RWTH Aachen Week 4: Bonn, Bowling, and Baked Pasta
1 - German lessons
The German course I am enrolled in actually started on April 20th, so I had already missed 4 classes by the time I showed up, because I physically was not in Aachen until mid May. Although the class is not mandatory, the final exam is worth 100% of the grade, so I figured I had better attend and not fail, or else I would not get my transfer credits. So on Monday I finally showed up, and it was quite different from what I expected. The professor is super friendly and the class is really small, around a dozen people, so everyone already knows each other. They were all very welcoming to me as a newcomer. The class format has everyone sitting in a semicircle and the content is highly conversational, basically nonstop talking from 8:30 until the class is dismissed at 12:00 on the dot. By the end I am nearly falling asleep from how long it is, but I sat through the whole thing. If you are coming to Aachen next year, be prepared to wake up at 7:00 on Monday morning and speak German for 3.5 hours straight.
2 - Mensa (dining hall)
The dining halls here are really different from Michigan too. They are called Mensa and there are a couple around campus. The best one is at campus central near the Audimax bus station, and there is also one in the Informatikzentrum right across from where I live on Halifaxstraße 85. If you have a student blue card it is very cheap, only 3.30 euros for a lunch dish with either salad or boiled vegetables. Currently my favourites are the Swedish meatballs with potatoes and the cordon bleu with french fries, and both come with a small bowl of salad included. The lines are really long though. Another thing I do not love is that the food is not an unlimited buffet like back in Michigan, but the food quality is genuinely much better and the taste is always incredibly pleasant. It is also really inconvenient that the Mensa only opens for one meal per day, which is lunch, and closes at 2 PM, and does not open on weekends. So plan accordingly if you want to enjoy the cheap and delicious lunch.
3 - Cooking in the WG
I set a goal to master cooking one dish at a time while I am here. This week I have been focused on practicing spaghetti. Although it might seem like madness to make the same dish every single day for a whole week straight, I am quite certain the taste is improving noticeably each time. My current recipe uses cherry tomatoes and brown mushrooms combined with either Hackfleisch or Wiener to make the meat sauce, then shredded mozzarella combined with Gouda or Edammer and egg yolk to make the cheese sauce, and I have also been alternating between spaghetti and fusilli to see which one mixes better. In the end it comes out as a delicious baked pasta. I will try a completely different dish next week.
4 - Maastricht again
Because the Netherlands is so close, our UROP group went bowling there and I won. Barely, though, considering I had not played in nearly 8 years.
5 - Bonn, Haus der Geschichte
The Haus der Geschichte, or House of History, in Bonn is one of Germany's foremost museums of contemporary German history. It traces the story of Germany from the rubble of 1945 all the way to reunification and beyond, spanning the parallel lives of West and East Germany through an extraordinary collection of everyday objects, political artifacts, propaganda posters, original vehicles, and reconstructed interiors. The museum does not just present facts but immerses you in the texture of what life actually felt like across different decades, from postwar reconstruction and the Economic Miracle of the 1950s through the social upheavals of the 1960s and the political tensions that defined the Cold War era.
I barely made it through to the 1970s, with a special section dedicated to the Beatles along the way, before I realized 2 hours had already passed without me noticing. As I rushed out, I saw the exhibition continued all the way up to right now! It was recently renovated to include the current Bundeskanzler Merz, which is cool. The museum's slogan is literally "You are part of history!!" so I will definitely come back for more next Sunday to finish seeing everything. It is my favourite museum I have visited so far in Germany.
6 - Botanical garden
Afterwards we walked over to the University of Bonn's botanical garden for a Spaziergang, but the rain started falling heavily so we left early, and the train back to Aachen was also delayed by over an hour. Next time I will come back to Bonn on a day with better weather.
Bonn is also the birthplace of Beethoven, and Germany's UN city and seat of western europe along with 18 UN organisations. I'll be back next time to visit them all!!
Yuqi SUN
Department of Robotics, Robotics
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Computer Science
Engineering - IPE: Undergraduate Research Program at RWTH Aachen in Aachen, Germany











