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MISSION
STATEMENT
The
Lumbee River Fund supports the study and preservation of Lumbee Indian
history, culture, religion, education, and political life. We seek to
preserve the past and improve the future lives of Indian people through
interdisciplinary research and education at the university, community,
state and regional levels. The Lumbee River Fund supports open, collaborative
relationships among the University of North Carolina at Pembroke, the
Robeson County Public Schools, non-profit organizations, and the general
public. The Lumbee River Fund was begun by a grant to the UNC Pembroke
Foundation, and is sponsored by UNC Pembroke.
ADVISORY
COMMITTEE
Organization affiliation
is for identification purposes only
- Bruce Barton, Indian
Education Resource Center, Public Schools of Robeson County
- Gretchen M. Bataille,
Office of the President, University
of North Carolina
- Cherry Beasley,
Associate Professor, Nursing, UNC Pembroke
- Danny Bell, American
Studies, UNC Chapel Hill
- Donna Chavis, Native
Americans in Philanthropy
- Jeff Currie, North
Carolina State Museum of History
- Daystar Dial, Artist/Writer
- Josephine Humphreys,
Author
- Cynthia Hunt, Lumbee
River Legal Services
- Stanley Knick,
Native American Resource Center, UNC Pembroke
- Joel Garth Locklear,
Indian Honor Association
- Louise Maynor,
English Department,
NC Central University
- Malinda Maynor,
Filmmaker and M.A. Candidate in History, UNC Chapel Hill
- Waltz Maynor, School
of Education, NC Central University
- Allen Meadors,
Chancellor, UNC Pembroke
- Linda Oxendine,
American Indian Studies, UNC Pembroke
- Theda Perdue, History
Department, UNC Chapel Hill
- Glenn Ellen Starr
Stilling, Belk Library,
Appalachian State University
- Charles D. Thompson,
Center for Documentary Studies
at Duke University
- Harry Watson, Center
for the Study of the American South, UNC Chapel Hill
- Walt Wolfram, North
Carolina Language and Life Project, NC State University
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