The Michigan Daily -Thursday, September 19, 1991 - Page 3 'U' student named first runner-up in Mr. Mich. pageant ' Campus area +a" stores offer A 2 by JoAnne Viviano Daily Staff Reporter Chuck Babinger got lucky last Friday night - thanks to his good looks and personality. The LSA sophomore was named first runner-up in the the 7th annual Mr. Michigan pageant, sponsored by Metro 25 Tire Centers and Miller High Life. The pageant was designed "to as- sess personality, appearance and modeling potential," said Babinger, a pre-med major. Contestants were judged as fol- lows: 50 percent based on a personal interview, 25 percent based on a tuxedo competition, and 25 percent based on a swimsuit competition. "I worried most about the swimsuit competition," Babinger said. "Being only 19-years-old, my body doesn't have muscle maturity. But they weren't looking for a lot of muscle, just a good coat hanger (for modeling)." Babinger is the youngest man to ever place in this contest. "Nineteen is a good time to start (modeling). Men get better looking as they get older," said pageant owner and Executive Director Diana Hunt. "I was most confident in the personal interview. I'm into archery and like to go hunting with my fa- ther. The judges thought that was unique," Babinger said. "I told them my closest rela- tionship is with my Dad. He's my very best friend. I think that stuck out in their minds," he added. "(Chuck) represents a lot of the ideal values the pageant was looking for," Hunt said. "We stressed the idea of being a positive male role model, not just a male model. He definitely is." "The time I was most nervous was when I was backstage just be- fore they announced the top 20 fi- nalists," Babinger said. "I was wondering what I would say when I had to answer a question in front of a live audience. It really got me shook up." Babinger said he was about to give up hope when the top five were announced. "By the time they named the third runner-up, I was giving up and when they announced the second runner-up, I was thinking, 'This is it,"' he said. "And there was such applause from the second runner-up that I couldn't hear my name. I didn't know if I should step out or not, but everyone was looking at me so I stepped out and just started laugh- ing," he added. The competition began at the start of the summer when Babinger responded to a radio advertisement calling for good looking men inter- ested in modeling. "Statewide, they screened over 400 men. Only 124 were in the pageant," he said. A photo session, four rehearsals, and two press parties followed se- lection. "It helped me get to know the guys. By the night of the pageant, most of us knew each new business Tower Records, Third Coast, 2001 Futon open to students by Marah Gubar _is ; FILE PHOTO LSA sophomore Chuck Babinger looks dapper in his tuxedo as he is awarded first runner-up in the 7th annual Mr. Michigan pageant. Babinger said he was confident about his personal interview, but admitted that "I worried ... about the swimsuit competalon." Three new businesses have opened in Ann Arbor, offering stu- dents and residents a variety of items ranging from futons to food. Tower Records opened Labor Day on South University Street. Manager Tom Rule said the Tower chain chose Ann Arbor as a location because it is trying to break into the college market. "Also, Ann Arbor is hip musi- cally, a real music center. A lot of bands on tour either stop here or in Detroit," Rule said. Rule has worked at other Tower stores in California and Tennessee. The Ann Arbor branch is the 60th to open nationwide. However, Rule maintains that each store is unique. "Tower is not a typical chain in. that each store is run independently by the manager. I decide what titles to order and how many of them we need. It's not done by some company headquarters in California that isn't aware of what we need to have in stock. "For example, we expect to sell a lot of imports and independent la- bels because this is a college town and alternative music is very popu- lar," he said. Rule explained that the store does not specialize in one type of music, but tries to maintain a com- prehensive catalog containing every type of music. Rule said he welcomes tapes by local artists. "If people in bands record a CD or tape, we'd love to carry it on consignment," he said. The Third Coast, another addi- tion to Ann Arbor, opened Sept. 6. The coffeehouse and wine bar is lo- cated off the corner of William and State streets. "The owner decided on Ann Arbor because the atmosphere seemed right and a nice space became available," said manager Martin Sweeney. "Because of our location, we hope to be accessible to students and because of our menu and wines, we hope to also serve people who would normally avoid campus," Sweeney said. "We do a few things differently than most coffeehouses," he added. "We have a full menu, waiter/waitress service, and at the beginning of October, we'll have liquor. Not hard liquor, but wine, sherry, cognac, etc.... Also, we are constantly looking to have special events - live music and poetry readings, for example. "In Ann Arbor, all the coffee shops are not really in direct compe- tition with each other. The amount