THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY OC 4 Will Open Choral Union Program Includes More Orchestras This Season Among the attractions listed for the 1944-45 music series are Helenj Taubel, Fritz Kreisler, Dorothy Maynor, three well known philharmonic Orchestras and the Budapest String Quartet. Besides the ten concerts on the Choral Union series, the annual May Festival with outstanding soloists, the Christmas performance of Han- del's "Messiah" and chamber music concerts will also be presented, Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University Musical Society has an- pounced. Qpening Is NoV. 4 Opening the Choral Union season N 4 in Hill Auditorium will be Helen Traubel, soprano and Metro- politan Opera star. Others scheduled for the same month are the Cleveland Orchestra with deorge Szell as guest conductor: Nov. 12; Fritz Kreisler, violinist, Nov. 17 and Josef Lhevinne, pianist, Nov. 27. Hopwoods Offer BEGAN WITH SIX STUDENTS: Opportunities to University Has Gr Young Writers Little School on S $10,000 in Prizes Is From a school which was started Sophoc] Sept. 8, 1841 with an enrollment of ing to Awarded Contestants seven students, one main building ment of now known as Mason Hall and four Even Rewarding contestants with a total professors' buildings, the University Een of almost $10,000 a year, the annual of Michigan has, in 103 years, grad- dentswo Avery Hopwood contests give begin- ually grown into a school with 5,586 logue ning writers a chance to have their civilians, 1,161 Army, 1,255 Navy and goodn work evaluated and their names 221 Marine students enrolled and a in all ca known in the literary field. campus with 85 buildings, 45 being nc A bequest by Avery Hopwood made principle structures. Once the awards possible and presents a In 1817 the first University of conise unique opportunity for writers in the Michigan, the Catholepistemaid, was algebra fields of drama, fiction, essay and established in Detroit with a presi- aner poetry. Of especial interest to the dent, vice-president and "didactors," man a- Class of '48 will be the annual awards or professors. The school was small lum. given for freshman writers. and existed in the days of pioneers Only O Major, Minor Awards until 1821. In that year the terri- Maso The prizes are grouped in major torial legislature established and ity for and minor awards-only senior and placed the affairs of the school in a there b graduate students being eligible for board of trustees who managed the there, the major awards while all under- school until 1837. brary graduate students are eligible for the No Responsibility Taken geologic minor awards if they meet the gen- It was discovered then that the collecti eral conditions for the contestants. board was not taking enough respon- very Hopwood, '05, became anfsibility in the school, and so, in that Exe Avery Hopwoodch'05, became a s ateayear, prominent American dramatist and year when Michigan became a state, There v bequeathed one-fifth of his estate the Board of Regents of the Univer- of this to the encouragement of creative sity of Michigan was created by the of.this . state legislature to make plans for a $7.50 f writing at the University. His be- permanent school. Profe quest states that, "It is especially Keen rivalry was to occur as to payed $ desired that the students competing which city the school was to be salary v for the prizes shall not be confined located in, but Ann Arbor, after fail- allowed to academic subjects, but shall be ing to become the state capital, was them 1 allowed the widest possible latitude finally chosen when the Ann Arbor Presi and that the new, the unusual and Land Company donated a 40-acre ven ha the radical shall be especially en- tract of land. it was couraged." With an enrollment of six fresh- Univers Begins Fifteenth Year men and one sophomore the Univer- a grand The awards have been given on sity's doors opened with a faculty of this campus for the past 14 years. two men: the Reverend George P. Nowhere else in the world does a Williams, formerly head of the Pon- university offer such large prizes to tiac branch when the University had its students in the field of writing. consisted of many branches through- Just one year after the Regents out the state, as professor of mathe- accepted the Hopwood bequest, pub- matics, and the Reverend Joseph lishers began to be interested in the Whiting, professor of languages. 