Thursday, January 5, 2012
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Public Safety and Facilities Announcements

Parking Permit Sales for Spring Term

Parking Sales for Day Students opens to ALL class years at 8:30 AM tomorrow (FRIDAY).

Parking sales for Fac/Staff surface lot permits are on now. Underground permits are available for Fac/Staff purchase at 8:30 AM tomorrow (FRIDAY).

Transportation and Parking information is available on the Public Safety website.
Use the following quick sheet for basic information about transportation options and parking permit sale dates for the rest of the week. http://web.augsburg.edu/dps/spring_2012_parking.pdf

If you purchased a year long parking permit, you do not need to register again for the Spring. Check your Parking Services History page if you are un-sure of your permit contract.

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Teaching and Learning

Spring Mindful Dialogue and Reading Circles

Mindful Dialogues – A New Culture of Learning
Douglas Thomas and John Seeley Brown's A New Culture of Learning: Cultivating the Imagination for a World of Constant Change, led by Annette Gerten.

Mindful Dialogues is a series of conversations designed to collectively examine issues relevant to higher education. During the spring, is leading dialogues on. James Duderstadt, President Emeritus of the University of Michigan described this work as, "A provocative and extremely important new paradigm of a ‘culture of learning,' appropriate for a world characterized by continual change. This is a must read for anyone interested in the future of education."

All sessions are held from 2:00-3:30 on Thursdays in Lindell 202. Each session includes a facilitated conversation about the reading and healthy snacks. Sessions will be held:

January 19 – Arc-of-Life Learning, A Tale of Two Cultures, and Embracing Change (Ch. 1-3)
February 16 – Learning in the Collective and The Personal With the Collective, and (Ch. 4-5)
March 15 – We Know More Than We Can Say; Knowing, Making, and Playing; and Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out (Ch. 6-8)
April 12 – A New Culture of Learning for a World of Constant Change (Ch. 9)

If you would like to participate in these sessions, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).


The Humanities and Democracy
Martha Nussbaum's Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities, organized by Marty Stortz and Merilee Klemp.

In this brief, but rich book, Martha Nussbaum argues the importance of the humanities to democracy. She believes that Americans increasingly treat education as though its primary goal were to teach students to be economically productive rather than to think critically and become knowledgeable and empathic citizens. She argues that this focus on profitable skills has eroded our ability to criticize authority, reduced our sympathy with the marginalized and different, and damaged our competence to deal with complex global problems. The loss of these basic capacities jeopardizes the health of democracy.

Faculty and staff are invited to participate in sessions to discuss this book and take a trip to St. Scholastica in Duluth, MN to hear Nussbaum lecture on February 23rd. By asking faculty/staff to lead each session, we hope not only to discuss her thesis, but to demonstrate it. Sessions will be held:

January 17, OGC 113, 3:40-5:00 pm – 1: The Silent Crisis (Marty Stortz & Merilee Klemp) and 2: Education for Profit, Education for Democracy (Jacqui DeVries)
January 31, OGC 100, 3:40-5:00 pm –3: Educating Citizens and 4: Socratic Pedagogy (Phil Adamo)
February 7, OGC 100, 3:40-5:00 pm - 5: Citizens of the World and 6. Cultivating Imagination (John Schmit)
February 21, OGC 100, 3:40-5:00 pm –Implications for Augsburg (Marty Stortz & Merilee Klemp)
February 23, 7:30 pm, Mitchell Auditorium, St. Scholastica, Duluth, MN – "Why Democracy Needs the Humanities" (Martha Nussbaum)

To register for this book group, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).


Social Learning
David Brooks' The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Virtue led by Jacqui DeVries.

Wednesday, January 25, 12:15-1:15, OGC 100
Thursday, February 23, 3:10-4:30, OGC 100
Wednesday, March 28, 12:15-1:15, OGC 112
Thursday, April 19, 3:10-4:30, OGC 100

New York Times columnist Brooks attempts in The Social Animal to explain why so many of our contemporary social problems and inequalities have proven so intractable. Weaving insights from sociology, psychology, history and brain science into an engaging narrative reminiscent of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Emile (a classic study of how people learn), Brooks tries to "explain how these findings about the deepest recesses of our minds should change the way we see ourselves, raise our kids, conduct business, teach, manage our relationships and practice politics." His work is certainly not without critics, but his insights and findings can be valuable to educators, who grapple on a daily basis with the implications of his observation that "we're not rational animals, or laboring animals; we're social animals. We emerge out of relationships and live to bond with each other and connect to larger ideas."

