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Show BsHey vmmed 1 )&2 ED- - Week (iflueeinL teach voice, flute, and piano. She enjoys nature, hiking, and reading. Four runners-uwere named as well in the contest. These girls were chosen by judges and by a vote of Dixie College students on Monday. Diane Wilkey, Lisa Hafen, Debbie Knell and Jerilyn Muhlstein were named as finalists. Wilkey, the daughter of Eugene and Jean Wilkey of Nephi, recently won a bronze award in the National Forensics Tournament for Dixie. Hafen, the daughter of Arlyn and Jeannine Hafen of Kanab, will attend BYU this fall as a major in child psychology. Knell, the daughter of Ronald and Virginia Knell, is a Rebelette and will attend BYU to graduate in Business Education. Muhlstein, currently serves as President of the Dixie College Associated Women Students, and she plans to get a degree in Home Economics at Utah State. Present at the contest was Koni Esplin, who was the 1980-8Queen. With Miss Esplin was her grandmother Roma Esplin who was the first Queen of Dixie College. also p Koni Esplin, last Queen, crowns Jaylyn Daley as the years 1982 Queen as Diane Wilkey and Jerilyn Muhlstein look on. Jaylyn Daley, - a Dixie College sophomore from- Viewmont High School was crowned Queen of the festivities on Tuesday night. Daley was chosen from a field of " 26 women competing in the annual contest which lucks off the events that follow through Saturday. Upon graduating from Dixie, Jaylyn plans to get a teaching certificate from Utah State, and go on to 1 y As the 1982 Queen, Jaylyn rode in the general parade on Saturday, along with the four other finalists. She also presided over the weeks banevents, including the quet, which was Saturday night. 1 i y Jaylyn Daley waves to the crowd at Saturdays parade. GrentRace Bookstore team sets new record The team sponsored by the college bookstore paddled, galloped its way to a new record in winning the annual Great Race Wednesday, a main event during the Dixie College Finishing with a time of 20:51, the bookstore team beat the Great Race record by two minutes. The old record was set last year by the Lug Nuts, the team that finished second in this years race. The Lug Nuts, the winning team for the past two years, lost their bicyclist over to the bookstore team this year when they changed sponsors. The loss of their bicyclist was probably the factor that spelled their demise. During the Great Race, four runners were interspersed among a inner-tubehorseman, motorcyclist, and bicyclist on a five mile miay race, which started at the motorcross track east of town, continued up over the Black Mesa to the Virgin River, and then to the college Student Union Building. r, Conspicuously absent from the top finishers in this years race was an alumni ttam, once the dominating force in the Great Race. The teams defeat, along with old age, may have discouraged its members from participating in this years strenuous competition. Larry Moss was the first leg for the Bookstore team, running several yards to his motorcycle where he led seven other teams over the motor-cros- s course to the bottom of the black ridge where he handed his baton to Rob Ward, who ran up the mesa 4 j'i 'I . From there, John Blake carried the baton for the Bookstore across the mesa to Barry Bundy, who rode the his horse to Mark Wade, downhill runner. Ted Miller took into the baton and his inner-tube the Virgin River where he tubed to bicyclist Matt Kindred. The final runner for the team was Barry Blake who broke the tape at the top of the Union steps by the Student X" r ' r t p . - jL ' f 4 ,4 Pictured aoove are members of the bookstore team, the winners of Their names are, top row, Ron Hansen, Matt Kindred, the Great Pace Larry Moss, John Blake, Rob Ward, Dave Wilkey, and, row two Jed Miller, Barry Blake, Barry Bundy, and Mark Wade x " r |