I?THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOIl J "Building Communicative Bridges f g: 1 ^??1*| ? ???????| Former United Nations Official Says: "Even Arab Nations Admit Khadafy is a Mad Man" John Fobes by Gene Warren John Fobes, who formerly worked with the UhltecT Nations and has visited half of the nations in that inter national organization, is con cerned about the United States' declining interest in ?h-* U.N ?nd says the Libyan situation is one to treat delicately. Fobes spoke at Pembroke State University Thursday in PSlTs Visiting Scholars Pro gram. "(Libyan leader Moam mar) Khadafv is a mad man. Even the Arab countries admit that. Therefore, we must be careful how we treat him," said Fobes. "Terror ism is a much bigger pro blem than Khadafy." Fobes claimed many of America's international pro blems arose because of the negative attitude of Jeane Kirkpatrick, U.S. represen tative to the United Nations. "Other nations couldn't ne gotiate with her. And becau se of that, we have not been in a position to get more at the United Nations." As a result of this and other factors, U.S. involve ment in the United Nations has declined. "We have reduced our contributions to a number of voluntary or ganizations," Fobes said. "We have also said we will not accept the compulsory jurisdiction of the U.S. World Court When a nation of our strength says we won't Comply, it is a blow to the strength of that organi zation." Fobes says the next 10-15 years will be a " very difficult period" for the United Na tions. "We are seeing a decentralization of what has been a centralized opera tion," Fobes observed. He emphasized the United States "should be dominat ing the (United Nations) agenda with our own con structive proposals" rather than taking a passive stance. From a business man's point of view, the stability of the world is important if America wants to continue to sell. "The United Nations needs reform and renewal, but only if the U.S. coope rates as the strongst na tion," he argued. In his talk Fobes, who has been a visiting faculty mem: ber at Duke University, UNC Chapel Hill, and Wes tern Carolina University, pointed out the many posi tive services rendered by the United Nations-like the areas of health, agricultural development, the interna tional telecommunications satellite organization, ra tional uses of resources, environmental pollution, poverty, human rights, illiteracy, water, food, etc. Tracing the history of the United Nations, Fobes said 1943-46 was an inspirational period. "The question was: What would we do at the end of the war? A lot of Americans were involved in the creation of the U.N. From 1946-54, we had the dominant role in the United Nations. We helped the devastated nations of the world recover from World War n. From 1966-70 was a period of uncertainty. From 1970 80, we became defen sive in our posture with the U.N. Since 1981, we have been negative." Fobes said at the end of World War II, the United States represented 50 per cent of the world's gross product. "This was because of the devastation to other countries. Today, however, we represent 25 percent of the world's gross product," he pointed out "There is a period of uncertainty today, whereas before we could control and dominate." Fobes stressed the United Nations is important because it helps to educate the nations of the world. "The organization provides im portant services--and every thing should be done to help education. What would the world be like without it? What are the alternatives? The rest of the world looks to America for a new order." In conclusion, Fobes commented thusly on the rtext 10-15 years which he sees as a "tough period" for the U.N. "I hope to stick around long enough to per haps help in the replanning of the United Nations," he smiled. The Cape Fear Council of the Boy Scouts of America is sponsoring a Sinlge Parent Family Weekend May 10-11, 1986. Hie weekend camp will be held at the Cape Fear Scout Reservation, three miles north of White Oak on Highway 53. Activities in clude canoeing, rowing, arch ery, swimming, cooking, and riflery. Special entertain ment will be provided. 31ST ANNUAL PO W WOW OFHALIWA SAPONI Hie 21st Annua) Row Wow of the Haliwa Saponi Indian Tribe will be held April 18th and 19th, 1986 at the Haliwa Indian School, at the Old Bethlehem Cross roads. Hie first dance begins FIrday at 7 p.m. Grand tin try begins at 11 a.m. Saturday. Guest speaker will be Richard Crowe, Cherokee Traditionalist RBGtSTKATTONFVR LOCKIEARS PRE SCHOOL Registration for children ages 2 to 5 are now register ing for the summer program, with planned activities and field tripe. Two meals and one snack per day. 120 per week. W* mora information, call 821-4M7. Verdia Loektoar. Robeson County Student Wins Regional Spelling Bee f ) Kris H Elena Woods Kristi Elena Woods won die regional competition in the Spelling Bee among third through eighth grade students. Kristi defeated 50 other students from 26 coun ties in North and South h Carolina in the regional spelling bee sponsored by The Charlotte Observer. Kristi will travel to Wash ington D.C. May 26-30 to compete in the National Spelling Bee. Kristi is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murphy Woods of Pembroke, She is an eighth grade student at Pembroke Junior High School where Bill James Brewington is principal. Coaching and teaching spell ing to Kristi is Mrs. Marga ret Lewis Moore. The Carolina Indian Voice congratulates Kristi and wishes her well and is confident she'll return a winner. 