Class of 2023 Archives - Augsburg Now /now/tag/class-of-2023/ 海角社区 Mon, 21 Oct 2024 17:41:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 From a small-town book club to paddling the Mississippi River, learning gets bigger outside the classroom /now/2022/02/22/from-a-small-town-book-club-to-paddling-the-mississippi-river-learning-gets-bigger-outside-the-classroom%e2%80%a8%e2%80%a8/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 17:24:26 +0000 /now/?p=11776 Just outside Hallock, Minnesota, in the skies that stretch above dormant sugar beet fields, charged solar particles meet the earth鈥檚 magnetic shield, exciting those atoms into the awe that is the aurora borealis. It鈥檚 a collision of energy that delights anyone observing, each drawn to its light for reasons both obvious and intensely personal. Maybe

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Just outside Hallock, Minnesota, in the skies that stretch above dormant sugar beet fields, charged solar particles meet the earth鈥檚 magnetic shield, exciting those atoms into the awe that is the aurora borealis.

It鈥檚 a collision of energy that delights anyone observing, each drawn to its light for reasons both obvious and intensely personal.

Maybe it鈥檚 poetry, or maybe it鈥檚 providence.

But the meeting of seemingly opposing forces is creating something spectacular in other parts of this border town, too. The magic is made of one cup of coffee, one shared car ride, one page at a time. Here, a book club brings rural community members and urban college students together, meeting each person wherever they are and challenging them to think differently. The book club is one of a number of experiential learning opportunities offered at 海角社区 that put into practice just what it means to pursue one鈥檚 calling and build a meaningful life and career.

Removing obstacles

Participants from the book club talk at a local business in Hallock, Minnesota. (Courtesy photo)

What鈥檚 become known as the Anti-Racist Book Club began as the brainchild of Augsburg alumni and Hallock residents Kristin Eggerling 鈥89 and Paul Blomquist 鈥88. For some time, the couple had been hosting a club, welcoming their neighbors into discussions of social justice issues. But the group grew to include current Auggies when Timothy Pippert, the Joel Torstenson Endowed Professor of Sociology, began reminiscing about a pre-pandemic writing retreat that gave him time for thought and reflection.

鈥淚 started talking to Darcey [Engen 鈥88] about it, about how I missed it, and she said, 鈥榊ou need to meet two of my friends,鈥欌 Pippert said.

Engen, professor and chair of the Augsburg theater department and founder of the theater company Sod House, helped get all the parties involved in conversation. Eggerling鈥攁 writer, editor, and community activist鈥攆ound comfort and friends at the Hallock library when she first moved to the town after working for a time in the Twin Cities. Hallock is where Blomquist grew up, and where he returned after college to run his family鈥檚 Ford dealership after his father鈥檚 unexpected death. Their Augsburg experience was imprinted on them on an almost cellular level, and it eventually led to them celebrating things in Hallock that some overlook or take for granted, while also asking critical questions and inviting others in the community to engage in challenging conversations.

When Pippert heard of the couple鈥檚 work, it wasn鈥檛 long before he asked if the group could join them.

The couple said yes. With that, planning began in earnest. What book? When? Who will be involved? How? The cumulative efforts of that organizing came together with a Fall 2021 trip,聽funded by Board of Regents member Mark S. Johnson 鈥75, that brought the city-dwelling students to the small country community that sits within 20 miles of the Canadian border.

Welcome to Hallock, population 981.

Student group poses in front of a wall with a City of Hallock mural
The book club students and faculty members left the Twin Cities to visit Hallock, Minnesota. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淥ne of the things we were trying to do was to focus not just on the anti-racism theme, but to explore the urban and rural divide. Many of our students don鈥檛 really have a sense of what it鈥檚 like to live in or know many people who come from a town of 900 people,鈥 Pippert said.

Conversely, folks who鈥檝e spent their entire lives in and near a place where Friday night is synonymous with fish fry don鈥檛 necessarily understand why someone would want to live in a place where a high school can be larger than their entire community.

鈥淲hen it comes to this idea between urban and rural, there鈥檚 a big divide in lots of ways,鈥 Engen said. 鈥淵es, of course, there are often issues around race, but there are economic issues, too. And in greater Minnesota, there are people who are struggling and need resources, the same as in the Twin Cities.鈥

What鈥檚 more, Engen said, specialty skill sets aren鈥檛 simply the purview of urbanites. Visiting a small farming community, and actually communicating with the residents there, is a great reminder that gifts and talents are universally distributed.

The group of Augsburg students and faculty visited a local business in Hallock, Minnesota. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淭o not forget there are artists, writers, sociologists, lawyers in greater Minnesota, all over the state鈥攑eople who are born in the Twin Cities don鈥檛 think about that,鈥 Engen said.

Being exposed to new ideas affects how a person thinks, maybe just for that moment. But sometimes the experience informs a lifetime.

Lydia Rikkola 鈥22 grew up in Minnesota鈥檚 cities and their suburbs.

There were some stereotypes about rural Minnesota that she expected to see when the book club visitors took a tour of Hallock. Rikkola doubted there would be much racial and ethnic diversity, and she was right: Census data confirms 96% of Hallock residents are white.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very homogenous,鈥 Rikkola said. 鈥淏ut some of the things that surprised me were how open-minded and aware some of the community members were. The woman who runs the food shelf 鈥 just to see her passion about social justice and the need for food, that food insecurity is in more places than just the Twin Cities. That was really cool to see her acknowledge that and do everything in her power to address it. It was incredible to see that kind of attention and care and detail.鈥

鈥業t became about the meal鈥

The evening of the group鈥檚 tour in Hallock and conversations with various community members, Eggerling and Blomquist invited the whole book club to their house for dinner.

It鈥檚 hard to be intimidating when you鈥檙e eating.

鈥淓veryone becomes a little more vulnerable and willing to share themselves,鈥 Eggerling said. 鈥淲e were sharing food and stories, laughing at our cat. It wasn鈥檛 rushed; we were able to talk about a variety of things. Some really great connections did come about.鈥

Engen agreed.

鈥淵es, absolutely, it became about the meal.鈥

People sat on the floor, on the couch鈥攚herever an open space presented itself. And the easy environment meant everyone had a chance to just breathe, relax, and reflect.

鈥淚鈥檒l never forget the dinner we had,鈥 Rikkola said. 鈥淭here were like 30 people stuffed in this house. It was buffet style, and the hosts were so kind as to pay attention to the fact that some of us are vegan, and it was a real home-cooked meal.

鈥淭he conversations were so rich. The adults in the room were so interested in seeing us grow, and we talked about everything鈥攑olitics, social issues, life issues.鈥 The following morning, the group all returned to the Eggerling-Blomquist home for much-needed coffee and a hot breakfast, before a planned tour of the town鈥檚 school.

