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VOL 23 ISSUE 16 • NOVEMBER 20, 2019 • charlestoncitypaper.com
turns sea level rise into food
returns to Charleston morning radio
Filling Up
DON’T MISS
20 19
GIFT HOLIDAY GUIDE
PAGE 36
Photography by Ruta Smith
Blessing Boxes take a small-scale approach to the big issue of food insecurity
INSIDE
VOL 23 ISSUE 16 • NOVEMBER 20, 2019
In a column last week, City Paper contributor Aaron Wood reflected on the mayoral election asking, “Is it already too late for Charleston?” Despite Aaron’s earnest, chagrined descriptions of the people and places that wallpaper his memories of Charleston’s past, there was a sense of optimism. At least that’s how I read it. Of course it’s not too late. But building a rich and forward-looking community like ours together isn’t easy. You have to want it. Aaron’s one of those people who wants it.
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
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■ NEWS p. 6 A Familiar Voice In a return to radio, Richard Todd aims to re-create “Charleston’s meeting place” p. 10 News Blips S.C. still awaits approval of Medicaid work requirements; Largest known survey of LGBTQ Southerners finds disparities; Education overhaul to hit state Senate floor in early 2020 p. 14 Blotter Sadly true cases from the police files
p. 18 A Few Words by Andy Brack Now’s the time to put extra state revenue to good uses
■ VIEWS p. 16 Comments Readers sound off p. 16 Guest Column by Gibbs Knotts Rethinking the Charleston runoff requirement p. 16 Stegelin! Steve Stegelin’s editorial cartoon
■ ARTS p. 26 Italian Craft, Charleston Charm Amanda Greeley on Thelma, her line of locally designed shoes p. 26 Artifacts Mary Whyte’s 50 veteran portraits now on display; SCAC canvasses the public p. 28 Rachmaninoff’s Recovery Charleston Symphony blends choral works with a beloved piano concerto
ONLINE
John Tecklenburg and Mike Seekings want it. Katie Dahlheim, the founder of the Lowcountry Blessing Box Project, wants it. And now with more than 100 Blessing Boxes dotting the Charleston area, the project relies on residents committed to their communities to help others make ends meet. Flip to page 20 to learn more about Dahlheim’s work, and find a full map at charlestoncitypaper.com/blessingboxmap. It’s never too late. —Sam Spence
■ FEATURE STORY p. 20 Filling Up Blessing Boxes take a small-scale approach to the big issue of food insecurity ■ CITY PICKS p. 24 City Picks The best events in Charleston this week
44 p. 32 More Like Disney Minus Disney+ adds yet another streaming service to the mix p. 34 Critics’ Picks The best arts events in town this week ■ 2019 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE p. 36 Ideas for Your Holiday Gift Giving ■ CUISINE p. 44 Sea Food Heron Farms is turning sea level rise into food p. 44 a la carte La Patisserie brings ruby chocolate to King Street p. 46 Dining Guide Where to eat in Charleston p. 48 Cuisine Calendar Beer; Foodie Events ■ CLASSIFIEDS p. 54 Real Estate
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p. 55 Pearl’s Puzzle “Honey Trip” p. 56 Jonesin’ Crossword by Matt Jones “Two Can Play” p. 56 Auto p. 57 Pets p. 57 Jobs p. 58 Market p. 58 Legal Notices p. 62 Free Will Astrology ■ MUSIC p. 63 Myth Maker Pip the Pansy’s new EP dives deep into Greek mythology and lush electronic pop p. 63 Pulse The local music lowdown p. 64 Modern Fries, Please Burlesque shows, broom closets, and bad friends knock at the door p. 66 Musicboard The most comprehensive weekly live music calendar in town
WHAT’S HAPPENING AT CHARLESTONCIT YPAPER.COM
KINDNESS
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ELSEWHERE ON THE INTERWEB
Find one of the many Blessing Boxes near you in News+Opinion.
See photos from the 2019 CPMA Winner Showcase at The Royal American in Music+Clubs.
More places to find us than you can shake a stick at! Mobile: m.charlestoncitypaper.com Facebook: facebook.com/charlestoncitypaper Twitter: twitter.com/chascitypaper
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Ruta Smith
BEFORE HIS RETURN TO CHARLESTON RADIO ON 105.5 FM, RICHARD TODD WAS THE HOST OF WTMA’S MORNING BUZZ UNTIL 2012
A Familiar Voice
In a return to radio, Richard Todd aims to re-create “Charleston’s morning meeting place” BY HEATH ELLISON
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
On Oct. 28, radio talk show host Richard Todd made his return to Charleston’s airwaves, on 105.5 the Bridge, after a seven-year hiatus from radio.
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Longtime local radio listeners know Todd. Between 1991 and 2012, Todd was a popular personality on several radio shows in the area, including TnT in the Mornings and the Morning Buzz. His mixture of advocacy and character allowed him to break out of the typical talk radio host mold, exemplified by the millions of dollars he’s raised for various charities and his 1994 petition to allow for Sunday alcohol sales in Charleston County. “Those people who listened then that are listening now are still looking for that vital, relevant, active music that’s still out there,” says Todd. “They can get it on the Bridge, but, again, it’s got to be local. A show for Charleston by Charleston in Charleston: It sounds so simplistic, but the way the radio has evolved, it’s almost revolutionary nowadays to have that.” Todd’s new show runs Monday-Friday, 6-10 a.m. For fans of his style of talk radio, the announcement that Todd would return to morning radio, this time on 105.5 the Bridge, was a triumphant moment after a seven-year-long silence that began in tragedy. “My wife had cancer, and she died when she was 44 years old — breast cancer,” Todd
recalls about his wife’s three-and-a-half year battle with the fatal disease. “I had a 9-yearold son; he had just turned 9 when his mom died. And, it was obvious that I — there’s lots of things for after-school programs, but there’s not much for 4:30 in the morning, and it just became obvious that my focus should be on my son after my wife passed.” On March 30, 2012, Todd left his popular show, the Morning Buzz on WTMA-AM 1250. While it could have been a complete retreat from the public eye, the host found other avenues for his voice. Todd has been the announcer for the Charleston Battery and the Volvo Car Open, the host for Earl Klugh’s Weekend of Jazz at the Sanctuary, and was the finish line announcer for the Charleston Marathon. His most recent job was “running simulations and scenarios for medical students for things they would encounter in the real world, the OR, the ER, the ICU.” As Todd puts it, he left radio at the top of his game, but he never felt remorse over leaving. “Honestly, I have never regretted that decision for a second,” he says. “My son has prospered as a result of that decision.”
Despite his comfortable life as a simulation expert and his occasional announcing gigs, Todd didn’t want to completely close the door on radio. And when 105.5 offered him a new talk radio show, and they were open to his ideas for how the show would look, Todd decided that it was time to step back into the booth. “I had equity in this town. I’d been around for over 25 years on the radio, and I didn’t want to walk away from everything that I had done before and just say, ‘That’s it.’ My wife, I think, would have wanted me to give it one more shot.” For the next chapter of his career, Todd says that he wants to give the local area a place to congregate and discuss the important topics of the day. “I’ve always called my show over the years, ‘Charleston’s morning meeting place,’” he says. “When I was on AM, it was a little harder to achieve that because who’s listening to AM radio nowadays? But, now that I’m on FM, even more so, I want to establish that same idea: this is Charleston’s morning meeting place. We get together, we listen to some great music, we talk about what’s going on in town, we give you all the information you need for the day, we give you the soundtrack to your life.” With roughly two-dozen shows under his belt, Todd has already interviewed his old TnT co-host Atom Tailor and mayoral
“When I was on AM, it was a little harder to achieve that because who’s listening to AM radio nowadays? But, now that I’m on FM, even more so, I want to establish that same idea: this is Charleston’s morning meeting place.” —Richard Todd
candidate Mike Seekings. It doesn’t seem like it took him long before he got back into the swing of things. Even after seven years, Todd still has the voice for radio. On Oct. 26, shortly after his return was announced, the radio personality met with James “The Critic” Voigt, another radio host who moved from WTMA-AM 1250 to 105.5 the Bridge. While Voigt reminisced on the wild times on and off the air, Todd reflected on something else. “We had a great time, and Charleston’s so different now than it was then, but the music, still, is great and the lifestyle is still great, and this place — love living here,” he said. “And I can’t wait to get on the air and start being the morning meeting place for the Lowcountry.”
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“From the start, I’ve raised concerns that the Opportunity Zone incentive would turn out to be a tax credit for rich investors with limited benefits for low-income communities.” —U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn introduced legislation last week that would reform the federal Opportunity Zone initiative first proposed by U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, who said Clyburn’s reforms were motivated by a “distaste for President Trump.” Source: U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, Post and Courier
S.C. STILL AWAITS APPROVAL OF MEDICAID WORK REQUIREMENTS
The state continues its wait for whether it can require work for South Carolinians to receive Medicaid benefits, despite a bumpy road forward paved by other Republican states. Sixteen states have either implemented or sought the waiver that allows them to enact a work requirement for those seeking federally-subsidized health insurance, according to Kaiser Family Foundation. But New Hampshire, Kentucky, and Arkansas have seen their waivers set aside by federal court decisions. Both Arizona and Indiana delayed implementation of their work requirements. South Carolina is one state of eight pending federal approval. S.C. Department of Health and Human Services (SCDHHS) public information director Colleen Mullis last week said the department is negotiating with the federal government on its waiver proposal, which would mandate recipients of Medicaid work at least 80 hours per month. Low-income earner advocates have said work requirements could have a negative impact on those caring for others. SCDHHS has responded that working could have a positive impact on the health of recipients. —Lindsay Street
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LARGEST KNOWN SURVEY OF LGBTQ SOUTHERNERS FINDS DISPARITIES IN HEALTH CARE AND ACCESSIBILITY
The Campaign for Southern Equality and Western North Carolina Community Health Services released the report of the 2019 Southern LGBTQ Health Survey on Nov. 6, providing a new perspective and shining light on health and health care experiences of LGBTQ people in the South. The survey collected responses from 5,617 participants from 13 states, making it the largestknown survey of LGBTQ health issues in the South. The report’s easy-to-read-and-understand graphics clearly lay out the gaps in health care and accessibility for the LGBTQ community. Researchers are hopeful that the results being made public will steer the conversation around continued on page 13
“She has revealed herself to be more Lucy from ‘Peanuts’ than Erin Brockovich” —Kathleen Parker, columnist for the Washington Post, described former S.C. Gov. Nikki Haley as an “unscrupulous, self-serving future presidential candidate” in a Nov. 12 column after the former U.N. ambassador’s defense of President Donald Trump in a new memoir, her second in 10 years. Source: Washington Post
The state’s first major education bill in decades is getting closer to the Senate floor, teeing it up for debate prior to the General Assembly’s slog as the two-year session ends in May, a key lawmaker says. “It’ll be right across the desk on the first day with a favorable report,” Senate Education Chair Greg Hembree (R-Horry) told Statehouse Report, Charleston City Paper’s sister publication. The session begins Jan. 14. Between now and the middle of December, Hembree said his committee will meet several times before voting it to the floor for debate. The meandering and expansive package addresses a wide range of issues including bumping the starting pay of teachers, addressing how the state intervenes in failing schools, changing the state’s literacy program, and more. In 2019, House and Senate leaders introduced the bill, which was quickly passed in the House. In the upper chamber, Hembree and a bipartisan panel have pored over the package for 10 months with 20 public meetings. “This is not a magic solution to the problems we have in education in South Carolina but steps in the right direction,” S.C. Sen. Vincent Sheheen (D-Camden) said during Wednesday’s meeting. Hembree said the bill “incrementally” moves education forward. But some education advocates remain skeptical. “It’s not the sweeping reform they want to act like this is going to change the South Carolina school system. It’s a step forward, though, because we haven’t talked education in 40 years,” South Carolina Education Association President Sherry East says, adding she worried it could lessen the appetite for further change in the Statehouse. Another advocate worries it does too much in the wrong direction. “We see a lot of paths toward privatization and a lot of paths that turn kids into widgets and we don’t see a lot of much else,” SCforEd board member Nicole Walker says. “I have seen so few indicators that educators are being valued.” East and Walker said the bill fell short on addressing class sizes in the state — a perennial complaint. East said the bill will also do little to address the current teacher retention and recruitment issues. “If you’re waiting for perfect, we aren’t going to do anything,” says Hembree. —Lindsay Street
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the health of LGBTQ Southerners toward a comprehensive, systems-level examination. “We conducted this survey to gain greater understanding and more nuanced insight into the specific experiences that LGBTQ Southerners have with their health and with accessing health care,” reads the report. Some frank discussion seems to be in order, with more than half of respondents reporting fair or poor mental health, according to the report. Numbers for those who are bisexual, transgender, 18-24 years old, and with lower incomes were even worse. While all identities on the LGBTQ spectrum reported relatively poor mental health, some indications were worse than others. Among bisexual and pansexual respondents, 62.1 percent and 73.5 percent, respectively, described their mental health as fair or poor — about 20 percentage points higher than gay, lesbian, and heterosexual participants. More than 20 percent of transgender respondents said they do not feel their health care needs are being met, nearly twice the number of cisgender participants. More than 1 in 10 transgender people reported that they rarely or never have positive experiences with physical health providers, almost triple the number of cisgender respondents in the study. Mental health care was not the only focus of the study, however. Participants also reported rates of Southerners living with HIV more than 15-times higher than the national average. Among African-Americans polled, 22 percent say that they are living with HIV, as are 13 percent of all gay male respondents. More than half of all participants admitted that they rarely — about every 3-5 years — or never get tested for HIV. Rural residents deal with health disparities, too, rating their overall physical and mental health lower than those in urban areas and also report less access to quality care; less comfort seeking medical care in their communities; higher rates of depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts, and selfharming behaviors; and lower rates of feeling that their health needs are being met. An executive summary of the report, details eight key findings including physical health, living with HIV, mental health, suicidal ideation, depression and anxiety, delay seeking care, comfort, and rural areas. The full, 174-page report breaks down multiple aspects of health and wellness in the LGBTQ community, comparing each by demographic and detailing research methods and findings. Both are available at southernequality.org. This isn’t the first time that researchers have revealed inequalities in statistics between members and nonmembers of the LGBTQ community here in Charleston and in the greater South. Just last month, a report was published by the Alliance for Full Acceptance that detailed the challenges LGBTQ community members face in the workplace that don’t seem to be commonplace among others. —Skyler Baldwin
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blotter
BLOTTER O’ THE WEEK
Letters from a Canadian man claiming to be “part of a satanic society” were received by the City of Charleston. Inside the envelopes was a poem that made “anti-American sentiments,” several bus and train tickets, and four pictures of an older white male. In typical Canadian fashion, this sounds strangely polite.
843.225.5807 • AUDIOSOUNDSOLUTIONS.COM The Blotter is taken from Charleston Police Department reports. We’ve added a cartoon and a little commentary. We’ve added a little humor, too. No one has been found guilty. This is not a court of law. Two racquets were stolen from a West Ashley sporting goods store. The racqueteer made off with $45 worth of property.
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
For the second time this month, a juvenile used a taser on another juvenile. This time, it happened at a basketball court downtown. The owner of the taser told police that they were unaware it was missing.
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An officer found a man urinating on the Calhoun monument. Don’t get excited, #Resistance members: it wasn’t a protest, he just couldn’t hold it any longer. The man was issued a homeless resource sheet and placed on trespass notice. A man received a bill in the mail for $47,500 for a bank loan that he did not apply for.
An unknown party broke a car’s rear window to steal a whopping $2 in change. The theft occurred in a student apartment parking lot, so that’s two less dollars for beer money. After a party celebrating her divorce, a woman woke up in her vehicle, which had crashed into a dumpster off of Highway 61. The woman claims that an unknown party had offered to drive her home in her own vehicle. The driver could not be found. In a local tech company’s parking lot, a black Ford Mustang was observed driving in circles for 45 minutes. According to the report, the driver began “doing burnouts” for two minutes, leaving a 50 yard diameter circle. The only crime here is someone being too cool. A man entered a building with two “no trespassing” signs conspicuously placed and was charged with trespassing. These can’t all feature satanic Canadians, OK?
A flamboyant trespasser entered a young man’s apartment to leave a “fluorescent pink cowboy hat with a crown on it” on the pillow of his bed. They also left the victim’s water running, causing between $5,000 and $15,000 in damage to the store below. Birth certificates and Social Security cards of a woman’s four children were stolen from her handbag in the backseat of her car. A small bag of what is “presumed to be cocaine” was discovered at a playground on Daniel Island. Damn kids. An intoxicated man downtown believed that he was in Ruffin, S.C., then Walterboro. He debated his location with the officer while being arrested by CPD. In the missing-firearms department, at least three pistols and one shotgun were stolen from vehicles this week.
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DROWNING EACH YEAR
GUEST COLUMN | BY GIBBS KNOTTS
Vote Smarter Rethinking the Charleston runoff requirement During the Nov. 5 general election, John Tecklenburg won 47.8 percent of the vote in a six-candidate field but fell just short of the 50-percent-plus-1 vote threshold required by the city’s election rules. Mike Seekings received the next highest level of support, with 34.3 percent. As a result, City of Charleston voters returned to the polls on Nov. 19 to participate in a runoff election between Tecklenburg and Seekings.
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
Local governments in South Carolina are empowered to make the choice about whether to have runoffs, or simply to let the person who wins the plurality of the vote be declared the winner. Even in the Lowcountry, some local governments use runoffs, while others do not. For example, in North Charleston, Keith Summey won 46.7 percent in a five-candidate field but was reelected because there is not a majority vote requirement. Similarly, Ricky Waring was elected mayor in Summerville with 47.3 percent of votes. After consecutive election cycles with mayoral runoffs, it is a good time for Charleston residents to rethink the city’s runoff requirement. One reason to consider a change is the racially charged history of runoff elections. Runoffs are a relic of the oneparty Democratic South, an era of racial segregation and black political oppression. During the Jim Crow era, from the end of Reconstruction through the 1950s, Democratic Party primaries determined political winners and losers in the region. Though whites were nearly always the only racial group permitted to vote in the primaries, there were instances where the vote was split among several white candidates. Runoff requirements emerged as a way to unite a majority of the electorate behind a single candidate, ensuring white Democratic dominance in Southern society. The use of runoffs accelerated following the passage of
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the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The number of AfricanAmerican voters increased dramatically following this legislation, and runoffs were used to make it harder for black candidates to win political office. In some jurisdictions, an African-American candidate might be able to win 40 percent of the vote, but not the majority needed for a victory. As a result, the runoff allowed white voters to unite behind a single white candidate, making minority office holding more difficult. In addition to the discriminatory history of runoffs, they have a number of other drawbacks. Turnout almost always decreases from the general election to the runoff. For example, turnout decreased by 6.3 percent between the initial election and the runoff for Charleston’s 2015 mayoral contest. Runoffs also place additional burdens on candidates and municipalities. Candidates are forced to raise and spend additional resources, and county election boards have to spend money to open polling locations. What should Charleston do in future election contests? City leaders could follow the lead of North Charleston and Summerville, where the candidate who receives a plurality of the vote is declared the winner. Another option is to lower continued on page 19
I lived in Charleston from 1976-1998 and loved it (“Is it already too late for Charleston?” by Aaron Wood). I raised my children there, in a house in Harleston Village — not a fancy one. I could walk or ride my bike to my office on Broad Street. When I come back for brief visits — the last one in 2018 — I am appalled at the transformation of a once charming place into a frenzied hub of hotels, chic restaurants, and nightmare traffic. Old friends, longtime residents, talk about moving away. Perhaps Charleston will become a little Venice, a place taken over by tourists, drowning a little more each year. I hope not. LEE MCADEN ROBINSON
TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE
I am so happy someone else seems to realize what has, and is, happening to downtown Charleston and surrounding areas (“Is it already too late for Charleston?” by Aaron Wood). This article by Aaron Wood just summarized what I had already been thinking at least 10 years ago. I will simply say: too much, too little, too late. Too much overdevelopment, too little done about it, and, regrettably and sadly, too late to do anything of significance about it — that is, unless our city government leaders take action and apply the brakes now. CELESTE JOYE
A NICE PLACE TO VISIT
I grew up in Charleston in the ‘70s and ‘80s (“Is it already too late for Charleston?” by Aaron Wood). Moved away for work and returned from 2003-2007. For me, home has become a nice place to visit, but not somewhere I would want to live. MARCUS VALDES
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A FEW WORDS | BY ANDY BRACK
Spending Money Now’s the time to put extra state revenue to good uses More likely than not, the good times won’t keep being good. At some point — and probably sooner than you think — the country will slip into another recession. With an unbudgeted $1.8 billion for the 2020-21 budget to be spent, let’s be ready for what’s coming by investing to reduce future impacts on institutions and people. Alternatively, we can follow past roller-coaster budgeting and spend fecklessly when times are lush, but cutting to the bone when times are bad. A year ago, state lawmakers prepared for a session that was to have $1 billion in extra funds. They generally spent it in good places: more pay for teachers, a freeze on college tuition, health care for the poor, reducing future pension liabilities, and more. Now is the time for legislators to make more investments, particularly in people — state employees and teachers — and infrastructure, long ignored and in need of maintenance. It is not the time to start a lot of new programs that will have to be cut when the wheel of fortune reverses. South Carolina needs to be strategic in spending this good fortune, not create a political slush fund that ignores the reasons we’re at the bottom in public education and have half of our people not earning a living wage. So, here are ways to spend almost $2 billion without creating future problems that will have to be cut when times become bleak.
New, recurring money: $815 million
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Just under half of the money coming in will keep coming in every year due to growth. This pool is best spent on things that will need to be paid for each year. Teachers. Lawmakers gave a good pay raise to the state’s teachers this year, but raised them to about the southeastern average. Let’s do better than that by spending another $200 million on teachers, particularly in raising starting salaries. State employees. If we’re going to give teachers a raise, spend $80 million to honor the service of state employees and pay them what they’re worth. Another $30 million should boost pay more for law enforcement and corrections officers who are in harm’s way and traditionally underpaid. Sales tax cut. Cutting the state’s high sales tax rate by a half-cent would cost about $300 million. That’s something that would help every South Carolinian throughout the year. Pension liability. The state has a huge unfunded pension liability. Putting in another $100 million would reduce future burdens — particularly in lean years. Health care. Lawmakers should invest $100 million in recurring money to keep up with health care costs for the poorest of South Carolinians on Medicaid.
One-time money: $1 billion
While recurring dollars generally should be used for people-related costs, one-time dollars are spent best on ignored problems, such as deferred maintenance on buildings and infrastructure. Some ideas to consider: Buildings. A couple of years ago, colleges outlined $2.5 billion in building needs. They got some money, but dedicating $200 million to fixing buildings would help. Similarly, another $200 million could be used to maintain state buildings and provide assistance to poor, rural school districts that need better facilities. Welcome centers. Look for a push by lawmakers to spend $150 million on completely revamping the state’s welcome centers, which currently may be better called Unwelcoming Centers. College tuition. About $100 million would allow the state to continued on page 19
Money continued from page 18 continue a freeze on in-state college tuition as well as significantly cut the cost of technical college tuition to new lows. A good strategy to reduce poverty is to invest more in education beyond high school. Next recession. We need to set aside an extra $230 million in additional rainy-day savings or in a disaster recovery fund for the next unexpected whack, either from Mother Nature or the economy. There’s a lot state lawmakers can do to prepare for lean times in the future. Spending it all on pet projects is not the way to go. But with this huge amount of extra money, there will be a lot of pressure to give back some to taxpayers. While we think a better idea is to invest, a rebate of $100 per taxpayer would cost the rest of the pot — about $120 million. Andy Brack is publisher of Charleston City Paper.
Smarter continued from page 16
Gibbs Knotts is a professor of political science at the College of Charleston. His co-authored book, First in the South: Why South Carolina’s Presidential Primary Matters, will be released next month by the University of South Carolina Press.
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the threshold required to win an election. Charleston residents could also consider Instant Runoff Voting (IRV). This procedure eliminates the need for a runoff election because voters rank candidates when casting their initial ballot. A number of major U.S. cities use IRV, including Oakland, Calif.; St. Paul, Minn., and Las Cruces, N.M. Even here in South Carolina, military and overseas voters provide ranked choices during the submission of their initial ballot, eliminating the need to participate in a second round of voting should a runoff be needed. How does IRV work? During the initial stage of vote counting, all “first choice” votes are tallied. If no candidate gets a majority, the candidate receiving the lowest vote total is eliminated. The “second choice” for all the voters who picked the eliminated candidate is then added to the remaining candidates vote totals. This process continues until a candidate receives a majority. While it is important to study the issues, research candidate positions, and cast ballots, our democracy also depends on a periodic examination of election rules and procedures. Charleston residents should engage in a conversation about the city’s runoff requirement and consider other options that might be a better fit for our community.
