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March 13 Denton Time 2014

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Weekly entertainment magazine of the Denton Record-Chronicle.
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Page 1: March 13 Denton Time 2014
Page 2: March 13 Denton Time 2014

2Denton

Time

031314

ON THE COVER

WILD BILLHe’s big. He’s white. He’s aredhead. And can he ever rap.Wild Bill just might have whatit takes to be the toast ofDenton’s hip-hop scene.(Photo by Lucinda Breeding)Story on Page 9

FIND IT INSIDE

MUSICConcerts and nightclubschedules. Page 5

MOVIESReviews and summaries.Page 7

DININGRestaurant listings. Page 10

TO GET LISTED

INFORMATIONInclude the name and descrip-tion of the event, date, time,price and phone number thepublic can call. If it’s free, sayso. If it’s a benefit, indicatethe recipient of the proceeds.

TELL US ONLINE:Visit www.dentonrc.com, and

click on “Let Us Know.”E-MAIL IT TO:

[email protected]

FAX IT TO:940-566-6888

MAIL IT TO:Denton Time

314 E. Hickory St.Denton, TX 76201

DEADLINE:Noon the Friday before publi-cation. All information will beverified with the sender be-fore publication; verificationmust be completed by noonthe Monday before publica-tion for the item to appear.

REACH US

EDITORIAL & ARTFeatures Editor

Lucinda Breeding [email protected]

ADVERTISINGAdvertising Director

Sandra Hammond 940-566-6820Classified Manager

Julie Hammond 940-566-6819Retail Advertising Manager

Shawn Reneau 940-566-6843Advertising fax 940-566-6846

DentonTime

The Denton AnimalShelter Foundation ispairing up wine and

food at 6:30 p.m. Friday at theDenton Country Club, 1213Country Club Road.

“Wine & Whiskers” raisesmoney for the Shelter Adop-tion Subsidy Program. For$70, animal lovers can sample

wine and food, all while help-ing “forever” homes adopt ani-mals without adoption feeshindering them from becom-ing proud and happy pet own-ers.

The fundraiser includescomplimentary valet parkingand a silent auction. All pro-ceeds from the event benefitthe foundation’s adoptionsubsidy program.

The Denton Animal Shel-ter Foundation is a fundrais-ing organization that pro-motes animal welfare among

the city’s population of com-panion animals.

The city of Denton manag-es and operates the animalshelter. The foundation worksto help place homeless petsand prevent pet abandon-ment. The foundation raisesmoney for adoption, emer-gency veterinary care andshelter care.

Tickets will be sold at thedoor of the event.

For more information, visitwww.dentonasf.com.

— Lucinda Breeding

IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK

Nick Ut/AP filephoto

The Denton

Animal Shel-

ter Founda-

tion is put-

ting a gour-

met spin on

helping out

four-legged

friends. OK,

so there

won’t be

any pups at

“Wine and

Whiskers,”

but com-

panion ani-

mals are at

the heart of

Saturday’s

fundraiser.

Putting on the dogGourmet fetebenefits Denton’sfour-legged set

THURSDAY

8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —

Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-aration help for residents with low tomoderate incomes, at the DentonCivic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call940-349-8728.9 a.m. — Geocaching class at theJohnson Branch Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM3002, 7 mileseast of I-35. Meet at Pavilion 1. Freewith regular park entrance fee of $7for ages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2294.9 a.m. — “The Fast and the

Furriest,” a program on mammals,at the Johnson Branch Unit of RayRoberts Lake State Park, on FM3002,7 miles east of I-35. Meet at Pavilion 1.Free with regular park entrance fee of$7 for ages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2636.9:30 a.m. — Crafters’ Corner atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Work on projects andlearn new techniques. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.10 a.m. — Nature journaling

class for adults and children at theIsle du Bois Unit of Ray Roberts LakeState Park, on FM455, 10 miles eastof I-35. Meet in the Lost Pines Amphi-theater. Free with regular park en-trance fee of $7 for ages 13 and older.Call 940-686-2148.10 a.m.— Basic geocaching class

at the Isle du Bois Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM455, 10 mileseast of I-35. Meet in the InterpretiveCenter. Free with regular park en-trance fee of $7 for ages 13 and older.Call 940-686-2148.10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Time

at South Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Stories, songs, puppets andmore for children ages 1-5 and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.Noon to 1 p.m. — “Post-Civil War

Reconstruction: Lee-Peacock

Feud” in the Commissioners Court-room at the Courthouse on theSquare, 110 W. Hickory St. JanetLatham will present the story of theLee-Peacock Feud, the longest andbloodiest feud in Texas history,through the voice of schoolteacherDorinda Pierce. Call 940-349-2850 orvisit www.dentoncounty.com/chos.3:30 p.m. — “Willy Wonka and

the Chocolate Library,” activitiesand crafts based on Charlie and the

Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, atSouth Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. For ages 6 and older. Free. Call940-349-8752.4:30 p.m. — Cave Painting

Adventures, stories and a craft forages 5-9, at Emily Fowler CentralLibrary, 502 Oakland St. Free. Call940-349-8752.7 p.m. — “Fossil Bob,” amateurpaleontologist Bob Williams, speaksat the Sanger Community Center, 101Freese St. Free. Visit http://sangerlibrary.org.7 p.m. — Denton County Genea-

logical Society meeting includes apresentation on “Finding the FiveTribes” by Marjorie J. Lowe at EmilyFowler Central Library, 502 Oakland

St. Free. Visit www.genealogydentontexas.org.7 to 8 p.m. — Conversation Club,for those wishing to practice theirEnglish language skills with others, atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Free. No registrationrequired. Call 940-349-8752.7 to 9 p.m. — Thursday Night

Music with AJ Scardino and GabrielEvens jazz small groups at UNT onthe Square, 109 N. Elm St. Free. Visithttp://untonthesquare.unt.edu or call940-369-8257.

FRIDAY

9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time

at North Branch Library, 3020 N.

Locust St. Stories and activities forinfants (birth to 18 months) and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.9:30 a.m. — Beginning crochet

class at North Branch Library, 3020N. Locust St. Yarn and hooks will beprovided for practice. Free. Call940-349-8752 to register.9:30 a.m. — Introductory nature

photography workshop at theJohnson Branch Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM3002, 7 mileseast of I-35. Meet in Pavilion 1 andbring a single-lens reflex camera. Freewith regular park entrance fee of $7.To register, call Danielle Bradley at940-637-2636 or 714-612-7159.11 a.m. — Story Time at NorthBranch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.

Stories, songs, puppets and more forchildren ages 1-5 and their caregivers.Free. Call 940-349-8752.1 to 5 p.m. — African Violet

Show and Sale presented by FirstAfrican Violet Society of Denton, inErwin Hall of First PresbyterianChurch of Denton, 1114 W. UniversityDrive. Free. Visit http://favsd.org.1:30 p.m. — Benjamin Lyon

Chapter, National Society Daughtersof the American Revolution, meets atDenton Good Samaritan Village, 2500Hinkle Drive. Donna Cunningham willpresent “Irish Legacy, Customs andTraditions.” Guests are welcome. Visitwww.dar.org, or call Diana White at

EVENTS

Continued on Page 4

Page 3: March 13 Denton Time 2014

3Denton

Time

031314

Hawk & Dove makes quietmusic.

Except that Hawk &Dove makes loud, intense rockmusic.

If ever two conflicting thingswere true, the Brooklyn sextet’smusic hits that mark with con-viction.

Hawk & Dove — which in-cludes former Denton residentCaitlin Becker on keyboard —stops in Denton on Saturday atDan’s Silverleaf.

The band is touring in sup-port of its debut album, This Yes-terday Will Never End, whichfollowed its EP Rocking Chair.

“We’d been working on thesesongs for a while,” said ElijahMiller, in a recent phone inter-view. “They all deal with issues offamilial dynamics, family issuesand quiet introspective reflec-tions, even though we workedthrough those in some prettyloud songs.”

The band developed a lot ofsongs, and Miller, the melody-maker-in-chief, said they pickedthe songs that best expressed thethemes of family, togethernessand loneliness.

Songs like “Stain” and“Things We Lost So Far” are qui-et tunes about the loud tapesthat play in all of our heads. Afair few of the songs are told inscenes borrowed from the Bible— like Adam and Eve in the first10 seconds after they’ve tastedthe forbidden fruit. Charactersare shocked by their epic naked-ness, rocked by how quickly theyunderstand the inevitability ofsin and its grinning wage nameddeath.

All at once, though, Miller re-minds us that in ordinary life, weacclimate to the dual realities ofsin and death as readily as frogsget used to boiling water. Truthand consequence overtake usgradually.

“There’s red in the sky, seep-ing into the night,” Miller singsin a voice older than his years on“Stain.” “If you believe what theytell you, it will all be all right./But the truth is, I’m jealous, andthough I act polite, I’m not giv-

ing up./I’m not finished. Notquite.”

Just when the momentseems right for Miller to screamand the band to crash into a bar-rage of raging noise, singer andcompany reel it in.

In “A Song for Him,” ancientfamily patterns explain the post-modern human condition of de-ferred dreams and imposed be-liefs and behaviors. In it, Millerwonders how things might haveturned out if “father Abraham”had gone through with his deep-est desire on the mountainwhere he planned to sacrificeIsaac to prove his faithfulness toGod.

What if Abraham were tospare his favorite son and curseGod? In the Old Testament story,God rewarded Abraham’s faith-fulness by staying the patriarch’shand, only to follow throughwith his own son in Jesus.

“All parents sacrifice theirchildren for their own desires,”Miller said. “Every aspect of ouridentity is made up of stuff thatcame before it.”

The song takes on a Spring-steen-like crescendo as Isaacclimbs down from the altar ofwood.

“Now maybe we’re too close

together in a city where we canbarely to see the sky./Maybewe’re too close together in a citywhere we can’t look into eachother’s eyes,” Miller sings. “Now Istill smoke my grandpa’s ciga-rettes from World War II./I stillwear the hood that hung thatcross that folks was burned onto.… I’m sick and tired of living ineverybody else’s shoes.”

“The Space Between” getsloud, too. It starts with Beckerplaying bells and chimes via key-board, then picks up energy withthe drums and guitar. Eventually,Miller is considering that fussyspace in relationships that growsand compresses almost in spiteof the human will on either end.

Becker said the literary bentof Hawk & Dove is both a lureand a limitation for the band.

“There are some target audi-ences in every show,” she said.“There are people who come be-cause they want to hear the lyricsand feel all that in the music.Those are the people who comeup after a show and are like,‘Wow, that was the coolest mu-sic.’ There are just as many whoaren’t going to appreciate thatpart of it as much.”

The band’s sound — rockinghard on the contemplative

songs, and using restraint dur-ing the numbers about intimatelittle twists and turns — gives it ahome in the same playlist withJohn Cougar Mellencamp andBruce Springsteen but alsoevokes the indie spirit and har-mony of a band like Seryn or theLast Bison.

Hawk & Dove made the al-bum independently and wassigned to Selfmade Records af-terward. The music might seemlike a strange fit for the Germanhip-hop label, but Selfmade ad-mires the DIY fire of acts likeHawk & Dove.

Did the band have to strike aterrible bargain to get its debutdone and dropped?

“Yeah, constantly,” Millersaid. “Recording in my apart-ment, and asking a lot of thegreat musicians who fleshedthings out on the record. Noneof those folks got paid. But Iwould never think that’s a sacri-fice.”

Hawk & Dove includes Mill-er on lead vocals, Becker on key-boards and backup vocals, JoanChew on bass and violin, JohnKleber on lead guitar, Aj Saus-ville on drums and Max Hodeson tenor guitar and backup vo-cals.

Biblical proportion For Hawk & Dove, deferred dreams,family dysfunction as old as mankind

Courtesy photo/Pieter M. van Hattem Photography

Hawk & Dove

takes on literary

and biblical

themes in its

music — but the

Brooklyn band’s

six members

aren’t serious all

the time. The

band plays

Dan’s Silverleaf

on Saturday

night.

Hawk & DoveWith Reinventing Jude and the Hate-ful Grateful. 10 p.m. Saturday at Dan’s

Silverleaf, 103 Industrial St. Doorsopen at 9 p.m. Tickets cost $7 in

advance and $10 at the door. Visitwww.danssilverleaf.com.

By Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor

[email protected]

Page 4: March 13 Denton Time 2014

4Denton

Time

031314

Dance classes start this week atDenia Recreation Center, 1001Parvin St. The following classes areon Fridays:● Ballet, with “Tiny Tutus” forages 2-3, from 5:30 to 6 p.m., and“Bigger Ballerinas” for ages 4-6,from 6 to 6:30 p.m. ● Jazz dance for ages 6-12, from4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Each monthly session costs $30.For more information or to register,visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-7275.

■Five-year-olds through adults cantake “Intro to Kayaking” from 10a.m. to noon March 22 at NorthLakes Park, 2001 W. Windsor Drive.Staff and lifeguards will be inattendance, and sit-on-top kayakswill be provided. Cost is $15 perperson. Register by Wednesday atwww.dentonparks.com or by calling940-349-7275.

■All adults are invited to a dancefrom 7 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at theDenton Senior Center, 509 N. BellAve. The band Pete & Patti will playoldies and classic rock songs.Refreshments will be served duringintermission. Prizes from localbusinesses will be awarded for themost spirited St. Patrick’s Dayoutfit. Admission is $6 per person.

Ages 3-5 can learn about humming-birds during Friday’s Preschool

Junior Master Naturalist classfrom 10 a.m. to noon at Clear CreekNatural Heritage Area, 3310 CollinsRoad. Cost is $8 per child. Toregister, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

■Teach your dog basic obedi-

ence from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. eachTuesday starting March 18 at DeniaRecreation Center, 1001 Parvin St.Basic obedience training is for dogs9 weeks old and older and handlersages 12 and older. The first class isan orientation, and shot records arerequired. Cost is $80 per dog. Formore information and to register,visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-7275.

■Ready to run, bike and canoe?Registration by Friday for the 3P

Challenge on March 22 on theGreenbelt in Denton. Participantscanoe 3.8 miles down the TrinityRiver, run 2.5 miles and end with a12-mile bike ride. Teams can regis-ter for this “paddle, pound andpaddle” challenge in teams of two,four or six. Entry fee is $90 to $180per team. Register at www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

■An Angler Education class forages 7 and older will be taught

from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday atSouth Lakes Park on Hobson Road.Participants will learn about safety,identification of fish species, andthe basics of tackle, casting andfishing. Cost is $8 per person.Register online or call 940-349-7275.

■Young Rembrandts Art Clas-

ses begin next week for ages atNorth Lakes Recreation Center,2001 W. Windsor Drive. The weeklyclasses meet on Mondays and aredivided by age. Ages 3-6 learn thebasics of drawing, while ages 6-12are also study art history, cartoon-ing and advanced techniques. Costis $65. For more information and toregister, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

■Red Cross Lifeguard training

for ages 15 and older continuesthrough May. Training is in theevenings. Cost is $225 for Dentonresidents, $230 for non-residents.Members of Denton ISD swimteams can train to lifeguard for$150. Registration continuesthrough March 21 for the nextcourse. The course material isavailable at http://rdcrss.org/1idTGym. A prep course is offeredeach Sunday for extra attention andtraining. Register online or call940-349-7275.

