December 13, 2019

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, December 13, 2019 • Vol.22, No. 49

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

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Sex trafficking victims get assistance from local PAGE 6 nonprofit

3.24%60 VEHICLE LOAN AS LOW AS

APR*

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Apply online. *Annual Percentage Rate is based on a 60-month term. Minimum loan amount for this offer is $5,000. A 60-month loan with 3.24% APR would have monthly payments of $18.08 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 September 15 through December 31, 2019. ©2019, Greenville Federal Credit Union. All rights reserved. Member NCUA.

www.greenvillefcu.com


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GREENVILLE JOURNAL

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WITH, FOR, & ABOUT

GREENVILLE, SC PUBLISHER Mark B. Johnston E XECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Susan Schwartzkopf E XECUTIVE ASSISTANT Kristi Fortner

publication

EDITOR Claire Billingsley ASSOCIATE EDITOR Sherry Jackson WRITERS Georgia Gay, Vince Harris, Jessica Mullen Evan Peter Smith DESIGN Michael Allen, Laura Allshouse, Kim Collier DIGITAL CONTENT MANAGER John Olson

operations

VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS Holly Hardin DISTRIBUTION Marla Lockaby

sales

DIRECTOR OF S ALES Emily Yepes MANAGER OF BUSINESS DE VELOPMENT Donna Johnston REL ATIONSHIP MANAGER Meredith Rice ACCOUNT MANAGER Callie Michalak MARKE TING REPS Abby Guin, Heather Propp, Jessica Schwartz CLIENT SERVICES Anita Harley, Lizzie Campbell

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The holiday season can be the best time of the year to upgrade your vehicle, or your vehicle loan.

© 2019 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 now for as low as 3.24% APR for 60 months on new, pre-owned, and refinanced vehicles with less than 30,000 miles and less than two years old. This low 60-month rate will end December 31. Don’t forget, we can beat other lenders’ rates by a quarter percent+. Ask us about refinancing your current vehicle loan. Our community-based charter allows anyone who lives, works, worships, or attends school in Greenville County to join. Greenville

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Greenville

1501 Wade Hampton Blvd. Greenville, SC 29609

Greer

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*Annual Percentage Rate is based on a 60-month term. Minimum loan amount for this offer is $5,000. A 60-month loan with 3.24% APR would have monthly payments of $18.08 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 September 15 through December 31, 2019. ©2019, Greenville Federal Credit Union. All rights reserved. Member NCUA.

Teacher Recruitment Saturday, January 25

8 AM – 12:30 PM Southside High School 6630 Frontage Road, Greenville

Inspire | Support | Prepare

Information | https://www.greenville.k12.sc.us/ Employment/main.asp?titleid=certified Registration | https://bit.ly/2RikXbF GreenvilleJournal.com/Greenville-County-Schools 2

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13


FIRST LOOK THE BIG PICTURES

shop owner offers 8 Knitting classes for 'crafty' students

hacks, 20 Holiday tips and tricks

QUOTED

13

“We will be able to host artists-in-residence, guest instructors and art exhibits. The opportunities to create beautiful art and music together are endless. We're so thankful for such a generous gift.” -Andrea Smith, executive director, Senior Action

35

“It is a great story and captures the essence of the classic Dickens story where you'll laugh but also have some gut-wrenching moments.” -Carter Allen, four-year resident actor, Greenville Theatre

WORD OF THE WEEK

Daal:

(also spelled dal, dail, dhal, dahl) is a term used in the Indian subcontinent for dried, split pulses (legumes). The term is also used for various soups prepared from these pulses. Page 30

THE BIG NUMBERS

3,200

square feet of ice at Ice on Main. Read more facts and figures about Ice on Main in By the Numbers on Page 4.

848

victims of human trafficking identified in South Carolina in 2018. Read more about this epidemic in our feature story on Page 6.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

www.G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L .com DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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NEWS

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NEED TO KNOW

BY THE NUMBERS

ICE on MAIN KRISTINA HERNANDEZ Contributor

n photo by IRINA RICE

When the holiday season hits, downtown Greenville just breathes Christmas. The eye-catching decorations, romantic horse-drawn carriages and magical parade make it easy to be immersed in the special season. The only open-air ice rink in Greenville, Ice on Main, invites anyone to experience that magic of the holiday season with skating under strung lights, enjoying a cup of hot chocolate and taking memorable photographs with loved ones in the heart of downtown. While there is plenty of holiday spirit to go around at Ice on Main, we wanted to know everything else that makes this place so enjoyable and what will go into operating Greenville’s only open-air ice rink for two consecutive months.

1,038

skaters came to the opening weekend

$3 for hot chocolate at pink mama's

THE RINK IS

3,200

square feet

It takes 3 WEEKS to set up the rink

150 skaters can fit on the rink at once

skates are available for rental from children's size 9 to men's 13

the ice is

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

: 11am-10pm | Sun: 11am-8pm M-Th: 3-8pm | F: 3-10pm | Sat n St., Greenville Located next to City Hall at 206 S Mai

degrees

fahrenheit

skating prices:

$10/ADULT $8/CHILDREN 4

The rink is open a total of 66 DAYS for the season

ICE on MAIN

0-10 238

The rink is resurfaced 2-4 TIMES per night

8 skate aids are available

For more about Ice on Main visit GreenvilleJournal.com


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FEATURED

|

FROM THE COVER

safe

from

harm 23% of South Carolina human trafficking cases in 2018 were in Greenville County n story by KRISTINA HERNANDEZ photo from stock

A What we are seeing is that the traffickers themselves see these cities as saturated so they come to Greenville because opportunities are more plentiful.” -Zaina Greene, executive director, Switch

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

t 15 years old, Julie* was first trafficked. Her husband became her second trafficker and it wasn’t until he was sent to jail for drug charges and she ended up in a detention center in the Upstate that Julie was able to understand she had choices in the direction her life would take. According to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, trafficked is defined as; “the use of force, fraud, or coercion to obtain some type of labor or commercial sex act.” Through an employee at the detention center, Julie met with people from Switch, a local nonprofit that helps victims of human trafficking, and she was able to get out. Switch helped her leave the state and enter a long-term restoration home for human trafficking victims, where she is now on her way to starting a new life, having been empowered to make a better choice. Not all victims of trafficking look like Julie or have been conditioned by their captors to accept a life of being trafficked. As beautiful and desirable as Greenville is from the outside, there is an underbelly of trafficking that runs through the community, just like most major cities across America.

“Atlanta is the number one city in human trafficking in the country and Charlotte is in the top 10. What we are seeing is that the traffickers themselves see these cities as saturated so they come to Greenville because opportunities are more plentiful,” said Zaina Greene, the executive director of Switch and co-chair of the Upstate Human Trafficking Task Force. When Switch was founded in 2012, people just didn’t believe trafficking happened in Greenville. But as the group started pushing awareness of trafficking through programs in the community and schools, residents began to understand just how prevalent it was in town. “One of the more positive things for us was when the community started to see victims and call us and ask how to help. When that happened, there was a shift in the mindset,” Greene said. “We had a woman brought to our office who was first victimized at age 5 and now she was 22. It was a sobering moment for that person and agency. When you put a face to the issue, everything changes.” Trafficking in Greenville Greene’s observations on the community’s response to trafficking isn’t just anecdotal. Shared Hope International, a

global organization dedicated to ending human trafficking, releases state report cards every year, using a grading system to illustrate how well state laws respond to the crime of human trafficking, especially for children. In 2012, South Carolina received a “D,” indicating that laws were not as protective as they could be towards minors who were trafficked. In 2018, the state received a “B” in part because sentences for those convicted of trafficking doubled from 15 years to 30 years and the institution of mandatory training of law enforcement about trafficking. Switch representatives say there is more to do, however. In July, part of an international sex trafficking ring was busted in Greenville where commercial sex was being sold out of an apartment on Pelham Road. Women were being flown into Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport for two-week stints as prostitutes until police were tipped off and launched an investigation that led to arrests. Last year, 23% of new human trafficking cases in the state were opened in Greenville County, according to the South Carolina Human Trafficking Task Force.


FROM THE COVER “Human trafficking is a supply-anddemand industry so the more Greenville grows, it’s likely human trafficking will increase,” Greene said. “This is why awareness of human trafficking in our area is crucial.” Training & Awareness When Alex Garvey began his position in 2016 as the senior vice president of Mission at Bon Secours St. Francis Health System, he, like Greene, realized that few Greenville residents had any idea of the extent of human trafficking taking place in Upstate. Under his leadership, the Bon Secours Mission Department hosted its first human trafficking awareness and educational seminar in 2017, titled “In Our Backyard.” Through a media blitz, the seminar was able to raise significant awareness of human trafficking in Greenville and start the city on a path to combating trafficking and helping victims. In August, Bon Secours hosted its third such seminar. Attendees came from a variety of backgrounds, including health care, social services, law enforcement, education and business. In addition to the more than 1,000 people who attended in person, the livestream was viewed by more than 30,000 people from around the world. One of the outcomes of these seminars has been a clinical-training video, produced through a collaboration between Bon Secours and the South Carolina Hospital Association, that will be used in all South Carolina hospitals to train staff to recognize victims of trafficking.

1in3

Local Solutions Partnerships have been key to combating human trafficking in Greenville and raising awareness of what it looks like and how to help. The South Carolina Human Trafficking Task Force, run out of the state Attorney General’s office, is composed of dozens of groups that seek to end human trafficking, including Switch and Jasmine Road, a long-term residential program in the Greenville area where women who are victims of trafficking or reliance on drugs can find hope and healing in a safe place. The Junior League of Greenville has recently started to provide resources for the women that these two organizations serve such as clothing, shoes and accessories from the Junior League’s Nearly New Shop. The task force also heavily promotes the National Human Trafficking Hotline (888-373-7888 or text 233733) through billboards and flyers in hospitals, truck stops, businesses, bathrooms and airports. Additionally, they help train first responders, medical professionals and labor agencies to identify victims of human trafficking. But housing for victims of trafficking remains at the top of the list. “Our greatest need right now is immediate or temporary housing for victims,” Greene said. “The first thing you can do for a victim is to meet the need for a safe place for them to lay their head. Stabilization homes would make them more

successful, give them time to rest and stabilize and give them authority over their life — it’s an important key that’s missing that would set them up for success.” More than 140 women have come through the restoration program at Switch and over 200 others through the intervention program. The nonprofit holds a yearly gala as well as a Sweetheart Ball, which helps encourage the family unit and empowers young girls to know their worth. The groundwork has paid off in the community. “We’ve seen a drastic change in the community since we started, which is a huge success,” Greene said. “Our community now has recognized a need for an anti-trafficking organization.”

FEATURED

The first thing you can do for a victim is to meet the need for a safe place for them to lay their head.” -Zaina Greene, executive director, Switch

*Not her real name

23%

|

of South Carolina human trafficking cases in 2018 were in Greenville County Source: HumanTrafficking.scag.gov p.16

848

victims identified in South Carolina in 2018

Source: HumanTraffickingHotline.org

runaway youth are solicited by a trafficker within 48 HOURS

Source: Shared Hope International

the average age when children are forced into sex trafficking is

14to16

opened in South Carolina in 2018 156 cases Source: HumanTraffickingHotline.org

the cycle of exploitation supply-and-demand keeps this cycle going

Source: SharedHope.org

buyer fuels the market with money

trafficker

victim

exploits victims for money from buyers

bought & sold for profit - both boys & girls are victims

For more information on Switch and for more statistics, visit GreenvilleJournal.com

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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NEWS

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NEED TO KNOW

PROFILE

Knitting shop owner offers classes for ‘crafty’ students Danielle Ertter learned to knit in the first grade, when she was 6 years old. Little did she know that more than 30 years later, she would start her own knitting company, London Fog Stitchery. Originally from New York, Ertter moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, about two years ago where she began to teach knitting. “I was new to the area and didn’t know what to do,” Ertter said. “I walked into a yarn shop and asked if I could teach classes there.” The classes proved to be successful, but Ertter wasn’t fond of the Charlotte area so she moved to Greenville. “I had this idea of having my own space to teach knitting and bring a new kind of vibe to knitting in Greenville,” Ertter said. After she found her space, the new business came together quickly. London Fog Stitchery opened on Oct. 1, 2019, at 217 E. Stone Ave., Suite 38, Greenville. While there are other yarn stores in Greenville, Ertter said she tries to make her store different. “All of my yarn is hand dyed and the fibers are local to Greenville, like Old Soul Fiber,” she explained. She also uses Queen City Yarn, handdyers out of Charlotte.

All of my yarn is hand dyed and the fibers are local to Greenville, like Old Soul Fiber.” -Danielle Ertter, owner, London Fog Stitchery

Ertter offers classes, which she calls Knit Clinics. From 10 a.m.-noon on Saturdays, members and non-members can attend one of the sessions to get help with a project, fix a mistake or just to work on a new skill. “I also created packages for students, so if you wanted to go from beginner to advanced, there is a package for that,” Ertter said. “Or you can buy packages separately, like a beginner or intermediate package.” When going into a typical yarn store, they may offer classes, but they may not

LONDON FOG STITCHERY at a glance OPENED: October 1, 2019 LOCATED: 217 E. Stone Ave | Suite 38 | Greenville HOURS: Wed: 3-8pm | Fri: 12-6pm | Class times vary KNIT CLINICS WHEN: Every Saturday | 10am - Noon WHAT: Work on a new skill | Start a project | Fix a mistake COST: $10 for non-members TheLondonFogStitchery.com 8

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

n story by GEORGIA GAY | photos by JESSICA CHARLES PHOTOGRAPHY

be as customized. “At London Fog Stitchery, I can take you through the entire fiber journey,” Ertter said. While Ertter said she is passionate about helping others on their fiber journey, she finds that she also helps herself. Knitting has helped her through tough times and remains an outlet for her, she said. Less than two months after opening, Ertter is still discovering the demographics behind her customer base. She said she encourages everyone to attend a lesson. For non-members, there is a $10 charge to attend the Knit Clinics. London Fog Stitchery also holds Open Knit sessions on Wednesday nights and Friday afternoons. “Open Knit is a great opportunity to get to know our members, and to spend time with the London Fog Stitchery community,” Ertter said. “For our fiber

community members that are looking for something a little more structured, I also offer classes across all skill levels.” Ertter said she has designed classes for everyone from beginning knitters to advance knitters. There are classes for groups or one-on-one lessons. Materials needed for projects can be found right in the studio. London Fog Stitchery also has gift certificates and class packages available for purchase that make great gifts for any occasion, Ertter said.


Bank of America N.A. Member FDIC.

Equal Housing Lender. © 2019 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved.

Investing in communities and our teammates At Bank of America, we’re committed to supporting the social and economic progress of those we serve. That’s why we’re addressing complex societal challenges such as affordable housing and economic mobility, and reducing our collective carbon footprint. We’re also committed to being a great place to work and are investing in the success of our teammates at every level.

I am Stacy Brandon, Upstate South Carolina Market President. I’m proud of the commitment we’ve made to our teammates so they in turn are better able to serve your needs and help you achieve your goals. To read about our commitment to being a great place to work, go to bankofamerica.com/About.

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NEED TO KNOW

COMMUNITY

Opossum SOS is dedicated to caring for one species of local wildlife n story by GEORGIA GAY | photos by PEGGY AMBLER

Our heather, interlock Beacon Quarter Zips are made from cotton and smooth modal known to be one of the softest fibers. We hope to bring a medley of charm, dignity, and ease to men’s dressing. We do it by designing with deep attention to details, staying grounded in the classics and tethered to seasonal color stories. And we keep it sensible for any situation. We deliver it with ease through fine men’s retail partners, our own retail stores, and at CoastApparel.com. Don’t Stress, Just Coast.

324 S. Main St., Greenville | CoastApparel.com 10

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

The folks at Southern Opossum Sanctuary, or Opossum SOS, want to educate Upstate residents about the beneficial and misunderstood creatures. The S.C. nonprofit, which was founded by Connie Reese, works to rescue opossums and provide rehabilitation services for them. Over 12 people volunteer for the organization and respond to a number of calls. Greenville’s Peggy Ambler is one of the volunteers who primarily focuses on rehabilitating opossums. When she began, she would respond to opossum 911 calls. “If an opossum was hit or acting strange, like doing circles on the side of the road, the organization would message us with a 911 update and a location that we could respond to,” Ambler said. This was the extent of Ambler’s participation until Shelby, an injured opossum, came along. Ambler said she felt equipped to rehabilitate Shelby because of her career as a physical therapist. Ambler has been rehabilitating opossums for about six months, usually taking them into her home. “The goal is to rehabilitate them to the point where they can be released somewhere,” Ambler said. However, Shelby’s case was different and Ambler decided to keep her. Her injury kept her from being able to survive in the wild. While some may find it strange to have an opossum as a pet, Ambler said she couldn’t be happier. She said she loves to educate people on the perks of opossums and to dispute the misconceptions often heard about them.

Oppossums are carrion feeders and can eat up to 5,000 TICKS during one season

People think they carry rabies, and very seldom is that the case.” -Peggy Ambler, volunteer, Opossum SOS “I think people are afraid of them,” Ambler said. “Don’t get me wrong, they will eat an animal or attack an animal if they have to or feel threatened.” However, she said opossums are often the victims of myths created about them. “People think that they carry rabies, and very seldom is that the case,” she said. According to farmersalmanac.com, opossums are not considered a rabiesvector animal, meaning they don’t spread it. The reason foam is often found around their mouth is because of an involuntary reaction — like fainting. Another misconception is that opossums eat trash. While they may resort to that when food is scarce, opossums require a balanced diet in order to avoid metabolic bone disease, Ambler said. “MBD comes from an improper diet and the disease can’t be spread to other animals,” she said. “It is when the bones start to deteriorate because of a lack of proper nutrients, like calcium.” Opossums are very beneficial to the Upstate area because they are carrion feeders. An opossum can also eat 5,000 ticks in a season, according to the National Wildlife Federation. “We need them in our woods and in our community,” Ambler said. “I understand that people think they are a nuisance, but with all of the opossums I have rehabbed, they have never offered to bite me.”


NEED TO KNOW

|

NEWS

OPINION

We all need safe places to walk and ride a bike n story by FRANK MANSBACH AND MARY MCGOWAN photos provided by BIKE WALK GREENVILLE

We at Bike Walk Greenville recently posted a disturbing photo on social media showing the tire tracks of a reckless motorist driving directly through the center refuge island at the intersection of state Highway 253 and the Green Line of the Prisma Health Swamp Rabbit Trail system. GVLtoday shared the photo with its readers. The post received several hundred comments, and many said we need safer infrastructure: “let’s build a bridge.” Others commented that they have seen too many near misses at this location and thus would never attempt to cross by foot or by bike. While the safety hazard posed by this intersection is immediately apparent to all, we believe the community must better understand the challenges of getting safer infrastructure funded and built. What we have witnessed since we founded our nonprofit in 2013 is that limited budget allocation for safe biking and walking infrastructure and very long implementation timelines are preventing the completion of projects that would bring real, meaningful changes to our community. The Greenville County Recreation Department had investigated a bridge over Highway 253 and found that due to adjacent high-voltage power lines and the required length and height of the bridge, the cost would exceed $3 million, and no such public money was available. With more than 5 million users to date, the popular Swamp Rabbit Trail is a prime example of safe multimodal infrastructure, and the continued expansion of the SRT network will be a great thing for our community. The city of Greenville has dedicated a significant amount of hospitality tax money to the SRT network, including $4 million for bridges for the SRT extension from Cleveland Park to CU-ICAR. Greenville County has invested over $10 million to create and maintain the SRT system since 2009. The Greenville Pickens Area Transportation Study will dedicate 10% of all funding starting in 2024 for biking and walking projects. Its long-range transportation plan funds the SRT expansion to Mauldin in 2024-30, and the Simpsonville SRT is funded in 203140. That seems a very long way off to us. Unfortunately, the safety of the SRT does not translate to our local roads and

streets. The dangers to people on foot and on bike whose travels require braving roads that have been designed to move only motor vehicles is obvious. For example, the report Dangerous by Design 2019 documents nine pedestrian deaths (200817) within a mile of the Highway 253 and SRT intersection. We have concluded that bringing meaningful impact to the safety of people walking or biking along major thoroughfares is not realistic under the current budget and timeline limitations. The cost to retrofit our car-centric roads with modern people-centric design with wide sidewalks separated from traffic, street trees and protected bike lanes — “complete streets” — simply requires funding and urgency that is currently nonexistent. So, what can be done? Bike Walk Greenville will continue to advocate for increased government funding for safe biking and walking projects. We will also endeavor to accelerate timelines by looking for opportunities to develop new public-private partnerships. The Lakeview Link project that now connects Lakeview Middle School to the SRT had no projected timeline for constructed until we raised private funding to partner with the county. Individuals in our community also have their own roles in making their voices heard. All of our elected officials need to understand from their constituents that we have been designing our community around cars for too long. A forward-thinking investment in multimodal infrastructure will benefit Greenville for generations. Now is the time to start designing our community for people. Frank Mansbach is the executive director of Bike Walk Greenville and became an advocate after being hit on his bike by a distracted driver in 2010. Mary McGowan is a board member of Bike Walk Greenville who commutes by bike and witnesses too many distracted drivers.

