Miss Illinois stays true to roots

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In this Sept. 20, 2012 photo, Miss Illinois Megan Ervin visits with area residents before a ribbon-cutting event in downtown Rushville. Ervin said it's not uncommon for her to make three to five appearances per day across the state. (AP Photo/Quincy Herald Whig,Phil Carlson)
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Being busy is not a problem for Ervin. She was a multi-sport athlete in high school and was involved in other extra-curricular activities.

"The Ervin family is a good Christian family. They're just good people," Jerry Wynn of Rushville said. "They help out a lot with sports at the high school and other things. It's exciting to have something like this, and we're all proud of her."

"Megan's always been very outgoing, and she worked hard to be Miss Illinois," Wilbur Kindhart, another Rushville resident who has known Megan most of her life, said. "She's just a very nice girl from a very nice family."

Cindy Ervin, Megan's mother, readily admits day-to-day life now is much different from when her daughter held such titles as Miss Macomb or Miss Schuyler County Fair.

"This has changed our lifestyle immensely over the last few months ... but I think Megan really understands the phrase, 'No place like home,' " Cindy Ervin said. "I think she'll always be a small-town girl who will (eventually) live in a bigger city."

Megan agrees, saying she will probably wind up in a city like Quincy or Springfield. She wants to eventually own her own fitness-related business.

"I will definitely stay in Illinois," she said.

And by saying "Illinois" and "bigger city," that will never translate into Chicago. She already has spent enough time there for Miss Illinois duties to know that is not where she wants her permanent home to be.

"Do you know it cost me $42 to park there the other day — for three hours?" said Megan, whose favorite food is sushi and who never misses an episode of "Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team."

Megan's dad, Jeff Ervin, admits he was not gung-ho — not even close — about seeing his oldest daughter get involved in beauty pageants several years ago.

"I was against it at the beginning," he said, shaking his head in a negative fashion.

Dad's main concern was having his daughter parade around a stage in a swimsuit, which at the early competitions was a one-piece. The two-piece suit she will wear on the Miss America pageant is still a rather touchy subject.

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