Saturday, Oct. 22

Transcription

Saturday, Oct. 22
If the dadburn
weather doesn’t cool
off soon I’ll have
to move into the
Gulf Coast
Cold Storage
building!
Old Crab
®
S e r v i n g
P a s c a g o u l a ,
O c e a n
S p r i n g s ,
M o s s
P o i n t ,
G a u t i e r
a n d
L u c e d a l e
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
25¢
saturday, october 22, 2005
www.gulflive.com Our online affiliate
United Way gets boost from national organization
and will have a new director to oversee its disbursement.
United Way of America President
names new director
Brian Gallagher made the announceBy DONNA HARRIS
ment Friday in Biloxi prior to a heliThe Mississippi Press
copter tour of the Coast.
BILOXI — United Way of Jackson
United Way of Jackson and George
and George Counties split a $400,000 Counties received $200,000 in the
grant with its neighboring agency, first wave of grants from the nation-
■ Area aid agency
Shelter
closings
in limbo
■ Christus Victor
Lutheran Church still
houses evacuees
Port approves
new lease for
Cold Storage
The Associated Press
CANCUN, Mexico — Hurricane Wilma tore into Mexico’s
resort-studded Caribbean coastline on Friday with torrential
rains and shrieking winds, filling streets with water, shattered
glass and debris as thousands of
tourists hunkered down in hotel
ballrooms and emergency shelters.
Packing winds of 140 mph,
the storm shattered windows
and downed trees that crushed
cars on the island of Cozumel, a
popular cruise-ship stop. Pay
phones jutted from floodwaters
in the famed hotel zone.
The fearsome Category 4
storm, which killed 13 people in
Haiti and Jamaica, was expected to pummel the tip of the
Yucatan Peninsula for two days,
sparking fears of catastrophic
damage. It is forecast to sideswipe Cuba before bearing down
on Florida on Monday.
“Tin roofing is flying through
See WILMA, Page 12-A
AP
A man tries to save some of his belongings as flood waters begin to rise at a low-income neighborhood during the passing of Hurricane Wilma in Playa del Carmen, Mexico on Friday. The mammoth storm, which had
already killed 13 people, was expected to pound the area for two days, raising the possibility of catastrophic
damage, before curling around Cuba and heading toward Florida.
In the eye of the storm
Mississippi Press
See PORT, Page 12-A
See UNITED WAY, Page 12-A
By WILL WEISSERT
By JOHN SURRATT
PASCAGOULA — Jackson
County port commissioners
approved a new lease with
Gulf Coast Cold Storage on
Friday for the port’s A-1 storage building at its West
Pascagoula River Facility.
Port Director Mark McAndrews said the new lease
involves the entire 75,000
square-foot building, which
will allow the company to
expand its operation, which
represents a $3 million investment. Company officials said
the expansion will result in
the addition of 15 new jobs.
Gulf Coast Cold Storage
exports frozen chicken, much
of which is shipped to Russia
This is the first phase of a multiphased allocation process that will
help people rebuild their lives, be
more physically secure and emotionally stable and have a community to
call home, he said.
To date, more than $24 million has
Category 4
storm hits
Mexico’s
Caribbean
coastline
The Mississippi Press
See SHELTER, Page 12-A
affected by Hurricane Katrina.
He said more than $4 million in
grants from the United Way Hurricane Response and Recovery Fund
has been awarded to 29 United Ways
in the Gulf Coast region for services to
individuals and families impacted by
the hurricanes. The region stretches
from Texas to Florida.
WILMA TEARS INTO RESORTS
By NATALIE CHAMBERS
OCEAN SPRINGS — Maggie
Seymour, 75, of D’Iberville had
no plans Aug. 29 to remain in
her home to watch Hurricane
Katrina do its thing.
She did not stay home during
Hurricane Dennis and wasn’t
about to start with Hurricane
Katrina, she said.
It was a good decision on her
part even. Her husband, John
Milton, 89, was a bit more reluctant but an arm ailment forced
him to seek medical attention at
a nearby health facility as their
world was being tossed upside
down.
The Seymours’ home was beat-
al organization. United Way of South
Mississippi, which serves Harrison,
Hancock and Pearl River counties,
received the same.
Gallagher spoke before a crowd of
representatives of various agencies
served by United Way to discuss the
organization’s commitment to longterm recovery in the communities
■ NOAA hurricane hunters
collect valuable data on Wilma
By MITCH STACY
The Associated Press
IN THE EYE OF HURRICANE WILMA —
When the pilot turns on the “Fasten Seat Belts”
sign in this plane, it’s not a good idea to linger.
When the sign lights up, the Lockheed WP-3D
Orion is about ready to fly into a nasty band of
thunderstorms or slam right into the eye wall of
the monster storm called Wilma, which will do its
best to batter the aircraft and knock it out of the
darkened sky.
For the 10-person crew of the Orion, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration hurricane hunter plane, the mission is critical. They
are gathering data about the speed, strength
and direction of the storm for the National Hurricane Center in Miami. That information helps
the hurricane center track the storm and let
coastal residents know if they should flee or
stay put.
It’s a wild and noisy ride. Much of the time it
feels like bumping along in the bed of a 1973
Ford pickup truck on a pockmarked dirt road.
Other times, when the wind shears are tearing
at the Orion’s wings, the bottom falls out suddenly and there is a brief free fall.
Which is why the plane stocks a liberal supply
of barf bags.
Thursday’s nine-hour mission was first for
the hurricane hunters into Wilma, which earli- Martin Mayeaux records data from Hurricane Wilma
er in the week had strengthened into a masSee HUNTERS, Page 12-A
AP
onboard a WP-3D Orion hurricane hunter Thursday
over the Caribbean Sea.
Tom DeLay makes five-minute court appearance
■ Lawyers attack judge’s
Democratic donations
By LARRY MARGASAK
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — Rep. Tom DeLay
appeared in court as a criminal defendant for the first time Friday, listening
while his lawyer pointedly asked the
presiding judge to step aside for making campaign donations to Democrats
and their liberal allies.
LOCAL, 2-A
Homecoming rolls
in to East Central
In a hearing that lasted less than
five minutes, Judge Bob Perkins
deferred further proceedings until a
hearing can be held on the congressman’s request for a new judge. DeLay
will have a chance to plead innocent
inside a courtroom later, and he made
his claim vigorously Friday outside the
state Capitol.
“I will be exonerated,” the Texas
Republican said, following with blistering criticism of prosecutor Ronnie
Earle. The appearance came one day
after DeLay was booked and photographed at a county jail.
The former Republican leader,
charged with conspiracy and money
laundering in a campaign finance case,
smiled occasionally as he sat alongside
his wife Christine in the courtroom.
He did not speak during the brief session that at times appeared more like a
campaign debate than a legal proceeding.
DeLay’s favorable rating plummeted
to 18 percent in the latest CNN-USA
Today-Gallup poll — down from 27 percent in May.
In court Friday, rather than the corporate donations DeLay is accused of
illegally funneling to candidates,
defense lawyer Dick DeGuerin made an
issue of the $3,400 in political donations the judge has made to Democratic causes, including one to a group
critical of DeLay and Republicans.
“I noticed yesterday MoveOn.org, to
which you have contributed, was selling
T-shirts with Mr. Delay’s mugshot on
LOCAL, 3-A
SPOR TS, 1-B
Gautier residents
disgruntled over
wild hogs
INDEX
Southern Miss takes
hold of division with
win over UAB
Advice . . . . . . . . . . . .9-A
Classified . . . . . . . . .4-B
Comics . . . . . . . . . .10-A
MISSISSIPPI PRESS HURRICANE HEADQUARTERS: (251) 219-5551, (866) 843-9020
it,” DeGuerin said, referring to the liberal interest group and the picture of a
smiling DeLay taken Thursday.
Perkins shot back.
“Let me just say I haven’t ever seen
that T-shirt, number one,” the judge
said. “Number two, I haven’t bought
it. Number three, the last time I contributed to MoveOn that I know of was
prior to the November election last
year, when they were primarily helping
Sen. (John) Kerry,” the Democrats’ 2004
presidential nominee.
Crossword . . . . . . . .10-A
Religion . . . . . . . . . . .4-A
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . .1-B
TV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-A
Vol. 159 — No. 305, 24 Pages ©
2-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
[email protected]
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FOR THE RECORD
MISSISSIPPI COAST WEATHER
TODAY
Clear
78°
53°
Crimes & Emergencies
SUNDAY
Clear
76°
55°
Gautier crime
MONDAY
Partly cloudy
68°
44°
LUNAR STAGES
ALMANAC
Last Quarter
Oct. 24
Record High
90° (1963)
New Moon
Nov. 1
Record Low
32° (1989)
First Quarter
Nov. 8
Yesterday’s High
77°
Full moon
Nov.15
Yesterday’s Low
56°
Yesterday’s Rain
No rainfall
MISSISSIPPI SOUND
Salinity
22 ppt
This Month’s Rain
0.19”
83°
Year to Date Rain
68”
Water temperature
TIDES
SUNRISE/SET
Rise
Set
Sat.
1:22 am H
12:52 pm L
Sat.
7:02 am
6:16 pm
Sun.
2:20 am H
2:05 pm L
Sun.
7:02 am
6:14 pm
Mon.
2:40 am L
2:53 pm H
Mon.
7:03 am
6:13 pm
Tues.
3:39 am H
3:26 pm L
Tues.
7:03 am
6:13 pm
Wed.
4:34 am H
3:45 pm L
Wed.
7:04 am
6:12 pm
Thur.
5:29 am H
3:50 pm L
Thur.
7:05 am
6:11 pm
Fri.
6:45 am H
3:39 pm L
Fri.
7:06 am
6:10 pm
RIVER STAGES
MARINE FORECAST
Pascagoula River (Cumbest Bluff)
3.02 feet
Pascagoula River (Merrill)
3.84 feet
Chickasawhay River (Leakesville)
9.44 feet
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
North winds 10
to 15 knots. Seas
5 to 7 feet.
Protected waters
a light chop.
Saturday, October 15
Mackerel Drive, Brandon Delane Howell, 25,
3500 Mackerel Drive, Gautier, was arrested for
domestic violence.
Sunday, October 16
2722 Ladnier Road, Tabatha Hammons reported someone broke into her vehicle.
Old Spanish Trail, Dale Patrick Eiland, 48, 2625
N. 16th St., Ocean Springs, was arrested for contempt of court.
Monday, October 17
3407 Shamrock Court, Dusty Walker reported a
hit and run.
1625 Martin Bluff Road, Carriage House
Apartments, Donna Bass reported vehicles at the
apartments were damaged.
420 U.S. 90, Michele Hill reported a steel
propane tank was stolen.
609 U.S. 90, Steven Moye reported he was
assaulted.
1612 Hasting Road, Jerry Smith reported someone used his credit card without his permission.
3001 U.S. 90, Burger King, Julie Spears reported a money bag missing.
Gautier-Vancleave Road, Janice Tossas, 28,
10520 Gloria Drive, Grand Bay, Ala., was arrested
for driving under suspension and no insurance.
2800 U.S. 90, Singing River Mall, Shoe Dept.,
Sheri Strickland reported a disturbance in the store.
Wynedote Drive, #32, Charles Yates filed a
complaint.
Tuesday, October 18
3400 Bonita Road, Tami Obrien reported
receiving obscene phone calls.
Pascagoula School, Hollie Engle reported she
was assaulted by a student on the bus.
Adult Detention Center, Melvin Montgomery,
38, 5612 Arrowhead Drive, Pascagoula, was
arrested for contempt of court.
Wednesday, October 19
4809 Fordham Drive, Daniel Lee Bolton, 26,
9501 Jim Ramsey Road, Vancleave, was arrested
for domestic violence.
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Mark P. Miller, 45, 4500 Scarlet Oak St., Gautier,
was arrested for allowing his dogs to run loose.
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Gerald B. McDuffie, 27, 4902 Friartuck Ave.,
Pascagoula, was arrested for contempt of court.
Ladnier Road/C.W. Webb Road, Donald Earl
Tucker, 29, 2402 Southern Drive, Gautier, was
arrested for driving under suspension.
5609 Pacailly Circus, Jamie Deon Turner, 20,
5609 Pacailly Circus, Gautier, was arrested for
improper equipment, no driver’s license and no
insurance.
Gautier-Vancleave Road, Terrance Rashid
Jones, 19, 120 Martin Luther King, Atmore, Ala.,
was arrested for possession of marijuana.
4709 Gautier-Vancleave Road, Gautier High
School, Richard Cowan reported a missing
DVD/VCR player missing.
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Tigre Reynolds Anthony, 23, 2201 Brairgate Drive,
Gautier, was arrested for public drunkenness.
Interstate 10, rest area, Ricky Duckworth, 23,
4336 Hilma St., Moss Point, was arrested for no
driver’s license and false information.
Thursday, October 21, 2005
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Melissa Biggs, 39, 5407 Hubert, Moss Point, was
arrested for simple assault.
Gautier-Vancleave Road/Westgate Parkway,
Archie Brown, 20, 2017 Victoria Drive, Gautier,
was arrested for tinted windows and no driver's
license.
Gautier-Vancleave Road, Anthony Hall, 27,
6418 Martin Luther King, Moss Point, was arrested for tinted windows, driving under suspension,
no insurance and disorderly conduct.
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Marlin Smith, 29, 6723 Gregory St., Moss Point,
was arrested for contempt of court.
1905 Westgate Parkway, Eljin Williams reported someone attempted to break into his house.
2000 Old Oaks Drive, Timothy Miles reported
someone took two Whirlpool ice makers.
1509 Willow Bend Drive, Charles Sharp
reported someone took a sink from his property.
Pascagoula Crime
Wednesday
1501 Gallery St., Melvin Wells reported a
grand larceny where a Maytag washer and dryer
were taken.
3801 Melton Ave., Bonaparte Square Apartments, Earl Billingsley reported damage to a
building.
3201 Eden St., Westwood Apartments, Marlin
Smith, 29, 6723 Gregory St., Moss Point, was
arrested for disorderly conduct.
5804 Tillman St., Leslie Tillman reported the
theft of a 1/2-carat diamond wedding ring set.
4415 Chicot Road, Dollar General, Michelle
Spanier reported threats.
3219 Martin St., Melanie Martin reported stalking.
4512 Shadowwood Ave., Zayne Dumond
reported vandalism to a vehicle.
3104 Frederic St., Betty Woods reported a burglary.
Thursday
3301 Denny Ave., Lowe’s parking lot, Darrel
Williams reported a petit larceny of a wallet and
contents taken from a vehicle.
623 Delmas Ave., Liz O’Cain reported a grand
larceny reported a grand larceny where a necklace and a Rolex watch were taken.
902 Live Oak Ave., First Baptist Church
parking lot, Lance Daffin reported a grand larceny where a double-axle trailer was taken.
2119 21st St., Jared Sumrall reported threats to
do bodily harm.
1317 Telephone Road, Wayne Lee’s, Perry
Lee reported vandalism to and theft from a vending machine.
Chicot Road and Baltimore Avenue, L.W.
Duckworth, 41, 2203 Chicot Road, Pascagoula,
was arrested for DUI.
3801 Melton Ave., Bonaparte Square Apartments, Hector Sosa reported an aggravated
assault.
Friday
1423 Denny Ave., Waffle House, Joshua
Walker reported an aggravated assault.
OBITUARIES
Dorothy Donald of Kiln, Miss.;
brothers, Joseph Donald and
Adam Donald; two sisters and
one brother-in-law, Amy (Kenneth) Teague and Kristie Donald; grandmother, Lorrie Fountain; five nieces; two nephews;
four great nieces; two great
nephews; uncle and aunt, Craig
and Wendy Bailey; numerous
cousins and other relatives.
We will miss him, but the
Lord called him home.
Visitation will be Saturday,
Oct. 22, 2005 from 10 a.m. until
11 a.m. from Heritage Funeral
Home in Escatawpa, Miss.
Funeral will be Saturday at
11 a.m., from the Chapel of
Heritage Funeral Home in
Escatawpa, Miss. with the Rev.
Billy Thompson Jr. officiating.
Burial will follow in Griffin
Cemetery in Moss Point, Miss.
Arrangements by Heritage
Funeral Home in Escatawpa,
Miss. Locally owned and operated.
DONALD
Mr. Johnny Franklin Donald, 45, of Saucier, Miss., died
Thursday, Oct. 20, 2005 in Pensacola, Fla. Mr. Donald was
born Jan. 13, 1960 in Jackson
County, Miss.
Mr. Donald was a native of
Gulfport, Miss. and a Carpenter for many years.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Willie Franklin Donald.
Survivors include mother,
Millender’s Funeral Home
We honor all PRE-PLANNED &
BURIAL Insurance policies 100%
from other funeral homes
475-5448
4412 Main Street • Moss Point
be lead by Rev. Rodger Green.
Pat was born June 17, 1938
in Durant, Okla. to the late
Walter Ralph and Mary Virginia Ord. She went to be with
the Lord on the morning of
Sept. 4, 2005 in Decatur, Ala.,
where she had evacuated to
after Hurricane Katrina.
Pat was a resident of
Pascagoula for 30 years where
she raised three sons and two
stepsons. She worked for Hancock Bank, and later the Jackson County Justice Court. She
was a member of First Presbyterian Church of Pascagoula.
She is survived by three
sons, Walter (Kim) Ord of Gautier, Mat (Amy) Ord of Tyler
Texas, and Clifford (Christi)
Ord of Decatur, Ala.; two stepsons, Mike (Karris) Nunez of
El Paso, Texas, and Johnny
(Christi) Nunez of Dallas,
Texas; six grandchildren, Sarah
Ord, Ashton Ord, Colton Ord,
Charlie Ord, Connor Ord, and
Mary Pat Ord. Pat was also
survived by a very special
group of friends known as the
Butt Sisters.
To the many folks who
touched Patricia (Pat) Ann
Ord’s life, the family would like
to say thank you. To the Jackson County Justice Court and
the doctors and nurses at
Singing River Hospital ‘God
Bless’ you all for what you did
for her.
In lieu of flowers please
make a donation to fight cancer.
A
D
ORD
REA EATHS
Memorial services for PatriMR. DANIEL FREEMAN,
cia (Pat) Ann Ord, 67, of Gautier, Miss. will be held Sunday, 53, of Lucedale, Miss., died Oct.
October 23, 2005, at 3 p.m. at 20, 2005. George County
the First Presbyterian Church Funeral Home, Lucedale, Miss.
of Pascagoula. The service will
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NEWS
“Obituaries over one inch in
length are paid advertisements.”
Steven Peck, 76,
choreographer
FULLERTON, Calif. (AP) —
Steven Peck, a choreographer,
dancer and actor who performed in more than 100 television shows and movies, died
Oct. 9. He was 76.
Peck died of cancer at his
home, said his wife, Cynthia.
He was a choreographer for
singer-actor Tommy Sands
when he was chosen to play
Shirley MacLaine’s boyfriend
in the 1958 film “Some Came
Running.” He played Sylvester
Stallone’s father in “Rhinestone” and danced the tango in
“The Godfather: Part II.”
He also ran a dance studio
in Los Angeles from the 1950s
to the ’80s.
Peck opened a Fullerton
restaurant, Angelo’s and Vinci’s, in 1971 known for eclectic
decor and delicious pizza.
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Homecoming maids roll out onto the field at East Central High School past cheering
classmates and family during the schools homecoming celebrations Friday night.
Homecoming rolls into East Central
By ALLISON MATHER
The Mississippi Press
HURLEY — East Central
High School mixed new with
old Friday night, as they celebrated homecoming with a few
new twists.
Instead of riding in a traditional homecoming parade,
homecoming maids were driven
around the football field in convertibles at half-time before
being presented and the queen
crowned.
“We have not had cars in
years,” said student council cosponsor Brenda Salter, responsible for organizing the homecoming court.
“It’s something different,”
said sophomore maid Morgan
Goff.
“The student council didn’t
have the money to put it (the
parade) on, so the maids are
going to ride in the Christmas
parade this year,” she said.
Sherry Frederic, student
council co-sponsor, said she didn’t know if cars at half-time is
a tradition here to stay, or a
one-time deal.
Also new this year was the
unofficial junior class cookout.
Students grilled food and
cheered on the home team from
the comfort of their truck beds.
“We don’t care how bad we
lose — we’re always going to
be there to support our team,”
said junior Chris Scott.
The Hornets lost to Forrest
County 42-13.
One tried and true homecoming tradition remained,
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4310 Chicot St., Pascagoula, MS
Phone: 228-769-2138 Fax: 228-769-1900
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LIKE A GOOD NEIGHBOR
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2005 ECHS Homecoming Court
Candace Fairley
Sophomore maids
Farrah Brown
Brianna Burroughs
Morgan Goff
Freshman maids
Amber Carter
Brooke Johnson
Samantha Wells
Queen
Breann Dykes
Senior maids
Audrie Cirlot
Brandy Johnson
Ainsley Vice
DwunShae Wells
Junior maids
Nikki Bailey
Cammie Blacklidge
however, evidenced by toilet
paper hanging gracefully from
trees throughout the community.
“It’s gotten to the point we
can’t even find new houses to
roll,” Scott said.
“We went last night, the
night before last, and we’re
going tonight,” Colby Pepper
added.
Reporter Allison Mather can
be reached at [email protected] or (251)2195551.
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Where the wild things roam
■ North Gautier
residents disgruntled
over wild hogs
From Staff Reports
By JOY E. STODGHILL
The Mississippi Press
GAUTIER—People were not
the only creatures displaced by
Hurricane Katrina.
Twenty to thirty wild hogs
have been spotted roaming free
in North Gautier and rooting
up peoples’ lawns and even
parts of the Mississippi National Golf Course.
“They’re like me; they don’t
have a place to stay,” said
Davis George, a groundskeeper
at Mississippi National.
Guy Funk, Gautier animal
control officer, said he believes
the hogs lived on Marsh Island
and Pine Island. When Katrina
hit, he said, the water carried
the pigs onto the mainland.
“They really rooted up a lot
by the number two tee,” George
said. “It looks like someone
took a plow to it.”
He said the damage is extensive and the pigs pulled the
grass up by the roots.
At least four of the animals
were reported to weigh about
200 pounds. The group is a
mixture of sows, boars and
piglets.
Yards along Spanish Oak
Drive and Powells Point Drive bear evidence that the hungry animals have been there.
The area looks like someone
intentionally came in and
fluffed the grass up in little
tufts, leaving bald patches
beside the mounds.
Joy Zerfoss has seen the animals several times in her back
yard on Powells Point Drive.
The first time she saw them
was two weeks ago. It was late
at night, and she noticed the
security light on the back porch
came on. She got up to see
what had caused it.
“I saw something move. I
Pre-trial program
pays victims, court
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Guy Funk, animal control officer with the Gautier Police Department, looks over one
of the steel traps set out for packs of wild pigs that have been displaced from their
homes and running loose in north Gautier.
just thought it was a dog,” she
said.
She said she thought, “Surely it’s not pigs.”
“That’s the last thing I would
have imagined,” she added. “It
was very shocking.”
But, sure enough, she heard
a loud snort from one of the
three large pigs and several
high-pitched oinks from the
dozen or so piglets running
around. Tuesday night, she
spotted another pig. This one,
she said, was light brown, and
it ran ‘back toward the
marsh.”
Now in the place of the beautifully flawless grass in the Zerfoss’ back yard, they have two
large patches where the pigs
have been rooting. They are
keeping sprinklers going so
they can water the areas.
Zerfoss said they had trees
down in their yard after the
hurricane, but they got them
up before they did any damage
to the lawn. So, now the lawn
that survived Katrina has fallen prey to a pack of hungry
pigs.
Funk has received assistance
from the United States Department of Agriculture. Dr. Wade
Reeves, a veterinarian from
Hattiesburg who works with
the department has set a trap
behind the Mississippi National club house for the animals.
Reeves built the trap based
on a design by a wildlife biologist he knows. He set out a
trail of corn soaked in fermented water (to keep other
harmless animals away) leading into a pile of the food.
Under that pile is a trigger and
when the pig starts to push the
pile of corn around with his
snout, he causes the doors to
slam shut behind him.
They have not caught any
pigs yet. When they do, Reeves
will take blood samples to
make sure they do not have
rabies or other diseases that
can be passed on to other animals.
He said people should be fine
as long as they stay away from
the wild hogs, especially sows
with piglets. Zerfoss’ said she
has only seen the animals at
night, so they have not posed a
serious threat to anyone yet —
only to their lawns.
Reporter Joy E. Stodghill
can be reached at (251) 2195551 or [email protected].
PASCAGOULA — The district attorney’s pre-trial diversion program provided checks
this week totaling $28,267 to
the Jackson County Circuit
Clerk’s office and separate restitution checks totaling $26,084 to
victims, District Attorney Tony
Lawrence said.
The money represents court
fees and restitution, respectively, collected by the program
since August.
“The program is a community building program to help victims receive financial losses as a
result of being a victim of a
crime and to make the participant a law-abiding citizen
again,” Lawrence said.
Paying court-assessed fees
and restitution in full is a
requirement to successfully
complete the program,
Lawrence added.
The program is an about 18to 36-month diversion program
available to non-violent, firsttime criminal defendants.
In addition to paying court
costs and other fines, defendants are required to pay restitution to their victims, to undergo random drug testing, attend
drug and alcohol counseling if
needed, maintain employment
and adhere to other stringent
requirements, Lawrence said.
The program aids the court
system by addressing cases
requiring sentencing alternatives other than incarceration,
easing the case load of the circuit court.
The program also presented
$500 to the state’s Crime Victim
Compensation Fund, a
statewide fund used to compensate victims for expenses
associated with their cases.
“As a result of Hurricane Katrina, the county and victims are
struggling financially. The program unit has worked tremendously hard since the hurricane
to get monies out, hoping that it
will ease some of the burden,”
Lawrence said.
Man stabbed in assault
From Staff Reports
PASCAGOULA — A man
was stabbed and a woman cut
following an altercation in a
Pascagoula apartment Thursday night.
Hector Sosa told police that
around 10:21 p.m. he went to
visit his friend, Karen Bartholomew, who resides in Apt.
34-C at Bonaparte Square
Apartments, located at 3801
Melton Ave.
Sosa alleged that a man exited from the bedroom, struck
him in the head with his fist
and stabbed him in the
abdomen and back with a knife,
Lt. Paul Leonard said.
Bartholomew and Sosa said
they did not know the suspect’s
name, only that he goes by the
nickname, “Little House.”
Bartholomew told police that
she had asked Sosa to leave
before the assault, which
occurred after he allegedly
entered the living room without permission. Bartholomew
was reportedly cut on one of her
hands when she attempted to
break up the scuffle.
A broken red pocket knife
was recovered and gathered as
evidence.
Rescue 14 personnel with the
Pascagoula Fire Department
responded but Sosa and
Bartholomew both refused medical attention, Leonard said.
No charges are being pursued
at this time, Leonard added.
Lucedale man attacked at Waffle House
From Staff Reports
PASCAGOULA — Suspects
are being sought in an
alleged aggravated assault
in the parking lot of a Waffle
House in Pascagoula on
Thursday morning.
J o s h u a Wa l k e r, 2 0 , o f
Lucedale, told Pascagoula
officer David Cole that he
entered the Waffle House at
1423 Denny Ave. around
12:23 a.m. to see a 17-yearold female friend. Her name
was not released because she
is a minor.
Walker said once inside the
restaurant two black males
and a white male asked the
girl, “Was this the guy that
hit you?” According to Lt.
Paul Leonard, the girl said
no.
Walker told the girl he
would wait for her in his car.
He told police he fell asleep
and was awakened by the
two black males.
As he was exiting his car,
one of the suspects tried to
strike him with a fist, Walker alleged. As he avoided the
punch, the other suspect
struck Walker in the mouth
with a boat paddle, causing
severe injuries to his upper
mouth and the loss of some
teeth, Leonard said.
He was treated at the
Singing River Hospital emergency room, where Leonard
said Walker’s female friend
discussed the incident with
Walker and his parents.
Both
suspects
were
described as black males
between 16 and 18 years of
age, around 5-foot-6, weighing 125 pounds.
Sgt. Vernon Smith is investigating the assault.
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RELIGION
Contact: Susan Ruddiman, 934-1419
E-mail address: [email protected]
Preachers, psychics and scientists
face limitations in forecasting future
By RICHARD N. OSTLING
AP Religion Writer
2004 was supposed to have been quite a
year. Osama bin Laden was said to have
died, Colin Powell was elected America’s first
black president and the Hoover Dam collapsed.
Well, no. But such were predictions from
psychics collected by Skeptical Inquirer, the
magazine of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. CSICOP is among groups led by atheistic philosopher Paul Kurtz that pooh-pooh
both parapsychology and mainstream religion.
If past predictions from psychics had come
true, by now we’d be zipping around in cheap
solar-powered cars on Earth, or traveling to
Saturn, or America would be reeling from
inundation of the Atlantic Coast or from a
nuclear attack launched by Russia.
With the Bible, too, it’s worthwhile for
believers to occasionally review the perennial mistaken predictions of prophecy-preachers to help distinguish between what the
Scriptures teach and what’s non-biblical speculation.
Instead of targeting the usual psychics
and biblical fantasists, however, one Skeptical Inquirer attack on “futurism” said scientists, too, have embarrassing misses. The
article was written by Richard L. Miller, psychology chairman at the University of
Nebraska at Kearney, and Emily Balcetis,
a doctoral student in social psychology at
Cornell in New York state.
Modern examples:
• In 1895 an eminent physicist, Britain’s
Lord Kelvin, said “heavier-than-air flying
crafts are impossible.”
That was an incorrect statement, since
successful gliders had long existed, and eight
years afterward the Wright brothers produced an aircraft with an engine.
• In 1903, several years before he won the
Nobel Prize, U.S. physicist Albert Michelson proclaimed, “The most important fundamental laws and facts of physical science
have all been discovered and these are now so
firmly established that the possibility of their
ever being supplemented in consequence of
new discoveries is exceedingly remote.”
Two years later, Einstein wrote the preliminary version of his theory of relativity.
Then came black holes, quarks, the Big Bang
and the uncertainty principle.
• In 1956 the United Kingdom’s
astronomer royal, Richard Woolley, proclaimed that “space travel is utter bilge.”
The next year Sputnik was aloft, in 1961
the Soviets put a cosmonaut into orbit, and in
1969 America landed astronauts on the moon.
• In the 1940s, Thomas J. Watson, the
godfather of IBM, remarked, “I think there’s
a world market for about five computers.”
That was a reasonable hunch with IBM’s
exorbitantly costly 1944 device, which
required a vast cooling system for 19,000
vacuum tubes, weighed 30 tons and nearly
filled a city block.
Who could have predicted the vast reductions in size and price with today’s laptops
and desktops?
• In 1981, Microsoft founder Bill Gates
announced that “640K (of computer memory)
ought to be enough for anybody.”
Guess again.
• In 1968, noted Stanford University biology professor Paul Ehrlich, the founder of
Zero Population Growth, published his apocalyptic book “The Population Bomb.” He figured that by the 1980s, pervasive famine
and disease on an overpopulated Earth would
be killing hundreds of millions of people.
Today, analysts across western Europe are
calculating that population shrinkage will
produce economic disaster.
Miller and Balcetis don’t think scientists
are stupid but they say theories are in continual flux so scientific futurism is as risky as
the religious versions. “The process of extrapolating the future from what we know now
can be inherently flawed. Events, discoveries
and scientific breakthroughs can all dramatically alter the possible,” they remind
us.
“Scientific research and prediction are worthy of respect but not unquestioned acceptance,” the writers further advise, and “generalizations that far outstrip actual scientific findings should always be looked at
skeptically.”
Why do folks lust for inherently unreliable visions of the future, anyway? Oddly
enough, psychologists Miller and Balcetis
say, “human beings value certainty and work
hard to reduce anxiety and insecurity.”
It’s this lust for certainty that creates the
market for uncertain predictions.
Biloxi Diocese faces same rebuilding problems
BILOXI (AP) — The Biloxi
Catholic Diocese faces a number
of challenging questions as it as
prepares to move forward from
Hurricane Katrina.
But they are much the same
as those facing homeowners and
businesses in the area left heavily damaged by the Aug. 29 hurricane: Where to rebuild? The
same places? New places?
Rebuild at all?
The diocese covers 17 counties
and has about 60,000 Catholics, a
number on the rise especially in
communities farther from the
coastline.
“Long before Katrina, the
demographics of this community
were changing and we were look-
ing at how best to serve our people with the resources we have,”
Bishop Thomas J. Rodi told the
Sun Herald newspaper on
Thursday.
Katrina is not changing the
diocese’s three years of studies
and planning, but puts an immediate spin on it.
“I wish I knew what we as a
community will look like 15 years
from now,” Rodi said. “We can’t
hold off to make decisions until
we have a better feel of how and
where the communities will grow
after Katrina.”
Rodi will hold six meetings to
hear from parishioners but it is
his decision on where churches
and schools will be rebuilt.
“It’s not something I can delegate,” Rodi said. “That’s why I’m
doing the listening sessions. They
help me clarify issues and understand what people are feeling and
thinking. The sessions are very
emotional but very helpful.
“At a time when people have
lost so much, losing something
else is a great concern to me.”
Rodi has already held sessions
with St. Thomas in Long Beach,
St. Paul in Pass Christian and
two other parishes in the Pass.
Rodi said in Pass Christian,
there are three churches, three
full-time priests and only 850
families.
“I’m hearing the affection for
the parishes is strong,” he said.
“At the same time, we have to
look at all options and make the
best decisions. This is not a money-driven conversation. It’s a look
at our pastoral needs.”
Growth beyond waterfront
towns and a diocesan priest roster that includes a number near
retirement are part of the considerations, he said.
Rodi said the diocese had “a
good insurance program,” but one
planned by the benchmark set
by Hurricane Camille in 1969.
“We won’t be able to replace
everything we lost,” he said. “The
people have such love and attachments to their parishes that I
know a lot of donated services
will come.”
CHURCH EVENTS
Pascagoula
The Greater Antioch Missionary
Baptist
Choir Annual Day is scheduled for 4 p.m.
Sunday. The church is located at 1028 Denny Ave.
St. Peter Baptist
The church is welcoming back members
for Sunday services. Sunday school will
begin at 9 a.m. and the morning worship
will be at 11 a.m.
The church is located at 1320 South Market St.
Ocean Springs
St. Paul United Methodist
Dr. Maxie Dunnam will conduct a prayer
conference from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Oct.
29 at the church’s east campus on U.S. 90.
Registration will be at 8:30 a.m., Dunnam
will speak at 9 a.m.,
there will be a break at
10:30 a.m. and Dunnam
will resume speaking at
10:45.
He will preach Oct. 30
at 8 a.m. at the Downtown Campus, 800
Porter St., and 9 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m. at the
Dunnam
East Campus, 6716
Bienville Blvd. A nursery will be provided at
both services.
Dunnam became the fifth president of
Asbury Theological Seminary in 1994, after
serving 12 years as senior
minister of Christ United
Methodist, a 6,000-member church in Memphis,
Tenn. After 10 years as
president of Asbury Seminary, Dunnam is now serving as chancellor.
His extensive pastoral
experience includes
church planting, rural
churches, suburban and
regional congregations in
Mississippi, Georgia, California and Tennessee.
In 1989, Dunnam was inducted into the
Foundation for Evangelism’s Hall of Fame
and in 1992 was awarded the chair of distinction by the World Methodist Council; the
following year he received the Philip Award
for Distinguished Service in Evangelism.
Dunnam has authored more than 30 books.
Fellowship Church
The church is hosting a fall festival on
Oct. 29 from 5 to 8 p.m. at St. Martin High
School on Yellowjacket Road. Festivities
will include games, activities for children of
all ages, including a giant slide, spacewalk,
cake walk, fishing and more.
Wade
Wade Baptist
Families and friends are welcome to a
hallelujah fall festival from 5 to 8 p.m. Oct.
29. There will be games, prizes and food
for the entire community.
The church is located at Miss. 63 and
Hurley-Wade Road.
Lucedale
Mt. Pleasant United Methodist
The church will conduct an Ole Time
Musical at 7:30 p.m. today. All groups, male
chorus groups, choirs, soloists and duets
are invited.
On Sunday, there will be a Love Feast at
10:45 a.m. and at the 11 a.m. service, the
Rev. Yates will deliver the message. Lunch
will be at 12:45 p.m. The afternoon musical
will take place at 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. The El
Bethel Choir will sing and the Rev. Yates
will deliver the closing message.
The church is located in the Basin Community.
Antioch Missionary Baptist
The church will have a sing on Sunday.
“Blood Washed” is the name of the group
from Ebenezer Baptist Church in Wiggins.
Sunday school will begin at 9:45 a.m. with
singing at 10:30 a.m. and the sermon at
11:15 a.m. A dinner will follow at noon. The
evening service will be canceled.
Antioch is located at 114 Old Mobile
Highway.
Deadline for submitting information to
Church Events column is noon Wednesday
each week. Information can be mailed to
The Mississippi Press, P.O. Box 849,
Pascagoula MS 39568, faxed at (251) 2195559 or e-mailed to [email protected].
RELIGION BRIEF
Panelists to discuss ‘Christians in the Marketplace’ at UM
The Mississippi Press
MOBILE, Ala. — Leaders in business and
the media will discuss how their faith as
Christians impacts their careers during
“Christians in the Marketplace,” a panel discussion presented by the University of
Mobile Accounting Club.
The public is invited to the free panel discussion from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Nov. 1, in
Weaver Auditorium on the University of
Mobile campus.
Dr. Anne Lowery, dean of the School of
Business, said the idea for the seminar grew
as professors discussed the negative impact
scandals such as Enron, WorldCom and
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
HealthSouth have on the public’s perception
of business leaders.
“We wanted to provide an opportunity for
our business majors and others to understand that it is possible to be strong Christians and be successful in the world of work.
There is a dire need for business professionals who espouse strong, ethical values,”
Lowery said.
Panelists will discuss what it means to be
a Christian in their careers; obstacles to their
Christian faith in their workplaces and how
these are overcome; and how they personally practice their faith in their workplaces,
demonstrate their faith to others and balance
the demands of work, family and church;
among other issues.
Panelists include Traci Gyan, president of
TriCor; Byron Sherman, certified public
accountant with Hall, Sherman, and Callahan PC; Eric Reynolds, broadcast journalist
for WALA; Andrew Corley, application developer for Schlumberger-Global Tel*Link, Inc.;
and Kay Mashburn, vice president of mortgage banking at AmSouth Bank.
Call Rusty Roberts at (251) 442-2464 or
Keli Robinson at (251) 442-2558 for more
information.
Letting your
past define
your future
In Isaiah 6, king Uzziah, who had been King of
Judah for 52 years, died. He had been a good king
and Judah had prospered under his leadership. He
had reigned over a rather peaceful time for the
nation.
However, at his death things changed. Enemy
nations were close to the border rattling their swords.
The death of Uzziah then must have been comparable to the assassination of John F. Kennedy in
the sixties. I still remember
where I was and how I felt
when I received news of his
death.
Isaiah must have felt that
way when he entered the Temple to worship. Uzziah may
have been his cousin. However,
this was more than grieving
over blood kin.
Isaiah knew the dismal situation Judah was in without her Rex
leader. He knew he needed to Yancey
worship.
A few years back I visited the Louvre museum in
Paris. Of course, along with hundreds of others, I
wanted to see the Mona Lisa.
I am told that one such person said to the guide “I
don’t see anything unusual about that painting.”
The guide said, “Sir, this painting is not on trial,
but you are.” The knowledge of art the man carried
with him into the museum limited his appreciation
of a masterpiece.
I have read that one can take a goldfish from a very
small bowl and place it in a bathtub filled with
water and the goldfish will continue to swim in a very
small circle. The fish allows his past to define his
future.
The same thing can happen to us when we come to
worship. We can allow what we bring with us to
church to limit and define what we take with us
when the worship is over.
What did Isaiah take with him to worship that
day? He took a broken heart with him. He was brokenhearted over the death of a national leader.
He was also brokenhearted over the direction his
nation would take without a leader.
Today I see many people come to worship with
broken hearts.
There are parents present who are brokenhearted
over their children.
There are wives present brokenhearted over their
husbands and husbands brokenhearted over their
wives.
However, people who come to worship with broken
hearts have the opportunity to go home a different
way.
Isaiah brought a bowed knee with him to worship.
“Woe is me, for I am undone.”
There is so much pride in the world today. God has
sent many signals to remind us that we live in a fallen world. And yet, after tragedies, many people go on
living the same prideful way.
One lady requested prayer from her pastor because
she had pride in her life. The pastor wanted to know
why she thought she had pride in her life. She said,
“I get up in the morning and look in the mirror and
think I am beautiful.” The pastor said, “Lady, that’s
not pride, that’s just a mistake!”
Isaiah had pronounced woes on everybody else in
chapter 5. However, when he saw the Lord, he saw
himself; and it would be an understatement to say
that he didn’t like what he saw.
We are growing when we become more concerned
with the hypocrisy in our lives than we are in the
lives of others.
As Robert Burns once wrote, “Oh wad some power the giftie give us to see ourself as others see us!”
Humility in worship sets the agenda for God’s
blessing on our lives.
Isaiah brought a bent knee to worship that day.
Wrath is the emphasis of some preachers and love is
the emphasis of others. However, holiness takes in
both God’s wrath and God’s love. We come to church
today without any awareness that a Holy God is
near. Church has become the fifth quarter of our cultural involvements.
J. D. Grey looked like a Kentucky Colonel. However he was the pastor of First Baptist, New Orleans
for many years. I had several opportunities to pick his
brain, both as an evangelist and seminary student.
When Archie Manning was drafted by the Saints,
he attended First Baptist Church. There was a
buzz in the hallway that day “Archie is here. Archie
Manning is here.”
When Dr. Grey got up to preach he said, “I don’t
know why you are making such a fuss over Archie
being here today. Jesus has been here for years and
I haven’t seen this kind of excitement!”
These are some of the things Isaiah brought with
him to worship. But I want you to see what he took
home with him.
He took home the forgiveness of sin. He felt the sin
of his nation and he felt his own sin.
However, he experienced cleansing on this day.
He took home the voice of God. “Whom shall I
send?” I shall never forget the day I heard the voice
of God in my own life. I went home a different way.
He took a yielded spirit. “Here am I, send me,
send me.” He had a good attitude. He volunteered for
service.
There was a little girl lost in a big city.
As the police were questioning her they realized
she did not know her address or phone number. The
little girl looked at them and said, “If you will take me
to my church I can find my way home.” They got a
description of her church, took her there, and she
found her way home.
I have been finding my way home since that day
I found the Lord in a country church. You can find
him, too, if you do not allow your past to define your
future.
Baptist
Apostolic
APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
3705 OLD MOBILE HWY.
PASCAGOULA, MS 39581
SUNDAY.....................................................2:00 PM
WEDNESDAY.............................................7:30 PM
PASTOR J. L. LEE
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS
BAPTIST CHURCH
Arlington at Old Mobile, Pascagoula, MS
“Worship With An Excited Fellowship Of Believers”
BEN CARLISLE..............................................PASTOR
SCOTT BOURNE......MINISTER OF MUSIC & YOUTH
TEMPORARY SERVICE TIME
762-3911
BETHLEHEM TEMPLE APOSTOLIC CHURCH
Dr. Martin Luther King Dr.
Moss Point
ORDER OF SERVICE
SUNDAY SCHOOL....................................9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP.............................12 NOON
SUNDAY EVENING...................................6:00 PM
BIBLE STUDY - THURSDAY.....................7:30 PM
PASTOR................................DR. JOHN H. SHAW
475-9088
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP........10:30 AM
WEDNESDAY SERVICE....................6:15 PM
769-2789
BIBLE BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
602 WASHINGTON AVE., OCEAN SPRINGS
DR. J. MICHAEL BARNETT . . . . . . . . . . . . PASTOR
SUNDAY
WORSHIP SERVICE . . . .8:30 A.M., 11:00 A.M., & 6:00 P.M
BIBLE STUDY FOR ALL AGES . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 A.M.
CHILDREN’S CHOIR • DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING FOR
ADULTS • POWER TRAINING AND POWER PRAISE
FOR YOUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4:30 P.M.
AWANA CLUBS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:30 P.M.
WEDNESDAY
FELLOWSHIP MEALS (Reservation Required) . . .5:00 P.M.
BIBLE STUDY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:15 P.M.
CHILDREN’S STUDIES • YOUTH POWER LIFT
NURSERY PROVIDED FOR ALL SERVICES
BIRTH-3 YRS.
3208 Nathan Hale Ave., Pascagoula
You Are Welcome At First Baptist, Ocean Springs,
“Leading the Coast to follow Christ”.
SUNDAY SCHOOL..........................................10:00 AM
875-4532
MORNING WORSHIP....................................11:00 AM
FIRST
PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
EVENING WORSHIP.........................................7:00 PM
WED. PRAYER SERVICE.................................7:00 PM
1305 Ingalls Ave.
Pascagoula
“Touching Pascagoula With Love”
O.J. RAMSEY............................................................PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNING................................................10:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING...................................................6:30 PM
THURSDAY EVENING...............................................7:00 PM
SAT. YOUTH SERVICE..............................................7:00 PM
BLESSED HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH
THE OLD LAND-MARK CHURCH
OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST
OF THE APOSTOLIC FAITH
PASTOR..............................................BEN BOHANICK
SUNDAY SCHOOL..........................................10:00 AM
SUNDAY WORSHIP.........................................11:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING...........................................5:00 PM
WED. EVENING ................................................7:00 PM
601-947-9652
Preaching the book, the blood and the blessed hope
762-3438
1302 Telephone Rd.
Pascagoula
ELDER ROBERT WILKERSON...............PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL.................................10:00 AM
SUNDAY WORSHIP...............................11:15 AM
MONDAY PRAYER SERVICE..................6:00 PM
MONDAY WORSHIP.................................7:00 PM
THURSDAY WORSHIP.............................7:00 PM
The Church in the Heart of the City, with the people of the City in it’s Heart.
Home Phone: 474-1785
Church. . .769-7798
TWIN PINES APOSTOLIC CHURCH
3304 LAMPKIN ROAD - MOSS POINT, MS 39562
PHONE 601-947-9824 OR 228-219-0315
PASTOR........................................................JOSEPH MOESCH
SUNDAY SCHOOL.......................................................10:00 AM
SUNDAY NIGHT.............................................................6:30 PM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT.....................................................7:30 PM
Assembly of God
BETHEL ASSEMBLY OF GOD
2105 Martin St., Pascagoula
762-4650 - CHURCH PHONE
762-3133
Located on the corner of Hwy. 613 & Joebubino Rd.
Hurley, MS (Directly in front of Hurley Quick Stop)
CALVARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
2101 MARKET STREET, PASCAGOULA
DISCOVER THE DIFFERENCE
REV. JOHNNY BEAVER . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
JOHN COMBS . . . . . ....MINISTER OF WORSHIP
AND STUDENTS
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
TRADITIONALWORSHIP SERVICE . . . .11:00 AM
DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING . . . . . . . . . . . .5:00 PM
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
SANCTUARY CHOIR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:00 PM
WEDNESDAY EVENING
YOUTH PRAYER
& WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:00 PM
PRAYER SERVICE &
BIBLE STUDY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:00 PM
NURSERY PROVIDED FOR ALL SERVICES
762-1338
EAST MOSS POINT
BAPTIST CHURCH
7842 Misty Meadow Rd.
Moss Point
SENIOR PASTOR....................................JOHN SCHWARTZ
REV. ALLEN HAYS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
WORSHIP LEADER ..............................TERESA BROADUS
TEMPORARY SERVICE TIMES
SUNDAY WORSHIP................................................10:30 AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP..............11:00 AM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING...........6:30 PM
APPROXIMATE DATE FOR SCHOOL REOPENING WILL
HURLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
6810 Hurley-Wade Road
Hurley, MS
PASTOR.........................BRO. BREAUX TAGEANT
SUNDAY SCHOOL.................................... 9:45 AM
WORSHIP SERVICE.................................11:00 AM
DISCIPLE TRAINING................................ 5:00 PM
WORSHIP SERVICE................................. 6:00 PM
WED. BIBLE STUDY....................................7:00 PM
(THE BOOK OF REVELATION)
588-3435
GRIFFIN ST. BAPTIST CHURCH
4207 Griffin St., Moss Point, MS
475-7663
PASTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .HENRY C. GOOGE, JR.
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
SUNDAY DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING . . . . . .5:00 PM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING . . . . . . . .6:45 PM
475-3521
762-9179
MINISTRY FOR PEOPLE OF ALL AGES
CANAAN ASSEMBLY
OF GOD CHURCH
13602 Hwy. 613, North Escatawpa
Office - 474-1040
Home - 474-2310
PASTOR............................RODNEY F. COLEMAN
YOUTH PASTOR..........................CHRIS NOWELL
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................... .....9:45 AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP............. .10:45 AM
CHILDREN CHURCH...............................10:45 AM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP..................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY MID WEEK SERVICES.......7:00 PM
ROYAL RANGERS /MISSIONETTES
HWY. 35 YOUTH
.NURSERY PROVIDED FOR ALL SERVICES
1704 Belair St. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pascagoula
REV. DAVID ELDRIDGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:15 AM
MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:30 AM
DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:00 PM
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER SERVICE . . . . . . .6:30 PM
762-4160
ESCATAWPA BAPTIST CHURCH
Highway 613 at Liverpool
Escatawpa, MS
MICHAEL GLENN...................................PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE..............10:30 AM
NO EVENING SERVICE
WEDNESDAY WORSHIP SERVICE......... 6:30 PM
FORTS LAKE
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
12412-Forts-Lake Rd.
