Price began his career at age 15 at the Boulder (Colorado) Daily Camera, where he worked in the composing room and advertising.
The charges were dropped after Price reported that the alleged victim was an undercover agent who fabricated the assault claim in order to give the district attorney a pretext for searching Thompson's Woody Creek ranch for drugs.
3: Songs of the Doomed: More Notes on the Death of the American Dream and included Price on the book's Honor Roll.
The first announced employee was former Daily News editor Diana Diamond, later a columnist at the Palo Alto Weekly.
[1][2] The New York Times did an in-depth report on the competition among Palo Alto newspapers, and much of the article focused on Price, who was described as a contrarian.