0410dentontime
Transcript of 0410dentontime
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IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK DentonTimeSpring gets sprung
ON THE COVER
TEXAS STORYTELLING
FESTIVAL
Storyteller Peter Cook (unseen)used some of his audience mem-bers as props during the 2007Texas Storytelling Festival. Theannual festival returns this week-end at a new location TexasWomans University.(Photo by Gary Payne)Story on Page 9
FIND IT INSIDEMUSIC
Concerts and nightclubschedules. Page 2
MOVIES
Theaters and summaries. Page 7
DINING
Restaurant listings. Page 8
TO GET LISTED
INFORMATION
Include the name and descriptionof the event, date, time, price andphone number the public can call.If its free, say so. If its a benefit,indicate the recipient of the pro-ceeds.
TELL US ONLINE:
Visit www.dentonrc.com, andclick on Let Us Know.
E-MAIL IT TO:
[email protected] IT TO:
940-566-6888
MAIL IT TO:
Denton Time314 E. Hickory St.Denton, TX 76201
DEADLINE:
Noon the Friday before publica-tion. All information will be veri-fied with the sender before publi-cation; verification must be com-
pleted by noon the Mondaybefore publication for the item toappear.
REACH US
EDITORIAL & ARTFeatures EditorLucinda Breeding. . . . . 940-566-6877
ADVERTISINGAdvertising Director
Sandra Hammond . . . 940-566-6820Classified Telemarketing ManagerJulie Hammond . . . . . . 940-566-6819Classified Display ManagerJulie Hammond . . . . . . 940-566-6819Retail Advertising ManagerShawn Reneau . . . . . . 940-566-6843Advertising fax. . . . . 940-566-6846
April10,
2008
DentonTime
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You should be seeing thepinkish flowers of the red-bud trees in Denton right
about now.The official tree of Denton gets
its own bash every spring, andofficials from Keep Denton Beau-tiful said all of their booth space isgone.
The Redbud Festival should
have plenty for gardening enthu-siasts and people who lovelooking at gardens to take in atDenton Civic Center.
For the green thumbs: tree andplant sales, gardening products,landscaping and home improve-ment products and more.
For the children: environmen-tal exhibits and activities, and aKid Zone with a bounce house,
recycling relay races and environ-mental activities.For the whole family: vendors
selling everything from outdoorpottery, birdhouses, sunrooms,wind chimes and yard art.
Art by local children will be ondisplay, and those who attend canvote for their favorite art. Festivalfood will be available for sale, too.
Lucinda Breeding
REDBUD FESTIVALWhen: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
Where: Denton Civic Center, 321
E. McKinney St
Details: Free. For more informa-
tion or to volunteer at this event,
go to www.kdb.org or call Aimee at
940-349-8739.Dallas Morning News file photo/Natalie Caudill
Keep Denton Beautiful presents the 15th annual Redbud
Festival at the Denton Civic Center on Saturday.
Gardening festival celebrates citys official tree
EVENTS
THURSDAY
4 p.m., 7 p.m. TWU Departmentof Dance presents DanceMakersconcerts in Margo Jones PerformanceHall. Tickets are $8 for general admis-sion, $6 for students and seniors and $4for TWU students. Call 940-898-2086
or visit www.twu.edu/soa/dance.5 p.m. Junior recital with SusanAnderson (horn) and Adam Woj-ciechowski (bassoon) in the ConcertHall at the UNT Music Building. Free.7:30 p.m. TWU Guitar Ensemblesspring concert at the Little Chapel-in-the-Woods at TWU. Free. Call 940-898-2500.8 p.m. Landscape of the Body, byJohn Guare, presented by the UNTDepartment of Dance and Theatre, inthe University Theatre at the Radio, TV,Film and Performing Arts Building.
Tickets are $10 for adults, $7.50 for stu-dents, seniors and UNT faculty andstaff. Call 940-565-2428.8 p.m. Global Rhythms mixedpercussion ensembles concert inthe Concert Hall at the UNT MusicBuilding. Free.8 p.m. Concerto Gala featuringstudent soloists performing works byVivaldi, Bach, Telemann and others, inthe Winspear Performance Hall of theUNT Murchison Performing Arts Center.Tickets are $5-$7. Call 940-369-7802.8 p.m. Master of Music recital
with jazz saxophonist SarahRoberts in Stan Kenton Hall at the UNTMusic Building. Free.8 p.m. Doctor of Musical Artsrecital with trombonist StevenHunter in the Recital Hall at the UNTMusic Building. Free.
FRIDAY
12:15 p.m. Bill James discussesHow to Do Historical Research, orHow My Book on Jim MillerEvolved, in the Commissioners Court-
room at the Denton County Courthouseon the Square, 110 W. Hickory St. Free.7 p.m. TWU Department of Dancepresents DanceMakers concerts.Performance is in Margo Jones Perfor-mance Hall. Tickets are $8 for generaladmission, $6 for students and seniorsand $4 for TWU students. Call 940-898-2086 or visit www.twu.edu/soa/dance.8 p.m. Landscape of the Body, byJohn Guare, presented by the UNTDepartment of Dance and Theatre, inthe University Theatre at the Radio, TV,
Film and Performing Arts Building.Tickets are $10 for adults, $7.50 for stu-dents, seniors and UNT faculty andstaff. Call 940-565-2428.8 p.m. A Midsummer NightsDream, presented by UNT OperaTheatre and Chamber Orchestra, in theLyric Theater of the Murchison Perform-ing Arts Center, on the north side of I-35E. An In the Know lecture begins45 minutes before each performance.Tickets are $15-$35 (the $35 priceincludes dessert and wine). Call 940-369-7802 or visit www.thempac.com.
SATURDAY
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Denton CountyFriends of the Denton Public Libra-ries sale at North Branch Library, 3020N. Locust St. Admission is $1 for adults.Members of the Friends of the DentonPublic Libraries and children youngerthan 12 get in free.
1 to 3 p.m. Denton CommunityTheatres Second Saturdays the-atre outreach program for adults, atthe Campus Theatre, 214 W. Hickory St.Julie Brinker presents PlaywritingBasics, covering format, tips and writ-ing prompts. Free, but reservations areencouraged. Call 940-382-7014 or e-mail [email protected] p.m. Landscape of the Body,by John Guare, presented by the UNTDepartment of Dance and Theatre, inthe University Theatre at the Radio, TV,Film and Performing Arts Building.
Tickets are $10 for adults, $7.50 forstudents, seniors and UNT faculty andstaff. Call 940-565-2428.
SUNDAY
2:30 p.m. Landscape of theBody, by John Guare, presented bythe UNT Department of Dance andTheatre, in the University Theatre at
the Radio, TV, Film and Performing ArtsBuilding. Tickets are $10 for adults,$7.50 for students, seniors and UNTfaculty and staff. Call 940-565-2428.3 p.m. A Midsummer NightsDream, presented by UNT OperaTheatre and Chamber Orchestra, in theLyric Theater of the MurchisonPerforming Arts Center, on the northside of I-35E. An In the Know lecturebegins 45 minutes before each per-formance. Tickets are $15-$35 (the $35price includes dessert and wine). Call940-369-7802 or visit
www.thempac.com.
WEDNESDAY
11 to 11:45 a.m. VictorianGardens: Planning and Planting forthe Spring, a free lecture and tour,part of the If These Walls Could Talk series, at Bayless-Selby HouseMuseum, 317 W. Mulberry St. Call 940-
349-2865.7 p.m. Shakespeare ManRobert Clover-Brown visits SouthBranch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane. Free.Visit www.shakespeareman.com.6:30 p.m. Denton Organic Socie-ty meeting, featuring Gardening withChildren, a talk by Johnnie Aven of theTWU School of Occupational Therapy.Free and open to the public. Meeting isat Denton Senior Center, 509 N. BellAve. Call 940-382-8551.
MUSIC
Andys Bar Thurs: Young & Brave,Sententia Dementia. Fri: Veloura,Stadium, Tastydactyls, Bronze Whaler,8:30pm. Sat: Children, A BeautifulDisaster, Consider the Source. Covervaries. 122 N. Locust St. 940-565-5400. www.myspace.com/andysbar.
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The voting is over...
Come in & enjoy your favorite flavor.
The voting is over...
Let the eating commence.
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DentonTime
April10,2008
Foodies know it: Every re-gion has its flavor. Literally. Visit a new country, a
neighboring state, or drive threetowns over, and you can find dis-tinct ways of cooking, seasoningand serving food.
A genial pair of travelers, Billand Cheryl Jamison, know athing or two about food and theplaces its cooked and eaten. OnTuesday, the award-winningcookbook-writing duo visitsTexas Womans University forThe Ultimate Culinary Adven-ture, a midday break that willgive foodies and cookbook buffsan insight into the Jamisons trav-els. It also gives patrons a sample
of foods from the Jamisons latestbook, Around the World in 80Dinners: The Ultimate CulinaryAdventure.
The pair will sign books, andTWU will have copies of booksand recipe leaflets from the uni-versitys celebrated cookbook col-lection.
ULTIMATE CULINARY
ADVENTUREWhat: Lecture and tasting recep-tion featuring Cheryl and Bill
Jamison
When: 11:30 a.m. Tuesday
Where:Blagg-Huey Library on theTWU campus, just off of
Administration Drive
Details: Admission is $40 per per-son. For reservations, call 940-898-3748 or visit www.twu.edu/library.
The Jamisons have earned fourJames Beard Awards for their work. Their recent cookbooksinclude The Big Book of OutdoorCooking and Entertaining; GoodTimes, Good Grilling; Chicken onthe Grill;A Real American Break-
fast; and the revised and expand-ed version of their landmark
Smoke & Spice one of the best-selling cookbooks of the lastdecade.
The Jamisons appear regularlyon TV and are frequent contribu-tors to magazines such asCooking Light and Bon Appetit.They live near Sante Fe, N.M.,and their daughter, Heather, is aTWU alumna.
