June 22, 2018 Greenville Journal

Page 1

IN THIS ISSUE

VOTE IN THE RUNOFF ELECTIONS ON TUESDAY // PUBLIC ART ON STONE AVENUE // PICTURING NAM

GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, June 22, 2018 • Vol.20, No.25

FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 864.679.1200 READ ONLINE AT GREENVILLE JOURNAL.COM

$1.00

Photos by Will Crooks

ANALYZING THE MCMASTER-WARREN REPUBLICAN RUNOFF FOR GOVERNOR

SHOWDOWN

e is ut! Timning o run

Don’t wait for a lower rate and longer term. VEHICLE LOAN AS LOW AS

OFFER ENDS 7/31.

2.74

% 60 APR*

MONTHS

*Annual Percentage Rate is based on a 60-month term. Your loan rate and term amount may vary depending on individual credit history and underwriting factors. Minimum loan amount for this offer is $5,000. A 60-month loan with 2.74% APR would have monthly payments of $17.86 per thousand borrowed. +Excluding auto manufacturer and captive finance company 0% rate offers; rate floor is 1.74%, offer excludes current loans held by Greenville Federal Credit Union. Offer good from April 1 through July 31, 2018. ©2018, Greenville Federal Credit Union. All rights reserved. Member NCUA.


2 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

GREENVILLEJOURNAL LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1999 PUBLISHER | Mark B. Johnston mjohnston@communityjournals.com MANAGING EDITOR | Emily Pietras epietras@communityjournals.com ADMINISTRATIVE EDITOR | Heidi Coryell Williams hwilliams@communityjournals.com STAFF WRITERS Cindy Landrum | clandrum@communityjournals.com Andrew Moore | amoore@communityjournals.com Sara Pearce | spearce@communityjournals.com Ariel Turner | aturner@communityjournals.com COPY EDITOR Rebecca Strelow ARTS & CULTURE WRITER Vince Harris | vharris@communityjournals.com EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Susan Schwartzkopf VICE PRESIDENT OPERATIONS Holly Hardin CLIENT SER VICES MANAGERS Anita Harley | Rosie Peck | Jane Rogers BILLING INQUIRIES Shannon Rochester

Now is the time to save on a lower rate and longer term. is Timeing out! runn VEHICLE LOAN AS LOW AS

2.74

%

APR*

60 MONTHS OFFER ENDS 7/31/18

DIRECTOR OF SALES Emily Yepes MANAGER OF BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Donna Johnston MARKETING REPRESENTATIVES Heather Propp | Meredith Rice Caroline Spivey | Liz Tew

Don’t wait to use this incredible 60-month rate when you finance your next vehicle.

VISUAL DIRECTOR Will Crooks LAYOUT Bo Leslie | Tammy Smith ADVERTISING DESIGN Kristy Adair | Michael Allen EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT | Kristi Fortner CHAIRMAN | Douglas J. Greenlaw

Hit the road this summer with a vehicle loan rate as low as 2.74% APR for 60 months on new, pre-owned,

Greenville

and refinanced vehicles with less than 30,000 miles and less than two years old. This low 60-month rate

3375 Pelham Road Greenville, SC 29615 864.371.6060

will end July 31. Lower rates with shorter terms are also available, and we can beat other lenders’ rates by a quarter percent+. Ask us about refinancing your current vehicle loan.

Greenville

1501 Wade Hampton Blvd. Greenville, SC 29609 864.235.6309

Better rates and terms can mean a better car with lower payments. What are you waiting for?

Greer

107 W. Church St. Greer, SC 29650 864.877.9089

publishers of

581 perry ave., greenville, sc 29611 phone: 864-679-1200 delivery inquiries: 864-679-1240 communityjournals.com

© 2015 published by community journals llc. all rights reserved. all property rights for the entire contents of this publication shall be the property of community journals. no part of this publication may be reproduced, scanned, stored, distributed or transmitted by any means – whether auditory, graphic, mechanical, or electronic – without written permission from the publisher.

Apply online at www.greenvillefcu.com or visit any branch to get started.

Mauldin

142 Tanner Rd. Greenville, SC 29607 864.676.9066

Our community-based charter allows anyone who lives, works, worships or attends school in Greenville County to join.

800.336.6309 greenvillefcu.com

SUMMER BRINGS DIRT IN. WE TAKE IT OUT.

*Annual Percentage Rate is based on a 60-month term. Your loan rate and term amount may vary depending on individual credit history and underwriting factors. Minimum loan amount for this offer is $5,000. A 60-month loan with 2.74% APR would have monthly payments of $17.86 per thousand borrowed. +Excluding auto manufacturer and captive finance company 0% rate offers; rate floor is 1.74%, offer excludes current loans held by Greenville Federal Credit Union. Offer good from April 1 through July 31, 2018. ©2018, Greenville Federal Credit Union. All rights reserved. Member NCUA.

Your savings federally insured to at least $250,000 and backed by the full faith and credit of the United States Government

NCUA

National Credit Union Administration, a U.S. Government Agency

SUMMER BRINGS DIRT IN.

WE TAKE IT OUT.

MIX AND MATCH SPECIAL

99

$

2 rooms Carpet I Tile & Grout I Hardwood Expires July 12, 2018 Promo Code: 2RM99

FOR A CLEANER & HEALTHIER HOMETM | 864-233-8688 | stanleysteemer.com

CARPET CLEANING

Minimum charges apply. Not valid in combination with other coupons or offers. Must present promo code at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Residential only. Cannot be used for water emergency services. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details.


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 3

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

We always let you know who will be there when you open the door!

PAGE 3 THEY SAID IT

Provided

“ Probably more than any previous war, the Vietnam War was visually seen by Americans at home, but mainly through the media. This is a chance to look at what soldiers were seeing at the time – the good, the bad, and everything in between.” Elizabeth Gunter, director of education and programs at the Upcountry History Museum on the exhibit, “Picturing Nam: U.S. Military Photography of the Vietnam War.”

“ McMaster certainly has the advantage of the office, but Warren has a pretty compelling biography for the political moment we’re in, especially in a Republican primary election.” Furman Political Science Professor Brent Nelsen on the Republican gubernatorial runoff on June 26.

“ You can still experience this as a part of your everyday life, even if you aren’t super interested in art.”

PATRICK KELLEY “I REALLY appreciate the promptness and professional approach that Corley has. I love that their uniform is so clean and well fitted and they really keep your house clean, as if they were never there. I love the suggestions they give but they’re not pushy. That makes me want to work with them again.” — Andrew & Katherine K., Greenville.

Call Corley to experience the remarkable service your family deserves.

Stephanie Burnette, one of the two women behind the Stone Mural Project, which aims to beautify Stone Avenue through murals.

2

The number of South Carolina counties Greenville’s John Warren won in the Republican primary for governor. Warren is in a runoff with incumbent Henry McMaster who won 39.

(864) 908.3360

| W W W. CO R L E Y P R O. CO M


4 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

A CONTEST OF CONTRASTS

What each candidate must do to win the nomination

WORDS BY CINDY LANDRUM | PHOTOS BY WILL CROOKS

The two candidates in Tuesday’s runoff to be the Republican nominee for governor are a study in contrasts. There’s incumbent Henry McMaster, 71, a longtime fixture in the Republican Party, who is looking to win his first election to the state’s highest office, although he’s been governor for the past 18 months. McMaster, who ran unsuccessfully for governor in the past, became governor when Nikki Haley resigned to become U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Challenger John Warren, a 39-year-old Greenville businessman and political newcomer, used $3 million of his own money to pound home the attributes — businessman; conservative; Marine; not a career politician, government insider, or lawyer — that he said would make him the best candidate for governor. In the June 12 primary, McMaster won 39 of the state’s 46 counties, but not by a high enough margin to get the 50 percent plus one votes that would have allowed him to avoid a runoff. Warren surged in the late primary campaign to take two counties, Greenville and Pickens — 28 percent of the statewide vote. So, what will it take for each of the candidates to win Tuesday’s runoff to get on the ballot to run against Democratic nominee James Smith and American Party candidate Martin Barry? The Greenville Journal asked Upstate political analysts just that.

HH WHAT McMASTER NEEDS TO DO TO WIN HH While McMaster is the incumbent, he is still looking to win his first gubernatorial race. “He’s still got that boogieman on his back,” said Clemson University political science professor Bruce Ransom. “He wants to win this race because he hasn’t previously.” Brent Nelsen, a Furman University political science professor, put the governor’s race as “somewhere in between an incumbent and an open seat.” “The people are being asked, ‘Do you want Henry as governor?’ They weren’t asked before,” Nelsen said. “[McMaster] certainly has the advantages of the office, but Warren has a pretty compelling biography for the political moment we’re in, especially in a Republican primary election.” McMaster needs to counteract Warren’s success in the Upstate and get some of those who voted for Catherine Templeton, who finished third in the primary, to vote for him, Nelsen said. He also has to get the vote out in the Midlands and Pee Dee regions, and he has to beat Warren in the Lowcountry. “He’s got to win Lexington bigger and win Richland [County] bigger,” Nelsen said. “Henry can spend all of his time in the Lowcountry and concede the Upstate to Warren, or he can challenge Warren on his home turf. That would be a gutsy thing to do … but he might be able to do that playing the Trump card because the Upstate is Trump territory.” McMaster was the first prominent South Carolina Republican to support candidate Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential campaign, and Trump tweeted

his endorsement of McMaster the weekend before the primary vote. “If Trump support prevails, it’s going to be tough for Warren,” Ransom said. “Warren has a lot of ground to cover, but that doesn’t mean it’s safe ground. Gov. McMaster has to run hard.” Nelsen believes McMaster needs to define his platform past his usual “feel good” message. “Henry sees himself as the cheerleader-in-chief,” he said. “His message about South Carolina and how great it is plays well with voters but may not appeal to the real activist who comes out to vote in a runoff. I think he needs to say where he stands on issues such as how he’s going to raise money for highways or how he would like to see the Legislature restructure the state pension plan.”

HH WHAT WARREN NEEDS TO DO TO WIN HH While Warren has momentum, Ransom said he still has a long road to be victorious because of his lack of statewide name recognition. Getting the endorsements of Templeton and Bryant can help — but only if those former candidates and those who worked on their campaigns work to get voters over to Warren’s camp, he said. “After the cameras are gone, what did you do for the candidate you endorsed? That’s what’s important,” Ransom said. “Evidence doesn’t show that endorsements transfer votes. But what extent does that candidate get out there and say, ‘This is my guy,’ or gets out on the campaign with him, that’s what matters.” If Templeton gets out there in counties where Warren’s name recognition is not good, that could help. Bryant’s endorsement could help deliver Anderson County, which is very conservative, to Warren. Nelsen said Warren must get his supporters who cast ballots in the primary to come out and vote again in the runoff. He said having the 4th Congressional District on the runoff ballot should help. In addition, Warren must do better in the Lowcountry, Nelsen said. “That’s going to be his battleground,” he said. “He’s got to spend some time there.” If McMaster plays the Trump card, Warren could counter by saying he’s the more Trumpesque candidate because he’s a successful businessman and political outsider. In addition, he could remind voters that McMaster pledged to support U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, who Nelsen said is not popular in the base, before becoming the first state official in South Carolina to endorse Trump for president. Finally, Warren must stay on message, Nelsen said. “He cannot be lured into a titfor-tat exchange. A lot of people are just waking up to John Warren. He’s got to stay disciplined and stay on message.” Nelsen said Warren, who comes from a family that has been involved in politics, had a well-planned campaign that “did all the right things at the right moments.” Ransom said that while Warren has momentum, McMaster has the advantage. “Whether he can maintain it is another question,” Ransom said.


COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 5

Henry McMaster Age: 71 Occupation: attorney and politician Previous elected office: South Carolina lieutenant governor, South Carolina Attorney General Lt. Gov. pick: Upstate businesswoman Pamela Evette

John Warren Age: 39 Occupation: businessman, founder of Lima One Capital Previous elected office: None Lt. Gov. pick: Charleston businessman Pat McKinney


6 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

RUNOFF ON TUESDAY Greenville County voters to return to polls CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Greenville County voters will return to the polls on Tuesday to help decide the winners of four statewide primary races. In addition to the Republican governor’s runoff pitting Greenville businessman and political newcomer John Warren against incumbent Henry McMaster, three other races will be on the ballot on June 26 — two Republican and one Democratic. Who gets to cast ballots in each of the runoffs depends on what voters did during the June 12 primary. Voters who did not cast a ballot at all can vote in either party’s runoff. Those who cast votes in one of the primaries may cast a ballot in the same party’s runoff.

U.S. House of Representatives District 4 Republican Runoff

Voters in Greenville and Spartanburg counties will choose between a current state senator from Greenville and a former state senator from Spartanburg to be the Republican nominee for the seat left open by U.S. Rep. Trey Gowdy. Lee Bright, who received nearly 25 percent of the vote in a crowded 13-candidate field, was ousted from his state Senate seat two years ago in a GOP primary. Sen. William Timmons edged out former state Rep. Dan Hamilton for the second runoff spot. During his time in the Senate, Bright was known for controversial statements and proposals, including pushing a “bathroom bill” requiring transgenders to use bathrooms matching the gender on their birth certificates modeled after North Carolina’s now-repealed law, and defending the Confederate flag’s presence on the Statehouse grounds after the Charleston church shooting that left nine dead. During a District 4 forum before the primary,

Bright said transgender people have “an issue with mental illness.” Timmons, a business owner and former prosecutor, defeated longtime state Sen. Mike Fair in the 2016 election. Timmons and seven other members of the Greenville County Legislative Delegation in February introduced a bill calling for the sale of the Greenville Health System and with proceeds to be distributed among various government, education, and other groups. The bill was a result of an ongoing controversy over the governance of GHS that started when the GHS board decided to existing public nonprofit GHS would remain a property owner and lease health system’s assets to two private nonprofit organizations. Eventually, a compromise bill was passed that didn’t require the sale, but instead required the hospital to provide more health-related grants to the community.

U.S. House of Representatives District 4 Democratic Runoff The Democratic primary for the 4th district may not have generated as many headlines as the more crowded Republican ticket, but there will be a runoff there, as well, between Doris “Lee” Turner and Brandon P. Brown. Turner is a Greenville accountant, while Brown is a Greenville businessman. On her website, Turner’s talking points include trimming the cost of recent tax reform by closing corporate loopholes and restoring the top individual rates to pre-reform levels, criminal justice system reform, and common-sense gun laws that include universal background checks, longer waiting periods, and more stringent licensing. She touts her business experience and calls herself a “fix it” person. Brown is a local businessman, former college administrator, and former aide to Joe Biden. He said it’s important to create new jobs in the district, address the high cost of education, and reform health care and the criminal justice system.

State Attorney General Republican Runoff

Incumbent Alan Wilson and Todd Atwater face off in the Republican

runoff. The winner will face Democrat Constance Anastopoulo, a Charleston lawyer. Wilson, who has been the state’s attorney general since 2010, was the leading vote-getter in the three-candidate primary that included Greenville attorney William Herlong. He received 49 percent of the vote. Wilson has championed causes such as fighting child sex predators, gangs, and human trafficking. But his primary opponents alleged he tried to derail a public corruption investigation into political consultant Richard Quinn, with whom he has ties, and Quinn’s son, former state Rep. Rick Quinn. Atwater, who was born in Greenville, was elected to the state House District 87 seat (covering Lexington County) in 2010. He is president and CEO of Folger Atwater & Co. Atwater had served as chief executive officer of the South Carolina Medical Association. During the campaign, Atwater said he’d appoint a public corruption unit led by a seasoned prosecutor and investigator, form an anti-gang unit, and take the lead in prosecuting drug dealers.

Who can vote in Tuesday’s runoff? REGISTERED VOTERS MAY CAST A BALLOT: If they did not cast a ballot in either the Republican or Democratic primary on June 12, they may cast a ballot in either party’s runoff. If they cast a ballot in a particular party’s primary on June 12, they may cast a ballot in that same party’s runoff. REGISTERED VOTERS MAY NOT CAST A BALLOT: If they cast a vote in the Republican primary, they cannot cast a ballot in a Democratic runoff, even if there is no Republican runoff. If they cast a vote in the Democratic primary, they cannot cast a ballot in a Republican runoff, even if there is no Democratic runoff. (Source: State Election Commission)

when you finish reading this paper please recycle it


I’m Too Young. Yeah... that’s what our members said too.

