Decorah High School’s Pride of the Vikings Marching Band Continues their Legacy of Success

On , the DHS Pride of the Vikings Marching Band performed at the Iowa High School Music Association’s Marching Band Festival in Waterloo and the Muskie Marching Invite in Muscatine.  

The Iowa High School Music Association’s Marching Band Festival is a divisional rating festival with scoring ranging from poor (Division V) to superior (Division I). The Pride of the Vikings Marching Band performed well, scoring their 21st consecutive Division I rating.  At the Muskie Marching Invite the band placed 5th in Class 3A out of 11 bands and 10th out of 23 overall.  The band also was awarded Best Drum Majors in class 3A.

The marching show is entitled “Thor’s Hammer” from composer Randall Standridge.  Soloists include Lucas Hanson, trombone; Aitor Cuevas, trumpet; Amelia Wadsworth, mellophone; Brenna Parker, alto saxophone; Jensen Korsness, color guard; and Alex McGohan, snare drum.  The color guard choreography was created by Abigail Toussaint, Jensen Korsness, Evon Leitz, and Kiele Eberling.  The drill was designed by Andrew Classen from Drake University.  

The Pride of the Vikings Marching Band is under the direction of Dustin Bliven, Matt Cody, and Emily Hahn.  The drumline is under the direction of Kassidy Steines, and the color guard is under the direction of Laurie Walter.  This year’s drum majors are Elizabeth Pritchard and Grant Zilka.  

Mr. Bliven states, “This was one of the best marching bands I have had the privilege of working with in my 22 years as a teacher.  They worked hard every rehearsal and really bought into the show this year.  Having the opportunity to compete this year was educational for this ensemble.  We were able to watch other groups we haven’t been able to see perform before and learn from how they performed, which was the biggest reason for attending a new festival and competing.  We were completely honored to place 5th in our class, to receive the Outstanding Drum Major award, and to receive our 21st superior rating. It truly was a wonderful day for this group, and our success really stems from our outstanding students.”

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DHS to Host Speech Judge Certification

Decorah High School is hosting an Iowa High School Speech Association judge certification meeting on Saturday, October 21st at 10:00 am in the high school study hall for anyone interested in getting certified. The meeting also works as a recertification clinic for current judges who want a refresher or need to renew their license. 

The speech department is always looking for judges–people who care about students, who want to help students gain communication skills, and who are up for having a lot of fun.

Even if a person has never been involved in speech before, help will be available to guide participants in learning about the variety of categories in speech and what the expectations are for judging such performances.

Certification is only $5.00, but judges get paid much more for their work during contests. Speech director Molly Holkesvik shared, “If this opportunity is even a bit intriguing to you, Decorah High School could use your help.”

Questions can be directed to Holkesvik at molly.holkesvik@decorah.school.

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At 101 years old, Luther College alum Dorothy Anderson continues to attend homecoming celebrations

Dorothy Anderson, class of 1943, comes to Luther Homecoming every five years

DECORAH,IOWA—Every five years since 1943, Dorothy (McMillen) Anderson gets dressed up and makes it over from her hometown of Mabel, Iowa, to attend Luther College’s Homecoming and class reunions.

Even at 101 years old, she wasn’t going to stop that tradition, so she came to Decorah for the Luther reunion luncheon Oct. 7.

When asked how it feels to be the only member of the class of 1943 back for the Luther reunion, Anderson is quick with her answer: “I can’t believe it. I’m very happy to be here. God blessed us with a beautiful day.”

An only child who grew up on a farm near Hesper, Iowa, Anderson was the first in her family to attend college. Now, her family boasts a large coalition of Luther graduates. Her daughter Karen (Anderson) Forde ’69 brought her to the reunion luncheon. Her other daughter, Sonja (Anderson) Bennett, also graduated from Luther in 1967. Forde’s three children, Elizabeth Forde ’01, Joanna Forde ’05 and Karl Forde ’08, also all graduated from Luther

At Luther, Anderson earned her B.A., majoring in music and English. She has taught English, music and drama in Mabel and other places. During her time at Luther, she was a four-year women’s choir member, and she had some remarkable musical classmates. Luther legends Weston Noble, who built the college’s renowned music program, and Bud Herseth, longtime principal trumpet of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and David Preus, bishop of the American Lutheran Church, both also graduated in 1943.

