June 15 look at okc

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LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION

JUNE 15 - JUNE 28 2017 • VOL. 13 • ISSUE 12 LOOKATOKC.COM

TICKET

HUBBUB Okie concertgoers share stories behind their favorite concert stubs Page 18

DOWNTOWN SKYLINE UPDATE ON PAGE 6 | MEET LAUREN BARTH ON PAGE 14


from the editor

NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC EDITOR NPOPPE@OKLAHOMAN.COM

B

etween “Kimmy Schmidt” episodes and the surplus of comedy specials, I noticed a documentary on Netflix called “Oklahoma

City.” The PBS outfit American Experience released the movie earlier this year, but I never had the chance to sit down and finish it. Now, I had no excuse not to hit play. My excellent co-worker Brandy McDonnell had this to say about the movie earlier this year: “Barak Goodman’s film feels like a cautionary tale, given the recently increased visibility of the alt-right movement as well as the proliferation of conspiracy theories,

echo chambers and extremist literature on the internet. Since history has an unfortunate tendency to repeat itself, ‘Oklahoma City’ is a sobering reminder that homegrown enemies can be just as dangerous as any outside foe.” I walk or drive by the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum every day. That terrible morning back in 1995 is constantly on my mind, so I didn’t exactly jump at the opportunity to revisit documentary on the same platform I normally look to for an escape and every episode of “30 Rock.” Luckily, “Oklahoma City” is expertly crafted, stirring and extremely well produced. It’s an important documentary that needs to be shown in every Oklahoma high school history class. The movie unfolds Ruby Ridge, “The Turner Diaries” and a few rescue stories that I’d never heard, too. It would’ve benefited me in school a lot more than repeated viewings of “Remember The Titans.” “Oklahoma City” is a history lesson with a neatly drawn line that connects recent tragedies straight to heart of today’s headlines. If you have a streaming device and a Netflix subscription, give it a watch. I hope it makes an impact on you like it did on me.

from the top

LOOKatOKC 11 | Back in the swing Oklahoma-rooted Cherokee Maidens released a new album. Brandy McDonnell chats with Monica Taylor, one third of the interstate Western swing trio.

6 | Developing story A rapid series of changes have begun at the future BOK Park Plaza that will begin with removal of the tower crane that was used to erect the 27-story tower in downtown Oklahoma City. Steve Lackmeyer shares the details.

4 | Online shopping Walmart continues to fight for its share of online shoppers. Recently, the retail chain introduced the concept of an automated kiosk that online grocery shoppers can use to collect their orders, building one at its Warr Acres location. Jack Money has the story. Find the LOOK photographers • LOOK photographers will be in Bricktown, Midtown and other hot spots.

The Oklahoman Media Group LOOKatOKC EDITOR Nathan Poppe PROJECT DESIGNER Chris Schoelen ADVERTISING Jerry Wagner (405) 475-3475

Check out our online home at newsok.com/entertainment/lookatokc Go to facebook.com/LOOkatOKC and become a fan.

Nancy Simoneau (405) 475-3708 NICHE PUBLICATIONS EDITOR Melissa Howell ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton PHOTOGRAPHER Steven Maupin COVER DESIGN Chris Schoelen

Follow LOOKatOKC on http://twitter.com/LOOKatOKC Single copies of LOOKatOKC may be obtained free of charge at locations from Stillwater to Norman. Additional copies are available for $1 each at The Oklahoman. Wholesale and indiscriminate removal of LOOKatOKC publications from newsstands for purposes other than individual use will result in prosecution. Every effort is made to ensure that all calendar entries are accurate. LOOKatOKC does not guarantee the events or the schedules. Readers are encouraged to call ahead for exact times and dates. LOOKatOKC is published every other Thursday by The Oklahoman, 100 W. Main, Suite 100, Oklahoma City, OK 73102 For advertising and promotional opportunities please contact The Oklahoman retail advertising department at 475-3338.

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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CITY NEWS

WA L M A R T

Faster food

Walmart introduces automated grocery pickup kiosk in Warr Acres BY JACK MONEY For LOOKatOKC

Walmart is trying out an automated kiosk where online shoppers can pick up their groceries, officials with the retail store have announced. The kiosk is a 20- by 80-foot building in the parking lot at the Walmart Supercenter at N Council and W Britton roads in Oklahoma City. Walmart spokesman Scott Markley said the kiosk is capable of fulfilling hundreds of orders throughout the day that are placed by customers who shop online or through their mobile browser at www. walmart.com/grocery. In an email, Markley said the automated kiosk gives the store’s online shoppers another option they can use to save time. “Especially for busy families with kids, grocery shopping used to take a couple of hours on the weekend,” Markley said. But people using the kiosk can pick up groceries in just a few minutes, he added. More than 30,000 items, including fresh produce, meats, dairy products and organic groceries, can be ordered online for the same price they cost in the store and can be picked up free, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The minimum purchase is $30. The retail operation will ask customers for feedback online as it tests the product during the next several months.

ONLY PICKUP POINT CHANGES Except for a minimum purchase amount and the delivery point, the online grocery ordering process for customers will be the same. Customers place and pay for their orders online, and those orders are filled

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inside the store by Walmart associates that store officials have said are trained to handpick the freshest produce and choicest cuts of meat. The orders are delivered to the kiosk in bins that are stored inside. The kiosk customer pulls up to the building and walks up to an interface station to enter a pickup code. The kiosk retrieves the order, delivering it to the customer in a process that takes a minute or less. Anne Hatfield, Walmart’s director of communications, said the store operates a similar kiosk concept in the United Kingdom. “Now we are starting to test some of the same features here in the U.S.,” she said. Other concepts also are getting tested in other markets across the nation. Another concept, called a Pickup Tower, serves customers who make online buys of general merchandise. That concept is being tested in five stores — in Bentonville, Arkansas, in Detroit, in Houston, in Atlanta and in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hatfield said each tower is 16 feet tall and 8 feet in diameter and can hold about 300 items. She said a tower is equipped with a sensor that can tell when someone approaches, which prompts it to open a door that gives the shopper access to a scanner. The machine scans a bar code on the customer’s phone, then the machine within seconds gives the customer the package. “Think of it as operating like a big vending machine,” she said. “It is amazing.” Hatfield said the goals of those tests and others are designed to determine ways Walmart can bring more convenience to its customers.

Walmart is giving its online grocery customers in the Oklahoma City area an opportunity to use an automated kiosk to pick up their purchases as a way to save time. The kiosk is a 20- by 80-foot building located in the outer parking lot at the Walmart Supercenter at N Council and W Britton roads in Oklahoma City. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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CITY NEWS

B O K PA R K P L A Z A

OFFICE WITH A VIEW

The downtown skyline is seen from the 25th floor of BOK Park Plaza at 499 W Sheridan Ave. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

27-story BOK Park Plaza is topped out and dressing up BY STEVE LACKMEYER For LOOKatOKC

A

rapid series of changes occurred at the future BOK Park Plaza, beginning with removal of the tower crane that was used to erect the 27-story tower. The crane went up in November 2015 and has punctuated the skyline ever since. Dennis Cisper, senior project manager at J.E. Dunn Construction,

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prepped the tower teardown. “We’re through with what we call the building phase,” Cisper said. “For a project like this, the tower crane signifies growth of the project. You’re going up floor by floor, everyone is working hard and we’re getting it to a certain point.” The final glass pieces were installed on the building’s “crown,” which conceals the roof equipment and also will be lit up with an LED band once the job is complete. With the tower removed,

glass panels will replace remaining openings. “The whole demeanor of the job changes with removal of the crane,” Cisper said. “We’re at the finish stage, and we have to be diligent about how we stay on the little things.” Those little things include restrooms, cabinetry and elevator lobbies on each floor. Work already is progressing on the interior finishes through the SEE SKYLINE, 8

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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B O K PA R K P L A Z A

SKYLINE

ABOVE: The 27-story BOK Park Plaza Tower, seen in this aerial photo by CloudDeck Media, overlooks the Myriad Gardens and has views of the Oklahoma River, Bricktown, the state Capitol and the downtown skyline. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

RIGHT: Dennis Cisper, senior project manager at J.E. Dunn Construction, and Trent Wachsnicht, senior vice president, survey reconstructed architectural caps that were removed from the 1930s-era Motor Hotel before it was torn down to make way for construction of BOK Park Plaza. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

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18th story, and air conditioning is on and working halfway up the tower. Tenant finishes, meanwhile, will await final designs being overseen by tenants. The anchor tenant, the Bank of Oklahoma, will consolidate operations in 100,000 square feet of the building with 111 employees who already work downtown at BOK Plaza, 201 Robert S Kerr Ave., and 124 employees who work at the Commerce Center building, 9520 N May Ave. in northwest Oklahoma City. The bank will occupy the top four floors of the new tower, along with a branch on the first floor. Devon Energy Corp. preleased 250,000 square feet but is now reported to be offering some of that space for subleasing. Jim Parrack, senior vice president at Price Edwards, recently estimated about 500,000 of the tower’s 690,000 square feet will be on the market when the tower is completed by its developer, Hines, later this year.