Lucinda Breeding
Home plateCouple brings
culinary travelsto TWU campus
Bill and Cheryl
Jamison have
producedvaunted cook-
books and
travel guides.
Theyll talk
about their
travels and
work at a tast-
ing reception
that highlights
some of the
dishes in their
book Around
the World in
80 Dinners:
The Ultimate
Culinary
Adventure.
Courtesy photos
Good Living. Movies. Religion.Every Friday in the
Denton Record-Chronicle.
Art Six Coffee House Music, playsand gallery shows in a house convertedinto an arts space. No cover. No smok-ing inside. 424 Bryan St. 940-484-2786.Banter Fri: It Is What It Is, 8:30pm.Sat: Uptown Saturday Night with
Bone Doggie, 8pm. Each Thurs, openmic night, 9pm-midnight, free. 219 W.Oak St. 940-565-1638.Boiler Room Fri: Brian The BeermanHouser. Sat: Urizen, Bat Castle, LocrianPsy-Fi Metalcore. Wed: Dub AssemblyLive PA with Mundo, Dragon Man,Wanz Dover, Soy Capaz, Royal High-nuss, Abso1ute. Each Mon, DS Murphy
Karaoke. Each Tues, dance night withVendetta Entertainment. Each Wed,drum & bass with Municipal Audio.Cover varies. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-5483. www.myspace.com/dentonsboilerroom.Cool Beans Live music and films onrooftop patio. All-ages before 9pm; 21& up after 9pm. 1210 W. Hickory St.940-382-7025.Dans Silverleaf Thurs: CommanderCody, 10pm, $12-$15. Fri: Susan Gibson,
the Hudsons, 10pm. Sat: Larry JoeTaylor, 8pm; South Austin Jug Band,10:30pm. Sun: Brian The BeermanHouser, the Hot Rockin Fonzies, 5pm,free. Each Mon, Paul Slavens, free.Cover varies. 103 Industrial St. 940-320-2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.The Drink Wed: Pat the Human, theWake of Man, Athens, the Legion of
Thieves, I The Emperor. 125 Ave. A. 940-591-0789. www.thedrinkonfry.com.The Garage Fri: 11 Dollars. Sat: Drew,Trebuchet. Each Mon, open mic. EachTues, Salsa Night. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045. www.thedentongarage.com.Haileys Club Fri: Boxcar Bandits,Whiskey Folk Ramblers, Telegraph Can-yon, $5-$7. Sat: DJ Nature & the Party,$3-$5. Wed: Ella Minnow, Siberian,Here, In Arms, $5-$7. Each Thurs, 80sNight with DJ G; Sun, Wild in the
Streets; Mon, Chillout Monday; Tues,OMG LOL BBQ; Wed, Radio Clashwith the Flashlight Party. Cover varies.Doors at 9pm. 122 W. Mulberry St.940-323-1160. www.haileysclub.com.J&Js Pizza Thurs: Twin Tigers, 9pm.Sat: Verulf, Gavin Guthrie, Voyant, free.Live music in basement bar of restau-rant on the Square. 118 W. Oak St. 940-
382-7769.R Bar Fri: Faktion, Siren City, Shore-lines End. Cover varies. 827 EagleDrive. 940-320-0405.Rockin Rodeo Thurs: Hayes Carll, theDeadringers. Cover varies. 1009 Ave. C.940-565-6611. www.rockinrodeodenton.com.Rubber Gloves Rehearsal StudiosThurs: The Hope Trust, RoyalAmerican, the FollyFandango, $5. Fri:The Paper Chase, Faux Fox, Mount
Righteous, $10. Sat: Less Is More, SeaFlea, Likely Story, Two Month Reunion,$6. Tues: Health, Daniel Francis Doyle,El Paso Hot Button, Last Men, $8. Wed:Short Attention Span Theatre, free.Doors open at 9pm for shows. 411 E.Sycamore St. at Bell Ave. 940-387-7781. www.rubberglovesdentontx.com.Strawberry Fields Sat: Fight Bite,
Last Men, Kaboom (CD release), Geist-heistler, Eat Averys Bones, NounsGroup, 9pm, $1. 2310 W. Oak St.www.strawberryfields.biz.Town and Country CoffeehouseMay 3: The Laws. Live music at coffee-house located in Lake Cities UnitedMethodist Church, 300 E. HundleyDrive in Lake Dallas. Smoke- and alco-hol-free. Doors open at 7:30pm. 972-849-6068. www.townandcountrycoffeehouse.org.
FUTURE BOOKINGS
32nd session of the ContemporaryPoets Reading, with featured guestCorey Marks speaking at 3:30 p.m.
EVENTSContinued from Page 2
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April10,
2008
DentonTime
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Friday 5-11pm Saturday 10am-11pm Sunday 11am-9pm
Quakertown Park321 E. McKinney Denton, Texas
(2 blocks NE of Courthouse Square)
www.dentonjazzfest.com
A Whole Lotta Jazzin Goin On!
The Neville BrothersFriday, April 25
9pm
Delbert McClintonSaturday, April 26
9pm
Brave ComboSunday, April 27
7pm
FREE ADMISSION!
P.O. Box 2104 Denton, TX 76202 1-940-565-0931 1-940-566-7007 (FAX)
Fine Arts & Crafts
6 Stages Childrens
Art Tent
UNT Jazz Bands
Community/School
Entertainment
Food Games FUN!!!
DENTON ARTS & JAZZ FESTIVAL
APRIL 25, 26 & 27, 2008
NoCoolersinJazzAreaPlease!
ALitter-Free
Event!
DCTA
BusShuttle-
$1
oneway
Please-ServiceAnimalsOnly!
C1
George Foreman wontbe in Denton for the 5-kilometer run and walk
bearing his name, but he hasdonated a few pairs of auto-graphed boxing gloves for theindividual and group that raisethe most money for pediatriccancer research.
The Canterbury EpiscopalMinistries of both Texas Wom-ans University and Universityof North Texas is sponsoringthe event, which will have walk-ers and runners on the move foryoung people with cancer.
Participants will gather Fri-day night outside the TWUstudent union. Spots for run-ners and walkers are still open.
Foreman, a former worldheavyweight boxing championand a minister, got involved inthe fundraising race for pedi-atric cancer as a Texan and aman of faith.
Texans recently proclaimedto the world that we are com-mitted to finding the cure,Foreman said in an official
statement, referring to a ballotproposition that passed lastNovember. I plan to give thisstatewide effort a little morepunch.
Foreman is a member of theUniversity Cancer FoundationBoard of Visitors at the Uni- versity of Texas M.D. Ander-
son Cancer Center.University of North Texas
graduate and guitarist RhettButler, himself a pediatric can-cer philanthropist, said his sis-ter Amy was good friends withForemans daughter Michi when the two were in highschool. Butler has long been anadvocate for his brother, Ash-ley, who is a 26-year survivorof a pediatric brain tumor.
We ran into him [GeorgeForeman] at a restaurant inHouston last December. Fromthe moment he told my little brother, Ashley, to keeppunching, I knew we would bedestined to work together,Butler said.
Lucinda Breeding
FUN RUN/WALKWhat:The George Foreman KOPC5K, a benefit fun run/walk for Knock OutPediatric Cancer
When: 7 p.m. Friday
Where:TWU, outside the Student Union, near the intersection of Bell Avenueand Administration Drive
Details: Registration is $20. Register in advance by visiting www.knockoutpedi-atriccancer.com and clicking on the Denton event icon.
Foreman takes aim
at pediatric cancer
Former world
heavyweight
championGeorge
Foreman will
be with Den-
ton residents
in spirit
Friday night
as they run
and walk in a
5-kilometer
race to bene-
fit Knock Out
PediatricCancer.
Dallas Morning
News file photo/
Evans Caglage
In Renunciation, poet Corey
Marks comforts the reader withwords, then suddenly shocks withtruth.
The poet, whose first book wasa National Poetry Series selectionpublished by the University ofIllinois Press in 2000, will be fea-tured at the Contemporary PoetsReading next week at the Univer-sity of North Texas. Marks is thedirector of creative writing atUNT.
The poet will read some of his work, and a signed and num-
Corey Marks readsat poetry session
Courtesy photo
Poet Corey Marks is the fea-
tured poet at next weeks Con-
temporary Poets Reading.
POETRY READINGWhat: Corey Marks, featured guestof the 32nd session of theContemporary Poets Reading, givesa poetry reading
When: 3:30 p.m.April 17
Where:The Rare Book Room, onthe fourth floor of UNTs WillisLibrary
Details: Free. A signed and num-bered chapbook, Fire and Tulips,will be available at the reading.
bered chapbook of his poemsFire
and Tulips, from Trilobite Press,will be available at the reading
The reading is part of a seriesstarted in 1982 and is co-spon-
sored by the English department. Lucinda Breeding
Metered with madness
EVENTSContinued from Page 3
April 17, in the Rare Book Room, on thefourth floor of UNTs Willis Library. Free.A signed and numbered chapbook, Fireand Tulipswill be available.Planning an Inner-City Historical
Park, at Bayless-Selby House Mu-seum, 317 W. Mulberry St. This pro-gram, from 1:30 to 2:45 p.m. April 17,will address the structures in the Histo-rical Park and some plans for the future.Cost is $5. Call 940-349-2865.Lyndon Baines Johnson A TexasPresident,a Texas history sympo-sium, in Room 255 of the UNT EagleStudent Services Center, from 7:30 to8:30 p.m. April 18 and 8:30 a.m. to 2:30p.m. April 19. The April 18 event, featur-ing biographer Robert Caro, is free.Admission to the April 19 event, which
includes breakfast and lunch, is $25 fortickets purchased by Monday and $35after Monday. Call 940-565-2288 or e-mail [email protected].
