On Dec. 4th, freshman Emmanuel Lemus Tinoco, affectionately known as Manny by many students, woke up one day with what he and his family thought was just a minor ear infection.
“I took him to the doctor's and they told me it was an ear infection,” Nicole Tinoco, Emmanuel’s mother, said.
Manny’s condition was getting worse, but his doctors insisted it was just an ear infection.
“The doctor didn't even reply to what I was telling him about the headaches, the fevers, him not eating, and if he ate
a little bit, he would throw it up,” Tinoco recalled.
The doctors finally realized the issue was an infection in his brain, and Manny had to be taken to Salt Lake City due
to the lack of local neurosurgeons.
When they reached Salt Lake City, they were unable to wake Manny up.
“Shaking him, putting bright lights in his eyes, he would not wake up at all,” Tinoco said.
After this scary encounter, the doctors realized how serious Manny’s condition was.
“[The doctor] saw how bad it was getting, and he said that it was life threatening,” Tinoco said.
Manny has been a prominent member of our community at NS and many were sad to hear about this.
“A lot of students miss having him here,” Latinos In Action (LIA) Director Rhett Bird said. “He's very friendly, and if
you ask people, he's one of their good friends that they just love having around.”
Bird’s sentiment is not uncommon and is shared among many students at NS.
“He's always talking to everyone, he was really nice,” LIA leadership member Viviana Rodriguez Cruz said.
After hearing the news, Bird brought it up in the quarterly meeting for LIA, wanting to help out Manny and the
community that cares for him.
In one of LIA’s meetings, they decided on selling concessions as a way to raise money for Manny and his family.
“We plan, usually a quarter, what we're gonna do every day, we just planned to do a fundraiser,” Cruz said.
This was all in an attempt to encourage inclusion and belonging in our community.
“Our mission, really, that we've set for North Sanpete High School and Latinos in Action, is to create an environment where everyone feels they belong,” Bird said.
The students in LIA were also eager to continue this goal.
“We just wanted to help already,” Cruz said.
LIA’s help has not gone unnoticed. It really shows just how important LIA’s goal has been in fostering a more welcoming and connected community.
“As a mother, I will always be so grateful for what they have done for my son,” Tinoco said.
The people who care about Manny can hopefully work through these hard times with help from their community.

