july 3 denton time 2014

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Weekly entertainment magazine of the Denton Record-Chronicle.

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Page 1: July 3 Denton Time 2014

User: [email protected] Time: 07-02-2014 23:29 Product: DRC_Tab PubDate: 07-03-2014 Zone: State Edition: 1 Page: DTIME_T01 Color: CMYK

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ON THE COVERFOURTH OF JULYFour-year-old Sarah Canonshows off her star-shapedshades before marching in the2013 Yankee Doodle Parade.This year’s parade is back onthe Square on Friday morning.(Photo by David Minton)Story on Page 8

FIND IT INSIDEMUSICConcerts and nightclubschedules. Page 4MOVIESReviews and summaries.Page 6DININGRestaurant listings. Page 11

TO GET LISTEDINFORMATIONInclude 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] IT TO:

940-566-6888MAIL IT TO:

Denton Time314 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 USEDITORIAL & ARTFeatures EditorLucinda Breeding 940-566-6877

[email protected] DirectorSandra Hammond 940-566-6820Classified ManagerJulie Hammond 940-566-6819Retail Advertising ManagerShawn Reneau 940-566-6843Advertising fax 940-566-6846

DentonTime

Denton artist J.R. Byrdtakes music seriously.

Himself? Not somuch.

The musician has been writ-ing and performing in NorthTexas for a while now. Hedropped his fourth solo recordin 2012, a hodgepodge of songsserved up on either the guitar orkeyboard, which Byrd tackleswith equal authority and ease.

Byrd brings that Dentonsummer tradition, TwilightTunes, to a close on Indepen-dence Day. Every other show inthe concert series on the Court-house on the Square lawn startsa bit before sunset on Thurs-days. (Tonight’s set by BoneDoggie & the Hickory StreetHellraisers will begin at 6:30p.m.)

On Friday morning, Byrdwill bring down the figurativecurtain on the concert series af-ter the Yankee Doodle Paradewraps up at about 10 a.m.

Byrd’s easy-listening tenden-cies make his live set suitable fortots and grandparents, and yethe doesn’t soft-pedal the rock at-titude of “Day in May” or “RobotMonkey.” And try as he might(though he probably doesn’t),Byrd can’t shed the funk andjazz he refined in the jazz studiesprogram at the University ofNorth Texas.

The concert is set to last until11:30 a.m., and is within walkingdistance of the Denton Fourth ofJuly Jubilee in QuakertownPark and Denton Civic Center,321 E. McKinney St.

The concert and holiday fes-tivities are free.

— Lucinda Breeding

IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK

Morning show J.R. Byrd’s 10 a.m. concertcloses out twilight series

Courtesy photoDenton blues-rock-pop artist J.R. Byrd wraps up Twilight Tunes with a special Fourth of Julyconcert at 10 a.m. Friday on the lawn of the Courthouse on the Square, 110 W. Hickory St.

THURSDAY9:30 a.m. — Crafters’ Corner atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Work on projects andlearn new techniques. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Timeat South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley

Lane. Stories, songs, puppets andmore for children ages 1-5 and theircaregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.3:30 p.m. — Book Adventures atSouth Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Books and hands-on activitiesfor grades K-3. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.4:30 p.m. — Book Adventures atEmily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Books and hands-onactivities for grades K-3. Free. Call940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.

6:30 to 8 p.m. — Twilight Tunes,Denton Main Street Association’s freemusic series on the lawn of theCourthouse on the Square, presentsBone Doggie & the Hickory StreetHellraisers at Elm and Oak streets.Visit www.dentonmainstreet.org.

FRIDAY6:30 a.m. — Sunrise hike at theJohnson Branch Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM3002, 7 mileseast of I-35. Bring coffee, cocoa or tea

to Pavilion 1 and join in a half-milewalk along the shoreline. Free withregular park entrance fee of $7 forages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2636.9 to 11 a.m. — Outdoor cookingdemonstration at the JohnsonBranch Unit of Ray Roberts Lake StatePark, on FM3002, 7 miles east of I-35.Meet at the Lost Pines Amphitheaterto learn about building the bestcooking fire and preparing a mealwith simple ingredients. Free with

EVENTS

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of Holly for years, but re-searched the icon in preparationfor the role. He appreciates themusician anew.

“He was a boy from Lubbockwho married a Puerto Ricanwoman back when things werestill pretty segregated [racially],”Lambert said. “He was so prolific,

Brian Lambert didn’t haveto work too hard on themusic in Denton Com-

munity Theatre’s Buddy: TheBuddy Holly Story.

“Buddy Holly is in my wheel-house,” the Denton indie rockersaid over tacos. “I’ve been doingthe rock ’n’ roll thing for a whilenow. In my earlier days, I was apunk rock guy, so hey, strum-ming those chords, playing thatrhythm guitar really fast, thatwas what I did. And if you listento Buddy Holly, there is a hint ofthat going on.”

Now the acting? Lambert,the frontman of Denton bandMy Kickdrum Heart, said actingdidn’t come as easily as assum-ing the music of an Americanrock ’n’ roll icon.

“Yeah, I’m still working onthat,” Lambert said.

Directed by Aileen Stark andBonnie McCormick, Buddy isthe company’s annual Encoreshow. Encore is typically a no-frills ensemble show leaning onbeloved Broadway music, stagedas a gala fundraiser.

Buddy is more of a full pro-duction.

Lambert was tapped for therole by company volunteer PollyMaynard, a Denton classical andindie musician.

“My daughters go to WoodrowWilson Elementary School, andHerb Newton [a Denton Com-munity Theatre volunteer] toldme about the show,” Lambertsaid. “He said they’d been talkingabout doing the show, and Pollysaid, ‘I just so happen to know arock ’n’ roll guitarist who can singthis.’”

Lambert accepted the invita-tion, and joined a cast from thelocal theater scene and Denton’smusic scene. Bassist DrewPhelps plays a member of Hol-ly’s band, the Crickets, withTrent Reeves and Dave Ran-dolph. Theater veteran JohnnyWilliams plays Hipockets Dun-can, and actors Bryan Patrickand Jaime Nunez Rodriguezplay the roles of the Big Bopperand Ritchie Valens, Holly’s con-temporaries.

Lambert said he’s been a fan

too. He wrote a lot of music. I’m alot like him in that I’ve never beenable to write the same music, thesame style or about the same ide-as. I can relate to this guy. ‘PeggySue’ didn’t sound like ‘Everyday.’And ‘Everyday’ didn’t sound like‘Raining in My Heart.’”

Buddy keeps Lambert on

stage through the entire show.Out of 18 numbers, Lambertleads 15. He said he had to getused to putting down the guitaron the few songs he doesn’t ac-company himself.

“I’m working on delivery,” hesaid. “And it’s kind of funny, too.Someone told me I did a good

job of Buddy’s gawky dancing. Ididn’t try to do any gawky danc-ing, but I guess being a tall skin-ny guy kind of helped out thatway.”

Lambert said he’s felt lucky toshare the stage with Phelps, awell-known upright bassist, andthat he plans to work with Ran-dolph, whom he met when re-hearsals began. He praised thedirectorial team and the estab-lished actors who play Holly’sfellow rock icons.

“I’m up there with horn play-ers and backup singers, maleand female, and that’s prettycool. All those folks are pros,” hesaid. “I’m up there having a blast,pretty much.”

Performances are at 8 p.m.Friday and Saturday and at 2p.m. Sunday at the CampusTheatre, 214 W. Hickory St.

Tickets cost $20 each. Topurchase tickets, visit http://bit.ly/1v7sy7k or call 940-382-1915. For more information, visitwww.dentoncommunitytheatre.com.

The company presents themusical with sponsor Kwik KarLube and Auto Centers of Den-ton.

Being Buddy Local rocker takes onacting in ‘Holly’ story

By Lucinda BreedingFeatures [email protected]

Courtesy photos

Denton indiemusicianBrian Lam-bert plays thetitle role inDenton Com-munity The-atre’s “Bud-dy: The Bud-dy Holly Sto-ry.” The showis the the-ater’s annual“Encore”presentation,which raisesfunds for thelocal compa-ny.

“Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story” includes, from left, Brian Lambert as Buddy Holly, Jaime NunezRodriguez as Ritchie Valens and Bryan Patrick as the Big Bopper.

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2 p.m. — “An Introduction toEnergy Healing,” presented byAzita Gonzalez, at Emily FowlerCentral Library, 502 Oakland St.Co-sponsored by the Texas Parapsy-chology Society. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.

MONDAY2 to 3:30 p.m. — PowerPointtwo-part class at South BranchLibrary, 3228 Teasley Lane. Learn tocreate eye-catching presentations inMicrosoft PowerPoint. Second classmeets from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Wednes-day. Must be able to attend bothsessions. Free. Call 940-349-8752.6 p.m. — Chess Night at NorthBranch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.Players of all ages and skill levelswelcome. Free. Call 940-349-8752.

TUESDAY9:30 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 940-349-8752.10 to 10:45 a.m. — Toddler PlayTime at North Branch Library, 3020N. Locust St. Free. Call 940-349-8752or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.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.Noon — VNA Ann’s Haven be-reavement luncheon for peoplegrieving the death of a loved one, atthe Denton Elks Lodge, 228 E. Oak St.Richard Godoy, Denton police family

services coordinator, will speak on“Grief Work.” Contact Jerald Garner at940-349-5900 or [email protected]:30 to 6 p.m. — Carter Blood-Care blood drive in the parking lotof South Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Donors will receive a voucherfor a pint of ice cream. Appointmentsare not required but can be made byvisiting http://tinyurl.com/o4df3my.3 p.m. — Critterman will teachchildren ages 5 and older about wildanimals from all over the world atSouth Branch Library, 3228 TeasleyLane. Free tickets will be distributedstarting at 2 p.m. Call 940-349-8752or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.3 p.m. — Creative Craniumspresents a program on dinosaurs forages 8-12 at Emily Fowler CentralLibrary, 502 Oakland St. Free. Call940-349-8752.3 p.m. — Wildlife Explorers:“Bugs, Bugs, Bugs,” hands-on activ-ities and crafts for ages 5-8 at NorthBranch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.dentonlibrary.com. 6:30 to 8 p.m. — Teen AdvisoryBoard at North Branch Library, 3020N. Locust St. For teens grades 6-12.Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.dentonlibrary.com.7 to 8:45 p.m. — North BranchWriters’ Critique Group, for thoseinterested in writing novels, shortstories, poetry or journals, meets atNorth Branch Library, 3020 N. LocustSt. Free.

WEDNESDAY9:30 a.m. — Toddler Time at

Emily Fowler Central Library, 502Oakland St. Stories, puppets andactivities for toddlers (12-36 months)and their caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.11 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.3 p.m. — Art Explorers: “O’Keeffe:Close-Up Flower Paintings” for chil-dren ages 6-8 at North Branch Li-brary, 3020 N. Locust St. Free. Regis-tration is required. Call 940-349-8752or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.3 p.m. — Teen Crafting Club atNorth Branch Library, 3020 N. LocustSt. Upcycle old wine bottles into art.Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.dentonlibrary.com.3 p.m. — Creative Craniumspresents a program on astronomy forages 8-12 at North Branch Library,3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.7 p.m. — Baby and Toddler StoryTime for ages 3 and younger atNorth Branch Library, 3020 N. LocustSt. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visitwww.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 and open to the public. Call940-349-8752.

