domenica 24 febbraio 2008

VERONA... La citta di Romeo e Guilietta


Buongiorno!

Yesterday I went to Verona, which is an hour and half train ride pretty much straight East from Milano.  It was soooo beautiful.  What a cute little city.  It's definitely a day trip, where you can hit up everything you need to see in one day + a whole lot of walking.  We went to see La Arena, which is a beautiful ancient amphitheater that is still used for operas today!  It's very magnificent to see.  I also saw la casa di Guiletta, clearly fake, but very romantic all the same.  It's fun to imagine that Romeo and Juliet happened here, even if it's a completely fictional story.  Imagining Romeo running through the narrow streets at night, and coming upon the Capulet household, and seeing Juliet looking out her balcony (which I did stand at and repeat the verse which I've still had memorized since 9th grade... Romeo o Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo? Deny thy father and refuse thy name...).  It's a very Romantic/ touristy little place :).  And I loved every minute of it.

We also saw the clock tower, the castle, Juliet's tomb (lame), and some really beautiful piazzas and such.  It was great city, great shopping, and some really great gelato!!!!! MMMMMM.  (I had some gelato in the form of the spaghetti (seriously right out of the playdough maker) with strawberry sauce (red tomato sauce) and coconut on top (parmesan cheese).  It was realllly good.  As usual.

Ok well I'm off to do homework and relax before school tomorrow.  Ciao a tutti... buona notte!!

giovedì 21 febbraio 2008

Scuola... finalmente


Ciao ciao,
Well after a month and a half of galavanting around Europe, this week I started school.  And wow.  Let me tell you how different it is!  First of all, I go to a very prestigious private business school.  So it is much smaller (our classes are only in 2 buildings) and much richer (I know surprising cuz UT is so rich).  All of the girls walk around with their designer bags, expensive European clothes, and ALWAYS have a cig in their hand.  It wouldn't be so bad for the fact that the no smoking inside rule leads everyone to smoke 2 feet from the doorway.  They need to implement the 200 feet from the door rule!!  Ewwwww.  Oh Europeans... they love their tobacco.
All of my classes are in English, and my classes consist of 1/2 exchange students and 1/2 italians who want to earn their business degree in the English program.  Apparently the English program is easier than the Italian one... which I'm hoping is not just a myth.  I'm taking 4 classes: Corporate Finance (sucks), Comparative Law (where we compare American law to the rest of the world... interesting!), Management of Human Capital Services (where we discuss the importance of maintaining human capital through education, on the job training, and health care... SOOOOO AWESOME... definitely an Alli class), and Organizational Networks and Entrepreneurship (which is a great class where we discuss how important networking is in business as well as in life and the necessary things you need to think about when being an entrepreneur or investor).  It's definitely a heavy work load, but I only have to pass my classes so I'm hoping it wont' be too awful.
School environment is definitely different than what I'm used to.  All the Italians talk during class (like while the teacher is talking), they are loud and make fun of people who say dumb ideas, and they randomly come in and out of class.  It's very distracting.  I've found myself becoming the true nerd that I really am and sitting in the front of class just so I don't get distracted by all the chatter.  Our classes are also formatted extremely differently.  Besides one class, where the professor was inspired by doing her doctorate at Stanford, all of my classes have no homework and consist of either one midterm and one final or simply one final!  AHHHHHH 1 TEST FOR AN ENTIRE SEMESTER!  Good thing I only have to pass!  Italians are lucky though, they have 3 chances to pass a test.  Unfortunately for me, I can't stay around to take the 2nd and 3rd test (September 2008 and January 2009!!!)
Other than sticking out like a sore thumb (my Jansport backpack doesn't compare to the Louie Vuitton oversized shoulder bag, my red hair screams exchange student, and the fact that I have to ask where the new building is when I'm standing in it doesn't help either) school is going really well!  I can't believe I've only just started... I've been over here forever already!
This weekend I'm headed to Verona... should be a fun little day trip.  Hope all is well wherever you're reading this from.  MISS YOU!
Vi voglio bene!
Alli

