LOOK AT OKC |4.22.2015

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from the editor

NATHAN POPPE

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’m a little too excited for the next couple of BY NATHAN POPPE months. LOOKATOKC EDITOR I think I realized this when I spent a mornNPOPPE@OPUBCO.COM ing in Guthrie at the Prairie Gothic gift shop. Shop co-owner Christie Clifford was telling me about how she went from organizing a few street festivals to planning the Queen of the Prairie Festival, her own vision of a sequel to 2013’s Gentlemen of the Road stopover. It’s a huge undertaking and Clifford is teaming up with her daughter and a small army of Guthrie residents to get things done. She’s learned a lot. Like how best to keep skunks from crawling into Cottonwood Flats or what sort of portable toilets aren’t a ripoff. You have to start somewhere. Just look at Norman Music Festival 8, which is in its eighth year come the end of the month. Speed bumps, growing pains and gun nuts can’t stop it from being as free and fun as ever. If you can’t find something to enjoy at NMF then you and your Spotify account can just have a great evening alone. Another festival has been growing up, too. OKCFest tiptoed out of its country comfort zone this year, and I’m interested to see how many people show up early for Drive-By Truckers and Grace Potter. Also, how many liquor stores will sell out of Jack Daniels right before the Hank Williams Jr. set? Only time will tell. Rocklahoma, you just keep being yourself. I was lucky enough to break the lineup news on three out of the four festivals we’re featuring in this issue. I’m not only proud of this accomplishment but mostly happy to have the opportunity to say that so much music is about to happen. It’s becoming so busy in Oklahoma that I can’t even fathom having energy left to drive to Jazz in June or Center of the Universe. It’s a good problem to have, I guess. Sorta like having hands made of honey hams. A special thanks to Ebony Dallas for her design on the 8-bit inspired cover artwork, Matt Carney for covering pop music like a boss and Jerry Wofford for helping gather his contribution for Rocklahoma. It’s going to be a busy summer. I’ll sleep when I’m 30.

Bright Light Social Hour performs live at Norman Music Festival 7. Photo by Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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from the top

LOOKatOKC

16 | Movie review: Oklahoma City: The Boom, the Bust, and the Bomb Mayor Mick Cornett wrote, directed and produced the documentary “Oklahoma City: The Boom, the Bust and the Bomb.”

18 | Food Dude visits West Town Resource Campus Popular local chefs prepare lunch for the masses through Turning the Table on Hunger.

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

OPUBCO Communications Group LOOKatOKC EDITOR Nathan Poppe PROJECT DESIGNERS Ebony Iman Dallas Steve Boaldin 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 PHOTOGRAPHERS Steven Maupin Quit Nguyen COVER Illustration by Ebony Iman Dallas

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Check out our online home at newsok.com/entertainment/lookatokc

Go to facebook.com/ LOOkatOKC and become a fan. Follow 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.

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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headphonetics

MATT CARNEY

FOLLOW @OKMATTCARNEY ON TWITTER

Courtney Barnett and Father John Misty, smart-alecks with soul

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e didn’t break character for the entire performance, but it took a solid minute before it became clear that Josh Tillman had arranged his latest song around an elaborate gag. Back in November, Tillman showed up channeling Todd Rundgren on “David Letterman,” every inch of him the wounded ’70s singersongwriter archetype, right down to the furrowed brow, closed eyes and a dull, gray blazer possibly whiffing of weeks-old studio funk. The frame slowly tightened on his bearded face for 60 seconds as Tillman bemoaned his affluent, educated situation at the piano, somberly informing the audience of his middle-class pain: “Now I’ve got all morning to obsessively accrue / a small nation of meaningful objects and they’ve gotta represent me too.” The tension stacked up like Legos. Tillman then turned and grabbed the microphone to lament his privilege for another camera, this time from the side, where the “Letterman” audience can suddenly see the piano keys twinkling along on their own. Tension released. It was this incredibly funny performance of “Bored in the USA,” a bitter, shallow, sarcastic ballad, that marked Tillman as popular music’s foremost smart-aleck, a reputation furthered by the January release of “I Love You, Honeybear,” his second record under the name Father John Misty. “Honeybear”’s cover may be pink but its humor is black as the grand piano Tillman pounds, a “look at how ridiculous all this is” record full of anthems for the American embarrassed by his or her own dissatisfaction. Surely somewhere, Randy Newman is beaming.

MATT CARNEY All about creating a deeper relationship with music.

From left, Courtney Barnett’s “Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit" album cover. Art from John Misty’s album “I Love You, Honeybear.” Photo provided

No surprise then that the humor of “Honeybear” comes caustic and mean. A trip to the bar (“Nothing Good Ever Happens At The G----mn Thirsty Crow”) turns obscene as Tillman’s rock star climbs on his stool to hurl insults and brag about his sexual prowess. A particular “insufferable” girlfriend who “gladly hoovers” all his drugs gets called a term that no man should ever use in “The Night Josh Tillman Came To Our Apartment.” “I’ve said awful things, such awful things” he admits on “The Ideal Husband,” in a tone that makes it tough to tell the difference between the character and the man himself. Whether or not it qualifies as a true satire is up to you, but the sarcasm’s certainly there. I’d argue it is, if for how tenderly Tillman — an incredible singer — performs it. It takes a certain depth of soul to convincingly perform a character, even one as shallow and unimaginative as the dweeb he inhabits in “I Went To The Store One Day.” But if irony and jokes so brutal as to not be funny aren’t your thing then perhaps newcomer Courtney Barnett’s good nature and wry observations are. The Australian’s humor occasionally steers mischievous at worst on her nervy debut record “Sometimes I Sit and Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit,” landing somewhere between the more effusive work of The Mountain Goats’ John Darnielle and Stephen Malkmus’s lackadaisical stoner jams. Like Tillman, Barnett’s style is wordy but her songs’ characters are far more likable. “I think you’re a joke and

I don’t find you very fuuuuu-uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uhhhh-nny” is about as mean as she gets. It just isn’t in her heart to even call somebody a name, even after all her anxiety and confusion piles up on the record’s second song, “Pedestrian at Best.” “Give me all your money and I’ll make some Origami, honey!” she shouts. Dawwww. Barnett also leans on her impressive skill as a guitar player, which is readily evident on the Aussie blues stomp, “Small Poppies.” “I make mistakes until I get it right,” she moans before launching into her down-under impression of Jack White. Barnett’s riffing ranges wonderfully here from fast-paced grungy heft (“Pedestrian at Best”) to wiggly power-pop (“Aqua Profunda!”) and she even has the good sense to dial the volume back when she’s got a tender story to tell. And when she does bear her heart — unlike Tillman — it doesn’t hurt to hear. “Depreston” gently unwinds as a house-hunting expedition through a suburb of Melbourne where Barnett confronts her own coming-of-age in the home of a widow recently passed. Her observations resonate: “And I see the handrail in the shower / a collection of those canisters for coffee, tea and flour / and a photo of a young man in a van in Vietnam.” Taken together, “I Love You, Honeybear” and “Sometimes I Sit and Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit” make kind of a sweet-and-sour recipe for humor in rock, which has always been kinda tricky to pull off at a certain level of notoriety. Tillman and Barnett both have the goods; here’s to a long, funny career for both of them.

Tune in to KO KOSU-FM 91.7 at 4:44 p.m. and 6:44 p.m. every Tuesday and at 6:45 a.m. and 8:45 a.m. every Wednesday to hea hear Matt break down the week in music news and new music releases with host Ryan LaCroix.

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art speaks

D R IINNKK && D RD ARWA W

Who said tacos weren’t a healthy food

DUSTY GILPIN

W

elcome to the latest edition of our collaboration with Drink & Draw, the event that invites doodlers of all skill levels to gather on a weekly basis in Oklahoma City. In case you’re new to the party, here’s the rundown. Every Thursday night from 8 to 11, Drink & Draw is hosted at any of three locations in the metro. On the third, fourth and fifth Thursday of the month, the event is held at Tree & Leaf Clothing. And that’s where you’ll encounter the Drink & Draw Challenge. A random theme is selected, you’re kindly requested to draw on specially designed Drink & Draw paper and then the results are published once a month in LOOKatOKC. Our theme this month is a taco hiking on Mars.

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CODY HAMPTON @OKIECODY

It’s been a pleasure to see new faces join the festivities, and I hope to see more. The intentions of the event are more than simple. It’s an excuse to show off the talented artists in our city and invite anyone with a hint of artistic aspiration to join the fun. Again, Drink & Draw is an invitation to an open dialogue in the art community. One story wouldn’t do this event justice. Instead we are making this a monthly celebration of all things awesome. Pens, pencils and markers of all shapes and sizes are welcome. It’s just another reason to LOOKatOKC. The proof is sitting right in front of you. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

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D RDI RNIKN K& &DDRRAAWW

DEAN WILHITE

ASHTON LETTON

art speaks

MATT KILGORE The Drink & Draw schedule: 1st Thursday: The Okay See (7 N Lee Ave., OKC) 2nd Thursday: Brass Bell Studios (2500 NW 33 St., OKC) 3rd, 4th and 5th Thursdays: Tree & Leaf (1705-B NW 16 St., OKC)

The Drink & Draw Challenge: 1. A random theme is selected.

ERIC SANDHOP

ZEKE RUZUICA

2. Artists draw on specially designed Drink & Draw paper. 3. The results will be published once a month right here in LOOKatOKC. 4. Fun is had.

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E B O N Y I M A N WDAARL HL OA LS

art speaks

Oklahoma City Museum of Art shows Andy Warhol’s ‘The Athletes’ series

Andy Warhol in 1987. AP photo

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ichard Weisman still has vivid memories of the portrait shoot between Andy Warhol and Jack Nicklaus. “During the shoot, Warhol made the mistake of saying to Nicklaus, ‘Could you move the stick a little to the left?’ He said, ‘The what? The stick? Sir, that is my golf club.’ And he turns, ‘Richard, does this guy know what he’s doing?’ I said, ‘Jack, he does, I promise.’ I said, ‘Andy, it’s a club. Call it a club.’ (He said) ‘Oh, yeah, OK, fine,’” Weisman recalled with a chuckle. “Every athlete, I’ve got good stories.” The portraits Weisman commissioned his artistic friend to paint in 1978 of sports superstars such as Nicklaus, Muhammad Ali and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar are on view at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art. “Warhol: The Athletes” opened April 16 at the museum, where the anticipation is becoming as intense as the kaleidoscopic colors in Warhol’s works. “He’s really kind of like THE American art celebrity at this point. It’s just that name that everybody knows. It’s like a Picasso, it’s like a Matisse,” said film curator Michael Anderson, who also is curating the Warhol exhibit for the museum. “But it really moves beyond that and also touches on the allure of the 1960s and the ’70s. It kind of embodies the ’60s counter-culture and then the Studio 54 era, too. So many moments in American history that have kind of a romantic appeal to both younger and older people, it really kind of touches on those. So, he pops up in so many places in American culture.” SPORTS SUPERSTARS “Warhol: The Athletes” features the iconic artist’s colorful portraits of 10 notable competitors in 10 sports, including Olympic figure skater Dorothy Hamill,

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tennis champion Chris Evert, jockey Willie Shoemaker, soccer star Pele, New York Mets pitcher Tom Seaver, New York Rangers hockey forward Rod Gilbert and now-infamous football player O.J. Simpson. The series also includes a portrait of Weisman in the same size and style — a 40-by-40-inch, black-and-white silk-screen image on canvas that Warhol embellished with brightly colored paint. Now based in Seattle, Weisman grew up in a family of art collectors, and “like any red-blooded American boy, (I) didn’t want to do what my parents did. But I liked it so much I did.” He said he specialized in collecting pop art and befriended Warhol while living in New York City in the 1960s. “We became really good friends. We went out a lot. They used to joke about Andy, saying that he would go to the opening of an envelope. The guy had four plans, five plans every day, and three or four every night. I mean, energy that never stopped,” said Weisman, whose collection is chronicled in the 2002 book “Picasso to Pop.” Weisman had known Warhol about a decade when he got the idea for “The Athletes” series. “I had this thought that the two areas that I felt were the two major areas of interest with people were usually art and sports — and they didn’t really mix. People who are into one usually aren’t into the other as leisure-time activities. I mean, there are some people who like both — I’m one of them — but not a lot. So, I thought it’d be a good idea to do a series of art portrait types, which is what Warhol was doing at the time, on athletes,” Weisman said in a phone interview from Los Angeles. “He didn’t know the difference between a football and a golf ball, so therefore, I picked out the athletes and tried to pick out people who I felt you would know

April 22 - May 5, 2015

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art speaks

EWBAORNHYO LI M A N D A L L A S

SEND ART SAMPLES & SHOW INFO TO EDALLAS@OPUBCO.COM

Above: Portraits of figure-skating Olympic gold medalist Dorothy Hamill and basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar by Andy Warhol. Bottom: Golf great Jack Nicklaus portrait by Andy Warhol. Photos provided

who they were even if you didn’t really know or get involved in sports.” POP CULTURE ICONS Warhol, who famously coined the phrase “15 minutes of fame,” took Weisman’s commission at a time when sports standouts were just starting to achieve the same levels of celebrity as entertainers. Although he was unfamiliar with the athletes at first, Warhol soon concluded “the sports stars of today are the movie stars of yesterday.” New York players Gilbert and Seaver were the first to join the project, Weisman said, but once Ali agreed to have Warhol do his portrait, “then everybody wanted to do it.” “Muhammad Ali and he got along just amazingly together. Amazing guy, Muhammad Ali. So smart,” Weisman said. “And Andy would be like in Texas and he’d be hanging out with the New York Rangers who were there for some reason. And someone would come up and make some remark — because Andy did look a little effeminate sometimes — and let me tell you, don’t make any remark, because then all the sudden three of the Rangers were, ‘You got a problem with my friend? You got a problem with my friend, you got a problem with all of us.’ It was really funny.” ART OF FUN Weisman commissioned Warhol to create multiple sets of “The Athletes” series, each depicting the sports stars in various colors. The collector said he relishes sending the portraits to museums around the country. “You’re gonna be showing something that people are gonna come and see that many have never set foot in a museum in their life,” Weisman said. “Because of the sports, people, they’re gonna come and look, and they’re going to walk through this room to get to that room. And they’re gonna be like, ‘Oh, that wasn’t so bad. Yeah, Degas isn’t so bad. It’s interesting.’”