MUSIC The Abbey Inn Restaurant & PubEach Wed, County Rexford, 7-9pm,free. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-5483.The Abbey Underground Thurs:Lovesick Mary. Weekly events: EachSat, “’80s and ’90s RetroActive DanceParty”; each Sun, open mic hosted byBone Doggie, signup at 7:30pm; eachMon, karaoke. 100 W. Walnut St.www.facebook.com/TheAbbeyUnderground.American Legion Post 550 EachFri, free karaoke at 9pm; each Tues,free pool. Live band on the last Sat ofthe month, free. 905 Foundation St.,Pilot Point. 940-686-9901.Andy’s Bar Sat: Jacko Suede. Wed:Union Specific. Each Wed, karaoke at10pm. 122 N. Locust St. 940-565-5400.Banter Bistro Thurs: MichaelKokkinakis, 6pm. Sat: Denton Rock(Scott Sackett, Deborah Mouser,Claire Hebert, Peggy Morrison, GregNaugher, Jack B. Walker), 8pm. EachThurs, open mic at 8pm; each Sat, livelocal jazz at 6pm. 219 W. Oak St.940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter.com.Crossroads Bar 1803 Elm St. 940-808-1177. http://crossroadsbarden-ton.com.Dan’s Silverleaf Fri: “Fourth of JulyMorning Western Swing Dance Party”with Bonnie and Nick Norris, 9:30am,free. Sat: Little Tybee, the Groove-bumps, Matthew and the ArrogantSea, 9pm, $10. Sun: Hares on theMountain, 5pm, free. No smokingindoors. 103 Industrial St. 940-320-2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.

The Garage 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045. www.thedentongarage.com.The Greenhouse Each Mon, livejazz at 10pm, free. 600 N. Locust St.940-484-1349. www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hailey’s Club Thurs: She Banshee,Space Goose, the Orcanaut, AstroVeil, My Lucidity. Sat: Jess J, Jus Raz,Jayall, Doe Cigapom, D, Royal T, 9pm,$10-$25. Wed: Robert Meade Trio,Kaitlin Riley, free. Weekly events,9pm, free-$10: each Fri, “Friday NightLive” with DJ Spinn Mo; each Tues,“’90s Night” with DJ Question Mark.122 W. Mulberry St. 940-323-1160.www.haileysclub.com.J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.La Milpa Mexican RestaurantEach Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 7:30-9:30pm. 820 S. I-35E, Suite 101.940-382-8470.Last Drop Tavern 508 S. Elm St.940-808-1651. www.lastdropta-vern.com.Lone Star Attitude Burger Co. 113W. Hickory St. 940-383-1022.www.lsaburger.com.Lowbrows Beer and Wine Gar-den 200 S. Washington St., PilotPoint. 940-686-3801. www.lowbrows.us.Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlorand Chainsaw Repair 1125 E.University Drive, Suite 107. 940-566-9910.Mulberry Street Cantina 110 W.Mulberry St. 940-808-1568. http://mulberrystcantina.com.Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Gary Kyle.1009 Ave. C. 940-565-6611.www.rockinrodeodenton.com.Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Stu-dios Thurs: Dome Dwellers, Cleanup,Babar, Blessin, 9pm, $1-$3. Fri: Termi-nator 2, Heavy Baby Sea Slugs, 9pm,free-$3. Sat: Dub Til Dawn: I Am ClarkKent; Johnny’s Big Red Rocket; Icha-bod, Crane, Goldstein, and Associates,9pm, $1-$3. Sun: New Science Pro-jects, Cat People, Losing, Bad Times,9pm, $1-$3. Wed: Honey, the Whip-poorwills, Pleasure Principle, 9pm,$5-$7. No smoking indoors. 411 E.Sycamore St. 940-387-7781.www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.Trail Dust Steak House Fri & Sat:Matthew Middleton & Texas Drive,7-11pm. 26501 E. U.S. 380 in Aubrey.940-365-4440. www.trailduststeaks.net.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,” 8-10:30pm. Nocover. 424 Bryan St. 940-484-2786.www.thewhitehousedenton.com.Zera Coffee Co. 420 E. McKinneySt., Suite 106. 940-239-8002.www.zeracoffeecompany.com.

IN THE AREA7 p.m. Tuesday — Sounds ofLewisville free concert seriespresents the Mullet Boyz in thecourtyard at Medical Center of Lew-isville Grand Theater, 100 N. Charles

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Registration is open for all-daysummer camps for ages 3 1/2 to15. Prices include a T-shirt, fieldtrips, crafts and more. For moreinformation, visit www.denton-parks.com. Cost is $105 per childper week. Register at the DentonCivic Center or the recreationcenters for the camps. Call 940-349-PARK for any other questions.Camps are offered at McMathMiddle School, 1900 Jason Drive;the Denton Civic Center, 321 E.McKinney St.; and Martin LutherKing Jr. Recreation Center, 1300Wilson St.

Sport camps are available forages 3 and older this summer,including programs in tennis,skateboarding, cheerleading,softball, volleyball and aquatics.For more information and toregister, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

Super Hero Adventures half-day camp for ages 3-5 will be nextweek from 9 a.m. to noon July 7-11at the Denton Civic Center, 321 E.McKinney. Campers can wear their

favorite costumes and explore theworld of superheroes. Cost is $75per camper. For more informationand to register, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

Youths ages 12-16 can enjoy theOutdoor Adventure Hike andBike camp from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.Monday through Thursday, July 10.Campers will go to locationsincluding Ray Roberts Lake StatePark and Clear Creek NaturalHeritage Center. Cost is $100 percamper. For more information andto register, visit www.dentonparks.com or call 940-349-7275.

Young Rembrandts art classesbegin July 14 at North LakesRecreation Center, 2001 W. Wind-sor Drive. “Preschool Drawing” isfor ages 3-6, “Elementary Draw-ing” is for ages 6-12, and “Elemen-tary Cartooning” is for ages 7-13.Each class lasts 45 to 60 minutesand meets on Mondays, July 14through Aug. 4. Cost is $52. Formore information and to register,visit www.dentonparks.com or call940-349-7275.

DENTON PARKS & RECREATIONregular park entrance fee of $7 for

ages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2636.8 p.m. — Denton CommunityTheatre presents Buddy: The BuddyHolly Story at the Campus Theatre,214 W. Hickory St. Tickets cost $20.Call 940-382-1915 or visit www.dentoncommunitytheatre.com.

SATURDAY8 a.m. — “Lost Pines Adven-ture,” a half-mile hike at the Isle duBois Unit of Ray Roberts Lake StatePark, on FM455, 10 miles east of I-35.Hikers will learn about the area andits history during the hike on the LostPines Nature Trail. Free with regularpark entrance fee of $7 for ages 13and older. Call 940-686-2148.9 to 10:30 a.m. — Class on thebasics of Dutch oven cooking, atPavilion 1 at the Johnson Branch Unitof Ray Roberts Lake State Park, onFM3002, 7 miles east of I-35. Bring aplate and spoon to sample breakfastitems. Free with regular park entrancefee of $7 for ages 13 and older. Call940-637-2636.9 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Denton Com-munity Market, a local artist andfarmers market, at Mulberry Streetand Carroll Boulevard. Visit http://dentonmarket.org10 a.m. — Story Time at SouthBranch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.Stories, songs, puppets and more forchildren ages 1-5 and their caregivers.Free. Call 940-349-8752.10 a.m. — Nature journal class atthe Isle du Bois Unit of Ray RobertsLake State Park, on FM455, 10 mileseast of I-35. Meet at the Lost PinesAmphitheater, and bring a journal andart supplies if possible. Free withregular park entrance fee of $7 forages 13 and older. Call 940-686-2148.10 a.m. to noon — Denton HerbSociety meets at North BranchLibrary, 3020 N. Locust St. RichardCorey and Margaux Khosraviani fromPermaculture Denton will present“Edible Landscaping: Permaculture inYour Backyard.” Free. Visit www.dentonherbsociety.org.11 a.m. — “Quit Bugging Out,” aprogram for children and adults aboutinsects and spiders, at the JohnsonBranch Unit of Ray Roberts Lake StatePark, on FM3002, 7 miles east of I-35.Meet at the amphitheater near thefishing pond for the talk, which will befollowed by a scavenger hunt hike.Free with regular park entrance fee of$7 for ages 13 and older. Call 940-637-2636.8 p.m. — Denton CommunityTheatre presents Buddy: The BuddyHolly Story at the Campus Theatre,214 W. Hickory St. Tickets cost $20.Call 940-382-1915 or visit www.dentoncommunitytheatre.com.

SUNDAY2 p.m. — Denton CommunityTheatre presents Buddy: The BuddyHolly Story at the Campus Theatre,214 W. Hickory St. Tickets cost $20.Call 940-382-1915 or visit www.dentoncommunitytheatre.com.

EVENTSContinued from Page 2

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FZ

GC

Local Artist Releases Album

Worldwide

Sarah Michelle Vinson, a Sanger High School

graduate, signed a record label with the

Tate Music Group and recently released her

CD worldwide.You can download her CD from iTunes, purchase it from the Tate Music

Group, Amazon, Walmart or Target,

as well asstop by Zera Coffee Company for some coffee,

good company, and a copy of Sarah’s “SHINE” CD.

St. Bring blankets and lawn chairs;pets on a leash are allowed. Visitwww.soundsoflewisville.com. 7 to 11 p.m. July 12 — St. JohnPaul II Catholic Church andCampus Center second anniversarydinner and dance, at the Knights ofColumbus Hall, 1700 Riney Road inDenton. Event includes prize rafflesand barbecue. Attire is casual. Ticketscost $20 for adults, $15 for studentsand $5 for children younger than 12.Tickets can be purchased from JulieGarrison at the Catholic CampusCenter, 1303 Eagle Drive, or at theinformation table at any Saturday orSunday Mass. Contact Garrison at940-566-0004, 940-736-6166 [email protected] p.m. July 14-15 — DentonCommunity Theatre open audi-tions for the comedy Moonlight andMagnolias by Ron Hutchinson, direct-ed by Betty Kay Seibt, at the CampusTheatre, 214 W. Hickory St. Roles areavailable for three men and onewoman. Production dates are Sept.12-14 and Sept. 18-21. Be prepared todo cold readings from the script. Noappointments. Resumes and head-shots are appreciated, but not re-quired. Call 940-382-1915 or visitwww.dentoncommunitytheatre.com.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. Registration costs $425. Visitwww.themayborn.com/registration.6:45 p.m. July 19 — Aubrey’sMusic in the Park series presentsDale Watson and Troy Cartwright atthe Aubrey Festival Grounds, 301 S.Main St. Bring lawn chairs, blanketsand coolers. Food concessions will beavailable.Aug. 4-8 — Denton CommunityTheatre’s Theatre School sum-mer camps at the PointBank BlackBox Theatre, 318 E. Hickory St. Pro-grams include creativity camps forages 4-6, from 9 a.m. to noon, $225per week; and musical theater dancecamps for ages 7-10, from 1 to 5 p.m.,$275 per week. For enrollment forms,visit http://dentoncommunitytheatre.com/school/summer-camps.Call education director MildredPeveto at 940-383-1356.

