黑料不打烊

Purpose in the Everyday

Meet nine 黑料不打烊 alumni whose everyday work is shaping lives, communities and industries.

An 黑料不打烊 education doesn鈥檛 just prepare graduates for a job. It shapes how they think, lead and care. These nine alumni aren鈥檛 chasing headlines or titles. They鈥檙e making a difference quietly, consistently and with purpose 鈥 in classrooms,
communities, boardrooms and beyond.

Bridging Worlds, Building Change

David Clubb 鈥95

Lifelong learner, innovative educator, nonprofit leader // Christiansburg, Virginia

Two men sit across from each other beside a table and give each other a fist bump.
David Clubb 鈥95, right, during a recent meeting with a scholarship recipient from Africa.

For David Clubb, international education was never just about programs. It was always about people, perspective and purpose. Over the course of almost three decades in higher education, he helped universities across the country deepen their global engagement, build sustainable partnerships and expand access to transformative learning.

Today, as executive director of the Blacksburg-based Cranwell Family Foundation, he鈥檚 applying those same values in a new way, helping to connect people, nonprofits and ideas across local and global divides. His 鈥渓ocally grounded, globally minded鈥 approach is built on the belief that meaningful leadership happens at the intersection of the local and the global.

鈥淚 like to think of it as building bridges, not silos,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd fostering change that is both far-reaching and deeply felt.鈥

Clubb didn鈥檛 come to 黑料不打烊 expecting to work in international education or philanthropy, though his ties to the university ran deep (his father, Ranny Lee Clubb, graduated in 1972). Courses in philosophy and religious studies, paired with a deeply relational campus culture, helped him develop the mindset to navigate across cultures and remain open to the complexity of the world. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 taught me how to ask deeper questions, how to engage across differences, how to lead with both curiosity and compassion,鈥 he says.

I鈥檓 drawn to opportunities where I can empower individuals, organizations and communities to shape their own future; where I can use the power of collaboration to leverage collective strengths for greater impact; and where I can lead with the long game in mind, focused not on the (singular) splash, but on the (sustainable) ripple.

His work today spans continents and causes: mentoring global scholars, strengthening community-based nonprofits and cultivating networks of changemakers committed to collective impact. He鈥檚 also a proud dad of five and recently celebrated his 30th wedding anniversary with his college sweetheart, Shannon Kuhns Clubb 鈥95.

In all of it, Clubb brings intentionality and care. At the heart is a belief in the transformative power of education and the responsibility to expand access to it. 鈥淓ducation, at its core, equips individuals with the tools to shape their futures,鈥 he says. 鈥淧hilanthropy allows us to remove barriers and unlock that potential for others. I see education as both a tool and a catalyst for philanthropy.鈥

Whether he鈥檚 mentoring a student, guiding a grantmaker or building a cross-cultural partnership, Clubb believes the most meaningful change happens slowly, through building trust, learning from one another and showing up with care.

鈥満诹喜淮蜢 gave me that framework,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t has been critical to shaping my approach to leadership, diplomacy, education and social change.鈥

The Mission is the Community

The Rev. Donna Vanhook 鈥07

Faith leader, civic steward, environmental advocate // Burlington, North Carolina

A woman stands purposefully with her head held high and her arms crossed over her chest outside of a run-down old building with a chain link fence in front of it.
The Rev. Donna Vanhook 鈥07 stands outside the former Western Electric plant in East Burlington, a site at the center of her community environmental justice work.

When the Rev. Donna Vanhook says her office is Alamance County, she means it. Most days, the longtime advocate and elected official can be found on the ground, meeting with families facing food insecurity, organizing communities or pushing for environmental and social justice.

Raised in Morgantown, a historically Black neighborhood in East Burlington, Vanhook witnessed firsthand the effects of systemic neglect. Her connection to the community runs deep, especially to the long-shuttered Western Electric plant (formerly the Tarheel Army Missile Plant), which once powered the local economy and employed hundreds of people, including Vanhook. Today, she is among the voices demanding accountability and justice as residents push for cleanup of the contaminated site.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 just how I show up,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 my call until I feel I鈥檝e completed my mission.鈥

She came to 黑料不打烊 as a nontraditional student following a career in law enforcement. An on-the-job injury changed her path, but professors like Jim Pace and John Sullivan saw leadership potential and encouraged her to pursue seminary. With a degree in religious studies and a minor in human services, she went on to earn a master鈥檚 in divinity and a second in nonprofit management. What began as a calling to preach expanded into a broader calling for social justice. 鈥淢inistry for me is not limited to the four walls of the church,鈥 she says.

