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Weekly entertainment magazine of the Denton Record-Chronicle.

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Page 1: April 17 Denton Time 2014
Page 2: April 17 Denton Time 2014

2Denton

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041714

ON THE COVER

UPON THE ECLIPTICLocal musician Andrew Tinkeris releasing his sophomorealbum, recorded at his studioin Copper Canyon.(Courtesy photo/Yana Khaykinson)Story on Page 9

FIND IT INSIDE

MUSICConcerts and nightclubschedules. Page 3

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 EditorLucinda Breeding 940-566-6877

[email protected]

ADVERTISINGAdvertising DirectorSandra Hammond 940-566-6820Classified ManagerJulie Hammond 940-566-6819Retail Advertising ManagerShawn Reneau 940-566-6843Advertising fax 940-566-6846

DentonTime

SATURDAY

8 a.m. to 11 a.m. — ArgyleLions Club’s Breakfast Withthe Easter Bunny in the cafeteriaof Argyle High School, 191 S. U.S.Highway 377. Cost is $5 per personor $15 per family for a pancakebreakfast with bacon and juice.8 a.m. — Zoo Eggstravaganzaat Frank Buck Zoo, 1000 W. Califor-nia St. in Gainesville. Egg hunts (infour age categories) start promptlyat 8:30 a.m., so arrive by 8 a.m.Tickets include all-day access to thezoo. Tickets cost $6 per person andmust be purchased in advance. Visit

http://bit.ly/1qmAuzi or call 940-668-4539.9:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Egg-’stravaganza and annual cityegg hunts for toddlers throughfifth-graders at the Denton CivicCenter and Quakertown Park, 321 E.McKinney St. Free event includesbounce house, arts and crafts and amagic show. Egg hunts, divided byage groups, start at 11:30 a.m.Photos with the Easter Bunny cost$2, and concessions will be sold.Visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-7275.10 a.m. — Community-wideEaster egg hunt for children ages

2-8 at First Christian Church ofDenton, 1203 N. Fulton St. Free andopen to the public. Call 940-566-4990.11 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Argyle’sSpring Community Event onthe grounds of Argyle High School,191 S. U.S. Highway 377. Eventincludes an Easter egg hunt, bouncehouses, a rock-climbing tower andother family activities. Free admis-sion, but canned food donations arerequested for the Argyle Communi-ty Food Bank. Organizations can setup informational booths; callCharles West at 940-464-7273.Visit www.argyletx.com.

EASTER EVENTS

Al Key/DRC file photo

THURSDAY

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.9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. — Uni-versity Scholars Day at the UNTGateway Center, 801 North TexasBlvd. About 200 undergraduates willpresent original research projects andresults. Visit http://honors.unt.edu/university-scholars-day.10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Timeat South Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Stories, songs, puppets andmore for children ages 1-5 and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.2 p.m. — UNT classical guitarensembles, coordinated by PaulLeBlanc, in the Recital Hall at theMusic Building, at Avenue C andChestnut Street. Free. Call 940-565-2791 or visit www.music.unt.edu.3:30 p.m. — Afternoon Ad-venture Club, stories and a hands-on workshop for kids in kindergartenthrough third grade, at South BranchLibrary, 3228 Teasley Lane. Free. Call940-349-8752.4:30 p.m. — Afternoon Ad-venture Club, stories and a hands-on workshop for kids in kindergartenthrough third grade, at Emily FowlerCentral Library, 502 Oakland St. Free.Call 940-349-8752.5 p.m. — UNT guest artist mas-ter class with viola player RichardYoung, in Voertman Hall at the MusicBuilding, at Avenue C and ChestnutStreet. Free. Call 940-565-2791 orvisit www.music.unt.edu.6:30 to 7:30 p.m. — B.O.Y.S.(Boys Only Yucky Stories) atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Book club for boys ingrades 2-5. This month, discuss Stick

Dog: A Really Good Story With Kind

of Bad Drawings by Tom Watson.Free. Call 940-349-8749 or [email protected] 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 NightMusic with students from Niko-la Ruzevic’s cello studio at UNTon the Square, 109 N. Elm St. Free.Visit http://untonthesquare.unt.eduor call 940-369-8257.7 to 9:30 p.m. — UNT Interna-tional Dance Party on the malloutside Willis Library, 1506 HighlandSt. Part of Celebrating Global CitizensMonth. Free. Call 940-369-8625 orvisit http://international.unt.edu.7:30 p.m. — UNT Concert Bandin Winspear Hall at the MurchisonPerforming Arts Center, on the northside of I-35E at North Texas Bou-levard. Tickets cost $8-$10. Call940-369-7802 or visit www.thempac.com.7:30 p.m. — UNT theater depart-ment presents The 25th Annual

Putnam County Spelling Bee at theUniversity Theatre in the Radio, TV,

Film and Performing Arts Building, atWelch and Chestnut streets. Ticketscost $15 for adults, $10 for students,UNT faculty/staff and seniors. Call940-565-2428 or visit www.danceandtheatre.unt.edu.8:30 p.m. — UNT guest artistrecital with the Tigran HamasyanTrio in the Recital Hall at the MusicBuilding, at Avenue C and ChestnutStreet. General admission is $10, freefor UNT jazz studies students. Call940-565-2791 or visit www.music.unt.edu.

FRIDAY

9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Timeat North Branch Library, 3020 N.Locust St. Stories and activities forinfants (birth to 18 months) and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.11 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 940-349-8752.2 p.m. — UNT theater depart-ment presents The 25th Annual

Putnam County Spelling Bee at theUniversity Theatre in the Radio, TV,Film and Performing Arts Building, atWelch and Chestnut streets. Ticketscost $15 for adults, $10 for students,

UNT faculty/staff and seniors. Call940-565-2428 or visit www.danceandtheatre.unt.edu.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 email [email protected].

SATURDAY

8 a.m. to 11 a.m. — Argyle LionsClub’s Breakfast With the EasterBunny in the cafeteria of Argyle HighSchool, 191 S. U.S. Highway 377. Costis $5 per person or $15 per family.9 to 11 a.m. — “Native Bees,” partof the Clear Creek Natural HeritageCenter Nature Series at 3310 CollinsRoad. Learn about bees and their rolein North Texas and take a short hiketo research sites. Free. Visit www.clearcreekdenton.com or call 940-349-8152.9:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Egg’strava-ganza and annual city egg huntsfor toddlers through fifth-graders atthe Denton Civic Center and Quaker-town Park, 321 E. McKinney St. Visitwww.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.10 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. — Community-wideEaster egg hunt for children ages2-8 at First Christian Church ofDenton, 1203 N. Fulton St. Call 940-566-4990.10 to 11:30 a.m. — Read to Roverat North Branch Library, 3020 N.Locust St. Free. Children ages 6-11struggling with reading can readone-on-one with a trained therapydog from Therapy Pals of GoldenTriangle. Parents or guardians mustregister their children in person andsign a permission slip. Call 940-349-8752.10 a.m. to noon — Denton Poets’Assembly meets at Emily FowlerCentral Library, 502 Oakland St. Freeand open to the public. Visit www.dentonpoetsassembly.weebly.com.11 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Argyle’sSpring Community Event on thegrounds of Argyle High School, 191 S.U.S. Highway 377. Visit www.argyletx.com.2 to 6 p.m. — UNT Basant KiteFestival at North Lakes Park, 2001W. Windsor Drive, in Pavilion 3. Partof Celebrating Global Citizens Month.

Continued on Page 3

EVENTS

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Free. Call 940-369-8625 or visithttp://international.unt.edu.7:30 p.m. — UNT theater depart-ment presents The 25th Annual

Putnam County Spelling Bee at theUniversity Theatre in the Radio, TV,Film and Performing Arts Building, atWelch and Chestnut streets. Ticketscost $15 for adults, $10 for students,UNT faculty/staff and seniors. Call940-565-2428 or visit www.danceandtheatre.unt.edu.

MONDAY

Noon to 1 p.m. — UNT EarthWeek Awards Ceremony andhonorary tree planting on the lawn ofGateway Center, 801 North TexasBlvd. Part of UNT’s Earth Weekevents. Visit http://sustainable.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 p.m. — Romance in theStacks Book Club at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. Discussbooks by Lauren Willig. Free. Call940-349-8796 or email [email protected] p.m. — UNT graduate improvi-sation recital, directed by FredHamilton, in Kenton Hall at the MusicBuilding, at Avenue C and ChestnutStreet. Free. Call 940-565-2791 orvisit www.music.unt.edu.8 p.m. — Spectrum Concertsponsored by Composers Forum inVoertman Hall at the Music Building,at Avenue C and Chestnut Street.Free. Call 940-565-2791 or visitwww.music.unt.edu.

TUESDAY

9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Timeat 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 940-349-8752.9:30 a.m. — Preschool SciencePlay: “Rainbow Fun” at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. Childrenages 3-5 can explore several colorplay stations. Free. Registration isrequired; call 940-349-8752.4 to 7 p.m. — UNT EarthFest andInternational Fair and Market onthe mall outside Willis Library, 1506Highland St. Event includes informa-tional booths, vendors, food, perfor-mances and more. Visit http://international.unt.edu or http://sustainable.unt.edu.6:30 to 7:30 p.m. — Story Art atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Children ages 3-7 willread Hooray for Fish! by Lucy Cousinsand then create open-ended art

inspired by the story. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.6:30 to 8:30 p.m. — “Learn Howto Use the Mouse and Key-board” class at North Branch Li-brary, 3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call940-349-8752 to register.7 to 8:45 p.m. — North BranchWriters’ Critique Group, for thoseinterested in writing novels, shortstories, poetry or journals, meetsfrom at North Branch Library, 3020 N.

Locust St. Free.8 p.m. — UNT’s Avenue C vocaljazz ensemble in Voertman Hall at theMusic Building, at Avenue C andChestnut Street. Free. Call 940-565-2791 or visit www.music.unt.edu.

