed for 150 years. Institutions such
as Augsburg University—no matter their
meaningful legacy and inspiring mission—are
viewed with some skepticism by a citizenry
more and more committed to going it alone.
I am privileged to lead Augsburg on
the occasion of its 150th anniversary and
dedicated to ensuring that our academic
mission and democratic engagement remain
firm for the next 150 years. In that way, the
history of Augsburg is in service of going
forward together.
There are four themes that I believe are at the
heart of this university’s identity. The themes
are abundance, generosity, engagement, and
service. Throughout Augsburg’s 150 years, there
is ample evidence that the interplay of those
themes has helped to shape what Burton Clark
has called “the saga” of Augsburg. A saga is
more than a story or a parable. It is an unfolding
narrative anchored in mission, values, rituals,
and objects.
This issue of Augsburg Now offers us
a glimpse of the ways in which our saga
continues to unfold in rich and meaningful
ways. From the yearlong celebration of our
sesquicentennial, to urgent interfaith and
human rights initiatives, to new academic
programs, to the remarkable accomplishments
of the many alumni, faculty, and students
featured in these pages—we are reminded
again and again of how Augsburg is both
faithful to its historic values and relevant to
the needs of the world today.
Augsburg alumni David Cherwien ’79
and Gracia Grindal ’65 painted with music
and words this saga of faith, educational
aspirations, and public service in a hymn
commissioned for my inauguration in 2006.
The final stanza of the hymn proclaims:
Send, oh God your Holy Spirit,
Give us wisdom, love, and faith.
Faith enough to move a mountain,
Love that died to conquer death.
Wisdom crowned with healing leaves,
Truth made flesh to set us free.
Let your glory bear rich fruit,
Growing from your sturdy roots.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
And so we join with the company of saints and
witnesses who have lived in the shadows of
our beloved Augsburg to renew our vow to hold
fast to all that is good.
Faithfully yours,
Director of Public Relations
and Internal Communications
Gita Sitaramiah
sitarami@augsburg.edu
Assistant Director of
Marketing Management
Laura Swanson Lindahl ’15 MBA
swansonl@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Elizabeth Kästner
kaestner@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Denielle Stepka ’11
stepkad@augsburg.edu
Marketing Copywriter
John Weirick
weirick@augsburg.edu
Communication and
Social Media Specialist
Briana Alamilla ’17
alamilla@augsburg.edu
Advancement Communications
Specialist
Kaia Chambers
chamberk2@augsburg.edu
Web Manager
Joe Mann
mannj@augsburg.edu
Contributing Writers
Katie (Koch) Code ’01
Kate H. Elliott
Augsburg Now is published by
Augsburg University
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Opinions expressed in Augsburg Now
do not necessarily reflect official
university policy.
PAUL C. PRIBBENOW, PRESIDENT
ISSN 1058-1545
AUGSBURG HOSTS ANNUAL INTERFAITH GATHERING
This February, 130 young people from across Minnesota came together at Augsburg
University for the fifth annual Interfaith Youth Day of Service presented in partnership
with Interfaith Action of Greater St. Paul. Augsburg students, staff, and faculty offered
programming assistance for the youth-designed initiative tailored to those in grades
6–12 and aligned with the United Nations’ observance of World Interfaith Harmony Week.
The event featured a keynote address, breakout workshops, musical performances, and
service projects before attendees concluded their day on campus with an Augsburg tour.
02 Around the quad
24 Auggie friendships
08
All in the family
27
Auggies connect
12
Learning across abilities
28
Class notes
15
A year of celebration
to honor 150
32
In memoriam
19
The new age of artisans
On the cover: Augsburg’s Hagfors Center
supplies an illuminating contrast to the
backdrop of downtown Minneapolis.
All photos by Courtney Perry unless
otherwise indicated
Send address corrections to:
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu
Send comments to:
now@augsburg.edu
AROUND THE QUAD
AROUND THE
QUAD
AUGGIE RESEARCH WOWS
AT THE ROTUNDA
Augsburg TRIO McNair Scholars Breanne
Sande-Martin ’18 and Andy Thao ’20 presented
their research during the 16th annual Private
College Scholars at the Capitol event this
January. As a member of the Minnesota
Private College Council, Augsburg was
invited to send Auggies to the event, which
recognizes the scholarship of students and
the efforts of their faculty advisors.
Psychology student Sande-Martin
presented her research on “The Impact
of Smartphone Notifications on
Proofreading Accuracy.” Biology
student Thao shared his
“Exploration of Local Field
Potentials and Spiking
Activity in a Genetic
Model of Schizophrenia.”
FOSTERING FUZZY FEELINGS
A new venue, a grand scale
Augsburg University will host this year’s commencement ceremony
May 10 at U.S. Bank Stadium in downtown Minneapolis. This is the
first time Augsburg will use the multi-purpose facility that’s home to
the Minnesota Vikings as the site for commencement events.
In making this change, Augsburg is responding to consistent
concerns raised by graduating students regarding the limited number
of tickets available for their guests to attend on-campus ceremonies
which were held most recently in Si Melby Hall’s gymnasium. Augsburg
will use a portion of U.S. Bank Stadium, and the change in venue and
dramatic increase in total available seats will enable all
graduates, their families, their friends, and members of
the Augsburg community to celebrate together.
HONORING
Two faculty members are retiring this
spring following years of dedicated
service to Augsburg University. Augsburg
is grateful for their commitment to
advancing the university’s mission and
supporting student learning within and
beyond the classroom.
ROBERTA KAGIN
Professor, Department of Music—joined
Augsburg in 1974
DAVID CONRAD
HUMAN RIGHTS FORUM
at Augsburg
THE AUGSBURG
PODCAST: SEASON 2
After a popular first season of the
Augsburg Podcast, season 2 kicked
off with President Paul Pribbenow,
Campus Pastor Rev. Sonja Hagander,
and Professor of English Doug Green
[pictured], among others. The podcasts
offer wide-ranging perspectives on the
university’s critical work of educating
students for the future.
Listen to the new season at
augsburg.edu/podcast or in
your podcast app.
AUGSBURG NOW
Announcing the
Retiring Faculty
Associate Professor, Department of Business
Administration—joined Augsburg in 2000
2
PHOTO BY STEPHEN GEFFRE
COURTESY PHOTO
COMMENCEMENT 2019
At the Ed Saugestad Rink, pucks glide across the ice and stuffed
animals fly through the air.
In January, Augsburg students on the women’s hockey team and in the
Master of Science in Physician Assistant Studies program collaborated
to host a teddy bear toss in which fans pitched plush toys onto the
ice during the first intermission in the Auggies’ home contest against
Gustavus Adolphus College.
The teddy bear toss concept originated in Canada in the early 1990s
and has grown in popularity through support from hockey teams at the
collegiate and professional levels. The 48 toys collected January 19
were donated to Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis, where each year
up to a dozen Augsburg physician assistant students complete clinical
placements as part of their studies. Fans also created greeting cards
with encouraging messages for hospital patients.
Building on a 30-year history with the
Nobel Peace Prize Forum and as part of the
university’s sesquicentennial celebration,
Augsburg is launching a new event this fall:
the Human Rights Forum at Augsburg.
The event will bring students, thought
leaders, global changemakers, and local
activists together to explore innovative
ways to take action in our ongoing pursuit
of racial justice, indigenous rights, and
environmental sustainability domestically
and globally.
The Human Rights Forum will be held
October 28-29 on Augsburg’s Minneapolis
campus and is open to the public. Tickets
will go on sale this summer.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
3
AROUND THE QUAD
MEDIA COVERAGE
WORTH MENTIONING
THE GOLDEN NIGHT GLEAMS;
STUDENTS GROOVE
The Augsburg Student Activities
Council treated Auggies to a formal,
Roaring ’20s-inspired event that
added zest to campus following a
stretch of bitter cold winter weather.
A NEIGHBORLY GESTURE
Augsburg University students distributed jackets, blankets,
children’s toys, and meals to families in need at a homeless encampment
near Franklin Avenue in Minneapolis in November. “It’s basically in
[Augsburg’s] backyard, and helping the community is a really big thing for
me,” student Tyler Johnson ’22 told Fox 9 reporter Christina Palladino. This
day of service was the brainchild of Augsburg student Inam Al-Hammouri ’20,
and other students quickly joined.
“Cooking a hot lunch and serving it to hungry families out in the cold is
not something most college kids would do on a Saturday, but these youth
at Augsburg University are not just your average students,” the Fox 9
reporter said. “The students believe it is their responsibility to take action
and empower their generation to build bridges to those less fortunate.”
A NOTEWORTHY LINEUP
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder journalist Charles Hallman wrote
about this year’s Augsburg University women’s basketball team when
its starting lineup included five African-American students—a moment
believed to be a first in Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play.
Augsburg University students Arianna Jones ’20, Camille McCoy ’20,
Tamara McLenore ’20, Camryn Speese ’20, and Kaezha Wubben ’20 made
history at the November 19 game against the University of Wisconsin—
Superior, the story said.
Go to augsburg.edu/news to learn
more about the university’s media buzz.
4
AUGSBURG NOW
COURTESY PHOTO
COURTESY PHOTO
The three-story mural “Emergence” adorns
the Hagfors Center’s west stairwell.
NEW PROGRAM LAUNCHES:
The Augsburg University Convocation Series is an annual
speaker series that includes long-standing endowed and
special programs. Recent presenters included:
• Terrance Kwame-Ross, associate professor in
the Department of Education at Augsburg, who
delivered “Our Conversation with Dr. King: Class
in Session” at the 31st annual Martin Luther
King Jr. Convocation in January.
• Jin Y. Park, professor of philosophy and religion
and founding director of the Asian Studies
Program at American University, who shared a
presentation at the Batalden Seminar in Applied
Ethics in March called “Ethical Imagination:
Buddhist-Postmodern Approaches.”
• Pamela Ronald, distinguished professor in the
Plant Pathology Department and the Genome
Center at University of California—Davis,
presented “Serving Up Science: Plant Genetics
and the Future of Food” for the General Leif J.
Sverdrup Visiting Scientist Lecture in April.
Augsburg University is accepting applications
for a new Master of Arts in Education program
that offers a non-licensure track for teachers
and educators looking to enhance their
skills within and beyond the classroom. This
program includes 30–31 credit hours and
can be completed in less than two years.
Students have the opportunity to choose from
two concentrations: Culture and Community,
which focuses on the tools educators need to
navigate complex systems and co-construct
curriculum with their students, and Community
Engaged Learning, which looks at the problems
students, schools, and communities face
when seeking meaningful change.
FOR CONVOCATION SERIES
AN ARTFUL COLLABORATION
The artwork in Augsburg’s Norman and Evangeline Hagfors
Center for Science, Business, and Religion always captivates eyes.
Recently, the collection also attracted the ears of Minnesota Public Radio
listeners. That’s because MPR highlighted the successful partnership
between Augsburg and Forecast Public Art, which helped guide the
university’s effort to commission original art for the campus’ newest
academic building. Now in its 40th year, Forecast Public Art is regarded
as one of the nation’s leading nonprofits committed to communityengaged design and placemaking. Augsburg benefitted from the
organization’s expertise as the university worked to acquire art to reflect
the diverse communities that make up the Augsburg student body and
to knit together the various academic disciplines housed in the Hagfors
Center. Today, the facility has more than 25 art pieces on its walls and six
works of art built into its structure.
AUGSBURG WELCOMES LEADING SCHOLARS
MASTER OF ARTS IN EDUCATION
Go to augsburg.edu/gpe to learn more
about the Master of Arts in Education.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
5
AROUND THE QUAD
WOMEN’S ATHLETICS
ARCHIVE NEARS THE FINISH LINE
The James G. Lindell Library’s digitization lab team has been working with an
impressive collection of projector slides and photographs that document women’s
athletics at Augsburg from the time Title IX took effect in 1972 to the present.
With more than 7,000 images,
this archive will become one of
the largest online collections
of women’s athletic history in
the country when processing
is complete in Fall 2020. The
collection was started by Joyce
Pfaff ’65, retired Auggie coach,
instructor, and director of
women’s athletics who launched
several women’s teams and
The Augsburg women’s basketball team posing for a
served the university for 43 years. photo in the locker room, 1978.
Gwen Walz is still surprised
to be addressed as first lady.
“I sometimes walk right past people or don’t turn around when someone says it
because I just don’t hear it like I hear ‘Gwen,’” said Walz, whose husband, Tim,
became Minnesota’s governor in January.
While Walz may not be used to being called first lady, she’s jumping into the
role. She’s the first Minnesota first lady to have an office at the state Capitol
and plans to focus on education and corrections as policy issues. Walz also
recently joined Augsburg University as an independent contractor serving in two
roles: as special assistant to the president for strategic partnerships and as a fellow in the Sabo Center for Democracy and
Citizenship. Here is a glimpse into her connection to Augsburg and new life.
President Paul Pribbenow has described
you as a friend of Augsburg. How have
you worked with Augsburg in the past?
Q:
A:
A:
President Pribbenow and I met
in Rochester when Tim (then
U.S. representative for Minnesota’s 1st
congressional district) asked us to facilitate
a series of community-wide conversations
on education. Through this partnership,
I knew that I shared Augsburg’s deep
commitment to equity.
Q:
You are the first Minnesota first lady to
have an office at the state Capitol. Why
was that presence important to you?
A:
Tim and I work closely together. We do
our work differently at times, though,
so having our own spaces is important. I
also work with the staff very closely, so it is
more convenient for them if I have an office
near them. I am still learning how to best
use this space to do meaningful work and
build meaningful relationships.
6
AUGSBURG NOW
Your mother, Linnea Wacker ’60, is an
Auggie. What did she say when you told
her about coming to work at Augsburg?
She told me that I had better bring
my “A” game. My mom told me that
Augsburg is a very important place, and
I must make sure I am prepared to bring
focus and energy to the task. The mission
of Augsburg University is very important
to her, and she wants to make sure I help
advance it! My mother was a teacher and
first-generation college graduate. She
and my father, a long-time educator, are
committed to providing opportunities in
education for everyone.
Q:
You started your career as an
elementary school teacher. How does
your passion for teaching and learning suit
your roles at Augsburg and the Capitol?
A:
On the campaign trail, Tim and I
both used the phrase that teaching
was not just how we paid our bills; it’s
how we live our lives. I have never been
able to separate things in my life; I have a
pretty holistic approach to who I am and
what I bring to something. I have a lot to
learn from Augsburg and the people here.
All of that informs how I am thinking
about how I might best serve all of the
people of Minnesota.
Search or browse at
archives.augsburg.edu.
Insta Augsburg:
A few square snapshots showing
significant #AuggiePride.
Q:
What’s your favorite thing to do in your
free time now that you’ve moved to the
Twin Cities?
A:
Each Sunday evening, I invite my
three sisters and their families to
have dinner. Everyone who can come does,
and it is lovely to have a moment to pause
as one week ends and another begins—we
all sit a little longer at the table. We even
have dessert on Sunday evenings!
@riverside_innovation_hub
COURTESY PHOTOS
Q:
Use Augsburg’s digital archive to find every Echo
issue dating to the 1890s, as well as photographs,
yearbooks, oral histories, videos, speeches, and more.
Head under heels
Auggie image shines in anthology
“Illuminated,” a photo by Ava
Fojtik ’21, will appear in plain china
(plainchina.org), a national anthology
of undergraduate creative writing and
art based at Virginia Commonwealth
University. Fojtik’s artwork was first
published in the 2018 issue of
Murphy Square, Augsburg’s literary
and visual arts journal.
Fojtik pursues portrait photography
as a hobby while studying religion,
theater, and English literature at
Augsburg. She said she’s particularly
fond of “Illuminated” because the
image is expressive without showing
an individual’s face. The image
is part of a larger collection titled
“Pity Party” that focuses on the
themes of absurdity and things
being upside down.
Recognize those limbs and laces? They
belong to Adam Ruff ’18.
The Augsburg greenhouse
@orchidhunter She’s beauty, she’s grace, she stinks
up the entire place. It’s the voodoo queen herself,
Amorphophallus konjac, serving sinister lewks and foul
odors to attract pollinators. #plantdiversity
@augsburgauggies
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
7
All in the
Family
I
t could have been worse. Their
parents could have made them
hold hands (or even smile). But
after each game during last year’s
Auggie football season, the parents
of the team’s four sets of siblings
lined the eight players up for a
Kodak moment.
“We loved the tradition, but
there was a bit of that ‘Come on,
mom’ feeling, especially when
they made us take a photo before
our last game,” said wide receiver
Nick Heenie ’19, whose not-so-little
brother, Frank Heenie ’23, protects
the Auggie line. “We were all so in
the zone that we look mean, but
that couldn’t be further from the
truth. It was such a special year and
an honor to play with brothers.”
Rounding up the octet was easy,
especially after home games, when
those same parents—led by the
Heenie family—prepared meals for
80 players and their families. Head
Football Coach Frank Haege said
the team traditionally shares food
and fellowship after one home game
each year, but the siblings’ parents
united the Auggie football family
in an unforgettable way during the
2018 season.
“It was such a joy to coach four
sets of siblings last year, particularly
8
AUGSBURG NOW
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
since I have twin boys, and I played
football with my brother,” said
Haege, whose 9-year-old son, AJ,
spends so much time with the team
that he maintains an Auggie locker.
“Our team always feels like family,
but we were especially close last
fall. It reinforced that Augsburg is
where students learn to be part of
something bigger than themselves.”
Coaching four sets of siblings at
one time was unprecedented for
Augsburg Athletics, but siblings are
not uncommon. Haege estimates he
has coached eight sets of siblings
during his 15-year tenure. In addition
to football, siblings have competed
on several teams recently: The Wilson
twins dominated the wrestling mat,
the Everett sisters commanded the
lacrosse field, and the O’Conner
brothers scored big on the ice.
Relatives on the
roster
The list of sibling alumni who have
played together at Augsburg could fill
a football roster, not to mention the
generations of families with Auggie
pride running through their veins.
An example: Athletic Director Jeff
Swenson ’79 wrestled and coached
for 25 years at Augsburg. His sister,
Marie (Swenson) Hechsel ’90, played
volleyball. Her son, Matt Hechsel ’15,
wrestled, and her daughter, Stephanie
Hechsel ’19, played volleyball.
Augsburg women’s ice hockey’s
Megan Johnson ’19 also is playing
out a family legacy. Her grandfather,
Bob “Badger” Johnson, attended
Augsburg for a year before
transferring to the University of
Wisconsin—Madison, where he
secured seven NCAA Men’s Ice
Hockey Championships. Her father,
Mark Johnson, was a member of
the fabled “Miracle on Ice” 1980
U.S. Olympic team and coach of the
2010 U.S. Olympic women’s silvermedal hockey squad.
Megan’s brother, Chris Johnson ’10,
’14 MAL, slapped the puck around
for Augsburg and later served as
men’s ice hockey assistant coach
for seven seasons. It was during that
time Megan picked Augsburg over
the University of Wisconsin, where
her grandfather, father, and two
other siblings played. Although the
colors of their jerseys differed, every
member of the Johnson family has
donned No. 10.
Women’s Ice Hockey Head Coach
Michelle McAteer said that although
Megan no longer has a sibling at
Augsburg, members of the team
Mustafa Adam ’18, left, and
his brother Shihab Adam ’22
“Augsburg—even beyond the field—is a tight-knit community, where everyone looks
out for one another. Teachers care about your education and are always willing to
provide you with extra academic support. At Augsburg, they truly care about you as an
individual, and they will do whatever they can to ensure that you succeed inside and
outside of the classroom.”
— Linebacker Mustafa Adam ’18, a three-time cancer survivor who studied business
and economics and plans to go to medical school
SPRING –SUMMER 2019
9
are like family. Third- and fourthyear student-athletes have begun
to mentor newcomers, calling
each other big and little sisters,
respectively.
on the football roster was “a dream
come true.” But he doesn’t have
one brother on the team. “I have
80,” said Mustafa, a two-time team
captain and nominee for Mayo
It was such a joy to
coach four sets of
siblings last year.”
“These mentor relationships
are lasting, and it’s an intentional
effort players established to support
each other on and off the ice,”
McAteer said. “As a two-time team
captain, Megan has been integral
in helping us foster that sense of
togetherness.”
Family legacies are
part of the game
To Haege and others, the influx
of legacy families and sibling
teammates is no coincidence.
Augsburg draws families, he said,
because the campus feels like a
family and students know they
will gain a solid education and
passionate sense of vocation. Older
siblings often make recruiting easy,
Haege said, by “talking up the
program naturally,” as they share
their good experiences with siblings.
Mustafa Adam ’18 said having his
younger brother, Shihab Adam ’22,
10
AUGSBURG NOW
Clinic’s 2018 Comeback Player
of the Year Award, which honors
college football players who have
returned to the field of play after
overcoming major life challenges.
Mustafa sat out his first year
at Augsburg when the cancer he
beat in high school returned just
prior to signing on at Augsburg. He
played the entire 2016 and 2017
seasons, but the disease returned
at the conclusion of his second
season, in which he finished second
in tackles (93) in the Minnesota
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
He underwent chemotherapy
and had to have his right ear
amputated to prevent the cancer
from spreading. In Fall 2018, he
returned to the field and played in
all 10 games.
“I know it pained Shihab and
all my teammates to see me go
through this disease, but having a
little brother only further motivated
me to keep my head up and stand
strong throughout this whole
process,” said the linebacker
from Wisconsin. “Envisioning the
football field was truly the driving
force behind my will to fight. I
was willing to persevere through
anything to accomplish my dream
to play college ball, and my
willingness to fight inspired many
of my teammates to look inside
themselves to find their ‘why.’ Going
through this—together—has created
lifelong bonds and friendships.”
Siblings and
teammates keep
each other on track
Nick Heenie ’19 said growing close
to dozens of teammates from
different states, cultures, and
life experiences has broadened
players’ worldview. The football
team’s inclusive culture, Nick said,
has inspired him to explore and
appreciate Augsburg’s setting in one
of the most diverse neighborhoods
in the Twin Cities.
The Heenies room with brothers
linebacker Xavier Hanson ’23 and
defensive lineman Christopher
Hanson ’19. “So our moms always
know where to get ahold of us,”
Frank added. Wrestling twins Aaron
Wilson ’21 and Alex Wilson ’20 also
share a residence, not to mention
a major—biology. The two are
rarely apart.
“I started wrestling in
kindergarten. Alex started a year
later, and we both dreamed about
wrestling at Augsburg as kids,” said
Aaron, whose proudest moment
was being ranked nationally
alongside his brother. “We knew it
would make us the best versions
of ourselves on and off the mat.
Augsburg’s small class sizes have
allowed me to make meaningful
relationships with my professors
and pursue research of my own.”
Lacrosse player Delaney Everett ’18
is equally ambitious, with plans to
own an accounting firm. Having
sister, Demey Everett ’20, by her
side has pushed the midfielder to
achieve in competition and in the
classroom. Head Lacrosse Coach
Kathryn Knippenberg has had a
front row seat to the dynamic duo’s
inspiring support.
“The two are in sync on the field,
and their intuitive play challenges
the rest of the team to follow suit,”
said Knippenberg, who is in her
sixth season at Augsburg. “Their
majors are different—biology
and accounting—but Augsburg’s
impressive academic programs were
able to support both their interests.
Not many schools in the area offer
lacrosse along with such diverse
academic options.”
‘Here’s to
quadruplets in 2021’
The Kordah brothers are a few
years beyond graduation, and these
stories of campus life and sibling
bonds call up fond memories for
the former Augsburg soccer players.
Lekpea Kordah ’15 is raising two
kids while working as a high school
administrator and as a certified tax
professional. Barinedum Kordah ’17
works in health care administration
in the Twin Cities.
Adulthood keeps them from
kicking the ball around together,
but they do find time to talk about
the “good old days as Auggies,”
while they watch professional
soccer, Barinedum said. Campus,
he added, became home to them
after their nine-member family
migrated from Nigeria.
“I learned some of my greatest
lessons at Augsburg. On the field,
my brother taught me to never give
up and to work with intensity,”
said Barinedum, a defender who
majored in exercise science and
minored in psychology. “Coach
[Greg] Holker taught us to consider
details, which was tough because
I wanted to just get out there and
play. That study of each opponent
and the game itself helped us
outsmart our opponents and waste
less energy than if we were always
trying to beat them athletically.”
Haege knows the Kordah
brothers, as most coaches and
players do. That’s how it works
at Augsburg, he said. Players—
siblings or not—don’t only support
their team, they are among the
loudest fans at all Auggie contests.
Whether that sense of support
stems from family connections or
not, Haege doesn’t make that call.
He does, however, predict the trend
will continue. “Here’s to looking at
quadruplets in 2021,” he joked.
“The two are in sync ...”
—Head Lacrosse Coach Kathryn Knippenberg
Demey Everett ’20, left, and her sister Delaney Everett ’18
LEARNING
ACROSS
ABILITIES
The Center for Learning and
Accessible Student Services
champions students with a broad
range of disabilities on the path
to academic success.
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
Maura Gunter ’19
S
ince second grade, Maura Gunter ’19 relied on
accommodations for attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder and a word processing disorder. So when she
started college, Gunter knew the drill. But on her way
to class that fall semester, Gunter’s vision blurred and a
metallic taste coated her mouth. She lay in the snow for
four hours before paramedics arrived. When she woke,
doctors greeted the then 19-year-old with another
diagnosis: epilepsy.
As her peers at Colorado State University prepped for
finals, Gunter was pricked and scanned for two weeks.
Catch up, you can do this. Seizure. Someone stuffs a
wallet in her mouth. Doctors: “Episodes might pass or
might not. Try this medicine—no, this one.” Catch up, you
can do this. Seizure. Hospital stay, stares, and bruises.
“You need to find a way to complete assignments, Maura.”
Can I do this? Brain throbbing. More pills. Less sleep. No.
“When I started having seizures, I didn’t know [my
illness] was considered a disability. Support services at my
college at the time were fine but not personal. I didn’t have
an advisor to help me navigate my college education with
this invisible illness,” Gunter said. “So, nearly every time I
had a seizure, I had to medically withdraw.”
“I felt like such a failure—lost
and alone”
Without campus advocates and close teacher relationships,
Gunter turned to doctor-prescribed opioids for support and
became addicted. She found Augsburg University’s StepUP®
Program—a residential recovery support community—and
decided to transfer in 2015. Disability Specialist Anne Lynch
12
AUGSBURG NOW
was there to greet her, then walk the Georgia native through
her rights and responsibilities, documentation forms, exam
scheduling, and more. When Gunter made the dean’s list,
Lynch was the first person she called.
“Anne has been my rock,” said Gunter, who plans to
graduate in May with a degree in social work. “When
people cautioned me against seeking departmental honors
because they were worried ‘it’d be too much for me,’ Anne
pushed me. She lets me determine and define my own
limits. People don’t realize that it’s as equally stressful
and offensive to be coddled as it is to not be believed and
supported. Anne took the time to know me, to listen, and to
empower me with information and guidance.”
Sober since August 2014, Gunter thrived with newfound
campus advocates and with caring professors at Augsburg’s
tight-knit, affirming campus. Driving that advocacy
and service is the university’s Center for Learning and
Accessible Student Services, known as CLASS, where Lynch
has worked for 20 years.
The center’s influence is woven throughout every aspect of
Augsburg: CLASS informs administrative policies, advises on
housing accommodations, monitors updates to the physical
campus, and ensures students’ dietary requirements are met. They
offer professional development across campus, introduce assistive
technologies, and meet one-on-one with professors about universal
course design.
Disability specialists connect with parents, meet regularly with
students, and coordinate a range of accommodations—from exam
and tutor scheduling to notetakers and sign language interpreters.
The office serves those who need temporary accommodations,
including injured student-athletes, and engages in community
outreach and education. CLASS maintains a robust website with
links to programs, software, and apps for anyone to access.
When Lynch started in the late ’90s, she worked with about 30
students. Now, that number is 100.
“It’s been amazing to see Augsburg embrace diversity and
grow the reach and reputation of this critical office,” Lynch said.
“CLASS empowers the students we serve, but our work also
informs and inspires faculty, other students, and the communities
in which we live and work. It’s a gift to see employers, faculty,
parents, and even the students themselves shed misconceptions
about disabilities after working with our office.”
Lynch calls herself a partner. She spends her days partnering
intentionally with each student—to listen, to solve problems
alongside them, and to empower them to better understand
themselves and their abilities.
“‘Disability’ is not a bad word; it is tied to rights and
protections,” she said. “I love when students get to a place where
they can say, ‘Yes, I have a disability, but I am not a disability.’
Let’s move beyond the word and come up with solutions for making
sure all students have the same opportunities afforded to others.”
education and contribute their wisdom to solving the problems of
the world.”
A 2018 report from the American Collegiate Health Association
indicated that in the past year, three out of five college students
experienced “overwhelming anxiety,” and two out of five students
were “too depressed to function.” With increased stressors and
public services cutbacks, Carlson said, Augsburg has rallied to
strengthen safety nets.
“We strongly believe in helping students put together teams of
support so they can navigate college successfully. For students
with a mental health or other disability, CLASS is part of that
team,” Carlson said. “Augsburg is blessed with faculty who ‘get’
mental health issues and want to support their students and
advisees. Together, we help students feel connected on campus,
and that sense of connection can increase students’ likelihood
of success.”
CLASS Director Kathy McGillivray said this focus on “together” is
what distinguishes Augsburg and draws students to study and grow
alongside the support of CLASS’s comprehensive services.
“Our focus is on each individual student,” McGillivray said.
“But we are part of a larger mission to connect Augsburg students
to academic support, resources, and services that will help them
create and achieve their educational goals. Prospective students
see that seamless student support, all housed within the Gage
Center for Student Success.”
Within the Gage Center, CLASS includes the Groves
Accommodations Lab, which provides assistive technology and
testing accommodations for students with disabilities, and the
Groves Technology Center, which is a fully equipped computer
lab that is available to all students. Resources for students with
disabilities are offered within a suite of services for all.
“‘Disability’ is not a bad word”
Augsburg’s team approach weaves
a strong safety net
Although her focus is on students, Lynch said the office invests
a tremendous amount of time and energy in partnering with the
campus community to ensure Augsburg meets its commitment to
provide equal access to higher education and campus facilities.
Among CLASS’s greatest collaborations is with Augsburg’s Center
for Wellness and Counseling.
CWC Assistant Director Beth Carlson said that with the strong
connection between mental health and academic success, CWC
staff have found their work with CLASS invaluable in helping
students thrive. CLASS is distinct, Carlson said, in its deep
connections with students and collaborative, creative approaches
to overcoming complex situations.
“Many students who are academically capable might not be
able to graduate from Augsburg if they didn’t have the support
of CLASS. In the past, a student with a significant mental health
disability may not have been encouraged to go to college; now, our
campus is much richer and more diverse because we’re embracing
all of our students, supporting them as they gain a liberal arts
Matthew Glaven ’21 has built a team at Augsburg. The history major
serves on the board of Augsburg’s chapter of Women for Political
Change, manages the baseball team, and has traveled overseas
with fellow Auggies. CLASS is a major player on “Team Glaven,”
given that the Minnesota native is deaf/hard of hearing and has
cerebral palsy, which makes it difficult for him to write and speak.
“One of the greatest lessons I’ve learned at Augsburg is that you
need to have a team, no matter who you are, to get through life. As
your life goes through different stages, your team of personal and
professional supporters evolves with you,” said Glaven, who uses
ASL interpreters, a microphone for his hearing aids, notetakers,
and testing accommodations. “CLASS also taught me that
advocacy is key to getting what you need to make your life better.
If you don’t advocate for yourself, you won’t be as successful.”
That embrace of advocacy will serve him well as he plans to
enter public office. The Queen fan and BBC-listening cat lover
is driven to improve public health care, protect minorities, and
continue to fight climate change, among other initiatives.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
13
The paw-fect solution
Matthew Glaven ’21
Faculty advocates
embrace universal design
Glaven gained that passion for policy
from instructors who were eager to make
lectures and content accessible—educators
like Rich Flint, assistant professor of
mathematics, who teaches core math
courses required of all students. In Spring
2009, Flint taught a pre-algebra course
of 24 students, 10 of whom had
documented disabilities.
“If I hadn’t known the CLASS staff
before that semester, I got to know them
all very well that spring,” Flint said. “We
now give all of our students a Math Anxiety
Bill of Rights, which includes statements
like, ‘I have the right to need extra help,’
and ‘I have the right to not understand.’
Many of us [math professors] include
statements about relaxation on our exams.
In fact, yesterday I proctored a Calculus 2
exam for a colleague that stated: ‘Relax.
You have done problems like this before.’
Without our work with CLASS, I don’t
know if we would be so attuned to using
straightforward strategies that benefit all
test takers.”
Professor of Mathematics Suzanne
Dorée said the department’s embrace of
universal design is a habit that emerged
from experience. Dorée has taught Auggies
for 30 years. When she started, parents
sometimes needed to attend classes to
assist their children. Now, because of the
resources and accommodations Augsburg
has to offer, students are able to enjoy
more independence, Dorée said.
“I love a good problem, and there’s
an element of creativity required in
adjusting my teaching style to reach all my
students. Over time you realize that the
new practices you adopt are good for all
students. For instance, I had a student who
was blind so I began narrating everything I
was doing on the board. It slowed me down
but I noticed that all my students were
processing the information better,” she
said. “The difference between a 50-minute
test and a 70-minute test’s ability to
assess student learning is not significant,
so I always write a 50-minute test for
my 70-minute classes. English learners,
students who didn’t get much sleep the
night before, and students with test
anxiety all appreciate the extra time to
check their work.”
That problem-solving can take many forms.
During Gunter’s freshman year, it barked and
was named Gus.
Gus was Gunter’s service dog. He was
trained to sense when Gunter might have a
seizure and assist her if and when she fell.
His vest detailed her diagnosis, which was
helpful since doctors previously missed her
medical ID bracelet three times, Gunter said,
while “Gus was tough to miss.”
“Was,” because Gunter hasn’t needed
a service dog since identifying the proper
blend of medicine, sleep, and support. The
24-year-old has been seizure-free for the
past year, and Gus has enjoyed the time off
to play with Gunter’s three other four-legged
pals: Nelson, Susan, and Shana. Each of her
pups, other than Gus, is a rescue with “some
special needs,” Gunter adds, proudly.
Health and stability, Gunter said, means
she can set her sights on the horizon—
toward research and graduate school.
Lars Christiansen, associate professor of
sociology, is collaborating with Gunter on
research about street equity, city planning,
and movement. This semester, Gunter is
focused on roadside memorial ghost bikes,
which are white-painted bikes placed near
streets not safe or accessible to cyclists.
She received travel funds to present her
findings at the Midwest Sociological
Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.
“Augsburg gave me the tools and space
to figure out my passion, understand my
responsibilities, and advocate for my
rights. A world that felt small years ago
now seems open and exciting.”
A year of
celebration
to honor
Augsburg’s leading approach to disability services didn’t just happen. Paired with staff expertise and an
inclusive campus culture, it took the vision and support of proud parents, alumni, and industry partners.
Auggie mom and Regent Emerita Barbara Gage, who served on Augsburg’s Board of Regents for 12 years,
led the charge to uplift Augsburg as a national leader in holistic student support services.
In the 1980s, Barbara and her husband, Skip Gage, along with the Carlson Family Foundation, donated and
raised funds to support the program that ultimately became CLASS. In 2011, the Gage Family Foundation
and the Carlson Family Foundation contributed $900,000 to create the Gage Center for Student Success.
This centralized, supportive learning space in the James G. Lindell Library provides resources for all
students—regardless of learning style, preference, or need. It houses the Office of Advising and Academic
Excellence, TRIO/Student Support Services, and CLASS.
A preview of Augsburg’s sesquicentennial plans:
September 27, 2019, to September 26, 2020
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
Sesquicentennial events calendar
From 1869
to today
Augsburg’s sesquicentennial
celebration will feature diverse
opportunities that uplift the
university’s founding principles,
honor its history, and look toward
its future.
Augsburg will:
• Showcase academic excellence
• Present historical elements
• Tell its institutional story
through art and design
• Host high-impact experiences
• Bring together thousands of
alumni and friends from all
generations
Augsburg’s community-wide events will include a gala, reunions, convocations, art shows,
concerts, book readings, theater performances, and lectures. Follow the sesquicentennial
calendar today for easy access to event details, possible weather-related changes, and parking
information. Here’s a glimpse at some of the signature events so you can start planning for this
historic year.
H O M E C O M I N G 2 0 19
September 23–28, 2019
New events along with traditional favorites make Homecoming one of the most
festive times on campus all year. The majority of this year’s events will occur
Saturday, September 28, and special reunions will honor the classes of 2009,
1979, and 1969.
S E S Q U I C E N T E N N I A L G A LA
September 27, 2019
Kick off Augsburg’s sesquicentennial at this once-in-a-lifetime event in
downtown Minneapolis. This gala will acknowledge Augsburg’s history of
pursuing the call to serve the community, and it will rally energetic support for
the next 150 years of Augsburg University.
I N A U G U R A L A LL- S C H O O L R E U N I O N
September 25–26, 2020
This all-inclusive gathering is for Auggies from every class, every degree
program, and every decade—Augsburg athletes, musicians, artists, scientists,
student leaders, and everyone in between. Learn how to coordinate a reunion
for a specific area of interest or identity by emailing Katie (Koch) Code ’01 at
codek@augsburg.edu.
Sesquicentennial book
Augsburg is publishing an institutional history book as part of its sesquicentennial celebration.
“Hold Fast to What is Good,” by History Professor Phillip Adamo, uses 10 objects from the
university archives to tell stories from Augsburg’s first 150 years. Signed, limited edition,
hardcover copies of this book are available for preorder until May 1, 2019.
SESQUICENTENNIAL
Register for Homecoming, purchase Sesquicentennial Gala tickets, learn
more about the All-School Reunion, and order your commemorative book at
augsburg.edu/150.
COURTESY PHOTOS
International travel
opportunities
BY JOHN WEIRICK
Augsburg will host four alumni trips to locations in Germany
and Norway that are central in the university’s history. Find
details for each trip at augsburg.edu/alumni under “Travel.”
NORWAY ARTS AND CULTURE
Tentative dates May 8–18, 2020
The tour will include theater productions, concerts,
and historical landmarks, and it will focus on the
rich and vibrant arts and culture of Norway. Explore
Norway alongside Augsburg Theater Program alumni,
co-leaders Darcey Engen ’88, Augsburg University
professor of theater, and her husband, Luverne
Seifert ’83, Minneapolis actor and instructor at the
University of Minnesota.
NORWAY NOW: EXPLORING
PEACEMAKING, THE ENVIRONMENT,
AND CLIMATE CHANGE
GERMANY AND AUSTRIA FEATURING
THE OBERAMMERGAU PASSION PLAY
Tentative dates July 15–26, 2020
This tour will focus on Bavaria, with stops in
Nuremberg, Salzberg, and additional nearby locations.
The hottest ticket in Europe every 10 years is to attend
the centuries-old Oberammergau Passion Play. This
trip includes prime seats for this once-in-a-decade
experience. As members of the university’s Department
of Religion, associate professors Lori Brandt Hale and
Hans Wiersma have teamed up to share their expertise
and offer a uniquely Augsburg experience.
NIDAROS PILGRIMAGE IN NORWAY
Tentative dates May 9–19, 2020
Tentative dates in July 2020
This tour will explore Norway’s peace work,
government, and environmental agencies. This tour is
co-led by Bettine Hoff Hermanson, managing director of
the Human Rights Forum at Augsburg as well as the
Norway Hub, and Joe Underhill, associate professor of
political science, director of environmental studies,
and director of the Human Rights Forum.
Hike to the Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim,
Norway—a pilgrimage made by travelers for more than
1,000 years. Augsburg University Pastor and Director
of Ministries Rev. Sonja Hagander will lead the trek in
which adventurous Auggies will learn about history
and culture, and they will experience firsthand some
of the most beautiful natural sights in the world. This
trip is intended for experienced mountain hikers.
For more information, contact Katie (Koch) Code ’01, director of Alumni
and Constituent Relations, at codek@augsburg.edu or 612-330-1178.
Matt Swenson ’91 displays artisan
creations on the Minnesota Art Truck.
During an economic downturn,
a resurgence of skill-savvy
craftspeople revived centuriesold traditions of making highquality goods in small quantities,
harnessing the power of modern
technology and local communities.
Americans plunged into the Great Recession.
A wave of new and seasoned workers alike struggled to navigate the economic
uncertainty of fewer jobs and growing debt in an ever-changing global landscape.
But while the economy grew stagnant, the creative efforts of workers did not.
An artisanal phenomenon gained momentum, which affects not only what people
buy and the jobs they seek, but also shifts consumer expectations around the
country. This is no new trend; it’s actually an old one.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
19
FINNEGANS taproom in downtown Minneapolis
LAGER
IPA
BELGIAN
STOUT
GROWLER
PILSNER
CASCADE
PORTER
PALE ALE
BLOND
AMBER
PILSNER
WEISSBIE
MAIBOCK
HEFEWEIZ
DOPPELBO
SAISON
WITBIER
BERLINER
WEISSE
GROWLER
CASCADE
PHOTOS COURTESY OF FINNEGANS
The modern artisan movement—
craftspeople who focus on distinct,
skillfully made goods produced in
small quantities, often by hand—has
deep roots in the past, before the
relatively recent industrialization that
revolutionized the global market by
providing more affordable products to
more people.
“The United States has had mass
production of plentiful and relatively
cheap goods for at least a century,”
said Nancy Fischer, associate professor
and chair of sociology at Augsburg
University. “An appreciation for more
traditional forms of making things—of
craftsmanship—was a reaction to and
coexisted with mass production.”
Fischer, who has researched vintage
fashion and is writing a book on vintage
clothing consumers, said artisans in
the pre-industrial 1800s could make a
living running shops that sold everyday
items like furniture, candles, or shoes.
However, artisan endeavors today form
a niche market, often as side jobs for
extra cash and personal fulfilment more
than a stable income or employment
benefits. The focus is not just on a
product; the artisanal approach also
20
AUGSBURG NOW
focuses on the origin of the item, what
it’s made of, and how it’s made.
You’ve seen the items: artisanal
breads and cheeses, small-batch ice
cream, hand-crafted chocolate and hot
sauce. Many major metropolitan areas—
and a number of smaller communities
as well—boast independent coffee
roasters, artisanal pizzerias, and craft
butchers of locally raised livestock.
Custom jeans and hand-tailored
leatherworks are neighbors to yoga
instructors, artisanal pickle producers,
and specialty popcorn shops in
tiny storefronts. Even international
corporations and fast food franchises
attempt to pique consumer interest
using the terms “artisanal” and “handcrafted,” much like they appropriated
“gourmet” and “specialty.”
Artisans appear in three oftenintertwined variations: 1. maker artisans
who produce tangible products, 2.
personal service artisans who offer
curated experiences, and 3. knowledge
artisans who bring together people and
ideas to enhance social capital.
“Artisans can look a lot different
than what most would expect,” said
Brian Krohn ’08, co-founder of Mighty
Axe Hops, which supplies Minnesotagrown hops to craft brewers around
the state. After studying chemistry at
Augsburg and finishing graduate school,
he became a serial entrepreneur,
launching a company that uses 3D
printing to make flame-emitting
wizard staffs and founding Soundly, a
smartphone app designed to reduce
snoring. “A woodworker would normally
be considered an artisan, but I think
an experienced engineer who uses CAD
[computer-aided design] and a CNC
[computer numerical control] to mill
wood or aluminum can also be
an artisan.”
To seek a simple explanation for the
artisan economy’s proliferation would
be to ignore the multifaceted appeal of
such products and services, as well as
the diverse array of people who sell and
buy them.
Consumer boredom, dissatisfaction
with mass-produced options, and the
feeling of overall instability could play
a psychological role in the appeal of
artisan alternatives. “When you think
about the current state of economic
inequality, recessions, an affordable
housing shortage, multiple wars, everchanging technology, outsourcing of
jobs, and terrorism, we live in a pretty uncertain world,” said Bridget Robinson-Riegler,
cognitive psychologist and professor of psychology at Augsburg. “We value nostalgic
products because they make us feel more secure. The new wave of such products is
possibly indicative of a society in turmoil and people in angst searching for comfort.”
The search for comfort doesn’t stifle the curious desire for variety, though. “If it’s
beer, consumers are looking for something that is different, not formulaic,” Fischer
said. “With woodworking items, ceramics, or clothing, they are looking for something
that will last, as well as something that is unique.”
Jacquie Berglund ’87 found a unique angle in
a competitive market: craft beer with a cause.
After graduating from Augsburg and studying
in Paris, she returned to Minneapolis and
co-founded FINNEGANS Brew Co., whose
profits are donated to alleviate hunger in the
markets that serve FINNEGANS beer. “When I
started my beer company, there were a handful
of breweries. There are now more than 150
in Minnesota. FINNEGANS needs to make
high-quality beer, differentiate our brand as a
FINNEGANS co-founder Jacquie Berglund ’87
social business with more than $1.3 million in
impact, and connect with our consumers and supporters.”
The craft beer boom is representative of the growing artisan movement in many
industries. Almost half of the 150 breweries in Minnesota have opened in the past
eight years, including Boom Island Brewing in Minneapolis, another brewery with
an Auggie connection. Qiuxia Welch ’99 studied music at Augsburg and became a
professional French horn performer and teacher. Today, she is Boom Island’s marketing
manager and runs the business with her husband, Kevin, its founder and head brewer.
