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Weekly entertainment magazine of the Denton Record-Chronicle.
Citation preview
2Denton
Time
02614
ON THE COVER
JESSIE FRYEDenton artist Jessie Frye
reflects on life, death and
growing up in her debut full-
length release, Obsidian.
She’s pictured during her 35
Denton performance in 2012
at Banter.
(Dallas Morning News file
photo/Gary Barber)
Story on Page 9
FIND IT INSIDE
MUSICConcerts and nightclub
schedules. Page 6
MOVIESReviews and summaries.
Page 8
DININGRestaurant listings. Page 11
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
It’s that time again.
Tomorrow marks the firstFriday of February, and in
Denton, that means it’s time forthe monthly arts promenade inand around downtown Denton.
The unofficial headquartersfor the First Friday Denton artsmixer, A Creative Art Studio, hasits reliable party on tap. JewelerTerri Richard and steampunkjeweler Deborah Waldrop willhave their creations on exhibitand for sale. Both will be onhand to talk about their workand to do some demonstrating.The feature art of the night is thework of metalsmith and sculp-tor Daren Fagen.
Singer-songwriter DanielZiegler will start off the enter-tainment at the studio at 7 p.m.
The New Rainbows, a classicalduo with Alyse Hashi on fluteand homegrown prodigy RobertHokamp on guitar, take over themusic at 8 p.m.
Artist Bailey Parris, the stu-dio’s “dollar a minute” sketch art-ist, will be on hand to draw por-traits. (The average portrait takes20 minutes for Parrish to com-plete.) As usual, the studio willhave a community art projectopen to all who visit. The projectwill be inspired by steampunkthemes using wood and metal.
All who visit the studio, at227 W. Oak St., are invited todress in steampunk costumes.The winner gets a $20 gift certif-icate from the studio.
SCRAP Denton will have itsdoors open for the mixer, too.
The local storefront repurposesdonated office supplies, craftingand art materials, houses a gal-lery and offers both boutique andcommunity instructional spaces.
SCRAP — short for Schooland Community Reuse ActionProject — will open “Art of thePage” during First Friday. TheRe:Vision Gallery, a space ded-icated to art made with mostlyreused material, will exhibit “up-cycled dictionary art prints” byDallas artist ChristopherBrown. The artist uses dictio-nary pages as the backdrop forhis prints. Brown adds imagesand messages to the pages, andtogether, word and image createa new intent and meaning.
The shop will also featurecraft vendor Cherry + Kandy,
whose owners incorporatefound and discarded materialsinto new products. SCRAP Den-ton is located at 215 W. Oak St.
The mixer continues with theDIME Store, the merchandisingspot for Denton IndependentMakers Exchange. Locals canshop among an array of hand-crafted clothes, bath goods, fur-niture and accessories. Thebrick-and-mortar shop is at 510S. Locust St.
Other downtown partici-pants include Circa 77, UNT onthe Square and Mulberry StreetCantina. Banter Bistro will pre-sent an evening of music forFirst Friday.
For more information, visithttp://firstfridaydenton.com.
— Lucinda Breeding
IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK
Courtesy photo/Deborah Waldrop
LEFT: Steampunk jeweler Deborah Wal-
drop specializes in eye-grabbing pieces
that hearken to an imaginary time — or
dimension — where the wild West meets
the Industrial Revolution. Waldrop makes
imaginative use of metals, suggesting the
stuff of clockworks and time machines.
Courtesy photo/Daren Fagen
ABOVE: Need a hand to point you in the
right direction? Check out this cheeky
anatomical sculpture by artist Daren Fagen
at A Creative Art Studio.
Friday night brights Time to bundle upfor arts mixer
3Denton
Time
02614
THURSDAY
8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —
Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-
aration help for residents with low to
moderate incomes, at the Denton
Civic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call
940-349-8728.
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.
10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Time
at South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Stories, songs, puppets and
more for children ages 1-5 and their
caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
3:30 p.m. — Superhero Ad-
venture Club, stories and a craft for
ages 5-8, at South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane. Free. Call 940-
349-8752.
4 p.m. — Question-and-answer
session with poet Brigit Pegeen
Kelly in Room 230 at UNT’s Sage Hall,
1167 Union Circle. Free. Presented by
the UNT Visiting Writer Series. Visit
http://english.unt.edu.
4:30 p.m. — Afternoon Ad-
venture Club, stories and a craft for
ages 5-8, at Emily Fowler Central
Library, 502 Oakland St. Free. Call
940-349-8752.
4:30 p.m. — “The Republic of
the Rio Grande: A Historical Or-
phan,” a free lecture by author Beatriz
de la Garza, in Room 80 at UNT’s
Business Leadership Building, 1307 W.
Highland St.
7 p.m. — Death and Dessert
Mystery Book Club at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. This
month’s theme is “Love Me Not:
Romantic Mysteries.” Free. E-mail
7 p.m. — Jeff Skiles, co-pilot of
U.S. Airways Flight 1549 of “Miracle
on the Hudson” fame, speaks at
Denton’s U.S. Aviation Services, 4850
Spartan Drive. Free; reservations are
requested by calling 940-297-6446.
7 p.m. — “Fossil Bob,” a.k.a. Bob
Williams, visits the Sanger Public
Library, 501 Bolivar St. Williams, an
amateur paleontologist, will speak
about the types of fossils found in the
Sanger area and display examples.
EVENTS
Continued on Page 4
Juror Judy Gordon fell inlove with American Craftalmost by accident — even
though two of her siblings areartists.
“A friend of mine from theEvanston [Ill.] Hospital Auxilia-ry, of all things, asked me to co-chair a craft show the auxiliaryhosted as a fundraiser,” said Gor-don, an Austin transplant whoselected the Greater DentonArts Council’s flagship show, the27th annual “Materials: Hard &Soft.”
“I said, ‘What do you mean,craft?’ I thought she meant mac-rame plant holders and thatkind of thing.”
Gordon remembers declin-ing the offer, but asked to learnmore in preparation to serve asco-chairwoman of the next craftexhibit. She accompanied thefriend to the American CraftCouncil Baltimore Show.
“I walked in and hadn’t gonevery far before I stopped andsaid, ‘I’ll do it. Sign me up.’ I wason board from that moment,”Gordon said.
What she saw in Baltimorehad nothing to do with paintedT-shirts, simple wooden toys or
products made with a wish anda hot glue gun. She saw art.
“Within the first five steps, Iknew I was seeing somethingdifferent,” Gordon said. “I’d beenin convention centers before,but we’re not talking about ta-bles and tents. The artists builttheir own walls, or rented theirown walls. They mounted theirwork like they were in a tiny gal-lery.”
She was drawn to the ceram-ic plates and cups.
“It was something I’d seenbefore, of course, but never inone place, with the artist stand-ing right there, waiting to talk toyou about how they make theseworks of art,” she said.
That was about 30 years ago,and Gordon was eventually in-vited to join the board of theAmerican Craft Council sevenyears after that. Now, she is onthe board of the Craft Emergen-
cy Relief Fund, which offersemergency grants and loans toartists whose livelihoods arethreatened by an emergency,
such as a studio fire, vandalismor health crisis.
As the sole juror of “Materi-als: Hard & Soft,” Gordon had to
select from 550 submissions.She eventually picked 70 pieces,and a few artists dropped, leav-ing the Meadows Gallery stillbrimming with pottery, fiber art,glass, furniture, jewelry andwood.
Like the jurors before her,Gordon looked for artists whoplayfully or elegantly made typ-ically hard items soft — for in-stance, a vessel made with tight-ly coiled threads — or used hardmedia to create an object thatlooks soft — such as what lookslike a rumpled leather shammycloth made out of sculptedwood.
“Being the only juror is a littleexhilarating, and a little scary,”Gordon said. “I went througheach media, considered thestrength of the submissions andhow good the pieces were. Ilooked at the skill and techniqueof the pieces rather than thescale.”
Gordon picked an exhibitthat highlights the fun craft art-ists are having with fiber and pa-per. There are a number of artistbooks — one staged as an instal-lation, others as objects that looklike they’d unfold in your hands.This year, far fewer glass artistssubmitted work, but the quiltershave gone gangbusters.
And at least one fiber artisthas brought felt back in a no-holds-barred way, suspendingthree life-size pies from the gal-lery ceiling. There’s a touchablecherry-style pie, with felt latticestrips of pie crust curling aroundthe pan. There’s a cloud-lightmeringue, tasty tufts of sugarytopping begging your tongue totaste it. Finally, there’s an applepie, capped with a crust that,though as pale as the other two,has to be buttery.
The exhibit opens Friday andruns through April 4 in theMeadows Gallery at the Centerfor the Visual Arts, 400 E. Hick-ory St. Gallery hours are 1 to 5p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.Admission is free.
Piesin the
sky
Photos by Lucinda Breeding/DRC
Houston artist Delaney Smith created “Knebix,” a 2013 work made of cast repurposed paper.
The installation of artist books is part of the Greater Denton Arts Council’s flagship show,
“Materials: Hard & Soft,” a contemporary American Craft competition and exhibition.
California
artist Carmen
A. Tostado
made her
“Miro Paint-
ing Tunnel
Book” out of
Japanese
cloth, bass-
wood and
printed co-
verstock. The
piece is one
of several
artist books
in “Materials:
Hard & Soft,”
at the Center
for the Visual
Arts in Den-
ton.
Fanciful, elegantpieces in exhibit
of American CraftBy Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor
4Denton
Time
02614
Free. For reservations, call 940-458-
3257 or e-mail library@sangertexas.
org.
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.
8 p.m. — Former Army Lt. Dan
Choi, an Iraq war veteran turned gay
rights activist, speaks at the UNT
Gateway Center, 801 North Texas
Blvd. between Eagle Drive and High-
land Street. Part of the Distinguished
Lecture Series. Tickets cost $10 for
the general public, $8 for UNT faculty,
staff and alumni, and free for UNT
students. Visit http://untuniontickets.
universitytickets.com.
8 p.m. — Reading and book
signing with poet Brigit Pegeen Kelly
Room 180 in the Business Leadership
Building, 1307 W. Highland St. Free.
Presented by the UNT Visiting Writer
Series. Visit http://english.unt.edu.
8 p.m. — UNT One O’clock Lab
Band performs with guest artist Billy
Harper, tenor saxophone, and the
Cookers, in Winspear Hall at the
Murchison Performing Arts Center, on
the north side of I-35E at North Texas
Boulevard. Tickets cost $10-$15. Call
940-369-7802 or visit www.the
mpac.com.
8 p.m. — “Dance Dance Dance,”
UNT’s annual faculty dance concert
with students, alumni and dance
educator Elizabeth Rhodes, at the
University Theatre, in the Radio, TV,
Film and Performing Arts Building, at
Welch and Chestnut streets. Tickets
cost $10 for adults, $7.50 for seniors
and UNT faculty, staff and students.
Call 940-565-2428 or visit www.
danceandtheatre.unt.edu.
FRIDAY
9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time
at North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. Stories and activities for
infants (birth to 18 months) and their
caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
11 a.m. — Story Time at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Stories, songs, puppets and more for
children ages 1-5 and their caregivers.
Free. Call 940-349-8752.
4 to 5 p.m. — Valentine cards
workshop for children ages 8 and
older, at Emily Fowler Central Library,
502 Oakland St. Free. To register, call
940-349-8752.
4 to 5 p.m. — “Science Hour,”
hands-on science learning for ages
4-10 at North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. Presented by the Texas
Academy of Mathematics and Sci-
ence at UNT. Free. Call 940-349-8752
or visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
7 to 9 p.m. — My Little Valen-
tine Dance, an event for families
with children 12 and younger, at the
Denton Civic Center, 321 E. McKinney
St. Event includes a photo booth,
flowers and a live DJ. Advance tickets
cost $5 each, available at the Civic
Center. At the door, tickets will cost
$7. Visit www.dentonparks.com.
