The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 4, 1992- Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS Women label harassment as demeaning STUDENTS APPLY NOW! ADVERTISING PLACEMENT COORDINATOR at The Michigan Daily. Obtain valuable experience. Must work independently & efficiently under deadlines. Inflexible hours from 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. M-F next semester. Apply at 420 Maynard, second floor before 5 p.m. Dec. 11. Ask for Nancy. SUMMER JOBS ACT NOW! Works Cor- poration is in search of a select few, for management positions state wide. Receive the best business experienceavail., not to mention the best money made anywhere. Interested? Act Now! Call 668-8155. TEMP. HELP WANTED part and full-time clerks, cashiers, etc. Please apply at the Michigan Union Bookstore, 530p.State St., ground floor of the Mich. Union. VOLUNTEER SUBJECTS NEEDED FOR ZINC DIET STUDY. Volunteers must be healthy men, age 22-40, who are able to eat all meals at our research unit at the Univer- sity of Michigan Hospital for 8-10 mos. Reimbursement, $300/mo. Call: 747-3166 9 A.M.-2 P.M., Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. WINGS OF WESTWOOD Looking for drivers & cooks to work in emps. bar. 662- 4659. WORK FOR ACADEMIC CREDIT OR VOLUNTEER at U of M's Pound House Children's Center during Winter Term. Join hundreds of past students in quality ex- perience in working with young children. Lo- cated at Hill and East University. Please call 764-2547 for more information or to arrange a visit. At~ PRkjtian PIaul Classified Advertising Department is currently hiring business-minded freshpersons sophomores to work as Assistant Account Executives. Applications available at the 'Student Publications Bldg. 420 Maynard Deadline: Fri., Dec.4 GOING PLACES *SELL ME YOUR STUDENT AIRLINE VOUCHER! (female) For use in Dec. Sarah 663-8310. EURAILPASSES, JAPAN RAIL, INT'L STUDENT IDs, HIOSTEL CARDS. We sell ,these cheap travel items, AND we'll tell you if there's an even cheaper way to go. EURAILPASSES COST MORE AFTER JAN. 1--buy now for next summer & save (makes a nice Christmnas present too). Visit the UM INTERNATIONAL CENTER for the best advice in the country on your options for study, work, and cheap travel abroad! We're next to the Union & W. Quad, 8-12/1 -5 M-F, or call 747-2299. LOW FARES - Europe fr. $448, Orient fr. $947. Call Claudia or Dan @ Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. PRICES FOR STAY-NOT PER NIGHT' SOUTH PADRE ISLAND ~ S109 5 and 7 NIGHTS DA YTONA BEACH $ 68 5 AND 7 NIGHTS PANAMA CITY BEACH $s81 5 AND 7 NIGHTS STEAMBOAT "" 129 2. 5 AND 7 NIGHTS cc 12th Annual Party! TOLL FREE INFORMATION SRSERYATIONS ROMANTIC X-SKI GETAWAY! Cozy log cabins with outdoor hot tub. $49-$69 nightly. Traverse City area. Close to downhill. Gift :certificates available. Ellis Lake Resort. 616- 276-9502. ROSEBOWL PACKAGES! GO BLUE w/ Student Breaks/Stamos Travel. Call 663- 4400, Ypsi. 483-5040, out of town 1-800- 554-7444. ROSEBOWL! Complete packages from $899. Land only from $479. Regency Travel, 209 S. State. Call 665-6122. ROUNDTRIP AIRFARE TO ROSEBOWL Depart Metro 12/29, return 1/ 5. $300 or best offer. Call 996-9244. SPOINS BREAK'93 Non-Stop air a (7) Nights Hotel - Taxes " Club Discounts " Transfers * Actvltles Program CANCUN from $399 BAHAMAS from $409 JAMAICA from $439 SOUTH PADRE from $469 00GOINGPA.CES.:,:. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS AT STAMOS TRAVEL. Open weekends and evenings. Ann Arbor 663-4400, Ypsi. 483-5040. STUDENTS ANYWHERE IN THE U.S. on Continental fr. $129/$199. Bring your Continental voucher and your AMEX Card. Anywhere in the U.S.A. on US Air fr. $129/ $189. Bring your US Air Voucher and Chase Visa/Mastercard. Call Kristina or Ann at Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122: (look own! Cancun Mexico from 419 Panama City Florida from $99 Daytona Beach Florida roni $119 Key West Florida from $229 On-ampus contact: Stacey @ 741-8141 or Melanie @ 663-3292 Conlin-Faber Travel 677-0900 540 E. Liberty St. 0 3270 Washtenaw 2663 Plymouth * Traber Village Mall Huron Valley Travel 1918 W. Stadium Blvd. 761-1300 Student Travel Breaks/Stamos Travel 407 N. Fifth Ave. 663-4400 I STUDENT siwcE 1-800-64&4849 SW AIRLINE TICKETS $350 RT/$200 Oneway. No notice reqd. 313-581-0290 24 hrs. FOOD GATHERERS THANKS ALL OF YOU who donated to our food drive! If you'd like more info, about us or want to help, please call 761-2769. MUSIC..... AUDIOPHILE QUALITY loudspeakers. Factory direct prices, 5 yr. warranty. Save $100 to $200 per pair. Dennis 397-0263. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Not just guitars. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Free les- son special: harp, percussion. PHANTOM OF THE OPERA TICKETS FOR SALE in Chicago for Dec. 19. Call 764-1758. ONE WAY TICKET TO NYC for anytime in Dec. $130 or best offer. 764-1103. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL TICKETS FOR SALE. All games. 