“Most of Boom Island’s beers are brewed using traditional Belgian techniques,”
Welch said. “This requires expensive ingredients, no preservatives, years of experience,
and time. It’s difficult for the large breweries to do this.”
Craft beer sales have grown to nearly
13 percent market share, according to
the Brewers Association, which offers
“certified independent craft” labels for
breweries not owned by the handful of
multinational corporations that have
maintained dominant market share
following the repeal of Prohibition.
Because consumers pay more for
craft beer, these corporations seek
higher profits through consolidation,
buying craft breweries with national
reputations, and creating “craft”
sub-brands to mass produce.
“Mass production is not able to
work with the small, local suppliers
of ingredients like artisans can,” said
Berglund, whose FINNEGANS pale
ale features Krohn’s Minnesota-grown
Mighty Axe Hops. “We have made more
than 100 different beers in our taproom
in the past 11 months with five barrelaged brews—mass production is not
this nimble.”
Though craft beer brewing and buying
demographics skew toward Gen X and
Millennial white males, some signs point
to a more diverse artisan future. “More
women, and particularly women of color,
are playing important roles,” Welch said.
“They are opening breweries, making
great beers, and changing how we
market and drink craft beer.”
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
21
When you visit a Twin Cities craft brewery
or farmers market, you also might
see another kind of artisan: artist and
curator Matt Swenson ’91, founder of the
Minnesota Art Truck. Swenson displays
local artists’ work in the truck to connect
with people who don’t realize they can
purchase original art at prices comparable
to big-box stores while sustaining the
local art community. “I don’t see art as
just for the middle class or upper middle
class or the wealthy. Art really is for
everybody, and the more I get to interact
with people, the more they see that
themselves,” he said.
Before he started this “food truck
for the soul,” Swenson studied
communication and English at Augsburg
and worked in sales and marketing
management for 13 years. Today, he feels
lucky and grateful that his wife supported
his departure from corporate America in
search of creatively fulfilling work: “We
had to adjust how we live, but she knows
Minnesota Art Truck and
founder Matt Swenson ’91
22
AUGSBURG NOW
that it’s something I’m passionate about,
and I think it can be sustainable.”
Billy Mzenga ’13 is another Auggie
who left the corporate world, turning
his attention to graduate school and
a new entrepreneurial initiative. The
venture started when his wife, Megan,
fine-tuned recipes of homemade almond
butter, cashew butter, and peanut
butter. In 2017, the couple launched
these products into a small business:
NutMeg’s Nut Butters. The Mzengas now
live in Chicago and continue to develop
new recipes. They distribute NutMeg’s
products online and at farmers markets
and Chicago-area grocery stores.
Like FINNEGANS, NutMeg’s is a social
enterprise. NutMeg’s donates half of
its earnings to humanitarian nonprofits
in Kenya. Staying nimble and avoiding
stockholder pressures are key factors for
artisan entrepreneurs like the Mzengas.
“We are accountable to our customers
to make sure we are providing a good
product, and to the charities we partner
with, making sure we provide them with
financial resources,” Billy said.
Billy believes his Augsburg University
education equipped him to see how his
purpose intersects with causes bigger
than himself. “My experience there
opened my eyes to the issues facing the
world, Minnesota, and those who were on
the front lines as problem-solvers,” he said.
Berglund, whose social impact model
with FINNEGANS inspired the Mzengas,
can relate. “I got a strong sense of ‘We
are here to serve others’ by going to
Augsburg,” she said. “It shaped my world
perspective and the way I designed and
run my business.”
Augsburg’s communal support was
also obvious to Boom Island’s Welch
when she arrived in the United States
to study music. “I came from a very
warm place in China,” she said. “I
didn’t come to Minnesota prepared for
the winter. Professor Roberta Kagin from
the Department of Music sent out a
campus email asking for donations of
winter clothing. I don’t think I bought any
clothes for two years after that.”
Welch wants the same qualities of
Augsburg in her business today. “This
is a very caring community with an
appreciation for a well-balanced life.
I like to think Boom Island Brewing is
the same,” she said.
FOAT co-founders Zoë Foat Naselaris ’96, left, and Kaja Foat ’96
Boom Island Brewing’s
Qiuxia Welch ’99
What prevents the artisan niche from
drawing more consumers away from massproduced items? “The choice is between
a $40 hand-crafted wood cutting board
or a $7 one from Target,” Fischer said.
“That kind of price differential for most
Americans’ financial situation—which is
more heavily weighted for folks with fewer
resources—eliminates the choice, even if
they would prefer the $40 cutting board.”
The higher price doesn’t necessarily
mean artisan products are luxury items.
In fact, artisan entrepreneurs often
justify the higher cost of crafted goods
in pragmatic terms. With some massproduced products, Krohn is concerned
that consumers will end up spending
more money in the long run on subpar
items that wear out rather than a quality
item that lasts—“You get what you pay
for,” as the adage goes.
Augsburg alumni craft a variety of artisan goods and services.
From a sociological perspective, the
benefits of less expensive production
and more affordable mass-produced
goods come with the risk of exploitation
of workers and the environment in
the supply chain and manufacturing
processes. “Organizations and activists
have encouraged us for decades to
question the unsustainable model of
buying more cheap goods shipped
from overseas where the pay, working
conditions, and factory harms to
the environment are jaw-droppingly
horrible,” Fischer said.
The relationship between quality,
cost, and ethics is especially tangible
in fashion. Zoë Foat Naselaris ’96 and
twin sister Kaja Foat ’96 created FOAT,
an environmentally conscious women’s
fashion brand with a personal touch.
Based in their Charleston, South
Carolina, and northeast Minneapolis
studios, they design, cut, and sew
garments by hand rather than
outsource the work.
“We are not interested in massproducing our patterns and clothing
overseas because it is important to us
to produce our items ethically, locally,
and with a lot of care,” Naselaris said.
“When garments are mass-produced,
they are designed with one body type in
mind. Handmade garments are tweaked
and tucked, pushed and pulled into a
COURTESY PHOTOS
shape that is both comfortable
and complementary to the
customer’s body.”
Like FOAT, many artisans
extend their care for customers
and details to the overall industry
and consumer expectations that
NutMeg’s co-founders Billy Mzenga ’13, left, and Megan Mzenga
influence business practices.
“Most Americans are not
accustomed to paying attention
Artisans offer alternate products as
to, or even caring about, how their
well as an alternate story, a different
products are made,” Naselaris said.
way to engage with the American
“There has to be a change of mindset.”
tradition of consumerism. They invite
FOAT encourages people to buy fewer
others to see that more isn’t always
well-made garments that last longer
better, that making something beautiful
rather than many poorly made products
and enduring takes time. Many
that tend to fall apart more quickly.
consumers are rethinking their economic
Billy believes many consumers are
relationships in society: how they engage
ready for change: “People are speaking
with what they eat, what they buy, the
with their dollars and moving their
issues they care about, and ultimately,
business to more locally owned,
how they engage each other.
locally made products.”
“The craft-brew taproom has become
a vital part of the community like you
find in Old World Europe,” said Welch,
who co-leads Belgium brewery tours to
Will some consumers continue to
stay tethered to a historic beer tradition.
lack the financial resources to choose
“Our typical customer wants to connect
more artisanal options? Will others
with the people who make and serve
grow weary of paying more for local,
their beer. They want to know where
sustainable, quality products? Might
their food and drinks come from, how
this artisan movement form a robust
they are made, and who made them.
economy of the future? It doesn’t show
This is how we lived for centuries. Now
signs of slowing, perhaps because of
artisans are back.”
the connection between crafters and
those enjoying the craft.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
23
Professor of Psychology
Assistant Professor of Psychology
They became colleagues at Augsburg
roughly a decade ago.
BY COURTNEY PERRY AND LAURA SWANSON LINDAHL ’15 MBA
Community is an undeniable fixture of the Augsburg experience, and nothing makes a campus feel small like the familiar
faces of those who’ve become friends. Countless Auggies have forged lifelong connections—whether in an instant during
their first days on campus or over time through shared classes, interests, residence halls, occupations, and stories. Here’s
a taste of the many rich friendships that have grown at Augsburg and carried on across time and geography.
Robinson-Riegler: “We’re both cognitive
psychologists, so we have a mutual interest,
which was probably the initial thing that
brought us together. Then once we got to know
each other, we just realized how similar we are.”
Professor Bridget Robinson-Riegler, left, often stops into the office of Assistant Professor
Ben Denkinger to talk about everything from their shared field of study to baseball.
Major: Communication Arts/Literature
and Secondary Education
Denkinger: “We’re excited about the same
things in psychology, and maybe riled up about
the same things in politics and culture.”
Meeting in the James G. Lindell Library, Joaquin
Delgado-Ortiz, left, and Ann Sheely discuss
a project she’s working on for her residence hall.
Majors: Film and Communication Studies
They helped each other on move-in day
and became intramural soccer teammates.
Harris: “Anthony is one of the greatest
students I know in the area of academics
. . . my grandad always used to say, ‘If
you want to get good at something, then
surround yourself with people who are
already outstanding in that area.’ So I see
him in that. He inspires me.”
Villagrana: “Likewise, from day one,
Mallory has always been positive—the
energy he gives is positivity. Always
smiling, always talkative. He’s never
gloomy, you know? He brings this energy to
the room. I’m just glad I met Mallory this
year because I was pretty quiet and kept
to myself last year. He’s a transfer student,
and he’s older than me. He introduced
me to a lot of people, and I made a lot
of friends. His character has inspired me
to be more open and more social in this
environment at Augsburg.”
24
AUGSBURG NOW
Major: Psychology
Anthony Villagrana, left,
and Mallory Harris head
off to class.
Majors: Life Sciences and
Secondary Education
After being assigned to the
same lab group, they formed a
friendship and ended up laughing
their way through their final
presentation for their course.
Sheely: “One thing I’ve noticed about people at Augsburg is that
everybody is really open and accepting and willing to just be there to
help you. They’ll actually return your smiles, generally. So that’s been
really helpful for me—not being afraid to reach out to people even if
I don’t know them really well yet, and then friendships can grow.”
Camryn Masse, left, and Jen Meinhardt study together, as they
do at least twice a week, in Christensen Center.
Major: English (Creative Writing)
“That’s a cool pen.” One
seemingly simple statement
made in a 12:30 p.m. religion
class on the first day of the
semester sparked a friendship.
Meinhardt: “We both transferred
here from a different school—
from the same school, in fact—
but we didn’t know each other
there. It’s been fun because we
have the same perspective of
someplace different—of going
from a small community college
to this school. The city is kind
of different for us, and we
didn’t know anybody else. For
me, our friendship just gave me
something more concrete and
grounded at this school, which
helped me transition better.
And it’s given me somebody to
study with. She’s inspired me to
hit the gym; she’s inspired me to
work instead of goof off. She kind
of just keeps everything rolling.”
Enrollment Communications
and Event Specialist
AUGGIES CONNECT
FROM THE ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
Dear alumni and friends,
COURTESY PHOTO
Major: Elementary Education
The Augsburg University Alumni Board
supports the university’s mission by finding
meaningful ways for our members to
contribute their time, talent, and treasure.
Members meet regularly to create and
enhance events where Auggies can network,
collaborate, and serve together.
This fall, we partnered with the Clair and Gladys Strommen Center
for Meaningful Work to co-host a mock interview event for current
students. We then brought Auggies together again this February at
our annual networking event. This year’s networking workshop offered
students the chance to practice their networking skills in a friendly
environment, and attendees heard from an impressive panel of alumni
who discussed how networking helped further their careers.
This spring, the Alumni Board has been busy working on events
like an Augsburg Beer Choir, A-Club Spring Happy Hour, and our first
All-School Reunion Stewards Meeting, which is coming up May 20.
Of course, the big event we’re gearing up for is Augsburg’s
sesquicentennial celebration. After we kick things off at the
Sesquicentennial Gala and Homecoming 2019, the Alumni
Board will focus on the ways it can support Augsburg at a number
of additional low- or no-cost events and new, family-friendly
opportunities. Augsburg’s sesquicentennial will truly be a year to
remember, and you can learn more on pages 15–18.
There are plenty of ways for alumni to give back to Augsburg as a
volunteer this year. Consider becoming a Sesquicentennial Steward,
joining the Alumni Board, or serving on one of our other leadership
boards. It’s been a pleasure to serve as board president for the past
two years. I’ve enjoyed working with current Alumni Board Vice
President Lori Higgins ’94, ’12 MAL, and I’m confident she will be a
terrific Alumni Board president going forward.
Assistant Director of Admissions
PICK THE
PATTERN
Denielle Stepka ’11, a senior
creative associate at Augsburg,
has created patterns for elegant
neckties, scarves, and—of
course—bow ties inspired
by art from around campus,
Augsburg’s “A” mark, and
university seal. Help decide
which designs should be put
into production.
Take a look at the options and “like” your favorites on the Augsburg Alumni
Association Facebook page: facebook.com/augsburgalumni.
HAGFORS CENTER
TRANSFORMS AUGGIE EXPERIENCE
It's been three years since Augsburg University broke ground
on the Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion,
and 16 months since the facility opened for classes. These
fast facts from the building’s inaugural year illustrate its
remarkable impact and the new opportunities it affords
Augsburg students, faculty, staff, and community members.
FAST FACTS
Go Auggies!
Office space for
They first worked together at another
college but both found a home at Augsburg.
NICK RATHMANN ’03, ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
of Augsburg’s
full-time faculty
Sotos: “Someone saw us playing
racquetball here together one day and
asked us if we were married. I said, ‘Well,
we’re not married, but I did marry him!’
because my wife and I officiated his and
his wife’s wedding.
It’s always good to have a familiarity
with how people work best and what
their strengths are, so it’s nice working
alongside a friend.”
40%
PARTICIPATE IN THE SESQUICENTENNIAL MUSICAL
Colleagues who once competed for the same job, Maggie Sotos, left, and Josh Owens, right, are now friends on
staff in Augsburg’s Admissions Department and opponents on the racquetball court during their lunch hour.
Among the many faculty-led projects in development to celebrate
Augsburg’s 150th anniversary is a new work of musical theater about
the university community, past and present, to be performed in Spring
2020. Members of the community are invited to take part in every step
of the process, from creating material to performing in the production.
Learn more at engage.augsburg.edu/sesquicentennialmusical.
29
THE HAGFORS CENTER HAS:
139,000
square feet of collaborative
learning areas with 32 open
study spaces
laboratories, four 30-seat classrooms,
and the largest classroom on campus,
which seats up to 100 people
If you are interested in learning more about projects in the Hagfors Center
or taking a tour, contact Heather Riddle at riddle@augsburg.edu.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
27
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
1960
Lowell “Zeke” Ziemann ’60
wrote a new book titled “A
Kaleidoscope of Baseball.” The publication
shares quotes, poetry, stories, odd facts,
and historical information related to baseball
as a national pastime. Ziemann previously
authored several books in the Old West
genre. He studied mathematics at Augsburg.
Jacquie Berglund ’87 discussed her craft beer
company’s social impact and collaborations with
local ingredients suppliers. See story on page 19.
1977
Zoë Foat Naselaris ’96 and twin sister Kaja
Foat ’96 create fashionable, ethically sourced,
one-of-a-kind women’s garments by hand. See story
on page 19.
The Augsburg men’s soccer
program celebrated its 50th
anniversary this fall with a lunch and
reception attended by more than 100
Auggies. The celebration brought together
Auggie soccer players from many decades
and was led by a host of Augsburg alumni
including Darcy Debing ’77, Gary Dahle ’79,
Mike Kennedy ’79, Don Potter ’79, Vinnie
Brooks ’07, Alex Hildebrandt ’10, and Van
Hong ’11.
Athletic Director Jeff Swenson ’79 has deep
family ties at Augsburg. His sister, Marie
(Swenson) Hechsel ’90, played volleyball. Her son,
Matt Hechsel ’15, wrestled; and her daughter,
Stephanie Hechsel ’19, played volleyball. See story
on page 8.
1982
Augsburg alumni Deb Krueger
Knight ’82, Mike Cunningham ’10,
Janice Gladden ’12, and Cyrus Batheja ’08,
’11 MBA offered networking and career
advice as panelists at the 2019 Augsburg
Alumni and Student Networking Event.
Attendees gathered to practice networking
skills, discuss career paths, and get to know
other Auggies.
Matt Swenson ’91 took inspiration from the
food truck phenomenon and created a mobile
opportunity to buy local art. See story on page 19.
1999
Tammy Sinkfield-Morey ’99, ’13
MAN, ’17 DNP received the 2018
March of Dimes Distinguished Nurse of the
Year award. She is the first African-American
recipient of this top honor, which recognizes
experienced nurses’ community service and
professional and personal development.
Qiuxia Welch ’99 builds community around
Belgian beer made with traditional techniques
in Minneapolis. See story on page 19.
1998
Scott Erickson ’98 opened an
independent insurance agency,
State Insurance, in Otsego, Minnesota. The
business serves all of Minnesota.
2003
Linnea Benton ’03 moved to
Okinawa, Japan, with her
husband who serves in the U.S. Navy.
Her oldest child started kindergarten, and
Benton, who graduated from Augsburg with
a degree in English, volunteers in the school
library to stay active in her field.
2004
Darin Rowle ’04, ’15 MSW
accepted a manager role for the
Department of Human Services HIV Program.
Most recently, Rowle served JustUsHealth
(formerly known as the Minnesota AIDS
Project) as a director of prevention and
coordinated care/integrated services. Rowle
has more than 20 years of experience
working with HIV-related concerns and
helping people navigate complex social
service and medical systems.
of development at Fordham University
School of Law. She and her family reside in
Brooklyn, New York.
They’re Auggie hockey stars, and they’re
siblings. Meet Chris Johnson ’10, ’14 MAL and
Megan Johnson ’19 in the story beginning on page 8.
2008
2013
Ben Katz ’08 produced a podcast
mini-series for the New Yorker
and New York Public Radio that tells the
story of his wife investigating a family secret.
Serial entrepreneur Brian Krohn ’08
demonstrates the breadth of diverse artisan
endeavors in today’s economy. See story on page 19.
2005
MK Gibbs ’05 opened the Mary
Katherine School, which is
an early education center serving children
and parents through infant, toddler, and
preschool programs in Bloomington,
Minnesota.
2009
Lisa Peterson ’09 is taking on
additional leadership roles with
the Northfield Area Chamber of Commerce
as she transitions from serving as its director
of tourism to her new position as chamber
president. Peterson studied marketing and
business administration at Augsburg.
2006
Ramsey County named Kari
Collins ’06 director of community
and economic development. Collins worked
as a community development manager with
the city of Roseville, Minnesota, since 2016.
She previously served as an assistant to
the city manager of Roseville and as zoning
administrator and board secretary for the city
of Milwaukee.
Evelyn Tsen ’09 and her husband, Alec,
welcomed a baby boy, Abraham Fenlason,
on January 18.
2010
The Litchfield Independent
Review reported that Brandon
Begnaud ’10 organized a Christmas cantata,
“The Glory of Christmas,” at Christ the King
Lutheran Church in Hutchinson, Minnesota,
where he serves as director of worship and
music. A graduate of Augsburg’s music
program, Begnaud recruited for, led, and
participated in the pre-Christmas cantata
that included a choir of 53 singers and 29
instrumentalists.
2007
Grant Hemmingsen ’07 and his
wife, Kari, welcomed a baby girl,
Quinn Joann, on January 26. Hemmingsen
is the men’s basketball head coach at
Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota.
Molly (Shortall) Kaszuba ’07 and her
husband, Brian, welcomed a baby boy, Jack,
this winter. Kaszuba is an associate director
Augsburg biopsychology major
Alix Young ’13 taught psychology
for two years in China’s Guangdong province
following graduation and opened the
Brain and Psychophysiology Lab at United
International College. Now living in Houston,
Young is a coordinator of clinical studies at
MD Anderson Cancer Center.
2016
Former Auggie women’s
basketball player Abbey Luger ’16
teaches and coaches at Transfiguration School
in Oakdale, Minnesota.
2017
Kaylee E. Gueltzow ’17 is teaching
English in Germany through the
Fulbright Program. She lives in Greifswald
and is traveling throughout Europe.
2018
Ricki Larson ’18 is a fourth-grade
teacher in her first year serving
her home district.
Billy Mzenga ’13 and his wife, Megan, turned
their hand-crafted nut butters into a small
business that supports nonprofits in Kenya. See story
on page 19.
Brothers Mustafa Adam ’18 and Shihab Adam ’22
were among four sets of siblings on the 2018–19
Augsburg football roster. See story on page 8.
2015
GRADUATE PROGRAMS
Awale “Wally” Osman ’15 and
Felecia Zahner ’15 served as
keynote presenters at Augsburg University’s
TRIO/SSS 50th Anniversary Celebration in
November. More than 130 of the program’s
students, supporters, and graduates
attended the event, which included a
reception and dinner.
Osman is also a new member of the W.K.
Kellogg Foundation’s Community Leadership
Network. He also serves as a community
innovation program associate at the Bush
Foundation and has received accolades
from the Center for National Leaders,
NAACP, TRIO, and the National Newman
Civic Fellowship.
Lekpea Kordah ’15 and Barinedum Kordah ’17
found that their brotherly bonds strengthened
their Augsburg experience. See story on page 8.
Carola Thorson ’07 MAL became the vice
president of enrollment management at
Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio,
in September. Thorson served in several
roles in Augsburg’s Admissions Department
from 2003 to 2013, and she most recently
was the executive director of admission
and scholarships at Concordia College in
Moorhead, Minnesota.
Physician assistant Sarah Pattison ’12 MSPAS
joined the internal medicine department at
Carris Health Clinic in Willmar, Minnesota,
where she also assists in urgent care. She
previously worked at High Point Family
Practice in North Carolina.
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
Annika (Spargo) Eriksson ’09
and Carl Eriksson were married
November 17 in Stillwater, Minnesota.
’09
Taneasha Muonio ’18 joined
People’s Center Clinics and
Services as a substance abuse
program manager in May 2018. Just
a few weeks before being hired,
Muonio completed a case
management internship at the
People’s Center and earned her
bachelor’s degree at Augsburg with
a double major in biology and
psychology. In her full-time role,
’18
’09
’18
28
AUGSBURG NOW
’01
’05
’13
’87
Muonio serves 150 patients dealing
with substance abuse concerns and
works with doctors to integrate
patients’ medical and behavioral
health care.
On November 11, Jill
’01 Mintz-Hoydl ’01 married
Andrew Hoydl. Augsburg alumna Jeni
(Eckman) Linnenberg ’01 [pictured,
left] was in the wedding party. The
Mintz-Hoydl family resides in Denver.
’05
Erika Hiland ’05 welcomed
a baby girl in November.
Shannon (Connaughton)
Grindal ’13 and Erik Grindal ’13
welcomed a new baby who someday
could be fourth-generation Auggie.
’13
Richard Bahr ’87 released a
book about homelessness in
Twin Cities. “Those People: The True
Character of the Homeless” includes
anecdotes about people with whom
Bahr has worked and seeks to
counter stereotypes and dispel myths
about people experiencing
homelessness.
’87
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
29
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
Tina (Anderson) Boe ’04
bought a home in Forest
Lake, Minnesota, and works
for Aveda as a distribution
supervisor. Her daughters
are 6 and 8 years old.
In September, longtime friends [L to R] Mary (Boraas)
Janotta ’73, Jill Steele ’72, Mary Lynn (Monson)
Ogelsbee ’72, Lennice “Sparky” (Nordaune) Keefe ’72,
and Julie (Hagberg) Swaggert ’73 traveled to upstate
New York. The Augsburg alumnae once lived together
in Chi House and have been traveling yearly since
their graduation. A highlight of their most recent trip
was visiting Niagara Falls.
Augsburg Assistant Volleyball
Coach Colleen (Ourada) Enrico ’14
and her husband, Zach Enrico ’12,
welcomed a son, George, on
May 23, 2018.
In December, Susie (Emmert)
Schatz ’09 MSW was named vice
president and chief advocacy
officer for St. Paul-based Lutheran
Social Service of Minnesota.
Schatz now oversees state and
national advocacy initiatives for the
organization. Schatz joined LSS nine
years ago as an advocacy manager,
and she has received numerous
accolades for her work, including
the LSS CEO Leadership Award.
Since 2011, Schatz has served as an
adjunct instructor at Augsburg.
This fall, Tina Nguyen ’08
and her fiancé helped
connect more than 250
people at Minneapolis’
Franklin-Hiawatha homeless
encampment with supplies
and blankets. Nguyen also
served on the Augsburg
University Alumni Board.
Allyson (Ruedy)
Dooley ’13 and Eric
Dooley ’13 welcomed
twin boys in February
named Jason Timothy
and Lucas Anthony.
Arianna Genis ’13 was
the campaign manager
for Jeremiah Ellison for
Minneapolis City Council.
Currently, she’s merging both
her creative and political
skills at Wellstone Action as
a deputy communications
director. Genis also creates
a podcast, “Latina Theory,”
to unite the voices of Latinx
people in Minnesota.
Kevin Butcher ’13 and Kacie
Lucchini ’13 were married on
August 18 at Surly Brewing’s
Beer Hall in Minneapolis.
Connor Krenik ’13 married
the couple, who celebrated
alongside family, friends, and
fellow Auggies. The newlyweds
live in south Minneapolis as they
both pursue graduate school at
the University of Minnesota.
This fall, Reginaldo HaslettMarroquin ’03 received a
lifetime Ashoka Fellowship
for social entrepreneurship. A
graduate of Augsburg’s business
administration and management
program, Haslett-Marroquin
is the principal architect of a
poultry-centered regenerative
agriculture model. As part of
his new role with the Ashoka
organization, Haslett-Marroquin
contributed to a commentary
on nonlinear farming that was
published in Forbes in October.
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
Leah (Jacobson) Soland ’12 and
Cody Soland were married this
November in Owatonna, Minnesota.
Leah graduated from Augsburg with
a bachelor’s degree in social work.
30
AUGSBURG NOW
Alom (Martinez-Aleman)
Walters ’13 and
her husband, Seth,
welcomed a baby boy,
Søren James, in October.
Former head coaches [L to R]
John Grygelko and Jeff
Swenson ’79 were among
more than 200 attendees
at the Augsburg wrestling
program’s 70th anniversary
celebration held this February.
The reunion took place the
same evening as Augsburg’s
meet against rival Wartburg
College—a competition known
as the Battle of the Burgs.
Anna (Ferguson) Rendell ’05
released a new book titled
“Pumpkin Spice for Your
Soul: 25 Devotions for
Autumn.” This is her third
book featuring devotionals
for women and moms.
Greg Schnagl ’91 published
the book “Not My First
Classroom: A Guide to
Supporting Experienced
Teachers in New Roles.”
Schnagl earned a
bachelor’s degree in
business management at
Augsburg and also holds
master’s and doctoral
degrees in education. He
is the founder and owner
of TeacherCentricity, which
supports experienced
educators. Schnagl is
married to Molly (Fochtman)
Schnagl ’92.
Lauren Webber ’14 welcomed
a baby boy in November.
“MN Original,” an Emmy Awardwinning program produced by Twin
Cities PBS, featured Alison Price ’08
and her painting series “Witnessing
Waves” in an episode that aired in
November. The artwork was created
during her undergraduate years at
Augsburg and was inspired by the
trees of the Mississippi River gorge.
SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE
Tell us about the news in your life—your new job, move, marriage, and
milestones. Visit augsburg.edu/now to submit your announcements.
Augsburg alumni [L to R] Dave Ogren ’91 MAL
and Eric Galler ’91 MAL visited Devils Tower,
Wyoming, this October and participated in the
KannonFall Charity Fun Rally.
Devoney Looser ’89 visited
Augsburg University in February
to discuss her new book, “The
Making of Jane Austen.” Looser,
who was featured in the Fall
2018 issue of Augsburg Now,
returned to campus for two
days to meet with faculty and
students. She is a professor at
Arizona State University.
SPRING–SUMMER 2019
31
Celebrate 150 years of Augsburg
and launch another 150 years
of Auggie legacies.
IN MEMORIAM
Gertrude E. (Larson) Franzen ’43,
Hastings, Nebraska, age 97, on
February 1.
Marlys A. (Backlund) Morland ’54,
Newberg, Oregon, age 88, on
November 19.
Thomas A. Steenberg ’58,
Missoula, Montana, age 83, on
October 20.
Milton L. Anderson ’44, Willmar,
Minnesota, age 96, on October 29.
Grace M. (Larson) Anderson ’55,
University Place, Washington, age
85, on September 22.
Paul H. Almquist ’59, Edina,
Minnesota, age 81, on
November 7.
Arnulf Maeland ’55, Royal Palm
Beach, Florida, age 85, on
February 7.
Harry C. Collin ’60, Gold Canyon,
Arizona, age 86, on December 21.
Lorna M. (Wilberg) Sanders ’47,
Sioux Falls, South Dakota, age
93, on November 20.
Jeroy C. Carlson ’48, Edina,
Minnesota, age 95, on
November 20.
James C. Record ’55, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 85, on May 20.
Lorraine “Lee” M. (Gimmestad)
Clyne ’48, Coldwater, Michigan,
age 92, on November 19.
Jeanette I. (Olson) Locke ’57,
Lakeland, Minnesota, age 83, on
February 10.
Llewellyn “Llew” (Rustad)
Smith ’48, Twentynine Palms,
California, age 90, in August.
John H. Olson ’57, Richfield,
Minnesota, age 88, on October 31.
Jean (Christenson) Sverdrup ’49,
Edina, Minnesota, age 91, on
September 12.
Einar D. Unseth ’51, Lester Prairie,
Minnesota, age 93, on January 2.
Harvey M. Peterson ’52,
Minneapolis, age 91, on
December 10.
Joan E. (Carlberg) Nordenstrom ’53,
Cambridge, Minnesota, age 87,
on September 8.
Lowell H. Kleven ’54, Golden
Valley, Minnesota, age 86, on
October 11.
32
AUGSBURG NOW
Gudwren “Goodie” L. (Ellingson)
Belkholm ’58, Ogilvie, Minnesota,
age 86, on January 20.
Kenneth J. Belkholm ’58, Ogilvie,
Minnesota, age 90, on January 28.
Roger R. Brandt ’58, Sonoma,
California, age 82, on January 8.
Mabeth L. (Saure) Gyllstrom ’58,
Minneapolis, age 82, on
September 22.
Betty J. (Johnson) Hass ’58, Rio
Rancho, New Mexico, age 82, on
November 4.
Carl L. Hellzen ’58, Litchfield,
Minnesota, age 83, on January 24.
Gerald “Jerry” E. Hendricks ’60,
Watertown, Minnesota, age 81,
on December 10.
Edward J. Olson ’60, Mauston,
Wisconsin, age 86, on January 3.
David G. Torgerson ’60, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 84, on April 9.
Russell D. Osterberg ’63,
Alexandria, Minnesota, age 82,
on October 1.
Jeffrey H. Barbour ’70, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 71, on January 27.
Mary K. Ratzlaff ’74,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 66,
on September 26.
Elin K. Ohlsson ’77, Edina,
Minnesota, age 63, on June 19.
Francine B. Chakolis ’78,
Minneapolis, age 73, on
January 15.
Carol L. (Watson) Saunders ’79,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 72, on
November 1.
Bonnie R. (Lindgren) Reeb ’81,
Willmar, Minnesota, age 60, on
October 3.
Jeffrey C. Yue ’81, Wayzata,
Minnesota, age 59, on January 10.
Henry F. Groth ’64, Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, age 77, on
August 31.
Bob S. Dayton ’90, Maplewood,
Minnesota, age 52, on
November 26.
Diane K. (Rife) Notch ’64,
Northfield, Minnesota, age 77, on
November 28.
Julie A. Tanner Fischer ’92,
Minneapolis, age 48, on
January 19.
Dwight J. O’Bert ’66, Minneapolis,
age 74, on February 4.
George “Bruce” B. Sorrells ’07,
Minneapolis, age 60, January 11.
Lois A. (Barnaal) Ryan ’67, Lilburn,
Georgia, age 73, on January 7.
Frances E. Cleveland ’10,
Minneapolis, age 48, on
November 18.
Linda D. (Letnes) Lewis ’69,
Hastings, Minnesota, age 71, on
January 3.
+
The “In memoriam” listings in this publication
include notifications received before March 1.
Attract future leaders and eliminate barriers so more students
can thrive at Augsburg and explore their vocations.
Give any amount to the Sesquicentennial Scholarship
to support students in financial need.
augsburg.edu/giving
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
PHOTO BY DON STONER
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Twin Cities, MN
Permit No. 2031
Auggies win 13th national wrestling title
In March, the Augsburg University wrestling team claimed its 13th NCAA Division III
national championship, winning all four of its individual national title bouts. Seven
Auggies earned All-American honors in the finals of the national tournament.
Visit augsburg.edu/now to learn
more about the university’s
national tournament win.
Show less
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Title
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Murphy Square 2019: Murphy Square Literary Magazine
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Collection
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Literary Journals
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Search Result
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ISSUE 44
2 019
MURPHY
SQUARE
LITERARY MAGAZINE
AUGSBURG UNIVERSIT Y
SQUARE
Copyright © 2019
Do not copy or redistribute without permission.
All rights reserved.
Printed on 100% post-consumer waste
Cover design and layout by Megan Johnson
“Here we are, trapped in the amber
of the momen...
Show more
ISSUE 44
2 019
MURPHY
SQUARE
LITERARY MAGAZINE
AUGSBURG UNIVERSIT Y
SQUARE
Copyright © 2019
Do not copy or redistribute without permission.
All rights reserved.
Printed on 100% post-consumer waste
Cover design and layout by Megan Johnson
“Here we are, trapped in the amber
of the moment. There is no why.”
- Kurt Vonnegut
special thanks to
Augsburg University Day Student Government
Augsburg University English Department
Augsburg University Art Department
The Echo
Bookmobile
editoral board
Gabriel Benson, Editor in Chief
Sonja Mischke, Associate Editor
Megan Johnson, Designer
Doug Green, Faculty Advisor
Lindsay Starck, Faculty Advisor
art editors
Rachel Brown
Olivia Fitch
Rachel Lindo
Jen Meinhardt
Rachel Thell
poetry editors
Rachel Brown
Abigail Eck
Jen Kochaver
Yoko Kofuji
Rachel Lindo
Gabriela Lucía
Ryan Moore
Emilie Tomas
prose editors
Julia Charron
Abigail Eck
Jen Kochaver
Rachel Lindo
Gabriela Lucía
Jen Meinhardt
Jessica Mendoza
Ryan Moore
Morning
3
ON THE USS ALBATROSS by D.E. Green
5
ODE TO MANGOS by Saira Montes Moore
7
UNTITLED by Bridgette Boone
10
TEGUCIGALPA bY Sarah Degner Riveros
11
TEGUCIGALPA by Sarah Degner Riveros
13
16
22
ELAINE RAMSEYER, DAYAMPUR FARMS,
CARBONDALE, IL by Grant Berg
23
PERPENDICULAR by Julia Charron
25
AFTER CHARLOTTESVILLE by John Weirick
29
I WILL GIVE BIRTH TO AN EGG by
Rachel Lindo
29
CONFLUENCE by Clara Higgins
33
ROCK AND ROOT by John Weirick
34
DAVID by Daniella Clayton
35
HAIL MARY by Kalie Havener
ROSA by Saira Montes Moore
MANIAC! by Ava Fojtik
17
THREE HEADED SELF PORTRAIT by
Ani Cassellius
19
SHE TASTED OF GRIEF by Abigail Eck
Noon
42
DAZZLE by Ava Fojtik
57
STORY OF A BROKEN GIRL by
43
NOT A LOVE POEM BUT DEFINITELY
Gabby Brooke
SOMETHING by Terrence
63
BETWEEN BORDERS by Saira
Shambley Jr.
Montes Moore
47
BREEZE by John Weirick
65
FREEDOM AND TENSION by Ani Cassellius
49
STORMS AND HOUSES by Rachel Brown
67
GLENN ELEMENTARY, 2 PM by Allison
50
ALMOST EDIBLE by Ava Fojtik
51
REVENGE OF THE SOLENOPSIS by
Rachel Lindo
53
POISONED SOIL by Kathryn Graham
55
RIVER KIDS, DAYEMPUR FARMS,
CARBONDALE, IL by Grant Berg
Uselman
75
UNTITLED by Bridgette Boone
77
TEOTIHUÁCAN, CIUDAD DE LOS DIOSES
by Sarah Degner Riveros
80
TEOTIHUÁCAN by Sarah Degner Riveros
81
SOLITUDE by Jen Meinhardt
83
TAKE A DEEP BREATH by D.E. Green
84
FANTASY by Nou-Chee Chang
85
BIG MUDDY MIKE WASHING DOLLY,
ST. LOUIS, MO by Grant Berg
87
I AM NOT DECEIVED by Rachel Brown
89
HOLDING ON by Saira Montes Moore
night
95
NAKED IN THE NIGHTTIME by Anders Sateren
121
STRANGER by Jen Meinhardt
103
A WARM PLACE TO SLEEP by Jen Meinhardt
123
FRIENDLY by Kathryn Graham
105
IDENTITY CIRCLE IN 3 PARTS, ENDING
125
DAD by Jen Meinhardt
WITH A TREK THROUGH THE ANTARCTIC
129
LIFE OF A DESIGNER by Nou-Chee
DESERT by Terrence Shambley Jr.
109
MICKEY by Melissa Flores
111
LIES MY DRUG-DEALER TOLD ME by
Michael Levine
115
WORRY by Daniella Clayton
118
THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS by Meredith
Chang
131
I AM AN ALCHEMIST by Jen Meinhardt
131
A DATE WITH DEATH by Carson Hughes
141
LIGHTS IN THE DARK by Elizabeth
Ihekoronye
143
PERCOLATING by Gabriela Lucía
145
AMERICAN ECSTASY by D.E. Green
Carstens
119
THE STREETLIGHTER by Gabriela Lucía
147
BULLETS, CARDBOARD, AND SLOBBER
by Carson Hughes
153
MY DAD WAS[N’T] AN UNCAUGHT
SERIAL KILLER by Jen Meinhardt
155
STAGES OF SLEEP by Gabriela Lucía
157
SUMMER NIGHT HAIKU by Rachel Brown
Morning
16
On the USS Albatross
D. E . G R E E N
This is our ship
We will lose our way
various as a city
our fragile home
intimate as a village
each other and ourselves
less like a nation
more like a world
But this is our ship
with all the possibilities
We do not have to drown
of neighbor and friend
nor to die of thirst on these ironic waters
This is our ship
We can traverse these seas together
swift in the currents
winds behind us
but in frigid seas
This is our ship
and dark wintry North
We do not need another
it grinds through
We will not get another
excruciating ice
Together we can reach our ports of call
This is our ship
This is our ship
We will not get another
If we cannot pull together
our lips will dry and split
our tongues crack and swell
our ears blister shut
4
Ode to Mangos
SA I RA M O NT E S M O O R E
your skin so soft and gentle
don’t call me jealous
I remember every time
but not everyone can appreciate
I get to taste
your warmth in
sweet and caring are you
the humid summer nights
let me unwrap you
all I wish is to
with your sweetness dripping
be with you all year long
you leave me with color
no matter the color of the leaves
my face flush and sticky
or the coldness of my apartment
everyone around is envious
it’s hard in your absence
when I’m with you
no song floats in the air
how can you let others
no other can replace
caress you?
what we will always have
tell me, will you be with me tonight?
6
7
B R I D G ET T E BO O N E
Untitled
8
Tegucigalpa
SA RA H D E G N E R R I V E RO S
Al no verte, te imagino.
Although I don’t see you, I imagine you.
“Entre las montañas” anuncia tu nombre.
“Between mountains,” announces your name.
Los gallos cantan tu amanecer, y te rondan
The roosters sing your dawn, and trucks
camiones sin mufle en tus calles.
Without mufflers circle about your streets.
The metal roofs frame out the pink houses
Los techos de acero encuadran tus casas
In the first light of day, their whiteness
rositas en la primera luz del día,
Blindingly brilliant in the sun.
su blancura alumbrante en el sol.
And between blocks made of cement,
Y entre cuadras de cemento,
I feel what lies rooted beneath.
siento lo que radica abajo.
You tread on the earth with your profound feet,
Pisas la tierra con tus pies profundos.
In your towns, I have seen the mud
En tus pueblos he visto el lodo
Of your entrails, the free breeze
de tus entrañas, la brisa libre
Of the hills crowned by your palm trees.
del cerro que encabellan tus palmeras.
Beneath all this civilization
Por debajo de toda esta civilización,
There you are, the lifeblood of the town,
allí estás vos, la sangre del pueblo,
The River Choluteca.
el Río Choluteca. Teguzgalpa, te llamabas,
Teguzgalpa, you were called back then,
cuando todavía se veía
When the reddish mud could still be glimpsed
entre tus fundamentos el lodo rojizo.
Amidst your foundations.
Te rodeaban los cerros de plata,
Silver hills surrounded you,
coronados de cedro, caoba, y guayabo.
Crowned with cedar, mahogany, and guava trees.
Todavía se siente el aire de tu selva pluvial.
Your rain forest can still be felt in the air.
Tegucigalpa, although I don’t see you, I imagine you.
Tegucigalpa, al no verte, te imagino.
10
11
SA RA H D E G N E R R I V E RO S
Tegucigalpa
12
SA I RA M O NT E S M O O R E
Rosa
I
n the mercado everything holds color. The yellow
on the kitchen wall, pots where the frijoles cook for
of sunflowers vibrates on the hand-painted toys.
hours, and beautiful mugs. Now these mugs, the ones
Dulces wrapped in red, yes it will be spicy. Anything
dripped with glaze on the inside, are the best for a
you could want lives in mercados. The fruits are fresh.
chocolate caliente and pan dulce when the sun retires
Vendors say, “Ovas, una caja por cuarto! Prueba!” You
and the crickets chirp.
listen to the vendor, usually a man with kind eyes and
you take the grape (you always do). Its skin taut with
with such love and care (like everything is here). The
the promise of relief and you find yourself with a box
salsa for the tacos is always spicier than the merchants
of them. It is fine, it is only four dollars.
The best smells live here, la comida is made
confess. “Pica esa salsa verde?” “No, no pica,” but it is
The pottery is handmade with cariño and sits
always spicier than they let on. La gente drizzle that
on white tablecloth. It drips with glaze that shines in
salsa verde and noses soon run. The aguas frescas
the sun. All kinds of pottery, small lizards that hang
are swallowed down burning throats. Antojitos are
13
sold in abundance. There is nothing you can’t find in el
asks, “Cual quieres mija?” She looks, with such focus
mercado. Here in the mercado we find her, amid the
that children rarely hold, at all the alebrijes. She ignores
sellers of pottery and food, amid the mugs with color
the ones that cost siete. She knows her dad will buy
dripped on them and the salsa que no pica.
one that’s siete but she also knows how money seems
to disappear quickly and quietly. So many to choose
She loves the mercado for these reasons. The
from, animals and non animals, all colors that god has
colors are her blanket, her relief in this heat. She is safe
created sit on the alebrijes skin.
here, among her people, among memories of what she
once knew. Here people do not look at her when she
speaks to her ama in the language her ancestors were
thinks, which do I want? Which alebrije will sleep next
forced to learn. Here she can wander around, look at
to me and ama? Her dreams wake her, when the night
the alebrijes that she so much loves, here she is safe.
is silent and the air is stiff with knowledge. Which will be
Cual quieres? That’s a good question, she
able to protect me from nightmares of that night? The
She and her papa are standing in the middle
burden Rosa carries is much too heavy for a child. It
of the mercado, between all vendors and colors. He’s
manifests where she cannot escape, her sueños.
a man whose hands are rough with labor and life filled
with love. Eyes dark brown, with wrinkles that wink at
you, and make you feel warm. It is Friday, the end of the
from the night Rosa and her padres came. How dark
quincena, when money seems plentiful. The mercado
and cold it was, in the desert at night. Her ama gave
is busy, everyone buying what they need and what
her the last of their water. Rosa, the girl with braids and
they don’t. Her papa wanted to surprise her with a new
focus to what others cannot see, did not know hunger
addition to her collection. So they stand in the heat of
there but she knew pain (it was a different pain, one
the midday, her eyes big, sweat on her forehead.
that she could not see, a pain that nestled itself into
It is hard for her to separate her nightmares
her tummy). She knew how hungry her parents were.
She stares at them in awe. Their heads
She saw the light from her papa’s eyes become dull.
bobble. Up, down, up, down. Left to right. Her dad asks,
She saw how her ama was always careful never to be
“Cuanto?” The man with skin loved by the sun replies,
alone. The men who led the group were not good
“Cinco, y estos—” he moves to his left and points at
men, neither was the land forgiving. Do not complain,
the more carefully painted alebrijes, “A siete.” Her papa
her padres made her promise. She still has not broken
14
SAIRA MONTES MOORE | ROSA
it. Rosa saw many things, pobrecita.
one of the ugliest pig/not pig things that he had ever
seen but Rosa sees what others cannot. She knows
In her dreams, she walks the desert alone. There are no
no one will take him, he’s a beautiful pig in his own
sounds, just the thumping of her heart in her ears. Her
right but will not sell. He’ll be there, on the tablecloth,
feet, so tired. The landscape never ending. The earth
heat beating down on him for months maybe, alone.
feels dead, only the restless souls of those who did not
Two lovely creatures, Rosa and the puerco will find
make it are stuck here with her. They cry and hope that
kinship instead of loneliness. He will keep her sueños
she, a beautiful child, will make it out and grow like the
away some nights, and that is enough. “Aye que feo,
cactus flower in a desert. She is their cactus flower.
si lo quieres?” Is she sure she wants this ugly pig? “Si!”
