Feb. 15 issue of LookatOKC

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from the editor

GEORGE L ANG

Heʼs a funny guy

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became a fan of our cover subject, comedian Marc Maron, more than a decade ago when I first saw him perform on “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” but it was his work as a podcaster that made me a loyal follower. His transformation, explored on page 20, is a great example of how adaptability in the face of upheaval can result in a better life and career. Radio is a notoriously unstable job choice for on-air personalities, mainly because formats are in a near-constant state of flux and the competitive nature of the business often results in seemingly popular deejays and hosts suddenly being handed a cardboard box after their slot and shown the door by company security. In 2009, this happened to two of the most popular current podcasters, Adam Carolla and Marc Maron. Carolla, the former co-host of “The Man Show” on Comedy Central, lost his radio gig when Los Angeles all-talk station KLSX switched to a Top 40 format. Within days, Carolla rebooted “The Adam Carolla Show” as a podcast, and it immediately flourished in an environment free of Federal Communications Commission oversight. Similarly, Maron found his best footing once he decided to be his own boss. After several contentious years in various shows on Air America Radio, Maron parted ways with the BY GEORGE LANG network in July 2009 and started his podcast LOOKATOKC EDITOR that fall, focusing on interviews with comeGLANG@OPUBCO.COM BLOG.NEWSOK.COM/ dians that can range from hilarious to starkly STATICBLOG emotional. While other podcasts such as Chris Hardwick’s “Nerdist” often have similar guests, Maron made his mark by taking his subjects into uncommonly honest territory. Without the FCC around to enforce profanity rules or subconsciously steer participants away from full disclosure, Maron became a game-changer in his arena. Just check out his interview with Louis C.K. as an example of Maron’s interviewing skill. Beyond all that, Maron is one of the most brutally funny standup comedians working today, and you can see him performing live at City Arts Center on Feb. 18. I truly enjoyed talking with him, and look forward to seeing him in person for the first time. Thanks to the rise of podcasting among comedians, Maron is able to get the word out and build an audience in Oklahoma City. Give him a big welcome when he gets here.



from the top

LOOKATOKC

19 | ‘Safe House’ has plenty of action to spare.

25 | Thunder section Check out our eight-page section about the Oklahoma City Thunder and the 2011-2012 season.

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

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

Check out our online home at www.lookatokc.com

Go to facebook.com/ LookatOKC and become a fan. Follow the LookatOKC on http://twitter.com/LookatOKC

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR Gene Triplett

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.

PHOTOGRAPHER Steven Maupin

LOOKatOKC is published every other Thursday by The Oklahoman, 9000 Broadway Extension, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73114.

ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton

For advertising and promotional opportunities please contact The Oklahoman retail advertising department at 475-3338.


live nathan

NATHAN POPPE

FOLLOW @NATHANPOPPE ON TWITTER

An early highlight to the year

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SHOWS TO SEE, OR NOT TO SEE

t’s still early in the year, but there’s already one Okie release that has my attention. And it’s only two songs. During the first week of January, Shawnee-native Samantha Crain sneaked “A Simple Jungle” into the world. I picked up the two-track vinyl a few weeks early at a show in late 2011. She previewed the a-side tune “It’s Simple” during the concert. It’s a warm, warbling folk gem complete with catchy handclaps and strings. Indie mainstay John Vanderslice produced “A Simple Jungle.” His resume includes albums from the likes of Spoon and The Mountain Goats. Vanderslice’s involvement is not only added incentive for those unfamiliar with Crain’s work but also it’s an exciting step forward for the Okie singer/songwriter. Both of Crain’s new tracks give off a Phil Spector wall of sound vibe. The songs are less folky and flex a more airy pop sound. I could only guess at the direction of Crain’s newest recordings, but I’ll say these two songs are enough to make them the best Okie tracks I’ve heard this year. Kudos to Crain for starting 2012 with such a strong release.

FEB. 18 – Defining Times, Deerpeople and Horse Thief are performing in the same night at the same bar. This means three times the disappointment if you miss these extraordinarily talented Okie acts. @Belle Isle Brewery, 1900 NW Expressway FEB. 18 - Modern Rock Diaries and Riley Jantzen are set to play at Blue Note, which has been notorious as of late for packed, exciting shows. Not to be missed. @ The Blue Note, 2408 N Robinson Ave. FEB. 19 - Here’s an opportunity to check out Samantha Crain and hear some of those excellent new songs I’m talking about. @ The Norman Depot, 200 S Jones Ave.

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

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FEB. 25 - VZD’s will be home to some exceptional folk tunes with the help of Okie acts Sherree Chamberlain and Black Canyon. Expect new songs from Chamberlain and plenty of volume from Black Canyon. @VZD’s, 4200 N Western Ave. I

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nightowl

LACEY LETT

Finding the fashionable folks in OKC LACEY LETT

T H IS W EE K , LA CE Y I N T R ODUC ES YOU TO :

Sunshine Campbell

“A Night Owl” is focused on what’s going on in nightlife news for LookatOKC.

Who She Is: Sunshine Campbell. Where She’s From: Los Angeles, recently moved to Oklahoma City. What She Does: Publishing with Dwell Media (Based in San Francisco). Where She Hangs Out: Ludivine, McNellie’s, Red Prime. What She Listens To: Van Morrison, Loretta Lynn, Mazzy Star. Her Style: Casual, Comfortable, Fun. Clothes: Animal Print Jeans, Hat from Goorin, Scarf from H&M.

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COMING SOON

Are you ready to be part of the fourth annual Look@ OKC swimsuit issue? Well, here is your opportunity because the scouting process is going to start soon. Starting Feb. 1, ďŹ ll out the information form at lookatokc.newsok.com/swimsuit, attach a few photos and submit them to our selection committee. We will select 10 ladies to participate in the 2012 issue. The entry deadline is Friday, March 2.

LIKE LOOKATOKC ON FACEBOOK.COM AND FIND OUT MORE ABOUT THE UPCOMING ISSUE


A LBUM REV IEWS


album review

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‘AJA’ – THE DARCYS

o tightly crafted is Steely Dan’s 1977 masterwork, “Aja,” that the only ways for any artist to approach the material consist of recreating the thing with painstaking detail or launching a sledgehammer at its crystalline perfection and rebuilding it from memory. The first approach can be thrilling in a live tribute but utterly pointless on record, and fortunately The Darcys take the latter route on their haunting reassessment of “Aja.” The Canadian band takes this 35-yearold monument to obsessive-compulsive jazz-rock and sails the yacht-rock juggernaut into a fog bank, creating a beautiful dissonance that amplifies the album’s spooky interior world. Stripped of the syncopated rhythm and bright horn charts that gave it such buoyancy, the Darcys paint “Black Cow”

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with harsh tones to match its lyrics about instability and infidelity, beginning the song with churchlike organs and ending with a thunderous crash of drums and wires. Singer-keyboardist Jason Couse delivers the title track with choirboy tones as the rest of the Darcys emphasize the song’s Eastern tonalities and expand on Steve Gadd’s iconic drum flurry from the original. The band segues into “Deacon Blues” with a Krautrock rhythm and cascades of warm background vocals, and then pounds forward with a chiming, anthemic reinvention of “Peg.” The Darcys rarely sound as if they are trying to actively subvert the material, and they embrace elements of the original — Michael Le Riche’s guitar on “I Got the News” almost quotes Larry Carlton’s work, one of the rare moments when the band closely evokes the source. But by the closing “Josie,” the Darcys get

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into some serious subversion, turning Steely Dan’s ebullient story of a hottie’s homecoming into a meditation on a “raw flame, a live wire” with supernatural control over the people around her, giving new context to that line in which they “dance on the bones ‘til the girls say when.” “Aja” in no way eclipses the

original, but by attacking these songs from a new angle, the Darcys create a convincing argument that “Aja” has deep substance beneath its shiny exterior, and the songs can exist outside of Steely Dan’s hermetic seal. — George Lang, LookatOKC Editor


album review

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‘BORN TO DIE’ – LANA DEL REY

omment section trolls with Eminem and Jay-Z in their collections tore Lana Del Rey to shreds for inventing a persona, critics who praise Lady Gaga for high-concept theatrics stomped on the former Lizzy Grant for draping herself in artificiality, and an idiotic debate raged about whether an artist signed to Interscope was truly “indie.” That’s not even counting all the shrill, mean-girl hatred aimed directly at Del Rey’s lips. All this extraneous blather, both before and after Del Rey’s weak-sauce performance on “Saturday Night Live,” muddies the water on whether “Born to Die” has any genuine life in it. The absolute honest truth is that “Born to Die” was born at the right time in 2012, released in the early

first quarter when movie studios dump their most exploitative horror bombs and most manipulative romances, and Del Rey has a whole lot of both in her. “Video Games,” the single that first earned Del Rey deserved attention, succeeded because it straddled the line between old-world Hollywood glamour and a severe case of David Lynch-ian creeps, but quality control falls off precipitously from there. “National Anthem,” containing the bona fide groaner “Money is the reason we exist / Everybody knows that it’s a fact — kiss kiss,” is too clunky to work as effective social criticism and insufficiently clever to operate as irony. The sonorous delivery on “Video Games” and the opening lines of the luxury rap pastiche “Off to the Races” get supplanted

by baby-doll cooing on echo-laden dance-pop love songs such as “Diet Mountain Dew” and “Radio” that leave Del Rey sounding like Britney Spears trapped in a well. Perhaps the naysayers feel cheated because, after the unsettling splendor of “Video Games,” Del Rey has little left lyrically, alternately simpering that she “will love you till the end of time” on “Blue Jeans” and flashing fake gangsta poses. “Born to Die” plays like a stunt gone wrong, a piece of performance art that began promisingly but lacked an exit strategy. Artifice is a key component of pop music, whether the instigator is a changeling such as David Bowie or Madonna or a pseudonymous speaker of truth such as Bob Dylan. What Lana Del Rey is missing that all those people have is sincerity — we can’t believe a single slurred word that comes out of her pouty mouth. — George Lang, LookatOKC Editor

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album review

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‘HOME’ – DIERKS BENTLEY

fter earning widespread critical acclaim with his 2010 progressive bluegrass album “Up on the Ridge,” Dierks Bentley returns to commercial country with “Home,” a solid collection of party songs, ballads and anthems anchored by the well-crafted title track. The Arizona native wrote “Home,” his latest top 10 hit, with Dan Wilson and album co-producer Brett Beavers in the days after the 2011 Tucson, Ariz., shooting spree that killed six people and injured 13, including former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. The writers avoid jingoistic chestpounding and soppy sentimentality, creating a rare patriotic ode that promotes unity, expresses loyalty and still acknowledges the flaws in the “place that we all call home.”

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Due out Tuesday, the album already boasts a No. 1 hit with the rollicking “Am I the Only One,” which Bentley penned with Jim Beavers, who co-wrote his previous party smash “Sideways,” and Jon Randall. The funny warning “Diamonds Make Babies,” the swaggering come-on “Gonna Die Young” and the zippy toe-tapper “5-15-0” all show off Bentley’s fun-loving good nature. He drowns his worries about “for sale” signs on Main Street and lowyield farm fields with the bluesy country-rocker “Tip It on Back.” The singer-songwriter makes romance with the seductive “Breathe You In” and walks the fine line between love and obsession with “In My Head.” He and Little Big Town singer Karen Fairchild beautifully blend their voices on the slow-dance ballad “When You Gonna Come Around.”

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Bentley reunites with celebrated bluegrass musicians Sam Bush and Tim O’Brien on the album highlight “Heart of a Lonely Girl,” and his daughter Evie, 3, is heard as a guest

vocalist on the closer, “Thinking of You,” his touching love letter to his wife and two girls. — Brandy McDonnell, Entertainment writer

LOOKATOKC.COM

Search for jobs 5 miles away,500 not

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Find the job you want, right here in Oklahoma.


MOV IE

REVIE

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movie review

‘CHRONICLE’

Rating: PG-13 (Intense action and violence, thematic material, some language, sexual content and teen drinking) Running time: 1 hour, 24 minutes Starring: Michael B. Jordan, Michael Kelly, Anna Wood, Dane DeHaan.

stars

****

‘Chronicle’ finds sharp take on tired conversations

“C

hronicle,” the impressive debut picture of director Josh Trank and screenwriter Max Landis, mashes up conventions of several genres — from teen-angst dramas to superhero sagas (most notably “SpiderMan”) to found-footage films (think everything from “The Blair Witch Project” to “Paranormal Activity” and “Cloverfield”) — yet still manages to seem novel and innovative. For freshmen, their work is remarkably bold and self-assured. That may be due to their lofty Hollywood pedigrees. Trank is the son of Oscar-winning documentarian Richard Trank (“The Long Way Home”), and Landis’ dad is John Landis, maker of such landmark comedies as “Animal House” and “The Blues Brothers.” So they would appear to have filmmaking in their blood. With the quick, savvy “Chronicle,” they glibly employ the shopworn convention of found footage and put a video camera in the hands of anguished high schooler Andrew Detmar (Dane DeHaan) to record a sort of bizarro world version of “Spider-Man,” with Peter Parker turning his powers to the dark side. <<<

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Andrew is highly sensitive, shy, bullied at school and enduring a cruel home life with a bedridden, terminally ill mother and an abusive, alcoholic father. Early on, after one of his father’s violent tirades, he picks up a used video camera and declares he “will film everything from here on out.” The cool, philosophy-spouting Matt (Alex Russell) is Andrew’s cousin and only friend. One night he drags Andrew and his camera to a boozy party. The two hook up with popular class presidential candidate Steve (Michael B. Jordan) and happen upon a mysterious cavelike sinkhole in the woods. The three brashly make their way down into the dank passage with camera in hand, and what they discover there radically changes their lives and their fates. Leap ahead a few days, and Andrew, Matt and Steve find themselves enduring mysterious nosebleeds and feeling strange, telekinetic sensations. Soon, to their boyish delight, they discover that they each have magical powers to move things with their minds. At first, they employ their rapidly advancing superpowers for childish games and pranks — levitating Legos and moving people’s cars around in parking lots. But as their powers grow stronger (Andrew being LOOKATOKC.COM

the most adept at using them), they find they can create tsunamis of force waves and they can even fly. Matt, well versed in the philosophies of Jung and Schopenhauer, recognizes the potential dangers and urges caution. Good-time Steve tries to find a way to use their newfound powers to make Andrew popular with snotty classmates. But, Andrew, obviously scarred and angry deep inside, is torn between his desire for acceptance and his hurt at past abuses. Gradually, he finds himself sorely tempted to use his psychic muscles to wreck revenge on his tormentors. And when he coldly and telekinetically pulls apart a spider, we see which path he’s on. Trank shapes the story’s formulaic contours deftly and turns the thing from lighthearted to bloodyminded with smooth, uncommon skill. Even the old found-footage technique comes across in his hands as fluid and natural. With its taut, smart script, sharp and full-bodied performances and impressive visual effects on a relatively low budget ($15 million), “Chronicle” gives us a snappy new-school spin on several old-school tropes. It proves that invigorating, innovative and playful filmmaking can still be crafted with used parts. — Dennis King, Staff Writer


movie review

‘THE VOW’

Rating: PG-13 (Accident scene, sexual content, partial nudity and some language) Running time: 1 hour, 44 minutes Starring: Rachel McAdams, Channing Tatum, Sam Neill, Jessica Lange, Scott Speedman.

stars

***

McAdams makes ‘The Vow’ worth taking

“T

he Vow” displays all the traits of a manufactured melodrama stuffed into a heart-shaped box for Valentine’s Day, and yet it modestly succeeds thanks to Rachel McAdams, who works hard enough for both herself and co-star Channing Tatum to make this story about memory loss a lot less forgettable. When Paige and Leo are introduced, the couple played by McAdams and Tatum are blissfully in love, a sculptor and a record producer married for four years and living in a rustic Chicago loft. All is wonderful until a freak winter accident puts Paige in a coma, and when she awakens, she is unable to remember the last five years of her life. Paige only remembers who she was long before Leo, a daddy’s girl attending law school and engaged to rakish corporate attorney Jeremy (Scott Speedman). Now a stranger to the woman he loves, Leo must try to reintroduce himself to Paige and make her fall

in love with him again, but several obstacles stand in his way. For one, Paige seems perfectly happy living her past life, and her manipulative parents (Sam Neill and Jessica Lange), who were estranged from Paige before the accident, are more than ready to exploit their daughter’s condition. Furthermore, Jeremy is ready to jump back into the picture, and everything pivots on just how much Paige can, or is willing to, remember. Director Michael Sucsy’s first theatrical film is a follow-up to his well-received HBO production of “Grey Gardens,” another story about an otherwise idyllic life undone by an accident of brain chemistry. The director’s naturalistic approach keeps “The Vow” from feeling manipulative and can first be sensed during the realistic car crash scene, in which Sucsy sensibly avoids using “bullet-time” effects and allows the painful event to resonate without distractions. Furthermore, “The Vow” does not go in for either easy solutions or contrived barriers in Leo’s quest to revive Paige’s memory — there are no

sudden triggers or surprise reset buttons. But mostly, “The Vow” works because McAdams is so convincing at playing what are essentially two different characters. When Paige revives, she is not the ebullient free spirit from before. Her allegiances are mostly arrived at from convenience, not solid judgment, and her behavior is so wrongheaded that Leo’s devotion almost becomes irrational. Tatum, a hardworking actor who nevertheless still faces challenges when called to emote, seems to respond to McAdams’ energy and creates a sympathetic but imperfect character. All this might seem to be overplaying the strengths of a commercial romance, but “The Vow” consistently performs above expectations thanks to a strong cast and a story that does not take the easy or predictable path. On a holiday weekend known as an easy mark for sickeningly sweet date movies, “The Vow” delivers something slightly richer than the standard candy box.

LOOKATOKC.COM

— George Lang, LookatOKC Editor I

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movie review

‘BIG MIRACLE’

Rating: PG (Language) Running time: 2 hours, 3 minutes Starring: John Krasinski, Drew Barrymore, Ahmaogak Sweeney, Tim Blake Nelson.

stars

***

‘Big Miracle’ thaws hearts with whale of a tale

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here’s nothing like a gnarly-cute family of whales in dire distress to pluck a nation’s heartstrings, ignite an international media frenzy, mobilize the National Guard, foster a truce between big oil and Greenpeace and bring about a thaw in the Cold War. That’s the cumulative effect of “Big Miracle,” a feelgood nature drama inspired by the amazing true story of three California gray whales that became trapped in the ice off the coast of Barrow, Alaska, in 1988 and set off a perfect media storm that led to an incredible rescue effort to save their lives. Adapted from the book “Saving the Whales” by Thomas Rose, this decidedly family-friendly film feels in some ways like a throwback to the old Walt Disney wildlife films of yore. Under the steady hand of journeyman director Ken Kwapis (“The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” and loads of TV credits), the often funny, honestly emotional tale attracted a remarkable cast of stars. With Drew Barrymore and John Krasinski (“The Office”) as prickly romantic leads, the impressive ensemble also includes Ted Danson as a blustery oil tycoon,

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Tulsa native Tim Blake Nelson as an Alaska wildlife ranger, Dermot Mulroney as a hotshot military pilot, Kristen Bell as an ambitious L.A. television reporter and Kathy Baker as the oil baron’s whale-loving wife. And amid all that star power, two newcomers deliver standout performances that neatly ground the film in the natural world and ancient Inuit culture. John Pingayak lends an abiding spirituality and earthy wisdom to the role of Malik, Eskimo village elder and oldschool whaler, and fresh young Ahmaogak Sweeney nicely bridges the gap between ancient and modern ways as Malik’s smart, rock ‘n’ roll-loving grandson, Nathan. The story is set in motion when Krasinki’s small-town TV reporter Adam Carlson happens upon three gray whales trapped in a rapidly freezing ice pack, able to surface only through a small hole in the ice to breathe. With their access to the open sea and their southern migration route blocked, the mother, father and baby whales (later dubbed Fred, Wilma and Bamm-Bamm) are in grave danger of drowning. In quick order, Adam’s local news feed is picked up by national wires, and the whales’ plight ignites a rolling wave of sympathy — spurred on by the fiery lobbying of

LOOKATOKC.COM

local Greenpeace activist Rachel Kramer (Barrymore) — that eventually reaches all the way to the Reagan White House and the Kremlin. Soon enough, little, barren Barrow is inundated by noisy network news crews, which sets up some funny scenes of local gouging (an enchilada dinner for $20 and a motel room for $500 a night — cash only). Amid the growing frenzy to save the whales, smaller individual stories also play out concerning Adam’s career and his love for Rachel, Nathan’s tug between the gogo outside world and his grandfather’s steady, timeless wisdom and so on. All in all, it’s a nice balance between individual minidramas and an epic rescue saga. The latter is made more urgent and believable by some wonderful visual effects work that renders the three animatronic whales in all their scarred, barnacled, sad-eyed glory. And the former is made thoroughly engaging by likable performances Krasinski and Barrymore, the debuts of brilliant native actors Pingayak and Sweeney and sturdy support by the always reliable Nelson and the slyly bombastic Danson. — Dennis King, Staff Writer


movie review

‘SAFE HOUSE’

Rating: R (Strong violence throughout and some language) Running time: 1 hour, 55 minutes Starring: Denzel Washington, Ryan Reynolds, Vera Farmiga, Brendan Gleeson.

stars

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‘Safe House’ is fun for action aficionados

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ake that, Matt Damon! When it comes to tire-screeching, fender-mangling car chases, deathdealing bursts of violence, brutal gunplay and cunning games of cat-andmouse spycraft, Ryan Reynolds’ solitary CIA soldier in the rapid-fire “Safe House” is every bit as butch, buff and battered as Damon in the Bourne cycle of espionage thrillers. The Bourne reference seems entirely apt here because “Safe House” director Daniel Espinosa and screenwriter David Guggenheim (both relative newcomers) seem to take most of their cues for breathless pacing, complicated plotting and chaotic, big-bang action set pieces from the Robert Ludlum playbook. Alongside Reynolds’ fresh young CIA agent Matt Weston, a potent Denzel Washington delivers an ominously silky, charmingly roguish performance as cynical CIA case officer Tobin Frost, a legendary agent who “went off the reservation” years earlier and has been selling state secrets on the black market to the highest bidders. The tale is set in Cape Town, South Africa, where

the ambitious Weston is stuck in a dead-end assignment watching over an urban “safe house,” which the agency uses as a clandestine refuge for endangered “assets” on the run. After a quick and deadly opening sequence, in which the outlaw Frost obtains highly classified and incriminating documents from a British MI6 colleague, Frost finds himself dodging gunfire from a resourceful gang of thugs and forced to seek asylum at the U.S. consulate. Finally in the CIA’s custody after years on the run, Frost is bound and hooded and transported to a sterile interrogation room at Weston’s safe house. Soon, a squad of coldblooded CIA spooks arrives to question Frost under dire duress (read that: water boarding). But their harsh interrogation is cut short by the arrival of those relentless armed goons, and quickly Weston finds himself on the run with a handcuffed Frost in tow and with bigwigs from the CIA’s Langley, Va., headquarters (notably, furrow-browed Vera Farmiga and sharkish Brendan Gleeson) barking long-distance orders. Sam Shepard weighs in with an oily political agenda as CIA Director Harlan Whitford. What follows is a series of on-the-run action

sequences, shoot-outs and terse interludes in which Weston and Frost roughly bond and Reynolds and Washington spark up considerable masculine chemistry between their characters — the idealistic young agent clearly intent on doing the right thing, and the world-weary old spy for whom the right thing got lost long ago in a hazy morass of spy-world deceit. On the writing front, there are some considerable plot holes to contend with and the usual array of breakneck stunts that defy logic and physics. Also, there’s an obvious turncoat mole in the CIA’s higher echelons that seasoned movie watchers will be able to spot early on. On that score, “Safe House” suffers in comparison with the more sharply written, more freshly and intricately plotted Bourne sagas. But with the brisk, brash performance of Reynolds and with the authoritative stillness of Washington’s presence, the story finds an arresting gravity despite its flaws. “Safe House” is a safe enough haven for fans in need of a swift, exhilarating espionage fix.