As the winter season arrives, our Members continue to thrive indoors at a variety of holiday events, social gatherings and family visits, all while their safety and comfort are cared for.

Call Us Today • (864) 606-3055

Independent Living • Assisted Living Memory Care • Skilled Nursing • Rehab Greenville’s Premier Life Plan Community

10 Fountainview Terrace, Greenville, SC 29607 (864) 606-3055 • Cascades-Verdae.com DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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NEWS

NEED TO KNOW

COMMUNITY

MODEL TRAINS STATION PRESENTS THE

2019 Christmas Display Greenville County wins 2019 Culture of Health Prize

A family fun adventure • Trains of all sizes

n story by EVAN PETER SMITH | photo by JOHN OLSON

MODEL TRAINS STATION

Taylors Mill • 250 Mill St. Suite BL1250, Taylors, SC 864.605.7979

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The county of Greenville has received the 2019 Culture of Health Prize, which Visit web site for hours and information honors communities across the .• . United www.modeltrainsstation.com . . • States that are catalyzing and sustaining • • • . • . • • • positive change in the overall health of • its citizens. • • • • • • . Out of about 200 applicant communi• � ties, Greenville was selected as one of five• • • • • • • communities to receive the award, which includes $25,000 to go toward advancing its health-oriented goals as well as national promotion by the foundation. . • • • • . ... • . . . “Greenville County is engaging . • • •• •• • • •• • . • • • • • . • • •• • public • . • • around transportation, afford•• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • able housing and education to improve . . . • the community’s • health and well-being,” � � • • • • � • • • • WINNERS INCLUDED: • • • • • the award citation noted. • Gonzales, California Awarded each year by the Robert • Broward County, Florida • • • • • . . • .• . • . . • Wood Johnson Foundation in partner- • Sitka, Alaska • • • • • • ships with the University of Wisconsin • • • • • • • Lake County, Colorado • • • Population Health Institute, the prize is • Greenville County, South Carolina judged with six major factors in mind: • Defining health in the broadest posS Greenville County received the prize sible terms. D R A T C LE! • Committing to sustainable systems along with Broward County, Florida; GIF AILAB AV changes and policy-oriented long- Gonzales, California; Lake County, Colorado; and Sitka, Alaska. term solutions. “These communities have set them• Creating conditions that give everyone a fair and just opportunity to selves apart by recognizing that health is about opportunity,” said Robert Wood reach their best possible health. • Harnessing the collective power of Johnson Foundation CEO and president • • • WOODRUFF ROAD FOREST PARK SHOPPING CENTER leaders, partners and community Richard Besser, M.D. “It is connected 1601)4\loodruff Ste.Pleas· A/B aRd. 1601)4\loodruff Rd., Ste. A/B 1601)4\loodruff Rd., Ste. A/B Ste. 20 St. 20, Greenville g Dr., Ste.Woodruff Ste. 20 27 South Pleas· an.tij�g Dr.,Dr., an.tij� South n.tij�g Dr., 1601 Ste. A/B, Greenville • 27 South Pleas· • 2027Rd., 27 S.• Pleasantburg Gre,fr1ville Gre,fr1ville • 864-603-5550 Gre,fr1ville • 864-603-5550 Greenville �864;;;24.,2-4856 Greenville �864;;;24. ,2-4856 • 864-603-5550 Greenville �864;;;24.,2-4856 to every element of our lives — good members. , -��·.,-, -��·.,-, Mon-Sat: 9am-9pm/Sun: 11am-7pm • Mon-Sat: 9am-9pm/Sun: 11am-7pm • Mon-Sat: 9am-9pm/Sun: 11am-7pm • eMon-Sat: 9am-9pm;Sun: 1 lam��P-� eMon-Sat:-��·.,9am-9pm;Sun: 1 lam��P-� eMon-Sat: 9am-9pm;Sun: 1 lam��P-� 864.242.4856 • 864.603.5550 • • and making the most of schools, safe and affordable housing, • Securing • • • • • • C.N.H.P. Staff Certified• C.N.H.P. high-quality jobs that pay a fair wage • C.N.H.P. CertifiedCertified Staff • C.N.H.P. Staff Certified Staff available resources. ti"skin &•Body • ,•�Vitai:ins ,•� Holi!tic• Pet Cale skin &Su;pl�ments BodyPet ,•� Holi!tic• Pet & Cale Body •,•� Holi!tic• Pet Cale Vitai:ins -� Herbal Su;pl�ments -� Herbal Su;pl�ments Vitai:ins -� ,•�ti" Herbal ,•�ti"skin Measuring and sharing progress and and so much more.” Vitamins Herbal Supplements Skin & Body Holistic Care •• •• • • • • • results.• w•ww. go r�@ersn a.tu ra I l•i•f w•ww. e.com go r�@e • rsnw•ww. a.tu rago I l•i•fr�@e e.com rsn a.tu • ra I l•i•fe.com www.GarnersNaturalLife.com

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NEED TO KNOW

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NEWS

COMMUNITY

Senior Action purchases new building to expand service to local seniors n story by JESSICA MULLEN | rendering PROVIDED

Pain. Less.

Get robot-assisted joint replacement for faster recovery and less pain. As the first to bring robotic arm-assisted technology to Greenville, our hospital performs more joint replacements than anyone else in the state. That means our joint replacement team is here for you from education to recovery so you can get moving again.

Call 864-213-4958 to sign up for a FREE joint replacement seminar on Jan. 22. Local nonprofit Senior Action announced plans to expand services and make room for new members, following the purchase of a building that will double the size of its current headquarters. Set to open in summer 2020, the new space will have a Fine Arts Center with music, art and movement studios specifically for seniors, and a conference center that can seat up to 400 people for special events, thanks to a gift from Greenville Women Giving. “Art and music programs are among our most popular and consistently have a waiting list,” says Andrea Smith, executive director of Senior Action, the nonprofit organization that connects adults over the age of 55 to programs and services to help them stay healthy, active and engaged in their community. “The Fine Arts Center will feature soundproof

We will be able to host artists-in-residence, guest instructors and art exhibits. The opportunities to create beautiful art and music together are endless. We’re so thankful for such a generous gift.” -Andrea Smith, executive director, Senior Action

The current building is

15,000 SQ FT

bonsecours.com

The new building will be

32,000 SQ FT

rehearsal rooms, a pottery kiln and a dance space. We will be able to host artists-in-residence, guest instructors and art exhibits. The opportunities to create beautiful art and music together are endless. We’re so thankful for such a generous gift.” The building Senior Action has been housed in since 2007 is approximately 15,000 square feet. The new headquarters is less than two miles away, located at 3715 E. North St., and offers 32,000 square feet of space for programs and activities. “This new building gives us muchneeded space to grow,” Smith says. “We hope it will also increase our revenue stream so we can continue serving as many seniors as possible.” Senior Action serves nearly 5,000 seniors at eight locations throughout Greenville County, offering a variety of educational programs, fitness classes and social events, as well as access to services like medical transportation, lawn care, home-delivered meals and affordable housing.

Objective, Experienced and Committed Helping clients with the four cornerstones of wealth

The Poplin

financial strategies group of Wells Fargo Advisors 35 W. Court St., Ste. 100, Greenville, SC 29601 www.ikepoplin.com Investment and Insurance Products: NOT FDIC-Insured/NO Bank Guarantee/MAY lose value Wells Fargo Advisors is a trade name used by Wells Fargo Clearing Services, LLC, Member FINRA/SIPC

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

13


NEWS

|

NEED TO KNOW

NEWS BRIEFS

EDUCATION

UPSTATE AREA NEWS AND NOTES

Clemson and MIT team up in virtual reality n photos by EVAN PETER SMITH

Groundbreaking held for new affordable housing Sharing umbrellas in the soft rain, a crowd gathered together on Monday Dec. 9 for a groundbreaking ceremony on Stratford Street in the White Horse Road area. The ceremony kicked off construction on three affordably priced single-family homes, each featuring three bedrooms, two bathrooms and a two-car garage. The homes are slated to be on the market by the end of the first quarter of 2020, priced in the mid-$100,000 range and available for purchase by moderate to low-income individuals. The properties were acquired by the Neighborhood Housing Corporation of Greenville with the stated goal of providing new homeownership opportunities in the Greenville community. The Affordable Housing Fund from Greenville County is financing the construction of the homes.

Local family achieves dream with a new home for the holidays More than a year after leaving an uninhabitable rental unit where the landlord refused to repair critical issues in their home such as holes in the walls and ceilings, and mold, Charles and Julie Merritt and their two sons were gifted a new home for the holidays. Interfaith Hospitality Network and Clayton hosted a ribbon cutting on Thursday, Dec. 12 to celebrate the new home, located in Greer. Charles and Julie Merritt and their two sons, Jordan Merritt, 13, and Trevor Merritt, 6, entered the United Ministries Interfaith Hospitality Network program in 2018 and worked closely with IHN to overcome housing obstacles, improve their financial stability and ensure their children could continue accessing educational resources.

Prisma Health Children’s Hospital has 18,000-pound new state-ofthe-art NICU ambulance Prisma Health Children’s Hospital’s newest delivery — an 18,000-pound state-of-the-art neonatal intensive care ambulance — will soon start carrying the Upstate’s tiniest deliveries. Medical professionals, members former patients and families gathered Tuesday, Dec. 3, at Prisma Health Greenville Memorial Hospital to welcome the new ambulance. The new ambulance, which replaces an outdated one, features a super-sized patient compartment capable of transporting twins in separate incubators along with the specialty assessment and treatment equipment necessary to treat these babies.

READ MORE ONLINE www.GREENVILLEJOURNAL.com

SUBMIT YOUR PRESS RELEASE AT: www.GreenvilleJournal.com/submit 14

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

The scene is an automotive factory, a tries, with special focus on the photonics massive warehouse with vaulted ceilings, manufacturing industry moving forward. “This program is an innovative way to exposed steel girders and caution strips running along the cement floors. You equip the workforce of tomorrow with find yourself walking through this fac- the skills needed to succeed,” Johnson tory, observing the vehicle assembly line, said. “Our unique confluence of expertise and infrastructure will allow us to help perhaps pausing as a forklift glides past. It all seems so real – which is exactly provide industry with a deep, diverse pool of workers who are ready for jobs in the point. The virtual reality simulation of this photonics manufacturing.” Photonics manufacturing is as comfactory floor is one of 40 lesson “modules” being offered over the next three years by plex and technical as it sounds. At its a team of researchers at Clemson Univer- simplest, photonics involves the producsity in partnership with the Massachusetts tion of optical fiber and a wide range of Institute of Technology and the University devices that are critical to modern technology. Whether of Arizona. it’s lasers, CT scans What is a modThis program is an or the internet itule exactly? Conself, optical fiber is sider it a replace- innovative way to equip vital to the underment of the old the workforce of tomorrow lying functionality book-and-lecture of so much of toformat. Students with the skills needed to day’s digital world. learn through a succeed” combination of John Ballato, -Mark Johnson, director, Clemson University virtual reality, the Sirrine enCenter for Advanced Manufacturing dowed chair of opaugmented reality, videos and protical fiber at Clemgrams, many of which can feel a lot more son, said the demand will only increase like video games than lectures. as 5G wireless networks are installed, The factory simulation module, devel- which will carry the vast amounts of data oped by the Clemson University Center that enable new technologies like driverfor Workforce Development, gives stu- less vehicles for example. dents a first-hand lesson in spotting safe“You’ve got to put even more fiber up ty hazards in an advanced auto manufac- the poles, down the roads and into buildturing floor. ings,” Ballato said. “Some of these comThe goal of the modules, according to panies are setting up entirely new fiberMark Johnson, director of the Clemson fabrication facilities just for the coming University Center for Advanced Manufac- 5G expansion.” To learn more about the turing, is to support the workforce needs modules, check out Clemson’s Educateof a wide range of manufacturing indus- Workforce.com.


NEED TO KNOW

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NEWS

CAPTURED

GREENVILLE POINSETTIA CHRISTMAS PARADE 2019

n photos by BONFIRE VISUALS

It isn't Christmastime in Greenville until the Poinsettia Christmas Parade makes its way through downtown. This year's parade was held on Saturday, Dec. 7 and included 75 floats, 12 marching bands and, of course, Santa.

VIEW MORE PHOTOS ONLINE

WWW.GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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South State Wealth represents the collective wealth management departments and subsidiaries of South State Bank (Member FDIC). Investment products offered by South State Wealth are not FDIC insured, may lose value and are not guaranteed by a bank or other financial institution.

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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PLACES

and

HOME REAL ESTATE

The 1800s rendering of the Batesville Cotton Mill rendering courtesy of THE GREENVILLE COUNTY LIBRARY SYSTEM

William Bates house – the home of Greenville's textile pioneer story by KIMBERLY COLLIER

Thousands of people drive by the William Bates house every day without even realizing they are passing the property and home once owned by one of the most successful and influential textile manufacturers in South Carolina. Almost completely obscured from view by trees and bushes along Highway 14, the William Bates house, built in 1835 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, is a privately owned piece of Greenville’s rich history. The home itself is believed to be the only remaining structure associated with textile pioneer William Bates. A two-story, clapboard-sided home with a tin gabled roof and a foundation of granite and fieldstone piers, the home has survived the test of time. Renovations and updates have long since changed the interior of the structure, but some of the original details have been left intact. The home is flanked on both the front and rear by porches extending the length of the home, each of which is supported by nine simple columns.

William Bates, the textile pioneer

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

Batesville is built

Batesville is typically thought of as the first true textile plant in the county. Over the years it was enlarged several times and by 1840 Greenville County was producing $72,000 worth of cotton goods, primarily from the Batesville plant. William Bates had truly become one of the most successful mill owners in South Carolina. In 1850 Bates’ son-in-law, H.P. Hammett, joined Wil-

William Bates House - Modern Photograph Hammett to purchase Garrison Shoals, located on the Saluda River, with the plan of eventually building a cotton mill at the location. Several events would delay progress on construction of the plant at Garrison Shoals, however, including the ongoing Civil War; William Bates’s death in 1872; and the financial panic of 1873. But, through Hammett’s perseverance, Piedmont Manufacturing No. 1 was put into operation in 1876 with a water wheel providing power for 5,000 spindles and 112 looms. This marked the real beginning of the textile boom in Greenville County.

The historic house and barn, situated on approximately 10.88 acres, are located off Highway 14 – in what used to be the rural ‘outskirts’ of Greenville County.

William Bates, who was born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, began working in the textile industry at the age of 8. In 1819, he relocated to South Carolina primarily to work in the Weavers’ factory located in the Spartanburg District. Around 1830, Bates went to work at Lester’s factory on the Entree River and in 1833 he purchased 300 acres of land from Josiah Kilgore for $810.

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This purchase made way for the initial construction and founding of “Batesville,” a revolutionary textile mill.

liam Bates & Co. and helped with the continued expansion of the Batesville plant. By the time it was sold to Charleston-based Trenholm, Frazier & Co. in 1862, the plant was operating 3,000 spindles. The sale of the Batesville plant made way for Bates and

Piedmont Manufacturing gets its start

The opening of the Piedmont Manufacturing Co. and the subsequent success of the operations made way and created the path for other textile plants to be built in and around the Greenville area. After several additions, including two complete new plants (Piedmont Nos. 2 and 3), Piedmont Manufacturing was the largest mill in the state, boasting a total value of manufactured goods well over the million dollar mark.

The Batesville and Piedmont Mills are early predecessors of the extensive Greenville textile industry history and evolution.


EVERYTH I N G WE TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Ch e t a n d Be t h Smit h.com

AWESOME OUTDOOR LIVING – GRIFFITH FARM

18 GRIFFITH KNOLL WAY, GREER | 4 BEDS | 4.5 BATHS | MLS#1406711 | $614,900 Gorgeous custom built 4BR/4.5BA all brick home located in the popular Griffith Farm subdivision. A two-story Foyer welcomes you with transomed entrance and lantern style lighting that makes an excellent first impression along with beautiful oak hardwoods that flow throughout the main level. The Kitchen has new high-end stainless-steel appliances with five burner gas range, double ovens, convection microwave and side-by-side stainless refrigerator, custom cabinetry with granite counters, custom tile backsplash and Breakfast area. Friends and family will also enjoy gathering in the centrally located 2-story Great Room which is anchored by a gas fireplace with stacked stone surround. The outdoor areas are just as impressive with a fully fenced backyard that offers an inviting Rear Deck, patio and fabulous in-ground custom salt water pool.

NEW

STRATHMORE 100 Strathmore Drive, Greer $849,900 • Beds: 6 Baths: 4 | 1 • MLS#1404745

OUT

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BRAXTON RIDGE

PARKINS MILL

412 Parkins Mill Road, Greenville $266,400 • Beds: 3 Baths: 2 | 1 • MLS#1400542

RIVERPLACE

GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB

THE RAVINES AT SPRING MILL

155 Riverplace Unit 103, Greenville $324,900 • Beds: 1 Baths: 1 • MLS#1407000

139 Sylvan Way, Greenville $849,900 • Beds: 5 Baths: 4 • MLS#1401043

132 Grinders Circle, Greer $314,900 • Beds: 3 Baths: 3 • MLS#1404633

SOUTH TYGER FARM

IEW

CON

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POO

505 Rustic Outland Drive, Simpsonville $539,900 • Beds: 3 Baths: 2 | 1 • MLS#1398754

NT DOW

105 Tyger Farm Lane, Woodruff $724,900 • Beds: 3 Baths: 2 | 1 • MLS#1400610

NEW

CREEKLAND 110 Creekland Way, Taylors $239,900 • Beds: 4 Baths: 2 • MLS#1407398

VING

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864-458-SOLD ( 765 3 )

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PARIS MOUNTAIN

DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE

CHARLESTON WALK

ROPER MOUNTAIN ESTATES

980 Altamont Road, Greenville $949,900 • Beds: 4 Baths: 5 | 1 • MLS#1402086

11 Briar Street, Greenville $219,900 • Beds: 2 Baths: 1 • MLS#1400362

9 Stonewash Way, Greer $389,900 • Beds: 3 Baths: 4 | 1 • MLS#1401660

9 Sundew Court, Greenville $359,500 • Beds: 3 Baths: 2 | 1 • MLS#1402825

(864)458-SOLD (7653)

EVERYTH IN G WE TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD

ChetAndBethSmith.com


HOME

Creating Home For The Holidays! Holiday Decor, Gifts, Home Accents and Designer Finds

20% OFF ALL THROW PILLOWS, SOFAS & CHAIRS

and REAL ESTATE

THE LIST

Rural Greenville County These four homes provide a way to "get away from it all" but still be located close enough to everything you need.

750 CIRCLE DRIVE | $1,799,000 TRAVELERS REST: Surrounded by pastures, nature, and a pond, this home makes for the perfect family estate, equestrian farm, or bed and breakfast. The possibilities are endless.

VALID FRIDAY12/13 - MONDAY 12/16

6

4.5 MLS 1396504

HOLLY MAY 864.640.1959 Blackstream| Christie's International Real Estate LLC

553 MOUNTAIN CREEK CHURCH ROAD | $639,900 GREENVILLE: Spacious 4200 sq ft, renovated 1913 farmhouse is a beautiful blend of old and new. The minute you walk up the front stairs, across the front porch and through the front door you will feel as sense of welcome.

3021 Augusta St., Greenville

4

864-241-0100 • 4roomsgreenville.com

YOUR DESTINATION FOR THE FINEST FRESH WREATHS

3 MLS 1405578

HEATHER STEMANN 864.386.5961 Wilson Associates

from Simple Fraser Fir to Custom Mixed 1332 JONESVILLE ROAD $499,900 SIMPSONVILLE: Updated Cape Cod with large 2 car attached garage on 2.9 ac,inc home, out-building plus apple/fig trees. Hardwd flrs, granite, Master BR down. Several walk in attics. Screened porch. Workshop/barn (~100x40')w 1/2 ba.