鈥淒uring part of that morning conversation, one of the students said, 鈥業 thought all you folks in small towns were hicks and racists鈥欌攖hey voiced that, they felt comfortable sharing that. And that started some really good conversations,鈥 Pippert said.

Taking students out of the classroom and trying something somewhat unknown takes a bit of a leap of faith, Pippert said.

鈥淭here are things you can鈥檛 control with it, certainly. One of the things we were really cognizant of was that we didn鈥檛 want to put students in a position of teaching; it鈥檚 not their responsibility to teach the folks up there, and it鈥檚 not those folks鈥 responsibility to teach the students鈥攊t has to be about relationships.

鈥淚t took us a while to realize that鈥檚 where the real work is and the real opportunity: in those relationships. Meeting people who aren鈥檛 anything like yourself, and talking and learning not only on the big issues of race, but on all things: Where do you eat in a town that size? How far away is the nearest hospital? The value of experiential learning is that it can be confusing, and it can be scary, rewarding, fulfilling, and life-changing.鈥

Rikkola said she鈥檚 proof of that.

鈥淭hrough conversation comes growth. It鈥檚 so easy to 鈥榦ther鈥 but going on a trip like this stops the 鈥榦thering,鈥 because the 鈥榦ther鈥 is feeding you, the 鈥榦ther鈥 is caring for you, the shared humanity breaks down barriers,鈥 Rikkola said. 鈥淭hey explain their perspective, and you explain yours and really listen.

鈥淕etting taken out of your environment is so necessary. If you only have friends with the same opinions you鈥檙e never challenged, you can鈥檛 really learn; you won鈥檛 grow.鈥

Best-kept secret

Experiential learning has been a core feature of Augsburg鈥檚 academic framework for more than 100 years. In the late 1800s Augsburg鈥檚 second president, Georg Sverdrup, required students to have pre-ministerial experience with congregations around Minneapolis. Today 100% of undergraduate students participate in some form of experiential learning. It takes shape for many students through internships, study abroad, research, and community engagement, in addition to the hands-on components already built into many academic courses.

Joe Connelly is the principal torchbearer for the practice, serving as experiential education specialist with Augsburg鈥檚 Center for Global Education and Experience. Connelly said these types of experiences are essential and always relevant for students. The experiences are also part of the university鈥檚 thinking about how a liberal arts education should prepare students for vibrant careers addressing challenges in their communities and around the world.

The River Semester crew paddled significant portions of the Mississippi River. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

鈥淚f there鈥檚 one best-kept secret, it would be just what an important role Augsburg plays to provide experiential learning for their own students and students around the country. This is work that is so closely tied to the mission of Augsburg鈥攁nd creating vocation鈥攁nd this is work that has been going on for decades,鈥 Connelly said.

And while the opportunities have always mattered, today鈥檚 global uncertainties provide perhaps even more motivation to make sure experiential learning continues, he said.

鈥淲e provide students the opportunity to immerse themselves in other peoples鈥 lives, in other peoples鈥 realities,鈥 Connelly said. 鈥淭hey share a meal, sit around a table and hear other peoples鈥 stories about their experiences with war or other hardship. We understand that life is very complicated, very nuanced. Things are not black and white; there are a lot of sides to it, and it鈥檚 not cut and dry. Through experiential education, students understand that鈥檚 what life is鈥攊t鈥檚 not easy answers; it鈥檚 not a yes or no.鈥

Science backs what these educators know: Moving out of a traditional classroom setting and into a learning experience can be challenging, but the effort is worth the work. In a 2019 study published by the Lithuanian Science Council in Public Health Magazine, researchers Viktorija Pi拧膷alkien臈 and Hans Ingemann Lottrup found that, 鈥淓xperiential learning and experience reflection hold a significant role as an educational methodology, and it is a shared value to prepare students for the challenges in a changing world by developing professionals who can think critically and reflectively.鈥

Having time to reflect is what motivated Pippert to go north. Associate Professor Joe Underhill was moved to go north, and south.

Underhill, Augsburg鈥檚 environmental studies director, wanted time and space to put big questions to his students. Specifically, he wanted to engage his students in more than conversation about climate change鈥攈e wanted them to find ways to combat it. And since big questions can benefit from having big space to work within, Underhill turned to the Mississippi River.

Joe Underhill [second from right] and a crew hand-build the boats for the 2021 River Semester. (Photo by Rebecca Slater)
鈥淲e started with smaller trips,鈥 he said, experiences that paired his students with like-minded nonprofits like the Audubon Society or the Friends of the Mississippi. But Underhill and the students wanted more. That desire gave way to what is now the River Semester.

鈥淭he ideas or inspiration behind the program have to do with the value of direct embodied experience as a way to learn, rather than reading about something,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou are seeing, feeling, smelling, hearing. Seeing the beauty of the river and the challenges, it sticks with people, it hits home, and it is the kind of thing you don鈥檛 forget. If you want to learn about something, there鈥檚 no better way than to experience it firsthand.鈥

鈥業 can do so much more鈥

Launched in 2015, the most recent River Semester ran for 101 days in Fall 2021. The team started with a trip to the Boundary Waters, where they paddled and camped for several days while they got to know one another a bit better, learned more about what the semester would hold, and came to grips with spending four months away鈥攆ar away.

There was a mix of rowing, sailing, and making use of shuttle vehicles that occasionally carried the group from one part of their journey into another. And the group camped on islands or in municipal river parks, eating mostly what they made on cookstoves.

It was an experience that Zoe Barany 鈥23 won鈥檛 forget.

鈥淚 have never in my life found a community like I did when I was on the river,鈥 Barany said. 鈥淧eople were so generous and kind with their resources and their authentic love for the environment. We had the ability to take agency and get things done. I just found a home out there.鈥

As an environmental studies major, Barany said they first fell in love with the promise of nature while in high school. But the River Semester opened their mind to so much more.

鈥淚 come from a place of privilege. I鈥檓 a white environmentalist, but I have still struggled with things to work through,鈥 Barany said. 鈥淏eing out there, it challenges you. It reveals things you don鈥檛 want to see about yourself. It鈥檚 just honest.鈥

Barany said they specifically learned of the power of clear communication.

鈥淚n everyday life you can sweep things under the rug, but when you鈥檙e outside you have to go through things,鈥 Barany said. 鈥淪ometimes I would lash out at people or be upset, or complain instead of enjoying the time we had. It challenged me to step up, be a leader, communicate, and speak on behalf of my needs and what I need to function in a group. Having that knowledge now is so empowering.鈥

Elias Wirz 鈥23 prepared for his River Semester with small trips in 2019 and 2020. There was never any question about making the 100-day journey.

鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the biggest reasons I chose Augsburg. There鈥檚 nothing like it that I鈥檝e found. With the River Semester you get to see a part of the world that you would never see if you don鈥檛 do something like this. You get to learn about yourself and what you are capable of, on top of learning some super interesting coursework.鈥

Wirz said with every experience, the group just kept getting stronger.

鈥淢y biggest takeaway is that I believe I can do so much more than I ever could because of the River Semester. Being able to do something like this, you feel like you鈥檙e capable of so much more. You want to keep going, trying, testing your limits鈥攊f I can do this, what other great things can I do now?鈥 Wirz said.

Some of that understanding came not only from the experience overall, but from the hundreds of small, seemingly innocuous moments along the way. It is in the accumulation of those moments鈥攁pplying academic knowledge in practical ways and engaging with the people present鈥攖hat experiential education transforms abstract ideas into real-world skills and understanding. That鈥檚 how Augsburg students become informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of good happening. In every city we went through, in every experience we had, I鈥檓 convinced that people are inherently good,鈥 Barany said. 鈥淣ow I want to serve, to continue this cycle of goodness.鈥

The River Semester crew traveled by catamarans down the Mississippi River. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

 


 

 


 


Top image: Professor Joe Underhill [back row] and students paddled hand-crafted catamarans during the River Semester. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

 

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The hustle and heart of Augsburg football coach Jack Osberg 鈥62 /now/2022/02/22/the-hustle-and-heart-of-augsburg-football-coach-jack-osberg-62/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 17:24:03 +0000 /now/?p=11774 Minneapolis native Jack Osberg 鈥62 played football from the time he was a kid in the alleys and parks of Minneapolis until his college years, and he entered Augsburg鈥檚 Athletic Hall of Fame in 1979. He taught high school biology for 30 years and coached high school and college football for 60. About 22 of

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Jack Osberg ’62 (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Minneapolis native Jack Osberg 鈥62 played football from the time he was a kid in the alleys and parks of Minneapolis until his college years, and he entered Augsburg鈥檚 Athletic Hall of Fame in 1979. He taught high school biology for 30 years and coached high school and college football for 60. About 22 of those years were at Augsburg, where he compiled a school-record 62 victories and, in 1997, led the team to its first Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship since 1928. At 81, he continues to assist Augsburg鈥檚 defensive line and personally connect with students.

Everyone who knows former Augsburg football coach Jack Osberg has a story:

鈥淭his giant offensive lineman got a concussion during practice, and I was doing the evaluation,鈥 said Missy Strauch, Augsburg head athletic trainer and athletics health care administrator. 鈥淛ack waited because he wanted to drive the student home, and when I left the building, the two were sitting on the steps. The young man was sobbing. Jack sat there, listening. Come to find out the student was the sole caregiver for his mother, who was dealing with Alzheimer鈥檚. Jack and his wife, Nina, checked on the student every day, and they are still in touch. That鈥檚 Jack. He coached these students to become better players, but he guided them鈥攂y example鈥攖o become even better people.鈥

鈥淛ack is a lifelong friend, and someone anyone鈥攏o matter their age鈥攍ooks up to because he works so hard and cares so deeply about everyone, whether you are the starting quarterback or the third string,鈥 said Jim Roback 鈥63, who met Osberg on the first day of classes at Augsburg in 1958. 鈥淚鈥檝e played and coached with him, and there isn鈥檛 a more genuine, collaborative person who can pull out the best in anyone. You never worked for Jack, you worked with him.鈥

鈥淗e was a father figure to us,鈥 said Augsburg Football Head Coach Derrin Lamker 鈥97. 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget when I was quarterback, and we were getting ready for our championship game. I walked into Jack鈥檚 office, and he and Nina were reviewing a list of our parents鈥 names. I was like, 鈥楥oach, what are you doing? We鈥檙e getting ready to play the game of our lives.鈥 He said, 鈥榊ou worry about the game; we want to be able to greet [the student-athletes鈥橾 parents by name.鈥 Well, we won the championship, and they greeted each parent by name.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e been taking notes from Jack since my first day of zoology class when he was a biology teacher at Wayzata High School,鈥 said former Augsburg Women鈥檚 Hockey Head Coach Jill Pohtilla. 鈥淚 recall overhearing him with a recruit. He told the young man, 鈥楢ugsburg is not built with bricks and mortar; it’s built with people,鈥 and that鈥檚 how Jack lived鈥攔ecognizing that people drive success. So whether it’s athletics or life, you surround yourself with people who make you better.鈥

Bob Schultz ’98 was inducted into Augsburg’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2021, the same year his brother, Ted Schultz ’98, was inducted and Jack Osberg ’62 received the Legacy of Augsburg Athletic Award. (Photo by Kevin Healy)

鈥淲e had just won the [MIAC] championship in 1997. Nearly everyone had left, but four of us were cleaning up the locker room,鈥 said Ted Schultz 鈥98, the student activities director for Minnetonka Public Schools in Minnesota. 鈥淛ack walked in with an old boom box. He pulled out a cassette tape from his back pocket and popped it in. 鈥榃e Are the Champions鈥 by Queen played out. Jack said, 鈥業鈥檝e been waiting to do that my entire life,鈥 and we all just sat and listened.鈥

鈥淛ack regularly drove 40 minutes to watch my son鈥檚 high school football games. My son, Kyle, was 125 pounds, but he played with heart, like I did, and Jack loves that,鈥 said Michael Weidner 鈥83, a former defensive end. 鈥淭hink about that. My college football coach cares enough about me and my family to show that kind of support, and consider the thousands of people he鈥檚 coached or taught and showed the same devotion and support.鈥

鈥淲hen I heard an 81-year-old was coming to work with our defensive line, a part of me thought, 鈥榃hat can this guy teach us? How will we relate?鈥欌 said Shaquille Young 鈥23, a third-year social work major. 鈥淲ell, I learned you can鈥檛 let stereotypes get in the way of learning something new. Coach Osberg is one of the greatest people I have met in my life. He knows football like he invented it, and he makes everyone feel welcome and supported.鈥

The first quarter

Augsburg Hall of Fame member Jack Osberg ’62 (Archive photo)

Osberg was born in 1940, when football players wore leather helmets. Football was everything to Osberg and his friends, who passed and blocked in the alleys of Minneapolis. In fifth grade, he entered club sports and church group leagues, which were 15 minutes from Augsburg鈥檚 campus. Osberg worshiped with Auggie professors and coaches, so when it came time to attend college, there was no other choice.

