History H istory
12 WILD AND WONDERFUL Items from around campus that make us who we are 24 CELEBRATING TITLE IX With Nicole LaVoi β91, plus the 2022 Hall of Fame inductees 36 CLASS NOTES What your fellow Gusties have been up to
IN OBJECTS WINTER 2022
Homecoming 2022 was a sunny fall day celebrating the Folke Bernadotte Memorial Library, Title IX and Gustavus Womenβs Athletics (including a 3β0 Womenβs Soccer win over Concordia), and packed stands at Hollingsworth Field as Gustavus Football beat St. Scholastica, 77β7. More photos on page 35.
For Alumni, Parents, and Friends
WINTER 2022 | VOL. LXXVIII | ISSUE 4
STAFF
Chair, Board of Trustees
Marcia Page β82
President of the College Rebecca Bergman
Vice President, Marketing and Communication Tim Kennedy β82
Vice President, Advancement Thomas Young β88
Director, Alumni and Parent Engagement Angela Erickson β01
Senior Director, Editorial Content Stephanie Wilbur Ash | sash@gustavus.edu
Alumni Editor Philomena Kau mann | pkau ma@gustavus.edu
Visual Editor, Production Coordinator Anna Deike | adeike@gustavus.edu
Adler | adlerdesignstudio.com
Photographers Aryana
Tourtelotte β26, Stan Waldhauser β71, Jesse Yeakle, Gustavus Adolphus College Archives Printer John Roberts Company | johnroberts.com Postmaster Send address changes to the Gustavus Quarterly, O ce of Alumni and Parent Engagement, Gustavus Adolphus College, 800 W. College Ave., Saint Peter, MN 56082-1498 GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS COLLEGE Saint Peter, MN 56082 507-933-8000 | gustavus.edu Articles and opinions presented in this magazine do not necessarily reο¬ect the views of the editors or o cial policies of the College or its Board of Trustees. The Gustavus Quarterly (USPS 227-580) is published four times annually by Gustavus Adolphus College, Saint Peter, Minn. Periodicals postage is paid at Saint Peter, MN 56082, and additional mailing o ces. It is mailed free of charge to alumni and friends of the College. Circulation is approximately 32,000. Gustavus Adolphus College is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and is a member of the North Central Association.
Design Jill
Contributing Writers Bruce Berglund, Kaitlyn Doolittle β22, Luc Hatlestad, Betsy Maloney Leaf β97, Rachel McCarthy, Emma Myhre β19, CJ Siewert β11, Corinne Stremmel β21 Contributing
Hutchinson β23, Kaitlyn Doolittle β23, Malia Kabis β24, Jolie Grimes β24, Hayden
THE FOLKS IN THE ARCHIVES
From the third ο¬oor of the library, Adrianna Darden and Je Jenson diligently curate the Gustavus Adolphus College and Lutheran Church Archives.
HISTORY IN OBJECTS
From the second-ugliest couch in America to the sculpture of fallen Navy pilot Joel Sandberg β67, stories behind the Gustavus objects that make us who we are.
IN GOOD COMPANY
Alum Betsy Maloney Leaf β97 on 70 years of the Gustavus Dance Program, beginning from when we could not dance at all.
LEARNING THROUGH INQUIRY
Student-faculty research results in meaningfulβ sometimes life-changingβpaths of discovery.
Though Ruth Vikner β37 received a C+ in Physical Educationβamong other so-so gradesβshe did attend several athletic contests and lecture courses.
IN
4 VΓLKOMMEN 5 ON
9 SHINE
24 SPORTS 26 FINE
28 GRATITUDE 34 GUSTIES 44 VESPERS IN THIS ISSUE 12 26 28 10 12
EVERY ISSUE
THE HILL
PROFILES
ARTS
24
THANKS TO TITLE IX Nicole LaVoi β91, Gustavus President Rebecca Bergman, members of Gustavus Athletics, and Gustie women athletes past, present (and future!) gathered on the soccer ο¬eld to celebrate 50 years of the landmark legislation.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 2
Staying Wild
βThere are so many great challenges of our time. This one is the challenge of conservation,β says Jon Grinnell, professor and Francis Uhler Chair in Biology. Heβs talking about research on South Dakotaβs Ordway Preserve, where he, Gustavus students, and others study the behaviors of the bison herd there. During the past two centuries, bison were rendered nearly extinct, their environment squeezed by agriculture. Today, bison are animals without a home. The research aims to learn βhow bison can be bison in a limited space,β Grinnell says. The aim of bringing undergraduates along is to get them in the ο¬eld to see science and research come to life and discern their passions. For Sam Heunisch β25, who accompanied Grinnell this summer, his passion is deο¬nitely ο¬eld work. βI like to go outside and see the world thatβs untouched and uninο¬uenced by people,βΒ he says. βI want to keep the world a more beautiful place to admire. But I know that admiring it isnβt enough. You have to work toward making the world a better place.β
Watch the short ο¬lm βBeing with the Bison,β about the research Grinnell and Heunisch conducted this summer on the Ordway Preserve. For more on faculty-student research, see page 28.
VΓ€lkommen
WORTH REMEMBERING
There are objects in my possession that I cherish. Some are from my family, like heirloom quilts made by my grandmother and great-grandmother, and a large copper kettle (big enough to climb into), which was used to make apple butter over an open ο¬re at my grandmotherβs farm. Some are from Gusties, like a set of eight Christmas in Christ Chapel pillar candles from Rev. Rod Anderson, a former Gustavus Trustee and senior chaplain. And some simply make me smile, like my grandmotherβs glass candy dish, with a glass lid. My cousins and I routinely tried to βquietlyβ sneak candy out of the dish. These objects all tell a story about me.
The objects in this issue, many pulled from the archives, tell a story about Gustavus. That story includes the immigrant experience, American response to World War II, music and sports, and the growth of our college. It includes global perspective, a politically and intellectually active student body, college pride, and humor. It is the story of the liberal arts at work.
Of course, how history is conveyed depends on the teller, and there are stories we are still learning. For instance, Gustavus is located on the ancestral lands of the Dakota people. Today, our college is examining how our story intersects with the Dakota story. Last fall, I established the Presidentβs Council on Indigenous Relations (PCIR), with representatives from across the college. This year, the PCIR is hosting speakers, artists, and elders from the Indigenous community to hear stories and generate dialogue. Our purpose is to build meaningful connections with the Indigenous People upon whose land this college stands. There is more history to learn and consider here, and a new future to create.
What will history remember of this current timeβGeorge Floyd and the changes his murder brought; a global pandemic that kept us physically distant while moving us digitally closer; a climate changing? What objects will deο¬ne Gustavus to future generations? I hope such objects show Gusties at our best, as people who act with good will, concern for others, wry wit, and great pride.
Go Gusties, then and now.
RECENT HISTORY All students received masks, hand sanitizer, and this thermometer in the fall of 2020 to help curb COVID-19 cases on campus.
GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS COLLEGE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Marcia L. Page β82 MBA (chair), Founding Partner, VΓ€rde Partners
Scott P. Anderson β89, MBA, Head, Carlson Private Capital Industry Executive Council
Catherine Asta β75, JD, Attorney at Law
Grayce Belvedere-Young, MBA, Founder and CEO, Lily Pad Consulting
Rebecca M. Bergman (ex o cio), President, Gustavus Adolphus College
Suzanne F. Boda β82, Retired Senior Vice President, Los Angeles, American Airlines
Robert D. Brown, Jr. β83, MA, MD, Sta Neurologist, Professor of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, and John T. and Lillian Matthews Professor of Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic
Kara K. Buckner β97 (ex o cio), President/Chief Strategy O cer, Fallon Worldwide, and Past President, Gustavus Alumni Association
Michael D. Bussey β69 (ex o cio), Senior Consultant, DBD Group and Past President, Gustavus Alumni Association
Janette F. Concepcion, PhD, Clinical Psychologist, Concepcion Psychological Services
Tane T. Danger β07, Director, Westminster Town Hall Forum
Edward J. Drenttel β81, JD, Attorney/Partner, Winthrop & Weinstine
Bruce A. Edwards β77, Retired CEO, DHL Global Supply Chain
John O. Hallberg β79, MBA, Retired CEO, Childrenβs Cancer Research Fund
John M. Harris β92, PhD, Associate Director, Protiviti Mary Dee J. Hicks β75, PhD, Retired Senior Vice President, Personnel Decisions International
The Rev. Alicia A. Hilding β08, (ex o cio) Co-pastor, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church; President, Gustavus Adolphus College Association of Congregations
John S. Himle β77, CEO, Himle LLC
Keith N. Jackson β89, JD, Assistant General Counsel, Aon
The Rev. Peter C. Johnson β92, Pastor of Small Groups and Service, St. Andrew Lutheran Church
Paul R. Koch β87, Retired Managing DirectorβPrivate Wealth Advisor, Senior Portfolio Manager, Koch Wealth Solutions, RBC Wealth Management
Nicole M. LaVoi β91, Director, Tucker Center for Research on Girls and Women in Sport, University of Minnesota
Dennis A. Lind β72, Chairman, Midwest Bank Group, Inc.
Jan Lindman, MBA, Treasurer to the King, The Royal Court of Sweden
The Rev. Dr. David J. Lose
The Rev. Dr. David J. Lose, Senior Pastor, Mount Olivet Lutheran Church
Mikka S. McCracken β09, Program Manager, WW CSPXT, Amazon
Mikka S. McCracken β09 Amazon
Jan Ledin Michaletz β74, Past President, Gustavus Alumni Association
Association
Thomas J. Mielke β80, JD, Retired Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Bradley S. Nuss β97, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial O cer, Nuss Truck & Equipment
The Rev. Dr. Dee Pederson (ex o cio), Bishop, Southwestern Minnesota Synod, ELCA
The Rev. Dr. Dan. S. Po enberger β82, Senior Pastor, Shepherd of the Lake Lutheran Church
Karl D. Self β81, MBA, DDS, Interim Associate Dean for Academic A airs, University of Minnesota School of Dentistry
Kent V. Stone β80, MBA, Retired Vice Chairman, U.S. Bancorp
The Rev. Heather Teune Wigdahl β95, Senior Pastor, Our Saviorβs Lutheran Church
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 4
Yours in community, Rebecca M. Bergman President, Gustavus Adolphus College
It is what so much of Gustavus is about. After online classes, online student org meetings, even online choir practice, the full return of in-person, on-campus life feels celebratory. Students packed the Involvement Fair. Attendance is up at campus events such as a Mario Kart tournament, a roller skating rave, group whittling, lessons and stories about Dakota history, Coming Out Week, the Diversity Leadership Council carnival, and the multiple events put on by the Organization for Latin American and Spanish cultures.
Another case in point: a 120 percent increase in new Greek membership.
ON THE HILL
Delta Phi Omega member Amber Krahn β22 went through Greek recruitment two years agoβonline. Her chapter has since doubled. Why? βFor those who were on campus when COVID ο¬rst hit, it has been a lot harder to ο¬nd community here,β she says. Fraternities and sororities provide sought-after, intentionally rich community. βPeople are looking to socialize as much as they can and meet as many people as they can.β
Kappa Sigma Chi member Ron Romero β23, co-president of the InterGreek Council, agrees. βWe were on it from day one,β he says. Thereβs been a shift in approach, too. βThereβs a focus
on diversity, equity, and inclusion this year, to break stereotypes and stigmas about Greek life. Weβre trying to get more people of di erent backgrounds involved.β To this aim, IGC has had guest speakers and critical dialogue sessions.
Romero himself was hesitant about Greek life at ο¬rst. βBut the guys made me feel like I belonged with them. They didnβt treat me any di erently because of my sexuality. I felt welcomed into their brotherhood.β And as this generation emerges from the distanced days of COVID, βItβs nice having guys I can count on while we work for the Gustavus community and the greater community.β
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 5
THE GREAT COMING TOGETHER
Abigail Eaton β23, Theta Gamma Xi member and DEI chair, and her snowcone at this yearβs Greek Carnival. The event was packed with students eager to make community after a college experience mitigated by global pandemic.
