The UCSB Library previously was open 24 hours, every day of the year, but the university has decided to cut hours as part of a campuswide effort to reduce spending. Credit: Rebecca Caraway / Noozhawk ...
Noah Luken, from left, Enri Lala and Natalia Pascher are leaders of UCSB Associated Students who worked with university administration and library staff to restore partial late-night study hours at ...
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Starting Sep. 25, the UCSB Library will end Late Night Study at 1 a.m. The library will be closed between 1 a.m. and 8 a.m. There won't be 24-hour access like there used ...
Insects often exist on the periphery of our experiences. They blend into the landscape and soundscape, rarely the objects of our attention. But an exhibition at the UC Santa Barbara Library draws our ...
An exhibit of groundbreaking prints dating back to the inception of California’s Chicano Civil Rights Movement opens on Oct. 25 at UC Santa Barbara Library. The event, “Cultura Cura: 50 Years of Self ...
Like any diligent UCSB student, I spent a ton of time at Davidson Library — when I wasn’t in class or goofing off in Isla Vista. Those hours, though busy, were always a breather in a demilitarized ...
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) The University of California, Santa Barbara is now home to KEYT archives that everyone can see for free. UCSB hosted a panel discussion entitled, "From Airwaves to ...
Thousands of songs representing some of the rarest and most uniquely American music borne from the Jazz Age and the Great Depression would have likely been lost to landfills and faded from memory.
Located in a wing of the UC Santa Barbara Library, about a quarter mile from the Pacific Ocean, the university’s collection of early music is the most extensive on the West Coast. Descend in an ...
Ten thousand is an important milestone in most things. Your car’s first 10,000 miles. Your business’ first $10,000. Your first 10,000 Twitter followers. Well, the University of California at Santa ...
Thousands of songs representing some of the rarest and most uniquely American music borne from the Jazz Age and the Great Depression would have likely been lost to landfills and faded from memory.