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Weather Advisory: Virtual Evening Classes and Travel Caution for Monday, April 28 Details ›

John Cerrito ’11 Discusses Value of Internships, Vocational Discernment

Augsburg alumnus John Cerrito ’11 wrote an article for College News in which he described how internship opportunities at a Twin Cities radio station helped him to discover and develop an enjoyable career before he completed his degree. Read the story, “It’s Not About Getting A Job, It’s About Finding a Vocation,” on the College News website.

Helping With Music – Sonja (Daniels) Zapchenk ’77

 

When Sonja (Daniels) Zapchenk graduated from Augsburg in 1977, she hoped fervently to find work with teens and young adults in a psychiatric hospital setting, similar to the fascinating work she had enjoyed in her internship. Instead, the only job she could find was as a music therapist with elderly in a nursing home setting—not what she had planned. But it wasn’t long till she realized that was what she really wanted to do. Music therapy, she learned, was at the core of her being, and helping people with Alzheimer’s Disease was becoming her passion.

ZapchenkIn her various jobs working with senior adults (as music therapist, recreation director, volunteer coordinator, and adult daycare provider), Zapchenk encountered many individuals who were lethargic, non-communicative, or confused; and she was delighted to discover—daily—that the music therapy she provided was making a difference in their lives. Adding music to the equation always seemed to open doors in communication, and she loved seeing them “come alive.” When she started playing the piano, the residents would often begin to sing the lyrics to the hymn, clap their hands, tap their toes, or nod their heads in rhythm. And she found that, for individuals with Alzheimer’s Disease in particular, music therapy could provide a way to communicate with their families as well—even without conversation.

At Eaglecrest, a Presbyterian Homes community in Roseville, Minn., where she has served for 20 years and is now Recreation and a Volunteer Director, Zapchenk is also the Intergenerational Coordinator, which provides the special opportunity of leading intergenerational activities for the senior residents and the toddlers and preschoolers who attend the childcare center in the same facility. She has seen music bring age groups together more quickly and effectively than anything else.

Zapchenk chose Augsburg after some friendly urging from her mother, Sigrid (Kvenberg) Daniels ’48, and because of its highly regarded music program. She was thrilled to sing under “Doc” Sateren’s direction in choir, and the start-up of a Music Therapy program in her junior year was perfect timing. She has stayed in touch with Augsburg in numerous ways—by singing in Masterworks and Vespers (under the direction of Prof. Peter Hendrickson, her classmate), by providing a music therapy internship program that drew in many Augsburg students, through countless reunions and singing opportunities with friends from choir days (including all-day “brunches” with many women friends), and by regular contact with Prof. Roberta Kagin and other music therapists from her graduating class. She is still moved when she thinks about the special bond among the “Sateren singers,” the many sustained and treasured friendships, and all the “really neat people” at Augsburg who have affected her life.

Fostering Future Leaders – Josh Thelemann ’14

 

For years, Josh Thelemann ’14 had been more than a little concerned about kids growing up in neighborhoods like his—neighborhoods where fewer than 50% of public school students would graduate from high school, Josh Ctypical 8th-graders were three levels behind their peers in math and two levels behind in reading, and the housing/income gap is among the highest in the nation. Then it struck him! While studying Elementary Education at Augsburg, he came up with an idea that has now become reality—a nonprofit organization that takes at-risk kids off the streets and provides programs to give them a fair shot. He named it SOS (Saving Our Schools).

Josh EIn an area where crime rates peak in after-school hours, students and chaperones bike across the city to learn about history, art, science and more. SOS provides programming that aims to decrease suspensions and increase cooperative activity in a school where 99.7% of children live below the poverty line. One annual SOS event, Thanks4Giving Day, is hosted on Black Friday and involves collecting donations for hundreds of families in need, as well as school supplies for schools serving large numbers of at-risk children. Also, SOS is a sponsor of the Minneapolis Math League, providing weekly practices, transportation, and other support for at-risk students to participate.

In launching the nonprofit and finding ways to engage young adults and professionals to help, Thelemann first obtained endorsements for SOS from community leaders, such as then-Mayor R.T. Rybak, the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, and Senator Terri Bonoff; then partnered with some of the state’s largest education-related organizations. In SOS’s first year, nearly $30,000 in funds, goods, and services was allocated to programming and resources for at-risk students of Minneapolis.

