December 16 Denton Time 2011
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IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK DentonTime
ON THE COVERBIG RIGThis weekend, Denton’s Big Rig
Dance Collective will present
Homing Where I Roam, a col-
lection of dances inspired by
the winter holidays.
(Courtesy photo)
Story on Page 8
FIND IT INSIDEMUSICConcerts and nightclub
schedules. Page 4MOVIESReviews and summaries.
Page 7DININGRestaurant listings. Page 11
TO GET LISTEDINFORMATIONInclude the name and descrip-
tion of the event, date, time,
price and phone number the
public can call. If it’s free, say
so. If it’s a benefit, indicate the
recipient of the proceeds.
TELL US ONLINE:Visit www.dentonrc.com, and
click on “Let Us Know.”
E-MAIL IT TO:drc@dentonrc.com
FAX IT TO:940-566-6888
MAIL IT TO:Denton Time
314 E. Hickory St.
Denton, TX 76201
DEADLINE:Noon the Friday before publica-
tion. All information will be ver-
ified with the sender before
publication; verification must
be completed by noon the
Monday before publication for
the item to appear.
REACH USEDITORIAL & ARTFeatures EditorLucinda Breeding . . 940-566-6877
cbreeding@dentonrc.com
ADVERTISINGAdvertising DirectorSandra Hammond 940-566-6820
Classified ManagerJulie Hammond. . . . 940-566-6819
Retail Advertising ManagerShawn Reneau . . . . 940-566-6843
Advertising fax . . 940-566-6846
02DentonTime
121511
1:30 and 2:30 p.m. Dec. 18. Visit
www.birdhouseservices.com.
MONDAY2 to 3 p.m. — Grief support ses-sion at SouthernCare hospice, 5800
N. Interstate 35, Suite 200, in
Stonehill Center. Led by chaplain
Karen DeFilippis, the session will fea-
ture an educational presentation and
a time of reflection and sharing. Visit
www.southerncareinc.com.
6 to 8:45 p.m. — Chess Night at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Players of all ages and skill levels
welcome. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
7 to 8 p.m. — Romance in the
Stacks Book Club at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. This
month, discuss your picks for the
best romance of 2011. Free. Call 940-
349-8796.
7:30 to 9 p.m. — Zumba-thonFitness Toy Drive to benefit the
Salvation Army at the Brickhouse
Gym, 3300 Unicorn Lake Blvd. in
Denton. Enjoy free Zumba in
exchange for an unwrapped toy. Visit
www.thebrickhousegym.com.
TUESDAY7 to 8:45 p.m. — North BranchWriters’ Critique Group, for those
interested in writing novels, short
stories, poetry or journals, meets at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
WEDNESDAY3:45 to 5 p.m. — Game Day for
grades 5-12 at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call 940-
349-8752.
4 p.m. — It's a Girl Thing! book
club for girls ages 8-12 and their
female relative or friend, at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
This month, bring your favorite book
to discuss. Call 940-349-8752.
bank on familiar themes andcharacters. From Fayro’s well-heeled dragon lady Patsy (JudiConger) to the town’s simple-ton (Jack Nance Garner) to thelast-minute frenzy to makeChristmas joyful, ChristmasBelles shows a season overcomeby too many expectations.
Christmas Belles is a special
presentation of the communitytheater. Performances are at7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturdayand 2 p.m. Sunday at the Cam-pus Theatre, 214 W. HickorySt.
Tickets cost $20. For reser-vations, call 940-382-1915 orvisit www.campustheatre.com.
— Lucinda Breeding
Courtesy photo/Denton Community Theatre
Reynerd Chisum (Jack Nance Garner) and Frankie Futrelle
Dubberly (Michelle Rose) try to smooth over the troubles
plaguing the Christmas pageant in Denton Community
Theatre’s Christmas Belles.
Denton CommunityTheatre closes its holi-day comedy Christmas
Belles this weekend. Co-directors Betty Kay Seibt
and Bonnie McCormick haveled a cast of familiar facesthrough the sorts of paces nor-mally used in the likes ofGreater Tuna.
The Christmas romp — writ-ten by Jessie Jones, NicholasHope and Jamie Wooten —finds three sisters in a royalmess in small-town Fayro,Texas. Honey Raye (AmberBryant), Twink (Leigh AnnStadt) and Frankie (MichelleRose) are up to their armpits inchurch politics and family dys-function as all three work tomake Honey Raye’s Christmaspageant the best ever atTabernacle of the Lamb.
Honey Raye wants the pag-eant to be worthy of Broadway,but the recently demotedGeneva (Jo Anne Cassell)keeps meddling and RhondaLynn (Susanne Coffey) is toohelpful for Honey Raye’s tastes.And everyone’s personal prob-lems threaten to surface beforeJesus makes it to the manger.
Seibt said the script does
Theaterrings inseason
EVENTSTHURSDAY
9:30 a.m. — Crafters’ Corner at
Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Work on projects and
learn new techniques. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
11:30 a.m. — Fred Moore HighSchool commencement in the
gymnasium at the school, 815 Cross
Timber St. A small reception will fol-
low. Call 940-369-4000.
7 p.m. — The Denton Quilt Guildmeets at the Center for Visual Arts,
400 E. Hickory St. A social time
begins at 6:30 p.m. The program will
be the third annual guild auction.
Non-members may attend up to two
meetings as guests. Visit www.
dentonquiltguild.org.
7 p.m. — Special family storytime at the Aubrey Area Library, 226
Countryside Drive. Call 940-365-
9162.
7 to 8 p.m. — Fowler Foodie BookClub at Emily Fowler Central Library,
502 Oakland St. This month’s book
selection is Kitchen Confidential by
Anthony Bourdain. Free. Call 940-
349-8752.
7 p.m. — Denton CountyRepublican Party monthly meeting
featuring talks by 2012 primary can-
didates, in the second-floor commu-
nity room at Medical Center of
Lewisville, 500 W. Main St. All
county GOP candidates have been
invited to attend and each will be
given one minute for remarks.
Candidates will also be available for a
6 p.m. meet-and-greet session during
the social hour prior to the meeting.
7 to 8 p.m. — Conversation Club,
for those wishing to practice their
English language skills with others,
at Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Free. No registration
required. Call 940-349-8752.
FRIDAY4 p.m. — Lego Builders Club for
ages 6 and older at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. Call
940-349-8718 or e-mail
stacey.irish-keffer@cityofdenton.com.
SATURDAY2 to 3 p.m. — “Make a FoldedPaper Book Lamp” at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. For
ages 12 and older. Free; supplies will
be provided. Registration required;
call 940-349-8762 or e-mail
leslie.couture@cityofdenton.com.
SUNDAY3 p.m. — A recital by pianistsJeaneane Dowis and JeanMainous featuring four-hand piano
music by Mozart, Poulenc, Schubert
and Brahms at First Presbyterian
Church of Denton, 1114 W. University
Drive. Event benefits Birdhouse Ser-
vices, a charity in Little Elm devoted
to the rehabilitation of abused
women and children. Tickets can be
reserved by calling 972-571-2479 or
purchased at the church between
‘Christmas Belles’wraps up its run
Continued on Page 4
Senior and group discounts are avail-
able. Call 1-877-936-3839.
Through Saturday — The CircleTheatre presents “Seven in OneBlow,” a holiday performance for the
whole family, inspired by a famous
fairy tale. Performances are at 7:30
p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, and 3
p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturdays, at 230 W.
Fourth St. in Fort Worth. Tickets are
$20-$30. For reservations, call 817-
877-3040 or visit www.circletheatre.
com
Through Sunday — WaterTowerTheatre presents Rockin’ Christ-mas Party at Addison Theatre
Centre, 15650 Addison Road. For
more information, call 972-450-6232
or visit www.watertowertheatre.org.
Through Dec. 21 — The NorthPole Express train ride at
Grapevine Depot, 705 Main St. in
Grapevine. Tickets are $18 per per-
son. For tickets, visit www.grapevine-
texasusa.com/Christmas. For more
information, call 817-410-3385.
Through Dec. 22 — Kathy BurksTheatre of Puppetry Arts pres-ents The Nutcracker at Dallas
Children’s Theater, 5938 Skillman St.
Tickets are $14-$26. For more infor-
mation, call 214-740-0051 or visit
www.dct.org.
Through Dec. 22 — Madeline’sChristmas at the Dallas Children’s
Theater, 5938 Skillman St. Tickets
are $14-$26. For more information,
call 214-740-0051 or visit
www.dct.org.
Through Dec. 23 — Electricritterslighted holiday display at River
Bend Nature Center, 2200 Third St.,
at the
Lucy Park
entrance in Wichita
Falls. Admission is $5 per person,
free for children younger than 2. Call
940-767-0843 or visit www.river-
bendnaturecenter.org.
Through Dec. 23 — Santa Clausthe Musical at Casa Mañana
Theatre, 3101 W. Lancaster Ave. in
Fort Worth. Tickets are $20-$25. For
more information, call 817-332-2272
or visit www.casamanana.org.
Through Dec. 23 — EbenezerScrooge presented by Pocket Sand-
wich Theater, 5400 E. Mockingbird
Lane in Dallas. Tickets are $10-$18.
For more information, call 214-821-
1860.
Through Dec. 24 — Dallas Thea-ter Center presents A ChristmasCarol at Kalita Humphreys Theater,
3636 Turtle Creek Blvd. in Dallas. For
more information, call 214-880-0202
or visit www.dallastheatercenter.org.
Through Dec. 25 — Life-sized gin-gerbread house on display at Great
Wolf Lodge, 100 Great Wolf Drive in
Grapevine. Reservations may be
made for dining inside the house. In
addition to the cost of food, fee of
$20 will be charged for each sitting
and donated to Big Brothers Big
Sisters. Call 817-488-6510.
Through Dec. 31 — Holiday at theArboretum at the Dallas Arboretum,
8525 Garland Road. Admission is $12
for adults, $10 for seniors 65 and
older, $8 for children ages 3-12, and
free for children 2 and younger.
Parking is $7. Call 214-515-6520 or
visit www.dallasarboretum.org.
ONGOINGThrough Friday — Argyle MiddleSchool Student Council coatdrive at the school, 191 S. U.S.
Highway 377. Drop off donations of
gently worn coats in a box in front of
the school office. Call 940-246-2126.
7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday throughDec. 23 and Dec. 27-30 — HolidayBlast Camp for children in kinder-
garten through sixth grade at the
Denton Civic Center, 321 E. McKinney
St. Camp includes activities and field
trips during the holiday break. Each
day costs $28 per child, and partici-
pants must register in advance at the
Civic Center. For more information,
including field trips and activities,
visit www.dentonparks.com.
Through Dec. 22 — Ann’s HavenVNA Hospice Auxiliary’s Light Upa Life tree, honoring the memory of
family members and friends, in the
J.C. Penney Court at Golden Triangle
Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. A paper dove
bearing the name of an honoree can
be placed on the tree for a $20 dona-
tion. To make a donation, visit
between 2 and 6 p.m. weekdays or
noon to 4 p.m. Saturdays, call 940-
349-5900 or e-mail hudsong@vna
texas.org.
Weekends and evenings from 5to 9 p.m. — Bethlehem in DentonCounty, a gallery of more than 2,900
nativities and creches collected by
Sanger resident Judy Klein. By
appointment only. For directions or
more information, call 940-231-4520
or visit www.bethlehemindenton
co.com.
Through Jan. 1 — Pet Santa Treeat Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Donations will be deliv-
ered to the Denton Animal Shelter.
Suggested items include pet food
and treats, dog and cat toys, bed-
ding, clay cat litter, dishwashing liq-
uid and bleach. Call 940-349-8752 or
e-mail library@cityofdenton.com.
Through Jan. 1 — Gift of Lights atTexas Motor Speedway featuring
more than 1 million LED light displays
on a 1.7-mile drive-through course and
seasonal festivities. Donations of gen-
tly used items will be collected for
Goodwill of Fort Worth. Hours of oper-
ation are 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday through
Thursday; and 6 to 10 p.m. Friday and
Saturday. Admission is $15 per vehicle
Monday through Thursday, or $20 per
vehicle Friday through Sunday. Visit
www.texasgiftoflights.com.
FRIDAY11 to 11:45 a.m. — Santa StoryTime at North Branch Library, 3020
N. Locust St. Stories, songs, puppets
and more for children ages 1-5 and
their caregivers. Bring your camera
to take pictures with Santa at the
end of the program. Free. Call 940-
349-8752.
3:30 to 4:30 p.m. — “ChristmasCrafts” for ages 5 and older at
South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Make a Christmas card and
special photo keepsake ornament.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
7:30 p.m. — Denton Community
Theatre presents ChristmasBelles at the Campus Theatre, 214
W. Hickory St. All tickets are $20,
available at www.campustheatre.
com or at the box office. For tickets,
call 940-382-1915. For more informa-
tion, call 940-382-7014 or e-mail
thedctteam@campustheatre.com.
SATURDAY9 to 11 a.m. — Breakfast WithSanta at the Denton Civic Center,
321 E. McKinney St. Kids up to age 12
can hand-deliver their letters to
Santa after enjoying breakfast, face
painting, a bounce house and holiday
crafts. Photos with Santa will also be
available. Cost is $10 per child, and
adults may eat for $3 per plate.
Register by Thursday by visiting
www.dentonparks.com or by calling
940-349-8575.
9 a.m. — Breakfast with Santaand Mrs. Claus at the Lake Ray
Roberts Area Elks Club Lodge, 1601
Marina Circle in Sanger. Breakfast,
which includes chocolate gravy, is
$2. Door prizes and treats will be fea-
tured. Bring cameras; pajamas are
welcome.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. — DentonHumane Society’s Santa Pawsposes with pets at Calloway’s
Nursery, 1601 Dallas Drive. Cost is
$10 for one 5-by-7-inch photo, $15 for
two. Proceeds benefit the society’s
rescue program. Call 940-382-PETS.