鈥淚 was the first to go to college in my family,鈥 Osberg said. 鈥淢y father was a hardworking man, but he disliked his job working in basements as a lithographer. He wanted us to lead a better life, and I saw my future in those professors and coaches. I knew Augsburg was the place to improve my spiritual, athletic, and academic self.鈥

The graduate of Minneapolis鈥 Washburn High School became a standout football player at Augsburg from 1958 to 1961, earning induction into the college’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1979. A nose guard/offensive guard, Osberg was named All-MIAC twice and selected as MVP, team captain, and Lutheran All-American. He also played baseball his freshman year and wrestled for three years.

Jack Osberg ’62 [back row, fourth from the left] poses with the聽1961 MIAC Championship wrestling team. (Archive photo)
鈥淚 had never wrestled before, but the coach recruited me. I was never all that good, but wrestling made me a better football player. It muscled me up and trimmed me down,鈥 he said. 鈥淲restling demands mental and physical strength, and it instills a natural flow and balance.鈥

Osberg didn鈥檛 live on campus鈥攈e couldn鈥檛 afford it. Commuting, Osberg formed a bond with other students from hardworking city families who put themselves through school sorting mail at the post office or loading shotgun shells onto railcars. The gang of about 12, mostly student-athletes, called themselves 鈥淭he Syndicate鈥 because they would 鈥渟ometimes skip required chapel [services] to shoot the bull at Smiley鈥檚 Pub,鈥 Osberg said.

Leading scorer Jim Roback ’63 turns the corner behind a block by All-Conference guard, Jack Osberg ’62, during a 1961 game. (Archive photo)

Since graduation in 1962, the crew has gathered each year for a fall picnic and holiday party. Jim Roback 鈥63 is one of the core Syndicate members who played football, baseball (as captain), and track at Augsburg. He also coached with Osberg, serving as Augsburg鈥檚 defensive coordinator from 1995 to 2001 and 2006 to 2007, with a 2002 season stint as offensive coordinator.

鈥淚 taught and coached for 46 years, and I thought that was a long time. Jack just keeps on going,鈥 said Roback, who taught and coached football, basketball, baseball, track, and women鈥檚 tennis in the Anoka-Hennepin School District for 34 years. 鈥淛ack worked every minute of the day, and when he wasn鈥檛 working, he was having lunch with a group of students in his office or helping them through this or that.鈥

Another Syndicate member鈥攁lso a teacher鈥攃oached alongside Roback and Osberg. Ron Scott 鈥62 met Jack during college registration and joined him on the offensive line as a three-year, letter-winning center and blocker. From 1997 to 2002, Scott served as an assistant football coach at Augsburg.

鈥淛ack is not a boss; he is a leader, and he motivates people by example鈥攏ever yelling, but showing and guiding. Whether you were playing or working for him, you didn鈥檛 want to disappoint him,鈥 said Scott, who retired in 1997 after 36 years coaching football and working as a teacher or administrator for the Anoka-Hennepin School District. 鈥淛ack never gave up on those Auggies. Whether winning or losing, his attitude never changed.鈥

The second quarter

Osberg loves football, but he is adamant the sport does not define him. He is equally passionate about teaching. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure if I was meant to coach and teach or teach and coach,鈥 he added. 鈥淚 loved coaching full-time at Augsburg, but the high school science classroom always tugged at me. I love the living world, and there is something about teaching kids at that age and really digging into science with them.鈥

He loved the challenge of figuring out ways to engage all students in biology, developing activities for all learning styles and covering a range of topics to motivate students beyond grades.

鈥淭eaching helps you appreciate the impact you鈥攁s a single human being鈥攃an have on a person, and I was OK never knowing my impact because students move on, and you may never reconnect with them. But I鈥檝e had enough students, some of them doctors or scientists, who have reached out to tell me how my classes and outlook helped them find their passionate purpose.鈥

Osberg began his teaching (and coaching) career immediately after graduation from Augsburg. He served as a biology teacher and assistant football coach at Minneapolis鈥 Roosevelt High School from 1962 to 1970, taking one year off in 1968 to serve as a graduate assistant on聽Bob Devaney’s聽staff at Nebraska University. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where I really learned my x鈥檚 and o鈥檚 in football,鈥 Osberg said, 鈥渂ut it is where I also learned that I wasn鈥檛 made for a large program. I needed a more personal experience with players. For me, coaching is about more than the game.鈥

Jack Osberg ’62 and Nina Osberg (Courtesy photo)

In 1971, Osberg was named head coach at Wayzata High School in Plymouth, Minnesota, where he served for six seasons. It was in the teacher鈥檚 lounge at Wayzata where he overheard a fellow teacher, Nina, talking with the school counselor about alcoholism鈥檚 effect on relationships. Alcohol dissolved Osberg鈥檚 first marriage, which had left him raising three kids under the age of 5, so he joined the conversation, which eventually developed into a larger support group. Osberg grew close to Nina, who guided Wayzata鈥檚 alternative education program for 28 years. In November 1976, the two married and blended their family of six children.

鈥淪he is a 4-foot-7-inch spark plug,鈥 Osberg said of Nina. 鈥淪he dealt with difficult kids all day, then came home to manage our family, then she鈥檇 help me with recruitment and other administrative duties. She was a mother to many Augsburg players who needed guidance, and she was a friend to so many of their parents.鈥

Osberg recalls asking Nina to join him on a recruiting trip after school because she would 鈥渁lways seal the deal,鈥 he said. Osberg realized on the drive that Tomah, Wisconsin, was a bit farther than he thought. The couple drove three hours through a snowstorm to stand on an unheated concrete floor and watch the recruit play hockey. They thawed over snacks and coffee at the recruit鈥檚 home. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 get home until 3 a.m., and it was a school night, but she never complained, and that athlete came to Augsburg,鈥 said Osberg, who taught high school while serving part-time as an assistant football coach at Augsburg from 1977 to 1984. 鈥淲e were a great team.鈥

Jack Osberg ’62, posing with Nina Osberg, received the Legend of Augsburg Athletics Award in 2021. (Photo by Kevin Healy)

The third quarter

Nina continued to be 鈥渉is everything鈥 as Osberg transitioned to become Augsburg鈥檚 head football coach in 1991. The previous coach had been there five years and won four out of 50 games. 鈥淭here weren鈥檛 many kids in the program, and they knew how to lose and blame someone else,鈥 Osberg said. 鈥淚t was difficult for them to look within, to find the gumption and confidence to believe they could turn the program around.鈥

Jack had that energy and belief, and then some. He recruited hard, even recruiting his own son, James 鈥淛amie鈥 Osberg 鈥95, who was set to play for Gustavus Adolphus College.

