LOOK AT OKC | 7.1.2015

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LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION

JULY 1 - JULY 14 2015 • VOL. 11 • ISSUE 13 LOOKATOKC.COM

TURN OVER TO SEE THE LATEST IN SWIM FASHION | DRINK & DRAW GHOST RIDES THE WHIP ON PAGE 6 SEE OKC‘S NEW MUSIC VENUE ON PAGE 30


from the top

LOOKatOKC 15 | Dan Martin shares trailblazing track Tulsa’s Dan Martin has crafted his first album after getting his start at the Colony’s singer/songwriter night. Find out what inspired his upcoming album.

10 | Norman Music Festival reveals record attendance, announces 2016 dates You’ll never believe how many people showed up to the music festival in April. Find out just how big the festival was and when it will be in 2016.

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 Mural by Jason Pawley | Photo by Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

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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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from the editor

NATHAN POPPE

FOLLOW @NATHANPOPPE ON TWITTER

NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC EDITOR NPOPPE@OKLAHOMAN.COM My favorite thing about The Sandwich Club is that they write your name on the bag. Photo by Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

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was only alive for about one year of the ‘80s but if it tasted anything like The Sandwich Club then I might buy a DeLorean, hit 88 mph and live it again. That’s how I felt after visiting The Sandwich Club, a tasty new restaurant on Western Avenue. Dave Cathey and I had to see if the goofy-titled food lived up to its name. It was delicious. Also, anyone who serves Big Red is fine by me. Once we left the shop, I couldn’t help but notice that my tastes have grown up alongside Western Avenue. From one of my first beers at VZD’s to my first shows at the former Conservatory. I’ve made a lot of memories on this one stretch of road. As the city’s districts have grown during the past couple of years, I’ve noticed Western Avenue taking some hits. Competition for time and attention has never been bigger. I’m not trying to say Western Avenue is hurting. I just think the spotlight has been spread around. I’m all for it, though. Who doesn’t want the city to grow? But with VZD’s re-opening, a rad sandwich shop opening next door to the city’s best record store AND West Fest, I’m tempted to call it a comeback. Flip on over to the cover story to see why I’m so excited about what the historic avenue has cooking. Thanks to Dave and Brianna Bailey for helping inspire the cover story. An even bigger thanks to all the artists whose public art makes Western Avenue incredibly photogenic. Jason Pawley was kind enough to let us photograph his artwork for the cover. Lots of great stuff in this issue. So many new businesses, district updates and even your new favorite corn dog restaurant. Now get out there and LOOKatOKC.

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MATT CARNEY

FOLLOW @OKMATTCARNEY ON TWITTER

headphonetics

Here’s your summer song cycle

Sheer Mag’s “II” 7” cover. Photo provided

Destroyer’s Dan Bejar. Photo provided

Ashley Monroe — “I Buried Your Love Alive” Most know Ashley Monroe as one-third of Pistol Annies, the all-female country supergroup she shares with Miranda Lambert and Angaleena Presley. And though her second record, the Vince Gill-produced “Like a Rose” only made small ripples on the US Billboard charts back in 2013, it made a huge splash with critics, who hailed her sharp songwriting wit and dedication to the countrypolitan and honky tonk styles that Nashville

made its fortunes on decades ago. “I Buried Your Love Alive” reinforces Monroe’s reputation for mixing old-fashioned music with modern attitudes. It’s a slow-moving, sultry song wrapped in crushed red velvet fabric, a stark contrast to Kacey Musgraves’ hot-neon country-pop and Miranda Lambert’s hillbilly feminist fireworks.

MATT CARNEY All about creating a deeper relationship with music.

Superhumanoids — “Anxious in Venice” Anxiety’s a powerful force in music. Repeat a simple bassline over and over, maybe scratch away at your barbed-wire-stringed guitar every so often, whatever it takes to produce that sense of tension in your listener. From Los Angeles, Superhumanoids harnesses that power by stripping ‘80s synthesizer pop down to its bare bones, until all that’s left is a skittery drum beat accented by bass twitches and Sarah Chernoff’s icy vocals. Sheer Mag — “Fan the Flames” “Trash on sidwalks, broken windowpanes / the pipes are leaking.” If you’ve ever rented from a bad landlord then this new song from Philadelphia garage punks Sheer Mag is the kind of thing you can relate to. “Fan the Flames” is stuffed full of the sorts of guitar riffs that dominated the radio in the mid-’70s, from static-y southern rock to sparkly, spunky Jackson 5-pop. And it’s powered by class struggle, a topic from which Sheer Mag churns fist-pumping, jump-up-and-down and wailalong lo-fi anthems for the working class. Singer Christina Halladay’s extraordinary vocal

grit and charisma are probably my favorite thing about what Sheer Mag does as a band, though: She stomps around “Fan the Flames” with a truckload of confidence, spitting venom at yuppies, rip-off landlords and even the man himself. Weaves — “Tick” If you enjoy the goofball melodies of Philadelphia’s Dr. Dog and the ramshackle looseness of the Flaming Lips’ catchy, guitar-heavy early ‘90s alt-rock then this song from Toronto band Weaves might just be a transmission headed straight for your satellite heart. I think I like “Tick” so much ‘cause of how exaggerated and silly the guitar playing is, basically to the point of cartoonish. If any of you out there pick which songs get used to soundtrack the opening credits of funny TV shows, please please please use this one. I think it’s got potential to be the next They Might Be Giant’s “Boss of Me” on Malcolm in the Middle. Destroyer — “Dream Lover” The new song from Canadian Dan Bejar’s long-running, genre-spanning project Destroyer draws on songwriting tropes from the revved-up heartland rock of the late 1970s and early ‘80s. But where most writers’ narratives zig along a much straighter path, Bejar’s “Dream Lover” zags into free-flowing, narrative-less chaos, a madness wildly amplified by its unrestrained saxophone play. It sounds like David Bowie charging fullspeed down Main Street in an old muscle car, and it’s great.

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

DD RR IINNKK && D RD AR WA W

Take a ride with this month’s ghostly theme

Zeke Ruzicka

Cody Hampton

“Sign-painter, granddad, old man.”

“This is ghost riding the whip, right?”

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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 ghost riding the whip.

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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

art speaks

1st Thursday: The Okay See (7 N Lee Ave., OKC)

QUIT NGUYEN • www.quitnguyen.com “I take pictures.”

TODD GOINGS

2nd Thursday: Brass Bell Studios (2500 NW 33 St., OKC) 3rd, 4th and 5th Thursdays: Tree & Leaf (1705-B NW 16 St., OKC)

1. A random theme is selected. 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.

THE RADIO GHOST

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ENRIQUE PEREZ www.daniel moyer.net • “Hiiiii!”

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art speaks

D DR RI NI NKK && DD RR AAWW

Dusty Gilpin “Tree & Leaf owner” Page 8

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OBTAHNE DR TL I TV LE ES

band q&a

Shaking things up helps produce ‘Rituals’

Other Lives (from left, Jonathon Mooney, Jesse Tabish and Josh Onstott). Photo provided by Emily Ulmer

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tillwater ex-pats Other Lives — Jesse Tabish, Josh Onstott and Jonathon Mooney — are currently touring in support of their acclaimed third record, “Rituals,” along with touring band members Daniel Hart and Danny Reisch. “Rituals” is an exploration of dualism and the roots of human behavior, both lyrically and in its widely varied soundscape. The band spent 18 months in the recording studio crafting each song layer by layer. A relocation to Portland, Ore., pushed them personally and creatively, likely a much-needed change of pace after years on the road promoting 2011’s “Tamer Animals.” Q: Pretty much every band from Oklahoma says two things about living here: There are no distractions, and it’s cheap. So why did Other Lives relocate to Portland? Jesse Tabish: I lived in Stillwater for a very long time. I think anybody who gets to their 30s and lives in a college town starts to feel ... old. Everyone is perpetually 21 years old. Living in Stillwater instilled a patience in Other Lives that I don’t think we’ll ever lose. It influenced the way we work, and those fundamentals will be with

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us wherever we go. With “Tamer Animals,” we’d come to an apex of writing about Oklahoma and the landscape. We toured so extensively on that album that the road became my new landscape, and I wanted to further along that spirit of change, to follow that. I felt like the Oklahoma record, we’d already expressed. We needed a physical change as well. Q: Is your songwriting process linear at all? Does anything happen in a specific order? Tabish: There are basically two ways. One is the “free form” way, I call it. It’s starting out with something where you have no idea what kind of result you’re going to get. Starting out with a drone or something and layering music on top of it. We’re basically doing a large collage to kind of see what comes out of that. Some of them are written in a very traditional way, just sitting at a piano and finding a melody and chords underneath. It always starts one of those two ways and then becomes a recording project. I take it to the band, and we layer everything individually, note by note. I do the songwriting by myself, but the recording is definitely all three of us.

Q: Do you get more fulfillment out of writing and recording than you get out of touring? Tabish: It weighs a lot heavier on writing and recording. I always think we’re a studio band that has to tour sometimes. I love playing live, don’t get me wrong, but I feel like we could tour for maybe two months and then be ready to make another record. The touring lifestyle can be a little rough. I much prefer waking up and having coffee and writing songs. Q: So you’re in the studio and working on new material, furthering that change. Did you find yourself leaning back on old tendencies? Did you have to force yourself to do things differently, or was it pretty natural? Tabish: I think it was very natural. It’s been this kind of way for the last two records. That process of me writing and then recording everything note by note. It’s unique to us, and it’s very natural. There was that but also the songs pushed us into some new territory, but the actual technique was very similar to what we’ve done. — Becky Carman, for LOOKatOKC

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music feature N O R M A N M U S I C F E S T I V A L

Norman Music Festival reveals record attendance, announces 2016 dates

Fans at Norman Music Festival 9 watch the main stage. Photo by Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

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t’s never too early to mark your calendars. On Tuesday, the Norman Music Alliance announced Norman Music Festival 9 will take place April 21-23 in 2016. The free festival is scheduled a week earlier than normal. The event normally competes with the Oklahoma City Festival of the Arts and the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon.

Record attendance The NMA also announced its record-breaking 2015 festival attendance numbers. Roughly 80,000 music enthusiasts enjoyed the festival’s three-day stretch in April. About 70,000 patrons Page 10

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attended the festival in 2014. NMA president Quentin Bomgardner noted how packed venues were as patrons caught more than 300 local, regional and national touring acts between the 100 west block and the 300 east block of downtown Norman. “Saturday night, the streets were flooded in a way we haven’t seen before, surrounding four crowded outdoor stages,” Bomgardner said in a press release. In 2015, the nonprofit music festival helped earn an estimated $5.7 million in revenue for the city of Norman. What started as a one-day festival featuring 27 bands has grown and expanded

to a three-day festival that’s easily one of the biggest in the state.

