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Mini Open House

These programs are held during common high school break weeks during the spring semester. They include a student-led campus tour along with a panel Q&A featuring staff members from key campus offices such as Advisement and Transition, Campus Activities and Corey Union, Career Services, Cortland Auxiliary Services, Financial Aid and Residence Life and Housing. Mini Open House events take place during February and April school break weeks.

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Campus Tours

Experiencing our campus in person is the best way to learn about all suny new paltz has to offer, schedule today there are two options to explore:.

  • The General Campus Tour : A guided, 90-minute trek across our beautiful campus, led by a Student Ambassador who can answer your questions from a current student’s perspective. After the tour, you’ll have the opportunity to meet with an Admissions Counselor who can help guide you through more of the details of applying and enrolling at New Paltz.
  • The Information Session & Tour : Everything you get with the campus tour, plus a short presentation designed to give you extra insights into what it means to be a student at SUNY New Paltz. Please note that we will also be offering Transfer Specific Information Sessions & Tours. The Transfer Specific Information Sessions & Tours will be taking place on Friday, March 15th at 12:30pm and on Saturday, May 4th at 11:00am. Registration for these can be done below.
  • Accepted Senior Days:  A 30-minute panel discussion with current students followed by a 90-minute campus tour taking place on Friday, March 1 st  at 10:00 AM, Friday, March 8 th  at 12:30 PM and 2:00 PM, Friday, April 12th at 10:00 AM and 12:30 PM, and May 3 rd  at 10:00 AM, 12:30 PM, and 2:00 PM.

View our calendar below to register for one of our visits!

Other things to know:

  • If you or a member of your party require special accommodations, please call us ahead of time at (845) 257-3688 so we can better assist you.
  • To cancel or make a change to your registration for a tour, please email [email protected]  and include your name, phone number and the change you would like to make.
  • If you are an accepted student and are having trouble scheduling your visit, or if you have any additional questions regarding your visit, please call our office at (845) 257-3688.  

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SUNY Cortland

Student Select 2024 lists winners

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Student Select 2024 lists winners

Student Select 2024, an annual, juried exhibition featuring artwork created by 50 SUNY Cortland art students, opened on Monday and runs through Friday, May 3, in the Dowd Fine Arts Center’s Dowd Gallery.

The exhibition is free and open to the public.

Carla Stetson, a contemporary artist and educator in the Ithaca, N.Y., region, was invited to be this year’s juror by the student-run Art Exhibition Association, which organized and sponsored the exhibition.

“I selected pieces that I believe will make a strong student exhibition showcasing works from all media areas,” Stetson said.

Winners were announced for best in show, second prize, third prize and honorable mentions on April 17 during an opening reception and awards ceremony in the Dowd Gallery. The ceremony featured the student artists, faculty and staff from the Art and Art History Department and Stetson.

Stetson, whose work was displayed in the recent “Eye Witness” exhibition, made her final selection of work on April 9. She chose for the exhibition 76 pieces made by 50 student artists out of 97 submissions. Their names are listed at the end of the article.

“This year’s exhibition explores the depths of the Art and Art History Department’s studio course diversity with a range of work from foundational courses through specializations,” Stetson said. “Visitors will experience a varied display of drawing, sculpture, ceramics, digital, print media, fibers, painting and more.

“Besides the first, second and third place winners, I selected three worthy honorable mentions. These award-winning works stood out for many reasons, most importantly a brave and innovative use of materials combined with an original, often very personal, conceptual basis. They were poignant, sometimes humorous and each winning entry demonstrated exceptional technical skill.”

After careful deliberation, Stetson selected three students as winners of the Student Select 2024 exhibition. Three Honorable Mentions also were awarded.  

First Prize went to Chloe Loewenguth for the 2024 wax and cotton wick piece titled “Neglecting Myself.”

Virginia Alvisi was awarded Second Prize for the 2024 digital animation piece titled “Overthinker.”

Sophie Marin took Third Prize for “Ritual of the Flower Moon,” a 2023 pen and ink piece.

For Honorable Mention, three students were recognized:

  • Ella Gorrell for “Ick,” a 2023 color pencil, marker and pen work
  • Megan Ludgate for “My Period Piece,” a 2023 piece made of fiber and hand-dyed cotton tampons
  • Meghan Wardell for “Under Attack,” a 2024 work made of hand-dyed mixed media fibers.

Additionally at the opening reception, Dana Garrison , a graduating BFA studio art major with a concentration in painting, delivered her BFA thesis defense on her body of work, “In the Weeds.”

Garrison also was introduced as this year's winner of the Muriel and Newell Keegan Prize for Excellence in Art, established in 2020 by alum Kevin N. Keegan ’76 and his wife, Linda DeRuvo-Keegan to honor Kevin’s parents. The award, formally announced at this year’s Honors Convocation on April 20, is given to the most outstanding senior student enrolled in any Art and Art History Department major.

Garrison’s BFA exhibition “In the Weeds” is on display in the west wing of the Dowd Gallery. Scott Oldfield, gallery interim director, described “In the Weeds” as a journey through the artist’s relationship with herself and the individuals surrounding her.

“Each piece provides a window into the intricate tapestry of emotions, experiences and connections that have shaped her existence,” Oldfield noted.

“Through a dynamic use of color, form and symbolism, the artist delves into the complexities of human interaction, exploring themes of love, loss and resilience,” Oldfield said.

“In our lives, we can find comfort in comparison,” Garrison said of her mainly mixed media work, which allows her to create layers that push and pull each other, symbolizing fluctuations in the human condition.

“A bad day can be compared to a bump in the road which wears itself out over time. A first touch with someone we come to love can be fireworks. Comparison helps us make sense of feelings that may be hard for us to experience: a juxtaposition of our emotions and experience to the known and accepted. Growing up surrounded by nature, from my grandfather’s garden to the dense forest behind my childhood home, I use symbols of nature as proxies for my personal experiences and emotions.”

During finals week, the gallery will remain open with a pared-down exhibition as students remove their work and faculty picks are relocated for display at Memorial Library.

The gallery in Dowd Center is located on the corner of Graham Avenue and Prospect Terrace. The Dowd Gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays; and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thursdays. Walk-ins are welcome. The exhibition is closed on Saturdays.

