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LUMBERTON – The Robeson County Sheriff’s Office is for a 20-year-old Parkton guy accused of stealing a vehicle.
Samuel Jatabie Ray is accused of stealing a motor vehicle, according to the sheriff’s office. He’s wanted through the Criminal Investigation Division of the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office.
Ray is accused of stealing a 1999 Ford Mustang from an undisclosed location.
No additional data were provided through the sheriff’s office.
Anyone with data on Ray’s whereabouts call the sheriff’s workplace at 910-671-3100 or 910-671-3170.
County Electoral Council Director: Mail-in voting request bureaucracy won through electorate from office
Marxism remains an idea
West Shore Homes shower and bathroom installer Juan Duran, 24, loaded used fabrics in a bathroom renovation assignment at a Rosewood Drive home in Lumberton in his pickup truck on Tuesday. The Wilmington-based company plans to return on Wednesday to the complete transformation of the house bathroom.
LUMBERTON – Staff from the University of North Carolina’s Department of Music at Pembroke mourn the loss of a student who died Monday morning in a shift in destination traffic in North Carolina 71.
Julia Dawn Merritt, who specializes in music, will be remembered for her kindness, smile and determination towards the art of music, José Rivera, associate professor and choral music coordinator of the UNCP music school program.
“She’s just a user who enjoyed life,” she said.
And his love of life radiated in his smile, Rivera said. Merritt had a great reputation and was appreciated by his peers.
“Our young people are very sad,” he says.
But Rivera encourages academics to the moments they shared with Merritt and never take the time they spend with others for granted.
“We have to appreciate the time with the other people we know because we don’t know how long it will last,” Rivera said.
Merritt has shown a lot of progress in his first year of school because he has gained confidence in his voice, he said.
He agreed to do a songwriter instructor for about 3 years.
“She’s developing like a wonderful musician,” said Jaeyoon Kim, associate professor of voice and choir.
He described Merritt as an intelligent and educated student.
Merritt was promising when he entered his fifth semester with Pembroke Singers, the college choir, which Kim conducts.
“We will miss her very much,” she said on behalf of the choir members.
Aaron Vandermeer, president of the music branch, said the branch would miss Merritt’s presence and contribution.
“She had a brilliant mind, and you know, we’re going to miss her a lot,” Vandermeer said.
The music branch plans to honor Merritt’s reminiscence by exploring a scholarship on his behalf, holding a memorial concert in his honor, and a candlelight vigil, Vandermeer said.
The memorial concert will be recorded, produced and broadcast online, he said. Information about online vigil, which will allow many others to attend despite COVID-19 restrictions, will also be published shortly.
Rivera recalls the joy of training Merritt and watching her share her upbringing with others as she ran as co-director of the Children’s Choir of the Laurinburg Presbyterian Church, which she also attends.
Merritt spent two years in the church to help lead the choir, and its effect has had an effect on the congregation and the community, said the Rev. W. Robert Martin III, the church’s senior pastor.
“It was enjoyed by the young and literally enjoyed by everyone in the congregation,” Martin said. “We are suffering losses.”
“His kind and gentle soul and disposition are qualities that Merritt will remember, ” he said.
“It’s a huge loss to us, ” he said. “I know it’s an unbearable loss to the family, but I’m grateful to have spent time with them.”
The 20-year-old died Monday morning in a head-on collision at NC 71 about 3 miles south of Red Springs when her 2008 Honda collided with a 2012 Chrysler passenger in the opposite direction led by John Garrett Broady Jr., 40. Rockingham, the sergeant said. James McVicker of the State Highway Patrol.
The turn of fate occurred when Merritt’s vehicle left the road on the right, attempted to enter the road and crossed to the left of the centre line. Merritt died at the site and Broady was transferred to an undisclosed hospital, where he was indexed in solid state.
LUMBERTON – Public school leaders, state legislators and representatives of communications corporations met Tuesday to take the “first step” toward offering broadband in Robeson County.
Some members joined the user and others through the video at the assembly building the Robeson County Public Schools District Headquarters on Hargrave Street.
“We look to see what can be done with short-term and long-term broadband in the future,” said Craig Lowry, chairman of the Board of Education at PSRC.
Discussions about the passage of underground cable communities were on the table, but it will take time, Lowry said.
“It’s just a multi-step plan that wants to be addressed,” said Mike Smith, a member of the Board of Education.
