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TCC's creation was authorized by voters in 1962, and it opened in fall 1965. On 7 December 1966 the Pearl A. Wanamaker Library at Tacoma Community College was named and Pearl Anderson Wanamaker was an honoured guest. [1] As of 2009, nearly 1/2 million students have attended TCC since its opening.
Lower Columbia College, Longview; Moody Aviation, Spokane; North Seattle College, Seattle [8] Olympic College, Bremerton [9] Pierce College, Lakewood; Seattle Central College, Seattle [10] Skagit Valley College, Mount Vernon; South Seattle College, Seattle [11] Spokane Falls Community College, Spokane; Tacoma Community College, Tacoma
Shoreline Community College: Shoreline: NWAC Northern: Skagit Valley Cardinals: Skagit Valley College: Mount Vernon: NWAC Northern: South Puget Sound Clippers: South Puget Sound Community College: Olympia: NWAC Western: Spokane Sasquatch: Community Colleges of Spokane: Spokane: NWAC Eastern: Tacoma Titans: Tacoma Community College: Tacoma: NWAC ...
Tacoma Community College This page was last edited on 18 May 2024, at 03:21 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
The Fort Lewis and McChord AFB Education Centers host these colleges, which offer a variety of course work to serve both civilians and military personnel. Several hundred undergraduate and graduate college courses are offered on base each year. [1] Information is available on how to transfer college credits. [2]
The Washington State Community College system was first established by the Community College Act of 1967. [1] The Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges, along with administering the Community and Technical College Act, [2] provides the member colleges with leadership and information technology services.
A triangular parcel of land in Tacoma’s Hilltop neighborhood has a new name: Dr. W. Joye Hardiman Park. The City Council last week unanimously approved an honorary-naming resolution for 1505 S ...
The University of Washington Board of Regents selected four finalist sites for the Tacoma-area campus in September 1989 out of a pool of 20 reviewed sites: a 79-acre (32 ha) downtown site, a Hilltop site, an area adjacent to the Tacoma Community College campus, and a rural site near Interstate 5 in Fife. [4]