FGBOU VPO Kostroma State Technological University. Kostroma State Technological University: address, photo, faculties, specialties

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Bachelor's, Postgraduate, Master's

Skill level:

full-time, part-time, remote

Form of study:

State diploma

Certificate of completion:

Series AAA, No. 001961, registration No. 1875, dated September 29, 2011, unlimited

Licenses:

Series 90A01, No. 0000440, registration No. 0436, from 03/11/2013 to 03/11/2019

Accreditations:

From 34 to 58

Passing score:

Number of budget places:

general information

Kostroma State Technological University (KSTU)— Kostroma university.

Early years

On November 1, 1931, the State Planning Committee of the RSFSR approved the proposal to open a textile institute in Kostroma. On July 26, 1932, the People's Commissariat of Light Industry appointed V. G. Bobrov as director of the Kostroma Textile Institute. The building of the former diocesan school, then occupied by land management, forestry, reclamation and flax technical schools (Dzerzhinsky St., 15), was allocated for the future institute.

In the first year, about 200 students studied in the daytime and evening departments. After five years, only 72 people received a graduation diploma. Due to the insufficient number of students and the level of their training, in 1933 an attempt was made to close it, and in 1934 to merge it with IvTI. Each time, the first secretary of the Ivanovo Regional Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, Ivan Petrovich Nosov, came to his defense. He managed to convince the People's Commissariat that the potential capabilities of KTI are quite high, and are limited only by the short period of existence as a higher educational institution. History has confirmed his assessment.

In 1937, the institute conducted its first graduation of specialists, and in total during the pre-war years, the national economy received 568 engineers from the institute.

Period of the Great Patriotic War

By 1941, the institute had what was then a modern educational and production base. The construction of the first stage of hostel No. 5 (corner of Dzerzhinsky St. and Ovrazhnaya St.) was completed, where 250 students were moved in in 1940 and where the institute’s teachers received 9 apartments.

The outbreak of the war radically changed life and restructured the orientations of students and teachers. Most of the physically healthy people went to the front. Their total number, including students, staff and teachers, was 364 people, including more than 30 girls. 200 students immediately went to the Leningrad region to build defensive lines, about a hundred stood at the machines of factories and factories, replacing those who had gone to the front. Two rifle companies of the Yaroslavl Communist Division were formed entirely from student volunteers of our university.

On the third day of the war, the main educational building had to be vacated, which later housed four military hospitals. In subsequent years, the institute changed its location three times. Due to the war and a large gap among students, the academic year began only on January 15, 1942. Enterprise workshops, dormitory rooms, and utility rooms were used as classrooms. And in the process of studying, students and teachers were often involved in the procurement of firewood, peat, the construction of a railway to Galich, an airfield in Kostroma, and the construction of defensive lines along the banks of the Volga. Students and employees of the institute participated in unloading wagons and sending military cargo, harvesting crops in the village, sewing and repairing uniforms, linen, and many other tasks. They prepared parcels for the front, performed concerts in front of the wounded in hospitals, wrote letters to them back home, etc.

In December 1944, the institute moved to the building that remains the main building today. The student population in 1945 was 430 people. At that time, classes were taught by 52 teachers, including 4 professors and 16 associate professors and candidates of science. 122 people did not return from the front. Among them, Deputy Director for Academic Affairs P.P. Sosnovkin, N.P. Chizhov, V.I. Kulikov, V.A. Neronov, I.V. Alekseev, secretary of the university party organization F.G. Golubev, secretary of the Komsomol organization A.P. Kasatkin, chairman of the student trade union committee I.Ya. Sonin and many others.

Post-war years

The first post-war academic year, the institute’s staff began work in an organized manner as part of two faculties: technological and mechanical. The enrollment plan was exceeded due to the return to the institute of former students demobilized from the USSR Armed Forces. There were 40 of them and among them V.V. Voykin, who had 9 military awards, partisan Gromova, communications operator Obiedentova, D. Laptev, S. Polkovnikov, Stalin scholarship holder M. Timonin, V. Shoshin, who graduated from the university after 11 years.

  • Founded in 1932 as the Kostroma Textile Institute;
  • On September 1, 1935, the Faculty of Technology was formed;
  • in 1937, the first graduation of specialists in spinning and weaving took place;
  • in 1939 the institute received the right to postgraduate studies;
  • in 1942, the first graduation of specialists in the primary processing of bast fibers took place;
  • in 1956, the first graduation of specialists in machines and equipment for the textile and light industry took place;
  • in 1962, the Textile Institute was transformed into a technological institute;
  • in 1964, the first graduation of specialists in woodworking technology took place;
  • in 1965, the first graduation of specialists in mechanical engineering technology, metal-cutting machines and tools, automation and complex mechanization of chemical technological processes took place. Obtained the right to defend doctoral dissertations;
  • in 1969, the first graduation of specialists in forest engineering took place;
  • In 1971, the first graduation of specialists in economics and industrial organization of consumer goods took place. Obtained the right to defend doctoral dissertations;
  • in 1982, the Institute was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, and a museum of the history of the Institute was opened;
  • in 1987, the first graduation of specialists in accounting and business analysis took place;
  • Doctoral studies opened in 1994;
  • in 1995, the Institute of Technology was transformed into a state technological university;
  • In 1999, the first graduation of specialists in technology and knitwear, CAD specialists, and specialists in artistic processing of materials took place.