EASTLAWN
BAPTIST CHURCH
Pascagoula
TIM CAULEY....................................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL.........................................10:00 AM
MORNING WORSHIP......................................11:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING.......................................... 6:00 PM
WED. ROYAL RANGERS &
MISSIONETTES..............................................7:00 PM
475-8615 Parsonage 475-8690
FULL LIFE ASSEMBLY
Hwy. 614, Hurley, MS
REV. JIMBO REED...........................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................................9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP......................................10:45 AM
SUNDAY EVENING.......................................... 6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY EVENING...................................7:00 PM
228-588-2670
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD
4848 GAUTIER VANCLEAVE RD.
GAUTIER
TEMPORARY SERVICE TIME
SUNDAY MORNING
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:45 AM
228-497-4089
MAGNOLIA SPRINGS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
475-2938
INTERPRETATION FOR THE DEAF
AT ALL SERVICES
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH GAUTIER
325 DeLa Point Dr.
Gautier, MS
LIGHTHOUSE
BAPTIST CHURCH
3003 Belair
Pascagoula, MS
“If you are in need Christ is the answer”
JERRY REED.............................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL..................................... 9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................11:00 AM
EVENING WORSHIP................................ 6:00 PM
WED. PRAYER SERVICE......................... 7:00 PM
769-2170
762-7293
NEW HOPE ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
“Where Your Are Only A Visitor Once’’
19321 Hwy. 63, Wade
BOBBY CREPS.........................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL....................................9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP..............................11:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING................................... 6:00 PM
WED. PRAYER SERVICE......................... 7:00 PM
ROYAL RANGERS, YOUTH &
MISSIONETTES, WED.............................7:00 PM
Nursery Provided for Sunday Services
588-6644
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF MOSS POINT (SBC)
4807 Main Street, Moss Point, MS
PASTOR.............................REV. MICHAEL PERRY
SUNDAY SCHOOL.................................... 9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................10:55 AM
EVENING WORSHIP................................ 6:00 PM
WED. PRAYER SERV. ............................. 6:00 PM
YOUTH PRIME TIME (WED.).................... 6:00 PM
MUSIC AND MISSIONS ACTIVITIES
FOR ALL AGES
475-8142
INGALLS AVENUE
BAPTIST CHURCH
4505 Ingalls Avenue
Pascagoula, MS
JOHN TURNER.........................PASTOR
BIBLE STUDY........................................... 9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................11:00 AM
DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING........................ 5:30 PM
EVENING SERVICE.................................. 6:30 PM
WED. PRAYER SERVICE......................... 6:30 PM
NURSERY PROVIDED FOR EACH SERVICE
762-9235
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF PASCAGOULA
902 Live Oak Ave., Pascagoula, MS
DR. REX YANCEY.....................................PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE.................11:00 AM
- Interpretation For Deaf At All Services “A Caring Church For Pascagoula”
Services can be seen on Cable Channel 7
Mon. & Tues. 6 & 11 PM
762-2343
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
4007 North Pascagoula St., Pascagoula, MS
762-5639
www.gcfa.cc
TEMPORARY SERVICE TIME
7417 Martin Bluff Road, Gautier
Phone: 497-4395
ERIC SMITH...............................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL..................................... 9:45 AM
SUNDAY AM WORSHIP.............................11:00 AM
SUNDAY PM WORSHIP............................. 6:30 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER SERVICE............. 7:00 PM
MIDWAY BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner of Short Cut Rd. & Temple St.
Moss Point, MS
PASTOR................................REV. JOHN COGGIN
SUNDAY SCHOOL....................................9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................11:00 AM
DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING........................ 5:00 PM
EVENING WORSHIP................................ 6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY “POWER HOUR”............... 7:00 PM
475-9683
18601 Hwy. 63 - Wade
REV. JIM FISHER & REV. H. W. PARKER..PASTORS
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8:30 & 10:55
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING . . . . . . .7:00 PM
588-6546 Nursery Provided
www.csumc.net
Tanner’s Chapel Rd.
REV. MICHAEL VICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 AM
MORNING SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 AM
SUN. NIGHT SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 PM
WED. PRAYER, PRAISE, & YOUTH SERVICE . . 7:00 PM
475-4235
Episcopal
EASTLAWN UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
ST. JOHN’S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
3507 Pine St., Pascagoula
SATURDAY.....HOLY EUCHARIST RITE II..........5:00 PM
SUNDAY.......HOLY EUCHARIST RITE II.....8:00 AM
CHURCH SCHOOL.......................9:15 AM
HOLY EUCHARIST RITE II........10:30 AM
WEDNESDAY HOLY EUCHARIST RITE II..............6:30 AM
HOLY EUCHARIST RITE II..
AND HOLY UNCTION...................5:30 PM
762-1705
ST. PIERRE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
4412 Gautier-Vancleave Rd.
Gautier, MS 39553
SUN. HOLY EUCHARIST.......................8:00 AM
CHRISTIAN EDUCATION......................9:00AM
HOLY EUCHARIST.............................................10:00 AM
FELLOWSHIP FOLLOWING THE SERVICE.
A NURSERY IS PROVIDED FOR SMALL CHILDREN.
WED. EVENING PRAYER.................................6:00 PM
BIBLE STUDY FOLLOWING SERVICE
497-9819
Interdenominational
Corner of Gautier-Vancleave & Callie Rd.
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE
10:30 AM
497-2373
809 De La Pointe Dr., Gautier
FR. PATRICK E. HAYES...........................PASTOR
SAT. VIGIL....................................................5:00 PM
SUNDAY MORNING..................8:30 AM & 11:00 AM
WEEK DAY MASS
MON. - TUES. - THURS. - FRI..................8:00 AM
WED.....................................................7:00 PM
497-2364
Church of Christ
CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST
1316 INGALLS AVENUE, PASCAGOULA, MS
www.123Jesus.com
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . .9:30 AM
SUNDAY BIBLE CLASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:40 AM
SUNDAY PRAISE AND PRAYER . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT CLASSES . . . . . . . . .7:00 PM
EVERYONE WELCOME AT EACH ASSEMBLY
GAUTIER CHURCH OF CHRIST
4605 Gautier-Vancleave Rd.
P.O. Box 122, Gautier
DORCIE MITCHELL......................................MINISTER
SUNDAY BIBLE STUDY..............................9:30 AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP................10:30 AM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP...................6:00 PM
WED. BIBLE STUDY....................................7:00 PM
497-4460
HURLEY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Highway 614
Corner of Baria Road
WAYNE ROBERTS....................................MINISTER
SUNDAY SCHOOL........................................9:30 AM
MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE.................10:30 AM
AFTERNOON SERVICE.............................12:30 PM
WEDNESDAY BIBLE STUDY....................7:00 PM
588-6983
CHICO ROAD
CHURCH OF CHRIST
762-7827
SUNDAY MORNING.......................................... 9 AM
WEDNESDAY EVENING................................... 7 PM
Salvation For Sale. Matthew 13:44
Very inexpensive, just a small amount
of time and a little effort.
THE STUDY OF REVELATION
ERIC G. CAMP.......................PASTOR
THREE RIVERS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Hwy. 63
Three Rivers
GENE EMSWILER..................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................... 9:30 AM
MORNING WORSHIP.............................10:15 AM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING,
MISSIONETTES & ROYAL RANGERS..7:00 PM
588-2385
762-2364
SAFE HARBOR
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
6416 ELDER FERRY RD., ESCATAWPA
GENE VANCE..................................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................................9:55 AM
MORNING WORSHIP......................................11;00 AM
YOUTH..............................................................4:30 PM
KIDS KORNER.................................................5:00 PM
EVENING WORSHIP.........................................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER
MEETING & BIBLE STUDY...........................7:00 PM
228-475-4833 OR 228-475-3435
DANTZLER MEMORIAL
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
3901 Chico St., Pascagoula
2550 Indian Point Parkway
Gautier
Off Gautier/Vancleave Rd., turn at Indian Point Resort Sign
PASTOR.................................................. JIM MOORE
SUNDAY SERVICE........................................10:30 AM
SUN. CHILDRENS CHURCH........................10:30 AM
YOUTH FELLOWSHIP MEETINGS
SUNDAY NIGHTS ....................................6:30PM
WED. SERVICE...............................................6:30 PM
YOUTH DISCIPLESHIP TRAINING
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS ............................7:00PM
497-1948
REFUGE CHRISTIAN CENTER
3400 HALL ST. MOSS POINT, MS
PASTOR..................ELDER ODELL RODGERS
SUNDAY SCHOOL................................9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP..........................11:00 AM
WED. BIBLE STUDY..............................7:00 PM
228-475-6065
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE...................10:00 AM
CHURCH - 497-1698
PARSONAGE - 497-2719
HURLEY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
21901 HIGHWAY 613 HURLEY, MS
REV. NELL MAKI.......................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL................................... 10:00 AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP.................11:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP....................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING............7:00 P.M.
KREOLE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
4707 Kreole Avenue, Moss Point PH. 475-8772
REV. JOHN D. TUCKER............................PASTOR
SAT. -- A NEW WORSHIP SERVICE..........7:08 PM
SUNDAY SCHOOL.................................... 9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................10:45 AM
EVENING WORSHIP..................................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY SERVICE.............................7:00 PM
MIDWAY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Hwy. 90, 6 Mi. East of Pascagoula
REV. GARRY RUFF............................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL.............................................9:45 AM
WORSHIP SERVICE..........................................11:00 AM
CHILDREN/YOUTH -2ND & 4TH SUNDAY..........5:00 PM
CHOIR REHEARSAL - WEDNESDAY..................6:00 PM
475-1961
- NURSERY PROVIDED-
VICTORY FULL GOSPEL
CHRISTIAN CENTER
8401 OCEAN SPRINGS ROAD
OCEAN SPRINGS, MS 39564
(228) 875-3131
CARLTON G. McCARTER......FOUNDER/SENIOR PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNINGS..........................................10:15 AM
TUESDAY PRAYER SERVICE....................................7:00 PM
WEDNESDAY EVENING (WORD FIRST SERVICES)..7:00 PM
WORSHIP CENTER
SENIOR PASTOR..........................HORACE VINSON
ASSOCIATE PASTOR ..................BENJAMIN WOOD
SUNDAY SCHOOL ........................................9:30AM
CHURCH SERVICE ......................................10:30AM
YOUTH CHURCH ....SATURDAY 6:00PM (ages 12+)
SPANISH CHURCH ..........................FRIDAY 7:00PM
Home groups meet various nights and cities.
EVERYONE WELCOME!
“Restoring true worship... building strong families”
4502 Short Cut Road
762-7228
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST
Mount Pleasant Rd.
Vancleave, MS
WAKE INABINETTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
MORNING SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WED. NIGHT PRAYER SERVICE . . . . . . . .7:00 PM
YOUTH MINISTRIES
THURS. NIGHT - Ages 12-19 . . . . .6:00PM-8:30 PM
826-5150
826-5006
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST
ESCATAWPA BRANCH
DAN SHERMAN RD., ESCATAWPA, MS
PASTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TERRY BRELAND
MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:00 AM
PREACHING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
INTERPRETER FOR DEAF AVAILABLE
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT PRAYER . . . . . . . . .6:00 PM
Methodist
BIG POINT UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
7534 Methodist Church Road
REV. JOHN MAKI ............................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................................9:45AM
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP......................11:00AM
CHILDREN & YOUTH MIN................................5:00PM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP.........................6:00PM
WED. NIGHT (Adult & Children Min.) ................6:00PM
CHURCH - 588-6653 PARSONAGE - 588-2602
Church of God
PASCAGOULA
CHURCH OF GOD
2511 Chico Street – 762-9083
EUGENE EUBANKS.....................................PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE......................10:00 AM.
“COME WORSHIP WITH US”
Please Attend The Church Of Your Choice
Is Your Church Listed Here?
Listing Your Church Invites Others To Join
With You In Celebrating God’s Goodness
For space availability or for any changes,
please call 1-866-251-3131 ext. 5389 .
Presbyterian
1ST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF
OCEAN SPRINGS
S. Washington at Ocean Ave. 875-5326
Rev. Timothy B. Brown
SUNDAY WORSHIP SCHEDULE
TRADITIONAL SERVICES . . . . . . . . . .8:15 AM & 11:00 AM
CONTEMPORARY SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:00 AM
ADULT BIBLE STUDY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL (ALL AGES) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:00 AM
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
(USA) OF PASCAGOULA
GAUTIER PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH (USA)
OCTOBER 16TH
ABUNDANT LIFE CHRISTIAN CENTER
TED PAGEZ ......................................PASTOR
MORNING WORSHIP.............................. 10:30 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL.......................................9:15 AM
EVENING WORSHIP..................................6:00 PM
WED. PRAYER & PRAISE..........................7:00 PM
872-0214 crossroadsonthecoast.com
COME JOIN US AT
SUNDAY SCHOOL AT 9:00 AM BEGINNING
Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:30 p.m.
Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:30 p.m.
Nursery Provided
www.jesusistherock.org
762-3221
Pastor: Rodger Bradley
6150 FIRESTONE ST. • GAUTIER, MS
“SPECIALIZING IN MINISTRY FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY”
Pascagoula Street at Ingalls Avenue
TEMPORARY SERVICE TIMES
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE..........................9:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL.............................................10:00 AM
762-2824
[email protected]
www.frstpres.org
RONALD STANLEY......................................PASTOR
CHURCH ON THE ROCK
Nazarene
CROSSROADS CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
4912 Weems St.
Moss Point
DAVID GREER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
MORNING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:50 AM
YOUTH CHOIR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4:00 PM
SNACK SUPPER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:00 PM
UMYF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:20 PM
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:30 PM
2717 Hwy. 90, P.O. Box 127, Gautier 39553
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE....10:30 AM
WEDNESDAY.................................7:00 PM
2502 Ingalls Ave.
Pascagoula
REV. GEORGE JACKSON, JR..................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL......................................9:30 AM
MORNING WORSHIP...............................11:00 AM
EVENING WORSHIP..................................6:00 PM
UMYF/CHILDREN.......................................5:00 PM
GAUTIER FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTH GAUTIER BAPTIST CHURCH (BMA)
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
Campground Road, Hurley
DAN BARNES...................................................PASTOR
SUNDAY SCHOOL.............................................9:30 AM
SUNDAY NIGHT YOUTH SERVICE........................6 PM
SUNDAY WORSHIP..........................................10:30 AM
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP...........................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SERVICE, ROYAL
RANGERS, MISSIONETTES........................7:00 PM
588-6454
MARTIN BLUFF
BAPTIST CHURCH
Catholic
6308 Wildwood Rd. - Helena Community - 475-7182
DR. ROBBIE HOWARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
GILBERT EMERSON . . . . .MINISTER OF MUSIC
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:45 AM
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
& 6:00 PM
CHILDREN’S CHURCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
WEDNESDAY BIBLE STUDY . . . . . . . . . .6:30 PM
YOUTH PROGRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:30 PM
5624 Grierson St.
Moss Point, MS
FELIX TOWNSEND.......................................PASTOR
SUNDAY MORNING.....................................9:45 AM
WORSHIP SERVICE....................................11:00 AM
EVENING WORSHIP......................................6:00 PM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT....................................7:00 PM
475-2849
WEEKLY SERVICES:
WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . .8:30 AM AND 10:30 AM
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERVICES . . . .6:30 PM
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF HELENA
CASWELL SPRINGS
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF GOD
OF PROPHECY
Helena, MS
PASTOR...................................................LONNIE GOFF
SUNDAY SCHOOL.........................................10:00 AM
MORNING WORSHIP....................................11:00 AM
EVENING WORSHIP.......................................6:00 PM
WED. EVENING PRAYER SERVICE.............7:00 PM
INDEPENDENT BAPTIST
CHURCH......474-9009
DAVID W. AULTMAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PASTOR
497-4050
Methodist
TANNER’S CHAPEL
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner of Hwy. 63 & Wildwood Rd.
BE BETWEEN OCTOBER 10 - 17
NURSERY PROVIDED FOR ALL SERVICES
Methodist
Church of God
Baptist
ST. PAUL
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
(CORNER OF MAYO & MAGNOLIA STREETS)
3924 DAVIS ST.
MOSS POINT
“WE CAN DO ALL THINGS THROUGH CHRIST
WHO STRENGTHENS US”
SUNDAY PRAISE SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:30 AM
SUNDAY CONTEMPORARY WORSHIP . . . . . . . . . .8:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:30 AM
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT BIBLE STUDY . . . . . . . . . . . .5:30 PM
PASTOR - ELIJAH HENRY, SR. 475-9253
1009 Highway 90, Gautier, 497-1706
CHRIS BULLOCK..........................................PASTOR
SUNDAY WORSHIP................................10:30 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL.........................................9:15 AM
VESPERS WEDNESDAY...................................7:00 PM
WOMENS BIBLE STUDY TUESDAY.................9:30 AM
Salvation Army
SALVATION ARMY
PASCAGOULA
3808 Arlington St. Pascagoula
PASTORS.........SGTS. BRETT & KIM CUNDIFF
SUNDAY SCHOOL............................................10:00 AM
MORNING WORSHIP........................................11:00 AM
EVENING WORSHIP............................................6:30 PM
WEDNESDAY WORSHIP.....................................6:30 PM
“Friendly and Informal”
762-7222
Seventh Day Adventist
PASCAGOULA SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
3705 Eden St. Pascagoula
SABBATH WORSHIP....................... 9:30 AM
SABBATH SCHOOL............................... 11:00 AM
WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING..................7:00 PM
Lutheran
CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH
3042 Pascagoula Street
SUNDAY WORSHIP......................8:30 AM & 11:00 AM
SUNDAY COFFEE FELLOWSHIP....9:30 AM & 10:45 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR
CHILDREN AND ADULTS.................9:45 AM
NURSERY PROVIDED
SCRIPTURE • FAITH • GRACE
762-1754
Nondenominational
ST. PAUL
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
OCEAN SPRINGS, MS
REV. MITCHELL HEDGEPETH-SENIOR MINISTER
DOWNTOWN CAMPUS 800 PORTER AVENUE
(228) 875-5278
TRADITIONAL WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . .8:30 AM
FELLOWSHIP TIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:30-10:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:00-10:45 AM
BLENDED WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 AM
EAST CAMPUS 6716 BIENVILLE BLVD.
(228) 875-5701
CONTEMPORARY WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . .9:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:00 AM
TRADITIONAL WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . . . . .10:30 AM
FELLOWSHIP TIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:00-10:30 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:30 AM
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
2710 Pascagoula St. - P.O. Box 371,
Pascagoula, MS 39568-0371 – 762-5222
REV. BRUCE TAYLOR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PASTOR
Sunday Worship Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 am,
10:45 am & 6:30 pm
Sunday School (all ages) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 am
Sunday Afternoon Programs:
5:00 pm . . . Children’s Choirs (preschool-4th grade)
5:00 pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5th & 6th Grade Youth
(TNT-Totally Nearly Teens)
5:00 pm . . . . . . . . . UMYF (Youth, 7th - 12th Grade)
Children, Youth, Adult & Senior Adult
Programs Available
Call for more information
Divorce Recovery offered quarterly on Saturday Mornings
**Trained Nursery Care is available for all services**
Church Up On
The Rock, Inc.
Pastor: A. Marshaye Pleasant Alexander
5664 Woodstock Court
Gautier, MS. 39553
228-497-7366
Friday - 7:30 PM
Sunday - 11:00 AM
“To Win The Lost At Any Cost”
LIFE CHURCH OF GAUTIER
Declaring the Word of Faith
3001 OLD SPANISH TRAIL, GAUTIER, MS
(CORNER OF DOLPHIN & OLD SPANISH TRAIL)
497-5777
PHILLIP & SHIRLEY STILTNER . . . . . . . . .PASTORS
SUNDAY LIFE TRAINING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:30 AM
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . . . . .10:30 AM
WEDNESDAY WORSHIP SERVICE . . . . . . .6:30 PM
LIFE BOOK STORE OPEN ONE HOUR BEFORE AND AFTER SERVICES
MESSIANIC CONGREGATION
MANNA FROM HEAVEN MINISTRIES
3801 HILL AVE., (ESCATAWPA) MOSS POINT
474-8877 PASTOR 826-3342
DAVID MATHEWS.....................................PASTOR
SABBATH SERVICE...................FRIDAY - 7:00 PM
SATURDAY EVENING.................................5:00 PM
WEDNESDAY EVENING............................6:30 PM
www.livingmanna.net
GOD IS LOVE!
Are You a Good Lover?
Most of us are often severely limited
in our ability to love our fellow human
beings, partly because of a natural
instinct for self-preservation, and
partly because we have learned that
if we don’t look out for our own
interests, no one else will. And,
while a modicum of self-interest is
perhaps a good thing, most of us
probably have too much self-interest
for our own good, and our constant
concern about our own health and
well-being can prevent us from being
appropriately concerned about others.
What really strikes us about such
exemplary models of loving kindness as
Mother Teresa, the Dalai Lama, or Mahatma Gandhi
is their lack of concern for their own self-interest. All of these people
were great lovers because they disregarded their own interests in
favor of the interests of others. And of course, it is easy to love those
who love us back and genuinely treat us well. The real challenge is to
love those who don’t treat us well, and especially those who actively
dislike us. Jesus and Buddha were fundamentally in agreement on
this, with Buddha saying “O let us live in joy, in love amongst those
who hate, let us live in love.” And, Jesus put it this way: “Love your
enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” (Matthew 5:44)
So faith, hope, love abide, these three:
but the greatest of these is love.
R.S.V. 1 Corinthians 13:13
6-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
STATE
Steel tycoon gives Long Beach $1 million
By TODD RICHMOND
The Associated Press
LONG BEACH — One of the richest men in the world has donated $1
million to help this coastal city
rebuild in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Billionaire Lakshmi Mittal, chief
executive officer and chairman of
London-based Mittal Steel, asked his
executives to find a hurricane-ravaged city he could help.
“He sort of looked at America as a
country in need,” Mittal spokeswoman Gillian Angstadt said Friday.
“They wanted to focus on a town that
was overlooked.”
Mittal Steel’s U.S.-based engineers
settled on Long Beach after Mayor
Billy Skellie took them on a tour in
mid-September,
telling them along
the way the city had
lost up to 70 percent
of its property and
sales tax base,
Angstadt said.
The money is a
fraction of the estimated $326 million
Mittal
in damage Katrina
wreaked on Long
Beach, a city of about 17,000 just
west of Gulfport on the Mississippi’s
Gulf Coast. But Skellie said he’ll
take anything he can get.
“I feel blessed he selected us,” Skellie said. “Obviously, we don’t have a
bunch of bread laying around. The
need is so great.”
Skellie said he plans to use the
money as matching funds to secure
enough in federal grants to help
rebuild City Hall, the police station
and one of the city’s three fire stations that is simply “gone.”
The Indian-born Mittal founded
Mittal Steel in 1976 and built it into
a global company. According to
Forbes.com, today he’s the third-richest man on the planet with a net
worth of about $25 billion.
He donated $1 million in aid to
victims of the tsunami that struck
southeastern Asia and already has
helped raise $500,000 for Gulf Cost
hurricane relief by matching his
workers’ donations, Angstadt said.
Mittal also plans to send engineers
to Long Beach as early as Monday to
Beef plant judgment still unpaid
By ARNOLD LINDSAY
The Clarion-Ledger
OAKLAND, Miss. — A 7-month-old
court judgment that should have compensated a company for services provided in constructing the defunct Mississippi Beef Processors plant in
Yalobusha County remains unpaid.
Anco-Eaglin of North Carolina won
a $249,708 federal court judgment in
March against Mississippi Beef
Processors for breach of contract. It’s
the only one of a dozen companies
owed by the processor to make it that
far in court. Eleven others have filed
liens for $929,147 never paid for supplies or services.
“Everybody I talked to, they have
stiffed. That’s been a real hardship to
us,” said Rick Eaglin, a principal in
Anco-Eaglin. “With our size, a quartermillion dollar hit is hard to swallow.
I’m disappointed with the state. I just
feel like the bigger mouse got fed first
— The Facility Group.”
The $43.5 million processing plant
opened in August 2004 with 400 workers but closed three months later, on
Nov. 17, because of equipment failure.
Citing inadequate cash flow, former
owner Richard Hall Jr. defaulted on a
$35 million state-guaranteed loan.
Hall and his wife, Jill, are being
investigated by a joint state and federal task force. Neither Hall nor his
attorney has returned calls from The
Clarion-Ledger.
Donya Edler, spokeswoman for The
Facility Group, which was paid $3.38
million to manage construction of the
facility when the state seized control
from Hall, would not say who was
responsible for seeing that vendors
were paid.
“These are business issues that we
are not at liberty to discuss,” Edler
responded.
The state on June 2 paid off the
$34.2 million balance on the stateguaranteed loan to Community Bank,
which financed construction of the
Oakland processing plant. Lawmakers
used money from a $100 million tax
settlement with MCI, the former Clinton-based company known as WorldCom, to retire the debt.
The state has invested $55 million
in the plant, including grants, consulting fees and upkeep. The facility is
owned by Community Bank.
Bank officials have not returned
telephone calls to discuss the matter.
Paula Moorman of Hernando, owner of Mid South Pipe and Valves in
Memphis, whose company is owed
$41,559.15, said she and other vendors
were deceived early on into believing
the state would pay, so they continued
to supply items to the plant.
“They threw me off because they
kept hollering, ‘state-funded, statefunded,’ not to worry about it, I was
going to get my money,” Moorman
said. “It was everyone I was in contact
with, Facility Group, (the Mississippi
Development Authority), the contractors that I spoke with. They said it
was no problem — ‘Don’t worry. State
funded.’ “
Moorman has a lien attached to the
property.
The MDA and the state Department of Agriculture and Commerce
say it was not their responsibility to
pay the vendors. The heads of the two
agencies co-chair the Land, Water and
Timber Resources Board that gave
the venture its $5 million seed money.
State Auditor Phil Bryant would
not place a time on when an investigation he is conducting will be complete.
help city officials survey structural
damage and begin repairs.
“Our point is not to bankroll the
recovery, but to take a deeper
approach,” Angstadt said. “We can
make a difference.”
That will take some doing in Long
Beach. Katrina all but erased the
city’s southernmost section, which
lies directly on the Mississippi
Sound.
The city’s beaches washed out,
leaving behind dirty muck. Seafront
hotels were leveled. Homes worth
half-a-million dollars were simply
smashed. Four of the five bodies
crews have recovered here were
found within a few blocks of the
beach, Skellie said.
The storm, which swirled around
Long Beach for hours, also sent a
20-foot-plus storm surge nearly 2,000
feet into town, the mayor said.
On Friday, seven weeks after the
storm, water marks still visible in
some wreckage were close to shoulder-high.
Sailboats sat in yards. Mounds of
tree branches, some six or seven feet
high, lined the curbs. Everywhere,
items hung in the trees: foam, tarps,
clothing.
Lori Carpenter, 40, of Gulfport,
was busy re-roofing her barber shop
across from City Hall in Long Beach.
She said she hopes the mayor can
use Mittal’s money to rebuild the
sidewalks and maybe add some nice
plants along the street.
“Every little bit helps,” she said.
Alcorn to receive settlement money
JACKSON — Alcorn State University
has received $1.7 million in endowment
money as part of the settlement of Mississippi’s college desegregation lawsuit.
The state College Board approved the
distribution Thursday.
Alcorn, one of three historically black
universities in Mississippi, earlier
received $1.4 million, its 28 percent
share of $5 million allocated to the publicly funded endowment.
By next week, officials said, it should
receive its 28 percent share of $1 million
in a privately funded endowment. This
disbursement was the first time endowment funds were allocated to any of the
schools.
Alcorn became eligible for the funds
this year, its third year in a row with a
nonblack enrollment of more than 10
percent.
Settlement of the case provided that
Alcorn, Jackson State University and
Mississippi Valley State University
would each get a portion of what will one
day be a $70 million publicly funded
endowment once they sustain 10 percent nonblack enrollment for three consecutive years.
Jackson State and Mississippi Valley
have not reached that mark.
The separate, privately funded endow-
ment that is supposed to reach $35 million has $1 million in it now. It will be
distributed in the same manner.
The late Jake Ayers Sr. filed a lawsuit
against the state’s university system in
1975, citing inequitable funding for the
state’s three predominantly black universities. A settlement was finally
approved last year when appeals were
exhausted.
Alcorn, Jackson State and Mississippi Valley will share a total of $503 million. Besides the endowments, they will
get $246 million for academic programs
and $75 million for facilities.
Alcorn president Clinton Bristow said
aggressive recruiting in and around
Natchez, where Alcorn has a campus,
increased the university’s diversity. The
university recruits heavily at nearby
Copiah-Lincoln Community College and
at Hinds Community College’s Raymond
campus, he said.
Out-of-state recruiting — including
from Russia — also has helped, he said.
Between 1994 and 2004, Alcorn’s nonblack enrollment went from 6.7 percent
to 10.5 percent, according to state College Board figures. Jackson State’s is
about 7 percent, and Mississippi Valley’s is about 6 percent.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
7-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
REGION
Schools ‘picked apart’ by special interests
■ New Orleans superintendent
says too many groups trying
to rebuild too fast
By DOUG GROSS
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The acting school superintendent in New Orleans said Friday that groups
hoping to push their own agendas are “picking the school system apart,” even as leaders try
to rebuild it.
Ora Watson said charter school groups, school
voucher advocates and others are moving too
fast, before the 56,000-student system has even
opened its doors to accept returning students
who evacuated to escape Hurricane Katrina.
“Right now, there are so many different agendas,” Watson said, while attending a conference
of the Council of the Great City Schools, a
coalition of 66 urban school districts. “Everyone
has their own agenda and they’re picking the
school system apart.”
On Thursday, the state’s school board voted
to study a plan to use tax dollars to send 3,000
New Orleans students to private Catholic
schools. Earlier in the week, Mayor Ray Nagin
proposed allowing the city government to create its own 20-school district, although it
remained unclear who would run the schools.
Recently, the Orleans Parish School Board
voted to create 13 charter schools on the city’s
west bank. Charter schools, which are generally
started by community groups, are part of the
public school system, but are funded separately
and given leeway on some rules other public
schools must follow.
On the Friday before Hurricane Katrina
struck the Gulf Coast, the New Orleans school
system had a staff of about 8,500, including
1,200 administrators, Watson said.
Now, she said she has 27 employees working
in New Orleans, all of them living in temporary
housing.
“We are a homeless administration trying to
set up a school district,” Watson said. “And we
are going to do it.”
Currently, the system plans to reopen four
schools in the city’s West Bank neighborhood on
Nov. 14. About 3,000 students are expected to
return to New Orleans schools then.
Watson said that while many people clearly
want what’s best for New Orleans schools,
long-term plans to rebuild and improve the
troubled system need planning, not quick solutions.
“We have to somehow get everybody at the
table,” she said. “There are people who think
that their notion is the best who have not sat
down at the table; the mayor has not sat down
at the table.”
Nagin’s office acknowledged not contacting
the school system before he announced his
school plan at his State of the City address.
One of the key questions will be how to pay
for the rebuilding.
Even before Katrina, the district was more
than $25 million in the debt, prompting it to
hire a financial management firm to help the
troubled system.
The system will almost certainly get millions
of dollars from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to rebuild damaged schools.
But in the short term, the district will need
AP
Ora Watson, left, acting school superintendent in New Orleans, leans from her chair
to talk with William Roberti, managing director of Alvarez & Marsal in New York during a conference of the Council of the Great City Schools in Atlanta. The conference
addressed aid and rebuilding in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
outside help to have schools open by Nov. 14.
“There aren’t any properties to tax right now;
there aren’t any sales to tax right now,” said
Sajan George, a consultant from Alvarez &
Marsal, the firm helping plan the system’s
finances. “As I stand here and talk about the
plan, we don’t actually have the funding to pay
for the plan.”
Ophelia unearths artifact from Blackbeard’s ship
AP
Yemaya Stallworth, an engineer at General Electric Co.
in Atlanta, walks in the fountain area of the complex
during a break. She takes classes full time at ClarkAtlanta University to earn her electrical engineering
degree.
Georgia’s only black engineering
program slated to shut down
By ERRIN HAINES
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Yemaya Stallworth came to Clark Atlanta
University to be an engineer,
pursuing her destiny at a
school where her teachers and
classmates looked like her.
Working at General Electric
while taking classes full time
toward an electrical engineering degree, the 20-year-old
sophomore embodies the historically black school’s motto:
“I’ll find a way or make one.”
But time is running out on
Clark Atlanta’s engineering
department, which is slated to
shut down by May 2008 as part
of a cost-cutting move by the
school’s board of trustees. Eight
engineering professors and a
group of engineering students
filed a lawsuit Friday in hopes
of getting a judge to reverse
the decision.
“There’s a dire need for us to
produce black enginers,” said
Kester Garraway, a mechanical
engineering senior and president of the Student Education
Reform Group. “The faculty can
better relate to our struggles
— some of us need that oneon-one time that we get at
CAU.”
Clark Atlanta’s board voted
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in 2003 to eliminate the engineering department, along
with the school of library and
information studies, which
closed in May, the international affairs department, the
allied health professions program and the systems science
doctorate program.
The board cited the university’s $7.5 million deficit and
a need to concentrate more on
other areas of study like business, mass media, biology, education and social work — disciplines President Walter
Broadnax said would draw
more donors and raise the
school’s profile.
The school said the engineering program doesn’t fit into
its strategic plan because it is
not specialized, not accredited
and would be too costly to bring
up to accreditation standards.
In the lawsuit filed in Fulton County Superior Court, faculty and students said that
Broadnax based the phase-out
on personal preferences, not on
financial needs or department
performance.
“We want the issue revisited,” department chairman
Lebone Moeti said. “It will be
clear that the department
should be put back together.”
ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C.
(AP) — Researchers excavating the site of the pirate Blackbeard’s wrecked ship got an
unexpected assist from Hurricane Ophelia, which unearthed
an apothecary mortar from the
remains of the Queen Anne’s
Revenge.
The item — familiar to modern eyes in pharmacy logos,
where it’s shown with a pestle
— was among several items
revealed among the wreckage
when the storm churned up the
North Carolina coastline last
month, said Chris Southerly,
project archaeologist for the
Queen Anne’s Revenge Shipwreck Project.
Two cannons, an anchor and
other debris were also exposed
when Ophelia scoured sand to
the south and southwest of the
main ballast pile.
Project workers believe that’s
the stern of the vessel, where
the officers’ quarters would
have been and where divers
are most likely to find Blackbeard’s personal items,
Southerly said.
“Probably, the majority of
artifacts that would have a
date or some (identifying mark)
would be found toward the
back of the vessel unless, of
course, we could find the bell,”
Southerly said.
The storm’s help wasn’t all
beneficial. It also appeared to
have damaged the bronze or
copper alloy pestle, stripping
off bits of a thin corrosive layer
that had protected its surface
as it lay on the ocean floor.
“It looks like in several places
on the artifact that (the layer)
had come off,” Southerly said.
Conservators who find artifacts clean such layers off, but
do so carefully to avoid marring the surface of the object,
he explained.
“In doing this you can lose
makers’ marks or any other
identifying marks that would
have been on the artifact,”
Southerly said.
Ophelia was not so meticulous. The storm also may have
washed away less heavy artifacts, such as glassware or
ceramic pieces.
The pestle is a significant
find that could provide useful
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AP
David Moore, left, nautical archaeologist with the N.C.
Maritime Museum, in Beaufort, N.C., works with Rich
Allen, of Nautilus Productions, on a pharmacist's mortar found at the site of a shipwreck of pirate Blackbeard's Queen Anne's Revenge.
historic data about the ship.
When Blackbeard took control
of the slave ship La Concorde
in the Caribbean in 1717,
renaming it Queen Anne’s
Revenge, he forced three of the
ship’s surgeons to remain
aboard.
In May 1718, Blackbeard
demanded and received supplies to refill his medicine
chest during a weeklong blockade of Charleston Harbor. The
ship ran aground in Beaufort
Inlet about a month later.
“It wouldn’t be surprising if
there were one or more surgeons aboard,” Southerly said.
Ophelia’s damage and the
threat from other storms that
regularly pass through the
area worry those working on
the QAR Project. Director
Mark Wilde-Ramsing said the
group will push for a full-scale
recovery of the site over the
next couple of years.
An expedition that had been
planned for September was
canceled, at first because of
fuel supply worries after Hurricane Katrina, and then
because of continuing bad
weather that included Ophelia.
The group has requested
more money from the Golden
Leaf Foundation, which gave it
a $145,000 grant this year. It
also plans to increase storage
capacity at its Greenville conservation lab and seek student
and staff support from East
Carolina University, WildeRamsing said.
(9 6 6 3)
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Gulfport, MS 39501
8-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
WORLD
Saddam defense team demands security after lawyer slain
By MARIAM FAM
The Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq — The body of a
lawyer in Saddam Hussein’s trial was
found dumped in the street with two
bullet wounds in the head hours after
gunmen dressed as security forces
took him from his office. A fearful
defense team demanded Friday that
the trial be delayed or moved out of
Iraq.
Four American service members
were killed in insurgent attacks, edging the total number of U.S. military
deaths near 2,000 since the start of
the Iraq war.
Investigators were trying to determine if the killers of Sunni Arab
lawyer Saadoun Sughaiyer al-Jan-
abi were Saddam opponents lashing
out at the defense team or perhaps
Sunni insurgents — including many
Saddam supporters — trying to disrupt the trial. Al-Janabi was the
lawyer for Awad Hamed al-Bandar,
the former head of Saddam’s Revolutionary Court.
Ten gunmen wearing police and
military uniforms walked into al-Janabi’s office Thursday evening in
Baghdad’s Shaab neighborhood, and
he went with them without resistance, police Maj. Falah alMohammedawi said.
Hours later, his body, bearing signs
of torture, was found on a sidewalk
by the Fardous Mosque in the nearby
Ur neighborhood.
Sunni insurgents are known to
have disguised themselves in police
or military uniforms in attacks usually targeting Shiites. But Sunni Arab
leaders have accused Interior Ministry forces or militias allied to the
Shiite-led government of killing Sunnis taken from their homes by men in
uniform.
The killing spread fear among the
other 12 defense lawyers at Wednesday’s opening session of the trial for
Saddam and seven co-defendants. On
Friday, they demanded that the trial
— now set to resume Nov. 28 — be
postponed if investigations into the
slaying are not finished.
They also demanded the government provide them protection and
even move the trial outside Iraq, said
Khamees Hamid al-Ubaidi, one of
Saddam’s two lawyers.
Moving the trial seemed highly
unlikely. The government has fiercely rejected any international venue,
insisting Saddam should be tried by
Iraqis in Iraq.
“It is time to lay low,” al-Ubaidi
said. “When something like this happens, who wouldn’t be terrified?”
He said he had taken personal
steps for security but would not elaborate. Government officials, including
some from the Interior Ministry, were
meeting Friday night to discuss protecting defense lawyers, al-Ubaidi
said.
Ministry and government officials
could not immediately be reached for
comment on the meeting or the
lawyers’ demands.
Saddam and his co-defendants face
possible death sentences if convicted
on charges of murder and torture for
the 1982 massacre of 148 Shiites in
the town of Dujail. They have pleaded innocent.
Heavy security was provided for
trial prosecutors and judges, who
were considered likely targets of
insurgents. Their names have not
been revealed and their faces were
not shown in the broadcast of
Wednesday’s opening session — with
the exception of the presiding judge
and the top prosecutor, whose identities were revealed for the first time.
Hip young beach-goers hit Egypt’s women-only beaches
By MARIAM FAM
The Associated Press
MARINA, Egypt — Iman Moustafa
loves the sea, but she always knew
her bikini didn’t conform with the rules
of Islam, so each time she took a dip
she would quickly cover up and pray
on the beach. The guilt spoiled the
fun.
“I felt as if I were fooling God,” said
Moustafa, 25.
The solution? La Femme.
La Femme is one of three womenonly beaches at this elite northern
Mediterranean resort, offering beachgoers a priceless commodity: guiltless
fun. Here the veiled, conservative and
shy can strip down to skimpy bikinis
safe from God’s disapproval and
intruding male eyes.
The beaches, about 60 miles west of
Alexandria, are part of a growing business that caters to the new class of
religious Egyptians who are hip, rich,
young. These secluded strips of sand
are an attempt to reconcile liberal and
conservative, worldly and heavenly,
fun and piety.
At ordinary beaches, where the sexes mix and any swimwear is allowed,
religious women face a challenge. They
must get up early to find a secluded
spot. Some take to the waves fully
clothed or wearing unrevealing Islamic swimsuits. Moustafa all but gave
up the beach altogether when she
donned the veil four years ago.
Then women-only beaches came
along.
At La Femme on a recent late-summer day, women let down their hair
and layers of clothes to reveal swimsuits or tight shorts, rubbed on tanning
oil and lay on the soft sand. Some
abandoned themselves to the blaring
Arabic pop music, swaying to the
rhythmic beats. Moustafa removed her
head scarf and traded her baggy skirt
AP
Egyptian holidaymakers, some fully clothed, crowd at the popular beach of Miami at the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, Egypt.
and top for a flower-adorned bikini.
The beach is screened off by reeds,
with female gatekeepers to keep out
men and cameras.
A visit to La Femme costs 50 Egyptian pounds (about $9), or $60 for a
summer membership — hefty sums
in low-wage Egypt, but worth it, many
women say.
“I’m having fun and am not sinning,”
said a 27-year-old accountant who
identified herself as Heba. Seven years
ago she became “moltazema,” meaning
she now wears only long clothes that
are not too fitting.
“I love the sea very much, but I
wasn’t able to swim because I know it
is haram (religiously forbidden) to
expose your body and have the guys
check it out,” she said, an Englishlanguage book perched on her bare
legs and a fashionable ring adorning
her toe.
“Those who came up with the idea of
this beach know what the country
needs,” she said. La Femme was set
up by private entrepreneurs.
Yasmeen Dinana, 16, said she started veiling herself about two years ago,
partly because of a sermon she heard
from Amr Khaled, a young evangelical-style preacher who draws the
young and rich to Islam.
Palestinian government said yielding to kidnappers
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Rather
than fight them, Palestinian officials have
been negotiating deals with those behind a
wave of kidnappings, and the lenience is
worsening the chaos left behind after Israel’s
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, according
to a senior Palestinian security official.
Citing the example set by Iraqi insurgents, gunmen are increasingly resorting
to kidnappings to get jobs, break relatives
out of jail or settle personal scores. Gaza
and the West Bank suffered 31 abductions in
August and 44 in September, according to
official statistics.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas’ reluctance to crack down on crime appears driven by the same fear that has prevented him
from going after militants: he doesn’t want
to unleash a battle he could easily lose.
A top Abbas aide, Rafiq Husseini, denied
the authorities were giving in to kidnappers’ demands. However, the security official
as well as a militant and a human rights
activist all said otherwise. “No one is ever
held accountable,” said Raji Sourani, a
prominent human rights lawyer in Gaza.
The security official requested anonymity,
saying he was afraid to go public in the dangerously charged atmosphere in Gaza. He
complained that the readiness to negotiate
with kidnappers was encouraging crime. In
a further twist, many of those involved in
kidnappings have ties to the Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, a violent group linked to
Abbas’ ruling Fatah movement. Other
hostage-takers even serve in the security
forces.
Tawfiq Abu Khoussa, an Interior Min-
istry spokesman, acknowledged the government appears weak, but said little can be
done for now.
“The abductions will end only when we
clean our streets of weapons,” said Abu
Khoussa. “Everyone who has weapons can
do whatever he wants to do and the authority can’t assign a policeman for every citizen
to protect him.”
Among those seized were 11 foreigners,
including journalists and aid workers, and
Palestinian commentators are warning the
abductions will hinder economic progress
in Gaza following Israel’s historic pullout
last month.
“Our areas will be seen as unsafe and
lawless,” said Palestinian columnist Hassan Kashef. “These acts ... will discourage
serious investors.”
U.S. image builder blunders in Jakarta
■ Hughes says Saddam gassed
’hundreds of thousands’ of Iraqis
By CHRIS BRUMMITT
The Associated Press
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Karen Hughes, who
has faced a rocky road since being named Washington’s public relations chief, answered tough
questions Friday about the invasion of Iraq,
and wrongly stated that Saddam Hussein
gassed to death “hundreds of thousands” of his
people.
Although the U.S. undersecretary for public
diplomacy twice repeated the claim after being
challenged by journalists, Gordon Johndroe, a
State Department official traveling with Hughes, later called The Associated Press to say she
misspoke.
Hughes, a longtime confidante of President
Bush, was in the world’s most populous Muslim
nation to improve America’s battered image
after the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
At a public debate with university students in
Jakarta, she was repeatedly criticized over
Washington’s original stated rationale for the
war in Iraq — Saddam’s alleged weapons of
mass destruction. No such arms were discovered.
“The consensus of the world intelligence community was that Saddam was a very dangerous
threat,” Hughes said.
“After all, he had used weapons of mass
destruction against his own people,” she told
about 100 students in a small auditorium. “He
had murdered hundreds of thousands of his
own people using poison gas.”
At least 300,000 Iraqis were reportedly killed
during Saddam’s decades-long rule, but only
about 5,000 are believed to have been gassed —
in a 1988 attack in the Kurdish north.
Hughes’ three-day trip Indonesia came as
the United States tried to limit damage from TV
footage that purportedly shows U.S. soldiers
in Afghanistan burning the corpses of two Taliban fighters.
The students did not ask her about the
footage, but she later told reporters it was
“abhorrent.”
“The important thing that the world needs to
know is that it is a violation of our policy,” she
said.
There has been little public reaction in
Indonesia to the footage, but clerics in other
Islamic nations expressed outrage and warned
of a possible violent anti-American backlash.
Indonesia is a moderate Islamic country with
significant Christian, Hindu and Buddhist
minorities. It has a long tradition of secularism,
but in recent years has seen a series of terror
attacks by militants linked to al-Qaida, including blasts this month on Bali that killed 20
people.
Khaled said the Prophet Muhammad would be upset by unveiled
women, she recalled. “I felt that the
prophet has suffered a lot for us and
that God has given us so many things,
so why not wear the veil?”
Preachers such as Khaled speak
young people’s language and wear
smart suits rather than robes and turbans as they guide the new generation
in this nation of 72 million toward
Islam and away from what is perceived as Western decadence and
materialism.
The Islamic revival has spawned
chic fashion stores catering specifically to veiled women. Makeup artists
advertise new trends in tying head
scarves. Video clips of religious songs
feature handsome male models.
Marina embodies many of Egypt’s
contrasts. On its streets, scantly clad
women walk next to others swathed in
black. On some of its beaches, men
and women mingle, drink alcohol and
publicly display affection. La Femme’s
own gatekeepers wear bikinis or
shorts.
Basma Magdy, a 21-year-old student at the American University in
Cairo, doesn’t wear a veil but feels
more comfortable at La Femme. “Here
I am sitting at ease, knowing that I’m
not doing anything wrong,” she
explains.
Iman Moustafa says her veil makes
her feel like “a precious and covered
pearl.”
It took her a while to realize it. “I
used to tell God, I know I have to get
veiled but I’m still young and I want to
wear a strapless gown on my wedding
day and I want to wear bikinis,” she
said. “Now I would never take off the
veil, even if you give me a million dollars.”
Her bikini, she says, is strictly for
La Femme.
The Law Firm of
RAY MITCHELL, P.A.
has reopened at our usual location.
Our Heartfelt Thanks To All Volunteers And Relief Agencies.
Please Accept Our Hope For A Speedy Recovery To All On
The Great Mississippi Gulf Coast.
We are continuing our law practice of more
than thirty (30) years accepting cases involving
Automobile Accidents, Worker’s Compensation Claims,
Offshore Injuries, and Flood/Windstorm Insurance Disputes
429 Porter Avenue, Ocean Springs, MS 39564
Phone (228) 875-1231 Fax (228) 875-5150
[email protected]
Serving Jackson
And Harrison Counties!
3257 Hwy. 90
Gautier
Serving The Entire Gulf Coast
934-2555 • 896-9555
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
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Older pets can bring new joy to a home
Dear Heloise: Your column runs in our
Hobbs News-Sun here in Hobbs, N.M. I
recently read the letter from Claire and
Joe in North Carolina, who ended up with
an older pet. I totally agree with your
response that an older pet can bring great
joy to a home. I am
personally owned by
a 13-year-old cat and
a 10-year-old dog.
At our Lea County
Humane Society, we
have animals of all
ages and are delighted when an older cat
or dog finds that
“someone” and leaves
us for a loving home. By Heloise
Our goal is not only
finding homes for the homeless but educating the public on pet care and the
importance of spaying/neutering. Please
keep writing pet hints and pet-care advice
in your column; we need all the help we
can get! — Sharon Harrison, Lea
County Humane Society, Hobbs, N.M.
