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King Harald V of Norway Receives Honorary Degree from Augsburg

King Harald V of Norway and President Paul Pribbenow smile side-by-side following the conferral of an honorary Augsburg degree on King Harald.
Photo courtesy of Her Majesty Queen Sonja of Norway

In a December ceremony in Oslo, President Paul Pribbenow conferred upon King Harald V of Norway the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa.听

鈥淲e are deeply grateful for Your Majesty鈥檚 abiding support of 海角社区 and our sister Norwegian-American colleges and universities throughout the more than three decades of your reign,鈥 said Pribbenow in his ceremonial remarks. 鈥淲e share both a common heritage and profound commitments to peacemaking and global citizenship.鈥

His Majesty King Harald V of Norway acceded to the throne January 17, 1991. The future king attended the Norwegian Cavalry Officers鈥 Training School and went on to finish his military education at the Military Academy in 1959. Upon completion of his military service, he attended Balliol College at Oxford University from 1960 to 1962, studying social science, history, and economics. He holds the rank of general in Norway鈥檚 army and air force, and of admiral in the navy.听

King Harald and his wife, Queen Sonja, visited Augsburg in 2011. The recognition鈥攐riginally scheduled for 2020 but delayed by the pandemic鈥攊s part of Augsburg鈥檚 sesquicentennial anniversary celebration.听

43rd Annual Advent Vespers Returns In Person

Augsburg's Advent Vespers takes place in the sanctuary of Central Lutheran Church, with choir, orchestra, and packed pews.For more than four decades, 海角社区 has ushered in the Advent and Christmas seasons with Advent Vespers, a magnificent experience of music and liturgy, focusing on the theme of preparation and culminating in the joyful celebration of the Incarnation.

The 43rd Advent Vespers will be held in person at Central Lutheran Church in downtown Minneapolis, with one livestream option available.听

  • Thursday, December 1, 2022 at 8 p.m. (open dress rehearsal)
  • Friday, December 2, 2022 at 7 p.m.
  • Saturday, December 3, 2022 at 2 p.m. (with livestream) and 5 p.m.

The event is free, with a suggested donation of $30 per person. Seating envelopes are required for entry and are distributed on a first-come, first-served basis. They can be requested online, by mail, or in person at the Augsburg Music Office.听

Shuttle service will be available from Augsburg鈥檚 Anderson Music Hall to Central Lutheran and back, with limited parking available in lot A on Augsburg鈥檚 campus.听

Podcast: Augsburg Enrollment Leaders Talk College Access

Headshots of Robert Gould and Stephanie Ruckel on a green and orange background with white text reading, "Enrollment Edge: the enrollmentFUEL podcast. Episode 45: Robert Gould & Stephanie Ruckel"Robert Gould, vice president for strategic enrollment management, and Stephanie Ruckel, director of admissions operations, joined host Jay Fedje as featured guests on a recent episode of the Enrollment Edge podcast by enrollmentFUEL.听

The episode focused on the power of direct admissions鈥攁 simplified approach in which students are admitted based on high school GPA, in some cases before they have even applied鈥攖o break down college access barriers.听

鈥淓ssentially, what we鈥檙e trying to do is remove as many barriers as we can for students, and give them the most options to enroll in whatever institution is a good place for them,鈥 said Ruckel. 鈥淲hen you start thinking about the student鈥檚 perspective, you can start questioning the [admissions] process a little bit differently. Why are we requiring these things? How are we using this data? Are we using this information?听

鈥淭he challenge in doing this is really stripping down the application鈥攎aking sure we are collecting what we need to collect, but keeping it as simple as possible.鈥

Augsburg鈥檚 participation in pilot programs with the Minnesota Office of Higher Education and the Common App, as well as significant changes to the Augsburg application itself, puts the university at the leading edge of this new policy movement.听

