Friday, Nov. 4
Transcription
Friday, Nov. 4
LOCAL, 3-A SPOR TS, 1-B BLOOD SUPPLY LOW SINCE KATRINA Gautier finishes region play perfect The only homecoming parade Crab Jr. is going to involves parading around the dadburn yard behind a lawnmower. 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¢ friday, november 4, 2005 www.gulflive.com Our online affiliate HOMES for the HOLIDAYS Crystal Countryman, of Pascagoula, holds her 18-monthold son, Landyn Hoard, in front of their new FEMA trailer in the IngallsWright Emergency Group Housing Site on Ingalls Avenue in Pascagoula. Barbour Blanco Katrina boosts one governor, lowers another ■ Hurricane turns Barbour into a tough candidate to beat, Blanco into possible one-term leader By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS The Associated Press Christy Pritchett/The Mississippi Press FEMA announces Jackson County trailer sites By JOY E. STODGHILL The Mississippi Press An estimated 1,393 Jackson County families may have a home in time for the holidays. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has tentatively set Dec. 24 as the latest deadline for Emergency Housing Group Sites to be ready for occupancy. Nineteen sites have been accepted for Jackson County. The sites are specifically for people without a driveway or utility connections for a trailer on their properties, or for former residents of apartments or condominiums. In Pascagoula, more than 100 trailers are in place on Ingalls Avenue and will soon be ready for occupancy. A few families have already moved to the site. Crystal Countryman and her son, Landyn Hoard, moved into their trailer Wednesday, along with her sister and her child. “It’s nice. You get some privacy,” Countryman said. “It’s better than sleeping on the ground every day.” “I think it’s harder on the kids than anything else,” said Countryman’s new neighbor, Lynda Price. Price and her two children, Ryan Christy Pritchett/The Mississippi Press Lynda Price places items in the cabinets as her daughter Alyssa, 7, plays at the table of their FEMA trailer. The family is dealing with space constrictions in their new home as they prepare to rebuild their Pascagoula home. O’Mary, 18, and Alyssa Price, 7, lost their home on Chickasaw Avenue. “It’s pretty bad when all you have fits in your trunk,” Price said. “The trailers could be bigger. It’s kind of snug.” Price said she was concerned that they have little storage space inside the trailers. However, she added, the trailer was better than the hotel room where she had been staying. They are waiting for possible changes to flood elevation requirements before they rebuild their home. Price said they plan to stay in the trailer for 18 months “or until we get our house built.” According to FEMA spokesman Gene Romano, temporary housing is available for a maximum of 18 months. He said FEMA intends for most residents on the sites to be reassigned to other types of temporary housing, such as mobile homes or trailers on their own property once utilities are restored. “Residents may move from one form of temporary housing to something more permanent,” Romano said. Sites are set up in each city to accommodate that city’s displaced residents. At this time, there are no plans to relocate residents outside their current communities. “That’s our goal. We’re trying to keep people in their own communities,” said Linda Green, director of the Jackson County Unified Command Team’s housing branch. In addition to the Ingalls Avenue site, Vancleave High School officials have allowed 12 trailers on their property for teachers who lost everything. These are the first two BILOXI — After Hurricane Katrina roared in, Gov. Haley Barbour quickly convened a special legislative session and, just 10 days after the storm, appointed a commission to study rebuilding Mississippi’s coastline. The former Republican National Committee chairman and influential Washington lobbyist also traveled to the nation’s capital several times to extract promises of federal aid from friends in the Bush administration. Because of the Barbour ’s take-charge approach to the disaster, even some of Mississippi’s staunchest Democrats are saying he may be tough to beat if he seeks a second term in 2007. In Louisiana, it is a different story: Some pundits suspect Democratic Gov. Kathleen Blanco could prove to be a one-termer when she comes up for re-election the same year. Some critics — particularly Republicans, but also some Democrats — say Blanco was overwhelmed by the disaster and paralyzed with indecision. They say she was too slow to call for federal assistance as Katrina See GOVERNORS, Page 8-A Zoning a hot topic for George County ■ Hurricane Katrina Recovery committee prepares wish list for public comment By ROYCE ARMSTRONG The Mississippi Press LUCEDALE — A public meeting will be held next Thursday so George County members of the Governor’s Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding, Renewal can receive public comment on plans about county renewal in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The meeting will be held in the George County High School cafetorium at 7 p.m. See TRAILERS, Page 8-A See ZONING, Page 8-A Homecoming not the same in Gautier ■ Played early, with no parade, Gators make best of the day By ALLISON MATHER The Mississippi Press PASCAGOULA — Though the football team played, a queen was crowned and the band played on, most Gautier High School students agreed that Game story, homecoming on a Thursday Page 1-B night just wasn’t quite the same. In order to allow Pascagoula High School to play at home at War Memorial Stadium Friday night, Gautier High celebrated homecoming a day early. Instead of the annual homecoming parade, the homecoming court was driven around the football field in convertibles. LOCAL, 3-A Saturday is last day for absentee voting for school board seats NEWSROOM: 762-0033 “It would have been better if it was on Friday because half of my friends and family couldn’t be here because they have other things to do on Thursday night,” sophomore maid Charlotte Bell said. “It’s not the same because I like to throw the candy,” she added. “That’s the best part about homecoming is the parade.” GHS principal Bernard Rogers said past homecoming activities have extended over five days. “We felt the need to scale it back to some extent,” he said. A pep rally was held at school Thursday, and the homecoming maids wore formal gowns during the traditional presentation of the court. “All of this was designed to give (the students) an added boost,” Rogers said. Keri Nelson, escorted by Chris Penton, is named the 2005 Gautier Homecoming Queen Thursday night. See HOMECOMING, Page 8-B STATE, 4-A MEMA director: ‘The system failed us’ Carisa Anderson/The Mississippi Press SPOR TS, 2-B INDEX Benson angry about situation in Baton Rouge Advice . . . . . . . . . . . .1-C Classified . . . . . . . . .2-C Comics . . . . . . . . . . .3-B ADVERTISING: 762-1111 Crossword . . . . . . . . .3-B Editorial . . . . . . . . . . .6-A Sports . . . . . . . . . . . .1-B TV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-C Vol. 159 — No. 318, 28 Pages © 2-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS OBITUARIES Millender’s Funeral Home We honor all PRE-PLANNED & BURIAL Insurance policies 100% from other funeral homes 475-5448 4412 Main Street • Moss Point BARNETT Mr. Macon (Make) Barnett, Jr., 80 of Moss Point, Miss., passed away at his home on Oct. 30, 2005. Mr. Barnett was born Aug. 9, 1925, in Barnett, Miss. to the late Mr. Macon and Ellen (Price) Barnett. At an early age Mr. Barnett united with John The Baptist Church of Barnett, Miss. He relocated to the Gulf Coast area where he joined The First Missionary Baptist Church of Moss Point, Miss. Mr. Barnett was formerly employed at Morton International of Moss Point, Miss., until retiring. Mr. Barnett was preceded in death by parents, Macon and Ellen (Price) Barnett; five brothers; and one sister. He is survived by his beloved wife, Gurthia L. Barnett; three daughters, Barbara E. Jones, Beverly McIntyre and Jackie (Johnnie) Eashmond of Hattiesburg, Miss.; one son, Johnnie (Mary Catherine) Barnett of Columbia, S.C. and one stepson, Fred C. Braggs, Jr. of Moss Point, Miss.; two brothers, Willie Lee Barnett of Heidelberg, Miss. and Herman “Tony” (Mary) Barnett of Pascagoula, Miss.; two sisters, Marcella Gilmore of Heidelberg, Miss., Eunice (Patrick) Rushing of Chicago, Ill.; 20 grandchildren; 21 great grandchildren; a devoted sister-in-law, Gwendolyn Stewart; and three devoted nieces, Tiffany S. Moses, Angel Stewart and Regina Poole; a host of nieces, nephews, relatives and friends. Funeral services will begin at 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, at First Baptist Missionary Church, 4600 Main St., Moss Point, Miss. Visitation will be held from 12 to 2 p.m., Saturday. The Rev. James Harris will officiate. Interment will be held at First Baptist Cemetery, Moss Point, Miss. Arrangements by Robinson’s Friendly Funeral Home, Moss Point, Miss. Have a story idea? CALL 934-1419 WELLS Mrs. Pearlie Mae (Bell) Wells departed this life on Oct. 29, 2005, in Gulfport, Miss., at Garden Park Hospital. She leaves to mourn her memory to nine daughters, Mrs. Clara (Frank) Smith, Barbara Rieves and Vivian (Donald) Wells of Grand Bay, Ala., Nina (James) Lewis and Ella Wells of Gulfport, Miss., Jo Anne (Andrew) Johnson of Irvington, Ala., Anna Louise Wells and Patricia (Johnny) WellsPerkins of Boston, Mass., Pearlie Mae Houston of Fontana, Calif.; two sisters, Hazel Roberson of Detroit, Mich., and Allie Cook of Grand Bay, Ala.; one brother, James (Cornelious) Bell of St. Elmo, Ala. Viewing will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, at Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church in Grand Bay, Ala. Homegoing Services will begin promptly at 1 p.m. from the church with Pastor Lamon Forrest, officiating. Interment will be in Pine Hill Cemetery, Grand Bay, Ala. All Arrangements Entrusted to Millender’s Funeral Home, Moss Point, Miss. JACOBS Mr. Herman “Love Child” Jacobs, Jr., 53, of Moss Point, was born July 4, 1953, in Pascagoula, Miss. He passed into eternity on Oct. 31, 2005, in Moss Point, Miss. Herman was a loving and devoted son, brother, uncle, and friend. He was involved in community service and was known for his generosity and loving spirit. Herman was a member of Triumph Church. He was also a Mason. He is preceded in death by his father, Herman Jacobs, Sr.; brother, Benny Lewis and a sister, Patricia Brothers. Herman leaves to cherish his memories to his mother, Carrie Bell Jacobs of Moss Point; nine sisters, Alice Tolbert, Geraldine THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Publication USPS 354420 — ISSN: 1059-7166 The Mississippi Press continues The Chronicle, The Chronicle Star and the Moss Point Advertiser, published daily. Second class postage paid at Pascagoula, Miss. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Mississippi Press, P.O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568-0849. Wanda Heary Jacobs, Publisher CIRCULATION BillyCIRCULATION Wilder, Circulation Director General Subscriptions: Director Billy Wilder, Circulation Monday - Friday 9AM - 5PM - (866) 843-8911 General (866) Saturday Subscriptions: and Sunday - 8AM - Noon - (228) 843-8911 875-8144 Home Delivery: 3 mos. — -$27 6 mos. Ext. — $54 Billing Inquiries (800) 239-1340 5411 1 yr. — $108 HomeHome Delivery: 3 mos. ——$27 mos.——$54 $541 yr. 1 yr. — $108 Delivery: 3 mos. $27 6 6 mos. — $108 ADVERTISING Tommy Chelette, Advertising Director General Advertising: (228) 762-1111 NEWS Galloway, Velma Kimble, Willie Jean Jacobs, Betty (Joseph) Rogers, Dorothy (Larry) Dunning, Kathy (Leonard) McEwen, Jacqueline (Charlie) Dixon and Brenda Jacobs all of Moss Point, Miss.; six brothers, Willie Alfred Broughton, New York City, Charlie Jacobs, Joe (Nicole) Jacobs of Moss Point, Phillip Jacobs, Merle Jacobs and Michael (Jennifer) Jacobs all of Minneapolis, Minn.; a host of nieces, nephews and other relatives and friends. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, at Triumph The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, 4224 Dr. Martin Luther King Dr., Moss Point. Funeral services will be held at 12 noon Sunday, Nov. 6, 2005, at the church with Prince James K. George officiating. Interment will be in Scranton Cemetery, Pascagoula, Miss. All Arrangements by Millender ’s Funeral Home, Moss Point, Miss. CROPP Mr. Charles Clark Cropp, Sr., age 65, of Ocean Springs, Miss., died with dignity, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2005, in Pascagoula, Miss., after a brief battle with cancer. Mr. Cropp was born in Escatawpa, Miss., on Jan. 4, 1940, to Vernon and Lorene Cropp. Mr. Cropp and his wife returned to the Gulf Coast nine years ago to be close to family. As a young man he earned a bachelor of arts in world history and a bachelor of science in chemical engineering at Mississippi State University. After working as a chemical engineer for International Paper Company in Mobile, Ala., he returned to Mississippi State to earn his master of arts in sociology. He then continued his education at Tulane University in New Orleans where he received his doctorate in sociology. Mr. Cropp was a college professor for most of his life, and last taught at Tulane Biloxi and MGCCC Lucedale. His love of teaching was reflected in the appreciation and respect he received from his students. His intelligence and knowledge was evident to everyone, yet he remained a humble and generous mentor. Mr. Cropp loved to cook, garden, and pamper his beloved grandchildren and numerous pets. He is preceded in death by his father, Vernon Cropp, mother, Lorene Miller Cropp, sister, Voncile Seyfarth, father-in-law, Colin Hemenway and motherin-law, Mary Hemenway. Mr. Cropp is survived by his wife of 33 years, Sheila Hemenway-Cropp, daughter, Constance Celles Cropp of Dallas, Texas, son, Charles Clark Cropp, Jr. and wife, Liz, of New Orleans, La., brother, Herman Cropp and wife, Nell, of Pell City, Ala., brothers-in-law, Huey Seyfarth of Houston, Texas, and Stephen Hemenway of River Ridge, La., sister-inlaw, Audrey Hemenway-Gault of St. Francisville, La., mother of his children, Barbara Cropp of Bay St. Louis, Miss., granddaughters, Isabelle Cropp and Kirsten Ishikawa, grandson, Piers Cropp, and numerous nieces and nephews. On Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, there will be a 5 p.m. Memorial Service at the Ocean Springs Chapel of Bradford O'Keefe Funeral Home, where friends may visit from 3-5 p.m. View and sign register book at www.bradfordokeefe.com. AREA DEATHS OPAL P. PETERS, 95, of Lucedale, Miss., died Nov. 2, 2005. George County Funeral Home, Lucedale, Miss. MR. HENRY FOUNTAIN, 50, of Moss Point, Miss., died Nov. 2, 2005. Millender’s Funeral Home, Moss Point, Miss. BENNIE N. VICE, 84, of Helena, Miss., died Nov. 3, 2005. Gulf Coast Funeral Home, Inc., Pass Christian, Miss. “Obituaries over one inch in length are paid advertisements.” Steve Cox, Editor Newsroom: (228) 934-1458 msnews@themississippipress.com news@mspressonline.com All submissions become the property of The Mississippi Press and will not be returned; submissions may be edited and may be published or otherwise reused in any medium. All carriers, dealers and distributors are independent contractors, keeping their own accounts free from control. Therefore, The Mississippi Press, Inc., is not responsible for advance payments made to them, their agencies, or representatives. However, we do have a Pay-by-Mail Subscription Department, whereby you can pay directly to The Mississippi Press for your newspaper in advance. FOR THE RECORD Crimes & Emergencies Gautier Crime Wednesday, Nov. 2 Martin Bluff Road, Amber Rose Charlton, 21, 1301 Hastings, Gautier, was arrested for contempt of court. Gautier-Vancleave Road, Rodrick C. Harris, 36, 1904 Ridgelawn Drive, Gautier, was arrested for driving under suspension, DUI 2nd, no insurance and improper equipment. 1404 Kingfisher Drive, Coleman Johnson reported he was assaulted. Thursday, Nov. 3 Gautier-Vancleave Road, Marcus Triplett, 32, 5609 Grierson St., Moss Point, was arrested for possession of cocaine and disorderly conduct. Gautier-Vancleave Road, Roshindee D. Stallworth, 24, 3637 Barnett, Moss Point, was arrested for illegal tinting and improper equipment. Pascagoula Crime 4208 Bluefish, Regina Cherry reported an auto burglary. Nothing reported missing at the time. 4107 Cedar, Bob McNease reported the theft of a Pennsylvania Crusher. Waffle House, 4411 Denny Ave., Uzima Meggs reported receiving harassing telephone calls. Wal-Mart, Denny Avenue, Ira Jamison, 67, of 4300 Pine St., Moss Point, was arrested for DUI. Chicot and Scovel, Major Lee Warner, 48, of 2616 Pleasant, was arrested for DUI. Ocean Springs Crime Sunday, Oct. 30 120 Arbor Vista, Ocean Springs, Kiem Dang reported her daughter missing since the night before. Dang’s daughter returned home later. Tuesday, Nov. 1 Bienville Boulevard, Martha Feig reported her wallet stolen. 3607 Magnolia Bayou, Ocean Springs Gary Tierce reported bookcases, a sofa, a refrigerator and a lounger stolen. Wednesday, Nov. 2 3098 Bienville Blvd., a tailgate off an Ford F350 was reported stolen at Fox’s Texaco. Unknown location, Page Pearson reported a lost cell phone. 3614 Bienville Blvd., Shawn Kissick reported his tag stolen from his Chevy S-10. Groveland-Parktown, Jason Davis reported a suspect took money from his pocket. Coast Calendar Special Events • Thursday, Nov. 10 — St. Paul United Methodist Church, 800 Porter St., in Ocean Springs will hold November Prayer Day. The FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 MISSISSIPPI COAST WEATHER TODAY Partly cloudy 78° 61° SATURDAY Partly cloudy 79° 65° SUNDAY Partly cloudy 79° 63° LUNAR STAGES ALMANAC First quarter Nov. 8 Record High 85° (1981) Full moon Nov.15 Record Low 27° (1991) Last quarter Nov. 23 Yesterday’s High 78° New moon Dec. 1 Yesterday’s Low 39° Yesterday’s Rain 0.00” 24.7 ppt This Month’s Rain 0.38” 71° Year to Date Rain 68.19” MISSISSIPPI SOUND Salinity Water temperature TIDES 9:55 pm H SUNRISE/SET Rise Set Fri. 6:11 am 5:04 pm Fri. 9:02 am L Sat. 10:32 am L Sat. 6:12 am 5:03 pm Sun. 12:28 am H 11:51 am L Sun. 6:15 am 5:03 pm Mon. 12:51 am H 12:49 pm L Mon. 6:13 am 5:02 pm Tues. 1:53 am H 1:35 pm L Tues. 6:14 am 5:01 pm Wed. 2:56 am H 2:08 pm L Wed. 6:15 am 5:01 pm Thur. 4:07 am H 2:22 pm L Thur. 6:16 am 5:00 pm RIVER STAGES MARINE FORECAST Pascagoula River (Cumbest Bluff) 2.14’ Pascagoula River (Merrill) 3.60’ Chickasawhay River (Leakesville) 9.18’ public is invited to come and pray between the hours of 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. • Saturday, Nov. 19 — Vancleave Views Arts and Crafts Fair and annual book sale from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the library on Miss. 57. Call (228) 826-5857 for details. Blood Drives • Saturday — Girl Scout Troop 462 is sponsoring a blood drive from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Hurley community center. Call (228) 5884852 or (228) 588-7051 for details. • Tuesday, Nov. 8 — Mississippi Power Company; Service Center Building; 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; 28th St. in Gulfport. • Wednesday, Nov. 9 — Bel-Aire Elementary School Fall Blood Drive; in the school gym; noon to 6 p.m.; 10531 Klein Road in Orange Grove. • Thursday, Nov. 10 — Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College; Jackson County Campus; on the Red Cross Bloodmobile in front of the Business Technology Bldg.; U.S. 90 in Gautier. • Friday, Nov. 11 — Mississippi Gulf Community College; Jackson County Campus; in the cafeteria; 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.; U.S. 90 in Gautier. Southeast winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet. A light chop in protected waters. Meetings • Monday, Nov. 7 — American Legion Post 160 will have its Post Executive Committee meeting at the Pascagoula VFW Post at 4724 Vega St. beginning at 7:30 p.m. The change of location will be until further notice. • Wednesday, Nov. 9 — Retired Education Personnel of Jackson County will meet at Barnhill’s in Moss Point at 10 a.m., with lunch beginning at 11 a.m. • Monday, Nov. 14 — American Legion Post 160 will have its general membership meetings at the Gautier American Legion Post 1992, located at 3824 Old Spanish Trail at 7:30 p.m. The change of location will be until further notice. • Tuesday, Nov. 15 — National Association of Retired and Federal Employees will resume monthly meetings at noon at the Gautier Public Library. Send information about special events to Coast Calendar, P.O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568; fax to (228) 934-1474; or e-mail at mispress@themississippipress.co m. Call (228) 934-1458 for details. Keesler commander headed to Pentagon BILOXI — Keesler Air Force Base commander Brig. Gen. William Lord will leave the Gulf Coast military facility on Nov. 15 to take a job at the Pentagon. Brig. Gen. Paul F. Capasso, director of command, control, communications and computer systems, at the U.S. transportation command, Scott Air Force Base, Ill., will relieve Lord at a change of command ceremony on Nov. 15. Lord, 50, has been promoted to chief information officer in the Air Force’s Office of Warfighting Integration at the Pentagon. He will be an administrator with the Air Force’s information technology office. Keesler suffered $915 million in damages from Hurricane Katrina. Lord, who took command of Keesler in April 2004, said the base has money earmarked to fix the heavy flooding and damage to Keesler Medical Center and base housing among other things. He said that money is appropriated each year and the Air Force has already given the base money for the repairs. Lord said other parts of the base, like the golf course, the base exchange and the commissary, do not receive appropriated funds from Congress. Lord said the base will be rebuilt and the infrastructure will be dramatically improved because many of the buildings on base were built in the 1940s. He said new buildings on base will also improve the chances for the base to be spared future base closure rounds, because the commission takes the condition of facilities into account. Lord said the information technology office has about $50 billion per year to work with. The new job also puts him in budget talks for the 108 Air Force bases. The new job will not be the first time Lord has worked in IT. He worked in the White House during the George H. Bush administration and part of the first Clinton administration as an communications systems expert. Lord said one of the ironies of his tenure is that he first came to Keesler in 1977 as a lieutenant with his wife Cynthia and all the couple owned was packed into his car, and now since he lost his home to Katrina, everything he owns will fit in a car. Author to speak at Dad’s Breakfast From Staff Reports KREOLE — Author Robert Little will be the special guest speaker for Kreole Elementary School’s annual Dad’s Breakfast. The event, scheduled for 8 a.m. Saturday, is a time for boys to bond with their fathers and other local male role models. The school is located at 6312 Dr. Martin Luther King Drive in Moss Point. “We understand in this day and time that families are unique, and often times there is not a male figure in the home, which is way this event is so important,” said Kreole Elementary principal Lena Sanders. “Mothers are welcome to attend the event with their sons in the absence of a father who may be working or just may FLOOD INSURANCE Carl Nulta 4310 Chicot St., Pascagoula, MS Phone: 228-769-2138 Fax: 228-769-1900 www.carlnulta.com LIKE A GOOD NEIGHBOR STATE FARM IS THERE.® State Farm Automobile Insurance Company (Not in NJ), Bloomington, Illinois not have a presence in that particular home.” Sanders says the quest speaker is a perfect fit for the event. Little is not only an author, but also a motivational speaker who talks to a variety of audiences about how to overcome adversities. The author will sell his autographed books such as “Grandma’s Biscuits” to students for $5. The event is open to all students in the Moss Point School District. Parents attending should call Kreole Elementary at (228) 4753719 for details. FREE QUOTES MEDICARE SUPPLEMENT PLAN G: $76/month Age 66 Female Non-Smoker GARY SMITH AGENCY, INC. 1964 Market St. 762-7511 Pascagoula A Certified Agent for Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mississippi THUNDER’S TAVERN O p e n 7 D a y s a We e k 1340 MARKET ST. PASCAGOULA D r i v e - U p W i n d o w Open 24/7 769-1531 PERFORMING THIS WEEKEND: Friday and Saturday Night “Split 6” Ladies Night Giveaway Free Beer Mirrors FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 3-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS LOCAL Contact: Lance Davis, News Editor, 934-1478 E-mail address: msnews@themississippipress.com MUMS THE WORD Hurley Girl Scouts to host Red Cross blood drive ■ Supply low because of drives canceled by Katrina By DONNA HARRIS The Mississippi Press Christy Pritchett/The Mississippi Press OpTech employees Vickey Dailey, left, and Robert Stallworth Jr. plant mums around the downtown Pascagoula area and in other visible places were residents can see them in an effort to restore hope and to change the scene. Delmas Nursery donated hundreds of mums to the city of Pascagoula in thanks for getting the city back to normal after Hurricane Katrina and to encourage others to make improvements to their homes to help beautify the city again. Saturday is last day for absentee voting for school board seats From Staff Reports Absentee voting will continue Saturday for Jackson County School District Board members for Districts 1 and 2. District 2 incumbent David Sims is unopposed. Glen Dickerson, 40, will run against current District 1 representative Eugene Owenby, 47. If elected, Dickerson said, he will emphasize continuing good instruction and building a good image for the school district. Owenby said he is proud of the accomplishments the district has already achieved, and will continue to strive for unity and fairness throughout all schools in the district. District 1 includes the communities of Big Point and part of Hurley. The communities of Carterville, Gulf Hills, Larue, Latimer, South Vancleave and a part of Hurley make up District 2. TO VOTE Absentee voting begins Saturday for Jackson County School Board members for Districts 1 and 2. David Sims, the District 2 incumbent, is unopposed. Glenn Dickerson, 40, will run against current District 1 representative Eugene Owenby, 47. The general election is set for Nov. 8. Absentee voting: Saturday, Nov. 5, from 8 a.m. to noon at the B.E. “Mac” McGinty Civic Center in Pascagoula. General election voting: • South Vancleave — Vancleave Community Center, on Ballpark Road, west of Vancleave Vo-Tech Center. • East Central — East Central Community Center, on south side of Miss. 614, two miles east of Miss. 63. • Big Point — Big Point Fire Station, in Big Point on Highway 613, north of Mississippi Export Railroad tracks. • Gulf Hills — West Jackson County Service Complex, 6904 Washington Ave. • Latimer — Latimer Community House, at intersection of Tucker Road, Old Biloxi Road and Jim Ramsay Road. • Larue — Larue Community Center, on Old Biloxi Road, across from Larue Baptist Church. School board members serve six-year terms. Absentee voting will continue Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon at the B.E. “Mac” McGinty Civic Center in Pascagoula. Voters should use the south entrance of the building. The general election will be Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at local voting stations. Donations sought to replace damaged memorial From Staff Reports GAUTIER — The Submarine Veterans of World War II and Submarine Veterans Inc. are seeking donations to replace the USS Tullibee and Submarine Memorial that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Located in the Ocean Springs Vietnam Veterans Memorial Park, the monu- COLD WEATHER HEADQUARTERS S-XL BLACK FLIGHT JACKETS $ 39 95 QUILTED, REVERSIBLE TO ORANGE “Great for security personnel & law enforcement” WALLS NAVY BLUE COVERALLS $ 3495 GULF COAST ARMY-NAVY Hwy. 90 • Pascagoula ACROSS FROM AUTO-ZONE (228)762-6253 To report a story idea CALL 934-1424 ment was dedicated on Aug. 2, 2003, to honor the men who served in the submarine service during World War II and after. The veterans are conducting a fund-raising program to raise the $9,000 to replace the monument. Officials for both organizations said that their national organizations will assist in the effort a and submarine service members will be asked to help with donations or assistance. Memorial Day 2006 is the tentative date to dedicate the new monument. Interested residents can call (228) 497-6559 or (228) 475-5428 for more information. HURLEY — Hurricane Katrina indirectly created a critical need for blood on the Gulf Coast. The American Red Cross lost the potential to collect about 2,000 pints of blood between Aug. 29 to Nov. 29 after about 30 blood drives were canceled because of the storm. That puts a huge dent in the supply, said Liz Gaulke of the Red Cross. “It was almost all the blood drives on the calendar,” she said. She said several Coast casinos, high schools and communities had to cancel their drives. Northrop Grumman Ship Systems also had to cancel its September blood drive, she said. Gaulke said the Red Cross needs organizations, churches and businesses to volunteer to host drives to replenish the blood supply. Hurley Girl Scout Troop 462 will host a blood drive Saturday at the East Central Community Center. The middle school girls are becoming experts at the process. They hosted three “It’s a great way for our troop to get involved in their community. We let the girls take care of the donors, leading them through the various steps and holding their hands if they need to. ...” — Donna Carpenter, Girl Scout leader THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS — Covering the Coast Since 1960 — Commercial – Residential Professional Installation COMPLETE FLOORING • WINDOW COVERING SERVICE WE ARE HERE TO SERVE YOUR NEEDS 3311 MARKET ST. • PASCAGOULA • (228) 762-7600 CAN HELP! Call (228) 762-4622 today to schedule an individual consultation THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Announces the publication of... A P ictorial OF Hu r r i c a n e Ka t r i n a • A beautiful hard bound collector's edition will be printed on acid free archival paper. • This pictorial will contain 128 pages, utilizing more than 250 photographs of Hurricane Katrina. • Delivery will be December 2005; a gift you know will be appreciated and cherished. • This pictorial of Hurricane Katrina, will analyze in words and pictures the devastation within the area, and touch on the lives of the people who pulled together to start again. • Only those who order and pay in advance are assured of obtaining a copy. After publication, remaining copies will sell at $39.95. SAVE $10.00 HURRY! RETURN ORDER BLANK TO RESERVE YOUR COPY Come In & See Our WIDE SELECTION of Work Boots in Assorted Brands & Styles Steel Toe & Non-Steel Toe Also handling Wolverine •Georgia Boots •Carolina • 3 Convenient Locations To Serve You Airport Blvd Near Cody Hwy 90 & I-10 Mobile, AL Tillman’s Corner, AL Exit 15-B Across 251-344-421 from Holiday Inn FAMILY PHARMACY Stallworth Carpet & Drapery Service After Sale Complete Shoe Repair Special Orders Welcome 30. NEED HELP CHOOSING A MEDICARE PART D PRESCRIPTION PLAN? Say you saw it in See Us Before You Buy WORK BOOTS STARTING AT 00 $ ble. “I might need it one d a y, ” s h e s a i d . “ I t h i n k everybody should give if they can. It’s important, especially at such a terrible time like this when the community is reaching out to each other. This is a small way that they can help. It’s just one little hour of their time.” Wayne Roberts of Hurley considers it a personal obligation to roll up his sleeves for the Red Cross. “It’s a way to give back without having to do much. Red Cross does the rest,” he said. Gaulke said the Red Cross is critically short on B negative and AB negative blood. drives last year for the Red Cross. “It’s a great way for our troop to get involved in their community,” said leader Donna Carpenter of Hurley. “We let the girls take care of the donors, leading them through the various steps and holding their hands if they need too. Then as a ‘thank you’ to everyone who gives, we offer them homemade desserts and handmade gifts. Hopefully, we’re teaching our girls to be Reporter Donna Harris responsible, compassionate can be reached at dharyoung women.” ris@themississippipress.co F u n d i n g f o r t h e b l o o d m or (228) 934-1448. drive was provided by a grant from the BacotMcCarty Foundation. Christy Redmond of Big Point is a regular at the Girl Scout blood drives. She tries to donate whenever possi- Mobile Shoe Hospital Price Quality TO GO Hurley Girl Scout troop hosts a Red Cross blood drive When: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Where: East Central Community Center, Miss. 614, Hurley Sage & Emogene Mobile, AL 251-471-2260 251-660-0709 Open Mon - Sat — 8:00 am - 5:30 pm Pre-publication orders will receive a $10.00 discount. Books will cost $39.95 after presale. Please enter my order for: Name: _____ copy(s) of A Pictorial of Hurricane Katrina, 29.95, tax Address: included. I am enclosing payment in full. City: _____ TO RESERVE _______ book(s). A $10.00 deposit per book is State: required. The balance is due when the book is picked up or before shipment. Zip: _____ Please ship my book(s) to Phone: the address at right. I have enclosed an additional $5.00 for each book to Mail to: The Mississippi Press be shipped. Make checks payable to P.O. Box 849 The Mississippi Press. Pascagoula, MS 39568 4-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 LOCAL/STATE MEMA director: ‘The system failed us’ By JANET BRASWELL Hattiesburg American HATTIESBURG — The federal logistics system collapsed in the days immediately after Hurricane Katrina, leaving emergency agencies with about 15 percent of the supplies they needed, says state civil defense chief Robert Latham. “Early on, we just said to heck with the system and started buying food, water and ice off the commercial market, wherever we could get it,” said Latham, director of the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. Latham and Nick Russo, deputy coordinating officer for the Federal Emergency Management Agency in Mississippi, talked Wednesday with the Hattiesburg American editorial board about problems and successes in the aftermath of the Aug. 29 storm. FEMA representatives arrived in the state five days before Katrina made landfall and, working with MEMA, asked for 450 trucks of water, 450 trucks of ice and 50 trucks of packaged meals to be on standby for delivery to affected areas, Latham said. “If we could have gotten the commodities in the numbers we were requesting, it would have sustained us and gotten us through some tough times,” he said. “There’s no question the system failed us. It failed the FEMA representatives in the field. We were getting only 10 to 15 percent.” The first supplies sent to the Gulf Coast and New Orleans weren’t replaced at the staging areas, creating delays in getting more commodities to those in need, Russo said. “When the magnitude of the incident began to unfold, what should be a simple process broke,” he said. “Once you have a kink in the system, it takes several days.” Latham advocates scrapping the delivery system that is centralized in Washington, D.C., and localizing it at the state level so that officials there can keep track of their orders. “We can never tell under the current system where that request is,” Latham said. “We all know UPS, FedEx can track, at any given time, where a package is. We should be able to do that.” FEMA and other federal programs, such as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Blue Roof project, have helped Hattiesburg homeowner Pat Dixon. The roof on her Memphis Street house is covered with blue plastic and debris has been removed from her yard by contractors working for the government, she said. She’s waiting to find out if she’s eligible for a Small Business Administration loan or grant. “The top of a cedar tree pulled the electric (connection) all the way down to the ground and tore a big hole in the roof,” she said. While Latham and Russo acknowledge the supply system failed, they also point to the failure of individuals to prepare themselves. “If there is any beauty in coastal storms, you have eight to 10 days to prepare,” Russo said. “There’s some personal responsibility we are not reinforcing. There are functional issues and social issues — a social issue is taking responsibility for caring for yourself and your family.” The memory of seeing beach parties in full swing on the Sat- urday before Katrina made landfall bothers Latham. “Obviously, we in emergency management haven’t done a good job of educating the public,” he said. Latham couldn’t provide details on what the agency will do differently but said Katrina’s magnitude will change public education methods. “What the citizen does with that information is up to them,” he said. Cut-N-Edge Landscaping Pest, Termite, Fungus & Interior Wood Treatments Anthony Mobley 769-7466 • Lawn & Shrub Maintenance • Tractor Work • Bush Hogging • Tree Removal Serving Pascagoula, Moss Point, Gautier, Ocean Springs CALL 475-6048 BRIEFS Household Hazardous Waste Collection Day is Saturday MOSS POINT — Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, the United States Environmental Protection Agency and local governments are sponsoring Household Hazardous Waste Collection Day on Saturday. Household hazardous waste is unused or leftover portions containing toxic chemicals and any product which is labeled caution, poisonous, toxic, flammable or corrosive. From 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., East Jackson County Facilities Complex in Moss Point; Ball Park Road in Vancleave and East Central Community Center will accept aerosols, all purpose cleaners, ammonia, anti-freeze, automobile cleaners, batteries, brake fluid, charcoal lighter fluid, chlorine bleach, detergents, disinfectants, drain opener and furniture polish for disposal. Other acceptable products are mothballs, motor oil, oven cleaner, paint, paint thinner, pesticides, pool chemicals, rodent poisons, rubber cement, rug and upholstery cleaner, scouring powder, silver polish, snail and slug killer, toilet bowl cleaner, transmission fluid, tub and tile cleaner, turpentine, varnish, water seal, wood finish and cooking oil. What is not acceptable are animal manure/carcasses; human waster or other biological waste (anything blood related or bodily fluids); home TVs, tubing or dialysis equipment; sharps/needles and spoiled food and mold damaged items. A cleanup day also is scheduled for Nov. 12 at Singing River Mall in Gautier. the books were donated by the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. “It’s going to be great. They have just about every kind of book you can imagine,” Root said. Caldwell Manufacturing to close Jackson plant JACKSON — Caldwell Manufacturing Co., an international manufacturer of window balances, will close its Jackson plant in January, leaving 114 employees without a job. Company President and CEO Ted Boucher said in a Wednesday news release that the decision was based on a changing marketplace. Caldwell has been in Jackson for about 51 years, said Jason Brookins, executive director of the Hinds County Economic Development District. The Rochester, N.Y.-based, family-owned company’s plant is in the city’s Northwest Industrial Park. The work being done in Jackson will be moved to El Paso, Texas, Juarez, Mexico, and Maryland, the company said. Brookins said the company decided not to invest money needed to upgrade in Jackson. Diamondhead man charged in road rage case, police say GULFPORT — A case of road rage on U.S. 49 led to the arrest of a Diamondhead man on a charge of unlawful possession of a weapon, police say. Charles William Jarrett, 41, was accused of pointing a School district begins firearm at a motorist Sunday. after-school program He had a gun when officers MOSS POINT — The Moss stopped his vehicle on InterPoint School District will begin its state 10, police said. He was after-school program Monday at held Friday at the Harrison all school sites. The after school County jail on $10,000 bond. program provides tutorial sesMississippi law doesn’t have sions to reinforce skills learned a specific charge for road rage. during regular instructional time. However, state law prohibits The program is conducted anyone convicted of a felony Mondays, Tuesdays and Thurs- from having a weapon. days. Police said Jarrett has conElementary school times are victions for burglary and narfrom 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. cotics crimes. Jarrett faces up Junior High students may to three years in prison and a attend from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at $5,000 fine if convicted on the Ed Mayo Junior High. weapon charge. Moss Point High School stuA motorist told police a driver dents will attend from 3:45 to pulled up in the adjoining lane 5:45 p.m. and became upset because he Registration forms were sent couldn’t get over in their lane. to parents and are available at According to the victim’s stateeach school. Snacks will be pro- ment, the driver “flipped them vided. the middle finger, then pulled Call the school district’s feder- the gun and pointed it at them al programs office at (228) 475before driving away,” said Lt. 7101 for more information. Craig Peterson. Free book fair set for Saturday OCEAN SPRINGS — A free book fair sponsored by Ocean SpringsMS.com will be from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. “A lot of kids lost quite a bit through the storm and we wanted to give them something back,” said Lonnie Root, owner and editor of the Web site. The book fair will be held at the Picnic Pavilion in the Ocean Springs Children’s Park on Washington Avenue and Calhoun Street, across the street from the St. Alphonsus Fall Festival. The books are free to the first 1,000 children who attend. All Former Mississippi first lady resigns position JACKSON — Former Mississippi first lady Pat Fordice is resigning her position as the city of Jackson’s interim head of human and cultural services. Fordice, 70, cited family reasons, saying the full-time job was more demanding than she believes she can handle. The resignation was effective Monday. Fordice’s former husband, Kirk Fordice, served as governor from 1992-2000. Her resignation leaves Deputy Director Michael Raff in charge of the department. — From Staff, Wire Reports THE 3(/0&2)$!9 AMPM 3(/03!452$!9 AMPM SALE EVERYTHINGONSALE EXCLUDES9%3ITEMS &RIDAY .OVEMBER 3%.)/23 /6%2 4AKEANEXTRA OFFYOUR PURCHASE /FFERVALID&RIDAY.OVEMBERONALMOSTEVERYTHINGINTHESTORE%XCLUDES ENDINGREDUCEDITEMSBRANDEDDENIMTWILLBOTTOMSCLEARANCE$OCKERS FAMILYSHOES'OODYSGIFTCARDPURCHASES9%3VALUEITEMSFRAGRANCES COSMETICSTUXEDORENTALSSALES(OMEDICS!S3EENON46ITEMS LAYAWAYPRIORPURCHASES-AYNOTBEUSEDWITHANYOTHER COUPONSORDISCOUNTOFFERS3EESTOREASSOCIATEFOR DETAILS/FFERVALIDINSTOREONLY 3ATURDAY .OVEMBER 4!+%!.%842! OFF 9OURENTIREPURCHASE INCLUDINGREGULAR ANDSALEPRICES /FFERVALID3ATURDAY.OVEMBERONALMOSTEVERYTHINGINTHESTORE%XCLUDES ENDINGREDUCEDITEMSBRANDEDDENIMTWILLBOTTOMSCLEARANCE$OCKERS FAMILYSHOES'OODYSGIFTCARDPURCHASES9%3VALUEITEMSFRAGRANCES COSMETICSTUXEDORENTALSSALES(OMEDICS!S3EENON46ITEMS LAYAWAYPRIORPURCHASES-AYNOTBEUSEDWITHANYOTHERCOUPONS ORDISCOUNTOFFERS3EESTOREASSOCIATEFORDETAILS/FFERVALID INSTOREONLY &2)$!93!452$!9 AMPM CLEARANCE OFF SAVEATOTALOF OFFORIGINALLYMARKEDPRICES ALLENDINGTICKETEDCLEARANCEITEMS /2)').!, ,/702) #% -!2+%$ $/7.02 )#% !$$)4)/.! /&& , 4/4!, 3!6).'3 9/50!9 02)#%$! 