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
Filling Up Blessing Boxes take a small-scale approach to the big issue of food insecurity BY SKYLER BALDWIN
As the sun begins to set and that pale, orange light creeps in through the office window, many are preparing to punch out and settle in for a comfortable evening in their own homes, avoiding the mid-November chill just outside. Others aren’t as fortunate, and even after a hard day’s work some people have nowhere to go, no easy way to get across town to a crowded shelter that never seems to be the best option. That’s where the Lowcountry Blessing Box Project, a local nonprofit that’s doing things a bit differently, comes in. “It’s still pretty expensive just to get a room in this city,” says Stuart, who preferred to keep his last name anonymous. Stuart has a job, but has been home“...things like less for about two years now, unable to afford a place to live. He earns enough dog food, school to cover what many would consider supplies, feminine essentials, including a cell phone for communication. Still, he struggles with products, things finding food to eat every day, so he relies like that are all on food banks and pantries to make up sort of welcome the difference. And the Blessing Box Project has additions.” helped feed him along the way. —Katie Dahlheim
On one trip to a food bank to get a few items, Stuart says that the staff didn’t even bother asking for his personal information. They remembered him. “It kind of made me feel bad, like, ‘God, they already know me,’” Stuart remembers. “But, the Blessing Box is just … I don’t know — it’s easier.” Taking the basic idea of a food pantry and making it something that everyone can use to its full potential, Katie Dahlheim started the project in January 2017, and it has been growing ever since. Dahlheim repurposed the first Blessing Box out of an old cabinet, and others have followed her example. Groups like the Boy Scouts and other local nonprofits have taken to refurbishing old furniture into Blessing Boxes, making each one unique to the community that helped to set it up. What makes the Blessing Box Project different is how simple it is
KATIE DAHLHEIM (LEFT) FOUNDED THE BLESSING BOX PROJECT TO MAKE ESSENTIALS AVAILABLE, LIKE AT ONE OF THE FIRST BOXES INSTALLED AT 302 RUTLEDGE AVE. (RIGHT) Photos by Ruta Smith
continued on page 22
There are over 100 Blessing Boxes across S.C. To find one near you, visit charlestoncitypaper.com/blessingboxmap.
charlestoncitypaper.com
The Need
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Filling
hams, and I was happy for that … I know there’s lots of groups that will host Thanksgiving dinner, but most of those areas tend to be downtown or areas that just aren’t accessible to me.” The holidays are also a hard time for those in the homeless community with families and others who struggle financially to support families.
continued from page 21 in comparison to other efforts. Now with over 100 boxes strategically placed across the state, anyone can leave food or other goods behind for those in need. “It was incredible to watch it grow,” Stuart says. “I believe in giving back as much as taking, and that’s what’s so wonderful about it. But also, you have to jump through so many hoops to get help in the city, and it becomes real frustrating when all you want to do is eat.” That discouragement is what inspired Dahlheim to start the project “I think it’s just almost three years ago. “To be able to important for folks go and take what you need at the time is a great feeling,” she says. “Because, to remember that you don’t have to bring your social security card; you don’t have to bring you may not know pay stub; you don’t have to tell who is experiencing your anyone your story.” food insecurity.” Though Dahlheim started the project, she never intended to be the face of it. —Margaret Grant, Lowcountry Food From the beginning, it was meant to be a Bank Vice President of community-driven, organically servicing Strategic Initiatives food pantry. No one person commits to filling any given box, but the generosity of the surrounding community keeps it going. With Thanksgiving and Christmas right around the corner, now more than any other time of year, we are focused on food. As some prepare for family dinners, others prepare for another cold night outside. “Fortunately, I’m from here, and I do have friends — not family, but friends — and some years I am invited Ruta Smith to join in the celebrations, and some years I’m not,” IN NORTH CHARLESTON BLESSING BOXES ARE FOUND ALL OVER, Stuart says. “One of my holidays it was just me alone, LIKE THIS ONE ON SPRUILL AVENUE and fortunately someone had given me some canned
Seeing the Need “We are always in need of food donations,” Dahlheim says. “With 100 boxes, there is always the opportunity to do a food drive. And that’s not anything that needs to be sanctioned or approved, especially as we come up to the holidays. Food-based holidays are especially hard for those who can’t afford to feed their families.” For those families and those who are alone, an empty box could mean an empty stomach for the day, or longer if the box isn’t filled soon. “Sometimes, the boxes are empty,” Stuart sighs. “Some areas just get hit a lot, or they just don’t get filled often enough. It’s kind of disheartening. To ride five miles through traffic to get to a box and find nothing in it — it just kind of hurts.” One of the benefits that large food banks have over smaller community projects is that they typically have an abundance of supplies for those in need. In fact, one community member who uses food pantries to supplement their needs often leaves food she receives from the food banks in Blessing Boxes for those left with limited options. Leslie Mays, 61, has been using local food banks for about three years now. She is raising her two grandchildren at her home in West Ashley, but with their needs combined with her age, it’s hard to come by enough work to pay the bills. Still, she says that her hardships have opened doors.
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“I think it’s also a blessing and a healing to know it’s a way of working together as a community in small ways,” Mays says. “The way we live these days is much more isolating. We used to get our needs met in the neighborhood, because we all knew each other ... “The Blessing Boxes are a great place to share with people who are trying to work jobs, but they still have needs, and they can easily swing by and grab things, but they don’t have time to go to the window of the food bank.” The options offered by most food banks are limited further for people with medical challenges like Stuart,
that. A lot of it has to do with my heart issues.” Donations look different for food banks like the Lowcountry Food Bank. According to Margaret Grant, vice president of strategic initiatives, the organization prefers that people donate cash through their website, as opposed to physical food. She says that the LFB often sources food from large-scale manufacturers, and cash donations go a long way in paying for shipping costs. If folks want to donate physical food though, Grant says that it’s a good teaching moment for children. “That’s a How to Help great way to reach kids, because they can actually see the So what are people supposed to donate? Dahlheim focuses food being donated.” on nutritious items that won’t go bad when planning for Of course, food banks, pantries, and the Blessing Box what to add to the pantries: peanut butter, pasta, cereal, Project all have one goal in common: helping those who and canned goods. What people may not consider is coffee, need help. Hunger doesn’t discriminate, and while many an arguably non-essential item that many of us depend on are quick to cast a suspicious eye on those in line for and take for granted. food, others are focused on ensurOn the other hand, despite the ing that everyone has access to what “To be able to go and take concept of a “food pantry,” Dahlheim they need. encourages people to leave more than what you need at the time “Young people can barely afford just food for those in need. Toiletries apartments now without getting three is a great feeling,” she says. or four roommates,” and kid-friendly items are great things Mays says. “We “Because, you don’t have to leave in your local Blessing Box. need to remove the stigma. So what if Bug spray and sunscreen in the sumto bring your social security you’re standing in line with a bunch of mertime and things to help others grannies — who cares?” keep warm in the winter are also great card; you don’t have to bring During his time on the streets, things to donate. your pay stub; you don’t have Stuart says he has seen that stigma “We try to discourage people from begin to break down. He says in to tell anyone your story.” donating clothing,” she explains. the beginning, it was easy for him “Because, there just isn’t enough space. —Katie Dahlheim, Blessing Boxes Project Founder to become discouraged and start to Other things like dog food, school believe that the world itself was cold supplies, feminine products, things like that are all sort of and cruel, but the work of people like Dahlheim and passwelcome additions.” ersby on the street have begun to change his mind. “Anything non-perishable that’s pretty light” is useful, “I think what she has done is a wonderful thing,” Stuart Stuart adds. “Cans are heavy. They’re hard to lug around. I says. “There are lots of people in the city who are doing definitely grab pop-tops, and soups are great. I try to get as something similar, and that’s what needs to happen, people many vegetables as I can — you really don’t get a whole lot of need to start caring about each other.”
FEATURE | charlestoncitypaper.com
who has had a heart condition since he was a child. Or those who don’t have access to a kitchen or other ways to prepare some food. “I try not to use [food banks] too much,” Stuart says. “It’s hard to get to the areas, and they want to load me up with items that I just can’t use — milk, eggs, pasta, dried beans. I can’t do anything with dried beans, and I would love to enjoy some pasta, but I can’t.”
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CITY PICKS
F R I D AY
Aloha Friday
S AT U R D AY
Repticon Your favorite wild animal exposition, Repticon, is back with all its wild, wiggly, and wondrous fun. The reptile and exotic animal event is coming to Mt. Pleasant this weekend and will feature educators, live animals, vendors, breeders, and fun for the whole family. You can even shop for an exotic reptile, amphibian, or spider to take home with you. Sat.-Sun. Nov. 23-24, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $10/adults, $5/children. Omar Shrine Temple, 176 Patriots Point Road. Mt. Pleasant. repticon.com
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
T H U R S D AY
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Holiday Sip N’ Shop Tackle your holiday shopping list in Park Circle with live music and a festive cocktail. The Station will serve as your one stop holiday gift shop, featuring handmade jewelry, housewares, art, and more. Roadside Blooms and Barrelli Barber will also stay open late to join in on the holiday fun. Thurs. Nov. 21, 6-9 p.m. Free to attend. The Station Park Circle, 4610 Spruill Ave. North Charleston
Don’t miss November’s Aloha Friday at Sightsee and be the first to get your hands on the limited edition J. Stark x Sightsee collection featuring signature J. Stark tote bags and other wares. Life Raft Treats will be there to serve up some sweet snacks, and special floral bouquets by Studio Arome will be available for purchase as well. Fri. Nov. 22, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Free to attend. Sightsee, 125 ½ Line St. Downtown
S U N D AY S AT U R D AY
Lights Up Head to Towne Centre for this festive event featuring a laser light show and the initial lighting of the dazzling 40-foot Towne Centre Christmas tree. Bring the whole family and enjoy a live band and choir performances, face painting, a jump castle, sweet treats, and a visit from Santa himself. It all goes down in front of Belk. Sat. Nov. 23, 6-8 p.m. Free to attend. Towne Centre, 1218 Belk Drive. Mt. Pleasant
Thanksgiving Farmers Market The West Ashley Farmers Market is back with some great additions to your Thanksgiving spread. At this one-day-only event, you can shop fresh produce, pre-prepared food products, and much more. Food trucks will be onsite in case you get hungry while shopping. Sun. Nov. 24, 12-4 p.m. Free to attend. West Ashley Farmers Market, 55 Sycamore Ave. West Ashley
F R I D AY
Thirty Dancing Gala Have the time of your life at the Thirty Dancing Gala to benefit Camp Happy Days, whose mission is to offer support and encouragement to those affected by pediatric cancer. Enjoy an open bar and heavy hors d’oeuvres while you dance the night away to live entertainment, or bid on items at both the live and silent auctions. Fri. Nov. 22, 6-11 p.m. $150. Memminger Auditorium, 56 Beaufain St. Downtown
The tabletop outdoor firepit excites your night. $136
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Charleston Classic
Have a shuckin’ good time this Sunday afternoon and help raise money for the American Cancer Society. The event will include an oyster roast with oysters from Pearlz, Lady’s Island Oysters, and 167 Raw, as well as barbecue from Rodney Scott’s. Eat to your heart’s content and enjoy both live music and a silent auction. Sun. Nov. 24, 2-6 p.m. $100. The Bend, 3775 Azalea Drive. North Charleston
The Lowcountry’s “premier college hoops” event returns with a field of some of the top 25 college basketball teams including UConn, Florida, Miami, Missouri State, and more. Learn more online. Thurs. Nov. 21, Fri. Nov. 22, and Sun. Nov. 24 at various times. $25+. TD Arena, 301 Meeting St. Downtown. charlestonclassic.com
S AT U R D AY
W E D N E S D AY
Creekside Comedy Night
Biergarten Trivia: Disney Villains
Spend your Saturday night hootin’ and hollerin’ at Creekside Comedy in West Ashley. This weekend’s show features a lineup of comedians including Cyrus Steele, Stan Shelby, and Kelly Kreye, plus Charleston’s own Amanda Beth. Keith “Big Daddy” Dee will hold it down as host for the evening and keep the laughs coming. Sat. Nov. 23, 9-11 p.m. $12. Creekside Comedy, 2600 Savannah Hwy. West Ashley
How well do you know Disney villains? Be sure to binge some classic flicks for a refresher course on all things Disney before heading to Biergarten this Wednesday where you’ll answer questions about the worst of the worst in the Disney world, from Ursula to Maleficient. Wed. Nov. 20, 8-11 p.m. Free to attend. Bay Street Biergarten, 549 East Bay St. Downtown. baystreetbiergarten.com
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American Cancer Society’s Shuck Cancer Event
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artifacts MARY WHYTE’S 50 VETERAN PORTRAITS NOW ON DISPLAY
Italian Craft, Charleston Charm
Award-winning American watercolor artist and Charleston resident Mary Whyte debuted her newest collection of portraits, We the People: Portraits of Veterans in America at The City Gallery this October. The series features 50 large-scale watercolor portraits of veterans of all ages and walks of life — one from each state. Beginning in 2010, Whyte set out to paint the portraits of 50 present-day American veterans. The end result depicts scenes of a Missouri dairy farmer, Rhode Island lobsterman, Pennsylvania science teacher, South Carolina single mother, and more, with each painting telling its own unique story of postservice life for American veterans. On Sun. Nov. 11, Whyte’s exhibition was featured on CBS Sunday Morning, including Martha Teichner’s visits with some of Whyte’s subjects. We the People will be on display through Dec. 22 at The City Gallery at Waterfront Park. To learn more about Mary Whyte, her prior collections, and her career as an award-winning watercolor artist, visit MaryWhyte.com. —Connor Simonson
Amanda Greeley on Thelma, her line of locally designed shoes
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
BY ENID BRENIZE
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“Maybe there isn’t a real Thelma ...” Before Amanda Greeley moved to Charleston, fell in love with brunch at Chez Nous, and launched an entire shoe brand focused on just one style, the loafer, she was making her way through New York City’s otherworldly fashion industry — with piles of fabric and a load of hope. “Learning how to navigate the garment district leads you to weird corners of Brooklyn where you have, like, unmarked doors and a shopping cart of fabric and no Uber to take you there.” Greeley, who founded Thelma around three years ago (about the time she moved to Charleston), laughs about it now, sipping Second State coffee and watching a latesummer rain threaten to swallow Beaufain Street. She says she wished she GREELEY could’ve been a “city bitch,” but Charleston seems to suit her fine. Greeley is wearing a pristine but worn-in white button-down, jeans, and a pair of her classic loafers in the pebble beige. Those are the loafers that brought Thelma to life. When Greeley launched her company with one classic shoe it wasn’t just a starting point for the brand, but also for her new life as a Charleston-based designer. Formerly a merchandiser at Coach, Greeley is no stranger to the women’s fashion industry. She grew up watching her mother, the former CEO of Victoria’s Secret, and began designing for the lingerie startup Cuup while living in New York. Before starting Thelma, she founded, ran, and folded the Tink + Tiger pajama line. She’s always been a fan of loafers. “Thelma is my number one,” says Greeley, a quintessential entrepreneur who has “a new idea every five seconds” and stays up late wondering, “maybe I’ve done everything wrong.” In many ways, Thelma is the opposite of that, like Greeley’s grounded alter-ego. The brand started small and steady, with a limited supply of shoes, Italian-made from responsibly sourced materials. The company does not do big sales, adhere to a break-neck fashion calendar, or release new designs to appease alwayseager online shoppers. Thelma is, if nothing else, carefully crafted and self-assured. A simple design. An Italian shoemaker. A
A LOAFER, A MULE, A BOOT — BUT MAKE IT FUN
SCAC CANVASSES THE PUBLIC TO PLAN FOR THE FUTURE OF ARTS
Lindsey Shorter
friend who started a shipping warehouse — one by one, Greeley built the pieces of the brand. Since then, she’s added sparingly and mindfully: an ankle boot, a cheery pink suede (already sold out), and most recently, the slide and its higher-heeled sister the mule. “The biggest thing people don’t realize is that nobody has all the answers about this stuff. It’s really a big scavenger hunt,” says Greeley. “You have to decide you want to do something and then figure out how to do it.” Inspired by Charleston style and burgeoning local networks of female entrepreneurs, Greeley’s goal is to make classics that are anything but drab and stuffy. “The first color I saw that I knew I needed to make was this vibrant red. It’s like a Ferrari. Now color is a really important part of it,” she says. “It can kind of make you smile. Like, it’s not so serious. It’s a loafer, but we’re having a good time here.” The way she sees it, shoes are personal and political. Minimalism is being eschewed in favor of pieces with personality. “Now, I feel like we’re in this place of
really expressing ourselves fully.” Greeley and I talked through a whole pot of coffee and nearly the entire storm — about her upcoming wedding at the Gadsden House, preoccupations with being perpetually busy, dreams of a big city brick and mortar, and the beer at Lowlife Bar on Folly. It wasn’t until that evening that I remembered to write back and ask the most basic question: Who is Thelma? “There isn’t a real Thelma, that I know anyway,” says Greeley. “When I began working on Thelma, I knew I wanted it to have a woman’s name and I knew I didn’t want to name it after myself. I really wanted the brand to have its own persona. Not long into working on the project, I thought of the name Thelma and it simply stuck. It felt right. To me, Thelma evokes ‘free spirit’. I also felt like ‘Thelma’ could be any age.” As the Thelma manifesto goes: “She’s extraordinary everywoman.” She’s a working woman who likes a little fun and flair. She’s practical but never ordinary. Maybe she’s you?
The South Carolina Arts Commission (SCAC) is hosting a series of public forums across the state this fall and winter to gather public input for the next long-range plan for arts and culture in South Carolina. Every decade the SCAC conducts its Canvass of the People in public and private forums with an anonymous survey to gather citizens’ impressions of the successes and challenges for the arts and culture scene in South Carolina. The SCAC is asking citizens to look ahead and weigh in on what the next steps should be. Responses will help the SCAC form its “Long Range Plan for the Arts” in South Carolina. “Public input is the cornerstone of this process,” says SCAC executive director David Platts in a press release. “The goal is to generate discussion about the arts to understand what South Carolinians envision for their communities.” To put it simply, the SCAC is asking: “Where do we go from here?” There currently are seven public forums on the calendar at locations throughout South Carolina, taking place from November through February, with more in the planning stages. Private forums are also expected to be announced, taking place during meetings of affinity groups in the state who work in or support the arts. Updated listings and the link to take the anonymous survey can be found at SouthCarolinaArts.com/ Canvass. The SCAC is planning for the Canvass of the People to finish next March and the Long Range Plan for the Arts in South Carolina is estimated to be released in fall 2020. —CS
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A
Rachmaninoff’s Recovery Charleston Symphony blends choral works with a beloved piano concerto BY VINCENT HARRIS Rach 2 Nov. 22-23 7:30 p.m. $27-$123 Charleston Gaillard Center 95 Calhoun St. Downtown gaillardcenter.org
We tend to think of classical music composers, specifically composers as talented and highly regarded as Russian composer/conductor/ pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943), as towering, unquestioned icons who were always beloved. Not only is it difficult to imagine someone like Beethoven or Mozart getting bad reviews, it’s even more difficult to imagine them caring about bad reviews. But the fact is that the pillars of classical music were praised and panned just as popular musicians are today. Occasionally, those
composers and musicians were able to channel the public’s negativity into their art. That’s the case with Rachmaninoff’s “Piano Concerto No. 2,” which will serve as the centerpiece of the Charleston Symphony Orchestra’s upcoming Rach 2 program at the Charleston Gaillard Center. The orchestra will perform the concerto with pianist Natasha Paremski as part of their Masterworks series. Rachmaninoff composed “Piano Concerto No. 2” after one of the worst periods of his life. He suffered a crippling mental breakdown after a bad review of his “Symphony No. 1 (Op. 13).” With one critic’s comparison of the 1897 work to the plagues of Egypt, the symphony was not performed again before Rachmaninoff died in 1943. Ken Lam, the music director of the Charleston Symphony says that Rachmaninoff went into a deep depression
Provided
COMPOSERS HAVE MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES TOO — RACHMANINOFF SAW A DOCTOR AFTER DEPRESSION SET IN FROM A BAD REVIEW
after the symphony debuted and didn’t compose again for years. “Rachmaninoff was so distraught by the notvery-nice reception of it that he was not able to compose for a very long time,” Lam says. “And it was so bad that he went to see a doctor about his mental state. The doctor (Nikolai Dahl)
helped him to get better and get back to work, and the result is the second piano concerto, which is dedicated to the doctor. It’s one of the best loved piano concertos of all time.” Lam says that very often, artists like continued on page 30
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Recovery continued from page 28 Rachmaninoff aren’t appreciated by contemporary audiences or critics while they’re creating their most lasting work. “Very often these great artists are ahead of their time,” he says. “By definition, they are creating things that have never been done before. And usually, the public likes the familiar. We like to go and listen to a piece of music that perhaps we already have an association with. So at the time, Rachmaninoff’s first symphony was a complete failure, but it’s since been reevaluated.” That being said, “Piano Concerto No. 2” received immediate acclaim upon its 1901 debut, essentially establishing Rachmaninoff as a notable composer. Perhaps most fascinating is that, despite a four-year struggle with depression and writer’s block, the composition is sweeping, epic, and surprisingly confident. “That’s the strange thing about it,” Lam says. “It took (Johannes) Brahms 20 years to write his first symphony, because he just couldn’t get past the nine symphonies of Beethoven and the mountain he had to climb, because he knew that any work he did would be compared to Beethoven’s symphonies. And if you actually listen to the piece, you can hear the struggle; you can hear the doubt; you can hear the years of hard work. Rachmaninoff’s concerto is a brilliant piece of music, and the melody just
seems to flow from his pen effortlessly.” The rest of the Rach 2 program will actually be quite a change of pace, because the remaining selections, Hubert Parry’s Blest Pair of Sirens and Jerusalem, and Gabriel Faure’s Requiem, are all choral pieces. The Charleston Symphony Orchestra Chorus will join the College of Charleston Concert Choir and the Charleston Southern University Concert Singers, with Alex Rosen (baritone) and Saundra DeAthos-Meers (soprano) as featured soloists. “There will be a chorus of around 200 singers onstage,” Lam says, “and incredible solos for soprano and bass baritone. It’s very tuneful and very melodic, and I think that the two pieces by Sir Hubert Parry could be huge in Charleston.” Lam says that the logistics of getting 200 singers onstage at the Gaillard is a technical challenge, but the sound they create is worth the trouble. “200 is a very large number for any symphony chorus,” he says. “Usually you get 120 if you’re lucky. But Charleston loves the arts, and we have a lot of music lovers who sing in the chorus. Our stage manager has been scratching his head wondering, ‘How do we fit 200 people onstage?’ But it’s incredible. The effect is this immediate, immense feeling of joy when you’re sitting in the audience. Getting all these people in the colleges and the community to sing together, it’s a huge collaboration, and it’s a great thing to bring to the community, as well.”
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BYE SOCIAL LIFE, HELLO MOVIES | BY KEVIN YOUNG
More Like Disney Minus Disney+ adds yet another streaming service to the mix
What was once an anomaly has become pretty much standard nowadays. Most of the new, more original movies we see today are because of streaming. Even though I will always prefer a big movie screen over a big TV screen, I’ve come to, however begrudgingly, accept the fact that this is the model for which we’ll be able to see most original movies. More homes in the U.S. subscribe to streaming TV than traditional television, according to an L.A. Times report in March. A recent survey found that the average consumer subscribes to three streaming services. Last Tuesday at work, I found myself semi-entranced by a bewildering thing: ESPN commentators enthusiastically going on about their favorite episodes of The Simpsons featuring popular athletes. Except, replace “enthusiastically” with “indifferently.” Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman talking about some old classics was about as lively as me talking about the rivalry between Clemson and South Carolina. It was weird. Then, seeing the Disney+ logo at the bottom of the screen, I suddenly understood what was going on. The hosts of a show on ESPN, a network conglomerate owned by an even-larger conglomerate, Disney, were essentially doing an insanely long plug for Disney+. Every episode of the The Simpsons is on the service, the result of Disney’s aquisition of 21st Century Fox earlier this year. It’s ironic and semi-tragic that the saccharine sweetness that would give There’s something Bart Simpson the heebeegeebees now about an entertainment owns his ass. When I realized what I was watching, I corporation that gobbles wasn’t even annoyed. Kellerman, Smith, up other entertainment and the staff gotta get paid. If a little shilling has to happen, more power to them. corporations while I’ve written before about my annoyance putting off an eternal with Disney, including their short-lived, homogenization-meets- hypocritical firing of James Gunn from the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise. infantilization vibe that It could be the overall Disney image gets under my cynical that bugs me? There’s something about an entertainment corporation that Gen Xer skin. gobbles up other entertainment corporations while putting off an eternal homogenization-meets-infantilization vibe that gets under my cynical Gen Xer skin. For the record, this half-assed puritanical idealism of mine would be demolished in a debate if my interest in golden-era hip-hop and exploitation films of the ’70s and ’80s were brought up. It’s also very probable that I, like any Gamecock/Tiger fanatic, look at Mickey Mouse and his posse as the rivals to Warner Bros.’ Bugs Bunny and co. To paraphrase a USC bumper sticker: They Can’t Lick Our Bugs. Even though I am sometimes wary of the House of Mouse one day gobbling up everything around us, to be completely honest, I’d be all over this service if it were my thing. It has a lot of things, boasting about 500 movies and 7,500 TV episodes. Hell even some things piqued my interest, namely: films like Disney’s first PG-rated animated film, The Black Cauldron; that nightmare fuel called Return to Oz; The Apple Dumpling Gang films; the original That Darn Cat; The Cat from Outer Space; and The Aristocats — but it’s not enough to make me want to purchase the service. I’m already beholden to Netflix, Shudder, Amazon Prime, and Hulu, where Disney has placed all its more
Images courtesy Walt Disney
OUR COLUMNIST MIGHT HAVE BEEN EVEN MORE JADED IF IT WEREN’T FOR SO MANY CAT-CENTRIC TITLES ON DISNEY+, LIKE THE ARISTOCATS (TOP), AND THE CAT FROM OUTER SPACE (ABOVE)
adult fare, for the time being. On the subject of The Aristocats, that film is one of quite a few Disney titles that feature offensive stereotypes. Disney has decided that they won’t remove the offending scenes, opting to leave them in with the following disclaimer: “This program is presented as originally created. It may contain outdated cultural depictions.” That’s a very nice and digestible way to put it. I wouldn’t expect anything less from Disney. I’m not complaining. It’s definitely better than acting like it never happened. Warner Brothers did the same when they released their old cartoons on DVD in the mid 2000s. Since starting up on the same day as when I tuned in to ESPN, the channel attracted millions of subscribers, naturally resulting in crashes and streaming slowdowns. No doubt a slew of folks were likely trying to stream the Western-inspired Star Wars series The Mandalorian. (Once the dust settles, I’m sure many who angrily took to Twitter on launch day already have or will soon be satiated.) In the end, the convenience of streaming in general is pretty awesome. With the exception of old nerds like myself, people no longer rely on physical media. Collectively, we have been able to successfully cut the cord. Streaming sites are quick to remind us that we only pay for what we want and, most importantly, suggest we are no longer beholden to a corporate behemoth like Amazon, Netflix, or Disney. But of course that’s not true at all.
