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801:'s successful 1978 campaign for Houston City Controller, the city's second most powerful elected position. Whitmire, who would serve two terms as Controller and then five terms as Mayor of Houston, was the first woman elected to citywide office in Houston. After the election, Teague Cavness left the partnership to serve as Whitmire's chief aide and Dreyer continued in business as Thorne Dreyer Associates.
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293:. "What happened during those years I will carry with me the rest of my life.... We had visions of a better world, and dedicated ourselves to building it." Kane wrote that Dreyer "was on the cutting edge" of the 1960s movement. Dreyer traveled widely, participating in SDS conferences and national demonstrations and gatherings of the burgeoning underground media.
248:, called Margaret Webb Dreyer "a moving force in Houston from the 1940s to the 1970s," and she is included in the University of Texas at Austin's Gallery of Great Texas Women and her biography is featured at the Handbook of Texas Online. The couple owned and ran Dreyer Galleries, one of Houston's earliest and most prominent art galleries. According to
457:, whose surrealist armadillos helped create what writer Hermes Nye called "the Great Armadillo Cult." Austin, long a haven for bohemians and iconoclasts, was also the center of a very active left political community based at the University of Texas campus and was a major player in the massive Sixties drug and music culture – incubating talents like
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prosecution for cocaine possession was at its most severe, Dreyer was twice arrested and convicted for possession of small quantities of the controlled substance. During this time Dreyer did little productive work. Many veterans of the
Sixties New Left experienced similar periods of crisis and "burnout," and a few, like Dreyer's friend
1057:, Brad Buchholz wrote: "Thorne Dreyer's belief system for a new millennium is anchored in community and participation and a sense of humor. As a younger man, he led a charge to change the world, thinking it his generation's calling. Today, Dreyer has the gentle feeling at times that the movement has repaid the favor and saved him."
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Dreyer, who has referred to recent changes in his personal life and his renewed commitment to social change and activist journalism as a "virtual rebirth," told Austin's public radio station, KUT-FM, that "our strength is in being together and realizing that we're not alone, and I think that's why
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ran a feature story with the headline, "Political parties: The campaign get-together taking on aura of best show in any town, thanks to Thorne Dreyer," in which writer Gary
Christian said, "Dreyer, 32-year-old public relations man making a name for himself with his party-planning, is out to defeat
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In 1969 LNS published a long essay co-authored by Thorne Dreyer and
Victoria Smith, titled "The Movement and the New Media," which was considered to be the first serious journalistic portrait of the increasingly powerful underground press phenomenon. Dreyer also wrote extensively about the growing
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John Burks quoted Thorne Dreyer as saying that the
Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) was organized "to create the illusion of a giant coordinated network of freaky papers poised for the kill." But, as McMillian and others would emphasize, the underground press was no illusion, and in fact played a
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In 1963, Dreyer went to Austin to attend the
University of Texas, but soon joined SDS and became heavily involved in the New Left—in student power and civil rights activities and the fast-growing movement against the Vietnam War. He organized demonstrations and guerrilla theater actions and helped
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Brad
Buchholz, Thorne Dreyer "suffered through a divorce, depression and two prison sentences for cocaine possession." Dreyer weathered a time of major personal crisis, struggling with severe clinical depression, the breakup of his marriage, and a long-standing bout with drug use. At a time when
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magazine and as a booking agent and personal manager for jazz and rock musicians – including popular jazz singer Cy
Brinson—and handled advertising, promotion, and booking for a number of popular Houston clubs and music venues, including Cody's, Rockefeller's, and Mum's Jazzplace, where he also
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Dreyer also helped set up an Austin chapter of
Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS), associated with the newly reestablished SDS. The group organized demonstrations around opposition to the U.S. war in Iraq and other progressive issues. Dreyer was involved with Progressives for Obama, which
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According to historian James Lewes, "A number of underground newsworkers – including
Marshall Bloom, Thorne Dreyer, Ray Mungo, and Victoria Smith – argued that their papers filled a vacuum left by the collective failure of mainstream media to address the needs of the growing counterculture and
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was published each night during the convention and posted all over town, playing an important role in keeping the thousands of demonstrators informed about the week's cascading events. These wall posters were featured in the 2011 exhibit, "Left to Right: Radical
Movements of the 1960s," at the
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Rag Radio is a weekly public affairs program that features hour-long in-depth interviews with prominent figures in politics and the arts. Rag Radio is broadcast every Friday from 2-3 p.m. (Central) on KOOP 91-7 FM, an all-volunteer cooperatively-run community radio station in Austin, and is
790:'s anti-war presidential campaign. He edited a statewide campaign tabloid, served as a McGovern delegate to the Texas State Democratic Convention, and attended the party's national convention at Miami Beach in 1972. He was also a supporter and friend of Houston's young progressive mayor,
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offered critical support to Barack Obama during his initial campaign for president (the organization has continued under the name Progressive America Rising), and has also helped organize a series of cultural and educational activities in Austin through the New Journalism Project.
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that the underground press was "consciously subjective" and "rooted in personal experience." Leo quoted Dreyer as saying that "objectivity is a farce," and that the underground papers were different from the establishment media because they were upfront about their biases.
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was credited with being the first of its genre to successfully combine the radical politics of the New Left with the spirit of the burgeoning alternative culture, and, according to historian John McMillian, it served as a model for many papers that followed.
42:
1973:
Holder, Matt, "A 'Molotov cocktail thrown at respectability and decency in our nation' : The Rhetoric, Revolutionary Zeal, and Myth-making of The Rag, 1966-1972", Honors Thesis, Southwestern University, 1996, Thesis Advisor, Jan C. Dawson,
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was the first independent undergrounder to represent... the participatory democracy, community organizing and synthesis of politics and culture that the New Left of the midsixties was trying to develop." Author Douglas C. Rossinow, described
191:(SDS), the moving force in the 1960s New Left and perhaps the most important student-based activist organization in U.S. history. Dreyer's writing was published worldwide and his work has been cited or excerpted in more than 100 books.
