Pages 15-21 from the June 17 issue

Transcription

Pages 15-21 from the June 17 issue
June 17, 2011
Pass Boy Scouts Attend Spring Camporee
Pass Christian Boy Scout
Troop 316 participated in
the Pine Burr Area Council
Spanish Trail District 2011
Black Creek Canoe Trip
and Spring Camporee on
April 29, 30 and May 1.
The Boy Scouts camped
Friday night at Janice Landing Campground near Black
Creek. On Saturday, they
canoed down Black Creek
and participated in games
and contests. They camped
at Cypress Creek Landing
Campground on Saturday
night. Awards were given
on Sunday.
The troop received third in
the Tennis Ball Round up,
second in the Canoe Rescue, third in First Aid, third
Overall and Cameron James
• Hannah Read, a sophomore psychology major, is
the daughter of Roxanne
Read and the late John
Stephan Read. Ms. Read
received the “Comcast Golf
Classic” Scholarship for
Recreational Sports. The
recipient was judged on her
essay, “What Southern Miss
Means to Me.”
• Morgan Acker, a junior
health care promotion major, is the daughter of Vin-
Smithsonian Institute’s Museum on Main Street Program, in
cooperation with the Mississippi Humanities Council, presents
June 4-July 17, 2011
Pass Christian Public Library
UPCOMING SPECIAL EVENTS
received second in the One
Man Canoe Slalom.
The Troop was also
awarded the Spirit Stick.
The Spirit Stick is voted on
by senior patrol leaders
Pass Students Receive
Awards at Southern Miss
Two students from Pass
Christian recently received
awards from the Department of Recreational Sports
at The University of Southern Mississippi.
15
Gazebo Gazette
cente and Jessica Stutts of
Pass Christian and
Dewayne and Linda Acker
of Diamondhead. She received the Bruce and Virginia Wilgus “Making a
Difference Award” which
honors a recreational sports
student staff member for
their dedication to making a
difference. Ms. Acker also
received The Student Affairs Student Service Scholarship which honors a recreational sports leader for
their student service. She is
a member of the Student
Advisory Council, Southern
Miss Activities Council and
the African American Student Organization.
— USM
from all the troops at the
camporee. It is given to the
troop that best exemplified
scout spirit.
Mike Sherman
Scribe
Boy Scout Troop 316
Friday, June 17, 7PM: Concert in the Courtyard
Ben Wiley Payton and the Thundering Harps (Blues)
City Hall Courtyard (Scenic Drive and Hiern Avenue)
Tuesday, June 21, 7PM: Movie Screening
“Times Ain’t Like They Used to Be: Early Rural & Popular
American Music.”
At the Pass Christian Historical Society, 201 E. Scenic
Thursday, June 23, 12PM: Brown Bag Lunch Series
Topic: “Mississippi Blues”
At the Pass Christian Historical Society, 201 E. Scenic
Friday, June 24, 7PM: Concert in the Courtyard
Featuring Vietnamese singer Sao Dem
City Hall Courtyard (Scenic Drive and Hiern Avenue)
Southern Miss To
Host ‘Understanding
Cancer’ Conference
The annual “Coastal MP3C
Cancer Control Conference:
Understanding Cancer along
the Mississippi Gulf Coast”
will be held from 8:45 a.m. –
3:30 p.m. on Thursday, June
23. The free conference is
open to the public and will
be held in the Fleming Education Center at the Gulf
Park campus in Long Beach.
The conference will offer
information on topics including understanding lymphoma, disaster preparedness
for the chronically ill and
social services in cancer care.
To register, call 228-2143314 or email stacey.curry@usm.edu.
For more information, please call 228-452-4596.
Public Accountants
♦
♦
♦
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♦
Financial Planning
Retirement Planning
Tax Preparation
Book Keeping Payroll Services
Notary Service
300 Davis Avenue, Suite 102
Pass Christian, MS 39571
228-452-9691
16
MDOT Distributes
2011 Hurricane
Evacuation Guides
The Mississippi Department of
Transportation has announced
the release of the 2011 Hurricane Evacuation Guide to encourage residents to be prepared
for this year’s hurricane season.