CHRISTMAS IN CHRIST CHAPEL 2022
A tradition since 1973, CinCC is the start of the Christmas season for many in the Gustavus community. More than 350 students bring a new program to life each year through music, dance, spoken word, and the visual arts. This year, it is a celebration in which heaven, earth, and all creation join Mary and Elizabeth, mothers of Jesus and John the Baptist, to proclaim with wonder, hope, and joy that the birth of Christ heralds into the world. It features the Gustavus Choir, Choir of Christ Chapel, Christ Chapel Ringers, Gustavus Symphony Orchestra, Lucia Singers, and dancers.
REV. DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. CELEBRATION
Gather your friends and loved ones and watch this yearβs CinCCβas well as past programsβvia archive at gustavus.edu/cincc
The 2023 celebration will feature Justice Alan Page. He is the ο¬rst African American on the Minnesota Supreme Court and one of the few associate judges elected to the court, a Presidential Medal of Freedom Award recipient, and a former defensive tackle for the Minnesota Vikings and Chicago Bears.
Attend in person at Christ Chapel or watch the livestream on Mon. Jan. 16 at gustavus.edu/mlk
This summer, peace, justice, and conο¬ict studiesΒ major Gabby Lavan β23 was aΒ Public Policy and International A airs Junior Summer Institute Fellow.Β The fully funded fellowship brought undergraduates from around the world to six participating schools in the United States for graduate-level study of major public policy issues, ranging from community safety to climate change.Β Lavan studied at the University of Washington.
Eight Gustie students conducted research through the Mayo Clinicβs Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF).
βIt was great to see so many Gustavus students and have someone in my corner,β said Katie Lillemon β24, a biochemistry and molecular biology major. Lillemon began her journey as an undergraduate researcher through theΒ First-Year Research Experience (FYRE) ProgramΒ at Gustavus (see page 28). βEstablishing connections makes a huge di erence,β said Ashley Ley β23, a chemistry and biochemistry and molecular biology double major. The experience was made possible
through the Gilyard Peterson Scholarship, established by Tim Peterson β83 in honor of his friend, Scott Gilyard β83, who died of leukemia in 2021. The other Fellows were Tessa Bierbaum β23, biology; Kade Copple β24, biochemistry and molecular biology; Kimberly Hareland β24, biochemistry and molecular biology and chemistry; Angel Obiorah β24, chemistry; Blake Power β23, biochemistry and molecular biology; and Annabel Smith β24, biochemistry and molecular biology.
ON THE HILL GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 6
PRETTY GOOD NEWS
Ashley Ley β23
Katie Lillemon β24
Making Your Mark: Prints and Drawings from the Hechinger Collection
Nov. 21βJan. 27 | Hillstrom Museum of Art
This exhibition brings together a rich array of works on paper and features prominent artists such as Claes Oldenberg (1929β2022) and Wayne Thiebaud (1920β2021). Showcasing 52 superb prints and drawings, it samples the breadth and beauty of International Arts & Artistsβ own Hechinger Collection, which has the unique theme of hand tools and hardware. Focusing on the creative process rather than subject matter, the exhibited works represent a variety of media and disciplines at an artistβs disposal. It also includes this piece from alum Pier Gustafson β78
Pier Gustafson, Step Ladder with Can and Brushes, 1984, paper construction with pen and ink
JOURNEY THROUGH THE HOLY LAND
Twenty-one Gustavus alumni and friends studied as they toured the Holy Land of Israel and Palestine. They visited sacred sites and deepened their understanding of the complexity of the region from local Israeli and Palestinian friends. They connected with pastors Rev. Adam Miller-Stubbendick β04 and his wife, Jordan, who are country coordinators of the Young Adults in Global Mission program for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. They also connected with other ELCA ministry partners in the region, most signiο¬cantly with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land. Among other activities, they walked and prayed along the Via Dolorosaβ βThe Way of the Crossββand worshiped in the Garden of Gethsemane. The group was led by Ann Sponberg Peterson β83, Rev. Grady St. Dennis β92, and Gustavus professor emeritus in religion, Darrell Jodock. (Photo by Rev. Daryl Thul.)
$665,570
Amount raised on Give to Gustavus Day by a record 1,271 donors. The amount is 18 percent greater than that raised in 2021, and a record in Give to Gustavus Day history.
This Founders Day, Oct. 31, Gustavus recognized three employees for their outstanding service and dedication. (Left to right) Troy Banse, head athletic trainer and director of strength and conditioning, received the Erik Norelius Award for the Outstanding Administrative Employee. Laura Boomgaarden β93, administrative assistant in the Departments of Physics and Math, Computer Science, and Statistics, received the Augusta Carlson Schultz Award, which recognizes outstanding support sta .Β And Brandon Dean, Jon and Anita Thomsen Young Distinguished Endowed Chair inΒ MusicΒ and Conductor of the Gustavus Choir, received the Faculty Service Award, the Collegeβs highest recognition for distinguished service activities across campus. Founderβs Day commemorates the dedication of Old Main.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 7
#whygustavus
CAMPUS SOCIAL
@gustavusadolphuscollege @gustavusalumni INSTAGRAM TWITTER
@gustavusadolphuscollege
In honor of Indigenous Peoplesβ Day, Dakota elder Joe Whitehawk came to campus to lead Gusties in conversation about the Dakota people, on whose homeland Gustavus Adolphus College was built. #whygustavus
@gustavusadolphuscollege
On #NationalComingOutDay, Gustavus celebrates all members of the LGBTQIA+ community on campus. Wherever you are on your journey, Gustavus remains committed to providing a safe, inclusive environment to explore and express sexual and gender identities.
@gustavus
Students from over 25 countries proudly carried their ο¬ags in Chapel today in celebration of the many nationalities and cultures that make up Gustavus. #gogusties #whygustavus
Have you ever painted the rock? This signature monument on campus has witnessed hundreds of holidays, celebrations, and eras at Gustavus. (The result? See page 14.)
@merylalper
Had a blast being given a real Midwestern welcome today by @NobelConference and @gustavus to talk about my research with an all-star panel of youth mental health researchers! #nobel58
Resilience is often described as being able to overcome adversity. We can go beyond this deο¬nition to imagine a way of living and being that gives hope, mutual aid, belonging, and connection.
βG. Nic Rider, assistant professor and Transgender Health Service Program Coordinator, Institute for Sexual and Gender Health, and Director, National Center for Gender Spectrum Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, speaking at this yearβs Nobel Conference
ON THE HILL
10:00 a.m. Time for Reο¬ection
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 8
/gustavusadolphuscollege /gustavusalumni FACEBOOK
SHINE : ALEX CHOU β22
A Concerto of Connections
WHETHER THROUGH THE UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE OF MUSIC OR AS AN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHER IN JAPAN, CHOU CONNECTS WITH HIS STUDENTS, HIS HERITAGE, AND HIMSELF.
Growing up half Chinese and half Japanese in the United States, Chou learned to navigate multiple cultures and identities from an early age. Now, as an assistant language teacher through the Japanese Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program, heβs using his knowledge and experience to connect his home country with high school students in a remote Japanese town.
When Chou came to Gustavus, he didnβt expect to pursue Japanese studies, let alone a year-long post-graduate program in Japan. However, while studying general education classes outside his premed track, he found himself taking Premodern East Asia with history and Japanese studies professor David Tobaru Obermiller. The switch to a history major with a minor in Japanese studies soon followed. βHistory is so much di erent in college than in high school,β Chou says. βThe discussions that you have, the critical thinking that goes on. And being able to unravel a lot of multiple perspectives opened a new world for me.β
Tobaru Obermiller became a close mentor who eventually wrote one of Chouβs recommendation letters for the JET Program. The other came from former Gustavus Symphony Orchestra conductor Ruth Lin. βThey both challenged meβnot just academically, but also as a person in terms of being able to transcend fear and go for opportunities into the unknownβ
As a student, he became the orchestraβs concertmaster and performed for audiences in multiple countries. βTraveling across the world with the Gustavus Symphony Orchestra was pure joy,β Chou says. βWe may not have spoken the same language, but music served as a universal bridge to communicate with each other.β
Participating in the JET Program has marked Chouβs ο¬rst time living abroad for an extended time. Despite the challenges of conducting everyday tasks in his non-native language, heβs found support from his Japanese colleagues and his fellow JETs in neighboring prefectures. βIn hard times, I always lean on people,β he says.
The same held true at Gustavus. βI was feeling homesick recently, so I looked back at some old Gustavus photos. They ο¬lled me with so much joy and nostalgia.β
For Chou, working as a high school English teacher in Japan has been a lesson in everyday courage. βYouβve just got to put yourself out there,β he says. βMuster up the courage to say hello and strike up a conversation; it goes a long way. For me, teachers donβt just teach. I get to learn from sta and students, too.β
COMMUNITY
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022
SHINE : JEFF JENSON
Swedish Lutheran History in our Hands
UP THE LIBRARY STAIRS AND INTO THE STACKS, THIS GUSTAVUS AND LUTHERAN CHURCH ARCHIVIST CONNECTS US TO OUR COLLEGEβS ORIGINS
βAnything can be interesting to the right person. And certain collections are very interesting to people who are part of that history.β
Jenson, who got his masters in history at Minnesota State University, Mankato, had no connection to Gustavus other than a little Swedish ancestry when he took charge of the Collegeβs connection with the Swedish Lutheran immigrants who founded it.
The Lutheran Church archives consist of records from the earliest Swedish Lutheran immigrants in Minnesota in the 1850s, including those who started Gustavus. It includes records of the former governing body of all Swedish Lutheran churches in Minnesota and the Dakotas through 1962, when various Swedish-American churches merged into the Lutheran Church in America. And it includes records of that governing body, up through 1988, when the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America was formed. (ELCA archives are in Chicago.)
Jenson also makes an e ort to acquire documents from student organizations like sororities, fraternities, and honor societies so that these groups may see their mark on Gustavus.Β βWe have a sorority that comes into the archives and has their members look at their organizationβs history,β he says. βItβs always an amazing thing. Itβs their history and they care a lot about it.β
Getting peopleβs own history into their hands is a passion for Jenson. He teaches Genealogy Research and Exploration as a January Interim Experience that helps Gustavus students connect with their familyβs past.Β βItβs a popular class and the students are passionate about learning their own history.β He also relishes the opportunity to help students and visitors handle books that are more than 500 years old, and manuscripts that are 1,000 years old.
He always keeps a piece of his own history near him: an aerial photo of his hometown of La Crescent, taken in the 1950s, and framed by a 23-yearold Jenson. βYou can really see how much things change over time.β
Part of what makes the Gustavus Archives so special is the people who have donated to create the collections. βWe can have an amazing robust collection 50 years from now if we start acquiring materials today,β Jenson says. βIβd like people to know that theyβre deο¬nitely a part of what Think you have something that the Gustavus Adolphus College and Lutheran Church Archives might want? Visit gustavus.edu/library/archives
EXCELLENCE ON THE HILL
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022
SHINE : ADRIANNA DARDEN
History Is A Group Project
PRESERVING GUSTAVUSβS HISTORY IS NOT A ONE-PERSON SHOW; IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO MAKE THE PAST ACCESSIBLE.
Working in the Gustavus Adolphus College Archives means immersion in the campusβs long, evergrowing history. It means prioritizing organization and accessibility. βThis is a career that has a calling; nobody settles to be in the archives,β Darden says. It is crucial that historical objects are well preserved, properly dated, and highly organized so that all members of the Gustavus communityβ who come for nostalgia, research, and celebrationβcan use and enjoy them.
