May 13, 2016 Greenville Journal

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM Friday, May 13, 2016 • Vol.18, No.20

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“All the better, red, ” gouache painting by Hallie M. Bertling

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PUBLISHER | Mark B. Johnston mjohnston@communityjournals.com MANAGING EDITOR | Jerry Salley jsalley@communityjournals.com DIGITAL OPERATIONS MANAGER Danielle Car STAFF WRITERS Ashley Boncimino | aboncimino@communityjournals.com Lety Good | lgood@communityjournals.com Caroline Hafer | chafer@communityjournals.com Sherry Jackson | sjackson@communityjournals.com Cindy Landrum | clandrum@communityjournals.com Emily Pietras | epietras@communityjournals.com

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05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 3

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Furman University art professor Michael Brodeur on art collecting.

Steve Scott, executive director of Upstate Splash, a nonprofit that provides free swimming lessons to children, on his California childhood.

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4 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

NEWS

Protected bike lanes being peddled CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Greenville is updating its bicycle master plan, and the new one could include a new concept in bike lanes that is spreading across the country: protected bike lanes. Protected bike lanes separate bicycles from vehicular traffic by curbs, parked cars or some other barrier rather than lines painted on the roadway. They are a relatively new phenomenon and not mentioned at all in Greenville’s first bicycle master plan that was approved in 2013, said Edward Kinney, senior landscape architect for the City of Greenville and Bikeville coordinator. Alta Planning and Design is working on the new bicycle master plan, which Kinney said should be presented to Greenville City Council members some time in June. Greenville has been designated a bronze-level Bicycle Friendly City by the League of American Bicyclists. But Greenville City Councilwoman Amy Ryberg Doyle, a big proponent of bike lanes, says the percentage of the city’s streets that have bike lanes is well below that of other bronze-level cities and she’s worried about the city losing that designation. “In terms of infrastructure, we have to up our game,” she said. A public meeting on the updated plan is scheduled for May 18 from 4 to 7 p.m. at City Hall.

A demonstration of a protected bike lane will be held Saturday, May 28. The protected bike lane will use parked cars as the buffer between automotive traffic and bicyclists on East Broad Street from Falls to Main streets, said Frank Mansbach, executive director of Bike Walk Greenville, an organization that advocates for bicycling and walking connectivity. Mansbach said the lane is scheduled to be up until Monday, May 30, but that he hopes it is so popular that it stays.

Bike Master Plan Public Meeting When: May 18, 4 - 7 p.m. Where: Greenville City Hall

Protected Bike Lane Demonstration When: May 28, 9a.m. - 5 p.m. Where: East Broad Street from Falls Street to Main Street, downtown Greenville

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FRIDAY, MAY 27TH

SATURDAY, MAY 28TH

• Great Scot! Parade - On Main Street in downtown Greenville at 6 pm

• Greenville Scottish Games at Furman University - all day • Heavy Athletics • Border Collies • Pipe & Drum Competitions • Military Tribute at 11:30 with massed bands! • Wee Scotland for the kids • Scottish Clans • British Car Show • Greatest Scottish Happy Hour in the World & Celtic Jam at 5:30pm


6 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

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OPINION Views from your community

Color your palette at Artisphere 2016 IN OUR OWN WORDS

By Marion Crawford, David Lominack and Knox White

Greenville’s downtown will buzz this weekend with some of the country’s most talented exhibiting artists during the 12th annual Artisphere, presented by TD Bank. Ranked sixth in Greg Lawler’s Art Fair Sourcebook Fine Art Show list, a Best Overall Show in ArtFairCalendar.com and included in the Southeast Tourism Society’s Top 20 Events, Artisphere welcomes the most talented fine art and craft artists to Greenville’s signature cultural spring event. This three-day arts celebration provides the opportunity to color your visual, culinary and performing arts palette with unique opportunities to experience, watch, learn and interact with artists, local creators and performers. The diversity of art that Artisphere presents to patrons has been a driving force behind its success and economic impact. With attendance close to 85,000, the event brings in over $5.5 million to the Green-

ville community as attendees patronize our hotels, restaurants and shops, as well as purchase art at the festival. Last year, the average artist sales were $7,300, up from $6,800 the year before. We look forward to another record-breaking year at Artisphere 2016. Artist Row features 135 juried artists selected from an applicant pool of 1,100 in 17 different medium categories, from painting, glass, jewelry, drawing and mixed media, to photography, ceramics and more. Fifty-five of the participating artists will be first-time exhibitors at Artisphere, and all exhibitors will show and sell original works of art while offering art enthusiasts the opportunity to meet the artists and inquire about their work. Artist Demo Row allows art lovers to observe an artist at work – watching them live in action. Glassblowing, metalworking, printmaking and woodworking demos enlighten and expand appreciation of these skillful art forms. Artists of the Upstate and the Greenville County High School Juried Exhibits, as well as Clemson’s art demonstrations, showcase the area’s most

Drawn Out Loud by Kate Salley Palmer

talented aspiring and veteran artists alike. Those who feel inspired by the surrounding art can experiment at the Art Lab, where instructors demonstrate how to create individual masterpieces in jewelry; experiment with painting techniques such as infusing hot wax with pigments, known as encaustic painting; and learn the early photographic craft of wet plate collodion process that gave way in the mid-1850s to the more practical daguerreotype. In addition, children will have the opportunity to learn how to create kites, puzzle quilts and superhero masks at Kidsphere. Next, venture into the science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics activities in the STEAM Exhibit, where the whole family can experience the intersection of art and technology. Take in colorful musical performances as national, regional and local performing artists play on the Main Stage, the Culinary Arts Café Stage and the new Acoustic Café Stage on South Main Street. In Falls Park, be prepared to engage in Brian Olsen’s live painting demonstration of popular culture icons set to music at the Art in Action Stage and participate in London artist Julian Wild’s communal sculpture, Making the Connection. Artisphere provides the opportunity to also please your palate – sip, taste and experience selections from some of the most popular restaurants in Greenville at the Culinary Arts Café. Don’t miss the tastings from the trendiest craft beers and premium wines at

the Wine & Craft Beer Experience. There are many ways to create a colorful experience at Artisphere. Come find your perfect medium and enjoy Greenville’s growing arts community May 13–15. Whatever it is you’re looking for, at any age, you are sure to discover it at Artisphere.

Marion Crawford is president of the Artisphere board of directors.

David Lominack is S.C. market president ot TD Bank.

Knox White is the mayor of the city of Greenville.

Color your visual, culinary and performing arts palette with unique opportunities to experience, watch, learn and interact with artists, local creators and performers. Speak your mind The Journal welcomes letters to the editor and guest columns on timely public issues. Letters should include name, city, phone number and email address for verification purposes and should not exceed 300 words. Columns should include a photo and short bio of the author and should not exceed 600 words. Writers should demonstrate relevant expertise and make balanced, factbased arguments.

All submissions will be edited and become the property of the Journal. We do not guarantee publication or accept letters or columns that are part of organized campaigns. We prefer electronic submissions. Contact Managing Editor Jerry Salley at jsalley@communityjournals.com.


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 7

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Dragon Boat festival sets records, changes lives IN MY OWN WORDS

By Allyson Steffen

research and support services that are available for patients. I’ve also seen how the funds from the Dragon Boat Upstate Festival have made a difference in the lives of the institute’s patients and their families. The event has raised more than $2 million over the years, and it has supported the Winn the Fight Tissue Bank (founded in honor of Karl Winn, who lost his fight with cancer in 2007), molecular screening, the Rare Tumor Center and various other programs to help cancer survivors and their families. Funds raised this year will purchase equipment for the Cancer Institute to better study and identify more targeted treatments for cancer, support programs for patients and their partners, and expand the GHS Blood and Marrow Transplant Unit and other local programs that assist cancer survivors and their families. All of us should be proud of these projects. It doesn’t matter if you spend November until April raising funds for a team competing in the festival, or if you simply give a couple of dollars to those of us leading fundraisers. The event, the dollars raised and the services established because of donations are a powerful example of what can be accomplished when a community collectively comes together. Until next year… paddles up!

What are you passionate about? What’s something that takes your undivided attention and makes you want to give your all – then, give even more? For a few years, the Dragon Boat Upstate Festival has been the thing for me, and I can’t describe how it feels to have been part of an event that set a personal best in fundraising to provide world-class care to cancer patients living across the Upstate. Twenty-seven teams participated in the 10th annual Dragon Boat Upstate Festival on April 30, which raised $580,000 for the Cancer Institute of Greenville Health System, GHS’s Institute for Translational Oncology Research and other organizing partners. Teams of paddlers and one drummer – along with a professional oarsman – raced in specially decorated boats on the waters of Lake Hartwell. Each of the 40 teams had their own team name, color and T-shirt, and each chose a theme for their boat. Some dragon boat teams write a check for donation, and individual donors also support the paddlers. Every paddler is encouraged to raise at least $100, and with 25 paddlers in each boat, the boats raise more than $2,500 each. Some teams have raised over $10,000 in the past. It’s always a special event, but setting a record along with the other captains and Allyson Steffen has been their teams is an amazing experience. Each a team captain for year, we know that we’ve done something Release The Kraken tangible and life changing, and this year’s during the Dragon Boat collective effort was simply amazing. Upstate Festival. Other than my marriage, there is nothing else that’s given me such fulfillment in my 45 years of life. I’ve received tours of the GHS Cancer Institute and met For more information on Dragon Boat its medical director, Dr. LarUpstate, visit dragonboatupstatesc.com. ry Gluck, to learn about the

IN MY OWN WORDS

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05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 9

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NEWS

GHS nutrition program builds healthier habits in preschoolers

The Highest Level of Safety & Security, for What Matters Most

MELINDA YOUNG | CONTRIBUTOR

myoung@communityjournals.com

A first step in combating the nation’s skyrocketing obesity rate is to teach very young children and their families healthier ways to eat. That’s the theory behind the Choosy – Farm to Belly childhood obesity prevention program in Greenville. “It’s hard to change a bad habit,” says Kerry McKenzie, obesity prevention program coordinator at Choosy – Farm to Belly, a 30week program, which is operated through the Greenville Health System (GHS) Children’s Hospital. “With Choosy, we try to start young, helping children build healthy habits before bad habits set in,” McKenzie says. “In South Carolina, the obesity rate for children ages 10 to 17 is the second-highest in the country, and we know that it all started early when they were younger.” When families are consistently planning, preparing and eating meals together, children will choose fruit, vegetables and trail mix over less healthy snacks, such as chips and candy, according to preliminary findings by GHS Children’s Hospital, Children’s Advocacy and Clemson University Public Health Sciences. The Choosy project, which stands for “Choose Healthy Options Often & Start Young,” involved 180 preschoolers and their families. It began Oct. 15, 2015, and ends May 16 at the North Franklin Road Head Start Center. For the program, GHS partnered with Feed and Seed, an advocacy group, which organized 12 partners for the project. Each partner had a significant role to play. How the program worked: First: The recipes were created by Clemson University associate professor Sarah Griffin. The bags, containing the recipes and ingredients like Spice Society’s spices, oils and other things they’d need to make it at home, were assembled by adults with disabilities who are part of the Thrive Upstate program. Second: Loaves and Fishes picked up the bags and delivered them to the North Franklin Road Head Start facility at the end of the week. Children and their families took the bags home and made the meals. Third: On alternating weeks, Frances Produce would bring a variety of fruits and vegetables to the Head Start building, where children and their parents could “shop,” paying with Choosy tokens the kids had

North Franklin Head Start’s Choosy Garden

earned through good classroom and athome behavior. “Every day of the week, children were learning about Choosy in the classroom, learning about physical activities or gardening,” McKenzie says. “They could participate with little red wagons and taste food growing out of the ground.” With help from the Hispanic Alliance and a master gardener, the preschoolers also learned to grow their own vegetables in a garden at their school. The little ones quickly caught on. “Kids would call out their parents and say, ‘You’re not being a choosy mom because you’re buying white bread,’” she says. “We had some parents who said they quit smoking because their kids would say they want them to be a choosy mom or dad. Kids can be a powerful influence to make change.” The TD Charitable Foundation provided $50,000 in funding to expand the program to more children and to follow them over time to see how the program affects their health and food choices as they enter elementary school. So far, the results look promising: When the program began, only half of the children could correctly identify a cucumber; now, 90 percent of the children can identify one, McKenzie says. Learn more about Choosy at bit.ly/GHS-Choosy

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10 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

NEWS

Electric avenues Can alternative-fuel vehicles gain traction on Upstate highways? LAURA HAIGHT | CONTRIBUTOR

lhaight@communityjournals.com

Walking up the 18th fairway at The Preserve at Verdae on Sunday, Dave thought about the drive home. He opened an app on his smartphone, saw the internal temperature of his car was 97 and turned the air conditioning on. Twenty minutes later, under the shade of a crepe myrtle, sipping a Pepsi, Dave reels off the many reasons why he loves his car. “My wife hates it,” he says. “It’s too fast for her.” The car: A Tesla S, a plug-in all-electric vehicle. The Tesla is one of many factors contributing to a growing market for alternative fuel both in the Upstate and nationally. Admittedly, the market is still small. But the introduction of cars with style, features and speed is turning heads and helping the EV movement gain traction. Those cars come from all corners: from the upstart Tesla with its head-turning lines and “wow-factor” technology; to the established luxury brand BMW, which reported that April sales of its i3 EV doubled to 814 vehicles; to Cadillac, an American automobile icon with two plug-in EVs in production. Michael Beinenson is president of the EV Club of the South, headquartered in Atlanta. He’s quick to point out the difference between electric vehicles (EVs), plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) and what most people bundle up under the term “hybrid.” Traditional hybrids use their batteries to extend the range of the primary gas engine. They are expensive and the fuel conservation isn’t enough to turn heads. But full electric or plug-in hybrids “are the future,” he says.

“Everything [about these vehicles] is positive,” Beinenson says. “Give someone an electric propulsion vehicle for 24 hours and they will never want to go back to a gas engine.”

Batteries and infrastructure Peter Bures, sales manager at Kevin Whitaker Chevrolet-Cadillac, says sales of the Volt increase steadily each year, held back only by the ability to make more batteries. “Eighty percent [of EV owners] go back into another one,” he says. Beinenson sees the two major areas that are key to growing the adaptation of electric vehicles. First, batteries. “Two hundred miles [full-charge range] is probably the proper amount,” he said. Right now, EV range falls somewhere from 35 miles on battery alone (the Cadillac ELR) to 230 miles (the Tesla S), with most falling in the 80mile range. Second, infrastructure. “More fast-charging infrastructure, so you can charge your car to 80 percent in less than 30 minutes,” he says. “That’s what we need to connect city centers.” This is an area where the Upstate is definitely improving. Spinx has 12 EV chargers in the state; eight of them are in the Upstate. Five are Level 3 chargers (also called DC Chargers or fast chargers). These chargers are 480 volts, compared to Level 1 (120 volt) and Level 2 (240 volt) chargers. Tyler Zelina, a marketing coordinator with the Spinx Corporation, said there are three Level 1 and 2 chargers remaining in the Upstate, but they are being upgraded to Level 3 in a project that began in January. All the Spinx chargers were provided by Nissan and fit the Leaf, but there are various adapters that will make them usable to other EVs, including the Tesla. The city garages have Level 2 charging stations in all but two of their locations. Dennis Garrett, manager of parking services for the city, says there will be charging locations in

each of the three new garages being built. Currently, charging is free and there are “no plans” to change that at this time, Garrett says. An average of 300 vehicles per month charge up at the Tesla Supercharger location at the Hilton Garden Inn at The Point on Woodruff Road. This is the second Upstate location; the other is The Bleckley Inn in Anderson. Tim McClintock, Hilton manager, says the seven superchargers were installed in November 2015. “I was a little surprised at the usage,” he admits. “But any time I look out there – especially on weekends – they are in use.”

“The car of the future” The Tesla chargers were not sitting idle on a recent Friday afternoon. Tom Wagner of Greenville was charging his Model S and, in short order, was joined by two other motorists. Tesla likes to put Superchargers in locations where there’s lodging, restaurants and activities, so drivers have something to do while they’re waiting. That can also be economically advantageous for businesses in the area. The Tesla community is pretty tight. They wave to each other when they pull in to charge up, and it’s not unusual for total strangers to watch your car or your things while you run into a building for a bio-break or to grab a sandwich. One Tesla owner recalled watching a fellow motorist’s dog for about 10 minutes during one stop. Wagner, like many Tesla owners, is a goodwill ambassador: A fount of information, happy to demo some of the cooler features – like summoning the car to you. “This,” Wagner says, “is the car of the future. And it’s here now.” While a $70,000 Tesla S is not exactly a car for the masses, the much-anticipated Tesla 3 could be a game-changer. In just under a month, nearly 400,000 people have plunked down a $1,000 down payment to get in line for the new $35,000 EV, Beinenson says.

Give us a break There are federal and state tax advantages for alternative fuel vehicles. Both the state and federal incentives are available through Dec. 31, 2016. SC Tax Credit: You can receive an income tax credit of $667 plus $111 on the purchase of qualified plug-in hybrid vehicles that have at least five kWh of battery capacity. You will receive an additional $111 for each kWh thereafter with a maximum credit of $2,000. Federal Tax Credit: A 30 percent tax credit on the cost of installation of a home vehicle charger up to $1,000. For businesses, there’s a $30,000 tax credit for installing chargers at your business.

Although we aren’t yet seeing builders putting charging stations in apartment buildings, condo developments and subdivisions, that may not be far behind, in the view of Craig Bailey, managing broker at Joy Bailey Real Estate. A recent development that Bailey was a part of included a Supercharger station as part of a retail/amusement development near Pleasantburg and I-85. That deal didn’t happen, Bailey said, “but I think more and more charging stations are going to developed around retail and other destination areas where you want to draw traffic.”

Welcome to the family Robert Johnson, Jr., MD American Board of Family Physicians POWDERSVILLE FAMILY PRACTICE 864-295-2505


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

NEWS

More than just a hybrid There are many kinds of alternative fuels available in the market today. Some are gaining more traction than others; some are designed more for fleet or industrial use, while others are more focused on the consumer market.

T R E C CON SERIES

Gasoline electric hybrid What powers it: This is what most of us mean when we talk about “hybrids.” Hybrids are powered by a combination of an internal combustion engine and an electric motor that uses energy stored in a battery. Standard hybrids using gasoline have the advantage of the range expected from a conventional car with the benefits of higher fuel economy. Hybrids can range from 35 to 50 mpg, depending on the size and weight of the car. Supply and demand: Between the 2010 and 2013 model years, manufacturers have increased production 71 percent to 459,150 vehicles in 2013, the last year data is compiled for.

J u ly 2 8

Daughtry

Driving the change: Full-size hybrids. In this class, 845 vehicles were built in 2012 and 17,254 in 2013 (a 1941 percent increase).

Electric (EV) or plug-in hybrid EV (PHEV) What powers it: Electric vehicles draw power from the power grid and store it in onboard batteries. Standard house current (120v or Level 1) is acceptable but slow charging; 240v or Level 2 charging can charge your Volt from a near empty battery to full overnight. Battery capacity varies by model. Some plug-in hybrids, like the Cadillac ELR, also use gas. The driver chooses to run only on battery or extend the range with the gas engine.

Driving the change: Two things are major drivers: First, significantly better mileage. When calculated as mpg (a complex calculation you can figure out here: goo.gl/1vfw9D), electrics are doing well over 100 miles per gallon. Some may never even use the gas in the tank, and charging at most facilities is free. Total cost of ownership (TCO) is dramatically reduced. Second, some sharp looking, luxury/performance cars are now in this space, appealing to the heart as well as the mind: The Tesla S, the Porsche Panamera, the Cadillac ELR and 2017 CT6 and BMWi3.

What powers it: Compressed natural gas is clean burning, domestically produced, relatively low-priced as a transportation fuel and widely available. Supply and demand: Worldwide, there are 12 million CNG vehicles zipping around the autobahns of Europe, but a small percentage is in the U.S. Still, since 2010 supply has nearly doubled, with manufacturers going from making 4,934 vehicles to 9,454 in 2013. Honda produced a CNG version of the Civic, which it has discontinued. There are also CNG versions of the Chevrolet Silverado 2500, Dodge Ram 2500 CNG and Ford F-250 pickups.

12

August

23

s n w o r C g n Ceacisalti remy Camp Sp est Je Gu 14 August and s i r r a H u Emmylopin Carpenter M a ry Ch a

Supply and demand: The fastest-growing segment of the alternative fuel industry, all-electric or plug-in hybrid electrics grew 5,749 percent from 2010 (2228 vehicles built) to 2013 (130,317 vehicles built).

Compressed natural gas

August

with

Welcomed by

Special Guests h t i w d l e i f g n i r p Rick S ger and The Romantics Night Ran

Driving the change: Public transportation has been the primary market for CNG with about 15 percent of buses running on it. Approximately 20 percent of all buses on order are CNG powered.

Hydrogen fuel cell vehicle (FCV)

Driving the change: Infrastructure. California has committed to spend $20 million per year to build out a network of charging stations for fuel cell vehicles. They are few and far between in the rest of the states. The nearest hydrogen charging location to the Upstate is in Columbia; in fact, it is the only public charging station within about 800 miles. The next closest is Washington, D.C. Supply information from the US Energy Information Administration

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Supply and demand: From 2010 to 2013, supply was nonexistent. But three major automakers – Toyota, Honda and Hyundai – are betting on fuel cell vehicles as the next big thing. Each has a major entry expected in the next one to two model years. Hyundai’s popular Tucson SUV is already available in a hydrogen fuel cell version but sold primarily in California where the bulk of the charging stations are.

RESERVED

What powers it: The heart of the FCV is the fuel cell stack, which uses oxygen from the air to convert on the onboard hydrogen gas into electricity, powering the motor. Fuel cell vehicles are zero-emissions, fast charging (three to five minutes), long-range and two to three times more efficient than an internal-combustion engine.


12 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM CITY

Greenville makes best small cities list Greenville has made another list. Thrillist.com named Greenville one of the 25 Best Small Cities to Spend a Weekend. Greenville, ranked 13th on the list, was honored as “one of those small cities that has everything a big city does, except for stuff like stress, traffic and unreasonable rents.” Greenville’s shout-out included mentions of the Liberty Bridge, Grill Marks, the food scene, the Swamp Rabbit Trail and Caesars Head (the list acknowledged the state park was outside the city limits), Furman University, Bob Jones University’s Museum & Gallery and The Village of West Greenville.

