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APRIL 6 - APRIL 19 2016 • VOL. 12 • ISSUE 7 LOOKATOKC.COM LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION SXSW ALTERNATIVES ON PAGE 7 | BEN FOLDS Q&A ON PAGE 22

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Page 1: LOOK AT OKC | 4.6.2016

APRIL 6 - APRIL 19

2016 • VOL. 12 • ISSUE 7

LOOKATOKC.COM

LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS

FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION

SXSW ALTERNATIVES ON PAGE 7 | BEN FOLDS Q&A ON PAGE 22

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You ever have a case of the Mondays?

Not like the lighthearted, humorous one from “Office

Space.” I’m talking like a Monday where you watch a car crash into a building.

On my way home from work last month, I was hit by a another driver. My car stopped in the inter-section but the other car didn’t. The Eulberg Law Offices, 925 NW 6, were greeted with a giant pickup truck in the front lobby. Thankfully, it was in the evening and everyone had gone home. Nobody got hurt in the incident but I walked away with a lesson.

All the fun music stories that I covered in this issue could have easily been my last if that oncom-ing car had smacked my the driv-er’s side of the vehicle. It’s not fun to think about. 

I was reminded that the fun I have at concerts is a luxury. One that could disappear in a flash. I also thought about someone less fortunate than me getting into this accident. About a person not having a phone handy so they can send pictures to their family, not having a car equipped with any air bags and about getting worried about how to get to work the next day. I can’t even imagine living in Oklahoma City without a car. We’re about as walkable as pit of fiery hot coals.

I guess I’m trying to say is that I feel lucky and Mondays are awful. The fun distractions this city has to offer are plentiful but they’re fleet-ing in the face of the aftermath of a serious incident. I don’t know why I got to walk away without as much as a scratch but I’m thankful I did. 

I called my friends and told them I loved them, I made some bad jokes about almost dying and I started moving on. There’s not much else I could’ve done. If anything, I’d like to be a reminder that everyone should slow down out there. We’re next to Texas, but we don’t have to drive like we’re in Texas. Y’all should LOOKatOKC and the road, too.

Eulberg Law Offices at the scene of the incident. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

N A T H A N P O P P Efrom the editor

NATHAN POPPELOOKatOKC EDITOR

[email protected]

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from the top L O O K a t O K C

22 | Never ‘Ben’ betterNathan Poppe talks with Ben Folds

about “So There,” returning to Oklahoma City and outplaying his piano teachers at the age of 10.

7 | A tale of two citiesThere’s a lot more to Texas than

South By Southwest. Music enthusi-asts Matt Carney and Nathan Poppe go on two road trips to see what Marfa Myths 2016 and Willie Nel-son’s Luck Reunion had to offer.

LOOKatOKC EDITORNathan Poppe

PROJECT DESIGNERSSuzanne Green Ebony Iman Dallas

ADVERTISINGJerry Wagner(405) 475-3475

Nancy Simoneau(405) 475-3708

NICHE PUBLICATIONS EDITORMelissa Howell

ART DIRECTORTodd Pendleton

PHOTOGRAPHERSSteven Maupin

COVER Photo provided by Laura E. Partain

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 areaccurate. LOOKatOKC does not guarantee the events or the schedules. Readers are encouraged to call ahead for exact times and dates.

LOOKatOKC is published every other Thursday by The Oklahoman, 100 W Main, Suite 100, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73114.

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

The Oklahoman Media Group

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

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

Go to facebook.com/LOOkatOKCand become a fan.

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Just minutes into the Coen brothers’ Oscar-winning adap-tation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel “No Country for Old Men,”

Javier Bardem’s remorseless, alien hit man Anton Chigurh lobotomizes some poor sap with a cattle gun and steals his car, but the scene isn’t the film’s opening series of shots. No, instead the Coens establish a profound sense of isolation in the rugged and craggy, but low-slung and far-reaching moun-tains of the west Texas Trans-Pecos, a region so sparse that some counties’ population density comes out to a cou-ple of people — or even just a fraction of a person — per square mile. Not only is nobody coming to save you from the villain unbound of the social contracts of morality, the Coens seem to say, but in a desert this vast your body may never be found at all.

Recently, I vacationed there.“There,” specifically, is Marfa, Texas,

population near 2,000, which serves as the seat of Presidio County and is home to a decommissioned U.S. Army fort turned art museum. You’ve probably seen pictures from Marfa on Instagram and swiped along assuming it was Aus-tin. The quirky town boasts more than a dozen art galleries, a nearly century-old hotel built in the Spanish Colonial style, boutiques that sell handmade soap and designer dresses, arts festivals, a coffee roastery and a surprising number of fine-dining options, considering its loca-tion in the middle of the Chihuahuan Desert.

Most point to Donald Judd when asked how Marfa’s relationship with the arts began. Seeking a respite from the bustle of New York City in the 1970s, the not-ed critic and sculptor purchased a lot of land around Marfa — including the for-mer Fort D.A. Russell — set up the non-profit Chinati Foundation and, as you do when you buy a lot of land in the middle of nowhere, started installing art out there. Just, like, in the middle of an open field. A stark, impersonal set of 15 rectangular concrete structures sit out in full view of the highway, like Stone-henge, but with 90 degree angles. See-ing it wasn’t the last time that weekend that I was shocked by artifice set against an inhospitable landscape.

• T E X A SA tale of two cities

The Big Bend Sentinel, a weekly newspaper, 2016 in Marfa, Texas. [PHOTO BY MATT CARNEY]

W E H I T T H E R O A D T O E X P L O R E T W O S X S W A L T E R N A T I V E S

M AT T C A R N E Y D E M Y S T I F I E S M A R FA A N D N AT H A N P O P P E R U N S O U T O F L U C K I N T E X A S F O R O U R B I G G E S T T R AV E L S T O R Y O F T H E Y E A R

BY MATT CARNEY

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A R T I S T E N C L A V ESince the ‘70s, Marfa’s reputation as an art-

ist enclave has blossomed. Beyoncé even visited a few years back, which worked a lot better than saying “artist enclave” when I explained to people why I was spending two whole vacation days driving through nine hours of ruinous west Texas hellscape.

The city hosts music and film festivals that infrequently churn the economy — I went during Marfa Myths, a festival put on by the indie record label Mexican Summer — though the presence of the Hotel Paisano (which opened in 1930) and the many books and ar-tifacts available to peruse in its lobby speak to a much longer history of tourism. Big Bend National Park, several sprawling ranches and state parks all lie within driving distance, but it would seem that Marfa has long been a retreat for those seeking peace and quiet. The scenic views are just pluses.

It turns out that isolation — the nearest large U.S. city, El Paso, is a three-hour drive away — is both bug and feature to Marfa. The drive

was tedious and long, leaving my girlfriend and I somewhat unsettled at one point. We were hours deep into west Texas oil patch, our supply of “Serial” podcast episodes depleted. Each passing truck dwarfed my red hatchback, worsening the feeling that we were out of place. We feared a blown tire. But the mood lightened around Pecos when the first far-off peaks came into view. The remaining hour’s drive rewarded our efforts with idyllic scenery: the maroon clay and vibrant green scrub of the Davis Mountains.

It sounds a little corny, but its isolation real-ly does make everything about Marfa that much cooler and more oasis-like. At night, for instance, the stars become luminous, their shine amplified by the lack of light pollution. A few different locals informed us that the city uses a special type of dimmed street lights, and sure enough, step out on to the main drag anytime after about 8 p.m. and you can spot the big constellations like a 16th Century con-quistador.

A neighborhood just north of the Presidio County Courthouse.[PHOTOS BY MATT CARNEY]

The courtyard entrance to the Hotel Paisano.

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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The view from outside an art gallery along Highland Street. [PHOTO BY MATT CARNEY]

IT TURNS

OUT THAT

ISOLATION

IS BOTH BUG

AND FEATURE

TO MARFA.

MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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F O O D F O R T H O U G H TOur first night in town we had reservations

for Cochineal, a Ludivine-like, dinner-only spot off San Antonio Street that, like many of Mar-fa’s restaurants and galleries, is obscured by a lack of lighting and signage. Inside, a modest bar serves high-end booze and regional mi-cro-brews to about 30 dimly lit seats. The menu changes weekly, based on nearby pro-ducers’ stock and what’s growing in the restau-rant’s vegetable garden. In a failed attempt to spend under $50, we sampled appetizers, our favorite being a very salty quail served on a bed of crispy polenta and topped with a tart lingonberry sauce.

A few beers later, we crossed the street to Boyz II Men, the local taco trailer, where the guy taking orders either seized an opportuni-ty to mess with a few inebriated tourists or else had dedicated his business to the undoing of the food truck craze. Probably both. When quizzed about portion size, he repeatedly an-swered “Most people get four,” and referred

us to an FAQ with sarcastic answers — includ-ing, again, “Most people get four” — taped to the window. By the time we figured out what we wanted to order, he took down the name “Ethan” — neither my or my girlfriend’s first or last names resemble “Ethan” — and offered us free beer.

“Well, the beer’s free,” he said with a straight face, slamming down a couple of lukewarm cans of Lone Star. “But it’s $5.00 for the mugs you drink ‘em out of.” Stamped on our mugs, of course, was the slogan “Most people get four.”

The next morning we set into town, where we learned a lot: Marfa has an NPR station! They shot “There Will Be Blood” on a nearby ranch! Everything also is an art gallery! Daniel Day-Lewis could be seen jogging through town that summer! The Presidio County Courthouse was built in 1885 for $60,000! Conveniently, it’s also located a block from our Airbnb, salm-on-pink and the town’s largest landmark. Our stay in Marfa had become idiot-proofed.

THE PRESIDIO COUNTY COURTHOUSE WAS BUILT

IN 1885 FOR $60,000 IT’S SALMON-PINK AND THE TOWN’S

LARGEST LANDMARK.

