The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. the university of north CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. OCTOBER 17, 1928 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROUNA PRESS VOL. XIV, No. 47 "Kdilorial Board, E. C. Branaon. S. H. Hobba. Jr., P. W. Wager, L. R. Wilaon. E. W. Knight. D. D. Carrol!, H. W. Odum. Entered aa aocond-claia matter November 14. 1914. at the Peatoffice at Chanel Hill, N. C,. nnder the act of Angnot 24, 1911, PUBLIC SCHOOL COSTS COMPARED SCHOOL COSTS COMPARED School costs represent one of the biggest items of public expenditure in this and every other state. Because school taxes bulk so large in the total tax bill there has developed an under current of resentment against public school administration. Without stop ping to analyze public school expendi ture, taxpayers often make charges of waste and extravagance which are without foundation. Undoubtedly there is some inefficiency, some extrava gance, and occasionally some misap propriation of funds, but no more of this sort of thing than in other depart ments of government. In fact, there is probably no group of public servants that take their duties more seriously, or work harder to improve themselves, than the public school teachers and administrators. School taxes are high because it is an expensive proposition to give every child eight, or ten, or twelve years of education. The burden is heavy on some because there are so many large families that pay little or no school tax. North Carolina is a state of large families, a large percent of the heads of which pay little or no taxes of any sort. The maintenance of two separate school systems is an additional burden on the Southern states. How North Carolina Ranks If we compare school costs in North Carolina with those in other states, however, we find that they are not excessive. In fact, when compared on a per pupil basis we find them much lower than in a majority of the states. Elsewhere in this issue is a table show ing the annual cost of public education (current expense only) per pupil enrolled, and the daily cost per pupil at tending school. It will be noticed that the range in annual' cost per pupil enrolled is from $116.97 in Nevada to $20.38 in Mississippi. In North Caro lina the figure is $32.10. The average for the United States is $64.69, or double the cost in North Carolina., If capital outlays, that is outlays for sites and buildings, are included North Carolina ranks fortieth instead of thirty-ninth. Apparently other states are keeping pace with our own in school building construction. Since the length of term varies in the several states, a more accurate -basis of comparison is the daily cost ^er pupil attending public schools. In the accompanying table only current expense is figured. Even when ranked on this basis North Carolina’s position remains thirty-ninth with a daily ex penditure of thirty cents per pupil at tending school. Nevada leads with an expenditure of seventy-nine cents per pupil per day and Georgia and Missis sippi rank lowest, each with an expendi ture of twenty cents. The average for the United States is forty-eight cents. If capital outlays are included the range is from ninety-seven cents in California to twenty-two cents in Mississippi, and North Carolina’s expenditure is forty cents per pupil. Our rank remains the same. We must conclude from these figures that school costs in the South, includ ing North Carolina, are low when com pared with the other states. The explanation must lie in shorter school terms, lower salaries, larger classes, smaller fuel bills, less transportation expense because of relative density of school population, and perhaps less com plete equipment. Our school taxes may be burdensome because of less taxable wealth and income, but school costs per pupil are not excessive. The cost of education has increased a great deal in North Carolina during the last few years, but it is still low compared with the cost in other states. If we were spending just twice as much on educa tion as we are now spending, the cost per child enrolled would be equal to the present average of all the states. NEED FOR COOPERATION The importance of closer coopera tion of the practising physician with the public school problem is the sub ject of an interesting article by Dr. C. C. Hudson in the September issue of the Health Bulletin. Dr. Hudson gives some interesting data on the extent of various diseases and defects among school children, and the number of school children examined and treated last year by officers of the State Board of Health, including cooperating county health officers. The conclusions drawn by Dr. Hudson are as follows: 1. Only a small part of the 818,000 school children in North Carolina are given an annual examination by physi cians. 