LOOKATOKC.COM

— Dennis King, Staff Writer

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COVER STORY

KEEP CALM AND LISTEN Marc Maron, who performs Feb. 18 at City Arts Center, is deeply cynical, openly bitter about the human condition and a frequent victim of self-lacerating critiques. But he’s really funny.

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COVER STORY S T O R Y B Y G E O R G E L A N G , L O O K AT O K C E D I T O R

arc Maron might be deeply cynical, openly bitter about the human condition and a frequent victim of selflacerating critiques, but he’s getting better. Three years ago, the stand-up comic and podcaster released an album called “Final Engagement,” titled because he was considering ending a 25-year career after a string of personal and professional disappointments. Within the first minute of “Final Engagement,” Maron lashed out at his audience. “So how’s it going, ‘need machines,’” Maron said. “Everybody OK? Are you excited that I’m part of your quest for relief this weekend? ‘In lieu of happiness, I’ll accept relief — make me feel better, angry Jew! Do it!’” Despite a track record that included a record number of appearances for a standup comic on Conan O’Brien’s talk shows, Maron, 48, was committing a common misstep for performers: putting the audience on the defensive. Appropriately, the tour was titled “Scorching the Earth.” These days, Maron, who performs Feb. 18 at City Arts Center, cultivates success rather than taking a flamethrower to it, but the dark year of 2009 is at least partially responsible S E E S TO RY O N PAG E 2 3

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MARC MARON WITH: Seth Joseph and BradChad Porter. WHEN: 7 p.m. Feb. 18. WHERE: City Arts Center, 3000 Pershing Blvd at State Fair Park. TICKETS: Sold out.

“I’m a pretty good adapter. As cantankerous as (I am), there’s a weird part of my personality that locks in with people.” MARC MARON

Maron’s L.A. home is affectionately known as “The Cat Ranch,” so named because of the growing population of stray felines in Maron’s care. <<<

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COVER STORY for his rise. After a tumultuous tenure at the now-defunct Air America Radio, during which he bounced around the network in various configurations and formats, he finally ended his association in July 2009. Two months later, he started “WTF with Marc Maron,” a twice-weekly podcast dedicated to incisive, wide-ranging interviews with other comedians. “In the early ones, I didn’t know what I was going to do with my life,” Maron said in a recent phone interview. “I was sort of in trouble myself, and I had no plan for this thing. The only thing we knew in the beginning was, we were going to do two a week and we had to put this up consistently. You should be there every week for people.” After a few dry runs at different formats that included co-hosts and comedy segments, Maron moved his operation from New York to Los Angeles and set up a makeshift studio in the garage of a suburban L.A. home affectionately known as “The Cat Ranch,” so named because of the growing population of stray felines in Maron’s care. He simplified the format and began focusing on the interviews. Maron’s insight into the comedic mind and his seemingly natural ability to engage his subjects in lengthy, often difficult discussions resulted in a genuine hit. “I’m a pretty good adapter. As cantankerous as (I am), there’s a weird part of my personality that locks in with people,” he said. Maron’s best segments dig deep into the psyches of great comics such as Louis C.K. and Judd Apatow, and the results are sometimes anything but funny. Mercurial prop comic Gallagher stormed out of the studio halfway through a show after a perceived slight, and Maron did not shy away from asking tough questions of Dane Cook and Carlos Mencia, two comedians frequently accused of stealing jokes from fellow performers. But Maron also provides a great forum for comedians to expose their vulnerabilities. Last month, comedian Todd Glass, a fellow podcaster, chose Maron’s show to announce that he is gay. “Todd’s been wrestling with this thing for awhile, and it took him a long time to find the courage to begin to think about how he was going to do it, where he was going to

do it, if he was going to do it,” Maron said. “And I guess after he discussed it with some people, he came to me. “He talked to Sarah (Silverman) and he talked to his management, and I think he trusted me to handle it properly and also keep him grounded in it,” he said. “I was very flattered and honored to help him out. I was nervous about it, but ... I mean, I can’t speak for him, but I think he really wanted to just be done with it in a way where he could tell the community without having to call people, without it having to be gossip, you know what I mean? I think he wanted to do it respectfully and in one sweep, to get it out to his peers.” Maron’s interview with Louis C.K. became a kind of classic due to the intense emotions generated by their discussion, and in late 2011, an interview with Todd Hanson, a former editor of The Onion, took place in the Brooklyn hotel room where Hanson, suffering from deep depression, had tried to commit suicide the year before. “My father was a manic depressive, so I’m wired to receive this stuff,” Maron said. “I grew up with it — I grew up with both extremes. I think emotionally, I can connect quickly. It turned out that episode helped a lot of people. I got hundreds of emails from people who had either felt like him, or people who had people in their family.” As for Maron, he seems to feel better than he did back in the sour times of “Final Engagement.” His most recent comedy album, “This Has to Be Funny,” is still acerbic, but when Maron opens by saying “I cannot handle the fact that things are going well,” at least he is admitting that life got better for him. “It’s a weird thing that it took me 25 years to acknowledge that I’m an entertainer,” Maron said. “My fears are different than they used to be. I don’t have the same fears or assumptions that people aren’t going to like me, because after 25 years, people are coming to see me because they know who I am.” But the podcast was not merely responsible for making Maron more visible. He said it made him a better comedian. “It’s a more satisfying experience and a better comedic experience, for me and, I think, for the audience, too,” he said.

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video game review

‘FINA L FA NTAS Y X I I I -2’

Part two gets ‘Final Fantasy’ back on track

T

he “Final Fantasy” franchise, now in its 25th year, has one of the most enthusiastic fan bases in all of video games. And those fans made their voices heard after the 2009 release of “Final Fantasy XIII,” which jettisoned some of the series’ long-standing features in exchange for a more streamlined, actionpacked narrative. Aficionados howled, particularly over the game’s linear nature; you didn’t really get a chance to explore the world of “XIII” until you were most of the way through. Where were the wacky characters who livened up previous chapters? What happened to the quaint towns where you could stock up on supplies and juice up your weapons? “Final Fantasy XIII-2” (Square Enix, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, $59.99) feels largely like a response to those criticisms. It’s anything but linear; it may even be too liberal in letting you freely skip between locations. There are more characters to interact with, and more side missions to break up the main story. You can even train and race chocobos, the ostrich-sized chickens that have been the series’ unofficial mascots. The sequel begins at the end of civilization, with “XIII” heroine Lightning battling against a powerful, purple-haired enemy named Caius. Hoping to reverse this disastrous timeline, Lightning flings the last surviving human, Noel, back through time. He finds Lightning’s sister, Serah, and they begin their mission to “save the future.” That entails traveling through time warps to a series of locations at different points during a 500-year span. There’s a lush forest where a crystal tower precariously balances Cocoon, a city in the sky. There’s an archaeological site where soldiers are fighting monsters from another dimension. There’s a sprawling urban campus where scientists are trying to build another Cocoon. <<<

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At each stop, Noel and Serah have a number of ways to correct the timeline and save humanity. Eventually, the “map” of “XIII-2” blossoms into a tangle of alternate realities — even as Caius and a mysterious girl named Yeul are hot on the protagonists’ trail. As any “Lost” fan can testify, time-travel narratives can run the risk of disappearing up their own wormholes. In 1995, Square’s “Chrono Trigger” deftly handled the genre’s puzzles and paradoxes, but “XIII-2” is much less successful. Its convolutions left me scratching my head, and its conclusion is certain to be divisive. And Noel and Serah are two of the blandest headliners in “Final Fantasy” history. There’s nothing really wrong with them, but when some of the more colorful “XIII” characters — like the droll, mysterious Fang — pop in for cameos, you wish they would hang around a little longer and take the spotlight away from the tiresomely spunky leads. Nonetheless, I found “XIII-2” more absorbing than its predecessor, in part because I’ve gotten used to its “paradigm”-based combat. Instead of controlling all three characters in your party, you control just one — though you can switch the paradigms used by the other two so they concentrate on physical attacks, magic or defense. Boss battles force you to constantly adjust your paradigms, so while the fights are fastpaced, they require strategy. The third position on your team is occupied by a monster. You recruit these helpful creatures by beating them in the wilderness, then “training” them with rewards collected throughout your travels. This critter-collecting metagame will thrill fans of “Pokemon” or “Monster Hunter.” I also enjoyed bouncing around the different locations, which, while drastically different, all display the eye-popping graphics that are a Square trademark. There’s a great deal to explore — and you can even reset completed scenarios and try different approaches. After the disastrous release of the online, multiplayer “Final Fantasy XIV,” Square Enix’s CEO acknowledged that the brand had been “greatly damaged.” The series may never return to its late-1990s peak, but — thanks to the input of its most dedicated fans — “Final Fantasy XIII-2” is a step in the right direction. From The Associated Press I

LOOKATOKC.COM



OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER INSIDER WI TH DA R NEL L M AY B E R RY

I

D MAY BERRY @ O PU BCO.CO M

Thunder should be OK with Jackson

R

eggie Jackson wasn’t supposed to be ready this season. The plan was to bring him along slowly and groom him for the future. But when Eric Maynor was lost for the year to a knee injury last month, the rookie out of Boston College was thrust into active duty only 10 games into his NBA career. Jackson and the Thunder have had to make the best of it, and so far the results have been adequate. Yet, people still are concerned over whether Jackson is the Thunder’s weak link to a title; if Oklahoma City can win it all with a rookie backup point guard. Of course, we see no reason why the Thunder can’t. It’s been done before. The last time a team won a title with a rookie backup point guard was in 2005, when San Antonio defeated Detroit in seven games. The Spurs that year handed the responsibility of that role to then 22-year-old Beno Udrih. He averaged 11.5 minutes and one assist in the postseason, while scoring 3.7 points per game on 35.9 percent shooting. Jackson’s statistical production thus far — 3.5 points, 1.4 assists on 32.9 percent shooting in 11.4 minutes per game — has been nearly identical to Udrih’s numbers from that playoff run. No other team from the past 10 champions has trotted out a rookie backup point guard. But the Spurs used second-year man Speedy Claxton in 2001, and two other teams in that window had third-year players as their primary backups. But for most teams chasing a championship, the backup point guard should be near the bottom of the list of concerns. Reserve point guards can help you win a game or a series, as we saw last season with former Dallas lightening bolt J.J. Barea. But rarely are they the reason you lose. Defensive rebounding, turnovers and half-court offense are more pressing issues for the Thunder. Sure, the

Reserve point guards like Reggie Jackson can help you win a game or a series, as we saw last season with former Dallas lightening bolt J.J. Barrea. For now, the Thunder must cut down on turnovers and improve half-court offense and defensive rebounding. Photo by CHRIS LANDSBERGER, The Oklahoman

Thunder would prefer a veteran backup with a steady hand, especially with the erratic Russell Westbrook steering the ship as the starter. But history has proved that having a young backup point guard is by no means a death sentence. There is no doubt the Thunder misses Maynor. He was magnificent at managing the second unit, controlling the flow of the game by playing with great pace and getting others easy baskets. Those things seemed to come natural, quickly establishing Maynor as one the league’s best backup point guards. What many failed to realize, though, (because the season was so young when he went down) is Maynor was having less of an impact this season. The emergence of James Harden as a playmaker and potent scorer in the second unit took the ball out of Maynor’s hands and put

OPUBCO Communications Group SPORTS EDITOR Mike Sherman LEAD PROJECT DESIGNER Matthew Clayton DIRECTOR OF PRESENTATION AND CUSTOM PUBLISHING Yvette Walker ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton PHOTOGRAPHER Steven Maupin

ADVERTISING JERRY WAGNER 475-3475

more responsibility on Harden’s shoulders. That trend figured to continue as the season played out, quashing Maynor’s best qualities. That suggests Jackson’s minutes now won’t make or break the Thunder, although there has been clear drop off in the team’s bench play since Manyor was lost. According to 82games.com, the opening-night second unit of Maynor, Harden, Daequan Cook, Nick Collison and Nazr Mohammed played 61.7 minutes. That unit scored 1.29 points per possession, gave up 1.03 points per possession and had an overall plus-minus of plus23. Overall, that unit outscored its opponents four out of seven times when on the court. By comparison, the current second unit of Jackson, Harden, Cook, Collison and Mohammed has played 64.8 minutes. That unit has scored 1.11 points per possession, given up 1.04 points per possession and has a plus-minus of plus-3. Overall, the current B Team has outscored its opponents only three out of nine times. Some of that difference can be attributed to the adjustment period of inserting Jackson, the Thunder playing better opponents recently and the team’s growing dependence on the two-man game with Harden and Collison, which has stymied the second string at times with more predictable offense. Those are enough reasons to believe the Thunder will be OK with Jackson. Additionally, it’s important to remember that Jackson is learning on the fly. Summer league was canceled. Training camp was cut short, and Jackson missed most of what was left because of injuries. The compacted schedule has all but obliterated practice time. And Jackson has appeared in just 21 games — only 18 of which were still meaningful by the time he checked in — for a total of 238 minutes. The areas in which we’ve seen Jackson struggle, most notably combating pressure while bringing the ball up, getting into sets quickly and defending isolations, certainly will improve. We can be sure because we’ve seen this show before. It wasn’t long ago that all the hand-wringing was over the same issues with Westbrook and Manyor. And most would say they turned out pretty good.

Single copies of LOOKatTheGame may be obtained free of charge through out Oklahoma City. Additional copies are available for $1 each. 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. As of press time all events are scheduled to the best of our knowledge. LOOKatTheGame does not guarantee the events or the schedules. Readers are encouraged to call ahead for exact times and dates. LOOKatTheGame is published 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.


OKC THUNDER DECEMBER

2011-12 SCHEDULE

25 Orlando W

26 Minnesota W

27

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

1

2 Dallas L

3 Portland L

4

8 San Antonio W

9

10 Memphis W

15

16 Boston W

22

29

SUNDAY

28 Memphis W

THURSDAY

30

31 Phoenix W

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

MARCH

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

*TNT 1 Orlando 7 p.m.

2

3 Atlanta 6 p.m.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

5

6 Houston W

7 Houston W

4

NBATV 5 Dallas 7 p.m.

6

7 Phoenix 7 p.m.

8

9 Cleveland 7 p.m.

10 Charlotte 7 p.m.

11 New Orleans W

12

13

14 New York W

11

12

13 Houston 7 p.m.

14

15 Denver 8 p.m.

ESPN 16 San Antonio 8:30 p.m.

17

17

18 Washington L

19

20

21 New Jersey W

ESPN 18 Portland 8:30 p.m.

19

20 Utah 8 p.m.

21 Clippers 7 p.m.

22

23 Minnesota 7 p.m.

24

23 Detroit W

24

25 New Orleans W

26

27 Golden State W

28

ESPN 25 Miami 7 p.m.

26

27 Portland 9 p.m.

28

TNT 29 Lakers 9:30 p.m.

30

31

30 Clippers L

31

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

3

6 Indiana 6 p.m.

7

TUESDAY

ESPN 4 Miami 7 p.m.

5

MONDAY

2 Memphis 7 p.m.

FEBRUARY

WEDNESDAY

29 Dallas W

JANUARY WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

*ABC 1 Chicago 12 p.m.

1 Dallas W

2

3 Memphis W

4 San Antonio L

8 Toronto 6 p.m.

9 Milwaukee 7 p.m.

10

11 Clippers 7 p.m.

12

13 Sacramento 7 p.m.

14 Minnesota 7 p.m.

19

20 Sacramento 9 p.m.

21

5

6 Portland W

7 Golden State W

8

9 Sacramento L

10 Utah W

11

15

NBATV 16 Clippers 9:30 p.m.

17

18 Phoenix 9 p.m.

12

13

14 Utah 7 p.m.

15 Houston 7 p.m.

16

17 Golden State 7 p.m.

18

*ABC 22

23

24 Sacramento 7 p.m.

25 Denver 7 p.m.

ESPN 22 Boston 6 p.m.

*TNT 23

24

25

ESPN 19 Denver 7 p.m.

20 New Orleans 7 p.m.

21

26

27

28

29 Philadelphia 6 p.m.

Lakers 8:30 p.m.

Lakers 2:30 p.m.

HOME

AWAY

All times are Oklahoma time. *All games on Fox Sports Oklahoma (Cox 37/HD 722) unless broadcast on ABC or TNT.

APRIL


FOR MORE THUNDER COVERAGE, GO TO NEWSOK.COM/SPORTS/THUNDER

OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER

28 T

2011-2012 NBA SEASON

28 Oklahoma City also is third in the league in scoring at just under 100 points per game, and its plus-4.83 scoring differential still ranks in the top 10 (seventh overall)..

Photo by BRYAN TERRY, The Oklahoman

Work TO BE

done

Through the first two months of the season, the Thunder has merely done enough to skate by. No one legitimately can claim the Thunder is playing as well as it is capable of.

id Clutch isn’t concerned. But, then again, when is he ever? “I think we’ve played well,” Kevin Durant declared. Actually, no, the Oklahoma City Thunderhas not. Not consistently at least. The team with one of the best records in the league has merely done enough to skate by. No one legitimately can claim the Thunder is playing as well as it is capable of. The difference this year is the Thunder is so darned talented it still wins on most nights even in spite of some serious flaws. But, as always, the most pertinent question remains is the team getting better in its preparation for what many expect to be a deep playoff run, or is it simply piling up wins and plowing along? Both are required approaches, each having its advantages throughout a marathon regular season. But at times, it surely has looked like the Thunder has done more of the latter. A recent four-game stretch, for example, illustrated the inconsistency. The Thunder was thoroughly outplayed by the Los Angeles Clippers, Dallas, Memphis and San Antonio. Only the final two quarters against the Mavericks, and the last period against the Grizzlies, were quarters that the Thunder won. That’s subpar basketball. That’s subpar basketball in 13 of 16 quarters against playoff teams. The Thunder survived that week and salvaged a 2-2 record. But this piece came that close to being about a four-game losing streak. “You’re going to have losses in this league,” Durant said. “Every loss we had, >>> SEE START, CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE


THUNDER NOTEBOOK If the NBA had any worries about how the twomonth work stoppage would affect TV ratings, those concerns are long gone. Ratings are up substantially on all networks. And in Oklahoma City, ratings for local Thunder telecasts are nearly double last season. The shortened 66-game season, which debuted on Christmas Day, has been a hit with the viewers. >>> ESPN’s ratings (a percentage of TV homes) are up 31 percent (1.7), households are up 27 percent (1,648,000) and viewers are up 20 percent (2,116,000) when compared Christmas-to-date with last season, according to Nielsen. >>> TNT’s ratings are up 29 percent (1.8), households are up 34 percent (2,116,000) and viewers are

up 36 percent (2,839,000). >>> NBA TV does not release ratings information, but viewership is up 57 percent (371,000) and households are up 60 percent (290,000) for 42 games. In gaining 3.3 million households, NBA TV showed the largest growth of any cable network since the start of the year and now reaches 59 million homes. The most recent Thunder-Warriors telecast delivered 434,000 viewers, 20 percent above average. However, those ratings increases pale to the growth in the Thunder’s local telecasts on Fox Sports Oklahoma. The team’s 6.0 average rating is up 82 percent from the same period last season (3.3). The Thunder still trails the San Antonio Spurs, which average 7.9, among NBA teams in Texas and Oklahoma. FSOK’s franchise-high 8.8 rating came during the late

Jan. 30 telecast against the Clippers, which included Blake Griffin’s monster dunk over Kendrick Perkins. Many Thunder fans are staying up late for the West Coast games as FSOK is averaging 6.9 for games at 9 p.m. or later. The two TNT telecasts have produced huge local ratings, including a team-high 10.5 at Boston on Jan. 16 and 10.0 against visiting Dallas on Dec. 29. The Christmas night game against Orlando produced a team-high 8.3 ESPN rating. The Thunder’s regular-season record of 11.1 came against Miami on ABC last season. That rating might be surpassed during the March 25 game against visiting Miami on ESPN or Sunday afternoon ABC appearances against visiting Chicago on April 1 and at the Los Angeles Lakers on April 22.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

Oklahoma City is third in the league in scoring at just under 100 points per game, and its plus4.83 scoring differential still ranks in the top 10. Photo by CHRIS LANDSBERGER, The Oklahoman

ing 12.5 offensive boards per game, the fourth most in the league. And teams are shooting 7.6 more shots on average than the Thunder. “We have yet to put a game of 48 minutes of team ball together,” said Kendrick Perkins. “We got to be able to trust each other offensively and defensively if we’re trying to get to where we’re going. Otherwise, it’s going to be what it’s going to be and we’re just making it hard on ourselves.” No one is suggesting the Thunder has a problem sizable enough to even begin looking for the proverbial panic button. Not even close. There are peaks and valleys in every season, and this current stretch very well could be a valley. This portion of the schedule, coupled with the Thunder’s ample areas of concern, could only further complicate things. Still, OKC might be good enough to skate by. But now is a good time to send a message.