Be careful of the snakes, the bad men told
He laughs, what an ugly pig! She likes when he laughs
her. In her dreams she is also careful of the snakes. She
because she can see papa’s gold tooth.
does not know what will happen if they bite her. There
is no color, just the shadows playing tricks and objects
wrapped up. It’s hot, they all know it. They look up on
melting into others. “I do not want to die here,” are her
occasion, hoping to see a cloud close by, hoping. None
only thoughts. Like the cactus flower, maybe she will
come. The girl feels the sun, how it seeks to touch
spend her whole life here. Her (re)birth, her blooming,
more than her exposed neck. She wishes this moment
her death. She always wakes next to her ama and papa,
won’t end. She’ll be okay with standing here, focused
safe. The alebrijes, animal and non animal are there
on the alebrijes, watching how their heads bobble
too, on the windowsill. Her papa tells her que todo va
with the absent wind. Standing with her papa, with the
estar bien, we’ll never do it again. Who will protect her?
They stand by the vendor while the pig gets
vendor whose skin was loved by the sun and her new
So many to choose from. Animal and non
puerco wrapped in newspaper.
animal. Rosa, her soul now many years old, finally
decides, “Quiero este!” She points to the one in the
middle. Her dad looks, and wonders for a minute,
Que es eso? What is it? It looks like an animal. Rosa
sees her dad’s confusion. “Es un puerco, papa.” A pig.
A pig that does not look like a pig. It was honestly
15
Here, I will repeat again, she is safe.
AVA FOJTIK
Maniac!
16
ANI CASSELLIUS
Three Headed Self Portrait
17
18
She Tasted of Grief
ABIGAIL ECK
I live among ghosts.
I can feel them there, all the time. Listening, sitting in the rocking chair as I read poetry aloud to them,
looking at me patiently as I take
breaks to absorb sections,
coming over to lean on my shoulder when I close my eyes. They are
strangers and loved ones alike, peering in curiously as I tend to my plants and then vanishing, popping in
if I mention a name that they are connected to, stopping to smell the mint and the incense and enjoying
the fires I light for them on the coffee table.
I am - not quite afraid, but I am buzzing, anxious. It is just under the surface, all the time - that pull of the
connection, to the spirits that show up around me.
In this, I have become more aware, that
when I close my eyes, I can feel something within me - my spirit, my soul, the ants that creep along my veins They are trying to detach from my physical being, become moths to force their way out of my pores, and
the only thing keeping me anchored is the cat lying on my hips,
the only thing keeping me rooted her steady breathing to remind me of her living heart.
In this, someone - perhaps, myself - has pried apart my ribs so that my heart and lungs are out in the open,
panting, beating, desperately gulping in air and blood, and I am exposed and aware of everything I can feel the oil under my skin, pooling in my elbows and my left hip, circling around my spine and my
throat and attempting to creep up up up to join with the dark something that sits in my mid-left-frontal Cortex And in all of this people tell you to conquer your biggest fear, but how the fuck are you supposed to
conquer it when that fear is the death of a loved one?
Nineteen, and, just like, that he is gone. No one is supposed to be fatherless at nineteen, at eighteen, at twelve
- and yet this is all across the world, these griefs and sufferings.
It was impossible for me to imagine a world without him, but now - it’s my reality, and it feels more like a dream 20
ABIGAIL ECK | SHE TASTED OF GRIEF
And then, it is almost fascinating, how quickly a heart can be snuffed out of this world.
They find a trapped mouse, still alive on its trap, slowly dying of starvation, dehydration, of the twisted
position it is stuck in, and there are choruses of ewwww and oh my gosh! Gross! They discuss what to do
with it - and it is going to die, no matter the conversation I listen to, no doubt about that.
I can feel the mouse, though, and I am struck silent - I can feel her spirit seeping away, the quiet struggle
and the unknown acceptance, my heart matching hers (it is a female, I know it, somehow), and I feel like
collapsing in sorrow for another life(s) gone.
I can’t stand it, now, the consistent death of people and animals, guns and bullets senselessly taking lives,
human cruelty destroying more and more of the world every day.
It is morning, and I am mourning again.
All I want is to feel alive, in this dead world of spirits and the creeping fingers of death, always reaching,
reaching. I am Itching for my body to bloom - bloom with ink, spiraling out of my skin in all the just-hidden
places, to make physical my thoughts and aches and pains.
At least this is something I can control, right?
And, Among all of / the
spirits /death / anger / sorrow / denial / grief / loss / ants / sympathy / flowers / writing / of / the /
obituary / guns / money / signatures / the / ghost / in / the / passenger / seat / don’t / you / see / her / ?
/ the / hand / that / rests / on / my / shoulder / the / pictures / voicemails / almost / deleted / ink / skin /
cigarettes / candles / cats / and / mice / fears / and / truths / - / - / . / . / . /
/ I / hold / my / fingers / to / my / throat / to / check / that / my / heart / is / still / beating / - /
/ and / all / is / - /
/ quiet / . /
21
G RANT BE RG
Elaine
Ramseyer,
Dayampur
Farms,
Carbondale, IL
22
Perpendicular
JULIA CHARRON
Even in the quiet of the morning there are people on the sidewalks and cars on the streets.
When did the World start to feel so empty,
so cavernous?
It’s impossible for me to decipher whether it was them or me that began to
ignore the other. Perhaps, at a point of intersection we agreed to exist outside one
another, and carried on-
perpendicularly.
The wind is the only direction I can find- although fickle and inconstant. I hear it whisper
through the trees and I find more meaning in the leaves than in the voices of any person around.
It is me and it is them and I am lonely. But I’d rather be completely empty than feel just short of whole.
I can only wait and hope that the quiet emptiness pacifies my bleeding mind.
24
After Charlottesville
JOHN WEIRICK
“This isn’t America”
shouts echo off buildings and blood-stained pavement.
“Racism has no place here”
confidently declared from states near and far
connected long ago by railroads built by Chinese laborers
over water and soil abducted
from the only non-immigrants the land has known.
“Society is equal now”
say those whose families once owned other human beings.
“Racism is still a problem”
cry the families who lived by the law
only to lose unarmed sons to bad apples
that continue to fall from the diseased tree.
“We will not be replaced”
shout those whose forebears
have never lacked opportunity
only grace.
“You can’t erase history”
protesting removal
as if the line vanished between
remembering history
and memorializing its demons.
26
42
JOHN WEIRICK | AFTER CHARLOTTESVILLE
Voices pile up like dry grass
and we all carry flames.
When will we set down torches
and talk through the night
catching glimpses of each other’s ragged humanity?
After we pause once naïve now ignorant
refrains of “All lives matter”
baptized well-meaning cliches and meager attempts
if any
of empathy.
“Shut up about Charlottesville”
he reminds himself
for his prompt opining feels true
until he steps beyond the echo chamber
humbled yet welcomed to those night talks
where he finds his place
which today
is to listen.
And then
what?
28
I Will Give Birth to an Egg
RA C H E L L I N D O
No matter how much time the traveler spends as she attempts to invent a wild contraption to give herself and her
friend, a witch, time-and-space whiplash or how many times the witch summons a spell that won’t give them split
ends, they always end up at a movie theatre. The time traveler sat down next to the witch at a bench outside, both
an hour early to a movie they managed to be two hours late to. Thanks to the traveler’s mother who also bends
space and time like pipe cleaners. Before the movie can even dance with British action movie stars, the mother
calls. The traveler’s father once told his daughter, while he stood in the middle of their clustered time machine,
Your mother is going to have a bird. Before the traveler answers the call, her hair a wild mass thanks to the flawed
witch’s spell, she yells, I will give birth to an egg! The phone vibrates and cracks the witch’s last-minute incantation
made to save their chances at seeing the film. While the mother sprouts a kuku bird over the kitchen floors
that the traveler scrubbed clean that aren’t clean enough, the witch closes her eyes and prays for the traveler to
smash her egg on the kitchen’s tile to fly.
30
C L A RA H I G G I N S
Confluence
31
32
Rock and root,
glistening slick from
night’s refreshment.
Away from rain-shy crowds
JOHN WEIRICK
Rock and Root
left at the rolling hills.
Higher in,
peaceful fog,
the cover of wistful solitude.
The forest’s silence
broken only by
distant planes,
brutish trains,
and emergence of
human voice, strained.
In morning’s solace,
nothing clearer.
Steady footing a luxury,
light and swift on narrow paths.
Mountain’s peace,
effort’s reward.
DAN I E L L A C L AY TO N
David
34
KALIE HAVENER
Hail Mary
A
damp, crumpled yellow piece of notepad
still clutching the yellow paper. Grandma Mary had
paper was being passed around the stuffy
written her dying wishes so openly and honestly, and
hospice room among my aunts, uncles, and
her tender words were just too much to handle right
cousins. It was the middle of March, and unseasonably
now. I read her words over and over, and before long I
warm. I sat cross-legged on the sticky floor, out of
walked back to the room, and no one commented on
the way and quietly writing in the visitor’s journal that
my absence. I was just in time to hear my aunt retelling
the nurses claimed to read to my dying grandmother
the story of how she discovered the yellow paper
every night. The wrinkly sheet finally made it into my
when she was cleaning Gram’s little back bedroom. In
sweaty palms, and I immediately felt her words pull at
a twisted sort of way I think we were all thankful she
a soft spot inside me: Carry a rose down the aisle for
was not conscious right now. The nurses told us each
me, and I will carry you in my heart.
time she woke up she asked them when she was going
home. I don’t think any of us would have had the heart
Growing up I always hid boyfriends, tattoos,
to tell her she would never be returning to her cardinal
piercings, and underage drinking from my family,
red cottage on West Road.
and yet here I was having a raw moment with them
watching me. Feeling unhinged by my sudden onset
of tears, I peeled myself off the ground and swiftly left,
Catholic Church. It had been a month since I held
35
The tolling bells rang out above Saint Joseph’s
that yellow paper with my Gram’s words, her final
like wisps became brown barrel curls precariously
thoughts recorded in shaky handwriting. The whole
pinned up around her neck. She held a single rose.
church was filled with clean white candles. There were
white calla lilies that looked like tiny upside-down
and those around me were laying sniffling heads
wedding gowns, delicate yellow layered roses like the
on shoulders and clutching the arms of loved ones.
pages of an old Bible, and the belles of Ireland which
Father Mark was wearing his vast robes of shiny gold
were skinny finger-like stems with a knot of a flower
and white that stretched across his giant frame along
on each joint with a tiny white blossom inside. The
with black loafers that prayed for mercy while they
choir voices picked up where the bells left off, and I
groaned in the silent church with each step he took.
let out a deep breath as I walked forward and picked
My cousin whispered something about how the Priest
up a single rose and held it in my hand as I followed
was crying, but I knew better. Father Mark’s massive
Gram’s casket into the church. I smiled into the rose
body was glistening with what could have only been
and thought about the story she told me right before
the Holy Spirit, and he dabbed his face not for tears—
I graduated high school.
but for sweat. He made his way to the podium and
I closed my eyes, and the two of us were in
began to speak.
her sitting room, sun illuminating the crystal prisms
that dangled delicately from her sparkling windows.
back to school to support them when her husband
of us was sitting in a squishy armchair.
died of cancer in 1968.”
“You know, Kalie-Illa, when I was graduating
from Catholic school they had a ceremony too,”
My grandparents met through letters in World
War Two. Grandma had been writing to her beau at
Gram said. “Sometimes being nervous is a good thing.
the time, and at his insistence she wrote letters to his
It means you really care about what is to come.”
“Mary loved her family and friends and her
faith. She went on to raise six kids on her own and went
The heavy scent of flowery tea filled the air, and each
I took a seat on the glossy wooden bench,
friend who didn’t have a girl back home. Grandpa fell
I was picturing her at eighteen. Her knobby
in love with her through her letters, and when they
hands that held coupons and bills before me were
walked down the aisle she held white calla lilies. It is
now covered in elbow-length white satin gloves. The
because of this story that I believe in the power of
heated blanket that covered her legs was replaced by
writing and the power in my own words.
a gown with a white tulle skirt. Gram’s silvery moon36
KALIE HAVENER | HAIL MARY
fallen queen by her devoted disciples.
Mom squeezed my arm and asked if I was
okay. She was handing me a tissue but raised an
eyebrow once she saw my dry face. I told her I was
The fresh smell of the flowers inside the church
was replaced by the earthy scent of wet pavement in
fine. I honestly couldn’t bring myself to cry. Maybe
the parking lot we had to cross in order to get to the
Father Mark and his script of sympathy wasn’t doing
muddy graveyard. It was drizzling over my curly red
it for me. I felt as though I should cry… if I was going to
hair, but I didn’t worry about it frizzing. The slick mud
make a big emotional scene, this was the time where
clung to my black velvet heels. My family members
it would be most acceptable—even welcomed. And
were weeping all around me as we made our way to
yet here I was coming up empty in the emotions
the open wound in the ground. So this is where Gram’s
department. Soon it was over, and the choir began to
body is going to lie from now on? I shifted my weight
sing once more.
from foot to foot in order to steady myself on the
We were once again back at the entrance hall,
uneven hollow ground. The ground groaned in protest
with its candles burning brightly and flowers spread
as if to say, “Hey! It’s not that bad here!” My Gram, the
all over like an Irish garden. I looked at my family so
light of my life, was going to be buried beneath this
distraught and I felt out of place, but what else is
crooked red headstone and sloshy wet grass. Father
new? I touched the little green-looped ribbon with a
Mark had sent his assistant out to say his blessings.
blossom in the middle that I made into a pin. I stayed
up all night making them for Gram, amid bottles of
“So he was too fat to walk thirty feet!” I heard
my uncle’s voice griping beneath his bushy beard. It
alcohol and old Irish pub tunes she used to sing to me.
had been Gram’s dying wish that Father Mark lead the
I made enough so everyone could wear green in her
funeral procession, and he couldn’t be bothered to
honor. My little Irish grandma, who celebrated Saint
bury her in the rain, apparently.
Patrick’s Day religiously and always made sure we had
enough shamrock-shaped cookies to last all spring,
was buried wearing a soft green ribbon pinned over
skinnier and dressed in street clothes led the Hail
her heart. The pall bearers now had the casket once
Mary: “Hail Mary full of grace! The Lord is with thee…” He
more and were making their way up the aisle, and
rushed through this, and said some quickly thought-
we all fell silent. I moved out of the way and stood by
of condolences and ushered us to come forward with
myself, and I smiled. This was her final time making her
our final goodbyes. My cousin lay spread-eagle over
way through a church aisle, and she was carried like a
the casket, and I looked down at the charm bracelet
37
The second-hand priest who was much
hugging my wrist.
life and death. Gram and I loved to speculate about
the deeper meanings of dreams, and so she indulged
Once again I was back in her warm cottage,
me with this gem.
steamy tea billowing out around us causing the
whole room to look misty. Gram asked me to reach
for a catalogue. It had fallen by the wayside from the
in my childhood bedroom but I can’t find the light
fortress that was her great brown leather rocking chair.
switch.” Gram coughed painfully and her body lurched
Her hands grabbed the catalogue from me, her skin as
forward and she made to hide the blood that came up
thin as crepe paper.
in her lily white handkerchief. I winced. Gram carried
on as if nothing happened.
“Now, Kalie-Illa, I want you to pick out
something from here, my treat!”
“Well, Kalie-Illa, I keep dreaming that I am
“It seems funny I wouldn’t be able to find the
light switch in the home I grew up in. I don’t know what
I knew money was tight, and I didn’t want to
it means but I have had this dream every single night
be the reason she didn’t have something she truly
since I came here,” Gram told me.
needed. Gram was so excited though, and in the end I
settled on a silver charm bracelet with shamrocks and
tiny silver keys.
was rising, and the light spilled over everything like a
Gram passed on Easter morning as the sun
golden halo. When I woke up that morning, I saw that
I continued to look down at the charm
my light switch had been unexplainably turned on, and
bracelet, on display in a very different atmosphere,
I smiled, knowing she had finally finished her dream.
and I wondered if Gram knew one day I would wear it
to her funeral. I spun it around and it made a tinkling
sound, as if it were laughing, and it drowned out the
memories carrying me and keeping me safe. As long
weeping around me. I couldn’t help but think about
as I have the memories, I never really have to say
what she told me before she passed. This was the last
goodbye to her. I walked toward her casket, my long
time we spoke, when she first entered the hospice
lace shawl swishing in between the raindrops as I did
and the pain wasn’t bad enough for them to increase
so. I placed my hand on the smooth mahogany wood,
her doses of morphine.
the bracelet tinkling along as I reached for a single
Though it was her funeral now, I felt the
rose. I was squeezing her hand one last time. The burial
The hospice walls were listening in on us. The
was over, and we slowly drifted away.
walls were saturated with the secrets uttered between
38
54
Noon
56
AVA FOJTIK
Dazzle
42
Not a Love Poem but Definitely
Something
T E R R E N C E S H A M B L E Y J R.
You look good in my sloppy camo sweater.
I lent it hoping it would catch your aroma
the only part of your ugly ass that isn’t bitter.
Girl, if you don’t get yo ole
talk so loud on the phone
booming at your mom so steady while we in the library and students studying
ole
one word response ole Crimson Chin forehead ole too cool to show teeth
in your pictures but when you do smile make me wanna get my life together
Ole when I ask you what is this,
you say What do you mean?
and I say what is
this
you kill it all with a
damn nigga
I can’t just come sit next to you?
Ole always wanna be in my space ole too strong to send a I miss you text
ole fat nose bean neck peanut head
ole seem too disinterested to send a come thru
text ole cute belly gloss skin clout eyes
44
60
TERRENCE SHAMBLEY JR. | NOT A LOVE POEM BUT DEFINITELY SOMETHING
ole I don’t have an answer for you right now
Ole why you assuming I was on that
when I was just asking
but you too slick to answer a goddamn question
girl I barely know you
but when we together I feel so settle
I write poems
after and air more than I should.
46
Breeze
JOHN WEIRICK
Sore.
that kind of contribution?
Did you ever think you would
feel so sorely ready
Well,
for that summer breeze
did you expect it to turn out
that whipped up dust and grass clippings
well after you spoke your mind
the day you packed your books and trinkets
at lunch
and all the extra notepads
and everyone was silent?
with your name next to theirs
There’s not enough vinaigrette to
(too many notepads to just throw away),
cover the wilted arugula and sour tomatoes,
and you walked out the doors
let alone your expired belonging.
that used to unlock with your badge,
But you are less concerned
back when you had one?
because you feel it again,
that summer breeze,
More.
too hot to befriend—
Bid adieu to any morsel
where will it carry dry leaves
of future memories you believed about
when summer is gone?
your contribution to the cause,
like a volcanic island:
heat,
light,
molten core spewing,
relegated to slip down the rough mountainside
into the ocean—
48
Storms don’t form
they’re built
like houses
on gravel
RA C H E L B RO W N
Storms and Houses
with bricks and white plaster
cloistering the heavens.
But houses aren’t homes
they’re goods
situated on beds of sand
and engraved
imprinted
like pirate treasure
lost in a sea
of lifelong guarantees.
Roses aren’t gifts
they’re dust
turning brown and crisp
crushed by the weight
of the sun
in a vase
in a house not a home.
Roses are dust
blowing in the storm
that was built
not formed.
AVA FOJTIK
Almost
Edible
50
Revenge of the Solenopsis
RA C H E L L I N D O
Red ants stumbled past me and bit my pal Greg. Myself a survivor, I boasted. Greg told me I better harvest my
luck during a luck famine. I panicked and threw off my shoes believing the red ants tore through the soles. My
lungs were gnawed on. I forgot how to breathe and shook him, begging that he’d give me his lungs. He refused.
I pushed his shoulders, like how an infant slapped his mother’s hand away when she airplane’d orange muck
into his mouth. Our struggle needed an audience and Hermes arrived, but not for free. His golden eyes shifted
to my great-grandmother’s necklaces, riches dangling around my neck. He stretched out a hand. I dove into
the sea, my right hand over my left to become a sharp knife that could cut through choppy waters. I needed to
make a bouquet out of deceased coral, believing there was a chance my lost humanity would scamper back
and lock itself into my hands.
52
Poisoned Soil
KAT H R Y N G RA H A M
If you want to talk about painful love,
because you’re so tired of caring
let’s talk about a flower born into poisoned soil
but it refuses to live or die
about carefully measured cups of water
about how some people call your flower
about weeds that have grown with it
a weed
that have grown into it
about how much you love this stupid little flower.
strangling it with faulty love
about how despite everything you’ve done
If you want to talk about painful love,
the flower is practically dead
let’s talk about my sister
about the room full of books on
and the time I found blood in the bathtub
gardening, weeding, soil, flowers, loving
and a torn apart razor on the floor.
about the frustration of suggestions
try weeding
water it
just let it die
about how sometimes you get angry
and just pour
every drop of water you have
into its dry cracked ground
or rip out every weed you see
until the earth around it is ruined
or spray it with herbicide
to just kill it already
or neglect it for weeks or months or years
54
55
G RANT BE RG
River Kids,
Dayempur Farms,
Carbondale, IL
56
GABBY BROOKE
Story of a Broken Girl
T
he first time I ruined my father’s life was
unaware of the life of imperfection it would soon lead.
long before I emerged from the womb. He
This wasn’t revealed until later, though. At the time,
and my mother had been arguing again, one
my father took my mother’s words at face value and
of the many that were destined to occur throughout
decided he was done.
the course of the unplanned pregnancy. The power
struggle between the two came to an abrupt halt as
street to the park by the house he lived in at the time.
my mother said the one thing she knew could be used
He looked around for a little while before finally finding
to force my father to back down: “I lost the baby.”
Later that day, my father wandered down the
what he thought to be the perfect spot. The branches
It wasn’t true, of course. The bundle of cells
of the tree looked sturdy enough to support the rope
growing and developing into the baby girl that would
he had brought with him and any additional weight
become me remained firmly attached to my mother’s
that happened to be attached to it, so he tossed the
uterine lining, perfectly healthy and completely
piece of cotton over and tied a knot he knew wouldn’t
57
slip. He then proceeded to place his head through the
birth a boy. My father therefore put more effort into
loop this knot created, tightening the rope until he
making his relationship with her work than he could
stopped taking in air.
muster for my mother.
The desired effect wasn’t achieved, however.
They made it through the first three years of
Instead of being embraced by the darkness of death,
my brother’s life before their relationship fell apart. It
the rope snapped. Instead of the permanent crushing
was within the first two years of this timeframe that I
of his windpipe, he got a couple scrapes and bruises
started to notice my father preferred his new son to me.
from hitting the ground below. Instead of escaping for
a better, less painful world, my father found himself
eight years at this point, I knew I couldn’t do anything
stuck suffering through the unjustness of this one.
Having grown up under my father’s rule for
fun until I mastered all my homework, both what my
The first time I disappointed my father was on
teacher assigned and what my father did. Because of
the day I was born. The sound of my parents fighting
this, I lay on the floor in the dining room of the woman’s
filled the hospital room as they tried to establish a
house finishing up the last couple of problems. It only
name for me. Both parents were not far out of high
took a few minutes, so I quickly put the packet back
school and were unmarried. As such, my mother
into my folder and shoved it in my backpack, climbing
wanted me—not her first child but her first child by
up off the floor as I did so.
this man and her first daughter—to carry out the
judgment that came with her last name. Much more
wandered into the living room in hopes of watching
traditional, my father thought I should share in the
some TV. The sight meeting my eyes seemed normal
fame that came with being so close to the heights.
enough at the time: my baby brother, his mother, and
Their words permeated through the air for quite some
my father cuddling on the couch. Similar expressions
time before they finally reached a conclusion. In the
filled all three of their faces, a mixture of happiness
end, my mother won.
Done with everything required of me, I
and contentment. I felt my mouth turn up in a smile
The first time I noticed my father’s feelings
as I looked at them. “Oh, what a happy little family,” I
for me was when he was still dating the next woman
said. They laughed, I walked over to the armchair in the
to get pregnant. She, unlike my mother, managed to
corner, and we sat watching cartoons together.
58
GABBY BROOKE | STORY OF A BROKEN GIRL
Later that night, after my father and I had
that I’m not good enough. Why did I get stuck with this
returned to our own home, I found myself struggling
failure of a daughter?
to fall asleep. My eyes were drawn to the darkened
periwinkle of my bedroom wall time and time again.
hatred was a month before I went back to college. I
Shadowy fingers skittered across the paint as the wind
didn’t want to admit he only cared about the mold
blew through the lilac bush outside the window, and I
he kept shoving me into. I wanted to believe that he
realized I hardly ever saw that look on my father’s face
would back off enough to let me live my own life if it
when we were alone.
looked like I was starting to achieve some semblance of
The day my best friend and I went into the
success. One warm, sunny day in July, however, he threw
counselor’s office at my high school to find out our
his true feelings for me in my face like a vat of acid.
results for the ACTs, I was ecstatic. I expected to get
a score similar to hers, only a couple of points above
His first text that day was something that
I probably should have seen coming. For years I had
the average. Instead, I somehow managed to get one
taken the brunt of my father’s anger and frustration,
of the highest scores in my class. Once the shock of
so I should have been used to it. Still, the message
seeing the handwritten number on the little slip of
came as a surprise. I paused my conversation with
paper wore off, I pulled out my phone and texted my
my boyfriend and unlocked my phone to see what
father. “I got a 31 on the ACTs!!!”
The first time I acknowledged my father’s
the message contained. I regretted it almost instantly.
A few minutes later, I got a reply. “Who
“After sunday your phone will be turned off,” the text
did better?” The ecstasy I felt earlier faded into
read, containing the numerous spelling and grammar
nothingness as I stared down at my phone.
errors that I had learned to ignore. “If you want to keep
your number you will need to be back here tomorrow
My first semester of PSEO, my GPA was a 3.62.
with enough time for us to go to a sprint store to
“Why didn’t you get all A’s?”
transfer it into your name. You a grown. Time to start
“Why aren’t you home to watch the pups?”
taking financial responcability for yourself.”
“Do you have a job yet?”
Silence. A deadly stare, eyes screaming at me
Reading the words off my phone screen,
fury started to bubble up inside of me. I hadn’t done
59
anything to prompt this sort of reaction from my
my anger into a full-on rolling boil intense enough
father. In fact, I hardly ever did. Knowing that any sort
to send the water of my sanity over the edge of
of misstep could lead to this sort of reaction, though,
the pot. As it came into contact with the burner, it
I had made sure to tell him before I left that my
completely evaporated.
boyfriend worked at 4:00, so we couldn’t have stuck
around like he asked. “He’s not going to pick me up
icon next to my father’s name on the screen. My rage
for another ten minutes, though,” I mentioned, trying
continued to double in size with each subsequent dial
to still be of help. When my father chose to ignore me
tone until finally he picked up the call. “What?” he said
and go inside the house, I figured he no longer wanted
gruffly, sounding as angry as I felt.
my assistance and that I was in the clear. Apparently,
this wasn’t the case.
I immediately hit the small telephone-shaped
“I’m not waiting until tomorrow to talk about
this. We are going to talk about this right now.” The fiery
I stewed in the heat of the cherry-red Impala
anger coursing through my veins caused my vision to
but said nothing. He takes his frustrations out on you
blur. Instead of a three-lane highway, all I saw was a sea
all the time, I thought to myself. It always blows over
of black. The pounding of the warriors desperately
in a couple of days. I stared out the window at the
wanting to draw blood blocked out every other sound
trees whipping by, but I didn’t really notice them.
filling the car. Every sound except my father’s breathing
I focused instead on the pounding of my heart,
on the other end of the line.
calling out like a war tribe about to go into battle.
Slowly but surely the screaming started to settle
into a whisper, at which point I turned to continue
after a few seconds of silence. “Do you really want to
my conversation with my boyfriend.
talk about this when I’m angry? Because you already
know how this is going to turn out if we start talking
Not even two minutes later, my phone pinged
about this right now. It’ll go so much worse for you,
again. “Will wil also discuss the terms of your rent
and you know it.” With each word came a new wave
tomorrow,” my father now wrote. “Payment will be due
of hatred that stacked upon the one prior. When the
on the 1st.”
“Do you really want to do that?” he asked
culmination of waves built itself into a tsunami he
This statement sent the gentle bubbling of
released it, directing all of that power at me. In one
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76
GABBY BROOKE | STORY OF A BROKEN GIRL
fell swoop, my father managed to not only crush the
Dear Father,
rebellion but drown all of the battle-crazed warriors
I’m sorry I ruined your life so thoroughly. I’m sorry I failed
marching out to meet him. The battlefield was empty
to become the child you thought you deserved. I tried my
save for a few raging questions.
best to live up to your standards and be everything you
What kind of father comes to hate his
wanted me to be, but I couldn’t force myself into that
own daughter? What kind of father can focus so
mold. Maybe it would have been better for both of us if I
intensely on creating the perfect daughter that he
had been able to. Maybe you could have had a better life
can completely ignore his breaking of her? What
than the one you’re stuck with now. I’m sorry we’ll never
kind of father can see the damage he causes and
have the chance to know. Maybe your other child will do
doesn’t care?
a better job at pleasing you than I did. Not just for your
sake, but for his.
The hatred in my father’s voice and the words
accompanying it finally broke me completely. I had
If things still fail to go as desired, however, know that I
done absolutely nothing wrong, and yet he still felt
refuse to give up hope. You may have succeeded in
it was necessary to tell me, “You fucked up your life
breaking me once, but I survived. And I will continue to
too many times and I am done dealing with it. You are
survive, despite all that you put me through. You may
an adult and it’s time for you to act like it. It’s time for
tear me down time and time again, telling me about
you to suffer the consequences of your actions.” The
how I will never amount to anything in life, but that won’t
fire fueling my anger gone, I felt nothing but sadness.
ever stop me from trying. I will continue to persevere until
Tears welled up in the corners of my eyes, and my
I either gain the approval I so desperately want from you
throat swelled to the point of almost entirely closing.
or I die trying. Either outcome will have the same effect.
I no longer wanted to tell my father his decision was
Love,
going to make it impossible for me to go to college.
The Failure
I didn’t want to confront him about the fact he was
attempting to ruin my life in much the same way I had
ruined his. At that moment in time, I no longer had a
life to ruin.
62
Between Borders
SA I RA M O NT E S M O O R E
I was born
but I can’t go back to where
I was born.
My brownness is stuck between borders.
It is stuck between:
whites mispronouncing Saira
for they do not know how to
caress my name on their tongues
and
a land I do not know.
I ache.
I exist between borders.
I grow with the little water that’s in the desert.
I heal and
allow myself to grieve
over what has been taken.
I allow myself to grieve
and remember
I resist between borders.
My skin is blessed,
with the color of earth.
I allow myself now to live,
to love
between borders.
64
65
ANI CASSELLIUS
Freedom and Tension
66
ALLISON USELMAN
Glenn Elementary, 2 PM
I
t was the second week of October, and the air
outside was cool and the leaves on all the trees on
When did Mrs. Carpenter say she was coming?”
the lawn outside John H. Glenn Elementary were
turning red and yellow and gold. Inside the school’s
“When did you say the mother would be here?
The secretary twisted the phone cord around
her finger and looked once at little James Carpenter,
main office, which was usually all but deserted at this
sitting in the gray plastic chair just next to the teacher’s.
time of the afternoon, the school’s secretary sat with
“I told you, Ms. Heller. She didn’t say,” the secretary said.
the phone cradled between her left shoulder and
“And I can’t call her again, she’s probably left already.”
ear, a pad of white paper on the desk in front of her.
She didn’t bother to cover the mouth piece of the
She was in the middle of writing down the name of
phone as she spoke.
a particularly uncooperative postal worker when the
teacher sitting in the corner chair, just across from the
desk, stood up and asked the question she had been
and walked back over to the seat she had been sitting
intermittently posing for the past twenty minutes.
in but did not sit down. Instead, she crossed her arms
67
Ms. Heller, captain of room 307, let out a sigh
and planted her loafer-clad feet firmly on the floor.
already taken care of it.”
“No, honey, I wasn’t talking to you,” the
At the mention of the girl Alice, James had let
secretary said into the phone and then rubbed at her
out a groan and doubled over in his chair in a position
temples as if the postal worker’s apparent confusion
that might have been impressive due to the flexibility
had the instant and singular ability to produce a
required of the performer but under the circumstances
headache in whoever happened to be on the receiving
just looked sad. He sat with his forehead touching his
end of it.
knees and his arms wrapped under his legs for only a
few seconds before Ms. Heller dropped her hand from
“Well I don’t know what I’m going to do if
her ear and spoke again, all sense of a kindly pretense
she doesn’t get here soon,” Ms. Heller said. “I just
leaving her voice.
don’t know.”
“Hang on a minute,” the secretary said into
“What did you say? Did you say something?”
she said. A muffled reply came from the region of
the phone, and then, after pulling the receiver slightly
James’ knees. “Sit up, please, so that I can hear you.”
away from her mouth, she said to the teacher, “Why
don’t you go back to your class? Why don’t you just go
back to your class and leave him here with me?”
said, ‘I didn’t say anything.’”
Ms. Heller either didn’t hear the secretary or
James sat up. “I didn’t say anything,” he said. “I
“Oh, I’m sure,” Ms. Heller said, and began
chose to ignore the suggestion. She uncrossed one
twisting her earring again. Then, turning to the
arm and lifted a hand up to her ear, twisting the back
secretary as if James wasn’t there at all, she said, “Do
of one of the little pearl earrings she was wearing back
you know how many times we’ve been through this?
and forth between her fingers. “I have a whole class of
Do you know how many times in just this year? Seven.”
students back in that room waiting for me, and that
The secretary nodded.
she said, her voice taking a tone of pity. “What am I
“Or something around that number, I can’t
supposed to do about that? What am I supposed to
remember.”
poor girl Alice still has pencil lead stuck in her hand,”
tell her parents?”
“It’s only October,” the secretary said
“I don’t know,” the secretary said. “I told you,
observationally. James, who was listening to all of what
just go back to your room and see if they haven’t
was being said, didn’t seem to mind so much what the
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ALLISON USELMAN | GLENN ELEMENTARY, 2PM
secretary said. He didn’t appear to be upset at the use
while the secretary turned back to her pad of paper.
of the phrase “only October” in relation to his seven
visits to the office, didn’t seem to feel accused by
said once the secretary was faced away from him.
it. It was as if the secretary had asked if anyone else
thought it was too warm in the office or if she had
pointed to the fluorescent lights on the ceiling and
said, “These sure don’t help my complexion any.” It was
The secretary snorted. “Nothing right now,”
shook his head no.
“I’m going to go back to my classroom now,”
“It means I’m waiting for the person on the
other line to come back. Right now they’re doing
and you can deal with him. I can’t wait around all day
something else, and I gotta wait.”
just for the mother to show up.”
“Alright, alright. You do that,” the secretary
James nodded the nod of a child that doesn’t
quite understand but wants to give the illusion of
said, and watched out of the corner of her eye as Ms.
understanding, the same nod that could be found
Heller turned on her heels and walked through the
adopted into the behavior patterns by any number of
doorway of the office.
children at Glenn Elementary.
Once she was sure the teacher was gone,
the secretary turned to James, her hand covering the
James waited for the secretary to turn away
from him before posing his next question.
mouthpiece of the phone, and said, “I told her to go
“Ma’am?”
back to her room a hundred times, didn’t I? I swear I
told her to go about a hundred times since she came
in here.”
James watched the back of her head for a
means?” She turned around to face James again. He
Ms. Heller said. “I’m going to leave him here with you,
she said. “I’m on hold, dear. You know what ‘on hold’
not say anything.
“The post office,” she said.
Abruptly, Ms. Heller reached out a hand and
patted the desk twice. The secretary looked up but did
moment and then spoke. “What’s it saying?”
strictly an observation.
“Who are you talking to on the phone?” James
“Yes? What is it?” the secretary said. She didn’t
turn around.
James didn’t say anything. He squeezed his
knees together and tapped his shoes lightly on the floor
69
“How many kids usually come here? I mean—
how many kids usually end up here on a regular day?”
never arrived in the first place?” she said, and that
was when James stood up from his chair and pulled
“You mean how many kids come to the office
the door to the office open just wide enough for him
like—like you do? Is that what you mean?”
“Yeah,” James said.
“Oh, I don’t know. Not too many.”
“How many of them are weird? Are a lot of
to slip through. Which he did without making a noise
until the door slammed shut behind him and he broke
into a run down the deserted hallway.
quickly descending a flight of stairs, James hooked
them weird kids?” James said and waited.
Being a boy all too familiar with the perils of
his index fingers through the two belt loops on the
The secretary, as if only now understanding
outermost sides of his pants and pulled as he ran
just what it was James was getting at, turned around
down the school’s front steps. Outside, in the October
and arranged her face into a smile, tilting her head
afternoon, the school grounds were empty. The only
a bit to the left− that is, as far as she could without
movement came from the rustling of the trees out
the phone slipping out from her shoulder’s grip. She
by the playground and the occasional bird flying over
probably thought the motion looked kindly, maybe
the athletic fields. Even the sky appeared still, the few
even sympathetic, which it might have if it weren’t
clouds slightly covering the sun hardly moving at all
for the self-satisfied look in her eye, the look that
so that the whole scene gave off the impression of
suggested what she was about to say was going to
a photograph. James stopped and looked at it all for
make her feel better rather than the child she was
a moment, his fingers still hooked around his belt
supposedly comforting. “None of them are weird,
loops, before he started down the pathway to the
honey. None of them are weird at all,” she said and
playground. About halfway down the path, he stopped
then turned back to the papers on her desk.
and veered off to the right so that instead of walking
directly down to the play equipment, he was standing
Evidently, the postal worker on the other
in place just before the ground dropped off and was
end of the line began speaking then, as the secretary
held up by a concrete retaining wall.
picked up her pencil and began writing something
down. “Uh-huh,” she said into the phone, and then
stopped. She set the pencil down and switched the
tapped at the concrete with the toe of his shoe. Then,
phone to her other ear. “So you’re telling me they
as though there were nothing else he could do, he
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He squinted out at the playground and
ALLISON USELMAN | GLENN ELEMENTARY, 2PM
lowered himself down onto the wall and sat. Although
coat, and looked rather casual standing there in the
the ground was soft, it was still cool on his skin. He
grass with his hand in his pockets and his tie loosened
dug the heels of his hands into the dirt and rubbed
around his neck. He looked like the type of man whose
at it until the friction warmed it and the dirt smeared
desk probably contained at least one drawer with, if
across his palms. He was occupied with the dirt for
not a full-sized at least a travel-sized, bottle of aspirin.
only a minute before he heard the distant creak of the
“Is this seat taken?” Mr. Mitchell said and nodded to
school’s front door and, soon after, the sound of dress
the space beside James where the boy had wiped the
shoes on pavement.
dirt off his hands.
He didn’t turn to look at who was coming.
Instead, he pressed his open palms flat onto the top
“No, it’s not taken,” James said. “But there’s
dirt there.”
of the wall on either side of him and rubbed the dirt
away, leaving his palms slightly pink. Then, with great
“There’s dirt everywhere,” Mr. Mitchell said,
and lowered himself down onto the concrete.
ceremony, he lay back in the grass and folded his
hands across his stomach, his legs hanging down in
front of him. He was positioned in such a way that if
don’t you have a jacket on today?”
someone happened to glance at the retaining wall
“Where’s your jacket?” James asked. “Why
“I didn’t feel like wearing one,” Mr. Mitchell said.
of small legs from the knees down, three inches apart
“Oh yeah?” James said. By now both his eyes
and seemingly unweighted by an attachment to any
were open but he was still lying flat on his back.
from a distance, they would only be able to see a pair
human form.
nice a day for jackets. All this beautiful weather and all.”
James was lying in this exact position, with his
eyes closed, when the sound of the dress shoes on the
pavement stopped, and a shadow crossed over where
At this, James sat up. “You can still wear a jacket
even if it’s nice out,” he said. Mr. Mitchell shrugged. No
he lay. He opened one eye, his nose scrunching up on
one spoke, there didn’t seem to be anything to say,
one side with the movement, and looked up into the
until James stared at the junior counselor long enough
face of Junior Counselor Mitchell—or, as the children
to wonder what was going on in his brain.
at Glenn Elementary usually called him, Mr. Mitchell.
“Yeah,” Mr. Mitchell said. “I thought it was too
Mr. Mitchell was in his shirtsleeves, no sport
71
“What are you thinking about right now?”
James said.
I guess.”
“What am I thinking about right now?” Mr.
Mitchell repeated. He scratched at his head and then
crossed his arms. “Ticonderoga pencils,” he said.
James frowned at this but did not say anything.
“Alright then, I guess I’m thinking about
“Well you just asked me what I was thinking
Mr. Mitchell let the question mull over in his
down the front of his shirt. When he found the words
he wanted, he spoke, although pensively as to give the
illusion that he was finding the words as he went.
began to walk along the edge of the concrete.
loose and so he undid it altogether and just let it hang
James jumped up suddenly from the wall and
“I don’t want to talk about that,” he said.
“Am I weird?” James said again.
out his tie, but it kept feeling either too tight or too
their hands.”
brain for a bit. While he thought, he tried to straighten
Ticonderoga pencils and little girls with them stuck in
Mr. Mitchell shrugged. “That’s fine. That’s fine,
“I’d say you’ve got about, oh, I don’t know,
slightly more weirdness than your average third grader.
About. If I had to guess.”
about,” Mr. Mitchell said. “And that was it.”
James nodded solemnly.
“Yeah, I know. I just don’t want to talk about that.”
“My mother always tells me I’m not. Well, my
Mr. Mitchell watched as James teetered on
mother and father I guess. And this morning, that lady
told me I wasn’t.”
the wall. “Would you sit down?” he said. “I don’t like
you being that close to the edge.”
“Lady. You mean the−?”
“Sec-retary.” James pronounced the word in
“It’s not that high,” James said. He kicked at a
few leaves on the wall and spoke again. “Am I weird?”
two, his expression serious as he did so.
“Oh,” was all Mr. Mitchell could think to say.
James twisted his face into what looked more
“Why don’t you just sit down, huh? Why
don’t you just sit down here?” Mr. Mitchell patted
the concreate beside himself where James had been
like an imitation of a sneer than an actual sneer, like he
sitting just moments before.
didn’t want to actually wear the expression but more
“I don’t think I want to,” James said.
so wanted to try it on for size. He bent down then and
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ALLISON USELMAN | GLENN ELEMENTARY, 2PM
picked up a leaf from the ground. It was red along the
not looking and didn’t need to be to know what Mr.
inside, near the stem, but the outside edges were a
Mitchell was talking about. “He ran all the way in less
bright yellow. He pinched the stem between his index
than thirty seconds. I couldn’t believe it.” He shook his
finger and thumb and spun it back and forth four times
head for emphasis.
before letting it drop to the ground. He watched it until
it lay still. “I guess I’m pretty sorry about that girl Alice,”
“In twenty-seven seconds,” James said, still
digging the hole.
he said then. “Her hand was just sitting there and all,
on the table. I didn’t mean to do it, it just happened.”
“I think it was twenty-eight.”
“Sure,” Mr. Mitchell said. “I see.”
“No,” James said, looking up now. “No, it was
“It really did. I really don’t even know how it
twenty-seven. I remember.”
happened. I don’t.”
delinquent, always in the principal’s office, always
“Okay.”
spending your lunches with the counselors−”
“Really.”
“Oh? And why should I believe you? A
“Because I did it,” James said, not quite
James crouched down in the grass and
believing that Mr. Mitchell didn’t know this already
wrapped his arms around his folded knees. The
but still insisting on it nonetheless. “I ran all that way in
grounds around the two were still, no movement in
twenty-seven seconds. That was me.”
the athletic fields or the playground. Only occasionally
a wind came through and shook the trees, but even
Mr. Mitchell wagged an I-should-have-known
finger in the air and nodded his head theatrically.
that didn’t last for long, and everything grew still again.
“That’s right,” he said. “That’s right, it was you. It was.”
Before long James began to occupy himself by digging
a small hole in the ground with a twig he found lying by
his shoe.
just long enough for a bird to sound its call somewhere
There was quiet between the two for a time
by the athletic fields, the sound itself ringing hollow
“You know,” Mr. Mitchell said, breaking the
and thin throughout the school grounds, the way
silence. “I once saw a kid run all the way from that
bird calls in the fall often sound to those privy to hear
field to that swing set right there.” He pointed as he
them. Just after the far-off bird fell silent, the quiet
spoke to illustrate what he meant, although James was
between the two by the wall was broken.
73
started to scream and−”
“I’m not a delinquent.” The assertion came
softly from the space just beside the freshly dug
hole in the ground, in the voice of someone trying to
He broke off at the same moment that he
dropped from his squat to fully sitting on the ground,
convince themselves of a thought while not quite sure
his knees folded in front of himself where he could
about its truthfulness. On the wall, Mr. Mitchell shifted
easily hug them to his chest.
his weight so that he could get a better look at James,
who had by now dropped the twig altogether and was
again hugging his knees. With his right leg pulled up
He breathed in as if he were going to say something
onto the grass now and bent at the knee, Mr. Mitchell
else but then stopped, apparently thinking better of
raised his eyebrows at the boy and waited for him to
it. James, too, took in a rather deep, although shaky,
say something else. When he finally did speak, it was
breath and then remained silent. He began to wipe at
in the same small voice as before.
his face with seemingly no specific intent. He might
“Alright,” Mr. Mitchell said. “That’s alright.”
have been wiping away tears or frantically feeling to
“It wasn’t my fault, with the pencil. It wasn’t
see if his eyes, nose, and mouth were still where he
my fault.”
left them, it was difficult to tell which. Whichever one
“Oh?” Both parties were hardly speaking
it was, though, the two sat there in the grass, holding
above a whisper; if there had been even a slight wind,
their respective positions for an impressive amount
neither would have been able to hear one another.
of time, until in the parking lot, a good fifty feet away
from the retaining wall and just out of earshot, a car
“Her hand was just sitting there on the table.
pulled up and parked.