For more information, an appointment, a tour, or additional images, contact Oldfield at 607-753-4216. Visit the SUNY Cortland Dowd Gallery website for details about exhibiting artists, other programs, safety protocols and group visits.

Participants in this year’s Student Select also include:

Jade VanZile

Angie Tillapaugh

Madison Hanford

Allison Perna

Danielle Lewis

Gabz Danyew

Devon Blackwood

Dina Palaguachi

Abigail Benham

Kathleen McDonough

Brooke Missina

Aimee Craddock

Terrell Parks

Ashley Nazario

Morgan Cherrone

Jordan Hildalgo

Rameen Zehra

Cameron Eastwood

Sarah Goldberg

Kat McCormick

Marjorie Castilla

Jean Tomassini

Shelby Swift

Keightlen Eaton

Ashley Hoyte

Bob Ponterio

Miles McCabe

Brooke O’leary

Ray Beltran

Marissa Deluca

Firat Ercan

Terrel Parks

Christopher Ramirez

Ariele Vance

Nick Kaires

William Henry Hilburger

X’Avion Irons

Haley Lambert

Yves Auguste

SUNY Chancellor spends Earth Day at SUNY Cortland

SUNY Chancellor spends Earth Day at SUNY Cortland

State University of New York Chancellor John B. King praised Cortland for being a leader in making campuses more sustainable.

Ending plastic pollution is topic

Ending plastic pollution is topic

Biology educator, researcher will speak as part of Earth Day week.

Student Select 2024 lists winners

Exhibition showcases best studio work of 50 Art and Art History majors.

Cortland Challenge 2024 is April 17

Cortland Challenge 2024 is April 17

Supporters get even more gift match opportunities this year to help their favorite Cortland cause.

Dowd Gallery presents Student Select 2024

Dowd Gallery presents Student Select 2024

Fifty art students compete for the top prize, to be announced Wednesday, in this annual, juried exhibition.

SUNY Cortland recognized for election encouragement

SUNY Cortland recognized for election encouragement

For a second time, the university is honored for its voter education, registration and turnout efforts.

Transfer students inducted into honor society

Transfer students inducted into honor society

Forty-five SUNY Cortland transfer students were inducted into Tau Sigma National Honor Society.

Student research showcased at Transformations

Student research showcased at Transformations

The annual spring conference is a chance to highlight academic excellence on campus.

SUNY Cortland senior earns EOP’s highest honor

SUNY Cortland senior earns EOP’s highest honor

Katelyn Thompson will receive a Norman R. McConney Jr. Award for Student Excellence.

The Big Event Returns April 21

The Big Event Returns April 21

The SGA will follow up on the campus-wide activity during Cortland’s spring administrative meeting on April 22.

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The Dragon Chronicle

SUNY Cortland's Student Publication

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The Importance of the SUNY Cortland Pride Club

David Alexander · April 22, 2024

Amidst students’ hectic college lives, there exists a haven where diversity thrives and acceptance knows no bounds: the Pride Club. Here, students of all identities gather to forge connections, learn, and celebrate their authentic selves.

SUNY Cortland’s Pride Club provides a safe space for queer students but welcomes all to join, regardless of identity or background. Weekly meetings during the school year typically center around an educational or social topic that is relevant to the LGBTQ+ community, like sexual health and the importance of pronouns, among many others.

Pride Club has always facilitated fun, social events both on and off campus in order to foster community among its members. Previous events have included sleepovers, flag football games, Homecoming and Prom dances, as well as museum trips.

Pride Club members have even taken a yearly trip to New York City to visit historical LGBTQ+ sites like Stonewall Inn, a pivotal site in the struggle for queer rights.

The club’s latest Thursday meeting was slightly atypical as it was in preparation for the annual PRIDE Prom, which was scheduled for the next day. PRIDE Prom offers its attendees an opportunity to be a part of a time-honored American tradition as their authentic selves, without the fear of judgment, shame, or othering.

suny cortland campus visit

The week’s gathering was led by Dahlia, whose laid-back and reserved demeanor is juxtaposed with the boisterousness of its other members. The meeting begins with an icebreaker; one by one each member introduces themselves along with their pronouns and the last song that they listened to.

The Pride Club then came together to create a fun and queer-centric Spotify playlist for Prom based on various prompts. The room reverberated with laughter, shock, and awe as funny and off-the-wall song choices were proposed. The raucous meeting concluded with a reflective exercise wherein each member identified their highs and lows of the week. This is an opportunity to celebrate even the smallest victory and to share life’s many challenges in a supportive and affirming environment.

As the members slowly shuffled out of the room, I chatted with a few members to discuss why Pride Club is important and what it means to them.

Holly, a transfer student, has found some of her closest friends at Pride Club and she emphasized the supportive nature of the environment. When asked about why Pride Club is important in today’s divisive political and social landscape, Holly states, “There’s been a lot of backlash against just like existing as a person. Unfortunately, I have experienced that on this campus, so it is important to have a solid community to go back to.”

“There’s been a lot of backlash against just like existing as a person.” Holly, Cortland student

Another student, Christina, stated “I believe that Pride is a very important place on campus because it is a safe space for people of all kinds of identities, sexualities, gender background, whatever. You can come and meet people and make friends and learn!”

In response to the rise of anti-legislation, Christina went on to say “It’s so important that these people are being seen and that they are supported and that they matter and that we want them.”

It’s evident that the Pride Club at SUNY Cortland plays a crucial role in providing support and community for its members. In a world where acceptance can be hard to find, this club offers a place where students can be themselves without judgment or fear, creating lifelong friendships along the way.

Pride Club meets each week at 7 PM in the Corey Union Voice Office, and welcomes all students to attend.

Things to do in Moscow: how to visit Moscow | Unmissable, cool & unusual

  • September 2, 2023

Things to do in Moscow best

What are the best things to do in Moscow? What to do in Moscow? First, I will list the main places to visit by theme, passing by the must-sees, but also more unusual places in Moscow. Then, I will describe what to see in Moscow in one day and how to visit Moscow in 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 days. Let’s go!

Good to know. For more information, click on the places to open the dedicated blog posts.

Main places to visit in Moscow & best things to do in Moscow

I worked in Moscow and I loved this city for its dynamism and energy. We find there from time to time to see friends, remember good memories and enjoy this giant city! Then the time has come for us to share with you our practical guide.

