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Ole Miss also owns University-Oxford Airport, which is located north of the main campus. [79] North Mississippi Japanese Supplementary School, a Japanese weekend school, is operated in conjunction with Ole Miss, with classes held on campus. [94] [95] It opened in 2008 and was jointly established by several Japanese companies and the university.
MS 6/US 278 now enter Oxford and bypass that city along a southern freeway bypass, where it passes by the main campus of the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss), as well as having interchanges with MS 7 and MS 334. It has an at-grade intersection with University Avenue (unsigned MS 738) before leaving Oxford.
A double-decker tourist bus and the former Mississippi state flag contrast beside the Lafayette County Courthouse in Oxford, during the 2007 Double Decker Festival.. Oxford is the 14th most populous city in Mississippi, United States, and the county seat of Lafayette County, 75 miles (121 km) southeast of Memphis.
Many college football teams visiting the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss), 49 miles west in Oxford, fly into Tupelo. As per the Federal Aviation Administration , this airport had 15,985 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2008, [ 3 ] 13,319 in 2009, and 12,749 in 2010. [ 4 ]
The Jim and Thomas Duff Center for Science Technology Innovation is the largest building on the University of Mississippi campus. University of Mississippi opens much-anticipated new STEM building ...
The Sandy and John Black Pavilion at Ole Miss, also known as the SJB Pavilion, is a multi-purpose arena on the campus of the University of Mississippi in University, Mississippi. The $96.5 million multipurpose arena [ 4 ] is home to the University of Mississippi Rebels men's and women's basketball teams, with seating for up to 9,500 people.
Oct. 14—The Matchup: Tennessee vs. No. 13 Ole Miss Where: Neyland Stadium (102,455), Knoxville,Tennessee TV: SEC Network, 6:30 p.m. Series: Tennessee leads 44-20-1 (one Ole Miss win vacated ...
[citation needed] Prior to the early to mid-1990s, Ole Miss would play many of its big rivalry games, including the heated feuds with LSU, Mississippi State, Tennessee, and Arkansas at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in the state capital of Jackson, located approximately 170 miles (270 km) south of the Ole Miss campus; and to a lesser ...