GE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY .ATEST DEADLINE IN THE STATE: The Daily Covers Every Aspect of News milli I World, National, Campus Every important news event is covered by the Daily. Two Associated Press teletype machines go on at 3 p.m. six days a week to bring the campus in- formation on what is happening throughout the world. The Daily's 2 a.m. deadline, the latest in the state, makes it pos- sible to put last-minute news on student breakfast tables when no other morning paper has it. Through its membership in the Associated Press, unusual for a college. paper, The Daily caA bring news on national and state events as well to its campus readers. A staff of student reporters numbering more than 60 Covers campus and local events, so that The Daily's news pages are able to keep 'students informed on matters that directly affect them. A staff member is also often sent to cover events of national sig- nificance. , s * EDITING-Night desk is a hubub of activity as the night editor, sitting in the middle of the semi-circle, edits stories and places them on a page with signifying marks on the page dummy. Staff members seated around the desk write headlines, rewrite stories and proofread. * Features Though a staff member's chief responsibility is being forever alert for news, he often works on feature stories about campus and city personalities, institutions and anything else that promises to make interesting reading. Ann Arbor, with the University its main attraction, is recognized as a gold-mine of story material. The University, by itself, could provide enough fascinating stor- ies to fill a set of encyclopedias if there were enough people to write them. The Daily writes as many of them as it can, and still tries for more. * * * s Editorials A staff member may also express his opinion onany topic by writ- ing for the editorial page. Its edi- torial page is what most distin- guishes The Daily from other college papers, for its editorials .represent the views of only the writer whose name is signed to the editorial. The Daily never has had an editorial policy. The reason for this is that The Daily recognizes that freedom of expression is necessary for intel- lectual growth. In fact, The Daily encourages the expression of di- vergent views through its editor- ials and Letters to the Editor col- umn. The editorial page, besides staff members' opinions and interpre- tations of the news, contains the writings of nationally known col- umnists, notably Drew Pearson and Walter Lippmann, and the clever cartoons of The Washing- ton Post's Herblock. * Magazine To provide even more reading enjoyment for the campus, The Daily last year experimented with a Sunday Magazine section that appeared roughly every three weeks. The venture was well re-; ceived by the campus and proved, worthwhile, so that the Sunday, Magazine will be a regular feature, this year. The Sunday Magazine contains articles on art, music, books, sports, personalities and many other subjects. An issue often de-i votes several pages to different ar-1 ticles on the same topic, such asI student travel.l Daily Offers Opportunities To All Students If you enjoy' meeting inter- esting and famous people, would like to learn first-hand the operation of a newspaper, and can withstand large quan- tities of cigarette smoke, you should join The Daily staff. A unique aspect of The Daily is that it is both a morn- ning newspaper and an extra- curricular activity. It depends upon student volunteers for its staffs, so that any academ- ically eligible student is not only welcome, but also encour- aged to stop at the Student Publications Building and in- quire about becoming a Daily staff member. Students may join the gen- eral news staff, the sports staff or the women's staff on the editorial side, or the busi- ness staff for the financial part of newspapering. Meetings for 'prospective staff members will be held during the first week of class- es at times to be announced in The Daily's first issue. Students Take Care Of Finances The Daily, like any newspaper, is also a business; and the busi- ness side of The Daily is like- wise handled by students. The Daily Business staff is res- ponsible mainly for keeping the paper financially above water, be- cause The Daily is a self-support- ing, non-profit organization. Advertising and circulation rev- enues make The Daily possible. Duties of the business staff include soliciting advertising, selling sub- scriptions and financing, Operating under a busines manager, the staff is segmented for work in various departments: local advertising, classified adver- tising, promotions, contracts, cir- culation and accounting. Student staff members gain experience in writing advertising, layout and de- sign and in general newspapei business practice. The Daily has a gross income of approximately $115,000 annually. * Plant Revenues in the past have pro- vided The Daily with its own phy- sical plant in the Student Publi- cations Building, one of the fin- est plants for a newspaper the size of The Daily, in the country. Besides a five-year-old, $100,- 000 rotary press, there are four linotype machines, a Fairchild en- graver, mat rolling and plate cast- ing equipment, and a complete line of typography - everything needed to produce a newspaper. * Board in Control The Daily is published under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications, an agen- cy of the University Board of Re- gents. The