TOP 5 must-see places in Moscow

  • Moscow Red Square
  • St. Basil’s Cathedral
  • Cathedral of Christ the Savior
  • Bolshoi Theatre

Places of cultural, historical and religious interest in Moscow

  • Novodevichy Convent and cemetery
  • Tretyakov Gallery
  • Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts
  • Kremlin Izmaïlovo (pseudo-historic place, recently built in the image of the old, one of the best things to do in Moscow for your Instagram account 😉 )
  • Park and ancient village of Kolomenskoye

Visit Moscow of the Soviet era

  • Moscow State University and Sparrows Hill
  • VDNKh and the Museum of Astronautics, one of the key landmarks of the Soviet era in Moscow
  • GULAG Museum
  • Metro stations
  • The Stalinist skyscrapers, scattered all over the city

Less touristy places in Moscow

  • Gorky Park and the GARAGE museum
  • The old Krasny Oktyabr factory
  • Zaryadye Park
  • Center for Contemporary Art, WINZAVOD
  • Business center, Moscow City

Main districts of Moscow to visit

  • Patriarch Ponds
  • Tchistye Prudy
  • Kuznetsky most
  • Arbat Street

However, regardless of the length of your stay, whether you are going to visit Moscow in 4 days or in 2, you need a visa. The article Obtaining a tourist visa for Russia could then be useful in any case.

What to do and see in Moscow in one day?

List of things to see and do in Moscow in one day:

  • Go to Red Square
  • Visit St. Basil’s Cathedral
  • See Kremlin walls (but not to visit)
  • Visit Cathedral of Christ the Savior
  • Discover Kuznetsky most districts and see Bolshoi Theatre building
  • And if you have time at the end of the day: go to the Sparrows Hill or to the Moscow City for a beautiful view

Things to do in Moscow in 2 days

If you want to visit Moscow in 2 days, there are 2 purposes: do not miss the essential places of Moscow and optimize travel.

  • First day: Red Square , Saint Basil’s Cathedral , Zariadye Park, Bolshoi Theatre , Kremlin
  • Day 2: Cathedral of Christ the Savior, the former Krasny Oktyabr factory on Balchug Island, Gorky Park, Moscow State University (one of the Seven Sisters buildings ) and Sparrow Hill

As 2 days os really short, be sure to choose an accommodation in the best districts where to stay in Moscow .

Walking on Red Square in Moscow: one of the unmissable things to do in Moscow

Iconic place and one of the must-see places in Moscow and even in Russia! Besides, if there was only one place to visit in Moscow in 2 days, this place would then be Red Square, without hesitation. Therefore, starting the city tour with Red Square is ideal . Several buildings are on the square, but not all of them have to be visited. Check out my blog post about Moscow’s Red Square in detail to learn more and not miss anything.

Red Square Moscow

Visiting Saint-Basil’s Cathedral inside

Even more emblematic than Moscow’s Red Square! Built in the middle of the 16th century under the orders of Tsar Ivan Le Terrible, this cathedral is one of the most beautiful monuments of Orthodox art, and definitely one of the unmissable places in Moscow. Visiting Saint-Basil’s Cathedral inside is one of the most beautiful things to do in Moscow!

  • Visit estimate time : 1h30
  • Entry ticket : 700 RUB. Tickets can be purchased on the cathedral’s official website 45 days before the tour.
  • Audio guide (recommended): 500 RUB
  • Opening hours : June to August 10 am-6pm; from November to April: 11 am-5pm; May, September, October 11 am-5pm. Cathedral closed on Wednesdays. Entrance is closed 45 minutes before closing.
  • Find out more in the dedicated article: Saint Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow

Saint Basil's Cathedral

Take a walk in Zariadye park: one of the coolest things to do in Moscow after visiting Red Square

Zaryadie Park is just a 10-minute walk from St. Basil’s Cathedral, so it’s easy to include in your itinerary if you’re going to visit Moscow in 2 days. From its heights, you can see the red walls of the Kremlin. But, the most impressive point of view is the platform which overlooks the Moskva river. A must see! And clearly one of the coolest things to do in Moscow!

  • Open 24 hours a day
  • Good to know! Park Zaryadye is also a place to visit in Moscow in winter. Find out more here: What to do in Moscow in winter?

What to do in Moscow

See the Bolshoi Theatre and discover the Kuznetsky Most district

The Bolshoi Theatre is the most famous Russian theater in the world. The most economical way to see a presentation at the Bolshoi Theater is to take the tickets on the theater’s official website in advance, so here is our tutorial to help you: How to buy entrance tickets to the Bolshoi? In addition, several pedestrian or one-way streets

The Bolshoi Theater is the most famous Russian theater in the world. The most economical way to see a presentation at the Bolshoi Theater is to take the tickets on the theater’s official website in advance, so here is our tutorial to help you: How to buy tickets to the Bolshoi? In addition, several pedestrian or one-way streets are located north of the theater. It is therefore very pleasant to find them to leave the main axes of the megalopolis.

IMG_3040 tickets Bolshoi Theatre dress code

Visit the Moscow Kremlin

Visit Kremlin is on top of things to do in Moscow. A place of power for centuries, the Kremlin then shows us a whole different image when viewed from the inside. If you want to visit Moscow in 2 days, the Kremlin is certainly one of the must-see places in Moscow.

  • Opening hours : Daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Thursday.
  • See our blog post about visiting the Moscow Kremlin

Moscow Kremlin: skip-the-line tickets and 8 things not to miss

Visit the Cathedral of Christ the Savior

This impressive Moscow Cathedral is the seat of the Russian Orthodox Church. It is a must see if you visit Moscow in 2 days and clearly one of the things to do in Moscow. The Cathedral of Christ the Savior was first built in 1883 in memory of Russia’s victory over Napoleon’s Grand Army. Then in 1931 Stalin ordered its destruction. It was then rebuilt again (identically) only in 2000.

  • Where? Ulitsa Volkhonka 15. At the foot of the Kropotkinskaya metro station.
  • Opening hours . Daily: 10: 00-17: 00, except Monday: 13: 00-17: 00
  • Free entry (some closing restrictions, for example a short)

Good to know! In orthodox religious places, one must avoid excessively uncovered clothing. Women should cover their heads. After visiting the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, you can explore Bolotny Island and Gorky Park. This is one of the routes our guide to Moscow.