01 results of the contests and now Entrance Requirements Then [hs accept prize-winning manuscripts in Entrance requirements in those constantl creiing mnubris days made it necessary to pass an Fo contanly crasm .nmbes. examination on geograpehy, arith- Henry Seibel Canby, Stephen Vin- mtinonsh grama, arith- laratio cent Benet, Louis Untermeyer, Arch- through simple equations, Virgil, Ci- interes ibald MacLeish, Dorothy Parker, Sin- cero's select orations, Sallust, Jacob's studen clair Lewis, Mark Van Dorn and John or' elton's Greek Reader, Stoddard's affairs Erskine have all been judges during or Fedron's L adrtdardto co or Andrew's Latin Grammar, ands o o the past years in which the contests presen have been held. Betty Smith, author els and of the recent best-seller, "A TreePl n Se This Grows in Brooklyn," was a Hopwood Plans.Set for preside winner. group The University also maintains the Developm ent it aft Hopwood Room as a gathering place A "We r for students interested in writing formal and a center for the interests arising million people in the metropolitan Big Fc from the contests. ulcn o ,,, ,, ences . HELEN TRAUBEL HILL AUDITORIUM-This imposing structure is the scene of all major campus meetings, concerts, and lectures. GLADYS SWARTHOUT Hill Auditorium Campus Center One of the landmarks on the cam= pus for uncertain freshmen is Hill Auditorium as the size alone of this imposing building makes it a fine place to start from with a campus map.! But it does not take many months for Hill Auditorium to become anj integral part of every student's col- lege experience for it is there that concerts, lectures. student shows and! gatherings are held. Possessing seat- ing accommodations for 5.000 people, Hill Auditorium has offered its stage to an untold number of celebritiesj in Choral Union concerts since 1913, when the building was completed. Hill Auditorium was made possible by a $200,000 grant from Regent Arthur Hill, of Saginaw. who gradu- ated from the University engineering college in 1865. One of the most outstanding fea- tures of Will Auditorium is the mag- nificent organ it contains. The organ was presented in memory of Prof. Henry S. Fries, Before the construction of Hill Auditorium the auditorium in Uni- versity Hall was used for campus functions but it was rather inade- quate when compared with the pres- ent day elegance and space of Hill Auditorium. CHARLES A. SINK ... Musical Society President The auditorium is commonly re- ferred to as "Hill" by the campus and it has a seating capacity of 5,000 persons. It has been the scene of many notable campus functions, out- standing among which was the Gold- en Jubilee May Festival, the appear- ance of British Ambassador Lord Halifax, and many other notable persons. The acoustics in the main section have been carefully designed and represent one of the finest musical halls in the nation. Outside of concert and lecture pro- grams,' Hill is the scene of many campus jamborees which include the monthly Victory Variety Shows, Hours of Fun, and is the scene of national broadcasts in Ann Arbor. FRITZ KREISLER Charlottesville, Va. and spend six months at the University. Known as the Horace H. Rackham Memorial Building, this white lime- stone structure was constructed at a cost of more than five million dol- lars and was given to the University by the late Horace H. Rackham. Both its main lecture hall which seats 1,200 and the smaller amphi- theatre have been the scenes of many University meetings and national conferences and both winter and fall graduation ceremonies are held here. The building houses the University Historical Archives, the Statistical service, and the Veterans Service Bureau as well as the Graduate School offices. L _ _.ll "y-, . 5Ti.r..... UTUEAR~TORYMEDICAL RESEARCH DAVIS AYE. - i ^! -(f T ' t7 1 ,, i yAS.LirTENAT __ PORTS -a 1FLW AEMi HOOSPITALT a 'Q1ROU P GENLRAL [ t'- CATHERINE STREET T ''I I OUSE, NUPE zRES OEN(ES ANN STREET ATHLETIO- PLANT --7 - SCALCI,.TEEiT SPEEcil PSYCHO- 2 !N0 AN (1Y TAcA.OZESHL N TTIJ LOICA NORTH U~INURSES RESIDENCE AV L HUROAMNSRET EC? - - STREE Pvt A E TREWETJ~ TR UAUNClTR RE_ L 4 o N UIG N 7 S STNNIS OURT QUADANGE I N f~~ERC~~ ~r~~I~ V7 K I--------\_ r ,., k House I II II I 11111