Trustmark Profits Dip as Costs RiseTrustmark Corp. says profit in 2012's second quarter fell 2.7 percent from the same three months of 2011, as expenses rose and noninterest income fell at the regional bank.
Apple Earnings Miss Expectations in 3Q as iPhone Gets CheaperApple products have been getting cheaper. That's good news for consumers but not for investors, who thought the company would keep boosting profits and revenues at its previous breakneck pace.
Budget Office: 'Obamacare' Reduces the DeficitPresident Barack Obama's health care overhaul will shrink rather than increase the nation's huge federal deficits over the next decade, Congress' nonpartisan budget scorekeepers said Tuesday, supporting Obama's contention in a major election-year dispute with Republicans.
State Holds Tax HolidayIf you're planning to buy clothes or shoes, you can save a few dollars this weekend.
Gov. Bryant: 'I Will Resist Medicaid Expansion'After weeks of dancing around the issue, Gov. Phil Bryant announced his intention to resist expanding the state's Medicaid program under the federal Affordable Care Act.
Ward 3: Vote Joyce JacksonThe JFP urges Ward 3 residents to go to the polls Tuesday and elect Joyce Jackson.
GOP May Sue Over Hinds MapsPhil Fisher, Hinds County District 4 supervisor, is thinking about suing over new county redistricting maps.
Voter ID Affects MinoritiesHours for voter identification offices could affect rural African American voters.
12 Local Stories of the WeekThere are no slow news weeks in Jackson, especially at the Jackson Free Press. Here are 12 vital stories from the last week.
Grads Sue Virginia CollegeA group of women are not happy with the education they received at Virginia College in Jackson.
Helping Young ExplorersUnited Way received a grant from IBM, a multinational technology corporation, for three Young Explorer learning centers last week.
12 Dead in Colo. ShootingJames Holmes, 24, opened fire in an Aurora, Colo. movie theatre overnight, killing 12 people and injuring 39 others.
JPS Talks New SchoolCitizens and city leaders packed the JPS meeting room Wednesday for new Superintendent Cedrick Gray and Ward 3 board representative Beneta Burt's first JPS board meeting.
Study: Voter ID a BarrierBarriers resulting from the new voter ID laws may well prevent numerous potential voters from showing up at the polls.
JPD Weekly Crime ReportHomicides in the city of Jackson are up 84 percent over last year. Through the week ending July 12, there were 35 homicides in Jackson compared to 19 last year.
Chartre, JSU Planning Development An area of green grass and trees off Dr. Robert Smith Parkway, near Jackson State University, may soon become a mixed-income housing development.
Battle to Unionize NissanCANTON – Michael Carter hardly evokes the Hollywood image of a podium-pounding, fire-breathing labor agitator.
Danny Glover Stands with Workers CANTON - Actor Danny Glover told a half-dozen Nissan workers at the United Auto Workers office here last Friday that he had a special, personal reason for meeting with them and encouraging them in their push for a union election.
Is Nissan Worth It for Taxpayers?Before Nissan's Canton production plant opened in 2003, then-Gov. Ronnie Musgrove hosted Carlos Ghosn, the Japanese carmaker's chief executive officer at the governor's mansion in Jackson.
Cooper-Stokes v. Jackson IVLaRita Cooper-Stokes and Joyce Jackson will square off July 24 for the Ward 3 City Council seat again.
Miss. Power's AddictionOpponents of Mississippi Power's 582-megawatt generating station in Kemper County question if the company's financial setbacks have resulted in a work slowdown at the plant, under construction since 2010.
New Abortion Law: Medically Justified?Is it medically necessary for doctors to have hospital admitting privileges? The question lies at the heart of the ongoing fight for Mississippi's last abortion clinic.
Romney: GOP Not 'Rich' PartyIn Jackson Monday, Mitt Romney said the GOP isn't the party of the rich—and used the wait staff to make a point to the audience.
Foreclosure Victims Get AidThousands of Mississippians who got swept up in the foreclosure crisis by losing their homes or falling far behind on mortgage payments might get some help under a new state program.