Luther’s director of alumni relations, Sherry Alcock, was amazed when she heard that Dorothy planned to come for Homecoming. “In my 33 years at Luther, this is the first time we have welcomed an alum for their 80th class reunion!”

About Luther College

At Luther College in beautiful Decorah, Iowa, students explore big questions and take action to benefit people, communities and society. Our academic programs, experiential approach to learning and welcoming community inspire students to learn actively, live purposefully and lead courageously for a lifetime of impact. Learn more at luther.edu.

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“Designing Trust through Future Literacies” lecture to feature Anne Beate Hovind at Luther College Oct. 21

DECORAH, IOWA— Luther College will host Anne Beate Hovind, who specializes in commissioning public art projects and developing public spaces in Norway, for the lecture Designing Trust through Future Literacy at 2 p.m., Oct. 21, in the Center for Faith and Life’s Concert Recital Hall. The event is free and open to the public.

Anne Beate Hovind

The event, organized by the Center for Ethics and Public Engagement and the Nordic Studies program, will discuss how and why to take a “future literacies” approach to soil, water and time in order to design long futures. Following the lecture, Hovind will lead a workshop, Seeding Collective Futures, where attendees will break out into small groups to discuss prompts on how to design long futures locally around foodways, collaborative organizations and practices of learning and teaching.

One of the public art projects Hovind oversees is the Future Library, an installation by Scottish artist Katie Paterson, which began with planting 1,000 trees in a forest outside of Oslo in 2014. In 100 years, in the year 2114, the trees will supply the paper for an anthology. One writer contributes a piece to the anthology each year for the next 100 years. Canadian author Margaret Atwood was the first writer to contribute a piece to the project.

As of now, the writings are held in trust in a specially designed room in the new public library Deichman Bjørvika in Oslo, Norway.

“I admire Hovind’s capacities to create user experiences that are pragmatic in surprising, ethical and artful ways,” said Andy Hageman, director of the CEPE and a professor of English at Luther. “Equally exciting is that local organizations and individuals are expressing interest in learning about future literacy and using the workshop as a chance to do some speculative design work that brings together diverse perspectives and voices.”

About Luther College

At Luther College in beautiful Decorah, Iowa, students explore big questions and take action to benefit people, communities and society. Luther’s academic programs, experiential approach to learning and welcoming community inspire students to learn actively, live purposefully and lead courageously for a lifetime of impact. Learn more at luther.edu.

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DHS Vocal Music Department to Present Fall Concert Monday, October 16

The Decorah High School Vocal Music Department will present a fall choral concert at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, October 16 in the DHS Auditorium. The concert will feature four choirs: Ninth Grade Treble Clef Choir, Ninth Grade Bass Clef Choir, Viking Chorus, and Concert Choir.

Choirs will perform pieces by Elaine Hagenberg, G. F. Handel, W. A. Mozart, Jeffery Ames, Joni Mitchell, Victor Johnson, Jennaya Robison, and Nancy Hill Cobb. In addition, arrangements of the folksong “Uncle Joe” and the jazz standard “Fly Me to the Moon” will be performed.

The choirs are under the direction of Jason Rausch and Dean Beckman. The collaborative pianist is Chris Hadley.  The public is welcome to attend this concert.

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Luther College announces 2023 recipients of Homecoming Music Awards

DECORAH, IOWA—This 2023 homecoming season, Luther College continues the tradition of presenting the Weston Noble, Dr. Carlo A. Sperati, Presser Scholar and Hemp Prize awards. Student and alumni award winners are recognized each year during the annual Homecoming Concert.