7 to 10 p.m. — First Friday Den-
ton at art venues around the down-
town Square. Free gallery viewings,
live music, art projects and demon-
strations at venues including UNT on
the Square, 109 N. Elm St., SCRAP
Denton, 215 W. Oak St., and A Cre-
ative Art Studio, 227 W. Oak St. Visit
www.firstfridaydenton.com.
8 p.m. — “Dance Dance Dance,”
UNT’s annual faculty dance concert
with students, alumni and dance
educator Elizabeth Rhodes, at the
University Theatre, in the Radio, TV,
Film and Performing Arts Building, at
Welch and Chestnut streets. Tickets
cost $10 for adults, $7.50 for seniors
and UNT faculty, staff and students.
Call 940-565-2428 or visit www.
danceandtheatre.unt.edu.
SATURDAY
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. — Monsignor
King Health and Wellness Pro-
motion Day at Immaculate Concep-
tion Catholic Church, 2255 N. Bonnie
Brae St. Event includes blood pres-
sure screenings, free cholesterol, blue
glucose and triglycerides testing, and
health and wellness information. Visit
www.iccdenton.org.
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Volunteer
Income Tax Assistance for low-to-
moderate-income families at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St. To
qualify, a household’s annual income
must be $50,000 or less. Free. Call
940-566-2688.
10 a.m. — Story Time at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
Stories, songs, puppets and more for
children ages 1-5 and their caregivers.
Free. Call 940-349-8752.
11 a.m. to noon — Read to Rover
at South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Free. Children ages 6-11 strug-
gling with reading can read one-on-
one with a trained therapy dog from
Therapy Pals of Golden Triangle.
Parents or guardians must register
their children in person and sign a
permission slip. Call 940-349-8752.
1 to 3 p.m. — Voter registration
event at Golden Triangle Mall, 2201 S.
I-35E. Register to vote, or update your
name or address information.
3 to 4 p.m. — “Sweet Science”
for ages 6-10 at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Explore the prop-
erties of different kinds of candy
through hands-on science experi-
ments. Free. To register, call 940-
349-8752.
6:30 to 10:30 p.m. — “A Heart
for the Hungry,” dinner, dance and
silent auction benefiting Our Daily
Bread soup kitchen, at UNT’s Gate-
way Center, 801 North Texas Blvd.
Tickets cost $50 each. For tickets and
more information, visit www.our
EVENTSContinued from Page 3
Continued on Page 5
The three Virginia broth-ers of Pontiak just re-leased the band’s ninth
album, Innocence, last week.Like any hardworking
band, the Carney brothers hitthe road the day after to takethe album on tour. Theirschedule includes a stop inDenton on Friday at RubberGloves Rehearsal Studios.
Guitarist Van Carney saidwhen it comes to nuances,Pontiak discovers them in per-formance, when an audience isthere to listen.
“We’ve done a lot of weirderstuff on our previous records,”Carney said. “With this one, wewanted to make a direct re-cord. We wanted to tighten itup and get the music recordedwithout a lot of changes.”
Innocence does have afreshness to it, with sludgy,punk-tinged guitar buzz andas-they-are vocals. The titletrack opens with much yippingand grinding guitars. The sec-ond song doesn’t change toomuch. The drums still crash,and the guitar still buzzes like achain saw on idle, but the beatgets a touch steadier.
In the studio, the trio tracksguitar, bass and drums togeth-er, and then records vocals sep-arately.
“I wouldn’t sing live be-cause the room is too loud,”Carney said. “The goal behind
that is to catch that immediacy.We don’t always record thatway, but it was right this timearound.”
Innocence was recorded inthe Carneys’ studio, near thefarm each brother lives on inhis own house. The project wasorganic.
“We kind of just startedwith melodies and then fleshedit out, and then arranged therest of the songs around it,”Carney said. “We all came upwith the melody together. Itend to sing the melody lineand Jennings and Lain singthe harmony, which they arereally good at.”
The album is hardly an ear-
bleeder from start to finish.There are slower tracks, suchas “It’s the Greatest,” whichseem more vintage, tune-wise,but plugged in. In fact, “It’s theGreatest” sounds a little likeDenton’s Midlake in its Trialsof Van Occupanther era. Pon-tiak’s song has a marching en-ergy and a folksy refrain, butset to rougher guitar hooks.The harmonies have a madri-gal, dancing rhythm over thedrums.
Van Carney even opts foracoustic guitar in “NobleHeads,” another slower song.“Wildfires” is a slow burner of asong, with mellow vocals andshimmering cymbals.
In spite of the pastoral set-ting, the Carney boys like tomake loud rock music.
“I guess I don’t have anysort of feeling toward [the al-bum]. I tell you what, though,the slower, softer songs arekind of nice,” Carney said.
And an album for the bandis a whole body of work, meantto be digested as a whole.
“We’ve never written a re-cord of singles,” Carney said. “Ilike full, real books. Thingshappen. You go places. I likerecords that have all kinds ofdifferent chapters in them, andthat’s the kind of records wewrite.”
— Lucinda Breeding
Brotherly sludge Crashing, crooning and othernoises figure into Pontiak’s jams
Courtesy photo
Pontiak — a trio of three brothers from Virginia — comes to Rubber Gloves Rehearsal
Studios on Friday night.
Pontiak
With Bad Design. Doors open at 9
p.m. Friday at Rubber Gloves
Rehearsal Studios, 411 E. Sycamore
St. Cover is $6 for ages 21 and older,
$8 for ages 20 and younger.
5Denton
Time
02614
dailybreaddenton.org.
8 p.m. — “Dance Dance Dance,”
UNT’s annual faculty dance concert
with students, alumni and dance
educator Elizabeth Rhodes, at the
University Theatre, in the Radio, TV,
Film and Performing Arts Building, at
Welch and Chestnut streets. Tickets
cost $10 for adults, $7.50 for seniors
and UNT faculty, staff and students.
Call 940-565-2428 or visit www.
danceandtheatre.unt.edu.
8 p.m. — Madera Wind Quartet
performs in the Recital Hall at the
UNT Music Building, at Avenue C and
Chestnut Street. Free. Call 940-565-
2791 or visit www.music.unt.edu.
SUNDAY
8 a.m. — Used book sale in the
Miller Center at First United Method-
ist Church Denton, 201 S. Locust St.
2 p.m. — “Dance Dance Dance,”
UNT’s annual faculty dance concert
with students, alumni and dance
educator Elizabeth Rhodes, at the
University Theatre, in the Radio, TV,
Film and Performing Arts Building, at
Welch and Chestnut streets. Tickets
cost $10 for adults, $7.50 for seniors
and UNT faculty, staff and students.
Call 940-565-2428 or visit www.
danceandtheatre.unt.edu.
6:30 p.m. — UNT faculty recital
with soprano Carol Wilson,
Kimberly Cole Luevano and John
Scott on clarinet, James Ryon on
oboe, Jesse Orth on tuba and Anatolia
Ioannides on piano, in Voertman Hall
at the UNT Music Building, at Avenue
C and Chestnut Street. Free. Call
940-565-2791 or visit www.music.
unt.edu.
MONDAY
1 to 4 p.m. — Tax-Aide, free
income tax preparation help for
residents with low to moderate
incomes, at the Denton Civic Center,
212 E. McKinney St. Call 940-349-
8728.
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.
7 p.m. — The Navo Middle
School Varsity Treble Choir
performs in TWU’s Margo Jones
Performance Hall. The choir will
perform at the upcoming Texas
Music Educators Association conven-
tion. Free.
8 p.m. — Guitarist Janet Feder
performs in Merrill Ellis Intermedia
Theatre at the UNT Music Building, at
Avenue C and Chestnut Street. Free.
Call 940-565-2791 or visit www.
music.unt.edu.
TUESDAY
6:45 to 8 a.m. — Rotary Club of
Denton South meets at Oakmont
Country Club, 1901 Oakmont Drive.
Call 940-368-3789.
8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —
Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-
aration help for residents with low to
moderate incomes, at the Denton
Civic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call
940-349-8728.
9 to 10:30 a.m. — “Sharing the
Journey: Coping With Grief,” a
grief support group, meets at VNA
Ann’s Haven, 525 W. McKinney St.,
Suite 101. Program will be offered on
five consecutive Tuesdays. Free. To
reserve a spot, call Jerald Garner at
940-349-5900.
9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time
at South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Stories and activities for infants
(birth to 18 months) and their caregiv-
ers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
9:30 a.m. — Toddler Time at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Stories, puppets and activities for
toddlers (12-36 months) and their
caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
10:30 a.m. — Toddler Time at
South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Stories, puppets and activities
for toddlers (12-36 months) and their
caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
4 to 5 p.m. — Valentine cards
workshop for children of all ages at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
4 to 8:30 p.m. — Volunteer
Income Tax Assistance for qual-
ifying families and individuals at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. To qualify, a household’s annual
income must be $50,000 or less. Call
940-566-2688.
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
Continued on Page 6
4 to 5 p.m. Friday — Valentine
cards workshop for children ages
8 and older, at Emily Fowler Central
Library, 502 Oakland St. Free. To
register, call 940-349-8752.
7 to 9 p.m. Friday— My Little
Valentine Dance, an event for
families with children 12 and youn-
ger, at the Denton Civic Center, 321
E. McKinney St. Event includes a
photo booth, flowers and a live DJ.
Advance tickets cost $5 each,
available at the Civic Center. At the
door, tickets will cost $7. Visit
www.dentonparks.com.
6:30 to 9 p.m. Saturday—
“Denim and Diamonds,” Little
Elm Chamber of Commerce’s
annual fundraising dance for fa-
thers and daughters, at the Little
Elm Recreation Center, 303 Main
St. Tickets cost $15 each, free for
ages 2 and younger. Tickets include
light refreshments, sweets and a
goody bag. Photos will be available
for an additional charge. Visit
www.littleelmchamber.com.
10:30 a.m. Tuesday— Toddler
Time at South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane. Stories, puppets
and activities for toddlers (12-36
months) and their caregivers. Free.
Call 940-349-8752.
4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday— Valen-
tine cards workshop for children
of all ages at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday —
Valentine’s Story Time for ages
1-5 and their caregivers at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
7 to 9 p.m. Feb. 13 — Semi-
Formal Valentine Dance and
Dinner at the American Legion Hall
Senior Center, 629 Lakey Drive.
Admission is $5. Reservations are
required and can be made with
Betty Kimble at the American
Legion Hall or at Martin Luther King
Jr. Center. Call 940-349-8298.
10 to 11 a.m. Feb. 14 — Valen-
tine Story Time and Cookie
Decorating for ages 1-5 at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
Free.
4 to 5 p.m. Feb. 14 — Valentine
Crafts and Cookies for children
of all ages at South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane. Free.
VALENTINE’S DAY EVENTS
Dallas Morning News file photo
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VALID ONLY AT 4007 N. INTERSTATE 35, DENTON, TX • OPEN 24/7
In Corinth
8000 Interstate 35E • 940-321-0708 • Corinth, TX 75065(Albertson’s Parking Lot) Exit Swisher Rd.
1 &##0 "--('4'/ 52(%)423/ !.+,42$ 4--('4'/*3.+
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DORANSKI AGENCY
(940) 387 6289
2000 DENISON ST #A
DENTON
6Denton
Time
02614
4:30 to 5:30 p.m. — “Death by
Chocolate … and Pizza!” for ages
11-18 at South Branch Library, 3228
Teasley Lane. Take part in a chocolate
taste-off, make chocolate creations,
play M&M Bingo and more. Free, but
registration is required; call 940-349-
8752.