Today, the Order of the Red Banner of Labor Kostroma State Technological University is a major educational, scientific and cultural center of the Kostroma region, Upper and Middle Volga. At the moment, the university has five faculties: mechanical, technological, automated systems and technologies, humanities, forestry; three institutes: the Institute of Management of Economics and Finance, the Institute of Law and the Institute of Additional Professional Education, as well as a center for pre-university training and a military department where more than seven thousand people study; The university trains personnel for mechanical engineering, textile and light industry, timber industry, organizations and institutions of management, finance and economics, legal sphere, tourism and hotel business.

Student education and scientific research are conducted by more than 400 full-time teachers, of whom 8 are academicians, 37 professors and doctors of science, 60% have academic degrees and titles. Most of the teachers have practical experience working at enterprises and research institutes, some have completed training and internships in educational institutions in the USA, England, Germany, France, India, Bulgaria, and Slovakia.

See all photos

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Admission conditions

List of documents required to submit an application:
 Passport;
 Photocopy of passport (2, 3 and 5 pages);
 Education document (certificate, diploma) or a copy thereof;
 Unified State Examination results (certificate if available);
 Documents confirming the benefit (if there is a benefit);
 Target direction (if available).
 Photos 3x4 cm 4 pcs. (subject to passing entrance examinations at the university or upon presentation of the original education document)

  • Sport
  • Medicine
  • Creation
  • Extra

Sport and health

Sport sections
  • football
  • volleyball
  • basketball
  • table tennis
  • hockey
  • Athletics
  • softball

Medicine

There is a first aid station.

Creation

CENTER FOR MORAL AND PATRIOTIC EDUCATION "HERITAGE"

The center was created in October 2010 on the initiative of the Department of Russian History, which takes an active part in all its events.

The goal is to effectively use the educational, scientific and educational process to satisfy the diverse cultural and spiritual needs of the individual student and young scientist, to form their professional and civic qualities, to prepare them for work and social activities in modern Russia. To do this, establish creative contacts with all structural divisions of the university, scientific, educational and cultural centers, administrative bodies, political parties, etc. in the Kostroma region and throughout the Russian Federation as a whole.

The main directions of the Center’s work: the activities of clubs (“Discussion Club”, International Club “Unity”), circles (“Family. Pedigree”, “Women in the history of the Kostroma region”, etc.), the “Search” detachment (collecting and recording the memories of veterans wars, participants in interregional conflicts, famous residents of the Kostroma land), the release of the student magazine “Father's House”.

As part of the work of the Center, events of various levels are systematically held: international conferences; round tables on a regional scale, meetings and debates between students and honored figures of the Kostroma region and veterans; round tables dedicated to anniversaries; student forums, etc.

Editorial office of the newspaper "Technolog"

A public university newspaper has been published at KSTU almost since the founding of the university. Already in 1932, the institute newspaper “For Linen Personnel” was published twice a month. In 1934, it was renamed “The Voice of Flaxseeds” (editors: Sorokin, S.V. Maklakov). In the 50-60s, the university newspaper began to be called “Personnel to the Motherland.” Since 1986, the newspaper has been called Tekhnolog.

The newspaper is one of the structural divisions of the university that carries out educational activities. The university newspaper plays a cultural and educational role, resolves issues of patriotic and moral education, promotes a healthy lifestyle, and provides students with the opportunity for creative activity and self-realization. Therefore, one of the tasks of the newspaper is to educate young people and create a positive image of the university. It is a kind of indicator of the stability of an educational institution. Its materials are a chronicle of education, science, traditions, culture, all the bright and multifaceted life of Kostroma State Technological University.

The most important task of the newspaper is to inform readers about events taking place in society, inside the university, and to reflect various aspects of the life of the university.

First of all, the newspaper has an informational and journalistic orientation. She reports on past events in the form of information, reports, articles, and sketches. Faculty events, scientific conferences, creative festivals, round tables, youth forums and sports achievements are in the field of view. Interviews with teachers, heads of departments, students who have proven themselves in science, creativity, and sports are always present on the pages of the newspaper. One of the newspaper's columns is devoted to the history of the university. Thematic issues of the newspaper are dedicated to anniversaries, student science day, and are also published for open days, for parent meetings of applicants, which helps expand the readership. The authors of the newspaper are both university teachers and students. Therefore, the publication covers a wide range of interests and readers.

Museum.

The University Museum opened in December 1982 to mark the 50th anniversary of the university. The initiator of the creation of the museum at the institute was Boris Nikolaevich Godunov. One of the most experienced museum workers in the region, Ariadna Borisovna Starogradskaya, was invited to work at the institute. Through her efforts, documents and exhibits were collected, which later formed the basis of the exhibition. She became the first director and worked until 2006. With her active participation, changing exhibitions dedicated to significant dates were created, the content of permanent exhibitions was adjusted, correspondence was conducted with war and labor veterans, and meetings were organized in the museum with students and teachers. During the same period, with the active participation of the museum, the “Center for Labor and Patriotic Education of Youth” was organized at the Department of Political History.

Since 2006, the museum has been headed by Alexander Ivanovich Davydov, a man with extensive experience at the university and excellent knowledge of its history. On his initiative, for the 60th anniversary of the Victory over Nazi Germany, an exhibition of 20 stands and stained glass windows was prepared, reflecting the university’s contribution to the victory over the enemy; a gallery of portraits of university scientists was placed in the meeting room of the Academic Council. At the same time, renovation of the museum and preparation of new exhibitions began. The initiative group included A.I. Davydov, Professor E.Yu. Volkova, Associate Professor B.N. Gusev and photographer A.N. Syromyatnikov. By the 75th anniversary of the university, the museum was included in the number of operating ones and took first place in the review competition city.

