October 4 Denton Time 2012
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IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK DentonTime
ON THE COVERZOMBIES!A woman dressed as a zombie
participates in a zombie walk
in Stockholm in August. Hold
on to your hearts, because
zombie specialist Max Brooks
is coming to Denton next week
to talk about how to survive an
epidemic of the undead.
(Getty Images/AFP, Jonathan
Nackstrand)
Story on Page 11
FIND IT INSIDEMUSICConcerts and nightclub
schedules. Page 4MOVIESReviews and summaries.
Page 9DININGRestaurant listings. Page 13
TO GET LISTEDINFORMATIONInclude the name and descrip-
tion of the event, date, time,
price and phone number the
public can call. If it’s free, say
so. If it’s a benefit, indicate the
recipient of the proceeds.
TELL US ONLINE:Visit www.dentonrc.com, and
click on “Let Us Know.”
E-MAIL IT TO:[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 publica-
tion. All information will be ver-
ified with the sender before
publication; verification must
be completed by noon the
Monday before publication for
the item to appear.
REACH USEDITORIAL & ARTFeatures EditorLucinda Breeding . . 940-566-6877
ADVERTISINGAdvertising DirectorSandra Hammond 940-566-6820
Classified ManagerJulie Hammond. . . . 940-566-6819
Retail Advertising ManagerShawn Reneau . . . . 940-566-6843
Advertising fax . . 940-566-6846
02DentonTime
100412
visit www.texascowboysagainst
cancer.org.
7 p.m. — First Friday Denton at
art venues around the downtown
Square. Gallery viewings, live music,
art projects and demonstrations and
more. For locations and more infor-
mation, visit www.firstfridaydenton.
com.
7 to 9 p.m. — Oxide Gallery’sfourth anniversary celebration at
211 N. Cedar St. Visit www.oxide
gallery.com or call 940-483-8900.
7 to 10:30 p.m. — Kids Rock! at
Denton Civic Center, 321 E. McKinney
St. A night of supervised activities for
children in grades 1-5. Cost is $9 per
child. Call 940-349-7275.
7 p.m. — Denton High Schooldrama department presentsHoles in the auditorium of the
school, 1007 Fulton St. Tickets cost
$8 for adults and $5 for ages 18 and
younger.
7:30 p.m. — Liberty ChristianSchool presents Around theWorld in 80 Days at the school,
1301 S. U.S. Highway 377 in Argyle.
Tickets cost $10 for adults and $7 for
students and seniors. Visit www.
libertychristian.com.
7:30 p.m. — Fight Boy Theatrepresents Sketchy People, an origi-
nal sketch comedy show, at Hailey’s
Club, 122 W. Mulberry St. Tickets
cost $10 at the door. For mature
audiences. Visit http://fightboy
theatre.webs.com.
SATURDAY9 a.m. to 3 p.m. — Fall GardenFest sponsored by the Denton
County Master Gardener Association
on the campus of Denton Bible
Church, at the corner of Mingo Road
and Nottingham Drive. Event in-
cludes workshops, demonstrations,
exhibits, vendors, children’s activities
and more. Free. Visit www.dcmga.
com or call 940-394-2883.
10 a.m. — Story Time at South
The Denton HumaneSociety is ready to cele-brate man’s best friend
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdayat Barktoberfest, a dog’s dayout and a fundraiser for thelocal animal welfare nonprofit.
The animal party forpooches returns to NorthLakes Park, 2001 W. WindsorDrive.
There is one perk this year:An anonymous donor haspromised to match the moneyraised up to $5,000. All pro-ceeds support animals in needin the city.
The Denton Humane Socie-ty promotes education, advo-cacy and awareness of animalwelfare needs in Denton, withemphasis on companion ani-mals like dogs and cats. The
nonprofit also has programs tohelp people in need keep theirpets through pet food supportand other initiatives.
Pet owners can get their pet’snails clipped, take advantage oflow-cost vaccinations from 11a.m. to 1 p.m., and partake ofdoggie trick-or-treating and“poochie art” (paw prints onpaper using washable paint). ADJ will play music throughoutthe event, and vendors will selldog collars, leashes, clothesand treats. Face painting willbe available.
A weenie-eating contest willbe conducted for small andlarge dogs. Arrive at 12:30 p.m.to secure your dog’s spot in thecontest to see which dog eatsthe fastest.
— Lucinda Breeding
Give your best friend a treat
on Saturday: Leash up and
head out to Barktoberfest.
DMN file photo
Denton Humane Society throws a shindig for dogsBARKTOBERFEST When: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.SaturdayWhere: Pavilion 3 at NorthLakes Park, 2001 W. WindsorDriveDetails: Admission is free.All dogs should be on leash-es and have up-to-date vac-cine tags. For more informa-tion, call 940-382-7387.On the Web: http://dentonhumanesociety.org.SCHEDULE11 a.m. — Welcome andopening11:30 a.m. — Pet costumecontestNoon — Rescue parade12:30 p.m. — Weenie-eatingcontest1:30 p.m. — Dancing withyour dog
Treat!
EVENTSTHURSDAY
9:30 a.m. — Crafters’ Corner at
Emily Fowler Central Library, 502
Oakland St. Work on projects and
learn new techniques. Free. Call 940-
349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. — Mini-stock-ing needlepoint class at Emily
Fowler Central Library, 502 Oakland
St. Learn decorative needlepoint
stitches for an ornament-size patch-
work stocking. Class is a beginner to
intermediate level. Class size is limit-
ed. Free. Call 940-349-8752 to regis-
ter.
10 a.m. and 11 a.m. — Story Timeat South Branch Library, 3228
Teasley Lane. Stories, songs, puppets
and more for children ages 1-5 and
their caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-
8752.
1:30 to 2:20 p.m. — “Two FlutistsAbroad,” a presentation by TWU
Presser Scholar Stephanie Mikus and
flute professor and music chair-
woman Pam Youngblood, in Room
301 at TWU’s Administration and
Conference Tower. Visit www.twu.
edu/global.
3:30 p.m. — AfternoonAdventure Club, stories and a
hands-on workshop for kids in
kindergarten through third grade, at
South Branch Library, 3228 Teasley
Lane. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
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.
7 p.m. — Denton High Schooldrama department presentsHoles in the auditorium of the
school, 1007 Fulton St. Tickets cost
$8 for adults and $5 for ages 18 and
younger.
8 p.m. — Writer Hannah Tinti,author of The Good Thief and Animal
Crackers, speaks in the Golden Eagle
Suite at the UNT Union, 1155 Union
Circle. Part of the creative writing
division’s Visiting Writers Series.
Free. Visit http://engl.unt.edu.
FRIDAY9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Timeat 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 care-
givers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
5 to 8 p.m. — RenaissanceFestival at Blanton Elementary
School, 9501 Stacee Lane in Argyle,
including performances by the
Blanton Squire Choir, ArsOrffeus and
the school orchestra and band, plus
food options and games. Event bene-
fits the school’s PTA. Call 940-369-
0700.
6 p.m. — Texas Cowboys AgainstCancer fundraiser featuring team
roping and “mutton bustin’” at
Diamond T Arena, 6900 E. Sherman
Dr. For fees and more information, Continued on Page 3
03DentonTime
100412
Branch Library, 3228 Teasley Lane.
Stories, songs, puppets and more for
children ages 1-5 and their care-
givers. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
10 a.m. to noon — Denton HerbSociety presents “All ThingsGarlic,” a lecture by Master
Gardener Cindy Reese, at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
10 a.m. — Aubrey Peanut Festivalat the festival grounds, 301 S. Main
St. in downtown Aubrey. Parade line-
up starts at 8 a.m., and the parade
begins at 10 a.m. Festival also
includes a horseshoe tournament, a
peanut butter sandwich eating con-
test, a peanut spitting contest and
other activities. Visit www.aubrey
peanutfestival.com.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Barktoberfestpresented by the Denton Humane
Society at Pavilion 3 at North Lakes
Park, 2001 W. Windsor Drive. Bring
your dog for photos, games, con-
tests, vendors, food and more. Call
940-382-7387 or visit http://denton
humanesociety.org.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — Denton HighSchool Air Force Junior ROTC faji-ta dinner fundraiser at the school,
1007 Fulton St. Advance tickets cost
$8; dinners sold at the door cost $10.
All plates may be picked up at the
school’s north entrance, facing
Crescent Street. Call Robert West at
940-369-2142 or e-mail rwest@
dentonisd.org.
2 to 3:30 p.m. — “Totally TeenFiction Makeover” at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Teens can
discuss favorite lead female charac-
ters, then become their favorite char-
acters through a makeup transfor-
mation. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
2 p.m. and 7 p.m. — Denton HighSchool drama department pres-ents Holes in the auditorium of the
school, 1007 Fulton St. Tickets cost
$8 for adults and $5 for ages 18 and
younger.
3 p.m. to 5 p.m. — Bookbindingclass at Emily Fowler Central Library,
502 Oakland St. Free. Participants
can make a simple sewn book. All
supplies will be provided. To register,
e-mail leslie.couture@cityofdenton.
com or call 940-349-8762.
6 p.m. — Texas Cowboys AgainstCancer fundraiser featuring a din-
ner, dance and live and silent auc-
tions at Diamond T Arena, 6900 E.
Sherman Drive. Tickets cost $30,
available at the door. Visit www.
texascowboysagainstcancer.org.
6 p.m. — Hearts and Heroes Galahonoring outstanding citizens and
organizations dedicated to communi-
ty service, at UNT’s Gateway Center,
801 North Texas Blvd. between Eagle
Drive and Highland Street. Benefits
Health Services of North Texas. For
tickets or more information, visit
www.healthntx.org.
7:30 p.m. — Liberty ChristianSchool presents Around theWorld in 80 Days at the school,
1301 S. U.S. Highway 377 in Argyle.
Tickets cost $10 for adults and $7 for
students and seniors. Visit www.
libertychristian.com.
EVENTSContinued from Page 2
Works by Mexicanartists Agapito Rin-con Pina, Leopoldo
Flores and Armando Pinedawill be on exhibit at UNT onthe Square beginning nextweek.
The exhibit is part of the10th anniversary of the jointresearch between the Univer-sity of North Texas and theAutonomous University of theState of Mexico in Toluca. All ofthe works are part of the per-manent collection at the Tolucauniversity.
Witold Brostow was the firstUNT faculty member to con-nect with the Mexican univer-sity when he began collaborat-ing on research with chemistryfaculty member Rafael LopezCastanares. Brostow is a UNTregents professor of materialsscience and engineering.
In 2002, the two schoolssigned an agreement to collab-orate on the academic trainingof students from both institu-tions and in research projectsin materials science, environ-mental science, physics andrelated fields. The agreementalso called for both universitiesto establish joint postgraduatedegree programs in materialsscience, environmental scienceand physics.
Supplementary agreementsover the past decade expandedthe research and degree pro-grams to other academic disci-plines. Among them was visualart.
Marakame,
Oleo Sobre
Tela is a
2008 acrylic
painting by
Agapito
Rincon Pina.
Prints of
Pina’s paint-
ings will be
among the
works by
Mexican
artists on
display at
UNT on the
Square.
Courtesy photo/UniversidadAutónoma delEstado de México
From science to artExhibit exemplifiesUNT’s bond withMexican university
The exhibit is presented bythe UNT Institute for theAdvancement of the Arts.
Plastic artist Leopoldo Floresreflects on social problems andhuman nature in his work,which is most often large. In2008, the Global Foundationawarded him the Excelsis prize,and the Mexican universitygave him an honorary doctor-ate for his career as an artist.
Painter Agapito Rincon Pinareflects a regionalist sense inhis interpretations of natureand light. The exhibition
includes 24 prints by Pina thatare part of the cultural heritagecollection of the Toluca univer-sity. The exhibit is the secondtime after his death that his col-lection will be displayed out-side of Mexico.
Armando Pineda is a painterand sculptor who has exhibitedwork individually and collec-tively. He was a guest of theU.N. Educational, Scientificand Cultural Organization inthe Dominican Republic andCosta Rica. His works are char-acterized by his colors, which
emphasize the roots and flavorsthat people live every day.
The exhibition is free, and anopening reception will be from5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 12. It runsthrough Nov. 9.
UNT on the Square is locat-ed at 109 S. Elm St. Galleryhours are 9 a.m. to noon and 1to 5 p.m. Monday throughFriday, with extended hoursuntil 8 p.m. Thursday, and 11a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday.
For more information visithttp://untonthesquare.unt.edu
— Staff report
SUNDAY3 p.m. — Liberty Christian Schoolpresents Around the World in 80Days at the school, 1301 S. U.S.
Highway 377 in Argyle. Tickets cost
$10 for adults and $7 for students
and seniors. Visit www.liberty
christian.com.
MONDAY8 a.m. to 5 p.m. — Kids’ Day Offat Denton Civic Center, 321 E.
McKinney St. On this school workday,
children in kindergarten through
sixth grade can enjoy supervised
activities and a field trip. Kids must
bring a lunch and snacks. Cost is $28
per child. Register by Oct. 5 by call-
ing 940-349-7275.
1 to 2 p.m. — “Get the Facts,” atalk about product nutrition labels,
serving sizes and fat and sodium
reduction, with Meilana Charles, of
the Texas AgriLife Extension Service-
Denton County and Better Living for
Texans, at North Branch Library, 3020
N. Locust St. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
7 to 8:45 p.m. — Chess Night at
North Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust
St. Free. Call 940-349-8752.
TUESDAY9:30 a.m. — Mother Goose Time
Continued on Page 4
04DentonTime
100412
at South Branch Library, 3228
Teasley Lane. Stories and activities
for infants (birth to 18 months) and
their caregivers. Free. Call 940-349-
8752.
10:30 to 11:15 a.m. — ToddlerTime 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 p.m. — Firefighter AfternoonAdventure Club at the Emily Fowler
Central Library, 502 Oakland St. Best
for ages 6 to 8. Free. Call 940-349-
8752 or visit www.dentonlibrary.com
6:30 p.m. — Twilight ToddlerTime features stories, songs and
activities for toddlers and their care-
givers at Emily Fowler Central
Library, 502 Oakland St. Free. Call
940-349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. — TeenAdvisory Board for teens in grades
6-12. Help plan and run library pro-
grams, discuss books, movies and
music, earn community service
hours and more at North Branch
Library, 3020 N. Locust St. Free. Call
Juli Gonzalez at 940-349-8741 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
7 to 8:45 p.m. — North BranchWriters’ Critique Group, for those
interested in writing novels, short
stories, poetry or journals, at North
Branch Library, 3020 N. Locust St.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
8 p.m. — “How to Survive theZombie Apocalypse,” a talk by
Max Brooks, author of The Zombie
Survival Guide and World War Z, in
the Silver Eagle Suite at the UNT
Union, one block west of Welch and
West Prairie streets. A book signing
follows. Part of UNT’s Fine Arts
Series. Tickets are $20 for the gener-
al public; $10 for UNT faculty, staff
and Alumni Association members;
and free for UNT students. Call 940-
565-3805 or visit http://untunion
tickets.universitytickets.com.
WEDNESDAY9:30 to 10 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.
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. — PreschoolPlay and Read at South Branch
Library, 3228 Teasley Lane. For chil-
dren ages 3-5 and their caregivers.
Free. Call 940-349-8752 or visit
www.dentonlibrary.com.
11 to 11:30 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 to 11:45 a.m. — FirefighterStory Time at Emily Fowler Central
Library, 502 Oakland St. Best for
ages 1-5. Free. Call 940-349-8752 or
visit www.dentonlibrary.com.
2 to 3:30 p.m. — “Job Searchingon the Internet” at South Branch
Library, 3228 Teasley Lane. Learn
EVENTSContinued from Page 3 Slice of life
Courtesy photo/UNT College of Visual Arts and Design
Pottery such as this piece of wood salt fired stoneware, prints, photos and even living
room furniture will give a glimpse into the life and work of longtime University of
North Texas regents professor Elmer Taylor. The potter’s retrospective exhibition at
the University of North Texas Art Gallery opens Tuesday and runs through Nov. 10. “Wel-
come to My World, 1972-2012” will feature Taylor’s ceramic works created over the last 40
years, photographs of Taylor, works by former students and other artists who have influ-
enced him, and 1940s-era handmade Japanese living room furniture from his home. An
opening reception will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Oct. 11 and an artist’s reception from 5 to 9 p.m.
Oct. 13 in the UNT Art Gallery in the Art Building, one block west of Mulberry and Welch
streets. Admission is free. For more information, visit http://gallery.unt.edu.
— Staff report
about sites that list available jobs,
and using social sites to help with job
searches. Must know how to use the
Internet. Free. Call 940-349-8752 to
register or visit www.dentonlibrary.
com.
3 to 4 p.m. — “Learn How to UseOverdrive E-Books and E-Audio-books” at Emily Fowler Central
Library, 502 Oakland St. Free. Call
940-349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. — UnitedMethodist Women sponsor abaked potato supper at First
United Methodist Church of Denton,
201 S. Locust St., in the Miller Center.
A baked potato with toppings, side
salad and dessert will cost $8. Sweet
potatoes will be available. Drinks, hot
dogs, baked goods and craft items
will also be sold.
7 to 8 p.m. — Milk and Cookies
Story Time at North Branch Library,
3020 N. Locust St. For ages 1-5. Free.
Call 940-349-8752 or visit www.
dentonlibrary.com.
7 to 8 p.m. — Professor’s Corner,
a discussion group dedicated to liter-
ary texts, meets at South Branch
Library, 3228 Teasley Lane. Free. Call
940-349-8752 or visit www.denton
library.com.
7 to 8:30 p.m. — ExploringPhilosophy at North Branch Library,
3020 Locust St. Join the ongoing dis-
cussions of time-honored philosophi-
cal issues with Dr. Eva H. Cadwal-
lader, professor of philosophy. Free
and open to the public. Call 940-349-
8752.
MUSICThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & Pub
Wed: County Rexford, 7:30-10pm,
free. 101 W. Hickory St. 940-566-
5483.
The Abbey Underground Wed:
“Bassment” with Vantege, Shelby
Woo. Each Fri, “’80s and ’90s Retro
Dance Party.” Each Tues, “Boombox”
with DJ Big J, 10pm. Each Wed,
“BASSment.” 100 W. Walnut St.
Andy’s Bar Sun: The Scary Mon-
delos, Walker and the Texas Dangers,
Gonzo City, the Scandals TX. Each
Tues, DJ Questionmark, 10pm. 122 N.
Locust St. 940-565-5400.
Art Six Coffee House Music, plays
and gallery shows in a house con-
verted into an arts space. No cover.
No smoking inside. 424 Bryan St.
940-484-2786. www.facebook.com/
artsixcoffeehouse.
