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含羞草传媒

The Dr. Grace Dyrud Scholarship

Some 含羞草传媒 scholarships are endowed to honor a favorite professor. Some endowments come from happy transfer students who became generous graduates. Others represent a legacy that bridges generations of Auggies. And some, like the Dr. Grace Dyrud scholarship, are all of the above.

Lars Dyrud 鈥97 virtually grew up on the Augsburg campus, taking violin lessons and hanging out in his mother鈥檚 office after school. Until she retired in 2015, his mother, Dr. Grace Dyrud, was a psychology professor and department chair. Widely respected by her colleagues, she was known for her research on gambling and attitude toward the environment, her early support of feminism, and her deep commitment to her students. She taught at Augsburg for more than five decades, and her reverence for the institution was not lost on her children.

鈥淎ll five of my brothers and sisters graduated from Augsburg. I think it was required by law,鈥 jokes Lars, who also notes that Dyruds could well take up an entire page in the alumni directory. Other alumni include his father, an uncle or two, even great uncles鈥攁bout 30 all together, he estimates. But Lars chose Augsburg for more than legacy reasons.

鈥淚 had wanted to be an astronaut, but my corrective lenses kept me out of the program. So I decided to study space science instead,鈥 he says. He became a student and fan of Professor Mark Engebretson, director of Augsburg鈥檚 Center for Atmospheric and Space Sciences. After earning his BA in physics, a Fulbright scholarship in space physics at the University of Oslo, and a Ph.D. in astronomy from Boston University, Lars embarked on a challenging career in science. He holds two patents and is currently senior vice president of machine learning for EagleView, an aerial imagery and data analytics company.

Of course Lars met his wife at Augsburg, too. Mocha Dyrud 鈥97 transferred to Augsburg after her first years at the University of Minnesota, where such classes as introduction to psychology, with 1200 students, left her wanting a smaller academic environment where she could better connect with faculty and peers. She encountered Lars during her first semester, in their introduction to theology class. 鈥淲e definitely noticed each other. I could tell by his comments that he was interesting and smart, but I was too scared to say more than a few words to him. He felt the same way,鈥 she says. Lars remembers first noticing her as 鈥渢he beautiful girl whose homework the professor kept reading aloud as an example of 鈥榩erfect.鈥欌

With a little help from friends, the two finally got together. Professor Engebretson later co-officiated at their wedding. Lars points out that his father, the other co-officiant鈥檚 father, and the father of his best man knew each other at Augsburg. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all interwoven,鈥 he says.

Like Grace, Mocha is a psychology professor, now at Northern Virginia Community College. She notes that the scholarship, initiated by Grace鈥檚 former student, Neil Paulson 鈥77, is designated for a female psychology student. 鈥淕race really gave the majority of her teaching career to Augsburg. Endowing the scholarship seemed like a perfect way to honor that,聽while also helping students financially,鈥 she says.

鈥淲e are particularly excited about the new Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion and the pre-eminence this institution has developed. Augsburg has the best science, math, and physics program in the region,鈥 adds Lars. The Hagfors Center will house the psychology department.

Lars and Mocha live in Virginia with their two children, Finn, 13, and Eli, 10, who enjoy visits from their grandmother. Since retiring, Grace has been busy traveling, pursuing her passions for art and music, and dropping in to see the far-flung Dyrud grandchildren. And who knows? Some of them just may become that next generation of Auggies.

 

 

Regents Fund a Welcoming Entry to New Building

President Pribbenow addressing the Regents on a Hagfors Center tour.

In the regular course of doing its work, members of the Augsburg Board of Regents hear many presentations: presentations that help them shape their decisions about budget, strategic plans, academic priorities, and community engagement. One such presentation caught the imagination of Regent Diane Jacobson.

鈥淲e鈥檇 been focused on the designs and construction of the Hagfors Center and how it would proceed since the funding for the building was secured. Everyone on the board had been so generous already. Then we heard from the Art and Identity Task Force and its initiative to infuse art in the building. I found it a very thoughtful project, designed to add a special dimension to the disciplines in the building. (art and identity link)

鈥淎 few of us thought, it would be wonderful if, as a board, we could do something in the arts for the building. We thought the idea of a welcoming floor was so wonderful.鈥

The welcoming floor described by Diane is a design proposed by artists Stanley Sears and Andrea Myklebust. Made of terrazzo, the floor鈥檚 design elements include references to cycles of the economy, organic chemistry, living water, a heartbeat, and music in harmony. (watch Stan Sears explain terrazzo and how it is made: link)

Diane and the other Regents noted their appreciation of the task force鈥檚 efforts to choose artists whose work illuminated the goals and ideals of the building, the intersection of disciplines, and Augsburg鈥檚 connection to the community.

鈥淭he building insists on being a marriage of disciplines. Not disciplines others would naturally put together. To be welcoming people as a Lutheran university, that is what we should be doing! The Art and Identity Initiative raises up the relationship between disciples, something that invites the entire community into the building to celebrate it together.鈥

It was very important for the Regents as a whole to embed key principles and values the building brings to the institution.

鈥淎s regents we are deeply thankful for the generosity that has led us to the opening of this building and all it represents. We chose a passage from the Bible for the plaque that will recognize the contributors to the floor. We want to communicate the idea of walking in beauty as one path to community.鈥

The passage chosen is from Psalms. 鈥淭each me your way, O LORD, that I may walk in your truth鈥” (Psalm 86:11)

Diane Jacobson has served as a Regent for two years and chairs its Academic Affairs Committee. She is a friend of the University, rather than an alumna, and brings to the Regents her experiences serving as a professor of Old Testament for Luther Seminary and as the leader of the Book of Faith Initiative for the ELCA.

She is energized by the Augsburg and its direction.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a way in which Augsburg is coming into its own as a significant academic community, both here and across the country. It鈥檚 making deep commitment to science and the arts, to multiculturalism, to an open community. The building is designed to function that way鈥攆rom the way it relates to the gardens and to the community. I am excited by the way we keep our identity as a Lutheran University with it also being a welcoming place. I find that exciting!鈥

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