ENVIRONMENT

Forestry commission urges care in burning The South Carolina Forestry Commission issued an advisory Monday morning warning state residents to take precautions when burning yard debris and conducting prescribed burns.

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The warning came in the wake of wildfires occurring in every geographic region of South Carolina Sunday and Monday. The warning came despite predictions of increased relative humidity levels, mild winds and expected precipitation during the week. Precautions include creating an adequate firebreak around the area to be burned and having enough personnel, water and equipment to keep the fire under control at all times. Forest fire danger in South Carolina is highest in late winter and early spring when most vegetation is dead or dormant. In South Carolina, 98 percent of all wild land fires are caused by human activities, and escaped debris burns are responsible for nearly 50 percent of them, according to the Forestry Commission. Forestry Commission firefighters respond to an average of 2,500 wildfires every year. The fires burn about 18,000 acres annually.

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Bon Secours St. Francis Health System CEO Craig McCoy, Priscilla and Knox Haynsworth and Dr. Hal Crosswell.

HEALTH CARE

Clement’s Kindness partners with Bon Secours AYA Cancer Program Clement’s Kindness Fund for Children recently announced a partnership with Bon Secours St. Francis Health System’s Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Cancer Program. Clement’s Kindness funding will be used to improve cancer patients’ quality of life while at the St. Francis Cancer Center. The fund presented $83,500 to the cancer program last week. Funds will provide a Teen & Young Adult Activity Center, an upgrade to the existing waiting room, mobile activity carts and an AYA program coordinator. Clement’s Kindness Fund for the Children was established by the Community Foundation of Greenville to address medical, psychological, social, emotional and financial needs of Upstate families impacted by pediatric cancer and other serious blood disorders. The AYA Cancer Program offers diagnostics, chemotherapy, radiation, bone marrow transplant and clinical trials.


#1

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Will’s Erskine story turned an English degree into an Emmy.® Sparked by a CNN summer internship after his sophomore year, Will Frampton discovered his passion for journalism and filmmaking. Within five years of graduating, Will produced an Emmy Award-winning documentary while following a South Carolina National Guard unit in Kabul, Afghanistan. Now he’s a television journalist and filmmaker in Atlanta. “At Erskine I grew in ways I never would have expected. Even though I didn’t study traditional journalism, Erskine prepared me for the challenges of this career as well as any college program I can imagine.” For more than 175 years, Erskine has equipped students for lives of significance and service through rigorous scholarship in a family-like Christian academic community. Where will your story take you? Investigate Erskine, and uncover the advantages of starting small.

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14 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

Attract Hummingbirds to your yard!

Front Row: City Council

City extends federal courthouse construction deadline Council also approves road abandonment CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Greenville City Council members on Monday agreed to extend the performance time for the construction of a new federal courthouse by three years. The city passed an ordinance in October 2013 abandoning nearly 11,000 square feet of North Irvine Street between East Coffee and East North streets contingent upon construction starting within 36 months. While Congress has passed an appropriations bill that funds several courthouse projects, including the one in Greenville, construction is not expected to begin before the deadline. The General Services Administration is awaiting Congress’ approval on the final spending plan before it proceeds.

The original ordinance called for the North Irvine Street property to revert back to the city if construction didn’t begin before Oct. 14, 2016. The new resolution extends that deadline to May 9, 2019. The new courthouse will contain seven courtrooms and nine chambers to accommodate nine judges. Other court-related tenants include U.S. Probation office, a federal public defender and U.S. Department of Justice agencies. When the new courthouse is complete, the Haynsworth Federal Building will be used by the Court of Appeals and Bankruptcy Court as well as other federal agencies that currently lease space elsewhere.

The GSA earmarked nearly $94 million for the project in the latest appropriation. It had earmarked another $11 million for the project in 2004. The federal government purchased the 2.4acre site in 2013.

Annexation

The City Council gave final approval to the annexation of 10.81 acres adjacent to Airport Road, Transit Drive and Jimmy Doolittle Drive and initial approval to the abandonment of a portion of Jimmy Doolittle Drive. Central Realty Holdings plans to develop flex and office space with an industrial use on the property, which is near the end of the runway of the Greenville Downtown Airport.

Proposed abandonment

Some property owners expressed concern over a proposal to abandon an unnamed alley located between North Main and Water streets during a public hearing held during Monday’s Council meeting. Nicholas Kelly, the property owner who requested the abandonment, said it would allow for continued maintenance of the alley. But some of the other property owners expressed concern that they would lose access to the back of their properties and that they’d have to pay property taxes on the land. No action was taken.

Law enforcement equipment Police Chief Ken Miller received initial approval to

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spend $220,000 from the department’s special revenue fund and Department of Homeland Security account to buy software that will help with incident management, analyze data and upgrade the municipal court security system.

Conservation Fund

Council approved the distribution of $12,500 from the Greenville Zoo Conservation Fund to nine local and international conservation programs. In 2010, 25 cents was added to the zoo admissions fee and $3 to membership fees to fund the Conservation Fund. Local groups receiving money were the Wade Hampton Water Monitoring Team from Wade Hampton High School and the Fine Arts Center, which received $800. Anderson University’s Ivy Wilson and Dr. Joni Criswell received $850 for an amphibian survey of Anderson University’s wetlands. Dr. Travis Perry received $1,000 for the Furman University cougar project. Other groups receiving funds were the Georgia Sea Turtle Center for research on the eastern diamondback rattlesnake, the Tropical Research and Conservation Center for sea turtle research, Zoo Atlanta for a project involving the Panamanian golden frog and Northern Illinois University for lemur research

UNIVERSITIES

Thousands graduate from Upstate colleges Thousands in the Upstate got new titles over the weekend: college graduate. Furman University awarded 598 undergraduate and master’s degrees during its commencement exercise on Saturday in Paladin Stadium. Teaching awards went to Dr. Frances Willard Pate, professor of English, and Dr. Benjamin Whitton Storey, associate professor of political science. Dr. Carolyn Anne Day, assistant professor of history, and Dr. Lourdes Manye, professor of modern languages and literature, received advising awards. Clemson awarded more than 2,625 bachelor’s degrees, 550 master’s degrees and 85 Ph.D.s during ceremonies at Bon Secours Wellness Arena on Saturday. More than 770 degrees, diplomas and certificates were awarded at Greenville Technical College this spring, and nearly 320 graduates participated in commencement on May 5 at the Bon Secours Wellness Arena. North Greenville University had a record graduating class of 331 undergraduates receive diplomas during commencement on May 5. Nearly 930 students received diplomas at the University of South Carolina Upstate’s commencement on May 3. This coming Sunday, 375 Wofford graduates will receive their degrees during a ceremony on the law of Main Hall.

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16 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

COMMUNITY

journey when they are 6 years old. We have about 100 students and provide therapy for 180 children. Our children come from Greenville, Pickens and Laurens counties, and we even have buses we send out to meet parents in Simpsonville. We’re a charter school that operates in coordination with Greenville County Schools.

What’s your professional background? I learned the importance of the intersection of business and politics while working for the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce from 1988 to 1990. After graduating from USC in 1990, I was the guy who dealt with constituents in Gov. Carroll Campbell’s office. It was a great experience. In 1994, I was political director for the state’s Republican Party and worked with David Wilkins on campaigns. It was the year Republicans took over the state legislature. Wilkins’ wife, Susan, is a Meyer Center emeritus; she’s an ambassador for us in the community. So it goes to show you that those early relationships come back. After this, I ran former Sen. Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential primary campaign in South Carolina.

BOUNDARIES, LIMITS, OBSTACLES

And then what?

New Meyer Center leader Chris Neeley brings Bronze Star experience to organization’s mission MELINDA YOUNG | CONTRIBUTOR

myoung@communityjournals.com

Chris Neeley’s path to becoming The Meyer Center’s new executive director took him through the thick of South Carolina’s Republican politics, into the heart of corporate America and across the world to Afghanistan, where he earned a Bronze Star. But if Neeley were to pinpoint one moment when his life seemed destined to include work with a nonprofit that helps children with learning disabilities, it would be when he was a teenager and created his own “Special Olympics” as part of an Eagle Scout project. Neeley’s family includes his wife, Janie; a daughter, Jordan, who will be graduating high school this spring and plans to attend the Citadel to run track and field; an 11-year-old son, Tucker, who will attend Beck Academy next year and a 7-month-old baby, Marshall, who has Down syndrome. The Greenville Journal asked Neeley about his life and his vision for the Meyer Center, which has been helping babies and young children with learning challenges in Greenville since the 1950s.

Who is Chris Neeley, and why did you come to the Meyer Center?

I was born and raised in Columbia and

went to Carolina. My family has been in South Carolina for eight generations. In 2012, I made a corporate move with Walmart to Arkansas, and I worked for their corporate office until two years ago when I left to manage Made in USA Works to help companies come back from China to the U.S. and create manufacturing jobs here. On Oct. 6, 2015, we had our third child, Marsh, who has Down syndrome. He spent six weeks in the hospital. He was born early and had to have surgery. Marsh transformed our lives. It was a game changer, because I had started evaluating my work in the corporate world and the work-life balance, and when we had a child with Down syndrome, I decided I needed a new focus, purpose and passion. That’s when I saw the announcement that the Meyer Center was looking for a new executive director through a national search.

What does the Meyer Center do especially well?

We learned quickly after Marsh was born that these children have to have early intervention in terms of therapies. They need a lot of different therapies, including occupational therapy, physical therapy and speech therapy, and you want therapy to start while they’re infants because that gives them a head start and helps them with eating, walk-

ing and mobility. Where we lived in Arkansas, the problem was that all of Marsh’s therapies were a 55-minute drive away and not in the same location. What’s unique about the Meyer Center is we provide all the therapies under one roof. And we also provide education. Children receive early childhood education and therapies in one place, so parents don’t have to drive all over town to meet all these appointments. The goal is to give the children a foundation so they can go to public schools and start their next

I worked in politics and then for WalMart until 9/11, when I joined the Navy, working at the Navy War College in Rhode Island, training senior officers how to do press conferences and media interviews. In 2009, I left the Navy with an honorable discharge and joined the Army National Guard in May. Then on Jan. 3, 2010, I was deployed to Afghanistan with a unit from South Carolina, the 1-178th Field Artillery Battalion, which is a Lowcountry unit around Georgetown. Our battalion provided security forces for 13 provinces in Afghanistan, including Kabul province, which is the capital of Afghanistan. We worked with tribal leaders and elders to build schools for children, provide humanitarian aid and provide work for Afghan men so they wouldn’t go to work for the Taliban. I re-

“The Meyer Center has done a great job getting to where it is today, a first-class therapeutic institution for children with disabilities, and I want to build on that foundation.” Chris Neeley, executive director, The Meyer Center


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ceived the Bronze Star for that work. While we were there, I led an organization we started with 10 soldiers who volunteered their time when they returned from missions to provide humanitarian aid to families who lived around our post. We called it Operation Outreach Afghanistan, and it grew to 200 soldiers, airmen, Marines and sailors. I was elected chairman, and we raised $75,000 from our families back home. So we’d collect shoes, clothing, school supplies and books from our families, and we’d take these on our missions and give them to the chil-

dren we met in the villages. That completely transformed my life and changed me. We were the first westerners these people had ever met, and the children had never seen a book before.

What is your vision for where the Meyer Center heads next?

Dr. Leslie Meyer founded the Meyer Center in 1954 because he saw a similar center in Boston and said, “Why can’t we do this here – get early intervention for children all under one roof?” He started with a handful

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of kids, and now we help more than 100 each day. But we have upwards of 2,000 children in Greenville County alone who need the services the Meyer Center can provide. They have disabilities and challenges that would qualify for our school. I’d like to reach out to all of those families who don’t know about us and help those children. The Meyer Center has done a great job getting to where it is today, a first-class therapeutic institution for children with disabilities, and I want to build on that foundation. We have some space in our building on

Rutherford that we’re going to be renovating through donations from generous donors, and we will do what we can internally to open our doors to more children. We’ll raise more money, hire more teachers and therapists. In the next five years, I’d like to see us grow out of our current school and into a brand-new Meyer Center in Greenville County, where we can open the door to any child who has disabilities and have it be a building that’s designed specifically for our children. That’s my vision for the place.


18 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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Hope Ball raises more than $500,000 The 2016 Hope Ball, the premier fundraising event for the Cancer Society of Greenville County, saw around 500 attendees at the Hyatt Regency on April 29. The ball, the 18th held every two years since its founding in 1984, raised more than $506,000 for local cancer patients.

Photos: Chelsey Ashford


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A look into downtown Greenville’s urban living

Animal Care’s

Correspondent

LETY GOOD | STAFF

lgood@communityjournals.com

While browsing through Greenville’s creativity at Artisphere, individuals will also have the chance to peek into five downtown dwellings. The Downtown Condo Rondo, hosted by the Greenville Symphony Orchestra (GSO), is a self-guided tour of five hom es uniquely decorated to reflect the owner’s style and interests. In its fourth year, the fundraiser event will feature homes concentrated in the downtown’s west end, all within walking distance from each other. In previous years the Condo Rondo has featured homes on Main Street and Riverplace. “We try to do something different every year,” said Phyllis Schrage, Guild of the Greenville Symphony co-chair. “We’re trying to give people a sense of what it’s like to live an urban lifestyle in Greenville.”

For the selection of each featured group of condos, Schrage said the Guild becomes familiar with new buildings and condos in the area each year and invites the homeowners to participate. The Guild usually chooses condos that are anywhere from 2,400 to 6,000 square feet. “We like to make sure we have diversity,” Schrage said. In addition to the downtown living tour, there will be a small flower show within the condos. Each home will have four different flower arrangements provided by master designers of the Clarice Wilson Garden Club that fit into this year’s “Gracious Living in the Historic West-End” theme. Arrange-

ments will be judged by national certified judges and awarded ribbons for excellence. Schrage said this is the first year the Guild is collaborating with the Clarice Wilson Garden Club. The Downtown Condo Rondo will take place on May 14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Individuals can visit the condos in any order at their own pace. GSO suggests allowing at least an hour and a half to two hours to visit all the condos. Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 on the day of the tour. All proceeds will benefit the Greenville Symphony Orchestra. For more information, visit guildgso.org or call the Guild office at 370-0965.

DOWNTOWN HOMES FEATURED Linda and Rod Grandy Rivers Edge 411 River St.

Tanis Bryan Riverplace 201 Riverplace

Angela and Jay Self The Brownstones 236 Rhett St.

Dru and Ennis James The Brownstones 236 Rhett St.

Karen and John Stoner Custom House 820 S. Main St.

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20 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

COMMUNITY Game On Talking Points on Sports with Vincent Harris

A Team Effort

PlaySafe rushes in to take care of injured high school athletes on the field It’s a chilling, but familiar, scene that’s reenacted on sports fields all over the world: A young athlete suffers a brutal hit, turns his leg the wrong way or simply collapses, and a team of athletic trainers rushes in from the sidelines. Now imagine that scene again, but without anyone rushing in to help. Smaller Upstate high schools like Pickens or Pendleton or Daniel High might have found themselves in that situation if not for PlaySafe, a nonprofit created to fund and provide athletic trainers in schools all around the Upstate, along with several schools in North Carolina and northern Georgia. High schools rarely have medically trained personnel on staff. Typically, they’re hired by local hospital systems or other health care organizations to provide care for injured athletes. And 10 years ago, it was a pretty flawed system, particularly in Anderson, Oconee and Pickens counties. “Back

then,

several

sports

medicine

physicians, primary care physicians, orthopedists and physical therapists in the tricounty area of the Upstate were all covering the costs of athletic training services to high schools directly through their practices or individually,” says the executive director of PlaySafe, John Crosby. “They were all working together to make sure they were getting sports medicine coverage to the high schools, but they couldn’t cover all of them. They ultimately realized that they couldn’t continue to do so … as the demand kept growing and still be able to do it as it needed to be done. And from that conversation, several folks got together and said, ‘We need a nonprofit that can raise the funds, because it’s not supported fully on the state level.’” So PlaySafe was formed about six years ago with a collective of sports physicians and trainers from Blue Ridge Orthopedics, Clemson Sports Medicine and other health care facilities. “We currently have 16 athletic trainers in 14 high schools across the tri-county area as well

as at the Palmetto Tennis Championships, Clemson University’s Club Sports Soccer tournaments and the annual Tiger Paw Gymnastics Classics, among others.” Crosby says the biggest misconception that PlaySafe runs into is the idea that athletic trainers are paid as part of coaching staffs or as state employees. That misunderstanding doesn’t just come from the general public. “We’re consistently working to educate families that it’s an outside organization, like a hospital system, that provides this service for the high schools,” he says. “Parents often have this misconception that our tax dollars fund that. And that’s not the case. But we also talk to coaches, because a lot of times there are coaches, especially new ones, that don’t understand that the athletic trainers that are on-site are not school employees.” Like any nonprofit, PlaySafe has multiple events (golf tournaments, silent auctions and the like) throughout the year to raise money. But they also visit schools and coaching staffs and families to educate them on the

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injuries athletes can suffer. “We talk about concussions, dehydration and the general health of the student athlete,” Crosby says. “The trainers have strategic meetings with parents to let them know what is expected of their students. “Safety, or the lack of it, at the high school level is a community issue,” Crosby says. “We’re looking not only to prevent injury but to help these kids bounce back from an injury. I’ve seen these guys do everything from working with kids with ACL injuries to putting kids on spine-boards, and in some cases, there wouldn’t have been anyone there to help otherwise.” For more information, visit: playsafesc.org

Vincent Harris covers music and sports for The Greenville Journal. Reach him at vharris@communityjournals.com


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 21

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COMMUNITY

Upstate musicians jam to prevent child drownings MELINDA YOUNG | CONTRIBUTOR

myoung@communityjournals.com

An Eagle Scout surfer, an elite swim instructor and an indie musician have teamed up to produce a concert for preventing childhood drowning. Upstate Splash Charity and local musician Charles Hedgepath will present the Upstate Splash Freestyle Jam at GottRocks on Sunday, May 22. More South Carolina children die from drowning than any other accidental cause except for asphyxiation, according to a state report. Between 2006 and 2014, there were 65 drownings among children 17 and under, according to the 2015 State Child Fatality Advisory Committee report. Often, children and adults drown because of a lack of water safety awareness, says Steve Scott, executive director of Upstate Splash, a Mauldin nonprofit that began in

February 2015 to provide free swimming lessons to children and to raise swim safety awareness. A California native and Eagle Scout, Scott grew up in an area where every high school had a pool and every kid learned to swim. “We grew up at the beach, surfing and hanging out at swimming pools,” he says. “Our blond hair would turn green because we were in the chlorine so much.” Scott and his wife, Leslie Scott, came up with the idea of Upstate Splash, partly because of their mutual attraction to water. Leslie, who teaches special education at Hillcrest High School and has coached high school swimming, is a member of the United States Masters Swimming (USMS) organization, which organizes national competitions. She also is one of fewer than two dozen people in the U.S. who is a level 4 certified swim coach through USMS.

“One thing Leslie wanted to do was give back to the community, and swimming is a great sport to be involved in,” Scott says. “You can do it yourself or with a group of people.” Upstate Splash raised $6,300 at an open water swim at Lake Jocassee in August, he says. “When we planned that event we were told we’d get 30 to 40 swimmers, but we had over 200 swimmers representing seven states,” Scott says. “We had 15 organizations donate food and volunteers, and that’s when we found out the community embraces this cause.” The nonprofit uses its funds in partnerships with organizations such as Westside Aquatics Complex to provide pools and swim instructors, who work with children at no charge to families. So far, the funding has helped more than 200 at-risk children learn to swim. “The other part of it is we’ll start using those funds with educational programs, going out to schools and educating kids that they need to learn how to swim and learn water safety,” Scott says.

Upstate Splash Fresestyle Jam WHO: Charles Hedgepath, Col. Bruce Hampton, Rev. Jeff Mosier, Yonrico Scott, Jeff Sipe, Darby Wilcox and Sam Kruer WHEN: Sunday, May 22, 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. WHERE: GottRocks, 200 Eisenhower Drive COST: Cost: $25, includes pig and chicken roast from GreenBrier Farm INFO: upstatesplash.org/freestyle-jam

A Child’s Haven opens infant center

Program provides services for infants at risk of developmental disabilities LETY GOOD | STAFF

lgood@communityjournals.com

One in six U.S. children has a developmental disability, according to a survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2011. A local nonprofit, A Child’s Haven, aims to help developmentally disabled children and their families. Recently, the organization expanded to serve at-risk infants, such as preschoolers, who may be developmentally delayed or who face behavioral challenges because of limited family resources or home conditions.

The new Bracky Comer Infant Center serves infants 12 weeks to 18 months old and provides support and education for their families at the nonprofit’s new main facility that was made possible by a $5.5 million capital campaign. The infant center opened in March and is named after Charlene Comer’s late husband, Bracky, who passed away in 2014. Charlene Comer served as past board chair for A Child’s Haven and has been involved with the organization for 15 years. A Child’s Haven headquarters at 20 Martin Drive is 25,000 square feet and includes doors with access outside, windows in the classrooms, plenty of teacher workspace, observation rooms and an outside “natural”

playground. “A Child’s Haven is only in existence because of the generosity of our community,” skills and motor control as well a nutritious said Debbie Rouche, ex- meal while an on-site registered nurse moniecutive director. “We tors the child’s medical needs. have had many loyal doFamily support includes weekly group parnors through the years, enting and prevention sessions. Trained faand that loyalty helped cilitators also lead parenting classes at the us build our new 25,000-square-foot cen- center and around Greenville County that ter. Support from our community is crucial teach the basics of raising healthy children. now more than ever, as we are entering our A Child’s Haven, founded in 1992 by Eva growth phase of the opening of The Bracky P. Hunt, is the only such treatment facility Comer Infant Center and the addition of in the Upstate and one of the largest in the five new classrooms.” Southeast for children diagnosed with or at The infant center program includes daily risk of developmental disabilities. treatment for the children, home visits, family support and daily transportation to and from the center for children at Learn more about A Child’s Haven no cost to the family. Daily treatment and the Bracky Comer Infant Center includes customized therapies for at achildshaven.org speech, emotional self-control, social


22 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

COMMUNITY Our Community

Community news, events and happenings

LOCAL SPENDING

MARKET

Spartanburg Area Chamber launches gift card program The Spartanburg Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated small business week by launching the Spartanburg Love Where You Live (LWYL) Discover gift card program, presented by SunTrust. Individuals can use cash or check to purchase a preloaded card at the Spartanburg Area Chamber of Commerce and redeem it at any Spartanburg Area Chamber member business that accepts Discover. For more information and for a directory of participating locations, visit spartanburgchamber.com/spendlocal.