29 2011-2012 NBA SEASON

teams came out and got hot on us, especially from the 3-point line. It’s stuff we can try to correct. We can’t get down on ourselves because we lost. We got to try to stay positive, but we got to know what we got to do to get better.” On one hand, you could say we’re nitpicking. Oklahoma City is third in the league in scoring at just under 100 points per game, and its plus-4.83 scoring differential still ranks in the top 10 (seventh overall). And the Thunder ranks second in blocked shots per game with 7.57 a night, in the top five in defensive fieldgoal percentage (42.2 percent). On the other hand, the team’s warts are flat out worrisome. The Thunder is averaging only 1.5 more assists than turnovers. The 16.7 turnovers per game rank the Thunder 29th in the league and are a staggering 2.3 more than OKC forces. Additionally, only Sacramento has a worse assistto-turnover rate than the Thunder’s 1.09-to-1 ratio. The Thunder also ranks 26th in defensive rebounding, allow-

OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER

START

29 T



THE

Cole Aldrich

Nick Collison

Daequan Cook

Kevin Durant

NO. 45 I CENTER HEIGHT: 6-11 WEIGHT: 245 AGE: 23 COLLEGE: KANSAS

NO. 4 I FORWARD/CENTER HEIGHT: 6-10 WEIGHT: 255 AGE: 31 COLLEGE: KANSAS

TEAM

NO. 14 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-5 WEIGHT: 210 AGE: 24 COLLEGE: OHIO ST.

NO. 35 I FORWARD HEIGHT: 6-9 WEIGHT: 230 AGE: 23 COLLEGE: TEXAS

James Harden

Lazar Hayward

NO. 13 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-5 WEIGHT: 220 AGE: 22 COLLEGE: ASU

NO. 11 I FORWARD

Serge Ibaka

Royal Ivey

NO. 9 I FORWARD/CENTER HEIGHT: 6-10 WEIGHT: 235 AGE: 22 FROM: REP. OF CONGO

NO. 7 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-4 WEIGHT: 215 AGE: 29 COLLEGE: TEXAS

Reggie Jackson

Eric Maynor

NO. 15 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-3 WEIGHT: 208 AGE: 21 COLLEGE: BOSTON COLLEGE

NO. 6 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-3 WEIGHT: 175 AGE: 24 COLLEGE: VCU

Nazr Mohammed

Kendrick Perkins

Ryan Reid

Thabo Sefolosha

NO. 8 I CENTER HEIGHT: 6-10 WEIGHT: 250 AGE: 34 COLLEGE: KENTUCKY

NO. 33 I FORWARD HEIGHT: 6-8 WEIGHT: 235 AGE: 25 COLLEGE: FSU

HEIGHT: 6-6 WEIGHT: 225 AGE: 25 COLLEGE: MARQUETTE

NO. 5 I CENTER HEIGHT: 6-10 WEIGHT: 280 AGE: 27 HIGH SCHOOL: OZEN HS (TX)

NO. 2 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-7 WEIGHT: 215 AGE: 27 FROM: SWITZERLAND

Russell Westbrook NO. 0 I GUARD HEIGHT: 6-3 WEIGHT: 187 AGE: 23 COLLEGE: UCLA


THE CHESAPEAKE ENERGY ARENA capacity for basketball: 18,203

THE ARENA

>>> BOX OFFICE: The box office is located at NE main entrance. On game days, it opens at 10 a.m. and closes at the end of halftime. >>> CAMERAS: Point-andshoot cameras are allowed. However, flash and video recorders are not permitted. If a Guest’s sightline is inhibited by another Guest’s camera, please contact the nearest Guest Relations Desk to handle the situation. Laser pointers are also not allowed. >>> DOORS OPEN: The main entrance doors open 90 minutes before tip-off. So, for a 7 p.m. tip, doors would open at 5:30 p.m. >>> POSTGAME FREE THROWS: Following each Sunday game all kids 16 and under are allowed to shoot one free throw on the court. Kids are to line up in the aisle behind each basket (section 120/101or 110/111). We ask that no marking shoes are worn on the court.

IMPROVEMENTS: Oklahoma City voters overwhelmingly approved a one-cent sales tax in 2008 to fund major upgrades to the arena. Renovations remain ongoing and are scheduled for completion in 2012.


BACK TO BASICS with revamped 1950s look Thomas Adamson | Associated P ress

PARIS — Christian Dior revamped the 1950s New Look for its 2012 spring-summer haute couture collection, with stand-in designer Bill Gaytten playing it safe, with success, following last season’s criticism.

A model wears a creation by British fashion designer Bill Gaytten as part of his Dior Spring-Summer 2012 Haute Couture for women collection presented in Paris. AP Photo. Photo Illustration.


stor y cont inued

Monday’s show got started fashionably late — but Dior is tardy in more ways than one. The front row was abuzz over Dior’s ongoing silence on the appointment of a new creative director. Would it be Raf Simons, artistic director of Jil Sander? Or perhaps French designer Haden Ackerman? But the fashionistas were quickly jolted back into focus as floaty silk crepe silhouettes with nipped waists — in shades of beige, aubergine, red, black and white — filed through the sumptuous salons of the couturier on the Avenue Montaigne. Gaytten had clearly hit on the house’s signature pieces from its 1950s heyday, in a back-to-basics move following the fall-winter couture flop. Despite its predictability, this collection somehow worked, perhaps by dint of its subtlety and textural detail. A classic A-line bar suit was given a light touch in ultrafeminine sheer silk with a full skirt, giving the show an ethereal, otherworldly feel.


Black silk dresses were painstakingly embroidered with delicate beads, followed by knee-length skirts featuring long knifepleats that fluttered like butterfly wings. One model looked so weightless in cascading chiffon she might have taken off in flight had she walked just a bit faster. The piece de resistance came near the end: a floor-length ball gown with a full black and white tulle skirt that brushed teasingly past photographers. When Gaytten came to take his bow, he winked, perhaps because he knew he had produced some solid couture. “I could show you a picture of every single one of those dresses from the 1950s. They were all copied. But it worked, it really did,” said British fashion writer Colin McDowell. It-girl of the moment, Olivia Palermo, summed it up: “Sometimes it’s good to go back to basics.”

On Monday in Paris, the haute couture designs of Bill Gaytten for Christian Dior were modeled as part of Paris' Spring and Summer Fashion Week. AP Photos.


ELIZABETH

BANKS IS EVERYWHERE Elizabeth Banks balances ‘Man on a Ledge,’ ‘Hunger Games’ and two other movies opening in theaters in 2012. <<<

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STORY

BY

BRANDY

MCDONNELL,

E N T E R TA I N M E N T

WRITER

lizabeth Banks is pulling off quite a balancing act these days, and not just because her most recent film features her venturing onto a narrow ledge 200 feet above Manhattan. The busy actress, 37, is starring in four movies opening in theaters this year: the current action-thriller “Man on a Ledge,” the hotly anticipated post-apocalyptic book adaptation “The Hunger Games,” the starstudded pregnancy ensemble “What to Expect When You’re Expecting” and the family drama “Welcome to People.” Plus, she directed a segment of the upcoming comedy shorts collection “Movie 43,” and she is producing the musical-comedy film “Pitch Perfect,” with her husband, Max Handelman, with whom she has a 10-month old son, Felix. Such an action-packed schedule seems to suit the lively Banks, who eagerly joined co-star Sam Worthington on a 21st-story shelf on the outside of the historic Roosevelt Hotel while filming “Man on a Ledge,” which opened in theaters last week. “It was great. I loved it. I’m sort of a thrill seeker in real life a little bit. I like, you know, roller coasters and

trapezing and things like that, so I was really excited to do it. And it’s also kind of a gift for the actor because you don’t have to fake any of that anxiety,” Banks said with a laugh during a recent interview at the Four Seasons Hotel. “It’s all real. Your heart is going 100 miles an hour and your knees are buckling, and you’re just having that natural fight-orflight response, which is like your body saying, ‘What the (expletive) are you doing in this super-crazy-dangerous situation? Get out of here.’ So you know, your adrenaline’s runnin’ hot.” While Banks only filmed on the ledge for about a day and a half — Worthington, as the title character, spent most of the production out there — she found it difficult to calm down once she was back on solid ground. “It’s 14 inches of concrete, so it’s essentially like the size of your foot ... and then like a couple inches and then literally a straight drop to Madison Avenue,” said Banks, who looked fetching in a pale yellow Jill Stuart dress patterned with bright red chicks. In “Man on a Ledge,” Banks plays Lydia Mercer, an embattled New York City police

negotiator summoned to the hotel by Nick Cassidy (Worthington), a former cop wrongly imprisoned for a stealing a priceless diamond. After his daring jailbreak, Cassidy makes his stand on an exterior ledge of the Roosevelt, pleading with Lydia to believe his claims of innocence, even as she quickly realizes that Cassidy has more in mind than just being heard. Banks will next be seen on the big screen in the role of Effie Trinket, a flamboyantly costumed representative of the dystopian Capitol regime in “The Hunger Games,” the first film based on Suzanne Collins’ bestselling young-adult trilogy about Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence), a poor teenager tapped to participate in a televised battle to the death. “It’s a really faithful adaptation of the books,” she said. “The great thing about working on those films is that all the collaborators are just amazing: (director) Gary Ross,Academy Award-nominated; the hair and makeup team are Academy Awardnominated; and the costume designer is Academy Award-nominated.” It took the team a couple of days of experimenting with wardrobe, hairstyles and makeup to transform Banks into Effie. LOOKATOKC.COM

I

“I think we came up with an amazing Effie that like in my mind brought her to life. We had a true aha moment,” Banks said. “They put a hat on or something, and it was like ‘Ta-da! She’s there!’ ... That became sort of the basic look, and then we played with it from there. So I had about a two-hour hair and makeup every day. My nails took the longest, actually, because I wear crazy nails every day, totally different crazy nails with every outfit.” While she will take on a dramatic role as an alcoholic mom who meets her long-lost brother (Chris Pine) for the first time in “Welcome to People,” the talented comedic actress will get another chance to create on-screen hilarity in the book-based “What to Expect,” in which she plays a militant breast-feeding advocate going through her first pregnancy. Plus, the Massachusetts native was just cast in “Frank or Francis,” Charlie Kaufman’s musical satire about Hollywood. “I love comedy. I don’t think that it gets the respect that it deserves when it’s done well. And it’s very addictive to make people laugh,” Banks said. “So I’ll keep trying to do that.”

FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29

I

PAGE 37 >>>


WIMGO

EVENTS

WED

15

CONCERTS Laura Gibson, 10 p.m., Opolis

Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

Rick Jawnsun, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog

Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

The Storm Repertory: The Tempest, 7:30 p.m., Tulsa Performing

Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., Casper McWade, 7 p.m., (405) (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee) The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road, Open Blues Jam, 7 p.m., 778-8166.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29 Waka Winter Classic, 7 p.m., Cain’s

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Exhibit,” Cherokee Heri-

tage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

LIVE MUSIC

God Bless America Touring Quilts,

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Northpark Mall, 12100 N May, 3565.

755-

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567. Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

815-9995.

401-1865.

The Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition, Oklahoma City University,

2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5000.

Kamp’s Bar, 1310 NW 25, Robotic

Healing Studio 2012 Exhibition,

Ronald J. Norick Downtown Library, 300 Park Avenue, Art Moves

Presents - East Side Boys Barbershop Quartet, noon, 231-8650.

NIGHT LIFE Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane, Ka-

raoke, 9 p.m.,

348-7555. (Edmond)

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Alex Ortiz, 8 p.m., 2394242. Kamp’s Bar, 1310 NW 25, Robotic

Wednesdays - Rule Of Eight, 9 p.m., 524-2251.

THEATER

Firehouse Art Center, 444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

THU

16 CONCERTS Greg Ginn and The Royal We with Cinema Cinema, 9 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Mamma Mia,” 7:30 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

Gary Allan, 8 p.m., First Council Casino, 12875 N Highway 77, (580) 448-3015. (Newkirk)

SPORTS

Back Road Bandits, 8 p.m., Wormy

Oklahoma State University vs Baylor, 7 p.m., Gallagher-Iba Arena,

202 Gallagher Hall (Stillwater)

University of Oklahoma vs Kansas State, 7 p.m., Lloyd Noble Center, 2900 Jenkins,

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

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

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Drive, 7

p.m.,

424-1000.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W Memorial, Stars, 9 p.m.,

Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 6016276.

The Storm Repertory: William and Judith, 7:30 p.m., Tulsa

Performing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

325-4666. (Norman)

38 » WIMGO.COM » EAT DRINK PLAY

751-1547.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Brian Gorrell and Jazz Company, 8 p.m., 7989. (Edmond)

359-

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery, 1900 Northwest Expressway,

Whistle Pigs, 9 p.m.,

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

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

Wednesdays - Rule Of Eight, 9 p.m., 524-2251.

Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa)

840-1911.

City Rescue Mission, 800 W California, Art Moves Presents - Erica Thomas and Terri Hiubek, 12 p.m., 232-2709.

NIGHT LIFE Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Alex Ortiz, 8 p.m., 2394242.

THEATER “Same Time, Next Year,” , 8 p.m.,

Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

Harp and Lyre, Outline In Color, Set

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567. Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

815-9995.

“As I See It” photographs by Carl Shortt Jr., In Your Eye Studio & Gallery, 3005 Paseo, 525-2161.

401-1865.

The Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition, Oklahoma City University,

2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5000.

“Color of Dreams,” Donna Nigh

974-2228.

Healing Studio 2012 Exhibition, Firehouse Art Center, 444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

“Mamma Mia,”7:30 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 2972264.

“Much Ado About Nothing,” 8 p.m., Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191. “Tony and Tina’s Wedding,” 7:30

FRI

17

p.m., St Mary’s Episcopal Church, 1st & University, 216-2585. (Edmond)

“Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282- 2800. (Guthrie)

SPORTS University of Central Oklahoma vs Lindenwood University, 6 p.m., University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-2000. (Edmond)

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

The Storm Repertory: The Tempest, 7:30 p.m., Tulsa Performing

Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Jake Owen, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa) Terry Fator, 9 p.m., WinStar World Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 2763100. (Thackerville) 1964…the Tribute With Midlife Crysis along with a discussion of Beatles memorabilia, 6 p.m., Catlett

Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 3254101. (Norman)

The Wake Up Call, Facing Giants, Against All and Ira Hayes, 6 p.m., 943-3637.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

1900 Northwest Expressway, Lemma with Joe Mack, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

The Pulse of OKC, 6905 Northwest

Expressway, The Kick-off Party with Verse Simmonds, 7 p.m., 470-1857.

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

616-0288.

Singing Sooners and Norman Philharmonic: Encore, 8 p.m., The

Robinson Renaissance, 119 N Rob-

ing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 5967122. (Tulsa)

Sooner Theatre, 101 E Main, 9600. (Norman)

321-

Your Mom, Scabby Itchins and

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

inson, Art Moves Presents - Brian Mitchell Brody, 12 p.m., 232-2000.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive, Derek Harris Duo, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

Dan McGuinness Pub, 3005 S

versity, 5810 S Western, 514-8096.

Broadway, Unchained, 9 p.m., 2222. (Edmond)

The Costanzas, Bare Knuckle

NIGHT LIFE

Shuffle, Foreign Contaminant, and Half Black Jesus, 9 p.m., The Hidden Castle, 1309 24 SW, 701-0870. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC Sonder Music Dance & Art, 225 E Gray, Third Friday Celtic Night, 6:30 p.m., 474-9734. (Norman) Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos, 25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

359-

Hi Lo Club, 1221 NW 50, Hi Lo Friday Night Drag Show, 10:30 p.m., 1722.

843-

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Alex Ortiz, 8 p.m., 2394242. Paseo Underground, 2415 N Walker, Back To Basics, 9 p.m.

THEATER

Grady’s 66 Pub, 444 W Main, Walt

“Same Time, Next Year,” , 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S

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

Wilkins and the Mystiqueros, 8:30 p.m., 354-8789. (Yukon)

Eastern, Randy McAllister, 9:30 p.m., 619-3939.

The Point After Club, 6800 S I

35 Service Road, Amy Lee and the Second Line, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

CONCERTS

McSalty’s Pizza, 3000 N Portland,

Home Made, 8 p.m., Tulsa Perform-

Verse Simmonds, 10 p.m., Club Di-

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

Gallery at UCO, 100 E 5, (Edmond )

The Sun, A Fight For Life, A Wolf A Liar and So Called Savages, 6:30 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

“Much Ado About Nothing,” 8 p.m., Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191.

“The Credeaux Canvas,” 8 p.m.,

Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand

Ghostlight Theatre Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Boogie

Ozma of Oz, 10 and. 8 p.m., Oklahoma Christian University - Judd Theatre, 2501 E Memorial, 425-5540. (Edmond)

Casino Blvd., Annie Up, 9 p.m., (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee)

Fever, 9 p.m.,

424-1000.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W Memorial, 2AM, 9 p.m.,

751-1547.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, AJ and Why Not, 8 p.m.,

359-7989. (Edmond)

“Tony and Tina’s Wedding,” 7:30 p.m., St Mary’s Episcopal Church, 1st & University, 216-2585. (Edmond) “Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8 p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)


WIMGO

EVENTS

SPORTS OKC Thunder vs Golden State Warriors, 7 p.m., Chesapeake Energy

Arena, 100 W Reno, 602-8700.

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567. Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29 Glory Bones and Forever Blowing Bubbles, 9 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

The Casey Donahue Band, 8 p.m.,

Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59,

Milkdrive, 8 p.m., The Blue Door,

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

2805 N Mckinley, 524-0738.

1964…the Tribute With Midlife Crysis along with a discussion of Beatles memorabilia, 6 p.m., Catlett

Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 3254101. (Norman)

Mickey and the Motorcars, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276. Kathy Griffin, 7 p.m., Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee)

The Storm Repertory: William and Judith, 7:30 p.m., Tulsa

Performing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

“As I See It” photographs by Carl Shortt Jr., In Your Eye Studio & Gal-

Home Made, 8 p.m., Tulsa Performing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 5967122. (Tulsa)

lery, 3005 Paseo, 525-2161.

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

401-1865.

Singing Sooners and Norman Philharmonic: Encore, 8 p.m., The Sooner Theatre, 101 E Main, 9600. (Norman)

321-

Transmission 1 Dance Party, 8 p.m. Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

SAT

18

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

<http://wimgo.com/events/ entry/258287/> The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road,

Michael Todd’s Wild Frontier Band, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

CONCERTS Cirque Du Soleil - Michael Jackson The Immortal World Tour, 8 p.m.,

Bok Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 8944200. (Tulsa)

Loretta Lynn, 8 p.m., Lucky Star Ca-

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

The Winter Jam Spectacular featuring New Song and Skillet, 6

1900 Northwest Expressway, Defining Times, Deerpeople and Horse Thief, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Diamond Ballroom, 8001 S Eastern, 677-9169.

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

815-9995.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S Eastern, Jack Rowdy, 9 p.m.,

619-3939.

Grady’s 66 Pub, 444 W Main, No Dry County, 9 p.m., (Yukon)

354-8789.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Boogie

Fever, 9 p.m.,

424-1000.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

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

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

Toni Braxton, 8 p.m., WinStar World Casino & Hotel, Exit 1, I-35, (580) 2763100. (Thackerville)

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Michael Summers, 9 p.m., (Edmond)

359-7989.

Stars, 9 p.m.,

616-0288.

Jacob Becannen and Mark Vollertson, 8 p.m., 235-4410.

NIGHT LIFE Cox Convention Center, 1 Myriad

Gardens, Oklahoma City Barons vs. Milwaukee Admirals, 7 p.m., 6028500.

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

Rockwell, Alex Ortiz, 8 p.m., 4242.

