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  • A collaboration of The Earl Scruggs Museum, Tryon International Equestrian & Resort Center, WNCW, and event sponsors present the inaugural Earl Scruggs Music Festival, on Labor Day weekend. This Friday Feature helps prepare you for the event, as you hear from Tryon Equestrian Center Director of Events and Entertainment, Jeff Fissel. The lineup of performers is incredible!
  • For the first time, WNCW welcomed South Carolina Public Radio and their Upstate Multimedia Reporter, Scott Morgan to More to the Story. Scott recapped his recent story about how the state's industries fell behind due to the pandemic and how there is now vast improvement. He also talked about how automation continues growing and that the United Way is helping with housing assistance.
  • Greenville News Watchdog Reporter, Macon Atkinson, took part in this edition of More to the Story regarding a connector to and from the popular Swamp Rabbit Trail. Macon goes over Greenville Council's opposing views on where the money comes from to pay for the extension. In what seems to be a recession, can this project be pulled off?
  • Located in Asheville, Western Carolina Rescue Ministries has been serving those in need for a number of years. More than often, the group is extending a helping hand to the homeless and someone fighting addiction
  • Kyra Freeman is a member of the Asheville Storytelling Circle and N.C. Storytelling Guild. A collection of her poetry and photographs entitled: Second Life: Poems of Re-emerging was released by Redhawk Publications in the summer of 2021.
  • Harold Wayne Turner is from Pickens, S.C. As a child, he spent much of his time as an apprentice in his father’s woodworking shop. His father, James “Carolina” Turner, shared cotton mill tales and stories about the war. Wayne took the skills he learned from his father and became an accomplished luthier; a renowned instrument maker. He received the prestigious Jean Laney Harris Folk Heritage Award in 2010.
  • WUNC Public Radio joined WNCW to cover their recent reports on the Green Party and N.C. Attorney General Josh Stien. Politics Podcast Host and veteran Politics Reporter for WUNC, Jeff Tiberii, shared his thoughts on what Green Party participation means for the November ballot and how it affects the Democrat and Republican parties.
  • Lord Randall is a haunting ballad that tells of a conversation between mother and son. Randall has been poisoned by his lover, his mother helps him dictate his last will and testament, “Mother make my bed soon, for I am sick-hearted and I want to lie down.”In the last verse, Lord Randall tells that it is his lover who has done him in.
  • The Frogs Desire a King, an Aesop Fable, makes it clear that people feel the need for laws but are impatient with personal restraint. The lesson drawn is that "he that hath liberty ought to keep it well, for nothing is better than liberty."
  • James Gamble Rogers IV (January 31, 1937 – October 10, 1991) was an American folk artist musician, and storyteller known for the recurring theme in his songs and stories about characters and places in a fictional Florida county. This story, Dogs and Dawgs, was recorded live at The Garden Theater in Charleston, S.C. March 26, 1988 and was released on Oklawaha County Laissez-Faire (Oklawaha Records).
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