PAOS VOTJrt
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1918.
PAGfl ~'OUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1918.
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MRS. T. L. STODDARD
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707 N. University
Phone 2652
AFTERTHE GAME
THE DANCE
HOT CHOCOLATE
LUNCHES SUNDAES
A BOX OF CHOCOLATES
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MICHIGIN 0DA I ISSUES I
EXTRA IN RECORD TIME
COMPLETE STAFF ORGANIZATION
FROM FIELD TO LINO-
TYPE
(By James C. J. Martin)
"Football Extra! All about the
football game!" cried the newsboys
this afternoon.
"How did The Daily get out an
extra one minute after the game?"
queried one of the gridiron fans com-
ing up State street from Ferry field.
Well, patient reader, this is the way
It is accomplished.
Special stories are assigned by the
editors several days before. They are
then written up by members of the
staff, set by the linotype man, proof
read, corrected slugs-lines of type
that have been reset-inserted, and
put in the forms. Pages two and three
are then "slapped on the press" and
"run off," which is otherwise known
as printed.
Now comes the exciting part of the
adventure. After the fourth page is
already in the forms, the great ma-
chine is in readiness for the remaind-
er of the task of getting out the extra.
A Michigan Daily man is stationed
in the press stand on Ferry field and
dictates a running story over the tele-
phone, which is connected to one of
the telephones in The Daily office. A
man at a typewriter in The Daily
pounds out the story as the other man
dictates it from the field.
Four men carry the copy from the
typewriter in The Daily office to the
linotype man who sets the story up as
quickly as it gets to the machine.
The story is then taken from the lino-
type machine and set in the forms
piece by piece.
As the game nears the close the
force carrying copy from the typist to
the linotypist in The Daily office works
with feverish haste. One minute be-
fore the whistle blows closing the
contest the "ribbon"-72 point type-
is put in the forms, which are in trn
taken to the press.
The second the game ends the typ-
ist in the The Daily office tells one of
the "copy runners," who in turn in-
forms the linotypist and the press-
man. The forms are then locked, the
"juice" turned on, the papers fed
through thepress, and the printed
extra rushed to the front office, which
is immediately sold to newsboys, who
in turn, sell them to the fans return-
ing from the game.
That's the way The Daily gets out
its football extra. Each year the extra
staff makes an attempt to beat the
record of those who have gone before
them. The record for speed of pro-
duction is now held by the 1917 M. A.
C. extra staff who succeeded in get-
ting the paper on the streets in 55
seconds after the final play was made.
Change of
Location
O.D.Morrill
has moved to
17 Nickels Arcade
(first floor)
next store to
Farmers & Mechanics Bank
where you will find the most
complete stock of high grade
Typewriterss
Supplies
Fraternity Die emboss-
ed Engraved and Soc-
ial Stationery in Ann
Arbor
Mimeographing
and Copying
on the typewriter a
specialty
Aggies' 01' Star
Hissing at Game
(By Henry R. O'Brien)
"Well," said the Old Grad, as he
glanced down at the yellow chrysan-
themums and brown eyes at his side,
then began watching the Aggies run
through their signals, "Let's see who's
here that we know. Carp Julian is
gone these three years, though they
do say that this man Graves is filling
his shoesnpretty well. The Miller
boys are not with us any more. And
Jerry De Prato won't punt for them
today; I wonder how well this Archer
will take his place. But as the years
roll on, I always feel at home at an
M. A. C. game. There is one familiar
face I always see." And he fell to
studying the Farmer tackles.
"What," he cried anxiously, as he
looked from the team to his program,
and then back to the field again,
dWhere's our old friend Blacklock? Is
he sick? Or what is the matter? I
thought the rule book said that no
M. A. C. game is legal without him.
Hughie gone? It won't seem like a
real game any more.'"
The Old Grad was not the only one
on the field today who missed Hugh
Blacklock. The Grand Rapids Scotch-
man was a fixture in Aggie athletics.
He climbed onto the Green team away
back in 1913, when for the first time
in history they beat the Maize and
Blue. He was with them again in the
13itter 3-0 game at Lansing in 1914.
He romped along in the 24-0 defeat
the Aggies administered a year later,
and he captained the team that in
1916 fell 10-0 before Cliff Sparks. His
opponents admit that he always play-
ed a healthy game in the line.
The big tackle became a tradition
in Michigan. Men played against him,
graduated, and years later sent their
sons back to fight him. Then the Ag-
gie eligibility rules came in, and Hugh
Blacklock had served his time.
Union Feeds Thousands Daily
Three times a day 3,619 men are
fed at the Michigan Union, about 600
of these in the navy mess room and
the rest in the army. The Michigan
Union is under a contract with the
government to feed these men and
they are allowed 46 cents a day per
man to do this. Thus it is only be-
causetof the large scale upon which
it is run that they can feed these men
at 15 cents a meal.
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Michigan
BUSY BEE
Will You Toast Michigan?
Can You Make A Rhyme?
BUSY BEE
offers a five pound box of candy for the
best, original
TOAST TO MICHIGAN
mailed to us before midnight of November
27. Contest open to every man and woman
in the University
Come on now-show your loyalty and
TOAST MICHIGAN
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