Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Crayfish Party

This year´s Finnish style Crayfish party was a lot fun. Find below Carl´s view on the evening!


Lovely music, colourful decorations and alluring tables. I felt so amazed when I first stepped into the room. I arrived a little bit earlier, finding my friends still fixing the last ornaments. Other CEMSies in the kitchen were making salad, cleaning tableware and getting everything ready to host this unprecedented crayfish banquet! I was certain it would be unforgettable and felt so grateful for these guys´ efforts to set up this wonderful party. Soon, friends were arriving and we all started discussing, displaying nothing but happy smiles on our faces. We talked about everything: the cold weather; heavy study pressure; but also about the great fun we have had a few days ago. Meeting with friends is always the most joyful thing!


But soon we faced a major issue: most of us did not know how to deal with the crayfishes’ hard shells. Fortunately, our experienced Finnish friends taught us out of it. The tasty meat was worth difficulties we had stripping the shells. You would be mistaking to believe eating and drinking were the only things we did. Singing during dinner brought even us more fun to the party. Even though most of us did not know any of the Finnish songs, trying to impersonate Finnish folks was an interesting experience! After eating, we hung around happily chatting and dancing.


Fact is, during that night, not only did I have a fantastic crayfish feast, but I also experienced unforgettable joy and happiness with all of my friends! After all, the most important thing was to have fun and spend time together!



Studying in a different country is about discovering a new world every day, but in such an amicable environment, I believe it will be an unforgettable enjoyment! I cannot wait until the next international celebration with you, dear CEMSies!

Xiangfeng Lei (Carl)

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Cottage Trip 2014

A thriller novel freely inspired from our trip to Inkoo

 Watching the smoke of his Marlboro lazily swirl away in the fresh Baltic breeze, Inspector Prasad could not help replay the night’s bizarre events in his mind. His friend President Tortilla had invited him to a teambuilding weekend in the remote area of Inkoo to oversee her turbulent guests. Casual job, and yet that thirteenth beer had somehow switched his usually acute sixth sense off ; now he had a crime scene in his hands and felt slightly nauseous. Three questions: what had happened in the lovers’ nest? What was the agonizing scream coming from the bathroom which had woken up the house earlier this morning? And last but not least, who had chopped off the tree?

           
The lovers’ nest was ideally located apart from the cottage’s main building. A truly charming place to get hot and heavy after getting warmed up in the sauna, Prasad reflected. Although there has been nobody to testify, his dirty imagination was picturing the most unlikely couples in that king-size mezzanine bed, and everywhere else in the wooden cocoon. The Finnish Three Graces Outi, Tuikku and Jaana looked just too reasonable to be innocent in that matter. And where was mysterious Mr. Xiang Feng? Had he even been there? His blurry memories were of no help, but he promised himself that he would neatly interview Riku Laitasalo, who had occupied the nest on the second night. Prasad was not suspecting him – he was certainly not capable of any kind of performance after “networking” so much with his colleagues – but maybe had he seen something uncommon. He admitted to himself that the evidence was thin, but he could also pull at another thread: he had been the outraged witness of how Reverend Father Denisty openly hit on the delicious Miss Kočárová in the sauna, and suspected the priest of having broken his sacred vow. The Holy man had not been seen drinking a single drop of anything else than Pepsi Max… Was he trying to keep his mind clear to take advantage of her?

                
Prasad lit another coffin nail and his mind jumped on to the next enigma. What a bad crime fiction, he thought to himself. Instead of birds chirping in the surrounding pines, the house had woken up to horrible, inhuman noises this very morning, coming from an upstairs bathroom. What terrible tragedy had been at play there? Nobody was reported hurt, but Inspector Prasad felt that something in the air had changed. Somebody was hiding something. The ancient sword that was hanging on the living room wall was broken, too. The list of potential suspects was long. One of them was Dulce “not so sweet” Barrueta, an undercover Mexican drugs lord who claimed to still be a student at the age of 30. Apparently she was here to handle business with two other infamous underworld criminals, Nastya “the bride” Gurina from the Russian Mafia and Chinese Triad henchwoman Dana “I can kill you with that frying pan” Xiaofei Du. Nevertheless, they had been cooking for everyone that weekend and Inspector Prasad did not want to appear ungrateful – the lovely cottage party had left him in excellent spirits. The only significant event that morning was that Colonel Tari remained unseen until late in the afternoon, under the pretext of a bad headache. Was it substantial to Prasad’s inquiry? Some claimed that it was the member of the post-soviet Hungarian military, sick from ingesting excessive amounts of punch, who had woken up the house. The experienced Prasad had immediately laid that hypothesis aside: he knew Hungary too well to believe that a women’s cocktail could have shaken the experienced Colonel.
                

For lack of clues, he desperately reached for his pack of cigarettes. Maybe he would be luckier with his third case, by far the most serious one. The lifeless trunk of a tree lied in the moss a few yards away from the cottage. Prasad’s heart jumped as he thought of the awful massacre. The felon Prasad was looking for was truly devoid of scruples and he would have to walk on thin ice. As a matter of fact, the inspector would have liked to casually interview Dr Böhm, whose troubled past put him in the position of suspect number one. While some of his ex-colleagues had chosen Argentina, he had settled in neutral Switzerland. Judging from the size of the tree, Prasad exculpated all women, including Milka Hänninen, although she had left in a hurry short after the probable time of the crime. He also exculpated the two Frenchmen, Renouf and Reneaume. They had an alibi: the accomplices would have been completing a so-called “project sunrise” with Father Denisty, which consisted in a nocturnal romantic rowing trip on the nearby sea. They were probably gay, Prasad thought to himself. Frenchmen usually were. He further considered Nikita Semkin: the brutal strength, the Russian roots and the wife carrying skills pointed him out as the ideal culprit. One detail however made Prasad hesitate: the murder weapon, which had been found near the pine’s still warm remains, was an axe – an engineer like him would have used cleaner methods. The last suspect was Diogo Conceição. Prasad thought he had caught a barbaric glimpse in his eyes when the victim had been found. And these lumberjack shirts he kept wearing also told a lot about his uncivilized inclinations. Happy with himself, Prasad had narrowed the list of suspects to two. What if both had given their own axe blow, as in Murder on the Orient-Express, he asked himself?


Never am I ever joining a CEMS trip again, he promised himself, and decided to go get some fresh air somewhere in Europe. But very soon, a call; Outi Broman, that he previously had rolled out of any suspicions, was leaving the country in an oddly rapid maneuver. Having heard of her plans to cross the Atlantic, Inspector Prasad engaged himself in a global womanhunt, questioning his unquestionable inquiring abilities, but eager to get to the bottom of this case.

(written by: Emmanuel Reneaume)