To register for this book group, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).

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Embedding Diversity and Global Learning

This series of workshops focuses on Augsburg's Model of Diversity and Global Learning and how it is being used to help embed diversity and global learning in the curriculum and co-curriculum. These sessions will be held from 3:15--5:00 on Mondays.

January 30, Riverside - Interpersonal Competence – using Intergroup Dialogue and other communication tools to develop empathy and improve relations with others (Laura Boisen, Nancy Rodenborg, and Vivian Jenkins-Nelson)
February 20, OGC 100, - Intercultural Competence – using cultural immersion to develop better understanding of other cultures (Orv Gingerich and Cheryl Leuning)
April 2, OGC 100 – Personal Competence – using self-assessment tools to better understand self (Tom Morgan and Velma Lashbrook)

To rsvp for these sessions, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).

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CTL & Dean's Grant Applications Due

International Travel Grant Applications due January 15
Two competitive grants are available for international travel during FY13 (June 1, 2012-M1y 31, 2013). These grants pay up to $2000 toward travel to present at an international conference. Applications should be submitted using the standard applications for Professional Travel on the CTL website. Those applications dated January 15 or earlier will be considered for this award.

Dean's Internationalization Summer Travel Applications due January 15
Two competitive internationalization travel grants (up to $2500 for airfare) are available to support teaching, scholarship, or service collaboration with Augsburg International Programs or Partner Institutions that facilitate internationalizing the Augsburg campus and curriculum. Applications are due January 15.

Hoversten Peace Seminar Applications due February 1
The next biennial Hoversten Peace Seminar will be June 1-9, 2012 in El Salvador. This is an opportunity for faculty, staff, and students to experience a Center for Global Education (CGE) program together, at a subsidized cost ($1090 for faculty and staff, $890 for students). The deadline for applications is February 1. More information is available on the CGE website (http://www.augsburg.edu/global/).

Faculty Summer Scholarship Grant Applications due March 15
Two Dean's Summer Scholarship Grants ($4000) and two Grangaard Summer Scholarship Grants ($2000) are available to support faculty summer scholarship activities. Applications should be submitted electronically no later than March 15. For more information and to receive an application form, contact Velma Lashbrook (lashbroo@augsburg.edu.)

Instructional & Course Design Grant Proposals due March 15
Up to eight Instructional and Course Design Grants ($3000 each) are available to support faculty summer course design activities, using L. Dee Fink's Creating Significant Learning Experiences and D. Randy Garrison & Norman D. Vaughan's Blended Learning in Higher Education. The purpose of these grants is to support the development of instructional design skills, as well as their application to a specific course. Tim Pippert and Cari Maguire serve as consultants for grant recipients. Applications are due no later than March 15. For more information and a proposal form, and to submit applications, contact Velma Lashbrook (lashbroo@augsburg.edu).

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Blended Learning Series

Blended learning has come to mean everything from web-enhanced face-to-face learning to, but not including, courses that are fully online. Integrating online technologies can enhance and enrich learning; online tools also help differentiate instruction. A recent meta-analysis reported by the U.S. Department of Education found that blended learning produced higher performance on learning outcomes than either online or face-to-face learning.

The Blended Learning Series, co-sponsored by IT, is offered from 8:30-10:00 on Third Wednesdays in Lindell 202, and includes the following spring workshops:

January 18 – Digital Video and Audio Tools (Anita Fisher, Scott Krenz, and Nathan Lind)
February 15 – Web Access: Universal Online Design Principles (Hans Wiersma, Eric Strom, and CLASS resources)
March 14 – Online Assessment Techniques and Academic Integrity (Scott Krajewski and Emily Hoisington)

If you plan to attend any of these sessions, please rsvp to Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu)

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Core Curriculum and Graduation Skills Workshops

AugCore is Augsburg's general education curriculum. This series introduces the curriculum, the first year Augsburg Seminar, the graduation skills, the concept of vocation, and the Keystone Seminar. The four graduation skills – critical thinking, quantitative reasoning, writing, and speaking – are embedded in every curriculum. Anyone who teaches a course with the embedded skill is expected to attend the appropriate workshop. These workshops, co-sponsored with General Education, help prepare faculty to understand the curriculum and effectively teach the graduation skills. Spring workshops will be held on Tuesdays, 3:00-5:00 (except the last one).

