? I PUBLISHED EACH THURSDAY I HJTHE CAROLINA INDIAN VOI( _ * "Building Communicative Bridges DnaCCrUl /V\l Hitv I ^ ^ PEMBROKE* W.C In A Tri-rqcial Setting." RQpcSQN COUNTY B VOWMEl^UMB^^r^ 28 CENTS PEMBROKE MAYOR SEEKS THIRD TERM ? * . \ . . ? Mayor Milton R Hunt announces his candidacy for a third term as Mayor of Pembroke. Hunt, age 43, is married to Polly Deese Hunt. They have two children, Anthony, 19 and Kimberly, 16 and two grandchildren. Hunt is a drywall contractor. After having served eight years on the Town Council, Hunt was elected Mayor in November 1983 and re elected in November 1985. He is a candidate for the office of mayor again on November 3, 1987. TOWN ELECTIONS SLATED FOR TUESDA\ Citizens of the Town of Pembroke will elect a mayor and two town councilmen on Tuesday, November 3, 1987. Seeking re-election is Mayor Milton R Hunt and Town Councilmen Henry Ward Oxendine and Vernon Oxendine. All three are incumbents and are running unopposed. According to reports, this will be the first election in more than twenty years that the incumbents have no opposition. Although the incumbents are unopposed, citizens are still encouraged to go to their respective polling places and cast their vote. Exercise your right to vote November 3, 1987. LOCAL HAPPENINGS this can you read this? Many people in Pembroke cannot but want to learn. You can help teach people to read by becoming a literacy tutor. It takes 3 days for 3'/z hours each day. Pembroke Area Presbyterian Ministry will sponsor tutor training sessions on Monday, Nov. 2- 2-5:30 p.m.: Tuesday, Nov. 3- 2-5:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Nov. 4, 3-5:30 p.m. in Room 233 of the Chavis Student Center at PSU. If you want to teach people how to read, or if you know somebody who wants to learn to read, call 521-3231 and leave your name and phone number and we'll get back to you. west robeson boosters to meet The West Robeson Band Boosters will have their monthly meeting on Thursday, November 5, 1987 at 7 p.m. in the band room of West Robeson High School. All parents and interested supporters are encouraged to come out and support the band. INTEREST Meeting to beheld There will be a meeting on Saturday, October 31, at 10 a.m. at the Town and Country Restaurant in Pembroke. The meeting will be an interest meeting to find out if there is enough interest shown to organize an Optimist Club in the area. Guest speaker will be Ed Yost, President of teh Lumberton Optimists Club. The club motto is: "Friend of Youth." Interested persons are invited to attend. WHATEVER HAPPENED TO... H.G. "JACK" BRAYBOY By Barbara Brayboy-Locldear SPECIAL TO THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE "I've never torn down anything I ever built," says H.G. "Jack" Brayboy of his years laying brick. "All I ever wanted was for a man to tell me what he wanted done or show me his blueprint," he adds. Brayboy's brick-laying began over forty years ago in Robeson County where he was struggling as a sharecropper on his late father's farm. "I decided I wouldn't be able to educate my children on the farm. So I sold my mule, wagon and plows and turned to carpentry, then to brick-laying," the father of four says. He says his late father, Tecumseh Brayboy, encouraged him in his new profession by buying him his first trowel which cost $1.50. Brayboy then embarked on a career which lasted 37 years. "I began working as a helper to the late Clearance Tuck, a notable area brick-layer," he remembers. "For ten years Mr. Tuck taught me all the techniques of brick-laying." After working under Tuck, Brayboy went solo in his wjrk which involved building brick homes in Robeson County and into other areas of the U.S. News quickly spread of the sprightly Lumbee Indian who could lay over two thousand brick a day. "I've laid 2,500 brick a many a day, and that's a lot of stooping," Brayboy laughs. He sits in the den of his Pembroke home he and his wife practically build alone in 1947 and talks of his years growing up in rural Robeson County. '' Times were hard back then growing up on the farm. I know plenty about hard work," he says. He was one of 11 children bom in a family of eight boys and three girls. The lengthy illness of his mother interrupted his early education. "I was pulled out of school in the seventh grade and stayed by my mother's bedside for two years before she died in 1929," he says. He, along with his brothers walked the three miles to Pembroke Graded School until he was given the school's first school bus driving assignment "I made three trips a day on that 1927 Model T bus and was paid six dollars a month for doing it" he comments. Brayboy drove the bus until he graduated from Cherokee Indian Normal School and married the former Attelia Graham. * After getting married, he worked a brief stint with his father in the Brayboy sawmill. He became an accomplished sawer and -lays, "I