UNPRECEDENTED INTEREST During that same presentation at the Mayors Development Roundtable, Kurt Foreman, executive vice president over economic development at the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber, reported he is fielding an unprecedented amount of interest among companies wishing to open or relocate downtown. BOK Park Plaza is the only one of five towers that were proposed before energy prices plunged and that was built. The development at 499 W Sheridan Ave. connects to the 50-story Devon Energy Center to the east and includes two garages. Four towers that were proposed

CITY NEWS

by Chicago developer Clayco and OGE Energy Corp. were scrapped as construction started on the BOK tower. In response to concerns about clearance of the site, which included buildings considered historic by preservationists, architectural elements were removed from four of the razed structures and are being included in the final design. Stone and brick caps that stood atop a 1930s-era Motor Hotel were removed, cleaned and reassembled by masons and are now on display in a lobby corridor that will connect the tower to garages built along Main Street and at Sheridan and Walker avenues. The north garage on Main Street is set to be adorned with colored mosaic tiles removed from a former department store that was best known as the longtime home of Carpenter Square Theater. Trim removed from the One North Hudson building, originally known as the Hotel Black, will be added along the west garage at Sheridan and Walker. Trent Wachsnicht, senior vice president at J.E. Dunn, said that with the removal of the crane, work on the north garage will be wrapped up quickly with restoration of sidewalks, lighting and landscaping along Main Street. He estimated Main Street should be returned to the city within a couple of weeks. By early July, work should be wrapping up on the west garage, as well, with a crane set to drop a restored Union Bus Station neon sign into a glass beacon at the garage’s corner. The sign will perch three stories above where space is set for a restaurant or retail. Blue glass tiles removed from the 1941 Art Deco/Moderne bus station also will be used in the adjoining garage facade. BOK Park Plaza, now topped out, is the sixth-tallest building in Oklahoma City.

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CITY NEWS

B R O A D WAY E X T E N S I O N

A DEVELOPING STORY Broadway Extension legacy includes questionable planning, missteps LOOKATOKC.COM

BY STEVE LACKMEYER For LOOKatOKC

F

or the first time in my memory, motorists recently were kept off Broadway Extension for an extended period of time as one of the last and oldest sections of the corridor is torn up to make way a wider, modern highway. Driving along Broadway Extension still allows for a glimpse here and there of what it once was — a rural two-lane street connecting the state’s capital with a small farming suburb several miles north. It wasn’t until the 1960s that the highway began to emerge from this two-lane country road, and even then, the design and planning was awkward and never quite right for the growth that was to follow. Planning started after World War II as returning soldiers started families and started buying homes further away from the central core. Industry was moving away from what is

now known as Bricktown and settling along the BNSF tracks between NW 36 and NW 50. At the same time, city fathers went on an annexation spree expanding the city limits to Edmond, then a remote suburb. Broadway Extension actually began as a what was really “Robinson Extension” with highway engineers building a four-lane highway from what was a residential two-lane Robinson Avenue between NW 36 and NW 30 in the historic Edgemere Park. Robinson was converted into a three-lane road with overhead signals changing the direction of the middle lane based on morning or evening rush hour. The street turned into the highway with a bridge spanning NW 36 that was built in the 1960s, along with a major cloverleaf interchange at Interstate 44. Traffic counts along Robinson Avenue in Edgemere Park climbed to 40,000 vehicles

LEFT: Planning for Broadway Extension from downtown to Edmond began after World War II, but construction didn’t begin until the 1960s. This sign stood for a dozen years at NW 36 before work finally got underway. RIGHT: State highway engineers designed the original Broadway Extension to end and funnel traffic into what was a two-lane residential street through historic Edgemere Park just south of the NW 36 highway bridge as shown in this 1967 aerial photograph. [OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES

SEE BROADWAY, 10

PHOTOS]

JUNE 15–28, 2017

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B R O A D WAY E X T E N S I O N

CITY NEWS

BROADWAY CONTINUED FROM 9 a day. No neighborhood should endure such an invasion. Yet in those days, without a court battle and lawmakers at your side, these sorts of highway engineering transgressions were routine across the country. Engineers were, and to some degree still are, more focused on doing what’s best for freeflowing traffic with little training or concern for planning and neighborhoods. By the 1970s, the historic apartment buildings along Robinson were a mess. Highway engineers started to turn their attention to building what is now the Interstate 235 Centennial Expressway that would go farther south and over a rail yard. Edgemere Park residents took the Oklahoma Department of Transportation to court and convinced powerful lawmakers to take up their cause. Highway engineers suggested the apartment houses that were blighted — as a result of their original planning — be used as a buffer for the rest of the neighborhood. The residents went to court and asked state highway officials pay to remove the worst of the blighted structures and instead build a wall and a tall landscaped berm. With lawmakers adding such requirements into annual funding for the agency, the residents managed to score a win. Work proceeded in the early 1980s, though a promised access road to create rear parking egress for the remaining apartment houses was never created. As these battles and more waged with the south half the highway, the state attempted to fix one issue after another on the older section between NW 36 and Edmond. Fencing was added on each side of the highway because children from an adjoining school started running across the busy corridor. Wood post and metal railing medians were upgraded to concrete barriers. Repaving and pothole repair became a

Broadway Extension traffic quickly exceeded its designed capacity, and repairs were ongoing over the years as shown in this 1995 photograph. [OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES PHOTO] constant issue as the highway strained from traffic counts far greater than its designed capacity. Funding for a rebuild was slow but steady, and at one point then-Gov. David Walters proposed converting the highway into a turnpike to quicken reconstruction. Edgemere Park is once again a thriving historic neighborhood, thanks to the battles waged by its residents. But farther south, completion of the highway killed the predominantly black Harrison-Walnut neighborhood, as well as much of Deep Deuce. By the time I-235/Centennial Expressway was opened in 1989, it represented everything the rest of Broadway Extension was not — wide open with three lanes on each side and generous shoulder lanes with good on and off ramp lead lanes. Within a few years, everyone agreed it was time to rebuild Broadway Extension between NW 36 and Edmond. Work began in 1999. We’ve been at it ever since.

ABOVE: The three-lane Robinson Avenue bottleneck from Broadway Extension became a hated but necessary connection between Edmond and downtown Oklahoma City. LEFT: Up to 40,000 cars a day exited and entered Broadway Extension from what was a two-lane Robinson Avenue through historic Edgemere Park. A third lane was added that switched direction for morning and evening rush hours. [OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES PHOTOS]

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LOOKATOKC.COM


CHEROKEE MAIDENS

M U S I C F E AT U R E

BACK IN THE

SWING Oklahoma-rooted trio Cherokee Maidens release new album BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

I

t’s no coincidence that the title track of the Cherokee Maidens’ new album “My Dixie Darling” is an old tune from the legendary Carter Family. “It’s a family thing we’ve got going on here now. It’s truly a family thing,” said red dirt chanteuse Monica Taylor, one third of the interstate Western swing trio. For the past five years, Taylor, who is based in Perkins, and Dixie Chicks co-founder Robin Macy, who lives in Kansas, have been channeling the likes of Bob Willis’ backing singers the McKinney Sisters with the Cherokee Maidens, alongside fellow Kansas crooner Jennifer Pettersen. “Jennifer got married, and as it happens — things like this happen — they had the most beautiful little girl. … And we are so happy for her. But it turned out that we had to make a decision: We either had to find somebody who was the right person to take her place in the group, or we couldn’t sing our songs anymore. It’s just one of those deals,” Taylor said. “One door closes and a beautiful window opens, and here comes Sis.”

TRI-STATE TRIO As it turns out, that’s not just a folksy nickname: Lauren “Sis” White is Macy’s sister-in-law. Kentucky “Kenny” White, Macy’s husband and White’s brother,

LOOKATOKC.COM

The Cherokee Maidens trio is, from left, Kansan Robin Macy, Oklahoman Monica Taylor and Kentuckian Lauren “Sis” White. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

leads the Maidens’ backing band, Sycamore Swing. “She and Kentucky had a bluegrass band when they were young, and then they each joined many different touring bluegrass bands over the years. Actually, the one she has in Kentucky just split, just decided everybody take a break and do different things. And it worked out perfect for us,” Taylor said. The singers aren’t letting the distance get in their way of making beautiful music with their new bandmate, even if Lauren White’s Louisville, Kentucky, residency makes the Cherokee Maidens a tri-state trio. “That’s the way it’s supposed to be. And we work harder now when we’re together to get many shows in a row,” Taylor said. “She’s back home, and (during the holidays) we practiced around their

mom’s kitchen table. She fed us like three meals. I don’t think we left the kitchen table, literally, this one whole day. We practiced all these songs that she memorized: not just words but the vocal parts. And then we worked on all these new songs. So, it’s pretty cool.”

OLD SONGS Apart from a couple of new original tunes, “My Dixie Darling” mostly showcases songs from the 1920s to 1940s with an occasional cut from the 1950s, 1970s and 1990s. “We all have those old-time songs in our blood,” SEE MAIDENS, 12

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M U S I C F E AT U R E

CHEROKEE MAIDENS

MAIDENS CONTINUED FROM 11

Cherokee Maidens, a Western swing trio, has recorded a new album called “Dixie Darling,” with backing band Sycamore Swing. [IMAGE PROVIDED]

The guys in the band are the tops. So, we feel

very blessed that they’ve hung in there with us.

