March 15, 2019 Greenville Journal

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GREENVILLEJOURNAL GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM • Friday, March 15, 2019 • Vol.21, No.10

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SC bill would allow DACA recipients to receive in-state tuition, scholarships, and professional licensure

broken dreams SC L AWMAKER FIGHTS FOR DREAMERS

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a better future DREAMERS LOOK TO THE FUTURE IN SC S T O R Y B Y A R I E L G I L R E AT H | P H O T O S B Y W I L L C R O O K S

S A R A I B A U T I S TA AGE 28 BORN IN Mexico DRE AM JOB Therapist

“If anyone believes in the American Dream, it’s the Hispanic community.” S A R A I B A U T I S TA

DACA RECIPIENT

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M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

As a child, when Sarai Bautista imagined the Chihuahuan Desert in northern Mexico, she envisioned sparse, flat stretches of sand — but when she walked it at age 11 with her mother and two younger siblings, she felt every rocky slope they stumbled over. The entire trip from her home state of Puebla, Mexico, to South Carolina likely took less than a week, but to Bautista it felt more like a month. In the 17 years she’s had to reflect on the journey, Bautista has attempted to pry every detail of the trip from her mom, but some remain hazy. Other memories stand out over time — the pebbles that stayed lodged in her shoes when they spent two days walking the border of Arizona and Mexico, the thorny brush that dotted the landscape and scraped her legs, and the nighttime wind chill that she never experienced in the small town she was from in southern Mexico. “It was very, very rocky, very uneven, very dry,” Bautista said. “[I remember] just trying not to fall, trying not to get continuously scraped in the face by thorns.” The trip was harsh and expensive — smugglers, often called coyotes, typically charge thousands of dollars to illegally transport immigrants across the United States border. Bautista isn’t sure exactly how much her own trip cost, but from the money her family owed afterward, her guess is upwards of $6,000. But her parents knew that while the trip had its own dangers and risks, so did staying in Mexico. Over the years, Bautista has heard stories about kidnappings and read reports of the brutal 2014 murders in Guerrero, Mexico — just one state over from her hometown. Often, she wonders what her life would have been like if she stayed, but even at 11, she knew that wasn’t her decision to make. “It was just like, this is what we’re doing,” Bautista said. “When your mom says this is what’s going on, this is what’s going on.” When she got to South Carolina, she wasn’t prepared for the hurdles she would have to jump for the next decade. Along with not speaking English, Bautista’s parents made the decision to hold her back in school for a year so she could catch up to her peers. “The educational system hadn’t done me that well in Mexico,” Bautista said. “I remember the first day of sixth grade I just cried in the middle of math class.” By the end of middle school, Bautista felt like she had finally gotten her feet underneath her — she was fluent in English and had made friends. It wasn’t until midway through high school that she realized life would be different for her than it was for her friends. By age 16, most of her friends were driv-


NEED TO KNOW

ing to school, but because Bautista was in the country illegally, she wasn’t able to get her driver’s license. By graduation, when most of her friends were applying for college, she found out South Carolina bars illegal immigrants from attending public colleges — it’s one of two states in the country that still has this rule. “Junior year of high school is when I figured it out,” Bautista said. “I read about [Gov.] Mark Sanford signing into law that it would be against the law for colleges to accept undocumented people, and I just started crying at the library.” Bautista rode the bus all throughout high school. She worked at a restaurant for four years after graduating. “I was just like, ‘Well, I guess this is it for me,’” she said.

THE HIGHS AND LOWS OF BEING A ‘DREAMER’

It wasn’t until Bautista was 21 years old — when President Barack Obama implemented the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program — that her life changed dramatically. “The first legal job I got was at ChickFil-A,” she said. “I got my license, I enrolled at Greenville

Tech — [my life] just flipped.” DACA allows Bautista and others like her, often called “Dreamers,” to work in the U.S. without the threat of deportation for two years, but comes with stringent requirements.

what is daca? Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) allows Sarai and others like her, to legally work in the U.S. without the threat of deportation for two years, but comes with stringent requirements. DACA recipients must: ■■ have been brought to the United States when they were younger than 16 by June 15, 2007. ■■ be between 15 and 31 years old to apply. ■■ have a clean criminal record ■■ have continuously lived in the United States since June 15, 2007 ■■ They must be in school, have graduated from school, have a GED, or have been honorably discharged from the military.

For now, the DACA program is limited — new applications haven’t been accepted since President Donald Trump rescinded the program in 2017, pending a review by the U.S. Supreme Court. Although DACA participants are allowed to attend public colleges in South Carolina, they’re charged as out-of-state students and don’t receive any state or federal scholarships. At most public colleges in the state, tuition is more than double the cost for nonresidents. For high school graduates like Claudia Hidalgo, the cost of tuition is the biggest factor holding her back. Hidalgo was born in Mexico, but she’s been living in the United States since she was 3 years old. “My parents have always advocated that your education is your No. 1 priority, and essentially,

that’s kind of why we’re here — to get a better life, to be able to get a secondary education,” Hidalgo said. But on top of the ever-increasing cost of tuition, Hidalgo’s and other Dreamers’ parents are unable to legally work in the U.S., making it difficult for them to save enough to pay for college. “Of course we have our dream schools that we want to go to — I applied my junior year of high school and got into USC, College of Charleston, Clemson, Furman — you get into these but then you see just how much you’re going to get charged, and it really demotivates you,” Hidalgo said.

‘WHY WOULD YOU WANT THAT TALENT TO GO TO ANOTHER STATE?’

Bautista’s and Hidalgo’s stories are similar to the estimated 6,500 other DACA recipients in South Carolina, including Ilse Isidro. Isidro wants to be a nurse — she even has her bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of South Carolina Upstate. She worked more than 30 hours a week while a student in order to attend the university and graduated in December. “I had no room to breathe because I had no room to fail,” Isidro said. “My whole existence and me coming to the United States is for us to have a better future.” But in a state with one of the largest nursing shortages in the country, she’s barred from receiving her nursing license because her parents brought her to the U.S. illegally when she was a toddler. Although DACA participants are allowed to work, South Carolina prohibits them from receiving an occupational license, which is necessary for dozens of careers — from lawyers to doctors to cosmetologists. I had no room to breathe because I had no room to fail. Isidro, who went through the public school system in South Carolina, said she just wants the opportunity to pursue her dream — as well as a chance to give back to the community that raised her. “This is our home — this

CLAUDIA HIDALGO AGE 21 BORN IN Mexico DRE AM JOB Lawyer

| NEWS

june 2008

Mark Sanford signs illegal immigration reform bill into law, making it illegal for undocumented immigrants to attend public colleges.

june 2012 President Obama makes the executive order for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy. The policy prevents deportation for certain illegal immigrants who came to the United States younger than 16 years old.

september 2017

President Donald Trump attempts to end the DACA policy, but federal judges have challenged the decision. New applicants are not being accepted, but those who were already recipients of DACA are still protected. The future of DACA is pending until the U.S. Supreme Court hears the case and makes a ruling.

december 2017

South Carolina State Rep. Neal Collins pre-filed a bill to allow recipients of DACA the ability to receive in-state tuition, scholarships, and occupational licenses. The bill died in committee.

december 2018 Collins pre-filed a bill identical to his previous one, which currently has 19 House members as sponsors.