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. — Holiday Drop’n’ Shop at the Denton Civic Center,
321 E. McKinney St. Parents can
sneak away while kids ages 3-12
enjoy a candy cane hunt, a holiday
craft, bounce house and a movie. Hot
chocolate and a snack will be pro-
vided. Cost is $15 per child. Children
must be potty-trained. Register by
Thursday by visiting www.denton-
parks.com or by calling 940-349-
8575.
1:30 to 2:30 p.m. — Bayless-SelbyHouse Museum’s HolidayMusicale performance features
music by Aubrey flutist Corinne
Mears at the museum, 317 W.
Mulberry St. Free. Call 940-349-2865
or visit www.dentoncounty.com/bsh.
6 p.m. — “The Drama,” a live
dramatization of the life of Christ, at
Bolivar Baptist Church, 6690 W.
FM455 in Sanger. Free. Child care
available.
7:30 p.m. — Denton CommunityTheatre presents ChristmasBelles at the Campus Theatre, 214
W. Hickory St. All tickets are $20,
available at www.campustheatre.
com or at the box office. For tickets,
call 940-382-1915. For more informa-
tion, call 940-382-7014 or e-mail
thedctteam@campustheatre.com.
SUNDAY2 p.m. — Denton CommunityTheatre presents ChristmasBelles at the Campus Theatre, 214
W. Hickory St. All tickets are $20,
available at www.campustheatre.
com or at the box office. For tickets,
call 940-382-1915. For more informa-
tion, call 940-382-7014 or e-mail
thedctteam@campustheatre.com.
6 p.m. — “The Drama,” a
live dramatization of the
life of Christ, at
Bolivar Baptist
Church, 6690 W.
FM455 in
Sanger. Free.
Child care avail-
able.
TUESDAY2 to 2:45 p.m. — FreeChristmas decor tourfocusing on tree ornaments at the
Denton County African American
Museum, 317 W. Mulberry St. Call
940-349-2865 or visit www.denton
county.com/dcaam.
IN THE REGION7 to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday— Winter Solsticelebration: OurHuman Journey at Cathedral of
Hope, 5910 Cedar Springs in Dallas.
Tickets are $15 at the door or $12 in
advance, $8 for children and seniors.
Call 214-261-5599 or visit www.
earthrhythms.org.
7 p.m. Sunday — The Women’sChorus of Dallas presents“Peace on Earth” with guest
Anton Shaw, at AT&T Performing
Arts Center, 2403 Flora St. in
Dallas. Tickets are $25-$37.50.
Visit http://tickets.attpac.org
7:30 p.m. Monday — The TexasVoices, a professional chamber
choir, presents “My Dear Heart:
Christmas Lullabies and Other
Holiday Favorites” at Zion Lutheran
Church, 6121 E. Lovers Lane in Dallas.
Tickets are $22 for adults, $18 for
seniors 65 and older, and $10 for stu-
dents. Visit www.thetexasvoices.org
or call 214-384-6336.
8 p.m. Wednesday — The TurtleCreek Chorale presents “My
Favorite Things” at the Morton H.
Meyerson Symphony Center, 2301
Flora St. in Dallas. Toy drive dona-
tions encouraged. Tickets are $20-
$65, available at www.turtlecreek.org
or by phone at 214-526-3214.
Dec. 30-31 — Lights All Night, a
two-day New Year’s Eve celebration
with three stages of electronic and
dance music at the Dallas Conven-
tion Center. DJs include Tiesto, Benny
Benassi, Laidback Luke, Wolfgang
Gartner and Porter Robinson, with
performers including Ghostland
Observatory, Girl Talk, Diplo and Neon
Indian. Tickets are $99-$290. Visit
www.lightsallnight.com.
Jan. 31 — “Big D NYE” at Victory
Park in Dallas. Free event includes
multiple stages, food and beverage
tents, live entertainment and fire-
works. The Dallas Stars play the
Boston Bruins at 7 p.m. at American
Airlines Center. Visit www.bigdnye.
com.
ONGOING7:30 p.m. Monday through Dec.22 and 2 p.m. Dec. 21 — 3Redneck Tenors’ “ChristmasSpec-tac-YULE-ar Show” at
Medical Center of Lewisville Grand
Theater, 100 N. Charles St. in
Lewisville. Tickets are $15-$25.
HOLIDAY EVENTS 03DentonTime
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04DentonTime
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6:30 to 8 p.m. — Animanga, a
club for teens in grades 6-12 who
love anime and manga, at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Meets every first and third Wednes-
day of the month. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
7 to 8:30 p.m. — ExploringPhilosophy at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Chat about philo-
sophical questions with Eva H.
Cadwallader, professor emerita. Free.
Call 940-349-8752 to register.
MUSICThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & PubWed: County Rexford, 7-9pm, free.
101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-5483.
The Abbey Underground Fri: Fatty Lumpkin, 8pm. 100 W.
Walnut St. 940-565-5478.
Andy’s Bar 122 N. Locust St. 940-
565-5400. www.myspace.com/
andysbar.
Art Six Coffee House Music, plays
and gallery shows in a house con-
verted into an arts space. No cover.
No smoking inside. 424 Bryan St.
940-484-2786. www.facebook.com/
artsixcoffeehouse.
Banter Thurs: Thumper D, Lando
and Darian, 6pm. Fri: The Ringy
Garcons, 6pm; Earthshine, 10pm.
Sat: Doug Raney, 1-2:30pm. Each
Thurs, open-mic night, 9pm-mid-
night, free. Live local jazz at 8pm
each Fri and 6pm each Sat. 219 W.
Oak St. 940-565-1638. www.denton
banter.com.
Cafe Du Luxe No cover. 3101
Unicorn Lake Blvd. 940-382-7070.
www.cafeduluxe.com.
Cool Beans 1210 W. Hickory St. 940-
382-7025.
Crazy Horse Saloon Each Thurs,
“Blues Power Happy Hour” featuring
Three Time Fool, 5:30-8:30pm, free.
508 S. Elm St. 940-591-0586.
Dan’s Silverleaf Thurs: Joe Ely,
Danny Balis, 8:30pm, doors at 7pm,
$30 for reserved seats, $18 general
admission. Fri: The Forever Fabulous
Chickenhawks (featuring “Blue” Lou
Marini, Big Luther Kent, Steve
Howard), 8pm, $15. Sat: Possessed
by Paul James, Kody Jackson, Dim
Locator, 6pm, $5; Petty Theft, 10pm,
$10. Each Sun, Hares on the Moun-
tain, 5pm, free. Each Mon, Boxcar
Bandits, 10pm, free. No smoking
indoors. 103 Industrial St. 940-320-
2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.
Fry Street Public House 125 Ave. A.
940-323-9800. www.publichouse
denton.com.
Fry Street Tavern 121 Ave. A. 940-
383-2337.
The Garage Each Mon, open mic,
11:30pm, $1-$5. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-
0045. www.thedentongarage.com.
The Greenhouse Thurs: Addison
Frei. Mon: Aaron Hederstrom. Live
jazz, each Mon and Thurs at 10pm,
free. 600 N. Locust St. 940-484-
1349. www.greenhouserestaurant
denton.com.
Hailey’s Club Fri: Freak the Mighty,
Terrestrials, Señor Fin, Comanche,
9pm, $3-$5. Sat: voltREvolt, Sol Tax,
Light and Ladder, Richie Bates, 9pm,
$3-$5. Sun: “Wreckin’ Mics to Christ-
EVENTSContinued from Page 2
Alittle slide guitar, sometwanging lead guitarand a lot of heart have
built Joe Ely’s progressivecountry music.
The Austin picker hasmade a name for himselfamong the likes of Texas leg-ends Stevie Ray Vaughan andZZ Top through songs aboutthe failings of characters realand imagined.
Most of those songs are sad.Ely was forging his identity
as a musician in the wake ofBeatlemania and as groupslike the Rolling Stones wererecording and performingsome of their most influentialalbums.
Ely released an album,Satisfied at Last, in June, andthe music is more rock, andthe lyrics more urgent. His“Mockingbird Hill” (not to beconfused with Vaughn Hor-ton’s song) is styled like ahymn, but perhaps per-formed beyond the walls ofany church.
The cast of characters inSatisfied at Last is still flawedand human, but Ely shows anew respect to top the old. Thealbum is the kind that couldonly be made in Austin. Therecord mixes Spanish influ-ences, country and blues and,on “Roll Again,” reggae. But it’sreggae only as Ely could do it.
Ely stops in Denton at 8:30p.m. today at Dan’s Silverleaf,103 Industrial St. Tickets are$30 for reserved seats, or $18for general admission. Fortickets, visit www.spunetickets.com.
— Lucinda Breeding
Pingpong players can show off
their skills in a tournament from 6 to
8 p.m. Friday at Martin Luther King Jr.
Recreation Center, 1300 Wilson St.
Entry costs $4, and players should
bring their own paddles. For more
information, call 940-349-8575.
�It’s the last chance to register for the
10K training course on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Thursdays, Dec. 19
through Feb. 23, at North Lakes
Recreation Center, 2001 W. Windsor
Drive.
The course is the perfect stepping
stone between a 5K and a half-
marathon. An experienced instructor
will guide participants through nec-
essary and safe steps.
The course will meet from 5:30 to
6:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays
and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursdays.
Cost is $80 per runner. Register by
visiting www.dentonparks.com or by
calling 940-349-8287.
�During the holiday break, children in
kindergarten through sixth grade can
enjoy fun activities and exciting field
trips in Holiday Blast Camp. The
camp will be offered from 7 a.m. to 6
p.m. Monday through Dec. 23, and
Dec. 27-30. Each day costs $28 per
child, and participants must register
in advance at the Denton Civic
Center, 321 E. McKinney St. For more
information, including field trips and
activities, visit www.dentonparks.
com
�To begin planning your fitness pro-
gram for the new year, visit
www.dentonparks.com for a list-
ing of our centers and to discover a
variety of exceptional group exercise
classes, including Zumba and Les
Mills BodyPump, BodyCombat and
BodyFlow.
To stay up to date on special events
and programs, including new year’s
fitness promotions, sign up for our
free email newsletter at www.
dentonparks.com.
Then “like” our Facebook page at
www.facebook.com/dentonparks
nrec to stay connected with discus-
sions, photos and more.
For more information about Parks
and Recreation programs, call 940-
349-PARK (7275), visit www.
dentonparks.com or e-mail
parksnrec@cityofdenton.com.
DENTONPARKS ANDRECREATION
Courtesy photo
Joe Ely, whose music in steeped in Texas’ many influences, plays tonight at Dan’s
Silverleaf.
Finally ‘Satisfied’Austin’s Joe Elystill kicking, withshow here tonight
mas Lights Toy Drive” with the
BoomBachs, Immigrant Punk, Wild
Bill, Infidelix, Ewok and more, 9pm,
$5-$7. Wed: The Stolen Season,
Beaver, New Sand, 9pm, $5-$7. Each
Thurs, ’80s music, free-$5; each
Tues, ’90s music, free-$5. 122 W.
Mulberry St. 940-323-1160. www.
haileysclub.com.
J&J’s Pizza Mon: Ramming Speed,
Wild Tribe, Oust, 9pm. 118 W. Oak St.
940-382-7769. www.jandjpizza
denton.com.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
La Milpa Mexican RestaurantEach Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 8pm. 820
S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-8470.
Love Shack Fri: Molotov Dogs, 8pm.
115 E. Hickory St. 940-442-6834.
www.loveburgershack.com.
Lowbrows Beer and Wine GardenEach Thurs, Fri and Sat, open-mic
night. Free. 200 S. Washington St.,
Pilot Point. 940-686-3801. www.
lowbrows.us.
Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlorand Chainsaw Repair 1125 E. Uni-
versity Drive, Suite 107. 940-566-
9910.
Mad World Records 115 W. Hickory
St. 940-591-3001.
Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Red Bull DJ
Battle, “End of School for 2011,” 8pm.
1009 Ave. C. 940-565-6611.
www.rockinrodeodenton.com.
Rubber Gloves Rehearsal StudiosFri: Cole Willis, Foe Destroyer, Battle
of Gonzales, Catahoula, 9pm, free-$5.
Sat: Dentoneer Holiday Spectacular
presents Sundress, Schmillion,
Soviet, the Hope Trust, Paper Robot,
9pm, free-$3. Mon: “Karaoke Gong
Show,” 10pm, free. Each Thurs,
“Discipline,” 10pm, free-$5; each
Tues, “Singles Going Steady,” 10pm,
free-$5; each Wed, “Whatever
Wednesdays,” 10pm, free-$5. 411 E.
Sycamore St. 940-387-7781.
www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.
Simone Lounge Sat: Peopleodian,
Diamond Age, Melting Season. Wed:
Kristy Kruger and the Town Criers,
9pm. 222 W. Hickory St., Suite 104.
Continued on Page 5
05DentonTime
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2317 W. University • Denton, TX
REPLACEMENTDENTURES
STARTING AT
$395A SET
940-566-0127Toll Free 866-940-0127
Insurance Accepted • Financing Available (W.A.C.)
Thomas John Kennedy of Texas, DDS, P.L.L.C. General Dentistry
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Get Your Smile BackGet Your Smile Back
LO
tion, then communion and,finally, a benediction with“When the Blues.”
“In visual art, I love the con-tour and the line. I don’t do theblurry stuff,” Long said. “If youlisten to people anymore, allyou hear are people disagree-ing. What we’re trying to dowith our music is find the com-mon ground we all share.”
