Proclamation 5899 --
National Farm-City Week, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
Communication
systems are the essential circuitry of democracy, the lifelines of information
and ideas that provide the motive power for economic growth, social
development, and personal enrichment. Throughout our history as a Nation of
great size and dynamic opportunities,
During
National Farm-City Week, we pause to recognize formally this aspect of our
heritage and to rededicate ourselves to the goal of open and effective
communication between rural and urban people, groups, and institutions. The
pace of change in this regard has been truly extraordinary over the past
century -- with, for example, rural free delivery, the telephone, radio, and
television. From the vantage point of the late 20th century, it may be hard for
us to imagine how significant these and other developments in urban-rural
communication actually were.
Advances
in communication are even more vital today, when an average
of 112 people rely on a single American farmer for their supply of food
and fiber and agriculture is the focus of increasing international commerce and
competition. The range of agricultural issues has grown, too, to include public
concern over the environment, recreational areas, water, wildlife, food safety
and nutrition, and, of course, the productivity and profitability of farming
itself. Fortunately, new means of communication are facilitating the rapid
transfer of the ever more complex data needed to support our Nation's thriving
mix of urban and rural activity. From satellites to on-line communications,
from specialized newsletters to general trade publications,
For
the past 34 years, the theme of urban-rural dialogue and communication has been
a regular part of our national celebration of Thanksgiving Week. Let us pause
again this year to acknowledge our gratitude for the bounty of energy and
invention God has bestowed upon our land.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this fourth day of November, in
the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,