0 m Page 6 -The Michigan Daily Centennial Edition- Friday, October 19, 1990 0 Photographer turns law writer for NY Times 1st woman editor loses $3 and editorship by Jennifer Hirl Margolick by Sarah Schweitzer "So you think I've come a long way," queried David Margolick as he moved his rocking chair back and forth inhis 14th story apartment on 'New York City's West Side. Now a columnist for the New York Times, Margolick has certainly come a ways since his first dabble in journalism as a photographer for The Michigan Daily. Margolick's column, "At the Bar," which deals with quirky as- pects of the law and the legal profes- sion, appears every Friday in the New York Times. From time to time, Margolick also covers hard news stories concerning the law. Despite his success as a journal- ist, journalism was not among Margolick's future plans when he was a Daily staffer 20 years ago. Margolick joined the Daily pho- tography staff in 1971 when he was a sophomore. By his senior year, Margolick had been promoted to head photographer. Despite his love of photography, Margolick feared that he wasn't a good enough photographer to make a go of it professionally so he went to Stanford Law School. Upon completion of law school and faced with the prospect of having to actually practice law, Margolick kturned to writing for legal periodi- cals. Eventually he made his way to the New York Times as a law writer at the metro desk. A few years down the road, when the New York Times decided to publish a law page, Margolick was asked to write his weekly column which would be complete with a cartoon. While Margolick readily admits he considers himself lucky for having found a profession he loves and feels as passionately about as the day he started, he credits his humble beginnings at the Daily for fueling his love of journalism. "The Daily was like an oasis. On a large campus where it's hard to find your place, it gave me a place to go in between classes and fraternize with friends," Margolick said. It was at the Daily that Margolick was able to find the peo- ple with whom he felt most com- fortable. Margolick recalls the kin- dred spirit he felt with other Daily staffers because they were "interested in events, a little bit neurotic, color- ful, imaginative and not indifferent." While he clearly relishes the years of 1971-1974 which he spent at the Daily, Margolick can't help but lament his arrival at the tail end of what he terms the "heyday" of the Daily. By "heyday," Margolick refers to the period of the mid to late 60's when the Vietnam War and the draft were news items which had a direct and personal effect for many stu- dents. In order to keep up with de- velopments in the war, students turned to the Daily and thus thrust the Daily into the spotlight and made it an integral part of student life. The result of this newfound atten- tion and relevancy in the student body was an attraction of the bright- est and most talented students to the Daily staff. It was during this period that such illuminous names as Tom Hayden served as Editor. Despite regrets for missing the "heyday" of the Daily, Margolick was not completely exempt from the anti-war sentiments which fueled so many explosive news stories of the 1960's. In the spring of 1973, Margolick headed out to Route 23 to pho- tograph an anti-war protest for the Daily. While observing the crowd, Margolick was mistaken for a protestor and knocked to the ground by police. Margolick recalled that the other Daily photographer on the scene could not decide whether to take the picture or come to his res- cue. The picture in the Daily the next day of a police officer with a raised fist above Margolick's head serves as testament to that photogra- pher's decision. A framed copy of that photograph sits prominently on the wall of Margolick's apartment. In addition to violent brushups with police, Margolick's memories also include the fun Daily staffers had with the men who worked down- stairs at the printing presses. "All the men had middle American names: Myron, George, Arch, Merlyn, Kermit, Pete," Margolick said. "College is such an ivory tower and there were real work- ing class people. It was a taste of re- ality." In reflecting on the Daily in re- cent years, Margolick expressed re- gret that the Daily began to distribute papers for free in 1985 due to financially difficulty. "If people stopped reading the Daily because they couldn't rustle up a dime, it's sad. A college paper is a reflection of a community; if people don't go out for it and read it, it's a terrible indictment of the college campus," Margolick said. While David Margolick's journal- istic endeavors have carried him quite a distance from his starting point at the Student Publications Building, rocking back and forth, Margolick contemplatively and nostalgically remarked, "The Daily still is a home to me more than any other Ann Arbor institution." 