| Generous alumnus supports
Morris D. Hayes fund
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| Morris Hayes |
UW-Eau Claire alumnus Michael Schulze, a member of
The Singing Statesmen from 1981 through 1984, has not forgotten
the group’s creed: “Once a Statesman, always a Statesman.”
Schulze’s involvement with the nationally
renowned male chorus and his respect for the group’s founder
and first conductor, UW-Eau Claire music professor emeritus Morris
Hayes, have led the alumnus to make a planned gift to the UW-Eau
Claire Fulfilling the Promise of Excellence campaign that
will significantly benefit the Morris D. Hayes Scholarship Fund.
“My experience with the Statesmen helped make
my UW-Eau Claire experience complete,” said Schulze, who graduated
in 1984 with a business administration degree. “The academics
were great, but the music program really rounded out my experience.”
After graduation, Schulze wanted to give back to
the program. “When Morrie retired (in 1987) and created the
fund, it was a natural place for me to contribute,” he said.
So Schulze contributed — first in 1987, then
almost every year since, and now through his planned gift. His contributions,
along with those of many alumni and friends of UW-Eau Claire’s
choral music program, have helped grow and sustain the endowed scholarship
fund Hayes established.
The fund pays for annual scholarships to students
involved in choral music at UW-Eau Claire. Beginning with the 2002-03
academic year, the scholarships will be awarded in alternate years
to either a non-music major who sings in The Singing Statesmen or
a music major who sings in the Concert Choir.
Schulze last visited Hayes in the fall of 2000 in
Carlsbad, Calif., where the former conductor now lives. The two
stay in touch via e-mail and keep up a yearly Christmas card exchange.
“Morris was a teacher, coach and friend,”
said Schulze, who is director of sales for SAP America and resides
with his family in Pewaukee. “He made his Statesmen a special
breed within the music department, the university and the state.”
What Schulze found most remarkable about his experience
with the Statesmen was that more than half the group’s members
were non-music majors.
“We won big-time music awards with a bunch
of business, education and math majors, and no other music group
on campus — or elsewhere that I know of — can say that,”
Schulze said. “It was, and is, a truly unique group, and that
was what Uncle Morrie, ‘the Master,’ had planned.”
Additional contributions to the Morris D. Hayes
Scholarship fund are welcome. Those interested can call the Foundation
at (715) 836-5630 or complete the online donation
form.

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