IN THE REGION
Humane Society of Lewisville holdsa rummage sale 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. April12 at 1400 Moccasin Trail in Lewisville.Sale includes books, toys, furniture. Call972-353-4840.Live folk and acoustic music per-
formances featuring David Byboth andthe Hudsons at Flower Mound Coffee-house in the Congregation Kol AmiAuditorium, 1887 Timber Creek Road inFlower Mound, 8 p.m. April 12. Doorsopen at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $12. Eventis alcohol- and smoke-free. Call 972-539-4110 or visit www.flowermoundcoffeehouse.com.Spring Delights concert at theEpiscopal Church of the Annunciation,602 N. Old Orchard Lane in Lewisville, 4p.m. April 27. Admission is $5. Call 972-874-7777, e-mail [email protected]
or visit www.musicalfeast.orgSouthwest Bluegrass Club Meeting,jamming and show each 3rd Sun of themonth at 2pm. Free. 701 S. Main St.,Grapevine. Visit www.southwestbluegrassclub.com.
CHILDREN
Mothers Day Out, for children ages 2
1/2 to 5 years old, at North LakesRecreation Center. Registration is $100per session. Classes are 9:15 a.m. to12:15 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays,April 28 through May 2. There is noclass on May 24. Sign up at the recre-ation center. Call 940-349-8578.Preschools at Denia and Martin
Luther King Jr. recreation centershave openings for half- and full-dayprograms for children ages 3-5 (mustbe toilet-trained), operated by DentonParks and Recreation. Call 940-349-8136.Emily Fowler Central Library 502Oakland St. 9am-6pm Mon, Wed, Fri &Sat; 9am-9pm Tues & Thurs; 1-5pmSun. 940-349-8712. Denton PublicLibrary events are seasonal and subjectto hiatus.G Story time 25 to 30 minutes of sto-
ries, songs, puppets and more for chil-dren ages 1-5 and caregivers. 11amWed.G Toddler Time 20 minutes of stories,songs, puppets and more for childrenages 1 to 24 months. 9:30am Wed.G Book Adventures 40 to 45 minutesof books, crafts and activities for chil-dren in kindergarten through thirdgrade. 4:30pm Wed.North Branch Library 3020 N. LocustSt. 9am-9pm Mon-Thurs, 9am-6pm Fri& Sat, 1-5pm Sun. 940-349-8756.GMother Goose Time 10am each Fri.G Story time 25 to 30 minutes of sto-ries, songs, puppets and more for chil-dren ages 1-5 and caregivers. 11am Fri,10am Sat.G Book Adventures 40 to 45 minutes
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DentonTime
April10,2008
of books, crafts and activities for chil-dren in kindergarten through thirdgrade. 4pm Tues.South Branch Library 3228 TeasleyLane. Noon-9pm Mon & Wed; 9am-6pmTues, Thurs-Sat; 1-5pm Sun. All eventsfree. 940-349-8251.
GMother Goose Time 9:30am Tues.G Story time 25 to 30 minutes of sto-ries, songs, puppets and more for chil-dren ages 1-5 and caregivers. 10amThurs, 10am Sat.G Book Adventures 40 to 45 minutesof books, crafts and activities for chil-dren in kindergarten through thirdgrade. 3:30pm Thurs.G First Friday Movie 3:30pm every firstFri. Third grade and older. Call 940-349-8252.
LITERARY EVENTS
Emily Fowler Central Library 502Oakland St. 9am-6pm Mon, Wed, Fri &Sat; 9am-9pm Tues & Thurs; 1-5pm Sun.940-349-8712.North Branch Library 3020 N. LocustSt. 9am-9pm Mon-Thurs, 9am-6pm Fri& Sat, 1-5pm Sun. 940-349-8756.G Second Friday Movie Free family fea-ture at 4pm on the second Fri of eachmonth. To find out whats showing, call940-349-8780. Children younger than 8must be accompanied by an adult.G Chess Night Casual, non-tournamentplay, 6pm Mondays.G Denton Community Network com-
Taking the Bards work to ahigher level, Robert Clover-Brown becomes William Shake-speare on a regular and profes-sional basis.
His Wednesday visit to SouthBranch Library spotlights hisability and his mission to portrayShakespeare thus making theBard seem less lofty and moreaccessible.
Brown references both Shake-speares plays and poetry, depend-ing on the crowd at hand; hisaudience members range fromstudents to the curious public.
Im in costume as Shake-speare, talking as Shakespeare,about my life, my family, myhometown, and I bridge it acrossto my work, Brown said. Therewas a man behind the words anda life of great interest, who livedin dangerous and exciting time inElizabethan England.
SHAKESPEARE MANWhat: A visit by Shakespeare
Man, Robert Clover-Brown
Where: South Branch Library,
3228 Teasley Lane
When: 7 p.m. Wednesday
Details: Free. For more information,
visit www.shakespeareman.com.
Dallas Morning News file photo
Noted biographer Robert Caro will speak at the University of North Texas Texas historysymposium, Lyndon Baines Johnson A Texas President. Caro will deliver a free lectureat 7:30 p.m. April 18, followed by a ticketed event on April 19, also featuring speaker Jan
Jarboe Russell, columnist and author of Lady Bird: A Biography of Mrs. Johnson. The presenta-tions will be in Room 255 in the UNT Eagle Student Services Center. Admission to the April 19presentation is $35 per person, or $25 for tickets purchased by Monday; the event includes acontinental breakfast and barbecue lunch. Call 940-565-2288 or e-mail [email protected]. A reg-istration form is available at www.hist.unt.edu/events/ths/ths08_color.pdf.
LBJ history symposium
His interactive program,Brown said, allows him to direct-ly engage an audience while incharacter.
As Im going through the pres-entation, I ask them questions.And I get them up with me, I getthem off their feet, he said.
Greg Russell
Shakespeares doppelgangerMan gives showabout and as the Bard of Avon
Courtesy photoRobert Clover-Brown, a.k.a. Shakespeare Man, brings his pres-entation to South Branch Library on Wednesday.
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
puter courses Call 940-349-8757.G Secondhand Prose Friends of theDenton Public Libraries fundraisingbookstore is open 9-3 Mon & SatSouth Branch Library 3228 TeasleyLane. Noon-9pm Mon; 9am-6pm Tues,Thurs-Sat; 9am-9pm Wed; 1-5pm Sun.940-349-8251.G First Friday Movie Free family featureat 4pm on the 1st Fri of each month. Toguess what movie, call 940-349-8252for a hint. Children younger than 8 must
be accompanied by an adult.
POINTS OF INTEREST
The Bayless-Selby House Museum,restored Victorian-style home built in1898. 317 W. Mulberry St. Tues-Sat10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free. Han-dicapped accessible. Regular specialevents and workshops. 940-349-2865.www.dentoncounty.com/bsh.Denton County African American
Museum, 317 W. Mulberry St., part ofBayless-Selby House Museum. Featuresexhibits of historic black families in thecounty, including artwork and quilting,and personal items of the lady of thehouse. Free. Tues-Sat 10am-noon and 1-3pm. www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.
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Bethlehem in Denton County, asmall gallery displaying a personal col-lection of more than 2,500 nativities.Open evenings and weekends, byappointment only. Located 6 milesnorth of Denton. Free. Small groups andchildren welcome. Call 940-458-3563
evenings/weekends to schedule yourvisit. www.bethlehemindentonco.com.Courthouse-on-the-SquareMuseum Exhibits include photos ofDenton communities, historic Hispanicand black families, farm and ranchingartifacts, and special collections.Research materials, county cemeteryrecords, genealogical info, photographs.110 W. Hickory St. 10-4:30 Mon-Fri and11-3 Sat, closed holidays. Free. Call 940-349-2850 or visit www.dentoncounty.com/chos.Denton County Historical Museum
Inc. and Texas Heritage Centerdepicts life in Denton County from mid-1800s through 1950s. Exhibits for allages. Documents, photographs, recordsrelevant to county history. Familyresearch center. 5800 N. I-35 at exit470. 10am-5pm Tues-Sat. Free. 940-380-0877.Denton Firefighters Museum, at 332E. Hickory St., offers a collection of fire-fighting memorabilia from the 1800s tothe present. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Closedon city holidays. Free and handicappedaccessible.
Gowns of the First Ladies of TexasCreated in 1940, exhibit features gar-ments worn by wives of governors ofTexas. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Administra-
tion Conference Tower, TWU campus.Free, reservations req. 940-898-3644.Hangar Ten Flying Museum WWIIaircraft on display including Lockheed10A, Beech Aircraft Stagger Wing, PT22& Piper L-4. Mon-Sat 8 am-3 pm. 1945Matt Wright. Free. 940-565-1945.Little Chapel-in-the-Woods Daily8am-5pm, except on university holi-days or when booked for weddings,weekends by appointment only, TWUcampus. 940-898-3644.
SENIORS
American Legion Building 629 Lakeyin Fred Moore Park. 10am-3:30pm Mon-Fri, 7-10:30pm Thurs. 940-349-8298.Denton Senior Center Offers dailylunches, classes, travel, health services& numerous drop-in activities. 8am-9pm Mon-Fri. 509 N. Bell Ave. 940-349-8280. www.dentonseniorcenter.com.GDancing, live big band & countrymusic every second and fourth Friday,
7-9:30pm, $5. Dances are open to alladults and include live music andrefreshments. Dance hosts will be pres-ent to dance with unaccompanied ladies.GMovies 6pm each Wed. Free for Den-ton seniors. $1 for popcorn and soda.G SPAN noon meal each Mon-Fri. $1.50for seniors age 60 & older, $3.50 forthose younger than 60.NARFE (National Active and RetiredFederal Employees Association)meets at 11:30am every 4th Friday atGolden Corral on Loop 288. All mem-bers and other federal employees are
invited. Call 940-382-6049.RSVP Referral & placement service forvolunteers age 55 & older. 1400 Cres-cent St. 940-383-1508.