It was just sitting there.”
Mr. Mitchell was still; he was waiting for James
to speak, not prompting the boy in the slightest. In
fact, he looked almost accustomed to the act of
silently waiting for the boy to speak, hardly moving at
all for fear of disrupting him.
“It looked soft, and I had the pencil in my
hand.” James paused, starting to cry now. “And I
don’t know what happened, I just know that girl Alice
74
75
B R I D G ET T E BO O N E
Untitled
76
“For Carl Brandhorst”
Teotihuácan, ciudad de los dioses
SA RA H D E G N E R R I V E RO S
La puerta de la ciudad del fuego y del agua
The door of the city of fire and of water
es la calzada de los muertos que guía
Is the pathway of the dead who guide
a través de un arco iris celeste.
Through a celestial rainbow
Pasa por el camino de las estrellas,
That passes along the way of the stars
orientada al norte astrológico
Oriented with the astrological north
a la entrada del paraíso Tlolcán.
To the entrance of paradise, Tlolcán.
Entre nopales y agaves, sobre las piedras
Between prickly pear cactus and agave,
sube el pirámide de la serpiente emplumada,
The plumed serpent’s pyramid rises over the stones
hecho de los restos de las esculturas caídas
Built with the remains of fallen sculptures,
de la cabeza del jaguar, un templo
From the jaguar’s head, a hidden and discovered
escondido y encontrado en las entrañas
Temple in the womb of a volcanic mountain.
de un monte volcánico.
On these rocks depends the fertility of the earth.
De estas piedras depende
The gods keep watch; Cipactli,
la fertilidad de la tierra.
Scaled monster from the underworld,
Guardan vigilia los dioses Cipactli,
The caiman lizard and its duality,
monstruo con escamas del inframundo,
Tláloc, god of the water from the sky, the rain,
el lagarto caimán, y su dualidad
In feline form representing the morning.
Tláloc, dios del agua del cielo, la lluvia
en forma felina que representa la mañana.
Further along the walk of dead,
Rows of pilgrims wind along the profile
Más allá en la calzada de la muerte,
Of the sun pyramid.
los peregrinos hormiguean en fila
To the right of the stone road, they walk
por el perfil de la pirámide del sol.
Along the horizon that passes through worlds.
A la derecha de la calzada, pisan
The grey temple remembers when it wore
78
SARAH DEGNER RIVEROS | TEOTIHUÁCAN, CIUDAD DE LOS DIOSES
el horizonte que traspasa mundos.
Smooth stucco painted red,
El templo gris recuerda cuando llevaba
And when the gods were honored
un estuco pulido pintado de rojo,
In the form of a fetus buried inside the uterus of the earth.
y cuando se honraban a los dioses,
The death overcame them in asphyxia,
plantando la semilla del cuerpo humano
Their last breaths choking on the dust
en forma de feto en el vientre de la tierra.
In the womb of the volcanic earth.
La muerte les sobrevino en asfixia,
su últimos suspiros ahogados de polvo
At the far end of the walk, the pyramid of the moon
en las entrañas de la tierra volcánica.
Rises up in light, reflecting the sun.
The energy crisscrosses the stone steps
Al fondo de la calzada, se levanta iluminada
From side to side, zigzag. The angle detains
la pirámide de la luna que refleja el sol.
Human breath amidst the heights.
La energía cruza las escaleras de piedra
Raising the gaze to observe the mountains
de lado a lado, diagonal. El ángulo detiene
And pyramids from afar
la respiración humana con la altura.
Is to feel for a moment in time, looking down from
heaven,
Levantar la vista para observar de lejos
Like a god of history, as the owner of the past,
los montes y las pirámides abajo
The present, and the future. The moon keeps watch
es sentirse por un momento desde el cielo
And remembers everything that has taken place,
un dios de la historia, dueño del pasado,
Illuminating prophesies with every cyclical turn in the
del presente, y del futuro. La luna vigila
years to come.
y recuerda todo lo sucedido y profetiza
cada giro del ciclo del porvenir.
79
SA RA H D E G N E R R I V E RO S
Teotihuácan
80
81
JEN MEINHARDT
Solitude
82
Take a Deep Breath
D. E . G R E E N
Even the air we breathe is processed,
has to be now that the fires in the north
and west have flung particulate matter
across the continent. So we carry on,
don our masks and our oxygen tanks
before we sit down to play the harp
or piano—no trumpets or trombones
since we cannot inhale enough to blow,
Gabriel, blow any more—and pretend
life is good, still pretty good, as my friend
Bob likes to say, just as the gauge on the tank
veers toward empty and the lightning cracks
and the floodgates open and we become
curios and knick-knacks in nature’s wild parlor.
NOU-CHEE CHANG
Fantasy
84
G RANT BE RG
Big Muddy Mike
Washing Dolly,
St. Louis, MO
85
86
I am not deceived
RA C H E L B RO W N
I am not deceived
No I am not deceived
I am not totally made of water
even if I can’t get you now
but like liquid I seep through the cloth
when the ice caps melt
that wraps around your wide shoulders
there will be no more places
and I warp your bones
for you to slither
the way rivers shape canyons
and your high ground
cutting
will be under my waves.
cutting
eroding away until you’re brittle.
I will not be deceived
not again
I have seen the way
you snake inside of girl’s hearts
flick them with your split
pink tongue
and lap away at the moisture there
and while I am not water
like liquid I will encircle you
ophidian
snakes can swim but
only for so long.
88
Holding On
SA I RA M O NT E S M O O R E
mami does not speak
sunflowers & white roses
about the past
of Mexico
she died from the mistakes of my abuelo
abuela’s favorite flowers
in hushed voices I heard: sida.
of crossing
acquired immune deficiency syndrome,
how did we cross?
AIDS
eso que no te importa
it does not matter, what matters is that we are
her daughters do not grieve her anymore
here
I do but
here we have enough
no la conozco.
maybe one day I can stand on the soft earth,
it’s not enough
but the past won’t catch up if
with sunflowers and white roses in my hand
you forget and are gone
her name etched in the gravestone
maybe one day I’ll—
my phone shelters notes of scattered words Mami
lets slip from the life before me,
some days all I smell is patchouli, my father loves the
smell
she gives me these gifts
eres como el, inteligente
with softness and in passing
mami always compares me to him
but at night when all is quiet I wonder
memories barely clinging to reality
memories that could mean nothing but
how can you leave your niña?
I hold with a clenched hand at night
90
106
SAIRA MONTES MOORE | HOLDING ON
how do you sleep at night,
when all is quiet and your daughter does not love
you?
el no es mi papa, no lo conozco
I hold on to the past with love and coraje
I sleep at night with memories in my phone
with dreams of patchouli, sunflowers & white roses
No los conozco
maybe one day I’ll know them
maybe it will not matter
because I’m
here
92
night
108
AN D E R S SAT E R E N
Naked in the Nighttime
I
awoke in the fetal position, huddled under the
miles per hour. I sat alone in a seat toward the front
warm glow of a vending machine. As I sat up,
of the bus, head propped against the window, feeling
there was a nice, chilly sensation as my bare
the vibrations as we thundered along the highway.
butt cheeks pressed against the concrete floor. I sat
For the last fifteen minutes, my attention had been
there half-asleep, feeling the gentle rumble of the
split between the pages of the book in my lap and the
coin-operated soda dispenser against my back and
passing landscapes to my right as it changed from
tried to figure out what exactly was happening. In my
flat farmland to a wall of towering pine trees.
befuddled state, I didn’t fully realize the disturbing
reality of my current predicament. I was lost,
drew closer to our destination: Camp Wijamego. At
disoriented, and entirely nude.
A tangible excitement could be felt as we
my high school, there is a tradition in which, once
The bus traveled northward along Interstate
a year, the band, choir, and orchestra kids pile onto
35 toward Duluth, Minnesota, doing just over 70
buses and go on a fun little retreat together to
95
someplace the teachers deem exciting enough. We
that things would be okay, the lingering fear that my
then spend a few days engaging in miscellaneous
sleeping disorder would act up on this trip would not
musical activities, participating in team-building
leave the back of my mind.
exercises, playing games, before performing in a final
concert. I was a freshman, so I’d never been on the
under the
vending
machine,
it
didn’t take long for me to realize that I was, in
trip, but from what I’d overheard, it can be pretty
fact, not dreaming but rather living through the
lame. I took it over the alternative: going to school
absolute worst-case scenario for any high-school
and doing homework.
Back
student: being caught naked at a school function.
A low hum of high-school voices filled the
Understandably, I began to panic, my heart beating
bus, mostly originating from the back of the bus,
out of my bare, hairless chest. Given that my wiener
which was where the upperclassmen dwelled—the
was fully exposed, I quickly scurried out of the open
cream of the crop from Central High School. I sat
and into the dark nook behind the vending machine.
up front, listening, and could make out the voice of
I must’ve looked like Gollum or some other type of
Ryan Norman above the rest. We played on the tennis
demented creature while nakedly sulking in that
team together last year. Well, I was on the B-team,
damp corner. There were so many questions being
and he was on varsity. He was a junior, and I was in
hurled in my direction, and I had no answers for any
eighth grade so we never talked, but I’m pretty sure
of them; it reminded me of math class. Am I still in
he at least knows my face. Of course, he was also
the lodge? Why am I naked? Where are my undies?
the captain of both the hockey and soccer team, so I
doubt I was even a blip on his radar.
Okay, let’s pause for a second. While my
current predicament may seem rather odd to most
Anyway, we were all assigned random
ordinary people, waking up in places other than
roommates, and with my luck, Ryan and I were set to
my bed has actually been somewhat of a common
be roomies on this trip. I had not yet talked to him, but
occurrence throughout my life. I believe the formal
I could only imagine how disappointed he must’ve
term for the bizarre sleep disorder that I suffer from is
been to have to room with a freshman. That was not
somnambulism; however, most people affectionately
what was worrying me though. I had never been on
refer to it as sleepwalking. Throughout my childhood
a trip like this, and despite my mom’s assurances
and into my early teens, I would occasionally wake
96
ANDERS SATEREN | NAKED IN THE NIGHTTIME
up downstairs on the couch, on the comfy leather
Ryan would be fast asleep on the other side of it. News
chair in the living room, or in our creepy, dungeon-
travels fast in high school, and if even a single soul
like basement with the multitude of centipedes and
were to find out about this, the entire school would
spiders. One time, I even woke up in our front lawn,
know in a matter of minutes. I don’t know Ryan, but
cuddled up in the long grass. When I slept over at
somehow I doubt he would keep this secret for me.
friends’ houses, my parents would have to call ahead
The sheer embarrassment would be more than my
and warn that I might wander around their house or
fragile teenage psyche could bear. Every ounce of
raid their fridge in my sleep. It goes without saying
my being wanted to cower in my safe haven behind
that I wasn’t invited to many sleepovers.
that vending machine until the end of time, but that
would basically ensure my capture come morning
Anyway, as I made my way through puberty,
time. Eventually, I would have to leave my cove and
these nighttime escapades became less frequent,
journey out into the frightening world.
and by high school, they had all but stopped. I was
happy to have left my sleepwalking and bed-soaking
days behind me. Fast-forward to the end of freshman
formulate in my mind. I imagined that I was James
year. At that point in time, my sleepwalking had
Bond planning an elaborate infiltration of a Russian
become so infrequent that I wasn’t overly worried
embassy, except naked. My dossier made it clear that
about staying in a lodge in Northern Minnesota for a
avoiding detection would be absolutely imperative in
few days. Oh, how wrong I was.
order to complete the mission with my dignity intact.
Slowly but surely, a loose plan began to
It also read that in order to stand any chance of ever
Okay, deep breath, dude. Pull yourself together.
reaching my destination, I would need to figure out
Let’s try to be rational about this. Obviously, I need to
exactly where the hell I was. This meant that I would
get back into my room and for reasons that need not be
have to sneak around and find my bearings. I took
stated, nobody can witness me doing this. The problem
a deep breath, said a quick prayer under my breath,
is that the doors in this lodge lock automatically and
gestured a cross across my chest (I’m not Catholic,
specific key cards are required to unlock them. I highly
but I could use all the help I could get), and slithered
doubt that my sleepwalking alter-ego was considerate
out from behind the vending machine into the
enough to grab one of them on his way out. Simply
illuminated hallway.
knocking on the door is out of the question because
97
With one hand permanently cupped over
placed decorative plants. Similar to the Predator
my genitals, I tiptoed through a long hallway. Staying
scanning the jungles of Val Verde in search of its next
as low to the ground as possible, I glided down the
trophy-kill, I scanned the room for any signs of life. I
long corridor, all the while keeping my bloodshot
detected no movement and picked up no auditory
eyes peeled for any clues regarding my current
cues; everything was eerily quiet, a little too quiet
whereabouts. Dorothy’s yellow brick road may
if you ask me. Concluding that the coast was clear,
have led her to Emerald City, but mine led me to
I cracked the door a little bit more and prepared to
a door marked “Lobby.” My situation was still quite
make my big entrance; that’s when I saw him.
dire, however. I was at the very least relieved that I
was still in the hotel. There were no stairwells or
overweight, middle-aged man with a rosy-red nose, a
elevators leading out of the hallway. It seemed that
shiny baton hanging off his utility belt, and powdered
proceeding through the lobby was the only viable
doughnut residue caked onto the large caterpillar-
course of action. I stood in front of that door for a few
like mustache rested upon his top lip. I’m surprised
minutes and cursed this entire awful situation. What
a stream of urine didn’t go shooting down my leg as
had I done in a past life to deserve such dreadful
I lunged backward through the lobby door and, with
luck? There was a good chance that once I passed
two hands, covered up my nuts like a greedy squirrel.
through that door, I could very well become the first
Dear baby Jesus, tell me that he didn’t see me, I thought
documented case of non-consensual streaking. I
to myself. Every second felt like a million lifetimes as
was never cool enough to have been assigned a
I waited for that door to come swinging open and
nickname in the past, but now my fate as the “Camp
for my cover to be blown, but that time never came.
Wijamego Streaker” seemed all but sealed; social
Eventually, the stress-induced heart palpitations died
demise was inevitable.
He was your prototypical security guard: an
down and I gathered enough courage to peer into the
With my naked body as my witness, it was
lobby once again. The man (who I will affectionately
time to make my move. Slowly, I edged the door
refer to as Paul Blart from now on) was seated
open, one creak at a time and peered through the
motionlessly behind the front desk with his head
slit into the well-lit lobby. The large room seemed
tilted back slightly. The adrenaline pumping through
all but uninhabited, aside from a few strategically
my naked body must have heightened my senses
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ANDERS SATEREN | NAKED IN THE NIGHTTIME
because I swear that I could see his long mustache
sleeping security guard, I got down on all fours and
whiskers quivering in the hot wind escaping his
stopped breathing entirely. There was no way that I
nostrils. Paul was definitely fast asleep.
was going to risk disturbing Paul’s beauty sleep. Like a
Paul’s poor work habits were a ray of
sunshine in an otherwise dark, hellish nightmare. It
was this stroke of good fortune that gave rise to a
tricksy, devilish idea. Up to this point, I had no clue
how I was planning on actually getting into the room
little, naked mole-rat, I quietly crept along the ground,
inching ever closer to the treasure awaiting me behind
the desk. I was nervous, exhausted, and sweaty, but I
had to endure. There was too much on the line to turn
back now.
once I arrived at my destination. Paul’s deep slumber
provided me with the means of entering the room
tentative crawling, I arrived at the side of Paul’s desk.
undetected: a room key. On the shelf directly behind
I couldn’t see him yet, but I could hear the deep,
the dozing behemoth were a few small stacks of key
reverberant rumble of his breath. I’m sure it also
cards. If I could slip past Paul and grab one of the
reeked of powdered doughnuts and cheap coffee.
keys, I would practically be home free! This would
As I peer around the edge of the desk, I found myself
be an extremely delicate and potentially hazardous
face-to-face with a pair of stained khakis. Now was not
maneuver, but acquiring one of those fabled key
the time to be distracted by Paul’s life habits; I needed
cards would be necessary if there was any hope of
to focus, retrieve the key card as quickly and quietly
this infiltration ending in success.
as possible, and put as much space between my
As I slowly crept into the lobby, I felt like Bilbo
Baggins entering Smaug’s lair for the very first time. I
was fully exposed. If only I had a ring that could grant
me the power of invisibility. Stealthily, I slithered
across the large room, getting closer and closer to
the front desk. The gravity and sheer ridiculousness
of what I was about to attempt felt like the weight
Hand. Knee. Hand. Knee. After ten feet of
naked body and the crime scene as humanly possible.
Without making a peep, I rounded the corner of the
desk, made my way past the dirty khakis, and headed
towards the prize. Almost there, almost there... Then
out of nowhere, I heard a heavy grunt and cough echo
out behind me. Every nerve in my body tensed up and
I curled up into a tiny ball on the floor.
of a thousand suns on my bony, teenage shoulders.
With only around ten feet separating me from the
Considering how startled I was, I’m surprised that a
99
In his deep slumber, Paul had stirred.
little turd didn’t plop out of my bare bottom onto the
around and began cautiously crawling away from
carpeted floor. I lay there on the ground scrunched
Paul, my unclothed booty raised with pride.
into a ball, eyes plastered shut and completely in the
nude. I didn’t move a muscle. I was so nervous that I
in unnoticed. Compared to everything that I just
wouldn’t be shocked if my heart had stopped beating
endured, this would be a piece of cake! On the other
entirely. After a few of the tensest moments of my life,
hand, walking around the halls of a camp in the nude
I opened my eyes and slowly looked behind me. Paul
was no time to get cocky. When I eventually pass
had shifted slightly, but he was still out cold. If I dared
away, I guarantee that Lady Luck will track down my
to make any noise, this is when I would’ve left out a
gravestone herself and chisel in, “Pride goeth before
massive sigh of relief. I had to put this minor speed
the fall.” My room was on the fourth fl
oor, and I guess
bump behind me and continue on my quest, though.
that it was too much to ask for me to walk up four
God, what I would give to be back in my bed right now,
flights of stairs because some irrational, stubborn
wrapped in a warm blanket. No, stop! Now is not the time
part of me decided that it would be a good idea to
to fantasize! At this point, I was a mere foot from the
take the elevator. Like a stupid lab rat, I was enticed
key cards. They were so beautiful that I could’ve cried.
by the cheese and foolishly entered the trap. Upon
At that moment, I wanted one of those keys more
entering the metal box of doom, I nonchalantly
than anything in the world; it would be my ticket out
tapped the button for the fourth floor and watched
of this nightmare and back into reality.
the heavy doors slowly screech shut.
I had traversed the lobby, slipped past
Paul—the
fearsome,
slumbering
All I had to do was get to the room and slip
dragon—and
The elevator jerked up floor by floor as I
leaned against the wall, eyes closed and head resting
finally, I had arrived. The treasure was within reach.
contentedly upon the cool metal. Things were going
Despite the circumstances, I felt a very real sense
well, considering the position I was in less than an
of accomplishment. With a slight grin, I hooked my
hour ago. At this point, I had gotten quite used to my
arm up and grabbed a handful of key cards off of
au naturel state, but even at four in the morning, I was
the counter. There was no way I was going to risk
fearful that the elevator would come to a halt and an
the card not working, so I took a few backups, just in
unsuspecting visitor would enter my naked, metal
case. After retrieving the precious cargo, I shimmied
tomb. Yet in a surprising turn of luck, I reached my
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ANDERS SATEREN | NAKED IN THE NIGHTTIME
floor without any hiccups or roadblocks. I was home
room behind him.
free at last! Yeehaw!
I could hardly look at Ryan as I passed him, but
Despite this, upon exiting the elevator, I
I wasted no time getting into the room, immediately
checked both ways to make sure the coast was
slipping into my Pink Floyd boxers. He followed me
clear. It was, thankfully. Yet again, as I made my way
into the room.
down the hallway, I found myself close to the ground,
sneaking like a ninja in the night. But then, I saw it.
“I woke up in the middle of the night and
couldn’t fall back asleep. It took a while to notice you
The promised land, Heaven, Valhalla, whatever you
weren’t here.”
want to call it; it was there: my room. Okay, just sneak
in unnoticed and put all of these shenanigans behind
you. Upon approaching the door, I let out a deep sigh,
once more cursed my dreaded somnambulism, and
“Yeah, I had some business to attend to.”
That was all I could come up with. I was now
perched on the side of the bed, looking down at the
reached out for the door. But just then, with a creak,
ground in shame.
the doorknob began to turn from the inside. Again,
as if on cue, the fear I had felt many times that night
flooded my senses. I watched in horror as the circular
“Apparently.”
knob rotated ninty degrees, turning and turning,
“With no clothes on?”
Ryan eyed me down, looking for answers.
I sighed. It would be easier just to explain.
figure, gawking. It was Ryan, the senior, in his pajamas,
“Well, this has happened before. Well, never
looking down at me, eyes wide as saucers. It was
quite like this but...yeah, I sleepwalk.” Ryan stood there
clear he was trying to comprehend exactly what he
for a moment, nodding, before going off on a tangent.
before letting out a slight click and popping ajar.
The door opened, and before me stood a
was looking at and really struggling with it, looking at
this skinny, pale, naked body in front of him. After a
sleepwalked into my room and peed all over my
few moments, he blinked as if coming to his senses.
“You know, one time my little brother
Pokémon cards, a whole binder full.”
“Uh...come in,” he said, gesturing towards the
101
I looked up and Ryan was now smiling, telling
his story.
same way it had been all year, only a nod from Ryan
as he looked up and saw me passing by.
“And then he walked over to the other
side of the room and peed on my Godzilla comics.
Everything I had ever loved!”
Now I was smiling.
“Man, I tell ya, I was so mad I could’ve killed
him. I screamed at him for hours the next day, How
hard is it to make it to the toilet!”
I was in no mood to laugh, but the conclusion
of his story made me chuckle. Ryan let out a smile,
now done reminiscing.
“I would’ve been mad too,” I agreed.
I awoke the next morning in my own
bed, thankfully, yet still filled with the dread and
embarrassment of the night prior. Ryan wasn’t in
the room, and I assumed he was already down at
the mess hall for breakfast. I slipped on my jeans, a
hoodie, and my sneakers and went off to face my
social reckoning. Upon arriving at the mess hall, I
found Ryan and posse already gathered there at a
table in the corner, no doubt waiting to get a peek at
the freshman who was found wandering the grounds
of Camp Wijamego in the nude. Yet as I walked past
their table, there were no jeers, no taunts, no social
ridicule. There was nothing from the seniors, the
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JEN MEINHARDT
A Warm Place to Sleep
103
104
Identity Circle in 3 Parts,
Ending with a Trek through
the Antarctic Desert
T E R R E N C E S H A M B L E Y J R.
The only glow radiated from a string of icicle lights
laid semi circle in the center of the room.
Our group gathered in a nervous halo
around it, the lights candle dim
hypnotic & spook.
The leader of the halo, a little black girl
turned self assured chair woman
says take a step into the circle if you identify as African or black
and we all step.
Step into the circle if most of your friends are the same racial
or ethnic background as you
and we all step.
Step into the circle
if you ever felt like you don’t belong
and we all step.
Step into the circle
if your authority figures look like you
and no one steps. Step into the circle
if you ever watched the fire die
in a set of eyes that are brown
as yours, whether in person or on video
and we all step.
Step into the circle if you routinely hear stormtroopers
spit I feared for my life as an apology
106
TERRENCE SHAMBLEY JR. | IDENTITY CIRCLE IN 3 PARTS
and we all step. Step
if you ever felt unsafe walking the streets at night
and we all step. we all step. we all step.
My eyes are fixed on the icicle lights the whole time.
As we step its glow is a swinging medallion a spoon tap to a coffee mug
a calm hand up a puppet’s back
and when the leader says take a step
if one of your parents is an alcohol or drug user
I’m the only one that steps
enough for the both of them. Take a step if you a stutterer
only I step. Take a step if you identify as queer
only I step. only I step. only I step.
Take a step if you identify as non-binary
my feet twitch
whole body jerk and stop like slammed brakes a myriad of irises pierce holes in my skin
and my eyes are fixed on the icicle lights
laid semi circle in the center of the halo
the whole time.
Its glow is a sneaky portal.
A lone body landlocked
like a peeling corpse
gawked by a ring of crows.
And as the lone body stands
107
idle there’s a snap in landscape a poof of halo
a vanish of room and lights
and emerges a plot of bald frozen snow
repeating into the distance.
The lone body steps.
123
109
MELISSA FLORES
Mickey
110
Lies My Drug-Dealer
Told Me
MICHAEL LEVINE
Television, as dramatized as it may be, can only teach you so much
I thought I had it all figured out at eighteen, but rather the drug had me as its crutch.
I tried it. I loved it. I used it more than anything in life,
And the only thing that I carry with me today is the awarded t-shirt and much strife.
Years went by and a decade removed,
While looking back, I am the only one that noosed.
When I went to buy drugs for the first time,
No one told me that these drugs would become more important than a perfect rhyme.
Not only lies my drug-dealer told me, but lies I told me
So that I convinced myself that this is who I wanted to be.
Once it set in that I made a mistake,
I thought that I could undo it by a few more extra minutes to bake.
Treatment centers, jails, and suicide attempts became more of who I am
Than scholarships, marathons, and a full container of jam.
I have been caught in a cyclone of cynicism meshed with regret,
Even Eddie Vedder living my life would have missed that fret.
112
128
MICHAEL LEVINE | LIES MY DRUG-DEALER TOLD ME
Retiring my drug catalog,
Now the time has come where my fog
Has begun to dissipate,
And those lies I am beginning to hate.
I know the direction in which I am starting to lead
And thankfully I no longer have to worry about putting in a not-guilty plea.
114
115
DAN I E L L A C L AY TO N
Worry
116
The Seven Deadly Sins
MEREDITH CARSTENS
Beware:
Violet-armored horses trot with hubris
Orange-tongued pigs leave fields fruitless
Emerald-eyed dogs covet man’s glories
Midnight blue cows graze warm bodies
Crimson-stained bears break spears and quivers
Yellow frogs desire more than the golden rivers
Sapphire goats idle by celeste waves
and will stay ‘til the end of days.
They lurk in the shadows,
A dark reflection which shows
Our flawed mortal souls bare.
118
The Streetlighter
GABRIELA LUCÍA
Do I know you?
I feel I should
as a flame dances in your hand
like sunset on your palm.
Meandering
down my calf, meeting
the underskin
of my knee.
Every knot untwists,
Bluedark slips between our fingers,
and my body bends
for you.
The fire undying
patterns my side
and the warmth crawls
like rainfall from the ground. Now your hands are laced
around my waist, a binding
I cannot escape.
And every unsung lullaby
seeps from my heart
when
you do
let me
go.
120
121
JEN MEINHARDT
Stranger
122
Friendly
KAT H R Y N G RA H A M
There is a man
like a ghost,
who is taller than me
like a monster,
and broader than me
behind me,
and much, much older than me
in the dark.
and whom I know to be
a bit too friendly.
There is a man
who took my safe place
There is a man
and poisoned it with terror,
who sends spiders crawling under my skin,
with dread of a surprise.
brews witches’ potions in my stomach,
grows vines up my throat,
Because there is a man
and shakes the earth around me.
who is taller than me,
and broader than me
There is a man
and much, much older than me,
who never touched me,
and whom I know to be
never spoke a threat,
a bit
and yet there’s fear
too
that fills me up,
friendly.
that drains me.
There is a man
I avoided in memories
and pushed aside
like someone I never met,
until he appeared again
124
Dad
JEN MEINHARDT
Aries is incompatible with Cancer,
and he was Aries and yet the cancer got him.
A fire sign standing on the beach
where Cancer became a wave, a chitin tsunami rising dark across the horizon.
Cancer sucked
the shoreline
of his future
out, out,
o
u
t,
and then sent it crashing back in again. Cancer covered the Aries fire,
dousing his flame and finding its way into the brain
and with the lunar pull of the moon it tracked,
down,
down,
down,
pulled by gravity
along the outer orbit of his spine,
paralyzing lungs as Cancer flooded them even
after the waters receded.
Dry drowning, a
doused fire sucks out oxygen
126
142
JEN MEINHARDT | DAD
leaving no flow to the brain.
Cancer laps at the banks where Aries
stood and each wave that hits the ground strikes,
eroding it in a crumbling chorus of
Abide With Me Fast Falls the Evening
Tide.
128
NOU-CHEE CHANG
life of a designer
129
130
I Am an Alchemist
JEN MEINHARDT
I submerge my skin and transmute the water
no forlorn contemplation, the past spirits away
from clear to deep blue, a hue the shade
along with the steam and I breathe, lungs
of distant Neptune, and I
expanding further then they have before. This is
have been immersed in stars.
the alchemy of life turning the lead of the everyday
I stare, enraptured
into golden, glittering sparkles.
at the captured heavenly bodies,
twisting and turning they glint
around my heavenly body, reflecting
the light of the lamp that makes my distant sun.
Comprised of a stick of sandalwood incense,
a flame in the cosmos burning down and pressing
into every gap like the way a child might press her
nose into her papa’s neck looking for cologne and after
shave,
safety and musk combined into one.
Together smoke and steam are breathed in through
my lungs and with another spell are expelled
into the air where they circle the room in a
translucent veil of lazy cosmic ghosts
looking for their next haunting.
Puckering my lips I blow a steady stream of
magicked air and they dissipate before the power
of my voiceless incantation. Banished remembrance,
132
CARSON HUGHES
A Date With Death
L
ike everything else in his life, Ted had managed
nebulous, pitch-dark cloak. Ted could only nervously
to screw this date up. He knew he should have
stare as a putrid brown rapidly devoured the crimson
called in and made a reservation at L’arnaque
petals of the half-dozen roses he had bought for her,
Chère, the most luxurious, yet quaint French eatery in
twisting and wrinkling their foliage into dried tendrils.
town. Instead, Ted sat with his date Lady Death, Reaper
It was becoming quite clear that the roses wouldn’t be
of Souls, Mistress of the Damned, and Goddess of the
up to the standards of Target’s return policy.
Styx, at the local Olive Garden, waiting on another
round of unlimited breadsticks. It certainly didn’t help
Ted thought of what he could say. What does
one say to the living embodiment of death itself,
that his chosen topics of conversation, ranging from
let alone a woman? Ted’s efforts to say something
how surprisingly little traffic there was on the way
witty, charming, or insightful were a futile practice.
here to the ridiculously high prices of gas these days,
He was simply not the type of person who could say
didn’t seem to interest her at all. He could already feel
witty, charming, or insightful things. On the contrary,
the disappointment radiating from underneath her
133
most of what Ted had spoken throughout his life was
that seemed to emerge over and over again no matter
completely unnecessary. Ted’s words swam where the
how many times Death popped the pus out of it.
tributaries of cliché entered the river of small talk. His
openers for any conversation were, “Some weather
“I think I’m going to head to the washroom,”
Death finally replied.
we’re having,” and, “Did you catch the game last night?”
which lacked any reverence for the type of weather or
game being discussed. Prying an original sentence
catching himself mid-blunder.
from Ted’s lips was like trying to extract the last drop
of toothpaste from a flattened tube. Whether it be
“Wait, you go to the—” Ted asked before
Death sighed. “This was a mistake.” This
wasn’t the first time Ted felt his name tied to the word
for a best man speech or for the eulogy at his father’s
“mistake,” and he was confident it wouldn’t be the
funeral, Ted could never be expected to summon up
last time either. Mistakes defined Ted’s life before he
anything greater than a “Merriam-Webster’s dictionary
was even born. He was the unfortunate byproduct of
defines fatherhood as…”
four Coors Lights, three sunrise margaritas, the men’s
“You know, these breadsticks are actually
bathroom at a Chili’s in Gainesville, Georgia, and a
pretty good,” Ted offered with a nervous chuckle.
broken condom. After the inevitable shotgun wedding,
“Not as good as how you look tonight, of course,”
Ted was born feet-first in the breech position, resulting
Ted stammered a few moments later with a line as
in a cesarean scar his mother never forgave him for.
smooth as extra-chunky peanut butter. The steam
from his minestrone that had tickled his lightly
Death gazed down upon the insignificant,
cowering mortal. “I thought the man who could see
whiskered upper lip withered away as Ted waited for
Death would be a lot more interesting.”
an acknowledgement from the ceaseless, encloaked
void. What thoughts could be dancing in that
shadowy ether?
wrong foot,” Ted responded. “But you have to give me
“Look, I think we may have gotten off on the
a chance.”
That motherfucker, Death thought. Not this
shit again. Unfortunately for Death, it was this shit
“I don’t have to do anything!” wailed Death.
again. This mortal male habit of interpreting any and
“R-right,” stammered Ted. “What I mean to say
all kindness as insatiable lust was an annoying blemish
134
CARSON HUGHES | A DATE WITH DEATH
is, I’m sorry the reservation fell through, but this is a
here and a grandmother there, Death’s visits turned
unique experience for the both of us. It would mean a
from calamitous uncertainty to comforting certainty.
lot to me if you stayed, just for a few minutes. I mean,
Death’s arrivals were a routine reassurance that the
what’s a few minutes to a timeless, eternal, and, may I
world was operating how it was supposed to be, like
say, quite beautiful being like yourself?”
a rolled-up newspaper waiting at the doorstep every
morning. Ted became so well-acquainted with Death’s
If Death had eyes she would have rolled
habits that he wasn’t the least bit surprised when he
them. Unique this certainly wasn’t, though a State
found his father choking on his own hunting rifle and
Farm Assistant Manager professing his love in the
his brains splattered across the attic of his parents’
confines of a faux Italian restaurant was new for
home.
her. The Ernest Hemingways, Cleopatras, and Kurt
Cobains of the world had all tried to woo her and
even they weren’t able to tie her down. Still, within the
confessed. “And I know you’re probably just waiting to
manatee-shaped man before her was a dangerous
get out of here so you can collect more souls, but I think
secret she needed to know. So Death responded
it’s good to recognize that first impressions can often
the only way she could. “Oh my god! You think I’m
be deceiving. You probably know more than anybody
pretty?” she expressed coyly.
how misleading first impressions can be, right?”
Ted couldn’t believe his luck. As they sat
down, Ted breathed in Death’s familiar chill that was
“Look, Death, I gotta say, I like you a lot,” Ted
“Wow, you’re sooo clever!” Death cooed while
tossing her head back as if she had hair to flip.
more bittersweet than bitter. His longing looks into
the obsidian void where her face should be would
Ted blushed. “Well, State Farm doesn’t let
just anyone be employee of the month five months
have disgusted Ted when he was younger. Ted was
in a row.”
just six years old when he and Death first met. Sparky,
the family basset hound, was crushed underneath
Dad’s 1988 Dodge Ram after he returned home at 3
appreciation flattered Ted, though he couldn’t recall
AM from the pub, forever staining its “MILF Hunter”
telling a joke.
bumper sticker. Like most children, Ted hated Death
at their first encounter. However, after a few goldfish
135
Death giggled. “You’re so funny, Ted.” Her
Ted spent the next 22 minutes and 46
seconds regaling Death with his most famous
end waiting for everyone. I have always belonged with
exploits, from the time he spotted a mouse by the
you, I just never realized it until now.”
copying machine and heroically alerted his coworker
Fred Pawlenty so that he could catch it to the time his
“I feel the same way,” Death responded. “I
knew it ever since you roamed through all those
expert couponing skills landed him 78 percent off of a
different rooms at that hospital trying to find me.
Tide detergent combo pack with a second pack free.
Speaking of which, how were you able to find me? And
All the while, Death responded with equally impressive
please, be specific.”
contributions to the conversation such as, “You look
really good in that polo,” and, “You have such a great
taste in dining.”
cheery “How are you liking your meal, folks?” Ted
became transfixed by the waitress’s blue eyes. Her
“I feel so connected to you right now,” Ted
blonde curls, round cheeks, and open smile made her
professed. “Can I tell you something?”
“Of course,” said Death.
“If there’s one thing you should know about
“Well you see—” He was interrupted by a
appear like a golden retriever with two tennis balls in
its mouth, wagging its tail in anticipation for another
round of fetch. She wore a black button-0down shirt
with a green button that greeted, “Hospitaliano!”
me it’s that I have always felt off,” Ted admitted.
“It’s like I’m not supposed to be here and I just got
squeezed into the middle of everything. I’ve never
got some reports of a manchild talking to himself, so
been particularly important to anybody. I’m just an
I decided to take over. How’s it going, Death? I didn’t
assistant manager at the State Farm down the road. If
expect to see you in a place like this.”
I fell into a ditch tomorrow, someone would be there
to take my place before you even got to me. Dad’s
“I hope you folks don’t mind a new server. We
“That’s interesting, Life,” Death retorted.
“Because a place with plastic scenery is exactly where
with you and Mom’s down in Florida getting Julian to
I would expect to find you.”
lather suntan oil all over her. Point is, life hasn’t been
kind to me, and at a certain point a guy has to start
asking himself ‘What has everything been for?’ I finally
such a charmer. Speaking of charmers, I see you
figured it out. You are the goal. You are the one at the
brought a friend, and it looks like he’s one of mine.
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Life giggled. “Oh, Death, you always were
CARSON HUGHES | A DATE WITH DEATH
What’s your name?”
horseshit. What made you decide to go into that
The bright glow that radiated off of life
hospital and try to find me?”
seemed to seep into every pore of Ted’s body. “T-t-t-tted Ted Butkus, ma’am.”
“No, no,” Death exclaimed. “Skip all that
“Well, my life was going nowhere, and I was
looking for some finality and…”
“Well aren’t you as cute as a deer in headlights,”
cooed Life.
“That cocksucker!” Death shouted.
“Y-y-you think I’m c-c-cute?”
“Excuse
“Sure, in a sickly kind of way. If dying elephant
me?”
Ted
replied.
“Is
there
something wrong?”
seal is your type,” Life growled. “You always did like the
ones who were pale, bloated, and infested with pests,
to kill themselves because they’re thinking ‘Hey, that
didn’t you, Death?”
Death chick is pretty cool. Black looks really slimming
on her. It sure would be fun take a drive out with her
“Shouldn’t you be out earning your minimum
while we sing Ramones songs at the top of our lungs.’
wage by getting us our check?” hissed Death.
“Life! It’s always Life. Nobody ever decides
Nope, it’s because Life started to treat them like shit,
“Of course, sweetie,” Life bubbled. “But I’ll give
which she always does, by the way, and they think, ‘Oh,
you two lovebirds plenty of time to catch up while I
well Death isn’t so bad I guess. I can settle for her. She’s
do it.” Ted turned around to watch her walk away and
a pretty good number two and she’ll take anyone. Yep,
didn’t even mind it one bit when Life jammed her heel
she’s reliable like a goddamn newspaper!’”
into his toes. Suddenly, Ted began to shiver as an icy
aura began permeating throughout the room.
sick, moist texture of living flesh. “You know…” started
“Here’s a question,” Death growled. “I want
Ted. “I could always take you out driving—”
you to think carefully. Think hard. Actually use your
feeble little mind for once to actually think. Why did
“Oh stop it, you creep!” Death slapped his
hand away, leaving a little bit of rot on his palms. “One
you decide to come and profess your love to me?”
Suddenly, Death’s pearly white hands felt the
more comment like that and I swear to God, I’ll make
“Well, it started with my childhood…”
you immortal.” Ted jerked his hand away and nursed
137
too-hard-to-swallow ego of yours for twenty minutes
the curious new bumps with his thumb.
and you feel like you’re on top of the world. Welcome
“I just don’t understand why people like
to Life. That’s what she does, lifts you up to take you
her more,” Death grumbled. “All Life does is toy with
down when you have something she wants to take
people. She turns every person into her own little
from you.”
game manipulating them from winning the state
soccer tournament to fracturing their spines, getting
married to the loves of their lives and finding out
Life had a different plan, birthing their first children
“Life’s a bitch,” Ted offered.
“Please don’t patronize me,” Death responded.
“The only reason I’m telling you any of this is because
only for them to grow up to be disappointments. It’s
there isn’t a singular person in the entire history of the
wave after wave of happiness, shit, happiness, shit,
world whose opinion I care about less than yours.”
happiness, and do you know what comes next? Shit. I
don’t play games. When you’re with me, you know how
it is. There’s stability. If I want to hurt you, I always will. If
Ted replied. “One time I almost got on Jeopardy. I
I want to love you, I always will. I’ll never lay my lips on
filled out the registration, took the test, auditioned,
a man I hate or wrap my hands around the neck of a
everything. They told me I qualified and was all set
woman I love. The most influential book in the entire
to go on the show, but they accidentally invited the
world promises that being with me will be a paradise,
wrong Ted Butkus. In the end, I just had to settle for an
but still no takers.”
autograph from Alex Trebek. So trust me, I know all the
“Death, you know you’re the only one for me.”
“I cannot believe this. Are you really so dense?
“I’m serious. I know exactly what you mean.”
crazy turns Life can put someone through.”
“Look, I appreciate the sentiment, but it’s
clear that even you, ordinary, mediocre, forgettable
I don’t care about you. I never cared about you. I’m just
you, would still prefer Life than settle for Death. I
trying to get you to tell me how you can see me, how
mean, look at where we are right now. If you wanted to
you can sneak up on me. You think that bubbly ‘You’re
find me, if you really wanted to find me, all you had to
so smart and talented, Mr. Butkus’ is me? No, that’s
do was take the rifle out of daddy’s mouth and put it in
just my impression of Life, and you fell for it. That’s
yours. Instead, you wandered around, looking for me,
shallowness for you. All I had to do is raise that not-
still clinging to her.”
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CARSON HUGHES | A DATE WITH DEATH
The conversation settled, and all was quiet.
better when I saw you for real, in your real form.”
The table became a bubble of silence in a room filled
with the slurping of soup, the crunches of breadsticks,
as though the void within the cloak was churning,
and the whining of children. Ted stared at the noble,
bubbling, stewing. Had this been another mistake?
eternal figure of Death, hunched over, swirling a lone
He knew he should have said nothing. Death slowly
finger in her zuppa toscana.
turned to meet Ted’s eyes. “Would you like to see my
It was in that moment that the most unique
face?” she whispered.
thing happened to Ted. A thought. A simple little
thought. Ted hadn’t experienced a thought in ages,
Ted nodded. Death pulled her hood back.
Ted’s flesh began to tingle. The hairs on his arms
but here it was. The thought planted its roots into
twitched and stood upright as goose bumps began
the fertile, untouched landscape of Ted’s mind. The
to rise. They expanded and grew bulbous and filled
thought bloomed and grew larger and larger still, until
with pus. The swelling spread until it looked as if
the point Ted could no longer contain it, until the point
tumors covered Ted’s entire body. They bubbled and
Ted finally had something to say.
Death was a corpse, still and silent. Ted felt
swallowed his eyes and lips, turning his face into a mass
“I’ll tell why I can see you. It’s Life. Or actually
of red, wriggling bumps of flesh. His body ballooned
the absence of life. Nobody knows, you Death, not
as if it were being pumped full of helium. Within just
really. You drift in and out of Life so infrequently. And
one second, it was over. Ted exploded, pieces flying
well, that’s what I do too. I spend so little time with Life
across the restaurant, covering the ceiling, floors, and
that I got stuck in the same plane as you. That’s why
even customer’s entrees. Death wore a smile as she
even though we’ve met so many times before, I didn’t
laughed with delight.
really see you until Dad died. When I climbed up that
attic staircase, I didn’t feel frozen like all of those times
before. You weren’t a thief in the night this time; you
were a healer. You cured the house of being filled with
demented wailing in the halls and fist-sized holes in
the walls. You’re a miracle-worker that puts an end to
age, disease, and mortal wounds. That made it all the
140
ELIZABETH IHEKORONYE
Lights in the Dark
141
142
percolating
GABRIELA LUCÍA
Let it come creeping
Let her sigh
into your bones
seep
like rain
or ocean into
bedrock.
Let it slosh against the sides
Of your veins.
Let her sing and fill up your spaces,
your darkness with sound—
cold, loud sound—
Like rain on the ocean.
Let her love you and she’ll love you
until she
doesn’t.