THEY SHOT THEY SHOT “THERE WILL BE BLOODTHERE WILL BE BLOOD" ON A NEARBY RANCH ON A NEARBY RANCH

• T E X A SA tale of two cities

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LEFT : The Presidio County Courthouse sits at the end of Highland Street. ABOVE AND DETAIL BELOW : A drive-through liquor store. [PHOTOS BY MATT CARNEY]

EVERYTHING ALSO IS AN ART GALLERYEVERYTHING ALSO IS AN ART GALLERY

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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T H E C H I N A T I F O U N D A T I O N

F E S T I V E B E H A V I O RMarfa Myths’ main lineup of bands didn’t

start ‘til that evening, so we checked out a small cafe called Do Your Thing for coffee and breakfast. It’s essentially a big shed, topped by a tin roof. Inside, a matronly woman in a dress and apron prepared heaping chocolate scones, frittatas and made-to-order bowls of porridge from an open kitchen while a wide-set man dressed all in black took coffee orders from behind an amply stocked bar. I drank my pour over and leafed through the Big Bend Sentinel (sample headline: “Howard is first woman

county commissioner, we think”) while we waited on the porridge, which turned out to be two hard eggs, a couple of sausage links and some fried kale served over a bed of quinoa mixed with something a hint sweeter, maybe maple syrup. Your local Starbucks never stood a chance.  

Early in the afternoon we gathered with about 250 others to hear the avant-garde ambient artist William Basinski perform at the Chinati Foundation, which is that decommis-sioned U.S. Army base turned art space. With-

out getting too much into it, Basinski’s music is about decay: It’s composed of old recordings that disintegrate as they pass through the tape loop he feeds them through, adding little creaks and cracks and pops to the ambient sounds he first recorded some 30 years ago. The pieces he plays for us are beautiful and sad, lasting about 40 minutes in total. Aside from the occasional shuffle of a neighbor, the only other sound heard in the warehouse was the roof rattling from strong winds. Nature reminding us what decay is really about.

William Basinski performs inside a warehouse maintained by the Chinati Foundation during the Marfa Myths music festival. [PHOTO BY MATT CARNEY]

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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AND OF COURSE, THERE’S PRADA MARFA, WHICH IS NEITHER A FUNCTIONING PRADA STORE NOR LOCATED IN MARFA.

1 | Outside of The Get Go Grocery on Sun-

day. 2 | A dumpster outside  of The Get

Go Grocery. 3 | William Basinski performs inside a warehouse maintained by the Chi-nati Foundation during the Marfa Myths music festival. [PHOTOS BY MATT CARNEY]

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

2

1

3

C H E C K I T O U TWe checked out a couple of galleries

that afternoon, including Marfa Con-temporary, which we learned is an extension of the Oklahoma Contem-porary Arts Center, based in Oklahoma City. It’s a relaxing space — a reclaimed car garage or gas station painted a sedate blue and white — showing works by a local woman, and I’d put it in my top five spots in town to take a selfie. Also up there was Donald Judd’s big field of concrete installations at the Chinati Foundation, which gives tours of Judd’s home and works for $10 to $25, depending on how much you want to see. (They also give stu-dent discounts.)

Some other places worth visiting if you ever go to Marfa:

•Frama’s Coffee & Ice Cream, which conveniently shares a building with a Wi-Fi  equipped laundromat, and served us a couple of scoops of oat-meal cookie-flavored stuff that was out-of-this-world-good.

•Pizza Foundation, which we found out was in danger of closing a few

years ago until Marfa residents — fearing the loss of one of their limited number of eateries — rushed to its rescue with an $80,000 Kickstarter program. (One gentleman we talked to at the bar there showed us his re-ward for donating, which was a cou-pon for five free large pizzas.)

•Museum of Electronic Wonders & Late Night Grilled Cheese Parlour played an old David Bowie movie in black-and-white while we waited on our grub in between festival acts. (Easily the quirkiest place in a very quirky town).

•The very chic Marfa Book Company is located in the lobby of the brand-new Hotel St. George and sells books on just about everything about Marfa, its history and artwork.

•And, should you need any of the creature comforts of home, The Get Go Grocery, open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., probably has them in stock.

•Patios: If you combined all of Mar-fa’s patios into a single mega-patio, you’d probably have enough open space to host a soccer tournament;

my only regret from our visit was not having enough time to casually enjoy them all. They range in size and shape from Planet Marfa’s ample, enclosed beer garden to front- and back-yard numbers for entertaining small par-ties, or perhaps just a bit of secluded mid-afternoon reading. Maybe three cars passed in the hour I spent on the porch of our Airbnb with the new book by Ben Ratliff. Wholly undisturbed.

•And of course, there’s Prada Marfa, which is neither a functioning Prada store nor located in Marfa. You have to drive about 30 to 40 minutes north and west, past the 187-person town of Valentine, where, much like Donald Judd’s concrete structures, it just sits out there along the highway, art of commerce installed in the least prac-tical location imaginable. It sits on the southwest side of the road, facing northeast, so the best time to photo-graph it is at sunrise, I learned, as we arrived in the heat of the mid-after-noon.

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O N T H E M A PTwo other tips if you ever go to

Marfa:1. Grab a map and scribble down

hours of operation as you see them listed. While unfolding and refolding something so unwieldy every couple of minutes is certainly uncool tourist behavior, it’ll save your smartphone’s battery and data. Plus, Marfa’s much like a ski or beach town in that every-where keeps odd hours that fluctuate with the seasons. Google-powered listings can’t keep up with human circumstance.

2. Two full days is just about the right amount of time to take the town in at a leisurely pace. Anything less would feel like a rush — those patios aren’t going to enjoy themselves, after all — and anything more would probably warrant a day of exploration at Big Bend or one of the nearby state parks.

The festival itself was tightly run out

of the Capri, a new restaurant and club with a sprawling patio across the street from the Thunderbird, a trendy roadside motel where many of the performers and out-of-town visitors were staying. Inside the Capri, a raised stage sat in a garage-like space with room for some four or five hundred people. Fashionably dressed concert-goers ambled in and out between sets, chatting, drinking, laughing. If it weren’t for the local flora growing in the nearby courtyard and a couple of hirsute ranchers, the venue and its congregants wouldn’t have looked out of place in Manhattan or Los Angeles.

A two-piece version of the Baltimore post-punk outfit Lower Dens got the music started, filling in last-minute for a cancellation by the reclusive Emitt Rhodes. After that came a carefully arranged, intricately harmonized per-formance by the retro-psychedelia band Quilt and a louder, lower-stakes

set from Brooklyn art-punks Parquet Courts. But to me, they were warm-ups. I drove all that way for Sheer Mag, a band that, to that point, had only existed to me as something on the internet, to be streamed through headphones and lauded on Twitter. But the tire-pealing squeal of Kyle Seely’s lead guitar announced their presence with roughly the same sur-prise and force as if they’d entered the venue by bulldozing through one of its walls. Stiff-lipped riff-rock had no business in the middle of the desert, but hey, neither did we.

I drove all that way for

Sheer Mag...

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

Sheer Mag performs live at the 2016 Marfa Myths music festival. [PHOTOS BY MATT CARNEY]

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LEFT: Lower Dens performs live at the 2016 Marfa Myths music festival. RIGHT: The south side of the Marfa National Bank. [PHOTOS BY MATT CARNEY]

M A R F A • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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W I L L I E N E L S O N ’ S R E U N I O N E V E N T O V E R C A M E M O T H E R N A T U R E T O D E L I V E R A N I N T I M A T E , O K I E - F I L L E D T E X A S F E S T I V A L

STRAIGHT

LUCKOUTTA

Roughly 4,000 patrons attended the Luck Reunion music festival on the grounds of Willie Nelson’s Luck Ranch in Spicewood, Texas. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

• T E X A SA tale of two cities

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It’s not easy to have a good time in Austin, Texas, during South By Southwest.

I’ve gone several times to shoot photos, and I usually end up completely exhausted

and waking up just long enough to fall back asleep on a plate of breakfast tacos. It can be fun, but the music festival portion of the event feels like work.

Maneuvering through mind-numbing traf-fic, outsmarting thousands of tourists and trying to catch bands gets exceedingly more difficult every time I visit SXSW. That’s why I jumped at the opportunity to drive several miles north of the Black Friday level of crazi-ness that is downtown Austin and visit Spice-wood, Texas.

1 | Fans attending the Luck Reunion music fes-tival. 2 | Neon sign at the Luck Reunion music fes-tival. 3 | Evan Tate and Melissa Mackaly dance during The Black Lillies’ set. The two work in and around Texas. [PHOTOS BY

NATHAN POPPE]

1

2

S P I C E W O O D • T E X A SA tale of two cities

It’s the sort of festival where the host’s personality is louder than the music.

3

BY NATHAN POPPE

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Tucked away between hilly country roads, Willie Nel-son’s Luck Reunion music festival offered a peaceful, mostly successful alterna-tive to SXSW. It’s the sort of festival where the host’s per-sonality is louder than the music. Luck Reunion is on his land, after all.

In the VIP lounge, I was greeted with a pack of roll-ing papers, and it didn’t seem weird for a second. Nelson’s branded marijuana business followed me on Ins-tagram immediately after I tweeted from  the festival. Luck Reunion attracts a very particular and Americana/weed-loving crowd that’s really there for the music more than anything. I’ve never met a friendlier fes-tival crowd. Did I mention that Bill Murray was hanging around the festival, too? 

Roughly 4,000 patrons attended the Luck Reunion, which is spread between three modestly sized stages and somehow never feels crowded. A chapel, revival tent and main stage are only minutes apart from one another and feel like they were planted in an old West-ern movie set, complete with wooden facades and even a saloon. It didn’t hurt that there were couches and copious amounts of shade from trees to pad the con-cert experience.

Every set I saw was excep-tional, and Oklahoma talent had a strong showing, with performances from  Parker Millsap, John Moreland, John Fullbright, Ray Wylie Hub-bard and Horse Thief. I felt a swell of pride hearing people buzz about who they were excited to catch. No less than 10 people were saying they had to hear Moreland’s set.

1 | A crowd at Luck Reunion. 2 | Ray Wylie Hubbard performs at the Luck Reunion music festival. 3 | From left, Michael Rose, Parker Millsap and Daniel Foulks perform for a video recording at the Luck Reunion music festival. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

2 3

1OKlahoma talent had a strong showing.

• T E X A SA tale of two cities

1

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S E T R E V I E W SThese were the sets I caught during the Luck Reunion.

