LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Duneland school leaders praised nwitimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nwitimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Since the 1970s, Chesterton High School has operated its own radio station that s given students ranging from freshmen to seniors real-world experience being on the air.
High school students run WDSO-FM 88.3 The Rock, a noncommercial educational station that broadcasts rock music during the day and some after-school shows. All the DJs are students who must first take the semester-long Introduction to Radio/TV class.
WDSO-FM also has broadcast news, sports and live coverage of Chesterton town meetings and the Duneland School Board.
The 410-watt station, which is broadcast from the Chesterton Middle School and on the internet, will host its 30th Annual Radiothon from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily during High School Radio Week, which takes place from April 19-23.
Residents largely favor $168 million Duneland schools improvement plan; board votes to move forward nwitimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nwitimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Concerned students, parents and community members organize outside the Chesterton Middle School auditorium entrance ahead of the school board s meeting after learning Pride flags were asked to be removed from a classroom at the school.
Concerned students, parents and community members organize outside the Chesterton Middle School auditorium entrance ahead of the school board s meeting after learning Pride flags were asked to be removed from a classroom at the school.
CHESTERTON â Milissa Beale said her 13-year-old daughter, Mila, came home upset recently after learning that an English teacher at the middle school had been required to remove gay and trans-positive flags from her classroom, as well as a Black Lives Matter poster.
By KEVIN NEVERS
Early in November I asked my editor whether given the sheer godawfulness of 2020 he’d still be interested in the
Chesterton Tribune’s traditional ”Year in Review” wrap-up, always run on the last publication day in December: a brief summary of the major stories in Duneland over the past year, and my (exhaustive or tedious, depending on your taste) catalogue of the headlines by month.
My personal feeling: there is really only was one story in 2020, and any account of the uncountable ways in which it infected, disrupted, distorted, and blasted everything else in our lives this year would be superfluous. My editor