_ I Published Each Thursday Since January 18,1973 I Carolina Iniiar Voice I Pembroke, NC Robeson County I ?j^; ! 11 1 "Building communicative bridges in a tri-racial setting" I t ?UMBER24 > r- [,- ?*?- -a-"? - ? .. ? - ?. . ? .' --' ? ??*?-- ? ? ' - I - - ? -......_ . ? _ ? ' I <1 H ? * 5 PSl | ? red Professor Dr. Otis Carnes Diec :xas . _ t -li _ Dr. Of I mem ber of thd biver sityfaculj. id May 29, in Tyler, Tex. Carries, a retired professor of philosophy and literature at PSU< died in a Tyler hospital followinga lengthy illness. *, Cannes, whose residence was in Troup,Tex., was buriedm Bradford Cemetery in Troup. Carnes had resided in Troup since 1978. Bom in 1902 in Martinsville, Tex. Carnes graduated from Nacogdoches, Tex. High School and received his Bachelor of Arts in English from Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches in 1932. He graduated from Yale Uni versity Divinity School with a Bach elor of Divinity in 1935 and earned his doctorate in theology from Boston University's School ofThe ology in 19S2. Carries was a life member of Stephen F. Austin University's Alumni Association and a member of the Texas Conference of die United Methodist Church. He was a Paul Hanis Fellow in Rotary and a member of First United Method ist Church ofTroup where he taught Sunday School. Survivors include his wife, Sa vannah Cross Caraes, a daughter and son-in-law, Mary Ann and Elans Coney; a niece, Sharon Hayden, all of Troup; three sisters, Pauline Foster, Troup; Ndrine Carries and Chleo Carries, both of Houston; ananve granacmiuren, i^esuc Lockey, Lisa Lockey, Eddie Lockey n, Lance Youngs and Allan Youngs. Memorial may be made to the Eddie Lockey and Otis Carnes memorial Scholarship Fund at Stephen F. Austin University. Columnist says it just doesn't get any better than this* I (Editor's note: The following is a syndicated column by Chuck Stone, who was commencement speaker at Pembroke State University May 9. His column appears in over 90 newspapers with this clipping be ing from the Philadelphia Daily News, for whom Stone wrote be fore becoming the Walter Spearman Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication at UNC Chapel Hill) . Pembroke, N.C. -"This is a day that the Lord hath made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it," the Rev. Jerry Lowry prayed. If God is a multicultural advocate (and she is), then it just doesnt get any better than this; a Native American Meth odist minister, quoting a Psalm by a Jewish king at a predominantly white Southern University in the Lumbee tribe's heartland, whose commencement speaker is a black Baptist. The Lumbees are America's second-largest tribe. But because of opposition by North Carolina's courtly antediluvian, Sen. Jesse Helms, the Bureau of Indian Af fairs has refused to recognize the Lumbees as a legitimate tribe. Writing that last sentence, 1 was struck by how silly it is. Here we are celebrating a 500th anniversary of the historical non sense that Columbus "discovered" a land where people had thrived for centuries, and we're still talking about whether they should be "rec ognized"! For decades, the three races white, Mack and Indian-in Lumbee heartland, Robeson County, mostly went their separate ways. Under Dr. Joeepb B. Oxeodine, Pembroke Stale University's chan celk*, die campus has been forging closer ties among the three races. Pembroke State's student body is 64 percent white, 24 percent Indian and 11 black. So it was an exquis itely appropriate setting for my commencement tribute to "the crossover generation." "Before you," I told the radi antly multicultural faces of 503 graduates, "there were the free speech activists, the Vietnam War protesters and the'me'generations. "But you are the crossover gen eration. Look at your musical and recreational worlds. Your musical tastes range from Michael Jackson and the rap litanies of Ice-T to the lyrical sensuousness of Madonna and the country music of Wynonna Judd. "Even while Los Angeles, like Rome, was burning, it still didn't stop hundreds of white and black kids from overflowing the audito rium each night to catch television's philosophical king of multiculturalism, Arsemo Hall". "...As foe crossover genera tion, you are a moral locomotive for progress-an insistent voice for multiculturalism in foe university curriculum-laid back partners in interracial marriages that have tripled in foe last 25 years. "This is a wonderful nation blessed with extraordinary wealth. But it is also a nation of hopeless homeless, rural poverty, racial po larization and sexist oppression... "This is a time of testing Jobs ar plentiful But the crossover generate is well endowed with brains and brat ery. We expect you to suceed where wi have foiled. CHUCK