GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, November 11, 2016 • Vol.18, No.46
Vance Ferrigno lost his son on Highway 25.
A simple guardrail may have saved him.
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They Said It
“People from all over the world will know about us if we do this right.” Photo by Will Crooks
Ty Houck, Greenville County director of Greenways, Natural and Historic Resources, on the planned Poe Mill Wheel Park
12 Sevier Street, Greenville 864.282.8600 www.embassy-flowers.com
“I believe my son would still be here had he crashed on the North Carolina side of the highway.”
“Going through those times made us who we are right now, and the record is a happier record than we’ve ever made.”
Vance Ferrigno, whose son, Anthony, died on a dangerous stretch of Highway 25.
Bear Rinehart, singer of NEEDTOBREATHE, on the feud that nearly broke up his band.
“If all lawyers were like Ron, there would be no lawyer jokes.” Ken Young, law school classmate of former Greenville City Attorney Ron McKinney, who died last week.
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OPINION Views from your community
The D-Word
When employed effectively, density can enhance a community’s character IN OUR OWN WORDS
By Andrea Cooper and Nancy Fitzer
Downtown Greenville is garnering national attention for its beauty and vibrancy. This deserved reputation feeds a cycle of attracting tourists, businesses and residents, which in turn creates a demand for new development. But the question for many area citizens is this: How much is too much? How do we continue to make our city an even better place to live, work and play without sacrificing our community’s character and our quality of life? Communities are not static. They grow, they decline, they become more diverse, they age and so on. Change is inevitable. But we do have a choice in whether we manage that change or just let the changes happen. The most livable cities plan for growth and take into consideration the protection of and interaction with natural areas, vibrant public spaces, a varied skyline, diversity and inclusiveness, affordable housing and a range of transportation options including public transit and bicycle networks. While we are usually quick to voice what we don’t want, it’s also important to talk about what we do want. Moving beyond downtown, are we developing neighborhoods that promote walking? Are we allowing and encouraging mixed-use developments? Are our developers connecting streets to reduce congestion? Are we investing in compact centers that can support public transit? We must be committed to the bigger picture
Letter
“Premature Criticism” After reading Jason Zacher’s Oct. 24 Greenville Journal column, “Proposed Greenville County sign ordinance creates burdensome regulations,” and as a member of the sign committee charged with rewriting the Greenville County Sign Ordinance, I believe a response is warranted. I find Mr. Zacher’s statements and accounts a bit disingenuous and his criticism of the committee’s work to be very premature; reacting to a working draft of the ordinance that has yet to be endorsed by the committee makes me question his motives. The committee and county staff are still hard at work developing its final recommendations. The committee was appointed by County Council to address a need in our community. You don’t have to look too hard to find areas of our county that are plastered with signs, banners,
and how we are going to accommodate this growth. Battles over growth and development often center on the “D-word”: density. For some, the word conjures visions of walkable, vibrant communities. For others, density raises the specter of overcrowding and noise. And they are all correct, for all density is not created equal — it can enhance our quality of life or detract from it, depending on the form it takes. Units per acre are but one characteristic that tells only a small part of the story of a place. As the Lincoln Institute for Land Policies notes in their “Visualizing Density” resource, “Two neighborhoods with the exact same density can look as different as night and day. Although they measure out at the same density, they are not necessarily perceived to be equally dense. What really matters is how the streets are laid out, how the land is subdivided, how the buildings are arranged and detailed, whether trees are planted, where the sidewalks lead. These are all functions of design.” So we should not reflexively fear density. It can bring significant economic and quality of life benefits for us all. But we should carefully examine densifying areas to ensure that stormwater will be managed appropriately, that green space and public gathering places are provided and that the character of the community is enhanced. And what about those ever-present twin bugaboos, traffic and parking? Even the most fervent city boosters among us grumble under our breaths as we spend
more time behind the wheel than we used to, stuck in rush-hour traffic or searching for an open parking spot. As Greenville continues to grow and densify, we simply can’t rely on the old model of everyone driving everywhere. If we do, we will end up with more and more congestion — an exercise in frustration, and perhaps killing the goose that laid the golden egg. We need shuttles, transit, sidewalks and bike lanes that enable us to get where we want to go conveniently and efficiently. These options benefit all users — old and young, rich and poor, impaired and functioning — providing improved and equitable access. In a recent piece in Citylab, Garrett Nelson writes, “What we care about most in community planning is that people can get to the places they use regularly — their workplace, school, child care, grocery store, café and so on — in a convenient, affordable and energyefficient manner.” This should be our goal as Greenville continues on its upswing: to promote density that works for all of us. Andrea Cooper (near right) is the executive director and Nancy Fitzer is the education director of Upstate Forever.
streamers, wind feathers, mobile signs, balloons, inflatable men and the like that often cause confusion and safety issues to the motoring public.
designed and all issues, real or perceived, will be addressed prior to the committee’s final recommendations, and certainly prior to consideration and adoption by County Council.
The sign committee’s main goals are to address two important areas of concern: First, create a balanced business-friendly sign regulation that is effective in minimizing the visual sign clutter that plagues many of our area roads. Second, develop a regulation that is simple to understand, administer and enforce with the current level of resources available at the County.
The goals are to treat every business fairly, and at the same time maintain Greenville County’s image as a pleasant community with signage that meets advertising needs and safety requirements without negative appearance. Many other communities do it, including cities in Greenville County.
The process established for this ordinance update is inclusive and open, and the committee’s final recommendations will be presented to the Board of Zoning Appeals, Planning Commission and County Council for their feedback and consideration. I would respectfully request that Mr. Zacher withhold his judgment until the committee has completed its work. I have no doubt that the established process, guided by county staff, will work as
Mr. Zacher’s premature criticism is obviously a preemptive strike aimed at discrediting the committee and the hard work of committee members and citizens of this county that have dedicated their time to this worthy project.
David A. Stevenson
Member, Greenville County Sign Ordnance Committee
Speak your mind The Journal welcomes letters to the editor and guest columns on timely public issues. Letters should include name, city, phone number and email address for verification purposes and should not exceed 300 words. Columns should include a photo and short bio of the author and should not exceed 600 words. Writers should demonstrate relevant expertise and make balanced, factbased arguments.
All submissions will be edited and become the property of the Journal. We do not guarantee publication or accept letters or columns that are part of organized campaigns. We prefer electronic submissions. Contact Editor Chris Haire at chaire@communityjournals.com.
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A year ago, Vance Ferrigno lost his son on a deadly stretch of U.S. 25 Words by Andrew Moore Photos by Jack Lukow
Low shoulders, potholes and more plague portions of Highway 25. Photos were provided by the Highway 25 Initiative
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O
n Nov. 10, 2015, Vance Ferrigno was driving home from work on U.S. 25 when he saw a cloud of dust and debris. A small car had run off the road, hit a concrete culvert and overturned in the median just minutes before. Ferrigno pulled up to the scene and started to panic. The turquoise car in the median was the pale blue 1998 BMW sedan he had purchased for his son, Anthony. He immediately stopped his vehicle and rushed to the median. “God put me there for a reason,” Ferrigno said. “The car was crushed. I crawled through the passenger side window and saw him upside down with his seat belt on and blood coming out of his mouth. My only thought was, ‘Please Lord, no.’” Anthony Ferrigno, 20, was taken to the Greenville Memorial Trauma Center, where he died from blunt force trauma. Highway Patrol officers investigated and ruled out speeding, according to Ferrigno, who also checked his son’s phone records to determine if Anthony had been distracted. Anthony had not used his phone in more than an hour before the crash. “I still have no idea what caused his death,” Ferrigno said. “But I know that the section of highway where my son died is simply unacceptable.”
way. The analysis is based on crash data from Jan. 1, 2013, to Dec. 31, 2015. There were 96 crashes between Hawkins Road and Belvue School Road. That is lower than other urban primary arterials with similar traffic volumes throughout the state. One of the accidents was fatal. There were 177 crashes between Belvue School Road and the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway. That is higher than other rural primary arterials with similar traffic throughout the state but “considerably lower than other roadways currently targeted for safety improvements.” Four of the accidents were fatal. To make matters worse, the number of accidents is rising on the 9-mile section. Between 2011 and 2016, there have been 425 crashes with 180 injuries and 10 deaths. A different section of U.S. 25, from the South Carolina border to Interstate 26, has had 156 accidents with just one death, according to SCDOT data. “I believe my son would still be here had he crashed on the North Carolina side of the highway, because they have much wider medians and cable-barrier systems,” said Ferrigno. “A simple guardrail could have saved him.”
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Ferrigno: ‘My son would still be here had he crashed on the North Carolina side of the highway.”
THE DANGERS REVEALED
A traffic engineering report released by the S.C. Department of Transportation on Oct. 28 found that the 9-mile section of U.S. 25, from Tigerville Road to the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway, is fraught with damages. Several intersections and medians have poor pavement, overgrown brush, faded road markings, missing or outdated signs, no acceleration or deceleration lanes and no paved shoulders or rumble strips to warn drivers they are close to the edge of the road. SCDOT also conducted a crash analysis for two sections of the highway. The first section spans from Hawkins Road to Belvue School Road. The second spans from Belvue School Road to the Cherokee Foothills Scenic High-
THE COSTS OF SAFETY
The state plans to fund some short-term, low-cost improvements on the 9-mile section of U.S. 25. That includes signing upgrades throughout the corridor with fluorescent sheeting, reflective strips at strategic locations and advance warning signs at intersections. The other improvements will include trimmed vegetation at critical intersections, raised pavement markers and future resurfacing projects that will also include wider markings, paved shoulders, rumble strips and stop bars. Parts of U.S. 25 are scheduled for resurfacing in 2017. U.S. 25 continued on PAGE 8
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8 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 U.S. 25 continued from PAGE 7
The improvements will be moved to subsequent years if portions of U.S. 25 do not rank high enough on the state’s priority lists. “We’ll have to address some of the bigger issues as funding becomes available,” said Mike Sullivan, planning chief for SCDOT. “It’s the same for all improvements.” Several improvements will remain unfunded. That includes the widening of all four-foot medians, median closures, development and improvement of turn lanes and acceleration lanes and improvement of intersections on U.S. 25 at Mush Road Creek, U.S. 25 northbound at S.C. 290 and U.S. 25 at White Horse Road. “Our needs outweigh our funding, so we can’t fix everything right now,” Sullivan said. The state has set aside $845 million for highway maintenance. Maintenance can include installing signs and traffic signals, patching roads and cutting grass. The state has also received $187 million in federal aid for highway improvements. SCDOT maintains a list of priority road improvements in its statewide multimodal transportation plan, which is used for the scheduling and allocation of funds. South Carolina has $70 billion in road improvements listed in its current plan, which is scheduled through 2040. South Carolina’s estimated transportation revenue is $27 billion for the year, according to Sullivan. And most improvements are costly. A new lane can cost up to $2 million, and a new highway interchange can cost up to $50 million. The new pavement for the section of U.S. 25 where Anthony Ferrigno crashed would cost about $6 million. That section of highway is also ineligible for federal maintenance dollars, according to the report. It only has about 35 crashes per mile as compared to another section of U.S. 25 from I-85 to Lily Street that was recently identified for a safety review. It has more than 1,700 crashes with 268 crashes per mile. SCDOT plans to monitor the corridor to determine if federal funding can be used in the future, according to Sullivan.
GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
9 Miles of Danger SCDOT recently studied a 9-mile section of U.S. 25, from Tigerville Road to the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway, and found several safety concerns. But that wasn’t surprising for nearby residents. The number of vehicular accidents on that stretch of highway has steadily increased over the last five years:
FURTHER DOWN THE ROAD
CREATING A MOVEMENT
A group of concerned residents called the Highway 25 Initiative is fighting for funding. “The new report substantiates what we’ve been claiming for the last year. So I hope we’ll be able to gain some momentum with it,” said Travelers Rest City Council member Rebecca Cooper, a member of the Highway 25 Initiative. Fueled by the death of Anthony Ferrigno, several residents living along U.S. 25 formed the group to address safety concerns. “Accidents and deaths are likely going to increase as the road continues to deteriorate and traffic volume grows,” Cooper said. “Someone had to address these safety issues, because the state wasn’t going to.” The group handed out petitions in April and garnered 1,900 signatures. “It’s great to see this group taking on such a
That is a result of inadequate funding. Both agencies create long-range transportation plans every 10 years to determine which transportation projects receive priority scheduling and funding. Selected projects are slated for completion in at least 25 years. “We’re probably not going to be able to schedule projects for funding that are outside the top 15 spots. We can only add a few of those projects to the short-range plan every five years. So even our top projects are a ways out from being completed,” said Keith Brockington, GPATS transportation planning manager. GPATS adds a limited number of projects to the short-range plan because it only receives $18 million per year, and most of the projects on the LRTP are multimillion-dollar road-widening or intersection projects. ACOG updated its LRTP in May. However, it only receives $3.5 million from the state, according to Chip Bentley, deputy director for ACOG. “We distribute a very small amount of money between our counties and focus on smaller projects. It’s the best way we to get more bang for the buck. We actually tend to list a lot of intersection projects,” Bentley said. “The [Highway] 25 improvements probably wouldn’t have made our list,” he added.
big effort,” said Ferrigno. “Signing a petition was easy for me. Too many people, including my son, have died on that stretch of highway. Something needs to change.” SCDOT solicited letters of support for the improvements in May. The Greater Travelers Rest Chamber, Greenville Health System and others voiced support. “ … The highway has a grass median in places with a 3- to 5-foot-deep ditch in it … these conditions, along with the dreadful state of the pavement, make this main corridor, which is also a truck corridor, a terribly unsafe highway,” wrote Adrienne Talbert of Greenville Health System’s North Greenville Medical Campus. In June, the group presented their concerns to the SCDOT commission, which
unanimously approved a traffic engineering study. After receiving a preliminary report in August, the group decided to request funding from the Greenville-Pickens Area Transportation Study (GPATS) and Appalachian Council of Governments (ACOG). The agencies oversee the 9-mile section of highway and allocate state funds for its improvements.
BARRIERS TO PROGRESS
Cooper has presented the report to both agencies. “There have been reflections on the inadequacies of our transportation system. But neither group really claimed the project like we thought they would,” she said. “It’s been disappointing.”
The group plans to apply to the C Fund Program. That program is administered by the SCDOT, and the funds are derived from 2.66 cents per gallon of the state gasoline tax. The state administered $4,252,400 to Greenville County this year. The county selects projects for funding. Most of the funds are used for secondary roads, according to Sullivan. The state requires counties to use at least 25 percent of the fund on state roads. The selected highways are costly for the state to maintain, but aren’t considered a priority. “Greenville County might have funding for this stretch of highway, but it’s also a federal highway. I’m not sure if they’d allocate funding for it since most of the money usually goes to paving projects for non-state roads,” Sullivan said. Greenville County has $3,189,300 for nonstate highway projects. SCDOT commissioner Wood Willard, who represents the Greenville area, said the roads agency would likely provide proposals to the Legislature in January to show lawmakers that SCDOT could improve significant primary roads, like U.S. 25, if it’s given more funding. The statewide multimodal transportation plan won’t be updated again until December 2019. “Some people say losing a child is a parent’s worst nightmare. But it’s much worse when it actually happens,” said Ferrigno. “How many people need to die before this section of highway sees change? It’ll only get worse if nothing is done.”
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The proposed Poe Mill Wheel Park scores a consultant but needs money for final plans CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF
clandrum@communityjournals.com
California Skateparks, one of the world’s top skatepark design and construction firms, has conducted an initial site visit to Poe Mill, the first step in turning the makeshift park skateboarders created amidst the mill’s ruins into a destination for skaters. The nonprofit Greater Greenville Parks Foundation is trying to raise an additional $13,000 for the company to hold community design meetings, create a 3-D rendering and provide a detailed construction budget. “People from all over the world will know about us if we do this right,” said Ty Houck, Greenville County director of Greenways, Natural and Historic Resources. The effort to build a skatepark in Greenville gained momentum in 2015 after the Innoskate skateboarding exhibit was brought in by the Children’s Museum of the Upstate. The park has since gotten the attention of the Tony Hawk Foundation and the Street League Skateboard Foundation,
whose executive director, Josh Friedman, will be leading the 2020 Olympic effort for the United States. “It’s amazing how much the site has changed even since Innoskate,” said Adrian Gallardo, owner of the Blazer Skate Shop on Laurens Road and an avid skateboarder. Gallardo is leading a grass-roots effort to raise money for the park. Plans for the Poe Mill Wheel Park far exceed what those do-it-yourselfers could have ever imagined for the park. Plans call for a 40,000-square-foot park for skaters and people who enjoy other recreational wheel sports such as roller-skating and rollerblading. “Greenville has plenty of parks,” Gallardo said. “But we don’t have anything like this.” The proposed Poe Mill park is 8,000 square feet bigger than SK8 Charleston, a new skate park on the north side of the peninsula in Charleston that has been years in the making. Team Pain, a skate park design group from Florida, designed that park.
