Mar 24, 2016
2Denton
Time
06514
ON THE COVER
MERGING VISIONSPomegranates are the subject
of a poem by Cindy Wood
Guthrie and art by Mindy
Faubion. The pairing is part of
“Merging Visions: A Collab-
orative Exhibit of Art and
Poetry.”
(Dallas Morning News file
photo/Evans Caglage)
Story on Page 9
FIND IT INSIDE
MUSICConcerts and nightclub
schedules. Page 3
MOVIESReviews and summaries.
Page 7
DININGRestaurant listings.
Page 10
TO GET LISTED
INFORMATIONInclude the name and descrip-
tion of the event, date, time,
price and phone number 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:[email protected]
FAX IT TO:940-566-6888
MAIL IT TO:Denton Time
314 E. Hickory St.
Denton, TX 76201
DEADLINE:Noon the Friday before publi-
cation. All information will be
verified with the sender be-
fore publication; verification
must be completed by noon
the Monday before publica-
tion for the item to appear.
REACH US
EDITORIAL & ARTFeatures Editor
Lucinda Breeding 940-566-6877
ADVERTISINGAdvertising Director
Sandra Hammond 940-566-6820
Classified Manager
Julie Hammond 940-566-6819
Retail Advertising Manager
Shawn Reneau 940-566-6843
Advertising fax 940-566-6846
DentonTime
The five actresses in Den-ton Community Theatre’supcoming comedy The
Dixie Swim Club are required toflex all of their acting muscles.
The play follows five women— all of whom met on a winningcollege swim team — through33 years of life, love and loss.
“They meet on the OuterBanks of North Carolina, on thebeach, every year,” said actressDena Dunn, who plays looks-obsessed romantic Lexie.
In the beach cottage, thewomen tell blue jokes and hardtruths — all while maintainingthe sweet-and-sour tang ofSouthern hospitality.
“I think Southern womenhave very close friends,” said La-na K. Hoover, who reprises herrole as the perpetually fit healthnut Sheree on the Denton stage.“I think there’s something aboutSouthern women that makesthem close to their friends for along time.”
Dixie Swim Club starts withthe women coming back to thebeach cottage in their mid-40s.Sheree and Vernadette are mar-ried. Dinah, Lexie and Jeri Nealaren’t. The clash of career andfamilies mean some friendshipswithin the five are stronger thanothers.
“Vernadette likes all of them.She’d like to be a little of all ofthem,” said Karen Gossett, whoplays the role of the slightly in-continent comedian of thebunch.
“I think Sheree is incrediblyclose to Dinah,” Hoover said. “Ithink they were roommates incollege. They are as different asnight and day. Sheree marriedthe [swimming] coach’s son andhad children. Dinah didn’t. She’sa lawyer, and Sheree kind of livesvicariously through her.”
Polly Maynard plays the roleof sweet-natured and very Cath-olic Jeri Neal.
“They’re all really close tome,” she said of her character.“I’m more likely to be closest toVernadette, though. I think shefeels kind of protective of her,and tries to take care of her.”
Dunn played the role of self-absorbed Lexie at Theatre Ar-lington alongside Hoover andConnie Lane, the director of theDenton staging. The comedy isin the same school as Steel Mag-nolias, with laughter and tearssometimes happening simulta-neously.
Lane said the auditionsbrought a lot of actresses out.She even noticed that a few of
the audition forms indicated awish to be involved backstage ifthe actresses weren’t cast.
“We actually have under-studies for this show, and that’snot something you always havehere,” Lane said. “You could seetheir passion for the show ontheir audition forms.”
Holly Chant was recruited tounderstudy the roles of Lexieand Jeri Neal. Barbara McIntyre
is understudying the roles ofSheree, Dinah and Vernadette.McIntyre filled in for a week ofrehearsals when one of the castmembers traveled to Hawaii forher wedding anniversary.
“I think all of us have createda back story for these charactersin our heads,” Hoover said. “Ithink we’ve all thought about therelationships and what they’vebeen through. I know I have. Iknow what my [character’s]kids look like.”
IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK
Photos by Lucinda Breeding/DRC
Sheree (Lana K. Hoover, seated), who isn’t quite ready for one of life’s milestones, is consoled
by friends Jeri Neal (Polly Maynard, left), Dinah (Kim Campbell) and Lexie (Dena Dunn) in
Denton Community Theatre’s “The Dixie Swim Club.”
Southern comfort Longtime friends convene overthe years in ‘Dixie Swim Club’
By Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor
THE DIXIE SWIM CLUBWhat: Denton CommunityTheatre presents the comedy byJessie Jones, Nicholas Hope andJamie Wooten.When: 7:30 p.m. Friday andSaturday and June 13-14 and 2p.m. Sunday and June 15Where: Campus Theatre, 214 W.Hickory St.Details: Tickets cost $20 foradults, $18 for ages 62 and older,and $10 for students and chil-dren. For tickets, visit http://dentoncommunitytheatre.com orcall 940-382-1915.
Accident-
prone Verna-
dette (Karen
Gossett)
explains how
she came to
arrive at the
cottage on
the beach of
North Caroli-
na’s Outer
Banks in a
clown cos-
tume in “The
Dixie Swim
Club.”
3Denton
Time
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THURSDAY
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.
2 to 4 p.m. — Get Crafty! , a
come-and-go crafting session for kids
of all ages, at South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.
com.
4:30 p.m. — The Ensemble
concert benefiting SpiritHorse Thera-
peutic Center, at in the auditorium at
Guyer High School, 7501 Teasley Lane.
Group includes student volunteers
from Guyer’s band, orchestra and
choir. Free; donations will be accept-
ed tor SpiritHorse. Visit www.spirit
horsetherapy.com.
6:30 to 8 p.m. — Twilight Tunes,
Denton Main Street Association’s free
music series on the lawn of the
Courthouse on the Square, at Elm and
Oak streets. Visit www.dentonmain
street.org.
7 p.m. — Death and Dessert
Mystery Book Club at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St.
Explore new mysteries each month
and eat a themed dessert. This
month’s theme is “A Thyme to Kill,”
gardening mysteries. Free. Email
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
FRIDAY
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Finish It
Fridays, for anyone with an un-
finished craft project, at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Bring a
craft project and visit with other
crafters. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
10:30 a.m. — Denton Public
Library’s Summer Reading Club
kicks off with an event featuring
Professor Brainius at South Branch
Library, 3228 Teasley Lane. Free. Call
940-349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
1:30 p.m. — Denton Public Li-
brary’s Summer Reading Club
kicks off with an event featuring
Professor Brainius at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call
940-349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
3 p.m. — “Facts From Fiction:
The Science of Stories” for grades
4-8 at North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. UNT professor Amy Petros
leads hands-on activities to investi-
gate the world described in children’s
fiction. This week, explore The Hog-
warts Library by J.K. Rowling. Free.
Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.
dentonlibrary.com.
4:30 p.m. — Denton Public
Library’s Summer Reading Club
kicks off with an event featuring
Professor Brainius at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. Free.
Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.
dentonlibrary.com.
6 p.m. — Better Block “Design
Happy Hour” at East Side Denton,
117 E. Oak St. Residents can give input
on the design of the Better Block
project. Email [email protected] or
visit http://teambetterblock.com/
denton.
7 p.m. — Pirastro Strings Elite
Soloists Program recital at UNT on
the Square, 109 N. Elm St. Directed by
Jeff Bradetich. Call 940-369-8257 or
visit http://untonthesquare.unt.edu.
7 p.m. — Rockin’ Roundup fun-
draiser for Health Services of North
Texas at Hopper’s Ranch, 5502 S. U.S.
Highway 377 in Aubrey. Event fea-
tures a barrel racing competition and
family and children’s activities.
Tickets cost $25 for adults, $10 for
children. Barrel racers can sign up at
the event for $70 plus a late fee of
$20. Visit www.healthntx.org or email
7:30 p.m. — Denton Community
Theatre presents The Dixie Swim
Club at the Campus Theatre, 214 W.
Hickory St. Tickets cost $20 for
adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for stu-
dents and children. Call 940-382-1915
or visit www.dentoncommunity
theatre.com.
8 p.m. — Night hike at the Johnson
Branch Unit of Ray Roberts Lake State
Park, on FM3002, 7 miles east of I-35.
Meet at the pavilion in the Dogwood
parking lot for a 2.5-mile hike. Free
with regular park entrance fee of $7
for ages 13 and older. Call 940-637-
2636.
8:15 p.m. — Denton Community
Band performs at the Denton Civic
Center, 321 E. McKinney St. Part of
Denton’s Starrise free performing arts
series. Visit www.dentonparks.com or
call 940-349-8733.
SATURDAY
9 a.m. to noon — Family fishing
program, teaching the basics of
fishing, at the Isle du Bois Unit of Ray
Roberts Lake State Park, on FM455,
10 miles east of I-35. Equipment and
bait will be provided, or participants
can bring their own. Free with regular
park entrance fee of $7 for ages 13
and older. Call 940-686-2148.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. — “Splash Day”
at Denton Community Market, a
local artist and farmers market, at
Mulberry Street and Carroll Bou-
levard. Free giant water slide. Visit
http://dentonmarket.org
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. — National
Trails Day at Clear Creek Natural
Heritage Center, 5800 Hartless Field
Road. Free event includes hikes,
geocaching, a raptor show at 10:30
a.m., workshops, crafts, food trucks
and more. Call 940-349-8152 or visit
www.clearcreekdenton.com.
10 a.m. to noon — Denton Herb
Society meets at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Dr. Betsy
Schenck will present “Wilderness 911:
Are You Prepared for Your Health and
Safety?” Free. Visit www.dentonherb
society.org.
1 to 4 p.m. — Widow-Daughter
Tea and Generations Past/Present
Program in the dining room of Car-
riage House Assisted Living, 1357
Bernard St. All area widows and their
daughters or “adopted daughters for
the day” are invited. Program features
speakers, entertainment, a plants-
crafts-bake sale and more. Tickets
cost $6. For space availability, call
Fran Massengale at 940-566-2963 or
E. Curina Morris at 940-648-2540.
2 to 4 p.m. — “Healthy From the
Inside Out: Medicine Cabinet
Makeover” at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Judy Boston and
Kathleen Baird present information on
using essential oils. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.
com.
7 to 9 p.m. — Golden Triangle
Mall Summer Music Series
presents J.R. Byrd & the Tracks in the
food court at the mall, 2201 S. I-35E.
Free. Visit http://shopgoldentriangle.
com.
7:30 p.m. — Denton Community
Theatre presents The Dixie Swim
Club at the Campus Theatre, 214 W.
Hickory St. Tickets cost $20 for
adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for stu-
dents and children. Call 940-382-1915
or visit www.dentoncommunity
theatre.com.
SUNDAY
2 p.m. — Author Tui Snider will
talk about her book Unexpected
Texas at Emily Fowler Central Library,
502 Oakland St. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
2 p.m. — Denton Community
Theatre presents The Dixie Swim
Club at the Campus Theatre, 214 W.
Hickory St. Tickets cost $20 for
adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for stu-
dents and children. Call 940-382-1915
or visit www.dentoncommunity
theatre.com.
MONDAY
6:30 to 9:30 p.m. — Bootstrap
Denton, a Denton tech creatives
mixer, at East Side Denton, 117 E. Oak
St. Event helps launch Denton’s
TechMill, a new nonprofit. Visit
http://bit.ly/1sVMDP1.
6 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.
TUESDAY
9 to 11:30 a.m. — Good Grief, a
grief support workshop, at Ann’s
Haven VNA office, 325 W. McKinney
St., Suite 101. Presented by Jerald
Garner, chaplain/bereavement coordi-
nator. For reservations, call 940-349-
5900.
9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time
at South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Stories, songs and activities for
infants up to 18 months and their
caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752
or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
Noon to 1 p.m. — VNA Ann’s
Haven bereavement luncheon at
the Denton Elks Lodge, 228 E. Oak St.
Guest speaker will be Christy Scifres,
manager of family services for the
Greater Dallas Chapter of the Alzhei-
mer’s Association. Free; no reserva-
tions required.
3 p.m. — Science Explorers:
“Magnetic Fun” for ages 5-8 at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Science program includes a story,
discussion and hands-on activities.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
3:30 p.m. — “Octopus Hunt!”
with author Deborah Johnston at
South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Kids ages 5-9 can hear a story
and learn about the octopus. Free.
Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.
dentonlibrary.com.
6:30 p.m. — Twilight Toddler
Time at Emily Fowler Central Library,
502 Oakland St. Stories, songs and
activities for toddlers (12-36 months)
and their caregivers. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.
com.
7 to 8:45 p.m. — North Branch
Writers’ Critique Group, for those
interested in writing novels, short
stories, poetry or journals, meets at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Free.
WEDNESDAY
Noon to 1 p.m. — Concerts on
the Square with Yancey Stevens
Band at Locust and Hickory streets.
Free. Rain location is the Denton Civic
Center. Visit www.dentonparks.com
or call 940-349-8733.
7 to 8:30 p.m. — Exploring
Philosophy at North Branch Library,
3020 Locust St. Join the ongoing
discussions of time-honored philo-
sophical issues with Dr. Eva H. Cad-
wallader, professor of philosophy.
Free and open to the public. Call
940-349-8752.
7 to 8:30 p.m. — Professor’s
Corner, a discussion group dedicated
to literary texts, meets at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
TWU professor Ashley Bender will
present “Mourning and Melancholy in
Two Poems by Thomas Gray.” Free.
Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.
dentonlibrary.com.
7:30 p.m. — North Texas Bass
Camps faculty recital in the Recital
Hall at the Music Building, at Avenue
C and Chestnut Street. Performances
by Jeff Bradetich, Carlos Gaviria,
Gundrun Raschen, Jack Unzicker and
Jessica Valls. Free. Call 940-565-2791
or visit www.music.unt.edu.
7:30 p.m. — North Texas Con-
ductors Collegium concert, direct-
ed by Eugene Corporon, in Winspear
Hall at the Murchison Performing Arts
Center, on the north side of I-35E at
North Texas Boulevard. Call 940-369-
7802 or visit www.thempac.com.
MUSIC
The Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub
Each Wed, County Rexford, 7-9pm,
free. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-
5483.
The Abbey Underground Thurs:
The Demigs, Brave Young Lion, Vince
Lujan Project, 10:30pm. Fri: Afro
Deezy Axe, Black James Franco.
Weekly events: Each Sat, “’80s and
’90s RetroActive Dance Party”; each
Sun, open mic hosted by Bone Dog-
gie, signup at 7:30pm; each Mon,
EVENTS
Continued on Page 4
The Denton CommunityBand’s “Movies, Musi-cals & Marches” concert
might make the little ones gocrazy on Friday night.
The local band plays its an-nual Starrise series set — start-ing summer with songs fromthe big and small screen andfrom the parade playbook — at
8:15 p.m. Friday at the DentonCivic Center, 321 E. McKinneySt.
The band will play sym-phonic highlights from thesmash hit animated feature,Frozen (get ready to belt out“Let It Go,” kids), highlightsfrom the hit Broadway musi-cal Wicked (that’s a double fea-ture for Idina Menzel fans whokeep “Let It Go” and “DefyingGravity” on repeat).
The community bandknows it draws an intergener-ational audience. This year,
that means the band will en-dear itself to PBS loyalists,playing the suite from Down-ton Abbey. Also included: mu-sic heard at Disneyland, musicfrom the film Spartacus andmore.
