July 19, 2019 Greenville Journal

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, July 19, 2019 • Vol.21, No. 28

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DIRECTOR OF S ALES Emily Yepes MANAGER OF BUSINESS DE VELOPMENT Donna Johnston REL ATIONSHIP MANAGER Meredith Rice ACCOUNT MANAGER Callie Michalak MARKE TING REPS Heather Propp, Liz Tew CLIENT SERVICES Anita Harley, Rosie Peck DIGITAL CONTENT MANAGER John Olson CHAIRMAN Douglas J. Greenlaw POSTMASTER Send address changes to The Greenville Journal, P.O Box 2266, Greenville, S.C. 29602 or 581 Perry Ave. Greenville, S.C 29611. All remittances should be made in the form of check, express money orders or personal checks. The Greenville Journal cannot be responsible for currency unless sent by registered mail. © 2019 published by Community Journals LLC. All rights reserved. All property rights for the entire contents of this publication shall be the property of Community Journals. No part of this publication may be reproduced, scanned, stored, distributed or transmitted by any means – whether auditory, graphic, mechanical, or electronic – without written permission from the publisher.

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NEED TO KNOW

| NEWS

IN THIS ISSUE

21

EVERYDAY INSPIRATION

Kent Ambler, a woodcutter and painter, finds inspiration in his daily surroundings.

Call (864) 606-3055 to start planning

n story by MELODY CUENCA

6

10

HEROES’ TALE

DINNER & A SHOW

Local author pens novel inspired by dad’s participation in critical WWII mission. n story by CAMIELL FOULGER

Let Ariel Turner and Vince Harris take care of date night planning. This week it’s dinner at The Strip Club 104 followed by Rumors: A Fleetwood Mac Tribute at The Spinning Jenny.

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FEATURE |

FROM THE COVER

Congestion and poor road conditions cost the average Upstate commuter $1,379 per year in added time and expenses. AC CO R D I N G TO T H E U P S TAT E M O B I L I T Y A N D CO N N E C T I V IT Y IN ITIATIVE

S TORY BY A R I E L T U R N E R

The phrase “solutions for a multimodal ecosystem” is a mouthful. The theme for Michelin’s 2019 Movin’On Summit held in Montreal June 4-6, its implications for Greenville’s transportation system – from traffic-light timing to consistent public transit – are even more complicated. Buzzword-heavy slogan aside, those five words succinctly sum up local efforts already in motion with the help of Greenville leaders who attended the third annual sustainable mobility summit last month. Created and inspired by Michelin, the Movin’On

Summit is an immersion into the world of mobility with the goal of moving from ambition to action in the conversations about the major global challenges of clean, safe, efficient, and accessible mobility for all. The 2019 summit coincided with the momentum Connecting Our Future – an Upstate transportation alliance – is experiencing as it moves toward formal organization. With Ten at the Top as leading organizer, Connecting Our Future is an effort to create a regional vision for transportation, mobility, and connectivity in the Upstate’s 10 counties.

multi modal

MOBILITY

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Beginning the search for an executive director, the alliance is poised to step up the local conversations as members work toward quantifiable action. But the solutions for moving a socioeconomically diverse population efficiently and sustainably are neither simple nor immediate. Dean Hybl, executive director of Ten at the Top, says most of the efforts started now to improve sustainable mobility locally will not reach maturity for five to 15 years. “We’ve got to plant the seeds. Most things are not an easy fix,” he says.

Defined, multimodal is “characterized by several different modes of activity or occurrence.” Relating to transportation, the term is used to describe using two or more modes of transportation to get from point A to point B – riding a bicycle to the bus or train stop or driving to a park-and-ride lot and carpooling from there, for instance. The potential combinations are numerous, even in a smaller metropolitan community, as are the benefits of decreasing the numbers of cars on the roads – lowering emissions being a main goal. “I think the Connecting Our Future initiative will help to advance the dialogue and, ultimately, the implementation of multimodal mobility solutions,” says Carlos Phillips, CEO of the Greenville Chamber of Commerce, who attended Movin’On. “I’m excited to kind of ramp up the conversation and get folks around the table that are open-minded enough to have them think past some of the challenges that we have. Implementing multimodal mobility solutions, there are going to be some challenges. How do you overcome that? Seeing communities that have done that, it gives me hope that we can do the same.” The alliance is bringing all of the right people into the conversation, Hybl says, such as Rob Krulac, senior business development director of CU-ICAR, who also attended Movin’On. “The alliance will be a mechanism to help the doers have greater success,” Hybl says. Krulac represents one of the potential alliance members who could be involved in developing new technologies and cultivating partnerships with international resources. Relieving road congestion requires collaboration with not only those public or private entities that could create a park-and-ride lot or, on a larger scale, a mass transportation system, but also traffic engineers to ensure that lights are timed efficiently to move traffic and that county and state road maintenance is kept up. Accidents and stranded vehicles due to tiresized potholes create literal roadblocks to efficient transportation, Hybl says. All of those, and many more components, have to be addressed for a workable solution to exist.


FROM THE COVER

| FEATURE

public TRANSPORTATION Greenlink’s marketing and public affairs manager, Nicole McAden, says the four electric Proterra buses that joined the public bus fleet last month are the most obvious response to creating sustainable public mobility. A reworked bus route schedule with the new additions was rolled out this month along with a new unlimited monthly ride card, both of which should improve access and consistency of service, and save Greenlink fuel, maintenance, and staffing costs, McAden says. Other considerations, such as the sustainability of the built envi-

ronment, are equally as important, she says. “As a community, Greenville County, we need to be thinking about how we develop our communities and our neighborhoods — new commercial, new residential projects – that support transportation in a sustainable way,” she says. McAden attended a session at Movin’On that dealt specifically with the financing of electric vehicles using sustainable models. “As a community, we’re going to have to get behind where that money comes from,” she says.

positive MESSAGING “We need to really think about how we’re selling the product of transit,” McAden says. Much of the challenge is overcoming misinformation about riding the bus or not understanding the benefits, Phillips says. Part of the messaging also includes communicating to an instant-gratification population the long-term results and

continual investment into public transportation, Hybl says. While certainly applicable to sustainable mobility as a whole, Hybl says a main benefit of Movin’On was discovering a sense of camaraderie with other communities, even those much larger than Greenville, that are struggling in the area of improving the communication about using public transportation and all of the various elements that go into that.

community BUY-IN “Hopefully, then, next year or at some point, we’ll start a campaign around understanding the value and the importance of community investment,” Hybl says. “And not just public transportation, but really, in a variety of methods that move people and goods. Public transportation is one element, where you’ve got to also make sure we’re focusing on the connection between land use and transportation. People want to walk and bike to work, to shopping, or to other things. Well, part of what makes that possible is having land use that connects those.” McAden says statistics are showing that youth are choos-

ing to delay getting their drivers’ licenses or cars and instead are using ride-sharing for transportation rather than the bus system. She says Greenlink is considering what type of communication would work to engage a population that is not yet involved. “Wouldn’t it be awesome if we could engage the youth of Greenville County?” she asks. Hybl says more companies like Michelin need to be involved not only on the technology side but also in educating their own employees to become community advocates.

employer COOPERATION McAden explains the need for employer partnerships or cooperation with Greenlink or any other future public transit options for those modes to continue to exist: “Specifically, if you’re doing like an 8-5 job shift, a bus can only hold 60 people. So how do you incentivize a staggering of shifts? Like, the employer is going to have to be flexible with that employee so that if they come in 30 minutes late because they’re on the second bus, they’re not penalized from it. So it’s a community effort to provide the services, but if the employer is going to pun-

ish an employee for utilizing that service, because they couldn’t fit on the first capacity bus, then nobody’s going to use it.” Phillips, as an employer, says he is considering his role. “I have a staff myself; we are moving from our Cleveland Street location to the heart of downtown. How can the chamber not only influence other employers, but how can we encourage our own staff to leverage existing public transportation and then embrace whatever the future will look like in that regard?” he says.

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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NEWS |

CORLEY

Home Tips Have you ever had a clogged drain and weren’t sure what to do? I always recommend plunging before ever using toxic chemicals. This is a good rule of thumb for two reasons. One, plunging does not flush corrosive liquids down your drains or pour toxins into the water supply. Two, if you pour chemicals down your drain and then try to plunge, the plunger may splash those chemicals onto your clothes and skin, into your eyes, or around the room. Be safe and use the plunger! Make sure your plunger is in good repair. If your plunger is torn or cracked, it will not work effectively. Make sure to keep the plunger clean and dry so it will last longer. Be sure to plunge straight up and down at a vertical angle so you don’t break the seal and so you can get the most force out of your plunges. Create suction by letting air out of the plunger and submerging the plunger in water. Add water if necessary to cover the plunger cup and create the best seal. If these steps don’t work, you may need the assistance of a plumber as there could be a bigger issue down the line.

NEED TO KNOW

PROFILE

LOCAL AUTHOR RELEASES BOOK CHRONICLING CRITICAL WWII MISSION Mission No. 760 8th Air Force Battle of the Bulge Dec. 24, 1944 n story by CAMIELL FOULGER | photos WILL CROOKS AND PROVIDED

(864) 908.3360 W W W. CO R L E Y P R O. CO M 6

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

Greenville auKILBURG’S thor Don Kilburg’s FATHER recently published book, “Hitler’s Last Christmas,” examines mission No. 760 of the 8th Air Force, which took place on Dec. 24, 1944. The mission marked a turning point in World War II — the moment the 8th Air Force joined the Battle of the Bulge, which hastened Germany’s eventual defeat. Kilburg’s father served as the primary inspiration for the book. He was one of the pilots in mission No. 760, but once coming home from the war, he did not talk about his experiences. But after a 487th Bomb Group meeting, the veterans of the mission admitted they had conducted the largest bombing mission in history, yet little was publicized about it. Kilburg’s father volunteered his son as the writer of their stories in the hopes of preserving history. Finding the information regarding the mission proved to be more difficult than Kilburg imagined initially. “I could find bits and pieces, but I

couldn’t find the big story. I couldn’t find the full information,” Kilburg said. Eventually, he located them in the box for mission No. 759. The documents were pristine, appearing untouched over the years. While working

full-time, he used the archived records to piece together “Hitler’s Last Christmas.” Additionally, his father provided insight on the mission through long phone calls and emails. “He was at the stage of his life — similar where I am now — where you start to realize that these stories, these events, are lost unless somebody documents it,” Kilburg added. “For my own kids and grandkids, it was a way to preserve that story.” With time, the story developed into not only a retelling of the mission but an uncovering of the impact this mission had as well as the war. And so in his book, Kilburg presents the narratives of what he believes is the greatest generation, whose stories are being lost with time. “The people who fought the war were a generation of youth who were patriotic, dedicated, and ready to go,” Kilburg said. “And it is a little bit like Vietnam, where suddenly there’s a generation that’s got big holes in it.” He believes future generations can learn from the experiences of those before and hopes to provide the means through his book. Kilburg is a member of the 487th Bomb Group Association and serves on its board. “Hitler’s Last Christmas” is available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Outskirts Press. You can also find it at Greenville’s Fiction Addiction bookstore.


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NEWS |

NEED TO KNOW

GOVERNMENT

Greenville County Schools advocates for board members to get state health insurance

Nearly every elected official in South Carolina is eligible for state health insurance, except local school board members. Members of the Greenville County Schools board of trustees are hoping to change that. The board approved a resolution in July to send to the South Carolina

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School Boards Association (SCSBA) in support of expanding state health insurance to include local school boards. “PEBA Health Insurance coverage is granted to all other local elected officials, including city and county council members, fire and police departments,

and various governmental boards, commissions and public service districts,” the resolution says. A long list of employees who qualify for PEBA is written in state law — it ranges from various elected councils to professional associations, such as the SCSBA, to employees of the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport. “For whatever reason, school board members are not included in the statutory allowance for participating in state health benefits,” said Scott Price, executive director of the SCSBA. “I do not know why — it kind of defies logic.” Price said Greenville County Schools approached the organization about supporting a change in legislation that would allow board members to have state health

n story by ARIEL GILREATH

insurance. “This is a position that we, here at the association, have been supportive of, but our membership has never really taken an overall position on it,” Price said. “There have been bills in the past, they’ve just never gone anywhere.” Price said now that Greenville County Schools has approved its own resolution, members of the SCSBA — which consists of public school boards across the state — will vote whether or not to support it at the annual meeting in December. If enough members support it, the SCSBA will start lobbying for it with the Legislature in January. The resolution does not outline how the insurance should be covered, but Price said there are a few options so that it wouldn’t have an impact on the state’s budget. “They would either pay their own way or the district would cover the cost so there shouldn’t be any fiscal impact to the state for doing that,” Price said.


