'HE MICHIGAN DAILY TTTE. ',nAV_ A'CC:'fiT: "'1* ' " t " fltt@ _HE_ I HINAIY _v _vATW T'T ')Y O_ [. HUIaUDl (, 1JU3 LATEST DEADLINE IN THE STATE: Daily Reports University, World News ECONOMICAL L V ING. About $16.00 per week for room and board plus 5-6 hours work.. BOAR DiNG. If you room near a co-op house, you may obtain 20 meals a week for $10.75 plus 4 or 5 hours work. ADULT RESPONSIBILITIES and privileges in homes that are student con- trolled and owned. Sharing work cuts costs. DEMOCRATIC IDEALS. No racial, religious, political, or social discrimi- nation. INT ER-COOPE RAT IVE COUNCIL for information, contact the Co-op Office: Room 2546 STUDENT ACTIVIT IES BUILDING, Office hours, 9-5 ... Phone NO 8-6872 <'r' (Continued from Page 1) As a result, The Daily is free to report the Universities prob- lems and controversies as well as its more innocuous aspects-and the editorial page .regularly car- ries stinging criticism, as well as praise, of University policies and institutions. Though scarcely an administra- tor has not occasionally had cause to regret The Daily's freedom, most feel that in the long run their faith in students has been vindicated by the high quality of the publication that has resulted. The Daily Career The diverse individual. of the Daily staffs share many experi- ences throughout their "career" on the paper. The newcomer to the organiza- tion first becomes a trainee, during which he gets his first taste of work on the night desk-the fraz- zled-nerve center from whiich the next morning's gaper is put out. The common reaction to this first experience is amazement-amaze- ment that from this incredibleE tangle of scattered copy, coke bot- tles, textbooks, coats, telephones, broken typewriters, assignment sheets, old newspapers, and dis- organized-looking, screaming and' often cursing people a coherent newspaper could emerge by 2 a.m. Trainees usually share other ex- periences : the trauma of writing headlines that have to FIT, the challenge of the first story, and getting to know the kooky people who will be their associates for the next few years. A Little More Sense As the first-year staffer moves up to reporter and then rewrite, the whole thing begins to .make. a little more sense. And more ex- periences follow--the first by-line, the first page-one story, the first lead story, the first editorial, the first angry reply to his editorial- and so on. During this period, he is first assigned to a beat. In attempting to completely cover all aspects of the sprawling University, the staff is divided into these small groups, each with responsibility for* a cer- tain area. The attempt, of course, is not totally successful-people in almost any area of University life will tell you that The Daily grossly underplays and misunder- stands the news from their corner, while wasting valuable space on trivia from others' corners. Somewhere around the onset of his sophomore year, the Daily staffer finds himself promoted to assistant night editor, responsible for putting out pages two, five and eight one night a week. " For the first time, the paper is really dependent upon him-and his first experience as an assist- ant night editor often proves a trial by fire. Forced to concentrate. on a half-dozen things at once, pursued by a clock running at least twice as fast as it should, he bemoans his ignorance of all the things he did not learn during his first year. Even More Sense But after a few nights on desk, he begins to sense the underlying organization that insures that to- morrow's paper will be born from the madhouse that is tonight's night desk. In the sophomore's writing, too, the scope broadens. He learns to handle controversial issues, begins to assemble seemingly unrelated ideas in his editorials, and starts. to achieve a larger view of just what this university is all about. His work swings into high gear as he becomes a junuior and a night editor. Now, one night a week, the full responsibility for the next day's paper is his. He puts out pages one and three (an exclusively state, national and world news page) himself and supervises the work of the assist- ant night editor. By now, he must fully understand the underlying organization that brings an ord- ered newspaper from a chaotic situation., '-I ..ICHIGAN'S Wolverines- Michigan's ..