591:– was distributed by LNS and published around the world. Called "an exuberant, emotional, firsthand account" by historian John McMillian, Dreyer's Pentagon commentary has been excerpted in a number of books about the era, including
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wrote that "at Stinson Beach, the paper that most prefigured those to come was represented... by several writers, including the increasingly important Thorne Dreyer." Dreyer also participated in a historic meeting of the
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features commentary on contemporary politics and culture and has been an original internet source on subjects like Occupy Wall Street, the environmental and sustainability movements, and other issues of social activism."
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magazine, a public information officer for the City of Houston, a booking agent for jazz and rock musicians, an event planner, and a bookseller—and for years operated a leading Houston public relations business.
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are "working in a media landscape light-years removed from the offset printing presses of their youth. While the original Rag would be lucky to sell 15,000 copies on Austin street corners... on any given day, a
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in the United States, supplied the growing movement media with interpretive coverage of current events and reports on movement activities and the Sixties counterculture. In a history of Liberation News Service,
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staffer Bobby Eakin: "Thorne was the glue that held the paper together..." Eakin added, "When it was tense and they were ready to tear into each other, Thorne would hop on a chair and recite a monologue."
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wrote that "for the first time, high-ranking NLF representatives would... be included in discussions with American peace activists." Author Mary Hershberger wrote that the meeting, organized by SDS founder
203:, on August 1, 1945, the son of Martin Dreyer and Margaret Lee Webb. He attended Bellaire High School, where he studied theater with noted teacher and director Cecil Pickett – who later taught at the
1098:, Volume VII (New York: Facts on File, 2010), Chapter 11: "The New Left and the Underground Press" by John McMillian, pp. 239, 240, 242, 249, 250, 251, 252, 255, 257, Biography of Thorne Dreyer, 502
605:, Bimbisar Irom referred to Dreyer's "dissenting, unassimilated... powerful individual voice," noting that he was close "to Mailer's own political sensibilities as an 'independent radical'...."
523:. At the meeting Bloom was purged from USSPA because of his radical politics (and, some thought, because of what John McMillian refers to as Bloom's "effeminate demeanor"). Bloom and colleague
238:, was an acclaimed artist, teacher, and peace activist – and a leading light in the local cultural scene—and his father, Martin Dreyer, was a fiction writer and long-time travel editor at the
1935:(New York: Facts on File, 2010), Chapter 11: "The New Left and the Underground Press" by John McMillian, pp. 239, 240, 242, 249, 250, 251, 252, 255, 257, Biography of Thorne Dreyer, 502.
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and LNS — wrote: "The people of the underground press helped forge a national youth culture and in both subtle and direct ways influenced their colleagues in the 'establishment media.'"
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884:. He is also host and producer of Rag Radio, a popular weekly interview show, and serves as a director of the New Journalism Project, a Texas 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, that publishes
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station in Houston, where he hosted "The Briarpatch," a long-running interview and talk show, and turned the station's monthly programming guide into an underground-style tabloid called the
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In 1975 Dreyer and Teague Cavness started an advertising and public relations partnership called Dreyer Cavness Associates that specialized in progressive political campaigns. They managed
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While in Houston, Thorne Dreyer engaged in an eclectic array of pursuits. He worked professionally as an actor, a freelance writer and editor, a political consultant, a correspondent for
701:: "There is a solid intelligence to the reviews and cultural articles... It is a radical journalism grounded in fact... resolved and balanced in content and full of common purpose..."
732:, "we endured break-ins, thefts, tire-slashings, potshots (including a steel arrow fired from a crossbow through the front door), and threats, both to staff members and advertisers."
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The underground press started out with a handful of papers on the East and West Coasts, but soon spread like wildfire and, according to historian McMillian, author of the 2011 book
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legacy carries onward even as so few people of the new Austin generation appreciate the impact that it had on their city and so much of what makes it a vibrant place to live."
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that deadly seriousness surrounding political parties..." Dreyer's lively, creative events – that pulled together people from the arts and political communities—were cited by
678:, power structure research, and arts coverage – and it served as a center for the bustling Texas boomtown's peace and hipster communities while spinning off a host of other
668:, with all editorial and production responsibilities being shared, and in the beginning the three couples also lived together in a communal home, sharing meals and chores.
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387:—with Thorne Dreyer and Carol Neiman as editors. (They were actually called "funnels," in keeping with the group's anti-authoritarian approach.) In his acclaimed memoir,
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978:... was in the middle 1960s, a light in the darkness... not only readable but funny," calling it "the best place for insights in the entire blogosphere that I follow."
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In June 2012 Dreyer topped a published list of Austin's most important political bloggers, and in 2011 received the noted Eddy Award for best Austin radio personality.
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John McMillian writes that "some of what's happening in the left-wing blogosphere can... be compared to the Sixties underground press," and Thorne Dreyer told the
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post might pingpong through the digital atmosphere, creating the type of traffic the kids of the Sixties couldn't imagine, not even with the right psychedelics."
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called "The Spies of Texas" featuring exclusive revelations about how the UT-Austin campus police tracked the lives of dissidents and iconoclasts in the Sixties.
794:, working in his campaign and then working as a public information officer in the City of Houston's Model Cities Department during the Hofheinz administration.
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Plan II Honors Thesis, University of Texas at Austin, April 22, 2012; Supervising Professor, Robert Jensen, pp. 3, 5, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 17, 54, 60, 61.