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E B O N Y I M A N WD A RL LH AO SL

art speaks

Top: Boxing legend Muhammad Ali. Bottom: Tennis champion Chris Evert portraits by Andy Warhol. Photos provided

Of course, Anderson said the museum expects Warhol to be as big a draw as the athletes he captured on canvas. A renowned artist and colorful character, Warhol, who died in 1987 at age 58, in many ways has become bigger than the pop culture he chronicled in his work. “I think a lot of it’s the character, but I think it’s accessible in a way that a lot of modern art isn’t,” Anderson said. “On a very sort of intuitive level, I think a lot of people can see that it both celebrates and also kind of ironizes the subjects that he’s depicting.” To go along with “The Athletes,” the museum is exhibiting 44 of Warhol’s Polaroid portraits on loan from the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art in Norman. Also, during the opening event and the first eight weeks of the exhibit, the Oklahoma City museum will show 12 of Warhol’s most memorable film screen tests from the mid-1960s, including those of Bob Dylan, Edie Sedgwick, Dennis Hopper and Salvador Dali, on loan from the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. “The work and Warhol in general is fun. That really can’t be overemphasized,” Anderson said. “This is art that’s fun, just fundamentally. And people know that and they understand that about Warhol.” — Brandy McDonnell, entertainment writer

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band q&a

SARDASHHH

Shardashhhh. Photo provided by Victoria Bui

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t’s electronic, but not exactly. It’s hip-hop, but without rap. It’s a complex combination of analog and digital production. It’s the work of Oklahoma City’s Joseph Sardashti, a 23-yearold producer and Bartlesville native, known as Sardashhh. Sardashhh has three hip-hop beat mixtapes available online: 2013’s “The Feast,” 2014’s “Vol. 2.” and 2015’s “ok.keys.” Q: How do you explain what you do ... in a way that most people would understand? Joseph Sardashti: It’s basically electronic music, but that’s such a huge genre. Most of what I release would be hip-hop instrumentals. Beats.

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Q: Where did you learn that this was even a thing? Sardashti: I had a good friend in Bartlesville who goes by Sayles, who is a great emcee. He made beats and put them on SoundCloud. I didn’t know what SoundCloud was at that point. He showed me J Dilla and Madlib and a lot of young Detroit and L.A. producers that would just put out albums of beats. It was kind of profound to me at the time, and I think it still is to a lot of people. ... I get asked when I’m going to finish my songs, because there’s no one rapping on them, but they’re done. If someone wants to rap on them, that’s cool, I’d work with them, but they’re pretty much finished products. Q: So how did you get into actually making music? Sardashti: I had made a lot of music on my computer for a long time. Nothing that I was happy with, just for

fun. The seminal moment came when these two things happened: My keyboard controller fell off my desk and broke, and I got a huge tax return. I’d been looking at these old samplers for a long time but never had the cash to get one, so I decided to spend all the money I had. I bought an MPC, which is the hip-hop standard. From then on, I was making things I really liked and felt more comfortable putting them online. Q: How do you reach out to people and find a network? Sardashti: Emphasis on the “net.” People I work with closely have found a lot of their scene from just getting posted on a blog and someone hitting them up. I haven’t done a whole lot of that. It’s

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SARDASHHH

band q&a

harder for me to keep up with things if my only level of commitment is a chat box. I met a lot of people just through playing shows and talking to people afterwards. I met Ben Hill, who goes by Askanse, a fantastic producer, while I was DJing a birthday party. ... What we’re doing isn’t necessarily acknowledged as being skillful or to be admired, so the Internet is an excellent outlet for niche music. Currently I’m in Safari Collective, headed up by Ethan Strange (Celadon City), who is a great producer and a really nice guy. He’s good at incessantly communicating with people, and I’m not capable of that. It’s been a good reminder that there are people who make electronic music here, who are very passionate about it. Q: Explain your process a little bit. Sardashti: It pretty much starts at the record store. I’ll flip through the dollar pile. After doing this for years, I know what to avoid. For a while, I’d go to garage sales, Goodwill, estate sales, and I’d just buy, you know, a box of 100 records. I have mounds of records that are so bad I can’t sell them back. If I hear something I like, I sample it in. If something’s really good, I’ll stop and make a song right then. Or it starts the other way: I’ll start with drums and build on top of that, but usually I start with something more melodic. Other times, I’ll just play my synthesizer and have it recording the whole time. Q: What you do is extremely analog and also extremely digital, and then you release it on tape. The process is complicated. Is that part of the attraction? Sardashti: I think so, yeah. I like having my alone time, and this is my favorite application of it. From start to finish, it’s the process that I love. Discovering the process with the first two tapes is what excited me about doing it. And now that I have that down, it’s more systematic, I’m adding more variation to it. The MPC is a computer ... but the sound reflects discovering the nuances of outdated things instead of just barely grasping the abilities of something as complicated as Ableton or even GarageBand or any of that stuff. That’s what I enjoy about it. Conceptually, though, people don’t care. (Laughs.) That’s the conclusion. And that’s fine. I didn’t expect it to be understood. But the sound that I want comes from that gear, and I’m going to keep with it.

Above, “ok.keys” album cover. Below, “The Feast” album cover. Photos provided

— Becky Carman, for LOOKatOKC

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Music feature

RECORD STORE DAY

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undreds of vinyl enthusiasts flocked to Guestroom Records on April 18 to grab exclusive releases and hear some free live music. A line outside of the OKC location started at 5 p.m., a day before the festitvies. Here’s a peek at the fun. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

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RECORD STORE DAY

music feature

3 1. Justin Sowers, Guestroom Records owner 2. Bobby Dean Orcutt and Chris Porter 3. Augustus and Beau Jennings 4. John Moreland

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movie review

‘OKLAHOMA CITY: THE BOOM, THE BUST AND THE BOMB’

MOVIE REVIEW

‘Oklahoma City: The Boom, the Bust and the Bomb’ Not rated 2:30 ★★ 1⁄2 I Narrated by: Mick Cornett. I Featuring interviews with: Larry Nichols, Gene Rainbolt, Burns Hargis, Aubrey McClendon and Russell M. Perry.

The mayor gets reel with new documentary film

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ayor Mick Cornett’s new movie belongs to everyone in Oklahoma. It is our story, after all. If you’re a native Okie reading this paper, then there’s a good chance you’ve already lived it. Like an interviewee points out during “Oklahoma City: The Boom, the Bust and the Bomb,” when describing the Murrah Building bombing: If you were near it, you felt it. Cornett’s feature-length documentary opened April 10 at Harkins Bricktown Cinemas 16. Today seems positively rosy compared to the 25-year stretch Cornett examines in his debut effort. At its heart, the flick is a straightforward narrative that details Oklahoma City from the late ’70s through the ’90s. The film’s title summarizes things nicely. We see how the oil and gas companies grew at an alarming rate in the ’70s and how twisted things got in the early ’80s as Oklahoma City sank into a cultural and economic funk. It ends detailing the impact of the April 1995 bombing. Like I said, it’s very straightforward, and it unfolds like a history book would. On a side note, I was raised here, and my high school spent just one week going over Oklahoma history. Maybe two, tops. So, I was pretty unfamiliar with this story.

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I can’t help but deem “OKC:BBB” worth watching if you’re an Okie history enthusiast. It’s an effective, heart-filled vessel that helps make sense of our resilience during a mostly heartbreaking history. It's not a highly creative documentary but it still tapped into my enthusiasm for my home state and my yearning to understand where I come from. It’s achingly relevant. The emotional interviews about the bombing hit home, too, and the overview of oil, gas and bank failings are a friendly reminder that big companies could always use a baby sitter. That said, this movie isn’t perfect. At a marathon screening, the film stretched 150 minutes. That’s roughly 20 minutes shorter than an entry of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. At best there’s an hour of especially engaging, impactful storytelling in the version of the film I watched. Simply put, it needs more editing for a national audience, which is something Cornett is well aware of. Production values are solid and consistent for a locally sourced creation. A few too many low resolution photos and small technical issues don’t distract too heavily from the narrative. I see a lot of potential for this vehicle to work as an hourlong PBS documentary. As informational as “Oklahoma City: The Boom, the Bust and the Bomb” can be, it still plays things a

little too safely. It features more talking heads than a David Byrne concert. It’s hard to anchor so much narrative on interviews of people in suits and ties. It feels a bit too much like a newscast. That shouldn’t come as a surprise, because Cornett had a healthy stay at KOCO-5, the local ABC affiliate, before becoming mayor in 2004. I wanted to feel more confusion during the bank crisis and a sense of whom it really affected. More scenes about just how desolate Oklahoma City became and why people leave and return. How about a chapter about white flight and suburbanization? It’s not pretty, but it’s our history. Documentaries such as the Oscar-winning “Man on Wire,” ESPN’s “30 for 30” series and HBO’s recent “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” illustrate how the documentary has been elevated during the past several years. Docs are now as hardhitting and informational as they are creative. We’re in the midst of a renaissance. “OKC:BBB” is the tip of the Oklahoma history iceberg. I’m glad it was made. There’s a lot to our roots, and this film acts as a great conversation starter. Just look at where we are now. – Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

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DAVE CATHEY

the food dude

COOKING FOR A CAUSE

LOCAL CHEFS PREPARE FOOD AT OKC HOMELESS SHELTER

Chef Kurt Fleischfresser and a group of local chefs prepared Pepperoni-Chicken Pasta for about 300 of Oklahoma City’s homeless in the day shelter at WestTown Resource Campus to launch Turning the Table on Hunger. Photo by Dave Cathey, for LOOKatOKC

THE FOOD DUDE <<<

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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

JULY 20 - AUG. 6

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DAVE CATHEY

the food dude

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he ethic of reciprocity was in full effect when wine broker Clayton Bahr approached chef Kurt Fleischfresser about doing lunch service at the day shelter for WestTown Resource Campus, 1724 NW 4 St. Despite overseeing culinary operations at Vast in the Devon Tower, a pair of Irma’s Burger Shacks and Western Concepts brands The Coach House, Sushi Neko, Musashi’s, Lobby Bar, The Tasting Room and Will Rogers Theatre, Fleischfresser’s answer was an immediate “yes.” That came as he and his wife, Jayne, were in process of moving, and also preparing for his son Kyle’s wedding — in Dallas. And did I mention he was the celebrity chef in the Wine Forum of Oklahoma in Stillwater this week April 10-11. “It’s just a great cause,” Fleischfresser said. “I’m happy to help, and I really hope it’ll raise awareness and encourage people to lend a hand.” The cause is homelessness, the program is called Turning the Table on Hunger. Fleischfresser was the first of many local chefs to bring his skills to WestTown to feed the masses for lunch. The program won’t be measured by how good the food it, but by how quickly and to what extent WestTown’s volunteer calendar is filled. And the best way to fill that calendar is as simple as following the Golden Rule. THE DAILY CHALLENGE Johnny Wofford begins his work day at 3:30 a.m. His job is to make sure those who come in need to the day shelter at WestTown are served breakfast and lunch. Wofford and his crew serve about 500 people — 180 for breakfast, 300 for lunch — five days a week. An hour after kitchen manager Wofford arrives, Delbert Briggs begins his shift, and the daily game of “Chopped” for the masses begins. The only thing Wofford and Briggs can rely on day to day is their own attendance, along with the 500 they feed. Everything else, including staff and ingredients for cooking, is subject to change daily. “On TV, chefs are challenged when the judges give them set ingredients to work with,” said Dan Straughan,

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Mean Green Wings with Coconut-Cilantro Dressing are inspired by Thai cuisine. Photo by Dave Cathey, for LOOKatOKC

executive director at the Homeless Alliance. “The reality is that chefs at shelters across the country face this challenge every day. They have to get creative with what food has been donated and piece it together to make a complete meal.” The idea for Turning the Table on Hunger came from local wine broker and host of The Spy’s “Tasting Notes,” Clayton Bahr, a longtime community volunteer. The plan: Bring local chefs into the commercial kitchen in WestTown’s day shelter to preview available ingredients, develop a menu and arrive the next morning to serve lunch by 11:30 a.m. The goal: To show the community that simply donating your professional skills will go a long way in raising living standards in our community for all its members. The first chef he approached was Fleischfresser, who has reigned at or near the top of Oklahoma City’s chef community since Ronald Reagan was president.