To do her job, Darden must have the objects themselves. βGive me everything you donβt want,β she says, even the latest meeting minutes or alumni get-together swag. βThe present will become history one day.β The belief that the archives will only accept or hold on to older materials is false. Darden encourages folks to take the initiative and donate any items that they would want to see in a museum one day. After all, history is a collective e ort and it cannot be secured by one person alone. Those who give are the keepers of the stories we will tell in the future. βKeep the College Archives in the loop,β she says. We canβt do this job without people.β
Darden ο¬rst discovered the archives during her undergrad years at Luther College. She was a history major who was not interested in teaching. After taking a single archives course, she was hooked. Her passionβand career plansβbecame clear. βI love having a hand in preserving history.β
After answering the what of her life, Darden had to ο¬nd her future where. Her journey to Gustavus came down to connections and an aggressive post-graduation job hunt (plus encouraging words from her family). She joined Gustavus in 2009 after completing her masters in library science from Simmons College.
Thirteen years later, she is glad she made the leap. Despite an aversion to teaching in the traditional sense, she loves working with students. βItβs so interesting and rewarding. The Archives are always here to help them.β
And everyone else. Even though Gustavus and Gusties dedicate ample time to care for the Collegeβs present and future, they also deeply tend to its past. βGustavus has a long and well-documented history. Itβs clear that Gustavus cared about its history from a very early point. We really value the archives.β
The Collegeβs 150th anniversary was a celebration of our rich history, so Dardenβs work was in full swing. After countless hours of organizing and displaying the campusβs past for the public to see, Darden was taken aback by the support and praise that came from the Gustavus community. She was incredibly proud of her and her colleaguesβ work. βI am happy to be one of those people that care about history.β
COMMUNITY
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 11
H istoryIN OBJECTS
Enjoy this journey through the wild and wonderful items found around campus and in the Gustavus Archives. These are the stories behind the unique items that make us who we were, and who we are.
By Stephanie Wilbur Ash,
Bruce Berglund, Luc Hatlestad, and Emma Myhre β19
WHATβS ANOTHER WORD FOR βHelp! It makes my eyes burn!β?
Eleanor Guanella β24, Andrew Escoto β26, Corina Occhiato β26, and Daniel Hendrickson β26.
12
TTHE SECOND-UGLIEST COUCH IN AMERICA
On Sept. 15, 2004, Sarah Pedersen Byrnes β07 appeared on Live with Regis and Kelly to discuss this couch from the Writing Center, one of three ο¬nalists in the 2004 Ugly Couch Contest. It came in second. For Writing Center director Eric Vrooman, the couch is fodder, if not for the landο¬ll then for writing exercises. βHow do you describe the yellow? How do you describe the green?β he is known to ask visitors. Its origin story is fuzzy, but English professor Becky Fremo believes a writing tutor rescued it from a campus dumpster twenty or so years ago. She has an unpublished ο¬ctional story by former English professor Eric Eliason called βSofa So Good.β Itβs a ghost story, though romance also surrounds the couch. βI like to think that since former Writing Center tutors Kara Barnette β05 and Drew Grace β04 got married, itβs a better predictor of romance than the Square Dance,β she says. Though itβs mostly been in Confer-Vickner, youβll ο¬nd it today at the Writing Center in Anderson Hall. You canβt miss it.
HEAR YE, HEAR YE According to a dictum to the Class of 1959 from the Class of 1955: βAll freshmen will be privileged to wear their freshman green beanies at all times and at all places. This includes the active hours spent in class, the shower, and o campus, etc., and the immobile hours spent in the sack.β
13
CHIP OFF THE OLD ROCK
This is what one hundred years of layered paint looks like. The exact origins of The Rock are unknown; most likely itβs a remnant of a ο¬eld of small boulders that were scattered at the bottom of Old Main Hill. How many times itβs been painted is also unknown. This fall, βGreeks have been painting it three to ο¬ve times a week,β says campus activities director Andrea Junso. βItβs a rite of passage.β
In 1966, a group of students (allegedly) took that rite to the extreme. They removed The Rock and replaced it with a smaller rock, probably in response to the news that a new library was in the works. (A sign next to the new rock read Countess Folke Bernadotte Memorial Rock Substitute. Do Not Paint.) In the Oct. 14 issue of The Gustavian Weekly, a reporter identiο¬ed only as Reporter 72 to protect their identity, called the crime, βthe most daring coup in the history of Gustavus crime.β There is also an obituary in that issue for Reporter 72. They (allegedly) died while reporting the story.
SSTONE GROUND
In the fall of 1863, St. Ansgar Academy, the predecessor to Gustavus Adolphus College, moved from Red Wing to East Union, Minn. Times were tough for the college, and one solution to stay solvent was to open a ο¬our mill in 1867. St. Angsar was known as a βMission Mill Companyβ that allowed students to o set their education with work. The Gustavus Class of 1922 elevated the millstone to monument. According to The Gustavian Weekly in 1926, the millstone represents, βthe ο¬rst attempt to safeguard the ο¬nancial outlook of Gustavus and therefore may justly be called the ο¬rst endowment.β
Ironically, the ο¬our mill put the school into even more ο¬nancial disarray. Records of the time show St. Ansgar was more than $5,000 in debt, or $90,000 in todayβs dollars. No o cial word on whether this stone was ever used to grind the rye to make Ma Youngβs famous rye bread.
At some point the millstone, with a bronze plate bearing its history, made its way to a spot between Old Main and Rundstrom Hall. It has since been removed to preserve it.
C
STRIKES AGAINST DISCRIMINATION
In the winter of 2016, the Diversity Center and the Center for International and Cultural Education held a cathartic joint event at KingPins Bowling Center in Saint Peter. They bought the pins and students wrote examples of o ensive things that had been said to them. βLike, βCan I touch your hair?β and βWow, your English is so good,ββ says Roger Adkins, former director of the CICE. Then they bowled them over. The idea was former Diversity Center assistant director Kenneth Reidβs. βIt was a huge success and a lot of fun,β Reid says. Students took the pins home. Those who were there signed this one. It residesβ uprightβin the Center for Inclusive Excellence today.
VVΓLKOMMEN TO GUSTIE SWEDEN
At the corner of 7th and Pine stood an old Victorian called the Swedish House, a student residence beginning in 1974. Its kitchen door became covered with Swedish and Scandinavian stickers, evidence of studentsβ travels. When the house was destroyed during the tornado of 1998, then-Scandinavian Studies professor Roland Thorstensson and then-director of the Career Center Je Stocco quietly carried the door away during campus cleanup. βWe must have looked very funny, but I donβt think there were too many people roaming around stealing doors,β Thorstensson says. It was stored in his garage until 2000. Today it is, well, right next door to the interior entrance of the Swedish House in the Carlson International Center. βI cleaned it up a little, touched it up with black paint,β Thorstensson says. βI even added one sticker. Only one!β
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 15
LLIONIZED
In the fall of 1960, a contest was held for a mascot that would perfectly represent Gustavus. A lion made sense, as the Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus was known as βThe Lion of the North.β That original costume was worn by any student ready to lead the pack. It disappeared. In 1983, his son was born. He was named Thor, like the Norse warrior God, after a student body vote. Gus the Lion, pictured here, arrived in the early 1990s. A Gustavian Weekly proο¬le of this Gus, written by Betsy Langowski β08, who apparently snagged an exclusive interview, describes the grandson of the original mascot as βan average Gustie in his interests and activities. Heβs a big fan of movies, especially The Wizard of Oz. He likes alternative music (ironically, the band Guster tops his list), and he also secretly adores pop icons such as Britney Spears, Ashlee Simpson, and Kelly Clarkson.β This Gus comfortably retired to the archives in 2012 when another new Gus was born, just in time for the Collegeβs Sesquicentennial. You can reach the current Gus through his friends at the Campus Activities O ce. Though heβs not much for words, heβs got a lot of Gustavus pride.
SIGNATURES OF NOTE
When the Nobel Hall of Science was dedicated on May 4, 1963, the ceremony counted 26 Nobel laureates, as well as o cials from the Nobel Foundation. It was the third-largest gathering of laureates to dateβand the largest outside Sweden. Ralph Bunche, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950 for brokering a 1948 cease ο¬re between Israelis and Arabs and the ο¬rst African American to be awarded the Peace Prize, delivered the address. Chemistry Laureate Linus Pauling stayed on after to lecture about his book, No More War. Many signed the pages of this guestbook, including laureates, dignitaries, college and government o cials, and folks from all over Minnesota, the country, and the world.
cease ο¬re between Israelis and Arabs and the ο¬rst African of this guestbook, including laureates, dignitaries, college and
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 16
SSHE WAS A BRICK HOUSE
Its namesake, Minnesota Governor John A. Johnson, secured $32,500 from Andrew Carnegie to expand the campus in 1908. The 1910 college catalog boasted a new ο¬reproof brick womenβs dormitory with electric heat and lights. In 1923, the Johnson women requested a curfew change from 10:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. (Men had no curfew.) The request was denied. Women would have a curfew until at least 1968.
During World War II, Johnson housed men in the Navy V-12 program (page 20), otherwise it was women only until 1990. It was lost to the 1998 tornado. This sweatshirt is in the archives, the brick is in the o ce of Rich Aune β81, associate vice president and dean of admission, who saved it before demolition.
Athe season, the players boarded a train in early December for the 700mile trip to Evansville, Indianaβhome of the Refrigerator Bowl. A number of college football bowl games were launched in the years after World War II,
including such short-lived contests as the Raisin Bowl in Fresno and the Cigar Bowl in Tampa. The Refrigerator Bowl was ο¬tting for Evansville. The cityβs three factories produced 3,800 fridges per day.
The Gusties had a warm welcome in Evansville, with Coach Lloyd Hollingsworth receiving a three-foot key to the city. That was the highlight of the trip. Gustavus lost 14β7 to Abilene Christian in a rainstorm. βIt poured,β recalled Dennis Raarup β53, a member of the 1950 team and later coach of the Gusties. βIt was a quagmire.β Adding insult to injury, the playersβ wet, woolen jerseys turned moldy on the long trip back to Gustavus. But the key to the Refrigerator Capital of the World remained untarnished. You can ο¬nd it locked in the trophy case in the Lund Center Hall of Champions.
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ASPIRING TO A GREATER GUSTAVUS
Many campuses across the country have an βOld Main.β These 19th century buildings, with their stone facades and ornate clock towers, are reminders of the determination and hope that drove immigrants to found colleges for their communities.
When our Old Main was dedicated on October 31, 1876, hundreds of people came to gather at the newly built structure. Founder Eric Norelius declared that Gustavus Adolphus was βa name that shines like a star of the ο¬rmaments.β Old Main matched the soaring heights of the dayβs speeches, at least on the outside. The buildingβs
interior was still unο¬nished. Without desks or lamps in classrooms, students sat on the ο¬oor near windows to do their coursework.
Like campus as a whole, Old Main has been in a constant process of renovation and updating over the decades. The wooden ο¬nial sheared o in the tornado (pictured here, currently located in the archives) was not the original. βThere was a renovation of the clock tower in the 70s. The original ο¬nial was replaced then,β says former physical plant director Warren Wunderlich. βSomewhere on campus, there is a second damaged ο¬nial.β That one is hidden in the basement of Co-Ed, now called Norelius.
RRINGING ENDORSEMENTS
When alumni visit the Book Mark, βOne of the ο¬rst things theyβll show us is their class ring,β says manager Molly Yunkers. βThey hold their hand up and the stories start to ο¬ow.β Like a yearbook and a letter jacket, a class ring is a piece of memorabilia infused with the meaning of place and individual accomplishment. Early designs were signet style, meant to dip into wax to seal a letter with your credentials. Class rings are an American trend for sure, and a local one at Gustavus. Jostens, a maker of class rings since 1906, began just 53 miles east of Saint Peter in Owatonna. Recently, thereβs been a resurgence in class ring popularity, particularly the vintage-looking signet style. Donβt have one? You can aways get one in your class year, and customized in other ways too, at jostens.com. Remember: graduates wear the insignia facing outward.
FLORENCE TURNER PETERSON 1922, taught English and history at Gustavus, and worked in the Collegeβs archives. The ring is a 10-karat gold signet engraved with her initials. Old Main is on the front.