DENTON PARKS & RECREATION

940-482-0056.2 p.m. — “Lost Pines Adven-

ture” half-mile hike on the Lost PinesNature Trail at the Isle du Bois Unit ofRay Roberts Lake State Park, onFM455, 10 miles east of I-35. Freewith regular park entrance fee of $7for ages 13 and older. Call 940-686-2148.4:30 to 5:30 p.m. — Lego Build-

ers Club for ages 6 and older atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Free. Call 940-349-8718or e-mail [email protected]:30 to 9:30 p.m. — Wine &

Whiskers, a fundraiser for theDenton Animal Shelter Foundation, atthe Denton Country Club, 1213 Coun-try Club Drive in Argyle. Event in-cludes wine tastings and food pair-ings, a silent auction and more.Tickets cost $70 at the door. Visitwww.dentonasf.com, or contactKathleen Duffy at 940-382-7196,940-453-5361 or [email protected]:30 p.m. — Owl Prowl at the Isledu Bois Unit of Ray Roberts LakeState Park, on FM455, 10 miles eastof I-35. Event features a brief rangertalk, followed by a night hike on theLost Pines Nature Trail. Free withregular park entrance fee of $7 forages 13 and older. Call 940-686-2148.7:30 p.m. — Night hike at theJohnson Branch Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM3002, 7 mileseast of I-35. Meet at the Dogwoodparking lot for the 2-mile hike. Flash-lights are recommended. Free withregular park entrance fee of $7 forages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2636.

SATURDAY

8 a.m. — Activities at the John-

son Branch Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park include a “FlyingFeathered Friends” 1-mile hike at 8a.m.; Vanishing Prairies Trail half-milehike at 10 a.m.; and “Bird WatchingBasics” at 2 p.m. Meet at Pavilion 1 atthe park, on FM3002, 7 miles east ofI-35. Free with regular park entrancefee of $7 for ages 13 and older. Call940-637-2636.9 a.m. to 2 p.m. — American Red

Cross community blood drive inthe gymnasium of St. Andrew Presby-terian Church, 300 W. Oak St. Poten-tial donors must have a photo ID, beat least 17 years old and weigh atleast 110 pounds. Walk-ins are wel-come. To schedule an appointment,call 1-800-RED CROSS or visitwww.redcrossblood.org and enter thesponsor code, “standrew.”9 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Volunteer

Income Tax Assistance for low-to-moderate-income families at NorthBranch Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Toqualify, a household’s annual incomemust be $50,000 or less. Free. Call940-566-2688.9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. — Ray Rock,a benefit for Raylyn’s Heart Founda-tion, at the Campus Theater, 214 W.Hickory St. Live music starts at 11 a.m.and includes New VooDoo, JoshKnight & the Vintage Experience,

Victor Gann, Crossing Main and more.Event also includes a silent auction.Admission is $15 for adults, $10 forstudents and seniors, free for children11 and younger; or $5 per person forfamilies of three or more. Visitwww.facebook.com/RaylynsHeart.10 a.m. — Story Time at SouthBranch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.Stories, songs, puppets and more forchildren ages 1-5 and their caregivers.Free. Call 940-349-8752.10 a.m. — Nature photography

workshop at the Isle du Bois Unit ofRay Roberts Lake State Park, onFM455, 10 miles east of I-35. Work-shop is for adults who are alreadyfamiliar with operating a camera.Meet at the interpretive center andbring a digital single-lens reflexcamera. Free with regular park en-trance fee of $7. Reservations arerequired; call 940-686-2148.10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. — African

Violet Show and Sale presented byFirst African Violet Society of Denton,in Erwin Hall of First PresbyterianChurch of Denton, 1114 W. UniversityDrive. Free. Visit http://favsd.org.2 p.m. — Fundraiser for Take a

Soldier Fishing at American LegionPost 550, 905 Foundation Drive inPilot Point. Event includes a fish fry,auction and raffles. Catfish or chickenstrip meals will be available for a$7.95 donation.3 to 4 p.m. — “Migration

Routes,” a program on the migra-tion patterns of immigrants to Amer-ica, at Emily Fowler Central Library,502 Oakland St. Free. Call 940-349-

8752 to register.2:30 p.m. Saturday — Faction

Before Blood Movie Release

Party celebrating the release of“Divergent,” based on Veronica Roth’syoung adult novel, at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. Event forages 11-17 includes themed snacks,crafts and games. Free. To register,call 940-349-8741 or e-mail [email protected].

MONDAY

1 to 4 p.m. — Tax-Aide, freeincome tax preparation help forresidents with low to moderateincomes, at the Denton Civic Center,212 E. McKinney St. Call 940-349-8728.3 p.m. — UNT Visiting Artist

Lecture Series presents TeresaHubbard and Alexander Birchler inRoom 223 at the Art Building, 1201 W.Mulberry St. at Welch Street. Free.Visit http://art.unt.edu.6 p.m. — Chess Night at NorthBranch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.Players of all ages and skill levelswelcome. Free. Call 940-349-8752.7 to 8:30 p.m. — Romance in the

Stacks Book Club at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. Thismonth, discuss books by Mary JoPutney. Free. Call 940-349-8774 ore-mail [email protected]:30 p.m. — TWU faculty recital

with Alex McDonald on piano inMargo Jones Performance Hall, on thefirst floor of the Music Building, at

Oakland Street and Pioneer Circle.Free. Visit www.twu.edu/music.

TUESDAY

8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —

Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-aration help for residents with low tomoderate incomes, at the DentonCivic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call940-349-8728.9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time

at South Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Stories and activities for infants(birth to 18 months) and their caregiv-ers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.9:30 a.m. — Toddler Time atNorth Branch Library, 3020 N. LocustSt. Stories, puppets and activities fortoddlers (12-36 months) and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.10:30 a.m. — Toddler Time atSouth Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Stories, puppets and activitiesfor toddlers (12-36 months) and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.11 a.m. to 1 p.m. — TWU Interna-

tional Festival, on the second floorof the Student Union, on Bell Avenueat Administration Drive. Free eventincludes food, fashion and dancing tocelebrate TWU’s diversity. Reserva-tions required for lunch. To RSVP,e-mail [email protected] a.m. to noon — No Paintbrush-

es Allowed, an open-ended artprogram for ages 3-5, at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. Free, butregistration is required; call 940-349-8752.4 to 5:30 p.m. — It’s a Girl

Thing! book club for girls ages 10-14and their female relative or friend, atSouth Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. This month, discuss any book inthe Twice Upon a Time Series byWendy Mass. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or e-mail [email protected] p.m. — Volunteer Income Tax

Assistance for qualifying familiesand individuals at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. To qualify,a household’s annual income must be$50,000 or less. Call 940-566-2688.7 to 8:30 p.m. — TRASHion

Workshops at North Branch Library,3020 N. Locust St. TRASHion Showparticipants are invited to come workon their designs. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.7 to 8:45 p.m. — North Branch

Writers’ Critique Group, for thoseinterested in writing novels, shortstories, poetry or journals, meets atNorth Branch Library, 3020 N. LocustSt. Free.8 p.m. — UNT Composition

Faculty Recital: “Works of JosephKlein” in Voertman Hall at the MusicBuilding, at Avenue C and ChestnutStreet. Free. Call 940-565-2791 orvisit www.music.unt.edu.

WEDNESDAY

8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —

Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-aration help for residents with low tomoderate incomes, at the DentonCivic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call940-349-8728.9:30 a.m. — Toddler Time atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Stories, puppets andactivities for toddlers (12-36 months)and their caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.10 to 11 a.m. — Art & Me for ages2-5 at South Branch Library, 3228Teasley Lane. Read Green Eggs &

Ham by Dr. Seuss and create artinspired by the story. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.11 a.m. to noon — Teddy Bear

Parade at Emily Fowler CentralLibrary, 502 Oakland St. Children ages1-6 can bring teddy bears for stories,songs, puppets, crafts and a paradearound the park (weather permitting).Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.dentonlibrary.com.4 to 5 p.m. — “Protect Your

Identity,” a free talk on protectingyourself from identity theft, by JonMadsen of DATCU, at Emily FowlerCentral Library, 502 Oakland St. Call940-349-8752 to register.7 to 8 p.m. — Baby & Toddler

Story Time at North Branch Library,3020 N. Locust St. Books, songs andplaytime for infants through 3-year-olds and their parents. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.7 to 8:30 p.m. — Exploring

Philosophy at North Branch Library,3020 Locust St. Join the ongoingdiscussions of time-honored philo-sophical issues with Dr. Eva H. Cad-wallader, professor of philosophy.Free. Call 940-349-8752.8 p.m. — UNT Chamber Music

Studies concerts in Voertman Hall

EVENTSContinued from Page 2

Continued on Page 5

Page 5: March 13 Denton Time 2014

5Denton

Time

031314

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The Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub

Each Wed, County Rexford, 7-9pm,free. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-5483.The Abbey Underground Thurs:

Big Band. Fri: Brian “Beerman” Hous-er. Wed: Speakeasy Night. Weeklyevents: Each Sat, “’80s and ’90sRetroActive Dance Party”; each Sun,open mic hosted by Bone Doggie,signup at 7:30pm; each Mon, karaoke.100 W. Walnut St. www.facebook.com/TheAbbeyUnderground.American Legion Post 550 EachFri, free karaoke at 9pm; each Tues,free pool. Live band on the last Sat ofthe month, free. 905 Foundation St.,Pilot Point. 940-686-9901.Andy’s Bar Fri: Virgin Gun Club, GasStation of Love, Beaver, the Faps,9pm. Each Wed, karaoke at 10pm. 122N. Locust St. 940-565-5400.Banter Bistro Thurs: Jordan Gheen,6pm. Fri: Classical guitar, 6pm;Richard Gilbert and Ellie Meyer, 8pm;the Bone Handle Set, 10pm. Sat:

Lauren Pierce (jazz), 6:30pm; JulianGill, the Mothers, 8pm. Each Thurs,open mic at 8pm; each Sat, live localjazz at 6pm. 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter.com.Crossroads Bar Thurs & Sat:

Karaoke. Fri: DentonRadio.com. 1803Elm St. 940-808-1177. http://crossroadsbardenton.com.Dan’s Silverleaf Fri: The Nice UpCrew, 9pm, free. Sat: Hawk & Dove,Reinventing Jude, the Hateful Grate-ful, 9pm, $7-$10. Sun: Jagwarma,Empires, Nite, 9pm, $10-$13. Mon:

Nicole Atkins, Davey Horne, Arc Iris,9pm, $12-$15. Wed: Rob Picott, IsaacHoskins, 9pm, $10. No smokingindoors. 103 Industrial St. 940-320-2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.The Garage Fri: Jay Muse. Sat: DJRockStyler. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045.www.thedentongarage.com.The Greenhouse Mon: HoraceBray. Each Mon, live jazz at 10pm,free. 600 N. Locust St. 940-484-1349.www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hailey’s Club Sat: Idler, D-Railed,Like Bridges We Burn, Band Nerds

Music, 9pm. Wed: “Wicked & WildStyles Wednesdays” with DJ SpinnMo, free-$10. Weekly events, 9pm,free-$10: Each Fri, DJ Spinn Mo andAV the Great; each Tues, “’90s Night”with DJ Questionmark; every otherThurs, “Y2K” with Yeahdef. 122 W.Mulberry St. 940-323-1160. www.haileysclub.com.J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.La Milpa Mexican Restaurant

Each Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 7:30-9:30pm. 820 S. I-35E, Suite 101.940-382-8470.Last Drop Tavern Each Thurs,karaoke at 8:30pm. 508 S. Elm St.940-808-1651. www.lastdroptavern.com.Lone Star Attitude Burger Co. 113W. Hickory St. 940-383-1022.www.lsaburger.com.Lowbrows Beer and Wine Gar-

den 200 S. Washington St., PilotPoint. 940-686-3801. www.lowbrows.us.Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlor

and Chainsaw Repair Each Fri,karaoke at 9:30pm; each Tues, openmic at 9pm. 1125 E. University Drive,Suite 107. 940-566-9910.Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Red DirtCollective, 8pm. 1009 Ave. C. 940-565-6611. www.rockinrodeodenton.com.Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Stu-

dios Fri: Bestial Mouths, Prisons,Wiving, 9pm, $6-$8. Sat: Serial Hawk,Spacebeach, Bitch Teeth, 9pm, $5-$7.Sun: Two Cow Garage, Daniel Mark-ham, Single Issues, 9pm, $10-$12.Mon: Kayo Dot, Cutter, Mountain ofSmoke, Vaults of Zin, 9pm, $8-$10.Tues: Pi, Darsombra, She Banshee,9pm, $5-$7. Wed: Aeges, LittleSisters of the Poor, Storm the Sun,Long Sword Spectacular, 9pm, $7-$9.No smoking indoors. 411 E. SycamoreSt. 940-387-7781. www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.Sweetwater Grill & Tavern Showson the patio, 7-9pm, free. 115 S. ElmSt. 940-484-2888. www.sweet

watergrillandtavern.com.Trail Dust Steak House Fri & Sat:

Cypress Creek Band. 26501 E. U.S.380 in Aubrey. 940-365-4440.www.trailduststeaks.net.UNT on the Square Thurs: Thurs-day Night Music with AJ Scardino jazzsmall group, 7pm, and Gabriel Evensjazz small group, 8pm, free. 109 N.Elm St. 940-369-8257. http://untonthesquare.unt.edu.VFW Post 2205 Free karaoke at8pm each Thurs, Fri and Sat. 909Sunset St.The Whitehouse Espresso Bar

and Beer Garden Each Thurs, openmic at 7:30pm, sign-up at 7pm; eachWed, Jeffry Eckels presents “Jazz atthe Whitehouse.” 424 Bryan St.940-484-2786. www.twobzandavcoffeehouse.com.

IN THE AREA

7:30 p.m. Thursday through

Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday

— The Butterfield Stage Players

present 12 Angry Jurors at ButterfieldStage, 201 S. Denton St. in Gainesville.Tickets cost $15. Call 940-665-1284or visit www.butterfieldstage.org.8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday

through March 20 — Registra-

tion for NCTC’s Community Art

Exhibit, sponsored by the Visual ArtsDepartment. Theme is “Connection.”Entry fees for the open division are$10 for online registry (limit of threeper artist); free for youths (limit ofone). Works will be on display March24 through April 4. For entry formsand information, visit www.nctc.edu/VisualArts.aspx. Call Karen Lampsonat 940-668-7731, ext. 4504, or [email protected].