Banter Thurs: Link Chalon, 6pm. Fri:
Chris and Matt (jazz), 6pm; Future
Eyes, 8pm. Sat: Alex Cannon (jazz),
6pm; Acoustic Distortion, 8pm. Each
Thurs, open mic at 8pm. Live local
jazz at 8pm each Fri and 6pm each
Sat. 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-1638.
www.dentonbanter.com.
Cafe Du Luxe Live music each Sat
at 8pm. 3101 Unicorn Lake Blvd. 940-
382-7070. www.cafeduluxe.com.
Cool Beans 1210 W. Hickory St. 940-
382-7025.
A Creative Art Studio Fri: Kylee
Pannel, Polly Maynard, Richard
Haskins, 7-10pm. 227 W. Oak St.,
Suite 101. 940-442-1251. www.
acreativeartstudio.com.
Dan’s Silverleaf Thurs: Rich Perry,
Alex Sipiagin and Donald Edwards,
Lynn Seaton and Stefan Karlsson,
9pm, $15. Fri: Charlie SHafter,
5:30pm, free; Shinyribs, 9pm, $10.
Sat: Old Warhorse (CD release), 9pm,
$7. Sun: Hares on the Mountain,
5:30pm, free. Mon: Mario Cruz, 8pm,
free. Tues: Paul Slavens and Friends,
10pm, free. Wed: Riggs/Slater/Eckels
Jazz Experience, 5pm, free; Lo-Fi
Chorus, 8:30pm, $5. No smoking
indoors. 103 Industrial St. 940-320-
2000. www.danssilverleaf.com.
Denton Square Donuts Fri: Kaitlyn
Sakry Duo. Each Mon, “Monday
Moanin’ Blues” with Mr. Beard, 7:30-
9:30am. 208 W. Oak St. 940-220-
9447. www.dentonsquaredonuts.
com.
Fry Street Public House Each Tues,
karaoke, 9pm, free. 125 Ave. A. 940-
323-9800. www.publichousedenton.
com.
Fry Street Tavern Fri: Jungle Boys.
940-383-2337. www.thefrystreet
tavern.com.
The Garage Each Thurs, “Whiskey
Jam” hosted by Matt Dunn, 10pm,
free. 113 Ave. A. 940-383-0045.
www.thedentongarage.com.
The Greenhouse Live jazz each
Mon at 10pm, free. 600 N. Locust St.
940-484-1349. www.greenhouse
restaurantdenton.com.
Hailey’s Club Fri: Fight Boy Theater
presents Sketchy People, 7:30pm,
$10. Sat: Hammer, Muenster MC,
Aaron Kaleta, Infidelix, Simple Seven,
KPD, Frank Twitchy, Lil Diesel, Spy
MC, Kid 214, 9pm, $5. Mon: Boxcar
Bandits, 10pm, free. Weekly dance
nights at 10pm, free-$5: Thurs, ’80s
music; Mon, DJ Questionmark; Tues,
’90s music. 122 W. Mulberry St. 940-
323-1160. www.haileysclub.com.
J&J’s Pizza 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-
7769. www.jandjpizzadenton.com.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
La Milpa Mexican RestaurantEach Fri, Mariachi Quetzal, 8pm. 820
S. I-35E, Suite 101. 940-382-8470.
Love Shack Thurs: Big Mike. Fri:
Lost Immigrants, 6pm. Sat: Robbie
Sanders, noon. Wed: Open mic, 6pm.
115 E. Hickory St. 940-442-6834.
www.loveburgershack.com.
Lowbrows Beer and Wine Garden200 S. Washington St., Pilot Point.
940-686-3801. www.lowbrows.us.
Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlorand Chainsaw Repair 1125 E. Uni-
versity Drive, Suite 107. 940-566-
9910.
Mad World Records 115 W. Hickory
St. 940-591-3001.
Oak St. Drafthouse 308 E. Oak St.
940-395-1950. oakstdrafthouse.com.
Rockin’ Rodeo Thurs: Bart Crow,
John David Kent. Each Wed, “Wild
Continued on Page 5
05DentonTime
100412
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IT
940.383.3536(Next door to Rockin’ Rodeo)
1007 Avenue C Denton TX
West Wednesdays.” 1009 Ave. C.
940-565-6611. www.rockinrodeo
denton.com.
Rubber Gloves Rehearsal StudiosThurs: Breathing Problem, Public
Health, J. Orion, Stoned to Death,
9pm, $1-$3. Fri: Inter Arma, Baring
Teeth, Lions of Tsavo, Bludded Head,
9pm, $5-$7. Sat: The Wee-Beasties,
Enormicon, Poor Dumb Bastards,
TriCounty Terror, 9pm, $5-$7. Mon:
Mind Spiders, Lenguas Largas, Occult
Detective Club, 8pm, $5-$7. Tues:
“Couples Going ’90s,” 10pm, free.
Wed: Open mic, 10pm, free-$5. 411 E.
Sycamore St. 940-387-7781. www.
rubberglovesdentontx.com.
SCRAP Denton Fri: Carolyn Curry,
Scott Neary, 7-9pm. 215 W. Oak St.
940-391-7499. www.scrapdenton.
org.
Sweetwater Grill and Tavern Sun:
Not So Hot Klub du Denton. Mon:
“Jazz Jam” with house band Michael
Palma Trio. Tues: Sweetwater Jazz
Quartet (Neil Slater, Jim Riggs, Ron
Fink and Lou Carfa). 115 S. Elm St.
940-484-2888. www.sweetwater
grillandtavern.com.
The Tomato Pizza 303 Bolivar St.,
Sanger. 940-458-9063. www.the
tomatopizza.com.
Trail Dust Steak House 26501 E.
U.S. 380 in Aubrey. 940-365-4440.
www.trailduststeaks.net.
UNT on the Square Thurs: UNT
Jazz Faculty Quartet, 7-9pm, free.
Arts and meeting space; headquar-
ters of the UNT Institute for the
Advancement of the Arts. Free. 109
N. Elm St. 940-369-8257. http://
untonthesquare.unt.edu.
VFW Post 2205 Free karaoke at
8pm each Thurs, Fri and Sat. 909
Sunset St.
IN THE REGION2 p.m. Friday — Denton CountyA&M Club golf tournament at
Tour 18 Golf Club in Flower Mound.
Registration will begin at noon. A din-
ner and live and silent auctions will
begin at 6:30 p.m. To register, visit
www.dentoncountyaggies.com.
7:30 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m.Sunday — NCTC presents Aroundthe World in 80 Days at the First
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
State Bank Center for the Performing
Arts, on West California Street at
Bonner Road in Gainesville. Tickets
cost $8 for adults and $5 for youth
(high school age or younger), free for
NCTC students with student ID. Call
940-668-3355.
1 p.m. Sunday — Kruisin’ for KodiPoker Run starts at the Mule Barn,
218 S. FM156 in Justin. Registration
will be at 1 p.m., and the first bike out
will be at 1:30 p.m. Cost is $20 per
driver and $10 per passenger.
Proceeds benefit Kodi Tutt, an 8-
year-old Sanger resident who is bat-
tling stage 4 neuroblastoma cancer.
Find Kick It Kodi on Facebook or e-
mail [email protected].
FUTURE BOOKINGS5:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 12 — Openingreception for exhibition of work
from the Autonomous University of
the State of Mexico (UAEM) at UNT
on the Square, 109 N. Elm St. Works
by Mexican artists Agapito Rincon
Pina, Leopoldo Flores and Armando
Pineda will be on display from Oct.
10 through Nov. 7. Free. Visit
http://untonthesquare.unt.edu.
10 a.m. to noon Oct. 13 —Instrument Petting Zoo for ele-
mentary-aged children, in the Recital
Hall at UNT’s Music Building, at
Avenue C and Chestnut Street. Event
begins with a concert by graduate
performance majors; then, children
will be invited to explore instru-
ments. Free. Visit http://music.unt.
edu.
Oct. 13 — Bonnie and Clyde Daysin downtown Pilot Point. Festival
includes a parade, soapbox races at 1
p.m., food and vendors, Hooverville
encampments, music, re-enactments
and more. E-mail jsander@cityof
pilotpoint.org or call 940-686-6488.
For more information about the soap-
box races and entry forms, call
Buster Chandler at 940-686-5770.
4 to 6 p.m. Oct. 15 — TWUGraduate and Professional SchoolFair in the TWU Student Union, at
Bell Avenue and Administration
Drive. Call 940-898-3188 or visit
DENTON PARKS AND RECREATIONKids in grades 1-5 can have a night of
fun for less than the cost of sitter at
Kids Rock from 7 to 10:30 p.m.
Friday at the Denton Civic Center, 321
E. McKinney St. The event features a
live DJ, sports tournaments, a bounce
house, Wii games and Rock Band on
a giant screen, dance contests and
more. Entry costs $10 per child; con-
cessions and glow products will also
be sold. For more information, call
940-349-7275.
�During the school in-service day on
Monday, students in kindergarten
through sixth grade can enjoy super-
vised activities and field trips in
Kids’ Day Off. Drop-off at 7 a.m. and
pickup at 6 p.m. will be at the Denton
Civic Center, 321 E. McKinney St. The
fee is $28 per child, and participants
must bring snacks and lunch.
Register by Friday by calling 940-
349-7275.
�New sessions of indoor swim les-sons for all ages begin next week at
the Denton Natatorium, 2400 Long
Road. Lessons are available on Mon-
day and Wednesday evenings with
eight lessons per session, or on Sat-
urday mornings with four lessons per
session. Participants must register by
Friday for weekday lessons or by Oct.
12 for Saturday lessons. To view a list
of classes or to register, visit www.
dentonparks.com or call 940-349-
8800.
�Discover Enchanted Rock, a national
natural landmark on Big Sandy Creek
north of Fredericksburg, during a 4-mile backpacking trip on Oct. 20-
21. The $100 fee includes entrance to
the park, a primitive camping site,
most meals and most camping
equipment. There will be a mandato-
ry meeting for all participants at 7
p.m. Oct. 10 at Denia Recreation
Center, 1001 Parvin St. Teens ages 15
to 17 may participate if accompanied
by a guardian. Register by Monday.
For more details and to register, visit
www.dentonparks.com or call 940-
349-8285.
�Register now for the following dance
classes beginning next week:
� “Tiny Tutus” for ages 2 and 3 on
Tuesdays, Fridays or Saturdays at De-
nia or North Lakes recreation centers;
� “Bigger Ballerinas” for ages 4 to 6
on Tuesdays, Fridays or Saturdays at
Denia or North Lakes;
� “Ballet 1” for ages 7 and older on
Saturdays at North Lakes, 2001 W.
Windsor Drive;
� “Ballet 2: Pre-Pointe” for ages 8
and older on Mondays at Denia, 1001
Parvin St.;
� “Tap” for ages 3 to 6 on Tuesdays
or Saturdays at North Lakes;
� “Bigger Tappers” for ages 4 to 6 on
Fridays at Denia;
� “Tap 1” for ages 7 and older on
Saturdays at North Lakes
� “Lil’ Hip Hop” for ages 5 and older
on Fridays at Denia; and
� “Salsa and Bachata” for adults on
Wednesdays at Denia.
For a complete listing of classes, visit
www.dentonparks.com.
�Kids ages 5 to 11 can enjoy old-fash-
ioned fall activities at “PumpkinPatch Mania” from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Oct. 13 at the Denton Civic
Center, 321 E. McKinney St. Kids will
create Halloween crafts before head-
ing to a local pumpkin patch for a
hay ride, bounce house, petting zoo
and more. The fee is $20 per child.
Register by Oct. 11 by visiting
www.dentonparks.com or by calling
940-349-7275.
Continued on Page 6
06DentonTime
100412
8 p.m. Tuesday — “How to Sur-vive the Zombie Apocalypse,” atalk by Max Brooks, author of The
Zombie Survival Guide and World
War Z, in the Silver Eagle Suite at
the UNT Union, one block west of
Welch and West Prairie streets. A
book signing follows. Part of UNT’s
Fine Arts Series. Tickets are $20
for the general public; $10 for UNT
faculty, staff and Alumni
Association members; and free for
UNT students. Call 940-565-3805
or visit http://untuniontickets.
universitytickets.com.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 13 —“Pumpkin Patch Mania” at the
Denton Civic Center, 321 E.
McKinney St., for kids ages 5 to 11.
Kids will create Halloween crafts
before heading to a local pumpkin
patch for a hay ride, bounce house,
petting zoo and more. The fee is
$20 per child. Register by Oct. 11
by visiting www.dentonparks.com
or by calling 940-349-7275.
12:15 to 1 p.m. Oct. 18 —“Haunted Denton,” a virtual tour
of Denton’s reportedly haunted
places by librarian Laura Douglas,
in the Commissioners Courtroom
at the Courthouse on the Square,
110 W. Hickory St. Free. Visit
http://dentoncounty.com/chos.
6:15 p.m. Oct. 18 — “A Night ofMystery on Hospitality Hill,” aprogressive dinner with stories by
Tejas Storytellers, benefiting the
United Way of Denton County.
Participants will meet at the
Courtyard Marriott, 2800 Colorado
Blvd., proceed to the Hilton Garden
Hill and finish at the Best Western
Premier. Cost is $60 per person or
$100 per couple. For tickets, call
940-566-5851, ext. 102. Visit www.
unitedwaydenton.org or e-mail
monica.glenn@helmhotelsgroup.
com.
6 to 8 p.m. Oct. 19 — HalloweenHarvest at Denia Recreation Cen-
ter, 1001 Parvin St. Event includes
carnival games, black-light games,
a bounce house, a costume contest
and a storytelling hayride. The car-
nival is free; rock climbing costs $1,
and low-priced concessions will be
available. Register at the door by 7
p.m. for the costume contest.
Winners will be announced at 7:15
p.m. Call 940-349-8285.
8 a.m. Oct. 20 — Jack-O-Lantern Jog, a 5K race and one-
mile fun walk, at North Lakes Park,
2001 W. Windsor Drive. Check-in
starts at 7 a.m. Register early for
$15 by 4 p.m. Oct. 18. Registration
at the event will be $20. Entry fee
includes a T-shirt, snacks and
drinks. Visit www.dentonparks.com
or call 940-349-8287.
6 to 8:30 p.m. Oct. 26 —Denton Green Mile presents a
free community costume bike ride
for all ages. Gather in costume on
the Square at 110 W. Hickory St. for
a one-mile ride. Pedestrians and
wheelchair users are welcome to
join the event. Free. An after-party
with music will take place at the
Love Shack, 115 E. Hickory St. Visit
www.dentongreenmile.info or
www.facebook.com/DentonGreen
Mile.
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 27 —Selwyn Pumpkin Fest at Selwyn
College Preparatory School, 3333
W. University Drive. Festival
includes a car show, music, a
health fair, a costume contest, chil-
dren’s activities, craft booths, food
vendors and more. A 5K run starts
at 7 a.m., followed by the Pumpkin
Chase Fun Run at 8 a.m. Admission
is free. Tickets for activities and
concessions cost 50 cents each.
Call 940-382-6771, or visit www.
selwynschool.com or www.face
book.com/SelwynPumpkinFest.
11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Oct. 27 —Denton’s Day of the Dead festi-
val all along Industrial Street in
downtown. Enjoy booths, children’s
games, a costume parade, live
music, and the all-ages Halloween
musical Cirque du Horror at Dan’s
Silverleaf 103 Industrial St.
Admission to festival is free; coffin
races and musical include fees.
Visit http://on.fb.me/SVutP2.
IN THE REGIONWeekends through Oct. 28 —Screams Halloween park, opens at
7:30 p.m. on weekends at 2511
FM66 in Waxahachie. Admission is
$24.99. For more information,
including ticket discounts, visit
www.screamspark.com or call 972-
938-3247.
HALLOWEEN AND FALL EVENTS
www.twu.edu and click on “TWU
Graduate & Professional Fair.”
10 a.m. Oct. 17 — Albert Chew,CEO of Freeman Co., speaks in the
ballroom of the UNT Gateway Center,
on North Texas Boulevard between
Eagle Drive and Highland Street. Part
of the Executive-in-Residence
Lecture Series. Free,
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 18 —Denton County Office of History& Culture’s “Lunch ’n Learn” docent
orientation session for volunteer
museum greeters and guides, in the
1896 Room at the Courthouse on the
Square. Laura Douglas will give a
presentation titled “Haunted
Denton.” Reservations due Oct. 16.
Call 940-349-2850 or e-mail
gretel.l’[email protected].
5 to 8 p.m. Oct. 18 — Spaghettidinner benefiting teacher Krystee
Lawson at Houston Elementary
School, 3100 Teasley Lane. Cost is $8
for those older than 14 and $5 for
students 13 and younger. Tickets can
be purchased at the school for three
serving times, which will begin at 5,
6 and 7 p.m. All proceeds will go to
help the Lawson family with medical
expenses. Call 940-369-2900.
7:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 18 — “TheFrench Connection,” a perform-
ance featuring the TWU Wind
Symphony, Flute Choir, Concert Choir
and Chamber Singers, at Margo
Jones Performance Hall. Tickets cost
$5 for general admission, free for
ages 12 and younger. Visit
www.twu.edu/global.
8 a.m. to noon Oct. 20 — TWUopen house for prospective stu-
dents and guests. Registration
begins at 8 a.m. in Hubbard Hall, on
Administration Drive between
Oakland Street and Bell Avenue. Visit
www.twu.edu and click on “Open
House,” e-mail [email protected]
or call 940-898-3014 or 1-866-809-
6130.
Oct. 20 — Veterans of ForeignWars Post 2205 Men’s Auxiliarygolf tournament at the TWU Golf
Course. Four-player team, best-ball
scramble. Cost is $55 per person,
limit of 72 players. Final team pair-
ings as required and team auctioning
will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 19 at VFW Post
2205, 909 Sunset St. Sponsors and
donations are needed. Call Bill at
940-566-6444, Ron at 940-381-
0849 or VFW Post 2205 at 940-387-
2205.
8 p.m. Oct. 23 — Poet KevinPrufer, a professor in the Creative
Writing Program at the University of
Houston, speaks in the Golden Eagle
Suite at the UNT Union, one block
west of Welch and West Prairie
streets. Part of UNT’s Visiting Writers
Series. Free. Visit http://english.
unt.edu.
5 to 10 p.m. Oct. 26 — “FridayNight Bites: Denton Foodie TruckFestival” at the Downtown Denton
Transit Center, at the corner of
Hickory Street and Railroad Avenue.
Event celebrates return of the A-
train’s late-night weekend service.
Includes live music, arts and crafts,
beer and wine. Visit www.dentonis
thefunnest.com.
8 p.m. Nov. 7 — Abigail Thomas,
� Toddler Time for kids 12-36
months and their caregivers, 9:30
a.m. Wednesday
North Branch Library 3020 N.
Locust St. 9am-9pm Mon-Wed, 9am-
6pm Thurs-Sat, 1-5pm Sun. 940-349-
8756.