Long said the band writesmusic that tries to explore
beauty, truth and, when possi-ble, transcend it.
“Ideals like peace, love andjoy, they’re almost inex-haustible,” he said. “TakeWoody Guthrie’s ‘This Land isYour Land.’ Everyone loves thatsong. If you find anything inthat song to oppose, then you’reone of those people who coun-ters everything you’ve everknown just to do it. And I’mnot OK with having that personon our team.”
VoltREvolt is working on itsdebut album, recording in astudio belonging to Denton’sMidlake. Long said he expectsthe album to be finished inMcKinney.
940-387-7240. www.facebook.com/
simonelounge.
Sweetwater Grill and Tavern Tues:
Mario Cruz & Friends. Jazz shows on
the patio, 7-9pm, free. 115 S. Elm St.
940-484-2888.
Trail Dust Steak House Fri & Sat:
Two Door Ford, 7-11pm. 26501 U.S.
380 East in Aubrey. 940-365-4440.
www.trailduststeaks.net.
VFW Post 2205 Free karaoke at
8pm each Thurs, Fri and Sat. 909
Sunset St.
IN THE REGIONThrough Dec. 23 — FlowerMound Performing Arts Theatrepresents Forever Plaid at the
Medical Center of Lewisville Grand
Black Box Theatre, 100 N. Charles St.
in Lewisville. Performances are at
7:30 p.m. Thursdays through
Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays.
Tickets are $25 for adults and $22 for
seniors, students and children. Visit
www.fmpat.org or call 972-724-2147.
SENIORSAmerican Legion Hall SeniorCenter 629 Lakey Drive in Fred
Moore Park. 10am-3pm Mon-Fri, 6-
9pm Thurs. 940-349-8298.
Denton Senior Center Offers daily
lunches, classes, travel, health servic-
es and numerous drop-in activities.
8am-9pm Mon-Fri. 509 N. Bell Ave.
940-349-8280. www.dentonsenior
center.com.
Ongoing activities:
� Athena’s Craft Store, open 9am-
1pm Mon-Fri; 9am-1pm Sat; first and
third Fri, 6-9pm. Call 940-349-8720.
� Dancing and potluck, live big
band and country music every sec-
ond and fourth Friday, 7-9:30pm, $5.
� Movies 6pm each Wed. Free for
Denton seniors. $1 for popcorn and
soda.
� SPAN noon meal each Mon-Fri.
$1.50 for seniors age 60 and older,
$3.50 for those younger than 60.
� Chime Choir 9:30am Mon
� Pinochle 10:30am-1:30pm Mon
� Young at Heart band practice,
9am Tues, 10am Thurs
� Card workshop 9am first Tues
� Needlework group 9am Tues
� Red Hat Society 11am first Wed
� Tap dance classes, for beginners,
intermediate/advanced, Wed nights
or Fri mornings.
� Bridge Party bridge, 12:30pm
Thurs; duplicate bridge, 1pm Wed
� Benefits counseling 1:30-4pm
third Thurs
� Bingo 12:45pm first and third Fri
� Fridays With Friends 9-11am Fri.
Courtesy photo
Denton’s voltREvolt will play Hailey’s Club on Saturday
night. With a beefy demo already available, the local indie
folk-rock group hopes to release a debut album soon.
THEY’RE WITH THE BANDVoltREvolt is:� Matthew Long — leadvocals, guitar� Thomas Paessler — ukulele,keyboards and vocals� Jordan Martin — lead guitar� Matthew Schipper — bass� Damon Kelley — drums
For voltREvolt, a demorecording stretches out tofull album length.
The Denton five-piece laiddown 12 tracks, with “Icarus”passing the seven-minute markand “The Limelight” lastingmore than 10 minutes.
“VoltREvolt is really all aboutcommunity, getting peopleinvolved with our ideas andcauses,” said lead singer andguitarist Matthew Long.
The demo is a mellow affair,with songs like “Bobby” sound-ing a little like alt-rock cast asshoegaze — though the lyricsare clear instead of muddled bythe wall of guitar sounds.When the band gets around to“About the World,” it’s all indiefolk embroidered with a lonehorn as the drums and guitarfroth up in a crest of energy.“Hey, hey-o,” Long sings in acampfire-worthy tune, “are youtroubled about the world?” “It’sHard to Be Happy” sees thegroup employing an earnestharmonica and WoodyGuthrie-style verses.
Long was living in Lubbockwhen he first got wind of the
Denton music scene. He wasbooking a coffee shop that wasplaying host to a show byDenton’s Baruch the Scribe. Itwasn’t long before Long wasliving here, going to shows andmeeting people.
“Everyone in the band is mybest friend,” he said. “Myfriends and I, we have a habit ofbringing all sorts of peopletogether. We recorded it [thedemo] live and simultaneouslytracked it.”
Long said voltREvolt basi-cally tries to achieve a kind ofworship when it performs.With the demo for an example,the statement makes sense.The music begins with celebra-tion, moves through introspec-
voltREvoltWith Richie Bates, Light and Ladder,Sol Tax. 10 p.m. Saturday at Hailey’sClub, 122 W. Mulberry St. Cover is $3
for ages 21 and older, $5 for thoseyounger than 21.
Denton’s voltREvolt energized by ideals
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
Continued on Page 6
06DentonTime
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LK
Singer-songwriterEmmeline Miles want-ed to take more risks
in the follow-up to her 2010EP Early Morning Hours.
With determination andthe counsel of engineer-pro-ducer Martin Baird, Miles —who goes by just Emmelineonstage — said she did justthat.
“I think that the way itcame together was kind ofsurprising,” the Dallas-basedperformer said. “EarlyMorning Hours was a veryacoustic. I knew when I wentinto the studio this time, Iwanted this record to beorchestrally a lot bigger. Iwas able to use more instru-ments, and play around witharrangements and vocal har-monies. I’ve been playingthese songs for about a year— and I’m having to makesome decisions about how toput some of that sound fromthe different instruments onthe record when Iplay them live.”
Miles metBaird
when he came to a show shewas part of, and the twodreamed aloud about whatthey’d try to do in the studio.Then, they went into the stu-dio to produce the record.
They came out withSomeone to Be, a seven-trackalbum that finds Miles backat the piano, using music tomake sense of a world besetby recession and democraticuprisings in the Middle East,and just about everything inbetween. Two songs havebeen ripening: Miles penned“Bad Day” when she was just16, and “Dallas” hatchedafter college graduationmeant Miles would migratefrom Los Angeles back hometo Dallas.
The remaining five songsare proof that Miles gotsomewhere with her risks.“All the Reasons Why”blends the musical theater ofJonathan Larson (Rent)with a love letter of sortsbegging a friend not to giveup. “Bad Day” is a gardenvariety pop tune pro-pelled along by up-tempodrumming. “Mine” isstraight-up indie with a
twist of cabaret. Baird was a key
player in Miles
making the record she wanted.
“His enthusiasm for themusic really impressed me,”she said. “We have the samesense of humor and we reallyclicked. He likes to let artistsfollow their heart, which Ireally appreciate. Somethingthat I really enjoy aboutworking with Martin is thatwe’re both really honest peo-ple. We were working onharmonies and he’d say ‘Ilike that’ and ‘No, I don’t likethat.’ I know I’d send himsome vocal harmonies andhe’d say ‘Yeah, I like this, butit needs a little something.’ Ithink he adds a lot of twistsand turns.”
Miles started playing onenight a month at Cafe DuLuxe when her friend andpeer Karyna Cruz asked herto perform at the cafe in herplace.
“The music scene inDenton and Dallas are reallyentwined,” Miles said. “I playDenton a lot, and I love it.”
Miles plays a CD releaseparty at Cafe du Luxe onSaturday night.
Details: Emmeline’s showis from 8 to 10 p.m. Saturdayat Cafe du Luxe, 3103 Uni-corn Lake Blvd. No cover.
On the Web: www.emmelinemusic.virb.com.
— Lucinda Breeding
Emmeline broadens sound
Fri-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. 940-
686-2396. www.farmersand
merchantsgallery.com.
Gallery 010 in the TWU student
union, at the corner of Bell Avenue
and Administration Drive. Mon-Thurs
8-9; Fri 8-5; Sun 1-9. Free.
Green Space Arts CollectiveGallery hours are Mon 5-6:30pm,
Tues-Wed 4-7pm, and by appoint-
ment by calling 940-387-2722. 529
Malone St.
Jupiter House 114 N. Locust St.
940-387-7100.
La Meme Gallery At Rubber Gloves
Rehearsal Studios, 411 E. Sycamore
St. www.lamemegallery.com.
Oxide Gallery Commercial gallery in
Linwood-Alford Florist. 501 W.
Hickory St. Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat
9am-1pm. 940-483-8900. www.
oxidegallery.com.
TWU Blagg-Huey Library Mon-
Thurs 7:30am-midnight, Fri 7:30am-
10pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun 2pm-mid-
night. 1322 Oakland St. 940-898-
3701. www.twu.edu/library.
TWU East and West galleries inthe TWU Fine Arts Building, at
Oakland Street and Pioneer Circle.
Free. Mon-Fri 9-4, weekends by
appointment. 940-898-2530.
www.twu.edu/visual-arts.
UNT Art Gallery in the UNT Art
Building, 1201 W. Mulberry St. at
Welch. Tues noon-5pm, Wed-Thurs
9:30am-8pm, Fri-Sat noon-5pm. Free.
940-565-4316. www.art.unt.edu.
UNT Cora Stafford Gallery In
Emmeline, a singer-songwriter who has been
writing music since age 11, celebrates the
release of her latest recording Saturday at
Cafe Du Luxe.
Courtesy photo/Mandy Caulkins
TURN IT UP Best bets for music this weekend
Volunteers create items to donate to
Denton Regional Medical Center
patients. Call Jeff or Jane at 940-349-
8720.
� Square dancing 7-10pm first and
third Fri, $6.
� Ed Bonk Woodshop 9am-noon
Mon-Thurs; 9am-noon Sat. $6 annual
membership or $1 per visit.
RSVP Referral and placement service
for volunteers age 55 and older. 1400
Crescent St. For more information,
call 940-383-1508.
VISUAL ARTSArt Six Coffee House 424 Bryan St.
Mon-Sat 9am-midnight. 940-484-
2786.
Banter 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638.
Burger and Friends 108 W. Oak St.,
Suite 101. www.burgerandfriends.com.
Cafe Du Luxe 3101 Unicorn Lake
Blvd. Mon-Thurs 5:30am-10pm, Fri
5:30am-11pm, Sat 6am-11pm, Sun
7am-9pm. 940-382-7070. www.cafe
duluxe.com.
� Work by Tina Church Alvarez on
display.
Center for the Visual Arts 400 E.
Hickory St. Free. Tues-Sun 1-5pm.
940-382-2787. www.dentonarts.com.
� “The Wizards of Pop: Sabuda &
Reinhart” runs through Jan. 15.
Presented by the Greater Denton
Arts Council,
The Chestnut Tree 107 W. Hickory
St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat 9am-
2:30pm, Sun 11am-2pm. 940-591-
9475. www.chestnuttearoom.com.
� Visual Arts Society of Texas exhi-
bition runs through Jan. 5.
A Creative Art Studio 227 W. Oak
St., Suite 101. Mon-Sat 12-6pm, Sun
by appointment only. 940-442-1251.
www.acreativeartstudio.com
Cupboard Natural Foods and Cafe200 W. Congress St. 940-387-5386.
Farmer’s & Merchant’s GalleryEarly and contemporary Texas art.
100 N. Washington St., Pilot Point.
UNT’s Oak Street Hall, 1120 W. Oak
St. Tues-Fri 10am-2pm or by appoint-
ment. 940-565-4005.
UNT Fashion on Main 1901 Main St.
in downtown Dallas. Free. Thurs-Fri
noon to 5 p.m. 940-565-2732 or 214-
752-8151.
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.
UNT Union Gallery Level 3, UNT
Union, 400 Ave A. Mon-Sat 8am-
10pm. 940-565-3829. www.unt.edu/
union/gallery.htm.
Visual Arts Society of Texas Mem-
ber organization of the Greater
Denton Arts Council offers comm-
unity and continuing education for
local visual artists, professional and
amateur. Meetings are at the Center
for the Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St.
Visit www.vastarts.org or call
Executive Director Lynne Cage Cox at
972-VAST-ORG.
EVENTSContinued from Page 5
LD
MOVIESTHEATERS
CINEMARK DENTON2825 Wind River Lane off I-35E.
940-535-2654. www.cinemark.com.
MOVIE TAVERN916 W. University Drive. 940-566-
FILM (3456). www.movietavern.com.
RAVE MOTION PICTURES8380 S. I-35E, Hickory Creek. 940-
321-2788. www.movietickets.com.
SILVER CINEMASInside Golden Triangle Mall,
2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-1957.
OPENING FRIDAYAlvin & the Chipmunks:Chipwrecked A group of talking
chipmunks and their human compan-
ions get shipwrecked on a remote
island. With Jason Lee, David Cross,
Jenny Slate and the voice of Justin
Long. Rated G, 85 minutes. — Los
Angeles Times
Mission Impossible: GhostProtocol (���1/2) The Impossible
Mission Force (Tom Cruise, Paula
Patton, Jeremy Renner and Simon
Pegg) finds itself abandoned just as
they need to break into the Kremlin
and, later, to scale the world’s tallest
building in Dubai. This latest
Impossible entry delivers on con-
stant action and white-knuckle
sequences, all ably rendered by ani-
mation director Brad Bird (The
Incredibles), who makes an impres-
sive first effort with humans. See it
in Imax for maximum effect. Rated
PG-13, 133 minutes. — Boo Allen
Outrage In the Japanese under-
world, rival yakuza clans vie for
power. With Ryo Kase, Jun Kunimura
and Tomokazu Miura. Written and
directed by Takeshi Kitano. In
Japanese with English subtitles.