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11
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NEWS “People from all over the world will know about us if we do this right.” Ty Houck, Greenville County director of Greenways, Natural and Historic Resources, on the planned Poe Mill Wheel Park
SK8 Charleston features two pool-shaped bowls, one 12 feet deep and another 6 to 8 feet deep. There’s a 200-foot snake run that includes different sized bends, hills, roll-ins and kickers. A street course modeled after downtown Charleston includes a quarter pipe, stairs, rails, funboxes and flats. It is expected to open by the end of the year. Gallardo said the Poe Mill park is already known nationally among skateboarders. Poe Mill park will be a premier wheel park in the Carolinas that will attract skateboarders from a wide area, he said. After the wheel park master plan and detailed cost estimate is complete, Houck will try to get the park included in the county budget. Those interested in contributing to the Poe Mill Wheel Park may go to donate tab on the Greater Greenville Parks Foundation website at www.greatergreenvilleparksfoundation.org for more information.
YOU KNEW CANCER BREAKTHROUGHS WERE BEING MADE SOMEWHERE. NOW YOU KNOW SOMEWHERE IS HERE.
Researchers at Greenville Health System aren’t just making progress in the war against cancer. They’re making breakthroughs. Like helping to develop the first new treatments for melanoma in more than 30 years. It’s the type of groundbreaking work that only happens in our nation’s elite cancer research institutes—including our very own, right here in the Upstate. Learn more at ghs.org/breakthrough.
Adrian Gallardo of Blazer Skate Shop said the proposed Poe Mill Wheel Park could become one of Greenville’s tourist attractions.
12 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016
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NEWS
The Science of Diversity Clemson launches initiative to boost women, minority faculty in STEM fields ANDREW MOORE | STAFF
amoore@communityjournals.com
Clemson University has been awarded a $3.4 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s ADVANCE program to address its lack of women and minority faculty members teaching science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). “We will be able to accelerate the recruitment and retention of underrepresented scholars across the university and to improve the work environment for all faculty no matter their background or discipline,” said Ellen Granberg, Clemson University’s associate provost for academic affairs and co-principal investigator for the grant. Thirty-five percent of full-time faculty members are women at Clemson University, but only 19 percent are women in STEM fields. “The statistics for racial diversity within the Clemson STEM faculty are even grimmer,” said Sez Atamturktur, the engineering
professor who oversaw the application process. “Out of 509 STEM faculty members, only one (0.2 percent) is an African-American woman, and two (0.4 percent) are Hispanic women faculty.” With the grant, Clemson has launched Tigers ADVANCE, an initiative to build a culture of diversity, inclusiveness and acceptance. Atamturktur and more than 40 faculty members and students spent two years identifying major challenges to women and minorities in STEM faculty positions at Clemson University. The initiative will include a program to train faculty to recognize biases; diverse search committees; a pipeline for women into institutional leadership roles; and increased opportunities for joint-hires of spouses or partners. Tigers ADVANCE is also being used to increase the number of women being considered for faculty positions at Clemson. The
Illustration, Credit: Clemson University
university will also be putting measures in place to retain female faculty members. “We will strive to match the representation of women in faculty positions to the number of candidates available for those positions in the national pool,” Atamturktur said. According to the university, of the 14,499
“There are clear economic and societal benefits for engaging the talents of people from every demographic.” Sez Atamturktur, the engineering professor who oversaw Clemson’s application process
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faculty applicants to Clemson between 2010 and 2014, 23 percent were women, 10.7 percent were minority women and 0.7 percent were African-American women. “Our search committees absolutely are doing a good job of identifying talented women and bringing them to campus,” Atamturktur said. “The problem is the number of women in our applicant pools is very, very low. We’re starting with fewer options.”
To make matters worse, women faculty members leave Clemson more than men despite receiving tenure and promotions at an equal rate. Between 2011 and 2014, 56 percent of assistant professors who left were women. But in STEM fields, 28 percent of tenured or tenure-track faculty members who left were women. Women made up only 19 percent of the faculty during that timeframe. Clemson has decided to extend the initiative to non-STEM departments as well. “There are clear economic and societal benefits for engaging the talents of people from every demographic. They bring a diversity of ideas and excellence with them,” Atamturktur said. “We believe this is the only way to achieve institution-wide impact and sustainable transformation,” she added. That effort will include tracking underrepresented faculty hired, promoted and advanced into leadership roles, as well as supporting efforts to increase diversity in all applicant pools. Clemson also plans to conduct climate surveys. “At the end of the day, the best determinants of whether the institution has transformed or not will be the Clemson faculty, the diversity of the Clemson faculty and their responses to the climate surveys,” said Atamturktur. “Five years from now, our campus should be a lot more diverse with a more inclusive culture and more openness to new ideas.”
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14 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
NEWS
Remembering Ron McKinney, the ‘heart and soul’ of City Hall CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF
clandrum@communityjournals.com
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Ron McKinney wasn’t a developer or an elected official, but he had as much impact on Greenville as any of them. Known for his keen wit and impeccable integrity, McKinney played a critical role in the development of downtown and the West End as Greenville’s city attorney from 1995 until his retirement in April 2014. “He was a perfect fit for the city of Greenville,” said developer Bo Aughtry, who called McKinney a gentleman and a gentle man. “He looked at things from a perspective of reasonableness. He didn’t see the private sector on one side and the public sector on another. If it was for the greater good of the community, he saw it as a common goal. He was a very able attorney who, in his role with the city, always had a balanced perspective and an approach of facilitating good business.” McKinney was found dead in his McDaniel Avenue home last Wednesday. He was 68. Greenville County Coroner Park Evans said in a news release that an autopsy performed Thursday found no signs of foul play but the cause and manner of death are pending results from the Medical Examiners Office. Mayor Knox White called McKinney the “heart and soul” of City Hall. “Ron was a pillar of this organization for almost 20 years and played a critical role in our becoming a world-class city that we are today,” he said. “We have lost a cherished member of the city family and Greenville has lost a devoted advocate.” Law school classmate Ken Young paid perhaps the ultimate compliment in a post on McKinney’s Facebook page. Young found himself opposite McKinney at the negotiating table on behalf of a billboard client. “He was always wonderfully polite and refreshingly candid. Never a hidden punch,” Young wrote. “We always found middle ground and avoided needless litigation. If all lawyers were like Ron, there would be no lawyer jokes.” Deb Sofield, a former member of the Greenville City Council, said she remembers McKinney for the twinkle in his eye and his sense of humor. “They say if you are attending a boring political rally, you want to sit next to a judge or sheriff. I’d add Ron McKinney to that list. He had the best stories and sense of humor,” said Sofield, who called McKinney a mentor when she was a new City Council member.
McKinney was an expert in oriental rugs and a barbecue connoisseur, Sofield said. He was an avid reader and an opera buff. Prior to joining the City of Greenville, McKinney was in private practice for a firm in Greer whose members served as city attorneys for the cities of Greer and Travelers Rest. During his tenure with Greenville, he served as interim city manager in 2000 and again in 2003. McKinney, a native Greenvillian, earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Furman University, where he was student body president, and a master’s from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He earned his law degree from the University of South Carolina and was admitted to the S.C. Bar in 1978. McKinney argued and won landmark cases before the South Carolina Supreme Court and was a former president of the S.C. Municipal Attorneys Association. McKinney resided in Greenville with his wife, Kathy Crum McKinney, a bond attorney with Haynsworth Sinkler Boyd. McKin-
Ron McKinney
ney had two children, William and Kathleen, and two grandchildren. Funeral services were held on Saturday, Nov. 5. Memorials may be made to the Rotary Global Scholars Rotary Charities, Inc., 728 N. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville SC, 29607; the OLLI Program at Furman University or Buncombe Street United Methodist Church.
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11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 15
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NEWS
Drones Over the Farmland Clemson drones could boost US farm production ANDREW MOORE | STAFF
amoore@communityjournals.com
Drones could be flying across America’s farmland soon. The Federal Aviation Administration has granted Clemson University a special license for researchers to pilot unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) weighing less than 55 pounds anywhere in the United States. One of those pilots is Joe Mari Maja. Maja, a sensor engineer, joined Clemson’s precision-agriculture research program two years ago to develop techniques and technologies that could improve profitability and environmental sustainability in agriculture, South Carolina’s largest industry. So he turned his attention to drones, which in recent years have been used by various industries, including retail and aerospace. “I believe the applications for this are very diverse. UAV is a game-changer in precision agriculture,” said Maja, who works at Clemson University’s Edisto Research and Education Center in Blackville, S.C. Precision agriculture is a method that reduces waste and optimizes farm equipment
and materials by determining the amount and locations of water, fertilizer and chemicals to specific areas of land where products are needed. This reduces the misapplication of products and increases crop and farm efficiency. In December 2015, Maja was granted a license from the Federal Aviation Administration to use a drone in agricultural research in Barnwell County. Maja has since used drones to monitor crop health and gather data to improve farming productivity by letting farmers know when and where to water, fertilize or spray crops. Maja is currently developing sensors that can transmit crop data from drones to wearable devices such as smart glasses. He is also developing a circuit board that allows drones to communicate directly with farm technology irrigation systems. “That’s my dream,” Maja said. Farmers could reap the benefits of the technology. The drones allow for quicker crop monitoring: One drone can survey and collect data from a 10-acre field in less than five minutes, according to Maja. That would take a person
Clemson University sensor engineer Joe Mari Maja works on a drone, which is used for agricultural research in Blackville, S.C.
days or weeks to complete. The drones could also help farmers improve soil quality and eradicate pests and diseases faster, according to Maja. That is particularly important in South Carolina, where fields are subject to high degrees of soil variability. The technology is expected to become a farm staple. Agriculture drones could eventually account for 80 percent of the commercial market, according to the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, the trade group that represents producers and users of drones.
As that growth happens, Clemson University will be helping drive industry innovation as the new license also allows the university to register more employees as drone pilots, which could lead to new projects. Maja said he plans to develop training and certification materials for university operators.
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NEWS IN BRIEF DEVELOPMENT
55 Camperdown Way project moves forward at DRB One of the dozen people who spoke at the Design Review Board Urban Panel meeting in opposition of a planned mixed-use development at 55 Camperdown Way says the project will harm Falls Park and has shown a gaping hole in the city’s planning process. “Falls Park has no protection. None,” said David Sweatt, a RiverPlace resident with 40 years in commercial banking and real estate. “This is not good for Falls Park and this is not good for the
City of Greenville.” The urban panel of the city’s Design Review Board approved a certificate of appropriateness for the 55 Camperdown project with four conditions: that Centennial American Properties submit final site design for DRB approval; that the project comply with city stormwater requirements; that public easement to the river is provided and that a balcony be incorporated into the southwest corner of the building at the Main Street level to give view access to the park from the Main Street bridge. Sweatt said Falls Park is not in the West End Historic District and that the Main Street Bridge
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receives no historic protection. “The current planning system treats Falls Park as ‘central business district,’” he said. “That’s just wrong. It has to be fixed.” Representatives of the Greenville County Historic Society, two garden clubs and Upstate Forever, told the DRB that the building would negatively impact Falls Park and the river as well as hide some of downtown’s historic aspects. “It is out of place. It feels forced and it looks greedy,” said Lindsey Strand, executive director of the Greenville County Historic Society. Nikki Grumbine of the Friends of the Reedy River said she doesn’t believe any building would be
appropriate for that site. City engineers said a minimum 25-foot stream buffer measured from the edge of the water of the river is required and that the buffer must average 50 feet. No structure is permitted within 25 feet of the river’s edge. Brody Glenn of Centennial said he understands how important the property is to Greenville. “We’re Greenville people. We want to make sure what we build is an asset to Greenville,” he said. For further coverage of the Design Review Board’s decision regarding 55 Camperdown Way, see this week’s Upstate Business Journal. —Cindy Landrum
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NEWS IN BRIEF PUBLICITY
The press praises Greenville … again Little ol’ Greenville has racked up quite the recognition as of late. The Wall Street Journal has named our town one of the Top 10 “buzzy, newly accessible destinations,” along with some pretty impressive international locations, like Abu Dhabi. And “Southern Living” lauded it as a “foodie paradise.” Locals certainly wouldn’t disagree. Now the Nashville daily The Tennessean has called it “a great choice for a long weekend trip, especially in the fall,” in a story called “Greenville, S.C. thrives with hip urban core.” The report gives a brief history of Greenville’s transition from a mill town to a destination city before providing a weekender’s guide to downtown, beginning with a visit to Falls Park on the Reedy. Then it highlights the Peace Center, the abundant Southern cuisine, the locally owned boutique shops along Main Street, the Heritage Green museums and of course, the Swamp Rabbit Trail. Sounds like a perfect weekend to us, too. —Ariel Turner
DEVELOPMENT
Federal courthouse construction to begin in 2018 Construction of the long awaited new federal courthouse in downtown Greenville is expected to begin in 2018.
The project, which received initial funding in 2004, will take three years to complete, according to information given to the Greenville City Council last Monday during a discussion about the city’s state and federal legislative agenda. The General Services Administration earmarked nearly $93 million for site preparation, design and construction of a new courthouse and inside parking spaces across from the Greenville County Courthouse in its Courthouse Investment Plan last year. That’s on top of the $11 million earmarked for the Greenville project in 2004. In 2013, the federal government purchased 2.4 acres on East North Street. The new facility will be called the Carroll A. Campbell Jr. Federal Courthouse in honor of the late Greenville native and South Carolina governor. The new courthouse is expected to be 10 stories tall and will contain seven courtrooms and nine chambers to accommodate nine judges. Other court-related tenants include the U.S. Probation, Federal Public Defender and U.S. Department of Justice agencies. When the new courthouse is completed, the Clement F. Haynsworth Federal Building will be used by the Court of Appeals and Bankruptcy Court. Mayor Knox White said the city is having discussions with the GSA’s Atlanta office about design, parking and landscape compatibility issues. —Cindy Landrum
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Fifteen-year-old Tim Pitts had three fractures in his back, a sports injury attributed to overuse.
Photos by Will Crooks
Too Much of a Good Th ing
Young athletes are experiencing more injuries thanks to one-sport focus MELINDA YOUNG | CONTRIBUTOR
myoung@communityjournals.com
Tennis is embedded in Tim Pitts’ bones, in his DNA. The sport, which his father, Eric, played in college, is so imprinted on the 15-year-old that it left a visible mark of fractures along his spine. For two years, the teenager played tennis despite recurring pain. His family and the physical therapist that treated him thought his injury was muscular. Tim had grown nearly a foot between ages 12 and 14. He was strong, athletic and had a powerful serve and forehand. “Tim would be in the match and all of a sudden he’d quit playing and say his back hurt,” recalls Bricey Pitts, Tim’s mother. Symptoms would come and go until a match in Knoxville, Tenn., when he vomited after winning the first set 6-0. Then he had to forfeit in the second set when he couldn’t bend over to pick up a tennis ball. “It was the worst pain I’ve ever experienced. I couldn’t sit up straight,” Tim says.
