[Imc-newsroom] Interviews

Michael Feltes mfeltes at gmx.net
Mon Nov 5 20:30:12 CST 2001


Well, folks, I went one of two with the interviews.  I did get my interview
with John Metz, the Socialist Party organizer.  It ended up being about 10
minutes.  I don't know how much we use music as an interlude, but I cut a
little piece of "The Internationale" by Ani DiFranco and Utah Phillips in at the
end of the interview.  It was very easy to do, and I thought it was a very
good way to wrap things up.  

BTW, if some of you don't have crossover with imc-staff and you're going to
be in the IMC tomorrow, I'd like someone to encode this interview as an MP3
and get it on the Newswire, as I won't be back in town until Saturday.  I
believe that the filename is something like "John Metz SPUSA organizer (Edited
Version).wav"; a search for John Metz on Mother Jones/mink should locate it
straightaway.  There are some people in the Socialist Party who would like to
hear it, so if you could get it out there on the Web with some vaguely
appropriate title, I'd be very grateful.  

Unfortunately, I was not able to get hold of Nancy Oden.  The 1-800 number
associated with the Green Party that I had didn't work.  John Wason has her
personal phone number, if someone would like to work on it; it was about 5:30
yesterday when he told me this, unfortunately, and I didn't have time to
follow up on it and get the first interview edited.  His email is
jwason at prairienet.org, if someone would like to pick it up.

Hrmmm... that's all I have.  Take care, folks.

-- 
--

Michael Feltes
mfeltes at gmx.net

The question is asked - can we afford it [Labour's socialistic 
reforms]?  Supposing the answer is 'No,' what does that mean?  It 
really means that the sum total of the goods produced and the 
services rendered by the people of this country is not sufficient to 
provide for all our people at all times, in sickness, in health, in 
youth and in age, [a] very modest standard of life... I cannot 
believe that our national productivity is so slow, that our 
willingness to work is so feeble or that we can submit to the world 
that the masses of our people must be condemned to penury.

- Clement Attlee, 1946

Sent through GMX FreeMail - http://www.gmx.net




More information about the Imc-newsroom mailing list