“I make my livelihood based on feeding people,” Fleischfresser said. “This is a logical way for me to help other people and hopefully raise some awareness about hunger and homelessness.” CHALLENGE MET The day before service, Briggs took Fleischfresser through the dry goods and walk-in freezer to see what ingredients were available. “We got lots of chicken,” Briggs said. “Think we got some pepperoni around here, too.” “You have any pasta?” Fleischfresser asked. “Oh, yeah,” Briggs answered. “We got a lot of pasta.” Fleischfresser turned and said to a small entourage of interested parties, “Looks like we’re making something from Portobello.” When asked what dish from the Northern Italian concept he opened

with Chris Lower in 1990 in the space where Deep Fork Grill now resides, Fleischfresser said, “PepperoniChicken Pasta.” The next day, Fleischfresser arrived early — not as early as Wofford and Briggs — bearing some nice red peppers and several pounds of fresh basil. Gradually the kitchen filled with other chefs: Russ Johnson, of Ludivine and The R&J Lounge and Supper Club; Jonathan Groth, of The Tasting Room; Kevin Lee, of Vast, and chef’s apprentice Danh Do, of The Coach House. Three and a half hours later, 300 ate every bite of the Pepperoni-Chicken Pasta with a fresh salad topped with Ranch Tomatoes and fresh-baked bread from Prairie Thunder Baking Co. When I arrived at WestTown at 8 a.m., Wofford had been there for nearly five hours and served breakfast with the help of Briggs, who arrived at 4:30 a.m. Chef Fleischfresser was already slicing red peppers and pointed to a sack of red onions.

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DAVE CATHEY “Can you slice those?” “Sure,” I said, but thought: “We’ll find out.” Because the goods are donated, they don’t come fresh from the fields. The first job was to eliminate onions not fit to eat, and there were a few. Then came cherry tomatoes to be sliced in half and dusted with Ranch dressing mix. “We’re making something called ranch tomatoes,” Fleischfresser wryly said. The look behind his glasses said, “I don’t think I’ve ever opened a packet of Ranch dressing powder.” By 11 a.m. it was clear this lunch was actually going to happen. Not that there was ever any real doubt, but part of the juice of working in a professional kitchen is the idea that the whole thing can go terribly wrong without focus, execution and properly timed good fortune. ‘WE CAN’T WAIT!’ About 11:15 a.m., the line started to form. By the time the cage in front of the kitchen was lifted, the line stretched almost out of view. Word had spread that today’s lunch was going to be special. The folks in the day shelter could see the extra help in the kitchen. They could see the chef coats, too. Unable to get cell reception in the kitchen, I had to make my way through the dining hall to reach the exit for a phone call. On my way back, a broadsmiling gentlemen shouted at me, “All of y’all chefs back there?” “Not all of us,” I said. “But there’s a bunch of them.” “Are you one of the chefs?” he asked. “No, but I’m helping them.” “All right!” he exclaimed. “We can’t wait!” Whether the chefs heard this fellow or not, they could feel the anticipation. And when the people came through to collect their lunch, dozens made it clear how much they appreciated the effort with a “God bless y’all” or a “Thanks so much for doing this.” The energy was palpable, inspiration reciprocal. WELCOME TO WESTTOWN At the WestTown Homeless Resource Campus, charity and collaboration are the standard every day. Developed by the Homeless Alliance,

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WestTown and its day shelter are part of the Coordinated Case Management program that provides housing and support to more than 100 homeless and at-risk families with children each month. The resource center uses its Homeless Management Information System — a networked computer database that allows agencies serving the homeless to share data on clients, measure outcomes and report to supporters. The system, called Horizon, was developed and is maintained by the Homeless Alliance and connects 42 agencies with 164 programs serving the homeless. The day shelter, developed, built and funded by the Homeless Alliance, is operated by City Care and is a 13,000-square-foot facility with a library, showers, computer workstations, a barbershop/salon, and classroom space for Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous, devotionals and art instruction. The day shelter also provides a place where people from agencies like Veterans Affairs, NorthCare, Be the Change, Healing Hands, and numerous churches can engage those seeking help. ELBOW GREASE, GOODS ARE SOUGHT Volunteer opportunities are bountiful, and the Homeless Alliance isn’t too picky about donations it accepts. Some areas of need are greater than others, but skilled labor is never far from the the top of the list. And skilled labor is what brought Fleischfresser and friends into the day shelter’s commercial kitchen to serve. “We see this as a great way to help bring our community of those who make excellent food in contact with those who need it,” Bahr said. “Our nature in the hospitality business is to take care of others, and in this project, we get to see it fulfilled.” Wofford and Briggs receive a couple of truckloads of food from Walmart each week and various goods from the Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma, but there is no continuity. That’s the nature of relying on charitable donations. The most prevalent item in the walk-in is Krispy Kreme doughnuts, which Wofford says they couldn’t survive without. “We get a lot of beans,” Briggs said.

“We do a lot of beans and cornbread — sometimes we don’t serve any meat at all.” When they do get meat, it’s usually chicken. “We haven’t had any beef in here in at least six months,” Wofford said. Wofford and Briggs get some help from AARP workers and a smattering of volunteers from various organizations, but the volunteer calendar is wide open. ACTIONS OVER WORDS Spending half a day feeding folks at WestTown makes it clear the Golden Rule is the only rule driving The Homeless Alliance. Officials with the Homeless Alliance, which funded and founded WestTown, indicate about 70 percent of those who use the day shelter sleep on the streets. Mental illness exacerbated by drug and/or alcohol abuse is common. Mental illness tends to frighten us, but that’s probably because we still have so much to learn about it. Regardless of why someone is homeless, it doesn’t make him or her any less human. Oklahoma City’s homeless bleed red, weep bitter tears, seek warmth from the cold, cool from the heat, share ideas, laugh and occasionally bicker. The bunch we served that day came in every conceivable age, shape, race, color, creed and culture. But there was a common demeanor of equal parts desperation and exasperation. WestTown isn’t a miracle mart where hope is pumped out like gasoline. It’s a place where a little peace, shelter and sustenance might rekindle some hope or spark inspiration. It’s a place where hope is built by hand, and inspiration comes from action, which is what West Town needs more than any-

the food dude

thing. Whether that action is writing a check, cooking lunch, planting a garden, teaching an art class, playing music, offering haircuts, providing counseling or showing up with a truckload of coats in the winter, it’s all welcome. Whatever you have to offer, offer it, and the folks with The Homeless Alliance will find a use for it. When the workday was over at WestTown, we parted ways back to our busy lives. Making the short drive from the day shelter to The Oklahoman’s gleaming new office in the heart of downtown, I kept thinking about the gentlemen who’d been so enthusiastic about lunch earlier. He couldn’t have been younger than 65, and it goes without saying that those who spend their days in WestTown for its services have met their fair share of poor fortune. But whatever landed this gentleman into homelessness hadn’t stolen the hope from his eyes. And I remembered, all day and each day of the two weeks it took to finish this story, his last words to me: “We can’t wait!” He meant the words one way, but the lifestyle he and his community live demand we take them in another.

Preparing the meal are, from left, Kurt Fleischfresser, Russ Johnson, Jonathan Groth and Danh Do. Photo by Jim Beckel,

The Oklahoman

HOW TO HELP Donations are accepted through the Homeless Alliance. Volunteers are needed to prepare and serve breakfast and lunch Monday through Friday. Volunteers can register through the United Way of Central Oklahoma’s Volunteer Center at www.volunteercentraloklahoma.org. To contact the day shelter, call 415-8500 or email okcdayshelter@yahoo. com. For more information, call the Homeless Alliance at 415-8410 or go to www.homelessalliance.org.

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POLAR DONUTS

food feature

1

Y

ounts Waters has been in the donut business for almost 23 years. Polar Donuts, 1111 N Meridian Ave. is his baby. Every day he starts prepping donuts at 2 a.m. for his morning crowd at 5 a.m. He’s extremely friendly and greets each customer with a free glazed donut and the funniest named donuts you’ll ever see. — Quit Nguyen, photographer

3

2

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food feature P O L A R D O N U T S

1. Polar Donuts owner, Younts Waters 2. 10:30 a.m. -The end of the day 3. Cherry Cream Pie Donut 4. "The college kids go crazy for this." — Younts Waters

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‘MILK BOTTLE’

city news

Guthrie boutique to breathe new life into local landmark

P

The Braum’s Milk bottle building at 2426 N Classen in Oklahoma City. It will become a second location for the Prairie Gothic boutique, which sells Oklahoma-themed home decor and gifts with a spooky flair. Photo By Steve Gooch, for LOOKatOKC and photo provided

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rairie Gothic, a Guthrie-based boutique, will open a second location this spring in Oklahoma City’s landmark milk bottle grocery building at NW 23 and N Classen. The shop carries Oklahoma-themed home decor and gifts with a decidedly spooky flair. Mother Christie Clifford and daughter Shirley Clifford have run the boutique’s first location in downtown Guthrie since December 2012 and also are organizing the upcoming Guthrie music festival Queen of the Prairie. The store’s aesthetic is a mash-up of mother and daughter’s personal styles. While Shirley Clifford likes cowboy-themed decor, her mother has more “goth” tastes, Shirley Clifford said. “We really like old trading posts and stuff, and that’s what we wanted Prairie Gothic to look like — an old trading post if it were owned by the creepiest people in town,” Shirley Clifford said. The Cliffords will continue that aesthetic at the new Oklahoma City shop, but with a more modern flourish in keeping with the Route 66 history of the milk bottle building. They hope to open the new shop in May. Milk bottle grocery owner Elise Kilpatrick inherited the milk bottle grocery from her father, the late businessman and civic leader John Kilpatrick Jr., and has just finished renovating the building with new transom windows as well as salvaged wood taken from another of her father’s historic Oklahoma City buildings. A vintage 1930 toilet also has been installed in the building, as well as 1930s-style tile floors. “It’s a really small building, but I went way over budget because I wanted to do it right,” Kilpatrick said. While renovations were underway, Kilpatrick was surprised by the number of Route 66 tourists who stopped by to visit the building from as far away as England and Australia. “I searched for who I thought would be tenants who would appeal to those travelers. I just really like Prairie Gothic, and I really like the things they are selling and their concept,” Kilpatrick said. The nearly 400-square-foot triangular milk bottle building has been vacant since the Saigon Baguette sandwich shop closed its doors in 2013 after occupying the space since the late 1980s. The milk bottle grocery was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998. The structure was built to sit on the old Belle Isle streetcar stop that ran diagonally across Classen Boulevard, which was part of U.S. Route 66’s original Oklahoma City alignment. Since it was built around 1930, the triangular building has been home to a variety of businesses, including a grocery store, a fruit stand, a laundry service and a barbecue stand. The milk bottle has been painted over the years to reflect advertising from various businesses and now bears the Braum’s Ice Cream and Dairy Store logo.

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calendarA P RAMI PLORN2I T3L H-2 02M0A- -YMM6A OY N9T H X X FILM

MUSIC

APRIL 23

“OKLAHOMA CITY: THE BOOM, THE BUST AND THE BOMB,” through April 23, Harkins Bricktown Cinemas 16, 150 E Reno, 231-4747. Call for show times.

NORMAN MUSIC FEST, 5:45 p.m. to 2 a.m., E Main between Jones and Porter. (Norman)

“WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS,” 7:30 p.m. April 23, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

BRAND NEW WITH CIRCA SURVIVE AND THE WEAKS, 7:30 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 677-9169.

“LA SAPIENZA,” 7:30 p.m. April 30, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

NICK SIGMAN AND JOSH COX WITH CAITLIN COX, 8:30 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950.

“CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA,” 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. May 1-3 and 7:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. May 7-9, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

APRIL 24

“A CAT IN PARIS,” 2 p.m. May 3, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 2363100. “SEYMOUR: AN INTRODUCTION,” 5:30 p.m. May 8-10, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

NORMAN MUSIC FEST, 4 p.m. to 2 a.m., E Main between Jones and Porter. (Norman) DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE WITH AWOL NATION AND ROBERT DELONG, 7:30 p.m., Brady Theater, 105 W Brady, (918) 582-7239. (Tulsa) A NIGHT AT THE COTTON CLUB, 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2584. AIR SUPPLY, 8 p.m., Riverwind Casino,

Showplace Theatre, 1544 OK-9, 322-6000. (Norman) MODEST MOUSE WITH MORNING TELEPORTATION, 8 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 677-9169. TONY FOSTER, 8 p.m., The Paramount, 701 W Sheridan, 517-0787. FORUM, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166. MIDWEST TRAGEDY, 9 p.m., Moonshiners, 119 E California, 235-7625. PIT BULL, 9 p.m, WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville) STARS, 9 p.m., Riverwind Casino, The River Lounge, 1544 OK-9, 322-6000. (Norman) ZEN OKIES WITH J. L. JONES, 9 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950.

APRIL 25 NORMAN MUSIC FEST, noon to 2 a.m., E Main between Jones and Porter. (Norman) JAESEN PEMBERTON, 4 p.m., Dope Chapel, 115 S Crawford. (Norman) BRUCE BENSON, 6 p.m., Jazmo’z Bourbon St. Café, 100 E California, 232-6666. BALANCE & COMPOSURE, 7 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 607-4805. DEREK HARRIS DUO, 7 p.m., Bedlam BarB-Q, 610 NE 50, 528-7427. AIR SUPPLY, 8 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville) ALBERT AND GAGE, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N McKinley, 524-0738. KENNY PITTS, 8 p.m., The Paramount, 701 W Sheridan, 517-0787.

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MUSIC SCISSOR TALES, 8 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950.

