0 The, Page 8 -The Michigan Daily Centennial Edition- Friday, October 19, 199 Michigan Daily t f_ 100-year traditions of bars, burgers, and beer busts* by Daniel Poux Staffers and stories have changed over the years but one Daily tradi- tion has remained unchanged: the staff's need to blow off steam after a busy night putting out the paper, and their inexplicable desire to spend what little free time they have with - who else - other Daily staffers. Daily alumni from different eras have varying recollections of how exhausted staffers unwound after the paper was sent to press. Joe Gies, Book, Night, and Associate Editor from 1936-39, said when he and the other staffers in the thirties finally finished writing and editing the next day's paper around 2 a.m., they would head over to the Baltimore Daily Lunch diner on State Street to grab a burger and a Coke. p; Gies said Daily staffers in the thirties also held a "beer bust" once a year for the recipients of the sev- eral Daily scholarships at the Pretzel Bell restaurant. After World War II, things ap- Nickel Cokes couldn't be beat by Erica Kohnke Back in the good old days, there were five-cent Cokes at the Daily. These were extraordinary drinks, en- cased in addictive, ten-ounce bottles and dispensed from an archaic ma- chine. By 2 a.m., when the editors finished for the night, the bottles covered the city desk. The story of the Coke machine is one that floods Daily alumni with emotion; it is a tale of "essence, nostalgia, and tradition" for Peter Mooney, an opinion page editor who graduated in 1988. "It was one of those cool Daily anachronisms, Along with the old typewriters." The Coke machine had its begin- nings in the late thirties, when the 'Board for Student Publications estab- dished a contract with the Daily in which it promised to subsidize the five-cent Cokes as long as the ma- chine lasted. By the sixties, it had become a "favorite challenge" to maintain the machine and the tradition of the Cokes. Daily staffers recruited students from the School of Engineering to craft parts for the ancient motor and "spot-weld" the decaying insides, which were the result of serious metal fatigue. Staffers located the unique, out- dated bottles needed for the Coke machine in distant lands such as Bo- livia and Calgary, Alberta. These peared to have settled down around the Daily. Leon Jaroff, staffer during the late forties and the 1950 manag- ing editor, said the staff remaining at 1 a.m. frequently went home to their dorms or fraternity houses and skipped the traditional midnight snack "because it was so late, and we all had class the next morning." "Most of the time we just sat around at the Daily building after deadline and hashed out the events of the day over a few beers," Jaroff said. The Daily staff hangout changed again in the late 1950s. Peter Eckstein, Editor-in-Chief in 1958, said, "by 1:30 or 2 a.m., there weren't too many staffers left in the building so the few senior and asso- ciate editors would head over to (the now-demolished) Red's Rite Spot for some burgers." The 1960s were a period of ten- sion and rebellion, around the coun- try, the campus and the Daily. But amidst the campus protests and struggles with the Board, "whoever was still around at 2 a.m. would head over to Cottage Inn on William for a pizza," according to Ronald Klempner, Associate Opinion Editor in 1968. The switch from typewriters to computers in the 1980s made the process of putting out a paper easier, but Dailyites still needed to cool down after their 11:45 deadline. reduced five-day format, only putting out a paper on weekdays. Miller said it was quite strange when a group of staffers suddenly found themselves together at a Friday night party a few weeks after the switch. "We couldn't believe that it was a Friday night and we weren't all at the paper," Miller joked. 'We went to parties together, movies together, we even sat together at football games' -Leon Jaroff, Managing Editor, 1950 celebration used to be in May, Gies said, and it "depended upon the de- cisions by the Board (for Student Publications)." If the student staffers approved the Board's choices, there was a celebration. But if the choices were unpopular, the incoming edi- tors were greeted with cold shoul- ders. The editorial changing-of-the- guard continued to take place at the end of the school year, and the staff party moved back to the Pretzel Bell restaurant, said Leon Jaroff. "The party was to celebrate both the end of the school year, as well as the new editors taking over," Jaroff said. Sometime in the mid-60s a new tradition began which continues to this day. After finishing their final production night at the Daily, outgo- ing editors climb up into the Student Publications Building attic. There they deposit their press passes and carve or paint the walls with their initials. It is strictly forbidden for a staff member to visit this sacred site until the final night