3-!2+% $ EXCLUDESBRANDEDDENIMTWILLBOTTOMSENDINGREDUCEDITEMSPREVIOUSPURCHASES FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 5-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS STATE/REGION Black lawmakers want more input on Katrina recovery By JEFFREY McMURRAY The Associated Press AP Harrah’s orbit spins at Harrah’s hotel-casino in Las Vegas. Harrah’s Entertainment Inc., the world’s largest casino company, on Thursday said profit rose 42 percent in the third quarter, boosted by its acquisition of Caesars Entertainment Inc. and an increase in gambling. Harrah’s profits rise By KEN RITTER The Associated Press LAS VEGAS — Harrah’s Entertainment Inc.’s acquisition of Caesars Entertainment helped the world’s largest gambling company weather hurricane damage to its Gulf Coast properties and pushed thirdquarter profits up 42 percent. The company said Thursday that an increase in gambling also contributed to a jump in quarterly income to $169 million, or 91 cents per share from $118.8 million, or $1.06 per share, the year before. The lower per-share figure reflected an increased amount of outstanding stock in the latest period. “Our newly combined company was tested early and often,” Gary Loveman, company chairman, chief executive officer and president said in a conference call. He said record revenues for the period ending Sept. 30 came despite the closure of four Harrah’s properties due to hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The Las Vegas-based company put an estimate of $20.8 million on the economic effect of the hurricanes, including insurance deductibles. Tim Wilmott, Harrah’s chief operating officer, said the loss of earnings cost the company about 5 cents per share. Revenue totaled $2.33 billion, a steep 78 percent gain from $1.31 billion a year earlier but short of analysts’ target of $2.38 billion. Adjusted earnings per share, excluding certain one-time items, were $1.05, down from $1.09 in 2004, but topped the average view of 99 cents per share from analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial. “Overall, not a bad quarter,” Bear Stearns analyst Joseph Greff said in a report Thursday. He said Harrah’s met analysts’ expectations for the quarter better than gambling industry competitors MGM Mirage and Las Vegas Sands. MGM Mirage last week reported its third-quarter net income dropped to 31 cents per share from 45 cents per share a year earlier. Its adjusted earnings, which don’t include charges, were 38 cents per share, short of analysts’ expectation of 41 cents. Las Vegas Sands on Wednesday reported earnings of 26 cents per share, while analysts had been expecting 27 cents. Harrah’s two Mississippi casinos in Biloxi and Gulfport were destroyed by the hurricanes in August and September. Its riverboat casino at Donations to Mississippi military up after Katrina By HOLBROOK MOHR The Associated Press On the Net: JACKSON — Since Hurricane Katrina rattled the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29, large donations have increased to a fund for financially strapped families of deployed Mississippi Guard and Reserve forces. But, the fund is actually designed to help soldiers whose financial difficulties arise directly from a deployment, not from an act of nature, said retired Sgt. Maj. Ron Graves, coordinator of the Mississippi Military Family Relief Fund. Graves said the hundreds of military families specifically seeking hurricane assistance — or those wanting to help storm victims — should check into the Guard’s Hurricane Katrina Relief Fund set up by the private, not-for-profit National Guard Association of Mississippi. The state fund “is pretty broad, where ours is dedicated solely to victims of the hurricane,” said retired Brig. Gen. Luke Goodwin, executive director of the National Guard Association of Mississippi. “Every dollar of our fund is going to go to some member affected by the storm.” Goodwin also said there has been generous donations to the hurricane fund, even from people who live in devastated areas. “It’s really amazing,” he said. “I got checks in from people from the Ocean Springs and Hattiesburg area, where I know they were effected by the storm, too.” The Mississippi Military Fa- National Guard Association of Mississippi: www.ngams.org mily Relief Fund, on the other hand, was created by the Legislature during a special session in May to help the thousands of Mississippians who have been deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. “We have received some significant increases in donations. Some were related to the storm, some were not,” Graves said. “But the intent is not to help hurricane victims. It’s primarily for assisting families who have developed emergency financial situations as a direct result of their deployments.” And while nearly 600 Mississippi soldiers lost homes or had property damage during Hurricane Katrina, Graves said thousands more face financial difficulties when they are forced to leave their civilian jobs for extended deployments overseas. “We’ve had some families that have taken up to a $100,000-a-year loss in pay when they deployed,” Graves said. “That’s quite a hit. We need to recognize that soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines make sacrifices daily.” Other families struggle even more, missing house payments and falling behind on utility payments, Graves said. And he anticipates more requests for assistance as Christmas nears and struggling families begin shopping for loved ones returning from overseas and their children. Lake Charles, La., was severely damaged and hasn’t reopened. The company said plans for a 450-room luxury hotel at Harrah’s New Orleans could cost more and take longer than planned because of hurricane damage to the casino site. Company spokesman Alberto Lopez in Las Vegas said the full extent of property damage and business losses remained unknown, though insurance should cover most losses. Harrah’s expects to announce a Gulf Coast rebuilding program “shortly,” Wilmott told analysts. The company has pledged to rebuild in Biloxi, but it has not committed to resurrecting its Gulfport resort. WASHINGTON — Black lawmakers Thursday demanded a greater role in the federal effort to rebuild the hurricaneravaged Gulf Coast, proposing legislation that addresses many social problems they believe the Republican-led Congress is overlooking. All 42 U.S. House members of the Congressional Black Caucus have signed on to the measure, which includes a massive list of health, housing and education provisions. It also guarantees victims a monetary grant similar to the ones doled out for victims of the 9-11 terrorist attacks. Caucus Chairman Mel Watt, D-N.C., said he did not have a specific cost estimate because it is unclear exactly how many Gulf Coast residents have been forced to relocate, but he floated $200 billion as a ballpark figure for the overall recovery. “One of the things we’re worried about is that our government, perhaps, would just as soon forget about those people and let them go where they are and fend for themselves,” Watt said. “That is inconsistent with what we said as a nation we would do for the victims of this hurricane.” At a news conference, Watt and other members of the allDemocratic group suggested they’ve offered the Bush administration plenty of advice about the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, but it’s been largely ignored, even though a high percentage of the victims are black. “It would be the height of irresponsibility on the part of the president, on the part of this Republican-led Congress, not to make sure that the Congressional Black Caucus has a seat at the table as a strong, genuine partner,” said Rep. David Scott, D-Ga. The bill creates a victim restoration fund, modeled after the one for terror victims, in which a special master would evaluate how much each victim should be paid in order to rebuild their homes to “pre-Kat- HURRICANE INSURANCE DISPUTES PERSONAL INJURY • DOMESTIC RELATIONS Mattress City Choice Sets Firm Set Plush Set Pillow Top Set SpringAir Set Beautyrest Set Queens $149 $269 $299 $499 $649 (Not Valid with any other offer. Exp. 11/30/05) Gautier 522-3201 3400 Hwy. 90 (Next to City Hall) Call the KIHYET LAW FIRM Established 1973 Kings $199 $349 $399 $699 $999 $$Another 5% Off with mention of Ad M-F 10-6 Saturday 10-5 90 Days SAC Accept All Major Credit Cards rina condition.” It also provides for grants that would help rebuild medical facilities and small businesses, pay a year’s worth of health insurance for each victim and fully fund education expenses for local school districts that take on new students. Also included is a measure proposed earlier by Rep. Artur Davis, D-Ala., which would let displaced hurricane victims vote absentee through the 2008 elections. The approach of the black caucus contrasted vividly with one suggested later in the day during a forum at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. Moderator James Glassman said the government should pay some limited funds toward displaced individuals and businesses but, otherwise, its job should be confined to rebuilding infrastructure, such as sewers and roads. “After doing the basics, government should get out of the way and let the city develop in a natural and organic way,” Glassman said. A name you can trust Scruggs Center • Moss Point, MS 228-762-5503 or 228-475-0055 877-887-9033 We’ve rebuilt our assets to help rebuild the Mississippi Gulf Coast We’re open for regular hours in all our communities Hurricane Katrina dealt a body blow to our region, but, thanks to the heroic efforts of our great team, the Peoples Bank is open for business to help rebuild the Mississippi Gulf Coast. We’re operating at 14 of our 16 branches offering our full range of banking services at regular opening times from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. Downtown Biloxi Main Office 152 Lameuse Street Biloxi, MS 39530 Orange Grove 12020 Highway 49 North Gulfport, MS 39503 Diamondhead 4408 West Aloha Drive Diamondhead, MS 39525 Cedar Lake 1740 Popps Ferry Road Biloxi, MS 39532 Handsboro 412 East Pass Road Gulfport, MS 39507 Gautier 2601 Highway 90 Gautier, MS 39553 West Biloxi 2560 Pass Road Biloxi, MS 39531 Long Beach 298 Jeff Davis Avenue Long Beach, MS 39560 Saucier 17689 Second Street Saucier, MS 39574 D’Iberville 10491 Lemoyne Boulevard D’Iberville, MS 39532 Pass Christian 129 Fleitas Avenue Pass Christian, MS 39571 Wiggins 1312 South Magnolia Drive Wiggins, MS 39577 Ocean Springs 2015 Bienville Boulevard Ocean Springs, MS 39564 Bay St. Louis 408 Highway 90 East Bay St. Louis, MS 39520 In addition, 24-hour ATMs are operating at each open branch except Bay St. Louis and Pass Christian. Other ATMs are available at the following locations: Biloxi Regional Medical Center Memorial Hospital at Gulfport Biloxi Gulfport Regional Airport Biloxi Public Safety Center Veterans Avenue at Irish Hill Our valued customers—businesses, institutions and individuals—can rest assured that The Peoples Bank will continue to serve and build the Mississippi Gulf Coast as we have for nearly 110 years. 1-800-873-6468 w w w. t h e p e o p l e s . c o m “WHERE PEOPLE E S TA B L I S H E D 1 8 9 6 COME FIRST ” 6-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Contact: Paul South, Editorial Page Editor, (228) 934-1423 E-mail address: editor@mspressonline.com OPINION State U’s need not apply THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Wanda Heary Jacobs Publisher Steve Cox Editor Tommy Chelette Advertising Director Billy Wilder Circulation Director LETTERS POLICY The Mississippi Press encourages letters to the editor. Writers are encouraged to keep letters to 500 words or less. Letters can be submitted via: • Mail: The Mississippi Press, P.O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568. • E-mail: editor@mspressonline.com • In person: 1225 Jackson Ave., Pascagoula. Letters will only be considered for publication if accompanied by the name, address and daytime telephone number of the letter writer. All submissions become the property of The Mississippi Press and will not be returned; submissions may be edited and may be published or otherwise reused in any medium. Other Opinions The Alito nomination Even for Washington, D.C., the speed with which the two sides swapped positions on failed Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers and the newest nominee, Samuel Alito, was neck-snapping. The White House said it was a plus that Miers had gone to university and law school at Southern Methodist University, that she would bring to the court a needed perspective from outside the elitist Ivies. Prominent in the nomination of Alito was that he had gone to Princeton and Yale law. The White House also said it was a plus that Miers, Bush’s personal attorney and now White House counsel, had never been a judge. Many distinguished justices did not have prior experience on the bench, it said. In introducing Alito, Bush boasted that he “has more prior judicial experience than any Supreme Court nominee in more than 70 years.” One criticism of Miers was the lack of a paper trail. The White House refused to turn over her legal memoranda, saying the Senate Judiciary Committee didn’t need them and the papers were privileged anyway. Alito, said Bush, “has participated in thousands of appeals and authored hundreds of opinions,” all of which are available to the committee just for the asking. Republicans opposed to the Miers nomination wanted protracted hearings to put off an up-or-down vote as long as possible in hopes she’d withdraw, as ultimately she did. Democrats, on the other hand, were happy to rush the process to embarrass the Republicans. Now the Republicans are demanding a speedy up-ordown vote. Senate Republican Leader Bill Frist says “in the next several weeks.” And now it is the Democrats who are being measured and methodical. Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Dick Durbin says, “Ordinarily it takes six to eight weeks to evaluate a Supreme Court nominee. We shouldn’t rush to judgment.” With Miers, who had no political track record, the White House assured social conservatives that she was a red-blooded ideologue who was with them on all the hot button issues. Alito’s backers take pains to stress that he is not a zealot, but in the words of GOP Sen. Mike DeWine, “clearly in the mainstream.” Fifteen years ago, Democrats like Sen. Ted Kennedy found that Alito had “a distinguished record” and “a commendable career” when they unanimously approved his nomination to the circuit court. Now Kennedy finds him “extreme” and Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid finds him perhaps “too radical for the American people.” In the nation’s capital, shamelessness is an art form practiced by masters. — Scripps Howard News Service Shame at the United Nations Overshadowed by the recent news of the indictment of White House aide Lewis “Scooter” Libby was a report of what seems a bigger scandal: the massive fraud involved in the United Nations’ oil-for-food program in Iraq. A U.N. commission headed by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker reported that, before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the brutal regime of Saddam Hussein had skirted economic sanctions with the help of corrupt activities by thousands of companies. As a result, Saddam collected some $1.8 billion through the program, money that was supposed to have helped feed starving Iraqis. Several American-run oil companies were apparently involved, and Marc Rich — yes, the friend of Bill Clinton pardoned by that president in 2000 — was identified as a middleman. Most of the lucrative contracts, though, apparently went to Russian and French companies, which makes it easier to understand why those countries were so prominent in bitterly opposing U.S. efforts to constrain Saddam Hussein. The Volcker report also maintains that individuals who sought to sway world opinion against the sanctions effort were handsomely rewarded by Iraq, including the notorious anti-American and pro-Saddam British politician George Galloway. Since the U.N. has no power to go into countries and punish people, it appears that many of the people involved in the alleged corruption will never be prosecuted. Many are denying the charges, making the farfetched claim that piles of documents that the Volcker commission studied are fake. But it is important to draw some lessons here. Foremost, economic sanctions must be tightly enforced. If the U.N. is to have credibility — and not simply be ignored by the United States and other powers — it must reform its ways and cease being an organization that is quite so tolerant of brutal and corrupt dictators. Beyond the global politics is a crime against humanity. Many children starved to death because of the greed of Saddam, and the eagerness of countries and companies to do business with evil. — Scripps Howard News Service FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 Alito’s Casey dissent displays proper restraint Will Planned Parenthood v. Casey be Judge Samuel Alito’s Hedgepeth v. Washington Metro? You don’t remember Hedgepeth? It was the infamous “single french fry” case that was going to be big trouble for Supreme Court nominee John Roberts last summer. The People for the American Way said that, in upholding the arrest of “a 12-year-old girl for eating a single french fry,” Roberts “appeared dismissive of the serious concerns raised by the use of police power.” It didn’t work out that way. On the contrary, his “subway snacker” opinion ended up spotlighting his qualifications for the high court — his careful reasoning, common sense, humanity and philosophy of judicial restraint. Opponents of Presi- David Reinhard dent Bush’s latest Supreme Court pick want to make hay of Alito’s dissent in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, in which he refused to strike down a law requiring a wife to notify a husband if she intended to abort their child. But a fair reading of Alito’s Casey dissent shows a judge working carefully to respect Supreme Court precedent — in fact, Sandra Day O’Connor’s own abortion-rights tests — and the other branches of government. The facts in Casey: Pennsylvania, under the leadership of Democratic Gov. Robert Casey, had passed several limits on abortion. One required spousal notice — not consent, but simple notice. A wife would have to self-certify she had notified her husband that she planned to have an abortion. The law included exemptions if the husband wasn’t the child’s father, if the father couldn’t be located, if the pregnancy resulted from a legally reported spousal assault or if notification might result in bodily harm to the woman. Judge Alito’s job wasn’t to pronounce on the wisdom or of lack of wisdom of spousal notice laws. It was to determine two things. Did the state regulation run afoul of the “undue burden” standard Justice O’Connor had set out in earlier cases? If he concluded it didn’t, the next question was whether the law was “rationally related” to a “legitimate” state interest. “Whether the Legislature’s approach represents sound public policy is not a question for us to decide,” he wrote. “Our task here is simply to decide whether (the spousal notice requirement) meets constitutional standards.” Alito wasn’t making law or expressing policy choices, he was interpreting O’Connor’s own standards for state abortion regulation to be constitutional. She had written that an “undue burden” is not created by a “regulation (that) may ‘inhibit’ abortions to some degree.” Rather, an “undue burden” had the effect of “substantially limiting access” to abortion. Alito concluded that the plaintiffs failed to show that the spousal notice requirement, with its exemptions, did so. With this question answered, Alito moved to the rational-basis test. He didn’t believe he needed to go into as much detail on this because, as he noted, the majority also believed the spousal notice provision served a “legitimate” interest — “the state’s interest in furthering the husband’s interest in the fetus.” But he did mention something that his critics should remember in this and other cases: A law is presumed to pass this test; the burden is on plaintiffs to show a law is irrational or arbitrary. “The Pennsylvania Legislature could have rationally believed that some married women are initially inclined to obtain an abortion without their husbands’ knowledge because of perceived problems — such as economic constraints, future plans or the husbands’ previously expressed opposition — that may be obviated by discussion prior to the abortion ...,” Alito wrote. “We have no authority to overrule that legislative judgment even if we deem it ‘unwise’ or worse.” There it is: The same due deference to the legislative branch, the same modesty regarding judicial power that Roberts exercised in the “single french fry” case. Will Casey be Alito’s Hedgepeth? Will it be quickly forgotten once its principled jurisprudence is fully understood? Probably not. Unlike Roberts’ case, Alito’s dissent is about abortion — the alpha and omega for people who are less interested in legal reasoning and judicial philosophy than results-based jurisprudence. Abortion-rights absolutists who’ve never met a limit on abortion they favor will flog his dissent to death. But will the Casey case have confirmation-killing resonance? Probably not. First, there are other Alito abortion cases that his opponents fail to mention. In Planned Parenthood v. Farmer, for example, he joined with the court in overturning a New Jersey ban on partialbirth abortions. Again, he was trying to apply Supreme Court precedent. Second, it will be hard convincing the public it’s “radical,” “extreme” or “out of the mainstream” for a judge to uphold a law that says husbands are relevant to decisions related to their unborn children. A 1988 poll of women for Good Housekeeping found that 90.9 percent said husbands should have the right to participate in the abortion decision. David Reinhard is an associate editor of The Oregonian of Portland, Ore. He can be contacted at davidreinhard@news.oregonian.com. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Enough of pompous bureaucrats To the editor: After a third visit to Pelican Landing in Moss Point, to apply for a federal loan, I chose to use the public restroom in that building. However, I was stopped by an official and a federal police officer who informed me that the public restroom was only for government employees and I was to use a row of portable toilets set outside the building. I explained to these obnoxious fellows that as a Moss Point taxpayer I figured that the building belonged to me so I could make myself at home. But I lost the argument. So this seems to be the bizarre situation. The bureaucrats in that building are well paid, get free room and board, have a great job, great benefits, a house to go back to and great looking vehicles behind the build- ing. And we pay for it all. On the other hand, most of those the “bureaucrats” are “serving” have severely damaged or no homes, no jobs and no transportation. Katrina has evicted us from our private homes. Now federal bureaucrats have the gall to evict us from our public places. I know that the use of a restroom is a silly issue in such a human tragedy. But what such pettiness really symbolizes is the arrogance and indifference shown by too many bureaucrats. Perhaps the manager of the federal team at Pelican Landing, who would not talk to me, would like to explain why he is royalty and the rest of us folks are second-class citizens. It’s too bad too many pompous bureaucrats make all the others look so selfish and shallow. Dr. Calvin S. Ennis Escatawpa WASHINGTON — Let’s say you’re a bright young man or woman who decides to attend the University of Michigan’s highly regarded law school with the hope of some day reaching the pinnacle of jurisprudence, the United States Supreme Court. If that’s your ambition, the best advice would be to forget it. Study hard, graduate magna or summa and Law Review and all that academically important stuff and it won’t make a wit’s worth of difference. The odds of your succeeding even after a distinguished legal career are slim to none unless you have had the benefit of the Ivy League generally and Harvard or Yale specifically. It is a rare exception when anything else counts — maybe Stanford or the University of Chicago, but certainly not, ugh, Southern Methodist University where poor Harriet Miers learned to be a lawyer. Assuming that the current nominee to fill out the court, Samuel Dan Alito, wins confirmation after what promises to Thomasson be one of those patented Senate knock-down drag-outs, the current score of the annual SCOTUS intramural football game would be Harvard, 6, Yale, 2 with Chicago U’s representative, John Paul Stevens, serving as water boy. So for any mother out there who would like to brag about “my son the justice,” don’t let them him up dreaming about Berkeley or Madison, Wis., or Baton Rouge, La. Throw in the fact that African Americans and women both will be outnumbered 8 to 1 on the court and that Hispanic Americans, the largest of our minorities, aren’t even present and the odds of being anything but white, male and “boola, boola” and reaching those hallowed chambers are really long. Oh, yeah. It also helps to have had some lower bench experience, preferably federal. Rather makes one concerned about the fitness of the court to hand down rulings on forced diversity and similar issues, doesn’t it? In fact, it makes one nervous about most everything the court decides given that all these guys with the exception of Stevens and soon to be the one remaining female, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, have been indoctrinated by essentially the same faculty. Actually, Ginsberg did attend Harvard law but graduated from an Ivy sister, Columbia. Frankly, if I wanted to influence the nation’s highest court, I would seek a position teaching at Harvard or Yale. At the very least, I could revel about all those important people who owe me their fame — but not their fortune because they get paid by the government. One can only wonder how often faculty lunches end in fisticuffs over bragging rights. Most disturbing about all this is that President Bush, after promising to look beyond the federal bench and into differing ethnic groups and state supreme courts and so forth, fell right back into the same old cookie cutter profile for his two nominations. He did give it a half hearted try with a bit of cronyism, but Miers was a dumb appointment, and in the long run she was smart enough to take herself out of the maelstrom. So Alito, who has punched all the right tickets along the way and is thought to be conservative, now faces a Senate whose atmosphere is as politically poisonous as any in recent memory. Republican majority leaders engender little respect and their Democratic counterparts seem only interested in hamstringing the legislative process until next year’s congressional elections. The onetime gentlemen’s club seems to have degenerated into a daily clubhouse brawl between the Crips and the Bloods. Any Bush appointee who needs confirmation and doesn’t suffer from masochistic tendencies might want to reconsider. Alito, who went through this process with ease for his lower court nomination, now faces an entirely different prospect, with some of those who praised him in the earlier instance ready to eviscerate him now. Hopefully, he has warned his proud family about what daddy will be facing over the next weeks. But then Yale must have prepared him for this. They must have a class in how to confound a Senate committee with the old “Razzle Dazzle” — sorry, Bob Fosse. They certainly would at Michigan if they had a chance in the high court sweepstakes. But then their Midwestern approach to law always has been a bit more practical and less theoretical than their Ivy contemporaries. As the brother, father and uncle of successful attorneys, I’ve always been glad they harbored no ambitions about service on a court that doesn’t even require a law degree. Dan K. Thomasson is former editor of the Scripps Howard News Service. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 7-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS NATION Libby pleads not guilty in CIA leak inquiry By PETE YOST The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff pleaded not guilty to a five-count felony indictment Thursday in the CIA leak case, signaling a protracted court battle that is sure to prolong debate about the White House’s prewar use of intelligence on Iraq. I. Lewis Libby appeared at his arraignment with trial lawyers Ted Wells and William Jeffress, known for their ability to win jury acquittals for high-profile clients in white-collar criminal cases. “With respect, your honor, I plead not guilty,” Libby told U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton, a former prosecutor who has spent two decades as a judge in the nation’s capital. Cheney and other top White House officials could be called to testify if Libby goes to trial. He is charged with obstruction of justice, two counts of lying to the FBI and two counts of committing perjury before a federal grand jury. Recovering from a foot injury, Libby leaned his crutches against a lectern from which lawyers normally question witnesses or address the court. “He has declared to the world that he is innocent,” Wells said outside the courthouse after the 10-minute session. “He wants to clear his good name, and he wants a jury trial.” Libby’s indictment has enabled Democrats to raise anew questions about the Bush administration’s primary justification for invading Iraq, the incorrect assertion that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. Libby was charged with lying to investigators and the grand jury about leaking the CIA status of covert CIA officer Valerie Plame to reporters. Plame’s CIA status was exposed after her husband, former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson, accused the administration of twisting intelligence in the run-up to the war to exaggerate the Iraqi threat from weapons of mass destruction. Wilson made his accusation after a CIAsponsored trip to Africa in which he said he AP AP I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff, leaves the U.S. District Court in Washington. Libby pleaded not guilty Thursday in the CIA leak scandal. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D- Nev., center, flanked by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., left, and Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., gestures during a Capitol Hill news conference to discuss the CIA leak investigation. The case has enabled Democrats to raise questions about the war in Iraq. found no evidence to support the allegation that Iraq had an agreement to acquire uranium from Niger. Bush told the nation on Jan. 28, 2003, that “the British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” The Bush administration later said the passage should have been taken out of the president’s address. In court in Washington, Libby waived his right to a speedy trial. It will take his legal team three months to get security clearances and to examine classified information that the prosecution must produce to the defense. Jeffress said there may be disputes over the use of classified information and that there may be First Amendment issues. He was referring to the fact that journalists are among the case’s central witnesses. Legal experts say there could be demands for reporters’ notes and Libby’s lawyers could demand the government turn over an extensive amount of classified information from the CIA about Plame’s covert status. The indictment says Libby got information about Plame’s identity in June 2003 from Cheney, the State Department and the CIA, then spread it to New York Times reporter Judith Miller and Time magazine reporter Matt Cooper. Libby told FBI agents and a federal grand jury that his information had come from NBC reporter Tim Russert. Russert says he and Libby never discussed Wilson or his wife. The exposure of Plame’s CIA identity by conservative columnist Robert Novak triggered the probe that resulted in Libby’s indictment. The next court date for Libby is Feb. 3. Senate wrapping up $34B budget cut bill By ANDREW TAYLOR The Associated Press WASHINGTON — A plan to impose the first cuts since 1997 to benefit programs like Medicare, Medicaid and farm subsidies headed for a Senate vote Thursday that could give Republicans a modest victory against rising government spending. Every Democrat opposed the measure, but GOP support seemed firm since the bill had few cuts that swing vote moderates found offensive. The bill covers dozens of programs and does not make major cuts to the Medicare and Medicaid programs for the elderly and for the poor and disabled. It also contains a hotly contested provision to open an Alaskan wilderness area to oil drilling. The Senate bill is estimated to trim $34 billion from budget deficits totaling $1.6 trillion over five years — just 2 percent. For the plan’s first year, with deficits predicted to exceed $300 billion, the cuts total $6 billion. Still, Republicans say the debate marks an important moment for their party, which gained control of Congress 11 years ago with promises to balance the budget. The return of intractable deficits and surg- ing spending has caused many Republicans heartburn over their record on spending and budget deficits. The long-planned budget measure would make the first cuts to so-called mandatory programs since 1997. These account for 55 percent of the budget and include Medicare, Medicaid, farm subsidies and student loan subsidies. The White House strongly supports the overall effort, but has threatened to veto the bill over an obscure provision to kill subsidies for some regional health insurers offering Medicare prescription drug coverage. The White House stand threatens $5.4 billion in savings. Democrats are united in opposition to the bill because it both permits drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and increases the deficit once coupled with a subsequent $70 billion tax cut bill. “Their budget ... actually would make the deficit worse,” said Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. “That’s fiscally irresponsible at any time, but especially when we should be saving to prepare for the baby boomers’ retirement.” Across the Capitol, the House Budget Committee approved a $54 billion deficit- reduction bill by a party-line vote. But so many GOP lawmakers are unhappy with the bill that Republican leaders acknowledge it will have to be reworked before a final floor vote next week. It appears increasingly likely that House GOP leaders will drop the Arctic oil drilling plan from their bill and revisit it in final House-Senate talks. House moderates are also opposed to cuts in a variety of social programs, especially food stamps, child support enforcement and Medicaid. The Senate bill reflects the influence of moderates providing swing votes in the chamber and on key committees such as the finance panel, which drafted provisions curbing the growth in Medicaid and Medicare, the federal health care programs for the poor and the elderly. As a result, the Senate’s Medicare and Medicaid cuts largely won’t touch beneficiaries of the programs, instead tapping drug companies, pharmacies and insurance subsidies for much of the savings. The Agriculture Committee dropped plans to cut food stamps. There’s also plenty of sugar to go along with the fiscal medicine. The bill contains about Senate clears measure setting digital TV deadline WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate moved the digital TV transition one step closer to reality on Thursday, setting a firm date for television broadcasters to switch to all-digital transmissions. Lawmakers gave broadcasters until April 7, 2009, to end their traditional analog transmissions. The so-called “hard date” was included in a sweeping budget bill. The bill also would provide $3 billion to help millions of Americans buy digital-to-analog converter boxes for their older television sets — so those consumers will continue to receive a signal once the switch is made permanent. Legislation approved last month by the House Energy and Commerce Committee calls for a Dec. 31, 2008, deadline and provides nearly $1 billion for the converter boxes. Differences between the measures would need to be worked out in a House-Senate conference. In the Senate, an amendment by Republican John Ensign of Nevada that would On the Net: Congress: thomas.loc.gov Federal Communications Commission: www.fcc.gov have reduced the converter box subsidy to $1 billion was withdrawn. Spokesman Jack Finn said Ensign was concerned that the $2 billion in savings would be spent on other projects instead of deficit reduction. Digital television promises sharper pictures and better sound than analog TV. National Association of Broadcasters president Eddie Fritts said the 2009 deadline NEED ACallROOF? On-Time Construction $35 billion in new spending to go along with the cuts. The nation’s doctors would get an $11 billion reprieve next year from a scheduled 4.3 percent cut in their Medicare payments. Dairy farmers won a $1 billion extension of milk income payments. College students would get more than $8 billion in new grants, and more disabled children would retain Medicaid health coverage. Senators also approved a $2.7 billion plan by Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., and Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., to lower student loan processing fees and provide aid to students and schools in hurricane zones. It passed after the Senate rejected, 31-68, a bid by conservatives to make much of the aid available through school vouchers. 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PASCAGOULA DEVELOPMENT COMPANY Interior Door Units $ 6999 White Vinyl Siding $ 3900 Ceramic Tile 99¢ sq. ft. 3 1/4” Colonial Base Board 39¢ lnf per square Aluminum White Insulated Windows 4549 $ Exterior Steel Door Units Starting at $ 8900 - IN STOCK SUPPLIES • 15# Felt • Aluminum Windows • Shop Vacs • Plastic Sheeting • Mold and Mildew Cleaning Supplies • Electrical and Plumbing Supplies Open Monday - Friday 7-6 Saturday 8-5 S u n d a y 11 - 3 H w y. 9 0 - G a u t i e r - 4 9 7 - 9 7 5 0 8-A THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Trailers From Page 1-A sites to be ready. The last site on the list, the Ocean Springs Civic Center, will be ready for trailers by Dec. 24. Pascagoula will have a total of 11 sites with about 770 trailers. Moss Point and Escatawpa will have three sites with an estimated 210 trailers, and Ocean Springs, Fountainebleau and St. Martin will have three sites with about 201 trailers. These numbers are part of the Jackson County group sites’ forecast, released Thursday. In addition to Vancleave, one location on Dolphin Drive in Gautier will accommodate close to 200 families. Negotiations for the property, located between city hall and Lowe’s on U.S. 90, are underway, Green said. Trailers are expected to be ready for occupancy in Gautier by Dec. 21. “We’re getting there,” Green said. “I just wish we could get them in faster.” The numbers for trailers at these sites continue to change, since new data is being reported to FEMA and the housing branch from the American Red Cross and the Carnival Holiday cruise ship, which currently houses 1,400 Katrina evacuees. The cities and the county evaluate different sites for the possibility of use as an site. Once sites are proposed, the Army Corps of Engineers performs an environmental analysis. Finally, the negotiation process is conducted by FEMA. According to Romano, FEMA Governors Jackson County Emergency Housing Group Sites • Pascagoula: Ingalls Avenue/Wright Avenue, MCC Ballfield, Belair Shopping Center, Jefferson Avenue, Veterans/Short Cut Road, Orchard Avenue/Mandalee Street, Frederic Street/Delmas Street, Orchard Avenue/Tillman Street, Old Mobile Highway, Denny Avenue/Temple and 2690 Jefferson. • Moss Point and Escatawpa: Temple/Short Cut Road, 4312 Second St. and Green Pasture/Martin Luther King Boulevard. • Ocean Springs, Fountainebleau and St. Martin: Ocean Springs Civic Center, St. Martin Civic Center and Yellow Jacket Road. • Gautier-Vancleave: Vancleave High School and Dolphin Road. provides security at the sites until trailers are occupied. At that point any security or emergency issues will be handled by local authorities. Park managers who serve as representatives for FEMA at each site will be appointed to help people with maintenance concerns or other issues in the park. Reporter Joy E. Stodghill can be reached at jstodghill@themississippipress.com or (228) 934-1428. Zoning From Page 1-A Throughout the meeting, zoning became a hot topic. “One of the reasons this is important,” Sones said, “is one of the counties on the Coast has already begun issuing building permits. The governor has expressed a concern that building codes and zoning meet necessary standards and are approached in the right way. Over the next four years, we expect between 3,000 to 5,000 new homes to be built, which is three to four times more than the largest single homebuilding year we have ever experienced. The concerns about how these homes are built include how they will impact both lender and insurer rates. At this point the flood plains have not yet been established. If we start rebuilding wrong and with this influx of new homes, we will not achieve the greatest value for our property.” John “Bud” Plisich, a civil engineer for FEMA, addressed the need for coding and zoning. “Who is looking out for your interests without zoning and building codes?” he asked. “How do you know buildings are being constructed to appropriate standards?” He spoke about two-year, fiveyear and 10-year weather events and communities with buildings suffering damage from two-year and five-year weather events. He went on to say that George County buildings should be designed to withstand 120 to 130 mph winds and the wind speeds in George County during Hurricane Katrina were significantly less than that. He spoke about the need to make sure buildings and roof systems could withstand those speeds and there was no way to do that without adequate codes and code enforcement. He said that codes needed to include fire, plumbing, sewage and drainage systems. “You are getting shortchanged if you are not having someone look out for your interests,” he said. Sones assured the group that the commission was not going to dictate codes and zoning. He said the commission was offering the resources of “the best minds” in these fields to assist local officials develop what they felt was necessary. Gov. Haley Barbour established the commission shortly after the hurricane hit and charged it to “develop a broad vision for a better Gulf Coast and South Mississippi,” according to the commission’s Web site. “The commission focuses on giving local leaders access to ideas and information that will help them decide what their region will look like in five, 10, even 20 or 30 years from now.” Information on the Web site also said the commission is not receiving any federal funding and solicits no money. All funding is coming from private donations. “The commission has approx- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 imately 40 members, many of them public officials, from the six southern tier counties most severely affected by the storm,” according to Lucedale Mayor Dayton Whites. “Most of the commissioners are from the three Gulf Coast counties with two from Pearl River County, one from Stone County and one from George County.” Whites is the George County commissioner. He, in turn, has put together a committee to work with the public in drafting a recovery and renewal plan for George County that will become a part of the overall six county plan. The members of the George County committee include the members of the George County Board of Supervisors; the Lucedale Board of Aldermen; and Lorraine Howell, Mike Steede, Jeff Howell, Tom Harlon, Cathy Davidson, Bill Wilkerson, Charlie Calhoun, Doris Alexander, Donnie Howell, Kathy Johnson, Mike Smith, Sue Wright, Darwin Maples, Jim Corley, Lisa Smith, James Whittington, Charlie Garretson and Jessie Ludgood. “The purpose of the committee,” Whites said, “is to draft a renewal wish list for the county with the benefit of public input. This wish list will be submitted to the Governor’s Commission for determination on what may or may not qualify for grant funding.” Representatives from the Federal Emergency Management Agency were on hand as well as Ken Sones, who works as the commission’s coordinator for George and Stone counties. The committee members expressed a number of concerns they said were important for the county’s renewal. These included a discussion of a lake for both recreational and reservoir purposes, a visitor center and nursery experimental station, development of the Pascagoula River, removing vision obstructing utility poles on Main Street, more and better housing for low-income people, evacuation routes, attaining Certified Retirement Center status for the city, the Lucedale Greenway project, a community center, a sports complex, transportation, development of the industrial park, a public owned golf course, bike trails on Section 16 land and the expected influx of new people into the county. One of the issues addressed was if there were going to be funds available to pay for these projects. Sones said money would be available. He said there are more than 300 federal grants may be available for the six counties, totaling $30 million. Whites expressed the desire that as many residents of George County as possible attend this very important public meeting. Reporter Royce Armstrong may be reached at rarmstrong@themississippipress.com or (601) 947-9933. From Page 1-A approached and in the first days after the storm, when New Orleans descended into chaos. She did not appoint her rebuilding commission until weeks after the storm, by which time the Mississippi recovery group had already held its first meetings. And only now is she bringing Louisiana lawmakers into session to work on hurricane reconstruction. The session opens Sunday. “Louisiana is bleeding to death and there has been no stoppage of the bleeding. That is uniquely and specifically the governor ’s job, and I don’t think Kathleen Blanco, personally or otherwise, is up to the task and may never be again,” said Elliott Stonecipher, a Louisiana pollster and political analyst. Political analysts warn that it is too early to write anyone off or declare someone’s future is assured. But in Katrina’s aftermath, it is clear that in the two neighboring states, one governor’s political stock has gone up, while the other’s has fallen precipitously. In Blanco’s defense, analysts note that she does not enjoy the same buddy-buddy relationship that Barbour has with President Bush. During one of the president’s trips to Louisiana, Blanco learned of Bush’s schedule from reporters, not from the White House. And if Blanco seemed overwhelmed by Katrina, she was not alone. “George Bush seems overwhelmed by it all, too,” said Joseph Parker, a University of Southern Mississippi political scientist. In many ways, Blanco and Barbour are dealing with two very different disasters created by Katrina, which roared ashore Aug. 29. In Mississippi, the storm obliterated whole coastal communities, smashed waterfront casinos and left tens of thousands homeless. Most victims, however, are still living near their former homes, though in tents or government trailers. AP File Photo Gov. Haley Barbour signs legislation that will allow casinos that were devastated by Hurricane Katrina to be rebuilt on solid ground in Biloxi. Because of Barbour's take-charge approach to the hurricane disaster, even some of Mississippi's staunchest Democrats are saying he may be tough to beat if he seeks a second term in 2007. AP File Photo Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco leaves a meeting in New Orleans, with Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, left, and New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, background center. Some pundits suspect Blanco, a Democrat, could prove to be a one-termer when she comes up for re-election in 2007. In Louisiana, Katrina devastated a major American city, trapped thousands in hellish conditions and forced a halfmillion people from their homes. Many of them are still scattered around the country, and New Orleans remains mostly shut down. Katrina killed at least 1,050 people in Louisiana and 228 in Mississippi. A second hurricane, Rita, dealt Louisiana a follow-up blow on Sept. 24. Barbour charged ahead after Katrina, calling Mississippi lawmakers into a nine-day special session starting Sept. 27 to take up recovery issues, including a bill, now signed into law, to let casinos move off the water and rebuild on dry land. In what could be seen as slaps at Louisiana, Barbour likes to say that Mississippians are “not into victimhood,” and he boasts that they are “hitching up their britches” and taking charge of their own recovery. Mississippi state Rep. Bobby Moak, a Democrat, strongly opposes Barbour’s positions on such issues as Medicaid and education. But on Katrina, Moak said: “I have to say Haley has done a pretty good job of putting his arms around the issue.” Moak said Democrats would have a tough time against Barbour now, but noted that the election is two years away, and “six months is a lifetime in politics.” Many of the early assessments of Blanco’s performance after Katrina were dismal. Blanco blamed the late appointment of her rebuilding commission on Hurricane Rita, and has dismissed much of the criticism as “a little bit of high politics.” Others say Blanco’s response to Rita was much more assertive. She marshaled state assets, requested federal assistance and pushed for a big evacuation of southwestern Louisiana. “At first her performance was a disaster, and she and her own people recognize it, but I’ve noticed the change,” said Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia. “She’s projecting a more decisive image. She’s taking very responsible actions and stances.” Associated Press writer Melinda Deslatte contributed to this report from Louisiana. Homecoming GHS 2005 Homecoming Court Queen Keri Nelson Senior maids Jessica Spivery Laura Skelton Chastity Quave Cierra Moye Dailey Avery Junior maids Jenna Zitzelberger Crissy Toomer Danielle McNair Turquoise Blanks Sophomore maids Raven Miller Ashleigh Grear Macey Doze Charlotte Bell Freshman maids Kirstie Wilson Jordan Thompson Tiffany Thomas Connie Coletta Carisa Anderson/The Mississippi Press Gautier High School senior homecoming maid Dailey Avery comes onto the football field with her escort, Jeff Redding, before the Gator’s homecoming game Thursday night. From Page 1-A Though homecoming festivities often distract students from their studies, Rogers said his students have maintained focus all week, and will be ready to hit the books Friday. “But given a choice, I would rather have homecoming on a Friday night,” Rogers said. Eleventh-grade cheerleader Collier Torjusen said the remaining homecoming traditions were exciting. “We haven’t been able to do all of the things we usually do because of the hurricane, but we’re trying to make the best of it,” she said. “(Thursday) I was thinking I was going to go home after the game and party, and then I was like ‘Nope.’” The Gautier Gators defeated the Vancleave Bulldogs 43-16 in the homecoming game. Reporter Allison Mather can be reached at amather@mspresson line.com or (228) 934-1495. BRIEFS Katrina brings winds of change to New Orleans schools BATON ROUGE, La. — Almost all New Orleans public schools, now closed because of Hurricane Katrina, could eventually be reopened by the state as charter schools under proposed legislation to wrest power from the city’s fractious school board. Gov. Kathleen Blanco outlined the proposal Thursday at the same news conference where state education officials released figures showing 68 of 110 New Orleans schools operating before Katrina were failing, earning a label of “academically unacceptable” based