144
American Ecstasy
D. E . G R E E N
Jazz in my ears
yeah I want all of you the east
classic vocals
west north and the south of you
the American Songbook
& want you to take all of me too
I love like I love
you go to my head you champagne
you my dearest
bubbles sparkling Burgundy brew
my potato-potahto
got that old feeling once again
tomato-tomahto
more than you know – pow! – I love you
my all-I-do-is-dreamof-you-the-whole-daythrough beloved
my delightful delicious
delirious delectable
deluxe de-lovely
you must remember this
when we two lovers woo
when we still say I love you
you are my oh-my-man-I-lovehim-so my all-through-the-night
girl my anything-goes mate
146
CARSON HUGHES
Bullets, Cardboard, and Slobber
I
hate dogs. I mean that and not in a “Oh, I’m not
on a planet that has over 70 percent of its surface
really a dog person” kind of way. I hate dogs with
covered in the stuff.
a gluttonous fire in my belly, the kind that inches
through your blood and scrapes at your flesh and
I can already hear a chorus of protests
shouting, “But dogs are man’s best friend,” but the
bone. And what’s not to hate about them? They’re a
truth is, dogs are every man’s best friend. A dog’s
bunch of freeloaders that will tear your socks apart
love is unconditional in the worst possible way. You
the moment you take your eyes off of them. A dog is
one of the most poorly designed animals there is. They
drop hair, saliva, dirt, fleas, just about anything you can
think of, like a piece of macaroni art held together by
a purple Elmer’s gluestick. Worse yet, some moron
could club seals for a living and every dog on Earth
would still love you. Even Hitler had a dog who loved
him. That kind of love is just a feeble imitation of the
real thing. I love yous shouldn’t be handed out like
candy. Embraces and kisses are precious, and like all
thought it would be a great idea for dogs to release a
precious things, they have to be earned.
pungent stench as soon as they’re exposed to water,
147
It turns out there is a limit to my anti-dog
paper and a bright red bow. After hanging up the
agenda; that’s why I found myself spending my
phone, Mom led Dad to our living room as I ran in
Saturday night 25 miles from home with a nearly dead
loop-de-loops around our tree.
flashlight and thorns in my legs trudging through the
heart of the Montgomery Woods. Olaf is his name, a
sing-song voice she used only for special occasions.
massive, dark-furred hellbeast (Newfoundland) with
I plopped down next to her and Dad on the couch,
an empty-eyed smile and a white crescent moon on
but my legs still ran right above the floor. “Now Max,
his chest. He’s lousy, even for a dog, but Mom loves
can you sit still and smile for me?” she sang. I happily
him, so I guess it’s worth the scars.
“Sweetie, over here,” Mom called in that
obliged and stretched my mouth agape into a toothy
The thing is, Olaf was never supposed to be
almost-smile. The press photographers snapped
our dog in the first place; he was a replacement. The
our pictures, and Dad handed the box to me. “You
first dog I had ever received was a golden retriever
can open your present now, dear,” Mom cooed after
named Freya. It was an exciting time for everyone. It
receiving a thumbs-up from the lead photographer.
was Christmas, and Mom had just won her first Senate
I opened up the box to see two chestnut eyes and a
campaign with a 5 percent margin of victory the
sunny face peering up at me, sparkling in the flashes
previous month. I remember lying on the floor with a
of the cameras. “According to the breeders, her, her
new package of markers in hand, drawing smiley faces
name is Freya,” Dad slurred. I pressed her tightly into
on Mom’s ankles while she babbled on the phone with
my chest until she started pawing to get free.
words that meant nothing to me as a seven-year-old.
Suddenly, Dad burst through the front door looking
Loosening my grip, I allowed Freya to leap free.
I was delighted to see her turn in a circle and begin
like he’d come from the North Pole. His red cap and
scratching her ear with her back paw. I crawled down
shoulders were covered in patches of snow, and his
on the floor next to her and ran my fingers through
beard was flipped upwards, veiling his nose and eyes.
her fur. Mom bent over on the couch to get a better
“Ho, ho, ho!” he bellowed with a voice that stank of a
look. “Hello, Freya,” she gushed in a high-pitched voice.
sourly sweet concoction of candy canes and vodka. I
Freya turned from me and wagged her tail in response.
squealed with glee as Dad lumbered forth, carrying a
“Come on up here, Freya,” Mom encouraged. She
box decorated with Christmas tree-themed wrapping
clapped her hands on her knees and showed Freya
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CARSON HUGHES | BULLETS, CARDBOARD, AND SLOBBER
her famous smile. It was tender smile, the kind that
After bringing the box to my bed, I held it tight to my
radiated a soft glow and made your anxieties drip
chest. I was kept awake by Freya’s whimpers and the
away like a popsicle at the beach. It was the smile she
scratching at the cardboard, but after a few minutes
wore every time she had a picture to pose for, a voter
the sounds ceased.
to sit down with, and a kid to tuck in. It was the smile
that made Dad, me, and now Freya fall in love with
many parenting books on what to do if your kid
her. Drunk under my mother’s enchantments, Freya
accidentally kills his new puppy, so I guess Olaf was
jumped into her lap and proceeded to cuddle with her
as good a solution as any. But instead of becoming
the rest of the evening.
Enter Olaf, the replacement dog. There aren’t
my childhood trauma band-aid, Olaf became my
With the night over, the photographers
worst nightmare. What they don’t tell you about
gone, Dad passed out on the couch, and Mom on a
Newfoundlands is that underneath all that fur is
conference call in the study, I took the opportunity
200 pounds of pure canine muscle that will come
to have Freya all to myself. I carried her into my room
barreling at you every time you get home from school.
and allowed her to lie by my pillow. A clattering noise
Of course, it’s not enough for Olaf to incrementally
shook me up from my sleep. Freya barked frantically.
shatter my ribcage day by day. When that animal
Holding my palm to her mouth, I tried to listen. Not a
hammers me into the dirt, he has to come over and
burglar, just another one of Mom and Dad’s shouting
inspect me and press that massive tongue on my
matches. After a while, everything was silent, and Freya
face. Then comes the drool. This frothing, soggy, pasty
stilled, until Mom’s voice rang through the house.
secretion dribbling down from a mouth which spends
“Freya!” The little golden retriever burst with energy
most of its time eating unidentifiable substances
but was held back my embrace. I felt a sharp pain in
found in-between couch cushions, onto my already
my finger from the sudden clenching of teeth into
starstruck face. Olaf is more slug than dog, leaving a
my skin. I whimpered and held Freya so tight that she
trail of slime wherever he goes.
whimpered too. Determined to keep her from leaving,
I grabbed a shoebox out of my closet and pinned her
in the box. I placed the lid on top and weighted it down
However, none of that compares to his
neediness. Personal space must not be something
they teach in dog training. If I sit down for a moment,
with a large textbook filled with pictures of dinosaurs.
he comes trotting over and rests his head in my lap
149
like he deserves to be pet just for being there. If I’m
But soon enough, I didn’t have to worry about that
at the dinner table, he’s there right under my feet,
happening anymore.
not even begging for scraps. If I’m in bed, he’ll jump
up and even when I push him off the mutt will still
A bullet changed everything. Some deranged
lunatic thought he was a holy prophet, and of all the
lie down at my bedside. Even when Mom gets home
seven billion people in the world, he decided that my
from Washington and she gives him a smile and a
Mom was the antichrist. I was in the middle of one of
kiss on the head, he’ll just wag his tail in response and
my drawing sessions when I got a call. A bullet lodged
head over back to me. Them Mom will always say, “I
in her neck. At the hospital. May never walk again.
guess not everybody’s excited to see me,” and, “Max
Possibly terminal. I don’t remember the trip there. I
you should be spending more time studying and less
can’t remember what the doctor said or how I even
time with Olaf.”
ended up in a room with my mother’s body, tubes
As much trouble as Olaf was, he was at least good for
protruding from her skin. Nothing we can do right now.
keeping me preoccupied. I didn’t need an excuse
That’s what he said. Or she. I just remember leaving
anymore when Mom tried to bring me along to
the hospital. ‘I’ll go back,” I thought. “I just can’t take
fundraisers or dinners with her colleagues. Instead of
waiting alone. I’ll get a book to read to her.”
dodging questions like, “Have you thought any more
about working at Senator Murray’s office?” and “You
I forgot about the book as soon as I opened
the front door. Pow! I felt Olaf’s head tackle right
thinking about Princeton Tiger like your mother?” I
into my stomach. He approached, ready to lick his
could sit at home and draw. Nothing profound really,
slobbering tongue all over me. “Enough!” I shouted.
just comics. People consider it to be a low art, but
That’s when I noticed it. Chunks of paper in between
there’s something about them that speaks to me. It’s
his teeth. I darted into the front room, and I could
the one thing I do that Mom would never approve of. If
barely breathe. There were bite marks on the dining
she found the stacks and stacks of comics that I keep
room table’s legs. Pillows and socks were shredded
hidden under my bed, she would pin me to the wall
all over the floor. A trail of slobber led directly to my
with her eyes. Her voice wouldn’t be angry, or sad, or
room. My comics, everything I had ever written kept
even disappointed. With a cold utterance, she would
in a shoebox under my bed, had been ripped apart.
simply state, “You’re becoming just like your father.”
There were pages where a clean bite had been taken
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CARSON HUGHES | BULLETS, CARDBOARD, AND SLOBBER
from them. Others laid finely shredded like confetti.
laugh while tears stream down your face and you grab
Some were no doubt in Olaf’s stomach, and other
the leaves, the branches, and the dirt around you.
pages, as I would soon find out, laid in a pool of vomit
You toss everything wildly into the air because who
on the kitchen floor. I didn’t cry. I didn’t yell. I smiled,
cares anymore. And then you realize something is off.
with the most intoxicating smile I could and said,
There’s something wrong with the grass below you.
“Come here boy!” We got in the car and drove straight
So you run your fingers through the ground below
to Montgomery Woods.
you, and you realize it’s sticky. You stop because it’s
familiar and you’re right to think it’s familiar because
I don’t know why I went back for Olaf. Maybe it
holy shit, Olaf, for once in your life your drool is useful
was for Mom. Maybe it was out of guilt. I just remember
for something!
sitting in the hospital room with a notebook in hand,
trying to recreate all the work I had done. It was
useless; I couldn’t even pick up the pencil. I sat curled
long, following the trail of slobber. Eventually, I made it
over my bruised stomach running my fingernail over
to a river’s edge. That’s when I saw two sparkling brown
the cardboard backing of my notebook and listening
eyes look at me from across the bank. “Olaf, come on,
to the whine of the machines. Right then, something
buddy!” I shouted. He didn’t move and as my eyes
told me that I had to go back.
adjusted to the darkness, I saw that his face was not
I crawled on the ground for I don’t know how
as dopey as it was before. “Olaf, come on!” I shouted.
When you’re in the middle of the woods
“Mom needs you!” Olaf started to turn around, and I
searching for a dog that has ruined your life’s work
dashed down the river bank and through the river.
at 1:18 AM and you have no idea what’s happening to
Splash! A pain seared through my foot, and water filled
your mom in the hospital and your flashlight dies, do
into my lungs. My body was soon swept up by the river,
know what you think? You don’t pray for your mom,
and my hands felt withered and torn as they scraped
you don’t curse the God who made this world, you
along the sediment at the bottom. I reached out for
think, “My fucking flashlight is dead. My Fucking
a large boulder in the middle of the river. Slick with
Flashlight Is Dead!” Then the panic sets in and you
blood and water, my hands couldn’t grab on and I was
start realizing the dog is probably dead, either caught
once again dragged by the current. Suddenly, a tug at
by a bear trap or eaten by a bear, and your dumb ass
my back stopped me in my place. I could feel myself
has no way to get home. So you kick around. You
151
being pulled against the current and onto shore.
Olaf stood above me, and licked and licked
and licked, but this time I didn’t resist. I simply held
Olaf close in my arms and for once I didn’t care that
his wet fur smelled like shit.
152
My Dad Was[n’t] an Uncaught
Serial Killer
JEN MEINHARDT
I once thought my dad was an uncaught serial killer stalking
The gated California communities because once I was
scrolling through some web pages and I saw a sketch that looked like him
but like, younger? As young as I remember him when he died,
swollen face, bald, and leaking pus from the cracked edges of his putrid dry skin.
And maybe because I was young,
And maybe because he was young? And maybe because the article said he smelled sick.
And maybe it’s because I barely remember him but the time he stuck his salty fingers
in my mouth and told me to suck that I’m inclined to be so mean as to believe he could be a
serial killer.
And maybe it’s even because in his first round of cancer as a young man doing IT work between
Omaha, Nebreaska and along the west coast of California leaving his young wife alone
With three kids in a trailer that I’m inclined to be so mean.
Or it’s probably because he wasn’t really there, but neither was mom but the occasional
Saturday where the social worker would drive us to see them. This is your parent, see, even
though
They don’t like? Parent? You?
Anyways. It was a cold case and it wasn’t him because he died in 2000 at 34 and this happened
In the 70s and the case was only concluded in 2018 when they caught the ex-cop who
Was killing people in an unofficial capacity.
Anyways,
boy did I feel silly.
Sorry, Dad.
154
GABRIELA LUCÍA
stages of sleep
T
hough I don’t have a thing for bad boys, I do
name into my skin.
have a thing for mediocre ones with absent
fathers and degrees in film, a subset of boy
incessantly kicking me in the head. I can’t fall asleep
which is arguably much worse.
knowing he’s sleeping somewhere, undreaming, and I
I keep picking his name into my skin. I can’t fall
can’t stop having nightmares, even while my eyes are
asleep because I keep picking his name into my skin.
open and staring at the red 4:05, :06, :07, :15, :28.
The red collects underneath my fingernails.
I can’t fall asleep with 50 mg of Trazodone
Though I was blessed with no acne on my
Red 4:04 glows on my face, reminding me
ass, I was also blessed with long, strong fingernails
that I can’t fall asleep because I keep picking his
for reopening closed wounds all over my body, over
155
and over again. Like I’m retreading my footsteps. A
fretting, spitting, and affixing my fists but never flexing or
nightly ritual.
sticking the landing.
Moon peers in through the slats of my
blinds and paints a square of light on my legs. I look
at moon, imagine liquifying her and pouring her over
my Frosted Flakes. I imagine Tony the Tiger sitting at
the foot of my bed, smoking a cigarette. I imagine
having sex with Tony the Tiger. I regret this.
I know I should have broken up with him (not
Tony the Tiger) when I tried to spoon him one night
near the end, and he pushed me out of bed, and
while I hunched on the floor, I imagined for one brief,
electric moment that I grabbed him by the hair and
pulled his head clean off.
Oh
What
is
this? Oh
I think I feel it
coming
now.
Grease
lick,
steep
slick,
spilled
liquid
underneath and spreading, heading east or was it west,
unsending every letter I’ve ever regretted sending, ending
every era of dick-clit contact and that’s that. Instead of
nibbling split ends, spending and sweating, flipping and
156
Summer Night Haiku
RA C H E L B RO W N
Shadows flit like moths
outside my bedroom window;
It’s too hot to sleep.
158
ISSUE 44
2 019
MURPHY
SQUARE
LITERARY MAGAZINE
AUGSBURG UNIVERSIT Y
Show less
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Title
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Augsburg Now Fall-Winter 2018: Remarkable Achievements
-
Collection
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Alumni Magazine Collection
-
Search Result
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Literary scholar on skates
Athletic facility spotlight
Sesquicentennial co-chair Q&A
Research and student success
REMARKABLE
ACHIEVEMENTS
FALL–WINTER 2018 | VOL. 81, NO. 1
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Director...
Show more
Literary scholar on skates
Athletic facility spotlight
Sesquicentennial co-chair Q&A
Research and student success
REMARKABLE
ACHIEVEMENTS
FALL–WINTER 2018 | VOL. 81, NO. 1
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Director of Marketing
Stephen Jendraszak
jendra@augsburg.edu
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
On “Yes, and … ”
I teach the Honors Senior Seminar each spring,
which is always a highlight of my year, and one
of the class sessions introduces students to the
history and practice of improvisation.
I invite members of our theater faculty and
local improv performers to come to class to
help us understand why improv is so important
to places like Chicago (think Second City) and
Minneapolis (think Dudley Riggs’ Brave New
Workshop). Then the fun begins.
The improv artists invite us to the front
of the classroom where we are taught some
basic improv skills. Embarrassment aside,
these sessions are full of life lessons. My
favorite exercise goes like this: one student
makes a statement related to an assigned
topic. Perhaps the topic is the weather, and
the student proclaims, “Wow, is it hot.” The
next student then answers, “Yes, and ... I’m
sweating like a faucet.” The next student
continues, “Yes, and ... my faucets often leak.”
You get the point. No one is allowed to
say “No” or even “Yes, but … ”—it’s always
“Yes, and … .” That’s how improv works, and
I believe that’s how Augsburg works when we
are at our best.
We live in a “No” and “Yes, but … ”
world—a world of scarcity that keeps us
from risking ourselves in relation to others.
Improv teaches us the way of abundance, a
way that finds we are better together. “Yes,
and … ” builds upon the gifts of others
to help us live healthier, more just and
compassionate lives together.
The anthropologist Mary Catherine Bateson
offers this helpful word: “Improvisation and
new learning are not private processes; they
are shared with others at every age. We are
called to join in a dance whose steps must be
learned along the way, so it is important to
attend and respond.”
This issue of Augsburg Now is full of stories
of “Yes, and … ”—including highlights of
our planning for next year’s sesquicentennial
celebration, Augsburg’s 150th anniversary.
What a grand celebration it will be, as we
recall the abundance of our founding in 1869,
the decades of educating students for lives
of meaning and purpose, and the promise of
Augsburg’s mission in the years ahead.
Yes, and ... it will be good!
Faithfully yours,
PAUL C. PRIBBENOW, PRESIDENT
Director of Public Relations
and Internal Communications
Gita Sitaramiah
sitarami@augsburg.edu
Assistant Director of
Marketing Management
Laura Swanson Lindahl ’15 MBA
swansonl@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Elizabeth Kästner
kaestner@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Denielle Stepka ’11
stepkad@augsburg.edu
Marketing Copywriter
John Weirick
weirick@augsburg.edu
Communication and
Social Media Specialist
Briana Alamilla ’17
alamilla@augsburg.edu
Advancement Communications
Specialist
Kaia Chambers
chamberk2@augsburg.edu
Web Manager
Joe Mann
mannj@augsburg.edu
Contributing Writers
Katie (Koch) Code ’01
Kate H. Elliott
Kelly O’Hara Dyer
Augsburg Now is published by
Augsburg University
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Opinions expressed in Augsburg Now
do not necessarily reflect official
university policy.
ISSN 1058-1545
AUGSBURG NOW
IN FOCUS:
Fall–Winter 2018
Surprising sights worth a
first (or second) glance
02 AROUND THE QUAD
This fall, Philadelphia-based artist
Margery Amdur created mixed media
installations in Augsburg’s Christensen
and Gage Family galleries. Amdur’s
art emphasizes the creative process
and incorporates unusual materials—
including cosmetic sponges. The
exhibition was presented as part of
a collaboration among Augsburg,
Bethel University, Minneapolis College
of Art and Design, and St. Catherine
University in conjunction with the
publication of the book “Creative
Practices for Visual Artists.”
08
ANNUAL REPORT TO DONORS
10
NO PLAIN JANE
14
CARVING PATHS FOR THE FUTURE
16
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE THE DOME
20
BANNER YEAR IN STUDENT SUCCESS
23
AUGGIES CONNECT
27
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
32
IN MEMORIAM
On the cover: Undergraduate researcher and biology major
Angelica Diaz-Juarez ’20 waters plants in Augsburg’s Hagfors
Center grow room. Learn about Auggies’ research experiences
on page 20.
COURTESY PHOTOS
Inset cover photo by Deanna Dent, Arizona State University
All photos by Courtney Perry
unless otherwise indicated
Here’s a new take on the “spring thaw.” Virtually all summer and fall, the Augsburg Ice
Arena was iceless, which allowed construction crews to complete facility improvements,
including installing a more environmentally friendly refrigerant system and upgrading the
ice sheet floors from sand to concrete bases. Augsburg’s two-rink facility opened in 1974 and
is used extensively—not only by the university’s men’s and women’s hockey teams, but also
by community groups, youth sports leagues, figure skating clubs, and recreational skaters.
Send address corrections to:
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu
Send comments to:
now@augsburg.edu
THAT’S GROOVY. Augsburg students
celebrate the start of the school year
Have you ever seen a dance floor filled with people swaying to the sound
of … silence? That’s what a silent disco looks like. But the amusement
was anything but muted for those who took part in an Auggie Bash
hosted by the Augsburg Student Activities Council this past September.
Participants wore wireless headphones tuned in to one of several audio
channels playing a variety of music styles. This unusual approach to
parties encourages dancers to move and groove their own way and to let
their uniqueness shine as brightly as their neon headwear.
THE
AUGSBURG
PODCAST
Listen to the podcast online
at augsburg.edu/podcast or
download episodes from iTunes.
2
AUGSBURG NOW
Hear Augsburg University faculty
and staff share stories of their
work with students in their own
words. Launched this fall, the
Augsburg Podcast is a new,
18-episode series offering a
variety of perspectives on the
university’s most important work:
educating students for the future.
StepUP makes
NATIONAL HEADLINES
NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt put
Augsburg University’s StepUP® Program
in the spotlight this May by showcasing
its success in helping students in recovery
complete their college education.
NBC’s Catie Beck interviewed Neil King ’18
about the support he received from StepUP
as a full-time student at Augsburg.
Beck also interviewed StepUP
Progam Director Tamarah Gehlen. “We
always say that no one should have to
choose between recovery and a college
education,” Gehlen said.
King, who began using drugs at age 14,
discovered the StepUP Program four months
into his recovery. “I really learned to believe
in myself and my skills and capabilities,”
said King, who’s now pursuing a master’s
degree at the University of Minnesota.
UNIVERSITY AWARDS
Top 200 Schools for Indigenous Americans: The
American Indian Science and Engineering
Society Winds of Change magazine selected
Augsburg as one of the 2018 Top 200
Schools for Indigenous American and
Alaska Native students pursuing degrees in
science, technology, engineering, and math.
THE PARADOX OF PEACE:
The 30th Nobel Peace Prize Forum
INAUGURAL
PHOTO BY REBECCA ZENEFSKI SLATER
The Nobel Peace Prize Forum in Minneapolis marked its 30th
anniversary in September. The forum, hosted and presented by Augsburg
University, celebrated the achievements of the 2016 Nobel Laureate,
President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia, and the 2017 Laureate,
The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, represented by
Executive Director Beatrice Fihn. The program explored the intertwining
complexities and paradoxes of water, conflict, and peace.
“The paradox of peace lies in the paradox of the human condition—
that we are capable of great love and great cruelty, that we are always
a mix of some amount of ability and vulnerability. To achieve peace,
we often have to fight for it,” said Joe Underhill, Augsburg associate
professor of political science and director of the forum.
Schwartz Professor of Choral
Leadership and Conducting
This fall, Augsburg named Kristina Boerger
the inaugural John N. Schwartz Professor of
Choral Leadership and Conducting. Boerger
leads a visionary program honoring Augsburg’s legacy of engaging both
music majors and non-music majors across campus.
“Kristina Boerger has collaborated with leading composers and artists
in creatively advancing the field of choral study and performance,” said
Augsburg University President Paul Pribbenow. “Her work has garnered
national recognition, and we’re excited to have her join Augsburg.”
With a strong commitment to inclusion, access, and equity, Boerger
brings to Augsburg a long and diverse professional practice of
exploring music from varied cultures. She has worked in public
school, collegiate, community, and professional settings. In
addition to her achievements in commissioning and premiering
new works, Boerger served as director of three choirs that earned
critical acclaim from The New York Times. She holds degrees in
music education and conducting from the University of Illinois.
Best Regional Universities by U.S. News &
World Report: U.S. News & World Report again
named Augsburg one of the Best Universities
in the Midwest, ranking the university No. 5
among the Minnesota schools on the list for
undergraduate teaching, No. 10 on best value
schools, and No. 14 for most innovative.
Best in the Midwest by The Princeton Review:
This year, The Princeton Review again
named Augsburg one of the Best in the
Midwest for academic excellence.
Best Value in Minnesota: Best Value Schools
ranked Augsburg No. 6 on a 2018 list
of 20 Best Value Colleges or Universities
in Minnesota. Rankings are based on
graduation rate, net price, acceptance rate,
and 20-year net return on investment.
Top LGBTQ-friendly Colleges and Universities:
Augsburg was named to Campus Pride’s list
of the top 30 LGBTQ-friendly colleges and
universities in 2017 and 2018. Campus
Pride is the leading national organization for
creating safer, more LGBTQ-friendly colleges
and universities.
Augsburg delegation
honors Mandela centenary
An Augsburg University delegation that
included administrators and Board of
Regents members traveled to Namibia
and South Africa for Nelson Mandela’s
centenary celebration. While there,
Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow
visited the university’s Namibia
operations and met with students.
Here, he’s pictured in Cape Town
with guide Shireen Narkedien.
COURTESY PHOTO
AROUND THE QUAD
Augsburg adopts
test-optional admissions policy
NEW AUGSBURG
BOARD OF REGENTS MEMBERS
Matthew Entenza, senior advisor on energy and the economy to
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton, was elected chair of the Augsburg
University Board of Regents at its October 6 meeting.
In addition, the Augsburg Corporation, at its annual September
meeting, elected three new members to the Board of Regents and
re-elected six members.
Elected to their first term on the Augsburg Board of Regents:
•
Mark Johnson ’75, retired city planner and
former president of Sonju Motors in Two
Harbors, Minnesota
•
Terry Lindstrom ’73, drug discovery
consultant and former Eli Lilly distinguished
research fellow in Indianapolis, Indiana
•
Nancy Mueller ’85, physics and chemistry
teacher in Rochester, Minnesota
Mark Johnson ’75
Elected to a second or third term:
•
Diane Jacobson, former director of the
Book of Faith Initiative for the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America
•
Terry Lindstrom ’73
for Hagfors Center for Science,
Business, and Religion
Toby Piper LaBelle ’96, senior vice president
of Northland Securities, a Minneapolis
securities brokerage firm
Nancy Mueller ’85
•
LaJune Thomas Lange ’75, former co-vice
chair of the Minnesota Supreme Court Task Force on Racial
Bias in the Courts and of the Minnesota Supreme Court Task
Force on Gender Fairness in the Courts
•
Dean Sundquist ’81, chairman and chief executive officer
of Mate Precision Tooling in Anoka, Minnesota
•
David Tiede, former president and professor of New
Testament at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota
See the full list of Board of Regents members
at augsburg.edu/about/leadership.
4
AUGSBURG NOW
AUGSBURG ACHIEVES
LEED Gold Certification
Dr. Steven Larson ’72, chief executive officer
and chairman of the board of Riverside
Medical Clinic in Riverside, California
•
This past spring, the Augsburg faculty approved
a pilot test-optional admissions policy, making
submission of ACT or SAT test scores optional for fall
2019 first-year and transfer undergraduate student
applicants, except in specific circumstances.
“The test-optional admission policy aligns with
Augsburg’s mission of intentional diversity and
is expected to increase the university’s pool of
completed applicants each year,” said Nate Gorr,
assistant vice president for innovation.
For a number of student populations,
standardized test scores may not reflect an accurate
indication of academic ability—including, for
example, people without access to test preparation
courses and tutors, those who can’t afford to
retake the test, people with learning and physical
differences, and English language learners. This
policy change also aligns with Augsburg’s holistic
admissions process, which looks at quantitative
metrics and beyond. The application-review process
allows Augsburg to maintain the university’s
academic standards and ensure Augsburg admits
students with the capacity to succeed.
Augsburg University’s new signature
interdisciplinary building—the Norman and
Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business,
and Religion—achieved Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design (LEED) certification
from the U.S. Green Building Council. In keeping
with Augsburg’s commitment to environmental
stewardship, the Hagfors Center was
designed to incorporate elements that
maximize resource efficiency and
minimize environmental impact, both
in its construction and throughout
its operational lifetime. LEED is one
of the most popular green building
certification programs used worldwide.
HAGFORS CENTER
RIVER SEMESTER 2018
A group of 15 Augsburg University students, two professors, and two guides
departed August 24 in 24-foot voyageur canoes to spend the semester
studying, researching, and living on the Mississippi River. The students
and their guides are traveling nearly 1,000 miles, making stops to camp at
several locations.
The River Semester, led by Associate Professor of Political Science
Joe Underhill, is a unique 100-day, hands-on, interdisciplinary program.
Students earn 16 credits studying biology, environmental science, health
and physical education, and political science. This is Augsburg’s second
time conducting the program; the first was in 2015.
Experiential education is a trademark of students’ Augsburg experiences.
“We do this because we think this is the best way to learn both about the
Mississippi River and about what’s going on out in the world,” Underhill said.
Students return to the Twin Cities on December 1.
COURTESY PHOTOS
2018–19 CONVOCATION SERIES
In October, Augsburg’s annual convocation series kicked off with
the Bernhard M. Christensen Symposium featuring author and
educator Rahuldeep Gill and his presentation, “Who Are ‘We?’ A
Sikh Perspective on Vocation, Justice, and Death.” Through his
lectures and workshops, Gill works to build pluralism and crosscultural relations to inspire connected communities on campus,
in the workplace, and in the marketplace.
In November, the Center for Wellness and Counseling
Convocation welcomed Gloria Burgess, pioneering scholar,
author, and international inspirational speaker. Her presentation
was titled “Greatness Lives in All of Us!”
SAVE THE DATE:
Join us Monday, January 21,
for the Martin Luther King Jr. Convocation. All
convocation events are free, public, and held
in the Foss Center. For more information, go
to augsburg.edu/convo.
FALL–WINTER 2018
5
A look at environmental privilege
with social worker Christina Erickson
Whether it’s popping up in social media news feeds or emerging in conversations held
around the dinner table, the concept of “privilege” is rising in the public consciousness.
“Privilege has become a serious area of inquiry in recent years,” said Augsburg
Professor of Social Work Christina Erickson. “White privilege and male privilege have
hit the spotlight, as have racial disparities in policing and the #MeToo movement highlighting harassment and sexual
assault. Environmental privilege is a related phenomenon, and, while it seems to be an understudied area of privilege
(and not the only one), it is still important, probably more than we realize.”
Erickson teaches courses in environmental justice and social change, and she’s taking on the challenge of exploring
environmental privilege in greater depth. She is the author of “Environmental Justice as Social Work Practice,” a textbook
designed to bring an understanding of environmental privilege into social work curricula.
Q:
A:
How do you describe
environmental privilege?
Environmental privilege is having
access to a resource simply because
of your social identity categories—race, age,
gender, income, and geography. Studies
have shown that if you have a higher
income, you likely have more green space
near your home, work, or school. Not to
mention owning a cabin, attending summer
camp, or even seeing people who look like
you at our most beautiful natural spaces. If
you use all the water you want for your daily
self care and other activities without thinking
about it, you have environmental privilege.
Q:
A:
Is environmental justice similar to
social justice and, if so, how?
Environmental justice and social
justice are intricately linked in ways
that we have only begun to discover
and name. For example, kids living in
neighborhoods with poor air quality are
missing school due to asthma more than
6
AUGSBURG NOW
kids breathing clean air. If you can’t
go to school, your chances for school
success, which leads to adult success,
are inhibited.
Q:
Can you describe environmental
injustices and the disparities
some groups face?
A:
In 1987, research found that
waste facilities were most often
near neighborhoods of people of color,
many of them containing toxic waste.
Even our own Minnesota nuclear power
facility, located near Prairie Island
Indian Community, is an example of how
some people are forced to live closer to
environmental burdens than others.
Q:
A:
Why is it important to reflect on our own
privilege, and how can we dismantle it?
Dismantling privileges is one of
the ways we create social change.
When we think about creating shifts in
society, we generally need to stop certain
behaviors—such as racist hiring practices
or sexual harassment—to integrate new
behaviors to take the place of the old.
Augsburg already has taken a stand on
water—we encourage our entire campus
community to refill water bottles from our
own taps, which environmental studies
students tested for safety.
Q:
How does your social work
background align with your work
in environmental justice?
A:
For most of my life I viewed myself
as a social worker who was an
environmentalist. It wasn’t until coming
to Augsburg, collaborating on our
interdisciplinary environmental studies
major, working with my social work
colleagues on privilege and oppression,
and participating in our Environmental
Stewardship Committee that I began to
recognize myself, in an integrated way, as
an environmental justice social worker.
AROUND THE QUAD
MINNESOTA URBAN DEBATE LEAGUE
receives renewed support from three area foundations
The Minnesota Urban Debate League, a program of Augsburg University,
entered the 2018–19 school year with a full head of steam thanks to funding
and partnership support from three Twin Cities grantmakers.
• With a $25,000 grant from the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota, MNUDL
will launch a program centered on building financial literacy skills. Young
women will learn financial concepts using the format of academic debate,
which breaks down abstract concepts and makes them more relevant. Funds
from this grant also will offer a cohort of women and gender-nonconforming
students the opportunity to attend The Advocacy Unit, an advocacy skills
training summer camp that takes place on Augsburg’s campus.
• MNUDL will reach even more students in St. Paul Public Schools using
a $40,000 grant from the St. Paul Foundation. MNUDL will add four middle
school programs over the next two years. Funds also will make it possible for
MNUDL to expand culturally specific debate programs for Spanish-speaking
and Somali students.
• A $40,000 grant from the Otto Bremer Foundation will provide general
operating support, helping MNUDL expand a variety of priorities, including
increasing summer camp opportunities for middle and high school students.
AUGGIE STYLE:
Athletics apparel, then and now
Forty years of serving
American Indian students
In October, Augsburg’s American
Indian Student Services celebrated
its 40th anniversary. The program
has been a national model of success
since 1978. Approximately 130
students representing more than 25
tribes are enrolled part time or full
time in Augsburg’s undergraduate
and graduate programs.
Special invitees to the 40th
anniversary reception included
Bonnie Wallace, Augsburg regent
emerita and the first director of the
AISS program, as well as current
Board of Regents members Eric Jolly,
Marlene Whiterabbit Helgemo, and
Noya Woodrich ’92, ’94 MSW.
Today Augsburg University’s varsity athletes wear high-performance gear that aligns with their high-caliber
capabilities. Many Auggie teams are sporting new uniform styles following Augsburg’s name change and a
recent partnership with BIG Athletics to supply athletes with adidas apparel, uniforms, footwear, and accessories
over the next five years. Here’s a glimpse at how current styles compare to those worn in years gone by.
See other athletic uniforms
at augsburg.edu/now.
1979
1930
1998
1975
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
2017–18 AUGSBURG UNIVERSITY
ANNUAL REPORT
TO DONORS
Thank you. Your giving supports current and future Auggies
as they gain skills and knowledge to thrive in their careers,
pursue advanced scholarship, and achieve in leadership
roles after graduation. Learn more about opportunities to
support an Augsburg education at augsburg.edu/giving.
ENDOWMENT MARKET VALUE
May 31, 2018—$48,136,083
$40.5
$38.3
EXPENSES BY CATEGORY
38%
33%
19%
4%
3%
2%
1%
Salaries and benefits
Financial aid
Operating expenses
Debt services
Utilities and insurance
Student compensation
Capital improvement
$32.4
$28.2
$39.4
$29.8
$24.5
2007 2008
Fiscal year 2017–18 operating budget:
$68,736,254
2009 2010 2011
2012 2013
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
As of May 31, 2018, Augsburg University had annual realized and unrealized gains of
10.19 percent on the university endowment. The five-year average annual return on
the endowment is 7.11 percent and the 10-year average annual return is 4.70 percent.
Augsburg is committed to maintaining the value of the principal to provide support to the
university in perpetuity.
$123.6
PHYSICAL PLANT VALUE
REVENUE BY SOURCE
76%
7%
7%
7%
3%
Tuition
Room and board
Private gifts
and grants
Other sources
Federal grants
$48.1
$34.6
$33.3
$31.5
$43.9
$103.4
May 31, 2018—$123.6 million
$73.9 $75.6
$73.8 $70.8
$68.7
2007 2008
2009 2010 2011
$67.9 $65.5
$63.6 $65.5 $62.8
2012 2013
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
The quality and value of Augsburg’s physical plant is on the rise. The largest recent
contributor is the Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion, which was completed
in November 2017.
Augsburg University is stronger and more vibrant than ever.
Investments in priorities like scholarships, experiential learning, research, and faculty mentorship
change the trajectories of students’ lives. We are deeply grateful for your generosity and the generosity
of alumni, parents, and friends who helped Augsburg raise $18,187,380 during fiscal year 2017–18.
The philanthropy of more than 9,400 donors will help the university attract talented students and the
dedicated faculty and staff who teach and guide them.
THIS IS WHAT GRATEFUL AUGGIES LOOK LIKE
THIS IS WHAT A
PEACE SCHOLAR
LOOKS LIKE
Lex Dorfman ’18
Mabeth Saure Gyllstrom Scholarship, Helen (Mohn) Henderson Scholarship,
Mary E. (Mimi) Johnson Scholarship, Hoversten Peace Scholarship
Hometown: Minnetonka, Minnesota
Studying: Religion, Spanish, and Leadership
Lex Dorfman ’18 spent her summer in Norway studying alongside students from around the
world. As one of two Peace Scholars selected at Augsburg this year and funded by the Hoversten
Peace Scholarship and other donors, Dorfman’s time in Lillehammer and Oslo was part of a robust
program designed to pair academic inquiry with real-world dialogue and to give students an
introduction to the field of conflict studies.
For Dorfman, the Peace Scholar program aligns with many of the topics she’s explored
throughout her college experience. Also an Augsburg Interfaith Scholar, Dorfman called on her own
multicultural background to found a Hillel organization on campus and to foster new opportunities
to build connections between people from diverse backgrounds. “Augsburg has offered me a
personal, hands-on education,” she said. “I have been able to create an organization on campus,
interview Jewish leaders, and collaborate with a variety of students because of Augsburg’s
engaging and small-but-powerful community.”
THIS IS WHAT AN
ALL-AMERICAN
LOOKS LIKE
Alex Wilson ’19
Arne and Jean Markland Scholarship
Hometown: Oak Grove, Minnesota
Studying: Biology
Alex Wilson ’19 can put the title “All-American” next to his name in two different contexts.
Competing in his first NCAA Division III National Championship tournament last March, the
Auggie wrestler earned All-American honors with a fifth-place finish at 149 pounds. He also
was among eight Augsburg wrestlers to earn the Division III Scholar All-America distinction
from the National Wrestling Coaches Association based on student-athletes’ GPAs.
Whether he’s facing an opponent on the mat or looking to ace an exam, Wilson has a
drive to excel that will serve him well as he applies to competitive graduate programs and
pursues his dream of becoming a physician assistant. For Wilson, Augsburg is a place where
there’s harmony between athletic and academic achievements. “Augsburg has helped me
develop as a student and as an athlete by giving me all of the resources I would ever need to
be successful,” Wilson said. “Faculty support creates an atmosphere where it is possible to
succeed in whatever you do.”
THIS IS WHAT AN
ENGAGED CITIZEN
LOOKS LIKE
Baoyia Kong ’19
Leola G. Anderson Scholarship, William and Anne Frame
Scholarship, Adeline Marie (Rasmussen) Johnson Scholarship
Hometown: St. Paul, Minnesota
Studying: Social Work and Psychology
Baoyia Kong ’19 has the guts to just dive in. When she studied at Augsburg’s Center for
Global Education and Experience site in Cuernavaca, Mexico, the social work major interned at
a grade school, helping administrators infuse inclusive practices into the school’s operations
and culture—and honing her Spanish skills along the way.
Whether studying in Minneapolis or Mexico, Kong sees Augsburg as “a community with so
many opportunities.” Kong has enhanced her academic experience by seeking out opportunities
beyond the classroom, completing an additional internship with Hennepin County, volunteering
at a medical clinic in Augsburg’s Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, playing intramural volleyball,
and joining the Augsburg Asian Student Association and Hmong Women Together campus
organizations. Kong said her Augsburg experience has shaped her as a leader because the
university encourages students to be engaged in topics that align with their passions and
creates “spaces for all to grow and flourish in their education.”
FALL–WINTER 2018
9
O
N N
I
A
L
PJane
EIRICK
BY JOHN W
and introduce
her properly into the world,” said one of Jane Austen’s
characters, “and ten to one but she has the means of
settling well, without further expense to anybody.”
For a line published in 1814’s “Mansfield Park,” it
prophetically resonates in the life and work of Augsburg
alumna Devoney Looser ’89.
Looser earned a doctorate in English and women’s
studies, holds extensive credentials as a professor who
has served at leading universities, and has written and
contributed to dozens of books, scores of academic
journals, and even more book reviews. When national and
international publications need an expert on 18th-century
literature, British women writers, or Jane Austen, they want
Looser—if they can catch her before roller derby practice.
Looser grew up in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. College
seemed like a distant dream, both because of the financial
barrier and the fact that she came from a family with no
college degree in sight. Her perspective changed when she
applied to Augsburg and earned a President’s Scholarship
for her academic merit.
“That made all the difference in terms of my ability to
go to college. Augsburg gave me an incredibly generous
opportunity with that scholarship,” Looser said.
PHOTOS BY DEANNA DENT,
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
FALL–WINTER 2018
11
Looser wasn’t outwardly
confident, but she caught
the eye of Cathie Nicholl, an
English professor who taught
at Augsburg for nearly 30 years
until her retirement in 1999.
Though Looser was somewhat
quiet, Nicholl said, “her written
work was always wonderful.
She’s really blossomed a lot
since then.”
Looser first became
enthralled with Jane Austen’s
writings through a literature
class with Nicholl, who has
maintained correspondence
with Looser through several
decades. “I had no idea at
the time how significant, how
important [that connection with
Nicholl] would turn out to be
to my life—to a path toward a
future in [literary] work.”
Douglas Green, a professor of
English who’s taught at Augsburg
since 1988, met Looser when
he first arrived at the university.
“She was exceptional. We
had a real conversation about
literature,” said Green, a
poet and scholar who teaches
Shakespeare, drama, and writing
as well as gender, sexuality, and
was very shy at 18, and to see
the same faces who could tell
me, ‘You can do this,’ made a
big difference in my believing
in myself.”
For a suburbanite, moving to
the heart of Minneapolis was
an education in itself. “Being
in an urban area, being able
to live among other students
was amazing,” Looser said.
“Augsburg’s student body was
very diverse. Being in class
alongside students from all over
the world was mind-blowing. It
made me reimagine my role in
women’s studies at institutions
including the University of
Missouri, Louisiana State
University, University of
Wisconsin—Whitewater, Indiana
State University, and the State
University of New York at Stony
Brook. She is described as a
thoughtful and wise mentor
who empathizes with firstgeneration college students.
Her ability to reflect on and
relate to the challenges others
face is something Looser shares
with the central figure of her
academic work: Jane Austen.
Did Austen predict roller derby?
women’s studies.
Though literature was central
in feeding Looser’s ravenous
appetite for knowledge, people
and experiences also offered
lessons beyond the classroom.
“There were lots of things at
Augsburg that brought me out
of my shell,” Looser said. “I
12
AUGSBURG NOW
the world, and what my world
could be, and how I was part of
their world.”
Engaging with a variety of
people and ideas has served
Looser well in her literary
pursuits and academic
experience alike. She has held
positions teaching English and
“Austen is one of the most
psychologically perceptive
observers in all of the history of
the novel,” said Jenny Davidson,
a novelist and professor of
English at Columbia University
who connected with Looser over
their shared professional interest
in 18th-century literature.
Known for romantic plots
steeped in English society,
including “Pride and Prejudice”
and “Sense and Sensibility,”
Austen’s writings have been
in print continuously for
nearly 200 years and retain
an unassailable foothold in
contemporary art and culture.
Who was Jane Austen, really—
and how did she become what
she represents now?
That’s the focus of Looser’s
latest book, “The Making of
Jane Austen,” which earned
high praise among literary peers.
It was named a Publishers
Weekly Best Summer Book for
nonfiction, featured in CNN
interviews, and reviewed in The
Economist, The New York Times,
and The Wall Street Journal.
Looser’s remarkable
scholarship has led to an
abundance of prestigious
opportunities, including a
fellowship from the National
Endowment for the Humanities
and a Guggenheim Foundation
Fellowship in support of one of
her current projects: a book about
unheralded British sister novelists
Jane and Anna Maria Porter.
Davidson offered a scholar’s
perspective: “The project on
the Porter sisters is a genuine
project of reclamation, of
rewriting an injustice of
literary history: these were
two extremely widely read and
well-regarded novelists whom
literary history has essentially
dumped in the trash.” Because
of Looser’s background,
Davidson believes, the firstgeneration college graduate
is attracted to the works of
underdogs and can convey
their stories empathetically and
authoritatively.
Perhaps her affinity for the
underdog is part of what drew
Looser to a lesser-known sport—
roller derby.
Nearly a decade ago, Looser
and her friend Katie Carr, a
special collections librarian
at the University of Missouri
where Looser was a professor
of English, reconnected over a
mutual sense that they needed
a change. Angela Rehbein,
one of Looser’s then-graduate
students who is now a professor
of English at West Liberty
University, joined them to skate
at a roller rink’s retro night,
where members of a local roller
derby team invited the three to
derby practice. It sounded fun,
so they accepted.
Roller derby is a sport in
which two teams of five players
in roller skates line up on a
track. The “jammer” on each
team tries to maneuver past
the “blockers” on the opposing
team, and it all happens in a
series of two-minute increments
called “jams.” Players force
opponents off the track or block
them with their shoulders,
chests, and hips. Because it’s
full-contact, they wear helmets,
mouthguards, knee pads, and
elbow pads.
It’s customary for derby players
to create personas based on
names that use a play on words.
Carr dubbed Looser “Stone
Cold Jane Austen,” a mashup
of Looser’s literary expertise
and professional wrestler Steve
Austin’s stage name.
Looser is now a faculty
advisor to the roller derby
team in addition to her work
as a professor of English at
Arizona State University. She
still remembers the coaches
who patiently taught her to
play derby, which perhaps
unexpectedly refreshed her
perspective on higher education.
“It’s humbling to start out as
a complete newbie, and being
laid flat and embarrassing
myself,” she said. “It put me
in headspace that made me
realize how students must feel
their first year of college, when
you didn’t know what you were
doing, and it was terrifying.”