EVA TEDERSTROM WICKLUND 1919, donated by her son, Edward Wicklund. Also a signet style, this silver ring has a GAC logo on its front. She was president of Alpha Phi sorority and vice president of the Young Women's Luther League.
JJ AKIN β11 The contemporary βGβ ring most of us are familiar with today. This one is white lustrium, with the class year on the side. He was an English major and a member of the Gustavus football team.
HHOT TOPICS
The ashes of great literature ο¬ll this unassuming holiday canister English professor Phil Bryant β73 grabbed from his house en route to teach Book Burning 17 years ago. In his course, students read a selection of banned booksβthis year included Huckleberry Finn, Invisible Man, and 1984βand discuss. As a 100-level class, itβs a true liberal arts o ering, catching a variety of students. βI try to make it a safe space where we can have civil discussion about censorship and banning,β Bryant says. On the last day, students bring a favorite passage, read it out loud, and toss it into this βurn.β Then, evoking the ο¬nal scene of FranΓ§ois Tru autβs movie Farenheit 451, Bryant lights it on ο¬re. βItβs very moving,β he says, βbut itβs not about the burning. The book is a physical manifestation of something spiritual. Itβs about the books being embodied in us.β
GGOODNIGHT, ERIC NORELIUS
Tala i nattmΓΆssan. The Swedish phrase is translated as βtalk in the nightcap.β Itβs used when someone is speaking nonsense, like we do while talking in our sleep. Nightcaps were common bedtime attire for men and women in the 1800s, especially in northern Europe. Eric Norelius surely wore one in his home province of HΓ€lsingland, Sweden, before emigrating to the U.S. . The nightcap served di erent purposes. It kept the head warm in the age before central heating. It also kept bed clothes clean at a time when hair washing was rare and pomades were popular. Norelius wasnβt known for talking nonsenseβin his sleep or otherwise. He was a pastor known for service to others. Along with founding Gustavus, he started the childrenβs home that was the forerunner to Lutheran Social Service and edited a Swedish-language newspaper for immigrants. Two of his nightcaps are in the Gustavus Archives. The one pictured here is embroidered.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 19
HIM IN HIS CAP Itβs the great great great grandson of Eric Norelius, Aaron Norelius β26.
TTO THE MOON, GUSTAVUS!
As certain uber-wealthy entrepreneurs strive to make a walk on the moon as achievable as a walk in the park, a treasured relic of lunar exploration lives right here at Gustavus. In 1967, the school awarded an honorary doctorate of science degree to astronaut Edwin βBuzzβ Aldrin to celebrate his Gemini XII mission. When he was later chosen to be one of three astronauts on the Apollo XI mission, Jim Wennblom β53, then the Gustavus director of public relations, conceived a way to establish the College as the ο¬rst βuniversalβ institution of higher learning by asking him to take a Gustavus pennant with him to outer space. Aldrin agreed, provided it was small, lightweight, and easily vacuum packed. When he and fellow astronauts Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins became the ο¬rst humans to walk on the moon on July 21, 1969, the Gustie pennant was along for the ride. Aldrin returned it to Gustavus with a small American ο¬ag from the mission and an o cial patch. This otherworldly bit of history can be found in Olin Hall, where it invites and inspires students to daydream about future study away programs in galaxies far, far away.
CCONGRATS TO COMPANY F
When the U.S. military underwent a massive expansion during World War II, enrollment at colleges plummeted as young men entered the armed services and military academies couldnβt provide o cers fast enough.
The V-12 Navy College Training Program solved both problems. O cer candidates completed their bachelorβs degrees, then they went to o cer-training school before being deployed.
The ο¬rst V-12 cadets arrived at Gustavus in July 1943. The College adopted a year-round schedule to meet the needs of these 400 students, half in the Navy and half in the Marines. Dressed in uniform, they outnumbered civilian students by more than 4-to-1. By the time the V-12 program ended in 1945, some 1,000 o cers had studied at Gustavus.
This wooden plaque from the College Archives was likely given to βCompany Fβ for winning a drills competition. The names of the 35 men under company commander Schreifer are on the back.
Jim Wennblom β53, then the Gustavus director of public
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 20
GONE TOO SOON
Joel Sandberg β67 spent his early years in Becker, where his father was a Lutheran minister. Rev. Ralph Sandberg β39 and Eleanor Valberg Sandberg β40 moved their children to Connecticut when Joel was in high school. He returned to Saint Peter, his motherβs hometown, to attend Gustavus. A math major who played tennis and trombone and was in the Kappa Sigma Chi Fraternity, he graduated in 1967 and enlisted in the Navy.
Lieutenant Sandberg was stationed in South Vietnam with a squadron known as the Black Ponies. He piloted an OV10 Bronco, an observation plane that provided support for patrol boats in the Mekong River delta. In late afternoon of Dec. 20, 1969, Sandberg was ο¬ying south of Saigon. Spotting a suspicious-looking boat, he radioed that he was descending to investigate. This was his last transmission. Burning wreckage was soon sighted, and a Navy unit was dispatched to search for the crew. Joel Sandbergβs remains were never found.
His mother donated his service medals to Gustavus. A bust of Joelβ created by Don Gregory β47 and cast in bronze by Paul Granlund β52βis located in the northwest entry of the Art Wing of Schaefer Fine Arts.
G
BEFORE GOOGLE CALENDAR students handwrote their schedules and assignments. How analog!
FFASHION FROM THE HOUSE OF BJΓRLING
In 2002, then-ο¬ne arts director Al Behrends β77 toured the Jussi BjΓΆrling Museum in BorlΓ€nge, Sweden with the Gustavus Wind Orchestra. The museum director asked, βWhy doesnβt Gustavus have a stronger connection with the BjΓΆrling family?β After all, the Gustavus recital hall is named for the Swedish tenor, and BjΓΆrlingβs son, Anders β58, was a longtime Comptroller of the College and owner of Saint Peterβs Swedish Kontur Imports (see page 41). It was a good question, and shortly after, Anders procured Jussiβs costume from the Metropolitan Operaβs production of played the starring role) as well as a musical score from the production with Jussiβs notes in German, Swedish, and English. They are displayed in BjΓΆrling Recital Hallβs lobby.
(in which Jussi
As a child, Jussi visited Saint Peter with his parents as a member of the BjΓΆrling Family Musicians. By the time he played Faust at The Met in 1950 and 1959, he was considered the most famous musician in the world. βHistorically, the costume and score are valuable and fascinating pieces of music history,β Behrends says. As bargains go, their acquisition has not been Faustian in any way the makers of this magazine are aware of.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 22
220 YEARS OF CINCC
Thatβs what these pins represent. Christmas in Christ Chapel itself has been a tradition since 1973. More than 5,000 audience members attend in person each year, and thousands more view the event online, live, and on replay, in emerging traditions of Gusties gathered in each otherβs homes for watch parties. Almost from the beginning, βO Come All Ye Faithfulβ has been the closing hymn, and the current arrangement was commissioned speciο¬cally for Gustavus in 1976. In 1979, CinCC closed with Handelβs βHallelujah Chorusβ instead. Ope. We have remained faithful to our original plan since.
2001: CELTIC PILGRIMAGE. The ο¬rst pin was shaped like a Celtic cross. So were the invitations and the human-sized ice sculpture outside Christ Chapel.
2004: SEASONS OF PROMISE. It features art by He Qi, the ο¬rst among Mainland Chinese to earn a PhD in religious art after the 1992 Revolution.
2014: TENDER ROSE, STARRY NIGHT. The ο¬rst livestream beamed CinCC into homes, ushering in appearance on National Public Television.
TTHAT OLD LIBERAL ARTS SONG
This banjo belonged to Carl Towley β28. According to his senior yearbook, he was βa goodnatured fellow with a resolute admiration for a tall violet that grows on Fourth Street.β That was Violet Mattson β28, his future wife. The Gustavian Weekly was only three years old when Towley began working on it, and evidence of his passion are all over this banjo: the letters of Iota Chi Sigma, the journalism fraternity he helped found, and illustrations for his satirical Weekly column, βOld Mane.β There is no immediate evidence he pursued banjo picking after college. He was a newspaper editor, a secretary to the Minnesota Senate, and a high school journalism teacher and principal. (The national Journalism Educators Association still gives The Carl Towley Award, its highest honor, to a high school journalism teacher.) He was also dad to Carl Towley β54, who was also a musicianβa baritone and bassβand an The Weekly. He went on to become an Army chaplain, and to deliver the liturgy at the dedication of Christ Chapel in 1962. You can ο¬nd the banjo in the archives. You can ο¬nd The Weekly all over campus. You can ο¬nd Christ Chapel right where the builders left it.
SMALL WONDERS It is ο¬tting to end on Paul Grandlund β52. The sculptor left a legacy of more than 650 ο¬gurative bronze sculptures in public installations and private collections nationally and internationally. Certainly youβve seen the large outdoor sculptures in the Collegeβs collection. The three pictured here are each small enough to hold in your hand. Together, they make up Floor Exercises (1984), inspired by the 1984 Summer Olympics. βOlga,β βNadia,β and βLudmilla,β as they are named, are tucked into the north end of the trophy case in Lund Centerβs Hall of Champions, good reminders that history is around every corner, and always in motion.
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MAKING A DIFFERENCE FOR WOMEN IN ATHLETICS
On October 8, the Gustavus Athletics Department Celebrated the 50th Anniversary of Title IX. Signed into the Education Amendments Act in June of 1972, the landmark legislation is best known for creating a more inclusive athletic environment, leveling the playing ο¬eld for women from elementary school to varsity college sports.
To celebrate Title IX on Homecoming Saturday, the Department hosted an Open House in the Lund Center, made t-shirts celebrating a half-century of sports equity, and showcased historic images depicting the particularly rich tradition and accomplishments of
womenβs athletics at Gustavus. There also was a special presentation prior to the womenβs soccer game. Events culminated with former and current Gustavus female athletes gathering on the ο¬eld to be recognized at halftime of the football game.
As a part of the womenβs soccer Title IX presentation, the Department gave the 2022 Making A Di erence Award to Nicole LaVoi β91. LaVoi, a former Gustie tennis player and 1990 national champion, is a leading scholar on women coaches as the director of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport at the University of Minnesota.
Sheβs also the founder and director of the annual Women Coaches Symposium and has advised numerous Gustavus students, graduates, and coaches. Her research focuses on Title IX and gender equity, physical activity and girls, media representation, and the womenβs sports industry. On Homecoming Saturday, she was surrounded by fellow female Gustie athletes, past and present.
The department and womenβs athletic teams will continue to celebrate Title IX throughout the year with stories and events that honor the rich tradition of women in athletics and the history and successes of Gustie female athletes.
SPORTS
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Hall of Fame inductee Nicole LaVoi β91 (front right) surrounded by Gustavus women athletes past and present on Homecoming. LaVoi, a leading scholar on women coaches and director of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport, received the 2022 Making a Di erence Award from the athletic department. She played on the 1990 Gustavus womenβs tennis NCAA championship team.
2022 Athletics Hall of Fame Inductees
These illustrious Gustavus student-athletes and sports advocates were honored at a banquet in October.
Brian Amundson
β07 (Coon Rapids), is the menβs swimming & diving program record holder with 14 AllAmerica honors, and was a 12-time MIAC champion. The freestyle specialist helped lead the Gusties to three MIAC championships and three top-10 NCAA ο¬nishes. He earned seven All-America honorable mentions and 23 MIAC AllConference selections.
Tim Brown β04 (Bloomington), earned All-America status and played an integral role in the menβs basketball team reaching the NCAA championship game in 2003. Brown holds the program record for career three-point percentage and single season three-pointers made. Brown was All-Region and All-Conference in both his seasons and helped the Gusties win the 2003β04 MIAC championship.
Scott Hagemeyer β07 (Willmar), logged a record 20 MIAC championships and 28 All-Conference selections as a swimmer & diver. Hagemeyer earned 13 All-America selections and owns the programβs second-fastest times in the 50 freestyle and 100 backstroke. He helped lead the Gusties to three MIAC championships and three top-10 NCAA ο¬nishes.
