LookatOKC - Oct. 12 issue

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GEORGE L ANG

from the editor

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iven the events of this month, my cover story on the 10th anniversary of the iPod looks like standard-issue opportunism, an attempt to jump on a bandwagon playing a dirge. Steve Jobs’ death certainly cast the anniversary in a different light, but we green lighted the cover story when we realized just how much has changed in a decade, and it all began with that little digital music player.

When the iPod hit Apple racks in 2001, digital music was still considered something vaguely criminal thanks to the proliferation of Napster and peer-to-peer file sharing. Even in 2005, when I unwrapped my first iPod – a 30-gig unit that, miracle of miracles, played video – my father-inlaw asked if it was legal. I had to go into my standard dissertation based on the Sony Betamax decision: technology cannot be considered inherently criminal unless used for such purposes. Two years later, he had a TiVo, which is like a programmable iPod for your television, and by that time, the concept of digital media was a foregone conclusion.

BY GEORGE LANG Back when the iPod came out, most of our LOOKATOKC EDITOR cell phones were not smart, and a few of GLANG@OPUBCO.COM your friends still did not have them. People BLOG.NEWSOK.COM/ still carried pagers, and those with home STATICBLOG Internet connections were still more likely to be dialing into their service providers than enjoying high-speed connectivity. There was no Facebook, no Twitter, no YouTube. It was not the Stone Age, but it was a time of awkward transition. The 1990s were a period in which technology did advance, but compared to the decade that followed, it progressed at a crawl. And then came the iPod, which changed how we live in both obvious and extremely subtle ways – many of which, as I explain in the story beginning on page 24, have nothing to do with playing your favorite music through a pair of earbuds. These days, there is a decent chance that your iPod collection is at least as big as your household population, and in this issue, we’ll talk about how an mp3 player changed how we consume nearly all media.

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from the top

LOOKATOKC

18 | ‘Reel Steel’ packs a big punch

22 | New game is all the ‘Rage’ The creators of “Doom” and “Quake” bring you this new post-apocalyptic game on all platforms.

Find the LOOK photographers • LOOK photographers will be in Bricktown, Midtown and other hot spots.

OPUBCO Communications Group LOOKatOKC EDITOR George Lang LEAD PROJECT DESIGNER Matthew Clayton ADVERTISING Jerry Wagner (405) 475-3475 Nancy Simoneau (405) 475-3708 NICHE PUBLICATIONS EDITOR Melissa Howell DIRECTOR OF PRESENTATION AND CUSTOM PUBLISHING Yvette Walker ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR Gene Triplett PHOTOGRAPHER Adam Kemp

Check out our online home at www.lookatokc.com

Go to facebook.com/ LookatOKC and become a fan. Follow the LookatOKC on http://twitter.com/LookatOKC Single copies of LOOKatOKC may be obtained free of charge at locations from Stillwater to Norman. Additional copies are available for $1 each at The Oklahoman. Wholesale and indiscriminate removal of LOOKatOKC publications from newsstands for purposes other than individual use will result in prosecution. Every effort is made to ensure that all calendar entries are accurate. LOOKatOKC does not guarantee the events or the schedules. Readers are encouraged to call ahead for exact times and dates. LOOKatOKC is published every other Thursday by The Oklahoman, 9000 Broadway Extension, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73114. For advertising and promotional opportunities please contact The Oklahoman retail advertising department at 475-3338.


live nathan

NATHAN POPPE

FOLLOW @NATHANPOPPE ON TWITTER

Surviving six hours of the Lips

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f music were food, then I ate an entire Golden Corral. Table and silverware included. Thanks to the Flaming Lips’ sixhour song “I Found a Star on the Ground” for supplying the musical gluttony. The Lips recently crafted the lengthy track during four weeks of recording. I spent one-eighth of my weekend hunkered down in my room for a marathon listening session. Did I finish? Did I like it? Could anyone like it? Read through my highlights to find out. HOUR ONE >>> The spastic guitar sounds, pulsating rhythms and overblown space noises began. >>> My roommate and his girlfriend checked on me because they thought a ghost started playing music in my room. It was just the six-hour song. >>> I started imagining what animals could be making the strange noises in the song. I decided it was mostly dinosaurs screaming into computer monitors. HOUR TWO >>> I discovered the only lyrics in the song are “I Found a Star on the Ground.” No stories about space or a beautiful face here. >>> My Internet crashed, and I had trouble finding my spot on the song. I restarted at the weird part. Success. >>> I began a live web recording of me listening to the song. I got one viewer. Thanks mom. HOUR THREE >> Sean Lennon read names of <<<

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SHOWS TO SEE, OR NOT TO SEE

people who donated $100 to the Central Oklahoma Humane Society and ACM@UCO as a part of Wayne Coyne’s charity request. The Spy FM’s Ferris O’Brien and music lover Mary Ann Johnson Osko’s soon-tobe-born daughter were one of the many who made the cut. >>> I moved my laptop into the bathroom and continued listening to the song in the shower. The song became calm and beautiful, but that changed with the addition of what sounded like screeching eels. I didn’t feel comfortable.

Oct. 14 – The Pains of Being Pure at Heart is playing a free show in front of OU’s student union. Shows don’t get any freer or more potentially awesome. Twin Sister and Skating Polly are on opening duties. @Meacham Auditorium, 900 Asp Avenue, Norman Oct. 15 - Tim Miser has kept pretty quiet on the live scene for the past several years, but when he does play it’s worth a dozen listens. His balladry and sentimental songs are among some of the most beautiful recordings I’ve heard this year. Don’t miss out on this show. Miser will be opening for two great Okie acts, Beau Jennings and Samantha Crain. @The Deli, 301 White Street, Norman

HOUR FOUR >>> I got hungry. Lucky Charms weren’t designed to carry me through six-hour music marathons. >>> The song sounded like Wayne Coyne was shaving guitar strings with a razor blade. I push on. HOUR FIVE >>> The song found a balance between aggressive and soft. It’s the most enjoyable portion of the song. However, one guitar sound was repeated more than 50 times in a row. My senses began to weaken. >>> It started raining. I imagined the song had something to do with it. HOUR SIX >>> I turned up the volume to 11. Things got weirder and louder. I started drawing this column doodle to stay awake. Home stretch. >>> Lennon repeated the song’s final lyrics, “We will always love you.” It feels like he’s giving me a congratulatory hug at the finish line.

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Oct. 15 - The Non is playing with several local acts at the Deep Deuce Music Festival. I haven’t seen the instrumental quartet perform in several months, and the band is reason enough to make it out to the festival. Junebug Spade and Them Hounds are among the openers. @ Deep Deuce Festival, 307 NE 2nd St.

NATHAN POPPE All about music and the shows you should see, and shouldn’t see around Oklahoma.

Oct. 20 - It’s always a celebration when Deerpeople are in town. The Stillwaterbased indie rockers have been busy touring the Midwest for the past few months. Here’s your chance to soak in some of the catchiest and dancetastic tunes coming out of Oklahoma. Moon and the Gentle Art of Floating are on opening duties. @The Blue Note, 2408 N Robinson Ave.



LACEY LETT

nightowl

Bro, you should totally read this!

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aradise city for men is where the girls are pretty and the dudes can be themselves or bigger, manlier versions of themselves. It’s a night of “Dude! Bro! Dude! Bro!” — or it is for the guys who completely repel me. But I’m willing to go out of my comfort zone for this column. I’m going to pretend I’m living in a man’s world for about two minutes. I’m going to leave out the gross stuff like 20-minute toilet sessions, Doritos snacking and all the scratching down there. TRIVIA The Lost Ogle trivia night is a pretty big deal around OKC and Norman. It’s every Monday at O’Connell’s Irish Pub and Grill in Norman and every Tuesday at the 51st St. Speakeasy in OKC. For my boyfriend, it has become a weekly event for him and his guy friends. “We like to prove we know useless stuff,” he told me. My question to him? “How can knowing how many faces are on the Guess Who? game be useless?” I was kidding, of course, and yes that was an actual question. If betting or money is involved, a lot of dudes are, too. They have cash prizes, food and drink drawings and a team atmosphere to go along with it. I will admit a lot of ladies head out to this as well, but I’d say the men outweigh the women. LADIES NIGHT I’ve always said wherever there’s a ladies night, then men will be there. I don’t know how many times in college I headed out to ladies night to find myself and my girlfriends entering into a sausage fest. BEER Where the beer pours, the men will follow. I sometimes have a guy mentality. I don’t want to have to get glammed up to go out. Just take me to a place where I can have a good time, drink a good beer, and eat something un-

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healthy. McNellie’s has the best beer selection in the state, hands down. Republic Gastro Pub is up there and so is Tapwerks. I love going to Tapwerks. They also have trivia every Tuesday not to mention the Guitar Hero tournaments on Thursdays. I wanted to say Dan O’briens is a place to hang out, but currently they are moving locations, and their Facebook just says “opening soon.” Stay tuned for that one. MANIFESTO There’s a new event in town focusing on all things “men.” It’s called Manifesto, and it’s going on Oct. 15 and 16 downtown on Film Row. The Exchange is hosting the man fest and will feature everything from street hockey tournaments, outdoor laser tag, luche libre and old school WWF-style wrestling matches, a Hooters hot wing eating contest, and some dudeshopping, to name a few things. You’ll also be able to admire facial hair with the Moustache Museum. Real guys will be on display with villain ‘staches, lumberjack ‘staches and more. The idea behind it came from watching guys being dragged to events where they just don’t want to be. It’s the guy’s turn to drag the ladies. I have to say I watched luchador wrestling last weekend, and it could be one of the most entertaining “sporting” events to watch. I thought I’d try my own hand at trivia. This is the kinda of trivia that is completely subjective, but I wanted to see how close I came to knowing what a guy likes. MY GUESSES Guy’s Favorite Romantic Comedy: When Harry Met Sally Guy’s Favorite Food: Chicken Wings or Pizza Guy’s sweet treat: Brownie Guy’s Favorite Cocktail: Beer Guy’s Favorite Annual Event: Oktoberfest

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LACEY LETT is the co-host of a local music show on “The Spy.” Her ongoing column, “A Night Owl” is focused on what’s going on in nightlife news for LookatOKC.

REAL GUY #1 FERRIS O’BRIEN Ferris’ Favorite Romantic Comedy: “About Last Night” Best ever. Rob Lowe and Demi Moore, and Demi shows boobs! Ferris’ All-time Favorite Movie: Anything by John Hughes. Ferris’ Favorite Food: Chicken Breakfast.

deadCENTER’s Kick-off outdoor screening and redCENTER Lounge party at Red Primesteak.

REAL GUY #4 KC LUPP KC’s Favorite Romantic Comedy: I’m gonna go “Knocked Up” or “40-Year-Old Virgin.”

Ferris’ Sweet Treat: The female of the species.

KC’s All-time Favorite Movie: “Rocky 1, 2, 3, and 4,” “Star Wars,” “Pulp Fiction.”

Ferris’ Favorite Cocktail: Vodka, and lots of it.

KC’s Favorite Food: Pizza and steak.

Ferris’ Favorite Annual Event: Halloween or St. Patty’s Day.

KC’s Favorite Cocktail: I’ll have to say scotch.

REAL GUY #2 PATRICK (THE LOST OGLE) Uhm...I don’t think the guy described exists!

REAL GUY #3 ROB CRISSINGER Rob’s Favorite Romantic Comedy: They’re all the same to me. If the girl is worth it (my wife, so she better be worth it), I will withstand a rom-com to make her happy = sex. Rob’s All-time Favorite Movie: “Apocalypse Now” or “The Godfather.” Rob’s Favorite Food: Pepperoni Pizza from Pepe’s. Rob’s Sweet Treat: Craft Beer. There’s sugar in beer, right? Rob’s Favorite Cocktail: Crown & Coke. Rob’s Favorite Annual Event: Sex — that’s funny, because I’m married. Beyond that,

REAL GUY #5 RYAN LACROIX Ryan’s Favorite Romantic Comedy: Probably one that ends badly like “The Breakup.” Ryan’s All-time Favorite Movie: “Major League” would be good, too. Ryan’s Favorite Food: Chicken wings or pizza. Ryan’s sweet treat: Brownie. Ryan’s Favorite Cocktail: Beer. Ryan’s Favorite Annual Event: Oktoberfest.

So based on my questionnaire I shouldn’t judge or stereotype men. They aren’t as simple as I might think. Also, I need to find out who this Jason Statham guy is. He must be hot or just awesome or both.




ALBUM REV IEWS S p o n s o r e d b y R e d n e c k Ya c h t C l u b


album review

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‘OWN THE NIGHT’ – LADY ANTEBELLUM

hile Lady Antebellum hardly experienced a sophomore slump, the contemporary country threesome shows marked growth and maturity on their third album, “Own the Night.” Co-lead singers Charles Kelly and Hillary Scott and multi-instrumentalist/harmony vocalist Dave Haywood won five Grammy Awards this year on the strength of their second LP, “Need You Now,” one of the top-selling albums of 2010. But the trio’s sophomore effort didn’t boast the most memorable songs — with the notable exceptions of the unavoidable monster-hit title track and the super-sweet single “American Honey” — and from that standpoint seemed a step back from the group’s substantial self-titled 2008 debut. Judging from their long list of song-

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writing credits — including co-writes for Tishomingo resident Miranda Lambert, Luke Bryan and Sara Evans — Kelley, Scott and Haywood have been focused on honing their songsmithing skills. Their hard work pays off on “Own the Night,” a more compelling collection of songs exploring love lost and found, fresh and aged. Lady A co-wrote 10 of the 12 tracks on the new album, including the powerful opener and fast-rising second single, “We Owned the Night,” about a perfect but all-too-brief affair. The trio, along with Dallas Davidson, also put their pens to the leadoff single, “Just a Kiss,” about taking a promising new romance slowly, which has already hit No. 1 on the Billboard country songs chart. But the group isn’t afraid to give the prime album-closing spot to “Heart of the World,” a heartfelt ode to a loving,

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lasting marriage written by Scooter Carusoe and Tom Douglas that spotlights the stellar vocal chemistry between Kelley and Scott. “Own the Night,” which last week debuted at the top of the multigenre Billboard 200 chart, also showcases Lady Antebellum’s burgeoning musical savvy. The group and producer Paul

Worley add all kinds of sonic flourishes to keep it interesting from the funky percussion of “Singing Me Home” and the Celtic flute solo at the end of “Cold as Stone” to the brawny good-time rock guitar opening of “Friday Night” and the old-school country fiddles in “Love I’ve Found in You.” — Brandy McDonnell, Entertainment Writer


album review

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‘THE WHOLE LOVE’ – WILCO

lternative’s ever adventurous Jeff Tweedy leads Wilco on yet another exhilarating exploration of new musical terrain on “The Whole Love,” the Chicago band’s eighth studio album of lyrical and instrumental invention. The album is bookended by two lengthy epics, opening with the exquisitely eccentric, seven-minuteplus “Art of Almost,” which takes flight on a Pink Floydian jet stream of Mellotron, synthesizers and urgent percussion, propelling Tweedy’s plaintive voice into a King Crimson-shaded storm of looped guitar riffs and stratospheric fuzz improvisation from the fiery fingers of Nels Cline. The closer is the less satisfying, breathily melancholic acoustic folkrocker “One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley’s Boyfriend),” which clocks

in at a naggingly repetitious 12 minutes, four seconds. But in between are 10 shorter (four minutes or less) and sweeter sonic experiments, such as the current single “I Might,” with its basic, rocking beat, randy, chugging interplay of acoustic and buzz guitars and whimsical and hilariously baffling lyric: “You come on / Sentimental / If the / Solar car’s coming / I’m home / The Magna Carta’s / On a Slim Jim blood / Brutha!” Another uncharacteristically sunny song is “Dawned On Me,” with Glenn Kotche again going for up, no-nonsense timekeeping behind Cline’s distorted electric creaking and cavorting while Tweedy sings, “I can’t help if I fall in / Love with you again I’m calling / Just to let you know / It dawned on me,” and actually whistles between the verses at one point. The shiny slide guitar and busy

downtown sound effects of “Capitol City” even call to mind the blue-sky poppiness of the Lovin’ Spoonful at times. However, those who prefer Tweedy’s downside or yearn for the bleak beauty and spare, deconstructed songs of “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” can take comfort in the gray moodiness and haunting, altered-states accompaniment of “Sun-

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loathe” and “Black Moon” that there still beats a heart of darkness within Wilco’s leader. But no matter what his frame of mind, Tweedy’s songs seldom fail to take the listener to thrilling new musical spaces heretofore uncharted, and these unorthodox tunes are no exception. — Gene Triplett, Entertainment Editor

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album review

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‘DRIVE SOUNDTRACK’ – CLIFF MARTINEZ

ust as Nicolas Winding Refn’s “Drive” actively calls to mind the early films of Michael Mann, Cliff Martinez’ hypnotic score for “Drive” recalls the chrome-and-neon feel of 1980s synthesizer soundtracks, principally the icy, propulsive sounds of Tangerine Dream and Giorgio Moroder. Martinez, who drummed for the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Captain Beefheart before breaking into soundtracks with 1989’s “Sex, Lies and Videotape,” is a master of texture and pulsing momentum, and “Drive” captures both the specific loneliness of city life and the unshakable feeling of being followed. The top end of “Drive” is dominated by recent electro-rock, and the tone is set by the amazing “Nightcall,” a pounding synth-pop marvel by Daft Punk collaborator Kavinsky and CSS singer Lovefoxxx. Kavinsky’s heavily treated robo-vocals

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and Lovefoxxx’s candy-coated counterpoint symbolize the film’s duality between romance and brutality, and the irresistible “A Real Hero” by College feat. “Electric Youth” feels like a 1983 teen love ballad looking for its John Hughes movie. After those tracks, Martinez gets to work on mood, constructing textures that are not far off from Brian Eno’s ambient works but regularly interrupted by “Midnight Express”-style pulses evoking long drives into darkness. Much like Martinez’ previous two scores of 2011, “Contagion” and “The Lincoln Lawyer,” “Drive” incorporates drones and metronomic percussion to create the sound of being alone. In all three films, key characters either live by choice as isolated outsiders or are forced by environmental circumstances to live apart from the world. Martinez’ use of texture rather than conventional melody imbues the films

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with a layer of discomfort. These are perfect sounds for a film about “the Driver,” who cares more for the fates of those around him than for his own

safety — in essence, “A Real Hero.” — George Lang, LookatOKC Editor


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REVIE

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movie review

‘THE IDES OF MARCH’

Rating: R (Pervasive language) Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes Starring: Ryan Gosling, George Clooney, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Paul Giamatti, Marisa Tomei, Evan Rachel Wood.

stars

***

‘Ides’ coasts to a narrow victory

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The Ides of March” spends much of its running time as the most trenchant and darkly funny film about politics since Michael Ritchie’s brilliant 1972 satire, “The Candidate,” but then director George Clooney’s campaign for greatness loses steam once a disappointingly routine plot device gets lobbed into the machine. Even then, “The Ides of March” coasts to a narrow victory thanks to its enormously talented cast, who nearly mitigate the politicsas-usual twist. Written by Clooney, Grant Heslov and Beau Willimon and based on Willimon’s 2008 play “Farragut North,” “The Ides of March” takes place entirely during the Ohio Democratic primary. Pennsylvania Gov. Mike Morris (Clooney) is locked in a tight, increasingly nasty race powered by senior strategist Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling), the rising star with sharp political instincts. In the calculus of presidential politics, Ohio is crucial to locking up the nomination, and the fight is on

between Morris, a slick and affable progressive candidate, and his more traditional opponent, Sen. Pullman (Michael Mantell). Myers is skilled and politically astute, but the downand-dirty elements of a campaign are best surveyed by grizzled veterans of the trenches, men such as Zara and his equivalent on the Pullman campaign, Tom Duffy (Paul Giamatti). Zara and Duffy are not two sides of the same coin — they’re duplicate coins. The rhythms of the race dictate that Morris should have Ohio sewn up, but the numbers, thanks to the state’s semi-open primary rules, mean that Pullman is getting a huge push from Republicans crossing party lines in an effort to weaken the more charismatic candidate. With this new reality asserting itself, Duffy is doing everything he can to compromise Morris’ campaign, including making overtures to Myers to jump ship so he can join the winning team. In the full heat of this political chicanery, “The Ides of March” crackles with stinging dialogue and spoton performances by all the players, including Marisa

Tomei as a New York Times reporter with enough savvy about the machinery of these campaigns to run her own candidate. It feels real, but once the bouncy and vivacious Evan Rachel Wood appears as 20-year-old Morris intern Molly Stearns, “The Ides of March” loses its pioneering spirit and falls prey to the run-of-themill, seen-it-before boilerplate that makes so many people want to ignore real politics and political thrillers. Granted, “The Ides of March” reaches its predictable revelations through an ingenious twist, but then the story hits all the marks of a ripped-from-the-headlines “Law & Order” episode in which the key points sound cozily familiar but the names are changed and the scandal is more sensational. If only “The Ides of March” had concentrated entirely on the ugly thrills of down-and-dirty politics instead of turning toward the kind of campaign story that attracts TMZ.com, Clooney might have achieved a landslide victory. Instead, it only wins in a squeaker.

