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Gustie of the Week: Meet Jordan Oleson

The Gustavian Weekly Primary Menu Michaela Woodward – Staff Writer Originally from Woodbury, Minnesota, Junior Jordan Oleson was immediately drawn to the community at Gustavus and now he has found himself to be an integral part of it. “After having visited many big campuses and some other small ones as well, Gustavus just felt most at home. I felt comfortable the second I stepped out onto the guest parking lot. I thought, ‘This is right.’ Ever since that day that I toured here I have never regretted it. I love the community so much,” Oleson said. While studying as a Biology and Spanish double major, he works as a Collegiate Fellow, a Tour Guide, a Gustie Guide Coordinator, a Gustavus Ambassador, a Spanish Tutor, the Spanish Department Assistant and is involved in intramural sports, Prepare Christian Ministries and Gustavus Youth Outreach.

Professor of History Colin Gordon awarded NEH Fellowship | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Professor of History Colin Gordon awarded NEH Fellowship The prestigious honor will support Gordon s research into the race-restrictive housing covenants that fueled structural segregation in St. Louis Sunday, January 24, 2021 Colin Gordon, the F. Wendell Miller Professor of History at the University of Iowa, has received the nation s most prestigious award for humanities scholarship, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellowship. Gordon s fellowship will support research for his upcoming monograph, tentatively titled Dividing the City: Race-Restrictive Covenants and the Architecture of Segregation. The monograph, and a digital companion project, will be the newest publications of his long-running and influential research into policies that created and have sustained residential racial segregation throughout St. Louis, Missouri, and its suburbs.

Inspiration on the Ice Age Trail

Emily Ford 15 and her hiking companion, Diggins. Checking in from a windswept trailhead outside of Dayton, Wisconsin, Emily Ford ’15 has to put down the phone to exchange greetings with a well-wisher. “Sorry about that,” Ford says when she’s back on the line. “There’s been so much support out here on the trail.” “The trail” she’s referring to is Wisconsin’s Ice Age Trail, a nearly 1,200-mile hiking path that is being carved across Wisconsin, following the contours left by ancient glaciers that shaped the state’s geography. It’s Thursday, January 21. Ford has hiked 382 miles since starting her journey in Potawatomi State Park near Sturgeon Bay on December 28. She expects to finish in early March at the trail’s western terminus in St. Croix Falls.

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