OCEAN CITY, N.J. - Miss New Jersey can keep her crown despite photos that
show her acting "not in a ladylike manner."
 Miss New Jersey, Amy Polumbo, listens as pageant officials
announce that they ruled she will be able to keep her crown despite photos
she admits show her acting 'not in a ladylike manner,' Thursday, July 12,
2007, in Ocean City, N.J. [AP]
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Hours after a nervous Amy Polumbo went public Thursday with photos of herself
that had been sent anonymously to pageant officials, those officials decided the
pictures did not merit stripping her of the title.
"I'm very happy about this decision, and I look forward to resuming my agenda
as Miss New Jersey," said a smiling Polumbo, who blew kisses to audience members
during the announcement.
The beauty pageant winner apologized for the trouble the pictures had caused
and thanked the pageant board for its support.
"I want to thank the public," Polumbo said. "I also want to thank God for
getting me through this."
The pictures include one showing what Polumbo said was her boyfriend
apparently biting her breast through her shirt, another of Polumbo in a
limousine wearing jeans with her legs spread in the air and another of her in
what appears to be a Halloween costume dress holding two small pumpkins up to
her breasts.
"It's not in a ladylike manner. I'm not a robot. I'm a human being," Polumbo
said.
There were also photos of Polumbo drinking, but the 22-year-old college
student said she was of legal age when they were taken.
Polumbo earlier said she didn't think the pictures should lead to the loss of
her crown but said other people might interpret them differently.
"What I think is OK, someone else's eyebrows could be raised," she said.
Polumbo's lawyer, Anthony Caruso, said that a person or persons claiming to
be The Committee to Save Miss America threatened to make the photos public
unless she resigned her title.
Polumbo will represent the Garden State in the next Miss America pageant,
which has yet to be scheduled.