Diversity and Inclusion Archives - Augsburg Now /now/tag/diversity-and-inclusion/ 海角社区 Tue, 05 Nov 2024 18:43:26 +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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Augsburg introduces American Indian Recognition Full Tuition Program /now/2022/02/22/augsburg-introduces-american-indian-recognition-full-tuition-program/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 17:22:56 +0000 /now/?p=11790 Augsburg is launching one of the nation鈥檚 first comprehensive full-tuition programs at a private institution to support American Indians within higher education.

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海角社区 is launching one of the nation鈥檚 first comprehensive full-tuition programs at a private institution to support and recognize the importance of American Indians within higher education.

In this context, Augsburg defines 鈥淎merican Indian鈥 as an enrolled member of a federally recognized American Indian tribe, Alaskan Native Village, or Canadian First Nation; a direct descendant of a parent or grandparent who is an enrolled member of the above; or a direct descendant of a tribally verified member of the above.

Unlike programs in many public institutions, Augsburg鈥檚 program does not limit eligibility to American Indian students who live in the state. In addition, the Augsburg American Indian Recognition Full Tuition Program provides access for both full-time undergraduate students as well as adult learners in any of the university鈥檚 degree completion bachelor鈥檚 programs. This new program will begin in the Fall 2022 semester for both new and continuing eligible students.

鈥淥ne of our commitments at Augsburg is to bring an equity lens to affordability,鈥 said Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow. 鈥淭his program is one step toward recognizing the profound contributions American Indian students and their communities make to the university and within higher education more broadly.鈥

Regent Eric Jolly described the program as 鈥済roundbreaking among private universities nationwide.鈥 He added, 鈥淎t the same time, it is absolutely in line with Augsburg鈥檚 long-standing commitments to intentional diversity and inclusive excellence. I hope this is just the first of many institutions designing creative and equitable paths to education for native and First Nations people.鈥

Students who apply for the program do not need to be enrolled as an American Indian tribal member, establish residence on trust land, or be Minnesota residents.

Through this program, Augsburg seeks to support and promote American Indians within the Augsburg community.

鈥淢y mom and dad told me my whole life, you鈥檙e going to college. It was a 鈥榳here鈥 and not an 鈥榠f.鈥 What I needed from a school鈥攖he main thing that was going to make or break it鈥攚as if I could afford it,鈥 said Reuben Kitto Stately 鈥22, a student from both the Red Lake Nation and Santee Sioux Nation. 鈥淏ut the culture of the campus, the way the Native students support each other, was also a big selling point. This part of the south side of Minneapolis is the most concentrated urban Native population in the whole country.鈥

鈥淭he systemic injustices that have limited access to higher education for many American Indian students need structural solutions,鈥 said Vice President for Equity and Inclusion Joanne Reeck. 鈥淭his program is one step that we as an institution can take.鈥

Learn more about the American Indian Recognition Full Tuition Program.


Top image: Reuben Kitto Stately 鈥22 is an Augsburg student from both the Red Lake Nation and Santee Sioux Nation. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

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The Auggies who refuse to 鈥榢eep politics off the field鈥 /now/2021/08/20/auggie-athletics-advocate/ Fri, 20 Aug 2021 16:50:42 +0000 /now/?p=11469 In 2016, first-year student Olivia House 鈥20 kneeled during the national anthem before one of her first Auggie soccer matches. She was alone鈥攖he only Black person on the team, and the only person kneeling on either side of the field. For four years, House continued to kneel as a respectful gesture to highlight pervasive racial

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Olivia House moving the ball on the soccer field during a game
Forward/midfielder Olivia House 鈥20 (Photo by Warren Ryan)

In 2016, first-year student Olivia House 鈥20 kneeled during the national anthem before one of her first Auggie soccer matches. She was alone鈥攖he only Black person on the team, and the only person kneeling on either side of the field. For four years, House continued to kneel as a respectful gesture to highlight pervasive racial injustice. Fans and opposing players ridiculed her, she was the first on the bus after away games, and teammates unintentionally bruised her with microaggressions: 鈥淵ou鈥檇 look so pretty if you straightened your hair.鈥 鈥淪o-and-so acts way Blacker than you.鈥 鈥淚 always forget you鈥檙e Black.鈥