Greenville’s Premier Life Plan Community 10 Fountainview Terrace • Greenville, SC 29607 (864) 606-3055 • Cascades-Verdae.com Independent Living • Assisted Living • Memory Care • Skilled Nursing • Rehab


Serving the Greater Greenville Area with Local Expertise, Global Reach

WATCH JOAN ON

JULY 13 • 10 PM

L

N OPE

615 Parkins Mill Road Parkins Mill Area • $349,607 Caroline Turpin 864.704.4610

CE PRI W NE

304 Stewart Street Augusta Road Area • $419,605 Caroline Turpin 864.704.4610

197 Fisher Knob Road Lake Jocassee • $1,900,676 Kim Crowe 864.888.7053

154 Riverplace Drive, Unit 501 149 Duck Hawk Way River House Condos • $1,629,601 Cliffs at Mountain Park • $1,299,661

NEW D N BRA

PARK D N A EL CLEV O T WALK

16 Cromwell Avenue Alta Vista • $699,605 Donnald Dobbins 864.315.7345

LAKE LOTS AVAILABLE 220 Deep Cove Point Reserve at Lake Keowee $525,685

403 McDaniel Avenue Alta Vista • $699,601 Liz Henry 571.228.8649

WS VIE L TIFU U A BE

+ ONE

LOT E R AC

5 201 N I LT BUI

6 Meyers Drive Augusta Circle • $659,605 Ragan Smith 843.437.6262

ATE PRIV

RT COU S I N TEN

Lot 81 Peninsula Pointe South Lake Keowee $232,696

864.888.7053

17 Toy Street Pettigru Historic District • $549,601 Reid Hipp 449.1779 & Caroline Turpin 704.4610

864.297.3450

114 Stafford Green Way Stafford Green • $496,615 Alex Boyd 706.825.8975

www.jha-SothebysRealty.com

ON SEE

HG

2 Phillips Lane Augusta Road Area • $649,605

109 Vaughn Court Lake Keowee 2 Lot Combo $488,682

Kim Crowe – Luxury Lake Specialist

VE I O M

116 Collins Creek Road Collins Creek • $1,049,607

RCLE I C A ST AUGU O T K WAL

E HOM W E EN LIK

E HOM R O ICE OFF

NEW

5 Griffin Street Downtown • $399,601 Reid Hipp 864.449.1779

NDO O C USE O H T PEN

N PLA R O FLO

108 Augusta Court Augusta Circle • $719,605 Ragan Smith 843.437.6262

CE PRI W NE

S IEW V C AMI R O PAN

E VAT REAT I R P RET AKE

187 Fisher Knob Road Lake Jocassee • $1,945,676 Kim Crowe 864.888.7053

G TIN 2-4 S I L AY NEWSUND N OPE

710 Brown Avenue Historic Belton • $489,627

IOUS C A SP


Serving the Greater Greenville Area with Local Expertise, Global Reach

NEW

ATE! UPST N I E STAT E T S FINE

CE PRI

28 Douglas Drive GCC/Augusta Road • $329,605 Jackson Herlong 864-313-2520

Y EAD R N VE I O M

502 Crescent Avenue Alta Vista • $1,049,601

3! LY 1 U J V HGT N O SEE

100 Chapman Place On Chanticleer Golf Course • $7,500,605

2.4

T E LO R C A

E HOM

K TO WAL

4 Cromwell Avenue Alta Vista • $649,605 Donnald Dobbins 864.315.7345

N PLA R O LO US F O I C SPA

205 Robin Lane Swansgate • $355,605 Caroline Turpin 864.704.4610

205 Jones Avenue Alta Vista • $649,605 Liz Henry 571.228.8649

R ATE THE

K BAC

E TTAG O C NG RMI A H C

19 Woodvale Avenue GCC Area • $599,605 Grace Loveless 864.238.5114

116 West Faris Road Augusta Circle Area • $349,605 Venetia King 864.414.5991

864.297.3450

M CHAR N A I ON LEST R A H C

TATE S E E ACR 2.8

329 Pine Forest Drive Extension Alta Vista •$769,601

, ATED UPD

100 Asheton Way Asheton • $749,681 Alexis Furman 864.630.3952

T E LO R C ON A

LOT E L AB IVID D SUB

15 Isbell Lane Parkins Mill • $559,607 Jackson Herlong 864.313.2520

E! TAG T O C ATED V O REN

S CES C A EY ALL

114 Keowee Club Road Lake Hartwell • $2,950,689

134 Acres Chinquapin Road Travelers Rest • $3,700,690

5 Brick House Court 105 Putney Bridge Lane Kilgore Plantation • $915,681 Cobblestone • $799,681 Patrick Furman 864.283.4560 Patrick Furman 864.283.4560

OWN T N DOW

! TATE S E E LAK G N I Z AMA

S, TY! ONDRTUNI P O TW OPPO G N AZI AM

25 Westbrook Lane Augusta Street Area • $195,605 Donnald Dobbins 864.315.7345

www.jha-SothebysRealty.com

37 Rock Creek Drive GCC • $549,605 Katherine Hall 864.678.0820

NEW SUBDIVISION IN N. MAIN

TWO LOTS REMAINING! Located off W. Mountainview Avenue

• Lot 1 Henigan Lane $250,609 • Lot 5 Henigan Lane $249,605 Caroline Turpin 864.704.4610 EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED


10 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

THERAPY FOR EVERYBODY We’ve got you covered, from your head to your toes Did you know June is National Migraine and Headache Awareness Month? If you suffer from frequent migraines or headaches, consider consulting with a physical therapist.

Headache pain is the third most common pain complaint worldwide. Both headaches and migraines can be caused by a variety of conditions including but not limited to sinus problems, vascular complications, or tumors. However, a large majority are caused by muscular and joint issues, such as muscle tension and tightness, disc pathology, lack of neck motion, poor posture, or tightness in the back between the shoulder blades. So how can physical therapy help those suffering from headaches or migraines? ...And is it actually effective? First off, a licensed physical therapist will assess the patient to determine the type of headache: tension, migraine, or secondary pain stemming from an underlying condition. This will allow them to pinpoint the root cause of the problem. Second, dependent upon the type the pain, the physical therapist can manually address the issue using a number of techniques: heat or ice, soft tissue mobilization/massage, cervical traction, stretching, strengthening exercises, dry needling, and/or posture education. This will allow them to alleviate a headache or migraine quickly and effectively. From there, the physical therapist may be able to provide the patient with specific, custom exercises to address any future flare-ups on their own. In some cases, a physical therapist can address and relieve headache and migraine pain as quickly as one visit, but results may vary based on the severity of each individual case.

If you suffer from headaches or migraines, give Elite Integrated Therapy Centers a call! With 7 offices across the Upstate, our licensed physical therapists are available to see you within 24-48 hours, no referral required. We are here to address any aches or pains, from your head to your toes!

Epinephrine is injected in the upper thigh using an auto-injector syringe as an emergency treatment for an acute allergic reaction. The auto-injector can administer the epinephrine through clothing.

PALADIN PRECAUTIONS To address growing problem of life-threatening allergies and anaphylactic shock, Furman installs epinephrine kits on campus in stations around campus CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

ANDERSON | BOILING SPRINGS | GREENVILLE | SIMPSONVILLE | SENECA

With 7 convenient locations... No Referral Required OFFICE HOURS: 7:00am to 6:00pm

In In In In

the Anderson area, call: Greenville/Simpsonville, call: the Seneca area, call: the Spartanburg area, call:

elitetherapycenters.com

864-964-0505 864-233-5128 864-886-0007 864-641-0175

Lips, tongue, and throat can start to swell. Airways start constricting, making it harder to breathe. Blood pressure can drop. The person’s pulse could become rapid and weak, and he could develop nausea and vomiting. Epinephrine is the only treatment that can reverse an anaphylactic response. But 25 percent of people who suffer from life-threatening allergies don’t know it, and those who do often engage in risky behavior by not carrying their prescribed epinephrine auto-injectors, including the EpiPen, the most commonly prescribed. Now, Furman University is installing anaphylaxis emergency kits around campus thanks to a partnership between the school’s Institute for the Advancement of Community Health (IACH) and Nashville, Tennessee-based company LifeReach. School officials said the kits would improve the school’s ability to respond to the rising number of anaphylactic shock incidents. “We are, to our knowledge, the first institution of higher education to … have nondesignated epinephrine auto injectors on campus available for use,” said Susan Ybarra, IACH associate director.


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

All of Greenville County’s K-12 schools have a supply of EpiPens, which are provided by Mylan Pharmaceutical through its EpiPens4Schools program. During the 2017-’18 school year, they had to be used eight times, according to Cathy Storey, the school district’s director of medical services. “Food allergies are the No. 1 cause of anaphylactic shock,” said Madison Ritter, an IACH post-baccalaureate fellow who worked with Ybarra to bring the kits to Furman. “High school students are much more likely to undergo anaphylaxis and also have fatalities from anaphylaxis.” Eventually, the kits will be in the Daniel Dining Hall, McAlister Auditorium, Younts Conference Center, Furman Golf Course clubhouse, the PalaDen in the Trone Student Center, the Library Cafe, and the Child Development Center. In addition, all Furman police vehicles will be equipped with AEKs, and 57 people have been trained to recognize the symptoms of anaphylactic shock and use the injectors. The prevalence of food allergies in children has increased 50 percent in the United States since 1997, but legal barriers in South Carolina prevented entities like Furman from stocking and administering epinephrine. The Emergency Anaphylaxis Treatment Act passed in 2016, allowing schools, recreation camps, day care facilities, churches, youth sports leagues, amusement parks, arenas, and restaurants to stock a supply of epinephrine auto-injectors. LifeReach was co-founded by Furman graduate Carol Len Frist Portis, who graduated with Ybarra and has a son with life-threatening allergies. LifeReach’s kits were the first approved provider of undesignated stock epinephrine by the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control. “The increase [in food allergies] is very significant in the kids that will have their first experience with a life-threatening reaction when they’re older,” Ybarra said. A community action task force has been formed to consider making Greenville the first city in the country to comprehensively address anaphylaxis.

A Touch of Kindness

It takes a special person to consistently show kindness, and to help families find beauty during a difficult time. But it’s second nature for Aida Gonzalez, a licensed funeral director, who views her work as not just a job, but a calling. She enjoys “finding the perfect approach for the needs of my families, allowing me to honor their loved one in a special way.” A mom of three, she loves to paint in her spare time, and is also bilingual, which allows her to bring her touch of kindness to even more families. The families Aida assists are invariably touched by her compassion and personal attention to every detail. As one family said of Aida, “You made it easy for me and sincerely joyful.”

GREAT RATES. EASY ACCESS. Earn up to

1.75

%

APY1

on our Signature Money Market! Visit hometrustbanking.com/easy-gvl or come in to get started today!

:RRGUX΍ 5G

8599 Pelham Rd

Kirk - Branch Manager 499 Woodruff Road 864.335.2200

Lydia - Branch Manager 8599 Pelham Road 865.605.6200

Signature Money Market Account

Minimum to Open is $5,000 Balance Tiers

Aida Milena Gonzalez Funeral Director

MACKEY

MACKEY

Funerals And Cremations Century Drive

Funerals And Cremations at Woodlawn Memorial Park

311 CENTURY DR., GREENVILLE (291 BYPASS AT I-385)

1 PINE KNOLL DR., GREENVILLE (OFF WADE HAMPTON)

864-232-6706

864-244-0978

Offering affordable, compassionate care to the Upstate since 1872.

NOW IN TWO LOCATIONS.

MackeyMortuary.com

$5,000-$49,999

$50,000-$99,999

$100,000-$249,999

$250,000-$499,999

$500,000+

APY 1.25%

APY 1.40%

APY 1.50%

APY

APY

1.60%

1.75%

1. Limited time offer. A minimum opening balance of $5,000 is required to earn the stated APY (Annual Percentage Yield). See table above for specific rates and corresponding balance requirements. Balances below $5,000 earn 0.10% APY. The Signature Money Market is a variable rate account and rates are subject to change after account opening. Rates accurate as of May 25, 2018. Account must be funded by money not already on deposit with HomeTrust Bank at the time of account opening and is subject to bank approval. Fees may reduce earnings on the account. Interest payments are subject to IRS tax reporting requirements. The Signature Money Market Account is not available for public funds or IRAs (individual retirement accounts). Federal regulation limits money market accounts to 6 transfers or withdrawals per month for most types of transfers and withdrawals. Certain transfers and withdrawals are not subject to this limit.


12 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM June 30 - July 8 • Mon. - Sat. 9:30 am til 6 pm • Sun. 12 noon til 6pm

Photo provided

4th of July

TAX FREE Sidewalk Sale

Outdoor seating, dining, grills, fire pits, accessories & more!

The Fire House

Casual Living Store

Our Promise

“We don’t mark it up to mark it down”

FRONTIER BECOMES SIXTH AIRLINE TO OFFER FLIGHTS FROM GSP

Buy With Peace Of Mind

CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF

clandrum@communityjournals.com

Our Everyday Low Prices

% 40 Off

20% to

*

SPECIAL TEXT OFFER!

Limited Time Text “gvl”

to 555888 to receive a special offer

The Fire House

Casual Living Store FHcasual.com

Greenville, SC

601 Congaree Road Greenville, SC 864.210.4024 *See store for promotional details. Cannot be used or combined with any other offers. Offer good through July 8, 2018

Frontier Airlines will become the sixth airline to offer flights from Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport when it begins service on Sept. 8. Frontier will offer nonstop flights to Denver, Las Vegas, Orlando, and seasonal service to Tampa, the airline announced Tuesday. “This is great news for GSP’s passengers,” said Dave Edwards, GSP’s president and CEO. “Each of these new cities is in the top 20 destinations for GSP’s passengers, and Frontier will make reaching these destinations more convenient. We are excited to offer these services to people living in the Upstate and surrounding areas.” There will be flights to each of those cities from GSP twice a week, Wednesdays and Saturdays. “We are proud to bring our unique brand of ‘Low Fares done Right’ to Greenville,” said Tyri Squyres, Frontier’s vice president of marketing. Squyres said Frontier’s new flights would make air travel more accessible and more affordable for Greenville-Spartanburg area residents. Flights to Denver will depart at 12:20 p.m. Flights to Orlando will depart at 3:40 p.m., while flights to Las Vegas will leave GSP at 8:40 p.m. Flights to Tampa will begin in the winter and can be booked in July when Frontier’s winter schedule is released. Frontier is offering a special introductory one-way fare of $34, which is available now on flyfrontier.com. The special fares must be purchased by 11:509 p.m. EST on Wednesday, June 20, for nonstop travel. Travel is valid Sept. 10 through Nov. 14. Additionally, local residents can enter to win two roundtrip tickets by entering the carrier’s contest at http://bit.ly/GSPairportGiveaaway. Frontier serves more than 90 cities in the United States, Canada, Dominican Republic and Mexico. Allegiant, American Airlines, Delta, Southwest, and United already offer flights at GSP. With the Frontier announcement, GSP will have 19 nonstop destinations. In April, Delta announced it would add two new nonstop daily flights to New York’s LaGuardia Airport (LGA) beginning July 9. Delta currently offers one daily nonstop flight to LGA.


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 13

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

IN THE HOLE Furman golfers compete in Celebration of Champions event at New York Course MELODY WRIGHT | CONTRIBUTOR

mwright@communityjournals.com

Furman University golfers Alice Chen and Taylor Totland, both U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball champions, participated in the Celebration of Champions event on June 12, which honored the winners of each of the 2017 USGA championships. This is the inaugural year of the Celebration of Champions event which was held earlier during the week of the 118th U.S. Open Championship. Chen, a senior on the 2017-18 Furman women’s golf roster, and Totland, a 2017 Furman alumna, were each paired off into two-player mixed teams for the event. The champions worked their way through holes 10-13 of Shinnecock Hills in Southampton, N.Y. With a two-over 17 score, winners Totland and Frankie Capan tied with another team. Retired pro golfer Jack Nicklaus and U.S. Open winner Brooks Koepka welcomed the participants at the event.

GET YOUR SKIN IN THE GAME When was your last skin check? Dr. John Korman,

South Carolina native, founder and Harvard-trained dermatologist, is now accepting new patients.

When you join the Y, you’re committing to more than simply becoming healthier. You are supporting the values and programs that strengthen our community.

JOIN TODAY FOR A BETTER US.

FREE Fitness Coaching FREE Child Care with a family membership

YMCA OF GREENVILLE 420 The Parkway, Suite M, Greer upstatedermatology.com | 864-877-0776

ymcagreenville.org 864.412.0288


14 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

SAIL SWIMMERS OF THE WEEK

Ava Patrick Blue Dovetree

Brookes Boone Gold McCarter

Campbell Murphy White Pelham Falls

Ella Maness Gold McCarter

Scott Greiner White Pelham Falls

Jenson Wagner Red Stone Lake

India Paul Red Stone Lake

Ian Truesdale Blue Dovetree

Sierra Dudley Green Wellington Green Brighton-Carisbrooke

Timothy Regan Green Wellington Green Brighton-Carisbrooke

Ana Poor Purple Roper Mountain Estates – Asheton Rec

Jax Ternes Purple Roper Mountain Estates – Asheton Rec

The Care You Need, The Way You Want It. ghs.org/access


COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

Genco

POOLS & SPAS

06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 15

SAIL Meet of the Week

SUGAR CREEK VS. RMEA

Sugar Creek – June 14, 2018

FROM BACKYARD GETAWAYS TO COMMERCIAL PARADISES – GENCOPOOLS.COM


16 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

A mural in progress by Bannan Blasko. Photo by Irina Rice

ORGANIZERS’ EFFORTS BRING COLOR TO DOWNTOWN STREET Stone Mural Project continues its mission to add public art to Stone Avenue SARA PEARCE | STAFF

spearce@communityjournals.com

The women behind the Stone Mural Project did not set out to change the world, but they did want to improve a street that was important to them and their families. Stone Avenue is a staple in the lives of North Main area residents as well as an SCDOT (South Carolina Department of Transportation) road that is a huge part of the daily lives of many Greenville residents. Stephanie Burnette and Jean Wilson Freeman embarked on a project to beautify the street through public art. “We are not a nonprofit organization; we are two moms who live in the neighborhood,” Burnette says. “Both of our kids go to an arts magnet school [Stone Academy], and we always believed if you paint it they will come.” The two women were inspired by other displays of public art, both in Greenville and cities around the country. They planned to divide and conquer: Wilson Freeman would focus on the art side, and Burnette would tackle the planning. They titled the endeavor “Stone Mural Project” and haven’t slowed down since. This is the project’s fifth year, and by the end of the summer, they will have completed seven murals on Stone Avenue, and they plan to create five more to total 12 in the coming years. They initially received the seed money from Stone Academy, and then approached the Arts in Public Places Commission, which was looking for an educational partnership. It agreed to fund the project for six years. “They wanted to do something with the school, and we showed up to say, ‘We can do that, we just need the money,’ and they were super excited,” Burnette says. The Stone Mural Project strives to choose notable local

artists who want to show their works on different media and improve the community through public art. Thus far the artists have included Eric Benjamin, Kalista, Jean Wilson Freeman, Sunny Mullarkey McGowan, Bannan Blasko LLC (a media company focused on the creation of public art, based in Spartanburg), Michelle Jardines, and Annie Koelle. The subject matter of the murals has ranged from a visual representation of the solar eclipse in the Upstate to a memorial for a North Main resident, Mike Mecklenburg, who was tragically killed. Another wonderful aspect of the Stone Mural Project is its educational partnerships with Furman University and Stone Academy. The students of Stone Academy have been a cornerstone of the project since its inception and always contribute their time to painting the sometimes huge murals. Over the years, the project has further involved the students of Stone Academy through artistin-residency programs with McGowan and inviting the children to pitch their ideas for the mural that Bannan Blasko created. Furman University’s involvement started in the third year of the project. The art department chair, Ross McClain, started a Maymester class to support public art and the Stone Mural Project. Each year, the students in the class and McClain have helped ensure the completion of the murals, as well as volunteered around the arts community in Greenville. During their involvement, the students from Stone Academy work with Furman students and learn more about the importance of art in public places. “The day Furman students interact with the fifth graders is the biggest reason we do it. That day of engagement is a powerful touch point for all of the participants in their educational pathway,” McClain says “The simple act of having a conversation while

painting a wall together is impactful.” The Stone Mural Project helps the community in other ways, as well. It works to use recycled paints from the area and keep their costs low so they can continue to add more public art to the area. Sixty-five percent of every mural uses recycled paint, Burnette says. This year, they are completing three murals. The first is by Bannon Blasko on the office of Watson Finance Co. The second is by Jardines, on the Bombshell Lounge, and the third is by Koelle on The Bohemian Cafe. This will be the second mural on the building where the Bohemian Cafe and Horizon Records are. This particular mural is in honor of the centennial of the Gridley Club, a women’s club that initially gave money to Stone Academy to fund its arts program. The Stone Mural Project has inevitably brought artists, residents, and business and real estate owners together. “We often end up with artists who wouldn’t typically meet these business owners, and it brings people with different worldviews together,” Burnette says. McGowan, painter of the 2017 mural titled “Every Day is a New Beginning,” says, “All three of my children have gone to Stone, and I still have a second-grader there, so this whole project is really close to my heart. I feel public art is incredibly important; it’s meant for everyone to enjoy and makes our world a happier and more beautiful place.” The mission of the Stone Mural Project is simple: to help improve an area that is near and dear to the hearts of Burnette and Wilson Freeman and many others in Greenville through the implementation of public art that can affect everyone in a different way. Burnette hopes for this art to touch everyone in some way. “You can still experience this as a part of your everyday life, even if you aren’t super interested in art,” she says.


