Other Ways to Give
There are many ways to support Interlochen Public Radio. Gifts you make today include donations of cash, securities, real estate or other assets. Future gifts are typically made in conjunction with your estate plan, such as including IPR in your will, naming Interlochen Public Radio as a beneficiary on a life insurance or retirement plan, or establishing a trust or similar tax-advantaged life-income gift.
Remember Interlochen Public Radio in your Will or Estate Plan
We offer a number of ways for you to leave a lasting legacy for future generations of IPR listeners, including:
Bequests through your will or living trust.
Kids Commute
Join Classical IPR sKate Botello each weekday at about 7:40 a.m. for the award-winning Kids Commute.
We explore lots of different kinds of classical music with themes like Pirates, Villains and Circus Music. The goal is to show that classical music isn t fancy - it s just music!
Answer our weekly Quizlet question correctly and win a Kids Commute Prize Pack! Text your answer with your name and address to (231) 237-7482!
Ways to Connect
Interconnected. Interactive. Interlochen Public Radio.
Local radio plays a vital role in the community. IPR informs listeners about current events and their impact, showcases the region s arts and culture, and helps our neighbors connect and engage with their community. Listen on FM radio throughout northern Michigan or stream online from anywhere.
News
From Northern Michigan to the World
As a charter National Public Radio (NPR) station, IPR partners with the most respected journalists and news organizations from around the globe to provide continuous national and world coverage, while highlighting important local issues and events.
Music
Live and Recorded at Interlochen
Stateside s conversation with Jennifer Tianen and Yael Mizrahi
In high school English classes, students are often tasked with trudging through the classics. At West Bloomfield High School, in
Jennifer Tianen’s class, they’re getting a different view of one author in the literary canon.
These students have been transcribing the letters of Marjorie Bump, a Petoskey woman who was friends with Ernest Hemingway when he lived at his boyhood summer home of Windemere. She was also a character in his Nick Adams stories, particularly
The End of Something, where Hemingway’s self insert character, Adams, ends up with a broken heart.
6:02
That’s where a long-proposed scenic road would run – between U.S. Highway 31 and M-22 – taking people from Beulah into Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore.
The land is mostly dense hardwood forest and it s extremely hilly.
“This is almost a 90-degree descent here we’re going to go down here, so we may want to keep our hands free,” says Andy Norman, a retiree of Michigan State University Extension who lives nearby.
Andy Norman lives near the proposed Benzie Scenic Road. Much of the land consists of hilly, dense hardwood forest.
Credit Dan Wanschura / Interlochen Public Radio
After about three-to-four miles of rigorous hiking, he peaks a ridge and scans the horizon.