[GRRN] Nostalgia
RecycleWorlds (anderson@msn.fullfeed.com)
Mon, 5 Jul 1999 10:42:10 -0500
Good simplicity' falls by the wayside
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        By Craig Wilson, USA TODAY =
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        OXFORD, Miss.  - The rolling countryside west of this =
        college town is dotted with small villages.  Taylor.  =
        Courtland.  Curtis Station.  Marks and Pleasant Grove.
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        Some are just crossroads, but many have churches.  =
        Methodist.  Baptist.  An assortment of Pentecostals.
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        Each is locked.
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        In this last summer of the 20th century, USA TODAY set out =
        to travel the back roads, searching for what has changed, =
        seeking out what is vanishing from the landscape, compiling =
        a list of what will not be part of America in the next =
        millennium.
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        There are grasslands vanishing in Texas, family farms =
        vanishing outside Des Moines and Jews vanishing from the =
        Main Streets of the rural South, the last of a breed of =
        small-town merchants.  Even Times Square, as we once knew =
        it, is gone.
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        The always-open church, the one you could enter any time of =
        day or night for a moment of silence and solace, is all but =
        gone, too.  After visiting dozens of locked churches from =
        Abingdon, Va., to Helena, Ark., we added the once-welcoming =
        sanctuary to our list of endangered species.
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        In the next weeks, USA TODAY will chronicle such passings: =
        the drive-in, the roadside tourist cabin, the hitchhiker.
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        Some, like the hitchhiker, have become so rare a story =
        couldn't be written.  The only one we encountered in our =
        travels during the last two months was on Route 81 in =
        southern Virginia, and he was thumbing a ride only because =
        his truck had broken down and he needed to get to the next =
        service center.  Vanished are the backpacking kids =
        hitchhiking their way to a promised land called California.  =
        Today they drive.
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        Independent book stores.
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        Typewriter repairmen.
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        The $300,000 family home in Silicon Valley.
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        All a vanishing breed.
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        Right along with the World War II vet and the butcher shop.  =
        And we have yet to find a surviving soda fountain at a 5&10.
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        Bill Bryson, author of The Lost Continent: Travels in Small =
        Town America and the recent best seller A Walk in the Woods, =
        didn't like what he saw 10 years ago when he traveled =
        America's back roads.  He fears things have gotten only =
        worse.
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        "I've spent a lot of time in Australia this last year, and =
        the thing that's amazing to me is how much it was like =
        America in the 1950s," he says.  "It rammed it home to me, =
        how much we've lost.  They still have mom-and-pop motels, =
        coherent small towns with vibrant Main Streets and two-lane =
        highways so you're part of the landscape.  It doesn't =
        separate you like a four-lane road does."
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        To Bryson, traveling the USA now "is by and large a =
        discouraging experience.  After Australia, it's even worse.  =
        We've given up so much."
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        He fears what we have lost is irretrievable.
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        "I think what happens, what we've done, is we've acquired =
        variety and convenience, but we've sacrificed a lot of good =
        simplicity.  We've sacrificed a lot of good quality.  It's =
        very hard to argue that going shopping at the mall or =
        Wal-Mart or a fast-food place aren't easy and convenient and =
        save you time, but it's hard to argue that any of them is a =
        quality experience.  It's not a quality experience for you, =
        or the community.  It diminishes things and makes the whole =
        nation less attractive."
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        Main Streets becoming cut-rate strip malls =
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        The National Trust for Historic Preservation put America's =
        Main Street on the top of its most endangered sites list =
        last month.  According to the Trust, national drugstore =
        chains are tearing down historic landmarks as they target =
        the centers of small towns for new stores.
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        "America's Main Streets could be turned into cut-rate =
        versions of suburban strip malls," said Richard Moe, the =
        trust's president, when unveiling the trust's newest =
        endangered sites list this spring.
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        Speaking of drugstores, when was the last time you shopped =
        in one that wasn't owned by a chain? Probably not this week.
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        And when was the last time you stayed in a hotel and were =
        able to open the windows? Can you open the windows in your =
        office? Bet not.
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        The family farm? Gone with the proverbial wind, although =
        many say it's just the nature of capitalism that they're =
        disappearing from a landscape marked by suburban sprawl.
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        "Small mom-and-pop operations cannot compete with larger =
        firms, so family farms have become an expensive lifestyle =
        that America cannot afford; it's an inefficient use of =
        resources that is becoming a hobby that leads to =
        bankruptcy," says Steven Blank, a cooperative extension =
        economist at the University of California, Davis.
