Monday, June 21, 2010

Ashlee Cherry's Weekend in London

Hello everyone, for this weekend of the 19th I figured since I didn't do too much I would get a girls perspective of the trip that went to see a play in London. So, here is Ashlee Cherry's weekend in London.

Within the time span of 24 hours, I went to London and back and had a crazy day full of events. The trip started (and ended) at G & D’s. On our way to the train station, Callie, Austin, and I got waffle cones, with chocolate sauce in the cone, a scoop of chocolate and a scoop of vanilla. Our train left at 2:30ish. We arrived in London, and took a taxicab to our hostel around 4:15. We stayed at the London Eye Hostel, which was only a few blocks away from the real London Eye, although you couldn’t actually see it from the hostel. We had 5 o’clock reservations at the Texas Embassy, which is only a restaurant, nothing else, so we had to quickly change and get ready. Of course, Callie and Austin ended up waiting on me… We enjoyed chips, salsa, and queso, but not so much our meals. After that we had tickets to Chicago, the best musical in the entire world. We got there on time, and had to pick up our tickets at will call, Austin got his, I got mine, and then Callie tried to get hers.

The man asked (in a Brit accent), “What’s the surname?”

Callie: “Partee.”

Man: …silent, but had a strange look on his face.

Callie: “Partee.”

Man: No change.

Callie: “Callie Partee.”

Man: “OH! Your name is Partee!”

Yea, we’re still laughing about that. Chicago was phenomenal. Although, the song “They Both Reached for the Gun” wasn’t as good as it was in New York. But that’s my only one of dos complaints. Since I am a Chicago fanatic, I sat in the middle and would sporadically explain what was going on, because unless you know, it could be confusing and not make sense. So this one time I was talking, and maybe I might have been talking a little too loudly, this woman sitting way diagonally in the row in front of us turns around, gives me a death stare, and shushes me as loudly and obnoxiously as she possibly can. Needless to say…Austin, Callie, and I all tried to muffle our laughing. The play was excellent. After that we decided to go back to our hostel. There was a lounge area and a pool table. We opted to watch a movie, District 9. Obviously I could’ve cared less to watch this movie, which was displayed when I fell asleep 4 minutes into it. After the movie we went up to our room, which we shared with 12 other strangers…weird and awkward.

The next day, we woke up at nine, only because check out was at ten. We hopped on one of those red, sightseeing tour buses. We rode on top, and in the very back, our usual spot on the bus. However, it was freezing cold, and the driver probably got up to 45 mph. After that, we decided to move to the sheltered bottom of the bus. We had already seen, the London Eye, Big Ben and St. Paul’s Cathedral by that time. After the tour, we took jump picks in front of Big Ben. We were starving at this point, so the next thing to do was get lunch. We were completely indecisive about where to go, but got a taxicab anyway. The driver got frustrated that we had no idea where we wanted him to take us. Note to self, don’t get a taxicab if you don’t know where you want to go. Done and done. Austin finally told the cabi where to take us. A restaurant called ASK. On the way… another car cut off our driver. I had never heard someone use so many curse words in a real life scenario, until then. Our driver sped up and cut off that car, then they both rolled their windows down and started yelling at each other. It was pretty intense/epic.

We arrived and the three of us enjoyed a quiet lunch and a short nap on the train ride back to Oxford. On our walk back to our houses we stopped at G & D’s for some sweet treats.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Canterbury and Warwick Castle


Thursday we got to miss class for the day and travel to Canterbury’s chocolate factory for a tour. Once we arrived, we had about 20 minutes to relax before our meeting with one of the managers from the plant, so everyone decided to go check out their mini chocolate candy store. They had so much chocolate in there, it was awesome! They even had a replica soccer ball of the 2010 world cup made of full chocolate for only 16 pounds! Unfortunately, I left my wallet back at the Oxford house, so I wasn’t able to buy it. However, I did purchase a pretty good size chocolate bar. Later, we were able to tour their facility and see how they go about creating the wonderful bars upon bars of chocolate. Once we finished the scrumptious tour and the free chocolate they gave us, we headed back to the bus to take our next tour of Warwick Castle. Warwick Castle is an authentic castle from the medieval era that was refurbished and now presented as a tour attraction that offers a viewing of a working trebuchet, a jousting arena, a reenactment battle with Warwick warriors, and viewing of how dungeons looked and treated the prisoners. It was a lot of fun with a great tour along the walls where hundreds of years ago people stationed at to defend their castle from invading forces. After Warwick, we headed back to our Oxford houses for a late class from 7pm to 10pm. Friday brought an early morning but was soon made better by having a couple of outdoor games like bocce ball and soccer. Then we wound back down by spending most all night studying for our marketing test Saturday morning. It has been a busy past couple of days with our projects but we have persevered through it and are coming to astonishing results in regards to the technology basis of Oxfam. Thank you for staying in touch, looking forward to the nice relaxing weekend in Oxford, Jeff Bartosh.