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. — Twilight
Toddler Time at Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. Bring
your toddler, ages 12-24 months, for
an evening that promotes literacy and
caregiver bonding. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.
com.
6:30 to 8 p.m. — Teen Advisory
Board meets at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. For teens in grades
6-12. 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.
7:30 p.m. — UNT Symphonic
Band, conducted by Dennis W.
Fisher, in Winspear Hall at the Murchi-
son Performing Arts Center, on the
north side of I-35E at North Texas
Boulevard. Tickets cost $8-$10, free
to UNT students. Call 940-369-7802
or visit www.thempac.com.
WEDNESDAY
8 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m. —
Tax-Aide, free income tax prep-
aration help for residents with low to
moderate incomes, at the Denton
Civic Center, 212 E. McKinney St. Call
940-349-8728.
9:30 a.m. — Toddler Time at
Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Stories, puppets and
activities for toddlers (12-36 months)
and their caregivers. Free. Call 940-
349-8752.
11 a.m. — Story Time at Emily
Fowler Library, 502 Oakland St.
Stories, songs, puppets and more for
children age 1-5 and their caregivers.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Mouthwater-
ing Wednesdays with food trucks
selling food at the Downtown Denton
Transit Center, 604 E. Hickory St.
Visit www.dcta.net.
2 to 3 p.m. — “How to Maximize
Your Social Security Benefits,”
presented by Jerry Brooks, at Emily
Fowler Central Library, 502 Oakland
St. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
2 to 3:30 p.m. — “Using a Com-
puter Mouse,” a free class at South
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
Call 940-349-8752 to register.
7 to 8 p.m. — Valentine’s Story
Time for ages 1-5 and their caregiv-
ers at North Branch Library, 3020 N.
Locust St. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
8 p.m. — “Tribute to Alec Wil-
der,” with Bob Levy on trumpet,
Mary Karen Clardy on flute, Steven
Harlos on piano, and others, in Voert-
man Hall at the UNT Music Building,
at Avenue C and Chestnut Street.
Free. Call 940-565-2791 or visit
www.music.unt.edu.
8 p.m. — The Syndicate Pre-
sents: UNT Jazz Lab Bands in the
ballroom at the UNT Gateway Center,
801 North Texas Blvd. Free. Visit
http://calendar.unt.edu.
IN THE AREA
Friday through Feb. 23 — Great-
er Lewisville Community The-
atre presents Superior Donuts by
Tracy Letts at 160 W. Main St. in Old
Town Lewisville. Performances are at
8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 3
p.m. Sundays. Tickets cost $17 for
adults, $15 for seniors and students.
For reservations, call 972-221-7469.
For more information, visit
www.glct.org.
MUSIC
The Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub
Each Wed, County Rexford, 7-9pm,
free. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-
5483.
The Abbey Underground Thurs:
J.R. Byrd Band, Gravity Feed, 10:30pm.
Fri: Opera on Tap, 7-9pm; Afro Deezy
Axe, the Holophonics, Magnatite,
9pm. Weekly events: Each Sat, “’80s
and ’90s RetroActive Dance Party”;
each Sun, open mic hosted by Bone
Doggie, signup at 7:30pm; each Mon,
karaoke. 100 W. Walnut St.
www.facebook.com/TheAbbey
Underground.
A Creative Art Studio Fri: Daniel
Zeigler, 7pm; the New Rainbows,
7:45pm. 227 W. Oak St., Suite 101.
940-442-1251. www.acreativeart
studio.com.
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 Fri: The Five Hands,
Synesthesia Battery, Awake in Theo-
ry, Mason Lemons, Soft Morning,
City!, 8pm. Sat: Lydia Low and the
Velvet Army, A Cold Trip Nowhere,
11:40, Rance Parrott, 9:30pm. Sun:
Catamaran, Brave Young Lions,
Biographies, 9pm. Each Wed, karaoke
at 10pm. 122 N. Locust St. 940-565-
5400.
Banter Bistro Thurs: Jesse Wash-
mon Trio, 6pm. Fri: Kent Shores and
Emily Davis, 6pm; Melissa Ratley and
Katie Lamb, 8pm; Vandfald, 10pm.
Sat: Miss Polly and Her Tiny Big Band,
1pm; Irish Session, 3-5pm; Niels
Rosendahl Quartet (jazz), 6pm; the
Congregation, Bouncehouse Cathe-
dral, Lydia Low, 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: Lydia Low,
6pm; Caleb Coonrod, 7:30pm. At
Sharkarosa Wildlife Ranch, 11670
Massey Road, Pilot Point. 940-686-
5600. www.bearsdentexas.com.
Crossroads Bar Fri: The Enablers.
Tues: Rob Donnelly. 1803 Elm St.
940-808-1177. http://crossroadsbar
denton.com.
Dan’s Silverleaf Thurs: Jambunc-
tious and the Master Classics, Astro
Veil, Kites and Boomerangs, the
Please Please Me, 9pm, $5-$8. Fri:
The Angelus, My Education, Daniel
Markham, 10pm, $5-$7. Sat: Lumber-
jack Fest 2014 with Bar Band, Spooky
Folk, Wurley Birds, Daniel Markham,
the Satans of Soft Rock, 7pm, $10.
Sun: Lumberjack Fest 2014 with
RTB2, the Spitfire Tumbleweeds,
Pinebox Serenade, Brent Best, Justin
Collins, 5pm, $10. Mon: Paul Slavens
and Friends, 10pm, free. Tues: A
Taste of Herb, 5pm, free; Noel John-
ston (CD release), Pete Weise Quin-
tet, 9pm, $5. Wed: The Pack A.D., the
Days, VoltRevolt, 9pm, $10-$13. No
smoking indoors. 103 Industrial St.
940-320-2000. www.danssilverleaf.
com.
The Garage Fri: Mos Neft. Sat: Droo
D’Anna. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045.
www.thedentongarage.com.
The Greenhouse Mon: Funda-
mental. Each Mon, live jazz at 10pm,
free. 600 N. Locust St. 940-484-1349.
www.greenhouserestaurantdenton.
com.
Hailey’s Club Sat: New Voodoo,
Jacko Suede, Nerdface, the Crypt
Creeps, 9pm, $5-$10. Mon: Magic
Mike Male Revue Tribute Tour, 7pm,
$15-$25. Weekly events, 9pm, free-
$10: Each Fri, DJ Spinn Mo and AV the
Great; each Tues, “’90s Night” with DJ
Questionmark; every other Thurs,
“Y2K” with Yeahdef. 122 W. Mulberry
St. 940-323-1160. www.haileysclub.
com.
Hoochie’s Oyster House Mon:
Billy Bennett, Bone Doggie, Kelsey
Henry, 6-8pm. Each Mon, live local
music at 6pm. 207 S. Bell Ave. 940-
383-0104. http://hoochiesoyster
house.com.
J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-
7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.
La Milpa Mexican Restaurant
Each Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 7:30-
9:30pm. 820 S. I-35E, Suite 101.
940-382-8470.
Last Drop Tavern Each Thurs,
karaoke at 8:30pm. 508 S. Elm St.
940-808-1651. www.lastdroptavern.
com.
Lone Star Attitude Burger Co. 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 Each Fri,
karaoke at 9:30pm; each Tues, open
mic at 9pm. 1125 E. University Drive,
Suite 107. 940-566-9910.
Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Roger Creag-
er, the Damn Quails, 8pm, $10. 1009
Ave. C. 940-565-6611. www.rockin
rodeodenton.com.
Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Stu-
dios Thurs: Red Like Heat, the
Demigs, Shapes and Faces, 9pm,
$5-$7. Fri: Pontiak, Bad Design, 9pm,
$6-$8. Sat: Daylight Industries,
Greenhouse, Idler, Betray the Dream-
er, 9pm, $5-$7. Wed: Le Saboteur,
Artifex Pereo, Little Sisters of the
Poor, The News Can Wait, Super
Thief, 9pm, $6-$8. No smoking
indoors. 411 E. Sycamore St. 940-387-
7781. www.rubberglovesdentontx.
com.
Rusty Taco Sat: Ellie Meyer, Richard
Gilbert, 7pm. 210 E. Hickory St. 940-
483-8226. www.therustytaco.com.
Smiling Moose Deli Wed: Lydia
Low, Richard Gilbert, 6-8pm. 501 W.
Hickory St. 940-566-3350. www.face
book.com/SmilingMooseDenton.
Sweetwater Grill & Tavern Sun:
Tito Charneco & Diaspora. Tues:
Sweetwater Jazz Quartet (Neil Slater,
Jim Riggs, Ron Fink and Lou Carfa).
Shows on the patio, 7-9pm, free. 115 S.
Elm St. 940-484-2888. www.sweet
watergrillandtavern.com.
Trail Dust Steak House Fri & Sat:
Cypress Creek Band. 26501 E. U.S.
380 in Aubrey. 940-365-4440.
www.trailduststeaks.net.
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.” 424 Bryan St.
940-484-2786. www.twobzandav
coffeehouse.com.
FUTURE BOOKINGS
Through Feb. 13 — Denton Coun-
ty Soil & Water Conservation
District tree seedling sale, with
EVENTSContinued from Page 5
Continued on Page 7
My Little Valentine Dance is
from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday at the
Denton Civic Center, 321 E. McKin-
ney St. This dance is for the family
— children ages 12 and younger and
their adult guardians. A photo
booth, flowers and a live DJ will
make this a memorable night.
Advance tickets cost $5 each,
available at the Civic Center. At the
door, tickets will cost $7.
■Group exercise classes start
this week at all three Denton
recreation centers. For more in-
formation, visit www.denton
parks.com or call 940-349-7275.
■Dance classes for all ages start
next week at North Lakes Recre-
ation Center, 2001 W. Windsor
Drive, and Denia Recreation Center,
1001 Parvin St. Classes are available
for ages 2 through adult and in-
clude ballet, tap, jazz and salsa.
Tuition is $20 to $30. Learn more
and register at www.dentonparks.
com or by calling 940-349-7275.
■Skateboard clinics are set for
ages 4 and older next week. The
“Mini-Skateboard” class, for true
beginners ages 4-7, meets from
8:30 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday. “Intro
to Skateboarding” is for ages 6 and
older from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. Feb.
22. Both clinics are at Skate Works
Skate Park, adjacent to Water
Works Park, 2400 Long Road. Cost
is $20 per skater for each clinic.
Register today for the mini clinic,
and by Feb. 13 for intro class, at
www.dentonparks.com or by calling
940-349-7275.
■Children ages 3-6 can attend the
Preschool Junior Master Natu-
ralist class from 10 a.m. to noon
Feb. 14 at Clear Creek Natural
Heritage Area, 3310 Collins Road.
Students will learn all about bats
with hands-on activities, a hike and
more. Cost is $8 per participant.
Register by Wednesday online or by
calling 940-349-7275.
■The spring Blastball league is
open to 3- and 4-year-olds. Coed
teams learn the basics of softball in
a fun environment. Games begin
March 22, and registration ends
Feb. 25. Teams fill up quickly, so
register early. Cost is $50. Practice
and games are at Denia Softball
Complex, 1001 Parvin St. Register
online, or call 940-349-7275.
■Basic dog obedience is for dogs
ages 9 weeks and older. Dogs will
learn to respond to common com-
mands from their handlers, who
must be age 12 or older. Classes
meet from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thurs-
days, Feb. 27 through April 3, at
Denia Recreation Center, 1001
Parvin St. The first lesson is ori-
entation — leave your dog at home,
but bring vaccination records. Cost
is $80 per dog. Register by Feb. 20
at www.dentonparks.com or by
calling 940-206-7156.
■Girls ages 5-14 can join a softball
league, with eight games officiat-
ed by umpires, and weekly practice.