M A R C H 15 / / 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 |

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is the only home that we know,” Isidro said. “Why wouldn’t we keep the talent in-state and local? Why would you want that talent to go to another state?” Like Isidro, Cynthia Oliver is a DACA participant who dreams of a career she can’t have in South Carolina. Oliver, who is co-valedictorian of her senior class at Legacy Early College Charter School, wants to become a doctor and eventually travel to countries with few health care options. Her motivation comes from seeing the care her family received from mobile clinics in South Carolina, which served them even though they were uninsured. Oliver has been accepted to attend Furman University in the fall — an opportunity she didn’t know she had until she met with mentors connected to Neighborhood Focus, a nonprofit after-school program in Greenville.

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COMMUNITY SUPPORT

Like Oliver, Bautista and Hidalgo have been able to navigate college with help from community organizations and programs that aid in securing scholarships.

CYNTHIA OLIVER AGE 18 BORN IN Mexico DRE AM JOB Doctor

Don’t Miss the Post-Planting Celebration at The Community Tap at 12 p.m. Visit www.ReLEAFday.com for more information

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Through the organization, Oliver met Julio Hernandez, associate director for Hispanic outreach with Clemson University. Hernandez helped Oliver navigate the application process and find nongovernmental scholarships. Although she’s found a way to attend school, unless the law changes, she’ll have to leave South Carolina to get a medical license. “Growing up, you hear from everybody that you can be whatever you want to be as long as you work hard,” Oliver said. But for Oliver, starting her dream career means moving away from her family.

“Growing up, you hear from everybody that you can be whatever you want to be as long as you work hard.” CYNTHIA OLIVER DACA RECIPIENT


NEED TO KNOW

Although the future for DACA participants seems bleak when looking through the lens of national politics, Bautista said she receives a lot of support from individuals and organizations in the community. “On the community level, local level, it’s great. It’s everyday people that are making our lives easier,” Bautista said. Keith Groce, executive director of Neighborhood Focus, said the organization is trying to identify children like Oliver who want to go to school but haven’t had the resources or knowledge they need to navigate that process. “They have all the potential in the world to go to school and further their learning, but they don’t have a Julio in their life, they don’t have somebody that is looking out for them and opening doors,” Groce said. State Rep. Neal Collins, R-Pickens, introduced a bill last year that would allow DACA students to receive in-state tuition and scholarships and be able to get an occupational license. It’s everyday people that are making our lives easier. The bill didn’t pass, but it did become a talking point for Collins’ two challengers last year in the Republican primary. “This was one of the major issues,” said Collins, who was re-elected for a third term in November.

“We want these students to succeed, and we want them to be contributing members of our community. This is not an immigration issue.”

C H U C K S AY L O R S

CHAIRMAN OF GCS BOARD Collins filed an identical bill this year — H.3404 — that he hopes will be discussed in the Legislature’s current two-year session. For Collins, the issue is twofold — there’s a humanitarian side as well as a fiscal one. “I like to say I’m in, arguably, the most conservative county in the most conservative state in the nation,” Collins said. “I think I’m very conservative, and from that viewpoint, I don’t see how we invest roughly $140,000 per [DACA] student and then tell them, ‘No, we don’t want you to pursue higher education. No, we don’t want you to get a better job so you can pay more taxes to return on that investment.’” Greenville County Schools estimates the cost of a DACA student in the public school system to be about $110,000 over the course of 12 years.

| NEWS

In February, the Greenville County Schools board sent a letter to the Legislature in support of Collins’ bill. The board has officially taken a stance

6,500-7,300

Data from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services estimates there are between 6,500 and 7,300 DACA recipients in South Carolina.

on the occupational license portion of the bill — which the district supports — but it hasn’t weighed in on the tuition or scholarship portions. The board first voiced support for the issue in a resolution it passed last year. The letter, penned by Chairman Chuck Saylors, mirrors much of the language in the resolution. “We are required by state and federal law to teach every child, and we follow that with great enthusiasm because an educated workforce is a successful workforce,” Saylors said. “So does it make good financial sense to spend that money on a student who wants to do good in the community, who wants to contribute, and our state will not allow him or her to do so?” Saylors said many students end up leaving South Carolina for a state that will allow them to get a license, and often, they don’t come back. “So we have spent an excess of $100,000 to educate that child, and Greenville County will not see one dime in taxes from a hardworking, tax-paying former student who wants to do good in their life,” Saylors said. He said the only pushback he ever hears on the issue is an argument rooted in national political rhetoric — most people he comes across want DACA students to be able to work. “We want these students to succeed, and we want them to be contributing members of our community,” Saylors said. “This is not an immigration issue.” But it’s a long road ahead for supporters of the bill. Although it has the bipartisan support of 19 legislators, like many issues in the Statehouse this year, it’s taken a back burner to the massive education reform bill that was just passed by the House. Even if the bill doesn’t pass, Bautista said she won’t stop advocating for her community. “If anyone believes in the American Dream, it’s the Hispanic community,” she said.

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M A R C H 15 / / 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 |

BRAD WILLIS started investigating the stories

behind his podcast while a reporter at WYFF in 2001. He officially began work on the podcast, titled ‘Murder, Etc.,’ last year. The podcast takes a deep dive into the 1975 double-murder of Lt. Rufus Frank Looper III and his father in the family’s auto repair garage. Photo by Will Crooks.

THE PODCAST CAN BE HEARD ON APPLE PODCASTS, GOOGLE PLAY, OR AT MURDERETCPODCAST.COM.

GREENVILLE MURDER MYSTERY Podcast highlights 1975 murder of Greenville cop story by ariel gilreath | photos provided

A photo of Charles Wakefield Jr. taken on the night of the Looper murders on Jan. 31, 1975. Law enforcement netted several dozen black men that night while looking for the suspect. Wakefield wouldn’t be arrested and charged with the murders until eight months later.

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M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

Brad Willis felt proud after he broke a story in 2001 of a convicted cop-killer being granted parole — less than a month after Willis’ story, the parole board changed course, and as a result, Charles Wakefield Jr. remained in prison for nine more years. It wasn’t until after the WYFF broadcast aired that Willis started to question Wakefield’s case — an attorney showed up from New York with a thick binder of unanswered questions and details that cast the story in a new light. Now, Willis is releasing week-by-week episodes of a podcast titled “Murder, Etc.” that explores what he

knows about the case and the evidence that has convinced him of Wakefield’s innocence. “This is my one opportunity to tell the best story I’ve ever heard,” Willis said. “If I’m ever going to tell a story the right way, it’s going to be this one.” Wakefield was sentenced to death in 1975 for the murder of Lt. Rufus Frank Looper III and his father in the family’s auto garage. On Jan. 31, 1975, Looper, who was head of the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office five-member narcotics unit, was living with his parents and had just worked a late shift the night before.


