January 31, 2020 Greenville Journal

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, January 31, 2020 • Vol.23, No. 05

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Christ Church Episcopal celebrates its 200th year PAGE 6 photo by BONFIRE VISUALS

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Greenlink announces possible transition from sale of paper passes to TouchPass n story by JEANNIE PUTNAM | photo PROVIDED

Greenlink recently announced a proposal to discontinue the sale of paper 20ride punch passes by July 1, but customers will still be able to purchase 20-ride passes through Greenlink’s electronic ticketing system, TouchPass. The proposal will be discussed during the Feb. 27 Greenville Transit Authority meeting. Greenlink is considering discontinuing the sale of paper punch passes to improve efficiency. “The paper punch passes are cumbersome and inefficient, as our drivers must physically punch the paper passes with a hole-puncher,” said James Keel, Greenlink’s director of public transportation. “Additionally, because there is no record of how many punches a customer has used, if they lose the paper punch pass, there is nothing we can do to reimburse their purchase.”

In addition to removing the need to physically punch cards, switching to TouchPass will allow Greenlink customers to freeze their accounts and transfer account balances to new cards if they lose their TouchPass cards, Keel said. By moving entirely to TouchPass, customers will have the flexibility to either buy reloadable smart cards for $2 at the Greenlink dispatch booth or download a smartphone app. Cards can be reloaded at the Greenlink Transit Center using cash, credit cards and debit cards. A customer can also add funds through www.TouchPass.com or enable an autoload feature via the app to replenish an account once the balance drops below a certain amount.

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Brotherton to leave school district for city of Greenville

n story by ANNA LEE | photo PROVIDED

Beth Brotherton, who for the past four years has served as Greenville County Schools’ communications director and ambassador of goodwill, is leaving the school district for a post at the city of Greenville. Brotherton will serve as director of the city’s newly created Department of Communications and Neighborhood Relations beginning Feb. 24. There, Brotherton said she’ll be working to help sell the city to its stakeholders — the residents and business owners who call Greenville home. “I’m really excited,” she said. “If I thought I had this amazing palette to work with at the school district, now I’m getting to paint with the city of Greenville.” Brotherton spent 20 years at WYFF-TV before she took a job as assistant communications director for the state’s largest school district in 2015. When the head of that department retired from the school district a year later, Brotherton took over the reins. “I’m incredibly grateful because I feel like the school district took a chance on me,” Brotherton said. “I had the opportunity to not

only leave TV and learn new skills but to really build something here.” Greenville’s existing public information and events department is being split into two departments with one focusing on communications and the other on special events and cultural affairs, according to city spokeswoman Leslie Fletcher. The city’s current public information and events director, Angie Prosser, will head the other department.

RACHAEL DENHOLLANDER GUEST SPEAKER Rachael Denhollander is an attorney, advocate, author and educator who became known internationally as the first woman to file a police report and speak publicly against USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar, one of the most prolific sexual abusers in recorded history. As a result of her activism, over 250 women came forward as survivors of Nassar’s abuse, leading to his life imprisonment. Rachael’s book, What Is A Girl Worth?, the story of breaking the silence and exposing the truth about Larry Nassar and USA Gymnastics, was recently released.

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ART IN FOCUS

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MURAL AT EXPRESSIONS UNLIMITED ARTIST: JOHN DONALD

n photo by IRINA RICE

Post yo photos in ur of the M front Express ural at ions usin g #gvlar tinfocus

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Music venue The Firmament to permanently close

n story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo by 864_SHOOTER LLC

The Firmament, a music venue off Woodruff Road in Greenville, has announced they’ll be closing permanently Jan. 31, according to a post on their social media account. The statement by owner Andrew Peek reads: “Dear Firmament Friends and Family, First I would like to say Thank You from the bottom of my heart for all the love and support you have shown us since we opened, but unfortunately our time has come to an end. I have tried my absolute best and given everything I possibly could to try and keep this venue afloat but I have reached my limit with my resources and efforts. To those of you who have helped I offer my sincerest apologies. I wish I could have done more, I am sorry for letting you all down. As of right now our last show will be this Saturday with DirtySnatcha and Rico Act with regional and local support from Zubah, Aesos and Neon Tiger. I hope you all come out for one last evening of raging. Hopefully I can find other venues to finish out the shows we have already announced. I will be in touch soon on that topic.”

The venue, which opened in March 2018, had several shows scheduled past this weekend, including performances by G. Love & Special Sauce, The Motet and Fozzy. In mid-2019, The Firmament launched a fundraiser on GoFundMe to cover expenses after Peek split with the venue’s former coowner, Chad Hendricks. The Journal has reached out to Peek for a comment, but he has not yet responded at the time of publication.

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FROM THE COVER

CHRIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL HAS BEEN WEAVING THE SPIRITUAL AND SOCIAL FABRIC OF THE COMMUNITY FOR 200 YEARS n story by STEPHANIE TROTTER | photos by BONFIRE VISUALS

photo LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, PRINTS & PHOTOGRAPHS DIVISION, HABS [OR HAER OR HALS], REPRODUCTION NUMBER [E.G., "HABS ILL, 16-CHIG, 33-2 "]

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

“They found it! They found it!” Rector Harrison McLeod rushes into his office at Christ Church Episcopal. “The cornerstone looks like every piece of vertical granite, so it was hiding in plain sight,” he says. “We’re going to dig it up this afternoon for Sunday’s celebration.” Work crews had located the sacred cornerstone just in time to kick off the first of the church’s bicentennial celebrations that will run through 2020. To thumb through the archives of Christ Church is to hold South Carolina history in your hands. Diplomat Joel Poinsett, businessman and benefactor Vardry McBee and U.S. Sen. Joseph Earle all have ties to the oldest church in the city of Greenville. For centuries, promises and programs presented from the religious center’s pulpit have canvassed the community, casting a hue upon all that has been as colorful as the nave’s great Ascension window. “It’s humbling to be a part of something that has had such meaning for so many people for 200 years,” McLeod says. “We really recognize the value of that tradition and hope for the future.”

SNAP-BEANS TO STAINED GLASS

They came every summer. Wealthy Lowcountry residents would trek to the Upstate to escape the coastal heat and humidity. On Sundays, a handful of Episcopalians would gather at the old wooden courthouse or private homes to worship with traveling minister Rodolphus Dickinson. “Christ Church was known as the snap-bean church,” McLeod says. “It didn’t operate year-round. Services were only in summer when it was time to harvest the snap-beans.” Dickinson established St. James Mission, which became Christ Church in 1826. During that time, merchant and farmer Vardry McBee donated “four acres and twenty-three poles” to build an Episcopal church in the small village of Greenville. Three houses of worship have occupied the land since, and that first congregation of Episcopalians has grown from 4 to 40, and now 4,000. The brick Gothic building and its 130-foot bell tower stand as constants against the city’s ever-changing skyline.


FROM THE COVER

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MISSIONS & PARISHES Founded by Christ Church

1900 St. Andrews in the West End

1903 St. James on Rutherford Street

1913 Good Shepherd in Greer

“What fascinates me is this church building today looks like our forefathers envisioned it to look in 1852,” McLeod says of the current facility. “What kind of imagination and hope for the future would inspire a small community of Episcopalians to build a church that fits 675 people, when there were only 11,000 people living in the county at the time? They were obviously looking to the future.” One woman certainly was.

INVITATION TO ALL

1914 St. Phillips

1951 Church of the Redeemer

1964 St. Francis of Greenville

1964 Church of the Holy Cross in Simpsonville

Since the beginning, members paid to sit in Christ Church’s pews. Yellowed ledgers detail “pew rent” payments of $75, $110 and $1,000. But in 1880, when members were looking to add another wing, Sarah Coxe Croft offered $3,000 to build the South Transept, as long as its pews were rent-free. “She was very generous,” says her greatgreat-great-grand-nephew and current church member Tom Croft. “She did a number of things like that and was very inclusive in making sure everybody could participate.” Today’s leadership follows her lead. “She had a real passion for the community and wanted to create a place for diversity within our parish,” McLeod says. “She sort of established the DNA of the parish. We always think back to Sarah Coxe and the example she offered us 100 years ago. That’s what we try to maintain today.” Christ Church’s outreach over the years runs in the millions, both in people touched and dollars spent. Members have built at least seven local churches, while sustaining

humanitarian and religious projects in numerous countries. The congregation currently supports programs in Costa Rica and Ecuador, but its largest international effort is in Haiti, where it’s brought safe drinking water, a hospital and school to the Central Plateau region, north of Port-au-Prince. Aiding the local community has been a focus since the church’s inception, with members creating a school for the poor and Greenville’s first general hospital in the 1800s. Modern-era nonprofits with Christ Church roots include the Greenville Free Medical Clinic, Project Host, United Ministries and most recently, Jasmine Road which helps women escape sex trafficking. Members are also building affordable housing and tutoring children in the Sterling community. More than 15% of Christ Church’s $3.6 million annual budget is earmarked for outreach.

What fascinates me is this church building today looks like our forefathers envisioned it to look in 1852.” -Rector Harrison McLeod “We like to be kind of entrepreneurial and find whatever the unmet need is in Greenville and see if we can offer a solution,” McLeod says. “Partnership is key. It’s always our preference to build a coalition around something so it’s a community project, not a Christ Church project.”

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FROM THE COVER

photo by STEPHANIE TROTTER

1820

CHRIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL: A HISTORY

The Rev. Rodolphus Dickinson left a Massachusetts law practice to move to South Carolina and establish St. James Mission.

1825 Above: The archives of Christ Church Episcopal contain such names from Greenville's past as Joel Poinsett, Vardry McBee and Joseph Earle.

THE CHURCHYARD

Construction cranes and office towers fill the horizon where Interstate 385 deadends downtown. Traffic whizzes past the corner of Church and East North streets at a pace Vardry McBee never could have imagined when giving away his pastureland in a small 19th century village. That initial “four acres and twenty-three poles” has grown into a vibrant 12-acre campus featuring a church and chapel, educational and administrative buildings, children’s playgrounds, and six acres of churchyard providing a tranquil spot of respite in the heart of downtown.

I am confident Greenville is the city that it is because of this church and other churches. I hope we are setting the stage for this church to continue to thrive and be an important voice for hope and transformation for another 200 years.”

come here to eat lunch, to visit and walk around. That’s what makes a city, is to have green space for people to enjoy. It’s tremendously important.” McLeod grows philosophical as he walks through the space from the parking lot to the church, passing dozens of granite monuments, carved headstones and ornate benches. “It’s a pilgrimage,” the spiritual leader says. “It’s a metaphorical sort of death to life. We take this journey every Sunday and surround ourselves by all of these people of faith who came before us, our forebearers who witnessed the power of this church and the power of Christ in their lives, and now we get to participate in that.” The past lives on in the present. “I hope they would be very gratified if we could interview them today,” he says. “They would say, ‘This is what we hoped for. This is what we built for.’ I am confident Greenville is the city that it is because of this church and other churches. I hope we are setting the stage for this church to continue to thrive and be an important voice for hope and transformation for another 200 years.”

Churchyard Residents

Vardry McBee deeds land for the establishment of an Episcopal church, and St. James Mission lays a cornerstone for its first building on Church Street, facing Coffee Street (a fountain now stands in this spot).

1826 St. James Mission becomes Christ Church Greenville, and the first service is held in the new building.

1835 Sarah Crittenden dies and is the first person to be buried in the Christ Church cemetery.

1852 Cornerstone of today’s church is laid as construction begins on a $15,000 church building.

1880 South Transept added, providing seating with rent-free pews.

1888 The Ladies Guild opens Christ Church Hospital, Greenville’s first general hospital.

-Rector Harrison McLeod “It’s an anchor for Greenville as we grow,” says Mary Johnston, lifelong member and chairman of this year’s churchyard preservation fundraising. “Visitors Below: Work crews located Christ Church Episcopal's sacred cornerstone just in time to kick off the first of the church’s bicentennial celebrations which will run through 2020.

“Father of Greenville” Vardry McBee U.S. Sen. Joseph H. Earle U.S. Rep William H. Perry Post-Civil War Provisional Gov. Benjamin F. Perry

photo by STEPHANIE TROTTER

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

1959 Christ Church Episcopal School opens with 213 students in primary through sixth grade.

1971 Christ Church is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

1977 Church elects first woman, Anne Blincow, to serve on the Vestry. For more visit GreenvilleJournal.com


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Late artist Dwain Skinner's work featured on VGSC's 2020 visitors guide

n story by JESSICA MULLEN | photos by BONFIRE VISUALS

Sweet

Desserts

Do something sweet for others! During the month of February, The Salvation Army of Greenville is partnering with local bakeries and restaurants for a fundraiser called Sweet Desserts. Sweet Desserts raises critical funds for The Salvation Army’s food assistance programs, like our daily soup kitchen and our family grocery boxes. Want to help? All you need to do is visit our Sweet Desserts partners and purchase their featured dessert! Then, a portion of your purchase will be donated to our food assistance programs. Learn more about our Sweet Desserts partners at SalvationArmyGreenville.org

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

This year’s VisitGreenvilleSC visitor’s guide features the work of Dwain Skinner, an Upstate native who spent his last year pursuing his dream of opening Woodbine Studio. Following his sudden death in December 2019, his winning piece has become the legacy he would leave to the community where he lived. Skinner was a graduate of the South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities and had lived in the Upstate for much of his life. In 2018 he left behind a corporate job to pursue art full-time. Together with his wife, Meredith, Skinner was planning to open Woodbine Studio and Gallery, located at 1112 Rutherford Road. It is named after the studio Meredith Skinner’s parents had opened in Brevard, North Carolina. One month before Dwain Skinner died, the couple participated in MAC’s Open Studios and invited the public into Woodbine Studio for the first time. “It was the first time we had invited people in to see his work and the first time he’d gotten any feedback in 20 years,” Meredith Skinner says. “He was kind of shy and didn’t like talking about his work much. He spent a lot of his time back in the back working on more pieces while people milled around.” Though he had a professional background in illustration, Skinner says her husband enjoyed creating with mixed media. She calls his style “eclectic” and says he liked to go to the Pickens Flea Market on Wednesday mornings to collect small pieces like knobs or lightbulbs that would find their way into his art. Skinner says Dwain spent much of the last year experimenting with his style,

trying to find his personal style as an artist as he created over 100 pieces in preparation for opening Woodbine Studio and Gallery. Skinner had approached “BirdsEye View,” the winning cover piece, with a new alldigital process. He was able to scan in paintings, drawings and clippings from magazines before digitally manipulating each one into just the right place. According to VisitGreenvilleSC, Skinner was inspired by 2019’s 15th anniversary of the construction of the Liberty Bridge in downtown Greenville. “It just seemed like a natural focal point given its importance to the downtown’s resurgence and its aesthetic appeal,” Dwain Skinner said in a 2019 interview with the publication. Dwain Skinner had been designing stand-alone birdhouses for 10 years, but birds made an appearance in his cover piece as an afterthought, Meredith Skinner says. “He had it all composed, and then he was like, ‘I don’t know, something’s just sort of missing.’ And then the birds came in and they just kind of changed the whole view of it. You almost felt like you were one of those birds flying above Greenville.” “Dwain’s piece has a great energy that evokes feelings of joy when looking at the people, places, and activities it represents in our community,” says Laura Connell, editor at VisitGreenvilleSC. “The use of

photo PROVIDED

Dwain’s piece has a great energy that evokes feelings of joy when looking at the people, places, and activities it represents in our community.” -Laura Connell, editor, VisitGreenvilleSC layering and texture creates an interesting sense of depth and beautifully balances realism and the abstract.” As winner of the cover contest, Skinner’s work will be distributed on all printed copies of the 2020 VisitGreenvilleSC Visitor’s Guide. “I’m really excited that though he may be gone, we get to share his art with 125,000 people this year,” says Stephanie Thorn, the project manager at VisitGreenvilleSC. In addition, Meredith Skinner still plans to honor Dwain and their work together by opening Woodbine Studio and Gallery on Feb. 14, the originally planned opening date. To learn more about Skinner’s work, visit Woodbine’s website or view his biography at VisitGreenvilleSC.com.