Pet Pal
Dear Readers: Shirley and Robert
Martin of New Sharon, Maine, sent a picture of their “animal-shelter refugee,” a
cat named Sweetie, who is dancing and
singing for her teaspoonful of milk, which
she has done each morning for the past
two and a half years. Sweetie also loves to
watch nature programs on television! —
Heloise
Birdie, Birdie
Dear Heloise: Our next-door neighbor’s cat often watches the birds that visit
the feeders in my backyard, and I don’t
want it to get too close to the feeder and
threaten these birds. I was told to throw
orange peels around the base of the feeder
to keep the cat at bay. So far, it has
worked, and I’m also now eating more
oranges! — Sally, via e-mail
Sally, according to the Wild Bird Centers of America, throwing citrus peels
where you don’t want cats to be does work
- they don’t like the smell. For other helpful bird-feeding information, you can visit
the WBCA Web site, www.birdfeeding.org.
— Heloise
Cozy Teddy Bear
Dear Heloise: I got an 8-week-old puppy a while back and just stumbled on this
idea. My granddaughter kept the puppy
the first night and said it cried all night.
When I picked up the puppy, she gave it
one of her old teddy bears as a parting
gift. That night, I wanted the puppy to
learn to like her new kennel, so I put an
old, flannel baby blanket and the stuffed
bear in the clothes dryer for five minutes
to warm them, and then put them and the
puppy in the kennel. Not a peep all night!
I figured she missed the presence and
warmth of her littermates, and the bear
and blanket made up for it.
Now, Tally is 5 months old, and I am
still warming her bear at night. We have
quite a ritual of going to the dryer and
then carrying them both to bed. The best
part is that she loves the kennel and feels
safe there. — Trudy Handte, San Antonio
Moving Hint
Dear Heloise: We have moved many
times, both on our own and with moving
professionals. Many times we’ve used this
hint: Pack a survival kit that consists of
linens and pillows for everyone’s bed, a
roll of toilet paper and paper towels, a
telephone (in the days before cell phones),
soap and bath towels for that first shower
in the new home. It makes those first few
days so much easier. Once the beds were
assembled, the kids knew to look for this
box so they could get their beds ready.
When the box is unloaded from the truck,
be sure to place it where you can find it at
the end of the day! — Martha Disberger, via e-mail
Crochet Hint
Dear Heloise: For those who crochet, I
have a great hint that my sister came up
with. Put your skein of thread in the plastic bag that your newspapers come in. It
will keep the thread coming out evenly
and untangled. — Doris Urbaneck, San
Antonio
FYI
Did you know that it’s not a good idea to
store your freshly dry-cleaned clothes in
plastic dry-cleaner bags? It’s OK for a few
weeks, maybe, but any longer and you
risk problems. Moisture can get trapped
in the plastic, causing your clothes to
mildew; the bags can also cause what’s
called fume fading — where your whites
turn yellow and your colors fade. So, to be
safe, take clothes out of the plastic as soon
as possible. If you’re worried about dust,
store clothes in garment bags made of
cloth. — Heloise
Laundry Shake-Up
Dear Heloise: Years ago, I began shaking out the items I was removing from the
washing machine before placing them in
the dryer. The result was that everything
came out less wrinkled. — Rita in Maine
Coupon Organization
Dear Heloise: At times, I would miss
out on using my coupons at restaurants or
shops because they were at home, carefully filed away with grocery coupons. But
here is how I keep them now:
I use an inexpensive 4-by-6 photo
album with the inside cover on one side
marked “dining” and other cover “shopping.” Monthly, I sort the dining and the
store shopping/errand coupons alphabetically into two piles. Then, with the “dining” side open on the left, I slip the
coupons into each right-hand sleeve
alphabetically; then I turn the book
around and do the same with the store
shopping/errand coupons. I can browse
through just my shopping or just my dining coupons with ease. It slips into my
purse, so I never miss out on using them
on spur-of-the-moment side trips with
girlfriends! — Gayle Minkus, Ada,
Mich.
Write P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio TX
78279-5000 or fax (210) HELOISE.
Son’s football buddies need
coaching about mom’s name
Dear Abby: My sons are
on a football team with a
group of young men I love
dearly. They spend quite a bit
of time at our house, and this
has become almost like a second home to a lot of them.
My problem is I am married for the second time to a
wonderful man whose name I
adopted. My children have a
different last name than my
husband’s.
My son’s
friends
(bless
their
hearts)
always
address
me by my
boys’ last
name,
“Mrs.
Dear
Jones,”
Abby
and they
have even
called my husband “Mr.
Jones”!
I know they mean no disrespect, but I’m trying to find a
way to fix this without making a big deal out of it. Can
you help us? In this day and
age, I’m sure it happens a lot,
and many other men aren’t
as understanding as my husband is about it. — Embarrassed in Nevada
Dear Embarrassed: You
and your husband should
have corrected the boys the
first time this happened. The
next time the “team” visits
and one of them calls you by
the wrong name, smile and
say, “I probably should have
told you before, but Mr. Jones
was my former husband.
Please call my husband and
me Mr. and Mrs. ’Smith.”’ If
it’s said pleasantly, I’m sure
it will upset no one.
Dear Abby: I am a 14year-old teenager who likes
to baby-sit. I’m a hard worker
and keep the children easily
amused.
One of the families that I
baby-sit for has a difficult
child who is rather bratty,
but I can control him very
well. Recently, when they
paid me, I noticed the
amount was less than what I
usually get. It is not the first
time this has happened, and
I have a feeling it won’t be
the last.
How do I tell this family
they are underpaying me?
And should I drop them? —
Overworked and underpaid
Dear Underpaid: The
next time you are asked by
the family to baby-sit, remind
the parent that you charge so
much an hour. Explain that
you are saying this because
you were not paid the full
amount the last time, and
you will expect to have the
balance added to this bill. If
the parents are cooperative
— fine. If not, you have every
right to drop them as customers and let them amuse
their own “difficult, bratty”
child on a night when they’d
rather be doing something
else.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
Distant grandpa sends
fright through 5-year-old
Dear Annie: My 5-year-old
daughter, “Susie,” is frightened of her grandfather, my
father. We see him only two
or three times a year because
he lives over a thousand
miles
away, but
I have
been diligent about
letting
Susie visit.
My
father is
not and
never has
been a
“kid” perAnnie’s
son — you
Mailbox
know,
someone
who gets down on the floor
and plays. Susie has never
warmed up to him or given
him so much as a hello without a lot of coaching and
encouragement.
My father is hurt and confused by Susie’s behavior. I
don’t expect him to change
his approach at this age, but
he thinks I shelter Susie from
him. The truth is, I’ve tried
everything to reassure her
that Dad is not scary, but she
refuses to have anything to do
with him. I should mention
that Susie is warm and loving
with all her other male relatives, especially her greatuncles. There’s just something about my dad that
frightens her, and she isn’t
able to explain it to me yet.
I’ve run out of weak excuses
to try to make my dad feel
better. And, no, there has
never been any opportunity
for abuse. We have another
visit coming up, and the situation has grown so uncomfortable that I’m not looking
as forward to it as I usually
would. How should I handle
this? — Seattle Mom
Dear Seattle: The most
likely reason Susie is afraid
of Grandpa is that she doesn’t
see him often enough. Each
visit, he’s been a stranger.
Now, all she remembers is the
negative reaction.
Try telling Susie funny or
loving stories about Grandpa
during the year, especially
before she visits, and show
her current photographs of
Have a
story idea?
CALL
251 219 5551
him so she connects the stories to the person. Let her
know how much Grandpa
loves her and that he’s eager
to see her. She also is old
enough for you to explain that
Grandpa doesn’t always
understand little children, so
she needs to help him out.
Dear Annie: Finding help
for stuttering can be frustrating and discouraging for parents, teens and adults who
stutter. Many are repeatedly
told “they’ll outgrow it,” but
the three million Americans
who struggle daily with stuttering know it’s not always
“just a phase.”
International Stuttering
Awareness Day, Oct. 22, is an
opportune time to once again
let your readers know that
help and information are
readily available from the
Stuttering Foundation at 1800-992-9392 (stutteringhelp.org or, in Spanish,
www.tartamudez.org). —
Jane Fraser, President,
The Stuttering Foundation
Dear Jane Fraser: We are
happy to help out. Thanks for
all the good work you do.
Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailboxcomcast.net, or write to: Annie’s
Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190,
Chicago, IL 60611.
MARMADUKE
ZIGGY
10-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
DENNIS THE MENACE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
CLOSE TO HOME
GARFIELD
PEANUTS CLASSICS
DILBERT
BORN LOSER
SNUFFY SMITH
KATHY
BLONDIE
BABY BLUES
B.C.
TODAY’S FUN
BEETLE BAILEY
PUZZLES
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Mike Argirion
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
ASAIL
©2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
WOPOH
FOXTROT
SUNDOL
www.jumble.com
AFAIRS
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
A: AT A
Yesterday’s
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
CURTIS
FOR
“
”
(Answers Monday)
FATAL
GYRATE
EXHALE
Jumbles: DRAWL
Answer: What the novice’s bridge partner wanted her
to bid — “FAREWELL”
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
11-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
NATION
Sarasota braces for trial in video taped abduction
By MITCH STACY
The Associated Press
SARASOTA, Fla. — Like everyone else who
saw it replayed over and over on TV around
the world, residents of this city shuddered when
they saw the video images of a man taking 11year-old Carlie Brucia by the arm in the back of
a car wash nearly 21 months ago.
Together they hoped and
prayed for a happy ending as
authorities launched a massive search for the little girl,
and together they mourned
when she was found dead on
the grounds of a nearby church
four nights later.
Now Sarasota’s deepest
wound will be torn open again
when jury selection begins
Brucia
Monday in the trial of Joseph
P. Smith, the man accused of kidnapping, raping and strangling the sixth grader on Super
Bowl Sunday last year.
“Carlie Brucia became, for all of Sarasota,
one of our children,” said Sarasota Mayor Mary
Anne Servian. “We felt like we knew her, and all
of us were so hoping for a different outcome
(after her disappearance). And when there wasn’t, we suffered a collective broken heart. I don’t
think I’ve ever seen a community so wounded.”
A security camera at Evie’s Car Wash captured images of the tall, blond sixth-grader in
jeans and a red shirt being grabbed by the arm
and led away by a man in dark mechanic’s uniform as she walked home from a friend’s house
at dusk on Feb. 1, 2004.
The video, released to TV news stations and
aired around the world, brought an onslaught of
media to Sarasota to chronicle the massive
search for Carlie and, ultimately, the discovery of her body.
The video also led to the arrest of Smith, an
auto mechanic with a drug problem and a long
rap sheet.
AP
This video released by the Sarasota
County Sheriffs Office, shows Carlie Brucia, right, possibly being abducted from
the rear of a car wash Feb. 1, 2004, in
Sarasota, Fla. Joseph Smith, believed to
be the man shown with Carlie, goes on
trial Monday for her murder.
A number of people called authorities to say
they recognized Smith as the man on the car
wash video. Arrested on unrelated drug charges
two days after Carlie disappeared, Smith confessed to the slaying to his mother and brother
during a jailhouse visit and then helped them
lead authorities to Carlie’s body, according to
testimony in pretrial hearings.
Smith, 39, is charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping and capital sexual battery.
Prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty.
Assistant Public Defender Adam Tebrugge
has tried to get Smith’s statement thrown out,
arguing that it was illegally obtained through
The Associated Press
Small-time inventors take on Congress
over proposed patent law changes
WASHINGTON — In the
world of small-time inventors,
George Margolin, 75, of Newport Beach, Calif., is a resounding success. He has patented
a syringe that prevents
unwanted needle-pricks, a folding keyboard that was licensed
by Hewlett Packard and 25
other devices from the practical
to the arcane.
Now Margolin fears his ability to create is threatened by
legislation he says would yank
patent protections from little
guys like him in favor of big
corporations like Microsoft.
“The Wright Brothers — two
slobs in Dayton, Ohio, who
became the airline industry —
Edison with his multitude of
inventions, they would have all
been stifled and stopped by this
kind of legislation,” said Margolin, who now makes a comfortable living from his inventions after years when he had
to support himself through bartending and other jobs. “It
would be absolutely destructive.”
The Patent Reform Act of
2005, sponsored by Reps.
Lamar Smith, R-Texas, and
Howard Berman, D-Calif.,
includes changes supporters
say are needed in a system
that’s processing more and
more patents.
Among other things, the bill
seeks to cut down on nuisance
lawsuits by “patent trolls” —
people who take out patents
on products, methods or ideas
just so they can sue a company
for infringement if it eventually produces something similar.
Such lawsuits have bedeviled the high-tech industry, in
part because computer technology can involve hundreds
his brother after Smith had already invoked
his right to remain silent and have an attorney
present during questioning. Tebrugge has also
challenged the car wash video, contending that
it should not be used at trial because prosecutors can’t prove the digital images and the date
stamps on the video are authentic.
Judge Andrew Owens has yet to rule on those
motions by Tebrugge, who has declined comment outside of court on other details of Smith’s
defense.
By ESTES THOMPSON
AP
The Associated Press
Joseph Smith, right, who is accused of abducting and killing 11-year-old Carlie Brucia in Sarasota in February 2004, speaks with his public defender Adam Tebrugge,
left, during Smith's first court appearance at the Manatee County jail at Port Manatee in Palmetto, Fla., on a drug charge stemming from a earlier arrest.
Grief over Carlie’s death last year rippled
through this southwest Florida city of about
53,000 residents, best known as a scenic sanctuary for northerners fleeing winter’s wrath.
Strangers turned out by the hundreds to attend
a series of televised public memorial services.
Servian said residents are preparing themselves for a repeat of the media onslaught and
to see the video snippet of Carlie’s apparent
abduction again run repeatedly on TV during
the trial.
Arrests of immigrants on military
bases raise questions about security
Inventor George
Margolin, seen here
holding one of his
inventions, a
portable syringe
designed to guard
against unwanted
needle pricks. Now
Margolin fears his
ability to create
inventions is
threatened by
legislation he says
would yank patent
protections away
from the little guys
in favor of big
corporations like
Microsoft.
By ERICA WERNER
AP
or thousands of individual
patents per product. The Information Technology Industry
Council says patent lawsuits
in federal court doubled from
1,200 to 2,400 annually from
1998 to 2001.
The bill would make it easier
for patent-holders to fight such
lawsuits in potentially friendly
legal venues, such as in the
judicial district where they are
headquartered.
Last year, 380,000 patent
applications were filed at the
U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office, compared with 200,000
in 1994. The office says it has a
growing backlog of 600,000
applications and a shortage of
patent examiners.
“I do believe that there’s a
patent quality problem,”
Berman said, citing reports by
the National Academy of Sciences and the Federal Trade
Commission that reached that
conclusion. “A lot of people who
don’t have an ax to grind think
there needs to be reform.”
Critics cite examples of
seemingly absurd patents, such
as U.S. Patent No. 5,443,036,
issued for a method of using a
laser pointer “in an irregular
way fascinating to cats” so the
animal gets aerobic exercise.
To try to ensure that patents
are issued for truly innovative
and novel devices, the bill
includes provisions allowing
patents to be challenged for
nine months after they’re
issued, and allowing third parties to present evidence to the
patent office related to pending patent applications.
Current U.S. law says a
patent goes to the person who
can show they first invented a
device; the pending legislation
would give the patent to the
person who filed for it first, the
method used internationally.
But Margolin and his group,
the Professional Inventors
Alliance, say the changes
would allow big companies to
endlessly contest legitimate
patents and patent applications. They say the bill would
protect corporations with the
means to rush to file their
applications first over small
inventors who actually come
up with the idea, and make it
unreasonably difficult for individual patent-holders to pursue legitimate lawsuits against
companies that steal their
inventions.
RALEIGH, N.C. — Scores
of illegal immigrants working
as cooks, laborers, janitors,
even foreign-language instructors have been seized at military bases around the country
in the past year, raising concerns in some quarters about
security and troop safety.
The immigrants did not
work directly for the military
but for private contractors, as
part of a large-scale effort by
the Pentagon to outsource
many routine rear-echelon jobs
and free up the troops to concentrate on waging war.
Some worry that this fastgrowing practice could make
U.S. military installations
more vulnerable to security
breaches.
“We can’t let down our
guard,” said Rep. Robin Hayes,
a North Carolina Republican
whose district includes Fort
Bragg, home of the Army’s
Special Operations Command.
“The motive of these particular
individuals remains unclear.
However, my greatest concern
is that they were able to gain
access to the installation at
all.”
Since the Sept. 11 attacks,
immigration officials have
focused on military bases as
well as airports, nuclear power plants and the nation’s power grid. In the past year, they
have caught about 150 illegal
immigrants at military installations around the country,
said Jamie Zuieback, a spokeswoman for the Immigration
and Customs Enforcement
service in Washington.
There is no evidence any of
them had any links to terrorists, though investigations are
continuing, Zuieback said. She
said the agency is concerned
that such installations “could
be vulnerable to exploitation
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by someone who has ill
intent.”
This month, officials arrested three foreign language
instructors at Fort Bragg.
Over the summer, authorities
apprehended 74 construction
workers lacking documentation at Camp Lejeune, the
Marines’ major base on the
Atlantic Ocean, and caught 49
illegal immigrants at North
Carolina’s Seymour Johnson
Air Force Base. Illegals have
also been caught at bases in
Idaho and Florida.
Some of them were deported; others were escorted off
base and released.
The total of about 150 does
not include those working for
military contractors off base.
The off-base arrests have
included hundreds of illegal
immigrants hired to prepare
field rations by a Texas company that admitted falsifying
their employment records. Offbase arrests have also been
made in North Carolina, Mississippi and California.
In North Carolina, the military paid contractors $823
million this year and last to
perform work at Fort Bragg,
Camp Lejeune and Seymour
Johnson. Such outsourcing is
likely to increase, said defense
analyst Loren Thompson of
The Lexington Institute.
Under Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld’s plans for
re-engineering the way the
military does business, “many,
many more activities will be
outsourced to contractors,”
Thompson said. “There’s hundreds of thousands of them.
The potential for abuse will
be there.”
Contractors provide the military with civilian instructors
in such areas as marksmanship, information management and medical care.
At Fort Bragg, the three foreign language instructors
worked at a school run by the
Army Special Operations
Command, which oversees
such elite units as the Green
Berets and the Rangers.
But command spokesman
Lt. Col. Hans Bush said that
the place where the instructors worked is not considered
a sensitive location and is
used for many unclassified
courses.
The instructors worked for
Orlando, Fla.-based B.I.B.
Consultants. Under Pentagon
policy, it is the responsibility
of the contractor to verify that
an employee is legally able to
work in the United States,
and B.I.B said its background
checks of the three instructors came back clean.
Such background checks
usually consist of asking for
a driver’s license and a Social
Security card.
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THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
United Way
Shelter
From Page 1-A
From Page 1-A
been contributed to United
Way to support hurricane
response and recovery efforts,
including approximately $8
million to the United Way Hurricane Response and Recovery
Fund and $16 million contributed directly to local United Ways.
The money “helps to support
the transition from immediate
relief to long-term recovery,”
he said.
Guiding United Way of Jackson and George Counties on
an interim basis will be former
director Elaine Kerr. She
replaces Dr. Lorraine Boisselle,
who has resigned after four
months of service. Kerr retired
as director in 2003.
Of United Way of Jackson
and George Counties’ share of
the grant, half will go to the
Salvation Army. The other
$100,000 will be disbursed
after an assessment meeting
with agency directors.
Donna Stewart, director of
community impact, said the
Salvation Army received the
bulk of the grant because that
agency already had recovery
efforts in place.
“We didn’t want the dollars
to be used for additional staff if
we already had that ready to
go,” she said.
President Chris Anderson
said the assessment will show
that most of the 23 agencies
they serve not only have their
regular yearly budget needs,
but because of Katrina have
unexpected needs as well.
“The need for United Way
agencies is especially evident
en. What the 30 to 35-foot storm
surge didn’t float away, Katrina’s
ferocious 140 mph winds finished
it off.
Seymour moved into the house
with her husband in 1957. John
Seymour grew up there with his
grandparents. The elderly Seymours were rearing two teenage
grandchildren there.
The grandchildren delivered
the devastating news: “They said
everything’s gone. I just went all
to pieces,” said Seymour while
trying to stave off tears.
She has pictures, plenty of
them, snapped days before bulldozers cleared the remnants of
what-was to make way for a new
Federal Emergency Management
Agency trailer.
Baby blankets, bedspreads and
tablecloths she crochet over the
years by hands, now claimed by
arthritis, were flung in the
marsh, Seymour said.
“It was home. Now my grandson is scattered one place and
my granddaughter is scattered
another place and we are over
here. It’s hard wondering where
they are sleeping at night and if
they are all right. We are trying
to get a trailer where we can all
get back together,” she said.
A relative has promised to
replace some of the family photos
she lost. Seymour was delighted to hear one picture he’ll send
is of her mother who died a few
years ago.
For three weeks, the Seymours
have lived at an American Red
Cross-sponsored shelter at Christus Victor Lutheran Church in
Ocean Springs.
“It ain’t home but they’ve really been good to us here. I couldn’t
ask for a better shelter. They took
care of him,” she said.
The shelter, a one-stop facility,
is tentatively scheduled to close
this month when a contractual
arrangement between the church
and Red Cross ends.
If that happens, evacuees
remaining will relocate to another Red Cross-sponsored shelter at
the Gautier Civic Center.
“The bottom line is we don’t
want to open another shelter,”
said Paige Roberts, executive
director for Southeast Mississippi Chapter of the American Red
Cross.
A certainty, she said, is no resident will be left stranded.
The U.S. 90 shelter is open 24
hours a day, seven days a week.
It opened Sept. 2. At one point, it
housed 160 storm victims, said
Red Cross shelter director Linda
Hayes.
The number has since dwindled to 42.
Some of those residents (evacuees) have been there since opening day.
Hayes said the agency is working to keep residents comfortable and entertained, which
includes regular pizza parties
and bingo nights.
Public transportation also is
available.
The church has opened its
entire facility, minus the sanctuary, for shelter usage.
Every bit of space is utilized.
Sunday school classrooms are
now bedrooms. The kitchen has
become a over-sized food pantry
and feeding site. The foyer is the
File Photo/William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Wayne Guest with the Salvation Army of Elberton, Ga., served hot meals to victims
of Hurricane Katrina on Sept. 3. The Salvation Army of Jackson County is a receipient of a $100,000 grant from United Way.
after a disaster like Katrina,”
Anderson said. “Unfortunately,
this is also the time these critical agencies could receive fewer contributions through the
annual campaign, even though
the demand for their services
has increased tremendously.”
The organization had just
begun its annual fund-raising
campaign before Katrina hit.
The campaign raised about
$1.4 million in 2004.
Anderson said a more lowkey campaign is planned in the
coming months, but an exact
date has not been announced.
He said he expects a smaller
donor pool and urges companies and those individuals not
financially injured by the storm
to step up and give accordingly. “The issue is that a lot of
the donors are hurting,” he
said.
Anderson said Kerr played
a huge role in the agency’s history of success.
“We have a lot of work to do
in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and Elaine brings the
experience and expertise necessary for us to continue serving the community during this
time of crisis,” he said.
Kerr is ready to take back
the reins temporarily until a
permanent director can be
found.
“I’m honored to return to the
United Way and look forward
to working with old friends to
overcome these new challenges,” Kerr said in a release
Thursday. “Now more than
ever the United Way is worthy
of our collective efforts.”
Reporter Donna Harris can
be reached at dharris@ms
pressonline.com or (251) 2195551.
Wilma
From Page 1-A
the air everywhere. Palm trees are falling
down. Signs are in the air and cables are
snapping,” Julio Torres told The Associated
Press by telephone from the Red Cross
office in Cozumel.
“Not even emergency vehicles have been
able to go out on the streets, because the
winds are too strong.”
Officials said damage assessment teams
couldn’t reach Cozumel until late Saturday, at the earliest. But Quintana Roo Gov.
Felix Gonzalez Cantu, whose state includes
Cancun, said the storm had caused “great
destruction.”
The National Hurricane Center in Miami
said Wilma officially made landfall about
3:30 p.m. with the center of the storm’s eye
hitting Cozumel. Seven hours later, the
storm finally reached the Yucatan Peninsula, coming ashore between Playa del Carmen and Puerto Morelos, about 11 miles
from Cozumel.
The wind bent palm trees and the surf
washed away tiki huts on hotel beaches.
Power was cut early Friday to most parts of
Cancun — a standard safety precaution.
Shop windows were shattered, cars were
crushed under fallen trees and pay phones
jutted from waist-deep floodwaters in the
famed hotel zone.
“I never in my life wanted to live through
something like this,” said cook Guadalupe
Santiago, 27, as howling winds shattered
windows and rocked the hotel where she
had taken shelter. “There are no words” to
describe it, she said.
Officials loaded more than 1,000 people
into buses and vans after a downtown cul-
tural center being used as a temporary
shelter suddenly became uninhabitable,
Cancun Red Cross director Ricardo Portugal said without elaborating.
At the same time, Wilma’s outer bands
pounded western Cuba, where the government evacuated nearly 370,000 people.
Forecasters said Wilma could bring more
than 3 feet of rain to parts of Cuba.
Waves of up to 21 feet crashed on the
extreme westernmost tip of Cuba and heavy
rains cut off several small communities.
About 7,000 residents were evacuated from
the coastal fishing village of La Coloma in
Cuba’s southern Pinar del Rio province.
“We thought we’d be spending a lot less
time here,” Maria Elena Torre said at a
shelter set up inside a Cuban boarding
school. “Now we have no idea how long
we’ll be here.”
Hunters
From Page 1-A
sive Category 5 storm. The fourengine, turboprop plane is one
of a pair of WP-3D Orions built
for NOAA in the mid-’70s. Decals
on the outside show it to be a
veteran of 79 tropical storms and
hurricanes, starting with Bonnie in 1976.
Inside, it’s a melange of work
stations, computers, radar
screens and state-of-the-art electronics that record barometric
pressure inside the storm to
determine its strength, wind
speed at different altitudes,
direction and exact location.
“The purpose is not only to fix
the storm but to make repeated
passes and notice trends,” says
Jack Parrish, a veteran NOAA
meteorologist and flight director. “All the clues are out there if
we know how to find them.”
Flying out of their base at
MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla., the Orion set a course
for the Caribbean and Wilma,
which was then plodding north
about 100 miles east of Cozumel,
Mexico. The mission would focus
on mapping the wind field, to
determine how far out from the
eye the hurricane-force and tropical storm-force winds extended.
An hour or so out of Tampa
and flying at 10,000 feet, the Orion starts bumping around as it
runs into the first of Wilma’s outer bands in the strait between
Cuba and Mexico’s Yucatan
Peninsula.
A little while later, Parrish
leans over and points to a spot on
the radar screen.
“There,” he says, “is the eye.”
For the crew and passengers,
crashing into the eye wall means
several minutes of rough and
tumble turbulence from the
white sky and rain beating
against the windows. Then it is
calm, and Strong turns off the
seat-belt sign.
“We’re through the eye wall,
heading toward the center,” he
tells the crew.
Martin Mayeaux is acting
flight director this time, under
Parrish’s tutelage. Once in the
eye, it’s his job to find the spot
where there’s no wind and direct
the pilots to it. From there, data
recording begins in haste as the
plane flies through the eye and
into the storm on the other side.
One thing they know for sure
is that Wilma is massive — hurricane-force winds extended 65
miles from the eye and tropical
storm-force winds out to 200
miles.
registration office for the shelter
and an in-house medical clinic. A
outdoor children’s playground is
shelter to residents pets.
The rear parking lot has
become a drive-though where
storm victims can pickup dry
goods and foodstuff. The church’s
laundry room is also made available to residents as well as
church computers and Internet
access. A nearby business, Biddix
Real Estate — allows free use of
its fax capabilities.
In addition to evacuees, the
shelter provides lodging for Red
Cross workers and Lutheran Disaster Response Team and Christian Appalachian Project Inc. volunteers.
This is Appalachian’s first disaster outside its region, said
Sherry Buresh, assistant director. She said the need was to
great along the Gulf Coast for
the Christian group not to assist.
Students from Concordia College in Morehead, Minn., assisted with food and supply distribution Friday.
“We are not a faith-based
group so normally we don’t partner with the church but this time
we did,” said Hayes.
Hayes was assigned to the
area for three weeks but requested additional time to better
organize the shelter.
“When I got here I decided I
should stay longer because I
wanted some continuity for these
folks,” she said.
Martin Kelly, a Red Cross public information officer, said the
church opened the shelter almost
immediately, providing food and
medicine.
“Then, they called Red Cross
and asked us if we would come
over here and provide sheltering
needs as well. It’s just a great
resource,” he said.
Anthony Propes, 22, of
Louisiana, was grateful for the
haven he found at the shelter.
He moved into a FEMA trailer
Thursday.
Propes visited the clinic Friday to receive medical treatment
on a spider bite wound suffered
on his neck. One of the nurses, he
said, is from Australia and specializes in venous bites.
“She has been helping me out
a lot,” he said.
It’s difficult for Moore, a proud,
independent woman who has
worked most of her life, to
depend on others for shelter and
food. She has handled the biggest
of adversities — Hurricane
Camille and life-threatening illnesses and injuries — until now.
Seymour hopes she has
enough fight left to handle what
could come her family’s way. Her
husband, she said, seems to be in
daze.
“We’ve been married 48 years
this month,” she said. “He wants
to go back home.”
Seymour hosts the special holiday meals each year. She worries such family gatherings will
be missed this year.
The Seymours want to rebuild.
Their home was not insured. She
said the small Social Security
checks they received prevented
them from doing a lot of things.
Reporter Natalie Chambers
can be reached at [email protected] or
(251) 219-5551.
Port
From Page 1-A
and Cuba. The company currently occupies 25,000 square
feet of the building, McAndrews said, adding that part
of the expansion includes the
installation of a blast freezer.
Pat McClain, general manager of the Pascagoula facility,
said the blast freezer will be
installed in the center of the
building. He said work has
already begun in the expansion.
“What poultry producers
were doing was raising the
chicken and then going to
another facility and have the
chicken quick frozen to be
delivered here,” he said.
Having a blast freezer at
the building, he said, saves
the farmers by eliminating the
middle step because the chickens will be frozen at the same
site where they will be
shipped.
“As far as storage capacity, it won’t increase our storage capacity,” McClain said.
“But having the blast freezer
will allow us to handle from
eight trucks to 10 trucks per
day and each truck holds
40,000 pounds (of chicken).
You can do the math and see
what that comes out to per
day.”
That also means Gulf Coast
Cold Storage will be able to
service more ships, McAndrews said, “and that’s where
we make our money (from
fees).”
In other action, the commissioners authorized R.F.
Ederer of Ocean Springs to
sell property it bought in Sunplex Industrial Park to Central Vending Co. of Moss
Point.
Ederer, which makes twine
and nets, bought the property
18 months ago for a potential
expansion under an agreement that gave the port the
right of first refusal if the
property was not developed in
18 months.
Ederer, commission attorney John Hunter said, has not
developed the property and
wanted to sell it to Central
Vending, a food vending
machine company that wants
to consolidate and expand its
Coast operations.
As part of the resolution
authorizing the sale, the commissioners revoked the port’s
right of refusal, allowing the
sale to go through. The port
keeps the right of refusal if
Central Vending does not
develop the property.
Reporter John Surratt can
be reached at [email protected] or (251) 219-5551.
WORKING ON THE RAILROAD
Carisa Anderson/The Mississippi Press
Matt Poole, left, Keith Wilson and James Craddock with Railroad Controls Limited replace cables Thursday afternoon for a railroad crossing west of the CSX railroad bridge in Gautier.
S PORTS
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Contact: JR. Wittner, (251) 219-5553
E-mail address: [email protected]
B
Saturday, october 22, 2005
PREP FOOTBALL WEEK 8
’Goula keeps pace in region with win
By JOSH JOHNSON
The Mississippi Press
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Pascagoula quarterback Cal Mitchell hands off to running back Jonathon Deflanders in the Panthers’ 33-30 win over Biloxi on homecoming. Deflanders continued to have an impressive sophomore season as he gained 216 yards on the ground and scored a touchdown.
St. Martin falls on the
road to D’Iberville
By GAYLON PARKER
The Mississippi Press
D’IBERVILLE — The St. Martin Yellowjackets were held to only 48 yards rushing
and managed only one long scoring play in a
21-6 Region 7-4A loss to the D’Iberville Warriors Friday night. Meanwhile, the Warriors (42, 4-1) chopped through St. Martin’s defense
for 248 rushing yards in the first game
between the old rivals since St. Martin moved
down to Class 4A.
Neither team gained much traction in the
first half as the Warriors were stymied by
penalties and St. Martin (1-5, 1-3) was stopped
cold at the offensive line at nearly every turn.
St. Martin notched only three first downs in
the first half and only 47 total yards.
“This is just the effort we got this week at
practice, this is exactly what we looked like,”
said St. Martin head coach David Gregory,
referring to his team’s poor preparation.
“Sometimes, you have a bad week of practice
and you play a great ballgame and sometimes
you have a great week of practice and have a
bad ballgame.
“But we were just flat.”
One drive was stopped short on Warrior
defensive back Dee McGee’s interception off
Yellowjacket signal caller T.J. Hay. Another
ended after only two plays when linebacker
Wesley Ladner recovered a fumble.
But D’Iberville got on the scoreboard first at
the tail end of the first quarter when senior
running back Austin Holley — who had a
game-high 124 yards rushing — pounded the
ball in from 5-yards out. Jeffery Kovacevich,
who had previously missed a 40-yard field
goal, missed the conversion kick and after a
scoreless second quarter the Warriors went
into the locker room with a 6-0 lead.
D’Iberville had its chances, however. Fiftyyard and 27-yard touchdown runs from Holley
FLORIDA LOTTERY
Cash 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-1-0
Play 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7-1-7-3
Fantasy 5 . . . . . . .1-4-6-19-26
Mega Money (2) . .23-34-40-43
LOUISIANA LOTTERY
Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-1-1
Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7-2-4-4
Cash Quest . . . . .26-34-35-48
were called back because of penalties in the
first quarter and St. Martin senior defensive
back Spencer Wallace broke up a long pass to
end another drive.
Neither team gave much ground in a scoreless third quarter, but both teams were productive in the fourth.
D’Iberville capped off an eight-play, sixminute drive on a 1-yard touchdown from
Holley with 9:27 remaining in the game.
McGee converted the run to extend
D’Iberville’s lead to 14-0.
The ’Jackets responded, however, when senior wideout Michael Payton took a Hay pass 80
yards to paydirt. Payton caught the ball and
sloughed off a would-be tackler, then raced
down the left sideline for the score. Two procedure penalties knocked St. Martin back and
eighth-grader Ryan Lepoma was unable to
convert the kick.
The Warriors came right back, answering St.
Martin’s big play with another time-consuming drive. Senior fullback Avid Harkey, who
had 49 yards rushing in the game, finished off
an 11-play drive with a 2-yard run at the 2:51
mark and St. Martin never challenged again.
“I don’t take anything away from D’Iberville;
they have a heck of a ball team,” Gregory
said. “But we had opportunities and we didn’t
seem like we wanted it.
“We couldn’t capitalize on anything and I
take the blame because we weren’t ready.”
The Warriors totaled 14 first downs, while
St. Martin managed only five the entire game.
D’Iberville has won 10 of the last 11 against
St. Martin, which was coming off a 35-31 win
over Vancleave last Friday.
The Yellowjackets will host Stone County
next week in their homecoming game Friday
at 7 p.m.
Gaylon Parker can be reached at [email protected].
PASCAGOULA — Last week,
Pascagoula found a way to lose in a
disappointing 14-13 setback to George
County. Friday night, however, they
found a way to win.
While the Panthers had the go-ahead
touchdown called back and missed two
extra points last week, Friday night
the Panthers erased a 10-0 first quarter deficit and stopped a last second
Hail Mary attempt to come away with
a 33-30 win over Biloxi at War Memorial Stadium.
“We felt like we should have pulled
away from them, but they fought hard,”
PHS head coach Dan Bland said. “Last
week we gave one away. Tonight, we
thought we could move the football and
that is what helped us comeback.”
The Indians almost completed a
fourth quarter comeback trailing 3317 entering the final period. The Indians fought back getting a 1-yard touchdown run by Damion Fletcher and successful recovered the ensuing onside
kick setting up quarterback Tony
Spears’ 23-yard touchdown pass to
Demetras Brasley with 1:28 left in the
game to make it 33-30.
The Panthers recovered the next
onside kick, but turned it over on
downs at their own 35-yard line with
one second left.
Spears’ toss failed giving the Panthers the win.
Leading the way for Pascagoula was
running Jonathon Deflanders 216
yards as the Panthers gained 345 yards
on the ground and found the end zone
four times.
“I feel like our running game has
been there all year,” Bland said. “I
know Biloxi is disappointed, but we
are proud we came out with a win.”
Despite the loss, Biloxi head coach
David Russell was proud of the way
his team played. The loss was Biloxi’s
fourth game decided by a touchdown or
less.
“We’ve been in every game, but just
can’t seem to turn the corner,” Russell
said. “These kids represent the city of
Biloxi. We’ve all be through a lot, but
we are going to fight until the end.”
Biloxi took their initial drive in for a
score on a 1-yard plunge by Fletcher.
After Nick Russell’s interception of Cal
Mitchell, the Indians added three more
points on a 34-yard field goal by Robert
Gayfor with 2:37 left in the opening
quarter.
The Panthers quickly responded as
they orchestrated an 11-play, 80-yard
drive capped by Deflanders 1-yard
plunge. The Panthers missed the extra
point making it a 10-6 game. On the
next possession, Mitchell then found
Gary Batiste on a 32-yard strike, and
Deflanders added the two-point conversion giving PHS a 14-10 lead.
Both teams scored touchdowns in
the third quarter, as Chris Blythe
scampered 15-yards for a score and
Biloxi got a 3-yard run by Fletcher,
cutting the lead to 20-17.
Pascagoula scored on its first two
possession of the fourth quarter as Vic
Ballard scored on a pair of runs to push
the lead to 33-17.
The Indians then chipped back into
the game as Fletcher scored on another 1-yard run to make it 33-23 after a
missed two-point conversion.
Biloxi then recovered the onside kick
and Spears connected with Brasley on
a touchdown.
Fletcher finished the game with 172
yards and three touchdowns for Biloxi
(0-5, 0-4).
Ballard gained 59 yards for
Pascagoula (2-3, 2-2) including a pair of
scores.
Josh Johnson can be reached at (251)
219-5553 or [email protected]
’Hounds start slow, roll to win
From Staff Reports
LYMAN — Ocean Springs fell behind Harrison Central 14-7 in the opening quarter Friday night on the road, but came back to take a
41-14 win.
Ocean Springs (5-1, 4-0) scored in the first
quarter on Chanse Cooper’s 2-yard run. Mike
Princiotta followed with the extra point.
Ocean Springs tied the game in the second
quarter as T.J. Lawrence scored on a 1-yard
plunge. Princiotta was true again on the extra
point to tie the game.
Kenny Brown put the Greyhounds in front
for good as he scored on a 2-yard run.
Edwin Miskel added to the lead on the next
possession with a 7-yard run, but Princiotta
missed the extra point leaving it a 27-14 game.
Cooper then rolled off a long run as he scored
on a 38-yard run. Princiotta’s PAT make it 3414.
Larry Thompson finished off the scored for
Ocean Springs with a 1-yard plunge.
The Greyhounds rolled up 415 total yards
and Cooper rushed for 121 in the game.
Ocean Springs will host Pasagoula next
week.
Gautier 15, Stone County 10
WIGGINS — Gautier survived a scare on
the road Friday night as quarterback Julius
Blanks found Jimmy Rowster on a fourth-and19 play and running back Issac Cherry finished off the drive with an 8-yard run to keep
the Gators perfect in Region 7-4A play.
Gautier (6-1, 5-0) will have a week off next
week, before hosting Vancleave to end the season.
Forrest County AHS 42, East Central 13
HURLEY — Former East Central running
back Bryant Liddell scored two touchdowns
as Forrest County topped the Hornets on homecoming.
Liddell, who transfered after Hurricane Katrina, scored on runs of 24 and 51-yards and fellow running back Chris Lett scored on runs of
62 and 1-yard to lead Forrest County.
Justin Houston scored a pair of touchdowns
for East Central as he scored on a 1-yard
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
East Central quarterback Jared Law
delivers a pass against Forrest County
Friday night on homecoming.
plunge and scored on a 7-yard run.
Houston gained 62 yards for East Central.
East Central (1-5, 1-3) will travel to Vancleave next week.
Vancleave 68, Pass Christian 0
VANCLEAVE — Vancleave scored 27 first
quarter points as they rolled to a homecoming
win.
Sammy Mitchell scored on runs of 27 and
See ROUNDUP, Page 2-B
Almond tosses three touchdowns as USM tops UAB
■ Golden Eagles take
hold of division lead with
37-28 win
By BOB JOHNSON
The Associated Press
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Dustin
Almond threw three touchdown pass-
es and Southern Missheld off a second-half rally by UAB for a 37-28 victory Friday night.
The Golden Eagles (4-2, 3-1 Conference USA) took a 17-0 lead, but
the Blazers got within 34-28 with
5:51 to play on an 11-yard pass from
Darrell Hackney to Chico Cleveland.
The Golden Eagles put the game
away with a 73-yard drive that was
capped by a 20-yard field goal by Darren McCaleb with 50 seconds to play.
Southern Miss has won four of five
games, while the Blazers dropped
their third straight.
Almond finished 18-of-33 for 247
yards.
Hackney was 29-of-42 for 407 yards
and three touchdowns for UAB (3-4,
1-3). Jhun Cook caught six passes for
127 yards and a touchdown for UAB
and Lance Rhodes had five catches
for 115 yards.
McCaleb also had field goals of 47
and 44 yards for the Golden Eagles.
Larry Thomas ran 28 times for 129
See USM, Page 2-B
2-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
BY THE NUMBERS
Walking onthe
FOOTBALL
wild side
Prep Scores
HOUSTON ASTROS
Thursday’s Results
Mooreville 34, Alcorn Central 23
Walnut 55, Falkner 8
Friday’s Results
Adams Christian 41, Riverfield 21
Amory 47, Nettleton 20
Baldwyn 29, Belmont 8
Biggersville 58, Thrasher 34
Bogue Chitto 18, Salem 14
Briarfield 47, Deer Creek 6
Caledonia 10, Houston 3
Calhoun City 30, Ackerman 8
Callaway 27, Canton 8
Charleston 49, Amanda Elzy 0
Claiborne Aca. 20, Tensas Aca. 9
Clarkdale 42, Kemper Co. 18
Clarksdale 48, DeSoto Central 14
Cleveland 32, Rosa Fort 19
Coahoma AHS 18, Shaw 12
Coffeeville 47, Drew 6
Corinth 21, Booneville 12
D’Iberville 21, St. Martin 6
East Side 20, Winona 14
Ethel 43, Montgomery Co. 6
Forrest Co. AHS 42, East Central 13
Franklin Co. 27, Columbia 18
Gautier 15, Stone Co. 10
Gentry 30, Lanier 16
Grenada 20, Columbus 19
Hebron Christian 38, Macon Central 7
Heidelburg 40, McLaurin 14
Hinds AHS 62, Amite Co. 8
Hollandale Simmons 28, O’Bannon 8
Humphreys Co. 28, Broad Street 14
Jackson Prep 9, Hillcrest Christian 7
Jefferson Co. 54, Raymond 14
Kossuth 35, North Pontotoc 0
Lafayette Co. 42, Northeast Lauderdale
14
Lake 33, Noxupater 0
Lamar 39, MRA 38
Laurel 42, Prentiss 7
Leland 14, Leflore Co. 12
Madison Central 31, Provine 13
Mantachie 21, Hatley 12
Mendenhall 26, McComb 7
Mercy Cross 45, Enterprise 14
Meridian 41, Brandon 12
Moss Point 41, Hancock Co. 0
Natchez 23, Jim Hill 21
New Albany 38, Pontotoc 7
New Hope 19, Neshoba Central 10
Newton Co. 33, Carthage 3
Northwest Rankin 24, Clinton 21
Noxubee Co. 45, Kosciusko 14
Oak Forest 35, Centreville Aca. 7
Ocean Springs 41, Harrison Central 14
Oxford 39, Hernando 21
Pascagoula 33, Biloxi 30
Pearl 42, Yazoo City 21
Perry Central 23, East Marion 20
Picayune 23, Bay St. Lois 20
Poplarville 33, Pearl River Central 20
Porters Chapel 287, Tri-County 7
Puckett 26, St. Aloysius 7
Ray Brooks 24, Weir 12
Ridgeland 45, Greenwood 20
Ripley 49, Saltillo 7
Riverside 48, Marshal 0
Senatobia 25, Independence 6
Smithville 28, Vardaman 25
South Panola 34, Tupelo 17
St. Andrews 27, Wesson 0
Starkville 37, Southaven 7
Starkville Aca. 38, Oak Hill 7
Stringer 23, Cathedral 14
Tishomingo Co. 14, Itawamba AHS 12
Trinity Episcopal 40, Brookhaven Aca. 21
Vancleave 68, Pass Christian 0
Velma Jackson 14, Forest 7
Vicksburg 32, Greenville Wesson 0
Warren Central 16, Murrah 0
Water Valley 26, Byhalia 0
Wayne Aca. 21, Prentiss Christian 0
West Boliver 35, Coahoma Co. 18
West Jones 41, South Jones 7
West Lauderdale 39, Louisville 0
West Point 21, Shannon 6
West Tallahatchie 34, Ruleville 22
Wilkinson Christian 27, Huntington 20
Winston Aca. 12, Canton Aca. 7
National Football League
Glance
All Times CST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
Buffalo
3 3 0 .500
New England 3 3 0 .500
N.Y. Jets
2 4 0 .333
Miami
2 4 0 .333
South
W L T Pct
Indianapolis
6 0 0 1.000
Jacksonville
4 2 0 .667
Tennessee
2 4 0 .333
Houston
0 5 0 .000
North
W L T Pct
Cincinnati
5 1 0 .833
Pittsburgh
3 2 0 .600
Baltimore
2 3 0 .400
Cleveland
2 3 0 .400
West
W L T Pct
Denver
5 1 0 .833
Kansas City
4 2 0 .667
San Diego
3 3 0 .500
Oakland
1 4 0 .200
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
Dallas
4 2 0 .667
Washington
3 2 0 .600
N.Y. Giants
3 2 0 .600
Philadelphia
3 2 0 .600
South
W L T Pct
Tampa Bay
5 1 0 .833
Atlanta
4 2 0 .667
Carolina
4 2 0 .667
New Orleans 2 4 0 .333
North
W L T Pct
Chicago
2 3 0 .400
Detroit
2 3 0 .400
Green Bay
1 4 0 .200
Minnesota
1 4 0 .200
West
W L T Pct
Seattle
4 2 0 .667
St. Louis
2 4 0 .333
Arizona
1 4 0 .200
San Francisco 1 4 0 .200
PF
95
138
78
115
PA
100
164
112
128
PF
151
108
126
54
PA
57
101
157
141
PF
155
122
63
68
PA
84
82
90
90
PF
129
149
176
90
PA
107
132
126
116
PF
137
83
149
122
PA
111
86
114
101
PF
116
148
148
102
PA
72
119
136
173
PF
90
91
124
67
PA
62
96
95
135
PF
168
156
94
79
PA
117
193
134
160
————
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 30, Miami 20
Sunday’s Games
Indianapolis at Houston, noon
New Orleans at St. Louis, noon
Detroit at Cleveland, noon
San Francisco at Washington, noon
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, noon
San Diego at Philadelphia, noon
Green Bay at Minnesota, noon
POS
AVG
HR
RBI
The Chicago White Sox will try to end their 88-year championship drought when they take on
the Houston Astros, who are making their first World Series appearance. The Astros are in position
to make it four consecutive years that a wild card team has won the World Series. The Anaheim
Angels won in 2002, followed by the Florida Marlins in 2003 and the Boston Red Sox last year.
(Regular-season stats)
Craig
Biggio
2B
.264
26
69
Chris
Burke
CF
.248
5
26
PROJECTED ROTATION (W-L • ERA )
RH Roger Clemens
13-8
1.87
LH Andy Pettitte
17-9 2.39
RH Roy Oswalt
20-12 2.94
RH Brandon Backe
10-8 4.76
Scott
Podsednik
POS
LF
AVG
.290
HR
0
RBI
25
Lance
Berkman
LF
.293
24
82
BULLPEN (W-L • ERA • SV)
RH Brad Lidge
4-4
RH Dan Wheeler
2-3
RH Russ Springer
4-4
RH Ezequiel Astacio
3-6
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
Mike
Lamb
1B
.236
12
53
2.33 42
2.21 3
4.73
5.67
Jason
Lane
RF
.267
26
78
Adam
Everett
SS
.248
11
54
RH Chad Qualls
LH Mike Gallo
RH Wandy Rodriguez
Jeff
Bagwell
DH
.250
3
19
6-4
0-1
10-10
Brad
Ausmus
C
.258
3
47
3.28
2.66
5.33
PROJECTED LINEUP
Tadahito
Iguchi
2B
.278
15
71
Jermaine
Dye
RF
.274
31
86
Paul
Konerko
1B
.283
40
100
Carl
Everett
DH
.251
23
87
PROJECTED ROTATION (W-L • ERA )
RH Jose Contreras
15-7 3.61
BULLPEN (W-L • ERA • SV)
RH Bobby Jenks
1-1
2.75
LH Mark Buehrle
RH Jon Garland
RH Freddy Garcia
RH Dustin Hermanson 2-4
RH Cliff Politte
7-1
LH Neal Cotts
4-0
2.04 34
2.00
1.94
16-8
18-10
14-8
TV SPORTWATCH
PROJECTED LINEUP
Morgan
Ensberg
3B
.283
36
101
3.12
3.50
3.87
6
Aaron
Rowand
CF
.270
13
69
A.J.
