
Vol. 76, No. 6, June 
2003
Untouched by Human Hands
ETraditional production is a thing of the past. 
Today's Wisconsin Lawyer embraces electronic publishing technologies. 
 
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
Last month, a State Bar member 
from Phoenix told me that the Wisconsin Lawyer is the best state bar 
magazine in the country. A bold statement. However, he is licensed in 
four states, reads numerous bar magazines, and said he derives more 
information from the magazine you have in your hands than from any of 
the others.
First, you have to start with excellent authors and topic selection. 
Not every submission is accepted. The Communications Committee, which is 
the magazine's editorial board, sets rigorous standards for acceptance. 
Committee members, representing a wide range of practice areas and 
settings, review substantive articles that are submitted for 
publication. Authors work closely with editor Joyce Hastings, who also 
serves as the Bar's Communications Director, and with associate editor 
Karlé Lester. Once articles are edited, they are sent to design and 
production manager Jean Anderson who works with the editors to develop a 
visual concept for each issue, and then combines copy, art, 
advertisements, and all the other elements into a magazine.
The Wisconsin Lawyer celebrates its 75th anniversary this 
year. For the first 67 years, every issue was laid out by hand. Manual 
production involved staff and several outside vendors, including 
typesetters, photographers, and others. It was tedious and 
time-consuming. Decisions to make late-breaking changes often depended 
on the expense, because a typesetting change of even one letter had the 
potential to affect several lines, paragraphs, or pages of layout.
Those days are gone. Briefly, every article is edited on a computer 
then sent electronically to production, where digitized copy, ads, and 
graphics (often using inexpensive stock art purchased and downloaded 
from the Internet) are placed and the layout completed. Final pages are 
scrutinized and last-minute changes are made without the previous cost 
considerations. When staff are satisfied, the entire magazine is sent 
electronically to the printer who returns a proof within 24 hours, not 
five days as before. The printer "sprays" addresses on each copy (from a 
list sent electronically only a few days earlier to capture most current 
addresses), and mails the magazine.
Today, the Wisconsin Lawyer leads state bar organizations in 
using computer-to-plate publishing technology. Articles still receive 
the same level of editorial scrutiny, but now electronic editing and 
production gives staff greater graphic design flexibility and control 
over the final product with faster turnaround time. Most important, 
today's technology allows authors and editors to deliver information as 
current as possible. The result is the high-quality, nationally 
respected magazine you have in your hands.
Wisconsin 
Lawyer