239-

“Same Time, Next Year,” 7:30 p.m.,

Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“Mamma Mia,”2 p.m., 8 p.m.,

Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“Much Ado About Nothing,” 8 p.m., Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191. “The Credeaux Canvas,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

Ozma of Oz, 8 p.m., Oklahoma Chris-

tian University - Judd Theatre, 2501 E Memorial, 425-5540. (Edmond)

“Tony and Tina’s Wedding,” 7:30 p.m., St Mary’s Episcopal Church, 1st & University, 216-2585. (Edmond) “Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

SPORTS Oklahoma City Barons vs. Milwaukee Admirals, 7 p.m., Cox

Convention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, 602-8500.

Oklahoma State University vs Texas, 3 p.m., Gallagher-Iba Arena,

202 Gallagher Hall (Stillwater)

University of Central Oklahoma vs McKendree University, 2 p.m.,

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

HAPPENINGS

OKC Community Orchestra, 8 p.m.,

OCU’s 30th Annual Film Institute’s Film Series presents “Milk of Sorrow,” 2 p.m., OCU - Meinder’s

Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Catlett Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

School of Business, 2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5276.

5th Annual Dog Bowl presented by Forrest and Jennys Place, 4

“Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

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

Brianna Gaither - The Living Room Session, 8 p.m., Credo House,

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

109 NW 142 (Edmond)

Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

LIVE MUSIC

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

The Performing Arts Studio, 200

“As I See It” photographs by Carl Shortt Jr., In Your Eye Studio & Gal-

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

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

Blues Saloon, 2525 NW 10, Blues Revue Band Open Jam, 9 p.m., 601-1165.

lery, 3005 Paseo, 525-2161.

401-1865.

NIGHT LIFE

The Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition, Oklahoma City University,

2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5000.

“Color of Dreams,” Donna Nigh Gallery at UCO, 100 E 5, 974-2228. (Edmond ) Healing Studio 2012 Exhibition, Firehouse Art Center, 444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

SUN

19

“My Fair Lady,” 1:30 p.m. and 1:30

p.m., City Rep Theatre, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

Trio Solisti, 3 p.m., Tulsa Performing

CONCERTS Cirque Du Soleil - Michael Jackson The Immortal World Tour, 4 p.m.,

Bok Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 8944200. (Tulsa)

Sutton Artist Series: Accademia Filarmonica, 3 p.m., Catlett Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

The Storm Repertory: The Tempest, 2 p.m., Tulsa Performing

Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Cox Convention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, Oklahoma City Barons vs. San Antonio Rampage, 4 p.m., 602-8500. Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N Rockwell, Alex Ortiz, 8 p.m., 2394242.

THEATER “Same Time, Next Year,” , 2 p.m.,

Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

“Much Ado About Nothing,” 2 p.m.,

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

“As I See It” photographs by Carl Shortt Jr., In Your Eye Studio & Gallery, 3005 Paseo, 525-2161.

MON

20 LIVE MUSIC Midwest City Senior Center, 8215 E Reno, Showtimer’s Classic Country Dance, 7 p.m. (Midwest City) Thunder Alley Bar & Grill, 2127 SW

74, Faster Pussycat, 8 p.m.

NIGHT LIFE

Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

“Tony and Tina’s Wedding,” 2 p.m., St Mary’s Episcopal Church, 1st & University, 216-2585. (Edmond)

SPORTS

“Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 2

OKC Thunder vs New Orleans Hornets, 7 p.m., Chesapeake Energy

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-2800. (Guthrie)

“My Fair Lady,” 1:30 p.m., City Rep Theatre, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

SPORTS Oklahoma City Barons vs. San Antonio Rampage, 4 p.m., Cox

Convention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, 602-8500.

OKC Thunder vs Denver Nuggets,

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

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

751-

Arena, 100 W Reno, 602-8700.

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Exhibit,” Cherokee Heri-

tage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

EAT DRINK PLAY » WIMGO.COM » 39


WIMGO

EVENTS

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

815-9995.

The Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition, Oklahoma City University,

2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5000.

“Color of Dreams,” Donna Nigh Gallery at UCO, 100 E 5, 974-2228. (Edmond ) Healing Studio 2012 Exhibition, Firehouse Art Center, 444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

TUE

FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29 Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

NIGHT LIFE

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

815-9995.

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

401-1865.

The Oklahoma City University School of Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition, Oklahoma City University, “Color of Dreams,” Donna Nigh

Gallery at UCO, 100 E 5, (Edmond )

974-2228.

Healing Studio 2012 Exhibition, Firehouse Art Center, 444 S Flood, 329-4523. (Norman)

CONCERTS Excision, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa)

Konstantinos Karathanasis Computer Music Studio, Noon, Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm, 325-3272. (Norman)

Hurt - Acoustic Performance,

6:30 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

LIVE MUSIC

WED

22

Hurt - Acoustic Performance, 8

SPORTS University of Oklahoma vs Texas A&M, 7 p.m., Lloyd Noble Center,

2900 Jenkins,

325-4666. (Norman)

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Art Moves Presents - Reduxion Theater’s ‘Shakespeare’s Love Songs’, 12 p.m., Chase Tower, 100 N Broadway

SPORTS Cox Convention Center, 1 Myriad

Gardens, Oklahoma City Barons vs. Texas Stars, 7 p.m., 602-8500.

University of Oklahoma vs Oklahoma State University, 7 p.m.,

Lloyd Noble Center, 2900 Jenkins, 325-4666. (Norman)

University of Central Oklahoma vs Northeastern State University, 6 p.m., University of Central

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

OKC Thunder vs Boston Celtics, 6

“Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Dixieland

359-7989.

THEATER

Boys No Good, Thirtyseven and Ivy

Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa)

Ruggles Native American Music Series, 8 p.m., Catlett Music Center,

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50

500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

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

LIVE MUSIC

Carolyn Faseler Art Exhibit, The

Kamp’s Bar, 1310 NW 25, Robotic,

12th Planet, Flinch, Gosteffects, Kids at the Bar, Crystal Vision and Ed Crunk, 9 p.m., 524-2251.

Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., Charles Scott Duo, 7 p.m., (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35 Service Road, Open Blues Jam, 7 p.m., 778-8166.

40 » WIMGO.COM » EAT DRINK PLAY

THU

“Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

23

Performing Arts Studio, 200 S Jones, 307-9320. (Norman)

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

815-9995.

“Still Life - Fast Moving” Art Exhibit, Paseo Originals, 2920 Paseo,

401-1865.

CONCERTS Lotus, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa)

Norton Visiting Artist: Joel Schoenhals, Piano, 8 p.m., Catlett Music

Center, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., Squad Live, 9 p.m., (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

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

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, 100 Bones Band, 7 p.m.,

424-1000.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Memorial, Threat Level Midnight, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

FRI

24

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

Rockwell, JR Brow, 8 p.m., 4242.

239-

THEATER “Much Ado About Nothing,” 8

p.m., Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191.

“Scapino!,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-7579. “A Hand of Bridge” and “Gallantry,” 7:30 p.m., University of

Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-3375. (Edmond)

“Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-Scapino!,” 2800. (Guthrie)

SPORTS OKC Thunder vs LA Lakers, 8:30

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

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Mike Bar424-1000.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W Memorial, The Klocks, 9 p.m., 1547.

751-

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, John Pizzarelli, 8 p.m.,

359-7989. (Edmond)

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

“Cupid’s Wingman,” 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 842-5387. Reverend Horton Heat, Larry and His Flask and Goddamn Gallows, 8 p.m., Cain’s Ballroom, 423 N Main, 918.584.2306. (Tulsa)

B.B. King, 7 p.m., Lucky Star Casino,

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

The Surrogate Band presents and Performs The Wall, 9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC, 113 N Crawford (Norman)

NIGHT LIFE

619-3939.

ham and Kaos, 9 p.m.,

CONCERTS

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

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S East-

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, 601-6276.

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

Service Road, Logan Mac, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

ern, Paul Thorn, 9 p.m.,

Ricky Fugitt, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog

LIVE MUSIC

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

239-

HAPPENINGS

Jeremy Phifer, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog

HAPPENINGS

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

Rockwell, JR Brow, 8 p.m., 4242.

CONCERTS

Memorial, Dante and the Hawks, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

Band - Faculty, 7:30 p.m., (Edmond)

348-7555. (Edmond)

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

League, 6:30 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane, Ka-

raoke, 9 p.m.,

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5000.

21

Memorial, Dante and the Hawks, 9 p.m., 751-1547.

The Face of Emmett Till, 8 p.m.,

Tulsa Performing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Baxter Black, 7 p.m., National Cow-

1900 Northwest Expressway, Whiskey Folk Ramblers and Cleverguns, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

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

616-0288.

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

Stephen Speaks, 8 p.m.,

McSalty’s Pizza, 3000 N Portland, A Covanant Evolved, Dyers Eve, Hope In Vain and This Wars Consumption, 6 p.m., 943-3637.

Dan McGuinness Pub, 3005 S Broadway, Sweetwater, 9 p.m., 359-2222. (Edmond)

NIGHT LIFE Hi Lo Club, 1221 NW 50, Hi Lo Friday Night Drag Show, 10:30 p.m., 8431722. Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

boy & Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63, 478-2250, Ext. 219.

Rockwell, JR Brow, 8 p.m., 4242.

Shotgun Rebellion, Sets of Failure,

THEATER

Meta and Relic, 8 p.m., The Hidden Castle, 1309 24 SW, 701-0870. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC

235-4410.

239-

“Cupid’s Wingman,” 8 p.m., Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 842-5387. “Much Ado About Nothing,” 8 p.m.,

Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos,

Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191.

Sliders, 2616 S I 35 Service Rd, Live

“The Tales of Hoffmann,,” 8 p.m., Oklahoma City University, 2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5227.

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

Music, 9 p.m.,

412-1641.

Blue Note, 2408 N Robinson, Junebug Spade and Dr Pants, 9 p.m., 600-1166.

“The Credeaux Canvas,” 8 p.m., Ghostlight Theatre Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

“Scapino!,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-7579.


WIMGO

EVENTS

Ozma of Oz, 10 a.m., 8 p.m., Okla-

homa Christian University - Judd Theatre, 2501 E Memorial, 425-5540. (Edmond)

“A Hand of Bridge” and “Gallantry,” 7:30 p.m., University of

Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-3375. (Edmond)

“Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-Scapino!,” 2800. (Guthrie)

“My Fair Lady,” 7:30 p.m., City Rep Theatre, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29 LIVE MUSIC Michael Murphy’s Dueling Pianos, 25 S Oklahoma, Dueling Piano Bar, 7:30 p.m., 231-5397.

The Roxy, 1164 N MacArthur, Dark

Funeral, Abigail Williams, Inquistion, Gigan, Enfuneration and Ritual Bludgeoning, 6:30 p.m.

Grady’s 66 Pub, 444 W Main,

Brandon Jenkins Band, 8:30 p.m., 354-8789. (Yukon)

The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

SPORTS

Service Road, Jon Anthony, 9 p.m., 778-8166.

Monster Jam Celebrity Truck Appearance - Ice Monster, 2 p.m.,

Oklahoma City Limits, 4801 S East-

Advance Auto Parts, 4535 NW 39th St, 440-0690.

Monster Jam Celebrity Truck Appearance - Stone Crusher with driver Morgan Kane, 2 p.m.,

Advance Auto Parts, 4329 SE 29th St, 672-6015.

Monster Jam Celebrity Truck Appearance - Higher Education with driver Jim Tracy, 2 p.m., Advance

Auto Parts, 6212 S Western Ave, 632-9052.

SAT

25

ern, Street Kings, 9 p.m.,

619-3939.

Remington Park Racing and Casino, 1 Remington Place, Stat Band, 9 p.m.,

424-1000.

Memorial, The Klocks, 9 p.m., 1547.

McSalty’s Pizza, 3000 N Portland, Its On Or Get On Tour, 6 p.m., 3637.

Locust Avenue and Shi++y Awesome, 9 p.m., Opolis Production LLC,

113 N Crawford (Norman)

The Face of Emmett Till, 8 p.m.,

Tulsa Performing Arts Center, 110 E 2, (918) 596-7122. (Tulsa)

Enfuneration, Ritual Bludgeoning, Lycergus, Dark Arsenal, Blest Abomination and Noosebound, 7 p.m., The Conservatory, 8911 N Western, 879-9778.

943-

616-0288.

Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewery,

1900 Northwest Expressway, Wink Burcham with Desi and Cody, 9 p.m., 840-1911.

Nonna’s Euro-American Ristorante and Bar, 1 Mickey Mantle Drive, Dan McGuinness Pub, 3005 S

Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua, 325-4712. (Norman)

THEATER

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, 848-5567.

239-

“The Tales of Hoffmann,” 3 p.m., Oklahoma City University, 2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5227.

Ozma of Oz, 8 p.m., Oklahoma Christian University - Judd Theatre, 2501 E Memorial, 425-5540. (Edmond)

“A Hand of Bridge” and “Gallantry,” 2 p.m., University of Central

“A Hand of Bridge” and “Gallantry,” 7:30 p.m., University of

Central Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-3375. (Edmond)

“Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” 8

p.m., Pollard Theatre, 120 W Harrison, 282-Scapino!,” 2800. (Guthrie)

City Rep Theatre, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

Oklahoma State University vs Texas A&M, 1 p.m., Gallagher-Iba Oklahoma State University vs Iowa State, 7 p.m., Gallagher-Iba

Arena, 202 Gallagher Hall (Stillwater)

Rhinestone Cowboy, 900 SE 59, Zoom City, 9 p.m.,

Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

Rockwell, JR Brow, 8 p.m., 4242.

“Scapino!,” 7:30 p.m., Oklahoma City Community College, 7777 S May, 682-7579.

Arena, 202 Gallagher Hall (Stillwater)

“Cupid’s Wingman,” 8 p.m.,

p.m., BOK Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 894-4200. (Tulsa)

Ghostlight Theatre Club, 3110 N Walker, 286-9412.

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble

NIGHT LIFE

Oklahoma, 100 N University Drive, 974-3375. (Edmond)

“My Fair Lady,” 1:30 p.m., City Rep

Theatre, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

MON

27

SUN

26

NIGHT LIFE Loony Bin Comedy Club, 8503 N

Rockwell, JR Brow, 8 p.m., 4242.

239-

THEATER “Dead Man Walking,” 7:30 p.m.,

Jeff Dunham, 7 p.m., BOK Center, 200 S Denver, (918) 894-4200. (Tulsa)

28

CONCERTS Sutton Concert Series: Wind Symphony and Symphony Band,

Roger Hodgson voice of Supertramp, 8 p.m., Hard Rock Hotel &

8 p.m., Catlett Music Center, 500 W Boyd, 325-4101. (Norman)

Casino, 777 W Cherokee, (918) 2664352. (Catoosa)

LIVE MUSIC

Bill Neill Voice Studio, Noon, Fred

Midwest City Senior Center, 8215

E Reno, Showtimer’s Classic Country Dance, 7 p.m. (Midwest City)

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, UCO Jazz Combos, 7 p.m., (Edmond)

359-7989.

Jones Jr. Museum of Art, 555 Elm , (405) 325-3272. (Norman)

Sutton Concert Series: Wind Symphony, 8 p.m., Catlett Music

Center, 500 W Boyd, (405) 325-4101. (Norman)

LIVE MUSIC

Moves Presents - Cimarron Opera Singers, 12 p.m.

NIGHT LIFE

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Emily Butterfield , 7:30 p.m. , (405) 359-7989. (Edmond)

Oklahoma City Museum of Art,

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

415 Couch Drive, Art Moves Presents - Peggy Payne , 12 p.m. , (405) 236-3100.

Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 297-2264.

SPORTS

NIGHT LIFE

Secrets, 6 p.m., The Conservatory,

Oklahoma State University vs Kansas, 8 p.m., Gallagher-Iba Arena,

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

“Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

THEATER

Gabriel Iglesias Presents Stand Up Revolution, 7 p.m., Civic Center

8911 N Western, 879-9778.

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

LIVE MUSIC

“Cupid’s Wingman,” 8 p.m.,

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 6620 S

Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 842-5387.

Memorial, Crossland Acoustic, 8 p.m. (Tulsa)

“Much Ado About Nothing,” 8 p.m.,

Blues Saloon, 2525 NW 10, Blues

Reduxion Theatre, 1613 N Broadway, 651-3191.

TUE

p.m., East Central University - Hallie Brown Ford Fine Arts Center, 920 E Main St, (580) 559-5751. (Ada)

Chase Tower, 100 N Broadway, Art

CONCERTS

815-9995.

Franc D’Ambrosio in Concert, 7:30

235-4410.

Broadway, Stereo Deck, 9 p.m., 359-2222. (Edmond)

“Reconsidering the Family of Man,” The Untitled Artspace, 1 NE 3,

CONCERTS

SPORTS

359-7989.

Jamie Bramble, 8 p.m.,

Winter Jam Tour Spectacular featuring NewSong and Skillet, 6

751-

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Garrett ‘Big

CONCERTS Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker, 842-5387.

“The Credeaux Canvas,” 8 p.m.,

“My Fair Lady,” 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.,

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701 W

G’ Jacobson, 8 p.m., (Edmond)

“The Tales of Hoffmann,,” 8 p.m., Oklahoma City University, 2501 N Blackwelder, 208-5227.

Revue Band Open Jam, 9 p.m., 601-1165.

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

751-

202 Gallagher Hall (Stillwater )

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

Memorial, DJ Big G , 9 p.m. , (405) 751-1547.

Franc D’Ambrosio in Concert, 7:30 p.m., East Central University - Hallie Brown Ford Fine Arts Center, 920 E Main St, (580) 559-5751. (Ada)

Doubt: A Parable, 7 p.m., Oklahoma City Community College , 7777 S May , (405) 682-1611.

WED

29

CONCERTS Lauren Nichols, 8 p.m., Wormy Dog Saloon, 311 E Sheridan, (405) 601-6276.

LIVE MUSIC Firelake Grand Casino, 777 Grand Casino Blvd., TJ McFarland , 7 p.m. , (405) 964-7263. (Shawnee) The Point After Club, 6800 S I 35

Service Road, Open Blues Jam , 7 p.m. , (405) 778-8166.

Baker Street Pub & Grill, 2701

W Memorial, Drive , 9 p.m. , (405) 751-1547.

UCO Jazz Lab, 100 E 5, Aaron

Tomasko , 7 p.m. , (405) 359-7989. (Edmond)

JJ’s Alley, 212 E Sheridan, Ronnie Deane and Ben Phillips , 6:30 p.m. , (405) 605-4543. JJ’s Alley, 212 E Sheridan, Jack Rowdy , 9:30 p.m. , (405) 605-4543.

NIGHT LIFE Cee Gee’s Club, 309 S Coltrane , Karaoke , 9 p.m. , (405) 348-7555. (Edmond) Kamp’s Bar, 1310 NW 25, Robotic

Wednesdays , 9 p.m. , (405) 524-2251.

HAPPENINGS “Brother Versus Brother: The Cherokee Civil War Exhibit,”

Cherokee Heritage Center, 21192 S Keeler (Park Hill)

“Warrior Spirits:Indigenous Arts of New Guinea,” Sam Noble Okla-

homa Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua , (405) 325-4712. (Norman)

Paintings by Susan B. Wilhelm, 50 Penn Place Art Gallery, 1900 Northwest Expressway, (405) 848-5567.

EAT DRINK PLAY » WIMGO.COM » 41


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SWIM

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FEBRUARY 15 – FEBRUARY 29

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01 WHERE: 28TH ANNUAL OMELETTE PARTY AT THE COCA-COLA EVENTS CENTER, WITH PROCEEDS BENEFITTING THE OKLAHOMA CITY MUSEUM OF ART’S EXHIBITIONS. |1| Patrick, Jessica and Adrienne |2| Liz and Marco |3| Melia and Kristen |4| Gregg and Stephanie |5| Shannon, Kelsey and Brian |6| Kelly and Doug |7| Chase and Hayley Photos by Steven Maupin

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'04 Aero 9.3, Turbo, loaded, lthr, sunroof, 96k, $6995, 209-5297co

'87 White/Volvo semi truck WCS42T 42K lb. 217K mi. 9 spd, Cummins Diesel $3500 Call 919-6517 OKC

07 Chevy O T RC, LB 6.0 gas, V8 auto, Solid Truck $11,500 obo ¡¡ 922-7236 '85 Chevy Silverado regular SWB $7350 692-8855 or 326-8855 06 Dodge Dakota Quad Cab, 4WD, V8, SLT $13,400. 610-6569

'98 Chevrolet Suburban 4x4, 5.7TBI, ready to rebuild, $500. 405-681-6732 '99 Ford Explorer XLT, 4x4 loaded, all power, runs great, $3950, 209-5297co '98 Ford Expedition, 3rd row seating, CD, leather, loaded, $4150. 863-6399 '97 Ford Explorer Sport 4x4, Sunroof, Nice $2,895 ¡ 946-4371

'01 Ford E350 Super Duty XL, 61K, handicapped van, new tires, $7450. 201-3831 1998 FORD WINDSTAR 1 owner, very nice, 123K, $1,500. 405-524-9601

'06 Honda Odyssey EX-L Nav/DVD, 53k miles, $17,500, 405-340-0317 '05 Nissan Quest SL, 140k, loaded, lthr, xx nice, $6995, 209-5297co '98 Pontiac Montana, loaded, 160k, runs & drives great, 3rd seat, $2750, 209-5297co

ACCOUNTING POSITION Payroll, debits, credits, bank recons, 2-3 yrs exp, need MS Excel, benefit package, fax resume to: 405-634-6815 or email to cris@classicautoparts.com

EMPLOY MENT

'06 DTS, 6 disc CD, lthr blk, chrome wheels, 78K loaded $14,700. 210-3351

2005 Infiniti FX45 AWD, 315 hp 4.5 Liter V8, Black ext, Graphite int, leather, excellent cond, 57,300 mi, keyless entry, memory seats, navigation sys, one owner - loaded with Technology Pkg and Premium Pkg - Bose premium sound - satellite radio - 20" chrome factory wheels - new tires Dec 2011 - sun roof original sticker $54,760 detailed maint. records Must See - NW OKC $24,750, 405-728-7408

'05 DODGE 1500 RAM regular cab, burgundy, like new, garaged, only 21,500 miles. $11,900, 405-216-3563

1997 Pontiac Transsport, 74K miles, blue, a/c, CD player, all power, good tires, $3700, 370-9032.

>>

AUTO MOTIVE

>>

'98 LeSabre 3800 V6, loaded, new tires, high hwy mi, exc cond $2595 392-4403, 326-2104

1979 Ford 4 cyl engine & trans, 12K orig miles, $500; Fiberglass bed cover, silver, for Chevy or GMC $300. Call after 4:30pm, Lynn 405-328-1103.