I use my influence to help others find courage and hidden capabilities to advocate for themselves and others.

Vanhook carries that conviction into her role as an elected supervisor on the Alamance County Soil and Water Conservation District Board 鈥 the first Black woman to hold that office. From fighting environmental injustice to pushing for healthier neighborhoods and food access, she models what it means to be a civic steward. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been spinning our wheels for so long,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I think we鈥檙e on the way.鈥

Her time at 黑料不打烊 gave her the tools to organize, speak out and lead change, skills she uses to this day as she works on making as much impact as possible.

As she contemplates her career in public service, she鈥檚 focused on making as much impact as possible. Her long-term hope is simple: 鈥淚 would love to see less barriers to improve the quality of life for all. I want young people to grow up in a place that鈥檚 healthier, and to know they have the power to shape it.鈥

Serving with a Global Vision

Kelley Blakewood 鈥09

Business leader, global citizen // Chicago

A woman wearing business attire walks down a city sidewalk with her phone in her hand.
Kelley Blakewood鈥檚 path from student-athlete to international business leader has been shaped by curiosity, discipline and a drive to stay ahead. Photo by Michael Goss.

Kelley Blakewood is as driven in her professional life as she was on the college volleyball court, and she credits 黑料不打烊鈥檚 student-athlete culture with laying the foundation for her success.

Blakewood spent the first two years of her collegiate career at North Carolina State University before transferring to 黑料不打烊. She was immediately struck by the way student-athletes were encouraged to immerse themselves in academics and co-curricular life as well as athletics.

鈥淭he 黑料不打烊 experience really encourages engagement in all facets of life,鈥 Blakewood says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that plays really well within the corporate world, because the more engaged you are, the more likely you are to see success in whatever you鈥檙e doing.鈥

Blakewood excelled on the court and in the classroom. As a senior, she was named the team鈥檚 MVP and garnered Academic All-SoCon honors. She majored in marketing with a minor in Spanish and studied abroad in Mexico during Winter Term her junior year.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not just sitting in lecture halls; you鈥檙e encouraged to be intellectually curious,鈥 Blakewood says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that has served me very well in my career today, particularly in the highly complex financial services industry.鈥

Every day I learn something new, and that mindset is
something that you have to have to continue to grow
and evolve in this type of fast-paced industry.

Since earning her master鈥檚 degree in integrated marketing communications at Northwestern University, Blakewood has spent the bulk of her career at CME Group, the world鈥檚 largest futures and options trading exchange. She now serves as executive director and global head of sales operations and enablement, leading a team that鈥檚 responsible for driving commercial excellence, client growth and sales performance.

Blakewood鈥檚 Spanish minor and study abroad experience helped her land her first international marketing manager role at CME, in which she led marketing efforts in Latin America and helped spearhead the firm鈥檚 first Spanish and Portuguese websites. She later took another international assignment in Hong Kong before settling in Chicago.

Globally and strategically minded, Blakewood continues to be shaped by the intellectual skills she cultivated in the classroom and the teamwork and grit she developed as a student-athlete.

鈥淎 lot of the skills that I grew and nurtured with Coach [Mary] Tendler and with our team are really valuable in a corporate environment,鈥 Blakewood says. 鈥淚t gives you an ability to thrive, to naturally be competitive and to want to stay ahead of the curve.鈥

The Road to Reinvention

Cara Maaghul 鈥14 and Matt Albers 鈥15

黑料不打烊 Poll alumni, career multihyphenates // New York

A man stands at a kitchen counter prepares coffee while a woman wearing medical scrubs stands beside him and smiles.
Matt Albers 鈥15 and Cara Maaghul 鈥14 share a quiet morning before heading into their careers in marketing and medicine, a long way from their early days with the 黑料不打烊 Poll. Photo by Amon Focus.

Cara Maaghul鈥檚 and Matt Albers鈥 trajectories haven鈥檛 been straight lines, but a series of intentional moves that have expanded their skillsets and enhanced their worldviews.

