Virginia
Commitment to affordability aids Virginia Tech’s rise in value ranking

When Laryssa Arms’ monetary support package deal arrived in 2017, it warranted each a second and third opinion.
“I learn it and I learn it and I learn it, and I assumed, I don’t suppose my 17-year-old mind is comprehending this accurately,” mentioned Arms, who earned a level in psychology in 2021. “I requested my mother to learn it, and he or she was like, ‘No, you’re proper Laryssa,’ and I didn’t imagine her. So I took it to my highschool steerage counselor, who mentioned, ‘No, you’re proper. That’s an enormous scholarship.’”
That fall, Arms was certainly one of 85 Hokies chosen for the Presidential Scholarship Initiative, a four-year, full scholarship program designed to acknowledge and reward academically proficient and devoted Virginians with vital monetary want.
At the moment, Arms is a Virginia Tech monetary support advisor, and, as of this summer season, the scholarship that helped her get there was expanded to 95 college students per cohort. This brings the whole variety of Hokies enrolled in this system to 340 undergraduates.
“It was life-changing,” mentioned Arms. “And I don’t know if that even comes near encompassing how necessary it’s. It simply actually makes school so accessible for college students in this system.”
The Presidential Scholarship Initiative is only one instance of college efforts to take away most of the conventional obstacles to increased schooling. This work has been key to Virginia Tech rising to rank twenty second amongst greater than 600 universities in Cash Journal’s “Finest Schools for Your Cash” rankings final spring. The publication primarily based the college’s total rating on an estimated full worth of attendance, the acceptance fee, the proportion of scholars receiving grants, the proportion of scholars who graduate, and the typical early profession earnings for graduates.
“The rating instantly displays Virginia Tech’s dedication to extend affordability, particularly for underrepresented and underserved college students, whereas offering a high quality academic expertise that prepares graduates for fulfillment,” mentioned Virginia Tech President Tim Sands. “Consequently, our graduates land nice jobs and have a optimistic influence on their communities. Because the college advances, entry and affordability for our college students and households will stay a high precedence.”
These efforts are notably salient for residents of Virginia. In June, the Virginia Tech Board of Guests successfully froze tuition for in-state undergraduate college students with a particular, one-time scholarship to offset a 3 p.c tuition improve. Over the previous 4 years, Virginia Tech has elevated in-state tuition simply 5.9 p.c, whereas nationwide, the patron worth index rose greater than 20 p.c.
On common, Hokies graduate with much less debt than different college students in the USA; 49 p.c of Virginia Tech’s 2019 graduates moved on with debt in comparison with 62 p.c nationally. And since a Virginia Tech diploma helps bolster the employment and earnings potential of graduates, Virginia Tech debtors additionally default on pupil loans much less typically. Simply 1.2 p.c of Virginia Tech’s 2018 cohort defaulted on a Federal Direct Mortgage or Federal Household and Training Mortgage in comparison with 2.1 p.c of their friends throughout the nation.
In June, the Board of Guests took one other step to extend affordability past the in-state tuition freeze by allocating a further $5.1 million to undergraduate monetary support packages. The monetary dedication raises whole institutional assist for college students to greater than $39.4 million for the 2022-23 tutorial yr.
The rise helps packages akin to Funds for the Future, which supplies one hundred pc safety from tuition and payment will increase for returning college students with a household earnings of as much as $100,000. In fall 2021, 90 p.c of Virginia’s counties and municipalities have been represented by college students within the Funds for the Future program.
The Presidential Scholarship Initiative is one other program benefitting from this extra assist, which can assist them shock much more high-achieving Hokies from Virginia with assist.
“I didn’t even learn about it [the scholarship] till I used to be chosen for it,” mentioned Levi Shoates, a second-year pupil learning artistic applied sciences and a Presidential Scholar. “It was positively an enormous a part of my choice to come back to Tech. I utilized to love 20 colleges, so it was actually laborious, however selecting Tech might be the perfect choice I’ve ever made.”
Coming to Virginia Tech helped Shoates broaden his research to incorporate not solely a significant in artwork, but in addition a minor in human-computer interplay. Being part of the Presidential Students Initiative has helped broaden his school expertise and step out of his consolation zone a bit.
“I’ve loved the truth that now we have to go on campus for occasions as a result of it inspired me to exit and do issues I usually wouldn’t do,” Shoates mentioned. “I went to some occasions that have been centered on careers and one on budgeting, which was actually useful.”
