Essays are for reference only. Do NOT copy or imitate anything!
Plagiarism is severely punished!
Instead, Kirchhoff tells the admissions committee about the Russia he has come to
know on his early-morning jogs. We learn that he is a disciplined runner, a
perceptive observer of human nature, a willing learner of the Russian language.
Bright Nike running tights, his Time Ironman, and the rhythmic swooshing of his
running shoes are details that his audience will remember. They also provide the
perfect segue into the more substantive issues Kirchhoff wants to address in his
essay – the conversations he has had with Russians his age. The reader gets to
know Kirchhoff before we get to know his views on such weightier subjects as
diplomacy and the American role in international relations.
While his supposedly verbatim thoughts after waving to the young sailor sound
stilted, Kirchhoff’s understated and personal approach throughout the majority of
his essay makes up for his waxing a bit too eloquent at times. Ideally, it would have
been nice to hear just as much detail about his conversations with Sasha as we do
about St. Petersburg at 6 A.M. The essay loses the details when it matters most.
Also in terms of detail, Kirchhoff makes a slight error in his statement that “the
Potemkin began the second Russian Revolution by training its guns on the Winter
Palace.” It was in fact that Aurora that fired mostly blank rounds on the palace – the
battleship Potemkin was the scene of a 1905 revolt by sailors in Odessa. These
mistakes are rather minor since the essay is not particularly centered on the ship.
However, let this serve as a valuable lesson: it is important to extensively check all
facts used in your essay.
Still, Kirchhoff’s essay works.
“Salade Olivier”
“Salade Olivier”
By Svetlana Rukhelman
For as long as I can remember, there was always the salade Olivier. It consisted of
boiled potatoes, carrots, eggs, bologna and pickles diced into tiny cubes and mixed
into a giant enamel pot together with canned peas and mayonnaise. It was
considered a delicacy, and prepared only on special occasions such as birthday and
dinner parties. But it was also a ritual, the only component of the first course which
was never absent from a dinner table, no matter which of our relatives or friends
was throwing the feast.
Ironically, the salade Olivier was never my favorite food, though the attitude of my
taste buds to the dish did evolve through the years. In my earliest childhood, I
favored the compliant potatoes, then began to lean toward the pickles and bologna
– that sweet-and-sour, crunchy-and=soft combination that never loses its appeal –
and next passed a phase in which the green peas appeared so abhorrent that I
would spend twenty minutes picking every pea I could find out of my serving. Only
recently did I resign myself to the fact that all the ingredients must be consumed
simultaneously for maximum enjoyment as well as for the sake of expediency.
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