WEDNESDAY

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 a.m. to 3 p.m. — 2014 GenderFair, “What Marks Your Spot?,” in theUNT Willis Library Forum, 1506Highland St. Booths will focus ondifferent aspects of gender in thepublic sphere. Hosted by UNT’sDepartment of CommunicationStudies. New and gently used itemswill be collected for Denton CountyFriends of the Family. Free. Visithttp://on.fb.me/1mdkWOv.

11 a.m. — Story Time at EmilyFowler Library, 502 Oakland St.Stories, songs, puppets and more forchildren age 1-5 and their caregivers.Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.dentonlibrary.com.2 to 3:30 p.m. — “Learn How toUse the Mouse and Keyboard”class at South Branch Library, 3228Teasley Lane. Free. Call 940-349-8752 to register.5 to 6 p.m. — “What theFrack?,” an educational and inter-active forum about the pros and consof hydraulic fracturing, in Room 125 ofthe UNT Environmental Education,Science and Technology Building,1704 W. Mulberry St. Part of UNT’sEarth Week events. Visit http://sustainable.unt.edu.6 p.m. — Edible Art for Teens:“Peeps” at South Branch Library,3228 Teasley Lane. Teens can makepretty and tasty creations. Free.Register by Monday by calling 940-349-8752.7 to 8 p.m. — Baby & ToddlerStory Time at North Branch Library,3020 N. Locust St. Books, songs andplay time for infants through 3-year-olds and their caregivers. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.7 to 8:30 p.m. — ExploringPhilosophy 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 940-349-8752.7 p.m. — Screening of When We

Were All Broncos at the Denton HighSchool Auditorium, 1007 Fulton St.David Barrow’s documentary, looks atthe integration of Denton publicschools. Proceeds benefit the DentonPublic School Foundation scholarshipfund. Tickets cost $10, available at thedoor and at www.whenwewereallbroncos.com.7:30 p.m. — TWU UniversityChorus and Chamber Orchestraspring concert in the Little Chapel-in-the-Woods, on Chapel Drive at BellAvenue on the TWU campus. Free.Visit www.twu.edu/music.8 p.m. — UNT Symphony Or-chestra with Grand Chorus,featuring mezzo-soprano LindaDiFiore, in Winspear Hall at theMurchison Performing Arts Center, onthe north side of I-35E at North TexasBoulevard. Tickets cost $8-$10. Call940-369-7802 or visit www.thempac.com.9 p.m. — Wednesday Night Jazzwith the Nine O’clock and EightO’clock Lab Bands at the UNT Gate-way Center, 801 North Texas Blvd.between Eagle Drive and HighlandStreet. Admission costs $4. Call940-565-2791 or visit www.music.unt.edu.

MUSIC

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

Human Groove Hormone, Magnatite.Fri: Soul Patrol, Woody’s Rampage.Weekly events: Each Sat, “’80s and

EVENTSContinued from Page 2

Continued on Page 4

It won’t be loud, but Den-ton will celebrate RecordStore Day on Saturday.Dave Koen, a staffer at

Mad World Records down-town, said the special-editionrecords that’ll be for sale willbe a surprise for the staff andcustomers alike.

“Record companies releaselimited-edition records on vi-

nyl and sell them to indepen-dent record stores,” Koen said.“The bigger independent re-cord stores, like Good Recordsin Dallas, get what they order.The smaller record stores gettheir allotment after that.”

Koen said Mad World willopen its doors an hour earlierfor the sale on Saturday. Shop-pers can get started at 10 a.m.

The shop won’t stage a Re-cord Store Day concert like itdid last year.

“People don’t come in theshop because it’s loud,” anoth-er staff member said.

“And the layout of the storedoesn’t lend itself to a showand shopping at the sametime,” Koen said.

Just around the corner atRecycled Books, Records &CDs, shoppers will be able topick up anything on vinyl for20 percent off. Recycled willalso be selling Record StoreDay exclusive releases.

Mad World is located at 115W. Hickory St. on the Square.Recycled is located at 200 N.Locust St.

— Lucinda Breeding

DMN file photo

Record Store Day, which started in 2007, is celebrated at independent music shops on

the third Saturday in April.

The vinyl countdownCollectors will hitthe Square forRecord Store Day

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’90s RetroActive Dance Party”; eachSun, open mic hosted by Bone Dog-gie, signup at 7:30pm; each Mon,karaoke. 100 W. Walnut St. www.facebook.com/TheAbbeyUnderground.The Bears Den Thurs: Lydia Low,6pm; Caleb Coonrod, 7:30pm. AtSharkarosa Wildlife Ranch, 11670Massey Road, Pilot Point. 940-686-5600. www.bearsdentexas.com.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: The Timbremen.Each Wed, karaoke at 10pm. 122 N.Locust St. 940-565-5400.Banter Bistro Thurs: Alex Blair,6pm. Fri: Oui Bis, 6pm; “Song &Story,” hosted by Richard Gilbert,8pm; the Fresh Baked Boys, 10pm.Sat: Horace Bray, 6pm; BaloneyMoon, 8pm; Red & the MusicalExperience, 10pm. Each Thurs, openmic at 8pm; each Sat, live local jazz at6pm. 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638.www.dentonbanter.com.Crossroads Bar 1803 Elm St. 940-808-1177. http://crossroadsbardenton.com.Dan’s Silverleaf Thurs: Joe PatHennen, 5pm, free; Charlie Parr, AMRamblers, Burnt Sienna Trio, 9pm,$7-$10. Fri: Andrew Tinker (CDrelease), Kaela Sinclair, 9pm, $7. Sat:

Neil Slater with Heather Paterson,5pm, $5; Los Patos Poderosos, SeñorFin, Delia Haunt, Jen Hill, 9pm, $5.Sun: Hares on the Mountain, 5pm,free; the Black Lillies, 8pm, $10. Mon:

Damien Jurado, Doug Burr, 9pm,$13-$16. Tues: A Taste of Herb, 5pm,free. No smoking indoors. 103 Indus-trial St. 940-320-2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.The Garage Thurs: Entropy. Fri:

Brandon Bush. Sat & Wed: DJ Rock-styler. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045.www.thedentongarage.com.The Greenhouse Mon: Alex Hann.Each Mon, live jazz at 10pm, free. 600N. Locust St. 940-484-1349. www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hailey’s Club Sat: Spoonfed Tribe,Idler, Manny the Martyr, the DeadpanPoets, 8pm, $10-$15. Mon: “50sDance Party,” 9pm, $3 donation toDenton Humane Society and Mazie’sMission. Weekly events, 9pm, free-$10: each Thurs, “’80s Dance Night”with Yeahdef; each Fri, “Friday NightLive 2.0” with DJ Spinn Mo; eachTues, “’90s Night”; each Wed, “Wick-ed & Wild Styles Wednesdays” withDJ Spinn Mo. 122 W. Mulberry St.940-323-1160. www.haileysclub.com.Hoochie’s Oyster House Mon:

Caruvana, 6pm; Dunashay, 7pm;Jordan Fruge, 8pm. 207 S. Bell Ave.940-383-0104. http://hoochiesoysterhouse.com.J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.La Milpa Mexican RestaurantEach Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 7:30-9:30pm. 820 S. I-35E, Suite 101.940-382-8470.Lone Star Attitude Burger Co.Fri: J.R. Byrd Band, 7-10pm. Sat:

Buffalo Ruckus, 7-10pm. Wed: Melis-

sa Ratley, Ed Vargas, Kelsey Henry,7-10pm. 113 W. 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 Parlorand Chainsaw Repair Sat: Whis-key Tongue Burlesque, 10pm. Each Fri,karaoke at 9:30pm. 1125 E. UniversityDrive, Suite 107. 940-566-9910.Mulberry Street Cantina Wed:

Buffalo Ruckus, 9pm. 110 W. MulberrySt. 940-808-1568. http://mulberrystcantina.com.Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: JohnnyCooper, Tyler and the Tribe, 9pm, $10.1009 Ave. C. 940-565-6611.www.rockinrodeodenton.com.Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Stu-dios Thurs: Stray Nimbus, Nerdface,Jacko Suede, 9pm, free-$3. Fri:

We’rewolves, Mix Magyk, the In-famists, Class Action, 8pm, $5-$7.Sat: Cornhole, the Treelines, Fool’sReverie, Brent Best, 8pm, $1-$3. Tues:

Marisa Anderson, Walker and theTexas Dangers, Will Frenkel, 9pm,$5-$7. No smoking indoors. 411 E.Sycamore St. 940-387-7781.www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.Rusty Taco Sat: Caruvana, 7pm;Jordan Fruge, 8pm. 210 E. Hickory St.940-483-8226. www.therustytaco.com.Smiling Moose Deli Wed: Caruva-na, 6pm; Lydia Low, 7pm. 501 W.Hickory St. 940-566-3350. www.facebook.com/SmilingMooseDenton.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 students from

Nino Ruzevic’s cello studio, 7-9pm,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 Barand 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.thewhitehousedenton.com.

IN THE AREA

8 p.m. Saturday — Texas Tunesconcert series presents CarrieRodriguez at Medical Center ofLewisville Grand Theater, 100 N.Charles St. Tickets cost $15 for adults,$10 for ages 60 and older or 12 andyounger; discounts tickets for Lew-

isville residents. Visit www.mclgrand.com or call 972-219-8446.8:30 a.m. April 26 — One Ale ofa Trail 5-mile trail run at LewisvilleLake Environmental Learning Area.Registration costs $40 per person,$20 for ages 12 and younger. Race-day registration starts at 7:30 a.m.Visit www.onealeofatrail.net.