2023 Weston Noble Award

Jan (Bakker) Knutson

Jan (Bakker) Knutson, class of 1978, is the 2023 recipient of the Weston Noble Award. Weston Noble served on the music faculty at Luther College from 1948 to 2005. During that time, the college grew in numbers, in national reputation and Noble became a leader in training trailblazers in the field of music education. Established in 2004, the Weston Noble Award recognizes music educators who honor and continue Noble’s legacy.

During her time at Luther, Knutson established herself as an exceptional musician and young conductor. After graduating from Luther, she began teaching elementary school music in Charles City, Iowa, and earned a graduate degree in music education and vocal performance from Florida State University.

From 2002 to 2021, Knutson served as the director of choirs and department chair at Parker High School in Janesville, Wisconsin. Under her direction, Parker High School’s a cappella choir toured across the country including in Washington, D.C., New York City, Philadelphia and San Antonio. The group was also a featured choir in the Dorian Choral Invitational at Luther College.

Knutson founded Parker Arts Academy, which integrates an arts-focused curriculum into general high school education. She now serves as coordinator for the academy.

Knutson has been the recipient of numerous awards including the Florentine Opera Young Artist Career Development Program, the Jerry Hall of Fame Award, a Herb Kohl Teaching Fellowship and Teacher of the Year in the Janesville School District.

2023 Dr. Carlo A. Sperati Award

Gene Anderson

Gene Anderson, class of 1963, is the 2023 recipient of the Dr. Carlo A. Sperati Award. Sperati, a pillar of Luther College and the Lutheran music tradition, was the conductor of the Luther College Concert Band for 38 years until his retirement in 1943. His work ethic and demand for perfection and patience when working with music students are part of the identity of the Luther College Music Department to this day. This award recognizes those traits in music educators as they follow in Sperati’s footsteps.

After graduating from Luther, Anderson taught in public schools across Iowa for nine years before earning a master’s degree in woodwind performance from the University of Iowa. He taught at Winona State University for three years before returning to Iowa City and completing a Ph.D. at the University of Iowa in 1978. He took a job at Monmouth College, where he taught music theory in addition to directing the college’s band and serving as chair of the music department. In 1983, he earned an additional Ph.D. in music theory with a dissertation on Jean-Philippe Rameau’s Traité de l’harmonie.

Anderson then worked as the director of bands and a music theory instructor for 20 years at the University of Richmond in Virginia. He was named head of the music department, a role he spent 13 years in, before retiring in 2017. Anderson formed Doctors of Jazz, an ensemble made up of university colleagues. They have played in Europe and continue to play around Richmond and at the occasional jazz festival.

2023 Presser Scholar Award

Malachi Rettmann

Malachi Retmann, class of 2024, is the recipient of the 2023 Presser Scholar Award. The Presser Scholar Award was established in 1939 by the Presser Foundation in honor of Theodore Presser, the publisher of Etude music magazine and founder of the music publishing firm bearing his name. The award, funded by a monetary gift from the Presser Foundation of Haverford, Pennsylvania, is presented annually to a current Luther music major chosen by a music faculty vote by consideration of excellence and merit.

Rettmann, a double major in music and management, is from Madison, Wisconsin. He was a member of the Wisconsin Youth Symphony Orchestra for six years. He has studied bass performance during his time at Luther.

In the summer of 2022, Rettmann completed a Student-Faculty Summer Research Project, along with his mentor Andi Beckendorf, on how to improve recruiting and marketing for Luther College’s Dorian Summer Music Camps.

Rettmann is now working on his senior capstone project, which examines how to manage and promote diversity in the professional orchestra world. After graduation, he plans to use this research as part of a career in arts and music administration.

2023 Hemp Prize

Emma Prostine

Emma Prostine, class of 2024, is the 2023 recipient of the Hemp Prize. The Richard C. and Joann M. Hemp Family Prize for Orchestra Performance is given annually to a senior member of the Luther College Symphony Orchestra. The $8,000 scholarship is funded through an endowment established by Richard, class of 1964, and Joann (Harr) Hemp, class of 1965. Richard Hemp is a regent emeritus, former chair of the Luther College Board of Regents and former interim president of Luther College. The auditioned prize awards students of exceptional performance, talent, musicianship and leadership.

