Landmark 122618

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RIVERSIDE-BROOKFIELD Also serving North Riverside $1.00

Vol. 33, No. 52

December 26, 2018 @riversidebrookfieldlandmark @riversidebrookfield_landmark @RBLandmark

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6 vie for trustee seats in North Riverside PAGE 3

Tourney time

Burglary suspect caught in the act PAGE 4

PAGE 14

Local high schools hoops squads face tough tests

2018 The slow march into YEAR IN REVIEW

uncertain times

From reeling retail to municipal and school board drama, 2018 was a rough go By BOB UPHUES Editor

When the clock struck midnight on Jan. 1, 2018 we’d thought maybe, mercifully we’d swept out the mess left at the end of 2017 and could usher in a better year. It couldn’t get any worse, right? Yet, as the sun of 2018 begins to descend slowly – so painfully slowly – beyond the horizon, we look back and see that the past 12 months were very much a continuation of the previous year with many of the same issues lingering, like spoiled leftovers in the fridge, with some fresher dishes thrown onto the shelves for a little variety.

Finding their voice Local high school students got a sense in 2017 of the power of protest. Perhaps nudged along by the larger national movement resisting the policies of President Donald Trump, students made their views known in 2017, staging a sit-in to protest the non-tendering of a popular teacher who many students said encouraged their engagement on important issues. On the one-month anniversary of another senseless mass shooting, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, See YEAR IN REVIEW on page 8

RBHS to search for new principal Smetana to be promoted to assistant supt., finance chief out By BOB SKOLNIK Contributing Reporter ALEXA ROGALS/Staff Photographer

WALKOUT: Riverside-Brookfield High School students in March took part in a nationwide school walkout to mark the one-month anniversary of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting and advocate for commonsense gun laws.

Riverside-Brookfield High School will have a new principal next fall. On July 1 Principal Kristin Smetana will move up to a newly created assistant superintendent position, pending board approval which is

expected to be a formality. The odd man out in the administrative reshuffle is Chief Financial Officer Scott Beranek, who will be losing his job. “We’re going to eliminate the role of chief financial officer and Kristin Smetana will See PRINCIPAL on page 13

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