ay .: +..'.'.:':' r w ..;:s;{'. ' Hopwood Award winners The Michigan Daily-Friday, April 10, 1981-Page 5 awrht Miller speaks at Hopwoods (Continued from Page 1) The Hopwood Award winners, from among 154 contestants who submitted 201 manuscripts are listed by hometown: MICHIGAN Ann Arbor: Victor Cruz, LSA senior, major poetry, $1,200, "No Sky"; Tina Michelle Datsko, LSA junior, t minor poetry, $500, "Hold to What is Difficult"; Michelle Dinsmore, LSA senior, minor drama, $600, "The Beer Tent"; Mary Lawrence Gaitskill, LSA senior, minor fiction (short stories), $1,100, "The ;Woman Who Knew Judo and Other Stories"; Paul Jopnston, graduate student, major fiction (novel), $500, "Arms and Legs"; Diane Gail Klempner, ResidentiaI College senior, major fiction (novel), $600, "Kamai"; Anna Nissen, LSA senior, minor :poetry, $700, "Yellow Balloon"; Shannon Richards, graduate student, major drama, $1,400, "This is a Fine Romance," and major fiction (short story), $2,000, "Granny's Boy," "Strictly Bedroom Material," and "Friends"; David Allen Victor, -graduate student, major poetry, $2,200, "Man and the Crux." Birmingham: William Fairfax Bahr, Residential College senior, major drama, $1,500, "Heavy Metal"; George Quin, LSA junior, minor drama, $400, "Aftermath." Buchanan: John Savoie, LSA senior, minor poetry, $400, "The River." bearborn: James Edward Garner, LSA junior,, minor drama, $400, "An Act in One Play." Detroit. Shelton Johnson, LSA senior, major poetry, $800, "Brief Anchorage." Flint: Josephine Kearns, U-M-Flint sophomore, 'minor poetry, $1,000, "Available Materials." Grand Haven: Dennis Harvey, Residential College sophomore, minor essay, $500, "Flash" and "Sleight-of-Hand Moviemaking." Grand Rapids: Laura Kay Kasischke, Residential College sophomore, minor poetry, $400, "Withered Fingers" and "A Collection of Flies"; Barbara Saunier, LSA senior, minor fiction (short stories), $900, "Family Matters and Other Stories." Grosse Pointe: George Orest Dzul, graduate student, major fiction (novel), $1,700, "Elusions." Livonia: David Nolta, LSA junior, minor essay, $600, "Art Historical Essays-1980." ' _ oxford Mary Catherine Wilds, Residential College junior, minor fiction (short story), $800, "Leroy," "Never," and "The Fourth House." St. Joseph: Laura Jane Roop, School of Education senior, major essay, $850, "Inventing the American Novel: Charles Brown." CALIFORNIA Coronado: Scott Edwin WEwing, sophomore, major essay, $700, "Playing Doctor: The Continuing Reflections of a Medical Student." ILLINOIS Chicago: Ari Roth, LSA junior, minor drama, $400, "Necessities." NEW YORK Brooklyn: Neil Gordon, LSA senior, major fiction (short story), $2,000, "Three Short Stories." Syracuse: Catherine Landis, LSA senior, minor essay, $600, "Art, Sympathy, and Female Vocation in 'To The Lighthouse' and 'Middlemarch.' NORTH CAROLINA Chapel Hill: David Marion Holman, graduate student, major essay, $1,200, "Why Regionalism" and "Two Meditations on Melville." OHIO Shaker Heights: James Jackson, LSA senior, minor essay, $400, "Post Industrial Anarchy." RHODE ISLAND Providence: Erica V. Cassill, LSA senior, major fic- tion (novel), $1,700, "Daughter." UTAH Provo: Timothy Slover, graduate student, major drama, $1,200, "The Dream Builder" and "Queen of Diamonds." news" that they were paying cash awards for writing. "The fact that they were giving out money meant that unlike your mother and friends, they could tell what was good work," he joked., "Having seen that a play was something other than learning how to speak with an English accent, but that it was sweat and hunger, I was hooked," said Miller of his first ex- perience as a playwright. "When I set about writing . . . I felt light years away from professionalism," he said. The audien- ce laughed when he added, "My only hope was that other Hopwood entries would be worse." "I had already earned more from my first play than I had during three years as a shipping clerk," said Miller of his