Ages 5 and 6 play T-ball, ages 7 and
8 play coach pitch and ages 9 to 14
play fast pitch. Practice starts
March 17 at Denia Recreation
Center, 1001 Parvin St. Cost is $55
per player for T-ball, $65 for coach
pitch softball and $75 for fast pitch.
Register by Feb. 18 at www.denton
parks.com or by calling 940-349-
7275. Add $15 per player for late
registration, Feb. 19-21.
■Denton’s adult softball league
has multiple divisions and game
days. All leagues include eight
games and single-elimination
playoffs. Cost is $250 per team and
for Coed for Fun, and $380 per
team for all other divisions. Games
start on March 17 at North Lakes
Park, 2001 W. Windsor Drive. To
register by Feb. 21 as an individual
or team, call 940-349-7275.
■Adult kickball league registra-
tion is open for teams through Feb.
28. There is a maximum of 12
players per roster. The league
includes eight games plus playoffs.
Fee is $200 per team. Register at
www.dentonparks.com or by calling
940-349-7275.
DENTON PARKS & RECREATION
7Denton
Time
02614
proceeds benefiting the Cool Shade
for Third Grade program in local
schools. Twelve species of tree
seedlings are available at $3 to $9
each. Trees will be distributed at the
North Texas Fairgrounds between 9
a.m. and 1 p.m. Feb. 28. To order, call
Jennifer at 940-383-2691, ext. 3, or
visit the office at 525 S. Loop 288,
Suite C-1.
10:30 a.m. to noon Feb. 13 —
Denton Christian Women’s
Connection Luncheon at Denton
Country Club, 1213 Country Club Road
in Argyle. Event features Crowned by
Grace Boutique and inspirational
speaker Yvonne King. Admission is
$15. Complimentary child care for
children (ages 6 months to 5 years) is
available by reservation. Reservations
due by Monday. E-mail cwcdenton@
yahoo.com or call Cathy at 940-765-
3054 or Mary Ann at 940-382-6977.
10 a.m. to noon Feb. 14 — Pre-
school Junior Master Naturalist
Program: “Bats” for ages 3-6 and
their caregivers at Clear Creek Natural
Heritage Center, 3310 Collins Road.
Cost is $8. Register by Wednesday by
visiting www.dentonparks.com or by
calling 940-349-8285.
11 a.m. Feb. 14 — Denton Go Red
for Women luncheon, “Simply Red:
Celebrating 10 Years,” at UNT’s
Gateway Center, 801 North Texas
Blvd. American Heart Association
fundraiser includes a silent auction
and a fashion show of work by TWU
and UNT fashion design students.
Tickets cost $45, available through
Thursday at Northstar Bank, 400 N.
Carroll Blvd., and DATCU, 225 W.
Mulberry St. Visit http://dentongo
red.ahaevents.org.
8 a.m. Feb. 15 — Pioneer Pre-
view Day, TWU’s open house event
for prospective freshmen, with
check-in at Hubbard Hall, on Adminis-
tration Drive between Oakland Street
and Bell Avenue. Visit www.twu.edu
or call 940-898-3014.
10 a.m. to noon Feb. 15 — Clear
Creek Natural Heritage Center
Sustainability Workshop: “For the
Love of Bees,” at the center, 3310
Collins Road. Introductory workshop
on the history, art and science of
beekeeping in both urban and sub-
urban settings. Visit www.clearcreek
denton.com or call 940-349-8152.
9 a.m. to noon Feb. 15 — Junior
Fillies Clinic for young dancers,
presented by the Fillies dance team at
Denton High School, 1007 Fulton St.
Participants will learn dances rou-
tines, play games and prepare a
routine for the Fillies’ spring show,
Fillies Follies, on Feb. 21-22. Register
by Monday for $25; after Monday,
registration is $28. Fee includes
T-shirt, a Fillies Follies ticket and
snacks. Onsite registration starts at
8:30 a.m. For forms and more in-
formation, visit www.dentonisd.org/
page/3551, or contact Fillies sponsor
Kerri Burgess at 940-369-2124 or
7 p.m. Feb. 15 — Mardi Gras Ball
Dinner and Dance, benefiting the
Denton African American Scholarship
Foundation Inc., at the Center for the
Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St. Event
includes music by Jay-B and the
Zydeco Posse. Attire is semi-formal to
formal; masks are encouraged.
Tickets cost $50. Call Harry Eaddy at
940-380-0761 or Val Morgan at
940-391-4148, or visit www.denton
aasf.org.
7:30 p.m. Feb. 17 — U.S. Navy
Band in concert in Winspear Hall at
the Murchison Performing Arts
Center, on the north side of I-35E at
North Texas Boulevard. The concert is
free, but tickets are required. To
request up to four tickets, send a
self-addressed, stamped envelope to:
Navy Band Concert, Wind Studies,
1155 Union Circle, Box 310818, Denton,
TX 76203. Any ticket requests re-
ceived after Feb. 11 will be available at
the will-call window at 7 p.m., and any
unclaimed seats will be made avail-
able just prior to concert time. For
more information, call 940-565-3737.
6 p.m. Feb. 25 — UNT Honors
College’s Great Conversations
dinner, in the clubroom of Apogee
Stadium, 1251 S. Bonnie Brae St. Area
experts will act as table hosts for
groups of eight to discuss a specific
topic. Tickets cost $65. For tickets
and a list of table hosts, visit http://
honors.unt.edu/great-conversations
-2014. Call 940-565-2474 or e-mail
8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. March
17-20 — Registration for NCTC’s
Community Art Exhibit, spon-
sored by the Visual Arts Department.
Theme is “Connection.” Entry fees for
the open division are $10 for online
registry (limit of three per artist); free
for youths (limit of one). Works will
be on display March 24 through April
4. For entry forms and information,
visit www.nctc.edu/VisualArts.aspx.
Call Karen Lampson at 940-668-7731,
ext. 4504, or e-mail artshow@nctc.
edu.
EVENTSContinued from Page 6
One critic has describedUnleashed! A DogDancing Story as a
movie Christopher Guestwould have made. The prob-lem is that no one would havebelieved it.
The documentary, yet an-other story about the unbreak-able love between people andtheir dogs, does look ridiculouson its face.
A team of “dog dancers” —spirited amateur trainers whochoreograph dances betweenthemselves and their four-legged, long-tongued pals —
gets a challenge like no other.A real-life Corky St. Clair, a
canine “freestyler” named Ray,decides the world just has tosee his unique theatricaldream: a play that brings dogs,dancers and artistic kite flierstogether on a single stage.
Early buzz about the filmplays into the heart of Denton’sThin Line festival, which in-cludes traditional documenta-ry films as well as projects thatare scripted, but set up as if thestories and their subjects werethe real deal. Viewers havepleaded for Unleashed! to beanything but a “mockumen-
tary,” a genre that eventuallylent viability to big-budgetfilms that claim to use foundfootage (e.g. Cloverfield, TheFourth Kind).
Regardless, the film is sureto score audience pointsthanks to a clever border collie,a refined collie, a poodle andsome spry terriers. And it’shard not to root for the directorwho dreams of putting dogs,people and kites on the stage.
Canadian filmmakers Jus-tin Turcotte and Ben Mallinhave an eye for all things en-dearing. Paws2Dance, a BritishColumbia dog dancing club, isjam-packed with heart, but au-diences have to see for them-selves if man’s best friend canperform like pros.
— Lucinda Breeding
Courtesy photo
“Unleashed! A Dog Dancing Story” will screen next week during the Thin Line film and music festival.
Cold noses, wagging tails‘Unleashed!’ putsdog dancing onfestival screen
Thin Line: ‘Unleashed!
A Dancing Dog Story’8 p.m. Feb. 13 at the Fine Arts
Theatre, 114 N. Elm St.
THIN LINEWhat: A five-day documentaryfilm and music festivalWhen: Wednesday through Feb.16Where: Films will screen at theCampus Theatre, 214 W. HickorySt., and the Fine Arts Theatre, 115N. Elm St., on the downtownSquare. Live music will be atDan’s Silverleaf, 103 Industrial St.;Hailey’s Club, 122 W. Mulberry St.;Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios,411 E. Sycamore St.; SweetwaterGrill & Tavern, 115 S. Elm St.; andthe Thin Line Tent, which will beon East Oak Street near OaklandStreet, across from Oak StreetDrafthouse & Cocktail Parlor.How much: $150 for an all-access festival pass; $75 for afilm pass, which grants access toany screening; or $75 for a musicpass, which grants access to anyThin Line music venue. Single-dayfilm passes and single-day musicpasses cost $25 each. To buypasses, visit http://bit.ly/14khzw3.On the Web: www.thinline.us
8Denton
Time
02614
MOVIES
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
The Lego Movie (★★★★ ) There
are so many things to like about The
Lego Movie: a great voice cast, clever
dialogue and a handsome blend of
stop-motion and CGI animation that
feels lovingly retro, while still looking
sharp in 21st-century 3-D. Set in a
world built entirely of Legos, the story
revolves around construction worker
Emmet Brickowski (voice of Chris
Pratt), a tiny plastic Everyman who
loves nothing better than following
instructions. But when his Legouni-
verse is threatened by the evil Lord
Business (Will Ferrell), Emmet must
join forces with a group of rebels to
stop him. Guided by a leader who’s
part Gandalf and part Morpheus
(Morgan Freeman), this underground
resistance includes a punk-ish loner
(Elizabeth Banks); her egotistical
boyfriend, Batman (Will Arnett); a
Lego spaceman figure from the
mid-1980s (Charlie Day); and a robot-
pirate hybrid (Nick Offerman). It’s
hard not to have fun when the film
(written and directed by Phil Lord and
Christopher Miller) is having such a
good time with pop culture. Rated PG,
94 minutes. — The Washington Post
Vampire Academy Two best
friends — vampire princess Lissa
(Lucy Fry) and Rose (Zoey Deutch),
her half-vampire guardian-in-training
— are caught and returned to their
boarding school, where they believe
their lives may be in jeopardy. Based
on the book series by Richelle Mead.
With Danila Kozlovsky, Sarah Hyland
and Dominic Sherwood. Directed by
Mark Waters (Mean Girls). Rated
PG-13, 104 minutes.
NOW PLAYING
August: Osage County When a
family crisis brings them back to the
Oklahoma house they grew up in,
three sisters confront the dysfunc-
tional woman who raised them. With
Meryl Streep, Julia Roberts, Ewan
McGregor and Chris Cooper. Written
by Tracy Letts. Directed by John
Wells. Rated R, 130 minutes. — Los
Angeles Times
Frozen (★★★ 1⁄2) Disney’s new
movie, very roughly based on Hans
Christian Andersen’s “The Snow
Queen,” follows two princesses:
rambunctious young Anna (voiced by
Kristen Bell) and older sister Elsa
(Idina Menzel), who has the secret,
magical ability to chill whatever she
Continued on Page 10
A fascinating story can befound at the core of The Monu-ments Men, the new film star-ring, directed and co-written byGeorge Clooney.
Unfortunately, that storyabout a dedicated group of menrecovering art treasures lootedby the Nazis flickers by on thescreen in awkward lumps. Un-wieldy execution dooms the ex-perience.
Clooney and frequent collab-orator Grant Heslov co-wrotethe script, based on Robert Ed-sel and Bret Witter’s nonfictionbook. But their screenplay un-folds in segments, without muchof a cohesive — or even driving— narrative force. Clooney cre-ates little suspense or dramatictension.
Instead of a connected storywith all parts relating to eachother, individual sequences un-
fold — sometimes with seem-ingly little relation to the overallmosaic. Characters drop in andout, unceremoniously addingtheir observations and wryasides.