of people who only go to one shop is very low. I think the people here definitely will support a diverse se- lection," Sweeney said. Yet another addition to Ann Arbor's growing commercial dis- trict is 2001 Futon which opened Aug. 31 on Main Street. There are 12 of the stores nationwide. "Ann Arbor was chosen as a lo- cation because our inventory seems to sell very well in college towns.. Futons are well fitted to the con-: temporary alternate lifestyle of college students," said store man- ager Linda Getty. f other," Babinger said. Babinger's award was accompa- nied by $12,000 in prizes including a full tuition scholarship from Specs Howard School of Broadcast Arts, a scholarship from John Casablanca modeling agency, a six month mem- bership at FitA S A Health Spa, and round trip a tue to Florida. Babinger said he plans to accept the Specs Howard scholarship be- cause "a great deal of modeling is acting and learning to use your voice." Diag fair to recruit student volunteers by Karen Sangir More than 50 organizations will seek volunteers for social action and *irect service projects on the Diag today. Project Serve's Volunteer Fair, which runs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m, will bring representatives from community agencies and campus or- ganizations together to recruit stu- dent volunteers, said Project Serve stafffyember Anita Bohn. Students can sign up for year- gong programs such as Alpha Phi Wmega and Students Working Against Today's Hunger, or volun- teer work in museums, the University Hospital, and local high schools, tutoring teen-agers. Bohn said some non-traditional groups, such as interfaith counsel- ing, will be present as well. This will be the fourth year for the Volunteer Fair, but only its sec- ond time on the Diag. In its first two years, the fair was held in the Union Ballroom. However, Bohn said she found it was more accessible when it was held outside and in the center of campus where it was able to attract people passing through the Diag. The Volunteer Fair has proven to be a very successful event in the past, Bohn said. At last year's fair, 600 people signed up to volunteer. She attributes some of the success to students' ability to talk with actual representatives from the organiza- tions. Beverly Smith, the volunteer co- ordinator for the University Medical Center and a fair partici- pleted community service in high pant for four years, said the fair has school and became involved with been a great aid to the hospital in its Project Serve during her first year at endeavor to recruit volunteers. the University. "The fair has been a valuable Alex, a Project Serve board tool to us," Smith said. member, sends notices to all the or- The hospital looks for students ganizations that might be interested who can offer support service for in setting up xhibits. She also con- visitors, patients, and hospital staff. firms whici r ps will come to Working in the recovery room and the fair and ; et up tables. taking the library cart to the pa- "We ha, e an expansive list of tients are two of many available community organizations in Ann placements. Arbor," Alex said. The Volunteer Fair is organized The Volunteer Fair is one of sev- and run by Project Serve, a eral annual campus-wide events that University department, located in Project Serve organizes. "Into the the Michigan Union. It is composed Streets" is another fall program it of a board of 20 students, of which sponsors, in which students spend a Bohn is one. semester completing community LSA senior Asha Alex com- service. Two other futon stores cur- rently exist in Ann Arbor, but* Getty feels that 2001 can offer' something special to the community. "All our products are made at: the same company, so the quality is- consistent, and the life span of our. futons is very long," she said. Iranian agency predicts Western hostage release *Engler to work with union on health reform LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Gov. John Engler and a state employee's union launched an ambitious joint effort yesterday to tackle health care reform. "This unique and innovative partnership will create opportuni- ties for more accessible, better qual- ity, and cost effective health care for *MViichigan workers and their fami- lies," Engler said. "At a time when other states are cutting back on benefits, we are de- lighted that Michigan has agreed to work cooperatively with its em- ployees in a forward looking cre- ative approach to prevent the loss of health care benefits," said John Sweeney, international president of the Service Employees International Union. Three SEIU locals represent more than 10,000 of Michigan's 65,000 state workers. THTE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Engler said he wanted the com- mittee to look at every aspect of health care, from the number of hospital beds in the state to whether more money should be put into pre- venting illness and disease. "I want Michigan to be a labora- tory for health care reform," he said. "We will work together to 'I want Michigan to be a laboratory for health care reform. We will work together to control health care costs and increase access to quality health care' - John