Miss World 1972
Miss World 1972, the 22nd edition of the Miss World pageant, was held at the Royal Albert Hall[2] on 1 December 1972 on BBC. Fifty-three delegates vied for the crown won by Belinda Green of Australia.[1][2][3][4] Green became the second Australian winner of the crown in just four years.
Miss World 1972 | |
---|---|
Date | 1 December 1972 |
Presenters | Michael Aspel, David Vine |
Venue | Royal Albert Hall, London, UK |
Broadcaster | BBC |
Entrants | 53 |
Debuts | Botswana, Singapore |
Withdrawals | Ceylon, Colombia, Cyprus, Guyana, Korea, Luxembourg, Nicaragua, Panama, Trinidad & Tobago, Tunisia |
Returns | Costa Rica, Honduras, Hong Kong, Liberia |
Winner | Belinda Green[1][2] |
Results
Final results | Contestant |
---|---|
Miss World 1972 | |
1st runner-up | |
2nd runner-up | |
3rd runner-up | |
4th runner-up | |
5th runner-up | |
6th runner-up |
|
Top 15 |
|
Contestants
Miss World 1972 had a total of 53 contestants.[3] Seven contestants did not arrive on time, and were disqualified from the event.[3]
Africa South – Cynthia Shange Argentina – Olga Edith Cognini Ferrer Aruba – Sandra Werleman Australia – Belinda Green[1][2] Austria – Ursula (Uschi) Pacher[2] Bahamas – Heather (Hedda) Cleare Belgium – Anne-Marie Roger Bermuda – Helen Brown Botswana – Agnes Motswere Letsebe Brazil – Ângela Maria Favi Canada – Bonny Brady Costa Rica – María Victoria (Vicki) Ross González Dominican Republic – Teresa Evangelina Medrano Ecuador – Patricia Falconí Finland – Tuula Anneli Björkling[3] France – Claudine Cassereau Germany – Heidemarie Renate Weber Gibraltar – Rosemarie Vivian Catania Greece – Helen Lykissa Guam – Maria Louise (Marylou) Pangelinan Holland – Monique Borgeld Honduras – Doris van Tuyl Hong Kong – Gay Mei-Lin Iceland – Rósa Helgadóttir India – Malathi Basappa[2] Ireland – Pauline Therese Fitzsimons Israel – Hanna Urdan Italy – Laura Romano Jamaica – Gail Geraldeen Phillips Japan – Akiko Kajitani Liberia – Cecelia Armena King Malaysia – Janet Mok Swee Chin Malta – Jane Attard Mauritius – Marie Ange Bestel Mexico – Gloria Gutiérrez López New Zealand – Kristine Dayle Allan Norway – Ingeborg Marie Sorensen[2] Paraguay – Rosa Angélica Mussi Philippines – Evangeline Rosales Reyes Portugal – Anita Marques Puerto Rico – Ana Nisi Goyco Seychelles – Jane Edna Straevens Singapore – Rosalind Lee Eng Neo South Africa – Stephanie Elizabeth Reinecke Spain – María del Rocío Martín Madrigal Sweden – Rita Berntsson Switzerland – Astrid Vollenweider Thailand – Jintana Jitsophon Turkey – Feyzal Kibarer United Kingdom – Jennifer Mary McAdam[3] United States – Lynda Carter[2] Venezuela – Amalia Heller Gómez Yugoslavia – Biljana Ristić
Judges
A panel of judges evaluated the contestants' performances.[3] Peter Sellers was one of the judges.[3]
Notes
Debuts
Botswana Singapore
Returns
No Shows and Did not compete
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gollark: You should also broadcast images from your tweets in spectrograms, using methods.
gollark: Secretly encode that in the broadcast from palaiologos analog radio™, yes.
gollark: Unfortunately, I have no further ideas at this time.
gollark: Well, I actually meant you could do digital radio broadcasts instead of analog, not internet radio, but I guess both work.
References
- "The Tuscaloosa News". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- "The Bryan Times". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- "The Sydney Morning Herald". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- "Ellensburg Daily Record". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- Strack, Harry R. (1978). Sanctions: The Case of Rhodesia. Syracuse University Press. p. 233. ISBN 9780815621614.
External links
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