The Daily Bruin isnt printing this quarter, but this isnt the first time weve scaled back on print production.
Just this week, the Daily Bruins upper management announced that the Daily Bruin would cease print production through the end of the 2019-2020 academic year, in light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
After all, it doesnt really make much sense to print 6,000 copies of a student newspaper every day when most of the student body has left campus and instruction is entirely remote.
Originally, managements plan was to cease printing until April 10 in line with the schools initial plans to return for in-person instruction by week three. But the ever-changing nature of the pandemic has lead to the extension of remote instruction and, consequently, the extension of digital-only production for the Daily Bruin.
The Daily Bruin staff had to make a similar decision regarding print production back in the 1940s, when the United States entered World War II. In Aprils updated letter from the editors, The Bruins upper management notes that this is the first time since World War II that the paper has ceased to be printed five days a week. However, this is the first time in our entire history that the paper has ceased printing entirely during the war, the paper continued printing three days a week, on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
While the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on The Bruin certainly draws parallels to that of World War II, the situation necessitated different responses in the way the paper scaled back its print production. The response to the current situation came relatively swiftly, but in the 1940s, the shifts in the papers production cycle were much slower and evolved throughout the course of the war.
As UCLA alumnus George Garrigues noted in his history of the Daily Bruin, the U.S. entered World War II right around the same time students were gearing up for finals. Late in the evening on Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, the papers staff scratched its original layout for Mondays front page and replaced it with a number of articles about the bombing of Pearl Harbor from the United Press wire service with the bold-faced headline Japan Declares War!
Print production didnt slow down right away. Through the end of the semester this was decades before the university switched over to the quarter system, of course Garrigues writes that war news blanketed The Bruins front page.
The paper did produce a shortened version on Dec. 11 this was, however, unintentional. During wartime, governments across the world used to impose blackouts, during which lights would be shut off for short periods of time, in an effort to prepare for potential attacks as well as to make it more difficult for bombers to navigate urban areas that would normally be well-lit at night. Garrigues writes that the first U.S. blackout of the war struck Southern California on Dec. 10, 1941 and the Daily Bruin editors had to publish a shortened three-page paper, composed of a broadsheet front page and two compact tabloid pages following it.
Due to the loss of time during last nights blackout the Daily Bruin today appears in a form unique in the annals of journalism a three-page paper, wrote the then-Editor-in-Chief Malcolm Steinlauf on the front page of the paper.
It wasnt until 1943 that the papers print format began to change for good. As staffers were drafted into the war, the size of the staff shrank, and so did the paper. On Jan. 4, 1943, The Bruin switched from the lengthy broadsheet layout it had been printing for decades before and as it is typically printed today to a smaller tabloid one, comparable in size and shape to that of papers like LA Weekly.
Later that year, the paper shifted to printing only three times a week. Following the publication of the papers 1943 Registration Issue, The Bruin began publishing three times a week during the week of July 5 (Interestingly, The Bruin only publishes a paper once a week during summer sessions nowadays).
In terms of wartime content, Garrigues notes that The Bruin took a largely liberal stance, with especial opposition against the internment of Japanese Americans; conservative groups in particular, those investigating communism at UCLA did not look upon The Bruin favorably. Then-dean Earl J. Miller even went as far as saying that UCLA would be better off without a school newspaper entirely, Garrigues writes.
Luckily, Miller didnt get his way as we all know, the paper survived opposition from conservative admins and readers. Following the end of the war, the paper resumed daily production, and has consistently published five days a week since fall of 1945. Until today, that is, when the pandemic once again puts us in a situation in which print production is not in the best interest of our students or staff.
Fortunately for the UCLA community, were living in an age in which cutting print production doesnt hold quite the same weight that it would have in the 1940s had the Daily Bruins then-upper management decided to cease printing the paper entirely, its possible there would have been no Daily Bruin at all. It goes without saying that temporarily switching to a digital-only media source would have been, well, impossible without any sort of internet to get things going.
While reading Daily Bruin stories online might not have the same novelty as picking up a paper and skimming through it on your daily walk to class, its a reminder that were all going through different adjustments to the current pandemic and doing our best to get through this safely and sanely. Just like The Bruin returned full-time in 1945, the papers staff is excited to come back to Kerckhoff Hall 118 and get the printers running once its safe to do so again whenever that may be.
Read more from the original source:
Press Pass: Looking back on when the Daily Bruin reduced print production during World War II - Daily Bruin