Leadership change The NMA also has a shift in board members. Steven White, who served as the nonprofit’s first president, has stepped away from the board. He helped bring previous headliners Portugal the Man and Joy Formidable to the main stage as well as Lawton-born musician Leon Russell. Keller Williams, Mike Hosty, JD McPherson and many more to the depot stage. Wilson Curtis has also stepped down from the board after accepting a new job in Colorado. LOOKATOKC.COM


NORMAN MUSIC FESTIVAL

music feature

Ra Ra Riot performs at Norman Music Festival 9. Photo by Nathan Poppe, for LOOKatOKC

Kent Johnson is returning to the festival’s board of directors. Johnson is the owner and founder of Massive Graphics, a design and print company based in Norman. Visit Norman’s Communications Director, Stephanie Brickman, is joining the festival as a board member for her first year after being a volunteer since year three. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

Norman Music Festival by the numbers: 2008 // 13,000 attendees // 27 bands 2009 // 25,000 attendees // 84 bands 2010 // 38,000 attendees // 177 bands 2011 // 50,000 attendees // 250 bands 2012 // 55,000 attendees // 260 bands 2013 // 60,000 attendees // 314 bands 2014 // 70,000 attendees // 323 bands 2015 // 80,000 attendees // 339 bands LOOKATOKC.COM

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movie review

‘ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL’

PG-13 | 1:44 | Starring: Thomas Mann, Olivia Cooke, R.J. Cyler, Nick Offerman and Molly Shannon. (Sexual content, drug material, language and some thematic elements)

‘Me and Earl’ transcends film’s focus on dying girl

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eath can be more than just a bummer. However, cancer has a knack of driving a narrative into extremely sad, emotional territory. Last year, it made bank in young adult fiction and theaters with “The Fault in Our Stars.” Again a year earlier in pop culture as AMC’s “Breaking Bad” ended. That effectiveness always scares me a little. I’d hate to see the sick character become the next vampire, werewolf or dystopian anti-hero archetype. But “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” is a book adaptation that escapes the shadow of its source material and creates its own quirky world. The drama focuses on social chameleon and amateur filmmaker Greg Gaines (Thomas Mann). Through his parents’ nagging, Greg is forced to befriend his high school classmate Rachel (Olivia Cooke), who has leukemia. If you can’t tell already, Greg is kind of a jerk. He

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only puts out enough effort to avoid getting close to people. Greg even takes top billing in the film’s title. The dying girl, last. That’s an important note. His selfishness and reluctance to grow up ends up being as big of a figurative cancer as Rachel’s very real leukemia. As Greg warms up to Rachel, he gets tasked with making her a film. It’s a disaster. He’s used to making parody movies for just himself and his co-worker Earl (R.J. Cyler, hilarious here). He doesn’t know how to remove himself from the equation and make something that evokes how he really feels about Rachel and her sickness. Greg learns how little he actually knows Rachel. That’s devastating. I look at the film as a meditation on creativity. It’s hard to communicate how something makes you feel, let alone transfer those feelings into a movie. Let’s not forget that death is confusing,

too. Some critics have been quick to point out that because so much of the film focuses on Greg, it’s shallow and his struggle outweighs the plight of our dying girl. I disagree. Not only does he have the excuse of being young, but it’s necessary in him making a change. Cancer also doesn’t just affect its victim. Greg’s struggle, although painful in a different way, is interesting. I liked how both limiting and emotional his point of view was, too. “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” is a coming-of-age tale with bite. It’s also the fourth perfect movie experience I’ve had this year. It also doesn’t hurt to have Brian Eno do your soundtrack. There’s some beauty in death, too. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

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‘TED 2’

movie review

R | 1:48 | Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Seth MacFarlane and Jessica Barth. (Crude and sexual content, pervasive language and some drug use)

Adult animated ‘Ted 2’ should have stayed stuffed

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s it possible to predict a storyline featuring a talking stuffed bear as its lead character? It’s easy to anticipate a romantic comedy to be full of love and laughs, and you can expect an action movie to have Liam Neeson in it. But what do we call a comedy about a CGI bear (voiced by director Seth MacFarlane) that wants to marry the love of his life — a human — and that is full of weed-smoking lawyers and includes Neeson buying Trix cereal? Say high to the stoner comedy “Ted 2.” The plot centers on Ted’s civil rights: He wants to be considered a person. He and best friend

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John (Mark Walberg) hire Sam L. Jackson (Amanda Seyfried) to represent Ted in court. In between all the f-bombs lives a valid argument: No matter the color of your skin or if you’re stuffed with cotton fiber, everyone deserves freedom and justice. That sounds nice, but let’s get real. He’s a magical stuffed bear. Granted, that’s what makes the movie unique. “Ted 2” creates an adult semi-animated film that makes you laugh and remember our nation’s civil rights history. It was almost whiplash-inducing the way the

film subtly sprinkles thought-provoking messages underneath layers of cursing and crude humor. Many sequels try not to venture into unknown territory. “Ted 2” sticks to what it knows best and plays up a lot of the kind of comedy from the first movie. That means cussing by nearly everyone in the cast (even Morgan Freeman), sexual innuendo and lots of drugs. Much like the “Hangover” franchise, “Ted 2” tried too hard to be like the first one. Some movies need a sequel, and some just need to be left alone. — Leilah Naifeh, for LOOKatOKC

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movie review

‘INSIDE OUT’

PG | 1:42 | Starring: Amy Poehler, Mindy Kaling, Lewis Black, Bill Hader and Phyllis Smith. (Mild thematic elements and some action)

Pixar gives feelings to feelings in touching new hit film

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nimated movies aren’t just for kids. In fact, one of my favorite pieces of cinematic storytelling lives in a Pixar feature. In 2009’s “Up,” the film’s pre-credits opening contains a five-minute scene that’s as heartbreaking as it is heartwarming. If you have kids or still are one at heart then you’ll remember it. Without a line of dialogue, it details the life of Carl and Ellie from their marriage to her passing. Try re-watching it on YouTube without crying. I couldn’t. Pixar managed to say more in five minutes than most animated films, and even live action ones, can say in two hours. The scene glows with warmth as Ellie ties Carl’s tie every day before work. It also descends into tragedy when we learn Ellie can’t have children. It breaks my heart. Pretty grown-up stuff for a kid’s flick, right? So what would happen if these emotional few moments were successfully stretched across an entire film? Meet “Inside Out,” a perfect movie. It’s Pixar’s 15th film in 20 years and it should be marked as a pinnacle in animated storytelling. Director Pete Doctor (“Monsters, Inc.,” “Up”) just knocks it out of the park. Much of “Inside Out” takes place in the mind of an average 11-year-old girl named Riley (voiced by Kaitlyn Dias). Five emotions orchestrate her every move and memory. Amy Poehler is Joy, unyieldingly optimistic, while Fear (Tulsa’s Bill Hader) handles safety, Anger (Lewis Black) balances fairness, and Disgust (Mindy Kaling) protects Riley from broccoli and social mistakes. Sadness

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(Phyllis Smith, “The Office”) is seemingly the foil, always bumming people out. Things get out of control when Joy and Sadness get lost after Riley gets uprooted from Minnesota and moves with her family to San Francisco. Emotions run wild. I can’t think of a better subject for a kid’s movie to tackle. What’s scarier than not knowing how to handle your anger? What’s harder than ignoring sadness? Can you act joyful ALL THE FRIGGIN’ TIME? It’s 94 minutes of therapy you probably didn’t know you or your family needed. I couldn’t help but think back on an old Mr. Rogers’ acceptance speech where he discusses the cost of a few minutes of studio animation. He called it animated bombardment. Cartoons are fun and all, but Rogers focused his entertainment on helping kids get a handle on their emotions. “Inside Out” is the marriage of creative animation and heartfelt, thoughtful storytelling. I walked out of the theater, and I felt better. A little less crazy at least. I think it’s a necessity to have movies that make us think, and “Inside Out” makes a great case for more heady entertainment. It’s funny, though. It was hard for me to get excited about this film when I caught the initial “Inside Out” trailer. Too cartoony. Too goofy. Too simple of a concept. Almost like when “Saturday Night Live” characters get movie vehicles. It usually works great for a short skit but ultimately runs out of gas pretty quickly. Not this movie, though.

So why does it work so well? Much like those golden five minutes of “Up,” the film feels like there’s something precious in the balance. Too often, I’ve seen film characters get into a crazy set of circumstances that don’t really matter. I rarely feel like they’re in actual danger because we all know they’re probably needed in a sequel and people love happy endings. The main character always figures things out. “Inside Out” is different. We get to see a likable character change, grow and learn something about herself. “Inside Out” mirrors real life. That was also a strength of 2014’s “Boyhood.” It’s beautiful and it’s frustrating. Funny and depressing. Sadness and joy are joined at the hip in this movie much like they are when we see an old flame at a party or get stuck in traffic on a road trip. It should go without saying that “Inside Out” is gorgeous to look at. Pixar rarely lets us down in the looks department, and the animation is fluid. It feels nearly effortless. Even the human characters look natural, which almost makes up for how wooden they were 20 years ago in “Toy Story.” Remember how doofy Andy and his baby sister looked? It’s extremely funny, too. You even get a short film about love-struck volcanoes before the feature. Guard your emotions all you want before “Inside Out” but just don’t be surprised if you walk out with a popcorn box stained with tears. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

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B A DN AD NT IMTAL RE T, I ‘NA, L B‘ HUOMK AT I HT EL EY ’’

music review

Dan Martin shares trailblazing track “Leave a Trail”

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an Martin has a solo album ready, but he didn’t make it alone. That would have been impossible. “I have plentiful appreciation in my heart for all who had a hand in the completion of this project,” Martin said. Here’s your first chance to hear a finished tune from the Tulsa native’s debut album, “Hoka Hey.” The title is translated from the Sioux battle cry meaning “It’s a good day to die.” Martin plans to release the LP Aug. 4 via Horton Records and it will be available on CD and digitally. I reached out to Martin, 27, digitally in June to talk about his new album. After events fell into place for him to record, he enlisted help from musicians Cody Woody, Jacob Flint and Kevin Smith. The crew recorded “Hoka Hey” last July alongside Mike McClure at Boohatch Studio in Ada. Mike Phenix mixed the album and Ryan Foster mastered it. The tracks on “Hoka Hey” vary in focus and inspiration, everything from love and politics to HBO’s “True Detective” and growing pot

“Hoka Hey” album cover. Photos provided

in southeast Oklahoma. Martin is fiercely loyal to his roots. “Thank God I am from Oklahoma,” he said. “It’s an effortless foundation of my identity to embrace. I love spreading my branches to new places. However, those branches will never outgrow my Oklahoma roots.” A Ralph Waldo Emerson quote sparked the breezy picking on “Leave a Trail,” an album highlight. If you like what you hear, then mark your calendars for Aug. 8 at Tulsa’s Colony for the “Hoka Hey” album release party. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

Dan Martin.

Subhead goes here. Photos by XXX, for LOOKatOKC

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the food dude

DAVE CATHEY

Johnnie’s boys

Rick Haynes, left, and David Haynes. Photos by Sarah Phipps, 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

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DAVE CATHEY

the food dude

Johnnie’s. Photo provided

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n Father’s Day, dads across Oklahoma received tokens of gratitude from their children, including David and Rick Haynes. But the Haynes brothers have made a career of serving in their father’s honor, maintaining, and expanding the legend of Johnnie Haynes, founder of Johnnie’s Charcoal Broiler. Johnnie passed away in 2000, leaving a legacy of burgers ordered by number cooked over a charcoal broiler with made-from-scratch fries, onion rings, milkshakes and fresh-baked pies. Haynes was, by all accounts, a tireless worker who prided himself on treating his employees with respect. Two of his longest-tenured employees are David and Rick Haynes, who are living proof their dad was as successful raising kids as he was building a burger empire.

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CALL ME JOHNNIE Many people know Johnnie Haynes was born David Nathaniel Haynes, but not too many know where he picked up the first name he was known by his entire adult life. “The true story is my father left home at 15 years old and moved to California,” David Haynes said. “When he got out there, he just started going by Johnnie — and it stuck.” Born in the spring of 1929 to John and Molly Haynes, David Nathaniel and his family moved to Poteau, where John found work in the coal mine. Despite his father’s best sales pitch, young David wasn’t interested in his father’s footsteps and headed west in the mid-1940s. Once in California, he started working in driveins and restaurants using his father’s name.

