Public Service Becomes Second Career For These Three BY ERIC CARLSON When Mason Barber re tired to Sunset Beaeh in 1986. it was the 28th and (he hoped) final move in a long, satisfying career with the Exxon Corporation. When George Anderson retired iO v aiaudMi iii i 7o /, nc quiiivi v >ci tied into to a quieter life on the 14th hole after traveling throughout Southern Asia as an international vice-president of Chase Manhattan Bank. When Wally Auslev retired to Holden Beach in 1990 as one of North Carolina's best known broad casters. he was returning to the beach where he had spent week ends and vacations since the 1930s. Like most new retirees, all three men figured that they would finally have a chance to relax, to play a lot of golf and to pursue other hobbies that had always taken a back seat to their busy careers. What thev did not expect of their so-called "retirement" was to be come the mayors of their new hometowns. Mayor Barber of Sunset Barber sa\ s he sought the post as a way to get involved in his com munis and to help guide its future. "I've always enjoyed working with people." he said. "Once 1 re tired. 1 had the time to devote to something worthwhile and thought 1 could accomplish something for the betterment of the community. 1 saw that Sunset Beach was destined to grow and wanted to see that we preserved the character of the town, and at the same time see that essen tial services were provided." Recognizing that most of his neighbors, like himself, live on fixed incomes, Barber is proud of helping to keep the town's tax rate as low as possible. At the same time, he cites his efforts to encour age a new supermarket and drug store to Sunset Beach as an impor tant benefit for local residents, both as a convenience and an asset for the town's tax base. "My philosophy is that things art going to change and if people can't accept change, they're going to have a problem." he said. A willingness to adapt was es sential lor Barber as he went from the U.S. Army to the University of Georgia and up the corporate ladder in the Exxon Corporation. When his country said go, Barber went?to Saipan, Iwo Jima and other hot spots in the Pacific theater. And when the company said go, Barber went?moving to New Orleans, Tampa, Atlanta. Jacksonville and cities all over North Carolina. (Barber and his wife Ginny lived in Charlotte four times.) He can recall "never a dull mo ment" in his career with Exxon, from his first days greasing cars iri :i service station in 1949. to his last vs / "? *-? 1 '?aL*&A".--? ^OJANS * STAFF PHOTO BY ERIC CARLSON SUNSET BEfiCH TOUJN Hfill :i ' ?*H ,**? - " f.y ? - ? 'v^-r v i? m +^ V d ' '? CALABASH MAYOR (teorie Anderson (above left) displays some of the more than 1,000 open salts he has been collecting since his mother gave him the first one over 20 years ago. He retired from Chase Manhattan Hank. Hidden lieach Mayr W'ally Ausley (top right) continues to be an uvid sports Jan and West Brunswick High School Trojans supporter after an illustrious broadcasting career as the "Voice oj the Wolf pack. Sunset lieach Mayor Mason Barber (bottom right) retired to Hrunswick County from the Exxon Corporation. post as the company's distribution manager for the Southeastern U.S. While vacationing in the Myrtle Beach area, the Barbers decided to explore nearby Brunswick County, where they discovered Sunset Beach. Thev decided it \s as just the kind of small town thev were look ing for as a retirement locale. They built their first vacation home in 1984 and moved into another house permanently four years later. The Barbers wasted no time get ting involved in local civic activi ties. Ginnv helped organize the town's beautification committee. As a former president of the Sunset Beach Taxpayer's Association, Mason was well-known when he arrived and was soon selected to be the town's mayor. "I've enjoyed being in govern ment It's very challenging," Barber said. "It's not that much different from business, except you have cit izens instead of customers. The rules and regulations make it a bit different, and you can't delegate as much as you can in the business world. But it's been a lot of fun." Mayor Anderson of Calabash George Anderson is enjoying his first term as mayor ol Calabash af ter serving four years as a commis sioner. He was a member of the first board to be elected following the merger <>l the old downtown rapidly growing neighbor, the Carolina Shores goi! and retirement community that comprises District 2. He is the lirst mayor from Carolina Shores. In a town where there's some times friction between the "old" and the "new" residents. Mayor Anderson has demonstrated a com mitment to represent the entire town of Calabash, not just his home district. Born on a farm in Northern Ireland. Anderson arrived in the U.S. at the age of 3, about a month before the great stock market crash of I1)?1) His father had emigrated to Canada and eventually to New Jersey, where he took a job as a trolley driver. He was later hired by the Mutual Life Insurance Co. and moved th?> family to Brooklyn, N.Y., and eventually to Long Island. As a youngster, George found he had a talent tor singing and became active in choir groups. He once sang in the famous Trinity C'hurch at the corner of Broadway and Wall c... \/ , ..i .meet ill i Vii IV v ay. While a student at New York University, Anderson decided he wanted to be an opera singer. To pay his expenses after college, he took a job with Chase Manhattan Bank, while pursuing his opera studies at night. "1 had planned to work there for about five years," Anderson re members. "Ix) and behold, five years turned into 43. "When I applied for the job, they noticed 1 had been born in Ireland, liven though 1 left when I was 3, and couldn't speak a foreign lan guage. they decided I ought to lx- in the international department." Anderson's operatic ambitions took a back seat as he advanced through the company's ranks, even tually taking over leadership of the bank's operations in Southern and Southeast Asia and the South Pacific. He travelled extensively, to India. Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, the Philippines, and other countries throughout the region while head ing a department of 600 to K00 peo ple. Back home on Long isianu, Anderson got his first taste of elec tive office when he was named chairman of the local school board. He fondly remembers having the privilege of handing his children their diplomas at high school grad uation. Anderson's first wife died ot cancer. When he later remarried, his second spouse Marilyn had a vacation home in Carolina Shores. He had been planning to retire in New England, but one trip to the North Carolina coast made him change his mind. The two moved south shortly after he left Chase Manhattan. "I came down here to retire." he said. "Unfortunately or fortunately, it didn't turn out that way. After the (Continued On Page 6)