LOOKATOKC.COM

— George Lang, LookatOKC Editor

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movie review

‘REEL STEEL’

Rating: PG-13 (Some violence, intense action and brief language.) Running time: 2 hours, 7 minutes Starring: Hugh Jackman, Evangeline Lilly, Dakota Goyo, Kevin Durand, Anthony Mackie

stars

***

Robot-boxing film ‘Reel Steel’ packs punch

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n a near future, human boxing has been outlawed, replaced by fast-paced, high-tech robot boxing. Hugh Jackman plays Charlie Kenton, a washed-up fighter who now promotes similarly washed-up robot fighters. He travels to rural fairs and shady underground fights trying to scrape together enough cash to keep his steel warriors slugging. He rarely has enough left over to pay rent to his former girlfriend Bailey (Evangeline Lilly), who owns the gym where he trained as a fighter, and where he now lives. After the death of a different ex-girlfriend, Charlie finds himself reunited with his estranged son, Max (Dakota Goyo). He’s hoping to make a little cash and keep the kid out of trouble for a summer, but discovers his son is a bit of a robot fighting prodigy. After Max finds

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an old-model sparring bot in a scrap yard, Charlie, on his last financial legs, goes along with the boy’s pleading to get the bot a fight. Named Atom, the sparring bot can take a lot of damage but doesn’t have a lot of offensive moves. Fortunately, it’s got a rare shadow circuit, allowing it to mimic another’s movements. So Charlie begins teaching his moves to the robot, which leads to surprising success. Shawn Levy (“Night at the Museum” franchise and “Date Night”) directs the film, which marries “Rocky”style inspiration with “Transformers”-style robots. The robots, however, aren’t just digital marvels — in most occasions, the robots were physically built objects, which adds to the film’s heft. While the trailers to the film remind many of the Mattel toy line “Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots,” the toy-maker

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has nothing to do with the film. The premise instead comes from a 1956 Richard Matheson story, “Steel,” which was adapted into a “Twilight Zone” episode in 1963. The film credits say it’s “partially based” on “Steel,” because the storyline goes far afield from the plot of “Steel.” But the heart of the idea is there — an aging fighter who refuses to stop punching even when the world wants to pass him by. The father-son dynamic is good in “Real Steel,” and once Kenton decides to stop doing the most immature thing possible at every moment, he proves he still has a good head for a fight on his shoulders. It’s predictable, but better than it has to be, and “Real Steel” should appeal to boys and their fathers looking for a film with action and heart. — Matthew Price, Features Editor


movie review

‘50/50’

Rating: R (Language throughout, sexual content and some drug use) Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen, Bryce Dallas Howard, Anna Kendrick, Anjelica Huston, Matt Frewer, Philip Baker Hall

stars

***

‘50/50’ brings laughter to a daunting scenario

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t boasts the most unlikely of premises, but the cancer comedy “50/50” finds both uproarious humor and touching tenderness in that dreaded, potentially deadly malady without ever becoming uncaring, or worse, mawkish. While Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Anna Kendrick and Anjelica Huston give subtle performances worthy of awards consideration, film fans’ appreciation of “50/50” largely depends on their tolerance of a hefty dose of Seth Rogen’s usual brand of boorish man-child wisecracking. On a number of levels, Rogen was key to getting the movie made, but his usual raunchy slacker/ stoner shtick quickly wears on my nerves, despite a few moments of surprising sensitivity from his best-pal character. Screenwriter Will Reiser loosely based “50/50” on his own experiences as a twenty-something battling cancer during his tenure as associate producer on the British import comedy series “Da Ali G Show.” His pals Rogen and Evan Goldberg, who are among the producers of “50/50,” were writers on the show at the time and encouraged Reiser to pen a screenplay exploring the darkly funny aspects of coping with cancer. Reiser and director Jonathan Levine (“The Wackness”) imbue “50/50” with an easy naturalism and affecting humanity. Adam Lerner (Gordon-Levitt) is a cautious, precise

and low-key sort of fellow. The 27-year-old refuses to jaywalk on his morning run, he won’t learn to drive since car accidents are a leading cause of death, and in his editing job at a public radio station, he struggles to get all the “ums” out of the narration of a volcano story. His restrained personality is a perfect foil to his boisterous and bawdy best buddy and co-worker Kyle (Rogen). When Adam seeks medical attention for chronic back pain, he gets a shocking diagnosis: a massive, malignant tumor is growing along his spinal column. In one of the movie’s darkly hilarious scenes, his physician doesn’t tell him he has cancer so much as rattle off the doctor-y jargon into a digital recorder while Adam is in the room. After doing some Internet research, the understandably shell-shocked Adam learns he has a 50/50 chance of survival. Adam’s friends and family react to the news in a variety of ways. His worrywart mother (Huston), who already has to contend with his father’s (Serge Houde) early onset Alzheimer’s, immediately makes Adam feel smothered. While initially taken aback, Kyle quickly begins scheming ways that he and Adam can use the diagnosis to score medical marijuana and sympathy sex. Their co-workers throw Adam an awkward party where the reactions range from patently false cheeriness to practically uncontrolled weeping. Although their relationship has been troubled, Adam’s

self-involved artist girlfriend Rachael (Bryce Dallas Howard) vows to stay with him and help him fight cancer. She even buys him a dog, but when she refuses to accompany him to his chemotherapy treatments — she drives him but waits for hours in the car — her loyalty and fortitude are called into question. Adam bonds with fellow cancer patients Mitch (Matt Frewer) and Alan (Philip Baker Hall), whose humor and pot-laced brownies help get him through chemo. Adam is less willing to accept the support of Katherine (Kendrick), his assigned therapist at the teaching hospital where he is seeking treatment. Although she earnestly wants to help him, Adam is just her third patient, and he never lets her forget it. As she haltingly follows the textbook-recommended counseling methods, Katherine’s sincere sympathy slowly wins him over, but their relationship begins to become less doctor-patient and more potential love match. Despite its unusual conceit, “50/50” clings a bit too closely to the usual storytelling tropes, and it doesn’t tie up all the loose plot threads. But Gordon-Levitt and most of the supporting cast bring an authenticity to their characters that makes them relatable, whether or not we’ve gone through a similar encounter with cancer.

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— Brandy McDonnell, Entertainment Writer

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movie review

‘WHAT’S YOUR NUMBER’

Rating: R (Sexual content and language.) Running time: 1 hour, 46 minutes Starring: Anna Faris, Chris Evans, Ari Graynor, Joel McHale.

stars

**

‘What’s your number’ doesn’t add up

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n his 1991 autobiography, NBA star Wilt Chamberlain boasted of having slept with some 20,000 women. That made national headlines and added a winking asterisk to Wilt the Stilt’s legendary prowess. In the tepid new romcom “What’s Your Number?” star Anna Faris’ woebegone single gal Ally Darling has racked up 20 sexual partners, and that ignites a moral crisis and sets her off on a desperate, wacky quest to find Mr. Right, settle down and get married. Freighted with virtually every romantic comedy cliche and convention in the book, “What’s Your Number?” — ably directed by Mark Mylod from a script by Gabrielle Allan and Jennifer Crittenden (all TV sitcom veterans) — seems an attempt to break the blond, bubbly and very appealing Faris out of the B-movie ghetto (“Scary Movie 1-4,” “The House Bunny,” etc.) and into a sexy league with Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Garner and the like. The irrepressible force of Faris’ personality, plus her penchant for cute self-effacement and charming

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pratfalls, does lift this movie slightly from its dolefully predictable course. But everything around her feels stale and second-hand. The story opens as Boston single gal Ally is dumped by her latest boyfriend, fired from her marketing job and reads in a slick women’s magazine a story that reports the average woman has 10.5 lovers in her lifetime. Furthermore, the article states, women who have had 20 or more lovers are unlikely ever to find a husband. Ally makes a quick head count and discovers to her horror that she’s had 19 lovers. And in a quirky scene depicting the rowdy bachelorette party for her soon-to-be-married younger sister (Ari Graynor), she notches number 20 in a drunken one-night stand with her oily ex-boss (“Community’s” Joel McHale, oddly unfunny). So in the story’s most arbitrary and far-fetched turn, Ally vows not to sleep with another man until she finds Mr. Right. Her cracked plan is to reconnect with ex-lovers in hopes of rekindling a spark and avoiding adding any

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new names to her bedmate roster. So she enlists the reluctant aid of her handsome, quarrelsome neighbor Colin Shea (Chris “Captain America” Evans), a womanizing musician-slacker who might as well have “Mr. Right” tattooed on his forehead, to track down these long-gone men. There are a few amusing and disastrous reunions between Ally and her exes. Especially funny is one with a stuffed-shirt Englishman (Martin Freeman), in which Ally assumes an erratic British accent that with each drink devolves from posh to Cockney to Borat-style eastern European. But mostly those scenarios are too few and too flat. Faris and Evans do make and appealing couple, and the filmmakers go to fevered lengths to get the two out of their clothes and sweetly poised for the final, thoroughly unsurprising hook-up. And that’s the main problem with “What’s Your Number?” We have its number from the moment these bickering lovers meet. The elemental math adds up far too easily. — Dennis King, Wimgo.com



video game review

‘R A G E ’

‘Rage’ could be the next big thing

“W

olfenstein.” ‘’Doom.” ‘’Quake.” They’re all landmark titles in the history of video games, and they defined an entire genre: the first-person shooter. The studio that created them, Dallas-based id Software, has been relatively quiet since 2004’s “Doom 3.” But id has finally returned with “Rage” (Bethesda, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC, $59.99), and fans will be delighted to discover it hasn’t lost its touch for trigger-happy mayhem. “Rage” takes place in the sort of post-disaster wasteland that has become a bit of a cliche. In 2029, the hero was put into suspended animation before an asteroid struck Earth. When he awakens centuries later, the surface has been overrun by bandits, mutants, cannibals and other miscreants. In an earlier id game, your goal would be simple: Kill ‘em all. Indeed, “Rage” doesn’t skimp on opportunities to fill your enemies with lead. You can run screaming into a firefight, flinging grenades and automatic weapons fire every which way. Or you can take a more cautious approach, taking out foes one-by-one with well-placed sniper bullets. While the weapons don’t get too exotic, they’re well differentiated. A shotgun has a beefy kick to it, while a rapid-fire machine gun is more difficult to control. You can also build turrets and sentry robots, which become valuable sidekicks when foes become too much for your lone gunman. There are only a few enemy types,

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but they come after you in many ways. Some kill from afar. Some heavily armored guards march relentlessly toward you. And the most agile mutants jump you en masse. The animation and artificial intelligence are terrific, making all your antagonists seem like living (and dying) creatures with their own unpredictable attack patterns. At its core, “Rage” is a series of environments — caverns, a factory, a prison — filled with things to shoot. There are a few short detours, but the paths are almost entirely linear. Still, other activities prevent the game from feeling like one long trudge toward the inevitable. You get access early on to a dune buggy equipped with guns and homing rockets, and it’s a kick to chase bandit vehicles around the wasteland. At two locations you can sign up for competitive races; a few are straightforward, but most turn into demolition derbies. There are also side jobs that you can take on for cash. And there are several gambling events, including an addictive collectible card game and the ever delightful “five-finger fillet.” Such side quests — as well as the colorful but cramped towns where you’ll find them — create the impression that “Rage” is an open-world adventure like “Grand Theft Auto” or “Fallout.” But that initial sense of freedom turns out to be an illusion, and it’s disappointing to discover that you don’t really have much choice in determining how the story unfolds. And the ending, which is blatantly written to set up a sequel, arrives so abruptly that I was taken aback when the credits started rolling. In the four years since “Rage” was first announced, its post-apocalyptic setting has been used more effectively in adventures like “Fallout 3” and “Borderlands.” Still, it does deliver plenty of thrills. Despite its disappointing story, I had a lot of fun — and I’m looking forward to “Rage 2.” – From The Associated Press

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COVE R

STORY

P H O T O B Y T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S

E N D O F A N E R A?

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Story b Story by y G George e o r g e La Lang, a n g , LookatOKC Lo o o k a t O KC E Editor d itt o r

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COV E R STO RY

On Wednesday, Oct. 5, the day Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs died, NBC broadcast an episode of “Parenthood” showing Camille Braverman, the family matriarch played by Bonnie Bedelia, wandering around her garden with headphones plugged into an iPad 2, reciting phrases in Mandarin Chinese. This is a woman in her sixties pondering what to pursue in the next phase of life. Rather than purchase a Rosetta Stone course or enroll in a class at the local college, she is learning one of the most difficult languages on our planet while surrounded by the butterflies of her garden. S E E R E ST O F STO RY O N PAG E 2 6

THE AGE OF IPOD

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T COV E R STO RY

hat ability for an individual to customize technology to suit his or her needs and personality, to make the world a little smaller, to summon content quickly and easily with the swipe of a finger, began in earnest 10 years ago, on Oct. 23, 2001, when Apple announced the launch of the firstgeneration iPod. With Jobs’ death and the arrival of the iPhone 4S on Oct. 14, the 10th anniversary of the iPod is getting lost in the shuffle, so to speak. But the iPod and its children, the iPhone and the iPad, permanently changed how most people experience and access music, and then proceeded to change how they thought about their relationship to technology, media and the design aesthetics of their everyday lives. Jobs was at the fore of many of the greatest innovations of the past 30 years, but his most important achievement was to make computers feel like extensions of their user’s personalities. The iPod was a simple box, ready to be filled with all of a user’s favorite things. “The whole ‘i’ concept — yeah, it stands for Internet, but they also say it stands for ‘individual,’” said Jim Rogers, director at Consolidated Networks Corporation in Oklahoma City. “To me, that was a core thing about Steve Jobs. He really tried to empower individual users and not only have people use the devices individually, but to their own ends.” This is what the iPod promised users in the beginning — “1,000 songs in your pocket.” A humble beginning, to be sure, but in 2001, 1,000 songs, carefully categorized and ready for playS E E R E ST O F STO RY O N PAG E 2 6

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COV E R STO RY back in endless configurations, was nothing short of miraculous. The iPod not only grew with technological advances and the demands of the public, but in classic Steve Jobs style, it anticipated what we did not even know we wanted.

WH Y W E WANT ED I T With the mp3 revolution of the late-1990s, music fans were suddenly able to compress the music files from compact discs into much smaller digital units. This meant hours of ripping discs into hard drives or, if you were a hardened criminal-type, spending days hooked up to Napster and scouring other people’s hard drives for illicit tunes. At some point, nearly every Napster user downloaded an otherwise terrible song just because they could — as a result, far more people owned a purloined copy of Aqua’s “Barbie Girl” than would choose to admit it. But once people downloaded these time-honored classics, it was hard to know what to do with them other than reconstitute them into their former selves, so most people with mp3 collections made mix-CDs with their brand new CD burners. Beyond that, they could load the songs onto players such as the Diamond Rio or the Eiger MPMan, which boasted storage capacities of about 32 megabytes, keeping most joggers rocking for about six songs. Before the iPod, other mass-storage devices existed such as the Nomad Jukebox, a 6 gigabyte machine roughly the size of a large CD Walkman, but navigating through song files and creating workable playlists was almost more trouble than it was worth. In the pre-iPod history, there was no set standard for organizing these music files, and looking at old mp3 players is to study an era of clueless conceptualizing, a little like watching old footage of pre-Wright Brothers flying machines crashing down mountainsides. As Farhad Manjoo of Slate wrote in his remembrance of Jobs, “The ones before the iPod stored too few songs, transferred your music too slowly, didn’t catalog your tracks in any useful way, and were too large and ungainly to carry with you.”

The first version of iTunes, released in January 2001, helped train Mac users for their future iPod experience. While predecessor programs such as MusicMatch Jukebox, which was bundled with early Windows-only versions of the iPod, offered a rough draft on how to organize digital music, the iTunes model featured the clean design typical of Apple OS programs, and the basic organization was simple, sorting by artist, then album, then songs, then genre. As for the player itself, the first-generation iPod came as a result of Apple engineer Jon Rubinstein visiting Toshiba’s Tokyo plant in February 2001 and seeing the company’s new, 1.8 inch hard drive. Apple steamrolled into research and development on a mobile player, finding the right combination of drive, processor and battery that would allow a user to listen from a 1,000-song collection for up to 10 hours on a player the size of a card deck. The initial design was predicated on how Apple could fit the component parts together into that card-deck size, but that design became the industry standard. After iPod, all pretenders to the throne patterned their look and their internal software on what Apple created. Even the Sansa Fuze and the Zune, Microsoft’s high-profile “iPod killer” that was discontinued on Oct. 3 after five years on the market, owed much to the iPod design. During his 2001 unveiling of the iPod, Jobs said that the average music fan owned 1,000 songs. His own creation caused that number to skyrocket, and not only that, people discovered new music in an effort to fill their shiny machines with interesting content — songs for all occasions and moods. The iPod and iTunes made it possible for people in remote areas to build music collections with as much sophistication as if they lived in major urban centers. The last iteration of the iPod Classic holds 32 times the music that the first-generation iPod did, and many of the people who own those units are doing their best to stock them to capacity. The result impacted all media within the iPod’s reach. With that sheer volume of music at one’s disposal, there was hardly the need for hit-oriented radio — even the most extensive music libraries at 21st century com-

mercial radio stations only have about 1,000 songs in rotation. The iPod took care of that on its first try. Then scroll down from “music” to “podcasts,” and the iPod makes most talk radio obsolete. Podcasts became the hot medium for disenfranchised former radio hosts and comics such as Adam Carolla and Marc Maron, who set up studios, recorded shows without fear of censorship or sponsor outrage, and became even more popular than they were before. These days, nearly every podcast from public radio networks include a “support your local public radio station” request, just in case listeners forget who makes them happen.

B E YO ND T H E B OX In his 2007 book “The Perfect Thing: How iPod Shuffles Commerce, Culture and Coolness,” Steven Levy sums up the lasting impact of the machine on the surface level. “It’s a six-ounce entanglement of cultural signifiers, evoking many things to many people.” That is true mainly because one person’s iPod is not the same as the next, and that extends to the iPhone and the iPad. The English professor’s iPod could be filled with Bad Brains and Dead Kennedys and the skatepunk could pack his with Jane Austen audiobooks. It is whatever you say it is. Look beyond what the iPod is and its immediate impact on the media landscape and the world begins to look like iWorld. The design by lead Apple style guru Jonathan Ive is one of the most copied aesthetics in modern culture. Things have fewer buttons these days, cleaner lines, fewer labels and take up less space. Once an iPod launches, everything starts to look just like it. The 5th generation iPod arrived in October 2005 in two colors, the familiar white and a new color, black. But it wasn’t just any “black.” It was something called “piano black” — glossy, like a lacquered piano. Before that iPod, a high percentage of televisions were being packaged in silver cases. Since then, a huge portion of commercial LCD televisions come in piano black, as do a large number of laptops, monitors, tablets and phones. After the iPod, Apple desktop computers started looking more and more like the mo-

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COV E R STO RY

The first version of iTunes, released in January 2001, helped train Mac users for their future iPod experience. Associated Press

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bile device they spawned: the iMac went from a teardrop-shaped unit available in multiple colors to a sleek, white box in just a few years. Even the design of e-readers such as the original Amazon Kindle evoked the iPod in its bright, smooth, white case. Extrapolate even farther, and the resurgence of mid-century modern home design, with its clean lines and simplicity, might be a direct result of iPod styling —Eames chairs and circular pendant lamps, with their relative lack of seams or anything extraneous, aren’t far off the mark from the nearly buttonless, streamlined machine Jobs created. As Dylan Jones wrote in “iPod, Therefore I Am,” the tendency for Ive’s designs to get copied for everything else goes back to those first iMacs. “Suddenly all computers, all white goods, every toaster, vacuum player and CD player looked as though they had been sent to the ergonomic doctor,” Jones wrote. “Even Rolex introduced iMac-influenced watches with translucent plastic in pastel colors.” But it is possible that the iPod era is nearly at an end. It’s not because of Jobs’ death, but because of the ways in which his machine gave life to new things that are more than just iPods. The iPhone is four years old and is by far the most popular smart phone on the market. Since its initial launch, the phone has carried an “iPod” app, and for the millions of people who purchased iPhones since 2007, their phones are

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now their music players. It is widely believed, now that the iCloud service promises to make storage on devices such as the iPod Touch limitless, that there is no longer a need for the highdensity storage available on the iPod Classic, and the iconic, touch-sensitive wheel design will soon be retired. The game is no longer “1,000 songs in your pocket.” There are virtually no limits now. It might only exist as an app found on an iPhone, an iPad or something unforseen d, just an icon shaped like that groundbreaking but possibly bygone 2001 machine. But unlike so many other things found on an iPhone touch screen, the iPod might be the only icon that is truly iConic. A few years ago, Wired magazine published a “Found: Artifacts from the Future” mock-up of a Hasbro “Operation” game from 2027. In addition to the bionic eyes and titanium shock absorbers in the legs of the familiar portly character with the light-up nose, the patient featured a curious add-on behind his right ear: “iPod implant.” An interesting thought: by-passing our imperfect, human ears to feed music directly to the brain. Steve Jobs probably thought of that one at least once. Your kids will love it.



the food dude

DAVE C ATHE Y

IT’S A HOME RUN

HOME RUN SLIDERS IS ANOTHER GREAT OPTION WHEN SEARCHING FOR THE BEST HAMBURGER IN TOWN

M

ajor League Baseball began its postseason last week, which means it’s the perfect time to check out Home Run Sliders, 125 E Fifth St. The newest concept from Deep Fork Restaurant Group is adorned in baseball paraphernalia and menu items that pay homage to the national pastime. Meanwhile, the cafe focuses on one of the food industry’s hottest commodities: The slider. Made famous by White Castle, the slider is simply a miniature hamburger. The benefit is the variety. The only time we’re usually able to try more than one flavor or burger is at our own backyard cookout. Like its cousin S & B Burger Joint, Home Run Sliders offers a multitude of flavor combinations. Unlike S & B, Home Run caters to more of a family setting. The restaurant opened in spring but recently was turned over to the care of general manager Elena Farrar, who has been the driving force behind Deep Fork’s wildly successful Wedge Pizzeria concept. Farrar said her first move was to lower the prices at Home Run Sliders.

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SEE REST OF STORY ON PAGE 31

Sweet potato fries and a bacon slider at Home Run Sliders in Edmond.

THE FOOD DUDE

Photos by David McDaniel, The Oklahoman

All about food, cuisine and the places you need to eat around Oklahoma. For more food talk, check out the Food Dude’s blog at blog.newsok.com/fooddude > ALSO, FOLLOW THE DUDE on twitter @TheFoodDood

SERVED TO YOU BY:

THE CULINARY <<<

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JULY 20 - AUG. 6 I NORTH LOOKATOKC.COM 7302 WESTERN

KITCHEN WHERE HIGH PERFORMANCE APPLIANCES MEET HIGH STYLE

AVENUE, OKC


Raquel Gies flips a hamburger patty at Home Run Sliders in Edmond. With that slider, you can visit Home Run Sliders’ prodigious ketchup bar. Along

with basic ketchup, you’ll find versions infused with Dr Pepper, blueberry, ancho chile, lavender, strawberry, sage, Caribbean jerk, barbecue, curry, chipotle and mayonnaise. Photo by David McDaniel, The Oklahoman “I thought we could offer a better value,” she said. “And I also simplified the menu and shored up the beer selection.” A ponderous menu hand-written on a chalkboard above the counter has been erased. Diners can now take a look at a pared down menu as they wait in line. Sliders are $3 each, two for $5, three for $7.25 and four for $9.75. Make any meal a combo, including fries and drink, for $2.50. The sliders range from simple beef and cheese to lush prime rib with Swiss cheese and horseradish. In between you’ll find chili, guacamole, a Theta, bacon and blue cheese and a play on hot wings. There’s even a veggie burger, which is a relief to those of us with vegetarians within our covey. Sides include onion petals, sweet potato fries, regular fries, tater tots, and macaroni and cheese. To adorn those fries, tots or petals, you can visit Home Run Sliders’ prodigious ketchup bar. Along with basic ketchup, you’ll find versions infused with Dr Pepper, blueberry, ancho chile, lavender, strawberry, sage, Caribbean jerk, barbecue, curry, chipotle and mayonnaise. Elena recommended the lavender ketchup with sweet potato fries,

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which was genius. I’ve tried a half dozen different sliders, and none has disappointed. The Rounding Third, which includes guacamole, bacon and cheese is a favorite, but The Ump is my favorite — candied blackened bacon and blue cheese crumbles. Farrar adjusted the Dominican Slider, which was my least favorite from an early visit. The chicken slider previously had a brown sugar and pecan batter, which darkened a little too hastily in past incarnations. “We took the pecans out of the batter and sprinkle them on now,” Elena said. Home Run Sliders is a welcome addition to the 5th Street Corridor, joining Hideaway Pizza, Cafe 501, Boulevard Steakhouse, Sara Sara Cupcakes and the UCO Jazz Lab, to name a few. With a little signage from Broadway, this area should become a metrowide destination. Farrar said they’re in the middle of transitioning their dessert options. The restaurant has offered soft-serve ice cream in mini batting helmets but is looking to go even more traditional. “We’re going to be serving boxes of Cracker Jack soon,” she said. Which can only mean that it’s time to play ball. (And root, root, root for the Rangers!)

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STATIC WATCH ALL THE EPISODES AT STATIC.NEWSOK.COM


ADD SOME No single jean style rules this fall, but two are grabbing most of the attention. “It’s all about flares and colored denim,” said Brook Balentine, a buyer for Cayman’s in Norman. Colored denim tested warm-weather fashion temperatures with pastels and brights. For fall, the colors have deepened to olive, emerald green, eggplant and mustard.

colorful

FLARE

TO YOUR FALL JEANS

This isn’t a short-lived trend, either. Balentine, just back from New York market, said colored denim goes forward into spring with lighter, brighter hues. While just as trendy as their skinny sisters, flare jeans require a bit more finesse. Some women just don’t like that much fabric flapping around their ankles. Heels or platforms tend to balance the look best, though Balentine said a less exaggerated flare can be worn with ballet flats. Story continues on Page 34

Mode Mo d l Alex ex E Epplee r w wee ar arss f l ar a red ed j eans by y 7 Fo or Al Alll Ma Mank nkin nk i d, in d d re ress sss ed u p wi with th h a Tory or y Bu or B u rcc h tw t wee e e d ja ee eed jack c ket ck et,, all l frr om C/K et K & C o. o. Pho hoto to by b y Ch h rii s La L and nd d sb b er e r ge erg ge r | Th ger The O Ok k la laho homa m n.