NEED TO KNOW

| NEWS

COMMUNITY

ROPER MOUNTAIN SCIENCE CENTER CAN SERVE ALCOHOL AT PRIVATE EVENTS n story by ARIEL GILREATH | photos WILL CROOKS

GREENVILLE COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD

Roper Mountain Science Center can now have alcohol at privately leased events after Greenville County Schools approved a policy change at its June board meeting. Previously the center, like other Greenville County Schools facilities, was barred from having alcohol on the premises. The policy change has strict stipulations — the center would not be allowed to have alcohol at any of its regular, educational events where students would be involved, and only at preapproved events rented by nonprofit or corporate entities. It does not affect any of the district’s other facilities. “In consideration of the unique nature of RMSC and the support provided by the community for its advancement, the Board authorizes the Superintendent to allow corporate and nonprofit entities to lease RMSC in accordance with board policy and administrative rule and serve alcohol when the facility is not being used to provide educational programming to students,” the policy reads. “The serving of alcohol is subject to the terms, conditions, and restrictions contained in Administrative Rule MBC. This administrative rule addresses safety, insurance, and liability pertaining to the serving of alcohol by entities leasing RMSC. This policy applies only to events pre-approved by the Superintendent or designee held at a specified location at RMSC.” Board members debated the change at an earlier meeting with members Pat Sudduth and Roy Chamlee opposing it. Glenda Morrison-Fair, the board’s liaison with the center, said the intent was to better enable the Roper Mountain Science Center Association to host fundraising events. Greenville County Schools funds only a portion of the center’s budget — the rest of Roper Mountain’s funding comes through fundraisers and donors. Greenville County Schools contributed more than $2 million to Roper Mountain’s budget this year, while the center generated about $850,000 on its own. Roper Mountain is currently trying to raise between $3 and $4 million to partially fund and support its new environmental building, which is scheduled to be completed next year. The board approved the policy with a 9-3 vote at its regular June meeting with members Roger Meek, Sudduth, and Chamlee opposing it.

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NEWS |

NEED TO KNOW

OPINION

Hindering Progress Provincialism has always been a major deterrent to progress, and there is no more flagrant example of this than recent denial of the Peace Center to by Alan Ethridge renovate the Wyche Executive Director of the Pavilion by the City Metropolitan Arts Council of Greenville’s Design & Review Board (DRB). This decision is ironic especially in light of our city leadership priding itself on Greenville’s burgeoning national reputation as a tourist attraction, a business-oriented metropolis and a cultural destination. What the renovations would bring to the entire community can be viewed as nothing but a tremendous asset with significant economic benefits. If one were to choose a single organization that has had the most profound impact on Greenville in the last 30 years, it would have to be the Peace Center. From its opening in 1990, the Peace Center has evolved into one of the country’s most reputable and most financially secure performing arts

centers. It is because of the Peace Center that the West End district is thriving with retailers, restaurants and businesses. The Peace Center also plays a major role in attracting new businesses to the area because of the vast cultural offerings it presents to the community. How and why the (DRB) denied the Peace Center’s request is mind-boggling, and some of the printed comments have been completely illogical. The assumption that enclosing the edifice will devalue it is counter intuitive, as it is obvious that just the opposite is true. One member of the opposition was quoted as saying “no ticket, no pass is necessary” to walk through the facility. As if walking through the Wyche Pavilion is the artistic equivalent of purchasing a ticket to Hamilton? Just how many people view the ground level of the Wyche Pavilion as a cultural destination? Does standing on the concrete floor of the Pavilion have the historical and cultural significance of visiting the Coliseum in Rome? At the meeting on July 9, one member of the opposition voiced that the proposed plans reminded

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the DRB’s Wyche Pavilion decision her of “a train.” Would the renovations be more palatable if they reminded one of an airplane or an automobile? Everything that the Peace Center has done to its campus since its opening has been first class, and its additions have been designed and implemented with the entire community in mind. The recent renovations have made the Graham Plaza a focal point of South Main Street. Expansions such as the TD Stage and Genevieve’s Lounge have provided the public with additional performance venues for expanded cultural offerings with price points designed to fit virtually every budget. The Peace Center has a proven track record of quality programming, community-mindedness and financial stability. What is there not to trust? This level of provincialism has been seen before – most recently in opposition to the construction of Falls Park on the Reedy and Fluor Field. Can anyone honestly say that these amenities are not outstanding community assets that have drawn residents and visitors to downtown? By enclosing the existing structure and transforming it into

If one were to choose a single organization that has had the most profound impact on Greenville in the last 30 years, it would have to be the Peace Center. – Alan Ethridge, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Arts Council

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another community asset without deterring from its beauty, the proposed Wyche Pavilion would provide even more music and entertainment options for the public. The late American astronomer, J. Allen Hynek, once commented, “We suffer, perhaps, from temporal provincialism, a form of arrogance that has always irritated posterity.” The DRB’s decision to deny these renovations is the ultimate example of such arrogance. The Peace Center, its Board of Directors, its staff, its donors and its constituents are to be applauded in their efforts to make Greenville an even more outstanding cultural center. We should all look forward to these renovations eventually becoming a reality and look back at the DRB’s misguided decision with regret.


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REAL ESTATE JOURNAL THE LIST

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MLS 1396504

Custom 4,000+ sq ft farmhouse, built on a 3000 sq ft unfinished basement with steel support beams, was built to last. It sits quietly nestled on 17 acres with easy access to surrounding communities. There are fruit trees, blueberry bushes, muscadine vines to enjoy, and you will often see deer and wild turkeys roaming the fields.

Welcome to your own paradise on 23+ acres and offering over 7,400+ square feet of living space. This home makes for an unbelievable family home, a bed & breakfast or a horse farm. The possibilities are endless. The residence offers multiple living spaces with 6 bedrooms, (master suite on the main level), 4.5 bathrooms, two full kitchens, and more.

AGENT: Heather Stemann BROKERAGE: Wilson Associates

AGENT: Holly May BROKERAGE: BlackStream | Christie’s International Real Estate

WANT YOUR LISTING FEATURED HERE? CALL EMILY YEPES AT 864.679.1215

KEY:

Bedrooms

Bathrooms

MLS MLS Number


HOMES |

REAL ESTATE

R E C E N T LY S O L D

SIGNIFICANT SALES

The details behind some recent real estate transactions in the Upstate.

COBBLESTONE 14 COBBLER LANE LISTED: $859,900

OAKS AT ROPER MOUNTAIN SOLD: $835,000

209 GARLINGTON OAK COURT LISTED: $629,900

DOWNTOWN SOLD: $620,000

102 JAMES STREET LISTED: $749,900

SOLD: $729,000

Magnificent best describes this one of a kind masterpiece that showcases superior craftsmanship, an easy living floor plan, and attention to detail. The interior of the home is stunning, with extensive hardwoods, dramatic crown molding, and picture frame wainscoting. A two-story foyer makes a powerful first impression with a lantern style chandelier, bull nose chair railing, and custom front door.

This beautiful home is for discriminating buyers looking for character and style. As you enter, you will immediately notice the gleaming hardwood flooring throughout most of the main level and the stunning moldings and trim work. T he welcoming floor plan offers a formal dining room and lovely great room with fireplace flanked on both sides with built in cabinetry.

Unbelievably gorgeous Victorian craftsmanship home in Greenville. This home has so much historic charm with modern day updates. Located in one of Greenville’s earliest residential neighborhoods, you will see detailed landscaping, the yard was just aerated and seeded complete with irrigation system. Beautiful wrap around porch that leads you through the custom front door.

AGENTS: Chet Smith, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices,

AGENTS: Christy Grear, Allen Tate Realtors and Charlotte

AGENTS: Carmen Crigler Feemster, Berkshire Hathaway

HOLLIGSWORTH PARK’S BELLHAVEN VILLAGE

DOWNTOWN

AUGUSTA ROAD AREA

218 VERLIN DRIVE LISTED: $479,900

820 S MAIN ST, UNIT 304 LISTED: $1,750,000

34 W TALLULAH DRIVE LISTED: $625,000

C Dan Joyner Realtors® and Laura Stanbro, Keller Williams

SOLD: $475,000

Sarvis, That Realty Group

SOLD: $1,700,000

Home Services C. Dan Joyner Realtors® and Jacob Mann, Coldwell Banker Caine

SOLD: $593,000

Home is both elegant and spacious. With 2 great outdoor living spaces, you can choose to relax on the front porch and chat with the neighbors or enjoy your privacy on the screened-in porch out back. As you walk in the front door, you will see the gorgeous hardwood flooring all throughout the main level and fine-looking wainscoting in the dining room and study.

This stunning property offers the conveniences of living in downtown Greenville without sacrificing the space of a single family home. Do not miss the rare opportunity for a two-level, corner condo in downtown Greenville. Unit 304 has three bedrooms, three full en suite bathrooms, two half-bathrooms, three balconies, a 2-car private garage and private elevator to each level. Over 3700 total finished square feet.

The perfect family home on one of the most coveted streets in the Augusta Road area. This home has it all with 4 bedrooms, 4 full baths and a playroom all on one level. There is a side entry with 4 lockers, walk-in laundry room and half bath. The updated kitchen has a built-in banquet, pantry, island and granite countertops. There is the perfect playroom just off the kitchen with French doors out to the covered porch.

AGENTS: Ryan Rosenfeld, Coldwell Banker Caine and

AGENTS: Laura T. Mcdonald, Wilson Associates and Lil Glenn,

AGENTS: Wendi Ruth, Coldwell Banker Caine and Jennifer

Andreana Horowitz Snyder, Wilson Associates

14

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

Lil Glenn Co, LLC

Hocker Van Gieson, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices C. Dan Joyner Realtors®


Congratulations, Top Producers

Spaulding Group

The Toates Team

The Chet & Beth Smith Group

MacDonald HomeTeam

Melissa Morrell

Dodds & Associates

The Van Gieson Team

Maggie Aiken Toler

Sam Hankins

The Clever People

At Home Assoicates

The Keagy Team

Beth Crigler

Lisa Norton Reese

Granville & Granville

Ginnie Freeman

Brian Welborn

The Morgan Group

Johnathan Lower

Katy Glidewell

Nation-Smith Associates

Regina Coulomb

Jenny McCord

Pam McCurry Team

The Cassity Partnership

Angela Harmon

The Sharpe Team

Nexus Group

The Coffey House Group

Eric Mitchell

June 2019 At

Berkshire

Hathaway

HomeServices C. Dan Joyner, REALTORS , we celebrate success. ®

B e c au se when ou r c l ient s succeed, our agents succeed.

Your Home’s Best Friend. cdanjoyner.com

© 2019 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.