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What’s next for Greenville County’s 1996 ‘anti-gay’ resolution? n story & photo by EVAN PETER SMITH

The spacious chambers of Green- President Caroline Caldwell, one of ville County Council were barely large the multiple county residents who adenough to accommodate the crowd of dressed council. “While you were not people that showed up for the regular there, you are here now, and you have meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 21. While not an opportunity to right a wrong.” listed on the agenda, it was understood But according to County Attorney the key issue of the night would be the Mark Tollison, the resolution has alcounty’s 1996 anti-gay resolution, a ready expired and did not carry any proclamation that declared homosex- power to begin with. Unlike ordinances uality incompatible with community or regulations, Tollison said, a resolustandards. tion such as the one made in 1996 is a The question at hand: How would purely symbolic statement from the mathe men and women of the current jority of county council at that particuCounty Council lar time, carrespond to the rying no legal In 1996, the council actions of their authority. Once predecessors? the lineup of made a moral judgement. “I’ve never been that council nervous up here changes, the While you were not there, before tonight, but resolution is efyou are here now, and you this is a tough subfectively dead. “We can fairly ject,” said Counhave an opportunity to well say that it cilman Rick Robright a wrong.” simply is not erts to the packed binding,” Tollicrowd. -Caroline Caldwell, vice president, Upstate Pride The 1996 resoson said. C o u n c i l lution, which passed in a 9-3 vote, was not without members, however, asked whether controversy in its inception. In response there might be a way to review past to the resolution’s passage, the orga- resolutions in order to ensure that nizers of the 1996 Olympic torch run they are up to the standards of the curfamously put the torch in a van and rent council. “I’m sure if there were a resolution drove it through Greenville to Atlanta as an act of protest— news that made it that were racial in nature, I don’t think to the New York Times (The torch was we’d turn a blind eye to it,” Roberts said. Moving forward, Roberts and other taken out of the van when it reached city limits, but was driven when solely council members asked Tollison to look into a method in which the counin Greenville County). Today’s council members, none of whom cil could implement a set lifespan for were on the council in 1996, were asked by all non-binding resolutions, at which multiple speakers to issue a formal decla- point the resolutions officially expire unless council intervenes. ration of the resolution’s expiration. “In 1996, the council made a moral “I’d be happy to do some research,” judgement,” said Upstate Pride Vice Tollison said.

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COMMUNITY

Edwin McCain raises $105,000 at 50th birthday bash

n story by VINCENT HARRIS | photos by BART BOATWRIGHT

p r e s e n t e d

b y

Greenville Journal honors the history and lives of African Americans in our community. Each week, during the month of February, we will highlight the inspirational stories, events, notable people, music, culture and more.

Follow along with the series each week in the Greenville Journal and on GreenvilleJournal.com

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Edwin McCain could have done whatever he wanted for his 50th birthday. But the platinum-selling singer/songwriter, successful entrepreneur and Upstate resident decided to hold a fundraising reception and concert for a cause near to his heart: the Meyer Center for Special Children, the mission of which is to provide quality education and therapy services to preschool children with disabilities. He had a lofty—and fitting—goal for his fundraiser, which took place Monday, Jan. 20 at Avenue in downtown Greenville; since it was McCain’s 50th birthday, he was aiming to raise $50,000. We’re here to report, though, that McCain didn’t make that goal. He doubled it. Through ticket sales and donations, McCain’s event raised $105,000 for an undeniably good cause. But don’t try to praise McCain for it; he’ll set you straight pretty quickly. “I don’t take any of the credit for it,” he says. “That’s just indicative of Greenville. That’s our community. Everybody seems to consistently answer the call to arms, and the Meyer Center has been improving the outlook of these kids for decades. I said at the event that if you haven’t ever been over there and taken a tour, go spend 20 minutes there, and that’s all you need to know.” McCain has been closely associated with the Meyer Center for 20 years after learning about it when he first moved back to the Upstate.

That’s just indicative of Greenville. That’s our community. Everybody seems to consistently answer the call to arms.” -Edwin McCain,singer/songwriter “My girlfriend at the time, who is now my wife, and I, were playing in a co-ed softball league,” he says, pausing for a moment to laugh at the memory. “It’s so funny to think I actually used to play softball. Anyway, a really good friend of mine from high school named Ashley Dunlap, she worked for the Meyer Center, and she just offhandedly said at one of the games, ‘Hey, would you be interested in taking a tour of the school?’ And just like anybody who’s ever walked in the door, I walked in the door and said, ‘What do we need to do to help?’ And that began my relationship with the Meyer Center.” One of the things that moved McCain the most was the results that the Meyer

Center gets with mentally and physically disabled children, and his emotion is audible when he talks about them. “These kids, by no fault of their own, have a developmental disability or physical disability,” he says, “And the outlook that the parents have been given … it’s not good. And most of the parents are young parents, and so they don’t know what to do with this diagnosis that they’ve just been given. But they arrive at the Meyer Center and they’re told, ‘It’s okay. We know what all the doctors said and what they about the potential for your child, but we don’t believe that and we’re going to show you how we’re going to change it.’ And then they do it! And if they did it one time in a thousand, it would be miraculous; but they do it every day with every child.” In fact, one of those children was at McCain’s Jan. 20 event. “My friend Ally was there the other night,” he says. “I met her she was maybe 5 or 6. Now she’s 22. The doctors told her parents that she was never going to be able to interact with them or play. And the Meyer Center said, ‘That’s not true. We’re going to let her have a happy, healthy life.’” McCain’s support over the years has been both consistent and, usually, quiet. He typically doesn’t talk much about his efforts on the center’s behalf. “It’s sort of a fine line I run with philanthropic support,” he says. “I never want it to seem like grandstanding. So I always try to keep it under the radar.” In fact, he says the only reason he agreed to speak up this time was because of the Upstate’s response to his call to action. “The result from the other night is more indicative of the kind of community we live in,” he says. “My birthday was just the vehicle. I think that you could’ve framed that party in any way, and the result would have been the same thing. I’ve seen it happen over and over again; I’ve just been witnessing this willingness to create a better Greenville. It takes precedence over our individual concerns.”


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GSP Airport to build $75 million parking garage

n story by ANNA LEE | rendering by LS3P

A $75 million parking garage that will add 750 new public parking spaces at Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport is set to break ground later this year. The garage is part of a multiphase construction project that will also include an additional surface lot and expanded employee parking, according to airport officials. Nearly 2.6 million passengers travel through the airport each year, GSP Airport President and CEO Dave Edwards said in a release. “We anticipate that these new projects will meet our current need and allow us to continue to grow in the future,” Edwards said. The airport has already begun construction on 1,500 surface spaces for the new Economy Parking Lot C. That project is expected to be complete in October, with work on the parking garage to begin the following month.

Located adjacent to the terminal building, the new Parking Garage C will offer 750 new public parking spots and 750 ready-return rental car spaces. The public spaces will feature timesaving Park Assist technology, which allows travelers to quickly find available spaces, while the rental car portion will include a spacious lobby and reserved spaces for premium rental car pick-ups. Construction is expected to take two years.

n photos by IRINA RICE

LAST DAY OF UNITED COMMUNITY BANK ICE ON MAIN

JAN. 20

NEW EMPLOYEE PARKING

A new employee parking lot on GSP Drive near the National Weather Service facility is also in the works. To accommodate these construction projects, airport officials said some roadway enhancements will be required. Among the changes will be the renovation of the airport’s main entrance road, Aviation Parkway, which will be resurfaced. A traffic circle will also be constructed. Road work will start on Jan. 27. Lane closures on Aviation Parkway from Interstate 85 to GSP Drive are expected during construction. At least one lane in each direction will be open throughout the project, officials said. Travelers are encouraged to plan for additional drive time and to closely monitor signage.

Table 301 Catering and Kitchen unveils little free cookbook library

CAT YOGA AT ORGANIC CAT CAFE

JAN. 26

n story by JEANNIE PUTNAM| photo PROVIDED

In celebration of National Reading Day on Jan. 23, Table 301 Catering & Kitchen unveiled its little free cookbook library. In the former Soby’s on the Side in downtown Greenville, diners can find Table 301’s take on the little free library. “For us, food is love,” said Carl Sobocinski, founder and president of Table 301 Restaurant Group. “We create memories at all of our restaurants for people every single day. What better way to promote community and create more memories than by a shared library of cookbooks?”

The location recently underwent a refresh last year and has become a place to catch up on emails, have a business lunch or meet friends for coffee, which makes it the perfect spot for the little free cookbook library, Sobocinski said. “We’ve been fortunate to host a number of celebrated chefs over the years at our restaurants, many of whom are cookbook authors, and have built up quite a collection of our own,” Sobocinski said. “Between our team and some friends in the community, we were able to gather a great little collection to start. I can’t wait to see the evolution and growth of this as the word gets out.”

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Top kitchen trends for 2020 n story by KRISTINA HERNANDEZ

Joel Linn, the principal designer at Forest Kitchen Design Studio in Greenville, has seen it all in his 17 years designing kitchens, everything from modern and sleek to rustic and chic. Forest Kitchen, in business for three years in Greenville, is the satellite location of Forest Millwork, which boasts clients such as the Biltmore Estate and New Belgium Brewery. While some designs and materials are timeless, there are certainly trends in kitchen design that are popping up for 2020. “It’s all about light and bright,” Linn said. “While monochromatic colors aren’t completely out, off-white, creamy white, and grayer lights are in.” Here are several more trends that Linn and his team believe will make the biggest splash this year.

Light and bright

While white isn’t quitting anytime soon, there is a divergence between warmer, creamier whites and the cooler, slightly grayer whites. This light and bright look is typically contrasted against natural, or jewel tone splashes in certain areas such as the kitchen island.

Jewel tones

Jewel tones, especially in greens and blues, are big. Blues have been big, but jasper greens as well as hunter or brighter true greens are trending upward. Linn encourages clients to go bold in powder rooms, and the vanity color is often the key place to complement a more subdued kitchen.

High-sheen or super-matte materials

High-sheen materials are being favored, even if monochromatic, to create a stunning, clean look. High-gloss tiles in simple geometric patterns are big. Representing the other end of the sheen spectrum are the super-matte materials such as leathered or honed-stone countertops, which bring a softer feel and aesthetic to a kitchen. Super-matte lacquer cabinet finishes can soften a contemporary kitchen’s edge and make it feel truly liveable.

Walnut

Walnut is everywhere in the furniture world, including kitchens. The midcentury modern style is warranting perfect walnut use.

Natural stone & Deckton countertops

Natural stone, especially marble, is beautiful for kitchen countertops. Quartz is still strong as well. A product new to the U.S. market and which is gaining popularity is Dekton by Silestone, which is essentially an ultra-durable slab of porcelain tile.

Oak

Oak is beautiful wood and it is coming back in fresh, new, stain finishes — not yellow as when left to a more natural pigment, but true brown or light, cerused finish. It’s being used for cabinets and for light colored floors in kitchens.

Furniture-style islands

Islands are essential to the open-concept kitchen, and take on whatever shape we need them to for the best use and beautiful application. Islands are trending more towards a contrasting finish to the perimeter cabinetry. They are also often designed to be large, symmetrical, and furniture-like with a sink and faucet on center. Seating on the same plane as the working counter surface continues to remain the standard since it makes the island surface feel generous and brings intimacy between cook and visitors.

Large ranges

All-in-one ranges are on trend right now rather than separate cook-tops and ovens. Stainless steel ranges continue to dominate, although some homeowners are bold enough to do a red range like those seen on Pinterest. Even though the 30-inch range continues to be the industry standard, wider ranges are surging in popularity.

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CAP BRASHIER BOYCE-LAWN ADD. SOUTHAMPTON

BOYCE-LAWN ADD. STONEBROOK FARM CRESCENT TERRACE GOWER ESTATES

BOYCE-LAWN ADD.

