RADAR
ISSUE 13 CONTRIBUTORS
Rahne Alexander will take a manhattan -- better make it a double.
Lauren Bender writes, draws, works, and performs other human feats (sometimes involving a giant blue fun-hop ball) in Mt. Vernon, where she lives with
an attack cat and the notion that futility is the spice of life.
Rebecca Burrett is a nonprofit devotee, living and working in Baltimore.
Miriam DesHarnais was called "jobless scum" by a fur-coated lady at the inauguration. In reality, jobless people are not scum, and
Miriam is a librarian for Baltimore County who enjoys monsters, mail-art and manifestations of free speech.
J. Gavin Heck recently moved to Baltimore from Brooklyn
New York. He won "best of" for "best dead-for-100-years elephant” from the Village Voice in 2003.
Lucy Hirsch has been bartending
and interning at the Creative Alliance. She graduated with a degree in English and is happy to finally be putting it to use!
Ellie Mitchell, the general
editor for RADAR, is the After School Strategy Projects Manager for Safe and Sound.
Molly O'Donnell is a Baltimore freelance writer.
Cara Ober is a painter
and teacher, who lives in Charles Village with her boyfriend and two cats. She is happy to be over the flu!
Kerry Oberdalhoff is born to the Shawnee
of Ohio. She is working on a project to connect Indian ex-offenders with traditional spiritual communities.
Ding Ren needs to stop obsessing. She wants a swing-set and an endless supply of polka dot stickers.
Bill Sebring is senior editor at Link, Baltimore’s
critical journal on the arts. His favorite animal is pretty much the liger.
Lynn Silverman is an artist who teaches at the Maryland Institute College
of Art.
James Stevenson is a writer and composer living in Baltimore who, in his spare time, designs databases and web applications.
Graham Summers is a musician,
writer, stock analyst, living in Hampden, MD.
M. Jane Taylor is a freelance writer and editor living in Mount Vernon. She is currently writing a book
on dream interpretation.
Kevin Thurston is a double agent. Wage slave by day, poet by night, he tries to take afternoons off.
Jeannie Yoon can be seen
snowboarding the hamilton hills with a camera tied to the end of her snowboard.
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