The Good

Center from June 4 to Aug. 27. Over 20 vendors from across the Upstate will sell locally sourced and produced bagels, bread, produce and more. To apply for a vendor spot, go to the Mauldin Cultural Center’s website or call 289-8903. For more information, visit mauldinculturalcenter.org.

Mauldin announces weekend market The City of Mauldin will host the Mauldin Downtown Market every Saturday morning from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Mauldin Cultural

SHOWCASE

Simpsonville Garden Club announces tour

national garden week with “A Tour of Simpsonville Gardens” on Saturday, June 4, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. featuring five gardens in Simpsonville and one in Fountain Inn. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased in advance at Vaughn’s Seed and Feed in Simpsonville, Martin Garden Center or Country Boy’s in Greenville or the day of at Garden House Inn or The Bragg Garden. Proceeds will benefit the beautification project in downtown Simpsonville. For more information, email simpsonvillegardenclub@yahoo.com.

The Simpsonville Garden Club will kick of

Events that make our community better

Blue Ridge Fest, held on Friday, May 6, presented the largest classic car cruise-in event in the Upstate, featuring more than 500 classic cars, along with a Beach Night concert. The event proceeds will benefit 12 different nonprofit organizations in Greenville, Anderson, Oconee and Pickens counties, and since the inaugural event in 1998, more than $2 million have been provided to nonprofit organizations in the Upstate.

FESTIVAL

ens County and Wilderness Way Camp School.

PAGEANT

Local electric cooperative and security company host festival

For more information, email Sheldon Johnson at sheldonj@hughes-agency.com or call 864271-0718.

New scholarship pageant to be hosted in the Upstate

Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative and Blue Ridge Security Solutions’ 19th annual Blue Ridge Fest took place May 6 from 6 to 10:30 p.m. at the cooperative’s headquarters in Pickens. The fest featured the Upstate’s largest classic car cruise-in event, showing over 500 classic cars annually in addition to a Beach Night concert and dancing. Proceeds benefited 12 nonprofit organizations, including Cancer Association of Anderson, Collins Children’s Home and Ministries, Center for Developmental Services, Dot’s Kitchen, Emerson Rose Heart Foundation, Feed A Hungry Child, Foothills Alliance, North Greenville Food Crisis Ministry, Rosa Clark Medical Center, Samaritan Health Clinic of Pickens County, The Dream Center of Pick-

FORUMS

Nonprofits host forum series DNA Creative Communications (DNA), in partnership with Community Foundation of Greenville, United Way of Greenville County and Hollingsworth Funds, launched its 2016 Shine the Light Nonprofit Forums series, “Transforming Nonprofits Through Innovative Leadership” with its kickoff session “Leading Forward: The Mindset of the Nonprofit Leader” on May 10, from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. at The Warehouse Theatre in Greenville. Jovian Zayne, a leadership and professional development coach, presented a keynote address

about living on purpose. The event also featured Innovation Labs who invited attendees to have conversations about their experiences and insights. For more information, visit NonprofitForums. org or call Debbie Nelson at 864-420-0195.

Reigning Miss South Carolina Daja Dial will be hosting the first Miss Upstate, G.E.M.S. “Going the Extra Mile for Success” scholarship pageant in Greenville on Saturday, May 14 at 6 p.m. Educational prizes and a $1,000 college scholarship will be awarded to the winner. Contestants are from ages 5 to 21 and participate in several weeks of sessions to learn about inner beauty, self-worth and health and wellness in addition to participating in Hands On Greenville. Purchase tickets by calling 864-787-7735.


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 23

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

COMMUNITY Our Schools

Activities, awards and accomplishments

RIVERSIDE HIGH SCHOOL

Karen Zhao selected as US Presidential Scholar Riverside High School student Karen Zhao was chosen as a 2016 U.S. Presidential Scholar. The Presidential Scholars Program recognizes the nation’s most distinguished high school seniors. Students are chosen based on academic achievement and exceptional performance on the SAT or ACT. Zhao will receive an all-expense paid trip to Washington where she will be honored at a ceremony sponsored by the White House.

SHANNON FOREST CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

SOUTHSIDE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

SCS student selected for Youth Leadership Greenville Class 11

SFCS adds Jaime Breakfield to faculty SFCS added Jaime Breakfield to its lower school faculty for the 2016-2017 school year. Breakfield will teach the school’s expanding STEM program.

Sara Collins Elementary third grade students visit with Gov. Haley, Sen. Turner and Rep. Bannister.

SARA COLLINS ELEMENTARY

Third grade students visit State House Sara Collins Elementary third grade students visited the State House on May 4. They also visited with Gov. Haley; Sen. Turner, a former parent at Sara Collins and Rep. Bannister, current parent at Sara Collins, during their tour. Governor Haley spoke to the students and quizzed them on South Carolina facts.

The Greenville Chamber selected Kate Brett, a rising junior at SCS, to participate in the Youth Leadership Greenville Class 11. Brett will attend a team building retreat, learn about the history and future of Greenville, volunteer and community service, attend career workshop and experience the justice system in action. The year will end with a graduation.

GREENVILLE TECH

Whitley Farmer and Leslie Brooks

SHANNON FOREST CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

SFCS students selected to attend Boys State SFCS high school juniors Noah Burress, Sam Garrison and Jack Smith were selected to attend the Palmetto Boys State program this summer. Stephen Glenn, who is being sponsored by the American Legion of Tryon, N.C., will represent SFCS in North Carolina at Tar Heels Boys State.

GREENVILLE TECH

THE CHANDLER SCHOOL

Greenville Tech holds spring commencement exercises

Chandler School students travel to Charleston

Over 770 degrees, diplomas and certificates were awarded at Greenville Technical College this spring, and nearly 320 graduates participated in commencement exercises held Thursday, May 5, at the Bon Secours Wellness Arena. Lissette Treanor was recognized as Faculty Member of the Year. Robin L. Carter was honored as Adjunct Faculty Member of the Year. Brady Gilbert received the Outstanding Alumnus Award. David Stafford received an Honorary Alumnus Award. Whitley Farmer and Leslie Brooks received President’s Awards.

Lower school students at The Chandler School recently traveled to the Charleston area. The students experienced wildlife at the aquarium and on an ecology boat tour finding shark teeth, sea glass, oyster shells and lava rocks on the shore. They enjoyed seeing the old bunkers that have been turned into homes at Fort Moultrie.

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY

Two alumni receive Clemson Medallion

The CCES boys golf team wins state championship for the fourth consecutive year.

Barker

SHANNON FOREST CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

Bostic

Clemson University recognized emeritus James Barker, former Clemson president, and businessman James E. Bostic Jr. with its highest public honor, the Clemson Medallion. The Medallion is presented to individuals who have rendered notable and significant service and support to Clemson University and who exemplify the dedication and foresight of university founder Thomas Green Clemson.

Lower school students at Fort Moultrie

Shannon Forest’s “Seussical Jr.” a success The all-school cast and crew of Shannon Forest Christian School’s musical production of “Seussical Jr.” had over 700 people attend the three-show run.

CCES class of 2016 shows off the T-shirts of their future colleges and universities on senior signing day.

Landon Best as Horton the Elephant, Cadence Boehm as Sour Kangaroo and Selah Boehm as Young Kangaroo in Shannon Forest’s recent musical production “Seussical Jr.”

GTC receives $20,000 grant The Bank of America Charitable Foundation donated $20,000 to the Greenville Tech Foundation. The donation will be used at GTC’s Center for Manufacturing Innovation (CMI) for developing curriculum and plans for capstone projects that are part of the Advanced Manufacturing certificate program. The CMI, opening fall 2016, is a response to the workforce concerns voiced by area manufacturers.


24 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

LOOK

Mark Susko: Visual Design

Greenvillians went Under the Boardwalk last Saturday for a night of dancing, food and fun to benefit the Cancer Survivors Park Alliance. Professional shaggers Jill and Steve Woodard demonstrated the shag dance.

Centre Stage hosted an opening night reception for “A Party to Murder,” which runs through May 21. For more information, visit: centrestage.org.

UrbanDogPhoto.com

Last Saturday at Conestee Park, the Second Annual Tails & Trails 5K featured 285 “teams” of humans and dogs, raising more than $14,000 for Greenville County Animal Care.

As part of their Earth Week efforts, ScanSource employees planted trees on the Swamp Rabbit Trail.

Wes Whitesell (left) with Chancen Blackwood, wellness program coordinator at ScanSource. ScanSource employees collected bikes and helmets during Earth Week to donate to The Village Wrench.


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 25

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

LOOK

Photos by Emily Pietras

Dozens poured into the Village of West Greenville Block Party last Friday to enjoy food, craft beer and wine and entertainment and artisan vendors.

Furman University awarded 598 undergraduate and master’s degrees and presented its top academic honors during graduation exercises Saturday, May 7. Approximately 7,100 people attended the commencement activities in Paladin Stadium.

The University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville’s first graduating class, including 49 new doctors, celebrated their graduation with a convocation ceremony at Furman University’s McAlister Auditorium on May 5. They received their M.D. degrees at a commencement ceremony in Columbia on May 6. Dean Dr. Jerry Youkey gave the convocation address at Furman. About half of the students plan to specialize in primary care and become family doctors, internists and pediatricians. All 49 students were placed with residencies.


AN IDEAL LIFESTYLE IN A PERFECT SETTING Your new home awaits you at Charleston Walk.

Charleston Walk exemplifies community and is a perfect place for your family to live. Situated in one of the most desired locations on the Eastside, Charleston walk is an intimate community of 23 home sites. We are confident you will feel right at home and invite you to tour our move-in ready homes. From the moment you set foot on the covered porch, your eyes will be drawn to the fine craftsmanship and attention to detail. Our homes offer gorgeous lighting and detailed trim work along with breathtaking kitchens, large master suites, and exceptional features throughout. Our homes are exquisite and practical to include: Maintenance-Free yards, spacious bedrooms with private bathrooms, walk-in closets, mud-rooms, and oversized garages. Priced from the low $400,000’s. Visit our model at 200 Grandmont Court in Greer. From Pelham Road, take Boiling Springs Road towards Greer. Travel approximately 2 miles. Charleston Walk will be on your left.

Contact the Charleston Walk Team at 864-416-4443


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 27

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

HOME

Featured Home

Claremont

312 Chamblee Boulevard, Greenville

Home Info Price: $759,900 Bedrooms: 4 Baths: 4.5 Lot Size: 0.34 Acres

MLS#: 1320439 Sq. Ft: 4200-4399 Built: 2013

Schools: Oakview Elementary, Beck Middle, and JL Mann High Agent: Melissa Morrell | 864.918.1734 mmorrell@cdanjoyner.com

Situated in one of Greenville’s premier gated communities, this one-owner home built by Goodwin Foust Builders, offers a boundless supply of high-end finishes and outstanding floor plan! The all hardwood main level features two bedrooms, spacious eat-in Kitchen with 48” dual-fuel range, oversized Dining Room with Butler’s Pantry, large vaulted Great Room with painted beams and floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace, Laundry Room, Powder Room and Mudroom with bench and desk station. The Master Suite overlooks a private backyard and

boasts a spa-like bath with large garden tub and tiled shower that will exceed expectations. Upstairs showcases two more bedrooms with private baths and walk-in closets, a study area with built-in desk, Bonus Room and Flex Room that could be used for exercise equipment or Media Room. Outdoor living has been given much consideration, too. The oversized screen porch overlooks a spacious grilling patio that provides enough space for table and chairs while overlooking a private and professionally designed backyard.

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR TOP APRIL PERFORMERS!

Julie Nelson

Kimberly Banks

Nora Nix

864-915-0216

864-567-7292

864-809-7520

Top Listing Units

Top Listing Volume

Top Sales Units

Michael McGreevy 864-735-0785

Top Sales Volume

864-297-3111 • joyrealestate.com


28 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

HOME: On the market Ridges at Paris Mountain · Open Sat. & Sun. 1-4

Stonebrook Farm · Open Sun. 2–4

Brookside Forest · Open Sun. 2-4

Augusta Road Area · Open Sun. 2-4

107 Greenedge Lane · $1,199,000 · MLS# 1317134

1 Stonebrook Farm Way · $924,500 · MLS# 1320771

6 Oak Bridge Place · $699,000 · MLS# 1321633

9 Rockwood Drive · $625,000 · MLS# 1314899

4BR/3BA Tour our “Sweet Repose” model and see upcoming floor plans for homes to be constructed by Dillard-Jones Builders. Old Buncombe Rd turn right and follow signs up Altamont.

4BR/4.5BA study, private dining, outdoor kitchen area, master on main w walk in closets, great room, office, full bath each bedroom. Roper Mountain l hwy 14. R stonebrook farm. House on L.

4BR/2.5BA Augusta Road, 1 min to I 85, 3 min to Downtown, 7 min to Woodruff Rd, master on main. Byrd Blvd, Rt Sylvan, Left Marshall Bridge, Left Oak Bridge.

4BR/3.5BA Open floor plan, rocking chair front porch, side porch, deck, covered patio. Amazing kitchen, tons of storage. Lots of updates. Augusta Rd to Rockwood Drive. Home on left.

Contact: Kathy Beckham 419-360-2836 Conservus Realty

Contact: Linda O’Brien 325-0495 Wilson Associates

Contact: Keri Hall 901-1109 Berkshire Hathaway Home Services C. Dan Joyner Co.

Contact: Susan Reid 616-3685 ColdwellBankerCaine

Parkins Mill · Open Sun. 2-4

Hollington · Open Sun. 2-4

Revis Falls · Open Sun. 2-4

Kilgore Farms

37 Isbell Lane · $459,000 · MLS# 1318335

232 Abbey Gardens Ln · $299,000 · MLS# 1312742

104 Revis Creek Ct. · $189,900 · MLS# 1313164

12 Cedar Glenn Way · $344,900 · MLS# 1320166

5BR/3.5BA Beautiful, spacious 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath brick ranch in popular Parkins Mill. Large, level lot. Perfect floor planß. Isbell Lane is off E Parkins Mill Road.

5BR/4BA Fabulous space - fabulous price. Finished walk out basement, ss , granite, great floor plan, media room, list goes on. From Woodruff HWY 14 toward Simpsonville, left into Hollington SUB.

3BR/2.5BA USDA Eligible. 3 Car Garage. Huge Pantry. LOFT and large bedrooms. Fully fenced. Back deck. Woodruff Rd., past 5 Forks, R into S/D

4BR/3BA Gorgeous full brick custom home at the end of a cul-de-sac in an socially active Five Forks community! Two bedrooms and two full baths on main level! Visit GreenvilleMoves.com.

Contact: Blair Miller 430-7708 Wilson Associates Real Estate

Contact: David Lock 270-0810 CB CAINE

Contact: Jennifer Simms 906-2021 Coldwell Banker Caine

Contact: Cameron Keegan 238-7109 RE/MAX Moves

OPEN HOUSE - SUNDAY 5/15 FROM 2-4

MOVE IN READY!

203 Carsons Pond Drive, Simpsonville 4BR 2.5BA • .052 Acre Open floor plan with many updates $292,000 • MLS #1317713

201 KETTLE OAK WAY – 4BR/3BA MLS 1313997 – $250,999

NEW TO THE MARKET

28 Dusty Oak Lane, Greer 3BR 3BA • Bonus w/bath • 6.49 Acres Master suite w/sitting area and fireplace $629,000 • MLS #1319636

BETH

SARMENTO

Realtor, ABR, CBR

864-350-4118

Charlene Panek Coldwell Banker Caine/Greer

864.404-9544 cpanek@cbcaine.com

I look forward to helping you find your NEW HOME!


COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

O P E N S U N D AY, M AY 1 5 f r o m 2 - 4 05.13.2016 P M | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 29

THORNBLADE

BATTERY AT THORNBLADE upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/TVG4GC

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/A8VGXK

403 Father Hugo Dr. • 6BR/4f&2hBA

SIMPSONVILLE

706 Lady Hillingdon • 4BR/4.5BA

$939,900 · MLS# 1300140 Emily Clough · 430-1839 CODE 2931764

PROVIDENCE SQUARE

$479,500 · MLS# 1315670 Susan Dodds · 201-8656 CODE 3334035

TOWNS@HIGHGROVE

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/Q2GWWW

COLEMAN SHOALS

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/U79NDB

51 Verona Circle • 4BR/3.5BA

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/BPBS9M

21 Everleigh Ct. • 3BR/2.5BA

$349,900 · MLS# 1320162 Rex Galloway · 630-1111 CODE 3532113

GILDER CREEK FARMS

$274,900 · MLS# 1316600 Steve May · 346-2570 CODE 3369485

PEBBLE VALLEY

5 Springhaven Court • 4BR/3.5BA $478,500 · MLS# 1321389 Kennie Norris · 608-0865 CODE 3578323

CARSHELTON BY THE BAY upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/5256R9

129 Carissa Court • 4BR/3BA

$289,900 · MLS# 1316781 Ron McDaniel · 979-6633 CODE 3375749

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/AAHRZY

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/M7YCAW

111 Cooper Drive • 3BR/3f&2hBA

$649,500 · MLS# 1297678 Cathy Stuckey · 992-1294 CODE 2931735

HOME

STONEHAVEN

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/4WR36G

320 Reflection DR • 4BR/2BA $267,900 · MLS# 1320242 Janie C Gibbs · 901-3403 CODE 3537226

COACH HILLS

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/J4R6SM

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/BWXGFK

Text each property’s unique CODE to 67299 for pictures and details. 224 Grimes Drive • 4BR/2.5BA

5 Neilson Circle • 3BR/2.5BA

$219,900 · MLS# 1319350 Jenny Weathers · 354-3169 CODE 3499069

4816 Coach Hill Dr • 3BR/2BA

$219,900 · MLS# 1309330 Sheila Hasser · 313-7409 CODE 3092246

$204,900 · MLS# 1319903 Vickie Given · 436-0859 CODE 3521186

MORE OPEN HOUSES FIVE FORKS PLANTATION

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/8YDPMP

201 Pawleys Drive • 4BR/3.5BA

$478,528 · MLS# 1315723 · CODE 3337054 John Bennett · 915-8738 upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/C2DU89

CARSON PLACE

235 Carson Rd. • 4BR/2.5BA

KELSEY GLEN

24 Velmere Drive • 4BR/2.5BA

$264,528 · MLS# 1321321 · CODE 3575349 John Bennett · 915-8738

OPEN NEW COMMUNITIES LAKESIDE @ BLUE RIDGE

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/BVFR99

5 Gander Ct. • 3BR/3BA

$329,900 · MLS# 1316516 · CODE 3368416 Keith Rudge · 735-0199

5 Double Crest Dr • 4BR/3.5BA

$326,000 · MLS# 1311900 · CODE 3197738 Norm MacDonald · 313-7353

RIDGEVIEW

PREFERRED BUILDERS

$279,900 · MLS# 1313284 · CODE 3240353 Elvin Rivera · 921-4733

ARTHUR RUTENBERG HOMES

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/3DGUQX

$289,900 · MLS# 1320615 · CODE 3549682 Christine Cashman · 754-610-4124 upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/7XH8LS

BERKSHIRE PARK

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/4HVSHU

185 Chestnut Hill • 4BR/3BA

upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/RJVMSE

SAVANNAH COVE

14 Sheepscot Ct • 4BR/2.5BA

$232,900 · MLS# 1318520 · CODE 3464515 Jon MacDonald · 979-7055

Mon.-Sat. 9 am-5pm Sun. 12-5 pm ARHUpstateSC.com For further info, call 655-7702

Alta Vista Place

Tues.-Sat. 11 am-5pm; Sun. 2-4 pm Units starting @ $949,000 CODE 2931606 www.AltaVistaPlace.com For further info, call 622-5253

The Oaks at Roper Mountain Open Sunday 2-4pm MLS 1310435 $636,000 CODE 3142140 Cynthia Rehberg 884-9953

Agents on call this weekend

Alex Eccles 561-5427 Pelham Road

Jane Gibbs 901-3403 Garlington Road

Gary Morris 430-6388 Easley

Kevin Crawford 640-7447 Simpsonville

Ellie Linder 430-5881 Augusta Road

Jane Ellefson 979-4115 N. Pleasantburg

Ashley Seymour 879-4239 Greer

Iris Wainright 616-0506 Downtown

Becca Crocker 270-3296 Prop. Mgmt.

Interested in Buying or Selling a home? Contact one of our Agents on Call or visit us online at cdanjoyner.com


30 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

HOME

Advertise your home with us Contact:

Annie Langston 864-679-1224 alangston@communityjournals.com

Real Estate News

GGAR Market Overview May Once again, Greenville, South Carolina has been voted one of the 10 Best Places to Live Now, according to Men’s Fitness Magazine editors. Calling Greenville the “very center of the New South,” the editors point out Greenville’s enviable location in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains and it’s nexus of multinational industry, including facilities for Fluor, Lockheed Martin, Michelin, GE, BMW, among others. With 10,000 employed at BMW’s Greenville location, it’s the most productive unit for the company worldwide. Home values are up exponentially. The median home price in Greenville is $143,000, easily affordable on the city’s median income of $44,783. The cost of living is nearly 7 percent below the U.S. median. Boasting a low 4.3 percent unemployment rate, Greenville has one of the best job markets in South Carolina. According to Jonathan Smoke, Chief economist for the National Association of REALTORS®, there are four key reasons housing sales will be hot this spring: lower interest rates, more urgency on the part of buyers, record searches on Realtor.com, and faster housing sales. In March 2016, Greater Greenville housing sales

rose over four percent year-over-year, from 994 units to 1037 units sold. The median price of homes sold was two percent higher than year ago levels at $198,599. As of April 2016, there were seven percent fewer homes on the market than the same period a year ago. Homes that sold were gone in under eighty days, eleven percent faster than in March 2015. The median price of homes that sold was $174,000, six percent higher than a year ago when the median was $164,084. The median listed home for sale is $239,000, nearly 10 percent higher than active listings a year ago. In the first quarter of 2016, home sales volume was up over eight percent from Q1 of 2015. At the current pace of sales, Greater Greenville has approximately five months’ supply of homes for sale, making it a seller’s market. A balanced market has six to seven months’ supply of homes for sale. It is a great time to list or buy a home! Greater Greenville Association of REALTORS® represents over 2,300 members in all aspects of the real estate industry. Please visit the Greater Greenville Association of REALTORS® web site at www.ggar.com for real estate and consumer information. “Every market is different, call a REALTOR® today.”

