An engineering student’s  multicultural experience at Jacobs University Bremen. By Dennis Waldron  ’10
Dennis Waldron ’10 (Owings, Md.) an electrical and  computer engineering major,is currently studying engineering and German  language and culture in Bremen, Germany, with 33 other students. The  Lafayette faculty-led program at Jacobs University Bremen (JUB) is being  headed by Erol Ulucakli, associate professor of  mechanical engineering. This is Waldron’s second letter this semester.
- Dennis Waldron ’10  Experiences German History and Culture (3-19-08)
 
- 34 Students will  Study Engineering and German Culture in Bremen
 
Over  spring break, I had a great revelation: I am in Europe. It sounds  ridiculous, but it took quite a while for it to really sink in. I knew I  was here, but I had a curious mental block that did not allow me to  realize the full magnitude of the situation. It finally hit me as I sat  on the edge of a jetty looking over the Atlantic Ocean in Porto,  Portugal. As I looked out over the ocean, listening to the waves break  gently below me, sea salt spraying in the warm breeze, I slowly began to  grasp the fact that this was the other side of the ocean. Somewhere  across this great expanse of water was home, not an unexplored and  unknown Europe as it always was before.
But in the time our group of “Lafayetties,” as we are known to the  Jacobs students and staff, has been here, we have made Europe our new  home away from home. While traveling over the weekend, many students  refer to “going home” as going back to Jacobs. We frequently find  ourselves out on weekend trips to another country saying things like  “It’s going to be a long night- I have a lot of homework when I get home  after this train.” We have even affectionately dubbed the local mall,  Haven Hoovt, “Wal-Mart” to really make us feel at home.
To a greater or lesser extent, everyone has been able to put together  a routine for him or herself, even when traveling to very non-routine  places. When we get to a city, we check into our hostel, and then when  we are ready to explore, we simply go outside into the city and walk, or  sometimes take the local Metro system. Tall buildings and green-copper  roofs lead our way, and we discover new sights as we go; in even the  most un-routine of times, we all have our own personal routines to help  us cope with and enjoy or constantly changing surroundings.
In fact, many of us have grown more comfortable not only with being  in Europe, but also with each other. Traveling around Europe, we have  all grown closer, even with people we did not know before the start of  the trip. From a sauna in Brussels, to a hostel in Sweden, there are few  better places to get to know some new people, or get to know some old  people better, than Europe.
- Electrical and Computer  Engineering
 
- Study Abroad