Song swap featuring Jonny Fritz, Andrew Combs, Robert Ellis, Shelly Colvin, Sam Outlaw and T. Hardy MorrisAs Robert Ellis fi nished a song, he looked up at the crowd in the revival tent and as politely as possible asked every-one to shut up. The acoustics of the tent made it easy to hear more than just the band, and any stray conver-sations could be heard by Ellis. It was a cool sight to see that request heeded, and when Johnny Fritz followed up with a funny, loose performance (complete with an intentionally bad guitar solo), it was all the funnier. This great collection of musicians kicked off my day and alone was worth the price of admission.

The Black LilliesThis Tennessee-based band was one of the more sur-prising acts at Luck Reunion. I had no expectations when its set began, and I wanted to join the couple dancing throughout the crowd when it ended.

Horse ThiefAs the crowd size began to swell around the main stage, Horse Thief started its afternoon set. The Oklahoma City-based band rocked a little harder than most of the acts in attendance, but its pastoral anthems still fi t comfortably in the festival’s lineup. Their highlight was a faithful, fi ery cover of David Bowie’s “Rebel Rebel.”

Aaron Lee TasjanI sat far away in the shade and ate a lobster roll during Tasjan’s set. He’s incredibly talented, no matter how closely you listen. Download his latest effort “In the Blazes” immediately. John Moreland would want you to do it.

Ray Wylie HubbardI’m late to the RWH party, but I thought his set was hilarious and fun. The Soper native, 69, spent most of his formative years in Texas, but Oklahoma should be proud to claim him, too. Check out the song “Snake Farm” and try not to sing along. 

Matthew Logan VasquezMLV’s music project Delta Spirit is taking a break, but he’s not slowing down at all. The Austin-based singer-song-writer performed new solo songs, Middle Brother tracks and a few Delta Spirit favorites. Early in the set, Vasquez accidentally cut his thumb on his guitar, and an adorable pink princess named Amelie Bryne, 8, came to the res-cue with Disney-themed Band-Aids. This was a bloody, beautiful experience. 

Jenny Lewis and LuciusThe rain forced this impromptu set to happen inside a tiny chapel with no more than 20 people inside. The two bands performed acoustic renditions and shared songs off of their latest albums. Something like this is so rare and special that it’s almost unfair for me to talk about it. Patrons tried climbing in through the chap-el’s windows to catch a glimpse, but most fans settled with sticking their heads through windows to hear the remarkable, intimate set.

Oklahoma City-based band Horse Thief  per-forms at the Luck Reunion music festival. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

The Oklahoma City-

based band rocked

a little harder

than most of the

acts in attendance.

• T E X A SA tale of two cities

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W H E N N A T U R E C A L L SThe only major hiccup came from Mother

Nature when a thunderstorm spoiled a few sets, including a secret visit from Kacey Musgraves. Dressing for the weather was impossible Friday. Between the heat of the early afternoon and the wet, chilling storm, no outfit was safe from either sweat, cold or mud.

The sky opened up in the early evening and drenched the festival grounds. Total buzzkill. It was handled well, though. Event organizers and security made sure everyone found cover and shooed people away from looting the bars filled with leftover bottles of booze. Instead of cheer-ing for bands, patrons  ooh’d and ahh’d at the lightning’s performance.

However, no amount of rain could totally hinder the Luck Reunion experience. Out of boredom and an enthusiasm for performing, many musi-cians started impromptu sets in barns, houses and even truck trailers. You can’t really put a price on moments that unscripted and unique.

Jenny Lewis didn’t need to stay late into the night and play a rescheduled set in a cramped chapel, but she did.

“This is off the cuff, guys,” Lewis said to the crowd with a smile.

Surrounded by bandmates and family, she per-formed a brief acoustic set unlike anything you could hear at a big festival.

Even the Luck Reunion’s merch booth had a personal touch. Each T-shirt was screenprinted in front of buyers and had to cool down before you could wear it.

That’s the mark of a festival that’s about more than bands or organizers scoring a paycheck. It really felt like a community, and I didn’t want to leave. However, the rain closed most of the food trucks, and I needed dinner around midnight. I left before Nelson capped off the festival at the  overcrowded, muddy revival tent. The rain had shut down  main stage where Nelson was scheduled to play but  it was better than it not happening at all. 

I left wanting more. I was exhausted again, but for the first time, I couldn’t wait to return to Texas next year. It wasn’t luck that made this festival great. It was hard work and a lineup of musicians that looked to be having just as much fun as the patrons.

ABOVE: Lucius and Jenny Lewis perform at the Luck Reunion music festival.

TOP: Jonny Fritz performs his song during a song swap at the Luck Reunion music festival. ABOVE: Matthew Logan Vasquez performs at the Luck Re-union music festival. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

S P I C E W O O D • T E X A SA tale of two cities

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Midland performs at the Luck Reunion music festival. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

S P I C E W O O D • T E X A SA tale of two cities

for the first time, I couldn’t wait to return to Texas...

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Ben Folds has been making pop music longer than I’ve been alive.

He’s battled being labeled as a “novelty act” for his hilarious piano ballads, but nothing slowed him down from releasing his most ambitious project to date. Fold’s 2015 release “So There” boasted a supernatural sense for crafting catchy pop songs and he mixed well with yMusic Ensemble. The album also features a piano concerto performed by the Nashville Symphony.

Q: Myself, and I’m sure a lot of orchestra enthusiasts, were excited to hear there was a concerto with three movements on the album. What made you want to close the album with it? Was it intentional for the concerto to land there?

Ben Folds: I think the sequencing decision to make it last over the record was one of going, “OK, well you’ve come from what I normally do.” (I decided to) start with pop songs with a small chamber orchestra, and then you’ll understand the thread when you hear the concerto. I won’t be so sudden.

It makes sense. I think it’s important for people to feel the thread. ... It’s really easy to just fold your arms and go ... “OK, what pretentious s*** has he done now?” If you’re warmed up to it by the time it’s there, it seems more logical.

Q: I saw you play with Oklahoma City’s Philharmonic Orchestra in 2011. That was a fun show and made sense in the Civic Center venue. So, what’s it like touring with a pop chamber orchestra and playing in rock clubs? Is there a difference depending on the room you play?

Folds: Oh yeah, there is. I mean, it’s a lot smaller, obviously, and these guys are very specific. When you’re charting for an orchestra, ... I mean you have to be good, but you know it’s more inter-changeable. The thing with live music is that ... it’s very much based around how many musicians you’ve got, so it’s sort of like a rock record in that way. Just because someone plays guitar, guitar, bass and drums doesn’t mean they’re The Beatles. It depends on who the people are, like what band is that?  It’s really based on their personality. My music group is very much like that. They’re like a rock group in that you can’t replace them. You replace them and they’re someone else.

B A N D T I T L E , ‘ A L B U M T I T L E ’Music feature

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Ben Folds performing live with the Oklahoma City Philharmonic in 2011. [PHOTO BY BRYAN TERRY]

Ben Folds with yMusic Ensemble

WITH: Dotan.

WHEN: 8 p.m. April 13.

WHERE: Chevy Bricktown Events Center, 429 E California Drive.

TICKETS: www.benfolds.com/tour-dates.

IN CONCERT

Q: You’re pretty well known for your voice. At any point during the concerto, did you find it weird that you weren’t able to sing?

Folds: No, I enjoyed the angle of telling the story without the lyrics. .... It has a flow. A piece of music has a flow that somehow develops evo-lution in a story and has cadence to it. I think it’s good for my chops. It’s good for my imagination and it’s good to listen to, for me, too, because it moves things for me that lyrics could step on.

Q: You had a lot of starts and stops during the months it took you to write the concerto. Can you give me an idea of just how much work went into writing the move-ments?

Folds: Yeah, it’s always involved painful concentration that I would just have to go, “Stick with it, stick with it. What next?”

It’s like when you have to crunch numbers in math and you don’t wanna do it. It was good to have a co-orchestrator sort of person there. That was really helpful for me because it kept me to appoint-ments, which I think is really import-ant when you’re writing long-form material.

(Similar to) when you’re writing a book, like OK, well here’s my thing. I wake up in the morning, I stretch out with my coffee and then I go into my writing room and I stay there for six hours a night and then let myself out. I don’t work that way when I’m making pop music because you don’t need to really, but for this, I had to. Every day would be a few hours, for four hours maybe, and I would schedule the guy to come over to my house with his computer program so he can input the notes. A lot of times I would have a lot of the stuff written on scraps of paper, it would be on a (digital) voice note or I would have it memorized. I would try to get 15 seconds of finished orchestra a day.

Q: A lot of the album feels cin-ematic. Almost like listening to a film score. Are you big soundtrack fan?

Folds: There are good ones and bad ones. I’m usually not that aware of a soundtrack because the story is being told by something else and not the soundtrack. ... When people say orchestra music is not relevant

anymore — it certainly is in movies, and movies are relevant. It’s just they’re taking on a different role. I don’t really think about movie music that much. I know some of it’s great. I think about the very well deserved (Oscar) award for “The Hateful Eight.” I thought that f*****g soundtrack was f*****g great.

Now that was pretty artful. That’s rare. I think everyone knew it imme-diately. Wow, it’s just the best thing about this movie is the soundtrack and that’s saying a lot because the movie is great but the soundtrack is certainly one of the stars.

Q: I read you started outplaying your piano teacher at age 10. What was that like?

Folds: She was like a babysitter who could play a little piano. There was another cat I was with for a while and he was just really support-ive. There were things I was playing that he would want to know how I did them and so I think it put my mother off one time to pick me up because she could hear from outside the door that I was showing him over and over again how to play this riff and he was like, “That’s so f*****g outside man. How did you do that and what finger goes where? That’s crazy.”

And I was actually learning by that, but I think probably my mother’s view was, “I’m not paying this guy to take lessons from my son.”

There was a little bit of that atti-tude, but I learned a lot from the two teachers that I had.

Ben Folds’ album cover for “So There.” [IMAGE PROVIDED]

B A N D T I T L E , ‘ A L B U M T I T L E ’ Music feature

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cover story P A R K E R M I L L S A P

Titus Andronicus performing live at a 1015 Shea Stadium concert in New York City. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY JIM APPIO]

Story by Brandy McDonnellStory by Brandy McDonnell

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cover storyP A R K E R M I L L S A P

Titus Andronicus. Patrick Stickles is circled in the middle. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

Parker Millsap is on his way to becoming a household name. Parker Millsap is on his way to becoming a household name. That is unless the world ends first.That is unless the world ends first.

