TWO, THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1954 TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER U. 19M _., _, w ._ _ .. .., .,.,, IlX DAYS A WEEK: Daily Covers Campus News Events From the Managing Editor down a h mneestmemberh of he staff 'aining program, the aim o f [ichigan Daily members is to get ie news to the public, in the best >rm possible, and to present ac- * 7W ompanying intelligent e d i tor - i comment. The Michigan Daily, edited and zanaged entirely by University ;udents, is the most important ews agency for the campus and; ies never to lose sight of this , :; ict. It -has long been rated one S-the outstanding college dailies i the country. Now in its 65th year of publica- tion, The Daily boasts a complete printing plant, financial Independ- ence and a strong alumni group numbering hundreds of men and women in the publication field in this country and abroad. Staffed locally by more than 200 student editors, reporters and busi- ness staffers, The Daily offers com- plete campus and city coverage, plus Associated Press coverage of national and world events. Latest Deadline Published six days weekly-Tues- day through Sunday-during the school year, The Daily has the lat- est deadline of any morning paper in the state. The front page is put to bed at 2 a.m. and the cir- xilation department makes good on a promise of delivery before breakfast to subscribers. On the editorial page The Daily depends upon its staff members for signed contributions which rep- resent their individual opinions. The letters to the editor column is open to readers of The Daily as a public forum. All letters which are signed (and quite an attempt is made to make sure they are signed by actual persons), 300 words or less in length and in good taste are published. Interested Students In order to turn out a p a p e r which will continue to win national awards, The Daily is dependent upon having a group of students interested in publications work and willing to devote more time and effort than is generally demanded by a college activity. The senior editors are the policy -Daily-Duane PooleI THE SIX UNIVERSITY STUDENT PUBLICATIONS making body of the editorial staff, working in close conjunction with the senior members of the busi- ness staff. The managing editor has general responsibility for any- thing which appears in The Daily; the editorial director is in charge of the editorial page; the city edi- tor and his assistant handle local news assignments and direct the night editors; and the associate editors are responsible for the training programs. Tryouts, or new members, on The Daily editorial staff go through a two-to-three semester training program te learn the fundamentals of reporting,proofreading and head- line writing. After the first semest- er, they are assigned to the report- orial staff with responsibility for seeing that a particular beat is covered. Staff Selection From this staff, the night editors and their assistants-the junior staff--are chosen. Each night edit- or is in complete charge of the actual publication of the paper one night a week. The senior editors are selected from this staff. Both the junior and senior staffs of the business and editorial de- partments are selected by the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations upon recommendation of the managing editor or business manager and receive salaries. Parallel appointments as night editors and senior editors are made on the sports and women's staffs. Like the editorial staff, these staffs have training programs for new members to teach the funda- mentals of writing a sports story or information about local social events. New business staffers spend a large percentage of time getting ads, but also receive a great deal general business experience. Daily History The Daily was first published in the fall of 1890 by a group of non- fraternity men. Later, the staff was opened to all interested students. It showed its stamina by sur- viving its competitors in the field, and, after the turn of the century, it was purchased by the University. Shortly afterwards, it was moved from a small downtown print shop to the Ann Arbor Press building and the name was changed to The Michigan Daily. The present Student Publications Building, which houses one of the finest shops for a paper its size in the country, opened in 1932 and was financed largely by The Daily's earnings. It numbers half-a-million dollars worth of equipment, includ- ing an automatic AP setter, a Fairchild engraver and an excel- lent rotary press, among its assets. Board in Control The Daily is published by stu- dents under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations, which is made up of stu- dents elected by the campus at large and faculty and alumni ap- pointees. The Board does not censor edit- orials or news articles. The Daily has won numerous awards for excellence, including those given by the Associated Col- legiate Press, Sigma Delta Chi, and the National Advertising Serv- ice. All-American ratings, the highest prize among college news- papers neatly framed, line the walls of the senior editorial office. Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAI N PRICES Gargoyle Is A Magazine For People Of the People, By the People Girl: Hello, Thenobord. Boy: Hiya Jane. Girl: That's not my name. Boy: That's not my name either. Both: We must be two different people, stranger. Boy: What is Gargoyle? Girl: A mouthwash, stupid. Boy: Is it dirty? Girl: Yes. Boy: Is it clean? Girl: Yes. Voice: Then how can you tell them apart? Girl: Who are you, anyway? Voice: My name is Abe. Fore- score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this con- tinent a new nation conceived in liberty and.. .. Girl: That's pretty good. What's your last name, Abe? Abe: Humperdink. Boy: Tell us about Gargoyle. Upperclassman: Yes, who is this man Hitler, and what does he want? Boy: That's pretty good. What did you say your name was? Upperclassman: Upper. Voice: Gargoyle is published five times a year except Thursday. Other Voices: Gargoyle is funny. Ha ha. Other Rooms: Gargoyle is a quarter. All: Who was that lady I saw you with last night? Both: That was no lady, that was my wife. All: Ha ha. Ha ha ha hahaha ha he ho haha. Both: Haven't you heard that joke before? All: It's the way you tell it!!!!! Mother: David! How many times have I told you not to wade in the sink? David: Seventeen. Girl: I'm going to join Gargoyle! Boy: Gee. Girl: Why don't you join Gar- goyle too? Boy: I'd rather die. (he dies) Girl: Did you know that the next fun-packed issue of Gargoyle is coming out this very next Monday. Why I can hardly wait to get hold of that fun-packed issue! Abe: It's so nutritious! Girl: Your corner drug store will love it! Abe: Yum. Girl: How long does this have to go on? Abe: Another Inch. Girl: How many lines gf writ. ing to an inch? Abe: Four. Girl: You get the last line. Abe: So I do. 'Thought Control' Several recent surveys taken by the New York Times and Time magazine show that the rash of loyalty investigations has infring- ed upon academic freedom and im- posed silence and thought control on college faculties and student newspapers. ANNUAL YEARBOOK: Ensian Provides Picture Record of'U' Activities When students leave the Univer- sity, the most cherished memories they carry with them are of the bluebooks they passed, professors they liked, and the football games Michigan won.. All this, plus more, is recorded for posterity within the covers of the thickest book that leaves with them, the Michigan Ensian. This picture-packed annual year- book has become an inevitable part of everyone's college career, for if students don't start out with ideas of buying the Ensian, hooded monsters (only one of a number of successful sales gags employed in recent years) or simply determined house salesmen (working on a com- mission basis) will make sure that an Ensian is purchased. What's in a Name Copies of the big book with the name nobody understands flood the campus every year. Actually, Ensian is an abbre- viation of the full name of the publication, "Michiganensian."This name in turn evolved from con- stant mispronunciations of the o r i g i n a 1 title, "Michiganensis" meaning "sword of Michigan." Salesmen begin taking orders for the book every fall, and sales con- tinue throughout the year-with prices rising at intervals-climbing to the thousands. The student editorial staff and a host of staff photographers works year round filling the Ensian's 500 plus pages with material that var- ies from the recording of the Uni- versity's sports achievements to its developments in the arts and sciences. More than Pictures However, the publication is more than a picture book of University achievement. With each year's ef- fort displaying the attitudes of its staff toward the University, the copy is a fine blend of nostalgia, humor and critical appraisal. Ensian staffers have already be- gun work on next year's publica- tion. With editorial and junior staff positions already assigned, the major need of the book now is a group of freshman and sophomore tryouts. Operating on the "work to the top" basis, the editorial staff offers opportunities for pre- paring and asembling copy and photographs, typists, and those in- terested in layout and design. For people interested in the busi- ness side of publications, positions in contracting, accounting, adver- tising and selling are still available. Editors and business managers are selected from these groups after a suitable period of apprenticeship. Ensian, which has won many prizes for being the top yearbook in the country and area, got its start in 1897 when three inter-col- lege magazines merged. It has grown from a small pic- ture book to a comprehensive year- book that arouses considerable at- tention. To become a staff member, one needs no special skills but rather an aptitude for hard work and a lot of interest. Generation Features Art Of Students Writing, Other Forms Included Generation,campus literary mag- azine, offers creative writers in fiction, poetry, drama