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		Pennsylvania's 'Charlie Brown Christmas' 
		city gets artificial tree 
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		 [October 11, 2016] 
		By Gina Cherelus 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - The cash-strapped 
		Pennsylvania city that was ridiculed and then praised in 2014 for its 
		scrawny "Charlie Brown Christmas" tree has decided to go artificial this 
		year, gracing its town square with a brightly lit, factory-made model 
		that will last for years.
 
 Reading Mayor Wally Scott agreed to erect a donated 34-foot synthetic 
		tree rather than take another chance on the imperfections of nature. 
		With luck, it will last up to 20 years.
 
 "I like the idea and I saw the tree and I fell in love with the 
		artificial tree," said Scott, who presides over one of the poorest 
		cities in the United States. "It will always guarantee that Reading will 
		have a beautiful tree."
 
 In 2014, employees of Reading's public works department had planned to 
		obtain a tree from a local farm. But they instead chopped down a 
		raggedy, 45-foot Norway spruce from a local ball field and erected it in 
		a downtown square.
 
 The humble, lopsided tree immediately attracted unflattering 
		international attention and brought a torrent of derision on social 
		media.
 
		
		 
		But the city, about 60 miles west of Philadelphia, turned the tables on 
		its detractors. It decorated the tree with a single red bulb, 
		reminiscent of scenes from the animated holiday classic "A Charlie Brown 
		Christmas," and was congratulated for embracing the true spirit of 
		Christmas.
 Money is tight in Reading, which has a higher percentage of its 
		population living below the poverty level than any other city in the 
		United States, according to 2010 U.S. Census Bureau data.
 
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			A single red bulb decorates a scraggly Christmas tree following a 
			ceremony in Reading, Pennsylvania with on December 7, 2014. 
			REUTERS/Mark Makela 
            
			 
			The city, which has about 100,000 residents, accepted a donated 
			25-foot-tall natural tree last year, according to the Reading Eagle 
			newspaper.
 The artificial tree will have 1,250 ornaments, more than 1900 lights 
			and 5-foot three-dimensional stars draped over its plastic branches. 
			The city is receiving more than $20,000 in donations to help pay the 
			bill.
 
 The newly elected mayor said that as a private citizen he loved the 
			charming 2014 'Charlie Brown' tree and plans on commemorating it 
			this year.
 
 "Somewhere in one of our parks, we've decided we're gonna light up a 
			random tree to represent the 'Charlie Brown' tree," Scott said.
 
 (Reporting by Gina Cherelus; Editing by Andrew Hay)
 
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