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        Still, millions of people are unhappy about the passing of =
        the old homestead.  Sales of antique barns are skyrocketing =
        as baby boomers with money to burn try to recapture an =
        America they probably never knew.
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        Some things, like the family-run farm, are tangible.  =
        Others, like peace and quiet, aren't.  Tried reading quietly =
        on a plane or train lately? Impossible, considering the man =
        behind you who is doing a day's worth of business on his =
        cell phone.
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        And civility on the road? Disappearing quickly.
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        Then there's the vanishing American waistline.
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        One only has to stand in line at Disney World or Elvis' =
        Graceland to see proof that 55% of Americans, about 97 =
        million people, are overweight, according the National =
        Institutes of Health.
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        Where these couch potatoes sit is another matter.  It's not =
        the living room.  The living room isn't exactly vanishing.  =
        It's just that no one sits there anymore.  The show house =
        Country Home magazine built last summer in lower Manhattan =
        didn't have a living room at all.  Its reader survey showed =
        no one wanted one.
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        Personalities just as endangered as places =
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        Certain Americans are vanishing, too.
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        The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates the remaining =
        6.3 million veterans of World War II will be gone by the =
        year 2008.  About 30,000 die every month, taking with them =
        their Big Band music, their brown fedoras and their wing-tip =
        shoes.
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        Where they all went on Saturday night -- the small-town =
        movie theater -- is pretty much gone too, moved to a =
        multiplex operation at the mall on the edge of town.
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        The outdoor counterpoint, the drive-in, is hanging on, =
        though barely.  Since 1958 the number of drive-in theaters =
        across the USA has dropped to around 500, down from a high =
        of 4,063, according to the National Association of Theater =
        Owners.  Some became weekend flea markets, some X-rated =
        theaters, and others disappeared altogether, vanished into =
        suburban tracts.
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        William Booker, who owns the Moonlite Drive-in in Abingdon, =
        Va., has no such plan.
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        "I'm going to be doing this for quite a long time," he says. =
        "It's never crossed my mind to close this place down."
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        The independent bookstore owners are putting up a good =
        fight, too, although they took a hit in the early '90s when =
        almost 1,000 of the 5,200 members of the American =
        Booksellers Association (the independent bookstore group) =
        closed after the advent of the superstores.  Amazon.com and =
        other on-line sellers present a new threat.
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        Then there are people who don't really care if they vanish =
        from the landscape.
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        Ralph Morrow, a 75-year-old boat maker in Saranac Lake, N.Y. =
        has made 53 Adirondack guide boats in his career that has =
        spanned almost five decades.  They are works of art; only a =
        handful of people still ply the craft.
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        But when a man asked whether Morrow would make one for him =
        so he could hang it up in his house, Morrow didn't.  " I =
        told him if he wanted to hang something up, hang up a =
        picture."
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        Is there a true-blue tie-dye wearing VW van-driving hippie =
        left to be found in Berkeley, Calif.?
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        Real food means getting off the interstate =
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        And is there such a thing as regional food, anymore? Of =
        course.  It's just harder to find through the thicket of =
        McDonald's and Hardees and Burger Kings that clutter the =
        main drags into most every town in America.
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        Bill Bryson says Americans are to blame for not seeking out =
        the authentic eateries more.
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        "There's a place in the modern world for the Wal-Marts and =
        McDonalds, but it's just that we seem to be heading in this =
        hell-for-leather manner that that's all there is.  We don't =
        even take the effort to get off the interstate, to drive 5 =
        miles into the countryside to eat or shop where our money =
        would be truly appreciated.  Where we might actually find =
        something interesting."
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        The Hollywood Caf=E9 in Robinsonville, Miss., is one such =
        place, typical of what is vanishing, despite the fact the =
        food is better and more honest than what's served at the =
        fast-food joints on the interstate: chicken, fried okra, =
        rice and gravy, lima beans and biscuits, followed by Key =
        Lime pie.  All for $5.92.
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        The waitress will call you sweetheart, too.
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____________________________________
Peter Anderson
RecycleWorlds Consulting
4513 Vernon Blvd. Ste. 15
Madison, WI 53705-4964
Phone:(608) 231-1100/Fax: (608) 233-0011
E-mail:recycle@msn.fullfeed.com