The story revolves around ateam of art experts, all middle-aged or older, assembled byFrank Stokes (Clooney) duringWorld War II. The gathering re-sembles the standard assem-bling of talents as seen in manyfilms.
Once together, they aim toidentify the art being stolen ortargeted for theft from muse-ums, churches, synagogues andJewish families by the Nazis.These vaguely empowered“Monuments Men” will then ei-ther protect or rescue the trea-sures.
Sure, the team wants to save
as much treasure as possible, butthe dramatic light dims whenforced to shine on thousands ofobjects instead of one. An at-tempt is made to promote a par-ticular item or two (a sculptedMadonna, a triptych) above therest, but even their recoverytakes place with little fanfare orsense of dramatic fulfillment.And the one Nazi who looks likehe might be made the designat-ed villain falls aside about half-way through the film.
A fine roster heads the cast,with Matt Damon playing one ofthe lead investigators along withan international crew, led byHugh Bonneville (DowntonAbby) and Oscar winner JeanDujardin (The Artist). Bob Ba-laban, John Goodman and BillMurray join the team for mis-placed comic relief. Cate Blan-
chett adopts a French accent toplay a museum administratorwhose mostly neglected storyseems to provide the choicestdramatic material.
The Monuments Menmarks Clooney’s fifth featurefilm, and it can only be seen as afalling-off. Nowhere to be foundis the madcap energy and phys-ical exuberance of Confessionsof a Dangerous Mind, or theheightened drama and visualpolish of Good Night, and GoodLuck.
So, to see Monuments Menjust plod tediously along servesas an early-year disappointment.
Columbia Pictures
A team of Americans (Dimitri Leonidas, John Goodman, George Clooney, Matt Damon and Bob Balaban) works to save cultural
treasures during World War II in “The Monuments Men.”
Much ado about everythingClooney’s kitchen-sink approach to
‘Monuments Men’ buries possible gems
By Boo AllenFilm Critic
[email protected] Monuments
Men
Rated PG-13, 118 minutes.
Opens Friday.
9Denton
Time
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COVER STORY
Forget for one second the fine, pol-ished pop-rock feel Denton artistJessie Frye gives to her debut full-
length, Obsidian.The whole album goes down in a
smooth rush of singles, but Frye has hadher nose against the grindstone that is in-dependent music since 2012. She wasn’tcooling her jets before that, either. Fryehad an auspicious start, releasing herfirst project, an EP called FireworksChild, in 2008. The EP was produced byindie star-maker John Congleton (who’sworked with Sarah Jaffe and St. Vincent)and Joe McGrath. Frye went on to playthe kinds of gigs that can snag headlinesand record deals small and big — Southby Southwest, the Dallas Observer MusicAwards and 35 Denton.
“Most of the songs were written in2012,” Frye said. “I did a Kickstarter forthe record, and raised about $5,600. I re-searched successful campaigns, but I alsoresearched a lot of unsuccessful cam-paigns.”
Financing is a hurdle for many an in-die musician, and crowdsourcing plat-forms such as Kickstarter.com and Indie-gogo.com have been a source of relief.
“I knew I needed to keep the numberlow,” Frye said. “I’d rather ask for a littleand make less than ask for the moon andnot even raise half. People don’t knowhow much it costs to make a record.”
She met her goal on Kickstarter, andended up splurging on the technical endof the recording.
“When I set out to make the record, Iknew that it needs to be professionalfrom a mixing and mastering stand-point,” Frye said.
The rest — the musicianship andsongcraft — was up to Frye and her band.
The rest wasn’t easy, either. Frye said
Dark, glossy rockJessie Frye’s ‘Obsidian’lives up to its nameBy Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor
Courtesy photo/Marcus Junius Laws
Jessie Frye marks the release of her debut full-length, “Obsidian,” with a show during Thin Line next weekend.See FRYE on 10
Jessie Frye at Thin Line10 p.m. Feb. 14 at Dan’s Silverleaf, 103 IndustrialSt. A festival music pass costs $75, and includesaccess to all concerts. A day music pass costs
$25. For more information, see Page 7.
10Denton
Time
02614
the work began with the writ-ing.
“At first I thought I was writ-ing a breakup record. I was ter-rified. I didn’t want my first full-length to be me [complaining]about someone who did mewrong,” she said.
Those worries eased whenFrye and her band started work-ing on what would be the overallsound of Obsidian. It startedwith a demo recording of open-ing track, “Never Been to Paris,”at Frye’s house, and pulling to-gether the third track, “WhiteHeat.”
“I realized there were only acouple of love songs on the re-cord,” she said. “Mostly, the al-bum is my perceptions of lifeand death. And I was reflectingon my teenage years.”
Eventually, Frye shaped Ob-sidian into a rock and synthpop record. “Power Lines” bearsthe mark of major Frye influ-ence Tori Amos, with an allur-ing melody line that getswhipped up in a storm of pianochords and surprising keychanges. It even trails off into abreath of descending notes.“White Heat” is a trancier sort ofsong, using the electronic beatone can find in a tune by Britelectropop kitten Little Boots.The sunny refrain “Let’s fall inlove, go insane” shows anotherof Frye’s influences, Canadianpop-rocker Lights.
Frye said the grind contin-ued with vocals, spending atleast 10 hours recording them inthe studio.
“I spent a lot of time training
on vocals,” Frye said. “I feel like alot of people don’t take the voiceas a serious instrument. For meit is. I was adamant about notusing Auto-Tune. You can do somuch in the studio, and that’snot necessarily a bad thing.Sometimes you use tuning toget the sound you want. It’s notwhat I wanted to do on the re-cord, though. I find it more hu-man, for me, to avoid tuning.You can hear all those littlethings that make my voicemine.”
Naming the record wasn’teasy, either. She wanted a oneword title that might pack ametaphorical punch. She wasn’timpressed with any of her ideas.Then a friend gave her a bottleof wine. Frye was absentlylooking at the label: ObsidianRidge.
“I really liked that word. ButI wasn’t sure what it meant. So Idid some research. I found theObsidian Butterfly, an Aztecgoddess of seduction and de-struction. And I went: That istotally me. That’s my alter ego.”
The title is fitting. The albumis slick in production, moody inpoetry. The final track, “TeenageLuck,” is a billboard for Frye’sdramatic pop: It scales two anda half octaves. Another pairingof voice and piano alone giveslife to the immoderate emotionsof adolescence and memories ofboth. “We live a secret lie/Wouldit be strange to comfort you inmy room, now that I am allgrown up?” Frye sings.
There’s a rock opera beatingin the heart of Jessie Frye, too.“Sabotage” comes along mid-al-bum. It fits neatly into the emo-tional landscape of Obsidian,and keeps its indie character in-tact. But the song is the closest
Obsidian comes to a ballad,evocative and vulnerable withnothing but piano and Frye’scrystalline voice. You can imag-ine “Sabotage” coming close tothe end of a musical’s first act,sung by a helpless character ob-serving a sin-riddled parent. Itpractically begs for a second-actreprise, complete with soaring,grinding guitars.
Frye said most of Obsidianwas born at the piano.
“I tend to write a lot of pianosongs and the band makes themrock ’n’ roll,” she said.
Frye said guitarist JordanMartin — who’s also her fiance— fleshed out the piano withjust the right touch.
“He’s such an amazing gui-tarist and the record wouldn’tbe what it is without his playing.I got with the right people. Mybandmates and I came togetherto make the record we wantedto make,” she said. “That firstday, when you’re trackingdrums in the studio, you’recrossing your fingers, saying,‘Man, I hope this turns out.’”
Frye said the record did turnout.
“Fireworks Child was differ-ent because I felt like I wantedto write a great indie-pop callingcard,” she said. “I had five songsthat were cohesive, written to fittogether, and I wanted to writeone really radio-friendly song.”
Obsidian shows more risk-taking, the breadth of Frye’ssongwriting vocabulary and herdetermination.
“I feel like, because of the ex-periences I went through tomake this, it’s a deeper recordsomehow.”
LUCINDA BREEDING canbe reached at 940-566-6877.
From Page 9
Frye
touches. Rated PG, 85 minutes. —
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Her (★★★ ) Spike Jonze wrote and
directed this soulful meditation about
a man (Joaquin Phoenix) who falls in
love with his operating system
(voiced by Scarlett Johansson). Jonze
probes higher questions of what
actually makes a human. Thoughtful,
if at times leisurely paced. With Chris
Pratt, Amy Adams and Rooney Mara.
Rated R, 126 minutes. — Boo Allen
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
(★★ 1⁄2) In this Jack Ryan reboot, Chris
Pine takes over as Tom Clancy’s CIA
analyst. Shadow Recruit, which was
scripted without a Clancy book, tells a
new backstory for Ryan. Inspired by
Sept. 11, he joins the Marines and is
heroically injured in Afghanistan.
During his recovery, he meets his
eventual fiancee (Keira Knightley) and
is lured to the CIA by a mysterious
recruiter (Kevin Costner). He’s co-
vertly embedded at a Wall Street
bank where he uncovers a Russian
plot to buy up U.S. Treasury bonds.
Director-actor Kenneth Branagh
endows his film with (mostly) old-
fashioned competency but little to
distinguish it from superior thrillers
that have come before. Rated PG-13,
105 minutes. — The Associated Press
Labor Day (★★ 1⁄2) In Labor Day, a
woman falls in love with the man who
takes her hostage, but the movie
goes out of its way to make that
journey easy for her. Adele (Kate
Winslet), a shy, divorced mother,
meets an escaped convict, Frank
(Josh Brolin), who makes his way into
her car and then into her house.
Outside there’s a manhunt, while
inside Frank soon is making chili and
baking pies. The overall effect is
drippy, not emotional but sentimental.
Adapted by writer-director Jason
Reitman (Up in the Air) from Joyce
Maynard’s novel. Rated PG-13, 111
minutes. — San Francisco Chronicle
Lone Survivor (★★ 1⁄2) Mark Wahl-
berg stars in this true story of four
Navy SEALS in Afghanistan in 2005
on a mission to find and eliminate a
Taliban leader. When the squad is
reduced to one (hence the title), he
finds refuge in an unlikely place. The
standard action flick accentuates the
bravery of the squad, but co-writer
and director Peter Berg never raises
his film beyond routine adventure
material. With Eric Bana, Emile Hirsch,
Ben Foster and Taylor Kitsch. Rated R,
121 minutes. — B.A.