Hailey Harren
Hollenhorst β07 (Cold Spring), won the 2005 NCAA cross country championship and was the 2006β07 College Sporting News Female Student-Athlete of the Year. The two-time All-American, two-time NCAA Central Region Runner of the Year, and two-time MIAC Runner of the Year, also earned two CoSIDA Academic All-America honors, received the prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, and was the 2005β06 Gustavus Female Athlete of the Year.
Joe Hartwell β05 (Apple Valley), earned First Team All-America and MIAC Player of the Year honors while leading the menβs soccer team to a MIAC championship and the NCAA quarterο¬nals in 2004. A two-time All-Region and three-time All-Conference selection, he anchored a Gustie defense that allowed just four goals in 23 games while recording 19 shutouts.
Lauren Hom Oien β07 (Stevens Point, Wisc.), is a ο¬ve-time All-American tennis player, highlighted by her 2005 ITA
national doubles championship with partner Marla Menne. She posted a career singles record of 84-21 and went 96-13 in doubles. Oien never lost a MIAC match in singles or doubles, going 60-0, and helped the Gusties win four consecutive conference titles with a 40-0 team record.
Toney Konicek β07 (Rochester), is a two-time First Team All-America selection as an outο¬elder and third baseman and holds program records in career batting average, hits, triples, RBIs, and runs. Konicek earned Midwest Region Position Player of the Year and MIAC Player of the Year in 2006 and 2007. Konicek was a three-time MIAC AllConference selection and the 2006β07 Gustavus Male Athlete of the Year.
Andrea Peterson β07 (White Bear Lake), is a four-time All-American and was the 2006β07 Division III Player of the Year. Her 185 career points is the program record and the most by a defender in Division III womenβs hockey history. She is the only four-time MIAC Player of the Year, has the secondmost assists in D-III history, and helped lead Gustavus to four NCAA tournament and two Frozen Four appearances.
25
A WALTZ THROUGH GUSTAVUS DANCE HISTORY
By Betsy Maloney Leaf β97, PhD, special to the Gustavus Quarterly
It has been seventy years since Dean of Students Melva Lind cautiously lifted the longtime restriction on dancing at Gustavus. The decision to allow dance back on campus, while initially intended for recreation only, proved monumental for the artform at Gustavus.
Today, dance at the college currently includes a department, a major, a minor, two dance companies, three studio spaces, six faculty, many student-led dance organizations, multiple mainstage productions, and opportunities to study
dance around the world.
The list of historic milestones is long. In 1982 the ο¬rst dance minor was o ered, and in 2001 the major o cially appeared in the catalog. (Since that time, 75 dance majors and minors have graduated from the program.) In 2020, the Rob and Judy Gardner Black Box Theatre opened as a new performance playground with full production support. Last spring, longtime professor Michele Rusinko retired after 34 years of weaving dance into the fabric of Gustavus life. During her
Leaf teaches in the Arts in Education program in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction at the University of Minnesota. She also works with the interarts (dance, theatre, visual art) license program, and serves on the editorial board of the journal Dance Education in Practice
FINE ARTS
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1 2 3
Maloney Leaf β97, front
I am Sorry You Feel That Way:
Shiny Things for the Mind Christmas in
performers. They work in a variety of sectors, including healthcare, marketing, social work, education, academia, and human resources. Their time at Gustavus, whether as a student, instructor, guest artist, or designer, was, as one alum
Though I arrived as a ο¬rst-year at Gustavus with ο¬fteen years of dance experience, my career plans did not include a life in the arts. But one day on campus I spotted a Theatre & Dance department poster advertising its Anything Goes, and a call for student choreographers. I marvel at my decision to attend the meeting, given that I had never performed in a musical and could neither sing nor choreograph my own work. I could only tap dance. But by the end of the brief informational meeting, and after meeting new dance friends and Professor Rusinko, I had found my calling. At Gustavus, I
Gustavus dance. In speaking with alumni, faculty members, production designers, and guest artists about their time on the hill, a clear pattern emerged: dance has been meaningful, signiο¬cant, and often transformative. Many spoke fondly of developing their artistic voices through classroom experiences uniquely curated by dance faculty, or by experiencing the entire performance arc, from rehearsals to
February 11 | Gustavus Choir: Home Concert, 7:00 p.m. in Christ Chapel
February 18 | Gustavus Wind Orchestra: Home Concert, 7:00 p.m. in Christ Chapel
February 13 to April 23 | Improvised Structures: Recent Sculptural Works by Nicolas Darcourt, Hillstrom Museum of Art
February 23 to 26 | Theatre Musical: Spring Awakening, Anderson Theatre
April 15 | Encore! Celebrating 70 Years of Dance at Gustavus, Schaefer Art Gallery
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NEXT
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Learning Through
Student-faculty research at Gustavus results in meaningful discovery in a variety of disciplines and can even change the life paths of students.
Inquiry
STUDENT RESEARCH
for many years meant doing experiments in a science lab or writing a research paper with multiple citations for a history class. There was a correct answer, and appropriate sources, and our professors wanted to make sure we students knew how and where to ο¬nd the answers.
The concept of student research has changed dramatically in the last two decades. In part, this transformation was spurred by a 1998 survey of undergraduate education, funded by the Carnegie Foundation. The ο¬nal report called for undergrads to engage in open-ended, inquiry-based researchββthe kind of research previously reserved for graduate students and professorsββin collaboration with faculty mentors. Students must have the opportunity βto learn through inquiry rather than simple transmission of knowledge,β the report concluded.
Schools of all types, including liberal arts colleges, have followed the reportβs recommendations. At colleges and universities across the country, faculty members now routinely include undergrads in their research projects. Today, professors in all disciplinesβ from natural and social sciences to arts and humanitiesβrecognize that undergraduates are valuable partners in their research projects.
Study after study has shown that conducting research is a transformative experience for students. In a 2013 article co-written with colleagues at Indiana
University and the University of Georgia, education scholar and Gustie Thomas Nelson Laird β95 counted the many beneο¬ts that research experience provides undergraduates: development of analytical and critical thinking, improved academic achievement, increased likelihood of retention and graduation, and clarity in choosing a major. Above all, doing collaborative research with a faculty member introduces students to the vocation of investigation, discovery, and analysis. Students learn how to turn their curiosity into questions, and how to turn those questions into new knowledge. Many students who have had research experience as undergraduates decide to go on to graduate school and pursue a career in that ο¬eld.
The experiences of student researchers at Gustavus reο¬ect the results of national studies. When asked about their research experience on campus, Gustavus students have cited the skills they learned and the mentoring they received from professors.
HOW THEY SPENT THEIR SUMMERS
DOING PRETTY MEANINGFUL RESEARCH
Lauren Buss β23 worked with James Patrick Miller, Douglas Nimmo Professor of the Gustavus Wind Orchestra, to develop a textbook for music educators on teaching conducting.
Bryce Knutson β22 collaborated with Physics professor Tom Huber to test how computers, using artiο¬cial intelligence methods, can extract ultrasound signals from noisy backgrounds.
Erik Small β23 worked with Kyle Chambers, Professor of Psychological Science, on collecting data necessary for an institutional grant proposal to the National Science Alexandra , on creating a new composition.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 29
Maddie Sandish β22 researched depictions of fascism and current far-right nationalism in French literature. Their mentor was French professor Sharon Marquart
Taylor Pearson β22 and geology professorJulie Bartley examined microscopic starο¬sh fossils dating to the Mississippian Period, more than 330 million years ago.
Brendon Carlson Sather β22 and Katie Leehy,Professor of Biology, investigated the plant Arabidopsis thaliana to understand how certain mutations a ect its resistance to drought.
Luke Haddor β23 and physics professor Chuck Niederriter researched whether amorphous silicon hydrogenated thin ο¬lms can be a viable alternative for the more commonly used crystalline solar cells.
Above all, they speak of gaining new conο¬dence in their ability to to conduct advanced research. βThe idea that I could contribute to science was so empowering for me,β wrote one student in a survey. Another student noted in a program evaluation that such hands-on experience demonstrated how open-ended research can be. βThe paths of inquiry in any ο¬eld are truly limitless, something my summer research experience showed me quite clearly.β
Nationwide studies show that collaborations between faculty and undergraduate students have signiο¬cant inο¬uence in their disciplines. Gustavus professors see these research collaborations as similarly beneο¬cial, and they have come to rely on students to make substantial contributions to their research projects. In the biology, chemistry, and geology departments alone, more than 90 students have been co-writers for faculty membersβ published articles, and more than 180 Gustavus students overall have presented their research ο¬ndings at national academic conferences. In education, management, physics, political science, and psychology, Gustavus students have co-authored scholarly articles in recent years.
Of course, these collaborations cost money. These projects often happen in summer, when most students need to earn money for the coming school year. This means student researchers have to be paid, as do the faculty members, because mentoring student researchers is intensive and time consuming. There also can be supplemental costs for lab equipment, specimens, data sets, or travel for ο¬eld research.
Funding for undergraduate research
comes from various sources. Since 1988, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, a nonproο¬t research and philanthropic organization, has awarded more than $870 million for projects to universities and colleges, including Gustavus, that emphasize undergraduate research. The College also received funding last year from the National Endowment for the Humanities to pilot a new Humanities Lab, an environment modeled on the hard sciences in which students contribute to faculty research projects. But this funding from foundations and agencies is often not enough.
Here at Gustavus, funding from a combination of resources is used to support student-faculty research. One source is research grants earned by individual faculty members or teams of professors. President Bergman and Provost Brenda Kelley also provide funds for summer research out of the schoolβs discretionary budget. As one would expect from a college led by an engineer and a chemist, each of them having spent much of their professional lives working in labs, Gustavus is fully committed
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 30
to promoting and supporting studentfaculty research.
The most consistent source of funding comes from Gustavus alumni and friends. Gifts to the endowment support research collaborations in various disciplines. The Johnson Peterson Research Fellowships, established by alumni gifts in 2019, fund student-faculty research across
campus. No matter which path Gustie students pursue, in graduate study or by diving right into a professional career, those with research experience carry the tools of critical thinking and creative problem-solving. Above all, they gain the tenacity needed to do a research project when there is no clear answer, and the agency to follow their curiosity and keep learning more.
Katya McDonald β21 Laura Burrack, Professor of Biology, examined the drug resistance Brettanomyces bruxellensis and related species of yeast. Their analysis of how cells acquire mutations provides crucial information on drug resistance in yeast species.
βBoyer Commission, Reinventing Undergraduate Education (1998)
Number of student-faculty summer research collaborations at Gustavus
Amelia Wernsing β23 and Yuta Kawarasaki, Professor of Biology, researched how fruit ο¬ies respond to cold temperatures, speciο¬cally the ways that the protein p38 MAPK helps fruit ο¬ies increase their tolerance of cold shock.
of nationally surveyed male students plan careers in STEM after undergraduate research experience 76%
of nationally surveyed female students plan careers in STEM after undergraduate research experience 92%
of nationally surveyed graduates said undergraduate research was βveryβ or βextremely importantβ to their overall education
Duong Pham β22 and Vita Faychuk, Professor of Economics and Management, examined a dataset of municipal bond trades in 2019β2020 to understand the e ect of the COVID-19 pandemic on municipal bond trading.
72%
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 31
INSTITUTIONS MUST FACILITATE INQUIRY IN SUCH CONTEXTS AS THE LIBRARY, THE LABORATORY, THE COMPUTER, AND THE STUDIO, WITH THE EXPECTATION THAT SENIOR LEARNERSβTHAT IS, PROFESSORSβWILL BE STUDENTSβ COMPANIONS AND GUIDES.β
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 GOAL 2022 2012 19 57 100
MORE OPPORTUNITIES TO DISCOVER, AND DISCERN
Student-faculty research could grow at Gustavusβwith help from donors. A word with Chemistry professor Scott Bur, who has mentored more than 30 student researchers, including several who have presented at national conferences.
