3 months 3 weeks ago
Madison High’s boys basketball team improved to 8-0 after four wins last week.
Madison defeated Vidalia 63-38 on Dec. 2. The Jaguars followed with a 73-37 road win at Tensas on Dec. 3. Madison beat Block 74-31 on Dec. 5, then won 61-38 at Ouachita Parish on Dec. 6.
Madison will host Tensas on Dec. 12 at 6 p.m.
Madison High’s girls team moved to 1-5 after three games during the same stretch.
By Timothy Holdiness - Publisher/Editor on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Madison High’s boys basketball team improved to 8-0 after four wins last week.
Madison defeated Vidalia 63-38 on Dec. 2. The Jaguars followed with a 73-37 road win at Tensas on Dec. 3. Madison beat Block 74-31 on Dec. 5, then won 61-38 at Ouachita Parish on Dec. 6.
Madison will host Tensas on Dec. 12 at 6 p.m.
Madison High’s girls team moved to 1-5 after three games during the same stretch.
By Timothy Holdiness - Publisher/Editor on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Madison High’s boys basketball team improved to 8-0 after four wins last week.
Madison defeated Vidalia 63-38 on Dec. 2. The Jaguars followed with a 73-37 road win at Tensas on Dec. 3. Madison beat Block 74-31 on Dec. 5, then won 61-38 at Ouachita Parish on Dec. 6.
Madison will host Tensas on Dec. 12 at 6 p.m.
Madison High’s girls team moved to 1-5 after three games during the same stretch.
By Timothy Holdiness - Publisher/Editor on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Northsider Pete Perry is headed to the United States Supreme Court. That’s a big deal.
Pete Perry is one of two individual plaintiffs named in a legal issue involving how election rules are set. The lawsuit pits the Republican Party of Mississippi against the State of Mississippi. The issue is whether mail in ballots have to be received by the constitutionally mandated election date or whether they can be postmarked by that date and physically arrive days later.
Or to put more exactly, quoting the petition for writ of certiorari:
Question Presented
By Wyatt Emmerich on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Northsider Pete Perry is headed to the United States Supreme Court. That’s a big deal.
Pete Perry is one of two individual plaintiffs named in a legal issue involving how election rules are set. The lawsuit pits the Republican Party of Mississippi against the State of Mississippi. The issue is whether mail in ballots have to be received by the constitutionally mandated election date or whether they can be postmarked by that date and physically arrive days later.
Or to put more exactly, quoting the petition for writ of certiorari:
Question Presented
By Wyatt Emmerich on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Northsider Pete Perry is headed to the United States Supreme Court. That’s a big deal.
Pete Perry is one of two individual plaintiffs named in a legal issue involving how election rules are set. The lawsuit pits the Republican Party of Mississippi against the State of Mississippi. The issue is whether mail in ballots have to be received by the constitutionally mandated election date or whether they can be postmarked by that date and physically arrive days later.
Or to put more exactly, quoting the petition for writ of certiorari:
Question Presented
By Wyatt Emmerich on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Northsider Pete Perry is headed to the United States Supreme Court. That’s a big deal.
Pete Perry is one of two individual plaintiffs named in a legal issue involving how election rules are set. The lawsuit pits the Republican Party of Mississippi against the State of Mississippi. The issue is whether mail in ballots have to be received by the constitutionally mandated election date or whether they can be postmarked by that date and physically arrive days later.
Or to put more exactly, quoting the petition for writ of certiorari:
Question Presented
By Wyatt Emmerich on
3 months 3 weeks ago
April 24, 1962 ~ December 6, 2025 (age 63)
By Paid Obituary on
3 months 3 weeks ago
April 24, 1962 ~ December 6, 2025 (age 63)
By Paid Obituary on
3 months 3 weeks ago
From left to right: T.I.A.R.A. Teenz JoiAnna Reynolds and Kennedy Wilmore; T.I.A.R.A. Girlz Dalaysia Dunlap, Aria Thomas, Amari Thomas, & Emeri Meadows
The T.I.A.R.A. Girlz and Teenz spent November stocking the 4-H Blessing Box at Loving Hearts Ministries in Tallulah to give back to the community.
By Timothy Holdiness - Publisher/Editor on
3 months 3 weeks ago
From left to right: T.I.A.R.A. Teenz JoiAnna Reynolds and Kennedy Wilmore; T.I.A.R.A. Girlz Dalaysia Dunlap, Aria Thomas, Amari Thomas, & Emeri Meadows
The T.I.A.R.A. Girlz and Teenz spent November stocking the 4-H Blessing Box at Loving Hearts Ministries in Tallulah to give back to the community.