Along with a detailed map of
alternate hurricane evacuation
routes and contact information,
the 2011 Hurricane Evacuation
Guide also includes updated information on lodging, animal
shelters and radio coverage.
Another beneficial tool initiated
by the Mississippi Department
of Transportation is the MDOT
Call Center. The MDOT Call
Center, manned by MDOT volunteers, will be activated only in
the event of a hurricane or natural disaster. The MDOT Call
Center number is 1-866-521MDOT (6368).
The guides will be available at
libraries, Welcome Centers,
Chambers of Commerce and
Convention and Visitors Bureaus.
MDOT will also hold several
hurricane blitzes to distribute
hurricane guides to the public
along the Gulf Coast. These
dates and locations are still
pending. MDOT will send out
updates as information becomes
available.
MDOT urges residents to discard last year’s hurricane guides
and pick up a new one. You can
also view the guide online at
www.goMDOT.com or call 601359-7074 to request a guide.
— MDOT
Gazebo Gazette
June 17, 2011
June 17, 2011
88 Anglers Participate In SSC Tournament
Eighty-eight anglers on 27 boats enjoyed
beautiful weather and great fishing during
the Inaugural St. Stanislaus Fishing Tournament on June 4.
The tournament had four major categories:
Speckled Trout, Redfish, Flounder, Biggest
Fish and Junior Biggest Fish. Master and
Junior Master Angler Awards were also
recognized. Over $5,000 in cash and prizes
were awarded to the top anglers.
The top anglers in the Speckled Trout category are as follows: Jeremy Clark, 4.44 lbs,
Kile Foster, 3.30 lbs, Jonathon Allen, 3.14
lbs, Walter Gex III, 3.04 lbs, and Danny
Peterson, 2.94 lbs.
The top Redfish anglers were Chris Doxey,
7.06 lbs, Kevin Peterman, 7.00 lbs, Chris
McRaney, 6.46 lbs, Kile Foster, 4.06 lbs,
and Jeremy Clark, 3.56 lbs.
Proceeds from the tournament will go towards the renovation of the St. Stanislaus
Marine Science Lab.
FOOD & MARKET, LTD
Now Open at 828 Highway 90, Bay St. Louis!
228-467-5687
ALWAYS FRESH, NEVER FROZEN
FATHER’S DAY SPECIALS
Biggest Fish Award winner John Zimmerman
with a 23.06 lb. redfish that he caught during
the 2011 St. Stanislaus Inaugural Fishing
Tournament.
06/12-06/13/2011
RIB EYES $11.49 LB
SAINT LOUIS PORK RIBS $2.49 LB
BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST $3.29 LB
POTATO SALAD, COLE SLAW,
BAKED BEANS, STUFFED
MUSHROOMS, HOME BAKED BREADS
HOMEMADE CHIPS & DIPS
Junior Master Angler Award winner Nathan
Bulot with Chris Mensi, far left, and Bro.
Bernard Couvillion, SC, far right.
Jeremy Clark and Kile Foster shared the
Master Angler title, and Nathan Bulot won
the Junior Master Angler Award.
Participants also had a chance to enter
Speckled Trout and Red Fish Calcuttas.
The winners of the Speckled Trout Calcutta, $562.20 winnings, were Patrick Martinez, Norman Cowand, Jeremy Clark, and
Kile Foster. The winners of the Redfish
Calcutta, $525.00, were Kevin Peterman
and Chris Doxey.
Open
MON-THURS
9:00am-7:00pm
FRI & SAT
9:00am-7:30pm
SUNDAY
10:00am-6:00pm
FULL SERVICE FRESH MEAT MARKET
There was one flounder caught by Billy
Lawson weighing in at 3.26 lbs.
John Zimmerman won the Biggest Fish
award with a 23.06 lb redfish. He was followed by Nathan Bulot, Chris Doxey,
Kevin Peterman and Chris McRaney. In the
Junior Division, Jonathon Allen won the
Junior Biggest Fish Award with his 3.14 lb.
trout. Justin Favre placed second, followed
by Michael Breaux, Glenn Quave and
Grady Lawson.