on testing. The state already can take over perennially failing schools. Under Blanco’s proposal, any New Orleans school with a performance score below the state average of 86.2 could be taken over by state officials and handed off to independent operators as charter schools. The proposal would bring the number of New Orleans schools that would be eligible for takeover by the state to 97. (Rural St. Helena Parish, where two of three schools are failing, would also be cov- lawyers tried to persuade U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon to restrict Murphy from entering into settlement talks with victims of the oil spill in Meraux. In recent weeks, Murphy has approached residents and businesses to urge them to accept a money settlement for the damage to their properties. George Frilot, a Murphy lawyer, said the company has talked to about 300 people so far, but he declined to say how many have signed settlements. People who sign agreements give up their right to pursue legal action against the company and its subcontractors. Lawyers ask judge to stop But plaintiffs lawyers said that Murphy Murphy Oil from settling has downplayed and misled people about NEW ORLEANS — The Murphy Oil the potential long-term health and environCorp. is providing false and misleading mental risks of the 1 million gallon oil spill information about a massive oil spill at its Louisiana refinery during Hurricane Katrina that washed into about 1,500 homes. They also charged that the company is making as it tries to ward off a class-action lawsuit, people think that the contaminated area is lawyers said Thursday. The allegations were made during a hear- smaller than it actually is. — From Wire Reports ing in federal court at which class-action ered by the legislation.) Such a large-scale takeover would be a daunting task, but Katrina gives the state a chance to ease into the job. The storm hit Aug. 29, killing more than 1,000 people, flooding most of the city and displacing an estimated 1.5 million people, at least temporarily. Enrollment in New Orleans schools was around 60,000 before the storm. Now, a survey shows only about 3,700 are expected to return when the first schools reopen, perhaps later this month. It is uncertain how fast others will come back. ERY S PORTS THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Contact: JR. Wittner, 934-1426 E-mail address: mssports@themississippipress.com B Friday, november 4, 2005 REGION STANDINGS Region 4-5A TEAM REGION OVERALL George County 5-0 6-2 Ocean Springs 4-1 5-2 Moss Point 4-1 5-3 Gulfport 3-2 3-3 Pascagoula 3-2 3-3 Biloxi 1-4 1-5 Harrison Central 0-5 2-5 Hancock 0-5 0-5 Last Week’s Results Pascagoula 33, Ocean Springs 32 Moss Point 38, Gulfport 18 George County 41, Hancock 0 Biloxi 36, Harrison Central 17 This Week’s Games Harrison Central at Pascagoula George County at Moss Point Hancock vs. Biloxi Ocean Springs at Gulfport, Saturday Region 7-4A TEAM REGION OVERALL Gautier 6-0 7-1 D’Iberville 5-1 5-2 Forrest County AHS 3-2 7-2 Vancleave 2-4 3-6 St. Martin 1-4 1-6 East Central 1-4 1-6 Stone County 1-4 1-6 Last Week’s Results Vancleave 49, East Central 6 Stone County 28, St. Martin 7 D’Ibervill 21, Forrest County AHS 13 Gautier — bye This Week’s Games Gautier 43, Vancleave 16 Forrest County AHS at St. Martin East Central at Stone County Region 8-3A TEAM REGION OVERALL Greene County 5-0 6-2 Magee 5-1 7-1 Raleigh 4-1 5-3 Collins 3-2 4-4 Prentiss 2-2 3-3 Purvis 0-4 1-5 Sumrall 0-5 1-7 Last Week’s Results Greene County 34, Purvis 6 Magee 21, Collins 14 Raleigh 46, Prentiss 22 Sumrall 44, South Jones 43 This Week’s Games Prentiss at Greene County Sumrall vs. Purvis Raleigh vs. Collins Pascagoula puts focus on HCHS ■ Cal Mitchell, Jonathon Deflanders leading Panthers during stretch run By JR. WITTNER The Mississippi Press The Pascagoula Panthers knocked off the Region 4-5A front runner last week on the road, but PHS head coach Dan Bland says that game is over. “The win over Ocean Springs was nice, but that game is over,” Bland said. “We have to focus now on Harrison Central, because they have a very solid team.” The Pascagoula offense has come to life the last two weeks as the Panthers have put together consecutive wins for the first time since the beginning of last season. Sophomore quarterback Cal Mitchell and sophomore running back Jonathon Deflanders have been a big reason Mitchell for that success as Deflanders has topped the 100 yard mark in the last three games and Mitchell tossed three touchdowns in the 33-32 win over Ocean Springs last week. “We knew coming into the season Jonathon was going to be a solid player,” Bland said of his sophomore rusher. “We probably should’ve played him a little more earlier in the season, but we knew he was going to be a big factor for us.” Deflanders and senior Chris Blythe have helped ignite an offense that scored just six points in two games to start the season. The Panthers are looking up at the rest of division for a playoff spot after losing to Gulfport and George County to start the region schedule. “We sort of played ourselves into a corner to start the region schedule,” Bland See PASCAGOULA, Page 3-B FLORIDA LOTTERY Cash 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2-2-7 Play 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-4-7-6 Fantasy 5 . . . .25-26-29-34-36 LOUISIANA LOTTERY Cash 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-0-9 Play 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5-3-0-1 Cash Quest . . . . .15-24-36-42 Blanks big in season finale By JR. WITTNER The Mississippi Press PASCAGOULA — Gautier senior quarterback Julius Blanks will remember his final homecoming game. Blanks completed 12-of-22 passes for 322 yards and four touchdowns and scored on a 5-yard run as Gautier topped Vancleave 43-16 Thursday night, finishing the Region 7-4A standings with a perfect 6-0 mark. Gautier (7-1) will host either Petal or Quitman next Saturday at 6 p.m. in the opening round of the playoffs. Gautier got on the board first with 5:00 left in the opening quarter as Blanks connected on an 83-yard touchdown to Jimmy Rowster on the first play of its third drive and Chris Penton added the PAT to make it a 7-0 Gators lead. Vancleave then took advantage of a Gautier fumble as they drove 63-yards leading to a Shane Scheiman 23-yard field goal for a 7-3 game. Gautier then had some luck go its way as Jonathan Massey rambled for 12 yards on a botched punt snap, which the Gators turned into a touchdown two plays later as Issac Cherry took a swing pass and raced 52-yards for the score. “We got ahead early in the game and didn’t get complacent and we were able to put the game away at the end,” Gautier head coach Don Nelson said. “They players continued to work hard all game and we got some nice plays.” On Gautier’s next possession, Blanks did the damage with his legs as he scored on a 5-yard run to make it a 213 game, and then followed that up with a 65-yard strike to Stennis Butler for a score. Chris Penton rushed in the two-point conversion to give Gautier a 29-7 halftime lead. “Gautier has a lot of speed on defense and makes big plays on offense,” Vancleave head coach Jim Bloomfield said. “They showed that again tonight.” Vancleave found a way to get back in the game in the third quarter as Seth Borries scored on a 2-yard run and after recovering the onside kick, Nick Dubuisson scored from 3-yards out to make it a 29-16 game with 1:48 left in the quarter. Gautier’s offense struck quick once again as it took only four plays for Blanks to find Rowster on a 45-yard touchdown. “Jimmy and I have developed a good chemistry,” Blanks said. “I know that if I give him a chance to catch it, he’s probably going to.” The Gators put a stamp on the game in the fourth quarter as Matt Nelson scored on a 12-yard run with 1:50 left. Rowster finished the game with 125 yards receiving on three catches. Borries led the way for Vancleave with 122 yards on the ground. Vancleave now must wait for the outcome of tonight’s game between Forrest County and St. Martin. If St. Martin loses, the Bulldogs get the No. 4 seed, but if the Yellowjackets win, St. Martin will get the No. 4 seed and face 4A No. 1 Wayne County. JR. Wittner can be reached at (228) 934-1426 or jrwittner@themississippipress.com Photos by Carisa Anderson TOP: Vancleave Sammy Mitchell (3) and Gautier’s Jarel Smith (21) grab each other’s facemasks during Thursday night’s game. RIGHT: Gautier’s Jimmy Rowster (24) makes his way up field with the help of teammate Calvin Newsome (59) as Vancleave’s Jarrod Ely (4) and Heath Fitzgerald (20) look to make the tackle during Thursday night’s homecoming game at War Memorial Stadium. Rebels, Tigers tangle in key division battle ■ George County tries to stay perfect in Region 4-5A tonight against Moss Point By JR. WITTNER The Mississippi Press The Mississippi Press File photo Jordan Scott (4) and the George County Rebels hit the road to Dantzler Stadium in Moss Point tonight for a key Region 4-5A showdown with the Tigers at 7:30 p.m. The George County Rebels find themselves in familiar territory, but it still is a little surprising. After claiming four consecutive Region 7-4A titles, the Rebels sit in first place in the Region 4-5A standing with two games left to play. The tricky part for the Rebels is, it is probably the two toughest teams in the region. The Rebels (6-2, 5-0) travel to Dantzler Stadium tonight to battle with Moss Point, before ending the season with a home date against defending 5A South State champ Ocean Springs. “These last two games will be a major challenge for us because we’re going to play against the big boys,” George County football coach Al Jones said. “We’ll have to take one game at a time, so right now Moss Point is our focus. “Moving up to 5A, we know right know we have a good chance to make the playoffs, but we still have a chance to be number one in the division,” Jones said. The Rebels have not lost a game since a set back to Niceville, Fla., reeling off five straight wins to take hold of the region race. The Rebels and Tigers have not met since 1992, but this will be the first game of many yet to come. Moss Point comes into the game clicking on all cylinders. The Tigers (5-3, 4-1) have won three straight since losing to Ocean Springs, winning all three by at least 20 points. “I think our early season schedule is finally paying off,” Moss Point head coach Jerry Alexander said. “We are playing with a lot of confidence and it is really showing on the field. Playing those tough teams to start the season, makes us better and makes us feel like we can compete against any team we face.” See BATTLE, Page 3-B Greyhounds look to get back on track ■ Ocean Springs’ football coach Steve Jones calls Gulfport game a ‘must win’ for team By JOSH JOHNSON The Mississippi Press Due to their stunning 33-32 loss to Pascagoula last weekend, Saturday’s 1:30 p.m. showdown at Gulfport has become a must win for the No. 7 Ocean Springs Greyhounds (5-2,4-1). The ’Hounds still control its destiny in Region 4-5A, but a slip up over the the next two weeks will hurt Ocean Springs’ chances of winning the division, with George County next on its schedule after the Admirals (3-3, 3Jones 2). Football coach Steve Jones said his team realizes what’s at stake, and is ready to take back the winning momentum it had before last weekend. “This game has become a must-win for us and Gulfport,” said Jones. “We still have our goals of winning the division ahead of us, but we need to win the next two weeks. “We need to take one step at a time, and that starts with getting back in the win column. The team realizes losing to Pascagoula hurts because they were one play away fron winning the game, but they’re ready to get back on the field,” Jones said. The Admirals will also be looking to get back in the win column after its 3818 loss to Moss Point last Friday night. Jones said his team must focus on the Admirals offense in hopes of coming home with the win. Gulfport quarterback Gary Holliman had 279 total yards against the Tigers. “They have a good offensive team over there,” Jones said about Gulfport. “They throw the ball all over the field, so we’re going to have to do a good job of keeping their offense off the field.” Jones added that an extra day to See GREYHOUNDS, Page 3-B 2-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 BY THE NUMBERS FOOTBALL National Football League Glance All Times CST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct New England 4 3 0 .571 Miami 3 4 0 .429 Buffalo 3 5 0 .375 N.Y. Jets 2 5 0 .286 South W L T Pct Indianapolis 7 0 0 1.000 Jacksonville 4 3 0 .571 Tennessee 2 6 0 .250 Houston 1 6 0 .143 North W L T Pct Cincinnati 6 2 0 .750 Pittsburgh 5 2 0 .714 Baltimore 2 5 0 .286 Cleveland 2 5 0 .286 West W L T Pct Denver 6 2 0 .750 Kansas City 4 3 0 .571 San Diego 4 4 0 .500 Oakland 3 4 0 .429 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct N.Y. Giants 5 2 0 .714 Dallas 5 3 0 .625 Washington 4 3 0 .571 Philadelphia 4 3 0 .571 South W L T Pct Atlanta 5 2 0 .714 Carolina 5 2 0 .714 Tampa Bay 5 2 0 .714 New Orleans 2 6 0 .250 North W L T Pct Chicago 4 3 0 .571 Detroit 3 4 0 .429 Minnesota 2 5 0 .286 Green Bay 1 6 0 .143 West W L T Pct Seattle 5 2 0 .714 St. Louis 4 4 0 .500 Arizona 2 5 0 .286 San Francisco 2 5 0 .286 PF 159 136 128 92 PA 180 134 159 139 PF 189 129 161 93 PA 77 125 211 195 PF 189 169 88 94 PA 125 114 120 122 PF 201 169 221 162 PA 152 160 166 158 PF 209 181 135 163 PA 137 137 139 167 PF 175 186 126 125 PA 133 149 87 222 PF 119 117 103 158 PA 81 125 193 139 PF 181 208 127 111 PA 127 231 178 222 Northwest Division W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 9 2 2 20 45 39 Edmonton 7 6 1 15 42 44 Minnesota 6 6 2 14 38 31 Colorado 6 4 1 13 49 37 Calgary 5 7 2 12 32 40 Pacific Division W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 9 4 0 18 49 35 Anaheim 7 5 1 15 41 37 San Jose 7 5 1 15 41 46 Dallas 6 5 1 13 37 45 Phoenix 5 8 1 11 36 42 Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss or shootout loss. Wednesday’s Games Ottawa 10, Buffalo 4 Chicago 6, St. Louis 5, OT Los Angeles 6, Dallas 3 Vancouver 2, Minnesota 1 San Jose 3, Nashville 2, OT Thursday’s Games Boston 4, Florida 1 Carolina 4, Toronto 3 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 1 Philadelphia 8, Washington 1 Edmonton 4, Detroit 3, OT Ottawa 4, Tampa Bay 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, New Jersey 2 Los Angeles at Phoenix, (n) Anaheim at Colorado, (n) Columbus at Calgary, (n) Today’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 6 p.m. Montreal at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Edmonton at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at Vancouver, 9 p.m. San Jose at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, noon Nashville at Los Angeles, 3 p.m. Buffalo at Montreal, 6 p.m. Florida at Carolina, 6 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Ottawa, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at Boston, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Toronto, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Dallas at Colorado, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Calgary, 9 p.m. Minnesota at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Toronto at Washington, 5 p.m. Phoenix at Chicago, 6 p.m. Detroit at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Anaheim, 7 p.m. NASCAR ———— Sunday, Nov. 6 Atlanta at Miami, noon San Diego at N.Y. Jets, noon Oakland at Kansas City, noon Houston at Jacksonville, noon Cincinnati at Baltimore, noon Detroit at Minnesota, noon Tennessee at Cleveland, noon Carolina at Tampa Bay, noon Seattle at Arizona, 3:05 p.m. Chicago vs. New Orleans at Baton Rouge, La., 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Green Bay, 3:15 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 7:30 p.m. Open: Buffalo, Denver, Dallas, St. Louis Monday, Nov. 7 Indianapolis at New England, 8 p.m. Top 25 Schedule Wednesday No. 18 West Virginia 45, Connecticut 13 Thursday No. 24 Louisville 42, Pittsburgh 20 Saturday No. 1 Southern Cal vs. Stanford, 9 p.m. No. 2 Texas at Baylor, 11:30 a.m. No. 3 Virginia Tech vs. No. 5 Miami, 6:45 p.m. No. 4 Alabama at Mississippi State, 2:30 p.m. No. 6 LSU vs. Appalachian State, 7 p.m. No. 7 UCLA at Arizona, 5 p.m. No. 8 Notre Dame vs. Tennessee, 1:30 p.m. No. 9 Florida State vs. North Carolina State, 2:30 p.m. No. 10 Penn State vs. No. 14 Wisconsin, 2:30 p.m. No. 12 Ohio State vs. Illinois, 2:30 p.m. No. 13 Florida vs. Vanderbilt, 6:15 p.m. No. 15 Oregon vs. No. 23 California, 2:30 p.m. No. 16 Texas Tech vs. Texas A&M, 6 p.m. No. 17 Auburn at Kentucky, Noon No. 19 Boston College at North Carolina, 11 a.m. No. 20 TCU vs. Colorado State, 6 p.m. No. 21 Fresno State vs. San Jose State, 8 p.m. No. 25 Colorado vs. Missouri, 2:30 p.m. Nextel Cup Points Leaders Through Oct. 30 1. Tony Stewart, 6100 2. Jimmie Johnson, 6057 3. Greg Biffle, 6025 4. Carl Edwards, 5993 5. Ryan Newman, 5993 6. Mark Martin, 5957 7. Matt Kenseth, 5945 8. Rusty Wallace, 5843 9. Kurt Busch, 5840 10. Jeremy Mayfield, 5790 11. Jamie McMurray, 3782 12. Jeff Gordon, 3740 13. Elliott Sadler, 3722 14. Kevin Harvick, 3711 15. Joe Nemechek, 3693 16. Brian Vickers, 3617 17. Dale Jarrett, 3583 18. Jeff Burton, 3524 19. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., 3489 20. Kyle Busch, 3485 Nextel Cup Money Leaders Through Oct. 30 1. Tony Stewart, $6,530,292 2. Jeff Gordon, $6,426,961 3. Jimmie Johnson, $6,361,191 4. Kurt Busch, $6,353,318 5. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., $5,370,708 6. Mark Martin, $5,339,828 7. Matt Kenseth, $5,191,941 8. Ryan Newman, $5,177,291 9. Greg Biffle, $5,126,653 10. Elliott Sadler, $4,656,271 11. Kevin Harvick, $4,595,666 12. Kasey Kahne, $4,559,453 13. Rusty Wallace, $4,538,902 14. Dale Jarrett, $4,354,112 15. Jeremy Mayfield, $4,259,428 16. Bobby Labonte, $4,258,829 17. Carl Edwards, $4,180,143 18. Michael Waltrip, $4,080,561 19. Ricky Rudd, $3,989,270 20. Jeff Burton, $3,959,381 BASKETBALL NJCAA Football Poll Record Pts Pvs 1. Glendale CC (6) 8-0 118 2 2. NE Mississippi (2) 6-0 108 3 3. Grand Rapids CC 8-1 92 4 4. Minn. West Tech 9-0 90 5 5. Butler (Kan.) CC 9-1 80 1 6. Snow College 8-1 79 8 7. NEO A&M 7-2 72 6 8. Nassau (N.Y.) CC 8-1 70 9 9. Pearl River CC 5-1 63 10 10. MGCCC 5-1 53 11 11. Coffeyville CC 8-2 48 14 12. Cisco (Texas) JC 6-2 24 15 13. Blinn College 6-2 19 16 14. Ga. Military Coll.6-2 11 18 15. Iowa Central CC7-2 7 20 15. Dodge City CC 7-3 7 NR 17. Trinity Valley CC5-3 6 16 18. Garden City CC 7-3 5 7 19. W.R. Harper, Ill. 7-3 4 13 20. Dixie State, Utah 6-3 2 12 HOCKEY National Hockey League Glance All Times CST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L OT Pts N.Y. Rangers 7 4 3 17 Philadelphia 7 3 1 15 New Jersey 6 6 1 13 N.Y. Islanders 6 7 0 12 Pittsburgh 3 5 5 11 Northeast Division W L OT Pts Ottawa 10 2 0 20 Montreal 9 3 1 19 Boston 6 5 4 16 Buffalo 7 5 0 14 Toronto 6 5 2 14 Southeast Division W L OT Pts Carolina 9 2 1 19 Tampa Bay 7 5 2 16 Florida 6 6 2 14 Atlanta 4 8 0 8 Washington 4 8 0 8 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division W L OT Detroit 12 1 1 25 Nashville 8 2 2 18 Chicago 4 9 0 8 Columbus 4 9 0 8 St. Louis 2 7 3 7 GF GA 45 35 52 38 41 48 39 49 45 57 GF GA 58 28 42 37 51 52 40 42 45 47 GF GA 52 35 43 38 33 39 37 49 26 54 Pts GF GA 58 28 36 34 38 52 24 43 37 51 National Basketball Association Glance EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 1 0 1.000 — New Jersey 0 1 .000 1 New York 0 1 .000 1 Toronto 0 1 .000 1 Philadelphia 0 2 .000 1 1/2 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Washington 1 0 1.000 — Miami 1 1 .500 1/2 Atlanta 0 1 .000 1 Charlotte 0 1 .000 1 Orlando 0 1 .000 1 Central Division W L Pct GB Indiana 2 0 1.000 — Milwaukee 2 0 1.000 — Chicago 1 0 1.000 1/2 Cleveland 1 0 1.000 1/2 Detroit 1 0 1.000 1/2 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB Houston 1 0 1.000 — San Antonio 1 0 1.000 — Dallas 1 1 .500 1/2 New Orleans 1 1 .500 1/2 Memphis 0 1 .000 1 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 1 0 1.000 — Utah 1 0 1.000 — Portland 0 1 .000 1 Seattle 0 1 .000 1 Denver 0 2 .000 1 1/2 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Lakers 1 0 1.000 — Phoenix 0 1 .000 1 Sacramento 0 2 .000 1 1/2 ——— Wednesday’s Games Indiana 90, Orlando 78 Washington 99, Toronto 96 Cleveland 109, New Orleans 87 Boston 114, New York 100, OT Milwaukee 110, New Jersey 96 Miami 97, Memphis 78 Detroit 108, Philadelphia 88 Minnesota 90, Portland 86 Chicago 109, Charlotte 105, OT Houston 98, Sacramento 89 Utah 93, Dallas 82 L.A. Clippers 101, Seattle 93 L.A. Lakers 99, Denver 97, OT Golden State 122, Atlanta 97 Thursday’s Games Indiana 105, Miami 102 Phoenix at L.A. Lakers, (n) Today’s Games New Jersey at Toronto, 6 p.m. Memphis at Orlando, 6 p.m. Charlotte at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Washington at New York, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Portland at Denver, 8 p.m. Utah at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. Minnesota at Seattle, 9:30 p.m. Atlanta at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Orlando at Washington, 6 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Boston at Charlotte, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at New Jersey, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Memphis, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Indiana, 7 p.m. Miami at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at Houston, 7:30 p.m. San Antonio at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Utah, 8 p.m. Atlanta at Portland, 9 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Golden State at New York, noon Sacramento at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Denver at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. NASCAR PGA-Tour Championship Thursday At East Lake Golf Club Atlanta Purse: $6.5 million Yardage: 7,154; Par: 70 (35-35) First Round Bart Bryant 32-30 — 62 Retief Goosen 31-33 — 64 Kenny Perry 31-34 — 65 Sergio Garcia 32-34 — 66 Tiger Woods 30-36 — 66 Charles Howell III 36-31 — 67 Scott Verplank 33-34 — 67 Tim Clark 33-34 — 67 Ben Crane 32-36 — 68 Davis Love III 36-32 — 68 Chris DiMarco 34-35 — 69 Vijay Singh 36-33 — 69 Stuart Appleby 34-36 — 70 Olin Browne 34-36 — 70 Luke Donald 35-35 — 70 Justin Leonard 36-34 — 70 Jim Furyk 35-35 — 70 Ted Purdy 37-34 — 71 Padraig Harrington 35-36 — 71 Fred Funk 35-36 — 71 Lucas Glover 37-35 — 72 Mark Calcavecchia 37-35 — 72 Billy Mayfair 37-35 — 72 Chad Campbell 37-35 — 72 David Toms 37-35 — 72 Tim Herron 36-37 — 73 Brandt Jobe 36-37 — 73 Sean O’Hair 36-37 — 73 Adam Scott 35-38 — 73 -8 -6 -5 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -1 -1 E E E E E +1 +1 +1 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +3 +3 +3 +3 PGA-Southern Farm Bureau Classic Thursday At Annandale Golf Club Madison, Miss. Purse: $3 million Yardage: 7,199; Par: 72 First Round Bob Tway 32-32 Jonathan Byrd 34-31 Kevin Na 32-34 Tom Pernice, Jr. 32-34 Tom Byrum 33-33 Bo Van Pelt 31-35 Kirk Triplett 35-32 Brian Henninger 33-34 Joey Snyder III 34-33 Paul Gow 34-33 Glen Day 36-32 Carl Pettersson 34-34 Tommy Armour III 33-35 Loren Roberts 32-36 Marco Dawson 34-34 Brad Lardon 35-33 Tag Ridings 33-35 Shaun Micheel 34-34 Brian Davis 34-34 Brett Wetterich 33-35 Charlie Wi 34-34 Chris Anderson 34-34 Hidemichi Tanaka 37-32 J.J. Henry 35-34 D.J. Trahan 32-37 Danny Briggs 35-34 John Cook 35-34 Woody Austin 36-33 Mark Brooks 34-35 Jeff Sluman 34-35 Bob Estes 37-32 Charles Warren 34-35 Bob Heintz 36-33 Paul Claxton 34-35 Will MacKenzie 33-36 Steve Stricker 32-37 Heath Slocum 35-34 Michael Allen 36-33 Steve Lowery 33-36 Jose Coceres 36-33 Tom Gillis 34-35 Jeff Hart 33-36 Mario Tiziani 33-36 Brett Quigley 34-36 Jim Carter 34-36 Steve Allan 36-34 Shigeki Maruyama 36-34 Bob Burns 35-35 J.P. Hayes 32-38 Alex Cejka 35-35 John B. Holmes 35-35 Kent Jones 37-33 Cameron Beckman 35-35 Billy Andrade 35-35 Bill Glasson 35-35 Rocco Mediate 36-34 Dan Forsman 33-37 Len Mattiace 35-35 Joey Sindelar 34-36 Frank Lickliter II 36-34 Omar Uresti 35-35 Danny Ellis 35-35 Matt Davidson 36-34 Justin Bolli 35-35 Rob Rashell 34-36 Hunter Haas 36-34 Jim Gallagher, Jr. 35-36 Dean Wilson 34-37 Ben Curtis 36-35 Stephen Leaney 35-36 Franklin Langham 35-36 Brenden Pappas 36-35 Brian Bateman 35-36 Ryan Moore 35-36 Gavin Coles 34-37 Tjaart van der Walt 35-36 Kevin Stadler 35-36 John E. Morgan 37-34 Bradley Hughes 35-36 Ryuji Imada 35-36 Chris Smith 35-36 Patrick Sheehan 37-34 Brian Gay 34-37 Todd Fischer 36-35 Zach Johnson 36-35 Craig Perks 32-39 Neal Lancaster 35-36 Jeff Brehaut 36-35 Duffy Waldorf 35-36 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — 64 65 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 67 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 68 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 71 -8 -7 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 SPORTS DIGEST TV SPORTWATCH TODAY’S LISTINGS College Football 7 p.m. — Toledo at Ohio (ESPN2) Golf 11 a.m. — PGA Tour: The Tour Championship (ESPN) National Basketball Association 7 p.m. — Cleveland at San Antonio (ESPN) 9:30 p.m. — Minnesota at Seattle (ESPN) LOCAL SCHEDULE Today’s Events High School Football Harrison Central at Pascagoula George County at Moss Point Prentiss at Greene County Ocean Springs at Gulfport Forrest County at St. Martin East Central at Stone County College Basketball Houston Jaguars at Mississippi State women (exhibition), 7 p.m. Roland Thatcher 36-35 John Elliott 35-36 Craig Bowden 35-36 Scott Gutschewski 36-35 D.J. Brigman 31-40 Mathias Gronberg 35-36 Mark Wilson 35-37 Robert Allenby 35-37 Brendan Jones 36-36 Jay Delsing 37-35 Tim Petrovic 38-34 Todd Hamilton 36-36 Casey Wittenberg 36-36 David Peoples 34-38 Briny Baird 38-34 Hunter Mahan 38-34 Richard S. Johnson 34-38 Darron Stiles 35-37 D.A. Points 37-35 Jerry Kelly 36-37 Aaron Baddeley 32-41 James Driscoll 37-36 Jason Allred 35-38 Ryan Palmer 37-36 Lee Janzen 38-35 Matt Gogel 38-35 Nick Watney 35-38 Chris Riley 36-38 Matt Kuchar 36-38 Vaughn Taylor 37-37 Michael Long 33-41 Tripp Isenhour 35-39 Notah Begay III 37-38 Phillip Price 38-37 Philip Schmitt 39-36 John Huston 41-34 John Maginnes 38-38 David Duval 38-38 Scott Hend 33-43 Skip Kendall 36-40 David Hearn 42-35 Willie Wood 41-37 Blaine McCallister 7-41 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — 71 71 71 71 71 71 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 72 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 74 74 74 74 74 75 75 75 75 76 76 76 76 77 78 78 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 E E E E E E E E E E E E E +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +3 +3 +3 +3 +4 +4 +4 +4 +5 +6 +6 BOXING Fight Schedule National TV in parentheses Tonight At Hammerstein Ballroom, New York, John Duddy, Ireland, vs. Bryon Mackie, Canada, 10, middleweights; Armando Guerrero, Mexico, vs. Taklani Ndlovu, South Africa, 12, for the vacant IBO junior featherweight title. At Buffalo Run Casino, Miami, Okla. (SHO), Sechew Powell, Brooklyn, N.Y., vs. Archak Ter-Meliksetian, Los Angeles, 10, light middleweights. Nov. 5 At Caesars Tahoe, Stateline, Nev. (SHO), Jeff Lacy, Tampa, Fla., vs. Scott Pemberton, Fair Haven, Mass., 12, for Lacy’s IBF and IBO super middleweight titles; Rafael Marquez, Mexico, vs. Silence Mabuza, South Africa, 12, for Marquez’s IBF bantamweight title. Nov. 10 At First District Plaza, Philadelphia, Yusef Mack, Philadelphia, vs. Robin Reid, Britain, 12, super middleweights. Nov. 12 At Thomas and Mack Center, Las Vegas (PPV), Vitali Klitschko, Los Angeles, vs. Hasim Rahman, Baltimore, 12, for Klitschko’s WBC heavyweight title; Antonio Margarito, Mexico, vs. Manuel Gomez, Laredo, Texas, 12, for Margarito’s WBO welterweight title; Martin Castillo, Mexico, vs. Alexander Munoz, Venezuela, 12, for Castillo’s WBA super flyweight title. Nov. 19 At Panama City, Panama, Roberto Vasquez, Panama, vs. Nerys Espinoza, Nicaragua, 12, for Vasquez’s WBA light flyweight title; Roinet Caballero, Panama, vs. Leonardo Gonzalez, Nicaragua, 12, for Caballero’s WBO Latino featherweight title. Nov. 25 At New South Wales, Australia, Vic Darchinyan, Australia, vs. Damaen Kelly, Northern Ireland, 12, for Darchinyan’s IBF flyweight title. Nov. 26 At Rome, Johnny Nelson, Britain, vs. Vincenzo Cantatore, Italy, 12, for Nelson’s WBO cruiserweight title. At Kuppersteg, Germany, Maselino Maseo, New Zealand, vs. Felix Sturm, Germany, 12, for Maseo’s WBA middleweight title. At South Yorkshire, England, Ricky Hatton, Britain, vs. Carlos Maussa, Colombia, 12, for the IBF and WBA light welterweight titles. TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Moved Joel Skinner from third base coach to bench coach and Jeff Datz from first base coach to third base coach. Named Derek Shelton hitting coach, Luis Rivera first base coach and Robby Thompson special assistant of baseball operations. Named Torey Lovullo manager of Buffalo of the IL. SEATTLE MARINERS—Named Ken Madeja midwest coordinator, Jack Smitheran scouting Saturday’s Events High School Football Ocean Springs at Gulfport, 1:30 p.m. High School Soccer East Central boys at St. Stanislaus, 12:30 p.m. High School Basketball Moss Point Classic (Ocean springs girls, Moss Point boys and girls) Bay High girls at Vancleave, 5 p.m. College Basketball West Georgia at Mississippi State (exhibition), 7 p.m. advisor and Pat Kelly Australia scout. TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS—Named Andrew Friedman executive vice president of baseball operations and Gerry Hunsicker senior vice president of baseball operations. Reinstated 2B Roberto Alomar and OF Danny Bautista from the voluntary retired list. TEXAS RANGERS—Agreed to terms with C3B Jamie Burke, OF Adam Hyzdu, C Nick Trzesniak, RHP Chris Baker and RHP Shane Bazzell on minor league contracts. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Received cash considerations from Detroit to complete the July 21 trade for INF John McDonald. National League CINCINNATI REDS—Agreed to terms with OF Dewayne Wise on a minor league contract. LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Exercised the 2006 option on RHP Elmer Dessens and announced Dessens exercised his right to decline the option. American Association ST. PAUL SAINTS—Agreed to terms with OF Kris Cox. Frontier League ROCKFORD RIVERHAWKS—Named Mike Holmes general manager. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NEW YORK KNICKS—Named Kelly Tripucka scout. American Basketball Association LOS ANGELES AFTERSHOCK—Signed G Dion Bailey. OHIO AVIATORS—Signed G Paul Webster. Continental Basketball Association ALBANY PATROONS—Signed F Jamel Gooding, F Erick Hall, G Ronald Thompson, F Edward Walden, F Chris Sockwell, G Brandon Dalton and G Eric Tatum. FOOTBALL National Football League CINCINNATI BENGALS—Released G Kyle Takavitz from the practice squad. Signed G Steven Vieira to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed RB Jason Wright from the practice squad. Arena Football League ARIZONA RATTLERS—Signed WR-LB Cosmo DeMatteo and OL-DL Norm Heuer. COLUMBUS DESTROYERS—Signed OL-DL Brad Greetis. DALLAS DESPERADOS—Signed OL-DL Anthony Foli. GRAND RAPIDS RAMPAGE—Signed OS Aaron Bailey, WR-LB Travis Burns, OL-DL Shawn King and OL-DL Albert Reese. Waived WR-DB Titcus Pettigrew and OL-DL Reggie Hargrove. LOS ANGELES AVENGERS—Signed OS Kareem Kelly. NASHVILLE KATS—Re-signed WR-LB Darryl Hammond. Signed DS Chris Angel and OL-DL Ahmad Childress. ORLANDO PREDATORS—Signed OL-DL Claude Harriott and OL-DL Delanio Taylor. TAMPA BAY STORM—Signed OL-DL Mondre Dickerson, OL-DL Buck Gurley, C-DL Demarco McNeil and C-DL Omar Smith. UTAH BLAZE—Signed OS Hurtis Chinn and DS Kevin Moffett. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES—Placed G Ryan Miller on the injured list. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Called up C Martin St. Pierre from Norfolk of the AHL. COLORADO AVALANCHE—Assigned F Paul Healey to Lowell of the AHL. LOS ANGELES KINGS—Placed LW Luc Robitaille on the injured list. Recalled LW Jeff Giuliano from Manchester of the AHL. NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Assigned C Pascal Rheaume to Albany of the AHL. WASHINGTON CAPITALS—Recalled LW Tomas Fleischmann and D Nolan Yonkman from Hershey of the AHL. American Hockey League CHICAGO WOLVES—Assigned D Jeff Dwyer to Gwinnett of the ECHL. HERSHEY BEARS—Signed LW Chris Bala. PROVIDENCE BRUINS—Announced RW Eric Nickulas has been recalled by the Boston Bruins. ECHL JOHNSTOWN CHIEFS—Announced LW Zbynek Hrdel has been recalled to Springfield of the AHL. LAS VEGAS WRANGLERS—Announced RW Thomas Bellemare has been assigned to the team from Omaha of the AHL. TOLEDO STORM—Acquired D Ryan Reid from Gwinnett for cash. COLLEGE BIG EAST CONFERENCE—Extended the contract of Mike Tranghese, commissioner, through the 2009-10 academic year. BIG 12 CONFERENCE—Reprimanded Bill Callahan, Nebraska football coach, for making an inappropriate gesture after arguing with the referee in an Oct. 29 game against Oklahoma. MID-CONTINENT CONFERENCE— Announced the additions of Eastern Illinois and South Dakota State as associate members in men’s and women’s swimming and diving. RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE—Named Shannon Hughey women’s assistant gymnastics coach and John Rafail men’s and women’s assistant track & field coach. Pacers get by Heat, 105-102 The Associated Press MIAMI — Jermaine O’Neal scored 27 points, six of them in the final three minutes to help the Indiana Pacers recover from wasting a 14-point second-half lead and beat the Miami Heat 105102 on Thursday night. Ron Artest, in his first post-suspension game in Miami, added 22 for the Pacers — who’ve won 13 of their last 14 regular-season meetings with Miami. Dwyane Wade had 31 points and 10 assists for the Heat, but his potentially game-tying 3pointer rattled out as the final buzzer sounded. Shaquille O’Neal had 18 points and six rebounds before leaving midway through the fourth quarter with a sprained right ankle. Stephen Jackson’s two free throws with 1:37 left gave Indiana a 103-97 lead, but the Heat answered with five points in the next 29 seconds. Wade hit a 3-pointer, and Udonis Haslem put back Gary Payton’s miss with 1:08 left to draw Miami within 103-102. Jermaine O’Neal made two free throws with 50.1 seconds left, and Miami wouldn’t score again. Antoine Walker dribbled out of bounds with 29 seconds left, costing the Heat a key opportunity. Jamaal Tinsley had 13 points, and Austin Croshere and Jackson each had 11 for Indiana. Haslem had 14 points, while Walker and Alonzo Mourning each scored 12 for Miami. FOOTBALL No. 24 Louisville handles Pitt LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Michael Bush rushed for 115 yards and two touchdowns and Art Carmody tied a school record with four field goals as No. 24 Louisville survived a wild start and beat Pittsburgh 42-20 on Thursday night. Louisville (6-2, 2-2 Big East Conference) has won two straight after losing its first two league games and temporarily falling out of the top 25. The Cardinals became bowl-eligible with the win in front of a record crowd of 42,692 at Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium. Pitt (4-5, 3-2) had a three-game winning streak snapped. The Panthers must win their final two games, against Connecticut and No. 18 West Virginia, if they are to extend their streak of consecutive bowl appearances to six. BASEBALL Nationals send Castilla to Padres for Lawrence, cash WASHINGTON — Third baseman Vinny Castilla was traded by the Washington Nationals to the San Diego Padres for right-hander Brian Lawrence and cash Thursday night. The move paves the way for Ryan Zimmerman, the No. 4 overall pick in June’s amateur draft, to start at third for the Nationals next season. The Padres have long been looking for help at third. Sean Burroughs struggled so badly he was sent to the minors in July when San Diego acquired Joe Randa in a trade with Cincinnati. Randa filed for free agency after the season. The 38-year-old Castilla, hampered by knee tendinitis last season, hit .253 with 12 home runs and 66 RBIs in his first season with the former Expos. He led the NL in RBIs with Colorado in 2004, and signed a $6.2 million, twoyear deal as a free agent with Washington last offseason. But with Zimmerman’s emergence — he hit .397 with 10 doubles in 58 at-bats as a September call-up — Castilla’s status in Washington wasn’t certain. Late in the season, Castilla said he didn’t want to stay in Washington if he’d be a backup. Lawrence went 7-15 with a 4.83 ERA in 33 starts for San Diego in 2005. He struck out 109 batters and walked 57 in his 195 2-3 innings. BOXING Ali treated for neck and back condition BERRIEN SPRINGS, Mich. — Muhammad Ali was treated for a back and neck condition, and is now undergoing follow-up physical therapy. Ali spokesman Craig Bankey said Thursday that the former heavyweight champion, treated at Emory University in Atlanta, will return to his regular routine of public appearances when therapy is completed. Ali will be at the grand opening of the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky., on Nov. 19, Bankey said in a statement. Ali’s office was responding to recent published reports concerning his health. The 63-year-old Ali has Parkinson’s disease. “Like Parkinson’s patients around the world, Muhammad faces challenges each day,” Bankey said. “He continues to fight Parkinson’s disease with the same courage and dedication he brought to the ring and to his work aimed at alleviating poverty, hunger and intolerance.” E-Mail: Benson won’t return to Baton Rouge ■ Saints’ owner says message sent out of frustration The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints say owner Tom Benson has not yet decided whether he will attend this Sunday’s game, and that an email he sent saying he would not attend any more games in Baton Rouge this season or next was sent out of frustration. Saints spokesman Greg Bensel said Benson was upset by his treatment from fans after the Saints’ 21-6 loss to Miami on Sunday. Benson, who attended the game with his wife, Gayle, granddaughter Rita Benson LeBlanc and grandson Ryan LeBlanc, was involved in an altercation with a WWL-TV cameraman and a fan as the owner and his family left the stadium near the end of the game. “Mr. Benson did write a message Sunday night to the commissioner expressing his con- cern about the incident that occurred following the game,” Bensel said. “It was an emotional and distressing situation and very unfortunate for him and his family. His comments to the commissioner relayed his frustration and at this time he has not yet made a decision on his plans for this weekend’s game.” Copies of the e-mail, sent to NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, were obtained by The Times-Picayune and WWL-TV in New Orleans. In the e-mail, Benson called security at Tiger Stadium “inadequate to nonexistent” and claimed that he and his family members “could have all been severely injured or killed.” “I will not return to Baton Rouge for any reason, including any games scheduled for the end of this season or a contemplated next season,” Benson said in the e-mail. “No person, much less the owner of NFL team, should have either he, his family or his friends subjected to this form of danger, intimidation and abuse. I was advised not to go but wanted to support the league.” LSU Police Chief Ricky Adams said his department had a regularly scheduled conference call with officials from the Saints and the NFL on Thursday. “There were no complaints or displeasure at all expressed by the NFL or the Saints about the level of security for last week’s game,” Adams said. “No one from the Saints requested security for Mr. Benson himself from the local law enforcement agencies. We were See BENSON, Page 3-B 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 MARMADUKE ZIGGY 3-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS DENNIS THE MENACE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 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. DAGUR ©2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved. MUJOB FOXTROT LENCAG www.jumble.com TIMOON Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. Ans: HE Yesterday’s FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE CURTIS “ ” (Answers tomorrow) TWICE DRUDGE NUMBER Jumbles: PLAIT Answer: When the marching band won the school competition, they — “TRUMPETED” IT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 OUTDOORS Time to prepare for deer season The small amount of rain that we received this week was a welcome sight even though it wasn’t very much. Maybe this will help give our food plots a start. The cool weather has been nice and in what very little time that I have been able to be in the woods, I have seen some nice bucks. You should be making your final plans for the upcoming first gun season with dogs because it is only a couple of weeks away. There is still no word on management areas being closed. Again, as you are in the woods, hunt with caution because of the amount of damaged timber which has still not fallen to the ground. If you are hunting from a tree stand you should exercise extreme Jimmy caution Davis because of all of the timber damage. Let’s not start off this season with an accident. On a different note, if you have kept up with my articles over the years, you have read about two friends of mine, BooBoo and Sam Ba, who continuously try to outdo each other during turkey season. Just like everyone our age we are getting older and slowing down, so BooBoo decided since he couldn’t beat Sam at turkey hunting, he decided to beat his wife and cousin at fishing. By the way, the waters have been tested out front and the way I understand it fishing and shrimping are OK now to catch, keep and eat. Oyster reefs, however, are still closed. Back to the fishing story, BooBoo took his wife Georgia Ann and his cousin Lavonda fishing off of Graveline and according to sources close to the story BooBoo, who was telling his normal stories and not paying attention, finally hooked a fish but lost his new rod and reel overboard. BooBoo, not as fleet of foot as he used to be, had to rely on the women to retrieve his new rod and reel. Not only did they get it back, it had a nice keeper speckled trout on it that he could not even claim for himself. The fishing trip was a success for Lavonda and Georgia Ann, with Lavonda catching a 37-inch red fish and both ladies filled the boat with white trout. Sad to say BooBoo was beat again. That’s all right. Don’t forget to watch Dynamic Outdoors on WXXV-TV 25 at 9:30 Sunday morning, where you can see hunting and fishing at its best. I am also glad to announce that soon on WAOY FM 91.7 Christian radio I will host a outdoors radio show on Saturday mornings at 7:00. Jimmy Davis can be reached at sports@mspressonline.com 3-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Bart Bryant grabs lead at PGA Tour Championship ■ Career grinder shoots record 62 at East Lake golf course in Atlanta The Associated Press ATLANTA — What was shaping up as a record round Thursday at East Lake suddenly was in peril as Bart Bryant planted his feet on the grassy mound of a bunker and chipped awkwardly to the hole. He would have been happy to get it within 10 feet. Imagine how he felt when his shot hit the pin, rattled the cup and settled a few feet away. “My caddie and I looked at each other and said, ’This is your day,”’ Bryant said. The career grinder and late bloomer must be starting to think this is his year. Bryant was nearly flawless Thursday in the Tour Championship, making an auspicious debut by setting the course record with an 8-under 62 to take a two-shot lead over defending champion Retief Goosen. He was the only player in the 29-man field without a bogey on his card. He missed only two greens and two fairways. Caught between clubs on the par-5 15th, he went with a hybrid and knocked it within 6 feet for an eagle. Maybe now the 42-year-old Bryant will start believing he belongs with the best. “I’m working on it,” said Bryant, who didn’t win until the Texas Open last year and added a validation victory at the Memorial in early June. “People try to pound it in my head, ’You belong, you belong.’ If I go out and shoot three more 62s, maybe I’ll believe it.” Kenny Perry bogeyed the last two holes for a 65, while Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia were at 66. Woods was at 5 under through eight holes and was poised to shoot 29 on the front until failing to convert an easy up-and-down for birdie from the bunker. He struggled the rest of the way, but had few complaints. Bryant had nothing to complain about, either. He wound up breaking by one shot the East Lake record set by Vijay Singh in the first round of the 1998 Tour Championship. Goosen made eight birdies in a round of 64, the same score he shot on the last day a year ago to win the Tour Championship. This time, it wasn’t even good enough for the lead. “I had a funny feeling somebody would shoot low around here ... if the weather stayed the way it was,” Goosen said. Not many would have guessed it would come from a player who had never seen East Lake until this week. “What a round of golf that is,” Charles Howell III said after a 67. “I saw him at 8 under and thought he was playing a scramble with Ted Purdy.” Twelve out of the 29 players at East Lake broke par, a tribute to a gorgeous afternoon with hardly any wind, and a course that is playing firm and fast. Even so, Bryant’s score got everyone’s attention. “I wasn’t expecting 8 under,” Davis Love Bryant III said after a 68. “I wasn’t expecting 6 under.” Bryant’s expectations keep getting higher, although it wasn’t always that way. There were times he would lie awake and wonder if his journey through the smaller tours and too many trips to Q-school were a sign that maybe he should find another job. It started to turn around when his swing coach, Brian Mogg, showed him six years of statistics and asked Bryant if they belonged to a guy who should be doing well on the PGA Tour. Bryant agreed. “It was me,” he said. “I think I finally started buying into the belief that maybe I belonged out here, and I certainly wasn’t going to chicken out anymore. I was going to put my neck on the line, and try to get in the lead. And if I failed, so what? I’m just too old to care about it anymore.” But he cares about being at the Tour Championship, one of the sweetest rewards for all his travails. Bryant had never finished higher than 80th on the money list until this year. He won the Texas Open last year, although it was played opposite the Ryder Cup. He backed it up with a solid victory at Muirfield Village, where he made par from a hazard on the 18th hole for a one-shot victory at the Memorial. Bryant arrived at East Lake at No. 22 on the money list with just over $2 million. “From where we’ve been to where we are now, maybe kind of through the school of hard knocks, maybe we appreciate it a little bit more,” he said. Woods, who needs a victory this week to become the first $11 million man in golf, was all over the place. He started out as if he would be the one to break the East Lake record, firing at flags from the fairway and hitting great shots when he wound up in the rough. What hurt him was the sand. He missed the simple upand-down on the ninth, blasted out too far on the 10th and made bogey, and lost another Greyhounds From Page 1-B prepare for the Admirals has been welcomed by him and his staff. “Playing on Saturday has given us some extra time to improve in some areas we struggled with last week,” said Jones. Josh Johnson can be reached at (228) 934-1246 or at jjohnson at themississippipress.com Battle From Page 1-B Alexander also says he sees the same thing happening against George County. “I think they’ve improved since the first time I saw them against Wayne County,” Alexander said. “We had a chance to watch some film of them from last week, and you can really tell they have gotten much better.” Moss Point got a huge game from sophomore running back Meco Brown last week and with the return of Dontavious Morrissette from injury, the Tigers look ready for the challenge. “I think George County is playing with a lot of confidence and they are now the team everyone is chasing,” Alexander said. “There is still a lot of work left to do for teams fighting for the playoffs and we are one of those teams.” JR. Wittner can be reached at (228) 934-1426 or jrwittner@themississippipress.com. Pascagoula From Page 1-B said. “We’re not talking about playoff. We just talking about winning football games. There have been so many things that have went on this season and football is just a good way for these guys to have fun. We are just going to try and keep preparing hard and working hard and hopefully things will take care of themselves.’ Harrison Central is winless in Region 4-5A play, but Bland still sees a team capable of doing some damage. “The have some very explosive players on offense,” Bland said. “They were hit pretty hard by the storm and are relying on some younger players. They have a lot of you talent on that team and they are very dangerous.” Kickoff at War Memorial is 7:30 p.m. JR. Wittner can be reached at (228) 934-1426 or jrwittner@themississippipress.com. chance at birdie with a poor bunker shot on the par-5 15th. “There’s so much sand in these bunkers, you have to put a lot of speed on the ball,” he said. “And I didn’t.” Tway ties SFB Classic’s opening-round record with 64 MADISON — Bob Tway shot a tournament recordtying 8-under 64 Thursday for a one-stroke lead after the first round of the Southern Farm Bureau Classic. Tway, an eight-time PGA Tour winner whose last victory came at the 2003 Bell Canadian Open, matched the first-round scoring record shared by four players in Mississippi’s only tour stop. Frank Lickliter was the last to open the event with a 64, in 2000. The SFB Classic’s record for a low round is 61, set by Keith Clearwater in 1996. Jonathan Byrd opened with a 65. Kevin Na, Tom Pernice Jr., Tom Byrum and Bo Van Pelt were two shots back after first-round 66s. Tway, who started on the back nine, had four straight birdies, starting at No. 3, to get to 9 under at Annandale Golf Club. After a third straight par, the 46-year-old Tway had a chance to break the opening-round record on his last hole, but left a 13-foot par putt 2 inches short. “I don’t think I know the golf course all that well,” Tway said. “It’s the type of golf course where if you hit it well, the greens are going to stay receptive. They’re going to stay soft and each round you can have a chance to make some birdies.... If you can make a few by getting close enough and and birdie the par-5s, you’ll be OK.” DISCOUNT CABINETRY Kraftmaid Kabinart Greenfield Coastal Cabinet Gallery 815 Hwy. 90 Suite D, Gautier, MS Phone: 228-522-6460 We’ll beat most quotes by 5% AP While leaving Louisiana State University's Tiger Stadium after a press conference, New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson, center, answers reporters' questions in Baton Rouge, La., in this Sept. 12 photo. Benson has not yet decided whether he will be at Sunday's game . Benson From Page 2-B advised that he provided his own.” Adams has been involved in security planning for LSU football for 22 years. The stadium holds more than 90,000 for LSU football and thousands more take part in tailgate parties outside the stadium spanning from Friday night to Sunday morning on football weekends. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said he is not aware of any security concerns of the Saints in Baton Rouge and said league officials “are not going e Sinc 74 19 to discuss communication between owners and our office.” Benson lunged at a WWLTV camera, knocking it down and causing a microphone to fall off, before engaging in a verbal confrontation with a nearby fan. The NFL has said it plans no action against Benson. WWL-TV said the cameraman was about seven to 10 feet from Benson and was not in the way of Benson and his party. The station said the Saints did not respond to its request for comment. WHITE’S BIG & MEN’S SHOP TALL The New Discount Store EXTRA 10% OFF WITH THIS COUPON ON YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE ON ALREADY DISCOUNTED MERCHANDISE OF 10% - 60% Limit One Per Customer • Expires 11-30-05 3980 Airport Blvd. • Pinebrook Shopping Center • Mobile Near Stein-Mart and Blockbuster Hours: Mon-Sat 10-6:30 • Sun 1-6 Thru Dec 24 • 251-380-0064 CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-410-7334 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 5-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Alabama town mourns teacher; 15-year-old boy held The Associated Press HATTON, Ala. — Hundreds of students, educators and parents gathered in a rural, small-town gym Thursday to honor a veteran teacher who was fatally beaten at work in what police say was a brutal robbery committed by a 15-year-old boy. Both before and after the tear-filled memorial service for Judy Jester, one question went unanswered: Why Lott-sponsored Amtrak overhaul approved, 96-3 WASHINGTON (AP) — Amtrak needs to improve the way it monitors performance and oversees its finances to reach solid financial ground, congressional investigators said Thursday. Meanwhile, the Senate voted 93-6 Thursday to include an Amtrak overhaul amendment to the budget bill being debated. The overLott all budget measure was passed 52-47 Thursday night. The Amtrak provision, sponsored by Sens. Trent Lott, R-Miss., and Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., would cut Amtrak’s operating subsidies by 40 percent, leaving it with $3.3 billion in subsidies over six years. The railroad would receive $4.9 billion over six years for capital grants and the measure would create a grant program giving states $1.4 billion for intercity passenger rail service. “Because the administration has indicated it will not support any funding for Amtrak this fiscal year unless Congress enacts Amtrak reforms, it is imperative for the Congress to make its voice heard on Amtrak,” Lott said. The Government Accountability Office, the auditing arm of Congress, report outlined recommendations to help the financially-troubled rail service that has never made money in its 34-year history. An operating loss of more than $550 million was expected for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. The railroad has a debt of more than $3.5 billion. “Amtrak’s management may be able to correct a number of these issues on its own, but the company is likely to need outside help in developing a comprehensive approach to address internal control weaknesses and improve the financial information for management and external stakeholders,” the report said. “While Amtrak has recently reduced costs, revenues are declining faster than costs, leading to operating losses exceeding $1 billion annually,” the report said. “These losses are projected to grow by 40 percent within four years.” The GAO recommends that the transportation secretary direct the Federal Railroad administrator to require Amtrak to submit a plan laying out specifically how it will improve its financial operations; provide Amtrak with direction on how to do so, and; monitor the railr o a d ’s p e r f o r m a n c e a n d report to Congress on Amtrak’s progress. Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta, called the GAO report “unusual, if not unprecedented, in the scope of its review and the severity of its indictment.” “The Amtrak board must stop and take a fresh look on how to proceed in the face of this non-partisan, objective report of systemic failure,” Mineta said. The Bush administration has called for no subsidies for Amtrak, but the House has approved an appropriation of nearly $1.2 billion for this budget year. COUPON COUPON COUPON $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 3999 & UP COUPON 2999 to 3998 COUPON COUPON COUPON 200 OFF 150 OFF $ $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 1999 to 2998 COUPON 1499 to 1998 COUPON COUPON 100 OFF $ $ COUPON 75 OFF On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 999 to 1498 COUPON COUPON COUPON 50 OFF $ BIG SCREEN TVs WITH HD CAPABILITY 25 OFF On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 499 to 798 249 to 498 $ COUPON 10 OFF % NO INTEREST FOR 12 MONTHS Balance must be paid in full within 12 months of purchase. Interest will be assessed from the original date of purchase on the average balance unless (1) the balance is paid in full by the end of 12 months, and (2) minimum monthly payments are made. Minimum monthly payments will be required in the amount of (i) if on a Rex card, the greater of $15.00 or 3% of the total amount financed or (ii) a portion of the amount financed based on the term of the contract (24 to 48 months). Minimum total purchase of $799 required. Financing provided by outside finance companies. Financing is subject to credit approval. Offer is for individuals, not businesses. Several different financing plans available with different APR’s. Current maximum APR up to 27%, the APR may vary in some states not to exceed state maximums. COUPON $ On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ $ COUPON SALE 799 to 998 9.95 2-YEAR PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY On Any Merchandise Purchase Totaling $ THIS COUPON EXTENDS THE MANUFACTURER’S WARRANTY (Usually 90 Days) TO A FULL 2 YEARS FROM ORIGINAL DATE OF PURCHASE Not Applicable to Prior Sale • Limit 1 Coupon Per Purchase • Expires 11/5/05 • Available Only on Items in a Factory-Sealed Box • Not Subject to Prior Sale • Offer Is for Individuals, Not Businesses • See Store for Details • EXPIRES 11/30/05 248 & Under SAMSUNG 32” DynaFlat™ MONITOR WITH HIGH DEFINITION CAPABILITY, MTS STEREO/SAP, 20W AUDIO SYSTEM $ & UNIVERSAL 649 REMOTE -50 $ AFTER COUPON Color TVs PHILIPS 34” RealFlat™ WIDE SCREEN HDTV MONITOR WITH DOLBY® VIRTUAL SURROUND, HDMI INPUT AND EyeFidelity™ SCAN SELECT $ 599 SAMSUNG 26” DynaFlat™ HDTV... After $ $ $ Coupon SONY 46” 16:9 HI-SCAN® PROJECTION TV W/HIGH DEFINITION CAPABILITY, TWINVIEW™ 2-TUNER PIP, TRUSURROUND® SRS® SOUND AND $ REMOTE 1299 999 -100 899 $ AFTER COUPON 424- 25= 399 -100 1199 $ AFTER COUPON LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY REAR PROJECTION 13” COLOR TV WITH TRILINGUAL OSD, V-CHIP, SLEEP TIMER, A/V INPUTS AND FULL $ 66 FUNCTION -7 REMOTE 59 $ AFTER COUPON 19” TELEVISION.......... RCA 27” TV WITH MTS STEREO/SAP, TRILINGUAL OSD, ADJ. COLOR WARMTH, PARENTAL $ 199 CONTROL -20 & REMOTE AFTER COUPON 179 $ RCA 32” STEREO TV.......... $289- $25= $264 $99- $10= $89 After Coupon JVC 27” FLAT SCREEN TELEVISION WITH MTS STEREO/SAP, BBE®, HYPER SURROUND, 3 A/V INPUTS, V-CHIP & UNIVERSAL $ REMOTE 324 After Coupon AFTER COUPON -25 299 $ & Combos DVD Players /CD-RW/MP3 R WITH DVD/CD/CD-R DVD PLAYE PROGRESSIVE SCAN ® PLAYBACK, DOLBY DIGITAL & REMOTE AFTER COUPON $ $ AFTER COUPON 1599 $ 1799 -150 1649 $ AFTER COUPON AFTER COUPON JVC 52” WIDESCREEN HDTV WITH D-ILA SYSTEM, DIGITAL 4 POINT COLOR MANAGEMENT, SPLIT SCREEN PIP, BBE® AUDIO, MTS STEREO $ & REMOTE 2199 O FI STEREO VCR COMB SCAN DVD/6-HEAD HIPROGRESSIVE ® L/DTS, $ 99 WITH DOLBY DIGITAMP3 3D VIRTUAL SOUND, -10 TE MO RE & K AC PLAYB $ 89 DVD/VCR COMBO AFTER COUPON SONY 50” 16:9 GRAND WEGA™ LCD REAR PROJECTION HDTV W/TWIN-VIEW™ 2-TUNER PIP, TruSurround™ SRS® SOUND $ & REMOTE 2399 -200 1999 $ AFTER COUPON $ 2199 $ $ -15 134 5-DVD/CD CHANGER AUDIOVOX 200-WATTS TOTAL POWER HOME THEATER SYSTEM WITH 5-DVD/CD CHANGER, AM/FM TUNER, 5 SATELLITE SPEAKERS PLUS SUBWOOFER AFTER $ #DV1532/1531 COUPON 139 -14 $ 125 AFTER COUPON $ AFTER COUPON JVC PROGRESSIVE SCAN 5-DVD/CD HOME THEATER SYSTEM WITH 5 SPEAKER SYSTEM PLUS 140-WATT SUBWOOFER & DOLBY® DIGITAL/DTS/PRO LOGIC II DECODERS Major Appliances per speaker AFTER COUPON 289 -25 $ WMA/MP3 PLAYBACK #TH-C3 AFTER COUPON $ 264 $ • 2 Agitate/Spin Speed Combinations • 3 Position Water Level. #WWS833ES 269 -25 $ AFTER COUPON 244 $ WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE 5.7 CU. FT. ELECTRIC DRYER WITH REVERSIBLE DOOR • Auto Dry Cycles • Timed Dry Cycles • One In Timer Temperature • Quick Clean Lint Screen. $ #WER211ES AFTER COUPON 219 -22 197 $ • 2 Sliding Shelves • Twin White Crispers • Static Condenser • White Dairy Door. #FRT17B3AW $ AFTER COUPON 359 -25 334 $ • 2–8” & 2–6” Coil Elements • Chrome Burner Bowls • Oven Light • Towel Bar Handle • Storage Drawer. $ #FEF316BS AFTER COUPON SUNDAY 12PM-6PM • DAILY 10AM-9PM 289 -25 #R-326FS AFTER COUPON on any FRIGIDAIRE or WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE purchase totaling $399 or more. Have a story idea? BUSINESSES, CONTRACTORS OR SCHOOLS CALL: 1-800-528-9739 • Mail-In Rebate Up to a $50 value • Local Metro Delivery • Not Subject to Prior Sale • See Store for Details AFTER COUPON 2199 -200 1999 $ TOSHIBA 24” FLAT SCREEN STEREO TV/DVD PLAYER COMBO W/DVD-Video, Video CD, DVD-R, CD, CD-R/RW, WMA, MP3 PLAYBACK, JPEG VIEWER $ 324 & REMOTE -25 299 $ AFTER COUPON 999- 10 $ 424 -25 399 After Coupon r• • Digital Image Stabilizegy • Integrated Improvement Technolo Combinations AFTER Auto Video Light • 108cts & Scene COUPON Of Digital Special Effe Transitions. AFTER COUPON 99 -10 199 R ® NDYCAM® CAMCORDE SONY DIGITAL8 HA CAMERA, 20x LL STI L ITA DIG H WIT $ L ZOOM & 2.5” 294 OPTICAL/990x DIGITAD MONITOR -25 SWIVELSCREEN™ LC Stabilization • SteadyShot® Picture tShot® Plus • USB Streaming • NighCCD AFTER 1/6” • tem Sys Infrared s, COUPON Imager, 460K Pixels Gros . ctive Effe 290K $ Mod • Continuous Shooting e • 8 Special Scene Processor • Video Mod s • Special AFTER Modes • 9-Point Autofocu COUPON Photo Effects. 89 Car Stereos 80W TOTAL POWER AM/FM/ CD RECEIVER W/DETACH. FACE & 1.0 DIN CHASSIS • Electronic Volume, Bass, Treble, Balance • Illuminated Preset Buttons • Clock • One Pre-amp $ Output • Hard Carry Case. #ECD12 AFTER COUPON $ 269 MEGAPIXEL DIGITAL CANON PowerShot 4 TICAL ZOOM $ OP 4x H 221 WIT CAMERA & 1.8” LCD SCREENe • DIG!C Image -22 $ $ WESTINGHOUSE 17” SUPER THIN LCD TV , WITH MULTI-MODE PIP MTS STEREO/SAP, N, 350:1 1280x1024 RESOLUTIO PC INPUT CONTRAST RATIO & $ WESTINGHOUSE 30” ....... LCD HD READY TV. $ $ 0= $899 R JVC SUPER /1000x DIGITAL HYPE WITH 25x OPTICAL TING 2.5” $ TA RO º 270 221 ZOOM & LCD MONITOR -22 Digital Picture SHARP 1.2 CU. FT. 1100-WATT MICROWAVE OVEN WITH SMART & EASY™ SENSOR SETTINGS, TURNTABLE, MINUTE PLUS™ AND INSTANT ACTION™ KEYS 264 FREE DELIVERY $ HITACHI 50” 16:9 LCD WIDE SCREEN HDTV WITH MTS STEREO/SAP W/dbx®, VirtualHD™ & ADVANCED HD DIGITAL WINDOW™ SPLIT-SCREEN $ igital Cameras Camcorders & DVH ORDER S-C & VHS ET CAMC Microwaves FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC FRIGIDAIRE RANGE WITH 4.1 CU. FT. 16.5 CU. FR. REFRIG.- OVEN, LIFT-UP FREEZER W/GALLON COOKTOP & VISUALITE® DOOR STORAGE OVEN WINDOW -25 299 DIGITAL WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE SUPER CAPACITY WASHER W/8 CYCLES AND 3 WASH/RINSE TEMPERATURES 3499 -300 3199 $ SHARP 13” AQUOS™ WING LCD TV W/170º/170º VIEAST ANGLES, 500:1 CONTR RATIO AND INCLUDES $324 TABLE STAND 5-DVD/CD CHANGER 810-WATTS TOTAL SYSTEM POWER 1499 EDTV MONITOR 49 per spkr. -5 per spkr. 44 -150 $ LCD TVs • 12” Woofer With Molded Fiber Cone • 5 1/4” Dynamic Mid-Range • 7/8” $ Polycarbonate Tweeter With Ferrofluid • Black Cloth Removable Grills. #9250B SONY 100Wx6 6.1 CHANNEL A/V RECEIVER W/32-BIT DOLBY® DIGITAL/EX, DOLBY® PRO LOGIC II, $ dts®/ES® DECODER/DSP AND REMOTE 149 AFTER COUPON TV/DVD Combos SONY 60” 16:9 WEGA™ 3LCD REAR PROJECTION DIGITAL CABLE READY HDTV WITH BUILT-IN HD TUNER, DOLBY® DIGITAL AND SRS® TruSurround™ XT -200 KLH 250-WATT 3-WAY 12-INCH FLOORSTANDING SPEAKER SYSTEM 600-WATTS TOTAL POWER COUPON 1799 $ BUILT-IN HD TUNER Audio Hi-Fi • 2 Component Video Inputs • Digital Cinema Sound™ System W/Cinema Studio EX Modes • Sound Field Modes. AFTER #STR-DE597S -200 24 59 AFTER COUPON -150 SAMSUNG 46” WIDESCREEN HDTV WITH DLP™ TECHNOLOGY, DIGITAL CABLE READY WITH CABLECARD™, SRS TruSurround XT™, MTS STEREO $ 1999 & REMOTE BUILT-IN HD TUNER OUTPUT, DVD+RW/R/ WITH PROGRESSIVE SONY DVD PLAYER /MP3 $ 66 DVD-RW/R/CD-R/RW® -7 PLAYBACK, DOLBY UT DIGITAL/dts OUTP $ ER AFT & REMOTE COUPON $ TOSHIBA 57” TheaterFine™ HD MONITOR PROJECTION TV WITH SPLIT SCREEN HD WINDOW™ POP, MTS STEREO/SAP W/dbx®, SRS® WOW™ AND $ 1649 REMOTE LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY REAR PROJECTION HITACHI 42” 16:9 LCD HDTV MONITOR WITH MTS STEREO/SAP W/dbx®, VirtualHD™, BBE® SOUND, SRS® SURROUND & HD DIGITAL WINDOW™ SPLIT-SCREEN SONY 57” 16:9 HI-SCAN 1080i™ PROJECTION TV WITH HIGH DEFINITION CAPABILITY, TruSurround™ SRS® AUDIO, TWIN-VIEW™ 2-TUNER PIP $ & REMOTE 1749 27 -3 OR 497-3087 39 -4 35 $ MP3/WMA PLAYBACK PIONEER 50Wx4 MOSFET CD RECEIVER W/SUPERTUNER® IIID™ DIGITAL TUNER, EEQ™, DETACH. FACE SECURITY, FLAP FACE & CARD REMOTE • Satellite Radio Ready • iPod Adapter Ready • MultiColor LCD With LED Backlight • CD Text • 18FM/ 6AM Station Presets. #DEH-P3700MP AFTER COUPON $ 149 -15 134 $ $ 199 Furniture Electronics Not Included TECH CRAFT TV STAND W/SWIVEL BASE • Sculpted Base & Top • Adjustable Shelf • Tempered Glass $ Doors • Easy Assembly • Jupiter Silver Finish. #CABS36 AFTER COUPON 139 -14 125 $ OUR RAINCHECK POLICY: Occasionally Due To Unexpected Demand Caused By Our Low Prices Or Delayed Supplier Shipments We Run Out of Advertised Specials. Should This Occur, Upon Request We Will Gladly Issue You A Raincheck. No Dealers Please. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. • Not Responsible For Typographical Errors. Correction Notices For Errors In This Advertisement Will Be Posted In Our Stores. • This Advertisement Includes Many Reductions, Special Purchases And Items At Our Everyday Low Price. • OUR LOW PRICES ARE GUARANTEED IN WRITING. IF YOU FIND ANY OTHER LOCAL STORE (EXCEPT INTERNET) STOCKING AND OFFERING TO SELL FOR LESS THE IDENTICAL ITEM IN A FACTORY SEALED BOX WITHIN 30 DAYS AFTER YOUR REX PURCHASE, WE’LL REFUND THE DIFFERENCE PLUS AN ADDITIONAL 25% OF THE DIFFERENCE. 107 CALL 934-1424 EVERYTHING ON SALE COUPON 500 OFF 300 OFF $ him with capital murder after Jester’s death Sunday. The boy has pleaded not guilty in the killing. While the capital charge normally carries the possibility of the death penalty, the youth — who has not been identified by authorities because of his age — faces a maximum penalty of life without parole, if tried as an adult and convicted, because of a Supreme Court ruling barring the execution of juveniles. far too few answers,” he said. As the service ended, some teachers still had tears in their eyes as they led their students to school buses. Jester, who ran an after-school program for at-risk students, was found unconscious and barely alive a few hours after the attack. Her skull was cracked, and police said money apparently had been stolen from her purse. The 15-year-old was arrested hours after the assault, and police charged Family Education Campus, a one-story brick school that houses programs for adults and needy children in nearby Moulton. Jester also taught first grade in Hatton, where the memorial service was held at the high school. About 900 people filled the stuffy gym, where Lawrence County School Superintendent Dexter Rutherford quoted the Bible and led a prayer. “These past few days have been filled with far too many questions and would anyone hurt a woman everyone remembered as dedicated to children, loving and hardworking almost beyond measure? “It’s just an extreme waste. She could have affected hundreds of more lives,” said Nancy Pinion, a retired teacher who worked with Jester for 15 years. Jester, 55, died at a hospital on Sunday, four days after she was beaten and kicked while working alone at the By JAY REEVES 6-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 NATION Poll has Bush’s ratings at lowest in presidency By TOM RAUM The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush’s job approval has fallen to the lowest level of his presidency amid worries over the Iraq war, a fumbled Supreme Court nomination, the indictment of one White House aide and uncertainty about another. Concerned that the president has lost his footing, some influential Republicans are urging Bush to shake up his staff and bring in new blood. A new AP-Ipsos poll found Bush’s approval rating was at 37 percent, compared with 39 percent a month ago. About 59 percent of those surveyed said they disapproved. The intensity of disapproval is the strongest to date, with 42 percent now saying they “strongly disapprove” of how Bush is handling his job — twice as many as the 20 percent who said they “strongly approve.” A year after his re-election, Bush’s second term has been marred by rising U.S. casualties in Iraq, a failed attempt to restructure Social Security, Hurricane Katrina missteps, rising fuel costs and his forced withdrawal of the Supreme Court nomination of Harriet Miers. In a case involving the exposure of a CIA agent married to an Iraq war critic, Vice President Dick Cheney’s former aide, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, pleaded not guilty on Thursday in federal court to charges of obstruction of justice, perjury and lying to investigators. The case casts a continuing cloud over Cheney and keeps Bush’s closest adviser, Karl Rove, in legal jeopardy. Republicans are worrying about losing their majorities in Congress in the 2006 elections and hope Bush can reverse his slide. Several senior Republicans who are close to the White House and Rove say there has been a lot of talk inside and outside the White House about the need for him to leave, but they’re picking up no indication from him or his associates that it’s going to happen — at least anytime soon. Neither Bush nor Rove has seemed to get the message, the Republicans say. Democrats have kept up the attack. “The 2006 midterm elections will be our next opportunity to change the environment of corruption and incompetence in Washington,” Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Thursday in a fundraising letter to Democrats. Reid has called for Rove’s resignation and a “thorough house cleaning” at the White House. In the AP-Ipsos poll, nearly one in five Republicans disapproved of Bush’s handling of his job, compared with nearly nine in ten Democrats. Nearly seven in ten independents disapproved. The president has lost support from some key groups of constituents over the past year. He’s dropped 16 points in his approval rating with men in that time, 18 points with people who have a high school education or less, 16 points among Southerners and 13 points among Republicans. The poll was conducted by telephone Oct. 31-Nov. 2 among 1,006 adults nationwide. The margin on sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points. Congress isn’t faring much better. In early October, 35 percent of poll respondents approved of the job being done by Congress, down from 44 percent in February. In December 2004, soon after Bush’s re-election, 51 percent approved of his handling of his job, while 47 disapproved, and 28 disapproved strongly. “I’m surprised it’s not even worse” in terms of Bush’s latest poll numbers, said GOP consultant Rich Galen. He cited three months of unrelenting bad news that have Republicans “beginning to scratch their heads.” Away from Washington, Republican leaders seemed concerned about Bush’s drift downward in the polls and about Iraq, where the 2,000th U.S. military death was recently recorded — and less troubled about the CIA-leak case and the controversy surrounding Rove and Libby. “I think the war in Iraq being on the front page every day has taken its toll,” said Van Poole, former Florida GOP chairman and now a Tallahassee lobbyist. “Americans are impatient. Whatever our job is, Americans want AP U.S. President George W. Bush and first lady Laura Bush arrive at the international airport in Argentina’s Atlantic Coast resort of Mar del Plata to attend the Summit of the Americas. us to get it done. Bush will bounce back.” Poole shrugged off the CIA-leak investigation. “Most people I’ve talked to think it was a big waste of money, taking as much time as it did.” Republican pollster David Winston said Presidents Reagan and Clinton recovered from low poll figures in their second terms and Bush should as well. Bush has been battered by many events over which he had no or little control, but next month’s Iraqi elections and signs of an improving economy should help him bounce back, Winston said. As to Rove’s status, “People are more interested in gas prices, how’s the war on terror going, how’s my child’s education,” Winston said. Political scientist Kenneth Warren of Saint Louis University said the Rove and Libby matter was undermining Bush’s credibility and helping to drive down his numbers. Still, he said the economy and Iraq remain the foremost issues for most Americans. O’Connor’s departure could shift high court ■ Samuel Alito could bring abrupt change By GINA HOLLAND The Associated Press AP Plaintiff Frederick “Mike” Humeston and his wife react after Merck & Co. won a major victory in the battle over its Vioxx painkiller Thursday in New Jersey. A state jury found that the drugmaker properly warned consumers about the risks of the medication during a trial in Atlantic City, N.J. Jury absolves Merck & Co. in Vioxx trial By JOHN CURRAN The Associated Press ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Merck & Co. won a major victory in the battle over its Vioxx painkiller Thursday when a New Jersey state jury found that the drugmaker properly warned consumers about the risks of the medication. The finding means Merck will not be held liable for the 2001 heart attack suffered by a man taking Vioxx. After deliberating for less than eight hours over three days, the jury cleared Merck of allegations it failed to warn consumers about the drug’s risks and engaged in “unconscionable commercial practices” in marketing it to doctors and their patients. The verdict was Merck’s first win out of two Vioxx-related trials. In August, a Texas jury found the company liable in a Vioxx user’s death. Damages there will be cut to about onetenth of the jury’s $253 million award due to that state’s caps on punitive damages. Much of the seven-week trial, eagerly watched by lawyers and plaintiffs from around the country, relied on the testimony of medical experts. Witnesses for Merck testified the company believed Vioxx was safe for the heart before the drug was pulled from the market a year ago after a study showed it doubled risk of heart attacks and strokes when taken for at least 18 months. The company faces more than 6,500 similar lawsuits, which Merck, based in Whitehouse Station, N.J., said it plans to fight one by one. Thursday’s verdict means it might take several more cases before lawyers can find any sort of precedent that might determine Merck’s ultimate Vioxx liability. In the meantime, each case — including a federal trial scheduled to begin in Houston Nov. 28 — will continue to draw the attention of pharmaceutical companies, lawyers, consumers and stock analysts Merck shares were up $1.16, or 4.1 percent, at $29.57 in afternoon trading — at four times normal trading volume. Stock analysts said the company clearly will face huge legal costs given its plan to fight each lawsuit individually. The company has set aside just $675 million for legal defense costs, but nothing for jury awards or settlements. “It’s still going to be a marathon” in the courts, said Barbara Ryan, pharmaceuticals analyst at Deutsche Bank North America. Members of Merck’s legal team, some with tears in their eyes, hugged each other after the New Jersey verdict. “I feel pretty good,” said lead counsel Diane Sullivan. “I’m proud of the folks at Merck.” Kenneth C. Frazier, senior vice president and general counsel of Merck, said in a statement, “there will be other Vioxx trials and we will vigorously defend them one by one over the coming years. Merck acted responsibly, from performing extensive clinical trials comparing Vioxx to NSAIDs (nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs) or placebo in almost 10,000 patients prior to approval, to monitoring the medicine while it was on the market to voluntarily withdrawing the medicine when we did.” WA SHI NGTON — The Sup rem e C ourt ’s m id d le ground is disappearing. If Samuel Alito is confirmed, he could almost immediately begin shifting the court onto more conservative footing as it considers contentious social issues like abortion, religion and capital punishment. With pragmatic Justice Sandra Day O’Connor as its pendulum, the court has staked out moderate positions, often in line with public opinion but not necessarily clear-cut. “We’ve been idling many years with the court being noncommittal,” said Ann Althouse, a law professor at the University of Wisconsin. That is likely to end with Alito, who is expected to bring a more reliably conservative approach to areas that O’Connor has influenced: abortion restrictions, the death penalty, campaign finance, affirmative action and states’ rights. The shift could be abrupt. O’Connor has been a tiebreaking vote in capital punishment cases, including a decision earlier this year that overturned Alito’s ruling as a federal appeals court judge a ga inst a Pennsylva nia inmate. The justices will take up a Tennessee death row inmate’s appeal in January that will decide when people should get a chance to prove their innocence with DNA or other new evidence. Alito has been less sympathetic to inmate appeals than O’Connor. Another case being argued in January brings up election law — a subject that O’Connor has commanded. “Justice O’Connor has been the key vote in everything from campaign finance to the meaning of the Voting Rights Act to racial gerrymandering to Bush v. Gore,” said Richard Hasen, a Loyola Law School professor specializing in elections. O’Connor was an author of the Supreme Court’s most recent decision on campaign finance, a 54 ruling two y e ar s ag o that upheld restrictions on donations. T h at same f e d e r al l aw Alito will be reviewed by the court on Jan. 17. Justice Antonin Scalia opposes the law on grounds that it violates free speech, and in Alito he could find a fifth vote to strike down part of it. Alito, like Scalia, has a record of friendliness to free speech claims. For example, he opposed a law that barred companies from buying alcohol ads in college newspapers. O’Connor sometimes votes with Scalia and other court conserva t i v e s, an d o th e r times provides the fifth vote to the court’s more liberal wing. “We may not have any more swing votes on the court,” said Suzanne Goldberg, a professor at Rutgers School of Law. She said the court may still frequently split 5-4, but with conservatives on the winning side each time. It is not clear how O’Connor ’s departure will affect Justice Anthony Kennedy, another Reagan administration appointee who usually, but not always, votes with conservatives. Kermit Hall, president of the State University of New York at Albany, said Alito probably will be a traditionalist judge with an emphasis on family values, more willing to back government than O’Connor, and more willing to vote on the side of employers in worker disputes. In a 1991 appeals court ruling, he voted to uphold a state requirement that women notify their husbands before getting abortions, relying on arguments that a family discussion in advance could clear up mi sc o mmu n i c ati o n . O’Connor was an author of the Supreme Court ruling that found the notification unconstitutional. O’Connor supports Roe v. Wade. Alito has not said how he would vote if asked to overturn the 1973 decision that established a woman’s right to have an abortion. A major abortion case is on the calendar for November. Alito is expected to go further than O’Connor in allowing religion in public life. O’Connor voted with liberal members this summer in a 54 decision that limited government Ten Commandments displays. Alito has given his support to a government holiday display containing a creche and menorah. Another room for change is the area of states’ rights. Alito, like Scalia, is expected to side with states more often in power struggles with Congress. While O’Connor has generally been a strong states’ rights advocate, her vote is not guaranteed. Last year she was the swing vote in a 5-4 ruling that said disabled people can sue if states ignore a civil rights law on access to courthouses. Two states’ rights showdowns are at the court now — a case that asks if federal law can trump a state physician-assisted suicide law, and a case that asks if states can be sued for not accommodating disabled prisoners. O’Connor is participating in both cases, and others that are on the schedule this fall, but her vote will not count if her successor is confirmed be f o r e th e r u l i n g s ar e announced. It is likely that some appeals will have to be reargued after O’Connor ’s departure because of 4-4 deadlocks. In her 24 years on the bench, O’Connor has been known for pragmatic votes, like her tie-breaking 2003 vote to allow limited affirmative action in college admissions. “Because of her style of interpretation, you could never tell whether she was gauging the political preferences of society ... reaching outcomes that were good in a policy or political way,” said Althouse, at the University of Wisconsin. “People would criticize her as being mushy.” With Alito, there will be less flexibility, which would please lawyers but may disturb some people, said Althouse. come see our new up to size 20 EEEE workboots up to 18 EEEE BIG & TALL men’s shoe dept! MOBILE’S ONLY FULL SERVICE FAMILY SHOE STORE SERVING MOBILE FOR 25 YEARS 251-343-7127 • Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Regency Square Shopping Cnt • Airport at University Grady BMW Collision Center in Mobile is open and ready to restore your vehicle to its original condition. Call today for an appointment. 1-800-633-6958 Grady BMW 3025 Hwy 90 West @ McVay Mobile, Alabama 36606 www.gradyautomotive.com FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 7-B THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS WORLD Paris-area riots spread to 20 towns, eighth night By JAMEY KEATEN The Associated Press AULNAY-SOUS-BOIS, France — A week of riots in poor neighborhoods outside Paris gained dangerous new momentum Thursday, with youths shooting at police and firefighters and attacking trains and symbols of the French state. Facing mounting criticism, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin vowed to restore order as the violence that erupted Oct. 27 spread to at least 20 towns, highlighting the frustration simmering in housing projects that are home to many North African immigrants. Police deployed for a feared eighth night of clashes, after bands of youths lobbing stones and petrol bombs ignored President Jacques Chirac’s appeal for calm a day earlier. “I will not accept organized gangs making the law in some neighborhoods. I will not accept having crime networks and drug trafficking profiting from disorder,” Villepin said at the Senate in between emergency meetings called over the riots. The unrest cast a cloud over the end of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month. In Clichysous-Bois — heart of the rioting — men filled the Bilal mosque for evening prayers, but streets were subdued with shops shutting early. “Look around you. How do you think we can celebrate?” said Abdallah Hammo as he closed the tea house where he works. Riots erupted in an outburst of anger in Clichy-sous-Bois over the accidental electrocution Oct. 27 of two teenagers who fled a soccer game and hid in a power substation when they saw police enter the area. Youths in the neighborhood suspect that police chased Traore Bouna, 15, and Zyed Benna, 17, to their deaths. Since then riots have swelled into a broader challenge against the French state and its security forces. The violence has exposed deep discontent in neighborhoods where African and AP French riot police officers, left, protect firefighters working in the Paris suburb, Le Blanc-Mesnil. Youths battled with police in Paris’ troubled suburbs for a eighth straight night, setting fire to a car dealership and hurling stones at police in at least 10 towns, officials said. Muslim immigrants and their French-born children are trapped by poverty, unemployment, racial discrimination, crime, poor education and housing. The Interior Ministry released a preliminary report Thursday exonerating officers of any direct role in the teenagers’ deaths. Some 1,300 officers were being deployed in Seine-Saint- Denis, a tough northeastern area that includes the town of Clichy-sous-Bois and has seen the worst violence. The report said police went to Clichy-sousBois to investigate a suspected intrusion on a building site but did not chase the teenagers who were killed. A third teenager who was seriously injured also told investigators he and the other boys were aware of the dangers when they hid in the substation, which was fenced off, the report said. The report did not address why the youths ran when officers came to the neighborhood, but it said Benna was known to police for having committed robbery with violence and Bouna was among those who had intruded onto the building site. Such official assurances that police were not directly responsible for the deaths have not stemmed the unrest, which authorities said spread Wednesday night to at least 20 Parisregion towns. Government offices, a police station, a primary school and a college, a Clichysous-Bois fire station and a train station were among the buildings targeted. Rioters also set fire to a gym near the Les Tilleuls housing complex in the Seine-SaintDenis region. It burned and smoldered Wednesday night as residents looked on in despair. “Where is she going to practice now?” asked Mohammed Fawzi Kaci, an Algerian immigrant whose 8-year-old daughter took gymnastics classes at the facility. The violence also has cast doubt on the success of France’s model of seeking to integrate its immigrant community — its Muslim population, at an estimated 5 million, is Western Europe’s largest — by playing down differences between ethnic groups. Rather than feeling embraced as full and equal citizens, immigrants and their French-born children often complain of police harassment and of being refused jobs, housing and opportunities. “It is very tough when you are stuck midway between France and Algeria or Morocco,” said Sonia Imloul, who works with troubled teens in Seine-Saint-Denis and was born in France of Algerian parents. She added: “Perhaps we should be told clearly to stop having children, because they have an 80 percent chance of not succeeding.” Europe Union to investigate reports of secret CIA prisons ■ Group claims evidence of facilities in Poland, Romania By CONSTANT BRAND The Associated Press AP Chinese health workers tend an animal disinfection and inspection check point in one of the entrances to the farm that suffered the first of four outbreaks of bird flu reported over the past month in China. China updates bird flu policies By AUDRA ANG the Associated Press TENGJIAYING, China — Chickens were dropping dead by the dozens at Qin Zhijun’s farm one morning, most while feeding in their squat, brick coops. “They died instantly,” said Qin, a breeder in China’s northern Inner Mongolia region, which reported the first of the country’s three bird flu epidemics in poultry last month. “I’ve never seen a disease like this.” Within 15 hours of the Oct. 14 outbreak, he says, up to 2,000 of his birds had died of the H5N1 virus and 7,000 others were destroyed by health officials. The prevention measures extended for a two-mile radius from Qin’s farm, with more than 93,000 birds slaughtered and tens of thousands more vaccinated. Now authorities are eager to assure the public and the world that the government is taking its anti-bird flu work very seriously — and to show it can be open following sharp criticism that it was unwilling to share information during an outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in China in late 2002. No human cases of bird flu have been reported in China, but two recent outbreaks in poultry — one in Anhui province in the east, the other in central Hunan province — have sparked fears that human infections may be on the horizon. Reporters dressed in protective suits and masks were taken on a whirlwind tour Thurs- day of Tengjiaying, a village of about 1,000 people just outside Hohhot, the regional capital. Cows and sheep roamed the dusty streets. Buses carrying the group were stopped at a checkpoint, where the wheels of the vehicles were sprayed with disinfectant by workers wearing white and blue protective suits. A thick registration book sat on a table filled with information on drivers and their cargo. “From the officials at the top to ordinary citizens, everyone understands this is a problem and everyone is paying great attention to it,” said Xu Yanhui, the official in charge of anti-bird flu measures in Inner Mongolia. “Everyone is filled with confidence that we will be able to overcome this.” Qin, 44, said that on the day of the outbreak, he awoke at 6 a.m. to find a few dead birds. He said many more dropped dead while eating an hour later. Qin said authorities, who arrived 30 minutes after he reported the deaths, detained him and his wife at the farm while they tested the chickens. He said that when the results came back positive for bird flu, they began destroying other chickens. On Thursday, Qin’s coops stood empty, their windows sea led wit h p la st ic. The ground is covered in chalky white powdered disinfectant; empty bottles for liquid disinfectant were piled up nearby. “At the time, it was hard to bear,” said Qin, whose face was browned by the sun and deeply lined. “I did not feel like eating, I did not feel like sleeping.” He said authorities filled a p ond where t hey susp ect migrating birds might have passed the virus to his flock. BRUSSELS, Belgium — The European Union and the continent’s top human rights group said Thursday they will investigate allegations the CIA set up secret jails in eastern Europe and elsewhere to interrogate terror suspects, and the Red Cross demanded access to any prisoners. Human Rights Watch said it has evidence, based on flight logs, that indicate the CIA transported suspects captured in Afghanistan to Poland and Romania. But the two countries — and others in the former Soviet bloc — denied the allegations. U.S. officials have refused to confirm or deny the claims. Such prisons, European officials say, would violate the continent’s human rights principles. At work may be a complex web of global politics, in which eastern European countries face choices between the views of the European Union and their interest in close ties with the United States. The International Committee of the Red Cross expressed strong interest in the claims, first reported Wednesday in the Washington Post, that the CIA has been hiding and interrogating some of its most important al-Qaida captives at Soviet-era compounds. Red Cross chief spokeswoman Antonella Notari said the agency asked Washington about the allegations and requested access to the prisons if they exist. The Red Cross, which has exclusive rights to visit terror suspects detained at a U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, long has been concerned about reports U.S. officials were hiding detainees from ICRC delegates. Europe’s top human rights organization, the Council of Europe, said it, too, would investi- gate. Notari said the Red Cross, which also monitors conditions at U.S. detention centers in Afghanistan and Iraq, has been unable to find some people who reportedly were detained. She said the Red Cross was “concerned about the fate of an unknown number of persons detained as part of what is called the ’global war on terror’ and held in undisclosed places of detention.” In implicating Poland and Romania, Human Rights Watch examined flight logs of CIA aircraft from 2001 to 2004, said Mark Garlasco, a senior military analyst with the New Yorkbased organization. He said the group matched the flight patterns with testimony from some of the hundreds of detainees in the war on terrorism who have been released by the United States. “The indications are that prisoners in Afghanistan are being (taken) to facilities in Europe and other countries in the world,” Garlasco, a former civilian intelligence officer with the Defense Intelligence Agency, told The Associated Press. He would not say how the organization obtained the flight logs, but said two destinations of the flights stood out as likely sites of any secret CIA detention centers: Szymany Airport in Poland, which is near the headquarters of Poland’s intelligence service; and Mihail Kogalniceanu military airfield in Romania. Human Rights Watch also obtained the tail numbers of dozens of CIA aircraft to match them with the flight logs, Garlasco said. He said that in September 2003, a Boeing 737 flew from Washington to Kabul, Afghanistan, making stops along the way in the Czech Republic and Uzbekistan. On Sept. 22, the plane flew on to Szymany Airport, then to Mihail Kogalniceanu, proceeded to Sale, Morocco, and finally landed at Guantanamo, Garlasco said. OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY PROFESSIONAL MOLD CONTROL With Bora Care-Mold Care (1 year warranty against reinfestation) •Termite Control with Termidor •Control of Ants, Roaches, Mice, Etc. Certified Technicians Ulcers • Diarrhea • Stomach Pain • Colon Disease • Hemorrhoids • Bleeding • Heartburn Liver Disease • Pediatric • Gastrointestinal Issues • Obesity • Hepatitis C Alfred E. McNair, Jr., M.D. Mary E. Norris, M.D. John D. McKee, III, M.D. Gracia Hudson, PA-C Michael J. Loebenberg, M.D. GULFPORT 15190 Community Rd. (228) 539-1205 762-5959 Pascagoula 392-3425 Biloxi PASCAGOULA 3616 Hospital Rd., Ste. A (228) 769-1035 Kimberley J. 