The new Johnnie Haynes enlisted in the U.S. Army and spent three years in Germany as a cook before returning home to Oklahoma City for good in 1950. Haynes left the Army with cooking skills, so he looked for kitchen jobs. The search eventually led him to a new burger joint owned by Vince Stevens called The Split-T. That was 1952, and Haynes was hired to wash dishes. About a year later, he married his sweetheart, Pauline. Within a year, the young couple expanded their family with a son, David, and five years later with a second son named Rick. Johnnie Haynes soon became manager of The Split-T and kept the job for the next 18 years, developing a reputation as an outstanding operator at one of the city’s most popular dining spots — known for charcoal-fired burgers

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the food dude

DAVE CATHEY

Bar area at Urban Johnnie in Oklahoma City. Photo by Sarah Phipps for LOOKatOKC

topped with a variety of sauces and toppings, hand-cut fries, onion rings and milkshakes. It wouldn’t have been a surprise for folks to mistake Haynes as the owner of The Split-T, considering how much he worked and how much time Stevens spent in California. “Dad was gone a lot during those early years,” Rick said. “He worked around the clock, it seemed like — but he made time for us.” David Haynes said it wasn’t uncommon for his father to check him and his brother out of school on Mondays — Johnnie’s day off from The Split-T — and take them on outings. “He was always there for us. He always took good care of us. He was a good dad, and an active dad as much he could considering that he worked an extremely lot,” Haynes said. By the start of the 1970s, Johnnie Haynes set in motion his exit strategy from The Split-T, building up his savings to open a place he could call his own. JOHNNIE’S CHARCOAL BROILER In 1971, David Haynes was a senior in high school and one of the first managers of Johnnie’s Charcoal Broiler on the corner of Military Avenue and Britton Road. His father had recently taken over a little drive-in previously known as Colonel Potter’s. “The first day was a little slow,” David Haynes said. “But it got a little busier every day until pretty soon we were busy all the time.” Rick Haynes was 13 when the 12-booth, 16-speaker drive-in with inside seating for 48 opened.

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“I’d ride the bus home, and then I’d go to work. I worked, my brother worked, my mom and dad worked — we were a family operation. I grew up in Johnnie’s,” Rick Haynes said. “My father was the only employer I ever had.” Both Haynes brothers agree they learned their work ethic from their father. “My brother and I, if we were working and my dad walked in everyone could be standing around, but we had a broom, you know?” Rick Haynes said. “He was a great man to work with. He was one of my best friends. He taught me a lot, but the biggest thing was work ethic. And how to run a business, and how to do it correctly. I always joke dad forgot more than we’ll ever know, but me and my brother are kind of the same way because we’ve been doing it all our life.” But they also said their dad was committed to making sure employees remained happy. “The biggest lesson I learned from my father was how to treat the people that work for us,” Rick Haynes said. “We take pride in how many people we’ve been able to employ over a long period of time.” By the time Johnnie Haynes passed away in 2000, David and Rick had been running the family business a while. “After Dad retired he was the one calling me to come play golf with him, and I was the one having to tell him no,” Rick Haynes recalled. “He really enjoyed himself after he retired. I’m really glad he got to have that time.” Johnnie Haynes was 71 when he died, and the little drive-in on Britton had moved down the street into a space twice the size and four more stores had popped up around the Oklahoma City metropolitan area. LIFE AFTER JOHNNIE Though the store had expanded before he died, Johnnie Haynes was conservative when it came to expansion. “Growing Johnnie’s was really about necessity,” Rick Haynes admits. “Dad was raising one family with the store, but when my brother and I came in that added two families to support.” So, the brothers embarked on an aggressive campaign to expand the brand in and out of Oklahoma City. They added a gelato shop next to Johnnie’s on Britton Road, expanded to Tulsa, and introduced Johnnie’s Express stores. They even partnered with chef Eric Smith on Pachinko Parlor, a sushi concept that offered traditional and nontraditional rolls. Those concepts weren’t all successful. Johnnie’s never gained traction in Tulsa, Pachinko Parlor never developed a consistent audience, and the gelato concept was compromised. “About the time we opened Giovanni’s, seemed like everybody and their brother was opening a yogurt shop,” David Haynes said. “We thought it was a better product, but the market was flooded.”

But nobody who ever hit a home run did so without swinging at a few curveballs along the way. Despite a few disappointments, business at Johnnie’s was plenty strong enough for the Haynes to continue their quest to expand their holdings. They took a full year razing and remodeling the building occupied by West on Western Avenue, which has proven successful enough for them to sign a deal to open Bricktown West in the space formerly occupied by Nonna’s Ristorante. Bricktown West will open later this year. Last year, they opened Urban Johnnie, an upscale sports bar that features burgers, tacos, sandwiches, appetizers and a broad variety of beer, wine and cocktails. The logo for Urban Johnnie is taken from a photograph his granddaughter Kortney keeps on her coffee table. “Dad really liked to have fun,” Rick Haynes said. “That’s something a lot of folks didn’t know. And that picture shows that. We thought that image was perfect for what we wanted to do with Urban Johnnie.” Urban Johnnie has two bars, one upstairs and one downstairs, and a menu that includes variations on Johnnie’s favorites like the Caesar and Theta burgers plus some original burgers, sandwiches and outstanding offerings for vegetarians. Fifteen years after his death, Johnnie Haynes can rest in peace knowing the concept he worked so hard to build is not only still going strong but getting stronger. Rick Haynes said there are now seven Johnnie’s concepts in the metro with plans for perhaps “a couple more” in the near future. His sons now sell the secret sauces by the bottle, and even used their father’s first Johnnie’s as the inspiration for Johnnie’s Express. But David Haynes said the two things his father taught him that he holds dearest have to do with dealing with others. “He would say, ‘When you give your word, that’s all you have. Your word is the most important thing you have — always stick to your word,’” David Haynes said. “He taught me also to respect my employees. Show them respect; they would show me back respect. And Rick and I have always been really good bosses when it comes to our employees. We get involved in our employees’ lives, and dad taught me how to do that. He taught me how to be part of a team.” But it’s hard to believe he wouldn’t be even more proud of how his sons have taken the career he helped them start and build it into something more, with one successful West concept and another on the way, plus Urban Johnnie, which bears his image everywhere in sight. While the Haynes brothers are proud to be a family business, David said “It’s not always easy working with family.” But that hasn’t stopped them from hiring Rick’s daughter, Kortney, as director of corporate communications and extending the business to a third generation.

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DAVE CATHEY

the food dude

Johnnie’s Charcoal Broiler opened in 1971. Photo provided

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food feature

ANCHOR DOWN

A

nchor Down is a new gourmet corn dog restaurant from the guys who brought you The Mule. The restaurant is located in the Deep Deuce District in a new red shipping container building, the OK Sea. Chef Beth Ann McFarland and co-owner Joey Morris gave us a little preview of what to expect. The chicken dog was amazing with the ghost pepper ranch, but MAN, the strawberry fritters were delicious. —Quit Nguyen, photographer

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ANCHOR DOWN

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city news

‘ AV ER NT IUCE L EW IHTEHA DA L MI NE EN’ U ’

A venue with a menu

Musician Graham Colton, left, and local restaurateur Brian Bogert tour the inside of a warehouse at 901 West Sheridan that they and Hall Capital will convert into a restaurant, bar and music venue in Oklahoma City. Photo by Bryan Terry, for LOOKatOKC

B

efore Graham Colton was a national recording artist, and before Brian Bogert was a successful restaurateur, the pair were friends at Heritage Hall dreaming up a future that now is set to include opening a restaurant and concert venue on downtown’s Film Row. The two admit they spent a few years working with the Hall family to come up with a good fit for their venture, which is part of a much larger redevelopment of the family’s Fred Jones Manufacturing Building at 900 W Main. Drawings for the new venue were released earlier this month along with plans for a proposed mix of housing and retail that also is proposed to be built around the Fred Jones building, which was originally built in 1916 as a Ford Model T Assembly Plant. Fred Hall, CEO of Hall Capital, announced Tuesday a deal is complete with Colton and Bogert to operate the music venue and restaurant in two decades-old warehouses at 901 W Sheridan. The venue, yet to be named, will feature a nearly

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year-round 8,000-square-foot outdoor patio space and bring a transcendent dining and live music concept to the expanding and emerging west side of downtown Oklahoma City contiguous to the popular Film Row District, Hall said. The new venue will be located directly south of the Fred Jones Manufacturing Building, which is being converted into a full-service 21c Museum Hotel, which will include a free, always open contemporary art museum. “This project will be another place-making opportunity around 21c Museum Hotel and the surrounding mixed-use project,” Hall said. “We have always liked these two warehouse buildings, but we never found the perfect fit for them until now. I believe the best days are ahead for the west side of downtown Oklahoma City.” Colton is a singer-songwriter who has recorded 14 albums and collaborated or performed with artists including Vanessa Carlton, Sheryl Crow, Maroon 5, John Mayer and Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips. Bogert, meanwhile, owns Seven47 in Norman

along with Texadelphia and Fuzzy’s Taco Shop in Bricktown. Bogert and Colton are teaming up with yet another longtime family friend, Paris-trained chef Brittany Sanger. Sanger, who oversee the kitchen at the new venue, is an Oklahoma City native and current chef de partie for Liquid Art House, an upscale and experiential restaurant and art gallery in Boston. Sanger, who trained at Le Cordon Bleu Culinary School in Paris, is set to create a menu that will include both culinary twists and late night finger food. Bogert and Colton said they are trying to create a venue that will be a draw throughout the year, not just when it draws national acts like Elvis Costello and Ben Folds who have until now largely skipped over Oklahoma City in favor of Tulsa, which offers a better variety of venues. “Aspiring local artists want a quality venue – a gathering place— where their music can gain traction and where established national artists will frequent, attracting Oklahoma City’s sophisticated music enthusiasts,” Colton said. “This project

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‘ V‘EANRUT EI CWL IE T H E AA DML EI N UE ’ will elevate Oklahoma City on the regional, and I believe, even the national music scene drawing the attention of top-notch performers, producers and the best in local talent.” The kitchen itself is designed to be visible from the street, which will allow chefs to be a part of the performing arts. A movable wall between the two-story enclosed building and the open-air one story building allows for the stage to open to both buildings or one or the other. The pair hope to host local singer song writers and acoustic performers on a daily basis.