The Denton parks depart-ment’s Starrise series bringsfree summer music and danceconcerts to the Civic Center onFriday evenings in June.
Coming up next on June 13:Sweet Harmony.
— Lucinda Breeding
As heard on TVCommunity bandplays show tunesto launch Starrise
4Denton
Time
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A Lewisville indie-rocka-billy outfit will serenade thesunset today at Twilight Tunes.
The Kerry Davis Jr. Banddeals uptempo alt-countrythat incorporates some rocka-billy flourishes.
The quintet proudly cele-brates its love of pedal steeltwang in “Oklahoma Girl,” but“Black Water Rolls” drivesharder, in spite of the fiddle so-los.
The band is anchored byAustin native Kerry Davis,who sings and plays rhythmguitar. University of NorthTexas-schooled percussionistLucas Albano mans the drumkit. Aaron Bucklin plays leadguitar. Matt Riley gives theband an extra dose of grooveon the upright bass, and well-known Denton musician andDentonRadio.com man PatYork plays harmonica.
Twilight Tunes is from 6:30to 8 p.m. today on the lawn ofthe Courthouse on the Square,110 W. Hickory St.
Attendees are welcome tobring blankets and chairs. Lo-cals and visitors are urged tobuy dinner from nearby res-taurants — or linger after themusic to enjoy desserts anddrinks.
Denton Main Street Asso-
ciation presents the concertevent that sets the tone for fundowntown every Thursdaythrough July 3. There’ll be abonus morning concert on theFourth of July, following theannual parade through down-town Denton.
Up next week at TwilightTunes: Chris Watson, bluesand soul.
— Lucinda Breeding
Dusty tunes at duskLewisville bandbrings countrifiedrock to Square
Courtesy photo
The Kerry Davis Jr. Band mixes country, rockabilly and
rock. The Lewisville-based five-piece plays Twilight Tunes
today on the Square.
karaoke. 100 W. Walnut St.
www.facebook.com/TheAbbey
Underground.
American Legion Post 550 Each
Fri, free karaoke at 9pm; each Tues,
free pool. Live band on the last Sat of
the month, free. 905 Foundation St.,
Pilot Point. 940-686-9901.
Andy’s Bar Sat: Vinyl, Brunettes Not
Fighter Jets, Duell. Each Wed, karaoke
at 10pm. 122 N. Locust St. 940-565-
5400.
Banter Bistro Thurs: Jesse Wash-
mon Trio, 6pm. Fri: The Reggae
News, 6pm; Texas Sky, 8pm. Each
Thurs, open mic at 8pm; each Sat, live
local jazz at 6pm. 219 W. Oak St.
940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter.
com.
The Bears Den Thurs: Kody West,
6pm. At Sharkarosa Wildlife Ranch,
11670 Massey Road, Pilot Point.
940-686-5600. www.bearsden
texas.com.
Crossroads Bar Fri: Caleb Coonrod,
10pm; Deadpan Poets, 11:30pm. Sat:
Grand opening and customer appreci-
ation party. 1803 Elm St. 940-808-
1177. http://crossroadsbardenton.com.
Dan’s Silverleaf Thurs: Biogra-
phies, Criminal Birds, Astro Veil and
the Please, Please Me, 9pm. Fri:
Chambers (album release), Pageantry,
Borrisokane, Leoncarlo Canlas, 9pm,
$7. Sat: Petty Theft, 9pm, $10. Mon:
Paul Slavens and Friends, with Brian
Wolfe of Drums and Tuba, 10pm, free.
Tues: Israel Nash, VoltRevolt, 8pm,
$10. No smoking indoors. 103 Industri-
al St. 940-320-2000. www.dans
silverleaf.com.
The Garage Thurs: Entrophy. Fri:
Droo D’Anna. Sat: DJ Yeahdef. Wed:
DJ Rockstyler. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-
0045. www.thedentongarage.com.
The Greenhouse Mon: Pete Weise
Quintet. Each Mon, live jazz at 10pm,
free. 600 N. Locust St. 940-484-1349.
www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.
com.
Hailey’s Club Thurs: DJ Question
Mark. Sat: Le Freak, 9pm, $15-$20.
Weekly events, 9pm, free-$10: each
Fri, “Friday Night Live” with DJ Spinn
Mo; each Tues, “’90s Night” with DJ
Question Mark. 122 W. Mulberry St.
940-323-1160. www.haileysclub.com.
J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-
7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.
The LABB Sat: Bird Meets Winter,
Forever and Everest, Sleepyhouse,
9pm, free. 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
La Milpa Mexican Restaurant
Each Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 7:30-
9:30pm. 820 S. I-35E, Suite 101.
940-382-8470.
Last Drop Tavern 508 S. Elm St.
940-808-1651. www.lastdrop
tavern.com.
Lone Star Attitude Burger Co.
Fri: The Velvet Army, 7-10pm. Sat:
The Holophonics, 7-10pm. Tues:
Texas Red Hot Radio broadcast,
7-10pm. Wed: Song swap with
Dunashay, Caruvana, Caleb Coonrod,
7-10pm. 113 W. Hickory St. 940-383-
1022. www.lsaburger.com.
Lowbrows Beer and Wine Gar-
den 200 S. Washington St., Pilot
Point. 940-686-3801. www.low
brows.us.
Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlor
and Chainsaw Repair 1125 E.
University Drive, Suite 107. 940-566-
9910.
Mulberry Street Cantina 110 W.
Mulberry St. 940-808-1568. http://
mulberrystcantina.com.
Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Tyler and the
Tribe, 9:30pm, $5-$10. 1009 Ave. C.
940-565-6611. www.rockinrodeo
denton.com.
Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Stu-
dios Thurs: Vagabond, Triple Aught,
Honest Shaun, 9pm, $1-$3. Fri: The
Raven Charter, Sleepwalking Home,
the Spectacle, I Am Man I Am Mon-
ster, 8pm, $5-$7. Sat: Hand Drawn
Records compilation release with
Gollay, John Earle Mainord, Jonathan
Jeter, 9pm, $6-$8. Sun: Behind the
Wagon, 10pm, $1-$3. Tues: Mugen
Hoso, Biscuit Head, 9pm, $5-$7. Wed:
Yoni Wolf, Serengeti, Topic, 9pm,
$10-$12. No smoking indoors. 411 E.
Sycamore St. 940-387-7781.
www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.
Rusty Taco Sat: Matt Grigsby, 7pm;
Alyssa Reynolds, 8pm. 210 E. Hickory
St. 940-483-8226. www.therusty
taco.com.
Smiling Moose Deli Sat: Nick
Ryebach, 7pm; Jordan Fruge, 8pm.
Wed: Matt Grigsby, 6pm; Lydia Low,
7pm. 501 W. Hickory St. 940-566-
3350. www.facebook.com/Smiling
MooseDenton.
Trail Dust Steak House Fri & Sat:
Cypress Creek Band. 26501 E. U.S.
380 in Aubrey. 940-365-4440.
www.trailduststeaks.net.
VFW Post 2205 Free karaoke at
8pm each Thurs, Fri and Sat. 909
Sunset St.
The Whitehouse Espresso Bar
and Beer Garden Each Thurs, open
mic at 7:30pm, sign-up at 7pm; each
Wed, Jeffry Eckels presents “Jazz at
the Whitehouse,” 8-10:30pm. No
cover. 424 Bryan St. 940-484-2786.
www.thewhitehousedenton.com.
Zera Coffee Co. Fri: The Ember
Days, 8pm, $8-$10. 420 E. McKinney
St., Suite 106. 940-239-8002.
www.zeracoffeecompany.com.
IN THE AREA
10 a.m. to noon Saturday —
Fishing day for youngsters 7 and
older at Lewisville Lake Environmental
Learning Area. No fishing tackle is
required, but those who intend to
stay and fish after the program will
need to bring their own gear. $2
program fee, in addition to admission
of $5 per person. Registration is
required; call 972-219-3930 or email
[email protected]. Front gate is at
Jones Street and North Kealy Avenue
in Lewisville. Visit www.ias.unt.edu/
llela.
7 p.m. Tuesday — Sounds of
Lewisville free concert series
presents Brave Combo in the court-
yard at Medical Center of Lewisville
Grand Theater, 100 N. Charles St.
Bring blankets and lawn chairs; pets
on a leash are allowed. Visit
www.soundsoflewisville.com.
FUTURE BOOKINGS
June 9-13 — “A Day in the Life,”
Greater Denton Arts Council’s sum-
mer camp, at the Patterson-Appleton
Center for the Visual Arts, 400 E.
Hickory St. Classes in guitar, dance
and the visual arts for ages 5-12.
Classes cost $55-$60 each. For more
information, visit www.dentonarts.
com or call 940-382-2787.
June 9-13 and Aug. 4-8 — Den-
ton Community Theatre’s The-
atre School summer camps at the
PointBank Black Box Theatre, 318 E.
Hickory St. Programs include creativi-
ty camps for ages 4-6, from 9 a.m. to
noon, $225 per week; and musical
theater dance camps for ages 7-10,
from 1 to 5 p.m., $275 per week. For
enrollment forms, visit http://
dentoncommunitytheatre.com/
school/summer-camps. Call educa-
tion director Mildred Peveto at 940-
383-1356.
June 13-14 — Denton’s June-
teenth celebration at Fred Moore
Park, 501 S. Bradshaw St. June 13
events include vendors starting at 5
p.m. and Gospel Night at 7 p.m. June
14 events include a parade at 9 a.m.
from the Denton Civic Center, 321 E.
McKinney St., to Fred Moore Park; an
adult coed softball tournament ($100
entry fee per team) at 9 a.m.; free
children’s games at 10 a.m.; and
vendors and entertainment starting at
11 a.m. Free admission. Call 940-349-
8575.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. June 14 — 2014
Denton Airshow at Denton En-
terprise Airport. Tickets cost $10, free
for children 5 and younger. Public
parking is at the UNT stadium parking
lot, on North Texas Boulevard at
I-35E, with bus transportation avail-
able starting at 8 a.m. Optional
“Breakfast With the Pilots” begins at
8:30 a.m., $4 per person. Ten-minute
helicopter rides available for $35. Visit
http://denton.schultzairshows.com or
call 1-877-503-8499.
June 27 through July 6 — Den-
ton Community Theatre presents
Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story at the
Campus Theatre, 214 W. Hickory St.
Performances are at 8 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays.
Call 940-382-1915 or visit www.
dentoncommunitytheatre.com.
June 30 through July 27 —
Denton Community Theatre’s
Theatre School musical theater
production camp at the PointBank
Black Box Theatre, 318 E. Hickory St.
Campers ages 10-18 will prepare to
perform Beauty & the Beast July
25-27. Tuition is $425; early registra-
tion discount through June 6. Camp
meets from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; no
classes on July 4-6. For enrollment
forms, visit http://dentoncommuni
tytheatre.com/school/summer-
camps. Call education director
Mildred Peveto at 940-383-1356.
July 18-20 — 10th annual May-
born Literary Nonfiction Confer-
ence at the Hilton DFW Lakes Exec-
utive Conference Center in Grapevine.
Hosted by the Frank W. Mayborn
Graduate Institute of Journalism at
UNT. Registration costs $425. Visit
www.themayborn.com/registration.
VISUAL ARTS
Banter Bistro 219 W. Oak St. 940-
565-1638.
The Chestnut Tree 107 W. Hickory
St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat
9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat
5:30-9pm. 940-591-9475. www.
chestnuttearoom.com.
A Creative Art Studio Gallery,
classes and workshops. 227 W. Oak
St., Suite 101. Mon-Sat 12-6pm, Sun by
appointment only. 940-442-1251.
www.acreativeartstudio.com.
Cupboard Natural Foods and
Cafe 200 W. Congress St. 940-387-
5386.
The DIME Store Denton Indepen-
dent Maker Exchange’s store carrying
local art, crafts and vintage items,
plus workshop/gallery space. Tues-
Sat 10-6. 510 S. Locust St. 940-381-
2324. www.dimehandmade.com.
Farmers & Merchants Gallery
Early and contemporary Texas art.
100 N. Washington St., Pilot Point.
Fri-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. Ap-
pointments encouraged. 940-686-
2396. www.farmersandmerchants
gallery.com.
EVENTSContinued from Page 3
Continued on Page 5
5Denton
Time
06514
Michelle Hanlon isbest known as thewoman with the ba-
ton, leading the Guyer HighSchool Orchestra through re-hearsals and performances.
“It took a long, long time,but I’m finally releasing myfirst CD,” Hanlon said.
She’s a music legacy,daughter to Robin Hood Bri-ans, singer-songwriter and theproducer credited for nudgingZZ Top to the cocktail of rockand blues that would becomethe band’s sound.
And mom? Suzanne Briansis a bassist who sang her waythrough college in southern
Louisiana band the Girls.Hanlon has a surprisingly
big alto and has no troubleweaving her vocals throughthe note-bending genre of theblues.
Backed by warbling organ,distorted guitar and crashingdrums, This Is My Day putsHanlon in the same school asMary Chapin Carpenter. Bothhave full contraltos that canrock and do the bluesy climband fall.
The record sands downnarratives about everyday peo-ple, mostly with plucky cho-ruses that urge the characters— and the listener — to always
look on the bright side. Hey,encouragement comes withthe territory of moldingemerging pit musicians.
“Guided Tour” is a tributeto the Beatles, complete withbright brass solos and march-ing tempo. The title track isequal parts Sara Bareilles andIngrid Michaelson. “I WillComfort You” is a swinging,nearly alt-country numberwith bluesy flourishes.
The record, which droppedTuesday, is available on iTunesand CDBaby.com.
For more information, visithttp://michellehanlon.com.
— Lucinda Breeding
Courtesy photo
Michelle Han-
lon, who di-
rects the or-
chestra at
Guyer High
School, re-
leased her first
solo album this
week.
Her day Guyer High music teacherreleases debut album
First Friday Denton on the first
Friday evening of the month at art
venues and businesses around the
downtown Square. Free gallery
viewings, live music, art projects and
demonstrations. For more informa-
tion, visit www.firstfridaydenton.com.
Green Space Arts Collective
Studio/gallery available for rental. 529
Malone St. 940-595-9219.
www.greenspacearts.com.
Impressions by DSSLC Store
selling ceramics by residents of
Denton State Supported Living Cen-
ter. 105 1/2 W. Hickory St. 940-382-
3399.
Jupiter House 114 N. Locust St.
940-387-7100.
Oxide Fine Art & Floral Gallery
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, 10am-3pm Sat. 115
W. Eagle Drive. 940-483-8900.
www.oxidegallery.com.
● Metal sculptor Daren Fagan,
featured artist for May.
Patterson-Appleton Center for
the Visual Arts Greater Denton Arts
Council’s galleries, meeting space and
offices. 400 E. Hickory St. Free.
Tues-Sun 1-5pm. 940-382-2787.
www.dentonarts.com.
● “Merging Visions: A Collab-
orative Exhibit of Art and Poetry,”
presented by the Visual Arts Society
of Texas, through Friday in the Mead-
ows Gallery.
PointBank Black Box Theatre
Denton Community Theatre’s black
box performance space. Mon & Wed
1-4pm, Fri 10:30am-1pm, and during
performances. 318 E. Hickory St.
● Paintings by Dawn Swepston,
through July 18.
