Thorne Dreyer / James McEnteer : Dallas Underground Icon Stoney Burns Dead at 68

                                theragblog.blogspot.com | May 2nd 2011          
                                                                                
                                                                 


Stoney Burns dies at 68:
Crusading underground journalist 
was incessantly harassed by Dallas officials

By Thorne Dreyer / The Rag Blog

See "Stoney Burns used a gentle wit to fight injustice in Dallas," by James 
McEnteer, Below.

Sixties icon Stoney Burns passed away Thursday morning, April 28, 2011, in 
Dallas. Our mutual friend, Angus Wynne, informed us that Stoney died at Baylor 
Medical Center “of a sudden, massive heart attack.” Burns, 68, was buried on 
Sunday at the Shearith Israel Cemetery on Dolphin Road in Dallas.

Stoney, who was born Brent LaSalle Stein, was a Sixties activist/journalist and 
pioneer of the underground press in Texas. When we were publishing The Rag in 
Austin and Space City! in Houston, he edited a series of publications in 
Dallas, including Dallas Notes and the Iconoclast -- and later the music 
magazine, Buddy. In its notice about Burns' death, Pegasus News referred to 
Stoney as the "King of the Hippies."

In an April 29 article, The Dallas Morning News said that Burns' Dallas Notes 
"decried war, intolerance and hypocrisy with a playful aggression and a cutting 
edge."

In his 1992 book Fighting Words, in which he profiled five independent Texas 
journalists, James McEnteer wrote, "Powered by an anarchic energy and a highly 
developed sense of the absurd, Stoney personified everything official Dallas 
loathed." [See McEnteer's reflections on Stoney Burns, written for The Rag 
Blog, below.]

Stoney was incessantly harassed by the Dallas authorities, who charged him with 
obscenity, beat him mercilessly, tore up his offices, and confiscated his 
equipment.

Burns' obscenity case went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court where Justice 
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.”

Stoney had trouble finding anyone in Dallas to print his newspapers, and, 
according to Austin's Steve Speir, a potential printer in Fort Worth backed out 
after someone threatened to burn down his shop. So Steve set Stoney up with a 
printer in Waco, “and on the way back to Dallas we’d be stopped by the cops and 
harassed. They’d throw all the papers on the ground and search the truck.”

According to The Rag Blog’s David P. Hamilton, four Dallas police cars followed 
him for several miles after one visit to Stoney’s home.

In 1974, Time Magazine wrote, "The law in Dallas, from all appearances, had 
been bent on getting Stoney Burns for years" when they "found in the glove 
compartment a tiny stash of marijuana. It was barely enough for one or two 
joints." But it was enough to get Stoney a sentence of 10 years and one day -- 
time he never served thanks to Texas Governor Dolph Briscoe who commuted the 
sentence.

Angus Wynne told the Dallas Observer that Stoney Burns had "gone through so 
much, between his public battles and private ones, and turned into a 
sweetheart. He'd had [an earlier] heart attack and cancer and whipped all 
those... He was just a great guy, one of the generalissimos of the so-called 
revolution back then. There was something real special about Stoney..."

[Rag Blog editor Thorne Dreyer was a colleague of Stoney Burns in the Sixties 
underground press.]

Stoney Burns. Photo courtesy of Angus Wynne. 
Fighting words:
Stoney Burns used a gentle wit
to fight injustice in Dallas

By James McEnteer / The Rag Blog / May 2, 2011

“Maybe that’s why we’re hated. We tell the truth; we’ve got nothing to lose. We 
do have something to gain, however. It’s our self-respect. Yeah, we tell the 
truth. It’s about time some newspaper did.”

-- Stoney Burns, Dallas Notes [From James McEnteer: Fighting Words, Independent 
Journalists in Texas, UT Press, 1992.]

Stoney was not just a brave man -- facing down the rigid Dallas Establishment 
in large part all by his lonesome -- but a funny one. He used his gentle wit 
and sense of the ridiculous as effective weapons for social justice in 1960s 
Dallas, just about the unfriendliest territory imaginable for stoned longhairs 
looking to have a good time.

Stoney loved a good time -- good music, friends, and laughter. But his 
easy-going sense of the absurd enraged the humorless conservatives in the 
Dallas Police Department who considered his satire of local laws and his 
criticism of usually unmentioned overbearing police tactics as unacceptable 
threats to their sense of law and order.

Stoney became a cause and a crusader almost by accident, as the sole occupant 
of the void left by jackboot censorship of all but the most orthodox right-wing 
cant in the Dallas media.

Stoney Burns in the Iconoclast office, 1972. Photo courtesy of Stoney Burns 
from Fighting Words: Independent Journalists in Texas, by James McEnteer, 
University of Texas Press, 1992. 
His Notes from Underground started on the SMU campus and was quickly banned. He 
was the only journalist to describe and photograph police harassment of 
peaceful long-haired young people in Dallas parks. His various newspapers took 
different names over the years, but were always an eclectic mix of music 
reviews, social commentary, and jokes at the expense of local officials, 
reflecting Stoney's own sensibilities.

His papers featured outrageous cartoons, guaranteed to offend the white bread, 
church-bred Folks who Mattered in Dallas. Stoney always professed bewilderment 
at the passionate hatred his dopey humor aroused among otherwise rather staid, 
affectless citizens. The brief, final incarnation of Stoney's journalistic 
ambitions was a paper he called The Iconoclast, in homage to the Waco 
rabblerouser, William Brann.

The police harassed Stoney Burns for years, wrecked his newspaper offices, 
stole his equipment, planted dope on him, and tried every which way to shut him 
up, finally hounding him into prison for 10 years and a day on a trumped-up 
charge of marijuana possession, which the governor later quietly dismissed.

But Stoney's abbreviated prison term ended up accomplishing its goal of 
silencing a genuine independent voice of Dallas journalism. Stoney went on to 
publish Buddy, about the local music scene, but made only occasional, rather 
vague political comments in subsequent years.

Stoney Burns brought light and fresh air into Dallas public discourse of the 
1960s. Despite the strange (to him) resistance his journalism conjured in the 
authorities, Stoney had the courage to continue telling the truth as he saw it 
for seven years.

He served as an inspiration to many in his own community and beyond, revealing 
the cowardice of a system ruled by intimidation, not by public assent. He 
opened up the acceptable limits of free speech in 1960s Dallas. And he paid a 
price for it.

Dallas and Texas and the country are in Stoney's debt, now as then. Stoney's 
courage and humor are needed today as much as ever. His spirit will always be 
worth remembering.

[Rag Blog contributor James McEnteer is the author of Fighting Words: 
Independent journalists in Texas, published by the University of Texas Press. 
He lives near Durban, South Africa.]

Also see: 

Stoney Burns, Co-Founder of Underground Paper Dallas Notes and Buddy, Has Died 
by Robert Wilonsky / Dallas Observer / April 29, 2011 Ernest McMillan and 
Stoney Burns : Dallas 60s Activists Revisited by Roy Appleton / The Rag Blog / 
November 3, 2008                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                        

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