AA .dd Pageant contestants sporting AMERICA, 1997 The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 12, 1997 - 7 two-piece suits for the first time By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- Miss land Jamie Fox broke a 50-year t tion when she walked across the stage of the Miss America Pageant in a bikini Tuesday night. Although pageant officials changed the rules this year to allow contestants to wear two-piece suits, the majority of contestants have chosen not to bare their stomachs. Miss Michigan Kimberly Stec - an Engineering senior - opted for a white, full-piece suit with mesh cutouts buse she said the one-piece style is m e flattering to her figure. "I'm just more comfortable in a one- piece - on stage, at least," Stec said. The new rule change has focused considerable attention on the controver- sial swimsuit competition, which counts for 15 percent of each contes- tant's overall score. Despite their personal choices, con- pageant officials were permitting biki- nis this year. "I think it's about time they gave the girls the choice. It brings us into the new age of the pageant." said Miss California Rebekah Ann Keller, adding that she opted for the two-piece because it is the kind of suit she would wear to the beach. "The whole point of the Miss America Pageant is to be yourself," said Miss Wisconsin Nicole Loey. "I think it's great that they're showcasing who these women really are." Pageant officials said they agree with the rule change. "My opinion is that it's their choice, as long as everyone keeps it in good taste," said Miss Alabama board member Walter Hill. "They should feel comfort- able." Miss District of Columbia Sonya Gavankar said she chose to wear a tra- ditional, bright-pink, one-piece suit out of habit. "I've never worn a two-piece before, do it," Gavankar said. Miss Connecticut Merissa Starnes said her short legs kept her from sport- ing a bikini. "I wouldn't be caught dead in a two- piece," Starnes. A swimmer and a lifeguard, Fox said she chose the two-piece because she felt confident about showing off her stom- ach. "I really feel comfortable wearing a two-piece," said Fox, who further updated the competition by compli- menting her bikini with shoes that resembled sandals more than the tra- ditional high heels. The audience at Wednesday's pre- liminary competition reacted posi- tively to the rule change, cheering louder for contestants who bared their midriffs. So far, the judges don't seem to have a favorite swimming suit style: Tuesday's preliminary swimsuit winner wore a one-piece, while yesterday's winner wore a bikini. BOHDAN DAMIAN cAP/Daily Miss North Dakota Shantel Swedlund and Miss Hawaii Erika Kauffman compete in the swimsuit competition. Kauffman won the swimsuit portion of the contest Wednesday night. testants said they were pleased that and it seems like n IMAGE Continued from Page 1 In an effort to emphasize sincerity, Pageant CEO Leonard Horn told judges this year to penalize contestants' scores if they detect that a woman is being phony. This new addition to the scoring method shouldn't hurt Miss New Hampshire Michelle Lamontange, who embodies the image of the updated, down-to-earth contestant: The front woman for a rock band, Lamontange breaks all the Miss erica stereotypes. amontange, whose fellow band members celebrated her crowning with a "kegger," is proud that she doesn't conform to the Miss America Pageant stereotype. "It's a whole new audience I'm bringing in," Lamontange said. "It's kind of neat to show them this side of reality." Wearing leather boots and a chartreuse suit, she brought the audience to their feet during the talent competition as she sang 4 rock version of the song "Route 66," which she chose because is lyrics incorporate numerous states. Lamontange said she does not take the competition too seri- e :, adding that some of her favorite parts of the pageant ia ide getting free food, free T-shirts and gambling. Contestants are also required to have a platform on which they answer questions during the personal interview and evening gown portions of the competition. "It's a program that believes in women, and it's a program that has evolved," said Holland, who has worked to promote increased literacy. While devoting the last year to her literacy campaign, Holland inspired a 65-year-old man to learn to read motivated a mother in a correctional facility to educate herself for the sake of her children and, Holland believes, was instrumental in bring- the issue of literacy into the spotlight in Washington, D.C. th e emphasis shifing toward goals and personality, con- testants said they had