鈥淓ven though I was vocal and open about what I stood for, my teammates didn鈥檛 see even half of who I was. I left so much of my identity at the door because there would be too many questions, too many things I鈥檇 have to explain about my identity and community,鈥 said House, a designer and art director for a creative agency in Chicago. 鈥淗aving to code switch from diverse classrooms and social advocacy groups to being the lone Black person on the team was exhausting.鈥

Augsburg is among the most diverse private colleges in the Midwest鈥攚ith students of color making up the majority of the last four incoming undergraduate first-year classes. On campus, House said she found her vocation: 鈥渢o demonstrate the power of design to communicate stories and create a platform for voices who haven鈥檛 been heard.鈥 And yet, her experience demonstrated more work is needed, even at the most equity-minded of institutions, and particularly in athletics, where 71% of student-athletes are white, according to a 2020 Augsburg internal survey.

鈥淢e simply stepping onto a soccer field as the only Black player is political in and of itself, without me saying a single word,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ad I 鈥榡ust played the game鈥 and 鈥榢ept politics off the field,鈥 I would have perpetuated the myth that athletes鈥 sole purpose is to entertain. You can鈥檛 ask us to put all of our lives on display except for our thoughts and opinions. It doesn鈥檛 work like that.鈥

Since House鈥檚 first year, the women鈥檚 soccer team has welcomed other student-athletes of color, and multiple soccer players and coaches have begun kneeling during the national anthem as matters of diversity and justice have remained prominent in conversations both on campus and across the United States.

Augsburg Women鈥檚 Soccer Head Coach Michael Navarre watched House address a crowd on the quad in September 2020 as a speaker at Augsburg Bold, a series of presentations for students to hear about important topics for the broader community. After House detailed a summer of racial justice protests and rubber bullets, of murals and oral history projects, Navarre commended House as the spark that ignited the team and inspired other student-athletes to take a stand.

鈥淎t the time, we felt as though we were supporting Olivia and our other players of color, but it wasn鈥檛 until the killing of George Floyd鈥攋ust a few miles from Augsburg鈥攖hat we truly began the difficult work that needed to be done,鈥 said Navarre, who has led the women鈥檚 soccer team for 23 seasons. 鈥淭hat self-reflection and education illuminated how much more we could have been for Olivia and others, and how much more we are now because of her. Our team is driven to be leaders for social justice advocacy and action.鈥

鈥楢n age of athletic activism鈥

Days after the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police, Navarre asked the women鈥檚 soccer players to connect virtually each week to discuss topics and resources shared on what has become an 11-page document of articles, podcasts, self-assessments, and videos to spur awareness, community engagement, and education.

Midfielder designed a Black Lives Matter patch, and the team collaborated to design a warm-up shirt that read 鈥淎uggies against injustice.鈥 The team supported several fundraisers and donation drives in honor of Floyd and Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old biracial Black man who was fatally shot by police during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota. led a collection of personal items and clothing for neighbors who frequent Augsburg鈥檚 Health Commons locations, which are nursing-led drop-in centers that offer resources and support.

, women鈥檚 soccer volunteer assistant coach and human resources assistant, said the team took to social media as a way to educate and advocate for others. 鈥淚nstagram, in particular, was a way for our players and our program to demonstrate our alliance to diversity, equity, and inclusion,鈥 Greathouse said. 鈥淔or example, we have student-athletes personally impacted by the unrest in Myanmar and Colombia, and we wanted our shirts, statements, and discussions to address issues of injustice around the globe.

鈥淚 have learned more in the last two years about my own privilege than I have in my lifetime. It鈥檚 not enough for individuals to view diversity merely as racial diversity. We are doing ourselves and our students a disservice if we do not first educate ourselves about intersectionality,鈥 Greathouse said, referring to the study of intersecting identities and dimensions of social relationships.

Across the Athletics Department, teams created T-shirts, facilitated discussions, visited memorials, and engaged in community activism. Augsburg Athletics partnered with Augsburg Day Student Government to hold a town hall featuring the voices of student-athletes of color and other members of the Augsburg community. , the university鈥檚 first director of athletic diversity and inclusion, facilitated this and other discussions and opportunities for community engagement.

