Miss Sanilac County

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Miss Sanilac County A LOCAL MICHIGAN AFFILATE OF THE MISS AMERICA ORGANIZATION Miss Sanilac County Application Deadline: Thursday, September 01 2011 Applications are now available for the 2012 Miss Sanilac County Scholarship Pageant to be held Sunday December 4th at the Firebird Theater in Sandusky. This program is a preliminary to the Miss Michigan, Miss America Program and the largest source of scholarship awards available to women in the world. Women ages 17-24, a resident or full time student in Sanilac County, Michigan are eligible. For an application or information, call Sandy at 810-648-3331 or Jackie at 810-648- 9183. Application deadline is Thursday, September 01, 2011 and will be accepted by mail or email only. Applications and more information are available on the Sandusky Chamber of Commerce web site: http://misandusky.us/chamber. General Information To compete in the Miss Michigan Scholarship Program, a contestant must first win a local preliminary pageant. Some locals have specific geographic eligibility requirements, based on where you live, attend school full-time, or work full-time. Below you see a list of eligibility requirements for our local program: ¨ Must be at least 17 years old and entering your senior year of high school. ¨ Single, never been married. ¨ Legal residence is in Sanilac County Michigan. ¨ Be a high school graduate by the time you compete for Miss Michigan (June 2012). ¨ Be no older than 24 on date of the Miss America Pageant. ¨ A U.S. Citizen ¨ Meet character criteria as set forth by the Miss America Organization. ¨ Be able to meet the time commitment and responsibilities as set forth by the Sanilac County program. ¨ Be able to meet the time commitment and responsibilities as set forth by the Miss Michigan program should you win the title. Additional Information Sandra Miller, Executive Director Miss Sanilac County Scholarship Pageant 105 E. Sanilac Ave. Ste. One Sandusky, MI 48471 810-648-3331 [email protected] Areas of Competition Interview Competition – 25% Talent Competition – 35% Evening Wear Competition – 20% Lifestyle and Fitness in Swimsuit Competition – 15% On-Stage Question – 5% Interview Competition Each contestant participates in an individual 10-minute press conference-style interview with our panel of judges. There are 5 judges on a panel. Contestants are questioned on their background as presented on their resume sheet, their educational and career goals, their opinions on current events and social issues, and their interests, hobbies and extracurricular activities. Scoring is based on overall communication skills, including personality, intelligence, validated opinions, emotional control, overall first impression and personal appearance, and whether the contestant possesses the overall qualities and attributes of a Miss America. Each interview ends with the opportunity to make a final statement to the judges. This is optional; a contestant need not take this opportunity. They may end the interview at that time. Talent Competition Contestants perform a 90 second routine of their own choosing. Some possible talents include all types of singing, dancing, gymnastics, instrumental music, dramatic or comedy monologues, baton twirling and ventriloquism. Other talents that can be performed solo on a stage are also possible. Phone or e-mail us if you have a question about your talent presentation. Scoring is based on contestant's skill and personality, interpretive ability, technical skill level, stage presence and the totality of all elements, including costume, props, voice, use of body and choreography. NOTE: For information regarding the talent competition production and music coordination, please communicate with Mr. Jay Williams. EMAIL questions to: [email protected] Evening Wear Competition Each contestant appears on stage in an evening gown of her own choosing, representative of what she would wear to a formal, black tie social event. Scoring is based on overall first impression, sense of confidence, personality and stage presence, walk and posture, appropriateness of attire and sense of attractiveness. Lifestyle and Fitness in Swimsuit Competition Each contestant briefly appears on stage in a one or two piece swimsuit and footwear of her own choosing. Scoring is based on overall first impression, statement of physical fitness and health, overall physique and proportion, walk, posture and grace, sense of confidence and presence on stage. On-Stage Interview Each contestant will be asked one or two on-stage questions during or after the eveningwear competition, with the score factoring on how well she answers the extemporaneous question(s). APPLICATION CHECKLIST: (Please include all of the following) ¨ Application completely filled out ¨ 5 x7 head shot photo ¨ Signed Rules & Regulations ¨ Copy of Birth Certificate ¨ Copy of Photo ID ¨ Claiming Eligibility by: | Sanilac County Resident- 2 proofs of address: drivers license, voter’s reg., utility bill, etc. | Full Time Student- proof of enrollment | Full Time Employment- letter from employer and pay stub SCHEDULE – YOU MUST BE AT ORIENTATION – NO EXCEPTIONS; YOU MUST MEET ALL DEADLINES – NO EXCEPTIONS Orientation:................. ………………………………..Monday, October 3rd, 2011 at 6 pm – Contestant only Resume, Platform, Contestant Contract Due..