986:, 90.3-FM in Mt. Cobb, PA, and 105.7-FM in Scranton, PA. Rag Radio also has a widespread Internet following and all episodes are posted as podcasts at the
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simply went dormant, and in fact, has come to life... as a blog initiated at the Rag Reunion... and Funnelled by none other than Thorne Dreyer himself.
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1968:"The Evolution of The Rag, An Analysis of the Social, Political and Technological Influences on the Birth of One Underground Newspaper in the 1960s,"
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Reunion and the renewed contacts, energy, and commitment that grew out of it, Dreyer moved back to Austin in 2006, and once again became involved in
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district of San Francisco. In September 1967, Dreyer was one of 40 peace activists, religious leaders, and movement journalists invited to travel to
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served as a manager. Dreyer also worked for Half Price Books, buying and selling used and rare books, and later ran an online bookselling business.
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Dreyer was "an influential journalist in the underground press movement of the 1960s and early 1970s," according to the documentary encyclopedia,
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Raj Mankad, Dreyer Galleries also "served as a countercultural hub," hosting art openings, political meetings, and social gatherings attended by
1870:(New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 9, 53, 58-59, 62, 72-73, 91, 97-99, 129, 151, 162, 164, 171, 210, 222, 241, photo gallery 9
161:, which included him in a series of 73 short biographies of key figures in "The Postwar and Civil Rights Era: 1945-1973" in the United States.
697:... a well written, sprightly sheet... also had an eye for vivid, telling graphics and poetry of a high level." Historian Leamer wrote about
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During this time Dreyer's writings were widely distributed, appearing regularly in dozens of periodicals. His coverage of the March 27, 1967,
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was published in Austin—partly in response to the election of an ultra-conservative editor of the traditionally-liberal UT student newspaper,
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the Internet has been very useful... in helping to uncover injustices and... in helping people feel like they're part of something larger."
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During this time Thorne Dreyer gained a reputation as an event planner for political campaigns, charities, and arts organizations. In 1978,
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But Thorne would soon turn his life around as he reunited with old friends and colleagues and once again became committed to the spirit of
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and was a winner of the national Big Story Award for "investigative journalism in the interest of justice." Sandra J. Levy, writing in the
1266:(New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 9, 53, 58-59, 62, 72-73, 91, 97-99, 129, 151, 162, 164, 171, 210, 222, 241, photo gallery 9
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met with violent opposition from some elements in the community, facing the wrath of right wing vigilantes openly identified with a local
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staffers Dennis Fitzgerald and Judy Gitlin Fitzgerald, and community organizers Cam Duncan and Sue Mithun Duncan. The staff was run as a
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for an historic three-day reunion that included a series of spirited meetings, social events, concerts, and art shows. Inspired by the
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as "part of an effort to revive some of the rabble-rousing counterculture spirit of the Sixties." Yet, Kevin Brass writes, Dreyer and
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660:) was founded June 5, 1969, by Dreyer and Victoria Smith – who had worked together at LNS in New York – in coordination with former
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188:
1970:
Masters Thesis, May 2010, University of Texas at Arlington, pp. vii, 11, 16, 22-23. 25, 27- 29, 36-42, 52-59, 62, 64-69, 72, 75-76.
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Christian, Gary, "Political parties: The campaign get-together taking on aura of best show in any town, thanks to Thorne Dreyer,"
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Christian, Gary, "Political parties: The campaign get-together taking on aura of best show in any town, thanks to Thorne Dreyer,"
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495:("from deep in the bowels of reaction... where apathy and dullness thrive") in a letter addressed to the founding members of the
1967:
628:, Houston, Texas, Vol. 3, No. 1, June 8, 1971, with photo of the paper's staff. Thorne Dreyer is second from right in front row.
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640:"unquestionably one of the strongest underground papers in America." In Leamer's words, the paper "had a special importance in
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were part of a larger picture of "threats and acts of violence against progressive and radical institutions in Houston. The
925:, which was founded in 2006 by Richard Jehn, has developed global reach and in 2011 had its one millionth visitor. Many of
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Kane, Karen, "Thorne Dreyer: Echoes of rebellion and random gunfire," from "The '60s: The young radicals, then and now,"
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Kane, Karen, "Thorne Dreyer: Echoes of rebellion and random gunfire," from "The '60s: The young radicals, then and now,"
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to help build the editorial collective at Liberation News Service in New York City. LNS, which was becoming the hub for
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1994:, October, 2000, pp. 379–400 (Iowa City, Iowa : Sage Publications, Inc.), pp. 387, 390, 392, 397, 400.
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2193:"Sixties-era 'underground' newspapers live on in new media websites and blogs," Debi Martin website, July 26, 2011.
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1942:(East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, 2011), pp. 299, 300 (photo), 301, 302, 310, 313 (photo).
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as the best political parties in the state. Dreyer also worked as a feature writer and correspondent for the early
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289:"In the '60s my values crystallized," Dreyer would later tell Karen Kane, in the December 7, 1980, issue of the
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Dissertation, 2009, University of North Carolina Press at Chapel Hill, pp. 26, 36, 46, 105, 107, 110, 122,
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station transmitter was bombed off the air twice. Bullets were shot at and yellow paint thrown on the walls of
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1414:(East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, 2011), pp. 299, 300 (photo), 301, 302, 310, 313 (photo).
1753:, First Unitarian Universalist Church, Austin, February 19, 2012. Broadcast by People United, KOOP-FM, Austin
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Jeff Zavala's videos of Thorne Dreyer's Rag Radio interviews with Scott Crow, Robert Jensen, and Diane Wilson
1597:"The Movement and the New Media," by Thorne Dreyer and Victoria Smith, Liberation News Service, March 1, 1969
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On Labor Day weekend in 2005 in Austin, Thorne Dreyer joined as many as 100 former staffers and followers of
1989:"The Underground Press in America (1964-1968): Outlining an Alternative, the Envisioning of an Underground,"
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Irom, Bimbisar, "Genre and Political Transition: The Problematic of the Collective Novel in Norman Mailer's
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and the Sixties underground press. The editorial core group includes Sarito Carol Neiman, Dreyer's original
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On March 26, 1967, Dreyer and Carol Neiman attended the first national convergence of underground papers at
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Plan II Honors Thesis, University of Texas at Austin, April 22, 2012; Supervising Professor, Robert Jensen.
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870:
652:
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220:
172:
1587:"The Spies of Texas: Newfound files detail how UT-Austin police tracked the lives of Sixties dissidents,"
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quickly moved to the fore of the second generation of underground papers—developing a reputation for its
2221:"Pressing for change: John McMillian's 'Smoking Typewriters' charts history of underground newspapers,"
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1998:
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Dreams of Everyday Life: André Breton, Surrealism, Rebel Worker, sds & the Seven Cities of Cibola
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Dreams of Everyday Life: André Breton, Surrealism, Rebel Worker, sds & the Seven Cities of Cibola
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235:
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Dreyer's family was at the center of a large literary and activist community in Houston. His mother,
1828:(Bloomington, Indiana : The Indiana University Press, 1970), pp. 36, 49. (spelled "Dryer")
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provided a primary forum for two of the most important of the Sixties underground graphic artists –
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Rebels With a Cause : A Collective Memoir of the Hopes, Rebellions and Repression of the 1960s
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1960:
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1940:
Voices from the Underground : Insider Histories of the Vietnam Era Underground Press, Part 1
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Voices from the Underground : Insider Histories of the Vietnam Era Underground Press, Part 1
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in Chicago. "Thorne Dreyer came into town from Austin, Texas, to edit the SDS wall poster called
122:
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He was a founder and editor of two of the most important of the Sixties underground newspapers,
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Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America
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Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America
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Jones, Glenn W., "Gentle Thursday: An SDS Circus in Austin, Texas, 1966-1969," pp. 75-85, from
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Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America
1978:
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1849:(New York : Simon and Schuster, 1972), pp. 41, 44-45, 47, 62, 63, 66, 104, 105, 108
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955:); filmmaker and writer William Michael Hanks; and art director James Retherford, who edited
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put together the now-legendary Gentle Thursday happenings on the University of Texas campus.
1979:"Genre and Political Transition: The Problematic of the Collective Novel in Norman Mailer’s
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On the Ground: An Illustrated Anecdotal History of the Sixties Underground Press in the U.S.
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987:
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309:
2055:"Living the Movement: Liberation News Service, Montague Farm, and the New Left, 1967-1981."
1928:(Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2011), pp. v-vii, 2, 18-22, 46-49, 89-90, 142-43, 179, 190-91, 196.
1772:(Austin: The Encino Press, 1976), Nye, Hermes, "Texas Tea and Rainy Day Woman," p. 118
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499:. This colorful dispatch — dated October 5, 1966 — is included as a historical document in
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1603:"Rag Radio: Carl Davidson on Mondragon and Workers' Cooperatives," by Thorne Webb Dreyer,
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959:, a Sixties underground paper published in Bloomington, Indiana, and was active with the
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In 1966, as part of an SDS summer project, Dreyer helped run a radical storefront in the
1525:: new found files detail how UT-Austin police tracked the lives of Sixties dissidents,"
1242:(New York : Simon and Schuster, 1972), pp. 41, 44-45, 47, 62, 63, 66, 104, 105, 108
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Kevin Brass that "There are a lot of similarities in the two eras." Brass, indeed, sees
880:, an Internet newsmagazine that has built a wide and loyal following in the progressive
2011:
Doctoral Thesis, Columbia University, 2006, Dissertation Advisor, Provost Alan Brinkley
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520:
519:(USSPA) in Minneapolis in August 1967 at the invitation of its newly elected director,
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1945:
Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, Merriam Webster, Springfield, Mass (1983),
1912:(New York: Columbia University Press, 1998), pp. 176, 192, 194, 257-58, 260, 269.
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1159:, edited by Barbara L. Tischler (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992).
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689:, Hermes Nye wrote that "the dark-haired bespectacled, lovely Victoria Smith and her
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2016:"One Nation, Under a Groove? Assessing the Legacy of the Sixties Underground Press,"
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and others from the Rag Reunion, September 2005, by People's History in Texas, 2005.
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1821:(New Brunswick, New Jersey : Transaction Publishers, 1998), pp. 148, 170.
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1623:"Montrose Lives: Houston’s Montrose: The strangest neighborhood east of the Pecos"
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Buchholz, Brad, "Thorne Dreyer back after 40 years: Radical returns to Austin..."
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chief 'funnel,' Thorne Dreyer, exercises an authority that is gentle and decent."
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1295:(New York: Columbia University Press, 1998), pp. 176, 192, 194, 257-58, 260, 269.
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as "enormously important to local activists," and historian McMillian said that
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Rossinow, Doug, "The New Left in the Counterculture: Hypotheses and Evidence,"
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Politics of Authenticity: Liberalism, Christianity, and the New Left in America
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Politics of Authenticity: Liberalism, Christianity, and the New Left in America
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693:, dashing mustachioed Thorne Dreyer... helped lay the cornerstone of Houston's
329:, "resulted in the first prisoner of war release to American peace activists."
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1961:"History of Student Activism at the University of Texas at Austin (1960-1988)"
1673:"Letter to the Underground Press Syndicate," by Thorne Dreyer, October 5, 1966
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The Armies of the Night : History as a Novel : The Novel as History
1633:"Sixties Radicals: Whatever Happened to the New Generation," by Thorne Dreyer
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Stern, Sol, "From Danube to Chicago," in "May 1968: 40 Years Later" feature,
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After a long drought, Dreyer began writing again, with his work appearing on
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The paper tempered serious political analysis with ample doses of humor, and
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Dupes: How America's Adversaries Have Manipulated Progressives for a Century
1793:, 1965–1975, (New York: Universe, 2006), Cover and pp. 4–5. Photograph.
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914:"both came of age in the tumultuous sixties," author Shelley Seale wrote, "
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Famous Long Ago : My Life and Hard Times with Liberation News Service
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New York Times: The Great Contemporary Issues: The Mass Media and Politics
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Interview with Thorne Dreyer on News 8 Austin, Video and Transcript, 2006.
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Famous Long Ago : My Life and Hard Times with Liberation News Service
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staffers Mariann Wizard and Alice Embree (who also worked with New York's
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shut its doors, Thorne Dreyer worked with KPFT-FM, the listener-supported
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was regarded by the Austin community as "a beautiful and precious thing."
1884:(Los Gatos, California : Shire Press. 2001), pp. 162, 227, 264.
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version of Los Angeles. The paper holds the radical community together."
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was the first underground paper in the South and the sixth member of the
130:
1561:, Thorne Dreyer discusses "The Spies of Texas" on KUT-FM, Austin, Texas.
538:, the papers' combined readership eventually reached into the millions.
316:, in what was an unprecedented effort to explore new avenues for peace.
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Nonviolent Direct Action: American Cases: Social-Psychological Analyses
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Imagine Nation : the American Counterculture of the 1960s and '70s
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775:. Dreyer would also serve for a time as the station's general manager.
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Thorne Dreyer (right) and University of Texas campus cop, October 1966.
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1891:(New York: Pantheon Books, 1985), pp. 58, 59, 75-76, 148-49, 287.
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1311:, edited by Francis Edward Abernethy (Austin: The Encino Press, 1976).
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Siemssen, John, "Remembering Houston's First Alternative Newspaper,"
2009:"Smoking Typewriters : The New Left’s Print Culture, 1962-1969,"
1933:
Conflicts in American History: A Documentary Encyclopedia, Volume VII
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Protest and Survive: Underground GI Newspapers during the Vietnam War
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Siemssen, John, "Remembering Houston's First Alternative Newspaper,"
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Protest and Survive: Underground GI Newspapers during the Vietnam War
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and some of the pioneering psychedelic poster and comix artists. And
208:
121:(born August 1, 1945) is an American writer, editor, publisher, and
1963:, Paper, University of Texas at Austin, Spring 1988, p. 20, 30
1889:
Uncovering the Sixties: The Life and Times of the Underground Press
1835:, (Washington and Cleveland: Corpus Books, 1968), pp. 266–267.
1612:
1574:
1280:
Uncovering the Sixties: The Life and Times of the Underground Press
1001:
and around the Internet. He is a contributing editor to the online
481:
Thorne Dreyer (far left) at first underground newspaper gathering,
423:
Uncovering the Sixties: The Life and Times of the Underground Press
2101:"Thorne Dreyer back after 40 years: Radical returns to Austin..."
2048:: Problems for Alternative Media in a Radical Movement’s Decline."
1847:
The Paper Revolutionaries : The Rise of the Underground Press
1712:
1499:: Problems for Alternative Media in a Radical Movement’s Decline."
1240:
The Paper Revolutionaries : The Rise of the Underground Press
645:
619:
476:
366:
110:
2137:"Houston's '60s night scene: Joplin sang here for $ 20 a night,"
1643:"People call for revolution: Pentagon up-tight," by Thorne Dreyer
1282:(New York: Pantheon Books, 1985), pp. 58, 59, 75-76, 148-49, 287.
983:
744:
181:
2249:"Election 2012: Keep up with Austin's top political bloggers,"
1613:"The Mad Mix: Montrose, The Heart of Houston," by Thorne Dreyer
902:
In a June 2012 feature on Austin's leading political bloggers,
2090:"Underground in H-Town: A Rich History of Alternative Media,"
1896:
The Open Conspiracy: What America's angry Generation is Saying
1814:(Los Gatos, California : Shire Press, 2007), p. 112.
308:, for a direct meeting with high-level representatives of the
1863:(New York : New American Library, 1968), pp. 274–5.
1779:(New York : Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 178.
1733:
Interview by John A. Salazar for YNN, Time Warner Cable, 2011
1078:"Election 2012: Keep up with Austin's top political bloggers"
453:
comix would be republished in papers all over the world, and
2239:"Everything Old is New Again: 'The Rag’ Returns to Austin,"
1898:. (Harrisburg, PA, Stackpole Books, 1970), pp. 40, 157.
1731:"Veteran activist pinpoints 1960s spirit in Occupy movement"
634:
The Paper Revolutionaries: The Rise of the Underground Press
1307:
Nye, Hermes, "Texas Tea and Rainy Day Woman," p. 118, from
1346:
Leo, John, "Politics Now the Focus of Underground Press,"
1196:
Traveling to Vietnam: American peace activists and the war
1877:(Boston : Beacon Press, 1970), pp. 9, 116, 126.
1747:
Podcast of Thorne Dreyer and Alice Embree speaking about
1096:
Conflicts in American History: A Documentary Encyclopedia
609:
repression of underground papers throughout the country.
543:
vital and dynamic role in the 1960s cultural revolution.
141:, where he edits the progressive internet news magazine,
2110:
Burks, John, "The Underground Press: A Special Report,"
1320:
Burks, John, "The Underground Press: A Special Report,"
469:
united those communities into a potent political force.
1072:
1070:
1791:
Free Press: Underground & Alternative Publications
730:
Insider Histories of the Vietnam Era Underground Press
2176:
Cite: The Architecture & Design Review of Houston
1856:, (Westport, CT, Praeger, 2003), pp. 38, 46, 67.
1617:
CITE: The Architecture and Design Magazine of Houston
1144:
Cite: The Architecture & Design Review of Houston
910:
at the top of its list. Pointing out that Dreyer and
751:'s gallery," which was located a few blocks from the
277:
He has one son, Dustin Dreyer, who lives in Houston.
1919:, (New York: Random House, 1973), pp. 392, 527.
1882:
Prairie Radical : A Journey Through the Sixties
1786:(New York : Routledge, 2002), pp. 107, 113
1649:, August 30, 1967. (Simultaneously published in the
728:
group. As Victoria Smith wrote in Ken Wachsberger's
340:
wrote about the historic demonstrations outside the
2032:
Masters Thesis, University of Texas at Austin, 1981
2019:
H-Net Reviews in the Humanities and Social Sciences
1224:(Boston : Beacon Press, 1970), pp. 9, 116, 126
1198:, (Syracuse, N.Y., Syracuse University Press, 1998)
151:, and is a director of the New Journalism Project.
106:
94:
86:
76:
51:
32:
1713:Interview with Thorne Dreyer by Texas Public Radio
1842:, (Wilmington, DE, ISI Books, 2010), p. 467.
1751:and the Underground Press at Public Affairs Forum
1653:and then distributed by Liberation News Service.)
982:rebroadcast every Sunday at 10 a.m. (Eastern) on
46:Thorne Webb Dreyer, 2009. Photo by Cynthia Bloom.
1337:, (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003), pp. 38, 46, 67.
231:where he took liberal arts and theater courses.
180:(LNS) in New York, and managed Pacifica Radio's
2165:"Politics Now the Focus of Underground Press,"
1807:, (New York: Arno Press, 1972.) pp. 96–98.
1657:"God Goes to the Astrodome," by Thorne Dreyer,
786:in Harris County and was on the Texas staff of
1905:(Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 2008), p. 202.
1709:and Sixties Houston at Zine Fest Houston 2009.
1693:, Houston Oral History Project, July 15, 1976.
1689:Dreyer, Thorne Webb and Louis J. Marchiafava.
503:, a 13-volume encyclopedia published in 2010.
1782:Baunstein, Peter and Doyle, Michael William,
1719:"The Eyes of Texas Were Upon Texas Radicals,"
1388:," Genre (Duke University Press, 2011), p. 49
8:
2283:Members of Students for a Democratic Society
413:as "one of the few legendary undergrounds,"
2119:"Officer to Play Down Marine Quiz Findings"
2069:"Media Watch:The Rag in the Modern World,"
1949:(In multiple editions from 70s to present.)
778:During this period he became active in the
125:who played a major role in the 1960s-1970s
2210:"John McMillian's 'Smoking Typewriters',"
1800:(New York: Pocket Books, 1972), p. 17
1798:The Age of Paranoia: How the Sixties Ended
1007:and in 2006 wrote a major cover story for
929:contributors are veterans of the original
314:National Liberation Front of South Vietnam
40:
29:
2338:21st-century American non-fiction writers
1984:(Duke University Press, 2011), p. 49
1770:What's Going On? In Modern Texas Folklore
1309:What's Going On? In Modern Texas Folklore
759:Progressive politics and public relations
587:in Washington – with its massive acts of
2174:Mankad, Raj, "Space City! Underground,"
1697:Thorne Dreyer interviewed by Jeff Farias
1211:(Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 2008), p. 202
1142:Mankad, Raj, "Space City! Underground,"
739:that the Klan's violent actions against
355:Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum
1831:Hare, A. Paul and Herbert H. Blumberg,
1066:
517:United States Student Press Association
1954:Scholarly articles and academic papers
1931:Trodd, Zoe and Brian L. Johnson, Eds,
1796:Burks, John, "The Underground Press,"
1455:
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1258:
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1254:
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1250:
1248:
1094:Trodd, Zoe and Brian L. Johnson, Eds,
2030:: A Study in Underground Journalism."
1715:about "Spies of Texas," Nov. 24, 2006
1234:
1232:
1230:
489:Thorne Dreyer heralded the coming of
7:
1817:Giles, Robert and Robert W. Snyder,
1090:
1088:
891:Melanie Scruggs wrote in 2012 that "
375:In October 1966, the first issue of
90:Writer, editor, blogger, broadcaster
2298:American anti–Vietnam War activists
2079:"Zine Fest: When Houston Is Cool,"
2062:Periodicals and online publications
828:During the 1990s, according to the
636:, Laurence Leamer called Houston's
342:1968 Democratic National Convention
219:. Dreyer later studied acting with
207:and whose students included actors
2107:(Reposted on the Sixties website.)
1819:1968 : Year of Media Decision
1725:Video interview with Thorne Dreyer
1581:Selected articles by Thorne Dreyer
1107:Levy, Sandra J., "Texas Project,"
685:In a 1976 book about modern Texas
644:since the city is a sprawled-out,
291:Houston Chronicle's Texas Magazine
199:An only child, Dreyer was born in
25:
2158:Texas Magazine, Houston Chronicle
2139:Texas Magazine, Houston Chronicle
1703:Thorne Dreyer and Sherwood Bishop
1625:by Thorne Dreyer and Al Reinert,
1511:Movement for a Democratic Society
1361:Encyclopedia of the American Left
1170:Texas Magazine, Houston Chronicle
189:Students for a Democratic Society
2313:American alternative journalists
2125:, July 13, 1967, pp. 14–15.
1992:Journal of Communication Inquiry
1826:The Underground Press in America
1109:Archives of American Art Journal
1081:CultureMap Austin, June 2, 2012.
937:co-editor who later edited SDS'
246:Archives of American Art Journal
2160:, Dec. 7, 1980, pp. 10–14.
1981:The Armies of the Night," Genre
1691:Thorne Webb Dreyer Oral History
1051:In a 2008 feature story in the
585:anti-war action at the Pentagon
576:— who had worked for both
137:movements. Dreyer now lives in
1705:discuss underground newspaper
111:http://theragblog.blogspot.com
27:American journalist(born 1945)
1:
2199:"Andy Warhol, Then and Now,"
2103:The Austin American-Statesman
1947:Usage example for "liberate."
1461:The Austin American-Statesman
1185:, New York, N.Y., Spring 2008
501:Conflicts in American History
451:Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers
229:University of Texas at Austin
176:in Houston, was an editor at
159:Conflicts in American History
81:University of Texas at Austin
2273:American political activists
1999:"The Battle of the Pentagon"
1777:The Movement and the Sixties
1538:Brass, Kevin, "Media Watch:
1132:The Handbook of Texas Online
1121:Gallery of Great Texas Women
563:In 1968, Thorne Dreyer left
187:Thorne Dreyer was active in
1768:Abernethy, Francis Edward,
1699:, April 29, 2010 (25 min.).
953:Women's Liberation Movement
601:. In the scholarly journal
497:Underground Press Syndicate
407:Underground Press Syndicate
227:, and briefly attended the
2354:
2328:Writers from Austin, Texas
2318:American radio journalists
2288:American newspaper editors
2178:, Summer 2010, p. 18.
2153:, July 19, 1998, Page D-6.
1938:Wachsberger, Ken, Editor,
1410:Wachsberger, Ken, Editor,
1375:(Garland Publishing, 1990)
873:and political organizing.
840:, even committed suicide.
704:John Siemssen, writing in
463:Thirteenth Floor Elevators
409:(UPS). Cited by historian
2293:American male journalists
2223:Austin American-Statesman
2183:"Underground in H-Town,"
2151:Austin American-Statesman
1172:, Dec. 7, 1980, pp. 10-14
1054:Austin American-Statesman
831:Austin American-Statesman
508:Stinson Beach, California
483:Stinson Beach, California
473:Underground press and LNS
39:
2323:Journalists from Houston
966:Historian and publisher
334:Dreams and Everyday Life
281:SDS and radical activism
1386:The Armies of the Night
529:Liberation News Service
350:Handwriting on the Wall
346:Handwriting on the Wall
178:Liberation News Service
102:journalist and activist
2303:American male bloggers
2088:Boyle, Shane Patrick,
2077:Boyle, Shane Patrick,
2044:"The Rise and Fall of
2037:Radical History Review
1908:Rossinow, Douglas C.,
1894:Romm, Ethel Grodzins,
1789:Bizot, Jean-Francois,
1542:in the Modern World,"
1495:"The Rise and Fall of
1291:Rossinow, Douglas C.,
951:and was active in the
906:put Thorne Dreyer and
871:alternative journalism
629:
569:alternative journalism
486:
372:
147:, hosts Rag Radio on
1824:Glessing, Robert J.,
1651:Washington Free Press
1157:Sights on the Sixties
1111:(Vol. 2, No. 4, 1982)
974:is in many ways what
623:
480:
370:
205:University of Houston
195:Family and early life
2333:Activists from Texas
2117:Chriss, Nicolas C.,
2105:, February 24, 2008.
2024:Olan, Susan Torian,
2014:McVicker, Jeanette,
1922:Stewart, Sean, Ed.,
1901:Rosemont, Penelope,
1803:Fixx, James F, Ed.,
1775:Anderson, Terry H.,
1758:Partial bibliography
1607:, September 20, 2011
1593:, November 16, 2006.
1463:, February 24, 2008.
1350:, September 1, 1968.
1207:Rosemont, Penelope,
1146:, Summer 2010, p. 18
749:Margaret Webb Dreyer
735:Raj Mankad wrote at
421:Abe Peck, author of
236:Margaret Webb Dreyer
184:90.1-FM in Houston.
2169:, September 1, 1968
2073:(February 12, 2010)
1915:Sale, Kirkpatrick,
1529:, November 16, 2006
1194:Hershberger, Mary,
970:said in 2009 that "
676:advocacy journalism
656:(originally called
598:Armies of the Night
578:The Washington Post
325:and peace activist
2141:, August 13, 1989.
2135:Feldman, Claudia,
2053:Slonecker, Blake,
2042:Scruggs, Melanie,
1966:Harvey, Marti G.,
1845:Leamer, Laurence,
1591:The Texas Observer
1589:by Thorne Dreyer,
1523:The Spies of Texas
1493:Scruggs, Melanie,
1481:2011-10-03 at the
1431:2014-11-29 at the
1238:Leamer, Laurence,
1020:in the digital age
1010:The Texas Observer
815:The Texas Observer
630:
589:civil disobedience
557:The New York Times
487:
373:
123:political activist
119:Thorne Webb Dreyer
98:Prominent Sixties
34:Thorne Webb Dreyer
2308:American bloggers
2251:CultureMap Austin
2132:, April 30, 1978.
2123:Los Angeles Times
2114:, October 4, 1969
2007:McMillian, John,
1866:McMillian, John,
1521:Dreyer, Thorne, "
1447:, April 30, 1978.