People who know Looser
best—like Carr, Rehbein, and
her former doctoral student
Emily Friedman—point to
Looser’s knack for transforming
her interests into excellence.
“There’s this world-renowned
academic and also someone
who plays roller derby and
excels at it. She is an incredibly
generous friend and an amazing
wife and mother,” Carr said,
referring to Looser’s sons and
husband George Justice, a
fellow Austen scholar and
British literature professor at
Arizona State University.
“I learned a lot from Devoney’s
incredible work ethic and her
generosity toward her students
and toward other scholars,”
added Rehbein, who appreciates
Looser’s influence both in and
beyond the classroom.
The same is true for
Friedman, who has also worked
on Austen scholarship and now
serves as a professor of English
at Auburn University. Friedman
observed Looser’s simultaneous
commitment to hard work and
a rewarding life outside of
it, and how “she keeps them
dancing rather than in conflict
and fighting.”
Like Jane Austen and many
icons before her, Looser will
maneuver past any limitations in
her path.
“She’s the hardest worker I
know,” said Friedman. “I’m just
trying to skate in her tracks.”
Looser’s next book topic:
CARVING PATHS
for THE FUTURE
Theater professor Darcey Engen ’88 helps plan a
forward-looking 150th anniversary celebration
BY STEPHEN JENDRASZAK
D
arcey Engen, professor of theater
arts, has been on both sides of an
Augsburg education: student and professor.
As a leader on campus, she brings both
perspectives to bear.
Thinking from a student perspective, she
understands the intense obligations today’s
students face and, with her colleagues,
implemented a series of changes to
make it possible for students from all
backgrounds and enrolled in any major
to participate in Augsburg’s theatrical
productions despite family or work
commitments.
As a faculty member, Engen observed
that faculty in the arts sometimes struggled
to receive appropriate credit for their artistic
and scholarly work, so she advocated
for revisions to promotion and tenure
guidelines to address the issue.
Now, she’s been asked to call on those
twin perspectives in a new leadership
role: helping to guide the commemoration
of Augsburg’s sesquicentennial during
the 2019–20 academic year. In a recent
interview, Engen shared her views on
the university’s 150th anniversary, the
important contributions faculty will make
in commemorating the occasion, and
what makes Augsburg unique in American
higher education.
14
AUGSBURG NOW
SE
R
AT
I
ON
1869-2019
SQ
U IC
ENTEN N
CE
IAL
LE
B
“
One of the things I love about Augsburg is that we
are more like the real world than other colleges
and universities. The needs of the real world
around us are present in everything we do.”
You are a co-chair of the sesquicentennial committee.
What do you hope this milestone will do for Augsburg?
I hope that it gives us a moment in time to understand our past,
mark where we are now, and look forward. It’s an opportunity for
us to appreciate those who came before us, what we’re doing in
the present, and those who will inevitably follow after us.
What does this occasion mean to you as both an alumna
and a faculty member?
In our costume shop, there are boxes and boxes that say things
like “summer hats.” Those labels were handwritten by my
professor, Ailene Cole, the former chair of the theater department,
before she retired in her 80s. When I’m in the costume shop
and see her handwriting, I’m reminded of her and what she did
for me and all her students. That inspires me to do the same
for my students. As a former chair myself, now, I am part of a
legacy, which gives me a lot of satisfaction. I’m aware that all of
us, chairs and faculty, are so privileged to be able to create an
atmosphere where our students can thrive as artists. I keep
the past with me as I try to carve out paths for the future with
my students.
How are faculty members going to be involved in marking
this significant moment in the life of the institution?
I’m very grateful that we were able to make resources available for
faculty to create scholarly projects that reflect sesquicentennial
themes. The support opens the door for these scholarly projects,
whether they be permanent works or ephemeral experiences, to
be installed or occur during our yearlong celebration. They will
honor and mark the 150th anniversary and also give faculty the
opportunity to expand the good work they do, which is ultimately
to support our students.
I understand that the number of proposals for faculty
sesquicentennial projects exceeded your expectations.
What does that enthusiasm say to you?
It was amazing to get all the proposals for such thoughtful
projects. It goes to show you that we faculty members all have in
us, no matter how busy our days can sometimes be, a great love
for this institution.
What kinds of projects are faculty members working on,
and what are they trying to achieve?
There’s so much incredible work being done, but I’ll offer a few
examples to give you an idea of the scope of the effort.
Sonja Thompson, assistant professor of music, is working on
an original musical—with original music—about Augsburg,
embracing both the rocky and exceptional moments in our
history. Her team is interviewing as many people as possible and
conducting story circles where students, staff, alumni, and friends
can share their Augsburg experiences to inform the production.
Erik Steinmetz, assistant professor of computer science, is
building an app for exploring Augsburg’s campus now and at
various points in history via augmented or virtual reality. The
idea is that if you’re on campus, you can look around through
your phone and see what a particular part of campus looked
like at another time. And if you’re not here, you can virtually
explore those same environments. We’re hoping to create online
experiences that capture as much of the art and activity and
scholarship happening on campus that year as possible.
As Augsburg prepares to commemorate 150 years,
what stands out for you?
I’ve toured a lot of colleges; I’ve taught at two other universities.
One of the things I love about Augsburg is that we are more like
the real world than other colleges and universities. The needs of
the real world around us are present in everything we do.
Augsburg’s plans to celebrate the sesquicentennial are developing,
and updates will be posted at augsburg.edu/150.
FALL–WINTER 2018
15
Augsburg alumna
Katia Iverson ’12
orients newcomers to
the United States amid
mounting uncertainty
and narrowing policies
16
AUGSBURG NOW
The Augsburg Air Structure—and the rest of the Minneapolis campus—looked
practically otherworldly following a record-breaking April 2018 snowstorm.
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE DOME
THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
DOZENS OF BUSES
en route from 25
Minnesota school districts pause on 23rd Avenue
to unload hundreds of students in grades three
through six at the Augsburg University Air Structure
(aka the Augsburg Dome). The air lock opens, and
grinning youngsters wheel, walk, and run into the
360-by-216-by-63-foot inflatable bubble lined with
activities to exercise their cognitive, emotional, and
physical muscles.
Augsburg has held this one-day Sports
Extravaganza for nearly 20 Novembers. Do the
math: that’s more than 4,000 children, teachers,
and paraprofessionals who have visited campus,
and two decades of Auggies who have applied
their health, physical education, and exercise
science coursework to the field.
HPE instructor Carol Enke said the event
wouldn’t have started without the dome.
“Imagine funneling hundreds of kids with
mental and/or physical disabilities into Si Melby
Hall via untold batches of elevator trips,” she
said. “Without the air structure, this dual
community engagement and learning opportunity
would have never taken off.
“Every year, teachers tell us that students ask
about the event from the first day of classes,
and we see that excitement as kids meet others
and participate in activities they might have
assumed were inaccessible to them.”
FALL–WINTER 2018
17
AN EXPANSIVE
GATHERING PLACE
Sports Extravaganza is one of several community events
squeezed into the dome between softball and lacrosse
games and practices for baseball, track and field, golf,
soccer, and football. Physical education classes, intramural
activities, alumni events, and more also vie for the space,
which features four batting cages, a driving range net, and
four soccer goals.
About 35 campus and community groups schedule
the space each year, according to Greg Holker, the men’s
soccer head coach, who helps manage dome schedules as
part of his dual role as athletic facilities assistant manager.
Thousands of people use the dome for a total of about
3,000 hours during any given year.
“Regular users include our sports teams, HPE classes,
camps, the Minneapolis United Soccer Club, and other
prominent academies and associations,” he added.
“During Super Bowl LII this year, a large corporation
hosted a Punt, Pass, and Kick Competition, and
the Minnesota Super Bowl Host Committee filmed a
commercial in the space.”
Each November, more than 500 student-athletes join
coaches, staff, and administrators to erect the weather-proof
18
structure. It’s a Herculean effort that illustrates the
university’s cooperative, all-in attitude, according to
Athletic Director Jeff Swenson ’79. Come May, after 12-hour
weekdays and about 18-hour weekend days, the dome is put
away in about three hours, again by a campus-wide team.
Swenson said the dome has substantially increased
Augsburg’s workout space.
“Nobody appreciates the air structure more than our spring
sports,” Swenson said. “Access to a climate-controlled
regulation field in our backyard gets them in the game earlier
in the season without interruptions due to weather.”
The university also is able to offer physical education
classes, including golf and soccer, in the spring. Eric
Rolland ’97, men’s and women’s golf head coach, said
without the dome, spring offerings would be limited to
indoor activities like bowling. And while Rolland enjoys
throwing a strike as much as the best of them, the former
All-American golfer said he has enjoyed the ability to teach
golf throughout the year.
“It’s a lifelong sport that can enhance your career, given
that so many business meetings occur on the golf course,”
said Rolland, who has taught golf classes for the past five
years. “Students make lasting friendships, too, as the
dome transforms into a giant driving range where students
visit as they perfect their swings.”
AUGSBURG NOW
The Augsburg University women’s lacrosse team competed in the dome in Spring 2018.
THE DOME ‘SAVED
OUR SEASON’
Talk of spring takes Softball Head Coach Melissa Lee ’04
back to April, when the Twin Cities experienced its
snowiest and fourth-coldest April on record, according
to the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, which
reported 26.1 inches of the white stuff and an average
high of 47.4 degrees.
“It was the winter that would never end,” said Lee, who
is in her 15th season on Augsburg’s coaching staff. “Other
teams in our conference have to rent out dome space
or practice on hard gym floors incapable of mimicking
competition, so when the weather is bad, those players
may catch—or try to catch—their first deep pop fly of the
season during a game. We made the playoffs last year,
and I believe the dome contributed to that success.”
Then-senior-outfielder Katie Parker ’18 was among
the Augsburg softball players who spent the majority
of the 2018 season under the dome. Playing inside
requires adjustment, she said, with rules against catching
deflected balls (to avoid injuries), turf vs. dirt, and many
lights, rather than the sun’s sole beam. But the snowy
season didn’t faze the native of Lakeville, Minnesota.
“It’s our home turf, literally, so we practice in the space
long before our first game,” said Parker, who graduated
in May with a bachelor’s in elementary education with
a focus on special education. “I loved the sense of
community and cooperation as we worked side-by-side
with student-athletes on other teams to take down and set
up fence panels and goals, depending on the sport. Coach
Lee also worked hard and stayed up late to make sure
other area softball programs could access to the dome to
finish out their seasons.”
Will this year be a repeat of last season? The Farmers’
Almanac indicates ‘no,’ Coach Lee said, but the Minnesota
native jokes the state’s weather is as unpredictable as a
curve ball. What is not inconsistent, she added, is Auggies’
willingness to work together—snow or shine.
Assistant Baseball Coach Zach Bakko ’18 echoed Lee’s
appreciation for the dome’s ability to bring athletes across
Augsburg’s 21 sports together with each other, the campus,
and greater community. Bakko spent several seasons
fielding balls under the dome lights as an Auggie outfielder.
“Whether it be quarterback Quinn Frisell ’19 throwing
out routes to his agile receivers, golfer Brett Buckingham ’21
working on his swing, or soccer forward Ashley St. Aubin ’20
figuring out another way to score a hat trick, I’ve been
able to see athletes in other sports work to maximize
their potential,” said Bakko. Plus, “The space allows
our campus to give back to the community and make a
positive difference in the lives of young athletes [through
camps and clinics].”
“Having worked for athletics, I’ve met the real heroes of
the dome—athletics administrators, coaches, and all the
maintenance staff—managing scheduling, cleaning, and
every other task that arises,” he added. “That willingness
to come together and do what’s needed, regardless of
whether it’s in your job description, has expanded my
understanding of the word ‘team.’”
Find bonus content and
fun facts about the dome
at augsburg.edu/now.
Augsburg community members work together to assemble the
dome each fall. First installed in 1993, Augsburg’s original dome
was one of the premier inflatable air structures in the Midwest.
FALL–WINTER 2018
19
Undergraduate research
gives students an edge
BY GITA SITARAMIAH
The summer before his third year at Augsburg,
Fekireselassie Beyene ’16 was paid to research Earth’s
magnetosphere. He worked in a lab on campus under the
direction of a physics faculty member.
And he discovered a passion for space physics.
Beyene’s research, which was funded by Dean ’91
and Amy Sundquist his first summer and TRIO McNair
Scholars for the second, helped him stand out in national
scholarship competitions. The following year, he was
awarded a Goldwater Scholarship, a prestigious national
program that provides financial support to undergraduates
who show the promise of becoming leading scientists,
engineers, and mathematicians. Then, Beyene’s Augsburg
advisors helped him successfully apply for the National
Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program,
providing him with more than $100,000 for graduate school.
Now a Ph.D. student in space physics at UCLA, Beyene
credits his Augsburg undergraduate research experience
with getting him where he is today.
“You don’t see the level of personal coaching at other
schools like you do at Augsburg,” he said. “I really
appreciate that about Augsburg.”
Augsburg’s undergraduate research opportunities are
paying off for students like Beyene, who compete alongside
the nation’s top students to land high-profile fellowships,
internships, and scholarships as well as selection to highly
competitive graduate programs.
In fact, Augsburg had a banner year in 2017–18, with
a record number of students earning prestigious awards
and fellowships.
20
AUGSBURG NOW
Here are some highlights:
• Augsburg had six Fulbright winners named this past
year and has been listed five times in The Chronicle
of Higher Education as a top producer of Fulbrights
for master’s level institutions. The previous singleyear record for Augsburg was four. Since 2008,
Augsburg’s Fulbright winners total 29.
•
An Augsburg student was one of just four Minnesota
recipients of the Goldwater Scholarship last year. Out
of 1,280 applicants nationwide, 211 were named.
•
Three Auggies were Critical Language Scholarship
winners in the first year that Augsburg undergraduates
pursued this fellowship. Only 10 percent of applicants
nationwide receive this award. Two of the students
were selected to study Swahili in Tanzania; the third,
to study Mandarin in Taiwan.
•
Another two Auggies were Public Policy and
International Affairs Program winners. Only
20 percent of applicants nationally are accepted
into this program. One of the Augsburg winners
studied at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at
the University of Minnesota. The other student spent
seven weeks at University of California—Berkeley in
a law-focused program.
•
For the first time ever, an Augsburg student won a
Boren Award, which honors undergraduates studying
language in areas underrepresented in study abroad
programs. The Auggie, who studied Swahili at the
University of Florida this past summer, is continuing
to study the language and culture in Tanzania this
semester. He will commit to one year of paid federal
government service after graduation.
Undergraduate research boosts the résumés of Auggies
like Holly Kundel ’19, who looked for a rare dragonfly in
Twin Cities area wetlands.
Many of
these accomplishments
are the result of Augsburg’s
decade-plus commitment to
providing undergraduate research
opportunities for students.
Two programs are responsible
for much of this success: the Office
of Undergraduate Research and
Graduate Opportunity and the
McNair Scholars program.
URGO, now in its 14th year, offers
an 11-week, on-campus, faculty-led
undergraduate research experience with
50 students each summer. Students receive support
throughout the research process from a faculty mentor,
participate in weekly seminars, and engage in roundtable
discussions with fellow student researchers to hone their
communication skills. URGO also advises students about
national fellowships, graduate school, medical school, and
other health sciences.
The McNair Scholars program is a federally funded
program designed to prepare students from groups currently
underrepresented in graduate school for doctoral studies to
some of the most competitive institutions in the U.S. The
program currently serves 26 students a year and includes
21 months of graduate school preparation workshops, travel
to national research conferences, and hands-on scholarly
research projects with faculty mentors.
Through these programs,
talented Augsburg students
are earning prestigious national
opportunities that they otherwise
may not even have known about.
“Many [of the students] who win
awards and fellowships had never even
heard the word ‘Fulbright’ before they
were in this program,” said Dixie Shafer,
URGO director.
When students start their first summer
research experience, Shafer said, they’re
looking around wondering how they got selected.
“You can tell they’re a little bit nervous,”
she said. “By the end, when they’re giving oral
presentations and submitting projects, they’re the
experts in the room. Their level of confidence has grown.”
Students agree that they gain key skills from research
and writing in partnership with faculty members, presenting
their work at conferences, and receiving hands-on guidance
from advisors about how to translate those experiences into
top fellowships, internships, scholarships, and graduate
programs. And they often go on to other off-campus research
experiences to expand their curricula vitae.
Blair Stewig ’18, currently a Fulbright scholar in Poland,
first did summertime research at Augsburg in a biophysics
lab. She successfully applied for an Augsburg grant to do
research while canoeing the Mississippi River during the
2015 River Semester experience, then did summer research
with the Minnesota Lupus Foundation at the Mayo Clinic.
The next summer, she conducted cancer research at Baylor
College of Medicine in Houston.
FALL–WINTER 2018
21
three URGO advisors on her medical
Currently, Stewig is conducting
school applications.
research on colorectal cancer at the
“It was almost like they knew
International Institute of Molecular
more about my story than I did,”
and Cell Biology in Poland and will
Bagonza said.
shadow physicians and volunteer at
Shafer sees this type of faculty and
the Maria Skłodowska Curie Memorial
staff interaction with students as a
Cancer Centre.
key part of helping students evolve.
“Without my research experience
“Faculty and staff believe in students
and the support of staff and faculty
and then the students start believing
at Augsburg, I don’t think I would
in themselves,” she said.
have had the confidence to apply
for the larger competitive
research experiences,” said
Stewig, who plans to apply
for combined M.D./Ph.D.
programs in the future.
Similarly, two months into
her first year at Augsburg,
biology major Vision Bagonza ’17
regularly started visiting the
URGO office and mapping her
trajectory to medical school.
“They were with me every step
of the way,” she said.
In her first summer research
project, Bagonza worked
on genomics research with
Associate Professor and
Biology Department Chair
Matthew Beckman. “That
Fieldwork experience inspired Holly Kundel ’19 to apply for
was instrumental to my
doctoral programs in freshwater ecology.
understanding of what was
going on throughout the field,”
Fourth-year biology major Holly
she said.
Kundel ’19 chose Augsburg after
The following summer, she
meeting faculty on a campus tour and
researched biomedical ethics at Mayo
Clinic, and she spent her third summer learning that she would be able to do
research directly with them.
researching malaria at Johns Hopkins.
The summer after her first year,
These experiences set the stage for her
Kundel began her paid research on
participation in the Mayo Innovation
the rare Spatterdock Darner dragonfly
Scholars program, where she learned
in Twin Cities area wetlands. Kundel,
about the complexities of the FDA
who loves being outdoors during
approval process when bringing
Minnesota summers, was drawn to
innovation to market. Finally, Bagonza
the project after approaching Biology
was awarded a full scholarship to the
and Environmental Studies Assistant
Cleveland Clinic Lerner School of
Professor Emily Schilling and learning
Medicine after working closely with
22
AUGSBURG NOW
that the research entailed doing
fieldwork.
Since then, Kundel has received
other grants to support her research
with Schilling. “It’s nice to work with
a faculty member who knows exactly
what my strengths and weaknesses
are,” Kundel said.
This year, Kundel received a
Goldwater Scholarship, providing
tuition assistance for her fourth year at
Augsburg, and the associated
prestige is expected to set
her apart in her applications
for doctoral programs in
freshwater ecology. “I wouldn’t
be applying to the graduate
programs I am this fall if I
hadn’t done this research at
Augsburg,” Kundel said.
While many in the URGO
Summer Research Program are
science majors, other disciplines
are represented as well.
English literature major
Abigail Tetzlaff ’18 studied
patterns in language and
rhetorical uses in poetry and
prose. Currently a Fulbright
Fellow in Berlin, she is an
English teaching assistant
and plans to pursue a Ph.D.
in English literature to ultimately
become a university professor.
“Especially for undergraduates
studying within the humanities, it isn’t
very common to come out of college
with a research experience already
complete,” Tetzlaff said.
For Beyene, if not for the direct
support from faculty and his McNair
Scholars and URGO advisors, he
wouldn’t have considered himself
graduate school material. “Being at
UCLA now, I realize how fortunate I
was to have programs like McNair and
URGO,” he said.
AUGGIES CONNECT
FROM THE ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
+
COURTESY PHOTO
Dear alumni and friends,
As always, the fall season at Augsburg was full of
excitement. This past August, for only the second time,
our community sent a group of Auggies to explore the
Mississippi on a River Semester off-campus study
experience. Over the course of the semester, these
students will spend 100 days paddling down the
river while learning about history, politics, and the
environment, and having the adventure of a lifetime.
Then, as the calendar turned to September, the community welcomed returning
students to a new academic year and ushered in the first-year students who make
up the class of 2022.
At Homecoming in October, we honored an accomplished group of
Distinguished Alumni. We found inspiration in hearing their stories and
learning about their achievements, and we were reminded of the talent and
dedication that Augsburg alumni exhibit across a vast spectrum of vocations
and commitments. Augsburg alumni are, indeed, remarkable professionals and
amazing people.
This year, I’m especially excited to serve on the Augsburg Alumni Board as its
members strive to increase the ways in which they give to the university. I have
personally committed to giving 50 hours of my time to Augsburg. I plan to attend
events, mentor a student, and help reconnect the Auggies in my social network
with the university.
If, like me, you’re interested in making a difference in the lives of others in
our Augsburg community, you’ll find that there are many ways to connect with
Augsburg in support of students.
• Consider attending the Auggie Networking Event coming up in February.
This is an opportunity for alumni to help students practice valuable
interpersonal skills that will benefit them in their future job searches
and careers.
• Join us for the 2018–19 Auggie Take Out student mentoring program.
• Reconnect with Augsburg by volunteering with the Alumni Office or
the Alumni Board. We’re always looking for people to join our
leadership boards.
• Volunteer to usher at Advent Vespers or to serve in another capacity.
In all of the ways that Augsburg has shown up for you, it is now the time to
show up for Augsburg. You can find information about these and other volunteer
opportunities at augsburg.edu/alumni. I hope you will consider sharing your time
and talents with the university this year.
*
+
+
HOMECOMING 2018
Nearly 525 Auggies attended the Augsburg
University Homecoming celebration held
October 11–13. Alumni, students, and
community members gathered for a festive
weekend featuring more than two dozen events
that united the university’s remarkable legacy
with its contemporary identity.
If you are interested in serving on an
alumni reunion committee or volunteering
to help plan Homecoming 2019,
contact alumni@augsburg.edu.
Go Auggies!
NICK RATHMANN ’03, ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
+ PHOTOS COURTESY OF REBECCA ZENEFSKI SLATER
* PHOTO COURTESY OF BRIDGET DONOVAN
FALL–WINTER 2018
23
A LIFETIME OF ACTIVISM:
Augsburg students of the ’60s reflect on the past 50 years
In 1964, folk singer Bob Dylan released his album and song
“The Times They Are A-Changin’,” which served as a call for
change to address the social injustices he saw in the world.
For the group of young students entering what was then
Augsburg College that same year, his words would prove prescient.
College is a transformational time for students, but for members of
the class of 1968, the impact was especially pronounced.
The Augsburg graduating class of 1968 witnessed the United
States live through some of the worst upheavals in the nation’s
history. In late 1963, President John F. Kennedy had been
assassinated. By 1968, assassinations also would claim civil rights
leader Martin Luther King Jr. and the late president’s brother,
Robert F. Kennedy, as well as political activist and leader Malcolm X.
At the same time, the country was becoming violently divided over
social issues, including civil rights and the increasingly unpopular
war in Vietnam, with ever-larger numbers of young people being
drafted and sent to southeast Asia to fight.
In response, Augsburg students began to march for peace and
civil rights and to take part in programs like Augsburg’s Listening
Witness, which brought them to live and work in impoverished and
racially segregated neighborhoods in Chicago and elsewhere.
It was fitting, then, that at this year’s Homecoming celebration,
1968 alumni celebrating their 50th reunion delivered an Auggie
Talk titled “The Baby Boomer Effect: How Four Years Affected 50.”
The five speakers—Michael Arndt ’68, Kim Gudmestad ’68,
Ted Johnson ’68, Augsburg Board of Regents member LaJune
Thomas Lange ’75, and Joey Sylvester ’68—said their time at
Augsburg shaped the course of their lives. They described how
education empowered them to pursue lifelong work in the areas
of diversity, justice, public leadership, and social activism.
“I think [those times] had a profound effect on many of us as
individuals, and it certainly had a profound effect on Augsburg,”
said Rev. Mark Hanson ’68, an alumnus who went on to serve
as a pastor and the third presiding bishop of the Evangelical
24
AUGSBURG NOW
Lutheran Church in America. “For me, Augsburg provided an
immersive experience so that those changing realities, those
cultural conflicts, and those strivings for racial justice and peace
in southeast Asia weren’t just topics that one was reading about or
subjects in a classroom. They became lived experiences.”
Hanson, who is now the executive director of Augsburg’s
Christensen Center for Vocation, said he’s seen the university
change as a result of activism originating in those pivotal mid-’60s
years. He points to increasing diversity in the current student
body—the result of an intentional commitment to inclusion,
equity, and intercultural competency.
Like Hanson, Myrna Sheie ’68, co-chair of the 1968 reunion
events, went on to work with the ELCA after graduation. She
reflected that she had entered college without much experience
with diverse cultures but saw both herself and Augsburg change
during her college years.
“When I started at Augsburg, I was both naïve and unaware
of the diversity we lacked,” she said. “Over the next four
years, my classmates and I were exposed to ideas, concepts,
and lifestyles—both inside and outside the classroom—that
challenged us intellectually, socially, and personally. I became
less naïve as my eyes and heart became more open.”
A laboratory for life
When Arndt, one of the Homecoming Auggie Talk presenters,
reflects on his college experience, his memories often connect the
time he spent on campus with dramatic life events that followed it.
Shortly after graduation, Arndt was drafted from his first
teaching job and sent to Vietnam as a member of the Army’s First
Cavalry division. He served in the jungle near the Cambodian
border and saw heavy military action that killed seven of his
friends. During that time, Arndt says he recited the Shakespeare
he’d learned during college to calm himself.
AUGGIES CONNECT
CELEBRATING A SEASON OF HOPE
ARCHIVE PHOTOS
39TH ANNUAL ADVENT VESPERS
Today, Arndt is chair and professor of Theatre Arts
and Dance at California Lutheran University and
the artistic director of the Kingsmen Shakespeare
Company. He calls on his experiences as a veteran and
artistic professional to use theater to help treat fellow
veterans suffering the effects of post-traumatic
stress disorder.
“There was a time after I got out of the army when
I felt that the country was going to dissolve into civil
war,” he said. “There was such a divide and … a real
sense that we were going to end up in total chaos. In
talking with my college students today, there’s a sense
of that now. [But] I think one of the things we’re saying
is that those of us who felt that strongly in 1968 tried
to work to make a difference. And many of us did.”
Hanson concurs. “All that was taking place in the
Twin Cities, in the country, and in the world in those
four years became, for so many of us, not just objects
of study, but context in which we were being formed
for our future lives and vocations. And that’s still to
this day what is particularly unique about Augsburg—
it takes its context as the laboratory for life, not as
something from which we seek to flee.”
Augsburg’s Class of 1968 is working to raise $68,000 in
scholarship funds for future students. Learn more about
this initiative and their Auggie Talk at augsburg.edu/now.
For more than three decades, Augsburg University has ushered
in the Advent and Christmas seasons with Advent Vespers, a
magnificent experience of music and liturgy, focusing on the
theme of preparation and culminating in the joyful celebration of
the Incarnation. Advent Vespers is set in downtown Minneapolis
in the sanctuary of Central Lutheran Church, and this year Advent
Vespers services will occur November 29–December 1. To learn more
or request reservations, visit augsburg.edu/music/vespers.
VELKOMMEN JUL
Velkommen Jul is one of Augsburg’s most beloved traditions. It’s
an event that celebrates the university’s Norwegian heritage and
ushers in the Advent season.
Come join us Friday, November 30, at 10:30 a.m., in Hoversten
Chapel for a special chapel service—with Danish, Norwegian, and
Swedish carols, Scandinavian dancers, and the Gospel read in
Norwegian. Wear your Scandinavian sweater, if you have one; it’s a
tradition to take a group sweater photo!
Following chapel, the festivities continue in Christensen Center.
Shop in the boutique for unique gifts and homemade goodies,
and make sure to visit the buffet featuring lefse, krumkake, and
other treats. The buffet is complimentary, but donations are greatly
appreciated. All proceeds from the event support Augsburg
student scholarships.
FALL–WINTER 2018
25
COURTESY PHOTOS
AUGSBURG UNIVERSITY
1869-2019
SAVE THE YEAR
Join us in honoring the traditions of Augsburg’s rich history and
celebrating the remarkable progress we have made in educating
students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical
thinkers, and responsible leaders. A yearlong series of events
including a sesquicentennial gala will commemorate our deep
roots and recognize our present opportunities and future endeavors
as we become a new kind of urban university.
Subscribe to the sesquicentennial events digital calendar to
participate in these community celebrations. Visit augsburg.edu/150.
NOVEMBER
AUGGIES TRULY
GIVE TO THE MAX
Each year, Auggies around the world respond generously to
support the breadth of programs and experiences offered by
Augsburg University.
In total, over the past five years, Augsburg has raised more
than $1.5 million through Give to the Max Day efforts. And even if
you missed the opportunity to participate this year, you can find
information about our fundraising results and learn more about
additional ways to support the university at augsburg.edu/giving.
26
AUGSBURG NOW
AUGSBURG SESQUICENTENNIAL
TRAVEL OPPORTUNITIES
Plan ahead to participate in exciting alumni trips commemorating
Augsburg’s sesquicentennial. Overseas trips are planned to
locations in Norway and Germany that are central in
Augsburg’s history.
In May 2020, Darcey Engen ’88, Augsburg University
professor of theater arts, and her husband, Luverne Seifert ’83,
head of undergraduate theater performance at the University of
Minnesota, will lead a tour exploring the rich and vibrant arts
and culture of Norway. The tour will include plays, concerts,
and historical landmarks as well as an opportunity to celebrate
Syttende Mai in Norway.
At the same time, a tour exploring Norway’s peace work,
government, and environmental agencies will be co-led by
Bettine Hoff Hermanson, Norway Hub managing director, and
Joe Underhill, associate professor of political science and
director of environmental studies. This trip also includes the
opportunity to celebrate Syttende Mai in Norway.
In July 2020, Rev. Sonja Hagander, Augsburg University
pastor and director of ministries, will lead a hike to the Nidaros
Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway—a pilgrimage made by
travelers for more than 1,000 years. Along the way, the group
will learn about history and culture, and experience firsthand
some of the most beautiful nature in the world.
Also in July 2020, Augsburg associate professors of religion
Lori Brandt Hale and Hans Wiersma—who led the 2016 alumni
tour for the anniversary of the Lutheran Reformation—will lead
a tour to Bavaria, Germany, with stops in Nuremberg, Salzberg,
and additional nearby locations. The tour also includes tickets
to the world-famous Oberammergau Passion Play, which first
opened in 1634 and has been performed every 10 years since.
Contact Katie (Koch) Code ’01, director of alumni and constituent relations, at
codek@augsburg.edu or 612-330-1178 if you are interested in learning more
about Augsburg’s travel opportunities.
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
1942
The French government
posthumously awarded Chester
Hendrickson ’42 the Jubilee of Liberty Medal
for his service and work in Normandy during
World War II.
1958
Grace
(Kemmer)
Sulerud ’58 received
a Spirit of Augsburg
Award at Homecoming
for her faithful service
to Augsburg across
her time as a student,
librarian, faculty
member, and alumna. After graduating from
Augsburg in 1958 with a degree in English,
she became a junior high English teacher
and an elementary librarian in U.S. Air Force
Department of Defense Schools in Germany,
Japan, and Libya. Sulerud earned master’s
degrees in library science and English, served
as the treasurer of the Augsburg Associates,
and continues to stay involved at university
events. She personifies Augsburg’s calling to
humbly serve in a variety of ways.
1968
David J.
Melby ’68,
Ph.D., received a
Distinguished Alumni
Award at Homecoming
and was recognized as a
psychologist, executive
leader, and advocate
who embodies faithful
service in true Auggie form. With a bachelor’s
degree in psychology from Augsburg and
master’s and doctoral degrees in counseling
psychology, he has worked as a CEO and has
served on the boards of organizations relating
to behavioral health care, health practices,
and housing. As a thoughtful steward and
responsible leader, his work has created
healthier, more fulfilling lives for many.
1971
The St. Michael-Albertville
(Minnesota) Coaches Association
Hall of Fame Committee selected Darrell
Skogan ’71 as a Hall of Fame inductee. This
fall marks Skogan’s 51st season as statistician
for the school district. He also has umpired,
run clocks, and coached girls’ basketball and
softball throughout his tenure with the district.
1972
John Sherman ’72 was honored
with two awards for his work
as a sports journalist. Sherman received
the Outstanding Media Award from the
Minnesota State High School League and the
Spinnaker Award from Minnetonka School
District. While at Augsburg, Sherman was
the editor for the school newspaper and
played baseball and soccer. Since graduating
46 years ago, he has served on the Sun
Newspaper staff in Edina, Minnesota.
Terry Lindstrom ’73 and Mark Johnson ’75
joined the Augsburg University Board of
Regents. See page 4.
Augsburg Athletic Director Jeff Swenson ’79
explains how the university’s dome gives
Auggies a competitive advantage. See page 16.
1982
Augsburg
Athletic
Hall of Fame inductee
Jeff Andrews ’82 was a
key defender on Auggie
men’s hockey teams
that won NAIA national
titles in both 1980–81
and 1981–82, while
winning MIAC titles and
reaching the NAIA tournament all four years
of his career. Andrews accumulated 29 goals
and 60 assists for 89 points in his college
career, and he earned All-MIAC honors in
1981–82 and All-MIAC Honorable Mention
honors in 1980–81.
Former basketball
star Brad Nelson ’82
was inducted into the
Augsburg Athletic Hall
of Fame. An All-MIAC
guard in 1981–82,
Nelson was a three-year
member of the Auggie
men’s basketball team,
averaging 12.0 points, 2.6 rebounds, and 2.9
assists per game in his career. He averaged
20.5 points, 4.7 rebounds, and 4.4 assists
per game on Augsburg’s MIAC runner-up
team in 1981–82, and averaged 7.8 points
on the Auggies’ MIAC title (later forfeited for
use of an ineligible player) and NAIA national
tournament team in 1980–81.
1984
Mayo Clinic Health System—
Franciscan Healthcare named
Dr. Paul Mueller ’84 the vice president of its
Southwest Wisconsin Region. As a regional
leader, Mueller will manage operations out
of La Crosse, Wisconsin. He completed
his undergraduate degree at Augsburg
and has spent the past nine years chairing
Mayo Clinic’s Division of General Internal
Medicine in Rochester, Minnesota.
Nancy Mueller ’85 joined the Augsburg
University Board of Regents. See page 4.
Darcey Engen ’88 employs perspectives
both as a student and as a faculty member
to plan Augsburg’s sesquicentennial celebrations.
See page 14.
1989
The U.S. Track and Field
and Cross Country Coaches
Association announced that Carolyn (Ross)
Isaak ’89 was inducted into the NCAA
Division III Track and Field Athlete Hall of
Fame in May. Isaak set several records as an
Augsburg athlete, including the 400-meter
hurdles record that stood until 2014. Isaak,
a five-time national champion and nine-time
All-American, is Augsburg’s first athlete ever
to be inducted into this Hall of Fame.
Literary scholar Devoney Looser ’89 was
awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2018
and will complete a biography of forgotten sister
novelists. See page 10.
Brynn Watson ’89
received a Distinguished
Alumni Award at
Homecoming. She is an
award-winning leader in
the aerospace industry for
her technical experience,
executive leadership, and
tireless advocacy of STEM
education for youth. She earned a mathematics
degree from Augsburg and a master’s degree in
applied mathematics before she gained several
director- and vice-president-level positions in
technology and engineering companies. She
now serves as vice president for the Future
Enterprise Program for Lockheed Martin.
Watson’s spirit and accomplishments mirror
the tenacity of Auggies around the world who
ascend to prestigious positions among today’s
leading companies.
1995
Wrestling
star Randy
Eastman ’95 was
inducted into the
Augsburg Athletic Hall
of Fame. Eastman
was a three-time
NCAA Division III
All-American in the
167-pound weight class, finishing second
nationally in the 1994–95 campaign, third
in 1993–94, and fifth in 1992–93. A transfer
from Mankato State, he was a member
of Augsburg teams that won the national
titles in both 1992–93 and 1994–95, while
FALL–WINTER 2018
27
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
finishing fourth in 1993–94. Eastman won
two MIAC titles and was a conference
runner-up in his Auggie career.
Augsburg Athletic
Hall of Fame inductee
Tom Layte ’95 was
a dominant wrestler
for the Auggies in
the mid-’90s. Layte
competed at Augsburg
in the 1994–95 season
after transferring from
Western New England College, and he made
the most of his Auggie campaign, going 44-4,
winning the NCAA Division III national title
at 150 pounds, and earning Outstanding
Wrestler honors at the national championships
as the Auggies won the team national
crown. He later served as an Augsburg
assistant coach and was head coach at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Augsburg volleyball star
Carolyn Tuohy ’95 was a
dominant player in the
mid-’90s, playing three
seasons as a middle
hitter, earning All-MIAC
honors in 1994, and
receiving All-MIAC
Honorable Mention
honors in 1992. Tuohy, who was inducted
into the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame, was
a team co-captain in 1994 and finished her
career with 878 kills in 2,566 attack attempts.
She was voted the team’s MVP in 1992.
1997
Derrin
Lamker ’97
was inducted into the
Augsburg Athletic Hall
of Fame in recognition
of his successes on
the football, basketball,
and baseball teams. A
quarterback in football,
Lamker led the Auggies to the 1997 MIAC title
and a spot in the NCAA Division III national
quarterfinals. He earned All-MIAC honors in
1996 and 1997. He was the conference MVP
in 1997, in addition to earning All-America
honors and finalist honors for the Gagliardi
Trophy (Division III Player of the Year).
Joe Lavin ’97 had an
outstanding pitching
career on the Augsburg
baseball team. An ace
during the mid-’90s,
Lavin earned All-MIAC
and All-Midwest Region
second-team honors
in 1995, while earning
conference Player of the Week honors multiple
times. He had a 1.42 ERA in conference play
with five complete games, a shutout, and 41
strikeouts against only 16 walks and 32 hits
in 1995, while winning three games on the
mound in 1994 and four in 1996.
Eric Rolland ’97, the Augsburg men’s and
women’s golf head coach, teaches students
a lifelong sport each spring in the campus dome.
See page 16.
2000
Jasha Johnston ’00 and Carrie
(McCabe) Johnston ’02 opened
their third restaurant, Mortimer’s, in the Whittier
neighborhood of Minneapolis. The new venue
features live music, an updated menu, and a
family-friendly atmosphere. In addition to their
new venture, the Johnstons own Nightingale
Restaurant and Tilt Pinball Bar.
2002
Three-sport
athlete
Brenda (Selander)
Mitshulis ’02 was
inducted into the
Augsburg Athletic Hall
of Fame. Mitshulis was
an All-MIAC honoree
in 2000 and All-MIAC
Honorable Mention honoree in 1999 in
soccer, where she finished her career with 15
goals and four assists for 34 career points.
She led the Auggies in scoring in three
seasons. In hockey, she was a member of the
1998–99 and 1999–2000 MIAC title squads
and the 2000 national runner-up team. She
also played two seasons of softball.
2003
Dual sport
athlete
Rachel Ekholm ’03
was inducted into the
Augsburg Athletic Hall
of Fame. One of the best
softball players in school
history, Ekholm earned
All-MIAC honors three
times, while earning NFCA All-Region honors
twice. As a pitcher, she won 39 career games
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
’70
’76
28
AUGSBURG NOW
’84
’90
’12
with a 2.45 ERA and 347 strikeouts. She
hit .389 and holds school records for home
runs, triples, RBI, and slugging percentage.
She also played in 60 career games in
basketball, averaging 9.1 points and 2.3
rebounds per game.
Softball Head Coach Melissa Lee ’04 said
the Augsburg air structure helped save the
team’s 2018 season. See page 16.
2006
This year,
Augsburg’s
Excellence in Coaching
Award recognized
Jim Gunderson ’06.
Gunderson is in his
fourth season as
football head coach at
the Academy of Holy
Angels in Richfield, Minnesota, after serving
for 14 years as an assistant coach. He has
also served as track and field head coach
since 2012. In football, his team won the
Minnesota Class AAAA state title in 2017,
with Gunderson being named the Minnesota
Football State Class AAAA Coach of the Year.
2008
graduating from Augsburg with a degree in
communication studies, he has devoted his
career to public leadership and making a
difference in his community. He ran for mayor
of Baltimore in 2016, becoming the youngest
person ever to run for the office. He also sits
on the boards of several Baltimore community
initiatives and is the co-founder of a nonprofit
fostering revitalization.
Brian Krohn ’08, Ph.D.,
received a First Decade
Award at Homecoming.
After earning a degree in
chemistry, researching
biofuel, and becoming
Augsburg’s first Rhodes
Scholar, Krohn founded
companies Mighty Axe
Hops and Magic Wizard Staff. He earned a
doctorate from the University of Minnesota as
an Environmental Protection Agency Fellow
and master’s degrees from the University of
Oxford in environmental change and science.
He was an Innovation Fellow at the U of M’s
Medical Devices Center and is CEO of Soundly,
an app-based therapy to reduce snoring—an
initiative funded by the National Institutes of
Health and the National Science Foundation.
Joshua
Harris ’08
received a First Decade
Award at Homecoming.
His life and work in the
past 10 years embodies
Augsburg’s pursuit of
social justice, equity,
and inclusion. Since
Nikki Rajala ’70 published “Treacherous
Waters,” her second novel in the
“Chronicles of an Unlikely Voyageur” series.
A career ESL teacher, Rajala retired from the
St. Cloud School District in 2004 and lives in
Rockville, Minnesota.
’70
Jeff Mueller ’76 was honored by Norway’s
King Harald V, who bestowed the rank of
Knight First Class in the Royal Norwegian Order
of Merit. Mueller, director of administration and
finance at Norway House, Minneapolis, is a past
president of the Norwegian American Chamber
of Commerce and currently serves on its board of
directors. He also has been active in the Syttende
’76
Killa Marti ’08, J.D.,
received a First Decade
Award at Homecoming
because she embodies
Augsburg’s values
through her thoughtful
stewardship, critical
thinking, and rigorous
pursuit of justice and equity. After graduating
from Augsburg with a major in international
relations and a minor in economics, Marti
earned a law degree so that she could serve
immigrant communities. She has worked
with the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota
and several law firms, has founded her
own law practice in the Atlanta area, and
has worked tirelessly for her law clients in
districts and cases where the decks were
stacked against them.
Former Augsburg cheerleader Cassandra
Roschen ’08 returned to Fairmont High School
to coach the cheerleading squad. Roschen, a
former Fairmont cheerleader, taught current
students sideline cheers and routines. She also
extended her service to include team building
and community outreach with the squad.
Chris Stedman ’08
received a First Decade
Award at Homecoming
for his robust intellectual
engagement as an
informed citizen and
critical thinker. A religion
major with minors in
English and social
welfare, he earned a master’s degree in religion
from Meadville Lombard Theological School at
the University of Chicago. He was the founding
executive director of the Humanist Center
of Minnesota, founded the Yale Humanist
Community, and was a humanist chaplain at
Harvard. Stedman is the author of “Faitheist:
How an Atheist Found Common Ground with
the Religious” (Beacon Press, 2012).
Mai Committee, the Norwegian Independence
Day celebration, the annual troop exchange
program with the Minnesota National Guard and
the Norwegian Home Guard, and Torske
Klubben. Mueller (right) is pictured with
Norwegian Ambassador to the U.S. Kåre R. Aas,
who presented the order of merit medal at
Norway House.
The HGA firm hired Mary Claire Olson
Potter ’84 as a health care business
developer and senior associate.
’84
’90
In June, former Augsburg football player
David Stevens ’90 hosted a Disability
Dream and Do Camp alongside the Binghamton
Rumble Ponies, an American minor league
baseball team based in Upstate New York. CBS
affiliate WBNG covered Stevens’ story and time
with the Rumble Ponies. Stevens, who led six
other athletic camps this summer, was the only
double amputee to play three seasons of football
for the Auggies. He later played for the St. Paul
Saints and tried out for the Minnesota Twins and
Dallas Cowboys.
Janelle (Christensen) Nelson ’12 welcomed
a daughter, Kennedy Elaine, in April.
Nelson majored in art history. Her grandfather
also attended Augsburg.
’12
FALL–WINTER 2018
29
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
2011
Laura (Schmidt) DuSchane ’11
and Seth Lienard ’11, ’16 MBA
opened a new business venture called Fretless
Marketing that provides social media and event
marketing services for small businesses. Their
company website is fretlessmarketing.com.
Ted Nielsen ’11 started a new job at Edward
Jones as a financial advisor. Nielsen assists
individuals and families with long-term
investing. Nielsen previously worked with
Thrivent and graduated from Augsburg with
a bachelor’s degree in English.
2012
Kimberly Simmonds ’12 was
promoted to a program assistant
with the City of Minneapolis. Simmonds
majored in history at Augsburg before receiving
her master’s in public administration in 2014.
2013
Alexandra Buffalohead ’13 started
a new role as manager of art and
cultural engagement with the Native American
Community Development Institute. Buffalohead
earned a bachelor’s degree in studio arts at
Augsburg. She has since served as a graphic
designer for the American Indian Cancer
Foundation and as a communications officer
for the Indian Land Tenure Foundation.
