Minuteman Press
1101 Fifth St. • Berkeley, CA 94710
Phone: 510-540-7113 • Fax: 510-540-4838
E-Mail Us
Minuteman Press
1101 Fifth St. • Berkeley, CA 94710
Phone: 510-540-7113 • Fax: 510-540-4838
E-Mail Us
To get help on your next project or to place an order, enter our Customer Service Area. Visit our Products & Services area for a list of some of our products and services. For software downloads and answers to common printing questions, visit our Resources & Support area. To learn more about us, browse our Company Information section.
We hope you enjoy your visit to our site. If there is anything we can do to further improve your experience, please let us know. We are always looking for ways to better serve our customers.
Want to learn how to use print and media to make the most out of your business or event? Check out our blog posts below for tips and resources specially prepared for you to give you the benefits of Minuteman's long experience in this field:
September 21, 2012 is our “official” birthday but we plan to celebrate this milestone throughout the year by sharing some of our history which mirrors the changes brought about by the information revolution.
September 21, 1972
2375 Telegraph Avenue,
Captain Copy sets up shop two blocks south of the University of California campus. Our business was made possible by a major break though in Technological innovation: the development of the high speed, high volume photocopy printer made the business possible.
Minuteman Press of Berkeley is the printer of record for The International Forum for LOGOTHERAPY Journal of Search for Meaning, Volume 34, Number 2, Autumn 2011.
This just completed edition is the official publication of the Viktor Frankl Institute of Logotherapy. It presents the meaning-oriented existential philosophy and therapy develope by Dr. Viktor Frankl and expanded by logotherapists throughout the world.
A brief description of Logotherapy from Wikipedia:Logotherapy was developed by neurologist and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl. It is considered the "Third Viennese School of Psychotherapy"[1] after Freud's psychoanalysis and Adler's individual psychology. It is a type of existentialist analysis that focuses on a will to meaning as opposed to Adler's Nietzschean doctrine of will to power or Freud's will to pleasure.[2] Rather than power or pleasure, logotherapy is founded upon the belief that it is the striving to find a meaning in one's life that is the primary, most powerful motivating and driving force in humans.[3] A short introduction to this system is given in Frankl's most famous book, Man's Search for Meaning, in which he outlines how his theories helped him to survive his Holocaust experience and how that experience further developed and reinforced his theories.