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Trump takes all in historic 2016 election by Michelle Ling and Meghna Pandey
PHOTO BY FATMA ELSAYED
Junior Kit Flaherty plays Miss Adelaide, fiancée of gambler Nathan Detroit, played by senior Joey Moore.
Black Maskers wins big with “Guys and Dolls” by Ayesha Khawaja and Daisy Grant
As the lights dimmed in the auditorium, the orchestra began to play a tuneful blend of jazz and classical music. The curtains opened to a frantic 1950s New York City, with people rushing by, marveling tourists and shopkeepers and vendors advertising their products. “Guys and Dolls” opened the evening of Friday, Nov. 11, with hundreds of people in the audience. “Guys and Dolls” is an awardwinning musical. It has earned several nominations and wins for various awards, the most notable being its 1951 Tony Award for Best Musical. The plot revolves around a group of gamblers struggling to find a place to conduct an illegal craps game.
Their leader Nathan Detroit, played by senior Joey Moore, aims to pay for a location gambling with Sky Masterson, played by senior Noah Montemarano. Detroit proposes that Masterson either take the conservative Sergeant Sarah Brown, the leader of a local Mission played by senior Marjorie Long, to Cuba for a day, or pay him a thousand dollars. The musical unfolds from there, switching from Masterson and Brown’s adventures to Detroit’s situation with the craps game and his needy fiancée, Adelaide, played by junior Kit Flaherty. The performance was the culmination of two months of tireless work from the cast and crew. The last week before opening night, dubbed “Hell Week” by the students, involved rehearsals from three o’clock to ten o’clock everyday after school.
“I’ve been tired all week,” junior and member of the makeup crew Emily Navat said. “I’ve been falling asleep in classes, and my grades are slipping… But it’s really fun, and it’s only a week,” she added. “There’s no replacing the bonding or the cast and working together; it’s definitely worth it.” Their week of rehearsals was essential to the success of the musical. Technical Director senior Sally Simpson explained, “Coming into tech week, we were really unprepared across the board. Cast and crew were nowhere ready for opening night.” Senior Oscar Saywell, who played Benny Southstreet, explained, “There’s always trouble with focus in the beginning.” MUSICAL, cont. page 2
From email scandals to tax returns, the 2016 Presidential Election was a fierce battle between Democratic candidate former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Republican candidate businessman and billionaire, Donald J. Trump. While presidential elections always generate a lot of media coverage and attention from the public, this year exceeded expectations. Americans were more polarized in their opinions on the candidates, and voter turnout escalated. After the election concluded on Nov. 8, Donald Trump was the declared the 45th President of the United States, with 306 electoral votes, and receiving 47.2% of the popular vote. The students and staff at RM voiced their opinions regarding Trump’s victory. “I can’t say that I’m satisfied with the results because I’m not. We are going to take away 100 years of progress with this election alone. He is a close-
“We must reject educational stagnation in our high schools,” stated former Secretary of PHOTO BY FATMA ELSAYED Education Arne Duncan after The group discusses the role of media in producing a change in culture. the National Assessment of
Inside The Tide...
TRUMP, cont. page 3
PHOTO COURTESY OF RICH GIRARD
With a close popular vote, Trump defeated Clinton by 74 electoral votes.
Minority Scholars Program promotes student excellence by Isabella Levine
minded person who belittles minority groups. I’m not sure I trust him to be our president,” sophomore Sherry Liang said. Junior Nina Brener agreed with Liang. “I hate it, I feel very misrepresented, I was in total shock, it was a very emotional time. It’s very disheartening because you’d think America has made progress as a nation to make these adjustments and civil rights and working towards equality, and I feel like this is a major step back,” she commented. Senior Tatiana Davidson Bajandas, along with a few other RM seniors and a number of people around the country, protested Trump in the days after the election on Main Street during lunch, using the phrase “Love Trump’s Hate.” “This is not even about party lines anymore, this is not about Democratic vs. Republican anymore, this is about good vs. evil, and this is a man who is actively encouraging hate crimes. The number of hate crimes since the election has just skyrocketed.
Educational Progress was released. “And, as a nation, we must do better, especially for African-American and Latino students.” The NAEP report revealed that the average standardized test scores of Hispanic and African American students are 30 points lower
than their white and Asian counterparts. This systematic pattern of lower minority academic success, the achievement gap, is the main focus of Richard Montgomery’s chapter of the Minority Scholars Program. “There is a great disparity between the races, academically,” commented the program’s sponsor and special education teacher Teresa Boyd. “Therefore we are putting things in place to reduce that gap.” The program’s membership consists of highly-motivated Hispanic and African American SCHOLARS, cont. page 18
Opinions, 7
International, 10
La Marea, 14
Arts, 17
Sports, 24
MCPS Wi-Fi blocks social media
Student and staff polyglots
The role of the Latinx vote
SNL ‘s debates satirize politics
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