….Monday, October 17th, 2011 at 6 pm Children’s Miracle Network Funds Deadline……..Tuesday, November 1st, 2011 Clothing/Wardrobe Review……………………………Thursday or Friday, October 27 or 28th, 2011 by appt. only Dress Rehearsal………….……………………………….Sunday, December 4th, 2011 at 9 am Interview……………………..…………………………….Sunday, December 4th, 2011 beginning at 2pm Pageant Day………………...…………………………….Sunday, December 4th, 2011 at 7 pm The schedule is set so please make sure you are available for those dates to participate. Miss Sanilac County Application Information MISS SANILAC COUNTY SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT ELIGIBILITY: Woman between the ages of 17 and 24: In 2011-2012 this pageant will be a closed pageant (open only to residents of Sanilac County) Full Name Age Date of Birth Home Address Zip Cell Phone Telephone Email Address Mothers Name Mothers Telephone Mothers Address Fathers Name Fathers Telephone Fathers Address EDUCATION High School Year Graduated College Year Education Information (list degree you are seeking, and or special training) Talent you will be Talent CD is Required to be turned in at Orientation On presenting 10-3-11 Signature Date NOTE For Email submission: Fill out the form above, attach it to an Email and send to: [email protected]. Adobe Acrobat, later versions of Microsoft Word, and several free programs, such as Fox-it Reader work well for filling in forms. Or you can, print, fill out, scan, and attach to an Email. Or, of course, mail. .
Recommended publications
  • Miss Taylor County Fair Pageant Thursday, June 6, 2019 15 Minutes Following the Mrs
    Miss Taylor County Fair Pageant Thursday, June 6, 2019 15 minutes following the Mrs. Taylor County Pageant Taylor County Fairgrounds - Under the Hoop Tent Pageant is open to natural born females between the ages of 16 – 21 who are permanent KY residents. Contestant must be single, never married/divorced, or had an annulment, nor had any children. Contestant must have reached her 16th birthday and cannot have reached her 22nd birthday by October 31, 2019. Previous winners are not eligible. Judges decisions are FINAL and no contestant or representative will be allowed to consult with a judge. Scoresheets will NOT be released. Failure to comply with the fair board or pageant committee and their rules and regulations may result in dismissal from the pageant and forfeiture of award/prizes. The entry fee for pre-registration is $50.00. If you choose not to pre-register, the entry fee is $60.00 at the door, cash only. NO REFUNDS WILL BE GIVEN. ALL PRE-REGISTERED CONTESTANTS WILL RECEIVE A WELCOME BAG Miss Taylor County Fair will receive a crown, sash, flowers, $100.00 prize money and the honor of representing the Taylor County Fair at the Miss Kentucky County Fair Pageant held in Louisville in January. She will also receive her entry fee and two nights lodging paid for at the state pageant. First runner-up - $50.00 cash prize, Second runner-up - $25.00 cash prize. • Introduction – One-piece swimsuit with sarong and heels • Swimsuit Competition - Suit should be a one-piece ONLY (NO cut-outs or Brazilian cuts) • Evening Gown Competition - Gown of your choice • On-Stage Question - Top 10 contestants only • Judging - Contestants will be judged on swimsuit, evening gown, and on-stage question • Dressing Room - Only one person per contestant allowed.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Western' Representations of Afghan Feminine Corporeal Modernity
