Friday, March 15, 2019
Latin is Not Dead Yet! :: College Admissions Essays
My hands were brittle and numb from the biting cold. Id been raking leaves for just chthonic three hours in the dwindling group of Latin Club members who braved the prevail for charity donations. As a freshman, I felt somewhat alone(predicate) in my new club, especially since my friends had backed come to the fore on my invitation to marriage me that Saturday. Nevertheless, I vowed to stick with it, and someday spark more interest in the activities...even in the cold. However, with my yet-unestablished high school reputation and lone voice out of 150 members, I continued to contribute merely my attendance at the meetings and activities.   Sophomore course, I found myself embracing Latin Club as a way to have fun with my friends and contribute community service. notwithstanding despite my enthusiasm, the club did carry a somewhat nerdy and uninteresting range of a function probably stemming form the name.   Latin Club? Come on. Whatta you guys do in thither...speak L atin...or play dead? a classmate remarked.   I chuckled, then certain him that the Romans were known for drunken revelry, large feasts, and ceremonial orgies. After translating that into music, food, and dancing, I reminded him that there was a Latin Club party coming up next weekend. Needless to say, I had little trouble improving the clubs popularity.   Junior year arrived, and I decided it was time to make my move on the Latin Club. The name consul, the equivalent of president, jumped out from the nomination form like a lone image in a 3-D comic book. However, the presidency required a partnership-an ancient Roman safeguard carried on symbolically in our club. No problem My friend Sankeerth and I couldnt have dual-lane more interest. Thus, the campaign for Court & Sankeerth was born, but by no means an heir to the throne. Our opponents were none other than two of the prominentgest academic powerhouses in the senior class Annie, who aced the SAT and Christy, pres ident of two other major(ip) clubs. Together they proved our valiant efforts basically futile in their shadow. next year, spoke the voice of optimism.   Senior year brought to our campaign the confidence of a veteran TV sitcom versus a pilot. Could anyone else possibly have valued to be Latin Club president as much as we did? We could take no chances.   The only way to win was to buy big markers.
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