HOMES |

REAL ESTATE

OPEN HOUSES

OPEN HOUSES

Here’s a look at some homes you can explore this weekend

12 S. CALHOUN STREET DOWNTOWN

$649,500

Customize your modern Cityhome in downtown Greenville! Open floor plan, elevator, 2 car garage, and tons of natural light throughout. WHEN: 2-4pm | Sunday, July 21 AGENT: Trey Cole, Coldwell Banker Caine 864.303.7249 | trey@treycole.com SPECS:

3|

3.5 | MLS 1393538

12 S. CALHOUN STREET DOWNTOWN

$559,500

Modern Cityhome in downtown Greenville! Open floor plan, 2 car garage, tons of natural light. Move in ready October 2019. WHEN: 2-4pm | Sunday, July 21 AGENT: Trey Cole, Coldwell Banker Caine 864.303.7249 | trey@treycole.com SPECS:

3|

3.5 | MLS 1369853

324 RIVERSIDE DRIVE

GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB $675,000 Augusta Road charmer walking distance from Greenville CC. All the comforts of newer construction with traditional architecture. WHEN: 2-4pm | Sunday, July 21 AGENT: Kathryn Curtis, Wilson Associates 864.238.3879 | kathryn@wilsonassociates.net SPECS:

3|

3 | MLS 1395864

9 DEERING STREET MILLS MILL

$299,900

Fabulous renovation of this adorable cottage from the inside out! Home located close to downtown Greenville and PRISMA Health. WHEN: 2-4pm | Sunday, July 21 AGENT: Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net SPECS:

3|

2 | MLS 1391945

105 BURNS STREET GREATER SULLIVAN

$279,900

This completely renovated, Paula Rallis inspired home offers three bedrooms and an open floor plan for entertaining. WHEN: 2-4pm | Sunday, July 21 AGENT: Blair Miller, Wilson Associates 864.430.7708 | blair@wilsonassociates.net SPECS: 16

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

3|

1 | MLS 1396993

SOLD SUBDIVISION

PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR JUNE 17-21

PRICE SELLER

$1,736,000 $1,490,000 $1,390,000 $900,000 HARTNESS $886,000 COBBLESTONE $835,000 $805,000 THE OAKS AT ROPER MOUNTAIN $790,000 CHAUNESSY $787,500 CLIFFS VALLEY $754,500 THORNBLADE $750,000 COLLINS CREEK $740,000 MAXWELL FARM $735,000 $712,800 RIDGELAND AT THE PARK $682,000 HOLLINGSWORTH PARK AT VERDAE $675,000 CLIFFS AT GLASSY WEST $652,500 $640,000 GRIFFITH FARM $625,500 $585,000 ALLEGHENY $568,000 CRESCENT TERRACE $557,000 GOWER ESTATES $551,000 ONEAL VILLAGE $525,500 $525,000 IVY GROVE $525,000 STONEBROOK FARMS $525,000 PALM GROVE $510,000 THE VIEWS AT MOUNT VERNON $504,632 121 RHETT STREET $500,000 $480,000 WAVERLY HALL $480,000 KILGORE FARMS $452,000 AUGUSTA RD HILLS $450,000 PARKERS LANDING $445,000 BROOKHAVEN $427,540 BRAEMOR $421,000 STONEFIELD COTTAGES $415,000 BRAEMOR $415,000 SHANNON FOREST $414,000 STONEHAVEN $410,000 VILLAGGIO DI MONTEBELLO $410,000 ALEXANDER FARMS $410,000 CARRONBRIDGE $406,265 STONEHAVEN $405,000 COUNTRY CLUB ESTATES $404,000 STONEHAVEN $400,000 $399,000 THE RESERVE AT RICHGLEN $388,675 ELLETSON ACRES $380,000 $380,000 KILGORE FARMS $380,000 COACHMAN PLANTATION $376,168 RIVER OAKS $375,000 ROPER MOUNTAIN ESTATES $370,000 EASTON RIDGE $368,322 BUTLER PARC $366,270 TUSCANY FALLS $362,000 $360,000 THE BRIO $355,000 NORTHSIDE GARDENS $355,000 KILGORE FARMS $352,500 RABON CHASE $348,500 NORTHWOOD $342,000 THE RESERVE AT RICHGLEN $340,579 BRENTWOOD $340,330 WEST FARM $337,282 WOODLAND CREEK $337,000 LANFORD’S POINTE $337,000 COOPER RIDGE $334,000 RIVERSTONE $333,750 WEST FARM VILLAGE $331,094 MILL POND AT RIVER SHOALS $330,900 $330,000 KILGORE FARMS $325,000 TOWNHOMES PENDLETON WEST $325,000 WOODLAND CHASE $325,000 $325,000 THE OAKS AT FOWLER $319,900 VILLAS @ WEST GEORGIA $318,100 HUNTERS RIDGE $317,000 THE TOWNES AT FIVE FORKS $314,665 LINKS OF TRYON $314,000 FORRESTER WOODS $310,500 EAGLES GLEN AT KIMBRELL $309,999 FAIRWAY VIEW $305,000 SUGAR CREEK $305,000 $300,000 HARTWOOD LAKE $298,280 HALF MILE LAKE $297,500

R F S CORP 108 EAST BROAD LLC 522 NORTH CHURCH STREET PALMETTO REAL ESTATE TRU MARLIN GROUP INC THE HOWARD HAROLD FRANCIS II MYERS CYNTHIA B REVOCABL CATER LIVING TRUST COLLINS JOHN M HATFIELD DIANE K (JTWROS CAPITAL INVESTMENT FUNDI HALL DAVID MILLFORD LOUI GOODWIN FOUST CUSTOM HOM FULCHER JAMES WILLIAM BOYD DARLENE S (JTWROS) WETHERBY NANCY R (JTWROS ATHERTON ANN R MCDONALD JAY & MICHELLE MASONE CHRISTOPHER B (JT OWNERS CHOICE CONSTRUCTI CLEMENCE ELLIOTT I IV SPRING JEAN M DALRYMPLE ROGER OV VENTURES LLC HARRISON PARK LLC HART CHRISTOPHER D MCALISTER PARRY T BLUE ATLAS BUILDERS LLC COBBLESTONE HOMES LLC OWENS WILLIAM RILEY MECKLENBURG WILLIAM CULV SCHRADER JONATHAN D (JTW FARNES MICHAEL BARNARD ( COVINGTON KIP (SURV) ESSEX HOMES SOUTHEAST IN D R HORTON INC DEPALLE ANNE PUYSSEGUR HIGGINS DONALD H (JTWROS WRIGHT DAVID C CARTER SALLY H SOLE TRUS ILLMANN HOLGER KEENAN SUZANNE MILLER CARRIE MICHELLE ( NVR INC JAGER ANTHOULA K ROBERTS JAMES C AGUDO-FERNANDEZ PATRICIA KELLEY BRYAN (JTWROS) DAN RYAN BUILDERS SOUTH HOFFMAN KYLE T (JTWROS) LEE FAMILY SURVIVORS TRU MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L CASSITY ANDREW L CARTER DOUGLAS E (JTWROS MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC BOZARTH JOE T IV (JTWROS BERARDINELLI TINA A OLBRYCH PAMELA CRAIG ERIC L BEAL JANE E GHENT CANDY C DELANEY PATRICIA L DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL D R HORTON INC MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L DIAZ AGUSTIN BURNETTE KAREN S (JTWROS FARLEY DENISE B (JTWROS) NVR INC MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L DUSSO JAMES E (JTWROS) LYNN JOAN DRYMAN TRUSTEE SIERRA ALEJANDRO MILLER NATALIE DARLENE MUNGO HOMES PROPERTIES L PICKELSIMER GAILOR R D R HORTON INC NEWSTYLE CARRIAGE HILLS JANOWIAK MARY C NVR INC HARRIS BEATRICE C MEILINGER MICHAEL E D R HORTON INC PRUNTY JOHN R STACHIW OKSANA PITTMAN’S TEXTILE MACHIN D R HORTON-CROWN LLC FERGUSON MICHAEL (JTWROS

BUYER

ADDRESS

ELEV8T PROPERTIES E NORT JULIUS II LLC S & P PROP SP3 INVESTMENTS LLC HUTTON GREENVILLE ST LLC DEMARIE DONALD J JR (JTW MASONE CHRISTOPHER B (JT STEVENS NORMAN BRADFORD SLACK CHERYL ANN (JTWROS PEEK DEBORAH SUE PEEK DO ATHERTON ANN R ATHERTON WILSON DOUGLAS CARY HALL DAVID MILFORD LOUIS COLEMAN ANTHONY L (JTWRO WILBER JACK G (JTWROS) W WALLS JAY D (JTWROS) WAL MYERS CHRISTOPHER BLAKE THIESING CAROL ANN (JTWR SIERRA MICHAEL A DURKAN NAOMI C (JTWROS) ROYKO STEPHEN P ROBINSON KIMBERLY RILEY MOYER SCOTT (JTWROS) STA DAVIDSON KELLY H (JTWROS SABAL HOMES AT O’NEAL VI THREE GIRLEE GIRLZ LLC DELGADO JENNIFER ERICA ( DEVITO DANIEL S HOLOMBO KIRSTEN (JTWROS) PISCHKE-THOMAS KATHERINE LANZA JULIO HORTON DEBRA HOWARD HAROLD F III LUKEHART BRADLEY SCOTT ( WILLIS KATIE C (JTWROS) MORRIS JESSICA R BRANCATO PETER G (JTWROS SCONE PEYTON J (JTWROS) JOHNSON JEFFRY W (JTWROS GREGG LAUREN E (JTWROS) CHAPMAN DAVID GLENN (JTW POSTA ANDREW ALLAN (JTWR SANDERS BRIAN (JTWROS) S EARLE KATHERINE B (JTWRO DICKSON ALANE (JTWROS) D MOON LAURA F (JTWROS) MO DAINTY ERIN E (JTWROS) Y DAMBMAN BRANT G (JTWROS) SIECKMAN BRADLEY (JTWROS BORER CHRIS J JR (JTWROS GARY CHRISTOPHER ADAM (J 405 WACCAMAW AVE LLC MATTHEWS BRITTANY (JTWRO BALDASSARRA RACHAEL L (J HANLIN ROBERT BRUCE (JTW FINNIGAN LINDSAY PAIGE F HENDERSON DANIELLE BROOK JONES DEBRA A JONES RICH ROSSI AMY ROSSI NICHOLAS AUGHTRY PAUL C III DESAI SANJAY R (JTWROS) BROWN LOGAN (JTWROS) ROB HERRINGTON HAROLD E JR JONGENELEN CASE (JTWROS) BROWN MELISSA (JTWROS) W BOONE LISA ANN (JTWROS) CASTRO ANDREA YEPES (JTW HARABES BARBARA W (JTWRO SCOTT EMILY G (JTWROS) S REDLINGER JENNIFER J (JT KANDEL ABIGAIL M (JTWROS KELLY ANGELA (JTWROS) KE MOSER BRENDA L (JTWROS) HARRIS DOUGLAS C JR GILBERT BRIAN (JTWROS) G PAUL BRANDON JOHN (JTWRO WALKER LINDSAY CHATTO GUTIERREZ ANTHONY C (JTW MARSH COLLEEN K (JTWROS) CANTRELL BILLY JOE (JTWR SCHIAPPA DANYA J TRUST DANIEL HUGH R III (JTWRO LALIBERTE ANNE MARIE (JT O’CONNOR DANIEL J O’CONN OLIVER JANE K RICHARDS SONNY LOGAN CHANDRASEKARAN SRIKRIPA LEWIS EMILY S (JTWROS) L PITTMAN REAL ESTATE & DE RICE ERIC S (JTWROS) RIC CORNELL CHRISTINA D

525 VERDAE BLVD 301 FALLS ST 522 E NORTH ST 736 CHERRY ST 207 REMBERT ST 14 COBBLER LN 28 CRAIGWOOD CT 136 CHARLESTON OAK LN 13 WEATHERBY CT 301 SEDGEWICK RD 310 THORNBLADE BLVD 23 BABBS HOLW 405 CANNIE CLARK CT 13 OLD LOG SHOALS RD 172 RIDGELAND DR 28 RUSKIN SQ 2092 ASHBURTON WAY 8 BEN ST 8 REDWING CT 107 ROBINSON ST 20 ALLEGHENY RUN 210 TINDAL AVE 126 WINDFIELD RD 421 WANDO PARK BLVD STE 230 204 BELLE OAKS DR 30 GROVE VALLEY WAY 5 NEW FOREST CT 60 PONDEROSA DR 132 PEACHTREE DR 121 RHETT ST UNIT 302 109 E EARLE ST 212 WAVERLY HALL LN 105 CARTERS CREEK CT 118 CAMMER AVE 9 LAKEWAY PL 131 RIVERLAND WOODS CT 241 YORKSWELL LN 612 PONDEN DR 10 MIDCROFT CT 119 SHANNON LAKE CIR 726 CARRIAGE HILL RD 6 AREZZO DR 1 ALEXANDER MANOR WAY 116 BRENNAN PL 3740 BOLING SPRINGS RD 352 42 DOUGLAS DR 119 GLENBRIAR CT 508 MEYERS DR 148 QUAIL CREEK DR 110 LOCKWOOD AVE 405 WACCAMAW AVE 47 QUIET CREEK CT 501 LADYSMITH DR 307 NEW TARLETON WAY 210 E CRANBERRY LN 403 WHITEROCK CT 44 GOLDEN APPLE TRL 324 MONTALCINO WAY 40 W BROAD ST STE 500 1001 S CHURCH ST UNIT 609 14 PRIMROSE LN 5 THORNCLIFF CT 6 STONE CHASE CT 8 WOODBINE RD 302 BEVY CT 103 GRANITO DR 401 CHILLINGHAM CT 10 BAYTREE CT 208 COVE HARBOR CT 104 COOPER OAKS CT 7 MOHEGAN WAY 39 GUERNSEY WAY 19 FLAT SHOALS CT 685 N FLAT ROCK RD 427 KILGORE FARMS CIR 315 ARLINGTON AVE 212 ARBORWALK CT 300 WILLIS RD 1 COMMON OAKS CT 2125 SOUTHEND DR STE 201 #453 153 GRAMERCY CT 14 HEMINGWAY LN 220 SAINT ANDREWS BLVD 102 ROYAL OAK RD 18 NOBLE WING LN 111 GOLF VIEW LN 102 CLIFFWOOD CT PO BOX 1507 503 SUNRIDGE PL 21 JULESKING CT


