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1997-04-16
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ PRODUCING A MAGAZINE ON THE ST ~
~ or ~
~ HOW 'BUBLIN TIMES' CAME ABOUT ~
~ by Ken Butler ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ken Butler is the Editor of "Bublin Times", a satirical free
magazine for the Bognor Regis and Worthing area. The magazine has
nothing to do with the ST, but as the STEN team is always interested in
what everyone's using their machines for, we asked Ken to contribute a
couple of articles on how "Bublin Times" came about and how he produces
it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi there,
My name is Ken Butler and I'm the Editor and Publisher of my own
fun magazine, "Bublin Times". "Never 'eard of it!", I hear you say. Quite
right. It has a huge circulation in a tiny corner of West Sussex and you
don't live there do you?
The magazine has nothing to do with computing as such but it is
typeset using Calamus and a 1040 STF.
The reason that you are being lumbered with this article is
because John Weller, in his infinite wisdom, asked for it. I suppose
you're going to say he's "asking for it"! But he's only trying to earn a
crust, like myself, which brings me to the point. The Bublin Times is a
monthly freebie but it costs money for ink jet cartridges, paper,
envelopes and stamps so if you would like a copy to be sent to you I'd
like 35p in stamps please. The motto, or logo, for the Bublin Times, is
'A Lighthearted Look At Life'. It was never planned to be a 'proper'
magazine and began life as a single-sided foolscap size broadsheet. Over
the past few years I have learnt a few things and the publication has
improved as a result.
In part two I will give you some useful hints, but first the
story of how it all began and slowly developed. Are you sitting comfort-
ably?
Many years ago, before the dawn of history, I used to write
silly postcards and other pieces and send them to my son David and his
wife Ethel (Angledave & Ethycurve) for their amusement. For example if we
were on holiday at Littlepuddle Creek, or wherever, the postcard would
contain an amusing anecdote or a rhyme and a black square of paper. That
purported to be a photograph of the place taken at midnight and clearly
showed that there was nothing much happening.
Time passed by......... The silly bits turned into short
articles. For this I used a number of imaginary characters such as Footsie
MacDonald and his Irish pal Dulally Donegal who got up to loony antics.
Gradually others joined them and there was Georgie Garlic, Blanche
Whitethighs, Carla Choccolo (very sexy!) Det.Inspector "Buster" Crook and
Lord Chief Justice Blarney Bushbog and his daughter Buddleia.
The pieces were passed around and I was encouraged by favourable
comments. This is quite necessary if you are to succeed. At that time I
had a 48K Spectrum and my 'computing' experience was limited to using the
Masterfile database for indexing records and books. However a friend had a
PC and a wonderful program called 'Newsroom Pro'. Unfortunately it never
became available for the ST for it had some lovely fonts. One looked like
twiglets (the edible sort) but the one I liked had each letter built into
a square with floral decoration around it.
To use it to make up a title one had to edit out (pixielate?)
the squiggly bits outside of each square then butt them up together. At
the top left corner of the 'B' I used a graphic which depicted a man in a
dinner suit. He seemed to be dancing without a partner for he had an arm
outflung and one leg raised in the air! I leaned him against the 'B' of
Bublin and put a glass of champagne in his hand. It looked very effective,
I thought, for it indicated that something was bubbling. I got my PC
friend to run off several copies of that mast head on his printer.
For several months I used those copies as part of a front page,
inserting them into my Star Gemini printer and adding the rest using my
Spectrum. However there was little satisfaction to be had from this
dependancy on a friend for producing a mast head. When I look back at
those early efforts in 1984/5 I shudder.
In 1985 (or would it have been '86?) I bought one of the first
1040STF's with the ROM built in (I've still got the Speccy) and in 1987
bought Timeworks Desktop Publisher.
I found it quite difficult to learn and use that program
because I hadn't grown up with computing like you young fellas of thirty
or so. My learning curve had begun with the abacus frame and I think most
of the beads were missing!
OK, so now I had a reasonable looking front page (which I
couldn't replicate) but the following pages, using Timeworks, at least
didn't look at though they'd been typewritten. The output from the Star
9-pin printer, however, was a long way from looking professional.
As the years went by I wrote more and the Bublin Times grew by
stages to six single-sided A4 pages. It didn't start to look really nice
until I bought Calamus but that program scared me silly. It had so many
features and the manual might just as well have been written in Chinese
for I was completely phased by it. It was my first experience of a really
sophisticated program and I realised how little I knew.
It was about a year before I found that I wasn't constantly
referring to the manual but many features such as macros, rotated
printing, and white on black were still beyond my poor brain. Then I read
about a new publication called 'The Guide to Calamus Desktop Publishing'
by Bonnie Robinson, published in December 1989 by Ditek International of
Toronto . It was worth it's weight in gold to me! It may have been
unobtainable for a while but I believe that Expressworks, 75 Heath Lane,
Upper Hale, Farnham, Surrey GU9 0PX can supply a copy.
By now my circulation had grown to an amazing fifty copies! I
could afford to move from Wood Green (neither woody nor green), London to
the south coast. Actually the cost of photocopying was killing me and the
GPO wasn't helping either by putting up the cost of postage every now and
then. It was taking fifty pounds a month out of my pension and that ain't
hay.
By early 1991 BT had grown to ten single-sided pages, stapled
together. By chance I saw a letter in a local newspaper. It was written by
a guy called Eric Huntingdon and he said that if people were to be
attracted to Bognor Regis the place should be covered in flowers. I
thought of Swanage, Dorset and knew he was right and so I quoted him on my
next front page where I was telling the City Fathers how to run things.
Before I published that issue I deemed it wise to go and see the
man to obtain his approval of my splashing his name far and wide. After
all, a copy of the Bublin Times was sent to Hong Kong (for my 'old' PC
friend) and to Holland (ST News).
He liked the article and questioned me about the publication.
Who did the writing? The typesetting? The graphics? And so on. I told him
and he seemed impressed. I did not realise that he had a couple of
Gestetner Off-set Litho machines in one of his two stationer's shops.
Eric got me all fired up by offering to print several thousand
copies per month. The number of pages had to be multiples of four. Could I
increase the size to 12 A4 pages (3 double-sided A3)? Overtaken with
enthusiasm I replied that I could. They would be printed on A3 size sheets
then folded and centre stapled. Colour would be introduced into the mast
head!
Because he was a well known local figure he would pull in
advertising. It was agreed that after covering his costs the remaining
revenue would be shared 50%-50%.
Copies would be put on display in the Bognor High Street shop and
the other one at North Bersted where the printing was done. Each 'Print-
In' plastic carrier bag would have a copy placed inside it before the
customer left the shop.
It seemed that I would become famous, or possibly infamous, in
the village of Middleton-On-Sea, where I had hitherto lived quietly.
To be continued.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-ooOoo-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~