Ride Along (★★ ) A little Kevin Hart
goes a long way in Ride Along, a dull
buddy picture engineered as a vehicle
for the mini-motor mouth Hart and
the perma-sneering Ice Cube. Cube is
cranky cop James, whose pursuit of a
mysterious villain named Omar is
interrupted by his sister’s fiance. That
would be Ben (Hart), a video game-
addicted school security guard who
longs to bring his wise-cracking,
voice-cracking banter to the Atlanta
P.D. James drags Ben on a ride-along
just to convince the dude he isn’t cut
out for police work and that he isn’t
good enough for James’ supermodel
sister Angela (Tika Sumpter). Rated
PG-13, 100 minutes. — McClatchy-
Tribune News Service
That Awkward Moment (★★ 1⁄2)
This chatty romantic comedy in the
modern mode — rude, nude and
crude — has some funny, writerly
riffs on relationships and how to
avoid them. But the movie, like star
Zac Efron and writer-director Tom
Gormican, never lets us forget that
it’s trying too hard, straining to spit
out sexy, silly patter, reaching for that
raunchy costume failure at a dinner
party, grasping for gross takes on
trips to the toilet. Efron, Miles Teller
(The Spectacular Now) and Michael
B. Jordan (Fruitvale Station) play
three New York pals who vow, when
one is dumped by his wife, to stay
single and enjoy the mingling. Which
all of them ignore. With Imogen
Poots, Mackenzie Davis, Jessica Lucas
and Josh Pais. Rated R, 94 minutes. —
MCT
MOVIESContinued from Page 8
TRACK BY TRACKJESSIE FRYE, “OBSIDIAN”
“Shape of a Boy” — Jessie Frye claims Tori Amos as an influence, andthere are moments in the verses of this song that must have been inspiredby Amos’ “From the Choir Girl Hotel.” Shades of Amos’ drama on “North-ern Lad” and risky abandon of “Iieee” are manifest in Frye’s “Shape of aBoy.” The blue notes from her keyboard, and her precise but warpingvocals, set Frye apart from Denton’s strong and vibrant Americana scene.Frye rocks out on the keys, met point for point by Jordan Martin’s swag-gering guitar. You can’t call Frye a drama queen; she gives herself over tothe piano-pounding histrionics completely.“White Heat” — The album is named for an Aztec goddess, but it’s alsonamed after a glossy black rock that looks like an alien froze black watermid-ripple. And there are deep, moody turns aplenty on the record. “WhiteHeat” isn’t one of them. Sunshine breaks big-time on this number. Electrobeats bump and the chorus rushes in like fresh love and fresher lust. Good,plastic synth starts us off with three simple notes. “I feel like running outof my mind,” Frye sings. “Let’s get outta here, soak up the city lights/Oh,I’ve been stuck in a sleeping dust/You’ve made my fear come undone.”Remember those puppy love feelings? No? Listen to this song. “Teenage Luck” — The final track starts with Frye’s steady contralto andends with a Handel-esque soprano. Sure, the lyrics would sound over-worked if you read them at the neighborhood open-mic slam night, butwhen they’re paired with brooding piano and vocals, the tune makes youremember why so many people skip high school reunions. Growing upmeans putting cherished illusions to rest, burying the incredible high ofyour first love (whether consummated or unrequited) and discovering thatMom and Dad can’t fix their own problems, much less save your world.
— Lucinda Breeding
11Denton
Time
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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.
$-$$. 940-243-7300. www.dustys
bar.com.
Hooligans 104 N. Locust St. 940-
442-6950. www.hooligansonline.com.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
The Loophole Square staple has
charming menu with cleverly named
items, like Misdemeanor and Felony
nachos. Decent range of burgers. 119
W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; food
served until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.
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. $-$$.
940-484-7455.
Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games on
big screens plus some pretty big
tastes, too. Now open for lunch. For
finger food, roll chicken chipotle and
battered jalapeno and onion strips are
standouts. Homestyle burgers; savory
Caesar salad with chicken. Full bar.
2000 W. University Drive. Daily
11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.
Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’t
Chicken” is what the eatery claims,
though the menu kindly includes it on
a sandwich and in a wing basket —
plus barbecue, burgers and hangout
appetizers (cheese fries, tamales, and
queso and chips). Beer. 113 Industrial
St. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-Sat 11-
midnight. $. 940-382-4227.
www.roosters-roadhouse.com.
RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 Dallas
Drive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.
Sweetwater Grill & Tavern It may
claim a place among the world’s other
memorable pubs, rathskellers, hang-
outs and haunts where the food
satisfies as much as the libations that
wash them down. 115 S. Elm St.
Tues-Sat 11-2am, Sun-Mon 11-mid-
night. $-$$. 940-484-2888.
www.sweetwatergrillandtavern.com.
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. $-$$. 940-382-5437.
BRITISHThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub
Full bar. 101 W. Hickory St. Sun-Wed
11-10, Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.
940-566-5483.
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. $-$$. 940-387-0888.
Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffet
guarantees no visit need taste like
another. Good selections include
cucumber salad, spring rolls, orange
chicken, pan-fried noodles, beef with
asparagus, steamed mussels. Beer
and wine. 2317 W. University Drive.
Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri 11-10, Sat 11:30-10,
Sun 11:30-10. $. 940-382-8797.
Golden China Small restaurant
boasts quick and friendly service. Nice
selections on buffet tables include
wonton and egg drop soups, teriyaki
chicken and hot pepper chicken. Beer
and wine. 717 I-35E, Suite 100. Daily
11-10. $. 940-566-5588.
Taipei Railroad Restaurant 4405
Pockrus Paige Road. Mon-Sat 5-9pm.
940-387-3871.
ECLECTICBears Den Food Safari Dine with
two rescued bears at Sharkarosa
Wildlife Ranch’s restaurant, specializ-
ing in brick oven pizza. Full bar. 11670
Massey Road, Pilot Point. Tues-Fri
5-9pm, Sat 11am-10pm, Sun 11am-4pm.
$-$$. 940-686-5600. www.bears
dentexas.com.
The Club at Gateway Center
Three-course meal for $7.50 at
restaurant run by hospitality manage-
ment students. Spring season runs
Feb. 17-April 25. Reservations recom-
mended. For schedule and menu, visit
http://cmht.unt.edu/theclub. In UNT’s
Gateway Center across from Fouts
Field. Mon-Fri, with seating
11am-12:15pm. $. 940-565-4144.
Denton Square Donuts 208 W.
Oak St. Daily 7:30am-5:30pm. 940-
220-9447. www.dsdonuts.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 Great American Grill at Hilton
Garden Inn, 3110 Colorado Blvd.
Dinner: Daily 5-10pm. 940-891-4700.
The Greenhouse Restaurant
Casual dining atmosphere comple-
ments fresh seafood, beef and chick-
en from the grill. Even 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). $-$$.
940-484-1349. www.greenhouse
restaurantdenton.com.
Hannah’s Off the Square Exec-
utive chef Sheena Croft’s “upscale
comfort food” puts the focus on local,
seasonal ingredients. Steaks get
A-plus. Tempting desserts. Full bar.
No checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Lunch:
Mon-Sat 11-3. Brunch: Sun
10:30am-3pm. Dinner: Sun-Mon
4:30-9; Tues-Thurs 4:30-10; Fri-Sat
4:30-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110.
www.hannahsoffthesquare.com.
Queenie’s Steakhouse Chef Tim
Love’s steakhouse just off the down-
town Square. Live jazz nightly. Full
bar. 115 E. Hickory St. Lunch: Fri
11:30-2:30. Dinner: Wed-Thurs 4:30-
10pm, Fri-Sat 4:30-11pm. $$-$$$.
940-442-6834. www.queeniessteak
house.com.
The Wildwood Inn Elegant dining
room tucked away in a bed and
breakfast. Excellent food like hearty
soups, Angus rib-eye, meal-size
salads and daily specials. Beer and
wine. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.
Thurs-Sat 6-10pm. $$$. 940-243-
4919. www.denton-wildwoodinn.com.
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. www.bochys.com/
rgs.html.
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.
INDIANBawarchi Biryani Point 909 Ave.
C. 940-898-8889. www.bawarchi
biryanipoint.com.
Rasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housed
in a converted gas station, this Indian
dining spot offers a small but careful-
ly prepared buffet menu of curries
(both meat and vegetarian), beans,
basmati rice and samosas. 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. $-$$.
940-381-2712.
Luigi’s Pizza Italian Restaurant
Family-run spot does much more than
pizza, and how. Great New York-style
pies plus delicious southern Italian
dishes, from lunch specials to pricier
meals. Nifty kids’ menu. Tiramisu is
dynamite. Beer and wine. 2317 W.
Continued on Page 12
Restaurant profiles and
listings are compiled by the
Denton Record-Chronicle and
The Dallas Morning News. A
comprehensive list of Dallas-Fort
Worth area restaurants is avail-
able at www.guidelive.com
Denton Time publishes
restaurant profiles and a guide of
restaurants that have been
featured in the weekly dining
section and online at DentonRC-
.com. Profiles and listings are not
related to advertising and are
published as space is available.
Denton Time does not publish
reviews.
Incorrect information can be
reported by e-mail to drc@den-
tonrc.com, by phone to 940-566-
6860 or by fax to 940-566-6888.
To be considered for a profile,
send the restaurant name,ad-
dress, phone nuber, days and
hours of operation and a copy of
the menu to: Denton Time Editor,
P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.
Please indicate whether the
restaurant is new or has changed
ownership, chefs or menus.
PRICE KEYAverage complete inner per
person, including appetizer,
entree and dessert.
$ Less than $10
$$ $10-$25
$$$ $25-$50
$$$$ More than $50
DINING PROFILEAND LISTINGS POLICY
12Denton
Time
02614
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A4
University Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs
11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988.
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.
$-$$. 940-321-5522.
El Chaparral Grille Restaurant
serves a duo of American and Mex-
ican-style dishes for breakfast, lunch
and catering events. Daily specials,
and breakfast buffet on Sundays. 324
E. McKinney St., Suite 102. Mon-Fri
7am-2pm; Sun 8am-2pm. $. 940-243-
1313.
El Guapo’s Huge menu encompass-
es Tex-Mex and Mexican standards
as well as ribs, brisket and twists like
Santana’s Supernatural Quesadillas
(fajita chicken and bacon) and jalape-
no-stuffed shrimp. Ilada Parilla Asada
steak with avocado was a little salty;
enchiladas are very good. Full bar. 419
S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat-Sun 11-11.
$$. 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 Restaurant
820 S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-
8470.
Los Toreros 2900 Wind River Lane,
Suite 134. Sun-Thurs 11am-9:30pm;
Fri-Sat 11am-midnight. 940-390-7693.
Mazatlan Mexican Restaurant
Authentic Mexican dining 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 Restaurant
The basics: brisk service, family
atmosphere and essential selections
at a reasonable price. Sopapillas and
flan are winners. 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. $-$$.
940-383-2695. http://thebowllery.
com.
Cupboard Natural Foods and
Cafe Cozy cafe inside food store
serves things the natural way. Win-
ning salads; also good soups, smooth-
ies and sandwiches, both with and
without meat. Wonderful breakfast
including tacos, quiche, muffins and
more. 200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat
8-8, Sun 10-7. $. 940-387-5386.
PIZZABosses Pizza 420 E. McKinney St.
Sun-Thurs 11am-10pm, Fri-Sat
11am-11pm. 940-382-8537. www.
bossespizza.com.
Crooked Crust 101 Ave. A. 940-565-
5999.
J&J’s Pizza Pizza lovers can stay in
touch with their inner-collegiate
selves through cold mugs of premium
draft. Bountiful, homemade pizza
pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dish Chica-
go style. Salads, hot and cold subs,
calzones, lasagna and spaghetti. Beer.
118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769. Mon-
Sat 11am-midnight. $-$$.
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.
Si’z Pizzeria 1776 Teasley Lane,
Suite 103. 940-808-1670. http://
sizpizzeria.com.
TJ’s Pizza Wings & Things 420 S.
Carroll Blvd., Suite 102. 940-383-
3333.
SANDWICHESNew York Sub-Way 305 W. Uni-
versity Drive. 940-566-1823.
New York Sub Hub Bread baked
daily and fresh ingredients, even
avocado. Broccoli and cheese soup is
impressive; “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
denton.com.
SEAFOODDani Rae’s Gulf Coast Kitchen
2303 S. I-35E. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm,
Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. 940-898-1404.
Frilly’s Seafood Bayou Kitchen
Plenty of Cajun standards and 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. $$. 940-243-2126.
Hoochie’s Oyster House 207 S.
Bell Ave. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm, Fri-Sat
11am-10pm. 940-383-0104. http://
hoochiesoysterhouse.com.
STEAKRanchman’s Cafe Legendary cafe
sticks to old-fashioned steaks and
tradition. Oversized steaks and
delicious chicken-fried steak. Homey
meringue pies; order baked potato
ahead. BYOB. 110 W. Bailey St., Pon-
der. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10.