Story continued from Page 33

“I do feel like there are flares for everyone, even curvier girls,” she said. Flares that accentuate the waist and skim the legs can be extremely flattering. Not interested in covering your lower half in color or slipping into retro flares? Dark and vintage washes get grabbed up more than any other. It seems skinny jeans are going to hang on forever, but this fall they keep company with wide legs, higher waists, wax-coated jeans that look like leather and the mini boot cut.

Flares look best with a more fitted top. Mustard-colored pintuck blouse by Collection Costa Blanca, Hudson f lare jeans and feather necklace are from Gil’s Clothing and Denim Bar. Photos by Chris Landsberger | The Oklahoman.

FIND THE RIGHT FIT Jeans are a staple in most wardrobes. The average woman owns eight pairs of jeans, according to Cotton Incorporated. As much as women love their jeans, the search for a great-fitting pair takes time. In 2010, a Levi’s survey revealed that 50 percent of women try on at least 10 pairs of jeans before they find one pair they would buy. “With me, it’s all about the fit,” said Jamicia Wylie, buyer for Gil’s Clothing and Denim Bar. She advises women to shop for jeans that fit and flatter. A shot of color would be nice, too.

TIPS AND TRENDS DARE TO FLARE. The flare jean is fitted through the hip and leg and then bells out from the knee. It’s a ’70s throwback that got a lot of talk in the spring, and it’s getting louder this fall. Most women will prefer this look with platforms or heels. Modified flares look good on many women, but Wylie said full flares look best on those who are long and lean. To balance out the bottom, consider a top with a slimmer cut. Balentine said she loves a bow blouse with flares. A leather jacket or a fur vest can also dress up the look.

Mini boot jeans by Hudson are a nice transition from skinnies to flares. The jeans, Pink Martini jacket with stitched shoulders and leaf necklace are from Gil’s Clothing and Denim Bar.

COLOR THE ISSUE. Styles tend to be skinny or straight to keep the color in check. Who really wants to wear purple flares? With college football season in full swing, there are plenty of orange and red jeans available. What tempts more are deeper, richer denim shadesis ofone darkofplum, olive and mustard. RIGHT: Colored the strongest trends for fall. Joe’s red skinny jeans, Idea“For fall, we “It’s definitely fresh and fun,” Balentine said. gray tank and Costa Blanca black puffy coatbit of brown. always have a lot of gray and black, and a little are from Gil’s Clothing and Denim Bar. It’s so nice to have color to mix back with those and brighten everything up.”


Colored jeans are definitely a statement, so keep what’s on top simple if you want. Or not. Embrace the color block trend and pair a mustard top with purple jeans, Balentine suggested. CONSIDER A MINI BOOT. After years of wearing skinnies, a regular boot cut may feel too wide for some women, Wylie said. A new style to try is the mini boot or baby boot cut. “It’s cut slimmer through the hips and knees and then boots out. It’s a good transition from straight and skinny. ... It gives you that slimming look,” Wylie said. Since a mini boot is more slim at the bottom, it works with a flat or heel and can even be tucked into a boot. GET THE SKINNY. “Skinnies are not going away,” Wylie said. “If you had asked me years ago, I would have told you it’s not going to last. Even the jeans companies thought it wouldn’t last.” Skinny jeans worn with boots have become a staple in the winter, and this season will be no different. Women love to tuck their jeans into boots, and the easiest style for that is the skinny, Balentine said. Tall boots and ankle boots work well with skinny jeans. THINK TWICE ABOUT WIDE LEGS. Unlike flares that are more fitted through the legs, wide-leg jeans usually fit at the waist and hips and then fall loose and wide. Like exaggerated flares, they tend to look best on women who are tall. It’s more of an extreme look and probably best suited for pants rather than jeans. “It’s not your every person jean,” Wylie said. Balentine agrees. “I think it’s a really hard fit. We’ve done that more in a pant. It’s really just not the best jean look.” But it is out there, if you want to give it a try. WAIST AWAY. Certainly waists are rising, which may be more comfortable and flattering, especially to women who have a bit of a tummy. But know that a super high-waisted jean usually looks better on the runway than it does in real life. “It’s a hard thing to wear,” Balentine said. “Every woman knows that your lower area is not always your most flattering. ... It’s not something I’m pushing.”

Colored denim is one of the strongest trends for fall. Joe’s red skinny jeans, Idea gray tank and Costa Blanca black puffy coat are from Gil’s Clothing and Denim Bar.

SORTING THROUGH THE SIZES. Shopping for a great-fitting pair of jeans is difficult enough. Then you have to figure out the sizing. Generally, a size 25 compares to a 0. A size 26 fits like a 2. A size 27 translates to a size 4. That type of sizing is a starting point, a guideline, not a measure of your hips or waist, Wylie said. Don’t get hung up on sizing because it varies from brand to brand. WORDS TO REMEMBER. “Not every trend is for every person,” Balentine said. “You can still look great without hitting every trend.”


There are more than 2.5 million breast cancer survivors alive in the U.S. today – the largest group of all cancer survivors.

The story of a true survivor

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reva Warcup was just doing her job. As the benefits manager for the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, OMRF, she’s always on the lookout for ways to help employees take better care of themselves and maximize their health benefits. But “just doing her job” saved her life. At the urging of a fellow employee who had recently lost her 32-year-old sister to breast cancer, Treva booked a visit to the mobile mammography van run by the Oklahoma Breast Care Center that was parked at OMRF. The screening costs were covered by OMRF’s wellness plan, so it was free and convenient, too. When a study was released discouraging women from having mammograms before age 50, Treva almost cancelled her appointment. At 44, she had no cancer in her family, and a breast cancer risk test she had taken had rated her lifetime risk at only 4 percent or less. She ate right, exercised and watched her weight. She thought she had nothing to fear. Still she decided to go ahead with the test, “I was only there to keep the screening numbers up,” she said. Or so she thought. Yet following her exam she was called back for follow-up testing. Within a month, her doctor scheduled a biopsy and it con-

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firmed her diagnosis: Stage Two Invasive Ductal Breast Cancer. Treva was now a breast cancer patient. “It blew me away the first time someone called me that,” she said. “It’s been a lifechanging experience. Now I know it can happen to anyone.” Treva began chemotherapy sessions every three weeks. She scheduled her treatments on Thursdays to allow her symptoms to occur over the weekend. Some weeks, she would try to come back to work for a few hours, as much for the mental boost as to put her physical woes behind her. At first, Treva kept her breast cancer quiet, only sharing the news with her family and a few coworkers. Yet within weeks of her first treatment, her hair began falling out by the handful. It proved the medicine was working, but it made it harder to keep her condition a secret. Through the summer, a wig helped hide the evidence of her ordeal, but Treva eventually abandoned it, choosing instead to share her experience with others to raise awareness. “I quit hiding, because anything I can to get other women to go for screening is worth it,” she said. Treva finished chemo last August and completed radiation treatments in December. She will continue frequent mammograms and take Tomixifen, a drug that

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helps suppress the hormones that can act as “fertilizer” for breast cancer cells. Doctors give Treva a better than 95% chance of beating her breast cancer. The main reason for the good prognosis: the cancer was found so early. “There are so many survivors now,” Treva says “and research and new technologies have done so much to help you survive – if you catch it early.” To those who fear the screening process itself or what the results might reveal, Treva stresses that knowing what is going on in your body is vitally important. “Don’t be afraid of getting screened. Anything you can do to catch breast cancer early is worth the time and effort.” Her hair is back and she has embraced a new hairdo. She may keep her hair shorter forever, because she says its trimmed 30 minutes off of her morning routine. Breast Cancer has changed Treva in many ways, but mostly it has helped her realign her priorities and focus on what’s important. She plans to take full advantage of every moment. Treva and her family participated in their first Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in October 2010. “It was amazing.” We’ll make it an annual event. I walked the race last year, but I’m a survivor. This year I want to run.” – From Wire Reports

Treva Warcup and her family participated in their first Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in October 2010. “It was amazing.” We’ll make it an annual event. I walked the race last year, but I’m a survivor. This year I want to run.” Photo provided by OMRF


RACE FOR THE CURE

®

The Central and Western Oklahoma Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure will hold its 18th Annual Komen Oklahoma City Race for the Cure® on Saturday, October 15th. The Race is expected to attract over 18,000 runners, walkers, spectators and volunteers. The Race for the Cure® is the

WHAT 18 ANNUAL OKLAHOMA CITY RACE FOR THE CURE® WHERE REDHAWKS FIELD AT BRICKTOWN WHEN SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2011 TH

Affiliate’s signature fundraising event, with earnings expected to exceed $1 million. Registration runs until Friday, October 14th at

7 - 8:00 A.M.

REGISTRATION

7:45 A.M.

OPENING CEREMONY

7 pm each day. Registration is also available

8:00 A.M.

COMPETITIVE 5K RACE STARTS

online at www.komencentralwesternok.org.

8:30 A.M.

5K RUN/WALK AND 1 MILE FAMILY FUN RUN STARTS

at Bricktown at 7 am Race day with the spon-

9:45 A.M

KIDS’ DASH

sor expo and a survivor breakfast in Coach’s.

10:15 A.M.

SURVIVOR CEREMONY

10:45 A.M.

CLOSING CEREMONY

Red Coyote in the Classen Curve, 10 am until

Race day festivities kick off at RedHawks Field

The Opening Ceremonies begin at 7:45 am. A Kid’s Dash and Survivor Ceremony close out the day at 9:45 am.

ALL AWARDS WILL BE GIVEN OUT DURING THE CLOSING CEREMONIES.

“I am truly humbled at the amazing outpouring of support our community has for its breast cancer survivors,” said Lorna Palmer, Executive Director of the Central Oklahoma Affiliate. “In a country that has so many ad-

ENTRY FEES ADULTS

vantages, it is unacceptable that we lose so many each year in the fight against breast cancer. We have to do more and we will do more until we have a world without breast cancer.” Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer

CHILDREN (17 & UNDER) TIMING SLEEP IN FOR THE CURE

$30 FOR 5K OR 1 MILE $35 ON RACE DAY $20, INCLUDES KID’S DASH $25 ON RACE DAY ADDITIONAL $5 FOR 5K $30

deaths among women ages 40-59. It’s estimated that over 207,090 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year alone.

LOOKATOKC.COM

I

OCTOBER 12 – OCTOBER 26

I

PAGE 37 >>>



WIMGO

EVENTS

WED

12

OCTOBER 12 - OCTOBER 26 THEATER “Altar Boyz,” 7:30 p.m., Lyric at the Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

“The Coronation of Poppea,” 8

p.m., University of Oklahoma - A. Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre, 840 Asp, 325-4101. (Norman)

“Spring Awakening,” 8 p.m., Uni-

CONCERTS Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N

Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

The Lonesome Heroes, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

Melody Guy, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

Chris Brown, T-Pain and TYGA, 8

p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno, (800) 745-3000.

Young Prisms and Big Troubles,

8 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

Hudson Falcons, 9 p.m., The Conser-

vatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

LIVE MUSIC Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705

versity of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, 325-3641. (Norman)

Children’s Theater presents “The Ugly Duckling,” 11 a.m., Oklahoma

City University, 2501 N Blackwelder, 951-0011.

HAPPENINGS Works by sculptor Janie Tigert, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

Norman Artists Show ‘Recourse for Discourse,’ Firehouse Art Center,

Gavin McGraw and David Cook,

7:30 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

The Summer Set, The Downtown Fiction and Allison Park, 6:30 p.m., The Marquee, 222 N Main (Tulsa) Charlie Wilson, 8 p.m., First Council Casino, 12875 N Highway 77, (580) 448-3015. (Newkirk)

LIVE MUSIC Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701

W Memorial, Spazmatics, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Service Road, Rick Toops Open Jam, 8:30 p.m., 778-8166.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Scott

Keeton, 7 p.m., 424-1000.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 500 Miles To Memphis, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,

The Best and the Coolest of the Summer Art Exhibit, Visions In

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

“Local Color,” Paseo Originals, 2920

Paseo, 401-1865.

FireLake Grand Casino, 777 Grand

Casino Blvd., Born In November, 7 p.m., 964-7263. (Shawnee)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road, Ambiance Band Jam Session, 7 p.m., 778-8166.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Scott

THU

13

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,Mark

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Donny McCaslin, 8 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

Boulevard Steakhouse, 505 S Boulevard, Evin Brady, 6 p.m., 715-2333. (Edmond)

444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

Explosions in the Sky and Wye Oak, 8 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001

“Altar Boyz,” 7:30 p.m., Lyric at the

Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane,

S Eastern, 677-9169.

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503

Green Corn Revival, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m., Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

“Spring Awakening,” 8 p.m., Uni-

versity of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, 325-3641. (Norman)

Rooster, 9 p.m., 424-1000.

Pogo and That1Guy, 8 p.m., Cain’s

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 5842306. (Tulsa)

Al Pacino, 9 p.m., WinStar World Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 2763100. (Thackerville) Albert Aguilar, 9 p.m., VZD’s

Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203.

Family Jam 2011, 5 p.m., OKC Zoo Amphitheatre, 2101 NE 50, 364-3700. Charlie Wilson, 8 p.m., Lucky Star

Casino, 7777 N Highway 81, 262-7612. (El Reno)

No Justice, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276. Jim Peterik In Concert, 7:30 p.m.,

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Slick

1900 Northwest Expressway, Brother Bear, Feathered Rabbit and Cooking With John And Dave, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59, Larry Morris, 9 p.m., 616-0288.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive, Jacocb Becannen and Mark Vollertson, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave., Matt Blagg, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse, 7 S Mickey Mantle, Aaron Newman and Lemma, 7 p.m., 272-0777.

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Miss Brown

The Paseo Art Gallery, 2924 Paseo, 557-1229.

My So Called Band, 9 p.m., the Blue

Boulevard Steakhouse, 505 S

“Pinktober” artwork celebrating Breast Cancer Awareness Month,

LIVE MUSIC

In Your Eye Studio & Gallery, 3005 Paseo, 525-2161.

“Local Color,” Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo, 401-1865.

FRI

14

NIGHT LIFE

THEATER

Don Henley, 8 p.m., Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, 777 W Cherokee, (918) 2664352. (Catoosa)

East Central University - Hallie Brown Ford Fine Arts Center, 920 E Main, (580) 559-5851. (Ada)

The Best and the Coolest of the Summer Art Exhibit, Visions In

The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart and Twin Sister, 7 p.m., University

NIGHT LIFE

Acoustic Oklahoma Showcase, 7 p.m., VZD’s Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203.

Norman Artists Show ‘Recourse for Discourse,’ Firehouse Art Center,

CONCERTS

CONCERTS

N Rockwell, Tim Gaither, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

N May, Suite 101, The Rooftop Dogs, 9 p.m., 778-8882.

Vollertson, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

Karaoke, 9 p.m., 348-7555. (Edmond)

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

The Office Drinks and Nosh, 5929

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Tim Gaither, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

Keeton, 7 p.m., 424-1000.

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 High-

Memorial, Big Mouth, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705

Wade Tower, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

The Paseo Art Gallery, 2924 Paseo, 557-1229.

Works by sculptor Janie Tigert,

25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

land Park Blvd., Edgar Cruz, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

HAPPENINGS

of Oklahoma - Oklahoma Memorial Union, 900 Asp, 325-4678. (Norman)

KC Clifford, 8 p.m., The Blue Door,

2805 N McKinley, 524-0738.

Foreign Contaminant, 9 p.m., The

Hidden Castle, 1309 24 SW, 701-0870. (Norman)

Billy Ray Cyrus, 7 p.m., FireLake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., 964-7263. (Shawnee)

Door, 2805 N McKinley, 524-0738.

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

To You, 8 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

Boulevard, Matt Stansberry, 8 p.m., 715-2333. (Edmond)

NIGHT LIFE

25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

Hi Lo Club, 1221 NW 50, The HiLo

Waterford Marriott, 6300 Waterford Blvd., Burton Band, 9 p.m., 848-4782.

Queen of Sheba, 2308 N Macarthur

Sliders, 2616 S I 35 Service Road, Pointblank, 9 p.m., 672-6306.

Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill, 310 Johnny Bench Drive, Jake Adams Band, 8 p.m., 231-0254.

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057. The Roxy, 1164 N MacArthur,

Spineshank, Clandestine, Soul Crisis, Amorda and Atrus, 7 p.m.

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 High-

land Park Blvd., Justin Witte, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S

Drag Show, 10 p.m., 843-1722.

Blvd., Urban Legends - The $1000 Competition and The Tryst Afterparty, 10 p.m., 606-8616.

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Tim Gaither, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

THEATER “Altar Boyz,” 8 p.m., Lyric at the Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m., Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786. “The Coronation of Poppea,” 8

p.m., University of Oklahoma - A. Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre, 840 Asp, 405.325.4101. (Norman)

“Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” 8 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120

Eastern, 2nd Street Band, 9 p.m., 619-3939.

W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

“Spring Awakening,” 8 p.m., Uni-

Memorial, Uninvited Guest, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

versity of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, 325-3641. (Norman)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Service Road, Ambiance Band, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

EAT DRINK PLAY » WIMGO.COM » 39


WIMGO

EVENTS

Jerome Bixby’s “The Man From Earth,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre

Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

“Dark Matters,” 8 p.m., Carpenter Square Theatre, 800 W Main, 2326500. Children’s Theater presents “The Ugly Duckling,” 11 a.m., Oklahoma

City University, 2501 N Blackwelder, 951-0011.

HAPPENINGS 2nd Friday Circuit of Art, 6 p.m.,

Norman Arts Council Gallery, 220 E Main, 360-1162. (Norman)

Works by sculptor Janie Tigert, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

Norman Artists Show ‘Recourse for Discourse’, Firehouse Art Center,

444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

SAT

15

OCTOBER 12 - OCTOBER 26 Brother Gruesome, Mordant Messenger and Tapestry, 9 p.m., VZD’s Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203. Granger Smith, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

Joe Walsh, 8 p.m., First Council

Taylor Swift, 7 p.m., Chesapeake

7:30 p.m., Yukon Fine Arts Auditorium, 850 Yukon (Yukon)

LIVE MUSIC The Performing Arts Studio, 200

S Jones, Winter Wind Concert Series with Steve Weichert, 7 p.m., 3079320. (Norman)

17

10 p.m., 605-4543.

Los Rieleros Del Norte, 8 p.m.,

The Deli, 309 White, Beau Jennings

Fort Reno Ghost Tour, 7:30 p.m., Historic Ft Reno Visitor Center & Chapel, Ft Reno, 262-3987. (El Reno)

The Roxy, 1164 N MacArthur, Bang Tango, 8 p.m.

Works by sculptor Janie Tigert,

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Service Road, Teddy Jack and the Alley Cats Open Jam, 8 p.m., 778-8166.

500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Rachel

Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

Lucky Star Casino, 7777 N Highway 81, 262-7612. (El Reno)

“A Pinch of SALT: Barbershop Harmony with a Swedish Flavor,” 7:30

p.m., Yukon Fine Arts Auditorium, 850 Yukon (Yukon)

DoJo presents 35 Denton Exchange Concert to benefit the Norman Music Festival, 10 a.m.,

and the Tigers, 12 a.m., 329-3534. (Norman)

The Roxy, 1164 N MacArthur, Local Metal Showcase featuring Dark Ascent, 8 p.m. Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59,

David Chamberlain, 9 p.m., 616-0288.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive,

Brothers Eatery & Pub, 563 Buchanan, 329-0040. (Norman)

Rick Jawnsun, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

LIVE MUSIC

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S

Centennial Rodeo Opry, 2221

Eastern, Stout, 9 p.m., 619-3939.

Exchange Ave., Rodeo Opry, 7:30 p.m., 297-9773.

Stevens, 10 p.m., 702-8555.

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse, 7 S

25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,Grant

Mickey Mantle, Aaron Newman and Lemma, 7 p.m., 272-0777.

Waterford Marriott, 6300 Waterford Blvd., Burton Band, 9 p.m., 848-4782.

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

Sliders, 2616 S I 35 Service Road,

NIGHT LIFE

Pointblank, 9 p.m., 672-6306.

Silver Stallion Club, Highway 152

& Morgan Road, Exit 151, 9 p.m., 7453310. (Mustang)

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057. Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 High-

land Park Blvd., Jessica Tate, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

Memorial, Uninvited Guest, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

Dyno and Friends, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill, 310 Johnny Bench Drive, Steve

Lynyrd Skynyrd, 8 p.m., Hard Rock

“A Pinch of Salt” - Barbershop Harmony with a Swedish Flavor,

A Spectacular Array Of Adornment - A Doodle Folkart Show, 8 p.m., 733-1448.

MON

HAPPENINGS

Blue Note, 2408 N Robinson, The Oh Johnny Girls, 9 p.m., 600-1166.

The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Charitables, 418 N Air Depot Blvd,

Rooster, 9 p.m., 424-1000.

Brad Chad Porter, Spencer Hicks and Cameron Buchholtz, 8 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

JJ’s Alley, 212 E Sheridan, Ali Harter,

Energy Arena, 100 W Reno, (615) 665-5950.

Tribal Seeds 2011 Fall Tour, 8 p.m.,

“Dark Matters,” 8 p.m., Carpenter Square Theatre, 800 W Main, 2326500.

Casino, 12875 N Highway 77, (580) 448-3015. (Newkirk)

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

CONCERTS

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Slick

Hamby and Jeff Parker, 8 p.m., 2310254.

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Service Road, Ambiance Band, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

Hotel & Casino, 777 W Cherokee, (918) 266-4352. (Catoosa)

40 » WIMGO.COM » EAT DRINK PLAY

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503

N Rockwell, Tim Gaither, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

SUN

16

THEATER

CONCERTS OU School of Music: Trombone Choir, 8 p.m., Catlett Music Center, Chip Tha Ripper and XV, 7 p.m.,

Stacy outside on the plaza, 1:30 p.m., 424-1000.

LIVE MUSIC

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Mountain

The College Bar, 319 S Washington,

Smoke, 7 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

NIGHT LIFE Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503

Achachay, 10 p.m., (405) 533-3217. (Stillwater)

NIGHT LIFE

N Rockwell, Tim Gaither, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

THEATER

THEATER

“The Broken Statue,” 2:30 p.m., Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

Memorial, Karaoke, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

“The Coronation of Poppea,” 3

p.m., University of Oklahoma - A. Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre, 840 Asp, 405.325.4101. (Norman)

“Spring Awakening,” 3 p.m., Uni-

versity of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, 325-3641. (Norman)

“The Barber of Seville,” 2:30 p.m.,

TUE

18

“Altar Boyz,” 2 and 8 p.m., Lyric at

CONCERTS

Tulsa Opera, Inc., 1610 S Boulder, (918) 582-4035. (Tulsa)

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m.,

David Crowder Band, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 5842306. (Tulsa)

SPORTS

CONCERTS

Oklahoma City Barons Vs. Houston Aeros, 4 p.m., Cox Convention

Kim Richey and Mando Sanz, 5 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

HAPPENINGS

Gringo Star, Wurly Birds and Dad, 9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

the Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

“The Coronation of Poppea,” 8

p.m., University of Oklahoma - A. Max Weitzenhoffer Theatre, 840 Asp, 405.325.4101. (Norman)

“Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” 8 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120

W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

“Spring Awakening,” 8 p.m., Uni-

versity of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, 325-3641. (Norman)

Jerome Bixby’s “The Man From Earth,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre

Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

Straight No Chaser, 7:30 p.m., Tulsa

Convention Center, 100 Civic Center, (918) 596-7177. (Tulsa)

Rascal Flatts, 8 p.m., WinStar World

Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 2763100. (Thackerville)

Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, 602-8500.