Rated R, 109 minutes. At the Texas
Theatre in Dallas. — LAT
Sherlock Holmes: Game ofShadows The famous detective
Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey Jr.)
meets his match in the criminal mas-
termind known as Professor Moriarty
(Jared Harris) in this sequel to the
2009 film. With Jude Law and Noomi
Rapace. Directed by Guy Ritchie.
Rated PG-13, 129 minutes. — LAT
NOW PLAYINGArthur Christmas (���1/2) This
pleasant holiday treat from Aardman,
the British animation outfit behind
Chicken Run and the Wallace and
Gromit cartoons, has the old-fash-
ioned spirit of Christmas at heart,
spinning a snowflake-light tale with
warmth, energy and goofy humor.
The movie unveils the vast high-tech
enterprise run by Santa to deliver all
those presents as his big-hearted but
bumbling younger son, Arthur
(voiced by James McAvoy), races to
deliver a single gift that fell through
the cracks. The delightful, drolly
funny voice cast includes Jim
Broadbent, Bill Nighy, Hugh Laurie,
Imelda Staunton and Ashley Jensen.
Rated PG, 97 minutes. — The
By Boo AllenFilm Critic
The Young Adult in JasonReitman’s new comedy-drama is an awful per-
son. She lies, she schemes, shemanipulates and she drinks somuch she starts every day facedown. And she is totally fasci-nating.
Charlize Theron plays MavisGary, who has come to a cross-roads in her life. Her decisionsabout her future propel thefilm’s involving drama, whilealso providing heaps of blackhumor.
Oscar-winning screenwriterDiablo Cody (Juno) provesshe’s not a one-hit wonder with
her exceptionally mordantscript. It gives directorReitman plenty of materialwith which to draw a finelynuanced portrait of a severelytroubled woman.
Mavis writes children’sbooks, but her latest contractdraws to a close and she mustdecide what to do next with herdead-end life. She leaves hercramped Minneapolis apart-ment, takes her tiny neglecteddog, and returns to her smallhometown of Mercury, Minn.There, she plans on forcing areconciliation with her ex-
boyfriend Buddy Slade (PatrickWilson), despite his being hap-pily married and the father of anewborn daughter.
Mavis knows her beautycould entice most men, so shesets out for a full makeoverbefore then ingratiating herselfto the point that Buddy willagain fall for her.
Her brazen attempts reachIago-levels of two-faced men-dacity. Cody’s script excels inproviding Mavis with herscathing, character-definingdialogue, as well as her atro-cious but believable behavior.
Mavis somehow falls inleague with Matt (PattonOswalt), the voice of reasonand a forgotten former highschool classmate who repri-mands her for her actions. Buthe also revels in watching thebuilding crisis. Through Matt,Mavis’ true deceitfulness
becomes apparent, andappalling.
Eventually, Mavis, in a classicmeltdown scene, bungles thebiggest option in her life alongwith every other choice. Anddespite the insidiousness of herprior behavior, the train wreckis still painful to watch. Theronmay have nabbed anotherOscar nomination for her ability, in this one scene, to elicit viewer emotions whilealso revealing her character’stotal depravity.
Young Adult becomes a com-edy filled with the pathos that isoften hard to face. Severalscenes might not ring entirelytrue or credible, but, in all, thefilm delivers a well-roundedpackage.
DR. BOO ALLEN is anaward-winning film critic forthe Denton Record-Chronicle.
Paramount PicturesPatrick Wilson is the one who got away from a novelist played by Charlize Theron in Young Adult.
Arrested developmentYoung Adult
Rated R, 94 minutes.Opens Friday.
Theron excels asjuvenile delinquentin ‘Young Adult’
Associated Press
Happy Feet Two (���1/2) The
dancing, singing penguins are as
adorable as ever. Yet a couple of
shrimplike krill almost steal the show
in this animated sequel that sticks to
the formula of the original while
adding enough variety to give it a life
of its own. It helps to have Brad Pitt
and Matt Damon voicing the krill
with great companionability as they
join a vocal cast that includes return-
ing stars Elijah Wood and Robin
Williams. Wood’s tap-dancing pen-
guin now is a dad dealing with a mis-
fit, runaway son embarrassed over
his own lack of rhythm. Director and
co-writer George Miller, who handled
the same chores on the 2006
Academy Award-winning first film,
keeps the focus on penguins in peril
while adding an interesting nature-in-
07DentonTime
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Continued on Page 10
By Lucinda Breeding | Features Editor
t won’t have the stunning visuals of The Nutcracker
or the plucky attitude of A Gift for Emma, but chore-
ographer Lily Sloan said Homing Where I Roam is a
collection of dances inspired by the winter holidays.
Except the holidays in the three modern dances by Denton’s Big
Rig Dance Collective will be rooted in reality.
No sugarplum fairies will pirouette. No swing-dancing elves
will turn a studio into a wonderland.
In Homing Where I Roam, dancers will deal with the trappings
and trimmings of the holidays in the here and now.
“Last December, I was like, ‘I need to make a new work,’” said
Sloan, sharing a table in the far corner of Banter with fellow cho-
reographers Amanda Jackson, Crysta Caulkins-Clouse and
Whitney Boomer. Jackson and Boomer are completing their
MFA degrees at Texas Woman’s University. Sloan and Caulkins-
Clouse are TWU graduates.
“When I was thinking about needing a new project, I started
thinking about the holidays. How they feel, how they look and
how, sometimes, the holidays don’t feel or look the way you think
they’re supposed to.”
Sloan said she kept returning to what became the central
theme: home.
And why shouldn’t home become an emotional foundation for
the holidays? Many — if not most — Americans develop their
understanding of Christmas and the winter holidays at home.
See BIG RIG on 10
Dancers with the Big Rig
Dance Collective will per-
form Homing Where I
Roam this weekend.
Courtesy photo
08DentonTime
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09DentonTime
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Then Sloan talked to her fel-low Big Rig dancers and foundthat the idea of home was fasci-nating to them, too. Then thedancers realized they’d bebuilding dances that wouldultimately be performed in aspace far smaller than MargoJones Performing Arts Centerat TWU or a local high schoolauditorium.
“A while back I just decidedto rent the [PointBank] BlackBox [Performing Arts Center, asmall venue run by DentonCommunity Theatre]. Once Idid that, I figured we wouldn’tbe creating some huge, 10-dance event. And I was justtrusting that we’d have a dance.”
Big Rig will perform threedances in the intimate blackbox theater, where people sit-ting the farthest from the stageare still so close they can see thedancer’s perspiration. Caul-kins-Clouse said each dance isthe result of staging move-ments often done on a largespace in a small one.
“That’s what happens whenwe talk about dance,” she said.“That’s what we talk about, theassociations we have with theidea of home. How do we twistthis idea, and does it have to bein a huge arena? We talk a lotabout how we’ll move and be inwhatever space we perform in.”
Sloan calls it “site-specific”dance, an academic term forputting dance in a space chosenfor a particular reason — in alocal yogurt shop or on thelawn of the historic downtowncourthouse — and making thedance fit the place.
“Putting dance out there,” asJackson said, is central to BigRig’s mission. A small percent-age of people will drive to BassPerformance Hall in FortWorth to watch Texas BalletTheater perform. Hundreds —maybe even thousands — ofpeople visit the Square on aweekend, and Boomer said alot of people will stop to watcha dance that looks sponta-neous.
Caulkins-Clouse’s dancemight feel the most overtlyrelated to home. She’ll performa short solo piece while cook-ing.
“I’m making a dance aboutwho I am, and about who I am
at home,” she said. “When Istarted working on it, my mindimmediately went to this ideaof biography. Because peopleare putting more of their livesout in public than ever; peopleare blogging, sharing their livesthrough social media. I startedthinking about, you know,what’s my story? What’s mystory of being in the real world,my story as a wife, as a personwho just bought a house, a per-son who just graduated?”
Jackson and Boomer willperform part of a curious proj-ect, titled “Homemade Dance,”that they just produced in avacant house owned by Dentoncity councilman Kevin Roden.The audience was led fromroom to room, from downstairsto upstairs, to watch dancerscreate both dance and a feelingin each room. In the kitchen,two dancers moved automati-cally, clock-like, around a tablewhile a musician sat in thepantry, tuning a small radio. Asolitary dancer quizzed patronsabout their favorite books as achild, and when a woman citedA Wrinkle In Time, the dancerseemed to fall apart emotion-ally, thrashing books from theshelves and losing her compo-sure. Finally, the audiencewatched a 15-minute modernballet of candid movement andintentions that related directlyto the security and dysfunctionof home. There were creepymoments when dancers stoodoutside rooms, becoming shad-owy figures peeping into a bed-room. The music was ambient— clicking, ringing and rustlingsounds that suggest bodiesmoving in other rooms or a room settling after water
rushes through pipes. “For Whitney and I, the
question is how to rule thischallenge. We perform in ahouse, in a very small space,and then we move to the BlackBox, which is an entirely differ-ent place with a different feel-ing,” Jackson said.
“I also feel that, as a per-former, we’re so ingrained inthe space, and then having toturn around and do it in a totally different place, well,we’re both accepting this ideaof change,” Boomer said.
Sloan said her dance is rootedin the idea of home, and howrelationships grow out of it. Her
piece uses nostalgia — and someholiday decorations here andthere — to tell a story of familysituations. She didn’t require thedancers in the piece to playcharacters, but they do explorethe connections that emerge in aspace made to feel like home.
“Some of it is really abstrac-tion, but there are these famil-ial situations that play out like astory,” she said. “We all embraceimprovisation as choreogra-phers. It’s like we’ve all gone onthis long journey, and it’s like Idon’t know exactly how we gothere, but we’re here together.”
Audiences will see someangles and patterns, and they’llsee relationships played out asthey emerge in houses, apart-ments and dorms. The waybodies move at home arereplete with subconsciousassumptions and consciousquestions and yearnings.
“We all want to see what hap-pens when we put all theseideas together,” Boomer said.
LUCINDA BREEDING canbe reached at 940-566-6877.
From Page 8
Big Rig
HOMING WHERE I ROAMWhat: a twist on holidaydance by the Big Rig DanceCollectiveWhen: 7:30 p.m. Friday andSaturdayWhere: PointBank Black BoxPerforming Arts Center, 318 E.Hickory St.Details: Tickets cost $10 atwww.bigrigdance.org/BRDC/Projects.html or $15 at thedoor.
Courtesy photoDancers with the Big Rig Dance Collective will perform
Homing Where I Roam this weekend.
MOVIESContinued from Page 7
“I’m making a
dance about who
I am, and about
who I am at
home.”
— Crysta Caulkins-Clouse,Big Rig Dance Collective
choreographer
perspective angle with the side jour-
ney of those tiny krill trying to find
their place in a world of bigger, hun-
grier things. Rated PG, 99 minutes.
— AP
Hugo (����) Martin Scorsese
uncharacteristically directs an ele-
giac, moving 3-D film about Hugo
(Asa Butterfield), a boy hiding and
living in a Paris train station around
1930. He befriends a toy store owner
(Ben Kingsley) who turns out to be
George Melies, a forgotten silent film
pioneer. Various other subplots from
Brian Selznick’s novel play out with
an excellent cast, and are comple-
mented by stunning special effects
in which 3-D is, for once, appropriate
and put to positive use. Rated PG,
126 minutes. — B.A.
The Muppets (���) In this new
caper featuring Jim Henson’s lovable
creations, Amy Adams and Jason
Segel give support as a couple who
venture to Los Angeles and end up
helping the Muppets save their old
studio from a dastardly oilman (Chris
Cooper). The film showcases the
best of what always made the
Muppets popular, along with an obvi-
ous plea to attract a new generation.
Rated PG, 98 minutes. — B.A.
New Year’s Eve (��) This is the
second in a remarkably shallow series
of holiday-themed, celebrity-stuffed
confections. Garry Marshall (Valen-
tine's Day) again directs a script
by Katherine Fugate that weaves
together a dozen or so plotlines that
crisscross a holiday prone to senti-
mentalizing. Included here are first
kisses, midnight rendezvous, dying
fathers, newborn babies, husbands at
war and trapped strangers. If there is
some kind of world record for
schmaltz, this may have set it. With
Hilary Swank, Jon Bon Jovi, Katherine
Heigl, Abigail Breslin, Sarah Jessica
Parker, Zac Efron, Jessica Biel, Seth
Meyers, Halle Berry and Robert De
Niro. Rated PG-13, 117 minutes. — AP
Puss in Boots (����) A spinoff of
the Shrek franchise, this is actually a
prequel, providing the origin story of
the diminutive, swashbuckling kitty
voiced with great charisma, as
always, by Antonio Banderas. At the
film’s start, Puss is an outlaw in his
small, Spanish hometown.
Flashbacks take us to his childhood
at an orphanage, where he was best
friends with a brainy, ambitious
Humpty Dumpty (Zach Galifianakis).
Now, Humpty’s partner in crime is
the dangerous master thief Kitty
Softpaws (Salma Hayek). Quick,
lively, family entertainment. In 3-D.
Rated PG, 90 minutes. — AP
The Twilight Saga: BreakingDawn — Part 1 (�1/2) Bella Swan
(Kristen Stewart) and her vampire
beau, Edward Cullen (Robert
Pattinson), marry in a lavish, roman-
tic outdoor ceremony. Bella’s child-
hood best friend and the other man
in the equation, werewolf Jacob
Black (Taylor Lautner), stops by as a
gesture of goodwill. Edward impreg-
nates Bella on the honeymoon and
the resulting hybrid spawn threatens
to destroy her from inside. Rated PG-
13, 117 minutes. — AP
10DentonTime
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11DentonTime
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RESTAURANTSAMERICAN CUISINECentral Grill 1005 Ave. C. 940-323-
9464.