This plan requires action, Kris Ward, Director of Business Development at Atlantic Telephone Membership Corporation.
“ATMC and LREMC are looking for opportunities to help each other get fiber optic resources for the county’s most deprived rural areas. Today’s assembly is a smart first step in what will be a long journey,” Ward said. “ATMC recognizes that we have intelligent representatives in Raleigh, such as Senator (Danny) Britt, representatives (Brenden) Jones and (Charles) Graham, all of whom know that the state’s most vulnerable scholars in rural spaces simply cannot be well informed without affordable home broadband service.”
Representative Graham stated that the factor involved “quality of life” and “equality with public education.”
“From a legislative point of view, we are doing it,” Graham said.
Legislation that provides incentives for companies to provide assistance to the school formula was passed, he said. The legislature also said that developing subsidies for tech-powered rural economies, or GREAT, announced on August 19 through Gov. Roy Cooper, have given a major boost to efforts to provide citizens in every corner of County InternetArray ATMC, earned $2.5 million in EXCELLENT investment to expand Internet service to rural communities in Robeson and Robeson counties.
“We know it’s not a one-year procedure, it’s a multi-year subsidy procedure,” Graham said.
And the internet broadcasting procedure in Robeson County is indicted, said Gordon Burnette, PSRC spokesman. By some estimates, the cost of providing broadband connectivity in some rural areas of the county is more than $50 million.
For now, the school formula will continue to deploy 39 school buses equipped with cell phones into communities to allow young people to access the Internet, he said. You can find a list of those places on the CRSP website.
“We will continue to provide our students with generation and Internet in all school parking lots, our learning parks and with the kind of assistance from our network partners,” Burnette said.
The North Carolina Office of Broadband Infrastructure conducts surveys to gather knowledge about Internet connectivity through N.C. Knowledge will identify spaces that want connectivity.
The survey can be conducted in www.ncbroadband.gov/broadband-nc/north-carolina-broadband-survey.
“COVID has recently brought the lack of broadband in rural areas to the forefront, however this has been a challenge for more than two decades,” said Ward of ATMC. “It will take public and personal partnerships so that our young people are not left behind.”
RALEIGH – Many will commemorate Wednesday the anniversary of the passage of the Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
This year’s birthday party is attractive because it is the centenary of the 1920 ratification of the amendment that granted women the right to vote. Under the leadership of New York Rep. Bella Abzug in 1971 and approved in 1973, the United States Congress designated August 26 as Women’s Equality Day.
The Robeson County Democrat took a photo Saturday in downtown Lumberton’s square in commemoration of the centenary celebration. The group’s president and founder, Caroline Sumter, said the day marked a turning point in history.
“Until a hundred years ago, most countries denied most of their other people the right to vote,” Sumpter said Tuesday.
She believes that the ability to vote is the “cornerstone of our democracy” and advocates that all citizens have the right to vote and that women have every opportunity that their male counterparts have if they wish.
“For me, women’s equality celebrates the achievements of women’s rights and reminds us of the demanding situations women face on a daily basis,” she said. “I can’t wait for everyone to be the same. Without taking anything from our male counterparts, but knowing that if women decide to sit at the table, it will be for them to have it on the table.
Wendy Pridgen, president and founder of the Robeson County Republican Women’s Club, said Women’s Equality Day is a time to reflect on the demanding situations they face in their quest for the right to vote.
“By celebrating the centenary of women’s right to vote, I honor the sacrifices made through those who fought for this right,” Pridgen said.
With the amendment, more women have the opportunity to run and serve, and they are congratulated, Pridgen said.
“I’m grateful for your great achievement,” he said.
The amendment is the culmination of a large nonviolent motion for women’s civil rights that officially began in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, at the first world conference on women’s rights, according to the National Women’s History Alliance.
“The Women’s Equality Day birthday party not only commemorates the adoption of the 19th Amendment, but also draws attention to women’s ongoing efforts to promote total equality. Workplaces, libraries, organizations and public establishments are now participating in Women’s Equality Day programs, exhibitions and activities video screenings or other activities,” read in part from the Alliance.