� Story Time for kids ages 1-5 and
their caregivers, 11 a.m. Friday
� Afternoon Adventure Club, a
hands-on workshop for kids in
grades K-3, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday
� Mother Goose Time for infants up
to 18 months and their caregivers,
9:30 a.m. Friday
� Chess Night Casual, non-tourna-
ment play, 6-8:45pm Mondays.
� Computer classes Call 940-349-
8752.
� Secondhand Prose Friends of the
Denton Public Libraries’ fundraising
bookstore is open 9am-3pm & 5:30-
8:30pm Mon, 9am-3pm Sat & 1-4pm
Sun.
� North Branch Writers’ Critique
Group Writing novels, short stories,
poetry or journals, 7pm Tuesdays.
South Branch Library 3228 Teasley
Lane. Noon-9pm Mon, 9am-6pm
Tues & Thurs-Sat, 9am-9pm Wed, 1-
5pm Sun. 940-349-8251.
� Story Time for kids ages 1-5 and
their caregivers, 10 and 11 a.m.
Thursday, 10 a.m. Saturday
� Afternoon Adventure Club, a
hands-on workshop for kids in
grades K-3, 3:30 p.m. Thursday
� Mother Goose Time for infants up
to 18 months and their caregivers,
9:30 a.m. Tuesday
� Toddler Time for kids 12-36
months and their caregivers, 10:30
a.m. Tuesday
POINTS OF INTEREST
The Bayless-Selby HouseMuseum Restored Victorian-style
home built in 1898. 317 W. Mulberry
St. Tues-Sat 10am-noon and 1-3pm.
Free. Handicapped accessible.
Regular special events and work-
shops. 940-349-2865. www.den-
toncounty.com/bsh.
� “Death and Dying in Victorian
Times” on display through Nov. 10.
Denton County African AmericanMuseum Exhibits of historic black
families in the county, including art-
work and quilting, and personal
items of the lady of the house. 317
W. Mulberry St., next to the Bayless-
Selby House Museum. Tues-Sat
10am-noon and 1-3pm. Free.
www.dentoncounty.com/dcaam.
Bethlehem in Denton CountySmall gallery in Sanger displaying a
personal collection of 2,900 nativi-
ties. Open evenings and weekends,
by appointment only. Free. Small
groups and children welcome. To
schedule your visit, call 940-231-
4520 or e-mail jkmk@advantexmail.
com. www.bethlehemindentonco.
com.
Courthouse-on-the-SquareMuseum Exhibits include photos of
Denton communities, historic
Hispanic and black families, farm and
ranching artifacts, and special collec-
tions including Southwest American
Indian and Denton County pottery,
pressed glass and weaponry.
Research materials, county cemetery
author of A Three Dog Life and other
works, speaks in Silver Eagle Suite A
at the UNT Union, one block west of
Welch and West Prairie streets. Part
of UNT’s Visiting Writers Series. Free.
Visit http://english.unt.edu.
LITERARY EVENTSs
Emily Fowler Central Library 502
Oakland St. 9am-6pm Mon, Wed, Fri
& Sat; 9am-9pm Tues & Thurs; 1-5pm
Sun. 940-349-8712.
� Story Time for kids ages 1-5 and
their caregivers, 11 a.m. Wednesday
� Afternoon Adventure Club, a
hands-on workshop for kids in grades
K-3, 4 p.m. Thursday
EVENTSContinued from Page 5
Continued on Page 7
Dallas Morning News file photo
07DentonTime
100412
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FREEBREAKFAST
Catering For All OccasionsAny Type of Food for as Many as 1,000 People!
FREELUNCH
when you buy one reg. priced breakfast entree receive the 2nd of equal or lesser
value free
Must present coupon. Limit one per table per visit.Offer valid 7am-11am Mon.-Thurs. Expires 10/05/12
when you buy one reg. priced lunch entree receive the 2nd of equal or
lesser value free
Must present coupon. Limit one per table per visit. Expires 10/05/12
324 E. McKinney St. • Denton • 940.243.1313
Serving Breakfast & Lunch7am - 2pm Daily
Dinner on Friday Nights Only
Breakfast BuffetSundays
8:30am - 11:30am
Great Home Cooking!American & Mexican Meals
Make Your Own Menu!
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DORANSKI AGENCY(940) 387 62892000 DENISON ST #ADENTON
records, genealogical info, photo-
graphs. 110 W. Hickory St. 10-4:30
Mon-Fri and 11-3 Sat, closed holidays.
Free. Special monthly exhibits and
lectures. Call 940-349-2850 or visit
www.dentoncounty.com/chos.
Denton Community Market, a
local artists and farmers market,
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday
at Mulberry Street and Carroll
Boulevard, in the parking lot by the
Bayless-Selby House Museum. Visit
www.dentonmarket.org.
Denton County Farmers MarketLocal farmers sell fresh seasonal
vegetables and fruit Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday mornings
starting at 8 a.m. At Mulberry Street
and Carroll Boulevard, in the parking
lot by the Bayless-Selby House
Museum. Market closes if it sells out
before noon.
Denton Firefighters MuseumCollection at Central Fire Station, 332
E. Hickory St., displays firefighting
memorabilia from the 1800s to the
present. 8am-5pm Mon-Fri. Closed
on city holidays. Free and handi-
capped accessible.
Denton Haunts Ghost Tour 90-
minute walking tours of the down-
town Square area, starting at 9 p.m.
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at
the gravesite of John B. Denton on
the Courthouse on the Square lawn.
Cost is $10. Not recommended for
children younger than 10. E-mail
[email protected] or visit
http://dentonhaunts.wordpress.com.
Gowns of the First Ladies ofTexas Created in 1940, exhibit fea-
tures garments worn by wives of
governors of Texas. 8am-5pm Mon-
Fri. Administration Conference Tower,
TWU campus. Free, reservations
required. 940-898-3644.
Hangar Ten Flying Museum WWII
aircraft on display including
Lockheed 10A, Beech Aircraft
Stagger Wing, PT22 and Piper L-4.
Mon-Sat 8am-3 pm. 1945 Matt
Wright Lane. Free. 940-565-1945.
Lewisville Lake EnvironmentalLearning Area Three hiking trails;
camping, fishing and more on the
Elm Fork of the Trinity River; restored
1870 log home. Summer hours: Fri-
Sun 7am-7pm. Admission is $5 per
person, free for children 5 and
younger. Front gate is at Jones Street
and North Kealy Avenue in Lewisville.
Call 972-219-3930 for directions.
www.ias.unt.edu/llela.
Little Chapel-in-the-Woods Built
in 1939, one of 20 outstanding archi-
tectural achievements in Texas. Daily
8am-5pm, except on university holi-
days or when booked for weddings,
weekends by appointment only, TWU
campus. 940-898-3644.
EVENTSContinued from Page 6
UNT Sky Theater Planetarium in
UNT’s Environmental Education,
Science and Technology Building,
1704 W. Mulberry St. 940-369-8213.
http://skytheater.unt.edu.
SENIORSAmerican Legion Hall SeniorCenter 629 Lakey Drive in Fred
Moore Park. 10am-3pm Mon-Fri, 6-
9pm Thurs. 940-349-8298.
Denton Senior Center Offers daily
lunches, classes, travel, health servic-
es and numerous drop-in activities.
8am-9pm Mon-Fri. 509 N. Bell Ave.
940-349-8280. www.dentonsenior
center.com.
Ongoing activities:
� Aletha’s Craft Store, open 9am-
1pm Mon-Fri. Call 940-349-8720.
� Dancing and potluck, live big
band and country music every sec-
ond and fourth Friday, 7-9:30pm, $5.
� Movies 6pm each Wed. Free for
Denton seniors. $1 for popcorn and
soda.
� SPAN noon meal each Mon-Fri.
$1.50 for seniors age 60 and older,
$3.50 for those younger than 60.
� Chime Choir 9:30am Mon
� Pinochle 10:30am-1:30pm Mon
� Young at Heart band practice,
9am Tues, 10am Thurs
� Card workshop 9am first Tues
� Needlework group 9am Tues
� Red Hat Society 11am first Wed
� Tap dance classes, for beginners,
intermediate/advanced, Wed nights
or Fri mornings.
� Bridge Party bridge, 12:30pm
Thurs; duplicate bridge, 1pm Wed
� Benefits counseling 1:30-4pm
third Thurs
� Bingo 12:45pm first and third Fri
� Fridays With Friends 9-11am Fri.
Volunteers create items to donate to
Denton Regional Medical Center
patients. Call Jeff or Jane at 940-
349-8720.
� Square dancing 7-10pm first and
third Fri, $6
� Ed Bonk Woodshop 9am-noon
Mon-Thurs; 9am-noon Sat. $6 annual
membership plus $1 per visit.
RSVP Referral and placement service
for volunteers age 55 and older. 1400
Crescent St. 940-383-1508.
ACTIVITIESDenton County Dulcimer Clubmeets from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m on the
third Saturday of each month in the
community room at Denton Village
Good Samaritan, 2500 Hinkle Drive.
Dues are $3 per month. Participants
may bring a sack lunch. Call 940-
565-9331 or e-mail donnasgregory@
gmail.com.
Friday night community dancesat Denton Senior Center from 7 to
9:30 p.m. on the second and fourth
Friday of each month. Dances are
open to all adults and include live
music and refreshments. Dance
hosts will be present to dance with
unaccompanied ladies. Admission is
$5. The Senior Center is at 509 N.
Bell Ave. Call 940-349-8720.
Green Space Arts CollectiveBallet, tap, modern, and hip-hop
dance classes for children and adults.
529 Malone St. 940-595-9219.
www.greenspacearts.com.
Harps Over Texas Autoharp ClubJamming as well as help for new and
experienced players. All acoustic
instruments welcome. 7 p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday of each month at
Cumberland Presbyterian Church,
1424 Stuart Road. 940-382-3248.
The Triangle Squares Local square
dancing group meets at 7:30 p.m. on
the first and third Fridays each
month at Denton Senior Center, 509
N. Bell Ave. Starts with early rounds
and workshops. Grand march starts
at 8pm. Non-members pay $6 per
person, members get in free. Call
214-288-6883.
� Mainstream dance lessons at
7pm each Tues at 1424 Stuart Road.
VISUAL ARTSArt Six Coffee House 424 Bryan St.
Mon-Sat 9am-midnight. 940-484-
2786.
Banter 219 W. Oak St. 940-565-
1638.
Bolivar Street Gallery 212 Bolivar
St., Suite 100 in Sanger. Fri-Sun 11am-
5:30pm. 940-390-4559.
Cafe Du Luxe 3101 Unicorn Lake
Blvd. Mon-Thurs 5:30am-10pm, Fri
5:30am-11pm, Sat 6am-11pm, Sun
7am-9pm. 940-382-7070. www.
cafeduluxe.com.
Center for the Visual Arts Greater
Denton Arts Council’s galleries,
meeting space and offices. 400 E.
Hickory St. Free. Tues-Sun 1-5pm.
940-382-2787. www.dentonarts.com.
� “Passion, Art, Community:
Denton, Texas, in Word and Image,”
a group show of artworks inspired by
Karla Morton’s poetry, and “Denton
Through Two Lenses: Walter
Eagleton and Tom Judd,” both on
display through Oct. 28.
The Chestnut Tree 107 W. Hickory
St. Mon-Fri 9am-3pm, Sat 9am-
2:30pm, Sun 11am-2pm. 940-591-
9475. www.chestnuttearoom.com.
A Creative Art Studio 227 W. Oak
St., Suite 101. Mon-Sat 12-6pm, Sun
by appointment only. 940-442-1251.
www.acreativeartstudio.com
Cupboard Natural Foods and Cafe200 W. Congress St. 940-387-5386.
Farmer’s & Merchant’s GalleryEarly and contemporary Texas art.
100 N. Washington St., Pilot Point.
Fri-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm.
Appointments encouraged. 940-686-
2396. www.farmersandmerchants
Continued on Page 8
08DentonTime
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JD
IM
Now ServingBreakfast
7 Days a week7:30am - Noon
940-440-9760www.PHTexas.com10001 Hwy 380 • Cross Roads
www.fuzzystacoshop.com115 Industrial, Denton1004 S. Maple, Sanger I1
EVENTSContinued from Page 7
gallery.com.
Gallery 010 in the TWU student
union, at the corner of Bell Avenue
and Administration Drive. Mon-Thurs
8-9; Fri 8-5; Sun 1-9. Free.
Green Space Arts CollectiveStudio/gallery available for rental.
529 Malone St. 940-595-9219.
www.greenspacearts.com.
Imagine Gallery at Denton Square
Donuts, 208 W. Oak St. 972-213-
6543. www.imaginingorange.com.
Impressions by DSSLC Store selling
ceramics by residents of Denton
State Supported Living Center. 105
1/2 W. Hickory St. 940-382-3399.
Jupiter House 114 N. Locust St.
940-387-7100.
La Meme Gallery At Rubber Gloves
Rehearsal Studios, 411 E. Sycamore
St. www.lamemegallery.com.
Oxide Fine Art & Floral Gallery 211
N. Cedar St. 940-483-8900. www.
oxidegallery.com.
SCRAP Denton Nonprofit store sell-
ing reused materials for arts and
crafts. 215 W. Oak St. 940-391-7499.
www.scrapdenton.org.
TWU Blagg-Huey Library Mon-
Thurs 7:30am-midnight, Fri 7:30am-
10pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun 2pm-mid-
night. 1322 Oakland St. 940-898-
3701. www.twu.edu/library.
TWU East and West galleries inthe TWU Fine Arts Building, at
Oakland Street and Pioneer Circle.
Free. Mon-Fri 9-4, weekends by
appointment. 940-898-2530.
www.twu.edu/visual-arts.
UNT Art Gallery in the UNT Art
Building, 1201 W. Mulberry St. at
Welch. Tues noon-5pm, Wed-Thurs
9:30am-8pm, Fri-Sat noon-5pm. Free.
940-565-4316. http://gallery.unt.edu.
� “Welcome to My World, 1972-
2012,” a retrospective exhibition of
UNT regents professor and potter
Elmer Taylor, opens Tuesday and con-
tinues through Nov. 10. Opening
reception will be from 5 to 7 p.m.
Oct. 11. An artist’s reception will be
from 5 to 9 p.m. Oct. 13.
UNT Cora Stafford Gallery InUNT’s Oak Street Hall, 1120 W. Oak
St. Tues-Fri 10am-2pm or by appoint-
ment. 940-565-4005.
UNT Fashion on Main 1901 Main St.
in downtown Dallas. Free. Thurs-Fri
noon to 5 p.m. 940-565-2732 or 214-
752-8151.
UNT on the Square 109 N. Elm St.
Free. Mon-Fri 9am-noon & 1-5pm,
with extended hours Thurs until
8pm; Sat 11am-3pm. 940-369-8257.
http://untonthesquare.unt.edu.
� Works by Mexican artists Agapito
Rincon Pina, Leopoldo Flores and
Armando Pineda from the Auto-
nomous University of the State of
Mexico (UAEM), on display from
Wednesday, Oct. 10, through Nov. 7.
UNT Union Gallery Level 3, UNT
Union, 400 Ave A. Mon-Sat 8am-
10pm, Sun noon-10pm. 940-565-
3829. www.unt.edu/union/gallery.
htm.
� Fibers and ceramics by Chelsey
Williams and Michael Garlitz on dis-
play through Thursday, Oct. 4.
Visual Arts Society of Texas Mem-
ber organization of the Greater
Denton Arts Council offers communi-
ty and continuing education for local
visual artists, professional and ama-
teur. Meetings are at the Center for
the Visual Arts, 400 E. Hickory St.
Monthly meetings include mini-
shows and demonstrations by visit-
ing artists. Two annual juried
exhibits. Critique groups and work-
shops. Visit www.vastarts.org or call
Executive Director Lynne Cage Cox at
972-VAST-ORG.
SPORTSDenia Recreation Center Fitness
center, basketball court, climbing
wall, gymnastics, dog-training class-
es, nature trips and more. 7am-9pm
Mon-Wed; 7am-8:30pm Thurs-Fri;
9:30am-3:30pm Sat. 1001 Parvin St.
940-349-8285.
McMath Middle School Gym Open
gym basketball, recreation classes,
tournament and league play. Gym
hours: 6am-9pm Mon-Fri; 10am-
4:30pm Sat. 1900 Jason Drive. 940-
381-5044.
Martin Luther King Jr. RecreationCenter 20,000-square-foot center
features basketball court, fitness,
game rooms and classrooms. 9am-
9pm Mon-Fri; 9:30am-6:30pm Sat.
1300 Wilson St. 940-349-8575.
North Lakes Recreation CenterOffers fitness memberships, aero-
bics, tai chi/chi kung, yoga, gymnas-
tics, preschool classes, meeting
rooms and more. 5:30am-10pm Mon-
Thurs; 5:30am-9:30pm Fri; 7:30am-
3pm Sat. 2001 W. Windsor Drive.
940-349-8287. Basketball court
located across Windsor Drive, behind
the softball fields on the north side
of the park. Lights available until
10pm (closing time for the park).
AQUATICSDenton Natatorium Indoor pools
with open and lap swimming, swim
lessons for children and adults, water
exercise available. 2400 Long Road.
Mon-Fri 5:30am-8pm, Sat 10am-
6pm, Sun noon-6pm. Admission for
city residents is $3.50 for ages 12
and older, $2.50 for ages 6-11, $1 for
ages 2-5; free for younger than 2.
Nonresidents pay $5, $3 and $1.50,
respectively. Passes and punch cards
available. 940-349-8800.
DOG PARKWiggly Field Dog Park at Lake
Forest Park, at 1400 E. Ryan Road,
between Teasley Lane and FM1830
(Country Club Road). Free. Closed
7am-3:30pm Wed for mowing and
maintenance. For rules, visit
www.dentonparks.com or call Kathy
Schaeffer at 940-349-8731.
GOLFDecatur Golf Club 211 Country Club
Road, Decatur. 940-627-3789. Daily
fee, 9 holes.
Denton Country Club 1213 Country
Club Road, Argyle. 940-387-2812.
Private, 18 holes.
Doral Tesoro Golf Club 15801
Championship Parkway, Fort Worth.
817-497-2582. Daily fee, 18 holes.
Lantana Golf Club 800 Golf Club
Drive, Lantana. 940-728-4653.
Private, 18 holes.
Oakmont Country Club 1200
Clubhouse Drive, Corinth. 940-321-
5599. Private, 18 holes.
On Course Golf Driving RangeOpen to public daily 8am-9pm. $5-
$9. 2009 W. Windsor Drive. 940-381-
2700.
Robson Ranch Wildhorse GolfCourse 9400 Ed Robson Blvd.,
Denton. 940-246-1001. Semi-private,
18 holes.