1997 Pontiac Firebird V6, t-tops, $3000. 405-610-6569

2007 Buick LaCross CX. 22k miles, never wrecked non smoker, like new $12,900, 405-282-0899

Jr Accountant in Edmond QuickBooks exp. a MUST 50 wpm min. Drug test. 2 yr min exp. $10-15 DOE Fax Res to 405-844-2793 Kirkpatrick Bank is accepting applications for a professional, outgoing individual to join our fast paced, rewarding organization. We are in need of a General Accountant in one of our Edmond locations. If you have a degree in Accounting (preferred) or Finance, previous exp. in accounting, GL entries & AP and looking for a new career opportunity, now is the time to join our team. KB offers a comp salary program, comprehensive benefits package and a professional work environment. Strong Microsoft Office skills required. Email cover letter, resume and salary history to: careers@ kirkpatrickbank.com EOE MANAGER for small loan company. Must have small loan, payday loan, or pawn experience. We offer a competitive bonus program, earned paid time off, and AFLAC insurance. We're a growing company with opportunities for advancement. Come join our team. Apply at B&R Finance, 2613 N MacArthur Blvd OKC, OK or fax resume 940-497-0542 Attn: Todd. National Charter Bank seeking

Loan Officers, Underwriters, Processers & Shippers.

Min. 2 yrs experience. Competitive pay with benefits. Fax resume to 206-222-2741. Norman CPA firm seeks

Audit Senior

with three to five years experience in public accounting. Only CPA’s or CPA candidates need apply. Send resume to: janiceg@cpagray.com or fax to 405-364-3771.

Accounts Receivable Established fast paced company seeks to fill Accounts Receivable/Collections position with general office duties. Apply in person Monday through Thursday, 9-3. Hagar Restaurant Service, 1229 W. Main St, OKC

Admin. Assistant Entry level position. Must be familiar with A/P, A/R & all MS Office programs. Detail oriented & able to work in fast paced environ. Exc. benefits. Must have clean background and driving record. Apply in person, METCO. 2025 S. Nicklas Ave., Ste 101, OKC. 681-6737.

ADMIN. ASST.

T-Hire $11/hr + Bnfts! Detail oriented, phones, fast paced environment. 2+ yrs. experience w/ Word & Excel. 942-8551 * Fax 942-2840 kim@tneesepersonnel.com Administrative Asst. needed full time in Norman office. Must be friendly, positive and flexible. Email resume and cover letter to: winstonhrdept@gmail.com Answer Service Operator Edmond. Must type 45 wpm. Shift: Mon 4p-12midnight; Tue off; Wed & Thur 4:30p-1a; Fri 12p-7p; Sat 4p-11p; Sun off; $12 per hour ¡ 285-4316 Customer Service/Office Assistant Needed Progressive Bio-Tech Company located in OKC at the Research Park has an immediate opening for a fulltime Customer Service/Office Assistant. Must possess a minimum of 5 years office experience, good communication and organizational skills, good telephone skills and experience with Microsoft Office programs. Science background a plus. Outstanding benefits package. Email resume to HR@arlok.com Excellent opportunity for position in office of optical laboratory. High school diploma required. Start $8hr call 631-8714

New Accounts/ Document Imaging

F/T Position, 8-5 Mon-Fri 1 year New Accounts experience required. Qualified applicants must be motivated, outgoing and customer service oriented. Contact Ruthie @ NBC Oklahoma Bank 405-748-9100 Fax 405-748-9191 EOE AA/M/F/D/V

OLD REPUBLIC TITLE has an opening in our Escrow Dept, located off Pkwy Blvd, Yukon. Full time M-F, Exc benefits, must be detailed & organized. Computer exp. a must, able to multi-task, handle busy phones, greet & assist customers. Equal Opportunity Employer. Call 942-4848 Receptionist/ Office Assistant Oklahoma State Fair, Inc. has an immediate full-time opening in its Administrative Office. Applicant must have strong customer service & computer skills & experience with multi-line telephone system. Starting salary, including benefits, is in the low to mid 20s. Some college preferred or comparable work experience. E-mail resume & cover letter to: anemecek@ okstatefair.com or mail to: PO Box 74943, Oklahoma City, OK 73147

Receptionist

needed for veterinary hospital. Computer exp required. 720 S. Air Depot, MWC. Receptionist Med ofc in NW OKC cmptr, phone, social skills, F-T $12/hr. Fax resume to 254-3133 Tag Agency Clerk (Experienced). Submit resume to 2501 NE 23rd, Ste E, OKC 73111 OR FAX 405-424-4727.

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS

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

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

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

JAVA positions BS, 3+ yrs JAVA exp, $70-95K

lcibest.com

Software Development Manager Needed in Oklahoma City to oversee the improvement of workflow with the development of new software & information systems, spot & correct problem areas within the workflow of the currently implemented system, research, design, develop & test operating systemslevel software and set operational specifications & formulate and analyze software requirements. Applicants must have the minimum of a Masters in Computer Science and at least 1 yr of experience designing, debugging and implementing support software applications for the drilling industry. Must have legal authority to work in the U.S. Send resume/references to: Bryan Guzak, District Manager, Cougar Drilling Solutions USA Inc., 9505 W. Reno Ave, Oklahoma City, OK 73127. EOE

Experienced Apprentice & Journeyman Electricians Wanted Hertzler Electrical Services is looking to hire Experienced Apprentice & Journeyman Electricians for large Commercial Construction jobs in the OKC area. Wages/Salary based on experience. No phone calls accepted. Please send resume casey@hertzlerelectrical. com Floral Designers and Delivery People needed to work in Floral Shop for Valentines Day. Apply Rose Petal Florist 8121 S. Western. 634-2212 Frame and Cornice Carpenters and Helpers, OKC area, steady work, hourly. Transportation & tools required. 824-8954. GCI needs EXPERIENCED Framing / Drywall / EIFS / Scaffold Foremen with minimum 5 yrs. experience. Positions are statewide in Oklahoma. Call 405-286-9092 in OKC or 918-663-5713 in Tulsa.

AMERICAN CLEANERS Hiring FT Customer Service Reps. Starting pay $9.00 per hour. Apply at 15300 N. Western Ave. CALL CENTER REP, OK PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT SYSTEM. Responsible for large volume of inbound calls, providing benefit information and troubleshooting member issues. Excellent interpersonal and customer service skills required. Must be proficient in current software applications including Word and Excel. Hiring rate: $33,489/yr. Deadline for applications: 2/23/2012. For more information and application procedures, go to http://www.opers.ok.gov/jobs EOE


Energy/Oil & Gas Customer Service Representatives, PT http://mntechnology. com/about-mntc/em ployment-opportunities

RN Field Nurse

For busy Home Health Care Agency. F/T position w/exc benefits Fax resume 286-1301 lori_platinum@coxinet.net

Facility Manager OKC Educare BA in Ed, or related field MA pref. 3-5 yrs exp in Early Childhood Mgmt www.sunbeam familyservices.org Fax: (405) 702-9432 EOE Short Term Health Instructor-Nurse Review/AUA Training Supervisor http://mntechnology. com/about-mntc/em ployment-opportunities

Animal Lover clean, feed, for large no kill animal sanctuary. FT, Edmond area. $7.50 an hour + benefits. 2 8 2 - 8 6 1 7 Answer Service Operator Edmond. Must type 45 wpm. Shift: Mon 4p-12midnight; Tue off; Wed & Thur 4:30p-1a; Fri 12p-7p; Sat 4p-11p; Sun off; $12 per hour ¡ 285-4316 CHILDCARE TEACHERS needed FT/PT. COOK Good Pay. ‘¡ Call 405-632-6724 ¡‘ Cleaning Service Supervisor/Janitor For the cleaning operations of the Will Rogers Airport. Min. 2 years supervisory exp. Also hiring janitors for all shifts must be able to work weekends and must pass background check. Call: (405) 684-9400 CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS LABORATORY TECH. CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL TESTING TECH. Will Train. Some benefits. Apply in person at 809 NW 34th, Moore.

FIREFIGHTER

No exp needed. Training, travel, Great pay/benefits/ vacation & regular raises. HS seniors & grads ages 17-38. Call Mon - Fri 1-877-628-9562. Hate dirt, but love people? Must have car, ins & DL. No nights/no weekends. Health & dental insurance. Merry Maids South 670-1120 JANITORIAL FLOOR TECHS for buffing, carpet cleaning & other duties, FT evenings. Paid vacation & holidays. Apply between 4pm-6pm, M-TH at 1024 N. Tulsa Ave., OKC JANITORIAL Individuals & Couples to clean office buildings. PT evenings, M-F. Paid holidays. Apply 4-6 pm, Monday - Thursday, at 1024 N. Tulsa Ave, OKC LABORERS For right of way clearing. Class A CDL required. Benefits. Apply at 8405 SW 15th St, OKC, M-F, 8-4, 405-495-5295. NW Sign Co. looking for Vinyl sign fabricator (exp. With graphics programs req, Flexi a bonus) Interior/Exterior Sign Installer (clean driving record req) Email resume to: cwilliams@jandbgraphics.net 524-7446 Parts Counter Salesman Needed at busy S. OKC motorcycle store. MUST have either motorcycle OR parts experience. Non smoke env. Tue-Sat Freedom Cycles 415-1626 PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Work in all aspects of daily production including document destruction, operating machinery and assembling products. HS Diploma or equivalent. 1 yr of experience preferred working with people with developmental disabilities and/or experience in production/assembly field. Drug screen, background check, minimum 21 years old, $11/hour + benefits. Apply in person @ 1000 S. Kelly, Edmond. Rent Quik now hiring several DELIVERY DRIVERS. $10 per hour to start. Apply at 1111 SW 59th or 3615 N MacArthur Ave Route Driver PT. Retiree ok. $80-100/day 3days/ wk Must live NW. Must have economy P/U&clean MVR. EOE. Rick 341-7017

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

Shop Assistant Oklahoma State Fair, Inc. has an immediate full-time opening in its State Fair Park Division. Warehouse/purchasing/ inventory control experience preferred. Parts/ mechanical knowledge a plus. Applicant must have good interpersonal, supervisory, problem solving & organizational skills. Knowledge of computers is required. Starting salary, including benefits, is in the mid 20s. Some college preferred or comparable work experience. E-mail resume & cover letter to: anemecek@ okstatefair.com or mail to: PO Box 74943, Oklahoma City, OK 73147

Far NW C-Store Deli seeks mature, responsible individual with experience. Lazy need not apply. 887-6568 lv msg.

Truck Detailers Needed Exterior & Interior experience only apply. 405-396-3345 leave message

CUSTODIANS Full time evening shift (Moore Schools area). Competitive wages & benefits. Please call 405-692-5743 for info and/or appointment. Must pass felony record check. SeHabla Espanol

Deliver AT&T phonebooks in

Midwest City, Del City, Edmond, Guthrie, Greater Shawnee, Canadian County and Norman. Payment issued within 72 hrs. (888) 510-9911

216

Health Care

221

Warehouse Person for Wine & Spirit Wholesale. Must be 21 & non felon. 557-1818, Apply M-F, 2226 N Broadway, OKC 73103

HR Coordinator Mid-America Christian University, Visit jobs.macu.edu

Work on the Wild Side! The Zoo needs happy, energetic people for gift shops, food & beverage, rides, catering, ticket booths, custodial & more. These are part time jobs thru Fall, both weekend & weekday positions available. Apply in person with ID's to Guest Relations, 10am to 4pm, Sun, Mon or Tue. Oklahoma City Zoo 2101 NE 50th, OKC, EOE

MAINTENANCE Assisted Living facility in NW OKC needs a part-time maintenance person. Must have experience in heating/ AC, electrical, plumbing & general maintenance. Ideal for retired individual »» Call 495-6870 »»

Petroleum Landman Training Course Comprehensive training gets you prepared for employment as a Landman. Enroll online at www.basictitle.com Phone: (405) 436-9094

Landscape Maintenance Foreman Min 4 yr. exp. on mowing crew. Must have driver's license & transportation to shop located in Newcastle. Starting pay above industry standard. 405-740-1897

Maintenance Tech-FT For OKC hotel, exp pref. Apply in person M-F, 8a5p, BW Plus Saddleback Inn, 4300 SW 3rd, OKC.

WANTED

Director of Nursing

Manage Inpatient Detox Unit by directing Nursing Staff & Case Mgmt. Must have strong communication, organizational and mgmt skills with a min of 5yrs mgmt exp. Min BSN required. Nurse Practitioner preferred. Benefits & competitive salary. Apply at: 1215 NW 25th EOE

Engineer

OKC Mfg seeking a degreed engineer w/ min 3 yrs exp with steel, steel fabrication, & nat’l gas processing equip. Applicants must be able to project manage, have excellent, assertive communication skills & ability to work in very fast paced environment. E mail resumes to: ddurbin@qbjohnson.com

Call Center Telemarketers to solicit usable tax deductible household donations. Exp pref. Must be able to work M-F 4:309pm. Min. wage + Bonus. Apply in person M-F 9-5 @ 8901 S Santa Fe #D, OKC. 405-680-9111. CMAs LPNs & RNs, CNAs, MAT Wolf Living Center is making scheduling changes. Need the following positions: CMAs $300 Sign On Bonus. Mon.-Fri., 2pm-10pm, weekends 2pm-10pm. LPNs & RNs weekends. PRN CNAs MAT Part Time in residential care unit. Wolf Living Center 18501 NE 63rd. Harrah, Ok. 454-1400 ask for Deen or Dianne

LPN

Beautiful Assisted Living Community in the NW OKC area seeking a committed, self motivated individual to work with the elderly. Medical, geriatric, supervisory skills & computer knowledge required. Previous nursing home experience a plus. Exc. working conditions. Please call 495-6870

LINCARE, leading national respiratory company, seeks MEDICAL BILLING AND COLLECTIONS Specialist with attention to detail & strong communication skills. Responsible for accounts receivable from Medicare, Medicaid, insurance and patient accounts. Experience preferred. Great benefits and growth opportunities. EOE/DFWP. Submit resume to: Lincare, Inc. 4005 NW Expressway #210, Oklahoma City, OK 73116 Attn: Employment Opportunities. OR fax resume to: 8 4 8 - 5 7 5 1

Dental Front Office ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ M-F. Fax resume to 794-9960 or mail to 1816 N. Eastern, Moore, OK 73160.

Lindsay Municipal Hospital We are a strong rural hospital in its community. Opportunities for:

Dental Hygiene Assistant for South OKC specialty dental practice. Part time Mon-Wed 7am-3pm.CDA w/radiograph & polishing certificate preferred but not required. Please fax resumes to 405-636-1197

•RNs •LPNs •Nurse Technicians •New Graduates •Medical Laboratory Technician •Medical Technician

Dental Hygienist

needed 3 days per week.

740-3428 »»»»»»

Competitive Pay with Full Benefits Email your resume to afernow@lindsaymu nicipalhospital.com or Fax 405-756-1802 Phone 405-756-1404 Located in Lindsay at 1305 W. Cherokee

FRONT DESK medical position MISYS exp. Exc customer service & detail oriented. M-F 8am-5pm. Exc benefits. Fax resume to 231-8884

Medical Assistant needed for busy NW OKC Dr.'s Office. Send resume to okcdoctorsoffice@gmail.com

Home Health Aides Unique home health environment. Excellent pay! Call 405-272-0700 or fax resume to 272-0701.

MEDICAL ASSISTANT With experience for full time position. Please fax resume to Kim at Medical Specialists 604-4331

Office Receptionist also Medical Assistant needed for dr.s office. Health insurance provided. Send resumes to: The Oklahoman, Box #2002, P.O. Box 25125, OKC, OK 73125-0125 RECEPTIONIST Dr's office full time apply Mon Feb 13 9am-12:00 pm. 7236 NW Expressway ’’ CERTIFIED ’’ HOME HEALTH AIDES & 24 HR LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS Caring for Seniors IMMEDIATE OPENINGS PT/FT FLEXIBLE SHIFTS To Apply Call 577-1910

Visiting Angels

Busy Choctaw Family Practice looking for friendly, energetic Phlebotomist/Medical Asst. w/exp. Fax resume 405-769-2999 or email medicalhelp27@yahoo.com

Case Manager Perform Case Mgmt Services for patients in the inpatient DetoxUnit of The Referral Center. Must be Case Mgmt Certified. Min 1 yr case mgmt exp. Min. Associates Degree required. Apply: 1215 NW 25th EOE

CMA/Advanced CMA Beautiful assisted living community now hiring all shifts. Excellent working conditions & compensation Forest Glade, 2500 N Glade Bethany or call 495-7100

RN

with Home Health Management experience. Call Debbie, 405-593-1917

»»»»»»»»»»»»

Bachelor's Level Counselor

Oklahoma Family Counseling Services, a leader in behavioral health, is now seeking applications for FT Bachelor's Level Counselors in Norman and Yukon. Excellent pay & benefits. Please fax resume to 405-217-8502 or email to apply@splains.org »»»»»»»»»»»»

LPN needed to assist doctor in busy W/C practice. Good communication skills necessary. M-F, exc benefits. Fax resume: 235-6206.

Contract BHRS ($35/hr)/ Therapist ($51/hr) for Chickasha Schools. Immed. case load. Email: advancecounseling@ coxinet.net

LPNs

Seeking Psychotherapist LPC, CNS, APRN-CNP, LCSW, or PhD for outpatient private practice in Norman. Will consider experienced or new providers. We treat adults with psychiatric/substance abuse disorders. Email CV to psychclinic1@yahoo.com

Work as an LPN in the inpatient Detox Unit of The Referral Center. Various shifts available. Min 1 yr exp required. Competitive salary. EOE Apply: 1215 NW 25th NURSING HOME ADMINISTRATOR Position available. Oklahoma license required. For more info call 918-645-8169 Quality Assurance Position Okla. Lions Eye Bank hiring Quality Assurance Manager RN, blood banking, hospital or lab experience, college degree required. QA duties include review medical charts, logs, records, lab, FDA compliance, training records, prepare reports, other duties. Send resume to: jking@oleb.org ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ ¡ Relief Cook ¡

LPN 2pm-10pm

¡ CNA 2pm-10pm Competitive salary, good benefits & team environment. EOE WARR ACRES NURSING CENTER Apply or fax resume to: 6501 N. MACARTHUR 405-721-8740 ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ RN Manager For LTC facility. Excellent Benefits & Competitive Salary. Norman Veterans Center, Frances Poindexter, HR Manager 405-360-5600, Ext 203, fpoindexter@ odva.state.ok.us

»»»»»»»»»»»»

THERAPIST

Oklahoma Family Counseling Services, a leader in behavioral health, is now seeking applications for FT Therapists in OKC area. Excellent pay & benefits. Please fax resume to 405-217-8502 or email to apply@splains.org »»»»»»»»»»»»

Securitas Security is accepting applications for FT & PT Armed/Unarmed Security officers in the OKC area. We offer Great pay/benefits. Uniforms are provided. Apply online www.securitasjobs.com SelectOKC Branch EOE M/F/D/V Wanted: 2 Private Investigators. Send resume and letter of introduction to: winstonhrdept@gmail.com

Opening at small but busy downtown law firm for Legal Assistant. Certification not required. Minimum of 1 year legal experience is required. Email resume to: chenson@rrvmlaw.com or fax to 232-7911.

Expereinced Welders needed, BOP valve & pressue vessel experience pref. Candidate should have abiltity to weld stick, mig, flux-core and sub-arc. Competitive wages w/great benefit package. Weld & drug test reqd. Applications & resumes will be accepted Jan 31-Feb 8, 2012. Fax resumes to; 405-799-8735 email to: rep@hornequip.com or at Horn Equpment 131 N Sunnylane, Moore OK.

THERAPIST

Tri-City Youth & Family Center, Inc. School & Office Based Services Licensed or Licensed Eligible Submit resume to: msmith@tricityyfc.org

NOW HIRING NIGHT AUDIT - Good Pay Apply in person at Governor's Suites 2308 S. Meridian Ave. Open Interview Monday 2/13/12, 10am-2pm NOW HIRING Front Desk, Shuttle Driver PT, with good driving record. Must be able to work flexible hours. Apply at 309 S. Meridian, OKC,

A real fit for HONEST PERSON TO WORK AT HOME W/ BENEFITS CO. APR. $700.00 WK PT/FT 877-672-9048 Work From Home For Local Charity Great for home bound individuals wanting supplement income. Mon-Fri evening hours. No selling involved. Must have home phone. Call 943-4530 EOE Worship Music Leader for new church in Deer Creek/Edmond needed. Contemporary and traditional music. Vocal, piano, guitar, music reading ability a must. Send resumes to connecting pointpc@gmail.com.