Engler control health care costs and in- crease access to quality health care." Engler pointed out that a mil- lion of Michigan's 9.3 million citi- zens don't have health insurance coverage. Sweeney said the nation's current health care system is "failing fast, providing less coverage at higher cost for fewer people. By 1998, health insurance premiums will be eating up 27 percent of our take- home pay. And for employers, like the state of Michig an, the price tag will be equally ho rendous." Sweeney said unions and private companies in the automobile, steel, telecommunications and other in- dustries had banded together to tackle health care. However, he said Michigan is the first state to take that step. Dave Fox, a spokesperson for the Michigan State Medical Society, said the doctors' group welcomed the action. "It's a commendable effort and we have already done a lot of work in the area and we would be willing to share any information that we have with that group," he said. Fox said the American Medical Association had put forward a 16- point plan to accomplish the objec- tives that Engler and Sweeney have set for the new eight-member panel. "It's a compromise plan for what we call fine-tuning the health care system without overthrowing it for some nationalized system," he said. Among other things, Fox said that plan calls for requiring em- ployers to provide insurance for all full-time employees, with tax cred- its and risk pools to support that. It also calls for reforms of the liabil- ity laws. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The official Iranian news agency yester- day predicted the imminent release of a Western hostage and named 77- year-old Briton Jack Mann as most likely to be freed. The report by the Islamic Repub- lic News Agency (IRNA) height- ened speculation that Mann, who was kidnapped May 12, 1989, would become the fourth Western captive to be set free in six weeks. Several hours after IRNA issued its report, there was no word of any release. U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar has been working to arrange a deal that would free Western hostages in Lebanon and about 300 Lebanese prisoners held by Israel. The Jewish state seeks an accounting of Israeli soldiers miss- ing in Lebanon. After Israel freed 51 Arab pris- oners last week, the pro-Iranian Revolutionary Justice Organization issued a statement saying Mann was alive and well. The Iranian-backed Hezbollah is believed to be the umbrella group for factions holding most of the missing Westerners. Iran, which has facilitated previous hostage re- leases, recently has reiterated the importance of learning the fate of four Iranians who disappeared in Lebanon in 1982. In Tehran, Lebanese Foreign Minister Fares Bweiz said he would urge Lebanese officials to press the search for the four Iranians. The Ira- nians were kidnapped by Christian militiamen, and were reportedly killed. Meetings Japan Student Association, mass mtg. Union, Kuenzel Rm, 7 p.m. Russkij Chaj, Russian conversation practice. MLB, 3rd floor conf. rm, 4-5. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, mtg. Dana, Rm 1040,7 p.m. U-M Pre-Med Club, mass mtg. MLB Aud 3, 6 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ, weekly mtg. Dental School Kellogg Aud, 0005, 7-8. U-M Sychronized Swimming Team, mass mtg. Beginners welcome. CCRB,. rm 1250.7:30. Amnesty International. MLB, B137, 7 p.m. Ann Arbor Libertarian League, mass mtg. Union, Anderson Rm, 8 p.m. Rainforest Action Movement, mass mtg. Writers, artists, and anyone inter- ested in saving the rainforest welcome, Dana, rm 1046, 7:30. American Chemical Society-Michi- gan Student-Affiliates. 1650 Chem Kinetics of Phase Changes in Molecular Clusters," Ted Dibble. Chem Bldg, rm 1640, 4p.m. "Sedention and Family Function: !Kung San," Patricia Draper of Penn State University. MLB, Lec Rm 2, 4 p.m. "Must Revolutions Fall?" Sir Ralf Dahrendorf of Oxford University. Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m. "Patterns in Old Kingdom Subsis- tence Behavior," Richard Redding. Natural Science Museum, rm 2009, 12- 1. Furthermore U-M Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, practice. CCRB Martial Arts Rm, 7-8. "IES: Study Abroad in W. and E. Europe or Asia," International Cen- ter, 3:30-5. U-M Swim Club, Tuesday workout. IM Pool, 5:30-7:30. U-M Women's Lacrosse Club. Call 996-8591 for info. U-M Rowing Team, novice practice. eV = ini n MUAC/MINI-COURSES inin * The following corrections need to be made: O N T H E P O S T E R ONL Y: classes listed for North Campus are actually ARTSPACE classes. : ON THE POSTER ONLY: classes listed for ' ARTSPACE are actually on North Campus. IN THE DAILY AD (9/16) and THE POSTER:; -The North Campus yoga class meets at * the times listed for the Central Campus class. **T he Cent ral Cam pus yoga class mee ts at the * h t imes listed for the North campus class. If you have QUESTIONS, please call U AC @ 7 63 -1 1 0 7 HELP WANTED 1. Would you Mke to work for yourelf? 2. Would you like to set your own hours? 9. Are you self-motivated? 4. Are you a bit of an entrepreneur? If you answered YES to all of the above, you are just the person we're looking or 6:30 pm Santamkhr 91~