鈥淲hen I arrived in 2019, I knew my position was an important one, but little did I know just how vital it would be to help our student-athletes, coaches, and staff process, learn, grow, and begin to heal鈥攖ogether,鈥 said Dixon, who also serves as assistant coach for the men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 track and field teams. 鈥淲e are in an age of athletic activism, and Augsburg is invested in this work to bring awareness and take a stand. We empower our students, coaches, and staff to have difficult conversations and use their status as leaders to advance causes that matter.鈥

鈥榃e can鈥檛 wait for the tide to shift鈥

To focus the department鈥檚 efforts and conversations, formed a Diversity and Inclusion Task Force in Fall 2020. The group of coaches and staff works closely with university administration and student-athlete advisory groups. Major initiatives include rewording of the national anthem introduction, offering training sessions, and developing a self-reported race survey of Augsburg student-athletes that revealed 71% of student-athletes are white, 12% are Black, 8% are Latinx, 5% are multiracial, and 4% are Asian. Results from a similar survey of coaches and staff are pending.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 need surveys to point out that we lack diversity in athletics, but we wanted to get a self-reported baseline to assess how our students perceive themselves and the department,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淭his work is personal to me as a Black father the same age as George Floyd when he died. Athletics has always been a battleground for people to advance causes. We reach audiences who might not be exposed to these issues otherwise, both in the locker room and in the stands.鈥

Dixon said that, although it鈥檚 difficult to turn inward and recognize gaps, Auggies are eager to learn and adopt best practices in recruiting and building inclusive team cultures. 鈥淲e celebrate diversity efforts at the national and international levels of these sports, but we can鈥檛 wait for the tide to shift. We are striving to be more present in diverse neighborhoods and partner with programs that introduce these sports to people with a range of backgrounds.鈥

In Fall 2020, the women鈥檚 hockey team gathered at George Floyd Square, where 38th Street and Chicago Avenue intersect in Minneapolis. The 24 student-athletes, coaches, and staff walked around in silence as they took in the flowers, pictures, and artwork that , women鈥檚 hockey head coach, described as 鈥渁 mix of pain, sorrow, and inspiration.鈥

鈥淥ur players were shocked at the long lists of African Americans killed by police, going back 20 years. We huddled and listened to each other, and the athletes鈥 perspectives were so powerful,鈥 McAteer said.

The team also gathered on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January. Alongside McAteer, Assistant Coach shared information she learned during a diversity, equity, and inclusion training.

鈥淲e recognized we are two white women, and it was not easy or comfortable, but that is the reason why we should be doing this,鈥 McAteer said. 鈥淲e need to make these types of discussions more natural and ongoing. Avoiding talk and action because it鈥檚 not natural or easy is a big part of the problem. We鈥檙e not trying to lecture or convince but share information we鈥檝e learned in a meaningful way.鈥

McAteer said players have begun kneeling for the national anthem, sharing information on social media, and educating family members and friends. The team routinely partners with the DinoMights, an organization that mentors Minneapolis youth through hockey.

Women鈥檚 hockey forward said this year changed her. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned that I need to make my voice heard in the community because making change takes every single one of us,鈥 she added. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned what it means to be 鈥榥ot racist鈥 versus 鈥榓nti-racist.鈥 Staying silent only hurts marginalized groups even more, so it鈥檚 important to have these tough conversations and speak out against racial injustice.鈥

Kathryn Knippenberg (right) has served as head coach of 海角社区 Women鈥檚 Lacrosse since 2014. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Women鈥檚 lacrosse has been equally engaged. Teammates wore rainbow jerseys in support of a transgender player, who helped lead a discussion about transgender issues and terms. Augsburg Women鈥檚 Lacrosse Head Coach Kathryn Knippenberg said the team is working to be more than performative allies. 鈥淚f one of my athletes feels called to protest but doesn鈥檛 have a ride, I will pick them up or find them a ride. If they want to kneel or don鈥檛 want to kneel, they know they have my support,鈥 she said.

