The Michigan Daily-Sunday,January 18, 1981-Page 3 'U' students enjoy getting into the woodwork By GREG DAVIS If you thought wood shop was just for high schoolers, sharpen your jigsaw and think again. For 50 cents a day, University students, staff, and faculty vho have completed a six-hour safety course can use a work shop equipped with power tools worth thousands of dollars. David Fauman, the shop supervisor, says that students Dan build anything they want - except boats - "as long as it will fit out the door." , BUT HE SUGGESTS that those just learning about woodworking start with something small. The Arts/Crafts Shop is funded by a Regents' grant, and operates on the student services fee paid each semester. All students are assessed 75 cents on their tuition bill for the wood shop. Lynette Nauer, a junior economics major, used the shop, located at 537 SAB, fall term to make Christmas gifts. "It is really satisfying to make something yourself," she said. One of her projects was a picture frame. "I like working with my hands," said senior business major Cheryl Kidston. Kidston designed a table which' she will complete lter this semester. Students use elaborate wood shop equipment to make gifts , repairs YASMIN KAHN used the facility to make a table as a gift. The junior civil engineering student said she likes the shop's friendly atmosphere. The shop is not crowded: The average number of users per day was eight fall term, according to Fauman. Shop per- sonnel are willing to help those having trouble with the projects, he said. An additional feature is the shop's skills exchange list. One person on the list can make musical instruments. A plat- form bed and china cabinet, which took 160 hours to com- plete, are among recent wood projects completed in the shop. SOON, FAUMAN said, the shop will offer a one-day seminar on apartment maintenance. It "will teach you to do repairs so that you can get your security deposit back," he said. Fauman and his assistant, Richard Seelig, run four other basic workshops every term. These sessions teach wood skills, including how to tell the difference between hardwood and softwood. Woodworking and woodcarving are also taught. Two- thirds of the spaces in these classes are reserved for studen- ts, and the workshop fee is $18. This week, the shop is offering a free power tool class every evening at 6. IT IS TYPICAL, Fauman said, for women to outnumber men in the workshops. "Traditionally, women have been barred from activities like woodworking," he said, ex- plaining the high female enrollment in the shop's classes. Also, Fauman said, "when it comes to safety, we have a lot fewer problems with women than men." Women pay more attention, he said, "because they don't have a macho image to uphold." The shop is used primarily by students - 85 percent of those who work on projects there are students and 35 percent: are women. The shop is open to all students with proper identification and has power sanders, a router, portable grinder (welds joints), band saw, power miter box, table saw, arc-welding equipment, and other power and hand tools. Users must sup- ply their own materials. IN ADDITION TO running the workshop, Fauman, a 1971 University graduate, works as a puppeteer. He and his wife perform at Mott's Children's Hospital, nursery schools, and do additional promotional work. Other woodshops in town are not for the public's use. These include the Adult Education Shop at Huron High School, the University theater shop, and the University art school shop. Shop hours are Sunday through Friday, 4-11 p.m. Six die, 59 injured Daily Classifieds Get Results! Call 764-0557 .._CoMi is' ..: ma c.. in Toronto Vincent Price 1 i5 hotel fire TORONTO (AP) - Six people died and 59 others were injured yesterday when a pre-dawn fire swept through the fashionable 22-story Inn on the Park hotel in northeastern Toronto. Police and fire department officials said details were sketchy, but the blaze was believed to have started on the second floor at about 2:35 a.m. EST. It was brought under control within a few hours. Authorities said three men, one woman, and two girls were killed. About 200 people were registered at the hotel when the fire broke out. Of- ficials began evacuating them after smoke streamed into the