QENE WARREN Diractor Of Publ io VTnformatIon mmmmKmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmtm .. J**b?h$tbMg*muti> be for dtlmfftd ibminj ra wm csbltiasfons Ffcr both PSU*s mra's and woman's basketball games against Mt OUvo College on Jan. 20 and against Pfeiffer College for homecoming on Feb. 10, P8U has made arrangements for the games to be videotaped to be shown later on cable vision stations in three American Television and Communications (ATC( of Charlotte is providing a fully equipped van to do the videotaping. WPSU-TV. Pembroke State's public televi sion! acility, is providing the student staff to use that equipment, says Dr Oscar Patterson, PSU director of telecommunications. "The announcer for doing the play-by-play will be provided by American Television and Communications," said Patterson, "while PSU-TV plans to provide the parson to telecast the color." Patterson said the cable vision stations of Rockingham and Fayetteville are planning to show the games the following Monday and Wednesday, respectively, after the games. Exact hours of the showings are being determined. Patterson is working out the dates and times when Lumberton cable vision will show die games. Ibe individual responsible for initiating this project, said Patterson, is Chuck Lowry of Rockingham, media crater coordinator of Richmond Community College who has bow a part-time student at PSU* majoring in broadcasting. He eras the one who conferred with American Tele vision and Communications about this project, whfch bee public service significance. Lowerj will be the producer of the program, and Patterson will serve as director. But it will be mainly a student effort. "American Television and Communications is peovid ing the equipment. We are providing everything else," ?aid Patterson, pleased over this opportunity for PSU broadcasting majors to gain this valuable experience doing game telecasts. PUBLIC SCHOOL DRUG AWARENESS PROGRAM GETS UNDBtWA YATPSU The Crime Education and Prevention Programs, Inez, which was organised in Robeson County last May, is starting the visitation of public school groups to the PSU campus lor drug briefing. Making the arrangements has been Burt Diddson, executive director of the program. The public school youngsters are being briefed in Room 204 of the PSU Business Administration Building where Criminal Justice students of PSU are assisting. Rut of the briefing is a special video presentation narrated by D*. Horace Baker of Lumberton, chairman of the Board of Director sof Crime Education and Prevention Programs, Inc. Leaders in the community take part in the video, which Diddson describes as "outstanding." Also part of the visitation program to PSU is the Robeson County Sheriff's Department's new mobile drug exhibt van, which contains valuable information about combatting drugs. Diddson also has had new posters printed about drug awareness which he says are being placed in every classroom in the county. These posters were sponsored by SOuthorn National B?nk DR. EVERETT HAMBR1C, EX-PSU CAGE STAR, doing internship at n.c. memorial hospital Dr. Everett Hambric, a graduate of the UNC Medical School who was a PSU basketball star of the 1970*1, is in his second year of residency in the Department of Neuropsychiatry at N.C. Memorial Hospital. Ham brick, 37, graduated from PSU in '74 and earned his Master's in Secondary Education in '79, attending both UNC-Greensboro and North Carolina A Si T. In the interim for six yean he taught in die Montgomery County School System with his principal at one time bein^ Ray Oxen dine, then at East Montgomery High School. Oxendine, now principal of Puroell Swett High School, encouraged Ham brie to go to medical school. With the help of a UNC Board of Governors scholarship, Ham brie began his studies at UNC Medical School in '83 and graduated in May of '88. He has completed his internship in general medicine. The future psychiatrist is married to the former Nancy Bennett of Jackson Springs. They are parents of two sons: Chad Everett, 7, and Brad Everett, 4. Ham brie was a star of the '73 basketball team which was the first to win an NAIA District basketball championship and qualify for the national NAIA tourney. The '74 team of which he was also a member missed going to the nationals by only three points. Ham brie recently visited PSU for the first time in seven or eight years to appear on a WPSU-TV sports interview show. Anted about his ygn at PSU, be replied: "They were probably ooe of the boat exciting timea of my life. Our teams had a dooeness that was unique. We recognized on one another's strengths and weaknesses." Ham brie said in '84 when PSU reached the national NAIA tourney for the second time, he heard on TV that the announced was describing it as "the first time." "I quickly telephoned the station to correct that, " he smiled. > PSU BUILDING UPDATE One major PSU building project has been completed, while another is still underway. The 1805,117 renovation of Loddear Hall. PSlTs art building, has been finished, and students began using the building after the Christmas holidays. The $2.45 million addition to PSLTs Herbert G. Oxendine Science Building is being completed, but PSU will not occupy that building until February or later, according to William Mason, PSU vice chancellor for business affairs. ~ DR. EVEWTT HMBRIC Congratulations Carolina Indian Uoice Happy 18th Anniversary Southern Interiors ' ?8 NOTICE TO BIDDERS TOWN OF PEMBROKE, NORTH CAROLINA REHABILITATION OF PRIVATELY-OWNED DWELLINC UNITS FY89 COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK CRANT PROCRAM The Town of* Pembroke, North Carolina, is requesting bids for the rehabilitation of privately-owned dwelling units in its FY89 Community Development project area. Bid specifications will be distributed at a contractor's meeting to be held on February 1, 1990, at 2:00 p.m. at the Town of Pembroke Municipal Building. Interested contractors ? or their representatives must attend this meeting to receive specifications; bids from contractors who do not attend the meeting will be rejected. Bids will be opened and read promptly at 2:00 p.m. on February 15, 1990. The Town of Pembroke's FY89 CDBC program budget is $231,260, of which $195,027, or 84%, is being financed with CDBC funds authorized by the Community Development Act of 1974, as amended. The Town of Pembroke is an equal opn^unttfr. employer and eo.9WT.a9a* bidding tBr' mi?w?'lly businesses. i . , Say You Read It In The Carolina I ndian Voice I Robert G. Revels jg I PRAYER LINE NOW AVAILABLE J dnrl I True * ZD S FOR PRAYER REQUESTS CALL \JUU 17USI m | 'Z'%r Al?y* | (919) 521-8390 or (919) 521-9166 fi?>nt? F??*! ?>?. WC. PUlMt-4?? Pharmacist ftp DMMI M? Aspirin and stroke An aspirin every other day has been proven to reduce your chance of heart attack, but the American Heart Association warns that not everyone should take aspirin regularly. Regular aspirin use may sometimes increase die risk of STROKE There are two types of stroke: ischemic, in which a clot blocks the flow of blood; and hemorrhagic, in which an artery bleeds into the brain. Aspirin interferes with the body's clotting mechanism, which may also increase the risk of hemorrhagic stroke. Consult your pharmacist or doctor before any regular self-medication. We're here for your health! EVERYTHING YOU NEED I FOR YOUR WINTER COLD! fftxeiPUnmety> i ufjjfi Cooy?rut?non? <xnd convtrmccL?ucce? ? /? Carolina Indian Voice On your 18th Anniversary ' '" ? Lumbee Regional Development Association

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