HomeMy WebLinkAbout2020-05-12 Euless Articles Euless Trinity grad, NBA star Myles Turner
donates $50,000 to Texas Health after dad’s
coronavirus recovery
It’s the latest example of Turner’s community service in the Dallas area.
Dallas Mavericks forward Maxi Kleber (42) and Indiana Pacers center Myles Turner (33) looks for a rebound during the second quarter of an NBA game between the Indiana Pacers and the Dallas Mavericks on Sunday, March 8, 2020 at American Airlines Center in Dallas.(Ashley Landis / Staff Photographer) By Callie Caplan 1:10 PM on May 5, 2020 Since graduating from Euless Trinity in 2014, Indiana Pacers center Myles Turner has remained involved with community service in the Dallas area. The latest example: Turner’s $50,000 donation to Texas Health Resources’ COVID-19 Response Fund at Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital Hurst-Euless-Bedford.
Turner’s father, David, was successfully treated for COVID-19 at the hospital in late March, and
Turner’s donation will benefit the “immediate needs” of frontline caregivers at the hospital,
according to the organization’s announcement.
“My family and I are extremely grateful for the dedication and care Texas Health gave my father,” Turner said in a statement. “We weren’t able to be with him while he was being treated, which was really hard, but knowing how well he was cared for gave us a lot of comfort. That’s why we wanted to give something back to the people who dedicated themselves to getting him back to health.
We prayed for his recovery every day and are thankful to have him home.”
Turner’s father suffered from flu-like symptoms for a week before being admitted to Texas Health HEB on March 24. After he was diagnosed with pneumonia and tested positive for the coronavirus on March 27, David wasn’t allowed visitors. The donation from Turner will go toward thousands of employees who care for COVID-19 patients while needing help with critical expenses, such as food, daycare and other medical equipment. “I wasn't able to see my family for a number of days, which was very tough,” David Turner said in a statement. “I feel strongly that having loved ones by your side at a time like that can affect how you get through it. In my case I was right. My nurses — Jacqueline, Julianne, Jenna and Shelby — were my blessing. I can't express enough how appreciative I am for the care they gave me. They worked tirelessly to save my life, feel a sense of encouragement and keep me smiling." Weeks before his dad was diagnosed with COVID-19 and a few days before the pandemic forced the NBA on March 11 to suspend operations, Turner and his family helped raise spirits for another
Dallas-area family. Before the Pacers faced the Mavericks on March 8 in Dallas, Turner met with
11-year-old A’Myah Moon, a sixth-grade student in Plano ISD. Moon is battling a rare form of
cancer and had been bullied when a classmate pulled off her wig during school. Turner shared a private moment with Moon on the American Airlines Center court before the
game, offering advice, friendship and a few gifts, and Turner’s family gathered with Moon’s after
the game. In the past, Turner has also hosted annual basketball camps in the Bedford area
to inspire and interact with young players from his hometown.
“The reason I do this isn’t for the cameras and that kind of stuff,” Turner said after meeting Moon.
“Kids see us, and we’re larger than life. They see us out on the floor, kind of like superheroes in a
sense, doing what we do. “When they see us [up close] in person, it’s like, you realize I’m just a human being like you are, too.”
Frontline Workers Honored As Blue Angels
Take To The Skies Over North Texas
May 6, 2020 at 11:40 am
The U.S. Navy's Blue Angels perform their precision aerobatics. (credit: Rob O'Neal/Florida Keys News Bureau via Getty Images) NORTH TEXAS (CBSDFW.COM) – Today was the day when the Navy’s Blue Angels flew a weaving path around North Texas to honor frontline workers as the country deals with COVID-19. The day began with a flyover near McKinney at 11 a.m. The entire flyover went over more than a dozen North Texas cities and lasted about 35 minutes.
This morning the pilots taking part in the ‘America Strong’ program — to salute doctors, nurses
and other essential workers — posted a video on social media as they headed out to their F/A-18
Hornets at the Naval Air Station Pensacola in Florida bound for the Lone Star State. The airborne
aerobatic team began their flight in Collin County, winding over the cities of Allen, Frisco, The
Colony and Plano. The jet pilots then flew over Richardson before circling downtown Dallas.
The squadron continued their massive air show into Duncanville and over Irving before crossing near Grapevine and Southlake. The team then moved into Tarrant County, flying over the mid-cities of Hurst-Euless-Bedford before blazing the skies over Keller, North Richland Hills, and Arlington. The end of the North Texas flyover took the fighter jets around downtown Fort Worth and Benbrook.
In all, the flight path took the squadron over nearly two dozen hospitals including, Medical City Dallas, Baylor Scott & White – Dallas, Parkland Hospital, Dallas Children’s Medical Center, Texas
Health Arlington Memorial Hospital, the entire Fort Worth Hospital District and Texas Health
Harris Methodist in Benbrook.