161206 Volume 104 Edition 10

Page 1

PAGE 4, MEETING

VOLUME 104 • ISSUE 10 • DEC. 6, 2016 VISIT MHSMENTOR.COM

PAGE 6, SWIMMING

THE MENTOR

German club creates ornaments to sell at Christmas market ANNA HUPP CONTENT EDITOR

Top: Multitasking. Sophomores Caleb Luck and Isaiah Glymour playfully tease each other while gluing foil stars together. Both students considered the club’s ornaments worth buying. “I think that we’re making a very quality product,” Luck said. “They’re pretty, they’re well-made.” “Perfectly made,” Glymour said; “and a good deal,” Luck added. Bottom left: Club president Grant Williams, senior, pokes his pencil into a foil star to push its sides outwards. The completed ornaments were sold at the Christmas Market in Junction City for multiple purposes: to raise awareness of the club and earn money for a future trip to Germany. Though

Williams will have graduated when the trip takes place, he is not upset or disappointed. “I’ve been offered to chaperone, which would be really cool and [which] I’m highly considering,” Williams said. “I hope people down the line will get an opportunity that I didn’t get to have and get to experience something life-changing.” Bottom right: Senior Kayla Semmel, Williams and Luck work together on the ornaments they later sold in Junction City to raise awareness of the club and fund a trip to Germany. “We take a bunch of circles of tinfoil and we cut them into small sections about eight per piece,” Semmel said. “We roll them up to have little points and then we have to glue them together so that it has a 3-D effect.”

Debate competes in highest level meet of season at Maize High ERICK ECHEGARAY OPINIONS EDITOR

The Maize High debate invitational concluded the regular season of the debate team after a semester, one which first-year head coach Kristal Kleiner took on

and ended up with improvement. “This was the hardest tournament that we’ve been to this year,” junior Lily Colburn said. “It’s toward the end of the season so everyone has improved a lot. It was only the second time that my

partner and I debated in the highest level possible of Kansas debate.” Her partner was junior Martina Hernandez, a first year novice who competed in the highest level possible. Colburn and Hernandez went 1-4, winning their first round

NHS collects over 200 cans for local shelter In total, they collected about 200 cans, or 220 pounds of food. Students met in the National Honor Sonurse’s office at 6 p.m., ciety is a club dedicatdivided into four groups ed to building student and set off leadership skills whatever and improving “It increases the bonds of to neighborlocal commuthe group and makes peo- hoods they nities, usually through fundple feel like they’re part of a chose. “It was raisers and volgroup,” pretty fun unteering. Many --club sponsor Robin b e c a u s e projects are done in groups Smith said. you got to go out with as opposed to your friends individually, and besides the obvious ing together and helping and just go to people practicality of this meth- the people around them, that you know,” senior od, the club has a spe- 13 NHS members col- Yusef Ciftci said. They went door-tocific reason for helping lected canned food for the nonprofit Flinthills others together. “It increases the Breadbasket on Nov. 23. SEE NHS ON PAGE 3 ANNA HUPP CONTENT EDITOR

GLOBAL

NEWS MIRA BHANDARI COPY EDITOR

For more information visit mhsmentor.com.

bonds of the group and makes people feel like they’re part of a group,” club sponsor Robin Smith said. In the spirit of work-

FIDEL CASTRO DIES AT AGE 90

PERIODIC TABLE GAINS ELEMENTS

Cuban political leader Fidel Castro died Nov. 25. The reactions to Castro’s death were divided, with some mourning for days on end and others taking part in celebrations. Citizens of Cuba are taking part in an official mourning period that will last until Dec. 4.

Elements Nihonium, Moscovium, Tennessine and Oganesson were added to the Periodic Table of Elements. They will now replace the four placeholder elements ununtrium, ununpentium, ununseptium and ununoctium.

but falling to capture the remaining four. “Two of them were really close, well really three, well just two,” Colburn said. Kleiner has lead a team full of novices, first year debate members, along with some veterans to fulfill her mission

on teaching her students. “It’s been a growing season,” Kleiner said. “We have very few advanced students or students who have ever taken debate before. At the same time have a large group of novices who are really passion-

ate about debate. The future looks really good I think for Manhattan High debate.” Among the veterans is senior Sean McGimpsey, whose last year was de-

ANGIE MOSS PRINT EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Topeka as the state level groups look to build a new school finance formula,” Reid said. “At our meeting, I shared what the Board of Education, administration and teacher’s association put together to send. At the meeting, people went through our document and asked questions while generating some ideas of their own. We then encouraged them to give input as well. These were recommendations for the state to consider not USD 383 making decisions about school finance choices.” Some main points in the new proposal included adjusting the two-and-a-half mile or

above requirement for bus transportation to and from school, additional transition services in and out for military families, fully funding all-day kindergarten programs across the state, continued funding of extracurricular activities and several other things. Members of the community did not want to see incentive schemes to support private schools, merit pay for teachers, any form of extraordinary needs funds that take money from school districts, or the prevention of spending for extracurricular activities in the new formula.

SEE DEBATE ON PAGE 3

Faculty, community members propose new funding formula Community members and faculty alike gathered in the cafeteria at Eisenhower Middle School to discuss possible solutions and modifications for the new school finance formula, as per request of Governor Sam Brownback. Assistant Superintendent Eric Reid led the meeting with the intention of listening to what the Manhattan community wanted for its public education system in the years to come. “The purpose of the meeting was to generate feedback to send to

CALIFORNIA FIRE KILLS 36

A fire in a warehouse was proven to be deadly when 36 people were killed during a gathering in the warehouse Oakland, California. As the list of missing people grows, the police and fire departments continue their search of the dilapidated building.

ICELAND INDUCTS NEW PARTY The Pirate Party of Iceland was at the receiving end of a request from its president to create an entirely new government centered around a strong, direct democracy. The party’s representation has increased to 10.

VISIT MHSMENTOR. COM FOR EXTENSIVE INDIAN MASCOT COVERAGE.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.