DETROIT MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL Let Mother's Day be colorful and bright with The largest selection in color! Greis Jewelry Jewish Co-Eds Focus Of Playboy Photographer C. A. D. AMY J. MEHLER E. A. Reg._,S13.38:80" Sale $580 00 B. Reg. i246:0fr Sale $172 " C. Reg. sfa.558.6rr $38500 Sale D. Reg. X558:68' Sale $38500 E. Reg. .1.5.8&90- Sale 406°° F. Reg. 11,586tI0' Sale $1,050" G. Reg. $.259:60- Sale $181 00 H. Reg..1.3444.1547 Sale $252 00 For the best in quality and design, there is only one place: 855.1730 32940 Middlebelt Rd. (At 14 Mile Rd. in the Broadway Plaza) JEWELERS Custom Designed Jewelry to Your Taste HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10.8, Sat. 10.5 JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S DAY ANNOUNCING GREG SHOES 4th ANNUAL wi7IT AfROSOltS. SATURDAY, MAY 11 4fROSOLES • NON-TOXIC TO THE ATMOSPHERE - ENTER TO WIN A FREE PAIR OF AEROSOLES! EVERGREEN PLAZA ORCHARD MALL 559-3580 851-5566 SOUTHFIELD W. BLOOMFIELD Serving the Community.for 35 Years. 16 Eat less saturated fats. FRIDAY,-MAY 10, 1991 WERE FIGHTING FOR `CUR LIFE American Heart Association Staff Writer L isa Engelman of Bloomfield Hills will have to wait until Oc- tober along with the rest of Detroit to find out if she's one of the "Girls of the Big 10," Playboy magazine's an- nual series of features on col- lege women. Until then, Ms. Engelman will spend her summer as usual, painting, writing poetry, acting, spending time with her boyfriend and volunteering at a homeless shelter in Ann Arbor. Ms. Engelman, 24, who's a junior at the University of Michigan, was among 50 women who interviewed last month with Playboy photog- rapher David Mecey. Despite her photo shoot and the fact that millions of readers might see Ms. Engelman's picture in the fall issue of Playboy, she declined to be photographed by The Jewish News. "Look, it was something I did; I'm not ashamed I took my clothes off, but enough is enough. I'm not looking for any more publicity. Anyone who knows me, knows what I look like," said Ms. Engelman, who is 5-foot-3 and 102 pounds. "I don't need to have my picture on the pages of the Jewish News." Mr. Mecey, who inter- viewed Ms. Engelman and other Playboy hopefuls from the ninth floor of the Cam- pus Inn across the - street from the university's Ann Arbor campus, was there to photograph women for the magazine's third annual "Girls of the Big 10" pic- torial. "The more they wear, the smaller the fee," he said. "It's $500 for the women who pose nude, and less for those who refuse." U-M was Playboy's first stop on an assignment that's taken photographers, war- drobe and makeup artists from their Midwest head- quarters in Chicago to Big 10 universities like Purdue, Penn State, Indiana, Iowa; Illinois and Wisconsin. - After talking with ap- plicants and shooting a few instant photos (with clothes), Mr. Mecey invited several students for full photo ses- sions later in the week. Ms. Engelman and her friend, Lisa Leib, a recent graduate of U-M, were two of the women who were called back. "When we heard that Playboy was in town, we thought it would be fun to go over to the Campus Inn and check it out," Ms. Engelman said. " When I got there, I liked what I saw." Ms. Engelman, who has modeled and acted profes- sionally in Detroit and in Los Angeles, said she was impressed by Playboy's pro- fessionalism. "Everyone was extremely friendly and honest about what they expected of us," she said. "Mecey (the pho- "The more they wear, the smaller the fee." Dave Mecey tographer) asked me right off how I felt about taking off my clothes for the pictorial spread. "I told him I wasn't ashamed of my body and that I considered nudity to be a form of art," she said. "I also told him I had a high opinion of the work that Playboy does. I said I thought magazines like Hustler and Penthouse did a lot more to exploit women, and that it's generally been society and the way it is that exploits women." But Ms. Leib, 22, of West Bloomfield, said she knew she blew it when she told the photographer she had a problem with posing nude. "I was one of the ones that was called back," she said, "but I wasn't ready to bare it all. I knew my family would be upset, and I thought it might come back to haunt me later. "I was really excited to go and meet the Playboy reps," she said, "but the talk all over campus and in classes was very negative. It wasn't something you volunteered to your professors or peers." Playboy's visit drew an outraged response from almost 200 feminist students and staff members at the university. Ms. Leib said the day she and Ms. Engelman came to the Inn, student groups were picketing and rallying all around campus. "We originally decided not to be interviewed the first day (April 15) so a lot of the furor would have a chance to die down," Ms. Leib said.