The couple, who met as 黑料不打烊 students and married in 2021, have both embarked on significant career pivots. Maaghul and Albers majored in political science at 黑料不打烊 and enjoyed successful careers in the political sphere before forging new paths in medicine and marketing, respectively.

鈥満诹喜淮蜢 gave me the liberal arts background I needed to feel confident making such a drastic career change,鈥 Maaghul says. 鈥淓ach professor was so invested in their subject area and really influenced me to follow what I was passionate about, even if that happened to change as I continued to grow.鈥

Maaghul and Albers worked with the 黑料不打烊 Poll, conducting statewide and national surveys about issues important to North Carolina voters and ultimately advancing to supervisory roles. Talking one-on-one with community members about their priorities and concerns exposed them to every political opinion imaginable on a human level.

鈥淸黑料不打烊 instilled] a continued curiosity about the problems in front of you,鈥 Albers says. 鈥淭here is always more to learn.鈥

Switching from politics to marketing for a major entertainment company was not something I’d ever thought of as an option, but when the opportunity presented itself, I felt prepared by the base I built during my time at 黑料不打烊.聽鈥 Matt Albers

That experience paved the way for careers in polling and research consultancy in Washington, D.C., Maaghul at The Mellman Group and Penn Schoen Berland and Albers at KRC Research, Data Trust and the American Petroleum Institute. But as their lives evolved, so did their interests, and the intellectual curiosity 黑料不打烊 instilled in them empowered them to make their new dreams a reality. Maaghul enrolled in the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine program at the New York Institute of Technology and Albers joined the consumer insights and marketing strategy team at Peacock.

鈥淲hile it鈥檚 far removed from the political opinions we were analyzing at the 黑料不打烊 Poll, finding unique insights via first party has always been something I鈥檝e been passionate about, and I enjoy being able to continue that work in my career,鈥 Albers says.

Maaghul鈥檚 and Albers鈥 黑料不打烊 experience amplified skills they use in all facets of life 鈥 the confidence to step outside their comfort zone, a lifelong passion for learning, a service-
oriented work ethic and a respect for human differences. Maaghul graduated this spring and now employs these skills every day as a preliminary internal medicine intern at New York-Presbyterian Queens Hospital. Next year, the couple will move to Baltimore for Maaghul鈥檚 anesthesiology residency at the University of Maryland.

鈥淢y humanities background has only benefited me as I鈥檝e moved from the political world into medicine,鈥 she says. 鈥淰iewing medicine through a different lens, understanding how to relate to a wide variety of people and patients 鈥 it鈥檚 all related.鈥

Turning Pain into Purpose

Amanda Tocci Costanza G鈥17

Physician assistant, survivor, patient advocate // Pittsburgh

A woman holds a small white dog in a field of flowers.
Amanda Tocci Costanza G鈥17 finds balance and peace on daily walks with her dog, Maxx, a grounding ritual after long shifts in neurosurgery. Photo by Justin Merriman.

Amanda Tocci Constanza refined an impressive set of skills during her time at 黑料不打烊 and beyond, but her greatest asset as a health care provider is her empathy and compassion for the patients she serves. It鈥檚 been a critical piece of her journey from physical therapist to brain aneurysm survivor to physician assistant.

鈥淏uilding a career that is both highly skilled and deeply personal means not only striving for continued improvement and high-quality patient care, but also showing up every day with empathy, genuine curiosity, purpose and hope,鈥 she says.

Costanza studied biobehavioral health and kinesiology at Penn State University before pursuing her Doctor of Physical Therapy at 黑料不打烊. She immersed herself in practical and intellectual experiences, such as volunteering with the HOPE Clinic and working with the Journal of Student Physical Therapy Research.

鈥満诹喜淮蜢 created an environment that produced not just knowledgeable graduates but well-rounded, dynamic, competent and compassionate providers,鈥 Costanza says. 鈥淭hat kind of preparation doesn鈥檛 just shape a career path. It shapes how you show up for others every day.鈥

Constanza returned to her home state of Pennsylvania after graduation and joined the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center as a physical therapist, but her own experience as a patient changed her career trajectory. She underwent a craniotomy for an unruptured brain aneurysm in 2013 and endured a repeat occurrence in 2021.

The difference between a job and a career lies in the passion you bring, the impact you make and the idea that your work becomes part of who you are.