Shelby Eicher and Kenny [White] just can work on arrangements like nobody’s business. — M O N I C A TAY L O R

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Taylor said. “We decided first off we would look for Cindy Walker tunes. You know, she’s kind of our muse; she wrote ‘Cherokee Maiden.’ … We were going to Louisville after Christmas, and we started looking at songs. And we found this one called ‘It’s All Your Fault,’ an old, old song. “But it only had one verse, so Robin and I wrote that whole second verse — like we have a habit of doing — between Springfield and St. Louis,” she added with a laugh. “We texted it to Lauren, and she typed it up. And she took a picture and she said, ‘OK, I’m ready for you when you get here.’ We got there, and it was like ‘Oh my God.’ It was so much fun. We all fell into our places, into our vocal parts. … That’s when you know it’s the right person. That’s when you know.” She praised Macy for having a knack for unearthing songs that are hidden old gems and urging the trio to make them shine again. “I’ll be like ‘Are you serious? Do you think we can do that?’ Like on ‘Avalon,’ all the scatting. She goes, ‘Monica, I am so excited about this. I believe we can do it, and this is something that people don’t hear.’ She’s so creative in that way. … She knows us well enough, and she can figure it out. ‘Here’s a song, let’s try this,’ and then we all work really hard,” said Taylor, who also performs as a solo artist and with other bands, along with hosting the Cimarron Breeze Concerts in her hometown. Ray Benson, of the Grammy-winning band Asleep at the Wheel, joined the Maidens on 1951’s “Rock City Boogie,” a classic cut from Tennessee Ernie Ford and The Dinning Sisters. “Man, he’s awesome. He and Robin go way back. When she had the Dixie Chicks, they shared a lot of shows, a lot of festivals, and shared the stage many different times,” Taylor said. “The song was just perfect for him. I mean, he’s got that fun-loving music spirit, just like Tennessee Ernie Ford.” Along with Kentucky White, the backing band includes members of the well-regarded Eicher family — Nathan on bass, Isaac on mandolin, and their father, Shelby, on fiddle — plus Steve Bagsby on steel guitar and Brandon Blackburn on drums. “The guys in the band are the tops,” Taylor said. “So, we feel very blessed that they’ve hung in there with us. Shelby Eicher and Kenny just can work on arrangements like nobody’s business. The arrangements on this new album are stunning; there are some things that I heard I just couldn’t believe the intricacy. And they’ll be able to play those. They’ll be able to play those parts, I have no doubt.”

LOOKATOKC.COM


CHEROKEE MAIDENS

M U S I C F E AT U R E

The Cherokee Maidens trio is, from left, Kansan Robin Macy, Kentuckian Lauren “Sis” White and Oklahoman Monica Taylor. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

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JUNE 15–28, 2017

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M U S I C F E AT U R E

LAUREN BARTH

Barth finds place in Tulsa, gathers for debut album,

‘Forager’ BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

L

auren Barth was looking for a change when she arrived in Tulsa last January with plans to stay just long enough to play a show and spend a week caring for a dog and housesitting. “By the end of that week, I was here. I had moved in,” the California native said. “I’d never felt so embraced by a community and supported by people I’d just met. It was just a wonderful experience, and I decided to ride it out for a little and see what happened. And all the stuff I’ve been able to get done while living here, I just don’t think I could have done it anywhere else.” Instead of sticking with her tentative plan to move to Nashville, Barth, 30, has found her place in Tulsa’s burgeoning music scene. The singer-songwriter released her debut album, “Forager,” on May 5 via Horton Records, a Tulsa-based nonprofit label. “I’m amazed that Tulsa has that: It’s so rare that a town has a nonprofit record label and that their sole interest and the whole point that they exist is to help artists and not take money from them. It’s a blessing for all of us really,” Barth said by phone.

DISTINCTIVE SOUND With “Forager,” Barth brings a distinctive sound to Horton Records roster. She makes folk music that doesn’t sound folksy, penning songs that often are

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With “Forager,” Lauren Barth brings a distinctive sound to the Horton Records roster. [IMAGE PROVIDED] both down-to-earth and otherworldly. Her influences range from Sheryl Crow, Fleetwood Mac and Tom Petty to Emmylou Harris, Liz Phair and Dwight Twilley. “It’s Americana, but it’s not honky tonk and it’s not country music. … I wanted it to be its own thing, because I feel like a lot of the Americana music coming out now, it’s great, but some of it’s very derivative. You can tell exactly what people were going for, so I wanted to kind of throw people off with this one,” she said. “With this record, especially I was trying to give a nod to all my influences, which a lot of them aren’t current. Some of them are, but I wanted it to have that old-timey feel but also be modern.” Although the way she describes her music varies, Barth often refers to it along the lines of “American mystic folk.” The new album boasts an atmospheric quality she said is no accident. “It definitely is folk music, but it’s not what you

would expect with a folk music label, which is, you know, one person and an acoustic guitar and a harmonica. It’s definitely vast, and we’ve got a lot of, like, musical landscapes that we created. So that’s where it’s kind of got this mysticism element to it,” she said. “I want it to live in its own crystal ball, for sure.” Although some of the songs are older, Barth said the title track sets the album’s enigmatic tone. “I felt like kind of a turning point in my life and in my writing. I heard people all the time say like, ‘I wish songwriters would stop just writing about sappy stuff and love and how the person they love doesn’t love them.’ I was like, ‘Well, that’s what songwriters know,’ ” she said. “Then, I did start thinking about it more deeply and kind of gave myself some challenges to try to write about other things. And this was this idea about kind SEE BARTH, 16

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L AU R E N BA RT H

M U S I C F E AT U R E

Tulsa-based singer-songwriter Lauren Barth released her debut album, “Forager,” on May 5 via Horton Records. [PHOTOS PROVIDED]

LOOKATOKC.COM

JUNE 15–28, 2017

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M U S I C F E AT U R E

LAUREN BARTH

I feel like that’s one of the reasons that there’s so much talent in this town is that it’s so collaborative. Artists here love each other and love each other’s music, and everyone knows each other’s songs.

Lauren Barth finds the Tulsa music scene a comfortable fit.

” BARTH CONTINUED FROM 14 of past lives and if you had lived through different lifetimes, the concept that you were maybe always a little bit the same even if you were doing something different. So my idea was that I’m a songwriter and an artist in this lifetime, but maybe if I were living in a time of traveling nomadic tribes that we would be like foraging for food and shelter. That’s kind of the concept of that song.”

COLLABORATIVE EFFORTS Barth created her crystal ball of an album at Fellowship Hall Sound in Little Rock, Arkansas, where proprietor Jason Weinheimer played bass, engineered

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[IMAGE PROVIDED]

and mixed the album. Tulsan Andrew Bones provided the percussion, while Memphis, Tennessee, player Al Gamble, of St. Paul & The Broken Bones, added his organ aptitude to the album. Although Barth called the making the album a team effort, she said Tulsa musician Jesse Aycock was clearly the captain. He not only contributed guitars, piano and vocals but also served as producer for the project. She said her connection to Aycock dates back to 2014, when they met in California through mutual friends, and she asked him to work on her debut album even before she moved to Tulsa. “We just clicked so well in the studio. He’s so good in the studio. It’s interesting to see, so many musicians are talented in so many ways, and studio proficiency isn’t always (one). ... It’s its own art for sure, and he’s great in there. He’s like a magician,” she said. “It’s just cool to see the direction these songs went

with him being in charge.” Although singer-songwriters don’t historically move from California to Oklahoma to seek their musical fortunes, Barth’s impromptu move to Tulsa seems to be working out. “I feel like that’s one of the reasons that there’s so much talent in this town is that it’s so collaborative. Artists here love each other and love each other’s music, and everyone knows each other’s songs. I’m sure there’s, like, a healthy amount of competition, but not anything like I saw in LA or Nashville where it can get kind of nasty and competitive,” she said. “It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before. It’s inspiring, and it pushes you, too, because there’s so much, like, raw talent here. You can go out any night of the week and see an amazing band and a great songwriter. It makes you want to go home and practice, but it also makes you want to get out and play and meet people. So, it’s a really cool scene.”

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COVER STORY

TICKET HUBBUB

Ticket hubbub

Roger Daltrey, lead singer of the Who, is shown performing March 11, 1976, in New York’s Madison Square Garden. [PHOTO BY ALAN TEPPER, AP]

OKIE CONCERTGOERS SHARE STORIES BEHINDTHEIR FAVORITE CONCERT STUBS

BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC Editor

Vince Gill had enough and d mooned the crowd. The year was 1976, and Gill’s bluegrass band Moun-tain Smoke was getting booed off the Civic Center stage. The musicians were ere opening for KISS, and fans weren’t impressed. One patron threw a drink onstage, ge, and the openers exited the performance after just two songs. Concert memories rank among my favorite stories to tell, but I wanted to share a few from Okie readers. There’s some really ly fun tales, including some that hat happened well before I wass potty trained. I asked if anyone had ticket ket stubs from memorable shows ws and received several repliess and funny moments, includding the Mountain Smoke story ory above. Here are a few standdout reader-submitted stories es from a concertgoer’s point of view.

Myriad (now the Cox Convention Center). The mid-’70s were an exciting time for fans of rock music in Oklahoma City. The Myriad hosted Led Zeppelin, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Jethro Tull and many other groups that I followed. I don’t recall who I attended this concert with, but I’m guessing it was a friend from Edmond Memorial High School. I especially wanted to hear The Who perform songs from their “Who’s Next” album. They did, and I’m pretty sure they closed with “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” I’d hoped to see Pete Townshend

THE WHO AT THE MYRIAD ARENA

March 15, 1976 The concert happened during my junior year of high gh school and took place at the e

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TICKET HUBBUB display the windmill technique on his guitar. He did. I’m sure I was also hoping he would smash an amp or guitar, but I honestly don’t remember whether or not he did. Undoubtedly, I stayed for the entire concert. As a kid I started saving ticket stubs from movies, sporting events and concerts. That’s something that I still do today. I’ve got a shoe box or two full of them and someday I’ll put together some sort of scrapbook or will just have fun remembering the great experiences. Although I understand the reasoning for the change, I’ve been saddened in recent years that fewer events have the old fashioned ticket stubs, and now use e-tickets or printed ones. — John Fletcher

TOM PETTY & THE HEARTBREAKERS AT THE MYRIAD ARENA

Nov. 4, 1991 Fifteen bucks for a Petty show, not bad. I was 23 when I saw that

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers recently returned to Oklahoma City for a 40th anniversary tour stop at the Chesapeake Energy Arena. [PHOTO BY DOUG HOKE]