The main building of the university is one of the historical buildings of the city and requires careful treatment and promotion of its history. Within its walls there was a classical gymnasium, among whose graduates were famous scientists, writers, philosophers, and economists. Exhibitions dedicated to the gymnasium, as well as the history of the university, are located in the buildings of the museum complex.

To more fully cover other areas of the university’s activities, the museum complex included the “Museum of Sports,” the creation of which was initiated by Rector V. N. Krotov. The purpose of creating this museum is to reflect the importance of sports in the life of the university and pay tribute to the athletes who created the glory of our university.

Over the 80 years of our university’s existence, we have received a significant number of gifts from related universities, enterprises, and alumni. A lot of exhibits, samples of fabrics, and linen products have accumulated. All of them are unique, and they had to be preserved and used in the educational process. Therefore, another section of the museum was created: “Museum of Gifts”.

Since April 2013, the museum complex has been headed by L. M. Petrovskaya, Ph.D., associate professor, who has worked at the university for more than 40 years. Currently, the museum carries out the following activities: conducting excursions with students and classes on introduction to the specialty, conversations with schoolchildren about the history of KSTU, participation in meetings with veterans and graduates of KSTU, etc.

About the university

Among Russian universities, Kostroma State Technological University occupies a worthy place. Created in 1932 as a linen institute, it experienced a lot together with the country, withstood the harsh years of the Great Patriotic War, and the 90s. rose to a new level - became a university.

Today Kostroma State Technological University is a powerful scientific, educational, cultural and educational center of the Kostroma region. The university is successfully developing and solving important tasks set for higher education by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation.

KSTU is a multidisciplinary educational organization. Along with engineering areas of training, the university successfully implements training programs in economic, legal and humanitarian areas. In recent years, the university has opened new areas of training for bachelors and masters, and training is underway in secondary vocational education programs. In close cooperation with employers, basic departments have been created to provide practical training for students and conduct scientific research. In addition, the university provides students with the opportunity to receive additional professional education.

The University of Technology is a multinational university. Along with Russian students, citizens of Belarus, China, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Estonia and other countries study here.

Much attention at the university is paid to the formation of not only the professional qualities of graduates, but also cultural, moral and patriotic education.

Thanks to the joint work of a team of teachers, staff and students over many decades, the prestige of the university has developed. KSTU graduates are in demand in the labor market. Many third and fourth year students successfully combine their studies and work in their specialty. This is the key to their employment and career growth.

The university looks confidently into the future

: 57°45′34″ n. w. 40°56′33″ E. d. /  57.7595° N. w. 40.9425° E. d. / 57.7595; 40.9425 (G) (I) K: Educational institutions founded in 1932

Kostroma State Technological University (KSTU)- University of Kostroma.

In accordance with the order of the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia dated March 10, 2016 No. 196, it is currently being reorganized by merging with Kostroma State University named after N. A. Nekrasov. By order of the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia dated July 5, 2016 No. 815, the university was renamed Kostroma State University.

Story

On November 1, 1931, the State Planning Committee of the RSFSR approved the proposal to open a textile institute in Kostroma. On July 26, 1932, the People's Commissariat of Light Industry appointed V. G. Bobrov as director of the Kostroma Textile Institute. The building of the former diocesan school, then occupied by land management, forestry, reclamation and flax technical schools (Dzerzhinsky St., 15), was allocated for the future institute.

In the first year, about 200 students studied in the daytime and evening departments. After five years, only 72 people received a graduation diploma. Due to the insufficient number of students and the level of their training, in 1933 an attempt was made to close it, and in 1934 to merge it with IvTI. Each time, the first secretary of the Ivanovo Regional Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, Ivan Petrovich Nosov, came to his defense. He managed to convince the People's Commissariat that the potential capabilities of KTI are quite high, and are limited only by the short period of existence as a higher educational institution. History has confirmed his assessment.

In 1937, the institute conducted its first graduation of specialists, and in total during the pre-war years, the national economy received 568 engineers from the institute.

Period of the Great Patriotic War

By 1941, the institute had what was then a modern educational and production base. The construction of the first stage of hostel No. 5 (corner of Dzerzhinsky St. and Ovrazhnaya St.) was completed, where 250 students were moved in in 1940 and where the institute’s teachers received 9 apartments.

The outbreak of the war radically changed life and restructured the orientations of students and teachers. Most of the physically healthy people went to the front. Their total number, including students, staff and teachers, was 364 people, including more than 30 girls. 200 students immediately went to the Leningrad region to build defensive lines, about a hundred stood at the machines of factories and factories, replacing those who had gone to the front. Two rifle companies of the Yaroslavl Communist Division were formed entirely from student volunteers of our university.

On the third day of the war, the main educational building had to be vacated, which later housed four military hospitals. In subsequent years, the institute changed its location three times. Due to the war and a large gap among students, the academic year began only on January 15, 1942. Enterprise workshops, dormitory rooms, and utility rooms were used as classrooms. And in the process of studying, students and teachers were often involved in the procurement of firewood, peat, the construction of a railway to Galich, an airfield in Kostroma, and the construction of defensive lines along the banks of the Volga. Students and employees of the institute participated in unloading wagons and sending military cargo, harvesting crops in the village, sewing and repairing uniforms, linen, and many other tasks. They prepared parcels for the front, performed concerts in front of the wounded in hospitals, wrote letters to them back home, etc.

