I drove nearly 350 miles today on an errand (picking up a couple goats), and it reminded me of what a rediculously big state this is, and how many small and medium sized cities there are (along the way I went through or near Allentown, Hazelton, and Williamsport). Someone of the foundation-l list had mentioned that having a local chapter would be more important for the suburbans than the urbanites, but I think it might end up being even more of an asset to rural communities and the towns in the interior of the state.
Andrew (Whiteknight) has mentioned both online and in conversations with me how he would like to see Wikibooks-derived textbooks made available for poor urban districts. I agree with that, but we shouldn't forget that there are rural areas in our state that are just as poor, with even less exposure to the world's opportunities.
I don't really have anywhere to go with that, but it seems to me that outreach into the hill country shouldn't be ignored for the sake of outreach into the inner cities. We have a lot of hill country in PA :-).
-johnny.
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