The 1973 Congressional Joint Solution reads:
“CONSIDERING that women in the United States have been treated as second-class citizens and have not had all the rights and privileges, public or private, legal or institutional, that male citizens of the United States have;
and CONSIDERING that women in the United States have combined to make these rights and privileges equally available to all citizens, regardless of gender;
and CONSIDERING that the United States designated on 26 August, the anniversary of the certification of the Nineteenth Amendment, as a symbol of the ongoing struggle for equivalent rights;
and CONSIDERING that women in the United States are praised and supported in their organizations and activities,
NOW, BY TRIAL, IT IS RESOLVED, the Assembly of the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress, that on August 26 of both a year be designated as Women’s Equality Day, and that the President be legal and asked to factor a proclamation of both one and two years in commemoration of that day in 1920 , in which American women first obtained the right to vote. Array and on this day in 1970, a national demonstration for women’s rights was held.
LUMBERTON – Arrested Potential Inc. has planned an e-book gift for children Little Red Wagon on Wheels starting at 2 p.m. Saturday afternoon.
It will be at Turner Terrace Community Center, 106 Spruce Street, Lumberton.
Arrested Potential Inc. will distribute three hundred books and beverages, nutritious snacks and backpacks to five- to nine-year-olds living in The Turner Terrace Public Development.
The books are donated through the Lisa Libraries Foundation in Kingston, New York, and Arrested Potential, Inc. Partners, which, according to its website, is a non-profit organization committed to the lives of youth and young adults, intellectually and morally. . Array by implementing state-of-the-art programs.
Turner Terrace Community Center will locate potential, Inc.’s arrested computer lab and children’s center at risk when Gov. Roy Cooper lifts restrictions on public meetings, according to Gene Jones, the nonprofit’s chief executive.
The following thefts reported Monday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:
Marty Willis, Maverick Road, Lumberton; Dyquan Morris, prom Vernons Way, Fairmont; Mortgage Vanderbilt, Cheyenne Drive, Fairmont; and Barbara Bell, Stanton Road, Maxton.
The following thefts reported Monday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:
U-Haul, North Carolina, Shannon; James Lamb, South Creek Road, Orrum; and Miranda Porter, N.C.130 East, Orrum.
St. PAULS – The police branch here is asking city citizens to sign up for a new neighborhood surveillance program.
Volunteers will be invited to attend an assembly consistent with the month at the City Council. Training will be provided.
Anyone volunteering should contact the police at (910) 865-5155.
LUMBERTON – The Lumberton City Council may vote to condemn the former Ramada Inn in its assembly on Wednesday and pave the way for the demolition of construction that has not been used for approximately 4 years.
The 73,000-square-foot hotel order on Kahn Drive, visual from Roberts Avenue and Interstate 95, comes after the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development rejected research conducted in the city.
“It will be a great project, so if the council makes the decision to condemn the building, it will have to approve the budget to dismantle it,” Horne said. “We hope to act temporarily on this and leave it blank as well.”
The federal agency’s provisions for the demolition and reconstruction of assets required assets to be placed outdoors on a 100-year floodplain. The Ramada Inn site is located on an alluvial plain, which led to the allocation wasting the $400,000 general network progression grant approved across the state.
The charge of demolishing construction fell only in the city after the loss of grant cash and efforts for other state and national investment resources failed.
Horne stated in the past that the estimated demolition fee includes $150,000 in landfill charges, $125,000 for asbestos relief and more than $100,000 for demolishing the building.
If the conviction is approved next week through the town hall, the city will leave the property blank. Before anything can be built on the property, the site will have to rise two feet above the fundamental elevation of the flood to comply with the city’s ordinances, Horne said.
Harry Jhala of Lumberton bought the assets in 2012. He said he planned to build two hotels and three restaurants on site.
Plywood placed the first construction land outdoors before this year to help protect the old hotel from vandalism and prevent other homeless people from entering construction.
The hotel, which spans more than five acres, has been deserted since it flooded with Hurricane Matthew in October 2016.
FAIRMONT – “It’s not a protest, it’s a business of life.”
Reverend Kerry Revels used those words to describe a prayer march in Fairmont that attracted about a hundred participants on Saturday. Revels and nine other pastors preached the occasion as other participants walked behind them. The march began at the Fairmont Police Department and ended there with a prayer. The address took Main Street participants to Walnut and Pine streets, then back to the police department.
Revels is the associate shepherd of the mountain. Hebron Holiness Church in Maxton. But he seeks to spread the gospel message in the county, Revels said. Through faith, others can find freedom, truth, life, and joy, he said.
“The ministry deserves to start at home,” Revels said.
