{"id":8357,"date":"2017-11-16T18:55:18","date_gmt":"2017-11-16T18:55:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/?p=8357"},"modified":"2025-04-02T20:52:05","modified_gmt":"2025-04-02T20:52:05","slug":"alumni-class-notes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/2017\/11\/16\/alumni-class-notes\/","title":{"rendered":"Alumni class notes"},"content":{"rendered":"
1950-1959<\/a> | 1960-1969<\/a> | 1970-1979 <\/a>| 1980-1989<\/a> | 1990-1999<\/a> | 2000-2009<\/a> | 2010-2015 <\/a>| Graduate Programs<\/a><\/p>\n Submit a Class Note<\/a><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Carl Vaagenes \u201950<\/strong>, a retired pastor, helped to translate the mission articles of Georg Sverdrup. Vaagenes was inspired to translate Sverdrup\u2019s sermons for future generations and did this as a member of The Georg Sverdrup Society. In 1898, Georg Sverdrup and Sven Oftedal, co-founders of Augsburg Seminary and College, published their sermons at the founding of the Lutheran Free Church but without their names. In \u201cAand og Liv\u201d (\u201cSpirit and Life\u201d), they reveal their mind and heart for the church and for Augsburg.<\/p>\n Stan Baker \u201957<\/strong> received the Ella Stephens Barrett Award for excellence in professional leadership and counseling from the North Carolina Counseling Association during its annual conference in February in Durham, North Carolina.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Garrett \u201cGary\u201d Waldner \u201964<\/strong> and his wife, Nancy, celebrated their 50th anniversary in October. They have three sons and four grandchildren. Waldner is active in the real estate appraisal field, specializing in litigation valuations.<\/p>\n After graduating from Augsburg, Ron Blake \u201966<\/strong> went on to Luther Seminary and has pastored several churches before retiring in 2009 as a pastor with dual membership in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the United Church of Christ. Blake and his wife remain active members of Trinity Lutheran Church in Lynnwood, Washington. They have two children and four grandsons.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n In June, Ray Hanson \u201970<\/strong> retired and moved to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, one day later. He completed his career with Goldbelt Raven, where he provided scientific and technical assistance to the chemical forensics program at the Department of Homeland Security.<\/p>\n In May, Rob Engelson \u201972<\/strong> received the Distinguished Service Award from Ashford University at its commencement ceremony in San Diego. The award acknowledged 21 years as a faculty member and five years as a member of the Faculty Senate.<\/p>\n Thomas Koplitz \u201974<\/strong> has been elected to the Minnesota Baseball Hall of Fame and was inducted at a September ceremony held in St. Cloud, Minnesota.<\/p>\n Phyllis Bartel \u201978<\/strong> published \u201cScooter \u2018n\u2019 Oaks: A Cat Adoption Story\u201d in October 2016. As Bartel\u2019s premier work, this fictionalized tale teaches children about the pet adoption process with compassion and gentle humor and shares similar themes with human adoption.<\/p>\n Dave Boots \u201979<\/strong>, who was inducted into Augsburg\u2019s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2004, was named to the University of South Dakota Vermillion\u2019s Henry Heider Coyote Sports Hall of Fame in October after retiring in 2013 with the 14th most wins in Division II men\u2019s basketball history. He led the Coyotes to 23 consecutive winning seasons from 1989-2011, 10 NCAA Division II tournaments, six NCC titles, and back-to-back Elite Eight appearances in 1993 and 1994. At the Division I level, Boots also won a Great West Championship in 2010. Boots began his coaching career at Anoka Ramsey Community College and spent six years coaching at Augsburg before arriving in Vermillion.<\/p>\n Sally (Hough) Daniels Herron \u201979<\/strong> is the new parish and communications administrator for Valley of Peace Lutheran Church in Golden Valley, Minnesota.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Paul Kilgore \u201980<\/strong> wrote a novel, \u201cThe Broken Key,\u201d that is available through online and retail outlets.<\/p>\n Brian Ammann \u201985<\/strong> has been running the Minnesota School of Basketball in Apple Valley and Golden Valley for 12 years. He is the former head basketball coach at Augsburg.<\/p>\n Lee Ann (Burson) Hohenstein \u201987<\/strong> left a 20-year career in mortgage banking to follow her dream and become a staff writer for the Mille Lacs Messenger. She also opened Restoration Books and Gifts in Crosby, Minnesota.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Dr. Jason Koch \u201993<\/strong> was appointed president of Southdale Pediatrics, where he has worked for the past 16 years.<\/p>\n Chris Terrell \u201994<\/strong> was promoted to vice president of finance for Medtronic\u2019s Cardiac and Vascular Group Global Operations. Terrell joined Medtronic in 2003 and most recently served as a senior director of operations in finance, where he drove finance strategies for nine manufacturing locations.