Cathedral of Christ the Savior

The old Krasny Oktyabr factory: one of the coolest things to do in Moscow

If you cross the Moskva River by a pedestrian bridge which is located just in front of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, you will enjoy a beautiful view of the city and at the same time you can discover Balchug Island. Furthermore, if you want to visit Moscow in 2 days, you can include this island in your itinerary between the cathedral and Gorky park. Here is the old confectionery factory Krasny Oktyabr, which has gradually turned into a fashionable micro-district. There are then some elements of street art, cafes and restaurants and some Moscow bohemian side. At the end of the island you can see a gigantic 98-meter-high monument dedicated to the Russian reforming tsar Pierre The Great.

Good to know! You can find on this island are the trendiest nightclubs in Moscow. On weekends, there are taxi caps after midnight so there are so many people. On the other hand, if you go there in winter and during the day, the island is quite empty and less interesting to see.

Gorky Park is one of the TOP places to visit in Moscow, because it allows you to better understand the life of the locals and their rhythm. In fact, it’s a huge entertainment park. For example, in winter there is a giant ice rink and in summer – free dance or yoga lessons, sandy beaches for playing volleyball, an outdoor cinema. So, like the locals, have a Stakantchik (ice cream or cooked corn), and enjoy the atmosphere of the place: that’s one of the interesting things to do in Moscow to discover the city.

  • Where? Krymsky Val 9. 20 minutes’ walk from Krasny Oktyabr, along the quays.

Sparrow Hill and Moscow State University

The Sparrow Hill, Vorobiovy Gori in Russian, is the highest point in Moscow. It is rather known to Russians, but less to travelers. A nice view on Moscow opens from the hill, and in particular on the Luzhniki Stadium. In addition, on the hill itself is the Moscow State University: an impressive skyscraper from the Soviet era.

  • How to get there? By bus T7 (35 min) from Oktyaborskaya station, near Gorki Park. By metro (Vorobiovy Gorki station) + climb the hill on foot. On foot along the Moskva along the Gorky Park (1h30) + climb in funiculars.

Good to know! It is possible to cross the Moskva river by funicular. We actually tested it and it was pretty cool! That is one of our favorite things to do in Moscow!

What to do in Moscow

What to do in Moscow in 3 days?

If you are going to visit Moscow in 3 days, it would be interesting to dive into the Soviet era which strongly marked the country and the city. After the Bolshevik Revolution, the capital was transferred from Saint Petersburg to Moscow, in order to mark the change of power. Moscow then became the world showcase for communist ideology. Here are the best things to do in Moscow for 3-day-trip!

VDNKh, visit Moscow of the Soviet era

VDNKh is a large exhibition center in the north of Moscow, where there are still several striking witnesses of the USSR. The most interesting are the Museum of Cosmonauts and the Statue of the Worker and the Kolkhozian , which will certainly impress you with its size!

Visit

GULAG History Museum

The explanations of the museum are very well done. We really have the feeling of going back in time. If you are going to visit Moscow in 3 days and you are interested in history and this subject in particular, I recommend this museum. Visit the GULAG History Museum is one of the most interesting things to do in Moscow.

suny cortland campus visit

Discover the Patriarche Pounds district

It’s a nice neighborhood in Moscow where you can come across rather affluent locals, but not necessarily very bling-bling. Take a walk in this area is really a cool thing to do in Moscow! In addition, the Ponds of Patriarch is one of the places of Bulgakov’s novel “Master and Margarita”. As this is an interesting area to see, we have included it in a walking tour of Moscow. The route ends at the Moscow Kremlin, which is very convenient, because you will be able to visit Moscow in 3 days by optimizing your trips.

suny cortland campus visit

What to visit in Moscow in 4 days: TOP things to do in Moscow in 4 days

If you want to visit Moscow in 3 days, you will already see a lot of things. On the other hand, if you stay one more day, you have plenty to do! The Novodevichy Convent, the Tchistie Proudy district and the Izmaylovo Kremlin are very good candidates for you, if you are going to visit Moscow in 4 days.

Visiting Novodevichy Convent in Moscow

The Novodevichy Convent is one of the most brilliant examples of Russian architecture, according to UNESCO. This beautiful complex was built in 1524 and today consists of the convent, but also of a cemetery whose status could be compared to that of Père-Lachaise in Paris. Visiting Novodevichy Convent is one of the great things to do in Moscow, if you want to go a little bit outside of the center!

What to see in Moscow in one day

Discovering Tchistye Proudy district

It’s one of the most popular areas of Moscow, with many cafes, restaurants and bars nearby. It is therefore a place to discover if you want to visit Moscow in 4 days. It is just as pleasant for a stroll as for the discovery of local life. For example, in winter the pond turns into an ice rink.

Visiting the Izmaylovo Kremlin, one of the coolest things to do in Moscow!

The Izmaylovo Kremlin is more of a tourist than a historic place. On the other hand, it is a pretty impressive place to discover, especially on weekends. Inside the Kremlin, there is a flea market where you can find a little bit of everything, but mostly good souvenirs to bring from Moscow. For example, chapka, traditional Russian scarves or matryoshka (Russian dolls). Add the Kremlin and the Izmaïlovo market to your itinerary if you are going to visit Moscow in 4 days, because it is a nice and very colorful place! Visiting the Izmailovo Kremlin is one of the things to do in Moscow, if you want to put colors in your Instagram account! 😉

Things to do Moscow blog

In 4 days, we will have the opportunity to see several Moscow: Classic Moscow, Moscow of old Russia, Soviet Moscow and a little bit of the new Moscow. So what to visit in Moscow on the 5th day of travel?

What to visit in Moscow in 5 days?

Art lovers will be delighted to discover the Tretyakov Gallery and the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, while others will prefer to stroll along Arbat Street, see the buildings of Moskva-City or visit Bunker 42.

Admiring Russian art at Tretyakov Gallery

Founded in 1856 by an industrialist and great lover of art, the gallery has grown over the decades, and then bequeathed to the state. Today the collection includes more than 140,000 pieces, 15,000 of which are paintings. Visiting the Tretyakov Gallery is one of the things to do in Moscow if you want to discover Russian art!

