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Editor’s note: This is last of a series following an incoming freshman and a first-time university president through their first school year at a United Methodist-related university.
By Joey Butler*
3:00 P.M. ET July 9, 2013 | INDIANAPOLIS
University president Robert Manuel greets students and faculty during
the 2013 graduation ceremony on the campus of the University of
Indianapolis. A web-only photo courtesy of the University of
Indianapolis.
The final grades are in, the caps and gowns have been put away and
most students have gone home for the summer. And yet University of
Indianapolis president Robert Manuel is still hard at work. End of
semester may signal time off for many students, but apparently a
president’s work is never done.
“It’s definitely less on the academic side ... you move into
planning. It doesn’t slow down; it just becomes different work,” Manuel
said.
In what has been a busy first year on the job, Manuel can point to a number of “high-water marks,” especially the creation of the Richard G. Lugar Academy, a collaboration with the longtime U.S senator from Indiana.
“We had a very good time seeing where our graduates go — to med
school, law school, to really good jobs. We had some faculty get
fellowships, and a few are headed to Harvard this summer for study and
review. There were a lot of athletic achievements as well in football,
volleyball, soccer, golf, track. Even a couple national champions,” he
said.
So after a little time off with the family, Manuel will get ready for his second year and start over again … or not.
“The goal is not just to start over again,” he said. “We have this plan — Vision 2030
— that takes us out 18 years with capital projects, academic projects,
student life projects. My goal is to turn them over to the appropriate
leaders on the campus and go out in search of business partners,
nonprofits and individual philanthropists to get this stuff funded.
“It’s a nice, clear path and really exciting to see how the ideas
that came through the community through the planning process will
ultimately transform this place.”
A summer of service
For many college students, summer break may mean road trips and
taking it easy for a few months, but some students at U Indy are just
starting the hard work. Students live out the school’s motto,
“Education for Service,” on numerous mission trips and service
projects.
Which is why we find soon-to-be sophomore Andy Wegg doing his best Davy Crockett impression on a mountaintop in Tennessee. A Mountain T.O.P.,
that is. Wegg is spending the summer as a day-camp coordinator for
Tennessee Outreach Project, a United Methodist-related rural ministry
in the Cumberland Mountains.
Wegg has spent six years at Mountain T.O.P. as a camper, but this is
his first time as a regular staffer. Campers stay for a week; Wegg’s
position runs from May to August.
Andy Wegg, right, sings in the choir during the March 21, 2013,
inauguration of University of Indianapolis president Robert Manuel. A
UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
“It’s a lot more exhausting than I thought it would be, but it’s a
lot of great service for the Lord,” he said. “It’s so fulfilling to
accomplish, and I feel good doing it.”
Manuel sees the school’s motto as a reflection of its connection to United Methodism.
“It’s a way to manifest the education we do here in the world and
reflect on that experience to see how it shapes you and your
capabilities,” he said.
Students don’t only do service work in the summer; it’s a year-round
mission. Manuel said U Indy students racked up about 25,000 hours
worth of service each term this past year.
In May, the school has a two-week term where students travel to
different parts of the world and consider their service in a global
context.
“Some students went to Cuba, others to Taizé, France; some went to
Cypress. One group went to Texas to identify remains of the forgotten
and establish DNA records so we can try to place the families,” Manuel
said. “All of that service gets culminated in the academic work we do
here.”
‘The future’s so bright’
Wegg will barely have time to get back from Tennessee before helping
with freshman orientation and starting a second year that promises to
be as hectic as his first. He may have packed a few years’ worth of
activities into two terms, but Wegg said it was all fun.
“The year went very well. I made dean’s list both semesters, so I’m
doing something right. I received a letter from the music program that
said, ‘Keep up the good work and you’re going to do great as a music
student.’ I’m really excited to go in as a sophomore knowing a little
bit more about what I’m doing.”
When pressed for a high point of his first year, Wegg said he’s
tempted to say starring in U Indy’s production of “Little Shop of
Horrors,” but he thinks he’s most grateful for all the friends he’s
made.
“I don’t know how the year would’ve been if I didn’t have my friends
backing me up in my good and bad times. Making all the connections with
friends and my professors made me feel like I did choose the right
school.”
Some of those friends are helping Wegg form the school’s first a capella group.
“My friends and I were complaining that the school doesn’t have one,
and I thought, ‘Why not stop complaining and take action?’ I’m really
excited, and President Manuel said his daughters love that kind of stuff
and told us, ‘You guys can come perform at my house.’ Hopefully, this
will become another tradition at U Indy that will last.”
“When Andy came by to see me before he left for Tennessee, he said
he has four or five ideas for new groups he wants to start next year,
including the glee club,” Manuel said. “It’s really great to see
freshmen like Andy take root and find their passions here.”
As for the upcoming year, Wegg proclaimed, “U Indy, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet! I’m just getting started!”
*Butler is editor of young adult content for United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Joey Butler, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
Follow President Manuel at twitter.com/uindyprez.