“After that weekend, I called the pediatrician and said, ‘He has been going to a physical therapist for two years, and it hasn’t gotten better. Can you do an X-ray?’” Bricey says. The MRI showed that Tim had three fractures in his back, all attributed to overuse. In the teen tennis player’s experience, this meant he was suffering from too much of a good thing. Sports injuries caused by overuse — playing one sport too often — have been on the rise. They account for half of all adolescent and teenage sports injuries and impact young athletes who spend hours daily in practice, according to recent studies, says Dr. Neeru Jayanthi, an Emory sports medicine physician and director of tennis medicine in Atlanta. Jayanthi also is a researcher and the president of the International Society for Tennis Medicine & Science. “The bottom line is that we’ve seen in the last 15 to 20 years a trend toward specialization,” says Dr. Alan G. Posta Jr., chief of the
shoulder service at Eastside Hospital and orthopedic sports medicine specialist at Bon Secours St. Francis (BSSF). “It used to be kids playing multiple sports in different seasons of the year. Now they play one sport, and they play on multiple teams within the same sport,” says Dr. Christopher Bray, an orthopedic surgeon with the Greenville Health System (GHS) Steadman Hawkins Clinic of the Carolinas. “Instead of basketball in the winter, baseball in the spring and football in the summer — where you use different muscle groups — they’re playing year-round baseball and playing on three baseball teams, so you don’t get the same break for a certain muscle group when you do that.” Research suggests overuse injuries are a new trend. For example, a large clinical study of more than 1,200 athletes between ages eight and 18 found that overuse injuries are increasing. Researchers learned that young athletes who play more hours per week than their age are twice as likely to be
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 19
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injured. For instance, an 8-year-old should not play more than eight hours a week. The more time a young athlete spends at a single sport, the greater the overuse injury risk. Concussions and ACL tears might make up the headlines, but overuse injuries are more frequently the problem for the young, Jayanthi says. For instance, youth baseball and softball players have had five times as many serious shoulder and elbow injuries in the past 16
years as they did in the 1990s, suggests data published on Stop Sports Injuries. Posta recently saw two young baseball players with overuse injuries. One teenage boy had “Little League shoulder,” which is a fracture that sometimes is seen in softball and baseball players who are not skeletonmature. “Because of stress on the joint, they actually fracture the growth plate,” Posta explains. Gage Laymon, 14, and his sister Gabrielle, 16, are textbook examples of this phenom-
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enon. Gage, who is a freshman at Riverside High School, has been a baseball player for about half of his life. He pitches and plays second base, and last year he was the left fielder for the Northwood team that made it to the Little League World Series, says his mother, Connie Laymon. Gage played year-round baseball, complaining occasionally of pain in his elbow and lower bicep. This fall the pain escalated, causing him to stop pitching, although he continued to make his freshman team’s
fall practice. “When you’re a freshman in high school, you don’t want to jeopardize fall practice, because you want to make the team,” his mother explains. Then, at one fall practice, he and another player collided in the outfield, head to collarbone, sending Gage to the doctor to make sure his collarbone wasn’t broken. The X-ray showed that the collarbone would be fine — no breaks, but there was a stress fracture in Gage’s shoulder’s growth plate. “The doctor said, ‘We’re shutting you
20 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
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down,’” Connie recalls. The experience was a bit of déjà vu for the Laymon family, as Gage’s older sister Gabrielle had a similar shoulder stress fracture when she was 14. Her sport was softball, and she had been a catcher on two teams, practicing weekdays and playing tournaments on weekends. “She played a crazy amount of softball that summer, but her injury was gradual and it never dawned on me that it could be a stress fracture,” Connie says. “It was one of those moments when I felt like a really bad mom. Why did I let her do this? But it was her passion.” With 11 children, all in sports, the Laymons have seen a variety of sports injuries, including tendon tears, wrestling injuries and surgeries, football injuries and the sorts of minor problems that come with soccer and dancing. But overuse injuries are a new phenomenon among their offspring, and the injuries weren’t because the Laymons were pushing their children to be sports stars. “Honestly, in our house, we don’t push our kids to play any sports,” Laymon says. “They have to want to play, and we want them to try different things to see what their passion is, what their talents are.” Often, it is the young athlete who decides he or she wants to specialize in a favorite sport. “I think the biggest thing we’ve seen over the last 10–15 years is kids are starting to decide on a single sport early on,” Bray says. Sports coaches and programs often encourage — or even require — young athletes to put in daily hours practicing a single sport. “I’m hearing there are so many full-time tennis kids and programs that encourage it,” Jayanthi says. “If you’re in that environment, and you decide to do it, then recognize the
Following his back injury, Pitts interned for an orthopedic surgeon.
problems early.” Parents and athletes can limit the risk of overuse injuries by limiting practices to fewer hours per week and by not letting the child specialize until middle or late adolescence, he says. Other than that, they need to recognize these injuries early, particularly in the higher risk areas of the lower back, elbow and shoulder, he says. In the Pitts family, this message now has sunk in, particularly as Tim has two younger brothers who also are top
regional tennis players. “It made me aware to give the kids more time off and to not have them do the same thing every day,” Bricey says. While recovering from his broken back, Tim Pitts had time to research orthopedic and overuse injuries, nurturing a budding interest in medicine that might one day replace his passion for tennis. “Over the winter, we had an internship week of school, and I did an internship with an orthopedic surgeon at GHS,” he says. “I liked it a lot.”
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Soccer program for disabled vets kicked off Nov. 4 An eight-month soccer program focused on supporting disabled veterans kicked off Nov. 4 at Clemson University. Skye Arthur-Banning, an associate professor in Clemson’s parks, recreation and tourism management department, secured funding from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to grow the sport of soccer with disabled veterans. The funds will be used to develop and educate player-coaches who will then assemble and coach teams of disabled veterans. The $52,000 awarded by the grant represents the only money given in 2016 to specifically fund Paralympic soccer by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Arthur-Banning will work with several veterans and representatives from
Our Schools
U.S. Soccer over the project’s duration that will culminate in several matchups between the assembled teams. “These men have already given so much to their country, and now they want to give back to their communities and fellow wounded warriors,” Arthur-Banning said. Arthur-Banning worked with Stuart Sharp, head coach of the U.S. Paralympic National Soccer Team, to assemble a group for the five-day camp last weekend. The camp focused on sports leadership, coaching and recruitment training. The participating coaches will then take lessons learned back to their own communities to assemble teams of veterans. Arthur-Banning said grant money will provide six months of resources for coaches to pull teams together and for necessary training expenses. U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Stephen Taylor is one of
the coaches involved in the camp.
be too old, but he tried out anyway.
Taylor suffered a traumatic brain injury that went undiagnosed for months after an encounter with an improvised explosive device in December 2010.
“I realized I was too old for the team, but I don’t play timid. I told Sharp I wanted to be involved,” Taylor said. “I want to be around young guys who I’ve got something in common with.”
It was only after returning to the U.S. on leave two months later that he and his family started seeing the real effects. His wife and kids noticed something wasn’t right. He had constant migraines, tremors and he frequently forgot things.
After Taylor and the other coaches have a few months to assemble and train teams, Taylor and other coaches will return to campus in April to become national, D-licensed U.S. Soccer coaches. In June, the three teams will participate in exhibition matches where they’ll be able to put months of practice to use in competition.
“I didn’t see the effects, but the onion started to peel,” Taylor said. “I was a real jerk and I was a bad father; I finally started to realize that it was affecting my family and it was time to do something about it.” After his diagnosis, he was stationed in the East Coast’s Wounded Warrior Battalion, where he saw a flyer for the U.S. Paralympic Team soccer camp. At 44 years old, Taylor thought he might
“There’s no reason everyone involved can’t get something out of this,” Arthur-Banning said. “Our students can gauge how much of an effect this experience has on these veterans, we can grow Paralympic soccer in communities and we can have a positive effect on people who have given so much.”
Activities, awards and accomplishments
SARA COLLINS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Greenville Mayor Knox White visited secondgrade students and spoke with them about government in the school’s media center.
CLEMSON UNIVERSITY
School named a Tree Campus USA School by Arbor Day Foundation Clemson University has been recognized as a Tree Campus USA for the sixth year in a row. Clemson fulfills the program’s five criteria, which include having a campus tree advisory committee, a tree care plan, a campus tree program, an Arbor Day observance and a servicelearning project.
GREER MIDDLE COLLEGE CHARTER HIGH SCHOOL
School announces spirit week totals The high school’s 2016 Spirit Week raised $42,629.97. The student government voted at the start of the 2016 academic year to invest all funds raised during spirit week to the new building where construction of classrooms and the learning courtyard broke ground this past summer.
BOB JONES UNIVERSITY
Senior honored by S.C. Student Legislature Margaret Stegall, a senior journalism and mass communication major, was awarded the prestigious Carlisle Award during the South Carolina Student Legislature (SCSL) fall session in Columbia, Oct. 26-28. The Carlisle Award is presented to the delegate who best represents the ideals of SCSL. Stegall, a resident of Greenville, serves as chairman of the BJU delegation and just completed her term as speaker of the house at the end of the fall session.
Submit community news items to community@communityjournals.com.
22 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
LOOK
The Clemson Tigers shut out the Syracuse Orange at home last Saturday with a 54-0 win on Military Appreciation Day. Clemson has now won 15 consecutive games against ACC opponents and is 9-0 for the fourth time in school history. Photo by Zach Hanby.
Sports injury? Call 675-HURT
Last Tuesday, the Clemson Tigers football team spent an afternoon working on properties in Habitat for Humanity of Greenville’s Grace Point neighborhood. One of those homes will be named the Next Generation Home in honor of quarterback Deshaun Watson, who grew up in a Habitat home and has received the Next Generation award from Habitat for Humanity International for his impact on the community. Watson was also named to the 2016 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. Photo provided by Complete Public Relations.
The Peace Center has received a $50,000 grant from the Duke Energy Foundation to sponsor the 2016–17 Youth Performance Series, a part of the Peace Outreach Program. Photo by Amy Randall.
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James Beard winner to serve ‘big bad breakfast’ at Bacon Bros.
This is a fact that every Southerner knows: Breakfast is not only the most important meal of the day, it’s the best. At least when it’s done right — that means no cereal, no smoothies and absolutely no Cream of Wheat. And few folks do breakfast better than John Currence, the Oxford, Miss., James Beard-winning chef of City Grocery, Snackbar, Lamar Lounge and Big Bad Breakfast. The latter restaurant serves up such gut-busting dishes as the Last Gentleman (three-piece plate of Coca-Cola-brined fried chicken with mac and cheese and slaw), Yard Work (two eggs scrambled with zucchini, squash, mushrooms, spinach, onions, peppers, tomatoes, sweet potato hash, fresh herbs, goat cheese and Swiss cheese) and the Pylon (split, griddle-fried hot dog with chili, slaw, cheddar cheese, mustard, chopped pickles, onion, jalapeños and crackers on a waffle). We don’t know about you, but that gets our mouths a-watering. If you’re the same, then you’ll be pleased to know that Chef Currence is coming to Bacon Bros. Public House Sunday, Nov. 13, to serve a three-course meal. For the first course, Currence is serving shakshouka with baked eggs, San Marzano tomatoes, feta cheese and warm buttered pita. For second, it’s his Hangtown Fry with fried oysters, soft scrambled eggs, table sauce and bacon, while the third brings monkey bread with apples, currants, chopped nuts and brown sugar. On the table, you’ll find buttermilk biscuits and cornbread using the Lowcountry heirloom grain, Jimmy Red Corn. Tickets are $30 (brunch, drinks) and $60 (brunch, drinks and a copy of Currence’s new cookbook, "Big Bad Breakfast"). To buy tickets, visit Eventbrite. —Chris Haire
Taste of Table 301 offers a small preview of Jianna At last Wednesday’s Taste of Table 301, we watched Jianna’s Chef Michael Kramer use a classically inspired meat slicer to cut through a massive hunk of beautiful, buttery ham, and it was a delight to watch. This is going to be a crowd-pleaser, like watching the doughnuts get made at Krispy Kreme, but for carnivores. We also got to sample one of Chef Kramer’s dishes: rigatoni with smoked bacon, tomato and Grana Padano. It was light and bright, with each smoky bite of bacon serving as a little savory surprise. While we expect good things from the menu, we were happy to learn that Jianna will be offering specialty negronis — the Campari-based cocktail that has experienced resurgence in recent years. At Taste of Table 301, Jianna offered their take on a boulevardier, but instead of using vermouth, they use the classic Italian digestif Averna alongside Elijah Craig bourbon and Campari, and they call the whole thing The Count. It was slightly bitter and medicinal thanks to the Campari, with the Averna and marinated cherry giving it a bit of sweetness, while the bourbon gave it an oak-barrel smokiness. Confession: We had more than one. Judging by Jianna’s offerings at Taste of Table 301 and Kramer’s work at The Lazy Goat, which is arguably the star player of the Table 301 team, the new West End restaurant should find more than a few fans of modern Italian cuisine. The 5,800-square-foot restaurant will feature a 40-foot bar that offers both indoor and outdoor seating on the second story of the new Falls Park Place development at the corner of Main Street and Falls Park Drive. Jianna is also set to have an open kitchen and pasta-making area. —Chris Haire
Billy Strings to play Upcountry Provisions oyster roast The Travelers Rest bistro and bakery will host a bluegrass fave Dec. 1 Billy Strings, International Bluegrass Music Association instrumentalist of the year, will be playing his unique brand of modern bluegrass, complete with a loop pedal board nearly as impressive as Ed Sheeran’s. Strings will perform around the campfire, while guests enjoy a small plate menu of oysters and the usual fixin’s. Upcountry Provisions chefs Steve and Cheryl Kraus and Jaimee Park, along with chef Greg McPhee of The Anchorage, will be collaborating to serve unique flavor combinations paired with craft beer and wine selections. The event will be held at The Grove at Upcountry Provisions, 6809 State Park Road, Travelers Rest, from 6–10 p.m. Early-bird tickets are $45. Regular price is $55. Cash bar not included in ticket price. —Ariel Turner
Cabela’s offers turkey frying safety seminar Thanksgiving is the peak day for home cooking fires, according to the U.S. Fire Administration. So if you’re hankering for fried turkey, do yourself, and your loved ones, a big favor and learn proper fire safety before you light up a probable fireball. To help out potential pyromaniacs, Cabela’s at 1025 Woodruff Road is offering a Holiday Turkey Frying Safety Tips seminar on Nov. 15 at 11:30 a.m. The City of Greenville Fire Department’s community risk reduction and education coordinator will be demonstrating safe turkey frying techniques along with a knowledgeable Cabela’s employee. For more information, visit cabelas.com. —Ariel Turner
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A properly planted and mulched tree will show it’s root flare.
Joelle Teachey | TreesGreenville jteachey@treesgreenville.org
Fred Olsen, 1985 drybrush and watercolor © Andrew Wyeth. Barefoot, 1992 watercolor © Andrew Wyeth.
The First Family of American Painting Upcoming ‘Wyeth Dynasty’ exhibit shows family’s depth of talent and expands GCMA’s Wyeth collection ARIEL TURNER | CONTRIBUTOR
aturner@communityjournals.com
It’s rare to have five members of the same family presenting an equally impressive level of artistic skill worthy of display in the same exhibit. The Greenville County Museum of Art’s “Wyeth Dynasty” capitalizes on this rarity. The exhibit is a celebration of the upcoming centennial of painter Andrew Wyeth’s birth, featuring works by the first family of American painting – Andrew (1917-2009); his father, N. C. (1882-1945); his son Jamie (b. 1946); and his sisters Carolyn (19091994) and Henriette (1907-1997). The exhibit, featuring 75 examples from the family’s prolific body of work, opens with a GCMA members’ reception on Nov. 15 and for the general public on Nov. 16. It will run through Sept. 10, 2017. To commemorate the opening, Jamie Wyeth will be traveling from his home in Wilmington, Del., to meet with GCMA patrons at a private dinner on Nov. 14. Additionally, tours and educational opportunities will continue throughout its duration. In July, the museum will also feature a photography exhibit, “My Andy,” by Andrew’s granddaughter, Victoria Wyeth of Philadelphia. The exhibit focuses on portraits of her grandfather in a behindthe-scenes look at many of the places he painted, bringing the “Wyeth Dynasty” full circle.
And as always, admission to these exhibits is free because of ongoing financial support from local patrons. “The community did this,” says Chesnee Klein, GCMA curator. “It’s amazing we have this collection and it’s free.” It’s not news that GCMA is home to the world’s largest public collection of watercolors by Andrew Wyeth. The acquisitions for this exhibit, however, will significantly expand on the museum’s Wyeth family holdings. Among the new selections are three egg temperas, which is a fast-drying Renaissance painting technique, several charcoal drawings and rarely seen studies of final paintings. Studies are the painter’s equivalent of a rough draft, explains Ellen Westkaemper, head of education for GCMA. Often, the final painted product will only loosely resemble the initial charcoal concept. Also among less frequently viewed works is a self-portrait Andrew Wyeth painted in 1945 for the National Academy of Design. Klein says it is especially unusual to have a self-portrait of Andrew Wyeth because his subjects were almost always his surroundings. Of the 75 pieces in the exhibit, 10 are by Jamie, three are by N.C. and two each are by Carolyn and Henriette. Carolyn was her nephew Jamie’s primary teacher, although his father Andrew, or “Andy” as he preferred, was also involved. The paintings by
N.C., Carolyn and Henriette are hung so the similarities and differences can be seen side-by-side, with the exception of one illustration N.C. created for a book published in Charleston. Jamie’s brightly colored portraits are displayed on the opposite side of the gallery from the other family members and show a sharp contrast to the muted neutrals of the others’ palettes. Jamie’s subjects include his mother; his contemporary Andy Warhol, whose portrait “Consumé,” painted on corrugated cardboard, pictures him sitting among a busy social scene calmly drinking his soup; and a nude rear-view of Arnold Schwarzenegger in Jamie’s apartment with Central Park visible out the window. Andrew’s wife, Betsy, still lives in Chadds Ford, Pa., where he painted a large portion of his work. The Maine islands of Monhegan and Cushing, where the family spent each summer, are the settings for most of his other paintings. Both are heavily represented in the GCMA collection. Andrew did, however, take one trip to a South Carolina barrier island just after selling out his first solo art show at the William Macbeth Gallery in New York City in 1937. His trip south lasted only a couple of weeks as he recharged from what must have been an emotionally exhausting experience, but he still painted a handful of pieces. GCMA has one of those paintings, “Under the Live Oaks.”
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26 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
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Covering the Holidays Norman Rockwell exhibit features ‘Saturday Evening Post’ covers CINDY LANDRUM | STAFF
clandrum@communityjournals.com
Many of the most recognized and beloved Norman Rockwell paintings on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post depicted the holidays, whether it was the presentation of a mouthwatering turkey at the Thanksgiving table or a rosy-cheeked Santa checking his list to see who was naughty or nice. But the covers were also lessons in history. Upcountry History Museum is hosting “Norman Rockwell’s Home for the Holidays,” a traveling exhibit from the artist’s museum in Stockbridge, Mass., through Jan. 29. The exhibition features more than 40 of the special holiday cover illustrations Rockwell completed for the Saturday Evening Post from 1916 to 1963. Overall, Rockwell created more than 300 covers for the magazine. “His work is so iconic, so memorable that almost every American has a Norman Rockwell image to which they can relate,” said Elizabeth
Gunter of the Upcountry History Museum. “And so many of his images are teachable moments. They are more than magazine covers. They are history lessons built into magazine covers.” Over the course of Rockwell’s career, he produced covers for Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s, Valentine’s Day, Easter, the Fourth of July and even April Fool’s Day, which included visual jokes and items that weren’t real such as flying penguins and mislabeled canned vegetables. “They had a sense of humor as well as a deep sense of humanity,” Gunter said of the April Fool’s covers. Throughout the years, his holiday depictions shifted in subject and style, from Victorian-inspired Christmas images to Christmas in smalltown America. In a quote from his biography on the Norman Rockwell Museum website, Rockwell said, “Without thinking too much about it in specific terms, I was showing the America I knew and observed to others who might not have noticed.”
