Folk School Aims At Education Program In Few educational institutions are j aiming,' straighter at tne needs of the : South than int Jj?hn C. Campbell Folk j School on the borders 01 Cherokee j and Clay Counties in southwestern North Carolina. Stressing analysis oi conditions here, particularly in the j mountain South, and concentrating on supplying stimuli toward doing something about these conditions, the School disregards the academic paiaphenali ol credits and examinations, : and emphasizes growth of character ; and principles of cooperation essen ial if a more intelligent agriculture and a higher level of life are to be achieved in this predominantly agri- j cultural region. 2 The program of studies, handi- ' crafts, and work?the latter enabling i students to earn their board and tui-j tion?all center in the combination*1 of commercial farming and self-main- j1 tenance in live-at-home agricultude < needed if the South is to come into J its own. j i Marking the last day in Jthe four ' months winter session of the Folk School proper, March first was given over to a celebration of the past vin- i ter's achievements, with an exhibition of student work and a program of entertainment attended by students' pa- j rents and friends of the school from | places near and far. Among Isle visi- . tors of over three hundred, were TVA ] officials from a number of different ! centers, twelve students and two directors from the Fletcher Sanatarium near Asheville on an adult-education field trip, and a number from the A.-hwood Plantation, a federal govern ( ment rural rehabilitation project in J South Carolina. The program featured a short ad- j dress by Airs. Campbell, the director, describing the school's activities as eye-openers and avenue-openers foi young adults wishing to use their lives well through an appreciation and development of their talents and an un- ; derstanding of the needs of their area; speeches by two of the students, one i describing the schoo'l activities, the other challenging the rural popula- ( tion of the South to do something about its deplorable conditions by us- ; ing Cooperative methods of improvement; a student-written play; and' folk games in which guests as well as the school 'family' participated. Edward D. Smith, of Munsic, Geor- j gia, made a stirring appeal to the people of the South to wake up to the problems confronting them and to do something about intelligently solving these problems. Some of the high , lights in his speech follows. "The South needs aid. Not one ox us can deny that when we sec the ,de- ; plorable conditions surrounding us op every side. But what form shall uiis aid take? Surely we do not wish it to help of the sort handed out by chari table institutions in the form of food and clothing. Isn't it pathetic enough I to see honest men, women, and chil- ! dren going to various relief agencies | for the bar necessities of life! No! I, don't think that's the sort of thing we ] wish for our fellow-men. But what is ] ? - jo ? < i me assistance uesirea: isn't it son?c- | thing that will make the Southern far-1 mer and laboring man self-supporting! and possessed of. an education which will lift him to a higher standard of living? "I think the person who said The i people of the South just seem to be asleep!' put it rather aptly. Then if we are asleep are we not in desperate need of awakening? It seems to j me a pity that we haven't wokeup sooner to the wonderful opportunities and vast resources of this region. A. stranger travelling through the South might wonder, and justly so, why this isn't one of the wealthiest i and most prosperous section ir the United States today. "To be sure, the South -is not a Utopia wherein all fault lies in the people. Around us we see the soil j slowly washing away before our eyes. ] and the remains of forest horribly1 mutilated by man's greed for money The Cherokee Progressive ' i Western N. C. The American farmer is sometimes tpoiver. ??i as thn Mrousvst individuality among men, and the southern fainter is no exception. Our foiTathers regarded the forests as an enemy to Lc completed by the axe. This, and tin fact that they saw such an abun dance of fertile soil and virgin tia ber that they saw no need to conserve either, leaves the present generation with a seemingly hopeless struggle to revitalize our spent soil and