EVENTSContinued from Page 5
MOVIES
THEATERS
CINEMARK DENTON2825 Wind River Lane off Interstate35E. 940-535-2651.www.cinemark.com.
MOVIE TAVERN916 W. University Drive. 940-566-FILM(3456). www.movietavern.com.
RAVE MOTION PICTURES8380 S. I-35E, Hickory Creek. 940-321-2788. www.movietickets.com.
SILVER CINEMASInside Golden Triangle Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-1957.
OPENING FRIDAY
Prom Night A killer with an obsessionruins a high school girl's rite of passagein this remake of the 1980 chiller. WithBrittany Snow, Scott Porter and JessicaStroup. Directed by Nelson McCormick.Rated PG-13. Los Angeles TimesSmart People (###1/2) Dennis Quaidstars as a pompous Carnegie MellonEnglish teacher, widower and neglect-ful father of his precocious daughter(Ellen Page). He begins a tenuous rela-
tionship with an ex-student (SarahJessica Parker) at the same time hisslacker brother (Thomas HadenChurch) moves in, both shaky ideas. Astrangely melancholic romantic-come-dy filled with biting humor and quickwit. Rated R, 93 minutes. Boo AllenStreet Kings (##) Keanu Reevesstars as a tough, quasi-good LosAngeles undercover police officer bur-dened with trying to find his ex-part-ner's killer. Directed by Training Daywriter David Ayer and co-written byL.A. Confidentialauthor James Ellroy.
Although extremely violent and filledwith shady characters on both sides ofthe law, it's still a routine shoot-em-up.Rated R, 107 minutes. B.A.
NOW PLAYING
Drillbit Taylor (##1/2) Owen Wilsonstars in this latest Judd Apatow-pro-duced youth comedy. Wilson plays the
title character, a homeless shysterwhos hired by three high school new-comers to defend them against a sadis-tic pair of bullies. The comedy ranksslightly above similar fare. With Leslie
Mann (Mrs. Apatow) and filled withcomedian cameos. Rated PG-13, 102minutes. B.A.Horton Hears a Who (###1/2) Slickbig-screen adaptation of the Dr. Seussclassic manages the often difficult taskof retaining the charm of the originalmaterial while making it fresh and hipfor contemporary kids. The pace is live-ly, and the gags hit the mark moreoften than not in this story of a bum-bling elephant teaching a lesson ofacceptance through a friendship with avillage of tiny creatures. The voice cast
includes Jim Carrey, Steve Carell andSeth Rogen. Rated G, 88 minutes. Todd JorgensonLeatherheads (##) George Clooneydirects and stars as an over-the-hill foot-ball player in this erratic, unimaginativeromantic comedy set in the 1920s, dur-ing the formative days of professionalfootball. Renee Zellweger plays the loveinterest, a journalist who tries to plysecrets from pro footballs possiblesavior (John Krasinski, The Office).Sluggish, predictable and disappoint-ing. Rated PG-13, 114 minutes. B.A.
Nims Island (##
) Designed to pro-mote the power of a young imagination,this well-intentioned, kid-friendlyadventure saga is energetic and visuallyengaging, but ultimately feels clumsyand manipulative. It mixes fantasy andreality to tell the story of a girl (AbigailBreslin) stranded alone on a SouthPacific island after her father (GerardButler) becomes lost at sea. So its up tothe reclusive writer (Jodie Foster) of thegirls favorite book to personify herhero. Rated PG, 95 minutes. T.J.The Ruins A group of friends' trip to
an archaeological site in Mexico turnsinto a terrifying struggle to survive.With Jonathan Tucker and Jena Malone.Directed by Carter Smith. Rated R. LATRun Fatboy Run (##) Broad, pre-dictable comedy sees the title charac-ter (Simon Pegg, wearing a prostheticpaunch) leave his fiancee (ThandieNewton) at the altar, only to have hisfeelings for her rekindled after she
meets a smug American businessman(Hank Azaria) who happens to runmarathons. The performances are fineand some of the macho competitionsare amusing, but the idea runs out of
steam before the finish line. Everyoneinvolved has done better. Rated PG-13,95 minutes. T.J.Shutter Newlyweds discover appari-tional images in photographs devel-oped after a tragic accident. WithJoshua Jackson and Rachael Taylor.Directed by Masayuki Ochiai. Rated PG-13, 85 minutes. LATSuperhero Movie The title explainsthe format. This time out, scenes fromvarious movies with superheroes(mostly the Batman, SupermanandSpider-Manpictures) are replayed
ostensibly for laughs but mostly to pro-vide a framework for a series of pre-dictable topical references. Rated PG-13, 85 minutes. LAT10,000 B.C. (#1/2) A mix of vast CGIspectacle and small, silly moments,this prehistoric saga is an epic in nameonly. Our dreadlocked, dirt-smudgedhero, DLeh (Steven Strait), must pro-tect his Yagahl people from a variety offoes and must rescue the love of hislife (Camilla Belle) from slave raiders.Rated PG-13, 109 minutes. TheAssociated Press
21 (##
1
/2) Up-and-coming British actorJim Sturgess plays the head of a teamof math student whizes recruited bytheir professor (Kevin Spacey) to learnhow to count cards before going to LasVegas to profit from their scheme.Although based on a true story, the filmseems to constantly stretch in itsattempts to keep the pace high and theaction teeming. Rated PG-13, 122 min-utes. B.A.Tyler Perrys Meet the Browns The writer-director-star adapts hisstage play about a single mother from
Chicago who goes to Georgia for thefuneral of the father she never knewand encounters the family she may notbe ready for. Rated PG-13, 100 minutes. LATVantage Point A presidential assassi-nation attempt is the focal point in thelives of several people as we see thesame moment played out from each oftheir perspectives. Directed by PeteTravis. Rated PG-13. LAT
A homelessfellow (OwenWilson) findsemploymentas a body-guard for a
trio of frailhigh school-ers in DrillbitTaylor.
Paramount
Pictures
Book buffs can pick thestacks clean at North BranchLibrary this weekend. Themonthly book sale run byFriends of the Denton PublicLibraries usually has a littlesomething for everyone.
Shoppers can get books of allkinds cookbooks, mysteries,histories and Texas nonfiction as well as VHS tapes andbooks on tape. Most books are50 cents, and most videotapesare $1. Books on tape will sellfor $1 to $2.
Shoppers who buy a Friendsof the Libraries bag for $12 canfill the bag with items for noadditional charge, then bring it back for a another fill-up for$10.
Lucinda Breeding
DMN file photo
Looking for books foryouths? Youll find thoseand more at the Friends ofthe Denton Public Librariesbook sale on Saturday.
BOOK SALEWhat: Denton County Friends of the Denton Public Libraries sale
When: 10 a.m.to 4 p.m. Saturday
Where: North Branch Library, 3020 N.Locust St.
Details: Admission is $1 for adults. Members of the Friends of the DentonPublic Libraries get in free. Children younger than 12 get in free.
Book sale gives boostto city library system
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DINING
Restaurant profiles and listingsare compiled by the Denton Record-Chronicleand The Dallas MorningNews. A comprehensive list ofDallas-Fort Worth area restaurantsis available at www.guidelive.com.
Denton Timepublishes restau-rant profiles and a guide of restau-rants that have been featured in the
weekly dining section and online atwww.dentonrc.com. Profiles andlistings are not related to advertis-ing and are published as space isavailable. Denton Timedoes notpublish reviews.
Incorrect information can bereported by e-mail to [email protected], by phone to 940-566-6860
or by fax to 940-566-6888.To be considered for a profile,
send the restaurant name, address,phone number, days and hours ofoperation and a copy of the menu to:Denton TimeEditor, P.O. Box 369,Denton, TX 76202. Please indicatewhether the restaurant is new or haschanged ownership, chefs or menus.
PRICE KEYAverage complete dinner per
person, including appetizer, entreeand dessert.
$ Less than $10$$ $10$25
$$$ $25$50$$$$ More than $50
DINING PROFILE AND LISTINGS POLICY
RESTAURANTS
AMERICAN CUISINEBarflys Sports Bar & Grill Lunchserved during the week. 5006 I-35E,Lake Dallas. Lunch 11am-2pm Mon-Fri;4pm-2am daily. 940-498-0920.
Dustys Bar and Grill Place serves oldand new bar entrees and a plethora ofappetizers among its pool tables, dartboards, video games and TVs. 119 S.Elm St. Daily noon-2am. $-$$. 940-243-7300.The Loophole Square staple hascharming menu with cleverly nameditems, like Misdemeanor and Felonynachos. Decent range of burgers. 119W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; foodserved until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.940-565-0770. www.loopholepub.com.Rockys Sports Bar Big games on bigscreens plus some pretty big tastes,too. For finger food, roll chicken chipo-tle and battered jalapeno andonionstrips are standouts. Homestyle burg-ers; savory Caesar salad with chicken.Full bar. 2000 W. University Drive. Daily4pm-2am. $. 940-382-6090. 1/04.Sweetwater Grill & Tavern It mayclaim a place among the worlds othermemorable pubs, rathskellers, hang-outs and haunts where the food satis-fies as much as the libations that washthem down. 115 S. Elm St. Tues-Sat 11-2am, Sun-Mon 11-midnight. $-$$. 940-484-2888.