Likewise, 5 years after studying she had been awarded a spot in this system, Arms mentioned the enrichment actions and steerage she acquired have been essential to her success in school and past.
“It actually helped spherical me out past the scholarship {dollars},” mentioned Arms. “The assist and neighborhood PSI [Presidential Scholars Initiative] has constructed, that was very encouraging throughout instances I actually wanted it.”

Virginia
Newly Released Bracketology From ESPN Leaves Virginia Tech Out Of The NCAA Tournament Picture

Last season was one to forget for Virginia Tech. The Hokies’ roster was decimated by transfers before the season, and while they were able to sneak into the ACC Tournament, they were bounced by Cal in the first round. Virginia Tech head coach Mike Young was pretty blunt following that loss to Cal and he talked about how his team had to improve in the offseason ahead:
“A lot was missing. A lot was missing, just call it what it is. They are great kids and a pleasure to work with. We have to get more talented and we are going to quick, all right?”
Virginia Tech has done that. They added international prospect Neoklis Avdalas, West Virginia transfer forward Amani Hansberry, Delaware guard Izaiah Pasha, and UNLV guard Jailen Bedford, among others. This group seems poised to take a major step up in the ACC, but in the newest edition of Bracketology from ESPN analyst Joe Lunardi, the Hokies are nowhere to be found. Lunardi had six teams from the ACC, Duke, North Carolina, NC State, Louisville, Miami, and SMU, all in the field. Duke, NC State, North Carolina, and Louisville have had great offseasons and have tons of talent on their roster, but you can make the argument that with the addition of Avdalas, Virginia Tech is on par or better than the Mustangs or the Hurricanes.
Will these new additions make Virginia Tech a legit March Madness threat? Our own Connor Mardian broke that down after Avdalas officially joined the program:
“Ranked as the No. 2 international newcomer in the 2025 class by 247Sports, Avdalas spent the past two seasons competing in Greece’s top-tier HEBA A1 league, first with AS Karditsas in 2023-24, and most recently with Peristeri BC. As an 18-year-old playing against seasoned professionals, he averaged 7.7 points, 2.7 rebounds, and 1.4 assists in 18.5 minutes per game across 26 contests. He recorded shooting splits of 43.6% from the field, 35.7% from deep, and 70.3% at the line.
The 19-year-old will make a massive addition to the Hokies. Rumors floated that Avdalas would be a second-round pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, which only adds to the allure Avdalas brings.
A combination of Pasha, Hansberry, and Avdalas will be challenging the ACC from day one, combine that with fellow transfer Jalien Bedford and two top-150 players in Christian Gurdak and Sincere Jones, who are inbound as freshmen.
It would be a long shot to say that the Hokies are expected to make the NCAA Tournament, but the Hokies should pose a much better threat and should make a great bid for the NIT if not a strong tournament run.”
Virginia
Roanoke car show raises money for Virginia Museum of Transportation

ROANOKE, Va. (WDBJ) – Star City Motor Madness is hosting a two-day event to raise funds for the Virginia Museum of Transportation and other nonprofit organizations.
An informal car show and party at the Virginia Museum of Transportation will take place Friday, June 27 from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
The party will feature Dale’s Diner/Kenney Burgers food truck and live music from Aaron & The Beaux Ties. Beer and wine will also be available. Visitors to the party will have full access to the museum including the Auto Gallery and world famous J-611 streamlined steam locomotive. Tickets are available at the door at regular museum admission rates. Free special parking is designated at a parking lot adjacent to the museum for cars being displayed to the public. Non-show cars are asked to park elsewhere.
A one-time-only feature on Friday is the arrival of 120 cars participating in the annual Great Race. The 8-day “Great Race,” a tour of 120 antique cars running from Minnesota to South Carolina, will make an overnight stop in Roanoke. Their arrival into Roanoke will be at the Virginia Museum of Transportation starting at 4:15 p.m.
The Star City Motor Madness Car and Truck Show will take place Saturday, June 28 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 706 S Jefferson Street.
Over 300 cars are expected as well as a huge selection of food and product vendors.
This two-day event takes place rain or shine, and Saturday’s car show is free for spectators.
Berglund Automotive is the primary sponsor of the event. They are joined by Southern Team Auto Mall, Grand Home Furnishings, Lanford Brothers Construction, six local car clubs, and numerous other businesses.
Click here for more information and/or to register your car or truck.