FUTURE BOOKINGS

5:30 to 7:30 p.m. April 24 —Opening reception for “MergingVisions,” an exhibit of art and poetry,at the Center for the Visual Arts, 400E. Hickory St. The exhibit runsthrough June 6.7 p.m. April 24 — Denton CityCouncil and mayoral candidatesforum, hosted by the Denton Neigh-borhood Association, in the CouncilChambers at City Hall, 215 E. McKin-ney St. Attendees’ questions will beaccepted in writing by the moderator.Visit www.dentonneighborhoods.org.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-ney St. Free admission. Visitwww.dentonjazzfest.com.9 a.m. April 26 — Take the FirstStep 5K and 1-mile fun run and walk,hosted by the Denton County HealthDepartment to raise awareness aboutcardiovascular disease, at SouthLakes Park, 556 Hobson Lane. Freeand open to all ages; strollers andleashed dogs are welcome. The first500 registrants will receive a freeT-shirt, and all participants will re-ceive a goody bag. To register, visithttp://bit.ly/1mz4VC9.10 a.m. to noon April 26 — Den-ton City Council candidatesforum, hosted by the Denton CountyBranch of the NAACP, at Central FireStation, 332 E. Hickory St. ContactWillie Hudspeth at 940-465-4321 [email protected]:30 p.m. April 29 — TWU WindSymphony and Flute Choirconcert in TWU’s Margo Jones Perfor-mance Hall, on the first floor of theMusic Building, at Oakland Street andPioneer Circle. Tickets cost $5 perperson, free for ages 12 and younger.Visit www.twu.edu/music.July 18-20 — 10th annual May-born Literary Nonfiction Confer-ence at the Hilton DFW Lakes Exec-utive Conference Center in Grapevine.Hosted by the Frank W. MaybornGraduate Institute of Journalism atUNT. Through May 1, registration is$374 for the general public, $354 foreducators and $324 for students.After May 1, all participants pay $425.Visit www.themayborn.com/registration.

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.● Annual high school art show,through May 10 in the Gough Gallery.

EVENTSContinued from Page 3

Continued on Page 5

In her final University ofNorth Texas concert beforeretirement, regents profes-

sor Linda DiFiore will performin Brahms’ Alto Rhapsody as asoloist with male chorus andorchestra at 8 p.m. Wednesdayin Winspear Hall at the Mur-chison Performing Arts Cen-ter.

DiFiore’s solo performanceis part of a larger performancewith the UNT Symphony Or-chestra and Grand Chorus. Di-Fiore will share the bill withvoice professor Carol Wilson.The program includes Stravin-sky’s Firebird Suite, J.A.C.Redford’s Rest Now, My Sisterand Poulenc’s Gloria. Thesymphony is directed by DavidItkin and the Grand Chorus isdirected by Jerry McCoy.

DiFiore is a mezzo-sopranowho has performed for 40years as a soloist in opera, ora-torio, recital and musical the-ater. She’s performed with op-era companies, symphony or-chestras, theaters and smallerensembles all over the world.

DiFiore joined the UNTCollege of Music in 1996, andsince then, her students andformer students have been ac-cepted into prestigious sum-mer opera programs andyoung artist programs. Her

students have also sung rolesin major opera houses hereand abroad.

Wilson will be the featuredsoloist on Poulenc’s Gloriawith the Symphony Orchestraand the Grand Chorus. A UNTfaculty member since 2012,Wilson previously served onthe voice faculties at Oberlin,Vassar and Sarah Lawrence

colleges, among others.The Murchison is on the

north side of Interstate 35E atNorth Texas Boulevard.

Tickets cost $10 for adults,$8 for seniors and non-UNTstudents, children, UNT facul-ty, staff and retirees. For tick-ets, call 940-369-7802 or visitwww.thempac.com.

— Staff report

Rhapsody before retiringDiFiore to givefinal concert asUNT professor

Courtesy photo/UNT

Linda DiFiore is a regents professor of music at the Uni-

versity of North Texas.

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IM

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● “Merging Visions: A Collab-

orative Exhibit of Art and Poetry,”

presented by the Visual Arts Societyof Texas, runs from April 24 throughJune 6 in the Meadows Gallery.Opening reception will be from 5:30to 7:30 p.m. April 24.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.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.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.● Teri Muse, featured artist forApril.PointBank Black Box Theatre

Denton Community Theatre’s blackbox performance space. Mon & Wed1-4pm, Fri 10:30am-1pm, and duringperformances. 318 E. Hickory St.SCRAP Denton Nonprofit storeselling 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.● Fourth annual “3arthurWurx”

exhibition, in the Re:Vision Gallerythrough April 25.● “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.● “Edible Matters: A 4-Course

Exhibition” features “The Seeds ofInterconnectivity” through May 2.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.● BFA graduating group exhibi-

tion, through Wednesday.● MFA graduating group exhibi-

tion, April 29 through May 10.TWU Gallery 010 Student-runexhibition space in the lower level ofthe Student Union, on Bell Avenue atAdministration Drive. Mon-Thurs 8-9;Fri 8-5; Sun 1-9. www.twu.edu/visual-arts.● “Lorie M.” by Madeline Timm,through Friday.● “Jamais Vu” by Heather Ross,Sunday through May 2.UNT Art Gallery in the UNT ArtBuilding, 1201 W. Mulberry St. atWelch. Building also includes theNorth Gallery and the LightwellGallery. Tues noon-5pm, Wed-Thurs9:30am-8pm, Fri-Sat noon-5pm. Free.

940-565-4316. http://gallery.unt.edu.● 54th annual Voertman Student

Art Competition, through April 26.Juried by Tempestt Hazel.UNT Cora Stafford Gallery InUNT’s Oak Street Hall, 1120 W. Oak St.Tues-Fri 10am-2pm or by appoint-ment. 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.● “Rob Erdle, His Students, His

Influence,” a show of work byregents professor emeritus Rob Erdleand his students, opens Wednesdayand runs through May 21.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.Visit www.vastarts.org or call Exec-utive Director Lynne Cagle Cox at972-VAST-ORG.

EVENTSContinued from Page 4

Continued on Page 6

The 10th Gender Fair atthe University of NorthTexas campus aims to

provoke conversations onWednesday.

Gender Fair X — with thetheme “What Marks YourSpot?” — will engage the cam-pus and broader community ina wide range of conversationsabout gender in American cul-ture from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in

the Willis Library Forum, 1506Highland St.

The event is hosted byUNT’s Department of Com-munication Studies — specifi-cally the students in theCOMM 4140 course, “Genderand Communication,” taughtby professor Suzanne Enck.

Booths at this year’s GenderFair will focus on different as-pects of gender in the public

sphere, including “ChallengingHegemonic Masculinities,”“Disciplining and LiberatingGendered Bodies,” “DisruptingGendered Violence,” “BeyondBinary Sexualities” and “Femi-nist Politics.”

The event, which is free andopen to the public, will offer in-teractive games and activities,prizes and information.

The Gender Fair will also

team up with the UNT chapterof Lambda Pi Eta, the commu-nication studies honor society,to collect items for DentonCounty Friends of the Family.Community members are in-vited to drop off new and gentlyused items that will be donatedto the nonprofit, which servesthose affected by sexual assaultand domestic violence.

— Staff report

UNT event questions gender conventions

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www.dentonjazzfest.comP.O. Box 2104 • Denton, TX 76202 • 1-940-565-0931 • 1-940-566-7007 (FAX)

Friday 5-11pm • Saturday 10am-11pm • Sunday 11am-9pm

Quakertown Park

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TAKE THEA-TRAIN!An easy3-block walkto the park!

DENTONARTS&JAZZFESTIVALAPRIL 25 • 26 • 27, 2014

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Zumba classes are offered at bothDenia and Martin Luther King Jr.recreation centers for ages 15 and up.The first class is free. Afterward,classes cost $5 each, or $30 for 10.Classes are from 6 to 7 p.m. everyWednesday at Denia, 1001 Parvin St.Classes are from 6 to 7 p.m. Mondayand Wednesday, and 10 to 11 a.m.Saturday at the MLK center, 1300Wilson St. To register, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

■Summer camp registration is open.For more information and to register,visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-7275.

■The Little Miss Pretty Pageant

for ages 1-13 will be on April 25-26 atMartin Luther King Jr. RecreationCenter, 1300 Wilson St. The pageanthas four age divisions, and includesprizes and awards for the top threeplaces in each division. Entry fee is$25. For more information and toregister by Wednesday, visitwww.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-8579.

■Young Rembrants Art Classes

begin Monday at North Lakes Recre-ation Center, 2001 W. Windsor Drive.Classes are taught for ages 3-6 and6-12. Cost is $65. For more informa-tion and to register by Friday, visitwww.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-8579.

■Ages 16 and older can go mountain

biking from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 26

at the Johnson Branch Unit of RayRoberts Lake State Park, located offFM3002. Bring lunch; bikes andhelmets will be provided. Bikers willmeet at Denia Recreation Center, 1001Parvin St. Cost is $20 per cyclist.Register by Wednesday online or bycalling 940-349-8579.

■Bitty Basketball teaches 3- and4-year-olds the basics of the gameand includes a scrimmage. Practice isfrom 6 to 6:45 p.m. every Tuesdayand Thursday at Carroll McMathMiddle School, 1900 Jason Drive. Thesession begins April 29 and costs $55per player. For more information andto register by April 25, visit www.

dentonparks.com or call 940-349-8579.

■Dog training classes are open tohandlers 12 and older, and dogs olderthan 9 weeks. The class meets 7:30to 8:30 p.m. on Thursdays startingApril 29 at Denia Recreation Center,1001 Parvin St. For the first class,bring shot records and leave the dogat home. Cost is $80 per handler. Toregister, visit www.dentonparks.comor call 940-206-7156.

■Adult summer league basketball

is now open for registration. Lateregistration ends April 25 and gamesbegin May 14. The league includes

eight games, including playoffs. Up to12 players are allowed per roster. Costis $325 per team. For more informa-tion and to register, visit the websiteor call 940-349-7275.

■Late registration for the adult vol-

leyball league ends April 25, andgames start on May 14. The leagueincludes eight games, includingplayoffs. Teams may be recreationalor competitive. Up to 12 players areallowed per roster. Cost is $200 perteam. For more information and toregister, visit www.dentonparks.comor call 940-349-7275.