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Many in the crowd yelled “Prince Charles!” as he approached — one woman adding, “Where’s William?” The 56-year-old heir to the throne may lack the college appeal of his 23year-old son William, but the enthusiastic reception was a welcome boost for a royal tour that has met a muted response in a Washington preoccupied with legal fights involving top White House and congressional figures, battles over a Supreme Court vacancy and the rising death toll in Iraq. After the pomp and ceremony of Wednesday’s black-tie dinner hosted by President Bush at the White House, Charles and Prince Charles his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall were on comfortable ground Thursday — visiting worthy projects in which they have a personal interest. Charles, who has called in the past for a greater understanding of Islam from the West, met representatives of Christian, Muslim and Jewish groups at Georgetown’s Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding. Earlier, the prince accepted an award for his contribution to architecture at the National Building Museum, donating the $30,000 prize money to hurricane recovery in Mississippi. Charles and Camilla were due to see hurricane damage firsthand on Friday, flying to New Orleans to meet residents and recovery workers. Later, Camilla wore a gold lace cocktail dress and a diamond necklace as she and Charles mingled with 140 guests at a reception hosted by the British ambassador, Sir David Manning, and his wife, Lady Catherine. The weeklong tour, designed to bolster trans-Atlantic ties and promote Charles’ environmentalist causes, also represents a coming-out for Camilla. The 58-yearold married the prince in April after a relationship that stretched back three decades — and was interrupted by their marriages to others. For many fans of the late Princess Diana, she remains the woman who broke up the fairy-tale royal romance, although both Charles and Diana acknowledged having affairs during a marriage that ended in divorce in 1996. Diana died in a car crash in Paris the following year. The spotlight-shy Camilla broke her customary public silence Thursday during a visit to the National Institutes of Health. Wearing a navy blue suit and pearls, the duchess made a rare public speech after meeting doctors working to treat osteoporosis and patients of the bone disease. It is an issue close to her heart. “I first became involved with osteoporosis after both my mother and my grandmother died as a result of this devastating disease,” said the duchess, who is patron of Britain’s National Osteoporosis Society. Addressing about 40 researchers with her husband by her side, Camilla point- ed out the “horrifying” statistics about the disease, which affects half of all women over 50 in Britain. She called for greater efforts to “prevent future generations worldwide from suffering the pain and ignominy of osteoporosis.” The duchess looked nervous before the speech, tapping her notes on a table and sipping from a glass of water. Afterwards, Charles gave her a reassuring look. The royal couple was greeted at the institute by U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona — who almost succeeded in leading the duchess into a full-length glass window. A startled Camilla touched her nose after narrowly avoiding a collision, prompting a laugh from her husband. The U.S. tour, which began Tuesday in New York, also includes a visit to San Francisco. ONLY The nationwide plan with AP Tilly Smith, 11, from Oxshott, England, right, talks with Former President Bill Clinton on Thursday in New York. Clinton serves as the United Nations Special Envoy for the Tsunami Recovery. Smith put her geography lessons to good use by quickly recognizing the warning signs of a tsunami. The English schoolgirl saved about 100 people from near-certain death at a Thai resort. UNLIMITED CALLING from home 10-year-old is credited with saving 100 tourists visits U.N., meets Clinton UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Tilly Smith, just 10 years old, put her geography lessons to good use: By quickly recognizing the warning signs of a tsunami, the English schoolgirl saved about 100 people from near-certain death at a Thai resort. On Thursday, Tilly visited the United Nations and met former president Bill Clinton, the U.N. envoy for the tsunami recovery. “My mum didn’t realize what was happening on the beach because she wasn’t taught about tsunamis when she was younger,” said Tilly, who was in New York with her mother, father and sister. The Smith family all escaped the lethal waves after Tilly’s early warning during their vacation on the island of Phuket. Two weeks before the Dec. 26, 2004, disaster that took at least 178,000 lives, Tilly had studied tsunamis in her geography class in Oxshott, a community of about 5,000 just south of London. The children were shown a video from an earlier tsunami. Tilly was armed with that knowledge when the Smith family decided to go for a morning walk on the idyllic beach near the JW Marriott Phuket Resort and Spa. Suddenly, “I saw this bubbling on the water, right on the edge, and foam sizzling just like in a frying pan,” she remembered. “The water was coming in, but it wasn’t going out again. It was coming in, and then in, and then in, towards the hotel.” She recognized it as an indication that earthquake-driven waves were only minutes away. Tilly turned to her mother, Penny, “and I said, ’Mum, I know there’s something wrong, I know it’s going to happen — the tsunami.”’ When her mother replied that it was just a day at the beach, “Tilly went hysterical,” recalls her father, Colin, who decided to return to the hotel with her 8year-old sister, Holly. While Colin Smith relayed Tilly’s warning to the hotel staff, the girl dashed back toward the beach filled with about 100 people. She told the Japanese-born hotel chef of the danger, “and he knew the word tsunami because it’s Japanese. But he never saw one.” The chef and a nearby hotel security agent both spread the warning and the beach was swiftly evacuated — minutes before the devastating waves struck. Family says Aruban officials ignored leads, botched case ORANJESTAD, Aruba (AP) — The family of a U.S. teenager who vanished on a school trip to Aruba urged Thursday that three law enforcement officials be removed from the case, saying they ignored promising leads and did not take the investigation seriously in the crucial early stages. Natalee Holloway’s family made the charges in a letter released as the missing teen’s mother, Beth Holloway Twitty, left the Dutch Caribbean island after she said prosecutors and the police chief refused to meet with her. The honors student was last seen early on May 30 leaving a bar with Dutch national Joran van der Sloot and Surinamese brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe. They were arrested on June 9 but released after a court ruled there was not enough evidence to hold them. Twitty, who arrived Tuesday, told reporters she wanted to meet with prosecutors and police to discuss a taped interview in which Deepak Kalpoe allegedly says all three had sex with Holloway, who would have turned 19 last month. Twitty said she was “disheartened” with the response of Police Chief Gerald Dompig, Chief Prosecutor Karin Jansen and Detective Dennis Jacobs to the disappearance of her daughter. “They have placed barriers to the advancement of the investigation,” Twitty said. “They should be replaced.” The police chief said he and the chief prosecutor were willing to meet with Twitty but first wanted her to clarify statements she made about an investigator whose name he did not disclose. Dompig declined to discuss her criticisms. 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If that doesn’t help, TVL Law & Order: Intent Law & Order: SVU Monk 118471 Law & Order: Intent Law & Order: SVU inform your boss that you have USA Law & Order: SVU Air Bud: Seventh Inning Fetch (G, ’02) ›› 189655 News 453617 Sex/City Becker Da Vinci’s Inquest 185839 done your part and now it’s her WGN Funniest Home Videos Everybody, Everybody, The Matrix Reloaded (R, ’03) ››› (Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne) Freedom The Matrix Reloaded (9:50) (R, ’03) ››› (Keanu Reeves, turn. The workp lace should WTBS Raymond Raymond fighters use extraordinary skills and weaponry to revolt against machines. 95608988 Laurence Fishburne) 65068100 not be a health risk for you. Shape can make it hard to judge First, look at the East hand. As dealer, would you open one heart? Assuming you pass, your left-hand opponent opens one spade, your partner overcalls two diamonds or three diamonds (a weak jump overcall), and the responder bids two spades or three spades, Philip respecAlder tively. What would you do in each case? How does South do in four spades doubled? Does East’s double carry a special message? Finally, can East-West make five clubs? I would not open with that East hand. In particular, what would I rebid if partner responds two diamonds? Instead, I would try to show my two-suiter on the next round. When partner overcalls two diamonds and responder raises to two spades, I can do just that, doubling to show length in the unbid suits. I would like to have some diamond help too, but one cannot always Herbal cholesterol-lowering regimen may do the trick have everything. When partner makes a weak jump overcall, though, I would pass over three spades. I have less chance of hitting a playable fit. But I would risk a penalty double of four spades, which asks partner to lead diamonds. Four spades plays very badly. West leads his diamond ace, then gives East a diamond ruff. He cashes the club ace, West signaling enthusiastically with his 10. A club to the king and another diamond ruff are followed by the heart ace and a heart ruff, leaving four spades four down, minus 800. East-West seem to have only two spade losers in five clubs, but if the opponents take those tricks and avoid shifting to diamonds, declarer cannot establish 11 tricks. ©NEA Dear Dr. Gott: I am an occasional reader of your column in my local paper and I noticed with interest the article wherein you responded to a “great-grandmother” age 86 (!), who stated that, although she was in good health, she did have hypertension (treated). She also had a cholesterol level of 223, and her doctor wanted her to take Lipitor, which for several valid reasons you didn’t recommend. I’ll be 80 (!) by the end of this month, am likewise in good health and take no drugs of any kind, but did have high cholesterol (over 240, not that many years ago!). So I chose to follow my usual herbal regimen, which Peter Gott, M.D. has served me well up to now, by taking an over-thecounter product called Cholest-Off manufactured under the brand name of Nature Made. With the help of the Senior Circle Association (of which I’ve been a member for over a year now), which sponsors monthly health-fair exams in the local hospital, I’ve been able to keep track of my reading for nearly eight months, and by adjusting my diet accordingly have been able to keep my readings between 180 and 220! (Incidentally, my blood pressure is also normal.) Your opinion, please! Dear Reader: Hey, look, if the treatment is safe and effective, go for it! I have no comments about your herbal remedy except to say that medical studies have failed to show any positive effects from several herbal preparations, except for omega-3 fish oil capsules. Keep up the good work. Dear Dr. Gott: I read your column every day and find it to be very informative and helpful. I am 74 years old. About two years ago, I suffered from chronic diarrhea. I could not go away from home until after lunch. I also had a combined cholesterol reading of over 200. I began taking a four-fiber tablet every day and the diarrhea is under control. I also began eating oatmeal every day for breakfast. My cholesterol is now 160. To save money, I buy quick oatmeal and the fiber laxative in a store brand. I prepare the oatmeal using a sugar-free sweetener and flavor it with ground cinnamon and dried apples. Dear Reader: Excellent choice. I’d be surprised if your dietary changes had failed to lower your cholesterol as well as improve your diarrhea. If your diarrhea persists, check with your doctor. Dear Dr. Gott: Is it possible that the use of bug repellent and topical sunscreen is dangerous? My doctor mentioned this in passing, but didn’t give details. Dear Reader: Your doctor gets five gold stars for this one. He is absolutely correct. As reported in the journal The Physician and Sportsmedicine (September 2003), the combination may be disastrous. Scientists in Canada have discovered that when applied simultaneously, insect repellents and sunscreen can increase the inappropriate absorption of each other, resulting in toxicity. The active ingredient in most repellents (DEET) is designed and marketed to remain on the skin after application. But the simultaneous presence of sunscreen protection can lead to toxicity: rash, low blood pressure, dizziness, headaches, disorientation and brain damage (especially in children). Scientists urge people to avoid the “double whammy” of both chemicals until the products’ ingredients can be modified. For now, consider applying sunscreen during the day and insect repellents (if necessary) in the late afternoon or evening. (The bad effects are a problem only when the two products are used simultaneously.) Teacher fills parents’ shoes for needy student Dear Abby: I am 18, and graduated from high school last spring. From the time I was 14, my parents and I did not get along. But I did become close with one of my teachers. “Mr. Carson” was always there for me when I needed an adult perspective about a problem. Sometimes he was the only person I could talk to. (He talked me out of suicide a couple of Dear times.) Abby Don’t get me wrong; Mr. Carson was always professional. He never tried to take the place of my parents. But because I turned to him first, my parents called me a worthless daughter. They even went so far as to inform me I was no longer welcome in their home. After that, I became depressed and made some bad choices. When I became pregnant at 17, my parents refused to let me back in their home. Mr. Carson and his wife helped me to pay for my pregnancy and get through it emotionally. When I needed advice, Mrs. Carson was always there for me. I am now raising my baby. My son is the best thing in my life. I’d like him to meet his grandparents, but my parents refuse. I have tried everything, but now I have given up. I want my son to have a grandma and grandpa in his life. Would it be OK for me to teach my son to call the Carsons “Grandma” and “Grandpa”? They are the closest thing I have had to parents for more than a year. Or should I continue trying to get my parents to change their minds? — Parentless in Richmond, N.Y. Dear Parentless: Give your mother and father until the end of the year to change their perspective. If their attitude hasn’t mellowed by then, by all means ask the Carsons if they would like to be your son’s honorary grandparents. Children need love, and unlike your parents, your teacher and his wife seem to have it in abundance to give. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. 2-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 CLASSIFIED P www.gulflive.com THE MISSISSIPPI SUPER DEAL ADS 762-CRAB 3 Lines / 7 Days $ 6 EMPLOYMENT ■ Indicates Mississippi Ads Help Wanted - Display . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Education/Instruction . . . . . . . . . . . 102 Work Wanted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Accounting/Bookkeeping . . . . . . . . 105 Casino . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Clerical Office . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107 Computer-Data Processing . . . . . . 109 Domestic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Drivers-Trucking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Engineers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 Financial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 $300 or LESS F R E E ADS! BOAT- 14 ft. aluminum fishing boat, $100, 875-9551 BOOKCASES- 7 ft. tall, $25 each, 875-9551 COMPUTER & Monitor, $150 228-327-6430 DESK, Real wood, $120 327-6430 DISPLAY, 2 panel Peg board/w stand, 2 shelves, $40 228-588-3862 Gun Shell Reloader, MEC 600 Jr. plus supplies, $75 475-6118 after 6pm. IBANEZ ELECTRIC Guitar SZ320, black, like new, $295 228-326-6952 LAWNMOWER by Craftsman, 19hp, $300 228-623-1354 $300 or Less / Free Ads 1989 Buick Skylark for parts, does not run, 4 inflated tires. $175. 7626369 LEGALS PUBLIC NOTICES MERCHANDISE Hot Tubs/Spas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395 Industrial Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . 400 Jewelry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405 Lawn/Garden Equipment . . . . . . . . 410 Medical Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415 Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420 Musical Instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . 425 Office Furniture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430 Produce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435 Seafood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 440 Sporting Goods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .445 Tickets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 450 TV/VCR/Satellite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 455 Want to Buy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 460 Want to Rent/Lease . . . . . . . . . . . . . 465 Want to Swap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 470 PETS/ANIMALS/ LIVESTOCK $300 or Less / Free Ads LAMPS, Burgundy (2) $20. 588-3331 NAVY, Braided Rug 8x11 $25 228-588-3862 RECORDS- 100 plus LP’s, classicals and musicals, $50 OBO, 875-9551 SECTIONAL SOFA, 2 pc. earthtone plaid, makes queen bed $300 497-1612 Sectional Sofa, beige w/ blue & green $75. 588-3331 STEEL TOE SHOES New, sz 10 1/2 $15. 872-3056 Call 762-4392 Glass Top Tables (2), oak finish. $25. 588-3331 LEATHER COAT, ladies med sz, Denim & Co $50. 872-3056 LEATHER COAT, mens 38, GAP $40. 872-3056 Mens Suit 3pc Navy 38L pants 34w32 inseam $20 228-475-6118 after 6pm CHARGE IT! We accept VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER and AMERICAN EXPRESS SUPER DEAL, AUTOMOTIVE & GARAGE SALE ADS - PRIVATE PARTY ADVERTISERS ONLY, PLEASE, NO COMMERCIAL SALES Because we want your ad to be easily understood, please no abbreviations. Flat rate still applies. PROCEDURE - Please check your ad the first day it appears to be certain it is exactly what you want readers to see. If you want to make any changes or corrections, please call us the first day the ad appears. The Mississippi Press takes responsibility for the first insertion only. For more information, see Procedure under the NOTICES classification. All rate card conditions apply. “LIVE” 24 HOURS A DAY. TOOLBOX, Aluminum, for full size truck, $75 Dr. Scholl’s Foot Massage 228-623-1354 never used $20 228-475-6118 after 6pm TOW BAR, Blue Ox Heavy Duty, $275 FENDER ACOUSTIC 228-623-0060 Guitar, was wet, was new, $100, 228-369-0968 TRAMPOLINE “Free”, FOLDING DOORS, 1 pair, You Move. Large size. 228-249-6896 excellent condition, $50 GENERATOR, 1000 Watt, New, $225 762-3246 For NEXT DAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Daily For SATURDAY Publication: 3:00 P.M. Friday For SUNDAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Friday For MONDAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Friday (Display ads may not automatically appear on Gulflive.com.) FINANCIAL BOAT COVER, 19ft. $30 497-5768 To Place, Cancel or Change Ads: When you place your Classified Ad in The Mississippi Press it automatically appears on our affiliated website www.gulflive.com Antiques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 305 Appliances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310 Arts & Crafts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .315 Auctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320 Baby Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 Bicycles/Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330 Building Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335 Cameras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340 Clothing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345 Collectibles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350 Comm Business Equip . . . . . . . . . . 355 Computers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360 Equipment Sales/Rentals . . . . . . . . 365 Farm Equipment/Supplies . . . . . . . 370 Firewood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 Furniture/Household . . . . . . . . . . . . 380 Money to Loan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 Garage Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385 Business Opportunities . . . . . . . . . 220 Guns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390 Pets for Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 480 AUTO FOR PARTS, ‘01 Grand Am, body in new condition $200 228-623-1354 DEADLINES Online at www.gulflive.com 00* $300 or Less / Free Ads FREE Garage Sale Kit Included FREE Rain Check Guarantee No animals, plants, produce or commercial ads. $3 each additional line *Ad must include a price and be pre-paid Adoptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 010 Business Opportunities . . . . . . . . . 020 Business Personals . . . . . . . . . . . . . 025 Lost & Found . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 030 Happy Ads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 035 Personals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 040 Special Notices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 050 Valentine Love Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . 060 4 Lines / 1 Day Get a Free Ad to sell any item priced at $300 or less. The price must be in the ad, and only one item per ad. No abbreviations. Private individuals only. You may place up to 3 Free ads per day. Ads must be faxed, dropped off or mailed to us. No phone calls please. Show your vehicle to more than 120,000 Gulf Coast households, in The Mississippi Press and The Mobile Register - for only General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Hair Stylists-Personal Services . . . .123 Restaurant-Hotel-Lounges . . . . . . . 125 Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128 Medical-Dental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 Modeling-Talent Agencies . . . . . . . . 133 Offshore-Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 Part-Time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 Professional-Technical . . . . . . . . . . 141 Retail-Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 Telemarketing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 Trades-Crafts-Skills . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157 Resumes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160 Employment Training . . . . . . . . . . . 163 Job Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170 Announcements 020 030 Business Opportunities Lost & Found LOST Female Blonde mixed Dog, recently spayed, collar, 235-4478 Lost Mini Schnauzer, scar on head & back answers to Toby 228-475-7951 G FOUND Fine China 2100 Block of Chickasaw N of Washington 228-769-1461 10 $3.00 each additional day, $1.00 each additional line 3 Lines / 7 Days 4 Lines / 30 Days ANNOUNCEMENTS $ FREE ADS $1.00 each additional line AUTO FOR SALE ADS 34 GARAGE SALE ADS Phone: 762-2722 Monday thru Friday, 8:30 AM - 5 PM Toll Free: 1-800-655-6597 Fax: 228-934-1492 If your merchandise doesn’t sell in 7 days, just call us and we will run it for another 2 weeks - FREE. Ads must include a price, one item per ad and the price of the item must be under $2,000. Merchandise only, private individuals, no abbreviations and ads must be pre-paid. $ RESS 030 Lost & Found FOUND- White Cat, Long hair, blue eyes, Govt & Hanley. 875-5822 FOUND Bassett mixed, AL State Line identify (251)366-2917 lv mess. 040 Personals HAMMER HEAD Only God Knows How Much I Love You! Miss You All. Doodle De Do 050 Special Notices PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD This newspaper makes every effort to avoid errors in advertisements. Each ad nd is carefully checked an proofread, but when you handle thousands of ads, mistakes do slip through. We ask therefore, that you check your ad and if you find an error, report it to the Classified Department y by calling immediately 934-1445. We regret that we will not be responsible for more than ONE INCORRECT RTION and only for INSER that portion of the ad that may have been rendered valueless by such error. Each insertion is proof of publication, and it is the responsibility of the advertiser to check each inssertion and call the error to our attention. DEADLINE FOR CORRECTIONS: M-F 8:30 am - 2:30 pm (Fridays are deadlines for Sun. & Mon. Editions) Pets: Free to Good Home . . . . . . . . 485 Waterfront Houses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 580 Unfurnished Houses . . . . . . . . . . . 650 Pet Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 490 Waterfront Lots/Land . . . . . . . . . . . . 585 Rent/Share Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . 655 Mobile Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .660 Poultry & Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 495 Livestock/Feed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500 REAL ESTATE RESIDENTIAL Jackson County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 505 Moss Point & Esca . . . . . . . . . . . . . 510 Pascagoula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 515 Gautier/Vancleave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 520 Ocean Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 George Co/Lucedale . . . . . . . . . . . . 530 Condos/Townhouses . . . . . . . . . . . . 535 Homes in General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540 Farms/Farmland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 545 Lots & Land-Jackson Co . . . . . . . . 550 Lots & Land-George Co . . . . . . . . . 555 Lots & Land-Other Areas . . . . . . . . 560 Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 565 Mobile Homes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 570 Mobile Home Lots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575 Employment ■ Indicates Jackson County 103 REAL ESTATE COMMERCIAL 105 Building for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 590 Office Space for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . 595 Warehouse Space for Rent . . . . . . . 600 Business for Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 605 Comm. Property for Sale . . . . . . . . 610 Investment Property . . . . . . . . . . . . 615 REAL ESTATE RENTALS Camps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 620 Condos/Townhouses . . . . . . . . . . . . 625 Furnished Rooms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .630 Furnished Apartments . . . . . . . . . . . 635 Accounting/Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 800 Furnished Houses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 640 Air Conditioning/Heating . . . . . . . . 805 Unfurnished Apartments . . . . . . . . . 645 Appliance Repair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 807 Accounting Bookkeeping BOOKKEEPER - Part Time, A/P, Payroll, GL, Quickbooks. 2-3 days per week. Fax resume to: 251457-7329. CFO/Controller $100K + DOE. Prefer MPA or CPA for Metal Bldg. Component Mfg. in Gulfport, MS. Fax resumes to Goldin 228-896-4653 Work Wanted ED'S PAINTING & home maintenance. General contractor licensed & insured. 228-497-2266. Construction Bookkeeper Looking for a professional Exp Bookkeeper to manage job costs, receivable/payables and MOVING FROM OHIO, payroll. Exp with Looking for Full Time Employment Quickbooks, Excel and Word a must. Fax resume in to 251-631-3961 Mobile Area. 26 Yrs E. Shore, Full Charge Experience in Sheet Metal & Welding Accounting/Bookkeeping & Job Office Manager Duties. Shop, Also Management Strong GL, AP, AR, PR, Exp. P&L, HR, Tax exp req’d. Call 419-303-0158 or E-mail: Busy office w/growth hallidaycharters@yahoo.co potential. FT + Benefits. m Resumes to: PO Box 99, Stapleton, AL 36578. 105 Accounting Bookkeeping Accounting Firm on the Eastern Shore is Seeking P/T Paraprofessional w/ Min. 3 Yrs. Exp. Send Resume and Salary Requirements to P.O. Box 1719, Fairhope, AL 36633. E. Shore: Construction Bookkeeper Needed. Looking for a professional Exp’d Bookkeeper to manage job cost, A/R, A/P. FT, M-F. Salary DOE. Fax resume: 251-948-6024 w/sal req. Silver King Golf Course in Irvington, AL is seeking an ACCOUNTING POSITION ACCOUNTANT/BOOKwith local General KEEPER Contractor. Degree or non- Must have experience in degree acceptable. Salary the following areas: + health insurance. accounts payable, accounts Commensurate with educa- receivable, payroll, clerition and experience. Must cal. Must be computer litbe proficient with erate. Send resume to: Quickbooks and Excel. Silver King Golf Course, Reply to The Mobile 7960 Edgar Roberts Rd., Register PO Box #2488-430, Irvington, AL 36544 Mobile, AL 36630 AP/RECEPTIONIST - MS Clerical Excel & Word a must. F/T, Office Mon-Fri, hiring immed., RECEPTIONIST with expd only apply. Fax Light Accounting resume to: 251-544-4504. Experience Needed. Apply with Resume in Person at 1050 West 1-65 Service Rd S. Mobile, AL 107 RECREATION Aircraft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 705 Boats-Power . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 710 Boats-Sail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 720 Jet Skis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 730 Boating Equip/Serv/Supplies . . . . . 740 ATV/Off Road Vehicles . . . . . . . . . . 750 Campers/Travel Trailers . . . . . . . . . 760 RV Lots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 770 Motorhomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 780 Motorhomes for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . 790 SERVICES 107 Clerical Office Experienced REAL ESTATE ASSISTANT needed for Eastern Shore Real Estate firm. Email resume with salary requirements to reprof@bellsouth.net Admin Asst needed in Spanish Fort. Customer service skills & some computer exp. Previous work w/automotive a +. Great benefits & perks. 251-6266061. Drug test required. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS TO SELL, BUY, TRADE, FIND OR LEARN! JUST PICK UP THE PHONE AND CALL 762-1112 OR 875-8144 Attorneys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 810 Backhoe/Dozier Work . . . . . . . . . . . 815 Bath Tubs & Tiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 820 Building/Contracting . . . . . . . . . . . . 825 Carpentry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 827 Carpet Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .830 Child Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 835 Computer Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837 Concrete/Masonry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 840 Decorating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 843 Dirt and Top Soil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 845 Domestics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 847 Elderly Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 848 Electrical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 850 Home Improvement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 853 House Cleaning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 855 Investigators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 860 Lawn Care/Landscaping . . . . . . . . . 865 Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 870 Medical Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875 Miscellaneous Services . . . . . . . . . 880 Painting/Wallpapering . . . . . . . . . . . 883 Plumbing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 885 Pool Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 890 Roof/Gutter Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . 893 Septic Tank & Sewer . . . . . . . . . . . . 895 Tree Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 897 TV/VCR/Satellite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 898 Window Tinting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 899 TRANSPORTATION ■ Indicates Mississippi Ads Antiques & Collectibles . . . . . . . . . . 910 Cars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 920 Cars Under $2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 930 Sport Cars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 940 Sport Utility Vehicles . . . . . . . . . . . . 950 Trucks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 960 Vans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 970 Motorcycles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 980 Vehicle Rental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 985 Vehicle Parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 990 4'+06'4)4#6+10 %1705'.1450''&'& 61#55+56*744+%#0' -#64+0#'8#%7''5 VQOQPVJ%QWPUGNQT2QUKVKQPU#XCKNCDNG +PVJGHQNNQYKPICTGCU $KNQZK$TQQMJCXGP%CPVQP%NGXGNCPF%QNWODWU)WNH RQTV*CVVKGUDWTI*GTPCPFQ,CEMUQP.CWTGN/E%QOD /GTKFKCP0CVEJG\2CUECIQWNC2GCTNQT2KEC[WPG #UUGUU&KURNCEGF+PFKXKFWCNŏU%KTEWOUVCPEGU +FGPVKH[$CTTKGTU2TQXKFG%QWPUGNKPI +FGPVKH['ORNQ[OGPV6TCKPKPI1RVKQPU 4GSWKTGOGPVU /CUVGTQT$CEJGNQT&GITGGKP%QWPUGNKPI5QEKCN 9QTM)WKFCPEG%QWPUGNKPI%CTGGT)WKFCPEGQT [GCTUGZRGTKGPEGKPVJGCDQXGCTGCU 5GPF4GUWOGD[0QXGODGT 4GKPVGITCVKQP%QWPUGNQT /5&GRCTVOGPVQH'ORNQ[OGPV5GEWTKV[ #6601HſEGQH)TCPV/CPCIGOGPV 2QUV1HſEG$QZ ,CEMUQP/5 (CZ 'OCKNYKCAQIO"OFGUOUIQX TO PLACE YOUR AD NOW! Read the Classifieds THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS CLASSIFIEDS /&'5KUCPGSWCNQRRQTVWPKV[GORNQ[GT2TQITCOVJCVJCUCWZKNKCT[CKFUCPFUGTXKEGUCXCKNCDNGWRQPTGSWGUV VQKPFKXKFWCNUYKVJFKUCDKNKVKGU6&&66;(WPFGFD[75&GRCTVOGPVQH.CDQT/KUUKUUKRRK &GRCTVOGPVQH'ORNQ[OGPV5GEWTKV[/KUUKUUKRRKKUCRTQWFOGODGTQH#OGTKECŏU9QTMHQTEG0GVYQTM 762-CRAB Janis . . . .934-1463 Karen . . .934-1477 Paulette . .934-1476 Sasha . . .934-1441 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 825 Building Contracting FOUNDATION REPAIR REMODELING SPECIALIST 1 Licensed & Insured 228-806-1979 Residential & Commercial Remodeling, Roofing, Sheetrock & Flooring. Free estimates. 588-1159 or 217-2695 Quality Home Improvements, additions, repairs, tile, painting, decks, elect., plumbing, pressure washing. John 228-474-1321 / Cell 355-0421 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 840 Concrete/ Masonry BRICK WORK All Types, block, stone,etc. No job too Small. 20 yrs exp. Gary, 228-474-7070 848 Elderly Care I SIT For the ELDERLY in your home. References available. M-F 8-5, 228-990-9332 Home 853 Improvement Gulf Coast Maintenance & Remodeling. Locally owned, licensed & bonded Free Est. 228-218-7062 PAINTING, Carpentry, Electrical, Plumbing, Air Conditioning & Pressure Washing. 228-990-3010 Feeling Overwhelmed? We can help. From Demo to Restoration. Call Wally & Jennifier, 228-219-3221/ 228-588-9573 20 yrs exp / Ref Avail. A.P.S. INSULATION Main Street Builders, LLC Local Custom Builder State Licensed 25 Years Exp. “We Warranty What We Build” Call DUNCAN NOBLE, JR. Residential-Commercial Batts & Blown Rock Wool (251)478-7899 CARR’S PAINTING, Plumbing, Sheet Rock, Remodeling, Windows, Roofs, Clean-up, Flooring, Carpet & Tille. 217-0337 TOP GUARD Remodeling & Roofing (228)341-1009 (228)497-5800 We do it all! 4400 Vancleave Rd., Gautier, MS 228-522-0900 THE W GROUP, INC. General Contractor. All types of commercial & residential. 1-800-770-7710 HOME RESOURCES Plumbing, Carpentry, A/C, Clean-up & Roofing Call 228-627-8248 / 588-2992 835 Child Care CHILD CARE IN MY HOME Day & Night / Reasonable References Available 228-475-6919 Little House of Wonders Re-Opening Nov 8. Now Taking Applications We Offer Night & Weekend Care. 228-762-7528/ 228-218-1675 CHILD CARE Mon-Fri. 6am-6pm Christian Home Drop-ins Welcomed No Weekends 228-497-8109 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS TO SELL, BUY, TRADE, FIND PAINTING, Carpentry, Electrical, Plumbing, Air Conditioning & Pressure Washing. 228-990-3010 Husband & Wife Lawn Mowing & Leaf Mulching Free est. 228-217-6200 880Miscellaneous Services WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER desires weddings, anniversaries, etc. Reasonable, reliable, money-back guarantee, $200-$250 228-326-7361 NEED PHOTOS? For Insurance Purposes, For Hurricane Damages, & also Photo Resoration, Memories Portraits 228-475-68831 Ced’s Environmental Contractor Sheetrock Removal/ Remodel Home/Industrial Cleaning H/P water blast/ vac. truck Chemical spray/ insured 228-235-4157 BUY JUNK CARS Free Tow Offs! 228-235-2122 FOUR SEASONS LAWN CARE Debris & Tree Removal. Tractor work & Complete Lawn Care Service. 228-355-03773 Locally owned & operated BOBCAT, TRACTOR & TREE SERVICES, DEBRIS REMOVAL Reasonable Prices 228-990-5042 HOUSE & PRESSURE Washing. S & J Cleaning Sam Wilkerson, 228588–6392/ 228-990-1921 CRCA, INC remove, repair, rebuild, Residential Construction All Phases, 228-323-8327 MAID SERVICE Affordable Rates 219-0532 or 623-0595 Sheetrock Removal, Sheetrock Installation, Tree Removal, 228-217-0337 855 House Cleaning RENT -AMAID 497-4418 THE PHONE 762-1112 OR 875-8144 HURRICANE DEBRIS Clean-up, tree removal, lawn maintenance & care. Grass Goblin Lawn Care 228-806-4911 SHEETROCK, Painting, Roofing, Remodeling. Local contractor. 228-497-1811 Leave mess. PICK UP AND CALL 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 HURRICANE DAMAGE We remove sheetrock, insulation, furniture, carpet & yard clean-up. 228-475-3679 / 228-990-6253 OR LEARN! JUST Lawn Care / 865 880Miscellaneous Landscaping Services ROACH FENCE DECKS & Remodeling Reasonable rates Quality work 475-0528 or 228-355-0541 MULTI CRAFT DEMO * Licensed * Bonded * Supplies Furnished HOUSE CLEANING Honest & Dependable. Due to storm lost customers. Ref’s avail. 475-6340 or 990-7509 DALE’S ROOFING, 22 YRS LOCAL EXP All work top quality 228-990-1723 MOLD TREATMENT, SHEET REMOVAL & Replacement. Locally owned & operated. Licensed & Insured. Crediit cards accepted. 228-366-0443/ 228-424-3632 QUALITY FIRST ROOFING CO. In Business Since 1975 Where Quality Counts Free Estimates Licensed & Fully Insured 228-424-5042 TO PLACE YOUR AD NOW! 107 Clerical Office Part/Full Time Clerical/ Admin. Experience in Excel/Word & trans. Fax resume/sal req: 251-3407346 107 Clerical Office RECEPTIONIST/FILE CLERK for tax business. Good phone skills. 251-367-5324; 345-1011 to schedule appointment. 107 Clerical Office Assistant Manager For well established car title loan company in Mobile. Salaried position with benePersonal & Commercial fits. Begin at $28,000 annual. Lines Need a responsible, organized, detail oriented, nonsmoker. Insurance CSR Must have excellent adminis251-767-6550 trative and communication Position Available: skills. Duties include making Administrative Clerk PARTS/SERVICE SECRE- loans, taking payments, light bookkeeping, typing, and colTARY. needed. 2 yrs of computer lections. Fax resume to 251Apply in person, Great skills preferred. 476-5858. Include salary histoDane Apply at Coastal Cargo Trailers, 4229 Fellowship ry and goals. EOE. 228-769-1061 or send Administrative Assistant/Receptionist for well established general contractor. Send resume to P. O. Box 9131, Mobile, AL 36691 or fax: 251-476-5282 resume to P. O. Box 1365, Pascagoula, MS 39567 or fax 228-762-1551■ Experienced LEGAL ASSISTANT & LEGAL RECEPTIONIST are needed for local law firm. Call 251-433-7379 Need F/T Experienced Front Office Employee for Medical Practice job consists of pre-certification from insurance companies & receptionist duties, exc. benefits. Fax resume to 228-938-0705 mail to MS Press, P. O. Box 849, Attn. Box 779A, Pascagoula, MS 39568. Dr., Mobile, AL 251-660-1001. SMALL SPANISH FORT LAW OFFICE seeks Receptionist/General Clerk Office Assistant. Professional office environ- Full time, entry level position. Salary DOE. Some ment. Must have excellent communication skills, writ- receptionist experience required. Fax ten & verbal; computer knowledge. Send resume to resume to: 251-626-3776 P.O. Box 81427, Mobile, AL OFFICE 36689 MANAGER/LEGAL SECRETARY. Skills req’d: SECRETARY Needed For Typing, phone, greet Used Car Dealership, Exp. clients, computer. Auto Necessary. Apply in expense & salary DOE. Person: 5706 Hwy 90 W Submit resume to P. O. Theodore. Call 251-653-7745 Box 366, Mobile, AL 36601. or 251-391-7745 (After 5pm) Accepting applications for ■ Clerical Assistant needOFFICE ASSISTANT. ed. Multi-Line phone Must have good computer exp req, 228-497-3434 skills, customer service exp., and good telephone etiquette. Send to resume to The Mobile Register PO Box #2488-422, Mobile, AL 36630 ZAXBY’S® iS LooKinG FoR A FeW GooD EggS. If you like chicken. No, wait . . . if you looove chicken, don’t keep it inside! Shout it from the mountain tops! Scream it at the top of your lungs! Better yet, come to work for the Zaxby’s in town. • Good Pay • Flexible Work Schedule • Fun, Safe Workplace • Opportunities to Advance Zaxby’s is a different kind of restaurant with a different kind of attitude - from the food and service we provide to our guests, to the respect we provide to each other. Stop by the Tillman’s Corner location at 4385 Rangeline Rd, anytime Mon. - Fri. 9 - 5 or call for an appt. 607-7645 / cell (706) 614-6291. 3-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 FREE TOWOFF of Junk Cars & Trucks Anytime! 228-826-1709, 217-8171 RAYBORN’S BOOM TRUCK SERVICE 15 Ton Boom Truck 80’ reach. By the hour, day or week. 4 hour minimum. 228-218-3310 / 228-497-3311 Painting / 883 Wallpapering PAINTING, Interior & Exterior, Small Repairs & Pressure Washing. ree Est. 12 yrs exp. Fr 228-522-0104/ 478-718-6143 MINOR DRYWALL Repair, Most Textures Matched, 30 yrs local exp. 228-497-1903 Roof / 893Gutter Service COAST-TO-COAST Remodeling, painting, roofing, sheetrock, tree work, etc, etc, No job too large or too small. Please call. 228-497-9864 / 228-366-1771 ALL YOUR ROOFING NEEDS! / Licensed & Insured / Insurance Specialist / Free Estimate Financing Available 251-802-8202 BROTHERS CONTRACTING Roofing, framing, building, siding, & tree removal- Call 607-329-5994 ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ NEED A ROOF NOW??? V&W Roofing Contractors • Residential/Commercial • All Types of Roofing In Stock • Shingles In Stock • Bonded, Insured & Licensed Contractor • Family Owned Since 1974 • Call for Estimates 866-769-5140, 228-769-5140 or 936-788-4459 ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ROOF REPAIRS & REPLACEMENT of Any Type- Locally Owned ! 228-369-9721 ✰ ✰ ✰ MAGNOLIA ROOFING ROOF IMMEDIATELY! 35 Years Experience Home Roof & Small Repair / Guaranteed! ✰ 249-6368 ✰ ✰ ROOFING & LEAK Repairs. Shingle, Metal & Built-up. 228-475-3866 / 228-219-1290 GULF COAST ROOFING & Disaster Relief, since 1983, 1-866-6-FIXROOF 1-866-634-9766 SOUTHERN PRIDE CONTRACTING ROOFING & REMODELING Lics’d, Bonded, Insured Starting $145 per square 3-1130 Free Est. (228)-623 107 Clerical Office Receptionist/Administrativ e Assistant Cherry, Bekaert, and Holland, CPA’s is seeking a Receptionist/Administrativ e Assistant to answer and direct all incoming calls; greet visitors; oversee the Fed-Ex, UPS and mail that comes in and out of our office; distribute faxes, mail and packages; and perform a variety of additional general office clerical and administrative duties to include some light bookkeeping. The applicants must have prior experience as an administrative assistant and be proficient in Word and Excel. Excellent oral and written communication skills also required. Send resumes to: P.O. Box 16007 Mobile, AL 36616 251-343-3439 fax or email recruiting@cbh.com EOE M/F/D/V RECEPTIONIST / RUNNER for local law firm, people skills, dependable a must. $8.00/hr. Send resume to The Mississippi Press, P. O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568 Attn: Box 778-A ■ 109 ComputerData Processing 113 DriverTrucking 113 ■■■■ Programmer Full time, VFP expertise plus C++, SQL, Exchange, Java. Offices in West Mobile, AL. Email resume to jobs@enveloc.com Internet Call Center seeking motivated individuals to fill FT & PT order processing positions. $400/wkly + comm. DOE/ bnfts. Email Cvr Letter, Resume & Sal req’s to: 251-662-4971 or jobs@qaparts.com Attn Kurt FLATBED DRIVER NEEDED FOR DEDICATED SHORT-HAUL RUNS DriverTrucking ★ ★ 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 866-737-9920 113 DriverTrucking 113 113 SOUTHERN QUALITY MOTORS NOW HIRING: Experienced Manager, Sales Person & Secretary 251-649-3100 BALDWIN CONCRETE Dump Drivers needed. Trailer, Tri-Axle Trucks. HIRING DRIVERS Class Class B CDL DIESEL MECHANICS Positions in the Baldwin Co. area. Pay depends on experience. MOBILE GREYHOUND PARK now hiring Lead-Outs Apply within Evergreen Transportation DRIVERS NEEDED FOR SHORT HAUL AND REGIONAL RUNS $1000 SIGN ON BONUS Class A CDL. Call Mon-Fri, FOR THE FIRST SIX DRI8AM-5PM VERS 251-675-8831 * up to .33 cpm * great benefits (BCBS/401K) * late model tractors * bonus $ ★★★★ for safety & miles * 2yrs AAA ASPHALT OTR exp reqd Wright Transportation TANKER 1-800-342-4598 DAVISON OIL COMPANY LOCAL DRIVERS NEEDED Home almost every night. Bonus pay, holiday pay, sick and vac pay. If you meet these requirements: Local & Regional Route Drivers Needed, Must Have Class A CDL w/ HAZMAT, Min. Age is 25 Years * at least 23 yrs of age w/ 1 Year Experience. * minimum 24 mos tractorExcellent Pay & Benefits. trailer exp. Apply in Person at 8450 * clean MVR * Class A CDL Tanner Williams Rd. Call BALDWIN TRANSFER Mobile. 251-633-4444 DRIVERS NEEDED NOW! Start at $11/hr plus 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. CO at 251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! No Overdimensional Drivers Needed. Exp Necessary. Regional Loads, Home Most Nights, BC/BS Ins, Paid Holiday & Vacation. Call 251-6261344 Exp. Req’d. Werner has Call BALDWIN TRANSFER immediate openings for at entry-level semi drivers. 433-3391, ext 114 Our average driver earns more than $36K first yr. ★★★★ 60% Werner drivers get home nightly or weekly. 15 day CDL training now Mechanic offered in your area. For Night Mechanic a new career call Today CLASS A DRIVERS Travel I-40 & South. Exc. pay & benefits + 401K. 2 yrs. OTR exp. Call Palmer Transport 800-559-0114 1-866-280-5309 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. RINKER MATERIALS Gypsum Supply. DRIVER/STOCKER WEST READY MIX Positions Exp’d Ready Mix available. Min Class B DRIVERS w/ Clean MVR CDL Apply at 6295 Hogg Rd., License. Excellent benefits. A&M Portables Eight Mile, AL 36613. Zeroforlife Safety Inc. all 251-679-1052 Ca Program. Paid Now Hiring Local Route time off, Must be able to Driver, CDL Preferred. lift, ROOFERS MART Health carry 100+ lbs. Insurance & Benefits Avail. 40+hrs/week. hiring CLASS A & B Health card required. We are EOE, Drug free workplace. a Drug Free Co. 251-679-0933 FLATBED DRIVERS Apply Fast Growing Furniture at 7770 Tara Dr. Semmes for new Mobile Branch. Company in Foley looking 36575. 251-645-8586 Home nights, full benefits. for ew equipment. Drug Ne a residential delivery drivscreen EXPERIENCE DUMP er. required. Call Mitch TRUCK Experience a must. at 800-367-9683 DRIVER NEEDED Excellent Class A or B CDL pay with benefits. South Baldwin Area Call Andy 251-955-5151 Please call M-F 8am to 4pm F & H TRUCKING 51-971-6251 25 OTR Flatbed Drivers Min 2 yrs exp, FORD LUMBER CO Top Pay, Tarp Pay SARALAND, AL Call 228-696-0570 ■ Class A or B CDL Driver ■ EXP DUMP TRUCK Needed. M-F. Please apply COMPANY DRIVERS DRIVER Class A or B CDL 6 in person 251-675-5336 Needed for Local Work And Equipment Operator WAREHOUSE/DELIVERY 6 days on 2 days off Needed / 8400 Jim Ramsey Rd CLASS A CDL Required. Hourly Training Pay Vancleave / 228-826-3200 Fax resume/qualifications 2 Years OTR- 25 yrs old to 251-476-1296 Tanker & HazMat FLATBED DRIVERS Endorsements NEEDED READY MIX Call Danny 800-274-1055 Home Weekends. 2 Yrs or 251-443-7055. EOE. OTR exp TRUCK DRIM/F/D/V Payed $700-$1000 wkly. VERS BC/BS Griffin Industries seeks an Needed. ins. furn’d after 30 days. honest & dependable DRIGood benefits package. 800-368-2243, Atmore, AL VER for local recycling G YOUNG TRANSPORT SIGN ON DRIVERS & O/O’s Needed. BONUS! Local & Regional. Up to $1500 Signing bonus. Safety Apply in person at: Bonuses & Benefits avail. 2640 South McKenzie St, HazMat & Tanker Foley, AL 36535. Endorsement Req. Min 2 or call 800-239-3879. yrs driving exp & 25 yrs. of age. 866-457-0263 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS, F/T Hazmat Drivers, Class ROLL OFF DRIVERS A CDL, Hazmat endorseClass B License Needed, ment. Clean driving Increase in Pay. Please record, 2 + years hazmat Apply Within 6225 experience required, trainRangeline Rd. ing provided. Excellent pay, 401K, paid vacation, Gas and Diesel Truck company paid driver insurDriver Needed, Exp only. Good Benefits, BC/BS. 251- ance, sign on bonus. Call M-F 8am-5pm, 1-800-350679-1700 8094 ext 25 & 21 Delivery Drivers needed, CDL and non-CDL. 401k, Diesel Mechanic health avail. Mon-Fri. 251Needed 970-3845 DRIVERS NEEDED Good Money - Yellow Cab Co. 251-476-7711 After 7PM BALDWIN COUNTY CONSTRUCTION INC. Needs Class A or B CDL Dump Truck Drivers 251-947-7711 Craft Turf Farms Wingo Trucking FOLEY, AL EXPERIENCE A PLUS NO TOOLS REQUIRED COMPETITIVE PAY EXCELLENT BENEFITS CALL 251-955-2000 company to service area customers, equipment, delivery & light maintenance. Must have CDL & clean record. Good pay, benefits & safety bonuses. Home each night. Call 1800-536-9804 8am-4pm. DRIVERS WANTED Company Drivers & Owner operators. Must be 23 Yrs Old, 2.5 Years OTR Experience. Regional Work & Some Local Work. Call Randy at Safeway Transportation 8am-5pm 251-694-7000 Warehouse/Backup Driver Join a great team and be home nights and weekends. Requires Class A CDL w/Hazmat endorsement and clean MVR. Forklift exp required. Full Time 40 hour week, good benefits and competitive wages. To be considered, apply in person at 5445 Business Parkway, Theodore or fax resume to 251-653-8535 EOE. P/T DUMP TRUNK DRIVER tandem, at least one year exp. Call 251-366-2389. Steel W’hse needs dependable Class A Driver w/good MVR. Home nights. No rain out days. M-F, good pay/bfts. Must pass D/S, phy. 251-433-0514 HTI CDL A Drivers Needed, 2-4 Weeks Out, New Pay Rate, Mileage + Drop Pay, 401K & Direct Deposit, Sign On n Bonus! Two Years Experience Required. Contact Martin Baker: 251-653-0370 or 800-9667092 ■ Dairy Fresh Of Alabama, LLC is accepting applications for the position of Route Delivery Sales. Most be 21 years of age, clean driving record, Class B CDL preferred. Applications will be accepted at 4020 Jefferson St, Pascagoula, Mon-Fri 12 Noon until 5:00pm EOE ★★★★★★ 15 F/T OPENINGS ● Competitive Wages ● Medical Insurance ● Vacation Pay HARD WORKERS ONLY $400 WEEKLY START IMMEDIATELY CALL BILLY Contact Kevin Jackson, Gulf Shores 251-968-3388 Spanish Fort 251-621-7982 ★ 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 ★ 118 Financial LOAN OFFICER & PROCESSOR. Barr Group Mortgage, Mobile. Competitive salary and benefits. Exp. needed. Call 251-609-2333 Exp’d MORTGAGE LOAN PROCESSOR. Min. 3 yrs exp in Sub-Prime market. Top dollar paid. 251-6348942. 