STONE PowWow Planned In Maryland July 4-5 The American Indian- Inter-Tribal Cultural Organization, Inc. (AIITCO) announced plans today for its tenth an nual POW WOW to be held at the Garrett County Fairgrounds, it 219, McHenry, Maryland, on July4-5,1992. The Pow Wow will run from 10a m - 10p.m. on Saturday and from 10am. to 5pm. on Sunday. The Pow Wow will mark the eighth consecutive year this event has been held in Garrett County Since 1985, the Pow Wow has brought an increased interest in Native American Culture to the area. Traditional American Indian sing ing and dancing will be featured on all days of the pow wow. Members of a number of tribes from many states in cluding Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, New e York, North Carolina, Florida,Virginia, n California, and Maryland are expected '-to attend There will also be a number of vendors offering a wide selection of . Mative American foods and arts and raft* Admission is $4.00 for adults; children under 12 are admitted without charge, and there is free parking Special seat ing and parking for handicapped per sons are available. Spectators are wel come and cameras are permitted. Ad mission to fairgrounds after 8:30pm. on July4, is free for purposes of vie wing County fireworks display. For more information.contact AIITCOm Twinbrook Station, P.O. box 775 Rockville, Md. 20848-0775,301-963 7284 or 703-752-5554 (This pow wow is made possible, in part, by a grant from the Garrett County Arts Council and the Maryland Arts Council). 'k -r * Wake Forest Researchers , Seek Indian Traces Traces of the Indians who welcomed ( Christopher Columbus to the New < World in 1492 are being sought by ] Wake Forest University researchers and < students on the shore of a small island ] in teh Bahamas. "We are reconstructing the life of the i Lucayan-Taino Indians, who have bee j ?living peacefully in villages on San ( Salvador Island for centuries when they ] encountered Columbus." says Mary t Janes Bennan, assistant professor of t anthropology at Wake Forest and di- j rector of the University's Museum of ] Anthropology. < The Wake Forest group is studying, in , part, what the Indians'culture was like ] during the centuries they lived on San - Salvador. I .Questions about the island's friendly \ I natives can be answered only by diggin , | in the island's sand, where Berman's ] j students find beads, pendants, pottery ? riiards, stone tools, food remains and ; other remnants of a people long van- ' ished. ] "There are no descendants of the , Ltcayaa-Taino ludtass," 4uments Barman, who is making her eighth trip dua summer to San Salvador, where aaany historians believe Cohanbus first made landfall in the New World. San Salvador, the farthest east ofthe islands that make up the Bahamas, is nearly 1400 miles southeast of Miami. Ihe Indians' encounter with Columbus i;to,ate;y proved fatal, she explains. Two or three decades after Columbus' initial landing, the DO longer l?ved on Sah Salvador. Many had been , enslaved by Spaniards and forced to work until their death in the mines of Hispanioia, the West Indies island now divided into Haiti and the Dominican Republic. "The work and living conditions were otally inhuman** " says Beiman, who is co-director of Wake Forest's field whool on San Salvador. Her hushand, ferry Gnivecki, co-directs the summer ttudy program and is a research associ ite in Wake Forest's anthropology de partment. Likely, other Indians fled the island or lied of European iHnesses previously mfamiliar to them, such as smallpox. Berman estimates that the Lucayan rainoIndians lived simply and peace fully in several villages on the island for at least 700 years before their de struction. Traveling from Cuba, the Indians immigrated to San Salvador about 800 A.D. Others came from Hispanioia about 1,000 A. D. The Wake Forest excavation area, known as the Three Dog Site, is the earliest Indian site excavated in the Bahamas Evidence uncovered by the Wake Forest group shows the Indians were still living there when Columbus came ashore about two miles away. Columbus' purported landing site is being studied by a researcher from another university. Many researchers are at work on the island, although not all take under graduates, as Wake Forest has in recent years. Researchers and students live at a former U.S. Navy base, now known as the Bahamian Field Station for the Study of Archaeology, Biology, Geol ogy and Marine Science. The station ie one of two major enterprises on die island, which is only about 12 miles long and six miles die. The other is a small inn. "It's not anything like living in a dormi tory room at college," says Wake For est senior Laura Burton of Athens, Ga.,wbo has spent two summers