Prostine, a violinist, came to Luther because of the school’s orchestra program. She has served as the principal second violin in the Luther College Orchestra for the past three years. Prostine attended Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where she represented her school in the All-State Orchestra playing violin.

Prostine, a chemistry major, serves as president of the Chemistry Club and a Health Sciences Club executive. She also received the Adrien Docken Award for Excellence in Chemistry. After graduating from Luther, she plans to attend University of Iowa next fall to earn a doctorate in pharmacy.

About Luther College

At Luther College in beautiful Decorah, Iowa, students explore big questions and take action to benefit people, communities and society. Luther’s academic programs, experiential approach to learning and welcoming community inspire students to learn actively, live purposefully and lead courageously for a lifetime of impact. Learn more at luther.edu.

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Rhymes With Decorah Podcast: Rhymes With Decorah – Fall 2023 Inspired – Aryn H Nichols

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Aryn Henning Nichols joins Benji for a rundown of the Fall 2023 issue of Inspire(d) Magazine – which also marks 16 years of Inspire(d)! Aryn likes to say the magazine is finally old enough to drive – even though it’s been driving our lives for 16 years! Truly – we’re grateful for everyone that has made this “experiment in positive news” possible – readers, advertisers, our amazing contributors, and so many others – A huge “Thank You”!

 

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Listen in to hear about the great stories featured in this issue, including community builders like Laura Gentry, Julia Borgen, Caitlyn Konze, and Wendy Lickteig. We also have feature stories on Decorah Native Elena Rue and Storymine, our “Sum of Your Business” La Rana Bistro, Postville School Districts Therapy Dogs, a feature about all that is happening at the International Owl Center in Houston, MN, our conservationist feature on Biophilia, 16 tips on finding inspiration, and so much more! 

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Tune in, read on, and spread the word – thanks for being Inspire(d)!

Become a member of Inspire(d) to support our work today.

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“Rhymes With Decorah” is a companion project of Inspire(d) Media.

Original music heard in this podcast performed and recorded by Nick Zielinski of Decorah. Find him on Instagram, Patreon, TikTok and more @indicative_of_drumming

Luther College announces 2023 Distinguished Service Award recipients

The 2023 Distinguished Service Award recipients with Luther College President Jenifer K. Ward.

DECORAH, IOWA—Luther College President Jenifer K. Ward is proud to announce the 2023 recipients of the Distinguished Service Award. The award is presented to alumni or individuals with strong connections to Luther College who have exhibited admirable service to society in areas such as education, government, the arts, business, church, labor, industry, agriculture, research, medicine and community affairs.

This year’s recipients are Leonard Myrah ’63; Dennis Christ ’63 and Ann (Henningsgaard) Christ ’66; Michael Ruzek ’68; Ken Abraham ’73; Patricia (Holtorf) Branstad ’73; Janet (Purmort) Tollund ’73; Denny Amundson ’73; Jill Blockhus ’88; Callista (Bisek) Gingrich ’88; Joan (Schneider) Schatz ’88; Stephanie Spear Filigno ’98; and Emerald-Jane (Aggrey-Appiah) Hunter ’03.

 

Leonard Myrah

Leonard Myrah

Leonard Myrah came to Luther in 1954 and stayed for two years before joining the Navy as a fighter pilot. He served in the Navy from 1956 to 1961, receiving his Navy Wings, then returned to Luther and graduated in 1963.  He returned to Naval service as a pilot during the Vietnam War. After retiring from the Navy, he spent 22 years as a commercial pilot.

Myrah has also served in a variety of government roles at both the state and local level throughout his life. In 1970, Myrah was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives for Houston and part of Winona. He also served on the Minnesota State Ethics Board and the Spring Grove Public Schools Board.

