JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?(AEa~(LS֛xQ`s$fQ@Q@9"i3dI42:$ %"{f'$*1rvE𡸎X6 7tZ~hU_!'N{JJ[Pqܖ( (jW k\LU Z5ʁDwEv~.YRh6e?ұmn/yn2Ԓ2@ϝĎn{++A%?^~5T (KI;U2O@1YV~OU1pZvFC)R=LGy|TeV?.35VX.ͼjȤH{_"]R2hgqLI-,FKK!K** 3ji敹mSI)2^IT5ͦJ߂=sVSz[&Ƃ]=1[ǻAAcNHbޫH6UIɬm$Q[ViknA%,OV2m\` e`tk*TN|?uS\\jcQ&Ԋ.$$ڠ"=»tGqҍ u8"` 'Yf!O8늘yḸTYóF0Lzڷi:2Ѽ+ 1M9C~sKnɐ>lw[r!yA/̀Ԛѵ KP2l5Dr>wcr;i2;4V@o#`\[K{Am(3бj]/7t)Hp86)E ^"ʪ2ۏsR֬I% '6!wqI\ԷCK5̒@rC#Wccd]^5 ~5xaXUĊk=^+e96@kg(XgbK3׽SVBNڵ8PH"^@ 3Z [\c^ Y̻%5uw#XtuI KªK1%$NkGO&Fox L.9SEvI[9$sRG<,sq[Z<[U-ػ\إo ؎Mdj6AlgM͹Qu o+n\/QQ 4R$ 5m,Be\ՍFukП(l{FG5Fi)h@8=kkö<:j1sPZC Bc83]l6vz|q r n)\_εU+kȤKs1VdfQ K-} 0w 91JNJ2+OMhyg-YFv+ye\@6gc7^(F29 \ߵ>сI;tX(+Zp]cTt$bǨT4hhۚKqp NIҵg"NYU#nAOJ7ШTerrzQV..q*p9EQCtC\c`@Azhx~wcPLwHPFH3Y:X|zQG"\4*Fxhاc1=G5wOkuE+mLi dO')ZdP&'9u™֢Ү?D,[CFT dxpLbiFfeIU5`ٴ 7d桛+5M>)#||ՆtI0!\~Qo ٲx$ΠuY0aT[aQvɧKM#2 H GO*+{Yn[l(\o:IBTE'miȼ !D%s*Hu5jn#cx#ESo0NRi#{Kkk(cֶd?f }n4DYsOfިa;w}YZĭsgq \ٮP3F"XN *W3u@Kd`Xjg4gS}f3z}3N֞1@ !p*UT/qzcy(D):UlRi/J*M>0O?x#wֶ 'VJq%^4bvV0qU{aԋ8=HcS^T`nM,Q15qdpkd'һ (q?6FMH4İXsoT$ 2j[M"bzrwa:(+OY=޳1ӥzUic@(QʜE-bUF)rđc))#W/ Uf ][=j!^}(ۢ-z)C-BJ(r ɫ_2Kj4ܒgqzU]fv cdPl%$ppҬ@2OEvRp0ͼ?W0ѐy`+ർ k6h @tvp0Op@׊K>#q]΄mo-EBXa|=qsaH$OZJ0Fs)T NB=;aocy{Ր)\ Q\R(-%-PEP[D oeO}zVX5K8I o)IPZC ;1|n{g*\G3I $hvczw;9ϥaw< ev+ǃp+mVuX'0u`k[/-6w%b|8Ej\f=UffAeZ:?4vD$C>jeff5T+EO5dֽX=.&CzhK-$\3p+@ Fc*&)h ( *)gHW.qT&ԙ#GMƀ4ZEC0V\$y,_et?+=kͶEP}j×'xPGP9Rs0;ջ]Ħ`‘Rs]k E2ch8@vl)tGiC fo/'Q36&43w0ؿCoS(~sH84N=(\Hu Ak3"#o$ת4 Cқ1hU@qBNJ \\w:ɬuȇzܒ8~U.58qdeM =p9 \O$4l''֥G`Gz#n }h&Ni胂*E=ϰ%G!q*RP@zsz~DhHo;H:gdxo  [˗HNu L*ު1ӯ'%/qǫ.mIEQS[-SmnF+~=s] &  PY.kcn"TSXzFvF{Md@=N'yFr49bIa*y gMbzԄwN ‘Sց\ ,Gbx 61p;nZX̀_~(g-\tϽhd to Frank Spellman, 1948 Olympic gold medalist in weightlifting (165-pound bodyweight division). Spellman introduced Miller to the Olympic lifts, the snatch and the clean and jerk, and continued to coach the young man until he was 21.  I was so captivated by the sport that it influenced me as both an advocation and a vocation, recalls Miller. <br>Soon after enrolling at UCLA in a pre-dental program, Miller found that time constraints forced him to choose between football and weightlifting. He chose weightlifting. And then, realizing that his passion was not in dentistry but in coaching, Miller went on to earn a master s degree in exercise science at the University of Arizona. <br>After raduation Miller coached weightlifting in South America for two years and in Japan for three years. Miller provides insight into why he loves the sport:  Doing something athletically using speed, timing, agility and flexibility in the coordinated power chain of the hips and legs, back, and then arms against an immovable object! Now this is real power! The most powerful sport of all! <br>I first met Miller in 1977 when I attended his Olympic-style weightlifting camp in Santa Fe. Miller s program was a week long crash course of classroom and gym instruction, teaching all aspects of competitive Olympic lifting. Serving as the national coaching coordinator for the US Weightlifting Federation, Miller told us how he ha