CHASTAIN GLEN HARTNESS COACHMAN PLANTATION PARKERS LANDING THE TOWNES WEST RIVERPLACE FIVE FORKS PLANTATION ACADIA CHASTAIN GLEN BRENTWOOD FOREST RIDGE BRADLEY OAKS THE BRIO FOXCROFT GREEN VALLEY ESTATES EASTON RIDGE CURETON CORNERS RIVERSTONE ASCOT RIVERPLACE KILGORE FARMS EAST HIGHLANDS ESTATES SWANSGATE BRENTWOOD HAMMETT CORNER HIGHVIEW TOWNES KILGORE FARMS RIVER OAKS GRAYSON PARK WATERS EDGE GLENVIEW PARK HIGHLAND CREEK POINSETT CORNERS GLENS @ LEXINGTON PLACE EASTON RIDGE LONGLEAF THE RESERVE AT RICHGLEN CAMDEN COURT BIG OAKS TRAXLER PARK HOLLY TRACE MARES HEAD FARM RIDGEWAY COTTAGES HIDDEN LAKE PRESERVE ASHETON LOST RIVER COUNTRY VIEW SHELLBROOK PLANTATION SUGAR CREEK DEVENGER PLACE BRIDGEWATER ROCKBRIDGE TOWNHOMES HERITAGE HILL LOST RIVER BOTANY WOODS MORNING MIST WEBBINGTON GRAYSON POINTE PINEHURST AT PEBBLE CREEK HARTWOOD LAKE ROCKBRIDGE TOWNHOMES NORTHCLIFF SQUIRES CREEK THE VALLEY GILDER CREEK RIVER DOWNS SUMMERFIELD THE RESERVE AT RICHGLEN

PRICE $1,315,000 $1,200,000 $1,200,000 $1,170,000 $1,000,000 $930,000 $850,000 $830,000 $790,000 $700,000 $679,000 $642,500 $630,000 $625,000 $610,300 $575,000 $540,162 $535,000 $517,996 $507,356 $491,000 $485,264 $480,000 $480,000 $478,450 $476,000 $464,500 $464,431 $455,066 $435,000 $432,000 $412,000 $410,000 $410,000 $407,186 $395,000 $395,000 $386,109 $377,000 $375,000 $370,000 $365,000 $360,000 $353,000 $345,000 $343,000 $340,000 $339,500 $331,183 $325,000 $324,081 $320,000 $316,000 $312,900 $311,110 $310,141 $309,227 $305,000 $305,000 $304,517 $302,000 $300,000 $300,000 $297,900 $296,980 $296,500 $292,000 $291,500 $290,000 $287,500 $286,000 $283,972 $280,715 $280,000 $276,146 $275,000 $273,435 $272,500 $271,338 $270,000 $270,000 $269,000 $267,542 $266,000 $265,000 $265,000 $264,150 $264,000 $261,622 $260,000

SELLER ELDER AVA CHRISTINE A RE ZEPHYR HOLDINGS SC LLC CAP BRASHIER LLC CHI-STENHOUSE LLC WILLIAMS 347 LLC CASEY WILLIAM S (JTWROS) SNYDER GARY H (JTWROS) COATES WILLIAM A HALTER PROPERTIES SC GEN FREEMAN REVOCABLE TRUST ZINSSER ELLEN S (JTWROS) MANNING NATHAN E (JTWROS TOBIN MARIA T MOTLEY LINDSEY B TRUST T SPINKS STEPHEN C HOFFMAN JEAN N CONNECTOR PLUS LLC ATTICUS INVESTMENTS LLC TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN J FRANCIS BUILDERS LLC MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L ESSEX HOMES SOUTHEAST IN MARK THOENNESS BUILDERS PENCE DAVID REYNOLDS CAROLINE TOMPKI ROTHERMEL KEVIN (JTWROS) FITZGERALD RYAN H (JTWRO TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN D R HORTON INC MARK III PROPERTIES INC FRANCIS HELEN S NEDVED DAVID ANTHONY KENNEDY MAURA W (JTWROS) ARNOLD SANDRA G MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L LAMOUREUX DEBRA ARTISAN CUSTOM WOODWORKI NVR INC PYLE BARRY J FREIBURGER JODI L MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH JONES ELIZABETH (JTWROS) BROOME ANN L D R HORTON INC PHILLIPS NORMA J (JTWROS NVR INC PETRILLI JANE D KATZ ROBERT S TRUSTEE EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL DOLCH MICHAEL C (JTWROS) DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL REMEDIOS BRIAN K SILLEMAN DONALD J STC PROPERTIES INC MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L D R HORTON INC DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C IN HAO YING (JTWROS) HUDSON GLEN W WOOD CATHERINE M COLEMAN ANN S SHEPARD CHARLES D DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL RENAISSANCE CUSTOM HOMES ADAMS HOMES AEC LLC MCMILLIN DAVID MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN FISHER DOUGLAS P (JTWROS CHAPMAN DAVID G (JTWROS) BRAVO PATRICIA E KUDERNA DAWN M MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN JOHNSTONE CARY MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH ROBERSON KATHERINE C BIGHAM ANA-CATHRYN (JTWR ELITE PROPERTY DEVELOPME SK BUILDERS INC EDWARDS PEGGY B FOWLER BRIAN BOYES JAMES ANDREW (JTWR TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN MASON LESLIE B DAVIS-PACHTER LUCY (JTWR WHITE BENJAMIN R (JTWROS NELSON H D GOTTLER DAVID A DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL CENTRAL REALTY HOLDINGS

SOLD BUYER MOTLEY ELIZABETH MORRIS ARBE-M LLC MARK III PROPERTIES LLC DMOF LLC WILLIAMS 347 LLC SYLVESTER DEBRA M (JTWRO CHI-STENHOUSE LLC DIXON LEE S DIXON MARGAR WILLIAMS 347 LLC KENNEDY JESSICA (JTWROS) HAASE NICKOLETTE GRACE HOWLE JENNA REDICK (JTWR GREENE LYNNETTE LORENZEN HELEN T (JTWROS WILLIAMS 347 LLC HALTER MANNING NATHAN EMERSON ( RENEWABLE WATER RESOURCE 421 NORTHMAINSTREET LLC PATEL BARKHA (JTWROS) WELLS ELIZABETH SANDERS LEONARD CHRISTOPHER S (J COSTE DAVID M DERICKE DAWN (JTWROS) KE FIGLIORELLI THOMAS HASSMAN ERIC (TICWROS) M HUME LINDA M (JTWROS) HU JONES ALISON (JTWROS) JU PETTIT RONALD KIMBERLY ( GIBBS CALVIN (JTWROS) GI SK BUILDERS INC DORITY PETER W ROUSSEAU LAURA GIORGIO BURNS NICOLE L (JTWROS) CLARK JAMES J (JTWROS) G NGUYEN LAN THI (JTWROS) PASHNIK LORI ALDRIDGE CHARLES F (JTWR BREWINGTON DANYELL (JTWR DUAN QUAN YI PILCHER JUNE J RACHAMALLA KIRAN ALAM WALTER LATIF (JTWRO WINN RUTH M RESTATED REV HANSEL LINDSAY CONNER HOLLY SEIB (JTWRO DIMINO KATHLEEN MARIE (J SANDIFORD JOHN (JTWROS) MANGUM EMILY G (JTWROS) MESA ADELA E CUNNIFF JESSICA NICHOLE BATES ASHLEY W BATES THO KENNEY ELIZABETH (JTWROS OLIVA LAUREN A STULL CHAD STULL HOLLY DAVIS HARRY (JTWROS) DAV WISE BRANTLEY S (JTWROS) MAYO CHRISTOPHER D MAYO JIMENEZ GRESMARI RALLIS RONALD DEAN SR (J NIE DIANE (JTWROS) NIE J BALL JULIE BALL PHILLIP SYKES ELIZABETH CLAIR-CO DUNKO DOUGLAS R STILES D CARMICAL HANNAH E WILLIAMS BLONDENIA GHANDI VIKRAM RANA NITA TENNEY CHRISTINA MARIE ( PIERCE CARL (JTWROS) PIE JUNQUEIRA LEIRIANE DA CR KUDEY ANDREW J (JTWROS) BRYSON AUDREY KEELIN CELISSAINT WOOD R MOYERS DANA REYNOLDS CAROLINE TOMPKI ALEXANDER JABARI TERRELL CURRY ERYN MARSHALL AUST CROFT DEMETRISE (JTWROS) GALE MARY (JTWROS) GALE SILLEMAN DONALD JAY (JTW PATIN ELISABETH PEACOCK NIEMI RYAN E (JTWROS) NI DUMIT ALISHA (JTWROS) LE JARISCH MARCIA LYNN CHRISTY ANDREA (JTWROS) WILLIAMS JIMI DEMPSEY AMY (JTWROS) DEM MAYO CYNTHIA HUTCHISON ( CARGILL EMILY MARIE (JTW BERBER WALEED M (JTWROS) ELIZABETH J COUTURE LLC

ADDRESS 225 W FARIS RD 2535 JOHNS PL PO BOX 170248 400 MEMORIAL DR STE 400 117 WILLIAMS ST 204 PRIVELLO PL 231 STENHOUSE RD 214 CLEVELAND ST 117 WILLIAMS ST 23 NORMAN PL 334 JONES AVE 206 BUCKINGHAM RD 321 W EARLE ST 317 JONES AVE 117 WILLIAMS ST 14 STONEHAVEN DR 561 MAULDIN RD 1016 BEL AIRE DR 701 ST LAURENT WAY 203 TOLLISON DR 239 SCOTTS BLUFF DR 202 LAKEWAY PL 104 N LEACH ST 155 RIVERPLACE UNIT 408 2115 BOHICKET WAY 19 CHICORA WOOD LN 115 FATHERS DR 210 SEMILLON RD 507 BLAIZE CT 955 W WADE HAMPTON BLVD STE 7 208 WOODBRIDGE WAY 5105 CANYON CREST DR 313 CONTINENTAL DR 104 SUNRISE VALLEY RD 1 EASTON MEADOW WAY 12 CURETON ST 46 GLENN ST 106 MOHEGAN WAY 335 ASCOT RIDGE LN 155 RIVERPLACE UNIT 101 124 QUIET CREEK CT 223 CAROLINA AVE 104 WREN WAY 700 PAXTON ROSE DR 215 WANDO WAY 75 ITASCA DR 411 KILGORE FARMS CIR 5 STONE VALLEY CT 228 HEARTHWOOD LN 2 PARIS RD 8 GLENVIEW PARK PL 7 DUNROBIN LN 101 W COURT ST UNIT 227 208 BELMONT STAKES WAY 118 EASTON MEADOW WAY 416 HILBURN WAY 128 QUAIL CREEK DR 20 BENTLEY WAY 2303 OLD PARKER RD 16 OAKMONT CT 7 LEGENDS WAY 201 CIRCLE SLOPE DR 9 PILGRIM RD 28 RIDGEWAY AVE 500 FLYING SQUIRREL WAY 206 HOLBORNE DR 307 RIVER OTTER RD 86 RIVER PARK LN 208 OYSTERCATCHER WAY 200 SUGAR CREEK LN 115 HARTSDALE CT 325 BLUE DANUBE DR 207 WRIGHTWOOD LN 100 COLVIN RD 301 BRISTLE FERN TRL 122 OAK GROVE LAKE RD 511 TULIP TREE LN 5 PADDOCK RUN LN 300 GRAYSON DR 15 PINEHURST GREEN WAY 1400 JONES MILL RD 120 HARTWOOD LAKE LN 201 WRIGHTWOOD LN 11 BLUFF RIDGE CT 206 CHARIOT LN 11 BRAEBURN DR PO BOX 817 209 TANNER CHASE WAY 143 QUAIL CREEK DR 715 WADE HAMPTON BLVD

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SUBDIVISION 1200 PELHAM 100 EAST FAIRVIEW POINTE ROCKBRIDGE TOWNHOMES MILL POND AT RIVER SHOALS KATHERINES GARDEN HAWK CREST REEDY SPRINGS VICTORIA PARK HAVEN AT RIVER SHOALS HAVEN AT RIVER SHOALS SHERWOOD FOREST TRIPLE CREEK SEVEN OAKS@ BLUE RIDGE PONDICHERRY MARTINS GROVE TRIPLE CREEK BRENTWOOD BROOKSIDE FLAGSTONE VILLAGE KATHERINES GARDEN ADAMS RUN KATHERINES GARDEN AUGUSTA ROAD RANCHES THE GROVE WADE HAMPTON GARDENS IVYBROOKE WATERMILL SHANNON TERRACE COUNTRY MEADOWS BROOKSIDE ORCHARD FARMS CROSSWINDS WYNDHAM PLACE HERITAGE VILLAGE GOLDEN GROVE ESTATES GREENS AT ROCKY CREEK SPARROWS POINT COUNTRY KNOLLS CHURCHILL FALLS DUNEAN MILLS WILLOW GROVE RICELAN SPRINGS CHARTWELL ESTATES TRIPLEX RIVERSIDE CHASE SHERWOOD FOREST RIVE RBIRCH VILLAS REMINGTON HALF MILE LAKE THORNBLADE CROSSING VINEYARD AT PLANTERS ROW HERITAGE VILLAGE HUNTERS POINTE COTTON MILL PLACE ONE LENNOX LAKE TOWNES AT PINE GROVE WOODS AT BONNIE BRAE BRUSHY CREEK TOWNHOMES KILGORE POINTE MAPLE GROVE BRUSHY CREEK TOWNHOMES BRUSHY CREEK TOWNHOMES DUNWOODY OAKS WATERFORD PARK BRUSHY CREEK TOWNHOMES BRUSHY CREEK TOWNHOMES TOWNES AT BROOKWOOD II EDWARDS FOREST HOWARDS PARK PINE BROOK EXTN CARLTON PLACE HUGHES HEIGHTS WESTWOOD AVONDALE FOREST WATERFORD PARK RIVERBEND BOYCE-LAWN ADD STALLINGS HEIGHTS

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PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR DEC 30 - JAN 03

PRICE SELLER

BUYER

ADDRESS

SUBDIVISION

PRICE SELLER

BUYER

ADDRESS

$260,000 $260,000 $257,000 $255,000 $253,000 $252,500 $250,051 $250,000 $250,000 $250,000 $247,719 $245,000 $245,000 $244,900 $244,000 $240,000 $237,990 $237,521 $235,500 $234,528 $232,990 $230,202 $230,000 $230,000 $229,379 $229,000 $226,325 $225,000 $225,000 $224,900 $222,000 $221,500 $220,000 $220,000 $220,000 $219,000 $215,000 $210,400 $208,500 $208,475 $207,000 $207,000 $205,000 $205,000 $205,000 $204,000 $204,000 $203,985 $201,000 $200,798 $200,500 $200,000 $200,000 $199,500 197500 $196,000 $194,500 $188,000 $186,345 $185,600 $183,800 $182,000 $180,000 $179,900 $175,000 $175,000 $173,500 $173,000 $170,500 $170,000 $170,000 $169,000 $168,000 $165,000 $164,900 $164,518 $164,000 $163,500 $161,100 $160,000 $159,000 $155,000 $155,000 $150,000 $150,000 $150,000 $149,900 $146,200 $145,407 $145,000

JOHNSON JOHN BUFORD (JTW BAKKER DAVID M TAYLOR AMANDA L (JTWROS) SWANSON JILL (JTWROS) SW GARVEY BENJAMIN GARVEY B DE LEON JUAN R (JTWROS) SHOOK ANTHONY AUSTIN (JT LINVILLE JAMES (JTWROS) DUNFORD DEBORAH LEE DAVITIAN LAUREN-GLENN GILLOTTE TIFFANY L COWPER LOIS W (JTWROS) C CRISCUOLA DEBRA (JTWROS) HOFFMAN RONALD III BRUNER AARON ERIC HAMPTO DEROSIER KIMBERLY R EDWARDS AUDREY (JTWROS) TURI CYNTHIA (JTWROS) TU SONNTAG CAROL A (JTWROS) MICHADICK MICHAEL LOPEZ ADRIAN PANIAGUA (J D R HORTON INC HELMUTH SAMUEL SMITH DAVID L MITCHELL FRED NEAL JR ALTOMARO PETER FRANK JR DULL CHRISTINE (JTWROS) JONATHAN A GOOD HOLDINGS BRADY BRICE HENSLEY CALE E (JTWROS) CLICK GEORGE L PATRIN CAROL A PEGRAM JAMES HANNON DETTMAN STEVEN MARK ANTOL KRISTIN NICHOLE (J GARCIA ELISET GIOVAGNOLI VALTER (JTWRO STANLEY CARLEE ROBERTS CHARLES H JR (JT HART ROGER CAMPBELL SHAMONA FERHATI MARSILDA (JTWROS TINGLE CLARK GORDON STECKER DIANA HARNESBERGER TREVOR D ARNOLD SANDRA G (L-EST) FIGUEROA JANETTE SINGLETARY BENJAMIN TERA BABB BETTY C BABB EDWIN GUBIOTTI JANET HEDRICK WESLEY WILDAY KEVIN MARTIN SARKELA 12 LLC BENNETT MAURICE L (JTWRO TURNER JASON CODY (JTWRO SCIESZKA DANIEL J (JTWRO HUFF SARAH INTERIANO-LEDBETTER PRIS BOWDEN LARRY JR (JTWROS) MAJOR CHRISTOPHER JR HALL JASON D SHULL JEREMY J SULLIVAN MELANIE MARY (J AGUIRRE MICHAEL H (JTWRO PIZZIRUSSO PASCAL EK REAL ESTATE FUND I LL KURGANSKY DANIEL (JTWROS WARD MAURICE J COOK SHARON E HOPPER (JT WOODRUFF INDUSTRIAL LANE WANG YAKUN (JTWROS) YI B NUTHALAPATI ANIL C (JTWR PERRY EMILEIGH CORTES LAURA KRISHNA RAKESH K GODAVAR HENDERSON THOMAS SULLIVAN ANGELA W HASTINGS FAMILY IRREVOCA D R HORTON-CROWN LLC AMRI KUU LLC VIVEROS FERNANDO CLEMENT HENRY E HAMILTON BERTICS ALBIN (JTWROS) B BURCH JOSEPH CAMERON II WARREN WILLIAM H CASEY DAVID J MCKENZIE PATRICK KEVIN WILLIAMS 347 LLC EDGERTO NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC SALAZAR MISAEL