REAL ESTATE

PROPERTY TRANSFERS FOR JUNE 17-21

| HOMES

SOLD

SUBDIVISION

PRICE SELLER

BUYER

ADDRESS

SUBDIVISION

PRICE SELLER

BUYER

ADDRESS

CLIFF RIDGE COLONY BENNINGTON HOLLY TRACE SILVERLEAF THE VILLAGE AT FOUNTAIN INN ABBEYHILL PARK ASHLEY ACRES DEVENGER PLACE GREYTHORNE STILLWATERS CANEBRAKE STILLWOOD AT BELL’S CROSSING CAPER’S PLACE AUGUSTA CIRCLE NEELY FARM - DEER SPRINGS PLEASANT MEADOWS BENNINGTON LENNOX LAKE SPRING HAVEN SHOALLY RIDGE HERITAGE CREEK KATHERINES GARDEN BRECKENRIDGE HARTWOOD LAKE WATERS RUN VALLEY VIEW REMINGTON BRYSON ACRES TOWNES AT BROOKWOOD II FRANKLIN MEADOWS BRIDGEWATER ARBOR WOODS BELL’S CREEK COLEMAN HEIGHTS

$295,000 $295,000 $295,000 $295,000 $294,605 $293,500 $292,500 $291,000 $290,000 $290,000 $289,599 $287,000 $285,000 $285,000 $285,000 $285,000 $284,900 $284,500 $279,900 $278,900 $277,900 $272,000 $270,000 $270,000 $268,135 $268,020 $261,230 $261,000 $260,000 $260,000 $260,000 $259,900 $257,500 $256,395 $253,500 $253,415 $250,016 $250,000 $250,000 $250,000

SWAIM DOUGLAS EUGENE (JT SUMMERS KAITLYN K (JTWRO OWEN DAVID M (JTWROS) OW LANIER GREGORY MICHAEL ( SCOGGINS MICHAEL WILLIAM VINCENT BRANDON (JTWROS) STANERT ERIC S MILES ADAM R (JTWROS) MI JOHNSON CLARISSA MAYE (J SIDDLE DAVID R (JTWROS) FITZGERALD MICHAEL J (JT LEVIN DANIEL M (JTWROS) GUILLOT KRISTY R (JTWROS DUBOWSKI CHRISTOPHER (JT ARRINGTON KAREN B (JTWRO WILLIAMSON HARRY MCKINNO ARNOTT CARL CAMPBELL (JT GRAHAM MARK B (JTWROS) G HOFF CAROL A (JTWROS) COX COURTNEY M MAYER HOPE (JTWROS) MAYE SRINIVASAN NARNAMALPURAM HENDERSON BRYAN A (JTWRO SCOTT EVERNE M (JTWROS) DUBIEL STEFAN ANDERSON JESSICA D (JTWR MORENO MARK (JTWROS) MOR FOREMAN ANDREW SCOTT HARRELL JEFFREY B CHANDA NARESH (JTWROS) D NORDSTROM CINDY L (JTWRO MORRISON CHRISTA HARVEY MARTIN ANNETTE (JTWROS) WATT DONALD A LIVING TRU WALKER GREGORY S WALKER ROJAS FRANCISCO JAVIER M GARNER GLORIA J (JTWROS) NEWTON MARKUS M MOORE CANDICE V ERTZBERGER STEPHANIE (JT

107 TRILLIUM WAY 219 WYCLIFFE DR 220 HOLLY CREST CIR 218 E SHEFFORD ST 133 VILLAGE VISTA DR 625 HEATHERCREST CT 20 ASHLEY CT 410 WINDWARD WAY 25 N JONES RD 115 KETTLE OAK WAY 307 FARMERS MARKET ST 114 BENNINGTON RD 108 POINSETTIA DR 30 RIDGELEIGH WAY PO BOX 10753 111 W FARIS RD 1030 MUSH CREEK RD 307 FARMING CREEK DR 18 ANA ROSE CT 209 WYCLIFFE DR 2 MANORWOOD CT 16480 SOUTH POST RD APT 201 105 CANYON CT 200 OPEN RANGE LN 325 E CELESTIAL DR 321 TIMBERTRAIL WAY 236 HARTWOOD LAKE LN 206 W MOUNTAINVIEW AVE 16 CAMMER AVE 408 FIELDSVIEW LN 308 MEADOW TREE CT 300 PLAMONDON DR 1101 HOWARD DR 827 STONEBRIAR ST 113 FRANKLIN MEADOW WAY 6 MANDOLIN LN 3 ARBOR WOODS LN 125 HORSEPEN WAY 903 DUNBAR ST 406 ALTA VISTA CIR

WOODRUFF LAKE FAIRVIEW POINTE HARTWOOD LAKE LINKSIDE GREEN RICELAN SPRINGS FOX TRACE VICTORIA PARK BROOKSIDE VILLAS ORCHARD FARMS ARBOR WALK PROVIDENCE SQUARE MEADOWS GILDER CREEK FARM KNOLLWOOD HEIGHTS WHITE OAK RIDGE PLANTERS ROW PLANTERS ROW WEXFORD SPARROWS POINT FOX TRACE TRIPLE CREEK WATERS GROVE FOX TRACE GLASTONBURY VILLAGE WAGON CREEK CAMERON CREEK STONELEDGES FOXGLOVE PINEHURST AT PEBBLE CREEK HIDDEN LAKE PRESERVE BESSINGER NEWLANDS PARKVIEW SQUIRES CREEK LONG CREEK PLANTATION CYPRESS LANDING HALF MILE LAKE VICTORIA PARK BUTLER STATION

$249,650 $247,000 $245,650 $245,000 $245,000 $244,500 $244,000 $243,946 $240,000 $240,000 $239,642 $239,500 $239,000 $238,000 $238,000 $238,000 $236,000 $235,000 $235,000 $232,500 $230,000 $230,000 $225,000 $225,000 $225,000 $224,000 $224,000 $222,400 $222,000 $221,000 $220,704 $220,549 $220,000 $220,000 $220,000 $219,000 $218,900 $218,000 $216,016 $215,000

WRIGHT DAVID C (JTWROS) MEDRANO SANDRA V WILLIS MARK P TEAGUE KAREN T NGUYEN THI KIM (JTWROS) STELZL FRANK ETHEREDGE BEEBE T (JTWRO HALL ZACHARY STEPHAN DODDS ANDREW N (JTWROS) GREEN CAROL (JTWROS) GRE NIX MATTHEW H VIANDS JULIE A (JTWROS) CARTER SEAN F (JTWROS) C LATIMER BONNIE G (JTWROS THOMAS ALVA F II HOOPER ANDREW (JTWROS) H GIDDINGS SARAH BROWNLEE FLOYD JAMES T III QUIGLEY ELAINE (JTWROS) HANLON KIMBERLY WILHOIT WARREN W JR ANGULO RONALD A ZAMBRANO GILREATH JOHN BAILEY (JT BABB DEMETRIUS D (JTWROS ORTIZ CARY A (JTWROS) OR STUDEBAKER RICHARD I CALIBER HOME LOANS INC ALDRIDGE AMY E (JTWROS) MCCARTHY MATTHEW TOWN & COUNTRY PROPERTIE RUBY KENNETH A JR DEFRISCO LAUREN (JTWROS) BERARDI JENNIFER ELVIRA SZABO JOEL PATRICK BRISTER JORDAN C BRISTER CASADO LUIS J FELIZ (JTW MAGALHAES CARLOS M (JTWR JONES JUSTIN PEREZ CHRISTINA R (JTWRO MILLS GREG D

3 LAKE VALLEY CT 104 ASHINGTON DR 233 HARTWOOD LAKE LN 102 GREENVIEW CIR 4 EUROPEAN PLUM CT 130 BORDER AVE 90 N ROYAL TOWER DR 209 SPRUCEWOOD CT 108 RASOR DR 9 REDGLOBE CT 56 VERONA CIR 17 SMOKEHOUSE DR 118 BROCKMAN DR 209 CHEVY CHASE BLVD 155 MIDWOOD RD 305 MARSH CREEK DR 115 KEITH DR 6 FRIENDSPLOT CV 201 BRANDT DR 105 COTTON BAY WAY 8 DANDIE DR 703 LONGHORN DR 12 KENTWORTH CT 63 BORDER AVE 25 SACHA LN 108 WAGONCREEK DR 13801 WIRELESS WAY PO BOX 4068 27 AMBERJACK CT 28 W NORTH ST 16 STARLIGHT DR 206 BROMLEY FOLD LN 27 BURGESS AVE 12 SITKA AVE 213 SQUIRES CREEK RD 309 SCHOONER CT 200 CABOT HILL LN 352 PLANTATION VIEW LN 716 CAMBERWELL RD 102 FAWN RIDGE WAY

WALKER FROST A (JTWROS) BALADI MIRANDA SIVADON KELLY N (JTWROS) PUTNAM JOSEPH W NVR INC THOMAS LISA FEINGLASS SCOTT ALAN (JT ANGEL CHRISTOPHER (JTWRO PORTER JOHN R (JTWROS) DRENNAN CHERYL (JTWROS) AMBRIA PROPERTIES LLC WILLOW HOMES BY DESIGN L FOWLER ELAINE H CRISCUOLI JILL O BLUE MOON OF GREENVILLE ASHLEY A ROY JR EVERETT HOMES LLC TUCKER ROBERT H MCGEE PROPERTIES OF GREE NORTH ALISON S (JTWROS) MANGUM JANE V JOCHIM ERIN A FRESHWATERS DENNIS A (JT MORRIS RUSTIN CRAIG (JTW DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C IN SK BUILDERS INC D R HORTON-CROWN LLC LIVELY ALISON C LOLLIS EZEKIEL B (JTWROS NVR INC COX SUZANNE P WEARLEY JOSHUA C RUSSELL MICHAEL W BROOKWOOD TOWNES LLC SIERON JOANNA A MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN CRESCENT HOMES SC LLC LYLE TIMOTHY S (JTWROS) RENAISSANCE CUSTOM HOMES MCGUILL CHRISTOPHER ALAN

273 Glen Crest Drive Moore, SC 29369 $225,000

823 Packs Mountain Ridge Road Taylors, SC 29687 $595,000

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J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

17


S.A.I.L. |

D I V I S I

DIVISIONAL RESULTS 2019

Genco

POOLS & SPAS

JULY 12-13

SAIL DIVISIONALS RESULTS, RANKINGS, AND COMBINED TEAM SCORES

RED DIVISIONAL

2019 RED DIVISIONALS Place Team

PURPLE DIVISIONAL

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores Quality Points

Place Team

Total Points

1

Devenger Dolphins

8.41

1

Gower Swim Team

2

Stone Lake Stingrays

7.51

2

Stone Lake Stingrays

3

SCR Sharks

6.14

3

Devenger Dolphins

1060

4

Woody Creek Swim Team

5.56

4

SCR Sharks

995.5

5

Gower Swim Team

4.83

5

Woody Creek Swim Team

784

TOTAL

32.46

TOTAL

5703

2019 PURPLE DIVISIONALS Place Team

1744 1119.5

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores

Quality Points

Place Team

Total Points

1

Holly Tree Country Club

14.74

1

Greenville Country Club

2

Forrester Woods Waverunners

11.09

2

Roper Mountain Estates Ash

3

Roper Mountain Estates Ash

10.53

3

Holly Tree Country Club

1076

4

River Walk Shockwaves

9.23

4

Forrester Woods Waverunners

898.5

5

Greenville Country CLub

8.12

5

River Walk Shockwaves

849

TOTAL

53.71

TOTAL

5718

2019 WHITE DIVISIONALS Place Team

WHITE DIVISIONAL

1494 1400.5

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores

Quality Points

Place Team

Total Points

1

Thornblade Country Club

19.41

1

Thornblade Country Club

1281

2

Poinsettia Pirates Swim Team

17.71

2

Spaulding Farm Swim Team

1261.5

3

Silverleaf Swordfish

13.65

3

Poinsettia Pirates Swim Team

1115.5

4

Spaulding Farm Swim Team

12.74

4

Silverleaf Swordfish

1078

5

Stonehaven Stingrays

11.50

5

Stonehaven Stingrays

828

TOTAL

75.00

TOTAL

5564

DID YOU KNOW? 37 pools participate with approximately 4,500 swimmers involving more than 1,700 families

RED DIVISIONAL

PURPLE DIVISIONAL

FOR COMPLETE RANKINGS, RESULTS, AND PHOTOS G E N C O P O O L S . C O M F R O M B A C K YA R D G E TA W AY S T O C O M M E R C I A L P A R A D I S E S . 18

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


O N A L S

DIVISIONAL RESULTS 2019

Genco

POOLS & SPAS

SAIL DIVISIONALS RESULTS, RANKINGS, AND COMBINED TEAM SCORES

BLUE DIVISIONAL

Place Team

BLUE DIVISIONAL

Quality Points

2019 BLUE DIVISIONALS

Place Team

Total Points

1

Foxcroft

21.74

1

Dove Tree Swim Team

1312

2

Dove Tree Swim Team

15.81

2

Pelham Falls Piranhas

1192

3

Pebble Creek Half Mile

14.24

3

Foxcroft

1174

4

Pelham Falls Piranhas

12.04

4

Pebble Creek Half Mile

1025.5

5

Wellington-Green/Brighton

11.51

5

Wellington-Green/Brighton

943.5

TOTAL

75.33

TOTAL

5647

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores Place Team

Quality Points

2019 GOLD DIVISIONALS

Place Team

Total Points

1

Weatherstone Waverunners

21.69

1

PMP/Del Norte/Canebrake

1693.5

2

Heritage Lakes Blue Wave

18.75

2

Heritage Lakes Blue Wave

1031

3

Bent Creek Blue Marlins

17.01

3

Bent Creek Blue Marlins

986.5

4

PMP/Del Norte/Canebrake

15.98

4

Weatherstone Waverunners

737.5

5

Knollwood Planters Row

14.40

5

Knollwood Planters Row

662.5

TOTAL

87.82

TOTAL

5111

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores Place Team

GOLD DIVISIONAL

JULY 12-13

GREEN DIVISIONAL

Team Rankings | Combined Team Scores

PURPLE DIVISIONAL

| S.A.I.L.