Bogert predicts the space will become a favorite destination for great food, craft beer, cocktails and live music performances. “Graham, the Hall brothers and I have dreamed for years of creating a true gathering place in our hometown where artists and friends converge,” Bogert said. “We wanted a year-round destination that would draw in everyone, narrowing the focus to three elements: Kitchen, patio and song. These two warehouse buildings ignited our imaginations the moment we saw them.” The development is expected to exceed $6

city news

million, and was first hinted at during tax increment financing negotiations with Oklahoma City last year for the 21c Museum Hotel. “We know the cost to preserve the warehouses is more expensive than starting anew, but we all loved the vibe and character this concept would create in these buildings,” Hall said. “At the end of the day, it is the kind of venture only local adventurers with vivid dreams could pursue with such enthusiasm.” —Steve Lackmeyer, for LOOKatOKC

Musician Graham Colton, left, and local restaurateur Brian Bogert tour the inside of a warehouse at 901 West Sheridan that they and Hall Capital will convert into a restaurant, bar and music venue in Oklahoma City. Photo by Bryan Terry, for LOOKatOKC

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city news

‘ AR RE PT UI CBLLEI CH’ E A D L I N E ’

Oklahoma City development Chisholm Creek may get Republic Gastropub, 300 apartments

Republic Gastropub will occupy about 7,500 square feet on two levels in Tract 30, a multilevel building on Pawnee Drive between Topgolf International and Cabela’s at Chisholm Creek in northwest Oklahoma City. Drawing provided

R

Republic Gastropub, a contemporary American public house will open a second location in the Chisholm Creek development. Photo by David McDaniel, for LOOKatOKC

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epublic Gastropub will anchor a new mixed-use building and Cornerstone Development has plans for multifamily housing as part of the 190-acre Chisholm Creek development in Northwest Oklahoma City. Cornerstone wants to build about 300 apartment units in Chisholm Creek, said Kathy Bridges, director of project administration at Cornerstone. “They’re going to be gorgeous,” Bridges said. The Oklahoma City Planning Commission will consider a zoning change for the apartments on Thursday for 6.33 acres south of W Memorial Road on the east side of N Blackwelder Avenue. MIXED-USE CONCEPT Republic Gastropub, operated by A Good Egg Dining Group, has signed on to open its second location in the Chisholm Creek development. “This area is a prime intersection for commerce, play and residential,” A Good Egg Dining Group President Keith Paul said in a statement. “Through the original concept and

planning stages of our first Republic Gastropub, (wife) Heather and I, along with Aubrey and Katie McClendon, knew that this concept could travel. Chisholm Creek’s mixed-use concept, desirable location and impressive tenant lineup made the development an optimal choice for a second Republic location.” Republic will occupy about 7,500 square feet on two levels and will feature an outdoor space within Tract 30, a multilevel building on Pawnee Drive between Topgolf International and Cabela’s. Construction on the Tract 30 building is expected to finish early next year and Republic will probably open sometime next spring, said Whitney Rainbolt, a representative for Chisholm Creek. “We think it will create a great place to go eat dinner and hang out — there’s really nothing like it in that area,” Rainbolt said. “It will be a great fit for what we are trying to create with Tract 30.” — Brianna Bailey, for LOOKatOKC LOOKATOKC.COM


‘ A R ‘TTI RC‘ 7AL’SESHHOETDAODDICLTAI NSE HSE ’

city news

Weird trash means cash for store

S

ituated in what was once a bail bond office at 118 N Western, 7’s Oddities is a junk store in the purest sense. Once shoppers maneuver their way past the rusted tread of an old bulldozer and pieces of Victorian wrought-iron fence at the curb, the inside is a maze of rusted taillights, glass doorknobs and dismantled pianos. Store owner Eric “Seven” Chapman has been salvaging discarded junk for the past decade, selling his finds at antique shows and to artists, but decided to open a brick-and-mortar store last year. Chapman started going by the name “Seven” — his favorite number — after working on a construction crew where there were several other guys named Eric. The numeral seven, salvaged from vintage signs, can be found hanging in several places around the shop. The distressed charm of salvaged wood and rusty, industrial-looking objects has become the latest trend in home decor, and business is picking up for Chapman. “People don’t want something you can get from

7’s Oddities and Antiques on N Western in Oklahoma City. Photo By Steve Gooch, for LOOKatOKC

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Walmart, they want something unique,” he said. “I think people are starting to like the kind of stuff I’ve always liked.” Chapman has three full-time pickers who find unusual objects from demolished buildings, dumpsters and scrap yards.

CUSTOM PROJECTS Many shoppers come in looking for an unusual coffee table or lamp, and Chapman has been known to make custom furniture pieces from salvaged items. His desk at the shop is made from an old baby grand piano, and he recently made a coffee table out of an antique operating table for one of his customers. “You can make a lamp out of basically anything,” Chapman said. People marvel at the strange assortment of items in the shop, said Chapman’s girlfriend, Sharry Wallace, who also works at the shop. “People will come in and see things they remember their grandparents or parents had,” Wallace said. — Brianna Bailey, for LOOKatOKC

Seven Chapman, owner of 7’s Oddities and Antiques on N Western in Oklahoma City. Photo By Steve Gooch, for LOOKatOKC

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calendarA P RJMIULOL NY2 T31H--0MA0AU-YG UM6SOTN T7 H X X MUSIC

CONCERT OF THE MONTH

JULY 2 KALI RA, 89th Street Collective. JULY 4

JULY 24 SUBSEVEN, ACM@UCO Performance Lab. CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE FESTIVAL,

July 24-25, Brady Arts District. (Tulsa) BUFFALO ROGERS, Blue Door. JULY 25 JULY 6 CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE FESTIVAL, 311, Diamond Ballroom.

July 24-25, Brady Arts District. (Tulsa)

JASON ISBELL, John Moreland, Cain’s Ball-

THE COMEDY GET DOWN FEAT. CEDRIC THE ENTERTAINER, Eddie Griffin, D.L.

room. (Tulsa)

Hughley, Chesapeake Energy Arena. JULY 7 HARRY CONNICK, Jr., WinStar World CasiTHIRD EYE BLIND, Dashboard Confession-

no. (Thackerville)

al, Zoo Amphitheatre. CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE FESTIVAL, JULY 10

July 24-25, Brady Arts District. (Tulsa)

THE COMMODORES, Riverwind Casino.

JULY 26

(Norman) ADAM AND KIZZIE, Lions Park. (Norman) JULY 11 JULY 30 STEVE MARTIN AND MARTIN SHORT,

WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville)

JANEANE GAROFALO, ACM@UCO Perfor-

mance Lab. JULY 14 JULY 31 LORD HURON, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) JULY 15 WIDESPREAD PANIC, Zoo Amphitheatre. JULY 16

ALICE IN CHAINS, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) AUGUST 1 ALICE IN CHAINS, WinStar World Casino.

(Thackerville)

SAMANTHA CRAIN, Tallows, Opolis. (Nor-

AUGUST 2

man) CYMBALS EAT GUITARS, 89th St. CollecPETER MATTHEW BAUER OF THE WALKMEN, KOSU Studio in Film Row..

tive. AUGUST 5

JULY 18 TRAVIS LINVILLE, Blue Door. JOAN JETT & THE BLACKHEARTS, Frontier

DAWES, John Moreland, ACM@UCO Performance Lab. AUGUST 6

City. AARON LEWIS, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) JULY 22 AUGUST 7 FALL OUT BOY W/ WIZ KHALIFA, BOK

Center. (Tulsa)

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JULY 24 • 8 P.M. Look no further than the Myriad Botanical Gardens for a free concert with Bearden’s John Fullbright on July 24. This is the third rendition of the Southern Sound Concert Series. Kyle Reid and the Low Swingin’ Chariots

and Town Mountain are on opening duties. The show starts at 8 p.m. See you there. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

BOB SCHNEIDER, Blue Door.

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M O NMTJOUHNLT0YH0 1 0- -0MA-OUNMG TUOHSN TTX HX7 0 0

VISUAL ART KLAIR LARASON, June 11-July 10, DNA

Galleries, 1709 NW 16, 525-3499. BETH HAMMACK — CATHERINE ADAMS,

July 1-31, JRB Art at The Elms, 2810 N Walker, 528-6336.

“WORKS BY REGINA MURPHY: CELEBRATING THE NUMBER 94 AND CREATIVITY,

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

Beauty Inspiration & More,” June 4-July 17, south lobby, Crystal Bridge, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno, 445-7080.

“AMERICA’S ROAD: THE JOURNEY OF ROUTE 66,” May 7-Aug. 29, Gaylord-Pick-

JERRON JOHNSTON: ACRYLIC PAINTING,

“ENTER THE MATRIX: INDIGENOUS PRINTMAKERS,” June 5-Jan. 16, Fred

July 7-Aug. 7, In Your Eye Studio and Gallery, 3005 Paseo #A, 525-2161.

Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 3253272. (Norman)

CALE CHADWICK, July 1-Oct. 31, Exhibit C,

“TERRA” BY ORLY GENGER, Oct. 20-Aug.

1 E Sheridan, 767-8900.

31, Campbell Park, NW 11 and Broadway.

“HOLLY WILSON: A FOOT IN TWO WORLDS,” June 18-Aug. 21, Oklahoma Con-

temporary, 3000 General Pershing Blvd., 951-0000.

“CONFLICT CAST IN BRONZE,” and Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson Sculptures, Feb. 8-July 12, National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250.

“VITRIM NOVUS: MODERN GLASS CONCEPTS,” June 10-July 5, Kasum Contempo-

“A WORLD UNCONQUERED: THE ART OF OSCAR BROUSSE JACOBSON,” Feb. 26-

rary, 1706 NW 16, 604-6602.

Sept. 6, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm , 325-4938. (Norman)

ens Museum Oklahoma Museum HOF, 1400 Classen Drive, 523-3208. “JOQIGACUT: TIPI WITH BATTLE PICTURES,” May 1-April 8, Oklahoma History

Center, 800 Nazih Zuhdi Drive , 522-0765.

“& THE KITCHEN SINK,” June 5-July 3, In Your

Eye Studio & Gallery, 3005 Paseo #A, 525-2161.

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“PRIX DE WEST,” June 12-Aug. 2, National

ANNUAL CAPSTONE EXHIBITION “EMERGE: 2015 ART + DESIGN SENIOR EXHIBIT,” May 9-Sept. 23, Lightwell Gallery

at OU, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman) SKETCHBOOKS OF O. GAIL POOLE, May 8-June 26, The Depot, 200 S Jones, 3079320. (Norman) “IF I WERE HERE,” Holly Wilson, May

21-Aug. 21, Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center, 3000 General Pershing Blvd., 9510000.

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WAFFLE SANDWICHES | $7 - $18 | WAFFLE CHAMPION, 1212 N WALKER

CAFÉ DO BRASIL STELLA MODERN ITALIAN CUISINE JAMES E. MCNELLIE’S PUBLIC HOUSE THE GRANDISON INN THE AMBASSADOR HOTEL IRMA’S BURGER SHACK 1492 NEW WORLD LATIN CUISINE

7 A.M. TO 2 P.M. • TUESDAY–SUNDAY Chef, owner and general manager Todd Woodruff serves craft waffle sandwiches in a “deconstructed waffle.” The Waffle Champion menu was a host of selections including the “Migas” with turkey chorizo, freerange egg, cucumber relish, queso cotija, crème fraiche and corn torilla for $7.95; to vegetarian items such as “Garlic Cauliflower Mash” with smoked almonds, fried carrots and lemon crème fraiche for $7.95; to more exotic choices such as the “Waffle Champion Lobster

Roll” with cold water lobster, sauce gribiche, romaine lettuce and green onion for $17.95. Started in 2011 as a mobile eatery, Waffle Champion now serves a menu of breakfast skillets, cold pressed juices, Maine Root fountain sodas, local beers, wine and garlic n’ parsley waffle fries with house ketchup or truffle mayo. For more information, www.visit wafflechampion. com.

BROWN’S BAKERY R&J SUPPER CLUB URBAN NEIGHBORS COMMUNITY GARDEN WINE & PALETTE ELEMENTAL COFFEE DMASON ART GALLERY BLEU GARTEN FOOD TRUCK PARK

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M O NMTJOUHNLT0YH0 1 0- -0MA-OUNMG TUOHSN TTX HX7 0 0 THE COMEDY GET DOWN | CHESAPEAKE ARENA

FOURTH OF JULY PARKFEST | EDMOND

JULY 25 • 8 P.M. Cedric “The Entertainer”, Eddie Griffin, D.L. Hughley, George Lopez and Charlie Murphy will come together for the comedy event of the year “The Comedy Get Down” at 8 p.m. Saturday, July 25 at the Chesapeake Energy Arena. Cedric the Entertainer is an actor and game show host, best known for co-starring along with Harvey on “The Steve Harvey Show” and starring as Eddie in the Barbershop films. Eddie Griffin appeared on the big screen in “Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo,” “Scary Movie 3,” “John Q,” and “Armageddon” to name a few. D.L. Hughley was a member of The Original Kings of Comedy, a correspondent for The Jay Leno Show, host of “D.L. Hughley Breaks The News on CNN” and the original host of BET’s

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“ComicView.” He is the host of his own radio program syndicated in many markets. George Lopez is a multi-talented entertainer whose career encompasses television, film, standup comedy and late-night television. For two seasons, Lopez hosted “Lopez Tonight,” a late-night television talk show on TBS, Television’s groundbreaking hit sitcom “George Lopez,” which ran for six seasons. Charlie Murphy spent the past two decades solidifying his position in Hollywood as a true acting, writing and producing talent. He’s appeared in feature films such as “Lottery Ticket” with Bow Wow, Ice Cube and Mike Epps, “Our Family Wedding” and “The Perfect Holiday.” For tickets and information, visit ticketmaster.com.