mixed feelings on the issue of whetlter the swimsuit and evening gown competitions are outdated. "As much as people say that they don't, looks can count as mouch as your personality can," said Miss Connecticut Merissa Starnes. "It's not beauty as much as how you present yourself." ow is not the time to PAG EANT Continued from Page-1 honors were given to Miss California Rebekah Ann Keller for her hot-pink bikini and Miss North Carolina Michelle Warren for her vocal performance of the song "And I'm Telling You I'm Not Going." The 510,000 Quality of Life scholarship was awarded last night to Miss Minnesota Jennifer Ostergaard for her efforts to curb child abuse in her state. Although preliminary winners are putting certain contes- tants into the spotlight, Stec said she feels winning the crown is still "anyone's game." "I don't really see people getting overconfident because they won a preliminary award," Stec said. The end of the preliminary rounds have made the reality of the pageant set in, Stec said. "Now it's not just a bunch of rehearsals," Stec said. "It's a bunch of rehearsals for the biggest night of your life.: Miss New York Lisa Esler, who calls Stec her "long lost friend," said she thinks intelligence and personality will make Stec a contender for the crown. -w "That's really what's important for Miss America to have," Esler said, adding that her parents will be rooting for both her and Stec. Stec's own family cheered her on from the audience last. night, wearing buttons of their loved one that beamed with, the contestant's warm, genuine smile. Her immediate family members - three of whom are University of Michigan alumni - said Stec's confidence, charisma and gentle personality have made her stand out dur- ing the competition. "She has represented the University of Michigan %ery well," said Kim's mother, Arlene Stec. Missed this week's mass meetings? Don't worry - there are still two more chances, this Tuesday and Thursday. Come to the Student Publications Building on 420 Maynard St. to find out more about 106 years of editorial freedom. i : BOHDAN DAUPMIA~J N A/ua0Y Miss Vermont Jill Renee Cummings Michelle Lamontange proudly displays her navel ring Wednesday night. Miss Colorado Regina Flores said although she thinks Miss America's appearance in an evening gown is still important, how she looks in a bathing suit is irrelevant. "You've never seen her pose in a swimsuit after the pageant," Flores said. RECEPTIONIST-ASSISTANT: Well organized, punctual, person needed by fast- paced real estate and legal firm. Computer, filing and communication skills (along with rofessional appearance) required, book eeping experience desirable. Send resume and salary requirements to: Lake Forest Partners, Suite 200, 206 S. Fifth Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48104. RENNAISANCE CLOTHIER is now in- te ewing for part-time openings. The posi- ti are both immediate & for the near future. Contact Dave Gilbert 769-8511. RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS Needed: are you a woman who has been suffering from "TMJ" or chronic facial pain for 6 months or longer? Qualified participants receive free dental evaluation, $150-$300 compensation at completion. Study involves overnight stays in hospital (may be scheduled for weekdays or weekends) and blood sampling through an IV. No medications are given. Women (18- 40) with normal menstrual cycles who are taking no regular medications (birth control is eptable) and who have had no previous ja surgery may be eligible to participate. Please icontact Michelle at 936-4845 for fur- ther details and screening. Restaurant FLEXIBLE SHIFTS No Experience Necessary Something Exciting Is Brewing...fresh career challenge at Tim Hortons! Fresh-baked a' s, custom-blended coffee, scrumptious wiches, excellent customer service-- all have made Tim Hortons the leading coffee and fresh baked goods chain in Canada with more than 1500 locations. Part of Wendy's International, we're expanding in the Michigan market offering outstanding opportunities on all shifts (including Midnight shift) for highly motivated individuals. Customer Service Staff Bakers Doughnut Bakers We are presently hiring for our restaurant location in Saline. We offer highly competitive wages, and great advancement potential. To apply, stop by or call the Saline restaurant location at 524 East Michigan Avenue, Saline, MI. Phone (313) 429-0761. EOE SI UDEN TUDuiAN WNED i f ior Fall/Winter 1997-98. Good physical condition: cleaning, lifting, odd jobs. Stu- dents enthusiastic, punctual and flexible will receive top consideration. Good working conditions. Good pay. Must be available 8:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Tues. and Thurs. Work Study welcome but not required. Apply now. Call 764-0550 or stop by room 210A Stu- dents Publications, 420 Maynard Street. STUDENT EMPLOYEES needed at Cris- ler Arena for event staffing, set up, tear down, & some cleaning. $5.50/hr. to start. Call Lisa at 998-7236. STUDENTS Lawyers Club Dining is hiring for fall term $7-$8 to start. Catering opportunities. Meal benefits. Apply in person or call 764-1115. 