| Miss International 1969 | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Date | September 13, 1969 | 
| Venue | Nippon Budokan, Tokyo, Japan | 
| Entrants | 48 | 
| Placements | 15 | 
| Debuts | |
| Withdrawals | |
| Returns | |
| Winner | Valerie Holmes  Britain | 
| Congeniality | Mireille Colling  Luxembourg | 
| Photogenic | Satu Charlotta Östring  Finland | 
Miss International 1969 was the 9th Miss International pageant, held on September 13, 1969 at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Japan for the second time. 48 contestants competed for the pageant. Finally, Valerie Holmes from Britain was crowned as Miss International 1969 by outgoing titleholder Maria Carvalho from Brazil.
Results
| Placement | Contestant | 
|---|---|
| Miss International 1969 |  Britain – Valerie Holmes | 
| 1st Runner-up  |  Finland – Satu Charlotta Östring | 
| 2nd Runner-up |  Nicaragua – María Margarita Cuadra | 
| 3rd Runner-up | .svg.png.webp) Switzerland – Jeanette Biffiger | 
| 4th Runner-up |  Thailand – Usanee Phenphimol | 
| Top 15 | 
 | 
Contestants
 Argentina – Graciela Eva Arévalo Argentina – Graciela Eva Arévalo
.svg.png.webp) Australia – Janine Forbes Australia – Janine Forbes
 Austria – Crystl Holler Austria – Crystl Holler
.svg.png.webp) Belgium – Josyjane Minet Belgium – Josyjane Minet
.svg.png.webp) Bolivia – Erika Kohlenberger Bolivia – Erika Kohlenberger
.svg.png.webp) Brazil – Maria Lúcia Alexandrino dos Santos Brazil – Maria Lúcia Alexandrino dos Santos
 Britain – Valerie Susan Holmes Britain – Valerie Susan Holmes
.svg.png.webp) Canada – Nancy Wilson Canada – Nancy Wilson
.svg.png.webp) Ceylon – Shirline Clara Perera Ceylon – Shirline Clara Perera
 Colombia – Laura Fabiola Pimiento Barrera Colombia – Laura Fabiola Pimiento Barrera
 Costa Rica – Sonia Kohkemper Costa Rica – Sonia Kohkemper
 Denmark – Gitte Broge Denmark – Gitte Broge
 Ecuador – Alexandra Swanberg Ecuador – Alexandra Swanberg
 Finland – Satu Charlotta Östring Finland – Satu Charlotta Östring
 France – Sophie Yallant France – Sophie Yallant
 Germany – Brigitta Komorowski Germany – Brigitta Komorowski
.svg.png.webp) Greece – Rea Nikolaou Greece – Rea Nikolaou
 Guam – Mercedes Rosario Rubic Guam – Mercedes Rosario Rubic
 Holland – Els van der Kolk Holland – Els van der Kolk
.svg.png.webp) Hong Kong – Cecile McSmith Hong Kong – Cecile McSmith
 Iceland – Helen Knutsdóttir Iceland – Helen Knutsdóttir
 India – Wendy Leslie Vaz India – Wendy Leslie Vaz
 Indonesia – Irma Hardisurya Indonesia – Irma Hardisurya
 Ireland – Mary Kelly Ireland – Mary Kelly
 Israel – Sara Dvir Israel – Sara Dvir
 Italy – Juliana Lamberti Italy – Juliana Lamberti
 Jamaica – Audrey Dell Jamaica – Audrey Dell
.svg.png.webp) Japan – Akemi Okemoto[1] Japan – Akemi Okemoto[1]
 South Korea – Kim Yoo-kyoung South Korea – Kim Yoo-kyoung
 Luxembourg – Mireille Colling Luxembourg – Mireille Colling
 Malaysia – Pauline Chai Siew Phin Malaysia – Pauline Chai Siew Phin
 Malta – Rose Barpy Malta – Rose Barpy
 Mexico – Ana Maria Magaña Mexico – Ana Maria Magaña
 Morocco – Rahima Hachti Morocco – Rahima Hachti
 New Zealand – Deirdre Bruton New Zealand – Deirdre Bruton
 Nicaragua – María Margarita Cuadra Lacayo Nicaragua – María Margarita Cuadra Lacayo
 Norway – Ingeborg Marie Sorensen Norway – Ingeborg Marie Sorensen
 Philippines – Margaret Rose "Binky" Orbe Montinola Philippines – Margaret Rose "Binky" Orbe Montinola
 Portugal – Maria Isabela Rosa Pinho Portugal – Maria Isabela Rosa Pinho
.svg.png.webp) Spain – Mery de Lara Caballero Spain – Mery de Lara Caballero
 Singapore – Jenny Serwan Wong Singapore – Jenny Serwan Wong
 Sweden – Bodil Jensen Sweden – Bodil Jensen
.svg.png.webp) Switzerland – Jeanette Biffiger Switzerland – Jeanette Biffiger
 Tahiti – Dominique Viloria Poemoana Tahiti – Dominique Viloria Poemoana
 Thailand – Usanee Phenphimol Thailand – Usanee Phenphimol
 Tunisia – Rekaia Dekhil Tunisia – Rekaia Dekhil
 United States – Gayle Kovaly United States – Gayle Kovaly
.svg.png.webp) Venezuela – Cristina Keusch Pérez Venezuela – Cristina Keusch Pérez
References
- 1 2 "British miss doesn't miss;she's now Miss International". Arizona Republic. September 14, 1969. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.