Page 8E-E-Thursday, September 4, 1980-The Michigan Daily d FEELI G VIED? Detroit area thrives with culture, ethnic variety u U FOR :, URE OF OU RSELF? By KEVIN TOTTIS If one city in the United States is continuously marred by negative publicity, it is Detroit. But despite the "Motor City's" high crime rate and un- sightly.downtown area, it offers studen- ts a spectrum of cultural and social ac- tivities just waiting to be taken advan- tage of. Anyone willing to make the 45-minute drive to reach downtown Detroit has the opportunity to experience anything from a rowdy afternoon at Tiger Stadium to a serene venture through the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA). REPUTED TO BE one of the top museums in the country, the DIA is commonly referred to as the heart of Detroit's cultural scene. Some of the museum's highlights include the Dutch and Flemish galleries, the recently opened African and Native American gallery, and the unique Graphics Arts Center, which is the newest in the coun- try. Across the street from the institute sits the Detroit Historical Museum, which is one of the largest municipally run historical museums in the country. The most popular of the museum's exhibits is the "old fashioned city," located in the museum's basement. Here, visitors can take a stroll back through a rendition of Dearborn's historical Greenfield Village. Sitting majestically on the Detroit River is the most recent addition to the city's skyline-the Renaissance Center. Regarded as the city's biggest tourest trap, the center features 73 story Plaza Hotel, Detroit's largest office building. Surrounding the hotel are four identical office buildings and a large collection of boutiques, restaurants, and other assorted stores. At the top of the hotel is Detroit's only revolving restaurant, known as The Summit. (The view is spectacular, but the food, unfor- tunately, does not always reach the same heights.) A FEW MILES from the Renaissance Center lies the London Chophouse. This restaurant's international cuisine is ex- cellent, but since it is a five star restaurant, expect to pay five star prices. After dining out, it's always nice to complement the evenings by taking in a play at the Fisher Theater. Its schedule generally includes big productions, such as "Annie," "Chorus Line," and "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas." Playgoers should also eAlore the Music Hall, Wayne State Uversity's Hilberry Theater, and the Attic Theater. Dance patrons can take advantage of the Music Hall recital series, which in recent years has featured the Martha Graham and Alvin Ailey Dance Com- panies. The series usually lasts from{ October through April. IF YOU ARE not interested in theater or dance, Detroit's various con- cert halls consistently feature headline acts like Ted Nugent, The Clash, and Earth, Wind, and Fire among other prominent rock bands. Most concerts take place at either Olympia Stadium, Cobo Hall, the new Joe Louis Arena, or the smaller Masonic Temple. If the wailings of Ted Nugent have a tendency of contorting your Beethoven- bred mind, the Detroit Symphony Or- cherstra may satisfy your craving for classical music. It is one of the top symphony orchestras in the country, and under the direction of Maestro An- hemisphere, and features an. acquarium and a "conservatory." "Greektown" has been around the city for years, although it wasn't such a popular ethnic neighborhood until recently. Appetities yearning for baklava can be satisfied on Monroe St., nearby downtown Detroit. Fresh hot Greek bread can be found early in the morning at any of the Greek town's bakeries. For ethnic activities other than those found in Greek town, the riverfront's a ". I Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY DETROIT'S RENAISSANCE CENTER has become the dominating figure in the motor city skyline. The 73-story complex is one of the many attractions that draw University students from Ann Arbor. J pro: two- get over it with C14, t zutIchtqttn :45tttlij tal Dorati, the symphony is rapidly am proaching international fame. Local'jazz buffs can often find their favorite artists playing at intimate. nightclubs in the midtown area. The two most popular establishments, Baker's Keyboard Lounge and Watts Club Mozambique consistently host major mainstream and progressive jazz musicians. One of the area's highlights during the day is Belle Isle. It is one of the only island parks in the western Hart Plaza features a n er of ethnie festivals from late May to September Various nationalities, such as Polish Japanese, and Albanian are'represen ted throughout the summer months. Baseball fanatics continue to flock to the newly renovated Tiger Stadiumi The Olympia, Cobo Hall, Pontiac's Silverdome, and the Joe Louis Arend also sponsor a wide range of professional sports teams, including the Lions, Pistons, Red Wings, and the Express. Hopwood awards encourage student writer aspirations a By GEOFFREY OLANS Encouragement is rarely so important as it is for the aspiring writer. Wrestling with frustration, despair and lingeijng self-doubt, he must plod along that not-so-unfamiliar, crumpled- paper-strewn path unknowing where it will leave him. At the University, however, the writer's plight has not gone unnoticed. Several campus-based groups have long acknowledged talented student writers and helped them develop the self-confidence necessary for greater literary achievement. THE HOPWOOD Organization is the most notable of these. Located in the Hopwood Room at 1003 Angell Hall, it is best known for the Jule Hopwood and Avery Hopwood Awards it has presen- ted since 1930. The Hopwood Awards are presented twice a year, in April and in August, in honor of Avery Hopwood, a former U-M student famous for writing and producing bedroom farces for the Broadway stage. Jule Avery was his mother. In his will, Avery Hopwood left $300,000 to the University for the pur- pose of encouraging creative writing. He stipulated annual awards be presen- ted to student writers "who perform the best creative work in the fields of dramatic writing, fiction, poetry and essary." He also said "the new, the unusual and the radical shall be especially eneouraged." Today, after 50 years of tradition, the contest is still "unique and one of its kind," according to Hilda Bonham, assistant to the director of the Hopwood nraninat.in nt 9ar 45 m anuserin- 4 Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS One of the Hopwood room's many features is what seems like an infinite number of literary periodicals and magazines. test, where the prize money is often much greater and the competition much keener. Each year judges are chosen from among the men and women who have distinguished themselves in writing and include such people as Thorton Wilder, W. H. Auden and John Erskine: Con- testants tend to be judged less for their "polished professionalism" than for signs of creative promise. Among several well-known past winners are Arthur, Miller, John Ciardi, and the Universitv's own Prof. Robert Hayden. decisions to persevere. Others, some of whom are still on campus, said the money was a big incentive and winning the award made life much easier. F Other creative writing awards the Hopwood Organization adminsters are the Marjorie Rapaport Award in Poetry, the University of Michiga6 Childen's Book Council Award, the Jef- frey Weisberg Memorial Prize ip Creative Writing, the Academy of American Poets Prize, the Bain- Swigget Prize and the Michael R. Gut- terman Award.