Page 6, The Corolino Indian Voice
Dr. Dolton Brooks,
PSU's new Director of
Institutionol Reseorch
According ro Scriprure
Dr. Dalton P. Brooks
Dr. Dalton P. Brooks, who
for the last year has been with
the State Department of Public
Instruction in Raleigh, is the
new Director of Institutional
Research at Pembroke State
University, it has been aiinoun
ced by Chancellor English E.
Jones.
With the State Department
of Public Instruction, he was
executive secretary of the Title
IV Advisory Council on Ele
mentary and Secondary Edu
cation.
His duties at Pembroke will
include compiling information
about the total university
(personnel, facilities, etc) for
the University of North Caroli
na General Administrative Of
fice at Chapel Hill and making
reports through UNC to the U.
S. Office of Education and the
Office of Civil Rights.
Of his new position, the
40-year-old Brooks said, ”1
am looking forward to my new
duties because research is
what 1 have been trained for. I
think it will represent a
challenge in coodinating the
ny information factors
about the university- It is a
challenge J’m gcfing to enjoy.”
A native of Pembroke, the
new PSU appointee earned his
B. S. in Science at Pembroke
State University in ’60, his
M. S. in Physics from Temple
University in '65 and his Ph.
D. in Educational Research
from the University of Miami
in '75.
Following graduation from
PSU, he taught in the Robeson
County School System from
1960-70. From 1970-72 he was
Project Director of the Emer
gency School Assistance Pro
gram for the Lumbee Regional
Development Assoc, at Pem
broke. Beginning in 1972 he
was working on his doctorate
at the University of Miami.
To attend the University of
Miami he received a Ford
Foundation Fellowship and a
University of Miami scholar
ship. He also had an Educa
tional Professional Develop
ment Fellowship. In '64 he
received a grant through the
National Science Foundation.
Dr. Brooks is a member of
the Educational Research As
sociation, the Classroom Tea
chers of America, the North
Carolina Education Associa
tion, the National Education
Association, and the Phi Delta
Kappa and Epsilon Tau Lamb
da honor societies.
He is married to the former
Doris Jacobs of Lumberton.
They have three children:
Peter, 13; Danielle, 8; and
Dori, 3.
JESUS IS COMING
MATTHEW 24:37-38: But as
the day of Noah was, so shall
also the coming of the son of
man be. Verse 38: For as in
ihe days that were before the
flood, they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving
in marriage, until the day that
Noah entered into the Ark.
In Genesis 6:5; God saw the
wickedness of man and it was
so great that God said he
repented that he had made
him (man). In Gen. 6:12 the
Lord looked upon the earth,
and beheld it was corrupt; the
Bible says these people were
eating and drinking, marrying
and giving in marriage. In
stead of destroying them, God
said Noah found grace in God.
God told Noah to build himself
(Noah) an ark (notice He told
him to build it for himself and
not for God). For God doesn’t
need any help: never has and
never will. We need God. He
can make all things without us.
The Bible said in Hebrew 11:7:
By faith Noah being warned of
God of things not seen as yet,
moved with fear, prepared an
ark to the saving of his house,
by which he condemned the
world.
It took Noah over a hundred
years to build the art. During
this time it shows the long
suffering of our Lord. The
Bible says Noah preached to
these people. He preached and
told these people that it was
going to rain and that a flood
would come and kill all man
kind. But the people said it
was not going to rain. It had
never rained before: a mist
had always come up from the
earth and watered everything.
The corn was up. the pasture
was green, the cows were fat.
Who was that fool who said it
was going to rain? When God
mid Noah what to do, the Bible
said he moved with fear. In
Luke 17:22-29. Jesus foretells
his second coming. He tells of
Ihe days of Noah and the day
of hot, how it rained fire and
brimstone and destroyed them
all. Verse 30: Even thus shall it
be in the day when the Son of
Man is revealed. Today prea
chers who preach on Hell and
fire are called fools. It never
rained fire and b
-before. That is what they said
are being told of a fire and the
wrath Ilf God which is to come.
Yuli belter move with fear.
You h.ad better listen and get
your house hold saved. Paul
said in Acts: Only those who
sh.all abide in the ship shall be
saved. Look around you today.
There’s a party just about
every night; eating, drinking,
men not pleased with their
own wives. They have become
evil minded. Pornography on
every book shelf. Strong liquor
in every store. But Jesus is
coming. He said two would be
in the field working. One
would be taken and the other
left. Will you be the one left?
Will you see Him as He is? He
(Jesus) said only those who
have been faithful and en-
dureth to the end shall be
saved. Have you been faith
ful? If not. you need to repent.
Some of you hypocrits have
fooled a lot of people. But
Jesus said for ye make clean
(he outside of the cup and the
platter, but the inside is full of
extortion and excess.
You can keep the outside
looking righteous. You can slip
and hide but God’s got your
number. You can entertain the
young people with old fifth,
But God has got an all-seeing
eye. These modern people who
have been told how to preach,
will make the word sound with
ni) effect. but the word will
stand. It was appointed unto
man to die, and then judge
ment.