WELCOME! DEANNA GIBSON

Joining our Greenville Team of Real Estate Professionals

Proud supporters of the American dream www.cbcaine.com


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 31

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

HOME Featured Home

Pettigru

11 Toy Street, Greenville

Home Info Price: $525,000 Bedrooms: 5 Baths: 3 Lot Size: 0.18 Acres

MLS#: 1320653 Sq. Ft: 3500 Built: 1925

Schools: Stone Elementary, League Middle, and Greenville High Agent: Cynthia Serra | 864.304.3372 | cserra@cbcaine.com

Currently being used as a live/work space with 5 offices on the commercial side. It can be changed back to a duplex, or Bed & Breakfast to become income producing property. Or, change it back to a single family home it’s your choice! Ample off street parking. Walkable to downtown with all its charms and activities.

This well maintained home has city code required sprinkler system already installed. Generous sized rooms on both side. Exceptional natural light, mature landscaping and deep front porch make this a lovely and relaxing space. ADA compliant on unit being used currently as offices. Call today for your personal tour of this exceptional property.

List for SALE? List for RENT? Why not BOTH! Contact Us! 864-627-9004

wetzelrealty.com • realty@wetzelservices.com

AGENTS

Amazing property in Pettigru Historic District! A two story brick charmer with endless potential.

Jacki Jesch 864-674-7482

Sonja Neufeld 864-881-2003


32 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

HOME Soil Therapy

with Will Morin

Bloom-then-prune to keep beautiful azaleas coming back strong

SPRING IS THE TIME TO SELL. WE G E T R E S U LT S !

C O N S E R V U S R E A L T Y. C O M VISIT OUR DISCOVERY CENTER & SHOWROOM 16 North Main Street | Greenville, SC 29601

864.608.4608

Conservus Realty provides equal employment opportunities (EEO) to all employees and applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability or genetics. In addition to federal law requirements, [Company Name] complies with applicable state and local laws governing nondiscrimination in employment in every location in which the company has facilities. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation and training.

N W O D N

U ER

1 0 T 19,00 LO$1,19 N LE O SA

N IO

CT

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KENDALL BATEMAN REALTOR®

864.320.2414

ONLY 11 LOTS LEFT!

LOT & HOME PACKAGES AVAILABLE

The amazing weather of the last few weeks – bright blue skies, cool mornings blossoming into warm, sunny afternoons – has created a welcoming home for azaleas. Popping out throughout the Carolinas, azaleas with blossoms in shades of pink, peach, white and salmon are a sign that spring is here. While they are all lovely, all azaleas are not the same, in bloom times or pruning schedules. Many varieties will lose their leaves in the autumn; others are “evergreen.” When it comes to blossoms, you’ll see the “encore” or “ever blooming” azalea throughout the Upstate. It blooms two or three times a year. The “Florida Flame Azalea” blooms in April with orange, yellow or scarlet flowers.

Once the blooms start to wilt, it’s time to prune – typically in late spring or early summer. If you wait to trim in late summer, fall or winter, you risk cutting off the buds that will become new flowers, and your azalea will not bloom the next season. It is vitally important to prune by hand. Please do not take an electric hedge trimmer to your azalea, as you risk disease and having it turn into the “ugly tree” (as in, “you must have fallen out of the ugly tree”) than a rhododendron. Using a simple hand anvil pruner, you can trim one-fourth-inch stems, or use a larger bypass lopper for bigger branches. Creating an uneven look, with some branches a bit longer than others, permits the sun to penetrate the canopy and allows for a more beautiful, natural and healthier plant.

«


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 33

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HOME Featured Home

The Courtyards on West Virginia Road 350 Laguna Lane, Simpsonville

Home Info Price: $398,500 Bedrooms: 4 Baths: 4

Sq. Ft: 3154

OPEN TUESDAY-SATURDAY 11:00-5:30; SUNDAY 1:00-5:30

Virtual tours online at viranicustom.com Virani Homes 864.634.5203 viranicustom.com

Gorgeous new home in a quaint neighborhood called The Courtyards on West Georgia Road. This 3154 square foot home boasts an open floor plan with plenty of room for entertaining family and friends. The brick accent wall in the dining room is reminiscent of a French Café adding ambiance to this already stunning home. This 4-bedroom, 4-bath home has a side entry garage that nestles up to a forest of trees providing plenty of privacy for the new homeowners. Home features custom stone window seats around fireplace providing unique seating for the

« Let’s talk container planting

Containers aren’t only great ways to grow summer vegetables; you can also grow amazing focal points of color that will be both beautiful and also attract beneficial bugs that help protect your veggie plants from damaging insects. When shopping to fill a pot with great annual color, I start with a focal point – the standardbearer geranium with shades from pink to red to purple, for example. I then search for

Great Room. Master shower provides curb-less/zero entry shower floor. Other great features include master bedroom suite and two additional bedrooms on the main level, beautiful hardwood floors, stainless steel appliances and extra large bonus room with walk-in attic. Don’t take my word for it, come see this beauty for yourself or take our virtual tour from the comfort of your living room – http://mls.homejab.com/?p=8219

two complementary plants to fill in the sides and help break up the hard lines of the pot. For example, I might use a tall African daisy, a yellow flower with purple accents, as the focus and add a purple trailing lobelia and some pink and white mounding impatiens to add some additional accent color. This is easy on the eyes, flows well and pops full of color. If you prefer to utilize the KISS method (Keep It Simple Stupid), your local nursery will have premade pots ready to go for you to just “drop in” to your container – simple!

Adding color with simple plants or growing some herbs, peppers and tomatoes can be as simple as going to your local garden center and picking up a plant and plopping it into a pot or the ground. Start small and grow your new hobby over time.

Will Morin, an avid gardener and instigator of cool projects like the downtown rooftop farm, can be found on Twitter @DrinksnEats.

Summer Solstic Brunch Help build a new greenhouse for the hungry minds at NEXT High School and join chef John Fink of San Francisco’s The Whole Beast on June 26 for a Summer Solstice Brunch. Tickets and menu at SolsticeSupperFoundation.org.


34 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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SOLD: Greenville Transactions For the week of April 11 – 15, 2016 SUBD.

PRICE SELLER

$1,682,000 $1,000,000 $800,000 CLAREMONT $740,000 $731,573 $720,000 CLIFFS AT GLASSY WEST $642,600 AUDUBON FOREST $642,000 MONTEBELLO $640,000 SHANNON TERRACE $637,500 GRIFFITH FARM $525,000 $516,525 $474,900 MCRAE PARK $454,000 $429,000 THE RESERVE AT GREEN VALLEY $419,252 GOWER ESTATES $416,000 RIVERBEND ESTATES $415,000 SUGAR MILL $399,500 MCDANIEL GREENE SOUTH $390,000 SAVANNAH $390,000 LANNEAU DRIVE HIGHLANDS $384,750 GOWER ESTATES $380,000 LINKSIDE $377,000 RIVER OAKS $365,000 CARRIAGE HILLS $353,626 CARILION $351,000 STONE CREEK $351,000 GOWER ESTATES $350,000 CREEKWOOD $348,000 COVE AT BUTLER SPRINGS $344,900 LOST RIVER $340,277 COVE AT BUTLER SPRINGS $338,000 WHITEHALL PLANTATION $335,000 NORTHWOODS $335,000 WHIPPORWILL COUNTRY CLUB $335,000 PINEHURST AT PEBBLE CREEK $333,000 HOLLY TRACE $329,250 MILL VALLEY CREEK $328,000 POPLAR RIDGE $317,500 FORRESTER HEIGHTS $317,000 PEBBLE CREEK VILLAGE $315,800 KILGORE FARMS $310,500 COACHMAN PLANTATION $310,000 NEWLANDS $290,000 GRAYSON PARK $287,500 FORRESTER HEIGHTS $287,000 $285,000 COOPER RIDGE $280,000 TUSCANY FALLS $278,709 LAUREL OAKS $276,375 HIGHLAND CREEK $275,900 BELSHIRE $273,955 SUMMIT AT PELHAM SPRINGS $270,000 SILVER MEADOWS $269,000 WALNUT RIDGE $267,356 $267,000 COTTAGES@HARRISON BRIDGE $265,900 FARIS OAKS $264,000 WINDSOR CREEK $262,211 MERRIFIELD PARK $256,000 IDLEWOOD $255,000

HUNT JULIAN G GREEN VELVET LLC EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF UPP FREEMAN DARRYL G (JTWROS SHULTS PROPERTIES FIRST STATES INVESTORS 6 CORDOVANO JAMES S WHERRY DANIEL S GRAY KRYSTAL L MARKEL ERIN LOUISE (JTWR PARADY MARK D VAN DER NOORD REBECCA L KILCOYNE MICHELLE C MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH HILL THOMAS EDVIN MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH SEELEY ASHLEY S MIDDLEHOUSE BUILDERS INC VICKS GABRIEL PLEXICO ROBERT L LYNN BARRY KAMM ANDREW M MCCARTY JOHN T (JTWROS) KNIGHT SHERRIE YANIK RALPH L NEWSTYLE CARRIAGE HILLS TIWARI RYAN DOUGLAS (JTW PATTERSON CHARLES R (JTW REED JOHN R BEISSER BRIAN G HUNT LAUREN KLAS MERITAGE HOMES OF S C LL NGUYEN DUNG ANH FISCHBACH KLAUS G TAYLOR ROBERT M CLOUGHLEY TERENCE D (JTW MIEL DIANA L (JTWROS) WETZEL PAUL A AHO MELODIE DRUMM THOMAS J TRUSTEE STIKELEATHER MICHELLE R SK BUILDERS INC PARK SONNY D R HORTON INC DAVIS DAVID L MARK III PROPERTIES INC KING KENDALL M LEGACY CAPITAL II LLC D R HORTON INC D R HORTON-CROWN LLC SISLER BRYAN D PAPAJOHN PETE S NVR INC ARK SERRUS LLC BRENNEMAN JOHN E (JTWROS ADAMS HOMES AEC LLC COOK STEVEN C DWELLING GROUP LLC GREEN LAURA EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION CO SCOTT BOBBIE Q CARR DONALD K (JTWROS)

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FARISH JAMES E JR PERRY STREET PARTNERS II EDGE COMMUNITY CHURCH TH WOOD EARL CLINTON IV (JT BAD COMPANY PROPERTIES L PONTUS VAULT PORTFOLIO L PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSOCI BEN-OR SHARON BOYER BENJAMIN (JTWROS) PHILLIPS ANDREA MCCALL AMANDA C (JTWROS) WAGNER AUBRAE (JTWROS) MCGARRAH CYNTHIA DAWN DEVRIES KEVIN M (JTWROS) BORRESON DONALD G (SURV) RUSSELL LANINA C (JTWROS CURLEE PAUL WILLIAMS JR RULAPAUGH RUSSELL (JTWRO SCHOMISCH NICKOLAS J (JT WHERRY DANIEL S MORENO JUAN C RIVAS MATKOVICH JOHN J III (JT SHADE LESLIE NEAL IV (JT WEST EMILY A (JTWROS) ROGERS ALAN W (JTWROS) HARTH JEROME A (JTWROS) KENT KATHRYN JOY (JTWROS MILLER DAVID A SEELEY ASHLEY S (JTWROS) BESSEAU ARTHUR L (JTWROS KOONTZ ALYSSA J STUDER JAMI (JTWROS) CALHOUN BRANDON P KELLY NICOLE M (JTWROS) CONNER MATTHEW W (SURV) FOWLER WILL B (JTWROS) OBRIEN NICOLE AMACHER CHARLES A (JTWRO SCHAEFER AMY N (JTWROS) CASTILLO ADAM M (JTWROS) EDGELEY GRANT P THRIFT LIMITED PARTNERSH JOHNSON IRMA SOCORRO (JT PENLEY HEATHER K (JTWROS PSC PROPERTIES LLC EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL MARTIN TOBIAS C (JTWROS) CIRESI BONNIE POPE MARION A JR (JTWROS NAGY WANDA K FRIAS JULIO (JTWROS) BARNARD JOANN C (JTWROS) PHAM TRANG T (JTWROS) HENN BRUCE J BAKER JENNIFER CIUROS WILLIAM JR KILCOYNE JESSICA ANN DODENHOFF EVELYN H TOMA CHRISTOPHER B BEHERA SUBRAT STOWELL JAMES LEWIS JR ( KLINT JAMES T

306 CRESCENT AVE 223 E SEVEN OAKS DR 506 EDWARDS RD 411 CHAMBLEE BLVD 101 E WASHINGTON ST STE 400 875 PROSPECT ST STE 303 3232 NEWMARK DR 1 DELLWOOD DR 105 SORRENTO DR 103 EDISTO ST 207 GRIFFITH HILL WAY 540 BETHANY RD 207 ELM ST 2 MCRAE PL 2134 HIGHWAY 11 106 GRASSY MEADOW DR 526 WEMBLEY RD 1 WINDSWEPT KNOLL DR 607 SUGAR MILL RD 127 MCDANIEL GREENE 3 OGLETHORPE CT 205 E FARIS RD 125 WINFIELD RD 6 COUPLES CT 201 WILDLIFE TRL 35 LAYKEN LN 54 PALLADI0 DR 100 HICKORY HILL LN 901 WEMBLEY RD 132 CREEK SHOALS DR 236 WISCASSET WAY 51 FOXMOOR CT 102 CUTLER WAY 3 FULLERTON CT 501 SUMMIT DR 136 PHEASANT WAY 15 TEE TIME CT 300 HOLLY CREST CIR 211 N RUTHERFORD RD 308 COTTONWOOD CT 208 ROANOKE WAY 3228-A WADE HAMPTON BLVD 308 ABBEY GARDENS LN 138 SCOTTS BLUFF DR 60 LAKE FOREST DR 1200 WOODRUFF RD STE H20 108 ROANOKE WAY 615 POINSETT HWY 223 COOPER OAKS CT 201 MONTALCINO WAY 19 OVERCUP CT 204 DUNROBIN LN 123 BELSHIRE DR 316 ROCKY TOP DR 101 PALADIUM PL 301 RABBIT RUN TRL 215 CURETON ST 116 BRIARHILL DR 407 W FARIS RD 116 WINDSOR CREEK CT 117 SEABURY DR 18 DUCK POND LN

HEARTHSTONE@RIVER SHOALS $252,730 HOLLINGTON $245,000 STONELEDGES $245,000 MERRIFIELD PARK $245,000 $240,000 LANDING@SAVANNAH POINTE $239,000 AMBER OAKS FARM $238,286 BROOKFIELD GARDENS $236,951 HIGHLAND TERRACE $236,000 PELHAM ESTATES $230,000 CAROLINA OAKS $229,900 $225,000 GARRISON WOODS $220,000 FOWLER CHASE $219,785 OLD MILL ESTATES $217,900 COACHMAN PLANTATION $217,500 NORTHWOOD $217,500 $215,000 RIDGEDALE $215,000 SWANSGATE $215,000 THE LOFTS AT MILLS MILL $212,000 COTTAGES@HARRISON BRIDGE $211,440 SUMMERFIELD $210,750 FIELDSTONE $208,000 SWANSGATE $207,000 WATERMILL $203,464 BRYSON MEADOWS $200,358 NORTHCLIFF $200,000 HAWTHORNE RIDGE $195,961 SEVEN OAKS $195,000 $195,000 WATERMILL $192,412 MCSWAIN GARDENS $191,500 HAMPTON FARMS $190,491 THE HEIGHTS $190,000 $190,000 HAVEN AT RIVER SHOALS $187,400 BLUE RIDGE FARMS $186,000 MAGNOLIA MEADOWS $185,000 AUGUSTA RD HILLS $185,000 ONEAL VILLAGE $184,900 SHARON PLACE $183,894 WINDSOR FOREST $182,000 ENOREE POINT $181,900 HILLSIDE HEIGHTS $180,000 HIDDEN SPRINGS@B RIDGE PLNTN $179,025 HAWTHORNE RIDGE $178,600 WOODS AT BONNIE BRAE $176,500 LONG CREEK PLANTATION $176,176 THE HEIGHTS $175,000 NICOLL PLACE $170,000 BROOKSIDE $169,900 $169,000 POWDERHORN $168,900 WESTVIEW $167,000 WOODLANDS AT WALNUT COVE $167,000 IVYBROOKE $167,000 STALLINGS HEIGHTS $165,750 BELLE TERRACE ACRES $165,000 PINE TREE $163,000 VILLAGE @ GLENLEA $161,000 LINKSIDE AT BONNIE BRAE $159,139

PRICE SELLER D R HORTON-CROWN LLC H&W INVESTMENT GROUP LLC VANPELT BARBARA JEAN URPS BRENDA BRASHIER T WALTER REV TR D R HORTON INC SK BUILDERS INC SHADY OAKS DEVELOPMENT L HOLLIDAY THOMAS N TAYLOR PETER A (L-EST) POPE MARION ARNIE (JTWRO GARNER MARK ANDREW BAYNE BRIAN P SK BUILDERS INC WOODHAM THOMAS M TI COACHMAN LLC RASMUSSEN VICKIE L CANNON G SHANE REGELE MEGAN BRYANT HENRY P JR HOUGHAM KYLE DWELLING GROUP LLC CASTILLO ADAM M CALDER PATRICIA A BROWN PATRICIA M EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL MUNGO HOMES INC OTTO RYAN S (JTWROS) MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH BRYANT F CHARLES TAYLOR MACHELLE B EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL TAYLOR MARY M (L-EST) SK BUILDERS INC BROOME HEATHER D (JTWROS HOWE JAMES E SR MCCORMICK DRU A CRABB AMY N KROOK BETH ROSSLEY HEATHER E PLACEK CHRISTINA M BRAMLETT LORENA C HUDSON JARED S (JTWROS) SK BUILDERS INC HOLLIS WILLIAM W III SK BUILDERS INC MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH B&W OPTIMUM INVESTMENTS GRIMES JARED P MARTINS VIVIANE SURETT PAULINE P CHISHOLM SHAWNTEL (JTWRO MIMMS JANNELLE MARIE SUTTON YVONNE D HUGHEY CARA ANN LEVENTIS GEORGE CHRIS SR XAVER GERALD E SK BUILDERS INC FRAZIER EDY L SUMMIT HOUSING SOLUTIONS JTB LLC OF GREENVILLE BELCHER SAMUEL E

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GRANT EMANUEL C (JTWROS) HILDERBRAN ABBY PATRICIA SMITH DAVID A DAVIS CATHY G PAINTER STEFANNIE H (JTW MCHALE KALIN A (JTWROS) PASIENZA JOANNE M (JTWRO DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL WOODS SCOTT PATTERSON CHARLES R (JTW PEED HARRY JR (JTWROS) DAUGHERTY RALPH B (JTWRO LIVINGSTON JESSICA (JTWR KING TERRY ALEJANDRO MCKINNEY BRIAN A MUNGO HOMES INC KERSCHINSKE JULIUS (JTWR STEVENSON JOHN W DUNCAN MAURICE JR (JTWRO TILLER LINDA N TEASDALL KATHY J (JTWROS STANLEY TATUM LYNN JUHL GARY (JTWROS) ELLIOTT BOBBY H DEUBEN REBECCA KNOTT MITCHELL DEMETRIUS N BROOKS BETHANY D (JTWROS MOLLOY ALLEN P (JTWROS) PEREZ JORDHY (JTWROS) MAY BENNETT RICHARD ESPINOZA SANDY TRIMBACH DAVID J (JTWROS BRYAN ALEXANDRA JAHR STANTON JEWEL M GOODELL BRENDAN M CLEAR SPRINGS FIRE AND R TRESSLER MARILYN B (JTWR RASMUSSEN VICKIE LEE TODD ALEXANDER C BENORE JESSICA SUE (JTWR THOMAS CHARLES L III (JT LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPATIO PITT EMILY M (JTWROS) SALINAS JUSTIN A (JTWROS SIMS LEW ADDISON MUNOZ CARLOS R HAN MINHUI DRINKARD CHANDRA L FORREST EMILY (JTWROS) WESTFIELD JOSEPH L II (J ROBERTS WAYNE V DEASE KENYA BROWN ANGELA F (JTWROS) AYERS SHARON H (JTWROS) MOORE KAREN E (JTWROS) A-1 PROPERTIES LLC RICHARDSON BARBARA H (JT JOHNSON WILLIAM N FLOYD WILLIAM CLARY III DYAR JARED J STEIN KEITH J LSF8 MASTER PARTICIPATIO