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Keeping the Faith Brothers resurrect NEEDTOBREATHE after feud nearly destroys the band VINCENT HARRIS | CONTRIBUTOR
vharris@communityjournals.com
In 2014, the Seneca, S.C., quartet NEEDTOBREATHE released their fifth album, “Rivers in the Wasteland.” It was the band’s usual mix of spiritual lyrics, anthemic, big-hearted rock and achingly introspective acoustic ballads. It was an unqualified commercial smash, debuting at No. 1 on both the Billboard Christian Album and Rock Album charts, reaching No. 3 on the Billboard 200, spawning a Grammy-nominated single (“Multiplied”) and selling more than 150,000 copies within a year. And it was also nearly the end of the band. Brothers Bear (vocals/guitar) and Bo Rinehart (lead guitar), the nucleus of the group, were essentially at each other’s throats by the time “Rivers in the Wasteland” came out. “Bo and I had a huge fight and thought about breaking the band up,” Bear says. “It had a pretty dramatic effect on how we do things.” Now based in Charleston, the band, which also includes bassist Seth Bolt and keyboard player Josh Lovelace, took a step back after years of constant touring and recording and decided to make some changes and clear the air. “We made some promises to ourselves and the band that we would care about each other more than we cared about the music or success,” Rinehart says. “And that’s helped us remember how much we enjoy what we do. We went back into the studio with a better perspective on things. Our music doesn’t necessarily define us now. It’s just something that we love to do.” The Rineharts wrote the songs for their new album, “HARDLOVE,” in their respective home studios, using programmed drums to create their demos. The result of that different writing environment, plus the electronic percussion, resulted in an album that sounds different than anything the group has ever done. Awash with massive drumbeats, waves of synthesizers and massive vocal hooks, the album is, according Bear, “as much of a dance record as NEEDTOBREATHE is ever going to make.” “I knew that the way the demos were sounding that it was going to be a different record,” he says. “But we’ve always felt like the bands we love continue to change and challenge themselves, and that came from real inspiration. There’s not a whole lot of inspiration in copying yourself. We’ve never seen the point of that. Our immediate thing is how do we change this up and make it feel fresh to us.”
Lyrically, the songs on “HARDLOVE” are full of gratitude, affection and themes of renewed determination. “What don’t kill you makes you stronger, get back up,” Rinehart sings on the title track. The pulsing “Great Night” takes things to a blissful extreme, with Rinehart exhorting people to “have a great night on the dance floor,” aided by a cameo appearance by, of all people, the adored rootsAmericana duo Shovels & Rope, also from Charleston.
NEEDTOBREATHE
“There’s no doubt that we’re talking about how thankful we are on the album,” Rinehart says. “Going through those times made us who we are right now, and the record is a happier record than we’ve ever made. It’s definitely about the place we are in life. We didn’t set out to do that, we didn’t know that was going to be the theme, but it happened naturally.” As for the fans, NEEDTOBREATHE needn’t have worried if their new sound was going to throw their fans for a loop. The band actually went one spot higher on the Billboard 200 chart with “HARDLOVE,” all the way to No. 2. “I think it’s made us incredibly proud,” Rinehart says. “We felt confident regardless of the reaction because it’s the record we were trying to make. It’s a reflection of who we are. But knowing that we made the record we wanted to make and it’s being received well, that’s just icing on the cake.”
NEEDTOBREATHE, w/ Mat Kearney, Parachute and Welshly Arms When: Friday, Nov. 11, 7 p.m. Where: Bon Secours Wellness Arena, 650 N. Academy St. Tickets: $33.50-$53.50 Info: 241-3800, bonsecoursarena.com
OPENING NOVEMBER 16!
WYETH DYNASTY Andrew Wyeth N.C. Wyeth
Jamie Wyeth
Carolyn Wyeth
Henriette Wyeth
In celebration of Andrew Wyeth's birth, the Greenville County Museum of Art presents the exhibition, Wyeth Dynasty, a retrospective not only of Andrew Wyeth's work but a glimpse into the work of his father, N. C., his son Jamie, and his sisters Carolyn and Henriette. More than 80 works are featured in this important look at the first family of American painting.
Exhibition presented by
Greenville County Museum of Art
420 College Street Greenville, SC 29601 864.271.7570 gcma.org Wed - Sat 10 am - 6 pm Sun 1pm - 5 pm
Journal W Dyneasty.indd 1
admission free
10/28/16 4:43 PM
30 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016
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Heavenly Metal Jonathan Scales takes the steel drum from the cruise ship to the jazz club VINCENT HARRIS | CONTRIBUTOR
vharris@communityjournals.com
Percussionist Jonathan Scales knows what you probably think about when you hear the words “steel drum.” He knows that the Trinidadian instrument, with its instantly recognizable metallic-butmelodic thrumming, will remind you of tropical destinations. “A lot people associate the steel drums with cruise ships and vacations,” Scales says. “And some people think it’s a novelty instrument.” With his band, the Fourchestra, Scales hopes to show the true potential of the steel drums. Using the steel drums as both percussive and harmonic instrument, he creates melodies that dart and dance around subtly
stuttering basslines, sounding like a keyboard one moment and a Milt-Jacksonstyle xylophone the next. He has a deft touch that keeps his tone light, like sunlight dancing on a stream. “When I was a junior in high school, I joined the drum line in marching band,” Scales says. “I was offered the opportunity at random and I took it. But it wasn’t until I got to college that I came across the steel drum, because there’s a steel drum ensemble at Appalachian State.” Scales found a flexibility in the steel drums that fueled his compositional urge, but it wasn’t until he discovered another skilled player taking an unconventional approach to a well-known instrument that he felt like he might be on to something: banjo master Bela Fleck, whose hybrid jazz-bluegrass band The Flecktones became a major source of inspiration. “I think the thing that hit me was that he was taking an instrument that people associated with something traditional and doing something different with it,” Scales says. “He wasn’t letting the stereotype of his instrument determine
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anything. He didn’t say, ‘I’m a banjo player, so I have to do this.’ That was something that really struck a chord with me. I was doing that with my instrument, and when I saw him trying different things and not letting his instrument be a binding thing, it was like validation, like, ‘Maybe I’m not crazy.’” The feeling must be mutual among some of the elite genre-benders of jazz, because over the past decade, Scales has played or recorded with The Flecktones’ Victor Wooten and Howard Levy, as well as drummer Jeff Sipe, Allman Brothers bassist Otiel Burbridge and many more.
Scales has typically had a fluid membership in the Fourchestra throughout its decade of existence, and for the most part, that’s how he wanted it. “As a composer, it’s nice to work with different people,” he says. “And I don’t have to turn down any work. I can say yes to any date because I’ve built this network of amazing players that can come in and play this music. It gives me a lot of flexibility.” But his current lineup, which has been in place for almost a year, is one he wants to keep around for a while. Drummer Robert “Sput” Searight is best known for his work with Snarky Puppy, but he’s also played with
Kendrick Lamar and Erykah Badu. Bassist Mono Neon was one of the last people to play with Prince before he died, and percussionist Weedie Braimah has played with The Nth Power. “This is a very special group,” he says. Scales will also be leading a percussion master class at USC Upstate before his show at Gottrocks Wednesday night, and he says his approach to instructing students is to treat them as peers. “It might be a crazy way to think, but I walk in assuming that they already know everything that I could possibly tell them,” he laughs. “That allows me to play and do what I do, and then people start to tell
me what they want to know. We’re together in this room together for an hour; what do you want to have from this experience? What do you want to walk out of here knowing?”
Jonathan Scales Fourchestra w/ Funky Knuckles When: Wednesday, Nov. 16, 8 p.m. Where: Gottrocks, 200 Eisenhower Drive Tickets: $12-$20 Info: 235-5519, gottrocksgreenville.com
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225 Foot Hills Road · $514,900 · MLS# 1331706
204 West Church St. · $479,500 · MLS# 1332315
5BR/3.5BA Wonderful 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath brick, new build in highly desired Augusta Road Neighborhood! 2 car attached garage! Left on Lupo off Augusta Street. Cromwell on Right.
5BR/3.5BA Brand new 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath Craftsman Style home in the heart of all that Augusta Road has to offer! Left of Lupo Off Augusta St. Cromwell on right.
4BR/3.5BA Exquisite open house in Downtown Greer this Sunday from 2-4! This is a fabulous move in ready condition home. I-85 to Highway 14 to Greer, Left West Church Street
Contact: Blair Miller 430-7708 Wilson Associates Real Estate
Contact: Blair Miller 430-7708 Wilson Associates Real Estate
4BR/3.5BA Beautiful one-level brick home, approx. 3600 SF, 1.4 acre lot, in heart of the neighborhood. 15 minutes from Downtown Greenville! Highway 25 to third entrance of Green Valley to Ft.Hills.
Augusta Road • Open Sun. 2-4 p.m.
Carisbrooke
313 Meyers Drive · $324,000 · MLS# 1328359
400 Ladykirk Lane · $369,900 · MLS# 1331331
2BR/1BA Newly updated 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom Augusta Road charmer steps away from Rockwood Park and zoned for Augusta Circle Elementary! Augusta St, turn onto Rockwood Drive. Right onto Meyers Drive.
4BR/2.5BA Desirable Eastside location with fenced backyard, 4 bedrooms, a screened porch and more! Visit GreenvilleMoves. com for more info.
Contact: Blair Miller 430-7708 Wilson Associates Real Estate
Contact: Debbie Dujardin 884-2588 RE/MAX Moves
Contact: Anne Marchant 420-0009 The Marchant Company
Contact: Kevin M Lawton 304-1101 The Lawton Team
The holidays, handwashing and hygiene By Kimberly Baker, Marie Hegler, Adair Hoover Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service The very first things we wonder when becoming sick with a foodborne illness is what caused it and from where did we get it. We often consider our last meal to be the culprit. Unfortunately, unless we have similar symptoms to someone who has been sick or who has shared a meal with us, we may never truly know the what, when, where, or how of a foodborne illness. We can, however, be proactive and protect ourselves from pathogens that cause foodborne illnesses. This can be especially important during the holiday season. The holidays are known for the gathering of family and friends. We often attend more parties, dinners and get-togethers than normal, which means we increase our likelihood of exposure to certain bacteria and viruses. The handling of food and crowded spaces create ample opportunities for the growth of pathogens and the spread of foodborne illnesses. While we don’t like to think about foodborne illnesses until we are actually sick, taking time in advance to review food safety practices can mean the difference between spreading holiday cheer and spreading foodborne illness. The Clemson Extension Food Safety and Nutrition team wants everyone to have a fun and healthy holiday season. In the latest installment of the Food Safety for Reel video series, “Holiday Food Safety,” we highlight some of the following precautionary measures to take during the holiday season.
OPEN HOUSE November 13 • Sunday 2-4pm
304 N Main Street Fountain Inn, SC
MLS 1332401 • $345,000 • 4 BR/ 2 BA • 2000-2199 sq. ft. • Built Circa 1899 • Completely updated throughout • Beautiful original woodwork • New hardwood floors • Spacious deck for entertaining • Custom gourmet kitchen • Luxury master bath Eric Cilli, Realtor® • 864-346-3501 • Eric.Cilli@AllenTate.com • www.EricCilli.com
Double-Dipping – Double-dipping is known to spread illness. Just one bite of food or lick of a finger when passing food can transfer enough bacteria to make someone else sick. Pets at the table – Pets at the table or near any food contact surface can spread unwanted bacteria. Just think about the places pets walk and the surfaces they lick. Sick people – Those who are sick are also carrying bacteria. These bacteria can easily spread when hands are not washed thoroughly, or by sneezing followed by touching a food contact surface that is then touched by others. So remember to avoid double-dipping, to keep pets away from food contact surfaces, to wash hands with hot soapy water for at least 20 seconds and to stay away from the party or take the necessary precautions if you are sick. We don’t want to see anyone’s family holiday ruined by a foodborne illness!
Watch Clemson’s “Holidays, Hand-Washing and Hygiene” video at bit.ly/clemson-hand-washing.
OPEN SUNDAY, NOV. 13 from 2-4PM THE COURTYARDS ON W GA upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/KSP6HZ/337-Laguna-Lane-Simpsonville-SC-1326359
337 Laguna Lane • 4BR/3BA $385,900 · MLS# 1326359 Linda Bobo · 982-8322 CODE 3770295
WATSON GROVE upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/4T42RD
SHENANDOAH FARMS
PELZER
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/GHQ9U6
249 Strasburg Drive • 6BR/3.5BA $339,000 · MLS# 1324159 Amy Hart · 354-3266 CODE 3693132
$259,900 · MLS# 1321784 Tanner Carter · 518-1641 CODE 3592756
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/3PEHL2/120-Wrenfield-Court-Piedmont-SC-1330114
1310 Highway 418 • 3BR/3BA
120 Wrenfield Court • 4BR/2.5BA
$334,000 · MLS# 1329816 Diana Henderson · 551-7293 CODE 3889139
MERRIFIELD PARK
$275,000 · MLS# 1330114 Clarence Lewis · 907-2610 CODE 3897931
CARRINGTON GREEN
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/SUGAV9/205-Connecticut-Drive-Greenville-SC-1329495
122 Red Maple Circle • 3BR/2.5BA
BAGWELL GLENN
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/ALVHDZ/1310-Highway-418-Pelzer-SC-1329816
RAVINES AT CREEKSIDE
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/4KWV39/126-Chenoweth-Drive-Simpsonville-SC-1331086
205 Connecticut Drive • 3BR/2BA $249,000 · MLS# 1329495 Lisa Birch · 678-5327 CODE 3876556
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/PTWC66/23-Fudora-Circle-Simpsonville-SC-1331862
126 Chenoweth Drive • 4BR/2.5BA
23 Fudora Circle • 2BR/2BA
$248,500 · MLS# 1331086 Amy Hart · 354-3266 CODE 3931348
RIVER MIST
$229,900 · MLS# 1331862 Ginger Sherman · 313-8638 CODE 3956123
ALSO OPEN
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/RPCU9M/9-Bristlecone-Court-Simpsonville-SC-1331852
TERRA WOODS
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/7X53X6/201-TERRA-WOODS-Lane-Greenville-SC-1330146
201 Terra Woods Lane • 5BR/3.5BA $524,900 · MLS# 1330146 CODE 3899229 Chet & Beth Smith · 458-7653
SHALLOW BROOK
OPEN NEW COMMUNITIES Alta Vista Place upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/VFMPCU
Tues.-Sat. 11 am-5pm, Sun. 2-4 pm Units starting @ $949,000 CODE 2931606 AltaVistaPlace.com, 622-5253
201 W. Hillcrest Drive • 3BR/3BA
$429,900 · MLS# 1329750 CODE 3887667 Chet & Beth Smith · 458-7653
MERRIFIELD PARK
$300,000 · MLS# 1328030 CODE 3828243 Kacey McCall-Hagin · 325-3737
HONEA PATH
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/9ZRUQM/515-Sherwood-Avenue-Honea-Path-SC-1330772
216 Parliament Road • 4BR/3BA
$193,000 · MLS# 1331852 Jon Ferguson · 616-7651 CODE 3955081
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/4V58SL/201-W-Hillcrest-Drive-Greenville-SC-1328030
158 Emily Drive • 4BR/3BA
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/JHTLER/216-Parliament-Road-Greenville-SC-1331666
9 Bristlecone Court • 4BR/2.5BA
NORTH MAIN
upstateschometours.cdanjoyner.com/home/AJ6K2Q/158-EMILY-Drive-Moore-SC-1329750
515 Sherwood Avenue • 3BR/2BA
$238,000 · MLS# 1331666 CODE 3949646 Stephanie Miller · 915-6076
$229,900 · MLS# 1330772 CODE 3919782 Jenny McCord · 313-2680
Fall is a great time for change IF YOU ARE READY TO TAKE THE LEAP, LET US HELP.
PREFERRED BUILDERS Arthur Rutenberg Homes Mon.-Sat. 9 am-5pm Sun. 12-5 pm ARHUpstateSC.com For further info, call 655-7702
www.CDanJoyner.com | #BestMoveEver
Agents on call this weekend
Wanda Reed 270-4078 Garlington Road
Chris Lee 906-3082 Easley
Bob Schmidt 313-4474 Simpsonville
Caroline Blouin 803-979-1322 Augusta Road
Patricia Grissinger 608-5009 N. Pleasantburg Dr.