COVER STORY

show. They played “Don’t Come Around Here No More” and it must have lasted 15 minutes or so. For the last few minutes of the song, the band was just jamming and Tom Petty was being chased around the stage by three guys in masks with strobe lights flashing. One in a Richard Nixon mask, one in a Ronald Reagan mask and one in a George H. W. Bush mask. There was a group of us that worked at a bar in Norman that went. One is unfortunately deceased, one moved down to Texas, one moved to California and one is still in Norman. Also, a buddy of mine from junior college (I was in my first semester at OU) joined us. We were sort of in the back corner of the Myriad, and we were partying it up quite a bit and had most of the section to ourselves. It was an amazing show. They were touring in support of Petty’s solo album “Full Moon Fever” which was a monster album so we had those new songs and all of the good Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers songs from before then. I’ve kept most of my tickets stubs all of my life. This one was probably in a shoe box for years and years. Now I have all of my tickets in an archival box. Some of my tickets are framed up with handbills or show posters. — Rusty Olsen

BIG AUDIO DYNAMITE II AT STATE FAIR PARK March 19, 1992 Over the years, I have attended hundreds of concerts. I have a stack of ticket

SEE TICKET, PAGE 19 Page 18

June 15 - June 28, 2017

LOOKATOKC.COM


COVER STORY TORY

TICKET HUBBUB

TICKET

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19

Nirvana performs live. Frontman Kurt Cobain would’ve turned 50 this year. BY SUB POP RECORDS]

LOOKATOKC.COM

[PHOTO PROVIDED

stubs I keep in a box in my desk drawer. My favorite stub is the one that began it all. I was 16, and this was the first concert I attended without my parents. My friend Clay and I threw on our best flannel shirts and Dr. Martens and arrived at the Oklahoma State fairgrounds about an hour before the doors opened. There was no way we were going to miss any part of this show. The opening band was Blind Melon. This was about a year before “No Rain” was overplayed on MTV, and we hadn’t heard of them. They absolutely blew us away, and we knew we were in for an amazing night. The second band was Live. We had listened to “Mental Jewelry” about 100 times so we were ready. The mosh pit was awesome, and we were right in the middle of it all. After the set we were hanging toward the back of the room to get some fresh air. There were two girls about

our age there. We summoned all the courage required to talk to them and began a lifelong friendship with Jennifer and Sara. Public Image Limited came out and we made our way back to the front of the stage to see Johnny Rotten in action. He didn’t disappoint. Big Audio Dynamite II was the headliner, and we danced with our new friends when “The Globe” was played. After the show we talked with Jennifer and Sara in the parking lot for a long time. We exchanged numbers before Clay and me headed back to El Reno. We would spend almost every weekend in Oklahoma City with them for the next year, and we attended many more concerts together. — Geoff Eaton

PHISH AT THE ZOO AMPHITHEATRE

Aug. 29, 2012 When we moved to Oklahoma from Minneapolis, Minnesota, the hardest thing for me to deal with was the lack of jam bands that came through the state. Music is fundamental for my family. Live music fuels us every day and gives us the extra strength when we need it most. Good music is as essential to us as good food. I remember the sweltering hot day Phish first came to Oklahoma at the Zoo Amphitheater. It was Wednesday (great bands almost always come through midweek), and the 100-degree temperatures were continuing at a record pace. We’d never seen Phish in such a small venue, and we wanted to share one

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Page 19


TICKET HUBBUB

COVER STORY

of our most favorite bands with our Okie Phish newbie friends. So, we bought 10 tickets through PTBM (Phish Tickets By Mail). We live by the philosophy, a concert is always better when you’re given a golden free ticket, plus good times are always more memorable when shared with friends. We were also celebrating our 5-year-old’s very first Phish show and stayed for the entire concert, even though Bella passed out like a hippie during the second set. I happily woke her up at the encore so we could share a classic “Loving Cup” cover by The Rolling Stones. The show remains special because it’s the only Phish show I didn’t have to travel to see. — Jennifer Bjerke Lessard

NIRVANA AT STATE FAIR PARK

Dec. 8, 1993 The thing that stuck out the most was how incredible Nirvana’s performance was. Nobody knew Kurt Cobain would be gone soon, but the writing had been on the wall in the press. With his stints in rehab and chaotic personal life, I thought they’d be a sloppy mess. But I couldn’t have been more wrong. They dominated with a tight, crunchy, aural assault that left no one unsatisfied. The Breeders, on opening duty, were the ones who wound up being too high to play. — Joe O’Shansky Page 20

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Nirvana performs live.

[PHOTO PROVIDED BY SUB POP RECORDS]

LOOKATOKC.COM


M O V I E F E AT U R E

O K L A H O M A F I L M I C O N AWA R D

‘A revival of everything I am.’

Gary Busey sings during The Very Gary Busey in his honor at The Jones Assembly in Oklahoma City. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY SCOTT LANCASTER]

Gary Busey received deadCenter’s Oklahoma Film Icon Award BY BRANDY MCDONNELL | For LOOKatOKC Gary Busey, who grew up in Tulsa, was honored in Oklahoma City, where the Oscar-nominated actor was presented with deadCenter Film Festival’s Oklahoma Film Icon award. The Very Gary Busey Gala took place at The Jones Assembly, a new restaurant, bar, music, and entertainment venue opening this summer on west Sheridan, next to 21C Museum Hotel. The May celebration was the inaugural event at the venue.

LOOKATOKC.COM

In a video interview with my excellent NewsOK colleague David Morris, Busey shared advice for young actors, his memories of making music with Oklahoma native and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Leon Russell and his thoughts on “the stew of life.” The actor, whose seminal performance as Buddy Holly launched a Hollywood acting career that has spanned decades, showed off some impressive hambone skills, too. “It’s beautiful to be back here again. It’s like a revival of everything I am,” he said of coming back to Oklahoma. SEE BUSEY, 22

JUNE 15–28, 2017

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O K L A H O M A F I L M I C O N AWA R D

BUSEY CONTINUED FROM 21 The event, a fundraiser for the 2017 deadCenter Film Festival, featured an appearance by the Thunder Girls and live music from Jabee and Matt Stansberry & The Romance. Busey joined the latter on stage to sing a little Buddy Holly. Busey is a graduate of Nathan Hale High School in Tulsa, and played drums for Russell and Willie Nelson before heading to Hollywood. In 1978, he landed the role of Buddy Holly in “The Buddy Holly Story,” playing guitar and singing all of the vocals. The performance earned Busey a Best Actor Oscar nomination.

Roles in Hollywood hits like “Lethal Weapon,” “Point Break,” “The Firm” and “Under Siege” solidified his place as an enduring actor. “As an actor, Busey has appeared in more than 160 film and television roles. Sixty of those roles have taken place since 2003 when he first started in reality television. At 72, Busey is busier and more widely recognized than all but a handful of his acting contemporaries. We’re honored to welcome him back to Oklahoma, and present him with this prestigious award,” said deadCenter’s Lance McDaniel in a statement. Busey starred in his own Comedy Central Show “I’m with Busey.” He also appeared on “Dancing with the Stars,” “Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew,” and twice on “Celebrity Apprentice.” And, he parodied himself on “The Simpsons,” “Two and

M O V I E F E AT U R E

a Half Men,” “Scrubs,” “American Dad!” and several episodes of HBO’s “Entourage.” During his 2015 run on “Dancing with the Stars,” Busey paid heartfelt homage to his hometown, noting “Tulsa is a spark in my heart for everything I am, for everything I’ve done.” The Oklahoma Film Icon Award was created by deadCenter Film to link the Oklahoma film community with Oklahomans succeeding in the movie industry around the world. Actors James Marsden, Wes Studi and Tim Blake Nelson have been honored alongside Oscar-winning producer Gray Frederickson, Emmy-winning editor Carol Littleton, and Oscar-winning makeup artist Matthew Mungle to highlight the diverse range of achievements Oklahomans have contributed to the industry.

From left, Bud Elder, Gary Busey, Gray Frederickson and Lance McDaniel appear on stage at The Very Gary Busey Gala at The Jones Assembly in Oklahoma City. Busey, who grew up in Tulsa, receives the deadCenter Film Festival’s Oklahoma Film Icon Award. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY SCOTT LANCASTER]

PAGE 22

JUNE 15–28, 2017

LOOKATOKC.COM


M OV I E R E V I E W

‘WONDER WOMAN’

PERSONAL POWER

‘Wonder Woman’ has power to carry entire film, plus a franchise

T

hanks to Gal Gadot’s truly wonderful starring turn and Patty Jenkins’ robust direction, “Wonder Woman” proves worth the wait. It’s been 76 years since the fearless Amazon princess made her bow in DC Comics, and the character is just making her feature film debut. Marvel’s “Iron Man” ushered in the current golden age of comic-book movies nine years ago, and “Wonder Woman” is the first to showcase a female lead. The last female superhero vehicle to charge into cinemas was the dismal “Elektra” in 2005, which incidentally debuted two years after Jenkins’ last feature, “Monster,” which only won Charlize Theron an Oscar.

Gal Gadot in a scene from “Wonder Woman.” [PHOTO BY CLAY ENOS, WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT / AP]

‘WONDER WOMAN’ 2:21 PG-13 ★ ★ ★ ½ ★ Starring: Gal Gadot, Chris Pine, Connie Nielsen, Robin Wright and David Thewlis. (Sequences of violence and action, and some suggestive content)

SEE POWER, 24

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JUNE 15–28, 2017

PAGE 23


‘WONDER WOMAN’

M OV I E R E V I E W

Connie Neilsen, right, and Lilly Aspell in a scene from “Wonder Woman.” [PHOTO BY ALEX BAILEY, WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT/AP]

POWER CONTINUED FROM 23 So, for women who love movies, especially movies made by women and about women, the stakes for “Wonder Woman” were high. Happily, Diana Prince’s film debut clears them with the same impressive ease that the sword-andshield-wielding superhero leaps tall towers. “Wonder Woman” isn’t just the best DC Comics movie to date, it also handily beats out most of Marvel Studios’ entries. Under Jenkins’ direction, “Wonder Woman” offers the requisite rousing fight sequences, clever quips and even the rare comic-book movie romance that actually gets sparks flying. But it also manages to inspire on more than one occasion.