JULY 4 • 6 TO 10 P.M. Celebrate Independence Day with fun, activities, food, music entertainment and fireworks beginning at 6 p.m. on the University of Central Oklahoma campus, 100 N University Drive, Edmond. Kids may enjoy the 35-foot obstacle course, 21-foot double lane slide, tropical island bounce, Mickey Park Learning Club and two carnival rides: The Wrecking Ball and Jitterbug Swings. Party with the animals in the petting zoo sponsored by Agvocates and visit the temporary Fourth of July tattoo booth. Feast on traditional Fourth of

July food and ice cold drinks and save room for free watermelon provided by Crest Foods. After a day of fun and games, sit back and watch the largest fireworks display in the metro area beginning at 9:30 p.m. Bring a lawn chair or blanket and watch from the campus. Seating will not be available in Wantland Stadium. Watch the Fireworks and listen on KCSC radio FM 90.1 The fireworks are synchronized to the music on the radio. Visit libertyfest.org for more information.

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calendarA P RJMIULOL NY2 T31H--0MA0AU-YG UM6SOTN T7 H X X GEORGE BERNARD SHAW’S “YOU NEVER CAN TELL” | OKLAHOMA SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK

EVENTS JULY 2

OPEN MIC NIGHT: SONGS, POEMS, COMEDY, 8 p.m., District House, 1755 NW 16 St.

FIRST THURSDAYS ON CLASSEN CURVE, 6

p.m., Classen Curve, 5825 NW Grand Blvd. ART AFTER 5, 5 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

JULY 8 SONIC SUMMER MOVIE NIGHT: “PADDINGTON, 9 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens. JULY 9

DROP-IN YOGA, 5:45 p.m., Oklahoma City

Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

ART AFTER 5, 5 p.m., Oklahoma City Muse-

um of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100. DRINK AND DRAW AT OKAY SEE, 8 p.m.,

Okay See, 7 N Lee, 440-3090.

DROP-IN YOGA, 5:45 p.m., Oklahoma City Museum of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

FULL MOON BIKE RIDE AND RUN, 6 p.m., Great Lawn, Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno.

DRINK AND DRAW AT BRASS BELL STUDIOS, 8 p.m., Brass Bell Studios, 2500 NW

33, 361-3481. WESTERN AVENUE ON THE LAWN, 5 p.m.,

Behind Whole Foods, NW 62 and Western. JULY 3

JULY 10 LIVE!S ON THE PLAZA, 7 p.m. Plaza Dis-

trict, 1700 Block of NW 16. PASEO ARTS DISTRICT FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK, 6 p.m., Paseo Arts Dis-

trict, 3022 Paseo. RED, WHITE & BOOM, 8:30 p.m., Entertainment Plaza, 3001 General Pershing Blvd., 842-5387. JULY 4 BRICKTOWN 4TH FEST, FIREWORKS, DODGERS BASEBALL AND LIVE MUSIC, 4

p.m., Corner of Sheridan and Oklahoma. FOURTH OF JULY NORMAN DAY, noon.,

Reaves Park, 2510 Jenkins (Norman). LIBERTYFEST PARADE, 9 a.m., Downtown

Edmond, S 2 St. and Broadway (Edmond). LIBERTYFEST PARKFEST AT UCO, 6 p.m.,

University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive (Edmond). LIBERTYFEST FIREWORKS AT UCO, 9:30

p.m., University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive (Edmond). JULY 6 BARRE 3 FREE COMMUNITY WORKOUT,

7 p.m., Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno.

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SECOND FRIDAY CIRCUIT OF ART, 6 p.m., Mainsite Art Gallery, 120 E Main, 593-9060. (Norman) JULY 11 FOODIE FOOT TOUR: DEEP DEUCE, 6 p.m.,

The Wedge Pizzaria, 230 NE 1. JULY 13 OPEN MIC NIGHT: SONGS, POEMS, COMEDY, 8 p.m., District House, 1755 NW 16 St. JULY 14

JULY 2, 3, 9, 10, 16, 17, 18 It’s the turn of the 20th century and a world famous author and her grown children have returned to England after 18 years abroad. But when her missing husband (who may also be the missing father) appears out of the blue, this fascinating troupe faces love, family, money, sex, social and political issues, women’s rights—and

the dangers of dentists in love. Shaw’s whimsical wit whirls us into a world where sweeping change has unexpected comic consequences. Directed by D. Lance Marsh. Performed on The Water Stage at Myriad Botanical Gardens, 301 W Reno. Call 235-3700 for information and to purchase tickets.

SECOND TUESDAY MOVIE NIGHT AT BLEU GARTEN: “PULP FICTION,” 8:30 p.m., Bleu

Garten Food Truck Court, 301 NW 10. JULY 16 SHAKESPEARE’S MIDSUMMER SIP: A CELEBRATION FOR OKLAHOMA SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK, 6:30 p.m., Oklahoma

Shakespeare in the Park, 2910 Paseo Drive, 235-3700. AUTOMOBILE ALLEY SHOP HOP, 6 p.m.,

Broadway between NW 4 and NW 10. ART AFTER 5, 5 p.m., Oklahoma City Muse-

um of Art, 415 Couch Dr., 236-3100.

DRINK AND DRAW AT TREE & LEAF, 8

p.m., Tree & Leaf Clothing, 1705 NW 16, 557-1900. SHAKESPEARE’S MIDSUMMER SIP: A CELEBRATION FOR OKLAHOMA SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK, 6:30 p.m., Oklahoma

Shakespeare in the Park, 2910 Paseo Drive, 235-3700.

“ELABORATE COLLABORATE” OPENING RECEPTION, 6 p.m., IAO Gallery, 706 W

Sheridan. JULY 18 FIRST CAPITAL TRIATHLON, 7 a.m., Guthrie Lake, 1412 Lake Road. (Guthrie) FOODIE FOOT TOUR: DEEP DEUCE, 6 p.m.,

JULY 17 PREMIERE ON FILM ROW , 6 p.m., Film Row, Sheridan Ave. between N Walker Ave. and N Western Ave.

The Wedge Pizzaria, 230 NE 1. HEARD ON HURD, 6 p.m., Downtown Ed-

mond, Broadway between Main and Hurd, 715-5121. (Edmond)

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WHERE: H&8TH NIGHT MARKET, MIDTOWN |1| Mike |2| Taylor, Amanda, Brooke, Becca and Charlissa |3| Frank Black |4| Matt, Rachel and Drew | Photos by Steven Maupin, for LOOKatOKC

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

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WHERE: HEARD ON HURD, EDMOND |1| Shane Henry |2| Amy |3| Amanda and April |4|Danielle, Donovan and Excelle Photos by Steve Maupin, for LOOKatOKC

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

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WANTED: R12 FREON Refrigerant 12 collecting dust in your garage? We pay cash for R12 refrigerant! 10, laurelgstiff@gmail.com/ 312-291-9169. '14 Ford Appearance Pkg black wheels w/ Pirelli tires, less than 1K miles. Regular price $6,000, Selling for $2,500. 863-3110 '96 Ford 5.0motor w/trans & '98 Lincoln 4dr $825ea. or trade 1959'72 VW 405-949-2067/882-6842 $150 & Up for most non-running vehicles, no title ok. 405-8196293

Reman carbs & TBI, domestic, foreign, farm, marine, performance, $125-$325, 249-1940.

'06 Cadillac DTS fully loaded, chrome wheels, cherry red, $7,800 » » » 405-265-2900

2005 XLR, grandfather's car, 12K miles, never driven in rain or snow, pristine condition, $35,000, 918-605-0683. '04 DeVille Sedan, lthr, loaded, nice, cold ac $4,250. 863-6399

'07 HHR Panel Excellent for service business. Auto, air, $5795 » » » 640-7209

2004 Chevy Classic good cond. $3200 405-681-6308 Barn Find - 1971 Triumph Spitfire Mark IV, complete car, $1500, 405-698-6617 or 405-693-1805

CASH 4 VEHICLES 788-2222 $$$$$$$$$ CASH FOR CARS

1998 Chrysler Cirrus, auto, runs good, $1,500 or make offer. » » » 405-205-5032 » » » 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, $46,000. Call 870-3291834 or 870-536-1414 or email me at moneymartinc@yahoo.com

2004 FOCUS. 118,752 miles. Light gray. $2250 ¡ 373-3091

WE BUY VEHICLES!

Comprehensive price list and grading guide ensure top price. 1000+? Refining terms available. $$ NOW PAYING CASH $$, Call DR2 at 580-735-4150

LOOKATOKC.COM

'10 Honda Insight, like new, low mi hard to find $16,000. 863-3110 2002 Accord, 173K, runs & drives perfect, cold a/c, $2500, 589-2592

'98 Honda Civic EX, 160K, AC,

all pwr $2,500obo. 300-4787

405-255-5962.

We Buy Catalytic Converters

'09 Mini Hardtop, grey/blk, Prem. pkg, 18" whls, lux lthr throughout w/matching 2 tone dash & armrest, panoramic sunroof, exc rubber, fully serv, 63K AMAZING Must see! $11,300NEG. 314-1900

'98 Pontiac Grand AM, 2dr, 125K actual miles, good shape, $1,200. 405-885-2572

Classic Pickup 1950 Ford pickup Solid body, Chevy 350 V8, auto transmission, power steering, brakes, Mustang II front end, running when parked six years ago. $4,000 obo. Call 405-2257199 or text 405-795-8136

2007 BMW X3 $13,500 OBO V6 3.0 68K miles 405-3062247.

2001 BMW 525i sedan, silver w/ gray leather, sunroof, 127K miles, $4075, 405-721-8833.

'06 Dodge Ram F-150 150K works great, good cond $5500. 902-5088 '01 Dodge SLT ext cab, 4WD, tow pkg, 20" whls, $4250. 863-6399

'95 GMC Sierra ext cab loaded nice, cold air $2850. 863-6399

03 Chev Suburban Z71 loaded lthr 3rd row CD nice $5950. 863-6399

'02 Grand Prix, 4dr, 108K, AC, CD, alarm, tint, alloy rims, nice, runs great. $1,900obo. 312-4573

405-512-7278

'06 Ford F-250 Crew Cab 4x2, 5.4 V8, auto w/spare tire, cruise, AC, roof lights, tow command sys., trailer brake controller, tires 70% life, telescoping side mirrors, 62K actual miles, 6 toolboxes, 8ft flatbed, ladder rack, exc. cond. $6,950 » » » 405-348-1712

'99 Ford F150 quad drs auto 4WD cold AC, nice $3650. 863-6399 Personal MB Collection: '03 SL, '91 SL , '00 S430, '02 CLK Conv. starting $7900 (405) 620-4529

Up to $5,000 paid on Cars, Trucks, Vans & SUVs

Any Make, Model or Condition. Free haul off for unwanted vehicles. 24/7. 100 mile radius of OKC. Honest.