Myrah has been a lifelong member of Trinity Lutheran Church in Spring Grove, where he served in a variety of capacities including as a Sunday school teacher, confirmation mentor and chairman of the church council. Myrah currently works as an organic farmer, growing crops and raising animals in Spring Grove.

Dennis Christ and Ann (Henningsgaard) Christ

Ann and Dennis Christ

Dennis and Ann (Henningsgaard) Christ met at Luther in 1963. Dennis was double majoring in mathematics and physics, and Ann was studying nursing.

After graduating from Luther, Dennis served in the Navy as a navigator and tactical coordinator on long-range aircraft during the Vietnam War. He also flew missions around Russia, Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Thailand and Taiwan, rising to the rank of lieutenant commander.

After his military service, he became involved with software development, integrating computer systems to aid the U.S. Department of Defense. He also served in leadership roles at Unisys, a global information technology company.

Ann earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing and a master’s degree in public health from the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities. She began her career as a critical care nurse before leading health maintenance organizations (HMOs) across the country. After retiring, Dennis and Ann helped their son run a restaurant and retail shop in Red Lodge, Montana.

Both Dennis and Ann have served on multiple church councils. Ann has served on the board of Luther Seminary for 12 years and as the president for the Luther Deaconess Association for 35 years. He served on the St. Paul United Way Board, the Minnesota Business Partnership, and the Board of Christikon Lutheran Bible Camp in Montana.

Michael Ruzek

Michael Ruzek

Michael Ruzek attended Luther from 1964 to 1968 where he majored in biology and started for three seasons on the Luther Norse football team.

After working for Hormel Foods and Lutheran Brotherhood (now Thrivent Financial) Ruzek started his own health insurance company in 1998, Austin Health Insurance Agency.

Ruzek is well known in Austin, Minnesota, for his volunteering. In 1990, he founded Spruce Up Austin, an organization devoted to community beautification projects around the city. He continues to serve as a board member. He has been a volunteer with the Austin Area Chamber of Commerce, Austin Youth Football and the Mower County Veterans Memorial. Ruzek has lived in Austin, Minnesota, his entire life. His hometown recently honored him as a Pillar of the Community, declaring February 11, 2023, as Mike Ruzek Day.

Ken Abraham

Ken Abraham

Originally from Richmond, Minnesota, Ken Abraham attended Luther College from 1969 to 1973, earning a degree in biology. He earned a master’s degree in wildlife biology from Iowa State University and Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from Queens University in Ontario. He spent the next 40 years as a prolific scholar and active researcher working in wildlife ecology and conservation.

For 32 years, he was a biologist and research scientist with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources before retiring in 2013. His work focused on understanding ecological relationships of birds and wetlands, especially waterfowl. Abraham also studied migratory caribou, polar bears, and moose. As an Ontario civil servant, his first duty was to help protect and manage the natural resources of the province.

Abraham continues to volunteer. He has served as director on the boards of Birds Canada and Trumpeter Swan Conservation Ontario, and as a member of a local Ducks Unlimited committee. He also volunteers as a citizen scientist for bird conservation monitoring programs.

Patricia (Holtorf) Branstad

Patricia (Holtorf) Branstad 

Patricia (Holtorf) Branstad graduated from Luther in 1973 with degrees in German and sociology. She spent 36 years teaching German to middle school, high school and college students. She retired from teaching German at Gustavus Adolphus College in 2018.

Since her retirement, Branstad has poured her heart and soul into community involvement. Seeing how hard it was for people of diverse ethnic heritages to integrate in her small town of St. James, Minnesota, she became a founding member of Uniting Cultures/Uniendo Culturas, an organization aimed at building bridges between diverse groups. She is also the chair of “Who We Are, and How We Got Here,” a collaborative history project about local immigration; the  project is run by community members, faculty and students at the University of Minnesota–Morris. Her efforts contributed to the Smithsonian Institution selecting St. James to be featured in a traveling exhibit focused on rural places of innovation.