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JUNE 15–28, 2017

Screenwriter Allan Heinberg, a Tulsa native, earns kudos for not only capturing the brave-hearted essence of the comics character but also for bringing a much-needed freshness to the origin story format. Cinematographer Matthew Jensen effectively transports the audience to the idyllic Themyscira, the hidden island home of the Amazon warriors, led by regal Queen Hippolyta (Connie Nielsen) and her fierce sister, Gen. Antiope (Robin Wright). Hippolyta’s daughter, Diana (charmer Lilly Aspell), is the only child among the superhuman fighters, and her mother just wants to keep her young and innocent. But Diana can’t wait to train with her aunt, who portends that the princess is destined for a crucial calling and is determined to prepare her. When American pilot Steve Trevor (Chris Pine) crash-lands on the island with horror stories about World War I, the grown-up Diana (Gadot) believes “the war to end

all wars” must be the work of Ares, the god of war, and she’s determined to venture out and defeat him. Gadot, who electrified in her small role in the otherwise dreary “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” proves she has the power to carry not just an entire film but a franchise. The Israeli martial artist and actor not only thrills when she boldly wades into battle, but also she perfectly plays the character’s fish-out-of-water naivete about humans. The stellar supporting cast gamely plays its parts, but Gadot provides enough wonder to lift the movie when the third act threatens to bog down in gloomy DC movie mode. Maybe a brooding Superman, bitter Batman and vengeful Iron Man are the superhero signs of our times. But Wonder Woman is the superhero we need in 2017. — Brandy McDonnell, for LOOKatOKC

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B R O N C H O | O P O L I S A N D T H E J O N E S A S S E M B LY

J U N E 1 8 A N D AU G . 1 0 BRONCHO shows are already pretty sweaty. Add in some summer heat, and you’ve got a guaranteed sizzler of a good time. The Tulsa-based rock outfit is returning to the Oklahoma City metro area twice this summer, including a newly announced concert date at The Jones Assembly, 901 W Sheridan Ave. You can catch BRONCHO with Spaceface and Daydrinker on June 18 at the Opolis in Norman and Aug. 10 alongside Net at The Jones Assembly. It’s impossible for me to suggest one night over the other, but I can help set your expectations. A BRONCHO show in Norman is always a joyous homecoming experience. The band played one of its first shows at a Norman house concert, and it feels every bit as intimate and freewheeling as a packed living room when the quartet performs at Opolis. I went to the inaugural event at The Jones Assembly and experienced concert sets on both the indoor and outdoor stages. The upcoming BRONCHO show will take place on the outdoor stage, and if the weather cooperates, then it’ll be a beautiful setting for a night of tunes. The outdoor patio is huge, so there’s plenty of room to soak in the show outside of a mosh pit. Either way, you can’t go wrong. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor

From left, BRONCHO is Ben King, Ryan Lindsey, Penny Pitchlynn and Nathan Price. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY POONEH GHANA]

MUSIC JUNE

J U LY

15: Beau Jennings, Tower Theatre. 15-17: G Fest, Hatbox Field. (Muskogee) 16: Boz Scaggs, Michael McDonald, WinStar World Casino.

2: Allie Lauren Project, Myriad Botanical Gardens. 6: Sherman Alexie, All Souls Unitarian Church. (Tulsa) 10: Rilla Askew, Central Library. (Tulsa) 13: The Mountain Goats, Samantha Crain, ACM@UCO

(Thackerville) 16: Costello, Leather Girls, Opolis. (Norman) 17: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 17: Travis Linville, Blue Door. 17: Montu, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 18: Paul Benjaman, Colony. (Tulsa) 19: Iron Maiden, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 20: Collective Soul, Our Lady Peace, Tonic, Zoo

Amphitheatre. 21: Chuck Klosterman, First Street Flea. (Tulsa) 22: Chris Stapleton, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 23: The Nixons, Fiawna Forte, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 23: Helen Kelter Skelter, Opolis. (Norman) 24: 808s and Solid Snake: A Kanye West/Metal Gear Art Show, 51st Street Speakeasy. 24: Jerry Seinfeld, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 24: Dwight Yoakam, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 24: Joe Jackson, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 24: Smash Mouth, Frontier City. 24: James McMurtry, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 29: David Ramirez, Tower Theatre. 30: A Giant Dog, 400 block of Main St. (Norman)

LOOKATOKC.COM

Performance Lab. 14-15: Garth Brooks, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 15: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 15: Rick Springfield, Frontier City. 21: Sun Riah album release, Opolis. (Norman) 22: Asleep at the Wheel, Dale Watson, Cain’s Ballroom.

(Tulsa) 24: AFI, Circa Survive, Diamond Ballroom. 26-29: Gathering of the Juggalos, Lost Lakes Amphitheater. 28: Morris Day and the Time, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 29: The Wallflowers, Better Than Ezra, The Jones Assembly. 30: The Lunar Laugh, Myriad Botanical Gardens.

AU GU ST 3: Edgar Cruz and the Brave Amigos, Oklahoma City

Museum of Art. 4: Oak Ridge Boys, Central National Bank Center. (Enid)

4: Bob Schneider, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 5: Tobin Sprout, Elf Power, Opolis. (Norman) 6: Matchbox 20, Counting Crows, Zoo Amphitheatre. 11: Statik Selektah, Jabee, Tower Theatre. 17: Ed Sheeran, James Blunt, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 19: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 19: Sports, Opolis. (Norman) 21: Michael Franti and Spearhead, Cain’s Ballroom.

(Tulsa) 22: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 23: Father John Misty, Tennis, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 25: Steven Tyler, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 26: Linkin Park, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 26: Keith Urban, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville)

SEPTEMBER 6: David Cook, Tower Theatre. 11: The Toasters, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 14: Old 97’s, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 16: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 23: Reverend Horton Heat, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 24: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Criterion. 28: Young the Giant, Criterion. 29-30: Illinois River Jam, Peyton’s Place. (Tahlequah) 30: Gary Clark Jr., Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa)

JUNE 15–28, 2017

PAGE 25


2 0 1 7 O KC P R I D E PA R A D E | 3 9 T H S T R E E T S T R I P

6 P. M . J U N E 2 5 Celebrate diversity in Oklahoma City with the OKC Pride Parade as more than 100 entries march down NW 39th Street from Classen Boulevard to Youngs Boulevard. The parade route begins at 42nd Street and Classen Boulevard and ends at 39th Street and Youngs Boulevard. This year marks the 30th year for the OKC Pride Parade. For more information, visit okcpride.org.

Kylie Hagerdon, left, and Lindsey Chaffin pose at the 2016 OKC Pride Parade in Oklahoma City. [PHOTO BY KURT STEISS]

B E AC H VO L L E Y BA L L T O U R N A M E N T | B R I C KT OW N B E AC H

8 A . M . T O 4 P. M . • J U N E 1 7 The Bricktown Beach Volleyball Tournament is back for 2017 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Bricktown Beach, 2 S Mickey Mantle Blvd. Downtown OKC will be bringing in bleachers, food trucks and a DJ, and the Dodgers will open up concessions. The tournament will be doubleelimination. Each Match will be the best two out of three games to 15 points. The event is free and open to the public. Team registration is full.

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JUNE 15–28, 2017

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F I R S T N AT I O N A L P R E - C O N S T R U C T I O N PA R T Y | D O W N T O W N

4 : 3 0 T O 7 : 3 0 P. M . J U N E 1 5 Before the construction at the First National Center starts, Cornerstone Development is opening the “Grand Dame” to the public one last time before her renovation. Oklahoma City’s treasured 1931 Art Deco skyscraper at 120 N Robinson will be celebrated with a comeand-go happy hour. Hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar will be available. For those who can’t make it June 15, the building will be open for public viewing from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. June 16 and 9 a.m. to noon June 17. This event is free and open to the public, however space is limited. Please visit www.eventbrite.com and search “First National Pre-Construction Party” to RSVP by June 13.

[PHOTO PROVIDED]

S TA R S & S T R I P E S R I V E R F E S T I VA L | B O AT H O U S E D I S T R I C T

1 0 A . M . T O 1 0 P. M . J U N E 2 4 An estimated crowd of more than 20,000 will gather in the Boathouse District for the sixth annual Stars & Stripes River Festival on June 24. This Fourth of July-themed festival combines on-thewater fun with food trucks, Riversport Adventures, white-water rafting and racing throughout the day. Competitors will take to the water in the Riversport Challenge kayak and 5K race and the PaddleFest community dragon boat races, followed in the evening by the OKC Riversport Corporate Rowing and Dragon Boat League Championships, and OGE NightSprints. The Riversport Whitewater Rafting League Championship will be held during the day at the Riversport Rapids white-water rafting and kayaking center. Visit www.riversportokc.org for more information. [PHOTO BY SARAH PHIPPS]

LOOKATOKC.COM

JUNE 15–28, 2017

PAGE 27


SHOTS

PA S E O A R T S F E S T I VA L

Cobos Leon

Bre, Natalie, Matt, Andy, Henry, Marcia, Mizuho and Miranda

Jordayn and Tyler

Erin and Tanner

PAGE 28

JUNE 15–28, 2017

Madison and John

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PA S E O A R T S F E S T I VA L

Tyner and Justin

Julia and Kyle

SHOTS

Lexi and Amanda

Anna and Michael

[PHOTOS BY STEVEN MAUPIN, FOR LOOKATOKC]

LOOKATOKC.COM

JUNE 15–28, 2017

PAGE 29


2000 Ford F150 Ext quad

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Thor Hurricane 35C Class A Motor Coach, 36.9ft, 2 slides, Ford V-10 gas engine, theater seating with foot rest, power drop down hide away overhead bunk, 1.5 ba, (2) 13,500 BTU ACs, fully equipped linens & kitchen including outside grill, 3 TVs, automatic outside awning, 2 many extras to list, reduced to $92,500, WAY UNDER LIST. 405-820-6433.

