Contributors
November 1975
Writers
David Bond has returned to the South from California, where he learned a few things. He’s a student at Duke Divinity School.
moreReturning to these pages is Judy Bratten.
moreLamellicorn the Clone (Rob Brezsny) won enough money to buy a new red truck but says this won’t keep him from begging.
moreBetsy Cox writes and publishes stories and is part, with Barbara Street, of a women’s writing group that meets Wednesday mornings in Durham.
moreReturning to these pages is Cindy Crossen.
moreRob Diamant has changed his name to Leaf.
moreReturning to these pages is Sue Hartnett.
moreJudy Hogan writes constantly and hopes to get pieces of it into publishable form. It was once a compulsion. Now, it’s just part of the day, like eating, or sleeping. She works with readings, selling small press materials, teaching, writing wherever she can. She believes in readers.
moreSarah Keith teaches T’ai Chi in Chapel Hill and is involved with dance and yoga.
moreJennie Knoop works at Somethyme, plays the guitar and sings, and writes when she has time, with Elizabeth, two, at her elbow.
moreTom Lindsey drives a taxi in New York City.
moreVirginia Rudder lives in Hurdle Mills and farms tobacco for a living. She writes a weekly column for the Roxboro Courier Times. Her first book of poems on women through history will be published soon by Thorp Springs Press.
moreReturning to these pages is Stephen March.
moreMarilyn Michael’s first book (with three other women) is The Moon Peelers.
moreDusty Miller is trying to keep one step ahead of winter.
moreMarsha Poirier has been coming to local readings faithfully since the summer of ’74. Loom Press is about to publish her book, Selling Grapes.
morePriscilla Rich Safransky suggested dropping Rich, but the editor is adamant.
moreHal Richman has written for THE SUN on God, community businesses, and peanut butter cookies, but this takes the cake.
moreSy Safransky is editor and publisher of THE SUN.
moreJaki Shelton works at Danziger’s Gift Shop, has poems in Hyperion, and is working on a play.
moreSherman Shelton is a graduate student in folklore at UNC. His work has appeared in The First New England Anthology of Black Poetry and Photography and in the recent Hyperion magazine.
moreBarbara Street writes and publishes stories and is part, with Betsy Cox, of a women’s writing group that meets Wednesday mornings in Durham.
moreElyse’s last name is now Towey.
moreJean Wilson lived until recently near Pittsboro and has moved back to Myrtle Beach.
moreOn The Cover
Frank Holyfield, who says the drawings in this issue were done several years ago and are “autobiographical,” just landed a job as an artist and educational consultant for the City of Durham through an NC Arts Council grant program.
Cover Illustration: Buick Gives You Something To Believe In But Plymouth Makes It.
moreEditor and Publisher
Sy Safransky
Editors-at-large
Priscilla Rich Safransky
Mike Mathers
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