鈥淚 want to credit the whole team,鈥 said Gould. 鈥淲e鈥檝e literally taken the admissions process and the system and changed it in one cycle. We had some good thoughts about how it fulfilled our mission as an enrollment division, but I think more importantly, people had the appetite for it鈥攚anting to build deeper relationships and wanting to eliminate barriers for all students.鈥

Listen to the episode here: Direct Admission: Unpacking College Access

Environmental Advocates 鈥淔lip the Switch鈥 on Solar Demonstration Project

Four students pose in front of the solar shed in lot B behind Mortensen Hall. One is pointing to the solar panels on top of the shed.The small crowd gathered by the freeway wall burst into applause as Professor Joe Underhill fired up a handheld sander. Despite the cloudy day, it was powered by the sun.听

The shed at the west end of Lot B attracted plenty of curiosity during its construction in the summer of 2022. On October 6, it was officially unveiled as a solar-powered demonstration project Underhill calls a 鈥淯nit of Resistance.鈥澨

Temporarily located at the end of 21st Ave, the shed currently houses tools and supplies for the River Semester, the Center for Global Education and Experience program Underhill also leads. Both projects, he says, are part of an attempt to rethink higher education as something more hands-on and to empower students with a sense of agency.听听

鈥淚n the face of huge problems like climate change and the student mental health crisis, what small steps can we take to focus on what we can do, instead of what we can鈥檛?鈥 he asks.听

The idea for a solar-powered work shed on campus arose last spring in Underhill鈥檚 The City and Environment keystone course. Inspired by the Augsburg Day Student Government鈥檚 2021 resolution calling on Augsburg to explore on-campus solar and reach carbon neutrality by 2030, the class wrote a grant proposal to the ADSG鈥檚 Environmental Action Committee to buy solar panels.听

EAC funded the purchase of six 320-watt Renogy Solar panels, a 24-volt battery bank, and a power inverter. Underhill used other grant funds to purchase wood for the 8×8-foot structure, which features a roof slanted at 45 degrees鈥攖he average angle of the sun at Augsburg鈥檚 latitude. He and students built it over the spring and summer, and electrical work was completed this fall by Aaron Jarson, the Augsburg electrician.

Senior Zoe Barany says that, like the campus solar and carbon neutrality resolution, the shed is a tangible expression of students鈥 interest in advancing Augsburg鈥檚 climate commitments.听

鈥淭he funds for the project came from the campus Green Fee,鈥 says junior Maya Merritt, who leads sustainability initiatives as the student government EAC officer. 鈥淲ith the Green Fee, we鈥檙e effectively taxing ourselves to support sustainability. If you鈥檙e paying the Green Fee, you get a say in where it鈥檚 going.鈥

Augsburg Music Professor Wins Entrepreneurship Prize

A white man in a sweater, jeans, and knit hat sits with his arms crossed among keyboards and music recording equipment.Intrigued by the potential of online education, J. Anthony Allen started a small company in 2018 to provide music instruction via the web. It grew organically at first, with a handful of classes and a few licensing agreements with larger platforms.

Then came the pandemic.听

鈥淚t was really a question of the right place and the right time,鈥 said Allen, an assistant professor of music, media, and management at Augsburg. was already established when the world saw a huge increase in demand for online classes of all kinds in 2020. Today, it serves more than a million students from every corner of the globe.听

Allen entered Punkademic in the prestigious entrepreneurship contest earlier this year. The competition, which is based at the University of Minnesota鈥檚 Carlson School of Business, provides seed funding and support to emerging entrepreneurs from across the state. His goal was to make it past the first round in order to connect with a mentor from the ed tech world.听

Punkademic did make the first cut. And the next one. In September, it was named a semifinalist for the grand prize and took first place in the Education and Training division.听

Allen plans to invest the $25,000 MN Cup award in marketing and general operating infrastructure for the company, which remains a slim operation despite its explosive growth. Punkademic鈥檚 flexible model offers individual class purchases as well as structured courses on a subscription basis. The site鈥檚 most popular offerings include courses on music theory, composition, film scoring, sound design, and ear training.听听听听

Allen sees a clear connection between his 鈥渟ide hustle鈥 and his work at Augsburg, where he teaches classes in music business and technology, runs the music production minor, manages Augsburg鈥檚 recording studio, and serves as interim music department chair.听

鈥淭eaching is a practice. All of this work online has informed my teaching style and abilities,鈥 he said. 鈥淗ere in the music business program we also talk about how all of music is an entrepreneurial act in one way or another.听

鈥淔or me, Punkademic is proof of that concept.鈥澨

To learn more, or .

