Wind Ensemble Reunion | Division Of Music | CAS |

Wind Ensemble to Celebrate 20 Years!

The Indiana Wesleyan University Wind Ensemble, under the direction of Michael Flanagin and Dr. Chris Lessly will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the group on Friday, April 17, at 7:30 in the Phillippe Auditorium. The first half of the concert will feature the current members of the wind ensemble playing the music of Bach (Toccata and Fugue in D Minor), David Maslanka’s Give Us This Day, and Dello Joio’s Scenes from the Louvre.

The second half of the concert will include alumni from not only the last 20 years of the wind ensemble but also Brass Dimensions as well as instrumentalists from the days of the IWU Concert Band. We expect to have 85-90 current and former members on stage to play American Overture, Variations on a Korean Folk Song, Riders for the Flag, and many more favorites from the ensemble’s past.

The concert is free and everyone is invited to a reception with the alumni following the concert. The reception will be held outside of Baker Recital Hall.

via Division Of Music | CAS | Academics | Indiana Wesleyan University.

IWU Golf League Celebrating Its 10th Year!

arbor trace

The IWU Golf League plays weekly at Arbor Trace Golf Club, located just ten minutes north of IWU’s Marion campus. Laughter can be heard for miles! The course is owned by IWU alum Jack Hart and serves as home course for many IWU friends. The league is turning ten this summer. To celebrate, Arbor Trace is inviting all IWU-affiliated men and women to be part of the IWU Golf League and is switching to Tuesday nights to allow for Wednesday night church commitments. IWU faculty, staff, retirees, alumni, and their invited friends and spouses can join the IWU Golf League at Arbor Trace! (Joining means simply showing up.)

Regardless of talent level, you’ll fit in. Jerry Pattengale (’79) founded the league and still is only a mediocre golfer! Collectively, Mike Roorbach and Dick Sprowl have 45 years on Jerry, and they can still beat him. (By the way, you haven’t lived until you’ve seen Mike putt.) Jerry’s league co-director is John Blake, who has also surpassed him in skill and personality.

We’d love for you to join us once a week through the summer, or as your schedule permits. You will be in for some of the most memorable scrambles you can imagine! We create new foursomes each week and give you a chance to win one of our ten nightly prizes as a team or as an individual. Earn points for each night you play, plus points for longest putt, longest drive, and more. Compete all season to win the trophy, or just come have fun!

Members over 60 get to use forward tees (with photo ID, for folks like Bob Tippey who still hit it 300). While using forward tees two weeks ago, John Blake hit the icy pond with a shot that put him into Arbor Trace’s comedic history. His decision ranks with Jim Brunner convincing his foursome to try to hit through a 30-foot spruce tree, Dr. Keith Newman’s drumming the forest with ProV1s, Terry Munday’s two-fairway hook, and Daryn Bronsink’s wardrobe. Don’t miss out on the chance to watch the entertainment yourself!

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Rates are $9 for nine holes, with special passes available if you buy ten rounds. For membership information, please visit Arbor Trace’s website.

The IWU Golf League will begin playing at the end of April and continue through the end of August. Due to scheduling needs, our first two weeks will be on Wednesday at 5:30. The rest of the summer, we’ll meet on Tuesday nights at 5:30, to help out those who have Wednesday night church commitments. Our schedule:

Opening Nights: Wednesdays, April 29 and May 6 at 5:30PM

The rest of the summer: Tuesdays at 5:30 PM, starting on May 12

Last Night: Tuesday, August 25, 5:30 PM

And keep in mind, these scrambles are to help folks get to know each other, and to mix the great golfers like almost-pro Austin Conroy (IWU golf coach), Keith Ruberg (former club pro), IWU golf veteran Adlai Deisler, and former college coach Lorne Oke with, well, you know—most everyone else. It’s a hoot. And, we start with prayer, which may be why only one person has been hit in ten years. (She finished her round!)

Please put your name on the list at Arbor Trace for email updates and Jerry’s follow-up narratives, if that’s what you call them. Reach us at the Arbor Trace website, or call 765-662-8236 and ask for Jack Hart or Doug Piper, club pro. Don’t forget – if Scott Turcott won the league a few years ago, anyone can win.

We look forward to golfing together this summer! Thank you for choosing Arbor Trace and helping us celebrate ten years of fun and games in the Marion community!

arbor trace 3

Emily Byrer: Connecting Alumni in the North East

Following her ’00 graduation, IWU alumna Emily Byrer lived in locations where alumni rarely met to share experiences and had little, if any, organized interaction. The problem continued when she moved to the Northeast. So when the IWU Alumni Board of Directors nominated her to be on an advisory council geared at connecting New England alumni, she jumped at the opportunity.

