Team pull planes in West Chicago
Nancy
Gier |
Daily Herald
Sunday, July 27, 2008
It's very hard work pulling a
33,000-pound plane, but the payoff came in the satisfaction of
helping a good cause.
 |
| Marcelle Bright |
| Members of the Lake County
Sheriff's Department team pull a 33,000-pound corporate jet 20
feet in the time of 5.97 seconds during the Law Enforcement
Torch Run Plane Pull at the DuPage Airport in West
Chicago. |
Eight teams of 10 members
participated in the 2008 Law Enforcement Torch Run Plane Pull
Saturday at the DuPage Airport in West Chicago. The event raises
funds for Special Olympics, which provides athletic training and
competition for people with disabilities.
Each team had
several opportunities to pull a Challenger 600 corporate jet 20 feet
with an extremely long and sturdy rope. The trick was to do the
20-foot pull as fast as possible.
"We do crazy things," said
Tom Reasoner, deputy director of the Northeast Multi-Regional
Training Inc., one of the event's organizers. The Law Enforcement
Torch Run also sponsors a super plunge into Lake Michigan in
February. "But our charity of choice is the Special Olympics and we
have raised $2 million every year for the last three years. That
means we've been able to help over 20,000 (special) athletes
participate in 16 different sports."
Most of the plane
pullers were law enforcement officers, but the special athletes had
their own team at Saturday's event, and Susie Doyens, 30, of
Sycamore was one of the members.
"It was hard work but a lot
of fun," she said. Doyens participates in golf and swimming through
Special Olympics.
Pam Stivers of Wheeling was on hand to
cheer on her boyfriend David McNichol, who was a member of the Lake
County Sheriff's Department team. Stivers was with her daughter,
Kristine, 21, who participates in the softball throw and the
assisted walking events through Special Olympics.
"She gets
so much out of it," Stivers said. "I think I get even more out of
it, seeing her smile, and the smiles of the others."
The
participants in Saturday's event also seemed to have a lot to smile
about, including Philip Brankin of Geneva, who directs the Northeast
Multi Regional Training program and was part of the Chicago Highland
Rifle and Bagpipe Band team, or "men in skirts."
"It's
really fun to do it in kilts because of the uniqueness," Brankin
said. "There's nothing below your kilts except your shoes and
socks."
Good thing the wind wasn't blowing too hard
Saturday.
Email
this to a friend
Printer
friendly version