Pierzynski
C
.257
18
56
Joe
Crede
3B
.252
22
62
LH Damaso Marte
3-4
3.77
RH Luis Vizcaino
RH Orlando Hernandez
6-5
9-9
3.73
5.12
Juan
Uribe
SS
.252
16
71
4
AP
Dallas at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Chicago, 3:15 p.m.
Denver at N.Y. Giants, 3:15 p.m.
Tennessee at Arizona, 3:15 p.m.
Buffalo at Oakland, 3:15 p.m.
Open: New England, Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Carolina
Monday’s Game
N.Y. Jets at Atlanta, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 30
Chicago at Detroit, noon
Arizona at Dallas, noon
Oakland at Tennessee, noon
Cleveland at Houston, noon
Washington at N.Y. Giants, noon
Jacksonville at St. Louis, noon
Green Bay at Cincinnati, noon
Minnesota at Carolina, noon
Miami vs. New Orleans at Baton Rouge,
La., 3:05 p.m.
Kansas City at San Diego, 3:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Denver, 3:15 p.m.
Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 3:15 p.m.
Buffalo at New England, 7:30 p.m.
Open: Indianapolis, N.Y. Jets, Seattle,
Atlanta
Monday, Oct. 31
Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.
Top 25 Schedule
Saturday
No. 1 Southern Cal at Washington, 2:30
p.m.
No. 2 Texas vs. No. 10 Texas Tech, 2:30
p.m.
No. 4 Georgia vs. Arkansas, 11:30 p.m.
No. 5 Alabama vs. No. 17 Tennessee, 2:30
p.m.
No. 6 Miami vs. Georgia Tech, 11 a.m.
No. 7 LSU vs. No. 16 Auburn, 6:45 p.m.
No. 8 UCLA vs. Oregon State, 6 p.m.
No. 9 Notre Dame vs. BYU, 1:30 p.m.
No. 11 Florida State at Duke, 2:30 p.m.
No. 12 Penn State at Illinois, 6 p.m.
No. 14 Ohio State at Indiana, 11 a.m.
No. 15 Oregon at Arizona, 6 p.m.
No. 19 Wisconsin vs. Purdue, 2:30 p.m.
No. 20 West Virginia at South Florida, 6
p.m.
No. 21 TCU at Air Force, 2 p.m.
No. 22 Michigan State vs. Northwestern, 11
a.m.
No. 23 Virginia at North Carolina, 11 a.m.
No. 24 Fresno State at Idaho, 4 p.m.
No. 25 California vs. Washington State,
9:15 p.m.
BASEBALL
Postseason Glance
DIVISION SERIES
(Best-of-5)
American League
Chicago vs. Boston
Tuesday, Oct. 4
Chicago 14, Boston 2
Wednesday, Oct. 5
Chicago 5, Boston 4
Friday, Oct. 7
Chicago 5, Boston 3, Chicago wins series
3-0
Los Angeles vs. New York
Tuesday, Oct. 4
New York 4, Los Angeles 2
Wednesday, Oct. 5
Los Angeles 5, New York 3
Friday, Oct. 7
Los Angeles 11, New York 7
Saturday, Oct. 8
Los Angeles at New York, ppd., rain
Sunday, Oct. 9
New York 3, Los Angeles 2
Monday, Oct. 10
Los Angeles 5, New York 3, Los Angeles
wins series 3-2
National League
St. Louis vs. San Diego
Tuesday, Oct. 4
St. Louis 8, San Diego 5
Thursday, Oct. 6
St. Louis 6, San Diego 2
Saturday, Oct. 8
St. Louis 7, San Diego 4, St. Louis wins
series 3-0
Atlanta vs. Houston
Wednesday, Oct. 5
Houston 10, Atlanta 5
Thursday, Oct. 6
Atlanta 7, Houston 1
Saturday, Oct. 8
Houston 7, Atlanta 3
Sunday, Oct. 9
Houston 7, Atlanta 6, 18 innings, Houston wins series 3-1
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Best-of-7)
American League
Tuesday, Oct. 11
Los Angeles 3, Chicago 2
Wednesday, Oct. 12
Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1
Friday, Oct. 14
Chicago 5, Los Angeles 2
Saturday, Oct. 15
Chicago 8, Los Angeles 2
Sunday, Oct. 16
Chicago 6, Los Angeles 3, Chicago wins
series 4-1
National League
Wednesday, Oct. 12
St. Louis 5, Houston 3
Thursday, Oct. 13
Houston 4, St. Louis 1
Saturday, Oct. 15
Houston 4, St. Louis 3
Sunday, Oct. 16
Houston 2, St. Louis 1
Monday, Oct. 17
St. Louis 5, Houston 4
Wednesday, Oct. 19
Houston 5, St. Louis 1, Houston wins
SPORTS DIGEST
series 4-2
WORLD SERIES
(Best-of-7)
Saturday, Oct. 22
Houston (Clemens 13-8) at Chicago (Contreras 15-7), 7 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 23
Houston (Pettitte 17-9) at Chicago (Buehrle
16-8), 7:10 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 25
Chicago (Garland 18-10) at Houston
(Oswalt 20-12), 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 26
Chicago (Garcia 14-8) at Houston (Backe
10-8), 7:25 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 27
Chicago at Houston, if necessary, 7:25
p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 29
Houston at Chicago, if necessary, 6:55
p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 30
Houston at Chicago, if necessary, 6:55
p.m. EST
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
Glance
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers 4 2 3 11
31 23
New Jersey
4 3 0 8
22 24
N.Y. Islanders 4 3 0 8
22 25
Philadelphia
3 2 0 6
21 17
Pittsburgh
0 3 4 4
20 33
Northeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Ottawa
6 0 0 12
27
11
Buffalo
5 2 0 10
23 21
Montreal
5 2 0 10
21 18
Toronto
4 1 2 10
32 23
Boston
3 5 0 6
25 29
Southeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Florida
5 4 0 10
19 20
Tampa Bay
4 3 2 10
24 21
Carolina
3 2 1 7
24 18
Washington
3 5 0 6
20 36
Atlanta
2 5 0 4
17 28
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Detroit
7 1 0 14
30 17
Nashville
6 0 0 12
23 15
St. Louis
2 4 1 5
20 26
Chicago
2 5 0 4
20 27
Columbus
2 5 0 4
15 20
Northwest Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Vancouver
6 1 1 13
29 23
Minnesota
4 2 1 9
27 14
Calgary
3 4 1 7
20 26
Edmonton
3 4 1 7
19 24
Colorado
2 3 1 5
23 22
Pacific Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles
6 2 0 12
29 21
Dallas
4 3 0 8
20 25
San Jose
3 4 1 7
24 32
Phoenix
3 5 1 7
20 23
Anaheim
2 4 1 5
18 23
Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss or shootout loss.
Thursday’s Games
Buffalo 4, Boston 3
Tampa Bay 6, Atlanta 0
Florida 3, Washington 2
N.Y. Islanders 5, N.Y. Rangers 4
New Jersey 6, Pittsburgh 3
Toronto 5, Carolina 4, OT
Nashville 3, St. Louis 2, SO
Los Angeles 7, Dallas 2
Calgary 3, Edmonton 1
Vancouver 3, Phoenix 2
Friday’s Games
Columbus 4, San Jose 1
Detroit 3, Anaheim 2
Ottawa 4, Tampa Bay 1
Colorado at Edmonton, (n)
Today’s Games
New Jersey at Atlanta, 6 p.m.
Detroit at Columbus, 6 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Boston, 6 p.m.
Carolina at Washington, 6 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 6 p.m.
Philadelphia at Toronto, 6 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Florida, ppd., hurricane
Minnesota at St. Louis, 7 p.m.
Calgary at Dallas, 7 p.m.
San Jose at Nashville, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Phoenix at Anaheim, 2 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 6 p.m.
Calgary at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.
NASCAR
Nextel Cup
Schedule-Winners
(x-non-points race)
Feb. 12 — x-Budweiser Shootout (Jimmie
Johnson)
Feb. 20 — Daytona 500 (Jeff Gordon)
Feb. 27 — Auto Club 500 (Greg Biffle)
March 13 — UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400
(Jimmie Johnson)
March 20 — Golden Corral 500 (Carl
Edwards)
April 3 — Food City 500 (Kevin Harvick)
April 10 — Advance Auto Parts 500 (Jeff
Gordon)
April 17 — Samsung/RadioShack 500
(Greg Biffle)
April 23 — Subway Fresh 500 (Kurt Busch)
May 1 — Aaron’s 499 (Jeff Gordon)
May 7 — Dodge Charger 500 (Greg Biffle)
TODAY’S LISTINGS
Auto Racing
2:30 p.m. — Busch Series: Sam’s Town 250 (TNT)
College Football
11 a.m. — Michigan at Iowa (Ch. 13)
11 a.m. — Ohio State at Indiana (ESPN)
11 a.m. — Northwestern at Michigan State (ESPN2)
11:30 a.m. — Nebraska at Missouri (FSN)
11: 30 a.m. — Arkansas at Georgia (Jefferson-Pilot)
1:30 p.m. — BYU at Notre Dame (Ch. 6, 15)
2 p.m. — Wyoming at Colorado State (ESPN Classic)
2:30 p.m. — Texas Tech at Texas (Ch. 13)
2:30 p.m. — Tennessee at Alabama (Ch. 4, 5)
6 p.m. — Baylor at Oklahoma (FSN)
6 p.m. — Oregon State at UCLA (TBS)
6 p.m. — Penn State at Illinois (ESPN2)
6:45 p.m. — Auburn at LSU (ESPN)
9:15 p.m. — Washington State at California (FSN)
Golf
3 p.m. — PGA Tour: Funai Classic (ESPN)
Major League Baseball
6:30 p.m. — World Series: Game 1: Astros at White
Sox winner (Ch. 10, 25)
May 14 — Chevy American Revolution 400
(Kasey Kahne)
May 21 — x-All-Star Challenege (Mark
Martin)
May 29 — Coca-Cola 600 (Jimmie Johnson)
June 5 — MBNA America 400 (Greg Biffle)
June 12 — Pocono 500 (Carl Edwards)
June 19 — Michigan 400 (Greg Biffle)
June 26 — Dodge/Save Mart 350 (Tony
Stewart)
July 2 — Pepsi 400 (Tony Stewart)
July 10 — USG Sheetrock 400 (Dale Earnhardt, Jr.)
July 17 — New England 300 (Tony Stewart)
July 24 — Pennsylvania 500 (Kurt Busch)
Aug. 7 — Allstate 400 (Tony Stewart)
Aug. 14 — Sirius at The Glen (Tony Stewart)
Aug. 21 — GFS Marketplace 400 (Jeremy
Mayfield)
Aug. 27 — Sharpie 500 (Matt Kenseth)
Sept. 4 — SONY HD 500 (Kyle Busch)
Sept. 10 — Chevy Rock & Roll 400 (Kurt
Busch)
Sept. 18 — Sylvania 300 (Ryan Newman)
Sept. 25 — MBNA 400 (Jimmie Johnson)
Oct. 2 — UAW-Ford 500 (Dale Jarrett)
Oct. 9 — Banquet 400 (Mark Martin)
Oct. 15 — UAW-GM Quality 500 (Jimmie
Johnson)
Oct. 23 — Subway 500, Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 30 — Bass Pro Shops MBNA 400,
Hampton, Ga.
Nov. 6 — Dickies 500, Fort Worth, Texas
Nov. 13 — Checker Auto Parts 500, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 20 — Ford 400, Homestead, Fla.
Subway 500 Lineup
After Friday’s qualifying; race Sunday
At Martinsville Speedway
Martinsville, Va.
Lap length: 0.526 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (20) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 98.083
mph.
2. (21) Ricky Rudd, Ford, 97.992.
3. (2) Rusty Wallace, Dodge, 97.931.
4. (12) Ryan Newman, Dodge, 97.911.
5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Chevrolet, 97.835.
6. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 97.548.
7. (19) Jeremy Mayfield, Dodge, 97.442.
8. (01) Joe Nemechek, Chevrolet, 97.332.
9. (38) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 97.292.
10. (18) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, 97.212.
11. (43) Jeff Green, Dodge, 97.212.
12. (77) Travis Kvapil, Dodge, 97.008.
13. (45) Kyle Petty, Dodge, 96.929.
14. (97) Kurt Busch, Ford, 96.884.
15. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 96.864.
16. (41) Casey Mears, Dodge, 96.849.
17. (25) Brian Vickers, Chevrolet, 96.835.
18. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 96.805.
19. (07) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 96.676.
20. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
96.671.
21. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 96.593.
22. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 96.533.
23. (5) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 96.479.
24. (49) Ken Schrader, Dodge, 96.474.
25. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 96.415.
26. (10) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 96.293.
27. (4) Mike Wallace, Chevrolet, 96.293.
28. (88) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 96.234.
29. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 96.166.
30. (42) Jamie McMurray, Dodge, 96.151.
31. (0) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, 96.122.
32. (40) Sterling Marlin, Dodge, 96.097.
33. (7) Robby Gordon, Chevrolet, 96.034.
34. (9) Kasey Kahne, Dodge, 95.908.
35. (6) Mark Martin, Ford, 95.830.
36. (22) Scott Wimmer, Dodge, 95.743.
37. (09) Bobby Hamilton, Dodge, 95.719.
38. (08) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 95.641.
39. (15) Michael Waltrip, Chevrolet, 95.357.
40. (37) Jimmy Spencer, Dodge, 95.266.
41. (66) Hermie Sadler, Ford, 95.237.
42. (95) Stanton Barrett, Chevrolet, 95.204.
43. (32) Bobby Hamilton Jr., Chevrolet,
95.075.
Failed to Qualify
44. (92) Chad Chaffin, Chevrolet, 95.046.
45. (34) Joey McCarthy, Chevrolet, 93.664.
46. (00) Carl Long, Dodge, 93.465.
47. (75) Mike Garvey, Dodge, 92.746.
48. (89) Morgan Shepherd, Dodge, no
speed.
49. (61) Wayne Anderson, Dodge, no
speed.
NASCAR Nextel Cup
Points Leaders
Through Oct. 15
1. Tony Stewart, 5777
2. Jimmie Johnson, 5777
3. Greg Biffle, 5766
4. Ryan Newman, 5760
5. Mark Martin, 5726
6. Carl Edwards, 5723
7. Rusty Wallace, 5685
8. Jeremy Mayfield, 5662
9. Matt Kenseth, 5653
10. Kurt Busch, 5635
11. Elliott Sadler, 3507
12. Kevin Harvick, 3496
13. Joe Nemechek, 3490
14. Jamie McMurray, 3486
15. Brian Vickers, 3444
16. Dale Jarrett, 3392
17. Jeff Gordon, 3385
18. Jeff Burton, 3227
19. Kyle Busch, 3215
20. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., 3210
GOLF
Funai Classic Scores
Friday
At Walt Disney World Resort Courses
Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
Purse: $4.4 million
Magnolia Course, 7,516 yards, par 72
Palm Course, 6,957 yards, par 72
Partial Second Round
(Note: Round suspended due to inclement
weather; will be complete Saturday morning.)
Tom Pernice Jr.
67-62 — 129 -15
Geoff Ogilvy
64-66 — 130 -14
Brandt Jobe
69-62 — 131 -13
Stephen Leaney
68-64 — 132 -12
Brendan Jones
67-66 — 133 -11
Dudley Hart
68-65 — 133 -11
Charles Howell III 65-68 — 133 -11
Harrison Frazar
67-66 — 133 -11
Nick Price
65-68 — 133 -11
Lucas Glover
68-66 — 134 -10
Pat Perez
64-70 — 134 -10
Bart Bryant
67-67 — 134 -10
Rich Beem
65-69 — 134 -10
Robert Damron
65-69 — 134 -10
Jeff Sluman
69-66 — 135 -9
Peter Lonard
70-65 — 135 -9
Tom Lehman
65-70 — 135 -9
Mark Wilson
67-68 — 135 -9
Brett Wetterich
67-68 — 135 -9
Robert Gamez
67-68 — 135 -9
Craig Barlow
71-64 — 135 -9
Scott Verplank
70-65 — 135 -9
Justin Rose
67-68 — 135 -9
Greg Owen
69-66 — 135 -9
Bo Van Pelt
66-70 — 136 -8
Neal Lancaster
70-66 — 136 -8
Retief Goosen
71-65 — 136 -8
Heath Slocum
67-69 — 136 -8
Joey Snyder III
68-68 — 136 -8
Ryuji Imada
71-65 — 136 -8
John Senden
69-67 — 136 -8
Daniel Chopra
66-71 — 137 -7
J.P. Hayes
68-69 — 137 -7
Tag Ridings
70-67 — 137 -7
Scott McCarron
68-69 — 137 -7
Stuart Appleby
69-68 — 137 -7
Tim Herron
69-68 — 137 -7
Dean Wilson
69-68 — 137 -7
Dennis Paulson
68-70 — 138 -6
Bob Heintz
67-71 — 138 -6
Bob Estes
69-69 — 138 -6
Duffy Waldorf
68-70 — 138 -6
D.A. Points
66-72 — 138 -6
Bob Sowards
70-68 — 138 -6
Cameron Beckman 74-64 — 138 -6
Todd Fischer
68-70 — 138 -6
John Rollins
70-68 — 138 -6
Hank Kuehne
73-65 — 138 -6
Jeff Maggert
68-71 — 139 -5
Wes Short Jr.
69-70 — 139 -5
Tom Gillis
66-73 — 139 -5
Darron Stiles
70-69 — 139 -5
Bob Burns
71-68 — 139 -5
Andrew Magee
72-68 — 140 -4
Charles Warren
70-70 — 140 -4
Omar Uresti
69-71 — 140 -4
Kevin Sutherland 72-68 — 140 -4
Tommy Armour III 66-74 — 140 -4
Vijay Singh
69-71 — 140 -4
Brad Bryant
67-73 — 140 -4
Steve Flesch
75-65 — 140 -4
Tom Byrum
70-70 — 140 -4
Brett Quigley
67-73 — 140 -4
Steve Allan
69-72 — 141 -3
Briny Baird
71-70 — 141 -3
Michael Long
72-69 — 141 -3
Woody Austin
71-70 — 141 -3
Chris DiMarco
73-68 — 141 -3
Peter Jacobsen
67-74 — 141 -3
Mark O’Meara
74-67 — 141 -3
D.J. Brigman
73-68 — 141 -3
Brian Bateman
73-68 — 141 -3
Brian Gay
68-74 — 142 -2
Rory Sabbatini
68-74 — 142 -2
David Hearn
69-73 — 142 -2
Franklin Langham 71-71 — 142 -2
Doug Barron
73-69 — 142 -2
Kevin Stadler
72-70 — 142 -2
Olin Browne
69-73 — 142 -2
Matt Gogel
73-70 — 143 -1
D.J. Trahan
70-73 — 143 -1
Skip Kendall
73-70 — 143 -1
Chris Anderson
73-70 — 143 -1
Bob Tway
73-70 — 143 -1
Hunter Mahan
68-76 — 144 E
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Named Leo Mazzone pitching coach and agreed to terms
with him on a three-year contract.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES—Acquired RHP Moises Hernandez from Baltimore as compensation for signing pitching coach Leo Mazzone.
Benson says
there is no
San Antonio plan
From Wire Reports
NEW ORLEANS — New Orleans Saints
owner Tom Benson said he hasn’t made any
plans to move the NFL team to San Antonio.
Benson’s statement Friday came two days
after New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said talk
of moving the Saints in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina was a shameful act of disrespect to
fans who supported the franchise for nearly
four decades.
But Benson said he wanted to “make it clear
that no decisions have been made regarding
our future plans,” and added that none would
be made until the 2005 season is over.
“There are many factors that will affect the
future location of our team,” Benson said. “That
is also true of many other New Orleans-based
companies that are faced with deciding their
future homes.”
On Oct. 30, the Saints will play the first of
four scheduled home games in Louisiana — all
in LSU’s Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge —
because of damage to the Louisiana Superdome.
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco will be there
and said she intends to meet with NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who also plans to
attend.
Chiefs 30, Dolphins 20
MIAMI — The Kansas City Chiefs made a
quick trip worth the trouble.
With Hurricane Wilma scrambling the schedule, the Chiefs arrived less than six hours
before kickoff for a rare Friday night game,
then shook off any flight fatigue to beat the
Miami Dolphins 30-20.
Trent Green threw for 289 yards against Miami’s injury-depleted secondary, and the Chiefs
totaled a season-high 462 yards while controlling the ball for nearly 42 minutes. Lawrence
Tynes’ three field goals included a 51- and 52yarder, the two longest kicks of his career.
Fans were jeering by Miami’s second series.
Gus Frerotte misfired on two potential touchdown passes and went 11-for-29, Ricky
Williams lost 1 yard in six carries and the
defense gave up four scoring drives of eight
plays or more.
Kansas City’s Larry Johnson rushed for 93
yards, and Priest Holmes ran for 90 and two
scores.
Rookie Ronnie Brown carried eight times for
95 yards, including a 65-yard touchdown on
the first play of the second half that briefly
reduced Miami’s deficit to 14-13. Kansas City
answered with a TD two plays later on a 35yard run by Holmes.
Another big gain got the Chiefs started.
Green, who finished 20 for 34, hit Chris Horn
for 50 yards on the first series to set up a 5yard touchdown run by Holmes. A 29-yard pass
from Green to Marc Boerigter led to Johnson’s
2-yard touchdown run for a 14-3 lead.
HOCKEY
Senators 4, Lightning 1
TAMPA, Fla. — Daniel Alfredsson scored a
short-handed goal to break a tie and Ottawa
remained the Eastern Conference’s only
unbeaten team with a 4-1 victory over Tampa
Bay on Friday night.
Blue Jackets 4, Sharks 1
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Jason Chimera scored
twice and Adam Foote added his first goal with
Columbus to lead the Blue Jackets.
David Vyborny also scored for Columbus,
while Marc Denis made 24 saves.
Red Wings 3, Mighty Ducks 2
DETROIT — Pavel Datsyuk, Robert Lang
and Mikael Samuelsson scored power-play
goals for Detroit.
MLS PLAYOFFS
D.C. United 0, Fire 0
CHICAGO — D.C. United, playing without
suspended forward Freddy Adu, played to a 00 draw against the Chicago Fire on Friday
night in the opening match of the MLS playoffs.
“It was determined this afternoon that Freddy
would be suspended for tonight’s game,” team
spokesman Doug Hicks said. “Beyond that it’s
an internal decision. It was Coach Nowak’s
decision and it was supported by the club.”
The 16-year-old phenom, who had four goals
and six assists this season, was missed by
United, who are bidding for a fifth MLS cup
title.
USM
Stewart wins Subway 500 poll Roundup
From Page 1-B
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
— Tony Stewart was the
fastest among 11 drivers who
broke the track qualifying
record for Martinsville Speedway, turning a lap at 98.083
mph under an overcast sky
Friday to win the pole position for Sunday’s Subway 500.
Stewart’s lap easily eclipsed
the mark of 97.043 mph set
by Ryan Newman in this race
a year ago, and eased Virginia
native Ricky Rudd to the outside of the first row.
Stewart took a cue from
Rudd when he qualified faster
than he practiced.
“We almost picked up the
same amount of time that he
did,” he said.
Stewart also gained what
he hopes will be an advantage
by spending the first hour of
practice working on his race
setup. He said the decision
was prompted by questions
yards for Southern Miss,
which held UAB to 80 yards
on the ground.
Southern Miss went up 170 in the first quarter thanks
partly to special teams mistakes by the Blazers.
The Golden Eagles started
their second possession on the
UAB 35 after a 23-yard punt
return by Chris Johnson. The
Blazers’ defense held and
forced a Southern Miss punt,
b u t a n o f f s id e s pen alty
against UAB gave the Golden
Eagles the first down and set
up McCaleb’s 47-yard field
goal.
The Golden Eagles expanded the lead to 10-0 on their
next possession on a 25-yard
pass from Almond to Damion
Carter. The six-play, 74-yard
drive was kept alive because
of a roughing the kicker
penalty after the Blazers had
37
28
forced the Golden Eagles to
punt.
Josh Barnes scored on a 34yard run for Southern Miss
late in the first quarter.
The Blazers did not get a
first down until the second
quarter and did not move into
Southern Miss territory until
the final five minutes of the
first half, when UAB drove
89 yards in 18 plays. Rhodes
got the Blazers on the scoreboar d w ith 24 second s
remaining in the half, catching a 17-yard pass from Hackney.
about the weather on Saturday, when the Nextel Cup
drivers have two practice sessions.
Rudd, making what could
be his final start at Martinsville, circled the .526-mile
track at 97.992 mph.
“It’s almost been sort of an
uneventful day,” Rudd said.
“We didn’t have to change a
whole lot of stuff. The car was
ready off the truck.”
The pole is the 10th of Stewart’s career and third this season. He’ll start the race in a
tie with Jimmie Johnson atop
the standings in the Chase for
the championship with five
races remaining. Johnson will
start sixth after a lap at
97.548 mph.
Rusty Wallace, seventh in
the points standings, will start
third in search of his eighth
career victory here. He leads
active drivers at Martinsville.
From Page 1-B
47-yards on the Bulldogs’ first
two possessions, and Jarod Ely
and Hugh Humphrey scored
on runs of 32 and 43-yards
respectively in a 68-0 win.
Reagan Williams made it a
34-0 game with 3-yard run in
the second quarter and
Humphrey hooked up with
Mark McKinley on a 47-yard
touchdown to make it a 41-0
game at halftime.
Nick Dubuisson scored on a
45-yard touchdown in the third
quarter and Tyler Sullivan
scored on runs of 2 and 6-yards
to make it 61-0.
Anthonly Delgaicco finished
off the scoring with a 44-yard
touchdown run.
Shane Scheiman hit on 8-of10 extra points.
Vancleave (2-5, 1-3) will host
Vancleave next week.
Moss Point 41, Hancock 0
KILN — Moss Point pitched
its second straight shutout Friday night as they picked up a
big win on the road.
The Tigers moved to 4-3
overall and 3-1 in the Region 45A standings.
Moss Point will host Gulfport in a key region game next
week.
No scoring details were
available.
MOBILE GREYHOUND PARK
MATINEE POST TIME 1:00 MON., WED. & SAT.
EVENING POST TIME 7:30 MON. – SAT.
1-800-272-5000
Min. age 18
COLLEGE GAME DAY
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
3-B
saturday, october 22, 2005
’Dogs, Rebs
try to take
step in right
direction
Ole Miss and Mississippi
State enter the home stretch
off their schedules this week
with big games at home.
The Rebels are coming off a
dominating performance
against No. 5 Alabama, a
game in which they won
everything but the final score.
Mississippi State had a
week off to prepare for homecoming, and for quarterback
Omarr Conner to get healthy
after getting banged up two
weeks ago in a road loss to
Kentucky.
The reason this week is key
for both Ole Miss and Mississippi State, is they are still
fighting for bowl eligibility.
Ole Miss has a tougher road
than State, but both need wins
today if
they want
to extend
their season.
Kentucky visits Oxford
this week
for the
first time
since 2000 JR.
when the Wittner
Rebels
topped the Wildcats 35-17.
Ole Miss has won five of the
last six in the series with the
Wildcats lone win coming in
1993.
Rebels running back Mico
McSwain is coming into his
own and should fare well
against the SEC’s worst team
in rushing defense.
The Rebels schedule ends
with a trip to Auburn and a
home game against LSU.
They will need to pull an
upset and top Arkansas at
home and State on the road to
reach six wins.
Ole Miss 38, Kentucky 14.
Mississippi State enters the
second half of its schedule in
position to reach a bowl game
for the first time since the
memorable Independence
Bowl in 2000.
The Bulldogs are facing
Houston today at 1:30 p.m. for
a homecoming contest with a
lot at stake.
The toughest part of the Bulldogs’ schedule is behind them
and they hold a 2-4 record
heading into today’s non-conference contest. The Bulldogs need
to win four of the last five to get
bowl eligible and that may not
be out of the question.
After facing Houston, MSU
goes on the road to battle Kentucky, faces Alabama at home,
travel to Arkansas and host
Ole Miss in the annual Egg
Bowl showdown.
The bye week came at the
right time for State as running
back Jerrious Norwood and
quarterback Omarr Conner
were banged up in a road loss
to Florida.
The Bulldogs face a tough
Houston team which won the
matchup last season 42-35 in
Houston. Houston also holds
an all-time advantage over the
Bulldogs.
Mississippi State 31,
Houston 28
JR. Wittner can be reached
at (251) 219-5553 or
[email protected].
Ole Miss looking to
rebound after tough loss
By JOEDY McCREARY
The Associated Press
Ole Miss has struggled to score.
Kentucky can’t stop most teams from
scoring.
Both the Rebels and the Wildcats
are winless in Southeastern Conference play, and those troublesome
units are big reasons why.
“This team has found ways to not
play good for 60 minutes,” Kentucky
coach Rich Brooks said. “We have
done extremely well for periods of
time during games. ... Then we give
up costly turnovers and no longer
look like a real football team.”
Entering Saturday’s game in
Oxford,
Ole Miss
(2-4, 0-3)
hopes to
extract
the posiKentucky (1-4, 0-2) at Ole
tives and WHO:
Miss (2-4, 0-3)
build
WHEN: Today, 1 p.m.
WHERE: Vaught-Hemingway Stasome
dium, Oxford
momentum
from a closer-than-expected loss to a
nationally ranked rival while Kentucky hopes it found the answers during some extended time off.
Fifth-ranked Alabama beat the
Rebels 13-10 when a Crimson Tide
field goal as time expired spoiled the
team’s best game under new coach
Ed Orgeron. Ole Miss moved the ball
reasonably well, driving deep into
Tide territory five times but coming
away with only a touchdown and a
field goal.
For the season, Ole Miss is next-tolast in the SEC in scoring with 15.7
points per game, but that glimmer
of success against mighty Alabama is
giving the offense hope.
“Coach was the one who called the
right plays and put us in the right
position to make plays, and everybody just executed,” receiver Mario
Hill said. “It was just like we were
clicking on all cylinders. That’s how
it’s got to be.”
AP
Ole Miss wide receiver Taye Biddle fights off Alabama cornerback
Simeon Castille in the Rebels 13-10 last-second loss to Alabama
last week. Ole Miss is hoping to take the good things from that loss
into the rest of the season.
The Wildcats (1-4, 0-2) played well
against a nationally ranked rival,
too, but came away with little to show
for it.
Kentucky hung with then-No. 14
Louisville before losing 31-24, but it’s
been downhill since a win over Division I-AA Idaho State — losing to
Indiana, Florida and South Carolina by a combined 131-58.
“They have had some unfortunate
miscues during the season, like everybody else has,” Orgeron said of the
Wildcats.
Kentucky has the league’s worst
defense in virtually every meaningful
statistical category, including yards
and points allowed. The Wildcats are
last against both the run and the
pass.
But at least they’ve had some extra
time to figure out what’s not working
— their two weekends off sandwiched
the 44-16 loss to the Gamecocks.
“It feels kind of weird because you
want to come and play as many
games as possible and pick up wins,”
Wildcats linebacker Braxton Kelley
said.
Both teams can boast of having talented, young running backs. Kentucky sophomore Rafael Little is
fourth in the SEC in rushing with a
92-yard average, and Ole Miss redshirt freshman Mico McSwain is
eighth, averaging 76.8 yards.
A possible wild-card in the Rebels’
backfield is Robert Lane, the bullish
backup quarterback who practiced
at fullback after starter Jason Cook
broke his arm against Alabama.
“We’ve seen he can handle it,” Hill
said. “So, put the ball in his hands
and see if he can make plays.”
MSU hosting tough homecoming opponent
STARKVILLE (AP) — Mississippi kick our legs up, start screaming and
State’s toughest games are in the crying and ask someone to feel sorry
past. But that doesn’t make the Bull- for us,” Houston coach Art Briles
said. “What we are going to do is get
dogs’ stretch run any easier.
After losing three straight to up, get our butt to work, be tougher
nationally ranked Georgia, LSU and and better and learn from it. That’s
Florida, the Bulldogs (2-4) hope to what we are doing. We are learning
finish the season strong beginning from it.”
Mississippi State coach Sylvester
Saturday against Houston.
“It made us more tough, more Croom expects Houston to throw the
strong,” quarterback Omarr Conner football, but also says the run game
said. “Those three games right there, is dangerous. Quarterback Kevin
they’re three of the top teams in the Kolb threw for a season-high 386
nation. ... We played the tough part. yards in the Memphis loss and is CNow we’ve just got to make some USA’s third-leading passer, while
Ryan Gilbert averages
plays.”
95.5 yards rushing.
Those teams, plus
“(Kolb) is in comNo. 17 Auburn, beat
plete control out there
Mississippi State by a
and he has some nice
combined 123-26 and
are responsible for the WHO: Houston (3-3) at Mississip- weapons,” Croom
pi State (2-4)
said. “The thing that
Bulldogs’ four losses.
WHERE: Davis-Wade Stadium,
gets him overlooked
Yet a winning record Starkville
sometimes is the fact
remains a possibility WHEN: Today, 1:30 p.m.
that he has some pretbecause only one team
remaining on the schedule, No. 5 ty good sized running backs.”
Houston has allowed a 100-yard
Alabama, is above .500.
Houston (3-3) is in third place in rusher in three of its last four games,
Conference USA’s West Division after including two losses, and gives up
171 yards rushing per game. That
a 35-20 loss to Memphis.
The Cougars also have a shot at a could mean success for preseason
winning season and their second all-SEC running back Jerious Norbowl berth in three years — like the wood, who rushed for 111 yards in a
Bulldogs, only one of Houston’s five 35-9 loss to Florida.
“It will be a good test for us from
remaining opponents, Southern Mississippi, has a record better than the stance of mental toughness and
physical ability,” Briles said of the
.500.
“It ain’t like we’re going to roll over, Bulldogs.
The Tide is a 3 1/2-point favorite
to send a Bryant-Denny Stadium
crowd home happy. They will.
Alabama 24-17.
Arkansas (plus 18 1/2) at No. 4
Georgia: The Razorbacks don’t have
en ou g h firep ower t o end D.J .
Shockley’s stretch of unbeaten success as Georgia’s quarterback.
Georgia 31-14.
No. 16 Auburn (plus 6 1/2) at No.
7 LSU: Auburn has had only one
road game so far, and it was a
struggle to dispose of Arkansas last
weekend. LSU 28-21.
Kentucky (plus 10 1/2) at Ole
Jackson State
hoping to end
slide against
SWAC leaders
By The Associated Press
AP
MSU quarterback Omarr Conner
sets to throw a pass against Florida.
Conner is ready to go after suffering
an injury against the Gators two
weeks ago.
Tide/Vols, LSU/Auburn highlight conference schedule
ATLANTA (AP) — In Tuscaloosa
and Knoxville, the Fall Classic has
n o th ing t o d o wit h baseball’s
biggest event — the World Series.
Those fans are more interested in
the annual Alabama-Tennessee
football game — an annual clash of
two of the most successful teams in
Southeastern Conference history
who usually have the World Series
to contend with when they meet
each year.
Alabama leads the series 43-37-7
despite having lost nine of the last
10 meetings.
This time should be different.
SMALL SCHOOLS
Miss: It may be hard for the Rebels
to get serious about the Wildcats
after fighting unbeaten Alabama
to the wire last week. Kentucky is
having all kinds of problems, and
that won’t change in Oxford. Ole
Miss 28-10.
Houston (plus 1) at Mississippi
State: Being only one notch above
t he b ot t om on t he SE C p ass
defense list may have Houston’s
Kevin Kolb chomping at the bit to
test the MSU secondary. Kolb
already has eight 300-yard pass
days. He shouldn’t expect an easy
time against the Bulldogs. Even
though they are 11th in defending
the pass, they only give up 134
yards a game. Mississippi State 1714.
Vanderbilt (plus 8) at South Carolina: Vandy still needs two victories to qualify for a bowl game,
something that will be almost
impossible if the ’Dores don’t take
care of the Gamecocks. They still
have games at Florida and Tennessee and a home game with Kentucky — the only one in which
Vandy will be favored. It’s wait
until next year — again. South
Carolina 24-17.
Two losses, two victories, then
two more defeats — it’s been a
streaky season for Jackson State.
The Tigers hope that pattern continues this week.
Jackson State (2-4, 3-3 Southwestern Athletic Conference) looks
to snap a two-game slide this week
when it plays host to West Division leader Grambling State (4-1,
4-0).
The Tigers opened the season by
losing two straight. Then, they won
two in a row — and then promptly
lost a pair of games to East Division leader Alabama State and
West second-place team Southern
U.
In other SWAC games involving
Mississippi teams, Alcorn State is
at Southern and Mississippi Valley
State is home against Texas Southern.
In games involving Mississippi’s
smaller colleges, Delta State is
home against Harding, Millsaps is
at DePauw, Mississippi College is
home against Texas Lutheran and
Belhaven is at Lambuth.
Alcorn State (3-3, 2-2) brings the
SWAC’s best rushing offense into
its game against Southern (2-3, 23), which has the league’s leastproductive offense.
For Alcorn, Keldrick Williams
has the most yards rushing in the
SWAC and is second in the conference with an 89.1-yard average.
Southern snapped a two-game
losing streak last week by beating
Jackson State 20-14. The series
between Alcorn and Southern is
26-26-3.
Mississippi Valley State (3-3, 2-3)
enters its game against struggling
Texas Southern (1-4, 1-3) after a
62-0 rout of NAIA member Paul
Quinn which snapped a threegame losing streak.
It could shape up as a contrast in
styles — the Delta Devils have the
SWAC’s third-best passing offense,
while Texas Southern has the
league’s leading rusher, Brent Wilson, who averages 90.4 yards.
Texas Southern has lost two
straight since an upset of Alabama
A&M.
Delta State vs. Harding, 6 p.m.
The Statesmen (4-4, 3-3 Gulf
South) look to bounce back from a
41-31 loss at Central Arkansas in
which Scott Eyster passed for 343
yards and two touchdowns.
Delta State leads the conference
in total offense, averaging 406.9
yards. Harding (4-4, 2-4) beat
Arkansas-Monticello 32-14 last
week to snap a three-game losing
streak.
Millsaps at DePauw, 1:30 p.m.
The Majors (1-4, 0-1 Southern
Collegiate Athletic Conference) are
coming off a 35-21 loss to RoseHulman in which Billy Bob Orsagh
threw for 298 yards and two touchdowns.
Freshman Matt Foisy fumbled
on the Rose-Hulman 1-yard line,
spoiling what would have been a
98-yard touchdown reception.
First-place DePauw (4-1, 2-0) has
the stingiest defense in the conference, allowing just 245 yards
and 11 points per game.
Mississippi College vs.
Texas Lutheran, 2 p.m.
The Choctaws (1-4, 1-4 American Southwest) are hoping to keep
their momentum going after they
snapped a 12-game losing streak
and earned their first victory under
new coach Norman Joseph by beating Austin College 35-19.
Texas Lutheran (3-3, 3-2) held
off a late rally in a 44-41 win over
Louisiana College in which Lutheran led 44-14 through three quarters before allowing 27 points in
the fourth.
Belhaven at Lambuth, 1:30 p.m.
The Blazers (2-4, 1-3 Mid-South)
bring the conference’s top passing
offense into a game against division leader Lambuth (3-4, 1-0) and
one of its stingiest pass defenses.
Belhaven, which throws for 335
yards per game, is coming off a 3128 loss to Bethel.
Lambuth safety Bobby Antee is
the Mid-South defensive player of
the week after intercepting two
passes in a 27-24 win over Cumberland, Tenn.
4-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
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105
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Responsibilities include
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020
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Found
payroll. Exp with
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FOUND: Small Pure
Breed Dog. Vic. of Ingalls Word a must. Fax resume
to 251-631-3961
& Market. 990-6072
PART-TIME Full Charge
Bookkeeper needed for
church organization. Must
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Non-profit organizations.
Please send resume to
LOST: White Jack Russell The Refuge; P. O. Box
w/blue spots. Vic. of
1019; Gautier, MS 39553■
Grand Bay. Missing
since Monday. Son’s pet.
Answers to Sonny.
SE THE
Reward! (251)422-1379
G
U
LOST AMERICAN
Bulldog, color Brindle,
cropped ears & tail.
Gentle, answers to the
name of Ziggy. Owner
Gulf Coast Fence Co.
Reward $200
769-2677 or 769-2688
FOUND: Pet Tropical
Bird. Vic. Seacliffe Subd.,
Gautier. 497-5912 aft 5pm
LOST- DOG, MALE
Chihuahua /Poodle mix,
black/white, Moss Point
Area. 228-474-1332
050
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ED'S PAINTING & home
maintenance. General
contractor licensed &
insured. 228-497-2266.
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If your merchandise doesn’t sell in 7 days, just call us
and we will run it for another 2 weeks - FREE. Ads must
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RESS
105
Accounting
Bookkeeping
107
Clerical
Office
CFO/Controller
Town of Dauphin Island is
accepting applications for
a full time Public Safety
Dispatcher. Requirements
include: Possess a valid
drivers license, high school
diploma or GED, good verbal and written communiClerical
cation skills, computer
experience helpful. Must
Office
be able to work weekend
OFFICE ASST./RUNNER: and shift work. PreDowntown firm has imme- employment physical and
diate opening for organized drug screen required.
, dependable person. F/T
position. Reliable auto
Applications may be
w/insurance required. Fax obtained at Town Hall,
resume to: 251-694-7930
Monday-Friday 8:00 AM 4:00 PM or the Dauphin
Daphne United Methodist
Island Police Department,
Church seeks FT
Secretary. Must be people Open 24 hours and should
be turned in or mailed to:
oriented w/exc computer
Town Clerk, 1011 Bienville
skills. Mail resume: PO
Blvd.,
Dauphin Island, AL
Box 609, Daphne, AL 36526
36528 through October 27,
SECRETARY FOR
2005 at 12:00 Noon.
FAIRHOPE LAW FIRM, 5
years Exp required, Word THE TO
OWN OF DAUPHIN
perfect Knowledgeable,
ISLAND IS AN EQUAL
Send Resume to: Atttn:
OPPORTUNITY
Personnel P.O. Box 1031,
EMPLOYER
Fairhope, AL 36533
■ Full Time Position
Law office-computer, typ- available for an office
ing, phone skills required. assistant. Applicant must
Resumes to: The Mobile
have at least 18 months
Register PO Box #2488-408, experience in a profesMobile, AL 36630
sional office setting,
SECRETARY
knowledge of Microsoft
West Mobile area. to han- excel/works and word.
dle commercial sales con- Experience with
tacts. Experience & refer- Timberline accounting
ences req’d. Fax resume to programs a plus. Please
251-633-0092
fax
■ Receptionist/ Secretary resumes to: 228-762-2101
for small Pascagoula law or e-mail to;
firm. Looking for someone [email protected]
with good personality &
phone skills. Must work
ASSISTANT
well with others. Mail
BUSINESS
resume to The Mississippi
Press, PO BOX 849, Attn
OFFICE
Box 776A, Pascagoula MS
MANAGER
39568
$100K + DOE. Prefer MPA or
CPA
for
Metal
Bldg.
Component Mfg. in Gulfport,
MS. Fax resumes to Goldin
228-896-4653
107
Part Time Secretary
Recept. needed for 31/2 day
work week.
Word, Excel, good written/
verbal skills. Call for appt
9-4 Mon-Thur 251-432-1749
Pascagoula Law Firm
seeks F/T Receptionist.
Computer skills & exp. a
plus. Send resume to
Office Mgr., P.O. Box
1407, Pascagoula, MS
39568 ■
OFFICE ASSISTANT
Must be a mature, reliable,
self-motivated individual
with computer experience
including Microsoft Word
and Excel. Will be responsible for multi-line phone excellent communications
skills a must! Normal business hours 8am - 4:30pm
M-F. Send resume with
salary requirements to:
Office Assistant, 1613
University Blvd. S.,
Mobile, AL 36609
CLERK
File, answer phones, light
duties. $8/hr. Military exp
desired. Fax resume: 251-6258817
Legal Secretary
Needed Immediately. 5 years
litigation experience a must.
65 wpm min., dictaphone.
Salary DOE. Only experienced need apply. Send
resume to: P. O. Box 851782,
Mobile, AL 36685
107
Clerical
Office
113
■ LEASING AGENT
needed for Pascagoula
Apt Complex. Fax
resume to 228-497-5010
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DriverTrucking
■ EXP. DUMP TRUCK
Driver Class A or B CDL
& Equipment Operator
needed. 8400 Jim Ramsey
Rd., Vancleave. 826-3200
113
DriverTrucking
113
DriverTrucking
DHL DRIVERS
Needed. Apply in person 2117
Michigan Av, Mobile. Must
bring
copy of MVR. Criminal background & drug screen
required.
G
■■■■
109
Processing
PHP/ASP.net positions now
available. Great Benefits!
Entry to Senior level avail.
Email resume to [email protected]
251-344-8934 x102
111
Domestic
Mature Person needed to
help Elderly Lady. P/T.
weekends. Non-smoker.
Ocean Springs/Vancleave
area. 228-826-2206■
Company?
* That is locally owned and
operates in the southeast
* That has few overnight runs
and you are home most
weekends.
* That has plenty of freight
with
quick settlements
* That pays fuel and safe
operations incentives
* Sign on bonus
CALL 1-800-626-5682
ASK FOR RAYMOND
113
Patricia A. Hudson-Arthur
WANT ADS
DriverTrucking
LAFARGE has immed.
openings
in Mobile and Gulf Shores
for
CLASS A or B
OFFICE MANAGER
COMMERCIAL DRIVERS
COX PHARMACY
for auto body shop. Good
BUS DRIVERS
Ready Mix experience a
DELIVERY DRIVERS
computer skills. Salary
FT/PT Avail. Must have
plus.
NEEDED
DOE.
exp. CDL w/ pass. endorse. Now Hiring Motor Coach
Must have good work
Apply in Person at:
Operators, P/T. CDL w/P.
251-343-2300
Clean
record clean MVR. We
825 Executive Park Dr.
Work available weekdays
MVR. 1153 N. Schillinger
offer excellent
DESK CLERK NEEDED
and
Rd.
starting pay & a comprePlease Apply in Person at IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
weekends. Retirees welhensive
6427 Airport Blvd. Mobile FOR DRIVERS &
COAST TRANSIT
come.
benefit package. Apply in
HELPERS TO
Monday-Friday b/t 9-5
AUTHORITY
Call for appt. 251-476-8687
person
FUEL GENERATORS
Administrative FOR CELL PHONE TOW- Full/Part Time Drivers:
18845 Scollard Ave, Gulf
Shores,
Drivers
ERS,
SOUTH
FLORIDA.
Permanent positions
Assistant
IS SEEKING A COMPANY AL 251-653-5327 or 968-3712
Trucks leaving Saturday
Competitive pay &
Positions available with local
DRIVER/HOME NIGHTLY 6781 Rester Rd. Theodore
AM October 22. Drivers
Benefits. Training
accounting firm in Mobile
Experienced driver with a
must have current MVR
and Daphne. Full time posiavailable. Apply
good
with
them.
tion with some seasonal over9:00a - 4:00p. MON-FRI.
MVR. Competitive salary
Call 251-866-2437
time and great benefits.
333 Debuys Rd.,
Benefits
package.
E.O.E.
Experience with MS Office
WAREHOUSE/DELIVERY Gulfport, MS 39507
New Line Transport
and multi-line phones pre228-896-8080
Ext
206.
CLASS
A
CDL
Required.
ferred. Send resume to: PO
1-877-447-4450
Fax resume/qualifications EEO/AAP
Box 2483, Daphne, AL 36526
to 251-476-1296
OPERATORS & DRIor fax to 251-621-9608
ATTN: OTR DRIVERS
A&M Portables VERS Class A or B CDL.
YMCA is now hiring CDL
VAN & FLATBED
★ ★ WANTED! ★ ★
Dump exp. needed.
$1000 SIGN ON BONUS
TITLE INS. CO. Seeking DRIVER for after school
Inc.
Apply in person: 1711
FOR THE FIRST SIX DRIEXPERIENCED Escrow program. Must be 21 or
Now Hiring Local Route
Prospect Ave.,
older
w/good
driving
VERS
Closing Agent. Send
Driver, CDL Preferred.
Pascagoula, MS 228-762pply at 951
record. Ap
* up to .33 cpm * great
resume:
Health
Downtowner
Blvd,
Monbenefits
(BCBS/401K)
*
late
Insurance & Benefits Avail. 0754 ■
PO Box 6525, Mobile, AL
Fri, 2-4pm.
model tractors * bonus $
Health card required. We are
36660
a Drug Free Co. 251-679-0933
for safety & miles * 2yrs
Evergreen
Owner Operators OTR exp reqd
ComputerTransportation
Wright Transportation
Do You Want Good Work
OTR & LOCAL DRIVERS
Data
From a Good Container
1-800-342-4598
Local Lumber Yard seeking Class A CDL Driver.