Copyright 2025 WDBJ. All rights reserved.
Virginia
Virginia Candidates Show You Can Try to Kill DEI, But You’ll Fail
VIRGINIANS HAVE CHOSEN THEIR CANDIDATES for this fall’s election—and if you are trying to murder DEI, they are your worst nightmare. The demographic diversity is spectacular in both parties.
In a state whose first two governors were Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson, two women will face off for the top job: former congresswoman and CIA officer Abigail Spanberger, a white Democrat, and Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, a black Republican, Jamaican immigrant, and Marine Corps veteran.
In the lieutenant governor race, it’s conservative talk-radio host John Reid, a Republican who recently came out as gay, vs. Democratic state Sen. Ghazala F. Hashmi, an Indian immigrant. As for attorney general, Democrat Jerrauld “Jay” Jones, a black former state legislator, will challenge the Hispanic Republican incumbent, Jason Miyares.
Is this (still) a great country or what?
When I read off those candidate demographics out loud, one straight white male in my vicinity joked that “this just proves everything’s turned to shit for white men.” And we all burst out laughing.
Don’t get me wrong, the Donald Trump–MAGA war on diversity, equity, and inclusion is deadly serious. The truth is that if those half-dozen people were Pentagon leaders instead of politicians running in a general election, they’d be ousted by now or, at the least, apprehensive about their career futures. If they were historic figures celebrated on federal websites, those pages would likely be wiped. If they were researchers in neglected health fields, their grants would be gone. Project leaders in “shithole” countries and continents, gone—them, their projects, and their web presence.
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The same day the Virginia results were finalized last week, the Supreme Court upheld a Tennessee ban on gender-affirming treatment for transgender minors. The straight-up ideological 6–3 majority said the ban did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. And the Trump administration said it was canceling specialized guidance for LGBTQ callers on a national suicide hotline.
And yet, a couple of days earlier, federal judge William Young ruled that the Trump administration must immediately restore some eight hundred grants awarded by the National Institutes for Health to study topics such as racial disparities and transgender health. “I’ve sat on this bench now for forty years, and I’ve never seen government racial discrimination like this. Is it true of our society as a whole, have we fallen so low? Have we no shame?” the Boston-based district judge asked in announcing his decision.
Young is 84. He was appointed by conservative hero Ronald Reagan. And in those remarks, Young was paraphrasing the line that finally brought down Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his “Red Scare” conspiracy hunts and blacklists that ruined so many lives and careers.
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BACK IN THE SUMMER OF 2016, when Trump was the newly crowned Republican nominee, a federal appeals court struck down a North Carolina voting law that was written expressly, and with astonishingly open intent, to suppress black votes. I wrote a column about it, and a colleague put the word “racism” in the headline. I was squeamish but didn’t say no.
I still hesitate to use “racism,” or “racist,” and yet what else could it have been in that case? North Carolina lawmakers requested a study of racial voting patterns and then killed or restricted IDs, time periods, registration methods, and anything else black people relied on disproportionately to cast votes. You can argue that it was a partisan move, designed to ensure victory. But zeroing in on one race—ensuring that it’s hard for black people to vote—is racism on its face.
That was before the 2016 election, and at the time, I believed and wrote that Republicans had been “accelerating their march to demographic suicide since Trump blared his hostility toward Muslims, Hispanics and immigrants on the first day of his campaign.” Though Trump won the Electoral College and the presidency, Hillary Clinton beat him by nearly 3 million votes that year.
It’s embarrassing to read that line now, especially after Trump grew his appeal to minority voters last year. Lots of people have sought to understand why that happened, and I won’t try to explain it here. I can only hope that it will fade as Trump continually overreaches on every front.
The disruptions and dangers to health care, immigrants, tariffs, corruption, war and peace, higher education, libraries, museums, and the entire system of checks and balances are manifest. There’s hating on science while crushing on dictators, the abuse of pardon power and obnoxious favoritism toward red states, political allies, anyone who adores him and/or pays him off.
And, of course, Trump’s travel bans and restrictions against countries that are mostly black and brown, in contrast with the several dozen poor, pitiful white people of South Africa, ceremonially invited and welcomed into the United States to escape their oppression, indeed their genocide (both thoroughly discredited).
I’m getting less squeamish all the time about the words “racism” and “racist.” The labels “white supremacist” and “white nationalist.” And the bald truths about attacks on DEI called out by a Reagan judge born 84 years ago.
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