Emily has always loved connecting people. As a freshman and sophomore, she resided in Shatford House. “That really made my college experience,” she says. “I still talk to those girls.” Emily – a marketing and business administration major with an art minor – was also a publicity coordinator for the Student Activities Council. As part of SAC, Emily was “a catalyst for bringing people together and creating memories.”

Emily Bryer
Emily Byrer (’00) hopes to connect alumni in the Northeast.

Post-graduation, she worked in the hotel industry for several years before opening her own company. MICAH:6 offers diverse services, including marketing, fundraising and event management, culinary services, and investment consulting. Says Emily, “I took the relationship building [I learned at IWU] into the professional world, and I positioned MICAH:6 as a way to bring people together, whether that’s corporate events, fundraisers, [or] dinner parties … There’s value in making connection[s].”

Now, Emily is bringing her relational skills to the New England advisory council, one of several regional councils that meet a few times each year to promote homecoming involvement and alumni engagement in their respective regions. Emily is excited to serve the 100-plus alumni in her area. Because she was previously unaware how many alumni live in the Northeast, she believes others may be making the same mistake; she hopes to help them locate and connect with each other.

“My goal would be to set up a quarterly networking or family event,” says Emily, although geography will affect event planning. “Because New England covers five or six states … there may be pockets of alumni 150 miles apart,” she explains. “There may not be one central networking opportunity. It may be a series of little events.”

Developing such events will take time. However, Emily believes social media can help alumni make connections during the interim. She suggests that alumni use the Alumni Portal, where you can search for other active alumni by city or zip code. Recently, she also launched a New England Alumni Facebook.

Most of all, she wants to create an established group of active alumni, so new alumni arriving in the region won’t have to start from scratch. “The biggest goal is setting up something that can continue, sustaining either a core network or way of getting information out,” she says.

The advisory council needs the help of local alumni to do that. The council would love to know about any events already happening in New England, no matter how small or informal they may be, and to be involved in those. As Emily says, “You never know where the next opportunity is coming from.” To tell the council about a current event or offer suggestions, contact Emily at ebyrer@gmail.com.

 

Written by Megan Emily. Megan is a senior English/Writing major and a member of the John Wesley Honors College. She also operates Earthworms, a blog about finding hope and security.

Mr. Canary Company birdfeeders feed more than birds | Fox News Video

Marion  community featured on national news – Fox News. “This is the best kept secret.” says Christina Mowery (IWU Graduate of 1970) – Mr. Canary Company birdfeeders feed more than birds | Fox News Video. For more information on Mr. Canary click here.

From their website: When Jan and her sister Christina Mowery began their company in 1995, they had no idea where their journey would lead. They knew everything would work out 1.) because, they were raised to believe they could do anything, and 2.) they didn’t waste time trying to identify the “how” and “when”. Christina has since retired from Mr. Canary, but both Jan and Chrisitna are proud of our products and they are proud of the workers who make them. Embracing an innovative business model in which Mr. Canary subcontracts the sourcing, assembly, packaging, and shipping of its products to a human services organization’s workshop in their hometown of Marion, Indiana, Jan is energized knowing that the Mr. Canary brand supports over 100 workers with disabilities having meaningful work everyday.

Fox News Blog.

 

Faculty Spotlight: Meet Umfundisi Jim Lo

 

Dr. Jim Lo may be IWU’s Dean of the Chapel, but to students, he’s better known as Umf. The nickname is short for an African word, umfundisi. “It means one who is a teacher, but it actually means more. It means one who wants to become part of someone’s life,” he explains.

Umfundisi discovered his love for teaching while in the Army, when he taught a seminar for 200-500 fellow soldiers. Although the Army later granted him a full college scholarship, he turned it down and left the Army to become a pastor. He soon enrolled at IWU because, “I realized my B.A. wasn’t enough … I had much more to learn.” 

As a grad student, he recalls, “I felt that the education I was getting here, I was able to apply into ministry right away. I also had some wonderful mentors at that time.” One of those mentors was Charles Carter, who encouraged Umfundisi and his wife, Roxene, to follow God’s call to overseas ministry.

Once he earned his M.A. in Ministerial Education in 1982, Umfundisi and Roxene moved to Africa, ministering for thirteen years in Zimbabwe, South Africa, Mozambique, Swaziland, and Zambia. 

The couple planted churches in Zimbabwe. But soon, “we realized that missionaries didn’t need to be doing the church planting. We needed to be training nationals to be church planters.” Umfundisi began working on leadership development and literature production, creating training materials for African pastors and churches.