Spirit of the West Resort 100 S.
Texas St., Tioga. 940-437-5000. Daily
fee, 9 holes.
Texas Sundown Ranch GolfCourse 13037 I-35, Sanger. 940-458-
5979. Daily fee, 9 holes.
TWU Golf Course 1120 Club House
Drive, Denton. 940-898-3163. Daily
fee, 18 holes.
The Timber Links at Denton 5201
Par Drive, Suite 2, Denton. 940-380-
1318. Semi-private, 9 holes.
GYMNASTICS Achievers Gymnastics Recrea-
tional and competitive cheerleading
and gymnastics for boys and girls
ages 1-18. Call 940-484-4900 for
schedules and pricing. www.
achieversgymnastics.com.
MARTIAL ARTSDenton Academy of Martial Arts 612 Hercules Lane. 940-387-7442.
www.dentonmartialarts.com.
MOTOR SPORTSTexas Motor Speedway Tours of
speedway available ($8, $6 seniors
and children 12 and younger); sou-
venir shop. State Highway 114 at I-
35W, Fort Worth. 817-215-8500.
www.texasmotorspeedway.com.
SKATINGHouse of Quad Roller derby facility
with three leagues. 222 S. Mayhill
Road. ntderbyrevolution.com.
Lone Star Indoor Sports Center1800 Shady Oaks Drive. 940-239-
6474. www.lonestarrink.com.
Skate Works Park Ramps, plat-
forms, railings and more for skate-
boarders and inline skaters of all skill
levels. Classes, rentals and parties
available. 11am-9pm Sat; 1-8pm Sun.
Free. Helmets may be rented for $3.
Next to Water Works Park on Long
Road at Sherman Drive (FM428) and
Loop 288. 940-349-8523.
TENNISGoldfield Tennis Center 8 outdoor
lighted courts and utility court.
Offers classes, leagues and tourna-
ments. Mon-Thurs, 10am-9pm; Fri
10am-5:30pm. 2005 W. Windsor
Drive. 940-349-8526.
09DentonTime
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MOVIESTHEATERS
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.
Rave Motion Pictures 8380 S. I-
35E, Hickory Creek. 940-321-2788.
www.movietickets.com.
Silver Cinemas Inside Golden
Triangle Mall, 2201 S. I-35E. 940-387-
1957.
OPENING FRIDAYFrankenweenie (���1/2) Feature-
length version of the 1984 short that
revealed early glimmers of the veter-
an director’s darkly humorous style.
Both films are about the powerful
bond between a boy and his dog, one
that goes on even after death. Beau-
tifully detailed and painstakingly ren-
dered in 3-D, black-and-white, stop-
motion animation, Frankenweenie is
a visual and thematic return to the
best Burton has offered in his earliest
films (Edward Scissorhands, Beetle-
juice). Rated PG, 88 minutes. — The
Associated Press
The Oranges (���) Two families,
and longtime good friends, live across
the street from each other in West
Orange, N.J. The middle-aged hus-
band (Hugh Laurie) of one family
begins having an affair with the twen-
ty-something daughter (Leighton
Meester) of the other. Instead of hid-
ing in shame, they indulge them-
selves, causing endless problems and
often finding humor in the awkward
situations. With Catherine Keener,
Oliver Platt, Allison Janney, Alia Shaw-
kat and Adam Brody. Rated R, 90
minutes. At the Angelika Dallas and
Cinemark West Plano. — Boo Allen
The Revisionaries (��1/2) What
could have been an incendiary indict-
ment turns into an often lethargic
documentary about how the Texas
Board of Education examines and
then adopts school books, with spe-
cific interest paid to the teaching of
evolution and various social topics.
Filmmaker Scott Thurman combines
lengthy interviews with stock foot-
age from several board meetings.
Interesting enough, but it could have
been more incisive. Not rated, 92
minutes. At the Magnolia in Dallas.
— B.A.
Taken 2 (��1/2) In this repetitive
sequel, Liam Neeson again plays for-
mer CIA agent Bryan Mills. The
father (Rade Serbedzija) of the men
Mills killed in the original now seeks
revenge, which results in more of the
same: Mills using his detecting and
tracking skills to ferret out locations,
beating up and killing an army of men,
and taking part in endless car chas-
es, this time through Istanbul. The
main difference is that mother (Famke
Janssen) and daughter (Maggie
Grace) get to participate. Lucky them.
Rated PG-13, 91 minutes. — B.A.
NOW PLAYINGDredd 3D (���1/2 ) A wickedly dark
Young Victor
Frankenstein
(voiced by
Charlie
Tahan) reani-
mates his
beloved dog,
Sparky, in
Franken-
weenie. Tim
Burton’s new
feature-
length film
opens in the-
aters on
Friday.
Disney
The first step
If you know the Serenity Prayer,
you’ve encountered Bill W. — Bill
Wilson, founder of Alcoholics
Anonymous and, perhaps, all the 12-step
programs that followed. The documen-
tary Bill W. by first-time filmmakers
Kevin Hanlon and Dan Carracino
explores the man who has helped
countless addicts beat their demons —
and keep them beaten — since 1935.
The documentary was screened in
Denton during Thin Line Film Fest last
February, and now, Rave Motion Pictures
at Hickory Creek will screen the docu-
mentary at 1:55 p.m. and 7 p.m. today.
Bill W. makes no bones about the found-
ing father of AA relying on God to stick
to the 12 steps to sobriety. The directors
use an exhaustive amount of archival
material in the movie, but present-day
AA adherents drive home Wilson’s
essential message: that a person alone
is powerless to overcome addiction and
to stay clean. They need something
beyond themselves and a community of
recovering addicts. The theater is locat-
ed at 8380 S. Stemmons Freeway. Not
rated, 104 minutes. Tickets cost $5 for
the matinee, and $7 for twilight. No
online ticket purchasing available.
— Lucinda Breeding
Courtesy photo/Page 124 Productions
Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres,
Alexander Gould and Willem Dafoe.
Rated G, 107 minutes. — Los Angeles
Times
Hotel Transylvania Despite the
proven talents of first-time feature
director Genndy Tartakovsky
(Dexter’s Laboratory), writers Peter
Baynham (Arthur Christmas) and
Saturday Night Live vet Robert
Smigel, and a voice cast headed by
Adam Sandler and Andy Samberg,
the collaboration falls flat virtually
from the get-go. Overprotective
daddy Dracula (Sandler) constructs a
refuge of an exclusive resort where
he and his monstrous ilk can feel free
to be themselves. But a party crasher
turns up in the form of Jonathan
(Samberg), a slacker human back-
packer who catches the eye of
Dracula’s daughter Mavis (Selena
Gomez). Rated PG, 91 minutes. —
The Hollywood Reporter
Looper (���) Joseph Gordon Levitt
comic streak breaks up the vivid vio-
lence and relentless bleakness of this
3-D incarnation of the cult-favorite
British comic series 2000 A.D. Karl
Urban stars as the stoic Judge Dredd,
an enforcer who serves as judge, jury
and executioner in a dystopian
future. Olivia Thirlby has a calm yet
confident presence as a rookie judge
who’s assigned to Dredd for training
one particularly bloody day. Visceral
visuals shot in 3-D by Oscar-winning
Slumdog Millionaire cinematograph-
er Anthony Dod Mantle. Rated R, 98
minutes. — AP
End of Watch (����) Mis-
matched buddy cop movie in which
the cops record their daily activities
while on patrol, from mercilessly
teasing each other in the squad car
between calls to tracking bad guys
through the dangerous streets and
narrow alleyways of South Central
Los Angeles. Co-stars Jake Gyllenhaal
and Michael Pena have such tremen-
dous chemistry with each other, they
make you want to ride alongside
them all day, despite the many perils
in store. With Cody Horn, America
Ferrera and David Harbour. Rated R,
108 minutes. — AP
Finding Nemo 3D A 3-D version of
the animated tale about an overpro-
tective clownfish on a journey to res-
cue his young son. With the voices of Continued on Page 10
10DentonTime
100412
By Todd McCarthy The Hollywood Reporter
Having a taste for Butterdepends almost entirely onwhether you find the comedyof condescension and ridiculea hoot or a very cheap form ofamusement.
This satire on self-right-eous, homily-spewing redstaters and the cutthroatworld of butter carving tradesalmost entirely on makingjokes at the expense of others,most of all an obsessed, venalwoman who could pass as akissin’ cousin to two promi-nent female Republicans ofthe pre-primary season(Butter was made in 2011).
Decidedly not a critics’ pic-ture, Butter brandishes thesort of snide humour thatplays well with a large public,but a fair slice of that audiencecould well be put off by thewhiff of agenda that’s hard tomiss.
The title of the first featurewritten by Jason Micallef andthe second directed by JimField Smith (She’s Out of My
League) refers to the competi-tive pastime of butter sculpt-ing that consumes the lives ofenough Iowans to have madeit a statewide sport. The un-disputed champion for 15years running is Bob Pickler(Ty Burrell), whose latest cre-ation — a full-sized renderingof the Last Supper — is con-sidered such a masterpiecethat he’s asked to step aside togive someone else a chance.
Furious at this blow to fam-ily eminence, Bob’s wife, Laura(Jennifer Garner), takes upthe carving knife herself.Laura is the sort of prim, flag-waving, self-satisfied do-gooder whose pasted-on smilecan’t disguise incisors ready torip into anyone she findswanting or threatening. Whennot on public view, Lauracusses like a David Mametcharacter and vents aboutevery perceived threat to herposition or worldview.
Laura finds no solace athome; Bob takes up withtrampy, extortionist stripperBrooke (Olivia Wilde), who in
turn exerts an unhealthy in-fluence on Laura’s alreadychecked-out stepdaughter(Kristen Schaal). But the mostserious menace comes froman adorable 10-year-old girlwith the loaded name of Des-tiny (Yara Shahidi), who hasbounced from one foster fam-ily to another until windingup with locals (Rob Corddryand Alicia Silverstone) whobend over backward to please.
Almost absurdly well-adjusted and even-keeled,Destiny is revealed as theMozart of butter carvers, anatural genius in an enter-prise her new mom admits is“kinda rednecky.” Faced withlikely defeat in both theregional and state competi-
tions, where Destiny doesremarkable work sculptingthe Freedom Train and aPieta-like rendering of herselfand her imagined mother,Laura resorts to deceit inleague with a good-ol’-boyformer flame (an amusingcameo by Hugh Jackman),revealing her whiny, self-pity-ing true self in the process.
Playing a thoroughly un-pleasant character, Garner,who also co-produced, some-what overdoes Laura’s initialphoniness and her overridingshrillness. When she discoversthat her ineffectual husbandhas cheated on her, shesweeps it under the rug of herartistic ambitions, which inthe end include a technicallyproficient but bad-taste ren-dering of the Kennedy assassi-nation.
Wilde lives up to her nameas the go-for-broke exoticdancer as dim as she is un-lucky, while the rest of thecast, excepting the dignifiedShahidi, works in bright-eyedcaricature mode.
Satiric ‘Butter’ spreads stereotypes too thick
Butter
Rated R, 90 minutes.Opens Friday at the AngelikaDallas and Plano.
Radius-TWC
Laura (Jennifer Garner) uses dairy products to recreate a scene from Dealey Plaza in Butter.
Soulless food
plays Joe, a looper — someone who
disposes of bodies sent to him by
organized crime from the future.
When a job is botched, and another
unexpected person (Bruce Willis)
returns, Joe flees to the isolated
farmhouse of a woman (Emily Blunt)
and her son, all for vague reasons.
Writer-director Rian Johnson delivers
an engaging, if often confusing, time-
travel saga, filled with twists and
turns but, as in most time-travel
movies, with little logic. Rated R, 118
minutes. — B.A.
The Master (��1/2) Philip Seymour
Hoffman plays an L. Ron Hubbard-
like cult leader in the early 1950s
who draws many to him, including an
unstable ex-serviceman (Joaquin
Phoenix). This sixth film from Paul
Thomas Anderson sports a wide, tal-
ented cast, an attention to period
details, and some flavorful settings
and costumes. Rated R, 137 minutes.
— B.A.
Pitch Perfect (����) Cheeky and
snarky but with an infectious energy,
this comedy set in the world of com-
peting college a cappella groups
makes us fall in love with the very
thing it’s making fun of. It’s ridiculous
and predictable but also just a ton of
fun, so you may as well give up and
give into your inner musical theater
geek. The debut feature from direc-
tor Jason Moore (Broadway’s Avenue
Q) and writer Kay Cannon (30 Rock),
based on the nonfiction book by
Mickey Rapkin, feels like a mash-up
of Glee and Revenge of the Nerds.
Starring Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson
and Hana Mae Lee. Rated PG-13, 112
minutes. — AP
Trouble With the Curve Corny,
conventional and quite enjoyable
father-daughter reconciliation story
set mostly in the minor league base-
ball world of the South. Clint East-
wood plays an old-fashioned scout
who disdains computers and fancy
statistical charts in favor of his own
time-tested instincts. Making his
directorial debut, Eastwood’s long-
time producer Rob Lorenz knows just
how to pitch the story to take advan-
tage of the humorous side of his
star’s obstinate crankiness, and Amy
Adams makes a good match as the
career-driven daughter with festering
resentments. Rated PG-13, 110 min-
utes. — THR
Won’t Back Down (��1/2) The
focus of this save-our-school drama
practically assures it will fail to join
the ranks of great, or even good, edu-
cation tales. The movie takes the
story out of the classroom and into
the halls of bureaucracy, leaving
almost every kid behind to center on
two plucky parents battling en-
trenched administrators and union
leaders to turn around a failing
school. So essentially, it’s a school
board meeting. Or school bored.
Despite earnest performances from
Maggie Gyllenhaal and Viola Davis as
a pair of moms leading the fight, the
movie lives down to its bland, us-
against-them title with a simple-
minded assault on the ills of public
schools. Directed and co-written by
Daniel Barnz. Rated PG, 121 minutes.
— AP
MOVIESContinued from Page 9
11DentonTime
100412
COVER STORY
By Lucinda BreedingFeatures Editor
Science buffs had their evening withthe men behind Mythbusters.
Now, the University of North TexasFine Arts Series gives sci-fi nerds andgraphic novel lovers their due.
Zombie specialist, former SaturdayNight Live writer and unapologeticobsessive Max Brooks visits the campuson Tuesday night to tell students andlocals how to keep their heads — literal-ly and metaphorically — during a zom-bie apocalypse.
Brooks, who comes by his comedy
chops from his father, Mel Brooks, gotbitten by the zombie bug hard enoughto write the book on how to avoidbecoming one of the gammy-legged,grunting corpses. Because, really, henotes, it’s a club you don’t want to join.
Denton Time asked the writer andfunnyman five questions about thispopular monster. Here are his respons-es.
Q: The Zombie Survival Guide ismarketed as a parody. How did youapproach writing this book? Did youassume a real zombie apocalypse was
Rogue Pictures
Edgar Wright’s 2004 zombie-infested romantic-comedy Shaun of the Dead is a favorite of writer Max Brooks. “It defined a British generation in the way
Clerks defined the American Gen X,” he said.
He’s gotthe brains
One of America’s foremost zombie experts talks shop, survival at UNT
imminent to achieve the tone and struc-ture you wanted?
A: I never set out to write a parody. Iset out to write a Zombie survival guide.
The whole “humor” thing was theinvention of Random House marketing.
See ZOMBIES on 12
Max Brooks,
author of The
Zombie
Survival
Guide and
World War Z:
An Oral
History of the
Zombie War,
will give a
talk at the
University of
North Texas
on Tuesday.
Courtesy photo/Crown PublishingGroup
12DentonTime
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They had this guy coming offSaturday Night Live who alsohappened to be the son of MelBrooks and, at least in theireyes, the book seemed so outra-geous (I mean, c’mon, whoreally spends that much timethinking about zombies) thatmarketing as humor seemedthe only logical course.
Q: George A. Romero (Nightof the Living Dead) often getsthe credit for introducing thezombie we know and loathe orlove. Does he deserve the cred-it or has the zombie been shuf-fling after our juicy brains intheir familiar form since before1968?
A: It’s George’s world andwe’re all just living in it. Heredefined the genre, he wrotethe book of zombie. If you’reinto zombies in any way, youhave George A. Romero tothank for that.
Q: When you think aboutmonsters, typically you thinkspeed, sharp teeth, claws, fire-breathing. What makes zom-bies so disturbing? I mean,they grunt and shuffle! Theyhave people teeth, no claws, nosuperpowers — just numbers.Why are they so scary? Whyhave zombies captured the20th and 21st century imagina-tions so thoroughly?
A: For me, it’s their apoca-lyptic nature. They are an exis-tential threat. They don’t justgo after individual humans,they go after the entire humanrace. Put legs on Ebola and youhave zombies.
Q: Zombies are ridiculously“hot” right now. (Think zombiecrawls, zombie 5K runs, Shaunof the Dead and AMC’s TheWalking Dead.) As a specialistin zombie lore, what currentzombie properties haveimpressed you and why?
A: Shaun of the Dead is oneof the best zombie films of alltime, and one of the best all-around films of the last 20years. It defined a British gen-eration in the way Clerksdefined the American Gen X.It’s one of those cultural mark-ers, like Rebel Without a Causeor Easy Rider, that will be withus forever.
Q: What’s the significance ofthe subtle changes in certainzombie properties: Zombies
MAX BROOKSWhat: “How to Survive theZombie Apocalypse,” a talk byauthor Max Brooks, presentedby the UNT Fine Arts SeriesWhen: 8 p.m. TuesdayWhere: Silver Eagle Suite inthe University Union, one blockwest of Welch and West PrairiestreetsDetails: Tickets are $20 foradults; $10 for UNT faculty,staff and Alumni Associationmembers; and free for UNTstudents with valid ID. Buytickets online at http://untuniontickets.universitytickets.com or by calling 940-565-3805.
got really fleet of foot in 28Days Later and the reboot ofDawn of the Dead (2004)?
A: I think the fast zombiesplay to our societal ADD. Mostpeople just want their enter-tainment to rocket by at ludi-crous speed. I’ll always be aslow zombie guy, but I’m clear-ly in the minority.
LUCINDA BREEDING canbe reached at 940-566-6877.Her e-mail address is [email protected].