By Timothy Holdiness - Publisher/Editor on
3 months 3 weeks ago
America is sinking further into a crisis of trust. It doesn’t trust elected officials or the institutions on which they serve. It doesn’t trust the courts or the news media. It doesn’t trust science.
In all of these areas, President Donald Trump and his administration have made the crisis of trust worse.
Nowhere is that more apparent — or more dangerous — than in the distrust toward vaccines being fueled within the administration by Trump’s secretary of health and human services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Published on
3 months 3 weeks ago
America is sinking further into a crisis of trust. It doesn’t trust elected officials or the institutions on which they serve. It doesn’t trust the courts or the news media. It doesn’t trust science.
In all of these areas, President Donald Trump and his administration have made the crisis of trust worse.
Nowhere is that more apparent — or more dangerous — than in the distrust toward vaccines being fueled within the administration by Trump’s secretary of health and human services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Published on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Kenneth McGowan, a senior studying computer engineering, poses for a portrait at Mississippi State University in Starkville, on Aug. 18, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
The new unexpected expenses are hitting budgets at the same time as tuition increases and other general rising costs such as food and electricity.
Since transferring to Mississippi State University from Itawamba Community College in 2022, the cost of parking on campus has always been an issue for Madeline Comer.
Last spring, Comer got a $50 parking ticket because her license plates weren’t registered properly with the university’s parking services, she said. Comer, a junior studying graphic design, called to dispute the ticket.
By Candice Wilder - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
Kenneth McGowan, a senior studying computer engineering, poses for a portrait at Mississippi State University in Starkville, on Aug. 18, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
The new unexpected expenses are hitting budgets at the same time as tuition increases and other general rising costs such as food and electricity.
Since transferring to Mississippi State University from Itawamba Community College in 2022, the cost of parking on campus has always been an issue for Madeline Comer.
Last spring, Comer got a $50 parking ticket because her license plates weren’t registered properly with the university’s parking services, she said. Comer, a junior studying graphic design, called to dispute the ticket.
By Candice Wilder - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
The Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, at the front of the line, is the spiritual leader of the Walk for Peace. He led other Buddhist monks and their dog, Aloka, as they crossed the Natchez-Vidalia Bridge from Louisiana and arrived in Natchez, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025, on Day 41 of their 2,300-mile pilgrimage to Washington to promote peace and kindness. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Buddhist monks from Fort Worth, Texas, are walking on a 2,300-mile, 110-day pilgrimage to Washington, D.C., to promote peace, unity and kindness.
They left Oct. 26 from their Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center.
By Vickie D. King - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
The Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, at the front of the line, is the spiritual leader of the Walk for Peace. He led other Buddhist monks and their dog, Aloka, as they crossed the Natchez-Vidalia Bridge from Louisiana and arrived in Natchez, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025, on Day 41 of their 2,300-mile pilgrimage to Washington to promote peace and kindness. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Buddhist monks from Fort Worth, Texas, are walking on a 2,300-mile, 110-day pilgrimage to Washington, D.C., to promote peace, unity and kindness.
They left Oct. 26 from their Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center.
By Vickie D. King - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
In a rare show of bipartisan cooperation, Mississippi’s congressional delegation has sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer with concerns that new regulations implemented by the European Union will harm the state’s forestry industry.
The delegation wrote that the E.U. regulations “introduce substantial uncertainty” for the forestry industry and risk “further depressing already strained log and wood-product markets, harming rural communities that depend on healthy, functioning timber economies.”
By Katherine Lin - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
In a rare show of bipartisan cooperation, Mississippi’s congressional delegation has sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer with concerns that new regulations implemented by the European Union will harm the state’s forestry industry.
The delegation wrote that the E.U. regulations “introduce substantial uncertainty” for the forestry industry and risk “further depressing already strained log and wood-product markets, harming rural communities that depend on healthy, functioning timber economies.”
By Katherine Lin - Mississippi Today on
3 months 3 weeks ago
In a rare show of bipartisan cooperation, Mississippi’s congressional delegation has sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer with concerns that new regulations implemented by the European Union will harm the state’s forestry industry.
The delegation wrote that the E.U. regulations “introduce substantial uncertainty” for the forestry industry and risk “further depressing already strained log and wood-product markets, harming rural communities that depend on healthy, functioning timber economies.”
By Katherine Lin - Mississippi Today on