THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG Honorary eneration Publishes Creative or l~ o mile By ATHEEN KOUE '61A&D, this years general editor, C o np l sPeople wander into the first admitted frankly. Standards of One of the most monumental endeavors of paper work on the1 campus is the semi-annual com-' pilation and publication of the University student directory. The directory is printed under' the auspices of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Each spring the Board opens petition-f ing to student honorary groups who submit estimates on publica- tion costs and profits. The board then selects an organization to put out both the fall and summer editions of the directory. The 1959-1960 student direc- tories were published by the Druids and edited by Ted Cohn, '60. The 1960-1961 directories will be issued by the Vulcans. The main task in compiling the directory is alphabetizing the thousands of names from the registration cards. Cohn explained that each member of the society publishing the directory contri- butes as much time as he can to sorting cards, first into the letters of the alphabet, and then within each letter. This operation oc- cupies hundreds of man-hours of work. When the cards are organized, they are taken to a typist and the names are typed up alphabetically on long sheets which eventually become the pages of the directory. After the names have been typed out, the sheets are cut and put in order, and the advertisements from local merchants are inserted. The University listings, student organizations and sorority and fraternity members are compiled separately and placed at the front of the direotory. Then the entire book is sent to the printer and photoengraved. The directories are sold on cam- pus on one specified day and are available at the Student Publica- tions Building during the rest of the year. At the end of the year, the or- ganization which published the book submits a statement to the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations and profits are totalled. floor room of the Student Publi- cations Building at odd hours of the day and night, usually to slip something into, or take something from, a single desk drawer, dis- tinctively marked with black. The room serves as headquar- ters for the all-student staff of Generation, and the black drawer is the focal point in publication of the University's inter-arts mag- Azine. Manuscripts are submitted in- formally-contributors place them in the drawer-and from them, selections to appear in each issue are made. Reflects Board's Taste "The whole magazine necessar- ily reflects the taste of the edi- torial board," Michael Wentworth, quality by which to select manu- scripts must have a continuity that is difficult to achieve in any other way, he explained. To publish "the best possible magazine, containing a wide range of material representative of all cultural fields of the University." Wentworth noted, is the aim of Generation. "People shouldn't feel limited just because they don't happen to be an English major," the editor insisted. Although poetry and fiction, the two literary genres most com- monly coupled with the term "creative," will retain a place of emphasis in the magazine's for- mat, he is interested in attracting more contributions in the essay field-{3n music, art, current af- fairs, book reviews, criticisms and topics of general interest. 'Rewarding Experience' "We want the whole magazine to be a rewarding experience," Wentworth added, calling it a "cultural synthesis, an inter-rela- tion between the colleges." For instance original music scores, as in the past, will occas- sionally be published in their en- tirety. This practice, Wentworth explained, "gives student com- posers the opportunity of having their worlk appear before the pub- lic. If just a few people see the scores and then play them, we think the effect is worthwhile." Contributions may be submit- ted to the Generation office by anyone, and manuscript dead- lines for each issue are published in advance in The Daily. Once the contributions start coming in, the regular all-student Generation staff starts compiling the magazine's format. Format Varies The actual format will prob- ably change from issue to issue with the general design and the a r t w o r k accompanying specific selections for each of the year's three publications directed by one artist. "This gives the magazine a vis- ual continuity that is lacking when the magazine is made up of 'art pages' interpolated in the body of the fiction," Wentworth said. -Daily-James Warneka INTER-ARTS MAGAZINE-Editor Michael Wentworth believes Generation should publish a diver- sity of original student works, including essays, music scores, art and of course poetry and fiction. Daily Business Staff Brings Financial Support to Paper (Continued from Pag 1) - __ _ -__..w I all concluded by four-thirty, when mensions and a rough idea of the the business staff "day people" content of a local ad for the next begin to disperse and the edit day's paper. Someone else is dis- staff "night people" take posses- patched to pick up the ad, usua'lly sion of the building, drawn by the store's own person- Business staffers change de- Bneeslafr caged- ne, -partments twice a year, so that The display junior manager is by the time they reach senior standing with pencil in hand, standing they have a broad back- giving directions to five people at ground of experience. The editor- once. But by four-thirty the edi- ial staff assigns news beats on torial staff Assistant Night Editor much the same principle. has the pages of the next day's LITERARY MAGAZINE ... student-produced paper to work with, the ads neatly blocked in. Local Material The display advertising depart- ment deals chiefly with local mer- chants and handles local copy and art work. Many nationally known corpor- ations with products that do a huge annual business handle ad- vertising through an advertising service. The national advertising department of The Daily gets ads from a national advertising ser- vice, which is given funds by each corporation that works through it to distribute as it sees fit. Deal- ings with national advertisers are carried on largely on paper-The Daily fills out an information sheet with circulation figures, ad- vertising data for the national service. Classifieds Popular Readership surveys have shown that when the average reader picks up The Daily, the first sec- tion he turns to is the classified ads. "Classifieds offer a special- ized service you don't get any- where else in the paper," Judy points out. Small advertisers, prankish students and student or- ganizations make use of the clas- sified columns to publicize their interests. One of the most creative of the business staff departments is the comparatively new Art and De- sign department, initiated last year. This department selects art (the journalistic euphemism for pic- tures of any kind, as opposed to written copy) from the mats sup- plied by their mat service. Mats are cardboard impressions of pic- tures which are cast in lead or plastic molds for use in printing the paper. Interesting coordination of ad copy with appropriate art liven up the advertising section of the Daily pages. For the coming year, Judy would like to gather a work- ing staff of artists anid cartooniists to work on call for The Daily in this capacity. Faithful Throwers Daily circulation is a difficult and complex department which, to the student. often seems to move in mysterious ways its won- ders to perform. A faithful head carrier arises at three in the morning, a staff of newsboys gather to fold papers at five or so, and trucks set out on the two University routes in the early morning-and a few subscribers still miss their papers daily. Some, Judy can affirm. are ac- tually even polite when they call the circulatior department early in the morning to report their . .. . .. ....... - "- 11 The MICHIGAN LEAGUE 1 The Ballroom set for a Banquet 3u bscr ipt ion accounts are ndled by a special department, ich does billing for subscrip- ns about to expire. The League Cafeteria