{"id":5420,"date":"2015-12-03T17:51:16","date_gmt":"2015-12-03T17:51:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/?p=5420"},"modified":"2016-02-16T19:58:27","modified_gmt":"2016-02-16T19:58:27","slug":"buy-a-brick","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/2015\/12\/03\/buy-a-brick\/","title":{"rendered":"Buy a brick. Honor a legacy."},"content":{"rendered":"
What started out as a group of first-year Auggies from Washburn High School in Minneapolis commuting to campus for classes led to friendships that have transcended job relocations, marriages, losses of parents, and births of grandchildren. Now those Auggies\u2014dear friends for nearly a half-century\u2014are celebrating their life-long relationships and Augsburg\u2019s role in bringing them together by buying a brick to support the College\u2019s new Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion.<\/p>\n
The group cleaned, painted, and got the house ready to live in. John Hjelmeland \u201970<\/strong> and Paul Mikelson \u201970<\/strong> moved into the house in the fall of 1967.<\/p>\n By winter break, more Auggies moved into the house: John Harden \u201969<\/strong> and Phil Walen \u201970<\/strong> from Washburn High and Terry Nygaard \u201970<\/strong> from Columbia Heights.<\/p>\n The five roommates spent the remainder of their time at Augsburg in the house located where the Charles S. Anderson Music Hall now stands. While the friends all pursued different fields of study, their friendship remained as strong then as it does now.<\/p>\n After graduation, Mikelson married and left for a U.S. Army position in Germany, and Hjelmeland and Walen moved out of state. During that time, the group started to circulate a handwritten chain letter as a way to stay in touch. Each of the friends lived in a different city, and the group kept the letter in circulation for 10 years.<\/p>\n Eventually, all five Auggies returned to the Twin Cities and began to meet for monthly lunches. This past September, Walen passed away, but the remaining four friends continue to meet regularly.<\/p>\n \u201cAugsburg was the place where we cemented our friendship and kept it going all these years,\u201d Mikelson said.<\/p>\n While Walen was still alive, the five former roommates together bought a brick to commemorate their camaraderie and Augsburg\u2019s place in it. The brick, which will be displayed as part of the new Hagfors Center, will be inscribed, simply, \u201c2207 S. 7th St.\u201d<\/p>\n Buy a brick to honor a family member, a teacher, a friendship, or a relationship that defines Augsburg for you. Augsburg will inscribe a brick with your name or the name of someone you\u2019d like to honor. Each brick will be incorporated into the building of the Hagfors Center, creating a lasting legacy for the future of Augsburg.<\/p>\n
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There is still time to participate in the campaign for the Hagfors Center!<\/h3>\n