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Feiern Sie Ihr lutherisches Erbe y die Reformation

Feiern Sie Ihr lutherisches Erbe y die Reformation translates to聽Celebrating Lutheran Heritage and the Reformation.

Augsburg College is designing a custom travel program for October 2016 that will celebrate the Reformation and the upcoming 500th anniversary of when Martin Luther in 1517 nailed the 95 Theses to the church doors in Wittenberg, Germany. A highlight of the trip itinerary will be a visit to Wittenberg over October 31鈥揳 time when the town annually celebrates Reformation Day with a parade, medieval fair, special church service, and evening concert. In addition to visiting Wittenberg, the itinerary includes stops in the German cities of Berlin, Dresden, Eisenach, Erfurt, Leipzig, and Prague, Czech Republic.

Led by Augsburg Department of Religion faculty members Mark Tranvik and Hans Wiersma, program participants will explore the lives and ministries of Martin and Katie Luther and the legacies of influential Lutheran musicians Johann Sebastian Bach and Paul Gerhardt. They will learn about Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a 20th聽Century German theologian and martyr, and Jan Hus, a church reformer of 15th聽Century Prague鈥100 years before Luther. Participants also will hear about the church鈥檚 role in the Peaceful Revolution that brought down the Berlin Wall and remember the sobering days of WWII at the Buchenwald concentration camp. This travel program is an opportunity to explore the connections between people, cultures, and historical events while examining the Reformation as an ongoing influence in the 21st Century.

To receive updates about this alumni tour as plans are finalized, email alumni@augsburg.edu, or call 612-330-1085 to be included on a mailing list.

Micelle, the Augsburg Biophysics Newsletter

Whether you were a physics major in college, work in the sciences now, or are in general interested in these topics, this newsletter will make you proud of your fellow Auggies! The Spring 2014 issue of the Micelle features student research, a new course, and ways for you to get involved!

 

Mina Halling ’12 Publishes

Mina Halling ’12 sent the English Department the following news and testimonial:

“First off, (a very abridged version of) my Departmental Honors project, ‘Adventures in Time, Space and Community College: Narrative Structure and Thematic Depth,’ has been featured in A Sense of Community: Essays on the Television Series and Its Fandom. Colin [Irvine] helped put me in contact with the editor of the collection over a year ago, and the book is finally ready to go. (And my essay is first! Exciting.)

“I also have a personal narrative piece, ‘Trivia Weekend: The Less Cool (but no less great) Minnesota Get-Together,’ that is about to be included in an e-book called Bright Lights, Twin Cities: A Collection of Stories from Real Minnesotans. Here’s a link for that one:聽

“… I’m sharing this stuff with you as a delayed part of Thank A Teacher Day. I’d like to say a huge thank you to each of you for making me a better writer, editor, thinker and person. I feel like I’m making steps on the long path to Making A Living By Writing, which is pretty awesome, and it wouldn’t be happening if it weren’t for your influence.”

Have you recently published? Received a promotion? Won an award? Started a business? Got married or had a child? If so, share your exciting news with us and submit an .

Called to Serve. Taunya Tinsley ’90

For years, Taunya Tinsley 鈥90 had used basic counseling skills in the field of higher education (admissions, career, academic, administrative, and athletic counseling), but it wasn鈥檛 till she lost her brother Ethan suddenly and traumatically that the 鈥渓ight came on.鈥 She was struck by the new awareness that God was calling her to the field of professional counseling as part of her ministry, both inside and outside the four walls of her church.

drtinsleyNow, as professional counselor and owner of Transitions Counseling Services and Life Skills Program, in Pittsburgh, Penn., she derives deep satisfaction from enabling clients to recognize and/or develop their skills and strategies to successfully manage life transitions, and to become increasingly aware that their expertise in doing so in one area of life may well be transportable to another arena as well. Tinsley specializes in organizational development, multicultural training, spiritual and Christian counseling, sports counseling, and development through sports, and she is committed to the psychosocial development of the whole person.

One client describes a time when she was 鈥渇ragile, scared鈥o, petrified鈥 during the bleakest time in her life, then sought counseling help from Tinsley. Now, she sees each new day as a testimonial that counseling is a vital tool. Without Tinsley鈥檚 counseling, she says, she 鈥渨ould be dead鈥攑eriod.鈥 Another client feels that Tinsley鈥檚 counseling helped her look deep inside herself and recognize issues she had suppressed, and then provided strategies to face them, 鈥渞eturning me back to myself.鈥 Tinsley鈥檚 help gave her more confidence to handle what life sends her way.

In addition to workshops, presentations, and clinical counseling work with individuals and groups, Tinsley is a professor at California University, in California, Penn., where she is also program coordinator for Graduate Certification in Sports Counseling. She says there are numerous benefits to being both a counselor educator and a clinician, as each experience informs the other.