From Page 11
Zombies
Zombie lore has its roots in Africanculture and religious magic. But tobe literate about the popular zom-bie that shuffles and kills inAmerican stories, we suggest thefollowing films to supplementauthor Max Brooks’ books:NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEADGeorge A. Romero became thegodfather of the American zombiein this 1968 movie made on amicro-budget. In this black andwhite film, a group of strangers fleea horde of people who appear tobe hypnotized and hungry forhuman flesh. They board up in anabandoned farmhouse only to findnew threats among them — suspi-cion, fear and maybe even theinfection they are trying to avoid.SHAUN OF THE DEAD In director and co-writer EdgarWright’s 2004 film, London slackerShaun (Simon Pegg, also a co-writer) has just been kicked to thecurb by his true love, Liz, for beingless than lively about anything.Can he win her heart — and recon-cile with his mom — just as thecity is besieged by slack-jawed,dead-eyed Londoners who reallycrave sushi-grade people insteadof bubble and squeak? Armedwith a cricket bat and his atro-phied wits, Shaun leads his lovedones to a local pub to ride out the
apocalypse.THE WALKING DEAD In AMC’s series based on thecomic books of the same name,Officer Rick Grimes (AndrewLincoln) awakens in 2010 in adeserted hospital, on the mendfrom a gunshot wound. Zombies(who are called “walkers” andnever referred to as zombies)surge up in hungry hordes, creat-ing a monstrous, sticky wallbetween Rick and his family. Withthe third season beginning on Oct.
14, Rick has become the unoffi-cial commander of a tribe of sur-vivors. The season finale left theclan on the run from the biggestlegion of walkers they’ve seen.Rick is now the not-so-cool-head-ed leader of his diminishing group.If only he can get them to theprison just beyond the woods …Other titles to check out:The Evil Dead (1981)28 Days Later (2002)Zombieland (2009)Dylan Dog: Dead of Night (2010)
BRUSH UP ON YOUR ZOMBIE KNOWLEDGE
AMC
A “walker” crawls across a barroom floor in the AMC hit series The Walking Dead. The series has been lauded for super-
realistic effects, including the reanimated torso of half a corpse. In modern-day zombie lore, one law has been bent: to kill
a zombie, you have to shoot or crush its head.
Fox Searchlight Pictures
28 Days Later documents a man’s struggle to survive an
epidemic called “the rage,” a virus that turns people’s
eyes red, their skin pallid and their purpose to killing
other people — by eating them alive.
13DentonTime
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Come celebrate the
GRANDGRAND RE-OPENINGRE-OPENINGof McDonalds at 306 W. University
Thank you for great years in Denton!4040
306 W. University2930 W. University1600 I-35E2850 W. University (inside Wal-Mart)
1515 S. Loop 288 (inside Wal-Mart)
FREE Wi-Fi serveddaily
Lobby &Drive Thru
OPEN24 HOURS!
Come register for Free Sweepstakes Prizes to be given away Saturday, September 22nd
• Philips 26” LED TV with surround sound• Nikon COOLPIX Digital Camera and pack• Sony 9” Portable DVD Player
• New Toddler Inside Play Area• New Outside Seating Area• New Contemporary Lobby• New Convenient Drive-Thru• Breakfast After Midnight
Breakfast after Midnight menu Sandwich Meal2 Sausage Burritos $1.00 $3.99(meal includes hash browns & small coffee)Sausage McMuffi n $1.00 $3.00(meal includes hash browns & small coffee)Egg McMuffi n $2.89 $4.39(meal includes hash browns & small coffee)Sausage McMuffi n with egg $2.89 $4.39(meal includes hash browns & small coffee)Hotcakes with Sausage $3.19Fruit and Maple Oatmeal $1.99Substitute any size fountain drink, juice or larger coffee for an additional fee
IT
Need more details? www.DentonIStheFunnest.com
Join us for a Foodie Truck Festival to celebrate the return of late-night weekend service on the A-train with fabulous food, beer and wine, live music, arts and crafts, and all your friends!
Produced by Economic Development, 9/2012
ADA/EOE/ADEA TDD (800) 735-2989,
www.cityofdenton.com
Brought to you by:
JD
Open 7 daysM-F 8:30am-7:00pmSat 7am-7pmSun 7am-6pm
1607 E. McKinney #800 • Denton, TX 75201 • 940-591-6807TX 75201 • 940-591-6807
• Tortillas • Tortillas • Salsa • Salsa • Taco Shells• Taco Shells• Queso• Queso• Tostadas• Tostadas• Mexican Candy• Mexican Candy
& more! & more!
Hot TortillasMade Fresh Daily
I1
RESTAURANTSAMERICAN CUISINECentral Grill 1005 Ave. C. 940-323-
9464.
Dusty’s Bar and Grill Laid-back bar
just off the Square serves a belt-
busting burger and fries, a kitchen
homily for meat and cheese lovers.
Seven plasma TVs for fans to track
the game, or patrons can take part in
interactive trivia and poker. Darts,
pool, video games and foosball. 119
S. Elm St. Daily noon-2am. $-$$. 940-
243-7300. dustysbar.com.
The LABB 218 W. Oak St. 940-293-
4240. www.thelabbdenton.com.
The Loophole Square staple has
charming menu with cleverly named
items, like Misdemeanor and Felony
nachos. Decent range of burgers. 119
W. Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am; food
served until midnight. Full bar. $-$$.
940-565-0770. loopholepub.com.
Pourhouse Sports Grill Classy
sports bar and restaurant boasts
large TVs and a theater-style media
room and serves burgers, pizza, sal-
ads and generous main courses. Full
bar. Smoking on patio only. 3350
Unicorn Lake Blvd. Sun-Thurs 11-10,
Fri-Sat 11-12. $-$$. 940-484-7455.
Rocky’s Sports Bar Big games on
big screens plus some pretty big
tastes, too. Now open for lunch. For
finger food, roll chicken chipotle and
battered jalapeno and onion strips
are standouts. Homestyle burgers;
savory Caesar salad with chicken.
Full bar. 2000 W. University Drive.
Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-382-6090.
Rooster’s Roadhouse “We Ain’t
Chicken” is what the eatery claims,
though the menu kindly includes it
on a sandwich and in a wing basket
— plus barbecue, burgers and hang-
out appetizers (cheese fries, tamales,
and queso and chips). Beer. 113
Industrial St. Sun-Wed 11-10; Thurs-
Sat 11-midnight. $. 940-382-4227.
roosters-roadhouse.com.
RT’s Neighborhood Bar 1100 Dallas
Drive, Suite 124. 940-381-2277.
Sweetwater Grill & Tavern It may
claim a place among the world’s
other memorable pubs, rathskellers,
hangouts and haunts where the food
satisfies as much as the libations
that wash them down. 115 S. Elm St.
Tues-Sat 11-2am, Sun-Mon 11-mid-
night. $-$$. 940-484-2888.
sweetwatergrillandtavern.com.
II Charlies Bar & Grill 809 Sunset
St. 940-891-1100.
ASIANLittle Asia 7650 S. I-35E, Corinth.
940-269-1110.
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. $-$$. 940-382-5437.
Ramen Republic Offers build-your-
own Eastern-inspired noodle bowls
and stir-fry, Western-inspired pasta
dishes, salads, sandwiches and more.
Beer, wine & sake. 210 E. Hickory St.
Sun-Thurs 11-9:30, Fri-Sat 11-10. $.
940-387-3757. ramenrepublic.biz.
Royal East Hefty Japanese offering
(including sushi bar) plus Korean and
Chinese dishes. Pleasing Fire
Mountain Roll. Fish tastes very fresh
and firm. Mochi ice cream is a
dessert unlike anything else. Beer,
wine and sake. No smoking. 1622A
W. University Drive. Mon-Sat 11-10. $-
$$. 940-383-7633.
BAKERIESDavis Purity Bakery Denton’s old-
est bakery has sculpted but simple
and flavorful cakes, soft egg bread,
cookies and more. 520 S. Locust St.
Mon-Sat 5am-5:30pm. 940-387-
6712.
Ester’s Tortilleria & BakeryMexican bakery offers panoply of
scents: cakes, pastries and sweets,
lunch-able entrees, and tortillas in
bulk. 710 Elm St. Mon-Sat 6am-9pm,
Sun 6am-2pm. 940-591-9105.
NV Cupcakes Gourmet cupcakes
and other sweets. 4251 FM2181, Suite
216, Corinth; 118 E. McKinney St.,
Denton. Tues-Sat 11am-6pm or until
sellout. 817-996-2852. nvcupcakes.
com.
Ravelin Bakery Gourmet bakery
offers fresh-baked bread, mouth-
watering sweets and a fine cup of
coffee. 416 S. Elm St. Tues-Sat
6:30am-5:30pm, Sun 8am-5:30pm.
940-382-8561.
BARBECUEMetzler’s Bar-B-Q Much more than
a barbecue joint, with wine and beer
shop, deli with German foods and
more. Smoked turkey is lean yet
juicy; generous doses of delightful
barbecue sauce. Hot sausage sam-
pler has a secret weapon: spicy mus-
tard. Beer and wine. 628 London-
derry Lane. Daily 10:30am-10pm. $.
940-591-1652.
Old House BBQ 1007 Ave. C. 940-
383-3536.
The Smokehouse Denton barbecue
joint serves up surprisingly tender
and juicy beef, pork, chicken and cat-
fish. Good sauces, bulky sandwiches
and mashed potatoes near perfec-
tion. Good pies and cobblers. Beer
and wine. 1123 Fort Worth Drive. Sun-
Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10. $-$$. 940-
566-3073.
Sweet Y Cafe 511 Robertson St.
940-323-2301.
BISTROS AND CAFESBanter Gourmet sandwiches and
salads, breakfast items, coffee and
espresso, plus traditional Spanish
tapas (small savory dishes) by reser-
Continued on Page 14
DINING
14DentonTime
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Free Edamame With
One Entree
Best Sushi In Town!
Free Brewed Coffee With ONe Purchase
Of Bubble tea
Brand new coffee shop!
1400 South Loop 288 Suite #100 Denton, TX
expires 11/30/12
expires 11/30/12
jsushibar.com | 940.387.8833
cafekaleo.com | 940.387.4848
I1
German RestaurantGerman Restaurant& Bar has moved& Bar has moved
to Denton!to Denton!222 West Hickory Street,222 West Hickory Street,
Denton, TX 76201Denton, TX 76201(Next Door to the Historic Campus Theatre)
Bavarian Oktoberfest Celebration:Friday Night, October 5 thru Sunday, October 7
940-381-6723 • www.gvrestaurants.com
SUNDAY BRUNCH • LUNCHSUNDAY BRUNCH • LUNCHDINNER • CATERING • PARTIESDINNER • CATERING • PARTIES
9 German Beers on Tap9 German Beers on Tap
Open Daily at 11am • Close at 10pm Sun-Thurs/Midnight Fri & Sat
facebook.com/pages/Gerhard’s @GERHARDS_TX Email: [email protected]
JD
vation only. Beer and wine. No smok-
ing inside. 219 W. Oak St. Daily 10am-
midnight. $. 940-565-1638. denton-
banter.com.
Bochy’s Bistro Fusion menu grabs
elements of European cuisines with
many salad and sandwich selections.
Winning Greek chicken lisi panini.
Artful desserts: tuxedo cake, cream
cheese brownie. No smoking. 2430 I-
35E, Suite 136. Mon-Thurs 8-3, Fri-Sat
8-8, Sun brunch 8-2. $$. 940-387-
3354.
Cachette Bistro 144 N. Old Town
Blvd., Suite 1, Argyle. Mon-Fri
7:30am-5pm, Sat 8am-3pm. 940-
464-3041. cachettebistro.com.
Cafe Du Luxe Upscale casual spot
for conversation and a cup of coffee,
a light meal, dessert or a glass of fine
wine. Specialty coffee beans are
freshly roasted; wine list includes
vintages both familiar and relatively
unknown. Beer & wine. 3101 Unicorn
Lake Blvd. Mon-Thurs 5:30am-10pm,
Fri 5:30am-11pm, Sat 6am-11pm, Sun
7am-9pm. $. 940-382-7070.
The Chestnut Tree Salads, sand-
wiches, soups and other lunch and
brunch options served in back of
small shop on the Square. Chicken
pot pie is stellar. Tasty quiche.
Decadent fudge lava cake and rich
carrot cake. Revolving dinner menu.
No smoking. 107 W. Hickory St. Mon-
Fri 9am-3pm, Sat 9am-2:30pm; din-
ner Thurs-Sat 5:30-9pm. $-$$. 940-
591-9475. chestnuttearoom.com.
Sidewalk Bistro 2900 Wind River
Lane, Suite 132. Sun-Mon 7am-3pm,
Tues-Sat 7am-9pm. 940-591-1999.
sidewalk-bistro.com.
BRITISHThe Abbey Inn Restaurant & PubFull bar. 101 W. Hickory St. Sun-Wed
11-10, Thurs-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.
940-566-5483.
BRUNCHCups and Crepes Eatery serves up
both traditional American and Euro-
pean breakfasts and lunch. Get bis-
cuits and gravy or test a crepe filled
with rich hazelnut spread. Specialty
coffees. Smoking on patio only. 309
Fry St. Tues-Sun 8am-3pm. $. 940-
387-1696.
Loco Cafe Casual breakfast/lunch
cafe that’s a sister restaurant to the
Greenhouse Restaurant across the
street. Signature plate is the Loco
Moco: stacked hash browns topped
with eggs, cheese, salsa or gravy
with a fresh biscuit. No smoking. 603
N. Locust St. Mon-Fri 6am-2pm; Sat-
Sun 7am-3pm. $-$$. 940-387-1413.
Seven Mile Cafe Breakfast, brunch
and lunch spot, including vegan
options. 311 W. Congress St. Daily
7am-3pm. 940-808-0200. sevenmile
cafe.com.
CHINESEBuffet King Dining spot serves more
than 200 items of Chinese cuisine,
Mongolian grill and sushi. No smok-
ing. 2251 S. Loop 288. Mon-Thurs 11-
9:30, Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-$$
940-387-0888.
Cafe China 2900 Wind River Lane.
940-320-8888.
Chinatown Cafe Bountiful buffet
DININGContinued from Page 13
guarantees no visit need taste like
another. Good selections include
cucumber salad, spring rolls, orange
chicken, crispy pan-fried noodles,
beef with asparagus, steamed mus-
sels. Beer and wine. 2317 W. Univer-
sity 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.
299 Oriental Express 1000 Ave. C.
940-383-2098.
COFFEE AND TEAAmitea 708 N. Locust St. Mon-Thurs
8am-8pm, Fri-Sat 8am-9pm. 940-
382-8898. amitea.org.
Art Six Coffee House Coffee,
espresso, tea and other drinks, plus
snacks, sandwiches and soup in a
spot where lounging is encouraged.
It’s an arts venue to boot. No smok-
ing. 424 Bryan St. Mon-Fri 10am-mid-
night, Sat noon-midnight and Sun 2-
11pm. $. 940-484-2786.
Big Mike’s Coffee Shop Fair-trade
coffee and smoothies near UNT. 1306
W. Hickory St. Open 24 hours daily. $.
940-383-7478.
Jupiter House Coffeehouse on the
Square offers espresso, coffee,
smoothies, shakes, teas and other
drinks, as well as pastries and
snacks. No smoking inside. 106 N.
Locust St. Daily 6am-midnight. $.
940-387-7100. Second location:
Jupiter House Europa, 503 W.
University Drive, 940-566-2891.
Kaleo Bubble Tea & Coffee 1400 S.
Loop 288, Suite 108. Daily 7am-
10pm. 940-387-4848. cafekaleo.com.
Naranja Cafe Famous for its bubble
tea, this shop also serves teas, juices,
smoothies and coffee. 906 Ave. C.
Suite 100. $ 940-483-0800.
Zera Coffee Co. Features artisan
coffee and specialty coffee drinks
and light snacks. Free Wi-Fi. No
smoking. 420 E. McKinney St., Suite
106. Mon-Sat 6am-midnight. $. 940-
239-8002.
ECLECTICThe Club at Gateway CenterThree-course meal for $7 at restau-
rant run by hospitality management
students. Fall season runs through
Nov. 30. For schedule and menu, visit
www.smhm.unt.edu/theclub. In
UNT’s Gateway Center across from
Fouts Field. No smoking. No credit
cards. 940-565-4144. Mon-Fri, with
seating 11am-12:15pm. $. 940-565-
4144.
Denton Community MarketWeekly market includes several food
vendors — vegan fare, Vietnamese
sandwiches, fresh juices and more.
From 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday
at Mulberry Street and Carroll
Boulevard, in the parking lot by the
Bayless-Selby House Museum. den-
tonmarket.org.
Denton Square Donuts 208 W. Oak
St. 940-220-9447. dentonsquare-
donuts.com.
The Greenhouse RestaurantCasual dining atmosphere comple-
ments fresh seafood, beef and chick-
en from the grill. Even vegetarian
selections get a flavor boost from the
woodpile. Starters are rich: spinach-
artichoke dip, asiago olives. Refined
cocktails and rich desserts. Patio din-
ing available. 600 N. Locust St. Mon-
Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11, Sun noon-9
(bar stays open later). $-$$. 940-
484-1349.
Hannah’s Off the Square More
room, more mid-price items and
more casual atmosphere. Steaks,
with any of 10 sauces or toppings,
get A-plus. Tempting desserts. Full
bar. Smoking on terrace only. No
checks. 111 W. Mulberry St. Sun-Mon
11-9 (brunch until 2pm), Tues-Thurs
11-10; Fri-Sat 11-11. $$-$$$. 940-566-
1110.
The Wildwood Inn Elegant dining
room tucked away in a bed and
breakfast. Excellent food like hearty
soups, Angus rib-eye, meal-size sal-
ads and daily specials. Beer and
wine. No smoking inside. 2602 Lillian
Miller Parkway. Thurs-Sat 6-10pm.
$$$. 940-243-4919. denton-
wildwoodinn.com.
GERMANGerhard’s German Restaurant 222
W. Hickory St. 940-381-6723.
gvrestaurants.com.
GREEK/MEDITERRANEANCaesar Island MediterraneanFood 7650 S. I-35E, Suite 112,
Corinth. 940-269-4370.
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. 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.
$-$$. 940-383-2441.
HAMBURGERSBurger Time Machine 301 W.
University Drive. 940-384-1133.
Cool Beans Funky atmosphere in old
building. Menu offers foodstuffs that
go well with a cold beer — fried
things, nachos, hamburgers, etc.
Veggie burger too dependent on salt,
but good fries are crispy with skin
still attached. Full bar. 1210 W.
Hickory St. Daily 11am-2am. $. 940-
382-7025.
Denton County IndependentHamburger Co. Custom-built burg-
ers with a juicy, generous patty, fresh
fixings on a worthy bun. Also avail-
able: chicken sandwich and limited
salad bar. 113 W. Hickory St. Mon-Sat
11-3. 940-383-1022. 2nd location: 715
Sunset St. Mon-Sat 11-8. 940-382-
3037. $. No credit cards. Beer at 2nd
location.
Love Shack Chef Tim Love’s third
gourmet hamburger establishment,
with patties made from half prime
brisket, half tenderloin. Specialties
include Dirty Love Burger, topped
with wild boar bacon and a quail egg.
Plus fries, chicken, fish, hot dogs,
soups, salads and the milkshake of
the day. Full bar. 115 E. Hickory St.