鈥淵es, we are here to win, but we are also here to equip student-athletes with valuable life skills, to prepare them for conversations and experiences they are facing and will continue to face.鈥

鈥擪athryn Knippenberg

鈥淲e want them to live out Augsburg鈥檚 mission to be informed citizens, thoughtful stewards, critical thinkers, and responsible leaders who are engaged in meaningful, transformative work.鈥

Allowing vs. actively supporting

All Augsburg teams agreed to adopt new wording to introduce the national anthem before each contest: 鈥満=巧缜 Athletics would like to recognize that the American experience has not been the same for everyone under the flag. As we continue the fight for equality and justice for all, we now invite you to respectfully express yourself for the playing of our national anthem.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 not easy getting an entire department and body of student-athletes to agree on wording, but it was an important initiative of our Diversity and Inclusion Task Force,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淏y having these words in front of the national anthem, we are acknowledging that we鈥攁s a university鈥攁ctively support people in how they want to express themselves. There鈥檚 a difference between this statement and simply 鈥榓llowing鈥 people to kneel or whatever.鈥

Coaches and staff are expected to complete the Augsburg Diversity and Inclusion certificate program, which requires 18 credits of specified training and encourages additional training for advanced standing each year. In 2020, coaches and staff completed the NCAA Division III鈥檚 LGBTQ OneTeam Program, which stresses the importance of LGBTQ inclusion in college athletics and provides an overview of common LGBTQ terms, definitions, and concepts. The peer-driven educational program, which Dixon facilitated, also shares best practices to ensure all individuals may participate in an athletics climate of respect and inclusion, regardless of gender expression, gender identity, or sexual orientation.

鈥淪ocial justice issues are incredibly important to us in the Athletics Department, and when our student-athletes are actively engaged in educating themselves about the current and historical context of what is happening and they are attempting to use their platform as student-athletes to create awareness and positive change, I feel incredibly proud of them,鈥 said Kelly Anderson Diercks, who served as associate athletic director and director of compliance until July 2021. 鈥淥ur student-athletes bring many identities and intersectionalities to Augsburg and their respective teams. To be the best we can be, we need to be able to show up fully as our true selves. This means we need to have spaces to talk about all those identities and intersectionalities and how the events facing our world play out differently for us all.鈥

Recognition of these different identities and experiences led to Dixon鈥檚 position; Augsburg hired him as part of a 2019 NCAA Ethnic Minorities and Women鈥檚 Internship Grant, which the university also received in 2012. In 2014 and 2021, the department received the NCAA Strategic Alliance Matching Grant, which also supports the hiring and mentorship of ethnic minorities and women in athletic leadership positions.

Alicia Schuelke 鈥20 MAE, former assistant coach for men鈥檚 track and field, said students are thrilled with Dixon鈥檚 enthusiasm and vision for the role.

鈥淚n a world where, many times, the odds are stacked against us, leaders of color provide hope and strength,鈥 said Schuelke, a physical education teacher at Columbia Academy Middle School in Columbia Heights, Minnesota. 鈥淚 came to Augsburg for the MAE program, but I was pleasantly surprised to find how diverse the campus is, and it is my absolute favorite part of my learning experience.

鈥淚f we can move the needle toward a more diverse group of leaders that better represent our country鈥檚 demographics, then students of color will begin to understand that the sky鈥檚 the limit in terms of their own hopes, dreams, and aspirations.鈥

House said she is encouraged by the department鈥檚 work to advance equity and inclusion. She appreciates the university鈥檚 willingness to be vulnerable and invite her and other people of color to share their experiences during this raw, unsettling time. But like any athlete knows, one must dedicate lots of hours and effort to see results.

Augsburg Athletics is putting in the work.


Top image: (Photo by Warren Ryan)

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Confronting the Minnesota paradox /now/2021/02/22/confronting-minnesota-paradox/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:20:53 +0000 /now/?p=11153 The post Confronting the Minnesota paradox appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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Head shot of Robert Harper
Robert Harper 鈥16 (Courtesy photo)

Robert Harper 鈥16 remembers the first time he was called the n-word.

His family had moved to Minnesota from the South Side of Chicago, seeking a better life. Since then, he鈥檚 achieved that better life, earning an undergraduate degree from 海角社区 and a master鈥檚 degree from the University of Minnesota鈥檚 Humphrey School of Public Affairs. He is now a supplier diversity director for the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system.

