FAMILIES HONORED AT ARBOR DAY
Every year for nine years, Dana College has honored its history,
its benefactors and its environment by celebrating Arbor Day. Trees
are planted in honor of some of Dana’s greatest friends and
supporters, so that their gifts to the college will be remembered
for years.
“We chose our Arbor Day celebration as a time to celebrate
another kind of growth, the beauty that makes our campus special,”
Dr. Myrvin Christopherson ’61, president, told the crowd gathered
at the event. “We celebrate and give thanks on this day for
the students who earn scholarships that enable them to attend Dana.
We also give thanks for the alumni and friends of Dana whose gifts
enable us to award the scholarships.”
This year’s Arbor Day honorees were Harold and Marian Andersen
of Omaha and the Irving F. Jensen Construction Company, Irving and
Tigger Jensen owners, of Sioux City, Iowa.
“The two couples we honor today share many features in common,”
Christopherson said. “The husband in each case is Danish-American.
The family names — Andersen and Jensen — testify to
that heritage. Both couples are a source of great pride to us and
to their cities and states.”
The Jensens have had ties to Dana for decades. Irving Jensen Jr.
and his wife, Tigger, continue the support passed on by Irving’s
father, the late Irving Jensen Sr., and his wife, Elizabeth. Irving
Sr. was a trustee of Dana for many years. A scholarship was established
by the Jensen family and construction company to honor Irving Sr.
and Elizabeth.
Irving Jr. and Tigger have continued the family’s support
of Dana. Irving has worked road construction all his life. The oldest
of the Jensen children, he graduated from Yale University School
of Engineering and served as an officer in the U.S. Air Force before
working full-time for Jensen and Krage Contractors in Sioux City,
and then for the Irving F. Jensen Company. He is still director
and secretary-treasurer of a group of family-related companies that
employ between 500 and 600 people. Tigger is active with Irving
in many Sioux City community projects as well as her involvement
in many church and community volunteer efforts.
The Andersens also have a long history of involvement with Dana.
Besides years of continual support of Dana, Harold is the holder
of an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Dana, given
to him in recognition of his service to the state of Nebraska and
journalism.
Harold is known to most as immediate past publisher and chief executive
officer of the Omaha World-Herald Company, where he still contributes
a column several times a week. He has brought pride to his state
for his service as president of the International Federation of
Newspaper Publishers, the first American to hold the position. Marion
is also a major figure in Nebraska. She has served as chairwoman
of the University of Nebraska Foundation, vice chairwoman of the
American National Red Cross Board of Governors, trustee of Doane
College and Nebraska Historical Society, and on the board of PBS.
“Harold and Marian are among Nebraska’s most loyal
supporters,” Christopherson said. “There is hardly a
volunteer effort that I prize to which they have not been key donors.”
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