1 The Carolina Indian V oice wants to seme you hy printing your news. However, in order to better serve von, the staff of The Carolina Indian Voice must impose a 5 p.m. Tuesday deadline for news that is to appear in the Thursday edition. Advertisers are asked to please adhere to the same deudline (Tuesday at 5 p.m.). To subscribe to The Carolina Indian Voice, please call (919) 521-2826. Or drop by the office located on High School Street in Pembroke, across front Old Main in College Plaza (we are two doi'rs down from the Pantry). 1 ?? i ? Historic Canoe On Display At Pembroke State The remains of a historic canoe discovered last year in the lumber River are now on display at Pembroke State University's Native Ameri can Resource Center. The canoe is 1,025 years old, according to scientific exam ination. It was returned to Robeson County after being treated, for preservation at Ft. Fisher's Maritime Mu seum Underwater Archeol ogy Unit near Wilmington. Shoum with the canoe is Linda Oxendine, director of PSUs Native American Re source Center. She said the canoe is "on indefinite loan to Pembroke State Univers ity. " Lumbee Homecoming 1986 Tentative Agenda Lumbee Homecoming 1986 is scheduled for the week of June 27 through July 5, 1986. The following activities are tentatively plan ned for that week. June 27-28: Pbw Wow at Riverside Country Club. Ha rold Dean Chavis, chairper son. July 2: little Miss Lumbee Pageant at the Performing Arts Center at PSU. Helen Sampson, chairperson. July 3: Awards Banquet at the Pembroke Jaycee Club House. Garv Deese. chair person. July 4: Miss Lumbee Pageant at-jhe Performing Arts Center at PSU. Flor ence Ransom, chairperson. July 5: Activities in the park in the Pembroke Town Park. William Locklear and Greg Cummings, chairper sons. July 5: Parade on Third Street, Pembroke. Willie Fay Sampson, chairperson. July 5: Art Display at PSU Old Main. Delora Cumm ings, chairperson. SENIOR CITIZENS ACTION GROUP CELEBRATES FIRST ANNIVERSARY Hie Senior Citizens Action Group Incorporation will be celebrating their first year anniversary of incorporation at the Maxton High School in Maxton. NC, April 22. 1986. The celebration will begin at 7:00 p.m. Everyone is invited! Come out and celebrate with us. There will be special singing and door prices given away. Guest speakers will be pre sent for this great event The guest speakers will be Hewitt Fnlton, FVrsonal Manager of the LO.F. Co.; Frank Williams! Xdministra tor of the East Coast Farm Workers Support Network Inc.; BObby G. Suggs, Man ager of the Division of Public Affairs for the Telephone and Telegraph Co. of Pay ette ville, N.C.; < Rosa Gal bert, member of the Board of Directors for the Senior 'itizens Action Group, Inc.; and Mac Lngerton, president of the Clergy and Laity Concerned in Lnmberton, NC. The Senior Citiseea Action Group encourages everyone to come out and barn of the pre-construction plans of the new Total Life Center being built for their senior cMaens. GROWING UP IN ROBESON COUNTY LEARNING THE FACTS Ot LB-EON A FAMILY FARM When I was growing up in Robeson County, my par ents never did clearly explain the facts of life, or even talked about the birds and the bees. The stork didn't bring the new arrivals either, but when Mama gained an excess amount of weight every two years and the nurse came to our house with the doctor carrying her black bag, I knew she was bringing a new addition to the family. Grow ing 'up on a family farm provided the opportunity for one to observe tl^e facts of life from a practical viewpoint. You grew up amongst the chickens;: cows, hogs, dogs, and cats, and you saw the propagation of the species taking place on a daily basis.. My first farm chore was feeding the chickens, and I became well informed about the way a rooster took care of his duties around the chick en and barn yeards. A virile rooster was an important part of the family farm scene, and a healthy one could keep a lai^ge nupibe' of hens conten ted and productive. The prowess of the rooster with members of the opposite sext h*>s been used to charaeeriae' those members of the human ( race who exhibit a high* degree of virility. In the, early 60s, I did some relief work for a pharmacist from the old school. He establish ed his business before the FDA began promulgating and enforcing more string ent laws pertaining to the dispensing of drugs to the public. Pharmacists from the old school formulated pro ducts for various maladies and sold them in their stores without much objection from outside agencies. A fast mover in this store was a bottle of tablets the pharma cist kept under his dispens ing counter under his own label called "rooster pills" aimed toward his male clien tele for the purpose of enhancing their manhood. In discussing the effect of this formulation, the pharmacist told me that I was seeing the practical application of the "Placebo Effect" or mind over body. About 85% of his customers for the rooster pills seemed to he satisfied Oy Ronald H. Lo%ury VffytpMiBttck, Vfiyi'ma with the results, and were bringing in new customers by word-of-mouth communi cation. In the early spring of each year we would round up all the pigs running loose in the fields and woods, and a man living across the river named John would pay us a visit & perform rear end surgery , on the male pigs. Before I j was old enough to help with the pig round up, I was not , allowed to observe this activ- , ity. When I questioned my 1 Dad about what was going s on out behind