MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — You can help community neighbors
across Middle Tennessee and add some red to the white and blue of your favorite
U.S. military branch this Tuesday, Sept. 11, by giving lifesaving
support at MTSU’s annual “Battle of the Branches” blood drive.
The event,
co-sponsored by the Charlie and Hazel
Daniels Veterans and Military Family Center at MTSU and the Department of Health and Human Performance,
is set from noon to 6 p.m. Sept. 11 in Cantrell Hall inside the
university’s historic Tom Jackson Building, located at 628 Alma Mater Drive on the
west edge of campus.
A printable campus parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking.
Off-campus donors can obtain a special one-day permit at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
The “Battle
of the Branches” is a friendly competition to encourage more blood donations
and thank active-duty and retired military members for their service to the
country.
It’s open to
students, faculty, staff, alumni, friends and neighbors across Middle Tennessee.
All donors will receive a coupon via email for a free haircut from SportsClips as
thanks for their lifesaving help.
Each donor
can also vote for a U.S. military branch — Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines or
Coast Guard — and the branch with the largest number of donors will have
bragging rights until the next veterans’ blood drive. The winning branch also
will receive a plaque at MTSU’s homecoming football game Oct. 20.
Last year’s
blood drive saw more than 100 successful donors, and the U.S. Army received the
most votes as favorite military branch.
“The Daniels
Center is excited to partner with the Red Cross for the ‘Battle of the
Branches,” said center director Hilary Miller. “We are glad to be a part
and to help the Red Cross and our community in this way.”
Donors can
make an appointment now for Sept. 11 by visiting http://ow.ly/Jszr30lJo9Z or using the new “American Red Cross
Blood” app, available at http://ow.ly/ogBb30lJqMl
or by texting "BLOODAPP" to 90999. Walk-in donors also are
welcome.
MTSU community
donors can save more time by completing the required health questionnaire online
on donation day with the Red Cross’s “Rapid Pass,” available at http://www.redcrossblood.org/rapidpass.
“Our goal is
to keep alive the spirit of unity and compassion that arose in the immediate
aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks by providing a positive way for people to
remember and pay tribute to the 9/11 victims and honor those that rose up in
service in response to the attacks,” said Mario Sedlock, director of donor
recruitment for the Red Cross Tennessee Valley Blood Services Region.
“We are
grateful to Dr. Hilary Miller, the Charlie Daniels Veterans Center, MTSU and
its donors for their ongoing support to ensure we honor our heroes while making
sure patients have the blood products they need.”
The American
Red Cross must collect more than 13,000 blood donations each day to help
accident victims, surgery patients, organ transplant patients and those being
treated for leukemia, cancer or sickle cell disease. The Tennessee Valley region
must collect 500 blood donations every day to meet the needs of regional
hospitals.
“We are
in the midst of a blood shortage emergency here in Middle Tennessee, and one
donation can save up to three lives!” said Casie Higginbotham of the Department of Health and Human Performance,
adding that less than five days’ worth of blood supplies are on hand to meet
local needs.
“You do not have to be active duty military or a
veteran to participate. Please
consider giving, as there is a critical need for blood right now.”
MTSU’s Daniels Veterans and Military Family Center is the largest and
most comprehensive facility for student veterans on any college campus in
Tennessee. The 2,600-square-foot center, located in Room 124 of the Keathley University
Center, provides a one-stop shop for a variety of academic needs for MTSU’s
nearly 1,000 student veterans and their families.
For more information about the Daniels Veterans
Center, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/military
and follow @MTVetCenter on Twitter.
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