and the es- say an opportunity to see their work published; it also provides experience for students interested in editorial, business or art staff positions. Originally begun in 1950 as an adjunct to the Inter-Arts Union, Generation attracted wide atten- tion in its attempt to present an in- tegrated view of all the arts, for the magazine contains the work of student architects, musicians, painters, sculptors and photogra- phers, as well as creative writers. Staff Members Staff members need not neces- sally be contributors, though their work is welcome at all times. The job of the editorial staffs consists in choosing the manuscripts which are to be printed; the business staff solicits advertising, manages circulation and plans the sales campaigns; the art staff is respons- ible for designing the advertise- ments, the cover, the layout, and for choosing the student art which appears in Generation's pages. No experience is required to work on any of these staffs; new members are trained and after ap- prenticeship may seek promotions to editorial and managerial posi- tions through the Board in Control of Student Publications. Notice will appear in the Daily about the organizational meeting and all subsequent activities. Generation accepts manuscripts on a continuous basis and those who wish to contribute but not be- come members of the staff may bring or mail their work to the office on the first floor of the Stu- dent Publications Bldg. The magazine is published three times annually, with the first issue of the year due early in November. All persons interested in seeing a copy of the most recent issue can inquire at the Periodicals Room in the General Library or can ob- tain one at any of the local book- stores, where it sells regularly for 35 cents. Student Directory Put Out Annually The Student Directory, contain- ing the names, addresses and tele- phone numbers of all students on campus, is sold early each fall. In addition to the student sec- tion, there is a complete classi- fied section in the back of the directory, similar to the "Yellow Pages" of a telephone directory. The Student Directory sells for one dollar and is printed only once a year. Supplement Photos by Duane Poole " j Student Book Exchange Offers Chance To Buy Texts Cheaply GE ErA TIO magazine CONTRI BUTIONS: Please bring or mail manuscripts to Generation Office, Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard STAFF MEMBERS: inquire at Generation Office about openings on the editorial and business staffs. POETRY * DRAMA . FICTION . ART . ESSAY For a brief, hectic period of six days, the Student Book Exchange will again set up shop at the be- ginning of the approaching se- mester. This time, the base of opera- tions will be the quonset hut on the corner of East University and North University, near Waterman Gymnasium. With used textbooks for sale, the Student Legislature sponsored exchange will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Thurs- day, and Friday of registration week and Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of the first week of classes. Operating as a non-profit stu- dent service, the Book Exchange is actually a scrupulous middle- man between student buyers and sellers. Students turn their books into the Exchange after setting their own prices on them.' When a book is sold, the Ex- change deducts 10 per cent for operating expenses and the stu- dent gets a check for the rest. Books that are not sold by the Exchange may be retrieved by their owners during the second week of classes. Sales Still Possible Although many of the books which will be on the shelves at the quonset hut were collected from students last spring, students may also turn in their books for sale while the Exchange is open for business. The Exchange is one of the many services organized by the Student Legislature for the stu- dent body. At one time, the Ex- change was under the auspices of the Inter-Fraternity Council; but SL took it over a few years ago. It's most successful session was in February of 1954 when the Ex- change grossed approximately $7,- 200 between the fall and spring semesters. Working for another success this year, Harvey Freed, '56, assistant manager, and others helping out on the Exchange have been oc- cupied with the task of spread- ing information on the Exchange and what it is attempting to do ever since May. Urging all students, especially freshmen (because of the large supply of freshman books), to take advantage of the Exchange's lower prices, Freed said, "We can give students a good deal on books if they just stop in to see what we have. And we still need more books to sell," he added. Ike on the Press ... President Eisenhower said re- cently; "I would like to say to the editor of every single newspaper in the United States: You have a duty, to find the truth, and pro- ject it fearlessly, honestly, and to the utmost ability that your heart and head will allow." III a 4' -- - - : , _ ,I .I U I dtit EVERYONE IN ANN ARBOR d4 e0 1 '- 4, - r 1 SHOPS AT U I