1994 Mark VIII, 4.6L, 32 valve V8, exc interior & tires, $1100 obo, 405-392-4987.

'02 Impala, 4door, auto, air, good cond., $2,495 » » » 640-7209

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

Like NEW 2014 Infiniti QX50 4Dr, Hatchback, 4WD, V6, Automatic, Midnight Garnet ext, Wheat int, Leather Interior, excellent cond, 8300 mi, Premium Package.Excellent condition inside/out. One owner. $28,000. juliegm818@gmail.com 405-531-1580

2003 Aerio SX, 1 owner, 85K mi, runs great, auto, 6 CD changer, great mpg, $3995 obo, 596-1209.

2006 Avalon XLS, loaded, exc cond, sunroof, $10,400, 728-1279.

99 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer tow pkg, lthr, loaded $2850. 863-6399 2006 Toyota Highlander FWD, 6 cyl, very good cond, 3rd row seat, $8900obo 405-514-8583

'00 Ford E150 cargo van w/protective cage 115k $3750 863-6399

'75 Ranger Bass w/70 HP motor & '92 Yamaha Jet ski $395ea. or trade 1959-'72 VW. 405-949-2067/882-6842

2 Place Ozark Jet Ski lift. new motor $995. 677-9934

2003 Harley Dyna-Wide, all orig, 6900 miles, $7,000, 405-344-6308 2013 Honda F6B Black. 14k miles. New tires and many extras. Excellent condition $12,000. 405-312-1884 1996 Honda Magna 750VF 30,788 original miles, new tires and windscreen. $2900. OBO 405-812-6740

July 1 - July 14, 2015

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Equipment Operators/Drivers Sherwood Construction Co., Inc. is accepting applications for Scraper, Dozer, Motor Grader Operators, CDL Class A Drivers w/ Hazmat & Tanker Endorsements. Med, Dental, Life, 401(k) +. Preemployment U.A. & physical required. Apply in person @ 1120 E. Reno OKC, OK, via email jobs@ Sherwood.net, Fax 918-574-2530 Equal Opportunity Employer of men, women, minorities, protected veterans & ind. w/ disabilities.

'05 Yamaha VStar 650 Classic. 3K mi. Cobra pipes, must see! $2995 (405) 842-5419, 840-7787 2012 HD Dyna Wide Glide, 460 mi, $12,500 obo 405-375-4953 2012 HD Dyna Wide Glide, 460 mi, $12,500 obo 405-375-4953 2005 HD Roadking Classic, 13K mi exc cond, $9000, 405-255-7726. '13 Can-Am serviced & road ready $16,995 trailer avail. 405-2050402 2002 HD Heritage Softail Classic, loaded, $8750 obo, 580-467-8472.

Need Experienced Drywall & Metal Stud Framers

DRIVERS WANTED NOW! NO CDL REQUIRED Must be 21+ Pass Drug/BG, Valid DL, clean MVR, www.RCXHires.com

HAYES CANTEEN Is looking to fill a position for Maintenance/Warehouse/ Delivery. Starting Pay $10/hr. M-F, 8:30-5:30. Good driving record. Drug Test. Apply M-F, 9am-11am, 6101 NW 2nd, or resume to office@hayescanteen.com

with 1-2 yrs. exp. 405-623-3360

Housekeepers, full time Seeking experienced and non experienced Laborers with valid driver's license. Please apply at 3216 SE 30th St., Del City. Great opportunity with growing company. 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

Edmond Investment Co seeking P/T Accountant, Excel, QuickBooks, financial, payroll, taxes, reconciliation, self motivated, organized. Fax resume to 348-2480 or call, lv msg 405-283-2620

Steel Building Erectors needed. Must have transportation. Drug screen required. Call 405-664-6321

AP Physics/Physics position available for Call 735-4898. ¡ EOE

2013 26 foot Freedom Express by Coachman w/bumpout, low miles, electric stablizer jacks & awning, EC, $19,500 firm, 405-640-1155.

Marketing Assistant for

Eastern OK County Tech Ctr.

2011 Lexington 25' Class C. Ford V10. 8871 mi. $50K 405-250-1645

2006 Forest River Charleston, 40ft, 4 slides, 330hp Cat, 45K mi, $95K (405) 642-6606, 642-9590.

Responsible for assisting with public relations and marketing projects within the EOC Tech district. Creates, manages and implements content with the purpose of sharing successes and offerings. Visit eoctech.edu/marketing for more information. AA/EOE

2013 Springdale 30' travel trailer pwr awning, stabilizers, 1 slide. Non smoker, 1 owner. $16,500 405-598-2857 or 301-3395

Opening for the 2015-2016 School Year:

Elementary Teacher Must be OK certified. Apply at 6721 NW 42nd St., Bethany, OK 73008. Call 405-789-3801 for more information. EOE Teacher Positive Tomorrows School for homeless children seeks 1&2 gr teacher. Requires OK certification in Early Childhood or Elementary Education. Excellent benefits & work environment. Send resume and cover letter to info@positivetomorrows.org

Carpenter C-STORE/DELI AM SHIFT TEAM LEAD responsible, mature, experienced, far NW OKC/Edmond. $9-$10/hr to start. 283-2620, lv msg.

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

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

Full time. Must pass background check. Great benefits and retirement. Send resumes to todd@genesiskids.com Metal buildings w/wood frames or Laborer Framing experience preferred but will train. (405) 412-7665, 208-9981.

ROUTE SERVICE National Co since 1939 has immediate opening to load and service vending machines. Salary and comm. starts at $30,000/yr. Benefits included. M-F. Good driving record. Drug test. Apply M-F, 9AM-11AM, 6101 NW 2nd or resume to office@hayescanteen.com

System Planning Engineer (2 openings) needed in Stillwater, Oklahoma to design and coordinate the implementation of engineering studies that supports the growth of the cooperative’s distribution system and optimize and produce efficiencies of the utility infrastructure by following smart grid practices and initiatives. Applicants must have the minimum of a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering plus 3 years of power generation transmission or power distribution experience. Employer will accept a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering plus 5 years of progressive power generation transmission or power distribution experience in lieu of the primary requirement. Must have legal authority to work in the U.S. Send resume/references to: Michelle Phelps, Director of Human Resources, ATTN: THE OKLAHOMAN, Central Rural Electric Cooperative, 3304 South Boomer Road, Stillwater, OK 74076. EOE

Grace Living Center Brookwood Immediate Openings for Nursing Staff We need outstanding nurses to grow with us! We opened our beautiful Bridges Skilled Rehabilitation center at the start of 2015 and continue to seek out the “best of the best” to join our team. Are you an RN, LPN or CNA? Apply in person at 940 SW 84th (just a few blocks from I240 and S. Western) and inquire about shifts or send email with desired work days/shifts to sarah.rhodes@gracelivingcenters.com. We offer competitive pay and benefits. EOE

CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDES & 24 HOUR LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS

An Individual RN seeking employment, full or part time, preferably in home care. 5yrs exp. w/elder home care. 10yrs exp in hospital cardiac care. SE OKC. References available. 405-201-7717

Sears

PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE 3-4 Clinical Services OKC-County Health Dept. Apply at occhd.org

RN Home Health Proficient in OASIS, MC, computer, Electronic health records. Fax resume to 405-720-2556 or email cdorough@okc.baptistvillage.org

Carpet & Air Duct Cleaning & Garage Door Technicians needed. Experience preferred but will train. 949-9240 or 630-5515 T R E E P R O S Accepting applications: Climbers & Climber Trainees. Top $$ + Hol./Vac Pay. Must have clean MVR. Drug screen req'd. 495-1982 for appt.

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

$18.00 per hour. Starts July 7th Click “Sign Up” at: capacitybuilders.com

Service & Sales. Outside work, heavy lifting, prof. appearance. Start $9/hr. Apply in person: 1300 E Reno OK Truck/Trailer 232-1200

Bethany Public Schools

AMERICAN CLEANERS

2008 Forest River Flagstaff 30ft 5th Whl include slider hitch, 1 Owner. Asking $13,700 obo. Call 405-821-5967 or 405-255-6094.

Laborer for Trailer Repairs,

Maintenance Position Moore Public Schools.

Consulting Firm in OKC/Moore area seeking candidates with exper in: bookkeeping, bank teller, insurance, data entry, medical field, &/or cust serv. New grads OTJT. Hrs are 8am to 4:30 pm M-F, $12 to $15/hr + Benefits Send resume to: AMM PO Box 892037 Okla City, OK 73189 or email: hr@ammokc.com

needed for SW OKC properties. Apply in person at Pickwick Place Apts., 2759 W I-240 Service Rd, Oklahoma City, OK 73159.

United Systems is currently looking to add to our growing team. We are an Oklahoma-based Information Technology company that has been in business for over 30 years. Our Service Department is currently in need of a Dispatcher; technical knowledge required, certifications a plus. Candidates will be responsible for scheduling and dispatching workers for installation and service calls. Candidates should be organized, detail-oriented, and dependable, have a positive attitude, time management skills, and be adaptable to a fast paced environment. If you are interested in joining our team, please contact Heather Ellison at hellison@unitedsystemsok.com or fax 405-523-2185.

Caring for Seniors IMMEDIATE OPENINGS PT/FT FLEXIBLE SHIFTS, BENEFITS

To Apply Call 577-1910 Visiting Angels

EVENT CASHIERS CHAIRSIDE Orthodontic Assistant, PT/FT. Midwest City. Exp. pref'd/will train. Fax Resume: 405-732-7191.

ACMAs/CMAs/CNAs All Shifts, Top Wages! Apply in person Sommerset Assisted Living 1601 SW 119th St. 405-691-9221

Part time. No felonies, must be 18 and able to work any days, $8.50/hr. Apply in parking garage underneath Cox Convention Center Downtown. 297-2543

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

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Private Investigator Must have completed CLEET PI course requirements to conduct surveillance. FT. No experience necessary. Send resume to Robert N. Dani, Inc., 6303 N. Portland, Suite 202, OKC, OK 73112, or fax 942-4767.

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

HVAC Service Techs & Installers

PROGRAM COORDINATOR A Non-Profit Agency Serving People with Developmental Disabilities is looking for a devoted, experienced and energetic Program Coordinator to become a valuable member of the Fretzpark family. The Program Coordinator directs and coordinates activities of the recipient in the accordance with DDSD. Is responsible for the supervision, coordination and monitoring of the services provided by the contract agency to the service recipient. Bachelor's Degree in B.A. An application can be submitted at our office, located at 4545 N. Lincoln, Suite 105, OKC, OK. Please bring your OK DL, current car insurance, three letters of reference and any training certificates you may have. Office hours are M-F from 9:00am-4:00pm.

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

AIRCRAFT MECHANIC FULL-TIME Great pay, benefits, vacation, $ for school. No exp needed. HS grads ages 17-34. Call Mon-Fri 877-628-9562

Commercial Cabinet Builders & Trim Carpenters, Journeyman Level. Please call 405-557-0358.

ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMAN & APPRENTICES: 2 years min comm'l exp. Contact Steve Hall, 405-943-2442, ext. 11, or email shall@klbradley.com

Director of Foster Care Operations Full time position responsible for training/recruitment services w/ foster care subcontractors; coordinate/deliver training to foster parents/recruit foster care families/process client referrals/act as liaison to foster families and DHS/oversee case management & monthly in-home visits/state wide travel. Qualifications: Master’s Degree in Social Services related field. Foster Care experience preferred. Salary Range $38-$50k; excellent benefit package. Mail resume: Oklahoma Association of Youth Services, 201 NE 50TH Street, OKC, OK 73105, by July 8, 2015

COOK Corrections program. Certification, 2 years exp. Req. Email resume to ddobbs@cpinc.org

Freeman's Liquor Mart is accepting applications for

Full & Part time staff. Experience in wine & spirits a plus. Apply in person at • 4401 N. Western Ave.•

LOOKATOKC.COM

in the OKC Metro/Windfarm Class A or B. Clean MVR. Co. pays 95% of health ins. $15-$25 per hour DOE.

