@THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOIC ? PtteHPQp I ^3^^ c . "Building Communicative Bridges %. ; ^ jr VOLUME U NUMBER tS 25? PER COPY ' THURSDAY. JUN) will ma ao nrn> quit Heron possibilitieb m bobbbow cooimr EDITOR'S NOTE This it the third in a series of articles about school mer ger possibilities in Robeson County. Will five go into one? History shouts "No!" We hope history vuill be proven wrong. The series of articles was written by Bruce Barton, editor of this news paper. Until 1975 the whites in Robeson County basically controlled educational mat ters in Robeson County. Until 1975, Robeson County was hampered, unduly, by a political device labeled "double voting" by ita dis tractors. "Double voting" was the practice in Robesoq County whereby the residents of Robeson County's then five city school units (Maxton merged into the county system in 1979) voted for the make up of their own respective boards of educa tion as well as for the makeup of the Robeson County Board of Education. City residents had a "double vote." Conversely, until the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Cir cuit, sitting in Richmond, Virginia ruled the political device unconstitutional, res idents within the confines of the Robeson County system (rrx>*tfy fri?figT>l| ?r?'W net vote on the makeup of the city school boards. The "double vote" effectively rendered the Indians and Blacks impotent politically in Robeson County: whites controlled all six school systems politically and ad ministratively. In 1975 (and the figures have not changed appreci ably in 1985) the county system's pupil enrollment was approximately 60 per cent Indian, 20 percent Black and 20 percent white. In spite of the 80 percent minority enrollment, the make up of the county school board was invariably white because of the "double vote" of city residents. Hie court of appeals ruled April 23, 1975, in a unani mous vote, that "double voting'' was unconstitutional because it essentially diluted the vote of the county residents within the county school system. Because of the ban on "double voting" and in spite of a politically- inspired district system of "lection, the county school board is made up in 1985 of 7 Indians, 2 Blacks and 2 whites.... a more proportio nate representation of the electorate at large. The school superintendent, Pur nell Swett, is an Indian; as is Dr. Dalton P. Brooks, the chairman. The Indian? now have a vetted interett in the R'-heyZ? S|? tem. (emphasis added by authorl, The Carolina Indian Voice Newspaper noted, as part of a 1975 editorial: "Hie Robe son County Board of Educa tion has never had an Indian chairman of the board of education and/ or an Indiar superintendent of the county school system. Until the N.C. General Assembly passed a law in 1973 declar ing that four members of the county board of education would be elected by county residents...Indians or Blacks could not be elected to the board of education. To our knowledge, until the general assembly ruled on the mat ter...only two Indians (and no Blacks) had been elected to the school board in the history of the county." Judge Algernon Butler, in the Eastern District Federal Court in Fayetteville, where the "double vote" suit was originally filed, had declared in a ruling that "...a com pelling state interest justifi ed participation .pf city board residents in the election of certain board members... That ruling, as noted earlier, was overturned when the court of appeals ruled em piratically that "WE DISAGREE." And further said: "We reverse the dis trict court and remand the case for the entry of declar Judgment ,an j I ?M?.' v-., ,.^-'' PEOPLE AND PLACEsl AND THt L ROBESON COUNTY BLACK CAUCUS SPONSORS DEBATE Hie public is invited to a public debate on the Pro's and Con's of the Merger of Robeson County Public School Systems. The debate will be held Saturday, June 21, 1986 at 10 a.m. at the O.P. Owens Auditorium (near the Cancer Institute) on Old Maxton Road in Lumberton, N.C. Legislators, educators, board members, parents, students and citizens are urged to attend and partici pate. The debate will be sponsored by the Robeson County Black Caucus. BROOKS APPOINTED TO NATIONAL WHITE HOUSE CONFERENCE ON SMALL BUSINESS Mr. Paul Brooks, owner of H & B Tree Company, received notification in May of his appointment to the National White House Con ference on Small Business from Mr. Peter J. Wallison, assistant to the President. Mr. Brooks has been a business owner for many years in Robeson County. He also serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Lumbee Regional Develop ment Association in Pem broke. FOUR MAN SUPER BALL GOLF TOURNAMENT A Four-Man Super Ball Golf Tournament will be held on Saturday, June 21 at the Riverside Golf Course. Tee off time is 9 a.m. Hie price is $20 per player. Hie event is being sponsored by the Pembroke American Le gion Post 205. Proceeds will be applied to the base ball program. Interested persons should contact one of the following by 5 p.m. FYiday: Bobby Dean Locklear, 521-2353 or 524-2502; Ronnie Chavis, 521 2368; Riveraide Golf Course, 521-8433. MISS LUMBEE APPEARS INMISSN.C. PAGEANT Hie annual Miss North Carolina Scholarship Pag eant will be held on June 28, 1986 at Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh, N.C. Our lovely Miss Lumbee, 1986 Brenda Lowry, will be representing the Lumbee community at this year's event Hie pageant preliminaries will begin on June 25. Brenda will participate in the swim suit preliminary on June 25, talent preliminary on June 26, and evening gown competition on June 27. Miss Lumbee, along with the other Miss North Caroli na contestants, will reside on the Peace College campus during pageant week. Fe lon's Florist of Raleigh is in charge of flowers for the pageant A coronation ball will be held at the Raleigh Civic Center following the pageant Please check your local TV listings for the TV stations that will eir the pige*nt-or Saturday, June 28, 1986 at 9:00 p.m. Tune in and give Miss Lumbee, 1986 Brenda Lowry, your support Miss Lumbee's business mana ger, Mrs. Florence Ransom, will accompany Brenda to Raleigh for the pageant MEMBERSHIP RECRUITMENT NIGHT On Thursday night June 26, the Board of Directors of Robeson County Clergy and Laity Concerned is sponsoring a membership recruitment night at 6 p.m. at the RC/CALC office at 116 W. 4th Street in Lumberton. All churches and community P/ganizations are invited to send at least two representa tives to the special monthly meeting. Also, any individu als who are interested in finding out more about RC/ CALC are invited to attend. Cherokee Join N.C. Commission Of { Indian Affairs For the first time in its 15-year history, the N.C. Commision of Indian Affairs will include representatives from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. John Standingdeer of the Big Cove community and Richard Welch of the Yellow Hill community, both near Cherokee, wfll be sworn in at the commission meeting June 19. Secretary of 9tate Thad Eure will officiate at the swearing in, which is scheduled for 1:15 p.m. in the conference room of the Heart of Raleigh Motel building. 227 E. Edenton St. Raleigh. "We see this as an important step," said N.C. Department of Administra tion Deputy Secretary Henry E. McKoy. "Now all tbw recognised tribes and organ isations Is North Carolina wfll ait on the tnrewlailr ii to handle the buainees of In Jian affaire in North Care u_- e? in 1971 when it wu establi shed, but declined. On April 8 the Cherokee Tribal Coun cil passed a resolution to accept full participation on the commission, saying the move would be "advanta geous for both." With 66,000 Native Amer icans, North Carolina has the largest Indian population of afly state east of the Missi ssippi. The N.C. Commis sion of Indian Attain is the only state government agen cy whose specific responsibi lity is to meet the needs of the state's Indians The Cherokeee Join four other tribes represented on the commission, as well as representatives from the tjT tnFhye^tts^Q^X ties. Cohorts in gampssn