As an Augsburg student, Tinsley found a mentor and spiritual mother in M. Anita Gay Hawthorne, former director of Pan-Afrikan Student Services at Augsburg. Her guidance and encouragement were steadfast, even after Tinsley鈥檚 graduation, and Tinsley recalls accompanying the Iowa Swim Team to Minnesota (as their athletic academic advisor) in November 1997, primarily to seek Hawthorne鈥檚 advice on a job opening at the University of Pittsburgh. With strong encouragement from her mentor, Tinsley accepted the offer in December 1997鈥攁n excellent decision she sees as pivotal in her career. A month after their visit, Hawthorne passed away, and Tinsley was especially grateful she had made the trip.

In the early 鈥90s, Tinsley was on staff at Augsburg, as women鈥檚 athletic recruiter and volleyball coach in 鈥92, and as an admissions counselor and coordinator of multicultural recruitment for two years before that, where she worked with then-admissions director Sally Daniels Herron 鈥79, currently director of family and constituent relations. 鈥淚 love her tremendously鈥nd would not be where I am in my career had it not been for Sally in my life.鈥 They worked together to support the integration of diverse cultures in the admissions process, a clear step in the pathway to her current work.

Currently, Tinsley is enrolled at United Theological Seminary in the Doctor of Ministry program, with a focus in sports chaplaincy. Find out more about her counseling business at .

Summer Camps at Augsburg College

Summer camps at Augsburg provide an exciting opportunity for regional students to experience life on a small college campus and to learn from the College鈥檚 outstanding faculty and staff. Augsburg鈥檚 unique location in the heart of Minneapolis gives students perfect access to all there is to see and do in our vibrant, diverse city. about the various camps offered at Augsburg College.

 

Golfing with Auggies

If you’re a golfer, there are several opportunities to support Augsburg College athletics this summer, with numerous fundraising golf tournaments at courses throughout the Twin Cities area. In addition to golfing opportunities, there are also options for businesses and individuals to sponsor holes or donate prizes for raffle drawings.

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Alumnus Launches Space Business

Augsburg College alumnus Lars Dyrud ’97 has recently been featured in a number of articles, including MarketWatch聽of The Wall Street Journal听补苍诲 , regarding his company’s announcement of a small-sat imagery venture.

Do you have news of an alum 聽featured in the news? Let us know about it at alumni@augsburg.edu.

 

Yoder ’06 Is 2A Hockey Coach of the Year

When Kasey Yoder 鈥06 took an interest in hockey at a young age, nobody was very surprised鈥攃ertainly not his step-father, who has been a high-school hockey coach for nearly 20 years. And certainly not his neighbors in Duluth (Minn.), located in the heart of 鈥渉ockey country鈥濃攚here high-school hockey is as good as it gets. He played hockey in high school and early in college, then transferred to Augsburg, where he explored and found the marketing program he wanted. While at Augsburg, he also started coaching youth hockey, and that鈥檚 when it started鈥攈is passion for coaching.

One of the most exciting challenges in coaching high school hockey, says Yoder, is keeping the kids focused and 鈥渂uying in,鈥 especially with everything else they have going on in their lives. He works to help them find balance, while still being committed to success at the arena. He is getting to know the families in the Orono (Minn.) community while developing relationships to further improve Orono hockey.

Taking his Orono High School team to the state hockey tournaments a few weeks ago was surely a highlight in his career, especially given the fact that 2013-14 is his first year at the school. The frosting on the cake鈥攂eing selected Section 2A Coach of the Year.

When he isn鈥檛 coaching, Yoder is tending to his聽2nd聽Life Sticks聽hockey stick repair company in St. Paul. His experience as a coach, not to mention the rising cost of hockey sticks (now $250 per stick), convinced him that the repair technology he learned while a junior hockey coach on a tight budget was something that needed to be done on a larger scale. His entrepreneurial spirit kicked in, and the company has been operating for a year and a half. Yoder also runs Orono鈥檚 18-day summer hockey camp for kids aged 12-18, careful to follow his own advice to students and carve out some valuable cabin time as well.

Dr. Mert Strommen ’42, Pioneer in Youth Ministry

As a 15-year-old, and with only self-training, Dr. Merton Strommen 鈥42 was already directing the Lutheran church choir in Lamberton, Minn., where his father was serving as pastor. Before long, he also organized a 10-member male chorus, which, only a year later, would 鈥渟erenade鈥 the Augsburg College Choir with Negro Spirituals at a pre-concert luncheon. The Choir鈥檚 visit to the church鈥攁n exciting event for such a small community鈥攆anned the flames of Strommen鈥檚 desire to pursue a career in music and one day direct a college choir. He eventually followed this dream at both Augsburg and the University of Minnesota.

