170124 Volume 104 Edition 13

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PAGE 5, AGST

PAGE 4, SWIMMING

PAGE 4, BASKETBALL

VOLUME 104 • ISSUE 13 • JAN. 24, 2016 VISIT MHSMENTOR.COM

THE MENTOR THEY DID THAT

Women’s March spreads message of equality, fights for justice MEREDITH COMAS STAFF WRITER

The nationwide Women’s March flooded the country with a sea of pink, spreading its message of equality for women and minorities everywhere last Saturday. Opposing President Donald Trump’s new presidential office, the March called upon the nation to stand together and unite against

oppression and injustice and make a call for political and social change. “I think it’s important to let America know that we are still here, and we are not giving up hope,” March attendee Bronwynn Bliss, freshman, said. A sister march to the one in D.C., the SEE MARCH ON PAGE 3

Students visit from Argentina, find value in educational differences ERICK ECHEGARAY OPINIONS EDITOR

It’s January and neither 17-year-olds Guillermo Iacaruso nor Iara Fernandez exist in their set Argentinian summertime. Strangely they cannot see the ocean from where they are. The beach is far away, and their loved ones even farther. A sun hovers pleasingly over Buenos Aires, over its youth, over its three million residents. It doesn’t shine for Iacaruso and Fernandez. For Domenico Miceli, Augustina Martin and Juan Martin Manent it doesn’t either. They are also in Manhattan, Kansas. “I’ve been to the United States before but never in Kansas,” Iacaruso said. “I never thought I’d be in Kansas.” Five new foreign exchange students, attendees of the Instituto Nuestra Señora de Las Nieves school in the Liniers neighborhood of Buenos Aires, find themselves

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NEWS MIRA BHANDARI COPY EDITOR

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at Manhattan High as foreign exchange students; far away from home yet not totally estranged. “I thought that people here were going to be unfriendly but it’s nothing like that,” Fernandez said. “Everyone here is really nice.” The students come thanks to AFS, a program which has allowed foreign exchange students to come and attend MHS for a whole year. “This one is just a short term program,” AFS sponsor Tony Wichmann said. “We’re having them stay with a temporary host family so it’s similar to our other students, it’s just the stay that is shorter.” Although it has been only a week since their arrivals, Manhattan has offered the Argentinian students an insight into the American lifestyle, showing them first hand the differences between reality and fiction. “I haven’t been around that much but of what I have seen it’s really different to where I’m from,” Fernandez said. “It’s a very quiet town.

ISIS BOMBS MONUMENT

Palmyra, a Syrian town with historical significance, was home to a second-century Roman amphitheater, which has now been destroyed by ISIS. The militant group has now effectively left the Palmyra Museum in shambles and destruction.

The lives of people are very calm. The school is nothing like mine and especially nothing like they show in the movies.” For others, like Miceli, Manhattan has provided them with an opportunity to see how other people bond over sports. “What I really liked was the fanaticism people here have for their Kansas State [University] teams,” Miceli said. “I went to watch the basketball game against Baylor and I really enjoyed the show.” Though their welcoming was warm, it was unavoidable to turn a blind eye to the massive social and economic differences between what they see at home and what they’ve seen here. The contrasting realities between first-world America and everything outside of that realm. “The family that hosts me here said they were poor,” Iacaruso said. “In my opinion they’re not poor at all in comparison to back home.” The real differences SEE ARGENTINA ON PAGE 3

Above: Juan Manent, a visiting student from Argentina, sits with one of his host friends, junior Gillian Nichols during Forensics class. “The most interesting thing…I think the Spanish classes are really fun and are interesting too, and I don’t know,” Manent said. “I’ve done...interesting things I went to a concert.” Right: Iara Fernandez, a visiting student from Argentina, works on a project in Forensics. Fernandez is following junior Cody Ballou for her time here. She said that so far, the Physics classes at Manhattan High are her favorite. PHOTOS BY ANGIE MOSS

VENUS HOLDS MYSTERY

PRESIDENT-ELECT INAUGURATED

EL CHAPO RECAPTURED

A “Nature Geoscience” paper, published on Jan. 16, presented new information supporting the suggestion that a peculiar curved atmospherical feature discovered on Venus in 2015 was a “gravity wave.”

Friday marked the day that President Donald Trump took the oath of office and was officially sworn in with the traditional presidential inauguration ceremony. The day of the ceremony was also the end of former President Barack Obama’s presidency.

After his escape from what was Mexico’s most impregnable prison, drug lord Joaquín Guzmán Loera, commonly known as El Chapo, was once again captured by Mexican Marines, who had been on his trail since his getaway.

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