Sun & Tues-Thurs 11am-10pm; Fri-Sat
11am-midnight. 940-442-6834.
www.loveburgershack.com.
Katz’s Hamburgers 901-A Ave. C.
940-442-6200.
Mr. Frosty Old-timey joint has all
your fast-food faves but with home-
made quality, including its own root
beer. Atmosphere and jukebox take
you back to the ’50s. 1002 Fort
Worth Drive. Tues-Sun 11am-11pm. $.
940-387-5449.
RG Burgers & Grill 2430 S. I-35E,
Suite 172. 940-383-2431.
HOME COOKINGBabe’s Chicken Dinner House 204
N. Fourth St., Sanger. Tues-Fri 4:30-
9pm, Sat 11-9 and Sun 11-3. $-$$.
940-458-0000.
Betty’s Cafe Diners get buffet selec-
tions of homestyle standards: catfish,
fried chicken, meatloaf and barbecue
ribs. Homemade rolls and pie are
available to go. Breakfast buffets
made to fill you up, and kids ages 1-5
eat for $2. 710 S. U.S. Highway 377 in
Aubrey. Mon-Sun 6am-2:30pm, Wed-
Fri 5-8pm. $. 940-365-9881.
Bonnie’s Kitchen 6420 N. I-35. 940-
383-1455.
Cartwright’s Ranch HouseRestaurant on the Square serves
breakfast, lunch and dinner, featuring
chicken-fried steak, hamburgers and
steaks. Family-style service available.
111 N. Elm St. 940-387-7706.
cartwrightsranchhouse.com.
Jay’s Cafe 110 W. Main St., Pilot
Point. 940-686-0158.
Krum Diner Offers homestyle cui-
sine, seafood and Italian food, along
with Greek and assorted desserts,
Continued on Page 15
15DentonTime
100412
and sandwiches, burgers, dinner
plates and more. 145 W. McCart St.,
Krum, Mon-Sat 7am-8pm, Sun 9am-
2pm. $. 940-482-7080.
OldWest Cafe As winner of the Best
Breakfast and Best Homestyle
Cooking titles in Best of Denton
2009 through 2012, this eatery
offers a wide selection of homemade
meals. Denton location: 1020 Dallas
Drive. Mon-Sat 6am-2pm, Sun 7am-
2pm. $. 940-382-8220. Sanger loca-
tion: 711 N. Fifth St. Daily 7am-2pm.
940-458-7358. 817-442-9378.
Prairie House Restaurant Open
since 1989, this Texas eatery serves
up mesquite-grilled steaks, baby-
back ribs, buffalo burgers, chicken-
fried rib-eyes and other assorted
dishes. 10001 U.S. Highway 380,
Cross Roads. Daily 7:30am-10pm. $-
$$. 940-440-9760. phtexas.com.
ICE CREAMBeth Marie’s Old-Fashioned IceCream and Soda Fountain Parlor
with lots of yummy treats, including
more than 40 ice creams made on
premises. Soups and sandwiches at
lunch at the downtown Square loca-
tion, all day at the Unicorn Lake loca-
tion. 117 W. Hickory St. and 2900
Wind River Lane. Mon-Thurs 11-10,
Fri-Sat 11-11 (Wind River shop open
until 11:15pm), Sun noon-10 (lunch
daily 11-4). $. 940-384-1818.
INDIANBawarchi Biryani Point 909 Ave. C.
940-898-8889.
Rasoi, The Indian Kitchen Housed
in a converted gas station, this Indian
dining spot offers a small but careful-
ly prepared buffet menu of curries
(both meat and vegetarian), beans,
basmati rice and samosas. No smok-
ing. 1002 Ave. C. Daily 11am-9:30pm.
$. 940-566-6125. dentonindianfood.
com.
ITALIANBagheri’s 1125 E. University Drive,
Suite A. 940-382-4442.
Don Camillo Garlic gets served
straight up at family-owned restau-
rant that freely adapts rustic Italian
dishes with plenty of American imag-
ination. Lasagna, chicken and egg-
plant parmigiana bake in wood-fired
oven with thin-crusted pizzas. 1400
N. Corinth St., Suite 103, Corinth.
Mon-Wed 11-2:30, 5-9; Thurs-Sat 11-
2:30, 5-10. 940-321-1100.
Fera’s Excellent entrees served bub-
bling hot. Rich sauces, firm pastas
and billowing garlic rolls. Dishes
served very fresh. Desserts don’t dis-
appoint. Beer and wine. No credit
cards. 1407 W. Oak St. 940-382-
9577. Mon-Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11.
$-$$.
Genti’s Pizza and Pasta 4451
FM2181, Suite 125, Corinth. Mon-Sat
11-10, Sun noon-9. $-$$. 940-497-
5400.
Giuseppe’s Italian RestaurantRomantic spot in bed and breakfast
serves Northern Italian and Southern
French cuisine. Beer and wine. 821 N.
Locust St. Mon-Thurs, 11-2, 5-9, Fri 11-
2 & 5-10, Sat 5-10. Sun 10:30-2. $-$$.
940-381-2712.
Luigi’s Pizza Italian Restaurant
Family-run spot does much more
than pizza, and how. Great New York-
style pies plus delicious southern
Italian dishes. Nifty kids’ menu.
Tiramisu is dynamite. Beer and wine.
2317 W. University Drive. Sun & Tues-
Thurs 11-10, Fri-Sat 11-11. $-$$. 940-
591-1988.
JAPANESEAvocado Sushi Restaurant 2430 S.
I-35E, Suite 126. 940-383-9812.
I Love Sushi 917 Sunset St. Mon-
Thurs 11am-3pm & 5-10pm, Fri 11am-
3pm & 5-10:30pm; Sat noon-
10:30pm; Sun 12:30-9pm. $$. 940-
891-6060.
J Sushi 1400 S. Loop 288, Suite 100.
940-387-8833. jsushibar.com.
Keiichi Sushi chef Keiichi Nagano
turns eel, fluke, squid, salmon, yel-
lowtail and tuna into sashimi. Daily
fish specials and pasta dishes served
with an Asian flair. Homemade
tiramisu and fruit sorbets. Reserva-
tions recommended. Wine and beer.
500 N. Elm St. Tues-Sat 5-11. $$-$$$.
940-382-7505.
Shogun Steakhouse & Sushi Bar3606 S. I-35E, Suite 100. 940-382-
7800.
Sushi Cafe 1401 W. Oak St. 940-
380-1030.
KOREANCzen 408 North Texas Blvd. 940-
383-2387.
MEXICAN/TEX-MEXCasa Galaviz Comfortable, 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;
albondigas soup rich with chunky
vegetables and big, tender meatballs.
Standout: savory pork carnitas.
Menudo on weekends, breakfast any-
time. Daily lunch specials. Full bar. No
smoking. 619 S. Denton Drive, Lake
Dallas. Mon-Fri 11-9, Sat 10-9. $-$$.
940-321-5522.
El Chaparral Grille Restaurant
serves a duo of American and
Mexican-style dishes for breakfast,
lunch and catering events. Daily spe-
cials, and breakfast buffet on
Sundays. 324 E. McKinney St., Suite
102. Mon-Fri 7am-2pm; Sun 8am-
2pm. $. 940-243-1313.
El Guapo’s Huge menu encompass-
es Tex-Mex and Mexican standards
as well as ribs, brisket and twists like
Santana’s Supernatural Quesadillas
(fajita chicken and bacon) and
jalapeno-stuffed shrimp. Ilada Parilla
Asada steak with avocado was a little
salty; enchiladas are very good. Full
bar. 419 S. Elm St. Mon-Fri 11-10, Sat-
Sun 11-11. $$. 940-566-5575.
El Pariente Roadside grocery and
music store serves exemplary
Mexican fare. High scores for authen-
ticity and freshness of ingredients.
2532 Louise St. Daily 9-8. $. 940-
380-1208.
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. 115 Industrial St. Mon-Wed
6:30am-10pm, Thurs 6:30am-mid-
night, Fri 6:30am-2am, Sat 8am-2am,
Sun 8am-10pm. $. 940-380-8226.
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. 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 RestaurantAuthentic Mexican dining includes
worthy chicken enchiladas and flau-
tas. Fine standard combo choices
and b’fast items with reasonable
prices. 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 spe-
cials and b’fast offerings. Fast and
friendly service. Beer and wine. 110
N. Carroll Blvd. Mon-Sat 7am-9pm. $.
940-891-1932. Mi Casita Express:
905 W. University Drive, 940-891-
1938. Mi Casita: 2221 S. I-35E, 940-
891-1500.
Miguelito’s Mexican RestaurantThe basics: brisk service, family
atmosphere and essential selections
at a reasonable price. Sopapillas and
flan are winners. Beer and margari-
tas. 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.
Papi’s Tex Mex Grill 421 S. U.S.
Highway 377, Argyle. 940-240-1600.
Raphael’s Restaurante MexicanoNot 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 fla-
vorful. Full bar. 26615 U.S. 380 East,
Aubrey. Tues-Sat 11-10, Sun 11-9. $-
$$. 940-440-9483.
Tortilleria Tierra Caliente 1607 E.
McKinney St., Suite 800. 940-591-
6807.
Tortilleria La Sabrocita 201 Dallas
Drive. 940-382-0720.
Veronica’s Cafe 803 E. McKinney
St. 940-565-9809.
Villa Grande Mexican Restaurant12000 U.S. 380 East, Cross Roads.
940-365-1700. Denton location: 2530
W. University Drive, 940-382-6416.
MIDDLE EASTERNGreen Zatar Family-owned restau-
rant/market does it all from scratch,
and with speed. Meats like gyros and
succulent Sultani Kebab, plus veggie
combo and crunchy falafel. Superb
saffron rice and sauteed vegetables;
impressive baklava. BYOB. No smok-
ing. 609 Sunset St. Daily 11-10. $-$$.
940-383-2051.
NATURAL/VEGETARIANCupboard Natural Foods and CafeCozy cafe inside food store serves
things the natural way. Winning sal-
DININGContinued from Page 14
Restaurant profiles and listings
are compiled by the Denton
Record-Chronicle and The Dallas
Morning News. A comprehensive
list of Dallas-Fort Worth area
restaurants is available at
www.guidelive.com.
Denton Time publishes restau-
rant profiles and a guide of restau-
rants that have been featured in
the weekly dining section and
online at DentonRC.com. Profiles
and listings are not related to
advertising and are published as
space is available. Denton Time
does not publish reviews.
Incorrect information can be
reported by e-mail to drc@denton
rc.com, by phone to 940-566-
6860 or by fax to 940-566-6888.
To be considered for a profile,
send the restaurant name,
address, phone number, days and
hours of operation and a copy of
the menu to: Denton Time Editor,
P.O. Box 369, Denton, TX 76202.
Please indicate whether the
restaurant is new or has changed
ownership, chefs or menus.
PRICE KEYAverage complete dinner per
person, including appetizer,
entree and dessert.
$ Less than $10
$$ $10–$25
$$$ $25–$50
$$$$ More than $50
DINING PROFILE AND LISTINGS POLICY
ads; also good soups, smoothies and
sandwiches, both with and without
meat. Wonderful breakfast. No smok-
ing. 200 W. Congress St. Mon-Sat 8-
8, Sun 10-7. $. 940-387-5386.
PIZZACrooked Crust 101 Ave. A. 940-565-
5999.
J&J’s Pizza Pizza lovers can stay in
touch with their inner-collegiate
selves through cold mugs of premi-
um draft. Bountiful, homemade pizza
pies, in N.Y. style or deep-dish
Chicago style. Salads, hot and cold
subs, calzones, lasagna and spaghet-
ti. Beer. 118 W. Oak St. 940-382-7769.
Mon-Sat 11-midnight. $-$$.
Mellow Mushroom 217 E. Hickory
St. Sun-Wed 11am-10pm, Thurs-Sat
11am-midnight. 940-323-1100.
Palio’s Pizza Cafe 1716 S. Loop 288.
940-387-1900.
TJ’s Pizza Wings & Things 420 S.
Carroll Blvd., Suite 102. 940-383-
3333.
The Tomato Pizza 303 Bolivar St.,
Sanger. 940-458-9063.
thetomatopizza.com.
SANDWICHESNew York Sub-Way 305 W.
University Drive. 940-566-1823.
New York Sub Hub Bread baked
daily and fresh ingredients, even avo-
cado. “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.
Vigne Wine Shop & Delicatessen222 W. Hickory, Suite 103. 940-566-
1010.
Weinberger’s Deli Chicago-style
sandwiches including the Italian beef
bistro, sausages, gyros, soups and
more. 311 E. Hickory St., Suite 110.
Mon-Sat 11-7, Sun 11am-3pm. 940-
566-5900. weinbergersdenton.com.
SEAFOODDani Rae’s Gulf Coast Kitchen2303 S. I-35E. Sun-Thurs 11am-9pm,
Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. 940-898-1404.
Frilly’s Seafood Bayou KitchenPlenty of Cajun standards and Texas
fusion plates. Everything gets plenty
of spice — sometimes too much.
Beer and wine. 1925 Denison St. Sun-
Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-9:30. $$. 940-
243-2126.
Hoochie’s Oyster House 207 S. Bell
Ave. Sun-Wed 11am-9pm, Thurs-Sat
11am-10pm. 940-383-0104.
STEAKRanchman’s Cafe Legendary cafe
sticks to old-fashioned steaks and
tradition. Oversized steaks and deli-
cious chicken-fried steak. Homey
meringue pies; order baked potato
ahead. BYOB. 110 W. Bailey St.,
Ponder. Sun-Thurs 11-9, Fri-Sat 11-10.
$-$$$. 940-479-2221.
Trail Dust Steak House Informal
dress (neckties will be clipped).
Dance to live C&W. 26501 U.S. 380
East, Aubrey. 940-365-4440. $$.
THAIAndaman Thai RestaurantExtensive menu continues trend of
good Asian food in Denton. Fried tofu
is a home run. Pad Thai noodles have
perfect amount of sweetness. Home-
made coconut ice cream, sweet rice
with mango. Beer and wine. No
smoking. 221 E. Hickory St. Mon-Fri
11am-3pm & 4-9:30pm; Sat-Sun
noon-9:30pm. $$. 940-591-8790.
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. $-$$. 940-387-3317.
Siam Off the Square Fresh flavors
set curries apart at comfortable din-
ing spot. Winning starters: shrimp
satay, Tum Yum Gai and Tom Kah
soups. Excellent Thai seafood. BYOB.
209 W. Hickory St., Suite 104. Lunch,
Mon-Fri 11-2; dinner, Mon-Sat 5-9. $-
$$. 940-382-5118.
Sweet Basil Thai Bistro 1800 S.
Loop 288, Suite 224. 940-484-6080.
Sukhothai II Restaurant 1502 W.
Hickory St. 940-382-2888.
Thai Ocha Dishes that are as tasty
as they are pretty. Hot and spicy
sauce makes even veggie haters go
after fresh veggies with zeal. Quiet
setting. BYOB. No smoking. 1509
Malone St. Mon-Fri 11am-3pm, 5-
10pm; Sat 11:30-10; Sun 5-9. $-$$.
940-566-6018.
16DentonTime
100412
businessopportunites
203 DR-C Classifiedswww.DentonRC.com
SELL YOUR STUFF HERE!
Best Prices Paid!We Buy Cars Running or NotDenton area. 940-390-5144
BEST VALUE RV Sales & Service. Consigning RVs.
Come by & register for our FREERV Give Away. 866-724-2378
#1 in pre-owned bikes, sales &service. We buy motorcycles,
Jet Skis & ATV’s. Call Carlos fora bid on your machine today.
521 Acme St (FtWorthDr/IH-35E)Cyclecenterofdenton.com
2009 HONDA XR 650L450 Original Miles, Like New,
Paid $6500 -- Sell $4500.Call 972-841-5750
1991 GMC SUBURBAN Runs Great. Well Kept,
New Tires, $1950. Call 940-387-2087
2005 MERCURY MARQUIS39,000 Miles, Fully Loaded, Extra
Clean, blue w/white vinyl top$8800. Must see to appreciate
3901 Montecito Dr #606, Denton806-445-6191 or 940-387-4520
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.
CASH LOANS on Car Titles,VIP Finance, Lewisville TX.
Call 972-434-6616vipfin.com
Advertising Sales Rep 8a-4:30pMon-Fri, 1st 90 days $8/hr & then
afterwards $10/hr + commLewisville Area 214-432-0426
Alignment &
Brake Technician
Must haveExperience
Apply in person at
822 S. Elm, Denton
An opening for CDL Drivers:We ship horses coast-to-coastwith the finest equipment on theroad. All trips originate and endfrom our terminal in Pilot Point,TX. Our average trip consists of5 to 5.5 days turn around, withweekends off. Our rigs leave onMonday & Tuesday and returnFriday or Saturday. We runteams with no dead head milesand no waiting for loads. If youlove horses, have a CDL licensein good standing and have a mini-mum of 2 years OTR experience,contact Mike Alexander, VP ofoperations Equine Express N.A.Inc @ 940/365-9098 to schedulean interview.
Assistant Managerneeded for Denton loan
company. We are a growingcompany with advancement
opportunities. If you have smallloan company, payday loan or
pawn experience, we would liketo hear from you.
Email resume or questions [email protected]
or apply at our home office3000 S. Stemmons Freeway,
Lake Dallas, Tx
Awesome Christian Childcare Facility wants fun loving,fantastic team members.
Pre-K Afternoon Teachers2pm-6:30pm must have experi-ence working in pre-k classroomin a licensed childcare facility.
2 yr old position :must have expoerience in li-
censed childcrae facility Infant Room Teacher:
8am-5pm18-24 month old teacher
must be 18 yrs old, with H.S. diploma, must love children.
940-484-8337
City of
Highland Village
Police Officer$50,131.37-$55,144.50 DOQ
Drainage
Technician I-III$12.91-$14.20/hr, DOQ
Streets
Technician I-III
$12.91-$14.20/hr, DOQ
Job Description andRequirements Available
on our website
APPLY ONLINE ATwww.highlandvillage.org
Human Resources1000 Highland Village RdHighland Village TX 75077
Phone: 972-899-5087EOE
Established commercialconstruction company seeks
Account Processor/Project Coordinator
to oversee documentation andaccounting for projects frominception to closeout. Thisposition provides a unique
opportunity for exposure to thefull cycle of the construction
process.
Responsibilities:* Accounts Payable/Accounts Receivable* AIA invoicing on percentage of completion basis* Accounting for retainage* Job costing* Change order processing* Lien release processing* Insurance administration* Preparation of Operation and Maintenance manuals* Preparation, administration and maintenance of subcontractor contracts
Skills required/preferred:* Commercial construction office experience* Bookkeeping/accounting experience, preferably construction industry* Software: QuickBooks, Word, Excel* Familiarity with lien law* Experience with contracts
Salary commensurate with expe-rience. Interested and qualifiedapplicants please email resume
Class A or B CDL
Concrete Mixer
Truck Driveropening available with
reputable company.Verifiable driving experience
and a clean drivingrecord necessary.