FUTURE BOOKINGS

10:30 a.m. to noon March 20 —

Denton Christian Women’s

Connection monthly luncheon,“Discovering the Artist Within EveyHeart,” at the Denton Country Club,

1213 Country Club Drive in Argyle.Event features Denise Montgomery ofPainting With a Twist and inspiration-al speaker Barbara Holland. Ticketscost $15. Reservations due by Mon-day. Complimentary child care avail-able for children ages 6 months to 5years. E-mail [email protected],or call Cathy at 940-765-3054 orMary Ann at 940-382-6977.Noon to 1:30 p.m. March 20 —

Barbara Jordan Media Awards

Luncheon at the Club Level of UNT’sApogee Stadium, on Bonnie BraeStreet at I-35E. The Texas Governor’sCommittee on People with Disabilitiespresents the event. Keynote speakeris Bob Phillips of Texas Country

Reporter. Tickets cost $25 each;sponsorships are available. Doorsopen at 11:30 a.m. Visit http://edo.unt.edu/content/barbara-jordan-media-awards.5:30 to 8 p.m. March 20 — 25th

annual Taste of North Texas,benefiting the Denton Kiwanis ClubChildren’s Clinic and UNT Athletics, atthe UNT Coliseum, at North TexasBoulevard and Highland Street. Eventincludes samples from more than 30restaurants, caterers and othervendors. Tickets cost $15 for adults,$10 for seniors, military and students,free for children 5 and younger.Advance tickets are available at theUNT Union ticket office, UNT athleticticket office, Denton Chamber ofCommerce and Crouch Realty, or callthe Kiwanis Club at 940-387-6323.Visit www.tasteofnt.com.4 to 9 p.m. March 22 — North-

west ISD Fitness Fun Fest, pre-sented by student councils fromByron Nelson and Northwest highschools, at Texas Motor Speedway,3545 Lone Star Circle in Fort Worth.Event includes live music, food anddrinks, a carnival, a 1.5-mile walk andfree health screenings. Admission is$10 per person or $30 per family.Tickets include the walk, music andcarnival. All proceeds will go to M.D.Anderson Cancer Center, the Amer-

ican Heart Association and ProjectOrange Out. To register or for moreinformation, visit www.nisdtx.org/Domain/5477.9 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 26 —

TWU’s Well Wednesday Com-

munity Health Fair in Hubbard Hallon Administration Drive. More than50 vendors will offer information,activities and some health services.Free services include blood pressurechecks, HIV/STI testing and visionscreenings. Blood profiles are avail-able for $55 with an appointment; call940-898-3833.March 27-30 — Book Cents, aused book sale benefiting Denton ISDlibraries, PTAs and the Denton PublicSchool Foundation, at Golden TriangleMall (near the Sears wing), 2201 N.I-35E. E-mail event chairwomanStacey Pascullo Ogden at [email protected] or call 940-369-0007.2 to 3:30 p.m. April 1 — Edible

Book Festival on the first floor ofWillis Library at 1506 W. Highland St.Entries must be completely edibleand represent a book or literature-related theme. To enter a dish, judgethe event or learn more, contactKristin Boyett at 940-565-2486 [email protected]:30 a.m. April 5 — Denton Dash

for Public Schools 5K and 1-milefun run at North Lakes Park, 2001 W.Windsor Drive. Check-in begins at7:30 a.m. Sponsored by the DentonCommunity Council of PTAs. Registra-tion is $20. To register by March 30,visit www.racedayeventservices.com.For information on sponsorships,donations and volunteering, contactAmanda McCleod at [email protected] or 972-757-7374.April 25-27 — Denton Arts &

Jazz Festival with headliners AlJarreau, the Quebe Sisters Band,Asleep at the Wheel and Brave Com-bo, at Quakertown Park, 321 E. McKin-

EVENTSContinued from Page 4

Continued on Page 6

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Buy

Sell R

epea

t

1 Bring in your gently used brand name clothing for teens and young adults.

2 While you check out the latest styles in the store, the buyer will review your items.

3 The buyer will create on offer based on style, condition and brand.

4 Once you accept the offer, you’ll be on your way with some extra cash or a hot

new outfi t!

1719 S Loop 288 Ste #150

Denton, TX 76205

www.platosclosetdenton.com CM

940.566.6096

CM

ney St. Free admission. Visitwww.dentonjazzfest.com.

VISUAL ARTS

Banter Bistro 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638.Center for the Visual Arts GreaterDenton Arts Council’s galleries,meeting space and offices. 400 E.Hickory St. Free. Tues-Sun 1-5pm.940-382-2787. www.dentonarts.com.● “Materials: Hard & Soft,” acontemporary craft exhibition select-ed by juror Judy Gordon, through April4.The Chestnut Tree 107 W. HickorySt. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat5:30-9pm. 940-591-9475.www.chestnuttearoom.com.A Creative Art Studio Gallery,classes and workshops. 227 W. OakSt., Suite 101. Mon-Sat 12-6pm, Sun byappointment only. 940-442-1251.www.acreativeartstudio.com.Cupboard Natural Foods and

Cafe 200 W. Congress St. 940-387-5386.The DIME Store Denton Indepen-dent Maker Exchange’s store carryinglocal art, crafts and vintage items,plus workshop/gallery space. Tues-Sat 10-6. 510 S. Locust St. 940-381-2324. www.dimehandmade.com.● Birthday Bash 6 to 9 p.m. April 4,backyard bazaar 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. April5.Farmer’s & Merchant’s Gallery

Early and contemporary Texas art.100 N. Washington St., Pilot Point.Fri-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. Ap-pointments encouraged. 940-686-2396. www.farmersandmerchantsgallery.com.First Friday Denton on the firstFriday evening of the month at artvenues and businesses around thedowntown Square. Free galleryviewings, live music, art projects anddemonstrations. For more informa-tion, visit www.firstfridaydenton.com.Gallery 010 in the TWU studentunion, at the corner of Bell Avenueand Administration Drive. Mon-Thurs8-9; Fri 8-5; Sun 1-9. Free.Green Space Arts Collective

Studio/gallery available for rental. 529Malone St. 940-595-9219.www.greenspacearts.com.Impressions by DSSLC Storeselling ceramics by residents ofDenton State Supported Living Cen-ter. 105 1/2 W. Hickory St. 940-382-3399.Jupiter House 114 N. Locust St.940-387-7100.Oxide Fine Art & Floral Gallery

Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, 10am-3pm Sat. 115W. Eagle Drive. 940-483-8900.www.oxidegallery.com.● Featured artist for March isencaustic artist Teri Muse.PointBank Black Box Theatre

Denton Community Theatre’s blackbox performance space. Mon & Wed1-4pm, Fri 10:30am-1pm, and duringperformances. 318 E. Hickory St.● Fiber work by Denton artist IngridScobie, through April 11.SCRAP Denton Nonprofit store

selling reused materials for arts andcrafts, with the Re:Vision Galleryfeaturing art made of reused andrepurposed items. Classes and work-shops. 215 W. Oak St. 940-391-7499.www.scrapdenton.org.● “Becoming Harmonious,” a soloshow by Nicole Cocco, through March31.● “Crafternoon,” open workshopeach Thursday, 3-6pm.tAd The Art Den, a small, artist-runspace inside the Bowllery, 901 Ave. C,Suite 101. Tues-Sun 11am-9pm.www.tadgallery.org. 940-383-2695.● “Liberty Leading the People,” anexhibition by Chen Yizhong, throughMarch 29.TWU Blagg-Huey Library Mon-Thurs 7:30am-midnight, Fri7:30am-10pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun2pm-midnight. 1322 Oakland St.940-898-3701. www.twu.edu/library.TWU East and West galleries inthe TWU Fine Arts Building, at Oak-land Street and Pioneer Circle. Free.Mon-Fri 9-4, weekends by appoint-ment. 940-898-2530. www.twu.edu/visual-arts.● 13th annual Joyce Elaine Grant

Photography Exhibition and “AfterSargent,” a solo photography show byLydia Panas, through Wednesday.TWU Gallery 010 Student-runexhibition space in the lower level ofthe Student Union, on Bell Avenue atAdministration Drive. www.twu.edu/visual-arts.● “Playful Shadows” by Amber Hall,through March 21.UNT Art Gallery in the UNT ArtBuilding, 1201 W. Mulberry St. atWelch. Building also includes theNorth Gallery and the LightwellGallery. Closed through Friday forspring break. Tues noon-5pm, Wed-Thurs 9:30am-8pm, Fri-Satnoon-5pm. Free. 940-565-4316.http://gallery.unt.edu.● “Marking a Course,” an exhibi-tion of figurative artworks, curated byTracee W. Robertson, through March29.

UNT Cora Stafford Gallery InUNT’s Oak Street Hall, 1120 W. Oak St.Closed through Friday for springbreak. Tues-Fri 10am-2pm or byappointment. 940-565-4005.UNT on the Square 109 N. Elm St.Free. Mon-Fri 9am-noon & 1-5pm,with extended hours Thurs until 8pm;Sat 11am-3pm. 940-369-8257. http://untonthesquare.unt.edu.● “Cold Connections,” a groupshow of work by graduates of UNT’sjewelry and metalsmithing program,opens Monday and runs through April16. Opening reception will be from 6to 8 p.m. March 21. Artists includeUmut Demirguc Thurman, HettyEstes, Anne E. Jones, Masumi Katao-ka, Natalie Macellaio, Michelle Milner,Tamar Navama, Deanna Ooley, SusanSitess, Liana Tomchesson and ErinTurner.Visual Arts Society of Texas

Member organization of the GreaterDenton Arts Council offers communi-ty and continuing education for localvisual artists, professional and ama-teur. Meetings are at the Center forthe Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St.Two annual juried exhibits. Visitwww.vastarts.org or call ExecutiveDirector Lynne Cagle Cox at 972-VAST-ORG.

POINTS OF INTEREST

The Bayless-Selby House Muse-

um Restored Victorian-style homebuilt in 1898. 317 W. Mulberry St.Tues-Sat 10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.Handicapped accessible. Regularspecial events and workshops. 940-349-2865. www.dentoncounty.com/bsh.Denton County African Amer-

ican Museum Exhibits of historicblack families in the county, includingartwork and quilting, and personalitems of the lady of the house. 317 W.Mulberry St., next to the Bayless-Selby House Museum. Tues-Sat10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.

Bethlehem in Denton County

Small gallery in Sanger displaying apersonal collection of 2,900 nativities.Open evenings and weekends, byappointment only. Free. Small groupsand children welcome. To scheduleyour visit, call 940-231-4520 or e-mailjkmk@advantexmail.com.www.bethlehemindentonco.com.Courthouse-on-the-Square

Museum Exhibits include photos ofDenton communities, historic Hispan-ic and black families, farm and ranch-ing artifacts, and special collectionsincluding Southwest American Indianand Denton County pottery, pressedglass and weaponry. Research materi-als, county cemetery records, genea-logical info, photographs. 110 W.Hickory St. 10-4:30 Mon-Fri and 11-3Sat, closed holidays. Free. Specialmonthly exhibits and lectures. Call940-349-2850 or visit www.dentoncounty.com/chos.● “Big Wheels Turnin’: The Evolu-

tion of Transportation in Denton

County,” through June 7.Denton Firefighters Museum

Collection at Central Fire Station, 332E. Hickory St., displays firefightingmemorabilia from the 1800s to thepresent. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Closed oncity holidays. Free and handicappedaccessible.Gowns of the First Ladies of

Texas Created in 1940, exhibitfeatures garments worn by wives ofgovernors of Texas. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Administration Conference Tower,TWU campus. Free, reservationsrequired. 940-898-3644.Hangar Ten Flying Museum

WWII aircraft on display includingLockheed 10A, Beech Aircraft StaggerWing, PT22 and Piper L-4. Mon-Sat8am-3 pm. 1945 Matt Wright Lane.Free. 940-565-1945.Lewisville Lake Environmental

Learning Area Three hiking trails;camping, fishing and more on the ElmFork of the Trinity River; restored1870 log home. Winter hours: Fri-Sun7am-5pm. Admission is $5 per per-

son, free for children 5 and younger.Front gate is at Jones Street andNorth Kealy Avenue in Lewisville. Call972-219-3930 for directions.www.ias.unt.edu/llela.Little Chapel-in-the-Woods Builtin 1939, one of 20 outstanding archi-tectural achievements in Texas. Daily8am-5pm, except on universityholidays or when booked for wed-dings, weekends by appointmentonly, TWU campus. 940-898-3644.Sharkarosa Wildlife Ranch

Nonprofit 126-acre ranch with rareand exotic animals. Exhibits, tramride, animal presentations and restau-rant. Open to the public 10am-5pmSat & Sun. Spring break hours: Todaythrough Monday, 10am-5pm. Ticketscost $10 for ages 13 and older, $8 forages 3-12, $8 for seniors. 11670 Mas-sey Road, Pilot Point. 940-686-4600.www.sharkarosa.com.UNT Rafes Urban Astronomy

Center UNT’s astronomy center,open to the public once a month.2350 Tom Cole Road. For directionsand more information, visit www.astronomy.unt.edu/obsv.html.● Star Party on the first Saturday ofthe month, beginning 30 minutesafter sundown, weather permitting.Admission is $5, free for children 4and younger.UNT Sky Theater Planetarium inUNT’s Environmental Education,Science and Technology Building,1704 W. Mulberry St. 940-369-8213.www.skytheater.unt.edu.● “Bad Astronomy,” a film explor-ing pseudoscience, myths and mis-conceptions about space and thesolar system, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. eachSaturday. Tickets cost $3-$5, cashonly.● “Dinosaur Passage to Pangaea,”

children’s matinee at noon eachSaturday in March. Tickets cost $3,cash only.Western Heritage Gallery atStonehill Center, 5800 N. I-35, Suite400. 940-243-3933. www.thewesternheritagegallery.com.

EVENTSContinued from Page 5

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MOVIES

THEATERSCinemark Denton 2825 Wind RiverLane off I-35E. 940-535-2654. www.cinemark.com.Movie Tavern 916 W. UniversityDrive. 940-566-FILM (3456).www.movietavern.com.Carmike Hickory Creek 16 8380S. I-35E, Hickory Creek. 940-321-2788. www.carmike.com.Silver Cinemas Inside GoldenTriangle Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-1957. www.silvercinemasinc.com.

