1963-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1963 February Voice | Page 4

February, 1963 2 Middle Term. State College Launches Horse Care Course; TWH Featured S. W. Beech, Jr., Tom Fulton, Sam Paschal, Donald Paschal, Charlie Martin, Others In Walking Horse World Give Lectures A College-credit course in the care and training of horses was launched Feb. 2, 1963 at the Middle Tennessee State College, Murfreesboro, Tenn., with some special attention to the Tennessee Walking Horse. It is being presented by the Agri­ culture Department with Dr. Robert Alexander, instructor in charge, and a number of visiting lecturers includ­ ing other members of the MTSC faculty. Four Tennessee Walking Horse brood mares were given to the col­ lege’s Loan, Scholarship and Devel­ opment Fund by the Tennessee Walk­ ing Breeder's 8: Exhibitor's Assn, of America, Inc. (with headquarters in Lewisburg, Tenn.) These animals will be used in demonstration sessions and in a breeding program. Classes are held each Saturday morning—starting at 8 o’clock. Two hours of undergraduate credit will be allowed to students finishing the course satisfactorily. Non-students are also invited to enroll. Among guest lecturers already an­ nounced for the semester are: Dr. Bob Womack, long an MTSC faculty member, a historian, and member of a Bedford County (Shelby- ville) family prominent in the breed­ ing of Tennessee Walking Horses for many years; Dr. J. L. Fletcher and Dr. D. Bro- gill, who will discuss pedigrees, gene­ tics and breeding; H. Tom Fulton, executive secretary of the Tennessee Walking Horse Breeder’s & Exhibitor’s Assn., who will speak on showmanship and judg­ ing; Dr. Clyde Morgan, speaking on diseases and parasites among horses; Trainer Donald Paschal of Wood­ bury, who will discuss feeding and training of intermediate horses in a series of lectures starting April 20; Trainer Sam Paschal of Murfrees- 75 Compete In Walking Horse Classes At Winter Haven, Fla. A Special Report From Charles R. Goldswig Seventy-five horses competed in the eight Tennessee Walking Horse classes at the Fourth Annual Imperial Charity Horse Show in Winter Haven, Fla. before more than 10,000 spectators. A total of 500 horses in all breeds were entered. The exhibition was acclaimed a great success by all. Walking Horse class winners were: $1,000 Walking Horse Grand Championship Stake won by Go Boy's Black Label, ridden by Boyd Hudgins for Fieldstone Farm of Macon, Ga. Walking Mare Class by Fascinating Rhythm ridden by Jack Warren for Dr. A. R. Dalton, St. Louis, Mo.; Stallion-Gelding Class, by Grand Sun ridden by Boyd Hudgins, Gaines­ ville, Ga.; Two-Year-Old Class by Sun’s Vamp, owned by Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Silver, Bradenton, Fla.; Junior Walking Class by Shadow's Bug, ridden by Jack Warren of Spring Hill, Tenn.; Ladies' Class by Sun Ho, ridden by Betty Keene Lundberg for the R. D. Keene Stables, Orlando, Fla.; Amateur Stake by Tombstone, ridden by Owner William T. Baynard, BaLon Rouge, La.; Walking Mare Class for Amateur Riders by Keene’s Fashion Lady, ridden by Owner R. D. Keene, Orlando, Fla. Carl Edwards of Quincy, Fla. judged the Walking Horse classes. boro will appear for two dates in March, lecturing and demonstrating on showmanship and training. He rode Setting Sun (195S) and Ebony Masterpiece (1962) to World Grand Championships at the Celebration. S. W. Beech, Jr., of Belfast, Tenn. (mail address Rt. 5, Lewisburg), president of the Breeder’s & Exhibi­ tor’s Assn., Trainer Charlie Martin of McFarlin Stables, Murfreesboro, and others discussing various aspects of training Walking Horses and ponies; Trainer Ellis Waggoner of Brown- view, Tenn., discussing roadster and five-gaited classes in horse shows; J. E. Young of the MTSC faculty who discussed breed identification at the opening class session. Farriers will present demonstration on the proper practices in the shoeing of horses and grooms will show in deteail step-by-step preparation in grooming show horses for competi­ tion. First steps in planning for Lhe course were taken last summer by Dr. Alexander. He received his doctor’s degree at the University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla., where he majored in horse nutrition and related subjects. He has been serving on the MTSC Agriculture Department faculty for several years. Wife of Sylvan Waggoner Dies In Iowa Of Cancer A letter from Friend Sylvan R. Waggoner, Rural Route 3, Ft. Dodge, Iowa, informs us that Mrs. Waggoner died of cancer on Jan. 21, 1963. We are sure many lovers of the Tennessee Walking Horse who have met the Waggoners through