■Summer youth sports leagues

are open for registration, includinggirls volleyball, ages 7-14; track, ages6-18; coed kickball, ages 5-14; andcoed basketball, ages 5-10. Prices andregistration dates vary. For moreinformation, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

■Hop ’Til You Drop is a structuredplaytime for ages 2-4 and theirparents. It meets from 10:30 to 11:15a.m. every Monday beginning April 28at North Lakes Recreation Center,2001 W. Windsor Drive. Cost is $15per monthly session. For more in-formation and to register by April 23,visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-8579.

DENTON PARKS & RECREATION

Zera Coffee Co. 420 E. McKinneySt., Suite 106. 940-239-8002.www.zeracoffeecompany.com.● Amanda Roberts, featured artistfor April.

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. 940-349-2865. www.dentoncounty.com/bsh.Denton County African Amer-

ican Museum Exhibits of historicblack families in the county. 317 W.Mulberry St., next to the Bayless-

EVENTSContinued from Page 5

Continued on Page 7

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Selby House Museum. Tues-Sat10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.Bethlehem in Denton County

Small gallery in Sanger displayinga personal collection of 2,900nativities. Open evenings andweekends, by appointment only.Free. To schedule your visit, call940-231-4520. www.bethlehemindentonco.com.Courthouse-on-the-Square

Museum Exhibits, special collec-tions, research materials, genea-logical info and more. 110 W.Hickory St. 10-4:30 Mon-Fri and11-3 Sat, closed holidays. Free. Call940-349-2850 or visit www.dentoncounty.com/chos.Denton Community Market, alocal artists and farmers market,from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Satur-day in April through November atthe Denton County Historical Park,on Mulberry Street near CarrollBoulevard. Visit http://dentonmarket.org.Denton Firefighters Museum

Collection at Central Fire Station,332 E. Hickory St., displays fire-fighting memorabilia from the1800s to the present. 8am-5pmMon-Fri. Closed on city holidays.Free and handicapped accessible.Gowns of the First Ladies of

Texas Created in 1940, exhibitfeatures garments worn by wivesof governors of Texas. 8am-5pmMon-Fri. Administration Confer-ence Tower, TWU campus. Free,reservations required. 940-898-3644.Hangar Ten Flying Museum

WWII aircraft on display. Mon-Sat8am-3 pm. 1945 Matt Wright Lane.Free. 940-565-1945.Little Chapel-in-the-Woods

Built in 1939, one of 20 outstand-ing architectural achievements inTexas. Daily 8am-5pm, except onuniversity holidays or whenbooked, TWU campus. 940-898-3644.Sharkarosa Wildlife Ranch

Nonprofit 126-acre ranch with rareand exotic animals. Exhibits, tramride, animal presentations andrestaurant. Open to the public10am-5pm Sat & Sun, Marchthrough Dec. 1. Tickets cost $10 forages 13 and older, $8 for ages 3-12,$8 for seniors. 11670 Massey 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. Visit www.astronomy.unt.edu/obsv.html.UNT Sky Theater Planetarium inUNT’s Environmental Education,Science and Technology Building,1704 W. Mulberry St. 940-369-8213. www.skytheater.unt.edu.● Water Worlds, 2 p.m. and 8p.m. each Saturday. Tickets cost$3-$5, cash only.● ExoPlanets: Worlds of Won-

der, children’s matinee at nooneach Saturday in March. Ticketscost $3, cash only.

EVENTSContinued from Page 6

MOVIES

THEATERS

Cinemark 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 THIS WEEK

Bears Keenly following the scent ofAfrican Cats and Chimpanzees,Disneynature’s Bears combinessweeping vistas and remarkablyintimate wildlife photography totypically stirring effect as it docu-ments a year in the life of a motherAlaskan brown bear and her twocubs. Save for some particularlyplayful narration provided by John C.Reilly, the film adheres closely to thesuccessful blueprint first laid out by2007’s Earth, pitting a wildlife familyunit against the not necessarilynurturing elements. Co-directed byAlastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey(African Cats). Rated G, 77 minutes.Opens Friday. — The HollywoodReporterA Haunted House 2 After movingon from his demonically possessedex-girlfriend and starting over with anew love and her two kids, a man isonce again plagued by bizarre para-normal events. With Marlon Wayans,Jaime Pressly and Gabriel Iglesias.Rated R, 87 minutes. Opens Friday. —Los Angeles TimesHeaven Is for Real (★★ 1⁄2) There’slittle doubt the T.D. Jakes-producedadaptation of Todd Burpo’s Christiannonfiction best-seller will have abuilt-in audience, especially on Easterweekend. After undergoing harrowingsurgery for a ruptured appendix,4-year-old Colton Burpo (ConnorCorum) begins recalling his journeyfor his family: Angels carried him toheaven where he met Jesus (playedby Mike Mohrhardt), as well as God,Colton’s great-grandfather and themiscarried sister he never knew hehad. Such talk frightens his sister(Lane Styles) and worries his pastorfather, Todd (Greg Kinnear), andmother, Sonja (Kelly Reilly). ThoughTodd sticks up for his son, his faith isalso tested. As Colton, Corum does anexcellent job of speaking softly, yetwith conviction. But it’s the casting ofKinnear that offers the film’s stron-gest chance at transcending thefaith-based demographic, as the actornever fails to embody the everyman.Rated PG, 100 minutes. OpenedWednesday. — The Associated PressTranscendence (★★ ) Wally Pfis-ter’s Transcendence isn’t so muchthe “Him” to Spike Jonze’s Her as it’sa more dystopian vision of the meet-ing of human consciousness andcomputer intelligence. But whereasHer was playful and personal, Tran-

scendence is clunky and lifeless. Inthe early scenes, Dr. Will Caster (a

disappointingly sleepy Johnny Depp)speaks confidently to eager listenersabout his potentially all-powerfulinvention: the Physically IndependentNeural Network (PINN), an earlyartificial intelligence. Desperate tokeep Caster’s mind alive after anassassination attempt, his wife Evelyn(Rebecca Hall) and colleague Max(Paul Bettany, serving as narrator)upload Caster’s brain to a PC. Anti-tech activists (led by Kate Mara)descend, and Max begins to realizethey’ve created a high-speed Franken-stein. Pfister, making his directorialdebut after years as a cinematogra-pher, doesn’t exhibit a sure hand with

dialogue or a feel for the rhythm ofhis narrative. Rated PG-13, 119 min-utes. Opens Friday. — AP

NOW PLAYING

Captain America: The Winter

Soldier (★★★ ) Chris Evans returnsas Steve Rogers, who becomesCaptain America, Marvel Comicssuperhero. He again joins Natasha,the Black Widow (Scarlett Johans-son), to fight against another evilentity of corrupt government officialsand corporate thugs who advocatetheir huge flying warships. Director-

brothers Joe and Anthony Russoprovide plenty of quick-cutting actionscenes. Rated PG-13, 136 minutes. —Boo AllenDraft Day (★★ 1⁄2) Draft Day is a“ticking clock” thriller built around theNFL draft, a movie that counts downto the fateful decision that oneembattled general manager (KevinCostner) makes with his team’sfirst-round pick. It’s a reasonablyinteresting peek behind the curtainsat the wheeling, dealing and over-thinking that goes on, but for the

Continued on Page 8

Darren Aronofsky is justone of many filmmak-ers with an obsession

with one of the Bible’s epictales. If Aronofsky’s Noah im-pressed you, circle one of thesedates on your calendar. TheDenton Cinemark will screenthe Cecil B. DeMille classicThe Ten Commandments at 2p.m. Friday and again at 2 p.m.Sunday and Wednesday. TheTen Commandments screen afinal time at 7 p.m. Wednes-day.

DeMille’s 1956 epic depic-

tion of the biblical characterMoses was a groundbreakingfilm, advancing special effectsin the famous parting of theRed Sea. Other scenes are partof American film history: Mo-ses (Charlton Heston) turningthe freshwater river to blood,and the sinister arrival of theAngel of Death, a ghoulishmist that comes to claim thefirstborn son of every family inEgypt.

DeMille’s film starts withMoses as a Hebrew child firstraised as an Egyptian prince,

who grows to discover his heri-tage and lead the Hebrewslaves to freedom.

The Ten Commandments ispart of the Cinemark ClassicSeries of Oscar-winning films.The cast also includes YulBrenner, Anne Baxter andYvonne De Carlo. Parentalguidance is recommended forinstense and violent scenes.Runs 220 minutes.

For reservations, visitwww.cinemark.com/the-ten-commandments.

— Lucinda Breeding

Courtesy photo

Charlton Heston appears in one of his most memorable roles as Moses in the Cecil B.

DeMille epic “The Ten Commandments.” Here, Moses invokes God to part the Red Sea so

that the Israelites might escape Egyptian soldiers.

Passover epic Heston as Moses,back on big screen

Page 8: April 17 Denton Time 2014

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The rich are different fromthe rest of us, but so are thosewho have gone to war. Theyhave seen, felt and experiencedwhat we have not.

The Railway Man exam-ines the lasting effects of suchexperiences. And the film looksat these effects brutally and real-istically, yet still retains its hu-manity.

The true story comes fromthe book by Eric Lomax, withscreenplay by Frank CottrellBoyce and Andy Paterson anddirected by Jonathan Teplitzky.Played as a young man by Jere-my Irvine and as an older one by

Colin Firth, Lomax spent timein a Japanese prisoner-of-warcamp in Thailand during WorldWar II, an event he never forgotand one that reportedly shadedhis life until his death in 2012.

Teplitzky takes Lomax’s storyand weaves a telling mosaic over30 years, building the psycho-logical portrait formed by thecamp’s extreme conditions. Thestory begins in 1980, NorthernEngland, as the 60-ish Lomax,now a seemingly staid, stuffysort, meets Patti (Nicole Kid-man) on a train and, with littlebuildup, marries her.

