0ii^o'ncE ifjroi’na ^undersigned, having as Administratrix of of Rosser iif. Page 0. The Carolina Indian Voice-Thuisday, December 11, 1986 deceased, late of \ tl)EO EXPLOSION Open your own video store. Get started in the newest and most profitable business around! Featuring the latest releases from the major studieos ‘Walt Disney •Warner Bros •RCA • Uni- County, this is to *dl persons having versal *20th Century Fox ' ainst said estate to •Columbia and many more. them to the 'fhousands of labels to choose led on or before the from. For $31,900.00 to 1987, or this $51,900.00 you can have a be pleaded in bar complete store ready to i^joveiy. service your first customer. Isons indebted to said Open in 10 to 15 days. ^11 please make Prestige Video-Division of payment to the Prestige Fashions. 501-.329- g VT ?8th day of No- ,,1986. j^U. OxenAne. iimmistratrix ^telBox29i fgtbroke,NC28S72 •f0EAS, BROOKS 0BS& SUTTON 0neysatEiw P.O.Box 999 Imbroke. NC 28S72 :^:\m521-SUS hualnouce • ofMortk Carolina ^ of Robeson ,4tee to Creditors and Debtors of I'.LeeMcGirl, Deceased > undersigned, having 5f(j as Executrix of the eofRobert Lee McGirt, ued, late of Robeson j, this is to notify all firms and corpora- baving claims against «ute to exhibit them to lodersigned on or before tJiday of June, 1987, or 11?d from their recovery. ^ :per$ons indebted to said if are asked to please i immediate payment to mdeisigned. Its the 4th day of Decem- ' 1986. Uary Site McGirt Executrix RmtelOBoxSS bmberton, NC 28S58 ii pdilisked Dec. Jt, 11, 15, im. fii^an Education Symposium Will Send Strong Message To N.C. Says Jones REIP WANTED Hundreds Weekly at t! Be flooded with vari- olfers! Details? Send iddressed stamped en- wpe to: P.O. Box 477, mod, NJ 07721. MRENT mEE ROMES Mmylll fcible Rome Park Call Day 521-8SS1 Night 7S8-7S1S borrent homes. Shekah LEGALNOTICE North Carolina Robeson County Graham McLean, Plaintiff, -vs- Maude McLean, Defendant Notice of Service of Process by Publication TO: MAUDE McLEAN TAKE NOTICE that a plea ding seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action in the Office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Robeson County. The nature of the relief sought is as follows: 1. To secure an absolute divorce on the grounds of one year’s separation. You are required to make defense to such pleadings no later than January 20, 1987; and upon your faOure to do so, the party seeking recovery against you will apply to the Court for the releif sought. This the 3rd day of December, 1986. CHA VIS & LOCKLEAR by Kenneth E. Ransom Attorney for Plaintiff The Law Building Post Office Box 877 Ljumberton, north Carolina Telephone: [SJ9] 738-8176 To be published: Dec. 11th, 18th, 25th, 1986 LEGALNOTLCE North Carolina Robeson County Notice The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of •Josephine Campbell, deceased, late of Robeson County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of June. 1987, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. AD persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 8th day of Decem ber, 1986. Mr. Carl Davis Administrator 319 West 6th Avenue Red Springs, NC 28377 LOCKLEAR, BROOKS, JACOBS & SUTTON Attorneys at law P.O. Box999 Pembroke, NC 28372 Televhone: \&19] 521-SltS The remarks by the Amen- can Indian representatives from across ^e state and nation could be described as “an Indian crusade for edu cation” at the N.C. Indian Educational Policy Symposi um last Thursday and Friday at PSU. Chancellor Paul Givens of PSU welcomed the Indian delegations by saying: ‘‘I hope in your poDcy making that the bottom line is to help young people." Dr. Adolph Dial, chairman of PSU s American Indian Studies Department, chall enged the auditorium full of Indian representatives. ■‘This thing about education, Indian education, let it begin here. It is fitting that it begins here,” he said. “We realize we've come a long way, but we have a long way to go.” Bruce Jones, executive director of the N.C. Commis sion of Indian Affairs which sponsored the symposium, stated: “1 think this wDl be a landmark occasion. Out of these tvro days, we wDl send a strong message to North Carolina.” Dr. James B. Chavis, PSU vice chanceUor for student affairs and one of the sympo sium's facUitators, used the symposium to reflec^n PSU s centennial. ‘Tt would boggle the minds of our forefathers if they could come back and see PSU today. This is an outgrowth of their dreams. Don't underestimate the im portance of this symposium. We are trying to expand upon what happened 100 years ago.” Lonnnie Revels, chairman of the N.C. Commission of hdian Affairs, said the Indi ans should ‘‘pressure’’ organizations like the State Board of Educauoii anu „... N.C. Department of Public Instruction to help Indian education and put bdians in places of leadership. “We are caught in a black and wdiite world,” said Revels, pointing out how Indians are being left out in receiving grants for Indian programs. He said he had been told by one administrator, “This is just an oversight on our part” Chavis later added: “We’ve been oversighted to death.” Carl Downing, president of the Oklahoma Council for Indian Education, interjected: “We are continually being oversighted in Oklahoma as weU as here.” Revels said once an Indian poDcy statement is put toge ther, "We wDl present it to the State Department of Public Instruction.” Downing spoke of the shrinking number of minority teachers. "Only 10 to 12 percent of our k-12 teachers are minorities, and by the year 2000 this wUl drop to 5 percent. At the same time the number of minority students in k-12 will be growing from 20 percent nov; to 38-40 percent by the year 2000. We've got to do something to attract minority teachers.” With this statement. Downing warned: "Our only hope to survive as a people is education.” He told of the thousands of Indians who were forced to migrate to OWahoma from the Southeast on the “Trail of Tears.’’ "Those who forced them to go were 90 percent literate, while those who went had a 10 percent Uteracy rate.” Betty Mangum, directo’- of CONTINUED ON PAGE 12 Bob*s Jewel Shop 31S Elm $t„ Lumberton liyawaY tor 739-3431 Christmas DIAMONDS AND ^ goid! Special Gifts For Special People Pol “'Gold ^ %etufMetiA4fSaeiMirA^ J Large Selection Of Ladies MANHATTAN BLOUSES $14.95 Sizes 4-42 VISA CHOICE i""** 2000 B.C. the Sumerians, in what is now southern Iraq, made the earliest ^fded astronomical observations. These are references to eclipses of the moon ” Mssiblv occurred in 2095 and 2053 B.C. THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE P.O. Box 1075 Phone 521-2826 Pembroke, N.C. 28372 Bruce. Barton Connee Brayboy Louise Hayes Stephanie D. 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