THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 7, 1972 I I inside 420 maynard Students who find the Michi- gan Daily on their doorstep six mornings a week often don't re- alize the massive human ma- chinery that operates day and night to push the paper to press. Daily work is accomplished through the combined efforts of four separate student staffs- editorial, business, sports, and photography - with the help of professional printers. Although it is often said that The Daily is only a student newspaper, staff members pride themselves on their profession- alism and work hard to live up to that pride. In the midst of this profes- sionalism, however, they are sometimes forced to realize that they are indeed students with classes to pass. . Daily finances Business staff keeps the paper financially soi.nd, and manages the Daily's $335,000 annual bud- get. Avid business staffers sell, "-' i TUILD y ui/d ' GUITARS STRINGS lay out, and sometimes design ads, as well as tending to sub- scription and circulation mat- ters. Business staffers are mostly people who enjoy newspaper work, but would rather avoid the ulcers from hastily writing until all hours of the night. Un- like other Daily staffs, business people actually keep convention- al (9 to 5) hours. Daily business, however, has its own demands, such as trek- ing across town to cajole local merchants into placing ads or trying to console an irate sub- scriber who did not receive that morning's paper. The power of the press Edit staffers, who manage n e w s coverage and editorial commentary, are known to spend hours at a typewriter muttering "why did I join?" For Oaily demands are many. It takes time - edit staffers spend on the average anywhere from one to 14 solid hours a day here. It takes effort - tracking down stories is not always as easy as it sounds, and writing them up can be even worse. It takes stamina - nobody likes to see their brainchild edited. beyond recognition, but it's a rare article that remains untouched or uncriticized. It takes devotion - you've got to have real dedication to spend stretches of eight hours at a time doing the dirty work like proof-reading, headline writing, and errand running, but that's often what you do (when you're not reporting). In return, the Daily gives, you power, pride, people and about $35 a month. The power, such as it is, comes from being part of a newspaper with a circulation of 10,000 and an estimated reader- ship of 30,000. Although some may refer to The Daily as "that To join the Daily staff, visit the second floor of the Student Publications Building, 420 May- nard St. Daily rag," and "Dailyslant" is a well-known word in the Uni- versity's vocabulary, The Daily is carefully read for the mnost part. The pride, in a way, comes from having the power, but there's more to it than that. The Daily, with facilities worth $250,000, has one of the best- equipped c o 11 e g e newspaper shops in the country. The Daily's printers and their super- visor have all had years of ex- perience, and some have owned their own newspapers. The Daily has won awards for typography as well as for its reporting. The pride comes simply from becoming an accomplished re- porter, covering assignments ranging from a chat with stu- dents to official press confer- ences. Reporters have been assigned to all major anti-war and abor- tion reform demonstrations in Washington, to the trial of Black Pa'nther Bobby Seale and the Harrisburg Seven. This year The Daily has cov- ered the Presidential campaign, sending a team of reporters and photographers to cover primar- ies in Wisconsin, Rhode Island, California and New York, and both political conventions. The pride comes from having a 2 a.m. deadline - the latest of any paper in the state - and occasionally "scooping" the pro- fessional metropolitan papers with late breaking news. And pride comes at 3 a.m., watching the papers roll off the presses and knowing you're at least partially responsible for them. sports staff Known as the bastion of the Fourth Down and the Home of the Called Third Strike, the Daily sports staff is the largest collection of maniacal misfits, malcontents and misanthropes ever assembled this side of the Ganges River. The work is fun but fatal, and includes playing APBA baseball, the staff's na- tional pastime, playing spectator to the famous wrestling matches between the mighty Bubba Con- strictor and the revered Gorilla Greer, and travelling all over the country torcover such events