I PUBLICATIONS SECTION Y 5k iianx A& AL :43 a t t PUBLICATIONS SECTION FOUR P1 ICU ?AGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1960 FOUR PA Ic 11 I t ,~, ,a t ,,. , ti" c THE MICHIGAN DAILY is the voice of news and opinion which goes to thousands in the University community six days a week. World news through the facilities of the Associated Press, local news, sports, edi- torials, features and national columnists are part of the complete coverage offered by the student-run paper entering its seventy-first year of publi- cation. THE MICHIGANENSIAN is x the celebrated, 500-page year- book published each spring as a permanent record of the past k school year. Offering complete pictorial coverage of activities,' housing groups and sports $ within its luxurious cover, the 'Ension provides the person- alized touch for a large uni- versity. ~att STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUILDING-The home of student publications is the red brick strue- ture at 420 Maynard Street. Within its walls The Daily maintains its offices and printing plant and the Michiganensian (yearbook), and Generation (inter-arts magazine) have offices. The student hub is maintained and operated through publications revenue. PAPER'S SUPPORTERS: Staff Handles D'aily Finr~ances By JEAN SPENCER "Try and get a new linotype without us to buy it for you.' Justifying the existence of the relatively obscure business staff of The Daily, Acting Business Man- ager Judy Nicholson. '61, chall- enged all comers on the editoriala staf f. One of the backstops of The Daily's claim to editorial freedom is its financial independence from the University, rare among college newspapers. The business staff,n under Judy's direction, handles the mechanics of drawing up and administrating the budget onr which The Daily operates." While the edtiorial staff prom-m ises its trainees "valuable exper- ience and interesting contacts"h with University personnel, faculty, and administration, the contacts and experience offered by work' on the business staff are of an- other sort, Daily Works Late To Publish News Local, State, National, Sports Events All Included in Six Papers Weekly By JUDITH OPPENIIEIM You seldom hear the clock tick in the Michigan Daily offices of the Student Publications Building at 420 Maynard Street. The City Room, which occupies more than half the second floor. hums till the early morning hours with the combined sounds of telephones, typewriters, reporters' voices and the clicking of the two Associated Press wires which supply The Daily with national, local and sports news from noon til 2 a.m. To the left of the entrance to the City Room is The Daily Library where photographs of campus, national and international events are alphabetically filed along with important news clippings and biographies of prominent local and i national figures. The library also keeps national magazines, profes- sional and collegiate newspapers w and reference books on hand for the use of Daily staff members. Staff Arrangement Approaching the City Desk from the door, a person has on his right the Business and Circulation°+r staffs, and on his left, the photog- raphy and Sports departments. At the very back of the room are$¢a the assignment board and city desk, the heart of The Daily, where reporters receive their instructions, turn in stories and make up pages and write headlines for the paper. Downstairs in The Daily shop isM a printing plant valued at half a f million dollars. Stories and head- lines are sent to the shop from .... the city desk in a dumbwaiter 4,x where they are printed in long sheets called galleys, then proof-TE DAILY read, corrected and set on metal plates as they will appear in the gives full coverage newspaper.I Engrave Pictures Pictures for The Daily are en- graved on the Fairchild machine where a fine needle burns a series of tiny dots on an engraving plate- according to the degree of light I or darkness of the picture. I t -=iT When the pages have been set, MAGAIN a papier mache mat is made of them and put on the presses. All this is done until the early hours of the morning, for The Daily has the latest deadline of any paper in the state. The Daily is unique in several respects, Editor Thomas Hayden says. The Daily staff writer may touch upon any subjects that in- terest or concern him, the editor explained, his only restrictions being those imposed by reason and good taste. Since the newspaper serves a community of unusually high intelligence, its writers are w free to discuss scientific and other complex subjects without down- grading the material. 'Unique Opportunity' The Daily, Hayden notes, gives students a unique opportunity to learn about journalism by trying each aspect of newspaper work. DAILY MAGAZINE By working on The Daily staff a ,... discussion in depth reporter "gains tremendous ex- perience in exercising sound editorial page features both edi- s judgment and making quick, ac- torials on local issues and na- curate decisions." tionally syndicated columnists. s The Daily differs from most col- Opinions Free lege papers in presenting full opinions free coverage not only of campus news, w enal"is The Dail,'srudh but of city- and state-wide as well will prevail, fs the top of e as national and international torial motto, found at the top of s events. The Daily's front page con- each editorial page. The Daily is sists mainly of local news, while proud of its record of 70 years of - page three - the second front editoria freedom page is cmpried amosten- With this freedom, however, goes page - is comprised almost en- the reciprocal obligation of serving tirely of national news taken from obyigeton thediversified the Associated Press wires. The every element pofthe di sifie, campus as completely as possible, Hayden added. In addition to news articles, the newspaper features the Daily Of- ficial Bulletin and Organization Notices which serve as a complete calendar for keeping readers in- formed about lectures, concerts, examinations, job opportunities and organization-sponsored events across ampus. Magazines Frequent Frequent Sunday magazines fea- ture art, drama and literature, and special supplements appear with pring and fall fashions. Special supplements are also published for Chr4tnaS and the spring honors announ cements, News uriting for The Daily is " done by the Editorial Staff, work- ing on a four-year progression s stem. Beginning staff members are Trainees who meet weekly with MI+IlI GAN\ ENIAt'I THE STUDENT DIRECTORY is the campus telephone book, compiled each fall by one of the honorary societies on cam- pus. Within its covers is a handy listing of every student who registers at the University in the fall semester. DRECTORY Ann Arbor merchants. The ,-;~..-- - Daily's chief advertisers, are among the denizens of the Uni- PRCIATY LU-Jd Z versity community with whom thePRACTICALITY PLUS-Judy business staff has most day-to- manager for The Daily in the c day contacts. The ins and outs of tions of the cash-oriented busi commercial Ann Arbor, whose The Daily's "day people." standard of living is reputedly among th enation's highest. can terms the junior editorial and prove quite as fascinating as in- business staffs "the backbone of vestigation of the University, the newspaper," in that much of Judy maintains, the routine work of putting out a In the absence of Michael Her- newspaper devolves on them. manoff, Judy will serve as Daily Staff Departments Business Manager for the coming The business staff juniors div- school year. While she has never ide their forces to staff nine covered a news beat for The major departments: Promotions, Daily, she is an edit staff sym- Display Advertising, National Ad- pathizer and would like to learn vertising, Classified Advertising, as much of the news aspect of Art and Design, Circulation, Sub- journalism as possible. scription Accounts, Display Ac- The senior business staff of, counts and Layout and Proof- four serve as administrative over- reading.I seers for the junior staff. Judy1 The promotions department Nicholson will act as business oming year, directing the opera- ness staff, familiarly known as works to get new advertising con- tracts, and renews standing con- tracts. Also, they handle Daily supplements and magazines from the business side-getting the ads to fill them, which can be tricky when advertisers run regular ads in the daily paper. Beehive Of Activity "Displa y advertising," some smiling voice says countless times every afternoon. Between noon and five, this department is a bee- hive of activity. Someone is an- swering the phone, taking the di- See DAILY, Page 3 NG IENERATION ,ERATION is the literary gazine produced by stu- its with student-written erial. Serving as an outlet creative expression, the Dazine's three editions a r contain music, poetry, ion and essays, published >I w - w: