Mississippi
Suspect Charged with Murder in Disappearance of U. Mississippi Student, Who Is Still Missing
this hyperlink is to an exterior web site that will or could not meet accessibility tips.
Mississippi
No. 23 Mississippi knocks off Arkansas 73-66 for first win in Fayetteville since 2015
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Malik Dia scored 21 points to lead No. 23 Mississippi to a 73-66 win over Arkansas on Wednesday night, the Rebels’ first win in Fayetteville since 2015.
Sean Pedulla scored 16 and Dre Davis 10. Pedulla and Dia made back-to-back buckets with less than nine minutes left to build Ole Miss’ lead to double digits after Arkansas (11-4, 0-2 Southeastern Conference) had cut it to six.
Adou Thiero led the Razorbacks with 17 points on 7-of-12 shooting. The rest of the Arkansas team shot just 32%.
Dia, Pedulla and Davis scored 14 straight points for the Rebels (13-2, 2-0) over a five-minute stretch midway through the second, outscoring the Hogs over that span by four to keep the lead at double digits.
The Razorbacks, who fell out of the Top 25 last week after a loss at Tennessee, have started 0-2 in league play for the second straight season.
Takeaways
Arkansas’ NCAA Tournament hole may be large by the end of the week as ninth-ranked Florida visits Bud Walton Arena on Saturday.
The Rebels are 2-0 in the SEC for the first time since 2019, which is also the last time the Rebels made the NCAA Tournament. They look the part of returning in 2025.
Key moment
Ole Miss’ 17-7 run over the first 5:37 of the second half was precisely what the Rebels needed to get out of Arkansas with a win.
Key stat
Shooting doomed the Razorbacks. Arkansas shot just 22% from 3-point range to Ole Miss’ 39% and the Razorbacks’ leading scorer on the season, Boogie Fland, went just 5 of 20 from the floor for 14 points.
Up next
Ole Miss hosts LSU on Saturday.
Arkansas hosts No. 8 Florida on Saturday.
___
Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball
Mississippi
The Mississippi State Department of Health first 2025 meeting
JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – The Mississippi State Department of Health held its first meeting of 2025 on Wednesday, during which it also announced an achievement.
At the state board meeting, the department discussed scheduled items on the agenda and heard from MSDH State Health Officer Dr. Dan Edney.
Edney briefed the state board on current health concerns such as a nationwide increase in cases of pertussis.
Edney also briefed the board on legislative priorities for the upcoming year.
And after an 18-month process, the Mississippi State Department of Health has officially achieved full reaccreditation status.
Edney expressed his gratitude to the MSDH staff and others in attendance.
“The fact that our hard work does not go unrecognized and objectively measured evidence is very important to me,” said Edney.
According to Edney, the reaccreditation status is objective evidence that MSDH is confident in what they do and more than confident that they excel in what they do.
Want more WLBT news in your inbox? Click here to subscribe to our newsletter.
See a spelling or grammar error in our story? Please click here to report it and include the headline of the story in your email.
Copyright 2025 WLBT. All rights reserved.
Mississippi
Parts of Mississippi could see snow, be under freeze warning this week. See where, when
Winter storm to slam Texas before moving through the Southeast
From Jan. 8-11, forecasters say a winter storm is going to impact a huge swath of the U.S., from heavy snow in Texas to wintry weather in the mid-Atlantic.
A winter storm system is set to sweep across the southern U.S. this week and is expected to bring snow and some ice and wintry mix to states along the Gulf coast.
The storm is set to start in Texas on Wednesday night and move toward the eastern seaboard. Parts of the South will get 4 to 8 inches of snow. The National Weather Service expects several inches of snow in the Dallas area, and the weather system will move northeast through the weekend. Nashville and Atlanta also could see hazardous conditions.
The southeast has already been feeling the effects of Arctic air that moved in a few days ago, and the storm is expected to delay travel including affecting road conditions in areas not accustomed to heavy snow and potentially affecting airports.
Parts of Mississippi could see freezing temperatures and some snow, though previous forecasts calling for wintery weather in most of the state have been updated. The latest forecasts look like central and north Mississippi will have the strongest chances for snow, sleet and freezing temperatures.
What will the winter storm bring to Mississippi?