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 17

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

FIND STONE'S MURALS

“Every Day Is A New Beginning”

by Sunny Mullarkey McGowan, 2017 223 W. Stone Ave. Photo by Will Crooks

Untitled

by Michelle Jardines, 2018 7 W. Stone Ave.

photo provided by Stone Mural Project

Untitled

by Annie Koelle, 2018 2 W. Stone Ave. Photo by Irina Rice

Unititled

by Bannan Blasko, LLC, 2018 328 W. Stone Ave. Photo by Irina Rice

“Be The Change”

by Kalista, 2015 214 W. Stone Ave. Photo by Will Crooks

“We Stand United”

by Jean Wilson Freeman, 2016 217 E. Stone Ave. Photo by Will Crooks

“Sunday in the Park a la Reedy River”

by Eric Benjamin, 2014 1 E. Stone Ave. Photo by Will Crooks


18 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

HONORING A LEADER

Former S.C. Governor and U.S. Education Secretary Dick Riley to be honored with sculpture downtown WORDS BY CINDY LANDRUM Former South Carolina Governor and U.S. Education Secretary Dick Riley will be honored for his public leadership and commitment to quality education for all children with a sculpture in downtown Greenville. The sculpture, designed by Greenville artist Zan Wells, features Riley reading a book to two children. The city’s Arts in Public Places Commission unanimously approved the design. The exact location of the sculpture has yet to be determined. Greenville Mayor Knox White said: “Dick Riley is a Greenville treasure. We are enthusiastic about the opportunity to have a sculpture in the city’s center that will honor for all time Dick Riley’s dedication to public service, including quality education for all children.” Frank Holleman, Riley’s former deputy at the U.S. Education Department, and Erwin Maddrey, a leader in the Greenville business community, are co-chairs of the Riley sculpture citizens committee. Riley was South Carolina’s first two-term governor in modern times, the legislature and the state’s citizens having voted to amend the South Carolina Constitution to allow Riley to serve a second term. Riley was known as South Carolina’s “Education Governor,” and pushed for the passage of the Education Improvement Act of 1984, considered one of the most comprehensive and successful education-reform packages in the United States. Riley also is the longest-serving U.S. Secretary of Education in the nation’s history, with a full eight-year tenure. In 2009, “TIME” magazine named Riley one of the “Top 10 Best Cabinet Members” in U.S. history. Riley graduated from Greenville High School and Furman University. After military service as an officer on a minesweeper in the Navy, he graduated from the University of South Carolina School of Law. He also served in the state House of Representative and the state Senate.

For complete SAIL results, photos, and rankings, go to GreenvilleJournal.com/SAIL

Former South Carolina Gov. and U.S. Education Secretary Dick Riley will be honored with a sculpture in downtown Greenville. Greenville artist Zan Wells designed the sculpture.

Riley, who is a partner in the law firm of Nelson Mullins Riley and Scarborough, helped establish the Riley Institute at Furman, including its award-winning, statewide Diversity Leaders Initiative. Riley has served as chair of the Furman Board of Trustees and continues as an emeritus trustee. He is also a member of the South Carolina Hall of Fame. The sculpture committee is in the process of raising funds to pay for the sculpture. Tax-deductible donations may be sent to the Community Foundation of Greenville, Riley Sculpture Fund, at 630 E. Washington St., Greenville, S.C., 29601, or made online at cfgreenville.org. Online donors should use the pull down menu to designate the Riley Sculpture Fund.


WWW.LEGACY.COM/OBITUARIES/GREENVILLEJOURNAL

OBITUARIES & MEMORIALS

Submit to: obits@communityjournals.com

DEATH NOTICES FOR JUNE 11-17 Nick Sola, 85, of Simpsonville, passed away on June 17. Thomas McAfee Funeral Homes are assisting the family.

Mary Spearman Bolt, 84, of Greenville, passed away on June 14. Thomas McAfee Funeral Homes are assisting the family.

Leslie “Red” Jolly, 62, passed away on June 17. The Wood Mortuary is assisting the family.

Jane H. Rhodes, 75, of Greer, passed away on June 14. The Wood Mortuary is assisting the family.

Alma Sutherland, 85, of Hodges, passed away on June 17. Thomas McAfee Funeral Homes are assisting the family.

Maxine M. “Max” Trexer, 83, of Greenville, passed away on June 13. Thomas McAfee Funeral Homes are assisting the family.

Melissa Ann Beufield, 49, of Pelzer, passed away on June 15. Robinson Funeral Homes are assisting the family.

Charles Hinton Houston, 88, of Greenville, passed away June 13. Mackey Mortuary is assisting the family.

Robert Lee Rogers, 95, of Greenville, passed away on June 15. Woodlawn Memorial Park is assisting the family.

Beatrice Netherton Nash, 98, of Greenville, passed away June 11. Mackey Mortuary is assisting the family.

Billy Joe Johnson

July 17, 1943 – July 12, 2018 Billy Joe Johnson, 74, was born on July 17th, 1943 to the union of Evelyn Pickens and Pickens W. Johnson. He served as a faithful member of Reedy River Missionary Baptist Church. He was a dedicated and honored employee of Shedd’s Inc. until his retirement. He had a great love for traveling, eating out, and He loved spending time with family and friends. Billy Joe Johnson departed this life on June 12th, 2018. He was preceded in death by his mother and father, a son Billy Joe Johnson Jr. and a sister Bobbie Jean Tolbert. He leaves to cherish his memory a son Van Darrell Johnson of Charlotte, NC, a daughter Rene’ (Darrell) Thompson Sr. of Greenville,

SC; four grandchildren: Jasmine, Kiera and Darrell Thompson and Zaedyn Banks; A dear friend, Ola Mary Beal; God-Daughter Joaquina (Jeffrey) Hicks of Greenville SC; four sisters, Ella (Willie) Ladson, Bennie Johnson, Dorothy Thomas all of Greenville, SC and Everlena Ewing of Washington, DC; also host of nieces, nephews, cousins, and the Beloved Gaines family, neighbors and friends. Funeral services for Mr. Johnson were held Monday, June 18, at 1:00 PM at Reedy River Missionary Baptist Church, 1012 Mauldin Road, Greenville, SC

A Lasting Legacy | Submit to: obits@communityjournals.com

Martha Snider Hall

April 17, 1931 – June 13, 2018 Martha Snider Hall, 87, of Greenville, passed away June 13, 2018. She was the widow of Dr. J. Floyd Hall the former Superintendent of Greenville County School System for 14 years. She was a loyal and devoted wife for 65 years. She was a beloved mother, grandmother, great grandmother, sister, and aunt. Mrs. Hall was known by those closest to her as being hospitable, a prayer warrior, a trusted and faithful friend, and an encourager.

( Chris), Kathryn Hall, Madison Hall, Harrison Hall and Valerie Hall; two great grandchildren, Chapman and Caroline Doar and one brother, Perry Snider (Nancy).

Honoring loved ones. Sharing their Story. Honoring loved ones. Sharing their Story.

A service was held at First Baptist Church in Greenville on Monday, June 18, 2018 at 2:00pm. Family received friends after the service. A private burial was held at Woodlawn Memorial Park.

She is survived by two sons; Michael B. Hall (Ellen) of Greenville, SC and Reginald S. Hall (Marian) of Columbia, SC; five grandchildren: Lauren Doar

Honoring loved ones. Sharing their Story.

Memorials may be made to First Baptist Church, 847 Cleveland Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601.

Honoring Loved Ones. Sharing Visit the OnlineTheir Obituary Story. Sign the Guest Book Visit the Visit the Online Online Obituary Obituary Sign the Guest Book

Visit the Online Obituary

In Partnership With

Sign the Guest Book In Partnership With

Online obituaries and memorials will be shared on our website via a Legacy.com affiliation. Obituaries can be placed in person at our office located at 581 Perry Ave., Greenville; via email at obits@communityjournals.com; or our website, GreenvilleJournal.com. Feel free to email or visit for more information about deadlines, space restraints, and editorial requirements. In Partnership With

Plan for “someday” today.

Thomas McAfee Funeral Homes can help you plan ahead, allowing you to design personalized arrangements that are a reflection of you. Contact us to receive complimentary information about the following: Funeral Planning Guides Cost Estimates & Payment Plans Cremation Services

Downtown Chapel | 232-6733

Northwest Chapel & Cremation Center | 294-6415

ThomasMcAfee.com Southeast Chapel | 688-1600


20 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

Our Community

Community news, events, and happenings

PHILANTHROPY

Greenville Humane Society receives $160K Grant from Petco Foundation The Greenville Humane Society has been awarded a $160,000 grant from the Petco Foundation. This is the largest foundation grant the shelter has received in its history. The grant was used to complete construction of the new Healing Place, the first facility of its kind on the east coast dedicated to caring for sick and injured animals that partner shelters would typically euthanize. Greenville Humane Society’s High Risk Ward treats animals with parvo and ringworm rather than euthanizing them. The facility has a 90 percent survival rate for the animals treated for parvo and 100 percent for those treated for ringworm.

CHARITY

Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative Announces Amount Raised for Charity Through Blue Ridge Fest Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative announced that it raised almost $225,000 at its 21st annual Blue Ridge Fest. The event was held on May 4, and the proceeds will benefit local nonprofit organizations in Greenville, Anderson, Oconee, and Pickens counties. Since the event’s inception, Blue Ridge Fest will have given more than $2.7 million to local human help organizations that provide basic necessities such as food, shelter, clothing, and health care. The charities receiving funds in 2018 include A Call to Action, Anderson Free Clinic, Center for Developmental Services, Collins Children’s Home, The Dream Center of Pickens County, Fair Play Camp School, Feed a Hungry Child, Hospice of the Upstate, The Lachlan McIntosh Tannery Foundation, Miracle Hill Children’s Home, North Greenville Crisis Ministry, and Samaritan Health Clinic of Pickens County. Reprecontinued on PAGE 24


The Garden Party AT CANCER SURVIVORS PARK

The Garden Party P R E S E NT E D BY

Thank &R Hosts A T You C A N To C E ROur S U RSponsors VIVORS PA K

Hosts

P R E S E NT E D BY

Thank You To Our Sponsors & Hosts • Allison and Steve Spinks • Martha and Stewart Spinks • Beth Wright Woodside • Ashley and Tom Bates • Diane and Larry Gluck • Sonya and Carmichael Caldwell • Rose and Kevin Mihaly • Brenda and Tim Morrison • Sugie and Nate Einstein • Alice and Mark Sobray • Claire and Joe Blake • Donna and Bo Gossett

Hosts

• Elizabeth and Jacob Mann • Laura and Bill Pelham • Bob Morris and Lesley Pregenzer • Neill Timmons • Nancy and Ben Ladner • Jackie D. Highley • Carmen and Larry Brotherton • CresCom Bank • Anita and John Humphries • Minor and Hal Shaw • Vicki and Craig Brown

• Lynda Leventis-Wells and Alan Wells • Michelle and Michael Shain • Dorothy Shain • Cynthia and Gary Hipps, Jr. • Carla and Tim Herron • Art and Sally Seaver • Annalynn and Jim Barnett • Jeanie and Fred Gilmer • Brantley and Austin Goforth • Fritzi Barbour • Susan and Scott Kilgore • Harper General Contractors

Sponsors Sponsors #ExperienceHealingGVL


22 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM sentatives from Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative will host check presentations later this month for each nonprofit organization receiving funds. The annual festival, which holds the Upstate’s largest classic-car cruise-in along with a beach night show and dance, attracted more than 6,000 attendees this year. The festival’s lineup included The Spinners, Jim Quick and the Coastline, and Magic. Blue Ridge Fest is organized and executed by 250 Blue Ridge Electric and Blue Ridge Security employee volunteers, enabling the festival to maximize its proceeds to benefit local charities. NONPROFIT

Miracle Hill Ministries Earns Coveted 4-Star Rating from Charity Navigator Miracle Hill Ministries has earned a four-star rating from Charity Navigator, America’s largest independent charity evaluator. This is the fifth consecutive time that Miracle Hill has earned the distinction. Charity Navigator awards this distinction to the most fiscally responsible organizations. In 2011, it added 17 metrics, focused on governance and ethical practices as well as measures of openness, to its rating process. These accountability and transparency metrics, which account for 50 percent of a charity’s overall rating, reveal which charities operate in accordance with industry best practices and whether they are open with their donors and stakeholders.

ARTS

Nephron Pharmaceuticals provides scholarships for Governor’s School for the Arts students The South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities received a $13,800 gift from Nephron Pharmaceuticals to support meal plan scholarships for Midlands students attending the school’s residential high school program. While tuition is free for all students attending for the full school year, about 30 percent of Governor’s School for the Arts students receive financial assistance from the Governor’s School for the Arts Foundation to pay for the $3,500 meal plan each year. This plan includes three meals per day for seven days per week during the nine-month school year. Nephron’s gift will provide meal plan scholarships to four Midlands students during the 2018-2019 school year. Currently, 52 of the Governor’s School for the Arts’ 236 high school students are from the Midlands region, including Calhoun, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland, Saluda, and Sumter counties. These students were selected based on their talents exhibited through a comprehensive application and audition process. Submit community news items to www.greenvillejournal.com/submit.

Susan McMillen

864-238-5498 | Susan.McMillen@allentate.com

T CU CE K! I R 5 P $7

W NE ICE! R P

ARROWHEAD

SIMPSONVILLE

CUSTOM 6BR/5.5BA HOME W/TWO MASTERS, BASEMENT, STORAGE, 2.1 ACRES! AMAZING SPACE & VALUE! #1368074 • $525,000

FIVE ACRES W/BARN FOR HORSES, CUSTOM/ UPDATED 4BR/4BA HOME, ~3800SF, TWO MASTERS, EXTRA GARAGE, 10 MIN TO SHOPPING! #1364794 • $435,000

W NE ICE! R P

WEATHERSTONE LOVELY 4BR/3BA W/BONUS ROOM, MASTER PLUS 1 ON MAIN, I/G POOL, 3-CAR GARAGE!. #1366230 • $424,900

W NE ICE! R P

COTTAGE HILL 4BR/3.5BA W/BONUS RM, CUSTOM BUILT, MASTER ON MAIN, LARGE CDS LOT, NEW FLOORS, OFF ROPER MTN! #1363559 • $399,000


This Week

TURF TIME


24 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

Synthetic lawns look and play like real grass (more than ever) by Leigh Savage Tim Rooke is expecting a lot of visitors to his Collins Creek home very soon thanks to the 8,000-square-foot golf project currently underway in his backyard. “It’s the talk of the neighborhood,” Rooke says. “We’re basically going to have to have a mini-invitational when it’s finished.” Rooke and his wife Kristen are both avid golfers and had considered putting in a smaller practice area before deciding to go big, turning their entire backyard into a synthetic turf golf green, including a bunker and putting area. When Tim asked “if we could just not buy a new car and instead do the whole backyard,” Kristen Rooke readily agreed. As varsity boys golf coach at Christ Church Episcopal School, she’s led the team to six out of the past seven state championships and knows the value of practice. In addition to a place to work on their swings, the Rookes liked the idea of reduced maintenance and an evergreen yard with no weeds. “How nice is it to have a beautiful golf hole in my backyard, and it looks like that 365 days a year?” he says. Since artificial turf simply needs to be blown off every once in a while, the Rookes are cutting their monthly lawn maintenance bill significantly (they still have fescue in the front yard). To achieve their golfers’ dream landscape, the Rookes contacted Scott Giles at Pendleton-based Heritage Synthetic Turf, which opened in 1999 offering natural landscaping, design and maintenance. Around 2002, the

All About FLOORING All About of SC FLOORING cd cdof SC

cd

cd cd

cd

cd cd

All AboutFLOORING FLOORING of SCof SC cdAll About cd

• FREE ’s of the latest styles • 100’s of the latest stylesestimates

cd

cd

All About FLOORING of SC

All All About About FLOORING FLOORING of SC of SC

• Experienced staff w larger showroom• New larger showroom

company did a couple of synthetic jobs and before they knew it, the specialty was making up more than half of the company’s business. “That’s when we changed our focus,” Giles says. In addition to golf-related projects, Heritage installs dog parks, kennels, croquet courts, playgrounds and turf around pools, slopes, or other difficultto-maintain areas. “It’s extremely customized,” Giles says. “It’s no maintenance, no mess in rain or snow, pets can come and go and it’s very realistic. People reach down and feel it because even from just feet away, it’s hard to tell if it’s real or synthetic.” Giles said the turf offerings have evolved in looks and longevity and he has exclusive rights to certain products, including Synthetic Turf International, where he is on the advisory board. The products are made of polypropylene, polyethylene, or nylon and are spun into yarns on massive looms. Rooke expects his custom project, complete with breaks and undulations, to be complete soon, and he’s excited to work on 30-yard shots in his own backyard. “It already looks so cool,” he said. “I can’t wait to see it when it’s finished.”

cd REASONS TO GO

• Indoor or outdoor putting greens or tee lines • Experienced staff (commercial or residential) • FREE estimates • Safe, easy-maintenance playgrounds

• Financing 0’s of beautiful colors • 1000’s of beautiful colors available • Financing available • New larger showroom

• Experienced staff

• 100’s of the latest styles

• FREE estimates

• 1000’s of beautiful colors

• Financing available

Newlarger larger showroom • New • •New larger showroom showroom

• FREE estimates

• 1000’s of beautiful colors

• Financing available

• 1000’s • 1000’s of beautiful of beautiful colors colors

LOCATION Pleasantburg Dr le, SC 29609 241-3636

••Experienced staffstaffstaff Experienced • Experienced

• 100’s of the latest styles

• 100’s • 100’s of the oflatest the latest styles styles

SYNTHETIC

• FREE • FREE estimates estimates • Financing • Financing available available

• Dog parks or kennels • Poolside or rooftop areas • Sports fields: baseball, soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, football, bocce, croquet, tennis • Lakeside, on slopes or yards with limited sun exposure • Frequent travelers - no watering, mowing, seeding or pesticides needed

NEW LOCATION TAYLORS LOCATION TAYLORS LOCATION TRAVELERS REST LOCATION TRAVELERS REST LOCATION NEW LOCATION TAYLORS LOCATION TRAVELERS LOCATION 2111k North Pleasantburg 3245C Wade Hampton Dr Blvd 3245C Wade11Hampton Blvd 3598 Hwy (just offREST Hwy 25) 3598 Hwy 11 (just off Hwy 25) 2111k North Pleasantburg Dr Wade Hampton Blvd 3598 Hwy 11 (just off Hwy 25) Greenville, Taylors,SC SC29609 29687 3245C Taylors, SC 29687 Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Greenville, SC 29609 Taylors, SC 29687 Travelers Rest, SC 29690 864-241-3636 864-292-8207 864-292-8207 (for appointment) 864-241-3636 864-292-8207864-241-3636 864-241-3636 (for appointment) 864-241-3636 (for appointment)