NEED TO KNOW

It was about noon when his mother saw a man pacing outside the family’s garage, where Looper’s father ran an auto repair shop. She asked Looper to check on him, and with his pistol in tow, he went out to the garage. His mother heard two gunshots before she saw the man through the window flee on foot. Looper and his father died soon after from gunshot wounds to the head. Law enforcement said it was a robbery gone wrong. Wakefield was arrested and identified by two key witnesses, which the case leaned heavily on. One was a woman who testified she saw Wakefield running from the garage. The other — Wyatt Earp Harper — said he was Wakefield’s lookout in the robbery. But in 2004, Harper recanted his story to a judge, saying law enforcement scared him into testifying and coached him on the facts of the case. Wakefield was not offered a new trial. In 1976, Wakefield’s death sentence, along with a handful of others in South Carolina, were thrown out by the United

States Supreme Court after a ruling that it was unconstitutional to impose the death penalty for all first-degree murder cases. His term was commuted to two consecutive life sentences. Wakefield was released on parole in 2010. In the 18 years since Willis first heard Wakefield’s story, he’s discovered details that cast a shadow of doubt about what actually happened that day — a testimony that Wakefield was elsewhere when the crime happened, an anonymous tip of a jailhouse confession, and a possible motive to paint Wakefield as the killer. Willis also found another person who had been researching the case — Andy Ethridge. Ethridge first learned about Wakefield’s case about 20 years ago when, as a history major at Lander University, he decided to wade through old murder convictions in a South Carolina library. “The more you look, the more you become convinced that there’s just more to it,” Ethridge said. “Once you become convinced that he’s not guilty, you start to see the tragedy that [police] just kind of picked a guy.”

| NEWS

LEFT:

Charles Wakefield Jr.’s attorney, Eric Gottlieb, hugs him after he was released on parole in 2010. Wakefield had tried unsuccessfully to get parole a few times prior. RIGHT: Wakefield walks out of prison for the first time in 35 years.

“IF I NEVER CHANGE ANYONE’S MIND ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LOOPERS THAT DAY, AT THE VERY LEAST, I CAN TELL THEM THE STORY OF GREENVILLE AS A COMPLETELY DIFFERENT CHARACTER THAN THE GREENVILLE THEY KNOW TODAY.” B R A D W I L L I S, P O D C A S T C R E AT O R

LEFT: The Looper’s family garage was a small, nondescript building that sat off Pendleton Street in West Greenville. RIGHT: A police sketch of the suspect who murdered Lt. Rufus Frank Looper III and his father on Jan. 31, 1975.

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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NEED TO KNOW

A few members of Looper’s own family, who are featured in the podcast, have been advocating for Wakefield over the past couple of decades. “The justice they thought they got turned out to be an injustice for someone else,” Willis said. “They don’t believe he did it.” Willis’ podcast also unearths details about 1970s crime in Greenville that makes the city seem like a sordid chapter out of a Wild West novel. In it, Willis explores the Dawson Gang — a crime ring based in the Southeast named after the Dawson family, whose various relatives served as kingpins of the group throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The gang was primarily known for its bank robberies and flair for heists. While telling the tale of a man convicted of double murder, who has maintained his innocence all 44 years, Willis takes a deep dive into a Greenville that might seem unrecognizable to its current residents. “If I never change anyone’s mind about what happened to the Loopers that day, at the very least, I can tell them the story of Greenville as a completely different character than the Greenville they know today,” Willis said.

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CHARLES WAKEFIELD JR. poses in his home for a photo

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Who is a SHEro? Each of us has one or more women who have made an incredible impact on our lives. A mother, sister or daughter. Or perhaps a teacher or friend. Who is GWG? Greenville Women Giving is a group of nearly 600 women who pool resources to award $50,000 to $100,000 grants to Greenville County nonprofits. Since its 2006 founding, GWG has given $5.4 million to 109 organizations.

We’re here to handle your smallest or biggest problems.

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

To honor your SHEros, go to greenvillewomengiving.org or call 864-361-1393.

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How will GWG honor SHEros? When you make a $50 donation to the GWG endowment in honor or in memory of your SHEro, her name will appear in a special tribute in the May 10 Greenville Journal. In addition, each SHEro will receive a card informing her of the recognition. If you specify Mother’s Day, it will include a special tribute.

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NEWS |

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PROFILE

TOUCH DOWN

“I HAD TO STEP BACK AND SAY,

New challenge energizes Greenville High football coach

‘WHY DO I COACH?’ IT’S NOT TO CHASE CHAMPIONSHIPS. I LOVE WORKING WITH KIDS AND DEVELOPING THEM.”

n story BOB CASTELLO | photo by DOVE LIGHT PHOTOGRAPHY

GREG PORTER

Greenville High Football Coach

Two weeks into Greg Porter’s latest assignment as the head of Greenville High’s football program, he was already in full-speedahead mode. “We want Greenville High School to be special,” he said. “It’s the epicenter of this city. Why shouldn’t this be the best program in the Upstate? “Let’s not be afraid to say what we want to accomplish. It sets us on our destiny.” Porter, 50, has never been afraid of failure. If that were the case, he never would have taken the job as football coach at Southside High School, and he never would have followed that by taking over the program at Hillcrest High School. “He took two programs that when he inherited them were not very good programs, and he took one all the way to the state championship and won it,” Greenville athletic director Steve Scolamiero said. In 2008, Porter’s first season at Southside, he led the Tigers to a 7-5 record — their best in 21 years — and the second round of the playoffs. But that was an appetizer for what he did at Hillcrest, a school that had one playoff vic12

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

tory before he arrived in 2010. In nine seasons, during which Porter became Hillcrest’s winningest football coach, he led the Rams to a 65-45 record, three region titles, and one state title. This past season, they were 5-5, yet still very competitive in the state’s toughest Class AAAAA region.

WE WANT GREENVILLE HIGH SCHOOL TO BE SPECIAL. IT’S THE EPICENTER OF THIS CITY. WHY SHOULDN’T THIS BE THE BEST PROGRAM IN THE UPSTATE?

GREG PORTER “The school had been open for 52 years, and we had won just over 200 games,” Hill-

crest athletic director Tommy Bell said. “That’s about 3.8 wins a year for the first [52] years of existence. That’s where we were as a football program. We’re going through a stretch here where the kids that are in our program now, they think the worst Hillcrest team that there’s ever been was 5-5. “Everything on our end was really, really positive with him.” And yet, Porter said there was frustration on his end. “I was a finalist for eight different jobs, from Summerville to Wilson,” Porter said. “I just said, ‘I’m going to stop, because it looks like I’m unhappy at Hillcrest.’ I just thought that when you win a state championship, there are opportunities to grow and develop. It was never about gaining money. That’s a byproduct of it, but I just thought there were some things that come with winning it. “I had to refocus. I had to step back and say, ‘Why do I coach?’ It’s not to chase championships. I love working with kids and developing them. And when I got at peace with that, when I started working on that for the next two or three years, then the opportunity finally came.”