Dusty’s Bar and Grill Laid-back bar
just off the Square serves a belt-
busting burger and fries, a kitchen
homily for meat and cheese lovers.
Seven plasma TVs for fans to track
the game, or patrons can take part in
interactive trivia and poker. Darts,
pool, video games and foosball.
Kitchen open throughout business
hours. 119 S. Elm St. Daily noon-2am.
$-$$. 940-243-7300.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
The Loophole Square staple has
charming menu with cleverly named
items, like Misdemeanor and Felony
nachos. Decent range of burgers. 119
W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; food
served until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.
940-565-0770.
Pourhouse Sports Grill Classy
sports bar and restaurant boasts
large TVs and a theater-style media
room and serves burgers, pizza, sal-
ads and generous main courses. Full
bar. Smoking on patio only. 3350
Unicorn Lake Blvd. Sun-Thurs 11-10,
Fri-Sat 11-12. $-$$. 940-484-7455.
Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games on
big screens plus some pretty big
tastes, too. Now open for lunch. For
finger food, roll chicken chipotle and
battered jalapeno and onion strips
are standouts. Homestyle burgers;
savory Caesar salad with chicken.
Full bar. 2000 W. University Drive.
Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.
Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’t
Chicken” is what the eatery claims,
though the menu kindly includes it
on a sandwich and in a wing basket
— plus barbecue, burgers and hang-
out appetizers (cheese fries, tamales,
and queso and chips). Beer. 113
Industrial St. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-
Sat 11-midnight. $. 940-382-4227.
RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 Dallas
Drive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.
Sweetwater Grill & Tavern It may
claim a place among the world’s
other memorable pubs, rathskellers,
hangouts and haunts where the food
satisfies as much as the libations
that wash them down. 115 S. Elm St.
Tues-Sat 11-2am, Sun-Mon 11-mid-
night. $-$$. 940-484-2888.
II Charlies Bar & Grill 809 Sunset
St. 940-891-1100.
BRITISHThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & PubFull bar. 101 W. Hickory St. Sun-Wed
11-10, Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.
940-566-5483.
CAJUNFrilly’s Seafood Bayou KitchenPlenty of Cajun standards and Texas
fusion plates. Everything gets plenty
of spice — sometimes too much.
Beer and wine. 1925 Denison St. Sun-
Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-9:30. $$. 940-
243-2126. Second location: Frilly’s
South Cajun Kitchen, 2303 I-35E,
940-898-1404.
CHINESEBuffet King Dining spot serves more
than 200 items of Chinese cuisine,
Mongolian grill and sushi. No smok-
ing. 2251 S. Loop 288. Mon-Thurs 11-
9:30, Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$
940-387-0888.
Cafe China 2900 Wind River Lane.
940-320-8888.
Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffet
guarantees no visit need taste like
another. Good selections include
orange chicken, crispy pan-fried noo-
dles, beef with asparagus, steamed
mussels. Beer and wine. 2317 W.
University Drive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri
11-10, Sat 11:30-10, Sun 11:30-10. $.
940-382-8797.
Golden China Small restaurant
boasts quick and friendly service.
Nice selections on buffet tables
include wonton and egg drop soups,
teriyaki chicken and hot pepper chick-
en. Beer and wine. 717 I-35E, Suite
100. Daily 11-10. $. 940-566-5588.
299 Oriental Express 1000 Ave. C.
940-383-2098.
ECLECTICThe Club at Gateway CenterThree-course meal for $7 at restau-
rant run by hospitality management
students. Fall season runs through
Dec. 2. For schedule and menu, visit
www.smhm.unt.edu/theclub. In
UNT’s Gateway Center across from
Fouts Field. No smoking. No credit
cards. 940-565-4144. Mon-Fri, with
seating 11am-12:15pm. $. 940-565-
4144.
Denton Square Donuts 208 W Oak
St. 940-220-9447.
The Greenhouse RestaurantCasual dining atmosphere comple-
ments fresh seafood, beef and chick-
en from the grill. Even vegetarian
selections get a flavor boost from the
woodpile. Starters are rich: spinach-
artichoke dip, asiago olives. Refined
cocktails and rich desserts. Patio din-
ing available. 600 N. Locust St. Mon-
Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11, Sun noon-9
(bar stays open later). $-$$. 940-
484-1349.
Hannah’s Off the Square More
room, more mid-price items and
more casual atmosphere. Fish tacos
filled with grilled tilapia, key lime
sauce and mango salsa. Steaks, with
any of 10 sauces or toppings, get A-
plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.
Smoking on terrace only. No checks.
111 W. Mulberry St. Sun-Mon 11-9
(brunch until 2pm), Tues-Thurs 11-10;
Fri-Sat 11-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.
Simone Lounge Full bar. 222 W.
Hickory St., Suite 104. 940-387-7240.
www.facebook.com/simonelounge.
The Wildwood Inn Elegant dining
room tucked away in a bed and
breakfast. Excellent food like hearty
soups, Angus rib-eye, meal-size sal-
ads and daily specials. Beer and
wine. No smoking inside. 2602 Lillian
Miller Parkway. Thurs-Sat 6-10pm.
$$$. 940-243-4919.
HOME COOKINGBabe’s Chicken Dinner House 204
N. Fourth St., Sanger. Tues-Fri 4:30-
9pm, Sat 11-9 and Sun 11-3. $-$$.
940-458-0000.
Betty’s Cafe Diners get buffet selec-
tions of homestyle standards: catfish,
fried chicken, meatloaf and barbecue
ribs. Homemade rolls and pie are
available to go. Also: Mexican dinner
buffets on Thursday. Breakfast buf-
fets made to fill you up, and kids
ages 1-5 eat for $2. 710 S. U.S.
Highway 377 in Aubrey. Mon-Sun
6am-2:30pm, Wed-Fri 5-8pm. $. 940-
365-9881.
Bonnie’s Kitchen 6420 N. I-35. 940-
383-1455.
Jay’s Cafe 110 W. Main St., Pilot
Point. 940-686-0158.
Krum Diner Offers homestyle cui-
sine, seafood and Italian food, along
with Greek and assorted desserts,
and sandwiches, burgers, dinner
plates and more. 145 W. McCart St.,
Krum, Mon-Sat 7am-8pm, Sun 9am-
2pm. $. 940-482-7080.
OldWest Cafe As winner of the Best
Breakfast and Best Homestyle
Cooking titles in Best of Denton
2009 through 2011, this eatery offers
a wide selection of homemade
meals. Denton location: 1020 Dallas
Drive. Mon-Sat 6am-2pm, Sun 7am-
2pm. $. 940-382-8220. Sanger loca-
tion: 711 N. Fifth St. Daily 7am-2pm.
940-458-7358. 817-442-9378.
Prairie House Restaurant Open
since 1989, this Texas eatery serves
up mesquite-grilled steaks, baby-
back ribs, buffalo burgers, chicken-
fried rib-eyes and other assorted
dishes. 1001 U.S. Highway 380, Cross
Roads. Daily 11 am-10pm. $-$$. 940-
440-9760.
ICE CREAMBeth Marie’s Old-Fashioned IceCream and Soda Fountain Parlor
with lots of yummy treats, including
more than 40 ice creams made on
premises. Soups and sandwiches at
lunch at the downtown Square loca-
tion, all day at the Unicorn Lake loca-
tion. 117 W. Hickory St. and 2900
Wind River Lane. Mon-Thurs 11-10,
Fri-Sat 11-11 (Wind River shop open
until 11:15pm), Sun noon-10 (lunch
daily 11-4). $. 940-384-1818.
INDIANRasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housed
in a converted gas station, this Indian
dining spot offers a small but careful-
ly prepared buffet menu of curries
(both meat and vegetarian), beans,
basmati rice and samosas. No smok-
ing. 1002 Ave. C. Daily 11am-9:30pm.
$. 940-566-6125.
ITALIANBagheri’s 1125 E University Drive,
Suite A. 940-382-4442.
Don Camillo Garlic gets served
straight up at family-owned restau-
rant that freely adapts rustic Italian
dishes with plenty of American imag-
ination. Lasagna, chicken and egg-
plant parmigiana bake in wood-fired
oven with thin-crusted pizzas. 1400
N. Corinth St., Suite 103, Corinth.
Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9; Thurs-Sat 11-
2:30, 5-10. 940-321-1100.
Fera’s Excellent entrees served bub-
bling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastas
and billowing garlic rolls. Dishes
served very fresh. Desserts don’t dis-
appoint. Beer and wine. No credit
cards. 1407 W. Oak St. 940-382-9577.
Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$.
Genti’s Pizza and Pasta 4451
FM2181, Suite 125, Corinth. Mon-Sat
11-10, Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-497-
5400.
Giuseppe’s Italian RestaurantRomantic spot in bed and breakfast
serves Northern Italian and Southern
French cuisine. Beer and wine. 821 N.
Locust St. Mon-Thurs, 11-2, 5-9, Fri 11-
2 & 5-10, Sat 5-10. Sun 10:30-2. $-$$.
940-381-2712.
Luigi’s Pizza Italian RestaurantFamily-run spot does much more
than pizza, and how. Great New York-
style pies plus delicious southern
Italian dishes, from $3.95 pasta lunch
special to pricier meals. Nifty kids’
menu. Tiramisu is dynamite. Beer
and wine. 2317 W. University Drive.
Sun & Tues-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11.
$-$$. 940-591-1988.
JAPANESEAvocado Sushi Restaurant 2430 S.
I-35E, Suite 126. 940-383-9812.
I Love Sushi Sushi joint features the
tempting Denton Roll (tuna, avocado
and cream cheese). 917 Sunset St.
Mon-Thurs 11am-3pm & 5-10pm, Fri
11am-3pm & 5-10:30pm; Sat noon-
10:30pm; Sun 12:30-9pm. $$. 940-
891-6060.
Keiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Nagano
turns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yel-
lowtail and tuna into sashimi. Daily
fish specials and pasta dishes served
with an Asian flair. Homemade
tiramisu and fruit sorbets. 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.
KOREAN Bulgogi House 408 North Texas
Blvd. 940-382-8060.
MIDDLE EASTERNGreen Zatar Family-owned restau-
rant/market does it all from scratch,
and with speed. Meats like gyros and
succulent Sultani Kebab, plus veggie
combo and crunchy falafel. Superb
saffron rice and sauteed vegetables;
impressive baklava. BYOB. No smok-
ing. 609 Sunset St. Daily 11-10. $-$$.
940-383-2051.
PIZZAJ&J’s Pizza Bountiful, homemade
pizza pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dish
Chicago style. Beer. 118 W. Oak St.
940-382-7769. Mon-Sat 11-midnight.
$-$$.
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.
STEAKRanchman’s Cafe Legendary cafe
sticks to old-fashioned steaks and
tradition. Oversized steaks and deli-
cious chicken-fried steak. Homey
meringue pies. BYOB. 110 W. Bailey
St., Ponder. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-
10. $-$$$. 940-479-2221.
Trail Dust Steak House Informal
dress (neckties will be clipped).
Dance to live C&W. 26501 U.S. 380
East, Aubrey. 940-365-4440. $$.
THAIAndaman Thai RestaurantExtensive menu continues trend of
good Asian food in Denton. Fried tofu
is a home run. Pad Thai noodles have
perfect amount of sweetness. Home-
made coconut ice cream, sweet rice
with mango. Beer and wine. No
smoking. 221 E. Hickory St. Mon-Fri
11am-3pm & 4-9:30pm; Sat-Sun
noon-9:30pm. $$. 940-591-8790.
Siam Off the Square Fresh flavors
set curries apart at comfortable din-
ing spot. Winning starters: shrimp
satay, Tum Yum Gai and Tom Kah
soups. Excellent Thai seafood, includ-
ing tilapia fillet. BYOB. 209 W. Hickory
St., Suite 104. Lunch, Mon-Fri 11-2;
dinner, Mon-Sat 5-9. $-$$. 940-382-
5118.
Sweet Basil Thai Bistro 1800 S.
Loop 288, Suite 224. 940-484-6080.
Sukhothai II Restaurant 1502 W.
Hickory St. 940-382-2888.
Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tasty
as they are pretty. Hot and spicy
sauce makes even veggie haters go
after fresh veggies with zeal. Quiet
setting. BYOB. No smoking. 1509
Malone St. Mon-Fri 11am-3pm, 5-
10pm; Sat 11:30-10; Sun 5-9. $-$$.
940-566-6018.
DINING
Restaurant profiles and listings
are compiled by the Denton
Record-Chronicle and The Dallas
Morning News. A comprehensive
list of Dallas-Fort Worth area
restaurants is available at
www.guidelive.com.
Denton Time publishes restau-
rant profiles and a guide of restau-
rants that have been featured in
the weekly dining section and
online at DentonRC.com. Profiles
and listings are not related to
advertising and are published as
space is available. Denton Time
does not publish reviews.
Incorrect information can be
reported by e-mail to drc@denton
rc.com, by phone to 940-566-
6860 or by fax to 940-566-6888.
To be considered for a profile,
send the restaurant name,
address, phone number, days and
hours of operation and a copy of
the menu to: Denton Time Editor,
P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.
Please indicate whether the
restaurant is new or has changed
ownership, chefs or menus.
PRICE KEYAverage complete dinner per
person, including appetizer,
entree and dessert.
$ Less than $10
$$ $10–$25
$$$ $25–$50
$$$$ More than $50
DINING PROFILE AND LISTINGS POLICY
12DentonTime
121511
businessopportunites
203
You can always findwhat you need in the DentonRecord-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722940-387-7755
Place a FREE Classified ad Online.