What is it like working with ο¬rst-year students in a chemistry lab?
SB: First-year students are interesting. They think they know what they want to do, but I always advise them to be open to new possibilities. During that ο¬rst summer of research, a lot of what we do in the lab is career discernment. We talk about strengths and weaknesses, core valuesβall the stu weβre so good at here at Gustavus. Many of our students start out thinking they want to be doctors. Of course, we have had students go on to medical school, and students who have earned a PhD in chemistry. Iβve also had students go into intellectual property law and commodities trading. Even though they are doing things completely di erent from chemistry, they still tell me how valuable their research experience was. It doesnβt matter what theyβre doing, the research skills and analytical thinking apply across the board.
What do you have students doing in your lab during the summer?
SB: I typically have one overarching project that has a lot of di erent parts to it. There will be some cell biology going on, small-molecule synthesis, peptide synthesis. And then there is a computational project to help us sort through the data. I have people working
talking to each other, and they know how their part ο¬ts into the bigger picture. These modular projects work really well with undergraduates. Each part requires a speciο¬c skill set. The student working in that area has a piece they can call their own. And if they donβt work on their piece, it wonβt move forward, because there are not three or four other people working on that same thing. Iβve had as many as six students on one project.
Thatβs a good number of students in a lab. How many could you work with?
SB: Itβs clear we have demand for more summer research positions. We are not at
capacity in terms of what we can handle in workload and physical space.
Of course, the big question is ο¬nancial. My research aims at ο¬nding a new therapeutic for malaria. Because malaria a ects people in underdeveloped countries, where there is not potential for drug sales, pharmaceutical companies are not interested in funding research. I rely on funding from nonproο¬t organizations or government agencies like the National Science Foundation. NSF grants are very competitive; less than 30 percent of proposals are funded. In years when I havenβt had NSF support, I rely on student researchers funded by the FYRE program or the Presidential FacultyStudent Collaboration Grants. The Johnson-Peterson Summer Research Fellowships have also been helpful.
Itβs also important to remember that in order to get external grants, you have to demonstrate some success in your research. Your initial results have to show that you know what youβre doing. Here at Gustavus, support for faculty-student research from the FYRE program, the Presidential grants, and the JohnsonPeterson Fellowships are all important in helping faculty get startedΒ with new projects, especially younger faculty who need this support as they begin building their own research programs.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 32
REASON TO GIVE: Alison Agather β13
MY UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH AT GUSTAVUS AND THE WORK I DO TODAY SEEK TO ANSWER THE SAME TWO QUESTIONS.β
In my ο¬rst year at Gustavus, I picked a January Term course in the Geology Department with Professor Laura Triplett. I was drawn in by the ο¬eld work. For the course, we went to Hallettβs Pond in Saint Peter. Even though it was frozen, we cored down to the lake bed to take sediment samples. We spent the rest of the month analyzing these samples,Β trying to ο¬gure out how the environment around the lake had changed over time. The project required an understanding of many di erent disciplines: geology, chemistry, biology, and history. While it was a challenge, it was also great because I got to meet and work with students from other departments. There were some junior and
Left: Agather at Gustavus as an undergrad with with professor Je Jeremiason. Below: Agather as PhD researcher at the North Pole.
senior science students in the course, and they used the Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer (ICP-MS) to measure the sediment samples for metals such as iron and lead. I remember thinking the ICP-MS was really cool, and I wanted to learn how to use it.
This led me to work in Professor Je Jeremiasonβs lab, where I researched mercury concentrations in lakes and wetlands in northern Minnesota. During my junior year, Je and our undergraduate lab team presented our work at a research conference. There I met my Wright State University graduate school advisor. Because of the work I did in Je βs lab, when I got to Wright State, I already knew how to measure mercury. I just had to learn how to adapt my analytical skills and methods to measuring mercury in ocean water. This became the focus of my doctoral research: mercury levels in the northwest Atlantic Ocean, the western Arctic Ocean, and a small lake in Ohio. After completing my doctorate, I started a prestigious marine policy fellowship with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. While my job today is very di erent from my ο¬rst-year research experience, the basis remains the same. Ultimately, my undergraduate research at Gustavus and the work I do today seek to answer the same two questions: How does our environment change, and how does it a ect us as humans?
ON FYRE
The First Year Research Experience (FYRE) provides research fellowships for students in the summer between their ο¬rst and second years. With the skills Agather gained in the lab student, she went on to earn a PhD in Environmental Sciences from Wright State University. (Her graduate research included a trip to the North Pole, where she measured mercury levels in the Arctic Ocean.) The FYRE program is unique among liberal arts colleges, let alone larger universities. Working with a faculty mentor, students gain the kind of intensive research experience usually reserved for upper-level undergraduates or graduate students. Launched in 2009 with support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Gustavus has remained committed to the program since the initial grant ended. Today, costs are met in part by gifts to the endowment.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 33
βULTIMATELY,
G US TIES
Gusties Are Shining
Greetings from your Board of Directors!
As the pandemic has subsided, this last year has seen a rejuvenation of opportunities to reconnect with our fellow alumni. In June, many returned to campus for a memorable Reunion Weekend with more than 800 attendees. As a proud member of the class of 1982, I can attest that my only disappointment with the weekend was that there was not enough time to attend all the activities that the O ce of Alumni and Parent Engagement and reunion committees arranged for us! In August, more than 1500 members of the Gustavus family did us proud by recording the highest participation of any βcollege nightβ at Gustavus Night at the Minnesota Twins. More recently, we celebrated Homecoming on October 8 with hundreds of Gusties and their families returning to the hill, punctuated by a rainbow of Fall colors framing the day. Gustie alumni are vitally important to the continued success of the College and we are grateful for all you do. Here are just a few examples of how you support current students, fellow alums, and our home on the Hill:
β’ Gusties Care Packs A new initiative to provide a care package and personal note to each of the incoming ο¬rst-years, all funded by alumni. What a wonderful way to welcome new Gusties into the family!
β’ Mentorship Program More than 400 pairs of mentors/mentees connect each year. What a fantastic way to pay it forward by helping to guide a student through the journey of career exploration.
β’ Class O cers These individuals are a key link between the College and alumni, helping us all
stay engaged with Gustavus and our classmates and making Reunion Weekend an event not to be missed.
our
β’ Chapter O cers For those who do not live in Minnesota and ο¬nd it harder to get back to campus, chapters are a great way to reconnect with fellow alumni and friends!
β’ Advisory Boards and Committees These groups include advocates and supporters of music, athletics, the library, various academic departments, and more. The volunteers in these organizations serve the College, its students, and us as alumni.
Now, we have a special request for all of you. As the College continues to navigate a challenging environment for student recruitment, we alumni are a valuable resource to promote this place that is so dear to us. So, spread the word to all potential Gusties on the important impact Gustavus has had on your life, and encourage them to come to campus and take a tour!
Gustavus Adolphus College is a special place that changes lives by giving us the conο¬dence and tools to go out into the world and act on our dreams. Thanks to all of you who stay engaged with Gustavus and support our continued success.
GUSTIES WILL SHINE!
JC Anderson β82 President of the Gustavus Adolphus Alumni Board of Directors
should be sent to: ce of Alumni Engagement,
CLASS NEWS and information to be included in the Alumni section of the Quarterly should be sent to: O ce of Alumni and Parent Engagement, Gustavus Adolphus College, 800 West College Avenue, Saint Peter, MN 56082-1498 alumni@gustavus.edu | 800-487-8437 | gustavus.edu/alumni Alumni Association 34
HOMECOMING 2022
Driving up College Avenue for Gustavus Homecoming 2022, Gusties revisited the magic of campus in the fall: vibrant reds, yellows, and oranges decorated the Hill and sounds of crunching leaves and curious squirrels ο¬lled the air.
Amidst this beauty, Gusties of all ages found their ο¬t on campus from the 35+ events, games, and activities o ered throughout the day. Families learned together from Gustie science clubs, current student musicians, and alumni authors. Hundreds of alumni sang together in celebration of the Gustavus Choirβs 90th Anniversary at the Service of Remembrance, and current and former athletes proudly stood together to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of Title IX.
As the sun set on the Homecoming tent, Gusties closed out this amazing day in community by raising a glass to another successful year and plenty more to come!
2022β23 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. C. Anderson β82, (president) partner/ attorney, Lathrop GPM
Deb Johnson Rosenberg β79, (vice president) retired, director of retirement plan consulting, Stiles Financial Services, Inc.
Amy Zenk James β94, (secretary) sales and outreach director, Meadow Woods Assisted Living
Jessica Martinez β15, (treasurer) Academic Dean for Grade 9, assistant to the principal, Cristo Rey Jesuit High School
Rick Barbari β91, head of IT economics, US Bank
Melinda Moen Batz β86, business manager/ partner, Good Leadership Enterprises
Mark Bergman β79, president and owner, Bercom International, LLC
Mary Booker β91, executive director, student ο¬nancial services, University of Delaware
Sarah Schue ner Borgendale β06, managerrecruiting, inclusion and diversity, Fredrikson and Byron, P.A.
Jen Brandenburg β02, clinical pharmacist, Pediatric Home Service
Jon Brunsberg β79, vice president and CFO, MedASTUTE Consulting, LLC
Tim Donoughue β91, product company counsel, Baker Hughes Incorporated
Torin Dougherty β16, solution architect, Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing
Bruce Ensrud β90, senior ο¬nancial consultant, Parable Wealth Partners
Rebecca Wold Freeman β98, associate pastor, Mount Olivet Lutheran Church
Jillian Hiscock β05, director of college and career success, Genesys Works Twin Cities
Bill Laumann β66, retired schoolteacher/ librarian, Albert Lea ISD #241
Katherine Medbery-Oleson β02, professor, speech communications, Bellevue Community College
Anne Miller β90, principal legal counsel, Medtronic
John Moorhead β68, retired co-owner, Lindskoog Florist
Jace Riggin β16, assistant director of admissions, Macalester College
Alissa Fahrenz Rowley β13, assosciate, Excelsior Energy Capital
Mary Anderson Rothfusz β83, retired attorney
Mark Scharmer β77, retired executive vice president, insurance operations, Federated Mutual Insurance Company
Marcia Stephens β73, retired ο¬nancial advisor
Matt Swenson β06, director of CEO communications, Cargill, Inc.
April Valentine β92, assistant director for immigration, Purdue University Northwest
Lucy Nelson Zanders β77, executive director, Theresa Living Center
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 35
Joanna Olson Kroschel, Forest Lake, is the clinical data abstractor for the stroke program at United Hospital.
Rob Williams, Chanhassen, is an attorney and partner in the real estate department of Best & Flanagan.
Carolyn Carlson Zervas, Stillwater, is a clinical pharmacist at U of M Health Fairview.
RAN INTO A GUSTIE
At Preschool Gymnastics
03|
Kevin Quealy, Brooklyn, NY, has been named the editor of The Upshot, the New York Timesβ statistical thinking and data visualization team.
06|
Adam Langenfeld, Champlin, completed his fellowship training in developmental and behavioral pediatrics at the University of Minnesota and is now a staff physician in developmental pediatrics at Childrenβs Minnesota. 07|
Brian Amundson, Eden Prairie, is the vice president of technology for ATEK Companies.
Ben Richter, Bloomington, works for Nice Guy Technology. 08|
Rachael Chaska, Allentown, PA, graduated from the University of South Florida, Morsani College of Medicine in May and is working in emergency medicine at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
Cara Carlson Peterson, Franklin, WI, is vice president, event planning, conference services, and global investment banking at Baird.
Linda Wallenberg β75 learned the grandson of her longtime friend Susie Bjorling Heim β83 was in Lindaβs preschool gymnastics class at TAGS Gymnastics Academy in Eden Prairie. Susie and Linda met in 1975 when Susie was a camper and Linda was a counselor at SjΓΆlunden Swedish Language camp, founded by Gustavus Swedish professor emeritus Roland Thorstensson and his wife Edi Thorstensson, who worked at the Gustavus library. L to r: Peter Heim β08 Susie, Linda, and Susieβs husband Steve Heim β81, plus Lindaβs granddaughter Layla and grandson Logan.