3

2+2 MLS 1393982

KATHY CASSITY 864.242.6650 Berkshire Hathaway Home Services C Dan Joyner, REALTORS®

244 HEWITT ROAD | $445,000

20% OFF

ALL FRESH WREATHS & GARLANDS

FOUNTAIN INN: Beautifully renovated & upgraded 4BR/3BA ranch with office, bonus room & loft! Approx five secluded acres near downtown Simpsonville! Over 3300SF of gorgeous home! Granite, SS appliances, cherry hardwoods, tile, and much more. See the virtual tour online.

4 * Valid Friday, December 13 - Monday, December 16.

2249 Augusta Street, Greenville • Open 7 days a week www.RootsofGreenville.com • 864-241-0100 18

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

3 MLS 1406079

SUSAN MCMILLEN 864.238.5498 Allen Tate


Luxury Service at Every Price Point MOUNTAIN TOP LOG HOME

PRIVATE CASTLE

MOUNTAIN & LAKE LODGE

EQUESTRIAN & SMALL FARM FRIENDLY

0 MARIA LANE POLO RESERVE $1,250,000 MLS#1404060 Mauricio Perez 864.326.3434

43 EAGLE ROCK ROAD CLIFFS AT GLASSY $4,500,000 MLS#1396366 Holly May 864.640.1959

601 FAIRWINDS ROAD LANDRUM $1,695,000 MLS#1391387 Damian Hall 864.561.7942

223 E EARLE STREET GREENVILLE $698,000 MLS#1403740 Whitney Poitevint 757.620.7105 CUSTOM-BUILT

1 ROSE THORN COURT TRAVELERS REST $690,150 MLS#1402811 John “Clark” Kent 864.784.9918

58 ENOREE FARM WAY SILVER MEADOWS $439,900 MLS#1392294 Michael Mumma 864.238.2542

182 GRAYLYN DRIVE GRAYLYN $384,900 MLS#1404876 Debra Owensby 864.404.8295

915 RUTHERFORD ROAD GREENVILLE $365,000 MLS#1404722 Rex Galloway 864.630.1111 Kary Galloway 864.901.2204

102 RICHGLEN WAY RICHGLEN $269,900 MLS#1395457 Katrina Campbell 864.567.5188

4 SANDRIDGE COURT SIMPSONVILLE $219,500 MLS#1406133 Tal Cloud 864.447.8327

26 BROOKDALE AVENUE GREENVILLE $199,900 MLS#1373046 Shannon Donahoo 864.329.7345

5 TEAKEWOOD COVE LONG CREEK PLANTATION $195,000 MLS#1405219 A. Denise Franklin 864.313.1566

161 LIGON STREET PACOLET $174,900 MLS#1406437 Anna Workman 304.646.9515

151 SHACK HOLLOW ROAD SALEM $1,695,000 MLS#1402557 Kim Crowe 864.888.7053

230 TUXEDO LANE TUXEDO PARK $649,900 MLS#1404657 Carol Pyfrom 864.608.3312 NORTH MAIN BUNGALOW

BlackStreamInternational.com | 864-920-0303

203 SOUTHVIEW LEDGE ROAD CLIFFS AT GLASSY $545,000 MLS#1388385 Kennie Norris 864.608.0865


HOME

and REAL ESTATE

AROUND THE HOUSE LI SI TI NG

ALTA VISTA

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106 Lanneau Drive $439,500 3BR/2.5BA. Welcome Home! Conveniently located...few minutes walk to Cleveland Park, the Swamp Rabbit Trail and downtown! Large wrap around porch. Master suite offers a large walk-in closet and ample bathroom with separate shower and tub. Newer carpet and paint on the second level. Seller will entertain a short term rental.

Holiday hacks, tips and tricks to make your life a little easier this season DECORATING TIPS, TRICKS AND IDEAS Candy canes as placecard holders

Decorate your pumpkins for the holidays

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Turn small candy canes into placecard holders. Tie a trio of them with a ribbon, or even glue them together and you've got an instant holiday holder.

FOREST LAKE

WATERTON

107 Waterton Way • $239,500

3BR/2BA. Just what your clients have been waiting for! Near Woodruff road...minutes to anything your buyers need. Open flow floor plan, galley kitchen, plenty of storage space. 9 ft+ ceilings with vaulted ceilings in the great room, dining and master bedroom. Enjoy the 2 car garage and private patio perfect for outdoor entertaining.

4BR/2.5BA. Come see this lakeside home with welcoming living room, gas fireplace, hardwood floors, classic dining room, master suite with separate shower, dual sinks, walk-in closet for your wardrobe. Enjoy the cook-friendly kitchen with breakfast area and granite countertops. Large deck has water views. MLS 1399684

The tree chart

Did you know there were tree decorating standards? Below is the recommended number of lights, ornaments and garland per foot of tree.

20

For every 1 foot of tree height ornaments you will need:

9ft garland

100 lights

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78 Forest Lake Drive • $272,000

Save a few of those pumpkins to paint, stack and dress up. Just paint them white and stack them like a snowman (largest to smallest) decorate with a hat, scarf and buttons and instantly transform fall into winter.

SOUTHAMPTON

CLAREMONT

15 Calaverdi Court • $1,650,000

212 Chamblee Blvd. • $796,000

6BR/5BA/2HLFBA. Meticulously maintained. Oneof-a-kind open floor plan perfect for entertaining. Master suite feels like a retreat. The attention to detail is amazing. This home offers a salt water Pebble Tea pool with LED lighting.You must see this house to believe all the extras it has to offer.

5BR/4.5BA. Stunning basement home with 4 car garage will not last long! Fabulous floor plan! The main level provides formal dining, great room with double sided fireplace so you can enjoy it on the spacious screened porch, office/library, master suite and 2 other bedroom suites. Custom moldings and ceilings and hardwoods throughout. MLS 1398465

Make your tree even more magical

Use two different sizes of lights to make your tree even more magical.

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LD

Easy Advent calendar

Using a muffin tin - just cut out circles from magnetic sheets or use construction paper and tape to lay on top of them. Each day the muffin "cup" reveals a new treat.

Festive chandelier decorations CANEBRAKE

CHANTICLEER

200 Saratoga Drive • $234,999

139 W. Seven Oaks Drive • $694,900

3BR/2BR. Beautifully updated home with a full unfinished basement with 4 rooms plus a 2-car garage. The basement rooms have framing, accessible wiring and rough plumbing ready to finish out if you like or use it for storage and play area for kids and workshop for Dad! MLS 1393209

4BR/3BA. Newly renovated kitchen with great covered porch overlooking a gorgeous pool. This home boasts great flow with multiple spaces for entertaining. MLS 1385688

For all your real estate needs...

Turn your chandelier into a festive one with the addition of a few fun Christmas ornaments, just hang ornaments from the chandelier - using different ornament styles and colors you can make just about any type of decoration you are looking for.

The UN-tangled light problem solved

Ah... the untangle-able ball of Christmas lights; if there are a few broken lights on the string and its in a tangled mess then you may think you should just toss it and save yourself the frustration, right? Well, instead of wasting that string(s) of tangled light mess, just place it - as is - in an outdoor planter/bushes for a dramatic lighting effect.

Instant holiday dramatic lighting 864-201-8656 • susandodds.com 20

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

Have a broken umbrella? Spray paint the frame white and twist twinkling lights around the arms for an instant holiday lighting fixture.


HOME

Reflections of light dancing in the tree

and REAL ESTATE

Put tiny mirror ornaments inside your tree to reflect the light and give the illusion of double the lights you really have hanging on the tree.

GIFT WRAPPING, GIVING AND RECEIVING Need Christmas gift ideas?

Sometimes people are hard to buy for, especially the ones who will not tell you anything they might want or even say they just don't want anything at all. So, a little bit of 'reverse psychology' solves this age old problem. Just get them to guess three things that you got them for Christmas... yes, now you have three ideas of something they really want.

MELISSA MORRELL GREENVILLE’S AGENT 24/7 est. 2003

Happy Holidays!

Photos instead of gift tags

Oh, the gift tag issue, trying to think of a fun and creative way to avoid those little store bought tags? A great way to 'label' packages is to use your favorite photo of the gift recipient - just print and paste for instant package personalization.

NEW LISTING HIGHLAND CREEK 401 Draymoor Lane $269,900 | 4BR/2.5BA MLS#1407104

NEW LISTING HIGHLAND CREEK 104 Carrick Drive $344,000 | 4BR/2.5BA MLS# 1407386

Tagless presents

NEW PRICE

This is what happens at my house during a typical holiday season, I put a gift under the tree with the name label on it and almost immediately the intended recipient is shaking it, guessing what the present is and just generally messing around with the package. Tagless presents solved this problem immediately. Just wrap each person's gifts in varied paper styles and there’s no need to put name tags on the packages. On Christmas morning give each person a square of their gift wrap to let them know which gifts belong to them. This increases the suspense.

CLAREMONT

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Go ahead... shake those packages

$5000 BUYER INCENTIVE!

Another way to 'fool' a gift shaker - add a handful of jingle bells to each gift box before they’re wrapped these will disguise the sound of the gift inside.

CHANCELLORS PARK

Get our your pom-poms

1 Knightsbridge $589,900 | 5BR/5.5BA MLS#1399807

Use yarn pom poms on packages instead of bows. No worries about bows being stacked on each other and getting squished or destroyed, and honestly pompoms are cheaper to buy and easier to DIY than bows.

Put the jingle in Pringles

NEW ROOF!

Clean out used Pringles containers, cover them in festive paper and boom: easy and free Christmas cookie packaging. Looks professional and keeps cookies from crumbling as well.

CHARLESTON WALK 204 Grandmont Court $454,900 | 4BR/4BA MLS#1402918

Pre-open those impossible packages

Those impossible to open plastic packages, the ones that seem like they intend for you get out the circular saw to open, make Christmas morning a hassle for the kids (young and old) and a hassle for you as you try to figure out just how to open them. Go ahead and pre-open those packages as you wrap gifts. It may make the gift harder to wrap initially (or you could put everything in an easy to wrap box) but the extra effort before hand will make all the difference on Christmas morning.

864.918.1734 GreenvilleAgent247.com *SOURCE: C. Dan Joyner Internal Records, 1/1/2017-12/31/2017.

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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A Great Time to Make Your Move!

and REAL ESTATE

AROUND THE HOUSE

TIPS, TRICKS AND IDEAS IN, AROUND AND FROM THE KITCHEN Melted snowman water

Change that bottled water label from whatever it is to custom printed labels that say "Melted Snowman Water" and create an instant hit.

501 Siena Drive • Montebello • $799,000 4 BR/3 Full BA/1 Hlf BA

Master on Main! This custom built home has tons of updates including a new roof, new HVAC, all new updated kitchen appliances. MLS# 1401268

Condiment bottle for easy icing decorations

Decorating cookies for the holidays is always fun and festive, especially when the whole family gets involved. Want to make it easier to be precise and cleaner with that icing, then just use plastic condiment bottles to squeeze your way to perfection.

Whipped cream shapes

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Historic landmark in the center of everything offers a peaceful enclave within the city. MLS# 1389884

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Master on Main! Club house, pool, tennis, walking trails and more. 10 minutes from Hospital System and 15 minutes from downtown Greenville! MLS# 1396977

Make the hot chocolate more festive with shaped whipped cream toppings. Just freeze the whip cream on a baking sheet and use cookie cutters to cut out festive shapes.

Aroma on a budget

Clove and cinnamon boiling on the stove will make the whole house smell festive.

Outstanding Service, Excellent Results! GINGER RODGERS SHERMAN REALTOR®

GingerSherman.net | 864.313.8638 A Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, C. Dan Joyner, realtors® Top Producer! President’s Club Member – Top 4% in the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Network of 45,000 agents

TWICE THE EXPERIENCE. TWICE THE SERVICE. TWICE THE SATISFACTION! LET US HELP YOU WITH ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

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Fancy kid friendly drinks

Mix green sherbert and sprite to make the kids feel like they have "grown-up" drinks.

Festive drink stirrers

String cranberries onto drink stirrers and freeze them. Beautiful and practical.

GENERAL TIPS AND TRICKS FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON Snap those cards

All those picture cards and no idea what to do with them? Just snap a picture of them with your phone to use as contact photos or save them for the photo as a gift tag tip.

Customer service on aisle four

Having a hard time getting the help you need in a store this holiday season? Go over and stand by the biggest, most expensive TV (or other in store item) and look at the price tag, someone will be right over to help you.

The aroma of the holidays (and beyond)

Sprinkle essential oil on your air filter to scent the whole house: Pine essential oil will give the whole house that Christmas tree smell. After the holidays are over other oils such as vanilla, jasmine, orange, etc... will have the same effect.

Picking up a broken glass

CRASH! There goes the glass at a party or a Christmas ball off the tree - and little glass shards are everywhere. Instead of trying to sweep or vacuum, grab a slice of bread it will pick those small shards up in one sweep.

Batteries in cold storage

Sam Van Gieson

Jennifer Van Gieson

svangieson@cdanjoyner.com

jvangieson@cdanjoyner.com

864.630.4708

864.590.4441

Buying batteries in bulk size packages is typically more economical and the better way to purchase. But, what about battery life? Store your batteries in the refrigerator and the will keep their strength and full power longer. And, just as a reminder, check those toys before you wrap them to make sure to have the correct battery size and number so you can be prepared on Christmas morning.

HOLIDAY TRAVEL TIPS Be the hero

Want to be a hero at the airport during the holiday travel rush? Bring a power strip. You’ll in22

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

stantly


HOME make a bunch of new friends.

and REAL ESTATE

Power check

Before going on your holiday vacation, place a coin on a mug of ice in your freezer. When you get home - if the coin is in the ice, it means your freezer stopped working at one point and the food probably has gone bad.

No leaks

Worried about leaking toiletries in your bag? Put a piece of plastic wrap under the screw on lids for a double seal.

Emergency copies

Scan and email yourself a copy of your I.D and passport - plus other important travel documents (download them so they can be accessed offline too) in case of emergency.

Road trip

Going on a road trip with the kids? Secure a fitted sheet to the back seat of the car, it will catch any crumbs/mess. Simply whip away the sheet and the crumbs are gone.

Fresh out of the dryer luggage

Put a scented dryer sheet into your luggage to keep clothes smelling fresh, when you get home and unpack, store your luggage with a dryer sheet or two in each bag and the bags will be fresh and clean when you get ready to travel again.

ENTERTAINING AND HOLIDAY PARTIES The belly button rule

Holding your drink at belly button level at holiday parties or networking events will make you look more confident.

Addressing directions - send a picture

When sending guests directions to your house, don’t just send them the address; send a picture of your house too - this makes it super easy to find the right house.

Offer guests a candy store

Create a "candy store" on an entry or side table with lidded apothecary jars in various sizes. Fill them with colorful candies and put scoops and small baggies on the table. Use individually wrapped candy and enjoy the look all season long.

STORAGE SOLUTIONS AFTER THE HOLIDAYS Store ornaments in cups

Everyone wants to keep their ornaments organized, and it turns out all you need is a bin and a stack of plastic cups to make sure each ornament stays perfectly packed until next year.

DEFINE YOUR POTENTIAL. As a regionally accredited college, your credits can move with you. Transfer options to many four-year institutions give you the choice to determine which career and educational track is your best fit. Honors programs, academic support and small class sizes mean you’ll be able to gain the educational foundation you need for your future with confidence. Student projects, like the Student Scholar Showcase, give you a venue to feature your talents and semester’s work, while one-to-one tutoring helps you master your material.

LEARN MORE!

Visit www.myGTCexperience.com

Eggs-cellent storage

For your smallest ornaments, use egg cartons.

Get all hung up

Wrap Christmas lights around a hanger so they don’t get tangled in storage.

Do you have some great holiday tips, tricks and ideas?

Helping people love what they do for a living. www.gvltec.edu

Share them with us on Facebook and let us know your favorites. DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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HOME

and REAL ESTATE

AROUND THE HOUSE

l la, Fa lla la la la a la! a la la, la,

photo provided by THE POOLE FAMILY

story by KRISTINA HERNANDEZ photos PROVIDED

photo provided by MELANIE COBLENTZ

See more light display locations and photos at GreenvilleJournal.com

photo provided by CHRISTMAS ON KWIKAWAY

Poole’s Light Show

The Christmas House

Christmas On Kwikaway

LIGHTS: 33,000 ELECTRIC BILL: Additional $50 during the light shows ADDRESS: 6264 Highway 92, Enoree COST: Free

LIGHTS: About 100,000 ELECTRIC BILL: N/A ADDRESS: 360 Foster Road, Inman COST: Free but they accept donations

LIGHTS: 12,000 ELECTRIC BILL: No big increase since they use mostly LED lights ADDRESS: 6 Kwikaway Court, Simpsonville COST: Free

Each year, the Poole family adds more lights and displays to their home light show. This year they are adding curtain lights and flame throwers to their already massive display, as well as another setup in their neighbor’s yard dedicated to the family’s grandmother. They estimate about 4,000 people come through this season.

The tradition of The Christmas House was started in the 1970s and continues to amaze visitors to this day. The show is drive-through only and can accommodate big passenger vans. The show begins nightly starting at sundown. This year, one of the displays pays homage to the new film, “Frozen 2.”

Lights here are all synced to music and start up on Thanksgiving night and run through New Year’s Eve.

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Red Sky Trail Cliffs at Glassy $99,000 #1377415

Glen Hollow Cliffs Valley $10,500 #1331762

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High Ridge Parkway Cliffs at Mountain $125,000 #1396574 Membership Available

“Excellence, Pure and Simple” 864.270.4078 | wreed@cdanjoyner.com 24

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

Round Top Cliffs at Glassy $49,000 #1377421 Wild Ginger Cliffs at Glassy $280,000 #1379377

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into the holidays glide + ICE SKATE IN DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE SCHOOL BREAK (DEC. 21 - JAN. 5): CHRISTMAS EVE (DEC. 24): CHRISTMAS DAY (DEC. 25): NEW YEAR’S EVE (DEC. 31): NEW YEAR’S DAY(JAN. 1):

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HOME OPEN HOUSES

AREA OPEN HOUSES

PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR NOVEMBER 11-15 SUBDIVISION

2-4pm | Sunday, December 15

2-4pm | Sunday, December 15

22 PINCKNEY STREET - $992,000

204 GARDEN TRAIL - $879,000

HAMPTON-PINCKNEY HISTORIC: Own a piece of Greenville's history! This Circa 1910 Gallivan - Fewell home has been restored to a beautiful showpiece.

CHANTICLEER: Amazing views, amazing location, amazing home! Opportunities like this do not come around very often.

SPECS: 4| 3+2 | MLS 1403962 Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net

SPECS: 3| 3.5 | MLS 1405135 Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net

2-4pm | Sunday, December 15

2-4pm | Sunday, December 15

7 SEMINOLE DRIVE - $859,900

107 CHARDMORE COURT - $499,000

SUNSET HILLS: Exceptional craftsman home in the heart of the Augusta Road area- walking distance to Augusta Circle Elementary!

HIGHGROVE: Wonderful Five Forks location, Easy access to Michelin, BMW & 85. Beautiful brick home, move in ready. Cul-de-sac lot.