first Hopwood award. "Needless to say the contrast was not lost to my mind." But joking aside, Miller talked of the idea held by many Americans that plays are "for fun," and that audiences do not want to pay $40 to see something with a serious message. He said the current trend has been that "nothing but musicals originate on Broadway." Miller also emphasized that despite the notion that theatre abroad is superior to that of the United States, American drama has traditionally been as good as, or better than, European drama. "The American writer must write for his own people," said Miller. "The writing of plays is not a profession, but a calling to be practiced for the love of it, or not at all." The playwright winced a bit as Hop- wood Committee Chairman and English Prof. John Aldrige announced to the audience of more than 800 per- sons, "All of you are invited to come up to the 4th floor (of the Rackham building) and meet Mr. Miller." Yesterday's ceremony was part of a week-long 50th anniversary Hopwood Festival planned by the Hopwood committee. Each year students' entries, submit- ted under pen-names, are judged by experts who read them and then rank the entries. The judges' rankings and comments are then reviewed by the eleven-member Hopwood Committee who decides which entries will receive awards. The committee is comprised of University English, Journalism, and Humanities professors. SYSTEMS PROGRAMMERS AND ACADEMIC COMPUTING ANALYST NEEDED AT NORTH TEXAS UNIVERSITY Openings for two systems programmers and one academic computing onalyst provide on opportunity for growth under desirable working conditions with IBM VM OS Operating Systems. Current system includes NAS 3000/VM 370/OS-MVT/HASP/CICS/MUSIC. Systems Programmer qualifi- cations include: A DEGREE, TWO OR MORE YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH IBM OS systems programming. Academic Computing Analyst qualifications include: a degree (Masters preferred), two or more years experience in academic computing, knowledge of common statistical packages like SAS and SPSS, FOR- TRAN deisroble. Competitive salary. MAIL RESUME TO: NTSU Personnel Office, NT Box 13764, Denton, TX 74203 Or call Tom Madron. 817-78-2324, 417-54-6474 or 517-768-2261. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer MEDIATRICS this weekend: Friday, Apr. 10-KAGE MUSHA is cancelled Sat., Apr. 11-GIRLFRIENDS at 7:00 & 9:00 P.M. in Natural Science Auditorium for more info. cull UAC 763-1107 Vnw**sOMW ..i.. ..ENATE'kr. BU .E C::OMMIT.... :a">:i{}r;".{,?>}x:TEE;,?.".J" t";rEAGAN:".... x"I}:AGf"EE:" Reagan budget rejected From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-In a surprising { love, the Senate Budget Committee rejected President Reagan's package of spending and tax reductions yester- lay after adding it up and finding it didn't achieve the goal of a balanced budget by 1984. By a 12-8 vote the Republican- controlled panel, which had been en- dorsing the various parts of the plan, rejected the overall package. " Sen. William Armstrong of Colorado, one of the Republicans who joined the minority of Democrats in voting again- st the program, said the president's ,.package was "an unpolished diamond" that needs more work. AFTER THE panel had endorsed Reagan's call for a three-year, 30 per- cent cut in individual taxes and a host of reductions throughout government, the committee staff concluded that there still would be a budget deficit of $53.8 billion next year and a deficit of $44.7 billion in 1984, the year Reagan has promised a balanced budget. The Reagan administration had forecast only a $45 billion deficit in 1982. Earlier yesterday, the congressional budget committees had gone their separate ways, with Senate Republicans remaining behind Reagan and House Democrats voting down the line for their party's alternative spen- ding plan for 1982. THE CHAIRMAN of the House tax- writing panel yesterday outlined an alternative to Reagan's tax cut plan that