VISUAL ARTSBanter Bistro 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638.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 andCafe 200 W. Congress St. 940-387-5386.The DIME Store Denton Indepen-dent Maker Exchange’s store carrying

local art, crafts and vintage items,plus workshop/gallery space. Tues-Sat 10-6. 510 S. Locust St. 940-381-2324. www.dimehandmade.com.Farmers & Merchants GalleryEarly and contemporary Texas art.100 N. Washington St., Pilot Point.Fri-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. Ap-pointments encouraged. 940-686-2396. www.farmersandmerchants-gallery.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 CollectiveStudio/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 GalleryMon-Fri 9am-5pm, 10am-3pm Sat. 115W. Eagle Drive. 940-483-8900.www.oxidegallery.com.Patterson-Appleton Center forthe Visual Arts Greater Denton ArtsCouncil’s galleries, meeting space andoffices. 400 E. Hickory St. Free.Tues-Sun 1-5pm. 940-382-2787.www.dentonarts.com. “American Brides: Inspirationand Ingenuity,” through Oct. 24.Presented by the Greater Denton ArtsCouncil and the UNT Texas FashionCollection. Steven Portfield, owner ofthe Cat’s Meow vintage store inMidland, will give a gallery talk at 11a.m. Saturday.PointBank Black Box TheatreDenton Community Theatre’s blackbox performance space. Mon & Wed1-4pm, Fri 10:30am-1pm, and duringperformances. 318 E. Hickory St. Paintings by Dawn Swepston,through July 18.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. “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.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.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.UNT Art Gallery in the UNT ArtBuilding, 1201 W. Mulberry St. at

Welch. 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.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. “Diane Williams: Life on theBlackland Prairie” and “Bankston,Shugart and Stryker: Horse Coun-try Photographers,” through July 19.Visual Arts Society of TexasMember organization of the GreaterDenton Arts Council offers communi-ty and continuing education for localvisual artists, professional and ama-teur. Meetings are at the Patterson-Appleton Center for the Visual Arts,400 E. Hickory St. Monthly meetingsinclude mini-shows and demonstra-tions by visiting artists. Two annualjuried exhibits. Critique groups andworkshops. Visit www.vastarts.org orcall Executive Director Lynne CagleCox at 972-VAST-ORG.Zera Coffee Co. 420 E. McKinneySt., Suite 106. 940-239-8002.www.zeracoffeecompany.com.

LITERARY EVENTSEmily Fowler Central Library 502Oakland St. 9am-6pm Mon, Wed, Fri& Sat; 9am-9pm Tues & Thurs; 1-5pmSun. 940-349-8712.North Branch Library 3020 N.Locust St. 9am-9pm Mon-Wed,9am-6pm Thurs-Sat, 1-5pm Sun.940-349-8756. Chess Night Casual, non-tourna-ment play, 6-8:45pm Mon Computer classes Call 940-349-8752. North Branch Writers’ CritiqueGroup Writing novels, short stories,poetry or journals, 7pm Tues Secondhand Prose Friends of theDenton Public Libraries’ fundraisingbookstore is open 9am-3pm & 5:30-8:30pm Mon, 9am-3pm Sat & 1-4pmSun.South Branch Library 3228 Teas-ley Lane. Noon-9pm Mon, 9am-6pmTues & Thurs-Sat, 9am-9pm Wed,1-5pm Sun. 940-349-8251.

POINTS OF INTERESTThe Bayless-Selby House Muse-um Restored Victorian-style homebuilt in 1898. 317 W. Mulberry St.Tues-Sat 10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.Handicapped accessible. Regularspecial events and workshops. 940-349-2865. www.dentoncounty.com/bsh.Denton County African Amer-ican Museum Exhibits of historicblack families in the county, includingartwork and quilting, and personalitems of the lady of the house. 317 W.Mulberry St., next to the Bayless-Selby House Museum. Tues-Sat10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.Bethlehem in Denton CountySmall gallery in Sanger displaying apersonal collection of 2,900 nativities.Open evenings and weekends, by

appointment only. Free. Small groupsand children welcome. To scheduleyour visit, call 940-231-4520 or e-mailjkmk@advantexmail.com.www.bethlehemindentonco.com.Courthouse-on-the-SquareMuseum Exhibits include photos ofDenton communities, historic Hispan-ic and black families, farm and ranch-ing artifacts, and special collectionsincluding Southwest American Indianand Denton County pottery, pressedglass and weaponry. Research materi-als, county cemetery records, genea-logical info, photographs. 110 W.Hickory St. 10-4:30 Mon-Fri and 11-3Sat, closed holidays. Free. Specialmonthly exhibits and lectures. Call940-349-2850 or visit www.den-toncounty.com/chos.Denton Community Market, a

local artists and farmers market, from9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday fromApril through November at the Den-ton County Historical Park, on Mulber-ry Street near Carroll Boulevard. Visithttp://dentonmarket.org.Denton County Farmers MarketLocal farmers sell fresh seasonalvegetables and fruit every Tuesday,Thursday and Saturday, throughSeptember, from 7 a.m. to sellout. AtSycamore Street and Carroll Bou-levard, in the parking lot by theDenton County Historical Park. Visitwww.dentonfarmersmarket.com.Denton Firefighters MuseumCollection at Central Fire Station, 332E. Hickory St., displays firefightingmemorabilia from the 1800s to the

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MOVIES

Much of Begin Again looksfamiliar. And it should. Thenew musical is the creation ofwriter-director John Carney,previously responsible for2006’s similar, curiously over-praised Once.

Like its predecessor, BeginAgain is not a musical comedybecause the laughs are few. Un-like the semi-romantic Once,Carney’s new creation is moreanti-romance that romantic.It’s just a pop musical drapedlightly around an even lighternarrative.

Once centered on Dublinstreet performers. Begin Againtakes place in Manhattan andconcerns itself with housebro-ken performers who, at somepoint, also decide to take it out-side. Again, one person is nativeand one an outsider.

With his two main charac-ters, Carney supplies some thin-ly drawn characterizations toflesh out the spots in betweenhis songs.

An over-energetic, but fun towatch, Mark Ruffalo plays Dan,a dysfunctional music executivestrung so high, it’s hard to be-lieve he can work. The night heis fired, he meets Gretta (KeiraKnightley) when she sings in aclub, a meeting Carney likes somuch he shows it three times.

From there, it’s all about themusic, man. Dan is determinedto show his ex-boss (Yasiin Bey,

formerly known as Mos Def)that he can still spot talent. SoDan aspires to produce an al-bum by Greta, even if he has tocall in favors, use nonprofes-sional musicians, and recordthe sessions guerrilla-style onNew York streets.

During all this, Greta fretsabout her philandering ex-boy-friend, Dave (Adam Levine),

while Dan tries to become moreof a father to his precocious teendaughter Violet (Hailee Stein-feld) and stay friends with hisex-wife, Miriam (CatherineKeener).

In the one memorable se-quence, Greta and Dan make aWoody Allen-esque journeythrough Manhattan while lis-tening to classics on their head-

sets. Except for these out-of-place nuggets, one forgettablesong follows another.

But everything ends happilyand predictably enough, send-ing the audience home smilingeven if not much has gone onbefore.

BOO ALLEN is an award-winning film critic who hasworked for the Denton Record-Chronicle for more than 20years. He lives in Dallas.

Don’t get them startedForgettable songs,weak story doom‘Begin Again’By Boo AllenFilm [email protected]

The Weinstein Co.

Gretta (Keira Knightley), a singer-songwriter, deals with her boyfriend, Dave (Maroon 5’s Adam Levine), finding growing famein “Begin Again.”

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

Silver Cinemas Inside GoldenTriangle Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-1957. www.silvercinemasinc.com.

OPENEDWEDNESDAY

America: Imagine the WorldWithout Her ( 1⁄2) Dinesh D’Souza’sAmerica sets itself up as a piece ofdocumentary counter-history, open-

ing with George Washington notsurviving the 1777 defeat at the Battleof Brandywine, which causes MountRushmore and the Statue of Libertyto dissolve. Where would the worldbe if America wasn’t here? ButD’Souza abandons that as he positshis main thesis — that a conspiracyby academics and activists hascreated a culture of “shame” aboutAmerican history. Rated PG-13, 100minutes. — McClatchy-Tribune News

ServiceDeliver Us From Evil A serial-killermystery in which the culprit turns outto be one of Satan’s minions, ScottDerrickson’s Deliver Us From Eviladapts the detective genre to anexorcism tale that is very seriousabout the prospect of demonicpossession. Though based on claimsmade by real-life NYPD officer-turned-paranormal investigator RalphSarchie (played here by Eric Bana),

the picture is stolen by a fictionalcharacter — a composite religiousfigure played with a predictable levelof smolder by Carlos star EdgarRamirez. Catholics will find Evil veryrespectful of their faith, though itsnods to religion are genre-appropriateand never preachy enough to alienatethe average horror fan. With JoelMcHale and Olivia Munn. Rated R, 118

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Begin Again

Rated R, 104 minutes.Now playing at the Angelika Plano.

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The Syfy channel’s dedica-tion to schlocky mod-ern-day B-movies is the

stuff of Michael J. Nelson, Kev-in Murphy and Bill Corbett’sdreams.

The three-man team be-hind RiffTrax.com — the latestiteration of Mystery ScienceTheatre 3000, a cult-comedytelevision series that aired from1988 to 1999 — is taking on one

of the most popular Syfy crea-ture features yet: Sharknado.

RiffTrax joins FathomEvents, The Asylum, IGN andSyfy in two screenings at 650cinemas around the country.And this is no mere replay ofthe television movie on the bigscreen. Rather, the guys of Riff-Trax will narrate and commenton the film live at the historicState Theatre in Minneapolis

at 7 p.m. July 10. Minneapolis is the birth-

place of Mystery Science The-atre 3000, the series that fea-tured a man and his robot side-kicks who screen bad moviesfrom their space station prison.Why? Because the evil scientistis using them in a psychologicalexperiment. To stay sane, theman and his robot friendsmock the films and crack wise

on everything from the plots tothe costumes and acting.

Local RiffTrax buffs can seethe live broadcast at 7 p.m. July10 from the comfort of theleaning chairs at the DentonCinemark, 2825 Wind RiverLane. A taped screening willroll at 7:30 p.m. July 15.

For advance tickets, visithttp://bit.ly/1iY9VTp.

— Lucinda Breeding

Syfy

Claudia (Audrey Peebles) screams and runs from the bloodthirsty great white sharks bound for land after a tornado sucksthem from the ocean and unleashes them on beachside humans in “Sharknado.” Syfy’s movie heads to the big screen atselect cinemas on July 10, with snarky commentary from the RiffTrax team.

Armed to the teeth Wisecracking commentaryaccompanies ‘Sharknado’

minutes. — The Hollywood ReporterEarth to Echo ( ) Earth to Echowould love to be the E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial for the 21st century. Butthe new movie is to E.T. what Reese’sPieces is to lumps of sugar. Theyshare an ingredient, but one is farmore satisfying. The lack of interest-ing characters and a patchwork plotleave Earth to Echo more of a Clo-verfield for kids. Alex (Teo Halm),Tuck (Astro) and Munch (ReeseHartwig) are three best friends beingforced apart by a freeway being builtthrough their neighborhood. Theyspend their last night together follow-ing some weird electronic signals thatshow up mysteriously on their cell-phones. Their quest becomes a closeencounter when they find a tinyrobotic figure in the desert. Throughwhat seems like an endless series ofquestions — and with the help ofEmma (Ella Wahlestedt) — the groupfigure out the alien they have namedEcho is trying to put together theignition key for his spacecraft. RatedPG, 100 minutes. — The Fresno BeeTammy ( ) When Tammy (Melis-sa McCarthy) loses her husband andjob, she heads out on the road withher oversexed, drug-taking, alcoholicgrandmother (Susan Sarandon). Asuccession of formulaic road-tripsequences follows. McCarthy fanswill be pleased even if the script,written by her and her director-husband Ben Falcone, relies almostsolely on her personality and uniquedelivery for laughs. With Kathy Bates,Sandra Oh and Gary Cole. Rated R, 96minutes. — Boo AllenThird Person ( ) Writer-directorPaul Haggis (Crash) again mixes uphis story lines, this time flippingamong Rome, Paris and New York totell the stories of three couples facingvarious difficulties. The situationsoverflow with angst and pretentiousdialogue, ending up looking contrivedand, in one case, silly. The couples areplayed by Liam Neeson and OliviaWilde, Adrien Brody and Moran Atias,James Franco, Loan Chabanol and, byextension, Mila Kunis. Rated R, 137minutes. At the Angelika Dallas. —B.A.Snowpiercer ( 1⁄2) Wild, non-stop craziness from Korean visionaryJoon-ho Bong (The Host). Set 17 yearsafter an icy apocalypse has engulfedthe Earth, the only survivors live on atrain constantly circling the globe. Butthose at the back of train rebel,heading to the front, car by car.Violent, creative and with an excel-lent, albeit often unrecognizable, cast:Chris Evans, Tilda Swinton, John Hurt,Jamie Bell, Octavia Spencer and EdHarris. Rated R, 126 minutes. Atregional theaters. — B.A.

