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Around the Dell Athletic trainers honored


Dr. Patricia Aronson was in- ducted into the Virginia Ath- letic Trainers’ Association (VATA) Hall of Fame and Dr. Debbie Bradney was named Educator of the Year in January. Dr. Aronson single-handedly


started the athletic training pro- gram at LC, teaching virtually every athletic training subject, according to Dr. Tim Laurent, associate dean for academic affairs. She has served on several local, regional, and na-


Pat Aronson Debbie Bradney


Association (NATA) has led to past accolades, including the NATA Athletic Training Service Award in 1998 and the NATA Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award in 2004. Dr. Bradney, associate profes-


sor of athletic training, has served as both athletic trainer and professor. She has served as coordinator of clinical educa-


tion and is now department chair. Dr. Bradney is as a site reviewer for the Commis-


Indian student attracted to physics of sports


Aakar Verma, a twenty-one-year-old mechanical engineering student from New Delhi, India, emailed LC’s Dr. Eric Goff after finding Goff’s paper on the aerodynamics of a soc- cer ball on the Internet. Their corre- spondence turned into a two-month research internship for Aakar last summer.


tional committees to enhance the profession. As an undergraduate student at Canisius College, she combined her athletic ability in basketball with her dedication to athletic training. Her experience as a clinician, professor, and in- volved member of the National Athletic Trainers’


sion on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE). In this volunteer role she is able to discuss education techniques with colleagues throughout the country.


FACULTY In print


Dr. Dorothy Bundy Turner Potter ’64, profes- sor of history, Food for Apollo: Cultivated Music in Antebellum Philadelphia, published by Lehigh University Press, 2011.


Dr. Nicole Sanders, associate professor of his- tory, Gender and Welfare in Mexico: The Consol- idation of a Postrevolutionary State, published by Penn State University Press, 2011.


Dr. Ed Polloway edited Exceptionality, A Special Education Journal, Vol. 19, No. 4, Oct.-Dec. 2011, with three LC alumni: Tammy Smith ’06 M.Ed., Julia Beyer ’06, ’08 M.Ed., and Jenevie “Wendy” Bailey ’08, ’08 M.Ed.


Paul Kelbaugh ’71, instructor in business administration, Closure: My Life Backwards, published by Lulu.com, 2011.


Adam Davies, fall Thornton Writer-in- Residence, is the author of three novels: The Frog King, screenplay by Bret Easton Ellis; Goodbye Lemon, a tragicomic family drama; and Mine All Mine, a screwball thriller that was named


“One of the Top Ten Crime Books of the Year” by Booklist. Davies became an integral part of the campus community, hosting weekly films, as well as doing a reading.


Dr. Bonnie Stevens, adjunct in English, writing as B.K. Stevens, published a short story, “Death in Rehab” (a Leah Abrams mystery), Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, May 2011; a novella One Shot, Untreed Reads, May 2011; and a play, One-Day Pass, second prize in One- Act Play Competition, Little Theatre of Alexandria, April 2011.


Dr. Frank Hanenkrat, professor emeritus of English, writing as Frank Troy, published a novel,


“Buried: The Discernment of Pagans in Ancient Rome,” Cave Canem Press, 2011.


10 LC MAGAZINE Spring 2012


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