Although he loved Africa, he hoped to return to IWU: “When I was here in the master’s program, one of the things I [told] the Lord was that one day I would love to teach here.” However, Umfundisi believed IWU was too racially homogenous to hire a Chinese-American professor. 

He had no idea what God had in store. When he brought his teenaged sons to visit IWU, he also planned to visit his friend Dr. Keith Springer, who was out of office that day. Umfundisi left a note with the administrative assistant and prepared to leave. 

However, she recognized his name and informed him that IWU had sent a letter the week before, inviting him to start an Intercultural Studies program. He had an impromptu interview with the university president and division chair that day. Because Umfundisi and Roxene had already committed to spending a year ministering in Cambodia, IWU held the position open until their return. 

Umfundisi taught Intercultural Studies for 10 years and created World Impact, a program that allows students to go overseas for an extended time. “Too many students were stating that they wanted to be missionaries, but had very little cross cultural experience,” he explains. World Impact gives those students a chance to gain intercultural experience and explore God’s call in their lives.

Being a professor is Umfundisi’s “sweet spot in ministry.” He especially enjoys watching students and professors interact: “Those distinct lines of boundaries [between professors and students], we don’t necessarily have those here … I think that’s part of the beauty of this university.”

Today, Umfundisi remains in contact with students he taught ten or twenty years ago. He loves knowing he has students all over the world who will stay connected as alumni. “[Being an alum] gives you identity,” he says. “It gives you a sense of belonging … You really do feel as if you’re part of a big family.” 

Written by Megan Emily. Megan is a senior English/Writing major and a member of the John Wesley Honors College. She also operates Earthworms https://megzilla99.wordpress.com/ , a blog about finding hope and security.

Dr. Charles E. DeVol – IWU Alumni World Changer Honored Posthumously

In addition to the inductee, MustaphaFrancis Mustapha who spoke in chapel the students also learned about another inductee who was recognized posthumously – Dr. Charles E. DeVol.

The following includes information about our inductee and a special message from hist older daughter, Margaret DeVol Mosher.

Dr. Charles DeVol

Dr. Charles E. DeVol

Charles E. DeVol graduated from Marion College in 1926 with a bachelor’s degree in science. Three months later, Charles and his wife Leora began serving as missionaries in China, where Charles was born in 1903 to medical missionary parents.

During their first decade in China as missionaries, the DeVols returned twice to Marion where Charles taught botany and zoology at Marion College.

The DeVols returned to China in 1939, but as war clouds gathered American women and children were advised to return home. Leora DeVol and the couple’s two daughters left China in March of 1941, but Charles stayed behind.

After Pearl Harbor was bombed, Charles was detained in the city of Shanghai where he taught in a school for Jewish refugee children and worked on botany research. He later was imprisoned in a Chinese concentration camp for 10 months, along with 1,000 other men. During his imprisonment, he taught a botany class in the concentration camp.

Charles was released in December 1943 as part of a prisoner exchange and returned to Marion where his wife was serving as dean of women at Marion College.

Charles resumed teaching at Marion College and completed his doctorate at Indiana University before the family returned to China in 1946. Three years later, the Communist takeover of Mainland China forced the DeVols to again return America – where Charles taught for another 11 years at Marion College.

In 1957, the DeVols went to Taiwan to oversee Friends missionary work. Over the next 23 years, Charles was not only active in helping to establish 31 Friends churches, but he also taught botany at the National University of Taipei.

Charles became internationally recognized as an authority on oriental ferns, and one fern specimen he discovered was named in his honor – and was featured on a Taiwanese postal stamp.

Dr. DeVol retired from missionary service in 1980 and returned to his family’s farm in Ohio. But in 1985, he had a final opportunity to return to Mainland China. He used the visit to see old friends and to revisit the familiar sights of his boyhood – including the Chinese hillsides where he first began his collection of plants that would lead to a lifetime of teaching botany.

Dr. DeVol died in 1989.


 

WC Display_Charles DeVolA Tribute – “My Father, Charles E. DeVol” by Margaret DeVol Mosher

One of my earliest memories is of summer vacations spent at Lu Shan Mountain Resort in China with my parents, Charles and Leora DeVol, and my baby sister, Esther. It was at that location that my father had gone during his childhood and had been fascinated with the beauties of God’s creation. On those hillsides, my father began his collections of plants, which led to a lifetime of teaching botany.

During my father’s lifetime of being a missionary, preacher and teacher, life was not always easy. The wonderful attitude he always had made a deep impression on me. I never heard my father complain or say anything unkind.

