page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 16, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 16, 1972 Forest fires bn more tan tres " M-PIN BOWLING IWia Fre Gam M UNION LANES AIR-CONDITIONED $1.50 John Roberts and Tony Barrand English vaudeville, beer hall ballads, and- humor. banjo, guitar, and concertina Wed.- FREE HOOT A NEW FOCUS Underground press alive and well By The Associated Press With less emphasis on bomb- making and more on day-to-day community problems, under- ground newspapers continue to grow in numbers and influence. There are at least 400 of these journals published weekly com- pared to about 200 a few years ago. Underground editors s a y their total readership is about 20 million. At the same time that under- ground papers have folded in ma- jor cities like New York and San Francisco, they are taking root in such unlikely turf as Apopka, Fla.; Anniston, Ala.; and McConnelsburg, Pa. "There isn't a town with a population of more than 50,000 that doesn't have an underground paper," says Max Scherr, found- er and editor of the Berkeley Barb. Since their major mushrooming in the late '60's, the papers have been changing to reflect the new moods of the youth movement. Where once the pages promoted urban guerrilla warfare, n o w they delve into local problems and issues of interest to a wide range of citizens. "The underground press re- presented the vanguard of t h e revolutionary struggle," *s a y s Tom Forcade, a Zippie, Wash- ington correspondent for t h e Underground Press Syndicate and self-styled authority on the underground scene. "But what did all those kids living in hippie pads care about bombs? Now the papers are be- coming much more relevant and realistic. They write about the alternative institutions of t h e community like day care centers, the food co-ops, the health clin- ics." The papers still speak to the generation that created the coun- ter-culture. They are antiestab- lishment, enduringly antiwar and anti-Nixon. Revolutionary rhetor- ic and scatalogical phrases spice the editorials. Marijuana smoke- ins make headlines. The ads sell sandals and water beds and in- cense. Many underground papers have begun aiming at a broader aud- ience, adding book and movie re- views, activities, meetings and demonstrations that aren't cov- ered as daily fare in traditional papers. "The tourists buy our paper to find out what's really happening in town," says A rt Kunkin of the LA Free Press. The Press is the oldest and largest of the underground pap- ers, now eight years old with a circulation of 90,000. Kunkin cre- dits the paper's longevity to its flexibility. have borrowed from the content and method of the underground press. Max Scherr of the Berke- ley Barb says, "We're probably less underground than b e f o r e because the straight press has co-opted a lot of our material." Some of the papers rotate their staff duties in order to prevent "ego tripping", they say, and to counteract charges of sexism in the newsroom. Over the last few years, women have demanded a larger share of editorial duties at underground papers, sometimes resorting to revolutionary meth- ods for control. "The underground press h as great job opportunities for wo- men," said one female Zippie. "Where else can a woman be- come an editor in one day by simply taking over the paper?" Today, there is an underground feminist paper put out exclusive- ly by women in almost every state, like Pandora in Seattle and A WED-SAT AT 900 lc AND HCO DI2Hr r.rrr 9IMG t. 'But what did all those kids living in hippie pads care about bombs? Now the papers are becoming much more relevant and realistic. They write about the alternative institutions of the community like day care centers, the food co-ops, the health clinics.' CO-.RFJVU -"A r i iIT WA 11\ "In the beginning, we were bo- hemian and cultural, but over the years our audience has changed SUN. AT 8:30 and now we've become political. ,A M We try to be sensitive to the de- n Wveloping social movements," says Kunskin. Boston After Dark began in 1966 to cover the arts and enter- I tainment scene. "As we watched ' r fthe changing attitudes in t h e country, we saw a responsibility to become more involved in soc- io-political issues - the antiwar ON.-TUES.AT 9 00 movement, segregation, consum- er affairs," says publisher Step- Cma CkNd 1fgWithhen Mindich. d Wnderground papers have not only popularized everything in the counter-culture from drugs to dropping out, they have also aid- ed the momentum of causes like ecology, women's liberation and peace. Some activists say the Ann Arbor Sun was helpful in electing radicals to the C it y Council and in lowering fines for marijuana smokers. Boston After Dark claims its investigative stories were instrumental in halt- ing construction of the P a r k Plaza urban renewal project that 217 S ASH J ;.: 2 PM. 2AM many felt threatened the com- munity. Some underground editors claim that the traditional papers r~ SA LE!4 Velvet Glove in Livermore, Calif. Financial difficulties and staff dissension are primarily to blame for the burial of some un- derground papers. But many that fail do so simply for lack of en- thusiasm. "I think the time for this kind of paper is over," said editor Thomas D'Antoni in May upon the death of Harry, two and a half years old in Baltimore. "There was no energy to keep the paper going," said Alan Copeland, a former staffer for the Berkeley Tribe. "All the peo- ple who used to spend all week on the paper are now into other things, like working at free clin- ics or studying radical psychia- try." "There's definitely been a wat- ering down of the spirit, maybe because our point of view is ,e- coming more accepted in t h e straight community," says Max Scherr. "There's less excite- ment in talking about something acceptable than having a battle about it." But Scherr and other under- ground editors have few doults about the survival of an alterna- tive press in the years ahead. "Someone has to prick the con- science of the establishment," says Scherr. ,:'G... 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