NOW PLAYINGEdge of Tomorrow ( 1⁄2)Military marketer Maj. William Cage(Tom Cruise) is thrown into battleagainst extraterrestrials by an unsym-pathetic general (the excellent Bren-dan Gleeson), and then finds himselfstuck in a mysterious time loop.

Cruise dies dozens of times over andover, often in comical ways. Dyingagain and again, Cruise has rarelybeen so likable. This is GroundhogDay with guns. Edge of Tomorrowentertains in its narrative playfulness— another entry in the burgeoningfad of puzzle-making sci-fi, as seen inInception and Looper. Directed byDoug Liman. Rated R, 119 minutes. —The Associated PressHow to Train Your Dragon 2( ) Written and directed byDean DeBlois, How to Train YourDragon 2 returns us to Berk, whereour young Viking hero, Hiccup (voicedby Jay Baruchel), lives and frolics withhis devoted dragon, Toothless. WhenHiccup and his girlfriend Astrid(America Ferrera) discover a vicious

villain (Djimon Hounsou) who’sbuilding a dragon army, Hiccupresolves to stop him. Rated PG, 102minutes. — APJersey Boys ( 1⁄2) The Broadwaymusical about Frank Valli and the FourSeasons delivers a few good num-bers, but overall director Clint East-wood fails to energize a film thatneeds it. At its core, it’s the story ofthe loyalty of Valli (John Lloyd Young)and his friends, who stay togetherdespite themselves. With ChristopherWalken, Mike Doyle and VincentPiazza. Rated R, 134 minutes. — B.A.Maleficent ( ) Angelina Jolieturns in a magnificent performance inMaleficent as the (now we are told)misunderstood villain of SleepingBeauty. Jolie rules this film with a

powerful acting grace accented bydirector Robert Stromberg’s film stylethat shifts from film noir to children’scomedy without a flinch. There’s justnot enough fleshing out of the storyto support these elements. Rated PG,97 minutes. — The Fresno BeeThink Like a Man Too ( 1⁄2) Thegreat appeal of 2012’s Think Like aMan is that it took four beautifulblack actresses (Regina Hall, Taraji P.Henson, Meagan Good and GabrielleUnion) and put them right at thecenter of a film. This time they’re allin Las Vegas to celebrate the weddingof Candace (Hall) and Michael (Ter-rence Jenkins). — San FranciscoChronicleTransformers: Age of ExtinctionThree years after an epic battle has

forced the shape-shifting robotsknown as Transformers into hiding, agarage inventor makes a startlingdiscovery and gets caught up in abattle for the fate of Earth. With MarkWahlberg, Stanley Tucci, KelseyGrammer and Sophia Miles. Directedby Michael Bay. Rated PG-13. — LosAngeles Times22 Jump Street ( 1⁄2) Un-dercover cops Jenko (ChanningTatum) and Schmidt (Jonah Hill) aresent off to M.C. State University totrack down a new designer drug thatcollege kids are using to help themfocus. A pack of writers, and theco-directors of the first film, Phil Lordand Christopher Miller, conjure upgood, quick-footed and foul-mouthedfun. Rated R, 112 minutes. — MCT

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In Denton, the Fourth of July means home-made parade floats, a band with a funnyname and lots of music.And, as always, a great big fireworks show

presented by the Denton Kiwanis Club that

helps low-income families get affordable healthcare for their children.

What’s a little different this year is the grandmarshal of the city’s Yankee Doodle Parade.

Short-track speedskater Jordan Malone —a Denton native and an Olympic silver medalist— will lead the beloved Fourth of July parade.

The local parade is a riot of sights — floats,

decorated bicycles, wagons and baby strollers— and sounds. The loose association of musi-cians that make up the Denton Institute ofPhrenology Half-Fast Marching Band returnsto the parade with the clarion call of “Remem-ber the rules: there are no rules!”

After the Yankee Doodle Parade, the Fourthof July Family Fun Jubilee begins at Quaker-

Fr

Fireworks at Apogee Stadium will close ouBy Lucinda BreedingFeatures [email protected]

present. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Closedon city holidays. Free and handi-capped accessible.Gowns of the First Ladies ofTexas Created in 1940, exhibitfeatures garments worn by wives ofgovernors of Texas. 8am-5pmMon-Fri. Administration ConferenceTower, TWU campus. Free, reserva-tions required. 940-898-3644.Hangar Ten Flying MuseumNonprofit museum displays, main-tains, preserves, flies and showsantique, classic and contemporaryclasses of aircraft. Mon-Sat8:30am-3 pm. 1945 Matt WrightLane at Denton Enterprise Airport.Free. 940-565-1945. www.hangar10.org.Lewisville Lake EnvironmentalLearning Area Three hiking trails;camping, fishing and more on theElm Fork of the Trinity River; re-stored 1870 log home. Summerhours: Fri-Sun 7am-7pm. Admissionis $5, free for children 5 and youn-ger. Front gate is at Jones Street andNorth Kealy Avenue in Lewisville.Call 972-219-3930 for directions.www.ias.unt.edu/llela.Little Chapel-in-the-WoodsBuilt in 1939, one of 20 outstandingarchitectural achievements in Texas.Daily 8am-5pm, except on universi-ty holidays or when booked forweddings, weekends by appoint-ment only, TWU campus. 940-898-3644.Sharkarosa Wildlife RanchNonprofit 126-acre ranch with rareand exotic animals, including blackbears, kangaroos, bobcats, zebrasand more. Exhibits, tram ride, animalpresentations and restaurant. Opento the public 10am-5pm Sat & Sun,March through Dec. 1. Tickets cost$10 for ages 13 and older, $8 forages 3-12, $8 for seniors. 11670Massey Road, Pilot Point. 940-686-4600. www.sharkarosa.com.UNT Rafes Urban AstronomyCenter UNT’s astronomy center,open to the public once a month.2350 Tom Cole Road. For directionsand more information, visit www.astronomy.unt.edu/obsv.html.● Star Party on the first Saturdayof the month, beginning 30 minutesafter sundown, weather permitting.Admission is $5, free for children 4and younger.UNT Sky Theater Planetarium inUNT’s Environmental Education,Science and Technology Building,1704 W. Mulberry St. 940-369-8213.www.skytheater.unt.edu.Western Heritage Gallery atStonehill Center, 5800 N. I-35, Suite400. 940-243-3933. www.thewesternheritagegallery.com.

SENIORSAmerican Legion Hall SeniorCenter 629 Lakey Drive in FredMoore Park. 10am-3pm Mon-Fri,6-9pm Thurs. 940-349-8298.Denton Senior Center offersdaily lunches, classes, travel, healthservices and numerous drop-inactivities. 8am-9pm Mon-Fri;

9am-1pm Sat. 509 N. Bell Ave.940-349-8720.Ongoing activities:● Aletha’s Craft Store, open9am-1pm Mon-Fri.● Social dancing, live bands andrefreshments every second andfourth Friday, 7-9:30pm, $6.● Movies 6pm each Wed, free forDenton seniors.● SPAN noon meal each Mon-Fri,$2 for seniors 60 and older, $5 forthose younger than 60.● Bridge Party bridge, 12:30pmThurs; duplicate bridge, 12:30pmWed● Bingo 12:45pm first and third Fri● Triangle Squares squaredancing 7pm first and third Fri, $6● Ed Bonk Workshop woodshop9am-noon Tues-Thurs, $6 annualmembership plus $1 per visit.RSVP Referral and placementservice for volunteers age 55 andolder. 1400 Crescent St. 940-383-1508.

ACTIVITIESAcoustic Lawn Jam from 10 a.m.to noon every Saturday, weatherpermitting, on the lawn of theCourthouse on the Square, 110 W.Hickory St. Open acoustic jam for alllevels of musicians.Denton Celtic Dancers meetsfrom 5 to 7 p.m. each Sunday at thePatterson-Appleton Center for theVisual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St.Beginners’ class starts at 6 p.m. Call940-321-0012 or visit www.dentoncelticdancers.org.Denton County Dulcimer Clubmeets from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m on thethird Saturday of each month in thecommunity room at Denton GoodSamaritan Village, 2500 HinkleDrive. Dues are $3 per month.Participants may bring a sack lunch.Call 940-565-9331 or e-mail [email protected] night community danc-es at Denton Senior Center, 509 N.Bell Ave., from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on thesecond and fourth Friday of eachmonth. Dances are open to all adultsand include live music and refresh-ments. Dance hosts will be presentto dance with unaccompaniedladies. Admission is $6. Call 940-349-8720.Green Space Arts CollectiveBallet, tap, modern, and hip-hopdance classes for children andadults. 529 Malone St. 940-595-9219. www.greenspacearts.com.Harps Over Texas AutoharpClub Jamming as well as help fornew and experienced players. Allacoustic instruments welcome. 7p.m. on the fourth Tuesday of eachmonth at Cumberland PresbyterianChurch, 1424 Stuart Road. 940-382-3248.The Triangle Squares Localsquare dancing group meets at 7:30p.m. on the first and third Fridayseach month at Denton SeniorCenter, 509 N. Bell Ave. Starts withearly rounds and workshops. Grandmarch starts at 8pm. Non-memberspay $6 per person, members get infree. Call 214-288-6883.● Mainstream dance lessons at7pm each Tues at 1424 Stuart Road.

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cycles, wagons and baby strollers— ds. The loose association of musi-c make up the Denton Institute ofP Half-Fast Marching Band returnst e with the clarion call of “Remem-

: there are no rules!”Yankee Doodle Parade, the Fourth

o ly Fun Jubilee begins at Quaker-

town Park and the Denton Civic Center. Chil-dren can cut loose at the carnival from 10 a.m.to noon and then head to the Civic Center Pool,which is open until 6 p.m. with $1 admission.Adults can flex their muscles in a lucky horse-shoe tournament, and seniors can attend a lun-cheon at the Denton Senior Center, serenadedby the Young at Heart band.

David Minton/DRC

ABOVE: Fireworks light up ApogeeStadium at the University of NorthTexas during the 2013 Denton KiwanisClub Fireworks Show. Parking feesand spectators’ donations help sup-port the Denton Kiwanis Club Chil-dren’s Clinic.

Friday night lights

l close out a bang-up holiday in DentonThe day ends with the Denton Kiwanis Club

Fireworks Show at the University of North Tex-as’ Apogee Stadium. The event will keep at-tendees entertained before twilight with music,and after dark, the Denton Noon Kiwanis Cluband sponsors will start the show. The fireworks

See FOURTH on 10

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show is a benefit for the DentonKiwanis Club Children’s Clinic.

The children’s clinic is a re-ferral service relying on a net-work of local physicians andhealth care providers who part-ner with the Kiwanis clubs toprovide low-cost care for chil-dren of low-income families.

