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- LETTERS, Page 6Small Town, U.S.A.
-
- You deserve applause for your positive treatment of the
- economic conditions in Clay Center, Kans. (BUSINESS, March 27).
- Your report of the slow demise of rural communities came as a
- pleasant surprise to one who believed himself to be shouting
- into the dark about his own town's troubles. The states appear
- concerned with urban decay but ignore rural disintegration. Even
- with modern telephone service, hospitals and schools, a town
- will perish without that intangible element of community spirit.
- Therein lies the continued strength of towns such as Clay Center
- and Windom, Minn.
-
- Tim Anderson, Executive Director Windom Area Chamber of
- Commerce Windom, Minn.
-
- Having just moved back to central Kansas from Washington,
- I find the quality-of-life differences dramatic: crack still
- refers to an expansion split in the pavement, a street sweeper
- means a vehicle with brushes and not a shotgun, and our high
- school's dropout rate is 0.01%, vs. a national average of 25%.
-
- Dane B. Britton Ellsworth, Kans.
-
- You need search no farther than Kansas' state capital of
- Topeka, 94 miles from Clay Center, to find a reason for the
- demise of small towns. Kansas has so badly wanted to attract
- inventory-laden businesses that this year the state is
- implementing a constitutional amendment that takes inventories
- off the tax rolls and shifts the property-tax burden to service
- businesses and "electronic cottage" industries. Those are the
- very enterprises that could save many small towns.
-
- Eldon Thorman Clay Center, Kans.
-