214-7450 ask for Brandi EOE

Call for Maps! See why we sell more acreages than anyone in Okla. E of OKC. o/a 275-1695

Good Pay. Experience preferred but will train. Fax resume to: 405-787-8912

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

Road ServiceDiesel Mechanic Need experienced Class 8 Diesel Mechanic to run service truck. Must have own tools. Clean Background and clean MVR. Pay depends on experience and ability. If interested please call Sean at 405-593-6604

•Two (2) 160 acre farms, Edmond Road and County Line, Piedmont Schools,large lake and home, asking $1.9M and $1.5M.

Pest Tech

»» » HOT » »»

needed for Shawnee property. Apply at Pickwick Place Apts., 2759 W I-240 Service Rd, Oklahoma City, OK 73159

NOW HIRING MIXER DRIVERS

Hiring Journeyman Plumber and Apprentice. located in Guthrie. Pay based on experience. Leave message at (405)757-5647

HEALTH PROMOTION SPECIALIST 1-4 OKC-County Health Department Apply at occhd.org

Assistant Manager

Van Eaton Ready Mix

Exp'd Telemarketer Wanted $10HR + BONUS MON-THUR. EDMOND AREA 405-340-4440

Telesales/Marketing AgentMoore, OK Telesales Agents needed to call existing customer base. Must have great verbal communication skills. Hourly + bonus. Good sales agents earn 30k+/year. Generous benefits pkg. Call 405-443-7782 or email resume to greg. meissner@all-solutions4u.com www.all-solutions4u.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

•Reputation Horse Breeding and Training Farm in Central OK, 320 acres, custom home, large lake, race barn, lots of paddocks, asking $2.9M.

Class A Driver needed Part time delivering fresh cut flowers. Contact Jim Hindman at 405-833-9627

•1,358 acre Major Co. Ranch in the scenic Gloss Mtns., Deer, Turkey, Quail, 12 ponds, 5 pastures, rural water, cabin, 100 ac. cultivated, asking $1.7M. Broker owns interest in this property.

Broker (405) 823-3177.

Hampel Oil

Night Loader CDL A with Hazmat Minimum 1 year driving, clean MVR. Previous Fuel and Oil experience helpful. Evening Positions Available 3pm-12pm Monday - Fridays Apply in person 8001 Pole Road Oklahoma City, Ok 73149 Or email: hr@hampeloil.com

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

2360 SE 29 Harrah, Ok. Beautiful remodeled 2554 sq ft. 4/2/2 Brick. On approx 2 acres. Call Johnny 473-3247 or 799-5531. www.homesofokcinc.com

Mohawk Materials Flatbed Driver 2 years experience, Class A CDL required. Home every night. 405-789-3001¡8300 NW 3rd, OKC

Updated 3/2/2, 3 liv, 1939sf, new roof, carpet. Great Florida room, fp, $159,700 Realty Exp 414-8753

July 1 - July 14, 2015

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Edmond Immaculate home 4 spacious Beds Plus office

1712 NW 184th St. $299,000 ¡¡ 312-4421 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

Summer Clearance Sale. Lenders offering zero down w/land & less than perfect credit programs. Limited time, select models. Free delivery & set. $2,000 Furniture allowance w/purchase. WAC. 405-631-7600

I-35 frontage, OKC $700mo - 2yr lease. 1st 6 mos $600/mo!! 405-208-9981 405-412-7665

Abandoned 4bed Doublewide Set up on 20 Acres. Call for Details 405-631-7600

Construction Office/Storage/Yard 811 W Britton Road, OKC 73114 Monthly Rent $1,100 call 405720-3115 ex 1/405-596-7686

Office/Warehouse 1800sf

MOVE IN NOW! 2 bed from $575 Try Plaza East • 341-4813

FOR LEASE - 4302 June Ave,

THE CHELSEA APARTMENT HOMES ¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡‘¡

Ask about our PREMIUM HUNTING ACREAGE 466 acres in major county on the Cimarron River aprx 1 mi of river frontage. Lots of deer, turkey, quail ducks, geese & sand hill cranes. $1475/Acre 405-830-2079 Amazing Hunting Ranch ¡ 2050ac Claude, TX. Deer, Aoudad, Hogs & Bobcat, 7 blinds, 8 ponds, huge shooting range, equip. included. $1,500/acre ¡‘¡ 806-584-8954

WYOMING MINERAL RIGHTS Eastern Laramie County, WY 1460 Net Mineral Acres for Sale. D.J. Basin Investment opportunity. $6000/acre Reba Epler, 307-701-1073 www.adelantebrokers.com

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

Versatile Commercial Building 5400 S. Western Ave, 8,400 sf, land size 1.39 acres, zoned C3, $520,000. JR Fulton & Associates ¡ 405-840-0200

WE SELL & FINANCE beautiful acreages for mobile homes-Milburn o/a 275-1695

» Lake front-Ski Island 6452 W Hefner Rd, 3/2.5/2, appls, FP, No Sect 8, $1150, avail. 721-1831

3 bed, 2 bath, w/appliances included + W&D, storage shed. Edmond Schools. No Pets. 348-6240 or 623-1181 MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes $400/up. RV space $200 763-3627

Large 2bd, 2ba, $900/mo+dep. no smoke pets or sec 8 shown by appt. only ¡¡¡ 918-489-2837 Remodeled - 1434 NW 92nd St. 2 bed, 1.5 bath, water paid, new carpet ¡ $650/mo ¡ 405-249-5362

Fml Seeks Roommate Looking for Mr. or Mrs. Doubtfire. $125 mo. Blanchard area. Details 274-2315

FREE RENT SPECIAL "LOOK & LEASE" Additional Discount ¡‘¡ NEW INTERIORS ¡‘¡ New Club/Fitness/Theater Room/Activity Center/ Playground/Jogging Trail ¡‘¡ HUGE FLOOR PLANS¡‘¡

Super Specials for 1 & 2 bedroom quadraplexes available now. 2211 S. Kentucky Pl. 632-6414 Se Habla Español

12821 Stratford Drive, OKC 405-752-2637 or thechelsea@priceedwards.com 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.

7 Homes 3-4 beds $775-1500 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com 312 W 10th St, beautiful 3/2/2 walk to school $1200 749-0603

3 bed 1.5bath, $775/month GREAT Office Space. Various NW locations, 300-6000sf 946-2516

CRESCENT PARK newly remod!!

1012 Lotus Ave, 219-1000

Great loc. Hdwd flrs, Pool! Quiet Secure, 1 & 2 beds ‘ 840-7833

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

Home for Rent 3300 Warrior Court. Beautiful and Affordable 4 Bed/2 Bath. Contact Willie 405-514-4055, Metro First Realty

800 N Meridian

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

2 Bedroom 946-9506

$430-$575 Furnished Efficiencies Remodeled. All Bills Paid. Laundry CH/A 2820 S. Robinson 232-1549 1213 SW 60th, 2bd apts, $475 mo $200 dep, stove, dishwasher, fridge. Clean! No Sec 8 632-9849 2409 SW 45th Clean & Quiet 1bd 1ba, stove, fridge $375 mo, $200 dep, no sec 8 314-4667

4 bed, 2 bath, ch&a, sec 8 okay, $900 mo+dep, 409 NW 85th, 405-204-4308. 4051 NW 34, duplex, 3 bd, 1O ba, FP, No smoking/pets or No Section 8, $875 + dep, 408-3074. 3 Homes 2-3 beds $775-$850 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com 3bd 1.5ba refinished wood floors

3800 NW 59 $1100 830-3399 3/2K /2, 9912 Harvest Hills Road, No Sec 8, No Pets, 405-749-7877.

Oldetowne, 9201 Pepperdine, 2bd, 2ba, 1car, 1 mi to Tinker 769-7177

Westinghouse upright freezer 21cf, GC, $250obo. 821-6047

Cute 2bd house, large fenced yard on quiet street, $495mo 596-8410

BID ONLINE! Fabrication Equipment To Include: Case Packer Pneumatic Spinner Forming Machines Drill Press Coil Cradle Screw Air Compressor Chip Processing Machine Location: Oklahoma City, OK Bid Dates: July 9th - 13th Bid Online at:

BidOnSurplus.com 2 bed duplex, $600 mo+dep, Sec 8 OK, $50 move in special, 1524 NE 42nd St., 204-4308

Duplex, 5915 Bonnie Drive, 5 blocks north of Britton on MacArthur. Sherwood Estates Addition. 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car garage, approx 1400 sq ft, $950 rent, $750 deposit, 405.370.1077

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

3320 S. Walker 2bed nice no pets stove frig. laundry rm you pay all bills $600mo $300 dep 650-0963

3 bd, 1 ba, close to school, available July 1st, $850/mo, 341-1413.

2 story 3/2/2 ch&a 2007 Oakhurst Ave, 1779sf, $850/mo. 426-5497

Search For: 21581 Call: 480-367-1300

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

8'x20' cattle guard, 7"runners, 3" traverse, good, $1750. 230-7753

LOOKATOKC.COM


•John Deere 338 Square Baler, wire tie, exc. cond., $15,595. •9ft Frontier Tandem Hydraulic Disk, nearly new $5,995. Both always in barn. 405-221-0366 '98 Case 485 Diesel Tractor with brush hog & bucket on front, good shape $4500. 405-885-2572

PC 980 Canon copier $100. Extra lrg lthr Lay-z-boy recliner $150. Solid oak 4 drawer dresser $150. Oak corner computer desk $100. Oak end & coffee table $100. Call for appt 706-3428 Heavy marble cocktail table w/ottoman 50x26x19 $160; Drop leaf oak table 40 X45" with 2 chairs $145; 6 foot Iron bakers rack $55; Wood & prism glass wall mirror $45; 735-9152

Ariens Maxzoom 60" Deck 25HP, 28.5 hours, $3,800/OBO. 405-301-7271

Propane tank end caps for fire pits 30"-$40, 37"-$60, 41"-$70, and Short open end pipes 24" X 5'-$50, 30" X 6'-$65, 37" X 6.75'-$80, 41" X 5.5'-$80, 405-375-4189, BLTTanks.com

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

Bengal Kittens, TICA, marbled $350-$500 ea ’ 816-9546 F2 Savanna Kittens! Best Prices, 12 wks, $2100 ’’ 405-397-1199

Kittens free to good home. 9wks ’’ 405-550-2145 ’’

LOST OR WASHED DOWN S. CANADIAN RIVER

•2006 Good Time Special 5 String Banjo, steel tone ring, maple neck & resonator, played 4x's by orig. owner. Paid $985, Asking $600. •2001 Kentucky 1000 Master Model Mandolin, spruce front, maple sides & back, set up by Brian Berline. Paid $2,295, Asking $1,650. Call 580-471-3671.

From 2 miles South of Noble. 39 black & red cows with calves & 1 black bull. Can identify. REWARD Offered. 405-642-8077 (55) 4-6yr Angus cows, calving early fall Angus bulls, nice ranch cows, gentle nature 405-642-6156

TOTAL GYM - used twice, $80. 405-485-9704

Ladies 14 ct white gold halo style ring, 1.50 center diamond, 1 ct small diamond, $6500, 476-8344.

Beagle Puppies, 2M, AKC registered, 9 weeks, s/w, out of field champions, $250, 405-830-8951.

9.9 Yamaha OB Motor 2- Stroke Less than 10 hours. Like new. $1500. 405-627-0319

Airedale puppies 8 wks Airedale puppy 8 wks old 1 female 5 males $300 405-368-7171

Summer Sale! Large selection of gas & elec cars! Hurry! 872-5671.

