tool name

close
tool goes here

Bobb Absten, principal of Life Christian Academy, dies after cancer fight

Families, students and staff at Life Christian Academy will gather Wednesday to remember Bobb M. Absten, the high school principal of the last eight years who died Saturday after a seven-month battle with cancer.

Published: Aug. 7, 2012 at 3:04 p.m. PDTUpdated: Aug. 7, 2012 at 3:36 p.m. PDT
0 comments

Families, students and staff at Life Christian Academy will gather Wednesday to remember Bobb M. Absten, the high school principal of the last eight years who died Saturday after a seven-month battle with cancer.

Absten, 56, was a Tacoma native who just two months ago spoke to the Class of 2012 at its graduation ceremony and exhorted students to hold firm in their faith.

"He stood there much lesser physically and yet so strong," said Ross Hjelseth, Life Christian's headmaster.

A graduate of Mount Tahoma High School and member of that school's hall of fame, Absten was known to his baseball teammates as "Bird Man" because of his short legs. Later in life, he would be called teacher and counselor by students in the Yelm School District, and pastor by churchgoers at Clover Creek Bible Fellowship in the Spanaway area.

He took an indirect route to the principal job at Life Christian, which has 725 students, including 200 at the high school. His wife, Juli, already worked there, and their children were students. (Three have graduated, two others still attend.)

"Bobb was a gentleman I had come to know from his role of being a parent here," Hjelseth said Tuesday. "Such an encourager and such a man who was solid in his faith."

Hjelseth recalled how Absten's personal concern for students and families was revealed as he checked in with them in the parking lot before and after school.

"I would observe him from car to car and person to person," the headmaster said. "His walk was never fast, it was always at a pace where he was never going to walk past anyone."

Absten was diagnosed in January with pancreatic cancer – the same disease that took the life of his father in February. Hjelseth said the principal continued to attend to his duties while going through treatment.

Wednesday's memorial service is set for 1 p.m. at Life Center Church, 1717 S. Union Ave.

It will be the second time in two months that a leader on the evangelical Christian campus is eulogized. The Rev. Fulton Buntain – who led Life Center for 40 years, developed it into Tacoma's first megachurch and founded the school in the '90s – died in June.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

PHOTOS
CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Sarah Clark

    Sarah Clark is proud to be looking ahead to college, considering a few years ago she wasn't sure she'd graduate high school. Clark has experienced a series of struggles that have completely changed her life.

  • Tri-City high schoolers face crunch time for college

    A student in Connell High School's Class of 2013 recently came into Marcie Koch's office to talk about his future.

    Koch, one of the school's two counselors, said the student talked about continuing his education, a few subjects he was interested in and schools he might apply to -- including the University of Washington.

    "I realized he had a lot of ideas, but the deadline for (University of) Washington was Dec. 1," Koch said. "You can't talk about it on Dec. 3."

  • Kamiakin student organizes golf tourneyfor cancer cure

    A routine visit to the doctor's office turned into a two-year battle with leukemia for Hannah Davison when she was 6.

    Today, the Kamiakin High School senior is using her experience beating cancer to help others fighting the disease.

    For her culminating senior project, which is a high school graduation requirement, Hannah decided to organize a golf tournament at Columbia Point Golf Course called Clubs for a Cure.

  • Skye Bible

    Skye Bible has been singled out as one of the best success stories at Henderson Bay High School.

  • Pasco principal to receive Martin Luther King Jr. Spirit Award

    PASCO -- Susan Sparks was a second-grader in the mid-1960s at Spokane's predominantly black Lincoln Elementary School when district officials closed it as part of their school integration efforts.

    Sparks told the Herald that she was bused up the hill to Roosevelt Elementary School, which had mostly white students.

    "I remember that experience, how scary it was and how we were treated for the first few months," said Sparks, now principal at Ruth Livingston Elementary School in Pasco. "We were called racial names. Those kinds of things you don't forget."