17
Gazebo Gazette
Family Owned & Operated Since 1925
LUMBER, PLYWOOD, MOLDING, WINDOWS, DOORS, DRYWALL, CONCRETE BLOCKS, CEMENT PRODUCTS, JAMES HARDIE SIDING, TRIM AND MUCH MORE … Co-Master Angler Award winners Jeremy
Clark and Kile Foster with Chris Mensi, far
left, and Bro. Bernard Couvillion, SC, far
right.
Photo and story by Richard Gleber, SSC
Check With Us FIRST And Help Support Local Business!
345 Fleitas Avenue, Pass Christian
228-452-4353
18
June 17, 2011
Gazebo Gazette
LUCIO’S IS OPEN!
Don’t let a little road work
stop you from enjoying the best
Mexican food on the Coast!
We are open Monday to Saturday
for lunch and dinner!
PASS CHRISTIAN CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Calendar Listings: editor@gazebogazette.com or 228-363-1973
Friday, June 17
• Youth Garden Camp for ages 2-5, 10
am, Pass Christian Library
• Concert in the Courtyard, 7pm. Municipal Complex. Featuring Ben Wiley Payton
and the Thundering Harps (Blues)
Wednesday, June 22
• Pass Christian Library Summer Reading Program: “Socks in Pockets”
Preschool Program, 10 am
• Youth Garden Camp for ages 6-11, 10
am, Pass Christian Library
Saturday, June 18
Thursday, June 23
• Art for Youth’s Sake, 2pm, Pass Christian Library
• New Harmonies Brown Bag Lunch,
12pm, Pass Christian Historical Society.
Topic: “Mississippi Blues”
• Yoga with Helen Davis, 5:30pm, Pass
Christian Public Library.
• Pass Market, War Memorial Park, 8am-
12pm. Weekly, weather permitting.
Sunday, June 19
Father’s Day
Monday, June 20
• Pass Christian Library Summer Reading Program: “New Harmonies” Elementary School Program, 1:30pm.
• Bingo at the VFW, 7pm, VFW Post
#5931 (North Street at Clarence). Weekly.
234 Davis Avenue, Pass Christian,
228-452-7186
***
Lucio’s Weekly Specials
Every Monday: Kids Eat FREE!
With an adult, 12 & under please, from the kids
menu
Tuesday, June 21
• Board of Aldermen Regular Meeting,
6pm, Municipal Complex
• New Harmonies Movie Night, 7pm, Pass
Christian Historical Society. Richard
Ward will present “Times Ain’t Like They
Used to Be: Early Rural & Popular
American Music (From Rare Original
Film Masters, 1928-35)”
Summer Feeding Program
Continues Through July 1
½ price drinks for the ladies from 5pm!
The Pass Christian School Child Nutrition
Department will be sponsoring The Summer Feeding Program this year. Meals will
be provided free to children 0 to 18 years
old. Breakfast will be served from 7:30 a.m.
to 8:30 a.m. and lunch from 11 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Monday-Friday at Pass Christian
Elem/Middle School Cafeteria from May 31
to July 1.
Happy Hour!
Monday-Friday, 3PM-6PM
For more information, call Saundra Isabelle
at 228-255-6200 ext. 106. USDA is an
equal opportunity provider and employer.
Every Wednesday:
Enchilada Night!
All-You-Can-Eat Enchiladas Just $8.99
Every Thursday: Ladies Night
2-for-1 draft beers and well drinks!
Friday, June 24
• Youth Garden Camp for ages 2-5, 10
am, Pass Christian Library
• New Harmonies Concert in the Courtyard, 7pm, Featuring Vietnamese singer
Sao Dem
Saturday, June 25
• Pass Market, War Memorial Park, 8am12pm. Weekly, weather permitting.
Monday, June 27
• Pass Christian Library Summer Reading Program: “Passport to Preparedness”
Elementary School Program, 1:30pm.
• Bingo at the VFW, 7pm, VFW Post
#5931 (North Street at Clarence). Weekly.
Wednesday, June 29
• Pass Christian Library Summer Reading Program: “Down on the Bayou”
Preschool Program, 10 am
• Youth Garden Camp for ages 6-11, 10
am, Pass Christian Library
Thursday, June 30
• Art for Youth’s Sake, 2pm, Pass Christian Library
• New Harmonies Brown Bag Lunch,
12pm, Pass Christian Historical Society.