    Gender, Place & Culture A Journal of Feminist Geography ISSN: 0966-369X (Print) 1360-0524 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cgpc20 The beautiful ‘other’: a critical examination of ‘western’ representations of Afghan feminine corporeal modernity Jennifer L. Fluri To cite this article: Jennifer L. Fluri (2009) The beautiful ‘other’: a critical examination of ‘western’ representations of Afghan feminine corporeal modernity, Gender, Place & Culture, 16:3, 241-257, DOI: 10.1080/09663690902836292 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09663690902836292 Published online: 28 May 2009. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 1641 View related articles Citing articles: 15 View citing articles Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=cgpc20 Download by: [University of Massachusetts] Date: 19 July 2016, At: 07:33 Gender, Place and Culture Vol. 16, No. 3, June 2009, 241–257 The beautiful ‘other’: a critical examination of ‘western’ representations of Afghan feminine corporeal modernity Jennifer L. Fluri* Geography Department and Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA This paper examines corporeal modernity as part of the larger ‘savior and liberation’ trope produced for Afghan women by US-led military, political and economic intervention post-9/11. This savior trope has been identified as a co-optation of women’s rights discourses and activism (Hunt 2002), a misguided approach to security through gendered scripts of masculine aggressive protection and female submission (Young 2003; Dowler 2002), and as yet another example in a long history of gendered tropes devised by colonial and imperial powers to save Muslim women (Abu Lughod 2002).
    [Show full text]
  • Sink Or Swim: Deciding the Fate of the Miss America Swimsuit Competition
    Volume 4, Issue No. 1. Sink or Swim: Deciding the Fate of the Miss America Swimsuit Competition Grace Slapak Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA ÒÏ Abstract: The Miss America beauty pageant has faced widespread criticism for the swimsuit portion of its show. Feminists claim that the event promotes objectification and oversexualization of contestants in direct contrast to the Miss America Organization’s (MAO) message of progressive female empowerment. The MAO’s position as the leading source of women’s scholarships worldwide begs the question: should women have to compete in a bikini to pay for a place in a cellular biology lecture? As dissent for the pageant mounts, the new head of the MAO Board of Directors, Gretchen Carlson, and the first all-female Board of Directors must decide where to steer the faltering organization. The MAO, like many other businesses, must choose whether to modernize in-line with social movements or whole-heartedly maintain their contentious traditions. When considering the MAO’s long and controversial history, along with their recent scandals, the #MeToo Movement, and the complex world of television entertainment, the path ahead is anything but clear. Ultimately, Gretchen Carlson and the Board of Directors may have to decide between their feminist beliefs and their professional business aspirations. Underlying this case, then, is the question of whether a sufficient definition of women’s leadership is simply leadership by women or if the term and its weight necessitate leadership for women. Will the board’s final decision keep this American institution afloat? And, more importantly, what precedent will it set for women executives who face similar quandaries of identity? In Murky Waters The Miss America Pageant has long occupied a special place in the American psyche.
    [Show full text]
  • Women's Achieve Summit Richmond, VA October 15, 2019 Introduction
    Women’s Achieve Summit Richmond, VA October 15, 2019 Introduction Queen Latifah, producer, actor, and musical performer Announcer: Good morning. Please give a warm Virginia welcome to our host and emcee, a multi-talented star who was a female hip hop pioneer, a Grammy and Emmy winner, and an Academy award nominee. The one, the only, Queen Latifah. Queen Latifah: Wow. You all was jamming. Woo. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you everyone. Relax. Have a seat. We about to hangout all day. I saw you had my girl Missy Misdemeanor Elliot up there. So proud of her. Just talked to her the other day too, so. Thank you so much and thank you. Give it up for the house band, the Misbehaviors. They're going to be rocking with us all day. Please make yourself comfortable. Audience: I love you. Queen Latifah: Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You got it. What a great sight to look out at 1400 women and one or two brave guys. I'm so happy to be here and be your host today. Today's summit is one of the signature events of the 2019 Commemoration American Evolution. American Evolution is the Commonwealth of Virginia's 400th anniversary of events in 1619 that still impact us today. All year, Virginia has been telling authentic stories of 400 years of democracy, diversity and opportunity in America. Women have not always been invited to participate in that democracy. Oh, but we in it now. And we are here to celebrate that today.