restore our once plentiful forests. "But semthing can be done and is being done to set this to rights. Our federal government has stepped in and through her various agencies is striving to help people by arousing them to the possibilities of what they themselves can do. The Civilian Conservation Corps are doing excellen work in the way of reforestation and through soil erosion prevention projects, thus teaching ways to rebuild soil and forest. A wealth of material on the best crops for certain soils and the get policy for rebuilding eroded ? land can be had for the asking from numerous agencies both federal and state." Pointing out two aspects of southern life which cannot be overlooked ?tenancy, and industrial workers' low wages?and dwelling chiefly on the tenant-farmer problem most pressing in the rural South, he said, "1 am speaking of the tenant farmer who ii-ouia 111-.? u;*. who has 110 chance to do so because he just can't seem to get that far a- 5 head*. Even worse off than the tenant farmer is the share-croppci v. ho is forced to raise only a money crop and has no time for product ing the food 1 he needs for his family. Again the j government has stepped in and is doing a number of things that should \ put new hope in life for the small far- i mei\ A man a ay now borrow money i 1 rom the government at a low rate oi i interest and on long terms to eithes : buy or improve a farm. This plan a ; yet, however, may be modified to e?I | vantage. It is such a pitiful thing that j this money borrowed is not always us- [ ed to the best advantage! Also, there are government resettlement projects I on which a number of small farmers are moved and allowed to purchase the land which is cut into small tracts. On these projects houses are built for the people who are given some work with wages as a "supplement to i the farming. This seems to me tc be a wonderful opportunity for the younger men who has chosen farming , as his life work and wishes to start j off as a land owner. "Hand in hand with th?? iv?< comes the activities of the TV A, the rural electrification program ami the rehabilitation program, extensive efforts by the government to help the southern man and to make life more ! pleasant for him. "But all the answers to the problem of the southland can not come from the government alone. What can we, I the people of the South, do to help ourselves, and what are we going to ; do? "We arc a democratic people. What j is more central in the principles of ] a democracy than the effort of a group to help the individual? With this in mind, does it not seem most logical for one to work toward the good of his community and neighbors rather than for mere individual gain? In other words, it seems to me that cooperation is the answer to a host of the problems facing us. If, for example, through cooperative the small farmer is able to get better prices foi , his produce receives the same atten- i tion as that of a large plantation > owner, does it not seem that the small farmer should back cooperation | to the limit? That cooperation will j work has been definitely proven by j great forward-strides made by Denmark through a thorough going net-, work of specialized cooperatives. If j it will do such things for another country, cooperation will do as much for us. Why not look into this matter I!|| WHEN I BEGAN TO LET UP_ LIGHT UP IS B A CAMEL r . ' x:> V-'" 'yy^. Bib immm : &ljyUiS?liilS8 Scout, Murphy, North C and give it our serious thought! , "another method by which the small fanner nay help himself is' through cart ful study and adoption of the betUr ways of farming. i>ie lirst J tring any farmer snou;d da ; raise; at hor.K pia. ticaUy ail tne iood he will |need inrouga ure year, ncxi, at >hoold : opp onent ii.it Uu.iiuig v.'itii i livestock, .-uch as chickens, caitic 01 nogs t-> bring him a cash income fci i rung he cannot laise. Of gi eat importance, too, is the adaption oi the iarming to that most suited to his particular farm. If much of a fanner's i land is rather hilly and none too 1 fertile, then to switch to dai.ying or tree farming is far the wisets policy J trpfi/ faiTninty ?q for * -1: ? ? ?"