Topic: “Captain John Handy”
• Yoga with Helen Davis, 5:30pm, Pass
Christian Public Library.
June 17, 2011
19
Gazebo Gazette
Historical Society Hosts Welty Exhibit
The Pass Christian Historical
Society is proud to host a
number of exhibits about
Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Eudora Welty. The exhibits,
on display through the end of
July, feature 36 black and
white photographs of Welty's
travels through New
York, New Orleans and Mississippi. An accompanying
display also provides biographical information about
Welty, a native Mississippian
and a literary luminary of the
20th century.
“Eudora Welty: Other
Places” features 22 of the
author's photographs from
New York and New Orleans.
During the winter of 193839, Eudora Welty spent several weeks in Manhattan.
Wandering through Union
Square and down Third Avenue, she photographed the
shadows and patterns of light
on the elevated subway, the
streets over which it loomed,
and groups of unemployed
people gathered to hear
speeches and wait for jobs.
Her photographs in New Orleans in the winter of 1936
offer a contrast in mood, subject, and object. The Mardi
Gras celebrations went on in
spite of the times. Welty did
not photograph the parades
or the festive balls that ended
parade days. Instead, as she
wandered through the streets
of the French Quarter, her
eye caught gestures, ironic
juxtapositions and, as always, human interactions and
relationships.
During the 1930s, Welty also
traveled over her native state
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of Mississippi as a publicist
for the WPA, photographing
scenes and people that interested her. It was not until the
1970s that the photographs
were examined for their relationship to Welty’s writing. “Welty,” a compilation
of 14 of her WPA photos,
displays several juxtapositions of her photographs to
her text, offering a rare insight into the process of creativity. The scenes that caught
the photographer’s eye were
images that settled into her
being and became a source of
her literary art. Through the
alchemy of Welty’s genius
and vision the images were
transformed into lush passages of fiction. The exhibit
includes photographs and
passages from her books
such as The Winds, The Wide
Net, Delta Wedding, The
Golden Apple, A Curtain of
Green and Some Notes on
River Country.
From the Welty Estate and
House, an accompanying
exhibit includes several biographical displays: how Eudora Welty grew up, her family, the tragedies, her educa-
tion, her travels and her blossoming into an awardwinning literary luminary.
An audiovisual display of
Eudora Welty reading one of
her short-stories, “A Worn
Path,” and expressing how
some of its excerpts came to
be, provides an insight into
her stories and the creative
process.
The Welty photography exhibits were produced by the
Museum Division of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History and supported in part by the Mississippi Arts Commission. The
photographs are from Eudora
Welty L.L.C. and the Welty
Collection of the Mississippi
Department of Archives and
History. “The Story Begins…” was provided by the
Welty Estate and House.
The Pass Christian Historical
Society, 201 East Scenic
Drive, will be open Monday
to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m., through June 25. The
public is welcome to drop by
to see this great, free exhibit!
For more information, please
call 228-452-7254.
•
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European-style Furniture
• Art Gallery
Fabric, Slip Covers
• Outdoor Furniture
Custom Upholstered Furniture
Custom Draperies, Bedspreads, etc.
Home Décor & Accessories
Professional Interior Design Service
207 East Scenic Drive, Pass Christian 452.3943
OPEN TUES.-FRI. 10-5 and SAT 10-3
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Dave Church 228-224-2773
Pass Christian
20
June 17, 2011
Gazebo Gazette
… Since 1988 …
WHAT’S GROWIN’ ON AT THE PASS MARKET:
T AYLOR M ADE L AWN C ARE
Enjoy Today’s Produce Throughout The Year
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Email: taylormade@cableone.net
P.O. Box 325 … 22405 Pineville Road
Pass Christian, Mississippi
www.TaylorMadeLawnCareInc.com
By Joe Buckley, The Pass Market
all frozen produce.
Last week we talked about
freezing squash, eggplant
and blueberries. This week
we will continue with our
discussion on freezing tomatoes, snap beans, peas
and fresh corn.
Now before we start, let me
back up just a little bit:
Most of the experts that I
have talked to concerning
freezing prefer to blanch the
produce. If you choose to
freeze without blanching,
the world will not come to
an end. Some say that rapidly stopping the enzyme
actions preserves the full
flavor of vegetables for a
longer time in the frozen
state. For that reason, I included blanching in this
discussion.