In December 1944, the institute moved to the building that remains the main building today. The student population in 1945 was 430 people. At that time, classes were taught by 52 teachers, including 4 professors and 16 associate professors and candidates of science. 122 people did not return from the front. Among them, Deputy Director for Academic Affairs P.P. Sosnovkin, N.P. Chizhov, V.I. Kulikov, V.A. Neronov, I.V. Alekseev, secretary of the university party organization F.G. Golubev, secretary of the Komsomol organization A.P. Kasatkin, chairman of the student trade union committee I.Ya. Sonin and many others.

Post-war years

The first post-war academic year, the institute’s staff began work in an organized manner as part of two faculties: technological and mechanical. The enrollment plan was exceeded due to the return to the institute of former students demobilized from the USSR Armed Forces. There were 40 of them and among them V.V. Voykin, who had 9 military awards, partisan Gromova, communications operator Obiedentova, D. Laptev, S. Polkovnikov, Stalin scholarship holder M. Timonin, V. Shoshin, who graduated from the university after 11 years.

  • Founded in 1932 as the Kostroma Textile Institute;
  • On September 1, 1935, the Faculty of Technology was formed;
  • in 1937, the first graduation of specialists in spinning and weaving took place;
  • in 1939 the institute received the right to postgraduate studies;
  • in 1942, the first graduation of specialists in the primary processing of bast fibers took place;
  • in 1956, the first graduation of specialists in machines and equipment for the textile and light industry took place;
  • in 1962, the Textile Institute was transformed into a technological institute;
  • in 1964, the first graduation of specialists in woodworking technology took place;
  • in 1965, the first graduation of specialists in mechanical engineering technology, metal-cutting machines and tools, automation and complex mechanization of chemical technological processes took place. Obtained the right to defend doctoral dissertations;
  • in 1969, the first graduation of specialists in forest engineering took place;
  • In 1971, the first graduation of specialists in economics and industrial organization of consumer goods took place. Obtained the right to defend doctoral dissertations;
  • in 1982, the Institute was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, and a museum of the history of the Institute was opened;
  • in 1987, the first graduation of specialists in accounting and business analysis took place;
  • Doctoral studies opened in 1994;
  • in 1995, the Institute of Technology was transformed into a state technological university;
  • In 1999, the first graduation of specialists in technology and knitwear, CAD specialists, and specialists in artistic processing of materials took place.

Today, the Order of the Red Banner of Labor Kostroma State Technological University is a major educational, scientific and cultural center of the Kostroma region, Upper and Middle Volga. At the moment, the university has five faculties: mechanical, technological, automated systems and technologies, humanities, forestry; three institutes: the Institute of Management of Economics and Finance, the Institute of Law and the Institute of Additional Professional Education, as well as a center for pre-university training and a military department where more than seven thousand people study; The university trains personnel for mechanical engineering, textile and light industry, timber industry, organizations and institutions of management, finance and economics, legal sphere, tourism and hotel business.

Student education and scientific research are conducted by more than 400 full-time teachers, of whom 8 are academicians, 37 professors and doctors of science, 60% have academic degrees and titles. Most of the teachers have practical experience working at enterprises and research institutes, some have completed training and internships in educational institutions in the USA, England, Germany, France, India, Bulgaria, and Slovakia.

Military department

Faculty of Technology

Faculty of Automated Systems and Technologies

Faculty of Forestry and Mechanics

Institute of Management, Economics and Finance

Faculty of Social Technologies

Institute of Additional Professional Education

Rectorate

Famous graduates

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Notes

  1. . Retrieved February 25, 2013. .
  2. . Retrieved February 25, 2013. .
  3. // Technologist: newspaper. - 2005, November. - No. 9 (188) .

