Completed calendar displays 'U' models' 'Looks of Class' The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 5, 1986 -Page 11 (Continued from Page 1) consignment, allowing them to return unsold calendars to his eompany. Although the cal - endars originally went on sale around three weeks ago for $8, most stores reduced the price to $6 oi' $7 because sales were slow. Moe's Sports Shop had 10 calendars sitting on its shelves for more than three weeks until ! the prices were lowered to $6. They sold quickly after the price riduction and now the store is ordering 10 more calendars, aecording to manager Debbie Johnson. TICE'S HASN'T been as successful marketing Looks of Class, said store employee Scott Habermehl, an LSA senior. The store has sold only three of its 10 calendars, which display a smiling wavy-haired brunette, Marlee Brown, on the cover. "Everybody looks at it, but nobody buys," Habermehl said. Tice's was selling the calendar for $8. LSA juniors Nancy Peterman and Nancy McClear were evaluating the calendar in the lMichigan Union Bookstore, but they didn't buy it. Like many students, they looked at the pictures because they knew some of the models. "SOME of the pictures could have been better. Some are good- she's pretty," Peterman said as she paged through the calendar month by month. "I wouldn't buy it," Peterman M 'hnally said. "I'll get the man's calendar." LSA senior Mike Macmanus, an employee at Tice's, thought the ,models weren't representative of university women. "It seems like the majority are in sororities," he said. THE MODELS and creators of the calendar disagree, saying that differents poses and background created the necessary variety. The "look" of each woman depended on "what you have to work with," said Timm Murphy. Murphy is a partner in Timm's Place, which was recruited by Roseman to do the hairstyling and makeup design for the models. "We wanted some soph - isticated looks, some casual, some sporty, a couple sexy- clean sexy," Murphy said. "Someone who is more sophisticated will look out of place with a sporty look," he added. 'U' groups to petition Oxfam aid embargo (Continued from Page 1) ."We have to put a tremendous amount of pressure on the overnment," said Striar, who llongs to the World Hunger Etducation Action .ommittee(WHEAC), a local :group that raises money for Yhumanitarian aid to Central America. Last spring, WHEAC raised roughly $900 for Oxfam's relief ,project and also lead the Fast for -World Hunger, coordinated through University Food Services, churches, and private ,homes, Striar said. AI expect anything to happen from the U.S,. and I'm not particularly zurprised (at the decision)," said Marian Milbauer of Ann Arbor Managua Initiative for Soil :Testing and Development AAMISTAD ), a group working towards better U.S. relations with :Nicaragua. The group still plans this January to send to Nicaragua 30 Michigan residents who will b :ring agricultural tools forbidden In its quest for variety, the calender takes sporty, sophis- ticated, and sexy models throughout the campus, posed at University landmarks. The cover shot, for instance, was taken on the Diag. "MISS September," LSA sophomore Susy Blair, donned a sporty look while wearing a Michigan jersey, her blonde hair tied back under a bandana, and stretched her legs out on the seats of the Michigan Stadium. "I wanted the football stadium shot," Blair said. "I'm a major fan; that's the most me." The models had some degree of control over their poses, and they wore their own clothes. Before shooting began, each model signed a contract which, in effect, allowed her complete control over the photograph that would be printed in the calendar, Roseman said. "THEY wanted to show every aspect of the campus; I was supposed to be swimming," said LSA junior Liz Matejka, who claimed the month of November while sitting in the sauna at the Central Campus Recreation Building. "I was a bit shaky with the bathing suit," Matejka said, "but it was a conservative bathing suit." Tally Alley A deserted alley between Schoolkids Records and Tally Hall leads to the Michigan Theater's stage door. 1 tee __ .- - - - - ro I tooa ,Uand o in a to -F Ponti, _ .. _ , a trip., 00 /m 'an, I b or s " N i r .}4 . .' t f - -_. a c " bea the c Dice. * Get the picture? With AT&T you can't lose. Unrivaled long distance service and now an unbeatable sweepstakes offer. Right now, if you enter the "AT&T Long Distance Sweepstakes" you could drive off with the national grand prize- a 1987 Pontiac Fiero GT. Or as one of two first prize winners, you could fly off on a trip for two to London on British Airways in cooperation with Flying Inter Collegiate Holidays Inc. 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