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FENWICK HEIGHTS MAYFAIR ESTATES DEL NORTE ESTATES HARTNESS FOXFIELD ADAMS MILL ESTATES CARDINAL PARK JAMESTOWNE COMMONS WOODSIDE BRAMLETT MCKENNA COMMONS BROOK GLENN GARDENS SUMTER ESTATES BRAXTON RIDGE WOODLAND HEIGHTS COUNTRY WALK PIEDMONT MFG CO LONGLEAF SCARSDALE MANOR BROOKHAVEN SAN SOUCI PARK MCCAULEY MOUNTAIN WESTWOOD WOODWIND TOWNHOUSES WOODFIELDS BUMCOMBE PARK BAYWOOD PLACE PIEDMONT MFG CO THE PLANTATION ON PELHAM CLIFFS VALLEY LAKE RIDGE KINGS COURT CLIFF RIDGE COLONY KATHERINES GARDEN STILLWATERS JUDSON MILL KITTLESON PLACE RIVERSTONE RIVERSIDE CLIFF RIDGE COLONY BOYCE-LAWN ADD BOYCE-LAWN ADD BOYCE-LAWN ADD HUNTERS RIDGE DUNEAN MILLS LAKE HARBOR SUMMER GREEN PALMETTO TERRACE OAKVALE TERRACE PIEDMONT ESTATES ROSEMAN HEIGHTS OXFORD ESTATES BOTANY WOODS TIMBER GLEN LOCKWOOD HEIGHTS HERITAGE PARK HERITAGE PARK GREEN HILLS OAK CREST GROVE PARK COTTAGES HARRISON BRIDGE FIELD HOUSE CONDOMINIUM EASTSIDE PROFESSIONAL CT. BOYCE-LAWN ADD. BOYCE-LAWN ADD. BOYCE-LAWN ADD.

$144,000 $143,000 $140,000 $135,000 $135,000 $133,500 $132,800 $132,000 $129,000 $128,900 $127,000 $126,000 $123,500 $123,000 $120,850 $120,000 $115,000 $115,000 $115,000 $115,000 $110,000 $110,000 $110,000 $109,395 $107,500 $105,000 $103,900 $100,000 $95,000 $95,000 $93,000 $91,500 $88,500 $87,700 $85,050 $85,000 $84,000 $83,936 $82,875 $80,000 $73,500 $72,000 $67,500 $65,000 $60,000 $60,000 $57,577 $52,832 $52,500 $52,000 $51,150 $50,000 $40,000 $37,000 $30,000 $28,754 $27,908 $27,908 $25,000 $25,000 $24,500 $18,500 $15,000 $14,000 $12,500 $12,500 $10,000 $8,000 $4,000 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10 $10

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FRAMPTON LISA 100 EAST VENTURE LLC HINEMAN MICHAEL ALLEN TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN STC PROPERTIES INC AGOSTINELLI DIXIE LEE RE SK BUILDERS INC REVI HELEN H VOELLINGER KEITH W HARVEY DAVID C FAMILY RE GREAT SOUTHERN HOMES INC BRIGHT KIM M LAPIERRE JANE M (JTWROS) GEISS THOMAS C (JTWROS) JOYCE KENNETH V JR SMZ INVESTMENTS INC D R HORTON INC SK BUILDERS INC PALMETTO DEVELPMT CO NOR SANFORD ROBIN E (JTWROS) D R HORTON INC BCB AND PRB 2 LLC LOOK-UP LODGE CHRISTIAN MICCIULLI MARISSA ROSE ( DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL BORDERS LEIGH SK BUILDERS INC BB 1031 LLC ALJAONI DANA Y (SURV) TCF REAL PROPERTY HOLDIN MOORE DOLORES L ACERSON AERSTA K (JTWROS BERRY TUCKER (JTWROS) GOINGS WANDA BURNS REPAIR SERVICE INC HAMPTON CHARLENE SISSON DAVID A SK BUILDERS INC BREDICE KARRIN D NVR INC SFR3 LLC SALTERS SCOTT A (JTWROS) BILLMAN CLAIRE CUNNINGHA GOMEZ SERGIO G BROWN KEVIN M MILLS EVELYN JEAN KEIR KENDALL (JTWROS) D R HORTON INC SIMPSONVILLE PROPERTY LL H&H CUSTOM PROPERTIES LL FYANS ROBERT W PERKINS WILLIAM F SNOW JOY L (JTWROS) BAKER DORIS JEAN (IND) COOPER PHYLLIS ANN CHRISTY ANDREA L (JTWROS HOWARD PAMELA C DEMPSEY ROBERT D JR NVR INC ANDERSON MICHAEL C JR BARTHOLOMEW PETER W (JTW KILLARNEY VIRGINIA ESTHE KELLER DAVID RUSSEL KURUCAR HELENA R (JTWROS CYR ALLEN (JTWROS) JERNIGAN SYLVIA V D R HORTON INC POLLY SHAWN GRANT GREEN DAVID (JTWROS) AIR POWER INC D R HORTON INC D R HORTON INC TODT ELLA L BROWN NIKKI M D R HORTON INC D R HORTON INC SULLIVAN JACOB B DAVIS ERMA P MARK III PROPERTIES INC WAY HARRIET KIMBRELL CAROLYN S HOOVER LESSIE J TURNER BRITTNEY BURCH LELAND E SR DAVIS HARRY T (JTWROS) JMC 1 LLC BARRON FELIX B SPINKS STEPHEN C GAMBLE JOHN G PFENNING LEIGH

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DRISKILL KIM DARLENE HENSLEY CALE E FULP JAMES A FREITAG ROBERT C MAYES LATORIA A KELLEY THOMAS GENTRY TRAVIS E LOLLIS STEPHANIE S & V ENTERPRISES LLC MARSHALL KENNETH A (JTWR MORRIS BETTY G OFFERPAD SPVBORROWER1 LL NICE GUYS BUYING HOUSES BRUCE REVOCABLE LIVING T GUARDADO TOMASA DEWEY JAMES (SURV) SULLIVAN JORY LARA BRAXTON RIDGE LLC GRACE MINISTRIES OF DURH ROSENTHAL EDMUND VICTOR FERGUSON STEVEN A (JTWRO TAYLOR JANET EDG RENTALS LLC MARK III PROPERTIES INC RICHTER DENISE M BALLEW TIMOTHY S MARK III PROPERTIES INC MOPSEY LLC GREEN BARNEY 33 HOLDINGS LLC 4MC RENOVATIONS LLC SALAS LISA (JTWROS) COTUNA BENJAMIN DICKSON W M III SHIRLEY GEORGIE M KEE DAVID C MANN CHRISTOPHER A IV 5 LLC BOWEN JONES E JR CANTRELL RUTH GRANT FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAG FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAG ARNDT FRANK-PETER GEVEDA MARIE V REVOC TRU EVANS PATRICK TERRILL WHEELER CLAUDIA P MARK III PROPERTIES INC BE STILLWATERS LLC GAINES JAMES RANDALL TM PROPERTIES LLC MARK III PROPERTIES INC BAKER BRIAN EDWARD HICKS SARA E MCCOY STEPHANIE L CLIFF RIDGE COLONY LOT L CAINE REALTY HOLDINGS LL CAINE COMPANY INC EDGERTON STEPHEN MCGEHEE JEFFERSON (HSA) KEASLER ROBERT A ROBLEDO HECTOR DANIEL HENDRICKS BARTO JR GENERAL FUNDING INC GARCIA ALMA DICKSON WILLIAM M III DICKSON WILLIAM M III GONZALEZ ESEQUIEL AVESAD HESS LIVING TRUST ALLEN ELIZABETH ANOSIKE EBERECHUKWU SMART CHERYL B LORA YEDDY R FOWLER GEORGE J ADEGBITE YETUNDE M AITTANIEMI DORIS V LIVIN FERNANDEZ EMILIO (SURV) FERNANDEZ EMILIO (JTWROS SURVIVOR'S TRUST A QUATTLEBAUM ANN A HUGHES NATHAN D ANGELONE JANE L (JTWROS) LITTLEJOHN TENEALYA CUNNINGHAM LEE DMOF LLC DMOF LLC DMOF LLC DMOF LLC CAINE REALTY HOLDINGS LL CAINE COMPANY INC EDGERTON STEPHEN


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ARTS & CULTURE

frontier

food

New taco popup Comal 864 brings “frontier food” to Greenville

catch comal 864

n story by EVAN PETER SMITH | photos by IRINA RICE

sundays The Whale | 3-7PM Whenever Dayna Lee fires up her stove, she returns home. Home for Lee is Brownsville, Texas, a city at the very southernmost tip of the state, right on the border with Mexico. As a child, Lee grew up helping her grandmother in the kitchen, stripping the thorns off of juicy nopal

1108 S Main St, Suite #116, Greenville Those looking to try her food will see Lee prepare it herself. You’ll select your dish and choose a type of protein: The Whale | 5:30-9PM bistek, al pastor, cho1108 S Main St, Suite #116, Greenville rizo, chicken, nopales cactus or black beans. To customize your dish, you can load up with as many toppings as you Fireforge Crafted Beer | 5:30-8:30PM want from the toppings 311 E Washington St, Greenville bar — not to mention Lee’s handmade salsas, which she whips up fresh each day. “The spiciness of the The Whale | 6-9PM salsas changes every day depending on how much 1108 S Main St, Suite #116, Greenville my 5-year-old son annoyed me that morning,” Lee joked. Lee said she hopes to expand to a brick-andmortar location in the future, but she already says she’s feel- a large chain restaurant, and she also ing a renewed sense of joy in her work. worked in the corporate world. Now For years she was a service manager at she says she has no plans to return to sitting behind a desk. “I’m excited to bring people a kind I’m excited to bring people a kind of food they may of food they may not have experienced before,” Lee said. “It’s made with love, not have experienced before. It’s made with love, and be- and being able to showcase my home ing able to showcase my home through my food is what through my food is what brings me joy.”

cactuses or draping homemade tortillas over the flames. She brings those warm memories to her cooking every time she prepares her fresh tacos, quesadillas, tortas, nachos and other dishes at her new popup food eatery, Comal 864, which she runs alongside her fiancé, Anthony Marquez. “It’s very much frontier food, border-city food,” Lee said. This type of cuisine — frontera food, as Lee calls it — is not fully Mexican or fully of the United States. Instead, it occupies that middle space where cultural histories merge, which Lee calls the deep tradition of the border. “Our culture is super rich when it comes to showing love through food,” she said. Comal 864 is an intimate operation. There is no fancy setup, nor flashy gimmicks. There’s not even a food truck or a fixed physical location. Lee operates as a popup taco stand out of two local bars, Fireforge on East Washington Street and The Whale on South Main Street.

mondays

tuesdays

thursdays

brings me joy.”

-Dayna Lee, owner, Comal 864 18

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31


AMAZING GRACE

David Drake, circa 1800 to circa 1870 storage vessel, 1857 alkaline-glazed stoneware inscribed: Aug 16, 1857, Dave I wonder where is all my relation Friendship to all and every nation

I wonder where is all my relation Friendship to all and every nation Experience the powerful story of David Drake, an enslaved African-American who worked as a “turner” in several pottery manufacturing facilities in South Carolina’s Edgefield District. Drake, who was known only as “Dave” before 1865, learned to both read and write, dangerous and even illegal skills for a slave to possess. Drake openly expressed his literacy by inscribing original poems on many of the utilitarian works he created. The identities of millions of enslaved African-Americans, whose talents and labor supported the development of American culture, were overlooked or disregarded by recorded history. Through the modest wares handcrafted and inscribed by David Drake, at least one remarkable voice remains to speak on behalf of the lives and stories irretrievably lost. The GCMA is home to the largest institutional collection of pottery vessels by David Drake, including single-handle jugs, storage jars, pitchers, a syrup jug, and a rare butter churn.