鈥淭hat first year, Concordia was our last game, and they beat us 62-nothing. The next year, they were our last game, and they beat us 58-nothing. The next year, it was 28-nothing. Those kids鈥 senior year, we played Concordia our first game of the season, and we beat them 10 to seven. We did it. What a triumph.鈥

[L to R] Bob Schultz ’98, Jack Osberg ’62, and Ted Schultz ’98 (Courtesy photo)
The experience of turning around a program was an exercise in faith, Osberg said. That faith, focus, and family-like atmosphere continued to build the program. Ted Schultz recalls Osberg driving to Hudson, Wisconsin, to watch him and his twin brother, Bob Schultz 鈥98, play in their senior homecoming game.

鈥淛ack was not afraid to speak about faith and the larger picture of why we come together as a football team, and not many coaches lead with that during a recruitment visit. He was genuine and made the program feel like a family, which it was and continues to be,鈥 said Ted Schultz. 鈥淚f you break down any transformational coaching, it鈥檚 about relationships. Being able to connect with the players and make an impact and build a relationship beyond the field is what separates a good coach from a great one.鈥

Bob Schultz, the fifth-grade teacher at Kimberly Lane Elementary in the Wayzata School District, said he continues to reflect on Osberg, whether in his parenting, teaching, or coaching. Having been a teacher for 24 years and a high school football coach for 20, he knows both the challenges and the triumphs of the profession.

鈥淛ack approached every day with purpose and energy,鈥 said Bob, who earned conference honors as a linebacker for Augsburg. 鈥淗e taught me to value every kid, no matter how well they played on the field. And he taught me to be vulnerable, as we saw him balance parenting and football.鈥

The Schultzes were part of the storied 1997 MIAC championship team along with current Augsburg Football Head Coach Derrin Lamker 鈥97.聽The relationship between Lamker and Osberg sounds like a ping-pong match: Osberg coached Lamker in the 鈥90s, then Lamker worked for Osberg as an assistant coach at Augsburg from 1999 to 2002. When Lamker was football head coach at Osseo High School, Osberg came out of retirement to coach the Osseo line for eight years. In Fall 2020, Lamker recruited Osberg to help guide Augsburg鈥檚 defensive line.

鈥淚t was so humbling and exciting when Jack came to work for me at Osseo. I鈥檇 ask him for advice, and he would give it, but he was never overbearing,鈥 said Lamker, who led Osseo to three conference championships in 11 years. 鈥淚 was equally thrilled when he agreed to help coach Auggies in 2021. You might think 鈥榢ids these days鈥 wouldn鈥檛 listen to an old guy, but they do. They soak up his energy and knowledge. He has this inspiringly subtle way of uniting coaches and players from different life experiences and backgrounds together for a common purpose.鈥

The fourth quarter

Shaquille Young 鈥23 (Courtesy photo)

Auggie defensive lineman Shaquille Young 鈥23 said 鈥渙ld鈥 doesn鈥檛 apply to Coach Osberg.

鈥淗e鈥檚 exciting to watch on the football field, running back and forth alongside the players, pushing us around, and the few times he yells, he never curses. One of the players knocked him over in practice, but he got right up and cracked a joke about the time his hip popped out of place.

鈥淗e has so much knowledge to offer our young minds,鈥 Young said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 one of the greatest individuals I have met in my life, with his ability to make everyone feel welcomed and valued. He brings his best every day, and if he can do it, so can we. He speaks, and we listen.鈥

But it鈥檚 not only what he says, Young said. Each day of practice, Osberg sets up a folding chair on the field for his wife, Nina, 77, who has Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. He is her sole caregiver. Lamker said the players and coaches see his devotion to her and are reminded of the fragility of life and the importance of relationships.

鈥淚t鈥檚 unbelievable how dedicated Jack is to Nina, watching her 24/7 during the COVID-19 pandemic. He鈥檚 living out the marriage vows鈥攆or better or worse,鈥 Lamker said. 鈥淒uring games, she sits on the bench with players who are injured or not playing. They talk with and cheer alongside her. It鈥檚 really neat to see their connection to and love for her as well.鈥

Augsburg Athletic Director Jeff Swenson 鈥79 said the Jack-Nina bond is one for the record books, and he would know. Swenson worked alongside the powerhouse couple for more than 45 years: first as a student-athlete when he backed Auggie鈥檚 defensive line, as an assistant football coach for 10 years, as a colleague, and finally as a boss, when Swenson transitioned into administration in 2001. The shift in roles never altered their relationship, Swenson said. Jack鈥檚 ability to treat everyone with respect, honor, and dignity鈥攔egardless of roles鈥攊s the greatest lesson Swenson adopted from his coach.

Nina Osberg and Jack Osberg ’62 at Disney World (Courtesy photo)

鈥淛ack is a living representation of Augsburg鈥檚 mission. He pushes everyone around him to give their best to meaningful pursuits, to be informed about the world and to make a difference where and when you can. He pushes people to lead with faith and value all people and what they bring to the table,鈥 Swenson said. 鈥淲hen you meet someone like that, you want to keep them in your lives.鈥

Former Auggie defensive end Michael Weidner 鈥83 also kept in touch with the Osbergs after graduation. They鈥檇 talk on the phone or meet for lunch; Jack and Nina came to Weidner鈥檚 kid’s games. By Summer 2020, Weidner recognized Jack needed a break from 24-7 caregiving. Weidner emailed former players and friends, asking them to visit with Jack and Nina鈥攐utside and distanced鈥攕ome evening that summer.

鈥淛ack was hurting and struggling during the beginning of the pandemic, when nobody was socializing,鈥 said Weidner, who is a lawyer based in Eagan, Minnesota. 鈥淛ack would do anything for one of his players. He鈥檚 been there for all of us, through good times and bad, so people came out of the woodwork. A bunch of us rotated going to his house in the evenings to talk about anything for an hour or two.鈥

Osberg said the chats saved him. 鈥淲ith everything in my life, I鈥檝e been able to hustle to change the program or win the game, I鈥檝e been able to work hard to achieve success or a positive outcome. But this is a game we can鈥檛 win. It鈥檚 incurable. It鈥檚 deadly. I鈥檓 getting to the point where I can鈥檛 care for her anymore, and it鈥檚 killing me. She is my everything,鈥 said Osberg, who received the Legacy of Augsburg Athletic Award during the 2020鈥21 Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame Ceremony. 鈥淭hose chats meant the world to me. To get out and coach or to talk with friends and former players about anything other than this disease was and is a gift.鈥

Nina Osberg and Jack Osberg ’62 (Courtesy photo)

But Osberg does not accept defeat. He quickly shifts to the positive, referencing their strong and active circle of friends and family, including 12 grandchildren and six kids鈥攖hree of whom graduated from Augsburg: Peter Osberg 鈥93, Jamie Osberg 鈥95, and Anne 鈥淎nnie鈥 (Osberg) Moore 鈥01.