1324:, October 4, 1969
1262:McMillian, John,
1076:Seale, Shelley, "
904:CultureMap Austin
876:Dreyer now edits
595:'s award-winning
338:Penelope Rosemont
241:Houston Chronicle
135:underground press
116:
115:
16:(Redirected from
2345:
2247:Seale, Shelley,
2243:, Sept. 2, 2005.
2241:Austin Chronicle
2201:Inside Higher Ed
2197:McLemee, Scott,
2099:Buchholz, Brad,
2071:Austin Chronicle
1997:Mailer, Norman,
1977:Irom, Bimbisar,
1880:Pardun, Robert,
1873:Mungo, Raymond,
1859:Mailer, Norman,
1677:The Rag Archives
1639:, November 1976.
1562:
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2237:Smith, Cheryl,
2232:Houston's Other
2225:, Feb. 20, 2011
2219:Shivani, Anis,
2214:, Feb. 21, 2011
2208:Raskin, Jonah,
2203:, Feb. 24, 2010
2147:"UT’s Radicals"
2145:Holland, Dick,
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1959:Burr, Beverly,
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680:countercultural
658:Space City News
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540:Rolling Stone's
475:
449:, whose iconic
447:Gilbert Shelton
411:Laurence Leamer
389:Famous Long Ago
384:The Daily Texan
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927:The Rag Blog's
858:
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773:Mighty 90 News
769:Pacifica radio
760:
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682:institutions.
617:
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521:Marshall Bloom
474:
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364:
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306:Czechoslovakia
298:Haight-Ashbury
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264:, and others.
262:Warren Hinckle
223:at New York's
221:William Hickey
201:Houston, Texas
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170:in Austin and
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1659:Texas Monthly
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1637:Texas Monthly
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1629:, April 1973.
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1627:Texas Monthly
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845:social change
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97:
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87:Occupation(s)
85:
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79:
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71:, Texas, U.S.
70:
64:(age 79)
54:
50:
43:
38:
31:
19:
18:Thorne Dreyer
2250:
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2212:The Rag Blog
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2130:Houston Post
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2092:The Rag Blog
2091:
2081:The Rag Blog
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2045:
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2027:
2021:, July 2011.
2018:
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1445:Houston Post
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1363:, edited by
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1183:City Journal
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1037:The Rag Blog
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1017:
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999:The Rag Blog
998:
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972:The Rag Blog
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947:
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938:
934:
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926:
923:The Rag Blog
922:
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916:The Rag Blog
915:
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907:
903:
901:
896:
892:
890:
886:The Rag Blog
885:
878:The Rag Blog
877:
875:
866:
862:
860:
856:The Rag Blog
855:
854:Reunion and
851:
842:
829:
827:
819:
813:
808:Houston Post
805:
803:
796:
782:wing of the
777:
772:
764:
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729:
726:Ku Klux Klan
721:
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694:
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684:
671:
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637:
633:
632:In his book
631:
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613:
607:
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596:
582:
577:
564:
562:
556:
551:movements."
545:
539:
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510:. Historian
505:
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466:
459:Janis Joplin
455:Jim Franklin
442:
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396:
395:wrote that "
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153:
149:KOOP 91.7-FM
144:The Rag Blog
142:
118:
117:
2268:1945 births
2163:Leo, John,
1887:Peck, Abe,
1707:Space City!
1278:Peck, Abe,
882:blogosphere
780:progressive
765:Space City!
753:Space City!
741:Space City!
722:Space City!
710:Space City!
699:Space City!
695:Space City!
672:Space City!
653:Space City!
638:Space City!
626:Space City!
616:and the KKK
614:Space City!
574:Allen Young
357:in Austin.
213:Randy Quaid
173:Space City!
100:underground
2262:Categories
2002:Commentary
1684:Interviews
1369:Paul Buhle
1061:References
968:Paul Buhle
666:collective
323:Tom Hayden
302:Bratislava
254:Jane Fonda
58:1945-08-01
1667:Documents
941:; former
755:offices.
624:Cover of
555:wrote in
525:Ray Mungo
397:The Rag's
393:Ray Mungo
318:Sol Stern
225:HB Studio
1974:History.
1605:Truthout
1479:Archived
1429:Archived
691:compadre
687:folklore
553:John Leo
512:Abe Peck
461:and the
312:and the
131:New Left
2185:OffCite
2046:The Rag
2028:The Rag
1749:The Rag
1743:, 2011.
1647:The Rag
1559:Podcast
1540:The Rag
1497:The Rag
1476:reunion
1425:OffCite
1018:The Rag
976:The Rag
961:YIPPIES
912:The Rag
897:The Rag
893:The Rag
863:The Rag
737:OffCite
718:The Rag
716:Unlike
642:Houston
565:The Rag
531:(LNS).
492:The Rag
467:The Rag
443:The Rag
436:The Rag
432:The Rag
427:The Rag
415:The Rag
403:The Rag
378:The Rag
362:The Rag
167:The Rag
107:Website
69:Houston
2039:, 1997
763:After
250:Cite's
209:Dennis
133:, and
1763:Books
1739:, at
646:Texas
603:Genre
1371:and
984:WFTE
806:The
745:KPFT
215:and
211:and
182:KPFT
52:Born
1917:SDS
1675:. (
1474:Rag
1042:Rag
948:Rat
943:Rag
935:Rag
931:Rag
867:Rag
852:Rag
662:Rag
2264::
2149:,
2121:,
1679:).
1645:,
1635:,
1615:,
1452:^
1367:,
1300:^
1271:^
1247:^
1229:^
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1029:'s
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963:.
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833:'s
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2227:.
2216:.
2205:.
2171:,
2096:.
2085:.
2026:"
1609:.
1599:.
56:(
20:)
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