as a basketball tournament at Madison Square Garden or Port- land, Ore., and reporting on the Rose Bowl., Butwall is not work with the sports staff. They form the most awesome squad to ever tred on a gridiron. Known as the Daily Libels, the men of Maynard are the proud owners of the world's longest winning streak, 713 games. a word from the darkroom This' being the year 126 of 4 Niepce (who invented us all) it is appropriate that a few words be said about photojournalists. We are the people who con- stantly try to answer the natural- ly empathetic question "What was it like?" Our search is for the best interpretation of an event in order to communicate its reality. Because of the inherent na- ture of Ann Arbor, The Daily en- compasses many diverse worlds. A normal harried day might in- clude shooting an art exhibit, an angry fired D.J., a Chinese forum, Allen Ginsberg doing his OMMMs, and a hockey game. It is an incredibly tense situation having a mere three hours to process everything, make con- tact sheets, coordinate with edit staff on the layout, and finally print the selected negatives. A photographer is devoid of such journalistic friends as an- onymity and invisibility. In an age when computerized data banks and wiretapping are stand- ard acts of repression, the pho- tographer is looked upon with suspicion. Itis not uncommon to be thrown out, chased W i t h epoxy to ruin a lens, or physi- cally assaulted when recording a volatile event, Alongside the J. Edgar para- noia. is the age of racism and sexism. Let it suffice to say that much frustration and token revo- lution is vented on the photog- rapher. And consequently, the particular nature of photojour- nalism makes for a half-crazed staff. While not trying to sound ped- antic, the photo staff is not a place for the neophyte. The job implicitly assumes technical and c r e a t i v e expertise. The strange quality of the printing process requires expert photog- raphy for even a mediocre rep- resentation. 4 , ' tj K Xtk .p. G6 TAR,., 3 ;STUDIO , I ;; ;} . >. <. yj: i WCBN:alterna radio by students INSTRUMENTS, ACCESSORIES, LESSONS INSTRUMENTS MADE AND REPAIRED By DIANE LEVICK Tired of Detroit radio stations and their top 40 or regressive rock formats? WCBN, the stu- dent-run University station, of- fers an alternative. WCBN (89.5 FM; 650 AM) is a carrier current station, mean- ing it broadcasts through spe- cial AM wires that go only to dorms. The FM broadcast goes out over the air to a potential Ann Arbor audience of about 100,000. Located in the basement of the Student Activities Building, WCBN dates back to the 1940's when each quad had its own station. These combined to form the Campus Broadcasting Network - thus the call letters CBN. In 1965, with a grant from the University, WCBN 209 S. STATE (Upstairs) 665-8001 -'I -- Textbook Reservation Blank for Pre-Registered Students (Save Up to V3 on Follett's Used Textbooks) moved to their present location and expanded. As for the FM station, "It was a dream of WCBN for many years," says- Program Di- rector Stuart Goldberg. The University Regents finally ap- proved plans in May, 1971. The station works on a block programming format - certain hours of each day are marked off for specific types of ,music. WCBN-AM has in the past offered a mixture of current popular, progressive rock and' oldies. This fall, programming will largely be determined by information gathered f r o i opinion surveys handed out to incoming freshmen at summer orientation. WCBN-FM, which started broadcasting just last January, will be in stereo in time for fall. , It's programming, like AM, is r not yet set. But Goldberg says that black programming will probably receive prime time- evening airing because of its popularity. In addition, FM carries live folk, often by performers from the 1 o c a 1 Ark coffeehouse. Broadway soundtracks, classi- cal, blues, jazz and rock music can also be heard. Last year's oldies show was Iespecially popular, bringing lis- teners back to the "glory that was Grease." In fact, WCBN co- sponsored the .all-campus sock hop at the end of last winter term. WCBN-FM and AM request phone lines - 761-3500 and 763-3500 respectively - give students an evengreater chance to hear what they want. This fall, Goldberg says, the AM station will be a "campus information station that peo- ple will be able to tune in to find out what's going on at the University at any time." In line with this new view of the AM station, and the fact that