• New larger showroom

• Experienced staff

• 100’s of the latest styles

• FREE estimates

Remember

LOCATION TAYLORS LOCATION TRAVELERS REST LOCATION • Financing available • 1000’s 2111k ofNEW beautiful North Pleasantburg Dr colors 3245C Wade HamptonDeserve Blvd 3598 HwyOur 11 (just off Hwy 25) Your Feet Floors

mber Remember Your Feet Deserve Your Feet OurDeserve Floors Our Floors Greenville, SC 29609 864-241-3636

NEW LOCATION NEW LOCATION 2111k North 2111k Pleasantburg North Pleasantburg Dr Dr Greenville, Greenville, SC 29609 SC 29609 864-241-3636 864-241-3636

Taylors, SC 29687 864-292-8207

TAYLORS TAYLORS LOCATION LOCATION 3245C 3245C Wade Hampton Wade Hampton Blvd Blvd Taylors, Taylors, SC 29687 SC 29687 864-292-8207 864-292-8207

Travelers Rest, SC 29690 864-241-3636 (for appointment)

TRAVELERS TRAVELERS REST LOCATION REST LOCATION 3598 Hwy 359811Hwy (just11off(just Hwy off25) Hwy 25) Travelers Travelers Rest, SC Rest, 29690 SC 29690 864-241-3636 864-241-3636 (for appointment) (for appointment)

Remember Your Feet Deserve Our Floors

21


OPEN SUNDAY, JUNE 24 from 2-4PM AZALEA SPRINGS

SPAULDING FARM

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/M2TSVT/11-Azalea-Spring-Court-Greenville-SC-1365281

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/ATRDPD/121-Hunters-Run-Greenville-SC-1368189

11 Azalea Spring Ct • 4BR/3.5BA $689,000 · MLS# 1365281 Margaret Marcum · 420-3125 CODE 4957989

WYATTS GRANT

121 Hunters Run • 5BR/3.5BA $600,000 · MLS# 1368189 Nicole Moore · 804-9463 CODE 5033878

EASLEY

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/89JGJS/3-Willow-Oaks-Court-Williamston-SC-1357363

$459,900 · MLS# 1364672 Rose Cuttonaro · 443-848-7137 CODE 4940528

SUMMER WOOD

219 Bruce Farm Rd • 4BR/4BA

$499,950 · MLS# 1357364 Stina Thoennes · 304-9475 CODE 4752207

CYPRESS RUN www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/ANSF29/5-Toulouse-Place-Greenville-SC-1369948

4 Roanoke Hills Ct • 5BR/5BA

5 Toulouse Place • 3BR/2BA

$378,500 · MLS# 1365908 Ted Green · 684-8789 CODE 4974365

PALMETTO DOWNS

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/U7GR7T/128-Faulkner-Circle-Greer-SC-1368897

103 Fairoaks Dr • 4BR/3.5BA

$539,900 · MLS# 1368514 Melissa Morrell · 918-1734 CODE 5041792

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/ADGKC7/4-Roanoke-Hills-Court-Simpsonville-SC-1365908

324 Snyder Rd • 3BR/2BA

$499,000 · MLS# 1357363 Stina Thoennes · 304-9475 CODE 4752214

WYATTS GRANT www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/BMWGZV/103-Fairoaks-Drive-Williamston-SC-1357364

SHENANDOAH FARMS

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/3P2SZ2/324-Snyder-Road-Easley-SC-1364672

3 Willow Oaks Ct. • 3BR/3.5BA

BRUCE FARM www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/VBVUP8/219-Bruce-Farm-Road-Simpsonville-SC-1368514

$339,000 · MLS# 1369948 Trish Aston · 275-5452 CODE 5084520

ALSO OPEN

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/8JTJMV/30-Blacks-Drive-Greenville-SC-1368884

SPAULDING FARM

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/92ZKLR/114-Northbrook-Way-Greenville-SC-1364969

COTTAGE GROVE

www.upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/K77NH8/211-PALMETTO-Way-LOT-1-Easley-SC-1368600

114 Northbrook Way • 4BR/4.5BA

211 Palmetto Way • 3BR/2BA

$1,190,000 · MLS# 1364969 CODE 4947516 Diane Dix Shapuite · 505 3692

128 Faulkner Cr. • 3BR/2.5BA

30 Blacks Drive • 4BR/2BA

$199,000 · MLS# 1368897 Rachael Watson · 444-1830 CODE 5055412

$183,500 · MLS# 1368884 Sean Keagy · 230-1348 CODE 5054860

$229,900 · MLS# 1368600 CODE 5044415 Mike Koper · 386-2506

Text each property’s unique CODE to 67299 for pictures and details.

Your Home's Best Friend. Agents on call this weekend

Jamie Thompson 879-4239 Greer

Richard Cox 516-2506 Main Street

Hope Roberts 617-6776 Anderson

Barry Cain 421-2166 Pelham Road

Taylor Mounce 430-6768 Garlington Road

Regina L. Salley 979-9646 Easley

Sandra Palmer 313-7193 Simpsonville

Jason McClain 354-8299 Augusta Road

Jennifer “JD” Davis 608-8866 N. Pleasantburg

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


26 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

On the market Kilgore Plantation • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Highland Parc • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Watkins Farm • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Roper Mountain Estates • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

234 Kilgore Circle · $1,150,000 · MLS# 1369610

412 Sunnybrook Dr. · $429,900 · MLS# 1368317

229 Watkins Farm Drive · $400,000 · MLS# 1345236

514 Meadowsweet Lane · $399,900 · MLS# 1367750

4BR/4f2hBA Immaculate home situated on over 1.5 professionally landscaped acres. Outdoor living includes pool, hot tub, fireplace and much more! Right into Kilgore. L on Kilgore Circle. Home on left.

4BR/3.5BA 4 BR/3.5 BA Gorgeous, executive home with 2 master suites in Riverside School district. 3 car garage, culdesac, private backyard hwy 14 to left on E Suber to Highland Parc

4BR/2.5BA Custom craftsman style, convenient to shopping, airport, and family friendly floor plan. Gourmet kitchen, master suite and lots of privacy! Batesville Rd, Anderson Ridge Rd, SC 296-E, Watkins Farm Dr

4BR/3BA Space meets functionality in this unique open floor plan! Move in ready, all brick, well located, & great amenities! I-385 South to exit Roper Mountain Road, left into neighborhood.

Contact: Jacob Mann 864-325-6266 Coldwell Banker Caine

Contact: Valerie Miller 864-430-6602 The Marchant Company

Contact: Linda O’Brien 864-325-0495 Wilson Associates

Overbrook • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Contact: Anne Marie Egan 864-905-8280 The Egan Team

Meadows at Blue Ridge • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Summer Wood • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.

Advertise your home with us Contact:

Caroline Spivey 864-679-1229 208 Lowndes Ave. · $335,000 · MLS# 1366262

28 Hurshfield Court · $238,000 · MLS# 1364161

128 Faulkner Cr · $199,000 · MLS# 1368897

3BR/2BA Awesome update on this cute 3/2 with basement. Great open concept with huge new deck for entertaining.New price. Stone to East North. Right Perin, right Lowndes Ave.

3BR/2BA Like new one level home with wonderful features! Enjoy the open floor plan, cathedral ceiling, screened porch and more! Enter Blue Ridge Plantation, left onto Hollander, left on Hurshfield.

3BR/2.5BA Beautiful 3 bedroom 2.5 bath + bonus room (can be 4th bedroom). Open floor plan and updated. Spectacular mountain view! Hwy 101 to N McElhaney. Left Rustcraft Dr. Left Faulkner.

Contact: Valerie Miller 864-430-6602 The Marchant Company

Contact: Maggie Aiken 864-616-4280 BHHS C Dan Joyner REALTORS

Augusta Heights

North Main Area

Contact: David Auler 864-404-9546 Coldwell Banker Caine

Augusta Road Area

cspivey@communityjournals.com

108 Conestee Avenue · $405,000 · MLS# 1369783

5 Waverly Court · $349,900 · MLS# 1369924

600 Bennett Street · $250,000 · MLS# 1369939

202 Rodney Avenue · $195,000 · MLS# 1370008

3BR/2BA Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath bungalow in heart of Augusta Road! 9ft+ ceilings, rocking chair front porch, large master w/french doors to brand new deck, fully fenced backyard w/fire pit.

3BR/2BA Rare find under $400k off Augusta Road! 3 bedroom-2 full baths+finished attic/bonus room can be 4th BR. 1 carattached garage! True master suite. Kitchen renovated-gas stove/new stainless steel appliances/quartz countertops.

3BR/2BA Awesome opportunity for a beautiful 2 story, historic home (built in the 20s!) in heart of North Main! Primed and ready for a renovation. House is sold in as-is condition.

2BR/1BA Fully renovated including new roof (2018)/new water heater (2018)/renovated bath (2018) +more! Kit. updates-stainless steel appliances/granite c’tops/custom soft-close cabinets/tile backsplash. Walkout bsmnt w/1400 sf! Seller has inactive RE license.

Contact: Maggie Aiken 864-616-4280 BHHS C Dan Joyner REALTORS

Contact: Maggie Aiken 864-616-4280 BHHS C Dan Joyner REALTORS

Contact: Maggie Aiken 864-616-4280 BHHS C Dan Joyner REALTORS

Contact: Maggie Aiken 864-616-4280 BHHS C Dan Joyner REALTORS

Real Estate News

Four Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS Sales Professionals Earn Residential Construction Certification Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS is proud to announce that Jill Chapman, Marsha Foster, Lynda Hanna and Stina Thoennes have earned national certification as Residential Construction Certified professionals. With this certification, Chapman, Foster, Hanna and Thoennes join a group dedicated to providing the highest level of professionalism and service. “This course is recognized as one of the best offered in real estate,” explains Dan Bryant, Director of Career Development at C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS. “The training covered architectural design and planning, blueprint reading, topography, building site design, evaluating quality construction, materials, methods, construction terminology and scheduling. Through this certification process, agents gained expertise, strategies and tools to more professionally assist their clients that are interested in a brand new or existing home.”

Chapman

Foster

Hanna

Thoennes

“I’m excited Jill, Marsha, Lynda and Stina have earned this certification,” explained Danny Joyner, president and CEO of C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS. “This knowledge provides them a foundation to communicate more confidently and professionally with buyers, sellers, appraisers, inspectors, lenders, designers, engineers and construction professionals. This expertise positions them to better help their clients make their best decisions.” Completion of the Residential Construction Certified™ training involves over 10 hours of specialized interactive course work and successful completion of RCC certification test. The continued on PAGE 30


Luxury Service at Every Price Point UNDER CONSTRUCTION

GREYLOGS ESTATE - 22+ ACRES

275 Montgomery Drive, Spartanburg $2,750,000 MLS#1350714 Damian Hall Group 828-808-8305

29 Falling Star Way, Cliffs at Glassy $1,895,000 MLS#1346224 John “Clark” Kent 864-784-9918

TO BE BUILT

4 Grouse Drive, Cliffs at Glassy $1,100,000 MLS#1346114 John “Clark” Kent 864-784-9918

5 Dunmore Lane, Lot 2, Cliffs Valley $850,000 MLS#1356225 Spencer Ashby 864-344-0333

4 HOMES TO BE BUILT

915 Rutherford Road, Lot 2, Greenville $520,000 MLS#1365975 Lonnie Adamson 864-385-4659

15 Windfaire Pass Court, Ridges at Paris Mountain $1,598,500 MLS#1369349 Holly May 864-640-1959

MULTI-FAMILY

805 Augusta Street, Greenvile $599,999 MLS#1364477 Cheyenne Kozaily 864-999-1959

59 Grand Vista Drive, Ridges at Paris Mountain $1,299,000 MLS#1369348 Holly May 864-640-1959

GOLIGHTLY-DEAN HOUSE

1551 Highway 56, Spartanburg $599,500 MLS#1347108 John “Clark” Kent 864-784-9918 Cynthia Cole Jenkins 843-696-7891

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

108 May Apple Way, Cliffs at Glassy $499,000 MLS#1369764 Debra Owensby 864-404-8295

9 Stonewash Way, Charleston Walk $459,000 MLS#1361662 Holly May 864-640-1959

UNDER CONTRACT

205 Fort Drive, Kilgore Farms $399,900 MLS#1368152 Michael Mumma 864-238-2542

CITY VIEWS

304 Goldsmith Road, Simpsonville $224,900 MLS#1369672 Kris Cawley 864-516-6580

203 Millstone Way, Stonehaven $404,500 MLS#1369899 Kennie Norris 864-608-0865

UNDER CONTRACT

111 Grand Oak Circle, Heritage Oaks $179,900 MLS#1367742 Nancy King 864-414-8701

BlackStreamInternational.com | 864-920-0303

5 Moonshell Court, Berea Heights $149,900 MLS#1369598 Kennie Norris 864-608-0865


28 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

SOLD: Greenville Transactions For the week of May 21 – 25 SUBD.

PRICE SELLER

PELHAM DAVIS PARK $3,350,000 $2,725,000 $2,678,537 $2,521,462 $2,127,017 $1,300,000 121 RHETT STREET $1,295,000 BLACKSTONE $1,000,000 KILGORE PLANTATION $865,000 TERRACE AT RIVERPLACE $860,000 $775,000 BARRINGTON PARK $760,000 DEERLAND PLANTATION $650,000 $641,667 CLIFFS VALLEY $630,000 HAMMETT CREEK $610,000 TINDAL PLACE $600,000 $575,000 $575,000 $563,000 HEARTHSTONE ESTATES $515,000 KINGSBRIDGE $487,500 CRESCENTWOOD VILLAGE $472,000 RIVER WALK $470,000 $457,066 WILLIE H MARTIN $455,000 BOTANY WOODS $446,000 GOWER ESTATES $443,100 STILLWATERS $442,462 FOXBROOKE $440,000 HEARTHSTONE@RIVER SHOALS $435,000 BELHAVEN PARC $425,000 $425,000 KILGORE FARMS $418,563 $405,000 CLEAR SPRINGS $405,000 TUSCANY FALLS $399,900 HIGHLAND PARC $392,000 RIVER WALK $387,000 RICHLAND CREEK@NORTH MAIN $385,000

SOUTH EAST BORDERS LLC HEALTH PROPERTIES INVEST T & N ENTERPRISES LLC SMITH DRAY LINE & STORAG BROOKFIELD ASSOCS LTD PA TF1 PROPERTY LLC 121 RHETT STREET HOLDING JACKSON LAWRENCE B MORRIS HORACE A III FAMI BONAFIGLIA BRUCE H BURNS LAURA T DOPP GAIL B RLT THE DURHAM GLENN D MASTROKOLIAS OURANIA FOSTER ELIZABETH K MCGARVEY DANIEL S TINDAL HOLDINGS LLC ST JOHNS BAPTIST CHURCH SNIPES LARRY W GLENN CLYDE A JR CAMBRON CYNTHIA L (SURV) AIME PHILLIP C BUTLER ROAD PROPERTIES L HUGHES LISA A (JTWROS) TABARES LUIS A (SURV) HILL AUSTIN D EADDY REID M NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC MIDDLEHOUSE BUILDERS INC BROWN JAMES HASKELL II VREELAND HOLLY M ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC 116 WEST STONE AVENUE LL MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN HOPE KATHRYN G DOOLITTLE STACEY B (JTWR OBRIEN BARBARA (JTWROS) PATEL MAYUR REGALA CLORINDA WITTE ASHLEY E (JTWROS)

BUYER

ADDRESS

SUBD.

SOUTH EAST BORDERS LLC FIRSTCHOICE PROPERTY & D CITY OF GREENVILLE THE CITY OF GREENVILLE THE GREENVILLE SENIOR LIVING VSP HOLDINGS LLC HICKS B MATTHEW (JTWROS) GUZMAN MARILUZ A (JTWROS SUTTON ALLISON B (JTWROS DUCHENE RONALD (JTWROS) BRINKLEY AMANDA SMOAK (J DILLON ELISHA A (JTWROS) PHILLIPS LARRY (JTWROS) PATEL KRISH HAMMOND KEVIN (JTWROS) BRINKMAN MARY C RED CLAY INVESTORS LLC ETOWAH LLC YOUNG MARK E SHOOK DAVID TRENTON (JTW WARNER JENNIFER L (JTWRO KUNDA ANDREW (JTWROS) H&H BRANDS LLC LAND DANIELLE M (JTWROS) FIVE LAKES LLC GARVIN JONATHAN D (JTWRO HOPE KATHRYN SHORT MICHAEL MILLER HAYLEY A (JTWROS) MCCALDEN JOHN D (JTWROS) PRICE JULIA ANGELA (JTWR CHAMBERLAIN DWIGHT AJG PROPERTIES LLC HILBRANT BRIAN (JTWROS) FADOOL JAMES C (JTWROS) NOWAK-O’BRIEN BARBARA M DI EMIDIO RUDY MANERA ALFREDO L BUCHAN ANDREW (JTWROS) ROBERSON AMANDA A (JTWRO

132 CORRINE DR PO BOX 12486 206 S MAIN ST9TH FL 206 S MAIN ST 9TH FL 114 PACIFICA STE 310 444 S OAKLEY LN 121 RHETT ST UNIT 603 2323 SW 7TH AVE 219 KILGORE CIR 201 RIVERPLACE UNIT 605 16 W TALLULAH DR 2 SAINT HELAINE PL 2335 ROPER MOUNTAIN RD 105 E NORTH ST 15 DUNMORE LN 31 HIGHFIELD CT 136 GREENACRE RD PO BOX 237 240 PARSONS RD 216 PINE FOREST DR 105 BAINBRIDGE CT 4 KINGS RESERVE CIR 701 ROCKCLIFF ST 105 RIVER WALK DR 222 W COLEMAN BLVD STE 218 34 SEVIER ST 15 STONYBROOK DR 184 CHAPMAN RD 702 KINGS HILL ST 517 FOXCROFT RD 18 STONOVIEW CT 1 JACKSON PARC CT 8 BACHMAN CT 35 QUITE CREEK CT 203 WALNUT ST 6 SUNRAY LN 2 AMIATA WAY 407 SUNNYBROOK LN 231 RIVER WALK DR 35 RICHLAND CREEK DR