Parker Millsap gets a lot of confused voicemails these days.That’s what happens when your

outgoing message says you’re either away from the phone “or the rapture

has occurred and you missed out,” and prom-ises to get back to the caller “if the pale horse doesn’t do it first.”The Oklahoma singer-songwriter, 23, might

have end times on his mind, but at least he’s awfully cheerful about it.“If it’s gonna happen, what am I gonna do

about it? So, I might as well sing something fun about it and have fun. I don’t have to be sad about the end of the world,” Millsap said with a laugh when he called back before the pale horse could make an appearance.“People do get worried about North Korea

and Iran and their nuclear weapons and what-not … but there’s nothing you can do about it. If it’s gonna happen, it’s gonna happen. It’s not in my control. Might as well laugh at it. If you don’t laugh, you’ll cry.”That enlightened attitude became a running

theme on his new album “The Very Last Day,” which takes its title from a track with a Motown groove that contrasts perkily with lyrics about the very last day before the Earth goes up in a mushroom cloud. The follow-up to his acclaimed 2014 self-titled national debut was released March 25 on his Okrahoma Records, with distribution through Thirty Tigers.

APOCALYPTIC STORYTELLERAlthough he relocated to Nashville, Tenn., last

year, Millsap wrote much of the album in his former Guthrie home during the gloomy win-ter of 2015. The Purcell native, who was raised Pentecostal, said the gloomy weather influ-

enced his thoughts of the end of the world.“You’ve been in Oklahoma in the winter. You

know what it’s like there. … It was just cold, gray, brown, and to kind of fit the theme, I was reading a lot of kind of apocalyptic books. And I was watching ‘The Walking Dead,’ so I just kind of got in that mindset,” he said. “It’s fasci-nating, I think, and I’m not the only person that it fascinates.”As with his 2014 national breakout, his new

album also reflects his ongoing fascination with religion, from the fiery opener “Hades Pleads,” which boogies through references to Greek mythology, to his “Tribulation Hymn,” a mournful mountain air that tells of a man left behind after the rapture.“Because I grew up in it, it’s easy for me to

go there. Also, I still find a lot of things — and not just Christianity and not just religion, but pretty much any spirituality, anything like that —  interesting to me. We believe some interesting things as a race. With this record, talking about the end of the world, that goes back through all religions. All religions have some sort of doomsday prediction,” he said.“You know, some people use religion as an

excuse to do things that are questionable, and other people use religion and faith to check themselves and keep themselves from doing the questionable thing. And I think it’s inter-esting how it can be used.”“The Very Last Day” also showcases Mill-

sap’s burgeoning interest in crafting charac-ters and telling their stories in song, whether he’s singing from the point of view of a des-perate military veteran struggling to feed his family (on “Hands Up”) or a gay son pleading with his religious father for understanding (on “Heaven Sent”). Not only does he perform

From left, Michael Rose, Parker Millsap and Daniel Foulks perform for a video recording at the Luck Reunion music festival. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

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cover story P A R K E R M I L L S A P

Titus Andronicus performing live at South By Southwest Music Festival back in 2012. [PHOTO BY MATT CARNEY, FOR LOOKATOKC] Parker Millsap. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

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cover storyP A R K E R M I L L S A P

The State flag flies above Oklahoma State Capitol. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

Much has been written lately about Oklahoma City’s renais-sance. The city has been lauded as a

place where community thrives, where jobs are good, where people have carefree fun and where there is relatively little worry about the economic perils the rest of the country is expe-riencing.For the average man or woman working at a

downtown firm and driving a Lexus, life is great. But there is far more to Oklahoma City than what we probably come across in our daily life.For some who live here, Oklahoma City is not

the bustling, thriving, enlightened place every-one seems to think it is. When we talk about the Oklahoma renaissance, we forget all about the people it left behind. We forget about the teachers who haven’t gotten a pay raise since 2008. We forget that the people responsible for educating the next generation of Oklahomans are barely paid enough to keep them out of pov-erty. We forget how Oklahoma pays its teach-ers far below what our neighboring states pay

them. And we for-get that with a $1.3 billion budget shortfall, none of that is likely to change soon.When we talk about the Oklahoma renais-

sance, we forget that just a couple weeks ago, state legislators voted in favor of a bill that would ultimately remove 111,000 people from the state’s Medicaid program. We forget that these aren’t high-earning individuals, but rather single parents who make less than $9,500 every year. We forget that almost 70 percent of those 111,000 people are women.

When we talk about the Oklahoma renaissance, we forget that Oklahoma is ranked among the highest in the nation for women killed in domestic disputes. We forget that 593 Oklahomans, mostly

women, were killed by their intimate partners between 1998 and 2013. We forget that more than half of the counties in Oklahoma lack a shelter for victims of domestic violence.When we talk about the Oklahoma renaissance,

we forget that a quarter of all children in Okla-homa are at risk of going to bed hungry tonight. We forget about the nearly 700,000 adults who are unsure about where their next meal will come from. We forget that one in 16 Oklahoma seniors are also at risk of going to bed hungry tonight.I, too, am guilty of bragging about how Oklahoma

City’s districts, restaurants, festivals and local

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cover story D O W N T O W Ncover story P A R K E R M I L L S A P

from these characters’ perspectives, but he also possesses a “for all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God” empathy for their plights.“A lot of the songwriters that I listen to, that’s

what they do, from Springsteen to John Prine to Tom Waits, you name it. They write songs about other people, and I just like that. I feel like it’s an effective way to tell a story. Also, I’m a big fan of short stories and novels, and I’m really interested in characters. So, it just seems like a natural extension. A lot of times song ideas, for me, sometimes it’s a turn of phrase or something, a little musical idea, but a lot of times — and on this record particularly —  it’s kind of a character idea. Like ‘what if there’s a guy who blank,’ and then fill in the blank and

try to fit a story around that little parameter,” Millsap said.“I try to see the good in people, and again,

it kind of goes back to books. A lot of novels that I read, there are characters in the book that are complicated, that are conflicted, that are doing things that are questionable, but can you blame them? … Sometimes from their per-spective, it’s not as crazy as it seems.”

NEW HOME BASEAfter working with Norman producer Wes

Sharon on his previous two albums — 2014’s eponymous effort and 2012’s stripped-down local release “Palisade,” Millsap teamed for the first time with Gary Paczosa (Alison Krauss, Dixie Chicks, Prine). He co-produced “The Very

Last Day” with Paczosa after meeting him a few years ago at the South By Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.“He is very attuned to the acoustic sound of

an instrument. He knows how to make those translate into a recording, which it is kind of tricky to really make an acoustic instrument sound as three-dimensional as it does in per-son when it’s coming out of a speaker. And he’s really good at it … and he’s super easy to work with,” Millsap said.“He’s really good at his job, and he pushes

us into doing things that maybe we wouldn’t have done otherwise. A lot of the electric gui-tar on the record, I was thinking more acous-tic, but he said, ‘nah, let’s do electric on a few songs.’ … He kind of nudged me toward certain

From left, Daniel Foulks, Patrick Ryan, Parker Millsap and Michael Rose performs live in Guthrie. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

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cover storyD O W N T O W N cover storyP A R K E R M I L L S A P

decisions that I probably wouldn’t have made on my own, which was great.”Millsap  and his bandmates even got to live at

Dockside Studio in Maurice, La., for two weeks while they were working on the album with Paczosa. “The Very Last Day” features Millsap on guitar and vocals, Patrick Ryan on drums and percussion, Tim Laver on keys and accordion, and Millsap’s longtime touring partners Michael Rose on upright and electric bass and Daniel Foulks on fiddle and violin.When Millsap decided to move to Nashville, Rose

and Foulks opted to relocate to Music City, too.“The record says Parker Millsap or whatever, but I

think of it as like I’m in a band,” Millsap said. “A lot of it just has to do with touring. We make a living

touring, so when you’re 12 hours from a city on the East Coast, it makes it harder. … There are a lot more places to play, just a lot more people. We can go on a little tour four or five days and then drive three hours home instead of driving 15 hours home.”Provided the pale horse doesn’t pay him a visit,

Millsap will be back in Oklahoma for an April 7 show at The Vanguard in Tulsa. Along with elec-tronic music iconoclast Dan Deacon, he also will headline the seventh annual ACM@UCO Metro Music Fest April 8 in Bricktown. Millsap will take the main stage on the southwest corner of Reno and Oklahoma avenues at 9:15 p.m.“I love Oklahoma, and it will always be home,” he

said.

IN CONCERTPARKER MILLSAP

With: Red Wood Rising and Red Dirt Rangers.

When: 7:30 p.m. April 7.

Where: The Vanguard, 222 N Main, Tulsa.

Information: www.thevanguardtulsa.com.

ACM@UCO METRO MUSIC FEST

Featuring: Dan Deacon, Parker Millsap, Colourmusic, Travis Linville, Josh Sallee, Camille Harp, Tallows, Chase Kerby and more.

When: Noon April 8 to 2 a.m. April 9.

Where: Bricktown.

Information: www.facebook.com/ACM.UCO.

Admission: Free.

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APRIL 6

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL: “TORUK,” 7:30 p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno.

WINE DOWN WEDNESDAY, 5 p.m., O Bar OKC, 1200 N Walker

APRIL 7

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL: “TORUK,” 7:30 p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno.

CRAFTING AND COCKTAILS FOR A CAUSE TO BENEFIT HEELS FOR HOPE FOUNDA-TION, 6 p.m., Waters Edge Winery, 712 N Broadway.

MAKE ME LAUGH OKC AUDITIONS, 8 p.m., 51st Street Speakeasy, 1114 NW 51.

SHINE A LIGHT GALA, 6 p.m., Chevy Brick-town Events Center, 429 E California.

UPTOWN UNCORKED, 5:30 p.m., Oklahoma, 800 Nazih Zuhdi Dr.

APRIL 8

2ND FRIDAY CIRCUIT OF ART, 6 p.m., Nor-man Arts District. (Norman)

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL: “TORUK,” 7:30 p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno.

EARTH DAY FESTIVAL, 7 p.m., Plaza Dis-trict, 1726 NW 16.

LIVE! ON THE PLAZA, 7 p.m., The Plaza District, 1700 block of NW 16.