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

David Lindley, 8 p.m., The Blue Door,

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Lionize with Larry And His Flask,

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

7 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

Acoustic Oklahoma Showcase, 7 p.m., VZD’s Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203. Appassionata Duo Candlelight Concert Series, 7 p.m., Harwelden

Mansion, 2210 S Main, (918) 5843333. (Tulsa)


WIMGO

EVENTS

Creepersin, Christophe and the Pallbearers and Dethroned Humanity, 9 p.m., The Hidden Castle, 1309 24 SW, 701-0870. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057. Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 Highland Park Blvd., Kam Brad, 8 p.m., 254-5200. Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,Mark Vollertson, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

NIGHT LIFE Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Memorial, DJ Big G, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

THEATER “Altar Boyz,” 7:30 p.m., Lyric at the Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

WED

19

CONCERTS Justin Moore, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ball-

room, 423 N Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

Ryan Reid, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276. Pop Evil, 8 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

LIVE MUSIC Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

OCTOBER 12 - OCTOBER 26 The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road, Ambiance Band Jam Session, 7 p.m., 778-8166.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Kristen

Stehr, 7 p.m., 424-1000.

Park Avenue Grill, One Park

Ave.,Wade Tower Dinner Theater, 6:30 p.m., 702-8444.

NIGHT LIFE Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane, Karaoke, 9 p.m., 348-7555. (Edmond) Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Collin Moulton, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

THEATER Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

HAPPENINGS Works by sculptor Janie Tigert, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

THU

20

Lemma, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

Buddy Guy and Jimmie Vaughan,

7 p.m., Osage Event Center, 951 W 36 N (Tulsa)

Acoustic Oklahoma Showcase, 7 p.m., VZD’s Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203. Freshest Live HipHop Bands, 7

p.m., McSalty’s Pizza, 3000 N Portland, 409-7556.

Crown Imperial Release Show,

9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos, 25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057. Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701

W Memorial, Spazmatics, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Service Road, Rick Toops Open Jam, 8:30 p.m., 778-8166.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Mack Band, 7 p.m., 424-1000.

McSalty’s Pizza, 3000 N Portland, Freshest Live HipHop Bands, 7 p.m., 409-7556.

The Deli, 309 White, Sister Sparrow

and the Dirty Birds, 10:30 p.m., 3293534. (Norman)

“Buried Child,” 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m.,

Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

Happenings Works by sculptor Janie Tigert, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr.

Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

Norman Artists Show ‘Recourse for Discourse’, Firehouse Art Center,

444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

FRI

21

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive,

Stevens, 10 p.m., 702-8555.

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

Boulevard Steakhouse, 505 S Boulevard, Evin Brady, 6 p.m., 715-2333. (Edmond)

Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203.

Cinderella and Vince Neil, 8 p.m.,

Lucky Star Casino, 7777 N Highway 81, 262-7612. (El Reno)

LIVE MUSIC

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,David Morris, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse, 7

S Mickey Mantle, Erick Taylor Trio, 7 p.m., 272-0777.

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, AJ Johnson and Why Not, 8 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

Sonder Music Dance & Art, 225 E Gray, Third Friday Celtic Night, 6:30 p.m., 474-9734. (Norman)

Boulevard Steakhouse, 505 S Bou-

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

NIGHT LIFE

25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

Waterford Marriott, 6300 Wa-

terford Blvd., Burton Band, 9 p.m., 848-4782.

Sliders, 2616 S I 35 Service Road,

levard, Billee Jean, 8 p.m., 715-2333. (Edmond)

Hi Lo Club, 1221 NW 50, The HiLo Drag Show, 10 p.m., 843-1722.

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Collin Moulton, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

Pointblank, 9 p.m., 672-6306.

THEATER

Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill,

“Altar Boyz,” 8 p.m., Lyric at the

310 Johnny Bench Drive, Kevin Pickett and Southern Rain, 8 p.m., 231-0254.

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705

W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

“Buried Child,” 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m.,

Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

“Sunday in the Park with George,”

Memorial, Voodoo, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

FireLake Grand Casino, 777 Grand

“Jerome Bixby’s The Man From Earth,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre

Mckinley, 524-0738.

Three Doors Down, 8 p.m., WinStar

Evil Jive - 17th Annual with Datsik And Gosteffects, Kids At The Bar,

Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

Miles Zuniga, 8 p.m., VZD’s

Ave.,Christian Pearson, 10 p.m., 702-8555.

Red Dirt Rangers and Charlie Faye, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Collin Moulton, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

“Altar Boyz,” 7:30 p.m., Lyric at the

Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park

“Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” 8 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120

David Wilcox, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

Casino Blvd., Dylan, 7 p.m., (405) 9647263. (Shawnee)

Johnny Cooper, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog

Jamie Bramble, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Chromeo and Mayer Hawthorne,

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

THEATER

N Western, 879-9778.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive,

8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

World Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 276-3100. (Thackerville)

wind Casino, 1544 W State Highway 9, 322-6000. (Norman)

Prettys New Petticoat CD Release, 7 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911

Street Kings, 9 p.m., 616-0288.

8 p.m., Reynolds Performing Arts Center, 560 Parrington Oval (Norman)

NIGHT LIFE

Three Doors Down, 8 p.m., River-

& Casino, 777 W Cherokee, (918) 266-4352. (Catoosa)

Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59,

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S East-

CONCERTS

CONCERTS

FireLake Grand Casino, 777 Grand

Travis Tritt and The Charlie Daniels Band, 8 p.m., Hard Rock Hotel

land Park Blvd., Justin Witte, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 Highland Park Blvd., Edgar Cruz, 8 p.m., 254-5200. Memorial, Stars, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

113 N Crawford (Norman)

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 High-

Oxford Town, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,Grant

Eagle Claw and Rainbows are Free, 9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC,

Ed Crunk and more , 8 p.m. Oklahoma City Farmers Public Market 311 S Klein, 232-6506.

ern, Scott Keeton, 9 p.m., 619-3939.

Casino Blvd., Banana Seat, 9 p.m., 9647263. (Shawnee)

Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

“Dark Matters,” 8 p.m., Carpenter Square Theatre, 800 W Main, 2326500.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

Service Road, Johnny Walker, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

1900 Northwest Expressway, Syndikut, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Brittney

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

Roe, 9 p.m., 424-1000.

EAT DRINK PLAY » WIMGO.COM » 41


WIMGO

EVENTS

Oklahoma City Barons vs Grand Rapids Griffins, 7 p.m., Cox Con-

vention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, 602-8500.

SAT

22

OCTOBER 12 - OCTOBER 26 Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W Memorial, The Jetset Kings, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill,

310 Johnny Bench Drive, Travis Kidd, 8 p.m., 231-0254.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery, 1900 Northwest Expressway,

Achachay and Mobley, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Brittney

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 3:30 and 7:30 p.m.,

Oklahoma City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

SUN

23

Roe, 9 p.m., 424-1000.

CONCERTS Mare Wakefield, 8 p.m., The Blue

Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

Health Outreach Prevention Education Presents - The 10th Annual Divas Concert, 6 p.m., Cain’s

Ballroom, 423 N Main, (918) 5842306. (Tulsa)

The Secret Post, 9 p.m., The Hid-

den Castle, 1309 24 SW, 701-0870. (Norman)

Gabriel Iglesias, 8 p.m., WinStar World Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 276-3100. (Thackerville)

Larry the Cable Guy and Friends, 7

p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno, 602-8700.

Ink For Your Letter Apparel Launch Show, 6:30 p.m., The Con-

servatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

JJ’s Alley, 212 E Sheridan, Carter Sampson, 10 p.m., 605-4543.

CONCERTS

Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59,

Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive,

Ben Rector and Andrew Belle, 8 p.m., The Sooner Theatre of Norman, Inc., 101 E Main, 321-9600. (Norman)

Street Kings, 9 p.m., 616-0288.

Derek Harris Duo, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

Hawthorne Heights, 7 p.m., The

UCO Exhibit “Authentic Containment” to feature Mixed Media Art, Nigh Gallery at University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

Robbers Cave Fall Festival, 9 a.m., Robbers Cave State Park, Hwy 2 N, (918) 465-2562. (Wilburton) OCU’s 30th Annual Film Institute’s Film Series presents “The Vanishing.” 2 p.m., OCU - Meinder’s School of Business, 2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5276.

MON

24

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park Ave.,Grant Stevens, 10 p.m., 702-8555.

Pierce Pettis, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

CONCERTS

Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse, 7 S

LIVE MUSIC

MC Frontalot, 8 p.m., The Conserva-

Mickey Mantle, C+ Born in November, 7 p.m., 272-0777.

Junior’s, 2601 Northwest Ex-

pressway, Anita White Trio, 8 p.m., 848-5597.

The Performing Arts Studio, 200

S Jones, Winter Wind Concert Series with Rory Block, 7 p.m., 307-9320. (Norman)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

359-7989. (Edmond)

Service Road, Teddy Jack and the Alley Cats Open Jam, 8 p.m., 778-8166.

NIGHT LIFE

NIGHT LIFE

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, EJQ, 8 p.m.,

tory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

LIVE MUSIC Brass Bell Studios, 2500 NW 33, Set It Off, Divided By Friday, City Lights, Command The Clouds and Theatre Breaks Loose, 7 p.m., 2553607.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, UCO Jazz

Combos, 7 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

NIGHT LIFE

Zach Walther, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

N Rockwell, Collin Moulton, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

N Rockwell, Collin Moulton, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

LIVE MUSIC

THEATER

THEATER

Centennial Rodeo Opry, 2221 Exchange, Rodeo Opry, 7:30 p.m., 297-9773.

“Altar Boyz,” noon and 8 p.m., Lyric

“The Broken Statue,” 2:30 p.m., Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

THEATER

“Sunday in the Park with George,”

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos, 25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

Waterford Marriott, 6300 Wa-

terford Blvd., Burton Band, 9 p.m., 848-4782.

at the Plaza, 1725 NW 16, 524-9310.

“Buried Child,” 8 p.m., Civic Center

Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“The Broken Statue,” 8 p.m.,

Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N Walker, 521-1786.

3 p.m., Reynolds Performing Arts Center, 560 Parrington Oval (Norman)

“Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” 2 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120

W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

Sliders, 2616 S I 35 Service Road,

“Drood: The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” 8 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120

W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

HAPPENINGS

Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705

“Jerome Bixby’s The Man From Earth,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

Pointblank, 9 p.m., 672-6306.

W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 High-

land Park Blvd., Jessica Tate, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

“Dark Matters,” 8 p.m., Carpenter

Square Theatre, 800 W Main, 2326500.

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

42 » WIMGO.COM » EAT DRINK PLAY

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Memorial, Karaoke, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

HAPPENINGS

Norman Artists Show ‘Recourse for Discourse’, Firehouse Art Center,

444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

The Best and the Coolest of the Summer Art Exhibit, Visions In

The Paseo Art Gallery, 2924 Paseo, 557-1229.

TUE

25 CONCERTS Ben Rector, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom,

423 N Main, (918) 584-2306. (Tulsa)

Drew Grow and the Pastors Wives, Sheree Chamberlin and Jeff

Richardson, 8 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

The Black Dahlia Murder, All Shall Perish and Cannabis Corpse, 7 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Acoustic Oklahoma Showcase, 7

p.m., VZD’s Restaurant & Club, 4200 N Western, 524-4203.

Norton Visiting Artist: Andrew Cooperstock, Piano Recital, 8 p.m., Catlett Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705

W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057.

Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509

Highland Park Blvd., Kam Brad, 8 p.m., 254-5200.

Red Piano Lounge, 1 Park

Ave.,Justin Echols, 5 p.m., 702-8555.

Works by sculptor Janie Tigert,

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, UCO

String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., 359-7989. (Edmond)

Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby exhibit by Craig Varjabedian, National Cowboy &

NIGHT LIFE

Robert Rauschenberg: Prints from Universal Limited Art Editions, 1962-2008, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

26

CONCERTS Snoop Dogg, 8 p.m., Lucky Star Casino, 7777 N Highway 81, 262-7612. (El Reno) Cale Lester, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

WED

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Memorial, DJ Big G, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

THEATER Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.

AIDS Wolf, Henry and Hazel Slaughter, 9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman) School of Music Horn Studio Recital, 8 p.m., Catlett Music Center,

500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC Friends Restaurant & Club, 3705 W Memorial, The Clique, 8 p.m., 751-4057. Avanti Bar and Grill, 13509 Highland Park Blvd., Edgar Cruz, 8 p.m., 254-5200. Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Memorial, Brian Odle, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

FireLake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., TJ McFarland, 7 p.m., 964-7263. (Shawnee)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road, Ambiance Band Jam Session, 7 p.m., 778-8166.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Urban

Addiction, 2 p.m., 424-1000.

NIGHT LIFE Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane, Karaoke, 9 p.m., 348-7555. (Edmond) Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Jimmie Roulette, 8 p.m., 239-4242.

THEATER “Sunday in the Park With George,” 8 p.m., Reynolds Performing

Arts Center, 560 Parrington Oval (Norman)

Cultural Art Series - “Girls Night: the Musical,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma

City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-1611.


shots

01

02 |1| Alyssa, a student at Harding Fine Arts Academy, plays for patrons of first friday on the Paseo. |2| Preston of the band Cracker Jack and the Coon Unit play in the Paseo for first Friday. |3| Jason and Kale sit in their store Buffalo Totem.

03

>>> Photos by Adam Kemp

LOOKATOKC.COM

I

OCTOBER 12 – OCTOBER 26

I

PAGE 43 >>>


shots

01

02 |1| Melissa and Vikki look at the art of Virginia Johnson at Contemporary Art Gallery. |2| Thomas paints on the streets of the Paseo district for First Friday |3| Blake checks out the art on the wall at Womb. >>> Photos by Adam Kemp

03

<<<

PAGE 44

I

OCTOBER 12 – OCTOBER 26

I

LOOKATOKC.COM


shots

01 |1| James inside the interactive art piece at Womb. |2| The crowd at Womb |3| John and Herb check out the art at Womb >>> Photos by Adam Kemp

02

02

LOOKATOKC.COM

I

OCTOBER 12 – OCTOBER 26

I

PAGE 45 >>>


shots

02

03

01 |1| Nicholas before the Oklahoma State game against Kansas |2| Charles drives around his motorized beer cooler. |3| Kevin starts to cook his onion burgers. |4| Brian, Max, Luke and Mandy sit and wait for the Spirt walk before the Oklahoma State game against Kansas. |5| Ryan tosses the ball before the game against Kansas. >>> Photos by Adam Kemp

05

04



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1991 300 SL, Beautiful Cond, 104k mi, both tops $8,999 ¡ 405-641-3700

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1990 Cadillac DeVille 4Dr, Sedan, automatic, leather, excellent cond, 35000 mi, loaded, one owner, garage kept $5000. 405-380-2838

2007 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible, auto, loaded, 12K, 2 years full warranty, sale by owner, 830-7001, $39,500. 06 Impala LTZ, 1 owner, silver, perfect, 40K mi., loaded, $13,950 630-4141

Affordable-Reliable Transmissions 635-0777

2000 Mercury Grand Marquis Red, $1450. 605-0840

2002 Escort ZX2 5spd 4cylinder nice gas saver $3450 863-6399

Classic Car Restoration Free transport available. Yesteryear 918-605-6070

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1985 CROWN VICTORIA 1 owner 38K act miles. $2000 Bob 405-820-0450

2003 M45, loaded, 78K, well maintained, must see, $10,000, 602-5622.

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1990 Chevrolet K5 Blazer rust free, nice, FREE, 25% discount on new work, $4,500obo. 613-9664

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2 CLASIC BUGS '75 Conv. and '73 Super Beetle, both projects, $3500 obo pair, 830-0692 '72 F250, 31K on total rebuild, straight body, $2K obo. 405-386-2515 1970 Chev Malibu Wagon, good looking, 69k mi, $4500 obo, 405-412-3746

2009 Jeep Wrangler 2Dr, 4WD, V6, manual 6 speed, Black ext, excellent cond, 26,000 mi, CD, cruise, PW, satellite radio, tow pkg, 3piece hard removable top $23,510. (405) 343-7251

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1996 Cougar, nice, low miles, runs great, $2499 obo. 405-412-3746

2006 Nissan Altima SE, charcoal w/lt. gray, 100k, $8500 obo cash. 405-206-2702

96 Oldsmobile Aurora Sedan, Gray int, very good cond, 135,000 mi, $2000. 405-286-9409

'98 Pontiac Grand Prix bad motor, great parts car, $700. 405-314-6644

BENTLEY TURBO R 1992 Pristine cond. Jet black /tan interior 75,600 mi. books & records $25,000 obo 580-482-3986

2008 Ford Mustang Red ext, Black int, leather, excellent cond, 78,000 mi, $1,000 below book $12,900., 405-921-2416 98 Chevrolet Corvette Coupe, 5.7l, automatic, great cond, $13,900, (405) 313-9110

2007 International 4300 DT466, 24 foot box, 2500 lb Maxon lift, 186K miles, sell or lease, $26,850, 405-761-7827.

'02 Chevy Crew Cab 4x4 Duramax diesel. 203K mi 8 new GM injectors. still under warr!! Pewter $13,500 • 580-320-2202

'84 Chevy short bed pickup, complete new 350 4-bolt main, new interior w/ lots of extras $3750 OBO. Call Gary at 812-8209

83 Chevy Silverado, SWB RBLT 350, vy good cond. $5,300 405-219-6707

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2003 Cad Escalade, excellent, loaded, 1 owner, 42K mi, $20K, 755-4638. '07 Chevy Suburban LTZ 4X4, blk, lthr, loaded, NAV $24,900 405-820-1541 '2001 Chevy S10 Blazer 2dr Sport, 2wd, CD ice cold air $2950 863-6399 2005 Dodge Durango Limited, 5.7L V8, 75K mi, White w/Gray int, DVD, NAV, Htd Seats, 4x4, Tow Pkg; EX Cond! Call Greg @ 580-278-1577 hercddy@hotmail.com $13,900

2002 Ford Explorer XLT, 4 door, rear air, 3rd row seating, 147k miles, $3950 obo. 2nd owner, last 8 years, come look & make offer. 694-0688 2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport 4Dr, Sport Utility, 4WD, V-8, automatic, Midnight Blue ext, Tan int, leather, great cond, 30450 mi, $38,500, allen@secokc.com (405)535-5061 2010 Volvo XC90 21K, 1 owner, 7 pass, great looking in & out, 50k fac warr. $32,500 obo. 373-2637

1999 Chrysler T&C LX Handicap lowered floor Van, loaded VMI conversion, low miles $14,900 obo Must Sell 642-7080 '07 Dodge Mini Van Cargo, loaded all pwr cold ac, $4150 863-6399 2000 Ford Windstar White, Good Running, $1550. 605-0840

2007 Dodge Ram 1500 White QUAD Cab 4x4 HEMI Excellent Cond. 125K HWY Miles Only $14,600. 405-590-6335 99 GMC Sonoma Ext cab 3dr V6 auto, sport bed CD ac $3250 863-6399

MUST SEE 2005 Outback, great car, very clean, 88K miles, $10,000 405-642-4432

'08 Toyota Tundra, blk, SR5, standard cab, short bed w/sports pack, 45k mi, V8, auto, power, air, bucket seats w/console, step rails, bed liners, receiver hitch, new Michelins & alloy wheels, professionally lowered w/ McGaughys kit. $17,000. OKC, cell 918-638-5780

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>>

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1990 GMC Sierra C/K 1500 2Dr, manual 5 speed, 133,000 mi, $3,000, 405-589-8311

'98 Ford 16' box truck, ac/ram, exc. work truck, Why buy a van? More space, more money. NW OKC, $3,700. 405-990-5137

No phone calls, please. Accounts Payable/ Receptionist Need personable, detail oriented individual to answer phones, process accounts payable and other administrative tasks. 10key, Microsoft Word and Excel required. Great Plains experience a plus High School Diploma Good benefits available SET Environmental Inc 1100 N. Main Street Noble, OK 73068 Fax: 405-872-1408 Accounts Receivable Analyze credit apps, verify & determine credit limits. Track, maintain, & balance G/L, A/R, balance daily, weekly, & monthly. Collecting, processing, & depositing funds online & at bank. Excellent verbal & written skills. Temp to Hire $14/hr. Submit Resume to Whrg@ wegenergroup.com Wegener Group

Collections Specialists

Oklahoma Employees Credit Union is seeking applications for Collections Specialists. Please submit resumes to employment@oecu.org. OECU is an EEO/ AA Employer CREDIT ANALYST Central National Bank is seeking an individual for either the Enid or Tulsa Branch who is interpersonal, analytical and has decision-making skills relating to commercial loan underwriting and risk assessment. A college degree is required with emphasis in accounting and finance. Responsible for analyzing commercial financial statement information and recommending loan structure. The individual will interact with both loan officers and customers. Strong computer skills in spreadsheets, word processing and databases are required. Apply or send resume to Central National Bank, 324 W. Broadway, Enid, OK 73701. Resumes can also be sent to jredding@cnb-enid.com. EOE/M/F

ALARM DISPATCHER

NW OKC Alarm Co. Will train. 3rd shift, midnight-8am w/ weekends. Monitoring, computer & gen. office. req'd. Fax resume 728-9254 or info@lvsystems.net Answer Service Operator Edmond. Must type 45 wpm. Shift: Mon 2p-10p; Tue 4:30p-12a; Wed 4:30p-11p; Thur-Fri Off; Sat 8a-5p; Sun 8a-4:30p $12 per hour ¡ 285-4316 Customer Service/ Counter Sales Assistant Manager Trainee, PT/FT Bilingual a +. 947-8700 Financial Aid Administrative Assistant http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities Insurance Clerk Claims, post, phone, ICD9, CPT, 10 Key, Mail To: Job App, PO Box 12883, Okla. City, OK 73157 » Legal Assistant»

2-4 years legal office experience required, 70wpm typing, Word. DT firm $30K plus benefits & parking. Call Laurie 942-8551 laurie@tneeseperson nel.com Medical Insurance Billing Specialist Seeking qualified, organized person for medical insurance claim filing. Includes claim submission, data entry, maintaining accounts receivable and equipment tracking. Medicare billing exp preferred. Basic computer knowledge such as Word, Excel, Outlook. Fax resume to (405) 286-5139 or email info@pmrcentral.com

Medical

Receptionist

Receptionist South Side OKC Cardiology Clinic F/T, M-F 7:30am to 5:00pm, Experience Required. email Resume James@HeartSolutions. org

MORTGAGE LOAN SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE First Mortgage Company has positions available in our Loan Servicing Department. The job duties include various loan servicing functions, specifically managing customer escrow accounts. Previous experience in mortgage banking, real estate or insurance fields is preferred. Basic 10 key and computer skills are required. We are seeking a multi-tasking detail oriented individual with good verbal and written communication skills. Excellent benefit package and working conditions offered. Qualified individuals should fax resumes to 405/302-0961, e-mail resumes to atophoj@firstmortgage co.com, or mail to: First Mortgage Co. ATTN: Human Resource Dept. 6501 N Broadway, Ste 250 Oklahoma City, OK 73116 EOE »

Receiving Clerk»

long term temporary $12/HR Position requires warehouse receiving experience, Excel & data entry, ability to lift 50 lbs, drug screen & background check. Call Laurie 405-942-8551 laurie@tneeseperson nel.com SECRETARIAL POSITION Oklahoma City, busy office/AR, good computer & communication skills. Send resume to PO Box 1407, Lawton, OK 73501 Temp Data Entry needed. Good computer & 10-key skills REQ. $8/hr, 8-4 & 4-10 or from your home w/high speed connection. Contact Madonna, me.resume@sbcglobal.net HCIPS is looking for

Data Entry Help in the Accounting Department. Good communication skills and work ethics a must. Immediate opening. Salary requirements required. EOE Please fax resume to 866-416-7316 or e-mail to resume to Ajobinokc@ymail.com

Ranch Manager: Woodward & Dewey Counties. Cow/Calf operation & Wildlife Mgmt. Competitive salary & living quarters. Call 580-302-1029

Auto Mechanic Full time experienced, preferably certified auto mechanic needed. Salary based on Exp. and Certificaton Apply at Paul's Conoco Service Center May Ave. and Hefner Rd.

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS

Now Hiring ‚ 203-0596 FIRESTONE Jiffy Lube now hiring for

ALL POSITIONS. Please call (405) 604-1331 for immediate interview.