(918) 582-7239. (Tulsa) APRIL 30

CADR DOGS, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166. CLASS ACT, 9 p.m., Riverwind Casino, The River Lounge, 1544 OK-9, 322-6000. (Norman) DAVID WAYNE BROYLES, 9 p.m., Thunder Alley Grill, 2127 SW 74, 702-0302. SLOWVEIN, 9 p.m., Moonshiners, 119 E California, 235-7625. DEREK PAUL & THE HANDSOME DEVILS, 10 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

JAKE FM NEW FACE SHOWCASE, 6:30 p.m., Riverwind Casino, Showplace Theatre, 1544 OK-9, 322-6000. (Norman) THE CENTRAL JAZZ JAM, 7 p.m., UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, 359-7989. (Edmond) NEEDTOBREATHE, 7 p.m., Chevy Bricktown Events Center, 429 E California, 236-4143. DEREK HARRIS DUO, 8 p.m., FLINT, 15 N Robinson, 605-0657.

APRIL 26 A SKYLIT DRIVE, 6:30 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 607-4805.

HOME FREE, 8 p.m., Rose State College Hudiburg Chevrolet Center, 6420 SE 15, 733-7372.

AMY SPEACE & RYAN CULWELL, 8 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N McKinley, 524-0738.

SAMANTHA CRAIN, 8 p.m., The Deli, 309 White, 329-3534. (Norman)

BILLY BOB THORNTON & THE BOXMASTERS, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918-584-2306. (Tulsa)

JACK ROWDY, 9 p.m., Moonshiners, 119 E California, 235-7625.

HOZIER WITH LOW ROAR, 8 p.m., Brady Theater, 105 W Brady, (918) 582-7239. (Tulsa)

Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville) SUN-DRENCHED CELEBRATIONS, 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 2972584.

MAY 6 CHRIS TRAPPER, 9 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N McKinley, 524-0738. HELEN KELTER SKELTER ALBUM RELEASE, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166. BLEVERLY HILLS, 10 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51, 463-0470.

APRIL 28

MAY 7

BOB DYLAN & HIS BAND, 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2584.

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, 7:30 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 2972584.

O’N NGHIA SINH THANH, 8 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville)

IN ROOMS WITH OKLAHOMA CLOUD FACTORY, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166.

MAY 4 ALI HARTER, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166.

MAY 1 QUEEN OF THE PRAIRIE FESTIVAL, noon to midnight, Cottonwood Flats, Guthrie.

GARRISON KEILLOR, 8 p.m., Brady Theater, 105 W Brady, (918) 582-7239. (Tulsa)

JOHN RANDOLPH, 6 p.m., Jazmo’z Bourbon St. Café, 100 E California, 232-6666.

ZAPPA PLAYS ZAPPA, 8 p.m., ACM@UCO Performance Lab, 329 E Sheridan, 9744700.

RUSTY AND IAN AULDRIDGE WITH BUFFALO ROGERS, 8 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950.

APRIL 29

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

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MAAJR WITH TRASH TV AND BEACH LANGUAGE, 10 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51, 463-0470.

MAY 5 MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, 7:30 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 2972584.

ZZ TOP AND JEFF BECK, 7 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville)

MARILYN MANSON WITH KNEE HIGH FOX, 8 p.m., Brady Theater, 105 W Brady,

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, 7:30 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 2972584.

MAY 8 CHRIST; THE SCIENTIST WITH CULTURE CINEMATIC, 10 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51, 463-0470.

MARILYN MANSON, 8 p.m., Chevy Bricktown Events Center, 429 E California, 236-4143.

BLUE OCTOBER WITH LEGENDARY SKIES AND ASHLEIGH STONE, 8 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 6779169.

MASTODON & CLUTCH WITH GRYARD, 7 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 677-9169.

MAY 3

APRIL 27 ALI HARTER, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166.

PRIMUS & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY WITH THE FUNGI ENSEMBLE, 8 p.m., Chevy Bricktown Events Center, 429 E California, 236-4143.

KYLE BREWER, 6 p.m., Jazmo’z Bourbon St. Café, 100 E California, 232-6666. JIMMY WEBB, THE GLEN CAMPBELL YEARS, 7:30 p.m., The Blue Door, 2805 N McKinley, 524-0738. RUSH, 7:30 p.m., BOK Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 894-4200. (Tulsa) FEEL GOOD FRIDAY FUNDRAISER, 8 p.m, Twisted Root Gallery, 3012 N Walker, 410-8913. KYLE REID CD RELEASE PARTY, 8 p.m., The Paramount, 701 W Sheridan, 517-0787. MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2584. RANDY ROGERS BAND, 8 p.m., Brady Theater, 105 W Brady, (918) 582-7239. (Tulsa)

MAY 2 QUEEN OF THE PRAIRIE FESTIVAL, noon to midnight, Cottonwood Flats, Guthrie. BOB DYLAN, 8 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777

TONY BENNETT, 8 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville) BANDITOS, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166.

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OKLAHOMA CITY MEMORIAL MARATHON | DOWNTOWN OKC

T. Z. WRIGHT, 9 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950. FOXBURROWS WITH OKLAHOMA CLOUD FACTORY, 10 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51, 463-0470. MAY 9 MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2584. DEREK HARRIS TRIO, 6:45 p.m., Redrock Canyon Grill, 9221 Lake Hefner Parkway, 749-1995. ED SHEERAN, 7:30 p.m., BOK Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 894-4200. (Tulsa) BIG OKIE DOOM RELEASE PARTY WITH KILLER GANDHI AND EYES MADE READY, 8 p.m., Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 677-9169. BONNIE RAITT, 8 p.m., WinStar Casino, 777 Casino, (580) 276-4229. (Thackerville) CHICAGO, 8 p.m., Riverwind Casino, Showplace Theatre, 1544 OK-9, 322-6000. (Norman) MISS BROWN TO YOU, 8 p.m., UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, 359-7989. (Edmond) LARRY CHIN WITH SPIRITS AND THE MELCHIZEDEK CHILDREN, TEACH ME EQUALS AND KYKUIT, 9 p.m., The Blue Note Lounge, 2408 N Robinson, 600-1166. PEGGY JOHNSON, 8 p.m., Back Alley Gallery, 5026 N May, 604-2950. DJ DEV, 10 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51, 463-0470.

THEATER “FLOYD COLLINS,” 7:30 p.m. April 23-25, Mitchell Hall Theatre, UCO Campus, 100 N University Blvd., 974-3375. (Edmond)

APRIL 26 • 6:30 A.M. Voted one of the 12 “must-run” marathons in the world by Runner’s World magazine, the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon will be held April 26. The event includes a 26.2-mile marathon, a 13.1mile half marathon, a marathon relay, a 5k race and a kid’s marathon. All races except the kid’s marathon begin at 6:30 a.m. at Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, 620 N Harvey. The kid’s marathon begins at 8:15 a.m.

Saturdays through April 25, The Boom, 2218 NW 39, 601-7200. NATIVE AMERICAN PLAY FESTIVAL, 8 p.m. May 7-16, Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2584.

The course begins at the memorial, winds through the Capitol campus, Lake Hefner trail and Oklahoma City’s historic neighborhoods, and finally ends back at the Gates of Time. Along the way, runners pass 168 banners, each bearing the name of one of the bombing victims. The Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon is a Boston qualifying USATF sanctioned event on a certified 26.2 mile single loop course. For more information, visit okcmarathon.com

EVENTS COMEDY

“JEEVES IN BLOOM,” through April 25, Carpenter Square Theatre, 800 W Main, 232-6500. Call for show times.

JJ’S ALLEY, COMEDY OPEN MIC, 8:30 p.m. Sundays, 212 E Sheridan, 605-4543.

“NUNSENSE A-MEN!,” 8 p.m. Fridays and

GREG MORTON, 8 p.m. April 22-25, Loony

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

Bin, 8503 N Rockwell, 239-4242. GABRIEL IGLESIAS: UNITY THROUGH LAUGHTER TOUR, 8 p.m. April 24, Cox Convention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, 6028500. AN EVENING WITH DAVID SEDARIS, 8 p.m. April 29, Rose State College Hudiburg Chevrolet Center, 6420 SE 15, 733-7372. (Midwest City)

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EVENTS TIM GAITHER, 8 p.m. April 29-May 2, Loony Bin, 8503 N Rockwell Ave., 239-4242. DC MALONE, 8 p.m. May 6-9, Loony Bin, 8503 N Rockwell Ave., 239-4242. POETRY PUBLIC ACCESS OPEN MIC, District House, 1755 NW 16, 633-1775. Weekly on Monday, with sign-up at 7:30 p.m.; show starts at 8 p.m. OPEN MIC, Urban Roots, 322 NE 2, 2979891. Weekly on Tuesday, with sign-up at 7 p.m. and show at 8 p.m.; two poems or 3.5 minutes. RED DIRT POETRY, Sauced on Paseo, 2912 Paseo, 521-9800. Weekly on Wednesday; 7:30 p.m. sign-up; show at 8 p.m.; two poems or 6 minutes. OPEN MIC, Hubbly Bubbly Hookah & Cafe, 2900 N Classen Blvd, 609-2930. Occasionally on Thursdays, call for schedule. OU WRITE CLUB, Second Wind Coffee House, 564 Buchanan Ave., or Cafe Plaid, 333 W Boyd; ouwriteclub@gmail.com. Second and fourth Thursdays each month. (Norman) RED DIRT MASTER OF FINE ARTS IN CREATIVE WRITING PROGRAM, monthly workshop, Ralph Ellison Library, 2000 NE 23, 424-1437. Second Thursday of every month (in October they meet on the 16th), 6 to 8 p.m. All ages and genres welcome. WORKSHOP AND OPEN MIC, The Paramount, 7 N Lee Ave., 517-0787. Weekly, 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday. Workshop from 2 to 3 p.m., open mic 3 to 4 p.m. Two poems, songs or short story and comedy; 10-minute limit. POETRY READING AND OPEN MIC, Full Circle Bookstore, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 842-2900. Last Sunday of every month, 3 to 5 p.m. Guest poet reads before open mic. SECOND SUNDAY POETRY, Norman Depot, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. Second Sunday of the month, 2 p.m. Provides a monthly venue for selected regional poets to share their work. Former Oklahoma Poet Laureate and Oklahoma Book Award win-

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DEEP DEUCE FOOD TOUR | DEEP DEUCE ner Carl Sennhenn hosts. (Norman) GENERAL EVENTS APRIL 22 FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. PUT YOUR STAMP ON EARTH DAY, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. APRIL 23 FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. ART AFTER 5, 5 to 9 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, Roof Terrace, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100. AVANT GARDENERS ARTS FESTIVAL HAPPY HOUR AND MEETUP, 5:30 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, Park House Restaurant, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. DROP-IN YOGA, 5:45 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100. ALL ACCESS WORKSHOP WITH LUCID SALON, 6 p.m., Lucid Salon, 518 NW 23, 673-7476. APRIL 24 FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. INDUSTRY FLEA, 5 p.m. to 10 p.m., Midtown, 399 NW 10. H&8TH NIGHT MARKET AND STREET FESTIVAL, 7 p.m., Midtown, Hudson and NW 8. APRIL 25 EDMOND FARMER’S MARKET, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Festival Market Place, 30 W 1, 2167635. (Edmond) INDUSTRY FLEA, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Midtown, 399 NW 10. DROP-IN YOGA, 11 a.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100.

APRIL 25 AND MAY 9 • 6 TO 9 P.M. Foodie Foot Tours will sponsor a Deep Deuce Food Tour at various locations throughout the district. The tour will feature a walk through Deep Deuce to learn some of its history and sample the foods at several restaurants. The tour meets at The Wedge Pizzeria starting 15 minutes before the tour time. Organizers ask that participants dress accordingly and wear comfortable walking shoes. Tours will continue through June. Cost is $55 per person. Visit www.foodiefoottours.com for more information.