Links

An excerpt characterizing Kostroma State Technological University

“Well, Nastasya Ivanovna,” the count said in a whisper, winking at him, “just trample the beast, Danilo will give you the task.”
“I myself... have a mustache,” said Nastasya Ivanovna.
- Shhh! – the count hissed and turned to Semyon.
– Have you seen Natalya Ilyinichna? – he asked Semyon. - Where is she?
“He and Pyotr Ilyich got up in the weeds from the Zharovs,” answered Semyon, smiling. - They are also ladies, but they have a great desire.
- Are you surprised, Semyon, how she drives... huh? - said the count, if only the man was in time!
- How not to be surprised? Boldly, deftly.
-Where is Nikolasha? Is it above the Lyadovsky top? – the count kept asking in a whisper.
- That's right, sir. They already know where to stand. They know how to drive so subtly that sometimes Danila and I are amazed,” said Semyon, knowing how to please the master.
- It drives well, huh? And what about the horse, huh?
- Paint a picture! Just the other day, a fox was snatched from the Zavarzinsky weeds. They began to jump over, out of delight, passion - the horse is a thousand rubles, but the rider has no price. Look for such a fine fellow!
“Search...,” the count repeated, apparently regretting that Semyon’s speech ended so soon. - Search? - he said, turning away the flaps of his fur coat and taking out a snuff box.
“The other day, as Mikhail Sidorich came out from mass in full regalia...” Semyon did not finish, hearing the rut clearly heard in the quiet air with the howling of no more than two or three hounds. He bowed his head, listened and silently threatened the master. “They’ve attacked the brood...” he whispered, and they led him straight to Lyadovskaya.
The count, having forgotten to wipe the smile from his face, looked ahead along the lintel into the distance and, without sniffing, held the snuffbox in his hand. Following the barking of the dogs, a voice was heard from the wolf, sent into Danila’s bass horn; the pack joined the first three dogs and the voices of the hounds could be heard roaring loudly, with that special howl that served as a sign of the rutting of the wolf. Those arriving no longer squawked, but hooted, and from behind all the voices came Danila’s voice, sometimes bassy, ​​sometimes piercingly thin. Danila’s voice seemed to fill the entire forest, came out from behind the forest and sounded far into the field.
After listening in silence for a few seconds, the count and his stirrup became convinced that the hounds had split into two flocks: one large one, roaring especially hotly, began to move away, the other part of the flock rushed along the forest past the count, and in the presence of this flock Danila’s hooting could be heard. Both of these ruts merged, shimmered, but both moved away. Semyon sighed and bent down to straighten the bundle in which the young male was entangled; The count also sighed and, noticing the snuff-box in his hand, opened it and took out a pinch. "Back!" Semyon shouted at the dog, who stepped out beyond the edge. The Count shuddered and dropped his snuffbox. Nastasya Ivanovna got down and began to lift her.
The Count and Semyon looked at him. Suddenly, as often happens, the sound of the rut instantly came closer, as if, right there in front of them, there were the barking mouths of dogs and the hooting of Danila.
The count looked around and to the right he saw Mitka, who was looking at the count with rolling eyes and, raising his hat, pointed him forward, to the other side.
- Take care! - he shouted in such a voice that it was clear that this word had been painfully asking him to come out for a long time. And he galloped, releasing the dogs, towards the count.
The Count and Semyon jumped out of the edge of the forest and to their left they saw a wolf, which, softly waddling, quietly jumped up to their left to the very edge at which they were standing. The evil dogs squealed and, breaking away from the pack, rushed towards the wolf past the legs of the horses.
The wolf stopped running, awkwardly, like a sick toad, turned his big forehead to the dogs, and also softly waddling, jumped once, twice and, shaking a log (tail), disappeared into the edge of the forest. At that same moment, from the opposite edge of the forest, with a roar similar to crying, one, another, a third hound jumped out in confusion, and the whole pack rushed across the field, through the very place where the wolf had crawled (ran) through. Following the hounds, the hazel bushes parted and Danila’s brown horse, blackened with sweat, appeared. On her long back, in a lump, lolling forward, sat Danila, without a hat, with gray, tousled hair over a red, sweaty face.
“Whoop, whoop!” he shouted. When he saw the count, lightning flashed in his eyes.
“F...” he shouted, threatening the count with his raised arapnik.
-About...the wolf!...hunters! - And as if not deigning to deign the embarrassed, frightened count with further conversation, he, with all the anger he had prepared for the count, hit the sunken wet sides of the brown gelding and rushed after the hounds. The Count, as if punished, stood looking around and trying with a smile to make Semyon regret his situation. But Semyon was no longer there: he, taking a detour through the bushes, jumped the wolf from the abatis. Greyhounds also jumped over the beast from both sides. But the wolf walked through the bushes and not a single hunter intercepted him.