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Thelemann, Behavioral Interventionist at Meadowbrook Elementary School in Golden Valley, Minn., is grateful for the amazing support he received from his family and community throughout his youth, as well as for numerous extra-curricular activities, all of which made a difference for him. He acknowledges the “huge role” Augsburg played in his creation of SOS (see www.SaveOurSchoolsToday.org/blog), and is particularly thankful for the “unwavering” support from Dr. Stanley Brown and Prof. Dan Jorgensen, who pushed him to reach new heights and guided him in efforts to foster good will in the community. Thelemann was recently recognized by OTA+Pollen as a “young professional on the rise” and for “outstanding work in the community and personal achievements.”

 

Volunteering at Commencement

There are dozens of ways alumni can get involved at Augsburg-from serving on a board or committee, to volunteering at Homecoming, or supporting current Auggies with career advice. Parents of Auggies often find joy volunteering at Commencement. The Matyi’s have taken time out of their weekend to volunteer at Commencement for 5 years. When asked why they volunteer, Elaine and Tim both exclaimed, “We enjoy seeing happy family and friends as they arrive to watch their graduate complete the Augsburg experience.”

If you would like to learn about ways to get involved, send us an email: volunteer@augsburg.edu.

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Your help needed! – Estate & Moving Sales

The Augsburg Associates need your help.  If you enjoy all the coffee you can drink, growing friendships, feeling good about assisting clients and customers, feeling REALLY good about raising funds for Augsburg Student Scholarships, and having WAY too much fun, then you would enjoy the estate sale group.

estate salesVolunteers spend one to two weeks in preparation for a sale. The number of hours you wish to volunteer is completely up to you and your schedule. Drawers, closets, cupboards, and storage areas are emptied. All items are sorted and priced for display by an expert team who has done its research and knows its stuff. Everything is arranged for the best sale advantage.

Sales are conducted over a two-day period, typically Friday and Saturday. Again, you may volunteer around your own availability.

These volunteers are friendly, helpful, and caring. The Augsburg College Associates is a service organization with more than 100 active members.

If you feel this is something you would enjoy and a way that you could give back to Augsburg, please call Becky Waggoner at 612-330-1085 for more information.

 

May Auggie Eye-opener


Featured Speaker, ELCA Bishop Ann Svennungsen

“Faith Active in Love”
Featured Speaker, ELCA Bishop Ann Svennungsen

Bishop Ann Svennungsen was elected February 2012 as the first woman to lead the Minneapolis Area Synod. Bishop Svennungsen deeply values the ELCA commitment to social justice action and serves as the director of The Presidents’ Pledge Against Global Poverty. She has had a variety of experiences, including pastoring four very different congregations in vastly different circumstances, serving as CEO of the Fund for Theological Education in Atlanta, and serving as president of Texas Lutheran University in Seguin.

We look forward to learning more from Bishop Ann Svennungsen on May 8th, at our spring Auggie Eye-opener. If you have attended an Eye-Opener in the past, you know it is a great time of networking among Auggies and friends. If you haven’t come before, give it a try ($5 for the breakfast is worth it alone!)

Date:  May 8, 2014
Breakfast and Networking:  7:00am
Speaker Presentation:  7:30am—8:30am
Location:  Town & Country, 300 North Mississippi River Boulevard, Saint Paul, MN 55104

Register at www.augsburg.edu/alumni/events. The cost for the breakfast is $5.

 

 

Finding Vocation in Corporate Philanthropy, Jon Campbell

Next week we are looking forward to welcoming Jon Campbell to campus for the third program this year sponsored by the Clair and Gladys Strommen Executive Series.

Date:  Thursday, April 3, 2014
Time:  5:00 p.m.
Location:  Kennedy Center, rooms 303-305

Jon Campbell, Executive Vice President and Director of Community Relations at Wells Fargo, will present about the connections between the nonprofit and corporate fields, and how values of community sustainability and giving back to his community are embedded in his career path..