TUSCANY FALLS $379,000 BERKSHIRE PARK $377,500 ISBELL HEIGHTS $375,000 WATERS EDGE $375,000 ARROWHEAD $368,000 COACHMAN PLANTATION $365,000 KINGS CROSSING $363,718 JONES MILL CROSSING $360,765 OAK HOLLOW $360,000 SUGAR CREEK $355,000 $354,000 $350,000 COPPER CREEK $350,000 CLEVELAND $350,000 SANCTUARY OF GREENVILLE $346,500 GREEN HILLS $345,000 THE VILLAGE AT FOUNTAIN INN $343,630 WOODLAND RIDGE $342,000 KILGORE FARMS $342,000 RICHLAND CREEK@NORTH MAIN $341,000 WHITEHALL PLANTATION $340,000 BELSHIRE $339,000 KANATENAH $336,000 BELSHIRE $332,785 MARES HEAD FARM $331,848 $329,900 KILGORE FARMS $326,860 MOUNTAIN VIEW ACRES $325,000 COACHMAN PLANTATION $321,932 TUSCANY FALLS $317,000 HOLLY TRACE $313,000 CAROLINA OAKS $305,000 $305,000 OAKS AT GILDER CREEK FARM $303,000 $302,000 $300,000 HOLLY TREE PLANTATION $297,950 SILVER RIDGE $295,000 BELSHIRE $292,965 BRIDGEWATER $286,545 $285,000 TIMBERLAND TRAIL $285,000 MAYS MEADOW $284,000 $280,000 CAROLINA COURT $279,900 WOODLAND RIDGE $279,500 WATSON CROSSING $277,500 SILVERLEAF $275,000 DEVENGER PLACE $272,500 THE CLIFFS AT MOUNTAIN PARK $272,000 BROOKFIELD WEST $270,500 BELL’S CREEK $270,000 MORNING MIST $270,000 HARRISON COVE $265,000 LONGLEAF $263,084 EDWARDS FOREST $262,900 MALLARD CREEK $262,000 WATERS RUN $260,280 GRAYSON PARK $258,811 DREXEL TERRACE $257,900 MCBEE BOOKEND $257,000 OAK POINTE $255,000 FORRESTER CREEK $255,000 KNOLLWOOD HEIGHTS $253,500 TOWNES AT RIVERWOOD FARM $251,000 WADE HAMPTON GARDENS $250,000 VERDMONT $245,500 NORTHCLIFF $245,000 GREEN HILLS $245,000 $243,500 LISMORE PARK $240,000 LIBERTY PARK $240,000 THE CLIFFS AT MOUNTAIN PARK $240,000 FAIRVIEW POINTE $240,000 WADE HAMPTON GARDENS $239,900 VICTORIA PARK $239,707 NORTHCLIFF $239,000 LONGLEAF $237,297 MILL POND AT RIVER SHOALS $236,435 NEELY FARM - LAUREL BROOK $235,000 SUGAR CREEK $235,000 WHITEHALL PLANTATION $235,000 FIELDSTONE $230,500 HERITAGE HILL $230,000 $230,000 SPARROWS POINT $229,900 PEBBLECREEK $228,900 BOULDER CREEK $228,000 FAIRVIEW POINTE $228,000 THE OAKS $226,000

AGENT IN

2016 &

2017 C. DAN

JOYNER

REALTORS

®

VOTED BEST REALTOR®

OF THE UPSTATE

2015 2016 2017

MaggieAiken.com

PRICE SELLER FACCIANI ANDREA M KELMAN DAVID G WYATT CHARLES D JR TIDBALL ROBERT W (JTWROS GENOBLE CHERYL B MANGEL ANTHONY J D R HORTON-CROWN LLC SABAL HOMES AT JONES MIL LANFORD FREDA FOLK FRAZIER JERRY T TRUSTEE MOLDMANN GABRIELE (JTWRO WILLIS THOMAS EUGENE (L- MUNGO HOMES INC MCCORRY PAUL COBBLESTONE HOMES LLC GRIFFIN JOHN RALPH JR (J NVR INC MORRIS HERMAN MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH OEHMEN JEFFREY R (JTWROS BHAVANNADAN SIVAKAMI NVR INC OHARA ALAN (JTWROS) NVR INC DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL GENDLIN HOMES LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN FILLNER STEPHEN K AND CO MUNGO HOMES INC DASILVA MANUEL ALBERS CREIGHTON E (JTWR RANDELL DARIN T PEDEN JENNIFER S CATENA MARY J FLATRON LLC CLEAR SPRING FIRE-RESCUE BROWN PATRICIA H ANTHONY RONALD D NVR INC MERITAGE HOMES OF SC INC GIBSON STANLEY C FOX ADAM T (JTWROS) REYNOLDS JOHN L P SQUARED INNOVATIONS LL RENAISSANCE CUSTOM HOMES BHAMIDIPATI MURTHY THOMPSON ROBERT S O’NEAL JASON P (JTWROS) DEMOS BETH K HARRISON JUDY E HENDERSON JOSHUA A (JTWR WHEELER BRIAN C WISE CHERYL M (JTWROS) SINGH GURPREET D R HORTON INC WILLIAMS WILLIAM CLIFFOR HANSSMANN THORSTEN NVR INC EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL CARRAN BRITTNAY C (JTWRO HOWARD DIXON B NEELY JONATHAN K BRYANT RICHARD F ALMEIDA VICTOR J SCOTT MARK L (JTWROS) MANOR ROBERT MICHAEL (JT WATSON JUDITH LINDSAY OSLAGER DANIEL A TUCKFIELD KYMBERLY H (JT REX R WILLIAM TRUSTEE RIVERA ELVIN HAMMOND EMOGENE HORTON WILLARD FLORENCE M TRUST PHILLIPS MELISSA A REAR JACK E GREAT SOUTHERN HOMES INC WINGARD ELIZABETH S D R HORTON INC NVR INC HAMMERAN JOHN H LONG CAROL M LEVIN BARBARA P (JTWROS) FAYSSOUX LAURA FRAZEE CAROLYNN F (JTWRO CALVIN GINA J ABEE CRAIG K CRANE BRITTANY L BARBARE SUZANNE Y BOUCHER NELSON J MCKINNEY CHAD W (JTWROS)

BUYER

ADDRESS

SALOMON SOBEIDA ARMSTRONG JAMES E WHITESELL SALLY TREADWAY PRUITT RACHEL CLICK (JTW HARDEN JOHN (JTWROS) FLOOD WILLIAM P (JTWROS) HAMMERAN JOHN H (JTWROS) FITZGERALD SHANNON V (JT MCGAUGHRAN GERILYN (JTWR NEELY JONATHAN (JTWROS) BIGLEY DAPHNE MARIE (JTW CHAPMAN STACEY M DE ANDRADE MEGAN ANNA (J JCI GROUP LLC OGWYNN MARTIN L (JTWROS) TUCKFIELD KYMBERLY H (JT ANTHONY CHRISTOPHER (JTW VREELAND HOLLY M MALANGA WANG JINGYI SUSTARSIC MICHAEL JOSEPH ALBERS ANNE E LIPINSKI JAROSLAW (JTWRO HALL CARTER RICHARDSON ( HEISER ANDREW J MATEYOV BRIAN WILLIAM RE BIGGINS JACQUELINE VERON SONI DIPAL M (JTWROS) CROUSE MARTHA D (JTWROS) WHEELER BRIAN CHRISTOPHE RAYFORD WILLIE H SMITH JAIME RUQUET NICOLE M (JTWROS) MICOLUCCI MARK ANTHONY STOUT ELIZABETH A (JTWRO AJH CUSTOM HOMES LLC 2 DUCKS FM INC BATLZ DUSTIN DUANE (JTWR RATTERREE ERICA R (JTWRO MUKUI GRACE MATTA GUIRGUIS A (JTWROS LOVELESS CHRISTOPHER (JT SHAVERS ERROL W (SURV) LISTER CHARLES M JR (JTW HUDSON BJC LLC NESSEL ANETA P (JTWROS) MERUGU JAYA BRETHOUWER ELIZABETH C DRAKE ADAM C (JTWROS) KOCIS BRADLEY F FELLOWS HELENA M DAVIS JOHN WILLIAM III ( ANDERSON RODNEY DARRELL LYDON ELAINE D (JTWROS) COMPTON NATHAN COOK SUZANNE M HENDERSON JOSHUA A (JTWR NEWELL JOSEPH P (JTWROS) ROBINSON BARTO CRAIG JR KOHL ANDREW M HERR JONATHAN CHRISTOPHE TANASE JOHN DANIEL WYMAN ANDREA M FLEURY ROBERT W AND ANN CLARK JULIE T STOKES BONNIE C (JTWROS) GARIBOLDI JORDAN (JTWROS VANNATTA DIANA (JTWROS) WEBSTER DANIELLE M (SURV HOPPE DANIEL LEE POUCH EDGAR D III AKULLI ALEXANDER N SAMII AMANDA (JTWROS) ANDERSON STEVEN (JTWROS) NICHOLS MASON ANDREW EADDY REID M WOODS EMILY R (JTWROS) ETCHISON JOSHUA M (JTWRO MORALES PEDRO (JTWROS) HULL TYRIEK (JTWROS) FELL ADIN (JTWROS) SIMMONS CARL B (JTWROS) FUNDERBURK JULIUS S JR ( BULLISTER LAWRENCE (JTWR SAYCE-WHITE SHEILA (JTWR MARTINI JOSEPH X SONIAT DU FOSSAT MALCOLM YOUNGBLOOD CYNTHIA DIANE LANGE CRAIG J (JTWROS) NGUYEN TRANG DAI SONG LEWIS ANDREW D (JTWROS)

329 MONTALCINO WAY 115 BECKWORTH DR 34 ISBELL LN 324 BASS COVE DR 90 BROOKE ANN CT 10 MODESTO LN 6 SHADYWOOD PL 926 BERWICK DR 4 OVERLOOK CT 408 SILVER CREEK RD 8 PRINCE WILLIAMS CT 1217 BRADFORD CREEK LN 124 LEIGH CREEK DR 101 N HENDERSON RD 112 DEER THICKET WAY 117 CHIPWOOD LN 120 VILLAGE VISTA DR 90 WOOD HOLLOW CIR 201 FORT DR 5 MAJESTIC OAK CT 205 WINDING RIVER LN 9 LOVVORN CT 100 CURETON ST 34 LOVVORN CT 232 CORONET LN 1613 E NORTH ST 16 LAROSE CT 15 MORNINGDALE DR 305 SCOTTS BLUFF DR 209 DANTE LN 4 CIRCLE SLOPE CT 112 CAROLINA OAKS DR 10 BEECHWOOD AVE 106 HONEY CRISP WAY 2650 AUGUSTA ST 400 SCUFFLETOWN RD 105 MAPLE WIND LN 4 SILVER RIDGE CT 41 LOVVORN CT 101 GRAND RIVER LN 32 FERNWOOD LN 22 OAK WILLOW CT 9 CALDERWOOD CT PO BOX 2730 316 WASHINGTON BLVD 75 WOOD HOLLOW CIR 206 GRAYSON DR 204 W SILVERLEAF ST 118 TERRENCE CT 450 S VINE ST 106 BRITON WAY 201 BELLS CREEK DR 12 VERDANA CT 7 CEDARHILL CT 602 TROUTDALE LN 7 ELMWOOD DR 6 S CEDARBLUFF CT 801 SILVERWOOD WAY 240 HEARTHWOOD LN 13 KIMBERLY LN 111 E MCBEE AVE UNIT 202 15 OLD TAYLOR CT 102 FORRESTER CREEK DR 220 EDGEWOOD DR 57 REDDINGTON DR 224 BALFER DR 2 MARQUETTE RD 106 STREAM RUN CT 116 CHIPWOOD LN 10 SEMINOLE DR 110 BELFAST CT 12 IVY TRL 14 LONDON CT 9 OXBOROUGH PL 220 BALFER DR 90 N ROYAL TOWER DR 231 NORTHCLIFF WAY 213 REDMONT CT 305 SANDUSKY LN 5 HEDGEFIELD CT 224 SUGAR CREEK RD 5 DUNBERRY CT 49 CANTERA CIR 820 BUTLER SPRINGS RD 1332 E NORTH ST 15 BAYHILL DR 4 PEBBLE PT 324 MELLOW WAY 126 ASHINGTON DR 1 OLD OAK DR


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 29

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

Featured Home

Augusta Road

309 W Faris Road, Greenville, SC 29605

Home Info Price: $949,000 Bedrooms: 5 Baths: 5 Lot Size: 0.85

MLS#: 1369694 Sq. Ft: 4000-4199

Schools: Augusta Circle Elementary, Hughes Middle, and Greenville High Agent: Sharon Wilson | 864.918.1140 sharon@wilsonassociates.net wilsonassociates.net

Own a piece of Greenville’s History! Built in 1876 as the original Faris home. This beautiful all brick estate, situated on almost an acre, includes 5 spacious bedrooms with en suite baths. Gracious living and dining room, 10 foot tall ceilings, hardwood floors and freshly painted interior. Recently updated kitchen with stainless steel appliances, granite counters and tile back splash. Master suite with built-in desk, large walk-in closet, separate soaking tub

and tiled shower, and opens onto a second-floor balcony. Rocking chair front porch looks out to well-manicured yard. Private fenced in backyard with 3 car detached carport plus additional storage. Conveniently located in the sought-after Augusta Road area and minutes to Downtown Greenville. This historic home is one-of-akind and a must see. Schedule your appointment today!


30 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

Featured Property

Fork Shoals

1100 Highway 418, Simpsonville, SC 29680

Home Info Price: $380,000 Lot Size: 38 Acres

MLS#: 1358454

Schools: Fork Shoals Elementary, Ralph Chandler Middle, and Woodmont High Agent: Elizabeth Johnson | 843-312-1322 Elizabeth@jenksincrealty.com Jenks Inc. Realty

The Highway 418 Estate is 38 acres full of breathtaking views located by the intersection of Highway 418 and Fork Shoals Road. This rare piece of property includes fish ponds, pasturelands, and 2,400 feet of frontage on Highway 418. The peak of the hilltop possesses the perfect slice of heaven for a home site. The possibilities are endless for this unique piece of property! Historically, the property has been used to pasture cows and horses. In addition to pastureland, the site has also served as a

prime spot for a dove field as well as other recreational activities. The three ponds total 8 acres and cascade down from a natural spring creating a paradise for horses, fishing, an estate tract or all three!The proximity of this property provides convenient access to Simpsonville, Mauldin, and Greenville. Visit our website, JIRLand.com, to see a drone video highlighting the attractive features of this unique piece of land!Please call listing agent Elizabeth Johnson to show or walk the property.

Real Estate News cont. course was created by trainer, author and consultant Dennis Walsh, who is recognized internationally as a leading authority in all aspects of residential construction, new home sales and marketing. Jill Chapman is an agent at the company’s Greer office and has been active in real estate since 2007. She has won numerous awards including her recognition as a member of the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices President’s Circle for her sales performance in 2017. Marsha Foster joined the company’s Boiling Springs office in early 2018 and was recognized that same year as the recipient of the C. Dan Joyner Spirit Award. Lynda Hanna joined the company’s N. Pleasant-

burg Drive office in early 2018. Stina Thoennes joined the company’s Pelham Road office in 2016. She was recognized for her 2017 sales results with the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Honor Society award.

That Realty Group is proud to announce the association of Chris Graves With over 20 years of real estate experience, Chris has been diligently and enthusiastically helping buyers and sellers with their real estate needs. Born in the United States, but moved to Germany at age 6, Chris has lived in numerous states and knows what it means to move. She has

the experience and knowledge you need when buying and selling in the Upstate of South Carolina. Chris is a Broker Associate and holds designations as an Accredited Buyers Representative (ABR), Certified Residential Specialist Graves (CRS) and Graduate Realtors Institute (GRI). In addition, she is a member of the Greater Greenville Association of REALTORS, South Carolina Association of REALTORS and National Association of REALTORS. Contact Chris today to get moving.


ARTS & CULTURE

A GLIMPSE OF WAR page

37

BACK IN THE PERPETUAL GROOVE page

36

A FEAST IN OVERBROOK page

38

“Da Nang, Vietnam . . . A young Marine waits on the beach during the Marine landing.” By an unknown photographer, August 3, 1965 Courtesy National Archives, photo no. 127-NA185146 COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 31


32 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

REMAKING THE BAND A R T S C A LE N DA R JUN. 22-28

Carolina Music Museum

Rebecca Pechefsky & Patrick Hawkins Jun. 22 ~ 520-8807 Greenville Chautauqua Society

History Alive Festival: Courage Through Jun. 24 ~ 244-1499 Greenville Little Theatre

Beauty and the Beast Through Jun. 24 ~ 233-6238 SC Children’s Theatre

Madagascar Through Jun. 24 ~ 467-3000 Downtown Alive

Hustle Souls Jun. 28 ~ 232-2273 Furman Music by the Lake

Let Freedom Ring Jun. 28 ~ 294-2086 Peace Center

Poetry with Pride Jun. 28 ~ 467-3000 The Warehouse Theatre

Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson Through Jun. 30 ~ 235-6948 Greenville County Museum of Art

Andrew Wyeth Through Jul. 1 ~ 271-7570 Riverworks Gallery

Photographs by Zane Logan and Patrick Owens

American Aquarium’s new lineup takes on their best songs yet

VINCENT HARRIS | ARTS & CULTURE WRITER

vharris@communityjournals.com

Last year, when BJ Barham, the lead singer, songwriter, and guitarist for the North Carolina band American Aquarium, began to think about making the band’s seventh album, he was in some ways better equipped to make a new record than ever before. Barham had spent 10 years building the band’s gritty, modern Southern rock style and developing his own songwriting voice, and he had a whole range of topics to choose from. He was newly sober, had just watched the most divisive presidential election in recent American history, and had recently come off of a solo acoustic tour that hit 48 states in 56 days. The only issue was that as of April 2017, he didn’t actually have a band anymore. In a somewhat unheard-of move, every other member of American Aquarium left the band in early 2017, leaving Barham with the motivation to make new music but nobody to make it with. “Imagine being a band with six people who all started with the same roots but are now all branching out into different areas,” Barham says. “Eventually, those

Photo provided

ican Aquarium from scratch or become a solo artist? “There was a moment when I was worried,” he says. “I thought, ‘Oh s---, the whole band left, maybe I should just be the traveling troubadour with my acoustic guitar.’ But I realized I still had something to say. I still had a voice. And as long as I was still willing to write songs and go to people’s towns and sing those songs, then I felt like I had an audience that could appreciate American Aquarium.” So Barham got to work recruiting new musicians for American Aquarium, who will

Through Jul. 1 ~ 271-0679 Greenville Chamber of Commerce

Works by Louisa Pyle Kirk & Sarah Teal Through Jul. 13 ~ 242-1050 Metropolitan Arts Council

Flat Out Under Pressure Exhibit Through Jul. 13 ~ 467-3132 Metro. Arts Council @ Centre Stage

Works by Cindy Hammond Through Jul. 15 ~ 233-6733 Greenville Center for Creative Arts

The Persistence of the Figure Through Jul. 25 ~ 735-3948 Greenville County Museum of Art

Highlights from the Bob Jones Museum Through Dec. 30 ~ 271-7570

Keeping our ARTbeat strong w w w.greenvillearts.com

16 Augusta Street

864. 467.3132

“When you deal with a band that has a really diehard following, you can’t just bring in a bunch of strangers and say, ‘Hey, forget about all of those guys you’ve been watching for the last eight years.” BJ Barham branches got so far apart that they didn’t have a lot in common. We started playing music together, and we were all on the same page; we had the same likes, we had the same dislikes, we had the same interests and goals. But people change over the course of a decade. Suddenly, that 90 minutes playing music every night wasn’t the most important part of the day for them. And when you’re in a band and that’s your mindset, you need to re-evaluate. “That’s what I chalk it up to,” Barham adds. “That, or the fact that I’m just impossible to work with.” This mass exodus left Barham at a crossroads: Was he going to rebuild Amer-

perform at the Radio Room in Greenville next Thursday. He eventually found guitarist Shane Boeker, pedal steel player Adam Kurtz, bassist Ben Hussey, and drummer Joey Bybee. And none of the decisions Barham made about the new players was made lightly. “When you deal with a band that has a really diehard following, you can’t just bring in a bunch of strangers and say, ‘Hey, forget about all of those guys you’ve been watching for the last eight years,’ because they’re family,” he says. “So I had to make sure I brought in not just a new band, but a better band. I had to make sure not one person in the crowd could honestly say, ‘I miss the old band sound.’ This new band

is absolutely phenomenal, and so far, there’s been overwhelming support for the new guys, which is great.” That greatness is borne out by "Things Change," the just-out American Aquarium album. Over 10 tracks of passionate, gritty rock 'n' roll and alt-country, Barham’s wickedly incisive lyrical eye takes on the modern political landscape (“The World is on Fire,” “Tough Folks”) and the wreckage Barham created in his own life (“Crooked + Straight,” “One Day at a Time”) with unvarnished honesty, and the band provides intuitive, muscular support throughout. Perhaps surprisingly, Barham — who will also play a solo acoustic show at Horizon Records on June 28 at 6 p.m. — gives a lot of credit to the musicians who quit the band last year for helping him make what is perhaps the band’s best album. “I would’ve never gotten rid of them,” he says. “I would never have had the balls to fire everybody and clean house, but they made the decision for me. So looking back, I owe each one of them a huge thank you, because getting this new band put me back into that headspace like when I was 21 years old, starting a band and excited and stoked to go on the road and play songs for people. I feel like a kid again. Whether they know it or not, they made this band better.”