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Page 30

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2009 Hitchhiker LS 5th wheel, 33' 3 slides, king bed, exc cond stored inside, $24,000, 405-850-6446 Individual - 2012 Chevy Suburban, loaded w/sunroof, silver w/black leather, x-cond in & out, $24,250 OBO. 842-4015 or 517-0227

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

Page 33


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Receptionist/Secretary With Microsoft Office Experience. Some benefits. Apply in person at

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Page 34

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Mt St Mary Catholic High Schl certified Tech.Ed tchr (Comp. Apps.,Video Production,TV/Webcast Prod.,Graphics/ Film Design) w/poss. coaching. Also, seeking P/T Spanish Teacher Please fax cover letter & resume 405-631-9209 or email to tdenegri@mountstmary.org

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RN FIELD CASE MGR FT•1-2 yrs home health exp. req'd •Oasis C2 trained FIELD RN's/LPN's FT & PT-

•1-2 yrs home health exp. pref'd.

Top Pay, Excellent Benefit Pkg. Health, Dental, Vision, AFLAC, PTO, Retirement & Disability Fax resume to 405-340-5101 or email

EXPERIENCED

Insulation Installer

(mostly blowing attics) START IMMEDIATELY. Top Pay! Must have driver's lic. & be able to run a crew. Call 405-495-1777

admin@allfaithhc.com

Experienced Comm'l Roofers Sub Crews - Foremen - Laborers Excellent pay scale & benefits. Brad, 936-203-1299 DISHWASHER 3-9 Tue-Sat Apply in person at: Ann's Chicken Fry House 4106 NW 39th

Stevens Trucking

is looking for an experienced

Class 8 Tractor Mechanic You must have your own tools. To apply go to

Think you're worth $150 a day? We might! Catering Company Must like concerts/bike rallies. Overnight travel required. Lodging and transportation provided. Call 918-361-0749

EMERGENCY MED. TECH

Must be HS grad ages 17-34. No exp needed. Paid training, benefits, vacation, regular raises. Call Mon-Fri 877-628-9562.

Massage Therapist

needed P/T or F/T for chiropractic clinic. Please fax resumes to 405-752-5839.

LOOKATOKC.COM

Practical Nursing Coordinator

www.mntc.edu/about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

Full Time Sales Full time Retail sales opportunity available for motivated and outgoing individuals. Apply at Tener's Western Outfitters 4320 West Reno, Okc. $12.00 per hour- Bonuses available *

Print & Marketing Sales -Previous sales experience, specifically in print marketing sales is desired but not required Proven ability to make successful cold calls & sales both inside and outside of the office 45k Annually Health Dental 401k LaSaundra Kendall Send resumes to (405)359-6528 or lasaundra@ssicards.com

www.stevenstrucking.com or

in person at 6600 SW 29th, OKC

DUMP TRUCK DRIVER Full time - Class A CDL. 2 Years Experience. Good Driving Record. Shop located in Cashion, OK. Please call 405-255-2788

Local Delivery Driver

Class “A” CDL-Home DAILY! No Unloading Apply: Mid-Con Carriers Corp. Midconcarriers.com (405)237-1300

No CDL? No Problem!

Mid-Con Carriers offers training. Start your new career today. Drivers earn up to $1400/wk. plus bonuses & benefits! Van & flatbed. Call 405-237-1300 or midconcarriers.com

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Page 35


Bank Owned 4/2/2, 2 liv, 1673sf, blt 91, lg enc patio w/deck, hot tub, $150,800 Rlty Exp 414-8753

K Office, K Warehouse.

800 N Meridian

1155sf. 221 W. Wilshire 842-7300

1 & 2 Bedroom 946-9506

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

Castle Tower Apts ¡ ALL BILLS PAID ¡‘¡‘¡‘¡ 405-946-0637

Bank Owned 3/2/2, .22 ac, 1293sf new crpt $79.9k RltyExp 414-8753

Spacious NW 2bd 1ba 1car $750+ dep. call Cynthia 405-424-1193

10 acre Mobile Home Park

1213 SW 60th St, 1 & 2 bdr apts, $375 - $475 mo w/$250 dep, No Sec 8. 632-9849

19 park owned mobile homes. 1 house. Bridgecreek. 405-793-1719 or 405-626-2022.

Spacious NW 2bd 1ba 1car $750+ dep. call Cynthia 405-424-1193 Clayton Homes of OKC has lenders offering Zero down with Land and less than perfect credit. We will take trades in any condition & give you top dollar towards your new home. Purchase home and receive a free 50 inch TV! Call 405-631-7600 for details WAC

New Luxury 3/2/2 Duplex 13516 Brandon Pl, fp, Deer Creek Schools, near Mercy 842-7300

27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

I-40W & Rt 66, 1/2 mi from Banner school. Call or write George: 240-486-2955 gecep@hotmail.com

For sale or trade, 3 bed, 1.5 bath, large den with fireplace, fix it like you want it, large shop, storm shelter close to I-40, 405-321-7843 or 405-317-0645. Owner Carry 3213 Lazy Ln nice & renovated 3bd, 1.5ba, $6000 down $650/mo. Call Steven 250-9539.

Showroom/Retail Space Norman 24th/E Lindsey 1250 SF $775 405-364-3935

Owner Carry 109 Kathleen Dr nice & renovated 3bd, 2ba $6000 down $650/mo. Call Steven 250-9539.

3 bed, 2 bath, w/appliances included + W&D, storage shed, Edmond Schools, No Pets, 348-6240 or 623-1181.

Furnished/Unfurnished. Bills Paid Unfurn 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; Wes Chase Apartments, Elk Horn Apartments, Hillcrest (SW OKC), 370-1077.

Cute 2br, 1ba, Home 4504 SE 19th St 1 car garage, central heat & A/C. $600 per mo. Call/Text (760) 470-6568

14 Homes 2-4 beds $750-2195 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com

907 N Kentucky-Eff. apt w/bath, kitchenette, all bills paid including cable & internet, $395 + dep & proof of income, 737-8423.

Pool & laundry. Casady 751-8088

3 bed, 1.5 bath, ch&a, new carpets, hardwood floors, 2 car garage, fenced yard $825+dep. 9714 NE 2nd St. 812-6014

Page 36

2004 Martin Luther King. Nice 3 bed 1 bath. $550. 732-3411

Adjacent to runway w/40ft & 70ft doors. 10,000sf hangar, 4,150sf warehouse, 4,980sf office/hospitality area, 4,980sq heated 2nd floor storage. Lease negotiable. Contact Jennifer @ Thomas Economic Development Authority, 580-661-3685. 2267200

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Washer, Dryer, Freezer, Stove, Frig, $100 ea, can del, 820-8727.

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

Auction Sat June 17 ¡ 10AM

15025 SW 59th Yukon OK 93 acres offered in 3 tracts 3185sqft home 4 bed 4 bath

Lg 1bd, newly redecorated $535 Extra Nice 2bd $615

Great find in Sara Homestead Subdivision 716 E. Olivia Terrace, Mustang, OK Open House Sundays 12-4 p. m. and by Appt. On Zillow web site. 4bed, 2.75ba, 2 Car 2408 mol Ranch Home, .46 ac., $314,900 (405) 376-0304

Financing avail. 30day-5yr warr. $125&up 1233 SE 44th 632-8954

Lg 3bd 2ba 2car, stove, fridge, new carpet, paint. $575 596-8410

CH/A, 1 car. $675. 732-3411

23,000sf Commercial Building in Thomas, OK.

1116 NW 12th, 2bed, 1bath, 1car, ch&a, $675mo+$500dep, 631-8220

2 bed from $675 Try Plaza East • 341-4813

7412 SE 15. Nice 3 bed 1 bath.

Bank Owned 4/2/2, 1400sf, brick $78,500 Realty Experts 414-8753

Townhouse NW, all new, 3/2/2, ch&a, $800 + dep, 405-968-1186.

10512 NW 37th Sharp 3bd 2ba 2car $1195 Harris RE 410-4300

MOVE IN NOW!

5208 Bodine, OKC, rented, net 9.3% ROI, $62.5K, Larry, 650-9684.

For Lease/Yukon Retail & Office Spaces, 1,170-9,600 SQFT Looking for new tenants to join our Plaza Family! Located in front of new senior citizen housing Call Debbie 405-642-2949

6 Homes 2-4 beds $675-1395 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com

3bd, 2 full ba, 1 car, fncd yrd, exc cond, $900mo+ dep. 405-402-0441

112KA SE 1st gar apt cute 1bd $400 No pets Harris RE 410-4300

155 acres 20 mi from OKC near

2929 NW 67th Nice 2/1/1 CH/A Fncd Yd Dishwasher W/D Hkup $795/600 Dp. No Pets, No Sec 8 $45 app fee 620-520

5 bed, washer/dryer hookup, SW 21st & Penn, $700+ dep, 968-1186

Lot on Lake Tenkiller, walking distance to lake, electric & sewer, $15,000 obo, 405-642-2447.