February 21, Marshall Room– Writing (Kathy Swanson and Jennifer Bankers-Fulbright)
March 27, Marshall Room – Quantitative Reasoning (John Zobitz and Stacy Freiheit)
April 17, OGC 100– Vocation and the Keystone Seminar (Mark Tranvick and Lori Brandt Hale)
May 21, 9:00-4:00, OGC 113 – AugSem and AVID Strategies (Lori Brandt Hale and Joe Cusco)

If you plan to attend any of these sessions, please rsvp to Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu)

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Focus on Our Somali Neighbors

To serve our neighbors and be inclusive of our Somali students, we need to learn more about them. This year, CTL in conjunction with the Sabo Center and Pan-Afrikan Student Services is offering a series of opportunities to learn more. These include:

January 24, OGC 100, 3:30-5:00 – Forum on Historical and Cultural Context of Somalia (Dahir Jabreel, Frankie Shackelford, and panel)
February 14, 3:30-5:00, OGC 113 – Faculty Experiences in Somali Community Engagement (Mary Laurel True and faculty panel)
March 13,3 :30-5:00, OGC 100 – Somali Student Experience at Augsburg (Mohamed Sallam and student panel)
April 10, 2:00-5:00. meet in OGC Atrium – Walking Tour of Our Neighborhood with Mary Laurel True and Steve Peacock, Sabo Center

To rsvp for these sessions, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).

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CTL Night at the Theater - February 9

During both fall and spring semesters, CTL buys tickets to an Augsburg theater production and offers them to faculty, staff, and their significant others. Theater offers a unique way of learning or knowing – from stories that touch our hearts and mind. Experiencing it together adds a social dimension that allows us to discover what the stories mean to others and what new possibilities they see. Through theater we can be healed and transformed, as well as entertained. In addition to the performance, participants engage in an informal reception and discussion with the director and cast. All productions are in the Tjornhom-Nelson Theater. This spring, we have reserved tickets for:

February 9, 2012 - 365 Days/365 Plays, Directed by Martha Johnson
In the fall of 2002, Suzan-Lori Parks (Pulitzer-prize winning playwright) decided to take on the challenge of writing one play a day for a full year. 365 Days/365 Plays is the successful result, featuring 365 short plays whimsically exploring such divergent topics as sex, war, fairy tales, Indian mythology, American historical figures, love, politics, race, contemporary celebrities--and numerous other issues from American life. The world premiere of these plays was an extraordinary event: From 2006 to 2007 more than 700 theaters in major cities across America performed various pieces or sections from Parks' cycle. This production we will include selections from this body of work to create an entertaining, thought-provoking, and imaginative assortment of contemporary theater pieces.

Reservations are taken on a first-come, first-served basis. If you would like to attend this production, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).

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Foundational Series on Student Learning

These workshops address basic teaching strategies for creating learning-centered experiences. They are held on the second Tuesday of each month from 8:00-9:30 am in OGC 100. Spring sessions include:

February 14 – Designing and Assessing Written Assignments (Kathy Swanson)
March 13 – Designing and Assessing Group Assignments (Kristen Chamberlain)
April 10 – Integrating Online Learning Technologies (Cari Maguire and Scott Krenz)

If you plan to attend any of these sessions, please rsvp to Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu)

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Leadership Series

This series is designed for all campus leaders, and is offered on Tuesdays. It includes the following spring sessions:

January 17, 2011, OGC100, 4:00-6:00 – Relationship Building: Developing Intercultural Competence (Karen Lokkesmoe)
February 14, 2012, OGC100, 4:00-6:00 – Influencing: Adapting to Interpersonal Differences (Brad Lashbrook)
March 13, 2012, Marshall, 4:00-6:00 – Executing: Leading Teams (Aaron Griess)
April 24, 2012, Marshall, 4:15-6:00 – Innovating: Facilitating Social Change (Paul Pribbenow)

For more information, please contact Velma Lashbrook (lashbroo@augsburg.edu). To rsvp for this series, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu).

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Well-Being Series

CTL sponsors a series focused on well-being. It includes a broad look at well-being based on Rath & Harter's book Well-Being: The Five Essential Elements. This monthly series is held 12:00-1:30 pm on the second or third Friday in the Augsburg Room, and includes a copy of the book and a diagnostic. It consists of the following spring sessions:

January 20 – Social Well-Being (Glenda Rooney)
February 17 – Financial Well-Being (Ashok Kapoor and Stephanie Ruckel)
March 16 – Physical Well-Being (Tony Clapp)
April 13 – Community Well-Being (Andrea Turner)

If you would like to participate in these sessions, please contact Sarah Hedstrom (hedstrom@augsburg.edu). If you sign up, you are expected to attend at least 4 sessions.