BAKERIESDavis Purity Bakery Dentons oldestbakery has sculpted but simple and fla-vorful cakes, soft egg bread, cookiesand more. 520 S. Locust St. Mon-Sat5am-5:30pm. 940-387-6712.Esters Bakery, Panaderia & Tor-tilleria Mexican bakery offers panoplyof scents: cakes, pastries and sweets,lunch-able entrees, and tortillas in bulk.710 Elm St. Mon-Sat 6am-9pm, Sun6am-2pm. 940-591-9105.Ravelin Fine Pastries & Artisan
Breads Gourmet bakery offers fresh-baked bread, mouth-watering sweetsand a fine cup of coffee. 416 S. Elm St.Tues-Sat 6:30am-5:30pm, Sun 8am-5:30pm. 940-382-8561. 11/02.Panera Bread Upscale fast-food chainis a full bakery and cafe with a varietyof artisan breads, rich soups, sandwich-es, desserts, bagels. 1601 Brinker Road,#117. Mon-Fri 6:30am-9pm, Sat 7am-9pm, Sun 7am-9pm. $. 940-483-9800.3/04.
BARBECUEHickory Creek Barbeque Home ofthe Biggest Pig in Texas has some ofthe biggest servings as well. Worthysides and desserts accompany heapingpiles of tasty meats. 8656 I-35E. Mon-Sat 11-9; Sun 11-8. $-$$. 940-321-0524.6/03.Metzlers Bar-B-Q Much more than abarbecue joint, with wine and beershop, deli with German foods andmore. Smoked turkey is lean yet juicy;generous doses of delightful barbecuesauce. Tender, well-priced chicken-friedsteak. Hot sausage sampler has a
secret weapon:spicy mustard. Beerand wine. 628 Londonderry Lane. Daily10:30am-10pm. $. 940-591-1652. 6/05.Pappas Homestyle RestaurantPappas pronounced paw-paws bysome dishes up heaping plates fea-turing barbecue house staples, freshcoleslaw and potato salad, outstandingmac and cheese. Barbecue sauce issweet and smoky. Huge array of
desserts. No smoking. 1031 HickoryCreek Blvd. in Hickory Creek. Mon-Sat11am-9pm. $-$$. 940-498-0327.www.pappashomestyle.com. 9/07.The Smokehouse Denton barbecuejoint serves up surprisingly tender andjuicy beef, pork, chicken and catfish.Good sauces, bulky sandwiches andmashed potatoes near perfection. Goodpies and cobblers. Beer and wine. 1123Fort Worth Drive. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat11-10. $-$$. 940-566-3073. 3/02.
BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Traditional Spanish tapas(small savory dishes), gourmet sand-wiches and salads, breakfast items,coffee and espresso. Free Wi-Fi. Livemusic on some nights. Beer and wine.No smoking inside. 219 W. Oak St.Thurs-Sat 9:30am-midnight, Mon-Wed9:30am-10pm, Sun 12:30pm-10. 940-565-1638. 4/06.Bochys Bistro Fusion menu grabs ele-ments of European cuisines with manysalad and sandwich selections. Win-ning Greek chicken lisi panini. Artfuldesserts: tuxedo cake, cream cheesebrownie. No smoking. 2430 I-35E, Suite136. Mon-Thurs 8-3, Fri-Sat 8-8, Sunbrunch 8-2. $$. 940-387-3354. 9/03.The Chestnut Tree Salads, sandwich-es, soups and other lunch optionsserved in back of small antique storeon the Square. Chicken pot pie is stel-lar, with painstakingly made crust andthick, tender stew inside. Tasty quiche.Decadent fudge lava cake and rich car-rot cake. No smoking. 107 W. HickorySt. Mon-Sat 11-2:30 (breakfast 9-11;desserts 3-5). $-$$. 940-591-9475.
BRUNCHLe Peep Grill Breakfast/brunch/lunchchain restaurant pushes the limits ofthe morning meal. No smoking. 1435 S.Loop 288, Suite 117. Mon-Fri 6:30am-2pm, Sat-Sun 7am-2:30pm. $-$$. 940-381-5357. 3/04.
CAJUNCooking With Style Cajun and Creole-style cuisine, featuring po boys, cat-fish, Creole red beans, gumbo, jamba-laya and more. Daily discounts avail-able. 1800 S. Loop 288, Suite 393.Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-11, Sun 11-6.940-380-2999.Frillys Seafood Bayou KitchenPlenty of Cajun standards and Texasfusion plates. Everything gets plenty ofspice sometimes too much. Sideslike jalapeno cornbread, red beans andrice extra. Beer and wine. 1925 DenisonSt. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-9:30 $$.
940-243-2126.
CHINESEChinatown Cafe Bountiful buffetguarantees no visit need taste likeanother. Good selections includecucumber salad, spring rolls, orangechicken, crispy pan-fried noodles, beefwith asparagus, steamed mussels. Beerand wine. 2317 W. University Drive.Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri 11-10, Sat 11:30-10,Sun 11:30-10 $. 940-382-8797. 11/03.J.C. China Fare shines at casual eatery.For appetizers, try egg rolls, crab ran-
goon and nice soups. Good main dishselections: cashew chicken and beefwith broccoli. Top-notch fried rice.Quick service. 7650 I-35E, Suite 108,Corinth. Daily 11-9. $. 940-269-1110.Golden China Small restaurant boastsquick and friendly service. Nice selec-tions on buffet tables include wontonand egg drop soups, teriyaki chickenand hot pepper chicken. Beer and wine.
717 I-35E, Suite 100. Daily 11-10. $. 940-566-5588.Mr. Chopsticks This pan-Asian eaterydoes a little Chinese, Japanese, Thaiand even Indian food. Offers a plethoraof tasty appetizers and entrees. Manyvegetarian dishes (some with egg).Beer and wine. 1633 Scripture St. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat 11-10, Sun 11:30-9. $-$$.940-382-5437.
COFFEEHOUSESArt Six Coffee House Coffee, espres-so, tea and other drinks, plus snacks,sandwiches and soup in a spot wherelounging is encouraged. Its an artsvenue to boot. No smoking. 424 BryanSt. Mon-Fri 10am-midnight, Sat noon-midnight. $. 940-484-2786.Chisholm Trail Coffeehouse, featur-ing sandwiches, dessert and salads.250A E. FM2449 in Ponder. Mon-Thurs6am-8pm; Friday 6am-10pm; Sat 7am-10pm; Sun 7am-3pm. $. 940-479-2060.Jupiter House All-night coffeehouseoffers espresso, coffee, smoothies,shakes, teas and other drinks, as wellas pastries and snacks. Open 24 hours,except for major holidays. No smokinginside. 106 N. Locust St. 940-387-7100.
ECLECTICThe Club at Gateway Center Three-course meal for $7 at restaurant run byhospitality management students. Forschedule, menu and reservations, visitwww.smhm.unt.edu/theclub. Locatedin Gateway Center across from FoutsField on the UNT campus. No smoking.No credit cards. 940-565-4144. Mon-Wed and Fri, with seating 11:30-12:30.$. 940-565-4144.The Greenhouse Restaurant Savvydinner menu begins with the magic ofmesquite: From the smoker, pork loin orbaby back ribs; and from the grill,chicken or N.Y. strip. Alongside burgersand sandwiches, even vegetarian selec-tions get a flavor boost from the wood-pile. Delectable desserts. 600 N. LocustSt. Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11, Sun
noon-9 (bar stays open later). $-$$.940-484-1349. 5/03.Hannahs Off the Square More room,more mid-price items and more casualatmosphere. Fish tacos filled withgrilled tilapia, key lime sauce andmango salsa. Steaks, with any of 10sauces or toppings, get A-plus. Tempt-ing desserts. Full bar. No smoking inside(smoking OK on terrace). No checks. 111W. Mulberry St. Sun-Mon 11-9 (brunchuntil 2pm), Tues-Thurs 11-10; Fri-Sat 11-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-1110. 10/04.The Wildwood Inn Elegant dining
room tucked away in a bed and break-fast. Excellent food like hearty soups,Angus ribeye, meal-size salads anddaily specials. Beer and wine. No smok-ing inside. 2602 Lillian Miller Parkway.Thurs-Sat by reservation only; seatingstarts at 6pm. $$$. 940-243-4919.www.denton-wildwoodinn.com.
GREEKMichaels Kitchen Family-ownedrestaurant offers a Greek/Lebanesemenu hummus, gyros, dolmas andkafta plus American food, for all
three meals. Breakfast buffet week-days. BYOB. 706 Fort Worth Drive. Daily5:30am-10pm. $. 940-382-3663.www.michaelskitchengreek.com.12/07.Yummys Greek Restaurant Smalleatery with wonderful food. Tasty sal-ads, hummus, falafel, dolmas andkebabs. 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. 3/03.
HAMBURGERSCool Beans Funky atmosphere in oldbuilding. Menu offers foodstuffs that gowell with a cold beer fried things,nachos, hamburgers, etc. Veggie burgertoo dependent on salt, but good friesare crispy with skin still attached. Fullbar. 1210 W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-7025. 10/03.Denton County Independent Ham-burger Co. Custom-built burgers witha juicy, generous patty, fresh fixings ona worthy bun. Also available: chickensandwich and limited salad bar. 113 W.Hickory St. Mon-Sat 11-3. 940-382-3037. 2nd location: 715 Sunset St. Mon-Sat 11-8. 940-382-3037. $. No creditcards. Beer at 2nd location. 12/02.Frostys Drive N Old-timey joint has allyour fast-food faves but with home-made quality, including its own rootbeer. Atmosphere and jukebox take youback to the 50s. 1002 Fort WorthDrive. Tues-Sun 11am-11pm. $. 940-387-5449. 8/03.Js Burger Barn Diners can count onhearty, satisfying portions for theirmoney. Breakfast is one of the Barnsstrong points. Burgers (with veggie ver-sion available), chicken-fried steak,sandwiches, etc., beat anything from adrive-through. Quaint place with regu-lar crowd of old-timers. 324 E. McKin-ney St. Mon-Fri 7am-3pm, Sat 7am-2pm. $. 940-387-9498. 11/04.