It’s a return to Greenville High for Porter, who teaches science and was chosen as the school’s Teacher of the Year for 2006-07. (He forfeited the honor when he accepted a position at Byrnes High School.). He also was Teacher of the Year at Sevier Middle School, his first stop in the Upstate. Porter said he wasn’t looking for another job when Greenville contacted him. David Crane, the offensive coordinator under Jim Sosebee during Porter’s previous season at Greenville, had accepted the head coaching position at his alma mater, Seneca, after a successful five-year run. Porter said he has great memories from Hillcrest — the players, the “brotherhood,” the pep rallies, principals (Bryan Skipper and the late Steve Chamness) who “understand football coaches.” But he’s just as appreciative of his new opportunity, his latest challenge. “I’m just going to build off of what David Crane built,” Porter said. “He’s passing me the baton. It’s my time to run. ‘What’s unique about my type of leadership, guys? I’ve been where you want to go, and that’s the state championship.’”


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NEWS |

NEED TO KNOW

OBITUARIES & MEMORIALS

Submit to: obits@communityjournals.com

Clifford F. Hintson, Sr.

Sadie (Willis) Rice

May 21, 1932 ~ March 9, 2019

Marcg 31, 1924 ~ March 8, 2019

On March 9, 2019 Clifford “Cliff” Frederick

Church in Easley and

Sadie Willis Rice, 94, of Greenville,

grandchildren;

member

wife of the late C.P. Rice, passed away

and numerous

Baptist

peacefully on Friday, March 8, 2019 at

nieces

McCall Hospice House.

nephews.

Hintson, Sr. peacefully passed from this earthly

a

former

realm to the loving arms of his Lord and Savior,

of

Mt.

Jesus Christ, following several months of

Church in Easley. He

declining health.

was

Airy

member

Born in Owings, SC, she was the

of the Jim Chapman

daughter of the late John Cleon and

to her husband

Leonard Curtis and Marguerite Hopkins. He

Memorial

Alva Stoddard Willis.

and

was married for 68 years to Amanda Lucille

Moving

Bagwell Hintson who predeceased him on June

group sponsored by the

Owings

16, 2016. In 1954, he graduated at Emmanuel

Robinson Funeral Home

College. She was a longtime member

death by her

College in Franklin Springs, GA. He retired

for widows and widowers.

of Trinity United Methodist Church in

sisters, Dot Owings, Katie Given, twin

Greenville and a regular attendee of the

Sara Gambrell, and a brother “Buck”

Fellowship Class.

Willis.

Mr. Hintson was born in 1932 in Alabama to

also

a

Class

and

Forward,

a

Sadie was a graduate of Gray Court/ High

School

and

Lander

In

and addition parents,

Sadie

was

preceded

in

from the U.S. Postal Service in Greenville, SC

Cliff is survived by a son, Clifford Frederick

as a letter carrier. He was also the president

Hintson, Jr. (Maryanne) of Easley, grandson,

of the National Association of Letter Carriers

James Patrick Hintson of Washington, DC,

Sadie was an avid bridge player,

The memorial service was held

during his postal employment. He and his late

and a special friend and devoted companion,

enjoyed crossword puzzles, watching

Monday, March 11, 2019 at 2:00 p.m.

wife Amanda ran a business called “Amanda’s

Nancy Harrison. He was predeceased by his

sports,

Tigers,

at Buncombe Street United Methodist

Bird Center” in Greenville at their home on the

wife Amanda Bagwell Hintson, an infant son, 1

and family gatherings. She was a

Church, Trinity Campus, 2703 Augusta

Poinsett Highway for a total of 30 years. They

brother and 1 sister.

wonderful mother, grandmother, great

St., Greenville. The visitation followed the service.

especially

Clemson

sold many varieties of exotic birds and raised

A Memorial Service and visitation was held

grandmother, and friend to everyone

the babies by hand until they were old enough

Tuesday, March 19, 2019 at 2:00 p.m. at Jones

she met and was known to many as

to be purchased. They were well known in the

Avenue Baptist Church. The family asks that any

“Granny”.

Greenville area for this business as they always

memorials be made to Jones Avenue and noted

Surviving are sons, Jim Rice (Carol)

had quality birds for purchase. He loved to work

for the Retire the Debt Fund. Or to any charity

and Rick Rice (Diane), daughter, Linda

In lieu of flowers, memorials may

in his yard at his house and loved to plant all

of your choice.

Gault (Greg), all of Greenville; her sister,

be made to Buncombe Street United

Jane Craddock (Mel) of Asheville, NC;

Methodist

2703 Augusta St., Greenville, SC 29605.

types of flowers and watch them bloom. He was

Condolences may be expressed online at

always getting compliments on his talents for

www.robinsonfunerahomes.com

Robinson

grandchildren, Scott Rice (Tiffany),

having a beautiful lawn.

Funeral Home - Powdersville Road, is assisting

Greg Rice (Layne), Brian Rice, Matt Rice,

the family.

and Josh Gault (Rebecca); nine great

Cliff was a member of Jones Avenue Baptist

.

DEATH NOTICES MARCH 2 – MARCH 10, 2019 Samuel Alvin Arms, 87, of Greer, passed away on March 5, 2019. The Wood Mortuary is assisting the family. www. thewoodmortuary.com Alan Edward Bird, 79, of Greer, passed away on March 7, 2019. The Wood Mortuary is assisting the family. www. thewoodmortuary.com Joseph Deadrick Brooks, Sr., 91, of Easley, passed away on March 5, 2019.

The family would like to extend a special thanks to McCall Hospice House for their loving care.

Thomas

Church, McAfee

Trinity

Campus,

Funeral

Home,

Downtown, assisted the family.

WWW.LEGACY.COM/OBITUARIES/GREENVILLEJOURNAL

Gray Mortuary, Inc. is assisting the family. www.graymortuary.com David E. Burgess, 73, of Simpsonville, passed away on March 6, 2019. Heritage Funeral Home is assisting the family. Dorothy Frost Kelly, 86, of Zirconia, NC, passed away on March 9, 2019. Thomas McAfee Funeral Home is assisting the family. www.thomasmcafee.com

Roger B. McKinney, 89, of Greenville, passed away on March 10, 2019. Thomas McAfee Funeral Home is assisting the family. www.thomasmcafee.com Susan H. Esser, 86, of Greenville passed away on March 3, 2019. Thomas McAfee Funeral Home is assisting the family. www. thomasmcafee.com David Junior Hickum, 80, of Greenville, passed away on March 2, 2019. Thomas

McAfee Funeral Home is assisting the family www.thomasmcafee.com Roger Dale Davis, 75,of Greenville, passed away, Monday, March 4, 2019. Thomas McAfee Funeral Home is assisting the family www.thomasmcafee.com Michael “Mike” David Ellenburg, 31, of Greer, passed away on March 2, 2019. Mackey Funerals and Cremations at Woodlawn Memorial Park is assisting the family.

