Students will be able to access the Leddy Library 24 hours a day, five days a week, through the end of the semester.
Students will be able to access the Leddy Library 24 hours a day, five days a week, through the end of the semester.
Digging through the history of Underground Railroad is the subject of a free public lecture Thursday on the UWindsor campus.
Two public lectures this week at the University of Windsor will explore issues of information literacy.
Most UWindsor offices will close Friday, February 24, at the end of Reading Week.
The Leddy Library will operate on a shortened holiday schedule on Monday and return to normal hours for the remainder of Reading Week.
Responses by UWindsor faculty, post-doctoral researchers and PhD students to a cross-Canada survey will offer important information and guidance to the Library Collections Review project, says Joan Dalton, associate university librarian.
The Leddy Library has begun its regular hours of operation for the winter term.
The Leddy Library distributed free coffee and cookies to its stressed clientele Tuesday for its Student Appreciation Day.
Librarian Scott Cowan will speak on “Provocative Politics: Queering the Archive” Wednesday in Vanier Hall.
A free public lecture Tuesday, December 6, will explore the implications of the erasure of librarians’ professional work.
Emily Drabinski, coordinator of library instruction at Long Island University Brooklyn, will deliver “Librarians and Labour: making infrastructural work visible” at 11 a.m. in room 302, Leddy Library West. She will discuss strategies for making the labour of librarians visible.