AMERICAN AQUARIUM W/ TRAVIS MEADOWS WHEN Thursday, June 28, 8 p.m. WHERE Radio Room, 110 Poinsett Highway TICKETS $15 adv., $20 door INFO 864-609-4441; www.radioroomgreenville.com


MAC invites you to

GET CARDED

for buy-one-get-one-free tickets to the best shows in town.

Greenville Little Theatre

With a donation of $50+ to the Metropolitan Arts Council you will receive an ArtCard entitling you to buy-one-get-one free tickets for one show at each of the following venues. Valid for one full year!

*select shows only

Get your ArtCard today:

16 Augusta Street | Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 467-3132 | greenvilleARTS.com/donate @MACartscouncil | #GVLarts


34 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

GOING WITH THE FLOW Asheville’s Hustle Souls play groove-heavy soulrock despite their first intentions VINCENT HARRIS | ARTS & CULTURE WRITER

vharris@communityjournals.com

The debut album by the Asheville, N.C., quartet Hustle Souls, "Colors," is 10 tracks of supple, groove-centric soul rock. Aided by the warm and inviting sound that producer Eric "Mixerman" Sarafin (Barenaked Ladies, Ben Harper) creates, bassist Sean McCann and drummer Tommy Moore lay down some tight-but-loose rhythms while guitarist Christopher Everett and singer/ keyboardist Billy Litz layer their molassesthick six-string and organ lines over the top. It’s hard not to start bobbing your head to a collection of tunes that sounds like it could’ve come from Willie Mitchell’s Hi Records recordings in the early 1970s in between Mitchell’s Al Green productions. The band sounds so comfortable in that sunlit R&B groove that it’s hard to believe that Litz, who founded the band back in 2015, never intended Hustle Souls to sound this way. Litz temporarily shelved his fulltime music career to join the Peace Corps in the early 2010s, and when he got out, he moved to Asheville hoping to get a rootsy, acoustic project going with him on guitar. “My influences were all over the place, from jazz and classical to pop,” Litz says, “but at that time I was into Americana music, and that’s what I saw myself doing. I was thinking acoustic guitar and harmonica, stuff like that. But once I found the right players, the songs started to change, and the band pulled it in more of an R&B-soul direction.”

Photo provided

It was a move that Litz wasn’t entirely comfortable with, at least not at first, but given the musicians he brought in, he now sees it was more or less inevitable. “I was a little bit hesitant about it, because it wasn’t the vision I initially had,” he says. “They were throwing stuff like D’Angelo at me, and I wanted to do stuff like The Avett Brothers and Ryan Adams and Wilco. So, it wasn’t necessarily intentional, but it evolved pretty naturally as everyone’s influences started to come into the mix. Plus, our rhythm section is so tight and groovy that it was tough for them not to play that way.” Rather than resist the change, Litz switched from guitar to keyboards and trumpet (which were his preferred instruments, anyway) and went with the flow, not just because he liked the music, but because he liked the idea of collaboration. “I knew bigger picture was having a real BAND, not just backing musicians,” he says.

“It was about having a team that was supportive and creative with me that would make a better product in the end. And playing with new people, you start to hear things that you didn’t before. I still felt like I had control over it, but hearing stuff the way they were hearing it opened my ears, and I organically started to enjoy a lot of music that I wasn’t hip to before. Then it started to slowly infiltrate my songwriting.” The result was an album of Litz-penned, old-school soul music gems, given a decidedly retro production by Sarafin. “It opened up a lot of new songwriting doors for me once I embraced that sound,” Litz says. “I had a whole new palette to work with. And Eric, and he took charge on the technical side of making that vibe happen. We didn’t want it to be a tribute to a ‘60s or ‘70s thing, but there’s a certain nostalgia there. The temptation was to bring in the synthesizers and add things, but we keep our aesthetic choices within

the box of an old-school approach.” Hustle Souls, who will perform at Piedmont Natural Gas Downtown Alive at NOMA Square next Thursday, also brought the discipline of a band that typically plays more than 150 shows a year, which was handy because they had a limited budget. “We’d road tested and arranged these songs and twisted them all kinds of ways before,” Litz says. “A big part of why we were able to get this producer to record us on our budget is that we knew these songs inside and out.”

Crossword puzzle: page 46

Sudoku puzzle: page 46

HUSTLE SOULS WHEN Thursday, June 28, 5:30 p.m. WHERE Piedmont Natural Gas Downtown Alive, NOMA Square, 220 N. Main St. TICKETS Free INFO www.greenvillesc.gov/1321/PNGDowntown-Alive

ECO FRIENDLY

REMOVAL 1-888-576-JUNK greenville.junkrecyclers.net

“We remove ANYTHING”


Ten things to know about • The college is regionally accredited meaning your credits can move with you. • We offer transfer admissions and credit transfer options to many four-year institutions. • We make education affordable. You can save $5,000 per semester compared to public four-year colleges. • Small classes mean more attention. • We have instructors with real-world experience who care. • Graduates earn 40% higher income than those with only a high school diploma. (GTCROI.com) • Internships and externships provide hands-on experience. • Certificates, diplomas and associate degrees are offered through 100+ programs. • Industry partnerships mean local employers have a voice in what you learn. • Classes are available close to you with five campuses and online offerings. www.gvltec.edu/ • (864) 250-8000

Helping people love what they do for a living: Business &Technology • Health & Wellness • Academic Advancement and Support Public Service, Arts & Sciences • Economic Development and CorporateTraining

GetThere.


36 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

BACK IN THE GROOVE After a tumultuous few years, jam-band veterans Perpetual Groove are back on track

VINCENT HARRIS | ARTS & CULTURE WRITER

vharris@communityjournals.com

For a while in the early part of this decade, the career of Perpetual Groove, a veteran Athens, Georgia, jam-band, was as unpredictable as its music. From album to album, sometimes even song to song, Perpetual Groove, which will play The Firmament in Greenville on Saturday, could create electronics-spiked ambient music (a sound it explored on 2004’s “All This Everything”), become a hard-rock band (2007’s “LiveLoveDie”), or switch to a more intimate ensemble playing folk-influenced progressive rock (2016’s “Familiar Stare” EP). The band built a loyal following around the South-

Photo provided

east over its first 15 years or so, but as the 2010s dawned, some cracks began to show in the hard-touring group’s foundation. The band’s keyboard player, John Hruby (who’d replaced original member Matt McDonald in 2008), left the band in 2011. Then in 2013, Perpetual Groove announced an indefinite hiatus, during which singer/guitarist Brock Butler battled to recover from substance abuse issues and the other members (bassist Adam Perry,

drummer Albert Suttle, and the recently returned McDonald on keyboards) started another project called Ghost Owl. The hiatus lasted more than two years, ending in February 2015 with a show at their home venue, the Georgia Theatre in Athens. “We took a couple of years off for everyone to do their own thing and take care of some stuff they had going on in their own lives,” McDonald says. “And fortunately, we were able to do all that and come back in 2015.”

This time, Perpetual Groove wanted to do things right, avoiding the punishing touring schedule that led to the exhaustion and burnout its members experienced the first time around. “We manage ourselves for the most part now,” McDonald says. “We still use all of the important tools like a booking agent, a CPA, and an attorney, but we don’t get told what to do any longer, which is pretty nice. We make a lot of the decisions

«

New lounge. New bistro. Same comfortable feeling. There’s a big, beautiful expansion about to take shape. With more independent living options, more dining, more lounges, more activity rooms, and more ways to enjoy life than ever before.

I n d e p e n d e n t L i v i n g | A s s i s t e d L i v i n g | M e m o r y C a re | R e h a b i l i t a t i o n | S k i l l e d N u r s i n g

Groundbreaking Fall 2018. To learn more, call 864.991.3100. One Hoke Smith Blvd., Greenville, SC 29615 | RollingGreenVillage.com Part of Greenville. Part of your family.

Rolling Green Village is a not-for-profit community.

.


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 37

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

WAR: UP CLOSE & PERSONAL ‘Picturing Nam’ gives insight to the Vietnam War through the eyes of soldiers SARA PEARCE | STAFF

spearce@communityjournals.com

The newest exhibit at the Upcountry History Museum from the National Archives sheds light and humanity on the Vietnam War. “Picturing Nam: U.S. Military Photography of the Vietnam War” shows the war through the eyes of those who actually experienced it, rather than the dramatized media and film interpretations. Even before photography was invented, the U.S. Army and Navy would send artists into combat to give a visual representation of the war for those at home and for soldiers who were unfamiliar with their future deployment. As photography developed, soldiers were trained to photograph their experiences to record the events and aid in training. Elizabeth Gunter, director of education and programs at the museum, says, “Probably more than any previous war, the Vietnam War was visually seen by Americans at home, but mainly through the media. This is a chance to look at what soldiers were seeing at the time — the good, the bad, and everything in between.” Due to the nature of any war, some of the photos are raw, graphic, and haunting. The collection is divided into three themes: landscapes, objects, and faces. One of the most unique aspects of this collection is that while it shows graphic moments that exemplify the rawness of war and combat, it also showcases the time in between, when soldiers are just waiting. It also allows viewers to see just how young many on our own now, and there’s usually « a much deeper thought process and a lot

of discussion. We’ve been very cautious about what we do now.” Part of that new approach is a lighter touring schedule, an appropriate change for a group that’s not in its 20s anymore. “I think a lot of it comes with age and maturity and experience,” McDonald says. “We’re not green anymore. We keep reading articles when we’re rolling into town that quite often call us ‘veteran jam’ act, so we’re not kids anymore who don’t really know the industry. That really informs us when it comes to the business of being in a band.”

of the drafted soldiers were. The Vietnam War has a complicated relationship with Americans and U.S. history. “When we think about U.S. conflicts, things like World War II get a lot of attention because it was a definitive U.S. victory and soldiers were welcomed home with open arms,” Gunter explains, but Vietnam soldiers experienced a very different homecoming. The veterans were often harassed and even shunned, things were thrown at them, and they were told to change out of their uniforms or even burn them. The Upcountry History Museum chose to host this exhibition for many reasons, including its work with the U.S. Department of Defense to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War. “Now 50 years later, the U.S. Department of Defense is trying to honor those veterans who were treated so wrongly. They are trying to step back and say most of them were drafted and had no choice in what they did, and they still served their country. How can we now thank them for their service and recognize what they did?” Gunter says. The exhibition hopes to connect local veterans to their history and recognize their service to the U.S. “We see a lot of multigenerational groups coming in who haven’t been able to share their experiences with their families,” Gunter explains. “This is an opportunity for them to share their own story now that time has given them distance from the direct emotion that was happening in the late ’60s and ’70s. Though the images can be hard to look at, Gunter also hopes they can be cathartic for veterans from any war and serve as a chance to open a dialogue between generations. “Though each war has its own unique experiences, I think that the photographs are really relevant to veterans and that they will still feel a connection to the images,” Gunter says. Gunter hopes that visitors will try to

gain a deeper understanding of the Vietnam War, especially since it has not always had a positive connotation with the public. “We are not trying to put a filter over war with these photos, and it is a very

Shows are one thing, but recording new material is another, and after a six-year gap in releases, P Groove put out the EP “Familiar Stare” in 2016 as a warmup for a fan-funded full album that will be out later this year. The four tracks on the EP, more subtle and introspective than anything they have previously done, let them know they were on the right path. “It was really great in the sense that it confirmed where we all thought we were,” McDonald says. “We did it in three or four days. We went in and knew what we wanted to do, and we were all happy with the outcome. That gave us a big boost of confidence.”

So musically speaking, Perpetual Groove has a future, and even better, it’s been able to hold on to its fanbase despite a few tumultuous years. “Coming back from the hiatus was a humbling experience,” McDonald says. “On the day we announced the band was coming back, the Georgia Theatre show went on sale, and a good friend called me five minutes after it went on sale and said, ‘I think it’s sold out.’ I couldn’t believe it. Then we announced a second show, and that sold out. My buddy was sending me these pictures of the line going around the Georgia Theatre, and

Above: Courtesy National Archives, photo no. 111-CC-34049 Left: Courtesy National Archives, photo no. 111-CC-64315

authentic experience of looking at what happened during Vietnam, but with that, there is a humanity that can been seen in the photos that doesn’t come across in text or a book,” Gunter says. The museum is planning to offer events that engage both veterans and nonveterans, including one of their monthly Lunchbox Learning programs. The event, “The Vietnam War Through Film Footage,” presented by Dr. Greg Wilsbacher, MIRC, USC, will take place Sept. 19.

“PICTURING NAM: U.S. MILITARY PHOTOGRAPHY OF THE VIETNAM WAR” WHEN June 16-Oct. 21 WHERE Upcountry History Museum, 540 Buncombe St. TICKETS $9 adults, $7 children, $8 seniors INFO 864-467-3100 or www.upcountryhistory.org

that continued everywhere we went. I was overwhelmed. I think that helped everyone have a better appreciation for how lucky we are to do this, and more importantly that there are people who want us to keep doing it.”

PERPETUAL GROOVE W/ FOUR 14 WHEN Saturday, June 23, 9 p.m. WHERE The Firmament, 5 Market Point Drive TICKETS $20-$25 INFO 864-616-5101, www.firmamentgvl.com


feast

CHANGE OF PACE

Fork & Plough opens in Overbrook neighborhood WORDS BY ARIEL TURNER

| PHOTOS BY PAUL MEHAFFEY

38 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM


G

feast

oing from four dining rooms and 1,000-cover brunch services at High Cotton in Charleston to the newly opened 99-seat neighborhood restaurant Fork & Plough is exactly the change of pace executive chef Shawn Kelly says he needed. On the second night of service, Kelly emerged from the kitchen to mingle with the friends and family who had shown up as willing guinea pigs to give the staff practice before the restaurant at 1629 E. North St. officially opened at 11 a.m. June 15. When asked his thoughts about finally opening more than a year after the restaurant was announced, Kelly responded in the genuinely honest fashion those who know him well are accustomed to. “How am I not feeling?” he said, listing a wide variety of current moods, including relieved, terrified, worried, excited. Fork & Plough, as the name suggests, is a partnership between two farmers, Chad Bishop and Roddy Pick of Greenbrier Farms, and Kelly. The concept is also the intersection of three concepts – restaurant, grocery store, and butcher shop – with the intention of serving the surrounding neighborhood and showcasing local ingredients in a casual and approachable atmosphere for lunch, dinner, and weekend brunch. The atmosphere is family friendly with a covered outdoor patio that sits above street level on the side of the building. Adding to the neighborhood feel, at least three of Fork & Plough’s employees live in walking distance of the restaurant, and ownership hopes that number grows. Kelly’s menu and the decor are similar – unpretentious with wellappointed details. The menu, written on brown paper rolls behind the order counter, will change weekly, depending on what ingredients are available. Greenbrier Farms beef and pork will be a mainstay and are also available at the butcher counter. Opening weekend featured local ingredients prepared in a global way, which Kelly has said would be his menu style since the beginning of this venture. Starters ranging in cost from $6-16 included chilled cucumber and artichoke soup with blue crab and lemon oil; two salads; a grass-fed beef carpaccio; PEI mussels with a Westbrook Gose, garlic, olive oil, and parsley broth and toast; crispy fried oysters; and a potato and chive gnocchi with duck confit, Carolina mushrooms, green peas, and parmesan. Mains in the $12-24 range continued the world tour hitting Europe, Asia, and the Southeast with a shiitake Swiss burger; a banh mi with fried pistachio pate, carrot and daikon salad, cilantro, Duke’s mayo, and cucumber salad; seared Carolina mahi mahi with cauliflower puree, asparagus, and mushroom conserva; and a panko-encrusted Greenbrier Farms pork shoulder with country-style yellow squash and peach chutney. Desserts were simple and fresh – peach and blueberry cobbler with vanilla ice cream, strawberry shortcake with whipped cream, and chocolate chip cookie with chocolate moose. A five-item kids menu is also available, as are a variety of nonalcoholic bottled beverages and a self-serve station with iced tea and coffee. The bar program serves only beer and wine, with a variety of both, along with mocktails made with fortified wine to mimic liquor-based standards, such as a Manhattan or gin and tonic. Father’s Day brunch, which Kelly said would be “simple,” included freshly baked cinnamon rolls and blueberry muffins, biscuits with tasso ham gravy, garden omelet, French toast, huevos rancheros, shrimp and grits, and a steak sandwich, along with some of the menu items from the previous lunch and dinner. A daily rotation of grab-and-go menu items is also available in the cooler along with cheeses, cured meats, local eggs, and produce. The grocery shelves feature a curated selection of accompaniments for a balanced charcuterie board, a variety of wine, bags of Carolina Gold rice, pasta, and other pantry staples. Fork & Plough is open six days a week (closed Tuesday). Hours of operation are 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday; 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday. Follow @forkandplough on social media for daily menu updates. COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 39


feast

small plates FOOD NEWS & EVENTS BY ARIEL TURNER

Hashtag Job Security New restaurant announcements and openings are keeping me rather busy these days, and that’s unlikely to chill out any time soon. Along with those listed below, keep an eye out on social media for the imminent openings of Yee-Haw Brewing Co., The Farehouse, and maybe even Carol’s Ice Cream in the Village of West Greenville. Nitro-frozen ice cream sounds about right for these mid-90-degree days.