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General Announcements

Spring Production Auditions

TITANTIC ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS!
By Hristo Boytchev-Orlovski
Directed by Barbra Berlovitz
AUDITIONS: January 18th (3:30pm-6:30pm) and 19th (6:30-9:30pm)
SIGN UPS ARE POSTED ON THE THEATER DOORS!
Callbacks January 20th
IN THE GREEN ROOM

A story of four vagabonds living at an abandoned little railway station, forgotten by God and people, where no train has stopped for a long time. Everything changes when a chest is thrown out of a passing train, and a mysterious individual emerges from it.
The four inconspicuous heroes of the play philosophize, lightly and unpretentiously, about what is the truth, where are the limits between reality and fiction, what reality really is. Boytchev's funny little people are dreamers full of profound feelings, searching for themselves and trying to find their connections with the world. A perspicuous, bitter-funny and very subtle diagnosis of the condition of the contemporary man.

FOR AUDITIONS:
Please prepare 2 pieces
-A short monologue of modern text- your choice
-A silent piece with a prop
THE TOTAL TIME OF BOTH PIECES TOGETHER SHOULD BE NO LONGER THAN 2 MINUTES!

MUSICIANS AND MAGICIANS:
If you have experience composing music or producing magic tricks and would like to lend your expertise to this production, contact stage manager Liz Behnke.

QUESTIONS? Email stage manager Liz Behnke: behnkee@augsburg.edu
The Show performances are: April 13, 14, 19, 20, 21 at 7 p.m. and 15, 22 at 3 p.m. in the Tjornhom-Nelson Theater

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Event Announcements

Billy Mills Event

Billy Mills, 1964 Olympic Gold Medalist in 10,000 Meter run, will present here at Augsburg College on Friday, January 13, 2012 at 7 PM in the Chapel. He is an amazing speaker who motivates and inspires by telling his story. Please join us!! Free and open to everyone!!

Billy Mills was born and raised on the Pine Ridge (Lakota) Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Although Pine Ridge is very rich in culture and spirit, it is continually recognized economically as one of the poorest communities in America with unemployment reaching 80%.

Billy was orphaned by the age of 12 and sent to boarding schools. He graduated from high school at Haskell Indian School. Billy became involved in distance running and earned an athletic scholarship to the University of Kansas. Never winning a major race in track and field or cross country, he continued to show promise by his performances, making NCAA and AAU All-American seven times. Upon graduating from the University of Kansas, Billy was commissioned an officer in the United States Marine Corps., and continued training for the Olympic Team. He made the Olympic Team in two events, the marathon and the 10,000 meter run. He had trained his body, mind, and soul for "Peak Performance." And the world was about to see the greatest upset in Olympic history unfold.

Today Billy is an accomplished businessman, author, and National Spokesperson for Christian Relief Services. As National Spokesperson, he has helped raise over 500 million dollars in cash and in-kind for charities worldwide. He has received five honorary doctorates, and is the recipient of the Distinguished Service Citation, the highest honor that the University of Kansas Alumni Association can bestow upon an individual to acknowledge outstanding achievement for the betterment of mankind. A major motion picture has been made about Billy, titled "Running Brave," and has been a positive influence on many of our American youth. Billy Mills was recognized on several end-of-the-millennium lists, including being chosen as Sports Illustrated's Athlete of the Century for the state of South Dakota and Runners World Magazine the second greatest Olympic moment. In 2009, his race was chosen by Running Times Magazine as the greatest distance race on the track in the history of the Olympics. He is the only person from the Western Hemisphere to ever win the Olympic 10,000 Meter Run.

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Keeping Track of Auggies

No postings


Auggie Athletics

Auggies Move to No. 2 in Wrestling Rankings

http://athletics.augsburg.edu/news/2012/1/4/wres010412.aspx?path=wrestling

MINNEAPOLIS -- The Augsburg College wrestling team shot up five spots to the No. 2 position in the latest National Wrestling Coaches Association Division III national rankings, it was announced on Tuesday.

Augsburg, which had been ranked No. 7 in the first half of the season, moved up to the No. 2 position behind defending national champion Wartburg (Iowa). Last weekend, the Auggies finished ahead of then-No. 5 Cornell (Iowa) and then-No. 6 St. John's at the Citrus Invitational, a tournament that featured five teams ranked in the top 30 in the Division III national rankings.

