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Saturday, March 12, 2016 • Vol. 62 • No. 11

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Crawfish Crazy

RSVP for our annual Senior Expo, presented by Memorial Hermann Greater Heights! We’re giving away $500 in gift cards! RSVP today!

Check out photos from last weekend’s annual Heights Crawfish Festival in this week’s issue!

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Your neighborhood drinkery & eatery 2307 Ella Blvd. (713) 701-9105

March 30 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. SPJST Lodge 88 1435 Beall St. RSVP online at theleadernews.com and See Page 10B

Shepherd Forest residents angry at CenterPoint tree removal

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By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com A group of residents in Shepherd Forest are bemoaning the loss of trees behind their property, saying that a recent tree removal by Centerpoint Energy has led to more light and sound pollution from surrounding businesses. However officials say that what happened is necessary to fall in line with new requirements for transmission lines. Shepherd Forest resident Jennifer Woodruff said that a contractor destroyed a significant portion of the greenbelt in the energy company-controlled easement late last week, leaving some living along West 31st Street with more questions than answers. The easement in question sits between Ella Boulevard and North Shepherd Drive and stretches over Alba Road. Woodruff said she returned to her home last Friday and saw half the trees were gone. She said not only is there greater noise from the adjacent West 34th Street, but bird nests and other homes for wildlife were also de-

All For One Mayor Sylvester Turner held a special summit for law enforcement leaders across the area last week to discuss how to best maximize cooperation and utilize resources as staffing issues continued to loom over the Houston Police Department. Find out some of what was discussed at the summit as The Leader sits down with Harris County Precinct One Constable Alan Rosen.

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Photo by Jonathan Garris Students at Houston Christian High School took turns painting and fixing up a group of homes belonging to elderly residents in Independence Heights.

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Teenagers lend helping hands to elderly in Independence Heights

Gamel Hartman

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By Jonathan Garris jgarris@theleadernews.com

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INSIDE.

Crushing the Competition A Heights-area youth baseball team is beginning to make waves on both the state and the national level. Read in this week’s Sports about the Houston Crushers and their passion for baseball, winning and all things community.

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Shelby Krummel, a junior at Houston Christian High School, said she was more than happy to join about 140 other fellow students in Independence Heights last week to help fix up homes belonging to the elderly. In fact, community service like this has been something of a pastime. “My dad and I have been doing these kinds of projects since I was about 6 years old,” Krummel said. That’s because Krummel’s father is on the board of Rebuilding Houston Together, an organization providing “free repair and renovation programs for elderly low-income, disabled and service-veteran homeowners in need.” Each year, her high school designates a week as Missions Emphasis Week with outreach programs including Community Service Day, which was held this year on March 2. Krummel approached school officials at the start of the year for a partnership with Rebuilding Together for the Community Service Day and months later over 140 juniors

with HCHS came out to help five homes in Independence Heights. Julie Mintzer, communications and advancement manager, said the benefits went beyond simply repainting and fixing up a few homes for those in need. These activities teach teenagers that community service is something that people can participate in throughout their entire lives. “It connects them to people who need a lot of help,” Mintzer said. “Home repairs sometimes go to the last thing on the list of what the elderly need and connecting the students to people in need is a big part of what we’re doing here.” According to a press release, the one day project is part of Rebuilding Together Houston Super Impact 17, the organization’s first major fundraising campaign. “The goal is to raise in excess of a half-million dollars which will be of critical importance as the organization seeks to rebuild 500 homes, through February 2017 as a See Rebuilding P. 3A

See Trees P. 3A

Contributed Photo Some residents living in Shepherd Forest aren’t pleased about the removal of trees behind their homes.

Reagan Red Coats take walk down memory lane By Kim Hogstrom For The Leader Last weekend, about 350 alumni women from the Reagan High School drill and dance team, the Reagan Red Coats, met for a reunion luncheon in the school’s cafeteria to dine and sing in celebration of the 90th year of the team. Founded in 1926, many representatives from the Red Coats attended, with graduates spanning the past 79 years. Eight of the women in attendance were in their 90s. There were

graduates from classes in the 1940s, 50s, 60s, 70s and many from the 1980s. A particularly interesting element at the luncheon was an exhibit of Red Coat uniforms through the years; it was a fascinating collection of headgear, pompoms, skirts, shirts, dresses and shoes starting with the 1940s through today. The Red Coats have morphed over 90 years, from a pep squad and drill team, to a drum and bugle corp, to a dance team. The uniforms changed several times each decade to reflect current fashions or the new assign-

ments of the team. Today’s Red Coats wear a beautiful cloak of maroon and gold on the top, short skirts, cowboy hats, and boots, and have won numerous awards for their performances. Although the styles have changed dramatically over 90 years, the name of the organization has not. Notably, for the first time in history, today there is a young man on the team. Reagan Red Coat Vicki Schmid Faulkner graduated from Reagan in 1967 and See Reagan P. 3A

Contributed Photo by Garen Ohanian Reagan alumni look through books, newspapers, yearbooks and other keepsakes during a Reagan Red Coat reunion last weekend.

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