HopwoQd Contests Remarkable Opportunity For Student Writer Establishes Awards Four Fields, Essay, Poetry, Prose Fiction, Drama, Are Open To Students Plans for the one-year physical education course, compulsory for alls entering freshmen have been an- nounced by Dr. George A. May, di- rector of Waterman Gymnasium. During the first three weeks of school, work in the course will be de- voted to six hygiene lectures by Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of the H 6eth Service. "the lectures, which have been an' important feature of the physical ed- ucation program for many years, will be given at 3, 4, and 5 p.m. on Mon- Oay; Tuesday, Thursda-v and Friday AVERY HOPWOOD of each week in Room 25, Angell Hall. Each lecture will be given six times. All freshmen are required to at- tend the lectures, but students on HealthServic athletic squads will be permitted to choose the hour at which they will Give C attend. All others must go to the i T lectures at the time assigned to their gymnasium section. iieuicalI 4 At the final lecture a comprehen- sive examination will be given, in- cluding all the material covered. At- Inexpensive And Ext tendance at the lectures and passing° the examination will be necessary for AiI Is Offered Stu completion of the course. Enrolled In Univei After the series h5 been com- - _ pleted the program will consist of in- sructional activities in five athletics: track and field, games, gymnastics, expensive medical services of boxing and wrestling. The classes American universities is pros will be divided into five sections and the University of Michigan yIll alternately be instructed in each Service, which cares for any activity, with an examination at the illness that should arise du] ~end of each three-week period. Any student whose name appears semester of the student's resi on the regular squad list of the coach the University and takes pr In charge of a particular sport may measures in regard to studen specialize in that sport until its in living and recreational ce Mlasses are disbanded, or until the Illness contracted by the student is suspended for non-atten- during the semester in whic dance. At that time he will be im- enrolled is taken care of in th tnediately transferred to one of the Service building and the U regular gymnasium groups. Hospital. Each studentr Gymnasium sections will meet at 3, without charge, office medi 4 and 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, from his physician adviser a Thursday and Friday. Each student the Health Service staff of sp must attend two one-our periods The student is also entitled tc each week. free bed care for 30 days an After Spring Vacation all activities gency operations without cha will be reclassified to include out- Nurses Available door sports. Passing the require- Nurses are stationed in eac nents in physical education will be women's dormitories and me eased on efficiency in sports and lec- in dormitories and rooming :ture attendance. have room-call service availa All unexcused activities in physical Of the medical services ren education must be made up, and all the University for which the excuses for absence must be given to is charged are the followin the director of Waterman Gymna- nursing, some Universityf sium for approval. If the excuse is service, dental X-rays, p for sickness it must come from the room calls, non-emergency physician in charge. tions, health appliances an and purchase of eye glasse charge for these services is n defray expenses to the U Att'1 AU111 * Iet nly Attend Alumn Meet Examinations Provide The health examination w Emory J. Hyde, president of the given to entering students is University Alumni Association and istered by the Health Service, T. Hawley Tapping, secretary of the University cares for any se Alumnni Association, attended the an- ness that is found in the e nual conference of the first district tion. They also advise stu of the University of Michigan Alumni the care of minor ailments. Club at Rochester, N.Y., Sept. 18. examinations are providedk The board of directors of the al- required annually. umni council will hold its first meet- The Health Service hasi ing Friday, Oct. 15, to make plans for equipped pharmacy, where p the year, Mrs. Lucille B. Conger, ex- tions are filled by order of a ecutive alumnae secretary, an- Service physician, a physic nAunced. Oct. 16 there will be a department, optical and X- general meeting of the council and partments and other facilitie representatives of various organized enables the Health Service groups throughout the United States the student complete medica will attend. tion. t E f 1 E l '< 1 t -etcE' re ensive idents rsity and in- fered by vided by' Health student ring thej dence in eventive t health nters. student h he is e Health niversity receives, cal care rnd from ecialists. o receive d emer- vge. h of the n living houses able. dered by student g: extra Hospital hysician opera- Ld rpair es. The made to niversity d which is admin- and the rious ill- ,amina- dents in, These but not a well- rescrip- Health otherapy ray de- s which to give 1 atten- 7 1 ij l i +l 1 , ' 7 One of the most outstanding fea- tures of the University of Michigan's extra-curricular program has been for several years the Avery and Jule Hopwood Awards for creative writ- ing, for which competition is held every spring and in which prizes to- talling as high as $10.000 are given. The contests are divided into two general classifications, major and minor, the former oven to senior and graduate students, and the latter to undergraduates. Each group is composed of four fields of writing: prose fiction, essay, poetry and drama. Major awards of as much as $2,500 are made, while minor awards are limited to $250. Discretion is given the contest judges in determining the exact amounts. Established By Will Established by the will of the late Avery Hopwood, successful writer of light stage comedy, the Hopwood fund has received many additions, in- cluding one of more than $50,000 last year upon the death of a relative of Mr. Hopwood. The fund was set up, according to the terms of the endow- ment, for the purpose of fostering student creative writing, and encour- aging ir particular "the new and the radical.' Seven competitions have been held since the contests were inaugurated in 1931. In 1932 a part of the fund was set aside for the inauguration of a contest for freshmen, ineligible under contest rules to enter the reg- ular competition. Freshman Hop- wood awards are made in the fields of poetry, fiction and essay, with prizes of $50, $30 and $20 usually made in each. Three Hopwood major fiction win- ners have already been published, while a fourth and fifth will be pub- lished this fall. Mildred Walker's "Fireweed," victor in the 1933 con- test, was the first, followed by Hu- bert Skidmorp's "I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes," winner of an award in 1935 and a contender for the Pulitzer Prize this spring and Ruth Lininger Dobson's "Straw In The Wind," win- ner of the chief major award in 1936. Judges Are Authorities Baxter T. Hathaway's "The Stub- born Way," also a major award win- ner in the 1936 contest, will appear at an early date, as will the winner of the 1937 major fiction award, a novel written by Emmanuel P. Menatsag- anian, an Armenian student enrolled last year in the Graduate School who learned to speak English while work- ina in an automobile fact d 111111U11au~ai~i1Clucory ani who filed for naturalization as an American citizen only two weeks be- fore the contest announcements. Hopwood competition is restricted to students enrolled in English courses in the .literary or engineering college. with minimum schedule and grade requirements for both graduate and undergraduate students. Contest judges are selected from the nation's leading men of letters. Among last year's judges were Joseph Auslander, Clifton Fadiman, Dorothy Thompson, Robert Hillyer, Mary El- len Chase and Bruce Bliven. Manu- scrips are first examined by the con- test committee before being sent to the judges. Material considered in- ferior in quality is weeded out. A part of the endowment is also used to bring an outstanding speaker to Ann Arbor to deliver the Hopwood lecture, given at the meeting at which the awards are made, generally held in the Union during the last week of school. Last year's lecturer was Christopher Morley, the noted essay- ist and speaker. NOM Ill _ _ _ _ -- I Snappy Days Are Here Again.. . mis is the time of year when foot- ball spectators must be prepared for anything in the way of weather. The late afternoon sun can no longer be depended upon to contribute very much warmth, so that it's well to go prepared if you want to enjoy the game. A topcoat that won't bear down too heavily on your shoulders is the much-favored polo model cam- el's hair that features a half-belted back, not shown here, but regarding which you can take our word. LW