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Washington State University Global Campus (or WSU Global Campus) is the distance learning campus of Washington State University, a public university headquartered in Pullman, Washington. The Global Campus was established on July 2, 2012. [ 1 ]
The Daily Evergreen is Washington State University's student newspaper. [134] The first issue of the Evergreen was published in 1895. WSU broadcast media include Northwest Public Radio and Television, the network of public radio and television stations in the Northwest owned and operated by Washington State University. NWPR's flagship station ...
This student government organization encompasses the Washington State University Pullman campus, the Global Campus, Vancouver Campus, Everett Campus, Tri-Cities Campus, and Spokane Campus. Each campus has its own student government and all the student governments come together multiple times a year for the Student Government Council (SGC).
Dec. 20—PULLMAN — In Jake Dickert's experience, sometimes it's about finding the right coach. When a player hits the portal with one year of eligibility remaining, Washington State's head ...
Washington State University Everett (WSU Everett) is a campus of Washington State University in Everett, Washington. The land-grant research university was founded in 1890 and the Washington State Legislature approved funding for WSU to expand to Snohomish County in 2011. [4] The campus began with a 95,000-square foot building costing $64 ...
Nov. 28—PULLMAN — Washington State's football team is on the brink of significant change. Three Cougars have announced their plans to enter the transfer portal, which officially opens on ...
Dec. 1—PULLMAN — Cameron Ward has played his last snap as a Cougar. He made that clear in a post Friday, announcing that he's taking his talents from Washington State to the transfer portal ...
In 1987, the Washington State Higher Education Coordinating Board (HECB), the predecessor to the Washington Student Achievement Council, released its first master plan which concluded that existing upper division and graduate higher education programs in the State of Washington, particularly in its urban areas, were inadequate for the state's population.