This is rushed, but I think Kos' take on the front page is wrong.
From AP (yeah, go ahead and sue me AP):
A majority of justices ruled Thursday that state law requires the special election between Republican Roger Wicker and Democrat Ronnie Musgrove to be near the top of the November 4th ballot.
But they stopped short of ordering Republican Gov. Haley Barbour to elevate the race off the bottom.
Justice Oliver Diaz wrote a sharp dissent, saying the majority's ruling was "little more than a dressed-up request" for the governor to comply with the law.
Oliver Diaz served as a Democrat in the Mississippi House. Sounds like he dissented because he knows the ballot won't change.
Update: Stealing Kos' update. Looks like Barbour will actually comply with the law:
A spokesman for Gov. Haley Barbour says he will move the special election for Trent Lott's old Senate seat off the bottom of the ballot [...]
A majority of justices ruled that a 2000 state law requires all federal races to be near the top of the ballot. But the majority stopped short of ordering Barbour to elevate the Wicker-Musgrove race.
Barbour issued a brief statement: "The Supreme Court has spoken; so be it."
His spokesman, Pete Smith, elaborated by saying "the governor is going to comply with the ruling and the Senate race will go near the top."
http://www.wreg.com/...