551 S. State St. (corner of State and S. University). TELEMARKETING Eve. $7/hr. 10+ hrs./ wk. No selling! Call Allen 996-1107. TEMPORARY DELIVERY POSITION AVAILABLE Drivers are needed to deliver construction material on U of M campus. Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Pay rate of $6.75 per hour. Valid drivers license is required. Applicant must not have any lifting restrictions. Vehicle will be provided. Fill out application at: 326 E. Hoover, U of M Plant Contracting Group office located behind U of M Football Stadium. Phone 936-0264. THE BLUE FRONT is hiring! Be casual, dependable and smart. Apply in person, 701 Packard. Thanks. TUTOR NEEDED for high school Spanish stud. pursuing independent study. High school level 4 approx. second yr. college level. Senior or grad stud. pref. 761-5102. TUXEDO WORLD HIRING full & part- time up to $10/hr., benefits available. If you are an enthusiastic & hard working individual please apply at: 893 W. Eisenhower Pkwy., Ann Arbor, or call: 313/663-5780 for appointment. TYPIST PART-TIME, accurate, dependable, people-oriented. Call Pat 994- 5515. WANTED Student to provide administrative support & assist faculty who are learning to use technology. Must be familiar with Web authoring, MS Office, Mac OS & Win 95 as well as UM computing environment. 10-15 hours/week (flexible). Call 647-7406 for more information, or stop by the Faculty Exploratory in Room 206 Graduate Library (second floor) and pick up an application. WANTED: ORDER PULLER. $9.34/hr. Starts at 4 p.m. for VSA of Michigan, 8979 Samuel Barton Dr. Belleville 48111. 800/ 288-8680. WORK STUDY STUDENTS. Lawyers Club Dining is hiring for fall term. $7-$8 to start. Catering opportunities. Meal benefits. Apply in person or call 764-1115. 551 S. State St. (comer of State and S. University). WORK STUDY OFFICE positions at Stu- dent Publications. We're looking for punctual, energetic students for assisting with some or all of mail, phones, filing, cash receipts, library, database coordination. Various hrs. available. Pay $5.90 to $6.75 per hr. Call for information or apply at 764-0550, 210E Student Publications. WORK STUDY position avail. in Romance Languages. Must not be taking Elem. French or Spanish. Competitive wage. Call Judi 763- 0408, 4105 MLB. WORK-STUDY STUDENTS: Looking for a variety of work experiences? Flexible hours. Evenings/weekends possible. Com- puter skills (word processing, data entry) a plus. Off-campus office. Own transportation necessary. Free Parking. Contact Heidi or Peg at: 998-7832 to schedule an interview. Y&S SANDWICHES CAFE hiring crew employees, shift managers, & drivers, no grease. Very flexible hours. Short & long shifts avail. Stop by the downstairs Michigan Union Food Court. YES, HIRING NOW! Paid training, talk on the telephone, never sell, get paid to do interviews for medical research [and morel, flexible scheduling, part-time or full-time. *Choose 10 to 40 hours per week! *Set your own schedule and stick to it! *Choose to work evenings and/or weekends!*Consume free coffee, tea or hot chocolate even as late as midnight! *Resume builder! *Earn $6 - $9.50 per hour! *Wear whatever you want to work! *Fill out a job application! (You can be eaming $$$ in 10 days or less.) Every "yes" directs you toward a telephone research or interview position with DataStat, No sales, ever! Make your progressive step toward DataStat Come over and see us now. We are in Ann Arbor at 3975sResearch Park Drive, near Briarwood. CALL 994-4199. ~j child care SR,, AFFECTIONATE responsible care needed for 3 yr. old boy Fri. 2:30-5:30 p.m., & Sat. 4:30-9:30 p.m. Own car. Non-smoker, experience, & ref. 971-5768. AFTER SCHOOL child care needed. Must have excellent references and good driving record. Generous salary. Call 995-0560. AFTER SCHOOL CHILD CARE for 3 great kids. 2-3 afternoons 3:30-6. Own car, non-smoker. Call 995-5348. AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 7 yr. old girl. 3:30 - 6:00 pm, 2-3 afternoons per wk. $7/hr call 769-5658. BABYSITTER NEEDED for 18 mo. old daughter. Tuesday/Thursday mornings in my home. Call 994-5512. BABYSITTER for 1 & 3 yr. old 10-20 hrs. Flex. time & pay. Must have ref. & car. N- smkr. Call Kathleen 665-8987. BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER for family, North East Ann Arbor. Tues.