At a Youth Basketball Tournament
Five former Gustie athletes coached with and against each other at a local youth basketball tournament recently. They donβt have as many wins combined among them as retired coach Mark Hanson β83, but they are passing on their love of athletics, competition, and sportsmanship to a new generation.
L to r: Ryan Barnick β03, Hans Sviggum β03, Cameron Scripture β00, Brent Olson β00, and Brock Peterson β03
At a Chicagoland Band Practice
One day, Jack Sikora β96 wore Gustie gear to band practice in Crystal Lake, IL. Vicki Rundquist β82, a percussionist in the band, asked if he went to Gustavus and played in the Gustavus Band. Turns out they both had! The two had been making music together in the Crystal Lake Community Band for four years without realizing they were both alums.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLYβ|βWINTER 2022 37
GUSTAVUS NIGHT AT THE TWINS
More than 1500 Gustie alumni, families, friends, and current students attended Gustavus Night at the Twins in August. Pre-game began at Gustie-owned First Draft. Birgen Nelson β23
G US TIES
Blake Theisen, Clear Lake, is the senior marketing manager at College of Saint Benedict + Saint Johnβs University in Collegeville. 09|
Christine Dornbusch, Waterloo, IA, is volunteer coordinator/ bereavement counselor for Care Initiatives Hospice.
Anthony Spain, Monticello, completed his MBA from the University of St. Thomas and is a senior manager, finance data analyst for Target.
10|
Katie Peterson, Boise, ID, was a visiting biology professor at Gustavus for three years and is now the education director at Idaho Botanical Garden.
12|
Annika Ferber, Brooklyn Center, was the team athletic trainer for USA IIHF U18 Womenβs World Hockey Championships.
Anthony Mefford, Piedmont, CA, is an assistant clinical professor of neurology at University of California San Francisco and VA Medical Center in San Francisco.
13|
Suzanne Mundhenke Ross, Columbia, MO, graduated from anesthesiology and perioperative medicine residency from the University of Missouri in Columbia.
Taylor Volk, Le Sueur, is the bed allocation management coordinator for Mayo Clinic Health Systems, Mankato.
15|
Scott Williams, Minneapolis, is the senior product manager for SPS Commerce.
16|
Alyssa Maxson Egersett, Shakopee, is a mental health professional for St. Davidβs Center for Child & Family Development.
Gavin L. Egersett, Shakopee, is an accounting supervisor for Optum.
Amie Goblirsch, Waunakee, WI, is a PhD candidate and teaching assistant at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Emily Leslie, Minneapolis, is working as a designer/artist.
Danielle Kirchner Mauren, Sauk Rapids, is the owner and manager of a new event venue called Northern Oaks Events. She was the first to hold her own wedding there in May.
Bailey Volk Schwope, Arlington, is a third grade teacher at Saint Anneβs Catholic School in LeSueur.
manager, international division in London.
18|
Marissa Bogdansky, Carbondale, IL, is owner/ founder of Silver Iris Photography.
Jared Morningstar, Madison, WI, is working as the operations assistant for The Cobb Institute, social media manager for The Center for Process Studies, and content manager for Psychedelic Medicine Association.
McKenna Patrow, Eau Claire, WI, is a mental health therapist at Lakeville Behavioral Health.
19|
Hannah Armstrong, Stanton, is an assistant teacher at Step by Step Montessori.
McKenna Hoffman, Le Center, is an associate account executive for Lockton Companies.
17|
Karena Baldwin, Eden Prairie, is a technical writer for Optum.
David Brazel, Bloomington, is a captain in the U.S. Army and serves as the Battalion S2 for the 23rd Brigade Engineer Battalion, 1-2 Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 7th Infantry Division at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA.
Andrew Malo, Owatonna, who teaches Spanish and world languages at Owatonna High School, was named Teacher of the Year by the Owatonna Education Association.
Agustin Murillo, St. Paul, is an assistant manager for Sherwin Williams.
Lydia Kennedy Reis, England, works for ALDI, Inc. as a district
Jacob Larson, Omaha, NE, is the applications analyst for the City of Omaha.
Rachel Lund, Apple Valley, is a scientist for ARKRAY USA in Edina.
Hannah Nolte, Boston, MA, received her PhD in industrial engineering in May and is working in senior human-centered systems for MITRE Corporation.
20|
Mykaela Otto Thompson, Amery, WI, is a city council member for Amery. 21|
Daisy HernandezBarguiarena, Edina, is a communications associate for Unidos MN.
Cole Pengilly, Le Sueur, is a professional baseball player with the Sioux Falls Canaries.
22|
Andrew Dooley, Blaine, is a graduate assistant at Illinois State University.
Tyler Ebner, La Crosse, WI, is the assistant menβs hockey coach for Fredonia High School in Fredonia, WI.
Justyn Hermel, Saint Peter, is a style advisor for Suitsupply.
WEDDINGS
Danielle Kirchner β16 and Andrew Mauren, on 05/21/22, Sauk Rapids
Bobby Rasmussen β16 and Sabrina Smith β19 on 9/3/22, Princeton
Andra Gulenchyn β17 and Thomas Lindquist β18 on 08/20/22, Minneapolis
Madeline Johnson β17 and Michael Apolloni, on 06/04/22, Golden Valley Ryan Pfeifer β19 and Courtney Wissbaum, on 9/24/22, Minneapolis
Calli Sizer β19 and Joshua Palmquist on 7/31/22, Shakopee
BIRTHS
Jonah, to Nick Sonsteby β04 and Kathryn Riggs Sonsteby β05, in October 2020
Berit, to Eric Risland β07 and Julia Gervais Risland, in July 2022
Piper, to Blake Theisen β08 and Mariah Fouquette Theisen, in November 2021
Veyda, to Kaylee Munson Lundblad β09 and Brady Lundblad, in February 2022 Harlow, to Mike May β10 and Amy Anderson β10, in March 2022
Logan, to Karl Boettcher β11 and Anna Franke Boettcher β16, in January 2022
George, to Julia LawantNelson β12 and Lane Nelson β10, in March 2022
Renee, to Cassandra Quam β13 and Nathan Dexter β13, in June 2022
Rebecca, to Suzanne Mundhenke Ross β13 and Thomas Ross, in March 2022
Asher, to Megan Schroepfer Koenigs β14 and Tyler Koenigs, in December 2021
Ella, to Alyssa Maxson Egersett β16 and Gavin Egersett β16, in September 2021
IN MEMORIAM
Elaine Johnson Matz β45, Perham, on 6/24/22. She was a long-time high school teacher. She taught physical education, English, business, health occupations. and was the school paper advisor. Five children survive her.
Glen L. Larson β49, Anoka, on 6/24/22. A Korean War veteran, he was a long-time educator, golf coach, and school principal. He is survived by two sons, including Jon Larson β84.
Herbert Halverson β50, Grand Rapids, on 6/15/22. He served in the U.S. Navy as a fighter pilot, then went on to become a veterinarian. He is survived by his wife, Jean, and six children.
Margaret βPeggyβ Clubb Jagger β50, on 2/21/22. A former registered nurse, she is survived by her husband, Earl, and five children.
John Zelgart β50, Arlington Heights, IL, on 5/11/22. A World War II Navy veteran, he later had an extensive career as a sales manager with 3M. He is survived by three children.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLYβ|βWINTER 2022 39
Marlys Akerson Chase β51, Minneapolis, on 6/24/22. A wife and mother, she is survived by four children and six stepchildren.
Wilfred Chong β51, Honolulu, HI, on 11/19/21. After receiving his graduate degree, he worked as a chemist at Pearl Harbor. He is survived by his wife, Ethel Chong, and four sons.
Marion Myrland Johnson β51, Minneapolis, on 5/28/22. A former elementary school teacher and apartment manager, she is survived by her husband, John, and three children including Nancy Johnson β86.
Robert R. Johnson β51, Duluth, on 6/28/22. A Korean War veteran, he worked as a controller for Duluth National Bank. He is survived by his wife, Mary, four children, and one stepdaughter.
Richard βDickβ P. Nelson β51, Cloquet, on 7/8/22. A World War II Navy veteran and retired teacher for Cloquet Middle School, he is survived by the love of his life, Linda Bush, and two children.
Beverly Jensen Petersen β51, Sioux Falls, SD, on 5/16/22. She worked as a preschool teacher and desk supervisor for the Sioux Falls YWCA and is survived by four children.
Arden Halk Sanstead β51, Cottage Grove, on 5/21/22. She was a former substitute English teacher for Hastings School District and served as chair for the Hastings Housing and Redevelopment Authority. She is survived by two sons.
Tsugio βTugβ Ikeda β52, Great Falls, MT, on 10/28/21. A World War
II veteran in counterintelligence, he later worked as an elementary educator and school principal. He is survived by his wife, Enid, and two children and two stepchildren.
John Renken β52, Minneapolis, on 5/20/22. A World War II and Korean War veteran, he worked as a chartered property casualty underwriter. He is survived by his three children, their mother, and one stepchild.
Gordon L. Cook β53, Laramie, WY, on 7/4/22. He had a long career teaching biology at Laramie High School and coaching tennis teams. He is survived by his wife, Marcella Cook, and four children.
Joan Ulrich McGroarty β54, on 5/16/22. A former schoolteacher in the Minneapolis School District, she is survived by three sons.
Caryl Wold Wedes β54, on 6/28/22. A wife, mother, and former nurse, she is survived by five children.
James Bristol β55, Cottage Grove, on 7/25/22. He was a retired electronics teacher for the South St. Paul School District and is survived by his wife, Marie Snyder Bristol β55, and five children.
Harris L. Johnson β55, Hallock, on 4/18/22. An Army veteran, he had a lengthy career as manager for Agsco. He is survived by his wife, Maxine, and three children.
Eugene Nei β55, Prior Lake, on 3/19/22. He was a former teacher for the Prior Lake High School for 30 years and is a member of the Gustavus Athletics Hall of Fame. He is survived by his five children.
Ronald Thureen β55, Two Harbors, on 5/24/22. An Army
veteran, he had a professional career in management at various companies. Four children survive him.
Paul Vrudny β55, Baxter, on 5/22/22. An Army veteran, he had a long career as a teacher and coach for Brainerd High School. He is survived by his wife, Myra, and four children.
Audree Anderson β56, Cokato, on 6/1/22. She earned a doctoral degree in English and worked for the Department of Defense schools in Germany, England, Italy, Spain, and Turkey. She is survived by two brothers including Mark Anderson β66.
Gary L. Erickson β56, Minneapolis, on 11/25/21. An Army veteran, he became an engineer with a long career with the US Army Corps of Engineers. He is survived by his wife, Myrna, and two children.
Robert A. Villesvik β56, Stillwater, on 6/20/22. A retired educator for the St. Paul School District, he is survived by his wife, Elizabeth βBetteβ Kocourek Villesvik β57, and three children.
David W. Ahlgren β57, Duluth, on 5/30/22. He worked in research and development for various companies, retiring from Luigino foods. He is survived by his wife, Katherine, and three sons.
Robert R. Berkner β57, Cambridge, on 7/2/22. He was a former educator and middle school counselor for Cambridge School System and survived by his wife, Sharon, and four children.
Orville L. Lind β57, Fernandina Beach, FL, on 6/5/22. A long-time
Lutheran pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church in Chelmsford, MA, he is survived by his wife, Donna, and two children.
B. Claudia Christianson Nimrichter β57, Fort Walton Beach, FL, on 5/6/22. She worked in civil service for the Air Force at Scott AFB, IL, and Dover AFB, DE, and is survived by two sons and a brother, Gerald Christianson β55.
Karin Erickson Gaskell β61, Georgetown, TX, on 8/2/22. A wife and mother, she is survived by her husband, Alfred, and two daughters.
