CRI ER
MUNSTER HIGH SCHOOL
vol. 51/issue 10/march 24, 2017
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upcoming
inside look Page 4-5: Students discuss bias in media, Crier
Prom is April 29; tickets for sale during lunch April 3-7 $100 per couple, $50 for single
Page 10: Track and Field indoor season ends
Speech is selling suckers Monday, Wednesday and Friday in the café
Softball prepares for first game next Monday against Hanover
Tickets for spring musical “Pirates of Penzance” for sale April 1
8808 Columbia Ave. Munster, IN 46321
In the name of free religion ALL ABOARD At the Hammond Train station, a South Shore line train leaves the heads westbound. Munster residents could expect to see such a sight as early as 2020.
Keeping on track
As scheduling for NICTD West Lake Corridor project looms closer, residents voice concerns
Ridge Road
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Chloe Wineinger Design Chief
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ny form of change will always be met with some enthusiasm, some acceptance, and some major disapproval. For anyone who has attended a Town Hall meeting or
Blueprint
1 = new train station
NICTD proposed plan spanning 2 = new train station through familiar parts of Munster and other towns. = Ridge Rd The map to the right illustrates the two new train stations = Calumet Ave proposed to extend the South = Aurelio’s Pizza Shore line with surrounding = Calumet Harley Davidson landmarks.
45th Street
West Lakes Subdivision
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Calumet Ave
any other public meeting where the West Lake Corridor Project was discussed, this is highly evident, seeing from the range of reactions from local attendees. This project, a nine-mile extension of the existing South Shore Line that will also connect to the Metra Electric District’s line, will largely affect the livelihood of some Munster residents, as the line is proposed to pass through the West Lakes subdivision, 45th Street, Fisher Street and Ridge Road, and having two stations. The Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District (NICTD) had been proposing this plan for a long time, performing studies of the economic and transportation benefits since 1989. It was not until 2014 that the NICTD began the first leg of the process by performing an environmental review. In December of 2016, the NICTD, along with the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), released their Environmental Impact Statement, which opens the NICTD to their next step of applying for having federal funds for the project determined. The project is proposed to end in 2022. “The fact is the first monies for the West Lake Extension were secured in 1991, so this has been a project that has been under discussion for literally more than a generation,” U.S. Representative Pete
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Students discuss House Bill 1024, religious expression in schools Danie Oberman Page Editor Throughout middle school, Zahraa Ouyuon, senior, would pray during school. She would go to the guidance office after lunch, pray, and then go to class. “(If people asked what I was doing), I would just be like ‘We do it (pray) five times a day, and one of them interferes with school,” Zahraa said. “So I don’t let it stop me from praying, I do it during then.” While Zahraa no longer prays during school hours, at MHS, the media center conference room is currently available for students who pray during the day. To ensure students all throughout Indiana have the right to express their religion in school, House Bill 1024 waits on the Senate floor. House Bill 1024 proposes to loosen the reigns on religious expression in school, stating schools must allow students to pray during the day, as well as accept religious ideology as they would any secular ideology in clothing, homework, art, and any other form of expression. It also establishes a limited public forum at any school event in which a student may speak, meaning students can include religious content in speeches. While previsions like these may be well-intentioned, Mrs. Kelly Barnes, English teacher, is wary of the possibility that the bill creates more problems than it solves. “I’m a religious person, and I’m a Christian, and I feel very strongly about my own beliefs,” Mrs. Barnes said. “But as a teacher, I am very wary of bills like this because I don’t want my students to ever feel that they are being pressured to do something or to not do something.” In favor of the bill, David Green, senior, sees an opportunity for religion to be put on an even playing field with all other ideas. “I write about religion in papers all the time, and I have discussions about religion with people,” David said. “I think, if I had done some certain things, like say I tried to start a school bible study, I think I could have accomplished it, but I would have had to jump through a lot more hoops than normal, and I think this bill would be helpful for people who do want to do something like that.” When it comes to discussing religion, Paige Mecyssine, senior, finds it can be helpful within boundaries. “I think it would be good to include it in class discussion, if it’s discussing and encouraging more viewpoints, but if it’s a teacher saying ‘okay, let’s take five minutes to pray,’ I don’t think that would be okay,” Paige said. The non-coercive moment of silence is the best method to navigate optional prayer in school, according to Mrs. Barnes. “I think that during MRT when we do the pledge and a moment of silence, I think that’s appropriate because that way people can (pray), or they don’t have to,” Mrs. Barnes said. “I think that’s giving young people a choice.” Religion does play a part in everyday education, however, according to Mrs. Barnes. “Especially in literature, as an English teacher, there
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