-Wed. 2/ 3pm-6pm. Thurs. 2/3 -8/9pm. $8/hr. Need car and references. 995-9668. BABYSITTER NEEDED Occasional wknd. or wk. eves. Adorable 2yr. old. 994-3698/ 913-3448 day. Call Gwen. Refs. pref. BABYSITTER NEEDED: delightful 3 & 5 yr. old boys, Bums park area. Mon a.m., Wed. a.m., every other Thur. 5:30-8, wknd. times. $7/hr. Car needed. Call 663-1455 if avail. any of these times. BABYSITTER NEEDED Tues. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Occasional eves. & wknds. Ref. req., close to campus. Call Kathy 668-2467. BABYSITTER NEEDED in our home. 2 to 4 afternoons a week Mon.-Fri. Beginning at 2:30 p.m. Must have own car. Flexibility a must. Call 761-2741. BABYSITTER NEEDED for one-year-old. Occasional eves. and wknds. References a must. Call 930-1525. CHILD CARE needed. 5 & 9 year old boys. 3 afternoons after school. 10-15 hrs./wk. 663- 3482. Exp. reference nec. CHILD CARE NEEDED FOR two boys ages 2 & 5. 15 hours/week. Flexible hours. 1 mile from campus. 761-1306. CHILD CARE NEEDED Tues. & Thurs. 3- 5:30 pm. Experience referred. References required. Call Cheryl 975-0434. CHILD CARE FOR 3 young, very active kids. Mon. & Wed. 5:30-8PM & some wknd. hrs. NE A2, must have car. $8/hr. Call Cindy w/ refs. 663-0191. CHILD CARE - Eleven year old. Own transportation helpful but not required. Sporadic evenings and weekend hours. $6.50 to start. Tolerance for birds, cats and large dno nmint-741-4R~74 LOVING RESPONSIBLE SITTER needed for 2 delightful kids ages 2 & 4. Intelligence, professionalism & ref. req. Need to enjoy playing & laughing. 747-8406. PART-TIME CHILDCARE & mother's helper for school age children, non-smoker, own car, reliable. Mon. & Wed. from 3:30 - 6:30 PM. 662-7119. PROFESSIONAL COUPLE seeking responsible student for child care, light cooking. 4pm-7pm M-F. Experience with in- fants and own transportation required. $8.50/ hr. 662-9491. RUSSIAN OR FRENCH speaker needed for toddler in Bums Park home. Mornings or 9-5 weekdays. Call 930-1622. SITTERS for 10 year old high func. boy w/ autism. Good pay. 426-8556. WED. MORNINGS and/or occasional eves. Start at $7/hr. Call Sally 975-9473. WEEKLY WOMEN'S GROUP seeks dependable, experienced child care. Own transportation please. Dana 741-8284. FREE CD CATALOG: Tired of paying $15+ for a CD? Previously owned CDs, your favoritesdat unbeatable prices, 100% guaranteed. Web Site www.usedcd.tom USEDCD, PO Box 31, Jericho, NY 11753 toll free 1-888-USEDCDS fax 516-677-6007 LESSONS-STRING-WIND-PIANO. You can play today - Herb David Guitar Studio 302 E. Liberty 665-8001. _ announcements ...6 ARE YOU INTERESTED in a careerin Law? Come to the Undergraduate Law Club Mass Meeting. Wednesday, September .17, @7:00 p.m. Mich. Union Anderson Room D. AVID M FAN seeks to borrow videotape of last falls UCLA at M game for personal viewing. If you can help, please call Roger collect at (818) 362-9350 after Noon Sun. or 11 p.m. other days. DR. RALPH WILLIAMS on "Speaking One's Self: Commitment and the University Community." Sunday, Sept. 14th at Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Ct. Light supper at. Sm., talk at 7 p.m. Contact: Marcy Carlson -9018. !!!WANTED FOOTBALL TICKETS. 6 U- M season tickets. Call Dan 747-9395. Leave message. Identify section/row. DESPERATE FAN will do anything for Notre Dame TixI Big$ Mike 810-979-9174. I NEED TIX FOR Michigan vs. Notre Dame. Will pay. Call 930-9599. LOW FARES WORLDWIDE Instant pur- chase Eurail passes issued. Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL Tickets available. Call Ted 615-662-3769. NEED 3 OR 4 tickets for UM/Notre Dame. Will pay. Call 313-997-9131. NEED 6 NOTRE DAME/UM football tix. Will pay big $. Call Jill 761-2790. NEED ONE NOTRE DAME ticket. I will bring you great riches. 913-9387. NOTRE DAME TICKETS wanted. Call Jim 495-1015 evenings or message. ROMANTIC GETAWAY- Cozy log cabins on lake. $54-79 ntly. Incl. hot tub, canoes & more. Traverse City. 616/276-9502. SPRING BREAK Reps wanted for Acapul- co from $559. Quad Call Dan Regency Travel 665-6122. HOUSEMATE NEEDED to share 3 bdrm.. hse. N-smkr. Fem. Pref. 10 minute walk to central cmp. Washr./Dryer. 1 blk. from Yost. Call 996-5932. $350 + util. LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION! Roommates needed to share 5 bdrm. hse. near Business School. 662-0070. SPRING BREAK '98 - Sell Trips, Earn Cash & Go Free!!! STS is now hiring campus reps. Check out our great trips to Jamaica & I I ,i~'>4~ ~44~4a,~'94~)7