OPENING FRIDAYBethlehem (★★★ ) This Israeli entryfor the Academy Awards’ best for-eign-language film is a tense, fore-boding examination of life in Israeland nearby territories. An Israelisecret service agent, Razi (TsahiHalevi), recruits a young Palestinianman to help spy on his own brother, aknown terrorist. The younger brotherdangerously weaves his way betweentwo worlds, eventually losing thetrust of each side. Co-writer anddirector Yuval Adler takes his dramato an unexpected finish. Not rated, 99minutes. At the Angelika Plano andDallas. — Boo AllenThe Single Moms Club Broughttogether by an incident at theirchildren’s school, a group of singlemothers from different walks of lifebond and form a support group tohelp one another overcome theirpersonal challenges. With Nia Long,Amy Smart, Cocoa Brown and TerryCrews. Written and directed by TylerPerry. Rated PG-13, 111 minutes. — LosAngeles Times

NOW PLAYINGEndless Love A privileged youngwoman and a charismatic young manspark an intense but star-crossed loveaffair in this remake of the 1981 movieof the same name. With Alex Pettyfer,Gabriella Wilde and Robert Patrick.Directed and co-written by ShanaFeste (Country Strong). PG-13, 105minutes. — LATThe Lego Movie (★★★★ ) Thereare so many things to like about The

Lego Movie: a great voice cast, cleverdialogue and a handsome blend ofstop-motion and CGI animation thatfeels lovingly retro, while still lookingsharp in 21st-century 3-D. Set in aworld built entirely of Legos, the storyrevolves around construction workerEmmet Brickowski (voice of ChrisPratt), who must join forces with agroup of rebels to stop the evil LordBusiness (Will Ferrell). With thevoices of Morgan Freeman, ElizabethBanks and Will Arnett. Rated PG, 94minutes. — The Washington PostLone Survivor (★★ 1⁄2) Mark Wahl-berg stars in this true story of fourNavy SEALS in Afghanistan in 2005on a mission to find and eliminate aTaliban leader. When the squad isreduced to one (hence the title), hefinds refuge in an unlikely place. Thestandard action flick accentuates thebravery of the squad, but co-writerand director Peter Berg never raises

his film beyond routine adventurematerial. With Eric Bana, Emile Hirsch,Ben Foster and Taylor Kitsch. Rated R,121 minutes. — B.A.The Monuments Men (★★ )George Clooney stars in this WorldWar II drama that he also directed

and co-wrote, with Grant Heslov,from Robert Edsel and Bret Witter’snonfiction book. Clooney heads ateam of aging art experts who identi-fy and then attempt to recover arttreasures stolen by the Nazis. Seg-mented film never gathers mo-

mentum but plods along with littlebuilding dramatic engagement. Thefine cast includes Cate Blanchett,Matt Damon, Bill Murray, John Good-man, Jean Dujardin and Hugh Bonne-ville. Rated PG-13, 118 minutes. — B.A.Mr. Peabody & Sherman

(★★★ 1⁄2) Dreamworks Animationsets its “Wayback Machine” to theearly 1960s and charmingly revivesone of the most popular features ofthe old Rocky & Bullwinkle Show.

Continued on Page 8

It takes a lot for a film basedon a video game to impress acrowd these days, given the daz-zling advancements in gamingtechnology. But Need for Speed,based on the hit EA Entertain-ment racing game that’s sold 150million units, could now drivesome of that success toward thebox office.

Despite its cliched elements,this adrenaline-fueled stunt festis an unequivocal thrill that de-serves to be seen on the bigscreen. Starring Breaking Bad’sAaron Paul, Need for Speed isfiercely entertaining, loadedwith beautiful cars, windingroads and racers in leather coats.

Paul has been making an im-pressive transition to film, start-ing with the indie drama Hel-lion. In Need for Speed, he flexeshis machismo as a street racer

on a vendetta.Following a two-year prison

sentence for a crime he didn’tcommit, mechanic and race cardriver Tobey Marshall (Paul) isdetermined to get revenge onDino Brewster (Dominic Coo-per), the man who framed him.To do so, Tobey drives from NewYork to California to battle Dinoin a high-stakes race dubbed theDe Leon.

Along for the ride are Britishcar buff Julia (Imogen Poots)and Benny (Scott Mescudi, alsoknown as recording artist KidCudi), the jovial airborne look-out of Tobey’s crew.

Written by first-timer GeorgeGatins, who produced She’s Outof My League, the plot is heavywith questionable logic and mo-notonous dialogue. Modeled af-ter classic 1960s and 1970s ac-tion films, Need for Speed oftenattempts to be a dramatic thril-

ler. But it’s best when conscious-ly comical. Trite conventions,like Tobey’s brooding demeanor,punctuated by his deep mono-tone and acute stare, are effec-tive, although overdone at times.

But Tobey isn’t always seri-ous. When riding cross country,the eccentric Julia gets him toloosen up. Their banter offerscute comedic relief and sets thestage for romance. Long goneare thoughts of his ex, Anita,played by upcoming FiftyShades of Grey star DakotaJohnson, who tests out her sirenpotential. But it’s the sexy, wittyand accessible Poots who really

shines. Michael Keaton, as theridiculously animated mysteryman behind the De Leon race, isanother highlight.

Easily the best parts of thisride are the thrilling stunts andraces. Stuntman-turned-direc-tor Scott Waugh puts us right inthe driver’s seat as cars exceed120 mph and spin through theair. First-person camera angleskeep the action immediate andpersonal, just like the game.Overhead views offer a sweepingscope as drivers speed past vine-yards in California’s MendocinoCounty, where the De Leon racescenes were filmed.

Though the pace remainsmostly high-octane throughout,Need for Speed drags in the be-ginning and during the finalface-off. But overall, this flashyunderworld of super-chargedmachinery and intense action isa blast.

DreamWorksPictures

Aaron Paul

stars as To-

bey Marshall,

a mechanic

and race car

driver who’s

out for re-

venge, in

“Need for

Speed.”

Main attraction Stunts and races thrill even ifcliches don’t in ‘Need for Speed’

By Jessica HerndonAP Film Writer Need for Speed

Rated PG-13, 130 minutes.

Opens Friday.

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This winning, witty and warm cartooncaptures the flavor, the tone andsome of the snappy pace of the TVshorts about Mr. Peabody (voiced byTy Burrell), a Nobel Prize-winningpooch who adopted Sherman (MaxCharles), a 7-year-old boy. The ani-mated details are a 3-D feast for theeyes. With Patrick Warburton, Ste-phen Colbert, Leslie Mann and StanleyTucci. Rated PG, 88 minutes. —McClatchy-Tribune News ServiceNon-Stop (★★ 1⁄2) U.S. air marshalBill Marks (Liam Neeson) is a drinkerand a smoker, a sad-eyed man whodoesn’t like to fly, in this solid, work-manlike action picture that buildsslowly. Somebody is threatening the150 passengers and crew on Marks’cellphone, and framing Marks withthe dirty work to his superiors backon the ground. In the wee hours ofthis red eye from New York to Lon-don, that first text arrives on his“secure” phone: “In exactly 20 min-utes, I’m going to kill someone on thisplane.” Directed by Jaume Collet-Serra (Orphan). With Julianne Moore,Michelle Dockery and Linus Roache.Rated PG-13, 104 minutes. — MCTPompeii In the year 79 A.D., a slaveturned unstoppable gladiator racesagainst time to save his true lovefrom a corrupt Roman senator andthe eruption of Mount Vesuvius. WithKit Harington, Emily Browning andCarrie-Anne Moss. Directed by PaulW.S. Anderson. Rated PG-13, 105minutes. — LATRoboCop (★★ 1⁄2) Director JosePadilha’s remake of the 1987 film ofthe same name delivers plenty ofmayhem and action. Joel Kinnamanstars as a Detroit detective blown upby a car bomb only to be reincarnatedas the titular crime-fighting roboticcop. Abbie Cornish plays his wife, andMichael Keaton goes over the top asa corporate villain. With Gary Oldman,Samuel L. Jackson and MarianneJean-Baptiste. Rated PG-13, 118 min-utes. — B.A.Son of God A film portraying the lifeof Jesus, from birth through hispreaching, crucifixion and resur-rection. With Diogo Morgado, GregHicks and Adrian Schiller. Directed byChristopher Spencer. Rated PG-13, 138minutes. — LAT3 Days to Kill (★★★ ) Kevin Costnerand director McG are plunged into themadcap mayhem of Luc Besson’sscript in 3 Days to Kill, a serio-comicthriller about mortality, murder forhire and fatherhood. Costner is Ethan,a veteran CIA agent diagnosed withcancer. But his new control agent, avamp named ViVi (Amber Heard),wants him to finish one last massacre— taking out a nuclear arms dealerand his associates in Paris. — MCT300: Rise of an Empire (★★★ ) Amore visually stunning but lessthrilling epic with bloodier slow-motion sword fights, this time at sea.It lacks the heroic proportions andpoetry of 2006’s 300, mainly thanksto a less impressive cast and murky,forgettable script. With SullivanStapleton, Eva Green and Lena Hea-dey. Directed by Noam Murro (Smart

People). — MCT

MOVIESContinued from Page 7

Like all films from writer-director Wes Anderson, TheGrand Budapest Hotel iswarmly funny. For a while, any-way.

Anderson is one of the mostcreative talents working in filmtoday. And his movies are someof the most original to appear.All of which makes it hard tounderstand why his films canbe so annoying.

Anderson wrote the screen-play from a story he wrote withHugo Guinness. The non-stopshaggy-dog narrative takesplace in a fictional Europeancountry, a fertile playgroundfor the director’s febrile imag-

ination and parts of whichsometimes look like the fairy-tale world of Anderson’s ani-mated The Fantastic Mr. Fox.

As usual, he paces his filmrapidly, never staying with oneshot, or locale, for too long. Al-so as usual, Anderson and hiscinematographer, Robert D.Yeoman, use frequent trackingand dolly shots — that is, whennot simply setting the camerain front of the actors for vi-brantly colorful, perfectly com-posed single shots.

But once the director setsthose actors moving, the often-dreaded Andersonian whimsykicks in. For a while, it lookslike The Grand Budapest Ho-tel might actually be clever, andhumorous, while avoiding the

cutesiness. But when everyonestarts talking in superficial dia-logue and the narrative eventsbecome increasingly silly, audi-ence involvement lessens.

In a default position amongthe film’s many prominent ac-tors (Edward Norton, TildaSwinton, Jeff Goldblum and, ofcourse, Bill Murray, Owen Wil-son and Jason Schwartzman),Ralph Fiennes more or less“stars” as Monsieur Gustave,the man in charge of the titularhotel in 1932. His story unfoldsin flashback, told by the elderlyZero (F. Murray Abraham) toan interested hotel visitor(Jude Law).

Gustave runs the Grand Bu-dapest Hotel while paying spe-cial attention — even sexual —to ladies of a certain age. Whenone of his conquests leaves hima priceless painting in her will,it thrusts Gustave and his lobby

boy, the young Zero (Tony Re-volori), into a chain of eventsthat eventually involves jail, anescape, a murder and variousother plot points that seemthrown in at random.

Through all that, keepingtrack of the goings-on becomesmore burdensome than enjoy-able, which coincides with thegradual diminution of thefilm’s funny bits.

What began as fun ends aswork.

Fox Searchlight Pictures

Monsieur Gustave (Ralph Fiennes, left) takes on the young Zero (Tony Revolori) as a hotel lobby boy in “The Grand

Budapest Hotel,” directed by Wes Anderson.

The Grand

Budapest Hotel

Rated R, 99 minutes.

Opens Friday at the Landmark

Magnolia in Dallas. Opens March

21 at regional theaters.

Precious lot of whimsyAnderson’s ‘Grand Budapest’ startsout promising, devolves into sillinessBy Boo AllenFilm Critic

[email protected]

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9Denton

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COVER STORY

Wild Bill looks like the kind of guy who’d elbow his way to thefront of a Brutal Juice show. Even from afar, Bill — the hip-hop brainchild of Denton’s Billy Ayers — cuts a Goliath-size

figure. He stands well above 6 feet tall (maybe well above 6-foot-6),sports a pair of warrior Saxon shoulders and long red hair.

But Wild Bill is also a 20-something, which means he’s heard hisshare of hip-hop music — enough to have an incredibly reflexive sense

Photos by Lucinda Breeding/DRC

ABOVE: Wild Bill kept

verses coming fast and

furious without a fumble

at a beats and rap battle

at Hailey’s Club on

March 1. He wasn’t com-

peting, but was featured

in a short show.

Wild man

Bill Ayers brings toughness and smarts to the mic as Wild Bill

See WILD BILL on 10

By Lucinda Breeding | Features Editor

[email protected]

LEFT: Before he started

rapping, Wild Bill shared

a text his mother had

sent wishing him good

luck.

Page 10: March 13 Denton Time 2014

10Denton

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DINING

RESTAURANTS

AMERICAN CUISINECentral Grill 1005 Ave. C. 940-323-9464.Dusty’s Bar and Grill Laid-back barjust off the Square serves a belt-busting burger and fries, a kitchenhomily for meat and cheese lovers.Kitchen open throughout businesshours. 119 S. Elm St. Daily noon-2am.$-$$. 940-243-7300. www.dustysbar.com.Hooligans 104 N. Locust St. 940-442-6950. www.hooligansonline.com.The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.The Loophole Square staple hascharming menu with cleverly nameditems, like Misdemeanor and Felonynachos. Decent range of burgers. 119W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; foodserved until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.940-565-0770. www.loopholepub.com.Pourhouse Sports Grill Classysports bar and restaurant boastslarge TVs and a theater-style mediaroom and serves burgers, pizza,salads and generous main courses.Full bar. 3350 Unicorn Lake Blvd.Sun-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-12. $-$$.940-484-7455.Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games onbig screens plus some pretty bigtastes, too. Now open for lunch. Forfinger food, roll chicken chipotle andbattered jalapeno and onion strips arestandouts. Homestyle burgers; savoryCaesar salad with chicken. Full bar.2000 W. University Drive. Daily11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’tChicken” is what the eatery claims,though the menu kindly includes it ona sandwich and in a wing basket —plus barbecue, burgers and hangoutappetizers (cheese fries, tamales, andqueso and chips). Beer. 113 IndustrialSt. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $. 940-382-4227.www.roosters-roadhouse.com.RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 DallasDrive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.Sweetwater Grill & Tavern It mayclaim a place among the world’s othermemorable pubs, rathskellers, hang-outs and haunts where the foodsatisfies as much as the libations thatwash them down. 115 S. Elm St.Tues-Sat 11-2am, Sun-Mon 11-mid-night. $-$$. 940-484-2888.www.sweetwatergrillandtavern.com.II Charlies Bar & Grill 809 SunsetSt. 940-891-1100.

ASIANGobi Mongolian Grill and Asian

Diner 717 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-387-6666.Mr. Chopsticks This pan-Asianeatery does a little Chinese, Japanese,Thai and even Indian food. Offers aplethora of tasty appetizers andentrees. Many vegetarian dishes(some with egg). Beer and wine. 1633Scripture St. Mon-Sat 11-10, Sun11:30-9. $-$$. 940-382-5437.

BARBECUEClint’s BBQ Barbecue spot serves up

Continued on Page 11

of rhythm and a keen ear forflow. And now he’s the voice andthe character behind two solidalbums — Tommy Pickles andthe more recent Rico Dyna-

mite. Ayers was born and raised in

North Carolina. He rolled intoTexas at age 20. To play football.In other words, Ayers was put-ting his impressive height andintimidating wingspan to godlyuse.

“I figured if I was going tomake football my thing, Texaswas a good bet. They make mov-ies about football here,” Ayerssaid.

The thing is, Ayers was afootball player and an indepen-dent thinker. Football and hispreferences were the center-piece of his four-year plan.