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n The Rev. Sara (Quigley) Brown \u201900<\/strong> has accepted a term-call as the associate interim pastor at Saving Grace Lutheran, Lutheran Congregations in Missions for Christ, in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. She will serve and work alongside its faithful congregation and pastor, the Rev. David Irgens, during a time of great transition and growth. Brown will serve Saving Grace Lutheran for one year until the congregation places a call for a permanent associate pastor. Two years ago Heather Cmiel \u201902<\/strong> left 13 years of communications agency life behind to go corporate. She now serves as global marketing communications strategist within 3M Healthcare. Cmiel spends her free time as president of Minnesota Public Relations Society of America. She also leads a contemporary worship band.<\/p>\n Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin \u201903<\/strong> is the founder and director of the Rural Enterprise Center, a program of Main Street Project, a nonprofit organization focused on rural development. Haslett-Marroquin also serves on the boards of the Northfield Area Foundation, the Northfield Area United Way, and Fifth Bridge, a nonprofit organization promoting volunteerism.<\/p>\n Ryan Bosshart \u201905<\/strong> is a vice president of services at phData, a global leader in big data consulting and managed services. Most recently, Bosshart was a principal sales engineer at Cloudera.<\/p>\n Michelle Dirtzu \u201906<\/strong> is a new marketing manager at Pacific Trellis Fruit\/Dulcinea Farms based in Los Angeles, California. Dirtzu has 10 years of experience in the grocery-retail-produce business. Previously, she was a marketing director for North Shore Living Herbs, in marketing with Flagstone Foods, and in brand management with Supervalu. Dirtzu earned a Master of Business Administration degree from Opus School of Business at the University of St. Thomas in 2014.<\/p>\n Brenda Valentine \u201906<\/strong> welcomed her son, Jackson James Valentine Rice, in April.<\/p>\n Tony Landecker \u201908<\/strong> serves as a portfolio manager in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development\u2019s Minneapolis-St. Paul field office and is responsible for assisting with the management of local housing stock. Landecker was named the Minnesota Civil Servant of the Year by HUD\u2019s Federal Executive Board for helping others find the comfort of a home in the aftermath of a disaster. In 2016, he left his home and family to spend time helping Baton Rouge flood victims, leading a team that found permanent housing for 130 families initially placed in temporary shelters.<\/p>\n Curtiss Schreiber \u201908<\/strong> is now an associate at the law firm Donohue Brown Mathewson & Smyth LLC in Chicago.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Denielle (Johnson) Stepka \u201911<\/strong> and Timothy Stepka<\/strong> were married July 15 in Prior Lake, Minnesota. Their ceremony was officiated by Josh Corrigan \u201911<\/strong>, and their wedding party included Augsburg alumni Katie (Christensen) Beadell \u201911, Korri (Yule) Corrigan \u201911, Tim Lund \u201912, Amy Jo Opsal \u201912, and Tyler Phillips \u201912.<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n
\n1950<\/h2>\n
1952<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Millie Nelson \u201952<\/strong> received a Spirit of Augsburg Award at Homecoming in recognition for her dedication to Â̲èÖ±²¥. Before retiring, Nelson worked at Augsburg for decades. In her role as Christensen Center manager, she guided student assistants who described her as professional, competent, knowledgeable, and kind. These former students acknowledged that Nelson embodied the spirit of Augsburg.<\/p>\n1957<\/h2>\n
1964<\/h2>\n
1966<\/h2>\n
1968<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Bruce Benson \u201968<\/strong> received a Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming. Benson served as campus pastor at St. Olaf College for 30 years and has been a board member at church camps in Minnesota, Montana, and Ohio. He graduated cum laude from Augsburg with a Bachelor of Arts in English, earned his Master of Divinity degree from Luther Seminary in 1972, and further earned a degree in Sacred Theology from Yale Divinity School in 1980. Benson hosts a radio program called, \u201cSing for Joy,\u201d which is broadcast on 140 radio stations in the United States, carried by cable networks, and broadcast in 40 countries in and near Africa.<\/p>\n1970<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Mark Francis \u201970<\/strong> received a Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming and was recognized for his leadership in the Arizona school system. After graduating from Augsburg with a music degree, Francis founded the Arizona School for the Arts in 1995. ASA became one of the top charter schools in the state. Today, Francis is a deputy associate superintendent within the Arizona Department of Education. He is an active member of Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church, which he has served in a number of capacities, including as congregational president, treasurer, and music leader.<\/p>\n1972<\/h2>\n