Mixer driver experience preferred, however, will train
for mixer operation.Competitive salary and
benefits package.
Please apply in personat 6636 East Highway 114,
Rhome, Texas.We are an Equal Opportunity
Employer and a drug freeworkplace with random
drug testing.
CNA needed at Guarranty Homehealth agency in Lewisville
214-695-2889CNAs Needed
Hourly & Live in.One year experience required.Call 940-380-0200 9am-5pm
Company Pipeline
Welder Must be able to pass 1104 test.
Please send resumeand wages desired to
[email protected] fax 940-458-9184
Construction LaborCompetitive wages with
overtime; Legal documents required; drug screening;
no criminal background
Application may be filled at 661 E. Shahan Prairie Road,
Little Elm, Tx 75068. 972-294-5000. EEO
Corinth Animal Hospital seeksexperienced full time
VET TECH. Hourly wages. Fax resume to 940-498-0352
COUNTRY CLUB NOW HIRING
PT Host/Hostess &
Food ExpeditorsApply in person at the
WILDHORSE GRILLin Robson Ranch
located at 9400 Ed RobsonBlvd. Bldg A in Denton.
Denton County MHMRLVN, Case Management,
Community Support,Direct Care and Supervisor ,
Crisis and more!Call 940-565-5287 or
Visit www.dentonmhmr.org
Experienced Cabinet Finisherfor Commercial Mill Work Shop.
Must have experience to doall types of finishes,
Benefits! 940-383-3879
Experienced staff for schoolaged children 2pm-10pm. Apply
Hope Christian Academy, 3730 E.McKinney #101, 940-243-7484
Female Care Givers Needed.24 Hour Live-in Senior Care
Phone answered -Tues-Sat. 8 am - 6:30 pm
Call 940-206-0276Fire Alarm Tech/Helpers Wanted
Will provide on the job training.Must have valid TX drivers license Background check
& drug test requiredApply within:
C&G Integration Systems, LLC.4801 W. University Drive
Bldg 102 Denton, Texas 76207
Food Service
Worker needed at Argyle ISD. Must be able to standfor extended periods and lift up to 40 lbs. Weekdays only.
$8.65 per hour/benefits available .
Please apply online atargyleisd.com
or apply in person at 800 Eagle Drive, Argyle,
Texas 76226. For questions,contact Kari Frederick at(940) 464-7241 ext. 1010
FT Resident AideApply in person at
205 N. Bonnie Brae, DentonAA/EEO/M/F/D/V
Fulfillment Supervisor2nd shift position. Must beGood in tracking shipments,And pulling orders accurately.Overtime a must.Pay $10 + DOEApply at 310 Audra LaneDenton, TX 76209
Full Time Child Care CenterTeachers needed M-F at non-
profit in Denton. Seeking energet-ic , responsible, self motivated &dependable individual s. M ust
have exp. and/or higher educationin early childhood development.
Call 940-387-8214.
Full-Time Front Desk Cust Svc Representative needed fornights and weekends. Email
[email protected] or faxresume and references
to 940-382-5602.Full time Receptionist neededfor busy local law firm. Must becomputer proficient and possessgood communication and phoneskills. Non smoking only needapply! Please email resume [email protected]
GLAZIER Experienced Glazier needed.
Call 940-440-9951
Growing Call Center40 Sales/CSR reps Needed
FT & PT Pos AvailOvertime Avail
Training classes weeklyGuaranteed Hourly Base Pay
w/ Bonuses paid Daily!Weekly Pay!
721 South I35 East, Suite 144940/323-2694
Horse Person,/Property Care-taker, Experienced individuals
only need apply, farm equipmentoperation, benefits 972-562-3662.
Hot off the PressOver 200 openings
Alliance/ Roanoke areaFull-time, Part-time, evenings,
weekendsAPPLY TODAY
Call Express for more detailsGreat Christmas $$$$$
940-312-7347
HOUSEKEEPERS WANTED!Do You Love to Clean?!
Up to $14 with tips!Maid Pro Denton 940-566-6243
Housekeeping & Laundry staffneeded. Competitive wages.
Apply in personSCC Denton 2244 Brinker Rd.
Inside Sales w/ Paid TrainingHigh Energy 8:30 - 3:45 M-F
No Exp. NecessaryCall TJ - 214-636-7427
JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!* Shipping/Receiving w/FL* Machine Operators* Order Selection/Lead* Assembler* Order Pullers* Payroll clerkPositions available inDenton, Gainesville,Lewisville & McKinney(940) 442-6550
LINE COOKS & WAIT STAFFwith Experience in country club
or hotel. Apply in person at 1213 Country Club Rd,
Argyle TX
Little Guys Movers is now hiringresponsible individuals who
possess strong communicationskills, a positive attitude, and a
valid driver’s license. Backgroundchecks. Apply in person,520 S. Elm St, Denton.
Starts at $8.50/hr.
JC
Be a part of Mean GreenFootball at Apogee Stadium!
CSC is hiring for P/Temployment for UNT, TCUFootball, Dallas ConventionCenter & many other venues.
Flexible scheduling, mustbebe at least 18 and HS grad,drug free, clean criminalbackground required.
call 866-754-5150. EOE
Medical Asst. w/exp. neededfor busy FP in Lewisville. X-ray& phlebotomy exp. a +. Excllntsal. 214-680-9895 fax: 972-221-7424 or [email protected]
Medical office needs Full TimeMEDICAL SECRETARY ,
entry level, mature, dependable,experience preferred.
Fax Resume 940-383-1499
NOW HIRING!!!Forklift Operators
Machine OperatorsOrder Pullers
Data EntryReceptionist
Administrative Assistant940-312-7347
Office Assistant - SangerMotivated team player neededto assist office manager andaccount managers with dataentry, answering telephones,and special projects. Must beable to follow directions, be
organized and communicatewell. Computer and CustomerService experience a plus. Seewww.colorstargrowers.com formore details. Email resume [email protected]
Painter/Make Ready,Dietary Aides & Other positionsCheck our current openings at:
www.good-sam.comAAE, EOE, MFHV
Paint Store Needs CounterHelp/Back up Driver , 21+ (req’dby co. ins.) No DWI, Drug Screen
Standard. Apply in Person,614 S. Kealy, Lewisville
Payroll ManagerDenton company seeking experienced individual to
process semi-monthly payroll, aswell as perform general office
duties on a full-time basis.Profficient in Quickbooks & Excel. Fax resumes to: 940-220-6443
Pipeline Land Services, Inc. hasan immediate opening for a
Registered Professional LandSurveyor in our Denton Office.Applicant must be registered inthe State of Texas. Oil and Gas
experience preferred but notrequired. Please email
[email protected] or call(940) 781-5334 for more details.
POOL CLEANER$10 per hour & up. Must havegood driving record. Will train--
no experience necessary.Call 940-458-4981
POOL CLEANERFULL & PART TIME Positions available
No Experience required.Must be a self motivated
hardworker. Must be 19 withclean driving record to qualifyfor insurance coverage. Mustbe willing to submit to back-ground check & drug test.
Please apply in personGOHLKE POOLS,
909 Dallas Dr, Denton TX k
PRESSERComet Cleaners of Corinth is
looking for 1 quality shirtpresser. Sankosha equipment,
good hours, good pay, vacation & bonus. Apply in
person I35 at Swisher Rd
PROJECT MANAGERHeavy Highway
Responsible for proj. planning,allocation, accting, & cntrl. Provide direction & compli-ance + addtl responsibilities.
Must have related constructiondegree or equiv. combo oftechnical training and/or
related exp.
Apply at 3020 Ft. Worth Dr,Denton, at www.jagoepublic.com, or call 940-382-2581 for info.
Resumes to [email protected]
EOE
REGIONAL ACCT MGR -SANGER Talented self starter
needed to work with keyaccount on sales program creation, implementation,
execution and daily management. Must work wellin team, communicate clearly,have strong computer skills &act with integrity. Horticulture
experience preferred. Some travel required. See
www.colorstargrowers.com formore details. Email resume [email protected]
Denton ISD is currently hiring:• Route Drivers• Extra-Curricular
Trip DriversPaid Training for Class B CDLDriving rate $12.60+ hr (after training)
School Holidays Off, Paid Personal/Sick LeaveTeacher Retirement Service, Child Ride AlongProgram...
• Times vary depending on Route Assignment andTrip Availability
• Must pass pre-employment physical, drug screenand criminal background check
• Possess acceptable driving record for driverpositions
Apply• online at www.dentonisd.org• visit us at 230 N. Mayhill• call 940-369-0300 I2
Rent 1st –starting pay $12.50hr,now hiring sales oriented
individuals, must be able to liftmore than 75lbs apply at
305 Bolivar St Sanger TXOr
103 N Hwy 77 Marietta OKFax resumes to903-686-9898
SALES ANALYST / ACCT ASST- SANGER Talented self starter
needed to assist accountmanager and analyze store
sales data in accurately executing the replenishment
process. Must walk greenhouse, write orders,
communicate with stores, andinspect for quality control. Seewww.colorstargrowers.com formore details. Email resume to [email protected]
Select Producer
Gainesville/Whitesboro, TexasFuneral Directors Life Insurance Company
is actively recruiting for a SELECT PRODUCER
who will be representingFDLIC and several area FuneralHomes to discuss preplanning
with client families. We are looking for a self
driven individual who has theability to inspire, motivate andconsistently execute results.
The ideal candidate must haveproven track record of
successful sales, excellentcommunication and strong
interpersonal abilities. Current Texas preneed
insurance license or ability toobtain within 30 days as well as
a valid driver’s license and reliable transportation.
Excellent income potential,benefits options, 401(k) and
lead generation.
To build a successful and rewarding career in sales and
a confidential interview, email your resume todirectconnect@funeral
directorslife.com or visit our website at
www.funeraldirectorslife.com
17Denton
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job lists 340
houses:unfurnished
630
houses:unfurnished
630
www.DentonRC.com
Se Necesitan Trabajadres paraConstruccion exelente pago ytiempo extra se requiere
permiso legal para trabajar ypasar examen de droga, notener historial criminal
Puede llenar aplicación en:661 E. Shahan Prairie Road,
Little Elm, Tx 75068.972-294-5000. EEO
Small AV rated law firmseeking an individual for
CLERK position.Please email Resume to:[email protected]
SPAN Transit Bus DrivingPositions Available
An exciting opportunity is nowavailable at SPAN Transit forPart-Time Bus Operators.Training is expected to beginas soon as qualified applicants
are selected.
Requirements:--Successful completion of police
background check--Successful completion of DOT
Physical/Drug Screen--Subject to Random Drug &
Alcohol Testing--Clean Driving Record
These are Part-Time positions,which will be filled upon selection
of qualified applicants.Please apply within at theSPAN Transit Office at
1800 Malone Street Denton, TX
Tax Preparer --Free tax school,earn extra income after takingcourse, flexible schedule 940-484-1040 Liberty Tax Service
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 forclasses! Write: Haz-Co,PO Box 3063, Sherman, TX75091 or call 903-564-3862
Bonduris Music • Lessons nowon all inst’s & all styles of guitar.Student bands. Try our $50 "nostrings" special 940-320-6023
Love to Sing? No contracts!All Styles • Group Rates Availwww.dentonvocalstudio.comCall Larry 383-1378, 391-4838
Adorable White Maltipoo Pups13 wks, 2 males, hypo allergenic,non shedding, stays small, $450each. Call Linda 940-759-2870
Tractor, Trailer, Repair, Paintingand Welding* All Makes
and Models. Pickup available.Brad Harkins 940-368-9494
Alfalfa & Alfalfa/Orchardsmall & large square. Round Bales
& Bermuda Sm. Sq.217-737-7737, Aubrey
Fresh, Green, Fert Hay Rolls,1st cutting Coastal $75
Daryl Anderson 940-391-6875 orCarlos 940-210-4071 Ponder
Booze ApplianceReconditioned & Guaranteed
Washers , Dryers,Stoves & Refrigerators
3511 E. University Dr, Denton940-382-4333 We Buy
Desktop, Laptop, New & UsedBought, Sold, Repaired,Specials, Del desktop
complete: Windows XP, Vista,7 for $299, call 940-482-7906
DENCO FIREARMSCHL Instruction & SalesSat. & Sun CHL Classeswww.dencofirearms.com
940-453-4162
Denton Publishing Companywill not knowingly publish anyad for the sale of weapons thatdoes not meet our standards ofacceptance.
Upholstery EquipmentHeavy duty Juki LU 562 SewingMaching plus misc. upholstery
supplies 940-383-0738
Auction Sat Oct 20, 10am,at Paul Redfearn’s gym,1 mile north of Aubrey onHwy 377, gyms is full & wehave lots of tractors & farm
equipment outside. if you haveanything to sell call us
940-391-2979 complete auctionTX license # 8247
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)
JA
AVEN ESTATE SALESExperienced & Reputable
940-594-2878
Corinth, Villas on the FairwayAnnual Neighborhood GarageSale -- 8 Houses participating,Oakmont subdivision gatedcommunity off Robinson Rd.Oct 5-6 Fri-Sat, 8am-12pmWoodworking Tools, StereoSpeakers, Furniture, PatioFurniture, Books Etc Etc.
Decatur, 564 County Rd 4004,15 miles W. of Denton off Hwy380. BIG SALE. Oct 5-6-7,
Chevy pickup, flatbed trailer,furniture, tools, much more.
Call 940-765-6439 for more info
Denton 1409 Wellington DrFri 10/5 & Sat 10/6 9am-noon
Lots of nice furniture,washer/dryer, golf clubs, tv,etc. Bring your own mover &
cash only.
Denton 1824 WillowoodFri 10/5 & Sat 10/6 8am
Furniture, lamps, home decor& lots of misc.
Denton, 2508 KARIBA LNoff Wind River, Fri-Sat Oct 5-6,8am-12Noon, Mac II Computer,
Furniture, Housewares,Vintage Collectibles,
Bucket Seats, Lots more!
Denton, 2708 ROCKWOODFri-Sat Oct 5-6, 8am-6pm,
Women’s plus sz clothes, purses,shoes, furniture, collectibles,decorator items, books, frames,fabric, costume jewlery, misc
DENTON, 2913 TOMLEEFRI & SAT OCT 5 & 6, 8am-6pmPlants, Household Goods,
Tools, Large Kiln
Denton 3131 Lido WayFri & Sat 8am - 4pm Boys
clothes 12-24mos, baby items,Xmas decor, misc. household
Denton 3405 Roselawn Dr.Fri 8am - 5pm & Sat 8am - 4pmAntiques, dolls, depressionglass, housewares, furniture,fall arrangements, homemade
jewelry & lots of stuff.
Denton 3901 Harvest Glen DrKings Row & Dunes
Friday, Oct 5 & Saturday, Oct 68am - 4pm
Denton, 5703 TENNESSEE DRSat-Sun Oct 6-7, 9am-2pmHuge Yard Sale, Everythingfrom Baby Clothes to Furniture.
Denton, 608 Mulkey, Yard SaleFri & Sat, 8 - 4 Lawnmowers,weedeaters, edgers, air comp,tools, fishing, golf, y tools,
dolls, pictures, etc.
Denton, 609 TICONDEROGA5 Generations -- Tools,
Collectibles, Decor, Clothing4-14 (name brand, some neverworn), X-mas Crafts Decor &much more. Saturday 8am-2pm
DENTON, 721 W. WINDSORSAT. Oct 6, 8am-3pm
Lots of Household Misc, linens,Nice Clothes, some furniture
Denton - Summit OakCommunity Garage Sale - offTeasley Ln Sat. Oct. 6th 7am - ?
Something for Everyone
FALL BAZAAR LIVE AUCTIONSAT. Oct 27, 12pm-4pm
Vendors wanted $15 per spaceChildren’s Learning Station, 315Carlisle, Lk Dallas 940-321-5858
Haslet, Sendera Ranchsubdivision, 14th semi annualOct 13th, 8am-3pm. Located 9mi SW of TMS btwn 35W &
SH287on Avondale-Haslet Rd.Maps will be handed out at en-trances. Rain day Oct 20th.
817-439-2155
Justin 9889 Meadow Ranch RdFri 1pm - ? & Sat 8am- ?Waterford Crystal, Cristal
D’arques, fine china, saddles,execise eqmnt, furniture,
antiques & misc.
Krugerville, 7745 ILESON RDOct 4-5-6, 8am. Huge 6-Family,Tools, Jon Boat, Furniture,English Tact, Antiques, misc
KRUM, 203 BROKEN ARROWFri-Sat Oct 5-6, Vintage PunchBowl, Mink, Dishes, Silver, Plussz 1X-3X $1 ea. Windmills. Tools
Krum - Annual EaglechaseCommunity wide garage salewill be held October 6 startingat 8am Furniture, antiques,tools, camping gear & much,much more. Eaglechase is
located in Krum 4 miles north-west of Denton on Hwy 1173.
Sanger, 2316 Mc Reynolds RdFri-Sat Oct 5-6, 8am-4:30pmLots of Good Stuff! Too much tolist! Household, decorating, misc
PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised herein issubject to the Federal Fair Hous-ing Act, which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preference, limita-tion, or discrimination because ofrace, color, religion, sex, handi-cap, familial status, or nationalorigin, or intention to make anysuch preference, limitation, or dis-crimination." We will not knowing-ly accept advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of thelaw. All persons are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-tised are available on an equalopportunity basis
0 Roommate HassleHistoric Downtown Denton,1 Bedroom starting at $799www.jackbellproperties.com
940-382-3009
1 & 2 Bdrm Apts. Clean & QuietNeighborhood, 1 block to UNT.1 bdrm $525, 2 bdrm $625-$650.All Bills Paid. 214-315-9439
1 Bedroom 1 Bath, Near UNT600 sq ft, $535/mo. No Petswww.tntprop.com or call
for more details 940-381-6675
2/1.5, large kitchen & garage ,good flooring & appliances, nearUniversity / Loop 288. $695/mo.FREE RENT! 940-390-8044
2/1 $700, 2/2 $750,Large Enclosed Patios
Greenway Patio Townhomes2912 Augusta @ Greenway940-387-8741, 940-368-1814
Largest Units in Denton!
