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Newspaper Los Angeles Free Press (Los Angeles) 1964-1978 [Online Resource] Free press / Introductory issue published as: Faire free press
The revived Los Angeles Free Press went out of business in 2007, [39] although Finger kept the website LosAngelesFreePress.com active, with archives of past editions available to view for historical reference and/or research.
Introductory issue published as: Faire free press Free press Dates of Publication 1964-1978; Created / Published Los Angeles, Calif. : Art Kunkin, 1964-1978. Headings
The Los Angeles Free Press (often called the Freep by its readers at the time) was one of the first and largest underground newspapers that sprung up across the United States and globe in the 1960s.
1 lis 2024 · The Arthur Kunkin / Los Angeles Free Press collection was acquired by the Gerth Archives and Special Collections in 2021. Prior to the archive's acquisition, the collection was in a storage shed in Joshua Tree, packed so tightly and just secure enough to be saved from complete deterioration.
8 sty 2020 · Los Angeles Free Press, 18 November 1966 Contains reports on the Sunset Strip (Los Angeles) curfew battles with police, which inspired the Buffalo Springfield song, "For What It's Worth (Stop, Hey What's That Sound)" ("There's something happening here, what it is ain't exactly clear....")
This series consists of printed materials, amassed by Moore, comprised of newspapers, newsletters, magazines, booklets, pamphlets, direct mailings, leaflets, and other printed ephemera issued by a range of organizations, movements, and ideologies from across the political spectrum.