The Library at YCCC is a welcoming and friendly library where students can get quick access to high-quality information sources, including books, magazines, newspapers, music CDs, DVDs, and more. YCCC’s library catalog and online research databases are available both on campus and off campus via the internet for scholarly research.

Library Hours, Spring 2011

M-Th: 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.
F: 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Closed weekends; closed holidays

Posts Tagged: history

Just added to our reference collection: The Routledge Companion to Ethics.

Just added to our reference collection: The Routledge Companion to Ethics.

Just added to our collection: Sweets: A History of Temptation.

Just added to our collection: Sweets: A History of Temptation.

Just added to our collection: Candy: The Sweet History, by Beth Kimmerle.

Just added to our collection: Candy: The Sweet History, by Beth Kimmerle.

Just added to our collection: 28 Business Thinkers Who Changed the World, by Rhymer Rigby.

Just added to our collection: 28 Business Thinkers Who Changed the World, by Rhymer Rigby.

Just added to our collection: The Emperors of Chocolate, by Joel Glenn Brenner.

Just added to our collection: The Emperors of Chocolate, by Joel Glenn Brenner.

Just added to our collection: The Tea Party, by Ronald P. Formisano.

Just added to our collection: The Tea Party, by Ronald P. Formisano.

Just added to our collection: The Modern History of Iraq, by Phebe Marr.

Just added to our collection: The Modern History of Iraq, by Phebe Marr.

Just added to our collection: The Collapse of American Criminal Justice, by William J. Stuntz.

Just added to our collection: The Collapse of American Criminal Justice, by William J. Stuntz.

Just added to our collection: American Food by the Decades, edited by Shari Liberman.

Just added to our collection: American Food by the Decades, edited by Shari Liberman.

Just added to our collection: Voices of the Women’s Health Movement, Volume Two, by Barbara Seaman.

Just added to our collection: Voices of the Women’s Health Movement, Volume Two, by Barbara Seaman.