Lookout #6

Item

Title
EN Lookout #6
Creator
EN
Subject
EN Activism
EN About Art, Media, and Technology
EN Anarchism
EN Cities and Places
EN DIY and How-to
EN Education and School
EN Environment and Nature
EN Fiction and True stories
EN Music
EN Personal
EN Travel
Description
EN Lookout magazine started as a xeroxed community newsletter when Lawrence Livermore lived on Spy Rock, just a few miles north of Layonville, CA. Spy Rock was part of a constellation of locales across Mendocino and Humbdolt County that, since the late 1960s, had become increasingly popular among artists, hippies, and back-to-the-landers. Initially crafted in his solar-powered home, not far from the Iron Peak Lookout Tower, from which the magazine takes its name, the magazine engaged with local politics and tackled issues as diverse as environmental issues and countercultural philosophy. Over the years, following Livermore’s involvement with the Gilman Street Project in Berkeley and the punk-rock scene that loomed around it, Lookout’s focus shifted to music, which resulted in finding a whole new audience in the Bay Area and across the United States, especially among Maximum Rocknroll readers.
Publisher
EN
Contributor
EN
Date
EN
Format
EN Standard (8 1/2 by 11)
EN Stapled
Number of Pages
EN 14
Language
EN English
Place of Publication
EN Laytonville, CA
Rights
EN In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
Table Of Contents
EN Mendocino Secedes from Planet Earth (3)
Demented Teacher Torments Students with Pointless Puzzles (4)
Local Woman Boasts of Raising Five Sons for Cannon Fodder (4)
30 Pieces of Silver Bid for Seized Pot Farm (5)
Letters to the Lookout (7)
Music Can Make You Stupid (9)
— Shows: The Fabulous Dyketones at the Caspar Inn; The Unreal Band at Grapevine Station;
— Records: Ed Reinhart - Copy in Blue
More Kultural Kakophony (14)
Item sets
Lookout Magazine
Media
Lookout6.pdf