The clinic is funded by grantsfrom the Flow Health CareFoundation, Texas MotorSpeedway Children’s Charitiesand other philanthropic organi-zations, by proceeds from theclub’s various fundraising pro-jects, by the members them-selves through the Patron’sFund, and by donations fromthe community.

Those who watch from out-side the stadium can be on thelookout for the Kiwanis “BucketBrigade,” a team of volunteerswho collect cash and check do-nations for the clinic.

Kiwanis officials said conces-sions will be for sale in the stadi-um, and no coolers will be al-lowed.

Chuck Myers/McClatchy-Tribune file photoU.S. speedskater and Denton native Jordan Malone, front,skates in the short-track men’s 5,000-meter relay final dur-ing the Winter Olympics in February in Sochi, Russia. Malonewill be the grand marshal of Denton’s Fourth of July parade.

From Page 9

Fourth

IN DENTONDENTON FOURTH OF JULYFAMILY FUN JUBILEEMost events are on the downtownDenton Square, 100 W. Hickory St.,and at Quakertown Park and theDenton Civic Center, 321 E. McKinneySt. Free.7:30 a.m. — Liberty Fun Run5K/1 Mile Walk starts at NorthLakes Recreation Center, 2001 W.Windsor Drive.8 a.m. — Parade lineup starts atthe downtown Wells Fargo parking lot(access is from Hickory and Mulberrystreets near Austin Street), withjudging at 8:30 a.m.9 a.m. — Yankee Doodle Paradebegins on the Square, led by home-town boy and Olympic short-trackspeedskating silver medalist JordanMalone.About 9:30 a.m. — YankeeDoodle Parade ends at DentonCivic Center and City Hall parking lot,and concludes with a flag ceremony.Live entertainment begins. Entrydrop-off for the children’s arts andcrafts show starts, with the displaystarting at 11 a.m. inside the CivicCenter.10:30 a.m. to noon — Free chil-dren’s carnival in the Civic Center,321 E. McKinney St.11 a.m. — Family Fun Jubileestarts. Also in Quakertown Park, theDenton Senior Center has a luncheon,with musical guest Young at Heartband; admission is $3. At Civic CenterPool in the park, admission is $1 forthe holiday.

TWILIGHT TUNESOn the lawn of the Courthouse on theSquare, 110 W. Hickory St. Free.About 10 a.m. — J.R. Byrd, aDenton blues-rock-pop artist, per-forms a special morning concert afterthe downtown Yankee Doodle Paradeends. The show closes out the DentonMain Street Association’s free sum-mer concert series.

FOURTH OF JULY MORNING WESTERNSWING DANCEDan’s Silverleaf, 103 Industrial St.Free.10 a.m. — Bonnie and Nick Nor-ris might give a patriotic tune aWestern swing styling. Or they mightnot. Regardless, the brother-and-sister duo will host a traditionalsession of down-home good fun.

DENTON KIWANIS CLUBFIREWORKS SHOWUNT’s Apogee Stadium, 1251 S. BonnieBrae St. at I-35E. Parking is at ApogeeStadium and Fouts Field, off I-35E andNorth Texas Boulevard. Admission isfree, but parking costs $5 per vehicle.Concessions will be available for sale.5:30 p.m. — Gates open.6:35 p.m. — Raised Right Menperform.7:50 p.m. — The Denton KiwanisClub welcomes attendees.8 p.m. — Color guard and nationalanthem8:15 p.m. — Stage Fright per-

forms.9:45 to 10:15 p.m. — Fireworksshow

IN THE AREAROBSON RANCH FOURTH OF JULYRobson Ranch, 9501 Ed Robson Blvd.in Denton. Free.9 a.m. — Community paradefeaturing floats, vintage cars, convert-ibles, motorcycles, bedecked golfcarts, bikes and wagons. About 450military veterans will march down EdRobson Boulevard.10 a.m. — Patriotic singalong atthe Robson Ranch Clubhouse

LAKE CITIES FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATIONLake Dallas City Park, at East HundleyDrive and North Shady Shores Road.Visit www.lakedallas.com/fourthofjuly.html. Free.9 a.m. — Patriotic Parade startsat the park, goes down to Main Streetand returns to the park.After the parade — Celebrationat the park features a free kids’zone, horseback rides, flag ceremonyand live music, including Ranee andthe True Tones, Jade Nikol and Bran-don Sarver. Talent show, watermeloneating contest, apple pie bake-off andfireworks. Evening music features DefLeggend and Eleven Hundred Springs. About 9:15 p.m. — Fireworksshow begins at dark.

PILOT POINT INDEPENDENCE DAYOn the downtown Pilot Point square,around Liberty, Prairie and Mainstreets. Free.7:45 a.m. — Parade lineup atPilot Point Intermediate School, 114 S.Harrison St.

8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. — Art showby Pilot Point public school studentsat the Pilot Point Community Opera

House, 110 S. Washington St.9 a.m. — Fourth of July paradearound the square.

FREEDOMFEST AT RANCHO DE LA ROCARancho de la Roca, 2459 BlackjackRoad in Aubrey. Admission is $7 perperson ages 4 and older. All proceedsbenefit local and global ministries.5:30 p.m. — Gates open. Familiescan use paddle boats, canoes, inflat-ables for all ages, mechanical bull,carnival rides and rock wall. Livemusic, freedom express train andkids’ crafts. Chick’n Coop Cafe sellshot dogs, chili dogs, Frito pies, na-chos, barbecue sandwiches andbeverages. Bring lawn chairs, blan-kets, bug spray and fishing rods.9:45 p.m. — Fireworks show

ROANOKE FOURTH OFJULY INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATION AND FIREWORKSIndependence Park East, 501 Park-view Drive in Trophy Club. Free.6 to 10 p.m. — Celebrationincludes live music by Limelight, abounce house, face painting, foodvendors and fireworks. 9:30 p.m. — Fireworks show

RED WHITE & LEWISVILLESouth side of Vista Ridge Mall be-tween the mall and Sam RayburnTollway. The mall is located at 2401 S.Stemmons Freeway. Free.9:30 p.m. — Fireworks show

FOURTH OF JULY EVENTS

David Minton/DRC file photo

The Stars and Stripes and Texas flags decorate a vintage Ford Mustang during last year’sYankee Doodle Parade around the Denton Square.

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Restaurant profiles andlistings are compiled by theDenton Record-Chronicle and TheDallas Morning News. A compre-hensive list of Dallas-Fort Wortharea restaurants is available atwww.guidelive.com

Denton Time publishes res-taurant profiles and a guide ofrestaurants that have beenfeatured in the weekly diningsection and online at DentonRC.com. Listings are not related toadvertising and are published asspace is available. Denton Timedoes not publish reviews.

Incorrect information can bereported by e-mail to [email protected], by phone to940-566-6860 or by fax to

940-566-6888.To be considered for a profile,

send the restaurant name, ad-dress, phone number, 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 dinner perperson, including appetizer,entree and dessert.

$ Less than $10$$ $10-$25

$$$ $25-$50$$$$ More than $50

DINING PROFILEAND LISTINGS POLICY

DININGRESTAURANTS

AMERICAN CUISINECentral Grill 1005 Ave. C. 940-323-9464.Dusty’s Bar and Grill Laid-back barjust off the Square serves a belt-busting burger and fries, a kitchenhomily for meat and cheese lovers.Seven plasma TVs for fans to trackthe game, or patrons can take part ininteractive trivia and poker. Darts,pool, video games and foosball.Kitchen open throughout businesshours. 119 S. Elm St. Daily noon-2am.$-$$. 940-243-7300. www.dustysbar.com.The Great American Grill at HiltonGarden Inn, 3110 Colorado Blvd.Dinner: Daily 5-10pm. 940-891-4700.Hooligans 104 N. Locust St. 940-442-6950. www.hooligansonline.com.The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.The Loophole Square staple hascharming menu with cleverly nameditems, like Misdemeanor and Felonynachos. Decent range of burgers. 119W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; foodserved until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.940-565-0770. www.loopholepub.com.Pourhouse Sports Grill Classysports bar and restaurant boastslarge TVs and a theater-style mediaroom and serves burgers, pizza,salads and generous main courses.Full bar. 3350 Unicorn Lake Blvd.Sun-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-12. $-$$.940-484-7455.Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games onbig screens plus some pretty bigtastes, too. Now open for lunch. Forfinger food, roll chicken chipotle andbattered jalapeno and onion strips arestandouts. Homestyle burgers; savoryCaesar salad with chicken. Full bar.2000 W. University Drive. Daily11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’tChicken” is what the eatery claims,though the menu kindly includes it ona sandwich and in a wing basket —plus barbecue, burgers and hangoutappetizers (cheese fries, tamales, andqueso and chips). Beer. 113 IndustrialSt. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $. 940-382-4227.www.roosters-roadhouse.com.RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 DallasDrive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.II Charlies Bar & Grill 809 SunsetSt. 940-891-1100.

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

BARBECUEClint’s BBQ Barbecue spot serves upbrisket, ribs, pulled pork, sausage,chicken and breakfast too. 921 S. U.S.Highway 377, Aubrey. Tues-Thurs

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

BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Bistro Gourmet sandwichesand salads, breakfast items, coffeeand espresso. Beer and wine. 219 W.Oak St. Daily 10am-midnight. $.940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter.com.Cachette Bistro 144 N. Old TownBlvd., Suite 1, Argyle. Mon-Fri7:30am-5pm, Sat 8am-3pm. 940-464-3041. www.cachettebistro.com.The Chestnut Tree Salads, sand-wiches, soups and other lunch andbrunch options served in back ofsmall shop on the Square. Chickenpot pie is stellar. Tasty quiche. Deca-dent fudge lava cake and rich carrotcake. Revolving dinner menu. 107 W.Hickory St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat5:30-9pm. $-$$. 940-591-9475.www.chestnuttearoom.com.Sidewalk Bistro 2900 Wind RiverLane, Suite 132. Sun-Mon 7am-3pm,Tues-Sat 7am-9pm. 940-591-1999.www.sidewalk-bistro.com.

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

BRUNCHCups and Crepes Eatery serves upboth traditional American and Europe-an breakfasts and lunch. Get biscuitsand gravy or test a crepe filled withrich hazelnut spread. Specialty cof-fees. 309 Fry St. Tues-Sun 8am-3pm.$. 940-387-1696.Loco Cafe Casual breakfast/lunchcafe that’s a sister restaurant to theGreenhouse Restaurant across thestreet. Signature plate is the LocoMoco: stacked hash browns toppedwith eggs, cheese, salsa or gravy witha fresh biscuit. 603 N. Locust St.Mon-Fri 6am-2pm; Sat-Sun 7am-3pm.$-$$. 940-387-1413.Royal’s Bagels & Deli 503 W.University Drive. Daily 6:30am-2pm.$. 940-808-1009. http://royals-bagels.com.Seven Mile Cafe Breakfast, brunchand lunch spot, including vegan

options. 311 W. Congress St. Daily7am-3pm. 940-808-0200. www.sevenmilecafe.com.

CHINESEBuffet King Dining spot serves morethan 200 items of Chinese cuisine,Mongolian grill and sushi. 2251 S.Loop 288. Mon-Thurs 11-9:30, Fri-Sat11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$. 940-387-0888.Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffetguarantees no visit need taste likeanother. Beer and wine. 2317 W.University Drive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri11-10, Sat 11:30-10, Sun 11:30-10. $.940-382-8797.Golden China Small restaurantboasts quick and friendly service. Niceselections on buffet tables includeteriyaki chicken and hot pepperchicken. Beer and wine. 717 I-35E,Suite 100. Daily 11-10. $. 940-566-5588.