Tuesday June 15

These past couple of days have been a good amount of class and working on projects. After our seemingly early class on Tuesday, most everyone went to sleep during the lunch hours. I spent most of my time looking over my blogs and new innovative products on gizmodo.com. Tuesday was definitely a relaxing day after the few hours spent on the Chunnel and late bus ride back from London. For our afternoon class, we worked heavily on our Oxfam project. We created various questions for our interview with Oxfam’s Headquarters as well as edited our business proposal for Oxfam. Nielsen group has been quite busy using Apple iPads to generate a survey for their market research in Oxford. Wednesday brought a much more stressful day, mostly for me, because I was trying to figure the cheapest way to book transportation to and from every airport for our deviation and open travel week. Class was quite interesting this morning and Oxfam project preparations are coming together perfectly. I love the brainstorming and creative ideas my group is doing to better help Oxfam’s technological sector. I feel that introducing a closed intranet system for the company will bring a more effective communication basis with stores and better time management for store managers. Later Wednesday night, after uploading pictures to Facebook, we started our first Star Wars movie night. And for the next 5 nights we will be watching in numerical order one of the Star Wars movies. It has been a great environment for history and even relaxation. Oxford offers so much to do and see that even when we are on trips and supposed to be relaxing, we end up completely exhausted from being active tourists. I wish I could just go back “home” to Oxford to relax. Now look forward to my next blog, because Thursday we visit Canterbury Chocolate and Warwick Castle.

Paris


On Friday, it was extremely hard to wake up, especially since I stayed up packing till midnight and our bus was scheduled to leave at 4:30am. So, since we had to wake up to get on the Eurostar (the chunnel) to take us from London to France, almost everyone crashed on the bus and the chunnel. However, waking up to the country side of France was pleasant and very peaceful. Once we arrived in Paris we went straight to our hostel, which was extremely nice, to drop off our bags. I was lucky enough to be included in the room with 8 guys, but we had a lot of room compared to the other hostel rooms, as well as two showers and a bathroom! However, I didn’t find that out till later that night because check-in wasn’t until later. Once we dropped off our bags, a group of us led by Charles, an international student that from France, headed over to Notre Dame. It was the most amazing church I have ever seen. We went inside to take pictures and it was so vibrant with its stain glass windows that everyone was in awe. A few interesting things that we found out a couple of days later: it used to be an all black but they used lasers to grind off the hundreds of years of age, 2) the back is so heavy because of the stain glass windows that the Gothic aesthetics arm-like structures that reach to the church actually support it from falling down, and 3) in the 19th century, Paris was going to tear it down to rebuild it but because of the book The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Paris thought it had become too famous, so they preserved it.

Following Notre Dame, Charles took us down towards the Louvre where part of The Da Vinci Code was filmed. It was so astonishing. We walked down through the court yard and had some ice cream while soaking in the Paris atmosphere. It was unlike anything else. The looks are identical to those seen in the movies, minus the magnitude of people. From the Louvre we walked to the subway to get back to the hostel because later that night we planned on watching the World Cup at the Eiffel Tower, France vs. Uruguay. The match was awesome and the Eiffel Tower not only lit up but had flashing lights, as seen in my picture. Afterward, we went back to bed and enjoyed the hours of sleep before our busy Saturday.