Housing Development Tax Credit Compliance Specialist Oklahoma Housing Finance Agency is accepting applications for a Tax Credit Compliance Specialist. This position is responsible for monitoring specific compliance with IRS Section 42 Low Income Housing Tax Credit requirements and OHFA program rules and regulations. Provides training to program participants on technical issues and regulations. Extensive in-state travel is required. A Bachelor’s degree in Business or related field is required or eight years related experience and/or training in IRS Section 42 regulations; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Knowledge of local, state and federal regulations governing housing programs is preferred. Skill in use of Microsoft programs is required. Starting salary is $2650.00/month with excellent benefits. All applicants must submit an OHFA application. Applications are available at 100 NW 63rd, Suite 200, OKC, OK 73116 or at www.ohfa.org. Applications may be mailed to listed address or faxed to 405-419-9221. Applications will be accepted until 4:45pm Tues, 02-21-12. AA/EEO

CARCO RENTALS

Rental/Operations Manager Our Truck Rental and Leasing Company, in business for over 40 years, is seeking a qualified Truck Rental/Operations Manager. Truck rental and leasing or transportation experience preferred. This is a full time position managing our Oklahoma City fleet and will include sales and sales calls. Excellent pay and benefits including a 401K program. Resumes may be faxed to 479-441-3212 Attn: Bobbie Sue or emailed to resumes@ carcotrans.com

Entry Level Draftsman: 1 yr min exp w/AutoCAD ’02 or newer, exp with MS/PS & strong understanding of drawing scale req. - Arch. or Mfg. background preferred Send resume to: Shanna@ downtownglass.com

HR ASSISTANT Growing company seeks HR Prof. 2-4 yrs HR exp. Payroll, ben admin. pref. Bachelor's a plus. MS Word, Excel, comp salary. Exc. benefits. Apply in person METCO, 2025 S. Nicklas Ave, Ste 101. 681-6737

MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR Covercraft is looking for a Maintenance Supervisor for its Wichita Falls plant. Must have sewing machine repair experience, e-ton and Gerber cutting experience a plus. Supervisory experience required. Fax or e-mail resume to 405-238-9603, dklause@covercraft.com Opening at small but busy downtown law firm for Legal Assistant. Certification not required. Minimum of 1 year legal experience is required. Email resume to: chenson@rrvmlaw.com or fax to 232-7911.

Operations Mgr. Worldwide Moving Co. in OKC. Salary & bonus, Medical Benefits, 3+ yrs experience. Resumes to Emrick's Van & Storage 4021 NW 3rd, OKC, OK 73107 or emricks@emricksallied.com


Transportation

THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA invites applications for the following position: Director Volunteer & Service Learning Center Manages the Assistant Directors of the VSLC and Coordinator of Commuter Student Services to include, but not be limited to, overseeing hiring and staff development. Supervises paraprofessional and grantfunded personnel programs to include, but not be limited to AmeriCorps, AmeriCorps VISTA and Volunteer Activities Council staff. Constructs and administers all budget organizations of the VSLC, Volunteer Activities Council, Commuter Student Services, UCOmmute, and associated grants. Develops, executes, and evaluates a strategic plan that includes a communication plan that aligns departmental activities with division and University missions. Salary: $51,434-$57,485/yr plus benefits. Master’s degree required. This position will remain open until filled. On-Line applications required. For details or to apply, visit our website http://jobs.uco.edu Call 405-974-2327 for technical assistance

Buffalo Wild Wings Now Hiring Experienced Managers Email resume to: bwwjosh@yahoo.com

Manager Development

Assists in developing fundraising goals, objectives, and strategies for the College of Mathematics and Science in coordination with the Dean of that college. Compares results achieved with goals established, and periodically advises the Vice President of Development and the Deans of progress being made. Makes personal solicitation calls on donors and prospective donors. Establishes relationships to create and build a donor base. Coordinates with the Dean to develop a case statement for the college. Coordinates efforts with the Dean to build an Advisory Board for the College. Salary: $45,662/yr plus benefits. Bachelor’s degree required. This position will remain open until filled. On-Line applications required. For details or to apply, visit our website http://jobs.uco.edu Call 405-974-2327 for technical

AUTO SALES -

Best Buy Here Auto Exp. preferred, but high energy a must. Great opportunity for growth. Salary + Comm. + Benefits Call Doc for interview 405-949-9911 or apply in person at 32nd & N. May.

CNC Machinists For mill and lathe. Set up a+. 5+ yrs exp. 1st/2nd shift. Reno/ Council. Pd ben. Fax res: 789-0183, Call 384-3155

FORT THUNDER HARLEY-DAVIDSON is seeking FT/PT Motorcycle Sales People Call Darrin, 793-8877 or fortthunder harleydavidson.com

Gas Processing Eq. Mfg seeking exp. w/instrument panel fabrication & power wiring. Exp w/panel programming a plus. Reqs. knowledge of 3 phase power, electronic logic & NEC. Apply at: QB JOHNSON 9000 S. Sunnylane Rd., OKC or e mail resume to: ddurbin@qbjohnson.com

Goodman Construction seeks an Experienced Residential Roofing Estimator / Salesperson. Call 405-414-7294 or fax info to 866-246-4508. In Office Sales Rep. Paid weekly. Strong communication skills a must. Background check required. Call 636-0432.

SALES REP

SERVERS FT. Full paid benefits after 90 days. Must pass drug screen and OSBI. Apply in person, Saint Ann Retirement Center, 7501 W Britton Rd, OKC.

Bob Mills Furniture Company has an exciting opportunity for a highly motivated Sales Associate! If you have been successful selling midpriced items to a variety of decision makers in a very competitive market, this may be the job for you. To be successful with us in this position, you must: •Have the ability to sell value over price •Be effective at overcoming resistance •Present yourself professionally in a more relaxed atmosphere •Have the demonstrated ability to close the sale •Be trainable where needed As a commissioned salesperson, you must be a consistent selfstarter and have the desire to earn more than your current income. You must have at least one year of selling experience, earned at least $60,000 annually in the past, and have the desire to earn much more. To apply, please go to bobmillsfurniture.com and click the Careers link at the bottom of the page. You must complete the application and the Job Fit. Contact Summer at slewis@bobmills.com upon completion. ACME Brick Co. Inside Sales Position Salary + Commission + Benefits. Sales Experience Preferred. Send resume to rmorgan@brick.com

AUTOBODY TECHNICIAN (Experienced) Resume & References Needed. Contact Arron, Manuel Collision Center of Ada, 580-310-9335

Lincare OKC, leading National Respiratory Company seeks results driven sales representative. Create working relationships with MDs, Nurses, Social Workers, and articulate our excellent patient care with attentive listening skills. Competitive base plus uncap commission. Drug free work place. EOE. Please fax resumes to

947-5751

Tired of your dead end low paying job? If you have a positive attitude, people skills and a strong work ethic, we will train you for a high paying career in sales. We provide a base salary, plus better than average commission. We are hiring entry level candidates for a career in these positions. POTENTIAL FIRST YEAR INCOME $50,000!!! Call 748-3030 for interview.

Edmond Ins. Agency seeking Telemarketer Mon-Fri noon-9. $10 hrly plus weekly bonus. Fax resume to 286-4233 Telesales/Marketing Agent-Moore,OK Telesales agents needed to do B2B sales with 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 visit www.allsolutions4u.com

Apprentice &/or Journeyman Electrician for comm. & industrial. &/or service work. Paid employee ins., 401k, holidays & vacation. Must have valid driver's license. Call 521-8810 for appt.

Electrical Tech

Electrical Assembly Including stuffing and soldiering circuit boards, surface mounts, reading value components & attention to detail. Send resume to resume@ciscor.com ELECTRICAL ESTIMATOR Must be experienced Call 361-4888 or fax to 405-728-9888 Electrical Journeymen Now hiring •Commercial Journeymen •Service Truck Driver Welco Electric, 634-3695 ELECTRICIAN Residential Journeyman Apply: 107 S. 3rd, Yukon, OK. 405-641-5400 Email: twincity@sbcglobal.net Established fork lift company with over 70 years industry experience looking for resident Field Service Technicians in the Metro and Western Oklahoma area. Minimum 5 years experience, must have tools and clean driving record. Call 405-887-0872 or email to bkirkpatrick@medleyco.com FRAME CARPENTER Experienced only. New homes. Self motivated. Hard worker. Have own tools & transportation. Edmond area. 340-0566 Frame Carpenters and Helpers. Must have reliable transportation. Kingfisher area. Call 990-6427 Heat & Air Tech Experienced w/preferred apprentice. Apply in person: Pickwick Place 2759 W I-240 Service Rd

HVAC Product Tester

Perform operational testing of manufactured HVAC equipment including: Refrigerant circuit evacuation, charging and reclaim procedures Electrical circuit testing and troubleshooting Evaluation of refrigeration sequence / performance. Knowledge of HVAC product testing procedures, refrigeration processes, electrical circuitry, and brazing Computer skills (MS Office). AA/EOE Apply in person GOVERNAIR 4841 N Sewell OKC 73118

Wrecker Driver Needed Class 8, CDL, Wrecker driver. Must have verified experience. D & D Truck Sales, Inc. 3409 E. I-240 Service Rd. Oklahoma City, OK 73135 405-794-5092

5 yrs exp. Top pay, co. van & cell phone. 996-7779 NOW HIRING

DIESEL MECHANICS

for our OKC Shop!! » Up to $3000.00 SIGN On Bonus » PAY: $20-25/hr DOE If you want to work for a STABLE company with great PAY and BENEFITS come join our team: ¡ Possess satisfactory driving record ¡ 2 years experience in heavy truck equipment maintenance & repair ¡ Minimum Class B CDL ¡ Affirmative Action/ Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F/D/V) Call 303-867-5502 Paint Booth Service Tech/ Sheet Metal Tech Will train. 3 years good MVR - CDL is a plus. Drug testing. Top pay, health insurance, paid vacation, 10 federal holidays. Call 405-650-7587.

PAINTER

with experience needed. Coatings background with epoxies and urethanes required. Apply in person, 9am-3pm, at Cote Rite. 2237 S.E. 15th St., OKC Pre-employment drug test required. Refrigeration Techs Looking for experienced Refrigeration Techs in the OKC and Tulsa areas for repair and installation of beverage equipment. Experience with ice makers, beer equipment, frozen beverage equipment, or small appliances preferred. Pay based on experience. Full benefits package. Please email resume to klane@bevcoinc.com or fax to 405-672-7443. ReMan. Tech in Edmond Must have mech. skills. 40hrs/week. Drug Test. OK DL req. $8-$12 DOE Fax Res to 405-844-2793 SHOP MAINTENANCE PART TIME Woodworking equip., forklifts, trucks. Excellent working conditions. Call 632-6800

Shotblasting Equip. Operator

$12-$15/hr + overtime. Travel required. Paid vacation. Health & Dental Insurance. 401K. Must be 21 yrs. Mechanically inclined. Background check. Drug Screen. Good Driving Record. Safety oriented. EOE. Call 4 0 5 - 4 9 5 - 9 7 9 7 Structural Metal Fabricator seeking qualified applicants for FITTER/WELDER & MACHINE OPERATOR Drivers license required. Drug free work place. Apply at 5 American Way, Shawnee, OK. Weed Control Tech Honest, Dependable, Hardworking with Good Driving Record, $1940/month + Benefits, Will Train. 2829 S. Douglas Blvd, MWC

WELDER

Top pay for exp. w/ fit-up pressure vessels, piping & heat exchangers. Must pass 6-G test. Apply at: QB JOHNSON 9000 S Sunnylane Rd or email resume to: ddurbin@qbjohnson.com X-Ray Service Engineer Service x-ray equipment. Experience necessary. Pay based on experience. fax resume: 789-5874

Farms, Ranches For Sale, Okla. 308

244

HVAC Svc/Install Journeyman

Best Well Services, LLC hiring experienced Class A CDL w/Tanker endorsement DRIVERS to haul water. Medford/Enid Area (ask about our relocation reimbursement up to $1000 after 90 days)

DRIVER (CDL)/SHOP HELP JA OILFIELD MFG. has position available for Class A DRIVER. Oilfield experience a plus. Must have clean driving record. When not on the road, driver will provide support to the yard and shop. Competitive salary and benefit package. Send resume or apply in person, 2101 SE 67th St, Oklahoma City, OK 73149. DRIVERS FULL TIME Class A or B. Drivers, Hazmat needed. Apply in person at 1905 S. Skyline Dr., OKC, OK. FUEL HAULERS We are a local fuel delivery company looking for professional part and full time drivers in the Oklahoma City, Wynnewood and Lawton area. Requirements are a Class A CDL with Tanker and Hazmat endorsements. You must be at least 25 years old with a clean driving record and have 2 years tractor trailer experience. 6 months experience pulling a fuel tanker preferred. Check out the following benefits you can have: ß $70,000 plus a year ß 4 or 5-day work week (12-hour days) ß Health care program ß 401K with 50% match ß Great equipment ß Uniforms ß Bonus incentives ß Sick pay ß Vacation pay ß Opportunity for advancement To apply, please call 405-512-6817 M-F, 10AM-3PM

» » » » »

HOME WEEKENDS Growing Co. needs Class A CDL w/Tanker ASAP. HAZ a plus. Good pay/ benefits. 405-670-2030 HOTSHOT DRIVERS! Regional work, $1000+ per week. Must have CDL-A & 1 yr experience, able to pass drug test and physical & be on-call 24 hrs/day. Apply at Acme Truck Lines, 10220 West Reno, Suite 200

MIXER DRIVERS Schwarz Ready Mix Class B CDL req'd. Excellent pay-benefits avail immediately-401k. Apply in person w/MVR & CDL. 1400 S. Holly Ave Yukon. 405-354-8824

NEED TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVERS We have plenty of consistent year round work. Tanker & Hazmat required. Home often. If you can help us take care of our customers you will make a very good income. Rimarc Transportation 1-800-831-9563

Average Pay $70K+ yr Medical & Dental Ins. Basic Life Ins & AD&D Paid Vacation 401K plan w/matching company contribution Must be 21yrs or older CLEAN MVR & Criminal history Must be able to pass a drug test Oilfield Experience a plus but not required

OILFIELD DRIVERS/ RIG MOVING CREW D&D Equipment is looking for experienced Oilfield & OTR Drivers, Winch Truck, Stepdeck, Tandem, Gin Truck & Forklift Operators & Swampers to assist with rig down/up. Winch & Stepdeck driving positions require a Class A CDL & 3 years verifiable experience. Competitive wages, vacation, insurance compensation packages, and safety/ performance bonus. Call 405-478-1105. OIL FIELD HOT SHOT DRIVER NEEDED Class A CDL with air brakes, Drug Free, Exp. Preferred. 405-261-0118 Repossession Driver Experienced for OKC Co. Good driving record. Background check is required. 405-677-8817. Responsible Class A or B CDL Driver IMMEDIATE OPENING to run vacuum tank truck full time. Pump truck experience helpful. Clean driving record reqd. Competitive starting pay & benefits, home every night!! Call Jason 8am-5pm M-F 405-657-9356 Shuttle Drivers Drive 30 passenger buses at OUMC. CDL required. $12.00 per hr. 711 Stanton L. Young, Ste 704, OKC 73104. Tank Drivers needed to haul salt water. Watonga, OK area. Must have tank endorsement & experience a plus. Call 580-603-3541

1015A First Class Ranch near OKC, w/lakes & home 650A Greer Co. – Ranch & hunting, river frontage 33A, 73A & 153A Rural Home Sites/Caddo Co 320A Wichita MountainsUnique & Secluded Tumbleweed Terr. RE John McElroy 580-569-4213

Homes For Sale

LOWER PRICE 4/2/2 Cottonwood farms hm. $192,900 Richard Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494 Home For Sale 4bd, 2ba, 3car 2158sf $184,900. 405-795-9255

309.9

Priced to sell @ $178,500 10 days only, then we list w/realtor at higher price. 2100 sf, 4br, 2ba, new roof & appls, lots of updates. 18113 English Oak Ln. Open 2/19, 2-4 pm. Will show before by appt. 574-6548/574-4918

FORECLOSURES 47, 1-4 bdrm homes in Edmond start @ $25,900 Patrick @Allied 740-6616

Contact Terry at 580-542-0002 OWNER FINANCING $2000 down No Credit Ck 522 E Douglas Dr. $49K ¡596-4599‘ 410-8840¡

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

SOCIAL WORKER I-2 Oklahoma CityCounty Health Dept. Visit www.occhd.org for more info.

THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL OKLAHOMA invites applications for the following position:

Atlas Enterprises in Edmond is currently looking for Iron Workers with a minimum 5 years proven experience. Must have current certs and valid DL to be considered. Drug test and background check required for most projects. 405-341-2580.

>>

PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT (PI)/ CORPORATE COMPLIANCE OFFICER/MGR Establish & implement an effective compliance Program to prevent illegal, unethical, or improper conduct. Monitor & report results of the compliance & ethics efforts of the facility to the CEO & Board of Directors. Develop, initiate, maintain, and revise policies & procedures for the general operation of the compliance program. Work with all departments to direct compliance issues to appropriate existing channels for investigation & resolution. Act as an independent review & evaluation body to ensure that compliance issues & concerns within the organization are being appropriately evaluated, investigated & resolved. Provide reports on a regular basis. Ensure that CARF/ODMHSAS standards are reviewed, updated & enforced in order to maintain accreditation. Monitor & implement PI program. Masters degree In Healthcare Administration required with at least 8 yrs of exp preferably in substance abuse/ mental health field with a min of 2 yrs PI exp. Salary $58k-75k. EOE Submit resume to: The Referral Center 1215 NW 25th St OKC, OK 73106

» American Quality» »» Exteriors»» Seeks a Siding & Window In-Home Sales Pro. You must have: •Reliable transportation •Strong work ethic •Desire to succeed We provide $20,000 base + generous commissions & monthly bonus. All leads & full benefits provided. M - F. No weekends required. Easy $60K-$80K first year potential. Call Doyle 405-722-3639

For Sale by Owner 9105 Crooked Creek Ln 4/2/3, 1783 sq ft, built 08, 164,999 granite, SS appls, ect. 405-808-3790

Alex, Ok 2500 SF 4 Bed, 2 Bath, 2 stories 2 car garage, Built 1931, last appraised $140,000 some fire damage as is $28000. 405-462-7301

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

Hunting Property

336.0

Kansas Hunting Land Great Income-SE 1/4 of S5/T21/R19 Pawnee Cty Ks 100ac in CRP w/13yrs left/cult-50ac wheat to buyer-grass well established. Privacy w/good access&view, electricity. Call 316-253-4895

CASH INVESTORS Brick 3bd 1ba, 1210sf $34,900 Realty Experts 414-8753

CASH INVESTORS 4plex 3/1.5 brick 5584sf $90,900 Realty Experts 414-8753 Acreage in Norman! Extra sharp 2bd brick, 1 car garage, new roof & ch/a, beautiful kitchen w/center island, on gorgeous O acre lot. All this for only $89,900 Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661

FORECLOSURES 128, 1-4 bdrm homes in NW OKC start @ $24,900 Patrick @Allied 740-6616

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

Updated 3/2/2, huge living & master, blt 81, PC Schls 1942sf, lots storage$139.9K Realty Experts 414-8753

1N to 10A, E. of OKC, pay out dn. before 1st pmt. starts, many are M/H ready over 400 choices, lg trees, some with ponds, TERMS Milburn o/a 275-1695 paulmilburnacreages.com

3739 NW 14th St. large 2 bedroom, everything done. $37,000. 947-7876

GREAT EL RENO bld sites 1 ac lt MOL $18,000, 1/2 ac lt MOL $16,000 New const only Richard 373-2494 Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494 GREAT PIEDMONT bld site 1 ac MOL w/storm shelter $25,000 New const only Richard Cleaton & Assoc 373-2494

OWNER CARRY 3 bed, 1 bth, 1c, ch&a, $4K dwn, 1157 NW 81st, 348-2108

FABULOUS HOME FOR SALE MUST SEE C H/A Large kitchen 3 bed, 1.5 ba, $79,000 Contact Cindy @ 405-464-4024 between 8a/8p or crodriguez@ priceedwards.com

Van Eaton Ready Mix NOW HIRING Mixer Drivers in Edmond, Norman & West OKC Class A or B 35hrs/wk Guaranteed Clean MVR, 2 Years Driving Experience 214-7450 Shawnee 844-2900 Edmond 912-4825 Norman EOE

5 acres, 2200sq ft Mobile Home, 4bd, 2ba, 2 fireplaces, w/1200 sq ft barn $58,900 Cash 15501 S. Harrah Rd 301-6495

5 wooded acres near Noble $193.01 per month By Owner. 226-2015

Nice 2bed house 1car garage, nice area, great for investor or 1st time homebuyer only $32,900 Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661

Winch Truck & Hotshot Regional driving opportunities are avail. at John Romine Trucking, Inc., OKC, OK. Class A CDL, clean MVR & 1 year exp. req'd Please call 405-601-3884

