Volume 1, No. 1 of the Seed, May, 1967. |
This afternoon
somewhere on Lincoln Avenue on Chicago’s Northwest side there will be
an assemblage of wrecks, relics, geezers,
and survivors will gather at a restaurant to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first issue of
the Seed,
the Windy City’s semi-legendary hippie/Yippie/psychedelic/radical/underground
newspaper. Your scribe will be one of the former staff members, associates,
street peddlers, allies, drug
suppliers, and hangers on in attendance at the reunion. Stories will be told. Some of them will be true.
In the spring of 1967 Old Town and a four or five block strip
of Wells Street with spill-over east and west on North Avenue was the Mid Continent epicenter of an exploding counter culture. Nothing between Washington Square in New
York and the Haight in San Francisco had anything like it—a vibrant
street scene the nurtured music, the arts, and all
forms of eccentric self-expression. Wells and North were lined with bar music venues, bookstores, quaint cafes,
specialty shops, and attractions like Piper’s Alley and Second
City. It was a magnate for young people who thronged
the sidewalks on weekends and warm evening. Dope of all
sorts was casually plentiful and cheap, and there was an electrifying possibility of sexual adventure with the supposedly free spirited/free love Hippie chicks and
semi-shirtless young dudes. What went largely unacknowledged was that many of the runaway/throw away street kids were drifting into and sometimes coerced
into prostitution. But, hey, it made the whole scene more exotic and alluring.
A post card of Old Town from the '60's. It was all happening there, babe! |
Not only college kids and weekend hippies from the suburbs
crowded those streets, but Old Town had become a major tourist attraction. Plenty
of curious parents, businessmen on the prowl, Division Street swingers, whoo-whoo out of town Conventioneer, and
Great Lakes Sailors joined the
crowds especially on weekend nights.
There were even tour buses.
What the scene did not
yet have was an alternative press like
the venerable Village Voice or the Berkley Barb. Enter Eric
Segal (aka The Mole), proprietor
of the Molehole, a pioneering head shop and poster palace, and artist
Don Lewis who had designed psychedelic posters for the shop. The Mole had the bankroll. Lewis had a vision and friends who could fill the
pages with art work, photos, articles, poetry, and music reviews. There was every expectation that the street
crowds would snap up a paper both as guide and a souvenir and
the local merchants, joint operators as
well a concert promoters and record labels would be eager to buy
adverting to reach them. Or so it was
hoped.
The Seed premiered
with a splash. The Village Voice and Berkley Barb
still resembled conventional newspapers with headlines, photos, and text on
their front pages. The tabloid
size Seed would have a more magazine style with an eye catch full cover illustration—and a radical declaration of full throttle counter culture. The paper would not just be the alternative
press—it would be a damn the torpedoes
underground newspaper. The cover featured
a photo cameo of a beautiful, topless waif framed by San Francisco psychedelic lettering. Yet she was not lurid like a South State Street burlesque queen, or one of
Hugh Heffner’s fantasy inflatables. She exuded
a kind of innocence and fresh vulnerability. This was something new indeed. And as predicted the first issue sold out almost before the ink was dry.
The City stood up and took notice. Gate
keepers of morality predictably clucked loudly. The
Seed was denounced by the Chicago Tribune, decried from pulpits, and the police made
threatening noises of busting the
street venders if such outrages
continued. All of which just stepped up
demand for the next issue. There may not
have been any more cover photo nudes, but naked
nymph continued to be seen in imaginative
illustrated covers.
I probably picked up my
first copy, maybe No. 3 that June one of my regular forays to Wells Street from Skokie. I had just graduated from Niles West High School and was working
as a dishwasher at a Howard Johnson’s Restaurant to earn
money for school that fall at Shimer College in Mt. Carroll, Illinois. All
summer long I brought home copies. To me
they were instruction manuals.
Before the first year
was out the founders had a business falling out and the paper was sold. The new
management kept the counter cultural feel and even more talented artists like
Lester Dore took over the graphic design which made the paper “the
most beautiful underground paper ever produced.”
The paper was not
heavily radical in its early editions,
concentrating instead on culture. But growing resistance to the Vietnam War and the approach of the 1968 Democratic Convention changed
that. Under the more radical leadership
of Abe Peck the Seed became something of a house
organ for Yippies! despite his initial prediction that their plans
would end in disaster. Under the leadership of Abby Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, and
Paul Krasner of The Realist, they were
plotting a total disruption of the Democrat’s
nominating party. In the spring of ’68
covers changed from flower power to
Yippie!
The Yippie! Call to the Democratic Convention protests. The Seed would be up to its eyeballs with preparations, the police riots, and the subsequent trials and protests for the next two years. |
Back from Shimer for
the summer, I came into the city to take classes from radical professor Staughton Lynd at the Free University at Roosevelt
University. He wanted to mobilize
our class as participant observers of upcoming Convention demonstrations,
which in addition to the Yippies had more conventional
marches and rallies planned by
the New Mobe and others. I volunteered to investigate the Yippies,
about whom I knew next to nothing except that I could probably find them from
the Seed.
The following is an excerpt from my Convention days memoirs, Chicago, Summer of ’68:
I made my way to the one place
in Chicago where I knew any Yippies could likely be found—the offices of the underground newspaper the Seed then on LaSalle Street just south of North
Avenue within blocks of ground zero
for the staging area for the Yippies
in Lincoln Park.
The door
was wide open to a dimly lit, cluttered, and chaotic office a few steps
below street level. Two dudes
with suitably long and unkempt hair were sweating over a table. “Hi!” I said, “I’m looking for Abbie Hoffman
or Jerry Rubin.” I was greeted with
incredulous stares and deep
suspicion.
Let’s review how I looked that summer—the frayed white short sleeve salesman-cast-off shirt, the store brand jeans with the cuffs turned up, the heavy Wellington work boots, the natty red kerchief knotted at the throat,
scoungy orange goatee, thick horn rim glasses, topped by a battered white Stetson. I looked like I
may have just graduated from the J. Edgar Hoover Academy for Stool Pigeons
and Spies.
“They’re not here,” one of the guys
said without volunteering any information
on their whereabouts or how I could contact them. I could have been staring at both of them that very
minute and I wouldn’t have known it.
A brief but cool conversation followed. I was beginning to detect full blown drug
induced paranoia from them. But they did give me some handbills and other information about the publicly announced plans for Convention week, all of which relied on free camping at the Park.
It
would be my first in-the-flesh encounter
with Seedlings. It would not be my last.
Coming
up: More Seed
memories.
Looking forward to next installment!
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