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  • 2) Compare the facilities provided by the Ukrainian Academy of Law and by the Karelian Branch ofthe North-West Academy of Public Administration in Petrozavodsk.

  • 3) Use the text to talk about your studies at the Karelian Branch ofthe North-West Academy of Public Administration in Petrozavodsk.

2.22 Living in The library

  • 1) Read the title of the text and predict what it will be about.

Many people go to the library. Most likely you go to the library yourself. But have you ever heard of anyone really living in a library?

In New York City, 250 people lived for a while in their neighborhood library. They slept on the floor in sleeping bags and on blankets. Did they want to be at home sleeping in their own beds? Yes, they did – it’s not fun sleeping on a cold floor.

Why did those people live in the library? The people stayed there to prove a point. The city had planned to close the library to save money. These 250 New Yorkers loved their library. They knew that the library couldn’t be closed as long as they were living there. When the city agreed to keep the library open, they went home.

What were all these people doing while they were staying in the library? Do you think that they were reading good books?

  • 2) Arrange the sentences in the logical order:

a) The New York government decided to keep the library open for the public.

b) Everyone was happy.

c) New Yorkers loved their local library.

d) The New York government decided to close a library.

e) They protested against the government decision by living in the library.

  • 3) Interview your neighbour:

a) Are you fond of reading?

b) What books do you prefer to read (poetry, drama, novels, funny stories, detective stories, thrillers, fantasy, fiction, scientific literature, or professional literature)?

c) Who are your favorite authors?

d) You sometimes read books in English, don’t you?

e) You have got a great collection of books at home, haven’t you?

f) How often do you go to the library?

g) Would you also protect your favorite library in the same way as New Yorkers did?

h) Would you read in English if you were in such a situation as described in the text?

2.23 Welcome to the university of arizona library

  • 1) Find the words that belong to the topic “a library” in the text.

Like many modern academic libraries, the University of Arizona Library has open stacks. This means that patrons may choose the books directly from the shelves. There are more than eighty professional librarians and staff members to assist patrons in making the best possible use of the library resources.

Since its beginning in 1891, when a few hundred books were housed in one room in Old Main, the library system has grown to over 3,000,000 items, including books, periodicals, microforms, maps, government publications, manuscripts, and non-book media. The University of Arizona Library is one of the approximately one hundred distinguished libraries which comprise the Association of Research Libraries. The library holdings cover all subject fields, and there are especially strong collections in anthropology, geology, Spanish and Latin American language and literature, American agriculture, Southwestern Americana, Arizoniana, history of science, and 18th and 19th century British and American literature. The University Library is also a member of the Center for Research Libraries, which vastly increases the resources available to faculty and students.

In January of 1977, the new Main Library on the Corner of Cherry Avenue and University Boulevard was opened. A pleasant, spacious, and comfortable building, it occupies almost 300,000 square feet and has seatings for 1,700 persons. There are special lounge areas, group study rooms, viewing rooms, and individual study carrels conveniently located throughout the building.

In the Main Library you will find the Central Reference Department and the Main Card Catalog; the Interlibrary Loan; the Current Periodicals and Newspapers Room; the Microforms Room; the Map Collection; the Media Center; Government Documents Department; Special Collections; the Technical Services Division; and the Library Administrative Offices.

The Science-Engineering Library, to the west of the Main Library, contains all materials on science and technology. The Oriental Studies Collection is on the 5th floor of the Science-Engineering Library.

In addition to the Main and Science-Engineering Libraries, the University of Arizona Library system also includes the following branches: the Music Collection, the Center for Creative Photography, and the Library Science Collection. The Library’s resources exist primarily to support the teaching and research needs of the University Community; however, all of its collections are available for use by the general public.

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