Jada Barnette 879-4239 Greer
Lindsie Sink 616-8865 Downtown
Sandy Patterson 421-4198 Pelham Road
Avril Caviness 201-6860 Prop. Mgmt.
Interested in Buying or Selling a home? Contact one of our Agents on Call or visit us online at CDanJoyner.com
LakeLiving Once a Dream. Now a Reality. We are proud to present...
Cottages at Riverbirch Packages starting in the $400’s Craftsmen-style Cottages Dockable Homesites 10-foot Ceilings Granite Countertops Hardwood Floors Colors by Professional Interior Decorators
“It’s a price point that opens up lake living to a different population than what was previously offered. We’re very excited about this,” says Andy Lee, the Broker of Lake Keowee Real Estate.
896 N. WALNUT STREET, SENECA, SC 29678
Contact us today for a tour! 864.886.0098 • LakeKeoweeRealEstate.com
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 37
COMMUNITYJOURNALS.COM
HOME Featured Home
Kingsbridge
201 Somerset Forest Lane, Simpsonville, SC 29681
Home Info Price: $1,185,000 Bedrooms: 5 Baths: 5+ Lot Size: 0.70 Acres
MLS#: 1331895 Sq. Ft: 6000+ Built: 1996
Schools: Oakview Elementary, Beck Middle, and J.L. Mann High Agent: Virginia Abrams | 864.270.3329 vabrams@cbcaine.com
One of Greenvilles most beautiful estate homes located in an exclusive gated community that features a large clubhouse, pool, tennis and exercise amenities. This 5 bedroom, 5.2 bath home features a resortlike back yard with plenty of room for kids to play, a pool and spa with waterfall. Formal living and dining have matching fireplaces. The family room is mahogany with a barrel ceiling. First floor master suite is a dream. Also on the first floor is a mahogany office with built-ins.
All of the closets in this home are “live-in” size plus a two level walk-in storage area. The bonus room is perfect for parties or children. All bedrooms are huge and have full baths. A three car garage and a circle drive gives plenty of room for guest to park. The landscaping, the large rocking chair front porch and the brick fence add to the superb curb appeal for this brick home.
Real Estate News
North Pleasantburg Office 0f C. Dan Joyner, Realtors Announces Addition 0f Karol Carter and Kacey McCall-Hagin Hathaway HomeServices C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS is pleased to announce that Karol M. Carter and Kacey McCall-Hagin have joined the company’s N. Pleasantburg office as sales associates. Carter attended Walter State University, TN, and Boston Colegio Universitario, Costa Rica. After studying accounting and interior decorating, she went on to be the owner-operator of Costa Rica Real Estate for 5 years in San José, Costa Rica. Carter now lives in Greenville, SC, with her husband and two teenage sons. A Greenville native, McCall-Hagin attended the College of Charleston. Most recently, she has Carter McCall-Hagin worked in the interior design industry in downtown Greenville. Prior to that, McCall-Hagin gained experience working directly with developers, builders and contractors during her assignment as a Pro Account Sales Associate at a large home improvement store. In her spare time, she enjoys volunteering in the community and spending time with her husband, Trevor, and their son, Liam. “We are delighted to welcome Karol and Kacey to our office. Their knowledge of the area and their relevant experiences will serve our clients well,” said Fritzi Barbour, Broker-In-Charge of the N. Pleasantburg office.
Advertise your home with us Contact: Annie Langston
864-679-1224
alangston@communityjournals.com
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 39
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HOME Featured Neighborhood
Tucker Branch
37 Donemere Way, Fountain Inn 29644
Home Info Price: Starting in the high $180’s Schools: Fountain Inn Elementary, Bryson Middle, and Hillcrest High Contact Info: Jessika Poole | 540-226-6830 jessikapoole@greatsouthernhomes.com
Buyer Great Southern Homes is excited to now be a part of the Greenville community, with one of their premier communities being Tucker Branch. Tucker Branch is an upscale community, conveniently located near downtown Fountain Inn and less than two miles from I-385. These Great Southern Homes have been tested by the Green Smart Homes program, to ensure maximum energy efficiency for optimal energy use. Honeywell’s Tuxedo Touch Home automation system is also a feature in the homes at
Tucker Branch, which allows you to control your homes lights and security while away, at no extra cost. Great Southern Homes is also building homes in the following neighborhoods: Whispering Oaks, Rolands Crossing (Spartanburg), Victoria Park and Weatherstone. For more information please visit our website at www.greatsouthernhomes.com.
Live Green. Live Smart. Live Efficiently.
In your new GreenSmart Home from Great Southern Homes. NOW BUILDING in Fountainbrook (Fountain Inn) with homes starting in the $150’s and Whispering Oaks (Mauldin) with homes starting in the $160’s. Building in the Southeast since 1993
GreatSouthernHomes.com
OUR AGENTS ARE READY TO ASSIST:
JOANN WILLIAMS 864.420.4019 joannwilliams@greatsouthernhomes.com
TREY BOITER 864.354.0622 treyboiter@greatsouthernhomes.com
JESSIKA POOLE 540.226.6830 jessikapoole@greatsouthernhomes.com
40 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
HOME Put Your Apron On
with Emily Yepes
99 Problems, But the Milk Ain’t One oats is helping the milk situation. Oats are considered a “lactogenic” food, which are said to increase milk supply. Science has neither proven nor disproven this claim, but the widespread reported experience of mothers suggests that eating oats indeed boosts milk supply. Add this to the humble oat’s list of accolades.
The path to motherhood was not the sunny stroll I had anticipated. As with so many other couples, our journey was full of potholes. We struggled to conceive, and there were multiple, confounding issues that were preventing pregnancy. It seemed that every time the doctors discovered one and then solved it, another problem would then be evident. It took two years of troubleshooting, rivers of tears and mountains of cash to have our daughter. I gave birth to our first child about three months ago, and she was certainly worth the wait. The first couple of months presented more challenges because, for whatever the reason, the universe was apparently keeping to the theme. She was born six weeks premature and lived her first three weeks of life in a clear plastic box in the NICU. I spent those days at her bedside and spent those nights waking every three hours to pump breast milk for her. While she was still in the NICU, we discovered a major water leak and corresponding mold situation at our house. We brought her home to a kitchen zipped up in plastic like some kind of HGTV nightmare. I could go on and on about how inconvenient it was to camp out in the nursery with an infant while contractors took over our entire downstairs doing their thing — hammering, pounding and making other terrifying loud construction sounds that I don’t
Unfortunately, the majority of oat products on the market are loaded with sugar. Flavored oatmeal, granola, snack bars and even “lactation cookies” targeted to breast-feeding women are just desserts in a healthylooking disguise. This is particularly problematic as a new mom wishing to shrink my postpartum belly while maximizing milk production. Eating plain oats out of the can is a healthy option, but a rather boring one. Luckily, making my own tasty, low-or-no-sugar oat cereal is incredibly easy. Will Crooks / staff
have words to describe. But this is where the pity party stops. In some unlikely stroke of luck, it turns out I have a rich and plentiful breast milk supply. One of the NICU nurses called it “the heavy cream” of breast milk, and I make far more than my daughter needs. It’s truly a blessing. Certainly genetics plays a large role, but I have to wonder if my longtime love affair with
This vanilla spice oat cereal is a fantastic recipe for getting a day’s fill of oats while controlling the level of sugar. I prefer this recipe without any sugar at all — some cold milk and a sliced banana add just enough sweetness in my opinion — but you can certainly add maple syrup as a sweetener. The oats are toasted, maturing the flavors of the spices and adding a rich, nutty flavor and texture. The
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LIVE, ONSITE AUCTION – NOVEMBER 15, 2016 AT NOON 6 WISHING WELL CT, SIMPSONVILLE, SC 29681 • OPEN HOUSE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13 FROM 2-4 PM
This home will be sold to the highest bidder at or above the discounted reserve price! For more information and reserve call Sunil at 864.525.7449. For more pictures and terms and conditions of the auction visit www.thevarghesegroup.com.
Sunil Varghese, REALTOR Warren Wilson, Auctioneer - SCAL 218
864.525.7449 | sunil@thevarghesegroup.com
thevarghesegroup.com | 314 Lloyd St., Greenville, SC 29601
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 41
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HOME Featured Home
Greythorne
105 Kettle Oak Way, Simpsonville, SC 29681
Home Info Price: $314,500 Bedrooms: 4 Baths: 3 Lot Size: 0.18 Acres
MLS#: 1320653 Sq. Ft: 2939 Built: 2007
Schools: Ellen Woodside Elementary, Woodmont Middle, and Woodmont High Agent: Cynthia Serra | 864.304.3372 | cserra@cbcaine.com
You’ll feel like you’re home the minute you walk through the front door of this charming 4 bed 3 bath home with bonus. Gleaming hardwoods throughout the first floor, stacked stone fireplace in Great Room. Generous kitchen with granite, stainless appliances and sunny breakfast room. Dining room w/coffered ceiling and wainscoting.
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cinnamon, nutmeg and ground ginger satisfy seasonal spice desires. Chia seeds and toasted pumpkin seeds keep the texture interesting on the tongue and further boost the nutritional profile. Eat as a cold cereal with milk, in a yogurt parfait or as overnight oats. Whether you’re lactating or not, it’s a healthy way to start the day.
Vanilla Spice Oat Cereal
Split plan with master and 1 bedroom on first floor. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath and bonus upstairs. Screened porch, with enlarged open deck and fenced yard. This home is a must see, it’s so well maintained you’d think it was brand new.
• 1 egg white • 1 tsp. vanilla bean paste or pure vanilla extract (do not use vanilla “flavoring”) • 1 tsp. cinnamon • 1/2 tsp. nutmeg • 1/4 tsp. ground ginger • 1/4 tsp. salt
Dry ingredients
• sunflower oil or another light-tasting oil such as grapeseed
• 3 1/4 cup rolled oats (do not use quick-cook oats)
• maple syrup (optional)
• 1/4 cup chia seeds
Mix dry ingredients in a large bowl. In a 1-cup measuring cup, whisk together egg white, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt. If using maple syrup, add it here (up to 1/4 cup), then add oil until the total volume of the wet ingredients is 2/3 cup. If not
• 1/2 cup roasted, unsalted pumpkin seeds Wet ingredients
using syrup, just add oil to egg/spice mixture until you get to 2/3 cup of total wet ingredients. Give the wet ingredients a good whisking and pour them into the dry ingredients. Stir to coat the dry ingredients evenly with the wet ingredients. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and spread the oats onto the sheet in an even layer. Bake in a 300-degree oven for 10 minutes. Stir, bake 8 more minutes, stir then bake 5 more minutes. The total baking time may vary from oven to oven. You want the oats to be toasted and golden — but pull them out of the oven before they start to burn. Emily Yepes is an advertising representative at Community Journals and a fitness instructor. She is “just” a home cook whose favorite hobby is testing and perfecting recipes for her annual family cookbook.
42 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
HOME
SOLD: Greenville Transactions For the week of October 10 – 14, 2016 SUBD.
PRICE SELLER
$9,174,500 WOODLAND $1,430,000 $945,000 MCBEE PARK $857,500 $778,260 CLIFFS VALLEY LAKE RIDGE CROSS $729,000 CLIFFS AT MOUNTAIN PARK WESTVIEW $660,000 HOBCAW $622,000 GRIFFITH FARM $605,000 $590,000 THE RESERVE AT GREEN VALLEY $557,027 ABINGTON PARK $525,000 RIVER WALK $500,000 HAMMETT’S GLEN $475,000 ALEXANDER FARMS $441,824 PARK HILL TERRACE $430,000 CLUB FOREST $428,000 CHARLESTON WALK $422,000 $420,000 KILGORE FARMS $407,550 HALTON VILLAGE $400,000 COACHMAN PLANTATION $390,056 STONEHAVEN $390,000 FIRETHORNE $387,091 RIVER OAKS $371,000 CARRIAGE HILLS $370,600 WATERSTONE COTTAGES $359,000 STONEHAVEN $355,000 STONEHAVEN $355,000 PINEHURST AT PEBBLE CREEK $351,500 GREYTHORNE $350,000 ASHETON LAKES $340,500 SHELLBROOK PLANTATION $339,900 COACHMAN PLANTATION $330,406 $327,500 $320,000 BENNINGTON $315,000 KILGORE FARMS $308,532 BEAUCLAIRE $305,000 THE LOFTS AT MILLS MILL $300,000 SUMMERSETT MANOR $286,000 KELSEY GLEN $285,200 RIVER DOWNS $285,000 WALNUT RIDGE $281,406 GRESHAM PARK $275,200 KELSEY GLEN $272,500 RICHLAND CREEK @ NORTH MAIN $272,000 PENNINGTON PARK $271,039 BELSHIRE $270,710 CARILION $269,900 SILVER RIDGE FARMS $268,000 WHITEHALL PLANTATION $267,000 HOLLY TRACE $265,000 HOLLINGTON $264,000 FORRESTER HEIGHTS $262,500 GREYSTONE COTTAGES $255,660 CAMERON CREEK $251,886 $250,000 $250,000 HALTON VILLAGE $245,000 PINEHURST AT PEBBLE CREEK $244,500 SADDLE CREEK $243,000
85 LLC ARRHYTHMIA PROPERTIIES L WARE PLACE RESOURCES LLC METCALF DONALD B (JTWROS BLAKELY FAMILY LTD PARTN MULFORD DOUGLAS N TRUSTE SYNOVUS BANK GIACOMETTI JOSEPH F HALLENGREN FAMILY REVOC STORER JEANNINE LIVING T MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH FRANK ABBY J (JTWROS) MOORE AMY L (JTWROS) HARVEY JACKIE L TRUSTEE MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH ELLER MARISA E HIDRIA USA INC HEARTHSTONE DEVELOPMENT GRECI MARCIA T MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN INDEPENDENCE BANCSHARES MUNGO HOMES INC IDRIS JACQUELINE S DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL FENDER WILTON J NEWSTYLE CARRIAGE HILLS CARLSON KENT A (JTWROS) RHEM ANTHONY NEI GLOBAL RELOCATION CO LANDRETH JOHN N JR HOWARD DEBORAH WILLIAMS NANCY KATHLEEN HACKLEY BRIAN J (JTWROS) MUNGO HOMES INC FORD ANDREW O (JTWROS) GROGAN FRANCIS H JR VAUGHAN STANLEY W MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH SHEALY DALE P LEPINA YELENA RIGDON LUKAS L NVR INC HOLTZCLAW JAMES TONY ADAMS HOMES AEC LLC TURSI RICHARD LONG MICHAEL (JTWROS) GSAA 2006-1 SK BUILDERS INC NVR INC JENSEN NANCY A FERNANDEZ CARMEN M MARTINEZ-RUZAFA IVAN WHEELER KATHARINE W NIKKHAH CALLIE (JTWROS) NELSON BRAD W ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC D R HORTON-CROWN LLC DUNCAN MARY ELLEN WARE WOOTEN JUDY PEACE INDEPENDENCE BANCSHARES HORNE JOSEPH ALLEN JR DURHAM EUNICE
BUYER
ADDRESS
SUBD.