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SHARE THE HALSEY INSTITUTE THIS HOLIDAY SEASON! Give a gift that friends and family can enjoy throughout the year & help us serve the community with world-class exhibitions & innovative programs for all.
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
Annual membership levels begin at $40 for individuals or $60 for families.
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GIBBES MUSEUM OF ART Art + Social Justice Wed. The Gibbes hosts a special lecture, Art + Social Justice: The Legacy of the Freedom Riders this Wednesday, inspired by Charles Williams’ current Gibbes exhibition, Sun + Light. The discussion will focus on the Freedom Riders, one of the most effective nonviolent collectives in American history, whose members risked their lives to challenge Jim Crow segregation laws. Panelists include Freedom Riders Bernard LaFayette, Jr. and Catherine Burks-Brooks. • Wed. Nov. 20, 6-7 p.m. $20/members, $30/non-members, $10/students and faculty. The Gibbes Museum, 135 Meeting St. Downtown. gibbesmuseum.org BLUE BICYCLE BOOKS A House with Holes book signing Thurs. A House with Holes: One Marriage Journey in a Charleston Renovation was released earlier this year. The heartfelt and humorous true story quickly became a No. 1 Hot New Release on Amazon. Blue Bicycle will host local debut author Denise Mast Broadwater this Thursday for a book signing where readers can meet the author, purchase the book, and have it signed. • Thurs. Nov. 21, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Free to attend. Blue Bicycle Books, 420 King St. Downtown. bluebicyclebooks.com GAILLARD CENTER Mannheim Steamroller Christmas Show Tues. Celebrate 35 years of Christmas magic as Mannheim Steamroller embarks on their annual holiday tour. On Nov. 26, they’ll bring the spectacular performance to the Gaillard Center, where you can hear all their popular Christmas songs live in concert. Grab your tickets now and join in the holiday cheer. • Tues. Nov. 26 at 7:30 p.m. $49-$89. Gaillard Center, 95 Calhoun St. Downtown. gaillardcenter.org ART MECCA Picturesque Surroundings: Reimagining the Abstract Fri. Join local art fans in celebrating The Art Mecca’s newest exhibition, Picturesque Surroundings: Reimagining the Abstract from artists Amanda Davis, Barbara Greaux, and Kat Cumberledge. The collection features landscape art with differing degrees of texture, color, and abstraction. Be the first to see these innovative works at the opening reception on Fri. Nov. 22, which will include live music and complimentary beverages. • Fri. Nov. 22, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free to attend. The Art Mecca of Charleston, 427 King St. Downtown. artmeccaofcharleston.com
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
HOLIDAY
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MARC TRUJILLO: AMERICAN PURGATORY (A) Unbelievably realistic oil paintings of the remarkably unremarkable. $24.95 AVAILABLE AT: HALSEY INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART
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A Charleston City Paper Advertising Supplement
WEEK ONE W
ith the holiday shopping season kicking off, it’s time for our annual Holiday Gift Guide. This year we’ve put together five weeks worth of gift ideas that you’ll find here and in the next four issues. All five gift guides will be different so check them all out so you can find something for everyone on your list — and remember to tell them you saw it in City Paper!
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Reversible fine gauge knit scarf. One size. 100% acrylic. $32.98 AVAILABLE AT: BARNES & NOBLE AT COFC
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(C)
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The minimalist design and color choices make it suitable for use in different settings. $150 AVAILABLE AT: IOLA MODERN
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GIFT GUIDE | charlestoncitypaper.com
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
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SEWING DOWNSOUTH PILLOWS (A) A sewing and southern lifestyle with pillows, hats, totes, and T-shirts. Perfect for gifts for those that love Craig Conover! $58+ AVAILABLE AT: STYLE DWELL
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Facial cleanser, cooling body lotion, volume thickening shampoo, SPF 20 face moisturizer, charcoal body soap bar. $49 AVAILABLE AT: BARRELLI BARBER
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GIFT GUIDE | charlestoncitypaper.com
KUSH CANDLES
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
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GIFT GUIDE | charlestoncitypaper.com
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
WHERE TO BUY
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S A T U R D AY, D E C 7
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a la carte HOTEL BENNETT’S LA PATISSERIE BRINGS RUBY CHOCOLATE TO KING STREET
SAM NORTON GROWS SALICORNIA EUROPAEA, AN EDIBLE PLANT FOUND ON THE MENUS OF SOME OF CHARLESTON’S TOP RESTAURANTS
Sea Food Heron Farms is turning sea level rise into food
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
BY GABRIELA CAPESTANY
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“Could I flesh it out on the board? I know that’s kind of cliche.” Sam Norton evokes the image of a pioneering scientist working toward a breakthrough. Working inside a small lab advised by Dan McGlinn at the College of Charleston, Norton spends his days analyzing Salicornia europaea, an edible salt water-tolerant plant. Norton begins sketching elaborate diagrams and graphs. “A halophyte is a salt-tolerant plant, that’s what I’m growing in here,” he says, motioning to stacks of Salicornia growing in plastic troughs with tubes of gurgling water and softly humming lights. “That plant is the most salt-tolerant terrestrial plant on the planet.” Norton’s company Heron Farms was born out of this salty, vividly green plant. As an undergrad at CofC, Norton met Elizabeth Wood, the director of biofuel strategy at Boeing. Wood told him about a Boeing program in the United Arab Emirates that was creating biofuel with the seeds of Salicornia, a plant that Norton had never heard of before then. Intrigued, Norton interviewed for the program. “They told me, ‘You’re not going to get a job with us unless you know more about this plant, this project, salt-water agriculture, and where it comes from.’” Norton finally looked up an image of this enigmatic plant, and something clicked. “I realized, ‘Oh my god, this is the plant that I had eaten many
times growing up in Charleston.’” As a child, Norton and his peers attended outdoor camps in the summer, kayaking through marshy creeks. “The guides would say, ‘Here you go kids, here’s a marsh plant you can eat, it’s called a sea pickle,’” recalls Norton. Inspired by his findings, Norton steered his undergrad studies to focus on Salicornia and used his capstone to research the feasibility of farming the plant in South Carolina. Norton would go on to win a Dept. of Agriculture start-up competition, which gave him $25,000 to start his own company. With some system design help from Vertical Roots co-founder Matt Daniels, Norton got up and running. On our lab visit, he launches into the various kinds of tests he has conducted there: creating and testing artificial sunlight, mapping and photoanalyzing seeds, testing deepwater hydroponic methods, documenting photometric analysis, plotting light saturation curves. All of this hard work produces a highly sought after product — chefs in the region are vying for a chance to get a piece of each harvest. Norton’s sea beans have appeared on the menu at Chubby Fish on tuna crudo; at Minero in ceviche; at Husk delicately perched atop raw cuts of flounder, tuna, and beeliner; and garnishing the seafood chowder at Delaney Oyster House. “James [London of Chubby Fish] was one
Photos by Ruta Smith
NORTON OPERATES OUT OF A LAB AT COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON
of the first people to reach out to me on Instagram a few months ago and was one of the key people telling me to change the name to sea beans. I’m just listening to chefs at this point, they just tell me what to do and I follow their direction,” Norton says. Chefs are paying high prices for Salicornia to be harvested in Portland, Ore. during a continued on page 46
La Patisserie’s executive pastry chef Remy Funfrock is thinking pink. We’re familiar with milk, dark, and white, but have you ever tasted ruby chocolate? This deep pink “fourth chocolate” gained cult popularity earlier this year when it became the first new shade to debut since Nestle unveiled their white chocolate bars in the 1930s. Hotel Bennett’s La Patisserie offers this new varietal in three different treats thanks to the creativity of Funfrock, who discovered ruby chocolate in 2018, but didn’t start working with it until five months ago. According to the French-born pastry chef, the natural ruby cocoa bean, which is found primarily in South America and the Ivory Coast, is fermented but not roasted like other cocoa beans, giving it a subtle chocolatey flavor with a little acidity behind it. Ruby chocolate’s sweet yet sour flavor profile makes fruit a logical pairing, and this became the inspiration for two of Funfrock’s new desserts. The pastry chef makes his own caramelized puffed rice, and he decided to coat it in a dehydrated raspberry-infused ruby chocolate. To make the coating, Funfrock melts the European-imported Callebaut ruby at 45 degrees Celsius, then cools it to 27 degrees Celsius before finally bringing it back up to 32 degrees. The raspberry is added in at the end of this process. According to the chef, this crunchy snack is a great way to get the true essence of ruby chocolate. Another of his ruby creations, the rubéclair, combines the chocolate with a blackberry compote, with the end result being a treat where raspberry is not the predominant flavor. Funfrock explains that the weekend-only offering is unique because he only uses blackberries as opposed to the more common mixedberry pairing that shows up in pastries. Winter is coming, so the pastry chef thought it was also a fitting time to test out a ruby hot chocolate. Playing on the ruby’s acidity, Funfrock tops the hot cocoa with a milk chocolate yuzu marshmallow that melts as you enjoy the warming beverage. The unexpected flavor is hard to pinpoint, but it gives the hot chocolate an earthy undertone that truly sets it apart. Visit the King Street-facing patisserie daily from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. for a taste of this rare ruby treat. —Parker Milner
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IN THE LAB, NORTON CONDUCTS A VARIETY OF TESTS INCLUDING MAPPING AND PHOTOANALYZING SEEDS AND TESTING DEEPWATER HYDROPONIC METHODS
Sea continued from page 44 limited 60-day wild harvest period. The wild version of Salicornia has a thick stalk that must be removed. But Norton’s product, which he sells for $27 per pound, does not include the same undesirable stalk. His first out-of-town sale was to chef Christopher Hatchcock at Husk Savannah who reached out to Heron Farms via Instagram. “He said, ‘Let me skip the list and pay more.’” Beyond thinking of Salicornia as a culinary delicacy, Norton sees much larger potential for his plant and Heron Farms. “If you live in this town now, you realize that saltwater is literally coming up through the streets during high tide,” he says, urging, “We don’t have time to be acting like it’s political football. Is there a machine that turns carbon dioxide and saltwater into something useful? Turns out, there is: It’s a plant that has been growing next to us the whole time.” Norton is also interested in working with Combined Disposal Facilities (CDFs), large plots of land in marshes where dredge materials from the harbor are left to “dewater,” a process that takes years. “Salicornia can do this process faster and
dining guide Restaurant listings include a combination of our critics’ recommendations and current advertisers.
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
PRICE GUIDE: Dirt Cheap: $ • Inexpensive: $$ Moderate: $$$ • Expensive: $$$$ Very Expensive: $$$$$
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Visit charlestoncitypaper.com for our complete bar and restaurant listings.
n AMERICAN 5Church The sister restaurant to 5Church Charlotte, 5Church Charleston is run by exec chef Adam Hodgson and Bravo Top Chef alum Jamie Lynch. While the menu veers pretty standard high-end, approachable, “modern American” fare — think salmon, raw bar items, flatbread — the Market Street spot has made a point to go the extra mile by sourcing ingredients from Lynch’s
create more potential land for housing since there is so much sediment area in Charleston. Toler’s Cove [in Mt. Pleasant] is on a former dredge site,” he explains. Norton is developing an elaborate plan to drop Salicornia seeds onto CDFs via drone. He has his sights set on two identical decommissioned dredge sites in Mt. Pleasant. For the immediate future, Norton is working to expand the growing side of business at Heron Farms. Earlier this month, Norton pitched his business at the Harbor Accelerator start-up competition — and won. The $15,000 check will help Norton to increase output and keep up with demand. “Turning sea level rise into food,” is how Heron Farms describes themselves on Instagram. Norton says he just wants to be productive in an effort to take some sort of action toward confronting the issue. “We’re going to wake up tomorrow and there will be 360,000 new mouths to feed, there’s going to be less fresh water and there’s going to be more salt water. My version of picketing in the streets is to be in the lab all night trying to grow plants with salt water. Could we eat our way out of climate change? Because people love salty food. We have too much salt water, let’s do something with it.”
new six-acre farm located 30 minutes from Charlotte. —Mary Scott Hardaway (Dish, Summer 2019) Lunch, Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. $$$. Dinner. 32 N. Market St. (843) 937-8666. The Alley Fun bowling alley with games, lanes, great drinks, and good food. Lunch (Thurs.-Sun.), Dinner, Late Night (daily). $$. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Live Music, Non-Smoking, Burger Week. 131 Columbus St. (843) 818-4080. Boxcar Betty’s Somewhat hidden away on Savannah Highway is Boxcar Betty’s, a simple enough place that means to take a stand on the lack of good fried chicken sandwiches. Because owners Ian MacBryde and Roth Scott, formerly of Magnolias, staked their claim as a niche kind of joint, the menu confidently boasts only a few items. Boxcar Betty’s now has four area locations. Lunch, Dinner (daily). Lunch, Dinner. 1922 Savannah Hwy. 843-225-7470 114 Holiday Drive. 7800 Rivers Ave. Burtons Grill Classic New England fare, from clam chowder to shrimp scampi with big entrees like barbecue ribs and rib-eyes, plus a local catch. Lunch & Dinner. $$$$. Lunch, Dinner. 1875 Hwy. 17 N. (843) 606-2590. Early Bird Diner Biscuits and eggs for breakfast. Patty melts and open faced sandwiches for lunch. Blue plate
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FREE DOWNTOWN PARKING NEAR THE FOOT OF THE COOPER RIVER BRIDGE BETWEEN MEETING & EAST BAY BAKERY 7AM - 10PM | PIZZERIA & TAPROOM 11AM - 10PM 94 STUART ST. | 843-297-8233 | BAKERANDBREWER.COM
n MODERN AMERICAN Angel Oak Restaurant Serving lunch, Sun. brunch, and “supper,” this Johns Island gem uses local ingredients and modern preparations. Lunch features fresh, quick, made from scratch fare that is at once rustic and delicious. Dinner takes a more innovative approach to southern American cuisine. Beer and wine only. Lunch (Tues-Fri.), Dinner (Tues.-Sat.), & Sun. Brunch. $$$$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 3669 Savannah Hwy. (843) 556-7525. Burwell’s Stone Fire Grill This “modern steakhouse” features a menu of diverse, yet refined, steak dishes and locally sourced plates highlighting purveyors like Tarvin Seafood and Carolina Gold Rice. Dinner (daily). Happy hour (daily) 4-7 p.m. bar only. $$$$$. Outdoor Dining, Dinner, Late Night, Valet, Catering. 14 N Market St. (843) 737-8700. Charleston Grill Exec. chef Michelle Weaver takes the helm in the kitchen of this world-class dining room. The innovative menu is broken into four types of dishes: pure focuses on fresh ingredients in simple preparations, lush delivers lavish French fare, cosmopolitan explores exotic and imaginative cuisine, and Southern is the Grill’s take on local favorites. Live jazz nightly. Dinner. $$$$$. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50, Valet, Non-Smoking. 224 King St. (843) 577-4522. Circa 1886 Intriguing cuisine at the Wentworth Mansion. Menu changes regularly based on the seasons and ingredient availability. But the antelope loin is a perennial favorite. Dinner (Mon.-Sat.). $$$$$. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, NonSmoking. 149 Wentworth St. (843) 853-7828. The Daily This great all-day cafe and to go market has everything from avocado toast to wines, pastries to copies of Garden & Gun. Breakfast, Lunch (Daily). $$. Lunch, Breakfast. 652-B King St. (843) 619-0151. Edmund’s Oast A brewpub from the guys at the Edmund’s Oast Exchange with a fresh, seasonal menu and 48 taps of awesome. Food options and drinks specials for $4 each and only available at the bar from 4:30 – 6:30 p.m. Serving Dinner (Mon.-Sat.), Sun. Brunch. $$$. Sunday Brunch, Dinner, Top 50. 1081 Morrison Dr. (843) 727-1145. FIG James Beard Award-winning chef Mike Lata helms this acclaimed neighborhood bistro, crafting a daily menu that is based on fresh, local food. Dinner, Closed Sun. $$$$. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50. 232 Meeting St. (843) 805-5900. Gabrielle Gabrielle Charleston is the signature restaurant at luxurious Hotel Bennett, which opened in January 2019. With French-influenced, New Orleans-honed sensibilities and locally sourced ingredients, Gabrielle’s elegant, polished cuisine will likely place her firmly in the “It Girl” running. 6:30 a.m.- 10 p.m. daily. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Valet. Graze Creative casual cuisine that encompasses the farm-to-table ethos. Lunch, Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. $$$.
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WED, DEC 25TH 11AM UNTIL 4:30PM
CHRISTMAS BUFFET
S E RV I N G C H A R L E S TO N S I N C E 19 24
ADULTS: $42+ • CHILDREN UNDER 12: $15+ UNDER 5: FREE
*Includes One Complimentary Bloody Mary or Mimosa
COLD SELECTIONS Bibb Salad Roasted Apples, Cranberries, Candied Pecans, Crumbled Blue Cheese, Maple Balsamic Vinaigrette, Hickory Hill Buttermilk & Herb Dressing Red Bliss Potato Salad Roasted Leeks & Storey Farms Hard Boiled Eggs Tortellini Pasta Salad Roasted Butternut squash, Zucchini, Red Onions, Feta & Peppercorn Vinaigrette Charcuterie Board Cured Meats, Select Cheeses, Assorted Pickles, Crostini, Mustards, Dips & Spreads Fresh Fruit & Berries Cinnamon Vanilla Yogurt CARVING CHEF STATIONS Certified Angus Prime Rib of Beef Caramelized Shallot Au Jus & Horseradish Cream Herb Rubbed Heritage Farms Cheshire Pork Loin Green Tomato Relish & Peach Chutney Lowcountry Shrimp & Grits Adluh Mills Pepperjack Grits with Tasso Ham & Lobster Gravy MAIN BUFFET North Coast Baked Salmon Roasted Tomato Sauce, Wilted Kale & Local Feta Apple Cider Brined Chicken Breast Wild Mushroom, Herbed Butter & White Wine Sauce Carolina Gold & Basmati Rice Pilaf with Toasted Almonds & Cranberries Red Skin Mashed Potatoes with Rosemary & Parmesan Braised Collard Greens with Smoked Bacon Green Beans with Cherry Tomatoes Roasted Winter Vegetables in Sage Butter Sweet Potato Casserole with Marshmallows Herbed Brussel Sprouts with Toasted Pecans DESSERTS Apple & Cranberry Bread Pudding • Pecan Pie • Pumpkin Pie • Apple Pie • Holiday Cookies Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Icing Soft Serve Ice Cream with Assorted Toppings Parking Not Included • 18% Gratuity & Tax Will Be Automatically Added Reservations Required 843.724.8888 Located in the historic Francis Marion Hotel • 387 King Street
CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com
Uptown Social There are adult slushies with names like High Noon grapefruit frose and Day Rager, plus signature cocktails like the Grape-full Dead and Burning Sensation. The bar food fares well. The sloppy joe sliders are billed as “cafeteria style, but better.” Although not a very high bar, they’ve succeeded. The Armitage pizza makes a case for what Uptown Social does best — bake fresh dough. Lunch, Dinner (Daily). Weekend Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner. 587 King St. (843)793-1837. Vickery’s Bar and Grill Great setting for creative American food with Cuban flair and some of the best bloodys in town. Voted Best Outdoor Patio and Best Happy Hour by CP readers. Lunch, Dinner, (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. $$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Waterfront, Best of Charleston winner, Parking. 1313 Shrimp Boat Lane. (843) 884-4440. Warehouse As of early 2019 Warehouse is now serving “noodle bowls for the soul,” offering a ramen-focused menu, small plates, and their neighborhood favorite Sunday brunch. Lunch (Fri.), Dinner (Daily), & Sun. Brunch. $$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Late Night, Wifi. 45 1/2 Spring St. (843) 202-0712. The Watch Rooftop Kitchen & Bar The only thing prettier than the views are what’s on the plate at this rooftop restaurant. Think hamachi crudo, lobster rolls, and a huge burger. Lunch, Dinner (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 79 Wentworth St. (843) 518-5115.
DO NO WW NT OP OW EN N!
specials for dinner featuring meat and sides of your choice. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner (Mon.-Sat.),. Late Night (Fri. & Sat.), & Sun. Brunch. $$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Parking, Non-Smoking. 1644 Savannah Hwy. (843) 277-2353. Eli’s Table Benedicts for breakfast, soup and sandwiches for lunch, and crowd-pleasing entrees for dinner like pork chops, lemon chicken, and seafood fra diavolo. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, & Weekend Brunch. $$$$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Breakfast. 129 Meeting St. (843) 405-5115. Florie’s at Commonhouse Aleworks Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 4831 O’Hear Ave. Harold’s Cabin This Bill Murray-owned restaurant serves fresh eats and coffees from its two-story location in the Westside neighborhood. Mon.-Fri. 4-10 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-10p.m. Brunch & dinner. Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast. 247 Congress St. (843) 793-4440. Hen and The Goat This fast/casual spot offers sandwiches, breakfast, and snacks in a family friendly atmosphere. Lunch (daily). Lunch. 869 Folly Rd. Jack’s Cafe A greasy spoon that’s operated on the edge of the college campus forever, serving up burgers, breakfast, and more. Breakfast & Lunch, weekdays. $$. Lunch, Breakfast, Non-Smoking, Wifi. 41 George St. (843) 723-5237. Kickin’ Chicken 27 varieties of wings, plus great sandwiches, huge salads, and burgers too. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night (Daily). $$. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Delivery, Best of Charleston winner. 337 King St. (843) 805-5020 1175 Folly Road. (843) 225-6996 349 W Coleman Blvd. (843) 881-8734 800 N. Main St. (843) 875-6998 1179 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 766-5292. KinFolk A stone’s throw from Kiawah, KinFolk occupies the tiny space once inhabited by Crave Smokehouse. With snug seating for two dozen, it’s something of a shack in its own right. There’s a welcoming “door’s always open” vibe that permeates everything from the decor to the food. . Lunch, Dinner. 4430 Betsy Kerrison Pkwy. Krazy Owls Steampunk sports bar and restaurant. L, D, daily. 3157 Maybank Hwy. (843) 640-3844. Mainland Container Co. Kitchen & Bar Mainland Container Co. is comprised of a rustic, beachy restaurant, a ground-level bar set in a shipping container, and ample umbrella-covered seating. Bar food offerings range from wings; hushpuppies that are basically savory donuts drizzled with honey, and served with hot pepper jelly and pimento cheese; and a beer cheese-covered tater tot extravaganza called The Full Container. Dinner (Mon-Sat.), Weekend Brunch. Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner. 1528 Ben Sawyer Blvd. (843) 284-8174. Ms. Rose’s Modern American diner food with classics like meatloaf and fried chicken and newer favorites like kale, polenta, and brussels sprouts. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner (daily), Weekend Brunch. $$. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Parking. 1090 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 766-0223. Philly’s Cheesesteaks They say don’t be fooled by imitators. We say this is definitely the real deal when it comes to cheesesteaks, whether you take ‘em ‘wi’d or ‘widout.’ Lunch & Dinner, Closed Sun. $$. Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner. 4650 Ladson Road. (843) 873-0776. The Rarebit A 50s-style cocktail bar with a full menu of diner favorites like chicken noodle soup, patty melts, and triple stack burgers. Breakfast is served all day, every day. Lunch, Dinner, & Late Night. (Tues.-Sun.) Kitchen open until 1 a.m. $$$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Wifi, Burger Week. 474 King St. (843) 974-5483. Rutledge Cab Co. An all-day menu of burgers, salads, sandwiches and finer fare. Lunch & Dinner. $$$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Parking, Burger Week. 1300 Rutledge Ave. (843) 720-1440. The Shelter Kitchen + Bar Burgers, brunch fare, beer, and a sprawling bar and patio make for a comfortable place to hang and enjoy yourself. Lunch, Dinner, (Daily) & Weekend Brunch. $$$. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Late Night, Burger Week. 202 Coleman Blvd. (843) 388-3625. Stack’s Coastal Kitchen A small menu focuses on fresh seafood with duck, steak, and pork entree options too. Lunch & Dinner. $$$$. Lunch, Dinner. 1440 Ben Sawyer Blvd. (843) 388-6968. Toast of Charleston Housemade soups, sandwiches, and desserts “to die for,” according to USA Today. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. $$$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Delivery, Live Music. 155 Meeting St. (843) 534-0043 2026 Savannah Hwy. (843) 556-0006 717 Old Trolley Rd. Unit 10.