  • Where? Pereoulok Lavrouchinski 10. A 5-minute walk from Tretiakovskaya station
  • Opening hours. Open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Closed on Mondays.
  • Entry tickets. 500 RUB.

Museum to see

Visiting the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts

The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts presents the treasures of ancient Egypt, the paintings of Rembrandt and Cézanne, a fine collection of Impressionism.

  • Where? Ulitsa Volkhonka 12
  • Opening hours. Daily: 10: 00-20: 00, except Thursday: 11: 00-21: 00. Closed on Mondays. The boxes close an hour before closing.
  • Entry tickets. The prices vary according to the collections from 300 to 750 RUB.

Walking on Arbat Street

All Russians know Rue Arbat. So, walking on Arbat street is one of the things to do in Moscow. However, after the years, little by little it became very touristy. This is a pedestrian street only. There are souvenir shops, restaurants and cafes there, but it is no longer the most authentic neighborhood in the city.

suny cortland campus visit

Seeing the buildings of Moskva-City (Moscow City)

Moskva-City is Moscow’s business center, much like Paris’s Defense district. The skyscrapers of Moskva-City are among the tallest in Europe: 373 meters high! Very nice place to see at dusk.

Good to know! You can admire a nice view of Moscow City from the docks of Tarasa Shevchenko. It’s especially beautiful in the evening with all the lights on.

Bunker 42, one of the most unusual things to do in Moscow

Bunker 42 is a secret military complex which was to be used by the Soviets in the event of a nuclear attack: a space of 7000 m² 65 meters underground!

  • Where? 5 Kotelnitcheski Lane, 11.
  • Prices. 2200 RUB per person
  • Opening hours. Open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  • Restaurant inside. Original, but rather a tourist trap.

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What to visit in Moscow in 6 days or more?

There are still so many places to see, because Moscow is a big megalopolis and there is always something exciting to do there. For example: the ancient Kolomenskoye village or the WINZAVOD contemporary art center .

If you are interested in history and want to see Russian cities on a rather “human scale”, it would certainly be interesting for you to discover the cities of the Golden Ring . For example, it is very easy to get to Sergey Posad from Moscow (less than 2 hours in train). Visiting the Golden Ring is one of the best things to do in Moscow if you are staying more than a 5-6 days.

There are still plenty of places to see in Moscow, however I did my best to list here the best things to do in Moscow, what to see in Moscow in one day, but also in 2, 3, 4 or 5 days in Moscow!

Moscow travel tips:

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Archives and Research

Moscow's Archives and the New History of the Communist Party of the United States

Randi Storch | Oct 1, 2000

Historians of communism now have access to an enormous range of new sources, but the picture emerging is not at all clear. The Russian State Archive of Social and Political History (RGASPI), formerly Moscow's Center for the Preservation of Documents of Modern History (RTsKhIDNI), holds the largest collection of materials related to international communism, totaling approximately 20 million documents. These collections include rich and varied sources related to communism in the United States that reveal a multidimensional story of American communism, one that will allow us to study local history in a national and international context.

I encountered this complex picture of American Communist Party history as I did my own research at the archive on the relationship between Chicago's party and the city's working people. The story I uncovered there is quite different from those I have been reading about in the most recent academic publications and popular press articles that suggest the last word on American communism is one of espionage and Moscow's domination. In fact, the substance of the archives should reopen the debate on the meaning of American communism.

The first studies based on these documents focused on national and international party issues. In The Secret World of American Communism, the first of a proposed 14-part series released by Yale University Press, Harvey Klehr, John Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov showed that the Soviet Union helped fund the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) and that top leaders in the American party supported Soviet espionage. With carefully selected documents, they suggested that the essence of the communist movement was its attempts to sabotage the American government. The second volume in this series, The Soviet World of American Communism , used the same approach to prove that, in some all-consuming fashion, "the American Communist party was a creature of the Comintern and, through it, of the Soviet Union."1

These works have been picked up in the popular media as if they held the long-sought-after evidence that established once and for all the depravity of the American communist movement, yet their arguments are still able to spark heated discussions among historians. In both books, the authors succeeded in gaining popular attention, as well as raising some historians' ire, by selectively using Moscow's archives to confirm assertions made by the first scholars of American communism—Cold War scholars whose anticommunist interpretations were shaped by the dominant political atmosphere of the country in the aftermath of World War II.

These Cold War historians and their 1990s counterparts believe the most important aspect of American communism was the party's subordination to Soviet Russia. Theodore Draper, writing in 1960, determined that by 1929, "nothing and no one could alter the fact that the American Communist Party had become an instrument of the Russian Communist Party." 2 Thus Draper and those writing in the 1990s from the same perspective see the party organization as a monolith. Each communist act is explained as another example of Soviet intrigue. 3

Because these historians assumed top-level party leaders determined the character and actions of the party, they also discounted the effect of local party experience in shaping the party and in influencing the politics of people who joined it. Focusing instead on the national leadership and emphasizing the Comintern's influence on it, Draper concluded, "a history of the Communist party is chiefly a history of its top leadership." Echoing Draper almost four decades later, Klehr, Haynes, and Kyrill M. Anderson argue that, "the dictates of the Comintern almost invariably superseded policies offered on the basis of local conditions."4

Because the CPUSA believed in democratic centralism, which required members to follow party policy, an institutional perspective is certainly an important part of the story. But Cold War scholars and their modern counterparts interpret all aspects of the party's organization and structure with negative moral overtones, depicting American communists as alienated from American society. Such nationally focused, institutional approaches therefore make it impossible to describe—let alone gauge the significance of—local party membership and activities. And by assuming that top-level discussions and factional fights always dictated the attitudes and actions of organizers in the streets and factories, these scholars ignore local developments and grassroots rationales that inspired working people to join the party.