1973<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Terry Lindstrom \u201973<\/strong> received a Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming. After graduating from Augsburg with degrees in chemistry and biology, Lindstrom received his doctorate in biochemistry with a pharmacology minor in 1977. He went on to complete postdoctoral research at Michigan State University from 1978 to 1979. During his career, Lindstrom led research teams that obtained patents for prescription medications Evista and Cymbalta. In addition to Lindstrom\u2019s many scientific achievements, he and his wife, Janet Lindstrom, have provided 16 full Undergraduate Research and Graduate Opportunity summer scholarships for Augsburg students during the past five years.<\/p>\n1974<\/h2>\n
1976<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Leah Abdella \u201976<\/strong> retired in 2016 from a 40-year teaching career in the field of special education. At Augsburg, Abdella earned a double major in music and music therapy as one of the first three music therapy majors. Abdella stays fulfilled in retirement through volunteer work and flute performance at assisted living residences, nursing homes, and churches. She also stays active in ballet classes and yoga. She is a former member of the Andahazy Ballet Company.1977<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Augsburg honored Inez Bergquist \u201977<\/strong> with a Distinguished Alumni Award at Homecoming. As the current president of Waltman Associates, Bergquist has more than 35 years experience in fundraising and is an expert in the area of nonprofit management. She served on the Â̲èÖ±²¥ Alumni Board for eight years and on the Augsburg Parent Council for four years. Bergquist authored several books on families of wealth including the \u201cBook of Minnesota Family Trees.\u201d She also is a Wells Foundation board member.<\/p>\n1978<\/h2>\n
1979<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Former hockey and football player Paul Holmquist \u201979<\/strong> was inducted into the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame. Holmquist was a key member of Augsburg teams that dominated in the late 1970s, earning the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national title in 1979 and qualifying for NAIA national tournament play all of Holmquist\u2019s four seasons. The teams he competed with also won Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference titles in 1978 and 1979. He was named a team MVP in the 1978-79 season, the same time period in which he earned All-MIAC Honorable Mention honors.<\/p>\n1980<\/h2>\n
1985<\/h2>\n
1987<\/h2>\n
1989<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Devoney Looser \u201989<\/strong> published a new book, \u201cThe Making of Jane Austen,\u201d which was named in Publishers Weekly\u2019s list of Best Summer Books of 2017 (nonfiction).1991<\/h2>\n
<\/a><\/strong>Kristin Dragseth Wiersma \u201991<\/strong> had an outstanding volleyball career at Augsburg, an accomplishment that earned her induction into the Athletic Hall of Fame. Wiersma played three seasons of volleyball, earning All-MIAC and Academic All-MIAC honors in 1990, and All-MIAC Honorable Mention honors in 1989. She remains in the top 10 players in school history in three career statistical categories: kills per-set, attack percentage, and digs per-set. A team co-captain in 1990, Wiersma also served as an assistant coach at Augsburg in 1991.<\/p>\n1992<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Athletic Hall of Fame inductee Juli Gustafson \u201992<\/strong> played two years of softball at Augsburg earning All-MIAC honors as a shortstop in both 1991 and 1992, while also earning National Fastpitch Coaching Association All-West Region honors in 1991. Her .395 career batting average is the third-best in school history. She also ranks third in career slugging percentage and sixth in career doubles. Gustafson was a member of Auggie teams that went 47-22 in her two seasons.<\/p>\n
Though he only competed in one season of wrestling at Augsburg, Bret Sharp \u201992<\/strong> made the most of it. He went 43-2-1 with 15 pins and 95 takedowns, won the MIAC title at heavyweight, and finished third at the NCAA Division III national tournament in the 1991-92 season, where he helped to clinch a second-place national team finish for the Auggies. Sharp was inducted into the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame. He competed his first three seasons at Drake University in Iowa.1993<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Wrestling star Gary Thompson \u201993<\/strong> was inducted into the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame. A four-year competitor in wrestling, Thompson completed his Auggie career with a 91-40-1 record, finishing fourth at the 1993 NCAA Division III national championships and earning All-American honors. He was a MIAC champion, a National Wrestling Coaches Association Scholar All- American, and a two-time Academic All-MIAC honors student-athlete. Thompson was a member of Augsburg squads that won the NCAA national championship in 1993 and finished second and third in other years.<\/p>\n1994<\/h2>\n