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FATHER’S DAY Sunday, June 17 10am - 2pm
Prime Rib Special $14 CATERING OPTIONS INCLUDING FULL SERVICE AND BOXED LUNCHES MON - THU 11AM - 9PM, FRI & SAT 11AM- 10PM REGULAR BRUNCH MENU 90 FOLLY RD. • 843.789.3722 • BLACKWOODSMOKEHOUSE.COM ALSO AVAILABLE P. 843-789-3722 90 Folly Road Charleston, SC 29407 blackwoodsmokehouse.com
HARVEST WED, NOV 27 ALL NIGHT LONG
DRESS UP FESTIVE! HOLIDAY COSTUMES ENCOURAGED
LIVE MUSIC
9PM-MIDNIGHT NICK COLLINS
OPENING AT 4PM THANKSGIVING DAY
Boxed Wine that Tastes Great Sun. Nov. 24 2-3 p.m. Free Edmund’s Oast Exchange 1081 Morrison Drive Downtown
FOODIE EVENT | Out of the box Certified Sommelier Sarah O’Kelley promises that not all boxed wine is created equal. The wine director for Edmund’s Oast restaurant and GM of Edmund’s Oast Exchange, O’Kelley knows a thing or two about vino. She leads a pre Thanksgiving free boxed wine tasting along with the makers of Boxxle, the chic wine dispenser that makes boxes and bags of your favorite varietal look sleeker than any vintage corked bottle. —Mary Scott Hardaway SUNDAY
cuisine calendar n BEER Growler Hour — $1 off drafts. Visit website to view what will be on tap. Dinner menu available. Get a free growler bottle with a fill ($6 value). Mention the word of the day on Twitter and get a free appetizer. Each Wed. 5-9 p.m. Laura Alberts Tasteful Options, 891 Island Park Drive #B. (843) 881-4711. lauraalberts.com Thankful Thursdays — One dollar from every pint sold on Thankful Thursdays is donated to a local charity. While sales throughout the day count, the official happy hour is from 5-8 p.m., when the charity will be in the brewery to discuss the good work they do. Learn more on Tradesman’s Facebook page. Each Thurs. 5-8 p.m. Free to attend. Tradesman Brewing Co., 1647 King St. Ext. 843 410-1315. www.facebook.com/ Tradesmanbrew/ Weekly Beer and Wine Tastings at Edmund’s Oast Exchange — Edmund’s Oast Exchange offers weekly wine tastings on Thursdays entitled Sarah’s Selections from 5:30-7:30 p.m. For $5, enjoy a special beer tasting selected by Certified Sommelier Sarah O’Kelley. All proceeds benefit a selected charity each quarter. Each Thurs. 5:30-7:30 p.m. $5. Edmund’s Oast Exchange, 1081 Morrison Dr. 843-990-9449. edmundsoast.com/exchange Open Mic — acoustic Each Sat.
4-7 p.m. Freehouse Brewery, 2895 Pringle St, Ste B. freehousebeer.com/ Suds and Savasana — Start your Saturday right with Suds and Savasana, a weekly all-levels yoga class held in Low Tide Brewing. After the yoga class, led by Darcy Mahan, enjoy a craft beer. Each Sat. 11 a.m. $15/ yoga and beer, $10/yoga. Low Tide Brewing, 2863 Maybank Hwy. (843) 501-7570. lowtidebrewing.com/ Bendy Brewski Sunday Brunch — 45 minutes of all levels yoga followed by a flight of beer! and brunch offered by Suelto at Holy City Brewing. Mats avail to borrow Each Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $15. Holy City Brewing, 4155-C Dorchester Road. 843-437-0846. holycitybrewing.com Bendy Brewski Yoga Frothy Beard — Enjoy all-levels yoga and craft beer along with Zombie Bobs Pizza every Monday inside the brewery. Mats are available to borrow. Each Mon. 6-7 p.m. $15. Frothy Beard Brewing, 1401 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 4370846. bendybrewskiyoga.com $12 Burger + Beer Night at Félix — Join us every Tuesday at Félix for our Raclette Burger, Frites and a Beer for $12! Tues. $12. Félix Cocktails et Cuisine, 550 King St. (843) 203-6297. felixchs.com
n FOODIE EVENTS
Common enjoy Common Hour with $8 white, red, and rosé wines and $5 Chef’s Selection of ‘bites’ from 5-6:30 p.m. Each Wed. Thurs. 5 p.m. A la carte. Wild Common, 103 Spring St. cannongreencharleston.com Joyeux Anniversaire, Félix! — Celebrate two years of Félix Cocktails et Cuisine. The festivities last all day and night with half-off house wine and cocktails, half-off small plates, as well as a complimentary Champagne pour and Oyster Rockefeller upon arrival. Wed. Nov. 20, 11 a.m. A la carte. Félix Cocktails et Cuisine, 550 King St. 8432036297. felixchs.com Undiscovered Charleston Food Tour — Chef Forrest Parker, the city’s only Palmetto Guild Certified chef guide, leads guests on a three hour experience unlike any other. You’ll begin with a 90 minute walking tour, exploring the complicated history of the Holy City and the culinary influences that shaped Charleston into one of the world’s top food destinations. The tour concludes at the cozy Bistro A Vin where you’ll relax while Chef Forrest teaches you how to cook three dishes from recipes he wrote interpreting definitive Lowcountry classics, and prepared using techniques he mastered over two decades. He’ll serve those recipes for lunch while you enjoy a carefully
Common Hour — Every Wed. and Thurs. evening at Wild
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SERVING UP A TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING FEAST
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RIVALRY ROAST SATURDAY, NOV 30 • NOON 10 OYSTER BUCKETS
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202 Coleman Blvd, Mt. Pleasant (just off Shem Creek) (843) 388-3625 TheShelterKitchenAndBar.com
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Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Parking. 863 Houston Northcutt Blvd. (843) 6062493 115 E 5th North St. The Grocery A changing, seasonal menu with Mediterranean and Southern influences. Craft beer on tap, housemade charcuterie, a wood-burning oven, and a familial atmosphere. Dinner (Tues-Sat.) & Weekend Brunch. $$$. Sunday Brunch, Dinner, Top 50. 4 Cannon St. (843) 302-8825. Herd Provisions A straightforward celebration of quality ingredients prepared with care, Herd Provisions puts the
farm in farm-to-table. The meat served by the restaurant has been raised on the owner’s Virginia farm, Leaping Waters. Meanwhile, just about everything else — from fruits and veggies to the beans, breads, and desserts — are locally sourced. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.- 3p.m. (lunch). Tues.-Sat. 5-10 p.m. (dinner). Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 106 Grove St. (843) 637-4145. Langdon’s Restaurant & Wine Bar The fine dining menu blends Lowcountry cuisine with a range of international influences, resulting in elegant entrées prepared by Chef/owner Patrick Owens. Lunch (Mon.-Fri.) & Dinner (Mon.-Sat.). $$$$$. Online Reservations, Lunch, Dinner, Parking, Non-Smoking. 778 South Shelmore Blvd. (843) 388-9200.
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CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com
L E AV E T H E ! S U O T G N I COOK
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BJ Dennis via Instagram
Sea Island Beer Release Sun. Nov. 24 3 p.m. Free to attend Revelry Brewing Co. 36 Romney St. Downtown
FOODIE EVENT | Historic grain, modern beer Revelry Brewing has partnered with chef BJ Dennis on a beer called Sea Island; it’s made with watermelon and S.C. grown white sorghum. The gluten free beer was brewed with “consideration of ingredients central to Gullah Geechee culture” and will be released this Sun. Nov. 24 with a party at The Hold starting at 3 p.m. A portion of proceeds from the Sea Island beer will be donated to the Jenkins Institute, a local organization that promotes and supports the social and economic well-being of children, families, and individuals. —Connelly Hardaway SUNDAY
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
curated wine pairing (or cool, delicious sweet tea if you’d prefer). You’ll go home with Chef Forrest’s recipes as his gift to you. Each Mon. Wed.Sun. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. $125. Riley Waterfront Park, 1 Vendue Range. undiscoveredcharleston. com Purlieu Second Anniversary — Nov. 21-23 Purlieu is celebrating its second anniversary and Beaujolais Nouveau by honoring three classic French dishes, bringing back select dishes guests have come to know and love at Chef John Zucker’s French restaurant over the last two years. Thurs. Nov. 21 the special will be frog legs, Fri. Nov. 22 feast on rabbit rillette, and Sat. Nov. 23 enjoy moulard de canard. Make your reservation via RESY. Nov. 21-23, 5 p.m. A la carte. Purlieu, 237 Fishburne St. (843) 300-2253. purlieucharleston.com Container Bar Late Night Eats — Starting Fri. Aug 9, Container Bar Charleston is extending their food hours on Friday nights to offer a late-night menu provided by Sap-Lai Charleston. From 10 p.m. to 12 a.m., customers will have access to a full menu of south-east asian eats sure to curb all of the nighttime cravings. The late-night menu will feature Dumplings, Pad Thai, Pad Woonsen, Khao Soi, Hot Pot, and Drunken Noodles with Pho,
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Ramen, and Soup Dumplings rotating in during the fall. Each Fri. 10 p.m. A la carte. Container Bar, 2130 Mt. Pleasant St. containerbarchs.com West Ashley Thanksgving Farmers Market — The West Ashley Farmers Market will return for a special Thanksgiving Market featuring fresh local produce, prepared and packaged food products, food trucks, free kids activities, live music by the Bluestone Ramblers, free parking, and a blood drive with The Blood Connection. This will be the final West Ashley Farmers Market of the season. Sun. Nov. 24, 12-4 p.m. Free to attned. Ackerman Park, West Ashley, 55 Sycamore Ave. NICO Oyster Education Classes — Join French Master Chef Nico Romo for a dive into the history of the oyster. The class includes an overview of farming techniques and lessons on how to shuck your own oyster as Romo shares his team’s experience traveling the east coast to study oysters and build the restaurant’s current oyster program. House shucker Bella who won the Lowcountry oyster shucking competition will help teach guests the best shucking techniques. Guests will enjoy 12 different oysters from Maine to South Carolina as well as two glasses of Oysterman wine. The class also includes take-home items.Reservations are available through RESY. As each class is
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The Macintosh Modern fare that varies seasonally but explores local ingredients with skill and creativity. Dinner & Sun. Brunch. $$$$$. Sunday Brunch, Dinner, Top 50. 479 King St. (843) 789-4299. McCrady’s Restaurant Settle in for an evening of that ingredient driven cuisine — choose from one of six nightly seatings and receive in return a highlychoreographed 15-course meal with impeccable wine pairings. The plates are both artful and playful, balancing rich, intense flavors with delicate nuances — a
limited to just eight guests and a credit card is required to confirm a reservation. Each Mon. 6 p.m. $45. NICO, 201 Coleman Blvd. (843) 352-7969. nicoshemcreek.com Jack of Cups Oysters — In the backyard of Jack of Cups — Back of Cups — every Tuesday there will be an oyster roast, hot toddies, draft mules, CBD honey straws, and live music starting at 6 p.m. $10 AYCE oysters. Each Tues. 6 p.m. Free to attend. Jack of Cups Saloon, 34 Center St. (843) 633-0042. www.jackofcups.com/ Neighborhood Night at Basic Kitchen — Every Tuesday, Basic Kitchen hosts Neighborhood Night, offering a weekly dish special and wine bottles at discounted prices. Any wine bottle on their list that’s $60 or under is 1/2 off, too. Each Tues. 5:30 p.m. A la carte. Basic Kitchen, 82 Wentworth St. (843) 7894568. basickitchen.com Pink Bellies pop-up at Edmund’s Oast Brewing Co. — Vietnamese pop-up by chef Thai Phi serving banh mi sandwiches, garlic noodles, Sriracha wings, dumplings, and more. Each Tues. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Through Nov. 26. A la carte. Edmund’s Oast Brewing Co., 1505 King St. Ext. (843) 990-9449. edmundsoast.com
E-mail cuisine calendar items to editor@charlestoncitypaper.com or fax to 576-0380 by the Wed. before the week of the event.
slab of 65-day aged ribeye dusted with black truffle, a single lightly-poached shrimp served atop an orb of “Charleston ice cream” (Carolina Gold rice), a tender sea scallop nestled between an earthy swirl of brown butter and ethereal, sea-like foam. The setting and service strike an equally delicate balance between high-end luxury and relaxing informality — an impressive step forward for a long-time Charleston dining institution. —Robert Moss Lunch, Dinner (Daily), Weekend Brunch. $$$$$. Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50, NonSmoking. 2 Unity Alley. Opal Chef Patrick Owens’ menu features housemade charcuterie and pasta with seasonal entrée selections. Bar opens at 4 p.m for craft beer and charcuterie.
n SOUTHERN Grace & Grit The menu at stylish, contemporary Mt. Pleasant venue highlights Lowcountry staples. Expect traditional brunch and dinner dishes like fried green tomatoes, she-crab soup and shrimp and grits, plus locally sourced fish and seafood selections prepared six different ways. The restaurant’s name refers in part to its Baskin Robbins-esque approach to grits, with 15 sweet and savory varieties available. Dinner (daily), Weekend Brunch. Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner. 320 Wingo Way. (843) 698-4748. On Forty-One Southern classics like pork chops with fall vegetables are made from the freshest ingredients. Dinner (Tues.-Sat.), Sun. Brunch. Sunday Brunch, Dinner, Parking. 1055 Highway 41. (843) 352-9235. Pawpaw Pawpaw restaurant is as chic as it is flavorful. The food is at once familiar and provocative, with a buttermilk biscuit appetizer that is sure to become the yardstick by which all future pimento cheese efforts are measured. Other standouts include crisp and seductive free-range recipe #88 fried chicken, the superlative crispy blue crab bites and the charred, yet luscious market catch fish. Lunch, Dinner, (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. Sun.-Thurs. from 5 – 10 p.m. and Fri. and Sat. from 5 – 11 p.m. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner. 209 East Bay St. 843-297-4443. Tomato Shed Cafe Classic country cooking inside a the Ambrose family’s Stono Market. Meat, sides, and sweet tea. Try the tomato pie. Lunch (Mon.-Sat.). $$. Lunch. 842 Main Road. (843) 559-9999.
n NEW SOUTHERN Anson Anson Restaurant takes a seasonal approach to its menu and its traditional Southern Cuisine. Dinner (daily). $$$$$. Dinner, Non-Smoking. 12 Anson St. (843) 577-0551. The Glass Onion Midscale Southern comfort food prepared with local ingredients. On the regularly changing menu, you’ll find favorites like deviled eggs, fried chicken, and gumbo. Lunch, Dinner (Mon.-Sat.), &. Sat. Brunch. Closed Sun. $$$. Lunch, 3, Dinner, Best of
Charleston winner, Top 50. 1219 Savannah Hwy. (843) 225-1717. High Cotton This Hall Group restaurant offers a delicious sampling of steaks and seafood with a variety of perfect accompaniments and sauces like bearnaise, cabernet, and more. A la carte menu. Dinner (Daily), Weekend Brunch. $$$$$. Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner. 199 East Bay St. (843) 724-3815. Husk Executive Chef Travis Grimes puts the focus on the artisans and ingredients of the modern south. Menu changes daily with a commitment to procuring only from within the south. Lunch (Mon.-Sat.), Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. $$$$. Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50. 76 Queen St. (843) 577-2500. Magnolias Contemporary spin on traditional Southern dishes. Fresh and satisfying. Enjoyable ambience. Lunch (Mon.-Sat.), Dinner (daily), & Sun. Brunch. $$$$$. Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 185 East Bay St. (843) 577-7771. Middleton Place Restaurant Seasonal and local fare in a historical plantation setting. Find classic dishes like okra soup, shrimp and grits, and Huguenot torte. Lunch & Dinner. $$$. Lunch, Dinner. 4300 Ashley River Road. (843) 556-6020. Parcel 32 Set in a renovated 19th century home, Parcel 32 serves wood-fired cuisine inspired by Lowcountry land and sea. They have happy hour Mon.-Fri. from 5 to 7 p.m., daily specials, and Sun. brunch. Head there every Wed. for Bubbles + Pearls starting at 5 p.m. featuring $1.50 oysters shucked to order, and half-price select bottles of bubbly. Dinner (Tues.-Sun.) & Sun. Brunch. 442 King St. (843) 722-3474. Peninsula Grill A rich, wonderful menu full of American classics and Lowcountry favorites. Top-notch wine list, impeccable service. Reservations suggested. AAA fourdiamond rating, Mobil four-star rating. Dinner. $$$$$. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50, Non-Smoking. 112 N. Market St. (843) 7230700. Poogan’s Porch Poogan’s offers classic Lowcountry dishes like okra gumbo, peach cobbler, shrimp and grits, crabcakes, and catfish alongside modern plates like sweet-tea glazed salmon and pork three ways. Lunch, Dinner, & Weekend Brunch. $$$$. Outdoor Dining, Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner. 72 Queen St. (843) 577-2337 188 East Bay St. (843) 577-5665. Slightly North of Broad There’s more to a dining experience than what arrives on the plate, and SNOB holds up well there, too. Tall windows fill the room with a golden orange glow at sundown — the perfect ambiance for an opening cocktail, the selection of which is conveniently listed right there on the dinner menu between the entrees and the medium plates. Lunch (Mon.-Fri.), Dinner (daily), Weekend Brunch. $$$$. Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50. 192 East Bay St. (843) 723-3424. Swamp Fox Restaurant & Bar Classic Southern cuisine at the Francis Marion Hotel. Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner. $$$$. Online Reservations, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast. 387 King St. (843) 724-8888.
1313 Shrimp Boat Ln. | 843-884-4440 | vickerysmtp.com
n SOUL FOOD Bertha’s Kitchen Classic soul food like you wish your mama made. Okra soup, mac & cheese, collars, and more. Lunch & Dinner, weekdays. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. $$. Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 2332 Meeting Street Rd. (843) 554-6519. Dave’s Carry-Out Up in Elliotborough on the humble corner of Morris Street, they serve a splendid array of breaded items from both surf and turf. Lunch (Tues.Fri.), Dinner (Tues.-Sat.). Closed Sun. and Mon. $$. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Top 50. 42-C Morris St. (843) 577-7943. Hannibal’s Kitchen Sautéed crab, fried whiting, or shrimp over grits for breakfast. Plus sandwiches, chicken wings, and more. No frills. True soul. Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner (Mon.-Sat.) 7 a.m.-close. Closed Sun. $$. Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast. 16 Blake Street. (843) 722-2256. Martha Lou’s Soul food — fried chicken, chitlins, lima beans. Lunch, Early Dinner Lunch (Mon.-Sat.). $$. Lunch, Dinner, Top 50, Parking. 1068 Morrison Drive. (843) 577-9583 2000-Q McMillan Ave. Nana’s Seafood and Soul The restaurant’s Instagram is
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817 Savannah Hwy. | West Ashley | 843-225-GENE | genes.beer
CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com
Dinner daily. $$$$. Dinner. 1960 Riviera Dr. (843) 6549070. Prohibition Greg Garrison’s menu satisfies with duck hash, smoky shrimp and grits, lamb ribs, and oyster sliders. Dinner, Late Night, & Weekend Brunch. $$$. Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner. 547 King St. (843) 7932964. Revival Revival is an upscale Lowcountry eatery, located on East Bay Street in the historic French Quarter, turning out Southern classics that are “modern, yet approachable.” Complimentary valet parking. Dinner (daily). Online Reservations, Dinner, Valet. 162 East Bay St. (843) 414-2335. Sorghum & Salt Situated in the space that once held the beloved Two Boroughs Larder, Chef Tres Jackson’s Sorghum & Salt has more than enough chops to fill those shoes. Tenaciously fresh and unapologetically creative, Jackson’s cuisine offers a mix of familiar and foreign in ways that are fresh and unexpected. Dinner (Tues.-Sun.). Dinner, Top 50. 186 Coming St. (843) 872-6393. Stars Restaurant Rooftop and Grill Room The big menu features unique culinary techniques using a custom designed live fire grill and rotisserie, hearth oven and rolled steel plancha. Half price brunch on Saturdays for industry folks. Dinner & Weekend Brunch. $$$$$. Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner. 495 King St. (843) 5770100. Tavern & Table From soy caramel-glazed short ribs with house-made ramen noodle gnocchi beneath handcrafted chandeliers inside, or biting into luscious shrimp beignets on the outdoor patio while watching pelicans skim the water, Chef Ray England rocks the house. Lunch & Dinner (Daily). Lunch, Dinner, Waterfront, Burger Week. 100 Church St. (843) 352-9510. Wild Common Executive chef Orlando Pagan crafts an inventive tasting menu in this beautiful Spring St. space. Menu highlights include fresh bites like Spade & Clover roasted carrots, Diver scallop crudo, and seared cobia; and rich indulgences like foie gras “pastrami cappaelletti, dry aged ribeye grilled over charcoal, and strawberry shortcake roulade. Serving Dinner (Wed.-Sun.). 5-10 p.m. Online Reservations. 103 Spring St. Zero Restaurant + Bar Chef Vinson Petrillo delivers big time fine dining in this tiny space. Try his three-course tasting menu for $55 or the full meal deal five-course menu for $115. Dinner (Tues.-Sat.). $$$. Dinner, Top 50. 0 George St. (843) 817-7900.
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24 BEERS ON TAP • 18 TVs FOR ALL YOUR FOOTBALL ACTION
updated daily — sometimes multiple times a day often with an image of Eugene H. Krabs from Spongebob Squarepants shouting “Ay yall boy! Nana’s got dem garlic crabs.” And you should follow Mr. Krabs’ advice. With pork chops, fried whiting, cornbread, and bread pudding, this is real deal comfort food. Check in often to see the full menu of must-try specialties. —Kinsey Gidick Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 176 Line St. (843) 937-0002. Workmen’s Cafe Miss Angie will comfort you with her food. We recommend the lima beans and rice plate. Smoky, meaty, and delicious. Breakfast (Sat.) & Lunch (Tues.-Fri.). $$. Lunch, Breakfast. 1837-A Grimball Road. (843) 225-0884.