DentonRC.com/ADS
It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3.
I BUY CARS RUNNING OR NOT
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BEST VALUE RV Sales &Service. Consigning RVs.
We’ve moved to 7201 North I-35 in Denton 866-724-2378
Mint Condition Low Mileage2008 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x431,900 miles, alloy wheels,
luggage rack, tow package, back -up camera, sunroof, fully loaded
with leather interior $25,500 OBO 940-206-4065
#1 when it comes to greatdeals. Motorcycles, ATV’s,Utility Vehicles, watercraft,
both new and used.521 Acme St (FtWorthDr/IH-35E)
Cyclecenterofdenton.comsales@cyclecenterofdenton.com
940-387-3885
1975 Chevrolet Scotsdale 3/4ton, current tags & inspection,very dependable, 30,000 miles,
brand new engine, new tires$1800 OBO 940-230-8065 or
940-595-3703
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.
Apply now for:
JOBS! JOBS! JOBS
*Packing/Kitting*Order Selectors*Assembly/Production*Forklift Operators
BG & DT required 310 Audra Lane
Denton, TX 76209(940)442-6550
Argyle business needsReceptionist, bookkeeping,
office assistant. Need excellentorganization and communication
skills, proficiency in MicrosoftOffice, willingness to do a variety
of tasks. Email resume withsalary requirement to
Ann@apcommunications.net
Assistant Manager/ManagerTrainees are needed
immediately. Auto required.Spanish speaking a plus.Complete benefit package
available. Consumer financeexperience helpful, but not
required. Apply in person only atNortex Finance, 405 S. Elm,
Ste. 104, Denton.Attendant/Caregiver Needed for
couple in Sanger, TX for lightcooking & housekeeping, 8a-5p
or 9a-6p 7 days per week, 63hours $8/hr Contact Tina at940-498-1524 or 214-236-8588
Auditor/Loan ReviewAll candidates must possess: Expwith internal compliance audits,
perform reviews of bankloans/ensure accuracy of estab -lished policies and standards. Min 2 yrs exp req. Availability-
Pilot Point.Commercial Lending AssistantAll candidates must possess thecapability to be proactive in sell -ing our products while providing
high quality service. Prior bankingexp strongly preferred. Commer -cial loan processing, customer
service, and loan officer support;open new accounts; cross sell
bank products & services.Availability-Denton area.
Send Resumes to:HR@pointbank.com or
fax to 940.686.9326 ; EOEBetty’s Cafe in Aubrey now takingapplications for full time waitstaff.Must be able to work weekends.For interview call 940-365-9881.
LK
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Caregivers/CNAs neededShift & Live-in schedules
available. Experience a must.Contact 940-380-0200
Casework Supervisor Position ,full-time. Bachelor’s degree in
social work, experience involunteer supervision.Flexible scheduling and
transportation necessary.Submit application from website
(www.casadenton.org)to application@casadenton.org
or by mail to CASA of DentonCounty, 614 N. Bell Avenue,
Denton, TX 76209.
Clerical positions open*Call Center/Customer Service*A/R with Collections*Exe Admin Asst.*AP/AR*Receptionist
BG & DT required for all positions310 Audra Lane
Denton, TX(940) 442-6550
www.otstaffing.com
NOW HIRING
Required Qualifications:
• 5 to 7 years of previous experience as an Electrician or Maintenance Mechanic(electrical, mechanical, and electronic equipment).
• Experience reading technical drawings and schematics.• Knowledge and practical application experience in electrical/electronics, PLCs,A/C and D/D motors, drives and controls.
• Knowledge of the National Electrical Code• Comprehensive knowledge in hydraulics, pneumatics troubleshooting and repair.• Must have knowledge, skills and ability to successfully perform maintenance onelectrical controls, adjustable motor drives, and switchgears.
Other Conditions of Employment:• Eligible to work in the United States• High school diploma or equivalent.• Eighteen years of age or older.• Able to communicate efficiently both oral and written.• Good reading and math skills.• Ability to work in a team environment.• Ability to work in a hot, cold, dusty, and noisy industrial environment.• Willingness to work shift work, variable start times, including overtime, andweekends (as scheduled).
• Must be willing to adhere to safety rules and regulations.
MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN
Key Functions:Responsible for safely providing maintenance support to our facility.Qualified candidates will utilize both excellent electrical skills and knowl-edge in electrical/electronics (PLCs, A/C and D/C motors and drives, controllogic, schematics and troubleshooting) in our continuous process manu-facturing environment to achieve machine uptime metrics. Candidate willwork positively with maintenance and operations teams to troubleshoot andresolve manufacturing constraints as well as being engaged in the preventa-tive maintenance processes.
For consideration please apply at www.gp.com/careers Requisition # 003499Georgia-Pacific LLC is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V.
Georgia-Pacific Denton LLC is seeking highly motivated, knowledgeable andexperienced candidates with excellent maintenance skills who can add value toour team for the Maintenance position.
Georgia-Pacific is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of tissue, pulp, paper,packaging, building products and related chemicals. We provide an excellentbenefits program, including medical, dental, 401(k), etc.
LH
DATCU has positions available!
TELLERS
PROGRAMMER (ENTRY LEVEL)
MORTGAGEORIGINATOR/CONSULTANT
Please visit our website atdatcu.org
for more information andto apply on-line.
EOE
DELIVERY DRIVERMust have CDL &
Haz Mat Endorsements. Background check required.
Call 940-482-3225
Dental Assistant Needed!Eaglesoft software experience
required. Benefits include healthins., bonus, vacation, 40hrs/week.
Dentures & Dental Services Please email resumes to:
manager@denton.dentalservice.netor bring to 2317 W. University Dr.
#B-8. No phone calls please.
Denton Company is hiringExperienced CSR’s.
Must have at least 2 yrs in anInbound Call Center.
Hour Personnel 940-566-6300
Denton County MHMR Nursing Program Manager and
Team Leader, CommunitySupport, Direct Care and moreneeded! Call 940-565-5287 orVisit www.dentonmhmr.org
Diesel Mechanic &Heavy Eq. Mechanic
Contact Mike 940-440-9122 Frank Bartel Tire Inc
7401 S. Hwy 377Aubrey, TX 76227
DIRECTOR OF
BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT
The Vintage, a continuing careretirement community in Denton TX is seeking a
seasoned multi talentedDirector of Development andLeasing. Ideal candidate will
be a self starter with asuccessful marketing &
leasing background.Excellent interpersonal &Customer service skills,
advanced computer literacy &have experience working effectively with seniors.
Please send resume to HR department at email:
vkelleher@seniorcarecentersltc.com 940-383-2361 EOE
13DentonTime
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940-387-7755800-275-1722
Dishwasher/Kitchen HelperRetirement community in Denton
seeking an experiencedDishwasher/Kitchen Helper. Workevenings & weekends. Must be
able to multi-task with strongorganizational & time
management skills. Backgroundchk req. Apply in person
2820 Wind River Ln, Denton
DRIVER -- local hauling,home every night,
Call 940-458-7607 orapply at 101 E. Bolivar St
in Sanger
Drivers needed Class A CDL,with Tanker endorsement
preferred. Call Mon thru Fri8am-5pm only 940-736-0758.
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WARRANTY5-Yr/Unlimited
Miles24-Hr Roadside
Assistance
2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT GLS MODEL 16402F45, MSRP $15,955, RES 58%, 1.95%, 12 K YR, $169 FOR 35 1 @ $9254 $1699 DOWN. 2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GLS MODEL 45412F45 MSRP $18,205, RES 65%, 4.41%, 12 K YR, $179 FOR35 1 @ $11,833 $1999 DOWN. 2012 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS MODEL 27402F45 MSRP $21,455, RES 61%, 4.08%, 12 K YR, $199 FOR 35 1 @ $13,088 $2599 DOWN. 2012 TUCSON GLS MODEL 83422F45 MSRP $23,005 X 61% RESIDUAL,
35 AT $259, 1 AT $14,033.05, 12 K/YR, $2,699 DOWN PLUS TTL AT 5.32% WAC. 2012 SANTA FE GLS MODEL 62422 MSRP $23,940 X 50% RESIDUAL, 35 AT $269, 1 AT $11,970, 12 K/YR, $2,699 DOWN PLUS TTL AT 4.34% WAC
Eckert Hyundai
Model 45412F45
$199/mo35 MPG!
2012 Hyundai Sonata GLS
Model 16402F45
$169/mo
$179/mo
40 MPG!
40 MPG!
2012 Hyundai Accent GLS
2012 Hyundai Elantra GLS Model 27402F45
32 MPG!
2012 Hyundai Tucson GLS
$259/mo
Model 83422F45
28 MPG!
Model 62422 2012 Hyundai Santa Fe GLS
$299/mo
Electricians wanted.Journeymens and Wiremens.
Call 817-424-2684.jreynolds@tlcelectrical.com
EXPANDING NOW!
* NO EXP. NECESSARY* WEEKLY PAY* FULL TIME / PART TIME
Overtime available.CALL NOW! 940/323-2694
Fairway Independent MortgageSeeking Licensed Loan
Originators to join Denton’s #1Mortgage Lender. E-mail resume to:
nataliek@fairwaymc.com
Five Star Orthodontic Labneeds LAB TECHNICIAN
Will train.Call 940-898-9900.
HEAVY HAUL DRIVER withClass A CDL and Low Boy Exp.
Owner/Ops wanted also.Call 940-387-4430 or 940-368-7432
Kenmar Residential Services isaccepting applications. ForDirect Care Supervisor and
Direct Care Staff. Thesepositions are working with
MH/MR clients. Assisting withdaily living and other various
activities. FT and PT available,Applicants must have a ValidTexas Driver License with aclean driving record. Please
apply in person at: 1505 N. Elm
14DentonTime
121511 job lists 340
livestock forsale or trade
406
You can always find what you need in theDenton Record-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722 • 940-387-7755
YOUR STUFF.ONLINE ANDON SALE.
FAST. SECURE.24/7.
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ClickNBuyDentonRC.com/ads
DR-C ClassifiedsDentonRC.com
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Introducing ClickNBuyDentonRC.com/ads
& Lake Forest Home Care
Services to seniors in:skilled nursing, assisted living,
home health and senior independent living.
We Hire: Nurses, Nurse Aides,Housekeepers, Cooks,
Waitstaff, Maintenance, Sitters,Drivers, and More.
Check our current openingsand apply on line at:www.good-sam.com.AAE, EOE, M/F,H, V
LINE COOKSwith 3+ yrs experiencein country club or hotel.
Email resumes togsanders@dentoncc.org
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
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 $8/hr.
Loan Company in Denton seeksExperienced Staff. Bilingual prefer -red. must have reliable transporta -
tion . Salary DOE Apply atB & F Finance 318 E. Oak Ste. 140
or call 940-566-0300
Local PhysicianPractice looking for:--Medical Assistant
-- Front Office
Experience a plus.Fax Resume to940-381-0727Make $16-$18/hr, M-F,
cleaning houses!Own transportation.
Please call 214-855-7189.
Manufacturing
ManagerUnited Copper Industries, Inc., aleader in the manufacturing ofwire and cable, has an excellentopportunity for a ManufacturingManager. The ManufacturingManager will be responsible fordirecting and coordinating thedaily operations of our manufac-turing plant, work with the man-agement team to develop and im-plement organizational strategies,policies and practices.
JOB REQUIREMENTS∂ Develop efficiency strategies toensure the plant meets produc-tion goals and standards at mini-mal manufacturing costs.∂ Establish and monitor overallplant performance for productionand quality standards.∂ Establish and monitor manu-facturing methods and measuresto ensure high quality and lowcost processes are being usedand maintained. Promote andsupport a safe work environment.∂ Review and evaluate cost ef-fectiveness, consistency, quality,accuracy, and performance tostandards and takes actions asnecessary to correct discrepan-cies.
SKILLS AND EXPERIENCE:∂ Bachelor degree preferably inMechanical or Manufacturing En-gineering discipline; an advanceddegree in relevant discipline is aplus.∂ 5+ years of successful manu-facturing experience in relevantfield.∂ Demonstrated understandingof Lean principles, Flow, Five S,Total Productive Maintenance,Continuous Improvement Proc-ess, Kaizen, etc.∂ Strong communication, inter-personal skills, with outstandingability to influence others.∂ Experience leading, training,mentoring and coaching leanprocess improvement teams.∂ Background with manufactur-ing methods, process improve-ment programs and procedures.
United Copper Industries offers acompetitive salary, a safe/drugfree work place and an excellentbenefit package including medi-cal, dental, prescription drug anda 401K plan. Qualified applicantsare invited to mail, fax or emailtheir resumes to the address list-ed below. Your resume shouldinclude professional referencesand salary requirements. Onlythose selected for an interviewwill be contacted, no phone callsplease. Recruiters and Agenciesneed not respond. United CopperIndustries is an Equal OpportunityEmployer.
United Copper IndustriesAttn: Human Resources
2727 Geesling RoadDenton, Texas 76208Fax: 940-323-0315
eclampitt@unitedcopper.com
Medical Front Office for FP inLewisville. Comp & ins exp. Greatsalary. fammed52@hotmail.com orcall 214-680-9895 fax: 972-219-0343
MEDICATION
AIDE
Needed 2p-10p shift.Monday thru Friday
Must be a Certified Nurse Aideand be able to pass a criminal
background check.
Apply in person.No phone calls please.
205 N. Bonnie BraeDenton Tx. 76201
EOE
NOW HIRING!We currently have 10 positionsopen for trim carpenter/woodproduction individuals that
have some experience. Must beable to read a tape measure.
Background & Drug Test required.310 Audra Lane
Denton, TX 76209(940) 442-6550
Nursing
Cross Timbers Rehab andHealthcare Center
is seeking full-time positions forour 120 bed
facility.
