Peninsula Observer Explained

Peninsula Observer
Type:Underground press bi-weekly
Format:Tabloid
Foundation:1967
Price:$0.15
Headquarters:Palo Alto, CA
Editor:rotating
Circulation:5,000

The Peninsula Observer was an underground newspaper published in Palo Alto, California from July 7, 1967, to November 1969. Co-founded by Barry Greenberg and David Ransom, it was produced by Stanford undergraduate and graduate students opposed to the war in Vietnam, with community members and others. Circulation was about 5000 copies.

Early issues were published as the Midpeninsula Observer. It became the Peninsula Observer with the issue of August 12–26, 1968 (vol. 2, no. 4). Editorship rotated among a group including Greenberg and Ransom, Randy Bonner, Marlene Charyn, Peter Dollinger, David Shen, Maureen Kulbaitis, and Joanne Wallace. Published roughly biweekly for two years, it printed its last issue in November 1969.

Its articles attacking the Stanford Research Institute helped to bring about the severing of the university's ties with the Institute in 1970.[1] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About this newspaper: Peninsula observer. Chronicling America. Library of Congress. 2011-04-18.
  2. Web site: Underground Newspapers on Microfilm: Peninsula Observer. Herb Caen Magazines and Newspapers Center. San Francisco Public Library. 2010-06-05. 2011-04-18.