鈥淲e all have to play the hand we are dealt,鈥 Osberg said. 鈥淚 am glad I focused so much of my life on relationships because now, when I need people most, they are there. I鈥檝e been a part of Augsburg all my life, and Nina is an honorary Auggie. It鈥檚 reassuring to know that even though she may forget Augsburg, the people who make up that great institution won鈥檛 forget her, and they won鈥檛 forget us. It鈥檚 family.鈥


Top image: Jack Osberg ’62 (Photo by Courtney Perry)

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Augsburg then and now /now/2021/08/20/augsburg-then-and-now/ Fri, 20 Aug 2021 16:55:41 +0000 /now/?p=11479 The post Augsburg then and now appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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For 152 years, Augsburg has both changed and remained the same. Though the Augsburg community looks much different outwardly鈥攃ampus layout and buildings, student body demographics and style of clothing, technology and teaching methods鈥攖he Auggie spirit continues to inspire faculty and staff to cultivate a vibrant learning environment in which students can engage in meaningful hands-on experiences.

Enjoy these glimpses into the Augsburg of the past and the university of today.

Curated with Digital Archives and Research Services Librarian

海角社区's campus in 1967. Old Main with the Minneapolis skyline in the background.

An image of Augsburg鈥檚 campus and the Minneapolis skyline in 1967, stitched together from three frames of an aerial camera shot in a promotional film. (Archive photo)

海角社区's campus in 2018. Old Main with the Minneapolis skyline in the background.

Part of Augsburg鈥檚 campus鈥攊ncluding Old Main, two residence halls, and the Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion鈥攊n 2018. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Auggies shoot hoops in Old Main gymnasium, circa 1945.

Auggies shoot hoops in Old Main gymnasium, circa 1945. (Archive photo)

Augsburg women鈥檚 basketball plays against the College of Saint Benedict in Si Melby Hall, 2018.

Augsburg women鈥檚 basketball plays against the College of Saint Benedict in Si Melby Hall, 2018. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

The Augsburg community poses in front of Old Main in 1931.

The Augsburg community poses in front of Old Main in 1931. (Archive photo)

The Class of 2023 gathers in front of Old Main in 2019.

The Class of 2023 gathers in front of Old Main in 2019. This fall, group photos are planned for the Class of 2024 and the Class of 2025. (Photo by Tom Roster)

The camera club in 1957 included [L to R] Jerry Matison 鈥59, Stan Quanbeck 鈥59, and James Nichols 鈥58.

The camera club in 1957 included [L to R] Jerry Matison 鈥59, Stan Quanbeck 鈥59, and James Nichols 鈥58. (Archive photo)

An Auggie wears virtual reality goggles in a new media class in 2019.

An Auggie wears virtual reality goggles in a new media class in 2019. (Courtesy photo)

Georg Sverdrup and Sven Oftedal, speak at a gathering of students in the first Old Main building 1897.

Georg Sverdrup and Sven Oftedal, who each served as Augsburg鈥檚 president, speak at a gathering of students in the first Old Main building (which was demolished to build Science Hall and Sverdrup Hall), 1897. (Archive photo)

A procession in a chapel service January 24, 2020.

A procession in a chapel service January 24, 2020. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Augsburg women鈥檚 track and field student-athletes prepare for a race in 1985.

Augsburg women鈥檚 track and field student-athletes prepare for a race in 1985. (Archive photo)

Augsburg women鈥檚 track and field student-athlete hits the track 2021

Augsburg women鈥檚 track and field student-athlete hits the track 2021. (Photo by Don Stoner)

Students work in a television studio, possibly in the basement of Memorial Hall 1976.

Students work in a television studio, possibly in the basement of Memorial Hall, in 1976. (Archive photo)

Students at a video shoot in Foss Center in 2019.

Students at a video shoot in Foss Center in 2019. (Courtesy photo)

Students attend a Pan-Afrikan Student Union cookout in Murphy Square in 1998.

Students attend a Pan-Afrikan Student Union cookout in Murphy Square in 1998. (Archive photo)

Students eating in Murphy Square.

Students attend a Multicultural Student Services event in the park to welcome students back to campus in 2019. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

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What it takes to fight a pandemic: Research and health care (Part 2) /now/2021/02/22/fight-a-pandemic-part-2/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:22:06 +0000 /now/?p=11121 The post What it takes to fight a pandemic: Research and health care (Part 2) appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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Head shot of Katie Clark
Katie Clark 鈥10 MAN, 鈥14 DNP (Courtesy photo)

Katie Clark 鈥10 MAN, 鈥14 DNP sees resilience every day as executive director of Augsburg鈥檚 Health Commons, which are drop-in health centers led by the nursing program with a model focused on caring for those in the community who are marginalized. Guests are not required to show identification, and medical professionals don鈥檛 wear scrubs or stethoscopes in order to increase relatability and public trust in health care workers.

Her focus at the Augsburg Central Health Commons is with individuals who are experiencing homelessness or who are marginally housed in Minneapolis, and the Health Commons in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood provides care for residents, many of whom are East African immigrants. As an assistant professor of nursing, Clark teaches primarily in the graduate nursing program through courses that emphasize social justice, health disparities, and civic engagement.

The Augsburg nursing program, Clark said, is unique because faculty and students are embedded in the community. Other schools often see that work as 鈥渆xtra service鈥 and send students to nonprofits, but Augsburg considers place-based work as central to the educational experience.

Hospitality and healing

Avan full of bottles of water with Bethany Johnson (on the left, standing with each other) Husband, David Chall Daughter, Olivia Chall (on right) in front of the van.
Augsburg鈥檚 Health Commons received donations from the community, including 27,200 bottles of water from UP Coffee Roasters and a grassroots fundraising campaign organized by Bethany Johnson 鈥19, 鈥23 DNP, whose family owns the business. Johnson (left) delivered water to the Health Commons with husband, David Chall (middle), and daughter, Olivia Chall, in April 2020. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淲e help students serve and explore the world we live in, and we鈥檙e with them when they do it,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淭hey get uncomfortable and lean into the biases they may have and really get involved in a community to understand the issues from the people who experience them.”

“You can鈥檛 come up with answers if you don鈥檛 know the problems.鈥濃Katie Clark 鈥10 MAN, 鈥14 DNP

When COVID-19 hit, the Health Commons at Central Lutheran Church in downtown Minneapolis was one of the only drop-in health centers that continued to stay open. At the height of the pandemic, Clark said staying open meant standing outside, passing out hygiene kits, and bringing meals and supplies to encampments of unhoused people.

