| SWU
News:
November 5, 2004
Health, exercise focus of lecture series
A
series of free lectures will highlight fitness advice
from how to select running shoes to healthy food selection.
The
lectures, part of Southern Wesleyan University’s
Health and Exercise Lecture Series will be offered at
the university’s main campus in Central, in Folger
Fine Arts Auditorium.
The
first in the series, “Running Related Injuries and
Shoe Selection,” Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. will feature Skip
Hunter, owner and director of Clemson Sports Medicine
and Rehabilitation.
The
second lecture, “Food Choices for your Personal
Health and the Health of the Planet,” will be presented
by Dr. Frank Powell, professor of Health and Exercise
Science at Furman University, Nov. 11 at 7 p.m.
“Overweight
and Obesity: How to Make the Connection that Movement
is Knowledge,” will be the final lecture, Nov. 15
at 7 p.m. The speaker will be Gwen Massey, president of
the South Carolina Alliance for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation and Dance.
Hunter,
the first guest lecturer, earned his bachelor’s
degree in physical therapy in 1978 from the Medical University
of South Carolina while simultaneously earning his certification
in athletic training from the National Athletic Trainers
Association. His career history as an athletic trainer
spans college as well as professional arenas.
As
a trainer for eight years at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, Hunter worked with the football team as
well as the field hockey, wrestling, tennis, track and
gymnastics programs. In 1989, 1990, and 1994, Hunter served
as trainer for the U.S. Soccer Program with the under-21
team in France, with the under-16 team in France and with
the World Cup team versus Trinidad in the U.S. He furthered
his career as head trainer for the Charlotte Rage arena
football team in 1991 and later served as trainer at the
1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta.
Combining
his knowledge of athletic training and physical therapy,
Hunter teaches continuing education courses throughout
the country and has published numerous articles in journals
including The National Athletic Trainers’ Journal,
The Physician and Sports Medicine, The Journal of Orthopedics
and Sports Physical Therapy and The Journal of the American
Physical Therapy Association. He has also co-authored
two books: Foot Orthotics for Sport and Therapy and How
to Become a Physical Therapist.
Southern
Wesleyan University’s second guest lecturer, Powell,
joined the faculty of Furman University in 1974. He teaches
nutrition and specializes in gerontology.
A
native of Kentucky, Powell earned his undergraduate degree
from Georgetown College, his master’s degree from
the University of North Carolina and a Ph.D. in movement
science from Florida State University. He completed post-doctoral
studies at UCLA.
Paraphrasing
the words of Powell’s close friend and mentor Dr.
Ray Wylie, a premier senior athlete who died in 1995 at
age 84, Powell said he is most concerned that as prosperous
Americans, we finance our most productive working years
with the physical capital of our youth.
When
we fail to regularly invest in the proper care and maintenance
of our bodies, Powell said, we find ourselves physically
bankrupt before our time. His lecture will focus on the
fuel we provide our bodies.
The
third lecturer, Gwen Massey, earned her bachelor’s
degree in physical education from the University of South
Carolina at Spartanburg and her master’s degree
in education at Furman University. She is president of
the South Carolina Alliance for Health Physical Education,
Recreation and Dance. She has been an integral part of
the Elementary Physical Education Assessment Writing Team
for the State of South Carolina Department of Education,
writing and piloting many performance indicators, criteria
for assessment, rubrics and testing protocols.
Massey
has organized a variety of activities at Northside Elementary
in Seneca, where she taught for 11 years. Jump Rope For
Heart, recess walking programs, individual fitness journals
and individualized report cards are a few of her projects
to stimulate fitness awareness in children. She was awarded
the 2002 SCAPES Founders Award for Teaching Excellence
at the Elementary Level and received National Board certification
in 2003. She also received National Board certification
in physical education in 2003.
She
currently serves as the assistant principal at Pendleton
Elementary School, as well as an adjunct professor at
Southern Wesleyan University. |