I BUY & SELL HOUSES

3410 Cameron Ct 2/2/1 fp $750 appls. no pets 755-2510 317-2479

HOME FOR RENT 3bed, 1.5ba, 1 Car Home 405 810-6758

3 bed 2 bath set-up & ready for immediate move-in. Burntwood Mobile Home Park 405-631-7600

E of OKC, pay out dn. Many choices mobile home ready. Call for maps TERMS 275-1695 www.paulmilburnacreages.com

12516 Abbots Way, 73162 3 bed, 2 ba, 2 car, approx 1400 sf, $975 mo, $900 dep, 370-1077.

Putnam Heights Plaza

Muntage Apts ‘ ALL BILLS PAID ¡‘¡ 405-946-0588

kencarpenterauction.com

Tami 406-5235 ‘ Ken 620-1524

PRIVATE COLLECTION

"High-End" GUNS AUCTION

Sat June 17 @ 1pm

Cleveland County Fairgrounds 615 E Robinson Norman, OK 73071 150+/- Quality Firearms PLUS Signed Ted Nugent Guitar. Photos/list @ webpage

MAYFAIR great historic loc, sec./quiet 1 & 2 beds 947-5665 1 & 2 bed, newly remodeled, ch/a, 1830 NW 39th 524-5907

inground pool. Large barns. Horse stalls. Lots of extras. Sundowner 3 horse slant trailer. T650 skid steer. Kubota U55-4 trackhoe 77 hours like new. Big Tex 18ft dump trailer like new. Enclosed 18ft trailer 22+5 flatbed gooseneck trailer. For Pics go to:

•8917 NW 80th, 1500 sq ft, •8413 NW 90th, 2000 sq ft, Both 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car garage, $1145 mo, $750 dep, 370-1077.

LOOKATOKC.COM


NEED 20,000 BOOKS, CDs, DVDs records, posters, art, comics. Tulsa. Will travel. Can pick up in 24 hrs. Gardner's Used Books.

Largest book store in Okla!!

(918) 409-1096 627-7323 250-7381

2 Part Epoxy Urethane,

Grey; shop, dealerships & factory floors. Has excellent adheision & chemical resistance. Abrasion tough. There are no commercial equivalence that meet the combination of all the properties of this spec. As good outdoors as indoors. $40/gallon kit, 15 or more $35. 405-401-6914 El Reno Sheet Metal 3'x10' $16 ¡ Trim & Screws ¡ Mon-Sat ¡ 390-2077

JD Round Baler 466 makes 4x5 or 5x6 bales field ready, very good baler $8000 Jim England 405-756-3842 or 405-756-6250

Cedar wood panels, 6 feet high, 8 feet long, $43 each, 405-833-5439.

The City of Ada, OK, is auctioning

Hunting Leases

on four tracts of land, located in Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, identified as follows: Tract 2, 320 acres, W/2 Section 4, T1N-R6E, Tract 3, 174 acres, Part of Sections 4, 33, and 34, T1N-R6E, Tract 4, 545 acres, Part of Section 3 and 4, T1N-R6E, and Tract 5, (bow hunting ONLY) approx. 320 acres more or less, Part of Sections 34 & 35, T2N-R6E.

Wheel chair $75; Walker w/seat $40; Bedside chair $25; 685-8240.

The proposed contract and map of the area are available from the Purchasing Department, City of Ada, (580)436-6300 X256 or by visiting www.adaok.com. The Auction Location is 210 West 13th St, West Annex Conference Room, West Door, Monday, July 10, 2017, 3:00 PM CT.

The City of Ada, OK, is auctioning a Grazing and Hunting Lease

on one tract of land, located in Pontotoc County, OK, identified as follows: Tract 1, 752 acres, Part of Sections 8, 16, and 17, T1N-R6E.

The proposed contract and map of the area are available from the Purchasing Department, City of Ada, (580) 436-6300 x256, or by visiting www.adaok.com. The Auction Location is 210 West 13th St, West Annex Bldg, Conference Room, West Door, Monday, July 10, 2017, 3:00 PM CT.

GUN SHOW JUNE 17 - 18 SAT. 9-5 & SUN. 9-4 OKLAHOMA CITY STATE FAIRGROUNDS Modern Living Building INFO: (563) 927-8176 www.rkshows.com

Troy-Bilt self-propelled push mower, exc., elec. start, used 1 season, $150obo. 405-209-8242 Late Spring Sale! Large selection of gas & electric cars! 872-5671.

Port-A-Cool evaporative cooler, $1000-$3000, 405-823-2917.

less than 100hrs - never stored $525 ¡ 405-340-4799

LOOKATOKC.COM

Blue Russians, M & F, $200ea. 769-2527, 323-2342, 627-9989

FREE Adorable KITTENS fun loving, need good home, Call anytime 405-613-1190.

Free kittens to good home, 405-550-2145. Free to good home, 9wks kittens litter box & wormed 405-323-5530

MODERN LIMOUSIN & LIM-FLEX BULLS

Birth weights as low as Angus but more growth & muscle & better dispositions. 25 yearling heifer bulls. 25 big stout 18-24 mo. old bulls. Black or Red. Most $1,800-$2,500. Delivery Assistance. John Kusel, Kusel Limousins ‘ 580-759-6038

AKBASH puppies, reg, 4 months, with chickens & sheep, $500 ea, 405-777-6820, Shawnee, OK.

We buy GUNS Mustang Pawn & Gun. Over 1000 guns! 376-GUNS German Shorthair Pointer AKC pups 12wks 1st shots. Parents exc hunters $600ea 580-284-8105

George Steck upright piano

Strips: FreeStyle, OneTouch, & Accuchek, also CPAP/BIPAP Machines Also buying GOLD & SILVER: Jim 405-202-2527

References and liability insurance are required. Lease terms are five years with rent payable annually. All leases are subject to approval and can be rejected.

References and liability insurance are required. Lease terms are five years with rent payable annually. All leases are subject to approval and can be rejected.

New & Used. Financing available. 1233 SE 44th 405-632-8954

Paying cash for: Diabetic Test

SWIMMING POOL ACCESSORIES LOOK/MAKE OFFER 376-5659

Australian Shepherd Mini ASDR, S/W tails and dew claws removed. M and F all colors. $800 & up 580-362-7166

June 15 - June 28, 2017

Page 37


AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD

full size, good bloodline, s/w, litter registered, $400, call 405-2243229, or see @ damcofarm.com

Doberman puppies, $1500, 501749-1034, www.foxkennel.com

Australian Shepherds, obedient & willing nature, will adapt to family & as aservice dog, 3M, 12 weeks $400 each, 405-365-0555.

GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC

PUPPIES, 9 weeks, 3M, father 95 lbs, big boned $350. 405-420-1279

Australian Shepherds, Toy/Mini, M/F, all colors, Registered/Guaranteed, $250-$600. 580-504-0585

Beagle puppies, 8 weeks old, s/w, 2M $250, 1F $300, 405-464-8318.

German Shepherd/Gr. Pyr mix 2 yr F. Up to date on shots, microchipped. $100 405-919-2065 Call or text for pics.

English Bulldogs AKC We have 2 home raised English Bulldog females. Dad is a clown you can't look at him without laughing. He weights about 75lbs. Mom is the kindest dog ever a true sweetheart. She weights about 55lbs. The girls are chucked full of personality and wrinkles. They come with full AKC, Vet check, Micro Chip, UTD on shots and health guarentee. $2000.00 580-380-0240

German Shepherd puppies, AKC, s/w, pics available, $700 obo, 405-249-7177 or 405-765-4900 German Shepherds, AKC, black & tan, 7 weeks old, 1st shots, healthy, $275, 405-921-8761. German Shorthair Pointer AKC pups 12wks 1st shots. Parents exc hunters $600ea 580-284-8105 Giant Schnauzer Puppies, DOB 4/9/17, AKC, 4M, 2F, $1,000. (405) 201-8603/201-8703 lv msg Giant Schnauzer 1/2 Lab, M, s/w $100. Newcastle, 405-387-3700.

Belgian Malinois, AKC Pups, 2M, great for home protection, parents imported $500ea. for limited registration. 918-630-8678

Great Dane AKC Pups, only 3 left, ready now. Forever Father's Day Present $750-$2000 405-4768673

Great Dane Puppies Full blood, Vet checked, dew claws, wormed 2,4,6 wks, first shots 250-350 405-590-7394

Poodle Puppy (Toy) AKC toy poodle.dob 04/17/17. Vet ck, shots. 1 m , 2 f $975.00 405-845-4274

HYBRID WOLF CUBS, 3F, 94% Timber Wolf, 6% Malemute, DOB 2/28/17, POP, 3rd shots, wormed, $100obo cash, call Barbara in Stillwater 405-624-3859

PUG PUPPIES REGISTERED $800 AND UP 580.927.6469

Rat Terriers, 9wks, 2nd s/w,

$300ea. Other pics available. Harrah Resident 405-240-0276 GOLDENDOODLES & LABRADOODLES Mini/medium sizes ~No shed/ hypoallergenic~S/W/DC vet check microchip~our website is rubyrunkennel.com $2,000-$2,500 rubyrunkennel@yahoo.com 405-320-1198

Border Collie, 2 year F, working potential, $100, 405-626-5474.

Rat Terrier puppies, will be small, $150 each, 405-222-8612.