Nikolai Rostov, meanwhile, stood in his place, waiting for the beast. By the approach and distance of the rut, by the sounds of the voices of dogs known to him, by the approach, distance and elevation of the voices of those arriving, he felt what was happening on the island. He knew that there were arrived (young) and seasoned (old) wolves on the island; he knew that the hounds had split into two packs, that they were poisoning somewhere, and that something untoward had happened. Every second he waited for the beast to come to his side. He made thousands of different assumptions about how and from which side the animal would run and how it would poison it. Hope gave way to despair. Several times he turned to God with a prayer that the wolf would come out to him; he prayed with that passionate and conscientious feeling with which people pray in moments of great excitement, depending on an insignificant reason. “Well, what does it cost you,” he said to God, “to do this for me! I know that You are great, and that it is a sin to ask You for this; but for the sake of God, make sure that the seasoned one comes out on me, and that Karai, in front of the “uncle” who is watching from there, slams into his throat with a death grip.” A thousand times during these half-hours, with a persistent, tense and restless gaze, Rostov looked around the edge of the forest with two sparse oak trees over an aspen underhang, and the ravine with a worn edge, and the uncle’s hat, barely visible from behind a bush to the right.
“No, this happiness will not happen,” thought Rostov, but what would it cost? Will not be! I always have misfortune, both in cards and in war, in everything.” Austerlitz and Dolokhov flashed brightly, but quickly changing, in his imagination. “Only once in my life would I hunt down a seasoned wolf, I don’t want to do it again!” he thought, straining his hearing and vision, looking to the left and again to the right and listening to the slightest shades of the sounds of the rut. He looked again to the right and saw something running towards him across the deserted field. “No, this can’t be!” thought Rostov, sighing heavily, like a man sighs when he accomplishes something that has been long awaited by him. The greatest happiness happened - and so simply, without noise, without glitter, without commemoration. Rostov could not believe his eyes and this doubt lasted more than a second. The wolf ran forward and jumped heavily over the pothole that was on his road. It was an old beast, with a gray back and a full, reddish belly. He ran slowly, apparently convinced that no one could see him. Without breathing, Rostov looked back at the dogs. They lay and stood, not seeing the wolf and not understanding anything. Old Karai, turning his head and baring his yellow teeth, angrily looking for a flea, clicked them on his hind thighs.
- Hoot! – Rostov said in a whisper, his lips protruding. The dogs, trembling their glands, jumped up, ears pricked. Karai scratched his thigh and stood up, pricking his ears and slightly shaking his tail, on which felts of fur hung.
– Let in or not let in? - Nikolai said to himself while the wolf moved towards him, separating from the forest. Suddenly the whole face of the wolf changed; he shuddered, seeing human eyes that he had probably never seen before, fixed on him, and turning his head slightly towards the hunter, he stopped - back or forward? Eh! anyway, forward!... obviously,” he seemed to say to himself, and set off forward, no longer looking back, with a soft, rare, free, but decisive leap.
“Whoops!...” Nikolai shouted in a voice that was not his own, and of its own accord his good horse rushed headlong down the hill, jumping over water holes and across the wolf; and the dogs rushed even faster, overtaking her. Nikolai did not hear his cry, did not feel that he was galloping, did not see either the dogs or the place where he was galloping; he saw only the wolf, who, intensifying his run, galloped, without changing direction, along the ravine. The first to appear near the beast was the black-spotted, wide-bottomed Milka and began to approach the beast. Closer, closer... now she came to him. But the wolf glanced slightly sideways at her, and instead of attacking her, as she always did, Milka suddenly raised her tail and began to rest on her front legs.
- Whoop! - Nikolai shouted.
Red Lyubim jumped out from behind Milka, quickly rushed at the wolf and grabbed him by the hachi (hips of his hind legs), but at that very second he jumped in fear to the other side. The wolf sat down, clicked his teeth and got up again and galloped forward, escorted a yard away by all the dogs that did not approach him.
- He will go away! No, It is Immpossible! – Nikolai thought, continuing to scream in a hoarse voice.
- Karai! Hoot!...” he shouted, looking with the eyes of the old dog, his only hope. Karai, with all his old strength, stretched out as much as he could, looking at the wolf, galloped heavily away from the beast, across it. But from the speed of the wolf’s leap and the slowness of the dog’s leap, it was clear that Karai’s calculation was wrong. Nikolai could no longer see the forest far ahead of him, which, having reached it, the wolf would probably leave. Dogs and a hunter appeared ahead, galloping almost towards them. There was still hope. Unknown to Nikolai, a dark, young, long male from someone else's pack quickly flew up to the wolf in front and almost knocked him over. The wolf quickly, as could not have been expected from him, stood up and rushed towards the dark dog, snapped his teeth - and the bloody dog, with a torn side, shrieked shrilly and stuck his head into the ground.
- Karayushka! Father!.. - Nikolai cried...
The old dog, with his tufts dangling on his thighs, thanks to the stop that had taken place, cutting off the wolf’s path, was already five steps away from him. As if sensing danger, the wolf glanced sideways at Karai, hid the log (tail) even further between his legs and increased his gallop. But here - Nikolai only saw that something had happened to Karai - he instantly found himself on the wolf and together with him fell head over heels into the waterhole that was in front of them.
The moment when Nikolai saw the dogs swarming with the wolf in the pond, from under which one could see the wolf’s gray fur, his outstretched back leg, and his frightened and choking head with his ears pressed back (Karai was holding him by the throat), the minute when Nikolai saw this was the happiest moment of his life. He had already taken hold of the pommel of the saddle to dismount and stab the wolf, when suddenly the animal’s head poked up from this mass of dogs, then its front legs stood on the edge of the waterhole. The wolf flashed his teeth (Karai was no longer holding him by the throat), jumped out of the pond with his hind legs and, tucking his tail, again separated from the dogs, moved forward. Karai with bristling fur, probably bruised or wounded, had difficulty crawling out of the waterhole.
- My God! For what?...” Nikolai shouted in despair.
The uncle's hunter, on the other side, galloped to cut off the wolf, and his dogs again stopped the beast. They surrounded him again.
Nikolai, his stirrup, his uncle and his hunter hovered over the beast, hooting, screaming, every minute getting ready to get down when the wolf sat on its backside and every time starting forward when the wolf shook itself and moved towards the notch that was supposed to save it. Even at the beginning of this persecution, Danila, hearing hooting, jumped out to the edge of the forest. He saw Karai take the wolf and stop the horse, believing that the matter was over. But when the hunters did not get down, the wolf shook himself and ran away again. Danila released his brown one not towards the wolf, but in a straight line towards the notch in the same way as Karai - to cut off the beast. Thanks to this direction, he jumped up to the wolf while the second time he was stopped by his uncle's dogs.
Danila galloped silently, holding the drawn dagger in his left hand and, like a flail, swinging his arapnik along the toned sides of the brown one.
Nikolai did not see or hear Danila until a brown one panted past him, panting heavily, and he heard the sound of a falling body and saw that Danila was already lying in the middle of the dogs on the back of the wolf, trying to catch him by the ears. It was obvious to the dogs, the hunters, and the wolf that it was all over now. The animal, with its ears flattened in fear, tried to get up, but the dogs surrounded it. Danila, standing up, took a falling step and with all his weight, as if lying down to rest, fell on the wolf, grabbing him by the ears. Nikolai wanted to stab, but Danila whispered: “No need, we’ll make a joke,” and changing position, he stepped on the wolf’s neck with his foot. They put a stick in the wolf's mouth, tied it, as if bridling it with a pack, tied its legs, and Danila rolled the wolf from one side to the other a couple of times.
With happy, exhausted faces, the living, seasoned wolf was loaded onto a darting and snorting horse and, accompanied by dogs squealing at him, was taken to the place where everyone was supposed to gather. Two young ones were taken by hounds and three by greyhounds. The hunters arrived with their prey and stories, and everyone came up to look at the seasoned wolf, who, hanging his forehead with a bitten stick in his mouth, looked at this whole crowd of dogs and people surrounding him with large, glassy eyes. When they touched him, he trembled with his bound legs, wildly and at the same time simply looked at everyone. Count Ilya Andreich also drove up and touched the wolf.
“Oh, what a swear word,” he said. - Seasoned, huh? – he asked Danila, who was standing next to him.
“He’s seasoned, your Excellency,” answered Danila, hastily taking off his hat.
The Count remembered his missed wolf and his encounter with Danila.
“However, brother, you are angry,” said the count. – Danila said nothing and only smiled shyly, a childishly meek and pleasant smile.