鈥淢any of our students are adult learners seeking bachelor鈥檚, master鈥檚, and doctorate degrees. Some of them have dealt with furloughs or are at the bedsides of patients, holding up the [touchscreen] tablet for family members to say goodbye, and adapting to constant changes in health care environments. Then they have school in addition to their own stressors at home, like juggling kids or responding to family members who say, 鈥楥OVID isn鈥檛 real.鈥 These students want to get involved and tackle the issues in their communities, and they are doing it! I get chills talking about it.鈥

Ellen Kearney 鈥23 DNP is one of Clark鈥檚 students in the Doctor of Nursing Practice: Family Nurse Practitioner program and also a registered nurse at a Twin Cities intensive care unit. Kearney admitted that despite extensive safety measures, it was scary to be indoors at the Health Commons with patients early in the pandemic. But the work鈥攈er passion鈥攊s critical, she added.

Katie Clark standing at a podium outside in the Quad as President Paul Pribbenow introduces her.
Katie Clark 鈥10 MAN, 鈥14 DNP (left) and President Paul Pribbenow at an Augsburg Bold event in the fall. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淏efore COVID-19 we were able to serve between 50 and 100 people each Monday and Thursday,鈥 said Kearney. 鈥淣ow we can only see 12 people each day we are open. But because our hours have not changed, it has been nice to have a longer period alone with each guest if they chose to stay and talk. I鈥檝e been able to learn about one guest鈥檚 upcoming trip to her home country in Africa and her worries about traveling, and I have been able to follow up with one older man while I do his foot care. It has been hard to not open the doors fully, especially now that the weather is colder and knowing there are so few public spaces open, though it is clear that we need to stay capped for everyone鈥檚 safety. While the scale of the Commons is small, the impact is large.鈥

When Augsburg temporarily restricted students from working at the Commons, volunteers and Augsburg alumni, like Emily Pierskalla 鈥20 DNP, stepped in to keep doors open. The most challenging aspect of working as a registered nurse is ricocheting聽through stages of grief, which Pierskalla said is emotionally, mentally, and physically exhausting. She avoids news about COVID-19 and social media because it can trigger haunting memories.

鈥淚 have flashbacks of the faces of patients I’ve seen die while their loved ones cry watching through an iPad or seeing my own co-workers struggling to breathe after getting sick,鈥 said Pierskalla, who has worked for eight years at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis. 鈥淚t has taken a lot of therapy, self-care, and effort to keep the burnout from causing me to become bitter and angry, or worse, apathetic to the world and society.鈥

She has also worked as a nurse practitioner at CVS MinuteClinics, administering COVID-19 tests and helping people understand their test results and quarantine recommendations鈥攅fforts that have immediate practical effects.

鈥淲hen I’m at the Commons or out in the camps, I actually feel like I’m helping to create the world I want to live in.鈥濃Emily Pierskalla 鈥20 DNP

Ray with two others sitting on the ground
Ray Yip 鈥72 has extensive global health experience, including work in Qinghai, a sparsely populated Chinese province. (Courtesy photo)

Advocates for change

Head shot of Dr. Ray Yip 鈥72
Ray Yip 鈥72 (Courtesy photo)

Auggies are working across the globe to create policies and medical solutions to realize that better world. Dr. Ray Yip 鈥72 is a global health specialist serving as special advisor to the Gates Venture on China Partnership Development. For the past 22 years, he has assisted the Chinese government in improving its public health system, with a focus on disease control and response capacity. When COVID-19 began spreading in January, Yip was in Beijing.

鈥淚 was impressed with how aggressive the outbreak was in Wuhan, and I predicted that China would be able to get it under control by April. To my pleasant surprise, China achieved that seemingly impossible task by mid-March.鈥

In February, he returned to his home in upstate New York, from which he has advised several organizations about COVID-19-related issues and provided a range of companies with updates about the progress of vaccine development worldwide.

鈥淭his pandemic, which we knew would happen sooner or later, requires strong government leadership as well as commitment and partnership with the private sectors for the solutions.”鈥Ray Yip 鈥72

“More than 23 years with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told me the United States had the know-how and capacity to contain this epidemic. After all, I was sent to China to help them to build such capacity. My prediction was so off, I hate to admit it. We all suffer dearly from the dire consequence of horrible mismanagement, which largely has to do with leadership failure. It was particularly painful to watch the CDC get sidelined, and public health measures became politicized.鈥

The heroes of the pandemic, Yip said: health care workers.

鈥淢ost people do not realize the risk and danger of those health care workers taking care of the COVID patients, especially in the early phase when protective gear was in short supply. A disproportionate number of them got infected and died. If I were my younger version, I would not hesitate to join them in on the front lines. I am grateful for their service and sacrifice.鈥

Head shot of Paul Mueller
Paul Mueller 鈥84 (Courtesy photo)

Dr. Paul Mueller 鈥84, regional vice president for Mayo Clinic Health System鈥檚 Southwest Wisconsin region, oversees thousands of such workers attending to patients in two hospitals and eight clinics. He manages COVID-19 response through policy decisions and exploring new treatments while treating the disease in his own patient panel.

鈥淚t is weighty from a psychological standpoint, as you try to be a leader in such an ever-changing, high-stakes environment, knowing the lives you impact,鈥 said Mueller, who has served as an Augsburg regent and as the campaign chair of Great Returns: Augsburg鈥檚 Sesquicentennial Campaign. 鈥淏ut every day I walk the halls of our hospitals and clinics and see the resilience and ingenuity of our staff who have delivered on the promise of medicine. Nurses greet me with a smile behind personal protective equipment. They are busy but feel called and up to this work. With a can-do attitude, we are caring for patients in the darkest of times, administering novel treatments, and preparing to safely roll out vaccines.

鈥淲e鈥檙e still in the thick of it. If you think of it like a marathon, we are at mile marker 19. But if we can maintain resilience and hope, we will finish the race and be better for it.”鈥Paul Mueller 鈥84

“This pandemic has shown us that we all breathe the same air, and it is the one thing that is unifying our entire planet. While the virus rages on killing people, we continue to see the brilliance of the human spirit鈥攂eacons of hope and optimism, compassion and resilience, integrity and ingenuity.鈥

Caring for patients, fueling research

Brittany Kimball with her face mask on and a bandage over where she received a vaccine shot.
Brittany Kimball 鈥13: “Getting my first COVID-19 vaccine at Masonic Children’s Hospital鈥攚hich I encourage everyone to do as soon as it becomes available to them!” (Courtesy photo)

Brittany Kimball 鈥13 is a third-year resident at the University of Minnesota in internal medicine and pediatrics. The pandemic has taken its toll on her and other residents, as expectations are in flux and workloads are stressful and exhausting. Virtual visits are difficult because of a lack of internet and personal connectivity, Kimball said. Loneliness has infected the hospitals. Last week, Kimball watched a nurse gently care for a patient isolated from visitors, playing his favorite music as he died.