Revels participated in the Lumberton Prayer March on July 20, but described the March in Fairmont as a “more intimate” delight because the network members were concerned and joined the cult. Some other people left their homes to look and respond. A woman joined the organization on Walnut Street.
“She began to worship God in the middle of the street, ” said Revels.
He described the woman’s reaction as a hard experience.
“She’s a component of the march, ” said Revels.
Residents gave the impression of being “very moved” through the prayer march, and he believes the occasion brought a “strong message of hope,” Revels said.
“We believe it was a very successful and very successful occasion,” said Reverend Brent Chavis, who led the occasion and helped organize the Lumberton Prayer March.
Carrie Jacobs, who attended the prayer march with other members of the Assembly of God of Pembroke, said she was affected by the event.
“It was a very humiliating delight to see other people renting and worshipping the 4 walls of the church outdoors,” he said. “People who didn’t come to church can just hear the preaching of the catwalk.”
Chavis said he was looking for more churches to get involved. Similar occasions are planned in other municipalities in the county.
“We can end up this way, ” said Chavis.
The purpose is to serve the members of the network and unite them to God, he said.
Fairmont police chief Jon Edwards said the branch revered escorting participants throughout the city.
“It’s great to see the network come together,” he said. “The Fairmont Police Department is proud to be concerned on such a positive occasion that it saw a desire for prayer in today’s dubious times.”
The organization is making plans for a march 19-25 tent revival event at Lumberton, but is still working to locate a location, Chavis said. Your prayer march will take position until after waking.
Anyone interested in sometimes long-term occasions can contact Chavis at [email protected].
PEMBROKE – The University of North Carolina at Pembroke received the first patent in the history of the university to treat patients with Alzheimer’s disease and head injuries.
The patent is the result of paintings by Ben Bahr, president of William C. Friday and distinguished professor, and his team at the UNCP Biotechnology Center. Bahr, Ph.D., recognized as one of the world’s leading experts in neurodegenerative diseases, is listed as the inventor of the patent.
“This patent is another vital step that recognizes Dr. Bahr’s cutting-edge studies in his lab on those diseases that deprive us of our very essence of who we are as people,” said Chancellor Robin Gary Cummings.
“These are transformative studies with profound implications for the long-term relief of human suffering. UNCP is proud to have Dr. Bahr among its teachers,” Cummings added.
Bahr has discovered in the past a compound that has been shown to produce protein buildups in the brain that cause memory loss and contribute to Alzheimer’s disease.
“The patent covers past compounds, new derivatives and unique combinations that exploit the box in development of herbal products for brain health,” said Bahr, professor of molecular biology and biochemistry. “We’re probably the first to show how they can be mixed to treat diseases like Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease and ALS.
“The most important thing is that the U.S. Patent Office It has allowed us to find the remedy for mild cognitive impairment. MCI disorder, which we have tested in animal models, is considered a disease prior to Alzheimer’s disease and in which it is really necessary to start treating the first symptoms of dementia before Alzheimer’s disease slowly settles in the brain.”
Bahr hopes that UNCP’s landmark patent will attract the attention of pharmaceutical corporations in their efforts to slow down and even oppose the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, which affects about 6 million Americans. Studies are also the subject of a PhD. Michael Almeida’s assignment in Bahr’s lab.
The new patent, US 10 702 571, covers traumatic brain injuries, as these types of lesions accumulate deposits of poisonous proteins similar to those of Alzheimer’s disease. Bahr’s studies led him to identify a unique elegance of catepsin B enhancing compounds. Catepsin B is an enzyme that can degrade neurovenous deposits found in Alzheimer’s disease and traumatic brain damage.
“It turns out that football players and the military also expand chronic traumatic encephalopathy and this has telltale photographs of the kind of protein deposits that occur in Alzheimer’s disease,” Bahr said.
The patent also includes patented compounds granted to Bahr and some other medical chemistry professor, Dennis Wright, while at the University of Connecticut before joining UNCP in 2009.
He has presented his studies in 17 countries and has published more than 150 publications on neuroprotection pathways and neurodegenerative diseases. Bahr is widely among his colleagues in the field of neuroscience across the state and nation.
Todd Cohen, an associate professor at the Center for Neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, interacted with Bahr, exchanging reagents and exchanging ideas.
Cohen said: “I was very inspired by Dr. Bahr’s curriculum to advance treatments for protein-related diseases, adding traumatic brain injuries.
