{"id":2544,"date":"2011-12-04T07:36:59","date_gmt":"2011-12-04T06:36:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/?p=2544"},"modified":"2014-12-15T07:33:05","modified_gmt":"2014-12-15T05:33:05","slug":"how-to-reach-the-new-kids-on-the-block","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.zeus.aegee.org\/magazine\/2011\/12\/04\/how-to-reach-the-new-kids-on-the-block\/","title":{"rendered":"How to reach the New Kids on the Block?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Every year, usually at the end of summer, tons of new students arrive in every university town in Europe. All of them full of great expectations, plans, ambitions, enthusiasm, creativity and whatnot, thousands of them flooding the city with new energy. Despite their sometime overabundance, I find their infiltration to be a happy sight every time and again.
\nPlenty of them are potential active AEGEE members, but of course you’ll need to attract their attention somehow. Unfortunately, so is everybody else. Save for a few of the very large ones like Enschede, locals struggle to place themselves\u00a0somehow in the new kids’ focus. What is AEGEE? What do we do? Why should you join us? We are the European Students Forum, we strive for pan-European understanding bottom-up. Which is very nice in itself, however, the message gets lost in the introduction festival mess common in the Netherlands…<\/p>\n