Only then does she becomeaware of his acute mental suffer-ing as seen through a series ofbreakdowns. He won’t talk to

her — or anyone — about hisproblems, but she learns someof her husband’s history fromhis friend and one-time fellowcamp mate Finlay (StellanSkarsgard).

While showing Lomax’s cur-rent state, Teplitzky flips back todocument the soldiers’ life in thecamp. The director shows thetortures Lomax suffered butdoes not dwell needlessly on it.

Teplitzky makes his pointand moves on, mainly to thefilm’s second half, when the old-er Lomax decides the only wayto deal with his demons is toface them. This difficult deci-sion results in a confrontationaltrip to the camp where the manwho was once his chief prosecu-

tor works as a tour guide.Such face-offs rarely end

well, either in the movies or reallife, and this one rings a littlehollow, even if it serves to bringsome kind of cinematic closureto the tortured Lomax.

The Railway Man coverssimilar ground found in otherwar-camp movies. But every ex-perience differs, as anyone whohas ever been locked up in acamp can testify.

BOO ALLEN is an award-winning film critic who hascontributed to the Denton Re-cord-Chronicle for more than20 years. He lives in Dallas.

The Weinstein Co

Eric Lomax (Colin Firth) falls in love with Patti (Nicole Kidman) but remains haunted by his wartime experiences in “The

Railway Man,” based on the book by the real-life Lomax.

Haunted soldier‘Railway Man’ looks into war prisoner’s dark corners

By Boo AllenFilm Critic

[email protected]

casual fan and the casual filmgoer, itcan be a bit of a melodramatic bore.Directed by Ivan Reitman. WithJennifer Garner, Denis Leary, ChiMcBride and Frank Langella. RatedPG-13, 109 minutes. — MCTGod’s Not Dead College freshmanJosh Wheaton (Shane Harper) findshis Christian faith challenged whenProfessor Radisson (Kevin Sorbo)demands his philosophy studentsdisavow, in writing, the existence ofGod, or face a failing grade. Josh mustprove God’s existence by presentingwell-researched, intellectual argu-ments and evidence, then engage theprofessor in a head-to-head debate.Rated PG, 113 minutes.The Grand Budapest Hotel

(★★ 1⁄2) Ralph Fiennes takes the leadrole in this latest slice of odd humorand great whimsy from writer-director Wes Anderson (The Royal

Tenenbaums, Rushmore). Fiennesplays Monsieur Gustave, the propri-etor of the titular hotel in 1932 in afictional European country. An An-derson-like narrative unfolds aboutGustave’s being left a valuable paint-ing and the hurdles he faces in ob-taining it. Rated R, 99 minutes. — B.A.Noah (★★★ 1⁄2) Old Testament furyhas rarely come to such spectacularlyfearsome life than in Noah, DarrenAronofsky’s audacious adaptation ofone of the Bible’s best-known but stillenigmatic chapters. Russell Croweand Jennifer Connelly deliver impres-sively grounded, powerful perfor-mances. Rated PG-13, 131 minutes. —The Washington PostOculus (★★★ ) Doctor Who alumnaKaren Gillan sheds her Scots accentas Kaylie, a young woman who wentthrough something terrible and, she isconvinced, something supernatural 11years before. Now, she’s out todestroy an ornate, baroque mirrorthat seemed to possess her parentsand put her brother into a mentalinstitution. Rated R, 111 minutes. —MCTThe Raid 2 (★★★★ ) The Raid 2

begins in an unexpected venue for a50-on-1 martial arts battle: a prisonrestroom stall. Director Gareth Evansand actor/choreographer Iko Uwaisare operating on a different actionmovie level here, and it’s thrilling towatch. Uwais is Rama, an Indonesiancop who’s on a multi-year undercoverassignment to take down a crimering. As two rival factions encroachon the turf, Rama must fight to keepthe case, and himself, alive. Rated R,150 minutes. — San Francisco Chron-icleRio 2 (★★★ 1⁄2) A vivid and delightfulanimated spectacle, Rio 2 is chock-full of colorful 3-D wonder and jubi-lant musical numbers set against atale of family dynamics and environ-mental dilemmas. After mating inBrazil in 2011’s Rio, rare macaws Blu(voiced by Jesse Eisenberg) and Jewel(Anne Hathaway) now have threelively kids. The family heads off to theAmazon rainforest when they getwind that a tribe of blue macaws maylive there and are being pursued byBlu’s past owner (Leslie Mann). RatedG, 101 minutes. — AP

MOVIESContinued from Page 7

The Railway

Man

Rated R, 117 minutes.

Opens Friday at the Angelika

Plano.

Page 9: April 17 Denton Time 2014

9Denton

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COVER STORY

Upon the Ecliptic marks a dramaticstep away from the polished pia-no-blues-rock that Denton musi-

cian Andrew Tinker distilled onto his de-but record in 2009, It Takes the World.

Upon the Ecliptic will be released onFriday, and Tinker will celebrate with alocal release show.

The artist said it took four years tomake his second record.

“The band itself was pretty well

known for live stuff, but we couldn’t, Iguess, get that on tape. It didn’t reallyseem to translate,” Tinker said. “It didn’thave the same vibe. So Upon the Eclipticreally just abandoned that vibe.”

Before and after the debut record,Tinker’s band had a healthy followingthat craved the intensity of its live show.Tinker would put his piano through thewringer, and the band kept up with KelynCrapp burning it up on guitar, Julia Ad-amy on bass and George Tinker ondrums. Some performances would endwith a wrung-out Andrew Tinker face-down on the floor after a rowdy round of“Working Man’s Blues.”

Tinker said the time between his firstand second records was busy and pro-ductive, but ultimately, the time didn’tyield a recording the group wanted to re-lease. Tinker also recorded other bands

at his Big Acre Sound Studio, the barn-like space at his folks’ Copper Canyonhome. Tinker renovated the storagebuilding so that he could record his ownmusic there and hire it out as a studio toarea bands and artists. He also wrote asong, “A Wandering No More,” for thefilm Ain’t Them Bodies Saints when afriend hit him up. The producer was oncea member of the Polyphonic Spree withTinker.

The band started projects, but didn’tfinish them.

“The fact is that my band was kind ofstill solidifying itself as so many of us fin-ished at North Texas, and by the time I

feel like the lineup crystallized, we’d triedto record some stuff,” Tinker said. “I dohave an archive of an entire EP that wegot into the mixing stage and kind of col-lectively look back at it and was like, ‘Thisdoesn’t really feel like where we’re at.’”

As material was written, recorded andworked over, the band lineup becameTinker, Jacob Smith and drummer JeffRandall. Then Randall announced hewas going to move to Nashville.

“And before he left it was like, if we’regoing to record something, it’s now ornever,” Tinker said. “And so we recorded abunch of tracks, and I parsed a wholebunch of stuff that became Upon theEcliptic.”

It Takes the World serves up carefullycrafted pop — with the anthemic title

Courtesy photo/Yana Khaykinson

Denton musician Andrew Tinker releases his sophomore album, “Upon the Ecliptic,” on Friday with a show that night at Dan’s Silverleaf.

Third rock from the sun‘Ecliptic’ takes Tinkerthrough the seasons,back home again

By Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor

[email protected]

See TINKER on 10

Andrew Tinker

Denton album release show, with Kaela Sinclairopening. 9 p.m. Friday at Dan’s Silverleaf,

103 Industrial St. Cover is $7.

Page 10: April 17 Denton Time 2014

10Denton

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track shining a hopeful light and“B Sweet,” an R&B experimentthat shows Tinker’s technical as-suredness (he did leave Univer-sity of North Texas College ofMusic with a degree in musictheory) and his talent for a hook.

Upon the Ecliptic betraysTinker’s quirk for curatingstyles, then using them withwhat sounds like native ease.Tinker is a fluent musician andan adventurer. The 12-bar bluesof It Takes the World gets up-graded to folk; Ecliptic is gritti-er, a messier record than its pre-decessor.

“I think there is a definitetheme to the album,” Tinkersaid. “There is some seasonalimagery, and I think that that’swhere I really felt like the bulk ofthe material was formed, in thetransience of everything.

“Everything’s moving. Every-thing’s changing and that’swhere I was in my life. Seeingmy friends get married, andhave babies, and move and pur-sue careers, and it’s like I feltkind of like the tree whose leavesare falling off. … And that fall-ing-away process, for me, iswhat made me feel new — mademe feel like there was some-thing left to do.”

The “ecliptic” in the title is areference to the orbital path ofplanets. The tilt of the Earth —what Tinker calls the planet’s“noncompliance” — causes sea-sonal change.

Tinker found his metaphorand wrote around it. “Feel It inMotion” is broad enough to beabout the cycles of relationshipsand the cycles of the seasons —falling light and diminishingshadows. “No Home,” with itspiano-rock intro and painterlylyrics, is a little Elton John, a lit-tle Michael W. Smith. “All toDust” sits in the middle of therecord, a reminder that allthings must come to an end andthis too shall pass.

With It Takes the World inhis rearview, Tinker started try-ing to write and record songs inways he hadn’t before. In “MustHave Been in Love,” Tinker letsthe drums take a prominentplace, tribal thrumming withtight harmonies and repeatscresting before settling quietlyat the end.

Folk purists might not ap-preciate “No Home,” which is amore overt nod to gospel-con-temporary Christian music. Ithas some flourishes that fans ofmusical theater would appreci-ate; Tinker doesn’t apologize forbeing a fan of StephenSchwartz’s Godspell. Tinkersings refrains of “yes, Lord” onthe bridge, and invokes the im-provisational feeling of worship.“All to Dust” drops the drums.

“I wanted it to have a fullfeel,” he said. “I wanted thatsweeping gesture, you know? Iwanted to try big, unique com-binations.”

Tinker said he wasn’t bashfulabout singing and playing froma vulnerable point of view.While relationships ran alongtheir natural course — thosemarriages, births and reloca-tions putting new people intohis life while putting others intothe distance — he couldn’t writeabout anything else.