“Through four separate uni-versities, junior colleges, gettingkicked out for disciplinary rea-sons, never grades — I was re-moved from four different foot-ball teams and four differentschools while still rapping. Thatkind of stayed consistent,” hesaid.

Wait. Before you start sizingWild Bill up as a petty criminalor enfant terrible, it wasn’t likethat.

“Let me rephrase,” he saidwhen asked about a police re-cord. “By disciplinary reasons, Imean like at one point in time Iwas attending a Baptist univer-sity, and they were incrediblystrict. And I did things like neverattend chapel. Not once. Like, somuch so that the dean cited meand I had to go meet with him. Itwas like a credit to graduate.”

He intended to transfer andgraduate from a different school,prolonging “all the things I likedto do.” Rapping was a hobby forhim. He was bounced from an-other team when he declined togive a urine sample for a drugtest — one of many stubbornwhiffs of libertarianism from theartist.

Then, Billy Ayers got drunkand “had kind of a freak acci-dent” in San Marcos that rippedclean through the three big liga-ments that move the knee andeverything below it.

“That put me immediately onbed rest after three surgeries,” hesaid.

Wild Bill was born in thatsickbed.

“I wrote all of Tommy Pick-les on painkillers, smok-

ing weed in the bed over thecourse of 60 days,” he said. “I waswriting like a verse a day. Andthen at the end of it I was like,‘Wow, I got like 30 songs worthof material.’”

The grind began. He sharedthe verses with his buddy andbeat maker, Ben Waid. Theyfloated the album to people whoknew of Ayers and his rappinghobby. It got an “OK” response.Ayers worked up his set and per-formed in San Marcos and thencame back to Denton.

“Denton is the best trainingground,” said Pudge Brewer, FabDeuce’s lyrical linchpin who isboth mentor and manager toWild Bill. “You can do a couple ofshows a week here, do a bunchof shows.”

Wild Bill the MC is both ahip-hop wunderkind — smart

rhymes peppered with cleverpop culture references just rolloff his tongue — and a protege ofDenton hip-hop institution FabDeuce. Denton’s national repu-tation often is framed throughindie-folk outfit Midlake, andjust as often for mall rockersBowling for Soup. But the city’ship-hop scene is fierce. You haveto have confidence and game, orthe competition rolls over youwithout even feeling the bump.

With Brewer managing WildBill’s North Texas musicalfreight, crews like Fab Deuce,Rec League and the likes of SanFrancisco’s ridiculously talentedQm are at Wild Bill’s disposal.Those crews stand by being inperpetual motion. To stay aliveand relevant, Denton hip-hopartists need to challenge them-selves to write better and workwith artists who won’t cut youslack.

“There’s people like FabDeuce and AV [the Great] whoare good in Denton,” Ayers said.“And then there is a great groupof hip-hop people that all prob-ably consider themselves in thesame echelon as Fab Deuce andAV, and consider themselves

great and Denton legends, butthey’re really not. I think thatkind of stuff is [shoddy] and awaste of time.

“Just rap good. I don’t careabout your hustle. I just haterappers who suck.”

Where Tommy Pickles isbrimming with attitude andrapid-fire pop culture referenc-es, Rico Dynamite is more fo-cused, even in its irreverence. Itgets started with a blaze ofhorns, bass-heavy beats andmore confidence. On Rico — thetitle is a hat tip to Napoleon Dy-

namite’s Uncle Rico —Wild Bill is still dedicated togood times, but there’s a moremature authority to it all. Where

Tommy Pickles wearsits written-in-a-haze-pot-smokebuzz proudly, Rico is deeper, po-etical. The party boy is gone. Atthis party, Wild Bill is the boss.

The artist admits that he haslittle patience when it comes togiving a track, beat or line hisseal of approval. That applies tohis music and everyone else’s.

“People like music thatsounds good, makes them feelgood. But they also like musicthat is authentic,” Ayers said. “Ithink that makes the best well-rounded projects. … Ben Waidwill generally send me 10[beats], and I’ll have like five orsix songs. It needs to catch theear of the listener. I probably ama bit of a troll in rap music — Ihate a lot. I’ll listen to 30 secondsand I’m like, ‘I hate it.’ Even ifthey’re like, ‘Dude, it gets amaz-ing after 35 seconds.’”

LUCINDA BREEDING canbe reached at 940-566-6877.Her e-mail address [email protected].

From Page 9

Wild Bill

Wild Bill10 p.m. Monday at Hailey’s Club, 122W. Mulberry St. Doors open at 9 p.m.No cover for ages 21 and older, $5 for

ages 18-20.

TRACK BY TRACK: WILD BILL“Crawford” — This searing-hot track is among the best of the criminallyoverlooked Tommy Pickles. The big, fat verses get better verse onverse, chorus for chorus. Check this out: “Sleepin’ on a jet plane/Too muchdro’ and too much champagne/I don’t really care where we land, I’m gon’hop out and still be the man.” That would be a reference to the iconic folktrio Peter, Paul and Mary — ancient history for a cat Wild Bill’s age.“Crawford” ticks off the box for puffed-chest braggadocio, then moves onto claim the rapper’s space among the other junkyard dogs: “Oh no, checkyour HMO. I’m certain your provider not coverin’ suicide and definitely notthis assault.”

“Erik Deker” — Everything about this track from Tommy Pickles

should strain your red-blooded American eye-roll muscles if you’re likeLorde and “over being told to throw my hands in the air.” It’s a song aboutWild Bill gaming the hip-hop system so good that “I’ma marry a model,like Eric Decker do.” It’s that old hip-hop saw, a fiefdom where all thechieftains are male and all the women are slight variations of the madden-ing cardboard cutout: cute face, slim waist with a big behind. But thenWild Bill pulls a fast one on us: “Pardon the appearance, your playa clear-ance got revoked, fool. Guess the ‘massah’ couldn’t see it while he wasgettin’ choked. … Big lurch lurkin’, eatin’ up your ‘who’s who,’ funky likeJimmy, children of the voodoo.” It’s Wild Bill who’s the outsider, scrappingfor the credibility he earns with good poetry. (If you want to assume the“come at me bro” posture with Wild Bill? Vaya con Dios.)

“Poptart” — The standout track of Rico Dynamite is evidence thatWild Bill can take a risk on an unlikely beat and go places lyrically. “In-telligent rap, we call it smart-hop, and you all wanna see the tart pop.” Hethrows Lymel Bivens into the track, too. Bivens’ verse is more organicthan Wild Bill’s incisive, hyper-literate writing. It adds the needed buoyan-cy to Bill’s lyrical weight — which is as substantial as the man himself.

— Lucinda Breeding

“People like music

that sounds good,

makes them feel

good. But they also

like music that is

authentic. I think

that makes the

best well-rounded

projects.”— Wild Bill,

a.k.a. Bill Ayers

Page 11: March 13 Denton Time 2014

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brisket, ribs, pulled pork, sausage,chicken and breakfast too. 921 S. U.S.Highway 377, Aubrey. Tues-Thurs6am-8pm; Fri-Sat 6am-9pm; Sun6am-3pm. 940-365-9338.www.clintsbbq.com.Gold Mine BBQ 222 W. Hickory St.,Suite 102. 940-387-4999. www.tex-asgoldminebbq.com.Metzler’s Bar-B-Q Much more thana barbecue joint, with wine and beershop, deli with German foods andmore. Smoked turkey is lean yet juicy;generous doses of delightful barbe-cue sauce. Tender, well-priced chick-en-fried steak. Hot sausage samplerhas a secret weapon: spicy mustard.Beer and wine. 628 LondonderryLane. Daily 10:30am-10pm. $. 940-591-1652.Old House BBQ 1007 Ave. C. 940-383-3536.The Smokehouse Denton barbecuejoint serves up surprisingly tender andjuicy beef, pork, chicken and catfish.Good sauces, bulky sandwiches andmashed potatoes near perfection.Good pies and cobblers. Beer andwine. 1123 Fort Worth Drive. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-566-3073.

BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Bistro Gourmet sandwichesand salads, breakfast items, coffeeand espresso. Beer and wine. 219 W.Oak St. Daily 10am-midnight. $.940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter.com.Bochy’s Bistro Fusion menu grabselements of European cuisines withmany salad and sandwich selections.Winning Greek chicken lisi panini.Artful desserts: tuxedo cake, creamcheese brownie. 2430 I-35E, Suite136. Mon-Thurs 8-3, Fri-Sat 8-9, Sunbrunch 8-3. $$. 940-387-3354.www.bochys.com.Cachette Bistro 144 N. Old TownBlvd., Suite 1, Argyle. Mon-Fri7:30am-5pm, Sat 8am-3pm. 940-464-3041. www.cachettebistro.com.The Chestnut Tree Salads, sand-wiches, soups and other lunch andbrunch options served in back ofsmall shop on the Square. Chickenpot pie is stellar. Tasty quiche. Deca-dent fudge lava cake and rich carrotcake. Revolving dinner menu. 107 W.Hickory St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat5:30-9pm. $-$$. 940-591-9475.www.chestnuttearoom.com.Sidewalk Bistro 2900 Wind RiverLane, Suite 132. Sun-Mon 7am-3pm,Tues-Sat 7am-9pm. 940-591-1999.www.sidewalk-bistro.com.

BRITISHThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & PubFull bar. 101 W. Hickory St. Sun-Wed11-10, Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.940-566-5483.

BRUNCHCups and Crepes Eatery serves upboth traditional American and Europe-an breakfasts and lunch. Get biscuitsand gravy or test a crepe filled withrich hazelnut spread. Specialty cof-fees. 309 Fry St. Tues-Sun 8am-3pm.$. 940-387-1696.Loco Cafe Casual breakfast/lunch

cafe that’s a sister restaurant to theGreenhouse Restaurant across thestreet. Signature plate is the LocoMoco: stacked hash browns toppedwith eggs, cheese, salsa or gravy witha fresh biscuit. 603 N. Locust St.Mon-Fri 6am-2pm; Sat-Sun 7am-3pm.$-$$. 940-387-1413.Royal’s Bagels & Deli 503 W.University Drive. Daily 6:30am-2pm.$. 940-808-1009. www.facebook.com/RoyalsBagels.Seven Mile Cafe Breakfast, brunchand lunch spot, including veganoptions. 311 W. Congress St. Daily7am-3pm. 940-808-0200. www.sevenmilecafe.com.

CHINESEBuffet King Dining spot serves morethan 200 items of Chinese cuisine,Mongolian grill and sushi. 2251 S.Loop 288. Mon-Thurs 11-9:30, Fri-Sat11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$. 940-387-0888.Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffetguarantees no visit need taste likeanother. Beer and wine. 2317 W.University Drive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri11-10, Sat 11:30-10, Sun 11:30-10. $.940-382-8797.Golden China Small restaurantboasts quick and friendly service.Beer and wine. 717 I-35E, Suite 100.Daily 11-10. $. 940-566-5588.Taipei Railroad Restaurant 4405Pockrus Paige Road. Mon-Sat 5-9pm.940-387-3871.

ECLECTICBears Den Food Safari Dine withtwo rescued bears at SharkarosaWildlife Ranch’s restaurant, specializ-ing in brick oven pizza. Full bar. 11670Massey Road, Pilot Point. Tues-Fri5-9pm, Sat 11am-10pm, Sun 11am-4pm.$-$$. 940-686-5600. www.bears-dentexas.com.The Club at Gateway Center

Three-course meal for $7.50 atrestaurant run by hospitality manage-ment students. Spring season runsthrough April 25. Reservations recom-mended. For schedule and menu, visithttp://cmht.unt.edu/theclub. In UNT’s

Gateway Center across from FoutsField. Mon-Fri, with seating11am-12:15pm. $. 940-565-4144.All About Mac This “macaroni andcheese emporium” near UNT offersmore than two dozen flavors. 1206 W.Hickory St. Sun-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat11am-3am. 940-808-1003. www.allaboutmacrestaurants.com.

FINE DININGThe Great American Grill at HiltonGarden Inn, 3110 Colorado Blvd.Dinner: Daily 5-10pm. 940-891-4700.The Greenhouse Restaurant

Casual dining atmosphere comple-ments fresh seafood, beef and chick-en from the grill. Even vegetarianselections get a flavor boost from thewoodpile. Starters are rich: spinach-artichoke dip, asiago olives. Refinedcocktails and rich desserts. Patiodining available. 600 N. Locust St.Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri 11-11, Sat 12-11, Sunnoon-9 (bar stays open later). $-$$.940-484-1349. www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hannah’s Off the Square Exec-utive chef Sheena Croft’s “upscalecomfort food” puts the focus on local,seasonal ingredients. Steaks getA-plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.No checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Lunch:Mon-Sat 11-3. Brunch: Sun10:30am-3pm. Dinner: Sun-Mon4:30-9; Tues-Thurs 4:30-10; Fri-Sat4:30-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.www.hannahsoffthesquare.com.Queenie’s Steakhouse Chef TimLove’s steakhouse just off the down-town Square. Live jazz nightly. Fullbar. 115 E. Hickory St. Lunch: Fri11:30-2:30. Dinner: Wed-Thurs 4:30-10pm, Fri-Sat 4:30-11pm. $$-$$$.940-442-6834. www.queeniessteak-house.com.The Wildwood Inn Elegant diningroom tucked away in a bed andbreakfast. Excellent food like heartysoups, Angus rib-eye, meal-sizesalads and daily specials. Beer andwine. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.Thurs-Sat 6-10pm. $$$. 940-243-4919. www.denton-wildwoodinn.com.

GREEK/MEDITERRANEANCaesar Island Mediterranean

Food 7650 S. I-35E, Suite 112, Corinth.940-269-4370.Jasmine’s Mediterranean Grill

and Hookah Lounge 801 Sunset St.Sun-Thurs 11am-1am, Fri-Sat11am-2am. 940-898-1800. http://jasminemedcafe.com.Michael’s Kitchen Family-ownedrestaurant offers a Greek/Lebanesemenu — hummus, gyros, dolmas andkafta — plus American food, for allthree meals. Breakfast buffet week-days. BYOB. 706 Fort Worth Drive.Daily 5:30am-10pm. $. 940-382-3663.www.michaelskitchengreek.com.Yummy’s Greek Restaurant

Small eatery with wonderful food.Tasty salads, hummus, falafel, dolmasand kebabs. Good veggie plate andgyros. Yummy cheesecake andbaklava. BYOB. 210 W. UniversityDrive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10,Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-383-2441.

HAMBURGERSBurger Time Machine 301 W.University Drive. 940-384-1133.Cool Beans Funky atmosphere in oldbuilding. Menu offers foodstuffs thatgo well with a cold beer — friedthings, nachos, hamburgers, etc.Veggie burger too dependent on salt,but good fries are crispy with skin stillattached. Full bar. 1210 W. Hickory St.Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-7025.Denton County Independent

Hamburger Co. Custom-builtburgers with a juicy, generous patty,fresh fixings on a worthy bun. Alsoavailable: chicken sandwich andlimited salad bar. Beer. 715 Sunset St.Mon-Sat 11-8. $. 940-382-3037.Lone Star Attitude Burger Co.