know wood pretty good. I can walk out in the forest pnd tell you which tree is good or rotten without ever touching ? I : Nicknamed "Jack" by an old couple he once lived with in . early childhood, the grandfather says he enjoyed every day he worked laying bricks. "I never tired of creating things with bricks. I specialised in fqncy fireplaces and to build one that works properly is an ait" , Raising his stubby fingers in the air, the 74-yearold brick mason says, "I reesntly had a little get together with myself and figured the number of brick I've laid during the pest 37 ypars, and the way I figured, I've laid a little better than five Biilbon brick, in my briefc-laying career." Brayboy no longer lays brick because at Wring health. Ha _ ?? ?i ^ . ?? ? -. - j IS "?* 0 *'' i* ?*>?~ making of picnic tables which he created from tile and concrete. He enjoys ink sketching and recently completed a drawing of the originial Sandy Plains Methodist Church. The artwork will be used in the church's upcoming histoiy publication. He readily admits that he misses his work. "I feel pretty good, and if I had good eye sight, I could probably go back to laying brick. With apparent pride he adds, "I never did catch up. I had a job for 37 years, and I never once advertised. My work was the only advertisement I ever needed." "Jack" Bmifboy tit* on a bench he built. SGH TO X-RAY TREATS Children look forwartl to Halloween m a fan time. fetehMatoae tienon! Hospital wants to help mate ante it's a On Halloween night, Saturday, October 31, (mm 7:00 to art ft will be available at the hospital's Dtagrtestie and - TreatBee^Ceeter. ' 11" ' V" . ' , ' A: M 5 ___ _ _ i ? ? ^nnfliolit on southern truck , kjpi/ulglll uil and automotive Local Business Persons ? by Barbara Brayboy-Locldear Down on the quality of American made automobiles? Don't tell Earl Maurice Locklear how you feel because he'll argue with you. " American-made cars today are just as good as most foreign-made cars. We (Americans) messed around in the 70s and let the Japanese get ahead of us, but we' re coming back, he says. locklear stands firm in his argument and has 27 years of auto mechanics experience to back him up. Bom and raised in the Barker-Ten Mile area of Robeson County, he was trained in auto mechanics by his late father who enjoyed a long successful career in the trade. After graduating from Magnolia High School in 1959, it seemed only natural for Locklear to continue doing what he enjoyed most-working on cars. Fifteen years were spent with three different auto firms where he leanred all facets of the business. The 46-year-old Lumbee Indian became disillusioned with his job situation and opened his own business in 1973. Southern TVuck and Automotive became a dream fulfilled. And long time customers still use him. Lately his business hast become such that he is unable to handle all work requests. "My primary business now is regular accounts. We've kinda shied away from the general public," the bearded father says. Locklear says his business is now more farm related than ever and adds, "I don't like to do the same thing over and over each day. Some days I work on lime and fertilizer spreaders, then I work on grain trucks, still others Til work on transmissions or build parts." He says his work it- a hands-on deal. "Qualified workers are hard to find, so I do most of my work myself." He enjoys building things like truck bodies. It's especially rewarding when I find and correct problems nobody else can," he adds. The inventive mechanic recently completed work on a wrecker he uses in his business. "I couldn't find the kind of wrecker I wanted, so I built my own. I took different parts off different trucks and different components and made one by myself," he laughs. The wrecker boasts hand crafted tool boxes and is used exclusively for towing trucks and cars to be worked on at his garage located in rural Lumberton. Locklear says he has seen many changes in auto mechanics over the past decade and adds, "It's hare for an independent like me to keep up with the new technology." He and his only employee/mechanic occasionally attend parts distributor sponsored classes. He views most of today's technology as ^omefiing he must dig out himself with actual hands on. On week ends, Locklear leaves his business garage and retreats to another hidden away near his home which he shares with his wife and young son. Then he enjoys what he terms his "true love" building Street Hods- fancy vintage automobiles. Over the years, he has build two Street Rods and is currently working on a 1933 Ford five-window coupe which he plans to show at one of the many Street Rodders' Conventions he attends throughout the U.S. Four other vintage automobiles sit outside his garage awaiting the privilege of getting 40 couts of paint and h^pdmade accents from the mechanic who must first finish metranical work on the hall dozen lime spreaders, two diesel tractor tailers, four automobiles, three pick up trucks and one fire truck waiting in the yard of his two-bay busin? -a garage. To locate Southern Truck and Automotive, from Lumberton travel K miles north on Htuay SOI to Magnolia High School, turn left in front of school. Go 2 miles, turn left at first paved road. Travel 1 mile, turn right at first paved road. It's the tall cinder block building on right in a field. Business hours are 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. Closed Saturdays and Sundays. 