SPECS: 5| 4.5 | MLS 1399160 Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net

SPECS: 4| 3.5 | MLS 1402456 Jay Burriss, Coldwell Banker Caine 864.906.7440 | jburriss@cbcaine.com

ON THE MARKET

2-4pm | Sunday, December 15

16 TOMASSEE AVENUE - $329,000 AUGUSTA CIRCLE: Stunning bungalow in the Augusta Road area! Zoned for Augusta Circle Elementary and just a few minutes from Prisma Health. SPECS: 3| 1 | MLS 1402175 Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net

402 BROOKWOOD DRIVE - $750,000 AUGUSTA ROAD: 3BR 2.5BA+basement apt w/exterior entrance-could be 4th BR or rented; oversized/insulated 3-car garage (built 2017); 9+ft ceilings... SPECS: 3| 2.5 | MLS 1407181 Maggie Toler, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, C Dan Joyner Realtors® | 864.616.4280

As leaders of the Toates Team, we would like to Congratulate our other Top 1 Producers for November. — Tim & Della Toates

2 Chris Toates 864-360-6696

PRICE SELLER

$2,600,000 NORTHGATE $910,000 $719,000 JOHN L. BRUIN $489,000 PARKERS LANDING $480,000 MCDANIEL GREENE SOUTH $475,000 KENWOOD $445,000 TRAXLER PARK $434,990 COPPER CREEK $414,770 WEST FARM VILLAGE $385,137 RIVERSTONE $383,522 CHASTAIN GLEN $374,950 LOST RIVER $355,000 HEARTHSTONE AT RIVER SHOALS $341,990 $340,000 DUNEAN HEIGHTS $325,000 KATHERINES GARDEN $321,035 BRIAR OAKS $313,660 HIDDEN SPRINGS \ $310,000 THE OAKS AT FOWLER $309,900 $309,000 SUGAR CREEK $307,000 RIVERSTONE $305,960 $300,000 GLASSY MOUNTAIN $299,000 ROLLINGWOOD $295,000 AUTUMN TRACE $295,000 BROOKRIDGE HILLS $295,000 GLENVIEW PARK $289,985 LINCOLN PARK $284,200 ANNANDALE ESTATES $277,905 PELHAM SPRINGS $275,000 COTTAGES AT NEELY $275,000 SILVERLEAF $270,000 THE FARM AT SANDY SPRINGS $260,000 HOWARDS PARK $255,665 PARKSIDE AT LISMORE $250,000 GREEN VALLEY ESTATES $250,000 TOWNES AT BROOKWOOD II $248,710 THE LOFTS AT MILLS MILL $247,000 MARTINDALE $245,000 PLANTERS ROW $240,000 TANNER'S MILL $232,800 SUMMERWALK $230,000 $227,000 ORCHARD FARMS $227,000 KATHERINES GARDEN $220,901 THE HEIGHTS $220,000 OAKWOOD PLACE $217,900 CHURCHILL FALLS $216,500 STONEBRIDGE $215,000 INGLESIDE CONDO $215,000 AUGUSTA ACRES $210,000 HERITAGE POINT $208,757 FAIRVIEW LAKE $207,500 $205,000 $205,000 GULLIVER OAKS $204,900 SEVEN OAKS $204,700 BROOKWOOD COMMONS $195,145 DEL NORTE $188,000 CROSSWINDS $181,400 ORCHARD CREST $180,450 STANDING SPRINGS ESTATES $177,000 $175,000

3 Patrick Toates 864-360-0170

SOLD BUYER

GREENVILLE TECHNICAL CHA CROWLEY MARC (JTWROS) NIXON JOSEPH BRYANT (JTW PEIRICK BENJAMIN EDWARD ESSEX HOMES SOUTHEAST IN BEAVER ANTONIA L REVOCAB FRASIER KATHY STANTON JOSHUA A MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L NVR INC TOLL SOUTHEAST LP COMPAN MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH WADDELL JEFFERY MCELHANNON DOROTHY T APEX PROPERTY GROUP LLC DAN RYAN BUILDERS SOUTH NVR INC DENTLER ANGELA SPEIGHT D R HORTON INC MCKINNEY ROAD LAND TRUST HESTER JACOB A NVR INC LAWHORN ENTERPRISES LLC GRAHAM HENRY L BRUMBAUGH MARTHA KAREN T ROUNTREE NAKIA D BATES ERICK A DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL SK BUILDERS INC NVR INC CLARKE FAMILY TRUST HOLTSCHLAG FREDERICK L I ZWOLAK SANDRA ANGELA GARY MICHAEL JONATHAN D R HORTON-CROWN LLC NICHOLS BARBARA J MULLHOLLAND ROBERT J TRU BROOKWOOD TOWNES LLC PETRAKIS AMANDA M MILLER CHERYL Y PARRISH JOSEPH R JR LINEBERGER LINDA B BROWN DONALYN J RIVER STREET MANAGEMENT BAILEY DAWN L SK BUILDERS INC COON CLIFFORD W POLLACK GARY B PECAN GROVE PROPERTIES L INGMIRE SILVANA A (JTWRO PHILLIPS MARY JRC PROPERTIES LLC DAVENPORT BENJAMIN T HALE OLGA (JTWROS) BAIR ALICE ASHLEY FERGUSON KRISTI BOROFF D R HORTON INC SK BUILDERS INC NVR INC LANG ERNEST DALE SK BUILDERS INC ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION L TORRES LENYN E 410 S WASHINGTON LLC

ADDRESS

MO&COMPANY LLC KLINE MARY ANN PUCIATY ANDREW J (JTWROS GEISS KATIE CHERIE (JTWR COLVIN-RYDELL MEGAN (JTW FITZER MATTHEW BARLOW RE SIPPEL REBECCA ANN SHETTERLY SUZANNE N LUDWIGSEN HEATHER L (JTW FIELDS STACY B (JTWROS) MILLIGAN KIMBERLY (JTWRO PINTO DEBORAH A (JTWROS) BARDENHAGEN JOHN WILK CORY J COON CLIFFORD CASTIBLANCO DANIEL A SAE NESBITT WILLIAM A IRVIN KATHARINE SARAH WICHERS BRITTANY (JTWROS TEMPLE LISA M (JTWROS) T LYONS HENRY W (JTWROS) M HART ANDREW (JTWROS) HAR GEHRES THIAGO VERRI (JTW HANNA ROLA (JTWROS) JOHN SILVERS DORIS V (JTWROS) RISELL AMBER RAE (JTWROS SOMMER ASHLEY (JTWROS) S BARNETT TRIONNE (JTWROS) TAYLOR ALLISON G (JTWROS VANCE ALOHA W (JTWROS) V BURR RICHARD A (JTWROS) BAKER CATHERINE C HUGHES RALPH W JR (JTWRO CARBONE ALYSSA AUSTIN (J CALHOUN BELINDA (JTWROS) BROWN DAVID NARADA HENSELER JENNIFER DECLAN ARWEN B L (JTWROS FU XIAOYONG ZHU CINDY WE CORL JONATHAN (JTWROS) N BURTON BRIAN KNOWLTON ELIZABETH A (JT ROGERS EVELYN GRACE (JTW ELLEDGE JOHN RISE PROPERTIES INC MEADE KYLE A MILLER GLORIA (JTWROS) M SULLIVAN MARLON C (JTWRO OBRIEN KEVIN R (JTWROS) BATES DEBORAH ELLEN (JTW HUNTER SHEBA MCKINNEY BRENDA E RIVERA NATHANIEL JR MAYER JONATHAN L (JTWROS KING TERRI KAY MORRIS DEANNA L (JTWROS) SANSOUCY PAMELA SANDALL KEVIN L (JTWROS) SMITH ARLEN D (JTWROS) S GADULA HARI PRIYA (JTWRO CULBERTSON JACOB ROSS (J GRIFFIN DOROTHY ALBAYATI BASSIMA DRAZ ZI WATSON DONALD J WATSON E EPHESIANS THREE TWENTY R

4 Joy Joyner 864-270-0893

and REAL ESTATE

3510 AUGUSTA RD 1724 N MAIN ST 17 W TALLULAH DR 304 ABERDEEN DR 4 LAKEWAY PL 119 MCDANIEL GREENE 108 SHANNON LAKE CIR 130 MOUNT VISTA AVE 217 GORDANVALE ST 229 HOLSTEIN CT 313 SPOKANE DR 413 NEBBIOLO LN 309 LINDSTROM CT 810 GIVERNY CT 465 GRIFFIN RD 604 POWDERMILL DR 820 ABBERLY TRL 214 LIMBERLOCK WAY 208 HIDDEN SPRINGS LN 410 WOODLAND OAKS CT 805 MCKINNEY RD 100 SWEETWATER CT 101 MOHEGAN WAY 111 MANLY ST 817 DETYENS RD 4 GREEN HILL DR 501 KINGSMOOR DR 6119 BLACK BERRY LN 305 KELBY ST 19 OCTAVIA RD 651 BROOKFIELD PKWY STE 200 503 FALLING ROCK WAY 19 GLADES END LN 300 W SILVERLEAF ST 5 TAIGA CT 15 LAKE GROVE RD 603 MILLERVALE RD 525 MCELHANEY RD 700 ELMBROOK DR 330 RANDOLPH ST 101 MARTINDALE DR 327 MARSH CREEK DR 202 WHIXLEY LN 23 SUMMER GLEN DR 15049 DANUBE CIR 114 SHELBY CT 306 ANSEL WOODS LN 20 GRANITE LN 5315 HARBURY LN 100 WAR ADMIRAL WAY 7 HARTWELL DR 205 INGLESIDE WAY 11 PATTON DR 100 HERITAGE LN 407 FAIRVIEW LAKE WAY 204 THACKSTON ST 101 GULLIVER ST 101 LOVETT DR 212 CHERRYBARK LN 299 PARK RIDGE CIR 8 GAVINS POINT RD 210 EVERARD LN 200 DEVONFIELD DR 9 TWIN FALLS DR 511 S FLORIDA AVE

5

Candice Herndon 864-561-3403

Mills Stover 864-360-1283

PUT THE TOATES TEAM TO WORK FOR YOU!

THE TOATES TEAM • 1313 A. MILLER RD. • GREENVILLE, SC 29607 • 864-360-6600 • THETOATESTEAM.COM DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

25


UNWRAP THE WONDER

OF LIVE ENTERTAINMENT! THE LINCOLN CENTER THEATER PRODUCTION

JUNE 23-28

MAY 19-24

JANUARY 28 - FEBRUARY 2

THE MUSICAL PHENOMENON

T H E H I T B R O A D W AY M U S I C A L

JIMMY BUFFETT’S

APRIL 7-12

©Disney

FEBRUARY 12-23

MARCH 3-8

©

DECEMBER 31 - JANUARY 5

FOLLOW FOR UPDATES, GIVEAWAYS, AND MORE! @peacecenter

AUGUST 4 -9

THE PERFECT GIFT!


“SMART, SILLY AND CONVULSIVELY FUNNY!” - THE NEW YORK TIMES

SPAMILTON SPAM AN AMERICAN PARODY

DECEMBER 17 - JANUARY 5 OPENS TUESDAY!

created , written , and directed by

GERARD ALESSANDRINI

GUNTER THEATRE

2019-2020

UPCOMING EVENTS SPAMILTON: AN AMERICAN PARODY DECEMBER 17 - JANUARY 5 2019-2020 Broadway Series BEAUTIFUL – THE CAROLE KING MUSICAL DECEMBER 31 - JANUARY 5 An Evening With PATRICK DAVIS & HIS MIDNIGHT CHOIR JANUARY 9 An Evening With BILL ENGVALL JANUARY 10 National Geographic Live! OCEAN SOUL WITH BRIAN SKERRY JANUARY 13 An Evening with BRANFORD MARSALIS JANUARY 15 NFM WROCŁAW PHILHARMONIC JANUARY 19 An Evening with Edwin McCain, Maia Sharp, and JASON WHITE JANUARY 24 2019-2020 Broadway Series MY FAIR LADY JANUARY 28 - FEBRUARY 2

ENSEMBLE 4.1 FEBRUARY 3 AQUILA THEATRE IN GEORGE ORWELL’S 1984 FEBRUARY 4 JAMES GREGORY FEBRUARY 8 THIRD COAST PERCUSSION FEBRUARY 10 2019-2020 Broadway Series DISNEY’S ALADDIN FEBRUARY 12-23

ITZHAK PERLMAN, VIOLIN Rohan De Silva, Piano MARCH 12

HONG KONG BALLET’S ALICE (IN WONDERLAND) APRIL 21

AMERICA MARCH 17

Fine Arts Center JAZZ ALL STARS: JAZZ AND BEYOND APRIL 22

JOHN PIZZARELLI & CATHERINE RUSSELL A Tribute to Nat King Cole and the Ladies of Song MARCH 19 JAY LENO MARCH 20

CHE MALAMBO FEBRUARY 18

DAVID FOSTER: HITMAN TOUR With Special Guest Katharine McPhee MARCH 27

Fine Arts Center JAZZ ALL STARS: CONTEMPORARY JAZZ AND R&B FEBRUARY 26

2019-2020 Broadway Series ESCAPE TO MARGARITAVILLE APRIL 7-12

An Evening with Edwin McCain, Maia Sharp, and GARY BURR & GEORGIA MIDDLEMAN FEBRUARY 28 2019-2020 Broadway Series LES MISÉRABLES MARCH 3-8 SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS MARCH 9

RUSSIAN RENAISSANCE APRIL 14 BEN RECTOR The Old Friends Acoustic Tour APRIL 17 PATTI LABELLE APRIL 18

An Evening with Edwin McCain, Maia Sharp, and WILL KIMBROUGH APRIL 24 LAKE STREET DIVE APRIL 29 NATE BARGATZE MAY 2 2019-2020 Broadway Series SUMMER: THE DONNA SUMMER MUSICAL MAY 19-24 2019-2020 Broadway Series CATS JUNE 23-28 2019-2020 Broadway Series JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR AUGUST 4-9


ARTS & CULTURE

|

THINGS TO SEE & DO

WARMER

ARTS & CULTURE

IN THE

WINTER Pop-classical sensation Lindsey Stirling brings Christmas cheer to the Peace Center n story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo provided by PEACE CENTER

Some artists release Christmas albums or create holiday-themed shows because it’s profitable. Some record and perform Christmas songs as a way to fill time in between original albums. Lindsey Stirling is not one of those artists. For the best-selling, Billboard Music Award-winning violinist and singer-songwriter, Christmas music is very personal, and her 2017 release “Warmer In The Winter” is an expression of what it means to her. “Christmas is really important to me,” Stirling says. “Not only the traditions and the memories, but I’m a Christian. I believe in Jesus Christ. I was really excited to make this album, and it wasn’t just because ‘Silent Night’ was a really popular song. I grew up singing that song in church, and I love what it means.” The 13-song “Warmer In The Winter” album is a mix of traditional holiday standards like “Silent Night,” more lighthearted tunes like “Jingle Bell Rock,” and a few Stirling originals, all marked by Stirling’s stunning violin playing over fresh, contemporary electronic-pop backing tracks. It was also one of the most successful releases of Stirling’s career, becoming the best-selling new Christmas album of 2017 and topping multiple album charts over artists like Gwen Stefani and Sia. “That made me so happy,” Stirling says of the album’s reception. “It seemed to resonate with people on a really personal level. There were a lot of people expressing to me how much it meant to them, and that was the biggest thing. I feel like people of faith related to that album. You can feel things on that album that you can’t fake; you can’t fake that genuine spirituality.”

The “Warmer In The Winter” album has since spawned a successful tour of the same name, which will bring Stirling to the Peace Center in Greenville on Monday, Dec. 16. Stirling planned the show as more than just a straightforward performance; it’s closer to a Broadway musical, with costume changes, different stage sets and set pieces designed to take the audience on an admittedly sentimental journey. “I love the Christmas tour,” she says. “One of the goals I have is that I want people to go through a lot of emotions. I want people to laugh and have fun, but then I also hope that people will feel something special. I want people saying, ‘I laughed, I cried, I went through all the feels.’”

Lindsey Stirling – Warmer in the Winter Christmas Tour 2019 Monday, Dec. 16 | 7:30pm | $45-$95 PEACECENTER.ORG 28

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

My whole thing is, when you’ve got lots of people listening to you, you should give them something to believe in; something that matters.” -Lindsey Stirling, musician Stirling says she wants the audience to react emotionally to her show because she’s coming from an emotional place onstage. “I really do go out there and not only perform my heart out, but I really bare my soul up there,” she says. “My whole thing is, when you’ve got lots of people listening to you, you should give them something to believe in; something that matters. When I leave the stage, I want people to leave the show feeling inspired and uplifted. I pray for that every night. That’s my calling as an artist, a performer and a person, and this gives me a really appropriate setting to share those kinds of things.” There will no doubt be a lot of young people in the audience for Stirling’s show on Monday; since her self-titled debut al-

bum in 2012, she’s become an inspiration to many aspiring young musicians, both because of her classical-meets-pop musical approach and because of her unflinching honesty when discussing her struggles with depression and anorexia. “I think that’s the greatest compliment you could possibly get from someone is that you in some way inspired them to create art as well as seeking it out,” she says. “I have to tell you, I just love when I see these little kids out in the audience who are so excited, or when they tell me they play the violin now. I think it’s so important for people to have an outlet they feel they can create with. I get excited when I see that people give themselves permission to create and be creative.”


DASHING THROUGH THE SNOW

Phyllis Mills Wyeth: A Celebration

Jamie Wyeth, born 1946 Stealing Holly from the Irénées, 2016 Courtesy of The Phyllis and Jamie Wyeth Collection

ON VIEW THROUGH DECEMBER 29, 2019 From the late 1960s onward, Phyllis Mills Wyeth (1940 – 2019) was a muse to her husband, artist Jamie Wyeth. The paintings assembled in this traveling exhibition are a memorial tribute to her and reflect her vibrant spirit and love of nature, horses, and her ever-present dogs. Phyllis Wyeth was a noted philanthropist, conservationist, environmentalist, arts supporter, accomplished horsewoman, and a staunch advocate for the rights of those with disabilities. When you visit the GCMA, you’ll discover a carefully curated selection of American art, including the world’s largest public collection of watercolors by Andrew Wyeth, one of the world’s best institutional collections of works by our country’s most acclaimed living artist, Jasper Johns, and an unrivaled Southern Collection.

GCMA Journal Dashing.indd 1

Greenville County Museum of Art

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

admission free

11/26/19 4:03 PM


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Alcon Data on File clemsoneye.com 855-654-2020 ract surgery is the most common while also correcting moderate lev- Eye. “While other range-of-vision (Mar 10 2017).

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care!

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care!