Hebrew 9:27: Young people
and old, God said to flee his
wrath. God hates .sin. He
hated so much He gave his
only son to die that you might
live. Whether you're a drug
addict, murderer, or one who
steals, Jesus is willing to save
y lU that you may escape His
wrath. There are some of you
n-'W reading this that needs
forgiveness. God has been
L-ng suffering and time is
running put. Genesis 6:3 tells
us that the spirit shall not
always strive with man. He
(Jesus) said ti> confess and
their sins and iniquities 1
remember no more. Laugh if
y.iu may. but 1 have given you
Ihe word of God.
I Christ
Evan. Ted Brooks
Rt.2.Box 239
Pembroke. N.C.
t^ocoa Dust
Chocolate cakes taste richer
and have a better if
the greased pans are du-sted with
dry cocoa before pour'"!!
batter.
Itefrigerale l|uickly
When buyine eroi'crics. take
Ihein home immediately ai"!
refrigerate or freeze them prop
erly. Store all food in covered
metal. gla.s.s. or plasUc contain
ers I’lacc leftover Ms m shal
low containers and relngerate as
s»>nasthemeal is finished
rarmsDonn
The number of (arrri-s in the
tl.S. Intaled2,808,tfflduring 1975,
one per cent fewer Iteh ‘tt
'Die average farm .size has in
creased 47 acres during the past
decade. The 1975 average of 387
acres is 3 acres larger than 1974.
Not Much
The Federal Bnergy Admin
istration estimates that the en
ergy derived from new technol
ogies, including .sintlietic fuels,
geothermal, and solar, will sup
ply not more than live per cent of
the nation’s total energy needs by
1990.
Ilainbou Cause
A rainbow iscaiM by sunlight
playing on water, usually rain,
though mist from a waterfall or a
garden sprinkler can create the
same effect. The sun’s rays are
refracted, or bent, as they enter
the water drops The light is
broken up into the colors of the
solar spectrum. The rainbow ac
tually forms a coraplele circle,
but the bottom half is cut off by
the horizon.
Barbara Locklear
to preside at State
Demo Meet
Thursdoy, September 23, 1976
PSU low costs talk of
"College Night"
Turkish Tulip
The word "tulip " comes from a
Turkish word for turban. The
spring flower was introduced to
Holland, by way of Aaslria. in the
latter part of lt» I6lh century.
Crepe ()ccasion
Crepes—those small, thin
pancakes —were once regarded
as an art for only the most ex
perienced cook. Todav, every
body’s giving them a’try. For
an adult woman, one serving of
three crepes supplies 12 per cent
of her daily protein requirement
They also add calcium, iron.
Vitamin A, and the B Vitamins
— niacin, thiamine and ribo
flavin.
Mrs. Barbara B. Locklear will
preside over the 16th Annual
State Convention of the Demo
cratic Women of North
Carolina.
This is the first time in the
history of DWNC that an
American Indian has presidea
or held a elected position of
the organization.
Mrs. Locklear, the former
Barbara Jean Brayboy re
sides in Lumberton with her
husband and three children.
i TALENT WANTED ^
Limited Life
Mixes have a limited shelf life,
so buy often to assure a satisfac
tory product.
Rasy aemoval
Stick a toothpick in a garlic
clove before adding to a mixture.
This makes the garlic easier to
find and remove.
Brown Nose
Then there was the cannibal
who was expelled from school
when they caught him buttering
up the teacher.
for TV commercials for Precious b
Memories Service. We need girl 14 to 15 J
years old with a clear speaking voice and a j
young girl 18-25 to play “Minnie Pearl”
type character. Send picture and details to:
Lumbee. Promotions, College Plaza, yL
Pembroke, NC 28372. No telephone calls
please. Royalities will be paid for talent.
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PEMBROKE-”The first question of
most of the high school students
concerned cost—and many could not
believe they could go a semester at
Pembroke State University for as little
a.s $216, not counting room, linen and
food.”
Dr. Norma Jean Thompson, dean of
admissions and registration at PSU.
said when she mentioned $216, the high
school juniors and seniors who converg
ed on PSU for “College Night” Tuesday
night thought she meant ’’$216 per
month.”
Pembroke State University was only
one of 65 institutions represented in the
university’s Jones Physical Education
Center auxiliary gymnasium where
booths were set up for the individual
schools. Students inquired of finances,
courses, etc., at the school of their
choice.
Total costs for a semester at PSU
couting everything but books is $65L
which amounts to $1,302 per year. A
television special on higher education
this week noted that the cost for a school
like Colgate University in New York is a
staggering $6,000 a year. The national
average is over $4,000.
“The response for our ninth annual
‘College Night' for Robeson County was
very good,” continued Dr. Thompson.
Over 1,500 students were present. The
PSU dean believes the fact that
“College Night” was held early in the
school year helped greatly.
"I talked to a lot of high school
juniors,” said Dr. Thompson.
Assisting her were Warren Baker,
acting director of admissions for PSU,
and Mrs. Ruth Tidwell and Miss Sheila
Brewer, secretaries in the admissions
office.
Dr. Thompson also answered ques
tions on financial aid (one of every two
students at PSU receive some type of
financial aid this year) and Scholastic
Aptitude Test scores. At PSU a 750
score is usually required, but the
university also has a College Opportun
ity Program which permits students
scoring under that figure to have a
chance of going to school.
Honored on Birthday
B0DUB&BO
•Expert Planning •Licensed Contractors
Architectiial drafting and designing
CALL HUBDARD LOWERY
521-4624
Box 1_37-D Pembroke, NC
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