5A 18mi SW of OKC 6mi S Tuttle $24,900 $900dn $226 mo. more avail 745-5889

Minco, brick, 3/2/2, sunroom, 40'x40', barn/shop 4N a. $198K. 405-812-4392

Owner Finance-Jones Acreage with home. 918-636-7527

Bank Owned Updated 3/2 new carpet/pnt ch/a $49.9K Realty Experts 414-8753

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

Double Your Tax Refund!! Double your money or use your land/family land for ZERO down. New & Repo Homes. $2500 Furniture package w/new purchase. Free phone app. WAC 405-631-7600 Cash 4 Clunkers!! Trade your used home in for a new home with Zero Down! Get up to $25,000 for your used home. WAC 405-631-7600 Abandoned D/W Repo set up on 5 Acres!! Ready to move in. Free phone application 405-631-7600 Rent to Own: Nice 2&3bd MWC $350&up 390-9777

517 Caddo County Acres Sat March 10. johnhuddlestonrealty.com 580-550-0207

Owner carry with down. Nice homes & fixers. 417-2176. www.homesofokcinc.com

EXTRA NICE 3 & 4 bdrms Totally Remodeled. $595mo. Financing Avail with good down payment. 570-4291 I BUY & SELL HOUSES 27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

Pegosa Springs - 3 story 3bed, 2bath condo w/hot tub. March 17-24, $900 + dep. 406-393-2184


Commercial RE

Rates starting at $825.00 month. First month FREE. Citadel Suites, 5113 N. Brookline 405-942-0016 www.citadel suites.com Including are the following:

Own established full service glass shop. Motivated seller. David 405-245-4429 Liquor Store 3+ yrs in bus. OKC. Serious inquiries only 405-625-5075

Business Property For Rent PRIME RETAIL LOCATION I-35 frontage, showroom, ofcs, warehouse 10,800sf $5,000mo. 8801 S. I-35 Dale or Mike, 631-4447

Office Space For Rent 7608 N Western Ave Retail/Office space, up to 2200sf avail, 370-1077 GREAT Office Space Various NW locations 300-6000sf 946-2516

Warehouse Space For Rent

$100 Off

1st Mo Rent 1&2 Bedrooms Furnished & Unfurnished NEWLY REMODELED GATED COMMUNITY

CAVE CREEK ON ROCKWELL 3037 North Rockwell

495-2000 $200 off

1st Mo Rent Selected Units LARGE TOWNHOMES & APARTMENTS • Washer, Dryers, pools • PC Schools, fireplaces

Yukon

438

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

Condominiums, Townhouses For Rent 441 Newly remodeled, Summit Ridge, 2 bd, 2 ba, FP, $800 mo no pets 348-3500

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PARKLANE 721-5455 $99 Special

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

3 Bed 2 Bath Mustang & Yukon. No section 8. Maria 405-618-0563

HEFNER ROAD & MAY, 2/2/2, 2531 W Hefner Rd appt only $900¡843-5853 Nice 2bd $475+gas & elec 1113 NW 27th 232-9101

2221 N. Meridian

946-6548

Walford Apts-Midtown518 NW 12 Giant 1 bed 1bath 1100sf $800/mo $600/dep dishwasher & wash&dryer hkups, must see; Studio 650sf $600mo $300dp 409-7989 no sec 8

1 Month Free!

2bd $575 Casady751-8088

Plaza Apts – Art Deco 1744 NW 17 1bed 1bath Starting at $500/month $250dp 409-7989 no sec8 Briargate 1718 N Indiana 1bd, 1ba, 800 sf, wood floors, all elect, $550 mo, $250dp 409-7989 no sec8 Furnished/Unfurnished Bills Paid » Wkly/Monthly Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest 370-1077 MAYFAIR Great location! 1/2 bd W/D hdwd flr quiet secure ngbrhood ¡947-5665 1bd 1ba Clean & Quiet $340/mo 1441 NW 92nd Special avail 405-767-3323 800 N. Meridian 1bd All bills paid 946-9506

»»»»»»»»»»»»» » Bills Paid 681-7561 » » 1 bd From $550 Move» » 2 bd From $650 In» » 3 bd From $740 Today» » Call for Special » »»»»»»»»»»»»

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

OKC SW 1bed, bills paid, no pets, $450 month + dep, 272-0650.

Bills Paid Furnished/Unfurnished

21240LkShdws4/3.5/3 $2300 2817 NW 170 3/2/2 $1300 18117 EngOak 3/2/2 $1225 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com Exec home, 2828 Canton Dr, 4 bed, 2.5bath, 3 car, $1500 mo, 405-397-9075.

Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th 3 bed, 2 bath, ch&a, 3/4 acre, lots of storage $950mo Call 974-1250

3 bed, 1.5 bath $525mo Refs req'd. 222-4386 740 SW 1st, Moore

3/2/2, storm shelter, 1+ acre, appls, tiled, 1104 S Rockwell, $825, 203-8150. 2814 S WOODWARD 2bd 1ba $450mo 408-5836 1709 SW 16th 2bed 2bath 1 car garage $450mo 408-5836

2212 NW 26th spacious 3bd 2ba brick home 2ba. Nice! Detached garage, fireplace, great area, Only $795. Fidelity RE 410-4200, 692-1661

2 bed, carport, lrg fenced backyard, $600 month + dep, 272-0650.

Windsor Hills Executive home 2 story 4 bed, 2K bath, 2 car, fenced back yard. $1250 mo + dep 946-0111 or 887-4455

Country Living, Minco, 3 bed, 2 bath, $699 month, 405-370-0182.

3232 Brushcreek, in Quail Creek on the golf course, 3 bed, 2.5 bath, 2 car, 1 FP, $1875 mo, $1500 dep. ¡ 831-0825

OCU-SHEP MALL, lrg historical 3 bd, 2 ba, hardwood flrs, French doors, fp, $550+dep, 524-0222. 3317 Pioneer extra sharp 2bd home, clean, fenced, nice area. Only $550? Fidelity410-4200, 692-1661 2459 W Sheridan, 3 bd, 2 ba, carport, w/d hookup, $500 mo + dep, 601-5191 1514 NW 17th 4 bed 2ba 2car 1920sf $1200/mo $900dp 409-7989 no sec8 »» SECTION 8 OK»» 336 NW 85th , 3bd $695 per mo, 942-3552

PC 3 bd, 2 ba, 2 car brick, like new, $1000/mo, $500/dep, 495-6446. 3 bed, 1 bath, attch 2 car gar. ch&a, 2410 NW 32nd no sec. 8, $700, 842-1137 8817 N. McMillan 3bed, 2ba, $1100 Call 903-523-9060, No Sec.8

3308 Brighton Pl nice, 3 bd, 2ba 2car, ch&a, $1100 mo, 405-205-2343 819-4097 3/2/2 4836 Rocky Rd (Deer Run Add) built '01 $895+ $500dep 826-6720

3/2/2, 2 homes, $1000$1100 mo, NW 115th, May & Memorial 405-205-2343.

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

NEW ON MARKET 2 3 & 4 bedrooms now avail. Low dep. or work for dep. (Handyperson needed) No application fees. Section 8 okay. 702-9798 or 209-7827 Houses All Areas- Free List 4 bed from $595-1295 3 bed from $495-995 2 bed from $395-795 605-5477 2545 SW 59th 1020 SW 58th-2bd duplx new carpet/paint, appls, no pets/smoking, $595mo sec 8 ok, owner 642-4116 4 bedroom house. Section 8, $825 month. Call Kevin at 213-5168

CANADIAN COUNTY LAND AUCTION Saturday, 2/25, 10AM, 15501 SW 59th St, Union City, OK. 113 acre farm. Legal 21-11N-6W. For pictures & more info kencarpenterauction.com 405-620-1524 ANTIQUE AUCTION Sat - Feb 18th - 10:06 a.m. 3200 W. Modelle Clinton, OK Oak Furniture - Toys Assorted Glassware Lg. Lot of AM Flyer & Lionel Trains 580-323-6120 www.heardknight.com

¡ Laminate Flooring 2100 sf, 25 yr warranty, 95¢/sf ¡ Prefinished oak, Hardwood, 2400 sf, 30 year warranty $2/sf ¡¡ 405-632-0499 ¡¡ GOBER BUILDINGS LLC Post Framed Buildings: 30x40x10, (2) 12x8 overhead (1) entry door, and concrete $12,500. Call 405-650-2556 •Solid Brazilian Cherry• • Hardwood Flooring • (2600sf) Beautiful, never used $2.50/sf 632-0499 Sheet Metal, 3'x10', $18, Mon-Sat. 405-390-2077. Assorted Colors!

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

M seeking roommate, Nice home, $390mo + 1/2 elec. No dep. No lease 789-6334

1 bedroom in my home $350 mo, 1/3 of utilities. No pets, 405-495-8512

Picture Framing Equip., 100's art prints, supplies, Great hobby or home Business, $3000. trade show booth display. 405-414-3004 BBQ Concession Trailer $32,000 and Restaurant Equipment $50-$2000 405-823-4642 RESTAURANT TABLES, CHAIRS, AND BAR STOOLS. 947-5013

Rest equip-100s -chairs, tables, refrig, grills, fryers, hoods. 417-5310.

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

1 bd, newly remod., w/d hk-up, ch&a ¡ $450+$400 343 NW 96th 478-3910

Weekly/Monthly 370-1077

Houses for rent

3320 S Woodward, large 3 bed, w/d hookup, fncd, $525 + $250, 631-8039.

NH 1069 bale wagon diese, 5 speed, new paint, 405-574-4642

Antiques, Art, Collectibles 501 Football Collector Cards. 100s of them. Asking $200obo. Call after 4:30pm, Lynn 405-328-1103.

FREE DELIVERY OKC! Washer $125 Dryer $125 Refrigerators $175 Warranty & Free Del. Call 405-210-2230. Frigidaire SxS Refrig, w/icemaker off-white $300; Nintendo DS w/ 8 games $75 227-2144 GE Washer & Dryer, Exc Cond $150/both; Nice patio table w/6 chairs $50 Call 283-0338 Daryl's Appliance: W&D $75 & up, limited supply! 5yr warr. Refr/Stoves $125 & up, 1yr warr 405-632-8954 BlowoutSale!All app xtra clean 1yr wnty 732-8503 stevensappliances.com BlowoutSale!All app xtra clean 1yr wnty 732-8503 stevensappliances.com

'94 Case Backhoe 580ck extahoe, Cab Ht/Air & '87 Carrier King Tag-a-long 9 ton trailer $24,500 Call 919-6517 OKC

65" Mitsubishi DLP TV 3y/o set with brand new DLP bulb. Need to sell. Must pick up. in Moore $1000 OBO Derrick or Michelle 405-735-5523

2008 NH TN60A 4wd, 57hp tractor w/ loader, power shuttle, 2 remotes, 272 hours, exc condition.

Central New Holland OKC 495-6151 Edmond 341-7829 800-256-1638 '94 Case Backhoe 580ck extahoe, Cab Ht/Air & '87 Carrier King Tag-a-long 9 ton trailer $24,500 Call 919-6517 OKC

STOCK UP & SAVE 7 RK-Unsplit Wood $300 Del 6 RK-Split Wood $425 Del 3 RK-Split Wood $220 Del 1 RK-Split Wood $85 Delivered & Stacked. Pick Up $60. (405) 641-4856 SEASONED OAK $80/rk Fast Delivery & Stacked 3 ricks delivered $220 405-314-5415 or 405-262-4950 SEASONED FIREWOOD FAST DELIVERY NEATLY STACKED $100/RICK, $60/K RICK 788-2398 OR 328-3601 WOODS UNLIMITED Mixed seasoned woods PU $50 2 Ricks Deliv $125 (405) 473-2851 996-6352 VISA/MC Accepted. The Firewood King $100/rick, delivered & stacked, OKC metro area, 405-818-7853 Good oak firewood- seas. unseas. split & deliver. $85rick 473-4426 753-4928 Firewood: 15 ricks Oak $100/rick, 4 Pecan $120, Del. & Stacked 777-0969 Split Oak & Pecan Delivered & stacked 405-596-0348 Firewood: 15 ricks Oak $100/rick, 4 Pecan $120, Del. & Stacked 777-0969 Mixed, split firewood, quick delivery, $90/rick $170/cord 405-823-8105 Split Oak, $90 del & stk. Season $100, Pecan $120 ‘¡¡ 405-401-0854 ¡¡‘

QUEEN PILLOW-TOP MATTRESS. Still in plastic! Unused. Must Sell! $175 ¡‘¡ 405-620-1913

Handicapped scooter $400; Electric wheelchair $400; Lift scooter/ wheelchair inside vehicle $275 »»» 488-7017 Red Rascal scooter, swivel chair, new batteries, $1600, 405-406-2379 Pride Heavy Duty 4 wheel scooter. $1,050. 405-632-2781

6y/o 3K T Condensor & air handler w/reefer line R-22 $500 Cash 405-527-9231

2 HONDA GENERATORS very low hours $550. Craftsman Rototiller 5.5hp, Briggs & Stratton motor $350. Troybilt Pony Rototiller, Briggs & Stratton motor, very low hours $400. 205-9950 or 203-4210 InfraRed Tube Heaters, NG/LP, $1000-$3000, Steve, 405-823-2917 Automotive lifts 2 & 4 posts new-used $1500$3000 Steven 818-7860 Trenching machine, rideon, Case 28hp, almost new digging teeth, back fill blade, good condition, $1700. 405-321-6279 1000 gal Propane Tank ¡¡¡ $500 Cash ¡¡¡ 405-527-9231

Propane Tanks Rebuilt, Warranty, 500 gal $515, Others available. 405-375-4189 www.blttanks.com Nice Loblolly Pines 11', Shumard & Sawtooth Oak, 2K diameter, $125 ea. John 370-9571 Car Top Rack Carrier $150, Bissell help home vac $50, 405-632-2781

Antique Piano, Good Condition, needs tuned $300 neg. 631-3830

3 Buildings Full - Good Used Office Furniture. 510 W. Reno 236-3166

Elna sewing machine Mod. 3007 $150; Elna 4 Thread Serger $200; Brothers Mod. PE-150 embroidery machine $200; Baby Lock Serger Imagine Wave Jet-Air Threading $400obo. Call after 4:30pm, Lynn 405-328-1103. Picture Framing Equip., 100's art prints, supplies, Great hobby or home Business, $3000. trade show booth display. 405-414-3004

CORUM 1904 GOLD COIN WATCH PAID OVER $12,000 $7950 OBO BOB 3598400 480-717-9535

Please give us a loving home. We have been spayed & neutered, declawed & shots. FREE 741-3420

550 HEAD AUCTION 180 Penner Angus bred heifers, 105 commercial Angus bred heifers, 160 Penner Angus open heifers, 100 commercial Angus open heifers, 20 (Penner/Conley) reg. Angus bulls, 5 Penner Angus (low birth weight) bulls. Feb. 25th, 12 Noon @ Freeman Livestock Barn Sulphur, OK. 580-618-0946 CHAROLAIS BULLS 1 & 2 year olds, gentle, 903-814-5008/580-657-3888 Young angus cows w/big calves 3-N-1 Reg. AI ET EPD DNA 405-247-3220

Airedale Pups, AKC, s&w PROVEN BLOODLINES $425. 405-433-2169 AKC REG TINY POMS AKC tiny Poms. Call for details. $500-$2000 Red Rock Poms 405-640-7953 redrockpoms.com ALAPAHA BLUE BLOOD BULLDOG PUPPIES $1000-$1200 405-3010618 www.facebook. com/oklahomaalapahas

Alaskan Malamute Valentine's Pups M & F $500 to $800 640.0635

405-295-2222

www.totallytickets.com

5x8, 5x10, 6x12, w/gates; like new 16 foot tandem; $650-$1050 Cash 670-1850 5x8 ut $795•12'x77 $945 16'ut $1300•18'car h$1895 J&J Trailers 405-682-2205 5x8, 5x10, 6x12, w/gates; like new 16 foot tandem; $650-$1050 Cash 670-1850 5x10 LAWN TRAILER with fold down gate $595 »» 824-6348 18' DOVETAIL CAR TRAILER $1600 obo 405-826-4200

We Buy Appliances, Working or Not 405-549-7004

Savannah Cats 1 m 3 f 15wks TICA myspottedcats.com $500. to $900. 405-570-2867 Kitty Wranglers Cat Rescue grey-calico-siamese-tabby S/N $35 ’ 722-9622

BOXER PUPPIES AKC , 3 Females $350. 517-4872 Boxer Puppies, AKC M&F fawn & flashy, s&w, pop, $300 ea. 918-387-4216 BOXERS AKC FOR VALENTINES DAY AKC Boxers, Fawn male and Brindle female $350.00 580-371-5198/ vwheeler@hughes.net will meet 1/2 way

Bull Mastiff ACK M 10wks. S/W $500 hlth guar, 405-379-3553 BULL TERRIER PUPPY, AKC reg, male, white, 11 weeks old, s/w, ready to go, $1,000 580-6477061, 580-492-5218 BULL TERRIES PUPPIES 9 wk old white Males, $1000 obo. 405-249-9030 or 405-414-8914. Cavalier AKC, 3 F, 1 M, 8 weeks, tri & blen $550 405-638-0049, 643-5481 Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Female tri color Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. 3 months. $1000.00 405-202-2221 Cav King Charles pups, ACA, s/w, tri color, $280, OK #04, 918-426-5181. CHIHUAHUA ’ puppies Fawn & white, dewclawed, 7 wks old, no papers, M $150, F $250. ’ Great Valentines gift! 405-496-8049 after 5pm Chihuahua, only 1K lb 4 mo F, good w/cats & other dogs $100 659-7576 Chihuahua 2 F, 4 M, rare colors, micro, s/w, $250$600, 580-548-7075

THUNDER TICKETS All Sports & Concerts » Local & Nationwide»

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Freshly Renovated 2 & 3 bed apts. Sec 8 ok. Now Acc. 1 bd vchr for 2bd. Call 475-9984 for info.

READY FOR SPRING? $189 1st Month, Pool Park, 293-3693 ALL BILLS PAID ! DREXEL ON THE PARK

3332A Newcastle Blvd Small effic. Duplex $300mo 408-5836

Moore Schools 3 bd, 1.5 ba, 2 car, ch&a $750mo, $500dep Call 631-8220

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Valencia Apts

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS Charles N. Atkins, Opportunities Gardens, is now accepting applications for efficiencies and 1 bedroom apartments. Come in to see what we offer: •All utilities included in rent •Laundry facilities •Off-street parking •Accessibility to public transportation •24 hr. “We Care” Maintenance •Frost –free refrigerator •Elevator •In-house security •Social services and activities Don’t delay. Call today at: (405) 424 – 3142, or better yet, stop in at Charles N. Atkins is located at 1917 NE 20th Street, Oklahoma City, OK. If you are disabled and need assistance with the application process, please contact us for assistance.