“MAKE ME LAUGH OKC” SEMI FINALS, 10 p.m., Othello’s, 434 Buchanan. (Norman)

NO PLACE LIKE HOME EARTH DAY FESTI-

VAL, 7 p.m., Dig It, 1739 NW 16.

OKC IMPROV PRESENTS SPRING SHOWS, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m., The Paramount, 11 N Lee.

APRIL 9

2016 REDBUD CLASSIC, 7 a.m., Waterford Complex Building, NW 63 and Pennsylva-nia.

BEATS & BITES 2016, 6 p.m., Riverwind Casino, 1544 W SH 9. (Norman)

“MORE THAN DRUMS” PRESENTED BY CANTERBURY CHORAL SOCIETY, 8 p.m., OKC Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker.

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL: “TORUK,” 7:30 p.m., Chesapeake Energy Arena, 100 W Reno.

“COMEDY’S BEST KEPT SECRET TOUR,” 9 p.m., OKC Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker.

HEART WALK, 9 a.m., Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark, 2 S Mickey Mantle Dr.

“MAKE ME LAUGH OKC,” 7 p.m., OKC Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker.

NO PLACE LIKE HOME EARTH DAY FESTI-VAL, 7 p.m., Dig It, 1739 NW 16.

OKC IMPROV PRESENTS SPRING SHOWS, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m., The Paramount, 11 N Lee, 456-9858

APRIL 10

2016 REDBUD CLASSIC, 1:30 p.m., Water-ford Complex Building, NW 63 and Penn-sylvania.

EVENTS FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS | DOWNTOWN

The 2016 Festival of the Arts will take place April 19-24 in Downtown Oklahoma City at Bicentennial Park.

The festival runs 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. Pets are not allowed.

Since 1967, the festival of the Arts has been Oklahoma City’s rite of spring. The free event is a community celebration of the visual arts, perform-ing arts and culinary arts.

A variety of children’s activities are featured in the Youth Plaza and around Festival grounds. Arts for children and families include hands-on activities in the Children’s Art Field for just $2. The Young-at-Art Mart is the children-only shopping venue with all artwork affordably priced at $5 or less. Families also can visit the face- painting station, Pottery Place and Creation Station.

Visual artsMore than 500 artists applied and

submitted work for the Festival jury process.  The 144 chosen artists are some of the nation’s finest.  Media includes oils, water, drawing and print-making, photography, ceramics, glass, sculpture, fiber, jewelry, wood, and two and three-dimensional works.Culinary arts

From appetizers to desserts, the festival is a celebration of the culinary arts!  Thirty-one vendors bring their specialties to the International Food Row and throughout the grounds.  Each food vendor is partnered with a local arts organization, so each bite you take supports the arts in central Oklahoma.Performing arts

Nearly 300 entertainers of all ages donate their performances on three stages at the festival.

APRIL 19 - 24

A P R I L 2 3 - M A Y 6calendar M O N T H 0 0 - M O N T H X XA P R I L 6 - A P R I L 2 4

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A P R I L 2 3 - M A Y 6calendar M O N T H 0 0 - M O N T H X XA P R I L 6 - A P R I L 2 4

“NATURAL IMPRESSIONS-EVOLVED,” Stacey Miller, through April 29, The Depot, 200 S Jones. (Norman).

“A LEGACY OF ART THROUGH FAMILY,” Willard Stone, through April 30, Oklahoma Hall of Fame, 1400 Classen Drive.

ARTWORK BY BETH HAMMACK AND PAT EDWARDS, through April 30, Studio Gallery, 2646 W Britton Road.

DAVID STEELE OVERHOLT IN THE SHOW-ROOM, through June 11, Oklahoma Con-temporary, 3000 General Pershing Blvd.

“EM/BARK: A MIGRATORY EXPERIMENT,” Christie Hackler, through April 30, The Project Box, 3003 Paseo.

FRINGE GROUP SHOW, through April 27, Opening reception April 9 from 7-11 p.m.,-Graphite Galleries, 1751 NW 16.

“FULL CIRCLE,” Mary Nickell, through April

8, Governor’s Gallery at the Capitol, 2300 N Lincoln Blvd.

“IMPERMANENCE,” through Aug. 12, Okla-homa City Underground, Downtown.

“IN ONE EAR,” through June 11, Oklahoma Contemporary Showroom, 1146 Broadway.

“JOQIGACUT: TIPI WITH BATTLE PIC-TURES,” through April 9, Oklahoma History Center, 800 Nazih Zuhdi Drive, 521-2491

“MURMURATIONS,” Philip Van Keuren, through May 14, Artspace At Untitled, 1 NE 3.

“NATIVE AMERICAN BOLO TIES: VIN-TAGE AND CONTEMPORARY ARTISTRY,” through May 8, Western Heritage Muse-um, 1700 NE 63.

NAVAJO WEAVINGS FROM THE PAM PARRISH COLLECTION, through May 8, National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63.

VISUAL ART

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New Tires, 148,000 miles,$17,000 firm. 405-640-5156

'04 GMC Sierra 15004WD, $11,000 obo. 405-696-9360

'05 Ford Expedition XLT loaded3rd row seat nice $4950 863-6399

'04 Chevy Venture van, 7 passen.affrdbl depndbl $2950. 863-6399

1999 Honda Odyssey3.5L, A/C, $2950. 405 819-7885

2004 Honda Ruckus customstretch, 150cc, GY6 engine,original owner, fast & fun,

$1775, 405-850-0707.

2011 H-D Road King ClassicTerrific condition, low miles, with

extras $14,300. 405-722-5548

2003 Honda Goldwing GL1800,65K mi, CB, candy apple red,

always garaged, exc cond, with2 helmets, leather jacket & chaps,

$8500 obo, 405-250-9244.

Page 32 April 6 - April 19, 2016 LOOKATOKC.COM

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2005 Flagstaff 825D pop up trail-er, electric lift, 1 slide, greatshape, $4000 obo, 405-613-8871.

'01 Winnebago Itasca 32' 2 slideouts new tires exc cond 54K mi.asking $22,000 701-8439 606-5315

Entry level/Receptionist@ downtown law firm.

Word/computer skills required.Salary negotiable.

Send resume to 101 Park Ave.,Ste. 210, OKC, OK 73102

HIRING 4 Multiple Jobs!15+ CSR positions- $12-15Legal Clerk- PT & FT $12

Admin Asst. $12-15Collector $10-13+ bonus

Legal Exec. Asst. $40-45kParalegal $45-55K

Send Resume to: [email protected] / AA EMPLOYER

Francis Tuttle Technology CenterAccepting Applications for the

Following Positions

• Technology Support Specialist:Job closing date 4/6/16

• System Administrator-Security Management:Job closing date 4/19/16

For extended job description andto apply for position, visit:

www.francistuttle.edu/discover/jobs

Only candidates of interest willbe contacted. EOE

Enid Schools:Director of Facility Construction,

Coordinator of Construction.Learn more at

www.enidpublicschools.org/applytoday

Enid Schools:High School Principal.

Learn more atwww.enidpublicschools.org/

applytoday

Practical Nursing InstructorFrancis Tuttle Technology Center

Job closing date: 4/15/16For extended job description and

to apply for position, visit:www.francistuttle.edu/

discover/jobsOnly candidates of interest will

be contacted. EOE

Westminster School is acceptingTEACHER applications in several

areas from Pre-K through 8thgrade. Experienced teachers will

enjoy a creative, collaborativework environment with enhanced

salary & benefits in a mission-driven school. Teaching

experience and advanceddegrees preferred; hard work &

enthusiasm are required.JOBS ARE NOW ONLINE at

www.westminsterschool.org.EOE

C-Store Shift Leaders wantedResponsible ExperienceIndividuals ONLY $$$!

Food and tank certificationshelpful. 408-0540 Leave Message

CUSTODIANS F/T - P/TFor Mid-Del area, must pass

background check, no felonies.Pay is $8.00 per hour. For moreinfo 732-8864 M-F 8:30-2:00pm.

Apply at: sodexousa.jobs

¡‘¡ DESK CLERK ¡‘¡Best Western - Yukon & El Reno

Daytime & Eves. Must workweekends. Paid vacation. Holiday

differential. Apply within;SW corner of I-40 & Mustang Rd.

405-265-2995

DRYCLEAN PRESSEROpening for experienced Presser.

Apply at Jack's Cleaners,3324 SE 15th.

FIREFIGHTERNo exp needed. Training, travel,great pay/benefits/vacation &regular raises. HS grads ages

17-34. Call Mon-Fri 800-492-4841

GROUNDS positions F/TMid-Del area. Must pass back-ground check, pay $9.00 per hr.

No Felonies. Call 732-8864www.sodexousa.jobs EOE

Manager for a non live-on siteStorage facility/S of I-240 & I-35.9-6 M-F. Retirees welcome. EOE.

Monthly salary + bonus.Call for appt. 830-7830

Oakley’s, Inc., 405-359-4944seeks 13 temp FT LandscapeWorkers from 04/01/16-12/01/16. Duties: Workers willmow, cut, water, edge lawns,rake and blow leaves, dig holesfor bushes, pull and chop weeds,prune and haul soil and mulch.Must be able to lift 50 lbs. ormore. Work tools, supplies &equip. will be provided w/o costto worker. No exp. req. On the jobtraining will be prov. Worksite2700 NW 178th, Edmond, OK73012. $12.31/hr Mon-Fri.; 40hrs/wk. Shifts 7am-5pm. 10 hrsOT may be available @ $18.47/hr.Employer guarantees work hoursequal to @ least 3/4ths of theworkdays in each 12-wk period ofthe total employment period.Workers will be paid bi-weekly;the employer will use a singleworkweek as its standard forcomputing wages due. The em-ployer will make all deductionsfrom the worker's paycheck re-quired by law but will make noother deductions. Transp. (includ-ing meals and, to the extent nec-essary, lodging) to the place ofemployment will be provided, orits cost to workers reimbursed, ifthe worker completes half theemployment period. Returntransp. will be provided if theworker completes the employ-ment period or is dismissed earlyby the employer. Return transp.and subsistence paid at $12.09per day during travel to a max. of$51.00 per day with receipts. Ap-plicants seeking to inquire aboutthe job opportunity or send appli-cations, indications of availabilityand/or resumes can contact thenearest Oklahoma Eastside SWAOffice @ 7401 NE 23rd, OklahomaCity, OK 73141, 405-713-1890 orcontact Jeff Oakley by fax at405-359-5607 using Job Order#1070133.