sabato 16 febbraio 2008

Berlin- February 11-15, 2008


Ciao a tutti!
Well I'm back in Milano after a week in Berlin, Germany.  I went with 5 other girls and we had THE BEST TIME!  Berlin is an absolutely amazing city.  It's crazy how beautiful it is considering how the city was not only completely destroyed in the war but how it only became 1 true city 19 years ago!!  It's definitely a thriving capital and a hot spot for young Germans.  We had such a blast.
First of all, the Berlin public transportation system is one we should all be jealous of!  With the most reliable subways and trams (well besides when our train decided to not take the tracks it was supposed to), the seats are all upholstered and some are even padded!  And everyone rides bikes in Berlin.  There wasn't one subway ride we took where we didn't see a bike on the train.
So the first day we went on a 4 hour walking tour.  It was one if not the best tour I've ever been on.  Our guide, a student from Ireland, was so knowledgeable about Berlin's history and he was a great story teller!  I learned so much about Berlin that I had no idea about!  And it was rather amusing that I learned it all from an Irish boy!  Oh Europe.  Some of the spots we hit on our tour were places that I would have never found without this tour.  Fuhrerbunker (where Hitler hid out and committed suicide) is now a parking lot for an apartment complex in East Berlin.  Our guide told us the reasoning for this is that Germany wanted to destroy it so Neo-nazis from around the world won't flock to this place to worship the man.  It's rather eery to think that you're standing above the spot where Hitler hid for months.  And yet I think it's what makes this world so cool.  That certain places have taken so many different forms throughout history.  Once a bunker, now a parking lot, and who knows what it was 200 years ago, 2000 years ago.  Anyway, we went to see the wall, of course.  They don't let you go touch it anymore, since people used to come and chip a little bit of it away to take home with them.  It's very cool to see, and not nearly as tall as any of us expected.  They had some memorials for people that had died trying to cross it.  I can't imagine how awful life must have been to risk being shot or drowned just to climb over a wall.  It was very amazing to see it in person.  We visited several other spots, such as the parliament (Bundestag), Ministry of Ministries, Museum Island, Humboldt University, and Brandenburg Gate.  One of my favorite spots on the tour was The Memorial To the Murdered Jews of Europe.  It's indescribable.  (http://en.wikepedia.org/wiki/memorial_to_the_murdered_jews_of_europe) Check it out!  It's a bunch of blocks (look at the picture) that can represent whatever you want them to represent, the # of Jews that died, gravestones, anything.  And you look at it and think these blocks maybe get around 6 feet tall.  And then you walk in, and these blocks get higher and higher, up to 15-18 feet tall.  And as I walked in, deeper and deeper, you get a sense of being lost, lonely, isolated, overwhelmed.  Our tour guide said it made him feel like he was going under water.  And you see all these people walking through with you, but it's not until you get really close to them that you can actually see them.  And people appear and disappear in an instant behind these blocks.  Really it's indescribable.  Anway, Berlin is a beautiful city, and the tour was absolutely incredible.  DEFINITELY GLAD WE DID IT!
We went on a pubcrawl, which is where they take you from pub to pub to pub.  It was fun, in that we met so many people but we really didn't need the people to tell us where to go.  Kind of a scam but I'm glad I went on it.  Now i can say I've done a pub crawl.
We went into the Bundestag, which is Germany's parliament building.  The building has a long long history which I won't bore you with, but the newly renovated part and the new dome on top is absolutely awesome.  Go check it out online if you get a chance.  The architect claims to have designed it with the intent that the German people can look down on Government, and the Government can look up at the people watching them, so everyone is watching everyone.  Cool concept.
Well we went to the Berlin Zoo, the Berlin TV tower, the Pergamon museum (where we saw the Original Gates of Babylon (soooo cool)), and well I ate about everything I could and walked about everywhere in Berlin.
Besides eating wienerschnitzle and bratwurst, running around the city doing everything and then some, I got a chance to go to the Jewish Museum.  It was the most amazing museum.  I actually liked it better than the Holocaust Museum.  The architecture by Daniel Libeskind was breathtaking.  I can't describe it unless you go there.  But really they couldn't have asked for architecture more fitting for this museum.  My favorite part was his exhibition of Memory Void.  Literally, there is nothing.  It's an entire exhibition floor, left empty.  No pictures on the wall, no boxes with artifacts, or names to remember.  Nothing.  Just emptiness.  Daniel Libeskind says he designed it this way to remember those who were killed.  Because what's a better way to remember the dead, than with nothing.  LOVED IT.
Well anyway, it was a great trip, and now I'm back in Milan starting school on Monday.  Awww traveling Europe.  Amazing.  Ciao ciao and love you all.