* CNAs - PRN,6a-2p & 10p-6a shifts
* Weekend RN Supervisor
Excellent Benefits: 100% PaidVacation/Sick.
We also offer voluntary:Medical/Dental/Vision/401k,
STD/LTD, LifeInsurance & AD&D.
Please apply at:3315 Cross Timbers Road,Flower Mound, TX 75028.
Phone:972-724-0996,fax: 972-724-0958.
EOE M/F/D/V
OnTrack Staffing is accepting applications for thefollowing:*Electrical/Mechanical Techniciansw/ manufacturing experience.*Forklift Operators w/recent exp.Must be available for any shift.DT & BG requiredApply at 310 Audra LaneDenton, TX 76209(940) 442-6550
Opening for Teacher, experi -ence preferred, & PT position
for Cook and Van DriverCall Kathy Davis 940-387-4200
Ray Roberts Lake State Park -Isle du Bois Unit - Pilot Point -
Maintenance Specialist V -Lead Maintenance Specialist
position available.$3,416.91/month plus benefits.See job posting #12-14-097 at
http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/business/jobs/ For more informa -tion call - 940-686-2148. EOE.
Receptionist NeededMicrosoft Office Proficient.$10/hr, M-F. Bilingual A+.
Call 940-566-4999 Fax resumes:940-566-4992 or email:
goldhealthcare@aol.com
Respsible for rec’ving &shipping all products & kitting
all orders for production, &general duties, Needs to be
motivated, be able to multitask.Send resume to
angela.emert@hcaind.com
RN’S AND LVN’S
Looking for PRN’s all shifts
Minimum 1 year experience in Long Term Care.
Must pass criminal backgroundcheck.
Apply in person.No Phone Calls Please.
205 N. Bonnie BraeDenton TX 76201
EOE
Roberts Paint-Collision NeedsExp. Body Tech, Painters
940-383-3695or email joatrpc@aol.com
Robson Ranch Grill is seekingto fill the below positions:
Restaurant SupervisorBanquet Manager
Previous experience is necessary. Please email
resume to jobs@robson.com
Southwest PetroleumTransport in Denton, TX is
looking for Transport Driversand/or Bobtail Drivers. Musthave CDL, Hazmat & Tanker
endorsement. Must be 21 yrs ofage. We offer top pay, great
benefits, 401K, paid vacation, &health & dental insurance.Call 940-442-5300, email
carrollenderby@yahoo.com,or fax 940-442-5301.
Staley Steel Inc in Pilot Point, TXhas an immediate opening for the
following position:
MechanicµDiesel and Gas experiencerequiredµ Air brakes requiredµ CDL a plusµ Hydraulics a plusµ Self Motivatedµ Must have own hand tools
40 hours per week. Competitivepay. Excellent benefits.Contact Mike Lee at
940-686-6000mlee@staleysteel.com
Truck Drivers Needed, CDL,local hauling, home every night,
vacation, salary negotiable. * Dump Truck Drivers,
paid by the hour,*Tractor Trailer Drivers,
paid percentage.Frank Bartel
7401 S. Hwy. 377Aubrey, TX 76227
Contact Archie 940-440-3230
Trucking Manager, minimum 5yrs exp. & CDL req’d.
Contact 940-382-2581 oremployment@jagoepublic.com3020 Ft Worth Dr Denton EOE
Welders, Metal Building Techs.Weld up and Bolt up. Must
have tools and transportation.Background & Drug Testing
Call 940-300-7844
Welders NeededLandmark Fabrication is hiringGas Metal and Flux-Cored Arc
Welders for 1st and 2ndshifts—must have solid work
experience with an impeccablesafety record. These are
full time, permanent positions atour Decatur fabrication facility.
Please call Landmark at1-888-486-6888 or fax your
resume to 817-230-2063.EEO/AA M/F/DV
ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.Consideration should be givenbefore making a financialcommittment. Please be awareof long distance charges, appli-cation fees, & credit card infoyou provide. Books/lists ofjobs do not guarantee employ-ment or that applicants will bequalified for jobs listed.
WANT TO BE AFIREFIGHTER?
in Less Than 6 Months?Texas Commission on
Fire Protection and EMT cert.Enroll now for classes!
Write: Haz-Co, PO Box 3063,Sherman, TX 75091or call 903-564-3862
Bonduris Music • Lessons nowon all inst’s & all styles of guitar.Student bands. All North Texastrained teachers. 940-320-6023
Love to Sing? Find Your Voice!All Styles • 20 years experience
www.dentonvocalstudio.comCall Larry 383-1378, 391-4838
Miniature donkeys for saleExcellent bloodlinesand conformation.
Prices starting at $150.00940-391-4716
Special Sunday Tack & HorseAuction Sunday 12/18 at2:00pm halfway between
Denton & Decatur, off Hwy 380.For info call Cal 940-367-1371or 940-627-3537 Licensed &
Bonded TXS8440
Agility, Obedience & RallyTraining Classes. Tuesday
Evenings in Denton 940-488-3180www.gtdogonline.org
Malti-Poos, Pomeranians,Maltese, Yorkies and Chihuahuas.
Shots and wormed. HealthGuaranteed 940-284-3753
Red healer hybrid, 6 1/2 weekold pups, males only, doggie
door ready & partial pottytrained, high bloodline, very
intelligent. $100.00 each940-367-8539
Shih Hound Puppies for sale2 female, 1 brindle, 1 blondeWill be ready New Years Day!
940-206-2586
Tractor, Trailer, Repair, Paintingand Welding* All Makes
and Models. Pickup available.Brad Harkins 940-368-9494
Alfalfa & Alfalfa/Orchardsmall & large square. Round Bales& Bermuda Sm. Sq. Shavings $5.
217-737-7737, Aubrey
Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed
Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators
3511 E. University Dr, Denton940-382-4333 We Buy
BUY SELL REPAIR We pay above scrap price for
some brands of washers,dryers, etc. 377 Appliance ,
1010 Ft Worth Dr 940-382-8531
Desktop, Laptop, New & UsedBought, Sold, Repaired, Specials,Del desktop complete: Windows
XP, Vista, 7 for $279940-482-7906, 940-391-1829,
Denton Publishing Companywill not knowingly publish anyad for the sale of weapons thatdoes not meet our standards ofacceptance.
Firewood business for sale,3/4 ton PU, GN trl & customerbase. Will finance part at no
interest 940-395-9090
Two spaces RoselawnMemorial Park in Denton, TX$2500, Section 18 Garden of
Disciples, lot 85, spaces 3 & 4Call 903-696-0239
380 FLEA MARKETOpen every Sat. & Sun.
All metroplex buyers & sellerswelcome. Located 1 mile E. ofLoop 288 on Hwy. 380, in Denton.
(940) 391-6202(940) 383-1064 (h) • (940) 390-5900 (c)
LA
Corinth, 2903 Geronimo Dr.,Sat 8am-? Downsizing, moving
into retirement home after 59 yrsof marriage. A ton of everything!
Pilot Point 1300 N. Hwy 377across from Valero
Fri 12/16 & Sat 12/17 8:30 - ?Giant Indoor Garage Sale
Lots of Everything
1st place to check for all yourChristmas needs Ruth’s Room
Christmas Store 615 SunsetTue-Sat: 10a-6p 940-387-7884
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, handicap,familial status, or national origin, orintention to make any such prefer-ence, limitation, or discrimination."We will not knowingly accept ad-vertising for real estate which is inviolation of the law. All persons arehereby informed that all dwellingsadvertised are available on anequal opportunity basis
Winter Special!$599.99 28 days at Value Place
No lease! Newly builtfurnished studios, full kitchens
Free utilities w/cable!4505 N. I-35 940-387-3400
New guests onlyLinen service requiredMust present this adBased on availability
BRING IN A TOY FORTOYS FOR TOTS
& RECEIVE A DISCOUNT
$0 Ap Fee, Large 2 Bdrm nearTWU at 327 Withers, $600/mo. +electric, no pets, 940-383-3887or 940-600-7555
1 & 2 Bdrm Apts. Clean & QuietNeighborhood, 1 blck fo UNT. 1bdrm $525, 2 bdrm $625-$650,
All Bills Paid 214-315-9439 1 Bdrm 1 Bath Starting at $5692 Bdrm 1 Bath Starting at $669Windsor Village 940-382-9556www.jackbellproperties.com
1 Bdrm 1 Bath Upstairs,$395/mo plus electric.
in Sanger. Credit check required,no pets. 940-206-4268
1 Bdrms Starting at $559/mo2 Bdrms starting at $639
CRYSTALWOOD Apartments940-591-0121
1 Bed Efficiency ApartmentsDOWNTOWN, Starting At $665
940-382-3009
1 Bedroom 1 Bath, Near UNT600 sq ft, $535/mo. No Pets
www.tntprop.com or call for more details 940-381-6675
2/1, 2/2, 3/2 $660--$825Large Enclosed Patios
Greenway Patio Townhomes2912 Augusta @ Greenway940-387-8741, 940-368-1814
Largest Units in Denton!
2/1.5, large kitchen & garage ,good flooring & appliances, nearUniversity / Loop 288. $685/mo.
FREE RENT! 940-390-8044
2B Townhouse 1.5B, WBFP,patio, 2-car carport, approx
1200 sq ft, close to I-35,$900/mo. 817-403-1570
$595/mo 3825 Camelot St. # DNew carpet & tile, Big kitchen
2 Bed/1 Bath, Unit in 4-plexCall 940-735-1999
707 W. Hickory, 2/1, $675/mo.plus electric, 940-566-5717
CALL US FOR 1, 2, & 3 BEDROOMS
940-382-6774 HOLLYHILLS and
FORESTRIDGE Apartments.Apply at office 900 Londonderry
Open Mon-Fri 8:30a-5:30p &Sat 10:00a-2:00p
CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565
All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,
1 & 2 BR starting at $415 & up
C BAR T Properties , Effs, 1, 2 &3 BR Apts, Homes & Duplexes,940-383-2141 UNT/TWU/OTHER
www.cbartproperties.com
Coronado Oaks, 201 Coronado,$149 (2BR only) Move in Special.
1BR starts at $539. Newlyrenovated property. 1&2BR.
Denton 940-566-0308FREE CABLE & WATER
Low elec. bills. 6/9/12 mo. lease.2/1 $670/mo; 2/2 $695/mo
1/1 $560-$570. Walk to UNT. Callour friendly staff at 940-382-3100.
GRANDVIEW GARDENS Ask about Our Special
2 Bedrooms starts at $629 Walk to TWU -- 940-442-6919
Leasing for January Move-In,Large Floor Plans, Must See!
Westwind Apartments!1710 Sam Bass 940-382-1535
Now Leasing Houses,Duplexes, Apts & Condos.Ask About Our Specials!!!
AMSI 940-565-8484www.assetdenton.com
Para uno y dos recamarasTodos Servicios pagados.305 Ave. G. 940-783-7910
Rental Assistance
1 & 2 Bedroom Aptswith Rental Assistance for
Qualified Applicantsin Valley View
940-665-0501or 940-726-3798
Shadowwood Apts Denton! 2BR, Open Thur-Sat 10-5.
940-387-0452. * 2B/2.5B, LakeDallas, 940-321-3231.
THE MARTINO GROUP940-382-5000
1119 W Hickory Loft, 2/1, 2 cargarage, one of a kind, $1295;
Talon 2, UNT, 2/1, $8202428 Louise, 1/1, $495 ABP;
DUPLEXES3605 Dunes, 3/2/2, $850416A Collins, 3/1, $725;
564 E Windsor, 2/2 w/loft, $750.
HOUSE:1609 May, 3/2/2, avail Jan,
$895.K
15DentonTime
121511
houses: unfurnished
630houses: unfurnished
630
houses: unfurnished
630
adult/elderly care 1010
chimney cleaning1120
computer services1140
mowing 1305
tractor service 1445
You can always find what you need in theDenton Record-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722 • 940-387-7755
You can always findwhat you need in the DentonRecord-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722940-387-7755
You can always find what you need in theDenton Record-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722 • 940-387-7755
6000 SQ FT WAREHOUSEwith 400 Sq Ft OFFICE
on 1 Acre, $3250/mo.1500 Sq Ft OFFICE
on 3/4 Acre, $1500/mo.Both gated and fenced.
Call 940-367-4704
750 Sq Ft, 1 Big Finished Roomw/restroom, commercial Use
only $325/mo plus electric. creditcheck, Sanger 940-206-4268
Available now small retailspace on high traffic Dallas Drlocation from $825/mo. All billspaid including free high speedFios internet. Call 940-387-7524
or mccullar2@verizon.net
For Sale Or Lease,Prime Location, DentonCommercial Building,
12800 Sq Ft Warehouse, 700 Sq ft Office,
Contact 940-367-4704
2 Bdrm 1 Bath, Near UNTAvailable mid December.
800 Sq Ft. $650/mo. No Petswww.tntprop.com 940-381-6675
Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath, CH/A,W/D connection, tile floors,owner agent $825/Month
940-594-6604
Large 3 bedroom 2.5 bath201 Irick Ct. Aubrey 2 car
garage, privacy fence. Greatlocation! $1050/mo $800 dep.Hundt Property Management
940-668-6455
NEW! 3-2-2 and 3-2.5-2Duplex $1175 ASK ABOUT
OUR SPECIALS!817-560-4900 www.txlec.com
$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000
Houses, Duplexes& Apartments
Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm
Saturday by Appt.
