JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================u" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?2h % $wǽoh*,~erzW#6˝F1$kGډeUМW1h$ݍs )cԁR͜gmD 9[jHdR`O=>ZV`gi /ᚮP&gzil0l! j1D=LUj&dRڈ34tC%\N ՞=ގTRk8 _.l񞝪`b5S#b̧qk8[y9MVP b5y9WK r4R5x-5֤Ė "0޷*ɌROaTໂV\6 \ڮG{Dkdw`?ut&5`_{W g›)7 ݺuZߠo4W<({Ҡk=H[濜sWIj@d<~yt8a w2ӳFyj͒ޮ-A7JԒ\Eidf#E;+*E #Bi.ecK,[Pľ{V^iQ^]FCm'O , ݎoziV;#%㹯?֯ qY$w\>xVKж+=` |Ke-I YT$nޤl6E2O), zw8mz:?)RňuV$ۭcIsW ov:)Px4Uzľ\w(CS?ɭ]UC*ȮwUPKrKۗ>q 9 Aw zH]bnxĚ:-2:G)]5S+9>Tnk~Uٹtd@C\_ <=dsUܬRT.n]?skOH lڀ^Hv]eo_u@\!vJg-Hs- qo9i2 (s5m F˄U>^ ҹUof ޡ\W\XJW3%deeyK)`Hϯ-{,uN@ޒdm8;p{WB͎ʋQ|-R309k{czx#$p~q^OK> -VE$#wRxaspgtFy+67Ú"Xk=7D`jj4V'$un7za:y3$`Úcë؋ ŶFq V).u4Qq]+Ė\\ \*:כ(k!K8fxJxPcӿsW2e _t[y8ggx(-LIe]<$v(<}V;60ߞZ89-;#;KuW/1XϖclpUqҪifշ1$rq5cT)"JℹNSG`mFIgTیukR #KoZiGo|o£uϴ[!"Hp\ZTتڻ#נ-fIe;Buy'x-!Lgz.samBL$R6&rpO@qDcP\foFw褱fA`"rȧC[-$IXuX͵®#1>_QGGqZ4Z]B o%\[" L4D$npGTt{%@p Z?Qq<$gt,2EE=e'48}>X8+ԡ6wox@f2;+&CW쮑1GUaZGTe72c*/@X 5l6T)Z'"EVu G%>U5v)%HQ08r7=J<Up+XM%\J8 ;S?Fu>5/k=es3qz,q`#,0q̖#ۯCms)F}+.GЧݚ_P5FC?#5{D̷}8zn/.d rZX|'pqqdt#"JJ LΕh9" fJ\J [ (nU{ֲK! GOִ|3~*֔' qpU,kr sFјz¨ %$]^GX*ˬNw1hՀ¹bդXwi`~aTV6סG&-<8씞+Ej`ɣ,ms4䑆>zVV hٴRG@u>KRbJCM?(et&1NkS:{ -s+R%rkExkiҰJ vgQ$6 ry!QUrNS *+̆BvpWI<>v}Ƨ̆[y@;LB7'ʡxt%GJ+#$z(L!0c1[ҳhZI"fWR9zTl$]k$} t59%9c(l0jM_N6r ߶bTcFAȤk o{jrݵe-Ќפh-eEfN~MzRu/J5R;9TMj SL &ˊIESq,;1*9br2s/t٭W{4cZK]Q-ńhclJͽ䁎Y'jÆkr]IǭY*16Ь;I&,ܒW*cDm.ٕB\-wId,Z6p=hM=7Tg$iQECɥ T?h (m8({E&ݣPJiQE͢")c4(*.yPx)ݒBFS takes a look inside Laura Dayton s world.<br><br>BFS: Were your parents instrumental in your choice of career?<br>Dayton: My father, who was an engineer, and my mother, who taught grade school, placed a tremendous value on education. There was never any doubt in our family that we would go to college. My father told us that each of us would work every day of our lives, so we d better find something we enjoyed doing. My parents encouragement helped me pursue a perfect career blending writing and fitness.<br><br>BFS: Your brother Mike was a Mr. America. How did he become involved in sports?<br>Dayton: When he was 13 he got a front tooth knocked out in a fight, and after that he became involved in wrestling and was encouraged by his coaches to lift weights. A few years later he met Jack Dillinger, a former Mr. America, who helped train him for bodybuilding competition. Mike won the Teenage Mr. America when he was 16, the youngest ever to win this title.<br> <br>BFS: Why did you start lifting weights?<br>Dayton: When Mike became successful, he was asked to contribute to bodybuilding and martial arts publications. I helped him write these articles, and I thought it would be best to train to better understand what I was writing about. I worked out hard, and in those early years I could out-bench-press most of the adult women in the gyms where I trained. As I learned more about weight training, I started writing my own articles. Of course I had to write under pen names, because I doubt that many bodybuilders were interested in reading an article by a 15-year-old girl about the best way to build 22-inch biceps!<br>BFS: Where did you train?<br>Dayton: At a European health spa, where at the time they had separate hours for men and women. But that all started to change very, very quickly, as women started to get more involved in lifting weights. <br><br>BFS: At first did the health clubs resent women lifting weights?<br>Dayton: No, the fact is most health clubs were men-only because no women wanted to train there. But gym owners loved it when women started getting into weight training because that meant more memberships for them.<br><br>BFS: You were involved in promoting the sport of women s bodybuilding from the very beginning, even becoming the editor of a magazine strictly devote