Branstad  also serves on the steering committee for Climate Smart St. James, a grassroots initiative aimed at helping her community make climate-smart changes.

Janet (Purmort) Tollund

Janet (Purmort) Tollund

Janet (Purmort) Tollund graduated from Luther in 1973 with majors in English and French. After receiving a master’s degree in secondary education from the University of Minnesota, she taught at Mayo High School in Rochester and Thomas Jefferson High School in Bloomington, Minnesota. She served as president of the American Association of Teachers of French in Minnesota.

Eventually, she left teaching and became a co-owner of Accolades/Group Travel Directors, a tour company specializing in faith pilgrimages and performance tours. She also led Luther alumni tours and  served in leadership roles on the Luther College Alumni Council for 12 years. Tollund is active in her local church, St. Stephen Lutheran Church in Bloomington, where she has served as president of the Church Council, a liturgist and a member of the choir. She is also currently president of Middle East Peace Now, a Minnesota-based organization that arranges monthly forums featuring speakers from around the globe. She has arranged several forums related to peace and justice at her church.

Denny Amundson

Denny Amundson

Denny Amundson graduated from Luther in 1973 and went on to practice critical care medicine. During his 38-year career as a Navy clinician, he became a specialist in disaster care. He did tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and responded to tsunamis and volcanoes in Indonesia, floods in Bangladesh and a drought in West Central Africa. He treated Ebola patients in Liberia and ran an ICU on a hospital ship off the coast of earthquake-stricken Haiti. In the United States, he has delivered healthcare to Mexican migrants in migrant camps and has responded to wildfires on Native American reservations several times.

As a disaster specialist, Amundson was the perfect person to help when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. He came out of a nine-year retirement to lead the largest COVID ICU in the San Diego area, at Scripps Mercy hospital in Chula Vista, a border city that’s home to a significant number of underserved populations. He continues to practice critical care medicine at the hospital.

Amundson’s volunteer projects include chairing the San Diego osteopathic student mentorship program, working with the American Lung Association, assisting with Native American education activities in Southern California and setting up medical clinics for migrant workers.

Jill Blockhus

Jill Blockhus

Jill Blockhus graduated from Luther in 1988 with a double major in French and economics. She went on to have a career in fighting for environmental protections across the globe. She earned a master’s degree from the Norwegian School of Economics in Bergen, Norway, and started working for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature in Switzerland. In this position, she developed and managed conservation projects that allowed local communities to benefit from forests.

Blockhus returned to the United States to study public policy and environmental economics at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, earning a master’s degree, followed by her doctorate in International Environmental Policy at MIT.

She is currently the climate policy and practice director at the Nature Conservancy, an environmental nonprofit. An expert on international forest policy and community development, Blockhus fights against deforestation and climate change through her work with the international community, governments and indigenous people.

For 15 years, Blockhus has served as a judge for the United Nations Development Programme’s Equator Prize, which is presented to communities and indigenous peoples who demonstrate exceptional achievement in nature-based solutions and local development.

Callista (Bisek) Gingrich

Callista (Bisek) Gingrich

After graduating from Luther in 1988 with a degree in music education, Callista (Bisek) Gingrich interned in the office of former Congressman Steve Gunderson, going on to serve as a staff member for seven years. In 1995, she moved to the House Committee on Agriculture, where she served as chief clerk until 2007. Later in her career, Gingrich was nominated by President Donald Trump and credentialed by Pope Francis to serve as the U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See from October 2017 until January 2021. While an ambassador in Rome, she worked to defend international religious freedom, combat human trafficking, provide humanitarian assistance and support the role of women religious around the world.

Gingrich serves as president and CEO of Gingrich 360, a multimedia production company, and is also a syndicated columnist. She is a New York Times best-selling author for her Ellis the Elephant children’s American history series. She is also president of the Gingrich Foundation, and currently serves as a board member for the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the Ave Maria School of Law, and the Richard Nixon Foundation.

