The Fine Print Issue Three, April 2015 | Page 2

“For the first few kilometres, I overdrove the car, snatching at corners, trying to predict the boost, failing. And then, I got into the groove, and the front wheels started to be where I wanted them and I found the right gears, the chassis started being less intimidating. And I simply... disappeared up the road.” through the mill. It was glorious. Come next semester and it turned. The Press was confronted with more responsibilities – not massive, though very volatile – and all of a sudden, we were back to square I compose the parting issue of the semester and mail it to the team with a note one: unsettled and nervous. Cue the dhobi issue and of thanks for the year-long rendezvous on fabulous, wriggle-strewn paths laid the QED, BITSMUN cancellation. Testing times, out across this little town called Pilani. A beloved editor of yore has just mailed letting us push through to unchartered territories. me citing edits. I'm smiling. No time for melancholies. The Achilles’ Heel So, here, I document the enlightening journey that ends (not quite) with this The Press requires more of you as a decision-maker particular iteration of The Fine Print. than a writer, which is both its genius and its Achilles heel. A wee bit too clever for the thick-headed me. Suspended Time Capsules If you had cared to rummage through the print issues that popped up over the There's more nuance to this than just stats, I was past year or so, you might’ve heard faint echoes of what the experience entailed. taught. But there’s a conclusion – nit-picky though it Well, firstly, not many would care enough to do so, is what I learned in my early is. Now, I’m tempted to think the idea of a studentdays. But, over the course of the last six months, I have been pleasantly surprised managed Press as an all the more essential cog in the (for instance, refer to the survey results, page 4-5). The BITSian, though it takes me an campus machinery. immense effort to stifle this sentence, does take genuine interest in making changes happen in a constructive way. Call me an optimist, for I think the current crop of BITSians is opinionated, calculated and brimming with radical thoughts. Our issues bear testimonial to the same. Short Shifting The idea of taking the reins from an established norm was moderately terrifying. Sweet as Honey It’s the end of the semester and I feel like doing an end-of-term-tribute special issue. But, this editorial space would perhaps serve much better, given the time constraint. I want to extend my heartfelt gratitude to the profoundly kind bunch of soul