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.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, Sun

noon-9 (bar stays open later). $-$$.940-484-1349. www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.com.Hannah’s Off the Square Exec-utive chef Sheena Croft’s “upscalecomfort food” puts the focus on local,seasonal ingredients. Steaks getA-plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.No checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Lunch:Mon-Sat 11-3. Brunch: Sun10:30am-3pm. Dinner: Sun-Mon4:30-9; Tues-Thurs 4:30-10; Fri-Sat4:30-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.www.hannahsoffthesquare.com.Queenie’s Steakhouse Chef TimLove’s steakhouse just off the down-town Square. Live jazz nightly. Fullbar. 115 E. Hickory St. Lunch: Fri11:30-2:30. Dinner: Wed-Thurs 4:30-10pm, Fri-Sat 4:30-11pm. Sun brunch,10:30am-3pm. $$-$$$. 940-442-6834. www.queeniessteakhouse.com.The Wildwood Inn Elegant diningroom tucked away in a bed andbreakfast. Excellent food like heartysoups, Angus rib-eye, meal-sizesalads and daily specials. Beer andwine. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.Thurs-Sat 6-10pm. $$$. 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.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.Veggie burger too dependent on salt,but good fries are crispy with skin stillattached. Full bar. 1210 W. Hickory St.Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-7025.Denton County 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. $-$$.940-458-0000.Bonnie’s Kitchen 6420 N. I-35.940-383-1455.Cartwright’s Ranch House Res-taurant on the Square serves break-fast, lunch and dinner, featuringchicken-fried steak, hamburgers andsteaks. Family-style service available.111 N. Elm St. 940-387-7706.www.cartwrightsranchhouse.com.Jay’s Cafe 110 W. Main St., PilotPoint. 940-686-0158.OldWest Cafe As winner of the BestBreakfast and Best Homestyle Cook-ing titles in Best of Denton 2009through 2014, this eatery offers awide selection of homemade meals.Denton location: 1020 Dallas Drive.Mon-Sat 6am-2pm, Sun 7am-2pm. $.940-382-8220. Sanger location: 711 N.Fifth St. Daily 7am-2pm. 940-458-7358. 817-442-9378.Prairie House Restaurant Opensince 1989, this Texas eatery servesup mesquite-grilled steaks, baby-backribs, buffalo burgers, chicken-friedrib-eyes and other assorted dishes.10001 U.S. Highway 380, Cross Roads.Daily 7:30am-10pm. $-$$. 940-440-9760. www.phtexas.com.

ICE CREAMBeth Marie’s Old-Fashioned IceCream and Soda Fountain Parlorwith lots of yummy treats, includingmore than 40 ice creams made onpremises. 117 W. Hickory St. Mon-Wed11-10pm; Thurs 11-10:30; Fri-Sat 11-11:15;Sun noon-10pm. 940-384-1818.Unicorn Lake location: 2900 WindRiver Lane. Mon-Wed 11-9; Thurs 11-10;

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Catering For All OccasionsAny Type of Food for as Many as 1,000 People!

FREE LUNCHwhen you buy one reg. priced lunch entree receive the 2nd of equal or lesser value free

Must present coupon. Limit one per table per visit. Expires 8/15/14

324 E. McKinney St. • Denton • 940.243.1313

Serving Breakfast & Lunch7am - 2pm DailyClosed Monday

Wednesday SpecialChicken Fried Steak

Great Home Cooking!American & Mexican Meals

Make Your Own Menu!

El Chaparral GrilleEl Chaparral Grille

FZ

Friday SpecialSteak and Shrimp

© 2009 Allstate Insurance Company allstate.com

Bill Doranski(940) 387-62892000 Denison St., #A

GA© 2011 Allstate Insurance Company

DORANSKI AGENCY(940) 387 62892000 DENISON ST #ADENTON

Fri-Sat 11-11; Sun noon-9pm. 940-591-1010. www.bethmaries.com.

INDIANBawarchi Biryani Point 909 Ave.C. 940-898-8889. www.bawarchibiryanipoint.com.Rasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housedin a converted gas station, this Indiandining spot offers a small but careful-ly prepared buffet menu of curries(both meat and vegetarian), beans,basmati rice and samosas. 1002 Ave.C. Daily 11am-9:30pm. $. 940-566-6125.

ITALIANAviano Italian Restaurant Tradi-tional Italian fare, including lasagna,pastas with meat and marinarasauces. BYOB. 5246 S. U.S. Highway377, Aubrey. Mon-Thurs 11am-9pm, Fri& Sat 11am-10pm. $. 940-365-2322.Bagheri’s 1125 E. University Drive,Suite A. 940-382-4442.Don Camillo Garlic gets servedstraight up at family-owned restau-rant that freely adapts rustic Italiandishes with plenty of Americanimagination. 1400 N. Corinth St., Suite103, Corinth. Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9;Thurs-Sat 11-2:30, 5-10. 940-321-1100.Fera’s Excellent entrees servedbubbling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastasand billowing garlic rolls. Beer andwine. No credit cards. 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. $-$$.940-381-2712.Luigi’s Pizza Italian RestaurantFamily-run spot does much more thanpizza, and how. Great New York-stylepies plus delicious southern Italiandishes, from lunch specials to priciermeals. Beer and wine. 2317 W. Uni-versity Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs 11-10,Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988.

JAPANESEHaru Sushi & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,Suite 126. 940-383-3288.I Love Sushi 917 Sunset St. Mon-Thurs 11am-3pm & 5-10pm, Fri11am-3pm & 5-10:30pm; Satnoon-10:30pm; Sun 12:30-9pm. $$.940-891-6060.J Sushi 1400 S. Loop 288, Suite 100.940-387-8833. jsushibar.com.Keiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Naganoturns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yellow-tail and tuna into sashimi. Daily fishspecials and pasta dishes served withan Asian flair. Homemade tiramisuand fruit sorbets. Reservations rec-ommended. Wine and beer. 500 N.Elm St. Tues-Sat 5-11. $$-$$$. 940-382-7505.Shogun Steakhouse & Sushi Bar3606 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-382-7800.Sushi Cafe 1401 W. Oak St. 940-380-1030.

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

MEXICAN/TEX-MEXCasa Galaviz Comfortable, homeyatmosphere at small, diner-stylerestaurant that caters to the morningand noon crowd. Known for home-made flour tortillas and authenticMexican dishes from barbacoa tomenudo. BYOB. 508 S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 7-7; Sat-Sun 7-5. $. 940-387-2675.Chilitos Delicious guacamole; albon-digas soup rich with chunky vegeta-bles and big, tender meatballs. Stand-out: savory pork carnitas. Attentive,friendly staff. Menudo on weekends,breakfast anytime. Daily lunch spe-cials. Full bar. 621 S. Lake Dallas Drive,Lake Dallas. Mon-Fri 11-9, Sat 10-9.$-$$. 940-321-5522.El Chaparral Grille Restaurantserves a duo of American and Mex-ican-style dishes for breakfast, lunchand catering events. Daily specials,and breakfast buffet on Sundays. 324E. McKinney St., Suite 102. Mon-Fri7am-2pm; Sun 8am-2pm. $. 940-243-1313.El Guapo’s Huge menu encompass-es Tex-Mex and Mexican standardsas well as ribs, brisket and twists likeSantana’s Supernatural Quesadillas(fajita chicken and bacon) and jalape-no-stuffed shrimp. Full bar. 419 S. ElmSt. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat-Sun 11-11. $$.940-566-5575.Fuzzy’s Taco Shop Eatery stakesclaim of wide variety in local tacoterritory. Beer, wine and margaritas.$. Multiple locations. DowntownDenton: 115 Industrial St. Mon-Tues6:30am-10pm, Wed 6:30am-11pm,Thurs 6:30am-midnight, Fri-Sat7am-2am, Sun 6:30am-10pm. 940-380-8226. I-35E location: 2412 S.I-35E, 940-488-4779.La Estrella Mini Market 602 E.McKinney St. 940-566-3405.La Mexicana Strictly authenticMexican with enough Tex-Mex tokeep locals happy. Chili relleno is awinner, with earthy beans and rice.Chicken enchiladas are complex,savory. Swift service with plenty ofsmiles. Beer. 619 S. Locust St. Daily9-10. $. 940-483-8019.La Milpa Mexican Restaurant820 S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-8470.Los Toreros 2900 Wind River Lane,Suite 134. Sun-Thurs 11am-9:30pm;Fri-Sat 11am-midnight. 940-390-7693.Mazatlan Mexican RestaurantAuthentic Mexican dining includesworthy chicken enchiladas andflautas. Fine standard combo choicesand breakfast items with reasonableprices. Beer and wine. 1928 N. RuddellSt. Tues-Fri 11-9:30, Sat 8am-9:30pm,Sun 8-4. $. 940-566-1718.Mi Casita Mexican Food Fresh,tasty, no-frills Tex-Mex at goodprices. Tacos, fajitas, quesadillas,chalupas and more plus daily specialsand breakfast offerings. Beer andwine. 110 N. Carroll Blvd. Mon-Sat7am-9pm. $. 940-891-1932. Mi CasitaExpress: 905 W. University Drive,940-891-1938. Miguelito’s Mexican RestaurantThe basics: brisk service, familyatmosphere and essential selectionsat a reasonable price. Beer andmargaritas. 1412 N. Stemmons St.,

Sanger. 940-458-0073.Mi Ranchito Small, family-operated,authentic Tex-Mex spot with $5.50lunch specials Tues-Fri. Beer. 122 FortWorth Drive. Tues-Thurs 11am-3pm,5-9:30pm; Fri-Sun 11-10. $. 940-381-1167.Raphael’s Restaurante Mex-icano Not your standard Tex-Mex —worth the drive. Pechuga (grilledchicken breast) in creme good to thelast bite, and beef fajitas are juicy andflavorful. Full bar. 26615 U.S. 380 East,Aubrey. Tues-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$.940-440-9483.Rusty Taco 210 E. Hickory St. 940-483-8226. www.therustytaco.com.Taco Lady 1101 E. McKinney St.940-380-8188.Taqueria El Picante 1305 KnightSt., Suite A. Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat-Sun 8-5.940-382-2100.Tortilleria Tierra Caliente 1607 E.McKinney St., Suite 800. 940-591-6807.Tortilleria La Sabrocita 201 DallasDrive. 940-382-0720.Veronica’s Cafe 803 E. McKinneySt. 940-565-9809.Villa Grande Mexican Restau-rant 12000 U.S. 380 East, CrossRoads. 940-365-1700. Denton loca-tion: 2530 W. University Drive, 940-382-6416.

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

NATURAL/VEGETARIANThe Bowllery Rice, noodle andveggie bowls featuring sauces anddressings made from scratch, withteriyaki and other meats as well asvegan and gluten-free options. 901Ave. C, Suite 101. Tues-Sun 11am-9pm.$-$$. 940-383-2695. http://thebowllery.com.Cupboard Natural Foods andCafe Cozy cafe inside food storeserves things the natural way. Win-ning salads; also good soups, smooth-ies and sandwiches, both with andwithout meat. Wonderful breakfastincluding tacos, quiche, muffins andmore. 200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat8-8, Sun 10-7. $. 940-387-5386.