668-7707. FULL SEASON B-BALL TICKET for sale. Make me an offer!! Call Brian, 663-7413. ONE WAY TICKET TO LA. Dec. 18, $110 or Best offer. Mark 769-4807. BASKETBALL TICKETS FOR SALE in student section. $10- 16 each. (313) 871- 5818. FULL SEASON STUDENT B-BALL tickets. Best offer. Call 764-9629. WE'RE SEARCHING FOR A "FEW GREAT MEN" The Mr. USA Michigan competition is interviewing men 18-35 to be contenders in the eighth annual Mr. USA Michigan Mens Pageant. This is not a body building competition. 335-5757. IBEARCH WfORMAIINN Largest Library of information in U. S. - all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD HOTLIE 800 -(1 3)1470 222 Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information 11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A, Los Angeles, CA 90025 FEMALE GRAD. STUDENT, mature non- smoker, share my quiet home. References required. 971-0122, leave message. by Pete Matthews LSA junior Amy Harfield was walking down an Ann Arbor street when a driver called her over to his car. She thought he was asking for directions, but when Harfield ap- proached the car, she realized the driver was masturbating while talk- ing to her. Street harassment - verbal or visual - is something almost all women experience at some point in their lives. While some may argue that comments are meant as com- pliments, many women report feel- ings of anger, fear, but sometimes indifference, to these encounters. "It makes me very angry and very self-conscious," Harfield said. "Women are viewed as prey - it makes me feel as if I should walk around with a sign announcing 'prime rib."' Verbal harassment doesn't only happen on the streets, but is a reality in bars, parties, and campus buildings. Harfield said she was told in a bar "what you need is a boyfriend or a good fuck," after refusing to date the teaching assistant she had beat in a game of darts. "I don't even notice it any more at work" said Laura, an LSA soph- more, who works in a local bar. "I came from a small town and grew up without harassment - coming here was a new experience and now I'm immune to it," Laura said. "The best way to deal with it is to ignore it." The definition of verbal harass- ment "depends on the person's per- sonality" said Susan Stark, a first- year LSA student. LSA senior Val Boreland defined verbal harassment as "anything that makes me feel uncomfortable and that is inappropriate. I used to be embarrassed by it, but now I take it for what it is, and it's nothing com- pared to New York." Other students agreed that Ann Arbor streets are tame compared to those in other locales. "People don't say anything com- pared to Pittsburg and New York or Spain," said Lisa Rubin, an School of Art senior, adding that the way she handles harassment depends on her mood. "One time I blew a kiss after a guy blewone. If it was five minutes later I might have said 'fuck you'... Some people talk shit, play along or tell the guy to 'fuck off.' You've got to find ways of dealing with it be- cause you can't walk around pissed- off all day." 'Women are viewed as prey - it makes me feel as if I should walk around with a sign announcing 'prime ribs" - Amy Harfield LSA junior U-M semmar permits students to visit home in 'virtual reality' One student said she feels she is often targeted for sexual harassment by homeless people because of her appearance and economic status. "I get derogatory remarks for being female or for being dressed well and being wealthy enough to study," said a School of Natural Resources and Environment junior, who preferred not to be named. She said being harassed by some home- less people has perpetuated her nega- tive stereotype of the group. Many women feel they have ex- perienced something akin to being stereotyped. Women said verbal ha- rassers ignore their personality, in- tegrity and feelings - only recog- nizing their bodies as objects of physical desire. "It's difficult to walk through a campus building or city street and not have your physical aspect valued more than any other part of you," Harfield said. "It plays into your self esteem and success as a student. It's hard to carry on a vigorous academic career when you are constantly being commented on and critiqued physi- cally," Harfield added. by David M. Powers Daily Staff Reporter In "Total Recall," Arnold Schwarzenegger had to wait until the year 2084 to travel to Mars - in his mind. Yesterday, however, U-M stu- dents could take a simulated ride through San Francisco just by visiting North Campus. "This is the future," said Rick Smith, a School of Music junior, after experiencing the simulated flight through San Francisco. "You don't have to take a vacation, you can just download Japan. Why watch a movie when you can be part of it?" Smith took flight at the Virtual Reality seminar and demonstration held by the U-M Program in Scientific Visualization at the Chrysler Center yesterday. The seminar showcased one of the recent developments in computer science - Virtual Reality (VR) - and its applications. Visitors were also allowed to try two different types of VR machines. Peter Beier, director of the