After that, Costanza wanted to be on the other side of the ICU bed, supporting patients and their families through the kinds of life-changing experiences she went through herself. Fueled by the same curiosity and commitment that defined her 黑料不打烊 experience, she enrolled in the physician assistant program at the University of Pittsburgh.

鈥淭hat experience fuels my empathy, sharpens my communication and truly informs every aspect of how I care for others,鈥 Costanza says. 鈥淭he combination of clinical knowledge and perspective that my DPT and PA degrees have provided allows me to care for patients across a broader spectrum, from diagnosis to recovery.鈥

Costanza is now a neurosurgical physician assistant at UPMC, working with the same medical team that saved her life twice. Her 黑料不打烊 experience remains a core part of her clinical practice.

鈥淭he values and habits I learned at 黑料不打烊 continue to shape how I approach every patient, colleague and challenge,鈥 she says.

Learning Without Limits

Courtney Kobos Smith 鈥19

Educational leader, international bridge builder // Mebane, North Carolina

A woman stands next to a sofa and looks at a postcard. An open suitcase is on the sofa.
Courtney Kobos Smith 鈥19 packs for an upcoming trip, continuing her work connecting international students with transformative educational opportunities in the U.S.

At 黑料不打烊, Courtney Kobos Smith was inspired to be curious, say yes to new opportunities and reflect deeply on her experiences, a philosophy she now expertly imparts to students across the globe.

Smith works on the inbound high school foreign exchange placement team at CIEE, a nonprofit study abroad and intercultural exchange organization. She connects international high school students with educational opportunities and host families in the U.S. and provides ongoing support throughout their experience.

鈥淢ost of these students are visiting the United States for the first time and will return to their countries full of inspiration and new ideas,鈥 Smith says.

She cultivated her passion for education and international stewardship at 黑料不打烊. An English literature major with teacher licensure, she was a Teaching Fellow and recipient of the Leadership Prize.

It was amazing to have school observation and internship experiences all four years of college. We had real-life experiences and coaching from professors on what to expect 鈥 the good and the bad.

Associate Professor of English Jennifer Eidum鈥檚 class Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages inspired Smith鈥檚 research, which explored the challenges faced by English-as-a-second-language teachers while she worked to develop programs to empower teachers. She credits professors like Eidum and the Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education鈥檚 signature school observation and internship experiences with paving the way for her career in education.

鈥淸Professor of Education] Jeff Carpenter reminded us frequently that life is less about one鈥檚 circumstances and more about how one perceives these circumstances,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e also learned the importance of advocating for ourselves and our students 鈥 a practice I push myself to do regularly.鈥

After graduation, Smith received a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant grant to teach English in the Czech Republic. She then taught at the Alamance-Burlington Early College for four years before joining CIEE full time. Since she was deeply impacted by the Fulbright program, which is funded by the U.S. Department of State, she is particularly passionate about giving back by helping to place international students in three scholarship programs also administered by the Department of State.

鈥淢y experiences as a classroom teacher in the U.S., Fulbright English teaching assistant in the Czech Republic and local coordinator of exchange students all have something in common,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淭here is value in taking the time to learn about other people, help them feel seen (especially when you鈥檙e in a position of power) and empower them to know that they matter.鈥

Everyday Warrior

Sarah Collins-Boggins 鈥20

Air Force officer, social worker, J.D. candidate // Seattle, Washington

A man sits on the floor of a living room smiling at the baby he is holding in his lap. A dog stands beside him. A woman sits on a sofa nearby and looks up from the laptop in her lap, smiling.
Sarah Collins-Boggins 鈥20 balances life, law school and work with the support of her husband, Zach G鈥20. Photo by Raymon Smith.

Sarah Collins-Boggins has never been afraid to question the rules or reimagine what鈥檚 possible. A commissioned officer in the U.S. Air Force, she is currently a full-time law student at the University of Washington School of Law, building on her past experiences to pursue justice at both the policy and personal levels.