Quality Points

2019 GREEN DIVISIONALS

Place Team

Total Points

1

Sparrows Point - Adams Run

17.37

1

McCarter Stingrays

1180.5

2

Botany Woods Swim Team

14.89

2

Botany Woods Swim Team

1146.5

3

Neely Farm Nitro Fish

14.69

3

Neely Farm Nitro Fish

4

McCarter Stingrays

11.69

4

Sparrows Point - Adams Run

903.5

5

Brushy Meadows Summerwalk

9.86

5

Orchard Farms Swim Team

827.5

6

Orchard Farms Swim Team

8.36

6

Brushy Meadows Summerwalk

661

TOTAL

76.86

TOTAL

5703

984

VISIT US ONLINE: GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM / SAIL F R O M B A C K YA R D G E TA W AY S T O C O M M E R C I A L P A R A D I S E S . G E N C O P O O L S . C O M J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

19


ART CONDITIONED. IT’S COOL INSIDE!

Greenville County Museum of Art

420 College Street on Heritage Green 864.271.7570 gcma.org

Wed - Sat 10 am - 5 pm Sun 1 pm - 5 pm free admission

Journal FP Art Conditioned 2017.indd 2

7/26/17 1:57 PM


ARTS & CULTURE

Kent Ambler transforms life’s often unnoticed objects into loosely textured woodcuts and paintings. “The art is based off of everyday life — my dogs, my yard, my observations, things that are around me,” Ambler says. Spending time in his newly designed studio and walking around his 12acre property on Paris Mountain, Ambler needn’t tread far to find simple inspiration. His three dogs — Mr. Whipple, Tonk, and Spooky — appear in much of Ambler’s work and are his constant studio companions.

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“I kind of have always gravitated towards what writers are told. ‘Write about what you know, for the most part,’” he says. For Ambler, that’s his surroundings. Growing up as a quiet kid, Ambler occupied himself with his artistic talents. “My earliest memories are of drawing. So, it’s just always something I’ve done.”

Life’s ARTIST KENT AMBLER

CAPTURES

SIMPLE SNIPPETS IN WOODCUTS AND PAINTINGS

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• One part sugar • Four parts hot water • NO ADDED COLOR • Cool, Serve and Enjoy the Entertainment

Open Mon. - Fri. 9:30-5:30 • Sat. 9-5

626 Congaree Road 864-234-2150 www.wbu.com/greenville

n story by MELODY CUENCA | photos WILL CROOKS AND PROVIDED

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

21


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

ARTIST PROFILE

He considers art his natural way of interpreting the world. His knack for aesthetic composition is also innate. “I don’t think about that, it just happens,” he says of mark-making and line quality. Whether he’s crafting a woodcut, painting, or sculpture, Ambler’s goal is not to send a message but rather to create visually pleasing art. “I don’t work conceptually,” he says. “It’s not about an idea. It’s more about the execution, the aesthetic.” Ambler’s art allows viewers to interpret it however they choose. “I think first and foremost it’s visual art,” he says. “I feel like if you’re not attracted to it visually, then what’s the point?” Using old techniques, he carves wood blocks and mixes ink to transfer layered designs on different types of paper. “It’s basically like old-time printing, so making stamps out of

wood,” he explains. “I try to be kind of loose, leave a lot of carving marks.” Ambler prefers handmaking each print rather than making digital prints. After he’s finished creating from the wood blocks, he cuts the blocks to create abstract wooden collages. For his woodcuts, Ambler wants the carving techniques to be obvious. “With a woodcut, it’s not going to look like a drawing,” he says. “I want it to look like it was carved.” Paintings and woodcuts have similar yet unique qualities that he enjoys. “Painting is immediate. You make a mark, it’s there,” he says. “[With] woodcuts, I’m making things that are going to make something else.” Ambler has been creating art full-time for 22 years, and his work can be seen at www.kentambler.net.

THE ART IS BASED OFF OF EVERYDAY LIFE — MY DOGS, MY YARD, MY OBSERVATIONS, THINGS THAT ARE AROUND ME...

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LIFE CAN BE HARD WITHOUT THE CARD South Carolina Children’s Theatre

2019 - 2020 SEASONS ANNOUNCED!

Buy-One-Get-One-Free Tickets To the best shows in town

With a donation of $50 or more to the Metropolitan Arts Council, MAC you will receive an ArtCard which entitles you to buy-one-get-one-free tickets for one time at each of the following venues for one full year! The ArtCard is a great way to sample the fantastic performing arts in Greenville at a substantial savings. In just two uses the ArtCard pays for itself. Get yours today to start planning your 2019-2020 shows!

*select shows

Get your ArtCard today!

*MainStage productions

You can donate through PayPal on our website, over the phone or at our office in downtown Greenville.

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


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

T H E AT R E

ARTS CALENDAR JULY 19-25

Metro. Arts Council @ Centre Stage WORKS BY LU WIXON July 19 - Sept. 6 | 233-6733 Peace Center AN EVENING WITH CHRIS BOTTI July 20 | 467-3000 Carolina Music Museum FURMAN CLARINET ENSEMBLE July 24 | 520-8807 Peace Center, Genevieve’s Lounge T H E C O N V E R S AT I O N July 25 | 467-3000 Downtown Alive P R O X I M A PA R A D A July 25 | 232-2273 Furman Music by the Lake THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA July 25 | 294-2086 Centre Stage R O C K A B I L LY H E AV E N July 25 - August 17 | 233-6733 Greenville Shakespeare Company AS YOU LIKE IT Through July 22 | 525-6940 Greenville Center for Creative Arts F I B E R , PA P E R , S C I S S O R S Through July 24 | 735-2948 Metropolitan Arts Council FLAT OUT UNDER PRESSURE EXHIBIT Through July 26 | 467-3132 GLOW Lyric Theatre MY FAIR LADY Through August 2 | 558-4569 THE BEST LITTLE WHOREHOUSE IN TEXAS Through August 4 | 558-4569 Upstate Shakespeare Festival THE TEMPEST Through August 4 | 235-6948 Greenville County Museum of Art H O W A B O U T P L E A S A N T B U R G? Through August 11 | 271-7570 MASTERCLASS: WATERMEDIA FROM THE GREENVILLE COLLECTION Through September 8 | 271-7570 PERSONS OF INTEREST Through September 15 | 271-7570

KEEPING OUR ARTBEAT STRONG WWW.GREENVILLEARTS.COM

16 AUGUSTA STREET | 864.467.3132

24

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

'Annie Get Your Gun' Shoots into town with music, fun for all n story by MELODY CUENCA n photo ESCOBAR PHOTOGRAPHY

Mill Town Players’ real-life story “Annie Get Your Gun” revisits Buffalo Bill’s Wild West in a show within a show that features sharpshooter Annie Oakley and her opposing shooter and romance Frank Butler. With hits like “Anything You Can Do,” “There’s No Business Like Show Business,” and “I Got the Sun in the Morning,” Irving Berlin’s show is considered a classic golden-age musical. While “Annie Get Your Gun” takes audiences back to days of cowboys, it also takes executive artistic director Will Ragland back to his first theater experience playing the role of a hotel owner. “This is the first time I have revisited the show since I was a little shy teenager in high school,” Ragland says. But this time, he’s playing the role of showman Buffalo Bill. Back in 1995, Ragland was persuaded by math teacher and director Jo Hood to paint the set and act in “Annie Get Your Gun.”

IT’S JUST GOOD OLD-FASHIONED ENTERTAINMENT AND EVERYBODY’S GOING TO LOVE IT. – WILL RAGLAND

EXECUTIVE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR

“She said, ‘Will, there’s something about being a thespian that complements being an artist,’” he recalls. “And of course I said, ‘What’s a thespian?’” Stubbornly refusing to sing his one line, Ragland instead spoke the line, “doing what comes naturally.” Now, he ironically loves to sing in musicals — thanks to a math teacher who is now the vice president of MTP’s board of directors. “Because of my introduction to plays, I eventually became a theater teacher,” he says. With several former students in the upcoming musical, Ragland recognizes and appreciates the connection between teacher and student. “If Jo Hood had not taken a chance on me, these young people may not have pursued their own paths in theater, and MTP would have never been formed,” he says. Ragland says his current role as Buffalo Bill is not so different from his reality. “I am the showman who inJULY 19 - AUGUST 4 troduces the show and is the Historic Pelzer Auditorium, person who weaves everything 214 Lebby St., Pelzer together, and I close the show,” $10-$12 he says. “But, I am the man who WWW.MILLTOWNPLAYERS.ORG is trying to make money on entertainment, trying to bring people together to present a spectacle that people want to see.” The family-friendly “Annie Get Your Gun” features new faces to MTP’s stage as well as upbeat music, comedy, and high-energy entertainment. “It’s just good old-fashioned entertainment and everybody’s going to love it,” Ragland says.

"Annie Get Your Gun"


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

IN A RUT WITH DATE NIGHT? WE’RE HERE TO HELP. Every week, we’ll pair a notable show – music, art, dance, or theater – with the perfect pre-show dinner at a local restaurant. We’ll even tell you what to order and how long your Uber or Lyft should take between the two. Consider all of the guesswork taken care of. All you have to do is snag tickets and make that reservation.

RIDE-SHARE NOT NECESSARY: PARK FOR DINNER AND WALK TO THE SHOW

SATURDAY, JULY 20

ENJOY DINNER AT:

THE STRIP CLUB 104

n story by

ARIEL TURNER

LISTEN TO:

RUMOURS n story by VINCE HARRIS

RECOMMENDED DISHES

Blue Cheese & Apple Wood Bacon Mussels The Pig Skin Parmesan Truffle Pomme Frites Bacon, Bacon, Bacon (bacon flight) Lobster Cobb Salad Redneck Delicacy (filet mignon, pimento cheese, crispy shrimp, collards, mashed potatoes) Just Too Good To Be Named (blackened sashimi grade tuna, goat cheese, roasted tomato chow-chow, collards, pilaf)

With so many new additions to downtown Greer’s restaurant scene in the last year, picking one of the several great options for a pre-show dinner could be tricky. But sometimes, just like Fleetwood Mac, you want to go with a classic that still has an edge. The Strip Club 104 at 104 E. Poinsett St., within walking distance of The Spinning Jenny, certainly fits the bill. (In terms of rumours that have been flying around, yes, the restaurant is listed for sale on LoopNet for $1.85 million, and has been for a while, but no word on any impending change there.) A steakhouse, The Strip Club has all the classics you’d expect – choice Strip Club 104 cuts of steak with accompanying toppings and shareable sides – but there’s so much more to it than that. And as a word of advice, if you order nothing TUES-SAT | 4:30-CLOSE else, get the mussels. When The Strip Club’s owners, Jason and Lori Clark, closed their other Greer restaurant, BIN112, where SELECT is now, they 104 E. Poinsett St, Greer transferred the famous BIN mussels to the steakhouse menu. At $18 for the $$ large bucket that could be dinner for two, they are arguably some of the tastiWWW.THESTRIPCLUB104.COM est and best value on mussels you’ll find anywhere in the Upstate.