6629 NW 123 3/2/2 $1195 14319 Penn #D 2/2.5 $950 2622Feathrstne3/2/2 $1095 1505 Oxford Way 3/1/1 $750 6704 NW 124 3/2/2 $1195 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com

787-1620 $200 OFF

8108 N. MacArthur Blvd.

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

Large 2 bedroom, CH&A, W/D hook up, newly remodeled, immaculate Must see! 1016 NE 19th 405-406-0565

5920 NW 28th 3/1, large yard, WD hookups CH/A $595 Mo / $400 Dep TMS Prop 348-0720

7301 NW 23rd

2420 SW 50th 3bed 1bath $550mo 408-5836 4512 S LEE 2bed 1bath Xlarge garage $475mo 408-5836

WILLIAMSBURG

Immediate move in 2 & 3 bed Townhouses Washer/Dryers, Fireplaces PC Schools

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

NW CLEAN FURNISHED BILLS PAID, $450+MO. NO PETS, 721-0296

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

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

All Utilities Cable High speed internet Telephone Free Laundry Business Center 2 Pools Free Movie Rental Breakfast Mon.-Fri. Social Hour Free Gym Passes

» » » » » » » » » » »

3315K SW 28th Upstairs apartment. 2bd 1bath new carpet, ALL BILLS PAID $575mo 408-5836 $99 SPECIAL Lg 1bdr, stove, refrig., clean, walk to shops. $345 mo. 632-9849 Furnished/Unfurnished Bills Paid » Wkly/Monthly Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts, Hillcrest 370-1077 $99 Move In Special!!! Lg 1 and 2 Bdr, $345 to $420 mo. 632-9849 » » » FURNISHED »»» Efficiency $305-$360 2820 S Robinson 232-1549 SAN-TEE APTS SMALL EFFIC. $275MO 685-2909

Chihuahua AKC Lg Hr Choc & Wh F, $450. 580-467-6470 American Bulldog Pups, 8 wks, s/w, big & bully 2M, 1F, $450. 429-9028 Aussies, Mini, 6wks old, $400-$600 580-695-6004 Australian Shepherd Puppies ASCA reg. Merles and blacks $250-$400 www. cowboyloveaussies.com Australian Shep. Cutest Cuddliest, merles, tri, wrmd $35 cash 412-2786 Basset Hound Puppies ACA 4M & 3F shots and wormed 9wks. $350. 918-680-1268 Beagle Pups, Adorable! 5 wks, tri color, 3F 2M, $150 ea. ’ 769-6369 BICHON, ACA, M, 8wks, small, playful, s/w, $300, Will meet. 405-238-8484 BICHON FRISE, Adorable 1M AKC, 3M Un-Reg. $225-$250; + 1M, 7 weeks, $300 ¡ 214-7857 BICHONS - 2 M, 2 F Males $175, females $250. ’’ 405-413-2801 BLUE HEELER PUPS 6 weeks old, ranch bred from working parents, $150 ’ 405-664-2832 Boston Terrier Male 1K yrs, $125; Siamese cat $25 524-1599 Boxer, AKC $400 cash willisboxers. webs.com 537-5709 Boxer AKC Puppies Fawn Boxer Pupppies, 3 Black Mask Female. AKC w/ Pedigree $400 call 405-596-4522 Moore, OK BOXER puppies, REG. M & F, Whites, Reverse Brindles ’ 10wks, s/w/d/t. $400 ’ cash only. 405-848-5096 Boxer Puppies, brindles & fawns, s/w/t/dc, $275. ’’ 580-461-1731

ANIMALS

UNFURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID

STUFF

Established Business For Sale

Chihuahua Puppies 2F, 2M CKC Reg, Tiny puppies $250-$300 405-380-4988 call or text Chihuahua pups, adorable, cute, small. 7 wks. $100. ’’ 405-602-1882 Chihuahua Puppies, 6wks blk, wht, tan $100ea will meet 580-542-4404 Chihuahuas, ACA & Mixes $175-$300 okcpoms.com OK#02 405-609-9241 Chihuahuas, 8 weeks, shots, health guarantee $125-$350 ’ 381-3740 Chihuahuas, 7 wks EXTRA TINY TEACUPS $250 Cash ¡ 519-8584 Chow Chow Puppies, AKC M/F; 8 weeks; blue/ black. S/W. $450. obo 405-990-3976 CHOW CHOW PUPPIES Registered $500. 405-285-0316 COCKER PUPS 1m 1f Adorable s/w groomed $175 ea 681-5155 COLLIE AKC PUPS Pics@http://bonnycollie. shutterfly.com/ POP 6wks 5M/8F All colors $350ea. 405-341-8576

Collie Puppies AKC, 6 weeks, S/W, POP, $150 each, 405-328-0056 CORGI akc PUPPIES s/w vet raised fun $350 405-567-4693 567-7221 Doberman Puppies AKC ready Feb. 17, t/d/s/w Cambria/Warlock bloodlines, red males, black females, $350 cash, 405-974-9339


Business Opportunity

ENGLISH BULL Affordable ’ 1-3 yr M studs & Fs ’ ch. bldlns $750 or highest bid, Sun. 1-4 918-951-5775

German Shepherd Pups Full Blood AKC GSD Males/Shots/4 Blk/Tan 1 Solid Black /6 Weeks Old $500 405-310-9546 StinehartShepherds.com German Shepherd Purebreed, 1 y/o M puppy w/ first round shots. $275 OBO Derrick or Michelle Lewis 405-735-5523 in Moore

English Bulldogs AKC, 7wks old. Taking deposits. $1200 ea. 918-650-8881 lakeridgebulldogs.com

English Bulldog Adorable Puppies AKC Home Raised Born 12-19 Jervis Buldogs $1300 jumbojervis@yahoo.com 918-706-8514

English Bulldog, AKC 4M 2F Pups $1500; 4yr F $500. 405-550-0886 English Bulldog Puppy F, fawn & white, 10wks, AKC, $900. 903-826-1195

EnglishLabs CH SIRED Chocolate pups Excellent pedigree and personality. 5 F, Blocky heads and stocky bodied. Parents intelligent and excellent hunt pedigree $600.00 Beth Chelf 405-566-9860

English Mastiff puppies AKC 15+ Champs in pedigree $600-1200 www. mastiffpups.webs.com or 405-537-0873 ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPS AKC 8 wks old $250. 405-209-6525

German Wirehair Pups 8wks, 3M 3F, Reg, point, track & retrieve, great family dogs, exc bldline, $350. 918-805-7512

Lab pups chocolate/ yellow AKC reg s/w

LABRADOODLE hm 2/14 PICK OF LITTER Female www.tiny.cc/edmond $800 Msg/txt 283-2579

Golden Retrievers 9 weeks old, 6M, 5F, s/w $200 each ’ 685-0860

LABS, AKC, 6wks, white, blocky, champ ped, sire OFA'd, s/w/dc, POP, $375. 818-4182

Great Dane Pups Registered Danes. All shots and wormed. POP. Several colors and prices. Will email pic. and meet new owners. Please no text $250 and up ojnelson@pldi.net 580-435-2391 Great Pyredane Puppies !! Pyrenees/ Dane 6 wks old 3 males 3 females $100. 405-596-3307 Havaneese AKC, cute, blk & white, tri color, $300-$350, 580-583-2696

HUNTING DOGS FOR SALE

BRITTANY PUPS Registered Brittany pups orange and white $250.00 580-766-2024 Italian Greyhound 4 AKC Pups. Beauties! $250 392-3467 or 408-8724

French Bulldog Puppies, AKC, 8wks, 3F, 1M, cream & fawn ’ $1,500 (918)407-5220/407-5221 stubbornbullies.com

Labrador puppies 2 males 5 females. Credit cards accepted through Paypal. All puppies for sale listed at www. oklabradors.com $200$300. 405-672-1972

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS AKC 8 WEEKS VERY LIGHT TO MED $250 $400 918-306-0255. 918-306-1826

Great Dane AKC, Blue, 9 weeks old, $1000 each. POP, vet checked, (405) 598-6870 249-7627

Jack Russell Pups Jack Russell Pups 7wks S/T/D/W $150. Dustin 405-779-4452 Jack Russell, ACA, 2F, 8wks, s/w/t/dc, vet ckd $200 ’’’ 405-612-5399

Min Pin puppies, ACA, s/w/e/t, $150-$200, OK #04, 918-426-5181.

Mal-Shi's

Adorable 9 week old males. Vaccines all up to date. $300. Call or text 580-515-6680. MAL-SHIH, ABSOLUTELY ADORABLE FUR BALL! $395 Visa/MC 826-4557 Maltese & Morkies T-cups, reg, s/w, $350$550, 580-548-7075 Maltese, ACA, 5 Males Champ. bloodlines, $300ea. 627-0419 ok#17

Papillion Puppies 2 F1 M 8 wks POP AKC S & W potty training 100.00-300.00 691-1069

Westie, AKC, 7 wks, S/W, 2 Males, $300 ea. Edmond, 405-824-2880

Pit Bull fullblood F aprx 7mo blk $75obo. »» Pit/ Wolf Mix. M aprx 8mo $75 obo both great with kids! 405-527-1440 Pit Bull Pups, 9 wks old, Razorsedge/Gotti, 1 Female, 2 Males, sire 110lbs, oklahomablue thunderbullies.com Pit Bull UKC reg pups D.O.B 12/26/2011 3 males 2 females all blue & white. call or text for pics & info $800 580-747-5714

Poodle Mini AKC, cute & small, blk & white, parti, $250-$300, 580-583-2696 Poodles, toy, 8 weeks, 3 red males, $300 each, 405-585-3036.

Yorkie, 5 Male, ACA reg. 7 weeks old, $250 each 580-334-8833

YORKIE, ACA, vet checked, s/w, M, 5 mos, will be small, needs good home, $400, 580-271-8108. YORKIE, AKC, 2 cute 4 words! will be tiny, 1M, 11 weeks, $600 cash, Must see! 405-631-5395 Yorkie, AKC, 1M, 9 wks vet ck'd $300 ¡ 943-2782 317-6414, 317-2042 Yorkie, CKC, 2 Females, 6 wks, Mom 5lb, Dad 3lb, Perfect Valentine! $500 405-964-5837

FRESIAN GELDING 5YR OLD BIG. $5500 405-816-5561

Yorkie ACA, tiny 7wks, 1M, 2F, $600, will meet, 405-503-8938 YORKIE ACA, M&F Pups, Awesome, Cute, Playful $300-$600¡580-660-5336 YORKIE babies T-toy A-1 qual babyface gorgeous hlth guar email pics $400$800 cash. 580-235-7812

Rottweiler, German, AKC Reg 9WKS. 1M 3F $400-$500 405-683-0893

Yorkie Female reg., pup, S/W, family size, $400 Cash, 659-9256

Schnauzer Mini, F, 1 yr old, not spayed, parti, $195. 405-844-1455 Schnauzer Mini, AKC, 6 wks, parti, 3 Females, s/w/t $295 405-659-2044

YORKIES, ACA, 3F, $600 heartlandpuppiesok.com 580-660-0120, Will Meet Yorkies, xtra tiny, cute Vet checked, $400-$600 918-207-6736

Like new Big Dog Petmate Kennel 22''wx26"hx33"l portable, in/outdoor/travel use $99, obo. 273-6691 2ftx3ft Drop-pin Cage w/wire bottom & tray $20 Cash 405-527-9231

SCHNAUZERS MINI AKC /CKC $300-$350 OK#02 okcpoms.com 405-609-9241 SHIBA-INU, 7wk Male. beautiful, fuzzy blk/tan $300 » 580-927-0770 Shih Tzu, ACA, 2M 2F, 6wks. Taking dep. $350$400ea 627-0419¡ok#17

350 ADORABLE PETS AT FREE TO LIVE NEAR EDMOND. ALL DOGS & CATS Shts & neut $60. 282-8617 www.freetoliveok.org

FINANCIAL

28' Bunk House 5th whl, slide, awning, lovingly maintained, $12,999. $13,500 w/tow pkg. See George at Secure Storage Santa Fe & Memorial or call 1-406-393-2184

JAN-PRO, the #1 fastest growing franchise in the world for 3yrs in a row, per Entrepreneur Magazine. Start your own business as low as $950dn 606-3300

'03 27' Toy Hauler; '08 27' Bunk House-both very nice $9500ea obo 922-7236

Coffee Shop Franchise Low Investment. contact@jammin-java.com

Bring Deer Racks to be Scored! Backwoods Expo Wall Of Fame-Feb 24-26, OKC Fairgrounds. Ron, 405-681-1333 Dale, 405-769-8816 German Wirehair Pups 8wks, 3M 3F, Reg, point, track & retrieve, great family dogs, exc bldline, $350. 918-805-7512

Winchester Rifle 94 XTR 22cal. collector $700, Taurus 9mm, millennium, $400, 405-590-2234

Tavern 8477 NE 23. With equip. & pool tables 525-6671 15 Convenience Stores For Sale in OKC, 405850-5288, Spencer RE

Buying oil & gas properties, any status, pay top $$$ 800-880-8004, 405-740-9000

WE BUY GUNS Mustang Pawn & Gun Over 1,000 New/Used Guns Tue-Sat 9-6 376-GUNS Conceal/Carry Class $40 Gun, ammo, range provided. 405-818-7904

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

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

Rose Electric LLC Service calls #87915 405-703-4556

SHARPE'S ELECTRIC & Heat & Air OKC 341-8488

Excavating, Backhoe, Tractor Work

TOTAL FENCE SOLUTIONS Best Price Guaranteed. Free Est. (405) 313-0502

REPAIR & NEW FENCES 36 yrs experience, 631-1925

3 rooms steam cleaned, tile, truck mount, $35, 406-5739

1999 80'x16' Summerset twin merc 5.0, 90hrs, 3br, 2ba, 2 showers, fully furnished, stern thruster, like new, 1 owner $159,000 Contact Burk Collins, 817-268-5489, cell 817-307-1109 2008 G3 LX 322 C Tri Log Pontoon with Yamaha 150 hp motor, perfect for fishing, tubing or relaxing. Excellent condition, 1 owner $27,000. 580-515-1779

I BUY BOATS Cell 580-595-1386

AVITA 950 professional rowing machine, $300 405-751-9286

Golf Car Center Yamaha, E-Z-GO New/Used 2622221 Okc, 866-323-2221 OK’s largest sel. of used Golf cars 800-276-0571 OK’s largest sel. of used Golf cars 800-276-0571

Carport, Patio, Awning

All Steel Carports, Patio Covers ¡ 2car carport $1695 free est 799-4026/694-6109

Child Care Services FOUND 2/2 Friendly lrg female dog. SE OKC. Call 740-1915 to identify Black Lab F. white markings Smart! Vic of 12th & Santa Fe. to ID 312-3789 Chihuahua F pup, about 6 months. Free to good home. 405-202-7940. Terrier, white male, near SW 48th and Independence, 405-708-3190. Pit Bull puppy M Del City SE 20th & Mansfield, Call to ID 826-6554 CORGI MALE. PLEASE CONTACT TO ID. 405-380-8180

Reasonable Child Care Newborn to Preschool SW OKC. 405-464-6990

DIRT & GRIME? Don't Have The Time? Call A Fresh Start @ 326-4332 Sunshine Cleaning Service ins/bond 793-1630, 625-3930

2/8 blk Lab Puppy found: Waverly & Britton Rd now@Village Dog Shelter

All types, comm'l & res, free est, ins, 314-5344, www.marcreteok.com

Male Pekingese dog, found near NW 10th & Eagle Ln. Call to id 405-491-6781.

Tearouts/Repours Drives Patios, Etc., Bonded, Lic., Free Est., 794-8505.

AIRE-MEN #76029, $49 svc & tune-up, 923-0477

Yard Clean-up, Mowing & odd jobs. 27 yrs exp. Ins. Marcelo 919-6494

M & M SERVICES - Interior & Exterior Painting, 751-4094

CARPENTER, DRYWALL + MORE » 408-7513 »

Roofing¡Painting ¡ Free Est ¡ 812-1608 ¡

D&D Tile & Remodeling 29 yrs exp. ¡‘¡ 971-4492 Ceramic Tile. Kitchen. Bath. Free Est. 706-9135 Leaky Showers, Tubs & Tile Floors 33 yrs 728-0545

Wood Flooring Experts hardwood, vinyl, laminate, dustless sanding/resurfacing ¡ Call 405-492-9897 ¡ lic.#898719 Ins/Bond Free Est All Types of kiln dried Hardwood Flooring & Lumber 580-931-6125

All Professional Tree Service. All Major Credit Cards or Cash. Sr. Disc. 50 mile radius 924-1430/885-2572

Garage Doors & Openers Sales & Service 794-1718

Arboreal Tree Service Military & Sr. Discounts removal, trimming, stump grinding Free Est. 405-881-8501

Affordable Rain Gutters Seamless Aluminum, Cleanout, Repairs, Leaf Guard, 405-728-7246.

Computer Services On-Site PC Maintenance $40 1ST HR » $35 AFTER 405-794-0998

Heating, Furnace Service

RAY'S ELECTRIC »»» 820-7466 »»»

BACKHOE-BOBCAT WORK, 341-5404

¡¡ WILD HOG HUNTS ¡¡ $75 per day, ¡¡¡ 580-294-3035 ¡¡¡

Yorkies

Adorable 9 week old males & females. Vaccinations up to date. ACA registered. $300-$750. Call or text 580-515-6680

2005 Honda TRX300EX 4 wheeler, low hours and miles, retail $1850, sell for $1700, 410-2552.

Restaurant 3104 N. Portland. With kitch equip 525-6671

YORKIE 16 WEEKS EXTRA TINY TEACUP $350CASH. 519-8584

Puggles - 1 black Female, 1 fawn Female, 8 weeks, shots, tiny & adorable, kid friendly $100. 405-551-5460

SCHNAUZER, AKC, 6 wks, white F, s/w/e/t/d, $300, 366-7723

Maltese AKC 1st shots 2M $250, 2F $350 accepting dep. for Valentine delivery NW OKC’ 405-990-5137

Westie Babies, M&F, 8wks Our Granddogs, home raised $300-$350 434-9440

3Appys 8-18mnths gntle 1leopard,etc race QH dad $125 & up 405-313-8152

POMERANIAN PUP AKC VALENTINE tiny male. EMAIL FOR PICTURE, rdwhite@pldi.net $500.00 580-334-1111

Maltese, M&F, 6-8 months, 3-5 pounds, $250-$500, 405-200-4205

MALTESE ACA M&F Pups Awesome, Cute, Playful $250-$800¡580-660-5336

Terrier Mix, F, 1yr, house broken shots, $50 392-3467 or 408-8724

Weimaraner Puppies 1 male left! ACA Reg. T/ D/S/W. Pics available. $350 Call (405) 227-7448

Schnauzer, ACA Mini, 2 F, black, ears done $350ea 627-0419 ok#17

MALTESE ACA, baby face, 1 M $250, 3 F $500 & 1 F t-cup, 288-2018

Silky Terrier, 2 F, $275, 9 weeks, s/w, registered, hlth guar, 405-379-3553

Old English Mastiff ’ AKC Champ. pedigree, 5M, 8F, 6wks, brindle & fawn, $800ea ’ 405-659-5181

MALTESE, AKC, 3F, 1M, Tiny, $350-$450 heartlandpuppiesok.com 580-660-0120, Will Meet

Maltese 2 Tiny F 8wks reg,d/w,shots,d/c removed,1.7lb&1.4lb $400-$600. 405-514-7471

HAY 130 4'x5' net wrapped $75 ea, Waveland, AR, 479-495-9841

Vizsla Puppies AKC 8 week old champion puppies, 1 male and 3 female. Sire and Dam are our pets. Perfect bird dog or family pet. $800 Amy 970-275-6789

Pit Bull adba reg pups 1 brindle with white markings.first shots and dewormed. Call or text. $500. 580-603-5906

4x5 1/2 net wrapped mixed grass hay, $75 a bale, 405-761-1166

Banshee 4 wheeler, exc cond, lots of extras, $3,500FIRM; Honda 250R 3 wheeler, great cond, $1,500FIRM. 832-444-4985

>>

English Bulldog Puppies AKC 7Wwks first shots wormed vet checked. $1200-$1500. Traci 405-830-7367 a_zmom@yahoo.com

Lab pups, reg., blk, 6 wks s/w, hunting bloodlines, $150 ea., 405-527-3338

Golden Ret., AKC, 6wks, S/W, 4M $300, 1F $350, health guar. ¡ 570-5768

MASTIFF, Tibetan, smooth 2m 1f all colors 5wks will be good guard dogs beautiful s/w $125 551-5460

Lab Pups, country raised, 5M, 3F, yellow, AKC reg, s/w/dc, credit cards accepted $400. 405-779-6473

German Shepherds, AKC, 9wks, 2M, 2F, excellent German ped, POP, s/w, $750. 799-7620/250-8266

Goldendoodles & Poodles shots,pics-info call or text $700 918-791-8800

Mastiff, English AKC pups 2 Males, 8 weeks old $500 ea . 580-371-8019

33 bales, 4x5 net wrapped Sudan grass hay. $110/bale. 733-8688

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ENGLISH BULLDOGS FOR VALENTINES DAY AKC English Bulldogs, M, ch. lines, great markings, will meet 1/2 way $1350.00 580-371-5198/ vwheeler@hughes.net

Lab Pups, country raised, 5M, 3F, yellow, AKC reg, s/w/dc, credit cards accepted $400. 405-779-6473

Maltipoo-ADORABLE! ITTY BITTY! $395, Visa/MC, 405-826-4557

Siberian Husky, AKC reg, 2M, 2F, black & white, 1st shots, vet checked, $800, 910-261-8281.

200 bales, good quality Soybean hay, 3ftx3ftx8ft $100/bale. 405-238-6829 or 405-207-6310

>>

English Bulldog Puppies, AKC 1F 2M, $1000-$1500 (918)407-5220/407-5221 stubbornbullies.com

LAB Puppies, AKC, 6 wks old, 1 yellow M, 2 black F, 1 black M, 1st shots, de-wormed $200ea 882-5599 or 882-5373

MALTI-POOs, Very Small Valentine Puppies, $250 405-380-8469

Siberian Huskies, AKC, Ready 4 Valentine's! www.skylimitranch.com $400-$500¡580-504-7115

$99. 474-2375

SERVICE DIRECTORY

FRENCH PUPS Spots & Dots, Fancy colors, Short & Stocky $850-$950 Ready 2/24 (580)677-1449/263-0379

LAB PUPPIES AKC Very nice, S&W, chocolate, yellow & black. 6 wks old, $250-$400. 405-640-1153

MALTESE PUPPIES $325-$475 580-220-5866 pedestalpuppies.com

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Divorces

TAKE NOTE

FRENCH BULLDOG AKC, pup F, white S/W $825. 580-332-0456 will meet

LAB AKC PUPS English, 25 Mo Health Guar, Parents OFA Cert, PuppyCam www.N40K. com Ylw males & females avail. S/W/D, POP $600 (580)-478-3966

BERMUDA, fertilized, sprayed, wrapped, round bales. You haul. $175/bale or 20+bales $150ea. 405224-6653, SW Chickasha

REC REATION

DWARF RABBIT MALE Very friendly » Super Cute $20 obo 405-527-1440

FRENCH BULLDOG AKC Wonderful puppy, great Valentine's gift $1200. 405-406-2727

Siberian Huskies, AKC, CHAMPION BLOODLINE, only 2 left, 1M, 1F, R&W, blue eyes, s/w, 12 wks, $300 ‘¡‘ 412-0561

1979 Arizona custom VW trike project, lots of new custom parts, needs rewiring, $4,200obo. Call after 4:30pm, Lynn 405-328-1103.

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Douge de Bourdeaux

French Mastiffs puppies for sale. 8 males and 4 females. Both parents are on site. $500. Please call 405-361-5703 for info and pics

Shih Tzu puppies ACA, 2F $300 1M $200, s/w, 405-249-2446 249-2353

Jack Russell, 4F 2M 6 weeks, s/w, $125$150, ’’ 405-651-0369

L & R Tree Serv, Low Prices, Insured, Free Est, 946-3369. » GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. L & R Tree Serv, Low Prices, Insured, Free Est, 946-3369.

HOME IMPROVE. REPAIRS. REMODEL. ROOFING. FREE ESTIMATES. 410-2495 Mr. Fixit Handyman Service. We do it all for less. Free est. Bond. Ins. Visa/MC 603-6104

RESIDNTIAL HAULING & CLEANING, 630-5484.



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