April 22 - May 5, 2015

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calendarA P RAMI PLORN2I T3L H-2 02M0A- -YMM6A OY N9T H X X

OKLAHOMA CRAFT BEER FESTIVAL DOWNTOWN OKC

EVENTS

FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

FIRST FRIDAY, 6 to 10 p.m., Paseo Arts District, 3022 Paseo, 525-2688. MAY 2

VERDIGRIS FLEA, 11 a.m., Verdigris, 415 NW 7. DROP-IN ART, CLAY CREATIONS, 1 P.M. to 4 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100. APRIL 26 OKLAHOMA CITY MEMORIAL MARATHON, 6:30 a.m., NW 5 and Harvey. FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

MARCH OF DIMES WALK, 7 a.m. to noon, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. AUTISM PIECEWALK, 8:30 a.m., Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark, 2 S Mickey Mantle, 218-1000. EDMOND ARTS FESTIVAL, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Downtown Edmond, Broadway N of 2nd Street, 249-9391. MAY DAY CELEBRATION, 10 a.m. to noon, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

APRIL 28 KIND YOGA SERIES, 5:45 to 6:45 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. APRIL 29 FOOD TRUCK WEDNESDAY, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., DC on Film Row, 609 W Sheridan Ave., 607-8600. APRIL 30 BROWN BAG LUNCH: DIG A TEN DOLLAR HOLE, noon, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

LARGE FORMAT MARBLING WORKSHOP, 1 p.m., Skirvin, 1 Park Ave., 2723040. MCNELLIE’S PUB RUN, 3 p.m., McNellie’s Public House, 1100 Classen Ave., 601-7468. MAY 3 EDMOND ARTS FESTIVAL, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Downtown Edmond, Broadway N of 2nd Street, 249-9391. FREE FAMILY DAY, 2 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100. MAY 4

ART AFTER 5, 5 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100. DROP-IN YOGA, 5:45 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100. MINDFUL LIVING, 6 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. CAFÉ SOCIETY, 6:30 p.m., [Artspace] at Untitled, 1 NE 3, 815-9995. MAY 1 EDMOND ARTS FESTIVAL, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Downtown Edmond, Broadway N of 2nd Street, 249-9391. (Edmond) BROADWAY & BREW, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEES APPRECIATION LUNCH, 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., DC on Film Row, 609 W Sheridan Ave., 607-8600. ATELIER WORKSHOP SERIES, DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEE APPRECIATION WEEK, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Film Row, Sheraton Ave. between N Western and N Walker Blvd., 235-3500. FULL MOON BIKE RIDE AND RUN, 6 to 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. BARRE3 FREE COMMUNITY WORKOUT, 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. MAY 5 KIND YOGA SERIES, 5:45 to 6:45 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno,

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

MAY 16 • 1 TO 4 P.M. AND 5 TO 8 P.M. Oklahoma Craft Beer Festival returns for a fifth year May 16 at 121 E Sheridan. It is an outdoor event in the east parking lot of TapWerks Ale House. Paid parking is available at the various lots located in Bricktown. The festival is a beer-tasting event that focuses on craft beer from the U.S. and around the world. Ticket holders will have access to over 200 beer samples, a commemorative tasting cup and food from some of OKC’s best food trucks. Beer samples are unlimited with a ticket; food is available for purchase. Both sessions will offer the same beers and same food. Tickets are $35. Designated Driver tickets are offered for $20 for those who would like to enjoy the festivities, but not partake in the beer. Free non-alcoholic beverages and snacks will be provided for Designated Driver ticket holders. Visit oklahomacraftbeerfestival.com for information.

445-7080.

and Gallery, 6 Santa Fe Plaza, 427-5228.

GETTIN DIRTY DATE NIGHT, DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEE APPRECIATION WEEK, 6 to 9 p.m., The Plant Shoppe, 705 W Sheridan Ave., 748-0718.

FOOD TRUCK WEDNESDAY, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., DC on Film Row, 609 W Sheridan Ave., 607-8600. MAY 7

MAY 6 BRINGING BOOKS TO LIFE, 10 a.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. PIZZA PARTY AND CONCERT, DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEE APPRECIATION WEEK, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Red Earth Museum

TAI CHI SERIES WITH SILAS WOLF, 9 a.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. ART AFTER 5, 5 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100.

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M O NMTOAHNP TR0 HI0L 0- 20M2 -O-NMMTOHANYTX HX9 0 0

VISUAL ART MOTHER’S DAY CARD-MAKING WORKSHOP, 5:30 p.m., Skirvin, 1 Park Ave., 2723040. MAY 8 SECOND FRIDAY ART WALK, 6 to 9 p.m. E Main and Santa Fe, 360-1162. (Norman) PICNIC IN THE PARK, DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEE APPRECIATION WEEK, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. MOTHER’S DAY CARD-MAKING WORKSHOP, 1 p.m., Skirvin, 1 Park Ave., 2723040.

Elm, 352-3272. (Norman) “ANSEL ADAMS: MASTERWORKS — FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE TURTLE BAY EXPLORATION PARK,” through May 10, National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250. ARBOR DAY ART SHOW, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through April 25, Edmond Historical Society Museum, 431 S Boulevard, 340-0078. (Edmond) “BEYOND THE BATTLEFIELD: DEPICTIONS OF WAR,” through May 10, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 3253272. (Norman)

MAY 9 GREAT STRIDES WALK, 7 a.m. to noon, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. PAINTING IN THE GARDENS SERIES WITH WINE AND PALETTE, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. CURATORIAL PRACTICE & MODELS, 1 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Drive, 236-3100.

BITING THE APPLE “HAUTE COUTURE,” 8 p.m. to 1 a.m., IAO Gallery, 706 Sheridan, 232-6060. “CONFLICT CAST IN BRONZE,” through July 12, National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250. “COYOTE SONGS — DESPERADO DREAMS: THE ART OF ROBBY MCMURTRY,” through May 10, National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

D.G. SMALLING, through June 30, Exhibit C, 1 E Sheridan, 767-8900. EMILY PETREE SOLO EXHIBITION, through April 25, IAO Gallery, 706 Sheridan, 232-6060. FRINGE ANNUAL GROUP SHOW, May 1-30, The Project Box, 3003 Paseo, 412370-9157. “ILLUMINATIONS: REDISCOVERING THE ART OF DALE CHIHULY,” ongoing, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100. “INTENT TO DECEIVE: FAKES AND FORGERIES IN THE ART WORLD,” through May 10, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100. “LADIES OF NORMAN,” through April 24, The Depot, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman) “MADONNA OF THE PRAIRIE: DEPICTIONS OF WOMEN IN THE AMERICAN WEST,” through May 10, National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

MARY RUSSELL EXHIBITION, through April 26, Governor’s Gallery at the Oklahoma Capitol, 2300 521-2931. “THE NATURE OF LIFE,” SCULPTURES BY DON NARCOMEY, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through May 28, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080. “POST POP CONSIDERATIONS,” WILLIAM STRUBY, through April 24, IAO Gallery, 706 W Sheridan, 232-6060. “PORTRAITS OF A DISAPPEARING AMERICA,” ALEX LEME, through May 2, Oklahoma Contemporary, 3000 General Pershing Blvd., 951-0000. “TERRA,” ORLY GENGER, through Oct. 2, Oklahoma Contemporary, 3000 General Pershing Blvd., 951-0000. “SIEGFRIED HALUS” — PAUL MEDINA EXHIBITION, through April 25, JRB at the Elms, 2810 N Walker, 528-6336. “WARHOL: THE ATHLETES,” RICHARD WEISMAN, April 16-July 12, Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

SUPER SONIC MAKE + TAKE, 1 to 4 p.m., Oklahoma Contemporary, 3000 General Pershing Blvd., 951-0000. THE PERFECT MOTHER’S DAY GIFT: DIY FLOWER BOUQUETS, 2:30 to 4 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

VISUAL ART 5X5 ART SHOW AND SALE, May 1-3, Downtown Edmond, Broadway N of 2nd Street, 249-9391. “A WORLD AT PLAY,” MARY RUSSELL, through April 26, Governor’s Gallery, State Capitol, 2300 N Lincoln, 521-2931. “A WORLD UNCONQUERED: THE ART OF OSCAR BROUSSE JACOBSON,” through Sept. 6, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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01 WHERE: AMC@UCO METRO MUSIC, BRICKTOWN |1| Kaitlin Butts |2| Jabee |3| Sophia and Joel |4| Cody and Liz |5| Bowlsey |6| John Fullbright Photos by Steven Maupin

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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01 WHERE: HEARD ON HURD, EDMOND |1| Beau Jennings and the Tigers |2| Angilla and Jonathan |3| Rosi and Jeff |4| Tony, Brooke, JC, Jackie, Andy and Pam |5| Heather and Brianna |6| Sarah and Gilson Photos by Steven Maupin

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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WHERE: HEARD ON HURD, EDMOND |1| Ashley, Jordan, Melanie and Matt |2| Aaron and Anna |3| Lyndsey and Harley Photos by Steven Maupin

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April 22 - May 5, 2015

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2011 Opitma LX Spicy Red! 19K mi. Must See $13,900. 659-6710 Twin 2010 Yamaha WaveRunners Like New! $10,500 ¡ 580-309-0637 '04 Lincoln LS, pearl white, 100K mi, new tires, well maintained, $3500 obo ¡‘¡‘¡ 405-404-6868 1955 Chevy Bel Air SHOW CAR, 2 Door coupe, 454-V8, AC, Black exterior with black & ivory tuckn-roll interior. Frame off restored, 185 miles, $47,000. Call 870-3291834 or 870-536-1414 or email me at moneymartinc@yahoo.com

'07 X5 Fully loaded, graphite grey, low mi, EC, $16,995 obo, 213-3471

2012 Regal GS, standard transmission, white diamond, 5K miles, $23,500, 405-201-9842.

CASH 4 VEHICLES

BEST VALUE ON NEW CADILLACS UNITED CADILLAC 800-310-6130

UP TO $10,000 Cars Trucks SUV Any Cond We Pay Cash & Tow Free

788-2222 $$$$$$$$$ CASH FOR CARS Up to $5,000 paid on Cars, Trucks, Vans & SUVs

'00 Lumina, 131K, all pwr, CD, alarm, tint, good tires, nice, runs great $1,900obo. 405-312-4573

AAA cash car, trk cycle. Run/notfree tow. Some $350+ 850-9696

Classic Car Restoration Free transport avail 918-605-6070 YesteryearClassicAutos.com 1995 Chevy Impala SS, hail damage, $2000, 405-650-3611.

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2003 Tiffin Phaeton 40', Triple Slideouts, 330hp Cat diesel pusher. Only 28,000 miles. Washer/dryer combo, diesel generator. 6 brand new Michelins! 10k pound BlueOx tow bar. Saturn tow vehicle also available. Very nice unit for this price! $59,900 405-528-1361

Mercedes SLK280 2008 Mercedes-Benz SLK-Class Convertible, Red ext, Tan int, Leather Interior, excellent cond, 34,000 mi, Garage kept $29,900, millsbits@aol.com 405-997-8560 or 275-6171

2007 Milan Premier, auto, leather, sunroof, 46K miles, EXCEPTIONAL, $9,750obo. » » 405-948-4310 » » '97 Tracer, 127K, 4dr, AC, remote alarm, tint, new tires, great on gas, nice $1900obo. 405-312-4573

'04 Honda Pilot, 193K, VG cond., VG price $5K » » 772-475-5024

'98 Toyota 4-Runner, 4cyl, 2WD, IMMACULATE, Exc. Cond., No leaks/drips, $6,950. 405-314-1900 ’03 TOYOTA SEQUOIA 4X4, CLEAN, 800-310-6130 co.

'94 MH 33ft 32190mi loaded, loan value $10K, make offer. 392-4854 '13 Monte Carlo 42' 5th Whl, 2bd 2 slide outs, 3 a/c, FP, w/d, elec awning, lots of xtras, non-smkr, clean $29,500 obo 405-249-5634 2010 Heartland 5th Whl 35', dual a/c, 3 slide-outs, elec roll-out tarp, cold pkg, low mileage, like new! 580-450-4165, 580-530-0444 2013 Columbus 5th Wheel, 38ft, 4 slides, tons of options, $42,000. » » » 405-921-5287 » » » 1995 Holiday Rambler AlumaLite custom, 28 foot 5th wheel, all options, $8500, 405-324-5593.

'07 Hemi 300, exc cond, 87K, sunroof, $10,950 » 640-7209 '05 Pontiac Sunfire, 2 door, white, sunroof, Rally wheels, GREAT SHAPE, $2,900. 405-728-5444 or 405-535-8806 2009 Dodge Charger, 1 Owner, Exc. Shape! $8,500 obo, 474-7844.

Any Make, Model or Cond. Free haul off on any unwanted vehicles 24/7 ‘ 405-255-5962

2005 Ford Expedition XLT, Leather, 3rd row power fold, exc cond $7999, (405) 550-3856

1999 Monte Carlo, very nice inside & out, low miles 80K, 1owner $3500 »»» 405-273-7674

405-512-7278 WE BUY VEHICLES!

2010 Toyota Tundra SR-5, black, double cab, 39,400 miles, mags, specialty rails $25,200 437-7309 GIANT INVENTORY OF TRUCKS UNITED CHEVY BUICK CADILLAC GMC 800-310-6130

Suzuki M50 2006,34kmi,blk,like new tires, extras $3500 Liz 405.650.4963

»» 2012 ACCORD LX »» 43K White/tan. Lady driven never damaged. Spare never on ground. Like new! $16,400 » 590-3000

2000 Grand Cherokee Ltd, 4.7L V8 4x4 $3500 obo Call 405-202-4417 2000 Grand Cherokee, red, 4WD, good cond, $3700, 405-410-6611.

2001 Toyota Celica GT, 5spd, 95K, good cond. $4500 obo 589-2592

'09 Dodge Ram 4WD, 60,750 mi, V8, Forced to Sell! ¡‘¡ $14,500 Ultra Clean 405-343-6369 by appt

'02 Ford F150 XLT Crew Cab 4.6ci, AC, auto 170K, drive train in exc. cond., $5,500. 737-2673

2001 18' Tahoe Boat SF - Trailer 2001 Mercury Marine 115 HP Ski and fish rig. New powerhead/pump/ prop/Troll mtr. 52# Fish Finder many accessories call. Dual Marine Batteries. Call 405-341-7146. No Dealers. $6888. 405-341-7146 Bass Buggy Has everything: Trailer, 44lb trolling motor and battery, 2 1/2 HP Outboard, depth finder, live well, padded swivel seats, boat cover. Great condition! $1800. Call 405-642-8313 Premium boat slip at Lake Texoma, located at Soldier Creek. Enclosed slip with lots of storage, electricity, running water & more. Priced at $5,000. Call Jack at 788-1726 for details. Clear, Beautiful Lake Tenkiller! Boat Slips for Lease 918-457-5674

April 22 - May 5, 2015

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Research and Quality Manager Research and Quality Manager needed in Ponca City, Oklahoma to research and test probiotics and pathogens in food products at Log10 facility. Applicants must have the minimum of a Master of Science in biological science, food science, or microbiology plus at least two years of experience managing or directing a food microbiology laboratory. Must have legal authority to work in the U.S. Send resume/references to: Dr. Siobhan Reilly, ATTN: Oklahoma City, Log10, LLC, 2402 Sykes Blvd, Ponca City, OK 74601. EOE.