One of the most difficult experiences in my father’s life was his seven months spent in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in Shanghai during World War II. My mother, my sister and I had come back to the United States before things had gotten so dangerous in China. My mother was employed as dean of women at Marion College, and my sister and I, ages 8 and 12, lived with my mother in Marion College’s girls’ dormitory.

The college celebrated with us when my father returned safely before the war was over. My father told us that on the repatriation ship coming home, he was singing Great is Thy Faithfulness. That hymn has become a favorite of our family.

The procedure followed by my father and our other Friends missionaries in China and later in Taiwan was to train pastors and leaders and put them in charge completely. Because of this, the mission churches in China are still carrying on today with no American missionaries present.

The churches in Taiwan Friends Mission, which my father helped to start, are now completely under Taiwanese leadership. In 2014, the 670 Taiwan Friends Churches celebrated the 60th anniversary of the founding of Friends Churches in Taiwan. The Lord has greatly blessed the seeds that were planted!

Due to illness my father retired at the age of 77 and returned to the United States. He lived for nine more years and was able to preach many times to Chinese congregations near Ohio State University ands Akron University.

In my house are 40 of my father’s sermon notebooks. Most of the outlines were a result of his morning devotional activities. One notebook is titled, “Science and the Bible.” These messages were the favorites of many who heard him preach.

My parents lived with my husband and me during their final years. My younger son, Daniel, assisted us with their care. We all enjoyed the many phone calls and visits from Chinese and Taiwanese friends.

The evening before my father went to be with the Lord, he held up two fingers and then five fingers. I couldn’t tell what he was trying to tell me. Was he thinking of II Corinthians 5, which he had referred to not long before that? That scripture talks about the fact that we exchange our earthly body for a heavenly one. Maybe that was what he was thinking about.

A couple of days after my father’s home going, I discovered that the Easter lily that I had planted in the spring was in bloom. On it were two buds and five lilies, serving as a reminder to us of the Resurrection. What an appropriate send-off for my botanist father who loved God, the Creator, so much and had devoted his life to preparing people to meet the Lord.

Thank you, Indiana Wesleyan University, for the blessing you have been to our family through the years. If I figured correctly, 18 of our family attended Marion College. Only three of us are still residing on Planet Earth.

May the Lord bless you and continue to make you a blessing.

 

Fort Wayne Regional Alumni Network – Building Your Network!

SPECIAL INVITATION FROM INDIANA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION – Workshop and Networking Event

Building Your Network presented by author and consultant Todd Rhoad 

Tuesday, March 31, 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM

kobos

Attend – Enter to win a Kobo E-book – Reader complete with all books by Dr. Todd Rhoad  when you attend this event.

You are invited to attend the Fort Wayne Regional Alumni and Friends Event for free. Lite meal will be served.

This event will be held this Tuesday, March 31 beginning at 6:30 PM.

Todd RhoadTodd Rhoad, Managing Director of BT Consulting, presents the “ME in 3” personal branding process for defining your value as a working professional. It’s a simple process for not only defining who you are but for creating your brand tangibles as well as the messages you will use to communicate your value. Rhoad will provide insight on your Personal Value Management System for maintaining and increasing the value of your brand. It’s sure to be an entertaining hour as Rhoad shares stories from working with professionals from all around the globe.

Todd Rhoad is a graduate of IWU’s MBA program. He is the author of over a dozen books and over 30 peer reviewed journal articles. Todd has created MBA classes on entrepreneurship and personal branding. He has also created MBAWriters, an international publishing group, and INCUB8, an entrepreneurial incubator program designed to help college students create their own companies.

We are offering this regional network Just for you! Bring your business cards to hand out and network.

This event is open to all current students and alumni of IWU. Non-alumni are also welcome to attend as well.

Please RSVP for this free event – a meal will be catered.

Contact alumni@indwes.edu to let us know you are attending.

The event will be held at the Fort Wayne Education and Conference Center – 8211 West Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN.  Directions.

Brought to you by the Indiana Wesleyan University Alumni Association

IWU Alumni goes to Victory Field

Join the IWU Alumni Association at Victory Field for a thrilling evening! We welcome EVERYONE! Alumni, bring your friends from home or family members. It will be a great evening for baseball fans or those just wanting to catch up and socialize.

May 29, 2015

7:15 @ Victory Field

The Indianapolis Indians will be playing the Toledo Mud Hens beginning at 7:15pm. We also welcome you to stay after the game to enjoy fireworks.

Group Discount Code: IWUA

Box seat tickets will be available at the group rate of $14.50. The tickets are limited and subject to availability. Contact Rick Carder, alumni@indwes.edu with any questions.