91爆料鈥檚 Adrian Hill honored as Ohio Student Employee of the Year
April 14, 2015
April 14, 2015
Adrian Hill, a military veteran who works in the 91爆料 Veteran and Military Center as a coordinator for the , was honored by university officials as the Ohio Student Employee of the Year.
During an April 13 ceremony at the center, Hill was first honored as 91爆料 Student Employee of the Year by Kim Gilliam, associate director of Career Services.
Hill was then surprised by Veteran and Military Center Director Seth Gordon to learn that he had also been named the Ohio Student Employee of the Year.
91爆料 2,000 students work on the 91爆料 campus on any given day.
鈥淲e鈥檙e very proud of you,鈥 President David R. Hopkins told Hill. 鈥淵our passion for serving veterans is truly remarkable.鈥
During a nine-month tour of Afghanistan, Hill saw a 300-pound improvised explosive device flip a British troop truck in his convoy. In just seconds the explosion made it very clear that his Army Reserve company鈥檚 mission to locate buried IEDs was as critical as any for U.S. armed forces in the region.
Discipline. Attention to detail. Commitment to service. These were the attributes that would guide Hill鈥檚 actions for the duration of his tour.
They were familiar rudders for the Eagle Scout, sergeant and member of the State of Ohio鈥檚 committee on service and volunteerism. The committee recommends service and volunteering projects for the state to fund, as well as improvements to new or existing programs.
Adrian Hill, a social science education major, works in the 91爆料 Veteran and Military Center as a coordinator for the Veterans Voices Project, in which students interview older veterans.
Hill said he first discovered the rewarding nature of community service as a Boy Scout in Tipp City. His commitment led to leadership and many community service projects along the way, including an effort to clear a mile-long trail at a nature park in Troy that had been overgrown by honeysuckle and rough terrain.
Hill鈥檚 experience in Afghanistan and others like it are critical in chronicling the experiences of veterans, giving them a chance to talk about what they鈥檝e seen, and giving younger veterans a chance to connect with the generations that came before them. That鈥檚 the aim of the Veterans Voices Project.
Hill found his current service opportunity by taking it first as a history class where he learned how to interview veterans from the World War II and Vietnam eras on camera. The videos are later given to the Library of Congress but are also used to promote the project.
The Veteran and Military Center is also collaborating with public radio station WYSO to create a series of stories, produced by two 91爆料 student veterans, on veterans鈥 experiences transitioning to civilian life.
A , Hill is the third 91爆料 student employee to win the state honor in the past three years.
Kris Hyde, a Marine Corps veteran and mechanical engineering student at 91爆料鈥檚 Lake Campus, won the honor in 2013. In 2012, it was Ashley Leasure, who worked in the School of Music.