鈥淚 think I鈥檝e had a unique experience escaping poverty on the South Side of Chicago and North Minneapolis, only to be confronted with the daily decisions made by white people that only re-create those circumstances of oppression,鈥 Harper said.

While he鈥檚 now a working professional in a state that prides itself on being 鈥淢innesota nice,鈥 Harper never gets too comfortable, recalling that painful moment when he was walking to middle school and a passing driver shouted the racial epithet at him. More recently, on a trip to northern Minnesota, Harper was told while visiting Gull Lake, 鈥榊ou don鈥檛 belong here,鈥 by a white man.

鈥淚t鈥檚 moments like that when you鈥檙e trying to do better, 鈥榩ull yourselves up by your bootstraps,鈥 that society reminds you that there鈥檚 a glass ceiling for some,鈥 Harper said.

Meanwhile, 海角社区, one of the most diverse private colleges in the Midwest, is positioned to be a statewide leader in the turnaround, with students of color in the majority on campus after years of intentional work on diversity, equity, and inclusion. 鈥淚 certainly feel that higher education is the clearest path to a middle-class life or better,鈥 Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow said.

鈥淪ome people constantly remind you that they decide how far you go, what rooms you enter, and in the case of George Floyd, whether or not you live.”鈥Robert Harper 鈥16

Exposing the paradox

George Floyd鈥檚 murder three miles from 海角社区 put an international spotlight on not only the experiences of Black people at the hands of the criminal justice system but also the reality of the disturbing 鈥淢innesota paradox.鈥

Head shot of Samuel Myers
Samuel Myers (Courtesy photo)

That鈥檚 how University of Minnesota Professor Samuel Myers describes how Minnesota has such a high quality of life and a history of progressive politicians but is one of the worst places to live for Black people.

鈥淢easured by racial gaps in unemployment rates, wage and salary incomes, incarceration rates, arrest rates, home ownership rates, mortgage lending rates, test scores, reported child maltreatment rates, school disciplinary and suspension rates, and even drowning rates, African Americans are worse off in Minnesota than they are in virtually every other state in the nation,鈥 Myers said.

The numbers illustrate the bleak story:

  • Only 25.3% of Black households in Minnesota own homes versus 76.9% of white households, according to census data, a stark divide given that home ownership is considered the leading contributor to household wealth.
  • The median household income for Black households in the state is the lowest of any group at $41,570, about half of what Asian and white households earn.
  • In the Twin Cities, African Americans represent 9% of the overall population, but are incarcerated at 11 times the rate of whites who represent 76% of the population, the NAACP reported last year.
  • Only 21.7% of Black people hold bachelor鈥檚 degrees or higher versus nearly 40% overall.

Meanwhile, between 2010 and 2018, the fastest growing racial group in Minnesota was the Black population, which grew by 36%, adding more than 96,500 people.

Many are immigrants but face the same backdrop of a state that hasn鈥檛 historically acknowledged that discrimination plays a role in the Black story here, Myers said.

鈥淲hen it comes to race in the Twin Cities, in Minnesota, there was this instinctive belief that we already know what the problem is, that it鈥檚 not really a problem, and since it鈥檚 not a problem, we don鈥檛 need to find answers,鈥 Myers said.

The COVID-19 pandemic compounded the inequities. The unemployment rate for Black Minnesotans in the aftermath of pandemic shutdowns rose to 15.3% last July, up 9 percentage points from a year earlier, versus 6.3% for white workers, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development reported. According to a Pew Research report published in December: 鈥淎mong Black Americans, 71% know someone who has been hospitalized or died because of COVID-19.鈥

Four people standing around a table pointing at a map
Kevin Ehrman-Solberg 鈥15 (center right) and the Mapping Prejudice Project team found inequities in housing documents throughout Minneapolis鈥 history. (Courtesy photo, 2017)

The path to today鈥檚 Minneapolis

High profile police killings of Black men in this region鈥攊ncluding George Floyd, Philando Castile, and Jamar Clark鈥攈ave heightened the protests and urgency for change. The viral video of Floyd鈥檚 murder with his neck under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer seemed to dawn a new era in the fight for justice.