“By improving the health of neurons, we could possibly improve synoptic service and repair cognition in members suffering from explosive injuries, as well as others who suffer one or more brain injuries, such as situations the tau protein that bureaucracy deposits in the paintings of their team deserve to provide new primary perspectives on those situations and help the consultant to the progression of healing in the coming years to treat those patients with new effective medicines”.
Ronny Bell, a professor and director of the Department of Public Health at the University of East Carolina, said the new patent is exciting for UNCP and Bahr.
“Dr. Bahr is conducting cutting-edge studies on the mastery of cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease,” Bell said. “Current projections imply that the number of Americans diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease will triple to 2050, so it is imperative to advance science to better perceive Alzheimer’s disease and expand effective prevention strategies. I congratulate Dr. Bahr and his team on their remarkable work.” .
Since joining UNCP in 2009, Bahr has won prestigious awards, and has added the 2013 Governor James E. Holshouser Governor Award to UNC Board of Governors’ Public Service Excellence. He also won the Council for Undergraduate Research’s Outstanding Mentor Award, a testament to his fondness for training the next generation of scientists and researchers.
As a result of contributions to his field, the UNC Board of Governors also awarded Bahr the 2017 O. Max Gardner Award, the honor a university member can earn from the UNC system.
LUMBERTON – A 20-year-old Pembroke died this morning in a head-on crash about 3 miles south of Red Springs, according to the State Highway Patrol.
Private M.W. Chavis responded around 7:42 a.m. to the vehicle crash at N.C.71, to the sergeant. James McVicker of the State Highway Patrol.
Julia Dawn Merritt, who was driving south, died when her 2008 Honda passenger car collided with a 2012 Chrysler car passing by John Garrett Broady Jr., 40, of Rockingham, McVicker said. The turn of fate occurred when Merritt’s vehicle left the road on the right, attempted to enter the road and crossed to the left of the centre line.
Cars arrived to rest near a ditch east of North Carolina 71, McVicker said.
Merritt was pronounced dead at the site and Broady was taken to an undisclosed hospital, where he was placed in solid condition.
“No fees will be imposed on the patrol from this investigation,” McVicker said.
Road situations were transparent at the time of the accident, he said.
LUMBERTON – The presidents of Robeson County’s two main political parties are encouraging the electorate to vote by mail in this election cycle, however, beyond the occasion, it is the idea to open the procedure to the error.
The National Elections Council has predicted a significant increase in absentee voting due to the aptitude and protection considerations raised through COVID-19. The Council recently published data reflecting the expected accumulation.
North Carolina County Election Councils won mail applications from 9,953 Democrats, 9,643 Republicans, and 7,223 unaffiliated voters as of August 23, 2016, according to the state council. The Council won requests from 156,960 Democratic voters, 44,867 Republicans, and 93275 unaffiliated electorates on August 18 for the 2020 general election on November 3.
Anyone who can’t vote in a vote on voting day “should” request a mail poll and “certainly” publish it,” said Stephen Phillips, chairman of the Robeson County Republican Party.
“We hope they may not delay the results, but obviously that would be the reality,” Stephens said.
Past occasions have cast a shadow of uncertainty regarding absentee voting, he said.
“[As evidenced] through the ninth electoral case in Congress in Bladen County, it was the irregularities in the mail vote that forced a special election,” Stephens said.
During the 2018 race, Mark Harris, a Baptist pastor, received maximum votes, but a temporary investigation into the allegations about McCrae Dowless, who had been hired for the Harris Crusade in Bladen County, was temporarily launched. Witnesses told state election officials that Dowless had collected a bunch of absent ballots from the Bladen County electorate with the help of his aides. Dowless staff testified at a State Council hearing that they were asked to gather blank or incomplete ballots, forge signatures, and even vote for candidates.
Still, Stephens believes mail votes are safer than mail-in votes for voter ID.
“Unlike mail-in voting, there are fewer guarantees,” Stephens said. “Proof of residency, verification of registration and verification of registration are some of the guarantees that exist when ballots are sent by random mail.
“While the absentees consulted have at least some integrity coverage. Duplicate registrations, misguided voter lists, poll collection, and missed surveys are problematic when sending random emails.”
Robeson County Democratic Party President Pearlean Revels said she had full confidence in the mail-in voting procedure and is the most productive option given the uncertainty posed by COVID-19.
“I gave him very force, ” said Revels. “The coronavirus made other people feel a little uncomfortable on the way out.