* mocai ^ulicy. prove his land by using: proper methods of cultivation and rotation and by planting a certain amount of soilbuilding crops. I think, also, that intensive farming is wiser than extensive farming. That is, concentrating on the raising of as much as possible on a small amount of land so as to rebuild the soil and conserve time and energy." Emphasizing thus principles of cooperation and ways of intelligent arming as the small farmer's great- | est hope. Mr. Smith dwelt briefly on "I think.'5 continued Miss Wilson, "it a problem that must be contended with, the question of the negro. "The negro," he said, "is here and here to stay, and such being the case we should try to make of him an asset rather than a liability. It is generally known that the negro lowers the wage rate because of his lower standard of living. I think the proper way to remedy this difficulty is to educate the negro !o * higher standard d? living." Concluding his speech, Mr. Smith lepealcd that " all the answers to l he problems of the southland cannot givei; by the government ah ne. Southern men. women and children must be educated to practical things lather than in mere facts and fi uics urcs ,and they must have aroused in then an earnest desire to raise themm.!vi. and their land to a level equal to the best, in the country. It can be done, because the South has as great minds as are to be found anywhere. We are capable of putting ourselves ahead; but are we going to do it?" Speaking for the girls. Miss (jeraldine Wilson, of Hemp, Georgia told he large number of recreational fac have been doing this past winter. "One of the girls," she said, "made this statement. 'My purpose in coming to the Folk School was to have something to do while not taking some special vocational training, ami to see what the school was all about. Much ! to my surprise, it was quite different from what 1 had had in mind. In fact it is more than I thought it could be. She spoke of the whole group, staff and students, as "a family group and a happy one" in work and at play with I r-m ay '? beek mr j taxes n ci M j I THROUGH TEDERAl, STATE ' j AND LOCAL AGENCIES, A SHAI OF TM? NATION'S HUGE *40C I ; MILLION YEARLY BCf R REVENt II comes back to benefit j! If Beer^ nation-wide tax* | j a day make it possible f j provide many things tha | crease everybody's taxe I j In preserving this re j the brewers recognize | beer must give no offeni |l It is not of course, t j I arolina , th? larg enun.ber of recreational fac ilities at the school, as well as in tin .urgv dining loom where al* gather to getn-r at meals. She continued by talking of tne work. "Th k.nd < ! work we do here is work mat we >nai ail probably h: \ - to do when we s:arl out. Our vitu ".vuy in the world' ?->u. ' i. i organized so as to give u student a chance to learn a number of things. For example, the giris haw cooking, housework, laundry .nd almost any other kind of house a oik one can think of as pail of a uval mountain home life, doing dif icient things from week to week 1'ietty generally too, we consider il all not so much work as a chance tc learn. Work for tho boys is similarly arranged so that they may find whal they most wish to do. For many stuor, n.ost students when they come dents this school has been a path-findnot knowing what they want to d< with their lives, and feeling quite differently when they leave. "As far a? possible the teaching if put into practice. For example, agri cultural problems and methods dis cussed in classes are actually tried oul in the labor of the farm. Surveying forestry, and simple buil dine? con. struction are taught through doing. "Most of the girls feel our 'homes class is one of the most essential ones We learn to appreciate values in sim pie worth while things that will grac our homes. Most of us have pretty well planned out what we want to d< in beautifying our future homes, ar.i in making them convenient for al kinds of life needs, as well as attrac Live and pleasing to live in." Kefei ring to uses to which flower: ufiB be put, she said, "This bring-- m< to something we make a lot of here a : ho school?the quality of being abb ' create. We all should have the de j -iie to create something beautiful. Ii I tudyin^. through discussion, basii j ;u eds in life, we all agreed that beau 1 y play a needed and helpful par I 11 our lives." Speaking of the siuler. j wojk on display, she -aid, "It vol J noticed the weavings, paintings, carv mg.