in the spartan quarters offered by the old Navy base. The walls are cement block and sheet metal, mostly. "For some students it's hard , because the/re used to the luxuries of western culture,"says Burton, who receivedclass credit for both of her trips. "I enjoyed it beause I like adventure." Burton admits digging for evidence ofa previous culture on a hot beach can be tedious work, but she insists "it's im portant to team how life was an the island before Columbus came." "By learning about past ways oflife, we can better understand our own lives," adds Burton, who received a bachelor's degree in anthropology this spring si I Wake Forest and plaas to eamagradu ate degree in anthropology. Burton anticipates returning one day to see how another newcomer, a Chtb Med resort now under construction af fects life on the lslnd. It is scheduled to open in October, in time for a Cohan bus commemoration. Five PSU Students are In terning at station in four states Five Pembroke State University tele communications students are intern ing this summer at stations in four states Four of the students are in the news department, while one is in produc tion and programming. These student recieve a solid foun dation with our program at PSU," said Dr. Oscar Ptterson, PSU director of telecommunications who is in charge at WPSU-TV, PembrokeState' s public TV facility. "At no other school in North Caro lina do students get the on-hands experience they do at PSU," ssid Patterson. "WPSU-TV is a stu dent-opreated television facility." Curtis Pair of Fayetteville is interning at WTVD-TVofDurham, while another Fayetteville student. Albert Scruggs, is with KTVI-TV in St. Louis. Both are in the news department. Charles Malloy of Southern Pines is doing his internship with WECT-TVs bureau in Lumber ton, also in the new department. Tashoma Jessup of White Oak is working in news for WPDE-TV in Florence, S.C. Laurie Sodas of Glen wood Land, N.Y. is working with the cable system in Long Is land, N.Y. She is interning in the production and programming ar eas. The experience that these PSU students are gaining will help them find good jobs after graduation because, as Dr. Patterson, "they learn everything-from production to reporting the news." Pembroke Kiwanis Program Chairman Larry Chavis introduced Mrs. Hope Shepard, Secretary for the Inititutional AdvanceemeotofPSU and spoket woman for the March 17th, 1993 Very Special Art* Festival to be held on the campus of Pembroke State University. Kiwanis Club has donated $250 plus adopting a child for S10, by each member The pro gram is similarto the Special Olym pics but is in music, drama and the arts. There will be some artists ?killed in painting with their feet and by mouth. Mrs. Sheppard felt I 5 very fortunate in having too healt hy children not needing ? Special Aits program but just think what the special means to about 2,000 handicapped childre, and adults. " Please help me to get other organi zstioas and groups to help raisse money for the Festival." One Wilminton Kjwarns Club visitor donated S10, maybe the oth ers did also. Lt Gov. C.D. Gruganus from Wilminton spoke outlining the mgor emphasis for all Kiwanis Club being on the young child from Our Men In Uniform 'i; June 3, (FHTNC)? Navy Seaman ^ Donnie Lockiear, son of Harieen and * DoonieLocklear Jr. of Pembroke^. C.I - recently completed banc training at-* Recruit Training Command, Orlando, ' FL. During the cycle, recruits are taught general military subjects designed to prepare them for farther academic and. on-the-job training in one of the Navy's;. 85 occupational fields. )?; Studies include seamanship, doae-orC ; der drill, naval histosy and first aid. ; The 1991 graduate of Purnell Swett; High School joined the Navy in Febru-* - ary 1992. ? National :? Accreditation The laboratory at Southeastern Gen eral Hospital has been awarded a two year accreditation by the Commission ? on Laboratory Accreditation of the College of American Pathologists (CAP), based on results of a recent on res pre-natal to S yean. We also want ' to increase membership to help - * support programs for youths in- . * eluding sports, scouting for both boys and girls. The Club voted to buy two com plete baseball uniforms for the All Stan team at a coat of $100. - Kiwanian Bill Oxeadtne made the ? motion to present Mr. Lacy Jaoobs with the donation. The lawn mower donated by Pembroke Furniture Co. isour fond raiser for the 4th of July Home Coming. Tickets areSl and may be obtained from any Kiwanian Presiding- Clay Maynor; Song ? Leader- Ed Teett, Invocation Reggie Strickland; Reporter-Ken Johnson. \ I. I iU 'Wise To advertise! Call (919)521-2826 I got Our Sates I Say 2foil Head Ot On * ? rthe Carolina Ondlan Voice 1