14 COEDS COMPETE NOV. 5 FOR MISS PSU Fourteen coeds from seven different towns will compete for the title of "Miss Pem broke State University" Thur sday, Nov. 5, at 8 p.m. in PSU's Performing Arts Cen ter. Hie winner of the pageant will receive a $500 scholarship, a crown, a tro phy, and a bouquet of roses. This event, which included both beauty and talent, al ways attracts one of the largest crowds of the year to the Performing Arts Center. Master of ceremonies will be Fred Fox, a PSU alumnus I with WEWO radio of Laurin burg for over 15 years. Assisting him as co-emcee will be Brigitte Brayboy Cum mings, a PSU graduate who was "Miss Lumbee" in 1980 81. Guest entertainer will be Kimberly Clark, a PSU stu dent from Red Springs who is the reigning "Miss Lumbee." General admission to the pageant is $2. PSU students will be admitted for $1. Sponsoring the pageant is the Pembroke State Univer sity Student Government As sociation. Hie contestants, their home town, parents, class in school school, major and sponsoi are as follows: Kathy Brown. Fayetteville, Command Sgt Major and Mrs. Hughy Brown, junior, elementary education (K-4), Baptist Student Organization. Angie Cox, Luraberton, Mr. ? and Mrs. Tommie Cox, junior, elementary education (K-4) Pi Kappa Phi. h Lisa Herndon, Fayetteville, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Herndon. freshman, criminal justice Alpha Omega Upsilon. Kimberly Jacobs, Fayette ville, Mrs. Martha Jacobs, sophomore,. broadcasting Kappa Delta, Janet Une. Fayetteville. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon lane, frhjor. music. Air Force ROTC Katherine LeSage, Phila Awli Lg' Mn Reagan McHugh, Chantil ly, VA, Mr. and Mis. John McHugh, freshman, business education. University Players. [ Jamie Lee Oxendine, Pem broke, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Oxendine, freshman, elemen tary education. Lambda Phi Epsilon. Kimberly Oxendine, Lum berton, Mr. and Mrs. Dobber Oxendine, sophomore, busi ness management Tonya Robinson, Fayette ville, Mr. and Mrs. David W. Robinson, junior, accounting, Sigma Sigma Sigma. Robin Sanderson, Maxton, Mr. and Mrs. Lesley Sander son, junior, elementary edu cation, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Tammy Sanderson, Fair mont Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Sanderson, freshman, busi ness administration, Native American Student Organiza tion. Torrey R. Spearman, Fay etteville, Mr. and Mrs. Jasper (Edwards, junior, economics. Army ROTC. Kristy Woods, Pembroke, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Woods, sophomore, computer sci ence, PSU Sports Information Office. CORRECTION In Ictt ctcck't icaued of (Ac Carolina Mian Voice the Hory about, the J jLREMC Earl Maurice Loctdear of Southern Truck and Automotive LRDA TAKING ENERGY APPLICATIONS Applications will be taken from November 2, to December 18, 1987 for fuel assistance through the Low Income Energy Assistance Program. Low income Indian households in Robeson, Hoke, and Scotland Counties that need help in paying heating bills may apply for assistance at designated offices of Lumbee Regional Development Association, Inc. (LRDA). Eligible Indian households should receive a check through the mail in February. 1988. Persons who think they are eligible and wish to apply are urged to contact the LRDA office nearest them. All applicants should bring the following items when they apply: 1. Food Stamp LD. Card 2. Social Security Cards for household members. 3. Verification of wages for householdmembers for the montK of October. (5 stubs). 4. Verification of Social Security, V.A., Unemployment, Retirement Income, etc. for the month of October, 1967. 6. Information concerning your household property, stocks, bonds, bank statements, and other assets. 6. Verification of income from rental property, farm income, etc. The LRDA offices and satellite centers taking applications are: Monday-Friday from 9a.m. until 4 p.m. (5 days per week) Energy Office Maynor Manor 2207 WestSth Street Pembroke, NC Lumberton, NC 738-7906 Scotland County Hake County Legal Services Offiee Raeford Foot Office 120 West Cronley St. URSAOflbe) (Across from Pope's) Lauringburg, NC Mooday-FrL 9 Monday-Wednesay Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1 wvmjv vuijr rromf i?in. loa p.m. Woodman of the World Hotlona Road'