鈥淭he COVID-19 pandemic has certainly compounded patients鈥 conditions.聽Children are missing well visits and immunizations. Cancer patients require COVID-19 tests prior to chemotherapy, sometimes missing a treatment because they have the virus. Many of my primary care patients with diabetes are wary of clinic visits, thus making it harder to [measure doses of] their medications,鈥 said Kimball, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in biology from Augsburg.

鈥淢ost troublesome, the pandemic has compounded inequities for already marginalized people. Some of my patients don鈥檛 have internet, while others don鈥檛 have access to a regular phone. For some patients, limited English proficiency can make getting set up on a virtual platform more difficult.

Brittany Kimball 鈥13 (left) and her co-resident work at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System. (Courtesy photo)

鈥淧atients dealing with addiction and trying to maintain sobriety have told me that their usual coping mechanisms鈥攍ike getting together with other people who are sober or participating in a faith community鈥攈ave become inaccessible. For patients living in poverty, balancing virtual school and frontline jobs has been incredibly stressful and sometimes impossible. It鈥檚 often people living in poverty that are doing frontline work that makes them more likely to be exposed to the virus, like working in a restaurant, public transit, or in a store.”

“We need to figure out how to make telemedicine more equitable.鈥濃Brittany Kimball 鈥13

Her dream has long been to be a doctor, so despite the challenges, she pushes on鈥攄riven to pursue a fellowship in hematology-oncology. As a Hodgkin鈥檚 lymphoma survivor, Kimball is particularly interested in caring for adolescents and young adults with cancer and blood diseases. 鈥淎s an 18-year-old in my first semester at Augsburg, I was figuring out dating while bald, chemo after classes, and trying to study when my brain felt foggy and my body felt sick,鈥 she added. 鈥淪ometimes I needed a bit more guidance and support than a typical adult patient, but not in the same way that a much younger child might. Teens and young adults don鈥檛 fit neatly in the pediatric or adult-centered models of care, and I hope I can make that better.鈥

Head shot of Hamdi Adam
Hamdi Adam 鈥18 (Courtesy photo)

Hamdi Adam 鈥18 is similarly driven to make a difference. As a doctoral student of epidemiology at the University of Minnesota, Adam followed his bachelor鈥檚 in biology from Augsburg with a master鈥檚 degree in public health at the University of Minnesota. Adam studies cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and neurocognitive disorders. He is focused on investigating the impact of COVID-19 on chronic conditions, which can lead to higher risk of mortality, especially among people with existing risk factors, like high blood pressure and diabetes.

鈥淎t some point down the road, I鈥檒l probably get the chance to utilize COVID-19 data to assess the relationship between COVID status and various chronic disease conditions in population-based research studies and hopefully add valuable and timely information to the base of existing literature,鈥 said Adam, who鈥攁s a first-generation Oromo American鈥攊s interested in applying his research to address health disparities affecting people of color. 鈥淚t feels good to know that your studies and work are for the betterment of people. With research, sometimes you feel like your work is so detached from the true health problems you are attempting to address, but I like to think that epidemiologic research provides the basis for informing more direct actions, such as health policy development and effective community-based interventions.鈥

Will Matchett in a full lab suit testing
Will Matchett 鈥13 used a plaque assay to quantify the amount of SARS-CoV-2 virus in a sample at the University of Minnesota biosafety lab in August 2020. (Courtesy photo)

Another researcher, Will Matchett 鈥13, earned a doctorate in virology and gene therapy from the Mayo Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. He works as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Minnesota, where he will spend up to five years acquiring training that will allow him to run his own lab. Between April and August, his research focused exclusively on developing a SARS-CoV-2 test to measure the specific antibodies that block the virus from entering cells. Since September, his focus has shifted to testing a COVID-19 vaccine being developed at the University of Minnesota.

Increasing and diversifying COVID-19 testing

Head shot of Elaine Eschenbacher
Elaine Eschenbacher 鈥18 MAL (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Does all the medical terminology sound like a foreign language? That鈥檚 how Elaine Eschenbacher 鈥18 MAL described her first few weeks as the higher education operations lead for Minnesota鈥檚 COVID-19 Testing Work Group. Since 2009, she has worked at Augsburg, the last six of those years as director for the Sabo Center for Democracy and Citizenship. But since June, the Sabo Center has put her 鈥渙n loan鈥 to Minnesota鈥檚 State Emergency Operations Center to work with a team of experts to in collaboration with colleges and universities. Subgroups are assigned to areas such as long-term care, child care and schools, , hotspots, case investigation and contact tracing, research, data, purchasing, and contracts.

鈥淢y work at Augsburg prepared me for this role in a variety of ways. The role is necessarily collaborative and involves recognizing that different people have different roles to play and respecting those different perspectives and sets of expertise.”鈥Elaine Eschenbacher 鈥18 MAL

“Civic engagement work is like that, too. I’ve also been thinking a lot about the Master of Arts in Leadership program, which I completed in 2018. This work is like having a master class in leadership and public health every day.鈥

In April, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced a 鈥渕oonshot goal鈥 of 20,000 tests per day in the state, at a time when only about 2,000 tests were being performed daily, Eschenbacher said. The testing work group increased capacity and made that moonshot goal by the end of June.

鈥淪ince then, we’ve been continuing to increase and diversify COVID testing, and make sure that the people who most need it have access to it. During the week of Thanksgiving, our daily average for testing across the state was more than 57,000,鈥 she added. 鈥淭esting is an important tool in controlling the spread of COVID-19, and making testing accessible regardless of income or location is an important equity issue.鈥

Eschenbacher has spent her days planning and data-modeling as it relates to higher education, consulting with specific institutions in the wake of outbreaks, guiding higher education testing, and organizing partnerships for case investigation and contact-tracing. She facilitates webinars and other information pieces about saliva testing, serves as state incident commander for community testing events, and helped coordinate mass testing of 18- to 35-year-olds prior to Thanksgiving.聽More recently, she has served as incident commander for a community vaccination site.

鈥淚t feels like a clich茅 to say this, but it is an absolute honor to do this work. We talk a lot about vocation at Augsburg, and I guess I would say that vocation can sneak up on you. I never would have dreamed of doing the work I’ve done since June, but it feels like purpose.鈥

These are only a handful of the Auggies who are living out their passionate purpose to bring an end to this crushing pandemic and, in the meantime, to soften the blow.


Augsburg stories on COVID-19:

Top Image: Augsburg’s coronavirus guidelines, including face coverings and physical distancing in classrooms and public places, helped protect Auggies from COVID-19. Professor and Chemistry Department Chair Joan Kunz instructs in the Hagfors Center. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

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