28 SAKONNET CT 335 ABBEY GARDENS LN 325 WITTROCK CT 13 HILLSBOROUGH DR PO BOX 4067 9 RHINEGOLD CT 218 WILLOWGREEN WAY 318 PRADO WAY 51 PADDINGTON AVE 105 JAMESTOWN DR 107 CAROLINA OAKS DR 1435 WINGO RD 600 S ARTILLERY CT 112 REDSTEM DR 11 EASTWOOD DR 441 WESTERN LN 213 MOHAWK DR 113 JUDSON AVE 38 CROSSLAND WAY 321 MOCKNIGBIRD HL 2732 FOREST DR 355 BELLE OAKS DR 6 CANSO ST 18 CANTERA CIR 211 SANDPIPER WAY 42 ALTAMIRA WAY 101 ODIE DR 233 NORTHCLIFF WAY 508 JONES PEAK DR 115 E WOODBURN DR 5 ROBINSON RD 396 RIVERDALE RD 222 MCSWAIN DR 306 STALLION RD 52 GRANITE LN 2435 E GEORGIA RD 505 RIO GRANDE PL 117 MARAH LN 313 MAGNOLIA MEADOW LN 223 CAMMER AVE 306 MERITAGE ST 13801 WIRELESS WAY 107 BATHURST LN 220 FINLEY HILL CT 120 CONVERSE ST 3 SILVERSTONE WAY 608 JONES PEAK DR 4 SANDY LN 12 COACHWHIP CT 39 SHALE CT 1813 HIGHWAY 414 10 KIMBERLYBROOK CT 841 TUBBS MOUNTAIN RD 1020 POWDER HORN RD 213 MORIAH LN PO BOX 25804 312 ROUND RIDGE RD 400 TERILYN CT 8 ELJEMA FRST 207 PINE TREE DR 54 MARAVISTA AVE 120 SANDY LN


www.MarchantCo.com (864) 467-0085 | AGENT ON DUTY: Barb Riggs (864) 423-2783 RENTAL PROPERTIES AVAILABLE • Marchantpm.com (864) 527-4505 us, geo cres r o ,G A ssy 12 Cla ol, w/ Po

ide ct ers istri v i D R ol o Sch

3559 Ballenger Road - Greer

12 Highland Drive - Augusta Road

217 Breton Drive - Hammett Creek

$875,000 • 1320397 • 4BR/4BA/1Hf BA

$788,900 • 1310557 • 4BR/3BA/1Hf BA

$595,000 • 1307572 • 4BR/3BA/1Hf BA

Valerie Miller • (864) 430-6602 • vmiller@marchantco.com

+

US EO G R GO

Tom Marchant • (864) 449-1658 • tom@tommarchant.com

Karen W. Turpin • (864) 230-5176 • karenturpi@aol.com Nancy McCrory • (864) 505-8367 • nmmccrory@aol.com

lete omp me! C e h o y “T ” H Trul ackage P

t l Lo d tia tn. R n e sid r M Re Rope on

205 Michaux Court - Chanticleer

108 Pond Terrace Lane - Carsons Pond

2328 Roper Mountain Rd - Greenville

$549,900 • 1318952 • 4BR/2BA/1Hf BA

$380,000 • 1321729 • 4BR/2BA/1Hf BA

$399,747 • 1304379 • Lot

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Anne Marchant • (864) 420-0009 • anne@marchantco.com Brian Marchant • (864) 631-5858 • brian@marchantco.com

ain nM o r ste Ma

Valerie Miller • (864) 430-6602 • vmiller@marchantco.com

T EA T! GR MEN SE BA

Joan Rapp • (864) 901-3839 • joan@marchantco.com

lan orp o l F en Op

403 Winding River Lane - Whitehall Plantation

603 Farming Creek Drive - Neely Farm

122 Whiffletree Drive - Neely Farm

$289,000 • 1321345 • 4BR/3BA/1Hf BA

$284,000 • 1320420 • 4BR/3BA/1Hf BA

$239,900 • 1320891 • 4BR/2BA/1Hf BA

Anne Marchant • (864) 420-0009 • anne@marchantco.com Brian Marchant • (864) 631-5858 • brian@marchantco.com

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Barbara Riggs • (864) 423-2783 • barbriggs@marchantco.com

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Barbara Riggs • (864) 423-2783 • barbriggs@marchantco.com

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8 Byrd Boulevard - Augusta Road $589,900 • 1314557 • 3BR/3BA

Tom Marchant • (864) 449-1658 • tom@tommarchant.com

t en pm ity! o l ve un De pport O

0 Barr Circle - Powdersville $339,000 • 1317340 • Lot

Joey Beeson • (864) 660-9689 • joeymbeeson@gmail.com

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39 Brightmore Drive - Riverwood Farm $189,000 • 1320940 • 3BR/2BA

Anne Marchant • (864) 420-0009 • anne@marchantco.com Brian Marchant • (864) 631-5858 • brian@marchantco.com

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925 Cleveland St, Unit 163 • Riverbend Condos

77 Regardless Lane - Waterloo

414 Kilgore Farms Circle• Kilgore Farms

338 Endless Drive - Greer

$135,900 • 1320572 • 1BR/1BA

$169,747 • 1301062 • 2BR/1BA/1Hf BA

$349,900 • 1312120 • 4BR/3BA/1Hf BA

$145,000 • 1317659 • 3BR/2BA

Nellie Wagoner • (864) 423-3939 • nellie@marchantco.com

Joan Rapp • (864) 901-3839 • joan@marchantco.com

Lydia Johnson • (864) 918-9663 • lydia@marchantco.com

Mikel-Ann Scott • (864) 630-2474 • mikelann@marchantco.com

Gordon D. Seay • (864) 444-4359 • gordonDseay@gmail.com

RESIDENTIAL | COMMERCIAL | NEW HOME COMMUNITIES | PROPERTY MANAGEMENT | VETERAN SERVICES | FORECLOSURES | LAND & ACREAGE | MOUNTAIN PROPERTIES


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05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 37

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HOME Real Estate News

Learn more about this Upstate business in

BEHIND THE COUNTER 2016

DeAnna Gibson Joins Coldwell Banker Caine Coldwell Banker Caine recently welcomed DeAnna Gibson as a residential sales agent to its Greenville office. DeAnna joins Coldwell Banker Caine with several years of real estate experience in Louisville, KY. She holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Music Business from the University of North Alabama. An active member of her community, DeAnna volunteers with Holly Ridge Baptist Church, where her husband (Brett) serves as Music Minister. DeAnna enjoys music and crafting in her spare time, as well Gibson as anything involving her three sons. DeAnna spent some of her life overseas, including multiple years in Indonesia and Malaysia, and often uses free moments to continue learning about other cultures. “We are delighted to welcome DeAnna to our Greenville team,” said Stephen Edgerton, president and CEO of Coldwell Banker Caine. “Her experience and wealth of unique skills will be a tremendous asset to our team and to her clients.”

Lindsay Blanton Joins Coldwell Banker Caine Coldwell Banker Caine recently welcomed Lindsay Blanton as a residential sales agent to its Spartanburg office. Lindsay joins Coldwell Banker Caine with nine years of real estate experience from another real estate company in the Upstate where she was a multi-million dollar producer, earning Rising Star and Silver Awards. Outside of work, Lindsay volunteers at her childrens’ school and her church. She loves spending time with her husband of eleven years Blanton (Freddie) and their two active, young boys (Sayler, 5 and Solby, 3). “We are pleased to welcome Lindsay to our Spartanburg team,” said Stephen Edgerton, president and CEO of Coldwell Banker Caine. “Her proven success in the Upstate market will allow her to continue to excel with the Coldwell Banker Caine family.”

When you have that hometown edge, it makes all the difference in the residential real estate market.

330 Pelham Rd., Ste 209B, Greenville 864.416.1031 montgomeryrealtysc.com

To get a copy of BTC or feature your business, call 679-1205.

Jenny Burns Tesner Joins Allen Tate Company Allen Tate Realtors® (www.allentate.com), the Carolinas’ leading real estate company, is proud to announce that Jenny Tesner has joined the Greenville-Woodruff Road office. “Jenny’s years of experience in Real Estate and her tenacity make her a valuable addition to the Allen Tate team.” states Trina Montalbano, branch manager of Allen Tate Realtors Woodruff office. Jenny joins a staff of 20 licensed Realtors in the Woodruff office and a large network of licensed Realtors throughout the Carolinas.

32 Rolleston Drive • Claremont $825,000 • 5 BR, 4 BA

156 Augusta Court $674,900 • 4 BR, 3.5 BA

100 Dellwood Drive • Near North Main $599,000 • 4 BR, 4 BA

203 Wild Ginger Way • Cliffs @ Keowee Vinyards $1,650,000 • 5 BR, 4.5 BA

Let us customize a buying or selling plan for you! • 16 + years of award winning sales & service • Flexible pricing structure • Luxury home specialist • New listings open houses

Rick Horne

Crossword puzzle: page 54

Sudoku puzzle: page 54

Broker In Charge www.customrealtysc.com (864) 982-7653


38 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

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COVER: ARTISPHERE

Bringing art home Art collecting doesn’t have to be intimidating or expensive CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Collecting art has never been easier than it is now, said Teresa Roche, owner of Art & Light Gallery and an Artisphere board member. And it doesn’t have to be costly or intimidating. “It’s not as expensive as people think it is,” she said. Yes, there are pieces that cost thousands of dollars. But there are many other pieces available for less than $100. Patrons at this weekend’s Artisphere will find plenty of both. So will visitors to Greenville’s many art galleries and art exhibitions, including the Metropolitan Arts Council’s “OneStop Open Studios Retrospective” exhibit that runs through May 27 and will be open during Artisphere weekend. That exhibit features small works by local artists who have participated in the MAC’s Greenville Open Studios. “People with modest means can easily begin an art collection,” said MAC executive director Alan Ethridge, who has an extensive collection of local art in his office and in his home. “Events such as Artisphere, Greenville Open Studios every November and First Fridays provide the public with fantastic opportunities to purchase original art, not all of which is cost-prohibitive.” Furman University art professor Michael Brodeur advises people to buy art they love. “If you start thinking about the value and reselling, you’re setting yourself up for disappointment,” he said. “One of the reasons to collect art is to look at it and live with it. That’s where the value is to me.” For those collectors for whom increasing values are important, Bob Jones University art professor Kevin Isgett advises enlisting an art consultant, although there are no guarantees.

About the cover image

“All the better, red” Gouache painting by Hallie M. Bertling Each piece in my faerie tale feet series is an original gouache painting that harkens back to

Art & Light Gallery located at 16 Aiken Street in the Village of West Greenville proudly displays the artwork of several local artists.

Roche said when somebody who doesn’t own any original art walks into her gallery, she first asks them to show her a piece that resonates with them and is something they’d want in their home. Next, she shows them more work from that artist and suggests a studio visit so they can talk to the artist and see part of the artist’s artistic process. “This connection with the artist, the medium and the process really triggers it for them,” she said. “It completely changes the way they buy art. So much of the collecting process is the joy and happiness that art brings; they want to do it again and again.” Ethridge said Greenville has an outstanding roster of visual artists across all media and across all price points.

“Our visual artists are very unique, and it can be very rewarding to own their work,” said Ethridge, who describes his taste as very eclectic but with one commonality – color, and a lot of it. Artisphere is a great place to look for art because it is a juried show and everything there is original and well done, Roche said. She recommends going from tent to tent to get a feel. Once drawn to a piece, visit other booths and then return the next day to see if the piece evokes the same emotion. “If it does, that’s a good sign you’re going to love it,” she said. If a piece draws your attention but you’re not ready to buy because it exceeds your budget, follow that artist by subscribing to his or her mailing list. Go to exhibits and the

the original source material, embellishing the little things that made these heroines and adventurers who they actually are and who they have become by the last page of the tome.

character by his or her shoes. I’ve painted just the feet in this series so that you can step into the story for yourself.

The backgrounds are full of icons and details of the story from the original tales. And why feet? You can tell a lot about a person by his or her posture, and you can tell a lot about a

And make sure you’re wearing the right pair of shoes.

TJ Getz / Contributing

artist’s studio if you can. “See if what they are doing really resonates. Is it worth the investment because it’s a piece you truly love and can’t live without?” Roche said. If it is, some artists and galleries offer payment plans, Ethridge said. If they don’t, they may have a similar piece that costs less, Roche said. Collectors may have to save up money and buy one or two pieces a year, Roche said. Collections can have themes, but they don’t have to. Some collectors buy certain artists; others buy pieces with certain subjects. But art doesn’t have to match the couch or the paint in the living room, Isgett said. “There’s no one correct way to collect art,” he said.

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COVER: ARTISPHERE

Art for everyone Artisphere When: • Friday, May 13 – 12 noon to 8 p.m. (Artisphere After Hours Concert Series ends at 10 p.m.) • Saturday, May 14 – 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Artisphere After Hours Concert Series ends at 10 p.m.) • Sunday, May 15 – 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Where: downtown Greenville

Artisphere takes over downtown this weekend CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

The arts will take over downtown Greenville this weekend. Artisphere, Greenville’s big festival that celebrates the visual arts and is widely recognized as one of the nation’s top art festivals, opens at noon Friday and runs through Sunday afternoon. Tens of thousands of people are expected to gather to view and purchase colorful art and enjoy free music, street performances and artistic demonstrations. The heart of Artisphere is Artists’ Row where 135 artists will display their work in booths that line Main Street. The featured artists – including 17 local artists – were selected from 1,090 applicants. To accommodate the largest Artist’s Row in festival history, the festival has enlarged its footprint downtown to accommodate the expansion of artists’ booths on South Main Street. The artists represent media ranging from painting, photography, jewelry, glass, sculpture and woodworking. Fifty-five of the artists have not participated in Artisphere before. But that’s not all there is to it.

What’s new? This year’s festival has some new features. One is London artist Julian Wild, who will be debuting “Making the Connection,” a communal sculpture project in Falls Park. The installation will allow people of all ages

the opportunity to participate in the construction of a large-scale sculpture made of low-tech everyday material such as plastic tubing and elbow joints. Artisphere is adding a fourth stage this year – the Acoustic Café Stage. The stage on South Main Street will feature local musicians such as Charles Hedgepath, Moody Black, Brooks Dixon, Wesley Cook, Darby Wilcox and Taylor Moore. Food trucks will be a part of Artisphere’s After Hours Concert Series, which features national performing acts such as Major & the Monbacks, SHEL, Diane Coffee and Brett Dennen on the festival’s Main Stage after the artists’ tents close up. Those into social media can check out what’s happening in the Windstream Social Media Listening Center.

Festival favorites Artist Brian Olsen, one of the festival’s most popular guests, will return with his “Art in Motion” performance. He combines music and paint in a flurry of action to create larger-than-life portraits of various pop culture icons and historic figures. Thirteen performances are scheduled throughout the festival. Festivalgoers can see how art is made on Artist Demo Row, while kids will get to release their inner artist at Kidsphere. Clemson University faculty, students and staff will showcase the intersection of science, technology, engineering, art and math in the festival’s STEAM exhibit. Visitors will get to create a Pascagaza (“an interactive contemporary artwork in which the spectator becomes the artist as he crafts his own unique aesthetic experience,” according to a Clemson University press release), take an infrared selfie and play a hydraulophone, among other activities.

The Artists of the Upstate juried exhibition entries are hanging in the Founder’s Room above Larkin’s on the River restaurant at 318 S. Main St. behind the Peace Center. Hours are Friday noon to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Artists in the exhibition live within a 35-mile radius of Greenville. High school artists are featured in a juried exhibit in the Broad at Main Courtyard. On Friday, the festival gets underway with a puppet parade at noon. The parade of larger-than-life puppets starts at City Hall and runs south. Sherry Jackson / Staff

Popular attractions: • Artists’ Row, featuring 135 visual artists • Art in Action, visual performing artist Brian Olsen • Kidsphere, a place where kids can create their own art • Culinary Arts Café and Stage, demonstrations by local artists, food • Music and performing artists • Artists of the Upstate juried art show • Greenville County High School juried exhibit • Demo Row Cost: Free, although art, food and drinks will be for sale Information: artisphere.org


40 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

COVER: ARTISPHERE

Local artists, national reputation KENT AMBLER Kent Ambler knew he’d be an artist. He was introduced to printmaking while a student at Ball State University in Indiana and discovered he had an innate feel for the process of making woodcuts. Mark making is the main focus in Ambler’s woodcut prints, while surface and paint application are the main focus in his paintings. Booth #20.

HALLIE BERTLING Hallie Bertling worked as a children’s book illustrator after graduating from the Savannah School of Art and Design. Her watercolors feature the feet of faerie tale characters and hidden objects from childhood favorites. She calls it “art for the visually articulate.” Booth #45.

JOSEPH BRADLEY Joseph Bradley’s career as an artist had a bit of an unusual impetus – he was held up in a bank robbery. The experience forced an evaluation of what energized him. Now a nationally known artist, Bradley, a Greenville native, is known for koi, wildlife and landscape paintings. Booth #108

EVANGELOS COURPAS Evangelos Courpas creates one-of-a-kind hand-built wood furniture using local trees – often from friends’ or neighbors’ properties – that he mills or splits and seasons. The wood’s qualities and characteristics such as grain, color, density and structural attributes are an integral part of the design. Booth #121.

JANINA ELLIS Janina Ellis is the third generation in a family of artists. Her grandmother was an oil painter, and her mother is one of the top U.S. scrimshanders, or maritime engravers. Ellis is a painter who now concentrates

This year’s Artisphere has its largest Artists’ Row ever. Greenville Journal reporter Cindy Landrum thumbnails the local artists you’ll see there.

on figurative work. Her style, which combines the lighting techniques found in realism with bold painting-knife strokes of impressionism, has been described as “peaceful, yet still subtly invigorating.” Booth #57.

KATE FURMAN Kate Furman’s jewelry pieces tell stories. Her designs are made from an array of materials, including found wood, sterling silver, bronze and steel. These wearable pieces are inspired by nature. Her years of whitewater raft guiding in Jackson Hole, Wyo., and beachcombing along the South Carolina coast are visible in her pieces. Booth #104.

DARIN GEHRKE As a potter, Darin Gehrke’s goal is to make work that is striking and functional. Since Gehrke returned from living in China, his work has focused on making ceramics that combine Chinese and Japanese aesthetics. Prior to moving to Greenville, he worked in a garment district studio in New York City and taught adult ceramics classes. Booth #68.

LYNN GREER Lynn Greer’s emphasis is color. Whether the variety found in the sky and lights of Greenville’s cityscape at night, a breathtaking landscape or a bunch of flowers, Greer tries to make a statement through new combinations of color. Greer, a graduate of the University of Georgia, has participated in every Artisphere except the first one. Booth #63.

MARIE GRUBER Black and white fine art photography has always been one of Marie Gruber’s favorite forms of artistic expression. Gruber studied fine art at the University of Georgia and Clemson University. She earned a degree in painting from Clemson. Her images are from her local surroundings and from her travels in the United States, British Columbia, France, Spain, China, Costa Rica and Italy. Booth #64.

JENNIFER JANEIRO Jennifer Janeiro creates vintagefeeling pen-and-ink drawings of modern elements, found objects and skulls. Utilizing cross-hatching and hard contrast, her drawings take on the appearance of old etchings. Booth #129.

JERRY MAXEY Jerry Maxey has always worked with wood, starting with building things and refinishing furniture at his father’s upholstery shop. When he found himself without access to a workshop, a friend urged him to start making baskets. Now he combines both in his art. Booth #16.

RAY MOSTELLER Photographer Ray Mosteller focuses on “storytelling” scenes in his photography. Mosteller photographed as a hobby for many years before becoming a full-time fine art photographer seven years ago. He specializes in large-scale photography and some of his pieces are 16 feet long. Booth #1.

DANIELLE MILLER-GILLIAM Danielle Miller-Gilliam discovered her passion for working with metal while making a large-scale welded-steel sculpture. She became entranced by jewelry making in college. Her present work consists of jewelry with kinetic elements designed to attract and engage the attention of the wearer. Booth #72.

JACKI NEWELL Jacki Newell loves painting outdoors, so the move to the Greenville area was perfect, because there is so much incredible scenery to paint. Newell said she wants the viewer to experience what she loves about the scene, which is almost always the light hitting the subject and shimmering in the air. Booth #49.


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COVER: ARTISPHERE KATIE POTERALA

Artisphere Map

Katie Poterala’s work is sensitive to the relationship between beauty and decay and people’s relationships to previous objects. A main focus of Poterala’s work is the reinterpretation of the jewel – often by removing it and replacing it with the unexpected or reincorporating it in unique and captivating ways. Booth #133

LLYN STRONG At first, Llyn Strong thought she would be a painter or a graphic designer. She didn’t make her first piece of jewelry until 1972. Now, she’s the owner of a downtown store that features her own original jewelry designs as well as that of more than 30 jewelry and glass artists. Booth #60.

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Mixed-media artist Judy Verhoeven made her first collage with gum wrappers she collected from family and friends. She’s still collecting paper and turning it into works of art. Booth #22.

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Tinnitus Educational Seminar May 26th • 11:00am - 12:30pm RSVP to: (864) 349-5265 The Cottages at Brushy Creek Community Room 101 Cottage Creek Drive | Greer, SC 29650 Stacy Harris Marlowe, Au.D. will lead a discussion on tinnitus, tinnitus management and options for living easier with tinnitus. Various treatment methods will be available for you to explore and ask questions about. During the event we will invite attendees to schedule an appointment for a hearing/tinnitus evaluation that will be conducted at our office. Hearing loss is the most common cause of tinnitus, learn more by attending our educational seminar.

Davis Audiology - What Sets us Apart. Only Independent Family-Owned Private Practice Doctors of Audiology In Greenville! We pride ourselves on a being a very patient-centered practice. We always take the time to listen to you so we can better understand the day-to-day challenges you are facing as a result of hearing difficulties. We find that this is the best way to develop treatment goals and intervention strategies that are both relevant and achievable. We promise to work closely with you to discover where you are having the most difficulty communicating. Then, we will collaborate with you to determine the best solution to increase your ability to hear and understand in the situations you describe. If that solution includes hearing aids, then we are committed to recommending the technology that works best for your level of hearing loss and lifestyle. 20+ Years of Experience!

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44 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

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BROADWAY 2016-2017

CULTURE

Collector’s conscience Sandy Rupp, owner of Hampton III Gallery, makes art accessible EXTRA RUTA FOX | CONTRIBUTOR

“IT’S SOME KIND OF WONDERFUL!” –NY1

To Paris and beyond, the world is at your feet the moment

Kelli O’Hara & Hoon Lee. Photo: Paul Kolnik

BROADWAY ’S BIGGEST NEW HIT!

Representing artists with work in the permanent collection of MoMA, the MET and the Whitney in New York City, not to mention the National Gallery in Washington, DC, and the Art Institute of Chicago, Hampton III Gallery owner Sandy Rupp has spent more than 25 years curating art. Her collaborations between artists, collectors, museums and academic institutions form the basis for her South Carolina–focused exhibits. Featuring sculpture, collage, mixed media, prints and paintings in subjects as varied as still life, figurative work and landscapes, the Hampton III Gallery offers art aficionados work to fit any budget. Rupp offered some tips on how to start collecting.

How long has the Hampton III gallery been in Greenville?

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Actually, we are the oldest art gallery in South Carolina, including Charleston. My father started it in 1970. He was a teacher who had summers off, so he decided to open an art gallery. He had three friends who were artists, so he called it Hampton III. In the late ’60s and early ’70s, there was a nucleus of professional artists in South Carolina who were exhibiting throughout the Southeast. He started with Carl Blair, Emery Bopp and Darell Koons and soon invited their friends: Leo Twiggs, Jeanet Dreskin and William Halsey.

How did you get into the gallery business?

I grew up in it because I was surrounded by artwork. There were always artists around; they were like aunts, uncles and grandparents, as well as mentors to me. The artists in the gallery are still mentoring me; I continue to learn a great deal from them.

What hangs in your own home?

