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Show CHAPTER FIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS Although considerable attention press movement of the has been the alternative given 1960's, few researchers have examined the anti-war, underground newspaper movement existing within the United States armed forces tive press has during the Vietnam War. historically been an integral part of the American radical movement, it thought that a study of the development of was the military underground press would of organized resistance to the Vietnam War. To begin Because the alterna the process of reveal much about the nature identifying and comparing the various parts of this highly unique ephemeral journalism, the writer (rely ing upon tape recorded interviews with two case studies of GI California) and The (Berkeley, Aboveground (Fort Carson, Colorado). Thus, the was papers: to trace the historical development of Ally and Aboveground from their inception to their demise. Analyzing the evolution of both twelve 1 em publishers) provided Ally purpose of this thesis The underground former of the GI press representative papers, specific questions (see pp. 14- 16) This thesis grounds, (2) through an in-depth study the writer attempted to answer derived from the statement of the prob- . proceeded with (1) the selection of the classification of GI under specific papers representative of major categories, and (3) the recording and analysis of personal |