GREENVILLE RETAIL ASSOCI GREENVILLE HEALTH SYSTEM STOP-A-MINIT #27 LLC HERWALD KURT (JTWROS) OAKS LIMITED LLC STEVENS JANICE D CHOUEST KIRT PERRICELLI LISA (JTWROS) RICE BILLAJEAN FREY SCOTT E (JTWROS) GOESS BRIAN (JTWROS) GENG XIAOLONG (JTWROS) HENDERSON JONATHAN D (JT GUSHUE JOHN F (JTWROS) MATHIASMEIER KENNETH J ( ROBERTSON MOLLY BARTGES ELIZABETH (JTWRO BROWN JILL C HUDSON LAUREN STONE FORD KYLENEE L (JTWROS) LAB DEVELOPMENT GROUP LD WADE FRED K (JTWROS) NELSON BRADLEY W (JTWROS MORLEY KAREN A (JTWROS) PALLINI CHRISTINE EBELING JOINT REVOCABLE LYONS ELIZABETH V NEI GLOBAL RELOCATION CO MILBY CAROL KATHLEEN (JT KREIN RENEE M BEAVERS KIMBERLY S SARHAN MARGARET A (JTWRO PEARSON DENISE M (JTWROS JACKSON REBEKAH A (JTWRO LEE CYNTHIA (JTWROS) SEASONAL CUISINE LLC HANKS MICHAEL A (JTWROS) DEGRAW JENNIFER LYNNE (J GORDON GREGORY L (JTWROS HARRINGTON RICHARD F JR STOFFLE GRANT ALBERT JR EARLSTON LATISHA L (JTWR NUTT AYESHA H (JTWROS) PIERCE SUSAN D (JTWROS) WARNER CYNTHIA MCGOWAN HASKELL MATHIAS (JTWROS) KING BERTRAND W HAY JAMES R (JTWROS) BUNHA AJAY K TEMPLETON JOHN C (JTWROS PENNELL CAROLINE R MOORE AMY L ARLEDGE COREY D COMEAUX JONATHAN D KUHLMANN JAN STEFFEN (SU BUCHANAN BRIAN WHIRL JERMAINE FLYNN MICHAEL B (JTWROS) SHELTON APRIL N (JTWROS) PALMETTO INFUSION REAL E RIFFLE ADAM S (JTWROS) STROBLE DAVID J
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ROPER MOUNTAIN PLANTATION $242,300 ST JAMES PLACE $239,000 TREYBERN $236,000 MOUNTAIN MEADOWS $235,000 GRIFFIN PARK $233,155 FRANKLIN MEADOWS $225,300 PLANTERS ROW $219,000 IVY GLEN $217,393 PARKVALE $215,000 WOODRUFF LAKE $215,000 VICTORIA PARK TOWNHOMES $209,173 NORTHCLIFF $206,900 HOLLY TREE PLANTATION $205,000 RIDGECREEK ESTATES $203,500 $200,000 LISMORE PARK $199,900 NORTHWOOD HILLS $199,000 COUNTRY MEADOWS $197,000 WOODLANDS AT WALNUT COVE $196,800 WATERMILL $196,620 MAPLE HEIGHTS $195,000 THE TOWNES AT FIVE FORKS $194,700 W.W. DAVIS $189,000 CREEK BANK COMMONS $187,000 THE HEIGHTS $186,750 THE GLEN AT GILDER CREEK FARM $184,000 WINDERMERE $183,500 LONG CREEK PLANTATION $183,000 RIVER MIST $182,500 SWANSGATE $181,000 $180,000 THE BROOKS AT AUTUMN WOODS $179,900 WOODFOREST $178,000 HAMPTON FARMS $177,050 RENAISSANCE EXCHANGE @ ALEXANDER ST $177,000 MARTINS GROVE $175,950 LISMORE PARK $173,500 SUMMERSIDE AT ROLLING GREEN $173,000 SPARROWS POINT $172,500 $169,273 RIVER MIST $169,000 HALF MILE LAKE $167,581 LISMORE PARK $166,000 CREEKSIDE $165,000 PLANTERS ROW $160,000 RABON VALLEY $158,500 PARKSIDE VILLAS $157,000 CANEBRAKE $156,500 WOODHARBOR $155,000 AVON PARK $155,000 BURGISS HILL $155,000 $155,000 RIDGEWATER $152,544 WATERMILL $151,100 $149,000 STONEWOOD MANOR $146,720 $146,000 JUSTICE ESTATES $146,000 COUNTRY CHASE $145,650 SUPER HWY HOMESITES $144,000 SADDLER’S RIDGE $144,000 BROADMOOR $142,000
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STOUT JOSEPH D (JTWROS) YANG XUEZHONG STIEKES GREGORY JOHN (JT CHUDY JUDITH E WETLI ANGIE (JTWROS) HOWAT GEORGE G (JTWROS) MIKELL BARBARA B KOPANSKI KYLE HOWE JAMES M LEE KYUNGMIN JACKSON SHAYNA E MORAN CHRISTIN L CORN ANDREW T (JTWROS) GANGI JULIE A (JTWROS) SSL PROPERTIES LLC COLDITZ CHRISTINA (JTWRO MORRIS GEORGE M SENN ERIN E (JTWROS) BERRIDGE BURTON STEVEN GALLOWAY DENITA C NEELY ANGELA Y NVR INC BENNETT ROBERT E JR (JTW GEISLER ROBERT NICHOLSON BRANDON J PATEL KESHA STONER CHRISTOPHER A (JT HUFFSTETLER CANDACE N CROWDER BONNY L GALLOWAY DWIGHT (JTWROS) ABERCROMBIE CINDY D (JTW FOSTER MICHAEL J SMITH ANGELA L CARLISLE BREANNA W (JTWR TWO BLUE STALLIONS LLC GORTON DAVID (JTWROS) PRICE JILL S SEMS CAROLYN V (JTWROS) SCIVEDGE JAMES T JR NEW AMERICAN EMBROIDERY SLAGH KEVIN D WELLS FARGO BANK N A REEL PROPERTIES GROUP CO AVERY HOWARD K SECURITIZED ASSET BACKED DYE KENDALL L (JTWROS) MACNEIL JEFF RODRIGUEZ MARY MILLER J GRADY III (JTWR GILBERT SARAH R STEKETEE JANET S WFLP LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN K & L RETIREMENT PLAN & WHITE RONALD J SR MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN MATSUDA RICHARD GALLION DONALD L ARANGO LUZ AIDEE (JTWROS TRACY ERIC (SURV) BOBO LAUREN A DOMINA EDWARD (JTWROS)
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RESIDENTIAL | COMMERCIAL | NEW HOME COMMUNITIES | PROPERTY MANAGEMENT | VETERAN SERVICES | FORECLOSURES | LAND & ACREAGE | MOUNTAIN PROPERTIES
44 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
CALENDAR
Ticket Alert: Disney’s “The Lion King”
Peace Center | 101 W Broad St. 10 a.m. | Tickets start at $35 “The Lion King” will return to Greenville May 31, 2017, for four weeks. Showtimes will be Tuesdays through Thursdays at 7:30 p.m., Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 8 p.m. and Sundays at 1 and 6:30 p.m. There will also be 2 p.m. matinees on Thursday, June 1, and Thursday, June 22. Premium ticket packages, which include a prime seat location, a commemorative souvenir program and an exclusive merchandise item, are also available. 467-3000 or 800-888-7768 peacecenter.org
COMMUNITY
SC Veterans Upstate Salute Fluor Field at the West End 945 S. Main St. 5-8 p.m. Free, but registration is required and tickets are limited. Join us Friday, Nov. 11, at Fluor Field at the West End to show support of our nation’s veterans with a free, family-friendly event featuring fireworks, aerial flyovers, paratroopers and a special concert by country superstar Tracy Lawrence. 240-4528 | upstatesalute.com
CONCERT
NEEDTOBREATHE Bon Secours Wellness Arena 650 N. Academy Street 7 p.m. | $33.50-$53.50 241-3800 | 800-745-3000 | ticketmaster.com
CONCERT
Furman University Presents Tribute Concert Honoring Robert Chesebro Furman University | Daniel Recital Hall 3300 Poinsett Highway 8 p.m. FREE Furman University music faculty and guests will present “A Tribute to Robert Chesebro.” Joining faculty member Dr. Cecilia Kang are guest clarinetists and alumni Elizabeth Crawford, Jennifer Everhart, Erik Franklin and Tod Kerstetter. Guest clarinetists are former students of Chesebro, who joined the Furman music faculty in 1965 and retired in 2015 after a 50-year career with the university. Also part of the program is a 20-plus member Paladin Clarinet Choir comprised of Dr. Chesebro’s current and former students, ensemble members and other friends. 294-2086 furmanmusic@furman.edu furman.edu/academics/music/Pages/default.aspx
NOV. 11
Gláss w/ Eureka California & Feather Trade Radio Room | 2845 N. Pleasantburg Drive | 9 p.m. | $5 (over 21)/$7 (under)
On their album Accent, the Greenville trio Gláss creates a sound that’s somehow massive and basic. Repeated guitar figures, elliptical, fragmented lyrics and pulsing rhythms feed songs that are infectiously melodic. But the trio can shift gears on a dime, moving from blissfully languid verses to jarring, jagged instrumental passages. The lyrics are more impressionistic than narrative, like a Morse code of confused or disassociated phrases. Those feelings of uncertainty and unease came naturally to the band’s singer/guitarist Aaron Burke. He’s spent most of the last four years adjusting to his new life after moving from Scotland to America with his mother and stepfather. “The move affected me hugely,” he says, “and I tried to convey the distant and uncomfortable feelings that I had about it in this record. Really, for the past two years, my move to America has really been the main subject I’ve written about.” —Vincent Harris
COMMUNITY
info@flatrockplayhouse.org
Mauldin Veterans Day Ceremony Mauldin’s Veterans Memorial 101 E. Butler Road, Mauldin 11 a.m. | FREE The event will feature patriotic performances by the Corridor Brass Ensemble and Bryson Middle School Chorus, a special presentation and a special tribute to veterans. This event is open to the public. cityofmauldin.org
CONCERT
The Con Aloft Downtown | 5 N. Laurens St. 8 p.m. | FREE Not sure if the band name refers to some sort of scam or some time in the big house, but The Con is a new band made up of some familiar faces from bands like Cold Shot, Of Good & Evil and The Roscoe. Their specialty is heavy blues rock with a bit of country twang thrown in. 297-6100 | aloftgreenvilledowntown.com
FRI-SUN
11-20
THRU SAT
12
THEATER
“Jekyll & Hyde: The Musical” Centre Stage | 501 River St.
Thursdays–Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. | $20–$35 The epic struggle between good and evil comes to life on stage in the musical phenomenon of “Jekyll & Hyde” at Centre Stage. Based on the classic story by Robert Louis Stevenson and featuring a thrilling score of pop-rock hits from
NOV. 12
multi-Grammy- and Tony-nominated Frank Wildhorn and double-Oscar- and Grammywinning Leslie Bricusse, “Jekyll & Hyde” has mesmerized audiences the world over. 233-6733 | centrestage.org
SAT
12
COMEDY
Jackie Tohn
Tryon Fine Arts Center 34 Melrose Avenue, Tryon 8 p.m. | $35 adult, $17 student Tryon Fine Arts Center continues the Main Stage Series with a side-splitting performance
Ian Fitzgerald Smiley’s Acoustic Café, 111 Augusta St. | 6:30 p.m. | Free
CONCERT
11
THEATER
CONCERT
FRI
THEATER PRODUCTION
“A Thousand Cranes”
Flat Rock Playhouse, Playhouse Downtown 125 S Main St., Hendersonvlle Friday (7 p.m.), Saturday (2 and 7 p.m.), Sunday at (2 p.m.) Seats from $10 to $18 Flat Rock Playhouse presents a Studio 52 production, “A Thousand Cranes.” This show tells the true story of Sadako Sasaki, who was a 2-year-old in the center of the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima. Although seemingly unharmed at the time, 10 years later she was diagnosed with “radiation sickness,” or leukaemia. While in the hospital, Sadako attempted to follow the Japanese legend that her wish of healing would be granted if she folded 1,000 paper cranes. 826-693-0731 | flatrockplayhouse.org
Singer/songwriter Ian Fitzgerald recorded his last album, 2013’s “No Time to Be Tender,” in four days with three additional musicians, one of whom was the producer. So when his new album, “You Won’t Even Know I’m Gone,” took a lot longer than that with a lot more musicians involved, he started getting a little nervous. But it turns out he just needed to find the right setting for his unassuming, disarmingly catchy acoustic folk. “I went in with a band that had two additional guitars, bass and drums,” Fitzgerald says of the sessions. “But as I started working on those I thought maybe the arrangements weren’t exactly what I was looking for, so I went back in with some other friends of mine. It was difficult but gratifying when I finally figured out what the sound was.” Fitzgerald’s music is so direct and his lyrical eye is so incisive that the tendency is to think of his songs as autobiographical, but he says he avoids simply singing about his life. “I don’t want people in my life to feel like if they say something to me that I’m going to jot it down and turn it into a song,” he says. —Vincent Harris
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from stand up comedienne and singer/songwriter Jackie Tohn. Jackie’s unique mix of musical talent and side-splitting comedy make for an unforgettable performance. 828-859-8322 | tryonarts.org
CONCERT
Jam Room Music Festival Jam Room Foundation | Downtown Columbia Main and Hampton noon-10 p.m. | FREE
CONCERT
NOV. 12
Susto w/ Vilai Harrington The Spinning Jenny, 107 Cannon St., Greer 8 p.m. | $10 (adv)/$12 (door) In 2014, the Charleston band Susto released their debut self-titled album. Written largely by singer/guitarist Justin Osborne, the songs on the album took basic acoustic roots-rock and imbued them with a haunted atmosphere of mystery, all the better for Osborne’s lyrical ruminations on regret, confusion and the past. And to his surprise, the album has slowly but surely built momentum over the last two years, allowing the band to tour continuously. “I thought we made a good record,” Osborne says, “but I didn’t know if we were going to do anything with it. We’re still riding the wave of it two-and-a-half years later, and it’s been really good for us.” The band has finished up their second album, which will be out early next year, and Osborne says he’s ready for people to hear Susto’s next step. “I’m anxious to start playing the new songs,” he says. “We’re excited to move forward. We took some chances sonically with the kind of Americana, alt-country sound on the first record, and people responded really well, so we kind of magnified that on the second record. It feels very much like the next chapter for the band.” —Vincent Harris
From soulful indie-folk, alt-country and stripped down rock to heavy metal, funk, voodoo hexes and hip-hop, the fifth annual Jam Room Music Festival is bringing 12 bands, two stages and an all-around street party to downtown Columbia on Nov. 12. Featured artists include Mountain Goats, Mount Moriah, Boulevards, Fall of an Empire, Preach Jacobs, Scott Low, The Restoration, Brave Baby, Gold Light, My Brother My Sister and Glaˆss. 803-787-6908 | jamroommusicfestival.com jamroommusicfestival@gmail.com
Create one-of-a-kind ornaments for the holiday season! Join Karoline and John O’Rourke of Kakilaki StudioArts for a fun and easy introduction to making fused glass. Each registration includes two ornaments. If class time allows and you wish to make another ornament, additional materials will be available for purchase. Recommended for children ages 5 and older. 271-7570 gcma.org/pages/calendar/detail/event/c11/ e359&DateOfEvent=11/12/2016
FAMILY
CONCERT
Thank A Vet 5/10K Walk The UpState PathFinders | Cleveland Park Cleveland Park Drive, Shelter #29 10 a.m. registration and11 a.m. walk | $3 In recognition of Veteran’s Day, The UpState PathFinders, an American Volkssport Association club, is sponsoring a “Thank A Vet 5/10K Walk” along Cleveland Park’s GHS Swamp Rabbit Trail and surrounding area. Bring your family and thank our veterans for all they do to protect us and our great nation. If you’re a veteran, come out and join us as we honor you and your family. After the walk, stay and have lunch in the park with our veterans and club members as we enjoy a Southwestern cuisine served by Meat’N In The Middle, a flavor you don’t want to miss. A magic show will follow the walk, performed by the Magic Man, Paul DiLella. We are giving a free 20 oz. pilsner glass with the UpState PathFinders logo to the first 35 registered veterans. So come on out, get a little exercise and get to know and support some of our veterans in the Greenville community. 505-5051 | upstatepathfinders.com
DANCE
SCGSAH Student Dance Performance
REUNION
Simpsonville Red Hat Society Chapters Reunion 1 p.m.
Blues Boulevard (Greenville) 300 River St., Ste. 203 8 p.m. $10, plus $10 food/drink minimum Saxophonist Thom Chambers has a molassesthick tone that he can bestow on a jazz standard or his own more contemporary, smoothjazz originals with equal ease. 242-2583 bluesboulevardjazzgreenville.com
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The art of Shay Brown will be on display. The exhibit is presented in cooperation with the Metropolitan Arts Council. This partnership is sponsored by South State Bank. 233-6733 | centrestage.org
Epic Buffet | 3940 Grandview Drive
Thom Chambers
THRU SUN
FREE
VISUAL ART
The Art of Shay Brown The Gallery at Centre Stage 501 River St.
2-6 p.m. | Tuesdays–Fridays
This should be an event filled with great enjoyment for all past and present members of these two Simpsonville chapters of the Red Hat Society. The luncheon should be a delight since the Epic Buffet has a huge buffet, so there should be something to please every palate. Afterward, all ex-queens will be introduced. There will be quite a few scrapbooks and other memorabilia there to spark memories and conversation. Bring some of your own too. Past members: If you no longer have your purple and red attire, it is not necessary to dress as you did yesteryear. Just come in your street clothes. We just want to see you again and, as the late Bob Hope used to sing, “Thanks for the memories.” Call Norma Tolbert by Nov. 7 at 962-1481 to reserve a spot. 962-1481
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re-ignite the spark
South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities Gunter Theatre at the Peace Center 300 South Main St. 7:30 p.m. The Governor’s School Dance students perform a wide range of works that celebrate ballet traditions as well as the moving trends of the 21st century. 467-3000 | boxoffice@peacecenter.org
VISUAL ARTS
Family Workshop: Merry & Bright – Glass Fusion Holiday Ornaments Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. 10:30 a.m.-noon, $15 1-3 p.m. 2 drink coasters or 4 swizzle sticks $28, 2 wine bottle stoppers $36, 2 decorative bowls $36, or 2 ornaments $15
Upscale lingerie and novelties boutique for all couples
Locally Owned
864-520-1143 Shop online at
adamevegreenvillesc.com 1659 Woodruff Road, Suite D Greenville SC 29607 LINGERIE • BACHELOR AND BACHELORETTE GIFTS • KNOWLEDGEABLE STAFF • GAMES
46 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM
CALENDAR « SUN EDUCATION 13 Guyology: Reproduction for Boys
Greenville Memorial Hospital 701 Grove Road - Conference Room 2 p.m. | $50/parent-child pair A two-hour program for fifth- and sixth-grade boys and parent. Why does it matter? By this age, most children have heard something about sex, right or wrong. Arm him with an accurate, yet age-appropriate understanding that will protect him from the myths and set the stage for future conversations that are vital to healthy development. Each program concludes with time for anonymously submitted questions and answers. What’s it about? Review of boys’ puberty, birth, menstration and ovulation, sex and reproduction, conception, animals vs. humans, fetal development, and why sex is for adults. Registration required. 843-693-3326 | girlology.com/events
at Joe’s Place. Billy Eli writes tight, lean songs played with an inviting groove. His songs of love, longing, the road and getting by are, in his words, “sometimes happy, sometimes sad.” See him unplugged and personal. 512-804-9934 | joesplacellc.com
VISUAL ARTS
Sundays at 2: Artists’ Perspectives-Syd Solomon Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. 2 p.m. Develop a new understanding of the works of abstract expressionist Syd Solomon, while listening in on conversations and seeing interpretations of modern dancers from Greenville’s Fine Arts Center. 271-7570 gcma.org
CULINARY
Big Bad Breakfast Brunch at Bacon Bros. Public House
CONCERT
Billy Eli Joe’s Place | 640 S. Main St.