OFFICE ASSISTANT Fort Gibson Schools is accepting applications for the following positions: •Secondary English Teacher •Secondary Special Education Teacher •Middle School Social Studies Teacher OR..... Certified Teacher with Middle School Endorsement in English or in Social Studies. •Possible Coaching position in football, wrestling & baseball For the 2015-2016 school year. Apply online at www.ftgibson.k12.ok.us or call (918) 478-2474. EOE.

Bricklayer Helper needed. Must have own transportation. Some experience needed. Call Rusty 405-550-1343

Dewains Automotive, in business since 1966, needs several Master Technicians. Work hours are 8-5, Mon-Fri. Call 505-239-9750cell or 405-759-2393

Mortgage Loan Originator (MLO) 8-5 M/F Associates or Bachelor’s degree in business or finance preferred but not required. High school diploma/ but degree preferred and at least 2-5 years’ experience in mortgage loan origination. This position requires a strong attention to detail and accuracy. Must be familiar with standard concepts, rules, regulations, practices and procedures as well as basic mortgage lending requirements. Contact Kasey Gorrell 405-748-9100 or fax resume to 405-748-9141 Attn: Mortgage loans.

Full Time Tellers M-F Some Saturdays 8-5 Cash Handling experience required, bank teller experience preferred but not required. Job duties: take deposits, cash checks, great customer service skills. NBC Oklahoma offers a great benefit package. Contact Leigh-Anne Taylor 405-748-9100 or fax resume to 405-748-9191.

Heavy Equipment Operators Sherwood Construction Co., Inc. is now accepting applications for Scraper, Bulldozer & Motor Grader Operators. Medical, dental, life, 401(k), flex spending. Apply in person @ 1120 E. Reno OKC, OK 73117, via email jobs@ sherwood.net, Fax 918-574-2530 download application @ www. sherwoodcompanies.com Equal Opportunity Employer, minorities, women, protected veterans, individuals w/ disabilities

AMERICAN CLEANERS Superintendent For Civil, Industrial & Commercial Jobs. Ranging from $2m-$25m Foreman For concrete crews. Send Resume to Wynn Construction Fax: 405-753-1159 wynn@wynnconstruction.com

CSR, Outbound Sales & Appointment Settings. Morning and evening shifts available. FT position. Great Pay and Benefits! Fax resume to 405-794-2037 or email to office@aircomfortsolutions.net Seasonal Customer Service Teleflora Seasonal Customer Service. Visit our website or apply in person Monday through Friday, 9a-4p at 3737 NW 34th, Oklahoma City, OK 73112. High School Diploma http://www.quia. com/pages/teleflorarecruiting/ okfaq

Hiring FT Customer Service Reps $9.85/Hour. Apply at 13901 N May, OKC, OK 73134.

April 22 - May 5, 2015

Wanted! Experienced, Full Time

COUNTER HELP

Retail Sales hrly plus great commission.

for national medical company. EOE/DFWP Fax resume to 405-691-6052 or email jobs0120@lincare.com

Apply in person, STATUARY WORLD, 8401 N. I-35, OKC.

Certified Advantage Case Mgr. Agency seeking Experienced Case Mgr. to work Oklahoma County. Competitive pay with benefits.

Arbuckle Memorial Hospital is accepting applications for an

I.T. Network Coordinator Previous experience with networking and software applications required. Experience with Healthcare systems and education with networking and operating systems preferred. Appl. may be downloaded at

arbucklehospital.com

HR at (580)622-5519.

CMAs and CNAs ALL SHIFTS New Facility seeking full time team players to join our staff. MUST PASS background check and be a self-starter. We offer competitive wages, benefits & vacation. Apply in person

at: Tuscany Village 2333 Tuscany Blvd. 405-286-0835 EOE

for moving company. Apply in person at 1131 Enterprise Ave., Unit 15A, OKC, OK, 445-7618.

PT/FT FLEXIBLE SHIFTS, BENEFITS,

Fence Installers needed. Must have transportation.

Call 405-431-0955

General Construction Laborers Must have transportation to work. Depending on exp., starting pay starts at $10/hr. Call 282-0311 or email onsite@coxinet.net

JANITORIAL Individuals & Couples to clean office bldgs, PT evenings, M-F. Pd holidays. Apply 4-6 PM, Mon-Thur, at 1024 N. Tulsa Ave, OKC. Se Habla Espanol

LPN on Weekends FT Housekeeper Apply in person Sommerset Assisted Living 1601 SW 119th St. 405-691-9221

CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDES & 24 HOUR LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS

Must be 21+ Pass Drug/BG, Valid DL, clean MVR, www.RCXHires.com

Service Technician Coffee Creek Apts-Edmond, OK-3 yr general maint exp, working knowledge of HVAC, electrical, plumbing, appliance repair, pools and carpentry, exp with various tools and equipment, EPA certification preferred. Please call 501-371-6310, fax resume to 501-374-3383 or e-mail resume to phillip.anders@bsrtrust.com

BANKING AllNations Bank in Calumet, Oklahoma is seeking an experienced lender in agricultural and commercial lending. Opportunity for advancement for the right person. gene@anbok.com

Fax resume: 842-5658.

DRIVERS & HELPERS

DRIVERS WANTED NOW! NO CDL REQUIRED

Available anytime. I will care for you. Exc refs & experience. 495-0323.

Insurance Biller/Collector

1PM-7PM shift plus Saturdays. Apply in person at Excel Cleaners 8900 S Penn.

Needed. Apply in person at: Sommerset Assisted Living, 1601 SW 119th St, OKC.

Opening for the 2015-2016 School Year: Secondary Social Studies Teacher with Assistant Varsity Girls Basketball Coach. Must be OK certified. Apply at Bethany Public Schools, 6721 NW 42nd, Bethany, OK 73008 E.O.E.

Part Time - Flexible Hours - M-F between the hours 8-5 - $10.00 $12.00 to start plus bonuses Great Job with a great work environment 25 - 30 hours per week. Call Joe @ 721-2222 local business for over 43 years.

or picked up at 2011 W. Broadway, Sulphur, OK 73086 and may be faxed to

Full Time Housekeepers

Bethany Public Schools

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ALL POSITIONS The City of Del City is accepting applications for the following full time positions: Crew Chief, Light Equipment Operators, Groundskeeper, Police Officer, Deputy Court Clerk, PT Custodian The City offers a great salary with excellent benefits. For more information or to apply please visit www.cityofdelcity.org or apply in person at City Hall, 3701 SE 15th St. EOE.

No experience necessary. Apply at 425 SW 44th.

Seeking Experienced Medical Scheduler/Receptionist Busy Cardiology Office in MWC, OK is seeking a full-time experienced medical scheduler/ receptionist. Preferably at least one year of corresponding experience - insurance verification, patient scheduling & billing, exceptional dependability, professionalism, and ability to work well in a busy and demanding atmosphere. Email resume to: windy.nunnery@csok.org

Caring for Seniors IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

To Apply Call 577-1910 Visiting Angels Office Assistant....If you believe that work ought to be more than just ''putting in the time to get your check''. If you want to help people and learn new things that will make a difference and you are not afraid of hard work fax 1 page resume to 752-5839

LPN or RN 3-11 and 11-7 New Facility seeking team players to join our staff. Must be reliable & hard-working. We offer competitive wages, vacation & benefits.

PHARMACY TECH Mon-Fri, FULL & PART TIME. Flexible hours. Fax resume to 424-4962.

Application/info available at 6700 NW 36 St, Bethany, and www.cityofbethany.org. Position open until filled. Manager/CEO Oversee the Credit Union's strategic plan, annual budget & daily activities while promoting CU growth & development. Bachelors Degree in Business or Accounting. Previous CEO/Senior Management Experience is desired. Please send resume/cover letter to PO Box 344, El Reno, OK 73036 Seeking a Vice President of Development, exper. grant

writer, must have good communication skills. Health insurance, paid vacation and sick leave provided. Send resume to bw@dailylivingcenters.org .

Apply in person at: Tuscany Village 2333 Tuscany Blvd 405-286-0835 EOE

LPN or RN Double Weekend New Facility seeking team players to join our staff. Must be reliable & hard-working. We offer competitive wages, vacation & benefits.

Apply in person at: Tuscany Village 2333 Tuscany Blvd 405-286-0835 EOE

Office Manager Fast paced, patient centered medical practice looking for qualified OM. Must have experience in medical office management, including accounting, collections, billing, insurance & personnel management. Email resume to: billmt@cox.net

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR

Buffalo Wild Wings We are hiring New Management Members who are looking to be part of a Great Team and a fast growing company. Earn up to $40,000 as an Assistant and get bonused in AGM and GM positions with higher salaries. We always try to promote from within for AGM and GM positions, and are currently looking for team players wanting a better balanced lifestyle while we update our schedules to be more family friendly.

$40,000 okbwwresumes@aol.com $500 BONUS FOR TRAINED HTS Independent Opportunities provides services to people with disabilities. Excellent FT benefits, paid training, opportunities for advancement. PT/FT HTS positions in OKC. Bonuses: 90 day bonus of $500 for trained HTS! Apply at 3000 United Founders Blvd, #221, (405) 879-9720. EOE.

COOK, FULL TIME Minimum 2 years experience in large volume cooking. Must pass drug and background checks. Full paid benefits after 60 days. Apply in person, Saint Ann Retirement Center, 7501 W Britton Rd, OKC.

LOOKATOKC.COM


Server, Full Time 10:30-7:00pm. Paid benefits after 60 days. Must pass drug and background checks and be able to communicate in English. Apply in person at Saint Ann Retirement Center, 7501 W Britton Rd, OKC.

Inside Agriculture Sales Looking for one inside salesperson in our Chemical/Fertilizer department. Some Chemical and Fertilizer background. Able to follow instructions. Must have 5yr sales experience and educated in Microsoft word and Excel. Salary based on experience plus benefits. Apply at 405 West Pikes Peak Rd Chickasha, www.agsolutionsok.com or fax resume to 405-224-7159

SALES CONSULTANT Oak Creek Homes a leader in manufactured housing industry is seeking professional sales consultant. Must have 2 yrs proven sales experience. Responsible for sales and customer relationships, driving business through various marketing strategies and reaching targeted set sales goals. Salary plus commission and bonuses with potential to reach 100K+. Insurance benefits and 401(k) avail. Future management opportunities. Send resumes to: mary.lawrence@oakcreekhomes.com

Air Comfort Solutions, Oklahoma City & Tulsa's largest residential service & replacement company is seeking qualified

Residential Journeyman PLUMBER. Excellent Benefits & Pay! Must have excellent driving record & pass drug screen. Apply in person at 908 Messenger Ln, Moore, OK, call Pam at 721-3740, or email pchapman@ aircomfortsolutions.net

Fuel/Lube Technician Sherwood Construction Co., Inc. is seeking a Fuel/Lube Technician for the OKC area. Must possess Class A CDL w/ hazmat/tanker endorsement, be 21 yrs of age & have clean driving record. Pre employment drug/physical required. Medical, dental, life, 401(k) + more. Equal Opportunity Employer of minorities, women, individuals w/ disabilities & protected veterans. www. sherwoodcompanies.com Send resume to jobs@sherwood.net or apply in person @ 1120 E. Reno OKC, OK 73117

Glaziers Will lead crew for install/ repair. DL req’d. Health Ins+. Atlas Glass ¡‘¡ 601-1015, ext. 0

ICE Technician Our Lawton, OK power station is now accepting applications for an ICE Technician. Troubleshooting and maintenance of electrical systems and instrumentation and controls. Must be able to program PLCs/DCS logics. Qualifications include: •Must have a two-year Associate Degree in Electronics, Electrical Engineering, or equivalent education & exper. •Must have the knowledge and skill to perform work in the installation, inspection, repair, adjustment, calibration and servicing of instruments and controls. •Success on Company pre-placement tests We offer an attractive benefits package. Qualified applicants may submit an on-line application to www.aep.com no later than April 27, 2015. Equal Opportunity Employer Minorities/Females/ Disability/Vets

Maintenance Technician Livestock Nutrition Center @ Guthrie, OK currently taking applications for Maintenance Technician. Preferred applicants will have a background in Diesel Mechanics and/or General Maintenance. Competitive Salary & Full Benefits are offered with this position. Please apply in person at 4806 Moose Circle Guthrie, OK. Aaron Colgin 405-260-1841

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

CDL DRIVERS NEEDED For Waste Service Co. Must have verifiable driving exp, work history and clean DOT record. RO; FL; SL exp preferred. Background and drug screen required, prior to employment. Competitive compensation package including benefits, PTO, 401K, etc. Email resume to: rfernandez@wcamerica.com or apply in person at 1001 S Rockwell Ave, Oklahoma City, OK.

