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Join us at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum

March 1, 7-9 at Augsburg College!
As the only conference of its kind sponsored by the Norwegian Nobel Institute, the Forum is a unique, multi-day event that brings professionals, academics, and students together to celebrate the work of Nobel Peace Prize winners and inspire peacemaking.  This year’s program is the biggest and most dynamic in the Forum’s long history, with a list of visionary speakers that includes Nobel Peace Prize laureates:  His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Ms. Leymah Gbowee, and Medecins Sans Frontieres.

>> Saturday, March 1: Faith & Peace Day
>> Friday, March 7: Law & Business Day
>> Saturday, March 8: Health & Science Day
>> Sunday, March 9: Global Day

All programming takes place at Augsburg College, the Minneapolis Convention Center and the University of Minnesota West Bank, and each day is ticketed separately.

Special thanks to the Sponsors of the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize Forum
Click Here
 for full list of sponsors.

Augsburg Alumni & Students Connect in Chicago

Congratulations to the 16 members of the Augsburg Business Organization (ABO) who spent the last 5 days of winter break in Chicago visiting the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Federal Reserve and a number of Augsburg Alumni and friends of the College living and working in the windy city! This year was the tenth year that a group of ABO students has traveled to Chicago.

A special word of thanks to Augsburg alumni Brett Batterson ’80, Joel Bue ’91, Holly Yeager ’93, Ryan Rivard ’06 and Erica Steinke ’04 for their work with the students. If you or someone you know is in Chicago and would like to be involved in meeting with the students next year, please contact ABO faculty advisor Marc Isaacson at isaacson@augsburg.edu.

Augsburg Business Organization listens to Brett Batterson speak in a large auditoriumAugsburg Business Organization in front of Cloud Gate in Millennium Park, Chicago

It’s about Self-discovery, Meaningful Connections and the Journey

Shane Xiong, Singha Village, Cambodia with a child on his backSeveral students from Augsburg College, including Shane Xiong ’16, traveled to Cambodia for a service trip with the Global Connections Project that partly focused on human/sex trafficking. They visited Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam before reaching Cambodia, then stayed more than a week in Singha village at the Khmer Heart Center teaching conversational English to local children. Before they left, the Auggies raised funds for school supplies and uniforms for their students. They also raised funds to purchase bikes for some of the kids who walk up to five miles just to attend school. Their experience in traveling with meaning, being of service, and enriching lives has been rewarding and has left lasting and profound impacts upon each of them.

Shane reflects, “Our crossover to Cambodia went smoother than expected…made our first stop in Phnom Penh. It’s a beautiful place with its faults, as would any place (though manifested in different ways). More importantly though, it’s filled with beautiful people. We actually were in the midst of a political protest as well. Factory workers were out in the streets marching & protesting for better living conditions…”

“The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others,” by Mahatma Gandhi

Read more on the blog at http://globalconnectionsproject.org/blog/

Auggies in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Augsburg Receives Grant for Historyapolis Project

Clean Water Land and Legacy AmendmentThe Minnesota Historical Society recently announced that Augsburg College’s Dr. Kirsten Delegard was the recipient of a Historical and Cultural Heritage grant for the Historyapolis Project. The grant will support the initial research phase of the project which will serve as a central hub for the interpretation of Minneapolis history.

Follow the Historyapolis Project

Facebook: The Historyapolis Project
Twitter: @Historyapolis
Website: Augsburg.edu/Historyapolis 

Augsburg is top military-friendly school

Award: MAE's 2014 Military-Friendly Colleges & UniviersitiesAugsburg College has been selected as a top military-friendly school in the Military Advanced Education (MAE) 2014 Guide to Military-Friendly Colleges & Universities. The list is featured annually in the December issue. The publication seeks to provide servicemen and servicewomen with information that will help them make decisions about higher education
MAE staff evaluated each submission by our strict criteria. As the first publication to do a military friendly list, MAE has been improving the process every year in order to provide our men and women in uniform information that will help them make the right choices about college.

Award: U.S. News Best Colleges - Veterans - 2014Augsburg was also ranked among the top 10 Best College for Veterans regionally by U.S. News and World Report in the 2014 edition of the U.S. New Best Colleges. Schools were ranked based on their  participation in federal initiatives helping veterans and active service members apply, pay for and complete their degrees.

Augsburg College proudly supports military veterans and those who actively serve in the U.S. Armed Forces. Our faculty and staff are committed to help veterans succeed in their academic and professional endeavors.

Campus Recovery Magazine features Augsburg StepUP program

Six students in an on-campus apartment, one wears a StepUP drawstring bagThe Augsburg College community was featured twice in the recent Recovery Campus magazine. The article, “A Shared Mission,” explains how the StepUP program aligns with the College’s mission and vision. StepUP Director Patrice Salmeri also was recognized for receiving The Harris Award for Outstanding Contributions to Collegiate Recovery Community Advancement, which honors exceptional leadership, vision, and service to the movement.