Gourmet burgers, sandwiches, saladsand more in a joint that doubles as ashrine to Texas music and has arooftop view of the Square. Full bar.113 W. Hickory St. Mon-Wed 11am-midnight, Thurs-Sat 11am-2am, Sun11am-midnight. $-$$. 940-383-1022.www.lsaburger.com.Mr. Frosty Old-timey joint has all

your fast-food faves but with home-made quality, including its own rootbeer. Atmosphere and jukebox takeyou back to the ’50s. 1002 Fort WorthDrive. Tues-Sun 11am-11pm. $. 940-387-5449.RG Burgers & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,Suite 172. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10.940-383-2431. www.bochys.com/rgs.html.

HOME COOKINGBabe’s Chicken Dinner House

204 N. Fourth St., Sanger. Tues-Fri4:30-9pm, Sat 11-9 and Sun 11-3. $-$$.940-458-0000.Bonnie’s Kitchen 6420 N. I-35.940-383-1455.Cartwright’s Ranch House Res-taurant on the Square serves break-fast, lunch and dinner, featuringchicken-fried steak, hamburgers andsteaks. Family-style service available.111 N. Elm St. 940-387-7706.www.cartwrightsranchhouse.com.Jay’s Cafe 110 W. Main St., PilotPoint. 940-686-0158.OldWest Cafe As winner of the BestBreakfast and Best Homestyle Cook-ing titles in Best of Denton 2009through 2013, this eatery offers awide selection of homemade meals.Denton location: 1020 Dallas Drive.Mon-Sat 6am-2pm, Sun 7am-2pm. $.940-382-8220. Sanger location: 711 N.Fifth St. Daily 7am-2pm. 940-458-7358. 817-442-9378.Prairie House Restaurant Opensince 1989, this Texas eatery servesup mesquite-grilled steaks, baby-backribs, buffalo burgers, chicken-friedrib-eyes and other assorted dishes.10001 U.S. Highway 380, Cross Roads.Daily 7:30am-10pm. $-$$. 940-440-9760. www.phtexas.com.

INDIANBawarchi Biryani Point 909 Ave.C. 940-898-8889. www.bawarchibiryanipoint.com.Rasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housedin a converted gas station, this Indian

DININGContinued from Page 10

Continued on Page 12

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$5.00 Off ANY CHECK OF $20 OR MOREOne coupon, per check, per visit. Not valid with any other coupons or promotional offers. Coupon has no cash value. No change returned. Taxes and gratuity not included. Alcoholic beverages not included. Valid at participating Denny’s restaurants. Selection and prices may vary. Only original coupon accepted. Photocopied and Internet printed or purchased coupons are not valid. No substitutions. © 2012 DFO, LLC. Printed in U.S.A. Offer ends 3/31/14.

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20% Off ENTIRE GUEST CHECKOne coupon, per check, per visit. Not valid with any other coupons or promotional offers. Coupon has no cash value. No change returned. Taxes and gratuity not included. Alcoholic beverages not included. Valid at participating Denny’s restaurants. Selection and prices may vary. Only original coupon accepted. Photocopied and Internet printed or purchased coupons are not valid. No substitutions. © 2012 DFO, LLC. Printed in U.S.A. Offer ends 3/31/14.

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dining spot offers a small but careful-ly prepared buffet menu of curries(both meat and vegetarian), beans,basmati rice and samosas. 1002 Ave.C. Daily 11am-9:30pm. $. 940-566-6125.

ITALIANAviano Italian Restaurant Tradi-tional Italian fare, including lasagna,pastas with meat and marinarasauces. Lunch specials till 2 p.m. onweekdays. BYOB. 5246 S. U.S. High-way 377, Aubrey. Mon-Thurs11am-9pm, Fri & Sat 11am-10pm. $.940-365-2322.Bagheri’s 1125 E. University Drive,Suite A. 940-382-4442.Don Camillo Garlic gets servedstraight up at family-owned restau-rant that freely adapts rustic Italiandishes with plenty of Americanimagination. 1400 N. Corinth St., Suite103, Corinth. Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9;Thurs-Sat 11-2:30, 5-10. 940-321-1100.Fera’s Excellent entrees servedbubbling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastasand billowing garlic rolls. Dishesserved very fresh. Desserts don’tdisappoint. Beer and wine. No creditcards. 1407 W. Oak St. 940-382-9577.Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$.Genti’s Pizza and Pasta 4451FM2181, Suite 125, Corinth. Mon-Sat11-10, Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-497-5400.Giuseppe’s Italian Restaurant

Romantic spot in bed and breakfastserves Northern Italian and SouthernFrench cuisine. Beer and wine. 821 N.Locust St. Mon-Thurs, 11-2, 5-9, Fri 11-2& 5-10, Sat 5-10. Sun 10:30-2. $-$$.940-381-2712.Luigi’s Pizza Italian Restaurant

Family-run spot does much more thanpizza, and how. Great New York-stylepies plus delicious southern Italiandishes, from lunch specials to priciermeals. Nifty kids’ menu. Tiramisu isdynamite. Beer and wine. 2317 W.University Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988.

JAPANESEHaru Sushi & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,Suite 126. 940-383-3288.I Love Sushi 917 Sunset St. Mon-Thurs 11am-3pm & 5-10pm, Fri11am-3pm & 5-10:30pm; Satnoon-10:30pm; Sun 12:30-9pm. $$.940-891-6060.J Sushi 1400 S. Loop 288, Suite 100.940-387-8833. jsushibar.com.Keiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Naganoturns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yellow-tail and tuna into sashimi. Daily fishspecials and pasta dishes served withan Asian flair. Homemade tiramisuand fruit sorbets. Reservations rec-ommended. Wine and beer. 500 N.Elm St. Tues-Sat 5-11. $$-$$$. 940-382-7505.Shogun Steakhouse & Sushi Bar

3606 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-382-7800.Sushi Cafe 1401 W. Oak St. 940-380-1030.

KOREANCzen 408 North Texas Blvd. 940-383-2387.

MEXICAN/TEX-MEXCasa Galaviz Comfortable, homeyatmosphere at small, diner-stylerestaurant that caters to the morningand noon crowd. Known for home-made flour tortillas and authenticMexican dishes from barbacoa tomenudo. BYOB. 508 S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 7-7; Sat-Sun 7-5. $. 940-387-2675.Chilitos Delicious guacamole; albon-digas soup rich with chunky vegeta-bles and big, tender meatballs. Stand-out: savory pork carnitas. Attentive,friendly staff. Menudo on weekends,breakfast anytime. Daily lunch spe-cials. Full bar. 621 S. Lake Dallas Drive,Lake Dallas. Mon-Fri 11-9, Sat 10-9.$-$$. 940-321-5522.El Chaparral Grille Restaurantserves a duo of American and Mex-ican-style dishes for breakfast, lunchand catering events. Daily specials,and breakfast buffet on Sundays. 324E. McKinney St., Suite 102. Mon-Fri7am-2pm; Sun 8am-2pm. $. 940-243-1313.El Guapo’s Huge menu encompass-es Tex-Mex and Mexican standardsas well as ribs, brisket and twists likeSantana’s Supernatural Quesadillas(fajita chicken and bacon) and jalape-no-stuffed shrimp. Ilada Parilla Asadasteak with avocado was a little salty;enchiladas are very good. Full bar. 419S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat-Sun 11-11.$$. 940-566-5575.Fuzzy’s Taco Shop Eatery stakesclaim of wide variety in local tacoterritory. Beer, wine and margaritas.$. Multiple locations. DowntownDenton: 115 Industrial St. Mon-Tues6:30am-10pm, Wed 6:30am-11pm,Thurs 6:30am-midnight, Fri-Sat7am-2am, Sun 6:30am-10pm. 940-380-8226. I-35E location: 2412 S.I-35E, 940-488-4779.La Estrella Mini Market 602 E.McKinney St. 940-566-3405.La Mexicana Strictly authenticMexican with enough Tex-Mex tokeep locals happy. Chili relleno is awinner, with earthy beans and rice.Chicken enchiladas are complex,savory. Also available: more than adozen seafood dishes, and menudoserved daily. Swift service with plentyof smiles. Beer. 619 S. Locust St. Daily9-10. $. 940-483-8019.La Milpa Mexican Restaurant

820 S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-8470.Los Toreros 2900 Wind River Lane,Suite 134. Sun-Thurs 11am-9:30pm;Fri-Sat 11am-midnight. 940-390-7693.Mazatlan Mexican Restaurant

Authentic Mexican dining includesworthy chicken enchiladas andflautas. Fine standard combo choicesand breakfast items with reasonableprices. Quick service. Beer and wine.1928 N. Ruddell St. Tues-Fri 11-9:30,Sat 8am-9:30pm, Sun 8-4. $. 940-566-1718.Mi Casita Mexican Food Fresh,tasty, no-frills Tex-Mex at goodprices. Tacos, fajitas, quesadillas,chalupas and more plus daily specialsand breakfast offerings. Fast andfriendly service. Beer and wine. 110 N.Carroll Blvd. Mon-Sat 7am-9pm. $.940-891-1932. Mi Casita Express: 905W. University Drive, 940-891-1938. MiCasita: 2221 S. I-35E, 940-891-1500.Miguelito’s Mexican Restaurant

The basics: brisk service, familyatmosphere and essential selections

at a reasonable price. Sopapillas andflan are winners. Beer and margaritas.1412 N. Stemmons St., Sanger. 940-458-0073.Mi Ranchito Small, family-operated,authentic Tex-Mex spot with $5.50lunch specials Tues-Fri. Beer. 122 FortWorth Drive. Tues-Thurs 11am-3pm,5-9:30pm; Fri-Sun 11-10. $. 940-381-1167.Raphael’s Restaurante Mex-

icano Not your standard Tex-Mex —worth the drive. Sampler appetizercomes with crunchy chicken flautas,fresh guacamole. Pechuga (grilledchicken breast) in creme good to thelast bite, and beef fajitas are juicy andflavorful. Full bar. 26615 U.S. 380 East,Aubrey. Tues-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$.940-440-9483.Rusty Taco 210 E. Hickory St. 940-483-8226. www.therustytaco.com.Taco Lady 1101 E. McKinney St.940-380-8188.Taqueria El Picante 1305 KnightSt., Suite A. Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat-Sun 8-5.940-382-2100.Tortilleria Tierra Caliente 1607 E.McKinney St., Suite 800. 940-591-6807.Tortilleria La Sabrocita 201 DallasDrive. 940-382-0720.Veronica’s Cafe 803 E. McKinneySt. 940-565-9809.Villa Grande Mexican Restau-

rant 12000 U.S. 380 East, CrossRoads. 940-365-1700. Denton loca-tion: 2530 W. University Drive, 940-382-6416.

MIDDLE EASTERNGreen Zatar Family-owned restau-rant/market does it all from scratch,and with speed. Meats like gyros andsucculent Sultani Kebab, plus veggiecombo and crunchy falafel. Superbsaffron rice and sauteed vegetables;impressive baklava. BYOB. 609Sunset St. Daily 11-10. $-$$. 940-383-2051. www.greenzatar.com.

NATURAL/VEGETARIANThe Bowllery Rice, noodle andveggie bowls featuring sauces and

dressings made from scratch, withteriyaki and other meats as well asvegan and gluten-free options. Freshjuices and smoothies. 901 Ave. C,Suite 101. Tues-Sun 11am-9pm. $-$$.940-383-2695. http://thebowl-lery.com.Cupboard Natural Foods and

Cafe Cozy cafe inside food storeserves things the natural way. Win-ning salads; also good soups, smooth-ies and sandwiches, both with andwithout meat. Wonderful breakfastincluding tacos, quiche, muffins andmore. 200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat8-8, Sun 10-7. $. 940-387-5386.

PIZZABosses Pizza 420 E. McKinney St.Sun-Thurs 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat11am-11pm. 940-382-8537. www.bos-sespizza.com.Crooked Crust 101 Ave. A. 940-565-5999.J&J’s Pizza Bountiful, homemadepizza pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dishChicago style. Beer. 118 W. Oak St.940-382-7769. Mon-Sat 11am-mid-night. $-$$.Last Drop Tavern Neopolitan-stylepizzas cooked in a wood-burningoven. Food served Mon-Thurs11am-11pm, Fri-Sat 11am-midnight, Sunnoon-11pm. 508 S. Elm St. 940-808-1651. www.lastdroptavern.com.Mellow Mushroom 217 E. HickorySt. Sun-Wed 11am-10pm, Thurs-Sat11am-midnight. 940-323-1100.Palio’s Pizza Cafe 1716 S. Loop 288.940-387-1900.TJ’s Pizza Wings & Things 420 S.Carroll Blvd., Suite 102. 940-383-3333.

SANDWICHESNew York Sub-Way 305 W. Uni-versity Drive. 940-566-1823.New York Sub Hub Bread bakeddaily and fresh ingredients, evenavocado. “All Stops” features almostevery cold-cut imaginable. 906 Ave.C. Mon-Sat 10-10, Sun 11-10. 940-383-3213. Other locations: 1400 S. Loop288, Suites 102-2, in Denton Crossing;

Mon-Sun 10:30-10; 940-383-3233.4271 FM2181, No. 308, in Corinth;Mon-Sat 10:30-9, Sun 11-7; 940-497-2530.Weinberger’s Deli Chicago-stylesandwiches including the Italian beefbistro, sausages, gyros, soups andmore. 311 E. Hickory St., Suite 110.Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 10am-3pm.940-566-5900. www.weinbergers-deli.com.

SEAFOODDani Rae’s Gulf Coast Kitchen

2303 S. I-35E. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm,Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. 940-898-1404.Frilly’s Seafood Bayou Kitchen

Plenty of Cajun standards and Texasfusion plates. Everything gets plentyof spice — sometimes too much.Sides like jalapeno cornbread, redbeans and rice are extra. Beer andwine. 1925 Denison St. Sun-Thurs 11-9,Fri-Sat 11-9:30. $$. 940-243-2126.Hoochie’s Oyster House 207 S.Bell Ave. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm, Fri-Sat11am-10pm. 940-383-0104. http://hoochiesoysterhouse.com.

STEAKRanchman’s Cafe Legendary cafesticks to old-fashioned steaks andtradition. Oversized steaks anddelicious chicken-fried steak. Homeymeringue pies; order baked potatoahead. BYOB. 110 W. Bailey St., Pon-der. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10.$-$$$. 940-479-2221. www.ranchman.com.Trail Dust Steak House Informaldress (neckties will be clipped).Dance to live C&W. 26501 U.S. 380East, Aubrey. $$. 940-365-4440.www.trailduststeaks.net.