SCRAP Denton Nonprofit store
selling reused materials for arts and
crafts, with the Re:Vision Gallery
featuring art made of reused and
repurposed items. Classes and work-
shops. 215 W. Oak St. 940-391-7499.
www.scrapdenton.org.
● “Crafternoon,” open workshop
each Thursday, 3-6pm.
tAd The Art Den, a small, artist-run
space inside the Bowllery, 901 Ave. C,
Suite 101. Tues-Sun 11am-9pm.
www.tadgallery.org. 940-383-2695.
● “Edible Matters: A 4-Course
Exhibition” features “What’s Cook-
ing Under the Microscope,” Friday
through June 27.
TWU Blagg-Huey Library Mon-
Thurs 7:30am-midnight, Fri
7:30am-10pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun
2pm-midnight. 1322 Oakland St.
940-898-3701. www.twu.edu/library.
TWU East and West galleries in
the TWU Fine Arts Building, at Oak-
land Street and Pioneer Circle. Free.
Mon-Fri 9-4, weekends by appoint-
ment. 940-898-2530. www.twu.edu/
visual-arts.
TWU Gallery 010 Student-run
exhibition space in the lower level of
the Student Union, on Bell Avenue at
Administration Drive. Mon-Thurs 8-9;
Fri 8-5; Sun 1-9. .
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
Continued on Page 6
A MUST-READOnce Upon ATime In the
Denton CountyJail
By: NancyBeth Hanks
This ebookcan change
your lifefor
$399
To Download:
www.nancybethhanks.comE3
EX
© 2009 Allstate Insurance Company allstate.com
Bill Doranski
(940) 387-62892000 Denison St., #A
FA© 2011 Allstate Insurance Company
DORANSKI AGENCY
(940) 387 6289
2000 DENISON ST #A
DENTON
6Denton
Time
06514
Swim lesson sessions begin this
month. Classes are offered at the
Denton Natatorium, 2400 Long
Road, and the Civic Center Pool, 321
E. McKinney St. There are classes
most days of the week, including
Saturday, with many different time
options. Most classes have a partici-
pant-to-teacher ratio of 6-1. Each
session costs $30 to $60. For more
information and to register, visit
www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-8800.
■All-day summer camps are still
accepting registrations for the first
week of camp, which begins Mon-
day. Programs are offered at
McMath Middle School, 1900 Jason
Drive; the Denton Civic Center, 321
E. McKinney St.; and Martin Luther
King Jr. Recreation Center, 1300
Wilson St. Prices include a T-shirt,
field trips, crafts and more. Cost is
$105 per week. To register for the
camp at Martin Luther King Jr.
Recreation Center, visit www.den-
tonparks.com. Register at the Civic
Center for the other camps. For any
questions, call 940-349-7275.
● Summer camp options for youths
ages 11-15 include an all-day camp
option that features a field trip
every day for $115 per session. Ages
10-17 can take the Youth Tech Inc.
Computer Camps, which feature top
software and classes like animation
and video game design. Outdoor
Adventure Camp, for ages 12-16,
focuses on an activity like rock
climbing each week.
● There are sports camps for ages
3 and older this summer, including
tennis, skateboarding, cheerleading,
softball, volleyball, golf and aquatic
camps.
■Denton’s Juneteenth celebration
will be June 13-14 at Fred Moore
Park, 501 S. Bradshaw St. Vendor
booths will be open both days while
activities go on. An adult softball
tournament will will start at 9 a.m.
June 14. Entry fee is $100 per team.
To register for the tournament, call
940-349-8575.
■Adults can learn basic and interme-
diate progressive country
dancing at Denia Recreation
Center, 1001 Parvin St. Classes
focuse on spins, wraps and more.
Classes begin June 10 and require a
partner. Cost is $25 per person. To
register by Friday, visit www.denton
parks.com or call 940-349-8285.
■Ages 8 and older can learn to
kayak in the lazy river at Water
Works Park, 2400 Long Road. “Intro
to Padding” is from 8:30 to 10:30
a.m. Monday through Thursday,
June 9-12. The four-day class teach-
es safety, stroke technique and
more. Cost is $60. For more in-
formation and to register, visit
www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-8800.
■Ages 16 and older can take River
Robics classes at Water Works
Park, 2400 Long Road. The next
session starts next week, with
classes from 7:30 to 8:25 p.m. on
Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays
through July 3. The aerobics class
uses the natural resistance of the
water in the park’s lazy river. Cost is
$65. Visit www.dentonparks.com or
call 940-349-8800.
■Ages 10 and older can go horse-
back riding in 1.5-hour guided trip
on June 14 at Black Mustang Ranch,
2200 FM1192. Ages 13-17 may attend
without a guardian with a signed
waiver. The trip will begin at 9 a.m.
at Denia Recreation Center, 1001
Parvin St., with vans returning at 1
p.m. Cost is $45 per person. For
more information and to register,
visit www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-8136.
■Five-year-olds through adults can go
kayaking from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
June 14 at Clear Creek Natural
Heritage Center, 3310 Collins Road.
Ages 12-17 may attend without a
guardian with a signed waiver.
Kayakers will need to bring a sack
lunch. The trip will begin and end at
Denia Recreation Center, 1001 Parvin
St. Cost is $20 per person. Visit
www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-8136.
■Outdoor Adventures for ages 50
and older will feature an archery
clinic from 1 to 3 p.m. June 14.
Participants will learn on a legal,
indoor range. Closed-toe shoes are
required. Cost is $8. For more
information and to register, visit
www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-8136.
■The Little Rookies Sports &
Fitness half-day camp is for chil-
dren ages 3 and 4, from 9 a.m. to
noon June 16-20 at the Denton Civic
Center, 321 E. McKinney St. Campers
will learn about the world of sports
and fitness with outside and inside
play. Cost is $75 per camper. For
more information and to register,
visit www.dentonparks.com or call
940-349-7275.
■Aquatic Explorer camp introduc-
es kids ages 7-14 to kayaking, water
polo, snorkeling and more. The first
session is from 1 to 4 p.m. June
16-20 at the Denton Natatorium and
Denton Water Works Park, both
located at 2400 Long Road. Cost is
$85 per person. Visit www.denton
parks.com or call 940-349-8800.
DENTON PARKS & RECREATION
UNT Art Gallery in the UNT Art
Building, 1201 W. Mulberry St. at
Welch. Building also includes the
North Gallery and the Lightwell
Gallery. Tues noon-5pm, Wed-Thurs
9:30am-8pm, Fri-Sat noon-5pm. Free.
940-565-4316. http://gallery.unt.edu.
UNT Cora Stafford Gallery In
UNT’s Oak Street Hall, 1120 W. Oak St.
Tues-Fri 10am-2pm or by appoint-
ment. 940-565-4005.
UNT on the Square 109 N. Elm St.
Free. Mon-Fri 9am-noon & 1-5pm,
with extended hours Thurs until 8pm;
Sat 11am-3pm. 940-369-8257. http://
untonthesquare.unt.edu.
● “On the Square, Outside the
Box,” an exhibit of art by Denton ISD
students, through Saturday.
Visual Arts Society of Texas
Member organization of the Greater
Denton Arts Council offers communi-
ty and continuing education for local
visual artists, professional and ama-
teur. Meetings are at the Patterson-
Appleton Center for the Visual Arts,
400 E. Hickory St. Monthly meetings
include mini-shows and demonstra-
tions by visiting artists. Two annual
juried exhibits. Critique groups and
workshops. Visit www.vastarts.org or
call Executive Director Lynne Cagle
Cox at 972-VAST-ORG.
Zera Coffee Co. 420 E. McKinney
St., Suite 106. 940-239-8002.
www.zeracoffeecompany.com.
POINTS OF INTEREST
The Bayless-Selby House Muse-
um Restored Victorian-style home
built in 1898. 317 W. Mulberry St.
Tues-Sat 10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.
Handicapped accessible. Regular
special events and workshops. 940-
349-2865. www.dentoncounty.com/
bsh.
Denton County African Amer-
ican Museum Exhibits of historic
black families in the county, including
artwork and quilting, and personal
items of the lady of the house. 317 W.
Mulberry St., next to the Bayless-
Selby House Museum. Tues-Sat
10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.
www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.
Bethlehem in Denton County
Small gallery in Sanger displaying a
personal collection of 2,900 nativities.
Open evenings and weekends, by
appointment only. Free. Small groups
and children welcome. To schedule
your visit, call 940-231-4520 or e-mail
www.bethlehemindentonco.com.
Courthouse-on-the-Square
Museum Exhibits include photos of
Denton communities, historic Hispan-
ic and black families, farm and ranch-
ing artifacts, and special collections
including Southwest American Indian
and Denton County pottery, pressed
glass and weaponry. Research materi-
als, county cemetery records, genea-
logical info, photographs. 110 W.
Hickory St. 10-4:30 Mon-Fri and 11-3
Sat, closed holidays. Free. Special
monthly exhibits and lectures. Call
940-349-2850 or visit www.denton
county.com/chos.
● “Big Wheels Turnin’: The Evolu-
tion of Transportation in Denton
County,” through Saturday.
Denton Community Market, a
local artists and farmers market, from
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday from
April through November at the Den-
ton County Historical Park, on Mulber-
ry Street near Carroll Boulevard. Visit
http://dentonmarket.org.
Denton County Farmers Market
Local farmers sell fresh seasonal
vegetables and fruit every Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday, through
September, from 7 a.m. to sellout. At
Sycamore Street and Carroll Bou-
levard, in the parking lot by the
Denton County Historical Park. Visit
www.dentonfarmersmarket.com.
Denton Firefighters Museum
Collection at Central Fire Station, 332
E. Hickory St., displays firefighting
memorabilia from the 1800s to the
present. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Closed on
city holidays. Free and handicapped
accessible.
Gowns of the First Ladies of
Texas Created in 1940, exhibit
features garments worn by wives of
governors of Texas. 8am-5pm Mon-
Fri. Administration Conference Tower,
TWU campus. Free, reservations
required. 940-898-3644.
Hangar Ten Flying Museum
Nonprofit museum displays, main-
tains, preserves, flies and shows
antique, classic and contemporary
classes of aircraft. Mon-Sat 8:30am-3
pm. 1945 Matt Wright Lane at Denton
Enterprise Airport. Free. 940-565-
1945. www.hangar10.org.
Lewisville Lake Environmental
Learning Area Three hiking trails;
camping, fishing and more on the Elm
Fork of the Trinity River; restored
1870 log home. Summer hours:
Fri-Sun 7am-7pm. Admission is $5,
free for children 5 and younger. Front
gate is at Jones Street and North
Kealy Avenue in Lewisville. Call
972-219-3930 for directions.
www.ias.unt.edu/llela.
Little Chapel-in-the-Woods Built
in 1939, one of 20 outstanding archi-
tectural achievements in Texas. Daily
8am-5pm, except on university
holidays or when booked for wed-
dings, weekends by appointment
only, TWU campus. 940-898-3644.
Sharkarosa Wildlife Ranch
Nonprofit 126-acre ranch with rare
and exotic animals, including black
bears, kangaroos, bobcats, zebras and
more. Exhibits, tram ride, animal
presentations and restaurant. Open to
the public 10am-5pm Sat & Sun,
March through Dec. 1. Tickets cost
$10 for ages 13 and older, $8 for ages
3-12, $8 for seniors. 11670 Massey
Road, Pilot Point. 940-686-4600.
www.sharkarosa.com.
UNT Rafes Urban Astronomy
Center UNT’s astronomy center,
open to the public once a month.
2350 Tom Cole Road. For directions
and more information, visit www.
astronomy.unt.edu/obsv.html.
● Star Party on the first Saturday of
the month, beginning 30 minutes
after sundown, weather permitting.
Admission is $5, free for children 4
and younger.
UNT Sky Theater Planetarium in
UNT’s Environmental Education,
Science and Technology Building,
1704 W. Mulberry St. 940-369-8213.
www.skytheater.unt.edu.
● Water Worlds, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
each Saturday. Tickets cost $3-$5,
cash only.
● The Seasons Reasons Show,
children’s matinee at noon each
Saturday in June. Tickets cost $3,
cash only.
Western Heritage Gallery at
Stonehill Center, 5800 N. I-35, Suite
400. 940-243-3933. www.the
westernheritagegallery.com.
SENIORS
American Legion Hall Senior
Center 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; 9am-1pm Sat. 509
N. Bell Ave. 940-349-8720.
Ongoing activities:
● Aletha’s Craft Store, open
9am-1pm Mon-Fri.
● Social dancing, live bands and
refreshments every second and
fourth Friday, 7-9:30pm, $6.
● Movies 6pm each Wed, free for
Denton seniors.
● SPAN noon meal each Mon-Fri, $2
for seniors 60 and older, $5 for those
younger than 60.
● Bridge Party bridge, 12:30pm
Thurs; duplicate bridge, 12:30pm Wed
● Bingo 12:45pm first and third Fri
● Triangle Squares square danc-
ing 7pm first and third Fri, $6
● Ed Bonk Workshop woodshop
9am-noon Tues-Thurs, $6 annual
membership plus $1 per visit.
RSVP Referral and placement service
for volunteers age 55 and older. 1400
Crescent St. 940-383-1508.
ACTIVITIES
Acoustic Lawn Jam from 10 a.m. to
noon every Saturday, weather permit-
ting, on the lawn of the Courthouse
on the Square, 110 W. Hickory St.
Open acoustic jam for all levels of
musicians.
Denton Celtic Dancers meets
from 5 to 7 p.m. each Sunday at the
Patterson-Appleton Center for the
Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St. Begin-
ners’ class starts at 6 p.m. Call 940-
321-0012 or visit www.dentonceltic
dancers.org.
Denton County Dulcimer Club
meets from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m on the
third Saturday of each month in the
community room at Denton Good
Samaritan Village, 2500 Hinkle Drive.
Dues are $3 per month. Participants
may bring a sack lunch. Call 940-565-
9331 or e-mail donnasgregory@
gmail.com.
Harps Over Texas Autoharp Club
Jamming as well as help for new and
experienced players. All acoustic
instruments welcome. 7 p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday of each month at
Cumberland Presbyterian Church,
1424 Stuart Road. For more informa-
tion, call 940-382-3248.
EVENTSContinued from Page 5
7Denton
Time
06514
MOVIES
Director Michael Mayer haslifted Verdi’s Rigoletto from the16th-century Italian court to SinCity. Denton residents can see
the opera in a 7 p.m. screeningWednesday at the Cinemark 15 atVista Ridge Mall, 2401 S. Stem-mons Freeway in Lewisville.
No one can say the Metopol-itan Opera has a fear of innova-tion. Tony Award-winning di-rector Mayer puts in Polish ten-or Piotr Beczala as the Duke —an amoral lounge singer in this
Las Vegas version. Serbian baritone Zeljko Luc-
ic sings the title role of theDuke’s world-weary comedian,while German soprano DianaDamrau portrays the innocentGilda, Rigoletto’s daughter andthe object of desire for the lust-ing Duke. Slovakian bass StefanKocan sings the role of Sparafu-
cile, Belarusian mezzo-sopranoOksana Volkova makes her Metdebut as Maddalena. The pro-duction is conducted by MicheleMariotti.
The screening is part of “TheMet: Live in HD” series, whichbrings encore broadcasts of per-formances to multiplexes.
— Lucinda Breeding
Metropolitan Opera
Piotr Beczala as the Duke and Emalie Savoy as Countess Ceprano are shown in Verdi’s “Rigoletto” at New York’s Metropolitan
Opera. The production, directed by Michael Mayer, puts the action in Las Vegas.
