Mississippi
Focused on Mississippi: Model T school bus is running

JACKSON, Miss. (WJTV) – WJTV 12 Information has been following the restoration of a Mannequin T college bus, and we received the chance to take a experience in it this week.
Kirk Hill, of Mendenhall, is a Mannequin T skilled and was the primary particular person to name when Britt McAlpin discovered the varsity bus his grandmother had ridden to highschool greater than 80 years in the past.
The primary time WJTV 12 Information noticed the bus was effectively over a 12 months in the past.
Hill took a take a look at it and stated he thought he might get it going once more. McAlpin remembers being there that first day Hill noticed it.
After just a few days, they did get it operating on the market within the woods. Then they hauled it out and took their time rebuilding it. This previous week, Miss Ethel Might, that’s what they name the bus, drove down our driveway right here at WJTV 12 Information to offer us a experience. For us, it was an journey. For Hill, displaying it off is a part of his love affair with Mannequin T’s.
“I fell in love with the previous bus. I actually did. I imply it’s been… I’ve executed lots of initiatives in my lifetime with Mannequin T’s and A’s, and I believe this tops all of them,” stated Hill.
Miss Ethel Might’s high velocity is 17 miles per hour.
“You’ll be able to solely have an unique automotive as soon as. As a result of when you paint it or when you do stuff to it, it’s not unique. So, that is an unique automobile. It’s actually a neat automobile. We’re not fairly by means of with it. We’ve received just a few little issues to do,” stated Hill.

Mississippi
MHSAA softball state championship roundup: East Central wins Class 5A

Watch East Central celebrate its MHSAA 5A title win over Lafayette
Watch as East Central softball celebrate its MHSAA 5A championship after a 10-6 win over Lafayette on May 14. Its first title since 2009.
HATTIESBURG — The Mississippi high school softball championships are underway at the Southern Miss Softball Complex for the MHSAA playoffs.
Games began May 13 and run through May 17.
Here is a recap of some of the games.
Mississippi high school softball championship roundup 2025
East Central claims MHSAA 5A title after sweeping Lafayette
East Central’s championship drought finally ended.
After its forth state final appearance in the last five years, East Central (30-7) swept Lafayette (25-9) in the MHSAA Class 5A state final on May 14 with a 10-6 victory.
East Central defeated Lafayette 10-3 in Game 1 on May 13.
The Lady Hornets won their first title since 2009 and fifth overall.
“I mean, it’s unbelievable. I don’t know even if it’s kicked in,” East Central coach Gerald Edmonson said. “We’ve been here four out of the past five years. … We’ve been really close for the past five years, and to finally get over that hump. It’s just, it’s unbelievable.”
Junior Abigail Danis won series MVP after going 4-for-9 with four RBIs, pitching 10 innings with five strikeouts, and allowing four earned runs through two games.
Danis entered the fifth inning of Game 2 and allowed three hits and one run while breaking the game open in the fourth inning at the plate with a three-run home run to left field for a 9-5 lead.
“It couldn’t have happened to a better individual,” Edmonson said of Danis. “I know a lot of people say that, and that’s kind of cliche, but it’s really the truth. … She has been phenomenal all year.”
Edmonson credited the Lady Hornets for battling against MHSAA 5A Miss Softball Mabry Eason in both games.
“When you’re able to get to the 5A player of the year, not once, but twice, that speaks volumes about our approach and how locked in our girls were yesterday and today,” he said.
Michael Chavez covers high school sports for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at mchavez@gannett.com or reach out to him on X, formerly Twitter @MikeSChavez.
Mississippi
Pertussis cases increasing in Mississippi and across the country

JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) -Cases of pertussis, known as whooping cough, are on the rise nationwide. And Mississippi has already seen more cases than all of last year.
“This year, I think it’s going to be one of our worst years,” said Mississippi State Health Officer Dr. Dan Edney.
Edney says whooping cough is most worrisome for five-year-olds and younger, especially infants.
“It causes infection of the bronchial tubes and causes swelling and inflammation,” he explained. “And it has that classic, you know, cough that whoop[s]. It’s even scarier than croup, so it’s a very dangerous infection.”
Here are the statistics: the Department of Health reports there were 43 confirmed cases in 2024. There have been 38 confirmed already this year with another 17 probable cases, totaling 55.
Dr. Tamina McMillan at TrustCare Kids, says she hasn’t seen it this year but notes that it can start with normal cold-like symptoms and quickly escalate.
“If you have a kid who’s coughing with secondary symptoms like color changes, vomiting after coughing, a really prolonged cough, then they should be evaluated,” explained McMillan.
Vaccination is considered the best form of prevention. But that protection does fade.
“A good way to protect against that is if you are in charge of being around younger people, like infants less than 12 months, then everyone who’s around that infant should be vaccinated. [It] is called the cocoon effect,” explained McMillan. “So, if you surround yourself with vaccinated adults, then the child will have improved immunity.”
‘What I do myself is, you know, when it’s time for my tetanus booster, I just do pertussis booster with it,” added Dr. Edney. “That mainly is to protect other infants and children that might be around me, that I’m not spreading pertussis to them, where it [would] be more dangerous.”
But Dr. Edney notes that it doesn’t stop the infection in its tracks, but it makes any cases mild and easier to treat.
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Mississippi
Where Mississippi State baseball stands in bid for SEC tournament bye ahead of Missouri series

STARKVILLE — One week remains in the college baseball regular season, and Mississippi State does not know yet which seed it will land in the SEC tournament.
The Bulldogs (31-20, 12-15 SEC) have won five of their past six SEC games. Even after firing coach Chris Lemonis on April 28, they can finish at .500 in the conference. It would be their first consecutive seasons with at least a .500 conference record since 2018 and 2019.
That would require sweeping Missouri (16-35, 3-24) on the road beginning on May 15 (6 p.m., SEC Network+).
Here’s where Mississippi State is in the SEC standings for the final week of the season.
Where Mississippi State baseball is in SEC standings
The Bulldogs are in 13th place with a 12-15 conference record. They are ahead of Missouri (3-24), South Carolina (5-22) and Texas A&M (10-17). If the regular season ended today, they would play No. 12 seed Kentucky on May 20 (12:30 p.m., SEC Network).
Can Mississippi State still get a bye in the SEC tournament?
Only three games separate seventh place from Mississippi State at 13th place. Mississippi State can finish as high as tied for eighth, the lowest seed with a first-round bye, but it’s unlikely to win tiebreakers.
Mississippi State cannot reach the seventh or eighth seed if Tennessee gets at least one win at Arkansas.
An MSU sweep of Missouri combined with Arkansas sweeping Tennessee could form a tie between the Bulldogs and Volunteers. Tennessee would win the tiebreaker because of its better record against common opponents.
MSU could be in three-way ties for the No. 8 seed with Tennessee (15-12) and combinations of Alabama (15-12), Ole Miss (14-13), Florida (13-14), Oklahoma (13-14) or Kentucky (13-14). However, it wouldn’t win any of those tiebreaker scenarios.
Four- and five-way ties are also possible. Even a six-way tie could happen. It gets increasingly complicated with more teams tied.
The first tiebreaker for three or more teams is record against the tied teams, followed by record against common opponents. The third tiebreaker is record against the highest seed of common opponents, proceeding through the entire standings. MSU is not situated well if a tiebreaker reaches that level because it was swept by No. 1 seed Texas and No. 3 seed LSU.
What’s the lowest seed Mississippi State can be in the SEC tournament?
Texas A&M could jump Mississippi State in the standings, but it would have to win its series at Georgia, and MSU would need to get swept by Missouri. MSU holds the tiebreaker over Texas A&M because of its record against common opponents.
That means No. 14 is the lowest seed MSU can be in the SEC tournament.
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@gannett.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
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