ICYMI from UBJ Ottaray Seafood & Raw Bar announced last fall for the the former YAP location at 12 S. Main St. is out and River Street Sweets-Savannah’s Candy Kitchen is in. While oysters would’ve been nice, it’s hard to be mad about house-made gelato and ice cream and old-fashioned pralines taking their place. Franchisee Lisa Warriner hopes to have the shop up and running by the fall. Fireforge Crafted Beer at 311 E. Washington St. is finally opening June 28. I say “finally” because this has been a three-plus year process for co-owners Nicole and Brian Cendrowski, and some of us feel like we’ve been heavily invested in the entire process even though we’ve just been the cheerleaders on the sideline. The brewery and taproom in the 4,500-square-foot warehouse at the back of the

former Watson building will officially open for business June 28 with limited taproom hours. Nicole Cendrowski says they are currently training their employees and finalizing their initial offerings in preparation for opening day. Playing off of the phrase “pie in the sky” for its name, Buttermilk Sky Pie Shop, based in Knoxville, Tenn., will open in the Augusta Commons shopping center at 2222 Augusta St. in the next few weeks. This will be the first South Carolina location for the brand. Founded in November of 2013 by Meredith and Scott Layton, the pie shop was inspired by their maternal grandmothers, and in 2015 the Laytons won Cooking Channel’s Sugar Showdown Garden Pie competition in season 1, episode 6. That’s not too shabby for only two years in the biz. The Laytons have a personal interest in the newest store, and thanks to franchisees Suzanne Keim and Michelle Hay, their hopes for a Greenville store have been realized. “As founders of the brand, my husband, Scott, and I have been especially hopeful for a store in Greenville since our oldest son plays football at Furman and we spend a lot of time there,” Meredith Layton says. “We have fallen in love with the city.” Burgerim, an international fast casual burger concept that started in Israel, is headed to 115 Pelham Road, Greenville, in the Pelham Court shopping center. Construction is currently underway with an expected opening in July. What sets this 160-location chain apart is its 2.8-ounce patties that are meant to be ordered in multiples. And the types of patties cater to pretty much any taste: beef, dry aged beef, wagyu beef, merguez (spicy beef), turkey, lamb, chicken, salmon, veggie, Spanish beef, or falafel. Also unusual for a fast-casual chain are the home fries, cubed potatoes tossed in chili sauce and topped with sesame seeds.

PRESENTS

FEATURING MUSIC FROM

AT

40 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 41

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

The Effen Halfway to Christmas Party,

CONCERT

JUN. 23

featuring AJ Ghent w/ WPOS, Paris Mountain Scoundrels, Stone Ground, Black River Rebels, and The Jonny Monster Band Gottrocks | 200 Eisenhower Drive 4 p.m. | $20 adv, $25 day of show

AJ Ghent is about as imbedded in the tradition of sacred steel, a form of gospel music that takes the flexible, near-human cry of the pedal-steel guitar and applies it to spiritual compositions and hymns, as a musician can be. His grandfather, Henry Nelson, is one of the founders of the sacred steel rhythmic style, made most famous by Robert Randolph & The Family Band. And his father, Aubrey, and great-uncle, Willie Eason, are two of sacred steel’s most revered players. But in his own music, Ghent applies his mastery of liquid-mercury pedal steel and slide playing to a mix of rock, funk, and soul music. Some might consider that a departure from the sacred steel genre, while others could see it as an expansion of it; Ghent tends to see it as the latter. “People may say I’ve pulled away from the tradition, but as far as the soul and the impact and the inspiration the music brings, I feel I’ve always stayed true to it,” he says. “I just went off the influence of my father and grandfather but made music that represents who I am and where I am in 2018.” –Vincent Harris FRI

22

MUSIC

Rebecca Pechefsky & Patrick Hawkins

Carolina Music Museum 516 Buncombe St. (on Heritage Green) 7:30-9 p.m. | $10/adults; $5/student w/ID Two masters play at the Carolina Music Museum. Rebecca Pechefsky and Patrick Hawkins, she a renowned virtuoso on the harpsichord, he a renowned performer on the square piano, will be featured in concert. Only 80 seats available. www.carolinamusicmuseum.org info@carolinamusicmuseum.org MUSIC

Beachin’ Fridays

Mauldin Cultural Center | 101 East Butler Road 7-9 p.m. | Fridays | FREE We’re bringing the beach music scene to Mauldin with Beachin’ Fridays. People come from all over the Upstate to converge on the Mauldin Cultural Center’s outdoor amphitheater for evenings of shag dancing, food trucks, and craft beverages. This week features The Holiday Band. 864-335-4862 www.mauldinculturalcenter.org/beachin-fridays/ events@mauldinculturalcenter.org SAT

23

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Yin & Tonic

Indigo Flow & Art | 1272 Pendleton St. 6-8:30 p.m. | $25 Join us for a Yin Sound Bath followed by cocktails. Yin Yoga consists of relaxing deep stretch poses. Live drummers will provide the Sound Bath. Cocktails included in admission fee. Must be 21 or older. www.indigoflowandart.com MUSIC

Music in the Park

City of Travelers Rest | Trailblazer Park 235 Trailblazer Drive, Travelers Rest 6-9 p.m. | FREE Come enjoy free, live music in our open-air amphitheater during the pleasant South Carolina spring and summer seasons. This week features ‘90s alternative rock with U-Phonic. www.TrailblazerPark.com info@TrailblazerPark.com

THRU SUN

24

PERFORMING ARTS

“Beauty and the Beast”

Greenville Little Theatre 444 College St. Thursdays-Sundays $35/adults, $33/seniors, $25/juniors Greenville Little Theatre presents a tale as old as time, Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast.” This magical tale comes to life with unforgettable characters, astonishing sets and costumes, and a stunning score. www.greenvillelittletheatre.org PERFORMING ARTS

Chautauqua History Alive Festival Courage

Greenville Chautauqua 7:30-9 p.m. | FREE A 10-day, two-weekend festival of nonstop live history and fun for the whole family. A different show outdoors each night and more indoors during the day. Five different shows performed by nationally acclaimed historical interpreters. And the audience is always a part of the show. Shows in Greater Greenville, Spartanburg, and Asheville. There is a nominal charge of $5 for Asheville shows. Other shows are free. Five courageous leaders tell their stories in their own words. You’ll laugh; you’ll cry; you’ll have lots of questions. And they’ll be answered. Bring your stories. Share your experiences. Get inspired. Because it’s not just history — it’s personal. For a complete listing of shows, visit the website. www.greenvilleCHAUTAUQUA.org caroline@greenvilleCHAUTAUQUA.org SUN

24

PERFORMING & VISUAL ARTS

Sunday at 2: Music in the Galleries

Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. | 2-3 p.m. | FREE Relax and enjoy an intimate concert by jazz combo Scotch and Soda with a Twist. Performing from “The Great American Saloon Singer Songbook,” their upbeat repertoire is sure to put a smile on your face. All Sundays at 2 are free and sponsored by Duke Energy. www.gcma.org | info@gcma.org

NOW OPEN Weekends

For details and locations visit:

GreenvilleRec.com


ART FOR DUMMIES.

Matthew Rolston |Talking Heads: The Vent Haven Portraits July 13 through September 16 Artist Visit, Sunday, September 9

Comprised of monumental color prints, Matthew Rolston | Talking Heads: The Vent Haven Portraits, features celebrity photographer Matthew Rolston’s eerie documentation of ventriloquist dummies from the Vent Haven Museum of Ventriloquy in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky. Discovered as a student by Andy Warhol, Rolston has photographed the likes of Michael Jackson, Prince, Beyonce, Johnny Depp, and Angelina Jolie, among others. His photographs have been published in Interview, Vogue, Vanity Fair, W, and others, including more than 100 covers for Rolling Stone. Rolston will visit the GCMA Sunday, September 9 for a free, public program. Visit gcma.org to learn more.

Journal Art for Dummies.indd 3

Greenville County Museum of Art

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

admission free

6/19/18 10:58 AM


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 43

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM

JUN. 23

Sezessionville Road

Smiley’s Acoustic Cafe | 111 Augusta St. | 10 p.m. | Free

CONCERT

Let’s start with the Asheville, N.C., band’s name: Sezessionville Road. We typically don’t ask how bands got their monikers, but this one begged further inquiry. “It’s the name of an actual road on James Island,” says Sezessionville’s DD Clayton, who handles vocals, guitar, and bass alongside singer, keyboard player, and guitarist Alpine Beck. “I was going to meet my cousin and play some tunes, and he was giving me directions and said, ‘Take a right on Sezessionville Road.’ Something about it struck me.” On their new EP, “Won’t Be Silenced,” the duo create a catchy synthesis of folkish vocal harmonies and straight-ahead guitar rock, with a little help from drummer Federico Foglia. Foglia also provided a near-idyllic place for the band to make its music. “Federico, he’s an Italian guy, and he said, ‘My family owns a villa in Genova, Italy; maybe we could stay there,’” Clayton says. “And we thought, ‘Italy? Stay for free? Yeah, we’re going.’ We stayed five or six weeks and recorded.” –Vincent Harris THRU MON

25

LESSONS & TRAINING

Fiction 102

Joe’s Place | 2 Williams St. 5:30-7 p.m. | Mondays $40/class, $20 discount if paid in advance for 4 classes Fiction writing class with Carol Baldwin. www.carolbaldwinblog.blogspot.com cbaldwin6@me.com MON-AUG

25-23

LESSONS & TRAINING

Learn to Play Appalachian Instrument

Preserving Our Southern Appalachian Music Church of the Redeemer 120 Mauldin Road 6:30-8 p.m. | $60 for six week session Registration begins June 25 for lessons learning to play banjo, guitar, fiddle or mandolin. These lessons are open to children over 9 and adults.The classes are grouped by skill level and will begin on July 12 at The Church of the Redeemer. Beginners are welcome. The total fee for 6 week session is $60. Also, rental instruments are available and can be reserved if needed. This program supports the nonprofit: Preserving Our Southern Appalachian Music. www.yamupstate.com WED-FRI

VISUAL ARTS

Art Camp: Harry 27-29 Summer Potter & the Magic of Art for ages 8 to 13

Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. | $85 plus $30 for materials Unlock the magic of art. Follow your imagination on an amazing, fantasy-filled journey to the enchanting world of Harry Potter. From wizard wands to sorting hats and magic potion jars, this camp keeps creative Muggles spellbound. Students are welcome to attend in costume. www.gcma.org/pages/calendar/detail/event/ c10/e511&DateOfEvent=06/27/2018 THU

28

LECTURE

Poetry with Pride: Celebrating Pride Month

Huguenot Mill | 101 W. Broad St. 6:30 p.m. | FREE The Peace Center’s 2017-2018 Peace Voices program presents Poetry with Pride: Celebrating Pride Month, featuring Andrea Gibson and Danez Smith. Andrea Gibson and Danez Smith

take the stage to confront some of the issues faced by the LGBTQ community. Gibson balances themes of love, gender, politics, sexuality, illness, and forgiveness. A 2017 National Endowment of the Arts Fellow, Smith is a black, queer writer and performer whose work has been featured on Buzzfeed, “PBS NewsHour,” and “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” 864-467-3000 or 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org LECTURE

Peace Center’s 2017-2018 Master Classes Ramsaur Studio at Huguenot Mill 101 W. Broad St. | 4:30 p.m. | FREE Master Classes give teens from the workshop series an opportunity to dig deeper into the nuts and bolts of the poetic process. Visiting poets will share pieces, dissect their own work, and hold an open forum. Participants are encouraged to ask questions about their own poems. Master classes are held in Ramsaur Studio and the public is invited to observe. This class features Andrea Gibson and Danez Smith. 864-467-3000 or 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org

ON SALE NOW! OCTOBER 9 GUNTER THEATRE

BÉLA FLECK, ZAKIR HUSSAIN, EDGAR MEYER

WITH RAKESH CHAURASIA, BANSURI NOVEMBER 6

BUSINESS/PROFESSIONAL

10 Questions w/John Moore

Engenius | Warehouse Theater | 37 Augusta St. 8-9 a.m. | FREE Entrepreneurship has been a frequent conversation in Greenville over the past decade. How is that impacting our community, both from a business perspective and as an Upstate resident? Join us for our 10 Questions Networking Event where Engenius co-founder and CEO Chris Manley will interview John Moore, CEO & Founder of NEXT SC. NEXT focuses on building a stronger entrepreneur ecosystem and promoting the successes happening here. NEXT also attracts outside companies to launch and grow here and assists with their relocation. John will field questions about our entrepreneurial ecosystem (as in, what is that?), what the landscape looks like for entrepreneurs, and how that impacts all of our everyday lives. Before the discussion, enjoy coffee and pastries while you network with other Upstate professionals. Advance registration is requested. https://engeniusweb.com/events/

KIRILL K ARABITS, CONDUC TOR GEORGE LI, PIANO

FEBRUARY 18 GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!

GROUPS


44 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

A Crown or Even a Smile Makeover in One Appointment CEREC is a high-tech dental device in the office that allows patients to go from diagnosis to walking out the door with their new crown in place, all in one visit. (Really, it only takes a couple of hours from start to finish for one crown!) Using the CEREC system to create an individual crown, multiple crowns or veneers or even a bridge allows your needs to be met in a more efficient and effective manner. Dentists are able to create your restorations in office, many times in one visit!

“One visit is all it may take for you to have the smile of your dreams!”

CEREC uses CAD/CAM or “Computer Aided Design” and “Computer Aided Manufacturing” technologies to design and create your CEREC crown in just one visit. The cutting-edge digital mapping technology charts the inside of your mouth and takes a very detailed and accurate computer image of your tooth. Your new tooth is milled out of a solid ceramic block in the office and is ready to be bonded to your tooth. With a small amount of prepping your tooth is ready to receive the new crown and you are out the door in just under two hours with a completed crown in place. With the CEREC system the Doctor can offer multiple units done in the office. Multiple units could be a cosmetic improvement to your smile or a new bridge to fill that space where you may have lost a tooth. The Doctor will assess your smile and after consulting with you to learn what you would like to improve on; he will create restorations that will have you smiling again with confidence! The CAD/CAM system can allow the Doctor to enhance and adjust shapes and contours of your teeth to correct imperfections that in some cases are not just cosmetic but also may improve functionality. One visit is all it may take for you to have the smile of your dreams! Utilizing current technology and years of experience Dr. Meyer and the Team at Meyer Dentistry can help you achieve a smile you will share with confidence!

JUN. 28

Borgore

The Firmament | 5 Market Point Drive | 9 p.m. | $20-$25

It has certainly reached out to other genres, but Greenville’s Firmament venue has done an outstanding job bringing a series of electronic dance music stars and innovators to the Upstate. And the Tel Aviv-born Asaf Borger, aka Borgore, is one of the most prolific and multi-talented artists it’s yet presented. Borgore is a great DJ and producer whose tracks rain down jagged sheets of noise, mountain-moving beats, and haunting vocal melodies like sonic nukes, but he’s also a talented rapper. And that’s all on top of his time as a deathcore drummer banging out vicious, extreme heavy metal, and his just-out jazz album, “Adventures in Time.” He’s essentially a musical omnivore, and his ear for crushing beats and infectious hooks has fueled not just his own flurry of singles, EPs, and full-length albums (nearly 50 since 2009), but also his remixes for Rihanna, Selena Gomez, LMFAO, M.I.A., Gorillaz, and even, in a nod to his heavy-metal past, a 2013 rethink of Metallica’s “Master of Puppets.” –Vincent Harris

CONCERT

SPONSORED CONTENT

FRI

29

MUSIC

Corona Concert Series

Peace Center TD Stage | 300 S. Main St. | 8 p.m. The Genevieve’s package includes a show ticket and offers entry to Genevieve’s Theatre Lounge. The package includes exclusive access to the balcony overlooking the Reedy River and the TD Stage, a complimentary small bites spread, a full cash bar, the air-conditioned lounge and Genevieve’s restrooms. The package also gives access to lawn seating. June 29 will feature Maxi Priest. Admission is $35 for lawn seating and $65 for the Genevieve’s package. 864-467-3000 or 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org THRU SAT

30

PERFORMING ARTS

“Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson”

The Warehouse Theatre 37 Augusta St. Most Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights and Sunday matinees | $40 general admission, $45 reserved, $65 premium seats This irreverent, funny, broad rock ‘n’ roll musical satire of America’s seventh president, Andrew Jackson, follows him from the campaign trail all the way through the White House. This musical explores how our great democratic experiment works and helps us realize how the more things change, the more they stay the same. www.warehousetheatre.com PERFORMING ARTS

“The Tin Woman”

CROWNS IN ONE VISIT • WHITENING • VENEERS • ORTHODONTICS

1212 Haywood Road, Suite 300, Greenville

864-213-4442 www.meyerdentistry.com

Centre Stage | 501 River St. 8-11 p.m. | $30, $25, $15 Tuesday-Sunday, No Monday, Tuesday-Saturday “The Tin Woman” tells the story of a heart transplant recipient and the eventual meeting of the donor’s family. Instead of relishing life after her heart transplant, Joy enters a downward spiral, unsure whether she truly deserves a second chance. Meanwhile, Alice and Hank mourn the loss of their son, Jack, whose heart was used to save Joy. www.centrestage.org

JUL MON-MON

02-30

MUSIC

Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival

Warren Wilson College | Carolina Music Museum 516 Buncombe St. ( At Heritage Green) 7:30-9 p.m. | $150 which includes a complimentary “Duet” membership at the Carolina Music Museum– $25 At The Box Office The Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival, now in its 48th year, will celebrate its fourth year in Greenville. Two world premieres, a worldrenowned countertenor, three award-winning string quartets, and artistic director Inessa Zaretsky bring the music of Mendelssohn, Franck, Beethoven, Schubert, Mozart, Debussy, and Dvorak to Greenville. 828-771-3050 | www.scm-festival.com chamber@warren-wilson.edu THU-SUN

05-29

PERFORMING ARTS

“The Taming of the Shrew”

Upstate Shakespeare Festival Falls Park | 601 S Main St. | 7 p.m. | FREE The 2018 Upstate Shakespeare Festival continues its 24th Season with the boisterous “The Taming of the Shrew.” This energetic comedy is suitable for all ages. Bring a picnic, lawn chair, and/or blanket. Donations are appreciated. www.warehousetheatre.com SAT-SUN

14-15

FOOD & DRINK

Greenville Charcuterie Intensive

Swamp Rabbit Café and Grocery 205 Cedar Lane Road | $350 In this two-day intensive, learn to confidently cure meats via salting, dehydration, smoking, and fermentation. We will begin with a half hog, and spend two days turning every scrap of it into charcuterie, from fresh sausages to smoked hams, pates, and hard salamis. In addition to learning salumi craft, we will discuss sustainable farming, mindful slaughter, artisan butchery, and inspired cookery. Best of all, you’ll join a growing cohort of ethical meat practitioners in touch via social media, direct email, and


06.22.2018 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 45

COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM community gatherings. Class includes copies of “The Ethical Meat Handbook and Pure Charcuterie.” www.mereleighfood.com mereleighfood@gmail.com THRU WED

