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Ways to Get Involved | University of Iowa Center for Advancement

Ways to Get Involved


Hawkeyes give back—whether mentoring current students, volunteering on campus, or being part of an alumni network. Check out some of the ways you can get involved as a graduate or friend of the University of Iowa. If you don’t see an opportunity that’s the right fit for you, tell us by submitting the form at the bottom of this page.

Note: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, many in-person activities are limited. Please check with each opportunity’s organizer for pandemic policies.

Volunteer on Campus

The University of Iowa is fortunate to have thousands of generous alumni and friends. You can sign up to volunteer, whether it is in the classroom, at the hospital, or working with the arts.

Mentor A Hawkeye

Are you a professional with an opportunity that would be valuable to a current Iowa student? Visit the university’s Mentoring@Iowa website to learn about mentorship opportunities and the Pomerantz Career Center website for information about recruiting and hiring Hawkeye students and alumni.

Join an Alumni Network

Be part of an Iowa Club or I-Club where you can volunteer, network, and socialize with Hawkeyes near you. Alumni affinity groups are also available for Iowa graduates to connect through shared interests and experiences.

Iowa Clubs

Iowa Clubs connect Hawkeyes in more than 60 cities across the country and around the world. Wear your black and gold proudly as you cheer on the Hawkeyes during game-watch parties at local bars and restaurants, attend networking and cultural events, and raise scholarship funds for Iowa students from your community.

I-Club

I-Club chapters form a strong Hawkeye presence within the state of Iowa and a few surrounding states. They serve as an extension of the National I-Club, which supports Hawkeye student-athletes while also raising awareness for and promoting Hawkeye athletics. Recognized I-Club chapters are made up of Hawkeye volunteers and are organized through and supported by the National I-Club.

Alumni Communities

Iowa alumni with shared connections are invited to join an alumni community. Some of these organizations are an extension of student interests, like Alumni Band or Dance Marathon Alumni Group. Other networks are made up of shared experiences like race, culture, sexual orientation, or military service.

Sign up to receive more information about alumni communities.

Can’t Find the Opportunity You’re Looking For?

Submit this form to tell us how you want to get involved with the University of Iowa.