'12 Montana 34' 5th whl rear liv4slides, dbl frig/freez, 2 TVs

home ent cntr, fp, elec. awningcontrol cntr w/remote. Non

smoking $38,000 817-771-9484

ROUTE SERVICENational Co. Load and service

vending machines. Salary -Comm. - $30K/yr. Benefits.

Drug test. Apply M-F, 9-11am,6101 NW 2nd, resume [email protected]

CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDES& 24 HOUR LIVE-IN CAREGIVERS

Caring for SeniorsIMMEDIATE OPENINGS

PT/FT FLEXIBLE SHIFTS

To Apply Call 577-1910Visiting Angels

DENTAL ASSISTANTBusy Okc Office. Now hiringFT/PT positions. Experience

required. Send resume [email protected]

Experienced chair sideDental Assistant

with business office experience.Excellent office/large staff/SWOKC. Call 405-831-5414 or fax

resume to 405-632-7717.

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Lincare is seeking a strong, highlymotivated, goal-oriented

individual to work in our billingdepartment. This individual will

be responsible for communicatingwith customers and insurance

companies, following up onaccounts, and establishing cus-tomer payment plans for one of

the Nation's Leading RespiratoryCompanies. Previous Insuranceand Medical billing experience

preferred. We offer an excellentbenefit package including:

Medical/Vision/Dental/Life Insur-ance, 401K Plan, Direct Deposit,

Paid Vacation and Holidays.EOE/DFWP/Disabled/Vet

Email [email protected] orfax resume to 405-691-6052.

MEDICAL OFFICE MANAGERFast-paced medical office is

seeking highly motivatedexperienced office manager withbilling experience. Good benefits.

Fax resume to 405-752-7305.

SCHEDULING COORDINATORNW OKC dental office looking for

a full time experienced teammember who is flexible and ableto multi-task. Must be able to

verify insurance, interview newpatients and present treatment

plans. Knowledge of Dentrixsoftware a plus. Great benefits

including 401K, vacation and sickpay, holiday pay and two bonussystems. Some Saturdays arepossible. Compensation nego-

tiable depending on experience.Fax resume to 405-840-5803 or e-

mail to [email protected]

MEDICAL ASSISTANTFast-paced medical office isseeking experienced Medical

Assistant. Good benefits.Fax resume to 405-752-7305.

Practical Nursing InstructorFrancis Tuttle Technology Center

Job closing date: 4/15/16For extended job description and

to apply for position, visit:www.francistuttle.edu/

discover/jobsOnly candidates of interest will

be contacted. EOE

Seeking Experienced R.N./L.P.N.OKC Oncology Practice seeking

experienced R.N. or L.P.N. for of-fice nurse position. Current Okla-homa licensure and BLS requiredand hospital and medical officeexperience preferred. Resumes:

[email protected]

APARTMENT MAINTENANCESeeking Full or Part Time mainte-nance, landscape, & groundskeep-

er positions. Responsible forvarious tasks. Must have own

tools & transportation. Apply inperson at 8823 S. Santa Fe Ave.,

OKC or fax 677-9316.OK Red Door Management

MOWING & WEED-EATINGMUST HAVE VALID DRIVERS LI-CENSE. Part time - possibly full

time - Mowing, weed-eating,shopping center maintenance.

Shop is located north of Edmond.Depending on experience $12-15

per hour. Call 405-396-8119.

Mid-sized 50 Penn Place law firmseeks Legal Assist. Estate Plan-ning/Real Estate bkgrd helpful.The Oklahoman, Box #2160, POBox 25125, OKC, OK 73125-0125.

Couple to Manage & Maintain10 Rental Properties.

Send resume to PO Box 10766,Oklahoma City, OK 73140. EOE

Part-Time TutorFrancis Tuttle Technology Center

Job closing date: 4/13/16For extended job description and

to apply for position, visit:www.francistuttle.edu/

discover/jobsOnly candidates of interest will

be contacted. EOE

System Administrator -Security Management

Francis Tuttle Technology Center

Job closing date: 4/19/16For extended job description and

to apply for position, visit:www.francistuttle.edu/

discover/jobsOnly candidates of interest will

be contacted. EOE

Page 34 April 6 - April 19, 2016 LOOKATOKC.COM

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Bank Owned 4/3/2, 2 liv/din, blt83, 2147sf, new roof, crpt, paint +$139,900 Rlty Experts 414-8753

121 SW 56th St, 2bed, 1bath,ch&a, 950sf +/-. 405-381-9013

PIEDMONT OPEN SUN 2-5.Model home. New hms onK ac lots. From NW Expwy

& Sara Rd go 4.5 mi N. KellerWilliams Platinum 373-2494

WE SELL & FINANCEbeautiful acreages for mobilehomes-Milburn o/a 275-1695

MOBILE HOME LOTCountry setting

Close InALL UTILITIES12601 SE 74th

640-3104

Tax Season Sales Promo!Lenders offering Zero Down

w/land & less than perfect creditprograms. $2,500 Visa gift cardw/purchase. We take trades!

WAC 405-631-7600

¡‘¡ LAND AUCTION ¡‘¡April 8, 2016 @ 6:00 p.m.

Holiday Inn Xpress, Guthrie, OK4 - 15 & 20 acre tracts, Logan Co.

OWNER FINANCINGjcbarrauctions.com

JC Barr, Broker ¡ 405-433-5635

I BUY & SELL HOUSES27 YRS EXP 650-7667

HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

GREAT Office Space. Various NWlocations, 300-6000sf 946-2516

K Office, K Warehouse. 1500sf.7925 N Hudson Suite D 842-7300

Law firm in NW OKC seeking at-torney for general civil and busi-

ness litigation practice. Musthave 4+ years litigation experi-ence, strong writing and oralskills, and be able to indepen-dently handle caseload. For

details please go towww.okcbar.org and look under

Attorney Placement Service

William Velie, Attorneys at Law,PLLC is seeking a case manager

(2). Must have a bachelor’sdegree. Qualified applicants

mail resume to: ATTN: Briian,210 E Main Suite 222,

Norman OK 73069

PROPERTY MGR & OFFICE ASTFull & Part Time position avail-able. Experience preferred. Pro-

fessional presentation, computerliterate, knowledge of mainte-

nance & customer service. Sendresume to [email protected] or inperson at 8823 S. Santa Fe Ave.,OKC. OK Red Door Management

COOKExp'd. Breakfast-Lunch Cook.

Full Time. Close at 2pm. Apply inperson, 5012 N. MacArthur

MOE'S PLACE

MIDTOWN OKC-RestaurantAsst. Mgmt. 2+ yrs exp. Salaryneg. Benefits avail. Must haveWine & Liq. exp. w/FOH & BOHexpertise! Fax resume 942-2012or email [email protected]

Restaurant ManagerAlways Growing, AlwaysHiring! Multiple new OklahomaCity metro area locations openingin the near future. Looking forleaders to share the next stage ofour growth with.FOR EXPERIENCED &QUALIFIED CANDIDATES:•Up to a $50K starting salary•Relocation Expenses•3K Sign-On Bonus after 90 daysAnd as Always:•Monthly Bonus for GM & AGMs•Paid Vacation •Health InsuranceIf you are a high energy teamplayer, we want to hear from you!SEND RESUME TO:[email protected]

SalesWanted: Experienced advertisingsales person. A motivated self-

starter. Earn 1200.00 per week ormore in commissions. CallDennis at 918-991-5388.

BRICKLAYERS LOCAL 5accepting applications for

Apprenticeship & Mason Sup-ports. Starting salary between

$13-$16/hr. Please make applica-tion at 212 NE 27th Street, OKC,

OK or call 405-528-5609.

Maintenance Technician

Astellas Pharma Technologieshas an immediate opening for aMaintenance Technician.

Position is responsible for thepreventative maintenance, cali-bration, and repair of equipmentin all areas of the facility. Willperform maintenance on buildingautomation systems, readschematics, troubleshoot PLC’ssystems, scale controls, flow con-trols (air and liquid), and levelcontrols. Successful candidatewill provide technical assistancein the diagnosis and resolution ofcomputerized building monitoringsystems, and maintain record andprocess control.

Requires a high school diploma orequivalent and one or more of thefollowing:• A minimum of four years

experience in the electronicfield with advanced completedcourses or certifications

• A minimum of four yearsexperience in electricalmaintenance with a journeymanlicense. Must also beexperienced in maintenance andoperation of medium voltage(4160) electrical equipment.

• A minimum of four years oftraining in specialized trade(millwright, carpentry,plumbing, painting, welding,machinist, boiler operator) orrelated area.

Astellas offers competitive com-pensation and benefits packageplus a great work environmentwhere you will work with a com-petent staff of professionals ded-icated to operational excellence.

Qualified applicants should sendresume and salary requirements

via e-mail [email protected]

or mail/fax resumes toAstellas Human Resources,

Attention: Human Resources3300 Marshall Avenue, Norman,Oklahoma, 73072, fax number

405-217-7906

EOE

ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMAN& APPRENTICES:

2 years min commercial exp.405-943-2442 apply online

@ www.klbradley.com

Licensed CommercialJourneyman Electrician

Benefits. 405-745-4700

Painters & Finishersexperienced painters & drywall

finishers.Call 306-5555

PLUMBERSIMMEDIATE OPENINGS.

Repair experience. Good benefits.627-6072 or 619-7900

CDL Local Class A DriverBiagi Bros.

5001 SW 36th St, OKC

Class A CDL DriversIMMEDIATE OPENINGS

HOFFMAN TRANSPORTATION$500 SIGN-BONUS

Home Weekends ¡ [email protected]

1N to 5A E of OKC, pay out dn.Over 100 choices. Many Mobile

Home ready. Call for maps.TERMS Milburn o/a 275-1695

www.paulmilburnacreages.com

2K ac S of Stratford, 24X30 bldgw/concrete & electric, old mobilehome, $30K; 2 ac approx 11 mileswest of Ada, 1-24X48 steel framebldg, 1-30X40 wood frame bldg onconcrete, electric, water & septic$85K; 580-235-3012.