visualization program, described VR as an interactive, realistic, three-dimensional computer simulation. "The user puts a helmet on.... This helmet encloses him from the environment he is in, and through very miniature video screens, he is presented with a stereo image of a computer-generated world. As he moves his head that world changes in concert," he said. With the use of various con- trollers the subject is able to interact with the artificial environment, said Steven Aukstakalnis, vice president of Martix Technical Services - a Michigan-based consulting company specializing in VR. Using gloves equipped with sensors and hand controls, the subject not only affects the images, but can actually feel a simulated physical response. "There's been a lot of recent effort to provide the users with ... tactile feedback," he said. The user feels a rough approximation of what the objects are like in real life. "They've also developed suits that track ... full body motion," he added. Currently these suits resemble wet suits. The applications are extraordi- nary, he added. Currently, VR is used to test aerodynamics by simulating wind tunnels, and by chemists to simulate molecular reactions in which the scientist can interact with the molecules. It is also being developed as a surgical aid, Beier said. Dave Gillie tries out a simulator at a demonstration of Virtual Reality technology at the Chrysler Auditorium on North Campus yesterday. However, the use of VR has raised some ethical concerns. Some research has focused on simulating situations such as sex. Important questions need to be asked, said Fred Budelman, director of marketing at Virtual Reality Inc. in New York. "Whom does it hurt when it's all computer simulated?" Currently, the most economically profitable field of development is entertainment, Budelman said. "VR Entertainment is going to be a bil- lion-dollar-a-year industry.'" At the moment no VR research is being done at the U-M, Beier said. I FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED Jan. May 1, Large apartment extremely close campus. Rent very reasonable 996-8503. 1- to FEMALE ROOMMATE to share 1 bdrm. in 2 bdrm. bi-level apt. on Church. Avail. Jan., dshwshr., lndry. Call 994-1440. FOURTH FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for fall & winter '93. Great apt., location, and people. 996-4216. Must act fast. MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for winter term. Rent is around $200/person. Call Bob at 994-8970. ROOMMATE NEEDED in spacious fully furn 1 bdrm. apt. Great Price/loc. 930-1895. SNG. OR DBL. ROOM AVAIL, from winter on. Bi-level apt. Call Judy at 665- 048 7. WANTED: FEMALE RMTE. JAN-MAY 1- at 2 bdrm/4 person apt. central campus, ]dry., cable, free heatwater. 741-8709. IBM 286 monochrome screen, quietwriter 7 printer, wordperfect 5.1, LOTUS, more. $350. Call Heidi 764-3870. Q o o o v r-Q Don't forget to say Happy Holidays with the Michigan Daily koeddaet Pa4el; T,---...,..tr --.A Michigan city heads list of possible locations for new Pentagon office complex Associated Press While one Michigan city prepares to show off its highlights in hopes of getting a Pentagon office complex, another plans to fight the gov- ernment' s decision to drop it from the list of possible sites. Saginaw was one of 20 sites an- nounced Tuesday by the Department of Defense as a possible location for one of five new accounting centers. Detroit, one of six other Michigan contenders, didn't make the cut. Officials in the cash-strapped city of Detroit had hoped the office com- plex might aid in revitalizing down- town. But Kenneth Dobson, Detroit Downtown Development Authority director, and other officials said Wednesday the requirements for placement of the building were bi- ased against big cities like Detroit. "They asked for small towns in the southern regions of the country," Dobson said. "We started out being behind the eight ball. They clearly were intent to not use this as an economic development program for urban areas." The site criteria included quality- of-life measures geared to small Coleman Young said Wednesday. The office complex would hold up to 7,000 federal employees. Urban centers making the cut in- cluded Cleveland, New Orleans and Indianapolis. A final decision is expected in March. Detroit's $100 million'proposal involved turning part of the aban- doned Hudson's building into a parking garage and renovating the top floors for offices. Dobson said the plan met all the Pentagon's technical requirements, including free rent and up to $20 million cash to cover operating costs. Defense Department spokesper- son Jean Marie Ward said only that, "The overriding evaluation criterion was the cost to the Department of Defense." Meanwhile, Saginaw officials are mapping a final push to persuade federal officials to transfer the work- ers to the city. Three staffers from the Defense Finance and Accounting Service will visit Saginaw Wednesday to inspect 10 downtown sites city administra- tors are offering. "It's just amazing to beat out all XX.