Journal FP Amazing Grace 4.20.18.indd 1

Greenville County Museum of Art

420 College Street on Heritage Green 864.271.7570 gcma.org Wed - Sat 10 am - 5 pm Sun 1 pm - 5 pm

admission free

4/23/18 10:41 AM


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UPSTATE BEAT

Jason Ringenberg on life as “the Mick Jagger of country-rock” VINCENT HARRIS Contributor

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

Singer-songwriter Jason Ringenberg was present at the birth of a whole new musical genre in the early 1980s. Ringenberg was the charismatic, cowboy-hat-wearing stringbean out in front of a red-hot band called Jason and The Scorchers, a group that combined punk-rock velocity and country twang into a whole new thing called “cowpunk.” Melding Ringenberg’s pure-honky-tonk vocals and Warner Hodges’ blazing rock guitar, Jason and The Scorchers spent most of the 1980s as the Next Big Thing, garnering a rabid cult following and becoming critical darlings, but never scoring a real hit single. The Scorchers eventually burned out in the early 1990s, but the sound the band helped pioneer eventually bore fruit through artists who work at the crossroads of rock and country like the Drive-By Truckers and Jason Isbell. “I’m really happy when young artists give The Scorchers a nod as an influence to them,” Ringenberg says. “I remember meeting Jason Isbell once and I could tell the way he talked about our music that he was a fan of our early stuff. I’m very proud when younger musicians find something to like about what we did.” In the aftermath of The Scorchers’ breakup in the early 1990s, Ringenberg quietly built a solo career that was more expansive than anyone could’ve expected. He’s crafted a blend of folk, country and ragged garage rock over five albums, the most recent of which is 2019’s “Stand Tall.” But he’s also launched a second career as a popular children’s music performer, Farmer Jason, and every so often he gets back together with The Scorchers for reunion tours. “I’m a very fortunate fellow to be 61 years old and able to play music and have people show up, and never have had any hit songs,” Ringenberg says. “It’s a really remarkable story. And I think that’s attributed to the fact that I’ve done so many different things.” Ringenberg was in town in 2019 as part of the Cosmic Honky Tonk Revue, which

JASON RINGENBERG » THURSDAY, FEB. 6 | 8PM » RADIO ROOM » $12/ADVANCE | $15/AT DOOR RADIOROOMGREENVILLE.COM

n photo by GREGG ROTH

I’m a very fortunate fellow to be 61 years old and able to play music and have people show up, and never have had any hit songs.” -Jason Ringenberg, musician featured fellow alt-country survivors Chuck Mead and Jim Lauderdale. But this time around, at his Thursday, Feb. 6 show at the Radio Room, it’ll be just Ringenberg, an acoustic guitar, and a collection of songs that have stood the test of time, even if they never burned up the charts. “I love the spontaneity of it and the oneon-one contact with the audience,” Ringenberg says of his career-spanning solo acoustic show. “I usually have the first couple songs and the last couple of songs figured out, but the second set is completely spontaneous, because I do that as a request set.” The solo setup is also a bit of a challenge for Ringenberg because he’s worked with some pretty incredible musicians in the past. “I’m not a great musician,” he says with a laugh. “My records have really great musicians on them, and with The Scorchers I had Warner Hodges. So when I step on stage solo, I have to completely change the songs, and sort of sing them as they were written initially.” Ringenberg says that there’s a big difference between being the frontman for a raging cowpunk band and being a solo acoustic troubadour. “Being a frontman is much more physical,” he says. “It’s more physically demanding because people expect that; I’m sort of the Mick Jagger of country-rock. With the solo thing, it’s much more difficult mentally, because you can never, ever let up.”


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

PAUL'S PICK

‘Timely’ production of ‘1984’ arrives at Peace Center

TWICE THE JOKES

PAUL HYDE Contributor

n photos by RICHARD TERMINE

GEORGE ORWELL’S “1984” » TUESDAY, FEB. 4 | 7PM » PEACE CENTER GUNTER THEATRE » $45 PEACECENTER.ORG Big Brother is coming to town. The Aquila Theatre’s production of “George Orwell’s ‘1984’” arrives in Greenville at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4 at the Peace Center’s Gunter Theatre. At a time of fake news, intense partisan animosity and attacks on the press, “1984” seems as relevant as ever, said Desiree Sanchez, director of the production. “It’s an important work that is really timely,” Sanchez said. The New York-based Aquila, specializing in stage adaptations of classic works of literature, has visited Greenville several times in recent years.

It’s great to see audiences so engaged with the work. They feel it’s very important, and we want our productions to facilitate dialogue and community.”

“The parallels with today’s fake news are uncanny,” Sanchez said. Michael Gene Sullivan’s 2013 stage adaptation moves the action from 1984 to more contemporary times. With a cast of six, the play takes place in the ironically named Ministry of Love, where the central character, Winston Smith, is being interrogated. Smith’s job in the Ministry of Truth is to alter news stories so they align with the ideology of the state. But Winston is suspected of subversive thought and activities. His interrogators reenact scenes from his past life. “It’s a very clever way of relating the story of the novel,” Sanchez said. The Aquila production of “1984,” which launched last fall, is traveling to 40 cities. “We’ve had incredible feedback,” Sanchez said. “It’s great to see audiences so engaged with the work. They feel it’s very important, and we want our productions to facilitate dialogue and community.”

-Desiree Sanchez, director Orwell’s dystopian “1984,” first published in 1949, is a classic exploration of personal freedom versus state repression. It’s a popular fixture in public school curriculums, though also a book that has been targeted by school censors. The story is set in a totalitarian state that closely monitors its people to suppress all dissent. Led by the mysterious Big Brother, the regime maintains power and control by inundating the populace with propaganda and rewriting history.

GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!

BEST PRICING ONLY AT

GROUPS

JANUARY 31 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

THEATER

‘Starbright,’ a play of love, loss and the cosmos, receives world premiere at Centre Stage THE SOUTHERN CULTURE ISSUE

n story by PAUL HYDE | photo PROVIDED

Odeto

South the

CELEBRATING THE TRADITION AND EXPERIENCE OF THE PLACE WE CALL HOME

FEBRUARY 2020 TOWNCAROLINA.COM

FEBRUARY TOWN HAS ARRIVED! AVAILABLE IN GREENVILLE: Barnes & Noble - 735 Hawyood Rd. Barnes & Noble - 1125 Woodruff Rd. Community Journals - 581Perry Ave., Village of West Greenville OR ONLINE: towncarolina.com Get TOWN magazine in your mailbox every month. 12 issues $65. Subscribe today at

TOWNCarolina.com/subscribe 22

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

Grace’s young daughter Abby has tragically died of a mysterious illness. But one day the young girl returns. Is Abby alive? Or is the grief-stricken Grace losing her sanity? Those are among the questions explored in “Starbright,” Sean David Robinson’s poignant play receiving its world premiere at Centre Stage. The drama won Centre Stage’s 2018 New Play Festival and is now being staged for the first time. Remaining performances are Feb. 4 and 5. At the center of the story is Grace, an astronomer trying to cope with the loss of her daughter. The 8-year-old Abby not only reappears a year after her death but also begins making predictions about the movements of the cosmos.

It involves some weighty issues — the death of a child and a woman questioning her sanity. But there are moments of humor, and the love of the mother and her daughter certainly tugs at the heartstrings.” -Miriam Ragland, director “There’s magic and mystery in this beautiful play,” said director Miriam Ragland, a professor of theater at Presbyterian College in Clinton. “Starbright” is the first full-length play by the Asheville-based Robinson, and it has garnered top awards at newplay festivals.

“STARBRIGHT” » FEB. 4-5 | 7PM » CENTRE STAGE » $15 CENTRESTAGE.ORG Above: Beth Martin | photo courtesy of CENTRE STAGE

“It involves some weighty issues — the death of a child and a woman questioning her sanity,” Ragland said. “But there are moments of humor, and the love of the mother and her daughter certainly tugs at the heartstrings.” As with all of Centre Stage’s Fringe Series productions, the play is staged with minimal scenery and set pieces. The four-person drama features Mary Catherine Brunson, Kristin Gagliardi, Tony Giordano and Beth Martin. “We’ve got some very talented actors,” Ragland said. “The cast is absolutely fabulous.” The young daughter Abby is played by 11-year-old actress Mary Catherine Brunson. “She’s a wonderful individual to work with, a consummate professional,” Ragland said.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

ARTS

Greenville Open Studios sets new sales record in 2019 n story by EVAN PETER SMITH | photo by BONFIRE VISUALS

The 2019 showcase reported record-high sales of

$376,022

158 artists participated in Greenville Open Studios 2019

That's an average of

$2,400

per artist

18%

That's an increase of from 2018's sales Since its debut year in 2002, there have been more than 621,000 visits to the various participating studios, and more than $3.8 million in art has been sold. The art showcase – presented by SEW-Eurodrive, South State Bank and the Peace Center – aims to provide an educational experience to the community about local artists, while also giving artists a way to promote their work to the community.

Jessica Fields, a painter with a studio in the Village of West Greenville, was new to the event in 2019. Fields called Open Studios “the highlight of my year.”

These fantastic results are due to the outstanding talent and professionalism of Greenville’s visual arts community.” -Alan Ethridge, executive director, Metropolitan Arts Council “I was overwhelmed by the profoundly tangible connection to the community,” Fields said. “It created real relationships that inspired and stretched me as an artist.” Printmaker Kent Ambler, a participant in Open Studios for many years, echoed that sentiment of connectivity. “It is such a great way for people to find new artists,” he said. The 2019 iteration of Open Studios was the second year the event offered an app to allow users to track locations of studios and plan their visits. About 1,500 unique users downloaded the app to their desktops or phones in 2019. Next year’s Open Studios is scheduled for Nov. 14-15.

THE HIT BROADWAY MUSICAL

FEBRUARY 12 – 23 PEACECENTER.ORG

©Disney

Greenville Open Studios broke a new record for sales in 2019, bringing in $376,022 for the 158 artists participating, an average of just under $2,400 per artist. The total sales for the event, held last Nov. 9-10, surpassed 2018's results by nearly 18 percent. “These fantastic results are due to the outstanding talent and professionalism of Greenville’s visual arts community,” said Metropolitan Arts Council Executive Director Alan Ethridge.

G R E AT S E AT S AVA I L A B L E N O W Puzzle Solutions

Challenge yourself with the weekly puzzles, see page 29

Since 2002, there have been more than 621,000 visits to participating studios JANUARY 31 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

DATE NIGHT

artscalendar

January 31- February 6 GREENVILLE CHAUTAUQUA SOCIETY History Comes Alive – Teddy Roosevelt Feb. 1-2 ~ 244-1499 WITS END POETRY @ COFFEE UNDERGROUND Say What! Poetry Feb. 2 ~ 298-0494 PEACE CENTER My Fair Lady Through Feb. 2 ~ 467-3000 SC CHILDREN’S THEATRE The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Through Feb. 2 ~ 467-3000 PEACE CENTER Ensemble 4.1 Feb. 3 ~ 467-3000 PEACE CENTER Aquila Theatre in George Orwell’s 1984 Feb. 4 ~ 467-3000 CENTRE STAGE I Feel Good: A Trip to Motown Through Feb. 16 ~ 233-6733 METROPOLITAN ARTS COUNCIL Zodiac: Works by Garland Mattox Through Feb. 21 ~ 467-3132

n DINNER story and photo by ARIEL TURNER

n A SHOW story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo ROBERT GOWAN

where we're EATING 732-A S. MAIN ST, GREENVILLE

If we’re all honest with ourselves, January is a tough month on the wallet because of the holidays, so this dinner recommendation is as easy on the bank account as it is delicious on the palate. Just opened in the former Encore Gastrolounge space (formerly American Grocery), Sabor comes from Latin America by way of Charlotte. Focusing on fresh, bold, and authentic street food, Sabor hits El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Mexico, and Colombia with its dishes, all so affordably priced and generously portioned you’ll wonder if the total cost is correct. Make sure to visit the salsa bar and try them all with your guac-and-chips order.

SABOR OFFERS DAILY SPECIALS SUCH AS TACO HAPPY HOUR FROM 3-5PM EVERY MONDAY-FRIDAY

METRO. ARTS COUNCIL @ CENTRE STAGE Works by David Armstrong Through Mar. 6 ~ 233-6733

You’re not going to find a band like Wasted Wine anywhere else in the Upstate, or the state as a whole. An eerie mix of dark theatricality, world music, gypsy folk and general oddness, Wasted Wine is an intriguing riddle. The two masterminds behind the music, Robert Gowan and Adam Murphy, bring out all manner of archaic instruments like harmonium, celesta and chalumeau during a typical show (if there is such a thing), creating a hypnotic, deeply layered trip into the macabre. Imagine a sinister, funhouse-mirror refraction of seriously old-school folk music—not the James Taylor kind, but the Eastern European kind—and you’ve got an idea of what Wasted Wine does.

CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM 7 Centuries of Keyboard Instruments Through Apr. 24 ~ 520-8807 www.GREENVILLEARTS.com 16 Augusta St. | 864.467.3132

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

RECOMMENDED DISHES: Barepa ....................................$5.95

Venezuelan-style white maize cake filled with barbacoa beef, curtido slaw, avocado

Quinoa Avocado Bowl ............$7.95 Lusty Monk mustard, fresh herbs

Curtido Fish Taco ...................$3.75 Seared tilapia, curtido slaw, tomato and cilantro on a corn tortilla with a lime wedge

what we're SEEING WASTED WINE & MADDY WALSH

CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM Trumpets, Weird & Wonderful Through Apr. 12 ~ 520-8807

Eighth State Brewing Co. is only a two minute drive from Sabor

SABOR LATIN STREET GRILL

GREER CENTER FOR THE ARTS Works by Jose Romero Through Feb. 29 ~ 848-5383

FURMAN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Art by Matthew Baumgardner Through Mar. 31 ~ 294-2191

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Dinner&a Show

AT EIGHTH STATE BREWING CO.

WASTED WINE COMBINE EASTERN EUROPEAN MELODIES, MIDDLE EASTERN INSTRUMENTS AND CRYPTIC LYRICAL STORYTELLING

WASTED WINE & MADDY WALSH » SATURDAY, FEB. 1 | 8PM » EIGHTH STATE BREWING CO. » 400 AUGUSTA ST., GREENVILLE » FREE EIGHTHSTATEBREWING.COM


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

THEATER

Greenville Theatre’s season features timeless classics and a regional premiere n story by PAUL HYDE

PHOTO CONTEST The Greenville Journal invites you to

2020 FULL SEASON

SPECIAL EVENTS

SEPTEMBER 2020 GUYS AND DOLLS

AUGUST 2020 THE RETURN

OCTOBER 2020 THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES The most famous of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories features Sherlock and Watson solving the diabolical case involving the curse of the Baskerville family.

DECEMBER 2020 ELF: THE MUSICAL The cherished movie comes to life on stage featuring the music of Matthew Sklar and lyrics of Chad Beguelin.

READER’S

LENS

Greenville Theatre’s 2020-2021 season will spotlight timeless classics as well as more recent Broadway shows. The 95th season opens with perennial favorite “Guys and Dolls” in September. The show is a sentimental favorite for the theater’s leaders, Allen and Suzanne McCalla. It was the first show the couple directed at the theater in 1993.

Frank Loesser’s score includes “Luck Be a Lady,” “Sit Down You’re Rockin’ the Boat,” “Adelaide’s Lament” and “Guys and Dolls.’

2 • 0 • 2 • 0

The Fab Four are back to delight audiences with their tribute to The Beatles.

share your best photos of what the Upstate has to offer.

Each month one Editor’s Choice winner will win a $50 gift card to an Upstate business. Three honorable mention photos will also receive a $25 gift card to an Upstate business. Winning entries will be published in the Greenville Journal.

JANUARY 2021 ERMA BOMBECK: AT WIT’S END A one-woman show about the great American humorist Erma Bombeck – a celebration of her life and humor.

FEBRUARY 2020 THEME:

THINGS WE LOVE, “AWWW”

MAY 1, 2021 CELEBRATE 95 - GALA

FEBRUARY 2021 GREAT EXPECTATIONS

MAY 6, 7, 8 & 9 CELEBRATE 95 - SHOW

Catherine Bush’s humorous and moving adaptation brings the Dickens epic to life with energy and excitement.

A Broadway revue celebrating with songs from past Greenville Theatre hits featuring talented local performers.