Gary S. Anderson β62, Minneapolis, on 6/12/22. A former Lutheran minister for many years, then later a financial planner and advisor for American Express Financial Services, he is survived by his wife, Catherine, three children including Leslie Anderson β89 and Nathan Anderson β95, their mother, Karen, and three stepchildren.
Barbara Dahlin Johnson β63, Minneapolis, on 6/26/22. She was the former assistant director for education for the Minnesota Board of Nursing and is survived by her husband, Ronald, five children, and a brother, Roger Dahlin β57.
Suzann Peterson Gardin β63, Grand Rapids, MI, on 6/9/22. A retired elementary school teacher, wife, and mother, she is survived by her former husband, Ronald Gardin β63, and four children.
Todd R. Heimdahl β64, St. Paul, on 1/8/22. An accomplished artist, he taught art and art history for 33 years at Minneapolis Community and Technical College. He is
survived by his wife, Carole, and two sons.
Mary Kohlmeyer Tauer β65, Rio Rancho, NM, on 4/28/22. She was a public health nurse working with the Indian Health Service on reservations in North Dakota, Montana, South Dakota and New Mexico. She is survived by her husband, James.
Carla Rudquist Tollefson β67, Ames, IA, on 7/1/22. A freelance writer and retired editor for Iowa State University Press, she is survived by two daughters and two sisters, Kay Rudquist β73, and Geraldine Rudquist Boman β84.
Gregory Henderson β68, Alexandria, on 6/7/22. He held various positions in the equipment industry, lastly as safety director for Rivard Construction, and is survived by his wife, MerriLee, and two sons.
John Bradley Ashford β71, Omaha, NE, on 4/19/22. An attorney who worked in private practice and served one term in the U. S. House of Representatives for Nebraska, he is survived by his wife, Ann, and three children.
Kathy Jo Ray Huijbregts β72, Boulder City, NV, on 7/26/22. A former middle school teacher for Los Angeles Unified School District and founder of LLP Communications, she is survived by a son.
Peggy Johnson Wagner β75, Chocowinity, NC on 5/27/22. She was an elementary school teacher and reading specialist in the Oshkosh (WI) School District. She is survived by her husband, Gary Wagner β73, and two children:
G US TIES GUSTAVUS QUARTERLYβ|βWINTER 2022 40
Jessica Wagner Stanwix β01 and Peter Wagner β04.
Michael Hecht β77, Waseca, on 5/10/22. He worked for various companies, most recently for SOREP Technology in Houston, TX and is survived by three siblings including Miles Hecht β78.
Karen Anderson Eastman β77, Gilbert, AZ, on 4/3/22. She had a lengthy career in banking and as a claims specialist for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. She is survived by her husband, Jerry, and a brother, Kevin Anderson β81.
John McDonough β78, St. Paul, on 5/3/22. He was chief operating officer for Health Prime International and is survived by his wife, Shelly, two sons, and four siblings.
Scott Morton β81, Pearland, TX, on 8/2/22. He had a long career in research and development for the oil and gas industry and is survived by his wife, Cathleen, two children, his parents, and three brothers including Jeff Morton β84.
Jay Englehart β82, St. Louis, MO, on 6/11/22. He was a psychiatrist in private practice at Northwest Psychiatric Associates and later a staff psychiatrist with Southeast Missouri Mental Health, then as its medical director. Jay is survived by his wife, Cynthia, and two stepsons.
Becky Jo Groska β82, Maple Grove, on 6/30/22. She was a senior product manager for Xcel Energy Foundation and is survived by three children, her parents, and a brother.
Thor M. Bolstad β87, Eden Prairie, on 2/22/21. An avid rugby player and coach, he worked
as a school psychologist and is survived by three children.
Mark R. Hagen β92, Chaska, on 7/14/22. A reinsurance broker for more than 30 years, most recently for Guy Carpenter. Mark is survived by his wife, Deanna, four children, his parents, Karen Hegland Hagen β63 and Richard Hagen, and a brother, Daniel Hagen β93.
Christopher A. Olney β93, Minneapolis, on 6/20/22. He was a culinary chef and worked various locations. He is survived by his parents, a brother, and a sister.
REMEMBERING THOMAS WITTY
former softball coach, Saint Peter, on 6/22/21. A former Marine, rehabilitation consultant, and avid sportsman, Tom was the womenβs softball coach at Gustavus from 1991β97. He is preceeded in death by his daughter, Krista Witty Amos β87, and survived by his wife, Jeanne Sletterdahl Witty β64, and daughter, Sara.
REMEMBERING ROGER W. CARLSON β54
former Gustavus Board of Trustee, Minneapolis, on 7/27/22. A U.S. Army veteran, he was president/owner of Carlson Consulting Company. He served for 10 years on the Gustavus Board of Trustees and was inducted in the Gustavus Athletics Hall of Fame for his football prowess. He was awarded a Distinguished Alumni Citation from Gustavus in 1995. He is survived by his wife, Janet Christenson Carlson β53, and four children including Kristin Carlson Vlasak β79, Bradley Carlson β81, and Douglas Carlson β85.
REMEMBERING ANDERS JUSSI BJΓRLING β58
St. Peter, on 6/6/22. The former longtime comptroller in the Gustavus Finance Office, and son of world-renowned tenor Jussi BjΓΆrling and accomplished soprano Anna-Lisa BjoΓΆrling, he grew up in Stockholm, Sweden. He came to America in 1956 to attend Gustavus and met and married his wife, Janet Neidt BjΓΆrling β58. They lived in Sweden for four years, then returned to Saint Peter and opened Swedish Kontur Imports in the basement of their home. Now, 60 years later, it is one of the longest-running private Scandinavian import stores in the U.S. Janet died in 2008. Anders is survived by his wife, Judie Ziemke, and three daughters including Susie BjΓΆrling Heim β83.
Jeffrey Salvevold β94, Minneapolis, on 5/21/22. He was an accountant for Steven Scott Management and is survived by his wife, Katheryn, his parents, and three siblings.
Samuel P. Marten β12, Lodi, WI, on 4/16/22. He was a math major who participated in curriculum II and club and junior varsity hockey while at Gustavus. He is survived by his father, his mother, Paula Nelson Marten β69, and his grandparents.
David T. Roland β16, St. Paul, on 2/1/22. A political science and environmental studies major, he liked to write and was an active participant in political campaigns. He is survived by his mother, Mary, and three sisters.
Marcella Mickelson , former support staff, Rochester, on 5/24/22. She was a clerical worker at various locations while her husband served as a sergeant in the Army during World War II. After the war, they relocated to Saint Peter, where Marcella worked at Gustavus in the Dean of Students
Office for 27 years, retiring in 1986. She is survived by two sons.
Stanley Sheie , former lacrosse coach, New Ulm, on 7/17/22. With a masterβs degree in physical education, he taught and coached for 10 years, then made a second career for himself as a master plumber for Feder Plumbing & Heating. He continued his love for lacrosse by coaching at Gustavus and playing in a Twin Cities league. He is survived by his wife, Karen Sheie, and six children including Margaret Sheie Krull β97 and Sigrid Sheie β99.
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLYβ|βWINTER 2022 41
GUSTIES GATHER WITH NEW GUSTIES
For ο¬rst-years whose parents or grandparents studied on the hill, this academic year carries the joy and nostalgia of continuing the tradition. These are some of the members of the Class of 2026 who were born Gusties.
G US TIES GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 42
1 7 14 6 13 12 19 20 18 23 24 25 28 30 26 32 33 34
Todd Andrix β96, Addison Andrix β26 holding Soren Andrix, Kristen Andrix, Brynn Andrix and Makayla Andrix | 2. Gigi Wait Dobosenski β98, Garek Dobosenski β26, Matt Dobosenski β99 and Gavin Dobosenski | 3. Jack Johnson β65, Carl Eckert β26, Katie Johnson Eckert β97, Judith Jagusch Johnson β69 | 4. Brent Newman, Bailey Newman β26, and Michelle Baker Newman β96 | 5. Walmy βLiseβ Sveen, Erik Erling β26 and Paul Erling (son, of Prof. Bernhard Erling β43) | 6. Lori Schlaak Baertsch β99, Ryan Baertsch, Andrew Baertsch β26 and Eric Baertsch β99 | 7. Carolee Hanks β26 and (grandfather) Rollie Hanks β60 | 8. (Siblings) Nathan Habben β21, Eleanor Habben β26 and Jonas Habben β23 | 9. Stacy Gans Goltz β98, Samara Goltz β26, Emily Goltz, and Elliott Goltz | 10. Julie Heer Heno β97, Kaylie Heno β26, Ellie Heno, and Steve Heno | 11. Michelle Koch, Jimmy Koch β26, and Paul Koch β87 | 12. Katherine Scott Koch β96, Carson Koch β26, Nate Koch, Ben Koch, and Anna Koch | 13. Anna Lundeen-Detisch β23, Elise LundeenDetisch β91, and Henry Lundeen-Detisch β26 | 14. JC McClelland β94 and Eva McClelland β26 | 15. Aunt Julie Dressel Goetll β86, Jack Meiners β26, and Uncle Je Goettl (mother-Michelle Dressel Meiners β90 could not be there, she was moving Jackβs twin brother, Dylan to another college.) | 16. Julia Nelson β26 and Sarah Beth Nelson β97 | 17. Matt LaJoy, Angela Carlson LaJoy β95, Madeline LaJoy β26, Elsie Engman β26, Heidi Engman β24, Kristin Swanson β95, and Jonathan Engman β96. | 18. Jennifer Monge Nichols β93, Halle Nichols, Hudson Nichols β26 and Matt Nichols β92 | 19. Melissa Matz Nungesser β90, Sophie Nungesser β26, and Glen Nungesser | 20. Rebecca Orn, Reese Orn β26, Tommy Orn, and Bradley Orn β95 | 21. Jason Rauk β96, Andrew Rauk, Ellie Rauk β26, Lindsey Rauk, Kate Rauk, and Kimberly Lacher Rauk β96 | 22. Nick Chial, Veronica Chial, Andrew Rygwall β26, Judy Rygwall, and Je Rygwall (parents-Jill Rokala Rygwall β91 and Chad Rygwall are both deceased) | 23. Julie Altman Simacek β81, Charlee Simacek β26, Mark Simacek, and Jack Simacek | 24. Rolf Simonson β97, Andrew Simonson β26, and Megan Cronin Simonson β97 | 25. Darren Strafelda β95, Boden Strafelda β26, and Stephanie Holman-Strafelda | 26. Amy Lindblom Vargo β87, Oscar Vargo β26, and Paul Vargo. | 27. Jim Williams β95, Jane Williams β26, and Susan Williams β94 | 28. Chris Deschneau β01, Cale Deschneau β26, and Beth Deschneau | 29. Vera Laine Stephenson β94 and Nate Stephenson β26 | 30. Aleida George Zollman β98, Adrienne Zollman β26, and Jaiden Zollman | 31. Elizabeth Johnson Fridinger β91, Luke Fridinger β26, and Stephen Fridinger | 32. Lauren Vedeen β26 and Wendy Gilland Vedeen β93 | 33. Robert Maas β97 and Will Maas β26 | 34. Jennifer Roy McCormick β95, Connor McCormick β26, and Tom McCormick | 35 Becky Anderson Fahrenz β87, Benjamin Fahrenz β26, and Lee Fahrenz β87
GUSTAVUS QUARTERLY | WINTER 2022 43
31 2 3 4 5 11 10 9 8 15 16 35 27 21 22 17
Vespers
44
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ALL
Sophia Hillman β24, a Gustavus nursing major, is also Miss Rodeo Minnesota. All summer and fall she o cially represented the sport, greeting folks at rodeos across the state, including at the Hamel Rodeo and Bull Ridinβ Bonanza pictured here. βSome of the main values in the sport of rodeo are faith and community, and those are also some of the core values at Gustavus,β she says. As theyβre also some of her own core values, βItβs been a super cool year for me.β She will compete for Miss Rodeo America in early December.
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