The old count went home; Natasha and Petya promised to come right away. The hunt went on, as it was still early. In the middle of the day, the hounds were released into a ravine overgrown with young, dense forest. Nikolai, standing in the stubble, saw all his hunters.
Opposite from Nikolai there were green fields and there stood his hunter, alone in a hole behind a prominent hazel bush. They had just brought in the hounds when Nikolai heard the rare rutting of a dog he knew, Volthorne; other dogs joined him, then falling silent, then starting to chase again. A minute later, a voice was heard from the island calling for a fox, and the whole flock, falling down, drove along the screwdriver, towards the greenery, away from Nikolai.
He saw horse-dwellers in red hats galloping along the edges of an overgrown ravine, he even saw dogs, and every second he expected a fox to appear on the other side, in the greenery.
The hunter standing in the hole moved and released the dogs, and Nikolai saw a red, low, strange fox, which, fluffing its pipe, hurriedly rushed through the greenery. The dogs began to sing to her. As they approached, the fox began to wag in circles between them, making these circles more and more often and circling its fluffy pipe (tail) around itself; and then someone’s white dog flew in, followed by a black one, and everything got mixed up, and the dogs became a star, with their butts apart, slightly hesitating. Two hunters galloped up to the dogs: one in a red hat, the other, a stranger, in a green caftan.
"What it is? thought Nikolai. Where did this hunter come from? This is not my uncle’s.”
The hunters fought off the fox and stood on foot for a long time, without rushing. Near them on chumburs stood horses with their saddles and dogs lay. The hunters waved their hands and did something with the fox. From there the sound of a horn was heard - the agreed signal of a fight.
“It’s the Ilaginsky hunter who is rebelling with our Ivan,” said the eager Nikolai.
Nikolai sent the groom to call his sister and Petya to him and walked at a walk to the place where the riders were collecting the hounds. Several hunters galloped to the scene of the fight.
Nikolai got off his horse and stopped next to the hounds with Natasha and Petya riding up, waiting for information about how the matter would end. A fighting hunter with a fox in torokas rode out from behind the edge of the forest and approached the young master. He took off his hat from afar and tried to speak respectfully; but he was pale, out of breath, and his face was angry. One of his eyes was black, but he probably didn’t know it.
-What did you have there? – Nikolai asked.
- Of course, he will poison from under our hounds! And my mousey bitch caught it. Go and sue! Enough for the fox! I'll give him a ride as a fox. Here she is, in Toroki. Do you want this?...” said the hunter, pointing to the dagger and probably imagining that he was still talking to his enemy.
Nikolai, without talking to the hunter, asked his sister and Petya to wait for him and went to the place where this hostile Ilaginskaya hunt was.
The victorious hunter rode into the crowd of hunters and there, surrounded by sympathetic curious people, told his exploit.
The fact was that Ilagin, with whom the Rostovs were in a quarrel and trial, was hunting in places that, according to custom, belonged to the Rostovs, and now, as if on purpose, he ordered to drive up to the island where the Rostovs were hunting, and allowed him to poison his hunter from under other people’s hounds.
Nikolai never saw Ilagin, but as always, in his judgments and feelings, not knowing the middle, according to rumors about the violence and willfulness of this landowner, he hated him with all his soul and considered him his worst enemy. He now rode towards him, embittered and agitated, tightly clutching the arapnik in his hand, in full readiness for the most decisive and dangerous actions against his enemy.
As soon as he left the ledge of the forest, he saw a fat gentleman in a beaver cap on a beautiful black horse, accompanied by two stirrups, moving towards him.

The only university in the country that has been training specialists for the flax industry, mechanical engineering, light and textile industries, and for the forestry complex for more than eighty years is the Technological University. In addition, it produces highly qualified personnel for labor protection and protection in emergency situations, for the tourism and jewelry industries, and there are also areas for training lawyers and economists. Kostroma State Technological University did not immediately receive its modern name and various training programs.

Start

In November 1931, the People's Commissar of Light Industry and the State Planning Committee of the RSFSR opened a textile institute in Kostroma. In the building on Dzerzhinsky Street, where it was located, there was previously a diocesan school, then technical schools: forestry, land management, flax and reclamation.

They became the basis for the functioning of the new educational institution. Years later, having gone through many renamings, the institute received its current name - Kostroma State Technological University. This happened in 1995.

Story

The history of this university is very interesting: from the Kostroma Textile Institute in 1962 a technological institute grew, and in 1982 it was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor for the good training of specialists, and by 1995 it turned into the Kostroma State Technological University. Now it is the leading university in the region, focused on the latest technologies, with great scientific potential, excellent material resources and incredible demand for graduates in Russia.

