To the readers
Library Rules
- Treat printed materials with care (do not tear out, bend pages, do not underline or make notes in books), other documents on various media, equipment, inventory.
- Maintain the order of arrangement of documents in the open access of the library.
- Use valuable and reference documents only on the library premises.
- Make sure that there are no defects upon receipt of documents, and if any are found, inform a library employee about this. The last user is responsible for any defects found in the documents returned.
- Sign the reader's form for each document received.
- Return documents to the library within the established time frame.
- Replace library documents with equivalent ones in case of their loss or damage.
- Pay off the library in full upon expiration of the term of study or work at the college.
Subscription usage procedure:
- a) Users have the right to receive no more than two documents from multi-volume publications at home at a time;
- b) Maximum terms of document usage: textbooks, teaching aids — academic year; popular science, educational, fiction — 14 days; periodicals, high-demand publications — 7 days;
- c) Users can extend the term of document usage if there is no demand for them from other users.
Reading room usage procedure:
- a) Documents intended for use in the reading room are not issued at home;
- b) Encyclopedias, reference books, rare, valuable and single-copy documents are issued only for use in the reading room.
Bookcrossing
Bookcrossing or bookcrossing is a hobby and social movement that operates on the principle of social networks and is close to a flash mob. A person, having read a book, leaves it ("releases") in a public place (park, cafe, train, library, metro station) so that another, random person can find and read this book; he, in turn, must repeat the same action (information from open sources).
You can take the book you like and leave yours in exchange.