
General
If you've got comments, questions, queries, observations, remarks,
feedback, kudos, input, compliments, complaints, flattery, venerations,
endorsements, praise, criticisms, tributes, commendations, reprimands,
remonstrances, acclaim, accolades, plaudits, insults or changes
of address use this address:
.
APInews
If you would like to send us information or announcements for consideration
in APInews, please use this address:
. We tend to give more, I mean a lot more, in fact tons more
priority to individual posts versus messages from people who just
put this address on an automated mailing list. But you go ahead
and do what you want. (See Announcements)
Web site Technical Issues and Questions
If you've got something to get off your mind that falls into
one of the categories listed under "General" above, except
it's specific to the subject of this Web site, then use this address:
. In particular it's a good place to write when something doesn't
work the way it seems like it should. If, through some brutal irony,
this address doesn't work, then as an emergency fallback measure
you could use the "General" link.
Announcements
If you're just dying to put us on a press release-type mailing
list, then use this address:
.
Mailing Address
If your bank doesn't let you wire money direct from your account
to our account, or you need to send us some other kind of object or document, then you're probably going to need to use our mailing
address:
Art in the
Public Interest/CAN
P.O. Box 68
Saxapahaw, NC 27340
336-376-8404 |
Again, this is the 21st Century. There's no need to send us anything
on paper that you can send us via the Internet. The Internet is
faster, safer, free of biological weaponry and it doesn't accumulate
into a fire hazard. We read e-mail daily and paper mail about, oh,
once a month or so. E-mail gets filed automatically. Paper mail
is always getting lost or we can't find a sheet of scratch paper
so we end up writing shopping lists on the backs of your unopened
envelopes that then get folded and stuffed into the bottoms of old
coat pockets that we're wearing when we bump into someone who says
"can you tear off a corner of paper so I can write down your
phone number" and, well, you know how it goes. And while we're
not going to go into the whole thing about saving trees and natural resources, we should mention
that our local landfill no longer accepts paper for recycling because
there's such a glut of paper out there, so it's kind of a double-whammy
when it comes to that sort of thing.