HOME COOKINGBettys Cafe Diners get buffet selec-tions of homestyle standards: catfish,fried chicken, meatloaf and barbecueribs. Homemade rolls and pie are avail-able to go. Also: Mexican dinner buffetson Thursday. Breakfast buffets made tofill you up, and kids ages 1-5 eat for $2.921 S. U.S. Highway 377 in Aubrey.Mon-Sun 6am-2:30pm, Wed-Fri 5-8pm.$. 940-365-9881. 11/05.
Krum Diner Offers homestyle cuisine,seafood and Italian food, along withGreek and assorted desserts, and sand-wiches, burgers, dinner plates andmore. 145 W. McCart St., Krum, Mon-Sat 7am-8pm, Sun 9am-2pm. $. Call940-482-7080.Lake Dallas Cafe This family-orientedcafe serves up farm-style breakfast andlunch. Smooth coffee and friendly serv-ice are bonus when compared to down-home good food. Hearty biscuits, chick-en-fried steak and breakfast items. 321Main St., Lake Dallas. Mon-Fri 6am-
2pm, Sat 6am-1pm, Sun 6am-noon. $.940-497-2925. 3/03.Old West Cafe Second location ofSanger restaurant serves stick-to-your-ribs bfast andlunch to fuel body andspirit. Hash browns come crispy out-side, soft inside. No smoking. 1020Dallas Drive. Mon-Fri, 6am-2pm; Sat6am-1pm; Sun 7am-1pm. $. 940-382-8220. Sanger location: 711 N. Fifth St.Mon-Fri 6am-2pm, Sat 6am-1pm, Sun7am-1pm. 940-453-7353. 10/03.Prairie House Restaurant Full bar.U.S. Highway 380 and FM720, Aubrey.Daily 11-10. $-$$. 940-440-9760.Rubys Diner Hearty breakfast andlunch buffets have made regulars formore than two decades. Buffalo burg-ers, ostrich steaks, quail and alligatorentrees grace the menu for dinerswhose mommas got game. 111 N. ElmSt. Sun-Wed 6am-3pm, Thurs-Sat 6am-9pm. $-$$. 940-387-7706. 2/03.
ICE CREAMBeth Maries Old-Fashioned IceCream and Soda Fountain Parlorwith lots of yummy treats, includingmore than 40 ice creams made onpremises. Soups and sandwiches atlunch. 117 W. Hickory St. Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11, Sun noon-10 (lunchdaily 11-4). $. 940-384-1818.
ITALIANDon Camillo Garlic gets servedstraight up at family-owned restaurantthat freely adapts rustic Italian disheswith plenty of American imagination.Lasagna and chicken, eggplant parmi-giana bake in wood-fired oven withthin-crusted pizzas. 1400 N. Corinth St.,Suite 103, Corinth. Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9; Thurs & Fri-Sat 11-2:30, 5-10. 940-321-1100. 7/04.Feras Excellent entrees served bub-bling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastas andbillowing garlic rolls. Dishes served veryfresh. Desserts dont disappoint. Beerand wine. No credit cards. 1407 W. OakSt. 940-382-9577. Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-
Sat 11-11. $-$$. 4/02.Gentis Italian Restaurant and Pizza4451 FM2181, Suite 125, Corinth. Mon-Sat 11-10, Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-497-5400.Giuseppes Italian Restaurant Ro-mantic spot in bed andbreakfastserves Northern Italian and SouthernFrench cuisine. Beer and wine. 821 N.Locust St. Mon-Thurs, 11-2, 5-9, Fri 11-2& 5-10, Sat 5-10. Sun 10:30-2. $-$$.940-381-2712. 7/04.
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COVER STORY
If you wanted to make anotherconcert right away, the trip to theresource tent could cost you partof the next concert.
Now, everything will be allthere. Everything will be in oneplace, Thomas said.
This year, the festival concerts will be in the southeast and
southwest ballrooms as well asPioneer Hall in Hubbard Hall.
National tellers crossover to publishing
This years storytelling festivalcoincidentally highlights the lit-erary power of the headlining tal-ent. The festival is known for
delivering evening concerts byexpert performers who knowtheir art. This years tellers packan additional punch to the artform. All of the national tellersare published authors.
Carmen Agra Deedys book Martina the Beautiful Cock-roach, written in English and
Spanish, earned the Pura BelpreMedal, given to childrens booksby and about Latino culture.
Tim Tingle, a Canyon Lakestoryteller, saw his latest book,Turtle Grew Feathers, publishedby August House last February,and the story hes probably mostknown for, Crossing Bok Chito: A
Choctaw Tale of Friendship, is onthe master list for the 2008-09Texas Bluebonnet Awards.
His book is made availablethrough Texas public schoollibraries, and when children readthe title, they get credit throughthe awards reading program.
Tingles book is the touchingstory about a Choctaw girl whobreaks the rules by crossing theBok Chito River, befriendingsome of the slaves on the otherside.
Tim Tingle is becoming ahard man to find, Thomas said.Hes getting booked like crazy.
Hes been a longtime supporterof the Texas festival, and a long-time supporter.
Though Tingle is known forhis Choctaw stories, hes good fora blood-chiller during Ghost
Tales, the inaugural concert ofthe festival each year.Doug Lipman, an Oklahoma-
based teller, has published hisstories and instructional manu-als and kits about storytelling foryears.
TEXAS STORYTELLING FESTIVALWhen: 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday, 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday,9 a.m. to 11 p.m.Saturday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday
Where: Most events are at TWUs Hubbard Hall, off Oakland Street. The TinyTales for Tiny Tots concert from 10 to 11 a.m. Friday will be at the Center forthe Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St.
Details: Festival passes are $150 for adults and $65 for youths. For TejasStorytelling Association members, passes are $100 each, and $50 for youths.Evening concert tickets are $10, individual day concert tickets are $5, Friday orSaturday day passes are $40, and Sunday day passes are $20. For a full ticketschedule, including workshops and student field trip, visit www.tejasstorytelling.
org or call 940-382-7014. See schedule, Page 10.
See STORYTELLING on 10
No weather worries:Storytelling festivalmoves indoors
By Lucinda Breeding
Features Editor
The Texas Storytelling Festi- val wont happen undertents, with trains blowing a
lonely whistle as the countrys best narrators command audi-ences with little more than musicand the spoken word.
This year, almost the whole fes-tival will happen under one roof. All workshops, concerts and
events will happen at HubbardHall on the Texas Womans Uni- versity campus. Only the TinyTales for Tiny Tots concert from10 to 11 a.m. Friday will happenoff-campus, at the Center for the Visual Arts. The hall is onHickory Street just a bit off BellAvenue, with plenty of room foreveryone, said Cristin Thomas,the executive director of TejasStorytelling Association, thegroup that stages the state festivaleach year.
Last year, after two days ofrain, we were really hurting. Therain just killed us, Thomas said.
Showers didnt just keepcrowds away from QuakertownPark, the festivals longtime loca-tion. Weather also forced schoolofficials to round up each andevery student attending the 2007
student field trip day mid-con-cert, and rain kept the resourcetent in a tizzy.
Every time it rained, we allhad to run around and pack upthe merchandise in the resourcetent. When it stopped, we had tostart all over, Thomas said. Itwas just crazy.
Discouraging weather chewedinto the nonprofit storytellinggroups revenue, urging organiz-ers to reassess their core audi-ence.
Access is important, Thomassaid. As an all-ages event, the fes-tival spread across QuakertownPark was a challenge for someolder audience members, and atrek for families with children. Volunteers and festival patronsmentioned limitations.
When we looked at the demo-
graphics of our base, they told usthey had a little trouble gettingaround the grounds sometimes.And if you liked a storyteller andwanted to buy some of their stuff, you had to leave that tent rightafter the concert and go acrossthe grounds to the resource tent,Thomas said.
In from the elements
Denton Record-Chronicle file photo/Gary Payne
Peter Cook, who is deaf, uses sign language to tell the story of a fishing trip during last years Tejas Storytelling Festival at Civic
Center Park. Rain caused havoc at the 2007 festival, so organizers moved this years event indoors to Texas Womans University.
Doug Lipman
YOUNG TELLERSFive Denton-area children will par-ticipate in the Texas StorytellingFestival including TuesdayKissinger, who attends L.A. NelsonElementary School, and RyanElementary School students GarrettSmith, Jackson Sawko, Kody Jonesand Caley Kubicek.Other youngparticipants include Aneeta Alex,10; Tionne Grady Fuller, 11; KeithKibby; Meena Subramanian, 12;
and Journey Poklikuha, 11.
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Luigis Pizza Italian RestaurantFamily-run spot does much more thanpizza, and how. Great New York-stylepies plus delicious southern Italiandishes, from $3.95 pasta lunch specialto pricier meals. Nifty kids menu.Tiramisu is dynamite. Beer and wine.
2317 W. University Drive. Sun & Tues-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-591-1988. 7/04.Neals Italian Restaurant Italianeaterys best bets include shrimp, scal-lop and crab-claw scampi; chickenMaria; blackened salmon and fettuc-cine primavera. Top-notch spumoni fordessert. BYOB. 721 Hundley Drive, LakeDallas. Tues-Thurs 6-9, Fri-Sat 5:30-10.$-$$. 940-321-4560.Tinas Italian Ristorante Toned-downatmosphere, attentive and eager-to-please wait staff, and very fair prices.
Offers pizza and pastas, plus special-ties like Linguini Modomio, with shrimpand clams in herb-infused white winemarinara sauce. Cappuccino ice creampie is so tasty its hard to share. BYOB.1125 E. University Drive. Tues-Sun 10-10. $-$$. 940-591-9212. 8/04.
JAPANESEKeiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Naganoturns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yellow-tail and tuna into sashimi. Daily fishspecials and pasta dishes served withan Asian flair. Homemade tiramisu and
fruit sorbets. Reservations recom-mended. Wine and beer. 500 N. Elm St.Tues-Sat 5-11. $$. 940-230-3410. 9/07.Royal East Hefty Japanese offering(including sushi bar) plus Korean andChinese dishes. Pleasing Fire MountainRoll. Fish tastes very fresh and firm.Mochi ice cream is a dessert unlikeanything else. Beer, wine and sake. Nosmoking. 1622A W. University Drive.Mon-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-383-7633,940-483-1173. 7/04.
