In the summer of 1967, Bloom was elected director of the
United States Student Press Association (USSPA), which ran the
Collegiate Press Service (CPS) news service. At an organizational meeting in
Minneapolis in August, however, Bloom was purged from the USSPA because of his radical politics, which included a push to send student editors to Cuba and defy the U.S. travel ban. (Others thought that Bloom's purging was additionally because of what historian John McMillian refers to as his "
effeminate demeanor"). The inaugural issue of the Liberation News Service, a
mimeographed news packet, was sent in the summer of 1967. By February 1968, LNS was becoming the hub for
alternative journalism in the United States, supplying the growing movement media with interpretive coverage of current events and reports on movement activities and the
Sixties counterculture. In 1968, the LNS moved to New York, and in August, an internal split developed. In August 1968, a successful fundraising event led to an ugly fight over control of the organization's funds. Bloom's intention was to abandon political activism in an urban setting, and supplant it with a
Thoreauvian lifestyle. Aspiring to contribute to the
counterculture phenomenon of rural
communes in the late '60s, The charges were later dismissed. For the next six months, Bloom published the "LNS of the New Age," with subscribers receiving rival news packets from LNS-Montague and LNS-New York. But Bloom's group was understaffed, underfunded, and isolated on a remote (and cold) country farm, and the project died when the ink froze in the mimeograph. ==Death==