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2002 |
Rodeo
picks Prineville woman as queen
Tawny Morris of Prineville is
the 2002 Sisters Rodeo Queen.
Judges selected Morris, age
20, from among three candidates based on an interview, a speech and a
demonstration of horsemanship.
"I was born and raised as
a cowgirl," Morris told the audience at the Sisters Rodeo clubhouse on
Sunday, March 24. "I was raised with down-to-earth values."
Those values include hard
work and responsibility, traits that were honed raising livestock in the
4-H program.
Morris, a hair stylist in
Bend, noted that the Sisters Rodeo is a family tradition for many people
in Oregon.
"I'm proud to say that I'm
a part of this tradition," she said.
Morris' father John was a
bull rider in his younger days, and he competed at the Sisters Rodeo.
Tawny tried to follow in her dad's footsteps, she recalled, becoming determined
to ride a steer in a junior rodeo.
Instead of telling her that
"girls don't ride steers," Tawny's father encouraged her. Although she
didn't make it to the whistle, she recalled, her father was proud of her
for "giving her all."
Morris said her love of rodeo
combined with her public speaking skills will make her a good representative
for the 62nd Sisters Rodeo.
Morris put her quarter horse
"Breeze" through his paces in the sunny rodeo arena before an appreciative
audience.
Runners-up were Brandi Kitcher
of Bend and Haley Zwicker of Terrebonne.
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