Professional Service Advisors – Pitbulls needed, poodles need not apply up to 750.00 wk depending on exp. For interview call (405) 604-1331.

OKLAHOMA STATE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION IS NETWORK ADMINISTRATOR Salary commensurate with actual network experience. Minimum requirement – A bachelor’s degree in an IT related field, 3-5 years of directly related experience, knowledge of firewalls, routers, layer 3 switches, VPN applications, intrusion detection devices and prior experience in the design, development and implementation of IT networks supporting critical 24/7 operations. To apply send resume and cover letter to: OSBI HR 6600 N. HARVEY OKC, OK 73116 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Software Engineer II Software Engineer II needed in Norman, Oklahoma. Mid-level JAVA developer position designs, modifies, develops, writes and implements software programming applications in varying platforms and languages. Supports and/or installs software applications/operating systems. Participates in the testing process through test review and analysis, test witnessing and certification of software. Applicants must have the minimum of a Master of Science in Computer Science plus six months of experience using Denodo, Drods, and HTML diff processing system. Must have legal authority to work in the U.S. Send resume/references to: Raymond Lewallen, Chief Engineer, Telogical Systems, LLC, ATTN: The Oklahoman, 765 Asp Avenue, Suite 206, Norman, OK 73069. EOE. See above.

Frame and Cornice Carpenters and Helpers, OKC area, steady work, hourly. Transportation & tools required. 824-8954 Working Superintendents/ Carpenters Wanted For national commercial retail tenant finish work. Must have tools and transportation. Work requires travel. Call 1-800-237-1694 or email resume to: beth@llretail.com


Professional AMERICAN CLEANERS Hiring FT Customer Service Reps. Starting pay $8.75 per hour. Apply at 15300 N. Western Ave.

CUSTOMER SERVICE

Union Corrugating Company, a metal building products manufacturer, is in search of a professional person with excellent phone skills to become a CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE at our Yukon plant. Experience with dispatch & routing truck deliveries, coordinating with other plants & working with outside sales reps would be a plus. Building products experience is preferred, but not required. We offer a competitive salary & benefit package. For confidential consideration, send your resume to: Fax - 405-324-2675 or email: bwallace@ unioncorrugating.com EOE CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Hiring FT high-energy CSRs with positive attitude. Need flexible & enthusiastic team players with attention to detail and comfort with computer entry. Environment is dry clean restoration facility near downtown OKC. Apply at CRDN (American Cleaners), 2 NW 11th (1 block East of Broadway).

THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA invites applications for the following position: Librarian-Reference & Instructional Services Responsible for scheduling library instruction classes and teaching library instruction classes as requested by faculty. Provides assistance to students and library users at the Reference Help Desk. Works closely with the web services librarian and web committee in developing webbased reference tools. Works with other Librarians in Reference and Instructional Services in the evaluation of publications, facilities and collections as well as plans for new or improved services. Works with other Librarians in Reference and Instruction in making requests for department equipment and furniture. Serves on the Collection Development Committee and develops book and serial collections in the specific areas in conjunction with departmental faculty liaisons. Salary: $32,363-$34,500/yr plus benefits. Master’s degree from an ALA accredited library program required. This position will remain open until filled. On-Line applications required. For details or to apply, visit our website http://jobs.uco.edu Call 405-974-2327 for technical assistance

Customer Service Representative, FT http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

Grow With Us

Customer Service Rep. Growing Edmond company seeks FT CSR. Must be professional, have excellent comm. & people skills, able to multi-task, & problem solve. Be organized, a team player, & reliable who would like to grow with us. Full Benefits. Send resume & salary requirements to edmondopportunity@ gmail.com

AUA Adjunct Instructor

http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

El Reno Public Schools SECONDARY SCIENCE TEACHER (8-12) available immediately Application website: www.elrenops.org click “Job Opportunities” For questions contact: Mrs. Linda Crawford (405) 262-1703 EOE

Assembly, Warehouse & General Labor Large manufacturing company is hiring for general labor, warehouse, assemblers, installers and Machinist. 1st, 2nd, 3rd & weekend shifts available. Pay is $8-$15 per hr. For more info please call or apply in person. Phone: 286-9414 Fax: 286-9415 2601 NW Expressway, Ste 110E

Assembly/Warehouse Diesel Mechanics Clerical Positions IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Please call 787-7600. Must past OSBI

»»»»»»» CHILD CARE

Grand Boulevard Early Education is seeking School Age Teacher/ Bus Driver to join our team. Apply at 1050 SW 36th, or call 634-1260. EOE.

»»»»»»» Custodian

http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities DRIVERS & HELPERS for moving company. Apply in person at 1131 Enterprise Ave., Unit 15A, OKC, OK, 445-7618. FLOOR TECH Exp. required in buffing, scrubbing floors & waxing Apply in person at Force Staffing 532 N. Penn OKC, OK 73107 Mon - Thur 9 AM - 2 PM Fax Resume: 405-605-7809

Grounds Keeper PT/Temp http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

Hate dirt, but love people? Must have car, ins & DL. No nights/no weekends. Health & dental insurance. Merry Maids South 670-1120 Airport Ground Transportation Supervisor All 3 shifts. $8.50/hr. Cashier, Eve/night shifts $7.25/hr. Auditor, Days $9/hr. SW OKC. »» 405-680-3250 »» Andy's Liquor Store Now Hiring. Start $10/hr CASHIER/STOCKER Must be 21. Neat appearance a plus. 25 plus hours a week. Apply in person 2720 S. Midwest Blvd, MWC. No phone calls! Answer Service Operator Edmond. Must type 45 wpm. Shift: Mon 2p-10p; Tue 4:30p-12a; Wed 4:30p-11p; Thur-Fri Off; Sat 8a-5p; Sun 8a-4:30p $12 per hour ¡ 285-4316

HTS/Trainers Now hiring individuals to work with adults with developmental disabilities in residential settings as Habilitation Training Specialist (HTS) FT & PT, evening & weekend shifts avail. $7.75-$8.75/hr. d.o.e. and training. Valid OK DL req'd. EARC offers great benefits: medical, dental & life insurance; vacation, sick & holiday pay! Send resume to marissadavis@coxinet.net or call 341-7132 or apply in person at 10 E. 9th St., Edmond, OK 73034. JANITORIAL Individuals & Couples to clean office buildings. PT evenings, M-F. Paid holidays. Apply 4-6 pm, Monday - Thursday, at 1024 N. Tulsa Ave, OKC LAB/TECH Lab & Field Tech for geotechnical engineering firm. Exp preferred but will train right candidate. Excellent benefits. Must have clean background & driving record. Apply in person @ METCO, 2025 S. Nicklas Ave, Ste 101. 681-6737

Choctaw medical office needs experienced Medical Assistant at drawing blood. Busy practice. Fax resume to 405-769-2999.

MAINT/MAKE READY IMMEDIATE OPENING Full time. 200 unit property. Req. general maintenance experience (HVAC &/or drywall exper a plus). Must have current OK dr. lic. & pass background chk/drug test. Please apply in person Meadowood Village Apts 6345 E Reno MWC.

CUSTOMER SERVICE REP for DME company. Experiencepreferred. fax resume to 405-702-6659 or call 405-702-6656 DENTAL ASSISTANT for Edmond pediatric practice, F/T, Coronal Polishing & X-Ray certificate req'd. Benefits. Fax resume to 348-8221.

Materials Management Tech

Ability to read, write and perform basic mathematical functions. Able to conceptualize and execute the functions of purchasing, receiving, distribution, shipping, mailing patient charges. Previous hospital experience and knowledge of medical supplies preferred. Send your resume to 378-3991 or jobs@chcares.com

Dental Receptionist For south OKC office. FT, M-F. Must be able to type 50+ wpm from voice recorder. Computer skills and multi task a must. Benefits including retirement, paid vacation and holidays. Bonus plan. No health insurance. Must apply in person 634-2239. ESEC SURGERY CENTER 3705 NW 63, Suite 100, Oklahoma City. X-RAY TECH Part time; OR & C-arm experience required. No wknds, holidays, or call. Fax resume to: 405.608.4269

OFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED No experience necessary Apply at 425 SW 44th Seasonal Dock Position available for EARC Thrift Store in Edmond. $7.50-$8.50/hr. d.o.e. Will work with adults with developmental disabilities receiving and sorting donations. Job coach training preferred, but not required. EARC offers great benefits and paid time off! Send resume to marissadavis@coxinet.net call 341-7132, or apply in person at 10 E. 9th St, Edmond, OK 73034. The Salvation Army Norman Corps is accepting applications for Seasonal Bell Ringers Work begins Nov 11 and ends Dec. 24. Apply in person M-F 10am-3pm, 318 E. Hayes, Norman. The Salvation Army is accepting applications for Seasonal Bell Ringers Work begins on Nov 11 and ends December 24. Apply in person M-F 10am-3pm, 311 SW 5th Warehouse Manager Trainee. Must have transportation and current driver's license. Bilingual a +. 947-8700

FULL AND PART TIME

positions available for Personal Care Aides to assist our patients with daily living in their homes. Entry level position, no certification required. Immediate daytime shifts available in NW OKC and South OKC Must have transportation and pass background check. Apply in person at HealthCare Innovations. 4300 Highline Blvd Ste # 380 (I-40 and Meridian). Now Accepting New Donors Earn up to $90 this week while saving lives Talecris Plasma Resources 7103 S Western Avenue Oklahoma City 405-634-0220 In addition to meeting the donation criteria. You must provide a valid photo I.D., proof of your current address and your Social Security or immigration card to donate.

CHEMOIL ENERGY NOW HIRING! Driver Services Supervisor (Oklahoma City, OK) Global marketer of fuels and lubricants seeks energetic and personable individuals with a get-itdone oilfield mentality. Based in Oklahoma City this position is responsible for the personal recruitment and evaluation of driver and field operations personnel; as well as company compliance with all DOT Federal and State rules & regulations and corporate policies & procedures. Salary & Bonus Resumes: US-HR@chemoil.com INSIDE SALES REPRESENTATIVE Immediate position available with a leading manufacturer/seller of Oil & Gas equipment. Hourly position, benefits, 401K. College degree and/ or Oilfield experience a plus, but not required. Must clear background check/ drug screen. Please send resumes to: KEVIN. GARVER@NOV.COM

LANDMAN

Field Landman- exp. with HBP title email resume to: dougtheland man@yahoo.com

MANAGERS FOR OKC AND TULSA AREA FOR NATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE CHAIN.

$40K, health, dental, IRA benefits. 405-808-9865.

ADVANTAGE CASE MANAGER Transporation provided and benefits. Apply at 3000 N Rockwell. CHHA AutumnBridge Hospice is taking applications for a part-time CHHA for Monday, Wednesday, and Friday visits with occasional weekends. Hospice or home health experience preferred. Apply at 3500 NW 39 St., Oklahoma City or call 440-2440.

Growing ENT Practice in Mercy Area looking for: Payment Poster Min 1 year experience in Medicare, Medicaid, and Commercial posting of EOB’s. 10 key by touch is required. Medical Manager experience preferred. Email resumes to christyv@medicbiz.org Hi Tech Dental Office in MWC has Front Desk opening for mature individual with dental exp. and positive attitude. 405-359-8784. Medical Assistant MA for busy physician's office, previous experience & phlebotomy skills required. Mercy area, hemonc1@coxinet.net My Dentist now hiring

Dental Assistants and Treatment Coordinators

for our OKC and surrounding offices. We offer competitive pay and benefits. Full time positions available. Visit our Careers link @ www.mydentistinc.com Email: Careers@ mydentistinc.com or Fax: 405.751.7160 for immediate consideration. Physical Therapy Tech Immediate Opening. Min 1 yr Exp. $10-12 based on exp. Fax 752-7387 or apply online azhar.us »» RDH »» Dental Hygienist Needed Tues & Thrs. Call 789-5552 or Fax resume to 405-789-8201 ’’ CERTIFIED ’’ HOME HEALTH AIDES & 24 HR LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS Caring for Seniors IMMEDIATE OPENINGS PT/FT FLEXIBLE SHIFTS To Apply Call 577-1910

Visiting Angels

Center for Women's Health

• LPN/MA • Medical Front Office

Send resumes to julie.vaughn@ centerforwomen-okc.com Or fax to 755-6319.

CHHA Home Health & Hospice FT/PT position. Reliable & experienced Call 405.879.3470 Fax 405.879.1625 CHHAs Needed Immediately Weekday & weekend hours available. Call 405-720-2401

CMA

full time, 6am-2pm, LTC/SNF experience for 48-bed facility. Wolfe Living Center 18501 NE 63rd St. Harrah, 405-454-1400

CMAs

for 3-11 (4 days on-2 days off)

LPNs

FT Mon-Fri (day shift) Apply at Skyview Nursing Center at 2200 N. Coltrane, OKC

237

RN/LPN Busy Oncology Practice has an immediate opening for an experienced full or part time RN/LPN. Oncology experience desired but not required. Prefer experience in a Clinic setting working closely with Physician. Margo Gonzales Phone (405)942-9200; Fax (405)942-9204 or email margo.gonzales@csok. org

RN Home Health Hospice

Full or Part time - Duties include field visits and case management Experience required Excellent salary, PTO, Health, Dental, Life, LTD, Profit Sharing, 401K. 405-879-3470 Fax 405-879-1625 www.choicehealthcare.net

CNA

full time, 6am-2pm & 2pm-10pm, LTC/SNF experience for 48-bed facility. Wolfe Living Center 18501 NE 63rd St. Harrah, 405-454-1400 CNAs 3-11 & 11-7 Small nursing home Senior Village, 1104 N. Madison Blanchard, OK. 485-3315 ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ ¡ Dietary Aide ¡

LPN 2pm-10pm

Competitive salary, good benefits & supportive team-oriented environment EOE WARR ACRES NURSING CENTER Apply or fax resume to: 6501 N. MACARTHUR 405-721-8740 ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘

LPN

3-11 M-F Apply at Heritage Manor at 3804 N. Barr

LPN Office Support / Scheduler Experience in home health & hospice required. Knowledge of computer based scheduling, clinical support functions, excellent interpersonal skills, self directed and detail oriented. Choice Home Health & Hospice Ph: 405.879.3470 Fax: 405.879.1625 LPNs PRIVATE DUTY FT/PT days, evenings and weekend shifts. Apply at PNC, 1240 NW 115th Street, OKC, OK 73114. $16.00 an hour + weekly pay checks.

LPNs RNs

Home Health Care Co. , BENEFITS ¡ INSURANCE Fax resume to: 722-4397 or 606-3031. Medical Assistant experience required. Send resume to 405-752-7305 or sendresumes7305 @gmail.com MEDICAL ASSISTANT Fast paced dermatology clinic. Great environment Fax resume to 951-4005

Clinical Supervisor, LPC or LCSW. Full time with benefits. Send resumes to okc82@aol.com Counselor (FT) Immediate opening at non-profit addiction treatment center. Master's degree in related field req'd; licensed pref'd, bilingual a plus. $32-$35K with good benefits, dep. on qual. Email resume with cover letter to jgilley@naichelp.org or mail to: NAIC, PO Box 730, Norman, OK 73070. Deadline 10/21/11. EOE Looking for LPC, LCSW, MSW or LMFTs working with children and adolescents in the Oklahoma City and Bethany area. If qualified, please forward your resume', credentials and salary requirements to 635-8417. LPCs, LCSWs, (or under supervision) to provide services in Ardmore, 2-3 days per week. Send resumes to fdis@coxinet.net

MAINT TECH needed for Property in OKC Applicant must have strong organizational skills and enjoy working outdoors. Ability to work independently with minimal supervision. Criminal Screen required before hire. 40 hours/wk. $13-14 Hourly, Vacation & Benefits. Fax resume 405.632.4168 Now Hiring General Labor Positions. All shifts available. Superior Staffing, 2700 S Walker, Oklahoma City. 405-632-2222 Service Person Valid driver's license required. Be able to drive pickup and pull trailer. Pick up and delivery of bulk grease bins. Some lifting required. Benefits avail. Apply in person 8am - 11am only 2228 S. Santa Fe, OKC

Mental Health Case Manager Supervisor Full time with benefits. Send resumes to okc82@aol.com

Certified Caregiver, 10 years exp, will work any days or hours, 361-9442.

CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL TESTING TECH. WILL TRAIN. Some benefits. Apply in person at 809 NW 34th, Moore. Exp. Tree Climber Must have Valid Driver License. Drug test & Ref Req. Pd Vac/Hol after 1 yr 475-9797 Lead Maintenance w/HVAC needed for multifamily property in Yukon. To apply please send resume to pking@jrkpropholdings.com or fax to 310.696.7441.

Now Hiring in Norman: Unarmed CLEET Certified Security Officer with Clerical skills. E-mail resume to mike152@cox.net or call Mike 405-820-2998 or Gina at 405-203-9557 Security Officer position $15.00 per hour. CLEET license and 1 year experience REQUIRED applicants contact Tim Noland at (580) 678-7892 Securitas Security is accepting applications for FT & PT Armed/Unarmed Security officers in the OKC area. We offer Great pay/benefits. Uniforms are provided. Apply online www.securitasjobs.com SelectOKC Branch EOE M/F/D/V

4 CNC MACHINISTS *** 1st and 2nd shifts *** Here we GROW again! Work with the best in a climate-controlled shop! Lathes & Mills. Experience w/ Mazatrol, Fanuc, Haas or Mitsub a plus. Top pay, OT & $2/hr shift diff. Paid health, 401(k) & Cafet. plans, Profit Sharing. EOE AIM, 1930 SE 29th, OKC 672-2226 or cell: 317-3220 Manual Machinist & Welders With experience needed. Must be able to thread tool joints. Welders Needed With Stick & Mig experience. Great Pay & Benefits! MAXX MACHINE 405-692-8300

WELDERS NEEDED

Can you weld? M&K Staffing is hiring welders in El Reno. Paid Holidays. Salary depends on experience. Apply online at www.jobscentral oklahoma.com or call 405.293.9018

A real fit for HONEST PERSON TO WORK AT HOME W/ BENEFITS CO. APR. $700.00 WK PT/FT 405-225-7761


Assistant Project Director/Food Service Mgr.

Sodexo, North America's leading provider of outsourced food service & facilities management, is seeking an Assistant Project Director/Food Manager for the Oklahoma County Senior Nutrition Program. You'll manage all food service operations, including planning and supervising special functions, maintaining payroll records, & hiring /training staff. Food service management experience & strong financial experience are required. Knowledge of senior programs preferred. We offer competitive wages, an excellent benefits package and the opportunity to advance. APPLY ONLINE AT: www.sodexoUSA.com click "Careers", Job #10233. At Sodexo, we value workforce diversity. EOE, M/F/D/V. COMMERCIAL PROJECT MANAGER Premier South OKC commercial building co. seeks Project Director/ Manager. 2+ years commercial or residential field, estimating & supervision experience required. Salary plus bonus. Self starter, excellent computer skills & communications. Fax resume with work exp. Attn: J'Layne McClure, 405-691-2572.

COST ESTIMATOR

LOW-VOLTAGE SYSTEM CONTRACTOR Individual would estimate the costs associated with installing low voltage systems like fire alarms, access control, intercom, and paging in commercial buildings. Experience in reading specs and prints and related field experience would be helpful in this office position. Competitive wage and benefit package. Cox Systems Technology (405) 235-2525 Director, Long Term http://mntechnology.com/ about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

Major Gifts Officer

for fast-paced nonprofit. Responsible for increasing major and planned gifts, and managing a large portfolio. Must be highly energetic professional with a track record of building donor relationships and gift procurement. Travel is required. Interested persons should apply online at www. regionalfoodbank.org EOE No Phone Calls Please »»»»»»»»»»»» Manager Trainee/ Manager For Southern Mgmt Corp needed in OKC area. Some B loan class experience helpful but not needed. Please send resume to: Debbie Armstrong, Po Box 1857, Lawton, OK 73502, or call 580-583-7522. »»»»»»»»»»»»

Professional Treatment Parents Looking for caring parents to place children in their home. We will train and certify you at no cost for this in-home opportunity. Reimbursement can be up to $2000 per month. Teen bonus opportunity, and up to 12 paid "vacation" days per year. Contact us for more information High School Diploma or GED required 405-751-0800 Project Coordinator needed in Oklahoma City, OK to develop, organize and coordinate the outreach activities of The Greater Oklahoma City Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, including its programs affiliated with the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. Duties include overseeing and administering the organization’s budget and policies regarding participant involvement and program requirements, as well as annual public relations and marketing goals relating to the Business Assistance Center and Oklahoma’s Promise/OHLAP college tuition program. Applicants must have the minimum of a Bachelor’s Degree in Business, Marketing or related plus at least six months of experience in public relations, marketing or journalism for Hispanic community and training employees, interns or volunteers in organizational procedures. Experience may be obtained prior to completion of degree. Must have legal authority to work in the U.S. Send resume/references to: David Castillo, Executive Director, ATTN: THE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN The Greater Oklahoma City Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, 309 Southwest 59th Street, Suite 302, Oklahoma City, OK 73109. EOE. Project Management Assistant Construction company looking for a team player. Must be good at time management, detail oriented and organized. Duties include: clerical work, prepare project files, work with sub-contractors. Word and Excel a must. Construction experience a plus. Apply at www.nabholz.com

General Manager & Kitchen Manager For 300 seat casual dining steak house in SW Oklahoma. Salary plus guaranteed monthly bonus for 1st year, plus benefits. Resume to stephenkurpil@gmail.com

QA/DC MANAGER

An innovative medical device manufacturer seeks a highly motivated, experienced individual to manage its Quality Assurance and Document Control Departments and administer the company's Quality System. This position is responsible for interfacing with FDA during Established Inspections. The position requires a Bachelor's degree in a technical or related field, or equivalent experience, with MIN 5 years in medical device manufacturing in a supervisory/managerial position. Previous quality auditing experience will include ASQ CQA certification or 4 years experience auditing medical device quality systems. A working knowledge of the FDA Quality Systems Regulation, Medical Device Directive, CMDCAS and ISO 13485:2003 is required. Experience w/MS office products is required. Experience with statistical and drafting software is preferred. Fax resume:

HuHot

Hiring ALL POSITIONS For immediate interview go to the Courtyard Marriott across from Quail Springs Mall, just West of Lowe's. M-F from 9am to 4pm. huhotokjobs@cox.net Server & Door Person needed part time evenings at Looney Bin Comedy Club. Must be 21. Apply within btwn 3pm & 6pm Wed. or Thur. @ 8503 N Rockwell.

WAIT STAFF

Full time. Must be available to work any day. Apply at Town Village, 13000 N May. 297-9600

405-682-2108

Archery Sales/Service Full Time & Part Time Knowledge and experience necessary. 405-677-4868

SOCIAL WORKER 1-2 (CONDITIONAL) Oklahoma City County Health Dept. For more info go to www.occhd.org

THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA invites applications for the following position: Assistant Director Academic Initiatives Responsible for the overall management and development of all academic initiatives in the residence halls. Will act as the liaison between UCO Housing & Dining Office and various campus entities; such as, Academic Affairs, Enrollment Management, Academic Advising, Tutoring Central. Will develop, coordinate and assess an early intervention program for UCO Housing students. Responsible for the development and assessment of programs designed to increase graduation and retention rates among Housing residents. Coordination of Living Learning Communities initiatives, including the overall vision, growth and direction of the Living Learning Communities program. Will assist in developing and completing the strategic direction of UCO's living learning communities. Responsible for the selection, training, and supervision of Peer Mentors and indirect supervision of RAs. Salary: $38,217-$40,000/yr plus benefits. Master’s degree required. This position will remain open until filled. On-Line applications required. For details or to apply, visit our website http://jobs.uco.edu Call 405-974-2327 for technical assistance

YOUTH COUNSELOR position available in Ponca City. Must have Master’s degree licensable in Oklahoma (LPC, LMFT, LCSW). Full range of benefits including LPC Supervision & competitive salary. Contact Jamie (580) 762-4156.