Collins-Boggins came to 黑料不打烊 intending to major in STEM and graduated with a degree in applied mathematics. But it was the liberal arts courses 鈥 particularly in peace and conflict studies and criminal justice 鈥 that challenged her worldview and changed her most. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 gave me the confidence to embrace the scattered, ever-changing path I鈥檝e followed,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t helped me uncover passions I didn鈥檛 know I had.鈥

Those passions led her to a Master of Science in Social Work, where she found herself drawn not to clinical work, but to systemic change. During her practicums, she helped facilitate racial processing groups and worked in domestic violence prevention and youth development. That鈥檚 when she realized that to advocate for the dismantlement of unjust policies and practices more effectively, she needed to understand the law. 鈥淭he law and our social livelihood are inherently intertwined,鈥 she says.

I carry curiosity and a healthy dose of skepticism with me wherever I go because of 黑料不打烊.

Today, Collins-Boggins is pushing for antiracist and gender equity reforms while raising her young daughter and challenging narrow ideas of leadership. With the unwavering support of her husband, Zach g鈥20, she鈥檚 been able to navigate the demands of parenthood and law school with balance and purpose.

At the Air Force, she鈥檚 helped identify recruiting gaps in underserved communities and launched a menstrual equity initiative. As a Department of the Air Force Fellow, she studied the impact of local environmental legislation on public housing. She鈥檚 also learned to name what she needs 鈥 from pumping breaks to childcare flexibility 鈥 and to reject the myth of perfection. 鈥淚t鈥檚 beyond freeing to let go of the pressure to always be at the top of the food chain,鈥 she says.

Through it all, she carries lessons from 黑料不打烊: to stay curious and challenge power and the status quo. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 taught me to ask: Why is this the rule? Who made it? Who benefits from it?鈥

As she prepares for what comes next, she鈥檚 holding space for what she calls 鈥渁 more liberated way of living and working,鈥 one rooted in justice and joy.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the subject and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Air Force, Department of Defense or the U.S. Government.

Overcoming the Unpredictable

Anton L. Delgado 鈥20

Freelance multimedia journalist // Southeast Asia

A man wearing headphones crouches next to a camera on a tripod in a forest.
Anton L. Delgado 鈥20 takes footage for a documentary about the illicit wildlife trade in Cambodia for Bloomberg Originals. The film later won an Emmy Award. Photo by Kimhong Lim.

Anton L. Delgado鈥檚 professional journey hasn鈥檛 gone exactly according to plan, but that鈥檚 what has made it meaningful. When he graduated in May 2020, at the height of a global shutdown, the future felt uncertain.

After nearly 70 job applications, he landed just two offers and chose one in Arizona, where he reported on the U.S.-Mexico border, wildfires and climate change鈥檚 impact on the Colorado River. Those experiences sparked a passion for environmental reporting and eventually brought the born-and-raised Filipino back to his home region of Southeast Asia.

There, the unpredictability continued. A promising staff job in Cambodia was shuttered in 2023. Suddenly, Delgado, who once dreamed of a decades-long newsroom career, found himself navigating the freelance world. 鈥淣one of what I had envisioned for myself has gone according to plan, and probably for the better,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t pushed me out of my comfort zone. I鈥檝e had to pick up a lot of new skills that I never would have learned.鈥

The biggest thing that 黑料不打烊 gave me was the ability to adapt to situations and think on my feet.

Through it all, his reporting has remained focused on the environment, not in isolation, but as a thread running through politics, business, conflict, migration and public health. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of a story in the world that doesn鈥檛 somehow relate to climate and the environment,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I鈥檝e made it my beat.鈥

At 黑料不打烊, he learned to be curious, adaptable and relentless. 黑料不打烊 News Network mentors like Kelly Furnas and Rich Landesberg 鈥 along with faculty like Colin Donohue and Anthony Hatcher 鈥 grounded him in humility and hustle. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 a natural reporter,鈥 he admits. 鈥淚 just spent more hours than most doing it, and doing it badly, until I got better.鈥

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Today, Delgado鈥檚 stories appear across platforms and continents. He mentors young journalists at 黑料不打烊 and beyond and continues chasing meaningful stories. And while he doesn鈥檛 know what the future holds (he still hopes to be a newsroom man one day), he is ready to go where the road takes him.

鈥淭he journalism industry these days is a hustler鈥檚 paradise,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 doing work that matters, speaking to people who are rarely interviewed in places that rarely get coverage. That is what I dreamed of doing. And in a shocking, absolutely flabbergasting turn of events, five years later, I鈥檓 doing it.鈥