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Show strument, dramatic reading, art display, dress designing, etc., or she may give a three minute talk on the career she wishes to seek Guard Faces Problem Of Naming Queen Utah National Guard units in the state are faced with a problem, prob-lem, not an ordinary Army-type problem, but one that every Guardsman is happy to try and solve. The puzzle has to do with queens National Guard-type queens, who can carry a unit's colors in the Miss Utah National Guard finals and perhaps even snare the 1962 crown. During the next few weeks each Utah Guard unit will start staging its local contest to pick the one girl the unit would like to enter into the finals February 17 in Salt Lake City. The queen, once chosen by the Guard's battery of competent judges, will reign over the local Muster Day activities on Feb. 24. By winning the title of the eighth annual Miss Utah National Guard the pert miss will also win an expense paid 8 days trip to the Capitol to represent her home state in the annual Cherry Blossom Blos-som Festival during April, in addition to other prizes. Since Miss Utah National Guard will be sponsored in the Miss Utah contest of 1962, the eligibility requirement and rule for that contest have been used by the Guard committee. Lt. Col. Joseph E. Jones, staff assistant, has been appointed project officer. Entrants must be single, high school graduates by September, 1961, and shall not be less than 18 or more than 28 years of age as of Sept. 1, 1962. In addition, the rules say, the entrant must be of good character and possess poise, personality, intelligence, charm and beauty of face and figure. The entrant must possess and display in a three minute routine talent. The talent may be singing or dancing, playing a musical in- |