the FM station is licensed as "class D" educational by the FCC, WCBN plans to expand its news operation._ "For the first time this fall," Goldberg says, "we're going to have a Campus Information Service. Last year, WCBN's public service department ran shows on Gay Liberation, Radicales- bians, and birth control and abortion. The b 1 a c k programming, sports, news, and engineering departments welcome new stu- dents. "The black programming department produces a show called "Black Edition" which deals with the whole black question in society," Goldberg explains. in P rin -t lgocally A variety of publications are, to be found in Ann Arbor . . . just waiting for your readership and writing contributions. Other than the Daily, news- oriented publications include: -The Michigan Journalist, published 8 times annually by both graduate and undergradu- ate University journalism stu- dents. The twelve-page maga- zine prints mostly feature stor- ies and investigative reporting pieces, and is available free of charge at the Journalism de- partment office in 2040 LSA building. -The University Record, pub- lished weekly by the University, offers- t h e administration's point of view on various issues and contains feature stories on Oniversity programs, as well as a calendar of local events. The University Record is distributed Dept. Course No. Class No. -I- If you have an ambition to be a disc jockey, WCBN is the place to start. Students fill out a form for the training pro- gram, meet the chief announc- er, and are scheduled for use of the training facilities. Trainees learn the mechanics of the station and work on their presentation before cutting and submitting tapes for review and feedback. When a trainee's tapes are ap- proved by the disc jockey ad- visory committee, he or she re- ceives regular scheduled time on the air. Training for newscast- ers is similar. Goldberg notes that WCBN will be doing "remotes" this fall. All the equipment and records needed to do a regular show are transported to a par- ticular dorm's main lounge. The disc jockey does the actual programming from that dorm, hopefully provoking student in- terest in the radio station as well. ;i Narme' Home Street Address _ _t City 1 Prefer Q Good U State Jsed Q New Books Fill in This Card and reserve your books. We GUARANTEE to have the right books ready for you, as you indicate. (NO CASH REQUIRED) (ALL BOOKS FULLY RETURNABLE) Signed -- DELTA RESTAURANT CORNER OF PACKARD AND STATE Q We specialize in Greek food * Homemade baclava D Breakfast all the time 0 Sunday special- $2.00 dinner (baked ham or roast turkey) also includes beverage and dessert * Complete carry-out service 50c off on PIZZA( THURS. after 7 p.m. HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 7 a.m.-1 a m.; Fri. & Sat 7 a.m.-3 a.m. free on stands around the cam- pus. -The Ann Arbor News, pub- lished daily. The most promi- nent local non-University pub- lication, the News- offers good coverage of local news, but runs a f a i r 1 y innocuous editorial page, mostly commenting on non-controversial issues. --The Ann Arbor Sun, pub- lished weekly /by the Rainbow People's Party, offers a view of the street community, drugs and rock and roll, and presents fairly comprehensive coverage of what's happening around town. Copies are sold on the street; to sell the Sun and keep the profits, drop in at their of- fices in the Community Center on Washington St. There are also three local lit- erary magazines that offer sam- plings of poetry, prose, music photography and other art forms. These magazines are: -Generation, published spo- radically by the University. Re- cent financial problems have forced the magazine to print in tabloid format. -Anon, mpublished annually by University graduate students of the English department, is available at local book stores. -The Michigan Quarterly Review, published four times a year by the University Press, is available at local book stores. d Date FOLLETT'S 322 S. State St. Ann Arbor, Mich. 48108 a .4 Nom 1 i~~C31~i I I Don't fail to shop MUEHLI G'S Washtenaw County's Largest I "i' DRY GOODS STORE rz* I for famous name College-Dormitory BED SPREADS and other BLIMEY, MATE, DON'T MUCK ABOUT WITH FILTHY SUBSTITUTES get on down to LUCKiY JIM'S FISH AND CHIPS 1232 PACKARD OPEN: Mon., Tues., 5-8 Wed.-Sat., 122, 5-8 ., Student Room Furnishings such as Blankets, Pillows, Sheets, Towels, Shower Curtains, 111: 1 hill'i i. I AT Scatter Rugs, Yard goods, etc. D' DONUT WHOLE - - -U1ElIs