PIEDMONT OPEN SUN 2-5.Model home. New hms onK ac lots. From NW Expwy

& Sara Rd go 4.5 mi N. KellerWilliams Platinum 373-2494

5.4 acres MOL, 11125 S Luther RdNewalla, $35K, 405-694-1734.

1 Lot Left!Gated Russleville Add. Will cus-tom build. FREE storm shelter

405-482-1905

525 ACRE RANCH BETWEENARBUCKLE MTNS & LAKELocated in S. Cent. Ok. SE ofDavis. Working cattle ranch

w/over 1m road frontage. Greatfor building sites, beautiful viewsevery direction, aprx 20% wooded,

improved grasses, 16 ponds 2nice homes, barns, corrals, etc.$1,750,000. Paula 580-618-0384

JARMAN REALTY, INC.

90 ac, mostly bottom land, yearround creek, lg pecan, walnut andpine trees, abundant wildlife, rur-al water or your well, great build-

ing site overlooking property,33 mi SE of Norman off Hwy 39,$2000 per acre, 580-925-2015.

Kiowa Cty 111 Acre Farm, Alfalfawheat, creek, bottomland. Huntdeer/turkey. Close to Quartz MtnState Park $1485ac. 580-530-1077

1.33 ac Home PoolBlanchard $219,000 move in

ready, in ground salt pool 3bed,2407 inground pool, 1.33 ac.,

$219000 rick 405-590-0700 call ortext [email protected]

Near Tinker, Choctaw Schools,Eastwood Summit, see

infotube.net, listing #261642.

Bank Owned 4/2/2, 1834sf, 2 liv,$74,900 Realty Experts 414-8753

3 or 4bd 2ba 3car, built 2003,1851sf, newer SS appls & A/C.HW floors, Australian closet,$181,500 Realty Experts 414-8753

Bank Owned 4/2K MH, 3.25ac,apprx 30x50 shop, blt 97, 1838sf,$79,900 Realty Experts 414-8753

Open 2-4 Sun, 13153 WestparkPl, 73142, built '95, updated 2 bd,2 ba, 1416 sf, $139,900, 408-1792

For Sale By Owner, 6213 NW31st St, 3/2/2, new ch&a, win-dows, wood, tile, cooktop, carpet,paint, 1600+', $126,900, 226-7449

Page 37April 6 - April 19, 2016LOOKATOKC.COM

Page 38: LOOK AT OKC | 4.6.2016

BULL SALEMCLEMORE FARMS: MONDAY,

ARPIL 11TH @ 1:00 PM INBRADLEY OK. OFFERING REG

ANGUS, REG SIMMENTAL, REGCHAROLAIS AND COMPOSITES.CONTACT US FOR A CATALOG

OR MORE INFORMATION.VIDEOS AND PICTURES ARE

POSTED AT MCLEMORE-STOCK.COM THIS IS AN AUC-

TION KENT MCLEMORE405.574.2245 AMY MCLEMORE

[email protected]

Best for crossbreeding for extraweaning wt. (53) big, stout, mod-ern Limousin bulls. Very gentle,easy calving, high growth $2,500- $4,500. We repay your fuel cost.

Kusel Limousins ¡ Since 1970580-759-6038 Add Profit!

Gelbvieh/Balancer Bulls2 yr. - yearling bulls. Black & Redswith good growth, performance &

genetics. Very gentle & passedBSE. $2750 & up 405-880-2564

Brangus Bulls, 18-24 months,$1600-$1800 each,

V Markes, Bison, OK,580-478-6729 or 580-758-3650,

24 Wyoming 2nd calf angus cows4 w/calves, balance heavy

springers $2300ea 405-306-1631

(30) fancy 3-5 year old heavybred northern Angus cows,$2350 each, 580-729-6849.

ANGUS BULLS FOR SALEHenricks Cattle Co. 405-574-4615

350 Fine Pets At FREE TO LIVE4mi N of Waterloo on Western

ALL Dogs & Cats $80 Shts/Neut282-8617 »» freetoliveok.org

AKITA FEMALE 2K YEARS OLDFREE TO GOOD HOME WITH

FENCED YARD 514-5444

American Pit Bullies $200 POP.Pics on facebook 580-237-1961

Aussie 1/2 Mini Aussie Pups,7wks old, $200. 405-570-5302

Australian Shepherds AKC1st shot, wormed, excellent pedi-

gree. Working farm dogs. Seepics at www.fitzfarmandpoultry.net $600 MERLE/$400 RED TRIBeth Fitzgerald 405-584-9077

Australian Shepherds, ASDR reg,toy & mini, puppies & adults,

s/w/t/dc, $400-$900,580-656-2335.

BASSETT PUPS, AKC, M&F 4wks,Taking deposits. Text for moreinfo. $500ea. 580-574-3243

BEAGLE PUPPIES, 6 WEEKS3F, rare chocolate & white, $250,405-740-0045 or 405-275-6610.

BOSTON TERRIERS M PUPSS/W VET CK $350. 405-566-9520

Boston Terrier AKC pups, s/w/chipped, $450-$600, 405-863-2272

Cane Corso PuppyBlue Female $2000 918-485-5981

Chihuahua, CUTIES, 8wks,Teacups $250 Cash 405-788-1520

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, 2F,1 white, 1 brindle, born 1/19,

no shots or papers, $200 each,Call or text ¡‘¡ 405-496-8049

TOP LOCATION!Pd. wtr/garb. Near malls.

2 bed from $595 341-4813

CLEAN LARGE 2 BEDBILLS PD $700MO + 319-9580

UNFURNISHEDALL BILLS PAID

Rates starting at $825/mo.CITADEL SUITES

5113 N. Brookline 405-942-0016CALL FOR SPECIALS

Included are the following:‘ All Utilities‘ Cable ‘ High speed internet‘ 2 Pools ‘ Free Movie Rental‘ Breakfast Mon.-Fri.

Furnished/Unfurnished. Bills PaidUnfurn 1 bed $169 wk, $640 mo;Unfurn 2 bed $189 wk, $780 mo;Furn 1 bed $179 wk, $680 mo;Furn 2 bed $199 wk, $820 mo;

Deposits: 1 bed $150, 2 bed $200;$25 application fee paid at rental;

New lower monthly ratesfor Wes Chase only.

Wes Chase Apts, Elk Horn Apts,Hillcrest (SW OKC), 370-1077.

CRESCENT PARK newly remod!!63rd/May Hdwd flrs secure quiet1 & 2 beds New owner! 840-7833

MAYFAIR great loc! 1&2 bd W/Dhdwd flrs quiet secure 947-5665

Autumn Ridge Town Homes,2 bed, 1K bath, ch&a, w/d,

all electric, $650-$700, 946-5020.

LIKE NEW! 2 bed, 1.5 bath, 2 car,w/d hook up, back yard, $750 mo+ deposit, Cynthia, 405-922-7610

800 N Meridian1 Bedroom 946-9506

1213 SW 60th, 2bd apts, $475 mo$200 dep, stove, dishwasher,

fridge. Clean! No Sec 8 632-9849

$430-$485 Furnished 1Bedroom &efficiencies. All bills paid, laundryCH/A, 2820 S. Robinson 232-1549

Great Area w/View! 1bd/loft, car-port, all appls, water pd, no petsno smoking, $750+dep, 943-0053.

Beauty, 2/2/2, 7116 NW 31st,new kitchen & bath cabinets,wood floors, windows, granite,ch&a, $900 w/good refs, 226-7449

GREENS, 2 liv/2 story/FP,3/2/2, 4045 Thunderbird Dr,

Appt. Only $1,100 ¡ 843-5853

2 bd, 1 ba, new carpet, no pets,sec 8 okay, references, 672-0877.

10 Homes 2-4 beds $750-1425Express Realty 844-6101

www.expressrealtyok.com

5312 N. SAPULPA3/1/1, PC schools Remod $825

mo + $650 dep. No pets. 823-7928

3 Homes 3-4 beds $895-1895Express Realty 844-6101

www.expressrealtyok.com

12904 Carrie Ct 3+/2+/2 $10004912 Creekwood Terr 3bd $800.DT Effic $450 2bd $600 749-0603

Large 3 bedroom, W/D hkup, CentH/A, $695mo $350dep 631-8039

MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes$400/up. RV space $200 306-2576

Bedroom & bath with kitchen andliving room privileges, bills paidexcept TV, $450 mo, $100 dep,722-1080 or 202-7876.

RCA Matching washer & dryer2 yrs old exc cond. $450 firm

MOVING ! 933-5355

LP Gas cook stv, natural gas stv$100ea. W & D $200. Elec stv

$100. Lrg 110 AC $100 275-3419

Whirlpool refrigerator, SxS, wa-ter & ice in door, exc cond, $350obo, 405-295-1792 or 838-2080.

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

BID ONLINE!Marine Corps

Sword & Scabbard

To Include:Atlanta Cutlery 30”

Newtell Worldwide 30”Newtell Worldwide 28”

Zubco 30”

Location:Oklahoma City, OK

Bid Dates:April 4th - 6th

Bid Online at:

BidOnSurplus.comSearch For:

SwordCall: 480-367-1300

TRACTORS ~ COMBINE ~TILLAGE ~ DRILLS ~

TRAILERS ~ SPRAYERS ~MOWERS ~ MISC ENID OK

AuctionWED APRIL 13TH 10AM

580-237-7174EQUIPBUZZ.COM

Farm Equipment Public AuctionSaturday April 9th @ 9:30am

I-35 & HWY. 19 (EXIT 72)1/4 MILE WEST.

Online bidding provided bywww.proxibid.com/self

For more info please visit ourwebsite @ Selfequipment.com

or call (405) 238-4604.

NEED 20,000 BOOKS, CDs, DVDsrecords, posters, art, comics.

Tulsa. Will travel. Can pick up in24 hrs. Gardner's Used Books.

Largest book store in Okla!!(918) 409-1096 627-7323 250-7381

Highest CASH for Silver Dollarsgold, old coin collections 620-7375

98 John Deere Gator 6x4only 1354 hours clean title, noaccidents leaks or rust, workslike new $2000. Call or text

anytime 515-992-0604

Nut Hustler pecan cleaner, exccondition, $5000, 580-453-1615.

Like new queen bedroom suite,$500 cash, 405-570-9144.