of his or her ca- If there is one aspect of the Daily which never changes, it is the close- ness of the staff. All the alumni in- terviewed recalled that Daily staffers spend a great deal of time together outside the walls of the Student Publications Building. "We would go out a lot, and it, seemed like we were always going to a Daily party," Miller said of the early eighties. Leon Jaroff agreed with Miller. The staff in his day appeared to have spent even more time together. "We went to parties together, movies to- gether, we even sat together at foot- ball games," he said. Jaroff still keeps in touch with his* fellow City Editor and other senior staffers he worked with during his day. "A lot of friendships made back on the Daily have lasted for 40 years," he said. reer with the Daily. Tom Miller, a Daily staffer from 1982-85, was responsible for the switch. Miller said the staff would head over to the Old Town bar on E. Liberty for beers before heading home to begin their classwork due the next morning. The paper also changed its circu- lation schedule during Miller's tenure, from publishing six days a week, Tuesday through Sunday, to a And if you're wondering where the current Daily regime heads after the final nightside of the week, you can find them at Ashley's on State Street Thursdays after the 11:50 p.m. deadline. Eu. These days, the mid-year transi- tion from old editors to new is cele- brated at a party which is the social event of the year for Dailyites. The Staff romance 0) occurs on a 'Daily' basis 30 years ago 1960 staffers produce the paper on the news room's old city desk. In the center are famed sixties activist TomI Hayden and Susan Jones, editor of "Special to the Daily," an anthology of 100 years of Daily stories. bottles were then shipped to the Ann Arbor Coca Cola bottling plant and filled 'specially for the Daily. The staffers were "at five cents a pop, addicted to the stuff' according to Stephan Berkowitz, a sociology professor at the University of Ver- mont who wrote for the paper during the 1960s. The strange bottles were "virtually indestructible" Berkowitz said in reference to a game known as "Coke-bottle bowling," in which few of the rare Coke bottles were broken despite the rough nature of the game. Advertisements in the Daily re- cruiting people to join the paper in 1962, . when the machine still charged a hefty nickel per pop, in- cluded the following: "You'll get a chance to see your name in print just as fast as you can write it, buy ten cent cokes for a nickel, and learn the In the mid-60s, the price began rising and eventually reached a high of 35 cents in the summer of 1988, when the demise of the machine was deeply lamented by all. It was re- placed, overnight, by a "commercial monstrosity," according to Kristine LaLonde, one of only six present Daily staffers to have used the ma- chine. The same style of Coke ma- chine found in such shady neighbor- hoods as Meijer's and South Quad was installed in the front lobby. was installed in the front lobby. It was not a staff decision to dis- pose of the relic, nor was it a wel- comed measure, said LaLonde. LaLonde described it as her greatest moment of wrath at the Daily and responded to the decision to eliminate the Coke machine by posting a profane message on the new machine which she described as "horrible, commercial, and crass." Susan Wellman, a 1966 Michi- gan graduate and Daily alumna, considered it a "trademark of the place" and was "appalled that anyone got rid of it. It should still be stand- ing, encased in gold, like a little museum piece." by Julie Foster Longing glances across news desks, soft whispers in meeting rooms, sharing five-cent cokes, hold- ing hands in the library. Over the years, the Daily has be- come more than just a place to write articles, hold political arguments, and hand out story assignments. For many, the Daily has been a haven for romance. Granted, the Daily, with its grey carpet, black steel staircase, wooden tables, and cream-colored walls cov- ered with old newspapers, sign-up sheets and phone messages, may not be as romantic as Paris in spring- time. But it does have its own special magic. "You saw those people in that building more than you saw your roommate," said Diane Kohn, who met her husband Howard at the Daily. In 1970, the production deadline of the Daily was 2 a.m. Kohn, who lived way across campus, said she often slept on the bench at the Daily to avoid the long walk home. "To a lot of us there, the Daily was sort of a co-ed fraternity or sorority," she said. Barney and Delores Laschever, who worked at the Daily in the 1950s, met at the critique board. "In those days the city editor would put a critique on the board and we would have to initial it to prove we had read it. I had not yet met her (Delores) and I was standing behind her, reading my critique and I ini- tialled it. She turned around to see who had such a strange name," Laschever said. Michael Wolff also took advan- tage of the Daily routine to meet his match. Helene, his wife, said, "He asked me for our first date while we were looking at the sign-up sheet." If Daily romances didn't spark in- side the actual building, chances are they were begun when staffers con- ducted interviews or covered rallies or political protests. 