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Black Wood Smokehouse Once inside, Joseph and Allison Jacobson’s Black Wood is open and airy, with a veritable cornucopia of seating. Tables, booths, communal pub seating, and a long wooden full bar: There’s something for everyone. Once you settle in, service is friendly and efficient. — Vanessa Wolf Lunch, Dinner (Mon.-Sat.). Parking. 90 Folly Rd. (843) 789-3722. Dukes Barbecue Chopped pork, fried chicken, mac & cheese, rice & hash, ribs by the slab and the rib. Lunch (Tues.-Sun.) & Dinner (Tues.- Sat.). $$. Lunch, Dinner. 331 Folly Road. (843) 789-4801. Home Team BBQ Barbecue, ribs, and a vinegar-based sauce. “Home Team’s meat will go up against anyone in town and hold its own. Excellent, tender, and moist.” —Jeff Allen. Voted Best Barbecue and Best Cold Beer by CP readers. Serving Lunch, Dinner (daily) 11 a.m.-12 a.m., Late Night Menu 10 p.m.-12 a.m. $$. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Live Music, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50, Parking. 1205 Ashley River Rd. (843) 225-7427 2209 Middle St. (843) 225RIBS(7427) 126 Williman St. Jim ‘n Nick’s Bar-B-Q Meat smoked in huge brick pits and slathered with sauce. Hand pulled pork, beef brisket, smoked turkey breast, and ribs. Lunch & Dinner. $$$. Lunch, Dinner. 4964 Centre Pointe Dr. (843) 747-3800. Lewis Barbecue Brisket bad boy John Lewis specializes in brisket, pulled pork “hot guts” sausage, and traditional sides. Tues. – Sun., serving from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Top 50. 464 N. Nassau St. Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint Family friendly barbecue joint specializing in whole hog, ‘cue with sides, salads, and sweet treats aplenty. Full bar and TVs, plus ample indoor and outdoor seating. Open daily. Lunch, Dinner (daily). 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun.-Wed. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Thurs.-Sat. 1622 Highland Ave. Poogan’s Smokehouse Find Southern favorites like ribs and pulled pork featured side-by-side with pork belly sliders and whole suckling pig. Lunch, Dinner (Daily). Lunch, Dinner. Rodney Scott’s BBQ The Scott family has been cooking whole hog barbecue over hardwood coals in remote Hemingway, S.C. since the early 1970s, and the same process is in place at pitmaster Rodney Scott’s BBQ here, with results yielding everything from spare ribs to pulled pork sandwiches. The pulled smoked chicken is a delicious and reliable option, while sleeper hits include the flawless collard greens and unexpectedly crisp and light catfish sandwich. With wine and beer available, if there’s a bag of Scott’s paprika-dusted fried pork rinds for sale on the counter, grab them to snack on while you await your ’cue. —Vanessa Wolf Serving Lunch, Dinner (daily). Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 1101 King St. (843) 990-9535. Smoky Oak Taproom Smoked barbecue served naked, wood oven-fired pizzas, 41 taps, and plenty of tasty bar fare. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night. $$$. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Live Music, Parking, Non-Smoking. 1234-C Camp Road. (843) 762-6268. Sticky Fingers They don’t call it Sticky Fingers for nothin’. Southern ribs and barbecue at good prices. Voted Best Ribs by CP readers. Lunch & Dinner. $$. Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Catering. 341 Johnnie Dodds Blvd. (843) 856-7427 235 Meeting St. (843) 853-7427 1200 N. Main St. (843) 871-7427. Swig & Swine Bring your appetite because Swig & Swine doesn’t play when it comes to large portions of wood-smoked barbecue. Lunch & Dinner (Daily). Lunch, Dinner, Parking. 1217 Savannah Hwy. (843) 225-3805 2379 Hwy. 41. (843) 416-7368 1990 Old Trolley Road. (843) 771-9688 49 S Market St. (843) 302-0290.
n SEAFOOD 167 Raw Chef Mike Geib makes killer tacos and serves up a fresh catch of the day sandwich that’ll surely surpass expectations. Serving Lunch, Dinner (Mon.-Sat.). Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 289 East Bay St. Acme Lowcountry Kitchen Fresh coastal cuisine in a comfortable, beach setting. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, (Daily). Weekend Brunch. $$. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Live Music, Parking, NonSmoking, Catering. 31 J. C. Long Blvd. (843) 886-3474. Amen Street Fish and Raw Bar Classic raw bar plus a full menu of fresh seafood choices. Lunch, Dinner, & Late Night. $$$$. Online Reservations, Lunch, Dinner, Late Night. 205 E. Bay St. (843) 853-8600. Blossom Executive Chef James Simmons focuses on simple, Lowcountry fare like chilled oysters on the halfshell; blue crab ravioli with sweet corn, spinach, cremini mushrooms, and parmesan cream; and pan roasted Mahi Mahi with butter poached shrimp, creamy rice purloo, and tomato butter Lunch & Dinner. $$$$. Outdoor Dining, Online Reservations, Lunch, Dinner. 171 East Bay St. (843) 722-9200. Blu Beach Bar & Grill Fresh local seafood combines with an oceanfront setting to make this place perfect for a day at the beach. Dinner. $$$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Live Music, Waterfront. 1 Center St. (843) 588-6658. The Boathouse at Breach Inlet Sunset views and seafood. Elegant nautical setting. Voted Best IOP Restaurant by CP readers. Dinner (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. $$$$. Outdoor Dining, Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Dinner, Waterfront, Best of Charleston winner, Valet, Non-Smoking. 101 Palm Blvd. (843) 886-8000. Bowens Island Restaurant Charleston’s favorite spot for oysters, recognized by the James Beard House as an American Classic. Dinner (Tues.-Sat.). Closed Sun. & Mon. $$$. Dinner, Top 50. 1870 Bowens Island Road. (843) 795-2757. Charleston Crab House The James Island locale features dockside dining on the Intracoastal Waterway. Lowcountry seafood. Lunch & Dinner. $$$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Waterfront. 145 Wappoo Creek Dr. (843) 795-1963 41 S. Market St. (843) 853-2900 Hwy. 17N. (843) 884-1617. Charleston Harbor Fish House A full slate of raw bar and fresh market fish in addition to a menu of classics like shrimp and grits and crabcakes. Breakfast, lunch, & dinner (daily) 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m. $$$$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Waterfront. 32 Patriots Point Road. (843) 284-7070. Chubby Fish Chubby Fish is airy and welcoming with a product people clearly want. There are raw bar dishes along with small plates, entrees, and landlubber friendly options, plus limited beer and wine selections. The octo salad is colorful and summery — tender octopus slices mingle with fresh corn, purple onion, butter beans, and bright red bits of hot chili pepper. Serving Dinner (Tues.Sat.). Tues.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m. & Fri. Sat. 5-11 p.m. 252 Coming St. (854) 222-3949. Coast More than a dozen fresh fish choices daily, a full raw bar, and a refreshing drink list. Dinner (Daily). $$$$. Dinner. 39-D John St. (843) 722-8838. The Darling Oyster Bar With its high ceilings, honeycomb tile floors, and oodles of vintage charm, it’s no wonder locals have been streaming into The Darling. From Creole shrimp to ceviche, oysters to shrimp and grits, get your seafood fix here. Dinner (daily), Sun. brunch. Sunday Brunch, Dinner. 513 King St. (843) 641-0821. Ellis Creek Fish Camp This creekside spot offers everything from fried shrimp to flatbreads and if you snag a picnic table, dinner or lunch comes with a picturesque view to boot. Lunch, Dinner (daily) Sun. Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 1243 Harbor View Road. (843) 297-8878. The Establishment With something of a Midas touch, everything about The Establishment works: buzzy, popular, and teeming with energy around the bar, service remains personal and intimate. The space itself feels historic, with high ceilings and portions of artfully exposed brick, yet the large, digital aquarium and chef’s table dining area are fresh and contemporary. Tues.-Sat. 5 p.m. Dinner, Top 50. 28 Broad St. (843) 789-4028. Fleet Landing Waterfront dining at the foot of the Market. Fresh seafood, crabcakes, sandwiches, and yummy fried oysters. Voted Best Waterfront Dining by CP readers. Lunch, Dinner (Daily) & Weekend Brunch. $$$$. Outdoor Dining, Online Reservations, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Waterfront, Best of Charleston winner, Parking, Burger Week. 186 Concord St. (843) 722-8100.
on the web Search our dining listings on the web by location, type of cuisine, and amenities like outdoor dining, valet parking, and Sunday Brunch. charlestoncitypaper.com
Executive Chef Wanted One of the highest-rated and nationally rated inns in the Lowcountry. Located in Beaufort, SC CANDIDATE WILL: Provide vision, create menus, and curate overall food program Bring out the best in the intricate flavors, culture, and tastes of Lowcountry cuisine Use your business sense and love of hospitality to build something amazing
Resumes to: Frank@Anchorage1770.com Anchorage1770.com/ExecChef
CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com
Hank’s Seafood Restaurant A rich, casual setting complements a varied menu. Voted Best Seafood by CP readers. Dinner. $$$$. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Non-Smoking. 10 Hayne St. (843) 723-3474. Hooked Seafood Formerly occupied by Noisy Oyster on the corner of East Bay and Market, Hooked Seafood opened spring 2019 with an expansive menu featuring fruits de mer in all its iterations. —Serving Lunch, Dinner (daily). Dinner. 24 N Market St. Leon’s Oyster Shop This hip oyster and fried chicken bar offers indoor and outdoor dining in a highly curated space. Lunch & Dinner. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 698 King St. (843) 531-8500. The Obstinate Daughter Executive Chef Jacques Larson’s big, open kitchen has a plancha and a woodfired oven, and he uses it to create a beguiling array of pizza, pastas, and small plates. Lunch & Dinner. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Top 50, Parking. 2063 Middle St. (843) 416-5020. The Ordinary Chef Mike Lata dives into seafood with his latest restaurant, serving platters of fresh, cold oysters, stone crab claws, shrimp, and clams plus a menu of fancy seafood. Dinner. $$$$. Dinner, Top 50. 544 King St. (843) 414-7060. Pearlz Casual raw bar for the serious seafood lover. Wide selection of fresh, local seafood and seasonal specials. “The great bar, succulent oysters, creative food, and proximity to the touristy section of town should keep Pearlz around for quite some time.” —CP’s Jeff Allen. Voted Best Oysters and Best Raw Bar by CP readers. Mon.-Thurs.: 4-11 p.m., raw bar open until 12 midnight. Fri.: 4-11 p.m., raw bar open until 1 a.m. Sat. 12 p.m.- 1 a.m., Kitchen 12 p.m.-11 p.m. Sun. 12 - 11 p.m., raw bar until 12 midnight. $$$. Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner. 153 E. Bay St. (843) 5775755 9 Magnolia Road. (843) 573-2277. Pier 101 Seafood fare and oceanside views are delivered from this bright and breezy spot on the pier. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Waterfront. 101 E. Arctic Ave. (843) 633-0246. Pier 41 Pier 41 has arguably the best happy hour in town. What sounds like hyperbole can be backed up by fact: $1 oysters and $1 Champagne from 4-7 p.m. every day they’re open, including Friday and Saturday nights. The defense rests. They also have a bloody mary that will put all others to shame, and will make you the queen or king of Instagram for a day. Coming in at 20 ounces and $35, this meal in a glass has Dixie pepper vodka and enough Armoracia rusticana to choke a horse. But the murky beverage also comes with a delightful spread, all perched on top: four fried oysters, three chilled shrimp, and a giant king crab leg. It’s the kind of thing that makes adjoining tables order what she’s having. The best part is the food is solid: The oysters are crisp, yet juicy, and the peel-and-eat shrimp are paired with pepperoncini, an unexpectedly agreeable sweet foil. And did I mention the king crab leg? You had me at king crab leg. —Vanessa Wolf Dinner (Mon.-Sat.). Dinner. 1039 SC Hwy. 41. (843) 388-4433. Rappahannock Oyster Bar Don’t let the word “bar” fool you. Rappahannock is so much more than an oyster bar thanks to the work of chef Kevin Kelly who adds exceptional ceviche, perfectly prepared scallops, and even a Lowcountry-worthy shrimp and grits to what appears to be just another oyster bar. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Top 50. 701 E Bay St. (843) 576-4693. Red’s Ice House Seafood platters, burgers, and sides — plus a great view with outdoor seating. Voted Best Mt. Pleasant Bar and Best Waterfront Bar by CP readers. Lunch & Dinner. $$$. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Live Music, Waterfront, Best of Charleston winner, Parking. 98 Church St. (843) 388-0003 1882 Andell Bluff Blvd. (843) 518-5515. The Royal Tern Set on Johns Island between Wild Olive and The Fat Hen, The Royal Tern is a well-positioned and welcome addition to that existing pair of successful Maybank Highway restaurants — the Tern also happens to be City Paper’s very own Best of 2019 New Restaurant winner. Mon.-Sat. 4-10 p.m. Online Reservations, Dinner, Parking. 3005 Maybank Hwy.
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Real Estate Roommates
Unfurnished Rentals
Downtown
SPOTLIGHT
Sullivan’s Island
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Place your ad in the Charleston City Paper for only $15 per week. Contact cris@charlestoncitypaper. com
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MORRIS SQUARE
DOWNTOWN
3/4 BR, 3 BA house, fully equip kit, living, dining and den, washer dryer, lawn service included. Avail now, $3,300/mo. No pets. Call Just Rentals (843) 225-7368.
PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER
55
DOWNTOWN
Rentals or interested in Buying a Home? Call us
33 & 33 1/2 Charlotte St. Studio & 1 BR, 1 BA apts from $775 $975/mo. Available now! Call Just Rentals (843) 225-7368.
(843) 608-6832 or visit www.843realestate.com
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SANGAREE 4 BR, 3 BA w/ 2,015 sf. Open floor plan, huge bonus room, 2nd family room, kids’ room, 2-car garage, enormous fenced yard, deck & covered patio. Only a mile from new restaurants & stores, $249,900. Call (843) 603-HOLY. Holy City at Bennett Construction & Realty of Charleston. Meg@HolyCityRE.com
NEED TENANTS? We can help. Advertise your rental to over 110,500 people each week for only $25. Call (843) 577-5304 or cris@charlestoncitypaper.com
WATERFRONT LOT
Gated community 20 minutes to Beaufort & easy drive from Charleston. NO FLOOD INSURANCE required. Partially cleared, lot has a shared dock w/ own pier head. Amenities include: clubhouse, fitness center, sauna, pool, tennis, 10 park areas consisting of 3 fresh water lakes, 3 deep water community docks, a river cabin w/ oyster pavilion, bird sanctuary & 5 mi. of walking trails, $135,000. Sue LeFavi, Lefavi. Sue@Gmail.com or (843) 6033800. http://bit.ly/33VsGQ8
VACATION PROPERTY
10097 Hwy 78 • Ladson • 843.821.8671 NANDMMOBILEHOMES.COM dl35721
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ADVERTISE YOUR VACATION PROPERTY FOR RENT OR SALE to more than 2.1 million S.C. newspaper readers. Your 25-word classified ad will appear in 99 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Call Alanna Ritchie at the South Carolina Newspaper Network, 1-888-727-7377.
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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
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Summerville 4 BR, 3 BA w/ 2,728 sf, hardwoods, large rooms, big windows, beautiful moldings, kitchen opens to family room, FP & sunroom, convenient to Folly and downtown, $575,000. Call (843) 478-5081. Becky Johnston, Boulevard Co. http://bit.ly/2ly3XRv
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HOUSE FOR SALE?
MOVE-IN READY! 4 BR, 3 BA, newer construction still under warranty! Tree-lined homesite, very private many upgrades, hardwoods, crown molding, chair rail & picture frame molding, gourmet kitchen w/ stainless, open floor plan, home office, huge loft upstairs, stunning views, 3-car garage, Cane Bay amenities, top-rated schools, shopping, restaurants, grocery store, $324,400. Call (843) 603-4659 Meg@ HolyCityRE.com
West Ashley STARTING IN THE MID $200s. Close to beaches and just a few minutes to downtown. Gourmet kitchens, tons of upscale features standard, luxurious master suites & efficient, power saving design. Call Lisa (843) 714-1407. www. mysouthwindhome.com
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58
4 BR, 3 BA w/ 2,015 sf. Open floor plan, huge bonus room, 2nd family room, kids’ room, 2-car garage, enormous fenced yard, deck & covered patio. Only a mile from new restaurants & stores, $249,900. Call (843) 603-HOLY. Holy City at Bennett Construction & Realty of Charleston. Meg@ HolyCityRE.com
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Services
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Enjoy the Charleston lifestyle in Morris Square, a new home comm. a few blocks from King Street w/ several floor plans, park, & more! From the mid-$500s. Model home open Sat. 11-6, Sun. 1-6. 21 Dereef Court, Charleston, SC 29403. Call (843) 814-0039, john@mysouthwindhome.com
1405 TARA ROAD
3 BR, 3.5 BA w/ 2,175 sf, prime location with pool! Extensively renovated, 2nd master upstairs, gourmet kitchen w/ stainless & granite, move-in ready, no HOA, $425,000. Call (843) 810-0403. Lisa Richart-Hernandez, View Properties. http://bit.ly/32JerO6
MARSH VIEW
1566 FIDDLERS MARSH DR. 3 BR, 2.5 BA w/ 2,250 sf, near old Mt P., wrap-around porch w/ nearly 4,000 sf of decking with a marsh view, firepit & bar area. Hardwoods & tile throughout, community dock w/ access, minutes from restaurants, shopping, beaches & great schools, $615,000. Call (843) 810-0403. Lisa Richart-Hernandez, View Properties. http://bit.ly/2JowNfP
Advertise in the
E-MAIL CRIS@CHARLESTONCITYPAPER.COM
JUST LISTED
6 Briarcliff Dr in West Oak Forest near Avondale. 3 BR, 2.5 BA w/ West Ashley’s best backyard including a screened gazebo with electricity for your ceiling fan, TV, outdoor covered bar & water. Outdoor shower, enormous deck, huge shed & boat storage space! Only 2.5 mi to Downtown, yet still affordable. Utility room, family room, DR & flex space. The master suite is almost the entire width of the home! Call (843) 603-HOLY today to schedule your showing. Listed by Holy City at Bennett Construction and Realty of Charleston. Meg@HolyCityRE.com
3 BR, 2.5 BA - $179,900
Only $179,900 with nearly 1,500 sf, 3 BR, 2.5 BA, new hardwood & tile, new vanities w/ solid surface counter tops, fireplace, new water heater, huge covered patio, shed & MORE. Awesome community pool & a brand new clubhouse will be completed sometime soon! (843) 603-4659 Meg@HolyCityRE.com
PENINSULA WESTSIDE
PENINSULA EASTSIDE
123 Fishburne St
22 Nassau St
PENINSULA RADCLIFFEBOROUGH
CLOSE TO AVONDALE
FANTASTIC WEST ASHLEY LOCATION. Charming 1940s cottage w/ 1,869 sf, 3 BR & 2.5 BA, Granite, stainless steel, huge yard, gardening shed. Call Susan Arrington, (843) 324-6165. Carolina One RE, 19028554. http://bit.ly/2o7bqYQ
Advertise in the
3bd/2.5ba with pool coming soon! $775,000
WEST ASHLEY MEGGETT
Full renovated, 3bd/2.5ba with plunge pool. $785,000
NORTH CHARLESTON UNION HEIGHTS
YOUR HOUSE COULD BE HERE!
E-MAIL CRIS@CHARLESTONCITYPAPER.COM
By Pearl Stark
Coastline Rd
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters
59 Radcliffe St
New construction, 1100 sq. ft., 2BD, 2.5BA house—near completion. Walk to MUSC, CofC, Roper. $525,900
2001 Hugo St
8 acres of vacant rural land. $99,000
Duplex in need of renovation. Previously commercial down, residential up. Includes second lot. $195,000
NORTH CHARLESTON UNION HEIGHTS
NORTH CHARLESTON CHICORA
HONEY TRIP The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote: “Cricket is a game which the British, not being a spiritual people, had to invent in order to have some concept of _______.” —Stormont Mancroft DIFFICULTY
YOUR HOUSE COULD BE HERE!
11/20/2019
1995 & 1997 Hugo St 2 Lots, residential, $30,000 each
2829 Spruill Ave Commercial. Needs full renovation. $90,000
Jennifer LePage QUODOKU SOLUTION ON PAGE --61
843-478-2600 • JJLRealEstate.com • LepageJ@BellSouth.net
CLASSIFIEDS | charlestoncitypaper.com
exactly once.
55
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TOYOTA TUNDRA TRD
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Pets Cats
BULLDOG MIX-BEBE
ALVIN
4 y/o female, who doesn’t mind dressing up. Sweet disposition. Come meet her. Call (843) 7474849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org
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ADVERTISE YOUR DRIVER JOBSIn 99 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 2.1 million readers. Call Alanna Ritchie at the S.C. Newspaper Network, 1-888-727-7377.
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Executive Chef Wanted One of the highest-rated and nationally rated inns in the Lowcountry. Located in Beaufort, SC
CANDIDATE WILL:
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2 m/o male, who is everything you want in a cat & more. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org MIX-CONNOR 2 y/o lab & retriever mix, very photogenic pooch that’s ready to be your pal. Call (843) 871-3820, www.dorchesterpaws.org
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Resumes to: Frank@Anchorage1770.com
Veterinarian
Anchorage1770.com/ExecChef
6 y/o female, sweet & playful. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org
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SHEPHERDS AKA: Mini Aussies. All health testing & OFA on both parents. Red & Blue Merles, Red & Black Tri’s. 1st shots, complete vet checks, AKC papers, 2 yr. guarantee. Raised in our home w/family, for families. See us on FB, Bouchard’s Best Shepherds. 10-15#’s when mature. A ton of fun, great with kids! A+ rating w/BBB since 2008. Located in Charleston, SC, $1500. Ready to go for Christmas. Call (978) 257-0353.
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THE AMENDED SUMMONS AND AMENDED COMPLAINT WERE DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON JULY 16, 2019 AT 11:05 A.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-3123 The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff, v. Suzanne L. Weeden; Jack W. Weeden; JOHN DOE, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled to claim under or through any of them; RICHARD ROE, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming any right, title or interest in the real property described herein; Bank of America, N.A.; and Discover Bank, Defendants. AMENDED SUMMONS and NOTICE TO: “John Doe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack W. Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them; and “Richard Roe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Amended Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or to otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Amended Complaint upon the subscribers at their office, 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604, Charleston, South Carolina 29412, or to otherwise appear and defend the action pursuant to applicable court rules, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of such service; and if you fail to answer the Amended Complaint or otherwise appear and defend within the time aforesaid, Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Amended Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDE(S), AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Amended Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Rule 53(b) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended effective September 1, 2002, Plaintiff may move for a general Order of
Reference to the Master-in-Equity for Charleston County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(b) of the SCRCP, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this action. Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive Suite 604 Charleston, South Carolina 29412 843-762-9132 Attorneys for Plaintiff July 11, 2019 Charleston, South Carolina THE AMENDED ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM NISI AND FOR PUBLICATION WAS DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON OCTOBER 17, 2019 AT 2:24 P.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-3123 The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff, v. Suzanne L. Weeden; Jack W. Weeden; JOHN DOE, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled to claim under or through any of them; RICHARD ROE, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming any right, title or interest in the real property described herein; Bank of America, N.A.; and Discover Bank, Defendants. AMENDED ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM NISI AND FOR PUBLICATION It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading Plaintiff’s Ex Parte Petition for Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem Nisi and for Order of Publication, for the appointment of Kelley Yarborough Woody, Esquire, to represent “John Doe” (all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack W. Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them),“Richard Roe” (all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein ), and It further appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading Plaintiff’s Affidavit for Order of Publication and from the Complaint herein that a cause of action exists in favor of Plaintiff against Defendant(s); that the action is to quiet title for real property located in Charleston County, South Carolina; that the following named and/ or designated Defendant(s) on whom service of the Summons and Complaint is to be made cannot be found, after reasonable due diligence, within the jurisdiction of the courts of this state; and that these named and/ or designated Defendant(s) are necessary parties to this action. These Defendant(s) named and/ or designated Defendant(s) are as follows: “John Doe”, a fictitious name
representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack W. Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them, and “Richard Roe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein. NOW THEREFORE, on motion of Plaintiff, IT IS ORDERED that Kelley Yarborough Woody, Attorney at Law, LLC, of PO Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260, 803-7879678, kwoody@sc.rr.com, be and hereby is appointed Guardian ad Litem Nisi on behalf of all such unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Jack W. Weeden, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them, if any, being a class designated as “John Doe”, and on behalf of all such unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein being a class designated as “Richard Roe”, who have, or may claim to have, some right, title or interest in or to that real property commonly known as 309 Coosawatchie Street, Summerville, SC 29485, TMS No. 388-13-00-596; that Kelley Yarborough Woody is empowered and directed to appear on behalf of and represent said Defendant(s) unless the said Defendant(s), or someone on their behalf shall, within thirty (30) days after service of a copy hereof as directed, procure the appointment of a Guardian or Guardians ad Litem for the said Defendant(s), and IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that should said Defendant(s) fail to procure the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem within thirty (30) days from the last day of service by publication, the appointment of Kelley Yarborough Woody as Guardian ad Litem shall be made automatically absolute, without further action by Plaintiff, and IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Summons, and the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem Nisi and for Publication be served upon said Defendant(s) John Doe and Richard Roe by publication in the Charleston City Paper, a newspaper of general circulation in Charleston County, South Carolina, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks, together with the Summons in the above titled action. Honorable Julie Armstrong Clerk of Court for Charleston County October 16, 2019 Charleston, South Carolina THE SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT WERE DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON JULY 19, 2019 AT 12:35 P.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-3862 RACQUET CLUB VILLA OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v.