Experience preferred.
Contact Rolo at 251-9473127, Mon-Fri, 7-4.
DRIVER w/2 yrs exp.
Class A w/HazMat &
Tanker endorsement. Clean
Live-in Caregiver needed.
MVR. Local Hauling.
Knowledge of
Valid DL. Room, board &
BC/BS. 8am-5pm 251-653Medicare/Medicaid Billing.
salary. Drug test, bkground
4374
Fax resume to: 251-479-0551 ck, refs req. No smoking.
Overdimensional Drivers
251-626-9182.
or Apply in person at:
Needed. Exp Necessary.
KINDRED HEALTH CARE
Regional Loads, Home
1758 Springhill Ave., Mobile,
DriverMost
AL.
Trucking
Nights, BC/BS Ins, Paid
EOE
Holiday
★★★★★★★★★
Receptionist
& Vacation. Call 251-626Recruiting ROUTE DRI1344
Needed
VERS!!!
TRUCK MECHANIC
for Home Improvement Co.
Sign on Bonus available.
Must have QuickBook Exp.
Cars, Vans or Box Trucks Must have own tools &
Call 251-607-9112
Needed! Come Associate good driving record. Exc.
benefits. Apply GREAT
with an Established 30
Local Law Firm Seeks a
Year Old Company! Call SOUTHERN WOOD, 7940
LEGAL RECEPTIONIST
Recruiter at 251-478-1401 Park Blvd, Irvington, AL
Must Have Experience.
or fax to 251-478-1464
Please Call 251-433-6505
FLATBED DRIVERS needed.
Downtown Law Firm
Home weekends. 2 yrs
Drivers
requires detail oriented
OTR exp.
OWNER OPERATORS
Clerical
Payed $700-$1000 wkly.
NEEDED TO PULL OUR
Assistant/Messenger. Send
BC/BS
FLATBEDS
resume to P.O. Box 1988,
ins.
furn’d after 30 days.
LOCAL AND REGIONAL
Mobile 36633
800-368-2243, Atmore, AL
We provide equipment and
★★★★★★★★
IFTA sticker. Plenty of
Delivery Drivers needed,
work for experienced
RECEPTIONIST
CDL and non-CDL. 401k,
owner operators who have
/OFFICE CLERK
health avail. Mon-Fri. 251Current opening for a motia good MVR and want to
970-3845
vated, personable individual.
be home weekends.
Full time. Great benefits.
$1000.00 SIGN ON BONUS
Come join the best little dealFUEL PRICE
LOCAL
ership on the Eastern Shore.
HELD&cquad;@ 1.25gal.
Call for appointment. 251-621DRIVERS
New Line Transport
2277. Fax resume to 251-6211-877-447-4450
1385 Attn:
★★★★★★★★
113
DRIVER NEEDED
CDL Req. Exp Pref. Refs.
req.
James 251-331-4236; 635-1919
Delivery of flatbed loads in
Gulf Coast. Home nightly.
Must be able to tarp. Need
CL A
CDL, good record, 2 yrs exp.
w/3 mo. on flats.
679-8200
Now Early Morning Delivery!
WRECKER DRIVERS
Local tow co. needs drivers.
Start immed. 51-479-6758
★ ★ NOW HIRING ★ ★
CDL Class AX Drivers, 1
Year OTR Experience and
a Driving School & We Will
Train for Tanks. Up to
$1200 Paid Every Week,
Great Benefits & Paid
Vacations! Call Mission
Petroleum at 251-675-5567
FLATBED DRIVER
NEEDED
FOR DEDICATED
SHORT-HAUL RUNS
Tarp pay, bonus pay, holiday,
sick and vac pay. If you meet
these requirements:
* at least 23 yrs of age
* minimum 24 mos tractortrailer exp.
* clean MVR
* Class A CDL
Must be 23 yrs of age.
Clean MVR, hold a Class A
CDL.
BC/BS, paid vacation, 401k,
$600 sign-on bonus
For all drivers
Guaranteed $600 first
3 wks of employment
Rangeline Rd., Mobile
251-660-9570
■■■■
COMPANY DRIVERS
Needed for Local Work
6 days on - 2 days off
Hourly Training Pay
2 Years OTR- 25 yrs old
Tanker & HazMat
Endorsements
Call Danny 800-274-1055
or 251-443-7055. EOE.
M/F/D/V
DRIVERS NEEDED
Good Money - Yellow Cab
Co.
251-476-7711 After 7PM
READY MIX
TRUCK DRIVERS
STERLING CONCRETE,
LLC - CDL DRIVERS
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Now Taking Applications IN BALDWIN COUNTY.
McDonald Oil Company
Experience preferred.
Has Opening for Full Time Competitive pay + bonusTANKER DRIVER, Home es. Health, Dental, and
Nightly, Excellent Starting Life insurance. Contact
Hourly Pay & 401K
251-945-1933 for application.
Benefits, Health Insurance
& Paid Vacation. Must
★★★★
Have Clean MVR Record &
AAA ASPHALT
Be Able Bring Current 3
Yrs Copy. Apply at Summit
TANKER
#42, 3274 Dauphin St.
Mobile, AL 36606. Mon-Fri. DRIVERS NEEDED NOW!
8-5
Start at $11/hr plus
Needed.
Good benefits package.
CONCRETE MIXER
TRUCK OPERATORS
Class B CDL
Min. 1 yr driving experience
Apply in person
3151 Hamilton Blvd.,
Theodore
ROLL OFF DRIVERS
Class B License Needed,
Good Pay. Please Apply
Within 6225 Rangeline Rd.
DRIVERS
Needed. FedEx Freight
accepting applications for
CDL drivers. Only those
with clean MVR and excellent driving experience
need apply. LTL preferred;
doubles, HAZMAT. Apply
in person 6250 Rangeline
Rd. EOE
CLASS A or B
VAN DRIVERS
Call Baldwin Transfer Co at
251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128
SIGN ON
BONUS!
Apply in person at:
2640 South McKenzie St,
Foley, AL 36535.
or call 800-239-3879.
A Class A CDL Driver
w/ 2 years verifiable experience. Forklift exp. helpful.
877-226-9088 call for an
appt.
bonus pay
● Must have Class A CDL
with
Tanker and Hazmat
endorsements, plus 2 years tractortrailer experience.
● Must have clean MVR and
be
at least 23 yrs of age.
● Good pay and benefit pack
age: vac pay, sick pay,
holiday pay, bonus pay,
BC/BS ins., etc.
Needed for local deliveries.
Drug Free Workplace, good Call BALDWIN TRANSFER
benefits. Top pay. Coastal
at
Door
&
Window,
5360 433-3391, ext 114
Commerce Blvd East, Mobile,
AL 36619.
★★★★
Mechanic
Night Mechanic
Needed for Mobile area
trucking co. to perform minor
& major repairs. Must have
own tools. Pay based on exp.
Major medical, dental, 401k &
paid holidays. Call Joe @ 251661-1232.
Exp Truck Driver Needed,
Must be able to operate a
24 - 26 ft light duty truck,
d. 401K
CDL lic not required
+ benefits. Apply in person, 600 Western Dr,
Mobile.
Deliver
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THIS IS AN OUTSTANDING
PART-TIME BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
We are looking for a dependable independent contractor to deliver The Mississippi Press for a few hours a day.
Must have dependable transportation and auto insurance is required.
Home Delivery Routes Are Available In The Following Areas:
• Vancleave • Ocean Springs • Moss Point • Wade
• Lucedale • Gautier • Benndale • Pascagoula • Hurley
If you are interested in a home delivery route, please call
228-875-8144 or 866-843-8911
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
“Business and Home”
TO ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS SERVICE
CALL: 934-1463 • 934-1476 • 934-1441 • 934-1477
WE SERVE ALL OF JACKSON,
GEORGE AND GREENE COUNTIES.
• ALL OF THESE CLASSIFICATIONS ARE TO BE PAID IN ADVANCE UNLESS A
CREDIT APPLICATION HAS BEEN SUBMITTED AND APPROVED FOR BILLING.
Business
Services
Backhoe /
Dozer Work
815
DOZER, Track-hoe work.
Dirt of all types.
Ponds & Custom work.
475-9254 or 218-4526
Building
Contracting
825
Quality Home
Improvements, additions,
repairs, tile, painting,
decks, elect., plumbing,
pressure washing. John
228-474-1321 / Cell 355-0421
THE W GROUP, INC.
General Contractor.
All types of commercial
& residential.
1-800-770-7710
Residential &
Commercial Remodeling,
Roofing, Sheetrock &
Flooring. Free estimates.
588-1159 or 217-2695
Main Street
Builders, LLC
Local
Custom
Builder
State Licensed
25 Years Exp.
“We Warranty What We Build”
Call
DUNCAN NOBLE, JR.
(228)341-1009 (228)497-5800
4400 Vancleave Rd., Gautier, MS
FOUNDATION REPAIR
REMODELING SPECIALIST
1
Licensed & Insured
228-806-1979
STORM
RESTORATION
Local Licensed
Contractor. We Do It
All!
Free est. within 2 days.
Materials prices are
rising, so hurry!
Call John Houston
228-497-1865
Child
Care
835
CHILD CARE
24 hrs. Christian Home
***Drop-ins Welcomed***
228-497-8109
848
Elderly
Care
I SIT For the ELDERLY
in your home.
References available.
M-F 8-5, 228-990-9332
Home
853
Improvement
REMODELING,
Additions, Roofingshingle /metal, Masonry,
Local contractor,
Licensed, Bonded &
Insured. 228-623-4679
SAM WALLS
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing & Remodeling
228-249-9767
R & D REMODELING
Drywall, carpentry,
painting, texture. Free
est. 475-0542 / 249-4567
Gulf Coast Maintenance
& Remodeling. Locally
owned, licensed & bonded
Free Est. 228-218-7062
PAINTING, Carpentry,
Electrical, Plumbing, Air
Conditioning & Pressure
Washing. 228-990-3010
ROACH FENCE DECKS
& Remodeling
Reasonable rates
Quality work
475-0528 or 228-355-0541
COVERALL; Roofing,
Drywall, Fences, etc,
Free Est. Your home
improvement
professional. Licensed
&
Insured (251)990-8572/
850-221-8069
5-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
855
House
Cleaning
HOUSE CLEANING
Honest & Dependable.
Due to storm lost
customers. Ref’s avail.
475-6340 or 990-7509
Lawn Care /
865
Landscaping
Creative Landscaping
Avail for Hurricane
receonstruction
developemnt on new &
exixsting properties.
resaonable rates. 228-4974199/ Call for Free Est.
Christine Ravens
thank you & GOd BLess
Husband & Wife
Lawn Mowing
& Leaf Mulching
Free est. 228-217-6200
AFFORDABLE LAWN
880Miscellaneous
Services
BANKRUPTCY
PETITIONS $300/Up,
Noncontested legal petitions.
$200/Up. Call 228-623-9820
DESIGNER BRICK
Work; Pressure Washing
& Painting. Charles
228-623-9277/ 228-475-4384
WILL DO Minor
Alterations at En-Vogue
Beauty Salon Building,
1002 Telephone Rd.,
Pascagoula. 228-217-4558
DALE’S CABINET,
Remodeling & Roofing
All work top quality
228-990-1723/588-9501
MAID SERVICE
Affordable Rates
219-0532 or 623-0595
Painting /
Free Est. / Call 324-7404
883
Wallpapering
HURRICANE DEBRIS
Clean-up, tree removal,
lawn maintenance &
care. Grass Goblin Lawn
Care 228-806-4911
Dennis’ A-1 Painting
30 yrs exp. Residential,
int / ext. Free Est .
228-522-1640/ 228-327-7658
CARE & TREE SERVICE
880Miscellaneous
Services
FREE TOWOFF
of Junk Cars &
Trucks Anytime!
228-826-1709, 217-8171
MINOR DRYWALL
Repair, Most Textures
Matched, 30 yrs local
exp. 228-497-1903
885
Plumbing
SOUTHERN PRIDE
CONTRACTING
ROOFING &
REMODELING
Licensed & Bonded.
Serving Grand Bay,
AL since 2000
Free Est. (251)689-9989
120
General
Now Hiring F/T Shop
Help. Paid vacation,
insurance, 401k. Apply
at ABC RENTAL, Oceans
Springs, MS 228-872-5577
■ Now Hiring, Cashier,
Housekeeper & laborers,
228-219-9334
Large company has immediate openings for the following departments:
● Insulation
● Garage Doors
● Fireplace
● Shelving & Gutters
Great benefits include
401K, medical, dental, life
& disability insurance.
Must have valid drivers
license and pass drug
screen. Apply in person
2609 Old Shell Road, Mobile
Greer’s Food Tiger
Has Immediate Opening
For
Exp. MARKET MANAGER
AND MEAT CUTTER
Call 251-928-8029 or
Send Resume to:
Human Resources
2850 West Main St.,
Prichard, Alabama 36612
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
G
General
120
General
893
855
251-943-2916
Eastern Shore veterinary
clinic accepting applications for KENNEL &
RECEPTIONIST. Drug
free workplace. Fax
resume: 251-928-5651 or
mail to PO Box 649,
Montrose, AL 36559
STORE WORKER
BASE MOBILE
EXCHANGE
Coast Guard Exchange
System is currently seeking a
part time person to take stock
from our warehouse area and
stock shelves in our store.
Must be able to lift 50-70 lbs.
Starting pay $7.74. EOE. No
phone calls. If interested
apply at:
Coast Guard Exchange
System
U.S. Coast Guard Base
South Broad Street
Mobile, AL 36615-1390
Phone #: (251)441-5096
Jimerson Home
Improvement
First Class Carpenter
Needed
Call 251-776-8738
■ P/T Delivery & Floral
Trainee. Job Hrs 10am2pm. 228-762-2037
RICH’S CAR WASH &
LUBE
now hiring all positions. FT
& PT, starting $6.50 + tips.
Apply 1066 Hillcrest Rd,
Mobile & 119 Shelton Beach
Rd, Saraland
KAP’S ALABAMA looking
for
SECURITY GUARDS.
Accepting
■ MAINTENANCE
applications 9am-4pm 7
Supervisors & Helpers,
days
needed for Pascagoula apt
a week. 251-666-0702 EOE
complex. Fax
resumes 228-497-5010
■ Company needs F/T
Electrician. Good pay &
DODGE’S
benefits. Please Call
STORE
228-497-7316
Mobile, AL - Now Hiring
CASHIER w/Qwik Cash
Responsibilities
$8.50 (per hour)
Please apply at Dodge’s
Store,
420 S. Schillinger Road
Mobile, AL 36695. See Iris
E.O.E.
DELIVERY DRIVER
Heavy lifting required.
Apply JEMISON WINDOW
011 Zeigler
& DOOR, 80
Blvd, Mobile
DRIVER TRAINEES
NEEDED NOW! No experience required. Werner
has immediate openings
for entry-level semi drivers. Our avg. driver earns
more than $36K first year.
60% of Werner drivers get
home nightly or weekly. 15
day CDL training now
offered in your area. For a
new career call Today.
1(800) 350-7364.
BALDWIN CONCRETE
HIRING DRIVERS
Class Class B CDL
DIESEL MECHANICS
Positions in the Baldwin
Co. area. Pay depends on
experience.
● Competitive Wages
● Medical Insurance
● Vacation Pay
Contact Kevin Jackson,
Gulf Shores 251-968-33888
Spanish Fort 251-621-7982
AAAAAAAAA
DUMP TRUCK DRIVERS
CDL, Clean record. 251-8656203
LOCAL DRIVER needed.
Class A CDL required and
Wrecker experience a plus.
Immediate Openings. 251653-3866
Contract Driver’s Needed
for auto parts delivery
between the hours of 1am
and 10am. Pick-up truck
with cover or cargo van
required. Call 1-800-5496911.
★
LOCAL TANKER
DRIVER
NEEDED NOW!
Work close to home! Good
pay
and benefit package! Call
now
if you meet the following
requirements:
* Class A CDL
* Minimum 2 years tractor
trailer exp.
* Clean MVR
* At least 23 yrs of age
Dedicated local non-hazmat
shuttle run.
Call Baldwin Transfer at
433-3391, ext 111 or 128
★
Experienced
Owner/Operator
needed. Mobile Company.
No overnights. Benefits.
Fuel furnished. Must
provide clean MVR and
own tractor. 251-476-8343
113
113
BALDWIN COUNTY
CONSTRUCTION INC.
Needs Class ‘‘A‘‘ CDL
Dump Truck Drivers
251-947-7711
120
Need CDL Drivers &
Equipment Operators.
Call Mark at 254-644-3739
DRIVER TRAINEES or Bill at 254-644-3738
NEEDED NOW! No
Landscaping Company
Exp. Req’d. Werner has Based in Fairhope Has an
immediate openings for Opening for a Foreman.
entry-level semi drivers. Must Have General
Our average driver earns Knowledge of all Aspects
more than $36K first yr. of Landscaping & Should
60% Werner drivers get Have Experience in the
home nightly or weekly. Running of Crews. Call 25115 day CDL training now 990-5912
offered in your area. For Wanted Experienced
a new career call Today Collectors who will receive
sign on bonus after 90
1-866-280-5309 adays.
k
Call 251-660-6763, ask
for Bob.
OWNER/OPERATOR
NEEDED
PRODUCTION ARTIST
Short & Long Haul. Good Needed. For interview call
Pay.
Greg 251-457-2388 Ext. 708
1-800-867-5535.
Part time position to full
time as business grows.
DRIVERS
Food service industry.
NEEDED
Light physical labor. Good
driving record. 251-209-2695
FOR SHORT
HAUL
AND REGIONAL
RUNS
Home almost every night.
Bonus pay, holiday pay, sick
and vac pay. If you meet
these requirements:
* at least 23 yrs of age
* minimum 24 mos tractortrailer exp.
* clean MVR * Class A CDL
N TRANSFER
Call BALDWIN
CO
at 251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128
Class A CDL for Wholesale
Nursery. Part-time driving
with full-time work. Apply
in person at 6470 DIP,
Mobile, AL.
Part time workers for
landscaping/lawn maintenance business. 251-4541006.
INVENTORY CLERK/
FORKLIFT OPERATOR
Needed. Fax resume to:
251-438-3839
Exp’d Auto Detailer
Needed for Springhill Ave.
location. Professional
Collision, Contact Terry or
Larry. Apply within or call
251-471-1279
STORE WORKER
ATC MOBILE
EXCHANGE
Coast Guard Exchange
System is currently seeking a
part time person to take stock
ROUTE DELIVERY
35 to 40 cases per hour from
DRIVERS NEEDED
our warehouse area. Stock
We offer paid vacations,
shelves in our store. Must be
excellent benefits, incentive
able to lift 50-70 lbs. Starting
programs and more! Good
pay $7.74. EOE. No phone
Driving Record A Must! Drug calls. If interested apply at:
screen and physical are
Coast Guard Exchange
required.
System
Come Join Our Family by
AVIATION TRAINING CENapplying in person, MonTER
Thurs from 9AM-3:30PM at
8551 Tanner Williams Road
Gulf Distributing Co, 3378
Mobile, AL 36608
Moffett Rd, Mobile, AL 36607.
Phone #: (251)441-6896
EOE.
Fax #: (251)441-6194
NO TELEPHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
Closing date October 28, 2005
CDL
IC
Please call 251-679-1965 ext 22.
G.A. West
Immediate position available
for Auto Mechanic. Excellent
Local Lumber Yard seeking Yard Help! Experience pay and benefits. Paid trainpreferred. Contact Rolo at ing. Flexible schedule. Valid
Drivers License. Some expe251-947-3127, Mon-Fri, 7-4.
rience needed. Apply in person:
G
GARDNER
The City of Gautier will
accept applications from
Oct. 21-Oct. 27, 2005 for
the position of Gardner.
Work involves the maintenance of flower beds and
shrubbery, including
weeding, mulching, pruning, and replacement of
plants as necessary, staking of plants, watering,
fertilizing and treatment
of plants for insects and
fungus as well as weed
control.
Applicants should apply at
the Gautier City Hall, 3330
Hwy 90, Gautier, MS
39553-5124. ■
Read the Classifieds
SKCO
Automotive
Service Dept.
7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
Ph: 251-343-4488
Website: skcoautomotive.com
Warehouse Labor &
Forklift Operators. Full
time positions, inquire by
phone. 251-964-4607
URETHANE COVER
REPAIRMAN wanted.
Nationwide company.
Benefits, insurance. Drug
screen required. Also,
PAINTER needed to prime
bumpers. Retired body
shop employees encouraged to apply. Fax info or
resume to: 432-2443 attn
Rick
P/T Cleaning Help.
Evening Hours. 2 Person
Teams. Extra $500mo.
potential. 251-533-6431
COUNTER SALES: FT &
PT
3-5 days/wk. Apply
Cleveland Florist, 4404 Old
Shell
Service Dept.
KITCHEN HELPER
MEAT CUTTER WANTED
7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
NEEDED
Ph: 251-343-4488
Will train the right person.
Website: skcoautomotive.com Apply in person Mosley’s Full-Time & Part-Time.
■ Termite Technician
& Secretary Needed.
Apply at 825 Jackson Ave,
Pascagoula
back of Century 21
Building. 228- 762-8010
General Laborer $9/hr
Must
Have transportation,
Call 251-802-8695
Dish Washing & Heavy
Meat
Market, 4678 Airport Blvd. Lifting required. Apply in
person:
Immediate Opening for
Sacred Heart Residence,
Bradford Body & Paint for 1655 McGill Ave, Mobile,
an Automobile Estimator. AL. EOE.
Must have a min. of 1 yr
AAA - Avon. Earn $$ for
exp. Call 251-639-9372 634Christmas. $10 to start.
0727 ask for Catherine or
Call 767-2048
Denise
PARTS/WAREHOUSE
PERSON NEEDED.
with experience. Must have
CABLE TV INSTALLERS
Fork Lift Experience.
&
Please Fax Resume to
BURY DROP CREWS
Attn: David Steele
NEEDED Immediately!
251-443-9569.
Get paid to train & learn.
Paid holidays & vacation.
JANITORS &
Must
SUPERVISORS
have truck or van. Please
Full Time & Part Time
call
251-621-0505 for directions Must have clean background
251-344-5105
to 25476 Friendship Rd,
Suite E, Daphne
■ Manager needed for 25
townhomes in Pascagoula
SUPERVISOR
light maintenance duties,
needed every other weeklarge 2BR apt and
end for Knollwood Pointe
Assisted Living. Must
utilities paid. Call
enjoy working with seniors. 228-762-3325/ 228-348-2226
Apply in Person at 5601
■ Wanted Accounts
Girby Rd, Mobile.
Managers & Delivery
Vet Hosp Needs PT Asst.
Drivers
No Exp Req. Interviews
Sign on Bonus now avail.
8:30-11:30 & 2-4:30. M, Tu, Valid Drivers license &
Th, F. Apply: Pet Doctor,
drug screen required.
7451 Old Pasc. Rd.
Competitive wages with
401k & benefits. Apply in
EXP. MAINTENANCE
person at 2500 Amonett St,
Person needed.
Pascagoula, or
Experience in all phases
call 228-380-0950.
of maintenance, HVAC
certified. Apartment +
Alabama certified TEACHSalary. 228-497-4221 ■
ERS for 1st-12th grades
needed immediately.
HOUSE MOVING
& FOUNDATION WORK Urban school. Must possess
Must have own transporta- strong behaviorial managetion, valid driver’s license ment skills. 251-452-4300.
120
General
General
PARTS PULLER NEEDPart Time
ED
TEACHER’S AIDES
Experience & tools a plus.
251-452-4300
AUTO DETAIL Apply in person: Joe
Immediate position available Pounds Auto Parts. 251-473- Kingdom Coach needs BUS
WASHER & INSIDE
for Auto Detail. Excellent pay 4896
CLEANER, P/T work,
and benefits. Paid training.
EXP. PET GROOMER
mostly nts/weekends. Must
Flexible schedule. Valid
Drivers License. Some expe- needed for established
have flex schedule, be
rience needed. Apply in perclientele. Apply at: Pet
dependable & have a cell
son:
Harbor Veterinary
phone. Physical labor
Hospital, 3110 Old Mobile involved (washing).
SKCO
Hwy, Pascagoula 762-1987 Serious inquires only. 251Automotive
660-0900
■
897
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
DriverTrucking
120
Warehouse Manager/Driver
251-633-2700
WANT ADS
113
General
For Florist Van
★★★★★★
PT/FT. Base + comm.
Auto Body Shop needs auto
Men & Women apply at
PREPPERS & TAPERS
★ CLEVELAND FLORIST ★
251-4711-9606
LEAD FORE4404 Old Shell Rd, Mobile, AL
★★★★★★
MAN
■ Company needs F/T
for site-work. Must be able Wholesale Food Distributor Alarm Installer. Good pay
has these current opento shoot grades, lay drainage
& benefits. Please Call
ings:
& water-pipe and run heavy
228-497-7316
se call
equipment. Pleas
Inventory Stocker/
HELP WANTED in
Service & Body Shop.
Rainey Builders, Roof
Technicians, Light Duty
Repair, Vinyl Repair,
Technicians, Porter,
Free Est, Licensed &
& able to pass drug test.
& Clean-Up. Apply in
Insured. (601)770-8007
person at: 2203 Market St. Starting pay $10/hr. 251-6339883
762-3533 ext. 128 ■
Roof /
CARR’S PAINTING,
Exp’d, dependable
BUY JUNK CARS
Plumbing, Sheet Rock,
Gutter
Daphne
Collection
Agency
TIRE CHANGER
Furniture Store
Free Tow Offs!
Remodeling, Windows,
Now Hiring Experienced
Service
Salary based on exp. Refs
WAREHOUSE/DELIVERY
228-235-2122
Rooffs, Clean-up,
Collectors.
Call
Betty
at
req’d
Clean Driving Record.
Flooring, Carpet & Tile.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
251-447-0742
L&M TIRES 251-479-8544
Benefits.
NEED PHOTOS?
217-0337
NEED A ROOF
Apply in person: Leon
EXPERIENCED
Need
Trainees
with good
For Insurance Purposes,
NOW???
Atchison
Hands Construction
TREE CLIMBER communication skills to
For Hurricane Damages, V&W Roofing Contractors
Furn,
5597
Hwy
90
W.
Home Remodeling,
train as Telephone
& also Photo Resoration, • Residential/Commercial
needed. 251-366-1595
Adjuster/Skip Tracer in a
Repair & Maintenance
BULLARD
Memories Portraits
• All Types of Roofing
ech, drug free workhigh te
No job too small!!
CAR CARE
LUBE TECH
228-475-68831
In Stock
place.
Apply at 1501
We
have
openings
for
expeLicensed & Bonded
Needed.
• Shingles In Stock
Government St.
rienced
Car
228-475-4930
HURRICANE DAMAGE
• Bonded, Insured &
Buffers, New Car Prep and
We remove sheetrock,
Good Benefits package
PRESSERS NEEDED
Licensed Contractor
SHEETROCK, Painting,
Car Inspection
insulation, furniture,
No phone calls.
• Family Owned Since
Roofing, Remodeling.
Please Apply in person at:
individuals. Nice working
carpet
&
yard
clean-up.
Apply
at Jaguar Cleaners
1974
Local contractor.
2640 South McKenzie St,
conditions.
228-475-3679 / 228-990-6253
6405
Cottage Hill Rd.
• Call for Estimates
228-497-1811 Leave mess.
Foley, AL 36535.
Call Marvin, 478-7667
866-769-5140, 228-769-5140
or call 800-239-3879.
DELIVERY DRIVERS
Located behind Joe Bullard
FOUR SEASONS
A-to-Z FENCE & DECKS
or
936-788-4459
w/van or box truck. (16’Cadillac/Hummer
LAWN CARE
Repair/Replace damaged
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
24’). CDL Drivers needed.
Beltline at Cottage Hill
Debris & Tree Removal.
privacy, cyclone or
ALL POSITIONS
251-621-9231,
Mon-Fri, 9AMRoad
Complete Lawn Care
other fences. Free est.
Interviews Mon - Fri, 15PM.
Service. 228-355-0373
Licensed & Insured.
2:30p.m.
SALES: Inbound Calls,
A+
ROOFING
ned &
Locally own
228-238-7587
Positions to be filled
Hourly, Commission,
1-866-878-9900/
Delivery Persons
operated
Benefits. FT/PT. Flex. E- include cashiers (day &
228-497-0002
MULTI CRAFT
evening shifts), stockers,
mail
Cover
Letter,
Needed with Vehicles to
Hurricane Code Installations
MOLD TREATMENT,
DEMO
Resume & Salary require- production workers &
Distribute Telephone
SHEET REMOVAL &
Sheetrock Removal,
laborers. Will train. Drugments
Directories in Mobile.
ROOFING & LEAK
Replacement. Locally
Sheetrock Installation,
to: [email protected] Attn Free Workplace. Good pay
800-388-8255 Ext 80548
owned & operated.
Repairs. Shingle,
Tree Removal,
& benefits. EOE
Kurt
NEED A JOB??
Licensed & Insured.
Metal & Built-up.
NO PHONE CALLS
228-217-0337
MUFFLER INSTALLER
Mobile’s fastest growing
Crediit cards accepted.
228-249-6038 / 228-219-1290
AMERICA‘S THRIFT
TRAINEE
Wholesale
company is Now
228-366-0443/ 228-424-3632
STORES
House
Apply in person
interviewing candidates for
312 So. Schillinger RdTree
Carlson’s
Muffler
Shop,
101
Cleaning
upcoming
busy season
BOBCAT, TRACTOR
Mobile
Telegraph Road,
rush.
& TREE SERVICES,
Service
HELP
WANTED:
Chickasaw
All positions are open
DEBRIS REMOVAL
RENT
ASAP TREE SERVICE
Carpet Installer,
immediately
Reasonable Prices
HIRING CARPENTERS,
& Debris removal.
Siding Installer,
-AFULL TIME/DAYS and
228-990-5042
Laborers, Sub228-348-0965
train in
Sheetrock
Hangers,
MAID
Contractors. 217-0337 ■
The following areas:
AR/ AP Clerk,
HOUSE & PRESSURE
●
PRODUCT
DISTRIBUCall Paula, 228-875-6883
Washing. S & J Cleaning
Exp’d FT FLORAL
DOUBLE R Tree Service
TION
497-4418 Sam Wilkerson, 228DESIGNER
Local Substance Abuse
&
Tree
Removal.
● SALES/MARKETING
588–6392/ 228-990-1921
for Eastern Shore. Call
Center seeking Weekend
Rodney A. Rouse
● STAFF MANAGEMENT
251-626-6323; ask for Dan
MANAGER/COOK
* Licensed * Bonded
Ced’s Environmental Contractor 601-508-4936 / 601-766-9635
$400 wk. start
2 Full-Time People needed Fax resume to 251-639-9561
* Supplies Furnished
Sheetrock & Debris Removal
Call for interview 635-1823
for established, growing
Home/Industrial Cleaning A TO Z TREE Hurricane
DRIVER
Relief. Tree removal,
business. Warehouse
■ Assistant Manager
H/P water blast/
needed 8 hours per week
stump grinding, clean-up
Receiving Clerk and an
Needed for Apt comm.
vac. truck
for Knollwood Pointe
Order Puller. Great beneMust be dependable,
Chemical spray/ insured & dirt work. Licensed &
Assisted Living. Must
Insured. Senior Citizen
fits. Send resume to
228-235-4157
enjoy working with seniors. responsible, computer litWarehouse Manager, P.O.
Discount. 228-238-7587
e knowledge
erate, & have
Apply in Person at 5601
Box 160775, Mobile, AL
of AMSI. Please fax
Girby Rd, Mobile.
36616.
resume to 228-762-0800
Full Time Runner Position Now Hiring 2 P/T
DriverDriverGeneral
Available for an active law Receptionists/
FLOOR TECH
Administrative Assistants
firm. Please send resume
Trucking
Trucking
for Non-Profit Christian
bile,
to PO Box 160204, Mob
Organization. Exp pre- Part-Time.
ATTN: NOW HIRING
CDL Driver-B Class
Driver Needed for
AL 36616
ferred. Apply at The
Petroleum Company. Local Carpet Cleaner & Water
For local waste hauling
MAID SERVICE
Apply in person at:
Refuge, 2707 Hwy 90, Suite
Restoration. Must have
company. Call 251-666-0112 runs. Class A CDL
TEAM LEADER
KINDRED HEALTH CARE
valid driver’s license &
w/Hazmat & Tankers
13, Gautier, MS Mon-Fri,
1758
Springhill Ave., Mobile,
Growing
company
offers
■ Dairy Fresh Of
good MVR. Must pass
endorsement required.
9am-12noon
AL.
excellent oppourtunity.
Alabama, LLC is accept- Hourly Pay with good ben- Drug test. Will Train.
228-522-1980 ■
EOE
No nights, no weekends,
ing
Benefits avail. Call for
efits.
30/35
hrs/wk.
$10-$12.50/hour
applications for the posiDirections. Service Master
Call Lee at 251-654-0045
to start. Must have superMAINTENANCE
tion of Route Delivery
251-653-9333.
CLASS A CDL DRIVER
visory
Sales. Most be 21 years of
exp. Apply at The Maids,
Field
age, clean driving record, Needed. Haz-Mat & Tanker
Exp. A Must. Home Most
4321 Blvd Park S. (off
Class B CDL preferred.
Construction
Nights, Good Pay &
Univerisi
Applications will be
Benefits! Apply at Mobile
ty Blvd near Saad’s
Clerk
accepted at 4020 Jefferson Solvent, Kushla-McLeod
Healthcare).
for work in Bay St. Louis, MS.
St, Pascagoula, Mon-Fri
Rd.
Excel, Time Keeping, and Job AUTO MECHANBE&K Industrial Services has long-term
12 Noon until 5:00pm
Costing experience required.
EOE
employment opportunities in the
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER
desires weddings,
anniversaries, etc.
Reasonable, reliable,
money-back guarantee,
$200-$250 228-326-7361
120
Foley Development
Company
looking for a
Closing date October 28, 2005
MECHANIC
The City of Gautier will
accept applications from
Oct. 21-Oct.27, 2005 for the
position of Mechanic.
Work involves repair &
maintenance of automobiles, trucks, heavy equipment and mechanical
equipment such as but not
limited to engines,
motors, pneumatic tools,
trenchers, backhoes, air
compressors, and pumps.
Applicants should apply at
the Gautier City Hall, 3330
Hwy 90, Gautier, MS
39553-5124. ■
120
MAINTENANCE
MECHANICS
Pensacola, Florida area for industrial
Maintenance Mechanics experienced in
the following craft areas: Millwrights,
Pipefitting and Welding, HVAC, Carpentry,
Electrical, Instrumentation, Insulation,
Heavy Equipment Mechanic, Steel
Fabrication & Welding, Equipment
Operator and Painters.
This is an excellent opportunity for you
to join an industry leader! We offer
competitive wages and a benefit package
that includes life insurance, long term
disability, short term disability, medical,
dental, vision and retirement.
Interested candidates, should call toll
free: 1-866-235-9675, ext 8, for more
information and the application procedure.
BE&K is an Equal Opportunity Employer
committed to diversity in the workforce.
Substance abuse screening required.
MOBILE HOME PERSON
needed to block & tie
Mobile
homes. 251-583-4998
MACHINE SHOP LABORER: Cleaning & Painting.
Must be able to lift 50lbs,
Pay up to $9/hr. DOE. 251675-1130.
SALES CLERK needed
for Boutique. Some sales
exp. req’d. FT & PT.
217-0887 Mon-Sat 9am-6■
Postal Worker Trainee
$1,000 Bonus if qualified.
No experience needed.
Excellent pay/benefits. Full
Medical and Dental. More
money if you have college
credits. College assistance
100%. Lucrative retirement
pkg. HS grads and seniors,
ages 17-34. Paid relocation.
Call 1-888-255-6289, M-F, 8-4
★★★★
HELPER
Mobile Gas Service
Corporation is seeking to fill
the position of Helper.
Qualified candidates must
possess a High School diploma or equivalent and a good
driving record. Experience in
custodial, buildings and
grounds maintenance, construction or related areas is
preferred. CDL and forklift
certification helpful.
A 58 year old company in AL, Competitive salary and beneMS and LA has openings for: fit package offered. Qualified
● REGIONAL MANAGER candidates should submit
resumes to:
● MANAGER
● TECHNICIAN
Mobile Gas Service
We offer a competitive beneCorporation
fit package. Must pass backHuman Resources
ground and driving tests.
Department
Call 800-898-0264 ext 212.
P. O. Box 2248
Email resume to:
Mobile, AL 36652
[email protected]
or Fax resume: 601-544-0809
Equal Opportunity Employer
EOE M/F
HAVARD
PEST
CONTROL
120
General
Securitas
Security
Services
WE ARE ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR SECURITY OFFICERS. APPLY @
3737 GOVT. BLVD. STE. 205
EOEM/F/D/V
Delivery Driver
Local Deliver y Company is
Looking
for
Independent
Delivery Drivers. Must Have
Own Cargo Van. Control Your
Own
Earnings.
Benefits
Available Through Nica. Must
Pass
Drug
Screen
&
Background Check. Apply in
Person at 3161 Crichton,
Mobile or Call Paul at 251-4715369 For More Info.
s
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
100 EXTRA
GENERAL
LABORERS
$7-$8-$9/Hr.
******
PRODUCTION
WORKERS
NEEDED
TELY
IMMEDIAT
Women Encouraged to Apply
******
10 CDL A
DRIVERS
TEMP TO
PERM
******
EXP. FRONT
END
LOADERS $15hr
EXP. CRANE
OPERATORS
$20hr
Long Term & Refs Req’d.
Current Medical. Drug tesr,
background check.
Must be at least 18.
Daily work. Daily pay.
5808-C Hwy 90 W, Theodore
251-653-1542
2 N Hwy 43, Saraland
251-675-8306
225 St Francis St, Mobiile
251-438-5808
COUNTER
HELP
Flex Hrs. 7-9 & 2-9 Shift
No phone calls.
Apply at JAGUAR CLEANERS
6405 Cottage Hill Rd. b/t 8-2
Exp’d Furniture
Upholstery Seamtress
Needed. Fairhope. 251-9905745 or 591-2389
MAKE
$100,000
a YEAR?
CUSTOMER SERVICE
★★★★
YES! If you are sharp and
REP
Energetic & Friendly. Must *** MASTER CLEANERS work hard, the sky’s the
limit. We advertise heavily
needs immediately be able to answer MultiPressers, Counter Clerks and have a high traffic
Phone System & Schedule
locations with lots of walkand Driver/Laundry
Jobs. Apply at Quality
in trade. The used car
Workers.
Auto Glass
market is hot! You must
ng benefits:
5545 Linwood Steiner Rd Qualifin
be clean and drug-free.
Paid vacations, Holiday
or call 251-653-5606
Find out about this unique
Pay, Christmas Bonus,
NOW ACCEPTING
opportunity to earn a big
Birthday off w/pay.
Applications for Bell
time salary. If you are
Ringers. Apply Mon-Fri., Apply at 4300 D Midmosst
inexperienced, we can
9am-4.
train you. Call Chuck at
Drive Between 9AM and
3217 Nathan Hale Ave.,
2PM Monday Thru Friday. 251-633-6337 for confidential
Pascagoula ■
appointment.
342-6096. Ext 16.
MOBILE AUTO OUTLET
PARTS PULLER NEED- 1st Class Roofers,
E/O/E
ED
Sheetrock Hangers &
Exp Lot Attendant/Detail
Painters Needed Immed,
Apply at Auto World
person. Please call
Salvage,
Top Pay for Top Skills.
Semmes Auto Sales
7980 Tanner Williams Rd. Contact Larry at 251-957251-645-3330 for appt.
6898 After 5pm.
Mobile 36608
LOOKING FOR A CAREER AND NOT JUST ANOTHER JOB
THEN WE’RE LOOKING FOR YOU
EXCELLENT PAY WITH FLIGHT BENEFITS
We’re Seeking Individuals with Exceptional Customer
Service Skills. We Have Part Time Positions Available
with American Eagle and US Airways.
MUST BE ABLE TO:
Work Flexible Part Time Hours
Able to Lift 70 Lbs.
Have a High School Diploma or GED
Present Valid Drivers License
Communicate Clearly and Concisely
Must pass drug screen and physical, finger printing
and airport security clearance.
A 10 year work employment history is required.
ALL INTERESTED APPLICANTS SHOULD APPLY
IN PERSON AT 1891 NINTH STREET.
Have you lost your
job because of
Hurricane Katrina?
We are here to help.
WE ARE NOW HIRING:
Experienced Audio/Video
Installation Specialist.
Send resume to: 3656-G
Gov’t Blvd., Mobile, AL
36693
Ten Sales Positions Available
$200 SIGN ON BONUS!
WANTED
A FEW GOOD ALUMINUM
WELDERS & FITTERS AND
OTHER SHIPYARD CRAFTSMEN
that want to make
GOOD MONEY
and plenty of
OVERTIME!
957-3800
Sales from ANY industry a plus! Must be
willing to work flexible hours and have a
SERIOUS NEED TO SUCCEED!
We offer:
GREAT Income for Top Performers
Great Benefits
Comprehensive Training
HUGE Inventory
Closed On Sunday
$2000 Guaranteed Income While In Training
Apply in person to:
Bill Ford
I-65 @ Airport
901 E I-65 Service Rd. South
Mobile, AL 36606
EOE
6-B
120
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
General
120
Wanted: Parts Person:
order parts, track parts,
etc. for Micky Bradford
Paint & Body. Exp. helpfful,
but will train. Call 251-6399372 634-0727 ask for
Catherine or Denise
General
SATELLITE
TECHNICIANS
Great Career &
ESTABROOK FORD-NISBenefits.
SAN
Long term employment.
Must have Cell Phone
Immediate openings.
Pascagoula, MS.
& Driver’s License
● BODY REPAIR TECHSEntry Level & skilled.
● PAINTER & HELPERNo Experience
Entry
level & skilled.
Necessary
● AUTO REPAIR TECHSskilled
● FAST LUBE TECH
● SERVICE CLERICAL
1-800-292-8421
positions
Insurance, 401K, paid holidays & vacations. EOE. All
AVON - ALL AREAS
applications confidential.
Buy or sell. Free gift! Ind.
Walter Hammock.. 800-748Rep.
9179 or 228-762-2641
1-800-572-4469, 645-1839
GYMNASTICS COACH,
CELLULOSE INSTALLAPT. If you love kids, love
TION &
gymnastics, and are
VINYL SIDING
responsible, give
INSTALLERS
Nasser’s a call 251-479-9311
438-4814
Call
AVON - $$500 Bonus!
Earn extra $$ for Xmas!
$10 fee. ISR 251-610-9846
Lube Technicians
Major oil change company
in southeast has openings.
Experience is helpful, but
er
not necessary. We offe
competitive wages, and
insurance is available.
Please Call 251-379-0827
to schedule an interview.
LAWN MAINTENANCE
Person needed full time.
Must be experienced.
Apply: 12401 Bellingrath
Rd, Mon. - Sat. 9-4.
Drivers/Minivan
Transporting railroad crews
in the Mobile area. Clean
MVR. Drug screen req’d.
Reference
location #113. 800-471-2440
LOCAL LUMBER
MANUFACTURER seeks
LABORERS and
EXPERIENCED FORKLIFT
DRIVERS for both Day &
night shiifts. Immediate
openings available.
Call 251-432-0003
123
Hair StylistPersonal
Service
SUB KING, Sch. Rd. &
T.C.
COSMETOLOGISTS
Hiring
P/T Exp. Counter
Must be experienced, have
Help
great attitude & want to
776-7900 B/W 10:00-11:00
work in busy salon.
Average over $10.50/hr.
Mobile Hotel hiring all
Benefits. Closed Sunday.
Mgmt Positions and
Call Mark 251-648-5787.
Constr. Super. Fax
resumes to 601-599-3175
125
RestauratHotel-Lounges
A Fun, Fast Paced &
Exciting Atmosphere Now
Hiring F/T & P/T
Dishwashers, Food Service
Supervisor, Cashiers,
Stock/Inventory Person &
PM Positions. Great
Benefits! Apply in Person
at University of Mobile,
Ingram Dining Hall. E.O.E
M/F/D/V
BARTENDER with food
experience. Apply in person: 11 a.m.
- 6 p.m. 2600 Gov’t Blvd.
NOW HIRING!
FRONT DESK CLERKS
HOUSEKEEPING. Apply:
Days
Inn, 1101 Industrial Pkwy.,
Saraland. No Calls Please.
Boxblade Operators
Full/Part Time for
Needed
Energetic, Reliable WAIT
Must Have Exp & Valid DL STAFF. Excellent Wages.
Call 251-957-4815
Call Raja @ 251-458-7201
HIRING EXP’D KENNEL Our hearts go out to all the
HELP
victims of Hurricane
Full time. Benefits avail. Katrina. In the wake of
Apply at Irby-Overton
this tragedy, McDonald’s
Veterinary Hospital 1123
would like to help. We are
Schillinger Rd. N.
now accepting interviews
for Crew, Maintenance &
Looking for
Managers for FT,
Subcontractors Exp’d
PT or Temp. positions. If
we can help you, please
Framing, Concrete, Masonry, give us a call. 251-478-0701
etc....Workmans comp & general liability insurance req’d.
Call Mitchelll Homes, Mobile,
AL 251-344-2600
MAID SERVICE
Join a great group of people!
No nights, no weekends. 8
open
positions. 30-37 hrs/wk. $7.20$7.85/hr to start. $200 hiring
bonus. Apply: THE MAIDS
4321 Blvd Park S., (runs
off Univ. Blvd. near Saad’s)
RestauratHotel-Lounges
125
L.A. Subs
In Daphne, AL interviewing
for FT/PT Day/Night Shifts.
Deli Exp. Preferred. Starting
Pay $6.50. 625-4334, Mrs.
Porter
WANTED:
Pizza Maker
, $8/hr. Bilotti’s
Italian Cafe, 1850 Airport
Blvd
Now Hiring
All Positions
All Shifts
125
RestauratHotel-Lounges
RestauratHotel-Lounges
Join our team, find out
work can be
e fun! Hiring all
positions. Please apply in
person 11am-2pm. Pelican
Reef Restaurant, 11799
Dauphin Isl Pkwy
EXP. KITCHEN HELP
NEEDED
Due to increased volume
we have 2 full time openings to fill. We now start
exp. line cooks from $9 to
$10/hr., with BC/Bs ins.
WAIT STAFF, CASHIERS, available after 90 days. We
COOKS. Richee’s BBQ
area looking for Cooks who
4451 Government, Mobile can handle extremely high
volume at a very fast pace.
Must be a professional who
ASHBURY HOTEL &
is willing to cook, prep and
SUITES
clean throughout the comNow Hiring for the
plete shift. Overtime is
Following Positions:
available at this time and
● Banquet Server & Set Up cash bonuses are on the
table. Apply in person after
● Lobby Attendant
2pm at Heroe’s Sports Bar
● Room Attendants
& Grill, 273 Dauphin St.,
Downtown.
Excellent Starting Pay
BC/BS, Holiday Pay, Vac.
Apply in person at
Management
600 S. Belttline Hwy.
NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE
128
BARTENDERS &
SERVERS
Apply in person at
needed. Under New
CRACKER BARREL
Management. Theodore’s
845-A SCHILLINGER RD. S. newest Country & Western
MOBILE, AL
Club. Apply:
The Round-Up, 5791
Mobile Hotel hiring all
Swedetown Rd. 251-653Maint.
and Hskpg Positions. Apply 1769.
w/in 3132 Government
FRONT DESK CLERK
Blvd.
7AM-3PM. Apply Best
Western
Dining Room Manager
Inn, Battleship Parkway,
Needed: Experience &
on the Causeway.
People Skills a must.
Salary/Benefits negotiable.
FOOD SERVICE/PREP
Apply in person: Beach
Part Time. Preps Foods,
House Grill, Battleship
Meats, Customer Service.
Parkway.
Call after 2 p.m. 251-345NOW HIRING
7411 for appt.
Live-In Maintence Person
Motel Work, Free Apt + HOUSEKEEPERS wanted,
Ramada Civic Center. 255
Salary
Also, Housekeepers. Apply Church St. Apply in person.
Hiring
Competitive pay & beneHOUSEKEEPING SUPER- at Rest Inn Motel, 3651
Government Blvd, Mobile. fits. Experience not necesVISOR
sary but helpful.
1 yr exp preferred
WANTED
Call 251-634-1189
PIZZA INN
Experienced Club Manager
Mon-Fri, 8am-11am
Manager, Cooks, & Drivers
Apply Airport Blvd behind
Applebee’s. ORLEANS
POBOYS PT/FT Kitchen
Help & Wait Staff. 251-3801503
125
Customer
Service Manager
ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT
CO. a local HVAC Distributor
in Mobile has opening for
Customer Service Manager.
Heating / AC experience helpful. Pd Vacation, Medical &
Life
Insurance,
Profit
Sharing. Call 800-289-1234 Ext
0
OPERATIONS
MANAGER
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
130
MedicalDental
I
Private club seeks
Dishwasher, Line cook &
Servers,
4925 Marina Dr., 251-4713131. Apply in person
Thurs-Sun 12-5.