3620 Pelham Road
4-6 p.m.
11 a.m. $30-$60
Roots rock songwriter Billy Eli from Austin, Texas, brings his songs about real stuff to Upstate music lovers on Sunday, Nov. 13, from 4-6
Crossword puzzle: page 50
Chef Anthony Gray has teamed up with Oxford’s Chef John Currence to bring Greenville a taste of Currence’s new “Big Bad Breakfast” cookbook, which draws from his iconic Oxford restaurant of the same name. Guests will enjoy a three-course brunch with beverage pairings from Currence’s cookbook. Books will be available to purchase at the brunch. On the table – Jimmy Red Cornbread and Buttermilk Biscuits with black pepper honey and apple butter. First - Shakshoucka with baked eggs, San Marazno tomatoes, feta cheese and warm buttered pita. Second - Hangtown Fry with fried oysters, soft scrambled eggs, table sauce and bacon. Third Monkey Bread with apples, currants, chopped nuts and brown sugar. 297-6000 eventbrite.com/e/big-bad-breakfastbrunch-with-chef-john-currence-tickets-29074190687
CULINARY
An Afternoon at the Farm Reedy River Farms | 78 Mayberry St. 3:30-6:30 p.m. $40/adults, $10/ages 7-12, Free/ages 0-6 Coastal Crust and Reedy River Farms present a collaborative, family-friendly farm-to-table dinner to help the farm “beet” the winter. My Girl Whiskey and Me will entertain diners. tinyurl.com/zedb9qx
THRU MON Sudoku puzzle: page 50
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COMEDY
New South Comedy Festival
Alchemy Comedy Theater 1 E. Coffee St. $14 This year the festival expands to two weeks in order to accommodate more than 200 improv, stand-up, musical and sketch comedy performers from New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Baton Rouge, Knoxville and throughout the Southeast. newsouthcomedy.com
MON-DEC
14-09
VISUAL ARTS
Furman University Presents Art by Greenville Native Kate Roberts Furman University Thompson Art Gallery, Roe Art Building 3300 Poinsett Highway 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-FridayReception and Talk: Monday, Nov. 14, 6-7:30 p.m. FREE Work by ceramic artist and Greenville native Kate Roberts will be on display in Furman University’s Thompson Gallery, Roe Art Building Nov. 14-Dec. 9. Thompson Gallery hours are Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. A reception and talk with the artist is set for Monday, Nov. 14, 6-7:30 p.m. in Thompson Gallery. Roberts’ exhibition, Indigo Curtain, is an extension of her philosophy, which says, “My practice is a meditation on time and its role in the decay of objects and memories. Inspiration is drawn from historical objects, the architecture around me, or a personal relationship. My processes are repetitive and labor intensive; I draw, construct and weave using materials to depict fleeting, fragile moments and to examine the temporary physicality of an object or idea.” bit.ly/2evIUsz
TUE
15
CONCERT
Pentatonix
Bon Secours Wellness Arena 650 N. Academy Street 8 p.m. | $32.50-$89 Pentatonix will have special guest Us The Duo. 241-3800 | 800-745-3000 | ticketmaster.com
COMMUNITY
November meeting of the Simpsonville Garden Club
Furman University Lyric Theatre Presents “Night at the Opera: Opera Scenes 2016” Furman University | Daniel Recital Hall 3300 Poinsett Highway 8 p.m. | FREE Furman University Lyric Theatre will present an opera scenes recital. The recital, “A Night at the Opera: Opera Scenes 2016,” is free and open to the public and is presented by the Furman University Department of Music. Directed by Furman’s Dr. Grant Knox, undergraduate music majors will present excerpts from the standard operatic repertory including music by Mozart, Verdi, Puccini and Bizet. Selections will be performed in original languages. 294-2086 | bit.ly/2fDoZdy furmanmusic@furman.edu
LECTURE
Furman Hosts Notre Dame Professor in “Why Scientists Playing Amateur Atheology Fail” Furman University | Younts Conference Center 3300 Poinsett Highway 8 p.m. | FREE Dr. Christian Smith, sociology professor at the University of Notre Dame, will deliver the Charles H. Townes Lecture on Faith and Reason in Shaw Hall of the Younts Conference Center on the Furman University campus. Smith’s talk, “Why Scientists Playing Amateur Atheology Fail,” examines the capabilities and limits of scientific authority to help us know what we can and cannot rationally believe about possible religious truths. Smith explores questions such as, do natural and social scientists have the capacity to make claims about the existence of God, the meaning of the universe or other metaphysical positions? Can science prove or disprove religious beliefs? Is atheism more scientific than belief in God? 294-3107 | bit.ly/2flEDoP vince.moore@furman.edu
WED
16
COMMUNITY
Furman University High Noon Series: “Sykes-Picot and the Modern Middle East”
Country Boys Garden Center 1949 Woodruff Road
Upcountry History Museum Furman University 540 Buncombe St.
2 p.m. | FREE
noon | FREE
Simpsonville Garden Club’s meeting will host speaker Bill Cearcy, who will speak on using live greenery in holiday arrangements. The Simpsonville Garden Club meets the third Tuesday of every month. simpsonvillegardenclub.com
From leading scholars to leaders of nations and terrorist organizations, blame for the seemingly perpetual conflict in the Middle East has been laid on the doorstep of a 100-year-old secret agreement bearing the names of a British aristocrat and a French career diplomat. Furman University professor of history Dr. Hilary Falb Kalisman, a historian of the modern Middle East, will
CONCERT
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discuss the history of the Sykes-Picot agreement, and its impact on the borders and conflicts in the region. 294-3107 | bit.ly/2dhn8GX Vince.moore@furman.edu
present and future, Dickens’ classic tale is sure to be a hit this holiday season.
FAMILY
FAMILY
Wednesday Night Pickleball Sterling Community Center | 113 Minus St. 6-8 p.m. | Wednesdays thru Dec. 28 | $3 Pickleball is the fastest growing sport in America. The game combines elements of tennis, ping-pong and badminton. It is easy for beginners to learn and is a challenging, fast-paced, competitive game for more experienced players. There are hundreds of Pickleball players in the Upstate. New players are always welcome. We play every Wednesday night at Sterling Community Center (113 Minus St., Greenville, SC 29601) starting at 6 p.m. No paddle, no problem. We have loaner paddles. Cost is $3 with the money going to Sterling. 603-3558 | Upstatepickleball.com
CONCERT
Mister F
826-693-0731 flatrockplayhouse.org info@flatrockplayhouse.org
Storytime Thursday Fiction Addiction 1175 Woods Crossing Road #5 10:30 a.m. | Thursdays FREE Celebrate Thanksgiving by bringing your preschool children to Fiction Addiction for a storytime reading of the picture book “There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Turkey!” by Lucille Colandro, illustrated by Jared D. Lee. 675-0540 fiction-addiction.com info@fiction-addiction.com
COMMUNITY
50th Annual Greek Ladies Philoptochos Bake Sale and Luncheon/Dinner
Independent Public Ale House 110 Poinsett Highway
St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral 406 N Academy St.
9 p.m. | $3
9:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
Mister F is a quartet from Albany, N.Y., that mixes down-and-dirty, danceable funk with jazzfusion instrumental chops. Think more Average White Band than Weather Report. 552-1265 | ipagreenville.com/index.html
Pastries will go on sale at 9 a.m. and will sell until sold out. Meals will be served 10:30 a.m.–7 p.m. or until sold out. 233-8531 | saintgeorge.church
WED-SEP
16-10
VISUAL ARTS
New Exhibition: Wyeth Dynasty
Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St. In celebration of the centennial of Andrew Wyeth’s birth, the Museum presents Wyeth Dynasty, a retrospective of Andrew Wyeth’s art complemented by works of his father, N. C., his son Jamie and his sisters Carolyn and Henriette. More than 80 examples are featured in this exhibition of works by the first family of American painting. 271-7570 | gcma.org
THU
17
THEATER PRODUCTION
“A Christmas Carol”
Flat Rock Playhouse Clyde and Nina Allen Mainstage 2661 Greenville Highway, Flat Rock Wednesday and Thursday (2 and 7:30 p.m.), Friday (8 p.m.), Saturday (2 and 8 p.m.), Sunday (2 p.m.)
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 47
Downtown Greenville
Main St. from Augusta St. to North St.
CONCERT
Furman University Symphonic Winds in Concert Furman University | McAlister Auditorium 3300 Poinsett Highway 8 p.m. | $12/adults, $10/seniors, $5/students Furman Symphonic Winds will present its fall concert Thursday, Nov. 17, at 8 p.m. in McAlister Auditorium on the Furman University campus. The concert, “Sanctuary,” is conducted by Furman music professors Leslie W. Hicken and Jay Bocook, with student conductors Alex Armock and Emily Salgado. The program includes 70 student musicians performing works by Claudio S. Grafulla, Mark Camphouse, Gustav Holst, Ryan George, Frank Ticheli and Luigi Denza. 294-2086 | bit.ly/2fbjzTO furmanmusic@furman.edu
basically a local version of theSkimm
VISUAL ARTS
Third Thursday Tour: Wyeth Dynasty Greenville County Museum of Art 420 College St.
Subscribe today!
Seats from $15 to $40
11 a.m.-noon | FREE
Now a biannual production, Flat Rock Playhouse presents the holiday classic, “A Christmas Carol.” Telling the timeless story or Scrooge, Tiny Tim and the ghosts of Christmas past,
Meet in front of The Salon near the front door and join us for a free docent-led tour of the exhibition Wyeth Dynasty. 271-7570 | gcma.org
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THU-SAT
Writers’ Harvest
Self Auditorium, Strom Thurmond Institute 230 Kappa St., Clemson 5 p.m. | Canned good donation Award-winning novelist and Clemson University English professor Nic Brown will read in a campus benefit for Loaves and Fishes. The annual event will also feature faculty writers Geveryl Robinson and Daniel Citro and student writers P.T. Stone and Miriam McEwen from the English department.
CULINARY
Beaujolais Nouveau 2016 Upstate International | 9 S. Memminger St. 7–9:30 p.m. $40 for members, $45 for nonmembers Celebrate Beaujolais Nouveau Day with a Beaujolais tasting featuring several kinds of wine paired with multiple courses of French cuisine. Advance reservations are required. conta.cc/2fUtbF8
17-19
THEATER
“Little Women”
Bob Jones University Rodeheaver Auditorium | 1700 Wade Hampton Blvd. 8 p.m. on Nov. 17 and 18; 2 p.m. on Nov. 19 $23/students; $34-$43/adults “Little Women: The Broadway Musical” follows the timeless saga of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy March as they grow up during the Civil War. With music and lyrics by Jason Howland and Mindi Dickstein, this production has touched audiences of all ages around the world. Join us for this captivating story based on Louisa May Alcott’s own life, and watch as the March sisters - through joy, sorrow, change and hope - charm their way into your heart. 770-1372 bju.edu/events/fine-arts/concert-opera-drama/little-women.php
FRI
18
EDUCATION
Culinary Institute of the Carolinas at Greenville Technical College Open House
FRI-SUN
18-20
CONCERT
The Greenville Symphony Orchestra presents “Divine Mozart”
Northwest Campus | 8109 White Horse Road
The Gunter Theatre | 300 S. Main St.
9:30 a.m.
Nov. 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 20 at 3 p.m.
The Culinary Institute of the Carolinas at Greenville Technical College will host an open house for prospective students November 18 at 9:30 a.m. at the Northwest Campus. Experience what they have to offer future culinary professionals, and learn more about their new certificate program in sustainable agriculture. Meet the faculty; tour the facility, including five kitchens and dining room; and observe demonstrations in poultry fabrication and balancing flavors, hands-on with breads and product specification/“can cutting” of vanilla ice cream. Attendees are encouraged to arrive no later than the start time of the event, and check-in will begin at 9 a.m. RSVP on the website. Open houses are also available in April and May 2017. rsvp-culinaryarts-gtc.eventbrite.com
$44 The annual and most popular all-Mozart concert returns featuring the GSO’s principal horn, Anneka Zuehlke-King, performing Mozart’s Horn Concerto. Other works reflect both the early and mature periods in Mozart’s life displaying the divine beauty of his music. 467-3000 | greenvillesymphony.org
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Send your event information and images to calendar@communityjournals.com by Friday at 5 p.m. to be considered for publication in the next week’s Journal.
Holiday Open House We invite you to begin the holiday season on Augusta Road. Sunday, November 20, from 1-5 pm
“I have listed and sold some of the finest properties in the upstate. Let me help you sell your current home or find your dream home.” — Rick
Let us customize a buying or selling plan for you! Gone are the days when a “For Sale” sign and a listing in the classified ads was enough to sell a home. Those strategies are still utilized, but today’s home buyer is more technologically savvy than ever before. Let us help. • 16 + years of award winning sales & service • Lower listing commissions • Luxury home specialist • New listings open houses
Shopping, Santa, Toys, Prizes & Rides. Fun for all ages! Only on Augusta!
Enter the Shopping Spree & Instagram Contest
Rick Horne, Broker In Charge www.customrealtysc.com • (864) 982-7653
THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA
LEGAL NOTICE RATES: ABC Notices $165 | All others $1.20 per line 864.679.1205 | 864.679.1305 | email: aharley@communityjournals.com Vaccines, spay or neuter, testing & microchip included!