And he doesn’t cloak his reli-gious yearnings, either. Andwith Tinker, religious yearningsaccept the reality of the naturalworld and the mysteries of love.

“To me, it is not a theologicalrecord,” he said. “It’s a personalaccount of how I deal with peo-ple and how I deal with the di-vine. And how they deal withme.”

Tinker said the four yearsnudged him to write what heknows.

“I couldn’t make a record toshow my band that we couldmake a record. I couldn’t make arecord for the fans, because weweren’t playing that much,” hesaid. “So then who am I going tomake a record for? I’m going tomake a record that is just asclose as I can get to describingmy own condition and hopethat that resonates with otherpeople — that the honesty will atleast resonate with other peo-ple.”

Tinker said he might be put-ting his scarred, beat-up pianoaway for a while. It’s been allover North Texas. It’s been onstage at the Denton Arts & JazzFestival, and it’s been on thehard floor of Banter Bistro.

“Making this record wasmore like, ‘Let’s make this al-bum larger than life,’” he said.

“That’s why live, I’ve just beenplaying with my acoustic guitar.I know that might sound con-tradictory, but playing the songswith just acoustic guitar reallyputs the songs out there in frontof people. That’s what I did atSouth By Southwest.”

Tinker performed at an un-official showcase hosted byHand Drawn Records duringthe huge Austin music and filmfestival.

Tinker said he feels like he’sstarting over, because he hadn’treleased new music since 2009.And as much as he insists thathe is “totally done” with It Takesthe World, he concedes thatUpon the Ecliptic is still a cous-in of his debut album.

“I definitely agree that it isdifferent, and maybe evolved,but the funny thing about it tome is that I feel like the evolu-tion came full circle,” he said. “Ithas some of the first songs that Iever wrote, when I was a teen-ager, and then some that werewritten in the recording processand never even played live be-fore the record was made. It waslike, ‘Wow, I’ve had some ofthese themes going since I was18 years old.’ And now I justneed to finish them and putthem on tape.”

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

From Page 9

Tinker

TRACK BY TRACKANDREW TINKER, “UPON THE ECLIPTIC”

■ “Feel It in Motion” — The album begins with this tune, an easymidtempo song reminiscent of Bruce Hornsby & the Range. Folksy guitarand keys — both of which are Tinker’s strong suit — ease you into arecord that has a slow-rock sensibility and the kind of soulfulness thatyou get with Lyle Lovett or Bob Dylan.

■ “I’ll Come Around” — A moody intro worthy of composers like Jonsigrows into a confession. “Don’t feel much like singing now/I’ll comearound/Baby, I won’t let you down/I’ll come around.” The final line — “Icannot fit my piano in this suitcase” trails off into a ornamental brush ofkeys. It’s the sort of song that would play during the end credits of adrama. Tinker is the music director at the Center for Spiritual Living inDallas, and has a clear understanding of how to make music underscoreexperience. Tinker tucked a reprise of the song — accompanying himselfon banjo — on the CD as a bonus track.

■ “All to Dust” — The standout track of the album wisely uses the sadsound of Appalachian folk songs and backs it with accordion, harp,harmonica, acoustic guitar, mandolin and classical guitar. Lyrically, Tinkerleans on biblical language. “For does the rain even upon them fall, thewicked and the righteous one the same/Who say your word but cannotsay your name, who hear the same but who do not hear the call.” Thevocal line — Tinker’s chorally trained tenor — mimics the simple, sus-tained notes of liturgical chants. With the instrumentation, though, theeffect is a gut-level thing instead of cathedral perfect.

— Lucinda Breeding

DINING

RESTAURANTS

ASIANGobi Mongolian Grill andAsian Diner 717 S. I-35E, Suite100. 940-387-6666.Mr. Chopsticks This pan-Asianeatery does a little Chinese, Japa-nese, Thai and even Indian food.Offers a plethora of tasty appetiz-ers and entrees. Many vegetariandishes (some with egg). Beer andwine. 1633 Scripture St. Mon-Sat11-10, Sun 11:30-9. $-$$. 940-382-5437.

BARBECUEClint’s BBQ Barbecue spot servesup brisket, ribs, pulled pork, sau-sage, chicken and breakfast too.921 S. U.S. Highway 377, Aubrey.Tues-Thurs 6am-8pm; Fri-Sat6am-9pm; Sun 6am-3pm. 940-365-9338. www.clintsbbq.com.Gold Mine BBQ 222 W. HickorySt., Suite 102. 940-387-4999.www.texasgoldminebbq.com.Metzler’s Bar-B-Q Much morethan a barbecue joint, with wineand beer shop, deli with Germanfoods and more. Smoked turkey islean yet juicy; generous doses ofdelightful barbecue sauce. Tender,well-priced chicken-fried steak.Hot sausage sampler has a secretweapon: spicy mustard. Beer andwine. 628 Londonderry Lane. Daily10:30am-10pm. $. 940-591-1652.Old House BBQ 1007 Ave. C.940-383-3536.The Smokehouse Dentonbarbecue joint serves up surpris-ingly tender and juicy beef, pork,chicken and catfish. Good sauces,bulky sandwiches and mashedpotatoes near perfection. Goodpies and cobblers. Beer and wine.1123 Fort Worth Drive. Sun-Thurs11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-566-3073.

BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Bistro Gourmet sand-wiches and salads, breakfastitems, coffee and espresso. Beerand wine. 219 W. Oak St. Daily10am-midnight. $. 940-565-1638.www.dentonbanter.com.Cachette Bistro 144 N. Old TownBlvd., Suite 1, Argyle. Mon-Fri7:30am-5pm, Sat 8am-3pm.940-464-3041. www.cachettebistro.com.The Chestnut Tree Salads,sandwiches, soups and other lunchand brunch options served in backof small shop on the Square.Chicken pot pie is stellar. Tastyquiche. Decadent fudge lava cakeand rich carrot cake. Revolvingdinner menu. 107 W. Hickory St.Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat 9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat 5:30-9pm.$-$$. 940-591-9475. www.chestnuttearoom.com.Sidewalk Bistro 2900 WindRiver Lane, Suite 132. Sun-Mon7am-3pm, Tues-Sat 7am-9pm.940-591-1999. www.sidewalk-bistro.com.

Continued on Page 11

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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.$. 940-387-1696.Loco Cafe Casual breakfast/lunchcafe that’s a sister restaurant to theGreenhouse Restaurant across thestreet. Signature plate is the LocoMoco: stacked hash browns toppedwith eggs, cheese, salsa or gravy witha fresh biscuit. 603 N. Locust St.Mon-Fri 6am-2pm; Sat-Sun 7am-3pm.$-$$. 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.

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.bearsdentexas.com.The Club at Gateway CenterThree-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’sGateway 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 Greenhouse RestaurantCasual 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). $-$$.940-484-1349. www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hannah’s Off the Square Exec-utive chef Sheena Croft’s “upscalecomfort food” puts the focus on local,seasonal ingredients. Steaks getA-plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.No checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Lunch:Mon-Sat 11-3. Brunch: Sun10:30am-3pm. Dinner: Sun-Mon4:30-9; Tues-Thurs 4:30-10; Fri-Sat4:30-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.www.hannahsoffthesquare.com.Queenie’s Steakhouse Chef TimLove’s steakhouse just off the down-town Square. Live jazz nightly. Fullbar. 115 E. Hickory St. Lunch: Fri11:30-2:30. Dinner: Wed-Thurs 4:30-10pm, Fri-Sat 4:30-11pm. $$-$$$.940-442-6834. www.queeniessteakhouse.com.The Wildwood Inn Elegant diningroom tucked away in a bed andbreakfast. Excellent food like heartysoups, Angus rib-eye, meal-sizesalads and daily specials. Beer andwine. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.Thurs-Sat 6-10pm. $$$. 940-243-4919. www.denton-wildwoodinn.com.

GREEK/MEDITERRANEANCaesar Island MediterraneanFood 7650 S. I-35E, Suite 112, Corinth.940-269-4370.Jasmine’s Mediterranean Grilland 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 RestaurantSmall 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.Good fries are crispy with skin stillattached. Full bar. 1210 W. Hickory St.Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-7025.Denton County IndependentHamburger 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 allyour 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.

HOME COOKINGBabe’s Chicken Dinner House204 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.

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. Lasagna, chicken andeggplant parmigiana bake in wood-fired oven with thin-crusted pizzas.1400 N. Corinth St., Suite 103, Corinth.Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9; Thurs-Sat11-2:30, 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 RestaurantRomantic 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. $-$$.940-381-2712.Luigi’s Pizza Italian RestaurantFamily-run spot does much more thanpizza, and how. Great New York-stylepies plus delicious southern Italiandishes, from lunch specials to priciermeals. Nifty kids’ menu. Tiramisu isdynamite. Beer and wine. 2317 W.University Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988.

DININGContinued from Page 10

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

DQ

Page 12: April 17 Denton Time 2014

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businessopportunites

203

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ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Consideration shouldbe given before making a finan-cial committment. Please beaware of long distance charg-es, application fees, & creditcard info you provide.Books/lists of jobs do not guar-antee employment or that ap-plicants will be qualified forjobs listed.

Packing and shipping store inDenton. $58,700 cash.

Selling for health reasons.Call Phil 940-382-2030

• 22 years minimum age;

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Denton ISD HiresRoute Drivers, Extracurricular Trip Drivers & Monitors

7650 S. I-35ECorinth, Texas 76210

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ALL PHASE ELECTRIC ISSEEKING A LICENSED

JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIANneeded to grow local electrical

contract service dept.Must have residential &

commerical experience. 2-5 yrsexperience required. Great

Communications Skills Needed.Well rounded & flexible.

Call 940-321-2242.

A Medical Office

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MA/ Front Office. Extra Pay for EMR and ClinicalExperience. Top 100 Company.Medical, Dental, Vision, 401K. Fax Resume to 940-566-0394.