CASHIERS NEEDED

ASST. MANAGER / LEASING For apt complex must have experience including heavy leasing required. Salary + apt and benefits, excellent career opportunity. Please call 495-6870. LEASING AGENT Energetic people person w/computer & office skills for high energy atmosphere Prefer 1 yr exp. Bilingual a plus. Apply in person 2759 W I-240 Service Rd Manager Apt. complex, salary + apartment & benefits. Must have experience in managing and leasing. Exc. career opportunity. NW area. 495-6870

Buffalo Wild Wings Now Hiring Experienced Managers Email resume to: bwwjosh@yahoo.com COOKS & DISHWASHERS Ann's Chicken Fry House 4106 NW 39th Apply 8:30-11AM Tue-Sat NO PHONE CALLS.

COOKS NEEDED

Deli Cook FT, PT, Nights available at Upscale Convenient Store in NE Edmond. Call 285-5924 or 285-8383. » DANCERS » Great $$$$ instantly. Days or Nights, no fees, no fines. Must be 21. CENTERFOLDS I-240 & S Western 631-8343

Cashier FT,PT, Nights available at Upscale Convenient Store in NE Edmond. Call 285-5924 or 285-8383

Driver/Sales Assoc. Clean driving record, paint exp preferred not required, 401k, health ins, paid vacation, pay dependent on exp, high school diploma, email resume, ATTN: Cole Stubby hismem@ sbcglobal.net HIS Paint Mfg., Co. 521 E Memorial, no phone calls Sales & Cashier needed for Holiday Season F/T & P/T. Experience helpful. Apply in person at: Kamber's, 7308 N. Western, 840-2122

Amazing Business Earn $1K-$4K month PT. $10K/$1,000,000 bonus for builders. Car allowance. Incentive trips. Fun. Clyde, 405-824-3668 Best Auto Buy Here Pay Here dealership looking for SALES MANAGERS. $36K Base Salary + Commission & Benefits. Send resume to mcastillo11@live.com Fast growing roofing company needs SALES PEOPLE. On the job training, excellent pay plan, growth potential! 405-837-5599 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Advertising Sales Career! Up to 60K - 80K 1st Year Client base - Profit sharing Flexible hours No nights - No weekends Call 888-338-3053 www.smartmediausa.com Email: jobs@smartmediausa.com

INSIDE (PARTS) SALES

Seeking counter sales professional with excel comm/cust srvc skills, prob solving abilities & exp w/ sales of auto/ truck parts. Req: HS grad/ GED or equiv work exp, ability to read/understand parts manuals, ability to lift up to 70 lbs, valid Driver's lic./good driving record. Comp sal & excel ben. Post-offer physical. Employeeowned&EEOco. Apply to: Inland Truck Parts Company; Attn: Bobby; 1905 S. Nicklas; Oklahoma City OK 73128. Fax: 405-682-3529 E-mail: recruit34@ inlandtruck.com LOCAL BUY HERE PAY HERE No experience needed. Clean DL a must. We offer $1500 + comm + bonus & benefits. Apply in person at Best Auto, corner of SW 29th & Walker & at 3333 N. May OUTSIDE SALES Looking for an experienced and extremely energetic sales individual in material handling. Must be very self motivated. Salary plus commission. Email resume materialhandling. experience@gmail.com Protection 1, America’s largest privately owned security company is currently interviewing for Res/Small Com consultants. Must have clear criminal background and be able to pass drug test. Must have great work ethic and desire to make $60K+. Per sale earnings - $200-$500! + Bonuses com guaranty, leads, bonuses, benefits, car allow, cell phone allow, laptop, annual award trips, etc. Must have at least 2-4 years of outside sales experience, must have reliable transportation. EEO, Interested candidates fax resume to: 405-9465219 or email to: james jack@protectionone.com. www.protection1.com Roofing Sales Manager Needed. Must have experience. Excellent pay. 405-837-5599 ‘‘ WINDOW REPS ‘‘ ‘‘ WANTED ‘‘ Must have reliable transportation. Doyle, 722-3639

Telemarketing Rep A great opportunity for the right people. Work in office full time on hourly rate plus bonuses. Need to be reliable, professional, positive, energetic, and provide proven work history. Telemarketing experience is preferred. Call for interview (405) 602-2700, or email resume to: admin@trustintegritas.com

Atlas Enterprises in Edmond is currently looking for Iron Workers/ Certified Welders with a minimum 5 years proven experience. Must have current certs and valid DL to be considered. Drug test and background check required for most projects. 405-630-8665.

Automotive Mechanic

with experience. Guaranteed salary. 677-0539. BUILDER Needed For backyard portable buildings. Experience helpful. For info call 9-5 Mon-Sat 405-235-9500

COST ESTIMATOR

LOW-VOLTAGE SYSTEM CONTRACTOR Individual would estimate the costs associated with installing low voltage systems like fire alarms, access control, intercom, and paging in commercial buildings. Experience in reading specs and prints and related field experience would be helpful in this office position. Competitive wage and benefit package. Cox Systems Technology (405) 235-2525 Customer Help Tech ASE certification preferred! 5 yrs automotive exp. req. Customer Service A +. Assisting customers with installation/technical issues. Excellent visualization capability. Temp-to-Hire 35K+ DOE Submit resume to whrg@ wegenergroup.com Wegener Group Diesel Truck Mechanic $25/flag hour + Paid Vacation, Holidays & Health Insurance. Some Saturdays. Own tools req'd. 5 yrs recent exp. req'd. Call 405-684-2273. DRYWALL HANGERS & METAL STUD FRAMERS Now hiring for new 52 story tower downtown. Must have tools & commercial experience. $13-$17*** APPLY IN PERSON TO: Marek Brothers Systems 1522 W. Main OKC, OK. 73106 214-869-6834 Electrical Journeyman Needed. 2 yrs exp. in commercial. Email ccwelectric1@ yahoo.com or call for appt. 255-9439. ELECTRICIANS State test prep course. Begins October 19th. Will hire. Contact Judge Porter. 1-888-293-2842 www.portertestprep.com Experienced Frame Carpenters needed. Minumum 3years experience. Must have hand tools & a transportation. Call 410-5042 FRAMERS NEEDED for residential and commercial work. Must have own transportation. Call 306-0435.

»»»»»»»»»»»» It may be COOLING OFF BUT our Business is HOT! Assemblers & Sheet Metal Workers start @ $10.50/hr Electrical Assemblers (wiring, reading schematics) start @ $12.00/hr Brazers start @ $11.00/hr Welders Start @ $13.00/hr 1st & 2nd shift positions ($1.00/hr differential for 2nd shift) Great benefits, including Medical, Dental, Vision, Disability, Life and 401(k). Must be able to read a tape measure. Welders must pass MIG weld test. Brazers must pass a brazing test. Physical, drug and background screen required. Apply in person Mon – Thurs. 9am- 4pm 4841 N. Sewell, OKC GOVERNAIR, LLC We are cool! (our plant has A/C) »»»»»»»»»»»» JOURNEYMAN PLUMBER NO Sundays • NO 24 Hrs Vac, insurance, IRA. 308 W Britton Rd. 73114 john@crazyplumbers.com LAB/TECH Lab & Field Tech for geotechnical engineering firm. Exp preferred but will train right candidate. Excellent benefits. Must have clean background & driving record. Apply in person @ METCO, 2025 S. Nicklas Ave, Ste 101. 681-6737 Looking to hire

Diesel Mechanic

Must have exp with various types of semi trucks and equipment. Min of 5 yrs exp. Must be self motivated. DL with good driving record. Great pay & benefits. Horizontal Well Drillers, 2915 SH 74S, Purcell, OK 73080. 405-527-1232 Machine Maintenance Diagnose mechanical problems & Inspect, operate, & test machinery & equipment in order to repair malfunctions (Pitney Bowes Mail Inserting Machines). Clear Background & Drug Test. $15/hr Submit Resume to Whrg@ wegenergroup.com Wegener Group

Maintenance Technician

for manufacturing company in El Reno. The successful candidate must have prior experience in plumbing, electrical, pneumatics, hydraulics & welding in a manufacturing environment. We offer a competitive salary and benefits package. Must fill out application on site: Dexter Axle 500 SE 27th El Reno, OK 73036 EOE

NOW HIRING

Licensed HVAC Journeyman or Registered Apprentice Installers with Experience in Residential New Construction! Offering $1,000 dollar sign on bonus to Licensed HVAC Journeyman and $500 dollar sign on bonus to Registered Apprentice Installers with 1-2 years of experience, along with excellent benefits and a chance to become part of a growing business in Oklahoma City. Please contact Doug Blaylock at 405.200.3836 or email a resume to www.directyourenergy.com to learn more about this great career opportunity. Oklahoma City University Facilities Dept. seeks HVAC Journeyman (2) & Licensed Plumber (1) Apply Online www.okcu.edu EOE. Pioneer Directional Drilling Looking for Experienced Directional Drillers & MWD Consultants Apply online at www.pioneerdirectional drilling.com or fax resume to 405-789-1718. More info 405-789-1717.

Reefer Mechanic

Need hard-working, selfmotivated professional with own tools who is capable of end to end reefer unit diagnostics, maintenance and repair, with at least 3 yrs prior experience. Competitive salary plus benefits avail. 4 day workweek, Thurs-Sun. Qualified candidates send resume & salary requirements to mdavenport@freymiller.com or call Tom at 717-7218. EOE. Promoting drug-free environment. Residential Glazier Residential Glass Installer needed. Must be proficient at measuring & installing all types of residential glass. Top pay & benefits for qualified person. Must pass drug test. Only experienced need apply. 232 W Britton Road. Skilled Trades Mechanical Engineer Mechanical Assembly Diesel Mechanics Tig Welder Yard Person/Loaders Building Maintenance Receiver/ Warehouse Tools required for some positions. Submit Resume to Whrg@ wegenergroup.com Wegener Group

Bus Drivers Needed at Western Heights Schools. Good pay with great benefits. Apply at 8401 SW 44th or call 261-6753.

House Painters ALARM TECHS

With competitive pay DOE. w/paid holidays & vac., co. vehicle, cell & laptop. OK license required. Email resume to okalarmtechs@yahoo.com or call 405-586-0287.

needed with experience. Call 921-9567 between 8 AM-3 PM.

• Hydraulic Mechanic with experience. • General Laborer Please apply in person at 2508 S Purdue Ave OKC, OK 73128

CDL Class A Drivers Flat or step deck exp req. Oilfield experience a plus. Vacation, insurance compensation, plus bonuses available. Call 405-478-1105 to start your application.

CDL DRIVER'S WANTED

Local Delivery Driver Class A or B CDL drivers needed immediately. Delivering building materials around the local metro area. Apply at: A&D Supply 801 South Agnew OKC, OK 73108 Class A Drivers needed Casual, 1-4 days/wk for small trucking co. 3 yrs exp. Clean MVR. Retirees welcome. 405-787-8228 eoe Delivery Driver needed in OKC area. Please send resumes to: cody.miller10 @okstate.edu. Driver Frac Tech Services's LLC is currently taking applications for over the road team drivers. 2yrs. over the road experience preferred and must possess a class A CDL with hazmat and tanker endorsements. Five days on, two off, home weekends. Great pay (hourly), benefits, 401K and weekly meal allowance. Clean MVR and references a must. Applications may be picked up at 2500 Hwy 62 W., Chickasha, OK or online @ www.fractechservices. net Joe Ramirez 405-320-3879 Experienced Teams or Drivers willing to Team. $2000+ per week. STI 501-733-1044 FUEL HAULERS We are a local fuel delivery company looking for professional part and full time drivers in the Oklahoma City, Wynnewood & Lawton area. Requirements are a Class A CDL with Tanker and Hazmat endorsements. You must be at least 25 years old with a clean driving record and have 2 years tractor trailer experience. 6 months experience pulling a fuel tanker preferred. Check out the following benefits you can have: ß $70,000 plus a year ß 4 or 5-day work week (12-hour days) ß Health care program ß 401K with 50% match ß Great equipment ß Uniforms ß Bonus incentives ß Sick pay ß Vacation pay ß Opportunity for advancement To apply, please call 405-512-6817 M-F, 10AM-3PM


Send resume or apply in person: LarrySims@Great WhiteEnergy.com 3901 Valley Park Dr. El Reno, OK EOE / Drug Free workplace

McCorkle Truck Line, Inc. **Regional pneumatic work** Assigned trucks, benefits, and Sign on bonus! Apply at 2132 SE 18th St. OKC or call 800-727-2855 Mid State Wholesale Lumber seeking Class A Driver with Flatbed experience. Apply at 101 SE 4th, OKC. 232-7088 Need Independent Contractor with cargo van. Must have good MVR & clean background. $225/day. START IMMEDIATELY. Call 405-412-0841. »»»»»»»»»»»» Night Route Delivery in our 24' truck. Call Monday - Friday, 9-3 405-850-0197 The Salvation Army is seeking 3 Seasonal Christmas Drivers for the Norman area, 11/9-12/24. Drivers will transport Bell Ringers & Kettles. Current DL & good driving record req'd. CDL not req'd. Must pass background chk & drug test. Apply M-F 10am-3pm at 311 SW 5th, OKC or 318 E. Hayes, Norman. EOE The Salvation Army is seeking 8 Seasonal Christmas Drivers, 11/7-12/24. Drivers will transport Bell Ringers & Kettles. Current DL & good driving record req'd. CDL not req'd. Must pass background chk & drug test. Apply M-F 10am-3pm, 311 SW 5th, OKC 73109. EOE

Waste Connections in Oklahoma City is now hiring and offering a sign on Bonus up to $2000 for a Safe and Professional CDL refuse route driver to join our team! Must have: » valid CDL license » satisfactory driving record. » ability to pass a criminal background check and drug screen We offer: » Steady Monday thru Friday work with occasional Saturday hours. » Great Medical, Dental and Vision Benefits! » Competitive pay and Over Time!! » Family friendly environment » Apply online www. wasteconnections.com Waste Connections is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F/D/V)

Fully Renovated Home 6821 NW 22nd St 3bed, 1.5ba 1112 sqft $102,500 ourbethanyhome.com 474-7212 MUST SEE!

Truck Drivers Wanted Nabors Well Services Co. is seeking CLASS A CDL TRUCK DRIVERS throughout Oklahoma. Must have Class A CDL with tank endorsements and clean driving record. Haz Mat endorsement preferred. Comp. salary and benefits, incl.: Health/Dental/Life/Paid Vac. and 401k. $2,500 Relo Bonus is available. The Oil and Gas industry is the place to be! Come for the JOB. Stay for the CAREER! Elk City, OK (580) 225-7415 El Reno, OK (405) 262-6262 Woodward, OK (580) 256-3353 Countyline, OK (580) 444-3302 Sweetwater,OK (580) 534-2210 Clinton, OK (580) 444-3302 Guymon, OK (580) 338-7777 EEO/M/F/D/V Van Eaton Ready Mix NOW HIRING Mixer Drivers in Edmond, Norman & Shawnee Class A or B 35hrs/wk Guaranteed Clean MVR, 2 years Driving Experience 214-7450 Shawnee 844-2900 Edmond 912-4825 Norman EOE Working Truck Driver CDL, Assist in loading. OSBI check. Local-5 days a week. Pd holidays Fax: 405-344-6800 or email sarush0215@pldi.net

4/2.5/3, waterfront, pool playground, 2140 sf, $227,500, lease purchase w/$10,000 dwn; 514-3800

3 Owner carry properties: 417-2176 www.homesofokcinc.com

Bank Owned brick 3/2.5/2 1711sf, enclosed patio, pool $79.9K Rlty Exp 414-8753

Extra Sharp 2bd Home w/1car garage, tastefully decorated, ch/a, park like O acre lot, nice area, only $93,900! Fidelity RE 410-4200, 410-4200 Bank Owned 5/3.5/2, 3 liv 3235sf, blt 96. Updated! $217.9K Rlty Exp 414-8753

TENKILLER LAKE, new 3bd 3ba log siding beautiful home. Gated entry, 1 mile to Pine Cove Marina, sell house & 38 ac. for $395,000 or house & 1K ac. $265,000. Great Investment Property. Owner, 918-640-8556 1N to 10A, E. of OKC, pay out dn. before 1st pmt. starts, many are M/H ready over 400 choices, lg trees, some with ponds, TERMS Milburn o/a 275-1695 paulmilburnacreages.com PIEDMONT OPEN SAT 2-4 & SUN 2-5 Model home. New hms on 1/2 ac lots. From NW Expwy & Sara Rd go 4.5 mi N. Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494 Prime Edmond-Covell Rd 7 Acres $167,250 4 Acres $105,250 1 Acre $49,500 Express Realty 844-6101 Call for Maps! See why we sell more acreages than anyone in Okla. E of OKC. o/a 275-1695

Riverbend Addn., Lakefront with pool, 3 or 4 bed, 3.5 bath $349,900 6804 GreenMeadow Ln 722-6598 or 417-5178 DEER CREEK Schls 3bd+office 2 din approx 1850' $158,000. Marian 850-7654, Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494 Owner carry 4621 NW 33 Terr Windsor Hills Renov 4/2.5/2, 2582 Ft 417-2176 www.homesofokcinc.com ARBORS townhouse w/lakeview 3bd 2ba Must see at $129,900 Marian 850-7654 Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494

Abandoned D/W set up on 1-5 Acres. Several to choose from. Ready to move in. 405-631-7600

3 bd 2 ba approx 1912' Must see at $153,000 Marian 850-7654 Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494

Over 100 Repos on Land or 0 down w/your Land! WAC 866-764-3200,405-631-3200 Solitaire, 76x18, 3 bed, 1.5 bath ¡ Only 3 yrs old, in Choctaw $24,000 769-2886

Church in shopping center 5400 sf, 9130 N MacArthur $1490 525-6671

In Geary, OK on 281. Handyman Special 2-3 bd house & 10x50 Mbl Hm for Bid. ¡¡ 580-496-2361

PIEDMONT OPEN SAT 2-4 & SUN 2-5 Model home. New hms on 1/2 ac lots. From NW Expwy & Sara Rd go 4.5 mi N. Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494

Hunting Property

336.0

HUNTING HUNTING 40A Caddo Co. $40,000 40A Caddo Co $60,000 160A Caddo Co $200,000 320A Caddo Co $384,000 320A Kiowa Co, mountain & valley. Scenic $480,000 320A KingfisherCo$480,000 HUNTING LAND LEASE 40A Caddo Co $500 160A Tillman Co $2000 Tumbleweed Terr. RE John McElroy 580-569-4213 HUNTING/RANCH LAND 450 acres on year round live water creek N.of Gage, OK. Deer, turkey and quail habitat w/all weather road access. 918-368-2547 305 Acres Hunting Sallisaw, Excellent Hunting Several Deer stands, Deer and Turkey, $345,000. 918-453-1111

Bank Owned 3/2/2 2035sf +encl patio, crn lot, PC Sch $124.9k Rlty Exp 414-8753

5824 S. Shartel Avenue Sharp 2bd, 1ba, 1car Seller pays closing. $43,500 ¡ 550-2145

HORSE READY on 2.6 ac mol 4bd 3ba $199,000 5 ACS mol w/stocked pond 3bd 1.5 ba 2 liv $159,000 1 AC mol 3bd+office approx 3100' $319,900 Marian 850-7654 Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494 1.1 AC mol 4bd 2.5ba near schl approx 2400' $250,000 Marian 850-7654 Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494

BANK ON IT!

800 N. Meridian 1bd All bills paid 946-9506

1bd 1ba $350mo, stove, fridge, very clean 818-4089

$99 Move In Special 1 & 2bds, carports, coin lndry $345-445 470-3535

Or...$5000 towards a New Home. 9 Communities in NW, SW, SE (Moore), MWC, Choctaw...Offer Expires 7-31. Call for details 405.326.5728

$5000 Towards Your New Home! You Pick the Home, You Pick the Lot! 9 MH Communities in SW/NW/SE (Moore) MWC/Choctaw. Call for Details 405.326.5728 Special Govt Program Own Land/Family Land ZERO Dn! Instant Rebates up to $10,000 use toward furniture, lower price, improvements. E-Z app by phone WAC 405-631-7600 Buyer Lost Financing New 4 Bed on 2.25 acres Ready to move in! FHA & VA Approved www.midstatehousing.com 405.527.5669 Repos! 3, 4, 5 bedroom available. Move to your land ZERO DOWN!! Huge Discounts. Free phone app. WAC 405-631-7600

TOP LOCATION! Pd. wtr/garb. Near malls. Try Plaza East 341-4813

$200 OFF RENT 1 & 2 bedrooms. Spring Tree Apartments. 405-737-8172.

»»»»»»»»»»»»» » Bills Paid 681-7561 » » 1 bd From $550 Move» » 2 bd From $650 In» » 3 bd From $740 Today» » Call for Special » »»»»»»»»»»»» $99 SPECIAL Lg 1bdr, stove, refrig., clean, walk to shops. $345 mo. 632-9849 Furnished/Unfurnished Bills Paid » Wkly/Monthly Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest 370-1077 $99 Move In Special!!! Lg 1 and 2 Bdr, $345 to $420 mo. 632-9849

Yukon Owner carry with down Nice homes and fixers James • 417-2176

$99 MOVE IN

Selected Units LARGE TOWNHOMES & APARTMENTS • Washer, Dryers, pools • PC Schools, fireplaces

WILLIAMSBURG 7301 NW 23rd

I BUY & SELL HOUSES 27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

Commercial RE Established Business For Sale Convenience Store w/gas $30,000 + inventory. Call 405-410-2322/405-921-5625

$100 lot rent for 6 months. Move Your Mobile Home FREE!

MAYFAIR Great location! 1/2 bd W/D hdwd flr quiet secure ngbrhood ¡947-5665

2bd $550 Casady 751-8088

Rent to Own: Nice 2&3bd MWC $350&up 390-9777

ABSOLUTE AUCTION ¡ COMMERCIAL ¡ ¡ DEVELOPMENT ¡ ¡ BUILDING SITE ¡ 16.234+/- ACRES OKC ~ EDMOND AREA NO MINIMUMS ON TRACT #2 MON. OCT. 24th 10 AM Rockwell & 150th St Edmond, OK More info 866-874-7100 LippardAuctions.com

Industrial Property For Rent INDUSTRIAL FACILITY FOR LEASE 201 ARLINGTON DR. YUKON, OK 15,000 Sq. Ft. w/6 offices. 5 ton Gaffey Crane and Electrical Package. Excellent Location. Near 66 Hwy. and Turnpike. $5,000 / Mo. net. net. net. 405-820-9286

Office Space For Rent GREAT Office Space Various NW locations 300-6000sf 946-2516

Warehouse Space For Rent 6000sf Warehouse Ofcs 13919 N. Harvey Ave Oklahoma City,OK 73114

Houses for rent

Oakwood Apt 5824 NW 34 1bed 1ba 800sf $315/mo $175dp 409-7989 no sec 8

1984 3 bd, 2 ba, 16x80 1 Owner, includes appls $8000 Call 405-503-1707

Bank Owned 3/2/2 PC Sch brick, 1673sf, .83 acre, $49.9KRlty Exprts 414-8753

2 or 3bd House E of Harrah 2K A, small barn. TERMS Milburn o/a 275-1695

» » » » »

HOME WEEKENDS Growing Co. needs Class A CDL w/Tanker ASAP. HAZ a plus. Good pay /benefits. 405-670-2030

Nice 1650' 3/2/2 brk. Gas FP, ch/a Strm shltr Patio. deck Recent updates. Appt only. Norma 464-6316

Bank Owned brick 3/1.5/1 shop area, lg yard, 1499sf $59.9KRlty Exprts 414-8753

>>

McCorkle Truck Line, Inc. **Regional pneumatic work** Assigned trucks, benefits, and Sign on bonus! Apply at 2132 SE 18th St. OKC or call 800-727-2855

TRUCK DRIVER

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Wanted: Delivery Drivers to move equipment from location to location and to the yard in the El Reno area. Pre & post trip equipment. Most are local equipment delivery and pickups. Requirements: Class A CDL, Hazmat and Tanker endorsement preferred & a clean driving history. 40 hours a week. Full benefits: Company matched 401k at 6%, Paid Medical, Dental & Life. Paid Personal time Off, 10 paid holidays.