Such one-sided interpretations were already under attack by the 1980s and early 1990s, when a group of scholars began shifting the terms of the debate. Most of these revisionist historians placed American communism within the broader history of this country's radical movements, taking three main approaches to the party's history. Some interviewed aging Communists to produce personal narratives that focus on activists' party experiences and activities, suggesting that Soviet policy could not explain all of their decisions and behaviors. Others made similar claims, in national party histories, arguing that America's party leaders were responsive to domestic political and social conditions. A third group, relying on oral history and newspaper sources, wrote local studies to discuss communist experience at the city level. 5 Rather than emphasizing the small and sectarian party of the 1920s and the postwar years, as Draper and David Shannon had, these revisionist historians looked at the party during its Popular Front heyday of the 1930s and World War II era and concluded that people joined because this was a radical movement offering solutions to America's problems. "Unlike their predecessors," Michael E. Brown noted, "the new historians emphasize the variations and complexities of context." 6

But in their attempt to write a more sympathetic history of American communism, many of these scholars romanticize the communist movement, understate its bureaucratic structure, and downplay sectarianism. In an effort to demystify and decriminalize the party, they swung the pendulum far away from the depiction of communists as automatons of democratic centralism and toward a conception of communists as idealized, organic radicals.

While personal testimony allowed these scholars to rely less on party sources and institutional interpretations, the turn to oral history presented its own problems. Personal interviews tended to move historians away from New York's leaders and encouraged them to focus more on local contexts, but works based heavily on oral testimony ran into the danger of presenting skewed, personal interpretations of history.

And using local sources meant that revisionist historians did not always grasp the significance of being a member of an international movement dominated by the Soviet Union. Because the Communist Party was an international movement operating through democratic centralism, it was inherently different from any other American political organization. It is essential to integrate this international context with a grassroots focus in order to understand the Communist Party and the role it played in working-class politics more generally.

But if these scholars' emphasis on localism led them to understate the significance of internationalism, they at least began to provide a more nuanced interpretation of American communism. As they responded to what might be referred to as Cold War histories, paving the way for new research and new interpretations, their efforts were stymied in part by a shortage of sources.

Now, however, the opening of former party archives in Moscow provides access to rich new sources. The RGASPI collection includes more than 4,000 files of CPUSA records, dating from 1919 to the late 1930s. Although the records are incomplete for the periods from 1919–22 and for the period after 1936, they still tell us a great deal about this enigmatic organization.

Fond (file) 515, the CPUSA's collection, holds minutes and correspondence for each department within the national party during this period. Perhaps most exciting from a social historian's perspective, however, is that it also contains the papers of each party district. This means that for the first time scholars have access to extensive internal party documents such as correspondence, financial records, meeting minutes, and discipline reports at the state, city, and neighborhood levels. Researchers can study shop papers, industrial reports, and organizing plans. Local educational material is plentiful, including the locations, materials, and course information for local party schools. The archive also contains local papers of agitation and propaganda committees, industrial committees, control committees, women's committees, Negro committees, and each ethnic group in the party.

The CPUSA papers represent just one collection at RGASPI containing United States material. There are thousands of other files that reach into the early 1940s pertaining to the Profintern (fond 534), which coordinated industrial organizing. This collection includes minutes of national and city industrial conferences, trade union organizers' reports, reports on the American Federation of Labor, minutes and letters from various industrial organizers, and copies of shop papers and leaflets. The Comintern papers (fond 495) include the papers of the Anglo-American secretariat, the Negro Bureau, and the Trade Union commission, each containing correspondence and minutes relating to local party activity and activists.

For the first time, it is possible to document the functioning of the local party, its relationship to the international, and the importance of individual members in shaping the party's program. Chicago's party sources reveal that local pressures and politics convinced communist trade unionists to leave the Trade Union Unity League for the American Federation of Labor before the Comintern agreed to this action. Local party organizers also led the way into the Congress of Industrial Organizations. These examples show that party policy was not merely imposed from the top, but was also established through the experience and activity of party trade unionists. Local shifts that predated Comintern policy changes also occurred in the Chicago party's unemployment activities and in its youth organizing. Its activists were dynamic elements of the social conflicts of the day and their party activities reflected it.

These materials also tell us a great deal about the ways in which ordinary people experienced communism. From the perspective of Chicago's neighborhoods, the party looked quite different than it did from New York and Moscow. Rather than describe rank-and-file experiences according to party leaders' plans, new evidence allows us to read about communist members' victories and frustrations from their own records. Neighborhood records, for example, show how activity varied from predominately African American to predominately Jewish neighborhoods. Rank-and-file letters to party leaders reveal party members' hopes, frustrations, and motivations. Such sources reveal openings in the movement in which individuals inserted their own visions of activism, and they allude to a larger context surrounding communists' activities, suggesting why communism made sense to some Chicago workers.

Pieces of this archive are showing up in various libraries and soon will be available online. The Library of Congress has already made some CPUSA materials available to researchers on microfilm. Also, the International Computerization of the Comintern Archive project (Incomka) is working on digitizing one million pages of the most used and "historically significant" collections of the Comintern archive. Such increased access will certainly help researchers rethink the meaning of American communism in this new round of scholarship although the editors' choice of documents will be important. But until such projects are complete, the best and the most complete records of American communism are in Moscow.

The opening of Moscow's archives has also opened a new period of Communist Party history, when opportunities to study local communist experiences are plentiful. While relations between the United States and Russia have changed considerably since the 1950s, the challenges of writing a balanced Communist party history are just as complicated and significant as ever. The new sources make it possible to reassess the movement, suggesting that in order to understand the experience of American communism we must be sensitive to the interplay between internationalism and localism. As Maurice Isserman noted in The Nation in 1995 , "the story of the C.P.U.S.A. is full of contradictions, and it's past time for all concerned to acknowledge and learn to live with them." Certainly this archive and its collections make such a conclusion emphatic.

This research was supported by grants from the University of Illinois, SUNY Cortland, and the International Research and Exchanges Board, with funds provided by the U.S. Department of State (Title VIII program) and the National Endowment for the Humanities. None of these organizations is responsible for the views expressed.

1. Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes, and Kyrill Anderson, The Soviet World of American Communism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998), 2.

2. Theodore Draper, American Communism and Soviet Russia: The Formative Years (New York: Viking, 1960), 440. While Draper's work has been the most influential, the Ford Foundation sponsored 10 studies, beginning in 1953, on various aspects of "Communism in American Life."

3. As Hugh Wilford points out, these historians did not distinguish between the Comintern and the Soviet Communist Party. See Hugh Wilford, "The Communist International and the American Communist Party," in Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe (eds.), International Communism and the Communist International, 1919–1943 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998): 225–33.