2. There are probably 360,000 or 400,000 diseased conditions existing in this large group which should be found and corrected if our school population is to grow up healthy. 3. The examination of school chil dren is distinctly a work for the physi cians if anything like all defects are to be found. 4. As most of the work of correct ing the diseased conditions found among school children will come back to the practicing physician, he should take a more a^ive interest in finding these conditions, and to this end he should, (a) Assist in every way possible the local Congress of Parents and Teachers to examine all children entering school for the first year. (b) He should co-operate with his brother physician to secure an annual examination of all school children in his neighborhood. (c) He should give sympathetic as sistance to the nurses and teachers in securing corrections of diseased condi tions. (d) He should give practical instruc tion in hygiene to gatherings of boys and girls, parentsor teachers, whenever this is possible. (e) He should be very careful when examining a patient brought him by a parent who is very anxious to have him give a different opinion from one which has been given by another examiner. Our dental friends are going far toward giving our children healthy teeth. I have never heard a practic ing dentist criticise a school dentist. They know that if the children are taught proper care of their mouths, when those same children are older and continue to have decayed teeth and diseased conditions which need dental care, having been properly trained, they will know where to get the service. If we physicians hope to eliminate quackery, to teach the public what constitutes good medicine, and, above all. to make our people strong and healthy, we must lose no opportunity to reach the boys and girls of our public schools and so train them that they will always have that faith in us as physicians which has always made the practice of medicine a glorious profession. We need all the assistance which the teacher can give to the work and she should be rt quired to take a course of training which will, at least, partially fit her for this important work. THE SOCIAL WORKER The first essential of social work is healthy-mindedness. If social work is to be more than an adventure in the amiable futility of unintelligent good will, it must both be born of healthy- mindedness and give birth to healthy- mindedness. Sick-mindedness gives us romantic social work that is marked more by its tears of sympathy than by its technique of service. Healthy-mindedness gives us realistic social work that operates in the brac ing air of facts. I suggest one test of healthy-minded- ness in the social worker. The healthy-minded social worker will go on the assumption that in a wholly healthy-minded civilization there would be no- social workers because there would be no need of social work. The goal of the healthy-minded social worker will be to work himself out of job. The healthy-minded social worker will recognize the danger as well as the desirability of professionalizing social work. We are, I admit, caught in the horns of a dilemma here. Social work needs all the expertness it can command, and yet the very efficiency of elaborate permanent social agencies of certain sorts niay become an alibi for slack EIGHT-MONTHS SCHOOL Governor McLean, in an article in the October issue of The North Carolina Teacher entitled A Six- Million Equalization Fund, says that the constructive work of the Educa tional Commission has paved the way for the uniform eight-months school term, “which is just around the corner.” Quoting him, he says, “I hope and believe that the corner may be turned and the longer term made an accomplished fact by the next General Assembly. It should not be done unless provision is made at the same time to distribute the financial burden fairly and equita bly, in all the counties of the state, by increasing the equalizing fund to such an amount as will accom plish this result. “State Superintendent Allen has estimated that an equalization fund of six million dollars for the first year of the next biennium and six and one-half millions for the second year, used for the support of the eight-months term, in the same way that the present equalizing fund is used for the support of the six- months term, would be sufficient to distribute the financial burden of an eight-months term fairly and equi tably in all the counties of the