Verdi at the Copacabana‘Rigoletto’ gets SinCity treatment inMet’s production
THEATERS
Cinemark Denton 2825 Wind River
Lane off I-35E. 940-535-2654. www.
cinemark.com.
Movie Tavern 916 W. University
Drive. 940-566-FILM (3456).
www.movietavern.com.
Carmike Hickory Creek 16 8380
S. I-35E, Hickory Creek. 940-321-
2788. www.carmike.com.
Silver Cinemas Inside Golden
Triangle Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-
1957. www.silvercinemasinc.com.
OPENING FRIDAY
Edge of Tomorrow (★★★ 1⁄2)
Military marketer Maj. William Cage
(Tom Cruise) is thrown into battle
against extraterrestrials by an unsym-
pathetic general (the excellent Bren-
dan Gleeson), and then finds himself
stuck in a mysterious time loop.
Cruise dies dozens of times over and
over, often in comical ways. Dying
again and again, Cruise has rarely
been so likable. This is Groundhog
Day with guns. Whereas Bill Murray
got to learn how to play the piano and
fall in love, Cage must become a
better killer. Edge of Tomorrow
entertains in its narrative playfulness
— another entry in the burgeoning
fad of puzzle-making sci-fi, as seen in
Inception and Looper. Directed by
Doug Liman (Swingers, The Bourne
Identity), who has a knack for smart
plotting. Based on the 2004 Japanese
novella All You Need Is Kill. With Bill
Paxton and Emily Blunt. Rated R, 119
minutes. — The Associated Press
The Fault in Our Stars (★★ 1⁄2)
Shailene Woodley, who can do no
acting wrong, brings a welcome
reality to The Fault in Our Stars, a
perfectly serviceable teen date
picture that teenage girls will have to
bribe teenage boys to sit through.
Sweet, cute to the point of cutesy, it’s
a weeper about doomed teenagers
(Woodley and Ansel Elgort, who
played her brother in Divergent) who
meet in a cancer patients support
group and dare to fall in love. With
Laura Dern and Willem Dafoe. Direct-
ed by Josh Boone, based the John
Green novel. Rated PG-13, 125 min-
utes. — McClatchy-Tribune News
Service
Night Moves (★★ 1⁄2) Uncharacter-
istically taut suspense-thriller from
director Kelly Reichardt. Two young
environmental activists (Jesse Eisen-
berg and Dakota Fanning) in the
Northwest team up with a veteran
(Peter Sarsgaard) to blow up a dam.
Of course, unintended consequences
complicate the aftermath. The able
cast helps disguise the film’s superfi-
ciality and lack of penetrating psycho-
logical insight. Rated R, 112 minutes.
At the Angelika Dallas and Plano. —
Boo Allen
NOW PLAYING
The Amazing Spider-Man 2
(★★★ ) Andrew Garfield returns as
Peter Parker and his alter ego, Spider-
Man. This time, he addresses his
issues with his father (Campbell
Scott), learning things about him
while dealing with an estranged
girlfriend (Emma Stone) and two new
villains, Electro (Jamie Foxx) and the
Green Goblin (Dane DeHaan). Marc
Webb returns as director and delivers
the action with help from a hard-
working special-effects team. Rated
PG-13, 142 minutes. — B.A.
Blended (★ 1⁄2) These days, Adam
Sandler is a bottle of beer that’s lost
all its bubbles. Drew Barrymore, in her
third pairing with Sandler, still brings
energy and conviction to her perfor-
mance. Terry Crews steals the movie
as an MC and singer at the Sun City
resort where Jim (Sandler), the sad
sporting goods salesman, and Lauren
(Barrymore), the professional closet
organizer, and their five kids end up in
an absurdly contrived joint vacation.
Rated PG-13, 119 minutes. — MCT
Captain America: The Winter
Soldier (★★★ ) Chris Evans returns
as Steve Rogers, who becomes
Captain America, Marvel Comics
superhero. He again joins Natasha,
the Black Widow (Scarlett Johans-
son), to fight against another evil
entity of corrupt government officials
and corporate thugs who advocate
their huge flying warships. Director-
brothers Joe and Anthony Russo
provide plenty of quick-cutting action
scenes. With Robert Redford, Samuel
L. Jackson, Emily VanCamp, Anthony
Mackie and Hayley Atwell. Rated
PG-13, 136 minutes. — B.A.
Godzilla (★★ 1⁄2) Godzilla, that
tail-swinging menace from the deep,
is back with a pair of friends. What’s
particularly weird about this Godzilla
is that for long stretches, all it shows
is destruction. Brian Cranston plays a
scientist in Japan, working in a nucle-
ar plant, who notices something very
wrong on his computer. A stony-
faced Aaron Taylor-Johnson plays
Cranston’s son, a lieutenant, and
Elizabeth Olsen is his wife. Unfortu-
nately, director Gareth Edwards
concentrated too much on the action
to worry about the performances.
Rated PG-13, 123 minutes. — San
Francisco Chronicle
Maleficent (★★★ ) It takes talent to
walk around in a black leather-horned
cap and not look silly. Angelina Jolie
turns in a magnificent performance in
Maleficent as the (now we are told)
misunderstood villain of Sleeping
Beauty. Jolie rules this film with a
powerful acting grace accented by
director Robert Stromberg’s film style
that shifts from film noir to children’s
Continued on Page 8
8Denton
Time
06514
The sides are drawn, butno one wins in Wordsand Pictures, an uneven
lump of comedy, romance anda self-congratulatory celebra-tion of the arts.
One side makes a case forwords, while the other advo-cates pictures. Naturally, sucharguments can only result infrustration and argument.
Clive Owen and Juliette Bi-noche star as Jack Marcus andDina Delsanto. Marcus is anhonors English teacher andDelsanto is an honors artteacher at a preparatory highschool. She enters as a newteacher, one with a reputationfor hardness and discipline but
also for being a highly es-teemed artist herself. (Binocheherself created the artworkseen in the movie.)
He’s the smooth-talker whowelcomes her with barbs. Andof course, she shoots back withquips of her own, a sure-fireauguring of how all this willend. In between, they organizetheir classes into opposingsides of the war vs. pictures set-up.
Director Fred Schepisi,from a script by Gerald Di Pe-go, fleshes out Marcus’ backstory, making him a once-fa-mous poet who now retreats tohis car for lunch and a heavydose of vodka. Elsewhere, hemostly languishes home alone,alienated from everyone, in-cluding his grown son. Delsan-
to suffers from rheumatoid ar-thritis, making her life as wellas her work at the canvas ex-cruciatingly difficult. Marcuscan be seen hovering over hiscomputer, while she stoopspainfully over her canvases.
But no film could ever ren-der visually what goes on in themind to initiate these creativeprocesses. Schepisi tries, how-
ever, resulting in a successionof cliche-heavy scenes that addlittle to the character portraits.
The film’s initially vibrantwordplay eventually devolvesinto recriminations and super-ficial personal conflicts. Vari-ous subplots are thrown in,and they seem exactly that —thrown in. Teen romances riseand fall, Marcus may lose hisjob, and Delsanto struggleswith her future. It’s all overdra-matized in a seeming attemptto make everything more im-portant than it is.
The early, promising fire-works eventually just fizzle out,devolving into pedantic lec-tures that leave both sides cold,as should probably be expec-ted for a conflict no one canwin.
Roadside Attractions
Jack Marcus (Clive Owen) and Dina Delsanto (Juliette Binoche) are dueling teachers — and maybe something more — in
“Words and Pictures.”
Lose-lose situation‘Words and Pictures’ can’t reconcile artless characters
By Boo AllenFilm Critic
comedy without a flinch. There’s just
not enough fleshing out of the story
to support these elements. As is, the
film is fun but not memorable. Rated
PG, 97 minutes. — The Fresno Bee
Million Dollar Arm (★★★ 1⁄2)
There’s something about a baseball
movie that just invites corniness. And
so it is with Disney’s Million Dollar
Arm, yet somehow, this flaw doesn’t
feel like the biggest crime — espe-
cially when you have a high-quality
cast at work. Real-life sports agent JB
Bernstein (Mad Men’s Jon Hamm)
and his partner Ash (the always
entertaining Aasif Mandvi) bring two
young Indian men (Madhur Mittal and
Suraj Sharma) to America in hopes of
creating the next international base-
ball sensation. Rated PG, 124 minutes.
— AP
A Million Ways to Die in the
West (★ 1⁄2) Seth MacFarlane (Family
Guy, Ted) wants to be a movie star in
the worst way. A Million Ways to Die
in the West is result of this longing —
a long comedy with long waits be-
tween jokes and longer waits be-
tween those that work. He plays
Albert, a timid sheep rancher in 1882
Arizona whose clumsiness and
cowardice costs him his best girl
(Amanda Seyfried). His pals Edward
(Giovanni Ribisi) and Ruth (Sarah
Silverman) worry he’ll never get over
that — until Anna (Charlize Theron),
the moll of a desperado (Liam Nee-
son), ducks into town. Rated R, 116
minutes. — MCT
Neighbors (★★★ 1⁄2) Young parents
Mac (the reliably funny Seth Rogen)
and Kelly (Rose Byrne) are doing
pretty well in their new suburban
digs. Until Delta Psi moves in. Right
next door. At first, Mac and Kelly try
to make nice with the frat’s leader,
Teddy (Zac Efron), and end up party-
ing all night, just to show how cool
they are. But soon, the noise is too
much, and the war is on. Neighbors is
noisy, crude, profane, gross and
sometimes mean. Luckily, it’s also
extremely funny. Rated R, 96 minutes.
— AP
Rio 2 (★★★ 1⁄2) A vivid and delightful
animated spectacle, Rio 2 is chock-
full of colorful 3-D wonder and jubi-
lant musical numbers set against a
tale of family dynamics and environ-
mental dilemmas. Rare macaws Blu
(voiced by Jesse Eisenberg) and Jewel
(Anne Hathaway) and their three
lively kids head off to the Amazon
rainforest when they get wind that a
tribe of blue macaws may live there.
Rated G, 101 minutes. — AP
X-Men: Days of Future Past
(★★★ 1⁄2) In this latest episode of the
mutant clan’s saga, Logan (Hugh
Jackman) travels back to 1973 to stop
the plans of an evil scientist (Peter
Dinklage). Director Bryan Singer ably
juggles past and present, with his
team facing off against a new batch
of robotic warriors with the help of
the young Charles Xavier (James
McAvoy). The young work with the
old, integrating the special effects
along with the era’s bad hair and wide
lapels. Rated PG-13, 131 minutes. —
B.A.
MOVIESContinued from Page 7
Words and
Pictures
Rated PG-13, 111 minutes. Opens June 6 at Cinemark WestPlano and the Landmark Magnoliain Dallas.
9Denton
Time
06514
COVER STORY
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the third and finalstory in a series about “Merging Visions: A Col-laborative Exhibit in Art and Poetry.” For previ-ous stories, visit http://bit.ly/1oXqhxp and http://bit.ly/1hcdTH8.
Denton poet Cindy Wood Guthrie said she wasstruck by Denton artist Mindy Faubion’s piece“Two Pomegranates” during a lunch at the
Chestnut Street on the downtown Denton Square.“It was a huge painting,” Guthrie said. “It made me
remember the story behind the poem.”Guthrie and Wood are among a number of artists
and poets who joined poetry and art in the seventhannual “Merging Visions: A Collaborative Exhibit ofArt and Poetry.”
The exhibit brings members of Denton Poets As-sembly and the locally based Visual Arts Society of
North Texas together in a show that pairs the literaryand the visual.
Guthrie was inspired to write a poem based on areal-life experience.
“I had the story because it happened in 1957,” Guth-rie said. “When I was a kid, we lived for a bit in Fuller-ton, Calif. My dad was transferred out there for oneyear. We could see the fireworks from Disneylandfrom the back porch of that house. Life was a lot differ-ent back then. It was so slow and so sweet.”
The poem is a humorous recollection of a shortcutGuthrie took with her brother. They two were walkinghome from school and the route took them throughan orange grove.
On the day recalled in the poem, Guthrie and herbrother saw a pomegranate on the ground, then theyfound another. They tasted their first pomegranates.
“The pomegranates were like nothing you’d everhad,” Guthrie said. “I think we ate them and then
Courtesy photo
“Two Pome-
granates,” by
Denton artist
Mindy Fau-
bion, is part
of “Merging
Visions: A
Collaborative
Exhibit of Art
and Poetry.”
The exhibit
closes Friday
at the Pat-
terson-Apple-
ton Center
for the Visual
Arts.
Creation, great and smallArtist, writer find inspiration in natural worldBy Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor
See MERGING on 10
POMEGRANATES TWO BY TWO, ONE FOR ME, ONE FOR YOUDuring the spring of ’57
life appeared a lot like heaven,
in our suburb of L.A.,
where my big brother and I would play.
The way we would walk home from school,
which still applied the “Golden Rule,”
was through a fragrant orange grove
ever-so-quiet, where no one drove.
And one bright day when we walked right through,
we found a red pomegranate, then two.
Never having seen one before,
began to eat and wanted more.
Yet spied a small ride that went round and round,
we got right on and it did wound
our heads and tummies, so I turned green —
then woozy, which was unforeseen.
I’ve never eaten another one ...
learned my lesson from what I’d done.
In the spring of ’57,
life became not quite like heaven.
— Copyright 2013 Cindy Guthrie Wood.
All rights reserved.
10Denton
Time
06514
played on this ride, and it justmade me feel kind of queasy.”
Now in her 60s, Guthrie saidshe’s been writing poetry foryears.
“When I first started writingafter I graduated from highschool, the boy [who lived]across the street committed sui-cide, and I wondered, ‘How doyou deal with that?’”
She wrote the poem, titled itwith the neighbor boy’s nameand gave it to his parents.
Poetry became a spiritualdiscipline for her. Guthrie saidshe shares her Christian faiththrough her poetry, and througha clown ministry.
“I don’t have a whole lot ofuncertainty because I’m in theword of God. I’m sure there is aheaven and I’m sure I’m going togo,” Guthrie said. “I’ve got toshare, so I do that through mypoetry. And when I’m doingclowning, I have the words ‘Je-sus Loves You’ on the back of my
costumes.”Faubion’s art is a monotype
print, and the artist described aprocess that could be describedas meditative.
A monotype print is a singlepiece that, when in color, can callfor the artist to crank the paperthrough the printing press as
many times as the piece needsfor completion.
“There’s nothing digitalabout it,” Faubion said. “You inkthe board with, say, yellow inkand run the paper through therollers. Then you wipe that inkoff and put another color on itand run it through again. In theend, you have just one print.”
Faubion, 55, earned a degreein studio art with an emphasis inwatercolor painting from theUniversity of North Texas Col-lege of Visual Arts & Design. Shesaid when Guthrie called herand asked to pair up for “Merg-ing Visions,” she accepted.
“I thought it was a wonderfulidea,” Faubion said. “I liked theidea of the local poets and localartists working together.”
She said “Two Pomegran-ates” is part of a series she didduring a printmaking course atUNT.
“I’d just done a series on sea-shells, and I was looking for
something I could paint thatwould have a lot of variety,” shesaid. “I use macro images when Ipaint because I like the details,and with these images, you seethe details within the details,you know?”
Faubion began studyingfruits and vegetables because ofthe variety of shapes, sizes andtextures. She painted severalstill-life pieces depicting pome-granates.