When Saturday came, a group of us headed for the Eiffel Tower area yet once again, but this time conquered it by climbing up the farthest you can, then hopping on an elevator to the top. Now, I’m from Dallas and have been on the titan at Six Flags and I knew the Eiffel Tower was higher, but I wasn’t expecting it to be this high! Even the Huge screen we watched the soccer game on seemed like a spec. It was so unbelievable to experience that view of Paris - much bigger city than I thought. We were smart and decided to take the elevator down this time, and broke off into our own separate groups. Michael and I decided to visit the Louvre which literally took us forever to just walk through. We actually had to rush to make it out within 3 hours due to the fact that USA was playing England, and we had to represent our country at the Eiffel Tower! There were seriously so many statues and paintings, my favorite being the Mona Lisa and the Greek mythological statues, that I recommend you have at minimum half a day prepared for the tour. And I also recommend you pay the extra 6 euro’s for the self guided tour because everything is in French so you won’t know what you are looking at. Also, as I already said, after the Louvre we went and cheered for USA and (unfortunately) ended up tying England. And, similar to the night before, we were so exhausted we went back to the hostel to pass out, but we did make a little stop at a restaurant to order some authentic crepes. it was an amazing way to end a long day.

Sunday, was filled with excitement! After barely waking up in time to hobble downstairs to grab some breakfast before it ended, I went back to the room to get ready for Mass at Notre Dame with the Morgan’s and other students. It was really interesting to hear the international service, which was not too different from my church since I am Lutheran except the exquisite beauty of Notre Dame and a few other details like the fact that it was in French and the process of the service. Afterward, a couple of guys and I ate some Subway, which so far if you have noticed I haven’t said much about the food mainly because I did not want to spend too much money, and Paris food is not really the cheapest, especially the way I eat. But once our Subway sandwiches were devoured, Michael and I again broke off to spend some time at the D’Orsay museum which I recommend to everyone! They have exquisite paintings and beautiful art work, and not as long as the Louvre, but make sure you go to both. And if you buy a museum pass for 32 euro’s you can go to any museum for free for 2 days. Another interesting part of the D’Orsay is a crime area exhibit. It shows you dramatic paintings of a darker/death feel to them as well as the change in the way the death punishment was enforced. It was pretty gruesome yet interesting when you see some of Van Gogh’s artwork. Right after the D’Orsay we bolted for the subway so we get to the hostel and back to the Eiffel Tower for a midnight bike tour of Paris called, the Fat Tire Bike Tour. Now I apologize for the length of this blog, but there is so much in Paris to see and write about, but I’ll sum up our tour because it felt like we saw easily 50 new different landmarks that would turn this into an encyclopedia. So, once we met our tour guide Bubba and finally started heading out we rode all over town, a few new interesting places to me were a bridge that has locks all over it that couples put there to symbolize their forever love, the bridge that was in the first Bourne movie, the bridge that was in the movie Taken, the statue of a flaming torch were Princess Diana died, and a multitude of buildings that I can’t even start to guess the names to. My point being that the Fat Tire Bike Tour is well worth the 26 euro’s, with student ID, especially the feeling of riding around instead of having to walk to enjoy the scenery. And unexpectedly we also were given a boat tour around the two islands in the Seine River, which was a lovely experience were we had completely different views points of most the places we saw while riding our bikes. So, once the boat docked back at our bikes, we rode back to the Fat Tire Bike Tour’s building, and then a few of us decided to take some “jumping pictures” as Callie called them in front of the Eiffel Tower. By the time we final were able to get the camera to take a good picture and get back to the hostel it was extremely late, we were all tired, and I had the best night of sleep that night. Now Monday was not that special because some of us were so exhausted from the late nights and early mornings; therefore, we literally sat at a few places around Paris after walking around some souvenir shops and just relaxed and watched fĂștbol. We would have slept in the room for longer but we had to be checkout by 10am, but it was nice getting a different feel of Paris, away from all the tourist attractions and “kicked back.” After we met up at 7pm to come back we took the chunnel back to London and a bus from London to Oxford, which I slept basically the entire time. Overall Paris was amazing, there is so much to do and see, but if I could recommend one thing apart from the main tourist spots in Paris, is to take a day to just relax, read a book, and absorb the feeling of Paris away from a touristy ideology. It is a completely different feel and I promise you will not regret it. This is Jeff Bartosh signing off, sorry about the “essay” I just wrote.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Photos of the Group

The Louvre

The Eiffel Tower

In Oxford

Buckingham Palace



Notre Dame

Notre Dame


Mini Cooper plant


Sorry about the long delay of blogs for about a week - we traveled to Paris for a long weekend and I wasn’t able to write one for Wednesday and Thursday before we left. However, that is a different story and I will discuss it in my next blog.

