Chinook (newspaper) explained

Chinook
Type:Underground press weekly
Format:Tabloid
Foundation:1969
Ceased Publication:1972
Headquarters:Denver, Colorado

Chinook was a counterculture underground newspaper published weekly in Denver, Colorado from Aug. 21, 1969 to Jan. 21, 1972. It was a member of the Underground Press Syndicate. A total of 117 issues were printed. In 1972 it merged with Boulder magazine to become The Straight Creek Journal,[1] which considered itself an alternative press rather than an underground press publication, publishing weekly from Feb. 10, 1972 to Aug. 7, 1980.[2] According to Abe Peck in his memoir Uncovering the Sixties, the original underground Chinook started to fall apart after a number of staffers left to become followers of Guru Maharaj Ji, who visited Denver and established a mission there in late 1971.[3]

From Chinook, Vol 3, No 18, Issue 83:Staff: Patick Dolan (editor), Kevin Tannenbaum (managing editor), John Loquidis (music), Milton Tea (music), Cosmic Joe (news, calendar). Steve Levince (City), Mike Wheelock and Lini Lieberman (food), Paul Salazar (astrologer), Swami Sivanand (swami), Dan Yurman (housing) Carl Stone, photography).

Other Contributors to Chinook included Chip Berlet.

The last issue published was on Valentines Day 1972. The folded (half-tabloid) back cover was by artist John Fish. The open tabloid full front page was by artist Layne Catherine Anderson.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn94053325/ About this newspaper: Chinook
  2. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90051901/ About this newspaper: The Straight Creek journal
  3. Peck, Abe. Uncovering the Sixties:The Life and Times of the Underground Press (New York: Citadel, 1991), p. 273.