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The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS), later known as the Alternative Press Syndicate (APS), was a network of countercultural newspapers and magazines that operated from 1966 into the late 1970s. As it evolved, the Underground Press Syndicate created an Underground Press Service, and later its own magazine.
The Rip Off Press Syndicate was launched c. 1973 to compete in selling underground comix content to the underground press and student publications. [35] Each Friday, the company sent out a distribution sheet with the strips it was selling, by such cartoonists as Gilbert Shelton , Bill Griffith , Joel Beck , Dave Sheridan , Ted Richards , and ...
Long Beach Free Press, Long Beach, 1969–1970; Los Angeles Free Press, Los Angeles, 1964–1978 (new series 2005–present) Los Angeles Staff, Los Angeles (splintered from Los Angeles Free Press) Los Angeles Underground, Los Angeles, first issue published April 1, 1967 by Al & Barbara (Dolores) Mitchell; Northcoast Ripsaw, Eureka
EVO was one of the founding members of the Underground Press Syndicate, a network that allowed member papers to freely reprint each other's contents. [2] The paper's design, in its first years, was characterized by Dadaistic montages and absurdist, non-sequitur headlines, [3] including regular invocations of the "Intergalactic World Brain."
A member of both the Underground Press Syndicate and the Liberation News Service, it published a total of 125 issues (sometimes as a weekly, sometimes as a biweekly) before folding on June 11, 1970. [1] [2]
Thomas King Forçade (September 11, 1945 – November 17, 1978), also known as Gary Goodson, [1] was an American underground journalist and cannabis rights activist in the 1970s. He was the founder of High Times magazine and for many years ran the Underground Press Syndicate (later called the Alternative Press Syndicate) [2]
Feb. 1-14, 1969 issue of Washington Free Press. The Washington Free Press was a biweekly radical underground newspaper published in Washington, DC, beginning in 1966, when it was founded by representatives of the five colleges in Washington as a community paper for local Movement people. [1] It was an early member of the Underground Press ...
As the sixth member of the Underground Press Syndicate and the first underground paper in the South, The Rag helped shape a flourishing national underground press. According to historian and publisher Paul Buhle, The Rag was "one of the first, the most long-lasting and most influential" of the Sixties underground papers. [2]