Every other week, our Highlanders are using their education to do extraordinary things.
                                                         Here, we’ll highlight some notable mentions from local, regional, national and international
                                                         news media. Whether our students, alumni, faculty and staff are featured as subject
                                                         matter experts in high-profile stories or simply helping make the world a better place,
                                                         we’ll feature their stories.
                                                   
                                                   Gift of a lifetime
                                                   
                                                   After her mother’s death in 2009 from liver disease, Blair Hoke ’10 searched for a
                                                      way in which she might memorialize her. 
                                                   
                                                   An Aug. 12 profile by Cardinal News explains how she ultimately did just that – by donating part of her own liver to
                                                      a child in need of a transplant. 
                                                   
                                                   Hoke, a mother of two, has worked in professional baseball for a dozen years and is
                                                      currently assistant general manager and vice president of ticket sales and service
                                                      for the Salem Red Sox. 
                                                   
                                                   According to Cardinal News, last September she underwent an eight-hour surgery in
                                                      order to help an anonymous pediatric patient. Neither Hoke nor the recipient know
                                                      each other’s identity, but Hoke has been told the child “is doing very well,” and
                                                      last fall, Diamond Baseball Holdings – which owns minor league franchises that include
                                                      the Salem team – presented Hoke with its “Hero Award.”
                                                   
                                                   “I didn't't do it for that reason,” she explained in the article. “I want the spotlight
                                                      to be more on the education piece of it than my act individually. It gave me the opportunity
                                                      to tell more people about organ donation.”
                                                   
                                                   You can read Hoke’s story here. 
                                                   
                                                   Volunteer information
                                                   
                                                   Students on break can spend their summer any number of different ways, but Sela Beatty,
                                                      a junior who’s double-majoring in communications and psychology, chose to use part
                                                      of her time off volunteering with , a private nonprofit organization. Earlier this month, FSRV returned the favor by
                                                      giving her a social media shoutout on and on . Beatty’s work, she said, “gives me a chance to apply what I’m learning in school
                                                      in a professional setting.” 
                                                   
                                                   Going “Mobile”
                                                   
                                                   “” started back in the late ’90s as a community outreach project under Nelda K. Pearson,
                                                      a former ߹ۿ professor of sociology and anthropology. Twenty-seven
                                                      years later, it’s still around and stronger than ever, with offices in Radford and
                                                      Pulaski. It offers affordable food, career preparation, loans and, in the wake of
                                                      COVID-19, a mobile food market that helps distribute fresh fruits and vegetables.
                                                      On documented the history of the New River Valley nonprofit and recounted how the organization
                                                      found a way to add its food truck in order to help others.  
                                                   
                                                   “Move-in” and groovin’  
                                                   
                                                   Last week’s wave of arrivals for Radford’s fall 2024 semester included more than 2,000
                                                      new students – which, on a year-to-year basis, represents the largest growth in the
                                                      school’s history – and it’s estimated that nearly 3,000 Highlanders are now residing
                                                      in on-campus housing. All in all, the move-in was quite an operation, with returning students getting back first and the freshman class hitting the dorms
                                                      on Aug. 23. 
                                                   
                                                   If you want a sampling of what that was like (without having to apply sunscreen or
                                                      being asked to grab the other end of a mini-fridge), you can check out the coverage
                                                      by Roanoke’s , which was picked up by , or an . This semester’s class also returned to a full line-up of things to do: from now
                                                      through most of September, Radford Welcome Weeks offer a slate of more than 110 activities on the main campus and another two dozen in Roanoke.