One of the first Digger activities was the publishing of various broadsides, which were printed by sneaking into the local
Students for a Democratic Society office and using their
Gestetner printer. The leaflets were eventually called
The Digger Papers, and soon morphed into small pamphlets with poetry, psychedelic art, and essays. The first issue of
The Digger Papers was published in Fall 1965.
Peter Berg was one of the regular contributors to the publication.
The Digger Papers originated such phrases as "Do your own thing" and "Today is the first day of the rest of your life." They often included statements that mocked the prevailing attitude of the
counterculture promoted by less-radical figures like the Haight-Independent Proprietors (HIP),
Timothy Leary, and
Richard Alpert. The first paper mocked the
acid community, saying "Time to forget because flowers are beautiful and the sun's not yellow, it's chicken!" They rarely included authors' names, though some had pseudonyms like "George Metevsky," a reference to the "Mad Bomber"
George Metesky. The
1% Free poster, showing two Chinese
Tong assassins under the Chinese character for "revolution," was thought to be demanding a 1% tithe from merchants, but that was not the case. The poster was a challenge, implicitly suggesting that "free" people were the minority, and inciting others to step up.
The Communications Company (ComCo) Writers
Chester Anderson and Claude and Helene Hayward the Communications Company distributed daily (and sometimes hourly) broadsides on the streets of the
Haight-Ashbury district during the early part of 1967 and the
Summer of Love. ComCo was a member of the
Underground Press Syndicate, a network of
countercultural newspapers and magazines. Through the Communications Company, Anderson circulated a number of his own bitter broadside polemics in the Haight, including, in April 1967, "Uncle Tim'$ Children," with its infamous, often-quoted line, "Rape is as common as bullshit on Haight Street."
Richard Brautigan's poem "
All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace" was first published, in March 1967, by the Communication Company on an mimeographed
broadside with both the title and imprint handwritten. The first run included a picture of a
megaphone, and a second printing had an image of people working on a large computer, rotated to run vertically beside the poem, with simple line drawings of animals all over the page. In April of the same year, the Communication Company published it again as the title poem in the
collection by the same name. It included 36 typewritten yellow pages measuring , in a print run of 1,500, all of which were given away for free. Brautigan then gave permission to The Diggers to include the poem in the final edition of
The Digger Papers, published in August 1968. The Communications Company also published
Harry Driggs' pioneering
underground comic The Life and Loves of Cleopatra (June 1967), an obscene 28-page narrative inspired by the
Elizabeth Taylor film
Cleopatra, and which featured artwork that today would be seen as
child pornography. The Diggers gave away the comic in their free store at the corner of Cole and Carl in Haight-Ashbury.
Joan Didion described the role Chester Anderson and ComCo played in Haight-Ashbury in her 1967 essay for
The Saturday Evening Post, "Slouching Towards Bethlehem", which was later included in the book of the
same name. == Parties, theater events, and happenings ==