APRIL 2021 A FLEA IN HER EAR Mistaken identities, a doppelganger, a spinning hotel bed, a crazy, jealous Spaniard and a foreigner no one can understand help make the antic, story leave audiences rolling in the aisles with laughter.

JUNE 2021 MAMMA MIA! The storytelling magic of ABBA’s timeless songs propels this enchanting tale of love, laughter and friendship, creating an unforgettable show.

Read more about Greenville Theatre's 2020 season at GreenvilleJournal.com. For tickets or more information, call 864-233-6238 or visit the website greenvilletheatre.org.

For details on each month’s contest, or to submit your photo and vote, visit:

GreenvilleJournal.com/ReadersLens JANUARY 31 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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FEATURED EVENTS THE LATEST CAN’T-MISS EVENTS

JAN. 31 7-10PM

Opening Night Benefit — An Evening with with Teddy Roosevelt

THRU FEB. 2

The opening of the winter season with Greenville Chautauqua consists of a private performance from Doug Mishler 315 N. Main St. as Teddy Roosevelt and a wine Fountain Inn reception.

$

$50

HistoryComesAlive.org

FEB. 4

10AM

Younts Center for the Performing Arts

$

‘The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’

What begins as an innocent exploration of an old home, Peace Center winds up taking siblings 300 S. Main St., Lucy, Edmund, Susan and Peter far beyond their wildest Greenville imaginations, as they step through a huge wardrobe, into a land where an evil witch has taken control and misery reigns.

$19 – $28

SCChildrensTheatre.org

6:30-10PM Husk

722 S. Main St.,Greenville

$

$220

Husk Greenville x Gracious Roots Dinner benefiting Mill Village Farms Husk Greenville is teaming up with Gracious Roots, a regional online magazine that celebrates the southern highlands area, and Six & Twenty Distillery for a dinner event benefiting local non-profit Mill Village Farms.

FEB. 6 6-8PM Greenville Center for Creative Arts

101 Abney St., Greenville

Making Murals in Greenville: A How-to Guide This two-hour workshop with Tracy Ramseur, senior economic development project manager, City of Greenville; Sean Scoopmire, chair of Arts in Public Places commission; and Adam Schrimmer, muralist, owner of Blank Canvas Mural Co. will focus on the process for creating a mural in Greenville, South Carolina.

ArtCenterGreenville.org

BrownPaperTickets.com/event/4491870

AN ELECTRIFYING JOURNEY THROUGH THE MUSIC OF BERRY GORDY’S ICONIC MOTOWN RECORD L ABEL

Open NOW through May 10, 2020

Through Darkness to Light: Photographs Along the Underground Railroad

Opening February 15, 2020

M A TRIP TO

OTOWN

6 1 Y R A U R B E F 3 2 Y R A JANU

Opening March 7, 2020

FROM FEATURING HITS MARVIN GAYE SON DIANA ROSS SMOKEY ROBIN JAMES BROWN E! AND MANY MOR

3 73 6 . 33 2 4. 86 | RG O . GE TA ES TR EN |C S GET TICKET GENEROUSLY SPONSORED BY: HARRY & SHEILA BOLICK | JACK & JUDY DEPRIESTER | ALLISON FIELDS

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

864-467-3100 | upcountryhistory.org


THINGS TO SEE & DO Derrick Dorsey and Travis Ridley

- generously presented by Greenville Maintenance Services. 6 p.m. | Shop & Sip Cocktail Hour 8 p.m. | Dinner & Live Auction $150 per person For event details, sponsorship information and to purchase tickets, visit www.MealsonWheelsGreenville.org/Sweetheart. If you have additional questions, please contact Karla Mendiola at kmendiola@mowgvl.org or 864.233.6565.

• January 31: 8:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. • Uncle Joe’s Sports Bar, 131 Farrs Bridge Road, Pickens

Derrick Dorsey is coming back to Pickens. Come out enjoy cold beer, great music and have a few shots.

I Feel Good – A Trip to Motown • January 31: 8:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. • Centre Stage, 501 River St. • $15 – $35

Put on your dancing shoes and kick off the new year with Centre Stage’s hit annual rock show "I Feel Good: A Trip to Motown". Celebrating the music and success of Berry Gordy and his iconic Motown record label, this concert style show features hits from Diana Ross, James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson and many more. Backed by a live band, join the featured live band and talented cast of Centre Stage favorites as they journey through this electrifying…

FEBRUARY 1 English for All Levels

• February 1: 9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. • Upstate International, 9 S. Memminger St. • $85 – $320 Upstate International offers language classes from beginner through advanced and conversational. Regular classes are 60 minutes and meet once a week for 10 weeks. Intensive classes are 90 minutes long and meet twice a week for 10 weeks. Language classes generally run with 3-15 students per class. All students

Americana Masters featuring Béla Fleck

Stained Glass Mosaics

• February 1: 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St., Greenville Make a small abstract stained glass mosaic using pre-cut pieces of stained glass. You will learn the placement of the glass and how to adhere the glass to a surface. Instruction will also include how to grout and polish for finished stained glass mosaics. must be members of Upstate International. Register early to guarantee a spot. Classes are dependent on registrations and we cannot offer refunds.

Sweetheart Charity Ball

• February 1: 6:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. • Hyatt Regency, 220 N. Main St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map • $150 The 2020 Sweetheart Charity Ball benefiting the homebound clients of Meals on Wheels of Greenville

• February 1: 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Twichell Auditorium, 580 E. Main St., Spartanburg, $12.50 – $45

For this concert, we trace back to our roots. Whether you are encompassed by Copland’s transcendent orchestral suite or roused by the marvelous musical color of the banjo, this program truly paints a picturesque dreamscape of Appalachian nostalgia. The scene opens with "Lincoln Highway Suite" by Spartanburg’s own Nolan Stolz. Aaron Copland’s famous "Appalachian Spring Suite" follows, evoking images of fruited plains and a sense of hope drenched in ambition. In conclusion, Spartanburg Philharmonic will host the GRAMMY award winning…

FEBRUARY 3 Wholeness Health Series: Chair Yoga

• February 3: 10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. • Augusta Road Ramsey Family Branch Library, 100 Lydia Street • Free Revitalize, heal, and grow. Begin 2020 with a renewed

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ARTS & CULTURE

dedication to healthy change.This session is led by certified 250-hour yoga instructor Ann Minard and is suited for beginners, seniors and the physically challenged. Registration is required. To register, email augustaroad@greenvillelibrary.org or call 277-0161.

Around the World in 3/4 Time

• February 3: 7:00 p.m. • Greenville International Folk Dancers, 100 E. Park Ave. • $8 Learn to move confidently in waltz time with line, circle and set dances from around the world. No partner or experience needed.

FEBRUARY 4 Weekly Happenings at El Thrifty

• February 4: 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. • 25 Delano Dr, Greenville, SC 29601, 25 Delano Dr Who says nights out are only for the weekend? El Thrifty always has something fun planned for a weekday pickme-up. Flex your knowledge on trivia nights, try your hand at bingo, or just kick back and enjoy an El Thrifty margarita. On Tuesdays is El Trivia Noche. With a new theme every week, we'll keep you on your toes. Gather your best and brightest pals on a team and come show us what you're made of.

Young Performers Iniative

• February 4: 4:30 p.m. - April 30: 6:00 p.m. • |Recurring Event (See all) • Greenville Theatre, 444 College St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map

JANUARY 31 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

• Greenville Theater Greenville Theatre is excited to announce a new young performers initiative, the Greenville Theatre Junior Players. The Junior Players will be a troupe of young performers between the ages of 10 - 15 who are interested in learning more about acting and what it takes to be a professional performer. This will be an auditioned ensemble of young performers who will spend 12 weeks learning about many different aspects of performing including improvisation, auditioning, scene work, movement, voice, and backstage etiquette.

• Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $229 – $249 An overview of impressionistic and naturalistic techniques of representational painting. You will learn about materials, color palette and forms of direct observation to interpret your subjects. Exercises, including sketching from nature and copying from pictures by past masters, will give you the foundation to practice these techniques and develop painterly ways of seeing and rendering the visual world. The class will culminate in an extended still life painting. Acrylic painting can be accommodated.

FEBRUARY 5 Jewelry Basics (Session I)

• February 5: 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $285 – $305

Starbright

• February 4: 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Centre Stage Starbright is the story of Grace, an astronomer and grieving mother, who lost her young daughter Abby nearly a year before the start of the play. As Grace’s life spins out of control, Abby appears to her and begins making predictions about the movements of the cosmos. Grace must determine if her daughter’s appearance is a sign of her dwindling sanity, or proof that there’s more to the universe than even she understands.

This class is a work and critique space for students interested in developing wax modeling, metal piecing, cold-connections and designing skills. If you have some experience in jewelry fabrication, you are encouraged to work at your own pace on your own bodies of work. If you have limited experience in jewelry fabrication, you will receive more direction from the instructor. Class demos will be determined by your needs. All supplies are included.

Dust Off Your Brushes (Session I) • February 5: 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $229 – $249

If you haven't painted in a while, dust off your brushes and join this class for painting sessions in a relaxed atmosphere, where you may work at your own pace on subject matters of your own choosing. Bring your own painting supplies, surface and art reference images and the instructor will help you improve your painting techn

Novel Writing Class

• February 4: 5:30 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Mauldin Cultural Center, 101 E. Butler Road • $195

Spanish Beginner Level I

Write (or Finish) That Book Already! Do you have an idea or a manuscript that's been crying out for you to write into a completed book? We're diving deep into our novels and complete a novel by the end of two months. The classes meet on Tuesdays at the Mauldin Cultural Center. Taking the class, you will be led by local author Theresa Kiser as we workshop plot, character, POV, and more. You will find support in your classmates and…

Upstate International offers language classes from beginner through advanced and conversational. Regular classes are 60 minutes and meet once a week for 10 weeks. Intensive classes are 90 minutes long and meet twice a week for 10 weeks. Language classes generally run with 3-15 students per class. All students must be members of Upstate International. Register early to guarantee a spot. Classes are dependent on registrations and we cannot offer refunds.

• February 5: 1:15 p.m. - 2:15 p.m. • Upstate International, 9 S. Memminger St.

Thai Basic Conversational

• February 4: 5:45 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. • Upstate International, 9 S. Memminger St. • $85 – $320 Upstate International offers language classes from beginner through advanced and conversational. Regular classes are 60 minutes and meet once a week for 10 weeks. Intensive classes are 90 minutes long and meet twice a week for 10 weeks. Language classes generally run with 3-15 students per class. All students must be members of Upstate International. Register early to guarantee a spot. Classes are dependent on registrations and we cannot offer refunds.

Painting In Oil: A Direct Approach (Session I) • February 4: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

Figure Drawing (Session I)

• February 5: 4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $265 – $285 Learn to draw the figure in charcoal from observation with emphasis on blocking in form and value to develop comparative measuring and shape-seeing abilities. This traditional academic training method allows you to fine tune foundational skills for higher accuracy. You will be introduced to the conceptual principles of light on form while understanding the pitfalls of purely visual observation. You will walk away with a good grasp of systematic approaches and deeper understanding of drawing the figure.

FEBRUARY 6 Mike Holstein Trio, Wheel Session 78 • February 6: 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • Greenville Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 1135 State Park Road • $15

Mike is a Master Musician who consistently brings an intense focus, creativity, and spontaneity to the band stand. He is quoted as saying, “I really enjoy changing settings, getting into new situations with different musicians, playing different music. In a small trio with drums, I can really hook up with the drummer and create an interesting and supportive structure behind a soloist. staying out of the way.” Hooking up with drummer Kevin Korschgen and trombonist Brad Jepson, guitarist Mike Holstein will lead a Wheel Session that no Upstate jazz lover will want to miss.

Bella Nova Strings at Carolina Music Museum • February 6: 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • Carolina Music Museum, 516 Buncombe St., Heritage Green • $5 – $15

• Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map • $89 This one-day workshop will you to the process of creating beautiful one-of-a-kind papers with water media. You will dye, paint and texture art tissue or rice papers with inks and acrylics. These papers may later be used in mixed media painting, combined with writings or collages onto three dimensional objects. The focus is on experimentation, color and design.

Village of West GVL First Friday at Textile Hall • February 7: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Textile Hall, 582 Perry Ave.

Join us for a night full of pop-ups at Textile Hall. We have curated a group of ladies who will be displaying local art, selling hand crafted bath/beauty products, stationary and jewelry. Village Wrench will also be here highlighting all the good they do for us here in Greenville. Stop by, grab a hot chocolate and support local.

Get plugged in with Bella Nova Electric Strings. Enjoy an electric musical evening with the exciting stylings of Bela Nova strings, performing familiar and popular music enjoyed by all ages. Our artists, Jean Anderson on electric cello and Kristen Miller on electric violin are local to Greenville and have entertained many groups in the area as sought after performers. Passionate strings players, the duo is on a mission to promote strings education on a local, regional and national level.

I Feel Good – A Trip to Motown • February 6: 8:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. • Centre Stage, 501 River St. • $15 – $35

Put on your dancing shoes and kick off the new year with Centre Stage’s hit annual rock show "I Feel Good: A Trip to Motown". Celebrating the music and success of Berry Gordy and his iconic Motown record label, this concert style show features hits from Diana Ross, James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson and many more. Backed by a live band, join the featured live band and talented cast of Centre Stage favorites

FEBRUARY 6 Shaping the Emotive Self Portrait • February 7: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. • Greenville Center for Creative Arts, 101 Abney St. • $275

This workshop approaches expressive selfportraiture in oil paint. You will be guided technically and challenged to identify strategies for creating a conceptual narrative reveal in your self portraits through composition and content. Emphasis will be placed on how each piece can be best executed using both traditional and contemporary painting techniques. This workshop includes brief lecture and photography session for source imagery for our portraits, on-going instructor demo and lots of individual guidance and feedback.

Creating Papers for Collage • February 7: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Village of West GVL First Friday at Textile Hall • February 7: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Textile Hall, 582 Perry Ave.

Join us for a night full of pop-ups at Textile Hall. We have curated a group of ladies who will be displaying local art, selling hand crafted bath/beauty products, stationary and jewelry. Village Wrench will also be here highlighting all the good they do for us here in Greenville. Stop by, grab a hot chocolate and support local.

First Fridays Gallery Crawl • February 7: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Free

First Fridays invites you to navigate Greenville’s visual arts scene each month as galleries and venues are open to the public from 6 – 9 p.m. There are a number of resources on this page to help you plan your route. First, you can sign up for our eblast list to receive gallery highlights in your inbox each month before the event. Second, you can visit our maps to find the main areas where the galleries are located.