120 251-635-1704 ★★★★★★ Need dependable person to pull parts in used auto salvage yard. Must have complete set of tools. Full time M-F, 8-5. $10/hr. Apply in person 3267 Schillinger Rd, Semmes. Jackson County Board of Supervisor is seeking a qualified candidate for the position of Airport Maintenance Laborer. This position is responsible for maintaining the grounds, buildings, and facilities at the Airport. High School Diploma or its equivalent, and a minimum of two (2) years experience in this or a related field. Apply no later than 5:00pm on Friday November 14th at Human Resource, 2902 ut Rd, Pascagoula, Shortcu MS 39568 PRODUCTION ARTIST For hand painted backdrops needed. For interview call Greg 251-457-2388 Ext. 708 Exp. spray person needed. Must be familiar with conventional spray equipment. Apply in person 3007 Dial St. 251-457-2388 General EAGLE SECURITY & PATROL SERVICES, LLC now hiring PT/FT Security Officers. Call 251-649-5743 for appt. Mon-Fri 9am5pm. 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 KINDRED HEALTH CARE CENTER OF MOBILE RN’s Want To Make A Difference In Someone’s Life? Kindred Health Care is the third largest owner of long-term healthcare facilities with a presence in over 40 states. CDL ROUTE DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED We offer paid vacations, excellent benefits, incentive programs and more! Good Driving Record A Must! Drug screen and physical are required. Come Join Our Family by applying in person, MonThurs from 9AM-3:30PM at Gulf Distributing Co, 3378 Moffett Rd, Mobile, AL 36607. EOE. NO TELEPHONE CALLS PLEASE. USED CAR MANAGER Experience Required High Volume Dealership Looking For A Qualified Used Car Manager. WE OFFER: • 401K • Health Insurance • Life Insurance • Disability We care currently hiring RN’s and offering a $5,000 sign on bonus. We believe in maximizing the potential of our employees and promoting career advancement. As part of Kindred’s commitment to hiring and retaining outstanding employees, we offer the most competitive benefits program possible. This year’s program, HealthySteps, includes a wide variety of healthcare plans, Dental, Life/Disability, Vision, Paid Time Off Program, 401K, Tuition Reimbursement, Flexible Spending Accounts for full-time employees. If you are ready to join the Kindred HealthCare Team for a rewarding career, resumes may be faxed to: Please submit resume to: 251-479-0559 MOBILE REGISTER P.O. Box 2488-429 Mobile, Al 36652 SPRINGHILL TOYOTA Now Early Morning Delivery! We are looking for energetic, positive leaders with caring hearts and compassionate hands to care for out most precious commodity - our residents. to the attention of Perian Petcher, Executive Director or emailed to: Perian.Petcher@ kindredhealthcare.com 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 NEW STORE! If you are interested in a home delivery route, please call 4385 Rangeline Rd. (Tillman’s Corner) General AAAAAAAAA DUMP TRUCK DRIVERS CDL, Clean record. 251-8656203 ■■■■ DriverTrucking 120 OPERATORS & DRIVERS Class A or B CDL. Dump exp. needed. Apply in person: 1711 Prospect Ave., Pascagoula, MS 228-7620754 ■ A Class A CDL Driver Tarp pay, bonus pay, holiday, Class A CDL Req. Exp A sick and vac pay. If you meet w/ 2 years verifiable expe- Must. 251-653-5410 these requirements: rience. Forklift exp. help* at least 23 yrs of age ful. * minimum 24 mos tractor877-226-9088 call for an trailer exp. appt. * clean MVR OTR & LOCAL DRIVERS * Class A CDL Class B Driver’s for Cotton Must be 23 yrs of age. Clean MVR, hold a Class A Module Trucks. 7 days a Call Baldwin Transfer Co at week, 12 hours a day. $10 CDL. Domestic 251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128 BC/BS, paid vacation, 401k, an hour + overtime. 251$600 sign-on bonus 602-1828 For all drivers CNA/Caregiver, N/S, priGuaranteed $600 first PITTS & SON TOWING is vate home, W Mobile. Must 3 wks of employment now hiring HEAVY DUTY be avail. nights/weekends Rangeline Rd., Mobile ATTN: OTR DRIVERS WRECKER DRIVERS to 251-607-9270 251-660-9570 VAN & FLATBED work night shift. Must have 111 DriverTrucking 228-875-8144 or 866-843-8911 4-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS General 120 120 General 120 251-607-7023 VETERINARY ASSIS- NOW ACCEPTING TANT: Exp Preferred. Applications for Bell Ringers. Resumes: 7705 Cottage Hill Apply Mon-Fri., Must have 2 valid ids. 9am-4. 3217 Nathan Hale Ave., Pascagoula ■ AVON - Free Sign-Up! Earn extra $$ for Xmas! ISR 251-610-9846 GROUNDS PERSON needed. Apply in person MS National Golf Club in Gautier, 8am til 1pm 497-2372 Mon.-Fri. 228-4 WE ARE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR SECURITY OFFICERS. APPLY AT 3737 GOVT. BLVD. STE 205 IN MOBILE, AL. M-F 9AM - 3PM 251-6661091 PARTS PULLER NEED- EOEM/F/D/V ED Experience & tools a plus. Apply in person: Joe Pounds Auto Parts. 251-4734896 G Local Sign Co. need individual to help run small sign shop. Exp. necessary. 251-583-6583 G ■ NEEDED VOLUNTEER or Reasonable Person to assemble Alum. Shed. Must have tools. Has been without hot water since Tropical Storm Cindy. Call 712-9944 ASSEMBLER for light machine assembly, plastic & metal parts. Jackson County is seeking Permanent position. Call a qualified candidate for Mr. Miller 251-947-6990 the following position at Robertsdale the Jackson County Solid Waste Department. ■ Floral Designer P/T Rubbish Truck Driver; Experience Necessary Class B C.D.L. required. call for Apt. 228-875-6109 Apply no later than 5:00pm PRODUCTION PRINTERS on Friday November 14th and PACKERS needed for at Human Resources, 2902 night shift. Mon-Thurs Shortcutt Rd., Pascagoula, 2:30pm-1:15am includes 45 MS 39568. min lunch and 2 breaks. Pay starts between $7Warehouse Delivery Driver 9.00/hr. Need to be availFull Time. Apply Within able to start work 11-9-05. 932-A Butler Dr. Mobile, Benefits include BC/BS, AL Alfa, 401K, Christmas Club, Vacation, and paid AVON - ALL AREAS Buy or sell. Free gift! Ind. holidays. Apply at 3107 Halls Mill Road Mobile Rep. 36606. No phone calls. 1-800-572-4469, 645-1839 General 120 ELECTRICAL HELPERS Residential work. Semmes area. $7/hr. Will train. Leave info 251-6491120 Flex Hrs. 7-9 & 2-9 Shift No phone calls. Apply at JAGUAR CLEANERS 6405 Cottage Hill Rd. b/t 8-2 BULLARD CAR CARE We have openings for experienced Car Buffers, New Car Prep and Car Inspection individuals. Nice working conditions. Call Marvin, 478-7667 Located behind Joe Bullard Cadillac/Hummer Beltline at Cottage Hill Road CUSTOMER SERVICE REP Multi-Line Phones for a West Mobile Consumer Products & Distribution Company. Fax resume to: 251-445-0084 Rd, Mobile, AL 36695 Securitas Security Services 120 COUNTER HELP AARON‘S SALES & LEASING INVENTORY CONTROL MANAGER Of Pickup and Truck Customer Accessories. Exp. Req’d. Accounts Mgr Top Pay and Benefits. Fax Experience preferred but not Resume To Bob @ 666-8676 required. Must have good Or Email To driving record. Apply in per- bob@truckequipmentsales.c son: 940 N. Schillinger Rd. om General PARKING LOT ATTENDANT. Part time. Min. Wage. Background check req’d. 251-438-5919. DHL EXPRESS Collection Agency in Daphne Now Hiring Experienced Collectors. Call Betty at 251-447-0742 Outdoor Recreation Company looking for Teleservice Representatives exc work environment, flexible hrs., base + commission. Call 228-497-3594 ext. 8050 ■ Is seeking a service agent for AM Shift. Duties include customer service, front counter, phones, some warehouse duties and other duties as assigned. DHL is a global company that offers many opportunities for growth and advancement. Please e-mail your resume to jeff.billingsley@dhl.com or fax to 251-433-0502. ATTN: NOW HIRING Carpet Cleaner & Water Restoration. Must have valid driver’s license & good MVR. Must pass Drug test. Will Train. Benefits avail. Call for Directions. Service Master 251-653-9333. Maintenance Person Needed For RV Park, Good Pay. Call For Details 251-423-3087 OFFICE FURNITURE SYSTEMS INSTALLER Experience pref’d. $8.00/hr to start. Call 251-990-3058 AAA - Avon. Earn $$ for Christmas. $10 to start. Call 767-2048 Now Hiring Custodial Workers for Schools. No experience necessary 228-818-0021, lev message The Paralyzed Veterans of America, Bayou GulfState Chapter Located at 3004 Bienville Blvd., Suite 2, Ocean Springs, MS 39564 is hiring for the position of Clerk/Bookkeeper. Applicant must be comWorkers Needed Apply: puter literate and must Flowerwood Nsy, 9451 Old have exp in the Pascagoula Rd B/t March following programs: & McDonald Word/Microsoft Publisher VINYL SIDING APPLICA- 2003/Excel/Power Point. We are an equal opportuTORS Needed, Employee or Sub- nity employer. Salary Contractor. Also GUTTER dependent upon exp. Send resumes & salary inforINSTALLER Needed mation to the address listee Employe Only. Call 251-634-9122 ed above. EXPERIENCED AUTOMOTIVE PAINTER Needed For Auto Bake II, Schillinger Rd. Contact Billy: 251-639-9545 General ■ F/T Bill collector. Exp. Req, Salary + comm. & benefits. 228-475-1401 120 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 General 120 SEASONAL SALES & GIFT BASKET HELP needed immediately through Jan 1st. Apply in Person, e & Cheese, Andree’s Wine 403 Fairhope Ave., Fairhope General Field Technicians for a Water & Sewer Company needed in the Kiln & Ocean Springs area. Must have valid driver’s license & pass drug screening. 1800-866-3561 120 General 120 General CARMEN’S CHILD CARE, INC now accepting employment applications at both locations, 1361 Springhill Ave. & 201 Cox St. Trained & experienced TEACHERS only need apply. MAXI CLEAN HOME SVCES We are not looking for maids, housekeepers, nor janitors. What we are lookFULL TIME JOBS ing for are homemakers like yourself, who are lookPaid training in power ing for a supplemental or NOW HIRING: DELIVplant operations, welding, second income. If you’re LABORERS NEEDED for ERY metal working or mechanNOW HIRING looking for something difbrick work for Mobile DRIVERS. Apply Anytime ics. Bonuses as high as ferent to do, join our team. area. 251-751-2120 at $20,000. No experience Our original team cleaning GENERAL LABORERS for Steak-Out, 4680 Airport required. We provide tools. the State Docks Needed. Avg. WANTED: MERCHANDIS- concept is fast paced Blvd. Full medical and dental. Pay $10-$12/hour. Call ERS w/travel between units proHS grads and seniors ages Partners 251-675-6840, 656-5675 WAREHOUSE & For Baldwin & viding ample break time. 17-34. Paid relocation. For Mobile County Area. COUNTER HELP needed DELIVERY Help needed. more information call 1Our hours of 8:30 to 3:00 We offer paid vacations, Apply in person: Exp Required. 888-255-6289, M-F, 9-4. excellent benefits & more. allows time for family and Apply in Person, T & H Taylor Furniture, 11000 personal commitments. GCD is a drug free work CLEANERS, 1436 Hillcrest Hwy 63, Escatawpa. LUBE TECH place. Come join our famiRd No phone calls please. ■ Needed. If you’re interested in tryly by applying in person CAR ing something different, MOBILE HOME PERSON Monday-Wednesday from Good Benefits package WASHER give us a call 251-343-0044 8AM-4:30PM at: needed to block & tie Auto dealer needs hardGulf Distributing, 3378 Mobile Please Apply in person at: working individual who JANITORS Moffett Rd, Mobile, AL homes. 251-583-4998 2640 South McKenzie St, 2nd shift, part time, desires good, steady job. EOE. Foley, AL 36535. workers needed. Private Nice working conditions. DISTRIBUTION NO TELEPHONE CALLS or call 800-239-3879. school. Must be 21 or older, must PLEASE. LINEMAN Ideal job for retirees. Accounting firm has pass drug screening and PRESSERS NEEDED 251-470-9026 8am-3pm Experience a Must! immediate opening for a have clean driving record. No phone calls. 334-222-7022 Ext 25 FILE CLERK/RUNNER No Phone Calls. See Jason For More Details. Apply at Jaguar Cleaners Monday-Friday 8-5 position or Lee 6405 Cottage Hill Rd. with mileage reimburseJOE BULLARD MITDRIVER/DELIVERY ment. Experience in an SUBISHI MAINTENANCE TECHNIPerson Needed for Furn office setting helpful. Send 1017 S. Beltline HwyE/O/E Store, Growth Potential. CIAN resume to: Needed for Apartment Call 251-605-1137 ■ CAR PREP PO Box 160748, Mobile, AL Complex Apply in person, Large company has immeATTENDANT 36616 or fax to 251-342-0454 Mon-Fri, 9AM-4PM, 3800 diate openings for the folPart-Time Michael Blvd. EOE The Gulf Coast’s NEEDED IMMEDIATELooking for something to lowing departments: LY! ● Insulation Oldest Family do during the day? Qualified Flooring Want to meet some new ● Garage Doors Dealership has REWARD Installers Fireplace ● exciting people? an opening for: Call Liz 251-633-9996 YOURSELF ● Shelving & Gutters Enterprise Rent-A Car with Bonuses, Double Service Technician LAMAR ADVERTISING has openings for Car Prep Great benefits include Holiday Pay, 3353 Halls Mill Rd. Valid Attendants. As a Car Prep 401K, medical, dental, life Advancement opportuni& disability insurance. Business is Booming! Attendant, AL Driver’s License, Must have valid drivers ties, Flexible hours, Make great $$$ now. your duties will include able to pass physical drug Paid Vacations and Dealership experience general maintenance of license and pass drug screen, construction Health & tools needed. background, & able to our vehicles such as wash- screen. Apply in person & Life Insurance. work Preferred candidate ing, vacuuming, checking 2609 Old Shell Road, Mobile Join our team at the at heights. Apply in needs to be fluid levels and general HELP WANTED family owned Person. motivated, aggressive cleaning. Qualified candiBurns Oil Company. and detail oriented. dates will have a valid COMPAC FOOD STORES ALABAMA PIPE & SUPPLY Friendly Clerks & driver’s license, strong Precast Concrete Plant Now Hiring for all posiStore Manager work enthic and must be accepting applications for Apply in person to tions, starting pay $7 an Needed. available to work all LABORERS. Concrete experihour, excellent benefits. Glenn Branton Call Mike O’Quin at ence a plus but not required. shifts, including nights Please call one of the fol228-475-1555 Apply in person at 5721 Hwy and weekends. lowing locations: Higgins 90 W., Theodore Burns Oil Company For consideration, Rd. 661-0905; Kushla 675Equal Opportunity please apply in person at: Nursery & Mom’s Day Out 7447; Overlook Rd. 342Employer in Pascagoula 4403 Chicot St, Workers needed immedi0703; Theodore Dawes Rd. Pascagoula, MS 39581 228-769-1660■ 653-5545; Schillinger Rd. ately. Saraland 1st A/G. 907 e calls please No phone 602-5561; Tanner Williams Shelton Beach Rd. $6-$7/hr. Read the Classifieds EOE/ AA, M/F/ D/V 645-4143. 675-4216 CROWN DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP Crown Dodge Chrysler Jeep 120 General Paragon Systems, Inc., will be holding a Job Fair for armed security officers to staff prestigious federal contracts throughout Mobile and Baldwin County. The Job Fair will be held on November 8th, 9th and 10th at 951 Government Street, Fourth Floor, Mobile, AL, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM each day. Offers of employment will be given at the Job Fair. Interested candidates should bring proof of citizenship, gun permit, and high school diploma. Candidates with prior military or law enforcement experience are strongly encouraged to apply. Interested applicants who cannot attend, may alternatively call our toll free employment hotline at 866/533-7598 or e-mail their resume to apply@parasys.com. Paragon Systems, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer. STAFF Needed for Fairhope dry cleaners. New ownership. Exp. not necessary,Will Train! Apply: 702 N. Section St. Fairhope 251-990-0602; 6097956 Jackson County Board of Supervisor is seeking a qualified candidate for the position of Human Resources Generalist. Administering two or more functional within human resources, including, but not limited to recruitment, employees relations, benefits and compensation. A four-year degree in an area related to Human Resources preferred or minimum of two (2) years of experience in Human Resources field is required. (PHR) certification preferred). Apply no later than 5:00pm on Friday November 14th at Human Resource, 2902 Shortcutt Rd., Pascagoula, MS 39568 ■ THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Real Estate Showcase W e e k l y S h o w c a s e o f H o m e s i n J a c k s o n / G e o r g e G IN LD SO W T LIS NE BEAUTIFUL HOME ON ONE ACRE IN LAKE AVENUE AREA Spacious 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath brick home with luxurious master bath, library, office, formal living and dining areas, vaulted ceilings, floor to ceiling windows in back of home, tile and hardwood flooring throughout, 2 fireplaces, gourmet kitchen with granite countertops and tons of cabinet space, 2 water heaters, detached 2 car garage with workshop/bonus room and still so much much more. Contact Sara Moore for complete amenities list. #169237 Sara Moore 990-4444 Coldwell Banker Smith Homes, Inc. “BEAUTIFUL SECLUDED HOME - 2 ACRES - HURLEY” 3-Year old custom built home 3 or 4BR, 2BA. Features Oak hardwood cabinets, wonderful pantry & island. LR w/fireplace & Entertainment center. Ex-large master suite w/Jacuzzi tub & shower. $174,500. #169451 Betty Cobb 228-769-7283 or 228-588-2294 or 228-990-7436 Coldwell Banker Smith Homes, Inc. ELEGANCE IN THE COUNTRY NEW! 1 year old two story, Harleston 3-5 bdrms., 2.5 baths on 9.980 acres in a very desirable area. This elegant home offers 3,400 sq. ft., granite counter tops, stainless steel appl., breakfast rm., den, great rm., FP & gorgeous formal DR. Cherry hardwood flrs., ceramic tile, high ceilings & pond. Quality craftsmanship throughout this home. $375,000. See more pixs on www.evelynbrown.com VANCLEAVE 5 Bedroom 3 bath mobile home with 2,060 square feet on almost 2 acres of land in Lake O Pines area on 16621 Sierra Lane. Den with F/P, dining room, large kitchen, lage bedrooms and more. Only 4.5 years old. REDUCED! Don’t miss out! Shirley Coakley Betty and Raphael Shumock 228-324-3711 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty 228-588-6037 and 228-324-9966 Evelyn H. Brown Realty G T LIS G IN IN W C o u n t i e s W T LIS NE NE BEAUTIFUL LAKE VIEW This fabulolus 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage family home has a lot of square footage for the money! Features include hardwood floors, a large open kitchen, formal living & dining areas, a bonus room/studio situated on a lot with a gorgeous view of Lake Beardslee! Too much to list. $135,000. Visit CliftonRealty.net for additional photos. Greg Caplan 228-918-6135 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty SERENE COUNTRY LIVING Hurley, 10.5/A, 1800 sq. ft., 3/2 with spacious gourmet kitchen, granite counter tops, kit/bath, stainless steel appl. Quality throughout! Vaulted ceilings, remote gas log FP, Formal DR, Greatroom, large Mbdrm, bath with jacuzzi jet tub, walk in closet. Wrap around porches, 24x36 garage with bathrm, 2 drop sheds 12x36. Great buy at $258,500. View inside pixs at www.evelynbrown.com Betty and Raphael Shumock 228-588-6037 and 228-324-9966 Evelyn H. Brown Realty CUMBEST BLUFF - C.E. NALL RD. Extra nice home with lots of room. Spacious 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 4,300 sq. ft. living area, formal dining room, den/family room, fireplace, 4-car garage, tennis court, 2.25 acres. Many extras. ACADIAN HOME WITH 3 ACRES w/three acres. Only 5 yrs. old! This beautiful 3 bdrm., 2 bath home has so much to offer! Features include high ceilings in living room & kitchen, hardwood floors, and ceramic tile. Price includes a 30x50 metal building; a 20x40 shed, a deck, a well-kept above ground pool, all situated on 3 gorgeous acres, 5 minutes from I-10. A lot of home for the money! $140,000. Vernon Pierce Greg Caplan 228-588-6213 x105 Cumbest Realty, Inc. 228-918-6135 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty Wa ter fro nt ED UC D RE COMMERCIAL - 40 MINUTES TO COAST George Co. on Hwy. 63 South, 3,265 sq. ft. 2 bathrooms. Excellent location for developing truckstop, restaurant, offices. Lots of storage space. Paved parking for 50+ vehicles in front. Located on 3.02 acres. Great investment. $200,000. View pix at www.evelynbrown.com Betty and Raphael Shumock 228-588-6037 and 228-324-9966 Evelyn H. Brown Realty 2909 SHELL LANDING BLVD., GAUTIER “VIEW OF 8TH TEE” BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM PLUS HOME IN GATED SHELL LANDING GOLF COMMUNITY - with 2100 sq. ft. it offers 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, open plan, formal dining, eat in kitchen, granite counter tops, great room with gas fp, spacious master bath with Jacuzzi tub/separate shower, screened patio and pool with overflowing hot tub and still so much more. Contact Sara Moore #168378. Sara Moore 990-4444 Coldwell Banker Smith Homes, Inc. MAGNOLIA BLUFF NO HURRICANE DAMAGE in this 5BR, 3.5 bath custom built home with great room, office, large play room, over 3500 sq. ft. Only 2 years old on 1.67 ac. $374,900. PICTURESQUE WATERFRONT OVERLOOKS WEST PASCAGOULA RIVER! 4.40 Acres of lush, beautiful, landscaping, gorgeous mature trees, a 2200 sq. ft. 3BR 2BA home, open floor plan, brick floors, built ins, crown molding, large master BR with two walk-in closets, a sunroom w/deck, shop, and a 8x14 green house for a gardeners pleasure. No Katrina Damage! Other pictures on our website www.cliftonrealty.net $242,500 Dorris Kendrick Kevin Clifton 228-497-1800 Coldwell Banker Smith Homes, Inc. 228-324-3711 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty Vie w 120 General 120 General ABC Child Development Center of Biloxi & Ocean Springs Needed Immediately Teachers, Infant - Pre-K Call 228-818-6677 for Information & Interview Canvas Products Company has opening for INDUSTRIAL SEAMSTRESS. 251-471-5308 ■ Company needs F/T Alarm Installer. Good pay & benefits. Please Call 228-497-7316 Grounds Person & Maintenance Person needed. Apply in person 6427 Airport Blvd. Monday5. Friday, 9-5 120 General 120 ■ ROUTE DRIVER Needed for Local Vending Co. Experience Preferred, Benefits, 401k, Paid vacation. Apply in Person at 7900 Hwy 613 N. Moss Point, 9-11am or 1-3pm or Fax resume to: 228-475-1665 General 120 OFFICE ASSISTANT needed for Real Estate Co.. Must have computer exp. Call 217-0887 Mon.-Sat., 9am-6 ■ General CELLULOSE INSTALLATION & VINYL SIDING INSTALLERS 438-4814 120 General SECURITY OFFICERS 123 Hair StylistPersonal Service 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges PCH HOTELS AND RESORTS HAIRDRESSER NEEDED d.b.a. MARRIOTT’S eam Players Need Only Te GRAND HOTEL To Full and Part time positions Waitperson/Server (26) Apply! Call 251-990-9934 Also weekend Guard Shifts of needed 2/1/06 - 11/30/06 by *****Great***** Forklift Drivers & 6-8 hrs each. No experience, ■ Company needs F/T hotel in Point Clear to PARAMEDICS we will train you. **Stylist Opportunity** serve/deliver food and bevElectrician. Good pay & Laborers. Immediate to $15.00 hr. Call Capt. Ward 251-633-0994 If you love cutting hair in Openings! Call b/t 1-5pm, erage products to resort benefits. Please Call a 251-432-1054; 209-9243 EMT BASICS guests. Assist with openStaff Needed for 228-497-7316 fast-paced salon, we have a ing/closing of COOKS, PREP-COOKS, & to $11.00 hr. Commercial Cleaning. HOUSE MOVING NEEDED IMMEDIATELY Rare Opportunity for you! restaurant/food and beverEntry Level Experience with large First Responders Off-shore Hands Needed. GROUNDSKEEPER / & FOUNDATION WORK (no age area; set-up/clean/tear Must have own transporta- buildings a plus. $7/Hour. to $9.00 hr. clientele needed), as we down work station; preEOE / Gulfport Marine Caretaker needed. Apply tion, valid driver’s license 251-661-3660 provide Security Officers Employment. 228-864-9797 in person at: Serene pare sidework; take guest ■ LABORER Apply at awesome floor traffic, Memorial Gardens, 12800 & able to pass drug test. order, advise kitchen perto $8.00 hr. Starting pay $10/hr. 251-633- 8400 Jim Ramsey Rd, Exp’d FT FLORAL salary, Hwy 613 N., Moss Point, sonnel of items ordered, 9883 DESIGNER Vancleave, M-F, 7-5 commissions, and benefits! serve/ deliver requested Uniforms & Benefits provided MS 39562 228-475-1246 ■ for Eastern Shore. Call CALL 251-455-6548 TODAY items and present check to to eligible employees. $7-$12/hour, PT/FT SALES CLERK needed Full, part time, temporary 251-626-6323; ask for Dan Immediate Opening for guest; and clear Hair salon looking for Very busy prof. seeks for Boutique. Some sales and permanent assignments. Full Time position of table/remove tray from Shampoo and Customer Moorer YMCA needs dependable person for exp. req’d. FT & PT. Warehouse Personnel. guest room. Option of Service Assistant. 4358-C LIFEGUARDS & SWIM errands, laundry, shopping, 217-0887 Mon-Sat 9am-6■ Forward resume to: Primary duties are loadOld Shell Rd. 251-343-8106 shifts: 6a-2p or 11a-7p or office help, more. Ideal Emergency Services Partners INSTRUCTORS. Great job ing & unloading freight 5p-1a. $5.98 an hr /$8.97 We are now hiring F/T P.O.Box 161098 for candidate can travel occaO/T. Refer to PCH Hotels Mobile, Alabama 36616 college students, flexible trucks. Benefits availsionally and is avail. more Tree climbers. Must able. Apply at Baber’s and Resorts dba Marriott’s Attention HR Manager have 2 yrs exp w/ drivers hours than wkdys. E-mail: (No Email to: license. $15 per hr. & great pay. 251-438-1163 Inc., 2500 Amonett St., attachments) emservpartners@yahoo.com Pascagoula, MS 39567 ■ or 251-421-2959 stalwartmgr@yahoo.com 228-860-2667 Read the Classifieds Emergency Services Partners has immediate openings for the following professionals: G 5-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 WANT ADS 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges Grand Hotel J.O.# AJL227839. BELLPERSON (10) needed 2/1/06 - 11/30/06 at hotel in Point Clear to assist guests with the unloading, storage, delivery and loading of luggage and other guest property. Duties also include, transferring luggage and guests, safe/securing and proper identification of guest personal items and rendering personal assistance and furnish information and directions regarding hotel facilities and surrounding area. Transport guests and luggage throughout the property. Option of shifts: 6a-2p or 2p-10p or 10p-6a. $6.25 an hr /$9.38 O/T. Refer to PCH Hotels and Resorts dba Marriott’s Grand Hotel J.O.# AJL228126. BOTH POSITIONS: NO EXPERIENCE 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges REQUIRED. 40 hrs a week + up to 5 hrs of overtime. Five (5) days a week (Some weekends required). Must be authorized to work in United States and able to complete an employment application. and must pass a pre-employment drug test. If needed, housing is available to employees for $85 per week. If residence is outside Point Clear, AL employer will pay reasonable cost of transporting employee from employee’s residence to Point Clear, AL at the beginning of the employment in February and back home at the end of employment in November. Contact Alabama State Employment Service, 200 West Michigan Ave., Foley, AL 36536 or your local state Employment Service Office. EOE THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Real Estate Showcase S h o w c a s e o f H o m e s i n J a c k s o n / G e o r g e C o u n t i e s SO LD SO LD W e e k l y 255 HENRY COCHRAN ROAD Beautiful 1.5 story, 3,639 sq. ft. modern brick home on 1.44 acres. Home features 4br/3ba, double garage, walk-in closets, fireplace, cathedral ceilings, granite counter tops, ceramic tile, hardwood, carpet, and much, much more!!! Must See Today!!! Dina Naron 601-947-2106 or 601-947-0404 Bobinger Realty, Century 21 3803 PASCAGOULA ST. Swimming pool, rental cottage, extra large den, fireplace, approx. 2914 sf, no hurricane damage in the past 63 years. 2/3 or 3/4 of an acre. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. $251,000. EAST CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT LAND LOOK NO FURTHER!!! Build your dream home on 5 plus acres wooded parcels 20 miles North of I-10 on Hwy. 63. Carla Rutledge 228-872-2598 or 228-327-4488 Susan Tolar Realty 437 MELISSA DRIVE Loaded with amenities! Brick entry provides a warm welcome to this stylish home. Vaulted ceiling, arched doorways, fireplace, formal dining room has French doors, back patio. Breakfast room has bay window. 3 bedroom and a study or 4th bedroom, 2 bath, huge laundry room, all 3 brs are large with walkin closets. 2356 sq. ft. home features accent lighting, crown molding, surround sound stereo wired in 4 room, living area has been elegantly painted. Short walk to Biloxi's back bay. $295,000. PALATIAL COLONIAL ON 8/A HARLESTON 4 bedroom/2.5 bath & 3200 sq. ft. Suspended stairwell overlooks vaulted GR & Foyer, FP. Split brick & hardwood flrs with unique, split brick sundial in center of GR. Custom Kitchen/breakfast area & bar, formal DR w/sep butler’s buffet. Lg MBR with vaulted bath with his & her vanities. 8/A fenced with barn, front/back/side porches. $239,900. Evelyn Brown 228-219-6050 or 877-588-6050 Evelyn Brown Realty ‘SPACIOUS AND AIRY” Large home in Delmas Estates with approx. 2,800 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, great room w/trey ceiling and frpl., large eat-in kitchen, large sunporch, new opener and garage door, new hot water heater, new A/C compressor since hurricane, needs sheetrock 4 ft. Asking $175,000. Gallery St. “GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR MORE SPACE” Belair St., Pascagoula, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, approx. 1,520 sq. ft., house needs sheetrock throughout, needs new kitchen cabinets, needs bath fixtures, being sold “as is”. Great opportunity, $60,000. Kathy Walley 762-7530 Gary Smith Realty REDUCED!! 3730 BAYWOOD, MOSS POINT 2 Lots, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, basement, den with extra kitchen, over 3,000 sq. ft., buy early and pick your carpet and paneling for den area. Shirley Coakley Mac Clopton Kathy Walley Shirley Coakley 228-769-7777 John Jones & Associates, Inc. 228-861-2270 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty 762-7530 Gary Smith Realty 228-769-7777 John Jones & Associates, Inc. 5519 ORLEANS CR. Located in Chateau Lake Subdivision. Completely remodeled, new carpet, tile, kitchen cabinets, bathroom, formal living room, den, family room, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, $84,000. Shirley Coakley 228-769-7777 John Jones & Associates, Inc. PRECIOUS HOME ON PONTIAC! Great Ocean Springs home conveniently located near O.S. Hospital, Hwy. 90 & I-10. Features high ceilings, walk-in closets, a covered front porch and a fabulous back deck & hot tub for your entertaining. This cute home also has a brand new roof! Call Kevin Clifton at Clifton Realty today for details! Won’t last! Priced at $134,900 Kevin Clifton 228-324-3711 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty 326 FERGUSON This cute home is conveniently located near area schools. Features a front covered porch and patio. High ceilings, a generous sized kitchen and large closets. It won't last long. Call Kevin Clifton for additional details at (228) 324-3711 or (228) 818-9606. Kevin Clifton 228-324-3711 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty RELAX BY THE POOL 1501 Gallery St. - Pascagoula - Delmas Estates. 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 9 ft. ceilings, beautiful crown moulding, garage, approx. 2,400 sq. ft., sheetrock needed 3 ft. down, $179,900. HEAVENLY HOME ON HANOVER! Well-kept home located in quiet area of St. Martin. Features casual living area, as well as formal living; ceramic and hardwood floors, Master BR includes a FP and dbl. closets. Added bonuses include new thermo-pane windows, interior storm windows, new A/C unit, deluxe hot water heater, & aluminum storm panels. New roof in process. Only minor damages from Katrina. Won’t last long! $163,900. Kathy Walley Kevin Clifton 762-7530 Gary Smith Realty 228-324-3711 or 228-818-9606 Clifton Realty Our Real Estate Showcase spotlights quality homes for sale and helps to quickly sell these fine properties. To have your listing featured among Jackson County’s prime offerings, call Peggy Burnham in our Advertising Department at (228) 219-5215 6-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges DAYS INN & SUITES, TILLMAN’S CORNER NOW HIRING Front Desk & Housekeeping GUIDO’S/VINNY’S Expd Only. Must be able to in Oakleigh is hiring exp’d work Kitchen help. Apply within, any shift. Apply in person: 351 George Street. NO 8AM - 3PM. CALLS. BARTENDER NEEDED: Daily Double, 7311 Theodore Dawes Rd. No Phone Calls Please. Our hearts go out to all the victims of Hurricane Katrina. In the wake of this tragedy, McDonald’s would like to help. We are now accepting interviews Exp’d WAIT STAFF. Must for Crew, Maintenance & Exp’d Managers for FT, be mature, pleasant, appealing. Split shift 11am- PT or Temp. positions. If we can help you, please 2pm & 5pm-10pm. Apply: Captain’s Table, Battleship give us a call. 251-478-0701 Parkway on the Causeway. ARE YOU ANXIOUS FOR NOW HIRING ALL POSI- A GREAT OPPORTUNITY AND EXPERIENCE? All TIONS Please apply in person to Mississippi restaurants are hiring for Crew & Shift Ramada Inn I-65 on the s. Managers at premium pay. Beltline next to Bumpers Apply at any Mississppi NO PHONE CALLS restaurant or fax PLEASE Delmonica Washington 251662-0285 or email: delNow Hiring. Do you have moni2@aol.com what is takes to join our RESTAURANT MANprofessional security AGERS team? & GMS NEEDED If so: Apply in person Sammy’s, Great Way to JumpMobile, 3106 Airport Blvd, Start Your Career. b/w 2pm-8pm. 251-479-8179 License fee required. Multi-Unit Restaurant Co. NOW HIRING now seeking exp’d manAll Positions agers. $75k potential. Exc. SERVERS, BARTENDERS, compensation pkg, ins., DISHWASHERS & BUSSERS. bonus. Resume to: Apply in PO Box 1985, Mobile 36633 Hiring Dancers For Bachelor & Bachelorette Parties No Exp Req. Call Steve 251-604-4132; 649-8939 lv msg. person ONLY Mikato Japanese Steak House, 364 Azalea Rd. Between 1-2 Mon-Fri. DIAMONDS Is Accepting Applications for Dancers & Doormen. Please Apply in Person after 7pm at 4664 Airport Blvd. See Lamar. No Phone Calls. 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges 125 RestauratHotel-Lounges Needed SERVERS, CRACKER BARREL in the KITCHEN STAFF, HOST, Eastern Shore Center is DINING ROOM MGR. Now Hiring for all posiBeach House Grill on tions n ● Full & Part Time Causeway. Apply in person ● Great benefits ■ EXP. HOUSEKEEPER ● Flexiblle schedules & Night Desk Clerk. No ● Top pay ASHBURY HOTEL & phone calls please. Apply ● $200 sign-on bonus. SUITES at Deluxe Inn & Suites. No phone calls please. Now Hiring for the 7105 Hwy 63. Moss Point. Apply in person CRACKER Following Positions: BARREL FRONT DESK CLERKS 30227 Eastern Shore Center and HOUSEKEEPING ● Front Desk Spanish Fort, AL PERSONS needed for ● Banquet Server & Set Up Airport Inn. Please call ● Room Attendants THE PILLARS 251-344-3410 and ask for Is Hiring Alex Excellent Starting Pay BC/BS, Holiday Pay, Vac. FRONT DESK CLERK MANAGER & PANTRY Apply in person at 7AM-3PM. Apply Best CHEF / LINE CHEF 600 S. Beltline Hwy. Western Best pay in Mobile. NO PHONE CALLS Inn, Battleship Parkway, Benefits PLEASE on the Causeway. avail. Apply within MonFri Now Hiring for SERVERS, HOLIDAY INN 2-4pm 1757 Government St. BUSSERS & LINE COOKS BELLINGRATH Please apply in person is looking for the best in Heron Lakes Country Club, LONE STAR STEAKthe hospitality industry. If 3851 Govt Blvd. Immediate HOUSE you Full & Part Time open3704 Airport Blvd, Mobile are a smiling, motivated, ings: guest service oriented per- ● Dining Rm Supervisor HOMEWOOD SUITES son come join our team by HILTON AM & PM shifts today! Is Now Hiring For: ● Banquet Housemen/ GUEST SERVICE MANset-up NOW HIRING: AGER ● Banquet Supervisor ● Housekeepers SUITE ATTENDANTS ● Waiters/Waitresses/ ● Houseman GUEST SERVICE Bus persons ● Bellmen AGENTS ● Diishwashers ● Bartenders Great Benefits & Great benefits avail. DOE. Opportunity ● Cocktail Servers Please apply in person for Growth. Apply within Mon 8am-12 Noon or at: WE OFFER: Tues-Fri 1-4pm. 530 Providence Park Dr E. ● Competitive Pay Valet Needed for night Email: homewood.mobile@ ● Paid Time Off shift at Sammy’s, Great nobleinvestment.com ● Holiday Pay, Vacation Pay!! Call Steve 251-604HOUSEKEEPERS NEED- ● Major Medical 4132; 649-8939 lv msg ● Dental ED Exp’d SERVERS & HOSTGood benefits. No experi- ● Positive Work Environ ESS needed at Spot of Tea ence NO PHONE CALLS Restaurant, 310 Dauphin necessary. Call Microtel PLEASE St. Inn Suites, Daphne. 251-621Y IN PERSON. APPLY Apply in person btwn 7am 7807 5465 Highway 90 West and Read the Classifieds Mobile, AL 36619 10 am. No phone calls. Energetic, Reliable WAITING STAFF x 3. Apply in person at Jericho Cafe, 5951 Old Shell Rd. Across from The Mitchell Center USA. 3.9% APR FOR 128 Management 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 128 Management STORE MANAGER w/ Retail Furn. Sales Exp. $40K + Benefits. Call 251605-1137 ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ Automotive Used Car Sales Manager Hill-Kelly Dodge-Jeep, a high volume-award winning ‘‘E’’ Dodge dealership located in Pensacola, FL is now accepting applications for a Used Car Sales Manager. Candidate should have prior sales management experience with impeccable references, be highly motivated, well organized and have prior work experience in a CSI oriented environment. SALARY: $23,400.00 to Top pay and benefits pack$34,400.00 per year based on age. education & experience. For a confidential interview call LOCATIONS: Gulfport, Ocean Mr. Tom Reed at 850-476-9078; Springs, Mobile & Baton OR FAX resume w/ history, Rouge. references and salary requirements to 850-478-2235. WORK EXPERIENCE: 1-2 E.O.E. Drug-Free Workplace. years minimum ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ EDUCATION: HS, GED or SALESPERSON above APPLY IN PERSON: AMERICA’S THRIFT STORES 312 Schillinger Road Mobile OR E-MAIL TO ethrift@americasthrift.com NO PHONE CALLS Read the Classifieds Apply in person, Red Tag Furniture, 5363 Hwy 90 W, Mobile. 130 MedicalDental MEDICAL ASSISTANT to work with Orthopedic Surgeon in patient care. Solo practice in West Mobile. Hours 8-5 or negotiable. EOE. 251-479-1441 preferably between 8-5, week days. THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS 60 MONTHS! AVAILABLE ON ALL NEW 2005 MODELS! LARGEST SELECTION OF TRUCKS EVER! 2005KS DISA C ! TRVUE YOU $$$ ES INCLUDING ALL NEW REB STER A ATE AT B E TO S REDESIGNED R 0 5 STILL O $72 T IN P U 2006 RAM EFFE CT SPECIAL PICKUPS, MEGA SHIPMENT CABS AND DAKOTAS T GREA N OF TIO C E L SE THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 762-CRAB 762-CRAB Janis . . . . .934-1463 Karen . . . . .934-1477 Paulette . . .934-1476 Sasha . . . . .934-1441 AL BODDEN USED SUPERCENTER & WE’RE OPEN & HERE FOR YOU! $750 2006 RAM PICKUP - REDESIGNED - G R E AT SELECTION OF JEEPS JEEP COMMANDER SPECIAL NOTICE! Buying From Auction Weekly. TELL US What You Want And We Will Buy It For You! EVERYTHING CHARGER RT 300’S IN STOCK! DAYTONA IS HERE! PT CRUISER PACIFICA JEEP WRANGLER JEEP LIBERTY DURANGO CARAVAN DAKOTA 2005 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE SUPER BUY! 2005 DODGE NEON SXT’S GAS SAVER! 00 Our Prayers Are With The Gulf Coast As We Begin To Build JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LARGEST SELECTION OF PROGRAM CARS EVER! 250 OVER OUR COST $ HUGE SELECTION OF 2500 & 3500 DIESEL 2006 DODGE MEGABAB PICKUPS! Largest Cab on the Planet STARTING AT $12,995 5 STAR CRASH RATING GAS SAVER! 2005 DODGE GRAND CARAVANS 2005 CHRYSLER SEBRING’S Stow-N-Go, Rear Video STARTING AT Save $$$ $13,995 2005 DODGE RAM PICKUPS HURRY, THEY WON’T LAST LONG! AT D DO OD DG GE E C CH HR RY YS SL LE ER R JJE EE EP P Main Street • Moss Point 475-9611 1-800-452-4341 OLDEST CHRYSLER DEALER ON THE COAST THE FAMILY STORE for 28 YEARS! 2707 SHORTCUT ROAD • PASCAGOULA • 769-1660 shop online @ www.crownd.com All Prices Plus Tax, Ttle & Fees, 3.9% through Chrysler Financial, WAC, in lieu of Rebate. 130 MedicalDental ■ RN/LPN Are you- a compassionate caregiver? - a motivated professional? - interested in working in a resident centeered environment? We have an opportunity for you on the 3-11 and 11-7 shift at River Chase Village, a quality home with new ideas about long-term care. 228-522-6700 ★★★★ CNA CLASS SAAD’S CNA TRAINING CLASS Has Openings For Our Next Class $275 PLUS $40 BOOK FEE Starts November 7, 2005 Call 251-343-9600 LPNs or RNs ● Full-Time 2PM-10AM ● RN: Full-time 10P-6A AND PRN’s ● All Shifts Must have Alabama Nursing License and possess a working knowledge in long term care. New wage scale. Pay Based on Experience. Benefits available, 401k plan. Apply in person at: KINDRED HEALTH CARE 1758 Springhill Ave., Mobile, AL. EOE 130 MedicalDental PHYSICAL THERAPIST Full & Part-Time & PRN Alabama License Required SPEECH & LANGUAGE PATHOLOGIST PRN or Part-Time. Must have Masters Degree & Alabama Licensed. CCC. Dental Office Admin Clerk Multi dentist clinic needs self motivated indiv with ’‘whatever it takes‘‘ attitude for busy front desk, must have exp processing dental insurance claims, patient scheduling, etc. Send resume and ref’s to Facility Manager, 2727 Pleasant Valley Rd. Mobile, AL, 36606 or fax 251-479-4709 DENTAL HYGIENIST, part time. Working Monday & Tuesday. Fax resume: 251-633-8061 EXP. DENTAL ASST. INSURANCE CLERK NEEDED for large Medical Billing Fast paced, non smoking Company. Previous practice. Friendly teamMedical Insurance players filing a must. Good beneonly need apply. Fax fits, M-F, 8-4:30. Send resume resume 251-342-1561 or send to PO Box 9977, Mobile, AL to 36691 Insurance Clerk, P.O. Box 70187, Mobile, AL 36670 File Clerk needed at Office, P/T, 12:30★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Doctor’s 5:00, Mon-Fri. Fax resume to 228-875-1335 ■ RN’s RN’s needed for Hurricane Stricken areas: New Orleans, Mississippi Gulf Coast, Texas & Florida. High compensation including high expense allowances, at least 3 week stays. For more information contact: Saad’s Healthcare Personnel, 1515 University Blvd or call 251-343-9600. EOE ★★★★★★ ■ CNA’s Are you- a compassionate caregiver? - interested in working with a top- notch staff? - looking for a low streess, resident centered environment? We have a full time opportuniy on the 3-11 and 11-7 shifts for the right CNA. Come visit and see how rewarding health care SHOULD be. 228-522-6700 130 MedicalDental 135 Full-Time Assistant. Must be energetic & friendly. Exp. preferred. Send resumes to P.O. Box 249, Montrose, AL 36559 ■ CNA NEEDED For More Information, Call 228-474-3201 LPN for Neurology practice. Send resume: 6701 Airport Blvd., B-215, Mobile, AL 36608 LPN needed Mon-Fri for busy Internal Medicine Office. Fax resume to 228-875-1335. ■ PRN Occupational Therapist Needed for Orthopedic Practice, Hand Experience Preferred. Send Resumes to: P.O. Box 86144 Mobile, AL 36689 E.O.E. DENTAL HYGIENIST Full-Time position in Pediatric Dental Practice. Successful applicant must demonstrate good communication skills and be able to work cooperatively in an active team environment. Please send resume to The Mobile Register PO Box #2488428, Mobile, AL 36630 OffshoreMarine Experienced Deckhands Experienced 100 Ton Near Coastal Captains. Competitive Pay Scale. Good Benefits. 800-245-9825 or Apply Online at lytalenterprises.com 100 Ton Captains Lic/Unlic Engineers, D/H’s NOW HIRING! TOP PAY! G Sign On BONUS! NO AGENCY! NO FEES! Full Charge Bookkeeper needed for busy medical Apply in person at: KINDRED HEALTH CARE office. Must have general 1758 Springhill Ave., Mobile, ledger exp., AP, bank recAL. onciliation & payroll exp.. EOE Please send resume to 2953 Bienville Blvd., PMB CNA/Caregiver, N/S, private home, W Mobile. Must 121, Ocean Springs, MS 39564 ■ be avail. nights/weekends 251-607-9270 Exp. Dental Assistant The Medical Oncology wanted for busy estabGroup in Gulfport is looklished office. Please fax ing for an RN with chemo resume to 228-712-2370 exp. and/or exp. in accessing ports. Exc. working environment and benefits pkg. Fax resume to: 228864-8053 or mail to PO Box 1210, Gulfport, MS 39502 7-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 INTERNATIONAL BOAT RENTALS GRAND OPENING! Mobile Office 6215 RANGELINE Bldg. 205 141 Professional -Technical control. Qualified candidates will have at least (5) years experience in the Construction Industry. Knowledge and Competence with Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, Access, advanced Outlook). Heavy spreadsheet and data entry A+. Ability to learn new programs such as Microsoft Project and Primavera. Please email or fax resume, salary requirement, along with (3) business references to; cowan@gawest.com (251)675-0591 EEOC 141 Professional -Technical Certified Water Operator & Waste Water Operator needed. Must have valid driver’s license & pass drug screening. 1-800-866-3561 ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN 5 yrs exp for commercial architecture firm in Mobile. Salary DOE; full benefits. Fax resume to 251-343-5505 The Town of Pine Hill has an Opening for CERTIFIED POLICE OFFICER. Salary negotiable. EOE. For info call Chief John Brown at 334-963-4351 Civil Estimator and Project Manager. Autocad Mechanical Experience with Site Work Detailer and Utilities. Fax resume ★★★★★★★★★★ Needed. Entry level. to 251-631--3961 TOWBOAT PILOTS Vacation, insurance. Send ENERGETIC CERTIFIED resume to Engineering Warrior & Gulf Navigation TEACHERS needed at Manager, PO Box 249, Sylvan. Send resume to: Company, Chickasaw, AL Saraland, AL 36571 is currently seeking USCG 820 S. ESTIMATORS University Blvd. Suite 2-C, Licensed Towboat Pilots. Now taking applications Successful candidates will Mobile, AL 36609 or fax for motivated individual ■ MEDICAL ASS’T - F/T, hold valid USCG master of resume: 251-460-0651 for Estimator/Project Medical office experience towing vessel- inland and Manager for the Gulf Coast Termite & Pest western river license, pass required. Excel area. Minimum 6 years company physical, and Control Tech benefits. Fax resume experience. Competitive to 228-938-0705 or mail to drug test, and hold valid wage and benefit package. Position open for Termite & All applications are confiMS Press, P. O. Box 849 drivers license. Call 251Attn. 779A. Pascagula, MS 452-6022 or fax resume to: Pest Control Technician. dential. Fax resume to 251251-452-6032 Locally owned and operated. 661-1181 or apply in person 39568 Family like atmosphere. C. Duke & Associates, ALL AMERICAN Growing company. Great J. 1716 OPHTHALMIC ASSISIndustrial Park career opportunity. Min 1 year TANT MARINE Drive, Mobile, AL 36693 experience. Send resume to: Looking for a great place Bugmaster Exterminators, ***Boat Jobs*** to Retailwork? We are looking for a NOW HIRING! TOP PAY! PO Box 9115, Mobile, AL 36691. GREAT BENEFITS! motivated, experienced Stores Immediate openings for AB’s, Mississippi Security Police Ophthalmic Technician OS’s, Captains, Eng, Unl Eng now hiring Security offi★★★★★ Full-time. w/emd exp., Q-Med’s, CUSTOMER SATISFACcers for our Chevron Benefits incl. BC/BS. Tankermen. Exp. Offshore & Pascagoula Refinery TION Certification a plus Inland Deckhands. Entry COORDINATOR ract. Prior Law Contr level deckhands needed up to Enforcement or Armed College educated preferred SURGERY SCHEDULER $95 per day. www.americanForces Exp preferred. to assist sellers of window Medical Office Exp. crewing.com Apply in person 3003 treatments/upholstery in Required. or call 251-443-7771 Pascagoula St., store setting. 