BARBARA S. BECKWITH, JOHN DOE, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled to claim under or through any of them; and RICHARD ROE, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming any right, title or interest in the real property described herein, Defendants. SUMMONS and NOTICE TO: “John Doe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them; and “Richard Roe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or to otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscribers at their office, 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604, Charleston, South Carolina 29412, or to otherwise appear and defend the action pursuant to applicable court rules, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint or otherwise appear and defend within the time aforesaid, Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDE(S), AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Rule 53(b) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended effective September 1, 2002, Plaintiff may move for a general Order of Reference to the Master-in-Equity for Charleston County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(b) of the SCRCP, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this action. Derek F. Dean SIMONS & DEAN 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, South Carolina 29412 843-762-9132 Attorneys for Plaintiff July 10, 2019 Charleston, South Carolina Attorneys for Plaintiff
THE AMENDED ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM NISI AND FOR PUBLICATION WAS DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON OCTOBER 17, 2019 AT 2:17 P.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-3862 The RACQUET CLUB VILLA OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, vs. BARBARA S. BECKWITH, JOHN DOE, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled to claim under or through any of them; and RICHARD ROE, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming any right, title or interest in the real property described herein, Defendants. AMENDED ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM NISI AND FOR PUBLICATION It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading Plaintiff’s Ex Parte Petition for Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem Nisi and for Order of Publication, for the appointment of Kelley Yarborough Woody, Esquire, to represent “John Doe” (all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them),“Richard Roe” (all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein ), and It further appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading Plaintiff’s Affidavit for Order of Publication and from the Complaint herein that a cause of action exists in favor of Plaintiff against Defendant(s); that the action is to quiet title for real property located in Charleston County, South Carolina; that the following named and/ or designated Defendant(s) on whom service of the Summons and Complaint is to be made cannot be found, after reasonable due diligence, within the jurisdiction of the courts of this state; and that these named and/ or designated Defendant(s) are necessary parties to this action. These Defendant(s) named and/ or designated Defendant(s) are as follows: “John Doe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them, and “Richard Roe”, a fictitious name representing all unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities
Honorable Julie Armstrong Clerk of Court for Charleston County October 16, 2019 Charleston, South Carolina NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-2526 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff v. Joshua David Green, Defendant. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: All that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Summerville, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as LOT 563, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, as shown on that certain plat of Seamon Whiteside & Associates Surveying, LLC entitled, “A FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT OF LOTS 552 THRU 571, A 0.140 ACREA H.O.A. COMMON AREA, A 0.173 ACREA H.O.A. AREA 1 AND A 4.309 ACRE RESIDUAL TRACT, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, BEING A PORTION OF TMS #388-00-
00-048, OWNED BY CHEROKEE VALLEY HOMES, LLC AND LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, LLC, LOCATED IN THE TOWN OF SUMMERVILLE, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA,” dated July 23, 2014 and recorded September 17, 2014 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book L-14 at Page 0375. Said lot having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. SUBJECT to any and all applicable easements, restrictions, conditions, right-of-ways and setbacks of record and as may be shown on the above-referenced plat. BEING the same property conveyed to Joshua David Green by deed of LOS Homes, LLC dated July 22, 2015 and recorded on July 28, 2015 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0493, at Page 589. SUBJECT, to any and all applicable easements, restrictions and reservations of record as set forth in Exhibit A of said deed recorded on July 28, 2015 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0493, at Page 589. TMS No.: 388-13-00-965 Property Address: 246 Coosawatchie Street, Summerville, SC 29485 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum].
NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-0694 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Heritage at Dunes West Townhome Association, Inc, Plaintiff, against Jeffrey M. Froehlich, Defendant; I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that Condominium Unit known and designated as Unit 604 in The Heritage at Dunes West Horizontal Property Regime located at Dunes West, City of Mt. Pleasant, Charleston County, South Carolina, as is more fully described in the Master Deed for The Heritage at Dunes West Horizontal Property Regime dated September 11, 2006, and recorded September 14, 2006, at the Charleston County RMC Office for South Carolina in Book E-598 at Page 487, as amended by First Amendment dated September 215, 2006, and recorded September 18, 2006, in Book N-598 at Page 531, Second Amendment dated September 28, 2006, and recorded September 29, 2006, in Book D-600 at Page 498 and Third Amendment dated October 23, 2006, and recorded October 24, 2006, in the Book B-603, at Page 191 in the Charleston County RMC Office; together with the undivided interest in the common elements declared by said Master Deed to be an appurtenance to the Apartment being conveyed. Said property is subject to all applicable covenants, conditions, restrictions, limitations, obligations and easements of record. BEING the same property conveyed to Jeffrey M. Froehlich by deed of Janine B. Belanger dated March 30, 2017 and recorded with the Charleston County RMC Office on April 4, 2017 in Book 0627, at Page 795.
The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by South Carolina State Housing Finance and Development Authority, by assignment from Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for Primelending in the original amount of $156,968.00, dated July 24, 2015, and recorded July 28, 2015, in Book 0493 at Page 590, and that mortgage lien held by South Carolina State Housing Finance and Development Authority in the original amount of $8,000.00, dated July 24, 2015, and recorded July 28, 2015, in Book 0493 at Page 591 with the Charleston County Register of Deeds.
TMS No.: 583-08-00-172 Property Address: 2460 Kings Gate Lane Unit 604, Mount Pleasant, SC 29466 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of Five (5%) Percent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (30) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder.
Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately.
The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum].
Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412
The sale shall be subject to that certain tax lien held by SCDOR in its favor and against “Jeff M. Froehlich and Victoria Culbertson” in the original amount of $1,529.16, bearing Tax Lien Number 3-51945193-4, recorded with the Register of Deeds for Charleston County on March 20, 2017; and that Dunes West Property Owners’ Association’s Notice of Lien in its favor in the original amount of $750.80 recorded with the Register of Deeds for Charleston County on October 31, 2017. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Purchaser shall pay for all costs
of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 THE SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT WERE DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON JUNE 5, 2019 AT 12:52 P.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-2996 SOUTHAMPTON POINTE PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. HAROLD E. CROWLEY, Defendant. SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or to otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscribers at their office, 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604, Charleston, South Carolina 29412, or to otherwise appear and defend the action pursuant to applicable court rules, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint or otherwise appear and defend within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDE(S), AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff. Derek F. Dean SIMONS & DEAN 147 Wappoo Creek Drive Suite 604 Charleston, South Carolina 29412 843-762-9132 Attorneys for Plaintiff June 3, 2019 Charleston, South Carolina
NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-2799 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff v. Andre R. Pryor, Defendant. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Summerville, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as LOT 566, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, as shown on that certain plat of Seamon Whiteside & Associates Surveying, LLC entitled, “A FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT OF LOTS 552 THRU 571, A 0.140 ACREA H.O.A. COMMON AREA, A 0.173 ACREA H.O.A. AREA 1 AND A 4.309 ACRE RESIDUAL TRACT, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, BEING A PORTION OF TMS #388-00-00-048, OWNED BY CHEROKEE VALLEY HOMES, LLC AND LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, LLC, LOCATED IN THE TOWN OF SUMMERVILLE, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA,” dated July 23, 2014 and recorded September 17, 2014 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book L-14 at Page 0375. Said lot having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. SUBJECT to any and all applicable easements, restrictions, conditions, right-of-ways and setbacks of record and as may be shown on the above-referenced plat. BEING the same property conveyed to Andre R. Pryor by deed of LOS Homes, LLC dated June 4, 2015, and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0482, at Page 453 on June 11, 2015. SUBJECT, to any and all applicable easements, restrictions and reservations of record as set forth in Exhibit A of said deed recorded on June 11, 2015 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0482, at Page 453. TMS No.: 388-13-00-968 Property Address: 275 Coosawatchie Street Summerville, SC 29485 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by Citibank, N.A., in the original amount of $168,730.00, dated June 8, 2015, and recorded June 11, 2015, in Book 0482 at Page 454; that mortgage lien held by Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America in the original amount of $________, dated June 8, 2015, and recorded June 11, 2015, in Book 0482 at
Page 456; and that tax lien held by South Carolina Department of Revenue in its favor and against “Andre Pryor”, bearing Tax Lien Number 3-51962399-9, in the original amount of $2,773.63, and filed August 1, 2017, with the Charleston County Register of Deeds with the Charleston County Register of Deeds. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-2801 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff v. Ronald Williams, Defendant. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in Charleston County, South Carolina, shown and designated as “Lot 12” as shown on a plat entitled, “FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT PREPARED OF THE LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE-PHASE II SITE LOCATED IN THE TOWN OF SUMMERVILLE, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA PROPERTY OWNED BY LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, LLC” by Associated E&S, Inc., dated December 15, 2003, and recorded December 30, 2003 in Plat Book EG at Page 794 in the RMC Office for Charleston County, South Carolina. Said piece, parcel or lot of land, having such size, shape, location, dimensions, buttings and bounding as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. SUBJECT TO ANY AND ALL RESTRICTIONS AND EASEMENTS OF RECORD. BEING the same property conveyed to Ronald Williams by deed of Michael T. Williams and Kenisha R. Williams dated February 26, 2007 and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County on February 27, 2007 in Book R616 at Page 377. TMS No.: 388-13-00-023 Property Address: 122 Savannah River Drive Summerville, South Carolina 29485 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and
applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for Lehman Brothers Bank, FSB, in the original amount of $181,000.00, dated February 26, 2007, and recorded February 27, 2007, in Book T616 at Page 608 with the Charleston County Register of Deeds; that judgment held by Charleston County Clerk of Court in its favor and against “Ronald Williams”, bearing case number 2010-CP-10-1492, in the original amount of $583.75, filed February 22, 2010, with the Charleston County Clerk of Court; that tax lien held by South Carolina Department of Revenue in its favor and against “Ronald Williams”, bearing Tax Lien Number 3-51289459-2, in the original amount of $4,660.16, filed August 18, 2011, with the Charleston County Register of Deed; and that Notice of Federal Tax Lien held by United States of America, by and through its agency the Internal Revenue Service in its favor and against “Ronald G. Williams”, bearing Serial Number 767880911, in the original amount of $52,130.60, filed March 29, 2011, with the Charleston County Register of Deeds. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-3151 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of Oak Bluff Homeowners Association, Inc, Plaintiff, against Sherri Gilbert n/k/a Sherri Avinger, Defendant; I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, with the improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in the City of North Charleston, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as Lot 4904, Block 4900, Oak Bluff Subdivision, as shown on
that certain plat prepared by Harold B. Nielson, Jr, PE & PLS, of Nielson & Associates, entitled “FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT OF OAK BLUFF, BLOCK 4900, 7955 CROSSROADS DRIVE, OWNED BY PORTRAIT HOMES OF SOUTH CAROLINA, LLC LOCATED IN THE CITY OF NORTH CHARLESTON, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA” which plat is dated July 9, 2005, last revised August 18, 2005 and recorded in Plat Book EJ, at Pages 187-189 in the RMC Office for Charleston County. Said lot having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully appear. Said lot is conveyed subject to Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for Oak Bluff recorded in Book L-399, at Page 285 and rerecorded in Book K-403, at Page 426 in the RMC Office for Charleston County. Being the same property conveyed to Sherri Gilbert by deed of Portrait Homes-Myrtle Beach, LLC n/k/a Portrait Homes - South Carolina, LLC dated August 29, 2005 and recorded September 13, 2005 in the ROD Office for Charleston County, South Carolina in Book K553, at Page 690. TMS No.: 484-00-00-507 Property Address: 8032 Shadow Oak Drive North Charleston, SC 29406 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of Five (5%) Percent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (30) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by Wilmington Savings Fun Society, FSB, as Trustee of Stanwhich Mortgage Loan Trust C, by assignment from Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger to BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP, by assignment from BAC Home Loans Servicing, L.P. f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, L.P., by assignment from Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. in the original amount of $98,422.00, dated August 29, 2005, and recorded September 13, 2005, in Book L553 at Page 779 with the Register of Deeds for Charleston County; and that judgment held by Discover Bank in its favor and against “Sherri Louise Gilbert”, bearing civil action number 2012-CP-10-7828, in the original amount of $2,002.97, dated April 8, 2013, and filed April 9, 2013 with the Charleston County Clerk of Court. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412
CLASSIFIEDS | charlestoncitypaper.com
claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein. NOW THEREFORE, on motion of Plaintiff, IT IS ORDERED that Kelley Yarborough Woody, Attorney at Law, LLC, of PO Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260, 803-7879678, kwoody@sc.rr.com, be and hereby is appointed Guardian ad Litem Nisi on behalf of all such unknown persons, heirs, devisees, distributees, legatees, widows or widowers, executors, administrators, successors, assigns, personal representatives, issue and alienees of the deceased person Barbara S. Beckwith, and all persons or entities entitled, or who may be entitled, to claim under or through any of them, if any, being a class designated as “John Doe”, and on behalf of all such unknown adults, unknown minors, incompetents, persons in military service, persons imprisoned, persons under any legal disability, and all other unknown persons or entities claiming, or who may claim, any right, title or interest in the real property described herein being a class designated as “Richard Roe”, who have, or may claim to have, some right, title or interest in or to that real property commonly known as 14 Back Court, Isle of Palms, SC 29451, TMS No. 604-10-00-248; that Kelley Yarborough Woody is empowered and directed to appear on behalf of and represent said Defendant(s) unless the said Defendant(s), or someone on their behalf shall, within thirty (30) days after service of a copy hereof as directed, procure the appointment of a Guardian or Guardians ad Litem for the said Defendant(s), and IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that should said Defendant(s) fail to procure the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem within thirty (30) days from the last day of service by publication, the appointment of Kelley Yarborough Woody as Guardian ad Litem shall be made automatically absolute, without further action by Plaintiff, and IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Summons, and the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem Nisi and for Publication be served upon said Defendant(s) John Doe and Richard Roe by publication in the Charleston City Paper, a newspaper of general circulation in Charleston County, South Carolina, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks, together with the Summons in the above titled action.
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NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-1672
County Register of Deeds, South Carolina.
By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Park Recreational Development, Inc., Plaintiff, v. Ralph Clifton Bennett, Defendant.
Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E.2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008). No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately.
I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on January 7, 2020 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that certain Unit situate, lying and being in Charleston County, State of South Carolina, known and designated as Unit Number 1702, in The Park at River=s Edge Horizontal Property Regime AA@, as shown on plans and specifications attached to the Master Deed of The Park at River=s Edge Horizontal Property Regime AA@, together with the Amendments thereto, dated September 20, 1984, and recorded in Book G-140, at Page 382, on September 25, 1984, in the R.M.C. Office for Charleston County, South Carolina. Together with undivided percentage interest in the General Common Elements of the property described in Section I of Article 4 of said Master Deed appurtenant thereto. SUBJECT to Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for The Park Recreational Development, Inc., and duly recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book G140 at Page 851 together with any and all amendments thereto. By the acceptance and recordation of the within deed, the Grantee hereby expressly assumes and agrees to comply with all the terms, conditions and covenants contained in said Master Deed and the By-Laws attached to said Master Deed. SUBJECT to any and all restrictive covenants recorded in the R.M.C. Office for Charleston County; also subject to any and all other easements or rights-of-way heretofore granted affecting the property above described and recorded in the Office aforesaid. Being the same property conveyed to Ralph Clifton Bennett by Deed of Loren W. Hall and Harriett S. Hall dated January 11, 1991 and recorded January 15, 1991 in the ROD Office for Charleston County in Book S199 at Page 64. TMS No.: 404-00-00-165 Property Address: 7945-B Timbercreek Lane North Charleston, SC 29418
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder.
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The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain senior mortgage lien held by MidFirst Bank, by assignment from Homeside Lending, Inc., by assignment from Banc One Mortgage Corporation, in the original amount of $42,150.00, dated April 22, 1994, and recorded April 28, 1994, in Book E242 at Page 034 with the Charleston
Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-1194 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Association of Northwoods Villas, Inc., Plaintiff v. Gregory J. Twohig, Defendant. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: ALL that certain pieces, parcels or lots of land, situate, lying and being in the City of North Charleston, County of Charleston, State aforesaid, being shown and designated as Lot C-25, on Plat entitled “Subdivision Plat of Northwoods Villas, Phase I, Located in the City of North Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina” dated April 29, I 985, by Geometric Surveying Company, which said plat is recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat File Cabinet BE, page 51. Said Lots below described, have such size, shape, metes, bounds, location and dimensions, as shown on said Plat. SUBJECT to restrictive covenants, easements and by-laws of record in the aforesaid RMC Office affecting the subject premises. BEING the same property conveyed to Gregory J. Twohig by deed of Sandra Haworth dated October 16, 2003 and recorded October 23, 2003 in Book R472, Page 816, with the Charleston County RMC Office. TMS No.: 485-11-00-194 Property Address: 2450 Woodstock Avenue Charleston SC 29406 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser
to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by PHH Mortgage Services in the original amount of $66,000.00, dated October 16, 2003, and recorded October 23, 2003, in Book W472 at Page 095 with the Charleston County Register of Deeds. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-1593 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Association of Northwoods Villas, Inc., Plaintiff v. Harold Craig Jackson, Defendant. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on December 3, 2019 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the City of North Charleston, County of Charleston, State aforesaid, being shown and designated as Lot D15 on a Plat entitled, “Subdivision Plat of Northwoods Villas, Phase I, Located in the City of North Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina” dated April 29, 1985, by Geometric Surveying Company, which said plat is recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat File Cabinet BE, at Page 51. Said lot has such size, shape, metes, bounds, location and dimensions as shown on said plat. BEING a portion· of the same property conveyed to Harold Craig Jackson, by Deed of C&M, LLC, dated December 11, 2015, and recorded on December 17, 2015, in the RMC Office for Charleston County, SC, in Book 0523, at Page 919. TMS#: 485-11-00-215 Property Address: 2464 Sorrell Ave. North Charleston, SC 29406 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder.
The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 THE SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT WERE DULY FILED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN CHARLESTON COUNTY ON JUNE 12, 2019 AT 12:12 P.M. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-3148 HUNT CLUB COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, vs. MARGARET HEYWARD, MARION HEYWARD and BRANCH BANKING AND TRUST COMPANY, Defendants. SUMMONS and NOTICE TO: ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or to otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscribers at their office, 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604, Charleston, South Carolina 29412, or to otherwise appear and defend the action pursuant to applicable court rules, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint or otherwise appear and defend within the time aforesaid, Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDE(S), AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Rule 53(b) of
the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended effective September 1, 2002, Plaintiff may move for a general Order of Reference to the Master-in-Equity for Charleston County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(b) of the SCRCP, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this action. Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive Suite 604 Charleston, South Carolina 29412 843-762-9132 Attorneys for Plaintiffs Charleston, South Carolina June 10, 2019 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2019-CP-10-05582 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., successor by merger to Wells Fargo Bank Minnesota, N.A., as trustee, in trust for the Holders of Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Mortgage Pass Through Certificates, Series 2003-BC3, Plaintiff, v. Any heirs-at-law or devisees to Martha A. Shavis a/k/a Martha Ann Shavis, deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Administrators, Successors and Assigns, and all other persons or entities entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons or entities with any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as Richard Roe; and any unknown minors, incompetent or imprisoned person, or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe.; Any heirs-at-law or devisees to Mary A. Shavis a/k/a Mary Alice Shavis, deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Administrators, Successors and Assigns, and all other persons or entities entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons or entities with any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as Richard Roe; and any unknown minors, incompetent or imprisoned person, or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe.; Belinda M. Shavis; Audrey V. Shavis, Defendant(s). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury) FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad
litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-inEquity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT an action has been or will be commenced in this Court upon complaint of the above-named Plaintiff against the above-named Defendant(s) for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage of real estate given by Belinda M. Shavis, Mary A. Shavis, Martha A. Shavis and Audrey V. Shavis to Beneficial Mortgage Co. of South Carolina dated January 15, 2002 and recorded on January 22, 2002 in Book O 394 at Page 879, in the Charleston County Registry (hereinafter, “Mortgage”). Thereafter, the Mortgage was transferred to the Plaintiff herein by assignment and/or corporate merger. The premises covered and affected by the said Mortgage and by the foreclosure thereof were, at the time of the making thereof and at the time of the filing of this notice, more particularly described in the said Mortgage and are more commonly described as: All that lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being on James Island in the County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, and known as Lot No. 14, in Block C, on plat of Green Crest, which map is made by the John McCrady Co., Engineer dated June, 1946, entitled “Plat of Green Crest Situate on James Island, Charleston County, South Carolina, owned by Burmain A. Grimball,” which plat is recorded in Plat Book G, Page 3, R.M.C. Office for Charleston County. This being the same property conveyed to Mary A. Shavis, Martha A. Shavis, Audrey V. Shavis, Belinda M. Shavis and Theodore M. Shavis by Deed of Martha A. Shavis dated February 7, 1996 and recorded April 12, 1996 in Book U 267, Page 177 in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Charleston County, South Carolina. TMS No. 427-01-00-021 Property Address: 1325 Witter Street James Island, SC 29412 NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on October 23, 2019. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office. ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY
It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Guardian ad Litem for unknown minors, and persons who may be under a disability, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to said appointment. FURTHER upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Attorney for any unknown Defendants who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, and may be, as such, entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act, and any amendments thereto, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to act for and represent said Defendants, it is ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Guardian ad Litem on behalf of all unknown minors and all unknown persons who may be under a disability, all of whom may have or claim to have some interest or claim to the real property commonly known as 1325 Witter Street, James Island, SC 29412; that he is empowered and directed to appear on behalf of and represent said Defendants, unless said Defendants, or someone on their behalf, shall within thirty (30) days after service of a copy hereof as directed, procure the appointment of Guardian or Guardians ad Litem for said Defendants. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Attorney for any unknown Defendants who are, or may be, in the Military Service of the United States of America and as such are entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act aka Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940, and any amendments thereto, to represent and protect the interest of said Defendants, AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED That a copy of this Order shall be forth with served upon said Defendants by publication in Charleston City Paper, a newspaper of general circulation published in the County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks, together with the Summons and Notice of Filing of Complaint in the above entitled action. Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2019-CP-10-02698 U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-HE1, Plaintiff, v. Any heirs-at-law or devisees of Bessie M. Pinckney, deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Administrators, Successors and Assigns, and all other persons or entities entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons or entities with any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as Richard Roe; and any unknown minors, incompetent or imprisoned person, or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe; Darrin L. Pinckney; Christian S. Pinckney; First Federal Bank f/k/a First Federal Bank of Florida, Defendant(s). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury)
FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-inEquity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT an action has been or will be commenced in this Court upon complaint of the above-named Plaintiff against the above-named Defendant(s) for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage of real estate given by Bessie M. Pinckney to Argent Mortgage Company, LLC dated February 4, 2005 and recorded on February 14, 2005 in Book S525 at Page 881, in the Charleston County Registry (hereinafter, “Mortgage”). Thereafter, the Mortgage was transferred to the Plaintiff herein by assignment and/or corporate merger. The premises covered and affected by the said Mortgage and by the foreclosure thereof were, at the time of the making thereof and at the time of the filing of this notice, more particularly described in the said Mortgage and are more commonly described as: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, with improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in or near the City of Hollywood, in the County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, being shown and delineated as Tract B, containing .50 acres, more or less, on a plat prepared for Bessie Pinckney, recorded July 27, 1995 in Plat Book DA, Page 530 in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Charleston County and having the
This is the same property conveyed to Bessie M. Pinckney by deed of Nellie Anderson and Ruby Smalls dated 06/03/95, recorded 06/07/95 in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Charleston County In Deed Book E256 at Page 396. TMS No. 1620000297 Property Address: 4569 Peters Field Road, Hollywood, SC 29449 NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on May 22, 2019. ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Guardian ad Litem for unknown minors, and persons who may be under a disability, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to said appointment. FURTHER upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Attorney for any unknown Defendants who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, and may be, as such, entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act, and any amendments thereto, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to act for and represent said Defendants, it is ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Guardian ad Litem on behalf of all unknown minors and all unknown persons who may be under a disability, all of whom may have or claim to have some interest or claim to the real property commonly known as 4569 Peters Field Road, Hollywood, SC 29449; that he is empowered and directed to appear on behalf of and represent said Defendants, unless said Defendants, or someone on their behalf, shall within thirty (30) days after service of a copy hereof as directed, procure the appointment of Guardian or Guardians ad Litem for said Defendants. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Attorney for any unknown Defendants who are, or may be, in the Military Service of the United States of America and as such are entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act aka Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940, and any amendments thereto, to represent and protect the interest of said Defendants, AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED That a copy of this Order shall be forth with served upon said Defendants by publication in The Post and Courier, a newspaper of general circulation published in the County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks, together with the Summons and Notice of Filing of Complaint in the above entitled action. Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2019-CP-10-04286
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2019-CP-10-03936
U.S. Bank National Association, Plaintiff, v. Lucinda Gardner Wichmann; South Carolina Department of Revenue, Defendant(s).
U.S. Bank National Association, as indenture trustee, for the holders of the CIM Trust 2018-R1, Mortgage-Backed Notes, Series 2018-R1, Plaintiff, v. Emanuel Craven a/k/a Ed Craven; Mary E. Craven, Defendant(s).
SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury) FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE
SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury)
TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-inEquity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto. NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on August 15, 2019. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office. Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803-454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff
FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-in-Equity/ Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto. NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on July 25, 2019. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office. Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT CIVIL ACTION NO. 2019-CP10-04727
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2019-CP-10-05672
Henrietta Blakeney, Plaintiff, vs. Tony Murphy, Defendant.
DONALD NELSON, Plaintiff, vs. JOHN DOE, adults, and RICHARD ROE, infants, insane persons, incompetents and persons in the military service of The United States of America, being fictitious names designating as a class any unknown person or persons or legal entity of any kind, who may be an heir, distributee, devisee, legatee, widower, widow, assign, administrator, executor, creditor, successor, personal representative, issue or alienee of ARDELL YOUNG, ANNA NELSON, also known as Anne Younge, and GARY YOUNG, all deceased, and any and all other persons or legal entities, known and unknown, claiming any right, title, interest or estate in or lien upon the two parcels of real estate described in the Lis Pendens and Complaint filed herein, Defendants.
