Sunday, September 1, 2019

After 3000 miles...


Howdy from the hot and humid Texas!

It has been a month since I am in the USA and I just passed 3000 miles on the dashboard since I left Boston. I finished the last post that I was leaving Boston on the 9th of August.

Before I get into more details in this blog entry for those of you who don't know me, I have to write it down in a few lines what I do exactly. So back in Romania I have my own company which has several activities. The company is called ACTIVE BROTHERS SRL (LLC). My main area of activity is cultural exchange programs for high school and university students. What does that mean exactly? It means that within the:
1. High School Exchange Program I recruit and send exchange students from Romania and Hungary to the United States to study for one academic year, or just a semester, but we also have various short term programs through which youngsters between the age of 13-26 can experience what is like to live and study in the USA. For more info, you can visit www.highschoolinamerica.org. After students finish their academic year in the USA and for those who require we offer consulting services on which university to choose for continuing their studies in the USA.
2. Work and Travel Program I recruit and send university students for a short term cultural exchange program where they can work during the summer vacation (May-October) for an American employer. For more information, you can visit www.gtamerica.hu

The secondary area of activity is translations. Since I am a certified translator for English, I do various translations in various domains and I also have my collaborators for other languages.
My office is in Oradea, but for qualified, trustworthy clients we execute translations online or via e-mail as well.

So due to my main area of activity during this trip, I am not just traveling, but I am also checking out potential universities and gather information on them for future possible customers. So if you consider applying for a university in the USA, ask me with courage, I am your guy!

Universities in the USA
Well, this is a topic of which I could go on and on till the day after tomorrow. It is a very interesting topic, maybe I will write a more wast post in a separate blog entry on this.
In a nutshell, you have to know that universities are different in every possible way from the ones back home. Universities have giant campuses, basically, they are a small city within a city. Most of the universities have their own police station, fire department, bus line (that only run from one end of the campus to the other), post office, book store, fast foods, etc. Crazy! If you have watched some American movies about universities, they are exactly the same. The size of the universities varies from a few thousand to more than 60.000 students. I will tell you some fun facts in a minute.

So, my first destination on this journey was in the state of Georgia at the University of West Georgia. Not a huge university, approximately 13.000 students attend it, but the campus is really green and well taken care of. It was the first day of school and freshman students (those who are in the 1st year) are greeted during that day and during the entire week with a bunch of free activities, food, T-shirts. They get to know the campus quickly and start their classes. For those who does not live on campus in dorms, they come either by bus, or with their car. The parking lots are huge, but also there 4-5 level parking garages available. The infrastructure on the campus is on the top!
The nice and green campus.

Indoor multifunctional sports area! "Just like home"

The universities gym/work out rooms with hundreds of machines!

The second destination was Purdue University in Indiana. On the way, I stopped by the Indianapolis Race Track. I did not go inside the museum this time, because I already visited this place back in 2006 during the Work and Travel program. So from the parking lot of the race tracks, I could observe what was going on. The track was rented out by individuals who have brought out their cars to test it out in race conditions. Ferrari, BMW, Mazda, Porsche and other brand cars burning tire on the track. Also in a separate area of the parking lot, kids (maybe between 5-10 years of age) were practicing GoKart. They had an instructor and he told them what and how to do it.





Purdue University is a much bigger campus compared to UWG. 30.000+ students attend this university. The campus is beautiful, full of water fountains and giant walkways and parks. Fun fact: Neil Armstrong and Captain "Sully" Sullenberger (who saved all the lives on a commercial jet by landing the plane on the Hudson River in New York City) attended and graduated this university. Also, it was the first week of school here. On the first day of school, all the fraternities and sororities go out to the main lawn of the university and begin the recruitment for new freshman members. If you have seen the movie American Pie: Naked Mile, The Old School, Animal House, you will know what I am talking about. Maybe the movies exaggerate a bit (I don't think you have to blast horse semen in your mouth to get accepted or to win a challenge), but there is a pledging process that you have to fulfill if you want to join one of these social clubs.


 The main administration building of the university.


The amphitheater of the university with the boys' choir cheered by the girls' choir!

Every Thursday there is a Farmer's Market happening on the same lawn. Local farmers bring their products to the university with a food truck, they set up the market and from 10 AM till 3 PM you can buy fresh locally produced food. Prices vary from $2 for a pretzel to $10 for a home-prepared meal (rice, meat, stew, or similar). I think this is a wonderful idea to support local farmers. This way the local economy can also flourish and not just the owners of large hypermarket stores get richer and richer. Prices are of course higher than in the hypermarkets. For example, in Walmart, a pound (approx 0,5 kg-10-12 pieces) jalapeno costs 60-88 cents in the farmers market you get 7 pieces for $1. The difference is in the taste. It is more juicy and fresh.





So Purdue is one famous university in the US, but not as famous as TEXAS A&M University. Everybody in the nation knows this place. I've promised you some fun facts, well here they are, but you better sit down for these or at least hold your jaw from dropping:
1. More than 66.000 students are enrolled (Largest in Texas and 2nd largest in the USA)
2. One year tuition costs approximately $26.000 (it is not a typo..twenty six thousand USD) - that would be $1.7 billion income for the university just form tuition/year
3. It has the 4th largest American football stadium (Kyle field) in the USA (110.000 people can fit in there) Imagine, that is more than the half population of my hometown Oradea.
4. The Aggie football team's coach (Jimbo Fisher) earns $7,5 million / year :O - In Romania Dan Petrescu at CFR Cluj soccer team earns approx $700.000 / year. What a difference!!
5. A ticket price for the football game depends on who does the team play. If it is not a rival team, tickets start from $9, but if the game is with a rival team you will not be able to find tickets cheaper than $145-$195.

The 4th largest football stadium in the USA behind me from the outside. 
From the inside (photo credit: Google search)

Now, this is what I call a lawn!

So if you are considering attending this university, reach deep into your pocket, or your parent's pocket, because we are talking about some serious money. After housing, food, entertainment, cost of living, tuition you will end up getting rid of roughly 35.000-40.000 USD / year. How is that sound? 
But trust me it is worth it! College life is totally different in the US. Lots of activities, events happening around the campus and you have so many possibilities not just from academics, but from sports, social clubs, student life points of view as well. I wish I was attended a modern, well equipped university like this, where student life is truly outstanding. Oh, well! Maybe in my next life, or maybe my kid will have the chance to experience it and tell me all about it.

I have 4 more universities to visit during my trip: 1 in Dallas, 2 in San Antonio and 1 in Louisiana.

Labor day is around the corner so my next post will follow this one really soon, because I want to share with you the madness that is going on nationwide with all the sales and discounts that companies offer in today's world of consumerism where they try to shove it down your throat the idea just to spend your money that you might not even have. 

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