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Otero County cowboy and Oregon cowgirl share the spotlight
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A 20 year-old cowgirl from the rain-rich pastures of Western Oregon, and
a Tularosa roper with an eye for engineering, are the winners of the
"DuBois Award" for All Around Cowgirl and Cowboy on the New Mexico State
Univfile:///mnt/pdrive/ErsinghausJ/dubois/071906.htmlersity Rodeo Team. Bailey Gow, a gifted rodeo athlete from Roseburg,
Oregon, picked up the Dubois Award for her individual and team efforts.
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Ty Trafile:///mnt/pdrive/ErsinghausJ/dubois/071906.htmlmmell of Tularosa, New Mexico, and two-time recipient of the G.B.
Oliver, Jr. rodeo scholarship, was the DuBois Award winner for
All-Around Cowboy. He is a senior at NMSU majoring in survey
engineering. Prior to his college career, Trammell attended Tularosa
High School. In 2001 he and his roping partner, James Gilliland, were
file:///mnt/pdrive/ErsinghausJ/dubois/071906.htmlthe National High School Rodeo Finals champion team ropers.
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The presenter and founder of the award, Frank DuBois, said that Gow and
Trammell are outstanding representatives for New Mexico State University
and for the Grand Canyon Region of college rodeo. "Bailey is the first
person in history to win All Around Cowgirl four years in a row in
Oregon High School Rodeo. Now her streak continues at New Mexico State
and we couldn't be more proud of her skills in the arena and in the
classroom," DuBois said.
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Trammell who hails from a long-time agricultural family in Otero County,
noted that, "No one has done as much for the NMSU rodeo program as Frank
DuBois," which he said made receiving the award an additional honor.
Trammell's events while on the rodeo team were team roping and calf
roping. DuBois said, "Ty is an exceptional athlete and I especially
enjoyed presenting him the award as I had roped with both his
grandfather and his father."
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In her final year in high school Gow sent her resume to fifteen select
universities with rodeo programs. "I went and looked at them all and I
picked New Mexico State," she says proud of her final choice. She noted
that the warm, dry climate in Las Cruces and the region was an
additional incentive. Her parents are ranchers and run a cow/calf
operation near Roseburg. As opposed to water-scarce New Mexico where
irrigation is used to water hay fields, Gow says, "there's not a pipe on
the place" referring to the usual, ample rain ranchers receive an hour
from the Pacific Ocean. Gow is also the All Around Cowgirl for the Grand
Canyon Region of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association (NIRA).
For that effort she won a saddle from the Grand Canyon Region at the
same ceremonies.
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The DuBois Award is a special cast bronze, mounted sculpture of a horse,
by world renowned artist Curtis Fort.
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Like many others on the NMSU Team, Gow and Trammell are also the
recipients of DuBois NMSU Rodeo Scholarships. "He has done some amazing
things for the NMSU Rodeo Team," Gow said of Dubois.
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Since the advent of the DuBois Scholarship Program in 2001, the number
of students on rodeo scholarships at New Mexico State has grown from
four to forty athletes, twenty men and twenty women.
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For more information on the NMSU Rodeo Team or DuBois Scholarship
Program contact coach Jim Dewey Brown 1-505-646-3659.