Plan for “someday” today.

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

Downtown Chapel | 232-6733 14

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

Northwest Chapel & Cremation Center | 294-6415

ThomasMcAfee.com Southeast Chapel | 688-1600


NEED TO KNOW

| NEWS

pres ented by

G I V I N G M AT T E R S

GREENVILLE HUMANE SOCIETY

Saving more lives, providing more needed services following recent expansion n story by REBECCA HOWERTON | photos PROVIDED

The future didn’t look bright for Buck, a Great Dane being cared for at a shelter that partners with the Greenville Humane Society. He was underweight, heartworm positive, and had been shot in the leg. But his caregivers saw past his suffering. “He was such a wonderful dog, he became a favorite of the staff. Fortunately, we had the means to give him a second chance,” said Kim Pitman, executive director of the Greenville Humane Society. “He gained weight, was treated for heartworms, and was adopted. We were lucky to be able to do what compassionate people are supposed to — take care of animals who can’t speak for themselves.” Thanks to strong community support, including annual grants from the Community Foundation’s Margaret Linder Southern Endowment, the Greenville Humane Society is now able to save the lives of more animals than ever, as well as provide needed services to Upstate pet owners. A recent expansion, funded by a $3.3 million capital campaign, added 14,500 square feet, bringing the campus

to 24,500 square feet spanning three buildings. Pitman, who has served as executive director since 2007, said demand for preventive-care services has grown rapidly since the Airport Road location opened in 2011. The Humane Society’s spay/neuter clinic and walk-in vaccine clinic offer reasonable prices to the public, with proceeds used to provide care for shelter animals. “We couldn’t keep up with demand. We have seen a 47 percent increase in the number of spay/neuter surgeries performed here since 2011. We used to give 20,000 affordable vaccines annually — now we give over 50,000,” Pitman said. “This additional space tripled our capacity to meet the needs of the community.” The expansion, completed last September, also added The Healing Place, where Buck was treated. In 2018, 38 percent of the animals placed in permanent homes went through treatment in The Healing Place. “The Greenville Humane Society Healing Place is a totally new concept. We are

the only shelter in the Southeast with space dedicated to the care of sick and injured animals, including those that have long-term health issues and otherwise would be euthanized,” Pitman said. “In 2018, we treated more than 2,300 suffering animals, providing them the opportunity to recover and find their forever homes. Because we partner with 38 high-euthanasia shelters in five states, we are helping to lower the euthanasia rates in the entire Southeast.” Pitman credited Southern, who specified that half the annual proceeds of her endowment go to the Greenville Humane Society, with making this critical care possible, and compared her to James M. “Miss Jim” Perry, a longtime leader who was also the first woman admitted to the South Carolina Bar. “Strong, bright women are part of our past and future — one as an early advocate and another whose gift moved us into the next century,” Pitman said. With 6,099 adoptions last year, the Greenville Humane Society is the sec-

ond-largest no-kill facility in the Southeast. About 200 volunteers care for pets each month, walking dogs, working on manners, and preparing animals for adoption. “We’re still a hidden jewel that not everyone knows about. We’ve worked hard to make this a high-quality, compassionate, and fun destination for people who love animals,” Pitman said. “We’ve earned a four-star rating five years in a row on Charity Navigator to become the No. 1 animal-welfare organization in the country.” Community Foundation President Bob Morris said the strong support earned by the Greenville Humane Society reflects well on both the organization and the community as a whole. “Pets are an important part of people’s families, whether as companions or therapy or service animals,” he said. “Providing ethical treatment extends beyond the welfare of the animals themselves; it also impacts the many people who care for them.” M A R C H 15 / / 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 |

NEED TO KNOW

REDEVELOPMENT

NEW AFFORDABLE HOUSING

Residential development near BJU that includes affordable senior housing moves forward n story by CINDY LANDRUM

Greenville is one step closer to getting some new affordable housing for seniors after City Council members approved a major modification to a planned development across from Bob Jones University. Renaissance Place will have 20 cottage-style single-family homes and a 60-unit senior apartment building under the rezoning approved during a special formal City Council meeting Monday night. The new plan reduced density, improved pedestrian connectivity, and provided larger setbacks and property buffers than a proposal the city’s planning commis-

sion recommended in December be denied. “It’s a better proposal than what’s currently on the books,” city Planning and Development Manager Jay Graham told council members. The original planned development, which was approved in conjunction with the Bob Jones University-owned property’s annexation into the city in 2006, contained 50,000 square feet of retail space along North Pleasantburg Drive and up to 180 condominiums behind the commercial area. Graham said the new plan has some of the largest setbacks and property buffers of any recent development proposed in the city. At the December planning commission meeting, residents of the McCarter neighborhood expressed concern the development would destroy the pristine natural setting around the adjacent community pool and would affect pool members try-

ing to sunbathe. At Monday’s meeting, some residents opposed the new plan, saying they were concerned that the development would increase flooding, reduce their property values, and increase traffic, and about the scale of the apartment building. “We do not oppose affordable housing, only the design and layout of the property,” said Tricia Austin, a McCarter Avenue resident. “We realize that financing deadlines are in play, but we have one chance to get it right.” City officials said the developer would have to meet federal, state, and local stormwater regulations. Greenville Homeless Alliance coordinator Susan McLarty spoke in favor of the change, saying the development would be a true mixed-income community with access to doctor’s offices, grocery stores, and transit.

Get the most out of your summer. Take a class or two at Greenville Technical College this summer, and you can return to campus a step ahead. Visit us at gvltec.edu/transient-visiting.

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M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


SPONSORED

COMMUNITY

THE BLOOD CONNECTION GIVES LOCALS A CHANCE TO BE HEROES

The Blood Connection celebrates more than five decades of saving lives You’ve probably seen the red and white bloodmobiles parked at businesses; you might even have walked by one on your way in to work or to shop. And you probably know someone who has had to be hospitalized and who might have required a blood transfusion. But what you might not realize is that, in the Upstate, there is only one agency that is responsible for supplying all the blood needed for every area hospital: The Blood Connection. Every day, the non-profit organization is tasked with supplying hundreds of units of lifesaving blood to the hospitals it serves. It’s a daunting challenge, yet TBC employees all understand the critical nature of what they do. “Our number one priority is making sure every daughter, son, mother, father, friend, or neighbor has the blood they need to live another day,” explains Delisa English, president and CEO of The Blood Connection. “When we come together as a community to hold each other up by donating blood, we show how powerful connecting can be. It’s in our name -- we make that connection between those who have and those who need, to save lives.” The Blood Connection has been focused on saving lives since it was founded in 1962 in Greenville. Over time, TBC accepted the challenge to provide blood to hospitals in an ever-growing geographic area, and along the way became the largest independently managed, non-profit community blood center in the region, according to Terra Strange, a 13-year TBC veteran who is currently the organization’s promotions and community engagement coordinator.