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The family, with an Iowa history dating back to the 1860s, will be honored at the Sept. 14 Iowa football game. Submitted photo Front row, from left: Julie Flack Eichacker, Lois Harper Eichacker, George Eichacker, and Kenton Eichacker. Back row: Milton Eichacker, Lois Eichacker Jr., and Virginia Eichacker. Virginia Harper played an instrumental role in advancing social change during Iowa?s civil rights movement. Years after she refused to sit in the segregated section of the Fort Madison, Iowa, movie theater at 11 years old, Harper incurred harsh discrimination while she and four other young Black women integrated the University of Iowa?s residence halls in 1946. There were only 20 Black women enrolled at Iowa that year, and Harper was one of five who lived on campus in Currier Hall. Photo courtesy of 1947 UI Yearbook Pictured are the five African American women who integrated Currier Hall in 1946. From left: Leanne Howard, Esther Walls, Nancy Henry, Gwen Davis, guest Pat Smith, and Virginia Harper. ?We knew that we got extra attention because we were Black,? said Harper, in a 1992 Daily Iowan interview recalling her time as part of what is now known as the Currier Five. These experiences propelled her into a lengthy career fighting racial injustice and prejudice with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). She wasn?t alone. Many individuals in the Harper-Eichacker Family dedicated their lives to ensure equity and justice for all Iowans, and their efforts are one reason why they have been named the 2024 University of Iowa Family Spirit Award recipients. ?It?s an incredible honor for our family,? says Lois Eichacker Jr. (85BBA), a fifth-generation Iowan and Harper?s niece. ?The university and the state have meant so much to so many. We?re filled with such gratitude and appreciation.? First awarded in 2018, the Family Spirit Award recognizes a family?spanning at least three generations of UI graduates?that has substantially benefited from and continues to advocate for the university, as well as contributes toward bettering the state of Iowa and its communities. The Eichacker-Harper Family will be honored at the Iowa football game on Sept. 14. Submitted photo Lillie Grinage Harper and Harry Dandridge Harper An Iowa History Spanning Nearly 160 Years The family?s Iowa story begins in 1866 when Rufus and Matilda Dandridge left the Kentucky and Tennessee cotton and tobacco plantations, where they had been enslaved, and migrated to Keokuk, Iowa. By the late 1910s, two of the Dandridges? grandchildren?Naomi Harper Jordan (1922BA) and Harry Dandridge Harper?were the first in their family to go to college and studied at Iowa. Serving as a doctor for more than 50 years in Fort Madison, Harry?who was a classmate and friend of Iowa football icon Duke Slater (28LLB)?played a central role in shaping Iowa?s civil rights movement as president of the Fort Madison NAACP and chair of the Iowa Civil Rights Commission. ?He was a civil rights pioneer in Iowa,? says Milton Eichacker (85BGS, 89JD), Harry?s grandson. ?He instilled in all of us the belief that everyone?regardless of race?deserves respect, and that advocating for racial justice is essential. He did so much for Fort Madison and the state of Iowa.? Harry and wife Lillie Grinage Harper had five children. Three of them studied at Iowa?Virginia Harper, Harry Harper Jr. (65R), and Lois Harper Eichacker. Lois Harper Eichacker?whose husband, George Eichacker (51BA, 52MA), and brother-in-law, Otto Eichacker (50BSC), were Iowa graduates?extended the family?s legacy of advocating for Iowans. She led the Southeast Iowa Community Action Organization and served on various committees and organizations at the local and state level?all in an effort to advance public policies to support disadvantaged individuals. Lois Harper Eichacker also wrote about the family?s experiences in a chapter of Invisible Hawkeyes?a book that examines influential African Americans at Iowa during the Civil Rights era. She also was the first African American president of the UI Alumni Association?s Board of Directors, an organization that has since merged with the UI Foundation to become the UI Center for Advancement. Her decades of volunteerism were honored in 1999 with a University of Iowa Distinguished Alumni Award for Service. Her three children?Milton, Lois Jr., and Virginia Eichacker (87BS, 92JD)?are now charting their own paths. Submitted photo From left: Virginia Eichacker, George Eichacker, Lois Harper Eichacker, Milton Eichacker, and Lois Eichacker Jr. Fifth-Generation Iowans Blazing Their Own Trails Growing up on a farm outside of Fort Madison was an idyllic experience for the family. They made frequent trips to Iowa City to cheer on the Iowa football team. ?My first was Oct. 16, 1965, against Minnesota,? says Milton, who calls Gilbert, Arizona, home. ?Our mother saved the programs and wrote our names and ages on them. I was four years old. Fall Iowa football games were some of our first recollections.? While Iowa City is where Milton met wife Julie Flack Eichacker (86BBA), it?s also where he discovered his professional interests. ?I wanted to follow in the footsteps of my grandfather and various aunts and uncles?all who were doctors. I took Introduction to Business Law, and it was a better fit,? says Milton, a successful lawyer who now works in school assessments with Pearson. ?Iowa played an important part in my life and career.? Milton and Julie stay connected to their alma mater and now support numerous areas at the UI College of Law?including diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in a continuing effort to assist others in obtaining a top-tier legal education. Much like her brother, Virginia gravitated toward a legal career. Her coursework?as well as volunteering with the student legal services?prepared her to work now as head of the Clark County Special Public Defender?s Office in Las Vegas. ?Iowa taught me the importance of a good education,? says Virginia. ?It also taught me the importance of giving back to the community?using what I have learned and paying it forward.? ?When we were kids, Iowa City was a central gathering place for us to meet and get to know so many successful Black professionals and role models.? ?Lois Eichacker Jr. Virginia has supported the University of Iowa Libraries and the Iowa Women?s Archives, and she volunteers on the Libraries Advancement Council. ?The libraries are so important to students while they?re at Iowa, and it takes a lot of resources to provide all the services at such a high level,? says Virginia. ?It?s also so important to have a place that provides access to historical documents and information?such as my grandfather?s, aunt?s, and mother?s papers?so that others can learn about the history of great Iowans.? Lois Jr. has remained connected to Iowa since graduation, as well, by serving on the UI Henry B. Tippie College of Business Advisory Board and the UI Center for Advancement Board of Directors. She feels compelled to be involved, in part, because of her roots. ?After five generations, we no longer have any immediate family in Iowa,? says Lois Jr., who lives in Chicago and is a vice president for a software and data company. ?Maintaining the connection to the state is important since we all grew up there. It was such a transformative time in all our lives.? She?s proud to support the Tippie Gateway Program, which provides opportunities for students?including those from underrepresented backgrounds or who would be the first in their family to attend college?to learn about the business school and gain the confidence needed to succeed in a collegiate academic environment. ?When we were kids, Iowa City was a central gathering place for us to meet and get to know so many successful Black professionals and role models, and those experiences really tie into why I support the Tippie Gateway Program,? says Lois Jr. ?So many individuals do not have role models or mentors in their lives, and the Tippie Gateway Program really helps put these young students on a completely different trajectory.? While many members of the Harper-Eichacker Family are now succeeding beyond the Hawkeye state, they know that prior generations would be grateful to know their legacies continue to live on through tributes like the UI Family Spirit Award. ?This award is such an honor for the entire family, and I know that there are a lot of Hawkeyes above smiling down on us right now,? says Virginia.

Whether you ended up across the state or across the ocean since your time at Iowa, you can meet fellow Hawkeyes through volunteer-led clubs and alumni affinity groups.

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