Green lift chair looks/works good$150. Electric wheel chair 5yrsold works great! $300 949-5510

Goat Professional Leaf Mulcher,10' hose, 6'' wide w/handle.

Cost new $1700. Asking $850.Fantastic cond ¡ 405-842-5566

King craft 6000 watt gasgenerator - new $425! Singlewall GE oven like new $100.4 17'' tires good tread $100.

42'' Lane New clawfoot table$125. 3 new arm chairs $200.Antique 6 leg table & buffet

& 4 chairs, $450. Antique3 way lamp $100. Old pumporgan $100. 80 gospel 12''

records $100. 405-752-7552

Propane tank end capsfor fire pits:

30"-$40, 37"-$60, 41"-$70.Rebuilt Propane tanks:

250 gal-$420, 500 gal-$595.405-375-4189 or BLTTanks.com

Plastic laminate sheets, manycolors, 50 cents per square foot,5X12 & other sizes, 405-282-6210

Wurlitzer console piano, goodcondition, $550, 405-721-9560.

All wood 8X8 barn/shingles, willassemble, $1295, 405-414-4286

Beretta PX4 Storm compact,9mm, single/double action, extramagazine & hard case, factorywarranty, paid $550 in February2016, shot less than 100 rounds,will take $500 firm, 405-722-4737

We buy GUNS Mustang Pawn &Gun. Over 1000 guns! 376-GUNS

ENGLISH SETTERS FDSBRegistered O/W. Avail 4/2. $800.

405-740-6860

SPRING TURKEY HUNTINGLots of birds. Apr 6-May 6. $200/day. Ardmore area. 817-946-5450.

W OKC summer basketball, boys& girls, grades 1-8, May 21stthrough July 9th, 405-503-2485.

Conceal/Open Carry Class$45 Total ¡ 405-818-7904

www.HavePistolWillCarry.com

5x8, 5x10, 6x12, w/gates;like new 16 foot tandem;

$650-$1250 Cash. 405-201-6820

Paying cash for: Diabetic TestStrips: FreeStyle, OneTouch, &

Accuchek, also CPAP/BIPAPMachines: Jim 405-202-2527

Want to buy watch makers/jewelers estate, 316-393-2871.

Page 38 April 6 - April 19, 2016 LOOKATOKC.COM

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SHEPHERD MIX FEMALEF, 2 YRS, FIXED, SHOTS, HOUSE-

BROKEN $45.00 405-220-2599

Shih Tzu, ACA, 8wks s/w$350ea. 918-421-1660

Shih Tzu Imperial, Teacup YorkiesRegistered. s/w/mc health grtd

1 year $450-$500 404-7069

Shih Tzu puppies, 8 weeks old,1M $200, 2F $250, 479-790-0885or 405-850-1937, Choctaw, OK.

Shih Tzus, AKC, $400-$450,s/w/chipped, 405-863-2272.

SHIH TZUs 3m $350. 3f $400blk/white chest. gold & whites

8wks s/w 405-822-2127 SW OKC

Want to buy female Pekingesepuppy, 6 weeks to 6 months age,any color, call 405-381-3139.

WESTIE AKC 7 mo old female.Shots, spayed, house trained

w/crates, gate, toys leash & food$1200 » 405-321-6902

YORANIUM F. 8wks. Tcup blk/tan s/w/dc $500 580-334-5292

YORKIEs ACA M&F Very mall11 weeks $600 580-695-1851

Siberian Husky PuppiesPurebred Registered w/papers 2F& 2M @ 8wks old. UTD w/shots,

dewormed x4, cage trained &puppy pad trained and ready fortheir future. $700 405-712-2078

COCKATIEL BIRDS, M&F,$35-$45 » 405-670-9678.

Roller Pigeons, $5 each,405-210-0264.

COIN LAUNDRYOWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS.

We provide location, installation,equipment, financing, service

& training! 972-241-2345 Charlie

For Sale/Lease, Beckham County,8N, 24W, sec 6: 82.5 ac; 8N, 26W,sec 30: 30 ac; 8N, 26W, sec 31: 11ac; 9N, 24W, sec 31: 120 ac;

405-721-7751.

Minerals for lease inGrady County, 405-205-0491.

2 DOGS Malti-Poos in goodhealth, collars no tags Warwick

Estates. call to ID 762-9351

German Shepherd mix?, youngmale, north of Arcadia, 277-9000.

FOSTER CARE RECRUITMENTOur Home Is Your Home LIVE-

LOVE-LAUGH Make this a realityfor children in need. Become aFoster Parent with EOYS, Inc.

eoysinc.org Andrea Sills /918-420-5325

LOST "COVEY" CATBlack Male, red collar, Rock-

well/Britton 3/29. 405-721-4157

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

Masonry Repair - All TypesSince 1975 ¡ Refs ¡ 405-695-8178

Organizing/Cleaning/Staging/Spring Cleaning » 213-8246

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

Ceiling & Wall DoctorTotal Remodeling

‚ Acoustic popcorn removal‚ Drywall repair ‚ Flooring‚ Custom hand trowel

finishes & spray finishes‚ Interior/Exterior painting

Call Jeff for free estimateat 405- 408-5453, insured.

QUALITY FENCE COMPANYFREE ESTIMATE on new & repair.Credit Cards OK. 405-317-0474.

Fence Rescue! Off-Duty Fireman.Free Est. ¡ 615-0526 or 386-7330.

CTR is your source for kitchen &bath remodels, room additions &siding & windows, free estimatesLic #24586. Call 405-388-6144.

Rain Gutters of OKCGutters, leaf guards, clean out,

repairs, siding, windows 848-8837

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

Int/Ext Painting Any constructonPlbg. Free est! Any job 243-2915

30yrs exp Home Repair & remodelKitchen-Bathrm-Custom Shower-Tile-Framing-Drywall-Windows-Doors. 7days/wk. David 565-9511

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

RESIDENTIAL HAULINGAND CLEANING, 765-8843.

Avila Lawn Care, complete lawnservice, fences, free est, 816-0077

Bobcat, grapple, limbs,debris, pilling, brushog,

gravel smoothing ‘ 615-5039

Starting @ $17 WeeklyMow • Edge • Weedeat

bettercutlawnsusa.com 681-6764

All yard work, clean up, scalping,mowing. Insured, cc ok, 919-6494

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

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

Hot Water Tank sale! Sewer linesAll plbg ¡ Free Est 405-243-2915

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC.405-528-7733

buddysplumbingokc.com

Garay's Roofing/ConstructionExp. quality work, free est, roofrepair & replace, local since 1985,insurance claims okay, 370-3572.

All types roofing ¡ All work grtdFree estimates ¡ 405-670-2320

» GENE’S TREE SERVICE»Insured-Free Est. 682-2100.

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.

Pro Tree Service - 1/2 off SeniorsFree stump removal. 314-1313

Chihuahua puppies, (not teacups)very rare, mom 8 pounds,

dad 14 pounds, 8 weeks old, $200,405-875-7815 or 405-434-5430.

CORGI PUPS AKC2 fml 8wks vet checked, 1st s/w.

$700 each 918-623-6612

DACHSHUND MINI adorablelong hair NO SHEDDING verysmall $395 Visa/MC 826-4557

English Bulldog, female white/brindle. AKC, 17 weeks. s/w

rabies vac $1400 580-729-2387

German Rottweiler, AKC puppies,6 weeks old, s/w/t/dc, POP,vet checked, M $550, F $500,

580-588-3895 or 580-483-4810.

German Rottweilers AKC 2 Males8wks, shots, wormed dewclawed

$750ea. 405-487-7128

German Shepherd Puppies,full blood, POP, $250 each,

405-424-1282 or 405-651-0417.

German Shepherd AKC Pups$600. 405-387-4813

Golden Retriever-European CremeAKC, OFA health, CH Spanish/French parents, home raised.

To your home in June.$500 deposit.

[email protected]

Great Dane PupsAKC, s/w, 4wks, 3M, 4F, black,

merle, harlequin see pics on Face-book-Dunham Danes $800-1200

580-305-0200, 580-305-0201

HAVANESE AKC » MALE$400 » 1-405-328-8508

HYBRID WOLF CUBS99% Blend Of Arctic, British

Columbian and North AmericanTimber Wolf. 2F & 1M Brown plus2F & 2M White 8wks S/W. $500

405-650-4302

Labradoodles CKC reg. 3M 3F s/dcborn 2/27/16, taking deposits,

ready 4/12/16 $800 405-823-9312

LabradoodlesRegistered, shots, wormed, etc$600 & up Call/txt 919-791-8800

MaltiPoo Mini. Babies s/w. cremeapricot $300-$350 250-4626

Min Pins, ACA, s/w/e/t,$400ea. 918-421-1660

MORKIES 2M 2F 8wks S/W$375-$450 580-465-1571.

Poodles, Toy apricot 8 weeks.2 male $350ea, 2 fml $400ea s/wno papers 405-822-2127 SW OKC

POODLES AKC 2 males neutered.$200 580-402-1020 ’ text or call

Red & Blue Heeler Mix. Havepapers on Dad, both working

parents 1m 4f $100ea 545-0677

Rott pups, German, black, 2M,12 weeks, s/w/t/dc, POP,

kid friendly, $350, 405-822-9463.

Rottweiler AKC, 11 weeks, POP,Strong Champ. German Bloodline,

1F LEFT! $1,200 405-503-1707

Rottweiler AKC Germanbloodline puppies. 4m 4f

6wks $600ea 405-380-4131

Rottweiler, AKC pups, true Germ,16wks $850-$1000 405-227-4729

Rottweiler AKC puppies, Germanimported, $1200, 618-1699.

Samoyed puppy, 10 week female,$150 to good home, must qualify,text me at 405-549-0841.

Schnauzer, Mini, AKC, familyraised, s/w/t/dc, 2M, salt &

pepper, 7 weeks old,$395, 405-659-2044.

Schnauzer, AKC, White M, 12years old, housetrained, good dis-

position, $300, 405-366-7723.

Schnauzers, toy size, registered,exotic colors, raised in our

home, $1,000-$1,500, call Lorie580-210-9127, Don 580-210-9575

Schnauzers, Mini, AKC, $400-$500S/W/Microchipped, 405-863-2272

Scottish Terrier, AKC puppies,9 weeks old, 2 wheaton F, s/w,

POP, $700, 918-510-0270.

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