PIZZABosses Pizza 420 E. McKinney St.Sun-Thurs 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat11am-11pm. 940-382-8537. www.bos-sespizza.com.Crooked Crust 101 Ave. A. 940-565-5999.J&J’s Pizza Bountiful, homemadepizza pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dishChicago style. Beer. 118 W. Oak St.940-382-7769. Mon-Sat 11am-mid-

night. $-$$.Last Drop Tavern Neopolitan-stylepizzas cooked in a wood-burningoven. Food served Mon-Thurs11am-11pm, Fri-Sat 11am-midnight, Sunnoon-11pm. 508 S. Elm St. 940-808-1651. www.lastdroptavern.com.Mellow Mushroom 217 E. HickorySt. Sun-Wed 11am-10pm, Thurs-Sat11am-midnight. 940-323-1100.Palio’s Pizza Cafe 1716 S. Loop 288.940-387-1900.TJ’s Pizza Wings & Things 420 S.Carroll Blvd., Suite 102. 940-383-3333.

SANDWICHESO’Philly — A Cheesesteak CafeRestaurant specializing in Philadelphiacheesesteaks, along with hot dogs,wraps, sandwiches and melts. 2430I-35E, Suite 164. Sun-Thurs 11-8,Fri-Sat 11-9. 940-488-9219. http://texasphilly.com.New York Sub-Way 305 W. Uni-versity Drive. 940-566-1823.New York Sub Hub $. 906 Ave. C.Mon-Sat 10-10, Sun 11-10. 940-383-3213. Other locations: 1400 S. Loop288, Suites 102-2, in Denton Crossing;Mon-Sun 10:30-10; 940-383-3233.4271 FM2181, No. 308, in Corinth;Mon-Sat 10:30-9, Sun 11-7; 940-497-2530.Weinberger’s Deli Chicago-stylesandwiches including the Italian beefbistro, sausages, gyros, soups andmore. 311 E. Hickory St., Suite 110.Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 10am-3pm.940-566-5900. www.weinbergersdeli.com.

SEAFOODDani Rae’s Gulf Coast Kitchen2303 S. I-35E. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm,Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. 940-898-1404.Frilly’s Seafood Bayou KitchenPlenty of Cajun standards and Texasfusion plates. Everything gets plentyof spice — sometimes too much.Sides like jalapeno cornbread, redbeans and rice are extra. Beer andwine. 1925 Denison St. Sun-Thurs 11-9,Fri-Sat 11-9:30. $$. 940-243-2126.

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

THAIAndaman Thai Restaurant Exten-sive menu continues trend of goodAsian food in Denton. Pad Thai noo-dles have perfect amount of sweet-ness. Homemade coconut ice cream,sweet rice with mango. Beer andwine. 221 E. Hickory St. Mon-Fri11am-3pm & 4-9:30pm; Sat-Sunnoon-9:30pm. $$. 940-591-8790.www.andamanthairestaurant.com.Oriental Garden Restaurant Thaistir-fried dishes, with some Japaneseand Chinese specialties. Homemadeice cream: coconut, green tea, Thaitea & lychee. 114 Ave. B. Mon-Sat 11-9.$-$$. 940-387-3317.Thai Square Restaurant 209 W.Hickory St., Suite 104. Tues-Thurs11am-3pm & 5-9:30pm; Fri 11am-3pm& 5-10pm, Sat 11:30am-10pm, Sun11:30am-9pm. $$. 940-380-0671.www.thaisquaredenton.com.Sweet Basil Thai Bistro 1800 S.Loop 288, Suite 224. 940-484-6080.Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tastyas they are pretty. Hot and spicysauce makes even veggie haters goafter fresh veggies with zeal. Quietsetting. BYOB. 1509 Malone St.Mon-Fri 11am-3pm, 5-10pm; Sat11:30-10; Sun 11:30-9. $-$$. 940-566-6018. www.thaiochadenton.com.

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

DININGContinued from Page 11

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See DentonRC.com/jobs to find a job at the intersection of both.

Wouldn’t you like a job that fullfi lls you both professionally and personally? With Monster’s new fi ltering tools, you can quickly hone in on the job that’s right for you.

So visit DentonRC.com/jobs and fi nd a job that makes everybody happy.

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14DentonTime07314

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15DentonTime07314

businessopportunites

203

www.DentonRC.com

YOUR STUFF.ONLINE AND

ON SALE.

FAST. SECURE.24/7.

Sell your stuffwith

ClickNBuyDentonRC.com/ads

A Cash For Cars RUNNING OR NOTCall 940-390-2577

2010 Mercedes C300, 29K miles,black w/tan leather, 4 dr, excellentcondition. Ext 5yr/100K warranty.

$23,500. 940-367-9187

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.

Accounting Assist. needed forbusy wholesale giftware company

in Gainesville, TX, to assistController with general ledger

account reconciliations, bank ac-count reconciliations, and generalledger accounting. Please apply inperson at 1304 Corporate Drive,

or email resume [email protected]

Denton ISDTransportation Department

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN

GB

Qualifications preferred• Experienced light and medium duty

automotive tech• Afternoon shift – Straight 40 hr weekno flags hours

• ASE Certification and/or equivalenttechnical training preferred

• Electronic and electrical systemdiagnostic abilities

Please apply online at www.dentonisd.org

For more information, please callAlan Wilcox, Fleet Maintenance

Supervisor 940-369-0360.

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

• Times vary depending on Route Assignmentand Trip Availability

• Must pass pre-employment physical, drugscreen and criminal background check

• Possess acceptable driving record for driverpositions

Apply• online at www.dentonisd.org• call 940-369-0371 GB

Denton ISD HiresRoute Drivers, Extracurricular Trip Drivers & Monitors

Affirm Oilfield Services in Bridgeport, TX is seeking flatbedtruck drivers. 1 year of experi-ence and valid Class A CDL re-

quired. Mostly day shift, but mustbe available all hours. Apply in

person at 239 County Road3503, Bridgeport, TX 76426. Pay

DOE. Paid time off, medical, dental, vision, 401k, more.

Auto Sales Assistant neededFT Must have sales exp. & D.L.

Contact Brian940-382-7700.

CACDC hiring (3) positions.(2)-FT Community Outreach

Coord. to execute child abuse ed-ucation, special events & volun-

teer mgmt. (2+ yrs nonprofit exp.)Also hiring (1)-FT DevelopmentOfficer responsible for annual

fund, PR, database, and supervi-sion of two staff (3+yrs nonprofitexp and managerial exp.) Both

positions will split time b/wLewisville & Denton office. Bache-

lor’s req for all positions. Salarycommensurate w/edu and exp. http://www.cacdc.org/contact/

employment-internships/

CARE GIVERS Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care

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

Call 940-783-4240

Certified MedicalAssistant for Back

Office for Localphysician practice.Experience a pluswith EMR back-ground. Fax re-

sumes to940-381-0727

Denton County MHMR CenterRequest for Application

DCMHMR is seeking applicationsfor the Contract position that

provides Psychiatric Services toindividuals with intellectual anddevelopmental disabilities in

Denton County. To request RFApacket, contact Contracts Special-ist at [email protected] is due by 4pm on

July 14th, 2014.Denton County MHMR CenterRequest for Application-Open

Enrollment

DCMHMR is seeking applicationsfor the contract position to provide

Counseling (CBT) Services forAdults & Children & Adolescentswith mental illness. To requestRFA packet, contact Contracts

Specialist [email protected] Family Medicine Clinicseeking Medical Assistant.

Bilingual a plus.FAX resumes to 940-442-6574.

F3

CoServ currently has the followingjob opportunities:

Mail Room ClerkEngineering Project ManagerRevenue Recovery Analyst 1

For more job opportunities, information, ap-plication form and complete job descriptionslog on to www.coserv.com. Contact us at940.321.7800 X: 7556. Must reference jobtitle. Salary commensurate with experience.EOE

DriversCDL DRIVERS NEEDED!!

No TravelingLocal Delivery

Must have a CDL-Class AMust be able to work

1st or 2nd ShiftCall (940) 442-6550

Drivers needed Class A CDL,with Tanker endorsement

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

Drivers

Truck DriversNeeded

CDL, Local Hauling, HomeEvery Night, Vacation.

* Mixer Drivers* Dump Truck Drivers,

paid by the hour,*Tractor Trailer

Drivers, paid percentage.Frank Bartel

7401 S. Hwy. 377Aubrey, TX 76227

Driving Positions Available AtSPAN Transit

An exciting opportunity is nowavailable at SPAN Transit forPart-Time Bus Operators. Training is expected to begin

as soon as qualified applicantsare selected.

Requirements: --Successful completion of policebackground check--Successful completion of DOTPhysical/Drug Screen--Subject to Random Drug & Alco-hol Testing--Clean Driving Record

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

of qualified applicants. Applicants must be available

from 6AM to 6PM.

Please apply within at theSPAN Transit Office at

1800 Malone Street Denton, TX.EOE

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

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

Background check &drug test required

No ExceptionsApply within at:

C & G Electric, Inc.4801 W. University Drive,

Bldg 102, Denton TX

Experienced Driver with class A CDL for metro

deliveries. Home nights. Paid weekly. Send resume to:

[email protected] or inperson at Trinity Turf Nurseryat 10815 Foutch Rd, Pilot Point

TX 76258 No Phone CallsEXPERIENCED

WELDER/FABRICATORWANTED. Looking for some-one willing to do some travel-

ing and has no fear of heights.Call 940-686-2492 or apply in

person 111 E. Liberty St.Pilot Point, TX

F1

Equal Opportunity Employer

• Competitive Pay• Quarterly bonuses, night differential, night shift bonus

• Drive locally • Medical, dental, life, supplemental insurance• Paid vacation, paid holidays • 401(k) Match

• Unused vacation paid out • Annual Safety Bucks

Minimum age 22 yrs, class a CDL + Tanker, some driving experiencerequired; acceptable MVR; medical card or the ability to obtain one.

For more information about BTT and open Driver positions,call Ronny at (940)577-3553 or [email protected]

F2

CLASS A CDLDRIVERS NEEDED

Sign OnBonus

Front Office/Receptionist

needed for localphysicians.

Experience a plus.Fax Resume to940-381-0727

FT - Resource DevelopmentDirector

Minimum requirements include;above average written & oral com-munication skills; ability to meas-

ure and comprehend certainknowledge: quantities & work w/percentages, decimals & dollar

figures, high school plus life expe-rience or some college. Prior ex-perience in like or related positiona plus. Must be able to speak infront of small groups of people;

have ability and willingness to en-gage in one-on-one conversationswith donors and prospective do-nors on a regular basis; ability tomanage multiple projects at thesame time. Must apply online at

www.good-sam.com.All qualified applicants will receive

consideration without regard torace, color, religion, sex, nationalorigin, disability or protected vet-

eran status.

JOBS!! JOBS!! JOBS!!Manufacturing

ProductionAssembly

Forklift OperatorsMachine Operators

WeldersQuality Assurance

Wood WorkersCall (940)442-6550

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 $9.00/hr.

Looking for Friendly customerservice agent in call center envi-ronment and experienced tow

truck operator. Apply in person at997 E. Main Lewisville, TX 75057

Maintenance Porter needed FT.Duties include mowing, cleaning,

painting. Hardworking only please!Apply in person

1900 Sam Bass, Denton.

Marketing & Sales DepartmentAssistant

We are seeking a friendly, outgo-ing person with good communica-tion skills and a strong work ethicto assist in several areas of ouroffice. Customer Service/Salesexperience prefered but not re-

quired. This is a full time positionwith growth potential. Assistantsstart at $12/hr. We offer health

insurance, retirement plan,& paid holidays.

Apply in person @Chairs4Worship

6311 S. I-35Gainesville TX.(940) 612-4700

Or Fax your resume to:(940) 612-4704

Medical practice looking for anExperienced MA OR CMA.

Great listening, memory skills,multi tasking and keyboarding

skills. Ophthalmology knowledgea plus but medical terminology a

must. CMA/COA preferred. Salarybased on experience.

