0 2A - Thursday, September 27, 2007 FRIDAY: The Extremist Flash photography Flipping through a stack of black and white postcards near the regis- ter at Shaman Drum Bookshop, you come across vintage portraits of James Joyce, Virginia Woolf - and then sud- denly - a faded shot of two naked men leaning over the passenger side win- dow of an Ann Arbor cop car. But it's not a pornographic gag tossed in to shock the stuffy literary postcard col- lector - it's a Harvey Drouillard. Drouillard earned his reputation in Ann Arbor in the spring of 1994 for photographing nude models in front of city landmarks. That year, Harvey rented out a part of his large downtown apartment to a nude photography workshop. on a whim, Harvey borrowed manual cam- era and a roll of film to shoot during Hash Bash. He got addicted. "Its such an adrenaline buzz," said Harvey of shooting nudes in public. "You never forget it." Drouillard, now a professional pho- tographer who has shot in more than CRIME NOTES Man disrupts Stu class fin WHERE: Michigan League tici WHEN: Tuesday at 8 p.m. WHAT: A man claiming tobe the a University alum was escorted from the building after he WHEt repeatedly disrupted a lecture, WHEP the Department of Public Safe- p.m. ty reported. The man, who was WHA' given a verbal warning, walked report into the room and began talk- stolen ing several times. unsur( len ori Thieves try to steal books Clo WHERE: Michigan Union bookstore fl0 WHEN: Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. WHAT: Police arrested two WHET men not affiliated with the Uni- ments versity for larceny after the men WHEt tried to steal two textbooks val- p.m. ued at about $155, the Depart- WHA' ment of Public Safety reported. from c Bookstore staff noticed the men about wandering in the store over the age to past few days. report 22 North American cities, still lives and works in Ann Arbor. Models are mostly local volunteers - sometimes students - who average around 24 years old. "It started at the strangest time," Drouillard said, referring to the onset of his career. Mid-1990s AnnArbor was the focus of negative media attention due to a rise in violent crime, he said. "The city saw (my project) as aposi- tive thing," he said. On his website, Drouillard maintains the artistic goal he set at the time: "To make people smile." It's also to see how much he can get away with. According to a 1998 Metro Times article that followed a Drouillardshoot, the process went something like this: a car pulled up in front of a local hang- out. A clothed young woman stepped out. With a flash of hand signals and quick shouts, Drouillard instructed the girl to drop trou and hit a pose. Drouillard snapped a couple of shots, the girl redressed, and they hopped back into the car and drove away - all in a matter of seconds. Early shoots were sporadic. Drouillard would pick locations as he walked with models. For his recent work, Drouillard scopes out the loca- tion, does practice runs and coordi- nates hand signals with models in advance. Drouillard said people's reactions to the shot are often more interest- ing than the models themselves. Most people around the shoot don't seem to notice, he said. And the ones who do often seem to ignore it. "People's true manners come out when something really bizarre hap- pens," he said. Drouillard is still considering doing a massive nude shoot in Michigan Sta- dium. He's been rethinking the idea. "The world record is 63,000 nude people in one shot," he said. "It would make history." MARY WILCOP A nude woman walks into the now defunct Del Rio bar in 2003. Photographer Harvey Drouil- lard began shooting nudes on the streets of Ann Arbor in 1994. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com EARL STAMPFL DAVID GOH tBditoor in Chief usiness Mater 734-647-3336 734-764-0558 stanpfl@michigandaily.com goh@michigandaily.com CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom office horns: Sun. 