251-479-0667 Ophthalmology practice, OIL FIELD POSITIONS Pasca agoula, MS. E.O.E Computers skills a must. RETAIL SALES HELP Fitter/Welder combo & Able to multi-task. (2) EXPERIENCED Person Needed FT w/ Min Riggers. Offshore exp Scheduling/Ins Precert TEACHERS & (1) VAN 1 Yr. exp. Pay DOE. Apply preferred. Some overtime experience preferred. DRIVER Needed. Apply at in Person at Azar’s ds required. and weekend 2732 Mill St. b/t 9am-12pm Uniforms (Police & Fire 251-957-6529 Apply Immediately to: supply). 2759 Pleasant Noon Mon-Fri only. VISION PARTNERS, Attn: Local Company now hiring Valley Rd. Mobile. No Office Manager INLAND DECK HANDS ■ Pascagoula Law Firm Phone Calls. Fax 251-650-1010 Seeks F/ T Workers Pay based on experience. OFFICE DEPOT - Daphne Email: Comp Paralegal. Exp. Must have valid driver’s now hiring Computer, vpettway@vp2020.com license, preferred. Send resume Technology Sales reliable transportation, to: Office Manager X-RAY TECHNICIAN Associates F/T & Cashiers proof PO Box 1407, Needed for Orthopedic P/T Competitive Rates, of insurance, ability to Pascagoula, MS 39568 Surgeons Office. Please Benefits, Flexible pass criminal background Send Resumes to PO BOX check and drug screen. 251Health Care Schedules. Call 251-626-4040 70167 Mobile, AL 36670 Representative, Mobile to schedule an interview. 433-2079 ext 3 ● Interview and screen Instructor for the patients in a hospital setUniversity of South Part ting Alabama College of Time ● Complete applications Nursing, Alabama RN for state and federal prolicensure, BSN and MSN ★★★★★★ grams teaching experience. Hiring: Jack of All Trades. ● Communicate with govt Master’s degree in Painting, Cleaning Rugs, agencies regarding claims Psychiatric Mental Health Janitorial, You Name It. status Nursing Required. Position Call 251-478-8449 ● Maintain claims docuA Division of Belk available ask for James btwn 10-3. mentation One of the premier January 1, 2006. jewelers in the Application deadline is Professional Require: College degree; southeast has positions November 15 or -Technical Strong communication for Manager Trainees until filled. and Seasonal Sales Send letter of Application ESTIMATING ASSISTANT skills; Ability to work well with people of various available in Biloxi and to: /ASST CONTRACT MAN- backgrounds; Ability to Gautier. We offer a Dr. Debra Davis, Dean, AGER learn and apply knowledge competitive starting ollege of Nursing, Contract Manager Large USA Co of govt benefit programs; USA Springhill, salary with increases Mechanical Contractor Computer skills, including Mobile, AL 36688-0002. based on productivity, seeking a full time individ- word processing benefit package, ual to provide administra- Prefer: Knowledge of state AA/EEO/M/F/D store discount and tive support to the Financial-Aid Programs holiday incentives. Estimating division. Duties and/or SSA /SSI Disability CLINICAL DIRECTOR for Contact HR new state-of-the-art ASC in include filling out bid docu- application process; RN, @ 800-776-6665 or email ments, preparing bid packor Social Work Degree; Fairhope, AL. Candidate ages, typing proposals, Previous case management resume and inquiiries to will have responsibilities contracts and document mvandevere@ experience for policy & procedures migerobe.com Email resume to: sriden@ plus supervisory role for or apply only at the chamberlinedmonds.com all Clinical employees. ASC Fine Jewelry counter at or fax to (404) 926-0436. For exp. & AL nursing license the Edgewater Mall in company information, visit req’d. Please fax resume Biloxi or Singing River www.chamberlinedmonds.c 251-990-9990 or email autier. EOE Mall in Ga om ap311@bellsouth.net 251-443-1110 145 138 G McRAE’S 141 145 RetailStores 150 Sales EXPERIENCED ROOFIn our efforts to re-open ING our MOBILE, Dauphin SALESMAN NEEDED. Square location we are holding a: Top Commission Paid, Lots of Leads. Mississippi & *JOB FAIR* Alabama Area. 251-633-2016 Monday, Nov. 7th between 10AM - 5:00 PM We are seeking: STORE MGMT. KEY HOLDERS & SALES ASSOCIATES JOB FAIR LOCATION: Dauphin Square 3226 Dauphin St. Mobile, AL 36606 MEAT CUTTER Chevrolet Dealership (new facility) located in Citronelle, AL now taking applications for: Service Manager Service Technicians Detail Personnel Sales Endless opportunity! Great Benefits! (251) 866-5100 for appointment Excellent benefits. Great work place. 89 yr. old compa- Automotive Sales ny. Fantastic future. Very y. 2 yrs. competitive salary The New Tameron Honda exp. in handling beef & pork Eastern Shore is looking for req’d. Send Resume to: motivated winners to comGreer’s Food Tiger plete Personnel Dept. its sales team. Currently we 28500 West Main Street, have sales positions available Prichard, AL 36612 If you are a proven winner, give Keith or Patrick a call An Equal Opportunity at (251)626-1118 for an appt Employer 3 OPENINGS 150 Sales ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ Start a Career in Automotive Sales Local auto dealership needs honest, sharp-dressed, customer friendly salespeople. No experience required. We will train promising candidates. We offer a great pay plan. Demo plan and 401K available. Become a part of our awardwinning sales team. Apply in person to Tim Poppell at Hill-Kelly Dodge Eastern Shore 1812 Hwy. 98, Daphne. E.O.E. Drug-Free Workplace. No phone calls please. ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ SALESPERSON needed. Self motivated & experienced. Kitchen Tune-Up. Call 251-554-0639 NEEDED SALES PEOPLE for Roofing & Construction Co. Income averages $50K-$120K per year. Must have sales background. 251-473-7700. Leads & raining will be provided. SALES PERSON FULLTIME Inside Retail Sales. Health Insurance Available Fax resumes to: 251-6666670 Local Wholesale Lumber Co. seeks inside sales person, 3-5 years of lumber ales and building material sa preferred. Send resume to attn: Manager, P.O. Box 5237, Mobile 36605 Industrial Distributor seeks INSIDE SALES PERSON for conveyor belting/rubber products. Experience preferred. Fax resume to 251431-0299. Email lkeuler@turnersupply.com or mail JOBS, P. O. Box 1428, Mobile, AL 36633. G Roofing Salesperson wanted. Top commission. Start immediately. 228-497-0002 ■ Seeking Talented Designer with furniture experience to join SALES staff at largest furniture store on Gulf Coast. Located 7 miles from Full & part-time retail beaches. sales position available. Fun and fast-paced work Base plus commission. Retail and/or flooring sales environment. Fax resume to: experience a plus but not Malouf Furniture & required. Please call Design, (251)633-8835 Attention: Sales Manager Inside Sales, Machinery, E. 251-955-5153 Shore, Nat’l Market. Communication, WP/DB, SALES Computer Skills req. TIRED OF A JOB Spanish speaking a ++. LOOKING FOR A CAREER? Base, Comm., Benefits. PO 5 SALESPERSONS NEEDED Box 99, Stapleton, AL 5 day work week. Above aver36578. age earning potential. Full SALES POSITION Sales Personal & Commercial Lines Insurance CSR 251-767-6550 154Telemarketing PHONE PROS Here’s your chance. Now hiring am and pm shifts. Top pay + bonuses. Auto dialers. 251-661-5098 157 TradeCraftsSkills Local Surveying Company seeking Party Chief & Instrument person. Exp req’d, Drug Free Workplace. Call 251-9682124 or fax resume to 251968-1840 CK COLLECTION Benefits Available. Please Apply in Person: 320 Fairhope Ave. TradeCraftsSkills 157 Carpenter Foreman/Supervisor Needed for Commercial Construction Project. Must be willing to work with tools. Send resume to: 200 Government St., Ste 101, Mobile, AL 36602 or Fax to: 251-432-8046 NOW HIRING! Experienced SIGN INSTALLER. Must be journeyman w/CDL. Top pay, benefits. 251-653-0555 Exp’d Sectional Door Installer needed in Mobile. Top pay. Holidays, Benefits, Insurance, paid vacation & Christmas Club. Contact Rachel 251-645-1016 ■ Maintenance Tech needed for 114 unit property. Psacgoula area, HVAC Needed. cert. Apply in Apply at: 4534 McCrary Rd. person: 3015 Eden St, Semmes, AL Pascagoula, or on line: www. lanecompany.com Elevator Constructors NO PHONE CALLS Recruiting Apprentices in the Mobile/Pensacola/Ft $$$ AUTO TECHNICIAN . Walton/ areas for its 4 $$$ year program. Must be 18 years or older, have H.S. Very busy repair shop on Diploma or GED, pass an the Eastern Shore now hiraptitude test and be able to ing perform work of the trade. experienced & qualified A $25 testing fee is Auto Techs, Tire Changers required at the time of and test. Send request for appl General Service Techs. & more info post marked Excellent pay. 5 day work no later than 11/15/05 week, uniforms, NEIEP-124 PO BOX 55397. medical/dental, incentive St Petersburg, FL 33732. plan, salary + commisEOE & Drug free. sion, modern equipment, Iron Workers good working conditions. Exp’d Rolling Steel or Start immediately! Call Hollow metal Door Tech. Greg 251-626-0002, 604-5066 Paid vacation, Benefits, Christmas Club, Paid SHEETROCK FINISHERS Holidays & Insurance. Call HANGERS NEEDED Rachel 251-645-1016 Must Be Experienced Dependable. 251-591-8194 COMMERCIAL ELECTRICIANS Wanted Carpenters & Nail & EXP’D HELPERS Drivers. $11-$15/hr. Call needed. Contact 850-968- 251-639-1983 554-9980 6691 METAL ROOFERS NEEDExperienced Trac Hoe ED Operator $18-$22 per hour. No Experience Required Experienced only apply. 251-751-5820 Apply in person to Skilled 80 St. Michael Street Residential/Remodeling (251) 434-9955 Foreman, Carpenters and GULF COAST CUSTOM Carpenters Helpers needed WHEELS needs experiimmediately for full time enced C&C MACHINE employment. Send resume OPERATOR or apply in person @ J. C. with aluminum welding Duke & Associates, 1716 exp. Contactt Rick 251-473Industrial Park Dr., 5588. Mobile, AL 36693 EXPERIENCED TRUCK EQUIPMENT PLUMBERS New constr., SALES-Mobile AL, Repair & Remodel. Must Needs Mechanics w/ have references and valid Hydraulic/Welding or Fab. drivers license. 251-666-1002 Exp., Pay up to $14.50 0 per hour F/T Fiberglass Laminators Benefits available Fabricators & Machine 800-633-6946 / 251-666-8606 Operators needed. Experienced & Trainees. ■■■■■ Pay dependent on exp. Apply in person: 8201 Zeigler Blvd. No phone calls. benefits package. Paid training. Salary + commission. $35K-$55K first year. Contact Danny Kinard 251-626-5558 for Crane Operator & interview Mechanic.Now Hiring, Top Launching New ESTEE Immediate sales position LAUDER open for highly motivated individual. Cosmetics Dept. Full Time 5 day work week, paid trainExperienced Skin Care ing, salary + comm + beneSpecialist fits. /Make Up Artists Needed. No exp necessary, will train. Hour Credit America, Apply in per+ Commission, son at GFAC, 156 N. Beltline Medical/Dental Hwy, Mobile. 251-470-9780 WANT ADS 150 pay. Apply at 12057 DIP. 7am-4:30pm. 251-973-0034 EOE HVAC Installers Needed. Competitive wages and benefits available. 21530 Professional Dr. Robertsdale. 251-947-5972 PAINTERS F/T, Reliable workers w/ reliable transportation. Will train Long term employment. 228-826-5160/ 228-327-3596 DIESEL MECHANIC Needed for local trucking company shop. Must be able to work immediately without ve own supervision. Must hav tools. ★ NEW STARTING PAY SCALE. Hourly rate based on experience. ★ Please call Mike at 251-433-3391 ext 105 ■■■■■ TRUCKLOADS OF NEW & PRE-OWNED ARRIVING EVERY D AY ! ! Come See Come See T o y o t a y r u c r e Lincoln-M Salespersons Salespersons Alonzo Smith Don Carraway Ray Millender Chuck Lansdale Derek Johnson Charlie Pace G a y l e H u x n o t l u F Chris Diliberto Raymond Don Daughdrill Jessica Stork Allen Prince Ronnie Smith “NEW” PRE-OWNED CARS, TRUCKS & S U V ’ S A R R I V I N G D A I LY ! ! ! Call or come buy from Brooke Chadick, Tommy Cothern, Gary Guessford, Ron Jones or J. D. Reeves, Used Car Manager 8-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS 157 TradeCraftsSkills 157 TradeCraftsSkills 157 TradeCraftsSkills 157 TradeCraftsSkills 157 Need Experienced workers needSANDBLASTER/PAINTER ed in Carpentry & metal familiar with conventional roofing. Call 251-679-7564 pot. Full-time work, CABINET MAKERS & Theodore Yard. Call 251Finishers Wanted. Exp 653-9012. Only! Quality Cabinets Inc. 251-661-9079 PLUMBERS NEEDED AC Service Tech & IMMEDIATELY. Serving Warehouse Worker needed. BUCKET TRUCK OPERASouth Estes Heating & Air. 251TORS Baldwin County. Call for IMMEDIATE OPENINGS: 443-7837. & GROUNDMEN/BOBCAT interview 251-967-5661 Underground utility OPERATORS for tree servDrag Line Operator & Sand (pipeline) contractor now ice. MAINTENANCE Dredge Operator Needed in hiring heavy equipment Pay based on exp. Drivers MILLWRIGHTS Pensacola, FL. Must Have operators, pipelayers, license a must, CDL a Experience. 850-477-35554 laborers and drivers plus. Basic Understanding of the including dump, PAINTERS 251-401-8733 Following: service/mechanic, CDL Needed with at least 3 yrs. Class A or B, hazmat a exp. New residential. 251● Flat, vertical and overplus. Clean MVR, must Bender 989-9888 head welding pass drug screen, competi● Shop Equipment Shipbuilding CARPENTERS & tive pay and benefits. ● Pipe Fitting ROOFERS needed. Must Please apply in person to Is Now Hiring For ● Power Transmission have 2 yrs exp & trans1301 North Wilson Ave. The Following Crafts: Componets portation. T&J Investments Prichard, AL. ● Pneumatic Componets 251-508-1841; 251-458-1975. - Crane Operators ADVANCED TRANSMISSION IMMEDIATE NEED Must be able to perform APPLY IN PERSON in Spanish Fort seeking preventive maintenance MUST PASS DRUG SCREEN R&R Person. Must have SHIPFITTERS jobs and Basic structural experience and own tools. PIPEFITTERS-WELDERS and sheet metal layouts. Great benefits. Drug testPIPE WELDERS Evening Shift (4:30PM ELECTRICIANS-OUTSIDE 3:00AM). Exp Only. $12.00 ing required. Call 251-6266061 for interview. MACHINISTSStart PAINTER BLASTERS AC SERVICE TECHS INSULATORS LUMBER GRADER Top pay, health-disabilityJOINERS dental-life insurance, 401K, High Production SYP Mill paid vacations and holiTOP PAYPer Diem has full time position open days, Included for experience Lumber spiffs and bonuses. Drug 251-473-1541; 877-473-1541 Sign On Bonus Grader or Grader Trainee. free work place. Apply @ $250.00 Exp in lumber business Climate Control, 7291 PIPE FITTERS 1st Class Only preferred but not required. Cottage Hill Rd. 251-633Structural Welders 3356 & (FC w/ ceramic tape Qualification: Physically PIPEWELDER & Stick with backing strap) fit, excellent vision, good Mig Welders eye-hand coordination. For Panama City, FL (Multi-pass w/ heavy wire Shutdown. Must be able to read and Exp. needed) Will be welding and fitting write, follow oral and writSchedule 120 Carbon Steel Shipfitters ten instructions, good Pipe. Only experienced need Pipefitters mathematic skills and be apply. $20.00/hour. $100.00/ Maintenance ewelders Pipe able to read tape measure day per diem. Outside Machinists (fractions). Tech Apply in person at: Electricians G.A. WEST Crane Operators Excellent benefits. 12526 Celeste Road FT. Must have exp. in woodOut of town work Resumes to: PO Box 1663, wlrk, plumbing, & electrical. Saraland, Alabama. Heavy Overtime Mobile, AL 36633 Call 251-679-1965 Must be HVAC Cert. Apply in Worldwide Labor Support Ask for Sonny person to: 2880 Dauphin St AUTO DETAILER TECH (228) 762-3418 Mobile, AL 36606. EOE Will train the right person (800) 748-1395 Paid training w/exc growth APARTMENT/BUILDING MAINTENANCE SHOP & SERVICE MANMaintenance Person potential. $400-$550/wk. AGER ELECTRICIAN Valid drivers license req’d. Steady year around work For Truck Equipment Drug free. Apply in person in town. Exp. & Refs. Installations. Top Pay And at 2675 Government Blvd., Apply: Summertree Office, We have immediate openings Benefits. 608 Azalea Rd Mobile. Fax Resume To Bob @ 666in our Maintenance CARPENTERS & FOREExp. PLUMBERS 8676 Or Email To Department for qualified MAN Proven exp. in resifor New Construction. bob@truckequipmentsales.c electricians to work on the Benefits Avail. 251-379-6576 dential day and night shift. Must om remodeling. Lipford conhave a minimum of 2 years EQUIPMENT OPERATOR PLUMBERS struction offers local, year maintenance experience in for dozer & trackhoe. Local Master & Journeyman preventive maintenance, round work. Competitive & perm. Must have site Needed repair of equipment, and pay, benefits. Valid DL. work skills. 251-633-3310. troubleshooting. for Comm Work, Top Pay Apply in person or call Benefits, OT Avail. 251Mon-Fri 9-4, 1480 Cody Rd. TRIM CARPENTER 583-7218 or Fax 251-666-1143 S. 633-5554 EQUIPMENT w/valid Drivers License. CALL 251-661-3000 Boat Manufacturer seeking Printing Company needs MECHANIC Experienced Laminators small press ELECTRICIANS and Mold Builders. We have immediate openings operator/bindery Starting pay DOE. Foley for Maintenance Mechanics to operator. Good driving $18/hr & $4/hr per diem. area. 251-209-8019 work on the day and night record Work 6 days a week. Call shift. Must have at least 2 required. Call 251-583-6583 Auto Painter’s Assistant 228-381-1115; 228-381-8327 years experience, and have Chapman’s Paint & Body Immediate Opening for own hand tools. CONVEYOR BELT Shop. Apply in person, SIGN FABRICATORS. SPLICING TECHNICIAN 5824 Hwy 90, Theodore Welding, electrical & sheet MUST PASS DRUG SCREEN metal exp helpful. Apply at Belt splicing or millwright A 1st Class Welder, 1st APPLY IN PERSON Quality Sign Co., 3650 Class Pipefitter & BENDER SHIPBUILDING experience desired. Full time work. Benefits. Local Structural Welder. Apply Hamilton Blvd. PERSONNEL DEPARTestablished company. Fax 8517 Bellingrath Rd, MENT Electricians resume to: 251-431-0299 or Theodore between 7-3:30 304 S. ROYAL ST. MOBILE, AL 36603 E-mail resume: Jobs in Bay St. Louis Area EOE Painters lkeuler@turnersupply.com, $20/hr. 2 hrs travel time. Mail to: Belt Job, PO Box $15.50 hour. Mobile Work $50/day for electricians Large company has imme1428, Local Mobile work at Ipsco diate openings for a Finish Steel, $18.50/hr & $40/day for GARAGE DOOR SERVICE Mobile, AL 36633 Carpenters Journeyman Electricians Carpenter’s, Carpenter’s TECHNICIAN. Experience Written test given. Drug test preferred. Great benefits $17.00 hour. Local Work Helpers and Framers required. Bring hard hat, Needed in Gulf Shores and include 401K, medical, den10hr days. 5-6 days a week safety glasses and steel Orange Beach area. Long tal, life & disability insurtoed shoes. Apply in person at ance. Must have valid driv- term,drug free environApply in person at G.A. West ment, immediate work ers license and pass drug G.A. West 12526 Celeste Road avalible. Call 251-269-1141 screen. Apply in person 12526 Celeste Road Saraland, Alabama Saraland, Alabama Call 251-679-1965 2609 Old Shell Road, Mobile or 251-968-7958 NCE MAINTENAN needed. Must have own tools & truck. Must know Section 8. Background check req’d. Call Mon-Fri, 9-3, 251-473-9445. CARPENTERS & SKILLED CARPENTERS HELPERS Tools, Trans & Professionalism req’d. Apply: TCM Remodelors 1061 Elmira St. M-F 8am12pm & 1pm-4pm. 251-2094281 G F TradeCraftsSkills 157 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 TradeCraftsSkills 157 STRUCTURAL FITTERS & HELPERS needed for local fab shop. BC/BS, 401K, vacation. Apply at 9490 I-65 Service Road, Drywall Hangers & Finishers needed. Top pay. Exit 22, Creola, AL Contact Gary Buchheit 251- SHEET ROCK FINISHER 648-1434 w/Valid Drivers License. CALL 251-661-3000 Forklift Drivers & EXP METAL STUD anic. Mecha Must have valid Drivers License. CALL 251-661-3000 Laborers. Immediate Openings! Call b/t 1-5pm, 251-432-1054; 209-9243 TIRE SERVICE Change and repair tires for truck fleet. Check fleet for air pressure, tires needing repair. Must have exp. Help in shop with minor repairs. S&M Transportation 245 Jacintoport Blvd Saraland, AL SERVICE TECHNICIAN Seeking ambitious people w/ mechanical bkgrd to replace hydraulic hoses on various types of heavy machinery & equip. Exp. a +. Must be dependable, have own tools & clean driving record. Service vehicle provided. Sales & product training given. Apply: Reliable Hose Service 1436 W I-65 Service Rd South Immediate Openings INSIDE MACHINISTS WELDERS & FITTERS. Apply in Person at SPI/Mobile Pulley Works 905 South Ann St, Mobile 251-653-0606 Project Manager for construction site in Mobile. Min 5 yrs exp in large commercial building. Fax resume to 256-442-6680 or email gbryant@dawsonbuilding.com IRON WORKERS needed. Vacation, holiday pay, health insurance. Apply 8155 Morris Hill Road, Semmes, AL EXPERIENCED CONSTRUCTION WORKERS all trades needed. 228-2176444 TradeCraftsSkills 157 EXP. CARPENTERS, Drywall, Roofers & Laborers. Reliable trans. a must. Call 497-5136 ■ Certified Pipe Welders, Pipefitters, & Millwrights needed. Drug screen req. 917 Apply in person: UOG, 69 Stennis Blvd, Pascagoula, MS 9:00am M-F (228) 475-3360 DR. REMODELING now hiring for all positions. Sales, Production Management, Office Management and Sub Contractors. Fax resume to 251-653-0485 or call 251-653-0484 GLOBAL EMPLOYMENT Has Jobs on Mississippi Gulf Coast Shipyards for all Shipyard Crafts & Out of State Work for Mig and Flux Core Welders. Good Pay & Hours. Call 1-877-762-9899 I IT OPERATOR The Mobile Register has an CARPENTERS for framimmediate opening for an ing in ELECTRICIAN needed. IT OPERATOR Fairhope & Mobile area. Heavy control background. The hours for this position Benefits and truck. Phone Experience needed. 251-649are 6755 251-694-0909, fax 251-694based on a two week 0977. alternating schedule. ARC Controls, Inc. Week one: GCR Tire Center is Taking 1st Class Job Shop Sat & Sun, 12Noon-12am Machinist for immed. emp. Applications for Tire Week two: Established fast growing Technicians and Mon-Thurs, 10pm-3am shop. located Warehouse Additional hours convenient to MS state Personnel. 251-456-7001 may be added as needed. b//t 8am & 4pm Mon- Fri or Apply in Person at 1854 N. Beltline Hwy. GCR is a Division of Bridgestone/ Firestone and is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V BRICK MASONS needed. Must have own transportation. 251-232-8312. GARAGE DOOR & GUTTER INSTALLERS Help Wanted. No experience needed. Start Immediately. Call 251-666-8313 Exp’d Sheetrock Hangers. Min. 6 yrs exp. & Helpers, min. 2 yrs. exp. Top pay 251-463-5433 Now Hiring ELECTRICIANS and HELPERS. Call for an appt. 251-3663222 FIBERGLASS LAMINATOR Full Time, Top Pay Benefits! 251-473-3176 PIPE-LAYERS & LABORERS for water, sewer and drainage projects. Experienced only need apply, Must be drug free. Mon thru Fri. 8 am - 5pm 251-457-7500 STUCCO PLASTERERS NEEDED Must Have Own Transportation Call 251-895-0383 line. Competitive pay DOE. Benefits. 251-666-2165 Requirements include a high school diploma. Ideal for a college student pursuing a COUNTER PERSON for computer degree. Desire genBusy Auto Salvage Yard. eral knowledge of main Willing to Train. Call 251frame computer systems and desktop pc’s. Must have good 456-1432 communication skills & the LUBE MECHANIC ability to work under little Needed. Exp. w/servicing supervision. Must be respectheavy construction equipful of authority and use conment. 251-653-5410 cerns. Must be very accurate & have good attention to Q.C.I. MARINE OFFdetail. Interested applicants SHORE, LLC Now hiring should apply in person on for all crafts: 1st Class. We Wednesday from 1-4pm at the offer top pay. Please call Mobile Register, downtown 228-762-8126 228-934-2453 or Mobile. Resumes may be fax resume 228-762-3687 emailed to mprhr@mobileregister.com or faxed to 251-2195099. EOE NEEDED. 251-401-8457 Carpenters 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 AUTO MECHANIC NEEDED, Irvington area for major and minor repairs, must have own tools. Pay based on experience. Medical & dental insurance avail. Paid holidays, vacations and uniforms fees. Call Lamar 251-957-3031 PLUMBERS & HELPERS Journeyman plumber. Pay based on exp & ability. Start today! Call Jessie 251-609-2925 Wanted. Company paid Medical & Dental & Life Insurance, 10 Paid Holidays, Retirement Plan -Company Match, Overtime. Call Amore Plumbing Company 251-626-9535 AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN required for busy shop. $600 weekly guarantee. Vacation & health insurance. 251-454-7968. SATELLITE TECHNICIANS GREAT CAREER & BENEFITS MUST HAVE CELL PHONE DRIVER’S LICENSE. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY CALL 1-800-292-8421 ★★★★★★ 15 F/T OPENINGS HARD WORKERS ONLY $400 WEEKLY START IMMEDIATELY CALL BILLY 251-635-1704 ★★★★★★ Carpenters and Helpers wanted for work in the Mobile Area. Call 251-973-1876 TradeCraftsSkills 157 TradeCraftsSkills Legal Notices SUMMONS BY PUBLICAHiring Immediatley TION Foster’s Painting Skilled Carpenters & IN THE CHANCERY hiring. Work in Mobile area. Laborer’s. Call 251-605-3315. COURT OF JACKSON 251-645-9911, 605-9100 EEOC COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI PARTS PULLER needed IN THE MATTER OF Immediate for busy salvage yard. THE LAST WILL AND Must Have Own Tools. 251Opening! TESTAMENT OF 456-1432 RICHARD E. DAVIS CARPENTERS & CARPENCOLLETTE M. MURTER RELL HELPERS to work on FEMA PLAINTIFF trailers in Mississippi. VERSUS Top pay, Per diem CAUSE NO. 2005-2052 PW 8235 Padgett Switch Rd BRENDA L. HARDING, Irvington, AL. 251-957-1095 ■ EXP. TILE SETTERS PATRICIA S. DAVIS, EOE. Drug free workplace & HELPERS for hourly SAMUEL ADAM DAVIS, ★★★★★★★★★ pay & benefits. Steady A MINOR, BY AND MAINTENANCE PERSON local & out of town work. THROUGH CANDACE CALL 251-456-1432 850-758-9293 or 850-543-9066. DAVIS, MOTHER AND Start Immediately on FLEET NEXT FRIEND AND THE Moss Point Project. MAINTENANCE/DIESEL UNKNOWN HEIRS-A TMECHANIC. Working on LA W OF RICHARD E. FIBERGLASS BOAT trucks and trailers. Must DAVIS REPAIR have own tools. Clean Can Train Right Person, DEFENDANTS MVR. Able to pass DOT, SUMMONS TO A DATE F/T, physical & drug screen. CERTAIN Top Pay, Benefits. 251-473Call 251-679-1052 THE STATE OF MISSIS3176 SIPPI SUPERINTENDENT HELP WANTED FOR COUNTY OF JACKSON For Commercial HOME TO: The unknown HeirsConstruction IMPROVEMENT COMPAat-law of Richard E. Projects. 5+ Years experiNY Davis, Deceased, who are ence NEED STRONG WORK adults, if they are living required. Drug Screen ETHIC. and are non-residents of Required. 251-607-9112 Fax Resume to 251-661-1181 the State of Mississippi, or ELECTRICAL HELPERS not to be found therein or Residential work. Semmes after diligent search and Apply in person @ J.C. area. $7/hr. Will train. Duke Assoc., 1716 inquiry, and whose places Leave info 251-649-1120 Industrial Park of residence, post office, Drive, Mobile, AL. street and house addresses Cabinet Makers & are unknown after diligent Finishers Evergreen Transportation, search and inquiry to Experienced Only. Inc. ascertain the same. Top pay, Start Mobile terminal now hiring Immediately. You have been made a 1st Shift Call 251-401-1308 Defendant in the suit filed MECHANIC & JOE KELLY DRYWALL in this Court by Collette M. Murrell, Plaintiff, seeking needs exp’d residential 2nd Shift FUEL to declare the sole and DRYWALL HANGERS. ISLE ATTEN- Top money. 251-423-6342. only Heirs-at-Iaw of Richard E. Davis to be the DANT READY MIX following: Collette M. Both must have Brenda L. valid drivers license PLANT REPAIR Murrell, Harding, Patricia S. Call Melvin & Davis, and Samuel Adam 251-660-9570 Davis, and seeking other MAINTENANCE relief. EXPERIENCED ROOFERS! TECHNICIAN You are summoned to LOTS OF JOB, TOP PAY appear and defend against Needed. CALL 251-421-0754 the Complaint filed against Good Benefits package GLAZER you in this action at 9:30 with experience in o’clock A.M. on the 9th day Please Apply in person at: of January, 2006, in the Residential & Commercial 2640 South McKenzie St, 251-605-0931; 473-5363 Chancery Courtroom of Foley, AL 36535. the Jackson County A Pallet Manufacturer or call 800-239-3879. Temporary Courthouse, Near Loxley, AL has an Accepting applications for 2902 Shortcut Rd., in Immediate Openings for HVAC TECHNICIAN. Pascagoula, Mississippi TRUCK DRIVERS, Competitive pay and bene- and in case of your failure MACHINE fits. Fax resume to 251-653- to appear and defend, a OPERATORS & LABOR3466 or call ERS. judgment will be entered 251-653-3477 for appointAttendance Bonus, Health against you for the thins ment. & Dental Ins 251-960-1107. demanded in the LABORERS needed for Complaint. MAINTENANCE TECHNIlocal You are not required to CIAN work. Miracle Landscaping file an answer or other Needed for Apartment 251-479-1048 or 479-1049 pleading but you may do Complex so if you desire. Apply in person, Mon-Fri, Issued under My Hand Resumes 9AM-4PM, 3800 Michael and the Seal of Said Court, Blvd. EOE this the 13th day of PAINTERS & LABORERS October, 2005. MOBILE’S FINEST NEEDED. RESUME Terry Miller, Chancery CALL 251-401-8174 800 Downtowner Blvd Suite Clerk AUTO BODY PERSON A Jackson County Chancery Experience w/ References 251-344-4253 Court $60,000+ Per Year. by: Connie Jones, D.C. Rettig’s 251-343-2300 Job (SEAL) Information No. 95324 3t 10/21-28-11/4 METAL BLDG ERECTORS. Tools & exp. req’d. CHECK FIRST Local permanent work. SUBSTITUTED 251-633-3310. THE MOBILE REGISTER TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SUGGESTS THAT BEFORE DUCT MECHANIC & SALE MAKING AN INVESTMENT HELPERS WANTED IN RESPONSE TO AN AD, 2 years exp req’d. Good WHEREAS, on May 24, THAT YOU INVESTIGATE driving THE OFFER WITH AGEN- 2002, Gerald W. Bradley record. Call 251-510-5755 CIES SUCH AS THE BETTER executed a certain deed of FRAMING & TRIM CAR- BUSINESS BUREAU AT 433- trust to Jim B. Tohill, 5494 OR THE CONSUMER Trustee for the benefit of PENTERS-Top pay. GENCY IN PROTECTION AG Mortgage Baldwin County work. 251- MONTGOMERY, AL AT 1-800- Ameriquest Company which deed of 379-3542 626-0800 392-5658. G 160 170 No Payment for 90 Days! ** 0.0% Financing Available! *** STRAIGHT FROM THE FACTORY!! Truckloads Of New Inventory Arriving Everyday! Hundreds Of New Vehicles!! 06 COLORADO REG CAB #C3416 SALE PRICE $14,045.00 13,295* #C3466 SALE PRICE $23,745.00 22,995 * 06 CHEVY IMPALA 06 CHEVY MALIBU SALE PRICE $16,245.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price Your $ Price DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price #C3531 SALE PRICE $27,745.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 06 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER 06 CHEVY AVALANCHE 26,995* $ 750.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATES! DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price 15,495* 06 SILVERADO REG CAB SALE PRICE $19,745.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price 18,995* 06 SILVERADO EXT CAB #C142429 SALE PRICE $19,245.00 #C3339 SALE PRICE $14,745.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price 13,995 *All rebates assigned to dealer plus tax and title w.a.c. **Subject to credit approval ***05 Tahoes #C3552 #C3495 06 CHEVY TAHOE * #C3375 SALE PRICE $28,245.00 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 Your $ Price 18,495* 27,495* 06 CHEVY EQUINOX SALE PRICE $19,745 2.9% FINANCING AVAILABLE *WAC TOP DOLLAR TRADE-IN’S DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 $ 18,995* 06 CADILLAC CTS SALE PRICE $28,745.00 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 ! ! ! ! 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 GM CERTIFIED USED CARS #3553 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE -750.00 #3450 $ 27,995* 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 Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices trust is of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Jackson County, State of Mississippi in Book 1854 at Page 236; and Sections 1 and 12, Township 8 South, Range 7 West, Jackson County, Mississippi, as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book 15, Pages 49-50, WHEREAS, said Deed of Records of Plats of Trust was subsequently Jackson County, assigned to Deutsche Bank Mississippi. National Trust Company, As Trustee of Ameriquest I WILL CONVEY only Mortgage Securities, Inc. such title as vested in me Series 2002-C, Asset as Substituted Trustee. Backed Certificates, under the Pooling & Servicing WITNESS MY SIGNAAgreement Dated as of TURE on this 17th day of October 1, 2002, Without October, 2005. Recourse by instrument dated August 19, 2005 and J. Gary Massey SUBSTIrecorded in Book 2317 at TUTED TRUSTEE Page 815 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's office; Shapiro & Massey, L.L.P. and 1910 Lakeland Drive, Suite B WHEREAS, Deutsche Jackson, MS 39216 Bank National Trust (601) 981-9299 Company, As Trustee of Ameriquest Mortgage 1608 Skyline Dr Securities, Inc. Series 2002- Gautier, MS 39553 C, Asset Backed JC/05-1159 Certificates, under the No. 95325 3t 10/21-28-11/4-11 Pooling & Servicing Agreement Dated as of October 1, 2002, Without Abandoned Vehicle ActRecourse has heretofore Bill 221 substituted J. Gary Pursuant to the Massey as Trustee by Abandoned Motor Vehicle instrument dated August Act of 1972 annotated, the 19, 2005 and recorded in following vehicles will be the aforesaid Chancery sold as abandoned at Clerk's Office in Book 2317 Public Auction at Danny's at Page 817; and Towing, 3835 Hwy. 63, Moss Point, MS on or before WHEREAS, default hav- November 16,2005. ing been made in the 1) 1993 Plymouth Vin# terms and conditions of 2P4GH25K1PR392110 said deed of trust and the 1) 1980 Ford Mustang Vin# entire debt secured there- OF03B239237 by having been declared to 1) 1989 GMC Vin# be due and payable in 1GTBS14E1K8505371 accordance with the terms 1) 1998 Dodge Neon Vin# of said deed of trust, 1B3ES47Y3WD612747 Deutsche Bank National 1) 1988 Oldsmobile Vin# Trust Company, As 1G3HN54C5JW31328 Trustee of Ameriquest 1) 1988 Jeep Vin# Mortgage Securities, Inc. 1JCHW74J6JT099421 Series 2002-C, Asset 1) 1992 Nissan Sentra Vin# Backed Certificates, under 1N4EB32A2NC814539 the Pooling & Servicing 1) 1991 Toyota Vin# Agreement Dated as of 1NXAE91A8M2208641 October 1, 2002, Without 1) 1995 Toyota Vin# Recourse, the legal holder 1NXAEOOB1SZ347058 of said indebtedness, hav- 1) 1999 Chevy Vin# ing requested the under- 1GCCS19ZXN8154836 signed Substituted Trustee 1) 1991 Chevy Blazer Vin# to execute the trust and 1GNCS13Z0M2235023 sell said land and property No. 95376 3t 10/28-11/4-11 in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust and for the purpose of rais- ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ing the sums due thereunder, together with attor- It is the intention of the Board of Trustees of the ney's fees, trustee's fees Mississippi Gulf Coast and expense of sale. Community College to NOW, THEREFORE, I, J. receive bids on the followGary Massey, Substituted ing items until 2 p.m., Trustee in said deed of November 29, 2005, at the trust, will on November 18, Business Office in Darby 2005 offer for sale at public Hall, Perkinston Campus, Mississippi outcry and sell within legal Perkinston, hours (being between the 39573. Bids on these items will be awarded December hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the 14, 2005. SouthFront door of the 1. Graduation Supplies Temporary County Courthouse of Jackson 2. No. 2 Vertical Milling County, Mississippi located Machine at the B.E. "Mac" McGinty Civic Center, 2902 3. Sale of Scrap Metal It is necessary that bids Short Cut Road Pascagoula, Mississippi, be marked as such on the to the highest and best bid- envelope and specificader for cash the following tions of item being bid on. described property situat- The Board reserves the ed in Jackson County, right to reject any and all State of Mississippi, to- bids. Dianne Raborn wit: Purchasing Department Lot 32, LaMotte Estates 601-928-6235 Subdivision, Part 2, in the No. 95406 2t 11/4-7 City of Gautier in Claim 9-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 320 Auctions ★★★★★★★★ AUCTION LEGAL NOTICES DEADLINES FRIDAY, NOV. 4th ■ 11:00 AM ■ Hwy 72, Spanish Fort, AL PUBLISH Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Sunday DEADLINE Wednesday 5pm Thursday 5pm Friday 5pm Monday 5pm Tuesday 5pm Wednesday 5pm For Information Regarding Legal Notices Call Telina Birch (228) 934-1420 ★★★★★★★★ Merchandise 310 Appliances WASHER & DRYER Set, Electric. Good cond. $225. 228-522-0072 DRYER, ELECTRIC. Looks & runs good. $85. 522-0072 320 2000+ SF HOME ON 3 1/2+ ACRES. Buddy Ray Auction and Appraisal Co LLADRO’S, ROYAL DOULTONS, OIL PAINTING ‘‘Sunset Beach’’ by CLEVELAND WOODWARD, PORCELAIN LAMPS, VASES, MIRROR, CRYSTAL, LINENS, TABLES, CHAIRS, SOFA, BOOKS, SHELVES, BROWNING SHOTGUN, REFRIGERATOR, WASHER & DRYER, HAND TOOLS, COINS, PATIO FURNITURE, MANY COLLECTIBLES. Building Materials NEED A ROOF? ESTATE AUCTION ON SITE IN FAIRHOPE 165 PIER AVE SAT. NOV 5 ’05 @ 10 am PREVIEW 9 am We will be selling the contents and personal property in this Estate Consisting of; 9 pc Mahog Duncan Phyfe D R set w/full size China Cab+Mahog Drop Leaf Server Table w/Brass claw cap Feet+5 pc English Pub Tab & Chairs+Mahog Serpentine Front Dresser and Full Size Bed and Dresser Vanity w/ Tilt Mirror+5 pc Gold Guild Italian Parlor Set+ Empire Burl Wood 1880s 4 Drawer Dresser+Early Walnut Glass Door Book Case w/ Razor cut inlay+Vict Carved Fruit Arm Chair +Full size Mahog Duncan Phyfe Buffet + Chippendale Foot Stool +2 Door Mahog Armoire + 5pc French Parlor Set+Mahog Queen Anne Conference Table+ Pr Corner Curio Cab.+ 4 Drawer Oak Chest + Small Oak Bistro Tab+Oak Side Board+ Boston Painted Rocker+80pc Noritake China ‘‘Thekiza’’ Pat. And 68 pcs of Noritake ‘‘Essex’’ Pat. + Collection of Tea Pots and Cup & Saucers+ Fine Punch Bowl Set /Serving Cups+Fenton Milk Glass+ Collection Milk Glass+ Blue Buffalo Bowl+ Old Scales+Pr Snow Shoes + 1950’s Child’s Booster Seat+ Household goods and kitchen wares + More Pictures are Available on the Web Site buddyray.com + Partials from other estates may be offered at this sale. 10% Buyer Premium. Visa & MC. Our Next Auction Nov 12 on site Buddy Ray Auction and Appraisal Co AL#1347 2202 Government St Mobile AL 251-554--9661 Sacrifice, Nice Sectional w/ 2 incliners, jeweltones, & cocktail table, like new, $675. 228-474-7257 A NEW Full Sz Mattress Set. New, never opened! $130.00 Can deliver. 228-234-0999 Miscellaneous Built on site!12X12, $1595 12X16, $1895;16X24, $2695 EC School Dist., 2-1/2 Ac 251-625-1626, pg. 423-9283 w/ 98’ 28x52 3bd 2ba fp, lg shed $72,000 228-588-2681 AC/HEAT UNIT 3.5 Ton Electric. 7 yrs old. Good Moss Point cond. $950 474-2841 STEEL ROOFING & SIDING Majestic Metals, Inc. 1-800-647-8540 STEEL ROOFING & SIDING Galvalume & Colors from $9.95/sq Goldin Metals, Inc. 800-777-6216 WOOD PANELING 3’x7’ Smooth Finish New $3.00 Sheet/ 601-947-9600 508-5613 370 Farm Equip./ Supplies 20hp Farm Pro Tractors; 25hp tractor w/ loader; Disk, box blades, rotary cutter, pan plow, landape rake. (601)766-3700 sca 375 All wood cherry bedroom suite: dresser, mirror, chest, queen Wholesale Salvage bed with rails, night Going Out of Business Sale! Take an extra 25% off our already low prices! All inventory & equipment must go! Open Thur-Fri-Sat 9-3 stand Retail Value Special Price $2,040 $999 Willis Furniture 460 “Where Quality is Still Affordable” 3202 Chico St. Pascagoula 1990 Oldsmobile Cutlass Sierra S for parts, 228-497-1903 Garage Sales 385 MOVING SALE!!! All Furniture, 4 wheelers, go carts, 36” tv, clothes, dishes, etc. - 228-588-3658 480 G MOVING SALE! FIREWOOD 475-7146 / 826-2531 (obo on all of it!) 475-7988 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 2005 NISSAN TITAN CREW CAB SE & Esca. No Flooding Here! Helena, Lyons Lake Area, 5.5 acres, 3/2/2 + carport, & office. Big 2550 sq ft la, formal DR, Large eat in kitchen screen porch, frpl. Great cond. large storage shed. fully landscaped & fenced, retiring to FLA. $191,000/ 474-0222 Coca-Cola Collection, mens & women XL clothes, misc, no storm damage, 4000 Coventry Escatawpa, Fri-Sat LARGE HOME $55,000 obo as is 228-623-2375 4BR, 2BA, SIDING Fair Market Value! $60,000 228-475-4376 aft 5 G D 410Lawn/Garden Supplies FIX UP SPECIAL 3br 1ba, Needs Roof & Clean Up, 6201 Dora Ave. $25,000 875-7770 Pascagoula 515 Read the Classifieds Read the Classifieds THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS 525 Ocean Springs 3 BR, 2 BA, Approx. 1400 sf. 505 Heatherstone $125K. 818-5283 ST MARTIN Jordan Farms Partiallly cleared home sites w/water, sewer for doublewides 3BR/2BA Dble Garage, split flr plan, 3 yrs old, 1,650sq ft, No Storm Damage, $179,500. 228-769-1327/ 228-990-4639 GAUTIER Hickory Hills Wooded lots for housesCity water/sewer Owner Financing available 24,688 #NT6391 & NT6349 535 acres. $5000/ac. Owner financing 826-1206/ 217-9856 E. Cent Sch D Big Point Paved Dead-end Road 4.65 Acres 228-762-7790 Condos / Townhouses $ 29,986 1/2 Acre East Cent. Sch. power, water, septic tank ready for hook-up. $16,000 228-475-3320 555 540 in General 5.75 ACRES w/14 x 60 Mobilehome (601)766-9708 2 STORY BRICK Home, 3 acre land, 4br/2.5ba, pool, very nice, 4 mi N. of Leakesville on Hwy 57, only 1 mi from new Hwy 63, $169,000. Cumbest Realty, Hal Rounsaville, 601-549-5981/601-394-5051 560 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 570Mobilehomes Sales G Any condition, any area, any situation sell your house quickly. 872-4628 VANCLEAVE 3 br, 2 ba, F/P. For Sale by Owner. As is. $76,000 818-0623 G HURLEY - Willow Brook Rd Spacious, Well Kept! 3 bedroom, 3 bath home. Offers many extras. 2,300 s.f. living area, 3.3 acres. alty $189,000 / Cumbest Rea 1BR/1BA NEW TRAILER Lot Included / By Owner $48,000 Firm! Escatawpa 228-218-2154 98’ DW 28X52 Chandler, 3bd, 2ba, fireplace $34,000, 228-588-2681 G A BARGAIN! 28 X80 Fleetwood, 4 bedroom, 3 bath $22,900 24X56 Peachstate, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, $23,,900 Ron’s 800-343-6040 Was $29,715 Was $39,860 21,988 NOW $ * SAVE FT5726 $ 19,900 #NT6183 & NT6709 HWY 57(Near I-10) 1200SF Retailer Office, ***$600/Mo*** 228-832-4475 Real Estate Rentals 630 Furnished Rooms G Ocean Springs Nicely furnished rm, $400 mo $150 dep 1/2 utilites 818-6531 635 Furnished Apartments 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. 11,980 $ 27,988* NOW $ $7600 $11,800 SAVE OVER 20 TO CHOOSE FROM 2005 F150 SUPERCREW 2005 EXPEDITION Row Capt. Chairs, Lariat, Adjustable Pedals, Leather Capt. Chairs EDDIE BAUER Second Power Moon Roof, Safety Pkg., Power Fold Seat, Climate Controlled Seats, DVD Entertainment 0% AVAILABLE FT5730 Was NOW $ $45,720 * 32,888 $12,800 WAS $35,995 24,488* NOW $ 2 YR. FREE SCHEDULE MAINTENANCE SAVE SAVE $11,500 2005 MUSTANG COUPE 2005 FOCUS ZX4 SE Auto, 110A Pkg., Interior Sport Appearance Pkg., Exterior Sport Appearance Pkg. 2005 FORD TAURUS SEL PROGRAM CARS Automatic, Tilt/Cruise, Body Side Molding $17,550 NOW $ WAS Starting At Office Space for Rent FC5651 #05716 Two available at this price 2005 NISSAN XTERRA S 595 2005 FORD TAURUS SE PROGRAM CARS Pkg., Reverse Sensing System Starting At 18,885 Real Estate Commercial ESTABROOK FORD USED CARS FT6924 $ RV & Camper Lot, Rent in AL, 10 mins from Pascagoula, all util. furn. $275/ Mo. 251-865-3480 228-588-6213 Two available at this price 2006 NISSAN ALTIMAS ARRIVING DAILY Lots & LandOther Areas Building Lots 1200 sq ft min, Grand Bay, AL. No flooding, $15,000 ea. 6 avail. (251)661-3193 520 3/4BR/3.5BA, Fireplace, 3 Car Garage, 228-497-5208, OCEAN SPRINGS Gulf Hill Estates, West El-Bonito. $35K 769-9291 1 BR CONDO: 25% Down Lots & Land6% APR on 10 yr balance. George Co. AS IS, Buyer does all 30 acres Hunting Land, repairs. 228-219-1359 Howell Comm. $2,000 per ac, (601)947-2451 Homes 2005 FIVE HUNDRED 2005 F150 SUPERCAB 4X4 Flareside, Leather Capt. Chairs, Power Moon Roof, Tubular AM/FM 6CD, Audiophile, LIMITED Automatic, Moon Roof, Safety Running Boards, Trailer Tow Pkg., Pwr. Driver Seat, FX4 Pkg. 2005 NISSAN PATHFINDER LE Leater, Power Windows, Power Lock, Bose Stereo Mobilehome Lots VANCLEAVE 2-10 ACRE Camps tracts, ok for mobiles homes. Owner financing. By Owner, Desperate to Joe West Realty, Sale, 2br w/ frpl, 1200 sq 228-497-3797 ft, near fishing camp, Vancleave, heavily wood- no flood damage. $79,000. 228-588-0188/ 601-947-6606 ed, high rolling hills, 4-6 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. Utility Bed, Power Pkg, Popular Pkg, CD, Power Seat, Cruise/Tilt $ 228-875-3200 575 620 George Co. Lucedale 57 AC. S of Leakesville on Hwy 63, 17 ac open, rest wooded, 3 ponds, barn, 3br/2ba remodeled, also small mini storage facility completely rented, Gautier only minutes from new Vancleave Hwy 63, $225,000.Cumbest Realty, Hal Rounsaville, VANCLEAVE 5 BR, 3 BA, 601-394-5051/ 601-549-5981 2 1/2 acres. $169,000 8264442 or 990-0293 BIG POINT, By Owner, 4br/2ba, 2300 sq ft, brick, 2 LAKE OF PINES SUBD. acres, $178,900. 588-9949 3 br, 2 ba, brick, shop, pond, 3+ acres. No storm damage. $149,500 228-826-3244 / 497-5884 238-1015 Leave message EX-MARK-MOWERS LZ23KC24AS or LHP5220KC, SALE $6,499. (601)766-3700 VANCLEAVE Ramsay Oaks. Wooded lots for homes only, Covenants, Min. 1600 sq. ft. Brick Home / 475-7988 Over 2100 sqft, brick, extra large kitchen , new appl, skylights, whirlpool Leo, Two Eyed Jack, Jet bath, 24X24, shop/garage, Straw & King Bloodlines. deck, needs few repairs, Great Disposition. $700 obo great buy, $70,000 cash, Jim McNair Realty, 601-766-1013 228-762-0954 Jackson County For Sale, 3br/1ba Brick home. No water damage. 228-872-4628 ! AQHA 6Mth Old Sorrel Filly 505 22 Acres, 1000’ Frontage on Hwy 614 Between Wade & Hurley / $60,000 588-9203 / 355-0317 2900 sq ft home on Park MOSS POINT - 4BR/2BA St. Lucedale, MS, 3/3, LR, 1625 Sq Ft, 10103 Hwy 613 DR., great room, & bonus ot. on 2 acre corner lo urricane amage room $115,000. 251-591-7566. No H Lots & LandJackson Co. HOME FOR SALE, By Owner, 1704 Martin Bluff, Gautier, 3br/1.5ba, Den, 1400sf, Brick $79,995 228-497-9811/ 228-327-4684 530 Moss Point, Richard St, 2br/1ba, on 1 acre No Flood Damage! $68,000. 228-475-9433/ 228-623-6267 G Real Estate Residential 550 w.msgulfcoastproperty.com G 18020 Goff Farm Rd, Big Point, Sat, 7:30til, furn ,h-hold items, clothes, comforters misc. Gautier Vancleave MUST SELL by owner, 3br/2ba, frpl, in ground pool, $139,900 228-872-1223 499 Firewood 380 Pets/Animals/ Livestock 510 FRIDAY 8am-5pm Pets SATURDAY 8am-12pm for Sale 1624 Amberjack, 2 Blocks East of Dolphin, Off Graveline / Misc. Linens, MIN-PINS. Ready for Christmas, Dep Holds Drapes, Home Items, 228-769-8819 / 228-990-8431 Clothes, Shoes, Etc. 5009 PELICAN ST, Totally Enuf Stuff 4 Two Weekends! Chihuahua, Male, black & Remodeled 3br, 1.5ba, New carwhite. 9 wks old, shots. Multi-Fam, Fri. 4 & Sat. 5 pet, tile & paint thru-out. Patio & 1 8a-12, 9744 Wilkerson Cir, 228-369-8568 / 228-369-8323 car gar. $65k 228-623-1978 off Prescott, Escatawpa. 3BR/2BA, Brick, 2215 Livestock/ Jonathan St, carport, Feed sheet -rock needed 4 ft down, needs kitchen cab, being sold as is, $64,000 /offer. 228-588-3380/ 228-2189593 Green Sofa & Loveseat, $500, Antique Style Desk, $100, & a Piano, $400. Furniture / Household Want to Buy G 762-0028 520 shed, 990-5478 for details TRAILERS: 16ft utility, 6X8, 5X10, 18ft, goose neck, car hauler & dump (601)766-3700 Louis Phillip Jackson County 505 QUALITY STORAGE 3br 2ba 2100 sq ft Living area, 2 utility rms, 20x20 BUILDINGS NASA Memory Foam DOUBLE CAR Garage Qn Sz Mattress Set 20 yr warr must sell $495 Door. Excel Cond. Can deliver. 228-234-0999 $500. 238-0708 ESTATE AUC- 3 PC King Dbl Pillow Top GUN SAFE, LIBERTY Lincoln LX25, Glossy Matt/Set Never Opened! TION Burgundy 790#, Worth $550, Sell $225! 