Lincoln
woman rides to victory
― with a dollar under her leg
and an egg on a spoon
[FEB.
26,
2001] Just
over a year after suffering a concussion in a fall from her horse,
Donna Laroux of Lincoln won four classes with him at a breed horse
show. In between came seven months of lessons and practicing such
skills as balancing a raw egg on a plastic spoon while riding.
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"My
feet have still not come down to earth," Laroux said of her trophy-filled
day. "It was so exciting." She called her children, Justin, 11, and
Stephanie, 9, her "biggest cheering section." In fact, Stephanie
carried the trophies around all afternoon.
Laroux’s
trophies plus six ribbons came at the Mid-States American Bashkir Curly Horse
Show and Sale on Feb. 17 at the state fairgrounds in Springfield. Her horse
Storm ― UB Stormy Mr. Lips, to be formal ― is a 6½-year-old
American Bashkir Curly with straight hair.
That isn’t as
impossible as it sounds. Although curly hair is a hallmark of the breed, a
recessive gene produces straight hair on some horses. There is no effort to
breed out this gene because some buyers like all other features of the breed
except the curly coat. Those other features include an extremely calm and gentle
disposition, slightly slanted eyes which enable greater rear vision, and tough
black hooves which rarely need shoeing. Some people who are allergic to most
horses are not allergic to Curlies.
Curliness of the
hair varies and extends to eyelashes, mane, fetlocks and even the hair in the
ears. Some manes split down the middle leaving ringlets on both sides of the
neck.
Laroux rode horses
as a child, so she had no qualms about getting into the saddle when she bought
Storm in December 1999. Three weeks later, however, she fell from her horse and
sustained a concussion. That meant six weeks of not riding and even longer
before she rode Storm again.
Laroux’s
husband, Greg, suggested that she practice on Spectacular Event, a 17-year-old
appaloosa mare they had recently bought. In July, however, she retrieved a news
article that had appeared months before and contacted Ann Liesman of rural
Lincoln. Laroux moved Storm to Liesman’s stable and began lessons.
At first her goal
was to master trail riding. That changed at the end of October when she received
an e-mail from the couple who had sold her Storm. Sue and Jeff Davis of Lebanon,
Ill., were organizing a breed horse show and asked Laroux to enter.
Liesman surveyed
the list of planned classes and said, “Well, OK. Let’s get you ready.”
From that point on, according to Laroux, her lessons concentrated on acquiring
the finesse needed to show. She had to fine-tune her posture and practice hand
positions and other techniques that weren’t important while riding in the
pasture.
Storm is a gaited
horse, but Laroux explained that she had been riding “strung out, not
collected gait.” Another way of explaining it is that she had to switch from
riding as she would a quarter horse to gaited riding. In the process she had to
change from Aussie to Western and English saddles for different events. She also
learned halter presentation ― where and how the exhibitor and horse must
stand and how to present the horse to a judge. In January Jan Davis helped her
perfect moves specific to Curlies.
The Egg and Spoon
class and Ride-a-Buck class, both of which she won at the show, required careful
practice. In Egg and Spoon the rider must balance a raw egg on a plastic spoon,
without touching the egg, while the horse walks, trots and canters, or ―
for gaited horses ― walks, slow gaits and fast
gaits. Laroux said she practiced with a plastic Easter egg containing Hershey’s
kisses to simulate the size and weight of an egg. At the show she was the last
rider with an intact egg.
[to
top of second column in this article]
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The Ride-a-Buck
class is performed bareback with a play dollar bill tucked under the back of the
rider’s leg. Again, three gaits are performed without the rider’s touching
or losing the bill. In practice Laroux, the bookkeeper for Steak ’n Shake,
sometimes used real dollar bills and sometimes bills she had traced on paper.
Whenever one fell out, she substituted another, then picked them all up
afterward.
When it came time
for the show, “Ann [Liesman] said I was ready, and I didn’t know any better,”
Laroux admitted. “As far as I was concerned, I was as ready as I was going to
get. I had no illusions; I went to have fun and meet Curly owners.” Because
she didn’t expect to win, Laroux was overwhelmed when her name was called
again and again.
Of the 35 classes
offered, she entered 10 and won trophies in four: Egg and Spoon, Ride-a-Buck,
Jack Benny Pleasure for adults over 39, and Gaited Country Pleasure Stake for
both adult and junior exhibitors. In addition, she won ribbons in the six other
classes she entered: second in Open Halter; third in Gaited Country Pleasure,
English Walk-Trot/Favorite Gait for Adults and Western Walk-Trot/Favorite Gait
for Adults; fourth in Adult Showmanship; and sixth in Best Color Halter.
For some events,
such as Gaited Country Pleasure Stake, she wore English attire, consisting of
bowler hat, gloves, dress shirt, man’s tie, and saddle seat suit with tails
and flared pants. For others, such as Ride-a-Buck, her Western dress included
Western shirt and hat, chaps, jeans and optional gloves.
The Open Halter
judging is primarily on the horse’s appearance and behavior, while in Adult
Showmanship the presenter is judged as he or she leads the horse through a
prescribed pattern of moves.
Laroux commented
that she thought the sixth place for Best Color was awarded only because her
horse behaved so well. Although “any color of any horse shows up in Curlies,”
her horse is not very colorful, she said. He is a blue roan, meaning a mixture
of light and dark gray, but in winter only the dark gray shows.