“I was studying the color, inparticular,” Faubion said. “I wasreally exploring the red in con-trast to the black, and I thoughtthe oil-based ink was a good me-dium to explore that.”
Guthrie has something incommon with Faubio. She saidshe “dabbles” in watercolor.
“I’ve taken classes,” Guthriesaid. “When I paint, I look atwhat I’ve done, and I’m thinkingit needs some words with it.”
Both artist and painter saidthey’d take part in another
“Merging Visions.”“I think it was really fun,”
Faubion said.LUCINDA BREEDING can
be reached at 940-566-6877.
From Page 9
Merging
PEOPLE’S CHOICE
AWARD WINNERSVisitors to the exhibit wereinvited to vote on the piece theyliked best in the seventh annual“Merging Visions: A Collab-orative Exhibit of Art and Poet-ry.”Three pairings were selected:■ “Grandparents are ...” by poetLloyd “Sandy” Sanborn, withartist Lin Hampton’s paintingBlue Britches;■ “Peace Passing Understand-ing” by poet Lydia Alexander,with artist Tesa Morin’s paintingPrayer Flags: Portrait of Jackie
Gibbons; and■ “Come to Life” by poetChristina Smith, with artist TexaMorin’s painting sserd-dress.
MERGING VISIONSWhat: The Visual Arts Society ofTexas and the Denton Poets’Assembly present a collaborativeexhibit of art and poetry.When: The free exhibit runsthrough Friday. Gallery hours are1 to 5 p.m. Tuesday throughSunday.Where: Meadows Gallery at thePatterson-Appleton Center forthe Visual Arts, 400 E. HickorySt.On the Web: www.dentonarts.com, www.vastarts.org, www.dentonpoetsassembly.weebly.com
DINING
RESTAURANTS
AMERICAN 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.
$-$$. 940-243-7300. www.dustys
bar.com.
The Great American Grill at Hilton
Garden Inn, 3110 Colorado Blvd.
Dinner: Daily 5-10pm. 940-891-4700.
Hooligans 104 N. Locust St. 940-
442-6950. www.hooligansonline.com.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
The Loophole Square staple has
charming menu with cleverly named
items, like Misdemeanor and Felony
nachos. Decent range of burgers. 119
W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; food
served until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.
940-565-0770. www.loopholepub
.com.
Pourhouse Sports Grill Classy
sports bar and restaurant boasts
large TVs and a theater-style media
room and serves burgers, pizza,
salads and generous main courses.
Full bar. 3350 Unicorn Lake Blvd.
Sun-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-12. $-$$.
940-484-7455.
Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games on
big screens plus some pretty big
tastes, too. Now open for lunch. For
finger food, roll chicken chipotle and
battered jalapeno and onion strips are
standouts. Homestyle burgers; savory
Caesar salad with chicken. Full bar.
2000 W. University Drive. Daily
11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.
Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’t
Chicken” is what the eatery claims,
though the menu kindly includes it on
a sandwich and in a wing basket —
plus barbecue, burgers and hangout
appetizers (cheese fries, tamales, and
queso and chips). Beer. 113 Industrial
St. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-Sat 11-
midnight. $. 940-382-4227.
www.roosters-roadhouse.com.
RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 Dallas
Drive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.
II Charlies Bar & Grill 809 Sunset
St. 940-891-1100.
ASIANGobi Mongolian Grill and Asian
Diner 717 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-
387-6666.
Mr. Chopsticks This pan-Asian
eatery does a little Chinese, Japanese,
Thai and even Indian food. Offers a
plethora of tasty appetizers and
entrees. Many vegetarian dishes
(some with egg). Beer and wine. 1633
Scripture St. Mon-Sat 11-10, Sun
11:30-9. $-$$. 940-382-5437.
BAKERIESCandy Haven and Kolache Haven
301 N. I-35E. 940-565-1474, 940-565-
9700.
Crickles & Co. Breakfast, pastries,
desserts, coffee and tea. 2430 S.
I-35E, Suite 136. Mon-Fri 7am-6pm,
Sat 7am-3pm. 940-382-6500.
www.cricklesandco.com.
Davis Purity Bakery Denton’s
oldest bakery has sculpted but simple
and flavorful cakes, soft egg bread,
cookies and more. 520 S. Locust St.
Mon-Sat 5am-5:30pm. 940-387-6712.
NV Cupcakes Gourmet cupcakes
and other sweets. 4251 FM2181, Suite
216, Corinth. Tues-Sat 11am-6pm or
until sellout. 817-996-2852.
www.nvcupcakes.com.
Ravelin Bakery Gourmet bakery
offers fresh-baked bread, mouth-
watering sweets and a fine cup of
coffee. 416 S. Elm St. Tues-Sat
6:30am-5:30pm, Sun 8am-5:30pm.
940-382-8561.
Sugar Queen Cupcakes Denton
location: 2320 W. University Drive.
Mon-Sat 10-9, Sun noon-8pm. 940-
566-7900. Lake Dallas location: 211
Main St., Suite 100. Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat
9-4. 940-497-3386. www.sugar
queencupcakes.com.
BARBECUEClint’s BBQ Barbecue spot serves up
brisket, ribs, pulled pork, sausage,
chicken and breakfast too. 921 S. U.S.
Highway 377, Aubrey. Tues-Thurs
6am-8pm; Fri-Sat 6am-9pm; Sun
6am-3pm. 940-365-9338.
www.clintsbbq.com.
Gold Mine BBQ 222 W. Hickory St.,
Suite 102. 940-387-4999. www.tex-
asgoldminebbq.com.
Metzler’s Bar-B-Q Much more than
a barbecue joint, with wine and beer
shop, deli with German foods and
more. Smoked turkey is lean yet juicy;
generous doses of delightful barbe-
cue sauce. Tender, well-priced chick-
en-fried steak. Hot sausage sampler
has a secret weapon: spicy mustard.
Beer and wine. 628 Londonderry
Lane. Daily 10:30am-10pm. $. 940-
591-1652.
Old House BBQ 1007 Ave. C. 940-
383-3536.
The Smokehouse Denton barbecue
joint serves up surprisingly tender and
juicy beef, pork, chicken and catfish.
Good sauces, bulky sandwiches and
mashed potatoes near perfection.
Good pies and cobblers. Beer and
wine. 1123 Fort Worth Drive. Sun-
Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-
566-3073.
BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Bistro Gourmet sandwiches
and salads, breakfast items, coffee
and espresso. Beer and wine. 219 W.
Oak St. Daily 10am-midnight. $.
940-565-1638. www.dentonbanter-
.com.
Cachette Bistro 144 N. Old Town
Blvd., Suite 1, Argyle. Mon-Fri
7:30am-5pm, Sat 8am-3pm. 940-
464-3041. www.cachettebistro.com.
The Chestnut Tree Salads, sand-
wiches, soups and other lunch and
brunch options served in back of
small shop on the Square. Chicken
pot pie is stellar. Tasty quiche. Deca-
dent fudge lava cake and rich carrot
cake. Revolving dinner menu. 107 W.
Hickory St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat
9am-2:30pm; dinner Thurs-Sat
5:30-9pm. $-$$. 940-591-9475.
www.chestnuttearoom.com.
Sidewalk Bistro 2900 Wind River
Lane, Suite 132. Sun-Mon 7am-3pm,
Tues-Sat 7am-9pm. 940-591-1999.
www.sidewalk-bistro.com.
BRITISHThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub
Full bar. 101 W. Hickory St. Sun-Wed
11-10, Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.
940-566-5483.
BRUNCHCups and Crepes Eatery serves up
both traditional American and Europe-
an breakfasts and lunch. Get biscuits
and gravy or test a crepe filled with
rich hazelnut spread. Specialty cof-
fees. 309 Fry St. Tues-Sun 8am-3pm.
$. 940-387-1696.
Loco Cafe Casual breakfast/lunch
cafe that’s a sister restaurant to the
Greenhouse Restaurant across the
street. Signature plate is the Loco
Moco: stacked hash browns topped
with eggs, cheese, salsa or gravy with
a fresh biscuit. 603 N. Locust St.
Mon-Fri 6am-2pm; Sat-Sun 7am-3pm.
$-$$. 940-387-1413.
Royal’s Bagels & Deli 503 W.
University Drive. Daily 6:30am-2pm.
Continued on Page 11
11Denton
Time
06514
$. 940-808-1009. http://royals
bagels.com.
Seven Mile Cafe Breakfast, brunch
and lunch spot, including vegan
options. 311 W. Congress St. Daily
7am-3pm. 940-808-0200. www.
sevenmilecafe.com.
CHINESEBuffet King Dining spot serves more
than 200 items of Chinese cuisine,
Mongolian grill and sushi. 2251 S.
Loop 288. Mon-Thurs 11-9:30, Fri-Sat
11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$. 940-387-0888.
Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffet
guarantees no visit need taste like
another. Good selections include
cucumber salad, spring rolls, orange
chicken, crispy pan-fried noodles,
beef with asparagus, steamed mus-
sels. Beer and wine. 2317 W. Universi-
ty Drive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri 11-10, Sat
11:30-10, Sun 11:30-10. $. 940-382-
8797.
Golden China Small restaurant
boasts quick and friendly service. Nice
selections on buffet tables include
wonton and egg drop soups, teriyaki
chicken and hot pepper chicken. Beer
and wine. 717 I-35E, Suite 100. Daily
11-10. $. 940-566-5588.
COFFEE AND TEAAmitea 708 N. Locust St. Mon-Thurs
8am-8pm, Fri-Sat 8am-9pm. 940-
382-8898. www.amitea.org.
Big Mike’s Coffee Shop Fair-trade
coffee and smoothies near UNT. 1306
W. Hickory St. Open 24 hours daily. $.
940-383-7478.
Jupiter House Coffeehouse on the
Square offers espresso, coffee,
smoothies, shakes, teas and other
drinks, as well as pastries and snacks.
106 N. Locust St. Daily 6am-midnight.
$. 940-387-7100.
Kaleo Bubble Tea & Coffee 1400
S. Loop 288, Suite 108. Daily
7am-10pm. 940-387-4848. www.
cafekaleo.com.
Naranja Cafe Famous for its bubble
tea, this shop also serves teas, juices,
smoothies and coffee. 906 Ave. C.
Suite 100. $ 940-483-0800.
Seven Mile Coffee 529 Bolivar St.
Daily 7am-8pm. www.sevenmile
coffee.com
Zera Coffee Co. Features artisan
coffee and specialty coffee drinks and
light snacks. Free Wi-Fi. 420 E. Mc-
Kinney St., Suite 106. Mon-Sat 6am-
midnight. $. 940-239-8002.
ECLECTICBears Den Food Safari Dine with
two rescued bears at Sharkarosa
Wildlife Ranch’s restaurant, specializ-
ing in brick oven pizza. Full bar. 11670
Massey Road, Pilot Point. Tues-Fri
5-9pm, Sat 11am-10pm, Sun 11am-4pm.
$-$$. 940-686-5600. www.bears-
dentexas.com.
All About Mac This “macaroni and
cheese emporium” near UNT offers
more than two dozen flavors. 1206 W.
Hickory St. Sun-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat
11am-3am. 940-808-1003. www.all
aboutmacrestaurants.com.
FINE DININGThe Greenhouse Restaurant
Casual 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
dining available. 600 N. Locust St.
Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri 11-11, Sat 12-11, Sun
noon-9 (bar stays open later). $-$$.
940-484-1349. www.greenhouse
restaurantdenton.com.
Hannah’s Off the Square Exec-
utive chef Sheena Croft’s “upscale
comfort food” puts the focus on local,
seasonal ingredients. Steaks get
A-plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.
No checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Lunch:
Mon-Sat 11-3. Brunch: Sun
10:30am-3pm. Dinner: Sun-Mon
4:30-9; Tues-Thurs 4:30-10; Fri-Sat
4:30-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.
www.hannahsoffthesquare.com.
Queenie’s Steakhouse Chef Tim
Love’s steakhouse just off the down-
town Square. Live jazz nightly. Full
bar. 115 E. Hickory St. Lunch: Fri
11:30-2:30. Dinner: Wed-Thurs 4:30-
10pm, Fri-Sat 4:30-11pm, Sun brunch
10:30am-3pm. $$-$$$. 940-442-
6834. www.queeniessteakhouse.com.
The Wildwood Inn Elegant dining
room tucked away in a bed and
breakfast. Excellent food like hearty
soups, Angus rib-eye, meal-size
salads and daily specials. Beer and
wine. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.
Thurs-Sat 6-10pm. $$$. 940-243-
4919. www.denton-wildwoodinn.com.
FROZEN YOGURTYogurt Fusion 209 W. Hickory St.
940-597-6367. www.yofusion.com.
Yogurt Story 1800 S. Loop 288,
Suite 393. 940-898-0131. Second
location: 2700 W. University Drive,
Suite 1080. 940-484-5407. www.
yogurtstory.net.
GREEK/MEDITERRANEANCaesar Island Mediterranean
Food 7650 S. I-35E, Suite 112, Corinth.
940-269-4370.
Jasmine’s Mediterranean Grill
and Hookah Lounge 801 Sunset St.
Sun-Thurs 11am-1am, Fri-Sat
11am-2am. 940-898-1800. http://
jasminemedcafe.com.
Michael’s Kitchen Family-owned
restaurant offers a Greek/Lebanese
menu — hummus, gyros, dolmas and
kafta — plus American food, for all
three meals. Breakfast buffet week-
days. BYOB. 706 Fort Worth Drive.
Daily 5:30am-10pm. $. 940-382-3663.
www.michaelskitchengreek.com.
Yummy’s Greek Restaurant
Small eatery with wonderful food.
Tasty salads, hummus, falafel, dolmas
and kebabs. Good veggie plate and
gyros. Yummy cheesecake and
baklava. BYOB. 210 W. University
Drive. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10,
Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-383-2441.
HAMBURGERSBurger Time Machine 301 W.
University Drive. 940-384-1133.
Cool Beans Funky atmosphere in old
building. Menu offers foodstuffs that
go well with a cold beer — fried
things, nachos, hamburgers, etc.
Veggie burger too dependent on salt,
but good fries are crispy with skin still
attached. Full bar. 1210 W. Hickory St.
Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-7025.
Denton County Independent
Hamburger Co. Custom-built
burgers with a juicy, generous patty,
fresh fixings on a worthy bun. Also
available: chicken sandwich and
limited salad bar. Beer. 715 Sunset St.
Mon-Sat 11-8. $. 940-382-3037.
Lone Star Attitude Burger Co.
Gourmet burgers, sandwiches, salads
and more in a joint that doubles as a
shrine to Texas music and has a
rooftop view of the Square. Full bar.
113 W. Hickory St. Mon-Wed 11am-
midnight, Thurs-Sat 11am-2am, Sun
11am-midnight. $-$$. 940-383-1022.
www.lsaburger.com.
Mr. Frosty Old-timey joint has all
your fast-food faves but with home-
made quality, including its own root
beer. Atmosphere and jukebox take
you back to the ’50s. 1002 Fort Worth
Drive. Tues-Sun 11am-11pm. $. 940-
387-5449.
RG Burgers & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,
Suite 172. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10.
940-383-2431.
HOME COOKINGBabe’s Chicken Dinner House
204 N. Fourth St., Sanger. Tues-Fri
4:30-9pm, Sat 11-9 and Sun 11-3. $-$$.
940-458-0000.