SEE MORE EVENTS ONLINE

GreenvilleJournal.com


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

PUZZLES

SLICK MIDDLE ACROSS

1 Musical McEntire 5 Bank acct. underwriter 9 Skate parts 15 Church seats 19 Students at Yale 20 — avis (one of a kind) 21 Actor Shaw 22 Take one’s leave 23 Photoelectric cells used for IDing 25 Title heroine of a 2001 French film 26 Onetime rival of Nintendo 27 Charges to get some quick cash 28 Property of a body in motion 31 Vardalos of the screen 32 Morales of “Bad Boys” 34 Roman 1,501 35 Noisy tot toy 36 Principles of household management 42 Rooted (in) 43 Hidden obstacle 44 Kitchen flooring, to a Brit 45 Sullen 47 Gore and Pacino 50 Humorous impact 58 Tightens, as one’s fist 63 Track circuit 64 Chute-deploying jumper 65 Goth foe 66 Fixed fashionably 68 Dollar part 70 Author — Rogers St. Johns 71 Taj Mahal locale 73 Person on a mostwanted list

77 Geraint’s patient wife 78 Averse (to) 80 Swanky 81 Diplomat 83 Suffix with ethyl 84 Strong coffee 87 Suffix with fact 89 One frosting a cake, e.g. 91 All-out attempt 94 Potentially shocking fish 95 Discontinued iPod 96 Rock concert equipment 99 Speak like Daffy Duck 103 Hits, as a fly 108 Imaginary band on the earth’s surface 113 Form a single file 115 “— tu” (Verdi aria) 116 Healing sign 117 Drink in a schooner 118 Luge, diving and biathlon 123 Saintly 125 Sit heavily 126 Clause’s cousin 127 Face-off area in hockey (or what’s found in eight answers in this puzzle) 129 Article in Germany 130 Yamaha products 131 “— girl!” 132 The Bradys’ Alice, e.g. 133 Elk relative 134 Sharply focused 135 Low in pitch 136 Poker cost

DOWN

1 Sends back into custody 2 Euphoria

3 Female honcho 4 “You wish!” 5 Most liberated 6 Go on a brief yacht outing 7 Furious state 8 Wine vessel 9 Marlon of film 10 Chinese noodle dish 11 Aid in wrongdoing 12 Sandwich shop 13 Actor Bana of “Munich” 14 Control the course of 15 Pre-euro Spanish money 16 Puts forth 17 Move like a hula dancer 18 Didn’t leave 24 Ho-hum grades 29 “No worries, dude” 30 Catch red-handed 33 Here, to Yves 37 Pulitzer-winning novelist Jennifer 38 Ltr. extra 39 Uncanny 40 Wets a bit 41 “Ew, gross!” 46 Marina del —, California 48 PC screen type 49 Frigate, e.g. 51 Ralph of “The Karate Kid” 52 Duel weapon 53 Govt. med approver 54 Bona — 55 Smoothed (out) 56 “My Heart Will Go On” singer Dion 57 Brokerage employee 58 Alpine abode 59 “The Raven” co-star Bela

60 Absorbed 61 Academy URL ending 62 Writ for court appearance 67 Arafat’s gp. 69 Dayton-to-Toledo dir. 72 Trac II successor 74 “Time — the essence” 75 Team VIP 76 Olden times 79 Clucking bird 82 “— -haw!” (rodeo shout) 85 Bad deed 86 Swindle 88 “Doggone!” 90 Penne — vodka 92 Mental haze 93 “You’re oversharing,” in texts 97 They may run Windows 98 Some trig functions 100 Like “penne” and “graffiti” 101 Seek pleadingly 102 Go ahead of 103 Went uphill or downhill 104 Baseballer Mays 105 “Who’s interested?” 106 Tone down 107 Have dinner 109 Liam of film 110 Author Hemingway 111 Australia’s main airline 112 Force along 114 Kid-lit’s Longstocking 119 Uppercut landing area 120 Part of QED 121 Windmill part 122 Healing sign 124 Columnist Bombeck 128 Socrates’ “H”

COMING NEXT WEEK: NEW PUZZLE CATEGORY FOR 2020!

SUDOKU

DIFFICULTY LEVEL: MEDIUM

By Myles Mellor

Sudoku Solution: Page 23

Crossword Solution: Page 23

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LEGAL NOTICES

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GREENVILLE COUNTY, SC

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA AMENDED SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2019-CP-23-06837 Orange Cotton LLC, Plaintiff, Vs. Terant Gamble, (a person about which it is not known whether he is dead or alive), the unknown heirs of Terant Gamble, “John Doe”, representing a class made up of all unknown parties who may have some right, title, or interest in the properties having Tax Map #0177.00-01012.00, (hereafter, the subject property), and “Richard Roe”, representing a class made up of all unknown infants and disabled persons who may have some right, title or interest in the subject properties, Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Amended Complaint in this action, (which Amended Complaint was filed on December 18, 2019) and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Amended Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Amended Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Amended Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. TO: INFANTS(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO ,(GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. YOU WILL FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Courtney S. Camferdam, 1204 A East Washington Street, Greenville, SC 29601, (phone # 864-6033250) has been appointed Guardian ad litem for the unknown heirs of Terant Gamble, and for all unknown parties (including unknown infants and disabled persons) who may have some right, title or interest in the subject property. In the event you are in one of the categories listed above and have a claim to the real property which is the subject of this action, more particularly described in the Amended Lis Pendens, you should contact the appropriate Guardian ad litem listed above or your attorney. All persons under a disability have the right to have a Guardian ad

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litem of their choice appointed if the request is timely made to the Court. AMENDED LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon amended quiet title complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants regarding title to property located in Greenville County. The subject property is described as follows: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land situate, lying and being in the State of South Carolina, County of Greenville, near the City of Greenville on the east side of Rutherford Road, and on the North side of Davis Street and being more fully described as a portion of Lot No. 4 as shown on plat recorded in Plat Book C at Page 226 in the Register of Deeds Office for Greenville County. References made to said plat for a more detailed description. LESS, however, any portion previously conveyed and subject to restrictions of record. Tax Map #0177.00-01-012.00 C. Richard Stewart, SC Bar #5346 Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD ON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2020, AT 6:00 p.m. (or as soon thereafter as other public hearings are concluded), IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, GREENVILLE, SC, 29601, FOR THE PURPOSE OF DETERMINING WHETHER THE BOUNDARIES OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT SHOULD BE ENLARGED TO INCLUDE THOSE CERTAIN PROPERTIES LOCATED AT 548 OLD HOWELL ROAD, GREENVILLE, AND 471 MOUNTAIN CREEK ROAD, GREENVILLE, FOR THE PURPOSE OF COLLECTING AND DISPOSING OF REFUSE, GARBAGE AND TRASH WITHIN GREENVILLE COUNTY. THE NEW BOUNDARY LINES TO RESULT FOR THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT WOULD INCLUDE: A. That certain real property located at 548 Old Howell Road, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# 0541030102401; and B. That certain real property located at 471 Mountain Creek Road, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# P036000100803. A. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARIES AND LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. THE REASON FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL OF REFUSE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGE IN THE COMMISSION OR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // JANUARY 31

SOLICITATION NOTICE_ Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: RFP# 63-02/24/20 Construction Manager at Risk, February 24, 2020, 3:00 P.M. Solicitations can be found at HYPERLINK "http:// www.greenvillecounty. org/procurement/" http:// www.greenvillecounty.org/ procurement/ or by calling (864) 467-7200.

SOLICITATION NOTICE_ Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: • QNAP Video Server Storage IFB #65-02/18/20, due at 3:00 P.M., EST, February 18, 2020. Solicitations can be found at https://www. greenvillecounty.org/ Procurement/ or by calling 864-467-7200.

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A public hearing will be held on Tuesday, February 4, 2020, at 6:00 p.m. (or as soon thereafter as other public hearings are concluded), in Council Chambers, 301 University Ridge, Greenville, SC, 29601, for the purpose of determining whether the boundaries of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District should be enlarged to include those certain real properties in the greater Mountain Creek Church Road and State Park Road area of Greenville County, for the purpose of collecting and disposing of refuse, garbage and trash within Greenville County. The new boundary lines to result for the Greater Greenville Sanitation District would include: Greenville County TMS# Site Address P036000101414 15 Buckhorn Dr P035000106300 125 Buckhorn Dr P035000106306 129 Buckhorn Dr P025000200403 67 E Mountain Creek Rd P025000200401 69 E Mountain Creek Rd P036000104200 117 E Mountain Creek Rd P036000104300 121 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200603 160 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200602 170 E Mountain Creek Rd P024000200609 9 Hannah Springs Court P024000200610 10 Hannah Springs Court P035000100715 2252 State Park Rd P035000100700 2254 State Park Rd P036000101424 101 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101402 115 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000103900 116 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000104000 118 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000104100 120 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101400 123 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101407 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101412 W Mountain Creek Church Rd P036000101423 W Mountain Creek Church Rd A map of the new boundaries and legal descriptions are available in the County Council Office. The reason for the proposed enlargement is to provide for the orderly collection and disposal of refuse. No additional bonds will be issued by the district, nor will there be any change in the commission or in the personnel of the present commission of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District. Butch Kirven, Chairman Greenville County Council

NOTICE OF SELF STORAGE SALE Please take notice Prime Storage Simpsonville located at 2711 Woodruff Rd., Simpsonville, SC 29681 intends to hold a Auction of storage units in default of payment. The sale will occur as an Online Auction via www.storagetreasures.com on 2/17/2020 at 12:00 PM. This sale is pursuant to the assertion of lien for rental at the selfstorage facility. Unless listed otherwise below, the contents consist of household goods and furnishings. Joshua McCorkle unit #A064; Randy Hunt unit #D019; Wayne Mcculley unit #E086; Lasondra Wright Atkins unit #J070. This sale may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain terms and conditions apply.

SUMMONS STATE OF SC GREENVILLE COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2018-CP-23-06090_ GREENVILLE COUNTY REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY v. THE ESTATE OF DOROTHY SCOTT, et. al, including DEFENDANTS ANN HILL AND WILLIE ROY SANDERS. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: You are hereby summoned and notified that an action has been filed against you in the Greenville County, SC court in action number 2018CP-23-06090. You have thirty (30) days from the last date of publication of this notice to answer the complaint. You must also serve a copy of your answer upon the Plaintiff or the Plaintiff’s attorney at the address shown below. If you fail to answer the Complaint, judgment by default could be rendered against you for the relief requested in the Complaint.

SUMMONS NOTICE (MOTOR VEHICLE COLLISION) JURY TRIAL DEMANDED STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF SPARTANBURG COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-__-____ Norman Brian Mathis, Plaintiff, v. Amber Sorrow, Defendant. You are summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action served upon you. A copy of your answer to the Complaint must be served on Plaintiff’s lawyer at their offices located at 224 NE Main Street, Simpsonville, South Carolina 29681, within 30 days after your receipt of this Summons. If you fail to answer this Complaint within the specified time, a judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded within this Complaint. Law Office of M. B. Derrick, LLC s/M. Brooks Derrick M. Brooks Derrick (SC Bar No. 76330) 224 NE Main Street Simpsonville, SC 29681 (864) 757-0757 brooks@derricklawoffice.com Attorney and Counselor for Plaintiff

When you finish reading this paper, please recycle it.

GREENVILLE COUNTY ZONING AND PLANNING PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE There will be a public hearing before County Council on Monday, February 17, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. in Conference Room D, for the purpose of hearing those persons interested in the following items: DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-12 APPLICANT: Krish Vijay Patel for KVP Five Forks, LLC CONTACT INFORMATION: Krish. patel@thewcinc.com or 864275-5605 PROPERTY LOCATION: 2615 Woodruff Road PIN: 0548020103902 EXISTING ZONING: S-1, Services REQUESTED ZONING: C-2, Commercial ACREAGE: 1.16 COUNTY COUNCIL: 21 – Roberts DOCKET NUMBER: CZ-2020-13 APPLICANT: Suzanne R. Childs, AIA for New Generation Daycare and Learning Center, LLC c/o Claudia C. Hernandez CONTACT INFORMATION: srchilds@childsarchitecture. com or 864-242-6977 PROPERTY LOCATION: 110 Old Grove Road PIN: WG01020500200 EXISTING ZONING: R-12, SingleFamily Residential REQUESTED ZONING: FRD, Flexible Review District ACREAGE: 1.77 COUNTY COUNCIL: 24 – Seman All persons interested in these proposed amendments to the Greenville County Zoning Ordinance and Map are invited to attend this meeting. At subsequent meetings, Greenville County Council may approve or deny the proposed amendments as requested or approve a different zoning classification than requested.

SUMMONS AND NOTICE (JURY TRIAL DEMANDED) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF SPARTANBURG IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C.A. NO. 2019-CP-42-04126_ Doretha Cohen, Plaintiff, vs. Kaitlan S. Brown, Defendant. TO THE DEFENDANT(S): KAITLAN S. BROWN You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, which was filed in the Office of the Clerk of this Court on the below mentioned date; and to serve a copy of your answer to the Complaint upon the subscriber at their office, 303 East Greenville Street, Post Office Box 4025, Anderson, South Carolina, within thirty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service. If you fail to answer the Complaint within that time, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE: You are further summoned and notified to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem to represent you in this action within twenty 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 the Plaintiff(s) herein. s/J. Christopher Pracht J. Christopher Pracht, V (SC Bar#77543) THOMASON & PRACHT, LLP PO Box 4025 Anderson, South Carolina 29622 864-226-7222 864-226-7224 (fax) chris@864law.com Date: 11/21/2019 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Anderson, South Carolina

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Slicks LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 953 N. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville, SC 29607. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 9, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Maestros Bistro and Dinner Club LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises INCLUDING SUNDAY consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 104 S. Main St., Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 9, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that White Duck Airport, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 301 Airport Road , Suite J, Greenville, SC 29607 . To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 16, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Shuckin’ Shack Oyster Bar intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and ON premises INCLUDING SUNDAY consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 221 W. Main St., Easley, SC 29640. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 2, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Wandering Bard LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON AND OFF premises consumption of WINE at 1320 Hampton Avenue Extension Bay 3, Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 2, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Golden Beverages Inc. intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 108 Balcome Blvd., Simpsonville 29681. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than February 16, 2020. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF COMPLAINT AND NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) C/A NO: 2019-CP-23-07013 DEFICIENCY WAIVED U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Home Equity Asset Trust 2003-3 Home Equity Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2003-3, PLAINTIFF, vs. Robert Lee Simmons and Beatrice Simmons and if Robert Lee Simmons and Beatrice Simmons be deceased then any children and heirs at law to the Estates of Robert Lee Simmons and Beatrice Simmons, distributees and devisees at law to the Estates of Robert Lee Simmons and Beatrice Simmons and if any of the same be dead any and all persons entitled to claim under or through them also all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, interest or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; Any unknown adults, any unknown infants or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe, and any persons in the military service of the United States of America being a class designated as Richard Roe; DEFENDANT(S) TO THE DEFENDANTS, ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscriber at his office, Hutchens Law Firm LLP P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, or otherwise appear and defend, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity for Greenville County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. 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

the Plaintiff immediately and separately and such application will be deemed absolute and total in the absence of your application for such an appointment within thirty (30) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity in/for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. NOTICE OF FILING OF SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on December 4, 2019. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm LLP, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803-726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm LLP, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this Notice. IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION, YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY/ AGENT MAY PROCEED WITH A FORECLOSURE ACTION. If you have already pursued loss mitigation with the Plaintiff, this Notice does not guarantee the availability of loss mitigation options or further review of your qualifications. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection. IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY.