American Pitbulls ADBA/ABKC/UKC 6 Males 3 Females www. facebook.com/okbigstarkennels $600 405-757-5458

Conceal/Open Carry Class $45 Total ¡ 405-818-7904 www.HavePistolWillCarry.com Taurus 380 TCP $295. Walther 22 $425. Ruger Mark III Target 22 $450 405-628-9560/208-8827

Used JD Lawn Tractors X304 all wheel steer 272hrs, bagger L110 Kohler eng, 42'' cut. Sabre 1848. LT166. 3 others $750-$2550 • 641-9932

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Grm. Shrthr. Pointers, champion bloodline, Rawhide Clown, 4F, 1M, $500-$700 ¡‘¡ 580-571-1763 Lake Tenkiller, camping available Chicken & Terrapin Creek, bring your generator, 918-685-0183.

Beautiful Female Calico Cat Spayed, declawed cat. Free 405-794-3493

AKC Registered Litter--Labrador Retrievers 5 males (3 black, 2 yellow) and 3 females (1 black, 2 yellow). I own the mother and father of this litter and they are family. Thus, I request if you do not have the time and dedication to provide a loving forever home-please do not apply for their adoption. All pups have guaranteed health and are currently 8 weeks old. Must be seen by vet at 9 weeks of life to ensure continued health and safety of your pups. Second series of shots due at this time. 1st set of shots, deworming, and dew claws removed. AKC papers/puppy kit comes with price. $400. 405-550-9687 Aussie Mini Puppy, 7 weeks, s/w, blue merle, $600, 580-695-6004. Australian Shepherds-Mini 6wks, s/w, working stock, $6501000 www.aussiesbymary.com call/text 405-226-8375

Aussie Mini red merles w/2 blue eyes 1 male red tri 8wks old $350 580-351-7652 East of Lawton

Basset Hound Pups AKC Reg. 2 males and 5 females, 8 wks old, had first shot and vet check. $450 (806) 683-5302

Aussie Minis Registered. 7wks. 2 males 2 females. s/w $400 cash » » 405-567-5250

Beagle/Boston Terrier Minis 9wks 1m 1f. Look like Mini Beagles. Adorable $100 405-902-6655

Boston Terrier AKC 3 Males, 7 weeks old, Bl&W, 1st shots, wormed and dew claws removed, very playful $700. 405-638-0049 Boston Terrier AKC 8 wk red F S/W $600.00 (405)699-1999 Cavalier King Charles Male Pup ACA blenheim $500 580-239-1843

Chihuahua, Cuties, 8 weeks, CUTE LITTLE TEACUPS, $250 Cash ¡ 405-434-1421 Chihuahua, ACA, 2 white Females. S/W ’ $300 ’ 627-0419

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, 10wks old, 2F $250ea, 2M $150ea, POP, no shots or papers. Call or text ¡‘¡ 405-496-8049 Chihuahuas, ACA, 2M, 9 weeks, s/w, $100, 580-465-1571. COCKER SPANIEL PUPPIES AKC 2 M Chocolate $400 405-434-7472 Corgi Puppies AKC Corgi puppy. 1 male left. UTD on vaccinations. Tails docked and dew claws removed. 8 weeks old. $600 580-761-5588 DACHSHUND, MINI, AKC, 2 red males, SH, s/w/dc, $150, Newcastle (405) 392-5490 or 641-4841.

July 1 - July 14, 2015

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DACHSHUND, Mini, AKC, long hair, 2F $350. 580-276-7396 ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPPIES AKC, 2M 9WKS/2M & 2F 7WKS, FAWN & WHITE, RED & WHITE, REVERSE BRINDLE, S&W, DEW CLAWS, 1 YR HEALTH GUARANTEE, FAMILY RAISED, CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED $1500 PLEASE CALL 405-532-5747 OR 405-520-0914

Golden Retriever AKC American/English Cream Puppies Taking deposits on 4 gorgeous male 7 wk old pups. MANY champs in bloodline. Full AKC registration, shots, vet checked. $1500. 405-388-2647 Great Dane Puppies, AKC Reg, born 4/2/15, s/w, POP, $500 ¡ 606-9748 ¡ 818-3560

FEMALE YORKIE CALL TO IDENTIFY 405-682-4916

Pomeranians ACA, Tiny! s/w, micro-chip, $500, 918-421-1660

White & yellow CAT Vicinity I-40 & Sunnylane in Del City. call to id 405-694-5439

POMERANIAN MALE PUPPIES all colors. 8 weeks old $400 ea 580-467-8679 » 580- 606-7162 Pomeranian Puppies, 2 blk males, no papers $200ea. 405-573-4861 POODLE, Toy, 2M, 1crm 1 apricot s/w vet ckd $300ea 9wks. 1f Maltese 3yr $125. Will meet. 580-857-2677 or 580-665-0546

Wht Grt Pyrenees & Red Heeler, collar/no tags, 6/19 Coffee Creek Rd & Indian Meridian. 830-6396 350 Fine Pets At FREE TO LIVE 4mi N of Waterloo on Western ALL Dogs & Cats $80 Shts/Neut 282-8617 »» freetoliveok.org

POODLES, AKC, Teacup, Tiny Toy & Toy Puppies, $300-$1000, OK#1 788-9709 ’’ tinyteacups.com Poodles, standard, red, our baby had babies, 12 wks, home raised, pre-spoiled, $750, 915-9105.

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

MINIATURE DONKEY, choc brown F, 6mos, gentle-make good pet $200, 391-3452/816-4348

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

Brown Chihuahua, NW 39 Expwy near Tinker Federal 405-843-7350 »» RESIDENTIAL HAULING »» AND CLEANING, 765-8843. Antique money clip w/gold peso. Family heirloom mistakenly sold on 6/15/15, by Greg Estate Sale at 6720 Edgewater Drive in OKC. Please contact 303-979-8983.

Brushhog, box blade, $42/ hour, 3 hour minimum, 227-3517.

German Shepherd Pups AKC GORGEOUS white bundles of fur! S/W, vet checked, $500 . Call 405-706-6310 or 708-9046.

GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC 4M, 4F, black, black & tan, vet ckd, s/w, will be large, $575 ea. ’ 405-313-1879 ’ GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC 3 Solid White F & 1 Sable M S/W POP adorable cute 6 week old pups with great attitudes ready for a good loving home $500. 405-664-4517

Great Danes, AKC pups Born 3/26. Ready now! 2 Black Females, $500. Kid tested, Mom approved • 405-476-8673 HAVANESE 4-FEMALE HAVEANESE, AKC, SHOTS, WORMED AND BEAUTIFUL. $400.00 TEXT OR CALL 405-638-1394 Heeler/Mix 1st shots, born 5-1-15 $50ea. 405-372-6912 Lab, 6 month old male, sweet temperament, $10. 405-257-3455

German Shepherds, AKC reg. w/ health certificates, 1M, 1F, s/w, 9wks, black & tan, $500-$650. ¡‘¡ 405-313-3906 ¡‘¡

Quality work »»»

630-0213

Bill's Painting & Home Repairs Quality Work! Free Est. 306-3087.

Rottweiler AKC Puppies 6wks old t/d/s/w 6M 5F FB page Berinhard and Delmire M$600 F$500 Dawn 405-229-8445

Schnauzers Miniature AKC 10 weeks, chocolate white particolored 1M S/W/D ears cropped. $750 call or text 580-402-2344 or 580-402-2345 Lab Pups, AKC, champ. bldline, yellow & choc., home raised, vet ck'd ¡ $400 ¡ 405-899-4132

Schnauzers, Toy, AKC puppies, 3F, 1M, choc liver phantoms, 1 pure black F, $1000-$1900, 405-919-4598.

Labradoodle pups (9) born 4/1/15 POP, UTD s/w, dwclaws removed, Muskogee $700. 918-577-7525

Scottish Terriers, AKC, Males, black, POP. will be ready July 15. $600eacg $200 deposit. call or text 580-309-7575

Labs, chocolate, CKC & AKC Certified puppies, 1F, parents come from hunting stock, 1st s/w, dewclawed, $500 ¡ 405-974-0699 Mini Pin Pups 3m s/w/t/dc $125 EA 405-226-5444/627-5739 GOLDENDOODLE F1 PUPPIES, 6 weeks, will be vet checked, s/w, M&F, cream and red, $1500ea call or text 918-497-8632

PAINT TECH, int/ext, 30 yrs exp. Rotts, AKC, Top Quality, Multiple World/Intern'l European Champs 7wks, S/W/T/DC $1000 651-6421

Jim's Painting/Remodeling, int/ ext, res/com'l, insured, 314-0755.

Rottweiler AKC Puppies 8wks old t/d/s/w 4F 2M FB page Berinhard and Delmire M$600 F$500 Dawn 405-229-8445

German Shepherd AKC -Solid Black S/W POP adorable huge pups with great attitudes ready for a good loving home $400.00 405-664-4517 German Shepherd Puppies Large Black & Tan, 2m & 3f, ready to go 06/26/15. Wormed and and Parvo shots. $650. (918) 351-3747 Bret

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

Reg. 4yr T W Filly, green broke, 15H, 1100lbs $1250obo. 273-2011

Morkie Female 14 wks Morkie-Sweet, cute multi-color,4 lbs. Vaccinations up to date. $450 OKC 405-922-0290 Call or text.

MORKIE Female Extra cute.

Goldendoodles! shots, vet ckd, champion lines $900 & up Call/text 918-791-8800

Tiny $500 ’ 405-380-8469

Goldendoodles, adorable, 6 wks, s/w, $600-$800, 405-887-0632.

PAPILLON fml ACA. 10wks S/W $400 580-695-1851

BULLDOG PUPPIES AKC 4f/1m 18 Champions in 4-gen pedigree. ringsidebulldogs.com $1,800 580-247-5439

» AB Discount Plumbing » Plumbing repairs. Cheapest service call in town » 556-1190

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

Baby chicks for sale. Rhode Island Reds, $12 each, 405-448-0831 A/C & Appliance Service, 27 years exper, $40 service call, 371-3049.

SHIH TZU, ACA, 2m 1f small tri color S/W $500 ’ ’ 627-0419 Siberian Huskies, ACA s/w, $300$450 can send pics. 580-224-1642

Masonry Repair - all types Since 1975 ¡‘¡‘¡ 405-695-8178 StevenByrdMasonry.com

Siberian Husky puppies, several colors, $500-$600, 405-614-5284.

Brick, block & pavers, 35 yrs exp. 405-631-7580 or 405-473-4647

Wirehaired Fox Terriers 4 weeks old NKC registered. Now accepting $300. deposits 4 girls, 2 boys. Call text or email for pics $800. Martacsimp son@gmail.com 317-6470 YORKIE, 7 weeks old, 1 Male $300 ’ 405-681-8377

Licensed Plumber Water, Sewer, Gas 405-512-2577

Carpenter-Union-Local#329-Home Repair & Remodel-Kitch-BathrmFraming-Drywall-David 565-9511

Alum patio covers, carports, screen & sunrooms, & concrete! Phil Reimer Const. Co 528-2676

All Professional Tree Service.

Steel Carports, Patio Covers 2car carport $1795 799-4026/694-6109

» Arborist » Senior Discount » Insured »»» 405-885-2572

YORKIE POO F 4mo mostly white w/a little red must sell due to health probs. $200 541-2054

» GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. Houses & offices ¡ trim/cut trees Alvaro or Nelvia ¡ 473-2135

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices, Insured, Free Estimate, 946-3369.

Drives, Foundations, Patios Lic./Bond./Ins. Free Est. 769-3094 KENNEL SALE VARIOUS BREEDS Yorkie, Pom & other breeds Golden Ret ACA 6wk 5M s/w POP hlth guar $450. 570-5768 no text

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Pit Bull, ADBA, blue pup, Chaos bldline, 9wks, $500. 405-812-6456

July 1 - July 14, 2015

Various ages » $100-$200 580-334-4767 » 580-334-7004

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

D&G FENCE, Repair Specialist. Guar lowest pr. Free est 431-0955

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

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July 1 - July 14, 2015

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