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Throwback Thursday

A Periodic Tale of Departmental Lore (Part 2)

Written by David Lapakko

Surprise, surprise–not that long ago, communication technology was quite different in our聽department and on this campus. In the 鈥80s and 鈥90s, we had this amazing piece of machinery聽called a VHS player. With it, we could see instructional videos in class and record student聽presentations–how cool was that? But, this equipment had to be housed somewhere. 171 Foss, which is now a suite for the offices of our department faculty, was Augsburg鈥檚聽A/V headquarters for many years. If you wanted to show a video in class, you needed to聽reserve a cart–a tall, gangly thing that had a large TV monitor on the top shelf and a VHS player聽on the shelf underneath. These top-heavy metal behemoths were on wheels, and there were聽perhaps a dozen of them.

Throughout the day, you鈥檇 see A/V student workers pushing these聽carts all over campus to classrooms where they had been reserved. It didn鈥檛 matter if there was聽a blizzard or a thunderstorm; someone had to push them through the snow, across the streets,聽and over the curbs. And, you counted yourself as fortunate to get one, because sometimes聽they were all in use in particular time slots. Back then, if you wanted to record student presentations, you could go to the library and check out a camera. But there were not things聽like mp4s, or online links, so if students wanted to see what they had done, they needed to get聽the VHS tape and find a place to play it.

In the meantime, technology was revolutionizing faculty offices. Throughout most of the 20th聽century, students would have to be very lucky to contact their professors. They could try them聽during their posted office hours, or they could phone them, but if the person wasn鈥檛 in, they聽were pretty much sunk. But then, along came voicemail! Now we could leave recorded聽messages for faculty and staff, 24/7. Especially in the early 鈥90s, voicemail was all the rage; my聽goodness, you could program the phone to include all the phone extensions in your聽department, and send them all a group voicemail message. Now, of course, we would send such a note via email, but that wasn鈥檛 an option back then. Still, we felt quite privileged to have聽such state of the art equipment–including overhead projectors in every classroom!

Next time: When 鈥渨orking adults鈥 roamed around campus by the hundreds–the glorious era
of Weekend College.