# Dallas Notes

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{{Short description|American underground newspaper, 1967–1970}}
{{italic title}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}
thumb|Oct. 23–Nov. 5 1970 issue|192px
'''''Dallas Notes''''' was a biweekly [underground newspaper](/source/underground_press) published in [Dallas, Texas](/source/Dallas%2C_Texas) from 1967 to 1970, and edited by Stoney Burns (penname of Brent Lasalle Stein; 1942–2011), whose father owned a printing company in Dallas. Initially founded by Doug Baker<ref name="Baker-oral-history" /> at [Southern Methodist University](/source/Southern_Methodist_University) in March 1967, under the title ''NOTES from the Underground'', the first issues were run off after hours on a copy machine at [Texas Instruments](/source/Texas_Instruments).<ref name="Lovell 1999" /><ref name="Burns-oral-history" />

== History ==
With a blend of New Left political activism, hippie/drug counterculture, and underground comix and graphics, the paper developed a growing citywide and regional readership, and starting with Vol. 1, No. 26 (Feb. 16-29, 1968) the paper changed its banner to ''Dallas Notes'' and is sometimes confused with the competing weekly publication published by Doug Baker, first called "Dallas News", later, when the U.S. Post Office delivered their mail to "The Dallas Morning News" and the big morning paper's mail to them, Baker renamed it "The Iconoclast". Eventually circulation peaked at 20,000 copies after Stoney Burns quit. Roy Appleton wrote in ''The Dallas Morning News'' that ''Dallas Notes'' "covered the local scene — from music and drug arrests to demonstrations and the men in blue." He reported that the paper "decried war, intolerance and hypocrisy with a playful aggression and a cutting edge."<ref name="Dallas-News 2011 Apr 29" />

The paper's 85-issue run came to an end with the issue of Sept. 16-30, 1970. It was subsequently revived and carried forward under the name ''H.O.O.K.A.'' (The Humanitarian Order of Kosmic Awareness, organized as a church, whose purpose was the overthrow of the U.S. Government). When Stoney Burns left, citing he'd "dropped acid and flipped out three times, but only came back twice," he introduced  J.R. Compton to the staff as the new editor and publisher, from late 1970 to 1972.

During its existence ''Dallas Notes'' was subjected to repeated police raids and harassment. [Thorne Dreyer](/source/Thorne_Dreyer) wrote at ''[The Rag Blog](/source/The_Rag_Blog)'' that ''Notes'' editor Burns "was incessantly harassed by the Dallas authorities, who charged him with obscenity, beat him mercilessly, tore up his offices, and confiscated his equipment." Burns later learned that many of the office tear-ups and equipment thefts were carried out by his father and his father's trusted assistant.

The obscenity case against the paper "went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court where Justice [William O. Douglas](/source/William_O._Douglas) commented on the cops' ransacking of the ''Dallas Notes'' offices: 'It would be difficult to find in our books a more lawless search-and-destroy raid.'"<ref name="Rag-Blog 2011 May 2" />

In a widely publicized case former editor Burns was sentenced to prison in 1972 for 10 years and a day for possession of marijuana,<ref name="Dallas-News 2008 Oct 25" /> but the sentence was commuted by Texas Governor [Dolph Briscoe](/source/Dolph_Briscoe). ''[Time](/source/Time_(magazine))'' magazine reported that, "The law in Dallas, from all appearances, had been bent on getting Stoney Burns for years."<ref name="Time 1974 Nov 25" />

In his book, ''Unamerican Activities: The Campaign Against the Underground Press'', Geoffrey Rips wrote that the "persistent persecution of Burns stemmed in part from [his] 1967 investigative report in ''Dallas Notes'' about Texas Congressman [Joe Pool](/source/Joe_R._Pool)'s arrest for drunken driving, after his car hit a carload of soldiers at a red light." Pool was released and the arrest records destroyed, and the story was ignored by the Dallas daily newspapers. Pool, who was a member of the [House Un-American Activities Committee](/source/House_Un-American_Activities_Committee), called for an investigation of the underground papers.<ref name="Rips 1981" />

In October 1972, Burns, founded ''[Buddy](/source/Buddy_(magazine))'' magazine, a free bi-monthly named after [Buddy Holly](/source/Buddy_Holly) that covered, among other things, the rock-n-roll and blues scene in [North Texas](/source/North_Texas).

