Well I've been in Paris for a week and a half and finally started classes today! More on that in a minute but first what we've been doing for the past few days. We've seen a lot in Paris and in the areas around it. On Tuesday we went to Versailles and did an audio tour, but because of the ice and snow (it is freeeezing here!) they closed the gardens. That was a bummer, but me and some of my friends are planning on going back when the weather is nice again. We also went to the cathedral in Chartres, which is the largest cathedral in France. The original stained glass remains intact because it was removed during WWII to protect it, and it was beautiful. Unfortunately it's a stone cathedral and unheated, so it was miserably cold when we were there- our hour and a half tour was rough. But still great to see! We've also been to a Monet museum, gone on a city tour, and went to Reims, the champagne capital of the world. We got to tour the champagne cellars and have a tasting after which was awesome. The lighting in the cellars is very dark so I wasn't able to get very good pictures, but it was really interesting. They also have different art exhibitions down in the cellar, so they was all this crazy modern art with all the champagne bottle- really bizarre, but cool!
After the champagne cellars we drove just a little while to this old high school in the town, which the Allies used as their headquarters at the end of WWII. They still have the map room intact where the Germans officially surrendered and WWII was over in Europe. It was awesome!! I learned that President Eisenhower couldn't be present for the surrender because there was no German of equal rank to him, so they had to have a lower rank officer sign it. Really interesting :)
Of course we've seen a lot of the major tourist things, like Notre Dame, Arc de Triomphe, and Eiffel Tower. But these will definitely be more enjoyable when it's not so frigid and we can walk around without freezing the whole time.
One thing that surprised me was how excited some people got for the Superbowl! Of course American football is not really watched in France, but many of them know what the Superbowl is (not my homestay mom though, I had to explain it to her haha) Several American/Irish/English bars stayed open until 5am because the game started at midnight. Me and several of my friends went to a Irish bar with about 15 French guys who play on an American football team at their school. They were SO into it! We were messing around a little playing drinking games and they were getting mad we were so loud haha. But it was a great game and so fun to watch with those guys- they even sang the National Anthem with us! Unfortunately it is showed on a British channel here, so we missed all the commercials- but I just youtubed the good ones the next day! Of course Im still hoping for a Broncos Superbowl in 2013, so we've been spreading Tebowing everywhere we go :)
Our first day of classes was today. We have 9 credits of French and then can choose lectures/seminars to make between 12-18 credits. I'm taking 15 credits, so besides French I have a French Literature class and a Multiculturalism class. I'm also taking a noncredit wine class. The lectures won't start until next week, but French started today. My mom asked if our school (La Sorbonne) is like my school at home- the answer is definitely NO! College is really cheap for French residents, and because of this their universities are not like ours at all. Most don't have dorms so students live around the city and commute via metro. There isn't really a central campus, but classrooms and buildings are spread throughout the city. They dont have anything like a campus gym and the library is much smaller than ours. But so far I love it! My French teacher is really nice and I think I'll improve my French a lot. Our commute is about 40 minutes, but class doesn't start until noon. And our Spring Break is two and a half weeks, so no complaints there!