First, let us talk about tomatoes. There are lots of
tomatoes available at the
market now. To freeze tomatoes by blanching, first
cut off the stem, then drop
them in boiling water. Peel
the skin off, cool and drain.
Bag them up, then freeze
them. If that is too much
trouble, simply drop them
in a bag whole and freeze
them. The second method
Corn close to harvest
might not yield a longlasting frozen tomato, but
they should be fine for
cooking for several months.
Snap beans are also easy to
freeze. Blanch for about
three minutes, drain, chill
and bag up. Go ahead and
cut them up before freezing.
Southern peas are perhaps
the easiest things in the garden to freeze. Most people
just bag up the shelled peas
and freeze them. Just thaw
and boil when you want to
enjoy them later. The trick
is to have a good vegetable
to start with. This is true for
Now finally for corn: Corn
can be frozen on the cob
easily. I am not going into
cutting corn right now because the steps are a little
lengthy. Corn on the cob
can be frozen in the husk
for use in a couple or three
months. For longer freezing
times, most prefer to shuck
and blanch. Depending on
the size of the ears, blanching time varies from 7 to 9
minutes. Drain, chill and
freeze as with most other
produce. As with all frozen
produce, be sure to label
and date all bags.
I have not talked about canning because I do not can. I
can recommend “The Complete Guide to Home Canning,” a publication available from the County Extension Office in Gulfport.
There are lots of other useful publications available
there also. The Extension
Office staff is very knowledgeable about food safety
and preservation and will be
happy to answer any questions you might have.
I hope that you can use
some of this information in
keeping vegetables for future use. Freezing is a great
way to save on grocery bills
while maintaining greattasting produce for your
family.
The Pass Market meets Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 12
p.m. in War Memorial Park.
June 17, 2011
21
Gazebo Gazette
Volunteer Monument Fund Formed
The people of Pass Christian
are erecting a granite monument in War Memorial Park
to thank and recognize the
efforts of the thousands of
volunteers who helped revitalize our city and rebuild
our homes after Hurricane
Katrina.
FOR LEASE
116 DAVIS AVENUE
A committee of citizens has
been formed to raise funds
for the monument, which
will be from “the grateful
A rendering of the planned monument
people of Pass Christian” to
the “countless volunteers
whose efforts revitalized our city after Hurricane Katrina.” The Pass Christian Park Commission has approved placement of the monument in the park, near the Katrina Memorial.
Prime Retail Space
From 400 to 900 sq ft
Ken Austin, CRS, GRI
The committee is asking for donations of one dollar, five dollars or whatever you can afford. Donations may be made at any Hancock Bank branch to the “Volunteer Memorial
Monument Fund.” For more information, please contact Ann Lazzara at 228-214-0100.
Mississippi Coast Realty
130 Davis Avenue, Pass Christian
228/452-2313 Office
228/493-0052 Cell
ken@mscoasthomes.com
IN MEMORIAM:
www.mscoasthomes.com
JUNE BERYL MCDONALD
June Beryl MacDonald, age
82, of Pass Christian,
passed away on Monday,
June 6, 2011.
She was preceded in death
by her first husband, Ainslie
Phillips, and a grandson,
Michael Gallion.
Survivors include her husband, Albert "Mac" MacDonald, her children, Christopher (Debra) Phillips,
Valerie (Paul) Loescher,
Wendy Phillips Landry, and
Kim Phillips Gallion, 10
grandchildren and 3 greatgrandchildren.
The funeral service was
held at 11:30am Thursday,
Eye Exams, Glasses, Contacts
Dr. James Benigno, Jr.
June 9, 2011, at the RIEMANN FAMILY FUNERAL HOME, 274 Beauvoir Road, Biloxi. Interment
was in Biloxi National
Cemetery.
An online guestbook may
be viewed and signed at
www.riemannfamily.com
Market St
Davis Ave
Menge Ave
Update your
look with
new frames!
205 East Second Street,
Pass Christian
E. 2nd St
Hwy 90
(228) 452-0830
Please call for an appointment
Pass Christian Harbor