Read more.

Augsburg College Mourns the Passing of Dr. Annette Gerten, associate professor of Social Work

Annette GertenDr. Annette Gerten, associate professor of Social Work, died this week from an aggressive cancer. Annette was a passionate and valued member of the Social Work faculty and the Augsburg community. Her time with us and our students–cut short too soon–was a blessing that we will long remember and greatly miss.

Below are some words from the Social Work Department faculty that speak to the work that Annette did at Augsburg and the impact she made on her students, her department, and the wider community.

“Courage. Some have suggested that the fullest meaning of this idea is to act with a whole heart, being brave is pursuing life with your whole-heart. Annette lived and she died whole-heartedly.

Professor Annette Gerten began her professional career in social work following her undergraduate years at the College of St. Catherine. She completed her MSW in 1984 at the University of Michigan. She returned to Minnesota in 1986 to work at Wilder Child Guidance Center. She went on to work as a family counselor and school social worker. Annette completed her Ph.D. in Social Work in 1996. A year later she began her career at Augsburg College, beginning as a full-time instructor.

Professor Gerten was a valued and innovative teacher, a tireless collaborator, and an incurable knitter. We can attest that Annette dedicated her whole heart to her students and to her colleagues. When she first entered the hospital in mid-December, she was attended by the hospital social worker, one of Augsburg’s MSW graduates. The social worker recalled that, 16 years earlier, while she was on the verge of dropping out of the MSW program, Annette spent time with her encouraging her to not give up, but to complete her degree. Now, many years later, she is still grateful to Annette for having had faith in her.

Annette was a valued colleague within the wider College, having served as a Fellow with the Center for Teaching and Learning and served on the Committee for Tenure and Promotion. Annette was also the assessment director for the Social Work program. Dedicated to social work field education, Annette coordinated field placements for BSW students. Annette’s publications included guidelines for working with students with conduct disorders, family friendly policies for mothers in the academy, and lessons learned from collaborating with the neighborhood Somali community. Annette did all of this while teaching students from their first year on campus, to their final year in graduate school.

But to focus on her professional career would be only a segment of Annette’s full story. She loved her family. She was devoted to her three children, her husband Jim and supported all their social, academic and sport activities. Annette played volleyball with her husband’s college friends, watched most of her three children’s soccer and basketball games. And just this past August, Annette proudly completed her first triathlon.

‘As she did with yarn so beautifully and creatively, she wove us all together more tightly centered on the important work of serving others…What a good mother, social worker, educator, and human being! May we carry on in her hopes and dreams as her spirit lives in our hearts….’ (Anthony Bibus, 2013).”

Annette’s family has scheduled a Mass of Christian Burial memorial service on Friday, January 10, at 10 a.m. at the Church of St. Patrick, 3535 72ndSt. E., Inver Grove Heights. Visitation will be Thursday, January 9, from 3 to 8 p.m., also at the Church of St. Patrick.

The Augsburg community will gather this afternoon from 2 to 2:30 p.m. in Hoversten Chapel for a community prayer service.

We hold Annette’s husband, Jim, their three children, her family, and all who knew Annette in our thoughts and prayers.

You Speak – We Listen: Alumni Loan Repayment Workshop

On December 10th the Office of Alumni Relations, in conjunction with Augsburg’s Student Financial Services (SFS) department, offered a loan repayment workshop to recent alumni. The workshop was a direct result of student and alumni requests to offer such an event.

SFS staff explained basic loan information, loan repayment options, consolidation, and loan forgiveness programs. After the presentation, alumni were able to access their own loan information to review different repayment options available to them.

Given the success and the feedback received from you, our alumni, we have decided to offer this workshop on an annual basis. Check back for more information about the spring workshop.

You Speak. We Listen.

StepUP Gala Meets $200,000 Fundraising Goal


The 2013 StepUP Gala took place on Friday, October 13, at the Hyatt Regency Minneapolis. Don Shelby emceed for the evening and Jim Ramstad provided an inspiring keynote address. Mike & Pam Sime were honored with the Toby Piper Labelle Award and alumna Dana Olson ’07 shared her story of enduring recovery. The audacious goal of raising $200,000 for the StepUP Program was met. This additional revenue will be added to the StepUP endowment.  Building the endowment is critical to maintaining program excellence and to serving more students in the future.

To learn more about the StepUP Program, please visit their website.

Augsburg Celebrates the Legacy of Leland Sateren ’35

Augsburg Choir Alumni perform for guests

A special choral concert in honor of Leland B. Sateren ’35, on what would have been his Leland Sateren100th birthday, took place on October 13 at Normandale Lutheran Church in Edina, Minn.

Sateren taught at Augsburg from 1946 through 1979, during which time he also served as chair of the Music Department. More than 180 Augsburg choir alumni, spanning four decades and coming from all over the U.S., participated in the concert, which was directed by several of Sateren’s former students, many of whom now serve as choral directors across the country.