$-$$$. 940-479-2221. www.ranch
man.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
13Denton
Time
02614
businessopportunites
203
businessopportunites
203
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ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Consideration shouldbe given before making a finan-cial committment. Please beaware of long distance charg-es, application fees, & creditcard info you provide.Books/lists of jobs do not guar-antee employment or that ap-plicants will be qualified forjobs listed.
BUSINESS FOR SALECampus Area Restaurant with
Strong Growth Potential for RightOwner/Operator, Denton, Texas
76201. Call for Details. 972-979-4737
Starting/Expanding a Business?Need SBA Business Loan?
Call the SBA INSIDER 940-600-3607.
Retired SBA Loan Officer/Banker.Packager/Consultant/Broker.
1ST & 2ND SHIFTS MACHINE OPERATOR
& ASSEMBLY POSITIONS. Hour Personnel 940-566-6300
7650 S. I-35ECorinth, Texas 76210
940-312-7347
A major regional distributioncompany seeking 3rd shift
Supervisor/Dispatcher in theDenton area. Basic computer
skills needed. Also, a CDL class“A” license. Full benefits providedcompany paid. Contact Terminal
Manager John Durbin:940-483-1347
AUTO BODY PAINTERSHELPER NEEDED IN DENTON.RV EXPERIENCE HELPFUL.
940-387-5366
Business Office Manager -Medicare/Medicaid Experience
The Hills Nursing andRehabilitation, Decatur, TX
The Hills Nursing and Rehabilita-tion, a premier provider of long
term care services, is looking foran experienced Business OfficeManager. Our company is one of
the largest privately-held longterm care companies in the stateof Texas. Candidate MUST haveprior experience in Medicare orMedicaid billing, preferably in a
long term care setting.The successful candidate will
have experience with thefollowing:
o Managing critical deadlines andkeen attention to detail
o Knowledge of Medicare, Medic-aid, private insurance, HMOs and
hospice billingo Knowledge of verifying payor
sources and posting payments tovarious systems
o The ability to work across de-partments to achieve positive out-comes for residents and familieso Knowledge of state and federalnursing home guidelines, includ-
ing trust fund managemento Experience working in a highvolume long term care environ-
ment is criticalMust have a passion for seniors
and their quality of life!We offer:
*Highly Competitive Salary*Benefits after 90 days
*Paid Time Off*Free CEUs
*Company-paid training events*Tuition Reimbursement andSuperior Corporate Support!
We look forward to hearing fromyou! We are an Equal Opportunity
Employer (EOE). Interested applicants, please send a resumeto [email protected], or
apply in person at The HillsNursing and Rehab, 201 E.Thompson St., Decatur, TX
76234.
Busy real estate office lookingfor a capable Office Manager . Responsible for budgets, mailpick up and drop off, ordering
office supplies, and execution ofhelp tickets. Some front desk
responsibilities. Ideal candidatewill have a positive attitude and
ability to multi-task. Strongorganizational skills are a MUST.This is a salary position, to com-mensurate with experience. Call940-243-7368 or email resumesto [email protected].
Call Center HiringCompetitive, Professional,
Articulate IndividualsNo Exp needed, will train
PT & FT Shifts AvailHourly wage guaranteedW/ bonuses & Incentives
Paid WeeklyCall 940-323-2694 to apply
Caregivers/CNAs NeededHourly or Live-in, 1 year exp
Required & Clean Background. Call 214-383-0555
CARE GIVERS Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care
Phone answered -Tues-Sat. 8 am - 6:30 pm
Call 940-783-4240
CLERICAL POSITIONS*Accounts Payable*Bookkeeper*Customer ServicePlease check our website atwww.ontrackstaffing.comfor all job postings(940) 442-6550
DENTON COUNTY INDEPENDENT HAMBURGER
needs EVENING CASHIER3pm--9pm Mon. thru Sat.
Apply in person715 Sunset, Denton
Denton County MHMRProgram Assistant, Child &Adolescent Case Manager,
Clinic Assistant, Di rect SupportStaff Team Lead, Registered
Nurse, Licensed ProfessionalCounselor, Case Management,
Community Support,Direct Care, Crisis and more!
Call 940-565-5287 orVisit www.dentonmhmr.org
Directional Bore Operator withClass A CDL with knowledge ofVermeer 7x11, 9x13, 20x22, &24x40 and Mini Excavator &
Trench Operator’s with class ACDL and skilled laborers. Please
call 940-482-8102 or fax 940-482-8103 you can ask for Tim.
Driver--FT Wrecker Driver. Mustlive in Denton & be able to obtainTDLR license 940-384-9866 apply8:30-5 at 2008 Metro St, Denton
Drivers needed Class A CDL,with Tanker endorsement
preferred. Call Mon thru Fri8am-5pm only 940-736-0758.
EXPERIENCED
SERVICE WRITER NEEDED IN
HICKORY CREEK AREAFAX RESUME 940-497-3074
OR CALL 972-594-9491
Henkels & McCoy is seekingexperienced DIRECTIONAL
BORE OPERATORS(must be familiar with Digitrakequipment, CDL preferable)BACKHOE OPERATORS,
LABORERS, FIELD MECHANICS and
AERIAL LINE PERSONS. CDL not necessary at time of
employment, but will be job requirement to gain after hire
(company will assist withprocess). Main office located inLewisville, Texas with possibility
of travel to jobsites in TX, OK, LA,& AR. Please fill out application at
515 Huffines Boulevard. (972) 512-2900 EEO
Immediate Opening for Regis-tered Health Information Tech/Registered Health InformationAdministrator . Prefer 2 yrs Exp.
Come in to fill out application.Select Rehabilitation Hospital.2620 Scripture St Denton, TX
940-297-6500.
JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!*Welders*Class A CDL Driver/Local*Production*Assembly*Forklift Operators*Pickers/Packers*Industrial Maintenance*Jobs available in Denton,and surrounding areas.(940) 442-6550
Looking for Lead Maintenance,Maint. Tech, Make Ready
People. Must be HVAC Certified.Must have knowledge of IndustryComputer Programs. Great Hours
& Benefits. Well MaintainedProperty. Please Apply to:www.Pinnaclefamily.com ,
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choose your position.
LTC Medicaid Billing Specialist- Fort Worth, Texas Creative
Solutions in Healthcare has anopening for an experienced
Medicaid Claims Specialist basedin Fort Worth, Texas! The ClaimsSpecialist will be responsible for
following up with Medicaid,Caseworkers, and patients to
resolve account balances. Essen-tial duties include account review,billing, and customer service. A
customer-focused demeanor is anabsolute must since this person
will have extensive contact with awide range of clients. The suc-cessful applicant MUST have
Long Term Care Texas Medicaidexperience. Experience in Long
Term Care is highly desired.Requirements:
*2-5 years of experience billingMedicaid claims in a Long Term
Care billing environment.*Demonstrated experience withMicrosoft Excel, Microsoft Word,and the ability to learn new soft-
ware programs quickly;*Excellent professional skill
(verbal, written, and organizationskills);
*Genuine care and interest in eld-erly and handicapped people.
Responsibilities:*Ensure all phone calls are an-
swered or messages returned in atimely, courteous manner
*Complete all business related re-quests and correspondence.
*2-5 years of Long Term CareTexas Medicaid claims processing
experience;*Update patient demographic in-formation and initiate account ad-
justments;*Try to resolve account balancesto zero prior to accounts reaching
collections status;*Experience in long term care,
with ability to demonstrate goodleadership and management
skills.Benefits:
Creative Solutions in Healthcareoffers a highly competitive
benefits package, includinghealth/dental/vision insurance
after 30 days, tuition reimburse-ment, immediate 401(k) eligibility,
paid time off, a company-sponsored life insurance and AD
& D policy, transfer and promotionopportunities, and extensive
company training.Interested applicants, please
submit your resume [email protected] for
immediate consideration. EOE.
14Denton
Time
02614
job lists 340
houses: unfurnished
630
houses: unfurnished
630
houses w/acreage 730
mobile/manufactured homes
760
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Maintenance Director - HVACThe Hills Nursing and
Rehabilitation, Decatur, TXThe Hills Nursing and Rehabilita-tion has an immediate opening for
a strong Maintenance Director!We are a long term care facility lo-
cated in Decatur, Texas. TheMaintenance Director is responsi-ble for making daily rounds of the
facility grounds and interior,checking for potential safety haz-
ards, environmental concerns,and inspecting facility equipment,as well as general physical plant
needs. The ideal Maintenance Di-rector candidate will have strongskills in HVAC, boilers, washer
and dryer repair, and knowledgeof emergency and fire systems.
The Maintenance Director will alsoneed basic computer skills to logpreventative maintenance tasks
into an online Senior BuildingManagement tool.
The successful candidate willpossess the following skills:
oHVAC experience preferred, butnot required.
oExperience with heating and airconditioning, boiler and water
systems, washers, dryers,emergency power generators and
other basic physical plant andequipment items.
oConduct and document inspec-tion of fire control systems;coordinate monthly fire drills.
oPerform preventative and routinemaintenance functions as
required.oEnsure the facility physical plantand equipment is maintained insafe and efficient working order.oRepair equipment and tools as
necessary.oMust qualify for company insur-ance, pass DMV check, practice
safe defensive driving skills.We are looking for a motivated
self-starter with a caring, compas-sionate heart. A complete benefitspackage is available including cellphone allowance, PTO (Paid TimeOff), health, dental, vision and ad-ditional supplemental insuranceproducts, and tuition reimburse-
ment after one year of service. Allfull time employees also receive afree $5,000 life insurance policyand free $5,000 AD & D policy
after 90 days. The Hills Nursingand Rehab is an Equal Opportuni-
ty Employer (EOE).Interested applicants, please
send a resume [email protected], orapply in person at The Hills
Nursing and Rehabilitation, 201E. Thompson St., Decatur, TX
76234
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Make $16-$18/hr, M-F,Cleaning Houses!Own Transportation.
Please Call 214-855-7189.
Mills Machine Shop in PonderTX is hiring CNC MachineOperators for 2nd shift.
Send resume to:[email protected]
NATIONWIDE UTILITYCONTRACTOR HIRING
Operators,
Laborers,
Directional Drill
Operators
& Locatorswith experience in electric andgas installation. Must be ableto pass drug test, background
check & driver’s licenseverification. Please call
214-571-2500 for information
NORTHSTAR BANKDenton:
Teller/New Accounts FloaterP-T Teller 11:00-6:00
Lewisville:P-T Teller 2:00-6:00pm
Colleyville:P-T Teller 10:00-2:00pm
Austin in the Westlake area:Underwriter & Portfolio Manager
P-T Tellers include Saturdayrotation.
Experience required; EOE.Resume to [email protected]
For details go to:www.nstarbank.com, “Careers”
NOW HIRING FOR LOCALDENTON COMPANY
Immediate Openings forMachine Operators
WeldersFitter WeldersAssemblers
Maintenance MechanicsForklift Operators
Must be Willing to WorkAny Shift. Call Today!
940-312-7347.
Now Hiring for Telemarketers$8-$17/hr, will train.
Krum, TX. 888-387-4827Ask for Lisa
Opportunities
Available!
APPLY ONLINE ATwww.highlandvillage.org
Human Resources1000 Highland Village RdHighland Village TX 75077
Phone: 972-899-5087EOE
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 10amPT Warehouse Mgr $9-$11/hr,Packing & Other Various Duties,Must have Valid Driver’s License.
Krum TX. 940-442-5366 Lisa.
Quadriplegic needs morning helpMon & Thurs 9:30am-12pm. TuesWed & Fri 9:30am-11:30am. Lift-ing required Derek 940-591-8383
Sales Associate for HospitalGift Shop. Professionalappearance and computer
skills. Evening and weekendshifts available. Please Apply
in person @ Denton RegionalHospital, no phone calls please.