Bus Driver SubstituteEnsure safe and orderly transpor-

tation of students on assignedroute. Operate school bus that

transports students and other au-thorized personnel to and from

schools or other designated loca-tion. To include field trips. Oncall basis - $13.32/hour - Will

train. Apply in person at ArgyleIndependent School District,800 Eagle Drive, Argyle, TX

76226, 940-464-7241 (ext. 8001)

Caregiver Needed in Krum, Texas

Interested call 214-998-7935

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

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CARE GIVERS Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care

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Class A CDL

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CONSTRUCTION WORKERSNEEDED. CAR/TRUCK AND

TOOLS A MUST. GOOD PAY.CALL LEE 940-268-8172.

Cook/cashier-fast food deli atPit Stop in Bolivar. Must be

experienced & have ref.6551 FM 455 W Sanger.

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DELIVERY TRUCK DRIVER Class B or C, Auto Diesel

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The City of Gainesville is accepting applications for a full timeCERTIFIED POLICE OFFICER position. Requirements include: educationequivalent to the completion of the twelfth gradesupplemented by specialized training in police science, criminaljustice administration or a related field. Possession of a valid driver’s license.Possession of, or in the process of obtaining, a valid Texas Peace Officer Licensefrom the Texas Commission on LawEnforcement Standards and Education.

Salary range - According to Police Department Step Plan.

Obtain job description and submit application at the City ofGainesville Human Resources Department located at 200 S. Rusk(South Entrance), Gainesville, TX 76240 or visit our website atwww.gainesville.tx.us/jobs.aspx. Resumes will be accepted with acompleted application. Position closes Monday, May 5, 2014 at 5:00 p.m.

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

City of GainesvilleJob Announcement

Denton County MHMR CenterRequest for Application

DCMHMR is seeking applicationsfor the Contract position that

provides Licensed Social Workservices to work with clients withintellectual and developmentaldisabilities in Denton County.To request RFA packet, call

Contracts Specialist @940-565-5263. Application is

due by 4pm on April, 28 2014.

Drivers needed Class A CDL,with Tanker endorsement

preferred. Call Mon thru Fri8am-5pm only 940-736-0758.

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

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

Environ. Assist./

Make Ready

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Bed & Texture experience aplus. We are looking for a

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remodels are done here atGood Samaritan Society forour apartments, twin homes,

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Search for Denton Village Campus

All qualified applicants willreceive consideration withoutregard to race, color, religion,sex, national origin, disabilityor protected veteran status.

Flooring co. looking for Out-side Sales People to sell flooring

& windows in DFW area, greatcompensation & benefits, salesexp preferred but not required.

Email resume to:[email protected]

FOOD SERVICE MANAGER atSelect Rehabilitation Hospitalof Denton. 3 years experience.

Contact Ashley [email protected] or

call 940-297-6521.

FT Help Needed at FostersSaddle Shop. Sales & Stock.

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Apply M-TH, 11-2 at6409 N. I-35 Denton

FT POOL TECH Must Have Good Driving Record.

Experience Helpful butNot Necessary.

Call 940-458-4981.

Full time Warehouse Supervisor needed for busy

wholesale giftware company inGainesville. Apply in person

1304 Corporate Drive,Gainesville, TX, 76240 or

Email Resume [email protected]

Growing Call Centeris filling Positions FAST!

FT & PT Pos AvailTraining classes weekly

Great for StudentsGuaranteed Hourly Base

Incentives & BonusesPAID WEEKLY!

Call 940/323-2694 or stop by721 South Interstate 35 E, #144 Denton, TX. 76205

to Apply Today

HAUL TRUCK DRIVERNeeded for Local DFW Area.

CDL Required. Will Train.Call 940-382-6020.

HIRING HVAC

SERVICE TECH 3-5 yrs Exp. Must Have OwnTools and Transportation.Longtime Area Company.

940-458-3866.

DI

BDC COORDINATOR

POSITIONFull-time position 1p–7:30p Mon–Fri

Every Saturday 8a–5p

$9 hour + Bonus.Must be dependable. This job does require you to be ableto handle multiple phone calls throughout the day and tomaintain a professional but friendly relationship with thecustomer as well as fellow employees. Making out boundservice calls. Must be quick on computers. Candidates

for this position must also be able to pass a backgroundcheck as well as a drug screening. EOE

Please email resume [email protected]

Classic Chrysler Jeep Dodge Mazda4984 South I35 E, Denton

Home Health Care Jobs Avail with Active Home Care

Services in Pilot Point &Sanger Tx

PRN Registered NursePart Time Certified Nurse AideFull Time Experienced Home

Health MarketerPRN Physical Therapist...

PRN Occupational TherapistLive in CaregiversHourly Caregivers

Great Pay, Flexible Schedule,mileage and cell phone

reimbursement.940-686-HOME or apply online

www.activehomecare.org

HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED. Oneday per week. No smoking, own

transportation. Must have aphone. Pay by the hour (not by

the job) 940-566-3088 Leave Msg

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]

HVAC Service Tech needed. Experience in Commercial &

Residential Required.Email resume to

[email protected] orFax 469-574-7959.

Inside Sales

PositionMUST have experience working

in manufacturing and/orconstruction field(s), office

exp, cash register, customerservice, & computer literate.

Please submit resume &salary requirements to

[email protected] orApply online at

www.ahi-supply.com.

Insurance Agency is lookingfor FT CUST. SERV. REP.

Must have excellent phone andcommunication skills. Experiencepreferred. Will pay for licensing for

the right candidate. Call940-382-9300 or email resumeto [email protected].

INTERNET SALES MANAGERwanted at Cycle Center of

Denton. Responsible for allinternet leads and Website Inventory Management.

Contact Chris at 940-765-3364.

Job Opportunities!Industrial & WarehouseMachine OperatorsForklift OperatorsWood WorkersAssembly/ProductionIndustrial MaintenanceOrder PullersCherry PickersWelders/Fitter Welders w/MIG,TIG & 3G-PositionQC w/Shipping & Computer Skills(940)442-6550

LANDSCAPE CREW OPERATOR/LABORER --Based in Denton. Need Valid

Texas Driver’s License. Experi-ence a plus. Must be Insurable.

Pay Based On Experience .Call 214-316-3985.

LARGE UTILITYCONTRACTOR HIRING

EQUIPMENT

OPERATORS,

LABORERS,

DIRECTIONAL

BORE OPERATOR/

LOCATORwith experience in distribution

electric & gas, andconduit/manhole installation.

Must be able to pass drug test& background check. Travel is

required. Please call 214-571-2500 for information

Little Guys Movers is now hiringresponsible individuals who

possess strong communicationskills, a positive attitude, and a

valid driver’s license. Backgroundchecks. Apply in person,520 S. Elm St, Denton.

Starts at $9.50/hr.

LOCAL MAID SERVICE ISNOW HIRING PART TIME

Need to have Experience & OwnTransportation. 940-206-5311.

Looking for Lead Maintenance.Must be HVAC Certified. Must

have knowledge of Industry Com-puter Programs. Great Hours &

Benefits. Well MaintainedProperty. Please Apply to:www.Pinnaclefamily.com ,

click on Join our team, careers,search, selected state and city,

choose your position.

Looking for Opportunity??

UBH of Denton is now hiring

Fulltime

Housekeepers &

Dietary Aides

For more informationPlease visit our website at:

www.ubhdenton.com

Maintenance

Technician FTMust have previous experienceincluding plumbing, electrical

and general repairs. HVACknowledge and certificationpreferred. Looking for staffwho enjoy working in a long

term care facility and is a teamplayer.

All applications are acceptedonline only at our website

www.good-sam.com

EEOCAll qualified applicants will

receive consideration withoutregard to race, color, religion,sex, national origin, disabilityor protected veteran status.

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

Own Transportation.Please Call 214-855-7189.

Medical Assistant needed for FPoffice in Lewisville; X-Ray and

phlebotomy experience [email protected] or

214-680-9895 / fax 972-219-0343

Nasr Bros. Jewelers is Looking for an EXPERIENCED

SALES ASSOCIATE.Please Email Resume [email protected]

NORTHSTAR BANKFlower Mound – New Location:

Loan Administrative AssistantP-T Teller (2:00-6:00pm)Grapevine: Commercial

RE LenderColleyville: P-T Teller

(10:00-2:00pm)Lewisville: P-T Teller

(2:00-6:00pm)Experience required, EEO.

Resume to [email protected] details go to:

www.nstarbank.com, “Careers”

North Texas Heating & AirNow Hiring Experienced

Service Technician Must have driver’s license, clean driving record andclean background check.

Apply at 9843 S. Fort Worth Dr , Argyle

Opportunities

Available!

APPLY ONLINE ATwww.highlandvillage.org

Human Resources1000 Highland Village RdHighland Village TX 75077

Phone: 972-899-5087EOE

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job lists 340

Denton Record-Chronicle

www.DentonRC.com/ads

Place a

FREE adfor stuff priced $1500 or less

Reaching over 320,000 potential shoppers!

From furniture and appliances to cars and homes,

let the Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds

help YOU earn cash!

*Non-commercial accounts only. First 15 lines are free. Price of items must be in ad with a

combined total $1500 or less. Excludes pets/animals for sale. Other restrictions may apply.

$200

Place a FREE Classified ad Online.

DentonRC.com/ADS

It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3.

PLUMBERS

LICENSED PLUMBERS.Accepting resumes for

experienced professionalresidential & commercial

service plumbers. Excellentcompensation and benefitspackage. Mail Resume to:

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

St. Denton TX 76201or Email to:

[email protected]

Pool Maintenance

Technicians Full and part time positionsavailable. Must have a cleandriving record for insurance

coverage. Must be able to lift50 lbs. Strong work ethic and

positive attitude preferred.Paid training and benefit pack-

ages are available.Please apply in person –

GOHLKE POOLS909 Dallas Dr. – Denton.

Property Management Companyin Denton seeking to

fill two positions:--Experienced Maintenance,must have HVAC experience.