1918 was a momentous year for the Michigan Daily. It was a year when American soldiers began fighting in World War I, but it was also the year the Daily hired its first female managing editor, Mildred Mighell Riorden Blake. The war was the catalyst which hastened Blake's move into the managing editor position. Since ev- ery male with significant experience at the Daily was sent to the service, the editor position was left open for a woman. "There was a student army train- ing corps in Ann Arbor that fall. The men were enlisted in it and they had to be in barracks and in bed be- fore the Daily went to press," Blake said. Blake said the male staffers al- ways treated her with respect. "I don't remember that there was any disrespect by the men on the Daily. I was doing the editorials and almost everyone agreed they were good edi- torials. And people respect some- body who is doing good work. I didn't feel that I had any complaints against my fellow workers at the Daily," Blake said. Blake's editorship, however, was not smooth sailing all the way, and soon enough hit rough waters. One night in January, after attending a concert, Blake came into the Daily. She found three students and an re- porter for the Detroit News playing a game of poker. Blake and the three others lost a little over $3 to a novice first-year student. "This was before the days of Thanatopsis and Inside Straight Club and the Algonquin Round Table, but even then, poker was part of a news- paper legend. All I remember is be- ing amused, a little startled. How- ever, the game was over, or so I thought," Blake said. The poker game on that cold Jan- uary night was not forgotten. The first year student who won the poker game wrote in, his journal: "Won $3.67 at poker.". Two days later the Board discov- ered the entry and took action against the staff. They did not approve of gambling at the Daily. "It just happened that at that time, there was a strong puritanic streak at the close of WWI and peo- ple were in a nervous state," Blake said. Soon after the incident, The De- troit Free Press published a story with a headline that read, "300 Stu- dents Involved in U. of M. Poker Scandal." "The Free Press couldn't believe the faculty could make such a fuss about one single game with only four players and a pot of only three or four dollars. In order to make a good story out of it, they multiplied it by a hundred - it didn't seem plausible to them that the faculty could make such a fuss about one game. They exaggerated it," Blake said. Despite the Daily staffers' protests that the incident was exag- gerated, students involved in the poker game were punished. One of the female students was ordered to be practically confined to the new Martha Cook Residence Hall for the rest of the year. She got married, however, and escaped. Blake was demoted to editorial writer for failing to report the poker incident. Rumors were spread that the game had been strip poker. "I heard that there were people who specu- lated that it must have been strip poker or the faculty wouldn't have been so upset. But actually that was not one of the charges against any- body. It just shows you how exag- gerations occur. People make an aw# ful big fuss about a small matter," Blake said. The poker uproar brought Blake's Daily years to a close. Soon after- ward, she went to work for the Adrian Telegram and married Vincent Riorden. Blake spent many years working for Young & Rubicam, where she won the 1941 Advertising Award fo "Advertising as a Social Force." Blake later became a founder of the World Federalist Association and vice president of the American Movement for World Government. Blake said that after more than 36 happy years of being "elderly," her favorite game is Scrabble, not Poker. Daily graduates prove once a journalist not always a journalist by Jennifer Hiri Over the past 100 years, more than 4,000 students have passed through the Daily working as edi- tors, reporters, and photographers. For many, the Daily was a vital part of their years at Michigan and set them on a course to a lucrative writ- ing career. Philip Slomovitz, a 1920 Uni- versity graduate, had a smooth tran- sition to print journalism after grad- uating from the University of Michigan. Slomovitz worked for the Detroit News for three years after re- ceiving his degree and then became a columnist for the Detroit Jewish Chronicle, which he later bought and renamed the Detroit Jewish News. Not all Daily alumni have chosen to work in print journalism, but rather have gone into other literary pursuits. Joseph Gies, a 1939 graduate, works with his wife Frances Carney Gies, a 1937 graduate, writing books about the Middle Ages. "I originally got interested in technology history and I had an idea for a book on the engineering his- tory of a city," Gies said. "My friend at Harpers' was looking for an au- thor for a book on a medieval city and so I began to look into it." Among the books Gies and his wife have written is one