)N LOCATION U OF VIRGINIA: Amazing! If her high school friends could see her now, that is what they would say about A.J. Brownstein. A.J., a blonde, 90-pound beauty, ap- peared last spring as the cover model on the University of Florida 1987 Women of UF Calendar. Yet the 22-year-old University of Virginia first- year law student admits to having been unattractive in high school. "When I was in middle school, I was hated;' A.J. said. "I was the brain and I had asses. In high school I didn't want be the brain, so I was this quiet tle girl. Then I went to college, cut y hair and I became outgoing." A.J.'s ansformation changed everything. ast year she was a senior at Univer- ty of Florida, and someone suggested e try out for the UF calendar. Out the 13 finalists she was chosen to ose for the cover. Women appearing in college calen- ars are often selected because they ave something going for them aside om their looks. In A.J.'s case the ther" things are phenomenal. As a istory major, she received a 3.96 GPA. he was one of only seven students hosen from her junior class of 9,000 s a Phi Beta Kappa, and she scored the top 92nd percentile on the SATs. Because of her looks, though, .J. notices that people do not always ake her seriously. Even when people ear about her grades and law school, he said, sometimes they are still hinking, "Well, she's an airhead. She oesn't have any common sense, but he might be book smart." A.J. comes from a long line of bril- iant, ambitious individuals. One of her andfathers was a Rhodes Scholar ho went to Harvard Law School. Her ther grandfather was a self-made millionaire in advertising. Her brother, s former member of a rock band, "has >een declared a genius." A.J. hates the dea of establishing a career based on ber looks, and plans to follow in their ambitious footsteps. "Doing something based on your looks is ephemeral, it's leeting" she said. "My mom always raid, 'Use your brain.' " -Kim Pryor P assions U OF MIAMI/STANFORD: In a dimly lit room, Chad and Melody walk toward each other slowly. Melody removes Chad's coat. Chad takes off Melody's robe, revealing a flimsy negligee. They kiss passionately. But alas, poor Melody! It is only a dream. To the audience, though, it looks more like a scene from Dynasty than what it is, a student-produced soap opera. Passions, a daytime drama written, acted and directed by students at the University of Miami, is one of the growing number of campus-run soaps aired on university stations and local cable networks. The show is set at Weston Uni- versity, a fictitious campus in Anywhere, USA, where sex, drugs and rock'n'roll are the main events. Passions is about the lives and loves of college students; drama with a touch of reality thrown in, or perhaps the other way around. The students come from all areas of the university-no acting experience required. Most of them, however, are good looking. "You have to have people the audience likes to look at;' said Shari Holbert, the "All-American girl." "There are a lot of blondes, though." Naturally blondes are ever present on the West Coast, too, where Stanford University students have created Gen- eral Dormitory, their equally steamy melodrama. "This soap is for actors who have watched a soap on television and felt that they could have done a much better job," director Jon Louis said. "And they do." So if you happen to pass a funeral or a drug deal on campus, or a bevy of blondes, you will know you have not entered the Twilight Zone, just a daytime dilemma. -Lisa Gibbs Stanforc' students snoot a scene rrom Generai ormitory. Hc Kto buya jacet The American Express' Card can get you virtually everything from a leather jacket to a leather-bound classic. Whether you are bound for a bookstore or a beach in Bermuda. So during college and after, its the perfect way to pay for just about anything youll want. How to get the Card before graduation. College is the first sign of success. And because we believe in your potential, we've made it easier to get the American Express Card right now. You can qualify even before you graduate with our special student offers. For details, look for applications on campus. Or just call 1-800-THE-CARD, and ask for a student application. The American Express Card. Don't Leave School Without It. MED SSERICES