“The absentee has been around for years. At the moment, I sense what the upheavals are, unless it’s the post office.”
She has “confidence” in the county board workplace and believes this year’s elections will be held “as they take place,” Revels said.
Robeson County BOE director Tina Bledsoe said the workplace had hired more and had bought letter-folding devices to reduce the time it takes to mail ballots.
Despite the pandemic, both resumed their voting campaigns.
“I think Republicans and Democrats have been artistic in their efforts to get out of the vote this year,” Stephens said. “I know I used a lot of important media, like Zoom and other meetings.”
Revels said the Democratic Party had organized several non-voter campaigns, not only to register voters, but also to inspire them to vote in the mail-making process. An organization went to Fairmont every day, he said.
“We communicate with other people and insist on absentee voting,” Revels said. “We’ll do it them and them. The most important thing is to make sure it faints and votes.”
The State Election Council recently issued rules for school and college academics who decide to vote the pandemic by mail, and orders them to request that their ballots be sent to a place where they know they will get them.
“We want to make sure that all eligible voters have the data they want to vote effectively on this election at those exclusive times,” said Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director of the State Council.
Other rules for academics include:
– If you live temporarily away or moved from the apartment where you are registered to vote and intend to return later, then you should not have lost your apartment position. It may remain your residential right to vote.
– If you are registered to vote on your campus and have not requested a vote by mail, you can request a vote and send it to the office of your choice. This is the option for academics who are registered to vote on their campus and who know they will leave their campus to cope for the rest of the semester.
– If you are registered to vote on your campus and know if you are leaving campus, please wait until you know your accommodation situation before requesting a ballot.
– Students who have already been deployed for a survey will still have to leave campus due to COVID-19 or any other explanation as to why they would possibly re-request that their survey be sent to another address. The first request will not be fulfilled. Students or others who submit a new form may write a note about the new form, such as “Updated” or “Modified” to alert county election officials that it is an updated request. They can also send an email or tap the county council workplace to make sure the survey is sent to the updated address.
– However, if you have left your apartment post and intend to stay indefinitely at your new address, you will need to register for your new residential address.
– If you are absent from your residential or postal address, be sure to come with the antepecho where you need your survey to be sent in your mailing request for voting. If you have moved to your county, you can use the application form to update the management of your home and/or postal management.
An online mail application portal will be available on the State Board of Elections website, NCSBE.gov, until September 1, according to the State Board. This will allow all registered voters to request an online survey. Starting September 4, county election councils will begin sending ballot boxes to the electorate who requests them.
The deadline for applying for a vote by mail is October 27. However, election officials strongly inspire the electorate to request a vote before that date so that return times by mail can be met.
As always, any electorate can vote on the user during the early voting period, from 15 to 31 October, or on polling day, 3 November.
LUMBERTON – If a Robeson County Sheriff’s deputy calls to ask for Social Security information, it’s likely to be a scam, Sheriff Burnis Wilkins said.
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Are they other people of faith?
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People are praying!
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West Shore Homes shower and bathroom installer Juan Duran, 24, loaded fabrics into his truck Tuesday for fabrics used in a bathroom renovation assignment at a house on Rosewood Drive in Lumberton. The Wilmington-based company plans to return on Wednesday to the complete transformation of the house bathroom.
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PEMBROKE – Much has replaced the University of North Carolina at the Pembroke Department of Athletics in recent months relative to the 2020-21 educational year and the COVID-19 pandemic, and steps toward branch normality require some primary decisions for the national level
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LUMBERTON – Staff from the University of North Carolina’s Department of Music at Pembroke mourn the loss of a student who died Monday morning in a shift in destination traffic in North Carolina 71.
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LUMBERTON – Public school leaders, state legislators and representatives of communications corporations met Tuesday to take the “first step” toward offering broadband in Robeson County.
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RALEIGH – Many will commemorate Wednesday the anniversary of the passage of the Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
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LUMBERTON – Arrested Potential Inc. has planned an e-book gift for children Little Red Wagon on Wheels starting at 2 p.m. Saturday afternoon.
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The following thefts reported Monday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:
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RALEIGH – Whether Democrat Yvonne Holley or Republican Mark Robinson wins the position of 2020 deputy governor, North Carolinaners will elect the first African-American candidate for office.
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St. PAULS – The police branch here is asking city citizens to sign up for a new neighborhood surveillance program.
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