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Miss Teen Rules
    Miss Teen Independence County “Celebrating 100 of Excitement, Fun and Family Traditions” 1. ALL Miss Teen Independence County Contestants must be 14 through 17 years by Julne 1. All contestants must be a legal resident of Independence County. Attending school in Independence County does not constitute legal residency. All contestants must reside in Independence County, and have been a resident since June of 2020. Contestants that participate in the Independence County Fair contests are not permitted to participate in any county contests. Please adhere to Arkansas State Fair Rules. 2. NO PROFESSIONAL MODEL (one who has been paid for modeling) is considered eligible. The contestant must have been born a female and be a legal resident of Independence County. The contestant cannot be or at any time have been married, pregnant, had/have children, miscarried or had an abortion, be engaged, or become engaged. This rule applies to all contestants with special attention pertaining to the new queen in addition to the first and second runners up during the course of their reign. The contestant must have never been convicted of a crime nor have criminal charges pending. 3. Contestants in the Arkansas State Fair Queen Pageant may no longer be Contestants in the Arkansas State Fair Youth Talent Contest in the same year alternatively. 4. Previous Miss Teen Independence County queens are ineligible to compete again. The winner of the Miss Teen Independence County pageant may not hold another title during the year of their reign. 5. Contestants are required to be on time for all rehearsals and events.
    [Show full text]
  • The Front Runner
    The Front Runner Written by Matt Bai & Jay Carson & Jason Reitman July 27th, 2017 Blue Revisions 8/28/17 Pink Revisions 9/10/17 Yellow Revisions 9/15/17 ii. Note: The following screenplay features overlapping dialogue in the style of films like The Candidate. The idea is to create a true-to-life experience of the Hart campaign of 1987. CAST OF CHARACTERS THE HARTS GARY HART, SENATOR LEE HART, HIS WIFE THE CAMPAIGN TEAM BILL DIXON, CAMPAIGN MANAGER BILLY SHORE, AIDE-DE-CAMP KEVIN SWEENEY, PRESS SECRETARY JOHN EMERSON, DEPUTY CAMPAIGN MANAGER DOUG WILSON, POLICY AIDE MIKE STRATTON, LEAD ADVANCE MAN IRENE KELLY, SCHEDULER AT THE WASHINGTON POST BEN BRADLEE, EXECUTIVE EDITOR ANN DEVROY, POLITICAL EDITOR AJ PARKER, POLITICAL REPORTER DAVID BRODER, CHIEF POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT BOB KAISER, MANAGING EDITOR AT THE MIAMI HERALD KEITH MARTINDALE, EXECUTIVE EDITOR JIM SAVAGE, EDITOR TOM FIEDLER, POLITICAL REPORTER JOE MURPHY, INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER ROY VALENTINE, PHOTOGRAPHER THE TRAVELING PRESS JACK GERMOND, BALTIMORE SUN COLUMNIST IRA WYMAN, AP PHOTOGRAPHER ALAN WEINBERG, PHILADELHIA ENQUIRER ANN MCDANIEL, NEWSWEEK MIKE SHANAHAN, AP MIAMI DONNA RICE, MODEL AND ACTRESS BILLY BROADHURST, HART’S PERSONAL FRIEND LYNN ARMANDT, RICE’S FRIEND “1984” EXT. SAINT FRANCIS HOTEL, SAN FRANCISCO. NIGHT. We open inside a NEWS VAN. Four monitors show different competing feeds. A waiting reporter. Color Bars. A political commercial. One monitor is cueing up a debate clip. A light pops on the reporter and he springs to life. TV REPORTER Yes, we learned just a few minutes ago that Senator Hart will soon be leaving this hotel back to the convention hall, where he will concede -- yes, he will concede -- to former vice president Walter Mondale.