Then life took a turn. He was personally confronted one day by a Presence he could only interpret as the Holy Spirit, and the 鈥渃onversation鈥 led to a change in life purpose. Further, he was unexpectedly rejected by the army for military service due to previous injuries. These factors, among others, pressed him to re-evaluate his life plan. He surprised even himself by enrolling at Augsburg Seminary, then an institution of the Lutheran Free Church (a predecessor body of the ELCA), where some of his closest friends were attending.

A year-and-a-half into his seminary training, he was summoned to the office of the church president, Dr. T. O. Burntvedt, and was urged to accept an appointment to serve as pastor of a congregation in Mora, Minn., starting on Christmas morning. Only part-way through seminary, and in the midst of preparing three choirs in a large congregation for Christmastime, he was stunned by this request. But it was obvious that 鈥測es鈥 was the answer Burntvedt required.

Strommen accepted the appointment, combining his work in Mora (on weekends) with completion of his seminary studies (during the week). In Mora, he was awed by his youth鈥檚 response to the ministry of his congregation, and his experience there created a passion for developing youth ministry, both in his congregation and beyond. His five years in Mora were transformative, both for him and for the confirmands, many of whom became leaders in their own right.

Youth ministry, a new idea then, would become the core of Strommen鈥檚 life鈥檚 work in ministry and research鈥攁s campus pastor at Augsburg, national youth director, and founder of the Youth and Family Institute at Augsburg. He also founded the renowned Search Institute, which, on the heels of the 鈥渢urbulent 60s,鈥 surveyed 4,745 randomly selected U.S. Lutherans (aged 15鈥65) on their beliefs, values, and lifestyles. The resulting report, A Study of Generations, yielded a remarkable set of data鈥攕cientifically collected, nicely collated (thanks to the advent of computers), and clearly interpreted. The comprehensive study was highly applauded by clergy and hailed by Time magazine in a full-page article as 鈥渁n assured classic.鈥

Having led numerous efforts over the decades to help youth into 鈥渁 conscious awareness of Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord,鈥 Strommen has written extensively about youth ministry. This spring, he released his 17th book, The Amazing Hand of God: My Story of a Lifetime in Youth Ministry. The book provides a detailed look at how youth ministry can work well, as well as a rich description of his own journey in ministry and his professional research of attitudes regarding youth and faith issues. The book also includes several appendices with useful data on pastoral effectiveness and healthy youth ministries. The book is available through Lutheran University Press (www.lutheranUpress.org) and for Kindle at Amazon ().

Strommen recalls his family鈥檚 praying for Augsburg regularly when he was a child, and his family tree is filled with Auggies鈥攆ather, brothers, wife, children, nieces, nephews, and grandchildren. He has seen Augsburg evolve over the years from many vantage points鈥攁s college student, seminary student, teacher, campus pastor, founder and director of the Centennial Singers, Regent, and Regent Emeritus鈥攁nd he applauds what he sees and is 鈥渧ery delighted.鈥

Now 95, Strommen lives with his wife of nearly 70 years, Irene (Huglen 鈥44), in a Minneapolis apartment, adorned with Scandinavian artifacts, family pictures, plenty of easy chairs, and a grand piano. Every week, the Strommens welcome about thirty neighbors into their living room for a musicale and stories about the composer. Though his ministry may have precluded his formally pursuing a musical career, he has found a variety of ways to share his love of music.

 

A Message from Pres. Pribbenow about Erwin Mickelberg ’54

Dear friends,

It is with great sadness that I send news that our long-time colleague, Professor Emeritus Erwin Mickelberg, passed away last Friday. Professor Mickelberg was an Augsburg alumnus (class of 1954), a member of the Augsburg Faculty and the Department of Biology.

Professor Mickelberg began his teaching career at Augsburg College in 1956 and retired in 1994. He received his bachelor’s degree from Augsburg College and his master’s degree from the University of Minnesota. Erwin taught classes in anatomy and physiology, human biology, nutrition, and botany in both the Day program and the Weekend College program. He also volunteered in the Minneapolis Public Schools, teaching elementary school children about the human body, and was active in his church.

An avid supporter for a new science building throughout his teaching career at Augsburg, a manuscript of Erwin’s was recently published, and all proceeds will be donated to the College’s campaign for the new Center for Science, Business and Religion.

A funeral is planned for this聽Friday, May 9, 11:00 a.m.(reviewal at聽10:00) at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis. An obituary will appear in the Star Tribune聽on Wednesday听补苍诲聽Thursday聽of this week.

Erwin’s family has requested聽聽be made directly to the聽, where a fund will be established in his name.

Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.

Paul C. Pribbenow, Ph.D.
President
Augsburg College