alumni news Archives - Giving to Augsburg University /giving/tag/alumni-news/ Augsburg University Tue, 07 May 2024 19:12:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 Donnie McCarthy ’09 Gives back to URGO /giving/2022/10/25/donnie-mccarthy-09-gives-back-to-urgo/ Tue, 25 Oct 2022 15:13:39 +0000 /giving/?p=48869 When it comes to Augsburg’s Undergraduate and Graduate Opportunity (URGO) program, things have really come full circle for Donnie McCarthy ’09. One of the program’s first student researchers, Donnie is now the first URGO alumnus to serve as a sponsor, making the same experience he had as an undergraduate possible for current Augsburg students. “I’m ...

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When it comes to Augsburg’s Undergraduate and Graduate Opportunity (URGO) program, things have really comeDonnie smiles for the picture in front of trees and wearing a suit full circle for Donnie McCarthy ’09. One of the program’s first student researchers, Donnie is now the first URGO alumnus to serve as a sponsor, making the same experience he had as an undergraduate possible for current Augsburg students. “I’m thrilled that I can help someone–and hopefully, help a lot of people over the years–get access to that kind of experience,” he says.

Donnie was one of the first Augsburg students to participate in URGO in the summer of 2008. It was his first experience undertaking research, working alongside now-retired Biology professor Ralph Butkowski. “It was really my first exposure to doing biological research; my first exposure to doing research in a lab setting, and really got me excited about that concept—being able to carve into the unknown a little bit,” says Donnie.

Donnie also went on to undertake asthma research with Biology professor Jennifer Bankers-Fulbright, sparking an interest in pharmacology and immunology. “My experiences at URGO were career-influencing and what resulted in me going to graduate school to do basic research. I was fascinated by the idea of asking questions and experimentally answering them. To be at the frontier of our understanding of a biological pathway seemed akin to being an explorer, albeit of the molecular type,” he says.

While a student at Augsburg, Donnie developed time management skills as he juggled school, a six-day work week, research, and playing on the men’s soccer team–another pivotal experience for him. “Coming from Michigan, not really knowing anyone at Augsburg, getting thrown into the first pre-season training session, you create a family away from your family, and that was super valuable to me, getting really close with the whole team.”

Donnie has also been a supporter of the men’s soccer team over the years and admires head coach Greg Holker’s dedication to create a strong sense of community among students and alumni. “[Holker] really requires excellence, has a really strong standard for being a person–he really does foster a fantastic environment,” says Donnie.

After Augsburg, Donnie studied at Albany Medical College before receiving his doctorate in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from the University of New York. If he hadn’t participated in URGO, Donnie says, he would have been at a disadvantage with his fellow graduate school classmates. “Having an idea of not just the scientific process, but being able to read and interpret scientific literature–there’s really no other way to get good at it, so having done it before (in URGO) definitely helped,” he says.

Today, Donnie works at Samsara Biocapital in San Francisco, where he serves as Vice President. In his work at Samsara, Donnie works with both company creation and more traditional investing in life sciences companies, helping companies developing early-stage drugs, take an interesting idea and how it might translate into a therapeutic concept, how it will position relative to things that are already out there. His URGO research provided the skills necessary to thrive in his career–“doing research is an excellent way to learn how to think about something critically.”

Donnie believes that a program like URGO sets Augsburg apart. “It truly does differentiate from most other small liberal arts schools–it’s not an opportunity you get at every place, for sure, and enriches the overall experience for students. It was just that impactful for me, and if I can help one person in my lifetime have that same sort of experience, I’ll do it a hundred times over.”

URGO is just one of many ways to give back, and any gift made to the program will automatically count towards your class’ total for the Alumni Class Challenge.

Learn more ways to give.

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Distinctive Sculpture Articulates Augsburg Identity /giving/2016/12/05/46982/ Mon, 05 Dec 2016 21:26:59 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/giving/?p=46982 “From the moment I heard that a chapel would be included in theHagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion,I wanted to design a piece of art for it,” said artist Bebe Keith. Her large 3-D glass sculpture will become a featured element of the building’s roof top chapel thanks to the sponsorship investment byJeff Nodland ...

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Trans:Perspective: Bebe Keith

“From the moment I heard that a chapel would be included in theHagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion,I wanted to design a piece of art for it,” said artist Bebe Keith. Her large 3-D glass sculpture will become a featured element of the building’s roof top chapel thanks to the sponsorship investment byJeff Nodland ’77 and Becky Bjella Nodland ’79.

“One of the things that drew my attention to this opportunity is that Augsburg is recognized asthe fourth most diverse and inclusive campus in the United States. The idea that people of all faiths and backgrounds will use the chapel space interested me while also presenting a challenge to me as an artist.”

has been creating art professionally for about 12 years, mostly in the public art realm. “I usually create stained glass mosaics by hand for public spaces, primarily in health care. “When I got the Art and Identity committee’s call for artists I wanted to do something distinctive.”

Drawing oninspirationfrom scripture, her original design was all about diversity, connections and networks between people.

“When I presented my first 2-D design to the Art and Identity Committee, they really latched on to the idea but wondered if it could actually be produced in three dimensions, so I figured out a way to make that happen.”

She found a computer program that helped her illuminate what was in her mind’s eye. It worked. The design addresses the networking of the three disciplines of science, business, and religion was at the origin of her idea.

“I started with the idea of networks—dots with lines connecting with other dots with lines which connect to others and so on. The negative space is all triangles. So the idea of people as networks becomes forms.”

As Keith puts it, “Acceptance is the most important value to me. I love to imagine people coming together in harmony and peace. Acceptance is the ideal. I want to promote places and spaces where people come together and listen to one another. This chapel is a place for sharing ideas and taking them along with them into the world. It will be a quiet place and those ideas are all there for the visitor.”

The piece consists of 43 glass panels that will be indifferentpatterns and colors. Each panel is drawn from a different tapestry of cultures and religions and references1 Corinthians 14:26 – “When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. Let all things be done for building up.”

“I found the patterns in books and drewfrom what people are wearing indifferent countries. Some patterns are from ancient places, while some are from newer countries such as Somalia.”

Six of the panels will be unpatterned to suggest the future of Augsburg yet to unfold. All of panels will also include some smudges, blurring and distress to suggest imperfection of the world past and present. “It’s not all tidy, but it makes us who we are,” she said.

It will hang in the space so that from one particular angle viewers be able to see a cross. From all other points in the room it will look likea tapestry, a quilt, an abstracted shape, an unfolded origami.

Augsburg Regent Jeff Nodland ’77 and Becky Bjella Nodland ’79.

Jeff Nodland ’77 and Becky Bjella Nodland ’79 share Bebe’s passion for the celebration of an inclusive faith and the ideas of welcoming thestranger as core aspects of what it means to be an Auggie. While serving as a member of the Augsburg Board of Regents, and now taking on theleadership of the board, Jeff participated in the decisions to proceed with the construction of the Hagfors Center. He and Becky were intriguedby the inclusion of the chapel as a visible expression of the ideals of a lived Lutheran faith.

“Becky and I see this piece of sculpture as a beautiful expression of what it means to live as faithful servants and relevant leaders. We support the essence of what it means to be a Lutheran institution of higher learning and to lead with a global perspective. Bebe’s piece embodies those ideals for us,” said Jeff.

The glass and metal framework will be fabricated in Germany based on Keith’s design.The sculpture will be installed in the chapel and open for visiting in January of 2018.

— Cathy Madison

 

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