Yes. The place is nowadays normally referred to as Thessaloniki.
Do you mean the College of Thessaloniki? There is no university of Salonika. If you're referring to ACT, the American College of Thessaloniki, in Salonika, Greece, here is the link to the map on their website. :-) http://www.act.edu/vcampus_tour.jsp;jsessionid=6DD00E70775432A49FFA93EA2422E2DB
Thessaloniki, or Salonika.
Thessaloniki (also the capital) with about 1 million inhabitants. It is also known as Thessalonika, Saloniki and Salonika.
Titos Vandis was born on November 7, 1917, in Salonika, Greece [now Thessaloniki, Greece].
Thessaloniki in Greek, Selanik in Turkish, founded by King Cassander 315BC
He was born in 1881 in the Koca Kasım Pasha district of Salonika now renamed Thessaloniki, which is in northern Greece (Macedonia). The house has been made into a museum.
Anysia of Salonika was born in 284.
Anysia of Salonika died in 304.
British Salonika Army was created in 1915.
371 miles
The ancient land of Macedonia included part of what is now Greece (the region called Macedonia, including the city of Thessaloniki or Salonika), as well as the entire present-day Republic of Macedonia (capital: Skopje; formerly part of Yugoslavia), and parts of Bulgaria, Albania, Serbia, and Kosovo.
Initially a combined Franco-British force landed at Salonika in late 1915. This force was re-inforced and later an additional 4 Divisions were sent in 1916 making it 6 British Divisions sent to Salonika. They fought in the region through to the Armistice on 1918