309.9

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Local CDL Drivers Needed

>>

Homes For Sale

787-1620 $99 Special

1 & 2 BD & Townhouses •City bus route/Shopping •Washer/Dryer hookups

Valencia Apts 2221 N. Meridian

946-6548

Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th 3bd/3ba/2car, ch&a $750mo, $600dep 3508 Leonhardt Dr 414-5530 4100 Kim Dr. 3 BR, 1.5 BA, ch&a, gar, lrg yard, no pets. $725+dep 672-8996

924 Fox Ridge 4/3.5/3$2395 2805VeronaWy2/2.5/2$2495 2075RaineysBlvd4/2/3$1895 14509 Wicklow 4/3/3 $1695 1929 Chaparral 3/2/2 $1795 2315 Blue Jay 3/2/2 $1295 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com 8632 NW 111 3/2/2 $1995 12304WalnutCrk3/2/2 $995 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com 3 bed, 2 bath, 2-story, near I-35. $850mo, $850dep. Call 919-6678

3/2/1, yr lease, kitchen appls, fenced, avail now, $750+, 454-2314/664-3751.

438

»»»»»»»»»»»»» » Bills Paid 354-5855 » » 1 bd From $550 Move» » 2 bd From $650 In» » 3 bd From $740 Today» » Call for Specials » »»»»»»»»»»»»

Condominiums, Townhouses For Rent 441 Thousand Oaks Unit 336 (1 blk W of Council on NW 10th) Extra sharp 1bd condo, washer, dryer, fridge, stove. Tenant pays elect only, $500. Fidelity RE 410-4300, 692-1661

Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th

13305 Green Valley Dr Executive Home 4bd 3ba 2car, Edmond Schls, 2500sf Granite Counters, Covered Patio & more $1550mo $1550dep 409-7989 Move-in Special 3227 Castlerock Rd $875mo, $800dep, 2/2/2 appl, FP, close to Quail Sprgs Mall 405-474-9805 701 NW 111 3bd 2ba 2car Sec 8 ok $695 RedbudRealEstate.com or 748-8520 K Off Special 904 NW 109 3bd 2bath 2car 1200sf $875/mo $800dp 409-7989 no sec 8 House for lease, 7700 NW 101st, Northaven Addn, $975/mo 721-3657 »» SECTION 8 OK»» 3 bed, 1149 NW 81st, $795 per mo, 942-3552 4141 NW 28 3b 1ba $700 RedbudRealEstate.com or 748-8520 900 and 908 N. Gardner 3bd, 1.75 baths, fireplace $550/mo 408-5836 3/2/1 fresh remodel. PC Schls. $1200mo. Alice Fitz, Paradigm 503-5755

9701 NE 2nd Pl. 3bd, 2ba, 2car $650mo, $500dep ch&a, quiet area 413-6204

3/1 $715; 4/1 $800; sec 8 okay; non smoke/pets; 440-2858

9321 NE 13 Pl, 4bd, 1.75baths w/den 1car garage $795/mo 408-5836

3bd, 1ba, ch&a, No Sec 8, no pets, $650mo + $400 dep, 789-4525, lv msg.

1016 Willowbrook 3bd 1.5 baths w/den $750/mo 408-5836

4 bed, 2 bath, 225 NW 84th, $850 month, $900 deposit, 405-537-0950.

$595 2bd 1ba, very clean, stove, fridge 818-4089 206 W Jacobs 3 bd 1 ba $600 • 732-3411

$200 OFF

4 Bd, 2 K BA, CH & Air, 2 living, formal dining, Lg kit w/ dining, util rm, study, 3 car gar, 2850 sq feet $1500/mo + $1200 16104 HIMALAYA RIDGE 340-8416

»» SECTION 8 OK»» 3bd, 1149 NW 81st 942-3552

Washer/Dryers, Fireplaces PC Schools-Townhouses

PARKLANE

8108 N. MacArthur Blvd. »»» 721-5455 »»» Walford Apts-Midtown518 NW 12 large 1bd 1ba 1100sf $900mo $800dep washer/dryer hookup. Studio 600sf $650mo $400 dep. Basement efficiency $425mo $325dp 409-7989 »» ALL BILLS PAID »» $189 FIRST MONTH ALL FLOORPLANS No hidden charges 293-3693 DREXEL ON THE PARK

4617 NW 19th, 2bd, 1O ba, large kitchen, private patio, $700/mo+utilities, non smoking, no pets, no sect 8. 942-0724 » 6448 W Hefner-Ski Isld Lux Dupl 1800sf 3/2.5/2 FP, fans, appls, deck, balc. exc cond $995 ¡ 721-1831 Nice lrg 2 bed, liv, 2 din, stove, refrig, h/w flrs, upstairs, 1823 Gatewood Ave. $550 301-5979

HOUSE FOR RENT Everything furnished, Kitchenware, Bed Linens, By the day, Week or Month. 414-1464. 3 Bedrooms. corporatehousing oklahoma.com Reasonable Rates.

Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th

1049 NW 22nd Sharp 3bd home, 2ba 2car ch/a fresh paint, clean $750. Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661

319 SE 60TH 2bd 1 bath $475 a month 408-5836

220 S. Norman, 3 bd, 1 bath, 1 car garage, $695/mo 408-5836

2621 NW 50th 2bd 2ba 1car 1200sf, $950, $800 dep, no Sec 8 409-7989 $79 SPECIAL!! Newly remodeled 1 2 & 3 beds Putnam Green 405-721-2210

1814 N Drexel ch&a 2bd $550. Gar apt. $400 2611K NW 11 314-9511

Plaza 1740 NW 17 K Off Special! 1bd 1bath 800sf $550mo $250/deposit 409-7989

Large 1bd 2609 N Dewey $425 +gas/elec 232-9101

Florence Apt-429 NW 11 Midtown Studio 600sf 1bd 1bath free Laundry $675mo $400dep409-7989

Duplexes, 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car, some new, some gated, call Rick, 405-830-3789.

Briargate Apts 1bd 1ba K Off Special, 850sf, wood flrs, elec only $550mo $300 dep, 409-7989 No Sec 8 FIRST MONTH $159 Your choice 1,2,3 bed PC Schools, N Rockwell The Belmont 455-8150 Furnished/Unfurnished Bills Paid » Wkly/Monthly Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest 370-1077

Gas Pd Nice Efficiency $360 1608 NW 16th 232-9101

Furnished/Unfurnished Bills Paid » Wkly/Monthly Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest 370-1077

1020 Clover Ln 1200sf 3bed 2ba $850 mo, $700 dep 409-7989 no sec 8 3bed 1bath $775mo $600dep 1231 NE 37th, »» 615-4938 »» 4810 Casper 3 bd 1 ba 1 car $600 732-3411 2212 NE 26 2 bd 1 ba 1 car $600 732-3411

3bd, 2ba, 2car, $750 No Section 8, No Pets Giles Enterprises 670-4833

Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th 1138 SW 77 Ter Sharp 3bd 2ba ch/a fireplace, fresh paint, clean $650 Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661 House for Rent SW-OKC Large 4+bed/2bath/2car $1,395/mo +Dep 405-312-5819 4 bed, 2 bath, 1c gar, sec 8 ok, newly remodeled, 2221 SW 23, $650+$600 dep. no pets, 412-4566 2936 SW 48 Remodeled, beautiful 3bd 1ba 1car 1100sf $675 mo, $600 dep. 409-7989 no section 8 Very nice redone 3bd 1ba ch&a, fenced yard, no pets, Sec. 8 ok. 680-9299 609 SW 45th spacious 3bd 2ba, nice area, $575 Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661



3315 1/2 SW 28th 2bd apt all bills pd $595/mo 408-5836 920 SW 48 3bd 1bath $550/month 408-5836 2741 SW 30 2bd 1 bath $395/month 408-5836

For rent/sale, McLoud, 3 bd, 2 ba, MH, 12 acres, $900/mo, 414-4004.

3bd, 1ba, 10 min S. of Blanchard $700mo w/ opt to buy. 925-229-1742

1229 Sumac, 2000+ sf executive home, 3bd 2ba 2 living, 2 car, on nicely landscaped cul-de-sac lot, $1350 mo Fidelity RE 410-4200, 692-1661

3/2/2 409 Conestoga Dr no pets, $925/mo plus $925 dep. 203-9121

3 bd, 1O ba, w/appls incl. W&D, Edmd Schls, storage shed. No pets. 348-6240 or 623-1181

AUCTION Sat. Oct 15th, 10:00 AM, 1208 N Clear Springs Road, Mustang, OK 2002 Ford Expedition, 2005 Suzuki 800cc street bike, Suzuki dirt bike, John Deere riding mower, hunting equipment, Hilti 200 core drill, pressure washer, Norton concrete saw, lots of other tools and household. For more info kencarpenterauction.com 405-620-1524

PUBLIC AUCTION

118a. Blaine County Recreational Land Canton Lake area SAT, OCT. 15TH, 10AM Sellers Leo C. Kopf & Clydene C. Kopf Auctioneers/Real Estate Brokers/MSA Jerry Evans & Assoc. 580-886-3494 www.evanslandauctions.com

>>

COIN AUCTION Sun Oct 16 2:30pm Embassy Suites Hotel 1815 S Meridian www.branchauction.com 405-627-3920 10% BP.

STUFF

Rent to Own: Nice 2&3bd MWC $350&up 390-9777

AUCTION SAT OCT 15 » 10AM SE 129TH & DOBBS RD (follow signs from SE 119 & Harrah Newalla) Lots of const. tools; saws, nailers, sanders compressors, tool boxes etc. Trucks, trailers, mowers, boats, camping eq. Restaurant eq: grills, freezers, walk in cooler, serving acces. Comm'l smoker on trailer, very nice many accessories. MANY MORE ITEMS. Barry Young 641-5670 Charlie Wise 601-3448

SPECIAL BUYS

Sheet Metal Sale: 29 & 26 guage. Galvanized & galvalume. Starts at 1.65 Prehung Ext Doors: Only $69.00 Deadbolt Combo Sets only $15.95 B&B Fix It Warehouse Located Downtown Just 7 blks South of the Ford Center! Call Vickie 405-232-3578

FREE DELIVERY OKC! Washer $125 Dryer $125 Refrigerators $175 Warranty & Free Del. Call 405-210-2230. Daryl's Appliance: W&D $75 & up, limited supply! 5yr warr. Refr/Stoves $125 & up , 1yr warr 405-632-8954 Washer & Dryer, Extra Large Cap., Exc Cond. $180 »»» 248-4070 W or D $65 up, sets $150 up, stove/fridge $100 up, 3436 SW 29th 549-7004 Washer, Dryer, Frig, & Freezer $100ea. Can Del. 820-8727 or 216-8318 Cash paid for appliancesworking or not. 732-8503

¡ Laminate Flooring 2100 sf, 25 yr warranty, 95¢/sf ¡ Prefinished oak, Hardwood, 2400 sf 30 year warranty $2/sf ¡¡ 405-632-0499 ¡¡ •Solid Brazilian Cherry• • Hardwood Flooring • (2600sf) Beautiful, never used $2.50/sf 632-0499 InfraRed Tube Heaters, NG/LP, $1000-$3000 Steve, 405-823-2917 Blue Hackett flag stone, approx 700 square feet, $2100, 830-3115. Sheet Metal, 3'x10', $18, Mon-Sat. 405-390-2077. Special on Trim!

Rest equip-100s -chairs, tables, refrig, grills, fryers, hoods. 417-5310. (2) 50lb coin operated washers, $1,500 390-3116 ‘ We Buy & Sell Used ‘ ‘ Restaurant Equip. ‘ Great Prices!¡760-8132

Highest CASH paid for old coin collections silver dollars & gold 620-7375

Handicap lowered floor Van, loaded VMI Conversion, 1999 Chrysler T&C LX, low miles $14,900 obo Must Sell 642-7080 Jet Elec Mobility Chair, late model, Clean, Works Good $425 753-4928

OKLAHOMA CITY PHILHARMONIC SEASON TICKETS ''POPS'' Orchestra Center, Row L, seat 107,108 » $1150 805-720-7556 » Dr. Purdy OU/ TEXAS I need 1 pair, will pay $500 405-329-4726 TEXAS TICKETS FOR SALE! 405-360-4150

Diamd ring, 1kt. appraised @ $3000, asking $1800 obo; Old oak desk $250 obo 605-9300 or 328-1103

TEXAS TICKETS WANTED. 360-4355

5x8 ut $795•12'x77 $905 16'ut $1300•18'car h$1895 J&J Trailers 405-682-2205 310D Backhoe Extend-ahoe with cab, 3 buckets, $24,000, 405-361-1682

Dixie Chopper 60'' cut, 5 yrs, personal use only, 525 hrs, $6100, 620-1881

5x8 ut $775•12'x77 $860 16'ut $1300•18'car h$1895 J&J Trailers 405-682-2205 Hvy Duty 20' w15'' sides. Fair tires in bed, $1950 obo 405-386-2515

2002 NH TC 45hp, 4wd tracter w/ loader, hydro trans, 1,784 hours, good condition.

Central New Holland OKC 495-6151 Edmond 341-7829 800-256-1638

2008 Kubota L3400, 4wd Tractor w/ loader, 34hp, hydro-trans, 350 hours, exc condition.

Central New Holland OKC 495-6151 Edmond 341-7829 800-256-1638

10ft Tye, No-till, Stubble drill w/ small seed box, new D.D. $10,500; Int'l Harvester 5100 Grain Drill w/ press wheels $1100 ¡¡¡ 405-250-7061 8N Ford Tractor runs great, looks Sharp! new tires, Guthrie, $2300, 405-513-3290

2 Tanaka gasoline drills $200 each; Stihl gasoline drill $350; Huge gasoline air compressor with Honda motor $450; Troy Bilt Pony roto tiller with Briggs motor $450; Huge trapping cage with door $60; 100 year old Pague 2-baby stroller, mint cond, $150; 405-2059950 or 405-203-4210. AMMCO Rotor Lathe, $2600. Hoffman Drum-Rotor Lathe $2800. Hunter Tire Changer, new $5400. asking $2,800, Coats Computer Balancer $1500. 405-210-7122 or 405-226-9404 Baldor 10'' Industrial Grinder, new-never used, $1400 new, asking $800 obo Call 580-284-8141 for details InfraRed Tube Heaters, NG/LP, $1000-$3000 Steve, 405-823-2917 10" brick saw, good condition, $100obo 826-6192 InfraRed Tube Heaters, NG/LP, $1000-$3000 Steve, 405-823-2917

WOODS UNLIMITED PU $60 • DELIVERY $85 (405) 664-7835 996-6352 Englander Wood burning FP, chimney, hearth pad, never used $800, 265-2455 Oak Firewood Delivered and stacked 405-596-0348

MOVING: Dining Room Table & Chairs $900; Buffet $900; Glass/ Metal/Wood End Tables $300-$500 405-664-8003 Sofa & loveseat $350,. Coffee & end table & 2 lamps $180. Refrig w/ice maker $125 843-5552 QUEEN PILLOW-TOP MATTRESS Must Sell! Unused, Still in plastic! $175 ¡‘¡ 405-620-1913 Burgundy sleeper sofa, 74"x34" approx, good cond, $250. 405-205-6693 WILL BUY 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFULL!! CALL TODAY 236-3811

Propane Tanks Rebuilt, Warranty, 500 gal $515, Others available. 405-375-4189 www.blttanks.com BLUE PLUSH CARPET exc cond 73sq yards $195 205-2067

BUYING ALL OU

Home Games & Sections: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, & 31, 32.

PAYING TOP DOLLAR!!! 405-364-7524 All Sports & Concerts

» Local & Nationwide»

405-295-2222

www.totallytickets.com

3-wheel mobility scooter $400; Electric wheelchair $300; Lift scooter/ wheelchair inside vehicle $275 » 488-7017 »

5x8, 5x10, 6x12, w/gates; like new 16 foot tandem; $650-$1050 Cash,670-1850

>>

1119 Park Manor 3 bed, 2 full & 3 half baths, 2car, office, wd flrs, $1650mo, $1500dp TMS Prop348-0720

ESTATE AUCTION SAT OCT 15, 9:30AM 1808 N Minnesota, in Shawnee. New & Antique furn, Depression & Carnival glass, household dishes & glassware, pots, pans, sml kitchen appls. mink stole, 52'' TV, costume jewelry, assorted antique pewter & glassware, clown collection, hand tools & much more. See pics & partial list at: www.d-dauctions.com 990-8802 275-1694

SOONERS & COWBOYS FOOTBALL TICKETS From upper end zones to hot yard lines & everything in between All home games call for pricing. 305-370-2033

14X5 stock trailer, tandem axle, enclosed top, good floor, tires & axles & solid frame, needs paint & tail light repair, $1500 obo, 405-354-7689 CHAROLAIS BULLS 1 & 2 year olds, gentle, 903-814-5008/580-657-3888

AIREDALE PUPPIES, AKC, 7 WKS, POP $275 (580)233-4835/977-9782 Anatolian Shepherd, 2F, 1M, 6 wks, rare snow white, $100. 702-8021 » AUSSIE's » All Colors, Mini & Toy's $100-$300 405-650-4671 Aust. Shep, AKC, Show Quality & working drive. Merles, $600-$800. Call or text 405-397-7687 Australian Shepherd Mixed Dog 5 years old great for older couple Free to good home call 405-313-1887

ANIMALS

3bd 1.5ba 2car, 2216 SW 77th St. close to I35 & I240, $850 mo 221-3193

Ocicats and Bengals 10-11 wks spotted kittens1f 4m Tica reg s/w www.myspottedcats. com 400.00-600.00 405570-2867

Australian Shepherd 11 weeks old 4 male tris $150-$300. 405-642-5472

Siamese kittens, reg., blue/seal, POP, 8wks, $250 ’’’ 405-632-7585

Sphynx hairless kitten 12 weeks old $ 900 call or text 405-343-6055 FREE Part Siamese Female Kittens, 10 weeks, 405-627-9893 Sweet 4-6mo kittens; 1-2 yr old cats, S/N, tested neg, had all shots $50 722-9622

HERD DISPERSAL: 100 LH/Cor X cows. 56 angus char x calves. 3 char X bulls. 1 Reg angus bull. HAY: 147 4x5 bales. 32 3x4x8 Alfalfa bales. COMPLETE PKG $95,000 (405) 598-8627 370-9658

English Bulldog Puppies AKC,vet che'd healthy!, CH lines, $800-$1200 www.burtonbullies.com, 918-696-0726

German Shepherd, AKC Pups, imported lines, solid black, $450, 405408-8968, or view at doublebarbranch.com

Boxer Pups, AKC, 2M 2F black. $300ea. 918-623-6612

English Bulldogs, AKC vet chk, 1st shots, 7wks, 1M, 3F. $1000-$1200 405-324-0906

GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC Puppies. $300. WILL BE LARGE, Parents On Premises, Pedigree provided. 405-285-5875

English Bulldogs AKC,8wks,3F,1M,, vetchkd,shots, $1100. 405-568-6769

German Shepherd AKC $300-$500, lg black/tan/wht bandtcaninecorral.com 405-323-3211, 527-8888

English Bulldogs AKC, 2 Female, 11 weeks, POP $800 ¡ 405-740-3394

German Shepherd Born on 8-23-2011 AKC male. Parents on site $425. 405 556-0502

BOXER PUPS 12WK OLD TAILS/1ST SHOTS FAWN&BRINDLE $175. 314-7072 Boxer Pups m/f, shots, wrmd, $250-$300. 405598-3567 or 788-1743 Cairn Terrier AKC registered Black & Brwn Male Neutered Cairn Terrier & 1/2 Cairn 1/2 Jack-Rat Black & whte female. Shots up to date. $300. (405) 850-5658 Cairn Terrier, AKC, (Toto-Wizard of Oz) 1M, $200, 580-583-2696. Chihuahua ACA reg. S/W/DC will be small born 6-9-11 and 78-11 males and females $150. 405-837-0494 CHIHUAHUA puppies, 9 weeks old, 2F, 4M, full blood, wormed, $100 cash, 405-417-2956.

Chow Chow, AKC, black, red & blue, POP, shots, wormed, $500, 514-5590. Corgis, Reg, 2F, 3 yrs $200ea; for adoption 2 rd F, 1 tri M. 580-334-5292

Bassett Hound Pups ACA Reg, 6 weeks old $200 ¡ 580-541-2411

Dachshund, Mini, ACA, 2 M/5 F, S/W, Long & Short hair, silver dapple, red, blk/tan ¡ $120 ea. ¡ 580-330-0661 ¡

Beagle CKC Puppies Tri-color 3 males, 3 females. Parents trained hunters. Vet 1st shots. $450 918-642-3083 or 940-768-9155

Belgian Malinois Puppies Home Protection Dogs AKC, 9 weeks old, $400, (918) 630-8678 Bichon Frise, Awesome Breed! 6mo & 7mo Males $200ea; 1 AKC M, 1 yr $250 s/w, POP 214-7857 Bloodhound Puppy 5-MONTH OLD,FEMALE, CURRENT SHOTS,WITH HOUSE, BED, & TOYS. $400. 405-630-8133 Bloodhound/Lab mix, 6 weeks, M&F, $150, (405)527-6132/570-5302 Blue Heeler Puppies, 6wks, s/w, POP, $80each. 405-221-1986 Border Collies, 2M, 8 weeks old, brown & white, POP, pure bred, $100, 405-315-1468. BOSTON TERRIER pups. Reg. 1 blk & wht M $300, 1 red & wht F $450 580-614-1241 Boston Terrier 1F, 8 wks old, s&w, b&w, good markings $200. 580-222-6709

ENGLISH BULLDOGS Ch sired, 2M pups $900 & $1500 ¡ 405-570-4893 English Mastiff Puppies AKC GROPPETTI /TAMARACK Bloodlines! s/w POP $500 Call 405-388-1303 ENGLISH MASTIFF Puppies, AKC, 7 weeks, vet checked, 1st shots, POP $600. 405-795-7168 English Springer Spaniel AKC, 6wks, lvr/wht pups $400/$450. 405-209-6525

Chihuahuas, ACA 2 Males $100ea ¡ 627-0419 diamondlkennel.com ok#17

Basset Hound, UKC, beautiful, choc & wht, 5M, 1F, POP, will be ready 10/7, $300. 580-656-0867

PERSIAN, 9wks, 2 Calicos, B&W M $250; blk F 6mo $200 632-3257 angelcakeskittens@hotmail.com Ragdolls, unregistered pair w/flame male $250, others $75 each, 405-5271753 or 405-397-4218.

BOXER Puppies AKC Black Mask & Flashy Fawns available, s/w/t/ dc $300 Call/Text (405)473-6929

DACHSHUND, MINI 6wks on Oct 10th 3FML CKC Registered $200 each cash. 580-369-8161. Dachshund, Mini, 3F 2M, LH/SH, red, b&t, dapple $225-$275 • 527-7776 ketchadoxiekennel.com Dachshund, Mini, AKC, 6wks, 2F, 1 w/ blue eyes, 2M, $160-$225. 503-2920

French Bulldogs, AKC reg, 2F, 9-13 wks, 1M $10 mos, $550-$1050, 918-680-0199.

