D-- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 3, 1997 Awrs Hopwood Awards shower cash, recognition on aspiring 'U' authors 0 By Mary Trombley Daily Arts Writer The Hopwood Awards are semi-annual contests that celebrate student ability in writing. The Hopwood Program grants special prizes to under- classmen and offers an excellent introduction to the writing resources of Ann Arbor. Highly competitive, the Hopwood Awards are an excellent opportunity for students to demonstrate their creative talent on a college level. Aside from artistic recognition, Hopwood winners also reap siz- able cash prizes. Former winners include playwright Arthur Miller and screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan. "The Hopwood Awards give student writers money, recognition and validation. They show that the University, the faculty and the community take writing seriously,"said Prof. Eileen Pollack, director of the undergraduate creative writing subconcentra- tion in the English Department. "The Hopwood Program brings visiting writers here and raises the level of interest about writing on campus.' The Hopwood contests are administered through the English Department and are open to University students enrolled in writing courses. These courses include creative- and essay-writing courses in the Communications and English Departments, as well as those in the Residential College. The Hopwood Awards were funded by a bequest of alumni Avery Hopwood, who granted one-fifth of his estate to start the program. In his will, Hopwood wrote that he wanted "the new, the unusual and the radical (to) be especially encouraged.' Many small- er writing awards are also given in conjunction with the Hopwood Awards. The Hopwood Program sponsors three contests a year. The Hopwood Underclassmen Contest is held in the fall semester and is open only to first and sec- ond-year University students. University students enrolled in writing courses during the spring and summer terms are eligible for the summer Hopwood Awards. The Major/Minor Hopwood Contest is held in winter term, and is open to undergraduate and graduate students. Pollack said that the size of Hopwood Awards is "very unusual, especially at the undergraduate level ... (the awards) are sometimes more than most writ- ers get for work published in the real world." For each contest, prizes are awarded in the cate- gories of short fiction, poetry, drama/screenplay and essay. The Major competition also gives prizes in the category of novel. Judges of the Hopwood contest have included writers in the Ann Arbor community, University staff, and nationally known writers like H.L. Mencken, Donald Barthelme, Anne Tyler and Gary Snyder. . Winners of Hopwood Awards are honored in cer- emonies. The Major/Minor Hopwood Awards also feature the annual Hopwood Lecture, which is deliv- ered by a prominent author. Speakers have included Philip Levine, Elmore Leonard, Maxine Hong Kingston, Joyce Carol Oates and Saul Bellow. Additionally, the Hopwood Room, located in 1176 Angell Hall, is an important resource for University writers. "The Hopwood Room is the physical center of the program. It is a place to gath* er the writing community together," Pollack said. The Hopwood Room contains information about the Hopwood Awards, a collection of periodicals and books, and manuscripts from previous winners. A set of Lawrence K(asdan's screenplays are also on display. Pollack calls the Hopwood Room's collec- tion "a wonderful resource, very inspiring." The Hopwood Program sponsors fiction readings in the Hopwood Room and holds a tea every Thursday afternoon during fall and winter terms. FILE PHOTO Bestselling crime novelist and Michigan native Elmore Leonard reads from his work at last January's Hopwood awards. Leonard's works include "Get Shorty" and numerous other classics of the crime genre. v r.