Salary based on experience.
Tiny Tykes is Hiring FT & PTCaregivers Immediately.
Flexible Schedules. Email Resume & Availability to
[email protected] or Fax to 940-483-0522
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.
ATTENTIONDenton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for ad content.Consideration should be givenbefore making a financialcommittment. Please be awareof long distance charges, appli-cation fees, & credit card infoyou provide. Books/lists ofjobs do not guarantee employ-ment or that applicants will bequalified for jobs listed.
WANT TO BE AFIREFIGHTER?
in Less Than 6 Months?Texas Commission on
Fire Protection and EMT cert.V.A. approved. Enroll now for
classes! Write: Haz-Co, PO Box 3063, Sherman, TX75091 or call 903-564-3862
Alfalfa & Alfalfa/OrchardSmall & Large Square. Round
Bales & Bermuda Sm Sq.217-737-7737, Aubrey
Coastal Hay Square Bales only,$7 each, quantity discount.
Round bale trailer.Call 940-391-3368
New Green Fertilized SquareBales $8. 1st cut rolls $70.
Daryl Anderson 940-391-6875or Carlos 940-210-4071 Ponder
Pastures Fertilized,Weeds Sprayed, Aerating,
Plowing, Mowing. Tommy 940-482-6578
Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed
Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators
3511 E. University Dr, Denton940-382-4333 We Buy
BUY SELL REPAIR Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers
377 APPLIANCE formerly 380 Appliance, 1010 Ft Worth
Dr 940-382-8531
Denton Publishing will not know-ingly publish any ad for sale ofweapons that does not meet ourstandards of acceptance.
380 FLEA MARKETOpen every Sat. & Sun.
All metroplex buyers & sellerswelcome. Located 1 mile E. ofLoop 288 on Hwy. 380, in Denton.
(940) 391-6202
(940) 383-1064 (h) • (940) 390-5900 (c)BA
AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable
www.avenestatesales.com940-594-2878 or 940-483-8767
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
2/1 $700 -- 3/2 $900 Large Enclosed Patios
Greenway Patio Townhomes2912 Augusta @ Greenway940-387-8741, 940-368-1814Largest Units in Denton!
2 Bedroom Starting at $12251 Bedroom Starting at $819Efficiencies Starting at $709
Call for Move In Specials
Your Key to
Downtown Living Call 940-382-3009
jackbellproperties.com
321 Withers in DentonCUTE 1 Bdrm 1 Bath, walk to
TWU. $510/mo. + residents payelectric & gas. 940-382-3100
A Block from the HistoricSquare. 1 bedroom /1 bath.All Appliances. 225 W. Oak.
940-387-5123.
** AMAZING COMMUNITY **Available now! Cute floorplans! Lease Today and receive a $100 gift card
New Construction Special!!Call 940-566-0033
525 S. Carroll Blvd, #100, Denton Tx. 76201
ASK ABOUT SPECIALS!at WINDSOR VILLAGE
APARTMENTSCall 940-382-9556
CALL US FOR 1, 2, & 3 BdrmsHOLLYHILLS Apts940-382-6774 900 Londonderry Ln. Open Mon-
Fri 8:30a-5:30p, Sat appt only
CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565
All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,
1 & 2 BR starting at $450 & up
FREE CABLE & WATERLow elec. bills. 6/9/12 mo. lease.
2/1 $705/mo; 2/2 $730/mo1/1 $600-$615. Walk to UNT. Callour friendly staff at 940-382-3100.
Rental Assistance
1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS with Rental Assistance for
Qualified Applicantsin Valley View
940-665-0501or 940-726-3798
Shadowwood Apts Denton! 1BR, $475/mo Specials avail.
Open Mon, Wed, Fri 10am-3pm940-387-0452
Carriage House
Assisted Living
OneBedroom500 sq. ft.
Several Levels of
Care Available
Bring in Ad forSpecial Pricing
940-484-10661357 Bernard, Denton
BA
THE MARTINO GROUPRENTALS AVAILABLE
Denton:2105 Stella, 3/1, $995
112 Oakland, 2/1, $10501512 N Elm, 2/2, $895
536 E Windsor, 2/2, $850Aubrey:
2576 FM 455, 1800 sf commercial, overhead door, $795
Call 940-382-5000 or 940-368-7874 - www.themartinogroup.com
WESTWIND APARTMENTSFeb & March Move-In. LargeFloor Plans. 1710 Sam Bass
940-382-1535.
3/2.5/1 Evers/ TWU Townhomefp, fncd, fans, appls, bar, ch/a,1,633 sf, laundry, roommates,
Sec8, pets ok $1035. 940-383-1940
$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000
Houses, Duplexes& Apartments
Open Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pm
Saturday by Appt.940-243-RENT (7368)
Jason Long 940-595-1900Katie McFarland 940-243-7368
www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DR
DENTON, TX 76205
1717 CRESCENT 3/2/2Newly Remodeled, Lawn Service,
Kitchen with Appliances.2 BEDROOM FURNISHED -
Hardwood Floors. 940-367-7292.
1724 Post Oak Ct. Denton76209 New 3/2/2, Good
locaction. $1250/mo + deposit.Call 940-565-1399 Lvg Msg.
2321 McCormick. 3/1.5/2. NewFloor Covering, Paint and Fenced
Yard. $1050/mo+ $1050 Dep.940-390-4309.
3/2/2. Hardwood & Tile Through-out, Large Kitchen & Utility Room.Near Schools & Parks. $1300/mo.
Ready to Move-In Now. 940-368-3162 .
3/2/2 Spacious Single FamilyRental. Argyle Schools, FencedYard, Patio, Fireplace, Walk-in
Closets,SS Appliances.Donna, 940-262-0185.
3481 Country Club 3BR/1.5BA,recently updated, W/D hookups,garage, $1050/mo 940-566-5717killianpropertymanagement.com
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath.621 Smith St.
$750/ mo + $500 Deposit.Call Dana 940-368-5555.
GREAT HOUSE!EVEN BETTER PRICE!
3505 Briercliff3 bedroom, 2 bathroom ,2 car
garage. Beautiful remodel!Huge Yard, Great Neighborhood!
$1025/monthSign In February and Get
TWO WEEKS FREE!Call now 940-243-7368
Krugerville/ Aubrey 509 Brumley , 3/2, 2 car garage,
Brick, 576 sq ft StorageBuilding, 2/3 acre. $1300/mo.
940-704-5419.
LOOKING TO RENT?Call CAMI today
to set up a search!Call 940-391-1614.
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
3/2, country living, clean condi-tion, laminate flooring,unique,
w/t fur. $725/mo. + $600 depositPonder TX. 229-314-2646.
Country View MHP Special!2 & 3 bdrms. $695 a month.
2800 Fort Worth Dr.940-380-1200
Lease to Own3 Bdrm 2 Bath Single & Double
wide starting at $710.In mobile home community.
940-387-9914
LOTS from
$330-$365/Monthwith Carport and/or Shed
Up to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914
Close to Downtown Denton 2 LUXURY OFFICE SUITES
1,128 & 564 Sq. Ft Call 940-387-7467 for more info.
JOIN THE BOOM! Come be apart of Denton’s exciting new
downtown! 540 SF, walking dis-tance to A-Train, ample parking.
Eric 940-382-6611
Available Now! Room for rent formale, min. to UNT, share kitchen, living & bath, pool. $350/mo most
bills paid. 940-594-4125
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.
3BR, LR 1 1/2, nice kitchen-den,large hobby room on back, largecovered deck. By lake, Nocona
TX $7700 down $600/mo. 10 yrswith tax & ins. 940-372-3577
Nice 3 BR 2 Bath Home, SaintJo. Nice kitchen, wood floors,steel roof. OWNER FINANCE
$7500 down. $600/mo. 10 yrs.940-372-3577.
Owner Financed. 3/2/2. LargeFenced Backyard. 101 Allen St.Sanger. Asking $4000 Down,
$990/mo. 940-595-1066.
10 Acres, 2 Great 2-storyHomes, Very Modern 2500 ft4/2.5/2 + office. Nice 1200 ft
2/1/2, storm cellar, barn. $239Kowner finance. Saint Jo TX.
Call Jim 940-372-3577
Investor Package 904 Bluebon-net, 1229 Amherst. $220,000.
Each has rented at $1200.SargentReal Estate 940-565-9574.
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
Nice 2+2+2 MH, 1 Acre, 2 decks$5000 down $500/mo. $29K total.
Steel roof, wood floors, Vinylsiding. Nocona TX 940-372-3577
Owner Financed 16x80 . 3/2 withOffice. Hardwood Floors, Vinyl
Siding, Huge Deck. Just $324/moCall for Details 214-403-9787.
TOP CASH PRICES PAID FOR USEDMOBILE HOMES.Call 817-395-2990
BA
15Denton
Time
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It’s easy to sell your stuff with a little helpfrom the Denton Record-Chronicle Classifieds.
To place an ad, visit DentonRC.com/ads or call 940-387-7755.
MAKEMONEYWITH THECLASSIFIEDS
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 /
Protect Your Home from the Flu.Let Us Clean and Disinfect for
You! Call ALL ABOUT CLEAN940-597-7129.
DANIELSON
CONCRETEAll Types of Concrete &
Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives,Patios & Excavation.
Commercial & Residential FreeEstimates! Visa & Mastercard
Accepted. 940-391-3830.
Jose’s Concrete Work--patios,sidewalks, barns, curbs, slabs,driveways, retaining walls. 940-
595-6908, 940-465-3550 Free est.
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
ADVANCE-FEE LOANS/CREDIT OFFERS
It’s illegal for companies doingbusiness by phone to promise youa loan & ask you to pay for it be-fore they deliver. For info., call
toll-free 1-877-FTC HELPPublic service msg from Denton
Publishing Co& Fed Trade Comm.
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Please be aware offirewood measurements:
Cord of firewood = 128 cu.ft.(8 ft long X 4 ft wide X 4 ft high)1/2 cord of firewood = 64 cu.ft.
Split OAK & PECAN Firewood.$200/cord you pick up. Locatedin Sanger. Deliverey available.
Cal 940-367-6512
Joe The Garage Door ManDoors & Openers Repaired
New Installs940-367-5123
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
LANGSTON’S HandymanI do tile, wood floors, minor elec-tric. Build fences, decks, tape andbed & paint940-390-9989 Insured
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
LaMonica Cleanup ServiceBrush, Junk, Clutter.
Serving Denton Co. since 1990.We Recycle! 940-595-9162
Celia’s House CleaningQuality service you cancount on! Wk/biwkly/mo.
13 years exp. Refs avail. Ins &bonded. $15 off 1st service!
Superior Housekeeping Serv.940-594-8035 or 940-206-3889
GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow,edge, weedeat, flower beds, trim
bushes, rake leaves, free estimate15% Sr discount
940-442-1440 or 940-442-1252
LEGENDARY LANDSCAPES &TURF MANAGEMENT
Fertilizer & weed control, sod& landscape installation. Fullylicensed & insured. Senior &military discounts. 14 yrs inbusiness. Call 214-542-8221www.legendarylandscapes.com
All American Painting &Remodeling Int. Ext., Stain, Faux
Patch & Repairs. 17+ yrs Exp.Free Estimates. 940-442-4545.
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware of licenses/insurances needed or required bylaw to perform certain services orbefore purchasing certain services
CRCCarpentry--Decks--
Windows--Slate Flooringint/ext, remodel/ repairGuttering--Metal Roofs--
Skylights--Chimney CapsSolar Vents--Any Type Roof
Repaired or Replaced35 yrs in business. A+ BBB,
Angies List, References.Call 940-383-0338
PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/
pics/slides/negs/videos/records-discs 940-231-5889
16Denton
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