THE MICHIGAN DAILY MERICAN BARREN: ie Sporting Life with Complete Coverage Notorious Daily Reviewing: A Cry in The Wilderness AEL HEFFER Daily sports staff (to the our knowledge) has never d an All-American athlete. 'en't the time. ugh we occasionally take it to play a game or two of . in The Daily's city room, side on the lawn of the n t Activities Building there are fewer breakable s), we find covering the )rld of Wolverine sports to 1 . . . a sport in its own e our critics accuse us of rg serious enough, and ev- mright lazy, we pride our- >n printing the most com- >verage of Wolverine sports. involves constantcontact, he coaches who guide the es of and the players who up the many Wolverine It means analysis of what hap-' pens to our teams and why, fea- tures on what the players are really like. It means assembling all this into stories that a great many of the campus' 30,000 students read each day. It also means finding willing students to do all this. That means you. You don't have to have any experience, or (quite frankly) any knowledge of sports. (don't laugh, it has happened). All you have to do is walk into the Student Publications Build- ing at 420 Maynard and look for the bunch of characters sitting with their feet on their desks, shooting rubber bands and trivial questions at each other. Ask them what you can do and they will fill you in., From the minute your story comes out, you will have new au- thority, people will want to discuss the team with you. Your opinions will have new power as you reply, "the coach told me . .." Want to play games too? You will be working in the world's smallest pillarless stadium, home of the campus-champion or- claims to All-American status as a newspaper. It also has the latest deadline in the state-2 a.m.-and is often the only paper in the area with the results of late sports rea- dy the next morning. Just imagine yourself in the pressbox next to the official scor- er, learning all the inside dope on why one team wins and another can't. Imagine traveling with the team, writing the big story. And then imagine yourself over to The Daily. It's the next best thing to being an All-American. By LISSA MATROSS Arts Editor "Playing to a capacity audience at Hill last night, Andy Warhol was a master at weaving a delight- ful fabric of smashing sound,' daring film and freaky movement. A good time was had by all," reads a Daily review the following didn't have a universally good time. At least you didn't. "How the hell did that idiot ever get to be a reviewer," you mutter. Probably he walked intouthe Daily one day: and announced modestly, "I have arrived." Or he walked in muttering to himself about that insane Truffaut re-' view. A shreaded newspaper could morning, be seen in his hip pocket. The You choke,. seethe, stamp your point is, any man-in-the-street feet. Maybe you even tear up The who cries in the wilderness can Daily. It's been done. You were get a chance to cry in print by part of the audience that not only becoming a Daily idiot-I mean wasn't capacity (a stock term) but Daily reviewer.' Actually. "Daily" reviewer is a misleadi-ng term. Reviewers are notoriously independent both in their writing and in their journal- istics habits. The dark stranger who creeps uip the stairs of the Student Publications Building at 10:00 p.m. Friaay night, glares at the night editors and locks himself in a side room with typewriter for two hours, is usually The Re- viewer. Element of Respect No one bothers him for there is an element of respectful fear involved. As a reviewer it is as- sumed that he has a private line to the Muses and a certain aesthe- tic ethos that leads him through and around the superficial, mech- anistic world that he finds around him.. That is one of the beauties of being a reviewer: no one is really sure that he understands your message. But at the risk of being called philistine, or worse, he won't edit your copy. I i I --- - - - -- - . - - ganization football team (4-0 in I PHOTO GREA TS: 1966). We frequently take a mo- ment out to humiliate campus nui- sances like the University Activi- ties Center in football or basket- ball, in famous contests for the Little Brown (waste) Basket. While our athletic prowess may not be great enough to get us on the team (although a former sports editor once played against Cazzie Russell in high school bas- ketball), T h e Daily has some Blow-Up to New Adventure ins traveling with the California or to North or to anywhere the the executives in the g offices may direct Mi- orts. Just1 War a sophomo Michigan ture, exc life. Before Direct News on . the Traveling Wolverines ...y .. .. ,. t .. WELCOME 6 before the Second World to the photography editor's desk, pleasant-looking young he was clapped on the shoulder re wandered into The by the friendly personnel director, n Daily looking for adven- steered in the general direction of itement, and a purpose in the night