Protesters took to the streets for weeks around the globe. Graffiti images of Floyd sprang up worldwide, even on a West Bank barrier in the Middle East. CEOs of Fortune 500 corporations in Minnesota wrote an open letter of outrage. Athletes of all races took the knee before matches to show their support for racial equity.

In the city of Minneapolis, at the center of the controversy, there was swift action against the officers, something unprecedented.

Head shot of Michael Lansing
Associate Professor Michael Lansing (Photo by Stephen Geffre)

鈥淒espite decades of police incidents that resulted in the deaths of people of color, today鈥檚 actions by the mayor represent the first time in modern history that Minneapolis police officers were fired within 24 hours for unjustly murdering a citizen,鈥 said Michael Lansing, associate professor and chair of Augsburg鈥檚 history department, in a about the Minneapolis Police Department. (Lansing鈥檚 comments on the history of uprisings and Minneapolis police were also carried by and .)

Now, many are acknowledging the systems that are behind today鈥檚 Minneapolis. Even the South Minneapolis street where George Floyd was killed is in a historically Black working-class and middle-class neighborhood created by housing segregation, Lansing said in his tweet series.

Indeed, Mapping Prejudice Project,聽a team of community members, geographers, and historians based at the University of Minnesota, have unearthed thousands of racial covenants in Minneapolis that reserved land for the exclusive use of white people.

Those restrictions served as powerful obstacles for people of color seeking safe and affordable housing. Racial covenants, dovetailed with redlining and predatory lending practices, depressed homeownership rates for Black residents. They also limited access to community resources like schools and parks.

While contemporary white residents of Minneapolis like to think their city never had formal segregation, those racial covenants did the work of Jim Crow in the Twin Cities, said Kevin Ehrman-Solberg 鈥15, a co-founder of Mapping Prejudice.

鈥淭he reputation of Minneapolis is that it鈥檚 a liberal bastion, yet there鈥檚 a racist reality that people live in.鈥濃Kevin Ehrman-Solberg 鈥15

Portrait of William Green
Professor William Green (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Looking forward with a pragmatic lens

While the period following George Floyd鈥檚 murder looked like a change moment, 海角社区鈥檚 M. Anita Gay Hawthorne Professor of Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies William Green worries that the momentum started to diminish as the summer progressed. 鈥淭he challenge that we face is to do the hard work to define what change means, and second, how to get at the root of the problems that lead to disparities in society.鈥

Head shot of Jonathan Weinhagen
Jonathan Weinhagen (Courtesy photo)

Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce President Jonathan Weinhagen looks ahead to the one-year anniversary of George Floyd鈥檚 murder and to the question of how much progress has been made in raising awareness about and working to eliminate the disparities experienced by people of color.

鈥淸Closing the racial divide] is not going to be resolved in a year. It鈥檚 going to take more time, but it鈥檚 going to have to be far more rapid than anything we鈥檝e done to date.鈥濃擩onathan Weinhagen

The implications of these disparities are wide-reaching, with government officials and the business community concerned that a growing population that isn鈥檛 able to fully participate in or benefit from the economy will threaten the vitality of the state as a whole.

鈥淭o have a large and growing part of our economy be marginalized is a huge disadvantage to all of us because it takes a huge part of the population out,鈥 said Susan Brower, Minnesota鈥檚 demographer.

The NAACP鈥檚 48-page issued in 2019 calls for a comprehensive, multi-pronged policy agenda anchored by five basic principles: economic sustainability, education, health, public safety and criminal justice, and voter rights and political representation.

The role of education

Many are looking to young people to be the lasting change.

The nonprofit in Minneapolis has emerged to support children from 鈥渃radle to career,鈥 envisioning a future in which 鈥渆very child has the academic, social, and emotional skills to thrive in a globally fluent world.鈥

Alan Page, retired Minnesota Supreme Court justice, and Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, amending Minnesota鈥檚 constitution to give every child a civil right to a quality public education. They define the current approach as a system that works well for children from well-to-do families but fails children from low-income families.