18

SUMMER CAMPS

2018 Science Camps at Clemson University

Clemson University | Jordan Hall $110-$950 Join in for hands-on, action-packed, thoughtprovoking science camps for rising fifththrough 12th-graders on the Clemson University campus. Choose from residential camps or day camps. Camps will include Crime Scene Investigation: Clemson; Potions 101; Engineering and Design Adventures; Biotechnology, Health and Society; and Public Health: Outbreak. www.clemson.edu/culsoc

AUG FRI

10

CAUSES & FUNDRAISING

Casino Night Benefiting SYNNEX Share the Magic

Armada Analytics, Inc. Old Cigar Warehouse | 912 S. Main St. 7-11 p.m. | $110 Greenville Business Networking Casino Night benefiting SYNNEX Share the Magic Children’s Charities. http://fnd.us/a1LCU6?ref=sh_37Cy18 SAT

11

CAUSES & FUNDRAISING

Superhero 5K and Fun Run

The Salvation Army of Greenville The Salvation Army Ray & Joan Kroc Corps Community Center 424 Westfield St. 8-10:15 a.m. $35/adult; $25/teen; $15/youth; $10/fun run Haven’t you always dreamed of being a superhero? Help The Salvation Army Boys & Girls Club take local youth in Greenville to GREAT FUTURES & BEYOND! Run as Superman, Spiderman, Wonder Woman, or any hero! 5K $35 Adult (18+) | $25 Teen (13-17) | $15 Youth (12 & under) Race packet includes a tshirt and other great items! Prizes given for best times and best costumes in adult and youth categories. Youth 1 Mile Fun Run (12 & under) $10. Each participant receives a medal and free Kilwins ice cream after the run. Parents and guardians are invited to participate with child during Fun Run at no additional cost. https://runsignup.com/Race/SC/Greenville/ BGCSuperhero5K

SEP FRI

28

MUSIC

Buddy Guy

Peace Concert Hall 300 S. Main St. | 8 p.m. | $45-$65 Buddy Guy is a Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame inductee, a pioneer of Chicago’s fabled West Side sound and a living link to the city’s golden days of electric blues. Guy has received seven Grammy awards and 37 Blues Music awards – more than any other artist. He has been honored with the Billboard Magazine Century award, a Kennedy Center Honor and the Presidential National Medal of Arts. Rolling Stone magazine ranks him No. 23 in its “100 Greatest Guitarists

of All Time.” The legendary blues artist’s 18th solo LP, The Blues Is Alive and Well, is the latest triumph in an already-legendary career. 864-467-3000 | 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org

NOV MON

05

MUSIC

Ben Rector

Peace Concert Hall 300 S. Main St. | 7:30 p.m. | $25-$45 Independent pop singer-songwriter Ben Rector presents “Magic: The Tour” this fall. The 28date national headlining tour brings the spellbinding, piano-fueled pop of his latest album, “Magic” to life. The band CAMINO will open. “Magic: The Tour” follows Rector’s 2015-2016 tours “The Biggest Tour I Have Done So Far Tour” and “The Brand New Tour,” a 73-date total run that included a sold-out two-night stand at the Ryman Auditorium, Atlanta’s The Tabernacle, Chicago’s House of Blues, and more. 864-467-3000 | 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org

Inform. Connect. Inspire.

FEB SAT

16

MUSIC

Jerry Lee Lewis

Peace Concert Hall 300 S. Main St. 8 p.m. | $65-$85 Catapulted to fame by his iconic hits “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” and “Great Balls of Fire,” Jerry Lee Lewis is one of the first true rock ‘n’ roll musicians. Lewis is part of the Million Dollar Quartet, along with Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, and Carl Perkins, and there is not any part of music that their influences haven’t touched. “The Killer” has been honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a Lifetime Achievement Grammy award and as a member of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame’s very first class of inductees. 864-467-3000 | 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org

MAR FRI

15

PERFORMING ARTS

Celtic Woman

Peace Concert Hall 300 S. Main St. | 8 p.m. | $55-$85 Grammy-nominated global sensation Celtic Woman’s concerts capture the hearts of audiences around the globe. Both an accomplished recording ensemble and a world-class performing collective, Celtic Woman celebrates Ireland’s rich musical and cultural heritage, while continuing a remarkable legacy of introducing some of Ireland’s most talented singers and musicians onto the world stage. 864-467-3000 | 800-888-7768 www.peacecenter.org

WANT TO SEE YOUR EVENT HERE? Enter your event information at www.bit.ly/ GreenvilleJournalCalendarOfEvents by Wednesday at 5 p.m. to be considered for publication in the following week’s Journal.

– Visit us online –

COMMUNITY: GreenvilleJournal.com

BUSINESS: UpstateBusinessJournal.com

ARTS, PEOPLE, FASHION, STYLE, FOOD, CULTURE & SOCIAL SCENE: TOWNCarolina.com


46 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 06.22.2018 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

FIGURE. THIS. OUT.

Returned ACROSS 1 Followers of Genghis Khan 8 More ill-tempered 16 Big deli cut 20 Level of authority 21 Called again 22 Like many hoops stars 23 Stadium levels reinforced with metal strips? 25 Falco of the screen 26 “I’m thinking ...” 27 “— and the Real Girl” (2007 film) 28 George Eliot’s “— Marner” 29 NEA part 30 BBQ meat bit 32 Dutch South African who’s testifying? 36 Org. on a toothpaste tube 38 Dot-com’s address 40 Ranchers’ ropes 41 Almost a plaintiff? 47 Salon colorer 48 Low-quality 51 Love affairs 52 “No noise!” 53 Sooner than 55 Cut-rate, in adspeak 57 Out of neutral 58 Pupils with artificially curled hair? 62 Fleur-de- — 63 — nitrite (vasodilator) 65 Longoria of TV 66 Examine critically 67 Fencing blades

69 70 71 74 75 76 79

By Frank Longo

Fruity drink Mixed dogs Continually doing well Boxer Laila Poet Ogden Stars’ place Small expert tennis server sent from heaven? 82 “Pest” in Beverly Cleary books 85 Like the soil around a big tree 86 Boater’s tool 87 Kiss go-with 88 Slate wiper 89 Naval off. 90 Drop anchor 93 Statement when lots of people have gathered somewhere? 96 Petty despot 98 Public radio’s Glass 99 SSNs, say 100 Like supplies for farriers that are sent by boat? 104 Filming area 106 “Us” rivals 110 Book before Nahum 111 Sailor’s mop 113 Like many monks, by vow 116 Toiling hard 117 Having reached a lower limit set by boxer Max? 121 Henchman in “Peter Pan” 122 And 123 Fettuccine —

124 That lady’s 125 Bald 126 Curly-haired dogs DOWN 1 Electric car company 2 One- — (short play) 3 Scarlett’s Butler 4 Overflows 5 German for “everyone” 6 Steals from 7 Curl the lip toward 8 Old PC screen type 9 Spool of film 10 Designed to be appended 11 Drag racer’s fuel 12 Old German ruler 13 — de la Cité 14 Always, in poems 15 Aves. 16 Ale mugs 17 Soup spoon 18 Phony name 19 Sanctify 24 Oahu wreath 28 Eyeballed 31 Wheat unit 33 Cabs it, e.g. 34 Direction 35 Ending for Seattle 36 Ambience 37 British statesman Benjamin 39 German coal region 41 Brad, for one 42 Ritzy hotel chain 43 Clothes, informally

Congratulations! Alex Britt

(Pictured right to left are Mary Bernard, owner of Joe’s Place, winner Alex Britt, and club president Randy Vogenberg)

Winner of a $300 gift certificate to Joe’s Place

North Greenville Rotary Club

E L F F A R R E P 2018 SU P U R C H A S E YO U R T I C K E T AT

www.RotaryRaffle.org

.

44 “— Sera, Sera” blackjack 112 Sheep calls 45 Annual awards for athletes 102 More aloof 114 “— & Stitch” (Disney film) 46 “Superman” star 103 Tom of “The Seven Year 115 News, briefly Christopher Itch” 117 Spa reaction 48 Skeletal 105 Bar code scanner, for 118 Gp. flagging bags 49 1998 bug-themed film short 119 Prefix with light 50 Two pills, say 106 Popular ’50s Ford 120 Snaky shape 54 Vitamin std. 107 Veronica of “Hill Street 56 Toon units Blues” 59 News outlets 108 Chopin piece Crossword answers: page 34 60 Pericles’ T’s 109 Short notes 61 Take out of the eye of a needle 64 Liquefy by Myles Mellor and Susan Flannigan 67 Start for “while” 68 Person of encyclopedic learning 69 Open-eyed 70 “The Simpsons” wife 71 Grimm nasty 72 12:00 p.m. 73 Fusses 74 Styled after 75 Of synapses and the like 76 Just all right 77 Recognized 78 Lawn site 80 Yeshiva topic 81 She sang “Believe” 83 Missile paths 84 Deface 91 Great Plains tribe 92 Surgery ctrs. 94 Having the right job credentials 95 Directory for a web page 96 Outpourings 97 More ritzy 100 Break to bits 101 Request in Sudoku answers: page 34 Easy

Sudoku


SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: RFQ#02-07/09/18 – CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING INSPECTION SERVICES, July 09, 2018, 3:00 P.M., E.D.T. Solicitations can be found at www.greenvillecounty.org or by calling (864) 467-7200.

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT (Non-Jury) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2018-CP-23-02622 George M. Smith, Jr., Plaintiff, Vs. TES Properties, LLC, The United States of America, and “John Doe”, representing a class composed of all unknown parties who may have some right, title, or interest in the p r o p e r t y having Tax Map #0554.05-01119.00, Defendants 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 this Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply for the Court the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. TO: INFANTS(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO, (GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants regarding quieting title to property located in Greenville County. The subject property is described as follows: ALL those certain tracts, parcels or lots of land, situate, lying and being in the State of South Carolina, County of Greenville, being shown and designated as Lot 32 – A on a plat of Shellbrook Plantation, Phase 1, recorded in Plat Book 1040 at Page 85 in the Register of Deeds Office for Greenville County. References made to said plat for a more detailed description. LESS however any portion previously conveyed and subject to restrictions of record. TAX MAP #0554.05-01-119.00 C. Richard Stewart, SC Bar #5346 Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com

SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT (NON-JURY) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2017-CP-23-01971 Elaine Owens aka Elaine Griffin, Plaintiff, Vs. Annointed Missionary Temple, ”John Doe”, a class made up of all unknown heirs of Lawrence Simmons, Curtis Owens, Carmichael Owens, Shelbra Owens, Mark McKinney, Katrina A. Owens, and “Robert Roe”, a class made up of all unknown heirs of Katrina Owens, Defendants 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 this Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply for the Court the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. TO: INFANTS(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO, (GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants regarding quieting title to property located in Greenville County. The subject property is described as follows: ALL that certain piece, parcel and lot of land situate, lying and being in the City of Greenville, County of Greenville, State of South Carolina, being known as #14 Doe Street, and fronting on Doe Street a distance of seventy (70) feet, and running back in parallel lines a distance of seventy (70) feet, with a width on the rear of seventy (70) feet. Said parcel is shown on the Greenville County Tax Map as Sheet 123, Block 13, Lot 2.1. Tax Map # 0123.00-13-002.01 C. Richard Stewart, SC Bar #5346 Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com

AMENDED SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT (NON JURY) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PICKENS IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2018-CP-39-00593 Two Tigers Investments LLC, Plaintiff, Vs. Betty S. Kelley, Jackie Womble, Travis Daron Pitts, all unknown heirs of Waymon Leslie Pitts, Cecil Dana Hamilton, Tony Leslie Hamilton, and “John Doe” representing a class made up of all unknown parties who may have some right, title, or interest in the property having Tax Map #4064-00-60-4333, Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Amended Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Amended Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Amended Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Amended Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Amended Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. TO: INFANTS(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO, (GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED

AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Amended Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. AMENDED LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon amended complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants to quiet title on property located in Pickens County. The subject property is described as follows: ALL that certain piece, parcel or tract of land in the State of South Carolina, County of Pickens, bounded on the northwest by lands now or formerly of R. R. Porter; on the southwest by lands now or formerly owned by R. R. Porter, on the northeast by lands now or formerly of Fred Sims; on the southeast by lands now or family owned by Cecil Hamilton, containing one-fourth (¼) acres, more or less, and according to plat of Dean C. Edens, Surveyor, dated September 11, 1957, being more fully described as follows: BEGINNING at iron pin, the southwest corner of the tract, running thence along lands now or formerly of Cecil Hamilton S 58 – 30 W 105 feet to iron pin; running thence along lands now or formerly of R. R. Porter North 27 – 15 West 105 feet to an iron pin, running thence along line of lands now or formerly of R. R. Porter N 58-30 E 105 feet to an iron pin, thence along line of lands now or formerly of Fred Sims S 27-15 E 105 feet to the beginning corner. Tax Map # 4064-00-60-4333 C. Richard Stewart Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 SC Bar No: 5346

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: Trinity Way Neighborhood Drainage Improvement Project, RFP #87-06/29/18, until 3:00 PM EDT, Friday, June 29, 2018; a Mandatory Pre-Proposal Meeting with Site Visit to Follow, will be held at 9:00 AM EDT, Monday, June 25, 2018 at Greenville County Procurement Services Division, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601. Solicitations may be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/procurement/ or by calling (864) 467-7200.

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE There will be a PUBLIC HEARING before the GREENVILLE COUNTY BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 2018 at 3:00 P.M. in CONFERENCE ROOM –D at GREENVILLE COUNTY SQUARE, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, GREENVILLE, S.C., for the purpose of hearing those persons interested in the petitions listed below. PERSONS HAVING AN INTEREST IN THESE PETITIONS MAY BECOME PARTIES OF RECORD BY FILING WITH THE BOARD, AT LEAST THREE (3) DAYS PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED DATE SET FOR HEARING, BY WRITING THEIR ADDRESS, A STATEMENT OF THEIR POSITION AND THE REASONS WHY THE RELIEF SOUGHT WITH RESPECT TO SUCH PROPERTY SHOULD OR SHOULD NOT BE GRANTED. CB-18-28 APPLICANT: JACKSON DOUGLAS AZEVEDO & ANN MARIE JEWELL TAX MAP#: 0437.00-02-001.00 LOCATION: 235 COURTNEY CIRCLE, GREENVILLE SC REQUEST: Use by Special Exception to allow Soap Manufacturing as a Home Occupation.

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: RFP#01-06/29/18 – SALE OF REAL PROPERTY, June 29, 2018, 3:00 P.M., E.D.T. Solicitations can be found at www.greenvillecounty.org or by calling (864) 467-7200.

SUMMONS NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO.: 2018-CP-23-01087 Geico as subrogee of Lora Stuart Shortt, Plaintiff, -versus- Latoya Shields, Defendant. TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to Answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Complaint upon the subscriber at the address shown below, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. MAYBANK & OWINGS, LLC s/David H. Maybank, Jr. (SC Bar No.:13436) Post Office Box 80669 Charleston, SC 29416 (843) 723-0412 (843) 723-8738 Facsimile dmaybank@subrogation.net Our File Number: GEI-902 Attorneys for the Plaintiff Date Electronically Filed: 2/26/2018

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SECOND AMENDED SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT AND SECOND AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) C/A NO: 2018-CP-23-00817 DEFICIENCY WAIVED U.S. Bank National Association, PLAINTIFF, vs. Kevin T. Dubose aka Kevin Dubose and if Kevin T. Dubose aka Kevin Dubose be deceased then any children and heirs at law to the Estate of Kevin T. Dubose aka Kevin Dubose, distributees and devisees at law to the Estate of Kevin T. Dubose aka Kevin Dubose, and if any of the same be dead any and all persons entitled to claim under or through them also all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, interest or lien upon the real estate described in the second amended complaint herein; Any unknown adults, any unknown infants or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe, and any persons in the military service of the United States of America being a class designated as Richard Roe; Holli K. Dubose; William Allen DuBose, Sr.; Cleo Thompson DuBose; William Allen DuBose, Jr.; MTC Federal Credit Union; Fairview/Waterton Homeowner’s Association, Inc.; American Express Bank, FSB DEFENDANT(S) TO THE DEFENDANTS, ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscriber at his office, Hutchens Law Firm P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, except as to the United States of America,

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Maple Street Bisquit Company 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 18 East North Street, Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than July 8, 2018. 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

which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, or otherwise appear and defend, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity for Greenville County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE, AND/OR TO MINOR(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND THE PERSON WITH WHOM THE MINOR(S) RESIDES, AND/OR TO PERSONS UNDER SOME LEGAL DISABILITY: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad litem within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff immediately and separately and such application will be deemed absolute and total in the absence of your application for such an appointment within thirty (30) days after the service of the Summons and Complaint upon you. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity in/for this County, which Order shall,

pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. NOTICE OF FILING OF SECOND AMENDED SUMMONS AND SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on February 13, 2018; that the foregoing Amended Summons, along with the Amended Complaint, was file in the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on February 21, 2018; that the foregoing Second Amended Summons, along with the Second Amended Complaint, was file in the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on April 4, 2018; SECOND AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Maple Street Bisquit Company 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 2815 Woodruff Road Suite 107, Simpsonville, SC 29681. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than July 8, 2018. 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. IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION, YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY/ AGENT MAY PROCEED WITH A FORECLOSURE ACTION. If you have already pursued loss mitigation with the Plaintiff, this Notice does not guarantee the availability of loss mitigation options or further review of your qualifications. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection. IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY. NOTICE TO APPOINT ATTORNEY FOR DEFENANT(S) IN MILITARY SERVICE TO UNKNOWN OR KNOWN DEFENDANTS THAT MAY BE IN THE MILITARY SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ALL BEING A CLASS DESIGNATED AS RICHARD ROE: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED that Plaintiff’s attorney has applied for the appointment of an attorney to represent you. If you fail to apply for the appointment of an attorney to represent you within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you Plaintiff’s appointment will be made absolute with no further action from Plaintiff.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Coffee on Stone, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 109 W. Stone Ave, Suite A1, Greenville SC 29609. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than June 24, 2018. 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

LEGAL NOTICE RATES ABC Notices $165 Summons, Notices, Foreclosures, etc. $1.20 per line 864.679.1205 | email: aharley@communityjournals.com


MADE IN USA SALE 40-50% OFF

Archbold Archbold, OH Charleston Forge Boone, NC Fairfield Chair Co. Lenoir, NC Hancock & Moore Hickory, NC Henkel-Harris Winchester, VA Hickory Chair Hickory, NC Jessica Charles Hickory, NC Lloyd-Flanders Menominee, MI MacKenzie Dow Huntington, WV Motioncraft Morganton, NC Nichols & Stone Manlius, NY Pearson Hickory, NC Precedent Newton, NC Sherrill Hickory, NC Stickley Manlius, NY/Archdale, NC Woodard Owosso, MI Yutzy Woodworking Millersburg, OH Zimmerman Chair Lebanon, PA

COMPLIMENTARY ASID DESIGN SERVICES (IN-STORE OR IN-HOME)

Browse our collections online at oldcolonyfurniture.com

|

3411 Augusta Road | Greenville, SC 29605 | 864-277-5330


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.