1995<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Dual sport athlete Marty Alger \u201995<\/strong> was inducted into the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame. In football, Alger set an Augsburg program record for career rushing yardage, which stood until 2014. In 1992, he became the first Auggie ever to rush for 1,000-plus yards in a season. He earned All-MIAC honors in football in both 1992 and 1993. As an Auggie wrestler, he qualified for the 1993 NCAA Division III national tournament after winning the MIAC title at 190 pounds.<\/p>\n1997<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame inductee Eric Rolland \u201997<\/strong> was a leader on some of the most successful men\u2019s golf teams in school history. He led squads that won the MIAC championship in 1995 and recorded second-place finishes in 1994 and 1996, while competing in three straight NCAA Division III national tournaments. Rolland earned All-America honors in 1995, All-District honors in 1997, and All-MIAC honors in 1995 and 1996. Since 2014, he has served as Augsburg\u2019s men\u2019s and women\u2019s golf head coach.<\/p>\n1999<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Elizabeth (Petrik) Brown \u201999<\/strong> had an outstanding goaltending career on the Augsburg women\u2019s soccer team, an accomplishment that earned her induction into the Athletic Hall of Fame. Brown started all but one game of her collegiate career, finishing with 34 career victories, including a then-school-record 13 in 1995. She stands second in school history in career shutouts, fourth in career wins, and eighth in career win-loss percentage. Her 1.69 career goals-against-average is 10th-best in school history.<\/p>\n2000<\/h2>\n
\n
This May, Lewis Nelson \u201900<\/strong> graduated from the University of Virginia\u2019s Darden School of Business with a Master of Business Administration degree. Nelson left a 15-year military and government career and is seeking the next challenge. Nelson resides in Charlottesville, Virginia, with his three children.2001<\/h2>\n
\n
Katie (Koch) Code \u201901<\/strong>, director of alumni and constituent relations at Â̲èÖ±²¥, married Chris Code in April during an intimate ceremony at the Guthrie Theater\u2014where the couple met while both on staff. The wedding was officiated by Code\u2019s father, the Rev. Jack Koch, and was witnessed by sibling Jason Koch \u201993 and sister-in-law Heather Johnston \u201992.2002<\/h2>\n
Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame inductee Chrissy (Baune) Bloemendal \u201902<\/strong> was a 16-time All-MIAC selection in cross country (three times) and track and field (13 times). The team\u2019s No. 1 runner her final three seasons in cross country, Bloemendal finished sixth in the MIAC championships in 2001 and 13th in 2000. In track and field, she won the MIAC title and qualified for the NCAA Division III outdoor national championships in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 2002, finishing ninth nationally.[\/block<\/p>\n2003<\/h2>\n
2005<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Allison (Cornell) Broughton \u201905<\/strong> and Matt Broughton \u201906<\/strong> welcomed new baby Nicholas James in June. Nicholas joins big brother Calvin, age 4.<\/p>\n
Rebecca (Welle) Winters \u201905<\/strong> and Paul Winters \u201907<\/strong> welcomed a daughter, Maisy Beverly, in May. She joins siblings Max, who is six years old, and Millie, who is three years old.2006<\/h2>\n
2007<\/h2>\n
<\/a>A managing partner of business planning at the American Public Media Group, Danielle Stellner \u201907<\/strong> received a First Decade Award at Homecoming. After graduating from Augsburg, Stellner went on to earn a Master of Business Administration degree from the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota in 2016. She was recruited for the board of Isuroon and Secretary, and she is the active co-chair of the AWE Philanthropy Council at Augsburg. In addition, Stellner serves the Friendship Academy of the Arts as a board member and expansion committee member.<\/p>\n2008<\/h2>\n
2009<\/h2>\n
Matt Tonsager \u201909<\/strong>, co-owner of Gullton Wood, and Melissa (Moberg) Tonsager \u201910<\/strong> welcomed a daughter, Adalind Kay Tonsager, in April.2011<\/h2>\n
<\/a>Jennifer Weber \u201911<\/strong> received a Spirit of Augsburg Award at Homecoming for her dedication to Minneapolis\u2019 Cedar- Riverside community and in recognition for the projects she has initiated in the Twin Cities area. Before graduating from Augsburg with a triple major in emotional\/ behavioral disabilities, learning disabilities, and American Indian studies, Weber created an American Indian resource library for the Anoka-Hennepin Indian Education Program. Weber has been involved in many community projects and is a crisis prevention and interventions trainer at the Charter School Special Ed Network. She is also a certified school coach, teacher, and member of the Cedar Riverside Community School Board.
<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n2012<\/h2>\n