hotel's main tower. The injured were taken to three local hospitals and treated for smoke inhalation, police said. .a ,, ._ _ . . T Oscar Wilde biaersions ~Del igts February 5, 8pm Lg vDaily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Few of the University's legal types stray off the beaten paths of the Law School courtyard. -- '. Professional Theatre Program Tickets at the PTP ticket office - Phone 764-@450 S , Z Or-AMPl HAPPENINGS- SUNDAY FILMS AAFC/Cross Qurrfnts-Loves of a Blonde, Landscape after Battle, 7 pam., MLB3. . - Cinema Guild-Tarzan the Ape Man, 7 p.m.; Tarzan and His Mate, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema Il-Dance Shorts, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Mediatrics-Dr. Zhivago, 2, 8p.m., MLB 4. PERFORMANCES Ark, Office of Major Events-Folk Festival, 2,8 p.m., Power Center. Sterns Lecture Concert Series-James Borders, "Musical Instruments of Fourteenth Century Angels," 3 p.m. Sterns. School of Music-Michigan Youth Symphony, Johnan van der Merwe, conductor, 3 p.m., Hill Aud. MISCELLANEOUS Hillel-Brunch, 11 a.m., 1429 Hill. Hillel-Israeli folk dancing; instruction, 12-1 p.m.; open dancing 1-3 p.m., 1429 Hill. Rec. Sports-Family Sunday Funday, 2-5 p.m., NCRB. Karma Thegsum Choling-Discussion on Buddhist texts, 4-5:30 p.m., 734 Fountain. Hillel-Kosher Deli dinner, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill. Hillel-"On Learning to -be Human: Exploring Metaphors of Con- sciousness," 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. MONDAY FILMS Cinema Guild-Design for Living, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall. SPEAKERS Ctr. for N.E. and N. African Studies-Miriam Gram, "Ethnicity in Algeria: Useless Categories", noon, Lane Hall Commons. Anatomy-Carlson Cornbrooks, "Studies on the Schwann Cell in Tissue Culture" 5732 Med. Sci. II 4 p.m. CCS-Michael Rabin, "RANDOM Algorithms," 4 p.m., 170 Dennison. Chemistry-Galen Fisher, "Are Structural Analogs from Inorganic Chemistry Useful in Surface Studies?" 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Economics-Wayne Passmore, "Introduction to Shazam," 7:30, 102 Econ. Gender Studies-Jane Collier, "Politics and Gender in Simple Societies," 8 p.m., Rackham E. Conf. Room. International Law Society-Prof. Osakwe, "Soviet Law of Human Rights: Theory and Reality," 6:30 p.m., Lawyers' Club Lounge. Bible Study Group-12:15 p.m., W5603 Main Hosp. Nuc. Med. Conf. Room. SACUA--1:15 p.m., Rackham W. Alcove. Senate Assembly-3:15 p.m., Rackham Amph. Christian Science Org.-7:15 p.m., 3909 Union. Journal of Econ.-7:15 p.m., 301 Econ. Michigan Journal of Economics-Mass meeting for new staff members and editors, 4 p.m., 301 Econ. WARC-7:30 p.m., High Point Cafetorium, 1735 S. Wagner Road. MISCELLANEOUS B'hai Student Ass'n-Info. and literature tables, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Union. Rec. Sports-Squash Club match, 6:30 p.m., CCRB. A-Squares-Beg. Lessons in Square Dancing, no partner needed: 7-8:30 p.m., Union Assembly Hall. Rec. Sports-Racquet ball skills clinic, 7 p.m.,- IMSB. h. lI 1i' Foreign student pays $406 STEVENS POINT, Wis. (AP)-Fidelis Etuk, newly arrived in the United States from Nigeria and on his way to this central Wisconsin city said he thought the $250 cab.fare for a 30-minute ride from New York's Ken- nedy Airport to La Guardia Airport was too steep. But the 20-year-old Nigerian said he got a confusing explanation from the cabbie and paid the fare because he had not asked the cost ahead of time and because he was a tired young man in a strange country. THINGS GOT even stranger after he caught his plane at La Guardia and flew to Milwaukee. Thinking Stevens Point was only a few miles away, he hailed another cab. This time, however, he asked the price first, and the driver told him that it would cost $156. "I was pretty surprised, but since I was charged $250 in New York for a cab to take me from JFK to La Guardia, I thought this was considerably cheaper," Etuk said. BUT HE SAID the real surprise was that the ride, which he had expected to take a few minutes, turned out to be 149 miles. "I was really surprised when he (the driver) kept on going, going, going," Etuk said. i sun ~v'photo ARE YOU INTO SO ARE WE! the university cellar. I I : .................... II