The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
Katie Bishop, Chief Student Success Officer, discusses the multiple pathways Augsburg is working to build systems for student success all the way to graduation, inclusive of identity, cultural competence, affordability, and a meaningful degree.
Will Walker ’17 knew as a boy that his grandfather had experienced some kidney issues, but he had no idea that the disease was hereditary, or that one day it would send him on a critical ambulance ride from his Augsburg dormitory to HCMC (Hennepin County Medical Center).
As a boy growing up in the South, Walker had watched his family struggle to make ends meet. When he was 10, they moved to Minnesota, and he sensed the opportunity for a fresh start. Survival still had its challenges, but as a teen, Walker learned how to fend for himself. To avoid confrontations with neighborhood gang members, he found ways to dress and act that kept him “under the radar.” He developed a sense of “street smarts” that served him well.
Walker knew about Augsburg, and he learned more when some of his friends became students there. With some scholarship assistance, eventually, he himself became an Auggie. Inclined toward either the physician assistant program or a business degree, he chose business. He also became involved in sports.
At one of Walker’s business classes, an evening class, he asked his professor if she would teach him how to be a businessman. He sought her advice regularly, often after class as he walked her to her car in the parking lot as a safety precaution. Thus began an enduring friendship between Walker and his professor, Dr. Karen Tangen.
One day in the dormitory, tragedy struck. Walker began vomiting. He kept on vomiting and then couldn’t breathe. He knew this was severe. Something was definitely wrong, so he called 911. The ambulance came to the dormitory and whisked him away to HCMC.
Fortunately, Walker’s emergency was addressed by a seasoned pulmonary specialist, who happened to be on hand when Walker arrived at HCMC. He drained two-and-a-half gallons of fluid from Walker’s lungs. What he had vomited was not blood, but fluid. It was at this time that Walker learned about the hereditary disease that could shut down his kidneys—the same disease that had caused his grandfather’s problems years earlier. The physician told Walker that, when he had made the 911 call, he was within a couple of minutes of losing his life.
Walker and Tangen at graduation
Walker’s name was put on the kidney transplant list. Though he was younger than most individuals meriting a spot on the list, he had shown himself to be very responsible—eating right, exercising regularly to keep up his strength, and following physicians’ orders. However, in order to be eligible to receive a kidney, he would need to have a sponsor and undergo a psychological exam—plus he would need to have all his wisdom teeth pulled since transplant patients are more prone to oral health complications. Tangen agreed to serve as his sponsor and she helped him find the resources to have the teeth pulled. But waiting for a kidney requires patience.
While waiting, Walker continued his Augsburg studies. In addition to managing his class load, handling a regular job, and working his student job in food service, he was also receiving kidney dialysis three times a week. Each four-hour dialysis session had to be capped off by a four-hour period of rest. The schedule was grueling, but he somehow managed it all. And he was nearing the finish line at Augsburg.
Then he got the call. HCMC had a kidney for him. The first person he called to “get down here right away” and join him was Tangen. Her mad rush to be there for him was successful, and the three-hour transplant surgery went well. He was put in isolation during recovery, and Tangen faithfully “guarded” his space, when his resistance would be low. He began taking 13 medications, a regimen he will need to continue the rest of his life. The recovery from surgery took two months, and two months after that, he graduated from Augsburg.
Walker shopping for interview clothes
As Walker searched for employment, Tangen stepped in to help again. They went shopping together for appropriate interview clothing, practiced “lunch out” with a fictional prospective employer, and attended a job fair. She gave him tips on how to handle an interview, helped him write a solid resume, and showed him how to search online for jobs.
All the preparation paid off, and Walker’s search yielded his current position in finance for Abbott Hospital in Minneapolis, where he handles revenue and statements for the parking department. He and his new kidney are doing just fine.
Through Augsburg’s Bernhard Christensen Center for Vocation, the Youth Theology Institute (AYTI) seeks to reach out to 9th through 12th graders and invite them to campus for a summer program that has been called “a year of spiritual growth concentrated into one faith-filled week.” Aligned with Augsburg’s mission of being guided by the faith and values of the Lutheran church and ability to aid with vocational discernment of young people, AYTI is a valuable and exciting experience that we are proud to host on campus.