state.” ness of social conscience and shoddi ness of social policy on the part of families, schools, industries and govern ments. The healthy-minded social worker will, therefore, resist the psychology of permanence in his work, bending all the energies of his expertness to hastening on the day when he can dismantle his office and disband his organization. This is asking a good deal of ordinary human nature, I know, but healthy- minded social work calls for more than ordinary human nature. It calls for an exceptional spirit of self-sacrifice that will not permit a man to keep his or ganization for the prevention of cruelty to animals, let us say, going after automobiles have taken the place of horses and dogs and cats have gone out of style in his town. Healthy-minded social workers create organization because there is work to be done, but they never look around for work to do in order to keep or ganization going. The healthy-minded social worker constantly reminds the nation that his very existence is an indictment of the normal processes of the social order. The greatest day in the life of a social agency is not when it adds a new activity, but when it is able to dis continue an old activity because the social order has caught up with its ideals.—Glenn Frank, in The Asheville Citizen. TAX-SUPPORTED LIBRARIES The September issue of the North Carolina Library Bulletin contains several tables which reveal the upward trend in library service in the state. The following is a partial review of the statistics as reported by the Bul letin. Of the tax-supported libraries report ing Charlotte reports the largest cir culation, 411,646 books loaned during the year, a gain of 60 percent over the previous year. High Point with a book collection of 4,407 volumes shows the highest percent of volumes circu lated; each book in the collection was loaned 12.9 times. Evidently all the books work all the time in High Point! This library is not quite two years old. Black Mountain and Weldon whose libraries are supported by a special tax levy are the only libraries in the state which attain the $1.00 per capita ex penditure, the standard set by the American Library Association as the minimum amount upon which a library can be expected to do anything like adequate library service. The average expenditure for the state is twenty- three cents per capita. A comparative statement for the tax- supported libraries for the years 1926- 27 and 1927-28 is interesting, 1926-27 1927-28 No. of libraries 27... 30 No. of volumes 240,621... 278,260 Circulation 1,536,632.,.1,968,979 County appropria tions $23,470... $24,768 Total income $177,672... $179,671 Amount spent for books $46,366... $43,609 Population served... '700,877... 769,380 Per capita expendi ture $.26... $.23 Since North Carolina is primarily an agricultural state the county as the library unit is the most logical. With the county as the unit one collection and one staff can serve all the people living in the cdunty at no more cost than several libraries maintained at public expense in several places of the county. The county library serves the people through branches, stations, de posits in schools, and book trucks. Four teen counties in the state through their Boards of County Commissioners have have provided this service in varying degrees for their citizens. Davidson county is the most recent county to adopt the county unit. Following are these counties with their respective appropriations. Durham and Guilford maintain motor book trucks for this service. Davidson will also have a truck, the gift of C. F. Finch of Thomasville. Buncombe $2,476 Burke 900 Chowan 100 Davidson 5,000 Durham 6,417 Forsyth 1,000 Guilford 4,091 Mecklenburg 4,800 New Hanover 600 Rowan 600 Stanly 1,200 Vance 1,000 Wake 2,760 .Warren 600 While these appropriations show an interest in library service they are pitifully small in nearly every case and very meagre service can be given for so little money. HISTORIC SHRINES The Warren County Record reports the organization of a county historical society to stimulate interest in local history. Not only has Warren county contributed its full quota of distin guished personages and been the scene of several events of historical signifi cance, but there are within its bor ders no less than three graves that ought to be dedicated and preserved as historic shrines. Nathaniel Macon of Revolutionary fame was a citizen of Warren county and is buried there. What is reported to be the grave of Governor Turner is located within the county. A 'third grave that deserves to be preserved and venerated is that of the little daugher of General Robert E, Lee, who