== Library access ==
* ''Dallas Notes'' – "Serving the proletariat since 1967," Notes from the Underground, Inc.; {{OCLC|14584184|1049750530|917535901}}
* ''Notes From the Underground;'' {{OCLC|869478328}}
* ''Notes on Pot;'' {{OCLC|8227105}}
* ''Hooka'' (Humanitarian Order of Kosmic Awareness); {{OCLC|14094691}}
* ''Hooka Notes'' (Humanitarian Order of Kosmic Awareness); {{OCLC|974432136}}
* ''Instant Karma'' (Humanitarian Order of Kosmic Awareness, Publishers of ''Hooka);'' {{OCLC|900010644}}

==See also==
* [List of underground newspapers of the 1960s counterculture](/source/List_of_underground_newspapers_of_the_1960s_counterculture)

== Notes ==
{{reflist|30em|refs=

<ref name="Lovell 1999">[https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc278642/m2/1/high_res_d/1002659811-lovell.pdf "Stoney Burns and ''Dallas Notes:'' Covering the Dallas Counterculture, 1967–1970"] (Master of Arts thesis, history), by Bonnie Alice Lovell, [University of North Texas](/source/University_of_North_Texas) (1999); {{OCLC|43299591|928059863}}</ref>

<ref name="Dallas-News 2008 Oct 25">[http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/102508dnmet1968activists.144753c0d.html "Dallas activists in 1960s struggled against status quo in a time of tumult, change"] by Roy Appleton, ''[Dallas Morning News](/source/Dallas_Morning_News),'' October 25, 2008. Retrieved July 27, 2010.</ref>

<ref name="Rag-Blog 2011 May 2">[https://theragblog.blogspot.com/2011/05/thorne-dreyer-james-mcenteer-dallas.html "Stoney Burns dies at 68: Crusading underground journalist was incessantly harassed by Dallas officials"] by [Thorne Webb Dreyer](/source/Thorne_Webb_Dreyer), ''The Rag Blog,'' May 2, 2011.</ref>

<ref name="Dallas-News 2011 Apr 29">[http://www.dallasnews.com/news/community-news/dallas/headlines/20110429-stoney-burns-leading-voice-of-the-1960s-dallas-counterculture-dies-at-68.ece "Stoney Burns, leading voice of the 1960s Dallas counterculture, dies at 68"] by Roy Appleton, ''[Dallas Morning News](/source/Dallas_Morning_News)'', April 29, 2011.</ref>

<ref name="Time 1974 Nov 25">[https://web.archive.org/web/20080408115559/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943067,00.html#ixzz1uIuANV8p "Justice: Getting Stoney Burns"], ''[Time](/source/Time_(magazine))'' (magazine), November 25, 1974.</ref>

<ref name="Rips 1981">''Unamerican Activities: The Campaign Against the Underground Press,'' compiled by Geoffrey Rips, [City Lights Books](/source/City_Lights_Books) (1981), pps. 107–8; {{OCLC|65614029|251710773}}<div style="margin-left:2em">Note: Rips ''(né'' Geoffrey Keith Rips; born 1950) is, among other things, a former editor of the ''[Texas Observer](/source/Texas_Observer)''</div></ref>

<ref name="Baker-oral-history">"Oral History Interview With Doug D. Baker, Jr., 1998 October 29 & 30", interviewed by Bonnie Lovell; {{OCLC|319177710}}</ref>

<ref name="Burns-oral-history">"Oral History Interview With Brent Lasalle Stein "Stoney' Burns", 1998 April 28," interviewed by Bonnie Lovell; {{OCLC|317394351}}</ref>

}}

==External links==
* [https://theragblog.blogspot.com/2011/05/thorne-dreyer-james-mcenteer-dallas.html Dallas Underground Icon Stoney Burns Dead at 68]. Articles by [Thorne Dreyer](/source/Thorne_Dreyer) and James McEnteer, ''The Rag Blog'' (May 2, 2011)]
* [https://theragblog.blogspot.com/2011/05/tom-miller-stoney-burns-was-dallas.html "Stoney Burns Was Dallas' Underground Iconoclast"], by Tom Miller, ''The Rag Blog'' (May 20, 2011)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080408115559/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943067,00.html "JUSTICE: Getting Stoney Burns"], ''Time Magazine'' (Nov. 24, 1974)

Category:Newspapers published in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex

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