Mr. Campbell serves on many regional boards including the National Urban League Board of Trustees, the University of Minnesota Foundation, University of Minnesota Carlson School, Board of Overseers, Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, and United Way U.S. National Board of Trustees. Wells Fargo has a strong history of giving back to the community; their team members accrued over 1.5 million volunteer hours and invested over $315.8 million in 19,500 nonprofits and schools nationwide in 2012.

Please join us in giving him an Auggie welcome, and for what will be a lively conversation about vocation, community engagement, and corporate philanthropy.

Register at www.augsburg.edu/alumni/events, and plan to join us for a networking event immediately following the presentation.

 

Loveland Rotary Club honors Earl Sethre ’68

In February, the Loveland Rotary Club honored Earl Sethre ’68 with the Citizen of the Year Award. Marvin Morganti explained that the award “is to honor someone in the community, a non-Rotarian, who demonstrates the four-way test and … who’s got the community in mind.” Mary McCambridge, who presented the award, said this about Earl, “the person we are honoring today is a very humble person, tall in stature and does much for the community but in a very quiet way.” Upon receiving the award Earl said, “I think it’s important to give back… a person who gives something feels good about it.”

Earl Sethre '68

Bush Foundation Selects Six Augsburg Alumni

Congratulations to the six Augsburg College alumni who were recognized by the Bush Foundation as leaders in their communities. Four of the six were chosen as Bush Fellows, a program that “provides individuals with opportunities to demonstrate and improve their capacity for leadership as they learn by doing.” Two other Augsburg alumni were recognized by the Bush Foundation as leaders and asked to participate in cohort 5 of the Native Nation Rebuilders program.

Bush Fellows
Syl Jones ’73
Jennifer Waltman ’07
Sue Hakes ’89
Jacquie Berglund ’87

Native Nation Rebuilders
Pamela Johns ’12
Joseph Regguinti ’07

Remembering Ed Saugestad ’59

A Message from President Pribbenow:

Yesterday morning we learned that legendary coach and faculty emeritus Edwin Saugestad passed away Thursday after a battle with pancreatic cancer. Ed, 77, served as a coach, teacher, and mentor for hundreds of Auggies during his long and illustrious career.

5811613907_3cd57366a4_oEd graduated from Augsburg College in 1959 with a double major in physical education and biology, and continued his connection with Augsburg through a 37-year coaching career—beginning in his senior year when he was both a hockey player and coach for the team. By the time he retired as hockey coach in 1996, Ed ranked second in career wins in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III history, compiling a 503-354-21 record, and that’s just the beginning of his accolades.

Ed’s teams won Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) titles six straight years (1977-82), qualified for national tournament play 10 times, and won the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) national championship in 1978, 1981, and 1982. Ed, himself, was inducted into Augsburg’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1978, and was named NAIA National Coach of the Year three times and MIAC Coach of the Year six times. The MIAC even christened its playoff championship trophy as the Ed Saugestad Trophy after he retired.

In 2002, Ed was awarded the American Hockey Coaches Association’s John MacInnes Award to honor his contributions in the growth of amateur hockey in the United States, and in 2007, he was named the Hobey Baker Legends of Hockey honoree. In 2010, Augsburg dedicated its main competition ice rink in honor of Ed. The Ed Saugestad Rink is used extensively by Augsburg’s men’s and women’s ice hockey teams, and by a wide range of Twin Cities sports teams, clubs, and organizations.

In addition to his hockey coaching duties, Ed taught in the Health and Physical Education Department throughout his career. He also served as the College’s men’s athletic director and on the Augsburg football coaching staff for many years. Ed earned his master’s degree from the University of Minnesota and was awarded faculty emeritus recognition by the Augsburg Board of Regents in 1998. The Augsburg Athletic Department also named its academic award for male student-athletes the Ed Saugestad Academic Award.

There will be a memorial service for Ed on Thursday, April 3, at 2 p.m. in the Hoversten Chapel.

In the meantime, our thoughts and prayers go out to Ed’s family and all of us whose lives Ed touched. As it says on the mural displayed in the Augsburg Ice Arena in his honor, Ed made us “champions for life.”

Obituary (Star Tribune)
Pioneer Press

Sincerely,
Paul C. Pribbenow
President