Part 8: Reflections on the Battle for Lumbee Recognition
Locklear, Arlinda. "Part 8: Reflections on the Battle for Lumbee Recognition." YouTube. 28 April 2010.
Locklear, Arlinda. "Part 8: Reflections on the Battle for Lumbee Recognition." YouTube. 28 April 2010.
Locklear, Arlinda. "Part 9: Reflections on the Battle for Lumbee Recognition." YouTube. 28 April 2010.
Pembroke State University. American Indian Studies Dept. “Early Lumbee Religion.” Oral history audiotapes. [Not seen.] [n.d.]
Indian Pentecostal Service. Eastern North Carolina, 12 Aug. 1980. Videotape. No dir., no prod. 60 min.
Evans, William, and David Oxendine. “To Die Game.” Unpublished screenplay. Registered: WGAW. [Los Angeles, CA: Barbara’s Place Script Specialists, 1993?] 75 p.
Good to Be an Indian: Proud and Free. Videotape. Prod. Billy E. Barnes. Title IV, Part A Indian Education Project, Robeson County Board of Education, 1980. 20 min.
In the heart of tradition: The eight state-recognized tribes of North Carolina and the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs. DVD. 28.30 min. Pembroke, NC: Native American Resource Center, UNC-Pembroke (in collaboration with the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs), 2005.
Robeson County Compensatory Indian Education Project. “Oral History Videotapes.” 1982. [Fourteen videotapes of Lumbee elders.]
Dancing in the gardens of the Lord: The faces of American Indian powwows in North Carolina. DVD. 12:22 minutes. Pembroke, NC: Native American Resource Center, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, 2007.
Sounds of Faith. Dir. and prod. by Malinda M. Maynor. Videocassette. Department of Communication, Stanford U, 1997. 14 min. Key source