1951 Editorial Director Roma Connable met her husband Alfred Connable Jr. while she was covering a speech given by Regent Alfred Connable. When she introduced her- self as a Daily staffer to him, the re- gent said, "Oh, I'd like you to meet my son." While romances have always said. She also said that many ro-f manes began because female staffers needed men to walk them home in time for curfew. Olnick lived in the Martha Cook Building. She said her husband-to-be came to eat dinner with her one evening after working on the printer at the Daily and he had, "...ink all over his hands. The president of the dorm asked him to clean up a little bit first and told him to wear a whitc.@ shirt next time," she said. Diane Kohn said that before 1967, few women worked on sports staff. "In 1967 the sports editor de- cided to recruit women to work on sports staff because he thought he could get men to write that way," she said. The plan backfired. Suzanne Noveck, the 1972 Sales Manager, said very few male sports staffers dated female sports staffers. "The females tended to be more interested in the jocks they were interviewing," she said. "In 1967 the sports editor decided to recruit women to work on sports staff because he thought he could get men to write that way 0 1890 Daily: ads on top of the front page -Former Daily staffer Diane- Kohn 1ST DECADE 'Ibntinued from Page 1 vifhile a year's subscription cost :0.50. g However, the paper's initial staffers realized that without a sound financial base their publication would quickly fold. It wasn't until its second decade that the paper be- came financially stable enough for advertisements to be moved off the front pages and below the text. Front page advertisements were the norm for the paper in the 1890s. The inaugural edition featured an ad in the upper left hand corner for, ironically enough, Roehm and Sons: Makers of Fraternity Pins. Despite the early editors' attempts to make the Daily "so newsy... no one could afford to be without it," the portion of the paper that sports' coverage was heavy dur- ing the paper's initial years. Sports covers and previews commonly ran as the lead story. The lead story in the first paper was a feature on the University rugby (football) team. Stories about the "varsity nine" (baseball team) and the annual campus tennis tourna- ment commonly copped the paper's top spot. In fact, the exploits of Mich- igan's foot-ball (hyphenation was removed during the late 1890s) team were considered important enough to warrant the first special edition of the Daily. It detailed the Michigan eleven's 56-10 thrashing of an Albion college squad. U.. M Wesleyan College where men were allowed to call on women in their dormitories, and announcements of the foundings of Stanford University and the University of Chicago. "Whoop-De-Doodle-Doo" pro- claimed a headline in 1891. The story that followed was an enthusias- tic account of the adventures enjoyed by the Rocky Mountain Club on its trip to Colorado. The activities of a wide variety of campus groups often found their way into the pre-turn-of- the-century Daily. A story that appeared in an 1891 edition of the Daily described a brawl that broke out between the medics of the classes of 1893 and 1894. Apparently one of the younger The more things change, the more things stay the same. Opinion pieces in the the U. of M. Daily of- ten sound alarmingly familiar to those of today. "We do not know that these men were under the influence of alcohol, but can account for their reckless use of fire arms in no other way. Such conduct cannot be too severely cen- sured, the more so that it was in the very shadow of the University," could have as easily been written about the 1989 post-NCAA tourna- ment riots as the 1897 disturbances they actually described. Imagine, on the other hand, to- day's Michigan Daily running an ed- itorial before a regents' meeting similar to this one that ran in 1898: In one case, the tradition of work- ing together on a newspaper stuck. Elizabeth and John Sinkevics, staffers in 1979, currently work to- gether at The Grand Rapids Press. They said the Press is different from the Daily because it is more like a job and less for fun. "We don't stay A up until 3 a.m. discussing the issues of the day," Elizabeth said. The Sinkevics romance~ began outside of the Daily when a mutual friend and Daily staffer introduced them. Although this was when they first met, John claims, "I had my eye on her for a while but she was dating someone else at the time." Their romance became a scandal of sorts because the man she was dating'