The AccuWeather and National Weather Service forecasts for the Jackson region through Friday have some slight differences. The biggest one is that while AccuWeather calls for a 25% chance of precipitation Thursday and a 99% chance with cold rain on Friday, the NWS says rain and sleet are likely Thursday night with a strong chance of showers on Friday.
Northern areas of the Magnolia State are under a winter storm watch Thursday and Friday. The NWS is predicting rain and snow chances in Greenwood, Oxford and Columbus/West Point/Starkville starting after midnight Thursday night and through Friday evening.
The Hattiesburg forecast now calls for showers Thursday night through Friday night. The overnight low Thursday is 35 degrees. Friday weather has a high of 46 and a low of 31.
The NWS New Orleans office issued a freeze warning Wednesday night for Gulfport. That area is set to get rain Thursday and Friday, but temperatures are expected to stay above freezing.
How should I prepare for extreme cold, winter weather?
The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency encourages residents to be ready for winter weather. Extreme cold, snow and ice can lead to power outages and make travel conditions dangerous.
Have non-perishable food and bottled water on hand. (If you have electric appliances, plan meals that can be eaten without using the stove or oven.) Make sure you have enough winter clothing and blankets to stay warm if power goes out. Keep your cellphone charged and have flashlights ready.
Keep an emergency supply kit in vehicles. Be prepared if you have to drive in icy road conditions. (If you hit black ice while driving, take your foot off the pedals and steer into the skid.)
Bring pets inside and make sure animals that can’t be brought in have access to lots of food and water that isn’t frozen.
Check on elderly relatives, friends and neighbors.
7-day Jackson weather forecast
According to AccuWeather, as of Jan. 8, the Jackson area can expect the following for the next week:
- Jan. 8: High 43°F, low 24°F.
- Jan. 9: High 43°F, low 35°F.
- Jan. 10: High 39°F, low 30°F, 99% chance of precipitation with cold rain.
- Jan. 11: High 44°F, low 26°F.
- Jan. 12: High 55°F, low 32°F.
- Jan. 13: High 52°F, low 29°F.
- Jan. 14: High 50°F, low 31°F.
- Jan. 15: High 52°F, low 28°F.
In the National Weather Service forecast, Mississippi is expected to have below-average temperatures and precipitation Jan. 13-17. From Jan. 15-21, temperatures are expected to stay below average while rain changes will be about average.
Mississippi weather radar
January average temperatures in Mississippi
These are the average temperatures for the Jackson, Hattiesburg, Tupelo and Gulfport areas for 2020-24, according to data from the National Weather Service.
Jackson
- 2020: 50.9°F.
- 2021: 48°F.
- 2022: 45.4°F.
- 2023: 53.8°F.
- 2024: 44.5°F.
Hattiesburg
- 2020: 52.6°F.
- 2021: 49.7°F.
- 2022: 47.5°F.
- 2023: 55.8°F.
- 2024: 48.2°F.
Tupelo
- 2020: 48.6°F.
- 2021: 45.1°F.
- 2022: 42°F.
- 2023: 50.6°F.
- 2024: 39.5°F.
Gulfport
- 2020: 55.3°F.
- 2021: 51.7°F.
- 2022: 49.4°F.
- 2023: 58.2°F.
- 2024: 51.2°F.
What are the next winter storm names for 2025?
The Weather Channel names winter storms based on scale. So far the 2024-25 season already has seen Anya and Blair. They do not name “pure arctic cold outbreaks.”
Other planned names are:
- Cora.
- Demi.
- Enzo.
- Freya.
- Garnett.
- Harlow.
- Iliana.
- Jett.
- Kingston.
- Lola.
- Marisol.
- Nyla.
- Omari.
- Pascale.
- Quentin.
- Roman.
- Spencer.
- Theo.
- Usman.
- Vincenzo.
- Wilhelm.
- Xia.
- Ygenny.
- Zahir.
Contributing: Christopher Cann and Doyle Rice
Bonnie Bolden is the Deep South Connect reporter for Mississippi with Gannett/USA Today. Email her at bbolden@gannett.com.
-
Business1 week ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Culture1 week ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports1 week ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics7 days ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics6 days ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics5 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health4 days ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World1 week ago
Ivory Coast says French troops to leave country after decades