GREENVILLE COUNTY, SC

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LEGAL NOTICES

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SUMMONS AND NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2020-CP-23-00249 Charles E. Cannon, VS. The PLAINTIFF, Personal Representative, if any, whose name is unknown, of the Estate of James Douglas Lowe; Christine Howes Lowe, Nicholas Lowe, and any other heirs – at – law or devisees of James Douglas Lowe, deceased, their heirs, personal representatives, administrators, p e r s o n s entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons with any right, title or interest in the real estate described herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class designated as Richard Roe; and The County of Greenville, DEFENDANTS YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, (which Complaint was filed on January 14, 2020) and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within

thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. TO: INFANTS(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO ,(GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. YOU WILL FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Rachael Ann Hardin, 3 Boyce Avenue, Greenville, SC 29601, (phone # 864-331-1751) has been

appointed Guardian ad Litem for any other heirs – at – law or devisees of James Douglas Lowe, deceased, their heirs, personal representatives, administrators, persons entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons with any right, title or interest in the real estate described herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class designated as Richard Roe. In the event you are in one of the categories listed above and have a claim to the real property which is the subject of this action, more particularly described in the Lis Pendens, you should contact the appropriate Guardian ad litem listed above or your attorney. All persons under a disability have the right to have a Guardian ad litem of their choice appointed if the request is timely made to the Court. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants regarding foreclosure of a mortgage on property located in Greenville County. The subject

property is described as follows: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate on the southern side of Brushy Creek Road at King’s Creek Drive in the County of Greenville, State of South Carolina, and containing 2.086 acres and further being described as follows: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land situate, lying and being in the County of Greenville, State of South Carolina, in Bates Township, containing 1.65 acres, more or less, and shown on a plat entitled “Property of James Munro and Loretta A. Lowe”, prepared by Lindsey & Associates, Inc., dated June 13, 1995, and recorded April 1, 1999, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Greenville County, SC, in Plat Book 39 – X, at Page 2. Reference is hereby made to said plat for a more complete metes and bounds description thereof. Also includes a 1987 Champion Mobile Home Serial #507285M0979A&B C. Richard Stewart Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 SC Bar No: 5346 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com

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NOTICE OF ELECTIONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, GREENVILLE COUNTY The General Election for Sheriff Special Election will be held on Tuesday, March 10, 2020. Any person wishing to vote in this election must register no later than In-person February 7, 2020, Online Registration 11:59pm February 9, 2020 and Registration By Mail post marked February 10, 2020. Voters will be asked to provide one of the following Photo IDs at their polling place. • S.C. Driver's License • ID Card issued by S.C. Department of Motor Vehicles • S.C. Voter Registration Card with Photo • Federal Military ID • U.S. Passport If you have one of these IDs, you are ready to vote. Voters should remember to bring one of these IDs with them to the polling place. Voters without Photo ID can get one free of charge from the Department of Motor Vehicles or their county voter registration office. Voters who encounter an obstacle to getting a Photo ID should bring their paper voter registration card without a photo with them to their polling place. These voters can then sign an affidavit swearing to their identity and to their obstacle to obtaining a Photo ID and vote a provisional ballot. This ballot will count unless the county board of voter registration and elections has grounds to believe the affidavit is false. For more information on Photo ID, visit scVOTES.org or contact your county board of voter registration and elections. At 9:00 a.m. on March 10th, the County Board of Voter Registration and Elections will begin its examination of the absentee ballot return envelopes at County Square, 301 University Ridge, Suite 1900, Greenville SC 29601, (864) 467-7250. At 12 noon on March 13th, the County Board of Canvassers will hold a hearing to determine the validity of all provisional ballots cast in this election. This hearing will be held at County Square, 301 University Ridge, Suite 1900, Greenville SC 29601, (864) 467-7250. The following precincts and polling places will be open from 7:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m.: PRECINCTS Greenville 1* Greenville 3* Greenville 4* Greenville 5 Greenville 6 Greenville 7 Greenville 8 Greenville 10 Greenville 14* Greenville 16 Greenville 17 Greenville 18* Greenville 19 Greenville 20* Greenville 21 Greenville 22 Greenville 23* Greenville 24* Greenville 25 Greenville 26* Greenville 27 Greenville 28 Greenville 29* Aiken* Altamont Forest Asheton Lakes Avon Belle Meade Bells Crossing* Belmont Berea* Boiling Springs Botany Woods Brook Glenn* Canebrake* Carolina* Chestnut Hills Circle Creek Clear Creek Conestee Darby Ridge Del Norte* Devenger Donaldson Dove Tree Dunklin Eastside* Ebenezer* Edwards Forest* Enoree Feaster* Fork Shoals* Fountain Inn 1 Fountain Inn 2 Furman Gowensville Grove* Jennings Mill Lakeview* Laurel Ridge Leawood* Maple Creek Maridell Mauldin 1 Mauldin 2 Mauldin 3 Mauldin 4 Mauldin 5 Mauldin 6 Mauldin 7* Mission Monaview* Mountain Creek Mountain View* Neely Farms Northwood*

POLLING PLACES Stone Lake Community Club Stone Lake Community Club Brutontown Community Center Sears Shelter Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church W Greenville Recreation Center WestEnd Comm. Dev. Center Springfield Baptist Church Phillis Wheatley Augusta Rd Baptist Church St Matthew United Meth. Church Augusta Rd Baptist Church Pleasant Valley Connection Center Meals On Wheels Meals On Wheels Sanctuary Church Sanctuary Church Flour Daniel McCarter Presbyterian Church Overbrook Baptist Church Overbrook Baptist Church Francis Asbury United Meth. Ch New City Public Works Parker Fire Station Station #2 Redeemer Presbyterian Church Five Forks Baptist Church First Church of God Disciples Fellowship Bapt. Ch. Immanuel Lutheran Church Belmont Fire Station Hdqt Unity Baptist Church of Berea Devenger Rd. Presbyterian Church Lutheran Church of Our Savior Lutheran Church of Our Savior Sugar Creek Clubhouse Anderson Rd Library West Branch Dunean Baptist Church Cross Roads Baptist Church Pleasant View Baptist Church Reedy River Missionary Bapt. Ch Velocity Church Heritage Bible Church St. Giles Presbyterian Church Donaldson Center Fire Sta Hdqt Dove Tree Clubhouse Dunklin Fire Station Hdqt First Church of God Renfrew Baptist Church Lutheran Church of Our Savior Enoree Career Center Rolling Green Retirement Center Reedy Fork Baptist Church Younts Center for Performing Arts Fountain Inn Activities Center Reedy River Baptist Church Gowensville Community Center Mt. Pleasant Community Center Cleveland First Baptist Church Parker Fire Station #3 St Mark United Methodist Church Parker Fire Station #3 Southside Baptist Church New Liberty Baptist Church Mauldin Cultural Center Forrester Woods Clubhouse Mauldin First Baptist Church Mauldin United Methodist Church Mauldin Miller Fire Station #1 Ray Hopkins Senior Center Holland Park Church of Christ Morningside Baptist Church Parker Fire Station Hdqt Mountain Creek Baptist Church Double Springs Baptist Church Christ Community Church First Church of God

POLLING SITE ADDRESS 707 Chick Springs Rd 707 Chick Springs Rd 200 Leo Lewis St 100 E Park Ave 2 Jeff Circle 8 Rochester St 404 Vardry St 600 E McBee Ave 40 John McCarroll Way 1823 Augusta St 701 Cleveland St 1823 Augusta St 510 Old Augusta Rd 15 Oregon St. 15 Oregon St 302 Parkins Mill Rd 302 Parkins Mill Rd 352 Halton Rd 2 Pelham Rd 1705 E North St 1705 E North St 1800 E North St 475 Fairforest Way 104 S Washington Ave 6150 Old Buncombe Rd 112 Batesville Rd 709 Brushy Creek Rd 105 Crestfield Rd 2820 Woodruff Rd 701 Fork Shoals Rd 12 Piney Rd 1200 Devenger Rd 2600 Wade Hampton Blvd 2600 Wade Hampton Blvd 103 Sugar Creek Rd 2625 Anderson Rd 21 Allen St 705 Anderson Ridge Rd 110 Old Rutherford Rd 25 Lakewood Dr 1720 Reid School Rd 2005 Old Spartanburg Rd 1021 Hudson Rd 2291 Perimeter Rd 2 Sugarberry Dr 11353 Augusta Rd 709 Brushy Creek Rd 951 Geer Hwy 2600 Wade Hampton Blvd 108 Scalybark Rd 1 Hoke Smith Blvd 3115 Fork Shoals Rd 315 N Main St 610 Fairview St 871 N Highway 25 14186 Highway 11 710 S Fairfield Rd 5 Church Dr 700 State Park Rd 911 Saint Mark Rd 700 State Park Rd 410 S Main St 1798 N Highway 25 101 E Butler Rd 424 Piney Grove Rd 150 S Main St 100 E Butler Rd 802 Miller Rd 203 Corn Rd 1131 Holland Rd 1115 Pelham Rd 107 Cedar Lane Rd 255 W Mountain Creek Church Rd 3800 Locust Hill Rd 700 Harrison Bridge Rd 709 Brushy Creek Rd

PRECINCTS POLLING PLACES Oakview* Five Forks Baptist Church Palmetto Grace Church Paris Mountain Piedmont Park Fire Station Hdqt Pebble Creek Pebble Creek Baptist Church Pelham Falls Cornerstone Baptist Church Piedmont Piedmont Comm. Cntr-BeattieHall Pineview Canebrake Fire Station Hdqt Poinsett* Duncan Chapel Fire Sta Hdqt Raintree The Bridge Church Reedy Fork Reedy Fork Baptist Church River Walk River Walk Clubhouse Rock Hill* E North Church Rocky Creek Rocky Creek Baptist Church Rolling Green Rolling Green Retirement Center Royal Oaks Rock Of Ages Baptist Church Saluda Unity Baptist Church of Berea Sandy Flat Double Springs Baptist Church Sevier* Piedmont Park Fire Station Hdqt Silverleaf Heritage Bible Church Simpsonville 1* Cedar Grove Baptist Church Simpsonville 2* Renovation Church Simpsonville 3 Simpsonville United Meth. Ch Simpsonville 4 Renovation Church Simpsonville 5 Center for Community Services Simpsonville 6 Calvary Baptist Church Skyland* Eastside Apostolic Lutheran Ch Slater Marietta* Slater Hall Community Center Southside* Pleasant Valley Connection Center Spring Forest Greenville Nazarene Church Stone Valley Springwell Church Stonehaven Advent United Methodist Church Suber Mill Praise Cathedral Sugar Creek Sugar Creek Clubhouse Sulphur Springs* Berea First Baptist Church Sycamore First Presbyterian Church Tanglewood* Anderson Rd Library W Branch Taylors Taylors Ministry Center Thornblade* Sugar Creek Clubhouse Tigerville* Glassy Mountain Fire Sta. Hdqt Timberlake Aldersgate United Methodist Ch Trade Needmore Recreation Center Tubbs Mountain Enoree Baptist Church Wade Hampton Faith Baptist Church Walnut Springs Clear Spring Baptist Church Welcome* Anderson Rd Library West Branch Wellington E North Church Westcliffe* Unity Baptist Church of Berea Westside Agnew Rd Baptist Church Woodmont* Valley Brook Outreach Bapt Ch Woodruff Lakes Woodruff Rd Christian Church Mt Pleasant Mt Pleasant Community Center Baker Creek Valley Brook Outreach Bapt Ch Bridge Fork Kingdom Life Church Castle Rock Washington Baptist Church Fox Chase Northwood Baptist Church Frohawk Grace United Methodist Church Granite Creek Pleasant Grove Baptist Church Graze Branch Holly Ridge Baptist Church Greenbriar Messiah Lutheran Church Hillcrest* Cedar Grove Baptist Church Holly Tree Faith Baptist Church Kilgore Farms Gilder Creek Farm Clubhouse Locust Hill Fairview Baptist Church Long Creek Rocky Creek Missionary Bapt Ch Moore Creek South Greenville Fire Station #6 Oneal Eastside Apostolic Lutheran Church Ranch Creek* Take Heart Church Riverside* Riverside Baptist Church Sparrows Point Immanuel Lutheran Church Standing Springs Standing Springs Baptist Church Travelers Rest 1 Travelers Rest City Hall Travelers Rest 2 Renfrew Baptist Church Tyger River* Northwood Baptist Church Verdmont Hopewell United Methodist Church Ware Place* Valley Brook Outreach Baptist Ch *LOCATION OR PRECINCT CHANGE

POLLING SITE ADDRESS 112 Batesville Rd 2801 Pelham Rd 2119 State Park Rd 1300 Reid School Rd 8508 Pelham Rd 3 Main St 100 Hillside Church Rd 5111 Old Buncombe Rd 257 Harrison Bridge Rd 3115 Fork Shoals Rd 103 River Walk Blvd 4108 E North St 1801 Woodruff Rd 1 Hoke Smith Blvd 105 Donaldson Rd 12 Piney Rd 3800 Locust Hill Rd 2119 State Park Rd 2005 Old Spartanburg Rd 206 Moore St 611 Richardson St 215 SE Main St 611 Richardson St 1102 Howard Dr 3812 Grandview Dr 2200 Mays Bridge Rd 5 Whitney St 510 Old Augusta Rd 1201 Haywood Rd 4369 Wade Hampton Blvd 2258 Woodruff Rd 3390 Brushy Creek Rd 103 Sugar Creek Rd 529 Farrs Bridge Rd 510 E Curtis St 2625 Anderson Rd 1 W Main St 103 Sugar Creek Rd 2015 Highway 11 7 Shannon Dr 202 Canteen Ave 881 Tigerville Rd 500 W Lee Rd 301 Bethany Rd 2625 Anderson Rd 4108 E North St 12 Piney Rd 400 Rainbow Dr 8323 Augusta Rd 20 Bell Rd 710 S Fairfield Rd 8323 Augusta Rd 416 Holland Rd 3500 N Highway 14 888 Ansel School Rd 627 Taylor Rd 1002 S Buncombe Rd 260 Adams Mill Rd 1100 Log Shoals Rd 206 Moore St 906 Highway 14 404 Grimes Dr 1300 Locust Hill Rd 239 Rocky Creek Rd 1800 W Georgia Rd 2200 Mays Bridge Rd 1330 Fork Shoals Rd 1249 S Suber Rd 2820 Woodruff Rd 1111 W Georgia Rd 125 Trailblazer Dr 951 Geer Hwy 888 Ansel School Rd 1420 Neely Ferry Rd 8323 Augusta Rd

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