}., famous Marching Band-The Victors- State Street-The League-The Union The process goes something like this: The night editor and assistant night editor begin work about the middle of the afternoon. They confer with the senior editors an. buttonhole other staffers, attempt- ing to find enough copy to fill the next day's paper. Meanwhile, the Daily business staff, working in a chaotic world of its own, is laying out the adver- tisement for the next day's paper. At about 4 p.m., their work done, the business staffers indicate the ad layout on the page dummies, hand them to the night editor, and go home. Attacks Page Make-Up Now the operation begins to move. The assistant night editor, who already has most of his copy, begins making up his pages-de- ciding what must rutn tonight, pondering which are mst import- ant, and trying to fit the recalci- trant things into decent-looking page. Meanwhile, the night editor has a little more time, and may indulge in a little speculation. He lays out a tentative version of page one, which will likely be trn to shreds by a late-breaking story or one which doesn't come through, but which provides a certain feeling of security as he turns to putting out page three. At about 5 p.m., he attacks the long ribbon of copy which the AP machine has been grinding out since about noon, and begins the page three routine: read through it, eliminate the rapes, hurricanes and Nixon's dog, decide how much AF should be saved for page one and put stories that are likely to have late developments in that pile, rank what's left in order of importance, and lay out the page, Attacks Copy At 6 p.m., their pages laid out, the night editor and his assist- ant begin editing copy, passing out headlines for the trainees to write, and sending copy from the second floor night desk to the shop on the ground floor of the publications bldg. The shop, manned by profes- sionals, is one of the most complete in collegiate pressdom. Built, as was the entire Student Publica- tions Bldg., from 'The Daily's prof- its during the roaring twenties, the shop includes five linotypes, a Ludlow (headline - setting) ma- chine, an electric and a hand-op- erated proof press, and assorted other paraphernalia which still baffles most staff members. Upstairs, the editing and head- line-writing continues. Around the night desk, people.guzzle Cokes, argue.politics, throw a fotball around, and pester the editors. Assorted senior editors come by to confound the night editor by veto- ing his page layout or ordering him to run a certain story. Head- lines come back up from the shop -they didn't fit, rewrite them. Khrushchev threatens war at 7:43 page three has to be remodeled to include this late development. The photographer missed an afternoon lecture, and the assistant night editor is without any photos for his page. And the clock keeps mov- ing. Attacks Page One But despite these and innumer- able other crises, the assistant night editor has his copy and his page dummuies down in the shop bay 8 p.m.; the night editor gets page See VARIED, Page 4 i -r #, (. Nt -Daly-James gescrn RAW NEWS-The Associated Press through its almost endlessly clicking teletype wire sends dispatches of world events. The na- tional concerns editor and the night editor evaluate it and place it in its proper place in the paper. Atempt to Relate News O 'U', Nat ion, World --al are great traditions of University. a great More than dust reporting the University and the campus com- munity, The Dtaily attempts to re- late them to this. increasingly com-. plex world. The Daily has been a member of the Associated Press since 1916 and still relies heavily on its dis- patches for news of events in the world, nation and state. It has re- corded war and peace, depression and prosperity as told by the AP. Reporters talk to campus experts. in political science, economics, law and business administration for their interpretation of events. Many have significant contacts in Washington and elsewhere and their remarks shed new light on many a situation. Emphasizing The Daily's need to relate the University and .world, last year's senior editor created a new senior position-the national concerns editor. This editor's main function is to correlate na- tional and world news with Uri- versity news and help assign each a proper place in the paper. He works specifically with the night editor in preparing page three-The Daily's non-local news page. This page, created four years ago, is taking on new meaning as more interpretive writing is ap- pearing on it. GREENE'S CLEANERS is a tradition, too. For forty-one years GREENE'S CLEANERS have given the best in dry cleaning and shirt laundering to thousands of Michigan students. In fact, many alumni around the country still send garments to us for special cleaning services. In Ann Arbor, GREENE'S have four convenient locations and six routes to service the quad- e rangles, dormitories,. sororities, fraternities, At the infor- apartments and rooming houses. mation desks in all quads and dorms you will find a GREENE'S card to fill out and attach to your garments. You will also find a place to leave garments for GREENE'S daily pick-up ser- vice. There is no additional charge for pick-up and delivery. FRESHMEN interested in -AD SALES? -COPY WRITING? -ANNOUNCING? -ENGINEERING? -NEWS? then join student -owned student-operated WCBN -thte finest in college broadcasting THE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE on drycleaning and shirt laundering takes three days. For same-day service take your garments to any of GREENE'S cleaning plants. There's an opening for YOU ! music-popular, classicial, jazz t !