Senior in the Springtime: The final countdown
Hello and a very warm welcome to the 16th and final installment of Senior in the Springtime. This week I continued the journey of completing the traditions that remained on my list.
Again, the numbers alongside the tradition reflect their placement in the original list. My three for the week:
33. Go to Midnight Breakfast.
Better late than never, right? I made it to Midnight Breakfast after my last Orgo Night at Columbia. It was in LeFrak Gymnasium, with a superhero-related theme.
There were a lot of people.
And there was a lot of food. Remember, you can go after Orgo Night is done and there will still be lots of food available. Ice cream, pastries, eggs, bacon, fruit, whatever. Don’t not go because you think there won’t be food left! And the line will be shorter too after Orgo Night.
So a professional journalist mentioned that I should stop taking photos of the event and actually take one to show I was present. Here you are:
114. Hook up in the Butler Stacks.
So I couldn’t figure out how I would prove this one actually happened (no, I wasn’t considering photos or videos and they’re still out of the question) so I decided I’d wait to do it till someone came up with a good idea for how to tell the story without being questioned about the legitimacy and without revealing the accomplice. I’d appreciate any and all ideas. Any excuse to go back to Butler is a good one in my book…
116. Graduate!
This one actually happened. I have a lovely Latin diploma to prove it if the photo below isn’t enough. (I don’t roam around in a light blue gown and cap for no apparent reason!)
That’s all folks! I hope you enjoyed this series. Thank you for reading and all the best in your future endeavours.





Is hot, and this series was excellent! Thanks Mrinal! We will miss you!
GONNA MISS YOU SO MUCH STOP COME BACK ALREADY LET’S GO TO BUTLER ;) ;) ;)
Mrinal I really enjoyed reading this all semester. Much loveXx
Cor
Yay, Mrinal! This was a very fun series! Spec won’t be the same without you.
I completely sypzithame with being a nervous reader. I know I am, despite the fact that I participated on the Speech and Debate team. I never debated, but I did read kid’s stories out loud (like “Leo the Lop”). It must help because when I read on Sundays at Church I get complements.As to reading my works to an audience I’ve actually done that too, if you count my two little kids. They may not be critical listeners, when they listen, but it does help to spot the errors I might not normally. I’ve read to my mom too. She listens, but rarely criticizes. I haven’t tried the critical spouse yet. My ego is fragile, sometimes. *grin*:} Cathryn Leigh (aka Elorithryn)