SUMMONS (JURY TRIAL DEMANDED) TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to this Complaint upon the subscriber, at the address shown below, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Jeffrey W. Ward, Jr. MILLER, DAWSON, SIGAL & WARD, LLC Attorneys at Law 8310 Rivers Avenue, Suite D North Charleston, SC 29406 Phone: (843) 284-7780 Facsimile: (843) 284-9118 E-mail: Ward@MDSWLegal.com Attorney for the Plaintiff September 12, 2019 North Charleston, South Carolina STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2018-CP-10-4427 DAVID G. MAFFUCCI, INDIVIDUALLY, ANNE F. MAFFUCCI, INDIVIDUALLY, AND DAVID G. MAFFUCCI AND ANNE F. MAFFUCCI AS CO-TRUSTEES OF THE MAFFUCCI REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST U/T/A DATED DECEMBER 11, 2007, Plaintiffs, vs. LEDFORD’S TERMITE & PEST CONTROL, INC., TRI-COUNTY ROOFING, INC., RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL SPECIALISTS, INC., and JOSE LUIS DIAZ JIMENEZ, Defendants, SECOND AMENDED SUMMONS (Jury Trial Demanded) TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and are required to answer the Second Amended Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the subscribers, at 864 Lowcountry Blvd., Suite A, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina 29464, within thirty (30) days after service thereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Second Amended Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Second Amended Complaint. *This Second Amended Summons was filed in the Charleston County Court of Common Pleas on August 7, 2019. SEGUI LAW FIRM PC Phillip W. Segui, Jr. SC Bar No.: 7029 864 Lowcountry Blvd., Ste. A Mount Pleasant, SC 29464 (843) 884-1865 psegui@seguilawfirm.com Mount Pleasant, South Carolina Dated: August 5, 2019
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SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the subscribers at their office located at 858 Lowcountry Boulevard, Suite 101, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina 29464, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for judgment by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Your Answer must be in writing and signed by you or your attorney and must state your address or the address of your attorney, if signed by your attorney. YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Summons and Complaint, Lis Pendens, Notice and Certificate of Exemption were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on October 29, 2019. CISA & DODDS, LLP By: s/John J. Dodds, III 858 Lowcountry Blvd., Suite 101 Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464 (P) (843) 881-6530 (F) (843) 881-5433 SC Bar No.: 1707 john@cisadodds.com ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF Mt. Pleasant, SC November 6, 2019. NORTH AREA SMALL CLAIMS COURT Judge James Turner Magistrate November 8, 2019 Bobby 0. Phipps, Jr. 307 Old Trolley Rd. Summerville, SC 29485 Maggie Adkins VIA Publication By Plaintiff Approved by Judge Turner. RE: Kim Smeltzer vs. Maggie Adkins Case No.: 2019CV1011500914 Notice to All Parties: Please be advised that a Default Hearing has been scheduled for: Friday, December 6, 2019 AT 10:00 A.M. Please check in at the Small Claims counter prior to entering the courtroom. Sincerely, Linda West, Summary Court Specialist
ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: WILLIAM RALSA MOREDOCK 2019-ES-10-1793 DOD: 09/06/19 Pers. Rep: EVE MOREDOCK STACEY 2409 MONROE ST. COLUMBIA, SC 29205 ************ Estate of: ALI REZA AKHYARI 2019-ES-10-1829 DOD: 09/27/19 Pers. Rep: MARY AUSTEN AKHYARI 125 DOROTHY DR. CHARLESTON, SC 29414 Atty: KEVIN D. HACKLER, ESQ. 451 FOLLY RD., #105 CHARLESTON, SC 29412 ************ Estate of: JOHN DWAIN SHIELDS 2019-ES-10-1838 DOD: 08/17/19 Pers. Rep: LINDA GAIL SHIELDS 913 RIVER RD. JOHNS ISLAND, SC 29455 Atty: SABRINA C. CALL, ESQ. 201 SIGMA DR., #300 SUMMERVILLE, SC 29486 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-1196 Staci Clark Plaintiff, vs. Alex Simmons Defendant. SUMMONS FOR DIVORCE (One-Year Continuous Separation)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that Charleston County Council will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, December 10, 2019, at 6:30 o’clock p.m., in the Beverly T. Craven Council Chambers, Lonnie Hamilton, III Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, S.C. on an ordinance authorizing the conveyance of a portion of the real property located at 4836 Seewee Road (Parcel ID #629-00-00-189) to Phillip A. St. Pierre and Sally Ann Ruth St. Pierre. Public comments, written and oral, are invited. Kristen L. Salisbury Clerk of Council NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that Charleston County Council will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, December 10, 2019, at 6:30 p.m., in the Beverly T. Craven Council Chambers, Lonnie Hamilton, III Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, SC regarding an ordinance approving and authorizing the grant of a utility easement to Dominion Energy South Carolina, Inc. on a portion of county property known as the Bees Ferry West Ashley Library. Public comments, written and oral, are invited. Kristen L. Salisbury Clerk of Council NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that Charleston County Council will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, December 10, 2019, at 6:30 o’clock p.m., in the Beverly T. Craven Council Chambers, Lonnie Hamilton, III Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, S.C. on an ordinance authorizing the conveyance of the real property located at 896 Folly Road / 1644 Camp Road (Parcel ID #42506-00-100) to Corky’s Outdoor Power Equipment. Public comments, written and oral, are invited. Kristen L. Salisbury Clerk of Council
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO: 2019-DR-10-1119 BRENDA HARO REYES, Plaintiff, v. JESUS VEGA CARDENAS, Defendant. SUMMONS TO: JESUS VEGA CARDENAS, DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve your Answer to said Complaint upon the undersigned attorney for the Plaintiff, at his offices located at 800 Wappoo Road, Charleston, South Carolina 29407, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service and, if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU ARE HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE FURTHER that if you fail to appear and defend and fail to answer the Complaint as required by this Summons within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of service, Judgment by Default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. G. EDWARD HAWKINS, III HAWKINS LAW FIRM, P.A. 800 Wappoo Road Charleston, SC 29407 (843) 225-7565 (843) 225-7585 fax ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Charleston, South Carolina March 28, 2019
HAVE YOU BEEN SERVED? Search the State Database for legal notices: HTTP://SCPUBLIC NOTICES.COM
To the DEFENDANT AboveNamed: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that you have been sued by the Plaintiff for DIVORCE in the Court indicated above. You must respond in writing to the attached Complaint for Divorce and serve a copy of your Answer on the Plaintiff at the address below within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons upon you, not counting the day of service, or thirty-five (35) days if you were served by certified mail, restricted delivery, return receipt requested.
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If you wish to retain an attorney to represent you in this matter, it is advisable to do so before submitting your Answer to the Plaintiff. If you do not answer the Complaint within the required thirty (30) days, the Court may grant a DIVORCE and grant the Plaintiff the relief requested in the Complaint. STACI CLARK CHARLESTON, SC 11/6/2019
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boundaries and measurements as shown on the last described plat. This description is made in lieu of the metes and bounds description as permitted by law under Sec. 30-5-250 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina (1976) as amended.
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STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF BERKELEY IN THE FAMILY COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT FILE NO: 2019-DR-08-1777 South Carolina Department of Social Services, Plaintiff, vs. Tina Williams Angel Andino Defendants. In the Interest of: Minor Born In 2005 Minor Born In 2009 Minors Under the Age of 18 Years. TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby Summoned and required to answer the Summons and Complaint filed October 31, 2019. Upon proof of interest copy of the Summons and Complaints will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Berkeley and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Attorney of the Legal Department of Berkeley County Department of Social Service at 2 Belt Drive, Moncks Corner, SC 29461, within thirty (30) days of the publication. If you fail to answer within the time set for the above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the court.
STATE OF COUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DORCHESTER IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO.: 2019-DR-18-863 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSES Nichole Gathers; Ricardo Jones; NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Dorchester County on June 20, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Dorchester, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Dorchester County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Dorchester County Department of Social Services, 216 Orangeburg Road, Summerville, South Carolina 29483, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-1840
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-3665
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Rodney Scott
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES
NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on May 24, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286
VERSUS Shara Greene, et al. NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on October 23, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2219
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-3060
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Ray Singleton
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Ricardo Araica
NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on June 26, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-3196 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS William Harold NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on September 18, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, Dawn M. Berry in the Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.
NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on September 9, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2521 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Ja’Shawn Carpenter NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on July 17, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286
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Free Will Astrology ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Beware of what disturbs the heart,” said Ibn Mas’ud, a companion of the prophet Mohammed. “If something unsettles your heart, then abandon it.” My wise Aries friend Artemisia has a different perspective. She advises, “Pay close attention to what disturbs the heart. Whatever has the power to unsettle your heart will show you a key lesson you must learn, a crucial task you’d be smart to undertake.” Here’s my synthesis of Ibn Mas’ud and Artemisia: Do your very best to fix the problem revealed by your unsettled heart. Learn all you can in the process. Then, even if the fix isn’t totally perfect, move on. Graduate from the problem for good. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus social critic Bertrand Russell won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1950. He’s regarded as the founder of analytic philosophy and one of the twentieth century’s premier intellectuals. But he went through a rough patch in 1940. He was adjudged “morally unfit” to accept his appointment as a professor at the City College of New York. The lawsuit that banned him from the job described him as being “libidinous, lustful, aphrodisiac, and irreverent.” Why? Simply because of his liberated opinions about sexuality, which he had conscientiously articulated in his book Marriage and Morals. In our modern era, we’re more likely to welcome libidinous, lustful, aphrodisiac, and irreverent ideas if they’re expressed respectfully, as Russell did. With that as a subtext, I invite you to update and deepen your relationship with your own sexuality in the coming weeks. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In her poem “What the Light Teaches,” Anne Michaels describes herself arriving at a lover’s house soaked with rain, “dripping with new memory.” She’s ready for “one past to grow out of another.” In other words, she’s eager to leave behind the story that she and her lover have lived together up until now — and begin a new story. A similar blessing will be available for you in the coming weeks, Gemini: a chance for you and an intimate partner or close ally to launch a new chapter of your history together. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Some scientists deride astrology despite being ignorant about it. For example, they complain, “The miniscule gravitational forces beaming from the planets can’t possibly have any effect on our personal lives.” But the truth is that most astrologers don’t believe the planets exert influence on us with gravity or any other invisible force. Instead, we analyze planetary movements as evidence of a hidden order in the universe. It’s comparable to the way weather forecasters use a barometer to read atmospheric pressure but know that barometers don’t cause changes in atmospheric pressure. I hope this inspires you, Cancerian, as you develop constructive critiques of situations in your own sphere. Don’t rely on naive assumption and unwarranted biases. Make sure you have the correct facts before you proceed. If you do, you could generate remarkable transformations in the coming weeks. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): As you glide into the Season of Love, I’d love you to soak up wise counsel from the author bell hooks. (She doesn’t capitalize her name.) “Many people want love to function like a drug, giving them an immediate and sustained high,” she cautions. “They want to do nothing, just passively receive the good feeling.” I trust you won’t do that, Leo. Here’s more from hooks: “Dreaming that love will save us, solve all our problems or provide a steady state of bliss or security only keeps us stuck in wishful fantasy, undermining the real power of the love — which is to transform us.” Are you ready to be transformed by love, Leo? VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Burrow down as deep as you dare, Virgo. Give yourself pep talks as you descend toward the gritty core of every matter. Feel your way into the underground, where the roots meet the foundations. It’s time for you to explore the mysteries that are usually beneath your conscious awareness. You have a mandate to reacquaint yourself with where you came from and how you got to where you are now. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): It’s natural and healthy to feel both the longing to connect and the
By Rob Brezsny
longing to be independent. Each of those urges deserves an honored place in your heart. But you may sometimes experience them as being contradictory; their opposing pulls may rouse tension. I bring this to your attention because I suspect that the coming weeks will be a test of your ability to not just abide in this tension, but to learn from and thrive on it. For inspiration, read these words by Jeanette Winterson. “What should I do about the wild heart that wants to be free and the tame heart that wants to come home? I want to be held. I don’t want you to come too close. I want you to scoop me up and bring me home at night. I don’t want to tell you where I am. I want to be with you.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The Louvre Museum in Paris displays 38,000 objects throughout its eighteen acres of floor space. Among its most treasured thirteenth-century artworks is “The Madonna and Child in Majesty Surrounded by Angels,” a huge painting by Italian painter Cimabue. When a museum representative first acquired it in the nineteenth century, its price was five francs, or less than a dollar. I urge you to be on the lookout for bargains like that in the coming weeks. Something that could be valuable in the future may be undervalued now. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian performance artist Marina Abramović observes that Muhammad, Buddha, Jesus, and Moses “all went to the desert as nobodies and came back as somebodies.” She herself spent a year in Australia’s Great Sandy Desert near Lake Disappointment, leading her to exclaim that the desert is “the most incredible place, because there is nothing there except yourself, and yourself is a big deal.” From what I can tell, Sagittarius, you’re just returning from your own metaphorical version of the desert, which is very good news. Welcome back! I can’t wait to see what marvels you spawn. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Upcoming events may bedevil your mind. They may mess with your certainties and agitate your self-doubts. But if you want my view about those possibilities, they’re cause for celebration. According to my analysis of the astrological indicators, you will benefit from having your mind bedeviled and your certainties messed with and your self-doubts agitated. You may ultimately even thrive and exult and glow like a miniature sun. Why? Because you need life to gently but firmly kick your ass in just the right way so you’ll become alert to opportunities you have been ignoring or blind to. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Every writer I’ve ever known says that a key practice to becoming a good writer is to read a lot of books. So what are we to make of the fact that one of the twentieth century’s most celebrated novelists didn’t hew to that principle? In 1936, three years before the publication of his last book, Aquarian-born James Joyce confessed that he had “not read a novel in any language for many years.” Here’s my take on the subject: More than any other sign of the zodiac, you Aquarians have the potential to succeed despite not playing by conventional rules. And I suspect your power to do that is even greater than usual these days. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “If you are lucky enough to find a way of life you love, you have to find the courage to live it,” wrote Piscean novelist John Irving. In the coming weeks, Pisces, you will have the power to get clearer than ever before about knowing the way of life you love. As a bonus, I predict you will also have an expanded access to the courage necessary to actually live that way of life. Take full advantage! Homework: Possible definition of happiness: the state that results from cultivating interesting, useful problems. What’s your definition? FreeWillAstrology.com
M MUSIC
pulse RURAL RESONANCE GOES TO “RECOVERY” TO BEAT WRITER’S BLOCK
Myth Maker
Charleston musician Matthew Kortheuer a.k.a. Rural Resonance released a new single, “Recovery,” on Nov. 5. Kortheuer describes his sound as “trap, future bass, and breakbeat hip-hop,” while admitting how hard it is to subject himself to one genre. “I have a lot of inspiration ranging from alternative to hip-hop to electronic music,” says Kortheuer. How Kortheuer wrote his new single is an interesting story. After suffering from writer’s block for months, he decided to take a vacation with his family to the Appalachian Mountains where he found inspiration. “For some reason during the vacation, I felt myself more relaxed and open to my creative flow,” says Kortheuer. “’Recovery’ was a breaking point for myself.” “Recovery” isn’t the only thing Kortheuer has been working toward. “This release and a couple after this one, in the coming months, will be leading up to an EP/album in spring 2020,” says Kortheuer. “This will be my first official multi-track release.” —Abrie Richison
Pip the Pansy’s new EP dives deep into Greek mythology and lush electronic pop BY VINCENT HARRIS Pip the Pansy w/ Damn Skippy, Dizzy Dames Sat. Nov. 23 9 p.m. $5 The Royal American 970 Morrison Drive (843) 817-6925 theroyalamerican.com
continued on page 65
JAH JR.’S LATEST SINGLE IS A TRIBUTE TO LATE VIDEOGRAPHER DREW GARDNER
On Nov. 8, rapper Jah Jr. released his latest single, “M.E.L. (Toucan’s Interlude),” a tribute to recently deceased videographer Drew Gardner. Gardner, who operated Toucan Films, was a popular friend of the music community, frequently filming shows, music videos, and viral videos for members of the music scene. He passed away on Oct. 20 at the age of 29. “M.E.L. (Toucan’s Interlude)” was handpicked by Gardner for a music video, according to Jah, but was left unfinished at the time of his death. Jah says that there will not be any music video to accompany the single. —Heath Ellison
THE MIDNIGHT CITY DOES SOMETHING ORIGINAL ON THEIR NEW EP
Provided
PIP THE PANSY’S LATEST EP IS JUST THE FIRST PART IN A SHORT SERIES OF RELEASES
Popular party band the Midnight City recently released their first EP of original material, Heartdream. Despite their status as one of the premier wedding and cover bands in the Charleston area, the members of the Midnight City have been doing original music behind the scenes for years. Singer/guitarist Brian Jarvis describes the sound of the new EP as alternative, indie synth-pop. “We wanted to write catchy lyrics, really catchy hooks, simple hooks that people could catch on to, but still enough to tell a story,” he says. “We just wanted to write stuff that we could fit in between a Miley Cyrus song and something else, and people would still be bopping and dancing to.” —HE
MUSIC | charlestoncitypaper.com
If it’s true that good albums create worlds of their own for the listener to dive into, then Love Legends, Pt. 1, the new EP by Atlanta singer-songwriter Pip the Pansy, certainly qualifies as a good album. By itself, the music is completely immersive, bathing the listener in wave after wave of lush electronic pop. All five of the songs on the EP are multileveled gems that mix programmed beats, icy synths, and dizzying vocals, with Pip using overdubs to create a kaleidoscopic chorus of voices that open up her beguiling melodies. But it’s not just the music; lyrically, Pip wanted to weave a concept throughout Love Legends, Pt. 1, specifically a mythological one. The EP is loosely based around legends and myths that she utilized while writing the album. There are direct references to mythical figures in lyrics like, “Aphrodite fantasy/Baby, does she look like me/When you dream in color,” from “Indigo Fantasy.” But, in general, her lyrical approach is impressionistic, touching on all sorts of archetypes and fantastical ideals. Pip has released a series of EPs and singles in the electronic pop mold before, but this is the first time she’s thematically linked her material with an overarching concept. “I think that these songs belonged together,” Pip says. “I’m really into this subject of Greek mythology, and I’ve studied it for a long time, and read stories, and watched Discovery Channel documentaries, and all this kind of stuff. I spent a lot of time digesting information for this project. Before this, it was more about, ‘Oh, I’m feeling this today,’ but this was, ‘I’m going to write all of my songs within the realm of Greek mythology or ancient stories.’ I think having it based around this one idea definitely informs how you’re going to move forward with recording.” In fact, if she hadn’t been feeling a little pressure to get new material out (the EP was her first album since 2017), Love Legends,
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3-6PM at Bowens Island
STAC HOUSE SHOWS PRESENTS EDWIN MCCAIN
Saturday, Nov. 30 SAT, NOV 23
7PM at The Historic Old Brick Church
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
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WED, NOV 20 RECKONING, 6:30 PM THURS, NOV 21 MR. CHARLIE, 6 PM FRI, NOV 22 POHO FAMILY FUNK REVUE, 6 PM SAT, NOV 23 FUSION JONEZ, 6 PM; NIGHT MARKET, 5-9PM SUN, NOV 24 POHO YOGA, 10 AM SUNDAY BRUNCH FARMERS MARKET, 11 AM MOTOWN THROWDOWN, 1 PM C. BROWN BAND, 6 PM MON, NOV 25 HOLY CITY HEATERS, 6 PM TUES, NOV 26 TOMATOBAND, 6 PM FOR TICKETS & SHOW INFORMATION
CHARLESTONPOURHOUSE.COM 1977 MAYBANK HWY • JAMES ISLAND
Burlesque shows, broom closets, and bad friends knock at the door Concert goers live in a world they believe to be loud and free. But there is, unheard by most, an outer world, a barrier between in and out, just as loud but not as free as they thought — the world outside a venue, where the door guy simply wants you to pay the cover charge. Welcome to a few nights in the life of Tin Roof’s door dude, Rex Stickel.
A lady walks up. Lady: “Is there a cover?” Me: “Yes, there are four bands. The cover is $8.” Lady: “I don’t have any cash...” Me: “We actually have an ATM inside.” Lady: “I actually don’t have any money.” Me: “Oh ... OK...” THURSDAY 9:03 P.M.
10:07 P.M.
A lady comes outside from the burlesque show. Lady: “Do I need to pay anything to get back in?” Me: “Just attention, once you’re back inside.” Lady: “I think I can handle that.” FRIDAY 8:31 P.M.
I approach a group of women who are inside before the doors open. Me: “Hello, I’m taking the cover tonight.” Lady: “I was wondering when you were gonna show up. We saw no one was at the door so we didn’t think there would be a cover.” Me: “Sorry, they hadn’t unlocked the broom closet I live in when I’m not working door.”
TRIBUTE, A CELEBRATION OF THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND FREE MUSIC ON THE DECK 6-9PM DAILY DECK STAGE SCHEDULE
Modern Fries, Please
A guy walks up with a buddy trailing behind. Me: “There’s a $10 cover for a burlesque show tonight.” Guy: “Great — can I use the ATM inside?” Me: “Yes, you can.” His buddy finally shows up. Buddy: “Did he already go inside?” Me: “He’s using the ATM.” Buddy: “OK, good. He’s dragging me out, so he can pay for it.” Me: “He’s dragging you out to a burlesque show? Oh, you poor bastard.”
FRI, NOV 22 LAST WALTZ ENSEMBLE PERFORMING THE MUSIC OF BOB DYLAN AND THE BAND, DANIEL HUTCHENS OF BLOODKIN
TALES FROM THE DOOR SIDE | BY REX STICKEL
WEDNESDAY 8:44 P.M.
CHARLESTON OYSTER SOCIAL WHITE DENIM W/ SPACEFACE
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WINE UNDER THE OAKS
Sunday, Dec. 8
1PM at Boone Hall Plantation HOSTING AN EVENT?
For more information on using City Paper Tickets for your next event contact us at melissa@charlestoncitypaper.com
A group of young men walk up. Me: “Hey guys, we have a show tonight. The cover is $7 and I need everyone’s ID.” Guy: “Oh ... Is it 21 and up?” Me: “It is.” Guy: “Do you take fake IDs?” Me: “Only if I wanna lose my job.” SUNDAY 7:28 P.M.
Me: “Hey, man. It’s $5 for the comedy show.” continued on page 65
continued from page 64 Guy: “Isn’t it free for comedians?” Me: “Sure, but if you can support, the headliner would appreciate it.” Guy: “Right on. I’m kinda broke, so...” He starts pulling at the stage door. Me: “That’s fine, man, but go through the front door.” Guy: “Oh. Are you new here?” Me: “Not even close.” FRIDAY 8:53 P.M.
Two ladies walk up. Me: “Hey, ladi—“ Lady 1: “Where’s the front door?” Lady 2: “Do you need to see our IDs?” Me: “Ye—“ Lady 1: “Oh my God, how young do we look?” Lady 2: “I gotta find my new ID.” She drops her purse. Me: “The—“ Lady 1: “Really look at mine because it’s brand new.”
Myth
Lady 2: “Finally got rid of your Pennsylvania ID?” Me: “Ladies! We’re having a show tonight and there is a $7 cover.” Lady 1: “Seven dollars?” Lady 2: “Why didn’t you tell us that?” SATURDAY 9:37 P.M.
A guy walks up behind two women paying the cover. Me: “Hey, man, it’s $7 for the show.” I make change for the women. The guy tries to hand me his money. Guy: “Uhh ... Who do I pay? Someone inside? You?” Me: “Me. You’re in line, sir.” 10:04 P.M.
TICK ETS ON SA LE
NOW!
A guy walks up. Me: “Hey, man. You here for the show?” Guy: “Yeah, man, I’m here to see my friends band, what are they called ... Oh yeah, Modern Fries.” Me: “Modern Fires?” Guy: “Yeah, my friends, they’re in that band Modern Fries.”
recreate a moment from the EP, and that’s with the song “Indigo Fantasy.” She collabocontinued from page 63 rated with the Charleston alt-hip-hop act Little Stranger on the song, and the second Pt. 1 would probably have been a full LP. half of the track features a tongue-twisting “I named it ‘part one’ intentionally,” she double-time rap from the duo’s emcee, says. “I’ve actually started working on part Kevin Shields. Pip recently played a few two, because I was so interested in what I was shows with Little Stranger and was able to learning. But it was time to get new music bring Shields out for the song. out. The boring business side of things was, “I wrote ‘Indigo Fantasy’ first out of all ‘I need to put something out there,’ but I still of the songs,” she says, “and it was a really needed more time to focus on this. So callcrappy demo. I texted Kevin and said, ‘I ing it ‘part one’ allows me to continue that have this idea, and I’m going to send it to concept in a way.” you, and I’d love for you Even if Pip largely to put a verse on it.’ And has the concept for Love in the demo, I only had “The boring business Legends mapped out, she one verse, and then I let side of things was, ‘I admits that she doesn’t the track play out for need to put something a really long time. So I quite have the touring part down. Her typical think Kevin thought I out there,’ but I still live setup is solo, which wanted him to fill that needed more time to is somewhat problematic whole thing. So it actubecause the material is so focus on this. So calling ally ended up being this lush and layered. really long rap. And it was it ‘part one’ allows “I’m still figuring out so good I didn’t want to me to continue that what I want my live show cut any of it. So the song to look like,” she says. “For concept in a way.” really became half what convenience, it’s easier to I wrote and half what —Pip the Pansy travel alone. And when Kevin wrote.” I travel alone, the show In a way, that collabois very track-heavy. But I ration is an extension of actually prefer these songs with a band. For the new musical energy that Pip has been my release show, I think I had four guitar experiencing recently; pushing her creative players playing on one song, and that’s fun boundaries has been the name of the game. and exciting to me. That feels better than “Sometimes I had trouble having fun with just putting the track on. So performing my music because the writing process was these songs live is still kind of an experiment; so serious to me,” she says, “and working I’ve tried a couple different ways, and I’m still with Kevin was kind of this way to break trying to figure out a way that’s satisfying to out of that box I get stuck in sometimes. me as an artist but still gives the fans what I just had a song that was fun and cheeky. they want to hear.” And that kind of stuff can still be profound, There has been at least one situation it just has a different personality than I usuwhere Pip has been able to accurately ally explore in my music.”