In each area it serves, TBC works closely with local hospitals to ensure their patients have enough blood and blood products on hand to meet their needs. “Consistently achieving daily blood collection goals ensures a worry-free inventory of blood products for our hospital partners,” Strange says. “They rely on us, and we deliver.” In total, TBC currently serves more than 55 hospitals each day, 25 of which are in the Upstate. To meet that need, according to Strange, almost 600 units of blood must be collected DAILY DEMAND daily, either at one of the TBC recruits donors five donation centers, and collects blood or through the agenwithin 17 counties cy’s bloodmobiles. in the Upstate. In The bloodmo2011, The Blood biles are highly visConnection exible evidence of the panded into Westclose relationship ern North Carobetween TBC and lina; six years later the communities it TBC expanded into TERRA STRANGE serves. Individuals, parts of Central North churches, businesses, orCarolina around Raleigh, ganizations, and schools freas well as coastal areas of the quently host the mobile donation Tar Heel State. Most recently, the blood center has expanded into Charleston. centers, Strange said.

BLOOD DONORS NEVER KNOW WHOSE LIVES THEY’RE GOING TO IMPACT...

Spartanburg Cherokee Pickens Greenville Oconee

Union Laurens

Anderson

Newberry

Abbeville Greenwood

Saluda

McCormick

L

5

1 19 14

Blood Donation Centers

435 Woodruff Rd. Greenville, SC 5116 Calhoun Memorial Hwy. Easley, SC 341 Old Abbeville Hwy. Greenwood, SC

“Thanks to our volunteer blood donors, we’ve successfully provided blood to every person in the Upstate who has needed it,” according to Strange. “The only way to make sure that the blood products are on the shelves in hospitals is through volunteer donors. That’s neighbors helping neighbors, and that need never goes away.” English notes the challenge: “Blood cannot be replicated; it has to come from other humans,” she explains. “It’s a non-stop critical need. One in 7 people who visit a hospital need blood. Unfortunately, less than 10 percent of eligible donors actually give. And national statistics show that every two seconds, someone in the U.S. needs blood. Those numbers speak for themselves.” People at TBC know that local patients rely on them every day, so the organization ensures that needs will be met by keeping all of the blood it collects in the communities it serves. That way, Strange says, blood is available for cancer patients, burn victims, trauma cases, surgical patients, and people with blood disorders. “Blood donors never know whose lives they’re going to impact, but they can know their donation will always give someone’s child, parent, grandparent or neighbor a chance at life,” Strange says.

1308 Sandifer Blvd. Seneca, SC

GET INVOLVED

270 N.Connection Grove Medical Park Dr. The Blood employees do Spartanburg, SC everything they can to make the donation experience as pleasant as possible. Strange says The Blood Connection offers a spalike atmosphere in our centers. “They’re clean, spacious, and comfortable,” she says, “the perfect places to give back and kick back.” Each of the five local centers is open daily, making it easier for donors to schedule a visit, and Strange says, every donation has the power to save up to three lives. Strange said there are several ways that donors can help: They can visit one of the donation centers regularly; donate at one of theare neede blood donations bloodmobiles, or host a blood drive as ei-the blood to maintain ther an individual or a business.

600 To learn more about how you can help, visit The Blood Connection’s website

thebloodconnection.org

Interested in hosting a blood drive?

864-751-1160

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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THE LIST

/

PROPERTY SALES FOR THE WEEK

/

FEATURED HOMES

REAL ESTATE and HOMES GREENVILLE JOURNAL  n  MARCH 15, 2019  n  PAGE 18

These master bathrooms bring the spa to you

A well-appointed master bathroom can become a personal retreat. These three homes, all currently on the market, have spa-like bathrooms that will turn the space into an inviting getaway. There are claw foot bathtubs that will make you want to grab a glass of wine and soak away. The spacious layouts and cabinetry are a dream. Indulge yourself and schedule a viewing while you can.

THE LIST

LOOKING GLASS RUN THE SCOOP

This master suite bathroom exudes luxury. The floor-toceiling windows offer mountain views and lots of natural light. There’s a large claw foot bathtub and a spacious glass walk-in shower. The bathroom is huge – with an abundance of storage and counterspace. This home sits on 16 acres and offers views of Paris Mountain, Table Rock, Casesar’s Head, and Hogback Mountain. Enjoy the views from every room or from the wrap-around porch.

ADDRESS : 158 Glassy Road LIST PRICE: $1,450,356 LISTING AGENT: Joan Herlong & Associates Sotheby’s International Realty, Cate Thompson

COBBLESTONE

CLIFFS VALLEY

THE SCOOP

THE SCOOP

ADDRESS : 101 Tooley Road LIST PRICE: $959,900 LISTING AGENT: Wilson Associates, Ashley Steigerwald

ADDRESS: 200 Knightsridge Road LIST PRICE: $849,950 LISTING AGENT: Blackstream Christie’s, John “Clark” Kent

This main-level master suite has a bathroom you’ll swoon over. There’s a vanity with a bench, sink and custom cabinetry on one side of the walk-in shower and a second sink with plenty of counterspace and more custom cabinetry on the other side. The bathtub and the shower have beautiful tile work. The custom-built home exudes casual elegance with its tasteful moldings, neutral tones and gleaming hardwoods.

The master suite bathroom is huge. There’s a clean, minimalist feel with the white tiled floor, gleaming white soaking tub and roomy walk-in glass shower. Other notable master suite features are the private deck and banks of windows on the walls offering mountain views. The home is on 2.8 acres and has both a natural feel and superb landscaping. You can walk from your home to the golf course or Cliffs Valley Clubhouse.


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Paige Haney

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Norman Group

Charee McConchie

Melissa Morrell

Bob Schmidt & Associates

Jeff Meister

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Sheila Newton Team

Jenny Weathers

Donna Stegall

The Coffey House Group

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Foronda Hall & Bill Forrest Team

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February 2019 At

Berkshire

Hathaway

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HOMES |

OFF THE MARKET

MOST EXPENSIVE

OFF THE MARKET

The details behind some recent top-dollar real estate transactions in the Upstate

GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB AREA ADDRESS : 40 Douglas Drive LISTED: $560,000 SOLD: $550,000 AGENTS: Wilson Associates,

Laura McDonald and Andreana Snyder

BRAGGING POINTS: This country club property has a mountain

aesthetic with the convenience of walking distance to Augusta Road schools and shops. The home was expanded and completely renovated in 2008. It has vaulted ceilings on both levels, exposed beams, an open floor plan, granite countertops, and hardwoods throughout. The master suite has dual vanities, a claw foot tub and a walk-in closet.