(Photo of J. Anthony Allen by Jade Patrick)

Augsburg Faculty Publish New Books for Kids, Parents

Augsburg students benefit from world-class faculty with deep academic expertise and a love of teaching鈥攁 major reason the university is so for undergraduate teaching.听

Many Augsburg faculty are also dedicated public scholars, whose work reaches beyond the academy to shape conversations in the public square. Two recent faculty books hold broad appeal for children and parents.听听听

Matt Maruggi holding a copy of his new bookMatt Maruggi, associate professor of religion and previous co-director of Augsburg鈥檚 Interfaith Scholars program, is the co-author of 鈥.鈥 The book aims to make the world’s major faiths accessible to kids ages 8鈥12, sharing the complexities of different religious traditions in language young people can understand. Maruggi calls it a 鈥済orgeous, content-heavy picture book,鈥 with sections on Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, as well as Native American traditions, Sikhism, Taosim, shamanism, secular humanism, interfaith families, and interfaith cooperation.听

Maruggi and his co-authors Sonja Hagander and Megan Borgert-Spaniol interviewed children from different traditions about the most meaningful aspects of their faith traditions. The book highlights their perspectives as well as famous individuals (like Dorothy Day and Muhammad Ali) and organizations (like Sewa International and Bread for the World) whose religious convictions are visible in public life.听

Cover of Spanked: How Hitting Our Children Is Harming OurselvesChristina Erickson, professor of social work and environmental studies, is the author of 鈥,鈥 a deep dive into the long-accepted practice of hitting children for learning and obedience. 鈥淪panked鈥 explores the historical roots, cultural supports, and social dynamics of spanking鈥攁 practice that is illegal in 62 countries, but still widely accepted here in the U.S.听Erickson, who also chairs Augsburg鈥檚 social work department, comes to this topic as a social worker, a researcher, and a parent herself. In the book, she traces more than a century of research into spanking outcomes to critically assess the common narrative: 鈥淚 was spanked, and I turned out fine.鈥澨

Erickson was featured by columnist Laura Yuen in a recent The book gives parents, health care providers, educators, social workers, faith leaders, and anyone interested in power and family dynamics a platform to respectfully discuss what spanking communicates to children.

“Ground Zero for Police Reform”: Professor Michael Lansing on Minneapolis Police Chief Search

Local media have turned to Augsburg professor Michael Lansing for historical context as the city of Minneapolis prepares to hire a new police chief.听

鈥淕iven the recent events, the murder of George Floyd as well as the uprising here in Minneapolis, there鈥檚 no question that the selection of a police chief is intensely important,鈥 Lansing told reporter Jay Koll on last week.听

The three finalists for Minneapolis police chief all come from outside of Minnesota鈥攁 rarity in recent decades. 鈥淣ot only is it unusual, it鈥檚 noteworthy because that only tends to happen when the city has been through some kind of intense experience around policing and public safety and police-community relations,鈥 said Lansing, who is writing a book on the history of policing in Minneapolis. He is also the co-founder, with Dr. Yohuru Williams at the University of St. Thomas, of the 鈥淥verpoliced and Underprotected in MSP鈥 project.听

鈥淗istory never repeats itself, but sometimes it rhymes,鈥 Lansing told . 鈥淭his is one of those examples when we鈥檙e hearing some rhyming: the call for outsiders, the desperate pleas for help to change the culture that you find across the city, in communities of color, in advocacy organizations, on city council, and in the mayor鈥檚 office. And yet what鈥檚 different is that you have a rearrangement of the actual administrative structure,鈥 with the city’s newly-appointed Commissioner of Public Safety in place.