NOVEMBER 26 Tickets available at GaillardCenter.org, 843-242-3099, and at the Gaillard Center Box Office (11 am – 6 pm Monday through Friday and two hours prior to a performance).
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MUSIC | charlestoncitypaper.com
Fries
65
MUSICBOARD
n WEDNESDAY, 20
AWENDAW GREEN Austin Quattlebaum w/ Chance and Circumstances, the Ain’t Sisters, Loose Hinges, Red Clay Strays, Social Void, folk, bluegrass, coun-
try, Americana, 6 p.m.
BURNS ALLEY Karaoke Chris CHARLESTON GRILL Duda Lucena, Latin
jazz, 6:30 p.m.
THE COMMODORE Lady & The Brass,
funk, soul, 9:30 p.m.
THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band,
jazz, 7 p.m.
ELIZA’S BAR AND KITCHEN The Shakin’ Martinis, jams, dance music, 6 p.m. HOME TEAM BBQ Red Cedar Review,
bluegrass, 7 p.m.
HOOKED SEAFOOD Chris Boone, singer-
songwriter, 5 p.m.
JOHNKING GRILL + BAR Graham Whorley & Friends, blues, roots, rock,
7 p.m.
LOGGERHEAD’S Seitu Solomon, steelpan, 7 p.m. Eric Penrod, jazz, 6 p.m. PLANET FOLLYWOOD Michael Martin Band, Americana, 9 p.m. POUR HOUSE Com Truise w/ Altopalo Beshken, electronic, funk, 9:30 p.m. On the Deck for Dead Wednesday: Reckoning, Grateful Dead covers,
HALLS Larry Ford, Abe White, and Chris Williams, jams, 6 p.m. HIGH COTTON Frank Duvall Trio, piano
jazz, 6 p.m.
JUANITA GREENBERG’S—MP Graham Whorley, acoustic soul/rock and jams,
6:30 p.m.
K.C. MULLIGAN’S Token Mary, pop,
jams, 10 p.m.
LOCAL 616 DJs: The Selectas, party tunes LOGGERHEAD’S Calhoun’s Calling, party
tunes, 7 p.m.
PINK CACTUS Hector Salazar & Gregory Guay, latin, 6 p.m. PLANET FOLLYWOOD Karaoke w/ DJ Richburg, 9:30 p.m. POUR HOUSE Mr. Charlie, folk, blues, Irish, 6 p.m. White Denim w/ Spaceface,
fusion, 9 p.m.
THE PUB ON 61 Karaoke, 8 p.m. THE REFUGE Todd Beals Trio, jazz,
6:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
rock, Americana, 6 p.m.
SOUTHERN ROOTS SMOKEHOUSE Sound Check: Musical Bingo, bingo, but with
THE PUB ON 61 The Associates, jams RITA’S SEASIDE GRILLE Bender Funk,
roots, 9 p.m.
THE TIN ROOF MC Chris, nerdcore, hip-
songs instead of numbers, 7-9 p.m. THE SPARROW Arthur Buezo, jams, 8:30 p.m. TASTY FUSION Ben Somewhere, singersongwriter
TOMMY CONDON’S Dave Berry, singer-
songwriter, 7:30 p.m.
THE WASHOUT Brady & Dale, bluegrass,
jams, 7 p.m.
WILD WING—NC Matt & Dan, jams WINDJAMMER Cabpot Players - Lethal Lecture, jams, 7 p.m.
KARAOKE
THE TIN ROOF Silver Tongue Devils w/ Obvious Liars, rock, 9 p.m. TOMMY CONDON’S The Bograts, jams,
7:30 p.m.
THE WASHOUT Gracious Day, acoustic,
country, jams, 7 p.m.
SMOKEY’S PLACE Karaoke with Jason,
karaoke, 9 p.m.
WINDJAMMER Cabpot Players - Lethal Lecture, jams, 7 p.m.
OPEN MIC
KARAOKE
ART’S Singer-Songwriter Night, rotating
singer-songwriters
ELLIOTBOROUGH MINI BAR Open Mic,
LOCAL 616 Karaoke Chris R PUB Karaoke with Aaron SHOOTER’S Karaoke with Rick, karaoke
7 p.m.
at 8 p.m.
n THURSDAY, 21
OPEN MIC
ANDELL INN The Joy Project Jazz Quartet, jazz, 6 p.m. BAR MASH Red Cedar Review, blue-
grass, 7:30 p.m.
BARSA TAPAS LOUNGE & BAR Steve Simon and the Kings of Jazz, jazz,
7 p.m.
CHARLESTON GRILL Richard White Trio,
jazz, 6:30 p.m.
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
jazz, 9:30 p.m.
THE ROOST BAR AND GRILL Jaykob Kendrick (Duo), party tunes, 10 p.m. THE ROYAL AMERICAN Cordovas w/ Sid Kingsley, American rock, 9 p.m. THE SOUTHERN BAR AND GRILL Guilt Ridden Troubadour, Americana, rock,
hop, 7 p.m.
66
FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Joe Clarke, jazz, 7 p.m. Joe Clarke w/ Evelyn DeVere,
CHARLESTON MUSIC HALL Aaron Neville, R&B, soul, 8 p.m. COASTAL COFFEE ROASTERS Acoustic Night, open jam THE COMMODORE The Majestics, soul,
funk, pop, 9:30 p.m. DASHI Chris Boone, singer-songwriter, 6 p.m.
THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band,
jazz, 7 p.m.
THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Donnie Polk, acoustic, 7 p.m. DOCKERY’S Ol’ 55’s, bluegrass, 4 p.m. THE DROP IN Stratton Moore & Friends,
acoustic rock and jamgrass, 10:30 p.m. ELI’S TABLE Gino Castillo, jazz, 7 p.m.
ELIZA’S BAR AND KITCHEN Chance and Circumstance, jams, 5 p.m.
MAINLAND CONTAINER CO. KITCHEN & BAR Open Mic Night, 7-10 p.m.
n FRIDAY, 22 BAR MASH Jeff Wilson, jazz, 9:30 p.m. CHARLESTON GAILLARD CENTER The Charleston Symphony Orchestra presents: Rach 2, piano concert, 7:30 p.m. CHARLESTON GRILL Ron Wiltrout Jazz Quartet, jazz, 7-11 p.m. THE COMMODORE Funktastics, funk,
soul, 9:30 p.m.
CONTAINER BAR Whitney Hanna & Fancy Kool-Aid, singer/songwriter,
10 p.m.
SUBMISSIONS Please have listings for the following week submitted no later than noon Friday to ensure publication both in print and online. Contact us at musicboard@ charlestoncitypaper.com.
Provided
THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band, jazz, 7 p.m. Joe Clarke Trio, jazz, 8 p.m. THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Charles Cannon, singer-songwriter, 7 p.m. DOCKERY’S Tom Crowley, blues, reggae, rock, 4 p.m. Gravy Wave, dance,
Wed. Nov. 20 7 p.m. $15/adv, $20/dos Tin Roof
NERDCORE | MC Chris
w/ Mason Jar Muzik, the Hooplas, Hollo Tip, Gracie Boy Sat. Nov. 23 6 p.m. $20 Cheetah Charleston
RAP-ROCK | Noisy Boys
hits, 8 p.m.
DUDLEY’S ON ANN Stream DJ, dance
music
ELIZA’S BAR AND KITCHEN The Louis D. Project, jams, 6 p.m. FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Joe Clarke, jazz,
7 and 9:30 p.m.
GALA DESSERTS World Music Cafe,
world music, 7:30 p.m.
HIGH COTTON James Slater Trio, sax
jazz, 6 p.m.
LOGGERHEAD’S Mike Huhn, singer-
songwriter, 6 p.m.
MOE’S CROSSTOWN TAVERN Whitney Hanna & Friends, rock, 10 p.m. MONSTER MUSIC Listening Party and Happy Hour, Get a free slice of pizza
and enjoy a different storewide sale each week. 5-8 p.m. PARCEL 32 Chris Boone w/ Jonathan DePriest, singer-songwriter, 9 p.m. POUR HOUSE Last Waltz Ensemble, Bob
MC Chris doesn’t want you to think of his music as nerdcore hip-hop. Instead, it’s just MC Chris music. With his high-pitched voice and a style that combines geek and gangster, Chris has made his blend of comedy and hip-hop an artistic expression. Starting out in the early 2000s, Chris wore two hats in the entertainment industry: Rapper and writer for Adult Swim. Taking aliases such as MC Pee Pants and Young Carl in Aqua Teen Hunger Force helped Chris find a distinct voice in the music industry. MC Chris has a wide variety of albums from his 2001 debut, Life’s a Bitch and I’m Her Pimp to his popular 2008 album, MC Chris is Dead. This has allowed him to create an esoteric and playful impression filled with innocence. His track “Fett’s Vette,” accumulated over 3 million streams on Spotify, and is Chris’ personal homage to being fly and unabashedly cool. His fruitful instrumentals and his polarizing, rhythmic lyricism can be found on any given song throughout his extensive discography. This equation led to a career full of lighthearted antics and honest emotions for MC Chris. —Matt Keady WEDNESDAY
Dylan and the Band tribute, 9 p.m.
RIVERTOWNE PUBLIC HOUSE Jameson Night with Jaykob Kendrick Band, party
tunes, 9 p.m.-midnite
THE ROYAL AMERICAN B-Side w/ Kid Trails, Persona La Ave, singer-songwriter,
9 p.m.
Provided
SALTY MIKE’S Thomas Champagne,
pop, rock, reggae, 5 p.m.
SAND DOLLAR Ocean Drive Party Band,
rock, covers, 10 p.m.
THE SPARROW Rowan Oak w/ Psychic Pets, rock, 9 p.m. THE TIN ROOF Majic Dust w/ Faline,
indie, 9 p.m.
TOMMY CONDON’S The Bograts, jams,
7:30 p.m.
TRAYCE’S TOO Hollow Point, rock,
9:30 p.m.
THE WASHOUT Eddie Bush, acoustic,
rock, jams, 8:30 p.m.
WINDJAMMER Last Resort, Eagles
tribute, 10 p.m.
DJS + DANCE Dudley’s After Dark — dance music, 8 p.m.
n SATURDAY, 23 CHARLESTON GAILLARD CENTER The Charleston Symphony Orchestra presents: Rach 2, piano concert, 7:30 p.m. CHARLESTON GRILL Asa Holgate Quartet, jazz, 7:30 p.m. CHUCKTOWN BAR AND GRILL Back in the Day Saturday, hits from the ’80s,
Throughout the nine songs on their self-titled 2019 LP, Noisy Boys do pretty much everything they can to earn their name. Outlandish groove jams? “Funk Junk” checks that box. Porn rap akin to 2 Live Crew? Take “Cougar Town” home tonight. Nu-metal yelps and chugging guitar licks? “#Forthenoise” is for the boys. Sure, it’s easy to hear the term “rap-rock” and assume that Noisy Boys are gunning for a bygone sound from the mid-’90s. For the most part, that couldn’t be further from the truth. Guitarist Josh Davidson actually jams on the acoustic more than he does on an overdriven electric, often opting for soul and funk riffs. The band’s emcee, Learical, raps like a student of the craft. “So stand with us/ if you’ve had enough/ feet to the ground/ straight to the clutch/ ready to push when it comes to shove/ ‘cus no one’s above peace and love,” he raps on album opener “Van Hail’em.” The duo prioritizes riffs and attitude, with a few surprises here and there, like some violin accents on “Rude & Groovy” or the strummy guitar licks on “Frenemies.” Rap-rock is a quick and easy description of Noisy Boys, but it’s not always the whole story. —Heath Ellison SATURDAY
’90s, and 2000s, 9 p.m.
THE COMMODORE Rochelle Whitney Green and The Unit Band, jazz, soul, 7 p.m. Futurefunk, funk, 9:30 p.m. COOPER RIVER BREWING The Shakin’ Martinis, dance, party music, 5:30 p.m. THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band,
jazz, 7 p.m.
THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Coffin Island Boys, bluegrass, 7 p.m. THE DIVE Radio Bomb, jams, 10 p.m. DOCKERY’S Big Wheel & the Hubcaps,
covers, 8 p.m.
ELIZA’S BAR AND KITCHEN The Louis D. Project, jams, 6 p.m. FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Shrimp City Slim,
jazz. piano blues, 7 and 9:30 p.m.
HIGH COTTON Frank Duvall Trio, piano
jazz, 7 p.m.
LOCAL 616 DJ D-EZ, old and new-school
tunes, 10 p.m.
LOGGERHEAD’S Mike Huhn, singer-
songwriter, 6 p.m.
THE ROYAL AMERICAN Pip the Pansy w/ Damn Skippy, Dizzy Dames, indie,
WINDJAMMER Dan’s Tramp Stamp & The Money Bags, rock, 10 p.m.
THE RUSTY RUDDER Chris Boone,
n SUNDAY, 24
alternative, 9 p.m.
singer-songwriter, 3 p.m.
SAND DOLLAR Ocean Drive Party Band,
MUSIC FARM - CHARLESTON Brian Courtney Wilson, American gospel,
rock, covers, 10 p.m.
NV DJ Y-Not, dance and party music PIER 101 Tom Crowley, blues, rock,
SUSHI BLUE Salsa Night , DJ Luigi, salsa THE TIN ROOF Never Better w/ Scene Jesus, Mourning Dove, post-rock, trap,
8 p.m.
country, 1 p.m.
POUR HOUSE Tribute, Allman Brothers
Tribute, 9:30 p.m.
PROHIBITION New South Jazzmen,
jazz, 7 p.m.
SURF BAR Weigh Station, rock, blues,
10 p.m.
folk, 8 p.m.
CHARLESTON GRILL Bob Williams Duo,
jazz/classical (guitar and violin), 7 p.m. COAST Graham Whorley, acoustic duo: rock, jazz, and grooves, 7-10 p.m.
THE COMMODORE Honky Tonk Sunday,
jams, 9 p.m.
THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Josh Hughett, singer/songwriter, 7 p.m.
TOMMY CONDON’S The Bograts, jams,
7:30 p.m.
TRAYCE’S TOO Night Shift, funk, 9:30 p.m.
continued on page 68
LIVE MUSIC!
11/24
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FRI, NOV 22 SALTI RAY SAT, NOV 23 DIRTY FUSS
VOTED BEST ROCK CLUB FOR 16 YEARS! 11/30
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SAT, NOV 30 JOEY STUCKEY BAND
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12/6
67
musicboard continued from page 66
HALLS The Plantation Singers, gospel,
12:30-3:30 p.m. HIGH COTTON The Bluestone Ramblers,
bluegrass brunch MEX 1 COASTAL CANTINA Occasional Milkshake, acoustic, 7 p.m. MUSIC FARM - CHARLESTON Freddie Gibbs, rap, 8 p.m. PIER 101 Dave Landeo, jams, 1 p.m. PINK CACTUS Hector Salazar & Grace McNally, Latin, 6 p.m. POUR HOUSE C. Brown Band, jams, 6 p.m. On the Deck: Kanika Moore and the Motown Throwdown, gospel, soul,
funk, 1 p.m. SNAPPER JACK’S SEAFOOD & RAW BAR Foggy Sunday w/ The Fogg, rock cov-
ers, 3:30 p.m. ST JAMES GATE Ed “Porkchop” Meyer,
MONTREUX Shrimp City Slim, blues,
CHARLESTON GRILL Duda Lucena, Latin
PLANET FOLLYWOOD Metal Monday,
THE COMMODORE Lady & The Brass,
7 p.m.
jazz, 6:30 p.m.
metal, 10 p.m.
funk, soul, 9:30 p.m.
THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band,
POUR HOUSE On the Deck: Holy City Heaters, jam-grass, Americana, roots,
jazz, 7 p.m.
6 p.m.
TOMMY CONDON’S Open Mic Night,
open mic, 7 p.m.
JOHNKING GRILL + BAR Graham Whorley & Friends, blues, roots, rock,
ART’S Saluda Shoals, country, rock,
7 p.m.
Americana, 9 p.m.
CHARLESTON GRILL Kevin Hamilton and Friends, jazz, 6:30 p.m. THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Jeff Bateman Duo, covers, jams, 7 p.m. FILL RESTAURANT AND PIANO BAR Jazz Night with Heather Rice, jazz, 6:30 p.m. HIGH COTTON James Slater Trio, sax
jazz, 6 p.m.
Hendrix tribute, 10 p.m.
case, 7 p.m.
rock, Americana, 6 p.m.
10 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
7-10 p.m.
jams, 7 p.m.
n MONDAY, 25
PROHIBITION Salsa Night w/ Gino Castillo Cuban Jazz Quartet, Cuban,
CONTAINER BAR Whits End, acoustic
LOGGERHEAD’S Seitu Solomon, steelpan, 7 p.m. Eric Penrod, jazz, 6 p.m. PLANET FOLLYWOOD Michael Martin Band, Americana, 9 p.m. POUR HOUSE On the Deck for Dead Wednesday: Reckoning, Grateful Dead covers, 6:30 p.m. Third Stone Trio, Jimmy THE PUB ON 61 The Associates, jams RITA’S SEASIDE GRILLE Bender Funk,
HOME TEAM BBQ Holy City Confessional, singer-songwriter showK.C. MULLIGAN’S DJ Random, DJ, jams,
9:30 p.m.-1 a.m.
Sun. Nov. 24 5 p.m. Free Tabbuli
songwriter, 5 p.m.
n TUESDAY, 26
singer-songwriter, 12 p.m. SURF BAR Powderhorn, Americana, 10 p.m. TOMMY CONDON’S Dylan Evans, singersongwriter, 7 p.m. THE WASHOUT Donnie Polk, acoustic, 4 p.m.
BAR MASH Live Funk/ Mo-town music with Mike Quinn and friends, funk, soul,
Provided
THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Sunflowers and Sin, Americana, 7 p.m. HOOKED SEAFOOD Chris Boone, singer-
THE WASHOUT Brady & Dale, bluegrass,
LOGGERHEAD’S Danny May, acoustic,
WILD WING—NC Matt & Dan, jams
OCEAN COWBOYS Poppa DuPree and JoJo, jams POUR HOUSE Tomatoband, electric
n THURSDAY, 28
jazz, 6 p.m. salsa
ANDELL INN The Joy Project Jazz Quartet, jazz, 6 p.m. BAR MASH Red Cedar Review, blue-
TOMMY CONDON’S Kevin Church, singer-
songwriter, 7:30 p.m.
THE WASHOUT The Ol’ 55s, bluegrass,
rock, 6 p.m.
7 p.m.
K.C. MULLIGAN’S Amanda, jams, 10 p.m. LOGGERHEAD’S Travelin’ Trio,
n WEDNESDAY, 27
Americana, 7-10 p.m.
BURNS ALLEY Karaoke Chris
TOMMY CONDON’S Carroll Brown, jams,
grass, 7:30 p.m.
BARSA TAPAS LOUNGE & BAR Steve Simon and the Kings of Jazz, jazz,
7 p.m.
QUEEN COVERS | Mercury Rising Queen is a British rock band that quickly became a household name in the 1970s. Since then, their music has been continuously consumed and celebrated, and Tabbuli is joining in on the fun. “A loyal patron and friend, Jed Drew, and I noticed, during one of our Taboo Tuesday Drag Nights, the crowd’s [positive] response when one of the performers did ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,’” says J. Michael Walker, the creative director behind the event. Freddie Mercury, Queen’s lead singer, was known for his ability to entertain multitudes with his unique stage presence and impeccable vocal talent, and fans are still being entertained today. But, entertainment isn’t the only upside to this night. “We were looking for a local charity that would benefit from this event, and Palmetto Community is very dear to our performers and staff,” says Walker. “We hoped that the life and legacy of Freddie Mercury would have an impact on HIV/AIDS education and testing.” Mercury defied the expectations that surrounded him in a way that inspired, and still inspires, everyone he entertained. Not only was he a rock icon, he was also an activist for AIDS research and awareness. Just months after his death in 1991, the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert at Wembley Stadium raised millions for AIDS research, and his memory is still alive. On Sunday, there will be queens singing and dancing to Queen’s timeless hits, as well as hookah, food, and drinks per usual. It’s going to be an event to remember, just like the icon it’s commemorating. —Abrie Richison SUNDAY
CHARLESTON GRILL Richard White Trio,
jazz, 6:30 p.m.
Visit charlestoncitypaper.com for the latest live music, karaoke, and open mic events
continued on page 70
FOOTBALL
SPECIALS
EVENT CALENDAR
VOTED “BEST DOWNTOWN BAR” IN CHARLESTON! NOV
21 THU
CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 11.20.2019
DOORS: 9PM / $5 COVER
22 FRI
B-Side + Kid Trails (of Toro Y Moi)
NOV
Pip The Pansy
NOV
68
Cordovas w/ Sid Kingsley
23 SAT NOV
29 FRI NOV
30 SAT
w/ Persona La Ave
DOORS: 9PM / $5 COVER
w/ Damn Skippy + Dizzy Dames DOORS: 9PM / $5 COVER
D!Z
(Vinyl DJ)
Dance party featuring the sounds of D!Z spinning funky soul 45s all night long!
DOORS: 9PM / $5 COVER
Guitar Andrei Andrei Andrei w/ Glass + Art Star
DOORS: 9PM / $5 COVER
TheRoyalAmerican.com 970 Morrison Drive Motel Glory Charleston, SC (843)817.6925 (CD Release)
ALL DATES AND SHOWTIMES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE
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Wed. Nov 20 MUSIC BINGO 7:30PM Free to Play
Sat. Nov 23 1/2 PRICE BURGERS 12-6PM FREE POOL 12-6PM NIGHT SHIFT 9:30PM
Thu. Nov 21 TEAM TRIVIA 7PM NFL FOOTBALL 8:30PM
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SATURDAY LADIES NIGHT
69
Provided
w/ Mourning Dove, Scene Jesus Sat. Nov. 23 8:30 p.m. $7 Tin Roof
CHARLESTON EMO | Never Better
w/ Kid Trails, Persona La Ave Fri. Nov. 22 9 p.m. $5 The Royal American
EXPERIMENTAL R&B | B-Side
CHEETAH CHARLESTON
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CHARLESTON’S PREMIER GENTLEMEN’S CLUB OVER 10,000 SQUARE FEET 30 ENTERTAINERS/DANCERS
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D.J. Edwards has been careful with his latest project, Never Better. Since releasing the band’s first single on a joint EP with Short Division, Edwards has slowly filtered out tracks, like the philosophical and dramatic “Light it Up.” And, while the band prepares for their first full release in 2020, the multi-instrumentalist is cautiously attempting to drop music that will invite and challenge his audience. “I’ve tried to make sure that people hear songs that most people will love,” Edwards explains. “Then I’ve also tried to make sure people have heard songs that are a lot heavier that I love, that I’m not sure everyone will like, as much.” The studio stuff is cool, according to Edwards, but performing is where the band shines. “[Audiences] should expect a lot of passion, they should expect the gong, and they should expect to like songs that they would have never thought they’d liked before,” he says. Never Better shows are each based on a seasonal theme and that’s reflected in the lineup that Edwards curated for the upcoming show. “This is my fall show and I really wanted to get acts to play with me that represent fall,” he says. Greenville-based psychedelic folk singer Mourning Dove and local trap artist Scene Jesus will feel the autumn vibe with Never Better this time around. —Heath Ellison SATURDAY
The man behind B-Side has a long history of musical reinvention in this town. The enigmatic moniker actually belongs to musician Brian Robert Hannon, who has also been known to go simply by Brian Robert in the years since his band, Company, closed for business. As part of this week’s triple-bill concert at the Royal American, Hannon is preparing to offer yet another side of himself. “I am super excited and nervous about this show because I am debuting new material from my latest project,” Hannon says. “I came up playing in the indie-punk scene with my band, Company, then later moved onto folk-country with my solo material, but B-Side is my current venture into hip-hop and R&B, and I am way out of my comfort zone.” Hannon goes on to say that this particular gig is extra special for him because it will be an evening among friends. “It will be me performing some new songs, then Kid Trails, who is in the band Toro y Moi and is wonderful, then my homeboys Persona La Ave. They are the best dudes ever and Dylan [Dawkins] was 100 percent instrumental in helping me create this new project.” —Kevin Wilson FRIDAY
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