Please submit resume [email protected]

MEDICAL SECRETARY ,full time, immediate, entry level,

mature, responsible, dependable,attention to detail.

Fax Resume 940-383-1499.

Nail Tech position , Nail Techcertification required. Competitive

pay, plus tips and incentives.Email resume with work/

salary history and references to kbutler@completefootandanklecare

.com

Need someone PT to load/unloadproduce from 3:30 am to finishTues- Sat. Must lift 35 lbs. Must

have good english skills. No crimi-nal background.940-312-2630

Now Hiring!Equipment operators, laborers,CDL drivers, asphalt workers.

Valid drivers license required. Apply at 3020 Ft Worth Dr,

Denton, online atwww.jagoepublic.com

or call 940-382-2581. EOE

Office help and experienceembroidery machine operator and

sewing machine operatorsneeded- Aubrey 940-365-0060

Office Manager needed for smallfamily business, in the

Ponder/Justin Area. Must bedependable, well organized, have

good customer service skills.Apply at 5772 Tim Donald Rd,

Justin, TX 76247 or call940-648-5263

Part Time Express Lube Techmust be experienced.Hourly + commission.

Pilot Point area. 940-686-5823

Property Management Companyin Denton seeking an experienced

LANDSCAPER Please send resume to rosanna@

placetobeapartments.comor fax 940-565-9990

Property Management Companyin Denton seeking an

--Experienced MaintenanceProfessional,

must have HVAC experience. Please send resume to

[email protected] or fax 940-565-9990

RN Case Manager , Fast growing!Fast paced! Flexible scheduling!Must possess Texas RN license

and be CPR certified, reliabletransportation and ON call

schedule

C.N.A Must have current Texaslicense, and reliable

transportation.

New Graduates welcome If youwould like to become a member of

our super team, apply on linewww.good-sam.com

Seasonal Employment1st & 2nd Shifts

Order Pullers Pick/Pack Hour Personnel 940-566-6300.

SECURITY GUARD Part TimeNight Shift. Clean Background.

$8.50/hr. [email protected]

SEEKING PART-TIME ORDERENTRY REPS!

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE! MUSTBE ABLE TO TYPE AT LEAST 35

WPM!

SHIFTS AVAILABLE:8AM-1PM10AM-2PM11AM-4PM12PM-5PM2PM-7PM3PM-8PM6PM-11PM

APPLY IN PERSON AT THEADDRESS BELOW! APPLICA-TIONS ARE ACCEPTED MON-

FRI FROM 10AM TO 4PM .

5800 I-35 North Suite #2008Denton TX 76207

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Page 16: July 3 Denton Time 2014

16DentonTime07314

job lists 340

houses: unfurnished

630

houses: unfurnished

630

mowing 1305

travel trailer/rv sales/rent

1446

DR-C Classifiedswww.DentonRC.com

SELL YOUR STUFF HERE! DR-C Classifieds(940) 387-7755 or

(800) 275-1722

Summers here...Get out of the heat

& get to work!Now hiring

No experience necessaryPaid weekly

Weekly and Monthly bonusesCall 940/323-2694 to apply

The City of Corinth has theFollowing positions

- DEPUTY FIRE CHIEF- UTILITIES MAINTENANCE

WORKER- PARKS MAINTENANCE

WORKER- HEAVY EQUIPTMENT

OPERATOR- PT RECREATION

ATTENDANT

Visit our website atwww.cityofcorinth.com

3300 Corinth Parkway Corinth Tx76208 EOE-Phone 940-498-3223

Transportation / LogisticsCustomer Service TraineeSales exp. a PLUS, Hourly +

bonus, great benefits. Must havestrong telephone & computer

skills. Email resume [email protected]

VRC in Argyle has Openingsfor a FULL TIME DESKTOP

INVESTIGATOR , Good computer skills, ability to

multi task & problem solve.Clean criminal record & valid

drivers license a must.$10/hour. Send Resume [email protected].

WORK OUTDOORS withLovelace Landscape and Tree

Service. $10-$11/hr. Depending on Experience. Must

Have Good Back, TX DL andBe Able to Lift 120 lbs.

Conservative Dress Code Expected. Located in Sanger.

940-458-5674.

www.seniorcarecentersltc.comClick on Careers on the top tab. SelectCareer Opportunities on the left menu.

205 N. Bonnie Brae, Denton, Texas (940) 384-1500

Certified Nurse AideTransportation AideResident Aide

CURRENT JOB OPENINGS

APPLYONLINE

The Vintage

AA/EEO/M/F/D/V

Charge Nurse - LVN/RNDietary Aide

F3

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.

One year old, black & white,female, full blood, Central Asian

Shepherd. Good with dogs & cats$180.00 940-597-3693

Tri County Farrier ServiceAll types all breeds

$40 to trim $120 to shoeCall Michael 214-355-8150

Alfalfa & Alfalfa/OrchardSmall & Large Square. Round

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

Weeds Sprayed, Aerating, Plowing, Mowing.

Tommy 940-482-6578

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) 383-1064(940) 390-5900

GA

AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable

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

Denton 2414 Robinwood LaneSaturday Only 7am-2pm June 6th

YARD SALEDenton, 2805 Christopher Dr.Thurs thru Sunday 9am-3pm

GARAGE SALE TOO MUCH TOLIST. FURNITURE, TOOLS.

Denton, 3005 Terry CourtFri. 7/4 & Sat. 7/5

Cleaning out the garage, garagesale! Perrenial plants, & misc.

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

1 & 2 BR Shadowwood Apts 1 & 2 Bdrms Hickory. 1, 2, 3

Bdrms Lake Dallas Open Mon-Wed-Fri 10am-3pm

940-321-3231

1 Bedroom Apartment.$635.00 1721 Panhandle St. in

Denton. No pets.Call 512-917-6419

2 Bedroom Starting at $12251 Bedroom Starting at $835Efficiencies Starting at $719

Call for Move In Specials

Your Key to Downtown Living

Call 940-382-3009jackbellproperties.com

2 bedrooom 1.5 bath, c/h/a,covered parking, no pets, 1 yr,lease. $500 dep/$650mo. plus

elec. 601 W. Oak 940-382-8488

3/2 $900 Large Enclosed Patios

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

CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565

All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,

1 & 2 BR starting at $460 & up

CITYPLACENew Luxury Apts.210 E. Sycamore

Just off the square, downtown.Efficiencys, 1 bed, 2 bed.

Priced from $725 to $1350Warner Properties

940-383-1313FREE RENT! Remodeled 1, 2,

& 3 BR. Hollyhills Apts 940-382-6774. 900 Londonderry.Open

M-F 8:30a-5:30p, Sat 10a-2pJUSTIN 2 Bdrm 1 Bath Studio

$610/mo $200 deposit,$50 application fee, 1 yr leaseterm only. Call 940-382-3100

THE MARTINO GROUPRENTALS AVAILABLE

DENTONTalon 2, 2/1, $895, June, July or

August1512 N Elm, 2/2, $950, July1512 Elm, 1/1, $750 August

115 North Austin, 1200 sq ft Loft,$995

219 E University, 1/1, $750,August

1119 W Hickory, 1/1/1, $995, ga-rage included, Fry St area, August

1509 Centre Place, 2/1, $9251122 Vine, 2/2, $775, August1122 Vine, 3/2, $850, August

Providence Village:1924 Bridgeport, 3/2/2, 2400 sf

house, two living areas and office,$1600

Call 940-382-5000 -www.themartinogroup.com

WALK TO UNT 1/1 Efficiencies- From $395/mo.328 Normal Denton, TX. Pleasecall for more info 512-917-6419.

WESTWIND APARTMENTS 940-382-1535.

Large floor plans 1 & 2 bdrm.$150 to apply. Upgrading

2/1.5/1.5 gar, in brick 4-plex ,fireplace, appliances, 1100 sq ft,

new carpet/ paint$750/mo $700 deposit 634

Wolftrap, Denton. 940-736-1966

305 FRY, AUGUST 1ST.5 BEDROOM, 3.5 BATH. $2250.DEPOSIT $2500. 1YEAR LEASE

NO PETS 940-367-3191

3499 Country Club, 3 Bdrm 1.5 bath, 1 car garage $1050/mo.

940-566-5717 see video at killianpropertymanagement.com

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

(940)243-5478.

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.

LOTS from $360-$395/Month

with Carport and/or ShedUp to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914Retired large refurbished mobile

home in Lake Dallas. Walk tolake, trees, fishing, 14x70. $550

month, no deposit. 940-393-3558

Close to Downtown Denton 2 LUXURY OFFICE SUITES

1,128 & 564 Sq. Ft Call 940-387-7467 for more info.Professional office space 2200 square feet, Unicorn Lake . Availa-ble immediately Contact Jason.

940-453-9700

Available Now! Room for rent formale, min. to UNT, share kitchen, living & bath, pool. $360/mo most

bills paid. 940-594-4125

Great Location--3737 Mingo Rdin Denton. Office / Warehouse ,

2511 sf . heavy power, largeoverhead door, 940-391-7696.

39.43 ACS LAKEVIEW DR. LAKERAY ROBERTS, 3 PONDS. WA-TER METER $12, 498 PER AC. Virginia Williams 940-391-2379

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.

2 bedroom, 1 bath, fixer upper.$25,000. OBO

207 Newton ST. Valley View, TX Contact Tracey 580-618-2057

1 ACRE LOTS FOR SALE ORLEASE FOR DOUBLE WIDES

in the Ponder/Justin area. Ponder ISD. Moving

Assistance Available to Qualified Home Owners.

Contact Jeff 940-648-5263

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

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

DANIELSONCONCRETE

All 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.

GA

Pruett Welding andConstruction

Welding, pipe and barb wire fenc-ing, barns, cattle guards, brushmowing, tree grubbing, lot clear-

ing and skidsteer work25 years experience , insured ,

references available,credit cards accepted

940368-3299

LANGSTON’S HandymanI do tile, wood floors, minor

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

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

HOME MAINTENANCE &REPAIRS Int/Ext painting,

sheetrock repair,windows & doorsshower repair & installment, and

decks.Richard 940-482-3624Lite House Repair &Handyman Services

Inside & OutsideFree Estimate 940-395-0549

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

Call 940-453-2776

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

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

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

Mint CleaningService

House Cleaning940-453-0516

GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow,edge, weedeat, flower beds, trimbushes, sprinkler repair. FreeEstimate 15% Senior Discount

940-442-1440 or 940-442-1252

LONGHORN LAWN CARESERVICES.

Charles Rohrer 940-284-2851.

Affordable MowingMowing in Denton Co. since 1998

Call Dwight 940-435-9975

MOWING--large yards, lots &acreage; all types of tractor

work. Visa/MC accepted. Call940-735-1446 or 940-482-3968

G. L. S. Ready make forSale/Rental properties.

painting,gutter cleaning & re-pair. Fence repair/replacement. 940-442-1252 or 940-442-1440

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

Kitchen/ bath remodelsDrywall, carpentry, painting,

flooring, and decks.Call Chris 330-581-9007

RV & BOAT STORAGE940-584-0080Great Prices!

PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/

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

Patrick’s RoofingA+ BBB rating, over 20 yrs exp.

Local company.Owner supervised jobs.

Residential specialists. Refsavailable. No $ down.

Save deductible. Outstandingprices. 5 year no leak guar.

Free estimates.817-528-2991

www.Patricksroofing.com

User: [email protected] Time: 07-02-2014 23:30 Product: DRC_Tab PubDate: 07-03-2014 Zone: State Edition: 1 Page: DTIME_T16 Color: CMYK