You don t have to be small-town bred to have a soft spot for America s small<br > towns. For at least half our history, we were mostly a nation of microcenters<br > surrounded by farms. In 10,000 Centervilles scattered across the land, the<br > American idea took root, flourished, and fed the nation. You can still catch a<br > glimpse of this old America from the window seat of ajetliner on a clear night,<br > spotting small clusters of light across whole time zones.<br > The 1990 Census contained no real surprises for small-town America.<br > Many of the rural lights have dimmed and some have flickered out, a long-<br > term trend that is well understood, if not well accepted. When the old family<br > homestead is gone and good jobs are elsewhere, people move away. In 1950,<br >44 percent of the U.S. population still lived on farms or in small towns; by<br > 1990, that segment was down to 23 percent. ~<br > Ask small-towners what their place contributes to the national economy<br >and they ll tell you, with a mixture of pride and sadness: our kids. You can<br >forget about those bumper crops of corn and beans and truckloads of beef<br >and machinery--the big export item of small-town America always has been<br >people, mostly young people, and mostly reared in an environment where<br >traditional values of family, community, faith, hard work, and patriotism re-<br >main strong. Small wonder we put our small towns up on a pedestal--they re<br >helping to preserve the American dream.<br >
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