4. First quote is from Draper, 4; second from Klehr, Haynes, and Anderson, The Soviet World of American Communism , 5.

5. Examples from the first group are Steve Nelson, James R. Barrett, and Rob Ruck, Steve Nelson, American Radical (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1981); Nell Irvin Painter, The Narrative of Hosea Hudson (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979); Dorothy Ray Healey and Maurice Isserman, California Red: A Life in the American Communist Party (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990). Examples of the second group are Maurice Isserman, Which Side Were You On? The American Communist Party During The Second World War (1982; Urbana: University of Illinois Press, Reprint, 1993); Fraser Ottanelli, The Communist Party of the United States: From the Depression to World War II (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1991). Examples of the third group are Paul Lyons, Philadelphia Communists, 1936–1956 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1982); Robin Kelley, Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Depression (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990).

6. Michael E. Brown, "Introduction: The History of the History of US Communism," in Michael E. Brown, Randy Martin, Frank Rosengarten and George Snedeker (eds.), New Studies in the Politics and Culture of U.S. Communism (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1993), 18.

Randi Storch is an assistant professor of history at SUNY, Cortland.

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Development Officer

SUNY Cortland

Job Details

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SUNY Cortland

From your first steps on campus, you’ll feel the spirit of Cortland. It’s an energy that extends from the classroom to competition to the community.

SUNY Cortland stands out as one of New York’s top public universities — a medium-sized school that offers academic strength across 68 majors, a high quality of student life and a degree that pays back graduates.

Reputations in teacher education and health-related majors laid the foundation for exciting new programs related to business, natural sciences, the arts and specialized professional fields.

Our students, faculty and staff members are invested in the world around them. Whether it’s a class assignment, independent research or a passion project, Red Dragons look to make a difference.

With more than 1,400 employees, we are the leading employer in the City of Cortland and in Cortland County, and we’re also one of the most desirable places to work.

Job seekers will find competitive salaries, outstanding benefits and an invigorating work environment with full access to Cortland’s exceptional recreation and fitness facilities, library and other resources.

We offer full- and part-time employment in  academic, administrative and staff positions , plus a wide range of employment opportunities for undergraduates and graduate students, including  graduate assistantships .

Also offering employment opportunities on campus are two affiliated organizations,  Cortland Auxiliary  and the Research Foundation of SUNY.

Cortland Auxiliary is a private, not-for-profit organization that provides the SUNY Cortland community with food services and the Campus Store, to name a few. 

The Research Foundation for SUNY is a private, nonprofit educational corporation that administers externally funded contracts and grants that support research and discovery for and on behalf of SUNY Cortland. The Research Foundation offers professional, research, day care, tutoring and clerical employment opportunities.

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University Union Celebrates Block Party April 26

people in Dome during concert

Block “Darty”

Activities from 1-5 p.m. are free for Syracuse University and SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) students.

Students are invited to participate in a meltdown zone, Ninja Warrior Obstacle Course, rat race inflatable, splatter room, receive artwork from a caricaturist, insight from psychic Jessica Johnson and airbrush tattoos. During this time additional highlights include food trucks such as XO Taco, Toss N Fire, Limp Lizard, Skippy’s Ice Cream and Bird Cafe. The outdoor concert will host performances from Dreamer Isioma, RENFORSHORT and DWLLRS on the Quad from 2:30 to 4:15 p.m.

Block Party

Starting at 7 p.m. in the JMA Wireless Dome, the Block Party concert will open with Syracuse University student group FEƎM and their DJ sets. Followed by performances from artists Lil Yachty, Teezo Touchdown, ISOxo and KARRAHBOOO. Learn more about the artists by visiting The Peel .

Tickets will be available for purchase until Friday, April 26, 10 p.m. A valid college I.D. and ticket are required to enter the event. The JMA Wireless Dome Bag Policy will be applicable, whereby backpacks, professional cameras, alcohol, drugs and re-entry will not be permitted.

  • Syracuse University and SUNY ESF: Tickets are $15 for students, faculty and staff with valid college I.D. and email address. Students are able to purchase a maximum of two tickets (the guest ticket must be for a student with a valid college I.D.) and at time of purchase they will be loaded to Student MyCuse .
  • Select colleges and universities: Based on availability, students with a valid college I.D. and college email address, attending from select colleges and universities may purchase tickets from the JMA Dome Box Office for $25 each, for a maximum of two tickets. Select colleges and universities include Le Moyne College, Colgate University, Cornell University, Hamilton College, Hobart and William Smith College, Ithaca College, Rochester Institute of Technology, Binghamton University, SUNY Oswego, SUNY Geneseo, University of Rochester, Wells College, SUNY Cortland, Onondaga Community College, Stony Brook University, University at Albany, University at Buffalo, New York University, Saint Lawrence University, Nazareth College and Utica College. If interested in purchasing a ticket from a college or university not listed, please email University Union vice president Heather Johnson ’25.

For additional information regarding accessibility, please contact Parking and Transportation Services . For more information about the events visit the University Union Instagram and Facebook accounts.

Gabrielle Lake

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  • Student Veteran Organization Hosts Gatsby-Themed Gala for Annual Awards Banquet Thursday, April 25, 2024, By Charlie Poag
  • Whitman School Welcomes New Director and Associate Director to Defense Programs Thursday, April 25, 2024, By Dawn McWilliams

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Moscow, Russia skyline: the 50 most iconic buildings and best views in Moscow

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1 The Moscow Kremlin

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3 Bolshoi Theatre

4 gorky central park of culture and leisure, 5 krasnaya ploshchad'.

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6 St. Basil's Cathedral

7 the state tretyakov gallery, 8 cathedral of christ the saviour, 9 red square, 10 kolomenskoye, 11 museum of cosmonautics, 12 all-russian exhibition center, 13 the pushkin state museum of fine arts, 14 novodevichy convent, 15 state historical museum.

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26 Central Armed Forces Museum

27 afimall city, 28 winzavod, 29 mini hotel rest on paveletsky train station, 30 catherine palace, 31 st. peter and paul orthodox church, 32 mayakovskaya, 34 kuskovo estate museum.

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46 Grand Kremlin Palace

47 moscow art theatre, 48 moscow cathedral mosque, 49 zachatyevsky monastery, 50 house on the embankment, top searches in moscow, popular road trips from moscow, what's the weather like in moscow.