Wednesday brought loads of excitement since it was the day we were able to tour the ONLY Mini-Cooper manufacturer in the world. This spot is their “bread and butter”. They bring all the parts together here and use a series of conveyor belts with excellent supply chain management to bring a just-in-time process to their company. We arrived at the plant around 1 o’clock, after our morning class. They showed us to the entrance room where we put on our protective jackets, similar to that of Neo’s in the movie The Matrix, as well as headsets so we could hear our tour guide throughout the tour. After we were ready, we took a tour of their “mini” Mini-Cooper museum, as they called it. The museum consisted of various famous Mini-Coopers, such as the Austin Powers Mini Coop, one of the Mini Cooper’s in The Italian Job, their pride and joy one millionth Mini-Cooper, and other special/older Mini Coopers.

Following the museum, we walked around the production line of the manufacturing plant where we learned interesting facts about Mini Coopers. For instance, there's the fact that no two Mini Coopers are exactly identical, and the fact that the production line was so ingenious and time-efficient they can start and finish a Mini Cooper within 6 hours.

Next, we walked through the process of getting the metal sheets and other parts of the car ready before transferring the car to the actual production line. These processes that once consisted of thousands of workers are now preformed by German robotic engineering. The utilization of advanced technologies into a single process has exceedingly benefited their company.

We then wrapped up the tour after visiting the robots, and proceeded back to the houses. The rest of the day was spent relaxing and getting ready for the test on Friday, as well as browsing around downtown for cheap soccer balls at JJB’s. Thursday was not too exciting until dinner time hit. With the morning spent taking a test and the afternoon with our different consulting groups brought the day to a peak of excitement when I tried to figure out the washing machines. (hint: make sure you have exactly 1 pound and a 20 pents when washing your laundry). This, however, was surpassed when Austin, Austin, and I tried to start the grill for burgers on a wet, windy day. We found it a huge hassle to find wood and stuff that would burn that day, but it turned out successful with only two burnt burgers and the rest nicely cooked. All in all, the days leading up to our Paris trip were quite interesting. From our projects to flipping hamburgers, these past several days have been a lot of fun. Next stop Pari!

Oxfam and Nielsen

Monday, we finally we able to visit the two companies that we will possibly get to consult for: Oxfam and Nielsen. It was an awesome experience. First, we took the bus over to Oxfam to see their headquarters and listen to the problems the company is currently encountering, as well as a brief explanation of what they do. For those who do not know, Oxfam is a 280-million-dollar company that specializes in low-end retail establishments similar, yet bigger, to that of Goodwill. It provides necessity items to poorer areas around the entire world. Their next target market is in Vietnam. However, they don’t solely confine their business to retail, but offer assistance when natural disasters like the earthquake in Haiti affect a large group of people. Oxfam is truly a great starting up company. They hope to expand much more in the future, and are asking for our assistance towards using technology to enhance efficiency with communications amongst retail establishments nationwide. On a side note, this was the company I chose to work with based on their mission statement and the overall feel of the company. For example, when we walked into their headquarters it was not like we were walking into a funeral home like some businesses feel. Everything was open and the architecture was astonishing. The ground floor was more like walking into a Macy’s or a nice Dillard’s in a mall except without all the merchandise cluttering everything up, and they had a cafeteria in the corner. In the middle it opened up to the staircase that led to the second floor, IT and marketing, and then proceeds to the third floor where you can find all the employees in charge of the 680 different retail establishments worldwide.
The other company was Nielsen, which, if I remember correctly, is the 3rd largest marketing research facility in the world and researches at least 15,000 products a year for various companies like Proctor & Gamble, Lysol, and Nestle. For Nielsen, you do more of a market research simulation due to customer confidentiality. However, they give you some products that you and on which your team get to use a statistical approach through the process of surveys and other various means to find out which product will be more profitable in the Oxford market. Nielsen is also a little more business-like in the way their facility is structured and known as a high-end market research group. Even though I didn’t pick Nielsen, they are an amazing company with a tremendous share in the marketing-research world, and were in fact my second choice. Both of these companies and the projects we are doing offer a magnitude of experience for, not just the marketing students, but those that want to be well-rounded when they come out of college. Again, thank you for staying tuned in and I can’t wait to let you know my experience at the mini cooper plant on Wednesday. Jeff Bartosh

First Day of "Class"