MEXICAN/TEX-MEXCafe Garibaldi A mom-and-pop shopwith an Italian name, run by a Peruvian,serves good authentic Tex-Mex andPeruvian meals. 1813 N. Elm St. Mon-Sat 11-3 and 5-9. $.Casa Galaviz Comfortable, homeyatmosphere at small, diner-stylerestaurant that caters to the morningand noon crowd. Known for homemadeflour tortillas and authentic Mexicandishes from barbacoa to menudo. Nocredit cards. BYOB. 508 S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 7-7; Sat-Sun 7-5. $. 940-387-2675.10/02.Casita Vara Long lines are testamentto good food. Well-fried beef flautitasand pleasing borracho beans. One ofthe best items: big green mint basilsalad. Flans on gelatinous side, butsopapillas are hot and crusty. No smok-ing. No checks. 1400 N. Corinth St.,Suite 111, Corinth. Mon-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-498-1220. 1/04.Chilitos Delicious guacamole; albondi-gassoup rich with chunky vegetablesand big, tender meatballs. Standout:savory pork carnitas. Attentive, friendlystaff. Menudo on weekends, breakfastanytime. BYOB. No smoking. 619-623 S.Denton Drive, Lake Dallas. Mon-Fri 11-9,Sat 10-9. $-$$. 940-321-5522. 1/05.El Chaparral Grill Restaurant serves ahealthy duo of American and Mexican-style breakfasts, lunches, entrees andsides. 209-B W. Hickory St. Sun 8am-2pm; Mon-Thurs 7am-6pm; Fri 7am-8pm. $. 940-243-1313. 1/08.El Guapos Huge menu encompassesTex-Mex and Mexican standards as
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Mi Casita Mexican Food Fresh, tasty,no-frills Tex-Mex at good prices. Tacos,fajitas, quesadillas, chalupas and moreplus daily specials and bfast offerings.Fast and friendly service. Beer andwine. 110 N. Carroll Blvd. Mon-Sat 7am-9pm. $. 940-891-1932. Mi CasitaExpress: 905 W. University Drive, Mon-Sat 7am-3pm, 940-891-1938. 6/03.Miguelitos Mexican RestaurantThe basics: brisk service, familyatmosphere and essential selections ata reasonable price. Sopapillas and flanare winners. Beer andmargaritas. 241W. McCart, Krum. Tues-Thurs & Sun 11-9; Fri & Sat 11-9:30. 940-482-7007.1/03.Mi Ranchito 122 Fort Worth Drive.Tues-Thurs 11-3, 5-9:30; Fri-Sun 11-10. $.940-381-1167.Raphaels Restaurante MexicanoNot your standard Tex-Mex worththe drive. Sampler appetizer comeswith crunchy chicken flautas, freshguacamole. Pechuga (grilled chickenbreast) in creme good to the last bite,and beef fajitas are juicy and flavorful.Full bar. 26615 U.S. Highway 380 East,Aubrey. Tues-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$.940-440-9483. 1/04.
MIDDLE EASTERNInternational Foods & Restaurant ofDenton Family-owned restaurant/mar-ket does it all from scratch, and withspeed. Meats like gyros and succulentSultani Kebab, plus veggie combo andcrunchy falafel. Superb saffron rice andsauteed vegetables; impressive bakla-va. BYOB. No smoking. 609 Sunset St.Mon-Sat 11-9; Sun noon-8. $-$$. 940-591-6530. 2/05.
NATURAL/VEGETARIANCupboard Natural Foods and CafeCozy cafe inside food store servesthings the natural way. Winning salads;also good soups, smoothies and sand-wiches, both with and without meat.Wonderful breakfast including tacos,quiche, muffins and more. No smoking.200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat 8-9, Sun11-6. $. 940-387-5386. 10/03.
PIZZAJ&Js Pizza Pizza lovers can stay intouch with their inner-collegiate selvesthrough cold mugs of premium draft.Bountiful, homemade pizza pies, in N.Y.style or deep-dish Chicago style.Salads, hot and cold subs, calzones,lasagna and spaghetti. Beer. 118 W. OakSt. 940-382-7769. Mon-Sat 11-midnight.$-$$.MVP Pizza place with above-averagepies and other fare. Good cheese bread
and lasagna. Try the most valuablepizza pie. 100 Country Club Road, Suite115, Argyle. 940-464-9899. Mon-Thurs11-9, Fri-Sat 11-9:30, Sun 11-8. $-$$.
SANDWICHESJimmy Johns Gourmet SandwichesDenton location of regional chain offerssubs on fresh-baked French bread andclub sandwiches. 107 Ave. A. Daily11am-3am. $. 940-484-5466.New York Sub-way $. 906 Ave. C.Mon-Sat 10-10, Sun 11-10. 940-383-3213. Second location:305 W. Univer-
sity Drive, 940-566-1823.New York Sub-Hub Franchise locationof local restaurant offers bread bakeddaily and fresh ingredients, even avoca-do. 1400 S. Loop 288, Suites 102-2, inDenton Crossing center. Mon-Sun10:30am-10pm. $. 940-383-3233.Second location: 4271 Swisher Road,Suite 308, in Corinth; Mon-Sat 10:30-9,Sun 11-7; 940-497-2530
SEAFOODSneaky Petes Restaurant 2 EaglePoint Drive, Lewisville. Sports bar
hours: 11am-midnight weekdays, Fri-Sat11am-1am, Sun brunch 10-2. $-$$. 972-434-2500.Three Fins Seafood Grill Fish cookedthe way you want it chargrilled,blackened or panbroiled. Crab cakescould be famous one day; gumbo isrich and dark. Fish turns out heavenly,especially with Dijon cream sauce. Fullbar. No checks. 2303 I-35E. Sun-Thurs11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $$. 940-898-1404.10/04.
STEAK
Ranchmans Cafe Legendary cafesticks to old-fashioned steaks and tra-dition. Oversized steaks and deliciouschicken-fried steak. Homey meringuepies; order baked potato ahead. BYOB.110 W. Bailey St., Ponder. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$$. 940-479-2221.Trail Dust Steak House Informaldress (neckties will be clipped). Danceto live C&W. 600 Lincoln (U.S. Highway380), Aubrey. 940-440-3878. $$. 3/97.
THAIAndaman Thai Restaurant Extensive
menu continues trend of good Asianfood in Denton. Fried tofu is a homerun.Pad Thai noodles have perfect amountof sweetness. Homemade coconut icecream, sweet rice with mango. Beerand wine. No smoking. 508 S. Elm St.Mon-Fri 11-9, Sat-Sun noon-9:30. $$.940-591-8790. 3/05.Siam House Thai Restaurant Freshflavors set curries apart at comfortabledining spot. Winning starters: shrimpsatay, Tum Yum Gai and Tom Kahsoups. Excellent Thai seafood, includingtilapia fillet. Beer and wine. 909 Ave. C.Lunch, Mon-Fri 11-2; dinner, Mon-Sat 5-9. $-$$. 940-382-5118.Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tasty asthey are pretty. Lunch specials can bemade with chicken, pork, vegetables orbeef; hot and spicy sauce makes evenveggie haters go after fresh veggieswith zeal. Quiet setting. BYOB. Nosmoking. 1509 Malone St. Mon-Fri11am-3pm, 5-10pm; Sat 11:30-10; Sun 5-9. $-$$. 940-566-6018. 7/04.
DININGContinued from Page 8
Its a coincidence that all of ournational tellers are published,Thomas said. I think thats a real-ly unique thing, though, and itshows just how dedicated theseguys are to their art.
Deedy was born in Havana,Cuba, and emigrated with herfamily to Georgia. She relies onher dual heritage to engage lis-teners with humor, poetry in lan-guage and frank insights. She haspresented stories on NationalPublic Radios weekend editionofAll Things Considered.
Lipman is a sought-after story-teller and coach who travels
widely he went to Mexico just before coming to Denton. He began storytelling because he was interested in becoming abetter teacher to the children inhis classes. Other storytellers lovehim for creating StorytellingWorkshop in a Box.
Tingle gave his first NationalMuseum of the American Indianperformance at the amphitheater
outside the Smithsonian Institu-tion complex last June. His workwith tribal Choctaw elders turnedinto an anthology that won the
Best Anthology of 2003 award,granted by Storytelling World
Magazine. Tingle has earnedcopious praise for his work to pre-serve Choctaw heritage, both instorytelling and music.
Regional tellers at this yearsfestival are Doc Moore, DonnaLively and James Ford.
LUCINDA BREEDING can bereached at 940-566-6877.