desk, and told that he was about to embark on a brilliant he could make it over career in the literary racket. Unfortunately for the young soph, one Arthur Miller, there was never time enough for him to meander over to the bright (f. 5.6, 1/125) little corner of the city room in which the photographic nerve center of The Daily is lo- cated. So, he has struggled along all his life on the meager proceeds of his literary endeavors never knowing where his next Pulitzer Prize was coming from. Avoid the fate which befell this bewildered student! To take the first timorous steps toward your slated destiny among such pho- tographic greats as Karsh, Bras- son, Steichen, and the four-for- a-quarter machine in every drug store, walk boldly through the clatter and clutter of the Water- man Gymnasium exit, and hie thyself over to the warm portals of the Student Publications Build- ing, 420 Maynard (in the friendly shadow of the Administration Bldg.) and ask for photo editor. Looking up from his littered desk where he has been adjust- ing his Hasselblad- with a 10-inch Phillips screwdriver, he will no doubt struggle against the emo- tion welling in his throat, and, stretching forth a gnarled hand in a silent welcome, invite you to become a member of one of the University's oldest institutions, In s The Michigan Daily photo staff. After shaking his hoary locks at the memory of this ancient rs feud, the photo editor will begin to tell you of the responsibilities and opportunities of a staff mem- ioQn ber. Wiping his rimless spectacles, he will explain the schedule in which one photographer works -ion t.either one afternoon or one eve- ning a week, averaging about an hour and a half each time. Shaking his dewlaps, he will ex- pound on the opportunity for each photographer to take p h o t o essays or picture features to be seen every week by The Daily's 20,000 readers. Stroking his ashen sideburns, he will enumerate the ways in which photographs of special news in- terest are sent out through news service channels to be printed in newspapers and magazines throughout the world. Blinking his watery eyes, he will elucidate the feeble remuneration system of The Daily. Warming his chilblained hands against a hiss- ing radiator, he will ask you if you are prepared to devote time and thought to an effort that will help lower your grade point aver- age and heighten your aversion to phone calls. If at the end of this long reci- tation, the photo editor grabs your hand in his wrinkled paw and gives it a curt shake, con- gratulations. You're in. The rest is up to you. 4 U. of Reviewers work for newspapers, but that doesn't make them news- men, i.e., they go beyond the who, what, where, how scheme of things. Reviews are arty, even poetic, editorials that set forth "the truth as we see it," as one New Republic editor was led to pronounce. No performer is al- lowed to stand on reputation alone. One Daily review of a Sego- via concert sent the artist racing to Metropolitan Airport vowing never to return to Ann Arbor. Certain Safe Guards M. Student This could, of course, become a problem. If Segovia goes racing to the airport dragging Van Cli- burn, Judy Collins and Eugene Ormandy with him Ann Arbor could cease to be the cultural cen- ter of the Midwest (or simply, a cultural center). There are certain safeguards, however. Any critic must have a thorough and open knowledge of the field he reviews. If you think De Mille was the greatest American product after Coca Cola it would be unwise, perhaps, to review a Resnais film. Then there is the question of finances. Your father's Income notwithstanding, few students or teaching fellows can afford sea- son's tickets to the APA, Univer- sity Musical Society programs, or Ann Arbor Film Festival. Even the Fugs are expensive. Here's where reviewing leaves the ethereal and becomes pragmatic. For just the few hours that it takes to bring Truth to the masses via the Daily, you get a free seat. You can even bring someone with you (say someone who knows something about the performer). At the risk of cloaking that old cliche, you too can be the Walter Kerr of student newspapers-be a Daily reviewer. -A MICH IGAN'S Wolverines - Michigc famous Marching Band-The Victor State Street-The League- The Un - all are great traditions of a gr With Trusty Camera cu .$ '.'.W,.V^:"}".'r...;W.;'.:ti.'..Wy.'A.".".""; .5;":. ',....".". . } F.":. . . . . . . . . ..4:" <%r ..'. ..},;{. . $Ntrti S. v .'.: AAf.S V,....'l.4 .....". :.w".'.?" S "''.. :":":'VA . """"" :r'. ".,.° v "".7; ..$::"'..... : $J . . . . . ..:":rfl"S;{{/.ytrs1 4 University. GREENE'S CLEANERS is a tradition, too. For forty-one years GREENE'S CLEANERS have given the best in dry cleaning and shirt launder- ing to thousands of Michigan students. In fact, many alumni around the country still send gar- ments to us for special cleaning services. 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