THAIAndaman Thai Restaurant Exten-sive menu continues trend of goodAsian food in Denton. Fried tofu is ahome run. Pad Thai noodles haveperfect amount of sweetness. Home-made coconut ice cream, sweet ricewith mango. Beer and wine. 221 E.Hickory St. Mon-Fri 11am-3pm &4-9:30pm; Sat-Sun noon-9:30pm. $$.940-591-8790. www.andamanthair-estaurant.com.Oriental Garden Restaurant Thaistir-fried dishes, with some Japaneseand Chinese specialties. Homemadeice cream: coconut, green tea, Thaitea & lychee. 114 Ave. B. Mon-Sat 11-9.$-$$. 940-387-3317.Thai Square Restaurant 209 W.Hickory St., Suite 104. Tues-Thurs11am-3pm & 5-9:30pm; Fri 11am-3pm& 5-10pm, Sat 11:30am-10pm, Sun11:30am-9pm. $$. 940-380-0671.www.thaisquaredenton.com.Sweet Basil Thai Bistro 1800 S.Loop 288, Suite 224. 940-484-6080.Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tastyas they are pretty. Lunch specials canbe made with chicken, pork, vegeta-bles or beef; hot and spicy saucemakes even veggie haters go afterfresh veggies with zeal. Quiet setting.BYOB. 1509 Malone St. Mon-Fri11am-3pm, 5-10pm; Sat 11:30-10; Sun11:30-9. $-$$. 940-566-6018.www.thaiochadenton.com.

VIETNAMESEViet Bites 702 S. Elm St. 940-808-1717. Mon-Thurs 11-8:30; Fri-Sun 11-9.www.vietbites.com.

DININGContinued from Page 11

Restaurant profiles andlistings are compiled by theDenton Record-Chronicle andThe Dallas Morning News. Acomprehensive list of Dallas-FortWorth area restaurants is avail-able at www.guidelive.com

Denton Time publishesrestaurant profiles and a guide ofrestaurants that have beenfeatured in the weekly diningsection and online at DentonRC-.com. Profiles and listings are notrelated to advertising and arepublished as space is available.Denton Time does not publishreviews.

Incorrect information can bereported by e-mail to [email protected], by phone to 940-566-

6860 or by fax to 940-566-6888.To be considered for a profile,

send the restaurant name,ad-dress, phone nuber, days andhours of operation and a copy ofthe menu to: Denton Time Editor,P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.Please indicate whether therestaurant is new or has changedownership, chefs or menus.

PRICE KEYAverage complete inner perperson, including appetizer,entree and dessert.

$ Less than $10

$$ $10-$25

$$$ $25-$50

$$$$ More than $50

DINING PROFILEAND LISTINGS POLICY

Page 13: March 13 Denton Time 2014

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businessopportunites

203

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APPLY NOW FOR: µ Order Pullers µ Welders/MIG & TIG µ Fitter/Welder µ Machine Operators µ Industrial Maintenance µ Quality/Mfg µ Forklift Operators(940) 442-6550

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Paid Training for Class B CDL, Driving Rate$13.00+ Hr (after training), School Holidays Off,Paid Personal/Sick Leave, Teacher RetirementService, Child Ride Along Program...

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Bookkeeper

Established commercialconstruction company in Dentonseeks Bookkeeper for AccountsPayable/Receivable processing

and general office help.

Skills required/preferred: • Commercial construction officeexperience - preferred • Job costing experience -preferred • Bookkeeping/accountingexperience - required • Software: QuickBooks, Word,Excel - required • Google docs - preferred

Interested and qualifiedapplicants please email resume

and salary requirements [email protected].

Please do not apply unless youpossess the required skills

listed above.

Busy wholesale gift companyin Gainesville, TX needs

Sales Assistant Must have experience

w/Excel, PowerPoint, goodorganizational skills, ability to

multi-task, excellent follow-through, attention to detail, &ability to travel to occasionaltrade show or appointment.

PhotoShop experience a plus.Email resume to

[email protected] or apply in

person at 1304 CorporateDrive, Gainesville, TX 76240.

Caregivers/CNAs NeededHourly or Live-in, 1 year exp

Required & Clean Background. Call 214-383-0555

CARE GIVERS Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care

Phone answered -Tues-Sat. 8 am - 6:30 pm

Call 940-783-4240

CLASS A CDL DRIVER2nd shift/local routePay $15.00 per hr.(940) 442-6550

CLASS A DRIVERS End Dump,Belly Dump Exp. Necessary. Paycompatible with exp. HOME everynight. 940-390-2331 or 940-391-

3485. Prefer fax resumes940-365-0202

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DELIVERY DRIVER/WAREHOUSE WORKER

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eoeInnovative Outcomes, Inc.

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Part-timeWeekends

- Part-time Painter

Positions available enhancing

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Apply in person:10a-3pmMon-Fri

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DENTAL: PT Front/Back personfor periodontal office in Denton. Marketing also. 940-384-7374 or

fax resumes to 940-384-7370

Denton County MHMRFront Desk, Medical Records,

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Disabled man needs morninghelp. Mon & Thurs 9:30am-12pm.Tues Wed & Fri 9:30am-11:30am.Lifting req’d Derek 940-591-8383

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DRIVER WANTED FOR LOCAL DELIVERIES Driving company truck with

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DRIVER -- Water Truck Drivers-- Class B CDL w/ Tanker Req’d.Apply 3020 Ft Worth Dr, Denton,online at www.jagoepublic.com,

or call 940-382-2581. EOE

DRIVING Positions Available At SPAN Transit

An exciting opportunity is nowavailable at SPAN Transit for

Part-Time Bus Operators.Training is expected to begin

as soon as qualified applicantsare selected.

Requirements:--Successful completion of police

background check--Successful completion of DOT

Physical/Drug Screen--....... Subject to Random Drug &

Alcohol Testing--Clean Driving Record

These are Part-Time positions,which will be filled upon selec-

tion of qualified applicants.Applicants must be available

from 6AM to 6PM. Please apply within at the

SPAN Transit Office at 1800Malone Street Denton, TX. EOE

ELECTRICAL HELPERS &CABLE PULLERS for Tempera-ture Control. 3-5 yr. Minimum

Experience. Some Travel Required. 469-203-7944.

Environ. Lab Denton.FT Office Admin. position. Gen.

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FT POOL TECH Must Have Good Driving Record.

Experience Helpful butNot Necessary.

Call 940-458-4981.

Full-time and Part-timeHOUSEKEEPERS needed.

Must be able to work any shift.Please apply in person

at Denton Travel Center6420 N I-35 exit 471 ask for Allie.

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE!

Full Time Horse Trailer RepairService Tech. Drug test required.Weld test & valid driver’s license.

Pilot Point Tx 940-686-3700.

Heavy Equipment

Mechanic 3 years experience with heavy

construction equipment; track repair & service;

hydraulics; provide own tools;clean driving record;

excellent wages and benefits;Contact 972-294-5000. EEO.

Henkels & McCoy is seekingexperienced DIRECTIONAL

BORE OPERATORS(must be familiar with Digitrakequipment, CDL preferable)BACKHOE OPERATORS,

LABORERS, FIELD MECHANICS and

AERIAL LINE PERSONS. CDL not necessary at time of

employment, but will be job requirement to gain after hire

(company will assist withprocess). Main office located inLewisville, Texas with possibility

of travel to jobsites in TX, OK, LA,& AR. Please fill out application at

515 Huffines Boulevard. (972) 512-2900 EEO

HVAC Service TechHVAC Technician.

Accepting resumes for experienced professional residential & commercial

service tech. Refrigeration &ice machine experience a plus

but not required. Excellentcompensation and benefitspackage. Mail Resume to:

Box # 201 C/O DentonPublishing Co., 314 E Hickory

St. Denton TX 76201or email to:

[email protected]

Insurance Agency is lookingfor PT CUST. SERV. REP.

Must have excellent phone andcommunication skills.

Exp not required but preferred.Will pay for licensing for the

right candidate. Email resume [email protected].

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job lists 340

poultry & supplies 427

Introducing ClickNBuyDentonRC.com/ads

Introducing ClickNBuyWhere Sellers & Buyers ConnectDentonRC.com/ads

Local physician

practice looking for

Certified Medical

Assistant for Back

Office. Experience

a plus. Fax resumes

to 940-381-0727

• 22 years minimum age;

• 2 years verifiable driving experience or

1 year of oil field driving experience;

• Class A CDL;

• Employee and Family health insurance

• Night shift premium

• Night shift bonus

• 401(k) Match

• Quarterly Bonuses

• Drawings for Rangers, Cowboys, Stars,

Maverick games and other events

Transport Drivers Needed

Hiring For Justin, Bridgeport and Jacksboro

CL

Equal Opportunity Employer

Call Danny @ 940.393.5525

RETAIL ADVERTISING OFFICE ASSISTANT -

PART TIME

• Advertising or design and electronic media experience is helpful

• Minimum of two years prior offi ce work experience

• Good math, grammar, spelling experience are musts

• Well-organized, multi-task oriented, able to work under pressure of multiple

deadlines

• Good working knowledge of Microsoft Offi ce

• Excellent customer service skills

• Must possess great telephone skills and speak in a clear, easily understood voice

• A pleasant, outgoing personality with a professional appearance and demeanor

Tuesday - Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. $8.00 per hour.

Applications may be completed at

314 E. Hickory St., Denton,

or Email resume to [email protected]

DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE

www.dentonrc.com

EOE

CK

Local Physician

Practice looking for:

Front Office/

Receptionist

Experience a plus.

Fax Resume to

940-381-0727Looking for a FT DUMP TRUCKDRIVER. Class B CDL. Current

Medical Card. Clean DrivingRecord. Experience Preferred but

Will Train. Collinsville, TX. Callfor More Details. 540-840-1960.

LOOKING FOR CLASS ACDL DRIVER. At least

1 yr Experience. LOCAL ROUTE.Contact 940-594-2934.

Looking for CLASS B CDLDRIVER FOR DUMP TRUCK .

Tri-Axel. Local, Good Pay,At Least 2 yrs Experience.NG Trucking. Denton, TX.

Call 940-368-3692.

Maintenance Personnel neededfor Mobile Home subdivision inPonder/Justin Area. Must beexperienced in all phases andhave tools and transportation.

Must be HVAC certified.Apply at: 5772 Tim Donald Rd,

Justin or call 940-648-5263

Make $16-$18/hr, M-F,Cleaning Houses!Own Transportation.

Please Call 214-855-7189.

Make Ready/Maintenance Part Time. Position may requirereliable transportation & own toolsTravel is within Denton city limits

Email resume to:[email protected]

MCCLAINS RV IN DENTON ISLOOKING FOR RV TECH. Sign On Bonus Depending

on Qualifications. $250.00 to S1000.00.

Call Pat 940-498-4315.

NORTHSTAR BANKDenton:

Customer Service RepLewisville:

Branch Operations Manager,Part-Time Teller 2:00-6:00pm

Grapevine:Teller 9:00am-6:00pm

Colleyville:P-T Teller 10:00-2:00pm

Flower Mound coming soon:Personal Banker, Teller

Supervisor, Part-time Tellers,New Accounts

Experience required; EOE.Resume to [email protected]

For details go to:www.nstarbank.com, “Careers”

Now accepting applications for Fuel Desk Cashiers,

Deli Cashiers and Prep Cooksfor our Deli inside the Store.

Must be able to work any shift in a24 hour period.

Please apply in person @ Denton Travel Center

6420 North I-35 Denton, Tx76207 exit 471. Responding applicants please ask for

Jennifer. NO PHONE CALLSPLEASE.

NOW HIRING FOR LOCALDENTON COMPANY

Immediate Openings forMachine Operators

WeldersFitter WeldersAssemblers

Maintenance MechanicsForklift Operators

Must be Willing to WorkAny Shift. Call Today!

940-312-7347.

Opportunities

Available!

APPLY ONLINE ATwww.highlandvillage.org

Human Resources1000 Highland Village RdHighland Village TX 75077

Phone: 972-899-5087EOE0500

PROPERTY MANAGERneeded for Denton County

Property Management. Contract to hire. Part time to fullTime. Texas Real Estate License

required. Work requires someevenings & weekends. Must bedetail oriented. Prior property management experience aplus.Must reside in Denton

County,TX. Email resume & infoto:[email protected]

PT Cable, Phone &

internet Order Entry

Day shift available.

Bilinguals also. No

selling. Earn up to

$9.50/hr. Integrated

Alliance, 5800 N.

I35, Ste. 200B, Den-

ton, Tx. Application

hours start at 10am

SALESPERSON NeededEarn up to 60k a year.Bilingual is a big plus.

Send resume to [email protected] or fax 940-479-9002

SERVERS Needed. Must beable to work any shift.

Apply in person atBonnie’s Kitchen locatedinside TA Travel Center at6420 N I-35 Denton Texas

76207. Ask for Dennis.

CI

Has an Immediate Opening for

PARTS

DELIVERY DRIVERFull-time position 8a–4p Mon–Fri

$9 hour to start. Benefi ts/401k.

Must be able to lift up to 50lbs and pass drug

screen and background/driving check. Contact

Phillip at [email protected]

Classic Chrysler Jeep Dodge Mazda

4984 South I35 EDenton, TX

EOE

Supervisor positions

Cable Order Entry

Call Center.

1 yr management experience.Multi tasking. Proficient in

written communication skills. Excellent customer service care.Good listener. Micro managing

target service factors.

INTEGRATED ALLIANCE5800 N. I35, Ste. 200B,

Denton, Tx. Application hoursstart at 10am or email:

[email protected]

TELEPHONE SALES earn up to$22/hr PLUS BONUSES . Must

have own transportation.Please call Cindy at

940-483-8548.

Travel Centers of America @6420 N I-35 Denton, Tx exit 471is seeking Full Time GROUNDSMAINTENANCE PERSONNEL.

Please apply in person and askfor Allie. NO PHONE CALLS

PLEASE.

Tuxedo Junction is NowHiring Part Time & Full TimeEmployees in our GrapevineOrder Processing Plant. Will

Train. Call Maria 817-421-1007.

Universal Worker

- C.N.A.Seeking 1 PT C.N.A. to work

in our Assisted Living Depart-ment. This is a double week-

end position. Must have acurrent TX CNA license. Musthave 6 months experience as a

C.N.A. Must enjoy workingwith older adults in a long term

care facility.

All qualified applicants will receiveconsideration without regard to

race, color, religion, sex, nationalorigin, disability or protected

veteran status.

You can apply at www.good-sam.com

VRC in Argyle has Openingsfor a FULL TIME DESKTOP

INVESTIGATOR &ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT.

Good computer skills, ability tomulti task & problem solve.

Clean criminal record & validdrivers license a must.

$10/hour. Send Resume [email protected].

WELDERS NEEDED!!!MIG & TIGFitter/Welders2nd shifts$13 + PER HR.Denton & Lewisville(940) 442-6550

ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.Consideration should be givenbefore making a financialcommittment. Please be awareof long distance charges, appli-cation fees, & credit card infoyou provide. Books/lists ofjobs do not guarantee employ-ment or that applicants will bequalified for jobs listed.

WANT TO BE AFIREFIGHTER?

in Less Than 6 Months?Texas Commission on

Fire Protection and EMT cert.V.A. approved. Enroll now for

classes! Write: Haz-Co, PO Box 3063, Sherman, TX75091 or call 903-564-3862

Ace Tutors! Math, SAT, GED,Grades K-12 & College.

