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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
The countercultural underground press movement of the 1960s borrowed the name from previous "underground presses" such as the Dutch underground press during the Nazi occupations of the 1940s. Those predecessors were truly "underground", meaning they were illegal, thus published and distributed covertly.
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 Oracle was an early member of the Underground Press Syndicate. The Oracle combined poetry, spirituality, and multicultural interests with psychedelic design, reflecting and shaping the countercultural community as it developed in the Haight-Ashbury. Arguably the outstanding example of psychedelia within the countercultural "underground ...
Underground: The London Alternative Press 1966-74, London: Commedia/Routledge ISBN 0-415-00727-5 / ISBN 0-415-00728-3 (pb) Irving, Terry and Rowan Cahill, Radical Sydney: Places, Portraits and Unruly Episodes, Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2010. ISBN 9781742230931; Palmer, Tony (1971). The Trials of Oz, Blond & Briggs.
Underground press * List of underground newspapers of the 1960s counterculture; A. ArtCrimes; Austin Sun; Avatar (newspaper) B. Berkeley Barb; The Black Dwarf (newspaper)
The Rag was an underground newspaper published in Austin, Texas from 1966–1977. The weekly paper covered political and cultural topics that the conventional press ignored, such as the growing antiwar movement, the sexual revolution, gay liberation, and drug culture.
Philadelphia Free Press was a 1960s era underground newspaper published biweekly in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from 1968 to 1972. Originally launched at Temple University in May 1968 as the monthly Temple Free Press , it separated from Temple and became the Philadelphia Free Press in September 1968.