You can’t argue with Fleetwood Mac, and there are a couple of reasons for that. First off, they’re way better at arguing with themselves than you’ll ever be — few bands have been through as much turmoil as the Mac has, and the Stevie NicksLindsey Buckingham dynamic is only a small part of their tumultuous 52-year history. Secondly, their catalog of hits, largely from the aforementioned BuckinghamNicks era, with a lot of help from keyboardist Christine McVie, is unassailable. From “Say You Love Me” and “Rhiannon,” to “Go Your Own Way” and “Dreams,” to “Tusk,” “Gypsy,” “Little Lies,” and beyond, no one came up with music like they did. Those songs powered a couple hundred million in album sales and countless shows in stadiums around the world. If you want to see the current incarnation of Fleetwood Mac, featuring Nicks, McVie, drummer Mick Fleetwood, bassist John McVie, and guitarists Neil Finn and Mike Campbell, that’ll cost you a few hundred bucks minimum, and you’ll be looking at video monitors a lot more than the stage. Or, if you want to be a lot closer to the music, you can check out Rumours: A Fleetwood Mac Tribute at The Spinning Jenny in Greer on Saturday. This band doesn’t just pump Rumours: out near-note-perfect versions of Fleetwood Mac, A Fleetwood Mac though they do that pretty spectacularly. They also take pains to look their respective parts. You’ll get Tribute a twirling, lace-and-top-hat singer paying homage to Stevie Nicks at center stage. You’ll get a ChrisSATURDAY, JULY 20 tine McVie lookalike behind the keys, and you’ll get The Spinning Jenny, a rhythm section that’s the spitting image of Fleetwood AND Mac. Their Buckingham isn’t bad either. 107 Cannon Street, Greer This is the epitome of a low-stress show — tunes $18-$22 you love delivered by pros who also love them, up WWW.THESPINNINGJENNYGREER.COM close and personal in a great room. It beats Row ZZZ at the Enormo-Dome any day, right? J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

25


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

U P S TAT E B E AT

In the film Parallel Love

ON SALE NOW! A PUNK BAND KEEPS

THE FAITH, LITERALLY You’ve seen one documentary about a rock band, you’ve seen them all, right? We’ve heard the story a hundred times: Band gets together, starts to gain momentum, achieves some level of success, then three of the four members become Eastern Orthodox priests. Nothing new under the sun, I suppose. VINCENT HARRIS Seriously, though, that’s the tale that a new documentary called “Parallel Love: The Story of a Band Called Luxury” tells. The film, which will be screened at The Spinning Jenny in Greer on Friday, was directed by Matt Hinton, and it traces the career of Luxury, a compelling, propulsive Toccoa, Georgia, indie rock group that began its journey in the mid-1990s, rising from its small-town roots to sign with Tooth & Nail, a highly respected record label that primarily specialized in punk and hard-core bands. Luxury released its first Tooth & Nail album, “Amazing & Thank You,” in 1995, just before they were in a serious car accident that hospitalized most of the band. That accident forced them to take a lengthy hiatus from touring and delayed their followup, “The Latest & The Greatest.” As the ‘90s progressed, the band became more disen-

JULY 20

AUGUST 2

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FRIDAY | JULY 19TH | 8 P.M.

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J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

chanted with Tooth & Nail, switching to Bulletproof Records for a self-titled album in 1999. 1999 was also the year that guitarist Matt Hinton joined The Spinning Jenny the group, just in time for 107 Cannon St., Greer them to go on a lengthy hiatus. He’s participated in their T I C K E T S : $15 periodic reunions (one in 2005, one in 2013, and so on), www.TheSpinningJennyGreer.com and by the time the band re864 - 469-6416 convened to record a new album this time around, three of the group’s original members, singer/guitarists Lee Bozeman and Jamey Bozeman and bassist Chris Foley, fell back on their always-strong spiritual beliefs and entered the priesthood, which was a story that Hinton, whose interest in film was just as strong as his interest in music, wanted to tell.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

And he would’ve told it far sooner if he hadn’t actually been part of the band. “It’s really super lame to make a movie about your own band,” he says, “because there’s no way that can come off as anything other than selfaggrandizing.” But as someone who came into the band five years or so after it formed, Hinton felt he still had the right kind of outsider’s perspective. “I was sort of an observer,” he says. “I have some distance from the band. But it’s not as if the band conspired to have a film made and I raised my hand. I had to talk them into letting me do it.” Telling his bandmates (including drummer Glenn Black, who along with Hinton forms the non-priest minority in the group) that he was planning on making a film about them was initially fairly easy, because they didn’t really believe him. – M AT T H I N T O N , D I R E C T O R “The fact that band had three members who had become priests but continued to make music just seemed too interesting for there not to be a movie about it,” Hinton says. “That’s where I was coming from. But the reaction was probably the same thing as if someone told YOU they wanted to make a movie about YOU. You would say, ‘That’s never going to happen.’ Their feeling was the same: ‘Yeah, OK, go ahead,’ and in the back of their minds they thought it wasn’t going to happen, so they weren’t sweating it. Little did they know that I’m stubborn and persistent.” He also had the experience to get the film done. Before making “Parallel Love,” which combines archival footage that Hinton shot and collected with new interviews, he worked on another spiritually based project called “Awake, My Soul.” “That one was about sacred harp singing,” he says, “so on one hand it was a very different subject, but on the other it has some parallels in terms of being music related and connected to faith, so there’s some overlap in many respects.” Hinton is reluctant to give out too many spoilers about the documentary’s plot twists, but he says there was at least one surreal moment during filming that he can talk about. “When we decided to make this new record [called “Trophies” and released June 14], each of the three priests reached out to their archbishop and asked for their blessing to re-engage in making music,” he says. “I could be wrong, but most rock and roll bands aren’t asking for permission from an archbishop to make a record.”

THE FACT THAT BAND HAD THREE MEMBERS WHO HAD BECOME PRIESTS BUT CONTINUED TO MAKE MUSIC JUST SEEMED TOO INTERESTING FOR THERE NOT TO BE A MOVIE ABOUT IT.

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

27


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

12 LAST MEALS IN GREENVILLE

PART 5 OF A 12-PART SERIES DOCUMENTING A FOOD LOVER’S FAREWELL TO OUR CITY

BY MEG AN B A X TER

Sidewall Pizza

NOT YOUR AVERAGE PIZZA

I’ve always thought of pizza as a last-ditch effort meal, not something to be savored, especially take-out pizza until we picked up those first two pies at Sidewall. How had we not known about this place earlier, we asked each other, standing in our empty kitchen eating slices right out of the box? Sidewall became our go-to for pizza and a place we’d invite all of our out of town guests to eat at. The hand-tossed ingredientdriven pizzas, retro sodas, daily ice cream specials, and dog-friendly seating showed off what we loved best about Greenville in one dinner stop.

We ordered takeout, just as we did with our first Sidewall experience. As I pulled up to Sidewall, dogs were resting under the tables outside, and kids were dancing under the lights. I wove through them to pick up our pizzas. We ordered the margherita and the roasted mushroom pies. The margherita had handtossed thin crust (baked to a deep, flaky brown) was dressed with nothing but fresh mozzarella, fresh basil, and extra virgin olive oil. It tasted almost light, with the cut of fresh basil finishing each bite. The roasted mushroom had five varieties of mushrooms (shitakes, oyster, cremini and button) tossed in a sauce made with butter, white wine, roasted garlic, and shallots, spread over a thin sheet of local mozzarella slices and dusted with pecorino cheese.

TRAVELERS REST 35 S Main St.

CLEVELAND STREET 99 Cleveland St.

PELHAM ROAD 3598 Pelham Rd.

MARGHERITA PIZZA ........................... $15

Fresh mozzarella, fresh basil, extra virgin olive oil

ROASTED MUSHROOM PIZZA................ $18

Shiitake, oyster, crimini & button mushrooms roasted with garlic, shallots, butter, white wine & fresh herbs, mozzarella, pecorino

SPICY ITALIAN PIZZA . ....................... $19

MEGHAN’S LAST SIDEWALL MEAL

WHERE TO FIND A SIDEWALL PIZZA:

What to Order: Italian sausage, hot cherry peppers, Italian herbs, extra virgin olive oil, shredded & fresh mozzarella, pecorino

GREEN GODDESS PIZZA....................... $19

Bacon, artichoke hearts, fresh basil, fresh mozzarella, goat cheese

HOMEMADE ICE CREAM........................ $4 Vanilla or flavor of the day

PUCK’S SODA..................................... $3

Handcrafted in small batches using pure cane sugar. Choose from Black Cherry, Cola, Diet Cola, Lemonade, Root Beer & Vanilla Cream

CLEMSON 1066 Tiger Blvd.

Come cheer your team & your team of heroes. FIRST RESPONDERS DAY

GAME JULY 21 AT 3 PM For tix, visit GreenvilleDrive.com 28

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

MUSIC

Nathan Bowles Trio

Eclectic banjo-led trio plays in-store n story by VINCE HARRIS | photos PROVIDED show at Horizon Records

Nathan Bowles essentially has two or three careers. He’s a gifted ensemble player and multi-instrumentalist who’s played with a host of artists working in the margins of folk and Americana, artists like Hiss Golden Messenger, Jake Xerxes Fussell, Spiral Joy Band, and many more. He’s a teacher who’s worked in Virginia Tech’s English department as an adjunct professor. And he’s also a fascinatingly mercurial solo artist, primarily playing claw-hammer banjo and percussion on his own recordings and creating an unlikely synthesis of world folk music and avant-garde minimalism. Bowles favors cyclical songwriting rather than traditional verse-chorus-verse form. In his hands, the banjo isn’t a quaint throwback instrument; it’s a machine that can drone like a sitar or create delicate, rippling melodies. Bowles typically makes this idiosyncratic music on his own, with occasional help from his friends. But on his fourth solo album, “Plainly Mistaken,” he expanded his vision, bringing in double-bass player Casey Toll and drummer Rex McMurry. “When I was writing material for the last record, I kind of heard the sound of percussion and bass with the banjo,” Bowles says. “I thought of that arrangement and how doable it would be, and I asked two of my friends who I knew were excellent instrumentalists, improvisers, and arrangers. It was just this idea I had, and it seemed to make sense in my head.” As a result of their collaboration, Bowles says he’s become a better player and songwriter. “It’s elevated not just my playing, but the idea of what I can come up with,” he says. “There are a lot more possibilities with that format.” And indeed, the trio format does seem to add a new depth to his music. McMurry is an inventive percussionist who never overplays,

The Nathan Bowles Trio FRIDAY | JULY 19TH | 8 P.M. Horizon Records 2-A W. Stone Ave., Greenville

FREE | HorizonRecords.net and Toll both plucks and bows his bass with an understated elegance throughout “Plainly Spoken.” That tasteful rhythm section frees Bowles up to play some sparkling, brightly hued melody lines. “In this trio, it feels like each person is listening closely to two other people,” he says. “You can’t get lost or lay back, especially in the music we’re making. Everyone’s pushing forward at the same time and having to stay active. I never feel like I’m missing anything.” Collaborating with Toll was an easy enough decision for Bowles. The two men have worked together before and are good friends. Getting McMurry on board was a bit more of a challenge. “Rex was actually on a break from playing drums,” Bowles says. “He didn’t even have his drum kit. He paints it like I made a bold ask when I called him on the phone: ‘I know you’re not drumming right now, but I want to recruit you because I have this idea.’ He came out of his drum retirement and jumped in with both feet. He’s minimal and cyclical and technically very precise and he’s got a very unique touch, and we knew a couple of rehearsals in that it was a good fit.” Perhaps it’s fitting that this somewhat unconventional trio will be performing in a nontraditional venue here in town. Bowles, Toll, and McMurry will play an in-store show at Horizon Records at 3 p.m. Saturday. “I like playing in a lot of different spaces, with different expectations,” Bowles says. “I like the intimacy of those shows and the idea of people experiencing the music in different ways.”