GRASSLAND LIVE WATER • WATER WELLS EXCELLENT HUNTINGLAVERNE/BUFFALO AREA

ABSOLUTE AUCTION TUESDAY APRIL 28TH 10:00AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

Class A CDL Drivers Needed Looking for a change? ODJE Trucking is seeking professional drivers to join our Regional and Over the Road Fleet. We are looking to fill dry van and flatbed positions. Base compensation is .40 cpm all miles with bonus .05 cpm on all miles once 2,001 miles have been run. Regional Drivers must be willing to stay out 2-3 nights per week, home on weekends. Must be 23 years, minimum of 3 years experience, Class A CDL, stable and verifiable work history, and an acceptable driving record. Call (405)474-8165 to join our team today!

WE SELL & FINANCE beautiful acreages for mobile homes-Milburn o/a 275-1695 Tax Time Clearance Sale!! Get up to $7500 off new home or gift card w/purchase. Lenders offering zero down w/land & less than perfect credit. 405-631-7600 Abandoned 3/2 Doublewide set up on 10 acres. Storm shelter, shed & carport. Ready to move in 405-631-7600

16x80 Singlewide

CLASS A CDL

Must Be Moved 238-4611

Local Building Product Distributor seeks Driver for Flatbed. Home every night. Call 632-6800. FLATBED DRIVER WANTED Central OKC home base. No forced dispatch, some tarping. Must have 1 year current flatbed exp. & clean driving record. Call 405-227-7170 or 405-808-8777

AUDIO-VIDEO CONTRACTOR needed for est. Okla. A/V co. Paid travel involved. Exp. pref. Serious inquiries only. 405-495-0609

LOOKATOKC.COM

LOGAN COUNTY, OK MARSHALL AREA

ABSOLUTE AUCTION WEDNESDAY APRIL 29TH 10AM www.LippardAuctions.com 580-237-7174

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

on Park Model 238-4699 1N to 5A E of OKC, pay out dn. 100's choices, many M/H ready TERMS Milburn o/a 275-1695 www.paulmilburnacreages.com

4 bed 2 bath Take over payments 238-4699

Schwarz Ready Mix

MIXER DRIVERS Competitive pay & benefits 401K, Vacation, Holiday pay Apply with MVR & A-B CDL 1400 S. Holly Avenue, Yukon 405-354-8824

DOWNTOWN OKC OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE 2,123 sq ft located in the BC Clark Building. 5 large office/ conference rooms, large waiting/reception area, break room with sink & mini fridge. $2500 mo electric, water & daily housekeeping included. 405-326-7554 GREAT Office Space. Various NW locations, 300-6000sf 946-2516

Call for Maps! See why we sell more acreages than anyone in Okla. E of OKC. o/a 275-1695 PIEDMONT OPEN SUN 2-5. Model home. New hms on 1/2 ac lots. From NW Expwy & Sara Rd go 4.5 mi N Keller Williams Platinum 373-2494

BETHANY HOME FOR SALE 3bed, 1bath, $90's ¡ 409-7877

Owner carry. 10300 St Patrick. 3 bd CHA Nice. Big lot. 6K dn. 550 mo. 650-7667

HVAC Service Techs & Installers Excellent benefits and pay. Must have excellent driving record. Apply in person at 908 Messenger Ln, Moore, OK.

82± ACRES CROP * PASTURE * PONDS

$4,000 Cash Rebate

Air Comfort Solutions, Oklahoma City and Tulsa's largest residential service and replacement company, is seeking qualified

840± ACRES HARPER COUNTY, OK • CRP

Estate Auction Saturday, April 25, 2015 at 10:00 A.M. 4602 Forest Hills Drive, Stillwater, OK Directions: From Hwy. 51 (6th St.) and Country Club go south to 44th. Go west 1/2 mile on 44th and turn south on Forest Hills Dr. Watch for Signs! Types of Personal Property Include: TOOLS! FIREARMS! AUTOMOTIVES! FARM & GARDEN! HOUSEHOLD!

NO BUYER'S PREMIUM Contact C.R. O’Hara Premier Auction and Real Estate 405-533-3722 www.premierok.com

ABSOLUTE AUCTION CDL-A Drivers Pneumatic hauls. Both local and regional. Plant hauls and oilfield. Benefits and assigned Trucks. McCorkle Truck Line, Inc., 2132 SE 18th, OKC, 800-727-2855.

Nice Location! Bank Owned 3/2/2, 2 liv/din, 2037sf, PC Schls, wd flr, .24ac $103,000 Rlty Exp 414-8753

Bank Owned 3/2/2, 1712sf, 2 liv, new carpet, paint, .25acre, Moore Schls $134,900 Rlty Exp 414-8753

390± ACRES OF OKFUSKEE COUNTY OK Offered in 3 Tracts HUNTING PROPERTY • CABIN HOME • PONDS TRACTOR • EQUIP • TOOLS GLASSWARE • MISC.

SAT• APRIL 25th • 10 AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

April 22 - May 5, 2015

Page 43


Page 44

April 22 - May 5, 2015

LOOKATOKC.COM


2409 SW 45th Clean & Quiet 1bd 1ba, stove, fridge $375 mo, $200 dep, no sec 8 314-4667

2228 NE 23. 2/1/1 Nice home. $400. 732-3411.

1 & 2 bed apartments, D&S Apts, 6101 S. Klein Ave., free cable. No Pets, No Sec 8. 631-2383 1213 SW 60th, 2bd apts, $475 mo $200 dep, stove, dishwasher, fridge. Clean! No Sec 8 632-9849

Home 4 Rent Section 8 OK! 229 NW 121ST OKLAHOMA CITY OK 3/2 GARAGE NEW PAINT & CARPET 405-816-4376 $875 +DEP. 7300 NW 105th St, OKC 73162 3bed, 2 bath, $1450/mo, $725dep. No Section 8 ¡‘¡ 831-0333

New Luxury Duplex 13516 Brandon Pl 2/2/2, fp, Deer Creek Schls, near Mercy 842-7300

3bd, 2ba, sec 8 okay, 234 Windsor Way, $725/mo. 405-205-2343

Luxury Duplex, 3 bed 2 bath, 2 car garage. Lots of extras. Pets OK. $1000/month ‘ 642-5996

VERY, VERY QUIET

200 Sutton Cir.

Super Specials for 1 & 2 bedroom quadraplexes available now. 2211 S. Kentucky Pl. 632-6414 Se Habla Español 8409 Wakefield, 2/2, ch/a, Moore Schls $795 Harris RE 410-4300

charliebrownauction.com Jon Brown 405-222-0330

2104 N College sharp 3/1/1 no pet all appls $795 JW Rlty 755-2510 3bd, 1ba, 1540 NW 48, ch&a $925/mo $600/dep 204-5500

BEBECO RIGHT OF WAY EQUIPMENT Bucket Trucks • Vehicles Chippers • Cutters Fork Lifts • Spray Trucks Excavator • Shop Equip -

210 SE 70th, 2 story home, 3 bed, 2 bath, workshop in back, fenced, $900mo + $450dep. 405-685-6151 5340 Coble St 3bed 2ba 2car ch&a fenced Nice! $695 » 476-5011

Near mall, schls, hosp 2 bed from $575 341-4813

1Bd $395mo. Stove, fridge, pool. No Sec 8. No pets. 794-5595

6 Homes 2-4 beds $750-$1575 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com

Morgan Cattle Co. Equipment Dispersal Auction 10am Sat April 25 - Ninnekah, OK 6 mi. S. of Chickasha on HWY 81 Ralph & Evelyn have sold the Farm - All Equipment Needs to Go! IH Case 7110 Tractor, IH Case MX135 MFWD & Loader, SF 9412 Drill, Hes 856 Baler, Hes 1340 Disc Mower, IH 4900 Grain Truck, Chevy C70 Truck, IH 2300 Truck, 40' Ground Load Cattle Trailer, 40'Lufkin Hay Float, 3-16'Dump Trailers, H&S Rakes, Elston Gopher, Woods 7' Mower, Gehl Grinder/Mixer, 65- 12'Steel Cattle Feeders, Much More Equipment- Lots of parts and other items For more details:

ENID OK

LIQUIDATION AUCTION

Rates starting at $825/mo. 1 month FREE or free Flat Screen TV w/12 mo. lease. Citadel Suites, 405-942-0016 5113 N. Brookline www.citadelsuites.com Including are the following: ‘ All Utilities ‘ Cable ‘ High speed internet ‘ Business Center ‘ 2 Pools ‘ Free Movie Rental ‘ Breakfast Mon.-Fri. Furnished/Unfurnished. Bills Paid Unfurn 1 bed $169 wk, $680 mo; Unfurn 2 bed $189 wk, $810 mo; Furn 1 bed $179 wk, $720 mo; Furn 2 bed $199 wk, $840 mo; Deposits: 1 bed $150, 2 bed $200; $25 application fee paid at rental; Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest (SW OKC), 370-1077.

MAYFAIR Great loc! 1&2 bd W/D hdwd flr quiet secure ¡ 947-5665 3336 NW 12th Clean & Quiet 1bd 1ba, stove, fridge $375 mo, $200 dep, no sec 8 314-4667

Spring Hill Apartments 4708 SE 44th Street Studio, One & Two Bedrooms Apartments $400- $550 Move-In Special Available Call Now (405) 677-2200

LOOKATOKC.COM

Beauty shop equipment: 5 stations with mirrors, 2 chair dryers, 4 portable dryers, 2 hydraulic chairs, 2 shampoo sinks, $900 obo for all, 405-382-4343.

COIN & GOLD EXCHANGE paying high CASH prices for coin collections, jewelry & diamonds, sterling flatware & estates. 7714 N May Ave ¡ 405-753-4473

50 inch TV on stand with 2 glass shelves, $75, 260-3425/226-6461.

EquipBuzz.com 580-237-7174

TRACTORS • COMBINE TRUCKS • TILLAGE/DRILLS ATV/MOWERS & MORE – CARRIER, OK AREA

AUCTION

MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes $400/up. RV space $200 763-3627

EquipBuzz.com 580-237-7174

MAY 9TH CONSIGN NOW

Sec 8 OK - Woodside & Del Rd 4bd&3bd $750-$850 405-759-6828

www.excel-auction.com 405-641-9438 ESTATE GUN AUCTION & RV Saturday, April 25th, 2015 at 10:00 am. 72 Guns & 2003 Gulfstream RV. Hinton, Ok www.tillmansauction.com 405-542-3837

6 Homes 2-4 beds $550-$1425 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com 308 Cherryvale Rd, 3/2/2, 1400sf, ch&a, $1045mo $750dep 370-1077

» GALAXY AUCTION HOUSE» » GRAND OPENING EVENT »

3bd/2ba 15517 Monarch Ln $1490 gated, pool, clubhouse 205-2343

901 N. COUNCIL APR 25, 6PM FREE FOOD & DRINKS 365-6164

418 Moiselle. 2/1 CHA Nice home. $650. 732-3411

10812 NE 19 3bd 2ba ch&a ceil fans blinds refrig stove W/D hkup patio fncd yd storage shed 2 car carport Choctaw/Nicoma Park schls $945mo $945dep No pets 405-630-0394

921 East Dr, 5 bed, 2 bath, ch&a, $30 application fee, 427-6798, 427-6796 or 464-1584.

Daryl's Appliance: W&D $100+, limited supply!5yr war. refr/stove $125 & up, 1yr war. 405-632-8954

2313 NE 22nd St., 3 bed, 1 bath, $30 application fee, 405-427-6798 or 464-1584.

Washer, Dryer, Frige, Stove, Freezer $100ea Can del 820-8727

Dbl.drop-in vanity top. Unused cultured marble pink&tan dbl.bowl. Pre-plumb w/high rise taps and drains. Will del. to 50 mi. of OKC. $350 Mike Newbury 405-524-3461(EVE) Prodmanwoof@sbcglobal.net Solid Brazilian Cherry• Hardwood Flooring • (2600sf) Beautiful, never used $2.50/sf • 632-0499

Premium JD lawn tractors: 425; X495, 318, LT190, SST15, SST16, X304 AWS, 3 others!

$1200-$4000 •‚ • 641-9932

MONDAY APRIL 27, 2015 10:00AM

THURSDAY, APRIL 30TH 10:00AM. Brick 3BR 1ba, 800 sq ft 1932 Lariet Lane. Conv gar, fenced yard, central heat, window a/c; $600+dep; pets ok w/dep; 796-7222 after noon

Sheet Metal 3'x10' ¡ $16. Mon-Sat ¡ 390-2077, 694-7534

Announcing Another Catching Bros. LLC Sec 8 OK sw30th,sw28,Kentucky 3bd&2bed $650-$780 - 759-6828 1424 SW 45 sharp 2bd new paint & carpet $650 Harris RE 410-4300

UNFURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID

(5) 4X8 foot sheets of fireproof kitchen paneling, originally $45 each, sell $10 per sheet, 227-0487

Queen mattress, box spring, rail & hdboard $150; 21.6cu ft side x side fridge $500. 405-733-4748

$2 OFF ADM W/AD

GUN SHOW APRIL 25-26 SAT. 9-5 & SUN. 9-4 OKLAHOMA CITY STATE FAIRGROUNDS Modern Living Building BUY-SELL-TRADE RK Shows Info: (563) 927-8176 Sig P938 9mm Para, 1 owner, exc. cond., shot less than 50rounds, factory case, holster, 2 mags, approx 300rounds of 9mm. Cash Only. Firm $650. ‘ 405-627-2322 Conceal/Open Carry Class $45 Total ¡ 405-818-7904 www.HavePistolWillCarry.com

FARM & CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT

AUCTION Friday, April 24th, 2015, 10am 18873 US Hwy 82 Sherman, Texas 75092 Auction will be conducted at the Catching Bros. Auctioneers, llc facility in Sherman Texas. The Auction will feature Small Farmer Dispersal, tractors, construction, combines, hay and tillage implements, trucks, trailers and many other items to be offered at PUBLIC AUCTION.