鈥淚 think this is ground zero for police reform in the United States.鈥澨

Read more from Michael Lansing: 鈥Policing Politics: Labor, Race, and the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, 1945鈥1972鈥 (Minnesota History magazine, 2021)

Congratulations to Auggies Named to the 2022 Summer Dean鈥檚 List

University SealMore than 50 海角社区 undergraduate students were named to the 2022 Summer Semester Dean鈥檚 List. The 海角社区 Dean鈥檚 List recognizes those full-time students who have achieved a grade point average of 3.50 or higher and those part-time students who have achieved a grade point average of 3.75 or higher in a given term.

Students who wish to notify their hometown newspapers of their achievement can do so at their discretion using a .

Reinaldo Moya Receives McKnight Composer Fellowship

Reinaldo Moya leans against a wall wearing a dark coat and blue collared shirt. Snow and trees are in the background.Reinaldo Moya, associate professor of composition, has been named one of four 2022听. Funded by the McKnight Foundation, the fellowship provides $25,000 in unrestricted support for outstanding mid-career artists living in Minnesota. He plans to use the award to record an album of his compositions, and to pursue additional training and equipment to widen his musical horizons.听

A graduate of Venezuela鈥檚 El Sistema music education system, Professor Moya is the recipient of the Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Van Lier Fellowship, and the Aaron Copland Award, as well as a previous McKnight Composer Fellowship. He was the winner of the Ellis-Beauregard Foundation Composer Award, leading to the commissioning of his Piano Concerto for Joyce Yang and the Bangor Symphony Orchestra. Professor Moya鈥檚 works have been performed by the Minnesota Orchestra, the Minnesota Opera, the San Diego Symphony, the Juilliard Orchestra, the Sim贸n Bol铆var Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, and the New Jersey Symphony. He is a graduate of The Juilliard School with masters and doctoral degrees.听

Learn more about his works at . Congratulations, Professor Moya!

Reggie Agyen-Boateng 鈥21 Anchors Hennepin Ave Public Art Project

A young man stands with his back to the camera looking up at a billboard photograph of a Black journalist with one fist raised
Photo via Instagram: @kusi_photos

Towering over Hennepin Avenue, the black-and-white photograph of a journalist with fist raised stops people in their tracks.听

The artist behind this complex, arresting image? Reggie Agyen-Boateng 鈥21.

Agyen-Boateng majored in sociology at Augsburg and now works professionally under the name Kusi Photography. He is one of seven artists featured in 鈥淚t鈥檚 the People,鈥 a public art installation in downtown Minneapolis coordinated by the Hennepin Theatre Trust. His portrait of independent journalist King Demetrius Pendleton was chosen to anchor the project with a multi-story billboard on 900 Hennepin Avenue for the next year.听

鈥淢y participation in 鈥淚t鈥檚 the People鈥 is my way of honoring the countless victims who have lost their lives to police violence,鈥 said Agyen-Boateng in his artist statement. 鈥淚t also allows me to give back to my community in a meaningful way after the suffering that Minnesota has endured over the years.听

鈥淲orking with King Demetrius Pendleton to capture his lived history in a single portrait challenged me to think about the complex layers and intersectionality of Black identities and lived experiences. This way of examining identity moved my work as an artist forward into new territory. It also became a way to document and truth-tell through images.鈥

Now in its fourth year, the 2022 project also features large-scale photos of theatre artists, arts leaders creating programming with youth experiencing homelessness, concert venue staff, Indigenous restauranteurs, student artists, and queer leaders. Learn more about 鈥淚t鈥檚 the People鈥 from Hennepin Theatre Trust.听

Congratulations, Reggie!