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ems Clemson on Eye Eye among top Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract,among Medical top Clemson Eye among top e in five in U.S. U.S. to implant to fiveimplant innew U.S. to implantnew new nOptix PanOptix Trifocal Tr ifocal Lens Lens PanOptix Trifocal Lens amaking change its protein content, issurgery ofinvolves cataract involves the use first-of-its’-kind trifocal implantable a change in its protein content, is of cataract the usesurgery trifocal a change inimplantable its protein content, is of cataract involves the use first-of-its’-kind trifocal implantable itin even more important to new lens isfirst-of-its’-kind notstates felt or seen by the tances.¹ ² surgery vices. Its American Board-Certified most advanced focal lens. “The PanOptix is Dr.the the natural crystalline lens due to 1. AcrySof® IOL Directions 1. AcrySof® IQ IOLDr. Directions 1. AcrySof® IQ PanOptix® IOL Directions usually seen later in life and of a to femtosecond laser to seen fragment, lens. ” PanOptix® states Donald Glaser, one usually seen later in life and must of amust femtosecond laser fragment, lens.” and Dr.precise Donald Glaser, one usually later form in life and must of a femtosecond laser to fragment, lens.” states Donald Glaser,IQ onePanOptix® for Use. for Use. for Use. manage this condition effectively be treated surgically. fact, catasoften, and natural lens of the eye surgeons at Clemson patient. Clemson Eye, a leading eye care team of Ophthalmologists have soften, and remove our natural lens remove of the eyeour surgeons at Clemson be treated surgically. In fact,In catabe treated surgically. In fact, catasoften, and remove our natural lens of the eye surgeons at Clemson 2. Alcon Data on File. TDOC-0053542 2. Alcon first-of-its’-kind Data on File. TDOC-0053542 2. Alcon Data on File. TDOC-0053542 trifocal implantable a change in its protein content, is of cataract surgery involves the use while also moderate Eye. “While othermoderate range-of-vision ract ract while also correcting moderate lev-correcting Eye. “Whileract other range-of-vision surgery isis thethe most most common common (Marrange-of-vision 10 2017). also correcting lev- Eye. “While other surgery is thelevmost (Mar common 10 2017). while (Mar 10 2017). and surgery optimize vision for a growing Cataract surgery a fascinat- lens.” practice in the was also more than 100,000 cata1. AcrySof® IQ PanOptix® IOL Directions laserhas to fragment, states Dr. Upstate Donald Glaser, one performed usually seen later in life and must of a femtosecond forLASIK, Use. population. ing history that dates back to over among the first five in the U.S. to ract, and microsurgical probe treated surgically. In fact, cata- soften, and remove our natural lens of the eye surgeons at Clemson 2. Alcon Data on File. TDOC-0053542 A cataract, which is a clouding of a thousand years ago. Today, the implant the new PanOptix® tri- cedures. ract surgery is the most common while also correcting moderate lev- Eye. “While other range-of-vision (Mar 10 2017). the natural crystalline lens due to most advanced and precise form focal lens. “The PanOptix is the

The Upstate’s Source for Medical and Surgical Eye Care!

a change in its protein content, is usually seen later in life and must be treated surgically. In fact, cataract surgery is the most common

of cataract surgery involves the use first-of-its’-kind trifocal implantable IQ PanOptix® IOL Directions els of astigmatism. method els lensesof have astigmatism. been available with lenses have been availab lens.” states Dr. DonaldThis Glaser,method one 1. AcrySof® of a femtosecond laser toThis fragment, extendedled focus, not the PanOptix is extended focus, the PanO has led not only to better surgi- has only to better surgifor Use. els of astigmatism. This method lenses have been available with of(andthe eye surgeons at has Clemson soften, and cal remove natural lens outcomes,our but also to reduced cal expected outcomes, known from Europebut also to reduced expected (and known from E AlconsurgiData extended on File. TDOC-0053542 focus, the PanOptix is led not only to2.better need for glasses in many patients. need an experience) fortoglasses provide a strongin many an expected experience) to provide a cal patients. outcomes, but also to reduced (and known from Europewhile also correcting moderate levEye. “While other range-of-vision (Mar 10 2017). focus and an additional inter- in surgical technear focus and an additiona Improvements in surgical tech- near Improvements

need for glasses in many patients. an experience) to provide a strong nologies have also been paralleled nologies mediate focus without have detracting also been Improvements paralleled mediate focus det near focus and an additionalwithout interin surgical techby exciting improvements in intra- by from exciting the near vision. improvements This transin intrafrom the near vision. This nologies have also been paralleled mediate focus without detracting STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD EASTERLING, MD S. JACOB JR, vision MD JR, MD DONALD GLASER, MD BRIANtechnology. JOHNSON, STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD ADAM EASTERLING,ADAM MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MD DONALD GLASER, MDlens (IOL)BRIAN JOHNSON, MD ocular STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD EASTERLING, MD comS. JACOB MONTGOMERY DONALD GLASER, MD MD BRIAN JOHNSON,MONTGOMERY MD lates intoADAM vision for driving, lates into for drivin ocular technology. Hislens (IOL) Hisby exciting improvements in intrafromCataract, the near vision. This transMedical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, puter and reading atMedical near.” puter and at near.” torically, most patients have Medical had a torically, most patients have a Medical lates into visionreading for driving, comocular lens had (IOL) technology. HisStatistics from a monofocal pivotal study at a pivotal s standard monofocal IOL implanted. standard IOLtorically, implanted. puter and reading from at near.” most patients have had aStatistics This type of lens often eliminates This 12 investigation type sitesof in the lens U.S. oftenstandard eliminates 12 investigation in t Statistics from a pivotal studysites at monofocal IOL implanted. the need for glasses (especially the showed need that 99% of patients for would glasses This (especially showed that of patients type of lens often eliminates 12 investigation sites99% in the U.S. with laser technology) for so called with choose the laser lens again. technology) This trifofor so for called choose lenswould again. Th the need glasses (especially showed thatthe 99% of patients “distance” activities, such as driv- “distance” cal IOL technology isactivities, already in such as drivcal choose IOL technology is alre with laser technology) for so called the lens again. This trifoing or watching television; howev- ing use in or more than watching 70 countries. Alltelevision; howevusecalin than 70 countr “distance” activities, such as drivIOL more technology is already in er, patients still need glasses for er , patients still need ing glasses for howevboard-certified ophthalmologists board-certified or watching television; use in more than 70 countries. ophthalmo All activities at near. For this reason, activities at near reason, at Clemson Eye are offering the . For this Clemson Eye are offer er, patients still need glasses at for board-certified ophthalmologists newer lenses have been designed newer lenses have been designed PanOptix® trifocal lens including PanOptix® trifocal activities at near. For this reason, at Clemson Eye are offering the lens in over the past several years to im- over the several years to imJoseph Parisi, MD,past Brian Johnson, Joseph MD, Brian Jo newer lenses have been designed PanOptix®Parisi, trifocal lens including prove vision at all focal points: up prove atRidall focalover points: up MD, Donaldvision Glaser, MD, Keith Donald Glaser the past several years to MD, im- Joseph Parisi, MD, Brian Johnson,, MD, Ke close, far away, and everything in close, far away, inpoints:dle, dle, MD, Jay Montgomery, MD,and everything MD, Jay Montgomer prove focal up SMITH, MD, Donald MD, Keith RidJOSEPH PARISI, H. KEITH MD JUSTIN ROMAN, MD PERUMAL, ALISON MDGlaser, JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACSMD, FACS H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD MD JUSTIN ROMAN, MDRIDDLE BALAJI PERUMAL, MDBALAJI ALISON SMITH, MD Adam JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACS JR, H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MDvision at all JUSTIN ROMAN, MD BALAJI MDEastALISON SMITH, MD between. between. Justin Roman, MD PERUMAL, and Justin Roman, MD far away,Cornea, and everything in dle, MD, Jay Medical Montgomery, MD, and Ada Cataract, Cataract, Cornea, Cataract, LASIK Oculoplastics Pediatrics, Medical Cataract, LASIK,LASIK, Medical Medical Oculoplastics Cataract, Cornea, Medical Cornea, Cataract, Pediatrics, Medical Cataract, LASIK LASIK, Medical Medical Cataract, Cornea,close, Medical Cataract, LASIK Oculoplastics Cornea, Pediatrics, erling, MD. This new lens implant erling, MD. This new lens i between. Justin Roman, MD and Adam Eastcontinues a long tradition of Clemcontinues tradition o erling, MD. This a newlong lens implant Trifocal IOLs Trifocal IOLs son Eye bringing surgical innovason Eyea long bringing surgical continues tradition ofJR, ClemSTEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD ADAM EASTERLING, MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY MD DONALD GLASER, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, MD Recently, the first and only tion Recently, the first Trifocal and to the Upstate. tion IOLs only sonto Eye the bringingUpstate. surgical innovaFDA-Approved trifocal lensCataract, was PEDIATRICS FDA-Approved trifocal lens was Clemson EyeGENERAL serves more than Clemson serves mor Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Medical Cataract, Medical ADVANCED CORNEA GENERAL EYE CARE ADVANCED PEDIATRICS ADVANCED EYE CAREEYE CARE CORNEA EYE CARE CORNEAEYE CARE GENERAL CARE and only PEDIATRICS Recently, theEYE first tion to the Upstate.Eye launched in Exams the U.S. for • patients launched in the patients 200,000 in busi- U.S. for 200,000 has been Diabetic Eye Disease • Keratoconus • Keratoconus • has Eye Exams • Exams Amblyopia • •Diabetic Eye Disease • Eye Amblyopia Diabetic •Eye Disease patients, •been Keratoconus • Eye • Amblyopia FDA-Approved trifocal lens was Clemson patients, Eye serves more than Macular Degeneration• Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Corneal Crosslinking • 50 Contact Lens • AcryEye • •Macular Degeneration • Collagen Contact Lens Fittings Eye Exams • Macular • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact LensExams Fittings • Eye Exams undergoing cataract surgery. Acry- •Degeneration undergoing cataract surgery. ness for almost years, with 20 Fittings ness for almost 50 years, launched in the U.S. for patients 200,000 patients, has been in busiDisease Treatment • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • •Dry Dry Eye Eye • Corneal Disease Treatment• Corneal • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • Dry • Corneal Disease Treatment IOL is • Most Vision Plans Accepted doctors • Strabismus Sof® IQ PanOptix® IOL is an Eye in- Sof® PanOptix® an doctors in IQ 9 locations (Anderson, in 509years, locations (An nts new PanOptix Dr. Glaser, MDT implants rifocal new PanOptix Lens. Trifocal Lens. undergoingVISION cataractinsurgery. Acry- VISION nessCORRECTION for almost 20 Glaucoma • •Glaucoma • DONALD Glaucoma CORRECTION VISION CORRECTION STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD DRY EYEADAM EASTERLING, GLASER, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MDwith Greenville lens designed to provide traocular lens designed toIQ provide Clemson, Easley, Greenville, Clemson, Easley, DRY traocular EYEMD OCULOPLASTICS OCULOPLASTICS DRY EYE SimpOCULOPLASTICS Sof® PanOptix® IOL is an indoctors in 9 locations (Anderson, Dr. Glaser, MD implants new PanOptix Trifocal Lens. • LASIK/PRK • LASIK/PRK • LASIK/PRK CATARACT CATARACT SURGERYSURGERY CATARACT SURGERY •Medical Certified Dry vision Eye Testing Laboratory • clear Blepharoplasty • Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory • clear Blepharoplasty • Certifiedvision Dry Eye Testing Laboratory • Blepharoplasty you with for near, interyou with fortraocular near sonville, Clinton/Laurens, Newsonville, Clinton/Laurens, Medical Cataract, Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, •, interKamra Corneal Inlay • Kamra Corneal Inlay Corneal Inlay Medical lens designed Clemson, Easley, Greenville, SimpLipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic Surgery Bladeless Laser Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow • •Bladeless Laser Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic Surgery to provide • Kamra • Bladeless Laser Cataract Surgery e leading Cataracts cause are the leading cause surgery surgery performed performed in the world.• In in mediate, the• Cosmetic and world. far Surgery distances In without •mediate, and far berry, &Contact Saluda). Clemson Eye distances berry, & Saluda). Clemso • Implantable Contact Lenses Implantable Lenses • Implantable Contact Lenses Advanced Lenses you withwithout clear vision for near, intersonville, Clinton/Laurens, New• •Advanced TechnologyTechnology Lenses • Advanced Technology Lenses dness in ofthe reversible blindness in thefifteen fifteenminutes minutes or less, the or cloudy less, glasses the afterCataracts cataract cloudy surgery. glasses after cataract surgery. provides comprehensive medical provides comprehensive m are the leading cause surgery performed in the world. In mediate, and far distances without berry, & Saluda). Clemson Eye s life expectancy United States. As life expectancy lens lens is isremoved removed and is replaced and by isIt’s replaced called of“The Next-Generation by It’s called “The and surgical eye care, LASIK, the theNext-Generation surgical eye care, LAS reversible blindness in the fifteen minutes or less, cloudy glasses after cataract surgery. and provides comprehensive medical country, increases so in this country, so an artificial an artificial intraocular intraocular lens that Trifocal”lens because that is designed TKamra rifocal” it is to inlay, Kamra inlay, pediatrics, UniteditStates. As life to expectancy lenspediatrics, isbecause removedcornea, and is replaced by designed It’s called “The Next-Generation and surgical eye care, LASIK, the ce of cataracts, has the prevalence of cataracts, lastslasts for for aa lifetime. lifetime. Remarkably, Remarkably, this provide correction allthis disprovide correction three disoculo-plastics, aesthetics ser-| Greenville oculo-plastics, and Anderson |three Clemson || Saluda Clinton | Easley | Newberry | Saluda | Simpsonville Anderson | Clemson | Clinton | increases Easley |atthis Greenville | Newberry Simpsonville Anderson |at Clemson | Clinton | Easley Greenville | to Newberry | Saluda Simpsonville in country, so Trifocal” because it| is designed an |and artificial intraocular lens thatall Kamra inlay, |pediatrics, cornea, aesthet more important making it evento more important to tances.¹ ² hasby tances.¹ ² new new lens lens is is not felt not or seen felt by theor seen the vices. Its American Board-Certified vices. Its American the prevalence of cataracts, lasts for a lifetime. Remarkably, this 855-654-2020 provideclemsoneye.com correction at all three dis- oculo-plastics, and aesthetics ser- Board-C clemsoneye.com clemsoneye.com 855-654-2020 855-654-2020 dition effectively manage this condition effectively patient. patient. Clemson Eye, a leading care Clemson Eye, aseen leading eye care team team Ophthalmologists making it even eye more important toof Ophthalmologists ² new lens is not felthave or by the tances.¹ vices. Itsof American Board-Certified ion for a and growing optimize vision for a growing Cataract Cataract surgery surgery has a fascinathas practice a infascinatthe Upstate was alsoeffectively practice in100,000 the was performed more than cata-UpstateClemson performed more have than 100,00 manage this condition patient. Eye, also a leading eye care team of Ophthalmologists population. the and first five in the U.S. to among the first five in the U.S. to ing history ing history thatthat dates back dates to over among back to over ract, LASIK, and microsurgical proract, LASIK, and optimize vision for a growing Cataract surgery has a fascinat- practice in the Upstate was also performed more than 100,000 microsurgic cataa thousand ago. Today, the ago. implant Today, thepopulation. new PanOptix® the tri- implant the new trich is a clouding A cataract, which of is a clouding of a thousand yearsyears cedures. ing history in the U.S.cedures. to ract, LASIK, and microsurgical prothat dates back toPanOptix® over among the first five lens. “The PanOptix is is the focal “The PanOptix talline lens the natural due crystalline to lens most due to most advanced advanced and precise and form focal precise form a thousand years ago. Today, the implant theis newthe PanOptix® tri- cedures. A cataract, which a clouding of lens. first-of-its’-kind trifocal implantable first-of-its’-kind trifocal implantable protein content, a change in its protein is content, of is cataract of cataract surgery surgery involves the use involves the use the AcrySof® IQ PanOptix® IOL Direc the natural crystalline lens due to IQ PanOptix® most advanced and precise form focal lens. “The PanOptix is 1. 1. AcrySof® IOL Directions er in life usually andseen must later in life andof must a femtosecond of a femtosecond laser to fragment, laser lens.” to states fragment, Donald one lens. ” states Dr.involves Donald Glaser, trifocal one implantable aDr. change inGlaser, its protein content, of cataract surgery the use first-of-its’-kind for Use. is for Use. soften, and remove remove our natural lens our of the natural eye usually surgeons lens at Clemson of the eye surgeons at Clemson cally. In fact, be treated catasurgically. In fact, cata- soften,and 1. AcrySof® IQ PanOptix® Directions 2. Alcon Data onof File. TDOC-0053542 laser to fragment, 2. Alcon Data onIOL File. TDOC-0053542 seen later in life and must a femtosecond lens.” states Dr. Donald Glaser, one Use. 2017). Eye. “Whilebeother range-of-vision other the mostract common surgery is the most common while while also also correcting correcting moderate lev- moderate lev(Mar 10 2017). (Marfor10 soften, and remove our naturalrange-of-vision lens of the eye surgeons at Clemson treated surgically. InEye. fact, cata- “While

JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACS Cataract, LASIK, Medical

STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD Medical

BALAJI PERUMAL, MD Oculoplastics

H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD Cataract, Cornea, Medical

ADAM EASTERLING, MD Cataract, Medical

JUSTIN ROMAN, MD Cornea, Cataract, LASIK

ALISON SMITH, MD Pediatrics, Medical

DONALD GLASER, MD Cataract, Medical

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care!

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H. KEITH RIDDLEMD JR, MD JUSTIN ROMAN, MD BALAJIDONALD PERUMAL, MD GLASER, ALISON SMITH, MD MD AM EASTERLING,JOSEPH MDPARISI, MD, FACS S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, Cataract, MedicalCataract, Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical LASIK,Upstate’s Medical Upstate’s Cornea, Medical Cataract, LASIK Oculoplastics Pediatrics, MedicalSource The Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care! The Source for Medical &Cornea, Surgical The Upstate’s for Medical Surgical Eye Care! PEDIATRICS ADVANCED EYEEye CARE Care! CORNEA GENERAL& EYE CARE • Diabetic Eye Disease • Keratoconus • Eye Exams • Amblyopia • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Lens Fittings • Eye Exams • Macular Degeneration • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • Dry Eye • Corneal Disease Treatment • Glaucoma VISION CORRECTION DRY EYE OCULOPLASTICS • LASIK/PRK CATARACT SURGERY • Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory • Blepharoplasty • Kamra Corneal Inlay GENERAL EYE CARE • BladelessPEDIATRICS ADVANCED EYE CARE CORNEA • Cosmetic Surgery Laser Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow • Implantable Contact Lenses • Keratoconus • Eye Exams Amblyopia Lenses • Diabetic Eye Disease • Advanced• Technology

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care! • Macular Degeneration • Dry Eye • Glaucoma

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VISION CORRECTION DRY EYE OCULOPLASTICS JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACS H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD BALAJI PERUMAL, MD • LASIK/PRK “While other|range-of-vision ract surgery is the most common while also correcting moderate lev- Eye. Anderson | Clemson | Clinton | Easley Greenville | NewberryCornea, | Saluda | Simpsonville Cataract, LASIK, Medical Cataract, Medical Oculoplastics • Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory • Blepharoplasty • Kamra Corneal Inlay JUSTIN ROMAN, MD BALAJI PERUMAL, MD ALISON SMITH, MD • LipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic SurgeryH. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD clemsoneye.com 855-654-2020 • ImplantableMedical Contact Lenses Cataract, Cornea, Cornea, Cataract, LASIK Oculoplastics Pediatrics, Medical 2. Alcon Data on File. TDOC-0053542 (Mar 10 2017).

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The Upstate’s Source for Medical &

JOSEPH FACS BALAJI PERUMAL, KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD MD BALAJI PERUMAL, MD PARISI, MD,H. Cataract, LASIK, Medical Oculoplastics Cataract, Cornea, Medical Oculoplastics

H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD MD JUSTIN ROMAN, Cataract, Cornea, Medical

JUSTIN ROMAN, MD ALISON Cornea, Cataract, LASIK

ALISON SMITH, MD SMITH, MD Pediatrics, Medical Pediatrics, Medical

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care! ADVANCED EYE CARE CORNEA Cornea, Cataract, LASIK

The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care! • Diabetic Eye Disease • Keratoconus

GENERAL EY • Eye Exams ADVANCED EYE CARE CORNEA GENERAL EYE CARE PEDIATRICS Anderson | Clemson | Clinton | Easley | Greenville | Newberry | Saluda | Simpsonville • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Le • Macular Degeneration E. CIVILETTO, MD STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, ADAM MD EASTERLING, ADAM EASTERLING, MD MD DONALD GLASER, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MD DONALD GLASER, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, MD • Diabetic Eye Disease • Keratoconus • Eye Exams • Amblyopia Medical Medical Cataract, Medical Medical Cataract, Medical Cataract, Medical Medical Cataract, Glaucoma,GENERAL Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Medical ADVANCED EYECataract, CARE CORNEA EYE Cataract, CARE PEDIATRICS STEVEN E. CIVILETTO, MD ADAM EASTERLING, MD S. JACOB MONTGOMERY JR, MD DONALD GLASER, MD BRIAN JOHNSON, MD • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Lens •Fittings • Eye Exams • Macular Degeneration • Most Vision • Dry Eye Corneal Disease Treatment Medical Cataract,•Medical Cataract, Glaucoma, Medical Cataract, Medical Medical • Diabetic Eye Disease • Keratoconus Eye Exams • Cataract, Amblyopia • Corneal Disease Treatment • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Eye • Strabismus • Dry •EyeMacular Degeneration Glaucoma • Corneal• Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Lens Fittings Exams CORNEA GENERAL EYE CARE PEDIATRICS • Glaucoma DRY EYE OCULOPLAST VISION CORRECTION • Dry Eye Corneal Disease Treatment • Most Vision Plans • Strabismus DRY• EYE OCULOPLASTICS Accepted • Glaucoma • Amblyopia • Keratoconus • CATARACT Eye ExamsSURGERY • Blepharop • Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory • LASIK/PRK VISION CORRECTION CATARACT SURGERY • Certified • Blepharoplasty DRY EYE Dry Eye Testing Laboratory OCULOPLASTICS • Kamra Corneal Inlay • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Lens Fittings • Eye Exams • LASIK/PRK • Bladeless Laser Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic S CATARACT • Bladeless LaserSURGERY Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow Cosmetic Surgery • Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory •• Blepharoplasty • Implantable Contact Lenses • Kamra Corneal Inlay • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • Corneal Disease Treatment • Advanced Technology Lenses • Advanced Technology Lenses Surgery • Bladeless Laser Cataract • LipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic Surgery