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ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

TOP PICKS

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

T H E L AT E S T C A N’ T- M I S S E V E N T S

MAULDIN FARMERS MARKET

FURMAN UNIVERSITY CLARINET ENSEMBLE CONCERT

MAULDIN CULTURAL CENTER JULY 23 | 5 - 8PM | FREE

CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM JULY 24 | 12 - 1:30PM | FREE

GREENVILLE KENNEL CLUB DOG SHOW TD CONVENTION CENTER JULY 25-28 | 12 - 1:30PM

ROCKABILLY HEAVEN

CENTRE STAGE JULY 25 - AUGUST 17 | 7PM

The 2019 Mauldin Farmers Market, sponsored by Bon Secours St. Francis Health System, will run Tuesdays, June 4 to Aug. 27, 5-8 p.m. at the Mauldin Outdoor Amphitheater. The Mauldin Farmers Market features a variety of vendors from around the Upstate selling locally sourced and produced items.

Guests can hear the talented Furman University clarinet students before they head off to perform at the biggest clarinet conference in the world, International Clarinet Association ClarinetFest. This year’s conference, entitled “Embracing the World,” will be presented in partnership with the University of Tennessee.

Entertain the entire family with the Greenville Kennel Club Dog shows. The shows are free to the public. The show starts July 25 and ends July 28. The shows are among the largest on the east coast with an average entry of about 2,000 dogs each day. The dogs hail from over 40 states from California to New England.

Rockabilly Heaven travels through the ages from the beginnings of Rockabilly up to its influence in modern music. Highlighting over 30 Rockabilly tunes, hits include “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Hard Headed Woman,” “Jackson,” “Rave On,” and so many more. This electrifying event is a non-stop, high energy romp.

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CarolinaMusicMuseum.org

www.GreenvilleKC.org

www.CentreStage.org

JULY 25 - AUGUST 17, 2019 GET TICKETS l CENTRESTAGE.ORG l 233-6733 30

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


| ARTS & CULTURE

JULY

19

THINGS TO SEE & DO

CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF THE CAROLINAS FINE ARTS CENTER | 7:30PM

The inaugural season of the Chamber Music Society of the Carolinas, formerly the Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival, upcoming season starts in July 2019. It will showcase some of the highest forms of artistry through music. String quartets, the Jasper String Quartet, and the Tesla String Quartet will be returning.

LASER DAYS OF SUMMER

ROPER MOUNTAIN SCIENCE CENTER | 6PM

Back by popular demand are the Laser Days of Summer laser shows in the Hooper Planetarium at Roper Mountain Science Center. Chart-topping musical artists and genres that appeal to all musical tastes will be featured, including Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, The Beatles, Pop, 80’s, 90’s and more.

‘PEACE STUDIO: BROADWAY’ SUMMER CAMP PEACE CENTER | 9AM-4:30PM | $900

This July, teens ages 13-17 with a passion for singing, dancing, and acting can hone their skills at “Peace Studio: Broadway”. The new, robust summer camp brings together top musical theater educators to give aspiring performers a two-week crash course into the theater process and the opportunity to perform on stage.

YOCO BREW TRAIL

ROCK HILL, SC | 12-11:30PM | FREE

Guests can experience York County through craft brews that make up the fabric of our communities. Just download the Visit York County app to get your passport right at your fingertips. If you check-in at five breweries, you’ll even get an exclusive t-shirt at the Visitors Center in Downtown Rock Hill.

BEACHIN’ FRIDAYS

MAULDIN CULTURAL CENTER | 7-10PM | FREE

The summer sun and beachin’ fun are coming back to Mauldin with Beachin’ Fridays! Join people from all over the Upstate at the Mauldin Cultural Center’s outdoor amphitheater for evenings of shag dancing, food trucks, and craft beverages served by Growler Haus.

JULY

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M. JUDSON BOOKSELLERS ‘STORY TIME’ M. JUDSON BOOKSELLERS | 10:30-11AM | FREE

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

WOMEN, EQUALITY, PROSPERITY

SOUTH CAROLINA GOVERNOR’S SCHOOL OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES | 2:30-4PM

JULY

Augusto Lopez-Claros, Director of Global Indicators and Analysis at the World Bank, will be in Greenville on July 20 to share the surprising ways in which global prosperity is connected to the equality of women. As he and Bahiyyih Nakhjavani explain in their new book, the economics of gender inequality extends far beyond equal pay.

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OUR MUSICAL JOURNEY AROUND THE WORLD: CARIBBEAN & SOUTH AMERICA CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM | 3-4:30PM | $10

Children have the opportunity to experience the colorful and diverse world of music through a series of four interactive classes at the Carolina Music Museum. Led by Jeff Holland, a renowned multi-ethnic percussion instructor, Our Musical Journey Around the World will explore music from various regions and cultures around the globe.

‘SAY WHAT SUNDAYS’ POETRY SHOWS, OPEN MIC COFFEE UNDERGROUND | 7:30-9:30PM | $7-$10

Celebrate National Poetry Month! Witness the talented local and regional poets at featured events and high-octane tournaments. Bring your poems for our welcoming open mic!

SKIP THE LINE

BUY TICKETS ONLINE! For tickets and locations visit:

GreenvilleRec.com J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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ARTS & CULTURE |

22

JULY

18th

THINGS TO SEE & DO

SUMMER LANGUAGE CLASSES

UPSTATE INTERNATIONAL | 9AM - 5PM | $65-$265

Summer is the perfect time to learn a new language. Classes meet once or twice a week, beginning the week of June 10 and ending by the week of Aug. 9. Class sizers are small, 3-15 people, with native instructors that teach to the interests of the students.

PLAY DATES WITH MISS DEBI

M. JUDSON BOOKSELLERS | 9 - 9:45AM | $100

Who’s ready for Miss Debi? Miss Debi’s having play dates at the bookstore with her 4- and 5-year-old friends from 9 to 9:45 am one Monday each month. Each play date includes a new book, a snack, a craft, and a lot of fun.

YOCO BREW TRAIL

ROCK HILL, SC | 12-11:30PM | FREE

Guests can experience York County through craft brews that make up the fabric of our communities. Just download the Visit York County app to get your passport right at your fingertips. If you check-in at five breweries, you’ll even get an exclusive t-shirt at the Visitors Center in Downtown Rock Hill.

CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF THE CAROLINAS

FINE ARTS CENTER | 7:30PM

EARLY BIRDS PAY $10 • STARTING AT 7:30

SUNDAY, AUGUST 11

1:00-4:00

BIG BAG OF BOOKS SALE • $10 TO FILL A BAG

The inaugural season of the Chamber Music Society of the Carolinas, formerly the Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival, upcoming season starts in July 2019. It will showcase some of the highest forms of artistry through music. String quartets, the Jasper String Quartet, and the Tesla String Quartet will be returning.

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JULY

SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 8:30-4:00 • MCALISTER SQUARE

FURMAN UNIVERSITY CLARINET ENSEMBLE CONCERT G R E E N V I L L E L I T E R A C Y. O R G

“Beautiful Music for Beautiful Minds” Greenville Literacy Association’s mission is to enrich our community by increasing the literacy and employability of our citizens.

Featuring music by Steel Toe Stiletto

Friday, August 2, 2019 • 7 pm-11 pm Please join us! Silent & Live Auction, Beer, Wine, Food, Cash liquor bar, and so much more! NEW LOCATION:

Larkin’s Sawmill • 22 Graves Drive

This beautiful evening furthers the mission of

CAROLINA MUSIC MUSEUM | 12 - 1:30PM | FREE

Guests can hear the talented Furman University clarinet students before they head off to perform at the biggest clarinet conference in the world, International Clarinet Association ClarinetFest. This year’s conference, entitled “Embracing the World,” will be presented in partnership with the University of Tennessee. Guests may attend the Greenville event for free.

OUTSHINE SUMMER READING PROGRAM

CENTER FOR DEVELOPMENTAL SERVICES | 12:30 - 2PM | FREE

All rising first through sixth graders in the Upstate are welcome to come participate in Summer Reading at CDS. The Greenville County Schools Food and Nutrition Services Summer Meals Program will also be at CDS on Wednesdays this summer, so families are encouraged to arrive at CDS at 12 p.m. to receive a free lunch.

THE CONVERSATION CONCERT

PEACE CENTER | 8PM | $20

Local group The Conversation will play Genevieve’s at the Peace Center. The Conversation -- inspired by jazz fusion from the 1970s onward, along with R&B, soul, and modern contemporary jazz -- is a melting pot of sounds and tones that make for a distinctly entertaining evening.

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JULY

8TH ANNUAL

ROPER MOUNTAIN ASTRONOMERS CLUB MEETING HUGHES MAIN LIBRARY | 7-9PM $85 - online tickets available at: gateway-sc.org Gateway is the premier adult mental health resource for the Greenville community. The unique Clubhouse Model offers the greatest hope for long-term success, because it provides members with a sense of hope, confidence and belonging.

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J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

Dr John Rollins presents, "Astronomy and Calendars." Come out and learn how they are related. Meetings are free of charge, open to visitors, and all levels of interest are welcome. An astronomy related topic is presented at every meeting either by a member or guest speaker. Questions and discussion are a part of our meetings.

MUSIC BY THE LAKE SUMMER CONCERT SERIES FURMAN AMPHITHEATER | 7:30 - 9:30PM | FREE

Leslie W. Hicken will continue to lead the Music by the Lake Summer Concert Series. “Marches from Around the World,” featuring the Lakeside Concert Band, opens the 10-concert series, a Greenville tradition since 1968.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

PUZZLES

BACKWARD WORD-BUILDING ACROSS 1 Really ruffle 6 Bozo 9 They may fly at half-mast 14 “— Mia” (Abba hit) 19 São — 20 Sway to and — 21 TV’s Greene or Michaels 22 Ovine sign 23 S 26 Asinine 27 “— -Dick” 28 — -Ball 29 2007 Disney princess 31 Add a letter before that to spell ... 37 Above, to bards 38 “How dumb of me!” 39 Fearless 40 Orbit, e.g. 42 Foliage unit 44 In the manner of 45 “The Zoo Story” playwright Edward 50 Bozo 52 Add a letter before that to spell ... 57 Close amigo 59 Really ruffle 60 Wet-weather headgear 61 Hay fever explosion 62 Former Israeli PM Golda 64 Big fusses 66 Capitol’s top 67 Add a letter before that to spell ... 71 “I know! Pick me!” 74 Novelist Jaffe 75 Two before X

76 Deadly 80 Fruity, sourish dessert 82 The Cowboys, on a sports ticker 83 Falsify 85 Add a letter before that to spell ... 89 Pear, apple and quince 90 Main artery 91 Essen “a” 92 He married Lucy 94 Moor growth 95 Tennis great Jennifer 99 Young — (toddlers) 101 ’60s Pontiac muscle car 102 Add a letter before that to spell ... 109 Alveolar trill, as in Spanish speech 110 Tofu source, to Brits 111 Long stretch 112 Perfect little kid 113 Add a letter before that to spell ... 120 Gettysburg victor George 121 C-3PO, e.g 122 Stanley Cup gp. 123 In snazzy clothes 124 Media biggie 125 Tabby cries 126 Dems’ rival 127 Bergen dummy Mortimer DOWN 1 Rival of FedEx 2 With 6-Down, yield a profit 3 Hot stretch 4 Macaroni shape 5 “Such a pity”

By Frank Longo

6 See 2-Down 7 Popped up 8 Two-pronged vehicle 9 Well-spoken 10 E-giggle 11 Dog’s yap 12 Wildebeest 13 Composer Prokofiev 14 En — (as one) 15 1989 Disney princess 16 Metric “thousandth” 17 — Yello (soft drink) 18 Thus far 24 Germ killer in a can 25 Connery of film 30 “— be an honor” 31 Subjects 32 In direct confrontation 33 “Trauma: Life in —” (old TLC series) 34 Guzzled, e.g. 35 Ill-gotten gains 36 Shimmery gem 41 Bride-to-be’s clothing drawer 43 Lumberjack, at times 45 Nickname of Onassis 46 Phyllis’ last name on the old sitcom “Phyllis” 47 — -chic (hippie-inspired fashion) 48 Mild cheese 49 Italy’s Villa d’— 51 Brand of tea 53 Jacob of social reform 54 Part of ETA 55 “No —!” (“Sure thing!”) 56 Studio tripods 58 Old-time actress Dolores 63 Water quality org. 64 Onetime ring king

All Adoptions

65 68 69 70 71 72 73 77 78

Longtime soap actress Hall Movie mogul Marcus Bird beak Tonto player Johnny Gymnast Korbut Seat of Hawaii County Sharif of “Che!” Uniform liquid suspension Zend- — (Zoroastrian scripture) 79 Rent check collector 81 Org. with putters 82 Levi’s fabric 84 Subject 86 Univ. division 87 Hidden mike 88 Uplifting spiritually 93 Like King Atahualpa 95 Movie dancer Charisse 96 Aviation branch of the military 97 Great traits 98 Traffic noise 100 Yarn units 102 Intense ache 103 Real introvert 104 Tank slime 105 Vehicles near igloos 106 Tennis great Monica 107 Cantina chip 108 Grown gal 114 Boot part 115 “Vice” airer 116 Dejected 117 Swiss peak 118 Env. insert 119 Guitarist Barrett 81 Ain’t correct? 82 Gerund suffix 83 We, to Henri 84 Anderson of “The X-Files” 88 Trough food 91 — Paulo

92 Unit of work 93 London beer 94 Foes 96 Wayward 98 Beauty shop 99 Family girl 100 Santas’ aides 101 Taxi drivers 102 Not as nasty 104 — petition 105 Felix played by Randall 106 Kelly of “One Tree Hill”

SUDOKU

107 Irregularly notched 111 Clears (of) 114 USN off. 116 “Citizen X” co-star 117 Sleazy paper 118 Lemon drink 119 “... grace of God —” 120 Med. stats. taken with arm cuffs Crossword answers: Page 22

By Myles Mellor

Sudoku answers: Page 22 J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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LEGAL NOTICES |

GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA

THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A public quarterly hearing for the Foothills Fire Service Area, (FFSA), will be held Tuesday, July 23, 2019 at 5:00 p.m. at the Tryon Fire Department, 301 North Trade Street, Tryon, NC 28782. The 2018-2019 budget included expenditures of $73,475 and revenues of $83,023 with a 23.1 millage. The 2019 – 2020 budget projection is estimated at $86,620. This is an increase $3400 over the last fiscal year and a millage increase of 1.0 mill will be recommended for the 2019-2010 tax year. This will be done accordance with SC Code (6-1-230).