鈥淎 quality education is without question the most powerful tool we have to break the cycle of poverty and create a society in which everyone can fully participate,鈥 . 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 just change one child鈥檚 life. It has the potential to improve the future for generations to come and lead to a more productive, vibrant society for all of us.鈥

Meanwhile, 海角社区 is positioned to be a statewide leader in the turnaround, with years of intentional work on diversity, equity, and inclusion. 鈥淚 certainly feel that higher education is the clearest path to a middle-class life or better,鈥 Augsburg President Paul Pribbenow said.

Despite Harper鈥檚 success after graduating from Augsburg, he views the disparate outcomes as a call to action, even forming his own economic development consulting firm, R.D.T.H Consulting, LLC, focused on social impact in addition to his day job. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have to be this way.鈥


A student walking on the sidewalk in front of Hagfors Center with snow on the ground.
海角社区's Hagfors Center. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

Augsburg鈥檚 efforts to address disparities and work toward equity

After the murder of George Floyd only a few miles from campus, 海角社区 introduced in June the Justice for George Floyd Initiatives to focus on working to heal the community, creating leadership and structures that make tangible change, and ensuring accountability for the work of undoing racist systems.

New efforts were introduced to combat systemic racism, including a critical race and ethnicity studies department; diversity, equity, and inclusion training; and a requirement that all faculty and staff complete antiracism training. Augsburg also canceled classes and suspended operations June 4 and 5 so students, faculty, and staff could have an opportunity to grieve.

鈥淲e acknowledge the pain, fear, and trauma faced by the Augsburg community鈥攅specially our students, faculty, and staff of color鈥攔emain a lived reality every day,鈥 Pribbenow said. 鈥淭his work by Augsburg will be persistent, resolute, courageous, and integrated into everything the university does.鈥

This ongoing work includes several components:

  • Augsburg named William Green, professor of history, the inaugural holder of the M. Anita Gay Hawthorne professorship of critical race and ethnic studies.
  • The university is employing new accountability for inclusive, antiracist leadership across the institution and reviewing Augsburg鈥檚 major academic and administrative policies and practices with a special focus on undoing bias and discrimination and enhancing student success.
  • Augsburg created a scholarship in memory of George Floyd and established a fund that matched donations from students, faculty, and staff for organizations doing important work, especially for Black-owned businesses and nonprofit organizations.
  • Augsburg appointed the first Chief Diversity Officer, , in 2016 and became home in 2019 to , the nation鈥檚 largest workplace diversity, equity, and inclusion conference.

These moves are an important continuation of Augsburg鈥檚 efforts to build and maintain an equitable and inclusive campus that became a strategic focus in 2006, resulting in Augsburg welcoming its most diverse incoming first-year class ever in 2017. Students of color are now in the majority of traditional undergraduates, making Augsburg one of the most diverse private colleges in the Midwest.


Top Image: Minneapolis is a city with a liberal reputation, but racial disparities persist. (Photo by Courtney Perry)

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Augsburg awarded $10,000 Minneapolis Foundation grant /now/2021/02/22/minneapolis-foundation-grant/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:13:20 +0000 /now/?p=10986 In September 2020, the Minneapolis Foundation announced that it would award more than $500,000 in grants to 40 organizations in the Twin Cities. Following the increased public dialogue about public safety after the killing of George Floyd, the grants aim to reduce violence, address systemic inequities, and provide community support. The Minneapolis Foundation鈥檚 Fund for

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In September 2020, the Minneapolis Foundation announced that it would award more than $500,000 in grants to 40 organizations in the Twin Cities. Following the increased public dialogue about public safety after the killing of George Floyd, the grants aim to reduce violence, address systemic inequities, and provide community support.

The Minneapolis Foundation鈥檚 awarded $10,000 to 海角社区 to elevate the voices of middle- and high-school students through debate on the topic of criminal justice reform. Other grant recipients are organizations working to support art projects, mediation, mental health services, civil rights education, and community healing while addressing police violence and public safety.


Top image: Demonstrators in Summer 2020 marched with a banner that was created as a part of Augsburg’s One Day in May art campaign. (Photo by Leon Wang)

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Faculty members William Green and Timothy Pippert assume new professorships /now/2021/02/22/new-professorships/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:08:26 +0000 /now/?p=10991 The post Faculty members William Green and Timothy Pippert assume new professorships appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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Head shot of Willam GreenProfessor of History William Green was named the inaugural M. Anita Gay Hawthorne Professor of Critical Race and Ethnicity Studies, effective September 1, 2020. The position was created on the recommendation of a working group of students, faculty, and staff who developed a vision for a new academic department in critical race and ethnicity studies at 海角社区.