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VISION CORRECTION DRY EYE OCULOPLASTICS • JUSTIN LASIK/PRK PARISI, MD, FACS RIDDLE JR, ALISON MDSMITH, MD ROMAN, MD JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACS BALAJI BALAJI PERUMAL, PERUMAL, MD MD H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD H. KEITH JUSTIN ROMAN, MD ALISON SMITH, MD • Certified Laboratory • Cataract, Blepharoplasty ct, LASIK, Medical Cornea, Medical Cornea, Cataract, LASIK Cataract, LASIK,Dry MedicalEye Testing Oculoplastics Oculoplastics Cataract, Cornea, Medical Cornea, Cataract, LASIK Pediatrics, Medical Pediatrics, Medical JOSEPH PARISI, MD, FACS H. KEITH RIDDLE JR, MD JUSTIN ROMAN, MD BALAJI PERUMAL, MD • ALISON SMITH, MD Kamra Corneal Inlay Cataract, LASIK, Medical Cataract, Cornea, Medical Cornea, Cataract, LASIK Oculoplastics Pediatrics, Medical • Anderson Cosmetic urgery • LipiView/LipiFlow |Surgery Clemson | Clinton | Easley | Greenville | Newberry | Saluda | Simpsonville • Implantable Lenses Anderson | Clemson Clinton | Easley |Surgical GreenvilleContact |Anderson Newberry || Saluda | Simpsonville Clemson | Clinton | Easle he Upstate’s The Upstate’s Source Source for Medical for & Surgical Medical Eye|Care! & Eye Care! es The Upstate’s Source for Medical & Surgical Eye Care! clemsoneye.com 855-654-2020 clemsoneye.com VANCED EYE CARE ADVANCED EYE CARE CORNEA CORNEA GENERAL EYE CARE 855-654-2020 PEDIATRICS GENERAL EYE CARE PEDIATRICS

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TARACT SURGERYCATARACT SURGERY Bladeless Laser Cataract • Bladeless Laser Surgery Cataract Surgery Advanced Technology • Advanced Lenses Technology Lenses

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• •Keratoconus Keratoconus • Eye Exams • Amblyopia • Eye Exams • Amblyopia CORNEA • •Corneal Corneal Collagen Crosslinking Collagen• Crosslinking • Contact Lens Fittings GENERAL EYE CARE • EyePEDIATRICS Exams Contact Lens Fittings ADVANCED• EYE EyeCARE Exams • Diabetic •EyeStrabismus Disease • Keratoconus • Eye Exams • Amblyopia • •Corneal Corneal Disease Treatment Disease T • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • reatment Most Vision Plans Accepted • Macular Degeneration • Corneal Collagen Crosslinking • Contact Lens Fittings • Eye Exams VISION CORRECTION VISION CORRECTION DRY DRY EYE EYE OCULOPLASTICS OCULOPLASTICS • Dry Eye • Corneal Disease Treatment • Most Vision Plans Accepted • Strabismus • LASIK/PRK • LASIK/PRK • Glaucoma • Blepharoplasty • •Certified Certified Dry Eye Testing Dry Laboratory Eye • TBlepharoplasty esting Laboratory VISION • Kamra CORRECTION Corneal Inlay • Kamra Corneal Inlay DRY EYE OCULOPLASTICS • Cosmetic Surgery • •LipiView/LipiFlow LipiView/LipiFlow• Cosmetic Surgery • LASIK/PRK • Implantable Contact Lenses Implantable Contact Lenses• Certified Dry Eye Testing Laboratory CATARACT •SURGERY • Blepharoplasty • Kamra Corneal Inlay • Bladeless Laser Cataract Surgery • LipiView/LipiFlow • Cosmetic Surgery • Implantable Contact Lenses • Advanced Technology Lenses

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VINCENT HARRIS Contributor

n photo by TRASHY BETTY PHOTOGRAPHY

For years, one of the coolest sights on the Upstate music scene was singer Little Lesley Swift standing atop her double bass, thumping out rockabilly rhythms with her band, The Bloodshots. It was a sight and a sound that got Swift noticed outside of our comfy South Carolina confines, and Little Lesley & The Bloodshots were able to supplement their local gigs by playing prestigious rockabilly festivals around the world. But for those who chose to take a deep dive into The Bloodshots’ most recent album, “Heartbeat,” it was clear that Swift was a fan of more than just double-time rhythms and stuttering guitar riffs. Midtempo ballads like “I’m Sorry” and “Spell My Name” revealed a promising honkytonk country singer-songwriter hiding beneath the stacked heels and big hair.

I don’t have any regrets. I think we still have enough of that rockabilly in us that we really feel part of a part of that community to some degree.” -Little Lesley Swift, musician

–GREENVILLE–

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From rockabilly raver to honky-tonk angel

And indeed, honky-tonk country is the musical direction Swift has headed in since “Heartbeat” came out. She recently revamped the Bloodshots, expanding it from a chopped-and-channeled guitar-bassdrums trio to a quartet that includes pedalsteel player (and occasional lead guitarist) Sean O’Shields, drummer Brian Kennedy and bassist Mark Dye, with Swift switching to rhythm guitar. She’s also written a set of fresh honky-tonk heartbreakers for her new band to perform. “I feel it’s definitely been a move in the right direction,” she says. “I don't have any regrets. I think we still have enough of that rockabilly in us that we really feel part of a part of that community to some degree. Honky-tonk is right on the border of rockabilly, right? So I haven't had to give that up entirely.” Swift says that she feels a lot more freedom as a songwriter now that she’s moved toward country.

“It's really challenged my songwriting ability,” she says, “and that’s one of the reasons why I wanted to get out of rockabilly. There tends to be a really set, formulaic structure in rockabilly, and I felt like there was a lot more room in honky-tonk; there's just more variety with the songwriting that I’ve really enjoyed.” Swift also decided that she needed a residency-style regular gig to hone her new band and new material before recording a new album early next year. That’s how “Honky Tonk Happy Hour,” a weekly Thursday night show at Greenville’s Velo Fellow, was born. “I just really wanted to pick up a residency to get us together every week and get us tight,” she says. “And so we started thinking about where we wanted to do it and everyone thought Velo Fellow would be a good choice. And I was trying to think of a good name, and I went with ‘Honky Tonk Happy Hour’ because we really want to create that honky-tonk vibe.” That vibe is an important part of the equation, and Swift says the Velo Fellow’s setup, which has the stage in a different room than the main bar/restaurant area, is ideal. “I want it to feel like if you’ve had a rough week, come enjoy some drinks and some music and kick back, you know?” she says. Swift and the new-look Bloodshots play three sets of rockin’ country every Thursday night, mixing her own new material with that of other honky-tonk-appropriate artists. “We do a mix of probably two-thirds original music and one-third covers,” she says. “We’ll do old Hank Williams songs, we throw in some Loretta Lynn, Patsy Cline or Dolly Parton, and we do Dwight Yoakam, too. It’s just old-school honky-tonk classics, and we do some obscure tracks that real aficionados will appreciate. It’s been really great.”


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

MUSIC

Straight Outta Taylors: Homegrown metal stars Nile return to the Upstate n story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo by F. DESMAELE/NUCLEAR BLAST RECORDS

Singer-songwriter and guitarist Karl Sanders has been leading the brutal Upstate metal band Nile for more than 25 years. The band has had a great deal of success, especially overseas; their technically dazzling, eardrum-punishing albums have hit the charts in Finland, Germany, Hungary, France just to name a few exotic locales. But the band’s ninth studio album, the just-released “Vile Nilotic Rites,” is a bit of a curveball. It sounds just as crisp, skillful and massively heavy as their other records, and it has already met with international success, hitting the charts in Germany, Scotland and Spain. Not bad for an album largely recorded in Sanders’ house just a few miles down the road. “We did the drums in Athens, Greece,” Sanders says, “but everything else was recorded in my home studio right here in Taylors.” That’s a notable first in Nile’s career, but it’s not the only one. This is the first album that Sanders has produced, and it’s the first one with the band’s new lineup featuring guitarist Brian Kingsland and bassist Brad Parris. Sanders says that taking the reins from Grammy-award-winning producer Neil Kernon, who worked on Nile’s last four records, was no easy task. “There are a lot of challenges when you try to take on a project like that,” he says. “There’s a responsibility to make sure the music’s right. There are a lot of long days. We wanted this to be a strong record, so we really put in extra time.” “There’s someone new who’s accountable now: me,” he says with a laugh. “I wouldn’t recommend it for the weak of heart.” Sanders says that 25 years ago, it would’ve been impossible for him to imagine recording a professional-sounding album in a home studio. Then again, he adds that it would’ve been impossible for him to imagine a lot of things.

NILE, WITH TERRORIZER » SATURDAY, DEC. 14 | 7:00PM » THE FIRMAMENT » $20 FIRMAMENTGVL.COM

It’s important to be taking care of people in our hometown.” -Karl Sanders, singer-songwriter, guitarist “Twenty-five years ago I couldn’t have envisioned a 25-year career,” he says. “It was a lot of hard days, busting our asses.” It helps when you have bandmates who are willing to help out, though, and Sanders says that Kingsland, Parris and longtime drummer George Kollias were more than up to the task. In fact, most of the “Vile Nilotic Rites” is a total group effort. “Brian wrote the music for four songs,” Sanders says, “so right out of the gate you have an instant collaboration. But it goes even deeper than that. There was a real willingness to trust each other and hear each other out.” Twenty-five years is a long time to do anything, but playing metal music around the world is an especially exhausting occupation. While other veteran bands have retired, Nile is still out there touring and recording, and Sanders says it’s at least partially because they concentrate on what’s right in front of them rather than the distant future. “We keep focused on the work,” he says. “We finished the record, now it’s time to tour, to meet fans, to shake hands and spread the gospel of this new Nile record. Our greater place in the grand scheme of thing isn’t up to us to decide. That’s up to the fans.” Nile will be spreading that gospel with a show at The Firmament in Greenville on Saturday, Dec. 14, and Sanders says that even after touring around the world, a hometown show is something special. “It’s important to be taking care of people in our hometown,” he says. “That’s where we’re from. It’s where our lives are; it’s where our friends and families are. You can’t argue with home.”

The state’s first applied bachelor’s program at a two-year institution began this fall at Greenville Technical College.

The Bachelor in Applied Science in Advanced Manufacturing Technology will prepare graduates to assume technical and managerial positions in the growing global manufacturing sector, which drives South Carolina’s economic strength. Technicians with plans to advance into higher-level technical and management positions can build on their associate degree, adding two more years of education at Greenville Tech’s very affordable rates. Learning will be active, engaging and hands-on. Keep up to date on the first-ever program in South Carolina. Visit www.gvltec.edu/advanced-manufacturing/.

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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ARTS & CULTURE

Thank you! During this Holiday Season, we would like to send out a heartfelt thank you to all who contributed to our 2019 Together We Can Food Drive

|

THINGS TO SEE & DO

THEATER

‘Spamilton’ an uproarious spoof of far more than ‘Hamilton’ n story by PAUL HYDE | photo © ROGER MASTROIANNI

With your help, we were able to raise and donate

11,200 pounds of non-perishable items to food banks in the communities we serve, across the Upstate and in York County,

proving Together We Can truly make a difference!

'SPAMILTON' With 10 convenient locations | No referral required In the greater Greenville area, call 864-233-5128

You saw “Hamilton.” Now here’s your chance to see the spoof. Actually, it’s not necessary to have caught the Tony Award-winning “Hamilton” to enjoy “Spamilton: An American Parody,” arriving at the Peace Center’s Gunter Theatre on Dec. 17 for a three-week run. The show takes humorous aim at several familiar Broadway shows, including “Phantom of the Opera,” “Book of Mormon,” “Avenue Q,” “Harry Potter” and “Hamilton.” Along the way, there’s an affectionate send-up of a few Broadway divas, including Liza Minnelli, Barbra Streisand and Bernadette Peters. And the Obamas — or at least their doppelgangers — make an appearance as well.

elitetherapycenters.com

THE HILL FAMILY

DONOR ADVISED FUNDS HELP MAKE GIVING SIMPLER AND MORE POWERFUL

To learn more about Donor Advised Funds, call us at (864) 331-8418 or visit cfgreenville.org. 34

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

Helpin g Families Suppor t Causes T hey Care A bout

It’s 72 minutes of nonstop singing, acting and dancing. We start and we don’t quit.” -Datus Puryear, actor “It’s just an awesome night at the theater,” said Datus Puryear, who plays Aaron Burr, among other characters, in “Spamilton.” The show was written by the master of musical spoof, Gerard Alessandrini, author of 25 editions of the parody “Forbidden Broadway.”

» DEC. 17-JAN. 5 | TIMES VARY » THE PEACE CENTER » $57 PEACECENTER.ORG The five-person “Spamilton” is performed in one fast-paced act. A pianist provides musical accompaniment. “It’s 72 minutes of nonstop singing, acting and dancing,” Puryear said, speaking on the phone from New York during a short break in the tour. “We start and we don’t quit.” “Spamilton” debuted off-Broadway in 2017 to rave reviews. The New York Times called it “smart, silly and convulsively funny.”

HERE TO LAUGH The national tour of “Spamilton” took to the road one year ago, with extended runs mostly in larger cities such as Boston and Phoenix. “It has been really well received,” Puryear said. “People come here to laugh. Many of the shows have been sold out. People will hang out to tell us how they loved this or that show we spoofed.” And while the show may lampoon “Hamilton,” at the heart of “Spamilton” is an abiding respect for that boundarybreaking musical. “Gerard (Alessandrini) created this show based on the incredible phenomenon called ‘Hamilton,’” Puryear said. “That’s really inspiring, and we hammer that point home.”


tickets

About the Artcard:

This year, give your family and friends a gift that will last all year long. For a donation of just $50 or more to the Metropolitan Arts Council, you will receive an ArtCard valid for buy-one-getone-free tickets for one time at each of the venues below. In just two uses this gift pays for itself, and using it is a great way to sample Greenville’s fabulous cultural amenities.

Centre Stage Greenville Chorale Greenville Theatre The Peace Center (select shows) Greenville Symphony Orchestra SC Children’s Theatre (MainStage shows) The Warehouse Theatre

Learn More:

(864) 467-3132 | greenvilleARTS.com/holiday-art-card @macARTScouncil | #macARTScouncil | #gvlARTS


ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

PAUL'S PICK

It’s not Christmas in Greenville until the big Chorale sings PAUL HYDE Contributor

n photo PROVIDED

2019 CHRISTMAS WITH THE CHORALE

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» TUESDAY, DEC. 17 | 7:30PM » FURMAN UNIVERSITY » $5-$35 PEACECENTER.ORG By many accounts, the Christmas season hasn’t really begun in Greenville until the big chorus sings. The Greenville Chorale’s annual yuletide concert, now in its 38th year, is surely one of the longest-standing Christmas traditions in the community. The 2019 “Christmas With the Chorale” performance takes place 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17 at Furman University’s McAlister Auditorium. The 150-voice Chorale, under the direction of Bingham Vick Jr., will offer holiday favorites such as arrangements of “Jingle, Bells,” “White Christmas” and “The First Noel” as well as Benjamin Britten’s classic “Ceremony of Carols.” “We all love this concert every year,” said Vick, the ensemble’s longtime conductor and music director. “The music is fun to sing, and the Chorale shares that fun with the audience. The festive atmosphere gives everyone a taste of joy like no other experience.” “It brings the community together.”

'GROWN-UP CHRISTMAS LIST’

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The Chorale will be joined by two other ensembles: the High Point Academy Honors Concert Choir, conducted by Chase McAbee, and the Herring Chamber Ensemble, conducted by Vick. The High Point choir will sing pieces by such composers as Kurt Bestor, Lari Goss and Dan Forrest. The chamber ensemble, for its part, will offer a choral arrangement of “Grown-Up Christmas List,” a song widely recorded by such singers as Amy Grant, Kelly Clarkson and Barbra Streisand. The group also will sing “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch.”

CHORALE PREMIERE The Chorale will present a premiere as well: Lanny Lanford’s “Come and Worship” was written in honor of his mother,

Mary Ellen Lanford, who also happens to be the Chorale’s longest-serving member, having performed with the group for 55 years. Guest conductor Merry Cox will lead the Chorale in “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” The soaring “First Noel” arrangement is by Greenville-based composer Dan Forrest. “It’s a beautiful setting,” Vick said. “Dan Forrest is well known, and his music is hard to beat.” The Chorale will also feature a couple of arrangements by the much-loved British composer John Rutter, including his setting of “Go, Tell It on the Mountain.” The music will be performed a cappella or with piano or harp accompaniment. Nancy Smith serves as pianist for the concert. Harpist John Allen Wickey joins the Chorale for “Ceremony of Carols.”

TRADITION WITHIN TRADITION Within the tradition of the Chorale’s annual concert, other traditions abide. The singalong of “The 12 Days of Christmas” has the audience hopping and bopping to the conductor’s directions: women sing, men sing, the balcony sings — and so on. “The first time I did this, in the back of my mind, I was thinking, ‘Will the audience participate?’ But they really get into this, every year.” Another Chorale tradition: Santa Claus is likely to make an appearance at the concert. These shared holiday experiences are important for a community, Vick said. “Especially in these days when there seems to be so much contention and dissension in our world, for us all to come together and celebrate the holiday spirit, and to join our voices in singing together, this is the experience we all need,” he said.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

THEATER

Greenville Theatre revives musical ‘A Christmas Carol’ after hiatus n story by GEORGIA GAY | show poster graphic by RYAN BRADBURN

After four years, the Greenville Theatre is bringing back a holiday classic. “A Christmas Carol” is set to run from Dec. 12-22. Based on the age-old tale by Charles Dickens, the theater has put a special twist on the show by making it a musical. None of the story has been changed, and the show still offers lessons about finding joy in life and helping one another. “This is what everyone wants to see,” said Latreshia Lilly, who plays the Ghost of Christmas Present. “It is that time of year that is bubbly and joyous, so it just makes sense to perform this play.” Carter Allen, a four-year resident actor, will play Scrooge. “This performance is

visually stunning and takes on a spooky, but fun side,” he said. The ghosts are particularly striking, with great effects being implemented in the show. “All of the ghosts are being played by women, too, which is great and a good thing to explore, especially during the current times,” Lilly said. Lilly said to expect catchy music in the performance with a great cast: “Just expect it to be a great show.” Allen said he hopes this musical gives the audience the opportunity to get away and relax during what can be a stressful time of year.

All of the ghosts are being played by women, too, which is great and a good thing to explore, especially during the current times.” -Latreshia Lilly, actress, Greenville Theatre

Below: Left: Carter Allen (Scrooge) JENNA CARNEY PHOTOGRAPHY Right: Latreshia Lilly (Ghost of Christmas Present) ESCOBAR PHOTOGRAPHY

'A CHRISTMAS CAROL'

“It is a great story and captures the essence of the classic Dickens story where you’ll laugh but also have some gutwrenching moments,” he said of the show. There will even be Christmas trees in the lobby, helping to establish the holiday mood.

» DEC. 12-22 | TIMES VARY » GREENVILLE THEATRE » $28 ADULTS | $20 YOUTH $27 SENIORS GREENVILLETHEATRE.ORG

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

DATE NIGHT

artscalendar December 13-19

CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM Steve Watson Trio Dec. 13 ~ 520-8807 METROPOLITAN ARTS COUNCIL Selections from Greenville Open Studios 2019 Through Dec. 13 ~ 467-3132 CAROLINA BALLET THEATRE The Nutcracker Dec. 13-14 ~ 467-3000 GREENVILLE BALLET The Nutcracker Dec. 13-14 ~ 234-5677 SC GOVERNOR’S SCHOOL Winter Dance Performance Dec. 14-15 ~ 467-3000 WITS END POETRY @ COFFEE UNDER GROUND Open Mic. & Poetry Slam Dec. 15 ~ 298-0494 THE WAREHOUSE THEATRE Every Brilliant Thing Through Dec. 15 ~ 235-6948 PEACE CENTER Lindsey Stirling Christmas Tour Dec. 16 ~ 467-3000 GREENVILLE CHORALE Christmas with the Chorale Dec. 17 ~ 467-3000 PEACE CENTER Spamilton Dec. 17-Jan. 5 ~ 467-3000 GREENVILLE THEATRE ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas Dec. 18-21 ~ 233-6238 PEACE CENTER Peace Interlude: NFM Wroclaw Philharmonic Dec. 19 ~ 467-3000 CENTRE STAGE A Holly Jolly Christmas Through Dec. 21 ~ 233-6733 GREENVILLE THEATRE A Christmas Carol Through Dec. 22 ~ 233-6238 GREENVILLE COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART Phyllis Mills Wyeth: A Celebration Through Dec. 29 ~ 271-7570 MCMILLAN PAZDAN SMITH ARCHITECTURE Works by Marty Epp-Carter Through Dec. 31 ~ 242-2033 METRO. ARTS COUNCIL @ CENTRE STAGE Works by Sherrill Hill Through Jan. 10 ~ 233-6733 CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM Trumpets, Weird & Wonderful Through Apr. 12 ~ 520-8807

www.GREENVILLEARTS.com 16 Augusta St. | 864.467.3132

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

Dinner&a Show

n DINNER story and photo by ARIEL TURNER

n A SHOW story by VINCENT HARRIS | photo PROVIDED

where we're EATING

You can walk from Aryana Afghan Cuisine to Alchemy Comedy Theatre

ARYANA AFGHAN CUISINE 210 E. COFFEE ST.