940-243-RENT (7368)Ashley Lail 817-240-3775
Katya Muller 817-781-3542www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR
DENTON, TX 76205
1100 Sierra, Denton, 3/1.5/2,1502 Linden, Denton, 3/1/1,3912 Titan, Denton 4/1.5/0
$995/mo. $750 deposit.1825 Emery 3/2/2
$1195/mo $900 deposit.Jack Bell Property Mgmt
Call 940-382-9556
1708 Red Oak 3/2 3 year oldhouse, tile floors, berber
carpet, fenced yard, $950/moplus deposit 940-390-4391
1 bedroom lakeside trailer$350/mo + $350 dep,
5295 Shaw Ln 940-368-5555
2006 Azalea, Denton3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1500 SFFenced Backyard, Fireplace
--Only $1025/ Month--CALL 940-566-0033 TODAY!
2104 FAIRFAX ROAD4 Bedrooms/ 3 Baths
BRAND NEW FLOORS!Fenced Backyard, Fireplace
2 Car Garage, W/D Conn.Only $1495/Month
CALL 940-566-0033 TODAY
2 Bdrm 2 Bath frame home on3/4 acre, $825/mo. $825 depos -
it. Krum ISD. No pets.Call 940-390-9574
2-story, 2 bed 2.5 bath, 2500SF,Nottingham & Windsor.
$1200/mo References & depositrequired. Avail. Jan 1st
940-383-3939 russell@verizon.net
301 W. Pecan in Aubrey$950/mo Darling 3/2/1 brick, FP,wood floors, large corner treedlot, fenced backyard w patio,
no pets/smoking 707-292-1304christieg@sbcglobal.net
305 Deer Run, Sanger3 Bed/ 2.5 Bath/ 1600 SqFt
Fenced Backyard, W/D Conn.2 Car Garage, Large Game
Room. Only $1150/mo.940-566-0033 TODAY!
3/1.5/1 Sanger 2 story brickduplex with yard, good
neighborhood, available 12/1$825/mo + $600 security deposit
940-206-0007
3328 ORIOLE LANE3 Bedrooms/ 2 BathsFireplace, W/D Conn.
Fenced Yard w/ Gazebo!2 Car Garage- $1200/MonthCall 940-566-0033 TODAY
3bed 2bath 3200sf on 1.5 acrelot, just east of Denton off
Mingo, fenced yard & furnishedappliances, $1200/mo, ref &dep required, avail Jan. 1st,
contact 940-383-3939 orrussell@verizon.net
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage$1000/month $1000/deposit
1701 Cordell940-367-2003
617 WOODLAND STREET3 Bedrooms/ 2 Baths
Bright w/ Lots of Windows!ONLY $975/Month
Call 940-566-0033 TODAY
940-566-4900Lewisville Lake
Townhome $1600900 W. Mulberry $750
611 N. Austin $5502108 Camilla $1050
113 Timberlake,Hickory Creek $1650
315 Frye $5752515 N. Locust $725
2808 Anysa $8753329 Garden View $675
Kathy Orr, Brokerpropertysearchassociates.com
ASSET MANAGEMENT
HOMES3b/2b 909 Rio Bravo
in Haslet $10954b/ 2 1/2b 12401 Steelwood in
Rhome $12953b/2b 108 Maned in Sanger $975
DUPLEXES3b/2b 3818 Stuart Rd $995
2b/1.5b 716 W. Mulberry #11 $8503b/2b 3918 Stuart $9952b/1b 1302 Margie $6252b/1b 1304 Margie $625
Call 940-565- 8484 orwww.assetdenton.com
Aubrey recently updated, 4 bdr2 bath 2 car grge, formal dining
room, family room withfireplace, appliances, fencedbackyard, $1195/mo + $1000deposit, Call 940-390-1165
In Denton, Nice Remodeled 3 Bdrm 2 Bath 2 car Garage,
$1250/mo. $1250 deposit. Call 405-542-7905
Large executive home, next toThackerville Casino. incl. wa -
ter, hunting rights, 4 car garage$1200/month 580-276-5147
LOOKING TO RENT?CAMI Can Help You
Find Your Next Rental!Call 940-391-1614
PRAIRIE RIDGE462sf efficiency,$400/$300dep
3112 INGLEWOOD1017sf, 2/1.5,$850mo/$850dep
6105 SADDLEBACK2960sf, 4/2.5, $1600mo/$1600dep
510 W Lloyd In Krum 720 SQ FT 2/1 $625/MO $625 dep
Tom Fouts, REALTORS, Inc.1200 S. Woodrow Lane, Ste 100
(940) 382-1541www.dentontx.com
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 bedroom unfurnished,water & garbage included,1st month free with deposit
$300-$500 dep. rent $500-$750,Ponder, TX call 940-595-4327
2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes - J & AMobile Home Park, Ponder.Starting@$570/mo. Also lots
for rent. 940-465-9022, lv msg.
2 Bdrm 1.5 Bath $550/mo. $400deposit. Krum ISD. Includes,water, garbage, lawn mainte -nance. no pets. 940-390-9574
2 Bdrm 1 Bath, single wide mo -bile home, 13 miles west of Den-ton, on Old Stoney Rd, $400/mo 940-367-1371 or 940-367-5491A New Home, 1 Acre, 4/2 DW,1750 sf, new appl, Ponder ISD,kid/pet ok $1295/mo 940-648-
5263 www.ponderei.com, ownerfinancing for qualified applicants
Brand New, 1, 2 & 3 BDRMWasher/Dryer ConnectionsLEASE TO OWN OPTION!
Starting @ $500/Month1/2 OFF Deposit & 1st Month’s
Rent! Pets OK-940-380-1200
LEASE TO OWN
3/2 starts at $650in mobile home community.
Call 940-387-9914
LOTS from
$305-$325/Mo.with Carport and/or Shed
Up to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914
1026 Shady Oaks, 3000+ SF and 2250 SF.
1028 Shady Oaks, up to 7000 SF,940-566-5717
KILLIAN PROPERTY MGT1100 SF Overhead door in rear.Fios available. Water &Trash pd.
438 SouthFork, Lewisville,$500 Dep/1st mo. rent free!
972-436-1690 or 972-897-8949
456 Sq Ft Luxury Office Spaceclose to Denton Square,Will finish to suit tenant.
Contact 940-387-7467 for info
A choice of offices, best locationin town. Single, double, or
multiple offices. Dr. office ready,move in all bills paid. 502 W. OakCall 940-383-4759, 940-367-3424
Office Space availableGreat location close to
Downtown & Arts DistrictCall for details 940-381-6675
Office Space/RetailDowntown Krum,Lots Of Parking
940-482-6599
Quiet room with ownentrance, close to UNT in
downtown, all bills pd, fridge,avail 1/1/2012. $425/mo + dep
940-566-1313
RV & BOAT STORAGECompetitive rates. Enclosed
Units, Covered Units & OutdoorUnits. Krum, TX. 940-390-9574
RV STORAGE50 ft x 12 ft on concrete
totally enclosed, locks, 30 amp,water, dump, 24 hour, $200/mo.
3 miles north of Justin TX atClark Airport 940-648-2264
Lewisville, Adorable 2/2.5/1GDO, fence, $895/mo $900
dep.109 Manco. Bill Clark Mgmt972-355-0970, 972-795-2211
7,500 SQ FTWarehouse Space
829 Rose St in Denton. Call 940-390-6510
Offices/Warehouses for lease.1400-5600 sf in Krum, TX. $695-$825/mo. Dep. same as monthly
rent. Call 940-390-9574.Warehouse Storage
30,000 sq Ft Dry Storage forLease at I-35 & Hwy 377,
Call 214-532-1975
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.
RESTAURANT For Sale orlease 6000 sq ft, heat/AC, fullyfurnished with equipment on
1.3 acres, located on busy in -tersection in Sanger, exit 477,
sale price $785,000, lease$6500/mo 940-367-4704 for info
3/2/2 Lrg Kitchen, 2 Dining Areas,Fenced Yard, Covered Patio
1904 Cornell $107,900 WoolaverProperties 940-595-2982
613 Prairie St, Denton 2B/1Bath917 Wood St, Denton, 2B/1Bath208 W. Collins, Denton 4B/1bath
Call 940-442-1728
BUILDER HAS 1 YR HOMEFOR SALE $159,900.00
Rates as low as 4%,Estimated payment
$1195.00 per month PITI.3 Bedroom 2 Bath,
2 car garage, fireplace,1 ac w/fenced backyard
Ponder ISD, Westover Ranch.Possible builder financing!
For Appt: Call David940.206.6603
"Fixer Upper" home for sale byowner: 5 bedroom, 2 bath,
2 living areas with largekitchen. Dining room, home
office, 2 acres with catfishpond. West of Krum, $130K
(flexible). Call for appointment940-391-1986
2 mobile home lots inOak Point, both for $23,000
will allow $3000 off for leveling.940-391-5050
MALE CAREGIVERSeeks employment.
Hourly or live in.Please lv msg 972-420-9349
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
Certified Professional
Chimney Sweep 30 years in business,Clean -- Caps -- Repair
Call 817-806-8678
Nick’s Computer ServicesUse your Denton local biz!
Repair, Backups, Tuneups, VirusRemoval, Training 940-465-9150
DANIELSONCONCRETE
All types of Concrete &Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives,
Patios & Excavation.Commercial & Residential
Free Estimates! 940-391-3830
Jose’s Concrete Work--patios,sidewalks, barns, curbs, slabs,
driveways, retaining walls.940-230-8220 Free Estimate
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
Dirt Work & Hauling, New Const.Including - Clean-up, Manure,
Trash, Debris, Pick-up & Haul Off.WE CAN DO ANYTHING!
Call Andrew at 940-367-0742
ADVANCE-FEE LOANS/CREDIT OFFERS
It’s illegal for companies doingbusiness by phone to promise
you a loan & ask you to pay for itbefore they deliver. For info., call
toll-free1-877-FTC HELP
Public service msg fromDenton Publishing Co.
Fed. Trade Commission
Seasoned Oak Firewood 100% split
$120 1/2 cord you pick it up1/2 cord $185 delivered
Cord $285 delivered. Pecan &mesquite available 940-668-8840
Joe The Garage Door ManDoors & Openers Repaired
New Installs940-367-5123
LANGSTON’S HandymanI do tile, wood floors, minor elec -
tric. Build fences, decks, tape andbed and paint. I can do mostly
anything! I have lived here for 42years. I have done this for 20years! Contractor ID 18340
940-390-9989 EPA certifiedper law passed 4-22-10 / InsuredDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
Maintenance, House Repairs &Mobile Home Repairs.
We Do It All. No Job too Big ortoo Small. Ben 940-387-5750
HOME REPAIR - Int/Ext Painting,Roof, Fences, Tile, Small Electri -cal, General Maint. Small Jobs -Free Estimates 940-442-8380
Roy ServicesFence, roof repair & new instal -
lation. Tree removal & trim.Free estimates 940-230-8834
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.
8 years exp. Refs avail. Ins &bonded. $15 off 1st service!
Superior Housekeeping Serv.940-594-8035 or 940-206-3889
Yudith House CleaningBlanca Hernandez
940-442-9511, 940-442-8380References available
GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut Trees, Fence Repair/Bldg
mow, edge, weedeat, flowerbeds, trim bushes, gutters, rake
leaves, res/comm, free est.940-300-5506 or 940-597-4787
ARENA & GARDEN TILLINGMOWING, BUSH HOG
$25 / Acre or HourCall 940-367-2741
Make Your House Sell!Paint, tape & bed, acoustic,water damage, wall repair Call Bob 972-317-9517
www.fisherpainting.com
PROFESSIONAL PAINTERSInt $80rm, ext $825; remodel proj -
ects, texture, faux glazing;15 yrs exp, guaranteed jobs!
Free estimate 940-300-6860
ARTISTIC SERVICESMurals, custom artwork, fauxfinish, paint effects, signage &
more. UNT Grad 940-368-1529www.jameshineman.com
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed or re-quired by law to perform certainservices or before purchasingcertain services.
*ROTOTILLING, *MOWING,*POST HOLES, *DRIVEWAYSBuilt & Surfaced. *All types
TRACTOR WORK 940-735-1446
SMART TREE SERVICETRIM OR REMOVESTUMP GRINDING
Free Estimate 940-597-3560
PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/
pics/slides/negs/videos/records-discs 940-231-5889
16DentonTime
121511
Red River RumbleSat, December 17 · 7 PM
$18 Res Gen $28 Prem $33 VIP
Casey Donahew BandFri, December 23 · 9 PM
$20 Res Gen $25 Prem $30 VIP
Lil WayneThurs, December 29 · 9 PM
$85 Res Gen $100 Prem $125 VIP
Blake SheltonFri, December 30 · 9 PM
$65 Res Gen $70 Prem $85 VIP
Maroon 5Sat, December 31 · 9 PM
$80 Res Gen $95 Prem $105 VIP
Gregg Allman & Buddy GuySun, January 1 · 7 PM
$40 Res Gen $55 Prem $65 VIP
Charlie WilsonSat, January 14 · 8 PM
$35 Res Gen $50 Prem $60 VIP
Peter Cetera & Richard MarxSat, January 7 · 8 PM
$30 Res Gen $40 Prem $50 VIP
Kraig Parker as ElvisSun, January 8 · 3 PM
$25 Res Gen $35 Prem $45 VIP
www.winstarworldcasino.comExit 1 • I-35 at the Red River • Thackerville, OK
Tickets available at the Global Event Center Box Office or online at Ticketmaster.comHotel Reservations 866.WIN.RSVP (866.946.7787)
Terry Fator 2/17Toni Braxton 2/18Kid Rock 3/3 & 3/4
Larry the Cable Guy 3/31
The Coasters, The Platters& The Drifters 2/10
Alabama 2/11
King of the Cage MMA 1/21Alan Jackson 1/27
Craig Ferguson 1/28Air Supply 2/4
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