Tyler Heaps ’13 is a manager of analytics
and research at the United States Soccer
Federation. SportTechie, an online resource
devoted to covering topics at the intersection
of sports and technology, interviewed Heaps
regarding his work within the federation
tracking players and opponents using
innovative technologies. Heaps is working
to standardize analysis and support across
all soccer levels and teams to ensure the
federation can effectively track players
within the system.
The Chicago Tribune wrote about Dustin
Ritchea ’13, who returned to live and work
in his hometown of Chesterton, Indiana.
Ritchea serves as a promotions director for
Indiana Dunes Tourism and also works as an
actor, producer, songwriter, and writer.
2015
Nikki (Ludwig) Darst ’15 started
a new job with Black Line
Group as a research and development tax
manager. She graduated from Augsburg with
a degree in accounting management.
Fekireselassie Beyene ’16 participated in
undergraduate research that contributed to
success after graduation. See page 20.
2017
Jack Swift ’17 recently started
a new role with In The Groove
Music as a publishing assistant. As an
Augsburg student, Swift majored in
business administration with an emphasis
on music business.
Vision Bagonza ’17 conducted research
through the Office of Undergraduate
Research and Graduate Opportunity. See page 20.
2018
The NBC Nightly News featured
Neil King ’18 in a story about
his success at Augsburg in the StepUP®
Program. After graduating from Augsburg
and StepUP, King started a master’s degree
in integrated behavioral health at the
University of Minnesota.
The Twin Cities Arts Reader interviewed
Brid Henry ’16 regarding her work in the
Minneapolis theater scene. Henry has
performed in the Minnesota Fringe Festival
and has directed and co-produced the first
year of the Minneapolis branch of the Future Is
Female Festival. Henry chose to study theater
at Augsburg because the university’s program
was ranked among the top opportunities
outside of New York.
30
AUGSBURG NOW
Blair Stewig ’18 and Abigail Tetzlaff ’18
delved into student research with the
Office of Undergraduate Research and Graduate
Opportunity. See page 20.
GRADUATE PROGRAMS
Matthew Halley ’97 MSW serves as executive
director for Cookie Cart, a nonprofit youth
program that equips young people with
employment and life skills. Halley was
interviewed by the St. Paul Pioneer Press
for an article highlighting the program’s
continuing success since its founding in
1988. Halley is focused on expanding the
program by adding more youth workers.
This spring, Education Minnesota named
Kelly (Sheehan) Holstine ’12 MAE the 2018
Teacher of the Year. An English teacher at
Tokata Learning Center, an alternative high
school in Shakopee, Holstine created a new
English curriculum and developed policies
that the school has implemented. Lavender
Magazine featured Holstine’s accolades and
focus on diversity in education. As Teacher
of the Year, Holstine is an ambassador for
86,000 teachers in Minnesota.
Chung Eang Lip ’18 started a new role as
a graduate school teaching assistant at
Columbia University in New York City. Lip
is working on a Master of Public Health
degree with a concentration in infectious
disease epidemiology.
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
’16
St. Olaf College hired Gregory Mitchell ’18
as a wide receivers coach for the 2018
season. Mitchell was a receiver on the
Augsburg football team. He previously
coached receivers at Centennial High
School and Southwest High School.
Augsburg alumnus Scott Cooper ’13
returned to the university this August as
a full-time staff member serving as an alumni
engagement manager. Cooper started his
undergraduate degree at Martin Luther College
in New Ulm, Minnesota, before transferring to
Augsburg in 2011 where he completed a
bachelor’s degree in communication. Cooper
was a member of the Augsburg Choir and the
2012 and 2013 Auggie football teams. Prior to
’13
SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE
joining Augsburg’s Alumni and Constituent
Relations staff, Cooper served in Minneapolis
Public Schools’ high school special education
programs. In his free time, Cooper has enjoyed
public speaking engagements in which he has
discussed his experiences as an Auggie
football player.
’12
Rick Wolke ’12 and Ashley (Carney)
Wolke ’13 welcomed Aurora Jo Wolke on
AUGGIES HONORED
Orville “Joe” Hognander Jr.
received a Spirit of Augsburg
Award at Homecoming for
his thoughtful stewardship
and responsible leadership.
Although he was not a
student at Augsburg, he
is a noteworthy Auggie
through and through.
His grandfather was an Augsburg graduate
more than 100 years ago, his parents were
highly involved in the music program, and his
ties to alumni and faculty run deep. A retired
naval officer and private investor now living in
Edina, Minnesota, Hognander’s longstanding
involvement with Augsburg speaks to a family
history of commitment and engagement,
particularly in the continued support of
Augsburg’s Department of Music.
’16
’13
Professor Emeritus John
Holum, Ph.D., received a
Spirit of Augsburg Award
at Homecoming. A beloved
retired professor whose
legacy spans more than 30
years, Holum is a prolific
writer who has published
dozens of scientific
textbooks and peer-reviewed papers. He came to
Augsburg with a doctorate in organic chemistry
and taught chemistry until his retirement in
1993. Holum, who lives in St. Paul, Minnesota,
has demonstrated a lifelong passion for
academic excellence and support for students on
their educational journeys.
’12
’09
Tell us about the news in your life—your new job, move, marriage, and
milestones. Visit augsburg.edu/now to submit your announcements.
’15
January 8. Rick and Ashley both majored in
business administration/economics.
Caitlin (Hozeny) Lienard ’09, ’17 MSW
and Seth Lienard ’11, ’16 MBA were
married on September 23, 2017, in Stillwater,
Minnesota. There were several Auggies in
attendance. Pictured are [front, L to R]: Seth
Lienard, Caitlin (Hozeny) Lienard, Morgan (Bray)
Thompson ’09, Amanda (Chmiel) Spence ’09
’09
[back, L to R]: Wade Wojick ’11, Ryan
Wilsey ’12, Erika Osterbur ’11, Aren Olsen ’11,
Luke Lienard ’16, Aaron Rosell, Stefan
Swanson, Sheridan Lienard, Lindsey Graff ’11,
and Ben Krouse-Gagne ’11.
Laura (Swanson) Lindahl ’15 MBA and
her husband, David, welcomed a son,
Lawson Robert, on April 26.
’15
’10
Jonathan Chrastek ’10 and Katie
Pendo ’10 were married on July 7 in
Leesburg, Virginia. Several Augsburg alumni
joined the couple as they celebrated their
wedding, which was officiated by Sylvia Bull ’10
and Emily Wiles ’10. Augsburg alumni Alissa
Nolan ’09, Nick Blixt ’10, and Cait Kortum ’10
were in the wedding party, and Kate Edelen ’11
was in attendance.
’10
FALL–WINTER 2018
31
IN MEMORIAM
Lydia C. (Mitlyng) Pokrass ’35,
Ashburn, Virginia, age 104,
on May 29.
Eunice C. (Knudson) Iverson ’42,
Richmond, Minnesota, age 97,
on September 9.
Joyce M. (Reitan) Knutsen ’43,
Fridley, Minnesota, age 93,
on May 30.
Richard J. Koplitz ’45, Minneapolis,
age 95, on June 15.
Lenore “Beth” B. (Buesing)
Opgrand ’45, Wilmington, North
Carolina, age 95, on May 25.
Adele L. (Anderson) Cupit ’46,
Walnut Creek, California, age 94,
on May 26.
Jack E. Jacobsen ’46, Minneapolis,
age 95, on January 11.
Duane J. Christensen ’53, Bemidji,
Minnesota, age 87, on May 7.
Clara A. (Hookom) Cobb ’54,
Willmar, Minnesota, age 85,
on May 26.
Daniel “Dan” E. Peterson ’66,
Clear Lake, Minnesota, age 75,
on March 4.
Niles R. Schulz ’66, Minneapolis,
age 74, on July 10.
James E. Leschensky ’67,
Minneapolis, age 73, on March 25.
John “Johnny” M. Burke ’94,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 54,
on March 20.
E. William “Bill” Anderson ’56,
Plymouth, Minnesota, age 84,
on May 16.
Judith A. (Anderson) Woods ’67,
Brainerd, Minnesota, age 73, on
March 7.
Rebecca E. Rehfeld ’95,
Minnetonka, Minnesota, age 62,
on February 19.
Lloyd C. Grinde ’56, Minneapolis,
age 92, on July 1.
Dolores “Dee” M. (Larson)
Fagerlie ’72, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 90, on
August 23.
Phyllis A. Lee ’96,
Frederick, Maryland, age 76,
on January 18.
Russell C. Lee ’56,
Albuquerque, New Mexico,
age 86, on August 17.
Roger K. Ose II ’56, Minnetonka,
Minnesota, age 84, on May 9.
Sidney D. Berg ’57, Minneapolis,
age 88, on May 29.
Kathleen E. Tinseth ’74,
Minneapolis, age 66, on
September 4.
John R. Burgeson ’75, Andover,
Minnesota, age 66, on May 19.
Leroy H. Conyers ’57, Marshall,
Minnesota, age 88, on June 13.
Margaret “Marie” (Salmonson)
Marx ’78, Scandia, Minnesota,
age 89, on September 7.
Arthur E. Marben ’47, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 95, on July 14.
Charles H. Erbstoesser ’58,
Little Falls, Minnesota, age 88,
on July 18.
Estelle M. (Uleberg) Swanson ’47,
Madelia, Minnesota, age 92, on
August 2.
Stephanie J. (Torgerson) Sipprell ’81,
Eden Prairie, Minnesota, age 59,
on May 5.
Harlan J. Jacobson ’59, Ashby,
Minnesota, age 81, on July 20.
Milan J. Sedio ’48, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 94, on May 18.
Joyce K. (Johnson) Rudi ’62,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 85,
on August 29.
Mary J. Andersen ’84,
Afton, Minnesota, age 61,
on March 10.
Richard J. Thorvig ’49, Minneapolis,
age 93, on August 4.
Lynn B. Lundin ’50, Pelican Rapids,
Minnesota, age 90, on May 29.
Verna M. (Haverly) Brue ’51,
Fergus Falls, Minnesota, age 90,
on July 16.
Gloria A. (Metcalf) Kubnick ’63,
Rice Lake, Wisconsin, age 77,
on July 12.
Susan D. (Graff) Mills ’96, Fargo,
North Dakota, age 65, on July 3.
Scott W. Schuck ’97, Minneapolis,
age 63, on August 31.
John M. Welch ’07, Sudbury,
Massachusetts, age 34, on
June 30.
Marlene M. Taylor ’09, Plymouth,
Minnesota, age 31, on May 16.
Jennifer L. Lovering ’10, Bemidji,
Minnesota, age 29, on April 26.
Cheryl L. Miller ’10, Altoona,
Wisconsin, age 52, on August 9.
Jon “Ryan” R. Benson ’12,
Chanhassen, Minnesota, age 40,
on June 1.
Karlton “Karl” I. Bakke ’64,
Roseville, Minnesota, age 77,
on July 18.
Jon M. Leverentz ’92,
Hopkins, Minnesota, age 67,
on August 16.
Jacalyn “Jackie” S. (Ruschmann)
Pederson ’14, Danbury, Wisconsin,
age 65, on August 28.
Bruce E. Braaten ’64, Prior Lake,
Minnesota, age 76, on May 27.
Alisa J. (Norvold) Leonard ’93,
Northfield, Minnesota, age 48,
on July 8.
David “Alex” A. Jenny ’16, Kansas
City, Missouri, age 29, on May 27.
Charlotte K. (Jensen) Duty ’65,
St. Joseph, Missouri, age 75, on
March 24.
A. Richard Petersen ’51, Sioux
Falls, South Dakota, age 89, on
August 21.
Cengiz Gokcen ’66, St. Pete
Beach, Florida, age 74, on
August 5.
AUGSBURG NOW
Linda J. (Skay) Weinberg ’87,
Brooklyn Park, Minnesota,
age 69, on March 13.
Alice E. (Barden) Mapes ’96,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 56,
on August 24.
Eileen M. (Henkemeyer) Saldana ’91,
Minneapolis, age 82, on January 6.
Erika R. (Staub) Niemi ’51, Tucson,
Arizona, age 91, on April 16.
32
David R. Berken ’94, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 50, on May 19.
Duncan D. Flann ’55, Overland
Park, Kansas, age 85, on April 9.
Helen “Merle” M. (Houser)
Campbell ’47, Newberg, Oregon,
age 94, on June 27.
Donald L. Sween ’49, Lakeville,
Minnesota, age 93, on April 25.
Scott D. Syring ’93, Minneapolis,
age 48, on August 24.
Shirley A. Sopkiewicz ’93,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 60,
on February 27.
John E. Sorlien ’93, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 55, on July 19.
Cole R. McAdam ’17, Faribault,
Minnesota, age 23, on April 7.
The “In memoriam” listings in this
publication include notifications
received before September 15.
VISIT CAMPUS
ALUMNI
Whether you’re on campus often or haven’t
been back in years, there’s always something
new to see. Schedule a personal tour by
contacting the alumni office at 612-330-1329
or alumni@augsburg.edu.
PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
Augsburg could be right for you. Traditional
undergraduate students who are children or
spouses of Augsburg graduates or the siblings
of current Augsburg students are eligible for
a minimum scholarship of $16,000 per year.
Schedule a campus visit at augsburg.edu/visit.
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Augsburg’s press box, completed in 2008, was made possible by
gifts from Oliver Dahl ’45, John ’36 and Christine Haalan, E. Milton
“Milt” Kleven ’46, Glen Person ’47, President Paul C. Pribbenow,
Dick “Pork Chop” Thompson ’61, and Gunner and Mary Wick.
Augsburg press box name commemorates Campus Pastor Emeritus Dave Wold
Augsburg University dedicated the press box at Edor Nelson Field in honor of the late Rev. Dave Wold during the Auggie football team’s
home opener this fall. Augsburg’s campus pastor from 1983 to 2013, Wold died April 21 at age 72. In addition to his service to the
Augsburg community as a faith leader, Wold was a constant presence in the Augsburg athletics community, serving as public address
announcer for football, men’s basketball, and wrestling home competitions, along with events in many other sports. The breadth of Wold’s
pastoral care supported generations of Auggies, and he is beloved by alumni and Augsburg community members around the world.
PHOTOS BY KEVIN HEALY
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Twin Cities, MN
Permit No. 2031
Show less
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Title
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Augsburg Now Spring-Summer 2018: Cultivating Connections
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Collection
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Alumni Magazine Collection
-
Search Result
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Strengthening community
Inspired design
The best is ahead
Welcome to America
CULTIVATING
CONNECTIONS
SPRING–SUMMER 2018 | VOL. 80, NO. 2
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Director of Marketing
Stephen Jendraszak
j...
Show more
Strengthening community
Inspired design
The best is ahead
Welcome to America
CULTIVATING
CONNECTIONS
SPRING–SUMMER 2018 | VOL. 80, NO. 2
INSIDE
AUGSBURG NOW
Vice President of Marketing
and Communication
Rebecca John ’13 MBA
rjohn@augsburg.edu
Director of Marketing
Stephen Jendraszak
jendra@augsburg.edu
NOTES FROM PRESIDENT PRIBBENOW
On unexpected connections
There are many ways in which higher
education is a leap of faith. Students come
to campus brimming with curiosity and
promise. Faculty and staff meet them where
they are and seek those connections that
lead to genuine learning. And, if all works
as intended, promises are kept, learning
happens, and our mission to educate
students to be informed citizens, thoughtful
stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible
leaders is advanced.
Easy, right? Or maybe not, because more
often than not, those promises, that learning,
and our mission are embedded in the daily,
mundane, and sometimes messy interactions
and intersections that define our lives together.
One of the cornerstones of our educational
leap of faith is the importance of the
unexpected conversations and experiences
that transform our learning and our lives.
These serendipitous moments are at the
heart of every aspect of our work at Augsburg.
Serendipity is built into our curriculum,
which emphasizes experiences in which
students face the unexpected—in the
classroom, the laboratory, the neighborhood,
and around the world—with the belief that
they will be changed and equipped for their
vocations. It’s in campus life, where our
remarkably diverse students are challenged
in their daily interactions with each other
to imagine what a vibrant democracy looks
like—the unexpected ways in which people
of different backgrounds and faiths and
perspectives learn to live together.
And it’s also in the ways we are designing
campus spaces and facilities, including the
remarkable Norman and Evangeline Hagfors
Center for Science, Business, and Religion—
which is highlighted in this issue of Augsburg
Now. Nearly half of Augsburg’s faculty now
call the Hagfors Center home, and, day by day,
they are interacting with each other, forging
new and unexpected relationships that are
leading to new courses, new research projects,
new ways of connecting students and faculty
to the neighborhood. Students are making
themselves at home in the building, enjoying
departmental neighborhood spaces as well
as group study rooms. There is an energy in
the building that is itself serendipitous—who
knows what unexpected connections will be
forged to keep our promises, expand learning,
and advance our mission.
What are your serendipitous moments
at Augsburg? Send them to me at
augpres@augsburg.edu, and we’ll share what
we learn in a future issue of Augsburg Now. In
the meantime, thank you for taking the leap of
faith that defines an Augsburg education!
Faithfully yours,
Director of Public Relations
and Internal Communications
Gita Sitaramiah
sitarami@augsburg.edu
Associate Director of
Internal Communication
Katie Langston
klangston002@luthersem.edu
Assistant Director of
Marketing Management
Laura Swanson Lindahl ’15 MBA
swansonl@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Elizabeth Kästner
kaestner@augsburg.edu
Senior Creative Associate, Design
Denielle Stepka ’11
stepkad@augsburg.edu
Marketing Copywriter
John Weirick
weirick@augsburg.edu
Communication and
Social Media Specialist
Briana Alamilla ’17
alamilla@augsburg.edu
Advancement Communications
Specialist
Asha Sorenson
sorenso3@augsburg.edu
Web Manager
Joe Mann
mannj@augsburg.edu
Contributing writer
Kate H. Elliott
Augsburg Now is published by
Augsburg University
2211 Riverside Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
PAUL C. PRIBBENOW, PRESIDENT
Opinions expressed in Augsburg Now
do not necessarily reflect official
University policy.
ISSN 1058-1545
AUGSBURG NOW
Spring–Summer 2018
ART THAT SPEAKS TO YOU
On the cover: An art installation in the skyway connecting Augsburg’s new
Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion
with the James G. Lindell Library features dozens of unexpected word pairings
that reflect a range of academic disciplines. The artist, Teri Kwant, also
created inspirational wooden tabletops embossed with spiritual texts from a
number of faiths and traditions to furnish casual study spaces [pictured] on
the Hagfors Center’s first, second, and third floors. See story on page 10.
02 Around the quad
20 Welcome to America
All photos by Courtney Perry
unless otherwise indicated.
08
25
Auggies connect
Send address corrections to:
alumniupdate@augsburg.edu
29
Class notes
Send comments to:
now@augsburg.edu
32
In memoriam
Building bonds,
strengthening community
10
Inspired design
18
The best is ahead
AROUND THE QUAD
Leah Phifer teaches Political
Statistics and Methodology
during Spring 2018.
HONORING
Augsburg instructor featured in
Retiring Faculty
TIME MAGAZINE
The January 29 issue of Time
magazine acknowledged the
record-breaking number of women
engaged in political campaigns
this year and featured photos on its
cover of nearly four dozen women
running for office. With them was
Leah Phifer, an Augsburg adjunct
faculty member who teaches courses on politics, policy,
immigration, and political methodology.
Phifer, who at the time was running for the DemocraticFarmer-Labor nomination for the 8th district seat of the
U.S. House of Representatives, was approached for the
Time magazine cover story because of her involvement with
VoteRunLead, an organization that provides candidate training
to women of all parties for local and state level offices.
Phifer has served Minnesotans through her work at the FBI
and Department of Homeland Security.
Several faculty members retired
following years of dedicated service to
Augsburg University.
Augsburg is grateful for their
commitment to advancing the
University’s mission within and beyond
the classroom.
JEANINE GREGOIRE
Associate Professor, Department of Education—
with the University since 1996
DONNA PATTERSON
Assistant Professor, Department of Education—
with the University since 2006
KATHRYN SWANSON
Professor, Department of English—with the
University since 1985
CELEBRATING
2
AUGSBURG NOW
STUDENT
SUCCESS
Read about the scope of prestigious academic
achievements, awards, and honors earned by Auggies
during the 2017–18 year at augsburg.edu/now.
Board of Regents
HONORED FOR LEADERSHIP
Augsburg’s Board of Regents was awarded the 2017
John W. Nason Award for Board Leadership for efforts
including initiating an inclusive, five-year strategic
planning effort and leading the institution’s largest-ever
capital campaign.
The formal recognition came in April at the Association
of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges National
Conference on Trusteeship held in San Francisco. This
year’s honorees were chosen from approximately 40
nominations nationwide.
“Traditionally, governing boards have stayed out of the
public eye except when something goes wrong,” said
Richard Legon, president of the association’s board of
directors. “But it is important that we honor the best of
us and inspire good governance practices in others. These
boards’ stories represent some of the sharpest and most
innovative thinking in the sector.”
Now in its third year, the award is named for higher
education leader John W. Nason, recognizing his work
as chair of the National Japanese American Student
Relocation Council in helping more than 4,000 interned
students continue their college studies across the U.S.
during World War II.
AUGSBURG RECEIVES FUNDING FOR
RIVER SEMESTER
Augsburg University received $30,000 from Pentair for
the River Semester, a high-impact educational program
that combines rigorous coursework with an immersive
field experience. Sixteen students will travel in four large
voyageur-style canoes and camp
alongside the banks and on the
islands of the Mississippi
River between Minneapolis
and Memphis, Tennessee,
from August to December
2018. All participants in
this hands-on learning
experience will earn 16
credits.
PHOTO BY
STEPHEN GEFFRE
COMMENCEMENT 2018
Augsburg celebrates first
commencement as a university.
Augsburg University celebrated students
completing degrees in the traditional
undergraduate, adult undergraduate, and
graduate programs during commencement
ceremonies held April 28. The morning ceremony
recognized 441 undergraduate students,
and the afternoon ceremony honored 497
adult undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral
students. The class of 2018 was the first class
to graduate from Augsburg University.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
3
AROUND THE QUAD
Pribbenow appointed to
Governor’s Workforce
Development Board
AUGSBURG NAMED
CHAMPION SCHOOL
by Special Olympics Minnesota
This fall, Augsburg was honored as Champion School of the Year by Special
Olympics Minnesota. The award is given to a school or university that
outperforms expectations in terms of student leadership, campus involvement,
and unified sports—a program in which athletes with intellectual disabilities
train and play sports together with partners without intellectual disabilities.
According to Devin Kaasa, competition and training manager for Special
Olympics Minnesota, Augsburg was selected for the many ways it supported
the Special Olympics organization in 2016–17, including:
• Participating in a unified rivalry with
Hamline University, where the
universities competed in flag football
and unified basketball;
• Engaging in significant volunteer
activity, including at the Fall Games,
where the Auggie football team filled
volunteer spots in bocce and softball;
• Holding a “Respect Campaign” and inviting Special Olympics Global
Messenger Patrick Elmore to speak about his experience of school
bullying;
• Hosting “Special Olympics Week at Augsburg” in January 2017
with multiple activities and events; and
• Taking the Polar Plunge at Bde Maka Ska (Lake Calhoun) to
raise funds.
“Augsburg went above and beyond with its participation, and continues
to exceed expectations with the program,” Kaasa said.
4
AUGSBURG NOW
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton has appointed
Augsburg University President Paul Pribbenow
to a three-year term on the Governor’s
Workforce Development Board. The board
represents key leaders from business,
education, labor, government, and communitybased organizations to advise the governor on
Minnesota’s workforce system.
“I’m proud to represent the state’s private
higher education sector as a member of
this board,” said Pribbenow, “and to have
Augsburg engaged in an integrated effort
linking government, employers, education,
workforce centers, and employees to sustain a
vibrant and equitable Minnesota economy.”
The board, which meets quarterly, analyzes
and recommends workforce development
policies to the governor and the Minnesota
legislature to ensure a globally competitive
labor pool for the state.
Augsburg continues to be top producer of
U.S. Fulbright students
In February, the U.S. Department of State’s
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
listed Augsburg University as one of the top
U.S. colleges and universities in producing
Fulbright students in 2017–18. Augsburg
ranked No. 9 among 22 master’s institutions,
the fifth time Augsburg was ranked on the list.
The Fulbright program offers recent graduates
and graduate students opportunities for
research, study, and teaching
in more than 140 countries.
Since 2007, Augsburg
University has had 28
Fulbright students selected
for their academic merit and
leadership potential.
PHOTO BY ELIZABETH FLORES, © STAR TRIBUNE
Interfaith
TOUCHDOWN
This winter, as the world’s attention focused on Minneapolis and U.S. Bank Stadium during
Super Bowl LII, Augsburg also took a turn in the spotlight. Faith leaders from across the
Twin Cities and a former Minnesota Vikings star gathered at Augsburg’s Edor Nelson Field
to film a football-themed video organized by the Minnesota Super Bowl Host Committee.
The purpose was to raise funds and awareness to end homelessness through the Emergency
Rental Assistance Program and to promote unity across faiths, races, and politics.
Augs burg launches
#LOVELOCALWATER initiative
Augsburg University is phasing out the use of bottled water to demonstrate a
commitment to consume local tap water readily available to everyone on campus.
Augsburg’s Environmental Stewardship Committee launched a #LoveLocalWater initiative
in May 2017. This new policy aims to reduce waste and greenhouse gas emissions, and
supports the provision of water as a human right, not a commodity. Since February 1,
bottled water purchases have no longer been reimbursed or available at most events.
Visit augsburg.edu/now to learn more
about Augsburg’s green initiatives.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
5
ON THE SPOT
Understanding the sharing economy
with Jeanne Boeh
When Super Bowl LII came to Minneapolis in February, an estimated 125,000 people descended on the Twin Cities
for the big game. But where did they stay? How did they get around? Increasingly, consumers opted into the “sharing
economy”—choosing services like Uber and Airbnb.
So what exactly is the sharing economy? And how does it impact traditional industries, as well as the economy in
general? Augsburg University Professor of Economics and Chair of Business Administration Jeanne Boeh weighs in on the
increasing popularity of collaborative services.
such as VRBO (lodging) and Turo (cars).
Nonprofits are increasingly attempting
to share services and equipment not to
increase revenue but rather in an effort to
reduce costs so that more of their budget
can be used for their core mission.
Q:
How have new platforms influenced
traditional industries like hospitality
and transportation?
A:
Q:
A:
What is the sharing economy?
The sharing economy allows
individuals and groups to make money
from underused assets like their cars or
homes. Some economists speak of a new
triple bottom line consisting not only of
financial returns but also environmental
and social benefits by connecting people
and resources. The sharing economy
also includes nonprofits sharing space or
personnel with each other.
Q:
A:
6
Why are people drawn to participate in
the sharing economy?
Money is the primary motivating factor
in many of the commercial enterprises
AUGSBURG NOW
Home sharing sites such as Airbnb
or VRBO have had an additive effect.
Uber and Lyft have served as a substitute
for cabs, drastically reducing the volume of
business for traditional taxis—I’ve heard by
even as much as two-thirds in Los Angeles.
Q:
A:
Are there drawbacks for providers and/
or consumers?
Commercial sharing sites work well for
those who are middle income or above,
but people with lower incomes will have
difficulty accessing most platforms without
smartphones or technological prowess.
Credit cards are often required by these
services, also hampering the ability of lowincome consumers to access them.
VRBO has attempted to minimize
potential problems for both sides of a
transaction by offering insurance options.
For renters it serves to ensure that the rental
will be available and as advertised. On the
owner side, damage deposits are collected
just as in a traditional rental. Consumers can
also buy additional insurance at a low cost
to cover any expensive accidental damage.
The rapid increases in these markets make
it clear that, overall, both providers and
consumers are benefiting.
Q:
The Super Bowl was in Minneapolis in
early February and there were widely
publicized predictions of a huge uptick in
sharing economy participants. Did we see that?
A:
Airbnb reported $3.7 million was spent
on housing during the Super Bowl as a
record-high 5,500 listings became available
in the Twin Cities. The average last-minute
rental was $286 per night. It helped the
city because there were simply not enough
hotel rooms available. Super Bowl visitors
also spent hundreds of millions of dollars on
food, shopping, and transportation.
One must always be careful to not
overemphasize the impact of such events
on the underlying economy, especially in
the long run. However, the homeowners and
workers who earned extra money during the
Super Bowl will continue to contribute to the
local economy as they spend those earnings.
Go to augsburg.edu/now to learn
the future of the sharing economy.
AROUND THE QUAD
Treasures in the
Distinguished Teaching and
Learning Award winners
science labs
Augsburg’s new Norman and Evangeline
Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and
Religion features 24 labs and 6,000 square
feet of student-faculty research facilities.
In the process of moving equipment from
Science Hall into the Hagfors Center,
Augsburg faculty members and students
sorted through devices spanning a variety of
applications and a range of eras. One of the oldest pieces of “lab equipment” still in use is
a Waring blender from the 1950s. Although these gadgets were initially created as a kitchen
tool, Matthew Beckman, associate professor of biology, said these blenders are used in student
experiments to break up tissues and show that bacteria mate by exchanging genetic material.
The newest lab device moved into the Biology Department was a NanoDrop
spectrophotometer, which measures how much DNA or RNA a solution contains by
calculating the amount of UV light it absorbs. Although initially purchased for genetics
research, the device is broadly used by biologists and chemists at Augsburg. While it’s
unlikely that faculty members or students have access to a spectrophotometer in their homes,
Beckman said he does keep a Waring blender in his kitchen. As the saying goes, they don’t
make ’em like they used to.
Augsburg annually recognizes
individuals who have made
exemplary contributions to creating
an engaging academic environment.
The 2018 recipients of the
Distinguished Contributions to
Teaching and Learning awards are:
Teaching
Dallas Liddle, Associate Professor,
Department of English
Elizabeth Klages, Instructor,
Political Science
Scholarship
Mary Lowe, Associate Professor,
Department of Religion
Service
Lois Bosch, Professor and MSW
Program Director, Department of
Social Work
SAVE THE DATES:
September 13–15
The Nobel Peace Prize Forum—Minneapolis will mark its 30th
anniversary in September. Hosted and presented by Augsburg
University, the Forum is a platform to educate and inspire a new
generation of peacemakers through the exemplary work of Nobel
Peace Prize Laureates. This year’s program is created around
the work of the 2016 Laureate, President Juan Manuel Santos of
Colombia, who was instrumental in bringing the South American
nation’s 55-year civil war to an end, and the 2017 Laureate, The
International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, whose work drew
attention to the consequences of nuclear weapons use and supported
passage of the Nuclear Weapons Prohibition Treaty.
[L to R]: Dallas Liddle, Mary Lowe, Lois Bosch,
and Elizabeth Klages.
Visit peace.augsburg.edu for ticket, schedule,
and presenter information.
COURTESY PHOTOS
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
7
BY LAURA SWANSON LINDAHL ’15 MBA
his year, John and Kristian Evans
started their Thursday mornings
off right … and left.
At the 6 a.m. DinoMights practices in
the Augsburg Ice Arena, young players
sometimes put their hockey skates on the
wrong feet or jerseys on backward, focusing
more on catching up with teammates than
on the logistics of assembling pictureperfect uniforms. As a volunteer coach,
Kristian describes the weekly 10-minute
rush to outfit 20 elementary schoolers for
the ice as “pure chaos.” After he and his
fellow coaches ensure that skate laces are
cinched tightly against players’ tiny ankles
and the kids are safely in their gear, these
volunteers prepare for a new challenge:
channeling the young athletes’ enthusiasm
into a successful practice.
“It’s crazy how much energy the players
have in the morning,” Kristian said. “It’s
never a problem to wake them up; it’s
always me who’s the sleepy one.”
Fortunately, the players’ spirited attitudes
are contagious, according to the Auggie,
8
AUGSBURG NOW
who is studying communication, marketing,
and political science. “They act like a shot
of caffeine,” he said.
It’s helpful that DinoMights practices leave
Kristian with a boost of energy. The thirdyear student was enrolled in a full course
load at Augsburg this fall and used his time
outside the classroom to intern at a U.S.
senator’s office, serve as a sports editor for
the Augsburg Echo student newspaper, do
play-by-play announcing for Auggie soccer
teams, and promote the Nobel Peace Prize
Forum—Minneapolis as a student member
of the Forum’s marketing team.
Volunteering for DinoMights, Kristian
said, was a way to carve out time in his
schedule for one more thing he loves:
hockey. DinoMights builds relationships
with at-risk youth in South Minneapolis
through hockey teams and training, tutoring
and academic support, mentoring, and
spiritual development opportunities. As
one of approximately a dozen nonprofit
organizations that lease athletic space
at Augsburg each year—from the CedarRiverside Community School to the
Minnesota Sports Federation broomball
state tournament—DinoMights benefits
from access to quality facilities that are
otherwise scarce in the Twin Cities.
A passion for hockey—and for Augsburg—
runs in the Evans family.
John, for instance, has been skating
at the university for nearly 40 years. The
Augsburg Athletic Hall of Famer played
for Auggie men’s hockey teams that won
four Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference championships and the National
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics
championships in 1981 and 1982.
While earning two national titles was
a thrill, John now looks back on his
college days and acknowledges that
it’s the relationships he developed with
teammates, classmates, and faculty
members that truly influenced his life. “It’s
[L to R]: Kristian Evans ’19 and John Evans ’82
Kristian Evans ’19 helps a member of the
DinoMights Squirt team prepare for hockey
practice. Players are 10 or 11 years old.
the friendships you remember,” he said.
Decades ago, John chose to attend
Augsburg because he wanted to live and
work in Minnesota’s urban core and was
drawn to the school’s pioneering emphasis
on experiential education.
Today, as fathers and sons go, John
and Kristian appear to be more alike
than different. Both men played hockey
in Norway; John signed a pro contract
after Augsburg, and Kristian played there
following high school. When Kristian was
searching for a college after his junior
hockey eligibility expired, at first he thought
he’d go to school anywhere but Augsburg,
wanting to venture farther afield than his
dad and mom, Joan (Moline) Evans ’83.
Kristian’s desire to take an entirely new
path soon gave way to the revelation that
Augsburg’s metropolitan location and
commitment to community involvement
were a perfect fit for him, as well.
And, much like his father, Kristian
values the power of Auggie friendships.
In January 2017, he was diagnosed with
cancer, underwent surgery to remove
a tumor, and began chemotherapy
treatments to rid his body of any remaining
cancer cells. He continued to attend
Augsburg full time and learned to lean
on his roommates for support, whether
he needed help shaving his head after
he began to lose his hair or someone to
accompany him to chemo appointments.
“I have friends who’d walk with me in
the middle of winter
to the East Bank
hospital where I
received care and sit with me
for three hours before they
had class,” Kristian said.
“You don’t get that with every
group of people, and that
fact is never lost on me.”
With his cancer in
remission, Kristian sees his role with
DinoMights as a way to strengthen an
important network for Twin Cities youth who
face challenges ranging from navigating life
as first-generation Americans to living in
single-parent households.
“It’s amazing to be part of a group that
says, ‘We understand that you’re going
through some tough stuff, and we will help
you in whatever aspect of your life means
the most—whether that be through athletics
or through faith or through education,’” he
said. “That’s why we build communities of
support—so that when one of us falls, there
are other people who are willing to step in.”
For Auggies like John
and Kristian who’ve come
to embrace Augsburg’s
commitments to vocational
discernment and civic
engagement, DinoMights is
just one example of the power
of transferring the University’s
educational framework to
a real-world application.
“If you can make one corner of your
community better, then you can say you’re
doing your part,” Kristian said. “This is
what Augsburg teaches when it comes to
vocation.”
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
9
The Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion is the largest academic building on
campus. It houses multiple academic disciplines, including biology, business administration, chemistry, computer
science, economics, environmental science, mathematics and statistics, physics, psychology, and religion. Several
of these departments previously occupied space in Science Hall, which is located across 21st Avenue.
BY REBECCA JOHN ’13 MBA
“Augsburg sees science as a search for meaning, a
collaboration with nature, and a quest for quantitative
understanding.”
This statement was captured in a 2007 “science
credo” authored by Augsburg faculty in the sciences.
The credo proclaimed that Augsburg’s science
programs should:
•
Emphasize science in context, seeking out and
developing intersections among departments
and programs.
•
Underscore the purposeful practice of science
as an essential ingredient to citizenship.
•
Use Augsburg’s urban setting to highlight the
relevance of science in our call to serve our
community.
This visionary thinking sparked the imagination
of faculty leadership across disciplines and led to a
vision for a new building concept: a center for science,
business, and religion that would not only replace
Augsburg’s outdated science facilities, but would
foster interdisciplinary collaboration and embody
Augsburg’s commitment to its community.
That vision came to life this past January with
the grand opening of the Norman and Evangeline
Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion,
a signature academic building that celebrates
Augsburg’s historic roots, contemporary relevance,
and promising future.
The Hagfors Center was made possible by the
generosity of more than 1,200 donors, whose
names appear on a glass wall outside one of
the ground-floor classrooms.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
11
The exterior colors of the Hagfors Center reflect Augsburg’s Norwegian
heritage, connect the decades of architecture represented on campus,
and espouse the vitality of Augsburg’s urban setting.
The Hagfors Center design complements the colorful
residences in the neighborhood surrounding Augsburg.
From Old Main to Oren Gateway Center, Augsburg’s campus
comprises architectural styles from various decades.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF HGA ARCHITECTS
The Hagfors Center front doors open onto a brand new roundabout at the west end
of South 7th Street, with a direct view to the main entrance of the Foss Lobeck
Miles Center and the atrium of Hoversten Chapel. Inside the building, the west
wing extends from the lobby at a diagonal that runs parallel to Riverside Avenue.
It connects with the north wing in an “open-arms” embrace of the community
garden, where neighbors and members of the campus community grow food, build
relationships, and engage in hands-on learning experiences. (See story, page 28.)
12
AUGSBURG NOW
Community
Garden
Riv
ers
ide
Ave
nue
Hagfors
Center
Foss
Center
New Green
Space Science
Hall
The
Quad
Murphy
Square
Inspiration for the color accents comes from images of
brightly colored homes and buildings in Bergen, Norway.
Gundale Chapel is named for Elnar Gundale ’33, who
emigrated from Norway to the United States in 1930 and
studied at Augsburg College and Seminary. He was ordained
in 1937 as a Lutheran Free Church pastor and served several
parishes for nearly 60
years. He and his wife,
Catherine, raised six
children (four of whom
attended Augsburg).
Their daughter,
Evangeline, and her
husband, Norm, are the
named benefactors of
the Hagfors Center.
The multicolor
“Trans:Perspective,” the sculpture in the
glass sculpture that
Gundale Chapel, was created by artist
hangs in the Gundale
Bebe Keith and sponsored through the
generosity of Augsburg Board of Regents
Chapel incorporates
Chair Jeffrey Nodland ’77 and Becky
textile designs from
(Bjella) Nodland ’79.
contemporary and
ancient cultures and religions. The sculpture also includes
glass panels without patterns—suggesting the future of
Augsburg yet to unfold—as well as smudges, blurring, and
distress to imply imperfection in the world, past and present.
From one specific location in the Gundale Chapel, the 3-D sculpture
takes on the shape of a cross—a perspective not viewable from any
other spot in the room. See a video at augsburg.edu/now.
The Hagfors Center anchors the west side
of campus, providing new green space
that will connect with the quad after the
removal of Science Hall and create an
open east-to-west pedestrian flow
through to Murphy Square.
FALL - WINTER 2017
15
The Hagfors Center’s expanded labs provide space for realworld experiments that take longer than a traditional 4-hour
lab period. Its grow rooms allow students to cultivate plants
for lab courses using modern plant science methods. There
are modern meeting rooms for presentations with local
businesses and entrepreneurs, aquaria that provide a handson experience with marine aquatic creatures like algae and
sponges, and a food lab where students study the physics,
chemistry, and social impact of our food systems. There’s
even a collaborative makerspace where students build rockets,
explore 3-D printing, and more.
14
AUGSBURG NOW
PHOTO BY GAFFER PHOTOGRAPHY
PHOTO BY GAFFER PHOTOGRAPHY
For many years, several Augsburg science departments had dedicated learning and gathering spaces in Science Hall. Augsburg
incorporated these “department homes” throughout the new building—providing interactive learning spaces for all science,
business, and religion students and faculty. The building also boasts multiple casual learning spaces, which are popular among
students of all majors. In fact, during finals week in December 2017—before the building was even officially open—students
filled the whiteboard walls in these spaces with notes and equations as they studied together for semester finals.
In the skyway that connects the Hagfors Center with the
James G. Lindell Library, custom glass etchings bridge
disparate disciplines, both figuratively and literally. The
etchings, which also make the skyway glass bird-safe, feature
unconventional word pairings, such as “define divinity” and
“love density,” that are designed to make people think. The
skyway was funded through the generosity of John R. Paulson
and Norma L. Paulson, whose family also sponsored the
skyway link from Sverdrup Hall to Lindell Library.
Learn more about the art in the Hagfors Center at
augsburg.edu/now.
The Hagfors Center is designed to meet the standards for
silver LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)
certification, a globally recognized symbol of sustainability. The
building has two green roofs—one on a flexible, ground-floor
learning space and one above the front entrance canopy.
During construction, Augsburg exceeded its goal of awarding
more than 10 percent of the project’s contracts to women- and
minority-owned businesses. To ensure the building can adapt to
evolving needs over the coming decades, each wing was built
on a standard grid that allows walls to be reconfigured to create
larger or smaller spaces as requirements change over time.
The skyway glass art, “Both/And,” was created by artist Teri Kwant and
sponsored through the generosity of Augsburg Board of Regents member
Karolynn Lestrud ’68.
The skyway art, “Both/And,” was created by artist Terri Kwant and
sponsored through the generosity of Augsburg Board of Regents Member
Karolynn Lestrud ’68.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
15
CE.COM
FINANCE-COMMER
E | $1.50
TAG
PERIODICALS POS
VOL. 131, NO. 14
2018 Project of the Year
nter at A
e
C
rs
fo
g
a
H
e
h
T
Building Blocks:
—Design Build Institute of
America-Upper Midwest Region
“... Hagfors Center exceeds
expectations.”
—The Echo, January 19, 2018
“The Hagfors Center makes
Augsburg more competitive.”
—Neal St. Anthony,
Star Tribune, March 3, 2018
“Augsburg is one of the most
thoughtful, reflective partners
that we’ve ever had.”
—Bill Blanski, design principal, HGA Architects,
Finance & Commerce, January 19, 2018
“We focused on our heritage
… experiential learning, our
diversity, and our call to serve.
That resonated.”
—Mike Good ’71, Augsburg regent emeritus and campaign
chair for the Center for Science, Business, and Religion,
Star Tribune, March 3, 2018
16
AUGSBURG NOW
feet of classroo
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FALL 2016
8
19, 201
Friday | January
* PHOTOS COURTESY OF STEPHEN GEFFRE
+ PHOTOS COURTESY OF McGOUGH CONSTRUCTION
GRAND OPENING JANUARY 2018
THE BEST
IS AHEAD
Athletic Director Jeff Swenson ’79 plays a
new role helping plan Augsburg’s 150th
anniversary festivities
BY GITA SITARAMIAH
S
ince arriving in 1975 as a first-year
student, Jeff Swenson has built a
storied legacy at Augsburg University.
Swenson was a national wrestling
champion as a student and joined
the Augsburg coaching staff upon
graduation. He then spent 25 seasons
as one of the most successful amateur
wrestling coaches in the U.S. As athletic
18
AUGSBURG NOW
director since 2001, he has led the
athletics program through a period of
unprecedented growth and improvement.
Now, Swenson is playing another key
role at Augsburg as Sesquicentennial
Steering Committee co-chair, shaping
the anniversary festivities planned
for the 2019-20 academic year. In a
recent interview, Swenson shared his
perspectives on the University’s 150th
anniversary as well as the importance
of academics and civic engagement for
student-athletes and why he’s proud to
be an Auggie.
Despite all of the achievements for
Augsburg and Swenson, he feels the
best is still ahead. “I’ve never been more
excited about Augsburg than I am today.”
SE
YOU ARE A CO-CHAIR OF THE SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMITTEE.
WHAT DO YOU HOPE THIS MILESTONE ANNIVERSARY WILL DO
FOR AUGSBURG?
It’s a great time to celebrate our rich history: 150 years, wow!
That’s really something special. I’m hoping the sesquicentennial
allows us to celebrate the past but also to look toward the next
150 years of Augsburg University. It’ll be a great time to bring
people together: faculty, staff, students, alumni, and friends of the
institution. Selfishly, I’m looking forward to celebrating athletics’
place in the school’s history. In the past two decades, we were the
first university in the state to start a women’s hockey team and a
women’s lacrosse team. Last year, we made the playoffs in eight
out of 10 sports—the most ever in school history.
AUGSBURG ATHLETES ARE INTENTIONALLY CALLED STUDENTATHLETES. HOW DO YOU SUPPORT ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT?
They’re students first. Every one of our athletes gets a day off of
training and games. Professors do understand the demands of
students involved in athletics, and they work with the students
to help them succeed. Ultimately, our goal is that all students
graduate in four years. We want to recruit prospective students
and tell them and their families that our students graduate in four
years with high achievement in their courses. Our student-athletes’
cumulative GPA averages 3.23, and we’re proud of that.
I UNDERSTAND THERE IS INCREASED COLLABORATION BETWEEN
STUDENT-ATHLETES AND OTHER STUDENT GROUPS. WHAT’S
BEHIND THAT, AND WHAT DO YOU HOPE WILL DEVELOP FROM
THIS PARTNERSHIP?