Bonnie’s Kitchen 6420 N. I-35.
940-383-1455.
Cartwright’s Ranch House Res-
taurant on the Square serves break-
fast, lunch and dinner, featuring
chicken-fried steak, hamburgers and
steaks. Family-style service available.
111 N. Elm St. 940-387-7706.
www.cartwrightsranchhouse.com.
Jay’s Cafe 110 W. Main St., Pilot
Point. 940-686-0158.
OldWest Cafe As winner of the Best
Breakfast and Best Homestyle Cook-
ing titles in Best of Denton 2009
through 2013, this eatery offers a
wide selection of homemade meals.
Denton location: 1020 Dallas Drive.
Mon-Sat 6am-2pm, Sun 7am-2pm. $.
940-382-8220. Sanger location: 711 N.
Fifth St. Daily 7am-2pm. 940-458-
7358. 817-442-9378.
Prairie House Restaurant Open
since 1989, this Texas eatery serves
up mesquite-grilled steaks, baby-back
ribs, buffalo burgers, chicken-fried
rib-eyes and other assorted dishes.
10001 U.S. Highway 380, Cross Roads.
Daily 7:30am-10pm. $-$$. 940-440-
9760. www.phtexas.com.
ICE CREAMBeth Marie’s Old-Fashioned Ice
Cream and Soda Fountain Parlor
with lots of yummy treats, including
more than 40 ice creams made on
premises. Soups and sandwiches at
lunch. 117 W. Hickory St. Mon-Wed
11-10pm; Thurs 11-10:30; Fri-Sat 11-11:15;
Sun noon-10pm. 940-384-1818.
Unicorn Lake location: 2900 Wind
River Lane. Mon-Wed 11-9; Thurs 11-10;
Fri-Sat 11-11; Sun noon-9pm. 940-591-
1010. www.bethmaries.com.
INDIANBawarchi Biryani Point 909 Ave.
C. 940-898-8889. www.bawarchi
biryanipoint.com.
Rasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housed
in a converted gas station, this dining
spot offers a small but carefully
prepared buffet menu of curries (both
meat and vegetarian), beans, basmati
rice and samosas. 1002 Ave. C. Daily
11am-9:30pm. $. 940-566-6125.
ITALIANAviano Italian Restaurant Tradi-
tional Italian fare, including lasagna,
pastas with meat and marinara
sauces. Lunch specials till 2 p.m. on
weekdays. BYOB. 5246 S. U.S. High-
way 377, Aubrey. Mon-Thurs
11am-9pm, Fri & Sat 11am-10pm. $.
940-365-2322.
Bagheri’s 1125 E. University Drive,
Suite A. 940-382-4442.
Don Camillo Garlic gets served
straight up at family-owned restau-
rant that freely adapts rustic Italian
dishes with plenty of American
imagination. Lasagna, chicken and
eggplant 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
bubbling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastas
and billowing garlic rolls. Dishes
served very fresh. Desserts don’t
disappoint. 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 Restaurant
Romantic 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. $-$$.
940-381-2712.
Luigi’s Pizza Italian Restaurant
Family-run spot does much more than
pizza, and how. Great New York-style
pies plus delicious southern Italian
dishes, from lunch specials to pricier
meals. Nifty kids’ menu. Tiramisu is
dynamite. Beer and wine. 2317 W.
University Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs
11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988.
JAPANESEHaru Sushi & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,
Suite 126. 940-383-3288.
I Love Sushi 917 Sunset St. Mon-
Thurs 11am-3pm & 5-10pm, Fri
11am-3pm & 5-10:30pm; Sat
noon-10:30pm; Sun 12:30-9pm. $$.
940-891-6060.
J Sushi 1400 S. Loop 288, Suite 100.
940-387-8833. jsushibar.com.
Keiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Nagano
turns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yellow-
tail and tuna into sashimi. Daily fish
specials and pasta dishes served with
an Asian flair. Homemade tiramisu
and fruit sorbets. Reservations rec-
ommended. Wine and beer. 500 N.
Elm St. Tues-Sat 5-11. $$-$$$. 940-
382-7505.
Shogun Steakhouse & Sushi Bar
3606 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-382-
7800.
Sushi Cafe 1401 W. Oak St. 940-
380-1030.
KOREANCzen 408 North Texas Blvd. 940-
383-2387.
MEXICAN/TEX-MEXCasa Galaviz Comfortable, homey
atmosphere at small, diner-style
restaurant that caters to the morning
and noon crowd. Known for home-
made flour tortillas and authentic
Mexican dishes from barbacoa to
menudo. BYOB. 508 S. Elm St. Mon-
Fri 7-7; Sat-Sun 7-5. $. 940-387-2675.
Chilitos Delicious guacamole; albon-
digas soup rich with chunky vegeta-
bles and big, tender meatballs. Stand-
out: savory pork carnitas. Attentive,
friendly staff. Menudo on weekends,
breakfast anytime. Daily lunch spe-
cials. Full bar. 621 S. Lake Dallas Drive,
Lake Dallas. Mon-Fri 11-9, Sat 10-9.
$-$$. 940-321-5522.
El Chaparral Grille Restaurant
serves a duo of American and Mex-
ican-style dishes for breakfast, lunch
and catering events. Daily specials,
and breakfast buffet on Sundays. 324
E. McKinney St., Suite 102. Mon-Fri
7am-2pm; Sun 8am-2pm. $. 940-243-
1313.
El Guapo’s Huge menu encompass-
es Tex-Mex and Mexican standards
as well as ribs, brisket and twists like
Santana’s Supernatural Quesadillas
(fajita chicken and bacon) and jalape-
DININGContinued from Page 10
Continued on Page 12
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 avail-
able at www.guidelive.com
Denton Time publishes
restaurant profiles and a guide of
restaurants 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@den-
tonrc.com, by phone to 940-566-
6860 or by fax to 940-566-6888.
To be considered for a profile,
send the restaurant name,ad-
dress, phone nuber, days 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 inner per
person, including appetizer,
entree and dessert.
$ Less than $10
$$ $10-$25
$$$ $25-$50
$$$$ More than $50
DINING PROFILEAND LISTINGS POLICY
12Denton
Time
06514
no-stuffed shrimp. Ilada Parilla Asada
steak with avocado was a little salty;
enchiladas are very good. Full bar. 419
S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat-Sun 11-11.
$$. 940-566-5575.
Fuzzy’s Taco Shop Eatery stakes
claim of wide variety in local taco
territory. Soft and crispy tacos avail-
able with shrimp, fish, chicken, garlic
shredded beef and veggies. Breakfast
burritos too. Beer, wine and margari-
tas. $. Multiple locations. Downtown
Denton: 115 Industrial St. Mon-Tues
6:30am-10pm, Wed 6:30am-11pm,
Thurs 6:30am-midnight, Fri-Sat
7am-2am, Sun 6:30am-10pm. 940-
380-8226. I-35E location: 2412 S.
I-35E, 940-488-4779.
La Estrella Mini Market 602 E.
McKinney St. 940-566-3405.
La Mexicana Strictly authentic
Mexican with enough Tex-Mex to
keep locals happy. Chili relleno is a
winner, with earthy beans and rice.
Chicken enchiladas are complex,
savory. Also available: more than a
dozen seafood dishes, and menudo
served daily. Swift service with plenty
of smiles. Beer. 619 S. Locust St. Daily
9-10. $. 940-483-8019.
La Milpa Mexican Restaurant820 S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-
8470.
Los Toreros 2900 Wind River Lane,
Suite 134. Sun-Thurs 11am-9:30pm;
Fri-Sat 11am-midnight. 940-390-7693.
Mazatlan Mexican RestaurantAuthentic Mexican dining includes
worthy chicken enchiladas and
flautas. Fine standard combo choices
and breakfast items with reasonable
prices. Quick service. Beer and wine.
1928 N. Ruddell St. Tues-Fri 11-9:30,
Sat 8am-9:30pm, Sun 8-4. $. 940-
566-1718.
Mi Casita Mexican Food Fresh,
tasty, no-frills Tex-Mex at good
prices. Tacos, fajitas, quesadillas,
chalupas and more plus daily specials
and breakfast offerings. Fast and
friendly service. Beer and wine. 110 N.
Carroll Blvd. Mon-Sat 7am-9pm. $.
940-891-1932. Mi Casita Express: 905
W. University Drive, 940-891-1938. Mi
Casita: 2221 S. I-35E, 940-891-1500.
Miguelito’s Mexican RestaurantThe basics: brisk service, family
atmosphere and essential selections
at a reasonable price. Beer and
margaritas. 1412 N. Stemmons St.,
Sanger. 940-458-0073.
Mi Ranchito Small, family-operated,
authentic Tex-Mex spot with $5.50
lunch specials Tues-Fri. Beer. 122 Fort
Worth Drive. Tues-Thurs 11am-3pm,
5-9:30pm; Fri-Sun 11-10. $. 940-381-
1167.
Raphael’s Restaurante Mex-icano Not your standard Tex-Mex —
worth the drive. Sampler appetizer
comes with crunchy chicken flautas,
fresh guacamole. Pechuga (grilled
chicken breast) in creme good to the
last bite, and beef fajitas are juicy and
flavorful. Full bar. 26615 U.S. 380 East,
Aubrey. Tues-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$.
940-440-9483.
Rusty Taco 210 E. Hickory St. 940-
483-8226. www.therustytaco.com.
Taco Lady 1101 E. McKinney St.
940-380-8188.
Taqueria El Picante 1305 Knight
St., Suite A. Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat-Sun 8-5.
940-382-2100.
Tortilleria Tierra Caliente 1607 E.
McKinney St., Suite 800. 940-591-
6807.
Tortilleria La Sabrocita 201 Dallas
Drive. 940-382-0720.
Veronica’s Cafe 803 E. McKinney
St. 940-565-9809.
Villa Grande Mexican Restau-rant 12000 U.S. 380 East, Cross
Roads. 940-365-1700. Denton loca-
tion: 2530 W. University Drive, 940-
382-6416.
MIDDLE EASTERNGreen Zatar Family-owned restau-
rant/market does it all from scratch,
and with speed. Meats like gyros and
succulent Sultani Kebab, plus veggie
combo and crunchy falafel. Superb
saffron rice and sauteed vegetables;
impressive baklava. BYOB. 609
Sunset St. Daily 11-10. $-$$. 940-383-
2051. www.greenzatar.com.
NATURAL/VEGETARIANThe Bowllery Rice, noodle and
veggie bowls featuring sauces and
dressings made from scratch, with
teriyaki and other meats as well as
vegan and gluten-free options. Fresh
juices and smoothies. 901 Ave. C,
Suite 101. Tues-Sun 11am-9pm. $-$$.
940-383-2695. http://thebowllery.
com.
Cupboard Natural Foods andCafe Cozy cafe inside food store
serves things the natural way. Win-
ning salads; also good soups, smooth-
ies and sandwiches, both with and
without meat. Wonderful breakfast
including tacos, quiche, muffins and
more. 200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat
8-8, Sun 10-7. $. 940-387-5386.
PIZZABosses Pizza 420 E. McKinney St.
Sun-Thurs 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat
11am-11pm. 940-382-8537. www.bos-
sespizza.com.
Crooked Crust 101 Ave. A. 940-565-
5999.
J&J’s Pizza Pizza lovers can stay in
touch with their inner-collegiate
selves through cold mugs of premium
draft. Bountiful, homemade pizza
pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dish Chica-
go style. Salads, hot and cold subs,
calzones, lasagna and spaghetti. Beer.
118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769. Mon-
Sat 11am-midnight. $-$$.
Last Drop Tavern Neopolitan-style
pizzas cooked in a wood-burning
oven. Food served Mon-Thurs
11am-11pm, Fri-Sat 11am-midnight, Sun
noon-11pm. 508 S. Elm St. 940-808-
1651. www.lastdroptavern.com.
Mellow Mushroom 217 E. Hickory
St. Sun-Wed 11am-10pm, Thurs-Sat
11am-midnight. 940-323-1100.
Palio’s Pizza Cafe 1716 S. Loop 288.
940-387-1900.
TJ’s Pizza Wings & Things 420 S.
Carroll Blvd., Suite 102. 940-383-
3333.
SANDWICHESO’Philly — A Cheesesteak CafeRestaurant specializing in Philadelphia
cheesesteaks, along with hot dogs,
wraps, sandwiches and melts. 2430
I-35E, Suite 164. Sun-Thurs 11-8,
Fri-Sat 11-9. 940-488-9219. http://
texasphilly.com.
New York Sub-Way 305 W. Uni-
versity Drive. 940-566-1823.
New York Sub Hub Bread baked
daily and fresh ingredients. “All
Stops” features almost every cold-cut
imaginable. $. 906 Ave. C. Mon-Sat
10-10, Sun 11-10. 940-383-3213. Other
locations: 1400 S. Loop 288, Suites
102-2, in Denton Crossing; Mon-Sun
10:30-10; 940-383-3233. 4271 FM2181,
No. 308, in Corinth; Mon-Sat 10:30-9,
Sun 11-7; 940-497-2530.
Weinberger’s Deli Chicago-style
sandwiches including the Italian beef
bistro, sausages, gyros, soups and
more. 311 E. Hickory St., Suite 110.
Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 10am-3pm.
940-566-5900. www.weinbergers
deli.com.
SEAFOODDani Rae’s Gulf Coast Kitchen2303 S. I-35E. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm,
Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. 940-898-1404.
Frilly’s Seafood Bayou KitchenPlenty of Cajun standards and Texas
fusion plates. Everything gets plenty
of spice — sometimes too much.
Sides like jalapeno cornbread, red
beans and rice are extra. Beer and
wine. 1925 Denison St. Sun-Thurs 11-9,
Fri-Sat 11-9:30. $$. 940-243-2126.
STEAKRanchman’s Cafe Legendary cafe
sticks to old-fashioned steaks and
tradition. Oversized steaks and
delicious chicken-fried steak. Homey
meringue pies. BYOB. 110 W. Bailey
St., Ponder. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat
11-10. $-$$$. 940-479-2221.
www.ranchman.com.
Trail Dust Steak House Informal
dress (neckties will be clipped).
Dance to live C&W. 26501 U.S. 380
East, Aubrey. $$. 940-365-4440.
www.trailduststeaks.net.
THAIAndaman Thai Restaurant Exten-
sive menu continues trend of good
Asian food in Denton. Fried tofu is a
home run. Pad Thai noodles have
perfect amount of sweetness. Home-
made coconut ice cream, sweet rice
with mango. Beer and wine. 221 E.
Hickory St. Mon-Fri 11am-3pm &
4-9:30pm; Sat-Sun noon-9:30pm. $$.
940-591-8790. www.andamanthai
restaurant.com.
Oriental Garden Restaurant Thai
stir-fried dishes, with some Japanese
and Chinese specialties. Homemade
ice cream: coconut, green tea, Thai
tea & lychee. 114 Ave. B. Mon-Sat 11-9.
$-$$. 940-387-3317.
Thai Square Restaurant 209 W.
Hickory St., Suite 104. Tues-Thurs
11am-3pm & 5-9:30pm; Fri 11am-3pm
& 5-10pm, Sat 11:30am-10pm, Sun
11:30am-9pm. $$. 940-380-0671.
www.thaisquaredenton.com.
Sweet Basil Thai Bistro 1800 S.
Loop 288, Suite 224. 940-484-6080.
Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tasty
as they are pretty. Lunch specials can
be made with chicken, pork, vegeta-
bles or beef; hot and spicy sauce
makes even veggie haters go after
fresh veggies with zeal. Quiet setting.
BYOB. 1509 Malone St. Mon-Fri
11am-3pm, 5-10pm; Sat 11:30-10; Sun
11:30-9. $-$$. 940-566-6018.
www.thaiochadenton.com.
VIETNAMESEViet Bites 702 S. Elm St. 940-808-
1717. Mon-Thurs 11-8:30; Fri-Sun 11-9.
www.vietbites.com.
DININGContinued from Page 11
LOCATION,LOCATION,LOCATION.
WHERE YOUADVERTISEMATTERS!
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realestateS H OW C A S E
13Denton
Time
06514
businessopportunites
203
You can always find
what you need in the Denton
Record-Chronicle Classifieds
1-800-275-1722
940-387-7755You can always find what you need in the
Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds
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and clean. Mileage 95410.$3500.00 940-206-6849
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.
$100 SIGN ON BONUSCommercial Landscaping
company seeking Gen Labor,Crew Leaders, Crew Drivers, andExperienced irrigation installers.
Call (940)648-3640 or emailcustomerservice@
texasenviro.com for details.
7650 S. I-35ECorinth, Texas 76210
940-312-7347
ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK
Now Hiring CWA Local 6171 Administrative Clerk Full-time
Position. Must have high schooldiploma/computer skills and oneyear experience in office clerical
work & QuickBooks.Job Description: Prepare, verify,
submit invoices Code, post&receipt payments, Prepare andcoordinate deposits. Perform allnecessary account, bank and
other reconciliations Perform filingand general administrative tasks.
Please send all resumes [email protected]
or call 940-482-7212 for more info.
ALLIANCE/ROANOKE AREAOVER 100 OPENINGS
Call Today Work Tomorrow!Cell Phone Distribution Center
General warehouse,flexible schedules,
general assembly/ shipping/receiving, forklift,
must have reliable transportation.CALL TODAY! 940-312-7347.
Attendant/CNA needed forHome Health Care Agency.
Immediate openings in Denton,McKinney & Lewisville. Must own
reliable vehicle with insurance.Competitve per visit rates. Pleasefax resume to 214-277-8899 or
Auto Sales Assistant neededFT Must have sales exp. & D.L.
Contact Brian940-382-7700.
BARTENDERS NEEDED!1st & 2nd Shift - 807 Eagle Dr.,
Must be TABC Certified.Apply in Person at
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BH Management is looking forMaintenance Techs for twoapartments. Apply online at
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Boat Mechanic needed inLake Ray Roberts area
940-231-4198
14Denton
Time
06514
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Denton Record-Chronicle
Classifieds.
1-800-275-1722
940-387-7755
Call Center looking to fill15-20 positions immediately.
Must be self motivated and like$$$!!! No experience
necessary.Hourly Guarantee. Paid Weekly
W/ daily & Weekly bonusesCall 940-323-2694 or stop by
721 South Interstate 35 E #144Denton, TX. 76205 to apply.
CARE GIVERS Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care
Phone answered -Tues-Sat. 8 am - 6:30 pm
Call 940-783-4240
Caregivers Needed!!!Lifespan now hiring in Denton!Call Madelin 214-231-0425 or
apply online @www.lifespantx.com
CDL-CLASS ADRIVER NEEDED!!
Local Delivery Truck DriverMust have a valid CDL-A
Must have experience driving an18 Wheeler
1st & 2nd ShiftsDenton Area
Call (940)442-6550
Paid Training for Class B CDL, Driving Rate$13.00+ Hr (after training), School Holidays Off,Paid Personal/Sick Leave, Teacher RetirementService, Child Ride Along Program...
• Times vary depending on Route Assignmentand Trip Availability
• Must pass pre-employment physical, drugscreen and criminal background check
• Possess acceptable driving record for driverpositions
Apply• online at www.dentonisd.org• call 940-369-0371 FB
Denton ISD HiresRoute Drivers, Extracurricular Trip Drivers & Monitors
• 22 years minimum age;
• 2 years verifiable driving experience or
1 year of oil field driving experience;
• Class A CDL;
• Employee and Family health insurance
• Night shift premium
• Night shift bonus
• 401(k) Match
• Quarterly Bonuses
• Drawings for Rangers, Cowboys, Stars,
Maverick games and other events
Transport Drivers Needed
Hiring For Justin, Bridgeport and Jacksboro
E4
Equal Opportunity Employer
Call Danny @ 940.393.5525
Certified Medical
Assistant for Back
Office for Local
physician practice.
Experience a plus
with EMR back-
ground. Fax re-
sumes to
940-381-0727
Concrete Finisher1 year experience concrete
finishing; wall finisher preferred; competitive wages.
May apply at 661 Shahan Prairie Road,
Little Elm Texas, or send resume to
Covington Credit has animmediate opening for aCUSTOMER SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE/CASHIER. Excellent starting salary +complete benefit package,
including retirement. M-F work.Contact Juliet at
316 East Oak, Suite B.
Customer Service/
Sales representativePosition in Sanger, Texas
Responsibilities include taking andentering orders into computer sys-tem, working with customers to re-
solve problems, answer productquestions, etc. Required skills forthe position include being depend-able, commitment to the job, pos-
sess a positive attitude, strongproblem solving skills, able to
handle high call volumes, musthave great telephone etiquette
and have strong office and com-puter skills.
· Hours are 8:00 to 5:00Monday thru Friday
· This is a full-time position
· Vacation time, paid holidaysand medical insurance
are offered
· Position starts at $14.00/hr.NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
Please send resume to: [email protected] or
fax to 940-458-7496
• 22 years minimum age;
• 2 years verifiable driving experience or
1 year of oil field driving experience;
• Class A CDL;
• Employee and Family health insurance
• Night shift premium
• Night shift bonus
• 401(k) Match
• Quarterly Bonuses
• Drawings for Rangers, Cowboys, Stars,
Maverick games and other events
Transport Drivers Needed
Hiring For Justin
FE
Equal Opportunity Employer
Call Danny @ 940.393.5525
Denton Chamber of CommerceJob Title: Membership Sales &Retention Specialist (Part-Time)Education & Required Skills:· Minimum of 2 years’ experience
in a professionalsales environment
· Minimum of Associates degreein business, marketing
or related field· Self-motivated with the ability to
meet or exceed monthlysales goals
· Ability to interact with professionals of various levels· Customer service orientation· Excellent verbal and written
communication skills
Submit resume to :[email protected].
For questions, call940-382-9693.
Denton County MHMRBehavioral Health Consultant
Clinic Assistant, Direct SupportRegistered Nurse, LVN ,
Program AssistantLicensed Professional
Counselor, Case Management,Community Support,
Direct Care, Crisis and more!Call 940-565-5287 or
Visit www.dentonmhmr.org
DIAMOND FOOD MARKET, INC.Taking Applications For
Assistant Store ManagerAUBREY, TEXAS
Email resume: [email protected] or fax to 817-444-0068
Drivers needed Class A CDL,with Tanker endorsement
preferred. Call Mon thru Fri8am-5pm only 940-736-0758.
Drivers
Truck Drivers
NeededCDL, Local Hauling, Home
Every Night, Vacation.* Mixer Drivers
* Dump Truck Drivers,paid by the hour,*Tractor Trailer
Drivers, paid percentage.Frank Bartel
7401 S. Hwy. 377Aubrey, TX 76227
ELECTRONIC REPAIRTECHNICIAN with the ability to
troubleshoot and repair digital andanalog controls to component
level without schematics. Mustpossess advanced soldering skills
with experience in both surfacemount and through-hole technolo-
gy. Must be willing to take onadditional tasks and work well with
others. Email resumes [email protected].
Entry LevelDISPATCHER/SCHEDULER
Established NationwideMedical Transportation CompanySince 1985 Located in Argyle, TX
"Paid Medical"Paid Vacation & Sick Leave
"Holiday Pay
Shift 8AM to 4:30PM M-FMust be available one Saturday
Morning/MonthOnce Trained
Please fax or email salaryhistory & resume
To: 940.241.1260 Orjobs@businessdelivery
systems.com
EW
RGAHOMECARE
A rapidly growing Home Health Care companyis currently seeking someone for a full time
Marketing Position:
If you would like to join the best team in Home Health and have at least 1 year salesexperience, please apply by faxing or emailing your resumé to the attention of:
Teresa Edgett, RN, COO940-683-6370 or 940-683-2973 (fax) • email: [email protected]
EOEFA
• Highly Competitive Pay Rates• 401(k) Plan (with employer
matching)• 8 Paid Holidays• PTO
• Company Car• Cell Phone Allowance• Comprehensive Health
Insurance Plan &Supplemental Insurance
Established Denton law firm islooking for a
Paralegal / Legal Assistant
Minor & Jester, P.C. is seeking aparalegal to assist the Owner and
Managing Partner of the firm.Qualified applicant must have
at least three (3) years of litigationexperience in a law firm. This willbe a very busy desk and qualifiedapplicants must display excel-lent time management, case
management and draftingskills. Proficiency in Word, Excel,and TimeSlips and a Bachelor’sDegree/Paralegal certificate are
preferred. Please send your resumes, references and salary
requirements to [email protected]
Experienced Painter
Must Have Valid ID
Call 817-235-7202
Experienced PLUMBER’S HELPER
Call 940-382-7464
EXPERIENCED RETAIL SALESNon-Smoker. Must work
Saturdays, some Sundays andEvenings. Send resume to:
Box #4 C/O Denton Publishing314 E Hickory St.Denton TX 76201
FORKLIFT DRIVERS NEEDED!!Immediate Openings
Great Compensation!!!1st, 2nd & 3rd Shifts
Denton, Gainesville, &Coppell Area
Call (940)442-6550
Front Office/
Receptionist
needed for local
physicians.
Experience a plus.
Fax Resume to
940-381-0727
Full-time and Part-timeHOUSEKEEPERS needed.
Must be able to work any shift.Please apply in person
at Denton Travel Center6420 N I-35 exit 471 ask for Allie.
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE!
Full tTime Maintence Supervi-sor needed for Mobile HomeSubdivision in Ponder/Justinarea. Must be experienced in
all phases. HVAC a plus. Applyat 5772 Tim Donald Rd Justin
Tx or call 940-648-5263
General Labor WantedMetal Working Experience
Apply 940-482-949411919 I-35 Sanger, TX 76266
HANDY PERSONas needed only for contractors.
Must have exp. in several areas.Must have internet access, cell
phone, clean record & vehicle, nocriminal history. 940-390-1285
Henkels & McCoy is seeking to fill a Data Entry/
Billing Clerk position.
The Principle responsibilities ofthis position would include:
- Various data entry functions-Other general office duties,
as requestedPreferred Skills/ Experience:
-Expert typing and 10-key skills-Computer knowledge, includingMS Outlook, Word, Excel and
Access-Excellent oral and written
communication skills-HS Diploma or equivalent
required.
Previous telecom constructionexperience a plus, but not
mandatory.
Please Send resume to [email protected] or fax to
(972)512-2957. H&M is an equal
opportunity employer.
HVAC-R LEADTECH/INSTALLER
Field exp. EPA universal, TXDL,facebook.com/myoasis for details
or call 940-594-7337
Immediate Openings!!Warehouse and Manufacturing
Call 940-442-6550 or visitwww.otstaffing. com
Inside Sales w/ Paid TrainingHigh Energy 8:30 - 3:45 M-F
No Exp. NecessaryCall TJ - 214-636-7427
Insurance Agency is lookingfor FT CUST. SERV. REP.
Must have excellent phone andcommunication skills. Experiencepreferred. Will pay for licensing for
the right candidate. Call940-382-9300 or email resumeto [email protected].
Insurance Agency PositionAvailable. Denton, TX
Established Independent Agencyseeking ExperiencedCommercial C.S.R,
Licensed preferred. M-F 8-5.Great Pay + Bonus & Benefits.Position available immediately.Please call 940-382-9691 or
send resume [email protected]
Little Guys Movers is now hiringresponsible individuals who
possess strong communicationskills, a positive attitude, and a
valid driver’s license. Backgroundchecks. Apply in person,520 S. Elm St, Denton.
Starts at $9.00/hr.
Looking for current driver with aCDL or CDL class B to drive a27 passenger mid bus field tripwith school age chidren. Must
pass background check, FBI fin-gerprinting, get pediatric cpr & first
aid. Age 18 & older HS Diplomaor GED. Be able to actively partic-
ipate and supervise a group ofchildren age 5 to 12. Hours varyso must be flexible and available
all day M-F. 940-484-8337
Maintenance Technicians
Reliant Worldwide Plastics inGainesville has an opening for aMaintenance Technician to workon 2nd or 3rd shift. Job responsi-bilities include planned and pre-ventative maintenance on plastic
injection molding machinery,maintaining work area in a clean
and safe manner, as well as otherduties as deemed by manage-ment. Competitive pay and full
benefits.
Requirements:* 2-3 years PLASTIC INJECTION
MOLDING EXPERIENCE* Maintenance experience a plusAbility to communicate in English
both verbally and in writing* Ability to be a team player
Benefits:"100% company paid employeeMedical, life, short and long-term
disability insurance, as well as op-tional dental and vision insurance"..........................401K with match"................ 10 PTO days per year
If interested, please email aresume to [email protected]. You may call 940-372-8202
with questions.
EOE M/W/Vet/Disability
Make $16-$18/hr, M-F,Cleaning Houses!
Own Transportation.Please Call 214-855-7189.
Medical practice looking for anExperienced EMR Scribe. Musthave great listening and memory
skills, multi tasking and keyboarding skills. Ophthalmology
knowledge a plus but medical ter-minology a must. CMA/COA pre-ferred. Salary based on experi-
ence. Hours are 4 1/2 days per wkPlease submit resume to
15Denton
Time
06514
job lists 340
antiques/collectibles
503
antiques/collectibles
503
You never know what you might find inthe Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds.
From a new car to a new hometo a new job, the Classifieds deliver!
Go to DentonRC.com/classifieds orcall 940-566-6836 for home delivery!
GET ITIN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
MEDICAL SECRETARY , full time, immediate, entry level,
mature, responsible, dependable,attention to detail.
Fax Resume 940-383-1499.
Must have background inExercise Physiology or
Personal Training .and excellentcomputer skills. Clinical Setting.Fax resume’ to 940-566-4841.
Need someone to load/unload &display produce & similiar goods,in outdoor market setting. Must lift
40 lbs, stand for long periods.Must be dependable/punctual.Must have good math, english
skills. Pays cash weekly.Bi-linglual a plus. 940-312-2630
NORTHSTAR BANKDenton: Bank Secrecy Act Officer
Flower Mound: P-T Teller 2:00-6:00
Pilot Point: P-T Teller 1:00-6:00Argyle: P-T Teller 12:00-6:00Grapevine: Commercial RE
LenderColleyville: Teller 9:00-6:00 &
P-T Teller 10:00-2:00Experience required, EEO.
Resume to [email protected] details go to:
www.nstarbank.com, “Careers”
Opportunities
Available!
APPLY ONLINE ATwww.highlandvillage.org
Human Resources1000 Highland Village RdHighland Village TX 75077
Phone: 972-899-5087EOE
Part Time Express Lube Techmust be experienced.Hourly + commission.
Pilot Point area. 940-686-5823
Part time Orthodontic DentalLab tech in Carrollton.
