MTSU faculty and staff took to WGNS Radio recently to share
information about the upcoming Bleed Blue Blood Drive, a student-led effort to
assist a local disabled veteran with housing and a professor’s new book about
gangs in the military.
The
details were shared during the Oct. 16 “Action Line” program with host Bart
Walker. The live program was broadcast on FM 100.5, 101.9 and AM 1450 from
the WGNS studio in downtown Murfreesboro. If you missed it, you can listen
to a podcast of the show here.
Guests
and their topics were as follows:
Ray Wiley, associate
director of MTSU Campus Recreation and longtime Red Cross volunteer, Diane Turnham, MTSU associate athletic director, and Sean Armstrong, regional business development manager with the
American Red Cross, discussed the upcoming “Bleed Blue, Beat WKU” Blood Drive.
For an eighth year, the Blue
Raider community will again be competing against supporters of our fellow
Conference USA member Western Kentucky University during the “Bleed Blue” Blood
Drive to be held Nov. 13-15 at the MTSU Campus Recreation Center.
Last year, WKU won the competition for the second time since 2010 with 414
successful donors to MTSU’s 404 donors. This year’s winner will be
announced at the Nov. 17 game at WKU.
For more information, including
how to make an appointment, go to http://mtsunews.com/bleed-blue-2017/.
Dr. Joey Gray, associate professor in MTSU’s Leisure, Sports and
Tourism Studies Program, and some of her students, discussed the “Bounce Back
Golf Scramble” fundraiser set for Veterans Day on Saturday, Nov. 11, at
Champions Run Golf Course in Murfreesboro.
Students in MTSU’s Leisure, Sports
and Tourism Studies Program are planning the golf scramble to raise funds for
the Homes For Our Troops nonprofit organization, which builds accessible, mortgage
free, homes for wounded veterans (post 9/11).
The MTSU students were able to
pick the veteran they would support, and in this case the wounded veteran is
former U.S. Army Sgt. Bryan Camacho of Murfreesboro. Camacho was first wounded
in service (paralyzed from waist down) in 2007 while in Iraq. He then had an auto
accident in 2014 and is now a quadriplegic.
Learn more about the event and
Camacho by going to MTSU Bounce
Back Golf Scramble: Benefiting Homes For Our Troops on Facebook (or search for @bbgolfscramble) or go to Active.com. For information, email Gray
at joey.gray@mtsu.edu or call
615-904-8359.
Dr. Carter F. Smith, a professor in the MTSU Department of Criminal
Justice Administration, discussed his
new book, “Gangs and the Military: Gangsters, Bikers, and Terrorists with
Military Training.”
Smith’s book is based on personal
experiences, historical documents, government reports and current events. He
was in the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, commonly called
CID, for more than 22 years, serving 15 years at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He
identified the growing problem of street gangs and military connections in the
early 1990s and later started the Army’s first gang and extremist
investigations team.
Smith recently shared his
expertise at one of the South’s premier literary events: the 2017 Southern Festival of Books in
Nashville. Learn more at http://mtsunews.com/smith-gang-book-fall2017/.
Students,
faculty and staff who are interested in guesting on WGNS to promote their
MTSU-related activities should contact Jimmy Hart, director of news and media
relations, at 615-898-5131 or via email at jimmy.hart@mtsu.edu.
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