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Allison Ghanian Tom Haynes Managing Online Editor haynesolo moichigandaily.com ASSOCI:ATE ONLINE EDITORS: Angela Cesere Ane ne anderMeyrMazineoEditrmandney@michigandaily.com Peter Schottenfels Multimedia Editor schottenfels@michigandaily.com Katherine Mitchell copy chief ritchel:@michigandaily.com BUSINESS STAFF David Dai Display AdvertisingSales Manager DISPLAY ADV .RTISING.SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER: Charles Hsieh DISPLAY ADVE.RTISING ASSISTANT MANAGER: Michael Schrotenhoer David Reile classified SalesManager Classified Sales Assistant Manager: ElainaBugli Hailey Swartz onlineS alesManager Rob Abb Layout Manager Chelsea Hoard Production Manager Margaret Lim Finance Manager FINANCE ASSISTIANT MANAGER: Daniel Cheung The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available freeof chargetoallreaders.Additionalcopiesmay bepickedupat the Daily'soffice for $2. Subscriptions forfalltermstarting in September,viatU.S.malare$110. Winterterm January through Aprl)ois $115, yearlong (September through Aprl) is $195. University affiliates are subject toa reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptionslforlfall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Pressand The Associated CollegiatePress. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES 0 6 6 S dent can't d football bets, reports m stolen RE: Bursley Hall ;N: Tuesday at about 3:30 T: A male student ed his football tickets , DPS reported. He was e if the tickets were sto- if he lost them. gged sink ds home RE: Northwood I apart- M: Tuesday at about 2 T: Water overflowing logged sink caused $3,000 in property dam- the apartment, DPS ed. TASA meeting WHAT: An open meeting for students interested in joining. WHO: Taiwanese American Students Association WHEN: Today at 7 p.m. WHERE: Wolverine Room, the Michigan Union Sukkot services WHAT: Hillel will host Orthodox services for the Jewish holiday WHO: Hillel WHEN: Today at 9:30 a.m. and 7:10 p.m. WHERE: Mandell L. Berman Center, at 1429 Hill Street FestiFools open house 'WHAT: Organizers for Festi- Fools, an April Fools Day fes- tival featuring papier-mache puppets, will be hosting an open house. WHO: FestiFools, Arts on the Hill WHEN: Today from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. WHERE: Room 1309, Cam- pus Safety Services Building at 1239 Kipke Street CORRECTIONS " An article on page 2A of yesterday's edition of the Daily (Ben and Jerry's and Stucci's make it work) mis- spelled reporter Sara Lynne Thelen's name. * The photos on the front page of yesterday's edi- tion of the Daily (The rise of the megagift) were taken by Angela Cesere and Rob Migrin. The same article said the 10 largest dona- tions to the University were given in the last 10 years. William Davidson, the lone exception, donated his gift in 1992. * Please report any error in the Daily to correc- tions@michigandaily.com. One thousand and ten bikini-cald women partici- pated in the largest swim- suit shoot in history yesterday, Reuters reported. Cosmopoli- tan magazine sponsored the shoot, which took place on Bondi beach in Sydney. Some of the women were models, but most were volunteers. The head of the Catholic Church in Mozambique told a BBC reporter that European condom manufac- turers are deliberately lacing condoms with HIV to "finish quickly the African people," BBC News reported. 3The School of Art and Design, which runs Work Gallery on State Street, opened a second branch, Work: Detroit, last weekend. FOR MORE, SEETHE B-SIDE KAUST Discovery Scholarship Full scholarships for science and techr.ology students The King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), a 21st century graduate-level, research university, is offering scholarships for future leaders in science, engineering, and technology. The benefits of the KAUST Discovery Scholarship include: * Full tuition at current institution " Living stipend, book and computer allowance * Upon graduation, admission and full scholarship for the KAUST master's degree program at the University's Red Sea campus The KAUST campus opens in September 2009. Highly talented students with one to three years remaining in first university degree programs can apply now. Visit www.kaust.edu.sa/discovery, or email scholarships@kaust.edu.sa. CONTACT: KUTShlrhpc/II 520 Post Oak Boulevard, Suite 740 Houston, TX 77027 Phone: 713.621.6300 x23 Wednesday October 3rd from 6-8pm Michigan Room in the Michigan League KeyBanc Capital Markets will be hosting an informational session about how you can get into an exciting and rewarding career within our Investment Banking Group. Refreshments provided For more information about KeyBanc Capital Markets please visit our website www.keybanccm.com Resumes accepted through Business School and Office of Career Planning and Placement 11/09/2007 On-site Graduate School Interviews 11/13/2007 On-site Undergrad Interviews KeyBanc Capital Markets KeyCorp is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/DN 0y00 ~r 01