FRENCH BULLDOG

dog FEMALE, 3 mos., fawn with black muzzle. cash only, no exceptions. (OKC) $500. call anytime - (405) 642-7466 OR (405) 373-1150 French Bulldog AKC red/ tri/pied, M&F $700-$1,300 bandtcaninecorral.com (405)323-3211, 527-8888

Furr Babies

Shih tzu Home loved unusal markings/eye color . Mom & dad on premises $350.00 Nego After 5:00pm 405-606-8862

GERMAN SHEPHERD Puppies ACA M&F s&w POP $300 918-387-4216 Golden Retriever AKC puppies OFA hips/heart, CERF eyes, 4males 3females, ready 10/22,www. riverridgegoldens.com $800. 580-761-4164 Golden Retriever Pups adorable, full-blooded, 1 male and 3 females $200-$300. 250-8810 GREAT DANE, AKC reg, Big beautiful blk Puppies s/w, Vet checked • $250 405-606-9748/818-3560. Great Danes AKC 4M, 1F, $400-$800, merle, merlequin & harlequin, 9 weeks. s/w/dc Jennifer (405)637-5898 Great Pyrenees, 7 weeks M/F, S/W, working POP, $300, »» 405-537-1526 »»

LABS AKC White & Black: Papers, S/W DOB 8/2/11 Call for price (405)473-8374 Mal-Shih-ADORABLE! ITTY BITTY! $350 Visa/MC 405-826-4557 Maltese, 8wk F, Reg., Cute, Playful - Small $325 ¡ 580-334-5292 Maltese, Reg., 4M, 3 months, s/w, $400 405-313-8355 MALTESE, Reg F, 8 wks, Home raised, Little Clown! s/w $500 ’ 432-9971 MALTESE / SHIH TZU Adorable Bouncing Balls of Fur! ’ $175 ’ 432-9971 Malti-Tzu Puppy Home raised, 12 wks, 1F, white/brown/black, 1st shots and wormed. $175. 405-473-0372 Min Pin puppies, s/w/e/t, $150-$200, OK #04, 918-426-5181. MIN PIN PUPS, 1M 3F s/w/t/dc done $75ea (405)226-5444/627-5739 Morkies-Adorable, s/w, housebroken, $150-$250, 361-5317 Papillon, ACA, 1 Male S/W $200 ¡ 627-0419 diamondlkennel.com ok#17 Papillion F, spayed, s/w, microchip, 7 yrs old, $50, 387-3565. Peek-a-poo Male, 8 weeks, s/w, very cute, $150. 887-0632

Great Pyrenees, 3M, 4F, 8 weeks, $100each, Okarche,405-368-0455

Pit Bull, pure bred, Colby Ch. bldlns, POP, 1/2 price $100¡580-237-1961

Italian Greyhounds, 2 AKC pups, 4mos, shots, $75, 392-3467/408-8724

Pit Bull Blue Pups, 13 weeks, ADBA reg. $250ea ¡ 405-598-1065

Jack Russells & Jack/Labs Mls & spayed Fmls $40$50 213-8681 390-2040

Pit Bull Bullies Blue XXL, 3 month old pups UKC purple ribbon registered POP Show Quality Dogs. $500 each. Go to website oklahomablue thunderbullies.com 405-802-0090

Jack Russell Terrier Pups, 3 M, 2 F, 6 weeks, $40 each. 405-651-9671 KENNEL SELL OUT JACK RUSSELL Pair. 3 SHIH TZUs. WESTIE Pair. ALL FEMALES BRED $150 EA SET » CASH Enid »» 580-541-3647

Pit Bull Pups, ADBA reg, 2M, Razors Edge, blue & white, champion bloodlines, $400-$800 580603-3143, 580-603-1690

Lab & who puppies 5M/1F 1st S&W Mom lab/dad ?? $30.00 405-615-9130

Pit Bull Puppies, Must See! 3, 9wk old blue females, $175ea. 405-826-2680

LAB AKC, White/Yellow 6 wks, D/C, S/W, POP $300 ¡ 405-279-2187

Pit Bullys, ADBA, 5 left M/F 9wks, s/w, blues & brindles, short & stocky $250-$300 405-637-8708 ¡¡ 882-5393

DACHSHUND Mini, AKC, Tiny, B/T Dapple, F $125, M $100. 405-872-7430 Dachshund Mini ACA Reg. s/w/dc all colors and markings will be ready Oct.24 $200 (405)837-0494

German Shepherd AKC Pups & Adults, Champion Heidelberg's $850. 918-261-4729

Dachshund Minis RED SH W/DAPPLE 2 F, 1 M. 7 WKS. OLD $150 ANGEL @ 405-650-0486 dachshund mini CHOC/WT/F,B/T/2F/1M 100.00 405-598-8617 Doberman, AKC Puppies, red & black ’ $250 each 580-362-0605. Doberman Puppies AKC registered. Born 8/ 28. Parents on site. Located in Norman. $500 Call Dane 918.951.5300

Piedmontese cattle Bull 3 yrs old, Bull 18 months old, Cow 7 years old and her heifer calf born April 5, 2011. $4500. OBO 405-831-1664

Boxer/Husky mix, 13 week old F, free to a good home, 610-7481.

English Bulldog Puppies AKC.2 males left. Vet checked,wormed,firsts shots.9 wks old $1500 Traci 405-830-7367 a_zmom@yahoo.com

National Livestock Selling - Mon, Oct 10, 2011 4-S Ranch calves 400-600lb Express & Limestone bulls For information call 1-800-999-8998

Boxer Puppies Purebred, no papers, parents on site. Tails and dewclaws done. 1st shots and wormed. $300 405-274-9900

ENGLISH BULLDOG AKC reg. 10wks-1yr old All Champion sired. $1000$2000 Also Ch. Stud Service 405-550-4339 cedarlanebulldogs.com

German Shepherd Pups AKC import. F& M, $850, blk&red, paper trained 396-2385

German Shepherd, 3 imp. pups, AKC, 7wks, POP, s/w, $400. 405-633-4897

German Shepherd Pups AKC, blk/tan, sable 64lbs @ 6mo old $500 282-4456

LAB PUPPIES, AKC, 4 males, 2 females, whites & yellows, 6 weeks old, exc hunting and companions. BIG thick pups, 98 champions on pedigree, shots wormed, eyes, hips, & health guar. $400ea www.mclemore labradorretrievers.com 405-933-1500

POINTER PUPS 4-F,7-M LIVER WH, LEMON-WH,WHELPED 84-11. PARENTS ARE ON SITE. PEDIGREE AVAILABLE. $250. 405-375-5895 Pom-Chi, DOB 7/31 2F 1M, 1 Rare F $100obo 405-618-8077(Asher,OK)

Lab Puppies, black, full blood, reg POP, 7wks, 1st shots, wormed, 5F, 2M, $75ea. 596-0212 Labrador Retriever AKC Puppies 2 Black Labrador Retriever Females for sale. Great temperament Family Pet or Hunting. Piedmont $250. 405-5090979 or 405-201-9007 Lab Registered AKC puppies 7 wk old, 2f/3m, shots $300. 580-618-1655

Pomeranian Puppies, red sable 1F $300; 1M $250 Reg. shots/wormed 580-541-7587 POMERANIANS 9wks4yrs. Beautiful, small $75-$125 405-651-8995 Pom Pups, ACA, teacup $250-$350, toy $150$250, 580-935-6702.


Business Opportunity

SCHNAUZERS TOY AKC /CKC, $175-$500, OK#02 okcpoms.com 405- 609-9241 Poodle, extra tiny, toy, AKC, quality family pet, M/F, $200-$500; Yorkies, M/F, $250-$500; current on shots, 405-613-7237 Poodle, Toy, apricot, AKC s/w, 8 wks, 3F/3M, $300 cash. 249-5459 Poodle AKC, T-cup, Tiny Toy, Toy & Mini, vet ck'd, $200-$1500 Lic.#1 275-6527 Pug puppies, s/w, micro chipped, vet chk'd, $300, OK #04, 918-426-5181. Pug Pups, ACA 2M 7wks fawn, s/w, guar $200ea Cash ¡ 405-756-2585

PUGS AKC Registered Older Pugs For Sale. 1M 2F $100. 405-923-0035 Rhodesian Ridgeback, 11 month F, loveable, can register, $300, 997-8406.

SCHNAUZERS MINI, dark choc, blk & parti, 1F 2M hlth guar. $325 226-2098 Schnauzers Mini 1M, 1F, very cute, small, guar, $200-$275, 405-380-5859 Schnauzer Toys, CKC, 2F, 2M, dark choc, 7 wks, $450 ea, 580-540-6354. SHELTIES, 2 CKC sable puppies shots. F $350. M $250 407-956-9220 beauti40@bellsouth.net Shelties AKC reg, 3M, 12 weeks, tri & sable, $200, 405-567-3025 »»» SHI-POO»»» 1 Male, 1 Female $150ea. »» 371-2399

Shih Tzu Puppies, AKC, s/w microchip great pets $250-$300¡405-503-2272 SIB HUSKY all ages, all shots, $250 - $600. www.debbiesdream.net 866-957-5572 lv msg SIBERIAN HUSKIES, hand raised, beautiful blue eyes, POP, 9 wks, M, shots & dewormed, refs. avail, $425, 405-285-8666. Siberian Husky AKC Pups cute, $400, blue eyes, bandtcaninecorral.com (405)323-3211, 527-8888 Snorkie, 1M, 1F, 6wks Very Cute! $250 580-542-4404 St Bernard Puppies, 6 weeks, 1M 1F, red/wht, Beautiful $100ea 702-8021

YORKIE AKC, PARTI breeders, young, proven 3.5-7 lbs, excellent quality, Male & Female. See in OKC area. $500$1000. 580-550-1380

Yorkie Puppies ACA reg. Precious Babies with Teddy Bear faces, F&M, 1-2 lbs, $500-$1000. 580271-0557, 580-298-3601 Yorkies, 1M, 1F, teacup and toy, cute, guar. $400-$500, 405-683-0116 YORKIES , ACA, S/W $250-$400 580-549-6583 or 580-695-1851 YORKIEs 3fml 8wks 2lbs or less! $300ea Pomeranians 1f 2m 8wks $150ea. Reg, s/w/dc Can meet or send pics (580) 995-3944 334-4765 dalel@dobsonteleco.com

Heartland MPG 2011 Model, new cond Tow away for $13,500, 733-9608, 831-2087

Weimaraner Pups AKC Highest Quality, MC/Visa $200-$500 918-694-3868

Shih/Poo, M&F, 8 weeks old, s/w, health guaranteed, tiny, will send pics, $250, 405-919-2575.

Rottweilers, 2F, 4 years, $200 each, 405-527-1753 or 405-397-4218.

Shih Tzu, ACA, 1 Male, $200 Extra Cute!! 627-0419 diamondlkennel.com OK# 17

Yorki-Maltese (Morkie) » » ITTY-BITTY! $395 Visa/MC 405-826-4557

YORKIES AKC

2 males/2 females $350$400 cash 405-919-7773 YORKIE T-CUPS 10oz- 1 lb ACA. Teddy Bear Faces, 9 wks, shots, vet ck'd FMLS $700-$1000 580-271-810 8

Mute Swans 3 years old, $400 each 405-612-4229 »» POT BELLY PIGS »» Tiny Babies! blk & blk/wht. $100 EACH » 823-7848 »

TIMOTHY HAY

OKC Fairgrounds, October 8th & 9th. Rifles, pistols, shotguns. Look for us! C&J Sporting Goods.

OK’s largest sel. of used Golf cars 800-276-0571

POINTERS: several to choose from. Trained, started & Puppies. 56 yrs breeding Top Pointers. $250-$550 405-659-1706

Hunting/Fishing Leases 607.0

Thompson Pro Hunter 50cal muzz speed breech S/S 28" Leo 3x9 scope $850. 210-3636

Deer Hunting for lease 800 acres. Pottawatomie & Seminole Counties. Call 405-997-8558

WE BUY GUNS Mustang Pawn & Gun Over 1,000 New/Used Guns Tue-Sat 9-6 376-GUNS

Deer Leases:(2) 160 acre tracts. Okemah area $1000 Firm 405-409-2410

2 compartment all aluminum dog box, $200; 10X12 dog pen, $200; 405-740-2330.

MOTORCYCLE SWAP MEET

Sun.,Oct.16, OKCFairgrounds, OKC, Set-up 6-9 am, Public 9-4, $5 pp www.jwswapmeet.com '06 Yamaha Road Trail 200, exc cond, $1,800 405-850-1005

2-3 month old male, Pointer mix, NW side of OKC. Call to ID 603-3842

#1 Bermuda sm sq $12; mid sq Tim Alf Brom $90 405-899-4438/323-4990

Corgi-Heeler mix? Male 67th & S Penn area. Call to ID 688-0310

Canaries Nice selection of yellow, red factor and yellow mosaic canaries. Call for Prices 405-703-2853

Male, Pug, neutered, near 122nd & N May, Call 918313-1539 or 405-549-8269 Young Bassett MWC area on Post Rd Btwn 15 & Reno to ID 769-2753 Small Dachshund, blk/ wht, 7400 blk of NW 32nd. Call to ID 789-2277

'07 Honda 4 Wheeler TRX250, used very little. $2500. 580-662-2001

Sm light colored M dog, near NW 63rd & MacArthur. 517-7612 to ID

'07 Yamaha 450 Grizzly camo, exc cond, $4,500 405-850-1005

Yorkie (2), found area of NW 10th & Rockwell. 789-6064 to ID & Claim

2 Day Auction

Blaine Co., OK. Land and Minerals. Farms sell Wed, Oct 12. 2160± acres. Minerals sell Thur, Oct 13. 2000± acres at Watonga, OK. Selling in tracts. For Flyer call John Ridenhour at 580-623-7902 or visit www. ridenhourauctions.com Buying oil & gas properties, any status, pay top $$$ 800-880-8004, 405-740-9000

Drives, foundations, patios, lic, bond, ins, free estimates,769-3094 Drives, patios, steps, lic, bond, free est, 424-5105 ALL TYPES LIC/BONDED FREE EST 625-3216 Marvin's all kinds concrete Free est, 885-4059, 605-0180.

Drywall Ceiling & Wall Doctor Roofing & Remodeling ‚ Acoustic popcorn removal ‚ Drywall repair ‚ Custom hand trowel finishes & spray finishes ‚ Interior/Exterior painting ‚ Powerwashing Call Jeff for free estimate at 405-408-5453, insured.

» $30 Off Any Repair » True Tech Home Service. Guaranteed Best Deal. Call 562-5421. Lic #44583

» $29 Tune UP » True Tech Home Service. Guaranteed Best Deal. $99 touch screen programmable thermostat installed Call 562-5421. Lic #4935 » $29 Tune UP » True Tech Home Service. Guaranteed Best Deal. Call 562-5421. Lic #4935

Appliance Repairs ‘ APPLIANCE REPAIR ‘ Since 1982 405-834-5517

ROUTE FOR SALE Own 200 accounts. Take 3 hours a day. Easy work. Be set for life. One time $40K investment. 803-327-5050

1982 Honda Goldwing, new tires and battery, $1500; 1968 W1 Kawasaki, runs, $1500; 740-2330

HONDA BIG RED side by side, balanced, new warranty, Senior Owned. Like new, $8750, 405-872-0630

Small Business Subcontractors Harper Construction will host an Outreach Event, Wed., 10/19 at the Best Western Hotel, 1125 E. Gore Blvd., Lawton, OK from 3-6 p.m. to discusss subcontracting opportunities for the Repair Starship Barracks #5955 at Fort Sill. RSVP to Jamie Price, jprice@ harperconstruction.com 580-355-3333

Conceal/Carry Class $40 Gun, ammo, range provided. 405-818-7904

100 bales or more $13/bale 405-664-8003

Kids Ponies & Gentle Family Horses 5 8 0 - 4 6 7 - 7 0 6 4 mantoothfamilyhorses.com

LOST Small brown dog, Chihuahua type, reward, 405-736-6147

‘ BOB WHITE QUAIL ‘ Flight Condition, $4, ‘‘ 405-816-5561 ‘‘

'87 Honda GW Inst. 1200 37K mi, New tires, battery, Clean $3700 ¡¡¡ 921-5690

2010 Polaris RZR-S 800 EFI ATV With extras! Showroom condition! $7500 405586-0489 harmy30@ inbox.com

All Divorces

$99 Other services 474-2375

GSP. F. 4mo, ex ret, good nose, $350. 443-8346 or 787-2638

>>

Baby Sulcata Tortoises just hatched, wonderful pet, $100 cash, 501-1068

Started 1yr old Pointer, Exc pedigree, Guardrail/ Tin Soldier, Ready to Hunt $500; 2M GSP, 5 mo, worked on birds, Exc pedigree, Koonas/Ckmate $300ea 405-213-6146

GUN SHOW

Deer Leases: Norman, Clayton, Hartshorne, Harrah, Maysville & Meeker

Heating, Furnace Service ALL HOURS HEAT AND AIR, fall service starting at $65, all types repair and replace, coml/res, lic #39450, 773-8882

END OF SEASON MOW Hauling, flowerbeds, hedges & rake 681-6764

Tearouts/Repours Drives Patios, Etc., Bonded, Lic., Free Est., 794-8505.

>>

350 ADORABLE PETS AT FREE TO LIVE NEAR EDMOND. ALL DOGS & CATS Shts & neut $60. 282-8617 www.freetoliveok.org

On-Site PC Maintenance $40 1ST HR » $35 AFTER 405-794-0998

76 Dodge Mobile TRAVELER, rare! clean, low mis, $4000 405-255-4168

•Trophy Deer Lease 1st time avail pheasant turkey quail, 1hr north Okc. ••580-402-0411••

BIG or Small, We Haul & Clean it All! ¡¡ 409-3681

On-Site PC Maintenance $40 1ST HR » $35 AFTER 405-794-0998

>>

ROTTWEILER PUPPIES Quality German AKC. 1 male $800, 2 females $600 (405)747-5291

Weimaraner Four and a half year old male Weimaraner, can be registered. Great companion and watch dog. Very loveable. Housebroken. $150.00 Angie (405) 694-1943

Yorkies AKC Highest Quality & 1yr Guarantee! $500-$700 918-694-3868

Sunshine Cleaning Service ins/bond 793-1630, 625-3930

Computer Services

Outwest RV. Mobile RV service & repair. $99 winterization. 405-274-3030

Golf Car Center Yamaha, E-Z-GO New/Used 2622221 Okc, 866-323-2221

RESIDNTIAL HAULING & CLEANING, 630-5484.

Exc service, detailed $14hr, 4hr min. 314-8743

92 CIVIC with tow bar. One owner. All records. $3000. 903-821-8335

HUNTING/FISHING BOAT 1854 BeaverTail Jon Boat 2007, MudBuddy Vanguard 35hp mud mtr, too many extras to list! $12,000 obo 580-223-8283

Honest, dependable, exp. References, Reasonable Okc/Edm/Yukon 314-3398

House, Apt. & Business. 430-6035 or 429-9050

'03 Sportsman TT, 1 slide, tinted windows, clean, $8950. 685-8810

Golf Car Center Yamaha, E-Z-GO New/Used 2622221 Okc, 866-323-2221

Shiba Inu puppies, AKC, 6 weeks old, 1 M, 1 F, $700/neg. 951-893-8387

Shih-tzu CKC, m/f, blk/ wh, 8 wks, shot/ wormed, homegrown, $250. 918-684-9904

Heartland MPG 2011 Model, new cond Tow away for $13,500, 733-9608, 831-2087

Guinea Pig Babies CUTIES! $10ea 392-3467/408-8724

SERVICE DIRECTORY

Schnauzer/Boston Terrier, BOWZERS, 1M/F, 6 wks. $100. 312-0012/0101

Shih Tzu Pups, Toy, 3F, 1M, 7wks, blonde & white, 1st shots, $250. 405605-3771 / 903-691-5104

802

FINANCIAL

Schnauzer, Mini, AKC, s/w/e/t, micro chip, $250-$300 ¡ 405-503-2272

Yorkie, AKC F, Sweet Tiny 2K lb, shots current, not spayed yet, 8mo, potty trained. Comes w/wellness plan to PetSmart Vet, already paid thru May. Crate & toys. Selling due to owners health $600 Cash 740-9507

TAKE NOTE

Poms ACA 12 weeks, 2 F, 1 M, s/w, $150ea 405-626-6703

Shih Tzu Pups 2M, brn, wht, 1 sm., x-sm. vet ckd, s/w, pop, hm raised, $150-$200, 603-4795

REC REATION

Rottweilers, Ger. AKC pups, 18 wks, (1) 8 wks, $400-$600, 619-0643.

>>

POMS, AKC/CKC, parti, okcpoms.com $75-$800 OK#02 ¡ 405-609-9241

Brick, block & pavers, 35 yrs exp, 631-7580 or 543-4801.

Rose Electric LLC Service calls #87915 405-703-4556

SHARPE'S ELECTRIC & Heat & Air OKC 341-8488

REPAIR & NEW FENCES 36 yrs experience, 631-1925

All Types of kiln dried Hardwood Flooring & Lumber 580-931-6125

Garage Doors & Openers Sales & Service 794-1718

4000sf Night Club for Lease in Guthrie. Full DJ sound system, Newly remodeled. $3000/mo. 405-496-8648

Carport, Patio, Awning

Yukon's Wall Dr. & Handyman. Commercial & Residential. Free Est., Call 326-2909

All Steel Carports, Patio Covers ¡ 2car carport $1695 free est 799-4026/694-6109

HOME IMPROVE. REPAIRS. REMODEL. ROOFING. FREE ESTIMATES. 410-2495

Drink & Snack Rte Grt Loc Guaranty Must Sell now Fin avail. 800-648-2124

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC. Gas pressure tests, floor furnaces, wall heaters, repair & replacement. ¡ 405-528-7733 Zax's Plumbing, Sewer & Drain.Complete sewer & drain cleaning/plbg repair. lic/bond/ins Sr disc. 409-7118 A-1 Plumbing 24hr svc. No job too BIG or too small. Free Est 919-3100 » $30 Off Any Repair » True Tech Home Service Call 562-5421, Lic #98814

Ceiling 2 Floorz ‚ Roofing & Remodeling ‚ Flooring, carpet, tile, wood ‚ Granite counter tops Insured, 412-0924. Remodel, Additions, Roofs All Trades, free est 408-7513

Roofing¡Painting Free Est. ¡¡ 812-1608 ¡¡

Eric Potts Storm Shelter SEAMLESS PATIO TOP SINCE 1972. (405) 872-5561 476-6033

¡¡ Gutter Man ¡¡ Seamless rain guttering Free Est. ¡ 405-203-2004

3 Rooms steam cleaned, trk mount $35 406-5739

Fully equipped Gym and Restaurant site for lease Downtown Edmond, 405-820-2222

M & M SERVICES - Interior & Exterior Painting, 751-4094

Storm Cellars

Wells & Lease For Sale Pontotoc & Pottawatomie Cty $80,000ea also pumping units. salt water pumps & tanks. 405-382-5241

Brand Dealership Full Time Income $15K starts 405-834-2934

BILLS PAINTING & HOME REPAIRS Free Estimates 735-8982

Custom Gutters Inc. New & repair; all kinds; warranty; Visa/MC; 528-4722.

Carpet Clean $12rm Repr Stretch Install 882-4592

Retired Contractor Repairs, remodels, paints, 25 yr exp, free est 314-3621

HOUSECLEANING Mature Lady, 20 yrs exp. NW OKC & Edmond only. 720-2099 leave name & #

Mr. Fixit Handyman Service. We do it all for less. Free est. Bond. Ins. Visa/MC 603-6104

General House Cleaning. new Const. Ofc & Buss. Free Est. 405-513-3290

ANY PROJECT ¡ FREE EST. & WARR¡INSURED OK EXPERTS ¡ 254-3000

D&D TILE showers, floors backsplashes.... 971-4492 Leaky Showers, Tubs & Tile Floors 33 yrs 728-0545

Affordable D&P Tree trim & removal, stump grind Ins/bond. 769-1960 » GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. » GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. L & R Tree Serv, Low Prices, Insured, Free Est, 946-3369. Prof Tree K off Sr's-free stump removal 314-1313




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