It’s very intentional, and it’s one of my goals, along with
President Paul Pribbenow. Our 2017–18 student body president
BK (Bashiru Kormah) ’19 really pushed for it. BK is on the Augsburg
men’s soccer team, and he organized a gathering at the president’s
house of student-athletes and members of other student groups to
talk about experiences and collaborative opportunities. Fostering
an even more unified campus culture is hugely beneficial, and
I think we’re doing that. We’re very involved with living out the
University’s mission in the daily life of athletics.
R
AT
I
ON
1869-2019
SQ
U IC
ENTEN N
CE
IAL
LE
B
AUGSBURG IS CALLED AS AN INSTITUTION TO SERVE OUR NEIGHBOR.
WHAT’S THE ROLE OF COMMUNITY SERVICE IN ATHLETICS?
Community service can have a major lifelong positive impact on
student-athletes.
I will always remember one of my community service
opportunities as an Augsburg student. I held a boy who had a
severe cognitive disability. I bounced him on my knee, and my
objective was to get him to smile. To this day, I remember that
experience as much or more than any of the football games or
wrestling matches I was in.
The Augsburg athletics experience is really well-rounded. All
of our student-athletes and coaches participate in at least one
community service activity each year. Jane Becker, our head
volleyball coach, is our director of athletic community service and
engagement. Because of her efforts, we do many more community
service activities than in the past. In the 2016–17 academic year
our athletes finished with 4,652 community engagement hours
and participated in the largest food drive on campus, collecting
410 pounds of food. We are on track to reach or exceed that
amount for 2017–18.
AS AUGSBURG PREPARES TO COMMEMORATE 150 YEARS, WHAT
STANDS OUT FOR YOU?
All the relationships stand out for me—from the time I was a
student-athlete here and then throughout my career. I’ve seen 10
buildings constructed on campus, worked for four presidents, and
held nine job titles, but it would all come down to the relationships
more than anything else, including relationships with my coaches,
students, faculty colleagues, and my teachers.
HOW HAS AUGSBURG EVOLVED AS THE UNIVERSITY APPROACHES THE
SESQUICENTENNIAL AND WHAT MAKES YOU PROUD TO BE AN AUGGIE?
I love that Augsburg is student-centered. We’re at the forefront
of society’s changes. We’re inclusive. We’re accepting. We’re
innovative in our work. I think the focus in those areas has enabled
us to stay ahead of our competition and is why students continue
to choose Augsburg.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
19
WELCOME TO
Augsburg alumna
Katia Iverson ’12
orients newcomers to
the United States amid
mounting uncertainty
and narrowing policies
BY KATE H. ELLIOTT
20
Katia Iverson refuses to say
“maybe.”
She used to say it a lot, as a
novice caseworker, unwilling to
share disheartening news. But
experience has vanquished the
word from her vocabulary.
“When a mother asks whether
her kids qualify for assistance,
and you respond with, ‘Well,
maybe’ when you know the
answer will become a ‘No,’ you
give those families false hope,”
she said. “It’s much better to
be direct and clear: ‘Yes, we
can help’ or ‘No, we can’t,’
and if we can’t, let’s not waste
time and instead figure out a
solution—together.”
Iverson is part of a team of 15
“ex-maybe-ers,” who each year
assist roughly 400 people—from
world-class bodybuilders and
doctors to farmers, models, and
priests. She and her colleagues
guide this cross-section of
humanity through securing living
arrangements, establishing
benefits, landing jobs, and
plotting out bus routes to school.
Her clients couldn’t be more
varied—some are single, while
others have 13 children; some
speak five languages, while others
cannot read or write.
But they all share the same
status: refugee.
Each fled their home country
because of persecution based
on race, religion, ethnicity,
social group, or political opinion.
They applied for refugee status
from the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees,
which verified their claims. They
applied for resettlement in the
United States through a yearslong screening process before the
U.S. Department of State invited
them to pursue a direct path to
citizenship.
They arrived on planes,
welcomed by strangers.
“No one wants to be a
refugee,” said Iverson, a team
manager for the Minnesota
Council of Churches’ Refugee
Services. “Many have lived
in terrible conditions and
experienced unimaginable
trauma. Nearly everyone dreams
of returning to their homeland—
to the family and friends who
speak their language, observe
their customs, and prepare
familiar foods.
“Being a refugee is their last
option.”
AUGSBURG NOW
PHOTOS BY RENEE JONES SCHNEIDER, © STAR TRIBUNE
Katia Iverson ’12 encourages a new arrival from
a refugee family as he practices his English.
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
21
he 90-day challenge
Refugees resettling in the United
States come through a state agency
or one of nine voluntary agencies
that have cooperative agreements
with the State Department to provide
reception and placement services.
Minnesota Council of Churches’
Refugee Services has welcomed
immigrants to Minnesota since
1985, and Iverson has done so on
its behalf since 2013.
“The clock is ticking from the
time refugees walk off the plane. We
have 90 days to help them start their
lives in Minnesota,” said Iverson,
who has welcomed hundreds of
refugees to America’s shores. “The
federal government provides slightly
more than $900 per person to get
each family started, but we rely on
the support of faith communities,
nonprofits, and individual volunteers
to help these newcomers gain
self-sufficiency.”
Iverson is glad to work in one of
the more welcoming U.S. states,
with Minnesota having resettled
more than 90,000 refugees since
1970. But increasingly critical
rhetoric around refugees has made
life on the front lines tough as the
28-year-old struggles with landlords
hesitant to rent to “those people”
and discrimination at new arrivals’
workplaces or schools.
Increasing day-to-day challenges
thicken amid confounding
regulations and tightening policies.
For the 2018 fiscal year, for
instance, the federal government
has capped refugee admissions
nationwide at 45,000—the lowest
in decades—and arrivals aren’t even
on pace to reach half that number,
22
AUGSBURG NOW
according to the United Nations.
“There is fear and uncertainty,
but for me, the toughest part of the
job remains the short window of
time I have with families,” Iverson
said of her three-month timeline.
“To make real progress, clients
need to be open, but they have
been telling their life story—almost
on autopilot—for years, and trust
doesn’t come easily for many of
them, especially with strangers.”
Building trust among
the doubtful
Ahmednor Farah has seen Iverson
knock down walls of resistance. For
four years, the native Somali worked
alongside Iverson as a resettlement
case manager and interpreter. Katia
can flip a switch, he said, from
boundless compassion—crying
alongside a despairing client—to
sober sincerity when she has to
administer doses of reality. Clear
boundaries within an expanse of
empathy is the job.
“Katia’s role is challenging, and
only a person with her integrity can
“Katia managed to learn Somali,
as the majority of her clients were
Somalis, and she pushes back at
the systems working against these
families to make sure they receive
equitable and just support.”
Her family has witnessed Iverson’s
devotion. Younger brother, Luke
Iverson ’15, roomed with Katia
for several years. He comforted
her when she would worry about
“families not making it” and
understood when Katia had to cancel
plans in order to meet a new arrival
or help negotiate with a landlord.
“Sometimes Katia would leave
the house at 11 p.m. to head to
the airport, but she’d always be at
work by 8:30 a.m. the next day,
following up with those clients
or others,” said Luke, a financial
advisor with Ameriprise Financial in
downtown Minneapolis. “Her life is
unconventional, but it is the times
of deep connection and joy that I
believe feed her the most and remind
her why she is doing this work in the
midst of a climate that fights against
her and these families.”
It’s all worth it, Katia said.
Minnesota has the highest number of refugees per
capita nationwide, according to the U.S. Census
and refugee-support agencies. With 2 percent of
the nation’s population, Minnesota has 13 percent
of its refugees.
deliver the way she delivers,” said
Farah, who now works as a human
services representative for Hennepin
County, where he said low-income
families, including refugee arrivals,
apply for food and cash benefits.
“There is challenge and sadness in
my job, but the positive far outweighs
any negative. The resilience of these
families is incredible. They are so
present and bring with them long-held
traditions—how to heal when we don’t
Iverson helps refugee families through the steps of resettling in Minnesota, from renting a house to helping children acclimate to their new homes.
have a doctor nearby or how to provide
emotional healing to one another—
that adds a richness to our world. They
invite me into a deep foundation of
wisdom, and that is a gift.”
A heart for service, a
passion for others
Katia was meant for this work. From a
young age, her parents drove their four
children from the predominantly white
suburbs of Minneapolis to engage in
missions in the Phillips neighborhood
and other low-income areas.
This focus on service inspired
Iverson to enroll at Augsburg
University, nestled among some
of the state’s most prominent
refugee settlements. She was an
international relations major until
her introductory class focused
on “the way nations and leaders
interacted rather than the humans
living in those nations,” Katia said.
Mid-year, the then-first-year
student headed to the Nobel Peace
Prize Forum, during which world
leaders and peacemakers interact
with students and community
members. Waiting for a keynote to
begin, Katia struck up a conversation
about career options with fellow
Auggies sitting near her.
A voice popped into the
conversation: “I’m Professor Frankie
Shackleford, and I’m developing a
new major: cross-cultural studies.
You should consider it.”
Katia spoke with the professor
of Norwegian—and continued
to talk for four years—about the
influence language has on our world
and the insight people gain when
they imagine life through others’
perspectives.
“I continue to rely on the lessons
I learned at Augsburg as I consider
the impact of my work and what I
bring to each home,” said Katia,
who went on to participate in the
Forum’s Peace Scholars program
and graduate magna cum laude. “I
am constantly analyzing the energy
I bring, the questions I ask, and
the way I ask them. I strive to be
respectful and curious, to dress
appropriately for each culture, and
to make clients laugh.
“Laughter is universal to all
people, and it is key to my work.
Intercultural interactions provide
constant opportunities to laugh
when we say or do something a bit
off,” she added. “But when both the
client and I come with a generous
spirit, the response is laughter rather
than offense or anger.”
Refining her skillset
Katia is comfortable being
uncomfortable, which she credits to
those formative mission experiences
that empowered her to become a
peer mediator in elementary school
and then the first white student on
the Maple Grove Senior High School
Diversity Council.
She embraced new opportunities
at Augsburg—traveling abroad
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
23
and enrolling in the Bonner Leaders
Program, now the LEAD Fellows
Program. Her brother, Luke, joined
Katia in the service-based, workstudy experience that empowers
undergraduates to integrate
civic engagement and leadership
development into their studies. Katia
said the experience honed her ability
to adapt, problem-solve, and relate
to others.
Every year, more than 70 courses at
Augsburg include an embedded servicelearning component. Students average
25 hours per semester in servicelearning experience directly connected
to course objectives and learning goals.
Elaine Eschenbacher ’18 MAL, director for
Augsburg’s Sabo Center for Democracy
and Citizenship, said the Iversons’
experiences reflect the transferable
skills and culturally relevant outcomes
the program is designed to inspire.
“Our LEAD Fellows are engaged
in long-term, in-depth communitybased work, and these opportunities
are funded, which opens the door for
many students who are often unable
to engage in service learning because
they need to pay the bills,” said
Eschenbacher, who guides the 35-40
fellows each year. “Community partners
are confident in our students, and
some have empowered undergraduates
to develop programs like an eight-week
nutrition education class for Somali
mothers. This is real, impactful work.”
Progress emerges from
collaboration
At Augsburg, the two eldest Iverson
siblings shared a focus on those in
need but it is a bond with younger
sister, Natalie Iverson, that has emerged
as of late. Natalie is a secondary ESL
teacher at Hmong College Preparatory
Academy, a K-12 charter school in
St. Paul. As it turns out, several of
Natalie’s students are from families
Katia serves as a case manager.
“It makes me realize how powerful
it would be if all systems were in
communication, where a teacher could
talk to a family’s caseworker and vice
versa. I update Katia about a student,
and she communicates it with those
families, making the families feel
seen, welcomed, and supported,”
said Natalie, who works with students
11-20 years old. “I can offer her my
advice as an educator when she’s got
families struggling with school, and she
can offer me perspective when I am
lesson planning.”
Earlier this year, for example,
Natalie mentioned to Katia that she
was teaching English vocabulary about
household problems families might
need to communicate to their landlord.
Katia offered Hmong, Karen, and Thai
language resources related to tenants’
rights, then followed with an ageappropriate presentation she modified
from one designed for parents.
The sisters maintain that immigrants
are the greatest gift our society never
knew it needed, and that we should
lean into their stories and customs,
rather than fear the unfamiliar. Katia
urges people to do what they can,
from welcoming a new family to the
neighborhood, teaching English,
writing elected officials, or sponsoring
a refugee family through church. The
possibilities are endless, Katia said,
and there is a way for everyone to
welcome others to our nation and set
them up to become successful citizens.
It’s not work; it’s a calling
Has this work changed Katia? Yes.
“Although her life is busy, and she
is always moving, there are so many
still moments of intimate spirituality
in her work,” Natalie said of her sister.
“Her work allows her to see people in
all stages of their lives, both in a literal
sense, and in a vulnerable, human
sense. And I don’t think anyone can
stay the same because of that.”
Ahmednor Farah and Iverson show a newly relocated refugee family
how to ensure the gas burners on the stove are safely turned off.
24
AUGSBURG NOW
AUGGIES CONNECT
FROM THE ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
Dear alumni and friends,
COURTESY PHOTO
T
he Augsburg University Alumni Board
supports the University’s mission
by finding meaningful ways for our
members to contribute their time, talent,
and treasure. Members meet regularly to
create and enhance events where Auggies
can network, collaborate, and serve together.
Our focus this year has been on
connecting alumni with current students. At an annual networking
event in February, attendees took part in mock interviews, had their
headshot photos taken by a professional photographer, and met with
other Auggies working in their industry. Most importantly, students
and alumni shared their experiences and stories, often creating longterm connections.
Another way the Alumni Board worked to foster connections
between Augsburg students and graduates was through piloting a
new program called Auggie Take Out. The program matches alumni
participants with students who have an interest in their occupation.
The alumni volunteers take the students out for informational
interviews over coffee or lunch as a way to initiate a mentorship.
I had the chance to participate and enjoyed connecting with
a second-year student on the football team who is interested in
sports medicine. I was impressed by the questions he asked me
and the ways Augsburg is helping him plan for his future career.
As you consider opportunities to remain engaged with the
Augsburg community, I encourage you to join the Alumni Board at
an event that’s part of the Auggies in the City series. Learn more
about the event series on page 27, and mark your calendar for
upcoming outings to see the Minnesota Twins, Minnesota United
FC, and Minnesota Lynx. Visit augsburg.edu/alumni/events for
details and discounted tickets.
I invite you to join the Alumni Board as we continue to advance
the Augsburg mission through events and networking. We work
hard, and we have just as much fun.
HOMECOMING
October 11–13, 2018
Interested in organizing your reunion?
Call the office of Alumni and Constituent Relations
at 612-330-1085 or email alumni@augsburg.edu.
augsburg.edu/homecoming
Go Auggies!
NICK RATHMANN ’03, ALUMNI BOARD PRESIDENT
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
25
Alumna’s homegrown art
featured in Hagfors Center
Having grown up in rural Wisconsin, Amy Rice ’93 had always
anticipated a life of farming. From a young age, she had an
appreciation for art and enjoyed depicting the beauty of nature
in her sketches.
“I made art my whole life, but never let myself dream or be so
bold as to think I could do it as more than a hobby,” she said.
When selling her produce at farmers markets, Rice would
display sketches of her flowers and tomatoes, incorporating
information about the plants into her sketches. She used the
drawings as a backdrop for her produce stand to entice more
customers. Soon, her art became popular at the market, and
people started inquiring about purchasing her work. When Rice
realized that she could earn more from her art than from her
crops, she decided to turn her hobby into a profession.
In 2015, when Augsburg University launched an Art and
Identity campaign, an initiative to bring original artwork into
the new Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science,
Business, and Religion, Rice was already working on a
long-term project to draw and write about every plant on her
40-acre northern Minnesota plot. Rice’s project connected
science and religion by combining the documentation of
plant life with the use of liturgical papers to form a type of
collage. She also incorporated letterpress samples and her own
Augsburg homework into the art pieces, making the project a
perfect submission for the Art and Identity campaign.
When potential sponsors were invited to view sketches of
the art selected for the Hagfors Center, Stephen K. ’67 and
26
AUGSBURG NOW
Sandra L. Batalden were immediately attracted to Rice’s “Six
Minnesota Wildflowers to Meet and Know” sketches.
“We immediately liked her work,” said Sandra, who shares
with Rice an appreciation for the letterpress printing featured
in the works. “Not only is she using original materials in her
paintings, but the unusual botanical subject matter seems to fit
perfectly in a building [that hosts] the life sciences.
“In addition to botanical accuracy, Amy’s drawings transport
us into an entirely new realm as leaves and flowers become
frames for musical
scores or other
chosen texts
woven into each
piece. What a
creative, beautiful
expression for a
university of the
21st century.”
Rice’s artwork
is displayed on
the fourth floor of
the Hagfors Center. Amy Rice ’93 is represented exclusively by the Groveland
Gallery in Minneapolis.
Each of the plants
depicted is native to Minnesota, and five of the six grow in the
St. Croix River Valley where Augsburg students do ecological
research. The five are snow trillium (Trillium nivale), eared false
foxglove (Agalinis auriculata), spatterdock (Nuphar variegatum),
obedient plant (Physostegia virginiana), and sneezeweed
(Helenium autumnale). The sixth wildflower, the Minnesota
dwarf trout lily (Erythronium propullans), grows in only three
counties of Minnesota and nowhere else in the world.
COURTESY PHOTO
O
T
M
R
A
F
M
FRO
AUGGIES CONNECT
hosted a discussion at the “Waitress”
pre-performance pie buffet about
the significance of the all-female
production team.
For Auggies with children, popular
family-friendly events included an
afternoon at the Minnesota Children’s
Museum with an Augsburg party
featuring Auggie Eagle, coloring
books, bow tie making, and a photo
booth. Another event attracting
families was the interactive learning
session at the Minnesota Zoo at which
a zookeeper brought animals to the
Augsburg reception—including a
lizard, a porcupine, and a chinchilla—
for children to see and touch.
Additionally, Auggie families and
friends have embraced Minnesota
sports as part of the Auggies in
the City series. In January, Auggies
watched the Minnesota Wild take
on the Ottawa Senators, and four
attendees won a drawing to ride
the Zamboni machine. A number of
current Augsburg University men’s
hockey players attended the event and
mingled with former Augsburg hockey
team members. Events this summer
included a St. Paul Saints game
and—still ahead—a Minnesota Twins
game in July and a Minnesota United
FC match in August.
For more information or to buy
tickets for upcoming events, go to
augsburg.edu/alumni/events.
COURTESY PHOTOS
Beginning this past fall, alumni,
parents, students, and friends have
had the opportunity to attend a
number of events in the new Auggies
in the City series that offers discounted
tickets and Augsburg-specific programs
to popular Twin Cities activities. The
series includes arts and cultural
programming, family-oriented outings,
and athletic events.
“Auggies love to explore and
appreciate the community in which
we live. We have had families,
couples, and Auggie friends enjoy a
variety of activities, ranging from zoo
and museum visits to sports events
and theater performances,” said Katie
Code ’01, Augsburg director of alumni
and constituent relations.
The theater events have been a
sellout success and included tickets
to the Tony Award-nominated musical
“Waitress,” fan-favorite “A Christmas
Carol,” and the family singalong
extravaganza “Annie.” The events were
complemented with unique, Augsburgspecific receptions or activities. For
example, Darcey Engen ’88, associate
professor and chair of Theater Arts,
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
27
AUGGIES CONNECT
GENEROSITY
COURTESY PHOTO
BLOSSOMS
in Augsburg’s community garden
COURTESY PHOTO
This spring saw the unveiling of the Medtronic
Community Garden at Augsburg University. Nestled
in the center of the open-arms design of the Norman
and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business,
and Religion and facing the Cedar-Riverside
neighborhood, the innovative garden supports food
sustainability and the community’s need to grow, sell,
and eat healthy food. The garden was designed by
Oslund and Associates, award-winning landscapers
who describe the reimagined community garden
for Augsburg University as “a place on campus to
celebrate the diversity of plants, people, and the
community it serves.”
The innovative style of the community garden
attracted interest from Fortune 500 company
Medtronic, which donated $100,000 to officially
name it the Medtronic Community Garden.
“The Medtronic Foundation focuses on expanding
access to quality chronic disease care among
underserved populations worldwide, as well as
supporting health initiatives in communities where
Medtronic employees live and give,” said Sylvia
Bartley, global director of Medtronic Philanthropy.
28
AUGSBURG NOW
Sylvia Bartley, global director of Medtronic Philanthropy [L], takes a moment
during the Hagfors Center grand opening celebration to talk with Augsburg Chief
Sustainability Officer Allyson Green about the Medtronic Community Garden,
which is nestled between the two wings of the building.
“We are proud to sponsor the transformation of the
Augsburg University community garden in the Cedar-Riverside
neighborhood, where access to healthy foods is scarce,” Bartley
said. “Providing opportunities for communities to cultivate their
own natural foods is one of the ways the Medtronic Foundation
strives to improve the lives of communities around the world.”
According to Allyson Green, chief sustainability officer and
program coordinator of Augsburg University’s Campus Kitchen
program, the redevelopment of the garden has been an
opportunity to further Augsburg’s ongoing sustainability work.
Promoting food security, reducing food waste, and feeding
students through Campus Kitchen programs are just some of
the benefits of the on-campus community garden.
Another key feature
Medtronic provided $100,000 to fund Augsburg’s community
of the garden is the
garden expansion that will improve accessibility, provide
consistent design for
additional space for increasing plot demand, and enhance
the planter beds—
sustainability through compost management and other
initiatives. The community garden expansion reflects
some of which are
Augsburg’s commitment to stewardship of natural resources,
raised to make the
student leadership around issues of nutrition and wellness,
garden accessible
and development of public spaces that are both aesthetically
to individuals with
pleasing and environmentally sound.
mobility constraints,
while others are traditional, ground-level planters. These
distinct planter beds create a physical language that make
them recognizable as part of the community garden, which will
eventually enable Augsburg to expand the gardens in small
pockets to additional locations across campus.
The redesign project also widened the pathways between
planters and introduced a series of benches throughout the
garden to create a welcoming environment for gardeners and
nongardeners alike, transforming the west edge of campus into
a public green space for Augsburg and its neighbors.
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
1969
The chapel in Augsburg’s new
Hagfors Center for Science,
Business, and Religion is named for
Elnar Gundal ’33. See page 13.
Glen Peterson ’69
began teaching in
Stillwater, Minnesota, in 1969
and taught for 40 years at
Lakewood Community College
in White Bear Lake, Minnesota.
He spent many years coaching
and was the director of the ski/
snowboard school at Hyland
Hills Ski Area in Bloomington,
Minnesota. In retirement, he
continues to help with instructor
training. He and his wife, Kathy
(Palmer) Peterson ’70, met at
Augsburg, and daughter Jessica
Peterson ’09 also attended
Augsburg.
1943
Legendary high school
coach and veteran
Stan Nelson ’43 was honored
in September by the Anoka,
Minnesota, community. Following
his World War II service, Nelson
coached in Anoka for more than
30 years and won conference
championships in ’55, ’62, ’63,
’64, ’72, and ’76, including 33
consecutive wins from ’62 to ’64.
1960
Retired ELCA pastor
Rev. Byron Schmid ’60
received his Swiss citizenship and
was honored when he returned
to Switzerland in September for
the 750th anniversary of Rubigen,
his ancestral village. He has
done extensive genealogical work
to document his family history
and lead family tours in both
Switzerland and Norway.
1968
1976
In November, Larry
Morgan ’76 was
presented with the Lifetime
Recognition Award by the Twin
Cities Compensation Network for
his work in compensation and
human resources.
Augsburg Board of Regents
Chair Jeffrey Nodland ’77 and
Becky (Bjella) Nodland ’79 sponsored
a sculpture now on display in the
Hagfors Center for Science, Business,
and Religion. See page 13.
5 0-Y EA R R E UNI ON
HOMECOMING 2018
Board of Regents Member
Karolynn Lestrud ’68 sponsored
an art installation for Augsburg’s
newest skyway. See page 15.
1978
40- YE AR R E U N I O N
HOMECOMING 2018
John Karason ’78 was among
100 Macy’s employees chosen
for a national choir to premiere
“Home For Christmas” by
composer Wesley Whatley during
the 2017 Macy’s Thanksgiving
Day Parade in New York. The
choir rode atop the new Macy’s
Singing Christmas Tree, caroling
from Central Park to Herald
Square. Grammy-nominated
conductor Judith Clurman led
the choir, and Broadway director
Stephen Nachamie oversaw
production.
Athletic Director Jeff Swenson ’79
shares his perspective on
Augsburg’s upcoming 150th anniversary.
See page 18.
1982
Rev. Scott Snider ’82,
priest of the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Springfield,
Illinois, was named ecumenical
and interreligious officer for the
diocese in July 2017. Snider is
also the pastor of three Illinois
parishes in Pierron, Grantfork, and
Pocahontas.
John Evans ’82 finds a
volunteer opportunity unites
his Augsburg legacy and desire to
serve. See page 8.
1987
Scott Anderson ’87
retired from the City of
Bloomington (Minnesota) Public
Works Department in September
after 30 years of service. Anderson
currently owns the Scott L.
Anderson Agency, LLC, an
independent insurance agency in
Maple Grove, Minnesota.
1990
Alisa “Al” Holen ’90
received tenure at the
University of Southern Indiana and
is now an associate professor of
art and design, ceramics. She also
was selected as one of the featured
artists in the 2018 American
Pottery Festival at the Northern
Clay Center in Minneapolis. She
and her father, Professor Emeritus
Norman D. Holen, were honored to
present their exhibition, “Nature/
Nurture,” at the Northern Clay
Center this past October.
1993
2000
2 5 - Y E A R R EUNIO N
HOMECOMING 2018
Guillaume Paek ’00
was named interim
athletic director at Burnsville
High School, Minnesota. He was
previously the athletic director
at Patrick Henry High School in
Minneapolis.
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
Brian Kuhl ’03, an associate at Mayer Brown
law firm, and his wife, Jesca Kuhl, generously
donate their money to build homes in Uganda. The
couple met while Brian worked as a teacher in the
Peace Corps. In addition to paying for two homes that
house roughly 15 Ugandan children, the Kuhls also
have paid for schooling for these children and more
than a dozen others.
’03
’03
Grant Hemmingsen ’07 is the new men’s
basketball head coach at Concordia College,
Moorhead, Minnesota. Grant worked his first college
coaching job with his brother, George Hemmingsen IV,
at Kentucky Wesleyan College in Owensboro. Grant [at
left] is shown with his father, George Hemmingsen III,
before a Cobbers basketball game.
’07
’07
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
29
ALUMNI CLASS NOTES
2001
Trang Dinh ’01 was
awarded the 2017
Excellence in Servicing Award
from NorthMarq Capital. Dinh has
15 years’ experience as a portfolio
analyst and asset manager, and
is a respected, knowledgeable,
and accomplished professional in
her field.
Mark Peterson ’01 recently
concluded a successful season
of coaching his son, Charlie,
on his first- and second-grade
soccer team.
2005
Allison (Cornell)
Broughton ’05 and
Matt Broughton ’06 welcomed
new baby, Nicholas James, on
June 10, 2017. Nicholas joins
big brother Calvin, age four.
Timothy “Tim” Stowe ’05 is the
principal for Westwood Elementary
School in Zimmerman, Minnesota.
He previously served as principal
and technology coordinator at
Waterville-Elysian-Morristown,
Minnesota.
2008
10- YE A R R E U N I O N
HOMECOMING 2018
Brian Krohn ’08 is launching a
smartphone app called Soundly.
Developed with funding from the
National Science Foundation
and the National Institutes of
Health, the app is designed to
help people who snore through
a voice-activated game that
strengthens the muscles in the
upper airway.
Newly promoted high school
guidance counselor Derrick
Smith ’08 received the THRIVE
Teacher of the Year award for
his work with middle- and highschool students. He teaches
math and social sciences to
eighth, ninth, and 10th graders
of diverse backgrounds at a
nontraditional Christian school
in Augusta, Georgia.
2009
Andrew “Andy”
Kent ’09 has joined
the University of Minnesota’s
hockey program as the team’s
AUGGIE SNAPSHOTS
Eloisa Echávez ’94, ’98 MAL, executive
director of La Oportunidad, a social
services organization in Minneapolis, was
honored by the Minnesota Vikings in September
as part of Hispanic Heritage Month. She
received a $2,000 grant, which she donated to
La Oportunidad.
’94
Margaret Johnson ’96 has committed to
a year of service with Minnesota Math
Corps. She will tutor students in Roseville,
Minnesota, in eighth grade math.
’96
’15
Alisha Esselstein ’15 and Tyler Dorn ’15
welcomed their son, Liam, on August 14.
Kia Burton ’11 is Augsburg’s new alumni
engagement program associate. Burton
most recently worked at the MHC Culinary
’11
30
AUGSBURG NOW
volunteer goalie coach. Kent has
spent the last six seasons as the
volunteer goaltending coach with
the Gopher women’s program
and will continue to work with
both teams. He served as the
goaltending coach for Finland’s
Women’s National Team at the
2014 Winter Olympic Games in
Sochi, Russia, and also served
as the goaltending coach for the
Augsburg men’s team from 2013
to 2017.
2010
In October, Joe
Finstrom ’10 opened
Lithium Mastering LLC, a
mastering and music production
studio in St. Cloud, Minnesota.
Finstrom teaches at the Wirth
Center for Performing Arts and
plays cello in the St. Cloud
Symphony Orchestra. After
graduating from Augsburg,
Finstrom attended the Institute
of Production and Recording,
where he earned an associate
degree in audio production and
engineering.
Katia Iverson ’12 and Luke
Iverson ’15 describe the
joys and challenges of helping new
arrivals acclimate to life in the U.S.
See page 20.
2013
Grant Niver ’13
founded Surrender
Salmon in Minneapolis in 2016.
Surrender Salmon specializes
in distributing wild sockeye
salmon from Alaska to Twin
Cities restaurants, meal delivery
services, and farmers markets.
2017
Katelyn “Katie”
Davidson ’17 is
the new sports and education
reporter for the Pierce County
Herald in Ellsworth, Wisconsin.
While a student at Augsburg,
Davidson worked at the League
of Minnesota Cities in St. Paul, in
the communications and public
affairs department. She also
worked part-time with Minnesota
United FC professional soccer
club in the public relations
department.
SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE
Tell us about the news in your life—your new job, move, marriage, and
milestones. Visit augsburg.edu/now to submit your announcements.
Group assisting the accountant and the sales
team. Prior to that, she was a sales coordinator
at the St. Paul Hotel, in St. Paul, Minnesota. As
an Augsburg student, Burton was a member
of the Pan-Afrikan Student Union, worked as
a Summer Bridge program mentor for TRIO/
Student Support Services, and served as a
residence advisor in Urness Tower. She was also
an Auggie Guide and worked in the James G.
Lindell Library for four years.
their production department. Nelson-Hopkins
received a 2017 Emmy Award for his part in
producing a commercial advertisement for
Padres membership.
Mortensen Hall roommates [L to R]:
Karen (Sougstad) Richard ’79, Laurie
(Nelson) Orlow ’79, Sue (Johnson) Drakulic ’79,
and Deanna (Stanger) Feldner ’79 reunited in
September.
Sue Nelson ’67 received the President’s
Award from the U.S. Tennis Association
in October. Nelson organizes the Iowa All Stars
event, a one-day tournament designed for
athletes who compete in the Special Olympics.
’79
’14
Nial Nelson-Hopkins ’14 is currently
employed by the San Diego Padres in
As of this past September, Tom Koplitz ’74
[right] and Bill Nelson ’74 are both in
the Minnesota Amateur Baseball Hall of Fame.
They were co-captains of the 1974 Augsburg
baseball team.
’74
’67
GRADUATE PROGRAMS
Laura (Swanson) Lindahl ’15 MBA
recently was promoted to assistant
director of marketing management
in Augsburg University’s marketing
and communication division, which
serves both Augsburg University and
Luther Seminary. In her new role,
she will continue to serve as editor of
Augsburg Now.
’94
’96
Heather (Smith) Pokrzywinski ’16 MPA
was hired by Essentia Health in the
Moorhead (Minnesota) Clinic as a
physician assistant.
Elaine Eschenbacher ’18 MAL,
director of the Sabo Center for
Democracy and Citizenship, describes how
Augsburg’s LEAD Fellows Program shapes
students and alumni. See story, page 20.
’15
’11
’79
’74
’14
’67
SPRING–SUMMER 2018
31
IN MEMORIAM
Ruth C. (Gudim) Wold ’41,
Mankato, Minnesota, age 100,
on December 13.
Hazel L. (Lanes) Angell ’42,
Carmichael, California, age 97,
on November 4.
Sigfrid D. (Aadland) Lybeck ’42,
Fostoria, Ohio, age 98, on
January 10.
Stanley R. Erickson ’51, Aitkin,
Minnesota, age 90, on January 4.
Hubert C. Hanson ’51, Lady
Lake, Florida, age 92, on
November 27.
Harland A. Nelson ’51,
Duluth, Minnesota, age 89,
on January 31.
Robert D. Larson ’56,
Everett, Washington, age 87,
on January 1.
Harris W. Lee ’57, Edina,
Minnesota, age 88, on
December 27.
James D. Plumedahl ’57,
New Brighton, Minnesota,
age 83, on September 8.
Carl H. Woyke ’44, Minneapolis,
age 95, on February 28.
Marjorie L. (Lindberg) Sveen ’51,
Naples, Florida, age 88, on
February 5.
Edryce Y. Johnson ’46,
Fresno, California, age 92,
on January 2.
Evelyn I. (Breckey) Swenson ’51,
Yakima, Washington, age 88,
on October 9.
Janet M. (Niederloh)
Christeson ’58, Georgetown,
Texas, age 81, on January 18.
Borghild M. (Rholl) Gabrielson ’47,
Sun City, Arizona, age 95, on
December 13.
Glen F. Gilbertson ’52,
Edina, Minnesota, age 87,
on October 17.
Lois R. (Mackey) Davis ’58,
Prairie Farm, Wisconsin,
age 86, on January 4.
Agnes V. (Valvik) Larson ’47,
Rochester, Minnesota, age 94,
on January 4.
David J. Robinson ’52, Maple
Grove, Minnesota, age 87, on
July 24.
Jerome F. Peterson ’58,
Princeton, Minnesota, age 81,
on January 25.
Clifford V. Aaze ’48,
Bloomington, Minnesota,
age 89, on September 12.
Alyce M. (Larson) Thureen ’52,
International Falls, Minnesota,
age 95, on December 18.
Robert C. Westerlund ’58,
Brainerd, Minnesota, age 83,
on September 21.
James W. Adair ’48, Florence,
Montana, age 92, on
September 11.
Joyce D. (Jorgensen) Eckhoff ’53,
Benson, Minnesota, age 86, on
March 10.
Janet L. (Andersen) Fredrick ’59,
Rice Lake, Wisconsin, age 79,
on October 9.
Duane G. Lindgren ’48,
Ponsford, Minnesota, age 93,
on February 1.
Kristian Frosig ’53, Lynnwood,
Washington, age 89, on
January 16.
John D. Wilsey ’60,
St. Bonifacius, Minnesota,
age 79, on February 20.
Margaret L. (Nelson Foss)
Nokleberg ’48, Northfield,
Minnesota, age 92, on January 1.
Lester D. Grafstrom ’53,
Salol, Minnesota, age 87,
on January 16.
Jean C. (Floren) Honken ’61,
Harley, Iowa, age 80, on
February 17.
Sylvia J. (Kolden) Strong ’48,
Olympia, Washington, age 94,
on November 3.
Elaine L. (Hamberg) Elness ’54,
Duluth, Minnesota, age 86, on
November 12.
Ella S. (Warnes) Lerud ’62,
The Dalles, Oregon, age 77,
on January 16.
Calvin E. Larson ’49, Rochester,
Minnesota, age 93, on
December 20.
Paul R. Britton ’55, Corona,
California, age 84, on
November 17.
Carol J. (Jeckell) Arkell ’63,
Lamberton, Minnesota, age 77,
on November 27.
Dorothy L. (Solheim) Schalk ’49,
Racine, Wisconsin, age 90, on
February 13.
Mavis J. (Johnson) Holland ’55,
Hendricks, Minnesota, age 84,
on February 17.
Carolyn E. (Johnson) Johnson ’63,
Fullerton, California, age 76,
on November 7.
Robert G. Eftedahl ’50, Appleton,
Wisconsin, age 89, on
September 28.
Kenneth W. West ’55,
Reedsburg, Wisconsin, age 85,
on December 6.
Barbara A. (Johnson) Miller ’65,
Marinette, Wisconsin, age 74,
on October 18.
32
AUGSBURG NOW
Joyce G. Boyum ’58, Minneapolis,
age 86, on December 9.
Timothy J. Leaf ’69, Minneapolis,
age 71, on December 2.
Robert J. Radebach ’71,
Eagan, Minnesota, age 81, on
February 3.
Marilyn K. Bush ’72,
Bloomington, Minnesota,
age 69, on October 3.
Burton L. Haugen ’72,
Walker, Minnesota, age 67,
on February 1.
James E. Carlson ’73, St. Paul,
Minnesota, age 66, on April 18.
Mary E. (Benesh) Lundstrom ’73,
Lafayette, Indiana, age 66, on
September 30.
George S. Mathison ’75,
Brooklyn, New York, age 64,
on September 24.
Mark R. Johnson ’76,
Coon Rapids, Minnesota,
age 64, on November 23.
Jane L. (Palumbo) Aubuchon ’82,
St. Paul, Minnesota, age 58,
on February 3.
Mark A. Fulfs ’89, New York
Mills, Minnesota, age 55, on
December 15.
Timothy P. Krenz ’89, Lakeville,
Minnesota, age 56, on
December 31.
Mayrlo D. (Grodnick) Kincade ’91,
Farmington, Minnesota, age
50, on February 17.
Teresa M. (White) Shanks ’92,
Shakopee, Minnesota, age 47,
on February 18.
Marcus Spiro ’19, Redmond,
Washington, age 22, on
January 25.
The “In memoriam” listings in this
publication include notifications
received before March 15.
MEET YOUR
CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES
AND CHALLENGES
WITH
CONFIDENCE.
Get your Master of Business Administration,
Master of Arts in Leadership, or both via the
MBA/MAL dual degree at Augsburg University.
ALUMNI DISCOUNT:
Complete your MBA or MAL studies for
less. Augsburg alumni receive an $80
per credit discount.
Learn more at augsburg.edu/grad.
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Twin Cities, MN
Permit No. 2031
Following creative whims
Described by National Public Radio as “a singer, rapper, poet, author, speaker, and all-around mogul,” renowned recording
artist Dessa visited Augsburg University this spring to engage students and community members in a conversation about
making a life and a living in music. During her talk, Dessa emphasized that creativity, resourcefulness, and honest enthusiasm
are essential components of a musician’s journey. “Indulging one’s imagination is part of the task of being an artist,” she said.
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Murphy Square 2018: Murphy Square Visual Art and Literary Magazine
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Literary Journals
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Search Result
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MURP
HYSQ
UARE
ISSUE 43 | 2018
VisualArt
&Literary
Magazine
MURPHY SQUARE
with special thanks to
cary waterman, faculty advisor emeritus
augsburg university student government
augsburg university english department
augsburg university art department
bookmobile
the echo
2
ISSUE 43
edit...
Show more
MURP
HYSQ
UARE
ISSUE 43 | 2018
VisualArt
&Literary
Magazine
MURPHY SQUARE
with special thanks to
cary waterman, faculty advisor emeritus
augsburg university student government
augsburg university english department
augsburg university art department
bookmobile
the echo
2
ISSUE 43
editorial board
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF, editor-in-chief
GABRIEL BENSON, editor-in-chief
MEGAN JOHNSON, layout editor
DOUG GREEN, faculty advisor
3
MURPHY SQUARE
art editors
CASSIE DONG
OLIVIA FITCH
KRISTEN HOLMBERG
SONJA MISCHKE
MADELEINE OSWOOD
4
ISSUE 43
poetry editors
JENNIFER KOCHAVER
SONJA MISCHKE
RYAN MOORE
ASHLEY MURRAY
EVE TAFT
5
MURPHY SQUARE
prose editors
NINA BERGLIN
JULIA CHARRON
DEREK HEUER
SOPHIA KEEFE
JENNIFER KOCHAVER
RYAN MOORE
6
ISSUE 43
artwork
ALLISON USELMAN dixon street
CAMERON YANG capital hill balance
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #12
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #17
GABRIEL BERGSTROM beach day
AVA FOJTIK flower boy
AVA FOJTIK illuminated
AVA FOJTIK cat’s cradle
AVA FOJTIK pit party
ALLISON USELMAN elizabeth, 1972
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
ASH M. KAUN a stable relationship
CAMERON YANG prayer
ALLISON USELMAN forest
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #1
MADELEINE OSWOOD special agent dale cooper
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF basilica
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #5
CAM YANG she-wolf
GABRIEL BERGSTROM flower girl flower girl
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF light rail
GABRIEL BERGSTROM the spin
7
11
15
20
21
24
30
31
32
33
35
41
43
50
54
56
58
60
62
63
72
76
79
80
82
84
MURPHY SQUARE
poetry
22 MATT PECKMAN constitution
23 RACHEL BROWN the country road that takes you home
25 D. E. GREEN a palpable hit
34 KELTON HOLSEN a closed library (an elegy to terry pratchett)
36 MARISA MOSQUEDA loneliness
42 MATT PECKHAM the icon
49 RACHEL BROWN old hands
51 HALLE CHAMBERS metal rings
53 SAM penitence
55 D. E. GREEN green and orange: a pantoum
57 ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF firebird
59 L. B. DOGOOD 12 west
61 ASHLEY MURRAY miikawaadendan (think it beautiful)
73 L. B. DOGOOD 52 hz
74 ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF roadkill
77 ALEXIS KIMSEY the eyes are the window to the soul
81 RACHEL BROWN galaxies
83 EVE TAFT sonas
8
ISSUE 43
prose
AMANDA YATCKOSKE rules
AMANDA YATCHOSKE fear
ASH M. KAUN 3:21
KELTON HOLSEN died 2016
ALLISON USELMAN tomatoes
SOPHIE KEEFE ode to leonardo
JACQUELINE DOCKA rhapsody on laurel
ALLISON USELMAN the wreck
DEREK L. H. infinite
GABRIEL BENSON the bridges
9
10
12
13
16
26
37
39
44
64
85
MURPHY SQUARE
rules
AMANDA YATCKOSKE
I t i s no t t hat ha rd. I t is ju s t wo r ds. W e ta ug
ht y o u t h is. Y ou j u st ne e d t o me m or ize t he
w o rds. Re m em be r t h e so und AT. A t, b a t, c
a t, s a t.
B ut, w h er e I s AT o n th e al p h ab et ?
I s n ’t t h at tw o s ou n ds? Wh a t ar e t he ru l e s?
I b ef o re E e xc ept a f te r C e x c ep t f o
r a ll o f t h e e x c ep t io n. Y ou m us t a lw a ys s
top a t a s top li gh t. E x ce p t w hen t he l ig h t is
gr e e n. H ow m an y w a y s i s t he re t o sp e ll l o
ngA?
A. R a in. E igh t. S ur v e y. At e. Ve in. P
r a y. B r e a k.
Y o u k n o w E ng li sh r ul e s? S u re. W
h ich o n e s r ig h t?
b. B r a in.
c. P ra
d. B re ig h n.
e. P re y.
f. Br ein.
g. Pra y.
h. B re an.
i. All. So, shut it.nostra, per inceptos himenae
a. B ra n e.
10
ISSUE 43
dixon street
ALLISON USELMAN
relief print
11
MURPHY SQUARE
fear
AMANDA YATCHOSKE
Ordering fast food because the text keeps getting
smaller.
Getting lost because white letters don’t
make since on green.
The teacher saying, “Why don’t you read?”
The what-the-fuck-is-wrong-with-you look when I say,
“No.” Saying, “Yes,” and then my brain betrays me.
The jolt of correcting impatience as I attempted to
decipher.
Knowing that it has four legs, a tail, plays
fetch, and has sweat glands in its paws, but not that
the word is dog.
The double circles on the letter g. The
letter bdqp.
The explanation between right and left,
“your left hand makes a L.” I put a L to my forehead,
“Is this right?”
The phrase, “Read this,” followed by two
seconds of a blurry cellphone screen.
Being asked to read what is on the projector
in class.
Beaing correkted on a spelling mistaik.
The rased ibrow when I proove that it was English
that was the mistaek, not me.
Being given a book because I am a writer.
The list of authors that I should know because I am
a writer. “You are an author, so you started written
at an early age.” “My best advice to give to you as a
writer is read.”
Teachers’ saying, “In the really world, they
don’t give special accommodations.”
Running into my elementary teacher who
said, “There’s no such thing as dyslexia.”
Being given five minutes to reading five
pages. Only reading half a page. Everyone else is
done at three minutes.
Able to repeat our entire conversation
back to you word for word, but still get an upturned
nosed because I can’t remember the nonsense word
that is your name.
Asking a classmate to look at my writing.
Their only response: “Spelling mistakes.”
12
ISSUE 43
3:21 p.m.
ASH M. KAUN
It’s four minutes past 3:02 p.m., and he still hasn’t
rounded the corner. Jaime always has a saunte