Augsburg will take its No. 2 national rankings into the NWCA Division III National Duals, to be held this Saturday and Sunday (1/7-8) at the Prairie Capital Convention Center in Springfield, Ill. The Auggies are seeded No. 2 in the 16-team Division III bracket and will face Rhode Island College in its opening match on Saturday at 11 a.m.

In the 10-year history of the NWCA Division III National Duals, Augsburg has won the event five times (2002, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010), placed second three times (2003, 2004, 2006) and placed third twice (2008, 2011). Augsburg is 35-5 in its history at the Division III National Duals, and 40-14 all-time in National Duals events (prior to 2002, the defending Division III national titlist was among championship teams invited to compete in the Division I National Duals).

This year's Division III National Duals bracket includes 15 teams ranked in the top 30 nationally, including seven of the top 10 teams -- No. 1 Wartburg, No. 2 Augsburg, No. 3 Ithaca (N.Y.), No. 4 Wisconsin-La Crosse, No. 7 St. John's, No. 9 Elmhurst (Ill.) and No. 10 Olivet (Mich.).

Six Auggies are ranked in the top 10 nationally in their individual weight classes, including two No. 1-ranked wrestlers -- 149-pounder Tony Valek (SR, Belle Plaine, Minn./Scott West) and heavyweight Chad Johnson (SO, Ferryville, Wis./De Soto HS). Orlando Ponce (SR, Hialeah, Fla./Hialeah-Miami Lakes HS) is ranked No. 2 at 165 pounds. Will Keeter (SO, Twin Falls, Idaho) is ranked No. 5 at 141, as is Brad Baus (SR, Mukwonago, Wis.) at 197. Tom Kuehn (FY, Fargo, N.D./West Fargo HS) is ranked No. 10 at 133.

A two-time national tournament runner-up and three-time national tournament qualifier, Valek has put together a strong campaign at 149 pounds, currently standing unbeaten at 18-0. Of his 18 wins, 16 have been bonus-point victories (pins, technical falls, major decisions). He has won titles at all four tournaments he has competed in this year -- the Auggie-Brute-Adidas Open on Jan. 19, the Minnesota State Moorhead Dragon Open on Dec. 3, the St. Cloud State Husky Open on Dec. 10 and the Citrus Invitational Dec. 29-30.

A seventh-place national finisher last season, Johnson has a 16-1 record, with his lone loss coming to the top-ranked wrestler in Division II, Jake Kahnke of St. Cloud State, in the finals of the St. Cloud State Husky Open. At the Citrus Invitational, Johnson scored a first-period pin and two major-decision wins en route to the individual title.

A two-time national tournament runner-up and three-time national tournament qualifier, Ponce returned to the Augsburg lineup at the Citrus Invitational to begin his final semester of collegiate wrestling. Ponce recorded three victories at the tournament, including two pins and a 13-7 win over Nick Schuler of St. John's, ranked No. 8 nationally at the time.

Keeter has emerged as a strong 141-pounder in his second season as an Auggie, with a 12-1 record, including six bonus-point victories. At the Citrus Invitational, Keeter outscored his opponents by a 55-3 margin in five victories, including a technical fall and two major decisions. He scored a 2-0 win over No. 9-ranked Josh Malave of Mount Union (Ohio) in the finals.

Baus has a 12-4 record so far this season at 197 pounds, including seven pins, a major decision and technical fall. Baus won his weight class title at the Minnesota State Moorhead Dragon Open, while finishing third at the Auggie-Brute-Adidas Open, fourth at the St. Cloud State Husky Open and sixth at the Citrus Invitational.

In his first collegiate season, Kuehn has an 11-5 record, including four pins, three technical falls and two major decisions. He placed third at the Citrus Invitational with a 6-1 record, bouncing back from a semifinal loss with four straight wins in the wrestlebacks. He placed fourth at both the Auggie-Brute-Adidas Open and the Minnesota State Moorhead Dragon Open.

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Feature on Bogojevic in Superior Telegram

http://athletics.augsburg.edu/news/2012/1/4/wres010412a.aspx?path=wrestling

http://www.superiortelegram.com/event/article/id/61496/group/Sports/

MINNEAPOLIS -- There's a feature in Wednesday's Superior (Wis.) Telegram on Augsburg College wrestler Niko Bogojevic (FY, Superior, Wis.), who is currently training for the upcoming U.S. Olympic Trials, to be held in Iowa City, Iowa, April 20-22. Bogojevic is taking the 2011-12 school year off from Augsburg to train for the Olympic Trials.