called Mar- riage in the Family in the Middle Over the past 100 years, more than 4,000 students have passed through the Daily working as editors, reporters, and photographers. For many, the Daily was a vital part of their years at Michigan and set them on a course to a lucrative writing career. tied Good Evening Mr. and Mrs. America: Walter Winchell and the Culture of Gossip. "It focuses on the evolution of the gossip column using Walter Winchell as the armature for how gossip arose, how it changed our sensibility, and how it affected our perceptions of the world," Gabler said. Gabler has also written an award- winning book titled How the Jews Made Hollywood. Gabler has re- ceived numerous awards for his work, including the Los Angeles Times Book Award and the Out- standing Work on Radio, Television, and Film. He was also nominated for the British Film Institute Award for one of the five outstanding books on media in the world. Many other Daily alumni have received notable awards for their work. Fred Neal, a graduate of 1937, re- ceived the Nieman Fellowship at Harvard for his work in journalism and has also received the Fulbright Fellow at the Sorbonne University in Paris. He has written for numerous papers, including the Trans Radio Press, the Omaha World Harold, the United Press, and the Wall Street Journal. The Daily, however, was not the starting point of Neal's career. "I wasn't new to journalism when I came to the Daily. My family ran a newspaper in Northville, Michigan, of which I was the editor on and off." During his years at Michigan, Neal continued to expand his experi- ence in journalism. "I did all kinds of things," Neal said. "I traveled around and I interviewed all the pres- idential candidates in 1936. It was a great experience, and of course it all helped in a great many ways." Top 18statesforDai6y alumni From sea to shining sea Michigan 734 New York 267 California 208 Illinois 196 Ohio 102 Flo rida 71 Marland P en ns/v an i a 5 Massa ch u sset ts 62 New Jersey 58 Washington D.C. 51 Connecticut 41 Vir inia Indiana 37 Missouri 30 A ri z on a 38 Wi sc on sin 23 Te xa s 23. Six years ago, he sold the Detroit Jewish News and was honored as the Editor Emeritus. "I started writing a column called "Purely Commentary" back in either '25 or '26 and it has not been inter- rupted for a single week and it's still appearing today," Slomovitz said. Although Slomovitz has recently suffered a loss of vision, he contin- ues to write his column. "I'm able to do typing which has to be very carefully watched, re-read by my reader who can sometimes change sentences," Slomovitz said. Ages, a main selection in the History Book Club. E U. Other Daily alumni have ventured into several of media related areas. Neal Gabler, a 1971 graduate who worked as a film critic for the Daily, is one such example. In 1982, Gabler replaced Roger Ebert in one episode on the Siskel and Ebert television show, "At The Movies." Today, Gabler is a fellow at the Gannett Center for Media studies at Columbia University and is working on a book that will tentatively be ti- Shoulder to the rock by Ronan Lynch As the sun sets on Santa Monica pier, people are making their way to the en- closed carousel, which is spinning mer- rily, throwing light out onto the board- walk. Small knots of street people are gathered near the door, mumbling at the passers-by - "Any spare change? Spare a buck, buddy?" Inside the carousel, Tom Hayden is also looking for money. He is raising funds for Proposition 128, the environ- The next morning, Hayden is sitting in his office, taking a break from the campaign. His environmental proposi- tion is taking a beating from the chemi- cal industry and its odd of passage are languishing at 50-50. He looks frus- trated. "All you do is wake up in the morn- ing and fight the power, as they say," he says, "and occasionally there's some syn- chronicity, you get progressive govern- ment and you can get somewhere. again. Hayden's battles began as a student in Ann Arbor, where he involved himself with The Michigan Daily. As an aspiring writer at the Daily, he enjoyed expressing himself in words, but was not comfort- able carrying a picket sign. His attitude changed over the summer of 1960 as he covered the civil rights protests. Rising to editor of the Daily that summer, Hayden wrote a series of articles proclaiming a "new student movement". Administration officials warned that he my journalist's notebook. King was say-,ad e ing that each of us had to be more than'* neutral and objective, that we had to make a difference. That was something I realized I always wanted to do." Back in Ann Arbor, Hayden became one of the seminal members of Students for a Democratic Society, which spawned the student movement of the sixties. He went to Mississippi in 1962 to partici- pate in voter registration drives, and was beaten and jailed. He is still remembered with hatred for his early opposition to i fv fmaw