Tower of London Independence Art Museums The Wall Soho "Staying abroad" on the continent 6 cd u V •M a. SJ H 0) u a 0) E 6 p 0) r* & By BRIAN CAREY A city of startling contrasts and mellow beauty, Munich was the ideal location for a semester of study in Germany. The center Altstadt portion of the city provided culture centers, shopping arcades, and ped estrian zones, while the perimeters of the city furnished students with the politics and excitement of Schwabing and the memories of Dachau. After five exciting days in Paris, the city of lights and lovers, the 32 assorted students and teachers made the ten-hour trek to Munich on a soon-to-be-all-too-familiar train. What a greeting the city had in store! Overcast skies and a miser able drizzle didn't dampen spirits however and the search for our temporary parents was engaged with enthusiasm. The students were to live with selected families in Munich and its suburbs. When the matches (and mis matches) were finally made, the group split off to see where they would be housed for the next 3> l A months. oooeesoooooeoooo "What a greeting the city had in store!" _ >apoooooooooooooo. , Students soon discovered that transportation was to be no problem; the übiquitous subways, trams, and buses can deliver a person to virtually any street corner in the city. With this discovery, a few more were made, among them where everyone else lived and how to get there. The first group tour of the city came the following day. With the rain still falling, Karl Fischer of the Columbus-Americar Gesell schaft (a group that tost , rman- American relations and wFs of great help) led the group on the ' 'church tour" of Munich. This entailed hopping from dry church to dry church while talking about what was famous (and wet) on the out side OQOOOOOOQOOOOOe "... Oktoberfest combined a county fair and a beer festival " 000300C0050MCC Over the next three months the group was able to sample many more of Munich's sights. Beautiful October weather brought afternoons of teaching Germans frisbee in sunny English type gardens. Crips September evenings were occupied by cruising Ludwigstrasse, the artery of the student section that throbbed with the lifebiood of bars, cafes, and jazz joints. What lay outside Munich was even more stupendous than what was contained within. The frequent group activities included climbing the rugged paths and rocky summit of Brunstein in the Alexandriaplatz in East Berlin is the site ot a huge televi; ion tower and many modern structures. This exhibition center housed a Bertol L. .ht exhibition while a the group was in Berlin. Bavarian Alps and exploring t autumn hues and Cinderella casi of Neuschwannstein, built by m King Ludwig 11. The beginning of each week w spent amassing skills in Studit Munich, our classroom building Schwabing. Formal classes offer were three levels of German, Opei and philosophy, all taught by Ma and Carroll Feagins, and Germ history and political science cours taught in English by two Germ teachers. Several independent stui courses had been pre-arranged students. These included studies math history, German flora, Ren ssance art, german literature, and European imperialism. As the antithesis too, and some times ironic companion of, the book-learning of the classroom, the group enjoyed an outing and several private ventures to the Oktoberfest. A harvest festival celebrating the bountifulness and hard work of the previous year, Oktoberfest combined a county fair and beer festival with the neon and hustle of an amusement park. These three V f LL B-XTJH M ipP®ssa^i [ N OH Beautitui gardens behind Schloss Nympenburg in Munich provide a peaceful " t, setting for many activities. The palace itself is rumoured to still be the residence Brueut 9mi|h of a mad princess. f~ weeks of fun and relaxation were to be missed later in the program. The museums, art galleries, and visual entertainment of Munich offered a diverse mixture of culture. Students regularly attend ed operas, ballets, art exhibitions, rock concerts, and orchestra recitals, and the whole group went to the production of Mozart's ''The Magic Flute.'' Munich's location in the center of Europe came as an expected boon to students. Places as different as the Alps of Switzerland and the deserts of Morocco, the ruins of Rome and Greece and the canals of Venice and Amsterdam, received at least a perfunctory glance, and usually were investigated intensely. >50009000000000 "The group s week seminar to Berlin was especially interesting." SOSOOCOGOGOOSOG* The group's week seminar to Berlin was especially interesting. Touring West Berlin by bus, one was constantly intrigued by the bombed ruins and modern edifices, and always reminded of' 'the East'' by the pervading presence of the Wall. Walking down Kurfurstdendam, touring the Reichstage, or enjoying the world-famous zoo, the group devoured Wesr Berlin. They spent one entire day touring East Berlin. Hundreds of fascinating places and a myriad of activities deserve further description. Andechs, the Thanksgiving dinner, Stars and Stripes Forever, the dollar decline, and the Christkindlmarkt revive many memories. The group mastered the German style of living and overcame the language barrier, but all too soon the 3'/2 months were over. There will be no more Purple Palaces, no more Wagner, and no more Weissbier. The group won't "assemble at Karolinenplatz;" "meet at Marienplatz," or "party at Riebesells" any longer. xaooooooooocjaoooo* "... All too soon the 3 y* months were over." But the group came back a little more cultured, a lot more educated, and ein bischen exhausted, compli ments of the Munich Seminar Abro- Thank you, Munich, and hello, *.S.A.! o o ft O o n rt) r-f /> e M* rt> P 5" rf N O P a- M* H-* o h* n d & O .3 U