It’s floor-to-ceiling work by all of my artists. If I fall in love with a piece of art here, it goes home with me. And it stays at home.

How exactly do you decide on which artist to represent?

I’m always looking for talent whether I go to exhibitions, research online or peruse magazines. I’m interested in artists who’ve been influenced and have developed a legacy in South Carolina. They may or may not actually live here now, but either through their childhood or their work career, they have deeply resonated with South Carolina. But

Paul Mehaffey

most important is their aesthetic; each artist needs to have a unique voice.

How do you describe the gallery?

I can’t really describe it. It’s unpredictable as to what I might show. It has to have a depth of quality, but I don’t look for a particular style. I do feel that my artists are the foundation for the visual culture of South Carolina, and that it’s important that gallery owners, collectors, and museums pass along their visual history to the next generation.

Is any type of art hotter than any other type right now?

Oh, everyone asks me that! I am not in the market to follow trends or encourage artists to work in a certain style. I urge artists to express themselves and follow their path. Hopefully, I will find collectors that respond to that. The dialogue between the artist, the collector and the gallery guests always delights and surprises me.

Should people just buy what they like or have a strategy to pursue a balanced collection?

People definitely need to buy what they love. When a collector looks at art, they bring their own aesthetic to the process. So, I find that often an unconscious connection will surface as a collection develops.

Can you give us some tips for buying art on a budget?

First, ask a gallery dealer if they will allow you to do payments. You could also start with etchings or lithographs, but be careful that the prints have come from the artist’s hand and are not commercially reproduced. There isn’t a rule that one medium is less expensive than another. However, sometimes works on paper tend to be less expensive than works on canvas.

Hampton III Gallery 3110 Wade Hampton Suite #10, Taylors. 864-268-2771, hamptoniiigallery.com


This weekend, enjoy

ARTISPHERE. ART IS HERE. And the rest of the year, remember

Greenville County Museum of Art

420 College Street Greenville, SC 29601 864.271.7570 gcma.org Wed - Sat 10 am - 6 pm Sun 1pm - 5 pm admission free

1623 GCMA Journal Art is Here.indd 2

5/10/16 12:51 PM


46 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

CULTURE

Ace of bass No matter the genre, Victor Wooten keeps his eye on the bottom line VINCENT HARRIS | CONTRIBUTOR

vharris@communityjournals.com

Most musicians would probably think that bringing incredible technique, genre-spanning ability and an extensive resume that includes five Grammys with them when they roll into town for a show would be enough. But bassist Victor Wooten isn’t most musicians. So along with a dazzling level of mastery over his instrument, the aforementioned fistful of Grammys, a list of cross-pollinating collaborations that includes work with banjo master Bela Fleck, the Dave Matthews Band’s Carter Beauford, Bootsy Collins and jazz bassist Christian McBride, Wooten is bringing an incredible ensemble with him to the Mauldin Cultural Center this Friday. Accompanying Wooten on sax will be Bob Franceschini, who’s worked with Paul Simon and Tito Puente, among many oth-

ers. Then there’s drummer Dennis Chambers, who’s played with George Clinton’s Parliament-Funkadelic collective, John Scofield and Santana. And interestingly enough, standing alongside Wooten on an additional bass guitar will be Anthony Wellington. “It frees me up a lot, having an extra bassist, a good supportive bassist,” Wooten says. “I can play the melodies and things that I play on my records, because just about all of the times on my records, I play a melody and then I still record the bass parts underneath. So having Anthony with me allows me not to lose the bottom end when I play bass on it.” And then there’s Chambers, with whom Wooten says he has a special bond. “Both

of us grew up in the funk and R&B era, with Parliament and James Brown. So what we do is rooted in funk music; there’s a solid funky groove to it. And that’s one of the things that allows us to relate together in music, and why we get along no matter what other style we’re playing, is that we both go back to the same era.” “But,” Wooten is quick to add, “to be a bass player and play with Dennis, you have to know what you’re doing. You have to stay on your toes at all times because he’s such a good drummer that he can flip the beat upside down, and before you know it, you’re lost. You thought you knew where everything was, and all of a sudden you’re just out in the wilderness. So you’ve got to stay on your toes. And it’s fun for me. I love that challenge; I love having to listen that closely.” Given that Wooten can pull from jazz, funk and all sorts of different styles from his 15-album discography (that’s apart from his ensemble work with Bela Fleck & The Flecktones), it’s reasonable to ask what kind of a set he’ll be playing on Friday. And the answer is, quite simply, any kind he and his band want to. “One of the first things I did with these musicians was ask them what they wanted to play,” Wooten says. “I wanted them to bring their interests to the table. So there will be quite a bit of new music that people haven’t

Victor Wooten featuring Dennis Chambers, Bob Franceschini & Anthony Wellington When: Friday, May 13, 7:30 p.m. Where: Mauldin Cultural Center, 101 E. Butler Road, Mauldin Tickets: Admission is free Info: 864-335-4862; mauldinculturalcenter.org

heard before. And of course there will be a lot of improvisation.” Then again, Wooten’s longtime fans probably know not to expect anything predictable. Heck, he even unexpectedly became an acclaimed author a few years back when he wrote a fictional book that incorporated the musical techniques he’d been teaching for years at his annual summer music camps. “I do think that any audience that’s followed me for years, they know that every time I come around, it’s going to be something different,” he says. “Different music they’ve never seen or heard before, and in most cases different musicians. It’s rare that I ever come back to the same area with the same outfit. Hopefully people like that. I know that I do.”


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CULTURE Sound Bites “LOOSEN THE BIBLE BELT,” FEATURING KRISTEN BECKER, JAY BAKKER, SARAHROSE MARIE, DWAYNE DUKE AND THE HEAVENLY CHILLBILLIES Independent Public Ale House, 110 Poinsett Highway, Greenville Saturday, May 14, 9 p.m., $12 Adv/$15 Door What do you get when you put a lesbian comedian and a preacher following in his father’s footsteps together? A “variety hour” show that features two standups, a man of faith preaching tolerance, a rockabilly band and a ukulele-strumming songstress, all in service of the idea of acceptance. Kristen Becker, the aforementioned lesbian comedian, reached out to Jay Bakker, son of Jim and Tammy Faye, with an idea about joining forces. “In 2006 I saw that Jay was voicing his support for gay marriage. I saw in him a guy who is of Christian faith and believes that Jesus loves you exactly as you are, and I thought that maybe if we could get together, then we could show other people how to do it. The idea is that it’s a two-way street; as much as Christians may have some negative view about LGBT people, LGBT people have some of those same views about religious people. It seemed like a really great way to open up a conversation and literally practice what we’re preaching.”

MORGAN OF THE PINES W/ JOHN THE REVELATOR & HUNGER ANTHEM Radio Room, 2845 N. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville Friday, May 13, 9 p.m., $5 The music that Rex Akins creates for his band, Morgan of the Pines, is dark, atmospheric and largely acoustic, combining the more sinister elements of Appalachian folk and blues. Which is why hearing about his first musical influence is a bit surprising. “The first band that started it for me was Nine Inch Nails,” he says. “It was very atmospheric, very evocative, kind of like a journey. After that there was this exponential upward curve of listening to other bands. But I also like that old, soulful, earthy blues music that sounds like it was recorded in a tin can. So I guess when I sit down to write music, it becomes a synthesis of those two different worlds.” And for Akins, creating an atmosphere isn’t just about the music. “The lyrics need to induce mood, even if you’re just looking on a piece of paper,” he says. “They need to be good enough to stand alone.”

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300 E. Coffee St., Downtown Greenville

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48 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

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CULTURE Page Turners

Must-See Movies By Eric Rogers

Experiments in suspense

Alfred Hitchcock was not afraid of novel approaches to filmmaking

Many consider Memorial Day weekend the official start to beach reading season. Here are some suggestions to take with you for those long, languid days in the sun. Fiction Addiction will be hosting these authors for events at the store as well, so stop by and say hello on your way to the shore.

Alfred Hitchcock directed 53 feature films and is often referred to as the Master of Suspense, but he was also the master of experimentation. These two films are good examples of his experiments.

“LIFEBOAT” Hitchcock made several films with a limited setting. This one was the most restrictive, because the entire film takes place in a lifeboat. Despite this limitation, it is a compelling film about how the survivors of a sunken ship battle one another in the confined space. In Hitchcock’s early days, he often appeared as an extra in his films simply because he didn’t have a large enough budget to hire more actors. By the time he released this film in 1944, audiences had come to expect his cameo. Perhaps his biggest challenge in this film was figuring out how to make that happen. He achieved it by appearing in a weight loss ad featured in a newspaper that one of the characters is reading.

“ROPE” Four years later, Hitchcock made this film loosely based on the Leopold-Loeb murder case. Leopold and Loeb were two wealthy college students who murdered a classmate just for the thrill of it in 1924. They believed themselves to be examples of Nietzsche’s “Übermenschen,” or “Supermen,” which meant that laws and morals did not apply to them. This is discussed in the movie; however, it’s one of the few references that are accurate to the real life story. Hitchcock used the true story as a

Prepare for beach reading season

framework but took some liberties with it. The experimentation in this film comes in the way it was edited. The majority of the movie appears to be one long shot without any cuts, so the film takes place in real time. At that time, it was impossible to actually shoot a whole movie in one take, because the film in the camera would run out about every nine minutes. During the shot the crew would move the camera to a black area in the scene, such as someone’s sport coat. They would then stop the camera, reload it, and then start the next take on something else black to make the edit point seamless and appear as an unbroken shot. Hitchcock coined the term “MacGuffin” to refer to an object in a film that creates conflict for the characters (like a treasure map or a valuable jewel). The MacGuffin in this film is a rope. In real life, Leopold and Loeb bludgeoned their victim with a chisel, but Hitchcock decided to use a rope as the murder weapon since it made a good metaphor for a movie that contained one continuous shot. Eric Rogers has been teaching filmmaking at The Greenville Fine Arts Center since 1994.

Vaccines, spay or neuter, testing & microchip included!

“A LOWCOUNTRY WEDDING” by Mary Alice Monroe (paperback, $16) The fourth book in Monroe’s Lowcountry series spends more time with Delphine the dolphin, Mamaw and her three summer girls – two of whom are having Charleston weddings. Fiction Addiction just hosted Monroe for an event, so we have signed copies available.

“THE CANTALOUPE THIEF” by local author Deb Richardson-Moore (paperback, $14.99) The first in a mystery series featuring reporter Branigan Powers who must convince the community’s homeless population to help her solve a murder.

beautiful Manhattan socialites. Event: Saturday, June 4, 2 p.m. Fiction Addiction; Free

“ECHOES OF MERCY” by North Carolina author Kim Boykin (paperback, $17) A Lowcountry tale of murder, regret and redemption. Event: Saturday, June 18, 2 p.m. Fiction Addiction; Free

“SUNSHINE BEACH” by Wendy Wax (paperback, $16) A continuation of Wax’s tale of three women who lost their life savings in a Ponzi scheme and then have banded together to reinvent themselves and the houses they restore. Event: Saturday, June 25, 2 p.m. Fiction Addiction Tickets: $17; price includes a copy of “Sunshine Beach.”

“LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB” by Susan Boyer (paperback, $15.95, to be released July 5)

Event: Tuesday, May 31, 5:30 p.m. Café and Then Some, 101 College St., Greenville Free

“BEACH TOWN” (paperback, $15.99) or “THE WEEKENDERS” (hardcover, $27.99) by Mary Kay Andrews “Beach Town” is set in Florida and “The Weekenders” on a North Carolina barrier island. Both contain Andrews’ trademark humor and quirky family drama. Event: Friday, June 3, 2 p.m. Fiction Addiction, 1175 Woods Crossing Road, Greenville Tickets: $30, price includes a copy of “The Weekenders”

“A FINE IMITATION” by Furman graduate Amber Brock (hardcover, $26) Sweep yourself away to Manhattan in the 1920s and peek into the world of restless but

The fifth book in Boyer’s Agatha Award-winning cozy mystery series featuring private detective Liz Talbot, who must infiltrate high society to discover who would murder one of the members of Charleston’s oldest book clubs. Event: Launch party Tuesday, July 5, 5 p.m. Fiction Addiction; Free

“JANE TWO” by actor/director Sean Patrick Flanery (hardcover, $26) the 1970s.

A tender coming-of-age story and tale of first love set in Houston in

Event: Saturday, July 16, 4 p.m. Fiction Addiction; Free Reviewed by Jill Hendrix, owner of Fiction Addiction (fiction-addiction.com) and treasurer of the SC Academy of Authors.


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CULTURE

Big screens in the The Hip Abduction takes the great outdoors groove in a new direction CAROLINE HAFER | STAFF

chafer@communityjournals.com

The difference between the Florida septet The Hip Abduction’s 2013 album and their new one, “Gold Under the Glow,” is startling. The 2013 self-titled album is reggae to the core. There are a few moments where the band stretches its groove out into jam-band territory, but for the most part, the band sticks to laid-bank Jamaican rhythms. Which is what makes “Gold Under the Glow” such a surprise. The backbeats are more influenced by African and Caribbean styles, with polyrhythmic percussion bubbling up throughout the songs. And the mostly organic sound has been replaced by a new electronic sheen, with synthesized sounds washing over just about every song. It’s still as danceable – and as soulful – as their last record, but it’s coming from an entirely different set of influences. “I don’t think we go into an album thinking, ‘From this point moving forward, we’re going to be a little more electronic, or we’re going to totally change the next album,’” says The Hip Abduction’s singer, songwriter and guitarist, David New. “I think it’s more of, ‘You are what you eat.’ I’d been listening to a lot of West African music and electronic music like Daft Punk, so that’s what led to the direction of this record.” New says that despite the change in direction, he feels that the basic thrust of the songs on “Gold Under the Glow” is just the same as on the previous two albums (their debut was 2011’s “One Less Sound”). “Even though the songs are a little more electronic-infused, I still think it takes people to the same place,” he says. “It’s still got that island or more tropical feel, whatever the fans call it. The songs changed, but I don’t think it’s been anything too drastic. In fact, the fans love it; it’s done a lot better than the last one.” To be fair, though, the band’s fans probably had an inkling about what was coming, simply because the album’s songs were a part of the band’s live show for months before they were recorded. “I always try to play a song for a couple months at least before we record it,” New says. “There are songs on the new album that we played for six or nine months before we tracked them. I always try to see how the fans

Josh Tremper/Flickr

Sound Check Notes on the Music Scene with Vincent Harris

It’s the time of year when everyone is looking for an excuse to spend as much time outdoors as possible. The Upstate offers a variety of outdoor movies for you, your kids and your friends (but no dogs, please) to attend. Here is your guide to outdoor movies – and the best part is, they’re all free.

Falls Park 601 S. Main St., Greenville Fidelity Moonlight Movie series at Falls Park start at sunset every Wednesday night in May. This is the only outdoor movie that allows alcohol with a $1 wristband, so BYOB, food and seating. Also expect the food trucks Automatic Taco, Ellada Kouzina, The Church Truck, Poppington’s Gourmet Popcorn and Highway 201’s Food Truck. Movies May 18 –­ “The Searchers”

May 25 – “Labyrinth” (and Costume Contest)

Greer City Park Amphitheater 301 E. Poinsett St., Greer

The Hip Abduction

The City of Greer hosts Moonlight Movies outdoors every Thursday. There are inflatables, crafts and dancing for the kids and door prizes for kids and adults. Activities start at 6 p.m., and the movie starts at dusk. Movies

When: Friday, May 13, 9 p.m.

June 2 – “Minions”

July 7 ­– “Hotel Transylvania 2”

Where: Gottrocks, 200 Eisenhower Drive, Greenville

June 9 – “Planes: Fire and Rescue”

July 14 – “The SpongeBob Movie”

Info: 864-235-5519; gottrocksgreenville.com

June 16 – “Pan”

July 21 – “The Good Dinosaur”

June 23 – “Shaun the Sheep”

July 28 – “Inside Out”

react and make sure it grooves with the rest of the music. It’s nice to do that before recording them.” The band, which will play Gottrocks in Greenville this Friday, worked with producer Dabney Morris for the first time on “Gold Under the Glow,” and New says that he was thrilled with the experience. “Dabney was awesome,” he says. “In the past we’d go in, and the producer wouldn’t have heard our music beforehand. We’d play it live in the studio and use those recordings and go from there. Dabney was involved five or six months before we even went into the studio. He really helped to shape the sound. It was nice to work with someone who was involved from the very beginning. When we were putting down demos, he was already suggesting keyboard sounds. He’s really into old synths and analog sounds. It was really cool experimenting with sounds, not just recreating something that came out of a box. It was really nice to have someone who was that involved.” Vincent Harris covers music and sports for The Greenville Journal. Reach him at vharris@communityjournals.com

June 30 – “Muppets Most Wanted”

Heritage Park Dennis Waldrop Way, Simpsonville Heritage Park outdoor movies are once a month in Simpsonville. Bring your own food and seating and get there early to get a good seat. There will be inflatables and activities for kids prior to the movie. Gates open at 7:30 p.m., and the movie starts at dusk. Movies June 16 – “Minions”

Aug. 4 – “Inside Out”

July 14 – “Grease Sing-A-Long”

Moves at Slater Hall 248 E. St John St., Spartanburg Barnet Park Movies in the Park events happen once a month in Spartanburg. There is an abundance of free activities at this movie night with free popcorn, drinks and a gift card giveaway drawing. Movie begins at sundown, and times will fluctuate, so call 864-433-0993 for more specific times. Movies May 21 – “Minions”

July 16 – “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”

June 18 – “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day”

Aug. 20 – “Zootopia”


50 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

PREVIEW

CALENDAR

Furman tunes up for Music by the Lake

Wild West-themed concert first in a diverse lineup CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Furman’s lake will be turned into the Wild West during the season-opening Music by the Lake concert on May 26. Music by the Lake is Greenville’s longestrunning outdoor summer concert series. It began in 1968 with Furman’s concert band playing from the roof of the student center. This year’s lineup features concerts by Furman’s Lakeside Concert Band, the Carolina Youth Symphony, the Poinsett Wind Symphony, the Steve Watson Band, the Greenville Chorale, members of the Greenville Symphony Orchestra and the Greenville Jazz Collective. “There’s no overarching theme to the series itself,” said Lakeside Concert Band director Les Hicken. “We try to feature a wide range of music.” The season-opening concert on May 26 will feature the Lakeside Concert Band and will include a piece from the movie “How the West Was Won,” the American folk song “Shenandoah” and music from the movie “The Cowboys” and the musical “Oklahoma!” The series will feature a Fourth of Julythemed concert featuring the Lakeside Concert Band and the Greenville Chorale. One of the weekly concerts will feature a bluegrass band. Music by the Lake concerts are held on Thursday nights at Furman University’s amphitheater on the clock tower side of the lake near the North Village Apartments. They begin at 7:30 p.m. and are free. Spectators are encouraged to bring blankets, lawn chairs and picnic baskets. A drawing is held before each concert for a picnic basket filled with goodies.

The rest of the lineup JUNE 2: “Kings, Queens and Royal Things,” Carolina Youth Symphony JUNE 9: “Music from Far and Away,” Poinsett Wind Symphony JUNE 16: “Contemporary Jazz,” The Steve Watson Band

JUNE 23: “Rhapsody in Blue,” McAlister Auditorium, Derek Parsons, piano soloist and the Lakeside Concert Band JUNE 30: “Patriotic Celebration: For Amber Waves of Grain,” the Greenville Chorale and the Lakeside Concert Band

JULY 7: “The West End Brass Quintet,” members of the Greenville Symphony Orchestra JULY 14: “Bluegrass Night,” The Andy Carlson Band

JULY 28: “An Evening with Henry Mancini,” Lakeside Concert Band AUG. 4: “Greenville Jazz Collective,” Big Band, Shannon Hoover and Brad Jepson, directors

JULY 21: “The Magic Kingdom,” Lakeside Concert Band

Music by the Lake When: May 26, 7:30 p.m. What: “How the West Was Won,” Furman University Lakeside Concert Band

FRI

13

CONCERT

Fountain Inn Natural Gas Friday Night Bandstand Commerce Park | 200 Depot St., Fountain Inn 7-9 p.m. | Fridays thru Aug. 12 FREE Bring a chair and come hear some great music

provided

Where: Furman University, Lakeside Amphitheatre at the Farmers Market Pavilion at Commerce Park in Fountain Inn. Beer and wine available for purchase with ID; snacks and soft drinks also available. May 13: Marvin King and the Blues Revival. May 20: Mac Arnold and the Plate Full O’ Blues. Visit fountaininn.org for a complete schedule of performers. 409-1050 fountaininn.org cheryl.pelicano@fountaininn.org

CONCERT

FAMILY

Legends of Southern Hip Hop

Fantastic Fridays: Trivial Pursuit Favorites

Bon Secours Wellness Arena | 650 N Academy St. 8 p.m. | $56-$107 Legends of Southern Hip Hop featuring Mystical, Juvenile and more 241-3800 | bonsecoursarena.com marketing@bswarena.com

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. 10-10:30 a.m. | Free with admission

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Our last Trivial Pursuit Fantastic Friday will be filled with our favorite state-based activities


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CALENDAR «

from the last three months. tcmupstate.org

CONCERT

The Reggie Sullivan Band Blues Boulevard (Greenville) 300 River St., Ste. 203 Tickets: $5 (plus $10 food/drink minimum) Upright bassist leads versatile jazz-soul combo. 242-2583 | hbluesboulevardjazzgreenville.com

CONCERT

Morgan of the Pines, w/ John the Revelator & Hunger Anthem Radio Room | 2845 N. Pleasantburg Drive Dark Appalachian blues with a touch of goth-rock. 263-7868 | radioroomgreenville.com

and Saturday shows are at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees are at 3 p.m. 409-1050 yountscenter.org cheryl.pelicano@fountaininn.org

NOW THRU

14

Greenville Heritage FCU Main St. Fridays NOMA Square

Free with admission This week we will be learning about the many creatures found in the ocean. We will read a book about the ocean and make a special ocean animal craft. tcmupstate.org

SAT

14

Dangerous Assumptions Ground Zero | 3052 Howard St., Spartanburg Home-grown Fountain Inn punk band. 948-1661 | reverbnation.com/venue/groundzero2

13-14

ARTS EVENT

Copperplate Calligraphy Workshop

Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. | $125/class Join us for an introductory look at Copperplate calligraphy, an elegant hand frequently used for formal invitations, documents and bridal events. This pointed pen calligraphy workshop will focus on lowercase letter formation using traditional Copperplate techniques. 271-7570 | bit.ly/GCMAArtWorkshops egeyer@gcma.org

FRI-SUN

13-22

FUNDRAISER

Symphony Guild Downtown Condo Rondo

Downtown Greenville 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $20 in advance and $25 on day of tour

CONCERT

FRI-SAT

Story Time and More: Ocean Aquatics Sneak Peek

10 and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

FREE Energetic cover band mixes rock, soul classics. bit.ly/greenville-main-street-fridays

FAMILY

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St.

