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Mississippi Highway 304 (MS 304) is an east-west state highway in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Mississippi, running for 40.4 miles (65.0 km) as a four-lane freeway from U.S. Route 61 (US 61) in Tunica Resorts to the Tennessee state line near Collierville. It is mostly concurrent with Interstate 69 (I-69) and Interstate 269 (I-269).
Mississippi Highway 3 (MS 3) is a north–south Mississippi state highway, located entirely within the Mississippi Delta region, running from Redwood to Lake Cormorant, both at an intersection with U.S. Route 61 (US 61). For much of its duration, MS 3 is overlapped (concurrent) with U.S. Route 49W (US 49W).
A road first appeared in maps in 1998, connecting from Artesia Road to US 82. [15] [16] The northern section of it became state maintained in 2001, as Industrial Park Road was constructed. [31] [32] The road became designated as MS 791 in 2008, the same time as MS 789. [33] [34] MS 791 was rerouted slightly and became a divided highway by 2010 ...
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org مقاطعة تونيكا (ميسيسيبي) Usage on bar.wikipedia.org Tunica County, Mississippi
The south end is an at-grade intersection with the former route of Mississippi Highway 304 (MS 304) near Tunica Resorts, where MS 713 continues west to U.S. Highway 61 (US 61), and the route continues north to the Mississippi state line. Much of the route overlaps MS 304, which intersects
The projects are part of the $7 billion Moving Florida Forward infrastructure initiative.
Mississippi Highway 4 (MS 4) runs east–west from an intersection in the community of Fox Island west of Tunica, Mississippi, near the border with Arkansas, to MS 25 in Tishomingo County, Mississippi. It travels a distance of 159.8 miles (257.2 km), serving Tunica, Tate, Marshall, Benton, Tippah, Prentiss, and Tishomingo counties.
Hollywood opened in Tunica on August 8, 1994, becoming the ninth casino in Tunica and joining Sam's Town, Southern Belle, and Harrah's at the Commerce Landing section of Tunica. [4] In 2003, Penn National Gaming (now Penn Entertainment) purchased the Dallas-based Hollywood Casino Corp. for $328 million. [5]