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Show 28 lished were by either civilians identified forces. One hundred five papers soldiers. published by active duty members as Of these 105 papers, Army, 14 by members and 10 or 64 were of the Air Force, by Marine Corpsmen. of the armed published by members of the 14 Two papers by members of the Navy, were published by groups composed of both Army and Air Force personnel, while one paper was published by a group composed of Army and Navy personnel. 2. The same 105 papers which were published by members of the military were also characterized by local distribution, while all 15 papers identified international 3. service as published by civilians were national or in distribution. An examination of issues of the 105 papers had coffeehouse affili personnel suggested that at least 22 ations, while none of the 15 papers published by publishd by civilians were found to have such affiliations. 4. nel were At least 15 of the 105 papers found to have published by service person organizational ties with groups the 'Vietnam War, while at least 5 of the 15 papers civilians were Selection of found to have such published by Representative Papers at Fort Carson, tributed GI to organizational affiliations. Aboveground, published from 1969 personnel opposed undergrounds. to 1971 by active duty Army Colorado, is typical of the locally dis Affiliated with the Homefront Springs GI coffeehouse financed by USSF), Aboveground was point of anti-military, anti-war activity. been mentioned in several sources (a Colorado a focal Although the paper has dealing with the larger question |