2425 Old North Road,2/1.5 $650 plus. 940-566-5717KILLIAN PROPERTY MGT
2519 W. Prairie 2/2 approx 900sf, all kitchen appliances, CH/A,walk to UNT, $595/mo $400
dep.C BAR T Prop 940-383-2141
2 Bdrm 1 Bath Starting at $679WINDSOR VILLAGE
940-382-9556www.jackbellproperties.com
2 Bdrm 2 Bath, Very Clean,New Carpet, Fresh Paint,near TWU in Denton,$650/mo. 469-831-2086
902 W. HICKORY #3Walk to UNT, 1 Bdrm 1 Bath ,Kitchen w/appliances, living
room, private parking, $500/mo$500 deposit. 940-390-1165
BRAND NEW CLOSE TOSQUARE VICTORIA STATIONAPARTMENTS 940-382-30091 Bedroom starting at $7992 Bedroom starting at $1175www.victoriastationliving.com
CALL US FOR 1, 2, & 3 BdrmsHOLLYHILLS Apts940-382-6774Apply at office 900 LondonderryOpen Mon-Fri 8:30a-5:30p &
Sat 10:00a-2:00p
CAMPUS SQUARE APTSCall 940-387-5565
All Bills PaidWalk to UNT -- Efficiency,
1 & 2 BR starting at $425 & up
C BAR T Properties , Effs, 1, 2 &3 BR Apts, Homes & Duplexes,940-383-2141 UNT/TWU/OTHERwww.cbartproperties.com
FREE CABLE & WATERLow elec. bills. 6/9/12 mo. lease.2/1 $695/mo; 2/2 $710/mo
1/1 $580-$595. Walk to UNT. Callour friendly staff at 940-382-3100.
Hickory Street Lofts, 1/1,wood floor, granite, stainless,
w/d $750-8251512 N Elm, wood floor, w/d,
walk to TWU $725The Martino Group
940-382-5000
MOVE IN SPECIALUtilities Paid -- 1 & 2 BDRMSstarting at $595 Walk to UNT.940-594-4893, 940-484-9000
Now Leasing Houses,Duplexes, Apts & Condos.Ask About Our Specials!!!AMSI 940-565-8484www.assetdenton.com
Rental Assistance
1 & 2 BEDROOM APTSwith Rental Assistance forQualified Applicantsin Valley View
940-665-0501or 940-726-3798
Shadowwood Apts Denton!2BR, $550/mo Specials avail.
Open Mon-Sat 9-5.940-387-0452
Westwind Apartments1710 Sam Bass 940-382-1535
Pre-leasing at this time.Large floor plans.
1704 N. Elm,Retail/Office 1200 sq ft.
$960/mo. includes water/sewer.940-206-5177
Available now small retailspace on high traffic Dallas Drlocation from $475/mo. All billspaid including free high speedFios internet. Call 940-387-7524or [email protected]
Woodlands Square,Krugerville, 1200 sf office orretail. 3 offices, restroom,kitchenette, showroom.Modern, clean and bright.$1200. The Martino Group,
940-382-5000.
2 Bdr/2 Ba, washer/dryer, ceil-ing fans, great neighborhoodStrata St., Denton $800/M,$350 dep. Call 940-594-1218.
3/2 Duplex, large living & kitchen,walk to UNT, $895/mo. Call forMove In Special 940-381-66775
www.tntprop.com
515 Austin - large 2/1.5 studio,fenced yard, close to down-town, TWU $800/mo + dep.940-565-1399 leave msg.
ABSOLUTELY GREAT 3/2.5/22000 sf, Tile/Wood Floors, NewlyRemodeled $1350/mo. On HollyHills in Denton. 940-367-0609Aubrey - 615A Main St.
3/2 $700 mo.W/D conn. Yard.
English – 940-367-2870Espanol – 940-390-5103
EFFIENCY NEAR TWU! fencedduplex on N. Elm. Some utilitiespaid. Mid Sept. Denton Premier
Properties 940-484-9000
For rent. SOUTH DENTON.2 bedroom 2 bath, NEWLY up-dated, LARGE yard, close toPARK. $895/mo 940-368-7146
NEW! 3-2-2 and 3-2.5-2Duplex $1175 ASK ABOUT
OUR SPECIALS!817-560-4900 www.txlec.com
Cottage Efficiency, 500sf, w/d&refrigerator, all bills paid,utilities-cable-internet$700/mo 972-754-5804
$0 rent for 2 weeks$ 425 - $ 2000
Houses, Duplexes& ApartmentsOpen Monday-Friday,8:30am-5:30pmSaturday by Appt.
940-243-RENT (7368)Katya Muller 817-781-3542www.rentdenton.net1400 DALLAS DRDENTON, TX 76205
$1000 / 1380ft² Nice 3 Bdrm,2 Bath, Attached 2-car Garage,large Back Yard, Big Trees,in Corinth, Tx. 702-502-2291
1318 Princeton Ct, north Den-ton, 3/2/2, CH/A, new paint &floors, no smoking, no pets,$1200/mo. Call 940-390-3925
2320 Westwood near BormanElementary & Denia Park. 3/2/2CH/A, fenced yard, $900/mo +deposit & utilities. AvailableOct 1st. No pets. Referencesneeded. 940-387-9135 or
940-765-9135
2470 BlackJack Rd. W, Aubrey,Country Home 2/1, Brick, CH/A,W/D, no smoke/pets. $780/mo.+ $800/dep. Call 940-365-2443
2505 Fondren Dr. Denton 762103/2/2 1600 sf, near communitypool, $1300/mo $1300 dep.Available now. 940-368-2160
302 Spurlock in Krum 3/2/3, allelectric, fenced backyard, all appl$1150/mo $1000 deposit. 940-383-2141 C Bar T Properties
3219 Breton 3/2/2 $1400/mo940-566-5717
KILLIAN PROPERTY MGT
3/2/2 brick in Krum, new carpet,tile & paint, W/D conn, 5 min.from Denton, across from
elem., $1200/mo 940-390-2712
3/2/2, FP, DW, range, ch/a, blinds& curtains, stg bldg, ceiling fans,W/Dconn. large fncd yard, trees,$1100/M $1100/dp 940.300.4011
3302 Huisache in Denton, TX3 Bdrms 2 Baths, 2-car Garage,fenced backyard, near schools,recently remodeled, $1250/mo.
Call 940-391-1258
3515 Country Club Rd2/1 $750 + dep. 940-566-5717KILLIAN PROPERTY MGT
620 Kings Row, north of TWUoff Sherman, 4/2/2 car garagelarge corner lot, trees, fire-
place, $1250/mo 817-430-1105
8700 CHISHOLM TRAILin Cross Oaks Ranch, 3/2/2,family room with fireplace,wood & ceramic tile flooring,large eat in kitchen area,
all appliances, covered patio,fenced yard, $1095/mo.
$1000 deposit. 940-390-1165
$995 Newly remodeled 3-2.5-2CP in central Denton. Walk toDCTA stop. 534 Alegre VistaKeller Williams 940-735-1999
Aubrey - 704 Caddell St$800 mo, $500 dep.
3/1, lrg yard, w/d conn.English 940-367-2870Espanol 940-390-5103
Denton Area - Easy Access toI-35 - Move in Ready. Very Nice!Foam insulated, 3/2/2, w/new
Energy Star stainless steel appli-ances. Granite countertops & tilefloors. Newly painted. Coveredpatio, fenced yard & storage
shed. You can be proud of whatyou live in! 3311 Meadowlark LnCall for showing 940-206-4065
EXEC. S. DENT. PATIO HM.3/2/2 1800sf, custom gated & qui-et, fenced, fans, fp, appls, c/tile,pets, $1395 + dep 940-383-1940
IN SANGER3 BEDROOM 1 BATH $690/mo.+ Deposit. No pets. Referencesrequired. Call 940-458-3660IN SUNDOWN RANCH
3/2/2 1525 sq ft $1325/mo.HOA included. Community Pool
Call 940-453-7717
LOOKING TO RENT?CAMI Can Help You
Find Your Next Rental!Call 940-391-1614
*PET FRENDLY* 3/2/2 walk toBorman Elm, fenced, trees, stor-age bldg, lg utility rm, FP, DentonPremier Properties 940-484-9000
1 BDRM 1 BATH on 1 Acre inPonder. Wood Floors, frontporch, includes water & trash$600/mo. Call 940-783-5460
HORSES OK!1/1/1 Guest House incl boardfacil for 1 horse. Free laundryfacil, onsite arena, close toLake Lewisville & trails.EZ access I35E. $750/mo.Lease required. Avail now
940-497-6236
0 Credit Check 2, 3 & 4 Bdrmhomes $550/mo to $1500/mo.
For Rent or SaleOwner financing on land/homepkgs , 1/2 acre to 4 acres,Ponder ISD, kid/pet ok,Call 940-648-5263www.ponderei.com
2-1 Mobile Home, $270/mo +$320/mo lot rent. In HickoryCreek, near I-35 & LewisvilleLake. Call 940-464-0415
2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes - J & AMobile Home Park, Ponder.Starting@$570/mo. Also lotsfor rent. 940-465-9022, lv msg.
3/2 $625/mo $500 deposit.And 2/2, $575/mo $400 depos-it. Ponder Tx. Water & trash
paid. 940-595-4327
18DentonTime
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See DentonRC.com/jobs to find a job at the intersection of both.
Wouldn’t you like a job that fullfills you both professionally and personally?With Monster’s new filtering tools, you can quickly hone in on the job that’s right for you.
So visit DentonRC.com/jobs and find a job that makes everybody happy.
19Denton
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mobile/manufactured homes
760
mobile/manufactured homes
760 building services/contractors
1075
health & fitness 1240
moving 1300
mowing 1305
You’ll find great deals every day in theDenton Record-Chronicle Classifieds.
From a new car to a new home to a new job,the Classifieds deliver!
Go to DentonRC.com/classifieds orcall 940-566-6836 for home delivery!
SAVE MONEYWITH THECLASSIFIEDS
BRAND NEW 3 BEDROOMS1/2 OFF DEPOSIT
1/2 OFF 1st Full Month’s Rent940-380-1200 TODAY!
2800 Ft. Worth Dr, Denton TX
Lease to Own3 Bdrm 2Bath Starts at $710in mobile home community.
Call 940-387-9914
LOTS from
$330-$355/Monthwith Carport and/or Shed
Up to $2000 Move In Incentive!Centrally located 940-387-9914
3.2.1....DON’T MISS OUT!Brand new building
500-1400 Sq Ft Prime OfficeSpace near Denton’s Main
Square and the "A-TRAIN".Call Eric 940-382-6611
564Sq Ft Luxury Office Spaceclose to Denton Square,
Available October 1stContact 940-387-7467 for info
609 Park Ln $350/mo all billspaid, free cable tv, washer &
dryer & kitchen privileges. Call940-395-7760 or 940-387-1731.
Room for rent for male,min to UNT, share kitchen, liv-ing & bath, pool $350/mo most
bills paid. 940-594-4125
2B/1.5B 1100 Sq. Ft. , Over-sized Garage, W/D conn. New
flooring & appliances. $675/mo+ $400 Dep. Call 817-944-8262.
Prestigious South Dentonbrand new townhomes 3 BR
1680sf, $1395/mo, 4 BR 1970sf,$1595/mo agent 972-379-7368
Townhouse For Lease$850/mo. Near Campus.
2 Bdrm 1.5 Bath, washer/dryerincluded, refurbed, small dogsallowed, no cats, no smoking,
call Hunter Phillips at KellerWilliams 940-536-5538
For lease Office WarehouseDenton, 3700 sq ft, 595 sq ft ofoffice, large overhead door,
972-921-7579
For lease Office WarehouseDenton, 3737 Mingo Rd, 2511sq ft, air conditioned office,
heavy power, brand new,12x14 rear doors. 940-391-7696
PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised hereinis subject to the Federal FairHousing Act, which makes it il-legal to advertise "any prefer-ence, limitation, or discrimina-tion because of race, color, reli-gion, sex, handicap, familialstatus, or national origin, or in-tention to make any such pref-erence, limitation, or discrimi-nation." We will not knowinglyaccept advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of thelaw. All persons are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-tised are available on an equalopportunity basis.
JA
302 Spurlock in Krum 3/2/3, allelectric, fenced backyard, all applwalkin closets, aprox. 1640 sq ft
$119,000 For Sale by owner940-231-3792
3103 Briarcliff Circle, Gainesville 1 acre lot, The Ridge Addn 3/2/2
Lg. MBR/sit area. Study. Den.Cov. patio, Pebbleteck pool.
$ 244,500 Premiere Real EstateLinda Ritchey 940- 736-4920
CASH for ManufacturedHomes/Titles.
Good, Bad & Ugly 817-395-2990
Four Mfg Homes for Sale-Lease Purchase
Owner Financing Available1. Justin--3 Bedroom Possible4th, Very Nice two Living areas,
2 bath, 2000sq ft, 1 acre2. North Ponder, 3 Bedroom
2 bath, 1800 sq ft, large deck, 1acre
3. Justin-4 Bedroom 2 bath 2000 sq ft 1ac
4. Justin -4 Bedroom 2 bath,1ac, 1700 sq ft, House only
2 yrs old Contact David (940-206-6603)
Mobile Home for sale in Dentonin The Shores 55 & over, 3 bed-
room, 2 full bath, all seasonsun room, storage barn 12x16, 2 lofts, 2-car carport , $39,900w/lake access 940-435-0195
Owner financed, 18x80, 3/2, setup in nice Lewisville Communi-
ty $345/mo 214-403-9787
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
"A" Perrfect Construction,complete remodel,
free estimates. 940-595-4251or 940-320-6085
"A" Perrfect Countertops,all kinds, Cabinets & Repair,
free estimates. Call940-595-4251 or 940-320-6085
Countertops: Granite, Lami-nate, Tile or Quartz. Cabinets &Repair. Call anytime. Free Est.940-320-6085 or 940-735-0853
Carpets, Vinyl & Vinyl PlankFlooring. Hardwood &
Laminate Flooring. Sales &Service. Call anytime. Free Est.940-320-6085 or 940-735-0853
A-1 Services: Home or OfficeComplete Cleaning. Free
Estimates. Bonded & Insured.940-320-6085 or 940-735-0853
Call Anytime.
"A" - Perrfect Cleaning ServiceHome or Office/Business, freeestimates. 940-595-4251 or
940-320-6085
DANIELSONCONCRETE
All types of Concrete &Asphalt Work! Slabs, Drives,
Patios & Excavation. Commer-cial & Residential Free Esti-mates! Visa & Mastercard
Accepted 940-391-3830
Jose’s Concrete Work--patios,sidewalks, barns, curbs, slabs,
driveways, retaining walls.940-595-6908 Free Estimate
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
ADVANCE-FEE LOANS/CREDIT OFFERS
It’s illegal for companies doingbusiness by phone to promise
you a loan & ask you to pay for itbefore they deliver. For info., call
toll-free1-877-FTC HELP
Public service msg fromDenton Publishing Co.
Fed. Trade Commission
Seasoned Oak Firewood 100% split
$120 1/2 cord you pick it up1/2 cord $185 delivered
Cord $285 delivered. Pecan &mesquite available 940-668-8840
Joe The Garage Door ManDoors & Openers Repaired
New Installs940-367-5123
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertisingcontent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed orrequired by law to perform cer-tain services or before pur-chasing certain services.
LANGSTON’S HandymanI do tile, wood floors, minor elec-
tric. Build fences, decks, tape andbed & paint. Contractor ID 18340.940-390-9989 EPA certified perlaw passed 4-22-10 / Insured
HOME MAINTENANCE &REPAIRS Int/Ext painting,sheetrock repair, shower
repair & installment, decks.Richard 940-482-3624
Handyman & Honey Do’sBy Darryl 40 Years Experience
No job too small!940-243-8945, cell 972-965-5655
HOME REPAIR - Int/Ext Painting,Roof, Fences, Tile, Ceiling Fans,
General Maint. DecksFree Estimates 940-442-8380
Lite House Repair &Handyman Services
Inside & OutsideFree Estimate 940-395-0549
HAULING & CLEAN UPNo job to big or small. Mobile
home disposal, satisfaction guar-anteed. 940-442-6369 or
214-566-9734
Mike’s Clean Up Services. Trash, brush & junk hauled off.Friendly & dependable service.
Call 940-453-2776
Holistic Stress Mgmt -- AQUAMen/Women * Support GroupsIndividuals. Call 214-850-3372
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
Yudith House CleaningBlanca Hernandez
940-442-9511, 940-442-8380References available
GILL’S LAWN SERVICECut trees, fence repair/bldg, mow,edge, weedeat, flower beds, trim
bushes, sprinkler repair, res/comm, free est 15% Sr discount
940-597-4787 or 940-300-5506
LA LAWN $20-$25mow, edge, weedeat, blow
(front, back, sides)Mow 4 times & get 5th free.10 yrs experience. Refer a
friend & get 1/2 price on yourlawn. Weeds sprayed & pulled.Fertilization. Shrub Trimming
Lance 940-390-3286
Yard Care & Tree TrimmingFence Building & Repair,
Flowerbed Clean-up. FREEESTIMATES. Cheapest in
town. Residential &Commercial Juan 940-597-5766
REAL GREEN GARDENING - Lawnservice, tree trimming,
arbors, pavers & flagstone patios,sprinkler repair, cleanup, fence work.
Call 940-453-7072
ONE MAN GANGMowing in Denton since 1998
Call Dwight 940-435-9975
GHS MOVING, $55/hr2 men, 17’ truck, Licensed, Insur-ed, Apts, Homes, offices, local,long distance 214-779-3772
ACREAGE and LOTSMOWED & TILLED
Also GARDENS TILLEDCall 940-367-2741
ACREAGE SERVICES Tractor Mowing, Plowing,
Seeding, Fertilizing, Spraying,Aerating, Tilling 940-482-6578
A-1 Painting Service: Interior orExterior, Residential or Com-
mercial. Free Est., Call anytime.Roll & Brush or Airless.
940-320-6085 or 940-735-0853
ARTISTIC SERVICESMurals, custom artwork, fauxfinish, paint effects, signage &
more. UNT Grad 940-368-1529www.jameshineman.com
Denton Publishing assumes noresponsibility for advertising con-tent. Be aware oflicenses/insurances needed or re-quired by law to perform certainservices or before purchasingcertain services.
A-1 Construction, complete re-modeling, decks, custom kitch-ens and baths, room additions,replacement windows & doors.FREE Estimates. Call Anytime.940-320-6085 or 940-735-8053
A-1 Tile, All Types of CeramicTile. Sales & Service. Showers,Tub Enclosures, Countertops,
Floors, Patios, Etc. FREEESTIMATES. Call Anytime.
940-320-6085 or 940-735-8053
Andrew’s TreescapesNow is the Time to Winterize
Your Trees! "Have Saw Will Travel"
940.368.2163 Free Estimates!
TOP TO BOTTOM TREE INC.Tree removal, trim, install & regu-lar maintenance, land clearing,940-483-TREE 940-483-8733
PRESERVE MEMORIESConvert 8-16mm/super 8 film/
pics/slides/negs/videos/records-discs 940-231-5889
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