-. word-work and iron-work exhib jitcd in our craft room, you saw some j thing of our efforts in creating thing I were not especially attractive, stii 1' you must remember the pleasure w< had in making these things and ih< i eauty we who made them can not f?ii j to see in them, made as they are fron I ordinary materials always nvai a I aand." Continuing she said. "I hope yoi j haven't gotten the idea that what i: on display is all that we have accomu 1 ished heii'. These things are only J smaller part. Wo have no cooking: 01 display, and that most important thin] ill daily life is only one of the man; things we experience through ou daily chores. One of the girls sai< this 'I think the expenrience we ge in the kitchen is worth any girl*! time that she can spend here." ?$[d)oooo Facts Thi P SUPPOR" r' ME STATE $92 IN BEtk * | (sOvJftCE Of OAT A ,?-?-PUBLIC EDUCATION es of ? million dollars nility to enforce or the government tc ating with all < it would otherwise in- to it that the la s >bse rved venue for the nation. May we *en< that the retailing of forwarri-lookinj je to anyone lustry ? ^ddre: he brewers' response- foundation. TS 'leverage.oj model Thursday, Mar. 9, 1939 - Miss Wilson concluded with an exi cellent statement well sun marized in - the remark to the effect that ""we want t?> be pro;; lessee i the real I s* isc. to bui t mo ?\v ..itelligently 1 and caieluliy. on u.< ov>i of yesteit day. adding it the best we can and . ceoper?tei??j to hotter use and undei' standing ourselves and at s < tion oi - the country." - Written by the -tudi t. hi! arious conuuy **lngren 'luni", .chier! followed the spec chcs. rtu. enthusias1 tically rece:veu :.y tie- .a?/f and ap preciative audience, t ecil Tipton of Bra&stown, N. C., and Alice Holland. L Andrews, a. t were tiic father and ' mother of the 'SludeT family of ' which Carol Deschan.ps, Brass*own. N. C., and Monroe \v ilson. Hemp. I Georgia were the daugiitei in love and the mischievous son. Jeannie James of Asnwood, S. C., and I). L. > Martin of Blairsville, Georgia, were ' scheming grandmother and mooning and loosing c-ranilsfin 1 lively. Sylvan Plott, Blairsville, Gcor -jgia, was the successful suitor, a city boy; Cleo Crone, Polk County, N. C.t : and Ruth Martin, Martin's Creek, N. , C., were friendly mother and daugh ter; John Erwin and A. J. Woodring, Blairsville boys, were stage managers; ' and in addition a number of students . and ex-student took part a neighbors _ of the Sluders who came in to make a music with guitars and banjos and f I mandolin. Particularly enjoyed were y' the mischievous antics of tht von, ] Monroe Wilson, in overalls and with 1 bale feet, a bandaged toe, and color. l'ul patche about his legs anu back. Following the play the students s den.onst rated folk games involving p much team work and carefully coort uinated thinking and action, conclud ing with a mass-march game in which - most of the guests participated. i : Guests, mostly students' parents, at |dinner prepared by the gi'I, were: Mr. -land Mrs. W. G. Holland with their t daughter, Helen. Andrews. N. C.; Ml. t 'and Mrs. li. K. Wilson with two sons, i' Hcmi. Ga.; Mrs. .!. R .Martin with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Piatt from - Blairsville, Ga.; Mrs. W. L Cobb, Blue - i Uidge, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Louds ermilk with their son, Buzzy and Miss 1 | Mildred Martin from Isabella, Tenn.; j Mi>. Fred (). Scroggs, Brasstown; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Deschamps, Folk 1 School; Mrs. \\ . R. Posey, Murphy, i NY A director; and from Ashwood, S. i C.. Mr. J. P. James, Miss Bnima Thames, Miss Ruth Lockman, recreai tional director, Mr. Loren Yarbors ough, Jr., and Mr. E. T. Berry. For the aftenoon program, in addii tion to a number from Murphy, came i Mr. Hudson with a bus-full of And4 rows High School seniors, Mr. Arrant /'with two carloads of students from r the Ogden School, Clay County, and 1 a number of TV A officials from Nort lis, Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Murs nhv. as well as th?? nhnv?> moniiAm.fi group from Fletcher, N .C. it Concern f THEM! OF NORTH CAZZLCN* COLlCCTEP /. H 7 2.no REVENUE rQR W3X , V OAR ft 9/ hltOHOLK. CO*T*Ol) | ? the law. But they are cooper?nforcement officials. .. . to see iws ycu have made are rigidly i, you * booklet discussing this a: program of the brewing inss United Brewers Industrial East 40th St., New York, N. Y. b