calls for a smaller reduction but is targeted to help lower and middle-in- come Americans. The proposal from Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski (D-Ill.) is the latest in a series underlining the dif- ference in economic approach between the Democratic-controlled House and the Reagan administration. Rostenkowski, in a speech to the Chicago Association of Commerceand Industry, called for a one-yeaA, 34 billion tax cut for businesses and in- dividuals in fiscal 1982. THE ILLINOIS congressman said his proposal "preserves the spirit of the president's tax plan" by encouraging savings, investment and increased productivity but takes a different ap- proach in providing tax relief. The package would help middle and lower-income taxpayers through rate reductions, larger standard deductions, and modification of the, so-called marriage penalty. It proposed tax in- centives for increased personal savings and offered guidelines for a business tax cut. SENATE FINANCE Committee Chairman Bob Dole (R-Kan.) called Rostenkowski's proposal "a construc- tive addition to the tax cut dialogue" but said the nation needs more than a one-year "shot in the arm" tax cut. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, who met with the president yesterday, said Reagan thinks Rostenkowski's tax cut ideas "are good, but he thinks that Tbis pjn ised. "I see no need for compromise with Democrats now," Regan said. "Ab- solutely not. No." Baxter pursues AT&T suit WASHINGTON (AP) - Rejecting a second appeal from the Defense Depar- tment to go easy on the government's suit against American .Telephone & Telegraph Co., the nation's new chief antitrust enforcer promised yesterday to prosecute the case "to the eyeballs" and said he could break up the com- munications giant without endangering national defense. At his first news conference since taking over the Justice Department's a antitrust division, Assistant Attorney General William Baxter said, "I do not intend to fold up my tent and go away simply because the Department of Defense is concerned. It is a sound case and I intend to litigate it to the eyeballs." IN A LETTER to the Justice Depar- ment earlier this year, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said the government's suit to break up AT&T -'could weaken a communications net- ' work that controls nuclear weapons. Weinberger described the Defense Department's worries March 23 in "closed Senate testimony which was released Wednesday. Baxter disclosed that he had received a second letter Wednesday from Deputy Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci, who wrote, "Because 'the American Telephone & Telegraph net- work is the most important com- munications net we have to serve our strategic systems within the United States, severe problems will confront the Department of Defense if this net- work is broken up." CARLUCCI specifically asked Baxter to dismiss the AT&T suit now being tried in U.S. District Court here. CAMP TAMARACK POSITIONS BRIGHTON & ORTONVILLE, MICH. FINAL INTERVIEW DATE APRIL 16, CALL 764-7456 FOR APPOINTMENT Staff needs: male counselors, campcraft-nature, arts & crafts, sports, tripping, horseback riding, performing arts spe- cialists, unit supervisors, bus drivers, nurse, kitchen/main- tenance staff. FRESH AIR SOCIETY 6600 W. Maple Rd. W. Bloomfield, Mi. 48033 (313) 661-0600 A JEWISH WELFARE FEDERATION AGENCY ------- ---- -- ------------------------------------- Class Rings Gold Jewob Foreign Gol Gold lyogl4 Wedding 11 Gold Watch YPSI GOLD'& SILVER EXCHANGE 404 tMindyan Ave 483-1330 BUYING GOLD-WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR GOLD ITEMS GOLD & DIAMOND JEWELRY at DISCOUNT PRICES W ANTED ------- GJ WANTEP Deontal Geld Or Old Gold CLASS RINGS Jd Gold Pins .ss Gold Telons We need 10,000 class rings I ands Gold Coln$ ms Gold Rigs lecause class rings are heavy;* Gold Item 1their gold contents can easily ..AVA1 M 9be worth up to $150"0 Any i soda +a e1