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Saturday, May 14, 2016 • Vol. 62 • No. 20
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Antoine reconstruction project still has some on edge
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tory Drive that remains in the planning stages and has not yet
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Roxanne Werner has only lived at the corner of Cheshire Street and Antoine Drive for the past year or so, but she’s already worried she might have to move if the southern segment of the Antoine Area Reconstruction Project goes through. Outside of her home, she sits with her 2-year-old son, watching traffic fly by in front of her home and nearby Scarborough High School, with a worried look on her face. She’s even more concerned that she only heard about city officials’ efforts to collect public input at the last minute. “I was shocked and very, very upset,” Werner said. “My knee-jerk reaction was if they widen the street I’m going to have to move. I can’t imagine the road being six lanes.” City officials can imagine it that way. The reconstruction project focuses on two seg-
Photo by Jonathan Garris Roxanne Werner sits on her porch with her son as traffic passes by on Antoine Drive. Werner and others have expressed worries and doubts about a proposed reconstruction project that would widen the Antoine corridor all the way to US 290.
ments – a North Segment and South Segment. The former is a 1.3 mile stretch of Antoine from Victory Drive to Bridge Forest Drive that is already
in the design stages, while the latter is a 3 mile segment stretching from US 290 to VicSee Antoine P. 2A
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Candlelight Oaks student shares her passion for fashion By Betsy Denson betsy@theleadernews.com
Scout Pride Get your wallets ready - the third annual bake sale benefiting Girl Scout Troop 21 (the only all-adult special needs troop in the country) is just around the corner. Learn how your bake sale purchases right here in Garden Oaks provide help for these talented scouts.
Photo by Jonathan Garris Students at Durham Elementary School helped paint their school with the help of parents and other community members last Saturday, which is part of an effort by officials to repaint much of the school with murals and enlightening quotes around the campus.
Durham Elementary begins repainting campus with help from students By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com
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Durham Elementary School students grabbed paint brushes and rollers last weekend as nearly 80 volunteers helped repaint the school with a white, blank slate. The blank slate isn’t necessarily a new beginning of sorts for the school. Assistant Principal Nicole Planck said she and principal Amy Poerschke traveled to North Carolina to tour dual language schools and gain insight into other school’s programs and campus designs. The school only recently became a dual language school, but Planck said their Leader-area school had staff and instruction just as good as the others but was still missing something. “They had these bright buildings with murals and quotes in both languages,” Planck said. “We came back to our building and saw that was our big, missing element.” The effort to repaint Durham began last fall when the school’s Dad’s Club repainted the front of the main building Photo by Jonathan Garris white. The previously plain, brick exterior now not only had the name of the school for the first time but also stood as a Nearly 80 volunteers took part in the event. perfect blank slate to build from. and estimate how much paint we would need.” “When we saw that white color and how the interior hall The school purchased paint from Sherwin Williams with a was white, we knew that was the direction we wanted to “substantial discount” and with help from private donations, go,” Planck said. “Around Spring Break, we had the local See Durham P. 8A Sherwin Williams come out and walk the building with us
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Who says today’s kids don’t have goals? For Candlelight Oaks resident and Carnegie Vanguard High School junior Emily Pennington, that goal is to be a fashion designer. And while New York’s Parsons School of Design is where Pennington has her sights set on for college, she’s already staging shows to build her portfolio right here in Houston. Pennington says she “has no idea” how she decided on fashion as a career, but there have been indications along the way. “I hand stitched a dress with yarn for a first grade project,” said Pennington, whose mom Angela taught her how to use a sewing machine in sixth See Fashion P. 8A
Photo by Zoe Herring Emily Pennington made seven formal gowns which were modeled by friends.
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