    [Show full text]
  • Wild, Wearable, and Seaworthy
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1996 Wild, Wearable, and Seaworthy Frances Evelyn Davey College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the American Studies Commons Recommended Citation Davey, Frances Evelyn, "Wild, Wearable, and Seaworthy" (1996). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539626019. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-s5sn-7b20 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WILD, WEARABLE AND SEEWORTHY A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of American Studies The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Frances E. Davey 1996 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Frances E. Davey Approved, August 1996 n '/h Barbar^ Carson E.7Grey Gundaker Colleen Callahan TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS . iv LIST OF F I G U R E S ........................................... V LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.................................. vii ABSTRACT ................................................. X INTRODUCTION ............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Miller 1 Amber Miller Instructor's Name ENGL 1013 Date the Chance of A
    Miller 1 Amber Miller Instructor’s Name ENGL 1013 Date The Chance of a Lifetime I had competed in the Perry County Fair Pageant numerous times before but had only placed. Although many people had told me “There couldn’t be a better person to represent Perry County in the State Fair Pageant in October,” I knew that I had to win in order to advance to the State Fair. Therefore, when Ms. Casey Meyers, the Perry County pageant director, literally begged me to do the Senior Fair Queen pageant on Saturday, September 9, 2006, I decided to enter one more time. I’m glad that I did because that Saturday evening became one of the most memorable times of my life. For two days I filled out my information sheet for the pageant. I wanted to make sure my grammar and spelling were perfect. By the time I submitted my information sheet to the fair board, I was extremely excited. All of the contestants competed in four different categories. These categories included interview, swimsuit, casual wear, and evening gown. Each contestant was responsible for all of her own clothes, so I needed to go shopping. I found a cute green dress at J C Penney that I could use for the casual wear portion of the competition. I already had an interview suit and a pageant swimsuit from the previous years of competing. When I managed to find a gorgeous dark-blue dress with silver sequins that I knew would be perfect for the evening gown competition, I was set.
    [Show full text]
  • EN Armoury: Chainmail Bikini
    E.N. Armoury Chainmail Bikini and Other Adventuring Gear for Beautiful People Author: Ryan Nock Cover Illustrator: J. L. Jones Interior Illustrators: J. L. Jones Matthew C Benjamin Richards Cover Design: Denise Robinson Eric Life-Putnam Interior Layout: Eric Life-Putnam Special Thanks to: John & Michelle Nephew “d20 System” and the d20 System logo are trademarks owned by Wizards of the Coast, Inc. and are used according to the terms of the d20 System Trademark License version 6.0. A copy of this License can be found at www.wizards.com/d20. “Dungeons & Dragons” and “Wizards of the Coast” are registered trademarks of Wizards of the Coast, Inc. in the United States and other countries and are used with permission. Some content included herein is derivative of existing Open Game Content as indicated in the Section 15 of the Open Game License included at the end of this document. All contents, regardless of designation, are Copyright © 2005 E.N. Publishing. E.N. Publishing logos, product lines, and product titles are trademarks of E.N. Publishing. This edition of E.N. Armoury – Chainmail Bikini is produced under version 1.0a of the Open Game License, version 6.0 of the d20 System Trademark License, and the current version of the System Reference Document by permission of Wizards of the Coast, Inc.; subsequent editions of this product will incorporate the most current versions of the license, guide, and document. Copyright © 2005 E.N. Publishing. Declaration of Open Game Content and Product Identity All text on pages 1 through 26 of this document – except for all E.N.Publishing Logos, product names, and product line names – is released as Open Game Content under the Open Game License version 1.0a.