It depends on when you visit! We've compiled data from NASA on what the weather is like in Moscow for each month of the year: see the links below for more information.

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Moscow throughout the year

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Looking for day-by-day itineraries in Moscow?

Get inspired for your trip to Moscow with our curated itineraries that are jam-packed with popular attractions everyday! Check them out here:

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Best attractions in nearby cities

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    Visit the campus. Visit programs are offered throughout the year, including winter and summer breaks. View a list of current opportunities online. Visit the campus; Open House; Take our virtual tour; View our interactive campus map; Why choose SUNY Cortland? You'll find an active student body involved in research projects, clubs and ...

  10. Virtual experiences at SUNY Cortland

    Undergraduate. Visit the Campus. Experience SUNY Cortland online. It's impossible to replicate the energy and spirit you feel when visiting Cortland in person. To schedule a tour during the fall semester, check out our campus visit page. The resources listed below can help future Red Dragons learn more about SUNY Cortland from anywhere.

  11. Future Students

    Graduate students can advance their careers through campus, online and hybrid learning options. Academic life at SUNY Cortland emphasizes experience-based learning opportunities that include research, internships and other fieldwork. This hands-on approach is one reason why 98% of recent graduates are employed or pursuing a graduate degree.

  12. SUNY Cortland

    You can't miss the momentum that's everywhere on the SUNY Cortland campus. You'll find an active student body involved in research projects, clubs and organizations. ... Success for SUNY Cortland's 25 men's and women's intercollegiate athletic teams is demonstrated by 23 national team championships, 96 individual titles and the #1 ranking among ...

  13. Current Students

    SUNY Cortland Cupboard. food cupboard. Student Disability Services. Student Health Service. Technology Resources. The Help Center. Navigate student life at Cortland. Access resources, services and engagement opportunities for current students.

  14. SUNY Cortland's Upcoming Open House

    SUNY Cortland is hosting another fall open house on November 11 th, 2023. Prospective undergraduate students can visit and learn more about the campus. Attending SUNY Cortland's Open House is a great way to explore the campus and get a feel for the university! Benefits of attending an Open House

  15. Planning a Visit

    Brauer Field Station. Planning a Visit. Brauer Field Station is open for use by SUNY Cortland faculty and students as well as groups unaffiliated with the university. This peaceful facility is open from May through October and is exceptionally affordable to rent. Each group using the site is responsible for cooking its own meals and cleaning up.

  16. Visit a Campus

    Visit a SUNY Campus. Visiting a campus is the best way to get a sense of whether it's right for you—meet the students, see the facilities, feel the culture, and ask all your questions. Find your top campus picks below to schedule tours, sign up for events, see virtual tour options, and more. We can' wait to see you on campus! All.

  17. SUNY New Paltz

    The Transfer Specific Information Sessions & Tours will be taking place on Friday, March 15th at 12:30pm and on Saturday, May 4th at 11:00am. Registration for these can be done below. Accepted Senior Days: A 30-minute panel discussion with current students followed by a 90-minute campus tour taking place on Friday, March 1 st at 10:00 AM ...

  18. SUNY Cortland's Family Weekend 2023

    Attend informative sessions: Take advantage of sessions that provide insights into SUNY Cortland's academic programs, campus resources, and support services. 4. Explore campus: Take a campus tour, visit the library, or check out the student life center. Get a feel for the campus and the facilities available to students. 5.

  19. Student Select 2024 lists winners

    Visit the SUNY Cortland Dowd Gallerywebsite for details about exhibiting artists, other programs, safety protocols and group visits. Honorable mention winner Megan Ludgate. ... The SGA will follow up on the campus-wide activity during Cortland's spring administrative meeting on April 22.

  20. Campus Resources/Student Support

    Van Hoesen Hall, Room B-205 607-753-4309 Fax: 607-758-5014 Email: [email protected] ASAP webpage. The Academic Support and Achievement Program (ASAP) provides tutoring and other academic support programs to undergraduate and graduate students of all ability and achievement levels.

  21. The Importance of the SUNY Cortland Pride Club

    SUNY Cortland's Pride Club provides a safe space for queer students but welcomes all to join, regardless of identity or background. Weekly meetings during the school year typically center around an educational or social topic that is relevant to the LGBTQ+ community, like sexual health and the importance of pronouns, among many others.

  22. Things to do in Moscow: how to visit Moscow

    Visit Kremlin is on top of things to do in Moscow. A place of power for centuries, the Kremlin then shows us a whole different image when viewed from the inside. If you want to visit Moscow in 2 days, the Kremlin is certainly one of the must-see places in Moscow. Opening hours: Daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Thursday.

  23. Moscow's Archives and the New History of the Communist Party of ...

    This research was supported by grants from the University of Illinois, SUNY Cortland, and the International Research and Exchanges Board, with funds provided by the U.S. Department of State (Title VIII program) and the National Endowment for the Humanities. None of these organizations is responsible for the views expressed. 1.

  24. Tours

    This is the tour for you! Designed for our younger visitors, this 45-minute interactive tour offers an introduction to college and campus life with fun facts and novel perspectives. Please register for a group visit here. Your group visit to campus is only confirmed after you have received an email from Visitors Center Staff approving your request.

  25. Development Officer job with SUNY Cortland

    Cortland Auxiliary is a private, not-for-profit organization that provides the SUNY Cortland community with food services and the Campus Store, to name a few. The Research Foundation for SUNY is a private, nonprofit educational corporation that administers externally funded contracts and grants that support research and discovery for and on ...

  26. University Union Celebrates Block Party April 26

    Syracuse University and SUNY ESF: Tickets are $15 for students, faculty and staff with valid college I.D. and email address. Students are able to purchase a maximum of two tickets (the guest ticket must be for a student with a valid college I.D.) and at time of purchase they will be loaded to Student MyCuse .

  27. Moscow, Russia skyline: the 50 most iconic buildings and ...

    Ostankino Television Tower is a historical place in Moscow, Russia that is famous for its observation deck and 45 levels. The tower is accessible by guided tour only and was completed in 1967. The Ostankino TV Tower in Moscow is an iconic structure, standing as one of the tallest freestanding towers in the world.