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that CHP Greenville SC Tenant Corp 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 1004 Augusta Street, Greenville, SC 29605. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 27, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: IFB# 40-12/06/16, Renovations to Detention Center Hospital Rooms, December 6, 2016, 3:00PM., E.S.T. A pre-bid meeting and site visit will be held at 11:30 A.M., E.S.T., November 16, 2016, Greenville County Detention Center, 20 McGee Street, Greenville, SC 29601. RFP# 39-12/01/16, UPS System and Installation, December 1, 2016, 3:30 P.M., E.S.T. Solicitations can be found at www.greenvillecounty.org/ Procurement or by calling (864) 467-7200.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE FAMILY COURT No.:2016-DR-23-3545 NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS TO STEPHEN ANDREW PITTMAN You have been notified pursuant to SC Code Ann Sec.15-9-710, that adoption proceedings have been initiated under the abovereferenced case number by Carmen Julia Bermudez Marin. YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED AS FOLLOWS: 1. That within thirty (30) days of receiving notice you shall respond in writing by filing with the Clerk of Court at 301 University Ridge Greenville, South Carolina 29602, notice and reasons to contest, intervene or otherwise respond; 2. That the Court must be informed of your current address and any change of address during the divorce proceedings. 3. That failure to file a response within thirty (30) days of receiving notice will constitutes judgement by default rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Nathalie M. Morgan (69848) 201 West Stone Avenue Greenville, SC 29609 (864)242-6655 (864)242-6111 (facsimile)
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that BON APPETIT MANAGEMENT CO. intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/ permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 3300 Poinsett Hwy, Daniel Din. Hall-Hartness, Greenville, SC 29631. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 20, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Noble-Interstate Management Group, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 40 W. Orchard Park Dr. Greenville, SC 29615. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 20, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that NORTH HIGHWAY 14, 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 5600 N. HIGHWAY 14, LANDRUM, SC 29356. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 27, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Prime Time Restaurant. LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 2726 Wade Hampton Blvd., Taylors, SC 29687. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 13, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
PUBLIC SALE NOTICE Notice is hereby given that on 11/12/2016, at 9:00 a.m. at Woodruff Road Storage, 1868 Woodruff Road, Greenville, SC, the undersigned, Woodruff Road Storage will sell at Public Sale by competitive bidding, the personal property heretofore stored with the undersigned by: 1. Unit: B012, Evangeline Butler Furniture, Clothing, Boxes, Misc. 2. Unit: A010, Katherine Flanagan Furniture, Boxes/Misc. 3. Unit A016, Alan Johnson Furniture, Appliances, Tools, Misc 4. Unit B040, Carlos Cuffie Totes, Clothing, Misc 5. Unit B089, Edmund Jacek Furniture, Golf Clubs, Clothes, Misc 6. Unit F04: Aaron Hall Baby Items, Furniture, Clothing/ Shoes, Misc. 7. Unit C166, Joseph Burgess Furniture/Electronics, Decor, Games, Boxes/Misc. 8. Unit E16 Allison C Burnett Furniture, TV, Appliances, Boxes/Misc. 9. Unit B056 Sherrie L Lawson Furniture, Collectibles/Misc
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SUMMONS NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF ANDERSON IN THE FAMILY COURT TENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE #: 2016-DR-04-1547 MICHELLE LYNN LANFOR, PLAINTIFF(S), -vs- STEPHEN MITCHEL LANFOR, DEFENDANT(S). TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: STEPHEN MITCHEL LANFOR YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint on the subscribers at their office, 514 S. McDuffie Street, Post Office Box 1965, Anderson, South Carolina 29622, within thirty days after the service hereof; exclusive the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff( s) will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said Complaint. IN THE EVENT THAT YOU ARE AN INFANT OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE OR AN IMPRISONED PERSON, you are further summoned and notified to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. IN THE EVENT THAT YOU ARE AN INFANT UNDER THE AGE OF FOURTEEN YEARS OR ARE INCOMPETENT OR INSANE, you are further summoned and notified to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under the age of fourteen years of age, or said incompetent or insane person, within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. CASE CLOSURE NOTICE TO ALL PARTIES Written request for a final hearing in this case must be delivered by a party or attorney to the Clerk’s Office within 365 days of this filing date July 19, 2016. Failure to comply with this case closure notice result in the dismissal of this case by the Chief Administrative Family Court Judge of this Circuit. DUNAWAY LAW FIRM Tom W. Dunaway, III Attorney for Plaintiff Post Office Box 1965 Anderson, South Carolina 29622 (864) 224-1144
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that The Greenville Bistro, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 805 Frontage Road, Greenville, SC 29615. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 27, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
PUBLIC NOTICE ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2016, THE GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED AN ORDINANCE THAT ADJUSTED THE BOUNDARIES OF THE FOOTHILLS FIRE SERVICE AREA SO AS TO DIMINISH THE SERVICE AREA BY THOSE PROPERTIES BEING SERVED BY THE NEWLY CREATED LANDRUM FIRE AREA AND RESCUE DISTRICT. THE FOOTHILLS FIRE SERVICE AREA BOUNDARY LINES TO RESULT WILL NO LONGER INCLUDE THOSE AREAS KNOWN AS TAX MAP NUMBERS (TMS#): 0624020509000 0624090100138 0624090104000 0624120100500 0624020510200 0624090100200 0624090104200 0624120100600 0624020510300 0624090100201 0624100101200 0624120100700 0624020511000 0624090100300 0624100101201 0624120100800 0624040901800 0624090100400 0624100101202 0624120100900 0624040902000 0624090100500 0624100101203 0624120100902 0624040902100 0624090100501 0624100101300 0624120100903 0624040902200 0624090100600 0624100101301 0624120100904 0624040902300 0624090100700 0624100101400 0624120101000 0624090100100 0624090100701 0624100101500 0624120101001 0624090100103 0624090100900 0624100101501 0624120101100 0624090100104 0624090100901 0624100101600 0624120101101 0624090100105 0624090101000 0624100101900 0624120101102 0624090100107 0624090101100 0624100102000 0624120101103 0624090100109 0624090101200 0624110100100 0624120101200 0624090100110 0624090101201 0624110100200 0624120101300 0624090100111 0624090101203 0624110100201 0624120101400 0624090100112 0624090101204 0624110100202 0624120101401 0624090100113
0624090101205 0624110100300 0624120101500 0624090100114 0624090101302 0624110100400 0624120101700 0624090100116 0624090101500 0624110100500 0624130100500 0624090100117 0624090101502 0624110100600 0624130100501 0624090100118 0624090101503 0624110100700 0624130100502 0624090100119 0624090101504 0624110100800 0624130100503 0624090100121 0624090101505 0624110100900 0624130100506 0624090100122 0624090101600 0624110101000 0625010100700 0624090100123 0624090101700 0624110101100 0625010100900 0624090100124 0624090101701 0624110101200 0625010100901 0624090100126 0624090101702 0624110101201 0625010100903 0624090100127 0624090101703 0624110101300 0625010101000 0624090100128 0624090101900 0624120100200 0625010101003 0624090100129 0624090101901 0624120100201 0625010101005 0624090100131 0624090101902 0624120100202 0625010101006 0624090100132 0624090103901 0624120100400 0625010101007 0624090100133 0624090103903 0624120100401 0625010101009 0624090100134 0624090103905 0624120100402 0639010103501 0624090100135 0624090103906 0624120100404 0639010103503 0624090100136 0624090103907 0624120100405 A MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARIES AND LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS 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 OF THE FOOTHILLS FIRE SERVICE AREA. BOB TAYLOR GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Vault & Valor 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 655 S. Main St., Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than November 27, 2016. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ATTN: ABL, P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110
COMPLAINT NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO: 2015-CP-23-04807 County of Greenville, Plaintiff, vs. Tonya L. Cummings (Owner), and James Paul Hamby, III, (Driver), Defendant(s). In re: 1995 Toyota Camry VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590 Plaintiff, County of Greenville, complaining of the Defendants, would respectfully show unto this Honorable Court: 1. Plaintiff, County of Greenville, is a body politic and political subdivision of the State of South Carolina and is authorized by SC Code Ann.§ 56-5-6240, as amended, to initiate this Complaint for the forfeiture of that certain, 1995 Toyota Camry, VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590, which is the subject of this action. 2. Upon information and belief, Tonya L. Cummings and James Paul Hamby, III, are citizens and residents of the County of Greenville, State of South Carolina. 3. On or about June 17, 2013, Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, was arrested and charged in Greenville County, South Carolina with, among other charges, Driving Under Suspension (“DUS”), 4th offense. 4. At the time of the arrest, Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, was driving an automobile, more particularly described as a 1995 Toyota Camry, VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590. 5. According to the records maintained by the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”), Defendant Tonya L. Cummings is the registered owner of the 1995 Toyota Camry, VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590. 6. At the time of Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, arrest for DUS 4th offense, Defendants Tonya L. Cummings and James Paul Hamby, III, lived together at 202 Cook Street, Greenville, SC 29601. 7. According to the records maintained by DMV, there are no lienholders. 8. The Greenville County Sheriff’s Office, pursuant to the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. §56-5-6240, as amended, seized the subject automobile at the time Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, was arrested. The subject automobile has been in the care, custody, and control of the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office since June 17, 2013. 9. Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, was convicted of Driving Under Suspension on June 3, 2015. 10. The subject automobile was seized and confiscated by the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office in accordance with the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. §56-5-6240, as amended, in that Defendant James Paul Hamby, III, at the time of the offense: (A) Had either been convicted, pled guilty or nolo contendere to the offense of Driving Under Suspension on at least three prior occasions within the last five years, (B) Was driving the subject automobile with the express or implied authorization of Defendant Tonya L. Cummings, and (C) Lived in the same household with Defendant Tonya L. Cummings, the registered owner of the subject automobile. WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays: 1. That this Court order the 1995 Toyota Camry, VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590, be forfeited to Plaintiff pursuant to the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 56-5-6240, as amended; 2. That this Court order the subject automobile be sold by Plaintiff by way of public auction; 3. That this Court order the net proceeds of the sale, after payment of any liens, be paid to Plaintiff, and 4. For such other and further relief as this Court may deem just and proper. Jeffrey D. Wile (SC Bar # 6102) Assistant County Attorney 301 University Ridge, Suite 2400 Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 467-7111 Attorney for Plaintiff
SUMMONS NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO: 2015-CP-23-04807 County of Greenville, Plaintiff, vs. Tonya L. Cummings (Owner), and James Paul Hamby, III, (Driver),Defendant(s). In re: 1995 Toyota Camry VIN: 4T1GK12E7SU069590 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint on the undersigned at his office at 301 University Ridge, Suite 2400, Greenville, SC 29601 within thirty (30) days of the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Jeffrey D. Wile (S.C. Bar #6102) Assistant County Attorney 301 University Ridge, Suite 2400 Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 467-7110 Attorney for Plaintiff
SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: Demolition of Structures, IFB #38-12/1/16, due at 3:00 P.M., E.S.T., December 1, 2016. A Pre-Bid meeting will be held at 2:00 P.M., E.S.T., November 17, 2016 at Greenville County Procurement Services, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601. Solicitations can be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/Purchasing_Dept/ or by calling 864-467-7200.
COMPLAINT NOTICES A complaint has been brought before the Code Enforcement Division of a dangerous, insanitary and unsafe structure located at the following locations: 209 Edgemont Avenue, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0146.00-05-003.00, Greenville County, SC. 22 A Gentry Street , Greenville County Tax Map Number 0235.00-04-031.00, Greenville County, SC. 18 Catawba, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0135.00-07020.00, Greenville County, SC. 205 Hammett Street, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0153.00-09-006.00, Greenville County, SC. 5906 Locust Hill Road, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0502.03-01-018.00, Greenville County, SC. 8 Selma Street, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0171.00-07-054.00, Greenville County, SC. Rock Road, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0531.01-01020.00, Greenville County, SC. 67 Dorsey Avenue, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0117.00-10-006.00, Greenville County, SC. 527 New Harrison Bridge Road, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0575.01-01-015.25, Greenville County, SC. 14 Liberty Street, Greenville County Tax Map Number 0616.03-01-111.00, Greenville County, SC. Any persons having interest in these properties, or knowledge of the property owner should contact the Codes Enforcement Office at 864-467-7090 on or before November 17, 2016.
50 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 11.11.2016 GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM FIGURE. THIS. OUT.
A Dose of Reality ACROSS 1 “The Real O’Neals” network 4 Eye-popper 8 Town in NE New Jersey 13 Root 19 Old Olds 20 Some till fill 21 Obstinate reply 22 Nobelist Hemingway 23 Phnom Penh’s land [2015] 25 Tonga’s site [2011] 27 Top points 28 Purplish-red flower 30 Apple product 31 “Beats me!” 33 Fashion’s Anna — 34 Aries, e.g. 36 Home of Columbus 40 Kitchen raiders 41 Neighbor of Mexico [2005] 44 Kenya’s home [2001] 46 Zing 47 Virginia hrs. 48 Varieties 50 They’re part of French Polynesia [2002] 55 Country with the capital Vila [2004] 58 Tint 59 Sailor’s site 60 Big Apple NFL team, on scoreboards 62 Umlaut pair 63 High-five sounds 65 Conduct, as business 68 Legal exam
By Frank Longo
70 “Adios!” 72 Harvest mo. 73 Where Tagalog is spoken [2012] 76 “Finished!” 80 Sailing 82 Biology div. 83 Inventive 85 Cola brand 88 Comic Foxx 90 Log cutter 92 Paradises 93 “Hail, Livy!” 94 Luzon province north of Isabela [2014] 97 Its president is Daniel Ortega [2010] 100 One who dawdles 102 Cartoon yell 104 Tram cargo 105 Where balboas are spent [2006] 106 World’s largest rain forest [2003] 110 Cotillion girls 114 Hose mishap 115 “Pardon?” 116 “— tu” (Verdi aria) 117 Diner staple 119 “Mamma Mia!” quartet 122 Treatment process 125 Greek vowel 126 Central American archipelago [2003] 130 Reality show of which 12 title locations are featured
in this puzzle 132 “Billy —” (2000 film) 133 Maine city 134 Sky color 135 Butyl or propyl ender 136 Titans 137 Native of Italy’s Leaning Tower city 138 Desires 139 Outlaw Kelly DOWN 1 Secret stuff 2 Signal light 3 Perpetrate 4 Having slack 5 German link 6 Viking Ericson 7 Chant for the Dream Team 8 Aquarium swimmers, to toddlers 9 Deuces 10 Novelist — May Alcott 11 Necessitate 12 Numerical suffix 13 Sewer’s line 14 Whale type 15 Horse’s mythical kin 16 Ump’s kin 17 2000-15 TV drama 18 List abbr. 24 Nap locales 26 Lapel sticker 29 Affectedly adorable 32 Old film critic James 35 Entire scope 37 Too — price 107 John Wayne film of 1962 123 Writer O’Brien 38 Freeze over 108 Group that shares a culture 124 Noel 39 Havens 109 Flies past 126 Wooden nail 42 Co. with brown trucks 110 Actress Moore 127 Yale attendee 43 “True Life” channel 111 Late morning time 128 Pie — mode 44 Hgt. 112 “Vamoose!” 129 Chop (off) 45 Soul-seller of legend 113 Gazed rudely 131 RBI part 46 Many groan-eliciting jokes 115 Used to exist 49 Egg-hunt holiday 118 Dance parts 50 Verbal jewels 120 Dark stain Crossword answers: page 46 51 Lot division 121 Smithereens 52 Harvest 53 Australian airline 54 Opposer by Myles Mellor and Susan Flannigan 56 Conforms 57 Brief denial 61 “The Wizard of Oz” witch 64 Hoity-toity 66 Jungle beast 67 Fee 69 Jacuzzi joint 71 “Do — say!” 74 Gent partner 75 “— get it!” 77 Blood type, in brief 78 Half of Mork’s farewell 79 Film lioness 81 “Attack, mutt!” 84 Richard of “No Mercy” 85 Feelers on insects 86 Brand of spring water 87 Del. neighbor 89 Ground 91 Major Turkish city 95 Noted coach Parseghian 96 Classy gp.? 98 Dove’s noise 99 River in Italy 101 Cosmonaut Yuri 103 Poet Ralph Waldo Sudoku answers: page 46 Easy —
Sudoku
945 E. Main Street, Spartanburg, SC 29302
26 Rushmore Drive, Greenville, SC 29615
864-573-2353
864-268-8993
11.11.2016 | GREENVILLE JOURNAL | 51
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BACK PAGE Community Voices
Where I’ve Been with Bill Koon
Spinning, Moving Forward and Doubling Down I’m sure you have noticed that the news is full of recalls, denials and apologies. I’m a big believer in correcting errors and asking forgiveness. But really! Volkswagen is losing a few billion because it cheated on the fuel efficiency of its diesel engines. My first car was a 1960 Beetle with a canvas sunroof. My mother and I bought it together; she drove it to work on weekdays and I drove it all over creation on weekends. It had its disadvantages, of course. That sunroof was a little leaky, which meant that, in winter, the frost was on the inside of the windshield. You just had to scrape it off into your lap. The little car, though, was incredibly dependable. Mine started almost every time, and when it failed to fire up, it was easy to give it a shove. It was economical; my roommate and I learned that we could drive about 50 miles on the spare gas tank, which we switched on with a little handle on the floorboard. And, maybe best of all, it was never recalled. The Germans had put the thing together right. Samsung dropped a few billion by selling phones that catch fire in your pocket. That’s a personal issue when you are alone on the sidewalk. It becomes a community matter, however, when you are packed into the economy section of a 747 over the Atlantic. Back before cellphones, we depended on pay phones and kept a few dimes handy should we need to make a call. Our college dorm, remarkably, had a pay phone on each floor; none of them caught fire. Millennials are miles ahead of me when it comes technology, but I bet that few of them would recognize a phone booth. Thousands and thousands of cars have been recalled for dangerous air bags. Ironic, isn’t it, that the great device designed to save us turns out to be deadly? My old Beetle wasn’t big enough for an air bag, though it probably could have used one. Wells Fargo deceived a couple of million customers by secretly giving them accounts they never asked for. Almost every day that bank has a full-page newspaper ad announcing that it is “Moving Forward to Make Things Right.”
I now believe that “moving forward” means “Let’s change the subject.” I remember that my grandfather never trusted a bank and kept his money in his clock. We found a lot of bread there along with a stack of uncashed Social Security checks after he died. My father paid cash for everything and never had a bank account until the company he worked for started paying him with a check. He never forgave them because he really loved to line up at the pay window on Friday afternoon to get his envelope of coins and bills. I remember being a little unnerved when my employer started using direct deposit. I liked walking my pay to the bank myself; that way I knew it was there. There was no online banking then, and I had to wait for the monthly statement to show up in the mail to see that I didn’t have as much as I thought I had. Nowadays, I go online every morning to be sure there has been no hanky-panky with my account while I was asleep. I refused to use an ATM until the bank tellers got so impatient with me that I had to go ahead and devise a secret code for myself. And I’m still not thrilled with automatic drafting. It has worked beautifully so far, but what if Netflix decides to snatch more than eight bucks each month?
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I won’t go into politics since recent candidates refused to acknowledge lies, crimes and misdemeanors. And certainly they have not apologized or sought forgiveness. As the media likes to say, they just “doubled down” on such and then turned it over to their “surrogates” to spin. “Doubling down” is almost as useful as “moving forward” when it comes to dodging the truth. And isn’t “spinning” designed to convince us that someone didn’t say what he said? George Washington and his apple tree have been left in the dust – with my lovely old Beetle. Bill Koon lives in Greenville. He can be reached at badk@ clemson.edu.
LIGHT G R=147 G=
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This is your chance to add a ray of sunshine to any room in your home. This multi-functional piece can be used in the foyer, in the living room, dining room, behind a sofa or as a TV console. Available in solid quartersawn white oak or cherry, in a variety of hand-rubbed finishes. This piece will be crafted only in the year 2016. Own it before it’s history.
C E L E B R AT I N G OUR 70TH YEAR