the crib barn | causing the pigs to squeal so much, he would Say they were being fixed so they could be be penned up in the fattening pens to provide us with meat the next winter. ' When I was growing up in '? Robeson County there were I a lot of people named John, < and some of them were 1 tagged with a descriptive title in order to differentiate between them. The man 1 living across the river who fixed our pigs each spring became known to me as pig fixing John. When I was old enough to help catch the pigs each spring, I became aware of why all squealing went on behind the bam when pig fixing John carried out his part of the operation. All he needed was his pocket knife St a whet rock, because my Dad provided the kero sene. I don't know why he used the kerosene after each procedure, unless it was a cleansing agent Usually one or two healthy male pigs were left with the capabili ties to propagate their kind. Our pugs down on the farm were mostly conceived in a haphazard manner without any planning for selective breeding. I recently heard a Georg ian relate his experiences with selective hog breeding when he first began farming in a rural community in Georgia. He had 2 sows which were ready for some interaction with the male element of the species. He loaded them upon his truck, i and went over to a friend's farm who had a healthy & i virile registered boar. While ' the 2 farmers chatted with ' each other as friends, the 2 sows & boar became more sociable with one another. All inhibitions were overco me, & the 2 sows received -* equal attention from the boar. This - was one love triangle where nobody was cheated. TOe owner of the boar told his friend to check on the sows early in the morning & call him. The fanner went out to the pasture early in the morning & found both sows lying in a nud hole. When he called hie rriend and reported wnat they were doing, the boar's owner replied, "it didn't take, load them up on your truck and 'ring them back." The 2 lows were loaded on the pickuptmck and hauled baca over to the boar's abode for a second session. There was no time wasted getting acquaint* ed, and tljey were even more affectionate toward .one an other the 2nd time. As the sows owner was leaving for home, his friend told him to :heck on his hogs the next Tiorning, & if they were lying in the mud holp, "it still, didn't take," his fnend told' him that his sows would be sunning themselves. Upon checking on his two sows the next morning, the farmer found them still lying the mud hole. He called his inpna and told him he was going to load up his sows in his truck & take them back over because they were lying outside in the mudhole. This was the 3rd trip, & the Georgia Idruier was btfujAifog ? cerned over the time be was losing from his other duties. The 2 sows & boar showed no curtailment of their ami cable affection for one ano ther. On the 4th morning the Georgian slept a little late, because he had developed a sore back from loading & unloading his sows for the last 3 days. He was in the process of shaving when he asked his wife to check on his sows. When his wife returned he wanted to know if they were lying in the mud hole. When she rqplieu in negative, the Georgian's dis position improved as he said, Good they mast be sunning themselves." When his wife infdrmed him that his sows * weren't sunning themselves either, the Georgia farmer wanted to know what they were doirig. His wife replied, "They're out in the cab of your truck honking the hom. Continued Next Week Chavi. Named Recipient Of Josephus Daniels Scholarship Audrey Don Cnavis oi Pembroke has been named a recipient of a Josephus Dan iels Scholarship for the 1985 86 academic year at North Carolina 9tate University. A senior majoring in nuc lear engineering and electri cal engineering, he is the son of Mr. and Ma. Lynwood N. Chavis, of Route 1, Pern tinnlrn DT0R6. He ia president of the Native American Student As sociation and ia a member of the Triangle Native American On ?Lt?i society? The Josephus Daniels Scho larships are awarded in honor of Josephus Daniels, a foun der of NC8U, publisher of "lbs News and Observer." Area Students Awarded Scholarships At Wake Forest I Two high school students from Robeson County have been awarded George Foster Hankins Scholarships at Wake Forest Unversity. They are Darby Celene Eliades, daughter of Mrs. Celene R Eliades of 120 Bee Gee Rd., Lumberton, and Dr. David K. Eliades of Pembroke; and Michael "* Dwayne Brooks of Pem broke. Miss Eliades is a senior at Lumberton Senior High School. Brooks is a senior at West Robeson High School. Hankins Scholarships are based on "need, scholarship and leadership ability." The awards range from 16,000 to 187,600 for four years. This year's Hankins Scho lars rank in the top three to five percent of their high school classes and in the 90-98 percentfle nationally on the Scholastic Aptitude Test ?? The program was estab lished in 1956 through in come from an estate of mora than $1 million left to Wake Forest by Col. George Foster Hanions of Lexington. Miss Blades is vice presi dent of the National Honor Society and drum major of the marching band. She is president of the Lumberton Junior Jaycottes. She was a marshal during her junior year. Brooks is a member of the National Honor Society, re ceived the American Gov ernment Award and was named outstanding math student and best all-around chemistry student He has studied in the summer pro gram at Gardner-Webb Col lege and Appalachian State University. ? a