During the summer of 2011, Bogojevic shined on the amateur wrestling stage. In May, he won the 120-kilogram (264.5-pound) Senior Greco-Roman title at the USA Wrestling Northern Plains Regional in Waterloo, Iowa, qualifying to compete at the U.S. World Team Trials in Oklahoma City, Okla., in June. In April, he finished third in Greco-Roman competition at the USA Wrestling FILA Junior Nationals in Cleveland, Ohio. In May, he reached the finals of the USA Wrestling FILA Junior World Team Trials in Franklin, Ind.

In July, Bogojevic swept the gold medals in both the freestyle and Greco-Roman categories at the Pan American Junior Championships in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Earlier in his career, Bogojevic won the USA Wrestling Junior Greco-Roman national title in 2009 (285 pounds), while also winning the FILA Cadet National Greco-Roman title (275 pounds) in 2008.

A 2010 Wisconsin high school state titlist and holder of Superior High School's career record for victories (135), Bogojevic finished 26-10 in 2010-11, his first collegiate campaign at Augsburg.

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Auggie Athletics Update

Auggie Athletics Update (click on link for story/stats):

Wednesday, Jan. 4:
Men's Basketball -- Augsburg 86, Macalester 50
http://athletics.augsburg.edu/news/2012/1/4/mbb010412.aspx?path=mbball

Women's Basketball -- Augsburg 54, Macalester 39
http://athletics.augsburg.edu/news/2012/1/4/wbb010412.aspx?path=wbball


Upcoming Events:
http://athletics.augsburg.edu/

Friday, Jan. 6:
Men's Hockey -- Augsburg vs. Wis.-Superior, Ed Saugestad Rink, 7:05 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 7:
Wrestling -- Augsburg at NWCA Division III National Duals, Springfield, Ill.
Wrestling -- Augsburg White Team (JV) at Ridgewater (Minn.) Open, 9 a.m.
Women's Swimming -- Augsburg at Citrus Classic, Mesa, Ariz., 1 p.m.
Women's Basketball -- Augsburg at St. Thomas, 1 p.m.
Men's Basketball -- Augsburg at St. Thomas, 3 p.m.
Women's Hockey -- Augsburg vs. Marian (Wis.) at Waupun, Wis., 7 p.m.
Men's Hockey -- Augsburg vs. St. Scholastica at Rosemount, Minn., 7:05 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 8:
Wrestling -- Augsburg at NWCA Division III National Duals, Springfield, Ill.
Women's Hockey -- Augsburg at Marian (Wis.), 2 p.m.

Wednesday, Jan. 11:
Women's Basketball -- Augsburg vs. St. Olaf, Si Melby Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Men's Basketball -- Augsburg at St. Olaf, 7:30 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 13:
Men's Hockey -- Augsburg at Concordia-Moorhead, 7 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 14:
Wrestling -- Augsburg at Cornell (Iowa) Matman Open, 9 a.m.
Wrestling -- Augsburg White Team (JV) at Central (Iowa) Invitational, 9 a.m.
Men's Hockey -- Augsburg at Concordia-Moorhead, 2 p.m.
Women's Basketball -- Augsburg vs. St. Mary's, Si Melby Hall, 3 p.m.
Men's Basketball -- Augsburg at St. Mary's, 3 p.m.
Women's Hockey -- Augsburg vs. St. Scholastica, Ed Saugestad Rink, 7 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 15:
Women's Hockey -- Augsburg vs. St. Scholastica, Ed Saugestad Rink, 3 p.m.

Monday, Jan. 16:
Men's Basketball -- Augsburg vs. Carleton, Si Melby Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Women's Basketball -- Augsburg at Carleton, 7:30 p.m.

Tuesday, Jan. 17:
Wrestling -- Augsburg White Team (JV) vs. Rochester CTC, Si Melby Hall, 6 p.m.
Wrestling -- Augsburg vs. Minnesota State Moorhead, Si Melby Hall, 7 p.m.

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Classifieds

For Rent: 2-room Suite, River View, Quiet 'Hood

Beautiful 2-room suite with hardwood floors. Suite includes private deck that overlooks wooded backyard, lily pond, Mississippi River. Pet-friendly. Quiet neighborhood, private home. Flower gardens, fenced back yard. $600/month. Option to have private bathroom for additional $50/month. Full details on Craigslist at:
http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/ram/roo/2780894383.html

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