The whole history is a dynamic and continuous development - from the “linen” college to the technological university through all sorts of significant events that are associated with its wonderful graduates. To this day, with all their creativity, these people confirm the high place in the rankings occupied by Kostroma State Technological University.

KSTU - early years

In the first years, only 200 people studied in both full-time and evening departments, and after a natural five-year dropout, only 72 graduates received diplomas. The level of training was weak, applicants bypassed the institute. The question of closing this educational institution arose several times, but each time it was possible to defend it. Before the war, the number of graduates reached 570. Then there was a war, which radically changed all the plans of both students and teachers. A huge part of them went to fight, the rest stood at their machines. Two rifle companies were formed entirely from volunteers from the Kostroma Institute and set off to defeat the enemy.

And the building housed military hospitals. Classes were still conducted - in the workshops of enterprises, in utility rooms, when there was no need to prepare firewood and peat, build railway tracks to Galich, an airfield in Kostroma and defensive lines on the Volga. In addition, we almost constantly had to unload the wagons and, conversely, send all sorts of cargo, harvest crops in nearby villages, sew uniforms and solve many other urgent tasks: collect parcels for the front, perform concerts in front of the wounded, care for them, help them write letters. Before studying?

KSTU today

The high authority of KSTU grew gradually, as the fruit of the work of the entire team of employees, teachers, students, over many, many decades. A special advantage of the university is its graduates who occupy leading positions in institutions, in production, in banks, and, of course, in science. University
today it is a major center of educational, scientific, sports, cultural, and educational work in the Kostroma region.

7,000 undergraduate and graduate students study here at a time, and more than a thousand employees and teachers bring their knowledge and skills to them. Eight educational buildings, equipped with the latest science and technology, accept students, five dormitories provide them with decent comfort and all kinds of amenities to prepare for classes, a dispensary was created to improve the health of students and staff, there is a kindergarten, as well as a sports camp. All these conditions are created so that the university prospers, so that a healthy, strong, creative team continues to live under the sign of a reliable present and a confident future, since this is exactly what Kostroma State Technological University is fighting for.

Military department

Nevertheless, in 1944 the institute moved to the building where the Kostroma State Technological University is now located. The photo shows us this building in its modern form. In 1945, 430 students entered the institute and began their studies. Four professors and 16 associate professors began work, and a total of 52 teachers. The rest did not return from the war... 122 people from the teaching staff died heroically, defending the country’s right to live.

At the same time, in 1945, a military department was opened at the institute. It still trains and trains reserve officers - first commanders of combined arms platoons, then reserve officers of the logistics service of the Armed Forces. More than seven thousand people were thus trained by the Kostroma State Technological University.

Faculties

The post-war years were also marked by all sorts of interesting events. Teachers and students demobilized from the USSR Armed Forces began returning to the institute from the war. The set was completed and exceeded. They returned, covered in military glory, with decorations, among them there were even Stalinist scholarship recipients, former partisans, signalmen, artillerymen... Forty people returned. The rest died. They were remembered by name by all those who managed to continue their studies. And studies began this year in only two faculties - mechanical and technological. Here they studied and improved devices and machines for the light and textile industries.

Then faculties were added, and in 1962 the institute could rightfully be called a technological institute - for the first time graduates received diplomas of specialists in woodworking technologies, and in 1965 - mechanical engineers, specialists in metal-cutting tools and machine tools, in complex mechanization and automation of chemical-technological processes. The institute receives the right to an academic council for the defense of dissertations. In 1969, the first specialists of the forest engineering faculty graduated, and in 1971, the economics and consumer goods industry faculties gave their students a start in life.

Victory time

The Order of the Labor Institute was awarded in 1982, at the same time a museum was opened, where the history of the institute was presented consistently and in all its manifestations. In 1987, new faculties graduated specialists in business analysis and accounting, and in 1994 doctoral studies were opened. In 1999, the university, now Kostroma State Technological University, significantly increased its specialties: it trained specialists in knitwear technologies, CAD, and artistic processing of materials.

Now there are five faculties: technological, mechanical, humanities, forestry, and the faculty of automated systems and technologies. In addition, there are three institutes within the structure of the university: legal, economics and finance, additional vocational education, and there is also a military department and a center for pre-university training. Specialists are trained for the light and textile industries, mechanical engineering, timber industry, institutions and organizations of management, economics and finance, for the legal sphere, for the hotel and tourism business.

Teachers

More than 400 teachers work on the university staff, and student training is carried out at the highest level, since 8 academicians, 37 professors work with them, and of the total number of teachers, more than 60% have academic titles and degrees.

Almost everyone who teaches students has a wealth of practical experience both in production and in research institutes. Many studied and trained in various educational institutions abroad: in the USA, Germany, England, India. France, Slovakia, Bulgaria.

For applicants

All the specialties for which the university provides training are in demand, and there are never any problems with employment. It is also easy for graduates to make a career with a diploma from this university; they are known everywhere and are welcome at all enterprises. Among them are many famous and wonderful people. For example, since 2010, who has been the mayor of Moscow, he is a graduate of a university that is now called Kostroma State Technological University. He probably remembers the address of his wonderful institute, and for applicants it is as follows: Kostroma, Dzerzhinsky Street, building 17. The admissions committee is located in room No. 108. They are held several times a year.