CONCERT

The Night Affair Band

LIVE MUSIC FOR ALL

THEATER PRODUCTION

FIRE Theatre Co. Presents Guys and Dolls

Younts Center for Performing Arts 315 N. Main Street, Fountain Inn 7:30-10 p.m. | Friday & Saturday $18/adults; $15/seniors; $10/students The season finale for FIRE Theatre Co. Friday

Five outstanding private homes available for touring, all within walking distance of each other in the Historic West End area of downtown Greenville. Each home is a distinctive reflection of Upstate urban living and uniquely decorated to reflect the owner’s interest in style, art, antiques and collectibles. 370-0965 guildGSO.org GuildGSO@bellsouth.net

ARTS EVENT

Southern Author Festival Greenville County Library System Hughes Main Library 25 Heritage Green Place 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. FREE Meet this year’s distinguished authors at this daylong event that explores Southern fiction and poetry with moderator Dr. Randall Wilhelm. Authors’ books will be available for purchase. – 9:30-11 a.m., Wiley Cash; 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., George Singleton & Ron Rash; 1:30-3 p.m., Ashley Warlick; and 3-3:30 p.m., Sue Lile Inman and Elizabeth Drewry. 527-9293 | greenvillelibrary.org explore@greenvillelibrary.org

GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!


52 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

WHAT’S HAPPENING

Can’t Catch Connor 5k and Half Marathon Saturday, May 14 • 7:30-11 a.m. • Gateway Park • 115 Henderson Drive, Travelers Rest • go-greenevents.com/event/id/4968 • nakerhielm@yahoo.com This race will honor the life of Connor McManus who tragically died in a plane crash in Alaska in 2013 along with the rest of his family and the Antonakos family. One of Connor’s main passions was the Boy Scouts, and all money raised will fund the construction of a prayer chapel located at his Boy Scout’s Campsite that will honor Connor and his dad, who was also very involved with the Boy Scouts.

« CONCERT

SUN

Marvin King Smiley’s Acoustic Café | 111 Augusta St. | FREE Dazzling blues guitarist. 282-8988 | smileysacousticcafe.com

SAT-SUN

14&15

3-4 p.m.

Trivial Pursuit: Last Adventure

Free

Saturday, 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. Free with admission Trivial Pursuit: A 50-State Adventure is finishing up this weekend. tcmupstate.org

15

FAMILY

Off the Wall: Spring Art

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate | 300 College St. 2-4 p.m. | Free with admission Join us for special nature-based art this week. tcmupstate.org

American Heritage Concert by the Greenville Concert Band

Peace Center | Amphitheatre 300 South Main St.

FAMILY

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St.

NOW THRU

15

CONCERT

The Greenville Concert Band explores America’s Musical Heritage with selections by Henry Fillmore, George Gershwin, James Horner and others. The program includes popular favorites like “Strike Up the Band,” “Hollywood Blockbusters,” “Armed Forces Salute” and “Harlem Nocturne.” Family friendly and free to the public. 627-4011 greenvilleconcertband.com djachens@swu.edu

MON

16

FAMILY

Coloring Session for Adults

Greenville County Library System Fountain Inn (Kerry Ann Younts Culp) Branch 311 N. Main St., Fountain Inn 6-7:30 p.m. | FREE

Adults join us for the fun and calming practice of coloring. Coloring sheets and colors provided or bring your own.

862-2576 | greenvillelibrary.org

fountaininn@greenvillelibrary.org

TUE

17

FAMILY

WWE Smackdown Bon Secours Wellness Arena

7 p.m. | $24-$108 WWE is coming back to The Well for Smackdown. See Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose and AJ Styles vs Bray Wyatt, Chris Jericho and Intercontinental Champion Kevin Owens. Plus you’ll see WWE Tag Team Champions The New Day, The Divas and many more. 241-3800 | bonsecoursarena.com marketing@bswarena.com

FAMILY

ARTS EVENT

Emrys Foundation Journal Launch Greenville County Library System Hughes Main 25 Heritage Green Place 7-8:30 p.m. FREE Join Emrys as it releases its 2016 Journal, a collection of previously unpublished fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction by emerging and established writers. 527-9293 greenvillelibrary.org explore@greenvillelibrary.org

TUE-WED

17&18

HEALTH/FITNESS

Pickleball

Homeschool Day: Forensic Science

Taylors Rec Center | Gymnasium 200 W. Main St., Taylors

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. | 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

Wednesdays | 9-11 a.m. Tuesdays | 6:30-8:30 p.m.

Check out our website tcmupstate.org for registration and price information. tcmupstate.org

FREE Pickleball is a paddle sport created for all ages and skill levels. The rules are simple and the

«


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«

game is easy for beginners to learn, but can develop into a quick, fast-paced, competitive game for experienced players. 292-4060 | darylh@taylorsfbc.org taylorsfbc.org/reach/taylors-rec/events/

TUE-FRI

17-20

FAMILY

Story Time and More: Insect Investigations Sneak Peek

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. 10 and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Free with admission The world around us is so amazing. Everywhere we look we can find new and interesting things. If we look down we can see so many interesting insects. Join us as we read books about insects and make a beautiful bug project. tcmupstate.org

TUE-SUN

17-22

FAMILY

Off the Wall: Messy Art

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. 2-4 p.m. Free with admission Gear up for Mess Fest by creating messy art all week in Off the Wall. tcmupstate.org

NOW THRU

18

THEATER PRODUCTION

Second Chance

CALENDAR to hear a celebrated international talent. With a career spanning 30 years, 32 albums, over half a million record sales and thousands of live performances, the versatility of his music touches genres of folk, rock, soul, folk-funk and Americana. 828-697-0690 tiggspond@gmail.com brownpapertickets.com/event/2499792

THU

19

CONCERT

Black River Rebels Gottrocks 200 Eisenhower Ave.

Down-and-dirty, straight-ahead rock & roll. 235-5519 reverbnation.com/venue/gottrocks

FAMILY

Bacon Bros. Suckling Pig Dinner

FREE

An exhibition of abstract painting by guest artists Steven Aimone, Katherine Aimone, Galen Cheney, Matthew Dibble, Margaret Glew and Jay Zerbe. Gallery hours Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and Saturday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 735-3948 artcentergreenville.org info@artcentergreenville.org

THEATER PRODUCTION

This celebration of railroads will feature the Hub City Railroad Museum and Caboose, an HO model railroad, an operating railroad motor car, performing artists singing railroad tunes, hot dogs and fixings for sale, a bounce house, rubber-tired train rides, a train watch on the NS main line and more. 504-5202 hubcityrrmuseum.org dwinans4739@charter.net

A Party to Murder

FAMILY

NOW THRU

21

Centre Stage 501 River St.

Good News Spectacular 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Six people come for a weekend mystery game, but it takes a sinister turn with unexpected and terrifying conclusions. 233-6733 | centrestage.org information@centrestage.org

FREE

$45 If you missed our first ever Suckling Pig Dinner in April, don’t worry because we have another great event coming your way. Join us Thursday, May 19, for a family-style dinner featuring whole roast suckling pigs, appetizers, sides and desserts. Curated beverage pairings are available for an additional $20 per guest. Only 24 seats available - don’t wait! eventbrite.com/e/may-suckling-pig-dinnertickets-25142191973?aff=es2 kcrawford@greenolivemedia.com

Soul Stew

Six weeks after the death of his wife, a man is visited by two beings who give him the chance to trade places with her. Does he do the swap? The provocative Fringe Series continues at Centre Stage. 233-6733 | centrestage.org information@centrestage.org

NOMA Square, Main St. Free Band throws soul, funk and jam into the pot and stirs liberally. bit.ly/downtown-alive

THU-SUN

19-22

FAMILY

Hometown Heroes Celebration

Tigg’s Pond Retreat Center 212 Fiddlehead Lane, Zirconia

Cabela’s | 1025 Woodruff Rd. Ste. H101

7-9 p.m.

FREE

Martyn Joseph has been a regular on the UK music festival scene for decades. Martyn’s commitment to perform at Tigg’s Pond represents a rare swing through the mountains of Western NC. Don’t miss this extraordinary opportunity

10-4 p.m.

FREE

$30, $25, $10

7 p.m. | Tuesdays and Wednesdays

$20

Hub City Railroad Museum Magnolia Street RR Depot 298 Magnolia St., Spartanburg

6-9 p.m.

$15

18

Greenville Center for Creative Arts 25 Draper St.

Train Day Celebration

TD Convention Center, Hall 1 1 Exponsition Drive

CONCERT

Martyn Joseph concert

“Kindred Spirits,” Exploring Abstract Expressionism Today

EDUCATION

8 p.m. | Thursdays-Sundays

Centre Stage | 501 River St.

CONCERT

20

ARTS EVENT

Bacon Bros. Public House 3620 Pelham Road Suite 3

Downtown Alive

WED

NOW THRU

11 a.m.-5 p.m. Cabela’s is honoring our Hometown Heroes by offering a discount to active military, veterans, law-enforcement, firefighters and EMS personnel. 516-8100 Cabelas.com

SAT

21

FAMILY

Mess Fest The Children’s Museum of the Upstate | 300 College St.

The Good News Spectacular is a free, one-day community event filled with games, inflatables, popcorn, live interactive shows and more fun for ages 5 - 12 and their family. The Spectacular will be held in an indoor hall at the TD Convention Center. We want to share the Good News of Jesus Christ with the community. 292-5844 | cefgreenville.com/4376-2/ alicia@cefgreenville.com

11 a.m.-4 p.m.

COMMUNITY MEETING

Free with admission

Monthly breakfast meeting of the Greenville County Democratic Party

Join as for our annual Mess Fest event today. Children will have opportunities to play in a shaving cream room, paint with big tools, explore giant bubbles, investigate slime and oobleck, and engage in other messy activities throughout the day. tcmupstate.org

FAMILY

Story Time and More: Mess Fest The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. 10 and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Long Branch Baptist Church 28 Bolt St. 8:30-10 p.m. 4th Saturday of each month Donations for breakfast are welcomed. FREE Come and meet our democratic candidates for state and local offices. Find out how you can get involved in the Democratic Party. All are welcome. 232-5531 greenvilledemocrats.com headquarters@greenvilledemocrats.com

CONCERT

Free with admission

The Work

It is that time of year again, time to get messy. Our annual “MessFest” is a favorite day at TCMU. Our preschoolers will have fun making “fizzy art” using baking soda and vinegar. The results will have your child loving this fun art project. tcmupstate.org

Gottrocks 200 Eisenhower Drive Beloved Upstate jam-rock institution rises again. 235-5519 gottrocksgreenville.com

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54 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

CALENDAR « SUN FUNDRAISER of the 22 Taste Upstate Hyatt Regency Downtown 220 N. Main St. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $70

2016 Red Ribbon Classic Golf Tournament. Join us in the fight to end substance abuse in Greenville County through prevention, treatment and community support. 467-4099 | facebook.com/RedRibbonClassic redribbonclassic.com

TUE-SAT

Join us for a very special Taste of the Upstate as we celebrate Loaves and Fishes’ 25th Anniversary. In addition to “tastes” from 10 of Greenville’s best chefs, our celebration bash will include a silent auctions, music from the Greenville Jazz Collective and a gourmet cake walk. 232-3595 | tessa@loavesandfishesgreenville.org loavesandfishesgreenville.com/taste-of-theupstate

FUNDRAISER

Red Ribbon Party and Auction Green Valley Country Club | 225 Green Valley Dr. 7-9 a.m.

24-28

FUNDRAISER

Upstate Splash Freestyle Jam

Story Time and More: Animal Adventures Sneak Peek

288-2486 tucanos.com/charitycelebration

THU

26

FUNDRAISER

Paint the Town Red Silent Auction

HEALTH/FITNESS

2-3 p.m.

This week we will read “Harry the Dirty Dog” as we celebrate the four-legged friends in our lives. We will make a “Harry the Dirty Dog” puppet to take home. tcmupstate.org

TUE-SUN

24-29

FAMILY

Off the Wall: Game-Inspired Art

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. 2-4 p.m. | Free with admission Create game-inspired art in Off the Wall this week as we gear up for the opening of Fun and Games. tcmupstate.org

May Upstate Open Ears Meetup Davis Audiology 4318 East North St. 2-4 p.m.

MON-AUG

26-4

WED

25

FUNDRAISER

Tucanos Brazilian Grill Charity Night Celebration

Tucanos Brazilian Grill 1025 Woodruff Road 5-10 p.m.

Green Valley Country Club | 225 Green Valley Dr.

$25 per person

7 a.m.-4 p.m.

Join us for a special evening. Tucanos will host a special event to celebrate three local nonprofit organizations. You can vote for your favorite online: tucanos.com/charitycelebration. Join Club-

Greenville Family Partnership and Chris and Kelly’s HOPE Foundation are sponsoring the

Beloved country band hits the Upstate, led by powerhouse vocalist Raul Malo. 467-3000 peacecenter.org/events/td-stage-summer-nights

CONCERT

Upstate Splash Freestyle Jam is a benefit concert to support Upstate Splash Charity, an organization dedicated to provide swim lessons to at-risk children. Come out and jam with us and help save some lives. Tickets include food, drinks and a good reason to boogie. Musicians include Col. Bruce Hampton, Reverend Jeff Mosier, Yonrico Scott, Jeff Sipe, Charles Hedgepath, Darby Wilcox, Sam Kruer and more.

FREE

TD Stage | 300 S. Main St.

Tickets: $35-$50

Break out your resort casual attire and prepare to shop and shag on the boardwalk. This silent auction will feature over 100 items. The Auxiliary Attic Pop-Up Shop will also be open, featuring “Upscale Rescale” consignment clothing items. Guests will enjoy food, a free photo booth and beach tunes provided by Beach Bob Entertainment. This event is hosted by The Salvation Army Women’s Auxiliary, and all funds raised will benefit the Women and Children’s Refuge. 235-4803 sawagreenville.org chelsia.spivey@uss.salvationarmy.org

A fun afternoon filled with games and education on hearing health: bingo, prizes, accessories and demos. 655-8300 alexandra@davisaudiology.com meetup.com/Upstate-Open-Ears-Group/ events/229315933/

23

The Mavericks

Free with admission

$25

Red Ribbon Classic Golf Tournament 2016

27

CONCERT

5-8 p.m. | $10

FREE

MON

FRI

10 and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.

5:30-9:30 p.m.

FUNDRAISER

news.furman.edu/2016/04/18/music-by-thelake-summer-concert-series/

The Salvation Army Ray and Joan Kroc Corps Community Center | 424 Westfield St.

Gottrocks 200 Eisenhower Dr.

349-7615 upstatesplash.org/freestyle-jam/ upstatesplash@gmail.com

July 28, An Evening with Henry Mancini and Aug. 4, Greenville Jazz Collective. 294-2086 | FurmanMusic@furman.edu

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St.

FREE Greenville Family Partnership and Chris & Kelly’s HOPE Foundation are hosting the “Red Ribbon VIP Party” 2016. There will be heavy hors d’oeuvres, a live auction and entertainment - all for a good cause. 467-4099 | karen@gfpdrugfree.org facebook.com/RedRibbonClassic gfpdrugfree.org

FAMILY

Tucanos and your vote counts twice, visit the restaurant and your vote counts triple. Reserve your preferred seat on May 25 from 5-9 at the charity event and your vote will count 10 times. Organizations are Make-A-Wish South Carolina, Pendleton Place and YMCA of Greenville.

CONCERT

Furman Presents Lakeside Concert Series Every Thursday at Amphitheater Furman University Amphitheater 3300 Poinsett Hwy 7:30-9 p.m. | Thursdays Free Les Hicken and guests present outdoor concerts: May 26, How the West Was Won; June 2, Kings, Queens, and Royal Things; June 9, Music from Far and Away; June 16, Contemporary Jazz; June 23, Rhapsody in Blue (McAlister Auditorium); June 30, For Amber Waves of Grain; July 7, The West End Brass Quintet; July 14, Bluegrass Night; July 21, The Magic Kingdom;

Solaire w/ Bobby Meader & Sweat Lodge Soundbox Tavern 507 W. Georgia Road, Simpsonville Raucous, fuzz-coated garage rock. 228-7763

SAT

28

EDUCATION

Free Lowrance Sonar Class

Cabela’s | 1025 Woodruff Rd. Ste. H101 FREE Lowrance Pro Staff, Ken Sturdivant will teach a free sonar class. This class will walk you through the basic steps of setting up your device to navigating its features. Class is limited to the first 30 participants. Call to register. If this class is in high demand, another time slot will open. 516-8100 | cabelas.com

SAT-SUN

28 & 29

FAMILY

Fun and Games Opens

The Children’s Museum of the Upstate 300 College St. Saturday, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. Free with admission Join us this weekend to play some childhood games with our TCMU programming team and explore our newest exhibit. tcmupstate.org

NOW THRU

29

ARTS EVENT

eclipse 2 sculpture by Leah Cabinum

Greenville Technical College Riverworks Gallery | 300 River St., Suite 202 1-5 p.m. | Wednesday-Sunday FREE The word eclipse references the lunar-solar cycles that through the calendar and clock,

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CALENDAR «

have come the universal measurement of the cycle of our lives,” says Leah Cabinum in speaking of her exhibition “eclipse 2.” “The works in this exhibition are intended to mimic life’s cyclical nature through an active exploitation of materials.” In “eclipse 2,” she is exploiting bicycle tire inner tube and repurposing them as if they are the elegant draping folds of fine fabric. 201-5683 gvltec.edu/dva fleming.markel@gvltec.edu

TUE

31

COMMUNITY MEETING

Forum: 2016 Primary Candidates for Greenville County Legislative Offices

Hughes Public Library | 25 Heritage Green Pl. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free The Greenville Branch of the NAACP, Freedom Fighters Upstate SC, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Greenville(SC) Alumnae Chapter and the Greenville County League of Women Voters have partnered to hold a public forum for the 13 candidates running in the primary June 14 for the legislature for Greenville County. 354-2512 | patrick.prince1971@gmail.com

JUNE

7:30 p.m.

behind the chart-topping hits. Founded and hosted by songwriter James Casto, Home By Dark pairs the best writers in the world with expert instrumentalists in this musical journey through multiple stylings and genres, proving once and for all that a song can truly change your life. Performing in the Peace Center concert will be Tony Arata, Michael Logen and Emily Shackelton. 467-3000 peacecenter.org boxoffice@peacecenter.org

THU-SEP

02-29

$100-$500 An internationally renowned superstar, the iconic and irrepressible Dolly Parton has contributed countless treasures to the world of entertainment. All-inclusive sales of singles, albums, hits collections, paid digital downloads and compilation usage during her illustrious career have topped a staggering 100 million records worldwide. 467-3000 peacecenter.org boxoffice@peacecenter.org

FAMILY

GHS Fountain Inn Farmers Market

THU-AUG

04-27

7-9 p.m. Saturdays

4-8 p.m. Thursdays

FREE

FREE Greenville Hospital System Fountain Inn Farmers Market is a yearly event in downtown Fountain Inn. Thursday evenings, come buy some produce and see the vendors, then stop in at some of the shops on Main Street, or grab dinner at one of our great restaurants. There’s lots to see in Fountain Inn. 363-0345 fountaininn.org market.manager@fountaininn.org

and master of multiple music genres. With a daytime TV show on its way, multiple other television appearances, major movie roles and the release of his new album, “That Would Be Me,” it’s easy to see why Connick is ranked amongst the top male artists in the world. He’s won three Grammys, two Emmys, and has received two Tony Award nominations. 467-3000 | peacecenter.org boxoffice@peacecenter.org

FUNDRAISER

02

Home By Dark

Peace Center, Gunter Theatre 300 S. Main St. 7:30 p.m. | $35 Home By Dark takes a step back from the pop-mainstream to celebrate the songwriters

04

Harry Connick, Jr. Peace Concert Hall | 300 S. Main St.

8 p.m. $65-$105 Harry Connick, Jr. is a pianist, vocalist, composer, writer, band leader, actor, philanthropist

06-09

CAMP

Youth Basketball Camp

Simpsonville

$90/student

10 a.m.-4 p.m.

Boys and girls ages 7-14. Directors Coach BJ Jackson and Coach LaCheryl Smith will feature offensive fundamentals, shooting and passing, ball handling, defensive fundamentals, proper stance and footwork, rebounding and man-toman techniques. 248-0646 legacycharterschool.com/summer-camps.php bjackson@legacycharter.org

05 CONCERT

MON-THU

Legacy Charter School, Gymnasium 900 Woodside Ave.

SUN

SAT

The only free weekly bluegrass festival in the Upstate. Bring a chair. Visit fountaininn.org for the full list of scheduled performers. 363-0345 fountaininn.org cheryl.pelicano@fountaininn.org

A Tour of Simpsonville Gardens featuring five beautiful gardens

Advance tickets can be purchased at Vaughn’s Seed and Feed at 109 Trade St. Simpsonville, or Martin Garden Center at 198 Martin Road, Mauldin. Day of tour tickets can be purchased at Garden House Inn at 302 S. Main St. Simpsonville or The Bragg Garden at 121 Fox Trace, Simpsonville. Exception one garden in Fountain Inn. 688-2356 | simpsonvillegardenclub.com jkm43066@yahoo.com

CONCERT

Depot PickInn

Commerce Park 200 Depot St., Fountain Inn

Commerce Park 200 Depot St., Fountain Inn

$10

THU

CONCERT

CONCERT

Dolly Parton Peace Center | 300 S. Main St.

9 a.m.-4 p.m.

MON-JUL

06-28

LESSONS

Summer Camp at Younts Center for Performing Arts

Younts Center for Performing Arts 315 N. Main St., Fountain Inn Classes and camps available all summer. No enrollment fees. Visit yountscenter.org and click on “Summer Classes and Camps” for information. 409-1050 yountscenter.org cheryl.pelicano@fountaininn.org

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56 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

CALENDAR « TUE COMMUNITY MEETING 2016 7 Forum: Primary Candidates for Greenville County (Sheriff/ County Council)

Hughes Public Library | 25 Heritage Green Place 6-8:30 p.m.