The trip has been amazing so far and the weather even better! OnWednesday, we were introduced into our first class over here: The Principles of Marketing. That morning was a little rough and it was difficult to get to the classroom at 8:30, but everybody made it on time. After our morning session, we headed out for some lunch at On the Hoof, which serves freshly made pitas, then it was time to return to class for our afternoon session. To my surprise, right after we were released from class, almost all of us, roughly 25 students, walked over to University Park to play some 7 on 7 footbol (a.k.a. soccer)! On a side note, since I love to play soccer I also would like to mention that the World Cup will be in sessionwhile we are here - more information later to come. But I digress, we had fun playing soccer for hours until we finally reached a stage of exhaustion from site seeing and intense soccer games. The rest of the afternoon and night were very relaxing, and going to bed never felt so good.
Thursday was similar except we went sight-seeing through the rest of downtown Oxford and got to see more of the history this city holds. Also, we ate at a Kebab’s vanthat night, which serves kebabs off Woodstock Street, and then proceeded back to the room to study for our first test Friday.
The test wasn't too terribly difficultand the afternoon class went by decently fast because we were all ecstatic about leaving at 5 to take our first trip to London. We boarded the train (hint going in groups can get you cheaper tickets then online) and met a couple of students from Wisconsin studying architecture and had a great ride talking with them on the way to Paddington Station.
Once in London, we headed for our hostel, which was not that great especially because my group booked it a night or two in advance, but we had a great time anyways seeing all the sights at night. The next day,we took the underground (was very cheap) all around London and to see the Changing of the Guards, which everyone should see(starts around 10:45 a.m). Sunday was a similar experience with running around town like Saturday. I could talk all about the different sites of London, but I will save you the hours it would take me to explain everything and just give you my top 10 favorite places I recommend seeing: The Tower of London, Westminster Abbey, Big Ben, Trafalgar Square, the Old Texas Embassy, Piccadilly Circus, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Tower Bridge, Buckingham Palace, and a play at The Apollo Victoria Theatre. Now these are only a few places that are special to London and and aren't even close to being the entire city, but our experience in London was so thrilling that itwill be hard to top it, but maybe our trip to Paris on the 10th just might. For now signing off, Jeff Bartosh.

The first few days

Hi, my name is Jeff Bartosh. I am a senior at Abilene Christian
University and currently studying abroad in Oxford England. This trip
so far has been the most amazing experience of my life, and I have
only been here for one week. I will go into more depth throughout the
rest of this blog, but first I would like to thank you for reading my
blogs and hopefully someday you will be able to share a similar
experience like the one I am about to share with you.

May 31- June 1: Now, I have been on an airplane before, but as I
arrived to Dallas/Fort Worth’s Airport I immediately started getting
the jitters. I have been preparing for months for this trip and now I
am finally at the place that is going to transfer me to another
country! After checking my luggage, I hugged my parents and girl
friend goodbye, and headed through security to start the opportunity
of a lifetime. Once on the other side of security, I filled my “safety
net” of a few hours by strolling around the airport and meeting other
ACU students that arrived earlier than I did. It was a fun beginning
that gave a great omen to how the flight and rest of the trip was
going to be.

After waiting around and talking for a while, we boarded the plane and
left for England at 5p.m. We arrived in London at 8 a.m. after a
surprisingly fast flight - I recommend that you sleep on the plane to
help prevent bad jetlag, which a few students understand better now.
However, once we hopped on our bus and started driving through London
to Oxford, you could see everyone's heads popping up like prairie dogs
and constantly moving as we were trying to take in such a beautiful
scene. My first thoughts after being able to visualize the aesthetic
beauty for myself were: why haven’t I ever lived here, I’m pretty sure
I am not dreaming, and I cannot believe I am actually over here. It
was so amazing and just got better as we started seeing the
transitioning from London to smaller, quaint Oxford. I think,
personally, it was better than London because you get that small town
feel when pulling into the neighborhoods and seeing true Victorian
style houses. It was a completely different feel that you don’t
normally get to see in the states. It was as if the city itself held
its own personal spirit that radiates culture off every little stone
and brick that completes it. Finally, we drove up to two houses that
gave us the feeling like we were right at home, especially with Mr. &
Mrs. Morgan there to great us as we came in.

It was early, and since I spent some of the airplane trip sleeping, I
was able to use the rest of the day to unpack and sight see around
part of Oxford’s main historical and “touristy” spots. It was a fun
day. The people here are really friendly and helpful if you get lost,
like we did, but we asked around and found our way back soon enough. I
appreciate you reading my blog, I hope you stay in-tuned.