At the heart of improv is saying “yes” — conceptually to new experiences and practically to keep scenes moving. In keeping with that theme, this week’s dinner suggestion (in short walking distance to the show) may represent new cuisine and flavors for you — embrace it. Chef/owner Nelofar Mayar greets guests at her Afghani restaurant like it’s her home, and the dishes she sends out are just as comforting as if it were. For lunch at Aryana, you control only whether your plate is filled with meat or vegetarian dishes. The dinner menu, however, offers guests more choices, but say “yes” to dishes that may be new to you.

RECOMMENDED DISHES: Mantoo .......................................$5

Three dumplings filled with seasonal meat and onion, served with a sweet pea/carrot garnish and yogurt

Vegetarian Plate ......................$14

Choose three: Eggplant Burani, cauliflower, sweet potato burani, chickpeas, daal

FOR MORE THAN 20 YEARS, CHEF NELOFAR MAYAR HAS USED RECIPES Kabob Kofta .............................$18 PASSED DOWN FROM HER FAMILY TO CREATE HEALTHY MEALS

Ground meat and spices grilled on kabobs

what we're SEEING IMPROV GAMES

AT ALCHEMY COMEDY THEATER Greenville’s own Alchemy Comedy Theater offers up fresh, funny improv every week, and their “Improv All-Stars: Interactive, Clean Comedy Games” event on Saturday, Dec. 14 is like a home-grown version of the TV show “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” A group of the Upstate’s best improv performers take on a series of fun, family-friendly games like “Blind Line,” where audience-suggested lines have to be worked into a sketch, and “Panel Of Experts,” in which three improvisers have to become the leading authorities on an obscure and unusual subject on a moment’s notice. It’s a clean, laugh-filled evening watching these skilled performers walking on a comedic tightrope before your very eyes.

ALCHEMY WORKS TO FOSTER DIVERSITY, EQUITY AND INCLUSION, LEADING TO THE CREATION OF THEIR DIVERSITY FELLOWSHIP

IMPROV ALL-STARS » SATURDAY, DEC. 14 | 7:30PM » ALCHEMY COMEDY THEATER » 1 E. COFFEE ST | GREENVILLE » $10 ALCHEMYCOMEDY.COM


THINGS TO SEE & DO

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ARTS & CULTURE

EAT & DRINK

Choice cuts for Christmas: A butcher shop’s holiday picks On cooking duty for Christmas this year? Don’t fret. We stopped by Revival Butchery in the Village of West Greenville, where master butcher Jeremy Webb schooled us on the best cuts of meat for that all-important Christmas dinner. With five kids of his own under the age of 8, Webb knows the stress that comes with preparing the family’s holiday dinner. He also knows his meats, having worked in the butchering business since he was 16 years old. In 2018, inspired by the classic family-run butcheries he experienced during his travels

in France, he started Revival Butchery on Pendleton Street, where he fuses old world techniques with modern creativity. Sure, he had to sell his classic ’71 Ford pickup to pay for the massive meat freezer in which his cuts are now on display, but in his words, “Oh man, was it worth it.” Here are Webb’s can’t-lose picks for Christmas dinner.

ON THE FANCIER SIDE PRIME RIB ROAST Elegant and crowd-pleasing, a classic French-cut (meaning the bones are exposed) prime rib roast is a sure bet. Webb said the prime rib roast pairs great with all sorts of vegetables and perhaps a nice red wine sauce. Going with the French cut means you’ll have a few servings of gourmet ribs as well, perfect for finger food. STUFFED TENDERLOIN The ultimate country club dish, a fine cut of tenderloin will make your family feel like a bunch of aristocrats for the

n story by EVAN PETER SMITH

night — perfect for when your judgmental in-laws are in town. Webb said the meat will be so tender, it won’t really matter what seasoning or vegetables you pack inside it. The result will be restaurantquality regardless.

BUDGET-FRIENDLY LAMB SHANKS Webb said this is the most underrated part of the lamb, and provides a surprisingly rich flavor. The shanks will also be a cheaper option than lamb chops. Simply season to your heart’s desire and slow cook the meat in a crock pot or the oven. You’ll be left with meat so tender it falls off the bone. CROWN PORK ROAST The most carnivorous-looking dish you can find, the aptly named crown pork roast appears super fancy but really isn’t. Essentially, it’s the fancy version of pork ribs. And, Webb said, it’s great for picky eaters and foodies alike.

TAKE A RISK PHEASANT Your grandparents may have fond memories of bringing home pheasant to cook for Sunday dinner, but for the modern eaters, this tasty bird is somewhat less understood. Webb said a pheasant can be roasted just like a whole chicken, and is best served with roasted veggies. Just be sure to soak the bird in a brine overnight before roasting to keep it nice and juicy. REVIVAL BUTCHERY: 1286 Pendleton St, Greenville

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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ARTS & CULTURE

ANNOUNCES the

S

AN ANNUAL CELEBRATION OF UPSTATE RECORDING ARTISTS

CALL FOR ENTRIES

?

BAND SOLO ARTIST SONGWRITER PRODUCER SOUND ENGINEER PHOTOGRAPHER VID VIDEOGRAPHER ALBUM ART DESIGNER upstatemusicawards.com FANS CAN NOMINATE TOO!

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

THINGS TO SEE & DO

EAT & DRINK

LOCAL. ORIGINAL. ABOUT TIME.

ARE YOU A

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Molly and Myles Ice Cream dips into local, national ice cream scene

Tucked away next to the Regal Cherrydale movie theater is a quirky ice cream shop serving up ice cream cones made out of cereals such as Cinnamon Toast Crunch and Captain Crunch. Molly and Myles Ice Cream has been serving Greenville since August 2018, with plans to open a second store where The Donut Experiment Greenville was previously. Steve and Nicole O’Brien are the owners of the shop, and Nicole O’Brien is the mastermind behind the crazy concoctions. The O’Brien’s children, Molly and Myles, designed the shop. The O’Brien family is originally from Chicago, where Steve O’Brien has an

We are always keeping it fresh and interesting.” -Steve O'Brien, owner, Molly and Myles Ice Cream award-winning burger restaurant called Burger Belly, which has been featured on TV and in print for Food Network. The restaurant can also be found at or near the top of many best burger lists in America. When it comes to ice cream though, the children are in charge. “The store was designed by children, for children,” Steve O’Brien said. Steve O’Brien says there is no adult supervision at all, allowing his children the artistic freedom to make the shop their own. “My daughter wanted to have fidget spinners in the store, so there are 700 fidget spinners throughout the entire space where kids can play with them,” Steve O’Brien said. Since its opening, Molly and Myles Ice Cream shop has already been awarded


THINGS TO SEE & DO

“25 Places Every Cereal-Lover Must Eat At Before They Die” by BuzzFeed because of their ice cream cones. It has also been recognized as one of the best ice cream shops in America by NBC’s “The Today Show.” O’Brien said the reason the shop was selected was because it isn’t just an ice cream shop, but an "amazing experience shop." The cones are homemade and the shop uses four to five dairies at any given time. “We’re always changing them out seasonally and we curate our ice cream based on the flavors that our customers are asking for,” Steve O’Brien said. Steve O’Brien says that while eating at Molly and Myles Ice Cream, customers will never experience ice cream fatigue. “We are always keeping it fresh and interesting.”

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ARTS & CULTURE

FIND YOUR FIT. Molly and Myles Ice Cream has been selected for national lists including Buzzfeed's '25 PLACES EVERY CEREAL-LOVER MUST EAT BEFORE THEY DIE' and The Today Show's 'BEST ICE CREAM SHOPS IN AMERICA'

MOLLY AND MYLES ICE CREAM WAS FOUNDED ON THE VALUES:

With 100+ programs, we have something for you! Did you know that Greenville Tech graduates earn more than 40% higher annual incomes than those with just high school diplomas?*

START TODAY! photo by IRINA RICE

Visit www.myGTCexperience.com *

Source: GTC Economic Impact Report (www.gvltec.edu/roi)

Be WEIRD and Be YOURSELF Be GENEROUS Be KIND to People and the Earth Be DARING Be AMAZING at ALL YOU TRY TO DO M-TH: 3-9pm | Fri: 3-10pm Sat: Noon-10pm | Sun: Noon-9pm 3225 N Pleasantburg Dr | Greenville

Helping people love what they do for a living. www.gvltec.edu

gluten-free & dairY-free options available DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

LITERATURE

New book offers step-by-step plan to be bolder and get out of "rock middle" n story by JOHN JETER | photo PROVIDED

Sitting with Sallie Holder in one of Greenville’s hip java joints, you don’t see the kid who worked a lemonade stand, went on to make and sell her own jewelry and went on to become a hotshot lawyer with a six-figure income. You also don’t see a recovering alcoholic, a life coach. “We all know looks can be deceiving. While smiling and confident on the exterior, Sallie had a secret: she was actually miserable living the life she’d chosen,” says the blurb for her upcoming book, “Hitting Rock Middle,” set to release in January 2020. Holder was 14 when she started drinking. After graduating in 2001 with a degree in human and organizational development from Vanderbilt, she went on to earn her law degree from the University of South Carolina, then joined a global labor and

employment law firm. She’s worked with companies such as FedEx and Michelin. In 2008, she won the Greenville Chamber’s Young Professional of the Year Award. A hyper-achiever by 30, she was successful … practicing misery—at least, until she stepped away from a conference to take a call from a client. He screamed at her about a bill. She had enough. That was six years ago. “When you don’t listen to the internal markers, there’s a huge downward spiral,” she says. “So I ended up using alcohol to numb myself.” She’d hit bottom. Then crawled back to “rock middle.” “There’s no other term that I know of that identifies that middle, frustrating place where I just don’t love what I do,” she says.

I’m going to be so bold and say I’m authentic. I’m honest. I’ll share every single bit of my ups and downs and everything I’ve learned along the way.”

“When you’re a highly driven person and you’re not paying attention to what fulfills you at all and that you’re going through life checking the external boxes of what other people define as success, which is what I did, you’ll end up in a place that maybe wasn’t meant for you.” Now 40, she’s at a place that is meant for her. Now sober more than four years, she changed her LinkedIn profile last year. It now reads, “Speaker, Podcaster, Upcoming Author and Business Coach.” On Jan. 14, M. Judson Books will play host to a party launching her book, which is earning marquee endorsements. “This book is for every person who has sought happiness from success, only to realize the formula is flipped,” writes Kate Fagan, “New York Times” bestselling author and former ESPN writer. “This book provides readers with the insight to begin to see their careers (and lives) from a new perspective.”

-Sallie Holder, author

So what differentiates Holder from the Tony Robbinses and Christian Mickelsens of the world? “I’m going to be so bold and say I’m authentic. I’m honest. I’ll share every single bit of my ups and downs and everything I’ve learned along the way, and there are a lot of other people in this space that have never lived it,” she says. Asked what she hopes happens next, she says after a remarkably long pause, “That desire, that dream you have within yourself, wouldn’t be there if it weren’t for you, and the book is your execution method to getting there.”

Can YOU see the cooling effect of Paris Mountain?

73.6˚F

The TREES in Paris Mountain keep it 14.4˚F COOLER than areas with little to no tree canopy, such as industrial areas and mill villages like Dunean and Judson

80.8˚F

96.2˚F

Land Surface Temperature Greenville County

TREES KEEP IT COOLER

Tree Canopy Greenville County

Trees positively impact the Upstate. Now is the time to support TreesUpstate and help us plant more trees! Donate today at: www.treesupstate.org 42

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13


HAVE YOU RECEIVED YOUR EXCLUSIVE INVITATION? ADIDAS — REEBOK EMPLOYEE STORE SIGN UP AT ADIDAS.COM/GREENVILLE FOR LOCAL BUSINESSES, NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS, OR SPORT TEAMS, PLEASE EMAIL ADIGREENVILLE@ADIDAS.COM TO LEARN HOW TO GET YOUR GROUP ADDED TO OUR INVITATION LIST.

10 QUE S T L A NE. GREEN V IL L E, S C 2 9605 | 8 6 4-5 35-5 08 8


ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

FEATURED EVENTS

SEE MORE EVENTS ONLINE

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

THE LATEST CAN’T-MISS EVENTS

Furman University Mens Basketball

DEC. 14 6-9:00PM Bon Secours Wellness Arena

DEC. 16 7:309:30PM

It’s time for Furman Hoops at The Well! Come support the ‘Dins as they host the Winthrop Eagles on December 14. Game time is 6 p.m.

650 N. Academy St., Greenville

Peace Center This will be Stirling’s third

$

BonSecoursArena.com

Lindsey Stirling – Warmer in the Winter Christmas Tour 2019

300 S. Main St., Christmas tour, and she will bring back her successful Greenville holiday show featuring elaborate festive themes as well as her signature brand of dance $45-$95 routines and on-stage visuals.

PeaceCenter.org

Roper Mountain

HOLIDAY LASER SHOWS

DEC. 21 6-11:30PM

Olde Soulstice Party w/ My Girl My Whiskey & Me

Celebrate Winter Solstice the 13 Stripes way it was intended, with BEER. Brewing We have 3 (count ’em THREE) Print Works, No. Beer Releases and My Girl My 3, 250 Mill St., Whiskey & Me last show of 2019 Taylors at 13 Stripes.

bit.ly/OldeSolstice

THRU DEC. 21 TIMES VARY Mauldin Cultural Center

$

101 E. Butler Road, Mauldin

$15

A Mauldin Family Christmas Christmas time is here — join us for a night of your favorite holiday hits. Performed live by local vocalists at the Mauldin Cultural Center, this musical revue is sure to get you in the holiday spirit by bringing Christmas cheer to you and to yours!

MauldinCulturalCenter.org

Have an Olde fashioned Christmas!

BUY YOUR TICKETS TODAY! RoperMountain.org

December 13, 14, 20 and 21 44

GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

~ Your neighborhood pharmacy and soda fountain ~ 3219 Augusta St., Greenville • Mon.-Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-3 • 864-277-4180 • ThePickwick.net


THINGS TO SEE & DO

DECEMBER 13 Christmas INN Our Town • December 13: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Fountain Inn, SC, USA Fountain Inn

Fountain Inn's annual Christmas INN Our Town returns on December 5 at 6 p.m.. The festival offers events every Wednesday-Sunday from December 5 until December 22. Check out live music, photos with Santa, carriage rides, local shopping, and new this year we have added a Petting Zoo. Most of the events are FREE of charge and family friendly. For all event info please visit www.fountaininnevents.com.

A Holly Jolly Christmas

• December 13: 8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. • Centre Stage, 501 River St., Greenville A Holly Jolly Christmas features original sketches following a familiar family navigating the stress, hilarity, and heartwarming moments of the holidays head on! Packed with toe-tapping, classic Christmas songs like “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,”, “Do You Hear What I Hear," “Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree,” and so many more, A Holly Jolly Christmas is the show to see this holiday season!

Every Brilliant Thing

• December 13: 8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. • The Warehouse Theatre, 37 Augusta Street, Greenville • $20 – $25 In this transfer of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival’s production of EVERY BRILLIANT THING, you’re six years

old. Mum’s in the hospital. Dad says she’s “done something stupid.” She finds it hard to be happy. So you start to make a list of everything that’s brilliant about the world.

DECEMBER 14 Breakfast with Santa

• December 14: 8:00 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. • The Children’s Museum of The Upstate, 300 College St. on Heritage Green • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map • $25 – $32 Join TCMU for a hot buffet breakfast, pictures with Santa, hot chocolate & coffee bar, story time, caroling, and holiday crafts! Multiple event dates and times available. We are offering this event on December 7, 8, 14 and 15!

13th Annual Santa Express • December 14: 9:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Belton Belton, SC United States

Santa visits Honea Path, Belton, Cheddar, Williamston and Pelzer by train. FREE event for children of all ages. Greenville & Western Railway Company, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Western Carolina Railway Service Corporation, is pleased to announce that Santa Claus will be riding the rails again on December 14, 2019 as Greenville & Western hosts its Thirteenth Annual “Santa Express.” Following Santa’s arrival at each stop, little boys and girls in attendance will have an opportunity to step on…

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ARTS & CULTURE

M. Judson Booksellers ‘Story Time’ • December 14: 10:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. • M. Judson Booksellers, 130 South Main St, Greenville • Free

Join us for our weekly children's Story Time! Each week on Saturday mornings at 10:30 am, we'll set up shop in the Kid's Nook to read stories of adventure, mayhem, and joy. As always, a story time treat will be provided by The Chocolate Moose.

‘Annual Christmas Concert’

• December 14: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • Riverside Baptist Church, 1249 S. Suber Road, Greer, • Free The Foothills Philharmonic Orchestra continues its 2019-20 season with the "Annual Christmas Concert" and Toys for Tots drive. Refreshments will be provided following the performance. The program includes seasonal favorites that will be guaranteed to help the audience get into a festive mood for the holiday season.

Dog Culture’s Winter Wonderland Market

• December 15: 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. • Free Join us on Sunday, Dec. 15 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. as we open our doors to the community for a Holiday Market. Partnering with the Greenville Humane Society, we are excited to host some amazing local vendors who will be selling their incredible products. So come out and get a little Christmas shopping done…there will be gifts for the entire family.

Seth Brand at Rainer’s Cafe & Bar • December 14: 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. • Rainer’s Cafe & Bar, 610 S. Main Street, Greenville

Seth Brand has been recognized and praised all over the country for his mesmerizing vocals, heartfelt tunes, and raw talent on the strings. Seth and his wife Sara, on percussion, are thrilled to perform at Rainer's Cafe & Bar. If you enjoy a night filled with love, humor, heartbreak, dancing, and a rootsy kind of edge, then Seth Brand is a show not to be missed.

DECEMBER 15 ‘Say What Sundays’ poetry shows, open mic • December 15: 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • Coffee Underground, 1 E. Coffee St., Greenville • $7 – $10

Celebrate National Poetry Month! Witness the talented local and regional poets at featured events and

Christmas with the Chorale

Sponsored by

NOW THRU FEBRUARY 16, 2020 “Ceremony of Carols” by Benjamin Britten • Traditional Carols Special guest, The High Point Academy Honors Concert Choir

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2019 – 7:30 PM MCALISTER AUDITORIUM, FURMAN UNIVERSITY

Bingham Vick, Jr., Conductor and Artistic Director

For tickets call 864-467-3000 or visit www.greenvillechorale.com

864-467-3100 UPCOUNTRYHISTORY.ORG Smithsonian Affiliate

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

high-octane tournaments. Bring your poems for our welcoming open mic!

DECEMBER 17 Petey’s Holiday Party

• December 17: 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. • The Pavilion, 400 Scottswood Road, Taylors • $8 Come with your preschoolers to join Petey in the festivities at the Pavilion for a morning of celebrating the upcoming holiday. Kids will enjoy a yummy snack, a holiday craft, story time and a visit to the Bounce House and the Ice Rink. Purchase Tickets: http://bit.ly/2AeUbXR

DECEMBER 18 Rain Barrel Workshop at Greer CPW • December 18: 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. • Greer CPW, 301 McCall Street • Greer, South Carolina 29650 + Google Map • $25

Greer CPW and the Watershed Ecology Center have partnered together to provide rain barrels to customers living within the Greer CPW service territory. During the workshop, participants will learn about the benefits of

rain barrels, applications for their use and maintenance. Participants will receive a rain barrel kit which can be assembled at the workshop or at home. (a drill is the only item required for assembly).

