WAVE Magazine 2019 - 2020 | Page 39

“We go out into the world to build our careers and our lives, but often times we don't stop to look at what we’ve accomplished and to reconnect with our old friends and make some new ones.” L U CAS homesick. He soon pledged Sigma Chi, joined the rowing team, and forged new friendships. “I came out of my shell at JU and learned who I was and what I wanted to do with my life. It was fantastic!” he said. “I want to be sure others have that same experience I did.” For Craft, an Atlanta native, it just made sense to give back to the university that brought her to Jacksonville as grad assistant for the women’s volleyball indoor and sand volleyball program. “My volleyball coach at the University of South Carolina got the coaching position at JU and asked me to come along to help coach and get my MBA,” she said. “How could I pass that up?” Craft loves that she can see the impact she is making just by looking around campus. “It’s a privilege as a young alum to get to give back.” G I V I N G J OY TO OTHERS “I’ve been volunteering and giving back since I came to JU,” said Fennell, a Marketing and Communications MEERS '12 Coordinator for Duval County Public Schools. “Recently joining the GOLD Phin Society made it more official.” JU’s Engagement Office to create a JU Black Alumni Network that will launch Summer 2020. Originally from Palm Coast, Fla., he dreamed of attending the university where two of his older brothers played football. So Fennell moved to Jacksonville to transfer to JU at the beginning of his junior year. “JU helped shape my character. I learned so much about life while I was there,” Fennell said. “I want to see other students who look like me succeed.” Fennell didn’t want all the financial responsibility for his education to fall to his family. So, to help pay for housing and other expenses, he applied to become an RA, became the videographer for the soccer team, and a student ambassador giving campus tours. “I worked really hard to stay,” he recalled. “I was given some great opportunities and I soon learned that volunteering was about giving joy to others, not to yourself.” Inspired to make a difference in the lives of those on campus, he founded the Distinguished Black Gentlemen of JU while he was a student. As an alumnus, he regularly volunteers at Black Student Union events and is currently working with THE JU INVESTMENT The desire to invest in the school that made a large impact in their lives is what continues to drive JU’s GOLD Phin Society. "JU made an investment in us when we created this group," Meers said. "As GOLD Phins, we want to build upon making JU a place where everyone wants to be and for alumni to come back and feel like they are home. By hosting these events around Jacksonville, we are creating a lasting impression that JU is investing both in our family of alumni and in our community." Learn more about the GOLD Phin Society by visiting www.ju.edu/goldphin. F E AT U R E S 39