domenica 10 febbraio 2008

FIRENZE... Feb 6-9, 2008


Dear All,
Florence was amazing!  What a beautiful city... seriously!  First of all, I took the Eurostar down here.. GORGEOUS TRAIN.  The people are nice (and don't smell), the seats are actually comfortable (ok well on the way I was much more comfortable than the way back), and I had a little pull out table to use my Italian book during the train ride.  It was great 2.5 hours :).  
What can I say about Florence?  Well it's an American city in Italy.  Ok not really, but everyone and their mom speaks English and you're more likely to see 2 college girls talking than to hear Italian.  It's definitely a hot destination full of students and tourists.  It's a smaller city, so you walk everywhere, which was a really nice change compared to riding the subway every day in Milano!!!  Florence is very beautiful, very quaint, and what a magnificent view of Tuscany in the background!!  MMMMM amazing.
The first night I stayed with my friend Christie (from mini-hops... back in the day).  She had a spectacular view and we watched Under the Tuscan sun and drank wine from a nearby Tuscan vineyard.. you can't not do that while in Tuscany!!  It was amazing :)
The next day I roamed the city, took way too many pictures, and ate THE BEST gelato.  MMM.  I'd have to say that Nutella crepes or Nutella waffles are definitely up there on my list as well.  If I come home fat, you know why.
Touring around Florence is beautiful.  The cobblestone streets get a little old (and if you're wearing stilettos they steal your shoes), but it really is so quaint and gorgeous!  All the salespeople were out at the market, and everyone was walking around bargaining and buying.  I loved seeing all the leather, glass, and pashminas they have.  Ok ok, besides seeing I did buy a little.  But you can't not when in Firenze!
I stayed with my friends Paul and Jordan the 2nd night.  Everyone has such gorgeous apartments in Firenze compared to Milano!  Oh well... I do live in a ridiculously large city that ooooober expensive.  I went out to meet my friends at this club that was little America.  Seriously.  Only American rap music.  I think I saw one Italian and 9500 American sorority girls.  Ridiculous.  Well, that's what we get to hitting up a bar that had student night.  DEFINITELY NOT LIKE MILANO AT ALL!
We went to the Pontevecchio, which I found every piece of jewelry I've ever wanted.  I found a couple gorgeous wedding rings, too bad they were only 20,000 Euros.  Damn.  Duomo was gorgeous.  We went to the top (yes 463 stairs and Alli completely questioning her past stair-master sessions later) and it was gorgeous!  Definitely worth the 20 minute walk up.  It was a spectacular day, the sun was slowly setting in the distance, and I can't tell you how in love with the Tuscan hills I am.  SIMPLY STUNNING. (that's for you Jen)  I went to see THE DAVID, which was REALLY cool.  The room they have him in, and just seeing how meticulously done he was, it was really awe inspiring.  Sculptures are my new favorite artworks, definitely.
The next day I hung out with my girlfriends Blake and Chelsea and we just walked around, shopped, and enjoyed the beautiful day (yes I enjoyed it with a Nutella waffle).  Florence was amazing... breathtaking... and absolutely gorgeous.  But let me tell you, after that 3 hour train ride... IT'S SO NICE TO BE HOME IN MILANO!!!
Ciao a tutti,
Alli

martedì 5 febbraio 2008

VENEZIA... Carnivale 2008


Ciao a tutti!
Come va?  Tutti e' buono qui!  Last weekend I went to Venezia (Venice) for Carnivale!  Che bella!  Venice is such a beautiful city.  It's full of so much history and was absolutely beautiful to see.  I cannot imagine living there... what a lifestyle.  Boats instead of cars... can you imagine how impatient Americans would be if you had to sit in a boat to go somewhere?  Ha.  Our gondola driver (yes we took a gondola ride.... AMAZING!) told us that they only built the bridges and walkways about 500 years ago... so literally before then, you HAD to take a boat everywhere.  At least now you can walk.
Carnivale was crazy... so many people in masks and dressed up.  It's like European halloween.  Instead of saying halloween costumes in their Ipercoop (target sort of), they have Carnivale costumes.  I saw some of the most intricate outfits.  It was really awesome.  Anyway, we took the train that left at 7am and stayed until the train left at 5am from Venice.  Let's just say it was a crazy, wet, cold, and AMAZING time!!  Seeing Piazza San Marco lighten up in multi colored lights was AWESOME.  There were hundreds upon hundreds of people there, all to party for Carnivale. It's weird to think how old the city is and how many people have stood in Saint Mark's Square before me.  I definitely am jealous of Europe's history.  The United States is such a baby compared to this ancient continent.  It's so cool to see something older than 400 years! 
Ok so I'm obsessed with Murano glass.  OBSESSED.  Blown glass is absolutely gorgeous.  I bought the most gorgeous Mezuzah... I can't wait to put it on my door when I get back to the states.  When I bought it the sales clerk goes, "Shalom".  I love it.  I found a 350 Euro Hannukkiah that was TO DIE FOR but unfortunately spending 350 Euros would kill me as well. So I had to promise myself that when I have money in 10 years I'll fly back to Venice and buy myself a Murano glass Menorah.  (Plus, what a bitch to bring back to the states.  Maybe I'll just move to Italy for good.  JUST KIDDING MOM.  Chill.)
Besides our Gondola ride, glass and mask shopping, and dancing to the DJ in Saint Mark's Square, we ate, drank, and wandered the streets of Venice.  All in all, it was a fabulous day (besides sleeping on the train station floor at 4am.. brrr... which I have to say is an experience that has made me realize I can now do ANYTHING).
Ok, I'm going to go study for my final Italian test tomorrow... I'm kind of sad the class is over... but hopefully I'll keep learning on my own!
Ciao e vi voglio bene,
Alli