Experienced, Day & Night
Line Cooks. Apply
Captain’s Table, Battleship
Parkway, on the Causeway.
■
DOMINO’S
PIZZA
NOW HIRING
Drivers and
Assistant Managers!
Drivers
Earn up to
$10-$12
An hour
Driving for
Domino’s Pizza.
You must have
a dependable car,
Insurance & a
good driving record.
Assistant
Managers
We offer
Paid training,
Paid vacations,
Health insurance
and much more.
Applicants can apply
At your local
Domino’s Pizza
Location
www.rpmpizza.com
EOE
130
MedicalDental
Patient
Insurance
Clerk
Apply in person Mon. - Fri. 8
a.m. - 4 p.m. at 3151
Knollwood
Dr, Mobile, AL 36693. E.O.E.
SURGERY SCHEDULER
MANAGERS &
ASSISTANT MANAGERS
★★ MURPHY USA ★★
is currently seeking
Managers for Baldwin and
Mobile County. Applicants
should possess strong leadership skills and solid
retail map skills. Prior
retail management in convenience store exp a plus.
Pay DOE. Monthly commission & benefits. Fax
resume to 251-217-6702 or
apply at your local Murphy
location. EOE M/F/H/V.
U-Store-It
We are among the largest
self-storage companies in the
U.S. Our Mobile facility seeks
aF-T Mgr. Must be avail.
Saturdays. We offer: $11/hr.
Benefits, mileage reimbursement and bonuses. Qualified
cand. must have Retail, computer and CSR exp. Email
Resume to
[email protected].
SALESPERSON
Apply in person, Red Tag
Furniture, 5363 Hwy 90 W,
Mobile.
MANAGEMENT
● TOP PAY
● HEALTH INSURANCE
● RETIREMENT
● SIGNING BONUS
● BALDWIN COUNTY
LOCATIONS
Call 888-737-7793
Out patient surgery center
needing experienced
PATIENT ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE. Medicare
& Medicaid knowledge preferred. Monday-Friday,
8:30 to 5:00. Excellent
Benefits package. Please
fax resume to 251-433-1467
Attn: Business Office
Manager
CNA’S
Increased Rate of Pay for
CNA’s. Apply in Person at
Grand Bay Convalescent
Home
Mon.-Fri. 9am-3pm
13750 Highway 90 West
Grand Bay, AL 36541
EXPERIENCED MEDICAL
ASSISTANT Needed for
OB-GYN Office, Part
Time,
Flexible Hours. Call MonFri
9am - 5pm 251-639-0335
★★★★★★
GORDON OAKS
Has immediate openings for
TECHNICIANS
• MECHANICS
• MACHINISTS
• TUBING
BENDERS
F
Exp. Required.
OPHTHALMIC
Ophthalmology
ASSISTANT
practice Computers skills a
must. Able to multi-task.
FT & P/T (M,W,F) days. Med
Scheduling/Ins Precert
exp. preferred. Apply in perexperience preferred.
135
Hiring Store Manager &
Asst
Manager - Bay Minette.
Asst
Mgr Positions Avail in
Mobile
Co. Locations. Send
Resume:
Attn HR 2448 Gordon Smith
17; Apply
Dr Mobile, AL 3661
at Any Location. E.O.E.
OffshoreMarine
OFFSHORE
INLAND SERVICES
Compensation includes: Base
salary, commission, quarterly
son or send resume to
bonuses, profit sharing, and
2880 Dauphin Street
APPT SCHEDULER/
401k. Also includes medical,
Mobile, AL 36606
TELEPHONE
dental, life insurance and
FT Days. Med. Insurance
EOE
EYE
CARE
PRACTICE
paid vacation.
work exp. req. Good Benefits.
Excellent Cust Svc Skills
Apply in person to: 2880
For an interview call
OffshoreMedical Ofc Exp Required
Dauphin St
251-414-55560
Mobile, AL 36606. EOE
Medical Manager Software
Marine
GOODWILL EASTER
SEALS
** GREAT BENEFITS **
135
F/T X-RAY TECH for busy PRN RNs, LPNs
Able Bodied Seaman and
QMEDs...Don’t miss your
orthopedic practice.
& CNAs
chance to get on board
Excellent benefits.
RN’s
Resumes: PO Box 86144,
Hornbeck Offshore, a
Mobile, AL 36689-6144. EOE Needed for rapidly growing leader in the marine transHome Health Care Agency in portation industry, is seekSaad Healthcare
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Bay Minette, AL area with ing resumes and applicaHas immediate opening for
position growing to full time. tions from USCG
FIELD STAFF RNs
Call Keena at 251-580-3271 or
Able Bodied
Home Health/Hospice exp.
GORDON OAKS mail resume to: Vanguard Documented
Seaman and QMEDs with
required. Paid on point sysHome Health, 100 E First St,
HEALTHCARE
valid STCW 95 interested in
tem w/guaranteed base. We
Bay Minette, AL 36507.
career advancement on
service Baldwin & Mobile
Has immediate openings for Lowery Animal Hospital is
board new state of the art
Counties. Apply in person:
Seeking Full Time
1515 University Blvd or call
supply vessels operating in
RN SUPERVIPersonnel Dept. 251-343-9600
Veterinary
the US Gulf of Mexico.
ext 138. EOE
Assistant.
Please
Bring
Hornbeck Offshore employSOR
Resume and Fill Out an ees enjoy premium pay,
★★★★★★
Full-time & Part-time
Application. 251-675-9323 comfortable work sched11-7
ules, an excellent benefits
Dental Receptionist W.
package, and abundant
New Pay Scale with benefits Mobile. Exp req’d. Send
LPNs or RNs Apply
opportunities for training
in person Mon. - Fri. 8 resume to: Box 852005,
and advancement. For
a.m. - 4 p.m. at 3151
Mobile
AL
36685
● Full-Time 2PM-10AM
Knollwood
immediate consideration
AND
Dr, Mobile, AL 36693. E.O.E.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ apply in person at:
103 Northpark Blvd., Ste
PRN’s
LAB TECH
GORDON OAKS
105
For busy family practice
ASSISTED LIVING
Covington, LA 70433 Or
● All Shifts
office. Good benefits. Send
Fax/e-mail
resumes to:
resume to: 1924-K, DIP,
Has Immediate Openings For
Must have Alabama Nursing
(985) 727-3788
Mobile, AL 36605
An
License and possess a [email protected]
ing knowledge in long term
RESIDENT
ORAL SURGERY ASSISMARINE PERSONNEL
care. New wage scale. Pay
TANT
ASSISTANTS
Exp’d
Inland Licensed
Based on Experience.
Dental Exp Req, Send
Captains & Deck Hands.
Benefits available, 401k plan.
Resume to 801 University
& CNA’S
Pay Starting $300-$325 per
Blvd. Suite D. Mobile, AL
3-11 & 11-7 Shifts
Apply in person at:
day. Paid Ins. & 401k Plan.
09
KINDRED HEALTH CARE 3660
Call 504-737-6993 9am-3pm
New Pay Scale.
1758 Springhill Ave., Mobile, LICENSED PHYSICAL
M-F
Apply in person
AL.
THERAPY ASSISTANT for
Monday-Friday,
8-4:30
100 Ton Utility Boat
EOE
PRN. Fax resume: 251-4503151-A Knollwood Drive
Captain
0072
Mobile, AL 36693
DENTAL ASSISTANTCompetitive pay + beneE.O.E.
Must be able to multi-task,
fits.
★★★★★★
8 hr day, 40 hr wk, nonFor more information,
CHIEF TECH POSITION
smoking facility. Will train.
call
985-325-5000
For growing multi-site canSend resume to: P.O. Box
GORDON OAKS cer center. 10 years
7387, Mobile, AL 36607-2940.
Therapy experience
HEALTHCARE
required. Supervisor expeMEDICAL ASSISTANT
Has immediate opening for rience a plus. Excellent
needed for Dermatology
benefits
and profit sharing.
Office. Must work well
Send resume to 3719
Physical
with others and be a team
Now Hiring
Dauphin St., Ste 100,
player. Experience preTherapist
• FITTERS
Mobile, AL 36608 or Fax:
ferred. Send resume along
on a PRN Basis
251-414-5646 Attn: Office
• WELDERS
with salary requirements
Manager
• HYDRAULIC
to The Mobile Register PO
F
preferred. Includes
grounds keeping & light
carpentry. Apply in person/interview req’d. 370
West Lee St., Chickasaw,
AL.
MedicalDental
★★★★★★
International Company seeking self-starter to join our
Field Operations Team. Must
be able to handle wide variety of duties in fast paced
environment including quality
control, training, and problem
solving in the commercial
cleaning industry. The
Operations Manager acts as a
corporate liaison to the JaniKing franchise base in the
region. Responsibilities
include classroom training for Box #2488-418, Mobile, AL
new
36630
Wait Staff & Bartenders
franchisees, management of
Needed
Immediately.
Call 251-456-2944
customer retention through a
Competitive Salary and other quality control program, and
Exp’d WAIT STAFF. Must
benefits. 251-661-0363
providing ongoing technical
be mature, pleasant,
support to active franchisees.
GENERAL MAINTEappealing. Split shift 11amA base knowledge of
NANCE
2pm & 5pm-10pm. Apply:
Microsoft outlook, Word, and
Captain’s Table, Battleship 60 unit Hotel. Hotel exp.
Excel a must.
Thunder’s taking BARTENDER
Warehouse Assistant
Parkway on the Causeway.
applications. Apply 4-6pm
Needed. Must have valid
THE PILLARS
only.
Driver’s
Is Hiring
7251-A Theodore Dawes
License, able to operate
Rd.
forklift, computer knowlWAIT STAFF & PANTRY
251-653-6988
edge a plus, must be willCHEF/ LINE CHEF
ing to work overtime &
CASHIER HOSTESS
Best pay in Mobile.
some weekends. Apply in
5PM-12AM. Apply
Benefits available.
person 11118 Hwy 31,
Captain’s
pply within
Ap
Spanish Fort, AL. No
Table, Battleship Parkway,
Mon-Fri 2-4pm
phone
on the Causeway.
1757 Government St.
calls please.
★★★★★★★★★
EOE Drug free Workplace.
DANCERS, SERVERS
PART-TIME
THE NAUTILUS
CLEAN UP NEEDED
Clean-up/Warehouse
TRUCK DRIVER
SEAFOOD
IMMEDIATELY.
Helper. Forklift exp.
RESTAURANT, US HWY
Mobile’s newest Adult
Unloading trucks, BC/BS,
The Mobile Register has an
98
entertainpd. vac., safety days, 401K. IN DAPHNE NOW HIRimmediate opening for a
ment club. $1000/wk earnApply: Gulf City Body &
Part-Time Truck Driver.
ING:
ing
Trailer Works, 601 S.
potential. Call 251-666-7020
The hours for this position
Conception St. NO PHONE
or
4115
Government
Blvd.
KITCHEN
HELP
are 7pm to 2am, days of the
CALLS
week may vary.
CHIEF ENGINEER
DAYCARE WORKERS
Requirements include a High
Experienced only need
No experience necessary.
School Diploma or GED.
Needed. Mon-Fri. 2-6pm.
apply.
Truck driving school desired. Must have References. 251- Also hiring for SERVERS and
EEOC.
Apply in person:
HOSTS positions. Start
1-year delivery and driving
660-7444
Mon-Fri
today. Apply in person or
r
experience required. Must
b/t 10am-5pm, Hampton
call 251-626-3972
have geographical knowledge Delivery & Installer perInn,
of Mobile and Baldwin coun- son needed. Apply in perExperienced
HOUSE930 W. I-65 Service Rd S.
ties. Must have a valid CDL
son at: Central Appliance, KEEPERS. Apply between
driver’s license and a clean
251-344-4942
1833 Denny Ave, Hwy 90, 7am to 3 p.m. at Econodriving record. Must also be
Pascagoula ■
WHATABURGER
Lodge, 156 West I-65. No
dependable, have the ability
NOW HIRING
phone calls please.
to work flexible hours and
CHICKASAW LOCATION
must be able to lift up to
COOKS-Earn Christmas
DRIVERS
60lbs.
money working at
Christian Organization
Now Hiring
Lakeside Lodege Rest. P/T.
Qualified applicants should needs FT drivers. Off
Cashiers & Retail
Immediate
openings for
Sundays. Excellent pay &
apply in person on
Part Time - All Shifts
the 4pm-9pm shift, Thurs.,
Wednesday from 1-4pm
benefits. Background
Apply in person at
at:Mobile Register
Fri. & Sat. nights & 10amchecks & drug screening.
CRACKER BARREL
401 N. Water Street
2pm Sun. lunch. Apply
Class D license required.
845-A
SCHILLINGER RD S
Downtown Mobile
after 4pm. 650 S. Cody Rd.
Apply in person M-F 1MOBILE, AL
Or fax/email resume to:
2:30pm
251-219-5099
NO PHONE CALLS
HOUSEKEEPING help
[email protected]
AMERICA‘S THRIFT
wanted. Schillinger Rd
EOE
STORES
location. Apply within: Blu
312 Schillinger Rd SouthRabbits Paradise, 2040
Read the Classifieds
Mobile
Schillinger Rd.
130
exp
pref. Apply Immediately ALL AMERICAN
to:
MARINE
VISION PARTNERS, Attn:
Office Manager
***Boat
Jobs***
Fax 251-650-1010
NOW HIRING! TOP PAY!
Email:
GREAT BENEFITS!
[email protected]
Immediate openings for AB’s,
OS’s, Captains, Eng, Unl Eng
Industrial Accounts
w/emd exp., Q-Med’s,
Representative w/vast
Tankermen. Exp. Offshore &
knowledge of filing
Inland Deckhands. Entry
Workman’s Comp & drug
level deckhands needed up to
screen certified. Good
$95 per day. www.americanBenefits. Send resume to
crewing.com
1924-K Dauphin Island
or call 251-443-7771
Pkwy, Mobile, AL 36605.
Two (2) Deckhands on 80’
boat, in most week★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ shrimp
ends. Call Randy at 251421-7997
Reimbursement
Specialist
★★★★★★★★
TRAINEE
Needed for Shipping
Industry
Needed for a fast paced
billing department.
(Borading Agent). Must
Experience in Medicare Part
Have
A & B Billing, Home Health
Clean Driving Record & Be
or DME a plus. Great pay
Able
and benefits for detail orientto Pass Drug Screen.
ed person with organizational
$25,000
skills may apply in person at
Salary to Start Per Year.
Saad’s Healthcare, 1515
Call
University Blvd, Mobile, Mon.
251-229-6342 9am-5pm Mon- Fri. 8-4. or call 251-343-9600
Fri.
for appt.
★★★★★★★★
EOE. M/F/D/V
Up to $19.00 per hr
depending on exp
Send resume or visit
3521 Brookdale Dr.
18
South, Mobile, AL 3661
or fax to 251-479-1989
EOE
138
Part
Time
I
PART-TIME
TRUCK DRIVER
The Mobile Register has an
immediate opening for a
Part-Time Truck Driver.
The hours for this position
are 7pm to 2am, days of the
week may vary.
Requirements include a High
School Diploma or GED.
Truck driving school desired.
1-year delivery and driving
experience required. Must
have geographical knowledge
of Mobile and Baldwin counties. Must have a valid CDL
driver’s license and a clean
driving record. Must also be
dependable, have the ability
to work flexible hours and
must be able to lift up to
60lbs.
★★★★★★
Qualified applicants should
apply in person on
Wednesday from 1-4pm
at:Mobile Register
401 N. Water Street
Downtown Mobile
Or fax/email resume to:
251-219-5099
[email protected]
EOE
Experienced
DIETARY AIDES
Apply in person Mon. - Fri. 8
a.m. - 4 p.m. at 3151
Knollwood
Dr, Mobile, AL 36693. E.O.E.
Home Heath Aid, Parttime.
For growing Home Health
Agency in Baldwin County.
251-943-3222, ask for Sonya.
★★★★★★
AL BODDEN
USED
SUPERCENTER
&
GORDON OAKS HEALTHCARE
Has Immediate Opening For
A
FLOOR TECH
Must be experienced.
1st Class (All Crafts)
18.00/hr.
$
18.30/hr.
$
New Top Base Pay:
Up To:
With Monthly Safety & Attendance Bonus
Additional Considerations and Pay:
- Scheduled Overtime
- Excellent Benefit Package
- Long-Term Work Under Contract
Immediate needs for the following crafts:
• Pipe Welders/Fitters
• Blaster/Painters
• Structural Fitters/Welders
• Scaffold Carpenters
• Maintenance Electricians/Mechanics
• Instrumentation Fitters
• O/S Machinists
• Marine Electricians
Apply in person only:
601 Bayou Casotte Pkwy.
Pascagoula, MS
Drug Free Workplace
Monthly Safety/Attendance Bonus
Day and Night Shifts Available
EOE
No Phone Calls Please
MANAGEMENT POSITION for local tax office.
Must have knowledge &
experience in income tax
preparation. Salary DOE.
Bonuses are available.
Mail resumes to: Baber’s
Inc., 2500 Amonett St.,
Pascagoula, MS 39567
or fax to 228-312-0387 ■
MANAGER
TRAINEES
NEEDED
Looking for a challenging
job? Looking for a great
place to work? Join the
Management Team at AMERICA’S THRIFT STORES and
put your leadership skills to
work. We are seeking selfmotivated individuals who
want to be successful and
help others at the same time.
Our company is founded on
Christian principles and supports family-oriented
Christian ministries locally
and around the world.
Competitive wages and an
excellent benefits package
based on education and experience. On-site interview is
required. EOE
Excellent pay and benefits
Apply in person Mon. - Fri. 8
a.m. - 4 p.m. at 3151
Knollwood Dr, Mobile, AL
36693. E.O.E.
DOCTOR’S
OFFICE
is expanding our team. You
can make the difference.
Direct patient care position.
On the job training available.
Email Resume Today [email protected] or fax
resume 251-343-9181
Licensed Graduate Social
Worker needed for local
outpatient dialysis clinic.
Regular hours. Excellent
benefits. Interested persons
should fax resume to 251471-2337. EOE
■ BILLING CLERK
Pascagoula Medical
office M-F, F/T, health ins,
vac, sick, & holiday benefits, CPT, ICD exp preferred. Fax resume
to: 228-938-0705,
■ CNA NEEDED
For More Information,
Call 228-474-3201
SALARY: $23,400.00 to
$34,400.00 per year based on
education & experience.
DENTAL ASSISTANT
NEEDED
E. Shore, Mon-Thurs,
Experience Required. Send
LOCATIONS: Gulfport, Ocean
Resume to 6475 Jordan Rd.
Springs, Mobile & Baton
Daphne, AL 36526
Rouge.
WORK EXPERIENCE: 1-2
years minimum
EDUCATION: HS, GED or
above
APPLY IN PERSON:
AMERICA’S THRIFT
STORE
312 Schillinger Road
Mobile
OR E--MAIL TO
[email protected]
NO PHONE CALLS
130
MedicalDental
Dental Assistant Position:
Competent adult, exp’d or
Faulkner dental trained:
M-Th, 8-6. 3263
Demetropolis Rd.
Ste 1, Mobile, 36693.
F
Appointment
Scheduler
FT Days. Exp. required.
Good benefits. Apply in person to:
2880 Dauphin Street
Mobile, AL 36606
EOE
Exp’d DENTAL ASSISTANT
needed for Multi-Doctor
Office.
Mon-Thurs. Apply 251-4766966
or fax resume to 251-4766967
Registered Nurses needed
for full time positions at
local Outpatient Dialysis
NURSE PRACTITIONER
Clinics. Regular hours.
(RFT): Salary Range:
Excellent benefits.
$21.00 - $32.00. Deadline for
Interested persons should
applications and resumes:
fax resume to 251-471-2337
5:00 p.m. Monday, October
EOE.
31, 2005. Send app. to:
Poarch Creek Indians,
★★★★★★
Human Resources
Department, 5811 Jack
GORDON OAKS
Springs Road, Atmore, AL
ASSISTED LIVING
36502. To receive more
info. call 251-368-9136 ext
Has Immediate Openings For
2263. Preference shall be
given to American Indians.
LPN’s
/DFWP. Every applicant
must complete an applica- All Shifts; Full-time, Mon-Fri
& Part-time Weekends
tion provided by Human
Resources at the Tribal
Apply in person
Administrative offices. A
Monday-Friday, 8-4:30
resume will not be accept3151-A Knollwood Drive
ed in the place of an appliMobile, AL 36693
cation.
E.O.E.
WE’RE OPEN &
HERE FOR YOU!
SPECIAL NOTICE!
We’re Going to Auction
WEEKLY North of the
Gulf Coast. Call Us Now
and Tell Us Your Needs
and We Will Buy For
You at Auction!!
EVERYTHING
25000
$
OVER COST
Our Prayers Are With
The Gulf Coast,
ESPECIALLY
Our Jackson &
George Co. Family
Main Street • Moss Point
475-9611
1-800-452-4341
141
Professional
-Technical
141
Professional
-Technical
IT MANAGER
Mississippi Security Police
now hiring Security officers
for our Chevron
Konica Minolta Printing
Solutions is looking for an IT Pascagoula Refinery
Prior Law
Contract.
manager for our Corporate
Enforcement or Armed
Headquarters in Mobile,
Forces
Exp
preferred.
Alabama. The persons hired
for this position will be
Apply in person 3003
responsible for planning and Pascagoula St.,
directing the efforts of the IT Pasca
agoula, MS. E.O.E
department and managing
the IT business applications
implementation of the
Company. Candidates must
have strong employee and IT
resource management skills
as well as a familiarity with
SAP. Familiarity with VB.net
is a plus. Other qualifications
include a Bachelors Degree in
Computer Science or similar
degree, 5 years experience in
IT Supervisory/managerial
responsibilities, strong familiarity with various Business
Applications, working knowledge of IT hardware, strong
technical skills and excellent
verbal and written skills.
CONSTRUCTION
MANAGEMENT
International Co. has career
position available in
Montgomery, AL for a
Contracts Manager. Must
have exp. working on large
comm. construction projects.
Government construction exp.
is preferred. Degree in construction related field preferred. Competitive salary,
benefits incl pd vacation, pd
relocation, ins, 401K. Mail
resumes to:
POB 210099, Montgomery, AL
Candidates must fill out an
36121. Fax: 334-394-0169 or
application on our website
Email to: [email protected]
under the Careers tab http://
EOE/M/F/D/V
printer.konicaminolta.com/
careers/index.asp
Commercial Lines
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
M/F/D/V
Insurance CSR , 3-5 yrs
exp, AL Insurance Lic.
Send resume to: CSR
Position, P.O. Box 850069,
Mobile, AL 36685
WEB DEVELOPER
Autocad Mechanical
Detailer
Needed. Entry level.
Vacation, insurance. Send
The Dixie Group is a major
carpet manufacturer with its resume to Engineering
MIS operation headquartered Manager, PO Box 249,
in the North Mobile area. We Saraland, AL 36571
have an immediate opening
for a Web Developer. Must be
proficient in Visual Basic,
ASP, Java, ActiveX controls.
Duties will include maintaining existing static and
dynamic websites, developing
new Java business applications, and VBA applications.
Must be forward thinking and
have experience in SQL. The
individual must possess good
communication skills and the
ability to work well with others as part of a team.
Macromedia experience a
plus.
Our company is a leader in
markets served and offers an
excellent compensation benefits package. Please mail or
fax your resume and salary
history to the address below:
No Phone calls Please!!
THE DIXIE GROUP
Attn: Human Resources
P.O. Box 11467
Mobile, AL 36671-0467
Fax: 251-679-3552
Seeking licensed commercial agent for insurance
agency. Accounting exp. a
plus. Please fax resume to:
251-343-1450
Architectural Firm in
Mobile
expanding with openings
for
INTERN & CAD OPERATOR
A CAD experience
required.
Submit resume to
[email protected]
INSURANCE
Commercial Lines
Assistant, Heavy
Technical, Computer &
Clerical, 5 Years
Experience in Insurance
Field. Mail Resume to:
P.O. Box 850069, Mobile,
AL 36685
Experienced, Professional
FORRESTER for
Executive
Level
Position. Send
AA/EOE
resumes
to Delaney Development,
Insurance Agency in
PO
Mobile & Baldwin Counties Box 218, Bellamy, AL 36901
seeks FT & PT P&C sales
producers respectively.
LOGISTICS COORDINAMust possess good written
TOR
and verbal communication 3 yrs min exp in truck
skills. Computer exp. and transporation. Must be
organizational skills
knowledgable in truck disrequired. Must be ambi- patch, computer exp a
tious, with strong people must. Exc. benefits. Apply
skills and ability to main- The Mobile Register PO
tain professionalism at all Box #2488-417, Mobile, AL
times. P&C lic. preferred 36630
but not required. Please
fax resume and salary
Retailrequirements to: 251-679Stores
1249
145
Web
Administrator
Looking for highly motivated
individual with experience in
graphic design and website
development. Responsibilities
include design and maintenance of all UM web pages,
maintaining presence on web
search engines, designing
email promotions, and some
graphic design print work.
Should be proficient in
Dreamweaver, QuarkXpress,
and Photoshop as well as
video applications, HTML,
Flash, etc. Send resume to
University of Mobile,
Director of Marketing, P.O.
Box 13220, Mobile, AL 36663 or
e
m
a
i
l
:
[email protected].
Civil Estimator and
Project Manager.
Experience with Site Work
and Utilities. Fax resume
to 251-631-3961
■ SATELLITE TV
Installers & Office Sales.
MS & AL. $7-$30/hr.
The Wireless Center
609 Hwy 90, Gautier, MS
Sun-Sat., 8-Noon
228-497-7027 / 251-634-9022
150
Sales
National Publishing
Company Expanding. 4
Sales Positions Mon-Fri
9AM-4PM 251-490-2891
SALES POSITION
Immediate Sales Position
open for self motivated
individual. 5 day work
week, paid training. Income
potential up $50,000 +
benefits. No experience
needed, will train.
Apply in person:
SKCO
Automotive
7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
Ph: 251-343-4488
Website: skcoautomotive.com
Seeking a qualified person
for an AD SALES & MARKETING position with
experience in publications.
The candidate must have
unique creative abilities,
distinctive computer skills
and experience in Adobe
Pagemaker, Microsoft
Office including Word,
Excel, and Publisher, as
well as Photoshop and
Quark Express. The candidate must have good organizational and follow-up
skills, be able to sell ad
space, layout ads and articles, and create press
releases as required.
Resumes must include
expected salary range those without will not be
considered. Please mail
resume to Communications
Position, 1613 University
Blvd., S., Mobile, Alabama
36609.
REX
Rex a leading electronic retailer
(over 200 stores Nationwide) seeks
motivated individuals to join our
professional sales team. Potential
to earn $40,000. Experience not
required. We offer benefits,
employee purchase discount and
unlimited opportunity for
advancement. Subject to
background investigations per
FCRA. E-O-E
Interviews 10 AM -7 PM Mon-Fri
7163 Airport Blvd.
& 3720 Airport Blvd.
NEEDED SALES PEOPLE for Roofing &
Construction Co. Income
averages $50K-$120K per
year. Must have sales
background. 731-467-1417.
Leads & training will be
provided.
157
TradeCraftsSkills
Exp’d Door Tech. Must
know rolling steel, hollow
metal. Benefits, pd. vacation, holidays & Christmas
Club. Contact Rachel 251645-1016
CABLE TV INSTALLERS
&
BURY DROP CREWS
NEEDED Immediately!
Get paid to train & learn.
Paid holidays & vacation.
Must
have truck or van. Please
call
251-621-0505 for directions
to 25476 Friendship Rd,
Suite E, Daphne
Metal Building Workers
Min 3 years experience
251-473-7730
Sales
P/T Sales
sperson/Assembler
Needed, 9-5 Town
Furniture
Company. 251-457-5452
SALESPERSON
Needed for Waste Industry.
Good Sales Package. Apply
Within 6225 Rangeline Rd.
Automotive Sales
3 OPENINGS
The New Tameron Honda
Eastern Shore is looking for
motivated winners to complete
its sales team. Currently we
have sales positions available
If you are a proven winner,
give Keith or Patrick a call
at (251)626-1115 for an appt
Full & part-time retail
sales position available.
Base plus commission.
Retail and/or flooring sales
experience a plus but not
required. Please call
(251)633-8835
157
TradeCraftsSkills
★★★★★★
Help needed Trimming
Paint.
Top pay $14/hr. 251-422-4769
STRUCTURAL FITTERS
& HELPERS needed for
local fab shop. BC/BS,
401K, vacation. Apply at
9490 I-65 Service Road,
Exit 22, Creola, AL
ELECTRICIAN needed.
Heavy control background.
Benefits and truck. Phone
251-694-0909, fax 251-6940977.
Avionics Electronics Tech
Must have abilities to
troubleshoot to component
level (not a board-swapper)
experience is a must!
251-947-7148 8am-4:30pm
CARPENTERS &
SKILLED
First Class Custom
CARPENTERS HELPERS
CARPENTERS. Home
Tools, Trans &
Builders.
Professionalism req’d.
251-377-7195 or 964-6891
Apply: TCM Remodelors
MAINTENANCE TECH
1061 Elmira St. M-F 8am12pm & 1pm-4pm. 251-209- Interviewing all skill levels. Must be willing to relo4281
cate.
Accepting applications for
Satisfactory Credit &
HVAC TECHNICIAN.
Crime Record Req’d. EOE.
Competitive pay and benePlease mail resume to 900
fits. Fax resume to 251-653Downtowner Blvd Suite A,
3466 or call
Mobile, AL 36609
251-653-3477 for appointMaintenance Personnel
ment.
needed, French Quarter
ROOFING & REMODEL- Apartments, 557 Azalea
ING
Rd. Apply b/w 10am &
ESTIMATORS needed
5pm.
Construction exp. preTRIM CARPENTER
ferred. Insurance estimatNeeded
ing exp. a plus. Salary,
Must have own trans. At
commission & benefits. 1least
888-222-6578 Mr. Brown.
5 yrs exp. 251-709-8581
ELECTRICAL FOREMAN
Commercial experience
JOURNEYMAN
req’d. Salary DOE. 251-580ELECTRICIANS
0730
MAINTENANCE
TECHNICIAN needed
for Pascagoula Apt.
Comm. . Fax resume to:
228-762-0800 ■
Floor Covering
Installer Needed Must
have
Exp. 251-937-5065 after 6pm
needed for Government
Project
in the Pensacola area. Pay
$23
per hour. Fax resumes to
541-888-0280 or email:
jacquie.armstrong@
natechcorp.com
AUTO BODY PERSON
Experience w/ References
$50,000+ Per Year.
Rettig’s 251-343-2300
Looking for
Warranty/Detail
Carpenter Needed immedi- Performance Contractors
ately.
is seeking qualified craftsMiscellaneous punch work. men to fill positions in the
Call 251-937-4935 or
Mobile, AL area:
fax 251-937-2682
Mr Rooter
Plumbing
now accepting applications
for experienced DRAIN
CLEANERS & PLUMBERS.
Good wages & benefits, uniforms furnished.
Apply at 2448 Wolf Ridge Rd.,
Mobile or 251-344-9465.
Roofing Estimator needed. Tools, truck, tape
measure, ladder intellectual. Pay upon experience. Call 1-866-634-9766
Pipe Welders
Structural Welders
Boilermakers
Form Carpenters
Pipe Fitters
Iron Workers
Up to $21.00/hour
Per Diem up to $100/day
w/OT (6-7 10 hr day workweek)
In House Painter Needed
for 760 unit plus Apartment
Call (251) 957-1111
Complex. Must have experience in acoustic and
■■■■■■■■■
sheetrock repair. 401K and
Forklift Mechanic
other perks. Salary DOE.
Min 3 years exp. IC &
FLOOR COVER- Apply at 3205 Lloyds Ln. or Electric
repairs necessary.
fax resume to 251-6666-1328
ING
Must have own tools.
Location
in Mobile, AL.
Welder
Fitter,
Manual
SALES ASSISSend resume to P.O. Box
Machinist
TANT
53321,
Baton
Rouge, LA
Current openings Fairhope,
70892 ■■■■■■■■■■
AL
Energetic, willing to learn college graduate needed to work
Marine Exhaust 251-928with/for experienced sellers in
A/C MECHANIC
1234
PET SHOP MANAGER
fine retail store setting.
Experienced Req’d. Better Hourly + benefits. 251-479- MAINTENANCE ELECbenefits & bonuses. 251-679- 0667.
TRICIAN FOR NIGHT
4560
SHIFT. Min. 3 yrs. exp.
Call for appt. 601-947-7210
150
7-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
154Telemarketing
NEEDED NOW
Commercial/industrial/marine
www.nanceinternational.com
Resumes to fax 409-838-6219
Tel 409-838-6127
EXPERIENCED
ELECTRICAL/MECHANIPLUMBERS New constr.,
CAL
Badge Deal. Phone Pros & Repair & Remodel. Must
FIELD SERVICE
Managers Wanted. Mon-Fri have references and valid Carolina Handling Exciting
drivers license. 251-666-1002
9AM-4PM. 251-490-2891
career opportunity with
premiere southeast dealer!
AAA A/C Co
TELEMARKETERS
Troubleshoot,
Repair and
Exp. Service Tech
Needed. Work from Home.
service our equipment in
UP2 $25/hr DOE 50+Hrs
$70 per deal. Call for
the Mobile, AL area.
Call 251-443-9323
details 251-661-2324
Basic Knowledge of electriLooking for
SALES: Inbound Calls,
cal
Hourly, Commission,
Subcontractors
and mechanical systems
Benefits. FT/PT. Flex. Ewith
mail Cover Letter, Resume Framing, Concrete, Masonry,
strong troubleshooting
& Salary requirements
etc....Workmans comp & genskills.
to: [email protected] Attn eral liability insurance req’d. Company Vehicle provided
Kurt
Call Mitchell Homes, Mobile, Salary DOE $16-20 per hr
AL 251-344-2600
EOE. E-mail: garePHONE PROS
cruiter@
FIRST CLASS CARPENHere’s your chance. Now
carolinahandling.com
TERS
hiring am and pm shifts.
fax
770-723-0920
TOP PAY
Top pay + bonuses. Auto
251-591-0546
dialers. 251-661-5098
GLAZIERS CURTAINWALL
JOURNEYMAN CARPEN5 yrs exp. Benefits.
TERS
TradeUniversal
Glass 433-5960;
needed. Pay based on
Crafts331-0471
experience 251-675-5914
157
Skills
ALAMO RENT A CAR @
MOBILE REGIONAL AIRPORT
AUTOMOTIVE TECH
Fastest Growing Furniture
WANTED
AUTO MECHANBoster
Plumbing,
Licensed
store
Jouneyman Plumber
in area. FURNITURE
IC
Must be skilled in repairs
Needed. 251-604-6612
SALES
of current model GM &
Immediate position available
Immed. position.
AC SERVICE TECHS
for Auto Mechanic. Excellent
Chrysler vehicles.
Salary+comm
pay and benefits. Paid trainTop pay, health-disability- Excellent ASE certified
& benefits. Apply in person dental-life insurance, 401K, pay scale. Minimum of 4
ing. Flexible schedule. Valid
w/resume: Leon Atchison
Drivers License. Some expepaid vacations and holi- ASE certificates required.
rience needed. Apply in perFurni.
days,
Minimum of two years
son:
Ask for Brenda or Diane.
spiffs and bonuses. Drug experience. Must provide
SKCO
free
work
place.
Apply
@
own tools. Benefits and
HEALTH & FITNESS
7291
Vacation offered.
Attention Mobile & Daphne
Automotive
Cottage Hill Rd 251-633-3356
Omni
Health
&
Fitness
Service Dept.
Fax resume to 251-633-6415
Center, the largest & the
Mailing Equipment
7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
most complete family fitPh: 251-343-4488
Installer, Mobile/Pensacola Email resume to:
[email protected]
Website: skcoautomotive.com ness center, are coming to area. Paid training.
m
Daphne & Mobile. We’re
Computer technical skills
looking for qualified mem- required. Send resume to
HELP WANTED FOR
ESTIMATORS
Action South Inc. P.O. Box
HOME
Now taking applications bership directors.
Qualifications
are:
Must
be
516,
Gardendale,
AL
35071
IMPROVEMENT
COMPAfor motivated individual
self motivated. Must be a
NY
for Estimator/Project
CARPENTERS & FOREteamplayer.
Must
be
fitNEED STRONG WORK
Manager for the Gulf Coast
MAN Proven exp. in resiness orientated. Sales
ETHIC.
area. Minimum 6 years
dential
251-607-9112
experience. Competitive experience helpful. Must
remodeling.
Lipford
conbe
able
to
do
external
&
wage and benefit package.
struction offers local, year
Exp. PLUMBERS
All applications are confi- internal marketing.
round work. Competitive
for New Construction.
dential. Fax resume to 251- Complete training propay,
benefits.
Valid
DL.
Benefits
Avail. 251-379-6576
661-1181 or apply in person gram. Salary +
Apply in person or call
Carpenter & Helpers
J. C. Duke & Associates, Commission. $27,000-$31,500 Mon-Fri 9-4, 1480 Cody Rd.
potential to start. Call 251Needed!
1716 Industrial Park
S. 633-5554
625-4240 Ask for Parker.
Top Pay, Tools Furnished,
Drive, Mobile, AL 36693
Hiring for Daphne &
■■■■■
Drug Screen Required.
Mobile
Orange Beach, AL. Call
251-980-5270
EXCITED?
WE ARE!! We can’t stop
1st Class
growing. Alliance Security
Painters
is now hiring 3 outside terSTART IMMEDIATELY!
ritory SALES REPS. Our
5 yrs exp. in new residential
company plan is the highhomes. Top pay with benefits.
est in the industry. Call
Needed for local trucking
251-454-1965
now to schedule a confiden- company shop. Must be able
tial interrview. 251-476-9000 to work immediately without FRAMING CARPENTERS
supervision. Must have own needed. Experienced only.
TOWN & COUNTRY
tools. ★ NEW STARTING
251-379-6945; 251-379-6941
FURNITURE
PAY SCALE. Hourly rate
Seeks SALESPERSON.
based on experience. ★
Full-time. 5 Day Work
Please call Mike
Week Closed Sundays.
at 251-433-3391 ext 105
Sales Exp. Req’d. 251-476■■■■■
0995
Exp’d PAINTERS needed
Must have transportation
& tools. 251-401-2719
DIESEL
MECHANIC
F
Maintenance
Tech
Exp Electrician Only.
Looking for hardworking,
dependable electricians.
Apply Spring Hill
Apartments, 150 DuRhu Dr.
Mobile. See Joe McAdory.
Wages based on exp and
performance. Starting at
$10 per hour.
CARPENTERS, NAIL
DRIVERS & HELPERS
Needed. 251-973-0692 or 251463-1644
EXP’D HELPERS &
GLAZIERS
needed. Contact Mobile
Glass for appt. 471-3378
Roofing Company now hiring
Exp COMMERCIAL
ROOFERS
and PROJECT MANAGERS.
Fax resume to 850-469-9300
or call 850-469-9490
SUPERINTENDENT
For Commercial
Construction
Projects. 5+ Years experience
required. Drug Screen
Required.
Fax Resume to 251-661-1181
or
Apply in person @ J.C.
Duke Assoc., 1716
Industrial Park
Drive, Mobile, AL.
Journeyman and
Apprentice Plumbers needed. Call Jimco @ 251-6338003.
Iron Workers
Apply in person at
G.A. West
12526 Celeste Road
Saraland, Alabama
Cabinet Makers &
Finishers
Experienced Only. Night
shift,
Top pay, Start
Immediately.
Call 251-401-1308
★★★★★★★
FT. Must have exp. in woodwlrk, plumbing, & electrical. Long Term Positions
Must be HVAC Cert. Apply in Available
person to: 2880 Dauphin St in Mobile, AL for:
Mobile, AL 36606. EOE
WE HAVE IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR THE
FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
PART TIME
Dispatchers
Valet
Traffic Monitor
Customer Service
FULL TIME
Police Officers
General Maintenance
Human Resource Assistant
Custodian
Training Available for All Positions.
We Offer Excellent Benefits for All Full Time Positions.
(Medical, Dental, Life Insurance and Retirement)
A 10 Year Work Employment History Required.
Must Pass Drug and or Physical, Finger Printing
and Airport Security Clearance.
ALL INTERESTED APPLICANTS SHOULD APPLY
IN PERSON AT 1891 NINTH STREET.
Aluminum Welders
Upholsterer Needed, 5
Fitters
Years Experience. Must Be
Outside Machinists
Fully Self Contained. 251Marine Carpenters/Joiners
316-0985
FIBERGLASS LAMINATORS, FABRICATORS &
RUBBER LINING TECHNICIANS NEEDED. TOP
PAY!! COMPANY BENEFITS. WILL TRAIN.
APPLY 8475
BELLINGRATH RD. 9AM2PM 251-653-5052
Starting Pay $19.00/Hr. If
you are interested in a job
in the Shipbuilding
Industry call Matt at
Marine Contracting Group
LLC @ 251-370-4225 or
email [email protected]
Sheet Rock
Hangers
Bender
Shipbuilding
Is Now Hiring For
In Bay St. Louis, MS. $20/hr.
The Following Crafts:
2 hrs travel pay. $50/day
per diem. Apply in person at
- Crane Operators
G.A. West
12526 Celeste Road
APPLY IN PERSON
Saraland, Alabama
MUST PASS DRUG SCREEN
Sonny 679-1965
A/C Install Mechanics
& Helpers: Top Wages
No Travel-45+Hours
Call 251-443-9323
HVAC Installers Needed.
Competitive wages and
benefits available. 21530
Professional Dr.
Robertsdale. 251-947-5972
G
8-B
157
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
TradeCraftsSkills
157
Electricians
Jobs in Bay St. Louis Area
$20/hr. 2 hrs travel time.
$50/day for electricians
Local Mobile work at Ipsco
Steel, $18.50/hr & $40/day for
Journeyman Electricians
Written test given. Drug test
required. Bring hard hat,
safety glasses and steel
toed shoes.
Apply in person at
G.A. West
12526 Celeste Road
Saraland, Alabama
AC Tech, Installers &
Helpers. Sign on bonus to
qualified applicants.
Early Air Control 251-6491026
Preferred Alignment & AC
needs experienced
MECHANIC
PDOE. 251-679-0323
TradeCraftsSkills
157
TradeCraftsSkills
157
TradeCraftsSkills
157
TradeCraftsSkills
157
ROOFER
1 needed w/5 yrs exp. No
labor involved. Great earnings potential. H.B. 251-3776951
AUTO BUFFER &
DETAILER
Min. 5 yr. exp. Refs req’d.
Call 251-476-9965
Construction Company
seeks WATER LINE SPECIALIST.
Position requires a minimum of 5 years experience
with installation of ductile
iron and PVC pipe. Good
pay and good benefits.
Please call (205) 349-1910
or send replies to
H & W Construction, Inc.,
3101 12th Street, Suite #1
Northport, AL 35476
157
TradeCraftsSkills
157
IMMEDIATE NEED
Exp’d Framers,
First Class MACHINIST
Trailer Mechanics &
LABORERS
Carpenters &
Helpers Needed. Sheet
Must be able to operate
Exp’d Form Carpenters
FT position. Call Mobile Pipe
SHIPFITTERS
Carpenters
Helpers.
Local
lathes
&
mills
&
read
blue
metal
work, welding, burnApply in person at:
Welding for appt 251-422-3065
ELDERS
work. 256-492-7575 or
prints. Mechanical exp pre- PIPEFITTERS-WE
ing, brake & suspension
G.A. WEST
PIPE
WELDERS
256-312-2684
Lv
msg
ferred.
Drug
test
req’d.
work.
Trailer repair.
CABINET
MAKERS
&
12526 Celeste Road
ELECTRICIANS-OUTSIDE
Salary based on exp.
BC/BS, pd vac., safety
Finishers Wanted. Exp
Saraland, Alabama or call
MACHINISTSExcellent
benefits.
251-457days
&
401K.
Apply: Gulf
ROOFERS
Only!
Quality
Cabinets
Inc.
Sonny 251-679-1965
PAINTER BLASTERS
9681
City Body & Trailer Works,
251-661-9079
needed. 251-209-9831
PLUMBERS
601 S. Conception St. NO
Master & Journeyman
for framCARPET & VINYL
TOP PAY- Per Diem
PHONE CALLS
PIPE FITTERS CARPENTERS
Needed
ing in
Installers Needed. Top pay.
Included
for Comm Work, Top Pay Pensacola, FL work. 877Fairhope & Mobile area. GARAGE DOOR & GUTPIPWELDERS
251-473-1541; 877-473-1541
Benefits, OT Avail. 251Experience needed. 251-649- TER INSTALLERS Help
227-6607
$17.00/hour + $50/day in
Wanted. No experience
583-7218 or Fax 251-666-1143
6755
A/C INSTALLER &
Mobile area for shutdown.
GLAZIERS
needed. Start Immediately.
HELPER
LAMINATOR
MAINTENACE
Top Pay and benefits. Pay
Call 251-666-8313
CUMMINS
NEED
A
RAISE?
Full Time, Top Pay
DOE. No experience, no
POSITIONS
251-660-9595; 680-0060
Benefits! 251-473-3176
CARPENTERS &
MID-SOUTH
problem, will train. Apply:
FOR 3 FITTERS
ROOFERS needed. Must
4415 Government Blvd;
TIRE TECHNICIAN
& 2 WELDERS
Immediate
have 2 yrs exp & transOpportunity for:
Fax: 251-666-6386. Come
Good driving record.
Working 4 10hr days a
portation. T&J Investments
Diesel
Technician
Metro
Glass
join
our
team.
Experience
in
large
truck
Opening!
week. $17.00/hour
251-508-1841; 251-458-1975.
tires. Great opportunity for
Apply in person at:
5
+
years
exp.
or
recent
grad
Journeyman
G.A. WEST
advanceme
ent. Exc. benePLUMBERS to hook up
■■■■■■
of
Diesel
College
or
Vo-Tech
12526 Celeste Road
FEMA
w/metal building erection
fits. Apply GREAT
program. Must have own
Due to tremdenous growth
Saraland, Alabama.
trailers in Mississippi.
experience. Mobile area.
SOUTHERN WOOD, 7940
tools.
in brand new facility immediCall 251-679-1965
Top pay, Per diem
$18/hr. $25/day per diem. work Park Blvd, Irvington, AL
8235 Padgett Switch Rd
Irvington, AL. 251-957-1095
EOE. Drug free workplace
5-7 days/week, 10hrs a day.
G.A. West, 12526 Celeste Road,
Saraland, Alabama. Call 6791965.
Ask for Sonny
MECHANIC NEEDED
3-5 years experience in
Drive Train. 251-625-1610
AUTO PAINT PREPPER
Min. 5 yr. exp. Refs req’d.
Call 251-476-9965
G
Contact Us By Phone At
432-337-3571
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
TradeCraftsSkills
CARPENTERS
UNDERGROUND
UTILITY LOCATOR
Top wages paid for experiGLOBAL EMPLOYMENT ROOFERS & LABORERS ence, must have good
Has Jobs on Mississippi
MVR. We offer truck,
Help Needed Top $$.
Gulf
401K, medical, paid vacaCall 251-645-6129 or
★★★★★★
Coast Shipyards for all
tion. Full time, Mobile
● Frame & Alignment
251-680-9463
Shipyard Crafts & Out of
County. Background check,
Tech
State
■
NOW
HIRING:
drug screen req’d.
Experienced with heavyMedical Equip.
Work for Mig and Flux
HVAC TECH & Installer, ASPLUNDH Company,
duty truck frame straightRepair
Tech
Core
Robert, 334-850-4324.
ELECTRICIAN &
ening and alignment,
Welders. Good Pay &
Helper. Good Pay &
including suspension
SAAD Healthcare Services
Hours.
Immediate
repairs.
benefits. Call 228-762-1786
has immediate opening for a
Call 1-877-762-9899
Openings
Medical Equipment Repair
SPRAY
● Body Shop Technician:
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
Technician. Hours are Mon.PAINTERS/SANDERS.
Experienced with heavyFOR FITTERS &
Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. with
INSIDE
MACHINISTS
Full Time w/Benefits.
duty truck paneling, body- weekend rotation. Great pay WELDERS. Great pay. For
WELDERS & FITTERS
251-653-4080
work and some mechanical & benefits.
info contact Ashley at 228Apply in Person at
work.
Please apply Mon.-Fri. 8:30SPI/Mobile Pulley Works
769-2546, 228-547-3216.
Exp’d FRAMERS &
4:30
905 South Ann St, Mobile
HELPERS
1515 University Blvd, Mobile,
Must Have Own Tools.
251-653-0606
ELECTRICIAN
Must
have
own
transportaAL
Please Contact Lou at
tion tools. Good pay.
LUBE
MECHANIC
or
call
251-343-9600
for
appt.
1-800-239-4608
Mobile area
EOE. M/F/D/V
Needed. Exp. w/servicing
For Details. E.O.E.
Industrial maintenance exp
Ricky 251-377-4093
heavy construc. equip. 251required. Remote Alaska.
653-5410
Carpenter/Carpenter
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Travel and housing provided. ELECTRIC MOTOR
Helpers
Salaried with full benefits. Up WINDER with EXPERIMotorcycle Mechanic needCONSTRUCTION WORKMust Have Commercial
to $5000 per month to start. ENCE. Pascagoula, MS
ed for growing business.
