Lindsay Dodge (May ’09) promoted to Southeast Regional Manager at American Junior Golf Association

Lindsay Dodge was recently promoted to the Southeast Regional Manager at the American Junior Golf Association. Lindsay is responsible for furthering the AJGA mission within the Southeast region by creating and maintaining positive relationships with sponsors, golf courses, parents, committee members, and golf industry leaders. On the sponsorship side, Lindsay is seeking tournament title sponsors along with promoting the AJGA brand and creating new revenue for AJGA tournaments. Lindsay also works on finding new venues for the upcoming years to ensure quality golf courses for AJGA members. In 2012, Lindsay will run three tournaments aside from her sponsorship duties. In this role, she coordinates, plans, and executes the golf tournaments to conduct a financially and operationally sound event. Lindsay has lived in Atlanta, Georgia for 1 year and is originally from Topeka, Kansas. The AJGA Headquarters is in Braselton, Georgia, which is about 40 minutes north of Atlanta.

Mason Einspahr, Health Science Senior, Featured in Index Article

Every bowler dreams of 300 — the score of a perfect game. For one Truman State student, that game was missed by a mere three points on the final ball.

During his freshman year, senior Mason Einspahr bowled a 297 — a near perfect score.

“It’s close,” Mason said. “It was almost 300, but the very last ball I got a seven instead of a strike.”

This 297 did not come easily and only served as a single moment in a life-long passion, coming after years of practice and an entire childhood of bowling.

“There are some pictures of me being 2 or 3 and my dad is sitting behind me helping me push the ball,” Mason said.

For Mason, bowling is a family affair. He said both his parents bowled in leagues at B&J Bowl in Boonville, Mo., owned by family friends.

Mason said he joined an official league at 5 years old, but it wasn’t until around age 12 that he began competing in more serious tournaments with larger numbers of competitors and more experienced bowlers. Boasting a gold medal at the 2005 Show-Me State Games and various other achievements, Einspahr said he has competed at tournaments throughout Missouri and the Midwest.

At the end of May, he will bowl at nationals for the first time. This tournament will have stringent rules including dress codes, lane courtesy laws and serious weigh-ins for each person’s ball, Mason said.

Good Luck at Nationals, Mason!

For the full Index article, click here

Erin Haslag, ’05 HES Grad: How to Make Wellness Your Focus in 2012

How to Make Wellness Your Focus in 2012

Tue., Jan. 10, 2012 6:00 PM PST by erin haslag

Bowl of Fruit, Too Fat For Fifteen Stock Images

 Tick-tock… the clock strikes midnight and you clink your champagne glasses in celebration of the new year. And then have another glass of champagne, followed by a little more food. And maybe just one more glass of champagne. We have all been having the “little extra” in the name of celebrations and the little overindulgences add up. Even your resident wellness coach starts to feel the sins of her food transgressions after the holiday season! We can get right back on track and feel fit, fab and amazing in the new year without being a slave to diets or the gym.

 

1. Begin to record all the things you eat. During the holidays we slip up because we allow ourselves to indulge in all the little things in celebration of the season. I have clients write out what it is they are eating and they become more aware of why and when they decide to eat. Use this trick. There’s even research to suggest that sharing your weight loss efforts on social media – think Facebook and Twitter – leads to greater accountability and support.

2. Drink – and eat more – water! Your body is an amazing detox machine given the right food and plenty of hydration. There’s zero need for a crash diet or low-calorie starvation misery. Your liver will do all the work if you take the junk out of your diet – like processed and sugary foods – and give it plenty of water-based foods, like fruits and vegetables.

Erin Haslag

 

3. You don’t have to kill yourself at the gym to peel off a few extra pounds from the holiday season. Try one to two weeks of your pre-holiday routine and notice if your body corrects for the holidays. If you don’t have a favorite sweat-it-out routine take the advice of one of my favorite physicians, Dr. Mike Evans. His prescription will have you back to the normal you in no time at all with a minimal amount of sweat.

4. We love to swear off our holiday transgressions with  “I’ll never…” statements. Turn these into positive statements and actions that lead to your goal. It’s difficult enough to eat healthy at times without Grandma’s famous cookies staring you down from across the kitchen. Clear out the tempting goodies, stock healthy foods and set reasonable goals, like trying to cook 3-4 healthy meals for yourself each week.

We all had our fun over the holidays and there’s zero shame in having had a little too much fun as long as you curb the holiday behaviors and put them away for the rest of the year. Recognizing what we can do to control holiday weight gain and learning from the previous year is a big help in staying healthy, happy and stylish all year long!

Erin Haslag, a 2005 Truman HES graduate and a board-certified holistic wellness coach, can be found at @WELLinLA where she writes too often about kale and shares ways to integrate wellness in all aspects of life.

Article link: http://www.mystyle.com/mystyle/b8483_ask_style_how_make_wellness_your_focus.html

December 2011 Athletic Training Graduates Pass BOC on First Attempt

The Athletic Training Education Program is  excited to announce that the  December 2012 graduates passed their BOC (Board of Certification exam for Athletic Trainer’s) on the first attempt.   Congratulations to Kelsey Lockyer, Danielle Zee Cheng, and Michael Atkinson!  We’re very proud of you!

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Hurst Quoted in Sun-Sentinel.com Article

Dr. Jennifer Hurst was quoted in the article “Skip the gym? You’ll pay the penalty,” which appeared in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel on December 28, 2011. The article discusses a new program called Gym Pact, which charges you money for skipping a workout.  It focuses on getting people who do not regularly exercise to do so by giving them an immediate consequence for not going to the gym.  Dr. Hurst addresses some of the hurdles that people need to overcome in order to successfully maintain a exercise schedule.

“The No. 1 reason people say they don’t exercise is time,” says Jennifer Hurst, professor of exercise science at Truman State University in Kirksville, Mo. “Anybody can change for two weeks, but all of the sudden life comes in and you aren’t as motivated as you thought you would be.”

Hurst would like to see fitness centers play more of a consulting role to help people incorporate exercise into their lives.

“Fitness centers are designed for people who are ready to go,” Hurst says. “It’s going to take personal trainers who also have an understanding about behavior change processes, not just how to lift weights and use machines. People who will help you set goals and work the process of getting healthy into your life.”

To read the full article, click here