A class that
Laroux did not enter was Best Curly Coat Halter, judged on thickness, curliness
and consistency of the coat. The show must be held in winter because Curlies
lose some or most of their curl as they shed.
Laroux met Curly
owners from Illinois, Michigan, Indiana and Oklahoma. She hopes that the
American Bashkir Curly Show will become an annual event, so she can renew
acquaintances every year. Curly owners also keep in touch through their
newsletter, “Curly Cues.”
At the show Laroux and her husband
purchased a second Curly, a yearling with curly hair, named WWW Proud Prince.
[Lynn
Spellman]
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Another
Davis, another Fults — competitors and friends
[FEB.
23,
2001] They’re
both political science majors at Western, they’re sorority sisters
and best friends, and they’re working on opposing sides in the
Lincoln mayoral race.
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"I didn’t
know how involved I would get, or how much I would care," said Bobbie Fults
of her work for her uncle Don Fults’ campaign in the Republican primary for
mayor. She is completing a six-credit-hour internship at Western Illinois
University working as his campaign secretary.
Emily Davis,
daughter of opposing Republican mayoral candidate Beth Davis, is involved in her
mother’s campaign while doing a 12-credit-hour internship in the office of
Illinois 50th District Sen. Larry Bomke. Both women are junior political science
majors at Western.
The two "see
each other every single night," according to Fults. They compare notes
generally but are careful not to talk too specifically about the campaign. The
outcome of the primary will not be a problem, however, because each says she
will be able to give sincere congratulations if the other side wins. "I
think Beth Davis is a wonderful person, and nothing can come between Emily’s
and my friendship," Fults affirms.
Davis, who has
worked for Bomke for three summers, hopes her internship will also include work
in the Springfield office of U.S. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald this summer.
She said the local
campaign has held few surprises. "However, politics isn’t an exact
field," she added. "You have to be always on your toes when you run
for office. Be alert and ready for anything and everything. Stick up for what
you believe in. Above all, keep it positive."
Fults said she
knew she would attend campaign events but not every event. She has been
surprised by the number of activities and demands on the candidates’ — and
their campaign workers’ — time.
Both Fults and
Davis have spent time delivering campaign literature, posting signs in yards,
making phone calls and meeting the public. They have also made suggestions
regarding statements to the media.
Both have used
information from college class work to advise their respective candidates. Davis
said the book "How to Run a Local Election," read for a Campaigns and
Elections course, was especially helpful. Using insights from the course and
book, she became a consultant to her mother.
Fults also
mentioned a particular book, an autobiography of the legendary Chicago mayor
Richard Daley. She said she shared some of Daley’s positive accomplishments
and the issues he addressed with Don Fults, who appreciates having a political
science major to give "a different spin" on the campaign. She acts as
a sounding board for him and said, "I get so excited every time he takes my
advice. He treats me as an equal."
The two women
studied three courses together last semester, but Campaigns and Elections was
not one of them. Fults said her most relevant course should have been Illinois
Politics, but that dealt primarily with Chicago politics. In fact, she is
devoting much of the 18-page paper required for her internship to contrasting
small-town politics and what she learned about Chicago. For her required journal
she is saving all news articles about the campaign and excerpts from the
lincolnil.com message board to show the variety of reports and opinions.
[to
top of second column in this article]
|
While Bobbie Fults
is taking two online classes to complete her semester’s load, Emily Davis is
earning a full 12 credit hours for her internship and therefore must write a
paper twice as long. Her paper, however, will be devoted to comparing her
classroom learning with the realities of Bomke’s legislative office. His 50th
District includes Sangamon, Cass and Menard counties.
Davis completed
plans for her internship in November. Fults decided one week into the spring
semester. "I heard Emily, and I really got into the idea of an
internship," she said.
Fults termed the
Lincoln mayoral campaign "a relatively clean race, compared to what it
could be." She noted that, while there have been subtle allusions to
character, out-and-out attacks have been avoided. Also, the number of candidates
has precluded debates or one-on-one comments on candidates’ stands on issues.
Noting that the
Beth Davis campaign has done no polling, Emily Davis said that "sometimes
it’s better not to do it" because respondents may disguise their true
opinions or change their minds and because a poll can become a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
Among the many
connections between Davis and Fults is the fact that they lived in the same
dormitory as freshmen. Though they had participated together in soccer, choir
and school plays at Lincoln Community High School, they did not belong to the
same social group. Independently they decided to attend Western Illinois
University.
Then, while moving
in, they discovered that out of 10 dormitories with 14 or more floors each, they
had been assigned to the same floor of the same dormitory.
Without consulting
each other about their preferences, they pledged the same sorority, Alpha Sigma
Alpha. The sorority and their shared studies have brought them closer together,
Davis said.
Both now live in
the sorority house while on campus. Each is spending this semester in Lincoln,
living with her mother. Their similarities even extend to both working as
waitresses at Al’s Main Event.
However, the
similarities do not include life goals. Davis plans to make politics her career.
She dreams of becoming a full-time Republican staffer at the state Senate.
Barring that, she expects to start out running for local office, with a
"wishful thinking" goal of becoming the first woman president.
Fults plans to
enter law school and has selected college courses with that goal in mind,
following the advice of her mentor Ted Mills. She hopes to practice law in
Lincoln and eventually to become a judge. As far as her career allows, she says,
she will continue to be involved in politics and expects to work on campaigns
for Emily Davis someday.
Competitors now, Bobbie Fults and
Emily Davis expect to remain friends for life.
[Lynn
Spellman]
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