DECEMBER 19 Peace Interlude: NFM Wrocław Philharmonic • December 19: 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. • Peace Center, 300 S. Main St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map

Home to notable musicians Frederic Chopin and Arthur Rubinstein, Poland has a long and diverse musical heritage. The history and artistic culture of Poland is uniquely characterized by its geographical location and the interweaving of outside Germanic, Latinate and Byzantine influences with the cultures of smaller regional groups. Based in the city of Wrocław – hailed as the 2016 European Capital of Culture – the NFM Wrocław Philharmonic is at the heart of the Polish music scene.

• December 20: 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • |Recurring Event (See all) • Peace Center, 300 S. Main St., Greenville$18 – $62

Even if you have heard the Celtic harp, you must hear this gorgeous instrument in the accomplished hands of this artist. He might take you to Scotland or to Ireland—this harp speaks fluently both musical languages—or maybe to another magical music place, but you’ll go home with the haunting beauty of the Celtic harp.

Twas the Fight Before Christmas • December 21: 3:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • The Dame Dome, 400 Scottswood Rd, Taylors • $20

Come help Team Nice take on Team Naughty to see which one rules the holidays!

DECEMBER 23

Ugly Holiday Cupcake Competition

• December 23: 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Ages 11-17. Supplies provided. Registration required. Email travelersrest@greenvillelibrary. org or call 834-3650 to register.

DECEMBER 26 Brew with a Legend

• December 26, 2019 - January 8, 2020 • Iron Hill Brewery & Restaurant, 741 Haywood Road, Greenville Mark Edelson, craft beer pioneer and Iron Hill cofounder invites all home brewers to submit their best home brews for a chance to win! The winners (up to 5 winners), chosen by a panel of professional brewers and celebrated craft beer industry guest judges, will each join Mark Edelson and one of our Head Brewers and brew their recipe at Iron Hill for regular sale on our taps.

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

• January 4, 2020: 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. • Greenville, South Carolina • Free

Many in our community rely heavily on bicycles as a primary mode of transportation; others, for recreation and exercise. Bikes require routine maintenance and often break. We aim to make these repairs accessible and financially attainable. Our monthly repair events are a great opportunity to build relationships with your neighbors, turn a wrench, and even serve up a hot dog. Community bike repair sites offer free basic bike maintenance instruction, free tune-up instruction, free minor bike repairs, and hugs!

• January 9, 2020: 7:00 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • Peace Center, 300 S. Main St. • Greenville, SC United States + Google Map • $35 • Patrick Davis Peace Center

Patrick Davis & His Midnight Choir will play the Peace Center on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2020, at 7 p.m. Patrick Davis is a Tennessee-born, South Carolinaraised, Nashville-based singer-songwriter who has had quite the musical run over the past decade. His musical prowess grew from modest beginnings inside his father’s Camden, S.C., guitar shop to establishing a name for himself on Nashville’s Music Row. A prolific and versatile songwriter, Davis has penned songs recorded by an array of major artists including Lady…

JANUARY 11 Auditions | Annie JR.

• January 11, 2020: 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. • Mauldin Cultural Center, 101 E. Butler Road, Mauldin Pre-registration for auditions is REQUIRED. Visit the auditions page for information on how to sign up and claim your spot.

SEE MORE EVENTS ONLINE

GreenvilleJournal.com Puzzle Solutions

DONATE TODAY AT SALVATIONARMYGREENVILLE.ORG

Village Wrench Free Bike Repair Day

Patrick Davis & His Midnight Choir

Real Wheel Christmas #3, Wheel Session 75

WHEN YOU GIVE, EXPECT CHANGE.

JANUARY 4

JANUARY 9

Holiday at Peace

DECEMBER 21 • December 18: 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. • $5 – $15

The Real Wheel Christmas is always free – our gift to you for supporting jazz in Greenville. The late afternoon Wheel Session includes an open potluck, complimentary beverages, and swinging Christmas jazz featuring an Allstar band: Mark Rapp/trumpet, Jorge Garcia/guitar, Philip Howe/piano, Mike Holstein/bass, and Kevin Korschgen/drums. Our sleigh will be filled with loads of joy and more than enough Holiday Spirit to go around! To reserve a seat, phone or text (312) 520-2760 or email: kmkorschgen@gmail.com

DECEMBER 20

The "most wonderful time of the year" can only mean one thing...Holiday at Peace. Making their Greenville debut are the universally praised vocal duo, Diane Penning and Paul Langford. You and your family will be swept into the seasonal spirit with Diane and Paul's heartfelt vocals and magical chemistry. Music and merriment abound in our holiday pops concert, perfect for the entire family.

John Wickey, Celtic Harp

• December 23: 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. • Underground Music, 1801 Rutherford Road, Greenville • FREE

Challenge yourself with the weekly puzzles, see page 50


Gee, DAD, glad Santa remembered you this year. I was sure you’d be on the naughty list after clogging the kitchen drain.

Stuff your stockings... not your kitchen drain! Give your family the gift of knowledge this year by learning how to protect sewer lines from cooking fats, oils and grease at CleanReedy.org.


REMEMBERING

Mark Andrew Cason

Russell Leland Kelly

September 4, 1966 - November 27, 2019

June 30, 1941 - November 27, 2019

Mark Andrew Cason, 53, husband of Tracey Pitt Cason, went to be with the Lord on Wednesday, November 27, 2019. Mr. Cason was born in Greenville to Annice Teresa Crosby Cason and the late William “Bill” Andrew Cason. He worked at DHL and formerly worked at Quality Carriers. He was the owner and operator of C.W. Solutions and Shippers Express. He was an alumna of Southern Wesleyan University. Mark enjoyed wood-working and playing the bass-guitar. He was a member and Elder of Oak Pointe Baptist Church and formerly served as the choir director at Calvary Baptist Church. He was a huge Miami Dolphins fan. Surviving, in addition to his wife and mother, are two daughters, Samantha Cason and Leigha Freeman and husband Tim; two sisters, Amanda Patton and husband Dan, and Jennifer Mansel and husband Carlus; and three granddaughters, Isabelle, Alyssa, and Emmalyn Freeman.

Russell Leland Kelly joined the Church Triumphant on Wednesday, November 27, 2019. He is survived by his wife, Helen Hoilman Shytle Kelly; three children, Sharon Kelly of Chantilly, VA; Katherine Kelly of Greenville, SC, and Daniel Kelly of Lilburn, GA; 2 step sons, James Shtyle of the home, and Clayton Shtyle of Playas de Tijuana, Mexico, 7 grandchildren, Destiny Shytle, Brendan Stohler, Lauren Stohler, Morgan Stohler, Eris Kelly, Fauna Kelly, and Leland Gwydian Kelly; and 2 great grandchildren, Stella Grace and Scarlett Hope. He is survived also by a brother, Larry Kelly of Etna, CA, a sister, Carol Conger of Grants Pass, OR, a half brother, Mike Kelly of Argentina, and 2 half sisters, Paula Jordan and Glenda Kelly of Grants Pass, OR and an ex spouse and dear friend, Fran Higgins of Greenville, SC. He is predeceased by a brother, Lyle Kelly and a half brother, Mike Kelly. He was born June 30, 1941 in Grants Pass, OR to Muriel Mayberry and Charles Kelly. Russ had many titles, but the ones he treasured were Christian, patriot, husband, father, son and friend. His adventurous spirit led to the nickname “Rambling Russ.” Russ enjoyed many careers, including firefighter, Navy medic, and computer programmer. His career in computer programming began in 1962, and included writing a book on Y2K preparation. He toured South America to educate companies on Y2K preparation, drove buses in Yosemite National Park, as well as the Wall Street section of New York, and he drove thousands of miles throughout America for Peterbilt. His sense of adventure and patriotic nature led him to drive trucks in Iraq and Afghanistan when he was in his 60s, earning him the nickname “Geritol” among his fellow drivers overseas. He loved to

A Celebration of Mark’s Life was held at Oak Pointe Baptist Church, officiated by Pastor Mike Morris. Memorials may be made to Oak Pointe Baptist Church Building Fund, 8649 Augusta Road, Suite D, Pelzer, SC 29669. Funeral arrangements by Fletcher Funeral Service.

O B I T UA R I E S & MEMORIALS For rates or more information on placing an Obituary or Memorial contact Anita Harley. 864-679-1205 | anita@communityjournals.com

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

write, and wrote a “Rambling Russ” column in 2008 for Oconee Today. Russ had an energy for life and loved to make others laugh. His generous heart, humorous writing, ability to laugh at himself, and good hearted pranks live on in his family and friends. He recently allowed his granddaughters to dye his hair pink and blue with permanent hair color, and fulfilled a goal at the age of 77 by sky diving. A celebration of this wonderful life will be held at Seneca Presbyterian Church, 115 W.S. First Street, Seneca, SC at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, December 14, 2019. Russ made life fun. He will be missed always. The family wishes to thank the teams of Hospice of the Foothills, and the medical staff of Prisma Cancer Institute and Prisma Health System for their expert and compassionate care during his illness.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be sent to Seneca Presbyterian Church or to your favorite charity.


Help Us Save Them All This is the most important letter I have ever written in the 12 years that I have been managing Greenville County Animal Care.

Please read every word. I am going to tell you just how much your donation makes a difference in the lives of animals and why we need your help even more this coming year. Since 2016, we have worked so hard together to build a no-kill, animal-loving community. Our goal has been to find homes for 90% or more of the animals in your shelter. In 2019, we have succeeded month after month. I am excited to tell you that we have met our goal this year with a combined life-saving rate of 90.5%! This is an extraordinary victory for animals. Please join us in shouting it from the rooftops and know that your support is what got us here. Now that we are here, we are not stopping. Saving 90% of our community’s homeless animals is a worthy achievement and I thank you sincerely for doing your part to get us here. But saving lives is not a percentage. It can get more difficult as we become better at solving pet overpopulation.

While the number of homeless animals entering your shelter decreases, the ones who do end up here need more in-depth medical care and attention given to their special needs. They need behavior training, quality-of-life enrichment, and time to heal their physical and emotional wounds. They need us to find them special homes where people understand that they are not just pets. They are living creatures with powerful stories of how people like you working together with people like me can make an incredible difference in their lives. I want to share a few of their stories so you can see where we need your help the most. Whether you donate money, volunteer, foster, or adopt, I am looking for your commitment today to help us help them find their forever home.

Buttered Up by an Itty Bitty Kitty Every spring and summer, your shelter is flooded with kittens. Those less than 4 weeks old are at the greatest risk because they do not have the ability to care for themselves. They need a mom to help them grow up. However, hundreds of small kittens enter Greenville County Animal Care without a mother. Butter was an orphaned kitten when we met him. He was just 3 days old and had little to no chance of survival without help. That help came in the form of a foster mom who bottle fed and raised Butter. Three months after entering our doors, a little boy adopted Butter. He loves her the way all animals need to be loved.

From Unknown Past to Certain Love in the Future We are not sure where Bayou called home before she came here, but we do know that her road to a new home is complicated. When Bayou entered Animal Care, we were saddened to discover a very deep cut across the back of her neck and a serious eye injury. Our staff veterinarians were able to perform surgery to remove her eye. You saved Bayou’s life by supporting Greenville County Animal Care. She and many others like her will be in a home by Christmas because of friends like you.

We can save the dogs and cats in Greenville County that we have not been able to save before. Be their champion by making a commitment to donate. If you cannot donate, give what you can and pledge to help another way. We always need volunteers, fosters and adoptive homes. Spread the word. Saving animals is a powerful life experience and every day heroes surround me. You, my friend, can be one of them. My deepest thanks,

Shelly Simmons, CAWA & Your Shelter Manager Donate to keep Greenville County a no-kill community.

Visit GreenvillePets.org


ARTS & CULTURE

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

PUZZLES

ANIMATED WOOFERS ACROSS

1 Agree (with) 5 Ability to cope well with difficulty 11 Mini-devils 15 Girl 19 Forget to say 20 Vocation 21 Heist booty 22 — Stanley Gardner 23 She played Kira Nerys on “Deep Space Nine” 25 Sicilian resort city 26 Rain-starved 27 Get riper 28 Taken with 29 Legendary nude horse rider 31 Small bird 32 Enhaloed Fr. woman 33 Lightning source, as shortened in weather reports 36 Like wicker baskets 37 Rotating rocket ride at Disney theme parks 40 Alternatives to dice 43 Has the helm 44 Exactly 46 Lime drink 47 “Oh, go on!” 49 Kevin Bacon’s “Footloose” role 55 Spring-loaded stick 58 R&B’s Rawls 60 Suffix with script 61 Elvis — Presley 62 Twitched, as a

muscle 65 Pasta strip 69 Raiment 71 — and yang 72 Depressing or untidy sort 75 Santa —, California 76 Overprotect 78 Most ashen 79 Discovered 81 Old cracker brand 82 Short time, for short 83 Sheeran and O’Neill 85 Regatta tools 86 Grammy nominee for writing the Lee Ann Womack hit “I May Hate Myself in the Morning” 92 Retort to “No you’re not!” 95 Moray, say 96 Gin mill 98 Be emphatic 102 Moniker for Boston’s locale 107 Flying disc renamed “Frisbee” in 1957 109 Zones 110 FDR part 112 “Indeedy” 113 “Law & Order: —” (NBC series since ’99) 114 Silly grin 117 Gravy Train competitor 118 Insult, in rap 119 Be very mad 120 Baseball’s Ty

121 Their names begin eight answers in this puzzle 125 Wields 126 Major city in Norway 127 Squirrel food 128 Actress Hathaway 129 Period before 6-Down 130 Close-call cry 131 Present in a different form 132 Attention-getting cries

DOWN

1 Piano recital pieces 2 Free-verse poet 3 Kitchen nook 4 Hellenic H 5 Red apple 6 It follows Holy Week 7 Stooges, e.g. 8 New Year in Vietnam 9 Zodiac sign 10 Mess up 11 “Word has it ...” 12 Munchies from Mars 13 Pint-size 14 Smeltery junk 15 Entice 16 Get there 17 Split-off bit 18 Alternatives to coupes 24 Sun blockers 29 Oscar winner Sophia 30 Proprietor 33 Uncle, in Spanish 34 Sky shiner

35 Head, in French 38 Creditors’ takebacks 39 Square in the first column of a bingo card 41 Speed 42 Nuptial vow 45 Try to equal 48 “We’re No Angels” actor — Ray 50 Regatta group 51 Gym pad 52 Pop singer Grande 53 Intersection 54 Presses and stretches 55 Hitchcock film of 1960 56 Downer drug 57 India’s Indira 59 Takes stuff out of a suitcase 63 Nero’s 1,550 64 Up ’til 66 Popeye’s Olive 67 Lofty poem 68 “ER” roles 69 Exist 70 Luggage-screening org. 73 Oil gp. 74 “Frozen” heroine 77 Fawn nurser 80 Hen’s perch 82 Road deicer 84 T. rex, e.g. 87 U.S. flag sewer Ross 88 Meadowland 89 Sappy tree 90 Earthen cooking pot 91 Person, place or thing

Crossword Solution: Page 46 93 Motorist’s distance marker 94 Attach with a click 97 Siouan tribe 99 “All finished!” 100 “Kids” actress Chloë 101 Bridge supports

SUDOKU

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM // DECEMBER 13

102 Amount a sack will hold 103 Stimulate 104 Naval petty officers 105 Most secure 106 OK for eating 108 Traffic cones 111 Funny bone locale

115 Garbage barge 116 Dance violently 117 Razor choice 121 Uber order 122 Fabulous flier 123 Fabled flier 124 “Zip-a-Dee-Doo—”

DIFFICULTY LEVEL: DIFFICULT

By Myles Mellor

Sudoku Solution: Page 46


GREENVILLE COUNTY, SC

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LEGAL NOTICES

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO.: 2019-CP-23-04437 James Borck, Plaintiff, v. C.A.N. Enterprises, Inc. and “John Doe,” representing all unknown parties with any right, title, or interest in the property having TMS# B009.03-02-003.00, TO: ALL DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY summoned and required to answer the Complaint of James Borck in this action filed in Greenville County and to serve a copy of your answer to the Complaint on the subscribers at P.O. Box 1804, Greenville, South Carolina, 29602, within thirty (30) days. If you fail to timely answer the Complaint, the Plaintiff in will apply to the Court and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. HOLDER, PADGETT, LITTLEJOHN + PRICKETT, LLC s/ M. Stokely Holder M. Stokely Holder (SC Bar #73892) Anna L. Bullington (SC Bar #102503 Attorneys for Plaintiff

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2019, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED AN ORDINANCE WHICH ENLARGED THE CAESAR’S HEAD FIRE SERVICE AREA TO INCLUDE CERTAIN REAL PROPERTIES LOCATED ON CAESAR’S POINTE, AND DIMINISHED THE RIVER FALLS FIRE SERVICE AREA OF THOSE SAME SAID PROPERTIES. SUCH PROPERTIES TO BE ANNEXED INTO THE CAESAR’S HEAD FIRE SERVICE AREA AND DIMINISHED FROM THE RIVER FALLS FIRE SERVICE AREA ARE AS FOLLOWS: 116 CAESARS POINTE (TMS# 0684020100100); 101 CAESARS POINTE (TMS# 0684020100102); 115 CAESARS POINTE (TMS# 0684020100103); 125 CAESARS POINTE (TMS# 0684020100104); AND 126 CAESARS POINTE (TMS# 0684020100105). THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION ARE NEW BOUNDARY LINES THAT REFLECT THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBERS LISTED ABOVE. A MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. THE PURPOSE FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR FIRE PROTECTION BY THE CAESAR’S HEAD FIRE SERVICE AREA TO THE ABOVE MENTIONED AREA. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION OR THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: • 2019-2020 Chevrolet Tahoe LS RFP #55-12/31/19, due at 3:00 P.M., EST, December 31, 2019. Solicitations can be found at https://www.greenvillecounty. org/Procurement/ or by calling 864-467-7200.

SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept bids for the following: • Development of Unified Development Ordinance, RFP #54-01/21/20, until 3:00 PM, EST, January 21, 2020. Solicitations may be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/procurement/ or by calling (864) 467-7200.

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY DECEMBER 3, 2019, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ENLARGED THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT BY INCLUDING CERTAIN REAL PROPERTIES AS LISTED: A. That certain real property located at 120 Dreamland Way, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# 0443000100101; and B. That certain real property located at 6002 Old Buncombe Road, Greenville, South Carolina bearing TMS# 0469000100706. THE REASON FOR THE INCLUSION OF THE AFORESAID PROPERTIES IS DUE TO THE PROPERTY OWNER HAVING PETITIONED THE COUNTY TO BE ANNEXED INTO THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT IN ORDER THAT THEY MAY RECEIVE SANITATION SERVICE FOR THAT RESIDENCE. THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION IS THE NEW BOUNDARY LINE WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBER LISTED ABOVE. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. NO BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, AS A RESULT OF THIS ACTION, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION NOR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2019, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ENLARGED THE METROPOLITAN SEWER SUBDISTRICT TO INCLUDE: A. That certain real property located at 1948 Jonesville Road, Simpsonville, South Carolina 29681 (Tax Map Number 0550030101311) THE PURPOSE FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION OF SEWAGE AND WASTE BY EXTENDING LATERAL AND COLLECTOR LINES FOR THE TRANSMISSION OF SEWAGE AND WASTE TO THE TRUNK AND TREATMENT FACILITIES OF REWA (Renewable Water Resources). THE RESULT OF THIS ACTION IS THE NEW BOUNDARY LINE WHICH WILL REFLECT THE AREA AND TAX MAP NUMBER LISTED ABOVE. MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARY AND A LEGAL DESCRIPTION ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE SUBDISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION OR THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE METROPOLITAN SEWER SUBDISTRICT AS ENLARGED. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Wandering Bard, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON AND OFF premises consumption of WINE at 109 Miller Rd. Suite B, Mauldin, SC 29662. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than December 22, 2019. 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

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NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Hoppin’ Greenville, 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 at 118 N. Markley St., Suite 202, Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than December 22, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that ACG Holdings LLC DBA Golden Brown & Delicious 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 147 Wellborn Street Suite B1, Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than December 22, 2019. 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

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* Coupon must be presented at time of inspection. Financing offer subject to credit approval. Interest accrues during the promotional period. All interest is waived if purchase amount is paid before expiration of promotional period. May not be combined with any other offer. Ask inspector for further details. Offer valid through 8/31/19.

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864-334-6330 MUST CALL THIS NUMBER IN ORDER TO RECIEVE DISCOUNT

DECEMBER 13 // GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

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