ERS - No experience. A
Exp,
Fax single page resume to 253- area 228-762-4923
251-689-9552 or 645-0336
local established specialty 502-5385 Attn: J.B. EOE
Transportation & Hand
after
5pm
Construction
contractor is seeking appliTools.
Iberville Insulations needs
Superintendent
cations for INSTALLERS
Call 251-973-2444
JOURNEYMAN INDUS- Baldwin Co. Area. Pay
for permanent work.
TRIAL
SIVALLS, INC.,
Based on Exp. Exc
Training provided. Starting
INSULATORS 251-653-2848 Benefits. 251-665-0021
HAS OPENING FOR
pay $8/hr. Experienced
installers earn over $15/hr
EQUIPMENT
AAA STUCCO
A.S.M.E.
with benefits. Applicants
& FINISHCODE WELDERSmust have reliable transSUPERINTEN- PLASTERERS
■ Maintenance Tech needERS
3G AND 6G
portation & be willing to
ed for 114 unit property.
DENT
$15-$18
hr
travel. 251-633-8940 between
$13.00 - $15.00/HR.
Sanders Bros., Inc. is accept- HELPERS w/exp $7-$10/hr Psacgoula area, HVAC
8am-3pm
Must pass drug test
cert. Apply in
ing applications for an experiDOE
& physical
enced Equipment
person: 3015 Eden St,
251-675-0771
READY MIX
Great benefits
Superintendent to maintain a
Pascagoula, or on line:
Minimum 2 years
PLANT REPAIR fleet of trucks, maintain com- TESECON, INC. www. lanecompany.com
faberciation expercience
pany owned and rented equipNO PHONE CALLS
Mobile, AL
&
ment, also perform scheduled
required
maintenance and make
Must pass 3G Test on
MAINTENANCE repairs
*HIRING
IMMEDIATELY*
ELECTRICIANS
as needed. For more
Plate & 6G Test on 2”
Rush Truck Center of
Mobile,
Located at Exit 15A & I-10,
Has Openings For The
Following Positions:
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
$1,000 Sign on bonus upon 6
months completion of employment
Competitive benefit package,
including vacation, holidays,
401k
Pre-employment substance
abuse testing and physical.
Send resumes to:
Cummins Mid-South LLC
Attn: Bill Calvert
1924 E. I-65 Service Rd. N.
Mobile, AL 36617
Phone: 251-456-2236
Fax: 251-452-6419
Exp’d HARDWOOD
FLOOR
INSTALLER, SANDER &
FINISHER. 251-634-1718;
401-5216
160
Resumes
MOBILE’S FINEST
RESUME
800 Downtowner Blvd Suite
A
251-344-4253
170
Job
Appliances
WASHER & DRYER Set,
Electric, good cond.
$225. 228-522-0072
DRYER,
ELECTRIClooks & runs
good.
$85, 522-0072
320
Auctions
ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY OCT. 22nd
■ 9:00 AM ■
6751 RYAN RD, THEODORE
Preview: Friday 21st
2:00 pm till 6:00 pm
38’ Motor Home, ’99 Jeep
Grand Cherokee w/tow pkg,
Pick-ups, pool table, fishing
tackle, baby grand piano,
sofas,
chairs, beds, Coca-cola
collectibles, golf cart.
335
pay and benefits. Paid training. Flexible schedule. Valid
Drivers License. Some experience needed. Apply in person:
SKCO
Automotive
Service Dept.
RADIATOR TECHNICIAN
7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
needed. Must have experiPh: 251-343-4488
ence. 251-675-4780
Website: skcoautomotive.com
Fiberglass Laminators
Fabricators & Machine
Operators needed.
Experienced & Trainees.
Pay dependent on exp.
Apply in person: 8201
Zeigler Blvd. No phone
calls.
★★★★★★★★★
COUNTERTOP FABRICATOR
/INSTALLERS NEEDED
Will Train Right Person
Call CTS 251-660-1148
★★★★★★★★★
CHECK FIRST
■■■■■■
★★★★★★★★★
FLOORING INSTALLERS
Needed, Must have own
tools
& vehicle. CTS 251-660-1148
★★★★★★★★★
310
Information
ate
opening for certified
TECHNICIAN
Howard Bonds #0533
SIGN-ON BONUS AVAILMike Morris #1621
ABLE
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
251-626-0197 251-401-5610
Automotive technician experiwww.hbondsauctions.com
SUGGEST THAT
ence a must. Applicants must
have own tools. Up to $22 per
BEFORE
flat hour w/40-50 hrs a wk
Building
MAKING AN
guaranteed. Great benefit
INVESTMENT IN
Materials
package. Come join the best
RESPONSE
TO
AN
AD,
little dealership on the
STEEL ROOFING & SIDING
THAT
Eastern Shore.
Galvalume & Colors from $9.95/sq
YOU INVESTIGATE THE
EAST BAY KIA
OFFER WITH AGENCIES Goldin Metals, Inc. 800-777-6216
251-621-2277
David Bitney
SUCH AS THE BETTER
Service/Parts Director
BUSINESS
[email protected]
BUREAU AT 1-800-987-8280
FIBERGLASS BOAT
REPAIR
AUTO MECHANCan Train Right Person,
IC
F/T,
Top Pay, Benefits. 251-473- Immediate position available
3176
for Auto Mechanic. Excellent
PLUMBERS WANTED
For Work in Perdido Key
and Mobile. Excellent
Wages,
Benefits & Sign On Bonus!!
Pleasse Call 850-626-0062 or
850-698-7033
TradeCraftsSkills
■ Wanted Electricians
& Helpers to hook up
FEMA Trailers.
Overtime, 7 days,
call 228-762-7588
STEEL ERECTIONS
Structural & Metal buildings. Need FOREMAN,
JOURNEYMEN and
HELPERS. Full time
work, good pay. 251-6756088.
NEED
A ROOF?
OR THE CONSUMER
PROTECTION
AGENCY IN JACKSON,
MS AT 1-800-281-4418
STEEL ROOFING
& SIDING
Majestic Metals, Inc.
1-800-647-8540
CHECK FIRST
380
Furniture /
Household
3 PC King Dbl Pillow Top
Matt/Set never opened
Worth $550 Sell $225
Can deliver 228-234-0999
NEW QUEEN Pillow Top
Mattress set. Never
opened. $145 Can deliver
228-234-0999
Louis Phillip
All wood cherry bedroom suite: dresser,
mirror, chest, queen
bed with rails, night
stand
Retail Value
Special Price
$2,040
$999
Willis
Furniture
“Where Quality is
Still Affordable”
3202 Chico St.
Pascagoula
762-0028
NASA Memory Foam
Queen size matt. set. 20 yr
warr Must sell $495 Can
deliver 228-234-0999
Sacrifice, Nice Sectional
w/ 2 incliners, jeweltones,
& cocktail table, like new,
$875. 228-248-2197
BEDROOM ENSEMBLE
Sleigh or Poster Bed,
Dresser, Mirror,
Armoire, Night Stand.
Exquisite hand-carved
w/mahogany finish. New
in box. Heirloom quality.
Retail $7900 Sale for
$2900 (334)406-4591
Can E-mail Pictures
Comm.
THE MOBILE REGISTER
Business
SUGGESTS THAT BEFORE
MAKING AN INVESTMENT
Equipment
IN RESPONSE TO AN AD,
THAT YOU INVESTIGATE Commercial Pizza Oven &
Garage
THE OFFER WITH AGEN- Stainless Steel Freezer.
CIES SUCH AS THE BETTER
Sales
$2500/obo 588-6934
BUSINESS BUREAU AT 4335494 OR THE CONSUMER
MOVING SALE!
Equipment
GENCY IN
PROTECTION AG
3304 Charlie Hudson Rd.
MONTGOMERY, AL AT 1-800Sales
(Just off Hwy 63, across
392-5658.
355
385
365
Rentals
Legal Notices
★★★★★★★★
LEGAL
NOTICES
DEADLINES
from Power Plant,
Moss Point) Sat., 8am-3.
90 ton Truck Crane, 240 Ft Lots of small items,
Boom, w/ operator
power tools & clothes.
avail for work Mobile to
Gulport, 8 hr. minimum
Industrial
+in & out, 251-675-6088
400
370
Farm
Equip./
Supplies
INTERNATIONAL 254
24HP, 3 cylinder diesel,
2-Spd PTO. Exc. cond.
PUBLISH
DEADLINE $3800 475-4203 / 217-4203
info call 1-864-303-1600.
TECHNICIAN
Exp’d FRAMERS & CAR& HELPERS
● Pipe (TIG) Welders CS/SS
Monday
Wednesday
5pm
EOE/M/F/V/H
PENTERS
25HP KUBOTA 4WD,
Needed.
Needed in the Gulf Shores
● Pipe Fitters
Tuesday
Thursday
5pm
AUTO DETAIL
& CARPENTER
$5,000
area.
● All Civil crafts
Carpenter Needed
Wednesday Friday
5pm
Good Benefits package
Immediate position available
HELPERS
228-327-0117
We offer BC/BS, 401K, etc.
Apply French Quarter
Thursday
Monday
5pm
for
Auto
Detail.
Excellent
pay
251-591-0546
251-370-0548; 251-540-2176
Working Ove
ertime
Please Apply in person at: Apartments, 557 Azalea
and benefits. Paid training.
Friday
Tuesday
5pm BOBCAT, Versa handler,
Good Rates/Per-Diems
Rd. between 10 & 5 p.m.
2640 South McKenzie St,
EXPERIENCED R&R
Flexible schedule. Valid
Immediate Need! Sunday
Wednesday
5pm 723 w/ grappler, 2004,
Foley, AL 36535.
Drivers License. Some expePERSON
excel cond. 251-391-2776
Fax resume to:
or call 800-239-3879.
rience needed. Apply in perneeded. Must have own
RESIDENTIAL ELECTRI(251) 478-6061
For Information Regarding
tools. Clean driving record. son:
CIANS
CAREER POSITION
Legal Notices Call
Furniture /
A+ TRANSMISSION
1st Class $21.00 hr.
Call:
SKCO
MAINTENANCE/HANDY
Telina Birch (228) 934-1420
Household
TOP HELPERS-$15 per hour
(251) 478-9031, x-55
Call Bo 2551-633-7979
MAN
Automotive
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A NEW Full size Matt/
Per Diem $6.50 per hour
for Fast Paced,
RADIATOR TECHNICIAN
Service Dept.
E-mail:
8235 Padgett Switch Rd
Manufactured Home
Set. New, never opened.
EXP. CARPENTERS,
w/experience. Apply in per7354 Airport Blvd, Mobile
Irvington, AL. 251-957-1095
[email protected]
Dealer. Salary, Benefits,
$130.00 Can deliver.
Drywall, Roofers &
Ph: 251-343-4488
EOE. Drug free workplace
son, Rainwater Radiator
Miileage. Truck & Basic
228-234-0999
Laborers. Reliable trans. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR Service, Inc., 2657 Old Shell Website: skcoautomotive.com
Tools Required.
A
POSITIVE
CHANGE?
a must. Call 497-5136 ■
Road.
Skilled Trades/Construction
Call 251-645-1502.
Construction Workers
PAINTERS NEEDED
RE-BATH OF MOBILE is
MASSE CONTRACTING AC
Needed Immediately.
BE&K Industrial Services
★ ★ CALL ★ ★
looking for Experienced
Techs/Installers/Plumbers.
NOW HIRING
Hiring
all Field positions. has employment opportuni251-473-3290 Ext 10.
Remodelers, Excelllent Pay
Foley. Great pay! Good
★ Expd Crane Operators
ALSO HIRINGties in the Jackson, AL
Antiques
Benefits. Must Have Own
Opp!
251-968-7980
975-7980
w/PLM Lattice Boom exp.
College Campus seeking
Superintendents,
area for experienced
Truck. Call 251-661-0029.
★ Frontend Loaders.
J & B ANTIQUES
Skilled ELECTRICIAN for
Journeyman Pipe Welders
Project managers &
Exp’d 2nd Shift FORE★ Shipfitters
Permanent Maintenance
Estimators
MAN for Steel Warehouse.
and Pipe Fitters. For more ✭ New Shipment
DIESEL MECHANIC
★ Pipefitters
Position. Comparable
Exp. preferred, travel req. information and applicaSupervise loading of trucks Must have own tools &
✭ Quality Furniture
★ Flux welders.
wages
Send resume or info to:
tion procedures, contact
2pm-10pm. Good salary,
good driving record. Exc.
✭ Certified Appraisal
and benefits. Fax resume NCD, Inc. P.O. Box 851645 Carla at: 251-246-8643.
benefits. Apply GREAT
Call 800-951-6223 or apply at monthly bonus, BCBS,
Services
to
Mobile, AL 36685-1645
EOE.
safety bonus, 401k. 150 yr
SOUTHERN WOOD, 7940
6331 E. Hwy 90, Moss
Quality Furniture Repair
251-460-2197 or call 331-3381
251-633-2762
old Company. 251-653-1911
Park Blvd, Irvington, AL
Point, MS
& Refinish. 769-0542
G
380
Merchandise
305
Equipment
‘83 MODEL CASE 880
Track-hoe. Runs good.
Call Steve 228-218-6046
410Lawn/Garden
Supplies
SNAPPER’S ZERO
TURN MOWER
Snapper Z-Rider Zero
Turn Mower. 38” Deck.
Joy Stick control.
5 yrs old. Exc. cond.
Paid $3000, Sell for
$1295/obo 475-7850
420
Miscellaneous
QUALITY STORAGE
BUILDINGS
Built on site!12X12, $1595
12X16, $1895;16X24, $2695
251-625-1626, pg. 423-9283
ROUND POOL 24ft,
you move, good cond,
needs new pump, $1,000.
/offer. 228-826-1198
AC/HEAT UNIT 3.5 Ton
Electric. 7 yrs old. Good
cond. $950 474-2841
Read the Classifieds
Best
Selection!
Lowest
Prices!!
NEW INVENTORY ARRIVING DAILY!!!
NO PAYMENT FOR NINETY DAYS!!!!** 0.0% FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS****
06 CADILLAC CTS
#A3379
SALE PRICE $29,495.00
SALE PRICE $15,695.00
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
24,745*
$
750.00 DISASTER
RELIEF REBATES!
06 COLORADO REG CAB
#C3300
SALE PRICE $13,995.00
*
06 SILVERADO EXT CAB
#C3338
SALE PRICE $19,695.00
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
18,945
#C3362
06 CHEVY COBALT
#C3407
SALE PRICE $14,285.00
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
*All rebates assigned to dealer plus tax and title w.a.c.
**Subject to credit approval
***05 models, all rebates assigned to dealer plus tax & title w.a.c.
****05 Tahoes w.a.c.
14,945*
13,245
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
13,995*
#C3318
06 SILVERADO CREW CAB
SALE PRICE $25,495.00
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
28,745*
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
#C3339
SALE PRICE $14,795.00
DISASTER RELIEF
REBATE -750.00
Your $
Price...
06 COLORADO EXT CAB
06 SILVERADO REG CAB
13,545*
CHEVY TAHOE’S***
SAVE UP TO $11,000.00!!*
+$750.00 ADDITIONAL
DISASTER RELIEF
*
TOP DOLLAR
TRADE-IN’S
2.9% FINANCING
AVAILABLE
*WAC
H U N D R E D S O F C L E A N L AT E M O D E L P R E - O W N E D V E H I C L E S ! ! R O W S A N D R O W S O V E R A C R E S A N D A C R E S ! ! ! !
GM CERTIFIED
A L L M A K E S A N D M O D E L S A VA I L A B L E
USED CARS
SLOW
BAD
CREDIT
OR NO
WE CAN HELP!
With Special Financing
YOUR JOB IS YOUR CREDIT!
Even if you’ve had
BANKRUPTCY
LOCATED NORTH OF HWY. 90... 14TH ST. PASCAGOULA
PHONE: 228-762-2711 1-800-252-9028
REPOSSESSION
LIENS
CALL LaLinda
1-800-252-0928 or 762-2233
Miscellaneous
420
485
Pets: Free to
A Good Home
SOD, CENTIPEDE, St. AUG KITTENS (2) & Mother
Bermuda. Delivery/Install 228- Free to a good home.
396-0282 1-866-374-7277
474-2161
TRAILERS, 16ft Tandem,
Ramps & Carrier;
5X8 tilt; 6.5 X10;
(601)766-3700
Kelvinator Commerical
Storage Freezer, 89”X30”
$270 /offer, Commerical
Popcorn maker, $200
/offer. 228-497-5335
Pets/Animals/
Livestock
505
Jackson
County
MIN-PIN PUPS
Pascagoula
228-769-8819
1500 Sq Ft, 3BR/1BA,
E Cent Sch D. on 3.88 ac,
$129,000/ 228-990-1403
Jackson
County
505
NEED to Move FAST?
I can buy your house in a
flash! In 8 days or less!
(281)467-7284
3 BR, 2 BA, on 27 acres,
30 x 40 metal building,
4 miles from Interstate.
(601)766-3771
A HOUSE BOAT,
60ft totally remodeled
1800sq ft, 2 story,
w/generator, sleeps 12,
Open House on River
Rd, Pascagoula,
(850)712-8255
Real Estate
Residential
505
Jackson
County
6+ Acres w/2 mobilehomes, Shop / Playhouse
& Pool. East Cent. Sch.
Dist. $110,000 228-641-3995
Moss Point
& Esca.
510
BIG POINT, By Owner,
4br/2ba, 2300 sq ft, brick, 2
acres, $180,000. 588-9949
G
Pets
for Sale
480
FREE KITTENS
Fully Wormed,
522-6082/ 355-0525
9-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
G
515
Pascagoula
FOR SALE BY OWNER 5
br, 2 ba on 2 lots, completely redone, new roof,
carpet, paint & counter
tops. Ready to move
into. 1711 Parsley Ave.
$82,000 228-229-7906 or
(772)529-3358
520
Gautier
Vancleave
VANCLEAVE 3 br, 2 ba,
F/P. For Sale by Owner.
As is. $76,000 818-0623
G
Escatawpa, MS/Pineview
Subd, 4/2, great room,
good neighborhood,
228-623-2586
HOME FOR SALE,
By Owner, 1704 Martin
Pascagoula Bluff, Gautier, 3br/1.5ba,
Den, 1400sf, Brick $79,995
228-497-9811/ 228-327-4684
South Pascagoula,
3br/2ba,
228-990-0845/217-2451
Read the
Classifieds
515
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
530
George Co.
Lucedale
VANCLEAVE 5 BR, 3 BA, BENNDALE 2 BR, 1.5 ba,
4 acres, pond, guest house
2 1/2 acres. $169,000 826w/bath, lots of
4442 or 990-0293
extras. Call for appt.
For Sale, 3br/1ba Brick
601-947-6476
home. No water damage.
FOR SALE BY OWNER 4
228-872-4628
br, 2.5 ba, 4.3 acres, 2100
BY OWNER Exc. cond.
sf.
Rocky Creek Comm.
Brick 3/2, dbl gar, priv.
Exc. cond.
fenc. Transfer. $110,000
$100,000
601-947-8913 or
228-249-6769 / 228-249-6789
601-508-6387
Ocean Springs
525
4 BR, 3 BA, Upgrades
Galore. 4002 Belle Terre
Court. Bienville Place.
228-875-8062 / 228-282-2644
3BR/2BA Dble Garage,
split flr plan, 3 yrs old,
1,650sq ft, No Storm
Damage, $179,500.
228-769-1327/ 228-990-4639
3 BR, 2 BA, Approx.
1400 sf. 505 Heatherstone
$125K. 818-5283
ACTION ADS
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU!
Gautier
Vancleave
520
FOR SALE BY OWNER
in South George County
off Hwy 63. Ready for
occupancy 3/2, 2400sf,
little roof damage from
Hurricane Katrina.
High & Dry. 1.90 acres.
Call for more details
762-7770 or 832-5354. The
Property Shop Realty.
540
Homes
in General
Homes
in General
Northwest Metro Atlanta
4br/2ba, large den,
newly renovated $140,900.
228-588-3442/ 404-375-7633
Any condition, any area,
any situation sell your
house quickly. 872-4628
1200SF Retailer Office,
35 -Thousand +or -ac.
***$600/Mo*** 228-832-4475
George & Jackson Co. 850496-1109 or www.
Commercial
landandtimber.com
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
AVAILABLE NOW
Magnolia Pointe Homes
NEW SUBDIVISION
NEW HOMES
6901 March Rd.
Theodore, AL
251-957-1151
www.magnoliapointehomes.com
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
550
Office Space
for Rent
Lots & LandJackson Co. HWY 57(Near I-10)
610
G
Pascagoula, Lease /Sale
4,560 sq ft. Dry, No hurricane damage, 3 street
access, drive thru shop,
1,645 sq ft office.
VANCLEAVE 2-10 ACRE 228-424-7040
tracts, ok for mobiles
homes. Owner financing.
Joe West Realty,
Investment
228-497-3797
Escatawpa, MS/Pineview
subd, lot w/storage
building. $15,000.
228-623-2586
Property
VANCLEAVE Ramsay
Oaks. Wooded lots for
homes only, Covenants,
Min. 1600 sq. ft.
GAUTIER Hickory Hills
Wooded lots for housesDesignated area for
Manufactured HomesCity water/sewer
Owner Financing
available
228-875-3200
w.msgulfcoastproperty.com
05 DODGE
05 DODGE
05 DODGE
NEON
SXT
RAM
1500
DAKOTA
CLUB CAB
MSRP
15,765
9,995 10,000
$
*
$
Plus Destination Charge. Stk#5D240809
MSRP
15,490
Plus Destination Charge. Stk#5J642477
Plus Destination Charge. Stk#5S223745
05 DODGE
05 DODGE
05 DODGE
RAM
1500
GRAND
CARAVAN
SPRINTER
ALL 2005
QUAD CABS
UP TO
REBATES UP TO
5750
$
10,000
$
Well Equipped,
Starting At
#1
Selling Van
In America
Plus Destination Charge. Stk#5J621772
Starting
At
$
Plus Destination Charge. Stk#5B286449
*
Plus Destination Charge.
2005 & 2006 3/4 and 1 TON
CUMMINS DIESEL POWERED
2WD, 4X4 & DUALLY TRUCKS
05 DODGE NEON ..........................................LOADED, ALL COLORS
04 DODGE RAM 1500 .................................LOW MILES, #4J112402
05 CHEVY CAVALIER .........................................#57169640
03 FORD MUSTANG ......................................AUTOMATIC, #3F386558
96 GMC YUKON 2DR GT.............RARE FIND, #TG500678
03 FORD RANGER .....................................AUTOMATIC, V6, #3PB45656
00 FORD WINDSTAR ..........................................#YBC02047
03 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB ..................................#YPA94689
03 FORD RANGER XLT .....................................#3PB45656
03 JEEP LIBERTY ..................................................LOADED, #3W504769
01 FORD F150 ...........................................................#1NB83699
03 KIA SORENTO LX ............................................................#35157606
00 DODGE RAM 1500 .......................................#YG139558
04 NISSAN TITAN X-CAB .........................1 OWNER, #4N506067
00 DODGE RAM 1500 ......................................#YM211361
04 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE .......................LOADED, #4U227340
98 CHEVY TAHOE LT 4WD............................#WJ335830
05 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE .............................#51136091
03 DODGE INTREPID...........................................#3H532538
03 SATURN VUE .......................................................1 OWNER, #3S878326
97 CADILLAC DEVILLE ..........................NICE, #VU244209
01 VW PASSAT ..................................................LOCAL TRADE, #1P268551
04 KIA SPECTRA ....................................LOADED, #45313399
03 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ..............LOCAL TRADE, #3F149359
02 MERCURY SABLE ..........ONLY 42K MILES, #2A611532
UNDER $15,000
UNDER $20,000
96 CHEVY CORVETTE ...................................................NICE, #TS109483
05 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER ........................11K MILES, #5T561547
03 CHEVY AVALANCHE Z66 ................................. #3G226926
05 CHRYSLER SEBRING .......................................................#5N589747
04 CHEVY SILVERADO .......................................................#1391954
05 CHRYSLER SEBRING CONV ...................................#5N608365
03 CHEVY XCAB ....................................................................... #3Z235503
04 CHEVY ASTRO .......................1 OWNER, CONVERSION, #3B111871
05 CHEVY EXPRESS ............................PASSENGER VAN, #51152554
04 CHEVY SILVERADO .....................................................#41391954
03 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB ..... LOCAL TRADE, #3S24678A
04 DODGE STRATUS....................................ALL COLORS, #5E046936
05 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN’S..................9 TO CHOOSE FROM
03 DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB ..............................................#3S368224
04 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB.............14K MILES, #4S50178B
02 FORD MUSTANG GT ..................................................#2F158059
04 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4...........................25K MILES, #4S50178B
03 CHEVY BLAZER .....................................EXTREME PKG, #3K109316
03 FORD EXPLORER ...............“MANAGER’S PICK CALL”, #3UA3600
05 CHEVY IMPALA ...............................................LOADED, #59108740
04 FORD MUSTANG GT....................CALL FOR PRICE, #4F111836
03 DODGE DAKOTA ....................................LOCAL TRADE, #3S36822A
03 FORD F250 .....................................................HEAVY DUTY, #3ED155579
04 DODGE RAM 1500 ...............................................SLT, #4J22915A
04 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB.......................... #4PB22196
Government Blvd. & I-65
SALES | SERVICE | PARTS
40 acres in S. E. George
Co, 8 mi from Wilmer,
AL (601)947-6801
G
5.75 ACRES
w/14 x 60 Mobilehome
(601)766-9708
560
UNDER $20,000
05 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE................LAREDO, #5C582440
03 MAZDA TRIBUTE....LEATHER, LOADED, 31K MILES, #3KM41008
03 NISSAN PATHFINDER..............ONLY 28K MILES, #3W702714
04 TOYOTA CAMRY...........................................9K MILES, #4U860742
03 TOYOTA RAV 4...............................................13K MILES, #30097336
02 CHEVY SILVERADO 4X4.....................X-T CAB, #2E168014
LUXURY
02 CADILLAC DEVILLE CARRIAGE TOP, S/R, CHROME WHEELS, #2U255442
05 CHRYLER 300’S ....................STARTING @ $23,999, #5H664659
05 CHRYLER 300C .....................MANAGER’S PICK CALL, #5H121593
05 NISSAN MAXIMA SE........................LOADED, #5C847388
05 TOYOTA CAMRY...................13K MILES, GOTTA’ SEE, #5C847388
04 LINCOLN TOWN CAR........AFFORDABLE LUXURY, #4Y682054
04 LINCOLN TOWN CAR........AFFORDABLE LUXURY, #4Y682054
04 MERCEDES NAVIGATOR........................WOW!, #3LJ15393
SPORT LUXURY
05 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE.........AUTO, 7K MILES, #5X030542
02 CHEVY CORVETTE....RED/TAN, ONLY 21K, CHROME WHEELS, #25131433
THE BEST OF THE BEST!!!
03 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB.....CUMMINS DIESEL, #3G79513A
04 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB................4X4, DIESEL, #4G109716
05 DODGE NEON SXT11 TO CHOOSE FROM, STARTING @ $11,990
05 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT...............8 TO CHOOSE FROM, W/STOW N’ GO
05 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CABS........4 TO CHOOSE, STARTING @ 21,999, #5J506120
02 FORD F350...........................4X4, DUALLY POWERSTROKE, #2EB72545
04 GMC 2500 SLT.............................DIESEL, MAKE OFFER, #4E162041
04 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE ..ONE OWNER, LOCAL TRADE, #4C282019
02 TOYOTA 4RUNNERS.................................STARTING @ $20,799
1-800-717-8505 or 251-243-7119
3118 Government Blvd. • Mobile
From I-10 Take I-65 North • Exit 1
Advertised offers valid on in-stock vehicles only. Dealer retains all rebates & incentives. Prices plus tax, tag & title. See dealer for complete vehicle equipment listing and further details. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors or omissions.
Vehicle art for illustration only. All vehicles subject to prior sale. $750 Hurricane Katrina rebate included in all prices plus destination charge.
Residential and
Commercial Property
East Tennessee and
Smoky Mountains.
(865)300-2499
Real Estate
Rentals
635
Furnished
Apartments
2BR/1BA APARTMENT
in Mobile, fully furnished,
utilities incl., cable/high
spd internet. Available
now! $3,210/mo.
800-968-0848 ext. 224
Publisher’s Notice
All real estate
advertising in this
newspaper is subject
to the Federal Fair
Housing Amendments
Act, which make it
illegal to advertise any
preference, limitations
or discrimination based
on race, color, religion,
sex, national origin,
handicap, familiar
status, or an intention
to make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.
familial status includes
children under the
age of 18 living with
parents or legal
custodians, pregnant
women and people
securing custody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which is in
violation of the law. To
report discrimination,
call the Office of Fair
Housing and Equal
Opportunity of the
U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban
Development (HUD)
at 1-800-669-9777. The
HUD TTY telephone
number for the
hearing impaired is
212-708-1455.
Lots & LandOther Areas
1 & 2 BEDROOMS
All Utilities Furnished.
$100$125 wk. 475-7419
nd Bay, Quail Ridge, 1
Gran
ac lots, w/ septic, $12,900.
251-865-3200
Unfurnished
Building Lots 1200 sq ft
min, Grand Bay, AL.
No flooding, $15,000 ea.
6 avail. (251)661-3193
1 or MORE Acres above
Hattiesburg. Negotiable.
601-792-9450 / 601-543-7032
570Mobilehomes
Sales
A ‘06 16 x 80, 3/2, appliances, ac, set-up. $289
mo./ WAC. 1-866-218-3977
MARK DODGE IS THE HUGE USED CAR SUPERSTORE
UNDER $15,000
Lots & LandGeorge Co.
USED - REPO’S
Available. Over 30 homes
on lot. Starting at $9900.
1-866-218-3977
IN STOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
UNDER $10,000
555
7.8 ACRES
2 miles West of 63 on 98
(601)947-2242
16,995 27,995
*
G
G
*
OFF $
MSRP *
*
OFF $
*
PASCAGOULA. FamilyFriendly Ward 1 at
1112 Polk Ave. Close to
everything. 340 Frontage,
150 Deep, May be
divided into four R-2
Zoned lots suitable for
duplexes. $158,000
Rick at 228-762-3560 or
[email protected]
1/2 Acre East Cent. Sch.
power, water, septic tank
ready for hook-up.
$17,000 228-475-3320
$
5750
$
UP TO
NEW DODGE
TRUCKS VANS,
SUVS & CARS
AVAILABLE!
MSRP
23,130
REBATES UP TO
$
Property
Commercial Building for
Sale, Call Allen Deal/
Keller Williams Realty
228-861-4165
ST MARTIN Jordan
Farms Partiallly cleared
home sites w/water,
sewer for
doublewides
HUGE SALE! 400
595
615
WANT ADS
ONLY
10 DAYS
LEFT!
Real Estate
Commercial
HOW MUCH HOME
CAN YOU AFFORD?
✬ A program to fit your needs.
✬ Assisted down payment,
For a free pre-approval Howard
Crocker MORTGAGES MATTERS, INC. at 1-877-863-4741
Plum Bluff Estates,
2br/1ba, 1200 sq ft, 12X24
open deck, completely
furn, move in today. cash
$51,000. (251)649-7884
Read the Classifieds
540
A NEW ‘06 Doublewide
4/2, appliances, ac,
set-up. $44,900 or $325
mo./WAC. 1-866-218-3977
1979 14 X 80, 2br/2ba,
cent h/a, needs work,
$7,500. (601)947-4312/
228-217-0423
2001 INDIES 28 x 72,
4 br, 3 ba, formal den,
living room w/fireplace.
$52,500/OBO 251-634-1313
2001 CHANDELIER
28 x 58 3 BR, 2 BA, all
appls, fireplace. $35,000/
OBO 251-634-1313
2000 BUCCANEER
16 x 80, 3 BR, 2 BA,
all appls. Good cond.
$25,000/OBO 251-634-1313
G
PRIVATE LOT East
Central 12x65 w/roof over
it & shed out back.
$17,000 228-475-3320
645
Apartments
REMODELED 1BR
$100/Dep, + $280/Rent,
** 990-7951***475-6813**
650
Unfurnished
Houses
LARGE 3BR/2BA in West
Mobile. Hickory Ridge
Subd. $1,400mo/dep
228-235-6090
WADE 2BR/1BA
Central H/A, Total Elect
228-588-9518/ 956-330-5857
660Mobilehomes
Rentals
Forts Lake 2br/1ba, 14x50
No pets,total elect $350mo
$250Dep. 251-633-8825
Recreation
■ Indicates
Jackson
County
710
BoatsPower
’99 Contender 21’, Yamaha
200HP, Saltwater II, T-Top,
Spreader Lights, Jensen
CD/AM/FM/Weather Radio
w/4 Marine Speakers,
Furuno GPS & Depth
Finder, VHF Radio, Alum
Trlr w/Disc Brakes.
$29,000. 205-625-5730 or 205288-9081
2002 Proline Sport 23’, twin
150 Merc, dual elects,
radar, GPS, bottom mach,
Double Wide 28X80,
600W stereo, 3 yrs on warr.
3br/2ba, frpl, new tile
dual axle trlr, $32,900obo
thru-out, $38,000 /offer 228- 251-583-5780
366-0280/ 228-588-2614
22ft TRITON Seaflight
HICKORY HILLS / GAUTIER
2br/2ba on 2 lots
228-990-4533
575
Mobilehome
Lots
MAGNOLIA POINTE
Lots For Rent
8130 Tanner Williams Rd.
1300 Schillinger Rd.
Call 251-634-1313
OCEAN SPRINGS- homesites with water & sewer
hookups for rent. 875-3200
w/ 200hp Honda, GPS,
Depth Finder, VHF Radio,
& alum trlr. Low hrs
$27,0000. 228-355-0999
21’ Fiberglass Pontoon
Boat,
150 HP Johnson, 40+ mph,
dual axle galv trlr, 5 new
tires.
Turnkey, many extras!
$15,000. 251-610-1238
Read the
Classifieds
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
10-B
710
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
BoatsPower
710
BoatsPower
710
35FT Grand Banks Style
Trawler ’83 New diesel
generator, 2BR, 2BA,
radar, TV,
stereo, all the Toys!
$92,000.
251-331-0044
24’ Pontoon Boat, ’96 90hp
Force, good cond, runs
great, cover & extras,
$8,875 obo. 251-341-1460
18’ 2000 Polar V-Hull
T-Top, 90HP Honda,
Low Hours $10,000.
251-621-9189
1989 STRATOS FISH
& SKI 19.5 ft
200 hp Mercury
$4900. 251-747-1856
2002 YAMHA LX 2000
JET BOAT
$13,500.
Call 251-379-4043
BoatsPower
760
40’ SHRIMP BOAT 453
Detroit, solid fiberglass,
3 drum winch & electronics. $18,500 228-990-0557■
1999 467 Ranger Bass boat
200HP Evinrude. Fully
loaded, $14,000 OBO or will
trade. 251-213-1387
35’ DIESEL
SPORT FISHERMAN
loaded, $25,000
251-583-4976
18FT Wellcraft CC 115HP
Seafox ’00, 215 Bay Fisher, Yamaha, galv trlr, bought Bertrum 56FT FB, MY,
new
3/05! only 10 hrs. Must
21’, 150 Ocean Pro, CC,
Great live aboard, twin cat
see! $18,500 251-621-1588;
Electronics, Bimini top,
diesels, Very nice boat!
767-2401
low hours, alum trlr.
Selling due to illness. Call
Extras! $13,500. 251-649for photos. $150,000
22’ GRADY WHITE
6566; 583-8448
Walk around Cuddy Cabin, Negotiable. 606-473-7864
Johnson Ocean Runner,
★★★★★★
Alum
’05 Blazer Bay 2170, 150
38FT PACEMAKER 1965
trailer, Great Cond! $9800.
Yamaha, TM, CD, GPS,
twin diesel, $10,000.
★★ 251-583-3670 ★★
Leaning Post & More, 5 mo
251-661-5564
old, $23,500. 601-264-8111 or
22’ Bay Palmetto ’04
’96 19.50ft Stratus 175 Evin,
601-550-0284
225HP
4
Stroke Yamaha,
t-top, L-post, dbl axle alum
Bayliner Trophy ’97, 20’,
trlr, full elecs. 2-SS props, only 24 hours, Color
Walk around cabin, 120
very low hrs, Lots extras! Furuno, GPS, Alum Trlr,
Force, Galv trlr, Lots of
Like New Cond. $35,000.
$22K Book, SELL $16K
Extras! $10,000.
251-962-7952
FIRM 251-422-1079
Exc Cond! 251-679-9935
’04 Century 2200 ’96 Cobia 171/2FT CC, 75hp
A 2000 Bullet Bass Boat
Yam, trol motor, GPS,
w/200 Yamaha 4-Stroke,
20XF w/225 Mercury
low hours, all electronics,
depth fndr, weather band
Promax ’00, tandem axle
loaded, $39,500. 251-610-6989 radio, cover. Exc cond
trailer. $18,500 obo. 251-377$7200 251-345-3300
8097
18ft Deckliner VIP
bought new 04-05,
’02 19’ PALM BEACH CC
Kenner 18 Center Console,
115 Yamaha, $15,500.
’03 Yamaha 150HP w/extd
Brand New 2005, Less than
Must sell! 251-296-1462
warr Great Fish & Ski
15 hrs, Loaded electronics,
Boat, FF, CD Radio/VHF,
Perfect Cond! $16,500. 251- 97 Robalo 2320 CC, 225
Dual Batteries, Exc Cond,
689-0605
Mariner OS, full trans.,
Trlr $15,500 251-751-5016
alum trlr, new Furuno
★★★★★★★★★
16’ Skiff 35hp Stack 3
elecs, t-top/curtains, F/W/
04 Xpress w/ 05 90hp
Mercury Like New $10,500 S/W wash down, tuna door, Johnson, 67lb Motor Guide
TM 24 volt, galvanized
live well, Exc cond,
Call Billy 251-679-7500
trailer, all in good shape.
$27,900. 251-379-9078
17’ Nitro Bass Boat, all
$3,500. 251-476-2717
options, galvanized trailer, 135HP MERCURY O/B
20’ Mako cc, exc cond, gal115hp Mercury, looks new, motor, boat & trailer
vanized trailer, bimini top,
$6,900 obo. 251-476--1173
attached. $3000 Firm.
etc.
Johnson 130hp Motor,
228-762-5911 between
1978 Mako CC w/ 2001
$5,500 obo. 251-476-1173
9am-4pm Mon.-Fri. ■
250HP Mercury,
20’ Classic AMF Robalo,
$11,700. 228-826-0330
21’ Cape Horn, CC, twin 200 175 Johnson, Tandem Trlr,
lev mesg.
Merc O/Bs, livewell, wash- VHF, F/F, New Cover,
down, all elect., galv 2 axle $4500. 251-621-4844 or 25121’ Cape Horn 1995, 200
trlr w/new tires $18K
Yamaha, F/F, GPS, CD
626-1595
Danny 251-344-1979
plyr, VHF radio, wash
’99 Bayliner, 1950 Capri
down, bate well, Bimini
Bowrider, 135 Mercruiser,
20’ Chaparral ’01 Bow
top, $13K. 251-604-1116.
I/O, Low hours, cover. Like
Rider,
2003 Seachaser, c/c, 21’,
Mercruiser 220hp, only 130 New! $7400. 251-634-0811 or
150 Yamaha outboard,
hrs, exc cond - MUST SEE 401-5641
Garmin
$17,750. 251-990-07449
A 2000 19’ Cape Horn, 150
fish finder, stereo/CD, galv
Merc, full elec, alum trlr,
16ft Crystal Craft ‘94,
trlr,
t-top w/box. Exc. cond.
low hours, $14,900. Moving, w/ 48hp Evrinrude & trlr.
$16,995. 251-404-6052; 633$2,000. 228-327-0117
must sell! 251-633-8084
7591
17’ SEA STRIKE ’03
Boston Whaler, 17’
Yamaha 60hp. Like new
Montauk, ’86 hull, ’96 88HP
Boats $11,000
Johnson,
Sail
251-510-5400
bimini top, cover, $7900 251990-5799 463-3375
PEARSON 35
1996 17’ KEY WEST
30hp Yanmar diesel, sloop
BAY BOAT w/’98 115HP
20‘ Wellcraft Cuddy, 120hp
centerboard, 11’ beam, 3.9Evinrude, Excellent
Force, Galv Trlr. VHF,
5.5 draft, very good cond.Condition
Fish Finder. Exc. Cond.
no storm damage. $30,000.
$6500. 985-778-9486
New price $4500 Orange
251-929-2853.
Bch 251-981-1324
Center Console 1990 17’ Pro
MERCURY OPTIMAX
Line. extra wide Deep V.
Campers/
225hp
120 OMC Sea Drive,
Travel
’99, Lo hrs, w/gauges con- Bimini, GPS, ’99 trlr. Orig..
Trailers
trols $5500. Runs
owner. Gulf ready. $2900.
Perfect! 251-865-3969
251-948-4434
2004 Americamp Travel
2002 16’ PolarKraft w/50HP
19’ Key West Bay/Reef
Trailer 31’ Bumper Pull,
Mercury, trolling mtr, car2003, 150 Yamaha, alum. with 1 slide-out.
pet, exc. cond. $7,500 firm trailer, electronics, trolling Like new cond. $16,500
251-580-0459
motor, low hrs, $19,900. 850- Call Gray @228-623-0355■
206-2979
18FT SEACRAFT ’79.
5th Wheel, Prowler, Needs
130HP Johnson ’95, Alum
’05 Kenner 23FT 225
Trlr, DF, VHF, Bimini Top, Yamaha 4-stroke, w/trailer, Interior Work,
$1,000. 228-497-5112
Well Maint. $7800. 251-639- Garman 188C stereo/CD,
9838; 802-5074
1968 Land Yacht Air
VHF, T-top, wash down,
dual batt., trim tabs, down Stream, good cond, 26 ft,
’04 Kenner 23FT, 225
sleeps
4 adults, dual axle,
rigger,
low
hrs,
warranty
Optimax, T-top, GPS, depth
finder, dual batteries, low started 7/9/05. $34,500. 251- $5,000 /offer. (407)491-4456
653-2270
or
656-4782
hours. $35,000. 251-402-7199
NEW 2006 30ft TT Bunk
House, w/ slide, 2br,
2001 SeaDoo 21’ Challenger ’00 WELLCRAFT 22’ CC,
loaded,
list over $23,000,
2000. Mercury 240HP, less
’01 Yamaha, 200HP 0X66
Hurricanne Discount
than 60 hrs. on motor.
Fuel Injected, alum trlr,
$17,900 in stock in
$17,500 251-343-7004 209-7572 Ttop, exc cond, elec.
209-8239
$19,950. 251-689-4788
Gautier MS, 970-371-0293
720
Campers/
Travel
Trailers
Park Model 35X14 w/4
slides, fully furn, $5,000
/offer (407)491-4456
2005 JAYCO Jayflight
Travel Trailer. 27’
Bumper Pull. New condition, Never Used. $15,200
Call Gray @228-623-0355■
‘05 32’ Travel Trailer
Sleeps 8. Good condition.
$11,900 850-221-1398
or 386-295-4119
910
Antique &
Collectibles
920
Chrysler New Yorker ’47
4 dr, straight 8, fluid drive,
new paint & int. Very
Cadillac
sharp car.
Allante’
$8,500. 251-653-8958
FORD BRONCO 1976. 3spd, 302 V8, gray, new
brakes, seats, steering column, too much to list.
$12,9900 OBO. 251-605-2112.
ACT NOW! Cars From
$500!
Police Impounds for sale.
For listings call 800-3669813,
Extension 9797
COACHMAN 22ft, ‘95 fully
equipped, good cond.
$15,000 @ 17
ACURA 3.2 CL ’01: Blk/blk
Magnolia St East ,
lthr, loaded, all pwr, 6-CD,
Lucedale, 228-990-2881
Sunroof, Bose stereo, 64K
mi. Below NADA at
27ft COBRA Class C,
runs great, generator, roof $14,500. 251-989-3030
air, CLEAN!
ACURA 3.2CL TYPE S ’01
$10,500. 228-875-2944
Red, 2DR, Blk Lthr, CD,
S/R, All
37’ ELANDEN Winnebago
Options!
New Tires! 68K
‘90 fully loaded,
Miles.
26K mi. In Moss Point .
$13,000. Call 251-391-5520
$16,500 813-478-5270 ■
Acura 3.2TL ’03, white/tan
1990 CHAMPION
lthr, AT, loaded, Bose 6-CD,
Ultrastar Motor Home
1 owner, non-smoker, 38,500
33.5 Ft Long, Cummins
miles, $20,750. 251-490-1610
Diesel, Auto, Onan 6.5KW
AUDI ’01 A6 2.7T AWD
Gas Generator. $25,925.00
Dk. grn w/tan lthr, 41,500
Truck Outlet 866-869-1987
mi,
2005 Monaco Diplomat
Great Cond! Htd. seats,
40ft, 4 slides, 3k mi,
sunroof,
loaded, $175,000. nego.
Bose stereo/CD, Premium
251-421-1335/ 251-634-9821
pkg.
$20,000. 251-610-2024 lv msg.
26ft Southwind Flair,
Class A, runs great,
clean int, slight body
damage. $8,500 reduced.
228-875-2944
‘89 DOLPHIN 33’
Good cond. $7500/obo
(601)508-7723
1997 Holiday Rambler
32 ft, like new, 20k mi,
$36,000 (251)865-2121
2000 Mountain Air 33ft
2 slides, V-10 Banks eng,
24 kmi loaded, ext warr.
5500 Onan Gen. $65,0000.
251-961-1675
2002 CLass C, 28 ft RV,
Ford E450 V-10 Triton,
w/ 2005 Honda Civic LX
tow car, total price
$58,000. 228-324-8175
760
Vehicles
■ Indicates
Jackson
County
910
BMW 325i ’92
Convertible, White w/Black
Top
Loaded, Good Condition
$5500 OBO. 251-928-9584
BMW 325i ’94
4DR, PW, AC, AT, s’roof,
White, Nice $5,995 251-661-2342
1990
Cars
920
Ford Crown Victoria ’01,
Excel Cond! Keyless entry,
PS, CD, New tires, 156K
miles, $6000. 251-463-6255
CADILLAC DEVILLE ’96 2300 mi, like new,
119K Mi, Excellent Cond! not flooded, $29k negoExtra Clean! Asking $8500. tiable 228-818-0645
251-649-0251 or 401-4121
FORD T-BIRD ’97
Auto, new tires, alloy
CADILLAC SEVILLE STS
wheels,
’02
loaded, power windows.
all options w/sunroof, beau$4800obo. 251-767-2657
tiful, good gas mileage,
trade considered.
FORD TAURUS SEL 2001
$15,900obo. 251-510-4669
Loaded w/options,
Extra Nice! $8200.
Cadillac Seville STS ’98,
Call 251-209-8651
Loaded, Bose stereo, $9000.
Day 251-626-5951
GEO PRIZM 2001
Night 251-978-1993
Deluxe Model, 4 Dr., Auto.,
AC, 39K actual miles, 24/34
Cadillac STS ’02, Loaded,
mpg. $6000. Call 251-344Pearl white w/tan interior,
6532
sunroof, 47K actual miles,
new tires, 1 owner, Excel
★★★★★★★
Cond! $22,500. 251-575-5308
Mercury Sable ’96, red,
lv msg
132k, runs good, cold AC,
PW. $3,100. 251-391-7894
CADILLAC, BLACK, CTS,
2003, 27K, LOADED,
★★★★★★
IMMACULATE. $23,900.
Oldsmobile LSS ’97
ORIGINAL OWNER. 251lthr, loaded, exc cond,
621-1934
$4,200 obo. 251-583-3415
Chevy Camaro 1999, 6 cycl,
★★★★★
great gas mileage, good
Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’97,
tires, factory installed
135k miles, black, $3,900.
spoiler pkg, very clean!
251-545-9790 lv msg
Adult driven, well mainHONDA ACCORD ’01
tained, 1 owner, 95K hwy
miles, Must see! $7900. 251- Spoiler, Auto, 4dr,
CD/Tape/AM/FM, Looks &
591-5735
Drives Like New! New
CHEVY Camaro ‘86
Tires! $10,500. 251-391-7490
IROC new motor, tree fell
Honda Accord EX ’00
across back hatch. $1,500.
85k, 33 MPG, ABS, AT, AC,
/offer. 228-826-1198
PL, sunroof, new tires, like
Chevy Camaro SS Conv. ’02 new, $10,650. 251-626-5802
Auto, LS1 350, 24MPG,
HONDA CIVIC 1998 4-Dr
Loaded, Garaged, Adult
DX
Owned. $19,000. 251-6395-spd. 124K mi; 35mpg.
4582; 753-5269
New tires. Exc. cond.
Chevy Camaro Z28 ’99, 88k,
$4450. 251-232-6192
5.7 V8, 6spd, Hugger
Honda Civic DX ’00,
orange, white stripes, lthr,
t-tops, very clean, $11,500. Green, 77K miles,
Excellent Cond! 1 Owner.