--Experienced paintingprofessional

Please send resume to [email protected]

or fax 940-565-9990

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

P/T Nurse Aide for Home Healthneeded immediately. $15/visit.

Current CNA , DL, Auto Insurancerequired. Email Resume.

[email protected] 940-566-4992.Tel. 940-566-4999.

Restaurant/

Banquet Servers

Wanted. Experience Preferred.$7.25/ hr plus Tips

Apply at the Hilton Garden inDenton 3110 Colorado Blvd,Denton 76210. Must Have

Positive Attitude, Strong WorkEthic and Flexible Schedule.

Southwest PetroleumTransport is looking for BobtailDriver and Transport Drivers

with CDL with Hazmat Endorsement . Must be 21 yrs of

age. We offer top pay, greatbenefits, 401K, paid vacation,

health & dental insurance.Experience preferred. Call

Carroll Enderby 940-442-5300.

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

have own transportation.Please call Cindy at

940-483-8548.

Tiny Tykes is Hiring FT & PTChild Caregivers Immediately.

Flexible Schedules. Email Resume & Availability to

[email protected] or Fax to 940-483-0522

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

Alfalfa & Alfalfa/OrchardSmall & Large Square. Round

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

Coastal Hay Square Bales only,$7 each, quantity discount.

Kawasaki diesel 4x4 Mule, likenew $8000. Krum 940-391-3368

First Cutting GrassRound Bales. $50 each.

We buy, sell, trade & repairwestern saddles & tack.Weldon’s Saddle Shop,

Bell & E. Hickory, Denton,940-382-1921

[email protected]

Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed

Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators

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

BUY SELL & REPAIR Working& Non-working appliances, some

brands. 377 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 & sellerswelcome. Located 1 mile E. ofLoop 288 on Hwy. 380, in Denton.

(940) 391-6202

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

AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable

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

DENTON,209 MOONLIT PATH

FRI-SATURDAYMULTI FAMILY SALE

Highland Shores

& CastlewoodHUGE COMMUNITY

GARAGE SALESaturdays, April 12 and 19

Rain or Shine, Mapsco 549Q -FM 407 N on Highland Village Rd

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

321 Withers in DentonCUTE 1 Bdrm 1 Bath, walk to

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

** AMAZING COMMUNITIES **Spacious floor plans!

1/2 OFF DEPOSIT! Call 940-566-0033 525 S. Carroll Blvd,

#100, Denton Tx. 76201Reserve yours today!!

CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565

All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,

1 & 2 BR starting at $460 & up

Carriage House

Assisted Living

Studio &One Bedroom

Several Levels of

Care Available

Bring in Ad forSpecial Pricing

940-484-10661357 Bernard, Denton

DA

Going Quick!

Page 14: April 17 Denton Time 2014

14Denton

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DentonRC.com

Find the right person for your job

today at DentonRC.com/jobs

or call 1-800-275-1722

Page 15: April 17 Denton Time 2014

15Denton

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houses: unfurnished

630

houses: unfurnished

630

houses w/acreage 730

mobile/manufactured homes

760

steel/portable/wood buildings

1415

travel trailer/rv sales/rent

1446

"# !"&!$#%' &$

Get more feedback from buyerswhen you advertise in the Classifieds.

To place an ad, visit DentonRC.com/adsor call 940-387-7755.

Introducing ClickNBuyWhere Sellers &Buyers ConnectDentonRC.com/ads

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

2/1 $715/mo; 2/2 $740/mo1/1 $610-$625. Walk to UNT. Callour friendly staff at 940-382-3100.

FREE RENT! Remodeled 1, 2,& 3 BR. Hollyhills Apts 940-

382-6774. 900 Londonderry.OpenM-F 8:30a-5:30p, Sat 10a-2p

Get a GREAT DEAL on Off Campus living,

209-213 Ave G - 2 Bedroom,1 Bath Apartments.

$625/mo, Water Included.Contact 940-243-RENT (7368)

Se habla espanol.

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, 940-321-3231

WESTWIND APARTMENTS$99 to Apply. 1 Bedroom Move-In

April & May. 1710 Sam Bass 940-382-1535.

$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 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

2009 Azalea Near UNT 3/2/2Brick, Fenced Yard, Energy Effi-cient, Extra Clean & Nice. $1150/mo + $1000 dep. 940-367-4178.

2/1.5. 2-Story Townhome. 1247Dallas Dr. Appox 1100 sq ft. FP.New Paint, Flooring & Appliances.

$975/mo + $800/ dep.No Pets/Smoking. 940-565-0078.

$3000/mo Lakefront!180 Degree Lake Lewisville

frontage. 3644 sq ft. 4bd/3.5baGranite and Hardwood throughout840 Highridge Drive, LakewoodVillage, TX. 214-679-9300 Ryan

3/2/2. Newly RemodeledNew Appliances, Fenced Yard. Pet ok with Deposit. Neptune

469-878-3676.

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

940-566-5717 see video atkillianpropertymanagement.com

4 bedroom, 2 bath, new paint,carpet & wood laminate.

816 Brittany DentonCall 940-367-2664

LOOKING TO RENT?Call Cami and setup a search today!!

(940)243-5478.

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

Call Crouch Realty940-382-6707.

1 BDRM 1 BATH on 1 Acre inPonder. Wood Floors, front porch,water/trash inc. Car port. $600/mo

$600 deposit 940-783-5460

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.

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

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

I want to Share 1 Room OfficeSpace in Denton,

$200/mo maximum. Call 940-383-5850

LAND FOR SALE427 Acre RanchMontague County

2 Barns + RunningCreek, Road Frontage

Call 940-841-0468

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.

Big, Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba Brickin Nocona’s Premier Area.

Great views of Indian Oaks GolfCourse. $169,000. Owner Financ-ing Possible. For More Info Call

Tom Horn at 940-841-0374.

23 ACRE RANCH OverlookingLake Ray Robert on Co Rd 231,Valley View. 3/2/2 + Suite & Barn.$499K/ Negotiable 214-957-3642

Realtor Must Sale Because OfHealth. 40 Acres. 2-Story Home.Shop and Barn. Good Hunting.

Call For Details 940-393-0421.

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

Very Nice 1996 Oak Creek28x58, 3/2. Set Up in Nice DentonPark with Enclosed Deck, Carport

and 2 Sheds. Just $29,900.Call 214-403-9787.

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

PROFESSIONAL BUILDERSQuality Cabinets/Countertops,

Wood/Tile Floors-Walls. Remod-eling. Call John 940-206-3568.

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 /

DA

L’ STOP MAIDS214-560-7004.

Residential and CommercialWe Are Cleaning For LE$$.

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, freeest. 469-487-4049, 940-536-4911

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

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.

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

LANGSTON’S HandymanI do tile, wood floors, minor

electric. Build fences, decks, tapeand bed & paint 940-390-9989

Lite House Repair &Handyman Services

Inside & OutsideFree Estimate 940-395-0549

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

Mint Cleaning

ServiceHouse Cleaning

940-453-0516

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

bushes, stonework. Free Estimate15% Senior Discount

940-442-1440 or 940-442-1252

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

Arriaga’s Lawn

Care ServiceExperienced in Mowing, WeedEating, Edging, Flower Beds,Trimming Bushes and Trees.

FREE ESTIMATES.Contact (940)268-7674.

LONGHORN LAWN CARESERVICES.

Charles Rohrer 940-284-2851.

Affordable MowingMowing in Denton Co. since 1998

Call Dwight 940-435-9975

LANGSTON’S PAINTI Do Tape & Bed and Paint.

In Business 24 Years.940-390-9989

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.

RV & BOAT STORAGE940-584-0080Great Prices!

PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/

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

ANDERSON ROOFING REMODELING

RESIDENTIAL ROOFING(General Contractor- Roofing,

Gutters, Siding, Windows,Painting, Screens.)

32 yrs exp

1. A+ Rating BBB Accredited 2. Member Chamber of Commerce Denton .

COMMERCIAL ROOFSSteel, ModBitumen, HydroStop, EPDM, 3 ply build up.

Save Deductible

817-230-9215

Ameripride Roofing &Construction

Roofing, Siding, Windows,Gutters, Painting, Drywall, Metal

Roofs, Becra, Skylights.

A+ BBB RatingMember of North Texas Roofing

Contractors Association

Free Estimates

817-501-4817

Advantage-

Roofing-Siding-

Windows-GuttersFree Storm Inspections

Let Us Get You the Most MoneyFor Your Claim.

No Money Will Be ExchangedUntil You Are 100% Satisfied.A+ BBB Rating Since 1986.

Call 817-313-0537.

ALPINE ROOF SYSTEMS

BBB ACCREDITED

817-296-2880HAIL-WIND

Repairs $90 & up

Save DeductibleRoofing, Gutters, Siding

Patio’s, Windows, Painting.

Capital Roofing

ContractorsAll Types of Roofing, Com/Res.

Insurance Claim AssistanceGutters * Skylights * Turbines

A Plus BBB Member. Free Estimates. Call 940-686-5354

or 972-539-3848

Patrick’s RoofingA+ BBB Rating. Save DeductibleOwner Supervised Jobs. FreeEstimates. No $ down. Over20 yrs exp. 5 year No Leak

Guarantee. Refs Available. Seeour website Patricksroofing.com

817-528-2991.

AMERICAN EAGLE ROOFINGGeneral Contractor. Local Roofer

Since 1973. 50+ Local Refs.Free Estimates. Ins. Specialist.

Avoid Scams No Money Up Frontwith Us. Save Deductible.

214-228-6742/ 817-627-4274

Local Licensed and InsuredGeneral Contractor.

Roofing, Gutters, Siding.Insurance Claim Specialists.

Free Estimates. 972-446-3300.

TILLERY ROOFING SERVICE All Types of Roofing. Insurance

Claims Welcome. Free Estimates.Local 30 years. A+ BBB.

214-243-3954.

HW Roofing Concepts"Building Relationship OneRoof At a Time" Call for free

estimate 817-441-5234

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