died and was buried in Warren county during the dark days of the Civil War. Every county has such spots as these which ought to be marked, beautified, and preserved as historic shrines. To visit such places prompts one to refresh himself in historical knowledge. It makes history more vivid and the teaching of it more dramatic. It helps to inspire young people with an ap preciation of the past and what they owe to those who have lived and labored before them. Not only do these retreats have historic value but they offer people in these crowded, hurried times a place where they may go and think. Such hallowed spots provoke reverie, meditation, worship. They lift us for a moment to higher planes of thought. In these days-when all of us are racing madly up and down the earth, often with no particular destination in mind, it would be well if we could occasionally direct our selves to one of these serene and lovely spots and breathe deeply of its pure and hallowed atmosphere. On Sunday afternoons let parents turn their cars off the traveled roads, follow a shady lane to some such shrine, and there relate to their children the stories of our honored dead. Each county ought to have an his torical association to discover and pre serve old records, to locate and mark obscure graves, to record and dramatize local history, and, in a word, to awaken in the minds of youth a fuller knowl edge and a richer appreciation of our own eventful past. PERSON BREAKS RECORD County commissioners in session to day reported a record-breaking tax col lection for the year 1927. When the books were turned over to Sheriff N. V. Brooks there was exactly $183,- 503 listed for collection. Sheriff Brooks turned in his report, which showed that he had fallen short $200 of collecting the whole amount. Chairman A. C. Gentry stated today that as far as he knew the record above breaks all previous tax collec tions for the county of Person. Further that it could be extended to comparison with other counties and also top the records. With the commissioners now in ses sion they are busying themselves about making out the new tax books which will be turned over to the sheriff with in a few days.—News and Observer. THE COST OF PUBLIC EDUCATION, 1925-26 Current Cost Per Pupil, by States In the following table, based on State School Facts, Vol. IV, No. 24. the states are ranked according to the daily current cost of public education per pupil attending school for the year 1926-26. The parallel column gives the total annual current expenditures per pupil enrolled. Capital outlays and debt service expenditures are not included. It cost 79 cents daily per pupil attending school to run public schools in Nevada and 20 cents per pupil in Mississippi. The daily cost in North Carolina was 30 cents per pupil in attendance and our rank was 39th. The average coat for all the states was 48 cents. In total annual cost per pupil enrolled North Carolina also ranked 39th, the amount being $32.10, or slightly less than one-half the average for all the states which was $64.69. Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina Annual Daily Annual Daily cost cost cost cost per per per per Rank State pupil pupil Rank State pupil pupil attend- attend- attend- attend- ing ing ing ing 1 Nevada $116.97.... ...$ .79 26 Nebraska $ 72.67.... ...t .48 2 Wyoming ..106.46.... 74 26 Delaware .. 72.73 47 3 Arizona .. 87.99.... 70 27 Wisconsin .. 71.47 46 4 California 94.27 68 28 Vermont .. 66.34 46 6 Colorado .. 89.69 66 29 Rhode Island .. .. 68.06 ... .43 6 Iowa .. 91.68 ... .66 30 Utah .. 69.74 ... .42 5 Montana .. 94.94 ... .66 31 Florida .. 46.61. ... ... .41 8 New Jersey ... .. 96.06 .. .64 31 New Mexico... .. 66.82 41 9 New York .. 97.97 ... .61 31 Oklahoma .. 42.01 ... .41 10 Michigan ... 87.88 ... .68 34 Missouri . 66.27 ... .40 10 South Dakota .. 82.07 ... .68 36 Maine . 61.34 ... .39 12 Ohio .. 82.34 ... .66' 36 Maryland .. 69.18 ... .39 12 Washington ... .. 79.19 ... .66 36 Texas . 44.79 ... .39 14 Idaho .. 71.19 ... .64 38 Louisiana . 39.36 ... .36 14 Minnesota .. 77.28 ... .64 39 North Carolina . .32.10 ... .30 14 New Hampshire 82.09 ... .64 40 Virginia . 31.97 ... .26 14 North Dakota . . 76.18 ... .64 41 Kentucky . 27.18 ... .26 14 Oregon .. 81.27 ... .64 41 South Carolina. . 26.08 ... .26 19 Connecticut.... , 77.98 ... .62 41 Tennessee . 26.69 ... .26 19 Illinois .. 79.91 ... .62 44 Alabama . 22.66 .. .23 19 Massachusetts. . 81.23 ... .62 45 Arkansas . 21.20 ... .21 22 Indiana . 79.94 ... .60 45 West Virginia . . 27.22 .... ... .21 22 Kansas . 72.91 ... .60 47 Georgia . 22.07 .. .20 24 Pennsylvania... „ 74.39 ... .49 47 Mississippi . 20.38 .. .20