AMENDED SUMMONS AND NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2019-CP-23-03312 Marion Brown and Mary J. Brown, Plaintiffs, Vs. Melton Lee Brown and the unknown heirs of Melton Lee Brown, Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Amended Complaint in this action, (which Complaint was filed on June 11, 2019) and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Amended Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiffs shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Amended Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. TO: INFANTS(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO ,(GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years

of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. YOU WILL FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that William Brandon Bell, 710 Hunts Bridge Road #8, Greenville, SC 29617 (phone number 864 – 906 – 7992) has been appointed as guardian ad litem for the unknown heirs of Melton Lee Brown. In the event you are in one of the categories listed above and have a claim to the real property which is the subject of this action, more particularly described in the Lis Pendens, you should contact the appropriate Guardian ad litem listed above or your attorney. All persons under a disability have the right to have a Guardian ad litem of their choice appointed if the request is timely made to the Court. AMENDED LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon adverse possession amended complaint of Plaintiffs against Defendants regarding title to property located in Greenville County. The subject property is described as follows: ALL that piece, parcel and lot of land with the improvements therein, and located in Gantt Township, County of Greenville, State of South Carolina, and being known and designated as Tract No. 7, containing 3.20 acres, more or less, on plat of property of George E. Brown Estate, dated October 13, 1978 by C. O. Riddle, Registered Land Surveyor No. 1347; and having according to said plat the following metes and bounds: BEGINNING at an iron pin, joint corner of Lot No. 10 and Tract No. 7 on a twenty foot strip and running thence N. 13 – 07 E., 152.38 feet to an iron pin; thence N. 24 – 47 W., 445.75 feet to an iron pin; thence S. 65 – 16 – 30 W., 334.65 feet to an iron pin; thence S. 40 – 16 – 30 E. 579.02 feet, line of division of Talley property to an iron pin; thence N. 70 – 38 E., 86.78 feet to the point of beginning; TOGETHER with and including a permanent easement of ingress and egress in into a twenty foot strip from Boling Road as shown on the plat. C. Richard Stewart, SC Bar #5346 Attorney for Plaintiffs 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com

AMENDED SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF AMENDED COMPLAINT AND AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) C/A NO: 2019-CP-23-02279 DEFICIENCY WAIVED Cenlar FSB, PLAINTIFF, vs. Mike E. Littlejohn; Sondra R. Moore; Comprehensive Legal Solutions, Inc.; Helen Miller aka Helen K. Miller; Ginger Holder aka Ginger L. Holder; Edward Golightly aka Edward M. Golightly and if Edward Golightly aka Edward M. Golightly be deceased then any children and heirs at law to the Estate of Edward Golightly aka Edward M. Golightly, distributees and devisees at law to the Estate of Edward Golightly aka Edward M. Golightly and if any of the same be dead any and all persons entitled to claim under or through them also all other persons unknown claiming any right, title, interest or lien upon the real estate described in the amended complaint herein; Any unknown adults, any unknown infants or persons under a disability being a class designated as John

Doe, and any persons in the military service of the United States of America being a class designated as Richard Roe DEFENDANT(S) TO THE DEFENDANTS, ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, or otherwise appear and defend, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscriber at his office, Hutchens Law Firm P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, or otherwise appear and defend, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein, and judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to Answer the foregoing Summons, the Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference of this case to the Master in Equity for Greenville County, which Order shall,

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that July Eleventh Winery, LLC/DBA Elevation 966 Winery, 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 301 Airport Road Suite B, Greenville, SC 29607. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than August 4, 2019 . For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

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

the Master in Equity in/for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master in Equity is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case with appeal only to the South Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 203(d)(1) of the SCAR, effective June 1, 1999. NOTICE OF FILING OF AMENDED SUMMONS AND AMENDED COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on April 23, 2019; that the foregoing Amended Summons, along with the Amended Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville Count, South Carolina, on May 29, 2019. AMENDED NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Mexico City California Style, 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 903 West Wade Hampton Blvd., Greer, SC 29650. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than August 4, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this Notice. IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION, YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY/ AGENT MAY PROCEED WITH A FORECLOSURE ACTION. If you have already pursued loss mitigation with the Plaintiff, this Notice does not guarantee the availability of loss mitigation options or further review of your qualifications. THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. THE PURPOSE OF THIS COMMUNICATION IS TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE, except as stated below in the instance of bankruptcy protection.

IF YOU ARE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT OR HAVE BEEN DISCHARGED AS A RESULT OF A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, THIS NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU PURSUANT TO STATUTORY REQUIREMENT AND FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND IS NOT INTENDED AS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT OR AS AN ACT TO COLLECT, ASSESS, OR RECOVER ALL OR ANY PORTION OF THE DEBT FROM YOU PERSONALLY. NOTICE TO APPOINT ATTORNEY FOR DEFENANT(S) IN MILITARY SERVICE TO UNKNOWN OR KNOWN DEFENDANTS THAT MAY BE IN THE MILITARY SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ALL BEING A CLASS DESIGNATED AS RICHARD ROE: YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED that Plaintiff’s attorney has applied for the appointment of an attorney to represent you. If you fail to apply for the appointment of an attorney to represent you within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you Plaintiff’s appointment will be made absolute with no further action from Plaintiff.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Little India Inc., intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON premises consumption of BEER, WINE & LIQUOR at 435 N. Pleasantburg Drive, Greenville, SC 29607. To object to the issuance of this permit/ license, written protest must be postmarked no later than July 28, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

LEGAL NOTICE RATES

SUMMONS AND NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 2019-CP-23-03380 Santos I. Linares, Plaintiff, Vs. Azalee Jones, the unknown heirs of Azalee Jones, “John Doe”, a class made up of all unknown parties who may have some right, title, or interest in the property having Tax Map#G016.00-05-023, (hereafter referred to as the subject property), and “Richard Roe”, a class made up of all unknown infants and disabled persons who may have some right, title or interest in the subject property, Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, (which Complaint was filed on June 12, 2019) and to serve a copy of your Answer to this Complaint upon subscriber at 11 Whitsett Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you shall fail to answer the Complaint within that time, the Plaintiff shall proceed in default proceedings against you and shall apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. TO: INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON) YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. TO: INFANTS(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO ,(GENERAL TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN)(COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM S(HE) RESIDE(S): YOU ARE FURTHER SUMMONED AND NOTIFIED to apply for the appointment of a guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. YOU WILL FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Charles W. Crews, Jr., 125 A Woodruff Place Circle, Simpsonville, SC 29681 (phone number 864 – 675 – 9581) has been appointed Guardian ad litem for the unknown heirs of Azalee Jones and for all

ABL Notices $165 Summons, Notices, Foreclosures, etc. $1.20 per line 864.679.1205 | email: aharley@communityjournals.com 34

J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

unknown parties (including unknown infants and disabled persons) who may have some right, title or interest in the subject property. In the event you are in one of the categories listed above and have a claim to the real property which is the subject of this action, more particularly described in the Lis Pendens, you should contact the appropriate Guardian ad litem listed above or your attorney. All persons under a disability have the right to have a Guardian ad litem of their choice appointed if the request is timely made to the Court. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced in the Court upon quiet title complaint of Plaintiff against Defendants regarding title to property located in Greenville County. The subject property is described as follows: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, together with improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in Chick Springs Township, the County of Greenville, State of South Carolina, near Greer, containing 2250 sq.ft. bounded on the north by lot now or formerly owned by J. Ratteree and W. R. Baily, on the east of Greenville – Spartanburg Counties’ line; on south by lands now or formerly owned by L. Jackson Green; on the west by lands now or formerly owned by L. Jackson Green; and having the following metes and bounds, to wit: BEGINNING at a point on the Greenville – Spartanburg Counties’ line, at corner of lot now or formerly owned by J. Ratteree and W.R. Baily; running thence westerly along the line of said land 105 feet; thence southerly along line of land now or formerly owned by L. Jackson Green 210 feet; thence easterly along line of said land 105 feet to a point on Greenville – Spartanburg Counties’ line; thence North 3 degrees East 210 feet to the beginning corner. LESS however any portion previously conveyed and subject to restrictions of record. Tax Map # G0160.00-05-023.00 C. Richard Stewart, SC Bar #5346 Attorney for Plaintiff 11 Whitsett Street Greenville, SC 29601 (864) 235-2019 dstewart@ attorneyrichardstewart.com


AROUND THE UPSTATE

| NEWS & NOTES

UPSTATE AREA NEWS AND NOTES

CHEMISTRY CONFERENCE SPURS INNOVATION, ACADEMIC DIVERSITY More than 100 chemists from across the nation will convene in Greenville when Furman hosts the 18th annual MERCURY Conference for Undergraduate Computational Chemistry July 15-19. Founded in 2001, Molecular Education and Research Consortium in Undergraduate Computational Chemistry (MERCURY) is a National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded organization comprised of 29 computational chemistry faculty from 25 primarily undergraduate institutions in the United States. MERCURY faculty, undergraduates and others have gathered each year beginning in 2002 to exchange ideas in computational chemistry.

DANIEL BUILDERS OPENING A DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE OFFICE Daniel Builders, a residential renovation company, is opening a Greenville office at 1006 East Washington Street, the former location of ID Studio Interiors. Though the company has been headquartered in Anderson for a decade, Daniel Builders’ clients are often located throughout the city of Greenville as well as the communities surrounding Lake Keowee and Lake Jocassee. The location officially launches in September of this year, but the team is already using the space. For more information, visit danielbuilders.com or contact Josh Hewitt, Client Relations, at (864) 506-5546.

LASER DAYS OF SUMMER IS BACK AT ROPER MOUNTAIN Back by popular demand starting July 18 are the Laser Days Of Summer laser shows in the Hooper Planetarium at Roper Mountain Science Center. Music that appeals to all tastes will be featured, including Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, The Beatles, Pop, 80’s, 90’s and more. It is the only indoor experience in South Carolina that offers the variety to satisfy everyone in your family or friend group in a cool place to escape the summer heat. Admission is $8 per person and $4 for Roper Mountain Science Center members. Show schedule, information and tickets can be found on RoperMountain.org

For more information on these stories visit www.GreenvilleJournal.com Submit your press release at: www.GreenvilleJournal.com/submit

THE 2019

READER’S

LENS PHOTO CONTEST

The Greenville Journal invites you to share your best photos of what the Upstate has to offer. Each month one lucky winner will win a $250 gift card to be used at any Rick Erwin’s Dining Group restaurant. Three honorable mention photos will also receive a $25 gift card to an Upstate business. Winning entries will be published in the Greenville Journal.

JULY THEME: CELEBRATING AMERICA

Independence Day often brings fireworks, picnics, a cookout and a day off from work. How do you celebrate America’s birthday? Upload your photos that show your love for America.

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

GreenvilleJournal.com/ReadersLens J U LY 19 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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