251-344-8414
$8,250. 251-604-1155 or 251CHEVY CORVETTE ’01, 1- 246-5868
Owner, Silver/Black
HONDA PRELUDE ’99
Leather, 8 Cylinder, T-top,
4 cyl, auto, white/black
loaded, Beautiful. $24,900
cloth, 98k, all pwr, sunroof,
251-490-7403
very clean, $10,850. 251-344CHEVY IMPALA 8414.
BMW 325IC CONVT. ’95
’02, leather, 59k miles,
super low miles, carfax, 1
$13,500. 251-246-4311
owner, white/tan lthr, auto,
pwr top, $10,000. 251-554Chevy Malibu ’02, LS, All
4583
Pwr, AC, Lthr seats, CD,
Silver, 4DR, 43K mi, Retail
BMW 530i 2002
Sport & Prem. Pkg 61K mi over $10K Sell $7000. 251633-4819
Gray
w/Gray Interior, MUST
CHEVY MALIBU 2004
SEE!!
Auto, PW, PL, cruise, tilt,
$24,900. Call 251-421-5969
CD, under fcty warr.,
$9900.
BMW Z-3 Conv. 2000
Call 251-209-8651
Auto, 33,500 miles, 1 owner
$25,000
Chrysler Concord LXI ’01
251-928-7926
79k miles, Loaded!
BUICK LESABRE ’03
garage kept, Very nice!
LOADED! Mint Condition!
$8600. 251-675-6059
One Owner, 76K Miles.
Chrysler Sebring Convt. ’04
$10,950. 251-645-4980
Plat. Series, silver w/blk
cloth
top, blk & silver lthr &
suede
int, 19k, $22,000. 251-7520212
Cars
LEXUS SC 300 1997
Green, 1 owner
$8900
251-752-8274
FORD MUSTANG GT ’04
LINCLON ’97
5 Spd, Black, Leather, 31K 120 Stretch Limo by Royal,
Miles, 6 Disc CD, Exc
Exc Condition! 92K Miles.
Condition! $16,900 obo. Call $18,000. Call 251-402-1437
251-454-1904
Convertible
Leather, 96K, new tires, beau- FORD MUSTANG GT 05,
tiful red. $9500. 251-649-0868 black, premium pkg,
920
Motorhomes
920
Buick Regal GS 1999, all
power, sunroof, leather
power seats, Monsoon
audio, new tires, battery,
brake pads, rotors, 82K.
$6000. 251-929-2080
1969 Roadrunner 383
4spd, blue w/black int,
very clean, Must Sell
$11,500 obo. 251-575-4418
FORD RANGER XLT ‘99,
Ford Mustang ’64
Convertible, 85% Restored
4dr, ext cab,
Must Sell! $11,000
4X4, $6,500.
251-662-7565
(601)947-6176
Mercedes 220 ’71, Gas,
STARCRAFT ‘96, 28ft
27K miles on rebuilt
w/ superslide, 5th wheel,
engine,
sleeps 6, kept covered.
Runs Good. $3500.
$15,500. (601)947-1065
251-990-9604 or 219-5676
26’ TAG-A-LONG Sleeps 7,
new tires, water heater &
Cars
refrig., etc. $2850
601-508-3870 / 601-508-1905
780
Cars
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
Honda’s From $500!
POLICE IMPOUNDS
For listings call
800-366-9813, Extension 4500
INFINITI G35 ’03, Silver/
beige lthr, AT, sunroof, xm
radio, loaded, 4DR, only
22k, $25,000 251-443-3258,
648-0246
Infiniti Q45 ’97,
Kelly Green, 133K,
Local car, Top of the line
$7500. 251-209-4611
Jaguar S-Type ’00, 4.0 V8,
loaded, super low miles,
carfax, 1 owner, new tires,
sacrifice $16,900. 251-5544583.
G
1956 Chevrolet 2dr
265 V8, 3 spd, matching
numbers, exc cond, $12,900
obo. 251-575-4418
Cars
LINCOLN Continental ‘90
1 owner. $2800
228-324-8842 ■
LINCOLN LS 2000
Leather, sunroof, V8, 63k
miles, extended warranty.
$12,000. Call 251-679-0201
920
Cars
Mitsubishi Galant S ’96
gray, AT, cold AC, PW,
PL, nice & clean.
$2,990. 251--680-2160
Toyota Corolla CE ’01
4dr, extra clean, auto,
cold AC, new tires, gas
saver, $7,100. 251-645-9530
NISSAN ALTIMA ’03
Silver, Spoiler, 47K, CD,
Tint
Widows, DVD Ready,
Under
Warr. $15,900. 251-709-0112
Toyota Scion XB ’04,
Loaded w/Prem Sound, XM
Radio, DVD, Fog Lights,
Air Bags, Spoiler, 15k Mi,
Prem Tires, 29.5 MPG
City/Hwy $14,500 251-7678467
NISSAN ALTIMA 2002
Auto, PW, PL, CD, extra
nice, $13,200. Call
251-209-8651
NISSAN MAXIMA SE ’00
Loaded! Exc Cond!
Sunroof, CD, Bose
Speakers, PS, 105K Mi.
$11,500 obo. 251-656-4859
TOYOTA SOLARA ’00
Auto, CD/Tape/AM/FM,
2DR, 1 Owner, Cold AC,
Showroom Cond! $9700.
251-342-8347
VOLVO 960 ’94
Auto, electric windows &
seats, moonroof, good condition. $3300. 251-660-0651
NISSAN MAXIMA SE 2003
VW BEETLE TDI, 2000,
Sunroof, all power, tinted
windows, 75K miles. Nice GLS, 40MPG, turbo diesel
loaded, new tires Sharp
car
Car! $9900. 228-326-6291/
$18,500. 251-865-9457
228--826-0856■
OLDS ALERO 2002
Like
new,
4
cyl,
all
power
Lincoln Signature ‘98, burSport Utility
w/factory warranty. $7850
gungy w/ white
251-645-1479
Vehicles
int. excel cond. $8,700.
228-497-4356/ 228-327-4356
POLICE IMPOUNDS
BMW X5 2005
Chevy’s From $500!
16K miles,
Lincoln Town Car Cartier
For listings call
Great Deal! Sacrifice.
’97
800-366-9813,
Extension 2241
$42,000. 251-402-7748
loaded, looks & runs great,
silver w/ black top,
PONTIAC GRAND AM ’94 CHEVY Avalanche ‘02,
$5,250. 251-928-0914
V4, runs great! New tires, high & dry, 22” rims, ap,
no
A/C. Super on gas! $1600 loaded, 77k mi, clean,
Lincoln Towncar ’01,
OBO. 251-604-1249
Executive Series, Good
$15,995. 228-366-0412
Cond,
Pontiac Grand Am
CHEVY BLAZER ‘01 4.3
Power Everything, $10,500.
GT ’01, 60K miles,
liter V6, 2-Dr., 4WD, pw,
251-476-4600
$7000.
pl, ps, alarm, moonroof,
251-765-2676
MAZDA MIATA 1991
am/fm radio, cd player,
Red, 81K miles, 5-spd, air, Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’04 cassette player, brush
radio/cass. Good cond.
guard, rear tire carrier,
62k miles, Burgundy,
$4000. 251-660-9335
Exc Condition. $12,800.
tow pkg, 69K mi. $9000
251-937-5945
or
604-3103
228-475-0884/ 228-990-5818■
Mazda Miata ’99 Conv., red
w/tan top, 5spd, 111k mi,
PONTIAC Grand Prix,
CHEVY SUBURBAN 2001
cruise, runs & drives very
‘93, ac, elect windows,
Gold LT, auto-ride, loaded,
3-9732
good. $6500. 251-443
runs great, $2,500.
clean, 89k miles, $19,500
228-217-7606
Call Jimmy 251-656-2292
Mazda Miata
LINCOLN LS 2000
V8 black w/lthr, roof,
53K mi. loaded exc. cond
$13,500 251-605-1943
950
Conv
PONTIAC TRANS AM
1996, Leather, Garage
CHEVY SUBURBAN ’93
great cond, cold AC,
3rd seat, 203k,
$3,500. 251-802-0096
‘94, 5 spd, red, PW, air, Great Kept, 42k Miles, Lady
condition $4,995 251-661-2342
Owned & Operated. No
MAZDA MIATA CONV ’97 Smoke, $10,500. 601-947-8600
Great Gas Mileage!! Exc or 251-331-4133
Cond! CD, 54K Miles, $7800
REPO SALE
251-471-6741 or 490-8499
Auto Credit, Inc.
MERCEDES 300SE ’89
Dealers Only 228-769-9888
White, Lthr, Sunroof,
SATURN ION 3 2004
Loaded!
4dr Sedan, Travel Pkg,
104k mi, $8900
Only
3K Miles, Like New!
228-475-3480
$13,500 obo. 251-662-1174,
MERCEDES 420SEL 1988 648-8617
Smoke silver/brown, 26k
miles. Perfect. 2nd owner TOYOTA AVALON XLS ’00
Leather, Auto, CD,
$17,000.
Sunroof, Loaded!
Call 251-455-8234
Showroom Condition!
Mercedes Benz SL500
$11,900. Call 251-391-7490
Roadster ’97, 63k, 2nd
TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2002
owner, like new, $26,000.
44K, Beige, new tires, CD,
850-382-0957
all power, $13,900.
MERCEDES E320 SW ’00
251-454-3208; 661-1905
White, Leather, Sunroof,
TOYOTA CAMRY LE ’97
3rd Row Seat. $24,500 obo.
Must see. Walt 228-424-6555 4dr, 1 Owner, Low Mileage,
Gold, Auto, AC,
MERCEDES SL 500 ’99
AM/FM/Tape, PW, PL,
White, immaculate, a must Cruise, 4 New Michelin
see beauty. $23,500. Call
Radial Tires. Exc Cond!
251-232-7307
$6495. D: 251-751-5865 N:
MERCURY COUGAR ‘99 476-1416
No water or hurricane
Toyota Celica GTS, ’00, 6damage. Ext. & Int.
speed manual, loaded,
looks great. Runs great.
Excellent Condition. Sharp.
$8000/obo 228-475-6203 ■
$9,900. OBO. 251-379-0186
JAGUAR XJ8 ’98
41k miles, white/tan
leather, sunroof, like new.
$14,900 251-721-5626
Mercury G-Marquis ’02,
GS, blk w/blk lthr, new
Lexus ES300 ’03. Loaded,
tires, 1 owner, CD, 91k,
FORD CROWN VIC Police voice GPS, moon S/L, $5k
garaged, non-smoker, $7500
Interceptor ’04. Ready for Mark Levinson stereo,
police work. 3200 miles.
Exc. cond. $24,500 251-366- obo. 251-490-0365.
$14,500. 251-666-2405
1646, 990-8266
Mercury Grand Marquis
FORD MUSTANG BULLIT LEXUS GS400 ’98, new
’96
’01
tires/ brakes, carfax, V8,
LS, loaded, all leather,
8,000 miles. $12,000
loaded, book value $16,665,
very good cond, cream,
251-751-4663
sacrifice $13,995. 251-554new Michelins, 120k, $5,900.
By private owner
4583.
251-928-6836
Antique &
Collectibles
920
Toyota Corolla (Prizm)
1995, 5 spd., AC, new
brakes & tires, high miles,
high mpg, great cond.
$3200 obo. 471-5760
CHEVY SUBURBAN ’99
4x4, LOADED! Exc cond!
Super clean! $8950 obo.
251-344-3443
Chevy Suburban ’99,
Like New, Loaded, CD,
3rd seat, 114K miles.
$8250. 251-533-3381
Chevy Suburban LT ’04
3rd seat, leather, loaded!
33K
miles, $27,000. 251-470-0474
or 251-401-2479
CHEVY SUBURBAN LT
’99
3rd seat, leather, 86K,
CD, Burgundy/grey intr.
$12,000. 251-666-5372
CHEVY TAHOE 01,
leather, loaded, 80k mi,
3rd row seat, excel cond.
$17,900. (601)201-2659
CHEVY TAHOE Z-71 1999
4-dr, 93K mi, Sharp looking!
$11,500
251-895-7507; 344-1608
Chevy Trail Blazer 2002
Excellent condition
$13,900. under Warranty.
251-368-3218
Chevy Trailblazer ’02 only
39k, exc cond! White
w/gray lthr seats, still
smells like new. $19,500
obo. 251-605-4450
TOYOTA COROLLA ’01
CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS 05
Bought new! 5 spd, 73K,
new Michelin tires, 41mpg,
Tow Pkg. OnStar, 25k
4dr, PW, PL, Exc cond!
miles. Loaded w/all
$8600 obo. 251-689-9175; 653- options. $17,900 251-945-6238
9316
747-1751
NO DEALERSHIP GIVES
YOU A BETTER CHOICE
H U N D R E D S O N T H E L O T ! ! H U N D R E D S A R R I V I N G E V E RY W E E K ! ! !
SOUTH MISSISSIPPI’S HEADQUARTERS FOR DURAMAX DIESEL TRUCKS!!!
‘06 BU I C K RE N DE VO U S ‘06 PO N T I A C TO R R E N T
stk# 043908
stk# 44669
‘06 PO N T I A C G - 6
stk# 71921
WE ARE PURCHASING HUNDREDS OF
QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AND
ROLLING THEM IN EVERY WEEK!!!
‘06 PONTIAC GRANDPRIX
stk# 71893
CARS, TRUCKS, VANS AND SUV’S
Access Cab, Like NEW!
MUST SEE!
P9603
Leather and Loaded!
P9230
Showroom Quality, Loaded!
P9218
Sunroof, Leather, Very Nice!
P9231
GM Company Vehicle, Save
THOUSANDS, Fully Loaded!
P9193 03 Chevy Avalanche Z-66
Sunroof, Leather!
P9205 05 Buick Rainier
GM Company, Save THOUSANDS,
2,500 Miles!! Leather!
2 Available – Ford Explorers, XLS Expedition Must See To Believe
P9083 03 GMC Envoy SLT
Loaded Up and Leather!!
P8881 04 Chevy Tahoe
Should Be Sold As New, So Nice!
P8974 04 Dodge Durango SLT
Leather Seats, Full Equipped!
98389A 01 Tahoe LT 4x4
Better Hurry!
98545A 03 Ford F-150 Crew Cab XLT
This Truck Is Fine!
P9023 04 Chevy Avalanche 4x4!
Only 4,000 Miles!
P9131 02 Ford Windstar Van
SE Model, So Much Equipment
P9077 03 Cadillac Escalade
Sunroof, DVD, So Much More!!
P9264 03 Lincoln LS
Sunroof, Leather, 17K miles!
P9263 04 Silverado Reg Cab
LS model!!! 4x4!!!
P9258 02 Nissan Maxima SE
Loaded!!!
P9269 04 GMC Envoy XUV
SLE model! Nice!
P9279 03 Pontiac Grand AM GT
Sunroof, Loaded!!
P9282 05 Pontiac Bonneville SE
Only 760 Miles!! Save Big!
P9283 03 Cadillac CTS
Low Miles!!!!
P9246 05 Chevy C-2500 Cargo Van
20K Miles!!!
P9234 02 Lincoln LS
Sunroof, Leather, Low Miles!!!
P9231 02 Ford Ranger XLT Ext. Cab
4x4!!!
P9250 05 Chevy G-3500 15 Passenger Van Great Buy!!!!!
P9247
P9240
SALE PRICE $17,495
SALE PRICE $22,295
SALE PRICE $23,495
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750
$
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750
$
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750
$
YOUR PRICE: 22,745* YOUR PRICE: 21,545* YOUR PRICE: 16,745*
‘06 GMC CA N Y O N
‘05 PO N T I A C VI B E
‘06 GMC CA N Y O N
REGULAR CA B
CREW CA B
$
$
$
stk# 71869
stk# 98632
stk# 98640
SALE PRICE $19,995
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
YOUR PRICE: $19,245*
‘06 GMC ENVOY
stk# 181375
SALE PRICE $15,495
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
CONQUEST INCENTIVE: $1,000
SALE PRICE $19,495
SALE PRICE $13,995
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
YOUR PRICE: 22,745* YOUR PRICE: 18,745* YOUR PRICE: 13,245*
$
‘06 GMC SIERRA
REGULAR CA B
stk# 98641
$
‘06 GMC SI E R R A
E X T. C A B
stk# 165474
$
GMC SI E R R A
E X T. C A B 4 X 4 ! ! !
SALE PRICE $24,995
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
YOUR PRICE: $24,245*
G M C Y U K O N S! ! * * *
stk# 98271
stk# 98659
GM Company Vehicles and Program Cars!
SALE PRICE $14,745
SALE PRICE $19,695
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750
YOUR PRICE: 13,995* YOUR PRICE: 18,945*
$
03 Toyota Tundra LTD
03 Chevy Avalanche Z-71 4x4
03 Buick Rendevous
03 Eddie Bauer Ford Expedition
01 Toyota Sequoia
05 GMC Envoy XUV SLT
$
SAVE $8,500!!!*
PLUS! 750 IN DISASTER RELIEF CASH BACK!!!
$
SAVE 11,000!!!*
$
PLUS! 750 IN DISASTER RELIEF CASH BACK!!!
$
N O PAY M E N T F O R 9 0 D AY S ! ! ! ! * * Z E R O P E R C E N T
FINANCING FOR SIXTY MONTHS!!!!****
*All rebates assigned to dealer plus tax and title w.a.c. **Subject to credit approval ***05 models, all rebates assigned to dealer plus tax & title w.a.c ****05 Yukons w.a.c.
SAVE THOUSANDS!
05 Malibu’s — 10 To Choose From!!
05 Cadillac Devilles — 5 To Choose From!!
05 Buick Centurys — 5 Available!!
05 Pontiac Grand Prixs — 5 Available!!
Chevy Impalas, Monte Carlos, Cavaliers, Pontiac
Bonnevilles, Buick LeSabres and much more!!!!!!!
# P2910
2005 FORD FOCUS SES ZX5
$14,500
Tilt, Cruise, Leather, Alloy Wheels,
Pwr. Windows, Pwr. Door Locks
# P2909
2004 KIA OPTIMA LX
$11,990
4-Door, 4 Cylinder, Automatic, CD Player,
Pwr. Windows, Pwr. Door Locks
# P2905
2003 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER GT
# P2907
2000 DODGE DURANGO SPORT
$15,900
$11,590
Leather, Pwr. Windows, Pwr. Door Locks,
Wheels, Pwr. Sunroof
Automatic, AC, Pwr. Windows & Door Locks,
3rd Row Seat
228-762-3325
228-762-3325
228-762-3325
228-762-3325
1-800-NEW-KIAS
Hwy. 90 at 14th St. Overpass Pasc.
1-800-NEW-KIAS
Hwy. 90 at 14th St. Overpass Pasc.
1-800-NEW-KIAS
Hwy. 90 at 14th St. Overpass Pasc.
1-800-NEW-KIAS
Hwy. 90 at 14th St. Overpass Pasc.
2001 DODGE 1500 QUAD CAB
2005 GMC ENVOY
2002 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER
# P2898
2003 FORD EXPLORER SPORT TRAC
$16,990
CD Player, Luggage Rack, Bedliner
$12,975
V8, Auto, AC, SLT
$18,990
Black & Beautiful
$11,875
Auto, AC, Only 46K Miles
228-762-3325
1-800-NEW-KIAS
Hwy. 90 at 14th St. Overpass Pasc.
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP
769-1660
769-1660
769-1660
2001 DODGE DURANGO
2004 OLDS ALERO 4-Dr.
$11,990
Loaded
$10,875
$21,995
Silver, V6, Loaded
Black, V-6, Loaded
762-3533
762-3533
2003 CHEVROLET SILVERADO XC LS
2003 CHEVROLET TRACKER
2002 CHEVROLET BLAZER LS
$19,995
$8,995
$9,995
Auto, Ac, Nice
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP
769-1660
769-1660
$21,995
2004 TOYOTA PRERUNNER XC SR5
$19,995
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP
2004 TOYOTA TACOMA XC 4X4 SR5
2003 TOYOTA PRERUNNER XC SR5
Maroon, V6, 5-Spd.
Red, Leather, Loaded
Burgundy, Nice
Navy, Clean
762-3533
762-3533
762-3533
762-3533
2003 DODGE NEON SXT
2005 FORD MUSTANG
$9,995
$19,995
Black, Sporty
762-3533
2003 FORD FOCUS
2005 FORD FREESTAR SEL
$9,995
$16,995
Red, Loaded
Maroon, 5-Speed
Tan, DVD, Nice
762-3533
762-3533
762-3533
12-B
950
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Sport Utility
Vehicles
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
Chevy Trailblazer LS ’05,
V6, auto, loaded, CD, on
star, 5k, Must Sell $25,000.
251-404-4598 leave message
in no answer.
FORD EXPLORER
SPORT TRACK ’01.
Loaded, 118K miles, sunroof, exc. cond., $8500. Call
251-366-9778
Dodge Durango 2000. Exc.
cond. Very clean. 5.9L V8,
3rd row seat, $9900 251-6451457 709-9287
FORD EXPLORER XLT
’00
Sunroof, All Power, Less
than 100K Miles, $8800.
Call 251-342-9341
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
Jeep Grand Cherokee ’96,
Limited Ed, 4x4, Excel
Cond!
All Power, 158K miles.
$4950. 251-753-0104 or 6340287
JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO 2002.
Loaded, all the extras, sunroof, extra sharp. Was
DODGE DURANGO 2001
$15,500; askiing $13,900. 251Maroon, cloth, Pwr seats, Ford Explorer XLT 2002,
689-7375.
Infiniti Sound, 50K, 10-CD, leather, all power, CD, 36K
mi,
tow
pkg,
$15,000.
251Jeep Grand Cherokee
bal of 7yr warr, $12,000 obo
432-2363 or 251-455-0180
Laredo ’97, leather, all
251-946-2217
power, 2WD, Looks & runs
GMC Envoy XL ’04,
great! Must sell! $6000 obo.
DODGE DURANGO 2003
V-8, loaded, 3rd seat
850-516-4869
47k Miles, Black, 3rd Row
warranty, $28,700.
Seats, CD, Rear AC, Well
251-604-6639
Jeep Grand Cherokee Ltd
Maintained. $14,900. 251’04
GMC Jimmy ’00
947-2136
2wd,
Black, Lthr, 27K
either take up notes of
DODGE DURANGO ‘98
$239.40 or buy for $7,000. Miles, Warr. Loaded w/all
Amenities! $23,500 obo. 251251-654-0801 or 533-4223
4WD, 3rd row seat, rear
645-7157
ac, tow pkg, 82k mi,
GMC Suburban 1500 1994
$8,700. 228-218-1526
JEEP LIBERTY ’03
142k Miles, New Tires &
$12,000
FORD EXCURSION 2001 Brakes Rebuilt
251-751-4663
XLT model, 4WD, 3rd seat, Transmission & Engine.
by
private
owner
Needs
Short
Block
$1895.
loaded, rear air, 69k miles
Call Gideon at 251-479-9591
$15,000. 251-947-4081
JEEP WRANGLER 1993
Manual trans, Manual
GMC Yukon ’03, White, 3rd
FORD EXCURSION 2001 seat, 34K miles, manufacsteering, $2500 obo.
XLT, 4WD, V10, 63K miles. turers warranty. $20,500.
251-709-0042
Hunter Green w/Tan
251-401-4131 or 478-07778
JEEP WRANGLER 2000,
Interior.
GMC YUKON ’04, loaded, softtop, 69K, AM-FM CD,
$15,000 obo. 251-747-2089
custom lthr, 3rd seat, car- A/C, new tires, fantastic
Ford Expedition ’01,
fax, low miles, like new, lg shape. $13,800. 251-753-8375.
AWD/4WD, 1 Owner, 55K
screen tv/dvd, book value
JEEP WRANGLER 2005
miles, new tires, new
$30,770, sacrifice $24,900.
6 cyl., AT, hardtop, running
brakes, excel cond. $12,500. 251-554-4583
boards, tow package, 19,500
251-928-8947
GMC Yukon ’99
miles, exc. cond. $23,000
loaded, PW, PL, CD,
Ford Expedition ’04,
obo. 251-709-4510
cruise,
exc cond, 101k
Loaded, 3rd seat, rear air,
JEEP WRANGLER ’98
miles, $8,950. 251-767-2395
23K miles. Excellent
4x4, 6 cyl, auto, cold
Condition! $25,920. 601-394- GMC YUKON SLT ’03. 3rd
AC, CD, extra clean
5218
row seats, loaded, lthr, 67K
$10,000. 601-394-4177
miles, new tires.
FORD EXPEDITION 2000
Jeep Wrangler ‘‘X Pkg’’ ’04
$19,750.
REDUCED
251-633Sport. Great shape. 198K
Black, auto, CD, 11k mi,
6914; 490-6914
miles, black, 3rd seat, rear
chrome wheels, nerf bars,
air. $7500. 251-209-2548..
GMC YUKON SLT 2003
front/rear bumper, $17,500.
66k, AM/FM/CD, Bose pre- 251-209-6480
Ford Expedition 2001,
mium sound, leather, new
Black, Over $10k in Extras, tires, $21,500. 251-675-8395.
KIA SPORTAGE 1999
Including Custom 23’’
Auto, 4WD, PW, 110k miles
GMC YUKON SLT ’99 4x4
Wheels, Custom Suede
Excellent $4500 CASH
145K
mi,
white
w/grey
Interior & Sound System.
Call 251-583-1076
leather, fully loaded, per56k Miles, Must See.
fect! $9600. 251-443-7445;
Land Rover Discovery 2003
$18,500. 713-385-0156, 251533-7344
Silver, 4WD, Loaded, Still
974-5535
Under Warranty, Low
GMC YUKON SLT ’99
Ford Expedition ’98, Eddie
Mileage, $27,000 251-421Bauer, V8, Red w/Tan lthr Blue, 90K, Leather, CD, All 6591 or 251-421-4383
Power, One Owner, $9900.
int, all pwr, new tires &
251-454-3208; 661-1905
LEXUS RX300 ’01
brakes, Exc Cond! $7000.
sunroof, leather, CD, Gold,
251-679-9935
GMC YUKON XL ’01,
113K, Excellent condition.
SLT Pkg, lthr, sunroof,
FORD EXPEDITION
$17,500. 251-648-9482 or 2514x4, 99K miles, $16,500.
Eddie
666-3174
251-554-7977
Bauer 1999 2WD 126k
LEXUS RX300 2X4 ’99
★★★★★★
White/Gray Leather
Loaded, pwr sunroof, heatISUZU TROOPER ’95
Rebuilt Title. Great
ed
seats, Pearl white/tan
Cond. $7900. 251-747-8216 White, 135k miles, $5500
OBO 251-626-5951 Mon-Sat., leather, new tires. $15,500
Ford Expedition XLT ’98 8-6.
251-661-0908
3rd row seat, mom driven,
LINCOLN AVIATOR ’04
Honda CRV 2000
great cond, 142k mi,
24K miles, loaded,
4WD, 4 cyl, 4DR, auto,
$7,150. 251-786-5619
dark sand, w/extended
Extra Clean! $9900.
warranty
FORD EXPLORER ’97
251-379-0186
$31,000 251-675-0383
Eddie Bauer XLT, All
HONDA ELEMENT EX ’04
Options,
Auto, Champagne, 20K
Mercury Mountaineer ’02
99+K Miles, Excellent
Miles, Like New!
Exc cond, 65k, V8, blue,
Condition! $6900. 251-947$18,300. 251-648-0067
loaded, leather, 3rd row,
62111
tow pkg, $14,750. Call 251HONDA PASSPORT 1997
929-0592
Ford Explorer
AT, V6, A/C, Pwr, CD,
Eddie Bauer 1994
4WD, New tires. Great
Mitsubishi Montero Sport
$3500. Priced to sell!
shape. Consider all trades.
’99
251-583-3228
$4,700. 251-471-5962 L
Limited, Leather, Sunroof,
New
Brakes,
Great Cond
FORD EXPLORER
Honda Passport LX ’98
556
$7900 Call 251-666-55
SPORT 01. Like new, 1
92k, great cond, auto,
owner-female, all power,
PW, PL, cruise/tilt,
Mitsubishi Montero Sport
leather, 78k hwy, wholesale
$3,995. 251-583-0348
XLS 2001, Loaded, 68k
price $8350 251-604-8705.
miles, $11,000. 251-947-4822
HUMMER H2 2003
Ford Explorer Sport Trac Loaded, New Tires, Pewter or 747-4559
Color, Lady Owner, $36,000. NISSAN PATHFINDER ‘01
XLT ’04, 9K, all power,
251-421-6591 or 251-421-4383 All Power, Cruise, CD
leather bucket, heated
seats, hard tonneau cover
Jeep Grand Cherokee ’00, Player, Black/Gray
$22,750. 251-968-4547
all power, Auto, CD/tape, Interior. 92K. $10,200. Call
251-533-5531
Ford Explorer Sport Track AC, Mint Condition! Must
77
Sell! $9200. 251-554-797
’04, Wht/Tan, PW, PL, CD,
NISSAN PATHFINDER SE
DVD Sys, 22’’ wheels, Grill, JEEP GRAND CHERO’01
36K miles. Nicest Around, KEE 2001, Silver/Gray, 4x4, Champagne, CD, Running
Real Head Turner! $12K in V-6, CD, PW/PL, 76k,
Boards, Alloys, Exc Cond!
access Must sell. $22,500
Beautiful, $11,800. 251-97389K Miles. $11,900. 251-421obo. 251-645-0605
2632 or 554-8921
5969
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
960
CHEVY SILVERADO 1500
’01. 3 toolboxes ladder
rack, new tires, 75,000 mi.
$13,000. Jessie 251-609-2925.
Nissan Pathfinder XE ’99
V6, auto, 70k, gold/tan
cloth, PW, PL, PM, very
clean, $9750 251-344-8414.
960
Trucks
FORD F-150 STX 2004
Super Cab, 27k miles,
$19,000.
Call 251-865-2129 or
533-3653.
CHEVY SILVERADO 2000
4x4, Red, 83K miles,
FORD F-150 SUPER CAB
Loaded! $16,000.
’01
251-689-4743
V8, 143K Miles, AT, Cold
AC,
Stereo,
Alloys,
Drives
CHEVY Silverado 4x4 ’05
Excellent! $6995 obo. Call
REG CAB, V6, 5 spd, 21
251-478-4445
mpg, 4kmi., CC, AC, bed
NISSAN XTERRA ’00
Excellent Condition!
Silver, Auto, CD, $9800
Call 251-639-9292
PONTIAC AZTEC SUV
2003
52,400 mi, new tires, 1
owner, 26mpg, exc cond.
$10,900 obo. 251-377-6781;
990-3781
mat, $15,500. Call 251-6758836 605-7925
Chevy Z71 Extra Cab99
4WD, auto, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, $11,500. Call
251-209-8651
TOYOTA SEQUOIA ‘03
33k mi, excel cond,
loaded, asking
$25,000. 228-217-5626
960
Trucks
970
GMC Sierra SLT Z-71 4x4
’01. Leather pkg, CD, tool
box, exc. cond. Gray/gray.
$15,000 OBO. 251-639-1462.
GMC Sierra Stepside ‘01,
4dr, w/ camper shell, 41mo
ext warr. 69k mi, No flood
damage, excel cond,
$16,000. 228-769-6401
GMC Z-71 2002
Ext Cab, SLT, Leather,
Ford F-150 Super Crew ’01, Loaded! Prefect Cond! 89K
V8 4.6, CD, Bedliner,
Miles. Only $15,900. 251-533Running boards, P.W., P.L., 8385
1 Owner, 81K mi, $13,000.
205-936-4535 cell; 251-3446263 hm.
G
Ford F-150 XLT 1995
Dodge 2500 Series 2005.
139k, Full Size, Clean, Steel
Toyota 4-Runner ’98, Lmtd Fully loaded. Hemi, asking
Rims, Good Cond, All
$20,000 but will take trade.
Ed, 2WD, 4DR, AT, AC,
Power,
251-213-1387
GMC Z-71 ‘98 Extended
lthr, s/r, New timing belt,
$4100 OBO. 251-623-9633
tires, 95K, Excel Cond!
cab, loaded. $8600
Dodge 3500 ’96, Extended
Ford
F-150
XLT 2004. Ext. 228-324-8842 ■
$12,975. 251-471-5962
Cab, Diesel, 4x4, 5 Speed,
cab. Fully loaded. Take
AC, CD Player, Very Good
TOYOTA 4RUNNER ‘97,
over notes. Approx. $25,000
★★★★★
255k mi, needs paint, runs Cond, $12,500. 251-391-2776 251-661-6222; 610-5650
Chevy Wedge Type Car
Dodge Dakota ’02, Quad
good, black,
Hauler ’78, w/454, new
Ford F-250 ’01, Lariat
Cab, 4x4, V8, auto, 54K,
$4,300. 228-475-9661
clutch,
Super Duty, V10,
Loaded! hard tonneau
$2,750. 251-456-7806
$15,700. 228-623-5075
Toyota 4Runner Sport 2002, cover, step rail, nerf bars,
or 228-474-9621
PW, power DRs, CD, tow
★★★★★★★
new tires, Silver/grey intr,
pkg., 50k miles, asking
Exc cond! $16,900. 251-675- Ford F-250 ’03, 6.0 Super
Dodge Dakota RT ’00
$19,800 OBO 251-490-1626
Duty 4x4 Lariat, Power
1872; 251-689-0670
electric blue, 107k, exc
Stroke Diesel, Auto, 74k
cond, $9,000. 985-788-2953
Toyota Landcruiser
Dodge RAM 1500 ’03
Miles.
FJ-62 ’88, Rare, only 61K,
Quad cab, exc cond, w/
★★★★★★★★★★★★
Sell for Pay-off, $28,300.
All Original, AT, PW, PL,
extended warr, 37k mi,
CHEVY COLORADO Z71
Call 334-357-0654 Anytime.
$12,900. 251-767-1258
$16,200. 251-786-5619
’04
FORD F-250 2002 SUPER
Toyota Sequoia ’02
Crew cab, PW, PL, low
DODGE RAM 1500 ’03
DUTY. 4x4, XLT ext. cab.
SR5, leather, DVD, fully V6, Auto, 52K Miles, AC,
miles.
Powerstroke diesel, auto,
loaded,
$20,200. Call 251-341-1742
CD, Very Good Condition! 152k. Sell for loan $18,500
49k mi, MUST SELL!
$10,700. 251-981-1211; 251Nissan Frontier ’03,
251-661-0908
Extra clean,
747-1616
4DR, LWB, Crew Cab,
$19,500 obo. 251-583-1318
FORD F-250 ’99
27K miles, $15,000.
DODGE RAM 1500 SLT ’01
TOYOTA SEQUOIA SR5
251-765-2676
Diesel, 4wd, ext cab, auto,
Quad Cab, 5.9L V8, auto,
2002, Silver, Leather, V8,
144k, $11,000. 601-508-1677
EXTRAS! Tow pkg, 71K,
NISSAN
FRONTIER ‘04
Rear
Extra
Spoiler, 4dr., CD/Cass., 53K Clean! $12,500. 251-649-5997 Ford F-350 ’00, DUALLY
XE-V6, Crew Cab, 10K, at,
Diesel, low miles, Show
Miles. $23,000. 251-957-6724
4x4/cd/pwr locks/windows
Star/Tuscany pkg. $22,500.
Dodge Ram Charger ’85,
$21,500obo 251-656-4105
4x4 w/winch. Great engine 251-490-8288
Trucks
NISSAN TITAN LE CREW
& drive train. Needs TLC.
FORD F-350 ’03.
$2000 251-660-2694; 653-8958
Dually, 4x4, crew, Lariat. CAB ’05. White, loaded out,
leather, 17k miles. $27,500.
Excellent
condition.
$32,900
Dodge Ram Quad Cab ’03,
(5) BUCKET TRUCKS
Call 251-747-0581
251-660-0709; 421-1933
SLT, 4.7 V8, Loaded, Liner,
all 1 Ton.
Boards, 63K mi, $16,200.
Toyota Tacoma ’00 Reg
30FT Booms. Verasalift.
Ford F-350 ’95, Single
228-990-9362
Wheel LWB, Turbo Diesel, Cab, SR5, 4WD, 2.7L, 4cyl,
918-207-6777
4WD, AC, Hitches, Very AT, AC, Bedliner, 108K.
FORD F-150 2000
CHEVROLET S-10 1998
Good Cond. $6800. 251-391- Sell for trade in value
4dr
4x4,
Red
w/gray
interiV6, AT, Air, 53k Actual
$8,950. 251-602-6525
2776
or
Correct Miles. Exc.
CD player, bedliner
FORD F-350 XL 2000
Toyota Tacoma ’01 4DR
Condition
$8350. 251-377-5444
6-spd, flatbed, 235K miles
78K miles, Excellent
$5950 Call 251-633-6800
$11,000 OBO
Condition! $12,500.
Ford
F-150
2000
Ext’d
Cab,
CHEVY 1500 ‘00 Single
251-661-4768, 533-1231
251-366-1727
4DR, V6, 5 speed, cassette,
Cab, LWB, at, 131K mi.
cruise, AC, bedliner, 140K FORD F-450 XL Super
Toyota Tacoma ’01, 4X4,
Great cond. $6700
hwy mi, $6800. 251-533-9252 Duty Powerstroke 2004,
SR5 TRD pkg, 104K mi,
228-522-6037 / 228-623-3937
39,984 mi., 4x4, V8 turbo
Extra cab, s/r, new tires,
FORD F-150 2004 SUPER
diesel. Asking payoff $37k, all power, CD, 5 spd,
Chevy 3/4 Ton ’03,
CAB. 20,300 Mi. 4.6, AT,
251-846-2366
$10,300. 251-847-3905
loaded, New tires, Red/Tan
HD, 4x4, Reg Cab, V8,
w/tan cloth. $18,500. 251-454- FORD F600 ‘69, septic
Auto Tran, AC, Tilt,
TOYOTA TUNDRA 2000
Cruise, $12,800. 251-454-2211 3989
Tank Truck , 360 eng, gas, Reg cab, AC, AT, V6, new
FORD F-150 2004. 4WD, 4- 1100 gal tank, new tires,
Michelin tires, 51k miles.
Chevy 3500 ’94, 8x12 box
gas/mud pump, less than
$8900 251-945-6238 747-1751
dr Lariat, Ext-Cab, 5.4L
truck, 204K, runs good,
500 mi on eng. 4spd,
engine, 16,001 miles. 1
Great work truck! $9300
Toyota Tundra, 2004,
$6,500. Tim (601)947-3199
owner, garage kept, mint
obo. 251-675-7605; 251-680Double Cab, LTD, 4x4 V8,
cond. Locally owned. AM8611
GMC DENALI ’02
Sunroof, Lthr, Towing, 1
FM CD Sys, Cruise,
4dr, AWD, Quadra
owner, 37K, $31,000. Ph 251Chevy 3500 Dually ’95
lthr/heated seats, alloys,
Steering, Lthr, Fully
342-9311
130K miles, Regular Cab, auto, PW, PL, rear
Loaded! Exc Cond! $17,900
Gas engine, needs tires, defroster, PM, running
TRUCK OUTLET
obo. 251-533-8385
$5900. 251-645-1966
boards, tow pkg, back-up
We Have Diesels,
GMC Extra Cab 1500 ’96,
sensors, 20,000 mi warr.
Chevy Avalanche ’03
Ford, Dodge, Chevy
Turbo diesel, 230K mi, fully
left. $26,900. 336-380-0263.
Black, Like New,
3/4 Ton, 1 Ton, Crewcab
loaded, hard shell cover,
22K miles, Must Sell!
4X4’s 866-869-1987
FORD F-150 ’97
compass mirror, overhead
$26,000. 251-680-2161
57K, V6, AUTOMATIC, A/C console, tow pkg, drive
GOOD COND. $6850
Chevy Blazer S-10 ’92 2WD,
Vans
anywhere, 19mpg Exc
★★251-634-8119★★
2DR, 245K, AC, Cd changer
Shape $6800 251-653-6313
no engine probs. New Tires
Ford F-150 ’99
GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE ’05 CHEVY ASTRO VAN 1996
$1700 251-455-6447
4x4, Extended Cab, 172K, 4 Ext Cab, Step Side, V8,
V-6, AT, 2 AC’s, AL, AD,
CHEVY S-10 2002
month motor warranty.
Toolbox, Loaded & Sharp! Work Vehicle, 8 Passenger,
R/C, V6, 5spd, cold AC, tilt,
$7500
$22,000 OBO. Call 251-621White, 148k, $3800. 251-344cruise, bedliner, alum
obo. 251-661-0908; 609-5376 1588 or 767-2401
8812
whls, 50K. Super nice.
FORD F-150 LARIAT ’04,
GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE
$8500 251-661-0908
CHEVY Conversion Van
Crew Cab, CC, DVD, 30k,
2001, AT, AC, 4DR, CD,
‘85, dual air, color TV,
Loaded, 5.4 V-8, Warranty, Liner, Tool Box, Alum
Chevy Silverado ’00, R/C,
VCR, DVD, qn bed,
$22,000. 251-604-6472; 454V6, 5 Spd, Short Bed, 56K
Rims, 1 Owner, Great
excel cond, $5,700 /offer.
miles, $7200. 251-970-2790 or 1612
Shape, $12,500. 251-471-5962
863-409-1613
251-978-7751
FORD F-150 LARIAT 2005. GMC Sierra ’98 1500 SLT,
CHEVY Venture Extended
Z71, Ext’d cab, Black,
CHEVY SILVERADO ’03 7k miles, super crew cab,
Van, ‘97, many extras,
40K miles, Extended cab, bed cover, chrome wheels, 120k, leather, PL/PW, PS,
145k mi, Must See.
many extras. $28,500 251HD tow pkg, toolbox
Bedliner, toolbox
753-5282
bedliner, $9500. 251-610-9391 $5,000 (601)947-1065
$17,750. 251-543-1116
960
970
03 FORD
F150 4X4
S/CAB, XLT,
SPORT SIDE,
V8, #PT9781
20,990
$
29,990
Dodge B350 15 passenger
van. 1997, Long Wheel
Base,
Good Condition $3800
Call after 6 251-471-1912
DODGE GRAND
Caravan ‘99. $4500
Call Stacey 228-818-2865
after 6pm weeknights.
Motorcycles
Motorcycles
2002 Electric Glide
Standard, Custom Paint,
Lots of Extras, 14K miles,
Must See! $14,500 obo. cell
251-455-3152
Harley Davidson Sporty
2002, 1200 Custom,
Screaming Eagle, lots of
chrome, $8000. Call 251-6490492, 251-802-3214
2002 HONDA 1800 2400mi,
windshield, saddle bags,
dble seat, triple lights,
lots of extra chrome &
access. $12,500. 228475-8434/ 228-806-1980
HARLEY DAVIDSON Wide
Glide 2005 Pearl White.
2000 mi. Lots of chrome, 7
yr warr. $16,500. 251-6611253
‘93 HARLEY-DAVIDSON
Sportster 1200 CC. Good
cond. Must see. $5200/obo
601-508-7723
A Brand New 250CC Vision
R3, remote keyless start,
DODGE GRAND CARAVAN ’05. PW, PL, front & alarm, 70mpg, 6-mo warr,c
$2500. Call 251-232-1760
rear air, AM-FM CD, seats
7, 18K miles. $14,900. 251- AAA Red Harley 98 Dyna
666-2405
Conv in great condition
Dodge Ram 2000, 1500 Van with complete service
Cold AC, new tires, 7 pass, record, HD ws, bags,
1,800 obo. 251-605very good cond. Must sell extras. $11
2954.
$3,995. 251-233-9545
FORD WINDSTAR SEL ’00
By Owner, Exc Cond. Dual
Pwr Sliding Doors, 61,500
Miles. $8750. 251-621-4125
980
★★★★★
’03 Pro Street Custom,
many
extras. Must sell! $14,000.
251-680-2719 or 649-2642
HD 1987 80’’ EVO ElectroGlide touring bike, loaded
w/chrome, custom paint &
seat, gorgeous. $6500. 251649-2439
HD Road King ’98, 38K,
custom seat, luggage rack,
windscreen, many extras,
gar kept, Reduced! $9,500
obo. Call 228-875-3830
HONDA GL 1500 TRIKE
2000
50TH ANNIV. EDIT. Pearl
white, 33k, Too many
extras to list. $21,500 firm
251-990-4908
HONDA GOLDWING 2002
$2500 in add ons
10,400 miles. Perfect cond
$12,000. 601-466-6115
HONDA GOLDWING 2002
FORD WINDSTAR SEL ’01
GL 1800, 6 cyl, ABS, 14K
★★★★★★★
Dual Pwr Doors, Quad
mi,
’03 Intruder Volusia 800
Capt Chairs & More! 105K.
Black, Elec reverse,
Great Cond! $7900. 251-533- Suzuki, accessories includ$12,000. 251-442-0885
ed,
83885
7k mi, $5,000. 251-680-7509
HONDA MAGNA 750 ’98
GMC ‘95 Custom Van,
Black/Blue, 4,800 Miles,
HARLEY DAVIDSON 883
equipped w/ wheel chair
Very
Good Condition! $5200
XL
obo. Call 251-960-1655
lift, $6,000. 228-588-6515/
Sportster ’01, Screaming
228-218-4279/ 228-809-5607
Eagle Pkg, Lots of Extras! HONDA SHADOW SPIRIT
$6000 obo. 753-4170; 633-7837 2003. Only 4K miles, candy
GMC SAFARI 97
red w/flames, like new.
7 pass., rear air, PW, PL,
Harley Davidson Dyna
$4950. 251-443-6312.
tilt,
Wide
cruise, low miles, $5800.
Honda VTX 1800R ’03
Glide ’96, great bike, many
251-209-8651
950 Mi, Pipes, Warranty,
extras. Call for details.
Illusion, Blue, $8900.
$10,500.
★★★★★★
Call 251-776-6414
251-928-8294 or 583-0496
Chevy Venture ’02
KAWASAKI VULCAN ’05
Harley Davidson Electra
87k, exc cond,
Glide Standard 2001. Great 1600 Classic, 5K Miles,
$8,000. 251-379-9095
shape, 11,731 Miles, Black, Excellent Condition, Many
Olds Silouette Premier ’01, $14,750. 251-422-5586
Extras! $8500. 251-455-1972
leather, captain’s chairs,
HARLEY DAVIDSON FAT- SUZUKI 1200s BANDITexcel cond, extended
2000
BOY 02. Only 1200 mi.,
wrnty, many extras!
ONLY 2K MILES. ONE
$4,000 in extras, black
$13,500 obo. 251-645-4092
ADULT OWNER. LOOKS
w/red pin stripe, Exc.
Oldsmobile Silhouette ’98
cond. $15,600 251-689-4743 NEW. First $4800 251-7513670
111K Miles, Leather, Auto,
AC, All Power, Very Nice! Harley Davidson Road
YAMAHA 750 VIRAGO ’97
King Classic 2002, 17K
$5200 obo. 251-490-4705
Black, 12,828 Mi., Saddle
miles, some extras, garage
Bags, Exc Condition!
PONTIAC MONTANA ’99 kept. Under warranty.
$3500. Call 251- 937-4444;
All Power, AC, Auto, Runs $17,900. 251-675-8617
605-4508; 605-4504
& Drives Perfect, Very
Harley
Davidson
Sportster
Clean! $3900. Call 251-4901200 Custom ’05, 1045 miles
47005
lots of extras, NOW $11,500
obo. 251-626-7782 or 423-5949
PONTIAC Transport ‘98
White. Good condition,
dependable. $4000/obo
228-497-5560 / 228-806-0630
ACTION ADS
Pontiac Transport SE ’97
65k miles on new engine,
runs like new,
$3,800. 251-786-5619
TOYOTA SIENNA LE 2004
Silver, Exc cond! keyless
entry, auto sliding dr, JBL
sound sys, 15K $25,200. 251455-5036
980
Motorcycles
’00 Yamaha Venture, MM
Edition, Touring Bike,
ivory
& tan, 39k, looks new, 2
headsets & helmets,
PG,
40MP
$8,995. 251-476-7888
‘05 Harley Davidson
Sportster 1200 Custom
3200 mi., w/windshield &
sissy bar. 1 yr factory
warr. $9500 228-623-4790
aft. 4pm. ■
2000 Yamaha Roadstar
Silverado 1600CC, Loaded!
20K miles, $7000 obo
251-649-8380; 232-8445
05 CHEVY
15 PASS
VAN
01 CHEVY
3500
21,990
DIESEL, FLAT
BED DUMP, AC,
LOW MILES,
#PT9832
25,990
$
04 FORD
F250
S/CAB
03 FORD
F350 4X4
CREW CAB,
LARIAT, DIESEL,
AUTO, OFF
ROAD, #PT9801
DIESEL, 4X4, OFF
ROAD PKG, TOW
PKG, #PT9793
32,990
$
CHEVY VENTURE VAN
2002
LOADED! auto, air, PL,
PW,
CD, 79.7K, Well maintained.
$10,500. 251-605-6382
980
Dewey Gunn
Sales Consultant
$
DIESEL,
CREW CAB,
LARIAT, LOADED,
#PT9719
Vans
Pam Niemeyer
DUAL AC, PWR
PKG, CRUISE,
#PT9790
04 FORD
F350
$
Trucks
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2005
33,990
$
1-888-402-6574