TODAY
QUAKERTOWN STAGE7 to 9 p.m. Ghost Story Concert
FRIDAY
CENTER FORTHE VISUAL ARTS10 to 11 a.m. Tiny Tales for Tiny Tots
QUAKERTOWN STAGE10:30 to 12:30 p.m. Middle schoolconcerts10:30 to 11:20 a.m. Donna Livelyand Doug Lipman, with youth tellers11:20 to 11:40 a.m. Intermission11:40 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. JamesFord and Carmen Deedy, with youthtellers1:30 to 3 p.m. Concert of all fea-
tured tellers: Carmen Agra Deedy,James Ford, Tim Tingle, Donna Livelyand Doug Lipman.3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Membershipmeeting5 to 6 p.m. Rising Star concert7:30 to 10 p.m. Evening concert,featuring James Ford, Doc Moore,Carmen Agra Deedy, Tim Tingle andDoug Lipman
DENTON STAGE9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Elementaryschool concerts
9:30 to 10:20 a.m. Donna Livelyand Tim Tingle10:20 to 10:40 a.m. Intermission10:40 to 11:30 a.m. James Fordand Carmen Agra Deedy
SATURDAY
QUAKERTOWN STAGE10 a.m. to noon Traditional Native
American concert and Story Circles1 to 2 p.m. Licking the Plate2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Kinfolk andOther Problems4 to 5 p.m. Lone Star Liars Contest
DENTON SENIOR CENTER5 to 7 p.m. Tale Spinner Dinner and
Silent Auction
QUAKERTOWN STAGE7:30 to 10 p.m. Evening Concert:Tim Tingle, Doug Lipman, John HenryFaulk, volunteer awards ceremony (12-14 minutes), Donna Lively and CarmenAgra Deedy
DENTON STAGE9 to 11:45 a.m. Childrens concertsfor children ages 5 and older9 to 9:45 a.m. Critters andCreatures
10 to 10:45 a.m. Around the Worldand Home Again11 to 11:45 a.m. For Your Funnybone1 to 2 p.m. Lessons Learned andLost2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Texas to the Bone4 to 5 p.m. Out of the Melting Pot,Into the Fire
SUNDAY
QUAKERTOWN STAGE10 to 11 a.m. Sacred Tales
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. ThoseWho Have Gone Before1 to 2 p.m. Farewell Concert of fea-tured regional tellers2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Farewell Concertof national tellers
DENTON STAGE10 to 11 a.m. Cowboy Church11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. CowboyPoetry
Carmen Agra Deedy
TEXAS STORYTELLINGFESTIVAL
From Page 9
Storytelling
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/CREDIT OFFERSIts illegal for companiesdoing business by phoneto promise you a loan &ask you to pay for it be-fore they deliver. Formore info., call toll-free
1-877-FTC HELPPublic service msg fromDenton Publishing Co.
& Grapevine Sun
Fed. Trade Commission
Help Wanted 305 Help Wanted 30511
DentonTim
e
April10,2008
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Help Wanted 305 Help Wanted 305Help Wanted 305 Help Wanted 305Help Wanted 305 Help Wanted 305Help Wanted 305
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HVAC TECHNICIAN2 year residential experience
required. Our Techs work full
time year round, and enjoy
top pay, health care, vaca-
tion, 401k & holiday benefits.
We drug test & criminal
background check.
940-323-1055
LIFEGUARDThe Nelson Childrens Resi-
dential Treatment Center
seeks to fill two certified life-
guard positions. The position
requires the individual to
work approx. 20 hours per
week including one weekend
day (Sat. or Sun). Must pos-
sess a current lifeguard cert.
Education/ Exp in Human
Services field preferred. In-
terested parties should apply
in person at 4601 I35 N,
Denton, TX. EOE/M/F/D/V
HVAC INSTALLERS!Great company,
Great benefits.
We have a place for you in
our growing company.
Call 940-382-1355
LICENSED PLUMBERS& PLUMBERS HELPERS.
Call Wallace Plumbing
214-680-4579
HVAC INSTALLERResidential replacement ex-
perience required. Our In-
stallers make over $45K, and
enjoy health care, vacation,
401k, holiday benefits. We
drug test & criminal back-
ground check. 940-323-1055
DG
Sales Professionals and
Licensed Real Estate Sales
ProfessionalsCome join our team!
Email resume/references to
visit our website
www.purplewave.com DA
Apply in person at:1111 Ave. C
Denton, Tx 76201
or Call
(940)384-2400for More Information
Customer Service AgentsDay/Evening Shifts, FT/PT avail-able. Bilingual a plus. Paid training,pay after training starts @ $6.00/hr.
Now
Hiring
Forklift Operators
$10-$12/hrFalcon 817-491-5991
Housecleaner at U-Checked.
Neat, dependable, honest
person. Must speak English
EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
PT to become FT later.940-591-0860 or 940-594-7848
EXPD WELDERS & SHOPLABOR needed near Aubrey.Eileen, 940-365-5990, or email
HAIR STYLISTneeded at Media Clips Salon
in Denton. Chair lease, com-
mission or hourly pay. Kim
940-206-3459
Lewisville Location
Large ICF-MR facility
is seeking
Health Services Supervisorto supervise thenursing de-
partment. Position requires
currentLVN license and abil-
ity to work as a teamplayer.
Prefer some administrative
experience.
Fax resumes to (972) 436-2739or call Megan at 972-436-4538,extension 310 for details.
Female Care Givers Needed.BFOQ. 24 Hr. Live In Care.
Room, Board, & Benefits.
Established Company
Call 1-888-215-6812
Groundskeeperneeded M-F, 9am-1pm,
at Oak Meadows. 940-382-4007Hair Stylists/Barbers
for New GREAT CLIPSsalon in Little Elm.
Part Time & Full Time
Guaranteed hourly pay
+ bonus. Bonnie 972-849-3117
LEAD & ASSISTANTTEACHERS
Private preschool/child carein Southlake area. No Nightsor Weekends. 817-421-8087.
Rambling OaksCourtyard
A Private Pay/SNF LTCCommunity is
currently recruiting
LVNs,CMAsCNAs
and
Prep Cooksfor 12 Hour
Shifts
We offer competitive
wages and benefits.
Please submit
a resume or
application to:
Executive Director
Rambling OaksCourtyard
112 Barnett Blvd.
Highland Village,
TX 75077
972-317-1174 phone
972-317-1175 fax
Hotels
EXPD HOUSEKEEPERSSERVERS & DISHWASHER
Other positions also
available. Apply in person.
1434 Centre Place Dr, Denton
FARM CARETAKER
Show horse care & farm
maintenance. Must be
experienced. Background
check, refs reqd. 972-562-3662
Graphic/Web Designer in of-
fice. Create cutting-edgemarketing material includ-ing website, PowerPoint,html, print, signage. Send re-sume [email protected]
Executive
AssistantFor local service company
Benefits included
Experience preferred
Hourly pay based
on experience
Bilingual a plus
Email [email protected]
Drivers, CDL Class A,Home Every Night! 3yrs
Experience w/Truck/Pup.
Guaranteed 40 hrs.
Insurance, 401K andVacation. CALL 940-387-3275
Hospice Company is seekingMarketing Rep. Exc. salary
& benefits. 940-323-2122fax 940-323-8095.
Growing Denton SignCompany needs; CustomerService Rep/Sales, SignMaker & Graphic Designer.Exp preferred but may train
right persons, must be hardworking, team playerdependable & drug free.Great opportunity for rightpersons. Call 214-957-1664.
Godfathers Pizza on 407
needs Delivery Drivers &
Cooks, FT/PT. Apply in per-
son 1297 FM 407, 972-966-8600
EQUIPMENT OPERATORof Heavy Equip. Class A
CDL. Guaranteed 40 hrs per
week. Insurance, 401K, vaca-
tion, 5 yrs exp. 940-387-3275
ExperiencedWait Staff
Apply in person
Denton COuntry Club
1213 Country Club Rd, Argyle
Hope Home Care a HomeHealth agency is hiring PT
for a (P.A.C) in Denton3900 Teasley Ln., 817-498-3403
Drivers/CDL Career
Training w/Central
Refrigerated. We Train,
Employ w/$0 down
financing. Avg. $40,000 1st
year! 800-567-3867
FULL TIME LEAD &PART TIME Asst Teachers
For Primrose School inSouthlake. Call 817-337-4666or fax resume 817-431-5006.
Energy management compa-
ny seeking experienced
Electrican & Electrical Help-er for temperature control,some traveling required.
214-683-2377
Full Time Experienced12-17 month oldTEACHER940-241-1341
Growing co. seeking
motivated individual for
COOK/SUPERVISORfor Denton Co. facility. Must
be able to pass background
check & have some foodman-
agement experience. Com-
petitive pay, insurance, paid
time off, 401k. 940-349-1781or fax resume 940-243-0445
HOME SUPPORT STAFF
Make a difference! Responsi-ble, dependable people towork with people with disa-bilities in home/community:shopping, meals, laundry,etc. NE Tarrant. $8-$9/hr.Call 817-456-3700.
Experienced, versatile Ad-ministrative Asst/ AssistantBookkeeper for FT positionin Denton for Sonic Drive-In
Franchisee. Pay commensu-rate w/exp. Must be comput-
er l iterate; Quickbooks
and/or Excel experience a
plus, must pass criminal
background check. Apply to
Driver TraineesNeeded!
Learn to drive for
Werner Enterprises!
Earn $700-$800/week!
CDL & JobReady in 15 days!
No experience needed!
1-888-690-0144
FT/PT Servers & Cooksneeded at Michaels Kitchen
in Denton next to theLa Quinta. Call 940-382-3663
Hiring Immediately GraniteInstallers/Fabricators. Mustpass criminal bckgrnd chk.CTC, 972-382-4261 Celina, TX
ELECTRICIANS WANTEDCommercial experience
required
Benefits, Insurance, 401K
Apply within at:
C&G Electric, Inc.Apply within at
1516 Masch Branch Rd, Ste A
Denton, Texas
LAWN-LAND,your local John Deere dealer
is accepting resumes for the
position of
OFFICE CLERKResponsibilities include ac-counts payables and receiv-
ables, payroll, posting work
orders & parts orders.
Qualifications--must be fa-miliar with Microsoft Win-
dows & have a basic back-
ground in office accounting,
bank reconciliation, and a
working knowledge in
Spreadsheets. Hours 42.5 per
week Mon-Friday 8am til
5:30pm. Benefits include
health insurance. Pays
$31,000 annually + benefits.
Fax Resume to 94-0566-0673with a current photograph ormail or deliver to 714 Dallas
Dr, Denton TX. All inter-views will be scheduled fromour office.
Experienced Dog Groomerneeded in a 1 person
facility. Call Club Canine
940-383-2766
Groundskeeper/Pool Keeper
needed for large apartment
community. Apply in person
3210 Fall