On Mentoring from page 46 With one arm fully extended and the other armed with fear, I led King George III as he cooled down from his exertions. After getting help securing King George III in his stall, I caught a glimpse of Wallace. We made eye contact for a few seconds. No nod or smile. Just eye contact. Then he walked off. GET LOST. Friday Night Live! Nellie McKay applies her many talents to "I Want to Live!," a zany musical revue based on the film biography of Barbara Graham, a convicted murderer put to death in California in 1955. Rivera Court, 7 and 8:30 p.m. Family Sundays Artist Clinton Snider shows how he turns castoffs left behind by businesses and people leaving Detroit into 'I:arks of art. Prentis Court, 12-4 p.m. Opening this Sunday Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus November 20, 2011-February 12, 2012 Tickets available at dia.org or 313.833.4005. Find info on these and other events at www.dia.org gi .1/ (1 . r DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS ard f,ve. 10% OFF TOTAL BILL Excludes tax, tip and beverages. With this ad. Dine in or Carry out. Expires 1/30/I I Jae. Brass Pointe pAiod 09/946.666 24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377 Open 7 Days a week for lunch & dinner 1711710 Log on to JNonline.us giveaways • forums • calendars VISIT .Thonline.us 48 November 17 m 2011 Moving Up As the weeks progressed, and my fear subsided, I "graduated" to other chores. My afternoons now included cleaning tack, changing stall bedding and wheeling the discards to the dung hill, stacking, re-stacking, un-stacking and distributing bales of hay and cleaning dreck stuck between hooves and horse shoes. There wasn't a dirty chore Wallace didn't send my way or that I wouldn't do, including catching mice that took up residence in the feed bin. When I came home, exhausted and hungry, I wasn't allowed inside until I stripped outside. Imagine smelling worse than pe'tcha And then there was the memorable Friday afternoon when my free child/ teen labor was first rewarded. When I arrived at the barn, Elsie was already saddled up and tied to the wooden beam in her stall. Elsie was a gray mare that hadn't played in a polo match in years and looked more like the Borden milk cow. In fact, Elsie preferred to sit, rather than stand, in her stall. I still remember the slogan one of the wise-guy players chalked onto the side of her wooden door: "Elsie — there ain't no udder." I was asked to bring Elsie into the otherwise empty arena by one of the stable hands. "Go ahead, get up!" Wallace boomed from the nearby shadows as he walked toward me. Until that moment, I had been under horses and alongside of them, but never on one. So, with a dose of trepidation, I pulled myself up. But there were only a few seconds to admire the view. Suddenly and violently, Wallace smacked Elsie's hindquarters. "Squeeze with your thighs" was all I recall thinking as the old gray mare became more than what she used to be and dashed forward. No one talked about liability insurance in those days ... Saddle Time Each week during the polo season, my reward was to ride on Friday afternoons. Periodically, Wallace would add a new wrinkle to the rid- ing routine. One time, it was riding without stirrups. Another time, rid- ing without stirrups, hands on top of my head while posting (this was before John Wayne showed in True Grit how to ride with reins between your teeth.) Another time, "stick and balling" with a polo mallet. Saturday was match day, with Yale President Kingman Brewster and his wife, Mary (you were expecting Jehuda and Shulamit Reinharz?), perched on the wooden benches behind the sidewall and mesh that separated the action from the specta- tors. Between the usual chores, I also served as the official scorer. After one match, Wallace gave me a phone number on a piece of paper. "Call this, and tell them what you saw. But write down what you saw first:' he instructed. The number was the sports department of the Sunday New Haven Register newspaper. I dictated what I saw to a raspy-voiced man. Magically, it appeared in the Sunday sports section ... and always with a bigger headline than it seemed to deserve. Shaping A Career In subsequent weeks, I continued to dictate dinky stories that received great position in the sports section. Finally, I asked the guy on the other end why these stories were being treated so well? "Kid, don't you know your polo coach is also the managing editor?" With gentle nudging from my father (and pestering from my mother), I mustered the courage to ask Wallace for a summer job at the newspaper. I had just turned 16. Actually, I didn't have to ask. He already created one for me — copy- boy trainee. I took orders from the copyboy. The pay was $2 an hour. The year was 1970. Long after I turned in my pitchfork, Wallace re-hired me each summer for positions of increasing responsibility and pro- vided references and other support as my career path took shape. Wallace passed away in 1999, los- ing a long battle with cancer. While he left the newspaper industry and Yale many years earlier, he remained active with the U.S. Polo Association (USPA), which dedicated an annual award in his memory. The award, the Daniel J. Wallace Women's Intercollegiate Player of the Year, "encompasses horsemanship, sports- manship, and leadership, the same attributes Wallace spent a lifetime promoting and coaching on two con- tinents." I can still see the red cheeks, feel the vibration of his voice and the firm hand on my shoulder, and hear the smack he delivered to Elsie's backside that moved my mount, and my career, forward. I I