DENTAL LAB experience preferred. Call 469-323-4650
PLUMBER/ HELPERwanted for residential,
new construction & service.31 yr company. 972-740-4261
PLUMBERwanted for residential,
new construction & service.31 yr company. 972-740-4261
PT Cable, Phone &
internet Order Entry
Day shift available.
Bilinguals also. No
selling. Earn up to
$9.50/hr. Integrated
Alliance, 5800 N.
I35, Ste. 200B, Den-
ton, Tx. Application
hours start at 10am
SALESPERSON NeededEarn up to 60k a year.Bilingual is a big plus.
Send resume to [email protected] or fax 940-479-9002
Sales Professionals forLocal ROOFING Company
w/B.B.B Accreditations.Great Commission-50/50profit split. Draw against
signed contract.Sales Material,Uniforms &
Leads Available.Must have Experience.
Call 214.489.5053
Steel Fabrication company inWise County seeking
EXPERIENCED WELDING
SUPERVISOR . Must have expe-rience managing employees andreading welding prints. Must be acertified AWS welder, CWI is pre-ferred. Must be able to pass drug
screen and physical. Salaryrange is $20 to $24 an hour
depending onexperience.
Send resume to:resourceshuman123@
yahoo.com
Travel Centers of America @6420 N I-35 Denton, Tx exit 471is seeking Full Time GROUNDSMAINTENANCE PERSONNEL.
Please apply in person and askfor Allie. NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
Wanted:Residential PROPERTYINSURANCE UNDERWRITER &CSR Great phone skills a must!
Experience with agent networks a+ Competitivecomp&benefits.Flower Mound, TX Resumes:
Washington Federal Branch MgrDenton.Email resume to [email protected]
/lending/ supervisory exp. req.
ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.Consideration should be givenbefore making a financialcommittment. Please be awareof long distance charges, appli-cation fees, & credit card infoyou provide. Books/lists ofjobs do not guarantee employ-ment or that applicants will bequalified for jobs listed.
WANT TO BE AFIREFIGHTER?
in Less Than 6 Months?Texas Commission on
Fire Protection and EMT cert.V.A. approved. Enroll now for
classes! Write: Haz-Co, PO Box 3063, Sherman, TX75091 or call 903-564-3862
Alfalfa & Alfalfa/OrchardSmall & Large Square. Round
Bales & Bermuda Sm Sq.217-737-7737, Aubrey.
Pastures Fertilized,Weeds Sprayed, Aerating,
Plowing, Mowing. Tommy 940-482-6578
2 Malls - 1 LocationSummer Sales
THE ANTIQUE EXPERIENCE &
THE ANTIQUE GALLERY
5800 N I 35 - Stonehill CenterDenton Texas 76207
940.565.0688
VINTAGE MOVIE POSTERS &
COMICS RARE BACK ISSUE
COMICS
1940’s - 1990’sSuper Hero Posters & More
THE ANTIQUE EXPERIENCE
5800 N I 35 Suite 307Stonehill Center
Denton Tx 76207940.565.0688
Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed
Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators
3511 E. University Dr, Denton940-382-4333 We Buy
BUY SELL & REPAIR Working& Non-working appliances, some
brands. 377 APPLIANCE, 1010 Ft Worth Dr 940-382-8531
6 piece queen bedroom set.Adams Furniture Hand made likenew. Will accept reasonable offer.
940-206-1266
Denton Publishing will not know-ingly publish any ad for sale ofweapons that does not meet ourstandards of acceptance.
380 FLEA MARKETOpen every Sat. & Sun.
All metroplex buyers & sellerswelcome. Located 1 mile E. ofLoop 288 on Hwy. 380, in Denton.
(940) 391-6202
(940) 383-1064 (h) • (940) 390-5900 (c)FA
AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable
www.avenestatesales.com940-594-2878 or 940-483-8767
Corinth 3225 Mulholland RdSaturday Only 8am-12:30 pmClothes, furniture, refrigerator,
TV’s & misc.
Denton, 2200 Spencer RoadFri. June 6th 8am-6pm . Sat. 7th8am-2pm . Gigantic Yard Salefor Amazing Love Ministries.Pool table complete, Piano andbench, Computer desk, clothesdryer, baby bed, baby car seats,dining room chairs, tons of toysand stuffed animals, glass andkitchenware, records, books,
shoes and purses, VHS tapes,jewelry, Dish boxes, infant-boys-
girls-teens- adult clothing all sizes.Misc
COME CHECK THIS ONE OUT!
Denton, 2312 Lookout Ln, Fri. 6/6, & Sat 6/7, 8a-12pHousehold items, clothing,
nightstand and misc.
Denton, 2408 Crestwood Place Estate Sale by Caring
TransitionsThurs, Fri. and Sat. Starting at9am - Furn, - Gods Children
Coll., -Tools, - Art, - Appliances, -Toys, -Quilts
Denton 2911 Montecito RdOne Day Sale! Sat. Only 8-3
Yard Items-chairs & tables, 6 1/2shoes many not used, Misc.
Denton 608 Uland StThurs. Fri. & Sat. 8am-5pm
Small appl., bedding, christmasdecor, new & used clothes, shoes,purses, dishes, TV, jewelry, misc.
Sanger, 2102 Huling RdFriday June 6th Starting at noonSaturday June 7th starting at 7am
Estate Moving Sale Riding mower, freezer, Englishtea set and much more for sale.
PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised herein issubject to the Federal Fair Hous-ing Act, which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preference, limita-tion, or discrimination because ofrace, color, religion, sex, handi-cap, familial status, or nationalorigin, or intention to make anysuch preference, limitation, or dis-crimination." We will not knowing-ly accept advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of thelaw. All persons are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-tised are available on an equalopportunity basis
$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000*prices subject to change
Houses, Duplexes& Apartments
Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm
Saturday by Appt.940-243-RENT (7368)
“se habla espanol” www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR
DENTON, TX 76205
1/2 Block to UNT 302/306 Fry.Spacious1 Bedroom. Double
windows, double walls, storage$589/mo. $500/dep. Tenant payselectric. 940-367-3191 No Pets.
1 & 2 BR Shadowwood Apts 1 & 2 Bdrms Hickory. 1, 2, 3
Bdrms Lake Dallas 940-321-3231Open Mon-Wed-Fri 10am-3pm
Carriage House
Assisted Living
One Bedroom
Several Levels of
Care Available
Bring in Ad forSpecial Pricing
940-484-10661357 Bernard, Denton
FA
Going Quick!
16Denton
Time
06514
houses: unfurnished
630
houses w/acreage 730
mobile/manufactured homes
760
moving 1300
travel trailer/rv sales/rent
1446
" #!$"&!$#%' &$
2/51 &' /)) 7-%1! &. (1#4+/'3*!1
0+1' -&6 !+&% 7+1 ")/!!*,13!$
DR-C ClassifiedsDentonRC.comwww.DentonRC.com
1 Bedroom Efficiency.$635 . 1721 Panhandle St. in
Denton. No pets.Call 512-917-6419
2 bedrooom 1.5 bath, c/h/a,covered parking, no pets, 1 yr,lease. $500 dep/$650mo. plus
elec. 601 W. Oak 940-382-8488
3/2 $900 Large Enclosed Patios
Greenway Patio Townhomes2912 Augusta @ Greenway940-387-8741, 940-368-1814Largest Units in Denton!
ALL BILLS PAID. Very large 2bedroom/1 bath, near TWU at510 Texas $825mo. No pets. Floyd Realty 940-383-3887
** AMAZING COMMUNITIES **Spacious floor plans!
1/2 OFF DEPOSIT! Call 940-566-0033 525 S. Carroll Blvd,
#100, Denton Tx. 76201Reserve yours today!!
CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565
All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,
1 & 2 BR starting at $460 & up
CITYPLACENew Luxury Apts.210 E. Sycamore
Just off the square, downtown.Efficiencys, 1 bed, 2 bed.
Priced from $725 to $1350Warner Properties
940-383-1313
FREE CABLE & WATERLow elec. bills. 6/9/12 mo. lease.
2/1 $715/mo; 2/2 $740/mo1/1 $620-635. Walk to UNT. Call
our friendly staff at 940-382-3100.
FREE RENT! Remodeled 1, 2,& 3 BR. Hollyhills Apts 940-
382-6774. 900 Londonderry.OpenM-F 8:30a-5:30p, Sat 10a-2p
GRANDVIEW GARDENS$100 OFF 1Bdrm and $200 off 2
Bdrms for 1stFull MOnth Walk to TWU, enclosed patio,onsite laundry. 940-442-6919
JUSTIN 2 Bdrm 1 Bath Studio$610/mo $200 deposit,
$50 application fee, 1 yr leaseterm only. Call 940-382-3100
Near TWU- 2 bed 2 bath.Central heat and air.Built in appliances.$700 940-382-6707
Near TWU- 2 bed 2 bath.Central heat and air.Built in appliances.$700 940-382-6707
Near UNT 2 bed 1 bathC/H/A,Carpeted,Ceiling fans,
Built in appliances $825 all billspaid 940-382-6707
Near UNT 2 bed 1 bathC/H/A,Carpeted,Ceiling fans,
Built in appliances $825 all billspaid 940-382-6707
WALK TO UNT 1/1 Efficiencies- From $439/mo.328 Normal Denton, TX. Pleasecall for more info 512-917-6419.
$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000
Houses, Duplexes& Apartments
Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm
Saturday by Appt.940-243-RENT (7368)
“se habla espanol” www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR
DENTON, TX 76205
3/2/2 Wood burning fireplace.2708 North Bell, Denton.
$1195/Month $1195/Deposit940-391-0261
LOOKING TO RENT?Call Cami and setup a search today!!
(940)243-5478.
Southridge Estate, 2513 ShilohRoad, Denton. 3/2+office or fourth
bedroom. Nicely landscaped,great location to schools,
hospitals and I-35. 1800/mo+ deposit. Please call
940-206-4846 or 940-206-4894
0 Credit Check 2, 3 & 4 Bdrmhomes $550/mo to $1500/mo.
For Rent or Sale Owner financing on land/home
pkgs , 1/2 acre to 4 acres,Ponder ISD, kid/pet ok,
Call 940-648-5263www.ponderei.com
2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes - J & AMobile Home Park, Ponder.Starting@$570/mo. Also lots
for rent. 940-465-9022, lv msg.
LOTS from
$330-$365/Monthwith Carport and/or Shed
Up to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914
Close to Downtown Denton 2 LUXURY OFFICE SUITES
1,128 & 564 Sq. Ft Call 940-387-7467 for more info.
Denton, 1014 N. Elm Street1332 sq ft.
Whole Building for commericaloffice lease near downtown.Orginial wood floors- private
parking lot 940-387-8690
LAST ONE ! Come be a part ofDenton’s exciting new
downtown! 540 SF, walking dis-tance to A-Train, ample parking.
Eric 940-382-6611
Great Location--3737 Mingo Rdin Denton. Office / Warehouse ,
2511 sf . heavy power, largeoverhead door, 940-391-7696.
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.
Sunset 40 acres 2 story home,barn & shop. Good hunting$289,000. 18 acres rough &rugged $60,000. 10+ acres.power $50,000. Alvord
168 acres, heavily wooded $3500 per acre. Jim BoydSunset Realty 940-393-0421
1 ACRE LOTS FOR SALE ORLEASE FOR DOUBLE WIDES
in the Ponder/Justin area. Ponder ISD. Moving
Assistance Available to Qualified Home Owners.
Contact Jeff 940-648-5263
TOP CASH PRICES PAID FOR USEDMOBILE HOMES.Call 817-395-2990
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.State Law requires child care pro-viders to obtain permit from DFPS(Tx Dept of Family & ProtectiveSvcs) to provide child care outsideof a child’s home. Daycare provid-ers must comply with applicablestate & local licensing laws beforeplacing ad. Consumers & daycareproviders may learn more aboutlicensing, regulation & permits re- quired to operate child care in TXat http://www.dfps.state.tx.us /
DANIELSON
CONCRETEAll Types of Concrete &
Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives,Patios & Excavation.
Commercial & Residential FreeEstimates! Visa & Mastercard
Accepted. 940-391-3830.
FA
Jose’s Concrete Work--patios,sidewalks, barns, curbs, slabs,driveways, retaining walls, freeest. 469-487-4049, 940-536-4911
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
ADVANCE-FEE LOANS/CREDIT OFFERS
It’s illegal for companies doingbusiness by phone to promise youa loan & ask you to pay for it be-fore they deliver. For info., call
toll-free 1-877-FTC HELPPublic service msg from Denton
Publishing Co& Fed Trade Comm.
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Please be aware offirewood measurements:
Cord of firewood = 128 cu.ft.(8 ft long X 4 ft wide X 4 ft high)1/2 cord of firewood = 64 cu.ft.
AAA Firewood David EstesPecan, hickory, peach, mesquite,
oak campfire. 940-284-WOOD (9663)
Delivery Available
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
HOME REPAIR - HANDY MANInt/Ext Painting, Roof, Fences,
Tile, Ceiling Fans, General Maint.Free Estimates. 940-442-8380
Lite House Repair &Handyman Services
Inside & OutsideFree Estimate 940-395-0549
Mike’s Clean Up Services. Trash, brush & junk hauled off.Friendly & dependable service.
Call 940-453-2776
CELIA’S HOUSE CLEANINGQuality service you cancount on! Wk/biwkly/mo.
13 years exp. Refs avail. Ins &bonded. $15 off 1st service!
Superior Housekeeping Serv.940-594-8035 or 940-206-3889
Mint Cleaning
ServiceHouse Cleaning
940-453-0516
GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow,edge, weedeat, flower beds, trimbushes, sprinkler repair. FreeEstimate 15% Senior Discount
940-442-1440 or 940-442-1252
LA Lawn Care
LAWNS $25www.lalawncare.com
( website for more pricing info.)Mow, Edge, Weedeat, Blow
front back & sides.Clean ups, Leaf removal,
Shrub trimming, Weeds pulled,Fertilization. If you want to sign upwith a 6 mow minimum you get1 Free mowing--use it anytime
you want (new customers only) --Convenient Credit Card Billing--
FREE ESTIMATECall Lance 940-390-3286
Noel’s Lawn Service Weekly & Biweekly Service.
Spring, Fall cleanup and more.Call or text Daniel 940-594-8646
or Noe 940-735-4879
LONGHORN LAWN CARESERVICES.
Charles Rohrer 940-284-2851.
Affordable MowingMowing in Denton Co. since 1998
Call Dwight 940-435-9975
Need help moving? Available todrive, load or unload your cargo.Local/long distance.Make ready
painting, touch ups. 940-230-9400
All American Painting &Remodeling Int. Ext., Stain, Faux
Patch & Repairs. 17+ yrs Exp.Free Estimates. 940-442-4545.
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
RV & BOAT STORAGE940-584-0080Great Prices!
PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/
pics/slides/negs/videos/records-discs 940-231-5889
Ameripride Roofing &Construction
Roofing, Siding, Windows,Gutters, Painting, Drywall, Metal
Roofs, Decra, Skylights.
A+ BBB RatingMember of North Texas Roofing
Contractors Association
Free Estimates
940-231-5249
Patrick’s RoofingA+ BBB rating, over 20 yrs exp.
Local company.Owner supervised jobs.
Residential specialists. Refsavailable. No $ down.
Save deductible. Outstandingprices. 5 year no leak guar.
Free estimates.
817-528-2991See our website at
www.Patricksroofing.com