THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FOUR-SECTION ONE r TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY __________________________i A Half-Century In Retrospect: The Daily's 50th Anniversary "Going Our Way?" Edited and managed by students of the tiniversity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Assolated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class mail matter. Subcriptions during the regular school year by carrier $4.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publisbers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON * LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40 Editorial Staff Hervie Haufler . Alvin Saraso~in. Paul M. Chandler Karl Kessler Milton Orshefsky Howard A. Goldman Donald Wirtchafter BEther Osser Helen Cormnan . . . Managing Editor . Editorial Director . . . AoCity Editor . . . Associate Editor . . . Associate Editor * . * Associate Editor . . . . Sports Editor S . . EWomen's Editor * .Exchange Editor (Continued from Page 1) hazing, and the oceans of praise heaped on Coach Yost; more and more names familiar to present-day students in the University ap- peared in the advertisements. All this time The Daily reported only, campus news. Even presidential elections were reported only from the campus angle, and such stories appeared only at the bottom of page one. A six-column paper was first published in 1911. At that time The Daily began to look something like what it is today. In that year, too, 'Official newspaper at the University of Michigan" first appeared on the masthead on the editorial page. A year later the first wire news appeared in The Daily. The Detroit News Service sent in reports on important events, and this ser- vice led to The Daily's first big "spread" on a presidential election: a two-column headline, "Wilson Elected." But a fire in Dayton, O., in the same year rated twice as big a headline! "Union Campaign Begins With A Rush," was The Daily's first banner headline on page one. It appeared Oct. 5, 1915, and it started the campaign to raise money to build the pres- ent Men's Union. WOR THE FIRST 18 MONTHS of World War I, The Daily reported war news only from the campus angle. Interviews with facul- ty experts on military and political affairs filled the pages. Then, late in 1915, telegraph news service (in this case by the New York Sun) came to The Daily to stay. From that time on, national and international news com- manded more and more space in Daily pages. In 1915, for example, bold headlines told of Pershing's expedition into Mexico to punish Pancho Villa, and of President Wilson's pro- tests to the German Kaiser about unrestricted submarine warfare. A December 1, 1915, headline read "Students Endorse (compul- sory) Military Training By Slight Margin." In 1916, The Daily received day and night wire news service from United Press. In that year, the close Wilson-Hughes election was explained in The Daily by three banner head- lines on three successive days: "Hughes Wins In Heavy Vote," "Election In Doubt," and "Choose Wilson Again." A year later, Associated Press began an un- interrupted 23-year service to The Daily. On April 5, 1917, The Daily brought the news to campus that "Senate Passes War Motion." The war had some effect on Daily personnel, as 1918 saw one of the two feminine managing editors in The Daily's history. Nov. 11, 1918 was literally a "banner day" in Daily history. Four "extras" appeared on the streets that day, each with a headline four inches high emblazoned across the top of page gone. These headlines gave The Daily's ac- count of one of the most eventful days in American history: "Foch Gets Hun Reply," "Huns Sign Document," "Congress To Hear Terms," and "Terms Out." The University's Board governing The Daily was incorporated into the Board in Control of Student Publications in June, 1919. Since that date, "Board in Control of Student Publica- tions" has appeared on The Daily's masthead. The Daily Official Bulletin was first pub- lished in The Daily in the fall of 1919. Two years later The Daily was again enlarged to include seven columns across the front page. From about that time on, The Daily began to look like the average newspaper sold on the streets. DURING the last two decades, The Daily has given to presidential elections the same space and attention ordinarily given by a town newspaper. "Harding's Election Assured," "Coolidge and Dawes Sweep Nation," "Hoo- ver Wins," "Roosevelt Wins In Democratic Landslide," and "Roosevelt Sweeps 45 States To Triumph" were the headlines telling Daily readers the results of the last five presidential votes. Just before the 1924 election, The Daily published a, feature section headlined "Cam- paign Issues From Three Camps." In this sec- tion were three articles, each written by a facul- ty member, giving each candidate's (Coolidge, Davis and LaFollette) answers to campaign questions. "Hurry Up" Yost resigned his coaching du- ties in 1927, in order to devote more time to the athletic directorship. This year will be his last in the latter post; and, at this time, as it did 13 years ago, The Daily wishes to pay tribute to the Grand Old Man of Michigan Football, noting in passing that throughout most of its 50 years of continuous publication The Daily has had the privilege of heaping merited praise upon him. In the fall of 1932, The Daily took on its present appearance. Since then, Daily head- lines and general make-up have been the same. (ONE MAN, long associated with the Univer- sity and for a short time with The Daily, has said that "Throughout its 50 years of con- tinuous publication, The Daily has in general influenced student opinion in the right direc- tion." He adds that "Students have a right to express their own opinion, and whatever that opinion may be, the University will profit by its free expression." The editors of the 1941 Michigan Daily, like their predecessors in the last 50 years, stand solidly on that principle. They look forward to another 50 years of progress and achieve- ment for that little newspaper of 1890 that hasn't stopped growing. And The Michigan Daily launches another half-century of what it hopes will be genuine service to students and alumni of the University of Michigan. I A - ~ '~ ~ * ~ ~., $c. -' t.~'.. ~ A' s Z, n a- : - fr 'r : '