CHANTICLEER ADDRESS : 112 Hidden Hills Drive LISTED: $695,000 SOLD: $665,000 AGENTS: Berkshire Hathaway C. Dan Joyner Realtors and Coldwell Banker Caine, Virginia Hayes

BRAGGING POINTS: This charming home, located on the Chan-

ticleer golf course, is a short drive to Augusta Road’s amenities and downtown Greenville. The property, which sits on one of the largest lots in Chanticleer Towns, underwent a major expansion in 1995. Notable features include a master suite on each level, a flexible floorplan that is perfect for entertaining and a sunroom that has a gas fireplace and brick flooring.

CHANTICLEER ADDRESS : 14 Lawson Way LISTED: $1,249,605 SOLD: $1,162,500 AGENTS: Joan Herlong & Associates Sotheby’s International Realty, Joan Herlong

BRAGGING POINTS: This 6,000-square-foot Chanticleer home

offers stunning features inside and out. The backyard is a haven with its beautiful pool, outdoor fireplace and covered terrace. Inside there are opulent amenities like a steam sauna in the master bath, a media screening room and a chef’s kitchen with a professional stove. There are top-of-the-line finishes, too.

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M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


OPEN HOUSES

| HOMES

OPEN HOUSES

310 MELVILLE AVENUE $279,500

Very charming bungalow zoned for Augusta Circle. Located just off Augusta Road with shopping and very close to downtown! ■■ When: 2-4 p.m., Sunday, March 17 ■■ Agent: Courtney Worley, Wilson Associates; (864)901-1503 or courtney@ wilsonassociates.net ■■ Specs: 2 bed, 1 bath, MLS#1380010

107 EAST FARIS ROAD $439,000

Augusta Rd area charmer alert! This updated home is full of character and curb appeal. You will love the space! ■■ When: 2-4 p.m., Sunday, March 17 ■■ Agent: Blair Miller, Wilson Associates; (864)430-7708 or blair@wilsonassociates.net ■■ Specs: 4 bed, 3 bath, MLS#1385364

63 PARK VISTA WAY $450,000

Custom built, gated community on a golf course. Master on main and finished walk out basement. Move in Ready! ■■ When: 2-4 p.m., Sunday, March 17 ■■ Agent: LeAnne Carswell, Expert Real Estate Team; (864)895-9791 or listings@carswellgroup.net ■■ Specs: 3 bed, 2.5 bath, MLS#1378802

Ready to Make a Move? Let’s Talk! 864-915-6076 | smiller@cdanjoyner.com

www.GoodToBeHomeSC.com

HAVE A NEW LISTING?

If you would like to have your listing here, call Emily Yepes at 864.679.1215

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

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HOMES |

PROPERTY TRANSFERS

SOLD SUBD.

G R E E N V I L L E T R A N S A C T I O N S F O R F E B. 11-15

PRICE SELLER

$7,886,474 $2,082,459 $1,200,000 $1,030,000 FOREST HILLS $906,750 $903,500 BELLA GROVE AT HOLLINGSWORTH PARK $789,000 SPAULDING FARMS $725,750 $725,000 THORNBLADE $655,000 GLEN ABBEY $630,000 $580,000 $555,000 $550,000 CARRONBRIDGE $487,350 HIGHCROFT $469,450 TINSLEY PLACE $460,000 CARILION $459,600 RIVER WALK $450,000 $445,000 CARRONBRIDGE $440,710 HIGHVIEW TOWNES $411,900 KILGORE FARMS $405,000 PLEASANT VALLEY $400,000 RIDGESTONE COTTAGES $390,035 FIRETHORNE $388,773 KINGS CROSSING $362,235 GOWER ESTATES $350,000 BRENTWOOD $347,000 CHANDLER LAKE $345,163 BRENTWOOD $340,000 HAMMOND’S POINTE $339,000 $339,000 ASHCROFT $333,000 ASHCROFT $330,000 GRAYSON POINTE $329,500 ASHCROFT $327,900 RICHLAND CREEK @ NORTH MAIN $327,000

BUYER

WOODSIDE PROPERTY OWNER WEC 99D-40 LLC IRISH INDUSTRIES LLC JONES CLAY C III PEARL MARK ALAN LIVING T GRANT LOUISE LOCHRANE DILLARD-JONES BUILDERS L TODD JOSEPH M WALI & SON LLC CHRISTENSEN CAROL A REVO HAYNIE KIM M (JTWROS) BAILEY ROBERT J ERWIN W D TYNDALL SETH T III (JTWR NVR INC LS RESIDENTIAL LLC AMMANN SUSAN E (LIFE EST SABAL HOMES AT CARILION CONSONERY ROBERT A JOSEPH ALEXANDER NVR INC HIGHVIEW LLC MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN ROBERTS NATHAN (JTWROS) ROSEWOOD COMMUNITIES INC DAN RYAN BUILDERS S C LL D R HORTON-CROWN LLC FRANCIS STEVEN CHARLES D R HORTON INC MERITAGE HOMES OF SOUTH D R HORTON INC ALLEN MARK B (JTWROS) ANDERSON HOMES AND CONST HUMPHRIES CHRISTOPHER M D R HORTON INC SK BUILDERS INC D R HORTON INC SHASTEEN JOEL STARBUCK (

CG WOODSIDE PARTNERS LLC ALEXANDER FUND VIII LLC TRAILBLAZER CAPITAL LLC LAUREL CREEK RESERVE LLC HILL CHRIS MCADAMS (JTWR MURPHY REBECCA REID (JTW AMMANN WERNER C JR REVOC HAYNIE KIM M (JTWROS) ANTIOCH CHURCH PARTNERS ANDERSON JOHN B (JTWROS) MCINTOSH GALINA N (JTWRO ELLANNA LLC PICKARD GLENN MARSHALL ( DUNLEAVY KATHLEEN A DUSTIN LISA (JTWROS) CUMMINGS ELIZABETH FAYSS JONES JEFFREY S (JTWROS) KLEIN ROBERT J (JTWROS) MOORE INGE M CRAIN AMANDA C (JTWROS) FOLEY ANNMARIE (JTWROS) NVR INC MCMASTERS ANGELA DENISE BUCKLIN LICHIA (JTWROS) BENSON ROBERT J (JTWROS) HENSLEY CARL A (JTWROS) CROWE TOMMY RUSSELL II FRANCIS JOSEPH G III DORIA VINCENT L II (JTWR BORTON CHRISTOPHER JOHN SMITH JENNIFER (JTWROS) MCARDLE JULIE J (JTWROS) SMITH JODY M (JTWROS) RIESSEN REBECCA A (JTWRO HESTER DEAN T (JTWROS) GOMES JOYCE (JTWROS) LOPEZ JORGE ALBERTO VAZQ KINGSTON SCOTT RICHARD

ADDRESS 7320 MCGINNIS FERRY RD 2521 FAIRMOUNT ST 101 E WASHINGTON ST STE 400 217 E STONE AVE STE 12 805 CRESCENT AVE 206 FAIRVIEW AVE 200 JESSEN DR 128 HUNTERS RUN 101 E WASHINGTON ST STE 400 306 REGATTA WAY 220 GLEN ABBEY WAY 116 KNOLLVIEW DR 98 E MCBEE AVE UNIT 112 8506 N TIGERVILLE RD 109 KNOX VALLEY LN 15 HIGHCROFT CT 108 TINSLEY CT 606 CARILION LN 206 WALNUT TRACE CT 130 SHELTON RD 113 KNOX VALLEY LN 651 BROOKFIELD PKWY STE 200 14 LAROSE CT 71 PLEASANT VALLEY TRL 108 HAVERCROFT LN 128 ROSECREST LN 806 SHOREDALE LN 282 HENDERSON RD 805 ABACOS CT 421 TEA OLIVE PL 100 VERDAE BLVD STE 401 4 KING EIDER WAY 4020 RIDGE RD 108 ASHCROFT LN 220 ASHCROFT LN 220 KILBURN LN 300 ROSENDALE WAY 4 MAJESTIC OAK CT

SUBD.