5’x30”x27”. $1200/obo Can deliver 228-234-0999 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5th You Haul. 228-762-7597 NEW QUEEN Pillow Top ★ 10:00 AM ★ SOD, CENTIPEDE, St. AUG Mattress Set. 152 PINECREST LANE Bermuda. Delivery/Install 228Never Opened. $145 FAIRHOPE, AL Can deliver 228-234-0999 396-0282 1-866-374-7277 335 a 420 Bonds Realty & Auction Howard Bonds #0533 251-626-0197 www.hbondsauctions.com Howard Bonds #00533 Mike Morris #1621 251-626-0197251-401-5610 www.hbondsauctions.com Auctions Furniture / Household 380 12,988* SAVE OVER $4500 FC7221 FC6871 WAS $22,265 NOW $ 18,488* SAVE $3,700 12,980 $ Vicki, Kendall, Atwood, Robert, Chris, Terry, Daniel, Mel *All prices after all applicable rebates including disaster relief and incentives. Includes FMCC Rebate, W.A.C. financed thru FMCC Power Windows, Power Locks, Tilt, Cruise Ask for your favorite salesman! Ken, Ron Lee, Margaret Brooks or Larry Lafferty Jr. Call or Come See Jamie Shows, Skipper Stork, Ray Hathcock, J.P. Nunez or Tim Odom Today! www.estabrookford.com 10-C 645 THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS Unfurnished Apartments REMODELED 1BR $100/Dep, + $280/Rent, ** 990-7951***475-6813** 650 Unfurnished Houses DUPLEX SPECIAL 1br $295, 2br $395, 3br $450, 4br $495, dep $300, 4901 Tanner St., Moss Point, MS (510)517-6789 710 BoatsPower 710 22ft TRITON Seaflight w/ 200hp Honda, GPS, Depth Finder, VHF Radio, & alum trlr. Low hrs $27,0000. 228-355-0999 2000 LOGIC 210CC 21ft CC, 200 Evnr Ocean Pro, Brand New Alum Trlr. Runs Great, Looks Good! $13,900 251-367-0683 Bayliner Trophy ’97, 20’, Walk around cabin, 120 Force, Galv trlr, Lots of Extras! $10,000. Exc Cond! 251-679-9935 20’ Chaparral ’01 Bow Rider, Mercruiser 220hp, only 130 hrs, exc cond - MUST SEE $17,750. 251-990-07749 Forts Lake 2br/1ba, 14x50 41’ Hatteras Convertible No pets,total elect $350mo Auto Pilot, radar, color $250Dep. 251-633-8825 graph plotters, outriggers, rebuilt engines. Asking $65,000, make offer. 251-4765434 or 423-4633 Recreation ■ Indicates Jackson County 710 2002 YAMHA LX 2000 JET BOAT $13,500. Call 251-379-4043 1989 STRATOS FISH & SKI 19.5 ft 200 hp Mercury $4900. 251-747-1856 BoatsPower 18ft Deckliner VIP bought new 04-05, 115 Yamaha, $15,500. Must sell! 251-296-1462 ’05 Kenner 23FT 225 Yamaha 4-stroke, w/trailer, 32’ FIBERGLASS Garman 188C stereo/CD, LAFITTE SHRIMPER VHF, T-top, wash down, 3208 CAT, 375HP, Many dual batt., trim tabs, down extras rigger, low hrs, warranty $18,900. 251-463-1174 started 7/9/05. $34,500. 251653-2270 or 656-4782 1998 19FT Sunbird Bowrider w/130hp Evinrude ’04 23.4’ SEAPRO CC, O/B, SS prop, seats 8, bimi200HP Yamaha HPDI ni top, $6850 obo. 251-580w/4yr warr. Alum Trlr, 8216 after 5pm Electronics, New $30,000, Sell $25,900. 251-422-5270 MERCURY OPTIMAX 225hp 20‘ Wellcraft Cuddy, 120hp ’99, Lo hrs, w/gauges conForce, Galv Trlr. VHF, trols $5500. Runs Fish Finder. Exc. Cond. Perfect! 251-865-3969 New price $4500 Orange Bch 251-981-1324 21FT AQUASPORT 1994 T-Top, AM/FM/CD, Garmin 35’ DIESEL GPS & Depth Finder. SPORT FISHERMAN Great Shape! $11,000. Call loaded, $25,000 251-769-4536 251-583-4976 26’ CC Trophy Twin 150HP A 2000 Bullet Bass Boat Merc, Elecs, Head, Large 20XF w/225 Mercury Fish Boxes & New Trailer. Promax ’00, tandem axle trailer. $18,500 obo. 251-377- Prefect Cond! $22,500. 251269-7588 8097 ’00 WELLCRAFT 22’ CC, ’01 Yamaha, 200HP 0X66 Fuel Injected, alum trlr, Ttop, exc cond, elec. $19,250. 251-689-4788 22’ Bay Palmetto ’04 225HP 4 Stroke Yamaha, only 24 hours, Color Furuno, GPS, Alum Trlr, Like New Cond. $35,000. 251-962-7952 ’05 Blazer Bay 2170, 150 24’ Pontoon Boat, ’96 90hp Yamaha, TM, CD, GPS, Leaning Post & More, 5 mo Force, good cond, runs old, $23,500. 601-264-8111 or great, cover & extras, 601-550-0284 $8,875 obo. 251-341-1460 PRO LINE WALK 2000 27’, twin 225 Mercurys, all electronics & trailer. Exc. 3586 cond. $62,500. 251-649-3 2002 Proline Sport 23’, twin 150 Merc, dual elects, radar, GPS, bottom mach, 600W stereo, 3 yrs on warr. dual axle trlr, $32,900obo 251-583-5780 17’ BOSTON WHALER MONTAUK 1993: boat, motor & trailer. Many 135HP MERCURY O/B options$11,600. 251-747-3529. motor, boat & trailer attached. $3000 Firm. ’99 Contender 21’, Yamaha 200HP, Saltwater II, T-Top, 228-762-5911 between 9am-4pm Mon.-Fri. ■ Spreader Lights, Jensen CD/AM/FM/Weather Radio 1996 17’ KEY WEST w/4 Marine Speakers, BAY BOAT w/’98 115HP Furuno GPS & Depth Evinrude, Excellent Finder, VHF Radio, Alum Condition Trlr w/Disc Brakes. $6500. 985-778-9486 $29,000. 205-625-5730 or 205288-9081 Kenner 18 Center Console, Brand New 2005, Less than 15 hrs, Loaded electronics, Perfect Cond! $16,500. 251689-0605 ACTION ADS BoatsPower 710 ’99 Bayliner, 1950 Capri Bowrider, 135 Mercruiser, I/O, Low hours, cover. Like New! $7400. 251-634-0811 or 401-5641 Mitzi 17, fully rigged, Motorguide trolling motor GAUTIER 2BR DUPLEX SW, 70HP Yamaha SW, Brick, a/c, drapes, city Lowrance DF #LMS-337, trim tabs, bass seats, bimiwater/ sewer, clean, quiet area, ni top, alum trlr & more. $650mo. 875-7812 / 872-6203 7mo. old $l6,990 256-268-5811 660Mobilehomes Rentals BoatsPower 1999 21.3 Contender Yamaha 225, Saltwater Series. T-Top, Top Gun Outriggers, Saltwater Washdown, Many Extras, Alum. Tandem tlr. exc. cond.. asking $29,000 D 228-875-3794 N 228-327-2234 97 Robalo 2320 CC, 225 Mariner OS, full trans., alum trlr, new Furuno 21’ Fiberglass Pontoon elecs, t-top/curtains, F/W/ Boat, S/W wash down, tuna door, 150 HP Johnson, 40+ mph, live well, Exc cond, dual axle galv trlr, 5 new $27,900. 251-379-9078 tires. 18’ 2000 Polar V-Hull Turnkey, many extras! T-Top, 90HP Honda, $15,000. 251-610-1238 Low Hours $10,000. ’96 19.50ft Stratus 175 Evin, 251-621-9189 t-top, L-post, dbl axle alum A 1999 CHAPARRAL 19.30 trlr, full elecs. 2-SS props, SS Ltd. Edit. open bow, 6 very low hrs, Lots extras! cyl Mercruiser, non skid $22K Book, SELL $16K liner, 2 tops, 1 owner, 150 FIRM 251-422-1079 hrs. total use, $16,500 251Boat Sacrifice Sale for Pay 510-9446 Off. $25,000. ’03 Stardeck 40’ SHRIMP BOAT 453 w/4 stroke 140hp Suzuki Mtr & Magic Tilt trlr. 251- Detroit, solid fiberglass, 3 drum winch & electron680-7240 ics. $18,500 228-990-0557■ Seafox ’00, 215 Bay Fisher, ★★★★★★ 21’, 150 Ocean Pro, CC, Electronics, Bimini top, 38FT PACEMAKER 1965 low hours, alum trlr. twin diesel, $10,000. Extras! $13,500. 251-649251-661-5564 6566; 583-8448 22 ft. Glacier Bay Catamaran twin 2001 Suzuki 90HP 16’ Dura Craft ’05 w/Trailer 4 stroke, electronics, 68’’ Wide, Yamaha 25 $21,500 251-423-4200 4Stroke Trolling Motor, Gun Box & Dog Stand. 21’ Cape Horn, CC, twin 200 $6800. 251-634-0014 Merc O/Bs, livewell, wash2001 SeaDoo 21’ Challenger down, all elect., galv 2 axle trlr w/new tires $18K 2000. Mercury 240HP, less Danny 251-344-1979 than 60 hrs. on motor. $17,500 251-343-7004 209-7572 1990 19’ PROLINE, Center 209-8239 Console, 130HP Yamaha, Boston Whaler, 17’ Montauk, ’86 hull, ’96 88HP Johnson, bimini top, cover, $7900 251990-5799 463-3375 760 Campers/ Travel Trailers 910 Antique & Collectibles FORD BRONCO 1976. 3spd, 302 V8, gray, new brakes, seats, steering column, too much to list. $12,,900 OBO. 251-605-2112. 2004 Americamp Travel Trailer 31’ Bumper Pull, with 1 slide-out. Like new cond. $16,500 Call Gray @228-623-0355■ 920 2001 Prowler 5th wheel, dble slide, 30.5 ft, ceiling fans, all extras, 228497-6922/ 228-990-0327 Cars 26’ TAG-A-LONG Sleeps 7, new tires, water heater & refrig., etc. $2850 601-508-3870 / 601-508-1905 ACT NOW! Cars From $500! Police Impounds for sale. For listings call 800-3669813, Extension 9797 2005 JAYCO Jayflight Travel Trailer. 27’ Bumper Pull. New condition, Never Used. $15,200 Call Gray @228-623-0355■ ACURA 3.2 CL ’01: Blk/blk lthr, loaded, all pwr, 6-CD, Sunroof, Bose stereo, 64K mi. Below NADA at $14,500. 251-989-3030 780 COACHMAN 22ft, ‘95 fully equipped, good cond. $15,000 @ 17 Magnolia St East , Lucedale, 228-990-2881 BMW 325i ’94 4DR, PW, AC, AT, s’roof, White, Nice $5,495. Call 251661-2342 BMW 528 2000 Black, 52K miles, 1 owner, Excellent condition! garage kept. Non smoker, $23,500. 251422-3204 WINNEBAGO Elandon Class A ‘88-33ft 454 Chevy BMW 740iL 1997 Engine, Gas-2 acs, sleeps Excellent condition! 139K miles, $8900. 6, 44k mi, 17” flat screen Call 251-510-1102 tv,, new refrigerator, microwave/stove, asking BMW ‘97, good shape, $11,000 obo - Contact Ray 96k mi, ap, ac, leather Campbell 228-474-1791 seats, No storm damage $11,500. 228-249-9062 ‘02, Class C, 28 ft RV Ford E450 V-10 Triton Total Price $40,000 228-324-8175 / 228-238-7592 BMW Z-3 Conv. 2000 Auto, 33,500 Miles, 1 Owner $22,900 Call 251-928-7926 2000 Trailer, Runs Great, Rides Well. $7250. 601-9476519 BMW Z3 ’98 37’ ELANDEN Winnebago 1.9 Auto, Lthr, Power Top, ‘90 fully loaded, CD Changer, 89K Miles, 26K mi. In Moss Point . Bertrum 56FT FB, MY, Exc Cond! $8900. 251-623$16,500 813-478-5270 ■ Great live aboard, twin cat 3935 diesels, Very nice boat! 26’ Redneck Yacht, 1976, Buick Century ‘95, Very Heavy Duty, Pontoon Boat, Selling due to illness. Call good cond, rebuilt trans, for photos. $150,000 90HP Yam, Tiki Torches new ac compressor, inc, $3000. 251-973-1632/209- Negotiable. 606-473-7864 $2,000. 228-475-7751 3777 ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Cadillac DeElegance 1999 ’04 SEA PRO 24’ Colored 1998 20’ Century Center Excellent condition, Pearl Hull, F/F, GPS, CD playConsole, 150 Yamaha, White, Leather $9500. er, 225 4-Stroke Yamaha. Trailer, Extras, Very Low 251-990-3011 Hours, Exc. cond. $12,900. Full warranty. Moving must sell. $37,800/obo 251-422-4151 day; 639-1499 Cadillac Deville ’03, Call Larry 228-217-7627 evening 47K miles, white, factory warr. A-1 cond! ’04 Sea Strike, 18 ft., 90 $17,995. 251-554-0188 Boats Yam, 4-stroke, hydraulic Antique & Sail Cadillac Deville 1998 steering, trailer, cover, Collectibles Pearl, tan leather, looks GPS, stereo, misc. $18,500 PEARSON 35 & drives excellent! 117K, 251-454-7635 1956 Chevrolet 2dr 30hp Yanmar diesel, sloop $7500 obo. 251-391-7088 265 V8, 3 spd, matching 23FT HydraSport Walk centerboard, 11’ beam, 3.95.5 draft, very good cond.- numbers, exc cond, $12,900 CADILLAC DEVILLE ’96 Around, less than 100 hrs obo. 251-575-4418 119K Mi, Excellent Cond! no storm damage. $30,000. on boat & motor, Extra Clean! Asking $8500. 251-929-2853. Firberglass T-top w/cur1963 Ford Fairlane 500, 251-649-0251 or 401-4121 tians, 250 Evinrude on out2DR, V8, auto. Looks and drive, FF, GPS, VHS, Boat Equip runs good, nice interior, Cadillac Seville STS ’98, AM/FM/CD, $30,000 FIRM. Serv. Supplies drive it everyday for $3500. Loaded, Bose stereo, $9000. 251-510-3267 Call 251-510-7141 Day 251-626-5951 New ‘05 Mercury 25hp Night 251-978-1993 1967 Ford Custom F-100, NEW ‘05 ALLWELD Electric Start, SS Prop, Large V8, AC, AT, 14 ft Aluminum Boat Cadillac STS ’02, Loaded, Tank & Hose, Very Solid Truck. $4900. Pearl white w/tan interior, $1,200. 228-588-3967 $2,850. 228-588-3967 251-675-7325; 377-3468 sunroof, 47K actual miles, tires, 1 owner, Excel ATV/Off 1972 VW Beetle new Cond! $22,500. 251-575-5308 ‘‘Herbie’’, white Road lv msg THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS $3700. 251-960-1427 Vehicles SUGGEST THAT Chevy Camaro ’02, 35th ’69 Firebird 350, air, PS, BEFORE Anniversary Ed, AT, 29K ‘97 YAMAHA 350 PB, 72K original miles, 1 MAKING AN miles, adult owned only , owner, Exc cond! WOLVERINE w/ Winch INVESTMENT IN excel cond. $13,000. 251-689Matching number car. $2800 228-219-3438 217-3208 RESPONSE TO AN AD, 3302 1-575-4418 $9750. 251 THAT CHEVY Camaro ‘86 ’69 Pontiac Tempist YOU INVESTIGATE THE Campers/ IROC new motor, tree fell Convertible Custom S, OFFER WITH AGENCIES Travel Good Condition! $12,900. across back hatch. $1,500. SUCH AS THE BETTER /offer. 228-826-1198 Call 251-391-9036 BUSINESS Trailers BUREAU AT 1-800-987-8280 ’73 FORD MUSTANG Chevy Camaro SS Conv. ’02 ‘05 32’ Travel Trailer OR THE CONSUMER 351 V-8, Drives & Rides Auto, LS1 350, 24MPG, Sleeps 8. Good condition. PROTECTION Like Loaded, Garaged, Adult $11,900 850-221-1398 AGENCY IN JACKSON, New. Too much new to list. Owned. $17,800. 251-639or 386-295-4119 MS AT 1-800-281-4418 $8000 OBO. 251-625-1486 4582; 753-5269 Vehicles ■ Indicates Jackson County 720 910 740 CHECK FIRST 920 Cars 920 Chevy Camaro Z28 ’99, 88k, 5.7 V8, 6spd, Hugger orange, white stripes, lthr, t-tops, very clean, $11,500. 251-344-8414 CHEVY CORVETTE ’01, 1Owner, Silver/Black Leather, 8 Cylinder, T-top, loaded, Beautiful. $24,900 251-490-7403 Chrysler Concord LXI ’01 79k miles, Loaded! garage kept, Very nice! $8600. 251-675-6059 CHRYSLER SEBRING 1999 CONVERTIBLE. Fully loaded w/leather, power, etc. 91k miles, $7,500 251-232-1291 Acura 3.2TL ’03, white/tan Chrysler Sebring Convt. ’04 lthr, AT, loaded, Bose 6-CD, silver w/blk cloth top, AC, AT, CD, LOADED! 19k, 1 owner, non-smoker, 38,500 miles, $20,750. 251-490-1610 $22,000. Will trade. 251-7520212 Motorhomes 1997 Holiday Rambler 32 ft, like new, 20k mi, $36,000 (251)865-2121 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 750 760 Chrysler Sebring Limited 2000, Excellent condition! Leather, champagne, brown top, $9850. 251-9903011 CHRYSLER SEBRING LX 2003 4DR, V6, PL, PW, AM/FM, CD, cruise, Silver, Exc cond! 66K, Reduced! $7900 251-625-4318 Dodge Neon SXT ’03 auto, PW, PL, keyless entry, 6 disc CD, exc cond, 48k miles, Must Sell $5,995 obo. 251-610-9561 DODGE SRT-4 Turbo ‘04, black, 20k mi, under fact warr., kicker sound system, Too many extras to list, $18,500. (601)528-3812 Cars Honda Civic 2000, 126k, 1 owner, Auto, AC, PS, PB, PW, PM, new tires, 32MPG. $7100 251-343-2380 or 401-4649 Cars Infiniti J30 ’95, 121k mi, runs great. $6,000. 251-709-1204 INFINITI Q-45 2000 Anniv Ed., loaded, immac., new tires, brakes & battery; 70K, fact. maint. $17,950. 251-990-3560. Infiniti Q45 ’97, Kelly Green, 133K, Local car, Top of the line $7500. 251-209-4611 MERCEDES 300SE ’89 White, Lthr, Sunroof, Loaded! 104k mi, $8900 228-475-3480 920 Mazda Miata ’99 Co onv., red w/tan top, 5spd, 111k mi, cruise, runs & drives very good. $6500. 251-443-9732 Mercedes Benz SL500 Roadster ’97, 63k, 2nd Honda Civic DX 2000 owner, like new, $26,000. Blue, 5 speed, Good condi850-382-0957 tion, new tires, CD player, $7000. 251-402-2007 MERCEDES SL500 ’96, Honda Civic EX ’94, 140K new tires, carfax, both miles, 2DR coupe, sunroof, tops, beautiful car, low Black, AT, $3900 251-379- miles, new $90K, sacrifice $18,900 obo. 251-554-4583 0186 MERCURY COUGAR ‘99 HONDA PRELUDE ’99 No water or hurricane 4 cyl, auto, white/black cloth, 98k, all pwr, sunroof, damage. Ext. & Int. very clean, $10,850. 251-344- looks great. Runs great. $8000/obo 228-475-6203 ■ 8414. Mercury Grand Marquis Honda’s From $500! ’91 POLICE IMPOUNDS Box style, V8, 120k mi, AC, For listings call 800-366-9813, Extension 4500 all power, super clean, drives perfect, $2100. 251Infiniti G35 ’03, 2DR, 604-1249 Black/Tan, lthr, XM radio, spoiler, all options, $25,900 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS ’86. 1 owner, obo. 251-510-3449 625-1484 garage kept, 20K actual Infiniti G35 Coupe ’04 miles. Mint cond. $7950. 251-645-498 80 22k, Sport Pkg, Consider SUV Mitsubishi Galant S ’96 Trades, Like New gray, AT, cold AC, PW, Condition. PL, nice & clean. $31,500. 251-689-2274 $2,990. 251-680-2160 JAGUAR XJ8L ’01 BEAUTIFUL CAR Ford Crown Victoria ’01, 51k miles, 1 owner, $19,500 Excel Cond! Keyless entry, 251-968-5469 PS, CD, New tires, 156K miles, $6000. 251-463-62255 Lexus LS 430 ’01, Fully Loaded, navigation sys, FORD FOCUS 2000 white on white, Spotless! 70K, 5 Speed, Avg. 30 90k mi. $29,900. Call 251MPG, $4995 obo or Trade 942-3855 for Truck. Florida Car. Call 813-245-0737 LEXUS SC 300 1997 Green, 1 owner FORD MUSTANG 2001 $8900 PW/PS/PL, 64K mi. Good 251-752-8274 cond. $6990. Must sell. 251675-6104; 675-6090 after 6 LINCOLN ’97 pm 120 Stretch Limo by Royal, Exc Condition! 92K Miles. Ford Mustang GT ’88 $18,000. Call 251-402-1437 103k Miles, 5 Speed, 5.0L Lincoln LS 02 Fully Engine all orginial. $4500 Loaded, OBO. 251-928-6670 Lthr, Sunroof, V8, 43K mi, FORD Mustangs ‘67 (2), Exc. Cond., $18,500 $2,500 /offer, for both, 228251-473-7995; 753-8474 475-1383/ 228-219-1813 LINCOLN LS 2000 FORD T-BIRD ’97 V8 black w/lthr, roof, Auto, new tires, alloy 53K mi. loaded exc. cond wheels, $13,500 251-605-1943 loaded, power windows. LINCOLN LS 2002 $4800obo. 251-767-2657 V8, 50K miles Ford Taurus 1994, SHO Pay off balance, approx Silver, 1 owner, $19,500. 251-460-4664 130K miles, $3500. Lincoln Towncar 2000 251-751-6453 Signature Series, loaded, FORD TAURUS SEL 2001 low miles, exc. cond. $9500, Loaded w/options, ($5000 below blue book.) Extra Nice! $8200. 251-504-0300 Call 251-209-8651 MAZDA MIATA 1991 ★★★★★★ Red, 81K miles, 5-spd, air, Oldsmobile LSS ’97 radio/cass. Good cond. lthr, loaded, exc cond, $4000. 251-660-9335 $4,200 obo. 251-583-3415 Mazda Protege LX 1994 ★★★★★ auto, air, new timing Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’97, belt/wtr pump, $2550 obo. 135k miles, black, $3,900. 251-463-5572, 463-9323 or 431251-545-9790 lv msg 1831 HONDA ACCORD ’01 Spoiler, Auto, 4dr, CD/Tape/AM/FM, Looks & Drives Like New! New Tires! $10,500. 251-391-7490 920 NISSAN ALTIMA 02 3.5 SE, white, sunroof, power seats, spoiler, mint cond. $19,500 OBO 251-7670156 Cars Toyota Camry 99 Black & gold, all power, $7900 251-610-1287 TOYOTA Celica ‘91, only 80k mi on motor, 5 spd, runs great, as is, $1,500. /offer. 228-217-2672 Toyota Celica GTS ’91, 5spd, all pwr, AC, CD, new tires & paint, all maintenance records, exc cond, $4,500. 251-753-7551 Toyota Celica GTS, ’00, 6speed manual, loaded, Excellent Condition. Sharp. $9,900. OBO. 251-379-0186 TOYOTA COROLLA ’01 Bought new! 5 spd, 73K, new Michelin tires, 41mpg, 4dr, PW, PL, Exc cond! $7900 obo. 251-689-9175; 6539316 Toyota Corolla CE ’01 4dr, extra clean, auto, cold AC, new tires, gas saver, $7,100. 251-645-9530 TOYOTA SOLARA ’00 Auto, CD/Tape/AM/FM, 2DR, 1 Owner, Cold AC, Showroom Cond! $9700. 251-342-8347 VW Beetle 99 PWL, 94k miles. Looks brand new. $8900 251-610-1287 VW JETTA GLS 02 AT, 4 cyl, CD, great MPG, Nissan Altima 2.5S ’05, 26k perfect, $10,950 Miles, Alum Rims, Electric 251-510-3449 625-1484 Seats, Cruise, Auto, $21,000. 251-633-6523 or 463Sport Utility 0978 NISSAN ALTIMA 2002 Auto, PW, PL, CD, extra nice, $13,200. Call 251-209-8651 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE ’99 100K, Silver, 4DR, CD/Cass AT, 4 Cyl, Extra clean! $5900. 251-379-0186 NISSAN MAXIMA ‘05 SE Very nice, clean car. 21K mi. $28,500/obo 228-475-7609/ 228-217-7609■ Nissan Maxima ’97, 140k miles, runs great, needs paint, everything works, SOLD. 251-401-2275 NISSAN MAXIMA SE 2003 Sunroof, all power, tinted windows, 75K miles. Nice car $18,500. 251-865-9457 950 Vehicles BMW X5 2005 16K miles, Great Deal! Sacrifice. $42,000. 251-402-7748 Cadillac Escalade 2000 4WD, leather, 115k mi. $12,500 Call 251-423-1111 Cadillac Escalade ESV ’05, fully loaded, black, 8k, $52,995. 251-634-9634 or 716-3864 CADILLAC SRX 2004 8K Miles, Extra, Extra Clean! $28,500 obo. Call 251-649-0470 CHEVY BLAZER ‘01 4.3 liter V6, 2-Dr., 4WD, pw, pl, ps, alarm, moonroof, am/fm radio, cd player, Oldsmobile Aurora 96’ 82K cassette player, brush guard, rear tire carrier, mi, 1 owner, cd, sunroof, lthr interior (no rips)$6k- tow pkg, 69K mi. $9000 228-475-0884/ 228-990-5818■ offer 228-235-5218 POLICE IMPOUNDS Chevy’s From $500! For listings call 800-366-9813, Extension 2241 Chevy Blazer LT 1995, 4x4, 145k Miles, New Michelin Tires, New AC, $3500. 601334-0557 or 251-343-2749 PONTIAC GRAND AM ’94 after 5PM V4, runs great! New tires, Chevy Blazer Sport 1995 no A/C. Super on gas! $1600 V6, 2WD, AC, PW, PL, OBO. 251-604-1249 Leather, Cass. Runs good. $4500. 251-649-0492, 251-802Pontiac Grand Am 3214 GT ’01, 60K miles, $7000. CHEVY SUBURBAN ’99 251-765-2676 4x4, LOADED! Exc cond! PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT 00’ 4dr, 87k pw/dr/mr, $7,850 228-219-1067 Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’04 63k miles, Burgundy, Exc Condition. $11,500 obo 251-937-5945 or 604-3103 REPO SALE Auto Credit, Inc. Dealers Only 228-769-9888 TOYOTA AVALON XLS ’00 Leather, Auto, CD, Sunroof, Loaded! Showroom Condition! $11,900. Call 251-391-7490 Super clean! $8450 OBO 251-344-3443 Chevy Suburban ’99, Like New, Loaded, CD, 3rd seat, 114K miles. $8250. 251-533-3381 CHEVY SUBURBAN LT ’00 Leather, Nice Family Car! 110K Miles. $9900 obo. Call 251-421-2211 Chevy Suburban LT ’04 3rd seat, leather, loaded! 33K miles, $28,000 251-675-0212 SPECIAL ALLOCATION! T H E L A R G E S T N E W V E H I C L E I N V E N T O RY I N O U R H I S T O RY ! ! SOUTH MISSISSIPPI’S HEADQUARTERS FOR DURAMAX DIESEL TRUCKS!!! ‘06 GMC CA N Y O N RE G CA B ‘06 GMC SIERRA EXTENDED CA B ‘06 PO N T I A C TO R R E N T stk# 98749 stk# 71917 stk# 98632 WE ARE PURCHASING HUNDREDS OF QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AND ROLLING THEM IN EVERY WEEK!!! CARS, TRUCKS, VANS AND SUV’S GM Company, Save THOUSANDS, 2,500 Miles!! Leather! P9603 03 Buick Rendevous Leather and Loaded! P9230 03 Eddie Bauer Ford Expedition Showroom Quality, Loaded! P9231 05 GMC Envoy XUV SLT GM Company Vehicle, Save P9218 01 Toyota Sequoia Sunroof, Leather, Very Nice! P9247 03 Toyota Tundra LTD Access Cab, Like NEW! THOUSANDS, Fully Loaded! P9240 03 Chevy Avalanche Z-71 4x4 MUST SEE! P9193 03 Chevy Avalanche Z-66 Sunroof, Leather! 2 Available – Ford Explorers Must See To Believe P9231 02 Ford Ranger XLT Ext. Cab 4x4!!! P9250 05 Chevy G-3500 15 Passenger Van Great Buy!!!!! 98389A 01 Tahoe LT 4x4 Better Hurry! 98545A 03 Ford F-150 Crew Cab XLT This Truck Is Fine! 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! P9264 03 Lincoln LS Sunroof, Leather, 17K miles! P9269 04 GMC Envoy XUV SLE model! Nice! P9279 03 Pontiac Grand AM GT Sunroof, Loaded!!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!! 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!!! P9263 04 Silverado Reg Cab LS model!!! 4x4!!! P9258 02 Nissan Maxima SE Loaded!!! P9234 02 Lincoln LS Sunroof, Leather, Low Miles!!! P9205 SALE PRICE $14,045 SALE PRICE $19,245 SALE PRICE $21,745 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750 $ DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750 $ DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750 YOUR PRICE: 13,295* YOUR PRICE: 20,995* YOUR PRICE: $18,495* ‘06 GMC CA N Y O N ‘06 PO N T I A C G - 6 ‘06 GMC ENVOY ‘06 GMC YU K O N CREW CA B $ $ stk# 71923 stk# 98670 SALE PRICE $18,245 REBATE: -$1,000 BONUS CASH: -$500 stk# 98640 stk# 98624 SALE PRICE $28,745 SALE PRICE $19,245 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750 SALE PRICE $24,745 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750 YOUR PRICE: 15,995* YOUR PRICE: 27,995* YOUR PRICE: 18,495* YOUR PRICE: $23,995* ‘06 GMC SIERRA ‘ 0 6 G M C S I E R R A ‘06 PONTIAC GRANDPRIX REGULAR CA B CREW CA B 4 DR $ $ $ stk# 71893 stk# 98809 stk# 98630 SALE PRICE $15,645 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION! $ DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750 SALE PRICE $22,745 SALE PRICE $20,145 DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: - 750 $ DISASTER RELIEF REBATE: -$750 YOUR PRICE: $14,895* YOUR PRICE: $21,995* YOUR PRICE: $19,395* N O PAY M E N T F O R 9 0 D AY S ! ! ! ! * * 0 . 0 % F I N A N C I N G A VA I L A B L E * * * *All rebates assigned to dealer plus tax and title w.a.c. **Subject to credit approval ***05 Yukons 05 Buick Rainier GM Company Vehicles and Program Cars! 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!!!!!!! 950 Sport Utility Vehicles 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 ’98, 2DR Sport, Z-71, 4x4, 95k Miles, All Options, 285/75 Tires, Exc Cond. $9995. 251-3912776 CHEVY TAHOE ‘99 LS 4X4. Looks & Runs Good $8,500 /offer. 251-455-5750 CHEVY Tahoe LS ‘02, loaded, leather, rear air, new Firestone tires, asking $18,700. 228588-2748/ 228-990-8525 CHEVY TAHOE LT 04 Black/gray leather, TV/DVD, 3rd seat, XM/Sat, 39k, $23,900 251-510-3449 6251484 CHEVY TAHOE Z-71 1999 4-dr, 93K mi, Sharp looking! $11,500 251-895-7507; 344-1608 Chevy Trailblazer LS ’05, V6, AT, Silver, PW, PDL, CD, OnStar, 5K, Tow Pkg. Must Sell $24,000 obo 251366-1534 LM DODGE Durango ‘00, V8, 3rd row seat, tow pkg, 127k mi, $8,200. 228-826-3378 950 11-C THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2005 Sport Utility Vehicles FORD EXPEDITION Eddie Bauer 1999 2WD 126k White/Gray Leather Rebuilt Title. Great Cond. $7900. 251-747-8216 950 Sport Utility Vehicles 950 Sport Utility Vehicles nder XE ’99 HONDA ELEMENT EX ’04 Nissan Pathfin Auto, Champagne, 20K V6, auto, 70k, gold/tan Miles, Like New! cloth, PW, PL, PM, very $18,300. 251-648-00667 clean, $9750 251-344-8414. Ford Expedition XLT ’98 3rd row seat, mom driven, great cond, 142k mi, $7,150. 251-786-5619 FORD EXPLORER ‘00 XLT lthr, am/fm cd, 61K miles. $9,800 228-990-6300 FORD EXPLORER 1996 2WD, V8 Auto., AC, All Power, 130K miles, CD Changer, Loaded. $4750. Call 251-689-4984 FORD EXPLORER ’97 Eddie Bauer XLT, All Options, 99+K Miles, Excellent Condition! $6900. 251-94762111 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer 1994 $3500. Priced to sell! 251-583-3228 FORD EXPLORER SPORT 01. Like new, 1 owner-female, all power, leather, 78k hwy, wholesale price $8350 251-604-8705. Ford Explorer Sport ’94, 2dr, PW, PL, sunroof, exc CD player, V6, 5spd manual, 63k mi, $4,200 Firm. 251-666-9404 Dodge Durango 2000. Exc. cond. Very clean. 5.9L V8, 3rd row seat, $9900 251-645- Ford Explorer Sport Trac 1457 709-9287 XLT ’04, 9K, all power, leather bucket, heated DODGE DURANGO 2003 seats, hard tonneau cover 47k Miles, Black, 3rd Row $22,750. 251-968-4547 Seats, CD, Rear AC, Well Maintained. $14,900. 251Ford Explorer XLT 2002, 947-2136 leather, all power, CD, 36K mi, tow pkg, $15,000. 251DODGE DURANGO ‘98 432-2363 or 251-455-0180 4WD, 3rd row seat, rear GMC Envoy XL ’04, ac, tow pkg, 82k mi, V-8, loaded, 3rd seat $8,700. 228-218-1526 warranty, $28,700. Ford Bronco XLT ’92, 147K 251-604-6639 mi, Leather, Loaded! New GMC Jimmy ’00 BF Goodrich All terrain either take up notes of tires, great cond! $5300. $239.40 or buy for $7,000. 251-414-5740 251-654-0801 or 533-4223 FORD EXCURSION 2000 GMC Suburban 1500 1994 White & tan, Limited, 90K 142k Miles, New Tires & Nice. $11,500 OBO Brakes Rebuilt 251-583-1535 Transmission & Engine. FORD EXCURSION 2001 Needs Short Block $1895. XLT, 4WD, V10, 63K miles. Call Gideon at 251-479-9591 Hunter Green w/Tan GMC YUKON ’00 Interior. Power everything, new $15,000 obo. 251-747-2089 tires, 16mpg, 117K mi. FORD EXPEDITION ’01 Must sell. $10,000 OBO. 251370-8526 Silver, 6 CD Changer, 62k Miles, Exc Cond, 3rd Seat, GMC Yukon ’03, White, 3rd Leather, $15,500. 251-653seat, 34K miles, manufac8686 turers warranty. $20,500. 251-401-4131 or 478-07778 Ford Expedition ’01, AWD/4WD, 1 Owner, 55K GMC Yukon GT 4x4 1995, miles, new tires, new 2DR, Low miles, 5.7, new brakes, excel cond. $12,500. tires, fully loaded, exc. 251-928-8947 cond. $7900. 251-504-0300 FORD EXPEDITION ‘03 GMC YUKON SLT ’99 4x4 Eddie Bauer. $22,000 145K mi, white w/grey For more info call leather, fully loaded, per601-947-2742/ 601-508-0225■ fect! $9600. 251-443-7445; 533-7344 FORD EXPEDITION 2000 Sport. Great shape. 198K GMC YUKON XL ’01, miles, black, 3rd seat, rear SLT Pkg, lthr, sunroof, air. $7500. 251-209-2548.. 4x4, 99K miles, $13,500. 251-554-7977 FORD EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER 01. Honda CRV 2000 Leather, sunroof, loaded, 4WD, 4 cyl, 4DR, auto, maroon, 74k miles $14,500 Extra Clean! $9900. 251-639-8294 251-379-0186 Trucks Chevy Silverado ’04, sportside, Ext cab, LS, 5.3 V8, carfax, low mi, custom extras, retail $24K. Only $18,900 obo. 251-554-4583 Nissan Xterra SE ’04 Loaded, Auto, AC, PW/PL CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 14k Miles, $18,500 ’01. 3 toolboxes ladder 251-633-3909, 391-7224 rack, new tires, 75,000 mi. $13,000. Jessie 251-609-2925. PONTIAC AZTEC SUV Isuzu Axiom XS ’02, 4WD, one owner, carfax, like new, htd lthr, roof, loaded, retail $12,740. Only $9900 obo. 251-554-4583 Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer 2001, 40k Miles, Excellent Condition. Loaded, $16,500. 251-634-5186 960 960 Trucks 960 Ford F-150 ’99 4x4, Extended Cab, 172K, 4 month motor warranty. $7500 obo. 251-661-0908; 609-5376 FORD F-150 SUPER CAB ’01 V8, 143K Miles, AT, Cold AC, Stereo, Alloys, Drives 2003 CHEVY SILVERADO 2004 Excellent! $6995 obo. Call JEEP CHEROKEE 52,400 mi, new tires, 1 R/C 4x4, 14K, V6, AT, AC, 251-478-4445 SPORT 1998. V6, 4DR, owner, 26mpg, exc cond. $15,000 obo. Call 251-9864WD, CD Player, 150k mi., Ford F-150 Super Crew ’01, $10,900 251-377-6781; obo. 6673, 251-550-6673 great cond. $4600 251-228V8 4.6, CD, Bedliner, 990-3781 1252 Running boards, P.W., P.L., CHEVY SILVERADO Jeep Grand Cherokee ’00, PONTIAC MONTANA 01’ CREW CAB LT ’03 DURA- 1 Owner, 81K mi, $12,000 OBO 205-936-4535cell 251all power, Auto, CD/tape, Seats 8, 83,400 miles, new MAX 3500 Dually, Allison 344-6263hm. trans, leather, 4dr, 6 disc AC, Mint Condition! Must brakes, No Damage, Excellent condition. 228- Bose, 70k. OnStar. $26,850 77 Sell! $8900. 251-554-797 Ford F-150 Super Crew ’03 334-313-2654 497-3143 $8,000 firm gold color, 4dr, auto, 5.7 JEEP GRAND CHEROChevy Silverado LS 2004 V8, KEE 2001, Silver/Gray, 4x4, 4x4 2500 Ext’d Cab, White, all options, tinted glass, Subaru Forester 2004, 20k, V-6, CD, PW/PL, 76k, 6.0L V8, tool box, bedliner, bedliner, 26k. Must see to black, XT Turbo, auto, Beautiful, $11,800. 251-490PD, PW, CD, keyless entry, appreciate. Located in loaded, warranty. Exc. 7403; 554-8921 Daphne. cond. $21,900 251-343-2380 or Exc cond! 48K, $24,000. 251JEEP GRAND CHERO- 401-4649 604-7908 $15,000. 813-376-3025 (D), KEE LAREDO ’00 74K mi., 251-625-8562 (E until 8) CHEVY Z-71 2002 Totota 4-Runner ’00, 4WD, V6, CD, PWL, Taupe, Ext Cab, SLT, ONE Ford F-250 ’03 $10,000 OBO. Call 251-679- Limited look alike, silver, OWNER, Loaded! Only lthr, roof, loaded, carfax, XLT, tow pkg, loaded, 5.4 4529 91K Mi. Exc Cond! Carfax. low miles. Sacrifice LTR, ext cab, 18k miles, $15,900. 251-533-8385 JEEP GRAND CHERO$14,900. 251-554-4583 $19,500. 251-401-2275 KEE LAREDO 2002. TOYOTA SEQUOIA ‘03 Chevy Z71 ’05 Ford F-250 ’03, 6.0 Super Loaded, all the extras, sun33k mi, excel cond, Quad Cab. Orange County Duty 4x4 Lariat, Power roof, extra sharp. Was Chopper Special. Stroke Diesel, Auto, 74k $15,500; askiing $13,900. 251- loaded, asking One of a Kind! 6500 mi. $25,000. 228-217-5626 Miles. 689-7375. $33,900 251-716-6389 Sell for Pay-off, $28,300. TOYOTA 4RUNNER ‘97, JEEP LIBERTY ’03 Call 334-357-0654 Anytime. Chevy Z71 Extra Cab99 255k mi, needs paint, runs $12,000 4WD, auto, PW, PL, tilt, good, black, 251-751-4663 Ford F-250 ’04 cruise, $11,500. Call $4,300. 228-475-9661 by private owner super duty XLT, gas, 3,400 251-209-8651 mi, Toyota 4Runner Ltd ’00 JEEP WRANGLER 1997 DODGE 1500 4x4 ’03 $27,000. 251-957-2459 4cyl, 5 spd, sound bar, biki- Millennium Silver, Leather Crew Cab, Grey, Hemi, Loaded! Exc Cond! 66K ni top, new tires, 107k mi. FORD F-250 2002 SUPER CD player. $13,700 Mi. Good shape. $5300 251-949DUTY. 4x4, XLT ext. cab. Call 251-402-0650 $16,999. Call 251-422-4328 7390 Powerstroke diesel, auto, Dodge 3500 Ext Cab 1997, Toyota 4Runner Sport 2002, 152k. Sell for loan $18,500 JEEP WRANGLER 2000, 4x4 Dually, Cummins PW, power DRs, CD, tow 251-661-0908 softtop, 69K, AM-FM CD, Turbo Diesel, gooseneck pkg., 50k miles, asking A/C, new tires, fantastic hitch, New 5 Speed Ford F-250 ’97, SLT, diesel, shape. $13,800. 251-753-8375. $19,800 OBO 251-490-1626 Transmission & Cluth, Cold ext cab, LWB, immac, Toyota Sequoia ’02 AC, Runs Excellent. $9600. comp equip’d. Must Sell, JEEP WRANGLER 2005 By Owner! $7,500 obo. 2516 cyl., AT, hardtop, running SR5, leather, DVD, fully Call Chris @ 601-394-4447 loaded, home or 601-394-9338 cell. 661-8979 boards, tow package, 19,500 49k mi, MUST SELL! miles, exc. cond. $23,000 Dodge Dakota ’02, Quad Ford F-250 ’99, long bed, Extra clean, obo. 251-709-4510 Cab, 4x4, V8, auto, 54K, reg cab, V8, AT, PS, PB, $19,500 obo. 251-583-1318 Loaded! hard tonneau AC, JEEP Wrangler X, ‘02, Toyota Sequoia SR5 ’05, cover, step rail, nerf bars, 33k actual miles, soft top, leather seats, 2WD, V8, fully loaded! new tires, Silver/grey intr, $8,500 obo. SOLD 4.0L, blue, asking payoff cloth intr, dual AC, TV’s, Exc cond! $16,900. 251-675$13,000. 601-947-1727/ Exc cond! Ext warr, non 1872; 251-689-0670 Ford F-250 XLT 2004 (601)508-5209 moker, $32,900 obo . 251sm 24k miles, Dodge RAM 1500 ’03 575-4418 Excellent Cond, $33,600. LEXUS RX300 ’01 Quad cab, exc cond, w/ 251-580-3495 or 232-7749 sunroof, leather, CD, Gold, TOYOTA SEQUOIA SR5 extended warr, 37k mi, 113K, Excellent condition. 2002, Silver, Leather, V8, $16,200. 251-786-5619 FORD F-350 ’03 $17,500. 251-648-9482 or 251- Rear Super Duty Dually Diesel, 666-3174 Spoiler, 4dr., CD/Cass., 55K DODGE RAM 1500 ’05. Reg Ext Cab. Exc. Cond. Call cab, SLT, auto, power, 5.7L Miles. $19,500. 251-957-6724 LEXUS RX300 2X4 ’99 Hemi, 20’’ wheels, chrome for details. $25,000. 251-422Loaded, pwr sunroof, heataccessories. $22,500 251-978- 1345. Trucks ed seats, Pearl white/tan 2150 FORD F-350 ’03. leather, new tires. $13,950 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT ’01 Dually, 4x4, crew, Lariat. 251-661-0908 Quad Cab, 5.9L V8, auto, Excellent condition. $32,900 CHEVROLET COLORADO 251-660-0709; 421-1933 Lincoln Navigator ’00, EXTRAS! Tow pkg, 71K, 2005. 4DR, 4WD, Z71, 9k loaded incl GPS navig sys, miles, satellite radio, Extra Ford F-350 ’99, short bed, 67k, exc cond, new tiers. Clean! $12,500. 251-649-5997 crew cab, V10, AT, AC, PS, orange sunburst color, $19,000 obo. 251-635-1274, 4yr/48k mi warr $25,000 251PB, 66k actual miles, Dodge Ram 2500 ’04 402-1990 866-5919 591-3401 $14,995 obo. 251-344-6739 or great shape, extras, LINCOLN NAVIGATOR 510-0760 w/5th wheel hitch, 3 Chevy /4 Ton ’03, ‘04, 8000K Miles, Loaded $25,500. 251-649-9590 FORD F-350 CREW CAB HD, 4x4, Reg Cab, V8, No Water Damage $34,900 Dodge Ram Charger ’85, ’95 Auto Tran, AC, Tilt, 228-475-9652 Cruise, $12,800. 251-454-2211 4x4 w/winch. Great engine Good condition. 160k miles. & drive train. Needs TLC. Great work truck. MERCEDES M350, 28k CHEVY 3500 ’94, 8x12 box $2000 251-660-2694; 653-8958 $8,000 251-232-5139 miles, immaculate cond., truck, 204K, runs good, No. Jackson Co., $29,500, Great work truck! $7400 Dodge Ram Pick Up 1500 Ford F-350 Crew Cab 228-588-9960 / 228-217-1804 obo. 251-675-7605; 251-680’01 LWB, V6, Auto, AC, 65K Lariat ’00 Powerstroke Miles, Excellent Condition Diesel Dually, Auto., Tow Mercury Mountaineer ’02 8611 $7350. Call 251-510-54338 Pkg.5th Wheel Hitch, New Exc cond, 65k, V8, blue, CHEVY S-10 2002 loaded, leather, 3rd row, R/C, V6, 5spd, cold AC, tilt, Ford F-150 2000 Ext’d Cab, Tires, Many Extras. 96K, 4DR, V6, 5 speed, cassette, $20,000. 251-580-4401 680-1954 tow pkg. NOW $12,900. Call cruise, bedliner, alum cruise, AC, bedliner, 140K 251-929-0592 whls, 50K. Super nice. Ford F-350, ’97, Crew Cab, hwy mi, $6800. 251-533-9252 $6950 251-661-0908 Diesel, Long Bed, Duallys, Mitsubishi Montero Sport FORD F-150 2001 Xtra Fuel Tank 50gal, XLS 2001, Loaded, 68k Chevy S-10 LS 1999 reg cab, V6, auto, AC, camp pkg, Exc Cond miles, $11,000. 251-947-4822 17’’ wheels, stereo, excellent condition. $8,350. $14.5K 251-961-2031 or 747-4559 $5500 OBO Call 251-633-0396 251-458-4827 NISSAN PATHFINDER ‘01 FORD F-450 XL Super FORD F-150 ’97 All Power, Cruise, CD Duty Powerstroke 2004, Chevy Silverado ’00, R/C, 57K, V6, AUTOMATIC, A/C 39,984 mi., 4x4, V8 turbo Player, Black/Gray V6, 5 Spd, Short Bed, 56K GOOD COND. $6850 Interior. 92K. $10,200. Call miles, $7200. 251-970-2790 or diesel. Asking payoff $37k, ★★251-634-8119★★ 251-533-5531 251-846-2366 251-978-7751 960 Trucks 960 Trucks 970 FORD F-350 XL 2000 6-spd, flatbed, 235K miles $11,000 OBO 251-661-4768, 533-1231 Toyota Tundra Limited TRD 2001, 4WD, 84,500 Miles, $16,200. 334-222-3680 or 334-222-6477 FORD F600 ‘69, septic Tank Truck , 360 eng, gas, 1100 gal tank, new tires, gas/mud pump, less than 500 mi on eng. 4spd, $6,500. Tim (601)947-3199 TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5 2000 4dr Ext Cab, 4WD, Lthr, V8, AT, CD, PW/PL, 95K, exc. $32k New Sell $14,995 251-769-5592 Vans 980 Dodge Grand Caravan HARLEY DAVIDSON FATBOY 02. Only 1200 mi., ‘90, $475 228-806-1812 $4,000 in extras, black w/red pin stripe, Exc. cond. $15,600 251-689-4743 G MERCURY Villager TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5 Estate ‘01, leather, loaded, $11,000 firm, 228-588-3967 2000 V8, 4WD, 40K mi, exc. Oldsmobile Silhouette ’98 cond, all options except ext. van, lthr, all pwr, leather, tow pkg, brand auto, 113k, $4,890. new tires. No wrecks, dam251-476-5434 or 423-4633 GMC DENALI ’02 age or smoke. Asking 4dr, 4WD, Quadra Steering, PONTIAC Transport ‘98 $17,500. 251-621-7326 Lthr, Fully Loaded! Exc White. Good condition, Cond! $15,900 obo. 251-533- Toyota Tundra, 2004, dependable. $4000/obo Double Cab, LTD, 4x4 V8, 228-497-5560 / 228-806-0630 8385 Sunroof, Lthr, Towing, 1 GMC Extra Cab 1500 ’96, owner, 37K, $31,000. Ph 251- Pontiac Transport SE ’97 Turbo diesel, 230K mi, fully 65k miles on new engine, 342-9311 loaded, hard shell cover, runs like new, compass mirror, overhead TRUCK OUTLET $3,800. 251-786-5619 console, tow pkg, drive We Have Diesels, anywhere, 19mpg Exc Ford, Dodge, Chevy Motorcycles Shape $6800 251-653-6313 3/4 Ton, 1 Ton, Crewcab 4X4’s 866-869-1987 GMC Sierra 2000 SLE ’00 Yamaha Venture, MM 2WD, 1/2 Ton Ext Cab, 4 Vans Edition, Touring Bike, Dr., 108K, PS, PW, PDL, ivory CD, $12,000. Call 251-490& tan, 39k, looks new, 2 0044 Chevy Astro Van 2000, 7 headsets & helmets, GMC Sierra ’98 1500 SLT, pass., auto, dual AC, 91k, PG, 40MP Z71, Ext’d cab, Black, loaded, new tires, $7100 $8,995. 251-476-7888 120k, leather, PL/PW, PS, 251-343-2380 or 401-4649 ‘05 Harley Davidson HD tow pkg, toolbox CHEVY VENTURE VAN Sportster 1200 Custom bedliner, $9500. 251-610-9391 2002 3200 mi., w/windshield & GMC Sierra Stepside ‘01, LOADED! auto, air, PL, sissy bar. 1 yr factory 4dr, w/ camper shell, 41mo PW, warr. $9500 228-623-4790 ext warr. 69k mi, No flood CD, 79.7K, Well mainaft. 4pm. ■ damage, excel cond, tained. 2002 Electric Glide $10,500. 251-605-63882 $16,000. 228-769-6401 Standard, Custom Paint, GMC YUKON XL 2002 Chrysler Town & Country Lots of Extras, 14K miles, Black with Tan Leather, ’03, 43K, Exc Cond! $15,000 Must See! $14,500 obo. cell DVD, obo 251-928-9068 after 5pm 251-455-3152 CD, Rear Bucket Seats, & wknds or 947-1981 days, ’99 Buell S3T Sport Sunroof, Tom Touring, $22,800. 251-767-0338 CHRYSLER VOYAGER ’02 4600 miles, $4800 obo. ★★★★★ New brakes & battery, 12K Will consider trades. Chevy Wedge Type Car mi left on Fcty wrnty, 251-232-1463 Hauler ’78, w/454, new ext’d wrnty avail. $9700. A Brand New 250CC Vision clutch, 251-660-1659. R3, remote keyless start, $2,750. 251-456-7806 DODGE GRAND alarm, 70mpg, 6-mo warr,c ★★★★★★ Caravan ‘99. $4500 $2500. Call 251-232-1760 Ford F-150 ext cab ’02 Call Stacey 228-818-2865 ★★★★★ XLT, 4dr, V6, auto, air, exc after 6pm weeknights. ’03 Pro Street Custom, cond, $8,950. 251-633-3986 Dodge Grand Caravan ’05 many ★★★★★★★ 13K Mi, Stow & Go Seats, extras. Must sell! $14,000. Dodge Dakota RT ’00 V6, Asking Payoff of 251-680-2719 or 649-2642 electric blue, 107k, exc $23,000. Call 251-296-0108 or ★★★★★★★ cond, $9,000. 985-788-2953 370-0560 ’03 Intruder Volusia 800 ★★★★★★★★★★★★ Suzuki, accessories includDodge Grand Caravan CHEVY COLORADO Z71 ed, ‘96, drives, needs trans. ’04 7k mi, $5,000. 251-680-7509 work $475 228-806-18125 Crew cab, PW, PL, low miles. FORD CONV VAN HI-TOP $20,200. Call 251-341-1742 ’94. Like new, great shape, $4800 or trade for truck. Jeep Wrangler 2000 251-634-1565, 767-8499 cell 4x4 Soft Top, 5spd, 46k Miles, Great Cond. $10,200. FORD WINDSTAR SEL ’01 601-947-6519 Leave Message Dual Pwr Doors, Quad Capt Chairs & More! 105K. Nissan Frontier ’03, Great Cond! $6900. 251-5334DR, LWB, Crew Cab, 83885 27K miles, $15,000. 251-765-2676 GMC SAFARI 97 FORD RANGER XLT ‘99, 4dr, ext cab, 4X4, $6,500. (601)947-6176 980 970 NISSAN FRONTIER ‘04 XE-V6, Crew Cab, 10K, at, 4x4/cd/pwr locks/windows $21,500obo 251-656-4105 7 pass., rear air, PW, PL, tilt, cruise, low miles, $5800. 251-209-8651 NISSAN Frontier X-Cab 98, 4 cyl, 5 spd, 83k excellent $6000 601-508-6998 ★★★★★★ Chevy Venture ’02 87k, exc cond, $8,000. 251-379-9095 NISSAN TITAN LE CREW CAB ’05. White, loaded out, leather, 17k miles. $27,500. Call 251-747-0581 TOYOTA TACOMA 1998 Ext Cab, V6, 4WD, 78k, std shift, SR5, bedliner, dk green/tan, $12,350. Aft 5p 251-344-8414. Motorcycles Harley Davidson Road King Classic 2002, 17K miles, some extras, garage kept. Under warranty. $17,900. 251-675-8617 Harley Davidson Sportster 2002, 1200 Custom, Screaming Eagle, lots of chrome, $7500. 251-649-0492, 251-802-3214 HARLEY DAVIDSON Wide Glide 2005 Pearl White. 2000 mi. Lots of chrome, 7 yr warr. $16,500. 251-6611253 HD HERITAGE (FLSTCI) ’05. F.I., Security. 1100 miles, ext’d warranty, 2 helmets. $17,000. 251-4905467. 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 GL 1800, 6 cyl, ABS, 14K mi, Black, Elec reverse, $12,000. 251-442-0885 HONDA MAGNA 750 ’98 Black/Blue, 4,800 Miles, Very Good Condition! $5200 obo. Call 251-960-1655 HONDA SHADOW SPIRIT 2003. Only 4K miles, candy red w/flames, like new. $4950. 251-443-6312. Honda XR 400R ’03 dirt bike, new tires, low hours, excel cond! $2850 obo. Call 251-666-3013 KAWASAKI VULCAN ’05 1600 Classic, 5K Miles, Excellent Condition, Many Extras! $8500. 251-455-1972 Suzuki Boulevard C50T ’05 Bags, Windshield, Back Rest, Adult Owned, 6 Mo Old, 3500 Mi. $6700 obo. 251970-5900 990 Vehicle Parts ‘97 TO ‘00 JEEP Wrangler Hard Top & Soft Top $1500 228-219-3438, 217-3208 ★★★★★★★★★ Dodge 1990 15 Passenger Van 51K mi, Good Cond. $5800 251-471-1912 ★★★★★★★★★ Dodge 1997 15 Passenger Van, 98K mi, Good Cond. $4800 Call 251-471-1912 Toyota Tacoma Pre Honda Odyssey LX Van Runner ‘03 Ltd Edition, V6, 1996 AT, PW, PL, bedliner, tow112k mi., CD, new tires ing pkg., CD player, $18,700 All maint. records, dependobo. Call 251-679-4529 able $4,500 - Call 380-0933 OPEN SUNDAY @ NOON Come Test Drive Our Hybrid Prius and Highlander HURRY! SALE ENDS MONDAY 8PM! 269mo. $ LARGEST SELECTION AVAILABLE OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES IN OUR HISTORY! WHAT IS CERTIFIED OR SPECIAL APR PROGRAM 0.0% FOR 36 MOS 1.9% FOR 48 MOS 1.9% FOR 60 MOS NEW 2006 TUNDRA DOUBLE CAB SR5 39 month lease. $0 down payment, $0 security deposit. 12,000 miles per year. Payments plus tax and tag. With approved credit through SETF. Ends 10/31/05 6000 OFF MSRP $ 4 IN STOCK ALL REMAINING NEW 2005 V8 4RUNNERS $3500 Toyota Factory Rebate plus $2500 Dealer Discount. 6000 OFF MSRP $ 4 IN STOCK ALL REMAINING NEW 2005 SEQUOIAS $3000 Toyota Factory Rebate plus $3000 Dealer Discount. ALABAMA’S #1 6 YEAR, 100,000-MILE LIMITED WARRANTY* • 6 YEAR, 100,000-MILE ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE* TOYOTA DEALER 160 POINT QUALITY ASSURANCE INSPECTIONS * From the original date of first use when sold as a new vehicle. CERTIFIED Based on 2004 calendar year sales for certified used vehicles in Alabama, per SET. OVER 100 CERTIFIED TOYOTAS AVAILABLE! CERTIFIED $ WHILE PREOWNED THEY 2005 CAMRYS LAST! Price plus tax and tag. 17,900 05 NISSAN ALTIMAS 00 TOYOTA RAV 4 4DR 5 TO CHOOSE FROM....................................................................... AUTO, XTRA CLEAN, XTRA LOW PRICE, #19836A.................. $AVE 05 NISSAN SENTRAS 5 TO CHOOSE FROM.......................................................................$AVE 00 ISUZU RODEO $ FRESH PALMER’S TRADE PRICED TO SELL, #19956B............ 6,988 96 CHEVY REG CAB 4X4 $ GOOD TRUCK FOR NOT MUCH MONEY, #19411B.................. 6,988 02 OLDS ALERO $ NICE CAR FOR NOT MUCH MONEY, #10005A......................... 6,988 96 CADILLAC SEVILLE $ LOW MILES AND LOW PRICE, #19562A.................................. 6,988 99 FORD EXPEDITION $ FRESH NEW CAR TRADE PRICED FOR QUICK SALE, #2001A...... 7,988 98 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 REG CAB $ READY FOR HUNTING SEASON, #19989A............................... 8,988 98 HONDA ACCORD EX $ LEATHER, SUNROOF, THIS CAR LIKE NEW, #18670A.............. 8,988 $ 8,988 98 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 $ SHARP TRUCK IS LIKE NEW, #19913A..................................... 8,988 97 TOYOTA 4RUNNER SR5 $ NICE SUV FOR A GREAT PRICE, #19074B................................ 8,988 03 TOYOTA COROLLA $ FRESH NEW CAR TRADE PRICED FOR QUICK SALE, #19941A................. 9,988 03 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE $ LOW MILES, XTRA CLEAN NEW CAR TRADE, #19207A.... 10,988 99 CHEVY SILVERADO EXT CAB Z71 $ 4X4, XTRA CLEAN, PERFECT HUNTING TRUCK, #18203B. 11,988 01 NISSAN XTERRA $ FRESH NEW CAR TRADE PRICED TO SELL, #19176A........ 12,988 02 MAZDA MIATA $ LOW, LOW MILES, XTRA NICE, #4651A....................................... 13,988 02 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR $ LOADED LIKE IT SHOULD BE, #19892A....................................... 16,988 04 MITSUBISHI ENDEAVOR $ 16,988 $ XTRA, XTRA NICE, #19497A................................................. 17,988 04 FORD SPORTRAC $ FRESH NEW CAR TRADE, PRICED FOR QUICK SALE, #19241A..... 18,988 04 NISSAN TITAN $ LOADED AND XTRA LOW MILES, #19545A........................ 21,988 04 FORD F150 CREW CAB $ LARIAT, 4X4, EVERY OPTION, #4581A................................. 22,988 03 HONDA PILOT EX $ LOW MILES AND LIKE NEW, #17564A................................. 22,988 04 VOLVO XC70 $ XTRA CLEAN NEW CAR TRADE THOUSANDS LESS THAN NEW, #19530A.... 22,988 05 CHEVY TAHOE $ LOW, LOW MILES, LOTS OF WARRANTY, #19261A........... 23,988 05 MAZDA RX8 $ ALL THE TOYS AND LESS THAN 1,500 MILES, #19237A.. 24,988 SHARP SUV FOR A REALLY GREAT PRICE, #19442A......... 03 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Need Repairs, Service or Parts? We Have One of The Largest Service And Parts Departments on The Gulf Coast. * MS AL I-10 Exit 13 0 DOWN AND NO PAYMENTS FOR 90 DAYS! $ Wal Mart Schillinger Rd. Good Neighbor Plan Mississippi Residents: N 13 miles East of Mississippi State Line, Exit 13, 8 miles North, on the left, 470 Schillinger Rd. Mobile, AL Across from WalMart. CALL THE TOYOTA HOTLINE 251-639-0800 or 1-800-868-0801 www.palmerstoyotasuperstore.com * No payments with approved credit through SETF. New and Certified Toyotas only. See dealer for details. CHECK US OUT ON THE INTERNET AT coastal-ford.com IS YOUR NEW AND PRE-OWNED 1 1 0 0 0 0 ’s TRUCK HEADQUARTERS ON TO CH ’s OOSE THE GULF COAST! FROM! 2006 F150 14,980 A/C, auto, V8, 6 disc CD player w/MP3, int. wipers, tilt, cruise, dual airbags, fog lamps. Stk#6T399 A/C, auto, AM/FM stereo, power windows/locks/ mirrors, cruise, dual airbags, roof rack. Stk#6T341 A/C, AM/FM stereo, int. wipers, cruise, dual airbags, 17” styled wheels, 40/20/40 seats. Stk#6T423 BUY $ FOR... 2006 F150 SUPERCAB STX 2006 ESCAPE BUY $ FOR... BUY $ FOR... 18,480 21,980 2005 EXPEDITION 2006 EXPLORER XLS 2006 F150 XLT A/C, auto, V8, CD player, power windows/ locks/mirrors, int. wipers, tilt, cruise, dual airbags. Stk#5T109 A/C, auto, CD player, power windows/ locks/mirrors, int. wipers, tilt, cruise, dual airbags. Stk#6T215 A/C, 5.4 liter V8, CD player, power windows/locks/mirrors, int. wipers, tilt, cruise, dual airbags, alloy wheels, trailer tow, bedliner, fog lamps 17” wheels. Stk#6T286 OR 0% BUY $ BUY $ FOR... 22,890 FOR... 22,980 FINANCING FO 72 MONTHS! R * PRE-OWNED 3-DAY 150-MILE MONEY BACK GUARANTEE See dealer for details. BUY $ FOR... 25,480 MOBILE’S FINEST PRE-OWNED! 03 JEEP LIBERTY WE BUY CARS We’ll pay you top dollar for your used car. Even if you don’t buy one of ours! 05 CHEVY 15 PASS VAN 05 FORD CROWN VIC RENEGADE PKG, V6, LOADED, ONLY 20K MILES, #6T304A LX, LEATHER, CD, ALUM WHEELS, LOADED, #PC9837 DUAL AC, PWR PKG, CRUISE, #PT9790 15,990 17,980 21,990 $ $ $ 01 CHEVY 3500 01 CHEVY 2500 4X4 03 FORD F350 4X4 DIESEL, FLAT BED DUMP, AC, LOW MILES, #PT9832 S/CAB, LT PKG, DIESEL, ONLY 29K MILES, #PT9838 CREW CAB, LARIAT, DIESEL, AUTO, OFF ROAD, #PT9801 25,990 25,990 33,990 $ $ CREDIT PROBLEMS? $ NO PROBLEM! BUY WITH CONFIDENCE... BANKRUPTCY • REPOS SLOW PAY• BAD CREDIT WILL NOT PREVENT YOU FROM GETTING A CAR. FREE VEHICLE HISTORY REPORTS. 7311 Airport Boulevard, Mobile Airport Blvd. between Schillinger & Cody TOLL FREE An Ed Morse dealership 1-888-405-5157 1-888-402-6574 SALES: Mon-Fri 8:30am-8pm, Sat 8:30am-7pm Illustrations are for example only. Prices include all costs except tax, tag, title & doc fee and are valid date of publication only. All vehicles subject to prior sales. * APR financing with approved credit.