5x8, 5x10, 6x12, w/gates; like new 16 foot tandem; $650-$1250 Cash. 405-201-6820

Diabetic Test Strips FreeStyle, OneTouch, & Accuchek Top $$ Paid. Jim, 405-202-2527

Catching Bros. Auctioneers offers several options to market your equipment. If you have equipment to sell please contact us for a marketing option that will suit your needs. Visit www.catchingbros.com for a complete listing or contact us for full color descriptive brochure. Don't miss this opportunity to purchase good clean usable farm equipment at PUBLIC AUCTION. Catching Bros. Auctioneers, LLC David Catching TXAUCT#6610 Clint Catching TXAUCT#10821 18873 US HWY 82 Sherman Texas 75092 903-868-3132 www.catchingbros.com

4 foot Ornamental Iron, 3 rail, black, $95/panel, 2540 SW 29, 634-6411.

Propane Tank end caps, 30"-41", for fire pits, etc. 405-375-4189.

April 22 - May 5, 2015

Page 45


Cane Corso Beautiful ICCF registered Cane Corso puppies. Mom and dad onsite. Please call or text for more information. $800 918-833-1551

Russian Blue, purebred, 3F, 6wks s/w $300ea ¡ 405-769-2527

Siamese, blue pointe F, 10mos, Very Loveable $80 405-924-4931

Siamese Kittens, CFA, 8wks, 1m 2f seal, POP $300 405-632-7585

AMERICAN ESKIMOS Great family pets, AKC-UKC, s/w $250-$500 ¡ Adults & Pups avail. 816-863-7954 Australian Shepherd/Great Pyrenees Mixed Pups, 4mos, 1st s/w, working parents, raised with sheep & goats on ranch $150ea. » » 405-227-7170 » »

EXPRESS RANCHES CATTLE AUCTION: APRIL 24th, Noon: Selling 166 Angus Bulls, 115 Registered Angus Pairs, 41 Registered Angus Fall Bred Heifers, 51 Registered Angus yearling heifers sold in groups of three and recently AI'd to EXAR EZX 3772B! 40 Commercial Fall Bred Cows also selling in groups of three. Visit www. expressranches.com or Call Express Ranches, Yukon, Ok for more information 405-350-0044

BEAUTIFUL BENGAL KITTENS 12 week old neutered male, 2 marbeled $450ea. 1 seal lynx point snow $600 405-885-5472

Page 46

8 Big Red Angus Pairs, $3000/pair, 405-567-7562

April 22 - May 5, 2015

Boxer puppies, 8 weeks old, s/w/t/dc, 5 males available, parents on site, $200, 405-695-2918. BOXER PUPPIES AKC ONLY 2 F LEFT, 16 weeks, 1 Classic Brindle, 1 White. AKC Reg. dw/dc/td. $500 Please call or text 405.368.4221 or 405.368.4210

Chihuahua, Cuties, 8 weeks, CUTE LITTLE TEACUPS, $250 Cash, 405-435-3323. Chihuahua, ACA, Tiny Tcup & Toy, 3M 3F ¡ $300-$400 s/w 627-0419 CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES $250 ’ 405-924-8479

Chihuahuas, Tiny, 8wks old, 1 wht M, 1 blk/tan M, 1 wht F, $250ea. Call Sherry 580-362-7531 Boxer Pups AKC, 8wks, 1M 1F, DC/S/W, $450 POP 405-821-5875

Boston Terrier Puppies, AKC Reg., 2F, black/white, $400ea. Call 405-543-9460 (calls only)

German Shepherd Puppies, AKC reg, 8 weeks old, 5F, $450 ea, 1st shots, vet checked, 405-206-2056.

German Shepherd AKC S/W POP 6wks-Black/Silver, Solid Black, Black/Tan-Adorable pups with great attitudes ready for a good loving home $600. 405-664-4517

Blue Heeler, 1yr old, M, housebroken, $50 ¡¡¡ 580-736-3121

Boston Terrier pup female no papers $400. 405-240-0950

Designer Puppies - LaChon Hybrid 6w,s/w/p $500-600 405-593-4714

Chihuahuas, 1M 1F adults, must go together, very small, fawn, dearhead $100/pr. 761-8423

BASSETT PUPS, AKC, all colors, M&F, 5 weeks old, taking deposits, $450, 580-574-3243.

Blue Heeler pups 7K wks working parents $150 405-892-7512

Carolina Dog (Dingo) / Heeler Mix Male, 5 months, neutered, vaccinated. Gets along w / dogs, cats, chickens, horses, and cattle. $65 405-625-2917

COCKER, ACA, 6wks, 2M 3F, s/w, hlth guar $300 570-5768 no text Bull Mastiffs, AKC, 2M, 3F, 6wks, $700ea, s/w ¡ 405-221-0881

Dachshund-Mini Male, shots, dewormed, parents on site.qi $400 405-618-7508

German Shepherd Puppies, AKC, 2F 4M, POP $600ea 405-882-0671

LOOKATOKC.COM


Rottweiler, AKC, puppies, German bloodlines 2F, 11wks, 1st s/w/tails/dc, $600, 405-487-7128 Rottweilers, AKC, true Germ bred Pups $500-$800 ¡ 405-420-8093

Goldendoodles, F1B, standard size, 11 weeks, non-shedding, microchipped, health guarantee, $1,200, Goldsby, OK, 918-8396420, newpuppies4u.com

Maltese (the ideal house pet) M/F, small, no shed, low allergy & odor, easy going & sweet & loving dog, delivery/show room, $600-$800. Stroud, 918-694-3868 Morkies, 7wks, Adorable, s/w, $350 - $400 ’ ’ 361-5317 Morkies, 8 wks, s/w, 4 Males $375-$400 ’ 580-465-1571 Pit Bull, ADBA, XL blues, Razors Edge Bldln ¡ $400 ¡ 580-237-1961

Great Dane For sale Great Dane puppy 12 weeks old. Mother is mantle 50% Euro 33" and father is black mostly American 37". $750. 405-420-1286 email s.thomas1@cox.net Great Danes AKC AKC Great Dane puppies, 8 wks old, 3 males, 1 female. black/ white mantle. $700. 918-618-3691

Scottish Terrier, AKC Pups, 4M 2F, will be ready in 3wks, Deposit will hold. $500 ’ 580-472-3169 Shih Tzu Imperial 8wks, 1st shots BEAUTIFUL TINY FEMALE $500 Cash ’ ’ ’ 405-435-3323

Shih Tzus, ACA, s/w, microchipped, $350, 918-426-5181.

Pit Bull Pups, Red Nose, Full blood but no papers, both parents have green eyes, 6 weeks, 1 male 2 females $250. 405-570-9029

Poodle Registered Standard (Apricot) 2yrs old, shots, wormed $600. 405.593.7348

FREE ESTIMATES Mow, clean up, trim, flower beds & more. Lopez 405-830-8532

Brushhog, box blade, $42/ hour, 3 hour minimum, 227-3517. Rototilling, all yard work, scalping & more, 789-3062/682-6383.

WE BUY MINERAL RIGHTS 405-562-1195 ¡ 405-924-2378 ¡ Red Stone Resources ¡ Call us Today! Premium Payouts

Annie's Lawn Care, Starts at $25. 615-9216

Pott. Minerals for Sale in 8N-3E & in 6N-5E, 203 ac, 405-740-9000.

Rototilling, all yard work, scalping & more, 789-3062/682-6383.

Buying oil & gas properties, any status, paying top $ 405-740-9000

LAWN MOWING STARTING $30 Metro area. RUBEN 405-476-8307

Found male Yorkie near SE 29th & Dobbs. Call to identify 371-8856

Interior Painting, Texture, Drywall Finish, Popcorn Removal, Sr Citizen Disc, P.J. 405-397-0034

Bill's Painting & Home Repairs Quality Work! Free Est. 306-3087. LOST - Omega Seamaster Watch Silver with well worn black leather band. Since I've owned this watch for 65 years, I will pay $500 reward for its return. 405-270-1008

POM PUPPIES, AKC, 1M, 1F, s/w, POP, $550 ¡ 918-387-4216 No texting. Can send pics. POODLE, Beautiful Mini Puppy $375 ’’’ 405-380-5859

Minerals for sale, Oklahoma: 160 acres, SE/4 section 7, TWP 1N, RN 17E, Pushmataha County. 77.5 acres, S/2, SE/4, section 2, TWP 12N, RN 2E, Lincoln County. 405-454-2149.

Yorkie, AKA, F, 3yrs old, not spayed, lovable, smart, house broken $350 ’ ’ 405-590-0094 YORKIES, ACA, M/F, $300-$500, s/w/dc, pics avail, 580-504-7115

POODLES, AKC, Teacup, Tiny Toy & Toy, adults & pups, $200-$1000 OK#1 788-9709 tinyteacups.com

Long haired black female cat w/unique feet, Rockwell & 164th, 405-359-4124 lv msg. Long haired black Female cat w/unique feet, Rockwell & 164th, 405-359-4124 lv msg.

PAINT TECH, int/ext, 30 yrs exp.

Quality work »»»

A/C & Appliance Service, 27 years exper, $40 service call, 371-3049.

Alum patio covers, carports, screen & sunrooms, & concrete! 740-9097 geetee064@gmail.com Steel Carports, Patio Covers 2car carport $1695 799-4026/694-6109

POODLES, AKC, 2M, black, $300, text/call, 580-402-1020. POODLES, Standard, Reg. 5M left blk, white, red & peach $400-$600 580-747-5127 call/text POODLES STANDARD www.puffypups.com. Apricots and reds! $700 580-467-1876 Lab Pups, Full AKC Reg, fox red, home raised, vet ck'd ¡ $595 405-899-4132

350 Fine Pets At FREE TO LIVE 4mi N of Waterloo on Western ALL Dogs & Cats $80 Shts/Neut 282-8617 »» freetoliveok.org

Friday & Saturday, April 24 & 25 Learn how to enjoy perks of $$ MULTI-BILLION $$ TRAVEL INDUSTRY Limited Seating 405-755-1555

2 DAY FREE SEMINAR !

LABS AKC CERTIFIED YELLOW Champion bloodline yellow lab puppies. $400 405-465-3669. Kristopher Madden

Rottweiler Mix Puppies AKC German bloodlines. 1M, 1F. 1st s/w/tails. 6 weeks old. $250 (405) 414-4909

Drives, Foundations, Patios Lic./Bond./Ins. Free Est. 769-3094

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC. All types, repair & remodel, gas, water & sewer, leak detection, video camera insp ¡ 405-528-7733 buddysplumbingokc.com

Drives, Foundations, Patios

All types, repair & remodel, gas, water & sewer, leak detection, video camera insp ¡ 405-528-7733 buddysplumbingokc.com

Lic./Bond./Ins. Free Est. 769-3094

Ceiling & Wall Doctor Total Remodeling

Friday & Saturday, April 24 & 25 Learn how to enjoy perks of $$ MULTI-BILLION $$ TRAVEL INDUSTRY Limited Seating 405-755-1555 Rottweiler Puppies, Beautiful Strong, world class pedigree, looking for loving homes, $1100 & $1200 ¡ 405-312-4513

AAA BATHROOM REMODELING Walk-in showers & bath tubs, Plumbing & Tile ¡ 751-7777

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC.

2 DAY FREE SEMINAR !

Poodle Toy Registered. F apricot 10mos S/W $600 405-924-4931

LABS, ACA, 6wks, 2M 4F, s/w, hlth guar $350 570-5768 no text

630-0213

‚ Acoustic popcorn removal ‚ Drywall repair ‚ Flooring ‚ Custom hand trowel finishes & spray finishes ‚ Interior/Exterior painting Call Jeff for free estimate at 405- 408-5453, insured.

QUALITY FENCE COMPANY FREE ESTIMATE on new & repair.

Credit Cards OK. 405-317-0474. D&G FENCE, Repair Specialist. Guar lowest pr. Free est 431-0955

Garay's Roofing/Construction Exp. quality work, free est, roof repair & replace, local since 1985, insurance claims okay, 370-3572.

D&D Tile & Remodeling Honest & dependable! 32yrs exp ¡ 971-4492

» Oklahoma Tree Service Ins., Free Est. 682-0649 » GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. L&R Tree Service, Low Prices, Insured, Free Estimate, 946-3369.

‘ Garage Doors & Openers ‘ ‘ Sales & Service ¡ 794-1718 ‘

Custom Gutters Inc., New/repair, warrnty, BBB top rated, 528-4722.

LOOKATOKC.COM

Earn Good Money Stapling Booklets at Home. For further details send a self-addressed envelope to: Mary L. Taylor, 3107 Hicks Ave, Spencer, OK 73084.

Home Repair & Remodel. Roofing. Siding. Free Estimate. 410-2495.

CONSULTANTS WANTED visit anointed.zealforlife.com call or text Robert 405-837-2617

»» RESIDENTIAL HAULING »» AND CLEANING, 405-543-8175.

April 22 - May 5, 2015

Page 47


Page 48

April 22 - May 5, 2015

LOOKATOKC.COM


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