Explorers Club. 233-6733 | centrestage.org information@centrestage.org

SAT

18

Free

CONCERT

An Evening with Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons

The Greenville Branch of the NAACP, Freedom Fighters Upstate SC, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Greenville(SC) Alumnae Chapter and the Greenville County League of Women Voters have partnered to hold a public forum for the five candidates running for the office of sheriff and the 10 candidates running for county council in the primary June 14. 354-2512 | patrick.prince1971@gmail.com

NOW THRU

09

10

ZooTunes Greenville Zoo 150 Cleveland Park Dr.

6:30-8:30 p.m. $75 The Greenville Zoo Foundation will host its first-ever ZooTunes concert, featuring Grammy award-winning singer/songwriter Jason Isbell, on June 10 at the Greenville Zoo. Tickets available at zootunes.eventbrite.com. The inaugural event, presented in partnership with the Greenville Zoo and Eleven Events, will raise funds for implementation of the Greenville Zoo Master Plan. 627-4200 | greenvillezoofoundation.org/events

THU-JUL

16-02

THEATER PRODUCTION

The Explorers Club

Centre Stage | 501 River St. 8 p.m. | Thursdays-Sundays $30, $25, $10 A comedy set in London in 1879, follow the brilliant Phyllida Spotte-Hume and her bid to be the first female member of the exclusive

Firearm Education Series

8 p.m. $65-$95 Frankie Valli came to fame in 1962 as the lead singer of the Four Seasons. They boast 71 chart hits, including such classic songs as “Big Girls Don’t Cry,” “Walk Like a Man,” “Rag Doll” and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You.” Valli has toured almost continuously since 1962, and his songs have been featured in such movies as “The Deer Hunter,” “Dirty Dancing,” “Mrs. Doubtfire,” “Conspiracy Theory” and “The Wanderers.” 467-3000 | peacecenter.org boxoffice@peacecenter.org

SAT-WED

21-29

THEATER PRODUCTION

Visiting Mr. Green

Centre Stage | 501 River St. 7 p.m. | Tuesdays and Wednesdays $15 A heartwarming tale that defies the boundaries of age, a young Ross Gardiner almost hits an old widower in his car. He’s ordered to spend the next six months making weekly visits to the interesting Mr. Green. 246-6644 centrestage.org information@centrestage.org

21-13

1-2 p.m.

8 p.m. Thursdays-Sundays

FREE This series of courses is to promote and educate customers on the various aspects of responsible gun ownership. The featured seminars will offer insight and training for levels of experience. To view a complete seminar schedule visit, Cabelas.com. 516-8100 | Cabelas.com

ARTS EVENT

Coldwell Banker Caine Hosting Artist Exhibit Featuring Christopher Rico

FREE

Peace Concert Hall | 300 S. Main St.

THU-AUG Centre Stage 501 River St.

Coldwell Banker Caine Main Street Real Estate Gallery 428 South Main St.

Trinity UMC | 2703 Augusta St.

Thursdays | $60 for six weeks of lessons

FRI

EDUCATION

Cabela’s 1025 Woodruff Rd. Ste. H101

30

Learn to Play Appalachian Music

CONCERT

25

NOW THRU

LESSONS

All ages can learn to play the banjo, guitar, fiddle or mandolin. Join the fun. Registration is now open for the Evening Music Program. These lessons are open to students third grade through adult. Rental instruments are available for $25. Register now by contacting Susan Ware-Snow. This program supports the nonprofit Preserving Our Southern Appalachian Music. 979-9188 | yamupstate.com susu9196@gmail.com

NOW THRU

Coldwell Banker Caine will host an exhibit for its next resident artist, Christopher Rico. Rico is an Upstate painter specializing in abstract oil on canvas pieces. His exhibit on display is entitled “That was yesterday, that day” and will be featured through June 30. 250-2850 | cbcaine.com marketing@cbcaine.com

JULY NOW THRU

EDUCATION

Registration Open for Executive Leadership Seminars at Furman University

15

Furman University | 3300 Poinsett Hwy. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. $3,950 for orientation and three two-day sessions Furman University’s Center for Corporate and Professional Development has created a series of seminars which offer a unique approach to executive development. Taught by Furman faculty, Liberal Arts Leadership (LAL) draws insights from literary classics and feature films to understand the relationship between effective leadership and organizations. A half-day orientation takes place Aug. 18. Two-day seminars are on campus Oct. 20-21, Jan. 19-20 and April 20-21. 294-3136 news.furman.edu/2016/05/06/registrationopen-for-liberal-arts-leadership/ brad.bechtold@furman.edu

THEATER PRODUCTION

Sisters of Swing

$35, $30, $10 They sold over 90 million records and the world fell in love with them. Come hear the story and the music of the Andrews Sisters. 233-6733 centrestage.org information@centrestage.org

WANT TO SEE YOUR EVENT HERE? Complete our easy-to-use online form at www.bit.ly/GJCalendar by Monday at 5 p.m. to be considered for publication in that week’s Journal.

TICKET OFFICE – GOING ON SALE – GREGG ALLMAN July 27; 7:30 p.m. Peace Center Cost: $45-$65 On sale: May 13, 10 a.m. To purchase tickets: 467-3000; Peace Center Box Office; peacecenter.org

THE AVETT BROTHERS Oct. 29; 7 p.m. Bon Secours Wellness Arena Cost: $45, $35 On sale: May 13, 10 a.m. To purchase tickets: 800-745-3000; GSP Box Office at The Bon Secours Wellness Arena; ticketmaster.com

– LAST CHANCE – MAY 17, 7 P.M. WWE SMACKDOWN Bon Secours Wellness Arena Cost: $108, $101, $60, $55, $45, $35, $24 To purchase tickets: 800-745-3000; GSP Box Office at The Bon Secours Wellness Arena; ticketmaster.com

MAY 13, 8 P.M. LEGENDS OF SOUTHERN HIP HOP Bon Secours Wellness Arena Cost: $107, $81, $61, $56 To purchase tickets: 800-745-3000; GSP Box Office at The Bon Secours Wellness Arena; ticketmaster.com Info: Mystikal, Juvenile, Trick Daddy, 8 Ball & MJG, Trina, Bun B Submit your Last Minute Ticket Sales for Upstate Events at bit.ly/LastTicketsGville For Upcoming Ticket Sales, enter them at bit.ly/UpcomingTicketsGJ


THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: Food Products for Greenville County, IFB# 88-05/27/16, 3:00 P.M. Solicitations can be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/Purchasing_Dept/Bids. asp or by calling (864) 467-7200.

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE THERE WILL BE A PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE GREENVILLE COUNTY PROPERTY MAINTENANCE CODE, HEARING OFFICER ON THURSDAY, MAY 26, 2016 AT 10:00AM, IN ROOM 5150 OF SUITE 5100, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, FOR THE PURPOSE OF HEARING THOSE PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE CASES PERTAINING TO THE HABITABILITY OF STRUCTURE(S) ON THE PROPERTY.

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: Counterweight Zero Turn Excavator, Tuesday, May 31, 2016, 3:00 P.M. Solicitations can be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/Purchasing_Dept/RFP.asp or by calling 864-467-7200.

A. CASE NO: 15-3653 PROPERTY OWNER: BARRY K MCCLAMROCK PROPERTY LOCATION: 401 W MORGAN STREET TAX MAP NUMBER: 0126.0004-007.00 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 23 B. CASE NO: 14-2521 PROPERTY OWNER: CARRINGTON MORTGAGE SERVICES CHRISTOPHER JAMES TALBERT PROPERTY LOCATION: 2524 FORK SHOALS ROAD TAX MAP NUMBER: 0583.0201-030.00 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 28 C. CASE NO: 15-4445 PROPERTY OWNER: ARBOR 15, LLC PROPERTY LOCATION: 100 ARBOR STREET TAX MAP NUMBER: 0166.0003-008.00 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 19 D. CASE NO: 15-4437 PROPERTY OWNER: ROBERT JAMAL FOWLER PROPERTY LOCATION: 13 BLACKWOOD STREET TAX MAP NUMBER: 0111.0006-004.00 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 23 E. CASE NO: 13-4463 PROPERTY OWNER: JOHN CHRISTOPHER MAULDIN, COX & FISHER LLC PROPERTY LOCATION: 645 TANNER ROAD TAX MAP NUMBER: T029.02-01-001.03 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 20 F. CASE NO: 15-4442 PROPERTY OWNER: JOHNNY LEE PROPERTY LOCATION: NANDINA DRIVE TAX MAP NUMBER: 0222.04-01-042.00 COUNCIL DISTRICT: 25

SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO.: 2016-CP-2300799 CONELL BENARD TERRY, Plaintiff, v. WHITEY'S AUTO AUCTION, and BLACKS AUTO AND SHIRLEY DIANN BROCK AND WEST SPECIALTY PRODUCTS OF EASLEY SOUTH CAROLINA, Defendant. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscriber at his office at 112 Wakefield Street, P.O. Box 10496, Greenville, South Carolina 29601 within thirty days (30) after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and, if you fail to appear and defend by filing an answer to the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Respectfully submitted, FLETCHER N. SMITH, JR., Attorney at Law 112 Wakefield Street (29601) Post Office Box 10496, F.S., Greenville, SC 29603 GREENVILLE COUNTY ZONING AND PLANNING PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE There will be a public hearing before County Council on Monday, June 20, 2016 at 6:00 p.m. in County Council Chambers, County Square, for the purpose of hearing those persons interested in the following items: DOCKET NUMBER: CP-2016-02 APPLICANT: Greenville County Council CONTACT INFORMATION: Spark@greenvillecounty.org or 864-467-7288 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN AMENDMENT: The proposed amendment will revise the Future Land Use Map for the Imagine Greenville County Comprehensive Plan for the Taylors Community. All persons interested in these proposed amendments to the Greenville County Comprehensive Plan 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 amendment than requested.

A complaint has been brought before the Code Enforcement Division of a dangerous, insanitary and unsafe structure located at the following locations: 401 W Morgan Street, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0126.00-04-007.00, Greenville County, SC. 2524 Fork Shoals Road, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0583.02-01-030.00, Greenville County, SC. 100 Arbor Street , Greenville County Tax Map Number 0166.00-03-008.00, Greenville County, SC. 13 Blackwood Street, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0111.00-06-004.00, Greenville County, SC. 645 Tanner Road, Greenville County Tax Map Number T029.02-01-001.03, Greenville County, SC. Nandina Drive, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0222.04-01-042.00, Greenville County, SC. Any persons having interest in these properties, or knowledge of the property owner should contact the Codes Enforcement Office at 864-467-7090 on or before May 26, 2016.

PUBLIC NOTICE Southern Connection, PO Box 6562, Greenville, SC 29606, Contact number: 864-295-2011 is seeking Title to a mobile home through a Judicial Sale in the Magistrate Office of Powdersville-Piedmont, South Carolina. This mobile home is a 1987 Fleetwood mobile home, Model Vanity with serial number GAFLVN1AG410712576 and is located at 707 H I Taylor Rd., Lot 18, Williamston, SC 296979023. The owner of record at the SC DMV Office is Pamela D. Tate, 707 H I Taylor Rd., Lot 18, Williamston, SC 29697-9023. The lien holder of record at the SC DMV is Manh Financial Services, Inc., PO Box 24489, Winston Salem, NC 271144489. Southern Connection has attempted to contact both Josie Haney and Palmetto Federal Savings Bank by certified letters to inform them of this matter.

SUMMONS AND NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT C.A. NO.: 2015-DR-23-4692 Jane Doe and John Doe, Plaintiffs, vs. Abigail McKenzie and David McKenzie Defendants. IN THE INTEREST OF: Damon, DOB: 05/29/2005; and Dawson, DOB: 06/03/2007, Minor children under the age of 18. TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint for termination of parental rights in and to the children in this action, the original of which has been filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Greenville, South Carolina on the 28th day of October, 2015, a copy of which will be delivered to you upon request; to serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint upon the undersigned attorney for the Plaintiffs at 1314 E Washington Street, Greenville, South Carolina, 29607, within thirty (30) days following the date of service upon you, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, Plaintiffs will apply for judgment by default against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Vanessa H. Kormylo Attorney for Plaintiffs S.C. Bar No. 12040 1314 E Washington Street Greenville, South Carolina Telephone (864) 242-1644 Fax (864) 640-8879

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2016, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ENLARGED THE METROPOLITAN SEWER SUBDISTRICT TO INCLUDE: A. That certain real property owned by Foothills Presbytery located off of Rocky Creek Road and described as Greenville County Tax Map Numbers (TMS#) 0575.0301-005.05; B. That certain real property owned by Foothills Presbytery located off of West Georgia Road and described as TMS# 0575.03-01-004.12; THE PURPOSE FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION OF SEWAGE AND WASTE BY EXTENDING LATERAL AND COLLECTOR LINES FOR THE TRANSMISSION OF SEWAGE AND WASTE TO THE TRUNK AND TREATMENT FACILITIES OF REWA (Renewable Water Resources). THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION IS THE NEW BOUNDARY LINE WHICH WILL REFLECT THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBER LISTED ABOVE. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE SUBDISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION OR THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE METROPOLITAN SEWER SUBDISTRICT AS ENLARGED. BOB TAYLOR, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

LEGAL NOTICES

Only $.99 per line

ABC NOTICE OF APPLICATION Only $145

864.679.1205

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that YB Supply Company/ DBA All About Spirits, intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and OFF premises consumption of LIQUOR at 1832-A Woodruff Road, Greenville, SC 29607. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 29, 2016. 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 STBT Acquisition TGR, LLC /DBA The Green Room, 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 116 N Main St., Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 STBT Acquisition TGR, LLC /DBA Sip Tasting Room & Rooftop Lounge, 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 103 N Main St., Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 1 Dave Garrett Way, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 100 Stadium Drive, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 101 Cherrydale Road, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 400 N Hwy 25 Bypass, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 3300 Poinsett Hwy., Pearce Horton Football Complex, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 3300 Poinsett Hwy., Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 at 100 N. Village Way, Bldg J 2854, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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 Silvia’s Supermarket 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 BEER & WINE at 2516 E. North Street Suite B, Greenville, SC 29615. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 15, 2016. 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 Velo Valets, LLC dba Velo Valets, 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 at 2901 Old Buncombe Rd., Greenville, SC 29609. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 15, 2016. 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 Bon Appetit Management Co., 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 1 Younts Way, Greenville, SC 29613. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than May 22, 2016. 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


58 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 05.13.2016

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

FIGURE. THIS. OUT.

Intro to Poe ACROSS 1 Iraqis, e.g. 6 Yank’s Civil War foe 9 “View of Toledo” artist 16 Road sign no. 19 — Haute, Indiana 20 Fruit eater in Genesis 21 “Naked” rodent 22 Byronic “before” 23 A second time 25 When you get there 27 Flat-topped rise 28 Choose to participate 30 Nosh, say 31 Like a desert 32 “Sister Wives” airer 34 Lots of 38 Greater than 40 President Nixon 44 Snatch 45 RV hookup gp. 46 Zilch 47 Love of Lennon 48 What jailbirds are behind 50 Color akin to navy 54 Pop singer Lovato 56 Journalist Paula 58 Dimwit 59 Lock plates 60 Cold, cloudy conditions, say 64 See 77-Across 65 Declaration at the door 66 Spock player 67 Has a printed price of

By Frank Longo

72 Secretive U.S. org. 73 “Since the subject has come up ...” 77 With 64-Across, of equal status 78 Olympic skater Witt 80 Packaging abbr. 81 Ugly beasts 83 Puppy’s bite 84 “Seems suspect to me” 87 Dimwit 90 Singer with the 2001 hit “Thank You” 92 Kemo — (the Lone Ranger) 93 Simon or Diamond 94 Meditated on 98 Guitar great Lofgren 100 “Botch- —” (1952 hit song) 101 “What —!” (“He’s the best!”) 102 Balkan repub. 103 Shag, e.g. 105 Get flushed 107 Actor Michael of “Star Trek: The Next Generation” 108 Cowardly 112 Day, in Peru 113 Shed tears 115 Rap’s “Dr.” 116 Arsenal 118 Take apart 122 “Such is life” 126 One may seek respite

128 Family cat, e.g. 129 Stephen, French-style 130 & so forth 131 Huge name in insurance 132 Voting “yes” 133 Least lax 134 With 135-Across, poem whose first line is found among this puzzle’s 11 longest answers 135 See 134-Across DOWN 1 Quark locale 2 Actress Russo 3 Oval portions 4 Respiration 5 Briny deep 6 Lop a crop 7 Best Musical of 1980 8 Gentle 9 Kiwi relative 10 Trotted 11 Twilight, old-style 12 1995 Leslie Nielsen comedy 13 Long span 14 Avis offering 15 Other, in Peru 16 Restorations 17 Exchanged for the better? 18 Slippery sort 24 Flip out 26 Jail cell parts 29 Linguist Chomsky

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33 Testing spot 35 Osaka sash 36 Off-limits 37 Slangy “OK” 39 Actress Charlotte and others 40 Tennis champ Andy 41 Notion about motion 42 Charges 43 Enticed 49 Aussie miss 51 Post-WWII prez 52 Fish-fowl link 53 “Yes, it’s also included” 55 “— so sure!” 57 Put a label on 61 Second draft 62 Pull along 63 “Laughing” mammal 64 Greek letter 67 Guy keeping the peace 68 Smidgen 69 Refrain 70 Former 71 Grappled, in dialect 74 In the know 75 Amp (up) 76 Summers, in French 79 Painkillers 82 Fired thing 84 Altar words 85 Carpooling lane abbr. 86 Misleading sort 87 Apple debut of 2010 88 Person with a pet pooch 89 No longer fazed by 90 Editor’s mark 91 Pin-ons worn by staffers 95 Not refined

96 East ender? 97 Repents of 99 — Lankan 104 Not stay dry 106 Queasiness 109 Norway’s currency unit 110 Wails in lamentation 111 Performs, in the Bible 114 Virgil, e.g. 117 Indy 500, e.g.

Sudoku

Medium

119 Tube fan’s punishment 120 Desert hill 121 “The Good Earth” wife 122 87-Down user’s buy 123 Suffix with Seattle 124 Pewter part 125 In place 127 Lt. Tasha on “Star Trek: The Next Generation” Crossword answers: page 37

by Myles Mellor and Susan Flannigan

Sudoku answers: page 37


05.13.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 59

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

BACK PAGE Community Voices

Life in the Slow Lane with Joan Herlong

A course in crash etiquette When you marry off three daughters in seven years, you become an expert in things you’d rather not be.

When they detoured from the exit to the restroom, they found a line of well-hydrated women waiting in line, and me, right behind them.

Did you know that having a (costly) “tossing bouquet” is de rigueur in all the “best” weddings? The well-heeled bride now “preserves” the bouquet she held for maybe an hour.

This is where their crashing etiquette fell apart.

My bouquet has been preserved for nigh on 34 years now, in a landfill. It might be nestled beside my wedding gown, because my mother sold it in a garage sale (for way less than what a tossing bouquet costs now, not that I’m bitter). Did you know that making extra nice to your local postal clerk makes zero percent difference? He is as nice and as helpful as he can be, but flirting, flowers and dinner will not guarantee invite delivery. I won’t bore you with details of lost and returned invitations. I’m saving that for the useful collection I plan to publish. Here’s a sampling:

Short Stories for Insomniacs: “My Dog’s Dreams,” an anthology of my dog’s recurrent dreams, and interpretations thereof, as intuited by Carl Simkins, MENSA member. “Squirrels: My Victorious 34-Day Battle to Win Back My Attic” as told by Fred Finkle, retired civil engineer. (Unabridged audio version also available. Warning: Do not listen while operating heavy machinery.) “My Wife’s Day,” as related by any given husband who nods and grunts “mmm-hmmm” in all the wrong places. But I digress. Weddings have also given us an eagle eye for identifying crashers. The first wedding only attracted one, a young man who claimed to be a distant cousin of the groom. I have no idea how Venetia (wedding coordinator par excellence) handled it, because she wisely spared us the details until later. At this last wedding, we had security to prevent crashers, who are drawn to outdoor venues like moths to an open bar. The profile of would-be crashers is usually a scrum of male millennials, camouflaged in coat and tie. Our security spotted and prevented a gang wearing those colors from penetrating the wedding membrane. Unfortunately, no Tasers were used. We had no security at the “after party,” we just had me, and I spotted two millennial female crashers. It’s always nice to be nice, so I informed them, nicely, that it was time to leave. At first, the girls shared a sheepish “Oh… gosh” look, and agreed to leave. Only they didn’t.

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I noted that the exit was in the opposite direction, but these two doubled down.

PLATINUM

“We need to use the bathroom!” one of them mooed. Mind you, there was a public restroom on another floor, and ample shrubbery outside. I took their (MY) drinks from their hands, so they could exit safely. “I cannot believe you’re doing this to us. You’re so rude!” the accomplice bellowed.

SILVER

Before the door closed, one of them hissed, “You’re trash!” These girls needed a course in crash etiquette, and the crashers at our second wedding could certainly teach it. I’m not one to use names, but their initials are N.E.I.L. and R.O.S.S. N & R were intrepid wedding crashers, boldly going where no crashers had gone before. When I spotted them at the first bar after the wedding, I had no idea they were crashers. In my defense, they were a couple of very married-looking guys in their 30s, wearing golf garb that would have made Mr. Rogers proud. Before they could respond to “Fancy-meetingyou-here,” my niece outed them: “They’re crashers! They boozed it up at the wedding, and then they got on the bus and wouldn’t get off! They claim they know you….” I was initially disappointed in them (well, not so much R.O.S.S., because I know his parents. He just wasn’t raised right, so it’s hard to blame him). But this is where these crashers showed true etiquette. They didn’t double down; they sheepishly admitted that they in fact enjoyed several beverages at our wedding bar. Then they bought a round for everyone, and joined in our continued revelry. They’re crashers anyone would welcome. I hear their transportation home that cold night involved a Good Samaritan pizza driver. The final chapter in their wedding crasher etiquette handbook dictated that their wives and toddlers lovingly let them all sleep in till 6:30 a.m. Cheers to that. I think we were worth it. Joan Herlong is a Realtor who loves to write. She can be reached at mailto:joan@ augustaroad.com.

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