Lab Pups AKC wht & yellow M&F champ bldline $795. 405-899-4132

English Bulldog Puppies, AKC, 8wks, current vaccs, ready for homes now $1600. 918-424-5294

Bully's, UKC/ABKC pups, 1F, 3M, champion bloodlines, $750 obo, 405-973-5000, Sulphur, OK. Cane Corso Puppies Males & Females * 918-616-3617

ENGLISH MASTIFF PUPPIES Beautiful AKC English Mastiff Puppies. 6 males and 3 females. apricots and fawns. up to date on shots and wormings. vet checked. Dam and Sire on site. Big, Beautiful, and very social. Ready for their forever homes on 6/11/17. Text or call Paul at (405)3883646. Please leave message. $800 text or call Paul (405)388-3646 FRENCH BULLDOG PUPPIES 2M, 1F, 11wks, chocolate & blue carriers, home raised, vet checked $1,800ea ‘ 580-243-7719

Cattle Dogs, sisters, 4 months, s/w, $100, 405-626-5474.

Goldendoodle & Labradoodle Puppies Available Now!

2 year health guarantee, s/w, $1,800 ea, 501-514-1026, www.platinumgoldendoodles.com

s/w, long hair, $300, Del City, OK, 808-3263.

Dachshund Puppies (Mini), will be small, $250. 405-892-7512.

Doberman Pups ACA 10wks, s/w/ t/dc, blk/tan, $400. 405-371-3307

Page 38

Siberian Huskies Born 4/11. Blue eyes,2 M, 2 F, blonde, choc, white/silver, POP $300. 405/657-8443

GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC PUPS 2 white F, 4 blk & tan/silver F, POP, vet ckd, s/w, $500 ea, 405-313-1879, can send pics.

June 15 - June 28, 2017

WOLF CUBS HYBRID 99% Blend Of Arctic, British Columbian and North American Timber Wolf. 1 White Male & 1 Gray Female, 9wks S/W. $500 405-650-4302 Yorkie, ACA, 2M, tiny teacup, $1250, 405-627-0419.

Yorkie AKC Puppies, Adorable

Rottweilers, AKC Puppies,

Boys, s/w/t, will be small. Ready to go, $600. 405-919-9386

Rottweiler AKC pups true Germ bred $700-$1200 405-227-4729

Yorkie-Poo, 10 week old male, loveable, great family dog, s/w/t/dc, bowls, food, collar, leash, 3 toys, $600, 405-593-2378.

Schnauzer, mini, 7 weeks, 2F, 3M, reg, black, s/w/t/dc, vet checked, puppy cuts, $450-$500, 412-4494.

Yorkies, Cute Babies, 1 Choc., $400-$450. 405-380-8469 YORKIES ACA M&F s/w/dc, pics avail. $350-$600. 580-224-1642

GOLDENDOODLE PUPPIES Ready now. 1st shots, 2M left, $1000, 479-675-6681. For pictures go to katherinewhitaker.net

COCKER pups, 4 AKC Beauties!, shots, groomed, health guaranteed, $300-$500 405-408-8724.

Dachshund Minis, 6 weeks,

Labradoodle CKC puppies CKC F1BB bred for non-shedding allergenic traits. Health guarantee, all vet current. contact Tracy for more info $1200 405-831-6754

Schnauzers, Mini, AKC, s/w/ chipped, $500-$600, 405-434-0534

Labradors, AKC, Ready now, POP, s/w & vet checked, Jacktown/Meeker, $300, 405-220-9159. GERMAN SHEPHERD AAA AKC Purebred pups + FREE food, leash, collar, training papers. Police dog parents. EXC guardians with Kids. Black/Silver/Tan, $495 972-333-4394, Pauls Valley

Rottweiler/Black Lab mix, 2 year old female, spayed, good natured, loves water, retrieves, free to a good home, 405-823-6236. 2M, short stocky build, $300 ea, 405-207-1453.

Chihuahua, ACA, 1F, long coat, black, t-cup, $850, 405-627-0419.

Corgi puppies, AKC, s/w, extra nice, $900, 940-867-0931.

Siberian Huskies AKC Siberian Huskies born 4/27. 1 W M, 1 W F, blue eyes. POP. $500 each 405-826-8349

Japanese Chin, female, black and white, very small, cute and loveable, 11 wks, $450, 405-365-0555.

English Bulldogs, AKC, 2 young adult F, 1 litter ea, color carriers, $2500 ea together, 918-951-5775.

BICHON FRISE

Boxers AKC 1 female $750 5males $550 1st shots wormed tails/dew claws done $550/$750 580-216-1864/ 910-747-1370

Pomeranian pups, ACA reg, M&F, s/w, POP, rare color, 8 weeks, $600 obo, calls only, 918-387-4216

Shidoodle Puppies: Tiny, Quality, 3 Boys, Okemah Sunday, 3pm. $450. 918-426-0169

Lab Pups, AKC, blk & choc., block heads, otter tails, s/w/dc, Ready Now, $600. 918-623-8305

small, cute & cuddly, delivery available, $450, 580-677-2087.

Boston Terriers, AKC, s/w/ chipped, $500-$600, 405-434-0534

Pomeranian AKC Male 11W Current S/W Raised in home. $700.00 580-231-6217

Maltese-Pekingese, ITTY BITTY! 2 cute, $395, Visa/MC, 826-4557. Golden Retriever Puppies AKC Registered Golden Retriever puppies. 1 female and 1 male. POP. Wormed. Born May 1st and almost ready to go! $700 Allison 580-682-1888

Golden Retriever/Bassett Mix

M 4yrs 50lb shots neut. hsebrkn loves kids! needs fncd backyard FREE 918-902-0060 TEXT.

Morkie Female 7 weeks old, tiny & super cute!! Black & tan $1,200. (405) 380-5014

Schnauzers, toy, AKC, 2M, 3F, POP, all with s/w, vet checked, chipped, crate & bed; $700, 405-318-4433 or 405-919-4598. Schnauzion, designer, 12 week female, small, very good with children, a lap dog for the elderly, $250, 405-365-0555.

Teacup & Juliana Piglets & pregnans sows, smallest you can get

$300-$500, 405-481-5558.

3 Female Racoons, $200 each. 405-226-5444

Morkies, 10 weeks, s/w, adorable, $400, 405-361-5317.

Schnorkies (AKC Mini Schnauzer/ Yorkie designer breed) Non shed Hypo allergenic Groomed Vet ckd s/w/t/dc ¡ $500 ¡ 580-436-1699

Morkies, Adorable, ITTY BITTY! $495, Visa/MC, 405-826-4557.

SCHNORKIES, darling puppies, s/w, $400, 405-626-5474.

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

LOOKATOKC.COM


Gold wedding ring, diamond solitaire, near NW 5th & Harvey, OKC reward offered, 405-550-7906. Home Repair & Remodel. Roofing. Siding. Free Estimate. 410-2495.

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

RESIDENTIAL HAULING AND CLEANING, 765-8843.

OKC Landscaping & Irrigation ‘ 405-778-5233 ‘

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

Prescription Drug Misuse Media Campaign The Southern Plains Tribal Health Board (SPTHB) seeks an independent media/social marketing consulting firm who will develop a comprehensive advertising & awareness media campaign to reduce prescription drug misuse for American Indian youth age 12-25. The successful bidder will provide video messaging, public service announcements, print and electronic advertisements, social media, using positive messaging/social norming strategies. Other requirements will include developing a post campaign evaluation; report development; market planning; image and concept development; design and placement; interactive social media campaign; public service announcements for radio and television; development of print materials; video production; on site real time marketing events; and plans for community and parent involvement. Experience in public health and working with Native American populations is preferred. Not to exceed $40,000 Contact: Aron Wahkinney, Communications Specialist, 405-4977868, awahkinney@spthb.org

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

David & Goliath Painting, interior & exterior, 33 yrs exp, 537-2657. Cracked Mortar/Brick Repair www.precisionbrickworks.com Free estimates!(405)652-1213 Jim's Painting/Remodeling, int/ ext, res/com'l, insured, 314-0755.

Bill's Painting & Home Repairs

A Carpenter & Handyman you can afford. 30yrs exp. 405-620-2623

Carports & Patio Covers, Any Size & Any Color. 799-4026/694-6109

Minerals Selling in the Heart of Oklahoma STACK: 880 NMA Blaine Co., OK

Farm Service Co. 405-224-1872

Belgian Malinios 3yr old Fml Tan w/black mask. Taken from yard on Dorchester Dr & Elmhurst Ave

$50 reward for info leading to recovery 405-843-4011 Belgian Malenios 3yr old Fml Tan w/black mask. Taken from yard on Dorchester Dr & Elmhurst Ave $50 reward for info leading to recovery 405-843-4011

LOOKATOKC.COM

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC.

SHEPHERD CONCRETE, Free Est, Licensed, Bonded, Ins, 520-4426.

Concrete Work/Driveways/Patios Lic./Bonded »» 405-301-2019

Garay's Roofing/Construction 370-3572, quality work, repair/ replace, fully ins, OK reg #3118.

ROOFING & REPAIRS, Free Est. lic 80000120, 722-2226/640-1144

June 20, 2017, 10:00AM. Info. available at FarmServiceCompany.net

Quality Work! Free Est. 306-3087.

Ask about camera special. 528-7733, buddysplumbingok.com

Resident'l & Comm'l. Sr. Disc. Lic./Ins. Free Est. 405-719-0793

Oklahoma Mineral Sale

Fitzpatrick Painting, 34 yrs exp, free est, lic, ins, 405-446-9882.

SHARPE'S ELECTRIC

& Heat & Air, OKC, 341-8488.

»GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. QUALITY FENCE COMPANY FREE ESTIMATES on new & repair, 405-317-0474.

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,

Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.

QUALITY FENCE COMPANY FREE ESTIMATES on new & repair, 405-317-0474.

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

June 15 - June 28, 2017

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June 15 - June 28, 2017

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