Related: Professor William Green comments on 鈥淐onfronting the Minnesota paradox鈥

Head shot of Tim PippertProfessor of Sociology Timothy Pippert was named the inaugural holder of the Joel Torstenson Endowed Professorship, effective September 1, 2020. This professorship is made possible through the generosity of Mark Johnson 鈥75, who also supports the university鈥檚 Torstenson Scholars program.


Top image: Professor Timothy Pippert teaches a sociology class in Hagfors Center. (Photos by Courtney Perry)

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Forum on Workplace Inclusion to host first virtual conference /now/2021/02/22/forum-on-workplace-inclusion/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:05:30 +0000 /now/?p=11019 The Forum on Workplace Inclusion, based at 海角社区, will host its 33rd annual conference as a virtual event March 8鈥12, 2021. Workplaces have struggled during the past year to navigate a digital, distanced work environment brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, social protests centered around racism and the unjust deaths

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The Forum on Workplace Inclusion, based at 海角社区, will host its 33rd annual conference as a virtual event March 8鈥12, 2021.

Workplaces have struggled during the past year to navigate a digital, distanced work environment brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, social protests centered around racism and the unjust deaths of Black people at the hands of police have also brought greater attention to overwhelming disparities in economics, education, health care, housing, and public safety.

This year, the forum asks: What will it take to start a workplace revolution that moves us from talk to action?

Learn more and register to attend at .

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Cedar-Riverside supply drives support neighborhood /now/2021/02/22/supply-drives/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:04:27 +0000 /now/?p=11028 The COVID-19 pandemic, combined with the damage some businesses experienced following the murder of George Floyd, put a strain on Augsburg鈥檚 Twin Cities community as many local stores temporarily closed and access to public transportation was reduced. In June and August, 海角社区 organized supply drives in partnership with the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood. Drivers in more

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The COVID-19 pandemic, combined with the damage some businesses experienced following the murder of George Floyd, put a strain on Augsburg鈥檚 Twin Cities community as many local stores temporarily closed and access to public transportation was reduced. In June and August, 海角社区 organized supply drives in partnership with the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood.

Drivers in more than 550 cars participated in the supply drives, and their donations were delivered to the through several dozen trips.

鈥淭his is our community; this is our neighborhood,鈥 one volunteer said. 鈥淪o when our neighbors are hurting, we step forward and do what we can to help.鈥

Read more about Auggies鈥 efforts to support the community: 鈥What it takes to fight a pandemic.


Top image: Auggies collected donations for the Twin Cities community in Summer 2020. (Photo by Joe Mann)

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Augsburg names George Floyd Memorial Scholarship recipients /now/2021/02/22/george-floyd-memorial-scholarship/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:03:56 +0000 /now/?p=11032 The post Augsburg names George Floyd Memorial Scholarship recipients appeared first on Augsburg Now.

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海角社区 created the George Floyd Memorial Scholarship, which is designed to support outstanding third- and fourth-year students who have a strong understanding of Black experiences and U.S. history while showing leadership in advancing racial justice efforts. Each selected student received a $5,000 scholarship.

Augsburg named the five inaugural scholarship recipients:

  • Aisha Abdi 鈥21 is majoring in management information systems and marketing.
  • Quran Al-Hameed 鈥21 is majoring in psychology.
  • Mallory Ferguson 鈥21 is majoring in communication studies.
  • Kaltun Hassan 鈥22 is majoring in computer science.
  • Nadirah McGill 鈥21 is majoring in music business.
Head shot of Alisha Abdi
Aisha Abdi 鈥21, management information systems and marketing
Head shot of Quran Al-Hameed
Quran Al-Hameed 鈥21, psychology
Head shot of Mallory Ferguson
Mallory Ferguson 鈥21, communication studies
Head shot of Kaltun Hassan
Kaltun Hassan 鈥22, computer science
Head shot of Nadirah McGill 鈥21
Nadirah McGill 鈥21, music business (Courtesy photo)

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