Board has concerned itself mostly with financial matters but serves as an intermediary between the editorial staff and the Univer- sity as well. However, it does not attempt to censor editorial or news articles, which is true also with its relations with the other four publications under its jurisdic- tion. " History Besides being recognized as one of the best, The Daily is the na- tion's oldest college newspaper in terms of continuous publication. It was first published in the fall of 1890 by a group of non-frater- nity men, and later opened its staff to all interested students. Surviving its competitors, itwas purchased by the University short- ly after the turn of the century. It was later moved from a small, down-town print shop to the Ann Arbor Press Building and finally to its present location in 1932. Former Daily editors and re- porters who have achieved nation- al and international fame are New York's ex-governor Thomas E. Dewey, Chicago Tribune publisher Chesser M. Campbell, Stan Swin- ton, Chief of the Associated Press RomerBureau, and Arthur Miller, author of "Death of A Salesman." ASSOCIATED PRESS-A reporter reads the latest international and national news as it comes off the Associated Press teletype. The Daily's 2 a.m. deadline permits it to get the latest teletype news on its pages. The Daily is one of the few college papers with a teletype service. I 41 AD LAYOUT-Business staffers solicit advertising to provide revenues for The Daily's operation. Here a staff member is placing ads on a page dummy, arranging them for a neat display that will leave sufficient room on the page for news and feature articles. REPORTING-Student reporters check every day for assign- ments. Here a reporter stands by to follow up a story tip received on the telephone. Material for the magazine is written by Daily staff members and others who wish to write only for the magazine section. * s * !r Staff Accomplishing all this indicates a bee-hive of activity in the Stu- dent Publications Building, and implies a large staff organized to work efficiently. A senior staff of seven directs The Daily's activity. It has the responsibility of maintaining a smooth-working and meaningful newspaper. A junior staff of night editors and assistant night editors han- dles the bulk of the work. A night editor is responsible for putting out the entire paper one night a week. In addition, night editors and assistants each cover one or more major news beats. Rewrites, soph staffers, and try- outs round out the staff. The first two of these are also assigned to news beats and are expected to help the night editor put out the paper one night a week. Tryouts spend their first semester learning the fundamentals of headline writing, proofreading and report- ing before they become soph staff- ers and begin to put to use what theyhave learned. * Sports A separate staff, headed by a sports editor, reports the results of all University athletic events. Daily sports writers follow the various teams through their prac- tice sessions, report on their prog- ress and often go along on road trips. The sports page often presents interviews with coaches and fea- ture articles on the University's outstanding athletes. Senior sports editors periodically write columns in- which they discuss some aspect of Michigan or national sports. An attempt is also made to keep students up to date on national sports happenings, especially dur- ing the football and baseball sea- sons. * Womens The Daily's women's staff is also a separate unit responsible for one, sometimes two, pages a day. In recent years, the staff has prid- ed itself on producing an activi- ties page, rather than a women's page. News and feature angles of all campus organizations and their work is covered, with emphasis on social activities. Composed only of coeds and di- rected by a women's editor, the staff writes news stories, feature articles, interviews with campus and visiting personalities and spe- cial picture-pages. Coeds also. learn headline-writing, proofread- ing and page make-up. Another separate staff provides The Daily with pictures to go with its stories. Daily photog- raphers have the use of The Dai- ly's own darkroom and two Speed- Graphic press cameras, one just recently acquired. Photographers are called upon to work with reporters on news and action photos and feature pic- tures, and sometimes find a whole page of their art published. They cooperate with the general news staff, the sports staff and the women's staff. * Radio In addition to their regular du- ties of putting out a daily news- paper, Daily staff members in- terested in radio present a nightly newscast over Ann Arbor station WHRV. Presented at midnight Monday through Friday, the program is a five-minute roundup of campus, national and international news, including the latest sports results. It is broadcast from The Daily's editorial office. * s * * Awards The Daily has become recogniz- ed as one of the best college news- papers in the country, and one .of the top dailies of its circulation, LINOTYPING-Four Linotype machines are among The Daily's equipment. Here, Linotype oper- ators are busy setting in head type stories sent downstairs by the night editor. After a story has been set, the lead type is inked and checked by a proofreader. The next step is putting the lead type in a page form. 4f A! Y.. } ; ; ' t's d ": RR . tq. .:..... " P Oe&d c .a .t : : ;:;: rs "'k::S:::+ : :... -- -- --- -- --- -