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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Oklahoma woman named Miss America


Miss Oklahoma, Lauren Nelson,  is crowned Miss America 2007 by Miss America 2006, Jennifer Berry,  in Las Vegas on Monday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

LAS VEGAS – Lauren Nelson, an aspiring Broadway star, was crowned Miss America on Monday night, the second year in a row that a Miss Oklahoma has won the crown.

Nelson, 20, of Lawton, Okla., is a student at the University of Central Oklahoma and wants to get her master’s degree in musical theater.

“I watched Miss America as a little girl since I was 2 years old, and never in my wildest dreams did I ever think that I would be one of those girls on that stage, and never did I think that I would be Miss America,” she said afterward.

Shilah Phillips, the first black Miss Texas, was first runner-up, and Miss Georgia, Amanda Kozak, was second runner-up. Miss Mississippi, Taryn Foshee, and Miss Alabama, Melinda Toole, rounded out the top five. Viewers named Toole as Miss Congeniality.

Nelson was crowned by last year’s winner, Jennifer Berry. Nelson sang “You’ll Be In My Heart” in the talent competition and plans to promote protecting children online during her yearlong reign. She gets a $50,000 scholarship with the crown and stands to make thousands more in appearance fees.

The last state to win back-to-back titles was Mississippi, when Mary Ann Mobley crowned Lynda Mead as Miss America in 1960.

The pageant tossed in a few reality-TV twists in its new time slot on the Las Vegas Strip.

Mario Lopez, of “Dancing with the Stars” and “Saved by the Bell,” hosted the show, its second year at the Aladdin Resort & Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. The pageant moved from Atlantic City, N.J., last year in an attempt breathe new life into an institution that had fallen from the forefront of American pop culture.

Although previous experiments with reality gimmicks fell flat, this year’s show included viewer voting and increased participation from the panel of celebrity judges, which included MSNBC talk show host Chris Matthews.

But Nelson wasn’t the viewers’ favorite, according to a text message voting system instituted this year.

Phillips, a singer and choir director’s daughter, was the fan favorite in the talent competition. Miss California, Jacquelynne Fontaine, was the viewers’ pick for her turn in a blue bikini, and Mississippi’s Foshee was voted the favorite in the evening gown contest. The viewer vote did not count toward the winners.