Joan (Schneider) Schatz

Joan (Schneider) Schatz 

Joan (Schneider) Schatz graduated from Luther with majors in math and accounting in 1988. She continued on to a successful career in the manufacturing industry. Over the past 16 years, Schatz rose up the ranks at Park Industries in St. Cloud, Minnesota, a machining manufacturer recognized for its innovation and community philanthropy. She served as its chief financial officer, eventually becoming CEO of the company.

Schatz is an active member of her community. She has served on the St. Cloud Technical and Community College Foundation Board, the board of the Central Minnesota Boy Scout Council and the board of the Boys and Girls Club of Central Minnesota.

Schatz is also active in her church. She went on a church mission trip with her daughter, Rachel, a 2023 Luther graduate, to distribute solar ovens along the Dominican/Haitian border. Most recently, she and her husband, Kevin Schatz, class of 1988, participated in a desert elephant conservation project in Namibia.

Stephanie Spear Filigno

Stephanie Spear Filigno

Stephanie Spear Filigno graduated from Luther in 1998 and earned a doctorate in psychology from the University of Nevada–Reno. She is a pediatric psychologist for Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.

After completing a two-year National Institutes of Health postdoctoral research fellowship in child behavior and nutrition, Filigno was recruited to serve as the first psychologist in the cystic fibrosis care team at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. She led her team to develop and implement screening processes that elevated mental health outcomes so they are monitored alongside physical health outcomes.

Filigno also volunteers within her community. She has served on mental health planning and fundraising committees, and she teaches curriculum in the Cincinnati public schools to support children in their mental and physical health as they transition to adolescence. She volunteers with her local church and with other community organizations aimed to beautify and improve the safety of public spaces in Cincinnati.

Emerald-Jane (Aggrey-Appah) Hunter

Emerald-Jane (Aggrey-Appiah) Hunter

Born and raised in Ghana, West Africa, Emerald-Jane (Aggrey-Appiah) Hunter emigrated to the United States in 1999 to attend Luther, where she majored in communication studies. An internship in college at a local cable television station cemented her interest in television and the world of media.

After graduating in 2003, Hunter started her own production company, Emerald-Jane Productions. Her success in television landed her a spot on the launch team for ABC’s “Windy City Live,” Chicago’s only local live talk show, which took over the Oprah Winfrey show time slot when it ended. Hunter served as one of the show’s producers and its lead guest booker. She received four Emmy Awards for her work on the show.

Hunter took her passion for media and storytelling and founded myWHY Agency in Chicago, an integrated marketing communications agency that works primarily with nonprofit organizations and women- and minority-owned businesses. She is also an alumna and cohort ambassador for the Goldman Sachs Small Business program and serves on the board of People’s Music School, the largest completely free music school serving Chicago metropolitan-area children.

About Luther College

At Luther College in beautiful Decorah, Iowa, students explore big questions and take action to benefit people, communities and society. Luther’s academic programs, experiential approach to learning and welcoming community inspire students to learn actively, live purposefully and lead courageously for a lifetime of impact. Learn more at luther.edu.

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Winneshiek County Supervisors Meeting – October 9, 2023

Agenda:

Pledge of Allegiance
0:00:04 – Miscellaneous
– Set Public Hearing for road vacation requested by Devin Creek
– Accept 2023 Weed Report from the Weed Commissioner
– Discuss Freeport property (IRP request) use and sale alternatives

0:14:01 – Discuss interview questions and procedures for County Engineer position & updates on County Engineer hiring process

0:43:28 – Andy Van Der Maten – County Attorney
Re: act on amendment to Public Defender Office Lease
and legal questions regarding agenda & other issues

0:58:38 – Public Hearing – Sale of lots in Spillville
– Consideration of comments, review bids, possible action on bids

1:06:00 – Nick Rissman – Interim Co Engineer and/or Jeff Kuboushek – Maintenance Superintendent
Re: Ice Control bids, fuel bids, LP bids, and road projects updates

1:33:40 – Closed Session – Interview with County Engineer Applicant #2

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