Homeschool, STAR Prep.940-383-5850 aceprotutors.com

LAYING HENS FOR SALE!$12 EACH.

FRESH EGGS! 940-210-8517.

2006 JOHN DEERE BALER 567 Net Wrap, Bale Push Bar,Mega Wide Pickup Attachment,Bale Track Monitor, 540 rpm Hy-draulic. $20,000. 940-580-5856.

Alfalfa & Alfalfa/OrchardSmall & Large Square. Round

Bales & Bermuda Sm Sq.217-737-7737, Aubrey.

FERTILIZED SUDAN5 FT X 5 FT BALES.

$65 PER BALE.SANGER. 940-391-5061.

Pastures Fertilized,Weeds Sprayed, Aerating,

Plowing, Mowing. Tommy 940-482-6578

Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed

Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators

3511 E. University Dr, Denton940-382-4333 We Buy

BUY SELL REPAIR Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers

377 APPLIANCE formerly 380 Appliance, 1010 Ft Worth

Dr 940-382-8531

Denton Publishing will not know-ingly publish any ad for sale ofweapons that does not meet ourstandards of acceptance.

380 FLEA MARKETOpen every Sat. & Sun.

All metroplex buyers & sellers welcome. Located 1 mile E. of Loop 288 on Hwy. 380, in Denton.

(940) 391-6202

(940) 383-1064 (h) • (940) 390-5900 (c)CA

Aubrey, 1625 Private Rd 2702off Fishtrap Rd.

Fri 8am-5pm, Sat 8am-12pm.Garage/Barn Sale

AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable

www.avenestatesales.com940-594-2878 or 940-483-8767

Denton, 1106 BERNARDSaturday March 15, 8am-?Smoker, Bicycles, Toys,

Household items

Denton, 1218 RIDGECRESTCIRCLE -- Fri-Sat March 14-15,

8am-3pm. Bunk Beds, UprightFreezer, Electronics, preschoolmaterials, workshop cabinet,

household goods, clothes, toys.

Denton, 2605 SHERATON RDFri-Sat. March 14-15,

8am-12pm. Furniture, Clothes,Household Items

PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised herein issubject to the Federal Fair Hous-ing Act, which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preference, limita-tion, or discrimination because ofrace, color, religion, sex, handi-cap, familial status, or nationalorigin, or intention to make anysuch preference, limitation, or dis-crimination." We will not knowing-ly accept advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of thelaw. All persons are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-tised are available on an equalopportunity basis

$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000*prices subject to change

Houses, Duplexes& Apartments

Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm

Saturday by Appt.940-243-RENT (7368)

Jason Long 940-595-1900Katie McFarland 940-243-7368

www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR

DENTON, TX 76205

2 Bedroom Starting at $12251 Bedroom Starting at $825Efficiencies Starting at $729

Call for Move In Specials

Your Key to

Downtown Living Call 940-382-3009

jackbellproperties.com

Page 16: March 13 Denton Time 2014

16Denton

Time

031314

houses: unfurnished

630

mobile/manufactured homes

760

steel/portable/wood buildings

1415

LOCATION,LOCATION,LOCATION.

WHERE YOUADVERTISEMATTERS!

*.8) &+82!9"

/%4$+086212+6

53:09- 52;8

.-(9#):$52+6

-)3: +9/

4),9

"$!#985$59% # " ( & * ( ! $ ' #0 ) , $ (

.+':99 -)3:

4),9 )7

$..9:69+8

6+&#%& 3+/%$-)!*$%&(/'+

2564" !.2,"01

Market Your Business

Where More Locals Look.

Reach thousands of potential buyersin your local market when you

advertise in our

For more information,call 940.566.6858

publishes 1st Wednesday of every month

www.DentonRC.com

realestateS H OW C A S E

DR-C Classifieds

DentonRC.com

(940) 387-7755 or(800) 275-1722

HOUSE CLEANING?

Don’t throwthat stuff away.

SELL itHEREin the

321 Withers in DentonCUTE 1 Bdrm 1 Bath, walk to

TWU. $510/mo. + residents payelectric & gas. 940-382-3100

3/2 $900 Large Enclosed Patios

Greenway Patio Townhomes2912 Augusta @ Greenway940-387-8741, 940-368-1814Largest Units in Denton!

** AMAZING COMMUNITY **Available now! Cute floorplans! Lease Today and receive a $100 gift card

New Construction Special!!Call 940-566-0033

525 S. Carroll Blvd, #100, Denton Tx. 76201

CALL US FOR 1, 2, & 3 BdrmsHOLLYHILLS Apts940-382-6774 900 Londonderry Ln. Open Mon-

Fri 8:30a-5:30p, Sat appt only

CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565

All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,

1 & 2 BR starting at $450 & up

FREE CABLE & WATERLow elec. bills. 6/9/12 mo. lease.

2/1 $705/mo; 2/2 $730/mo1/1 $600-$615. Walk to UNT. Callour friendly staff at 940-382-3100.

JUSTIN 2 Bdrm 1 Bath Studio$610/mo $200 deposit,

$50 application fee, 1 yr leaseterm only. Call 940-382-3100

Rental Assistance

1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS with Rental Assistance for

Qualified Applicantsin Valley View

940-665-0501or 940-726-3798

Shadowwood Apts Denton! 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Specialsavail. Open Mon, Wed, Fri10am-3pm, 903-705-2351

THE MARTINO GROUPRENTALS AVAILABLE

2105 Stella, 3/1, $995Boat Storage by Lake Ray

Roberts, 12’ x 30’, 10 foot door,$120/month

Now Pre-Leasing for UrbanSquare at Unicorn Lake, high-end

apartments opening in August!Call 940-382-5000 -

www.themartinogroup.com

Carriage House

Assisted Living

Studio &One Bedroom

Several Levels of

Care Available

Bring in Ad forSpecial Pricing

940-484-10661357 Bernard, Denton

CA

Going Quick!

WESTWIND APARTMENTS$99 to Apply. Large Floor Plans.

1710 Sam Bass 940-382-1535.

23 acre Ranch overlooking lakeRay Robert on Co Rd 231 in

Valley View. 3/2/2 + suite & barn.$499K 214-957-3642

$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000

Houses, Duplexes& Apartments

Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm

Saturday by Appt.940-243-RENT (7368)

Jason Long 940-595-1900Katie McFarland 940-243-7368

www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR

DENTON, TX 76205

1729 Post Oak Ct. Denton76209 New 3/2/2, Good

locaction. $1250/mo + deposit.Call 940-565-1399 Lvg Msg.

2/1 with hardwoods. Huge yard.Washer and dryer included. $950/mo. 2623 N. Elm. 940-591-1000

www.reddooroperations.com

3204 AVON -- 3 Bdrms 2 Bath 2 car garage, all new kitchen

appliances, wood floors, fencedyard, $1200/mo 940-565-9331

3515 Country Club 2 Bdrm1 Bath, 1 car garage $1000/mo.

940-566-5717 see video atkillianpropertymanagement.com

3bdrm/2bath on 4 acre lot.Barn for animals. 5 min drive

from Denton. For information,call 940-391-1566.

Custom 4/2/2 Home in WindRiver Estates , 2417 Kariba2428 sft. formal dining, openkitchen, great backyard, plus

much more. $1750.mo. 972-591-1552 ext. 2417

Krugerville/ Aubrey 509 Brumley , 3/2, 2 car garage,

Brick, 576 sq ft StorageBuilding, 2/3 acre. $1250/mo.

940-704-5419.

Near UNT- 3/2/2. CH/A2003 Westwood. $1100/mo.

Call Crouch Realty940-382-6707.

2/2 House on Fenced 8 Acres .Detached Shop, Garden & BBCourt. 10 min West of Denton.

$1500/mo Firm. 214-704-8097.

0 Credit Check 2, 3 & 4 Bdrmhomes $550/mo to $1500/mo.

For Rent or Sale Owner financing on land/home

pkgs , 1/2 acre to 4 acres,Ponder ISD, kid/pet ok,

Call 940-648-5263www.ponderei.com

2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes - J & AMobile Home Park, Ponder.Starting@$570/mo. Also lots

for rent. 940-465-9022, lv msg.

Country View MHP Special!2 & 3 bdrms. $695 a month.

2800 Fort Worth Dr.940-380-1200

Lease to Own3 Bdrm 2 Bath Singlewide

starting at $710.In mobile home community.

940-387-9914

LOTS from

$330-$365/Monthwith Carport and/or Shed

Up to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914

MOBILE HOME LOT INCOUNTRY. Part of 9 acres. 10

minutes from Denton. $250/ mo.214-704-8097.

Close to Downtown Denton 2 LUXURY OFFICE SUITES

1,128 & 564 Sq. Ft Call 940-387-7467 for more info.

JOIN THE BOOM! Come be apart of Denton’s exciting new

downtown! 540 SF, walking dis-tance to A-Train, ample parking.

Eric 940-382-6611

ROOM FOR RENT. Very nicesmoke free house in a nice

neighborhood . Must pass creditand background check and haveverifiable income. $800/ Mo plus$800 Deposit . Call for details

940 222-1950.

PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised hereinis subject to the Federal FairHousing Act, which makes it il-legal to advertise "any prefer-ence, limitation, or discrimina-tion because of race, color, reli-gion, sex, handicap, familialstatus, or national origin, or in-tention to make any such pref-erence, limitation, or discrimi-nation." We will not knowinglyaccept advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of thelaw. All persons are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-tised are available on an equalopportunity basis.

CA

Deal Directly with BuilderSpecial 100% Financing

Certain ConditionsBuilder spec for Sale w/1 ac

$209,900.00. Builder will giveBuyer $10,000.00 for Upgrades-

fence-pool-detached building,New furniture, whatever the Buyer

wants! Located in beautifulWestover Ranch No HOA

("the La Cross" floor plan)-lowtaxes(1.85%) 3 Bedrooms-2 Cargarage Granite Tops. StainlessSteal appliances- 5 Star EnergyBuilder will pay title, survey, &

buyer’s closing costs. AvailableNOW- Call David Jackson-

(940.206.6603) ASAP! Appoint-ments: M-F (10-3) Saturday (10-2)

HILLTOP ESTATE$285,000

Call 214-535-7094

629 SOUTH RUDDELLRemodeled. 3 Bedrooms.

1 Bath. $85,000Call 972-242-0933

1 ACRE LOTS FOR SALE ORLEASE FOR DOUBLE WIDES

in the Ponder/Justin area. Ponder ISD. Moving

Assistance Available to Qualified Home Owners.

Contact Jeff 940-648-5263

1984 Schult. 28ft x 48ft. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath plus Office in

Great Condition. Cash Only$15,900. 214-403-9787.

Mobile Home Repos andForeclosures Wholesale to thepublic. Call Kathy 817-884-7152

R 36365

OWNER FINANCED. 1995 PalmHarbor. 28 ft x 64 ft. 3 bedroom,

2 bath, 2 Living Areas, Fireplace,New Flooring and Paint. Just$34,900. Set Up in LewisvilleCommunity. 214-403-9787.

TOP CASH PRICES PAID FOR USEDMOBILE HOMES.Call 817-395-2990

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.State Law requires child care pro-viders to obtain permit from DFPS(Tx Dept of Family & ProtectiveSvcs) to provide child care outsideof a child’s home. Daycare provid-ers must comply with applicablestate & local licensing laws beforeplacing ad. Consumers & daycareproviders may learn more aboutlicensing, regulation & permits re- quired to operate child care in TXat http://www.dfps.state.tx.us /

DANIELSON

CONCRETEAll Types of Concrete &

Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives,Patios & Excavation.

Commercial & Residential FreeEstimates! Visa & Mastercard

Accepted. 940-391-3830.

Jose’s Concrete Work--patios,sidewalks, barns, curbs, slabs,driveways, retaining walls. 940-

595-6908, 940-536-4911 Free est.

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services

MONTY’S BOBCAT SERVICEDirt Leveling, Lot Clearing, TrashClean-Up and Haul -Off, Gravel

Driveways. 972-829-1908.

ADVANCE-FEE LOANS/CREDIT OFFERS

It’s illegal for companies doingbusiness by phone to promise youa loan & ask you to pay for it be-fore they deliver. For info., call

toll-free 1-877-FTC HELPPublic service msg from Denton

Publishing Co& Fed Trade Comm.

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Please be aware offirewood measurements:

Cord of firewood = 128 cu.ft.(8 ft long X 4 ft wide X 4 ft high)1/2 cord of firewood = 64 cu.ft.

Split OAK & PECAN Firewood.$200/cord you pick up. Locatedin Sanger. Deliverey available.

Cal 940-367-6512

Joe The Garage Door ManDoors & Openers Repaired

New Installs940-367-5123

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services

Lite House Repair &Handyman Services

Inside & OutsideFree Estimate 940-395-0549

Mike’s Clean Up Services. Trash, brush & junk hauled off.Friendly & dependable service.

Call 940-453-2776

CELIA’S HOUSE CLEANINGQuality service you cancount on! Wk/biwkly/mo.

13 years exp. Refs avail. Ins &bonded. $15 off 1st service!

Superior Housekeeping Serv.940-594-8035 or 940-206-3889

GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow,edge, weedeat, flower beds, trim

bushes, rake leaves, free estimate15% Sr discount

940-442-1440 or 940-442-1252

LEGENDARY LANDSCAPES &TURF MANAGEMENT

Fertilizer & weed control, sod& landscape installation. Fullylicensed & insured. Senior &military discounts. 14 yrs inbusiness. Call 214-542-8221www.legendarylandscapes.com

LA Lawn Care

LAWNS $25www.lalawncare.com

( website for more pricing info.)Mow, Edge, Weedeat, Blow

front back & sides.Clean ups, Leaf removal,

Shrub trimming, Weeds pulled,Fertilization. If you want to sign upwith a 6 mow minimum you get1 Free mowing--use it anytime

you want (new customers only) --Convenient Credit Card Billing--

FREE ESTIMATECall Lance 940-390-3286

LONGHORN LAWN CARESERVICES.

Charles Rohrer 940-284-2851.

Affordable MowingMowing in Denton Co. since 1998

Call Dwight 940-435-9975

ARTISTIC SERVICESMurals, custom artwork, fauxfinish, paint effects, signage &

more. UNT Grad 940-368-1529www.jameshineman.com

All American Painting &Remodeling Int. Ext., Stain, Faux

Patch & Repairs. 17+ yrs Exp.Free Estimates. 940-442-4545.

Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services

CRCCarpentry--Decks--

Windows--Slate Flooringint/ext, remodel/ repairGuttering--Metal Roofs--

Skylights--Chimney CapsSolar Vents--Any Type Roof

Repaired or Replaced35 yrs in business. A+ BBB,

Angies List, References.Call 940-383-0338

M & C METAL BUILDING &TREE REMOVAL .

Call for Quotes!Call Matt 940-284-8324.

PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/

pics/slides/negs/videos/records-discs 940-231-5889


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