About Science & Theology in Action
Scholars at this year’s AYTI will develop leadership skills and put creation care theology and science knowledge into action. The world and neighborhoods we live in are a series of complicated yet beautiful systems and networks. Therefore, we’ll practice thinking in systems–both ecologically and vocationally within spheres of community, home, congregation, and school. We will use faith-based environmental STEM curriculum to practice problem-finding and problem-solving and then apply STEM to greening our churches, homes, and communities. With the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood as our classroom, we will identify our strengths and explore how our gifts and talents meet the needs of the world.
Enjoy a piece of Augsburg history in your home! Institutional Advancement is hosting an auction for classic Augsburg A presidential dinnerware sets on eBay. All proceeds from this charity auction will go to the Sesquicentennial Scholarship. This scholarship will help eliminate financial barriers and launch the next generation of leaders at Augsburg.
This elegant china was once used for dinner parties and events hosted by the president at the Augsburg House – it has since been retired due to our name-change and rebranding, which changed the look of the “A” icon that appears on most of the dinnerware. Each item has been professionally packaged and can be shipped or picked up from campus once the auction ends at midnight on March 1.
Please contact Hannah Walsh if you have any questions at walsh@augsburg.edu or 612-330-1098.
The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
Some stories were meant to be read aloud. Doug Green, Professor of English, recalls his path to Augsburg and reflects on the capacity of the spoken word to give new life to the roles we play: both those performed in dramatic literature and those that we embody, ourselves, in our everyday lives.
The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
Terrance Kwame-Ross, Associate Professor of Education, unpacks language, power dynamics, and our sense of “Place” as major forces of influence in our worldviews — both as students and as educators.
The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
Associate Professor Bob Groven (Co-Chair of the Department of Communication Studies, Film and New Media, and the Director of the Minnesota Urban Debate League) breaks down the power of constructive debate as a force for positive change, understanding, and empathy in our society.
The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
Pastor Sonja Hagander recalls her path to the ministry, explores Augsburg’s tradition of Interfaith excellence, and considers how the practice of faith evolves in response to its circumstances.
If you’re a regular reader of the Augsburg Now magazine, you may recognize leading literary scholar, Austen expert, and roller derby devotee Devoney Looser ’89 from the featured article “No Plain Jane.” She is the author or editor of seven books on literature by women. Looser will be visiting Augsburg’s campus on February 5 at 7 p.m. to read from her most recent book “The Making of Jane Austen” in Hagfors 150. Books will be available for purchase at this event and Looser will stick around to visit with guests and sign their copies after the reading.
“The Making of Jane Austen” Press Release
Just how did Jane Austen become the celebrity author and the inspiration for generations of loyal fans she is today? Devoney Looser’s The Making of Jane Austen turns to the people, performances, activism, and images that fostered Austen’s early fame, laying the groundwork for the beloved author we think we know.
Here are the Austen influencers, including her first English illustrator, the eccentric Ferdinand Pickering, whose sensational gothic images may be better understood through his brushes with bullying, bigamy, and an attempted matricide. The daring director-actress Rosina Filippi shaped Austen’s reputation with her pioneering dramatizations, leading thousands of young women to ventriloquize Elizabeth Bennet’s audacious lines before drawing room audiences. Even the supposedly staid history of Austen scholarship has its bizarre stories. The author of the first Jane Austen dissertation, student George Pellew, tragically died young, but he was believed by many, including his professor-mentor, to have come back from the dead.
Looser shows how these figures and their Austen-inspired work transformed Austen’s reputation, just as she profoundly shaped theirs. Through them, Looser describes the factors and influences that radically altered Austen’s evolving image. Drawing from unexplored material, Looser examines how echoes of that work reverberate in our explanations of Austen’s literary and cultural power. Whether you’re a devoted Janeite or simply Jane-curious, The Making of Jane Austen will have you thinking about how a literary icon is made, transformed, and handed down from generation to generation.
The Augsburg Podcast features voices of Augsburg University faculty and staff. We hope this is one way you can get to know the people who educate our students to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders. Subscribe on Itunes.
President Paul Pribbenow explores family, faith, and prioritizing the student experience of present and future Auggies.