    [Show full text]
  • The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz a Dissertation Submitted in Part
    The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures By Katie Rebecca Horowitz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Linda Williams, Chair Professor Catherine Cole Professor Judith Butler Fall 2012 Abstract The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric University of California, Berkeley Professor Linda Williams, Chair This dissertation responds to the frequent charge within academic and activist circles that queer theory is simply gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language. Taking as its starting point an ethnographic case study of drag king and queen performance cultures, it challenges the efficaciousness of an everything and the kitchen sink approach to queer theorizing and organizing. This work constitutes the first academic monograph centered on queer life in Cleveland, Ohio and is also the first to focus simultaneously on kinging and queening, a lacuna at once explained by and demanding interrogation of the fact that these practices have almost nothing in common with each other. Despite the shared heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to audience, movement vocabulary, stage persona, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality. The radical (in)difference between these genres serves as a microcosmic representation of the perennial rift between lesbians and gay men and highlights the heteronormativity of the assumption that all of the identity categories subsumed under (and often eclipsed by) the queer umbrella ought a priori to have anything in common culturally, politically, or otherwise.
    [Show full text]
  • Miss Black Cincinnati Pageant
    • Black Talent ~ ,~. !.limited Inc. Present~ The 4th Annual MISS BLACK CINCINNATI PAGEANT June 4th 7:00 pm Emery Theatre She's a Super Lady CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO ALL THE CONTESTANTS * BARBIZON SCHOOL 126 E. Sixth Street Cincinnati, Ohio Deamodel. (or••• JUSf look Ilk. on.) Since 1939 The Barbizon School at Fifth Avenue in New York City has trained thou­ sands of girls either for modeling careers ...or to develop the "look", poise, and confidence that could make the difference in whatever you do in life. Now there is a franchised Barbizon School right here! Our new 32-page book may start you on your way. Send cou­ pon today for your copy. No obligation to girls 13 or older. Or, CAll. 242-7878 r-----------------------------------Tile ......Iaon School 126 E. Six th Street Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 Mme, _______________________ address. _____________________ city zip ____ age phone ( ) ____ ___________... (area code) Message from the Director-Producer ROBERT L. HUMPHRIES ________..... Once again I greet each and everyone that has come to support this year's Miss Black Cincinnati Pageant. This year as well as last, it has been a pleasure and a great experience in working with all the talented contestants who help to make this Pageant possible. I extend my heartfelt thanks to my staff, who gave me all the encouragement and support that I needed, in aiding me in my fourth production of the Miss Black Cincinnati Pageant. Many thanks to all the judges, participants, sponsors, patrons, families, and friends who gave their support, time, and expended their energies unsparingly.
    [Show full text]
  • Miss Jessamine County Fair Pageant 19. Grounds for Disqualification Can
    Miss Jessamine County Fair Pageant Monday, July 5th, at 7 pm Age 16-21 OPEN PAGEANT Rules and Regulations Contestants must be a natural born female, single, never married, never had a marriage annulled, and never had any children, nor criminal record of any kind. They must not have won any other preliminary competition to the Miss Kentucky County Fair Pageant. Previous queens of the Miss Jessamine County Fair Pageant are not eligible to compete. 1. This is an OPEN PAGEANT. Contestant does not have to live in Jessamine County. Open to ALL RESIDENTS OF STATE OF KENTUCKY. Must have been a resident of the state of Kentucky for at least 6 months. 2. Entry Fee $60.00. Must be submitted with entry form. 3. NO PERSONAL CHECKS OR CASH. Certified check, money order, or cashier check accepted! 4. Contestants must show proof of age when sending in applications. (copy of birth certificate) Contestants must be 16 years of age on October 31st and cannot be 22 on October 31st of the year when the local pageant is held at the local fair. 5. Contestants will be judged on poise, personality, beauty, and on stage interview by judges from outside of Jessamine County. 6. Contestants will appear in an opening outfit, one-piece pageant swimsuit and an evening gown. 7. Only one person will be allowed in the dressing room with each contestant. 8. No cameras, video cameras, or cell phones allowed in dressing rooms. This rule will be strongly enforced. No males allowed!! No running in & out of dressing rooms, privacy reasons only! If you are caught using a camera or your cell phone they will be confiscated, and this could result in disqualification from the pageant.
    [Show full text]