PRICE SELLER

LINKSIDE $320,000 PELHAM CREEK $319,500 CYPRESS RUN $315,000 HOLLY TREE PLANTATION $315,000 THORNHILL PLANTATION $309,900 TOWNES AT THORNBLADE $303,605 STONERIDGE $303,569 HIGHVIEW TOWNES $301,410 VERDMONT $300,000 LOST RIVER $299,000 COTTAGES AT HARRISON BRIDGE $294,000 MILL POND AT RIVER SHOALS $292,090 COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK $287,926 THE RESERVE AT ASHETON LAKES SWEETSPIRE LN COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK $285,000 BENNETTS CROSSING $277,000 COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK $277,000 NEELY FARM - DEER SPRINGS $274,900 HOLLINGSWORTHPARK@VERDAEMANOR $274,000 BRIAR OAKS $273,647 BRECKENRIDGE $273,262 POINTS NORTH $272,500 THE VILLAGE AT ADAMS MILL $272,459 HIGHVIEW TOWNES $271,860 CAROLINA OAKS $270,500 E HIGHLANDS ESTATES $270,000 TYGER BRIDGE ESTATES $268,000 DEVENGER PLACE $262,000 LANSFAIR @ ASHBY PARK $258,000 MOUNTAIN WATCH $255,000 SHOALLY RIDGE $255,000 HOWARDS PARK $251,775 SALUDA ACRES $250,000 CREEKSIDE $250,000 ORCHARD FARMS ARBOR WALK $249,900 AVALON ESTATES $248,000 FARIS OAKS $247,000

BUYER

ADDRESS

MAPPIN ROBERTA L SCHMITT ALLISON LACY CAR PHARR BETTY S SNOAD PAUL G (JTWROS) SIEG CAROLYN A TOWNES AT THORNBLADE LLC BYERS DANIEL L JR NVR INC PETERS RONALD EUGENE MERITAGE HOMES OF S C IN DWELLING GROUP LLC NVR INC COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK LL $287,465

SCHNEE STEPHEN W HILL DAWN S BURDESHAW JENNIFER (JTWR FARRELL JOHN R JR (JTWRO ALBERT JEREMY WILLIAM (J HEISER BRIGITTE H FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGA MANOS MARK STEPHEN KLEINER CINDY L (JTWROS) AKINS SHANITA (JTWROS) MCGUIGAN MICHAEL J (JTWR CRUZ FABRICIO FURLONG MICHAEL GARY ASHETON LAKES COMMONS LL

29801 HAMPTON BLVD STE 115-248 203 SUN GARDEN CT 7 WINDMILL WAY 203 LONG POINT WAY 4 HOPTREE DR 110 MEADOW CLARY DR 8250 JONES BRANCH DR 31 ITASCA DR 34 LUCERNE CT 203 BANK SWALLOW WAY 109 SUNLIT DR 309 SANDUSKY LN 11 GREENRIDGE DR GOLDEN AMY E 7

COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK LL COGBURN SHELLEY R COTTAGES AT OVERBROOK LL RMAC TRUST SERIES 2016-C DURSHANAPALLI SRINIVAS R NVR INC SK BUILDERS INC STRAWN CONSTRUCTION LLC EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL NVR INC TIMMIE JAMES D (JTWROS) LAMBERT JOHN BRYANT ANDERSON TARA WALLING MARSHA K ADAMS ROBERT M JR CHISM JEREMY KEITH MOSS DEISHA R D R HORTON-CROWN LLC 1601 E SALUDA LAND TRUST COOK ELIZABETH M TRUSTEE PARTHASARATHY VANAJA PANASENKO GENE WALTER JASON SCOTT

SHIELDS EVAN WOJTALA LINDA DILLE ROBERT (JTWROS) HARMON DANIELLE D (JTWRO IDREES IRUM MONA (JTWROS ALVAREZ AYDELENA CABALLE GARRISON JOSPEH JOSH (JT JOENS CLIFFORD J (JTWROS BRACKEN LINDA S (JTWROS) FORE MARY ELISE ALEXANDR WAGERS DUSTIN (JTWROS) SPRUCE STREET PARTNERS L LUGO EPHARIM SMITH CARL ANDREW (JTWRO BUTLER TERRY W LIVING TR BARGER GREGORY O MCNEELY CAROL K (JTWROS) RILEY DESIRAE CUMMINS DEVIN J (JTWROS) GLENNON SUSAN (JTWROS) ADAMS JORDAN BLAKE (JTWR CURETON ERIN (JTWROS) MOODY EMILY (JTWROS)

27 GREENRIDGE DR 107 FORD RD 1500 WADE HAMPTON BLVD 304 NEELY FARM DR 216 WELLING CIR 219 LIMBERLOCK WAY 305 TIMBERTRAIL WAY 203 NOLAN RD 2857 WESTPORT RD 33 ITASCA DR 5 CREST HILL DR 409 PARKINS MILL RD 2515 OLD TIGER BRIDGE RD 124 PADDOCK DR 309 ASHBY PARK LN 1 HINDMAN RD 27 CANYON CT 145 LAKE GROVE 1601 E SALUDA LAKE RD 9 CREEKDALE CT 8 REDGLOBE CT 11 BRADBERRY CIR 413 W FARIS RD

u L c n k a T h o Sell A H T e r o M s e 2018 was a great year for me! Let me put my experience ouse k a T It and knowledge to work for you to get your home SOLD! #1 GREER OFFICE AGENT NATIONAL BHHS LEGENDS AWARD AND CHAIRMAN’S CIRCLE GOLD RANKED IN TOP 10 AGENTS FOR BHHS C DAN JOYNER

Paige Haney

864.414.9937

phaney@cdanjoyner.com • www.GreenvilleLifeSC.com

22

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M


PROPERTY TRANSFERS

SOLD SUBD.

G R E E N V I L L E T R A N S A C T I O N S F O R F E B. 11-15

PRICE SELLER

RAVENWOOD $240,000 EAGLES GLEN AT KIMBRELL $239,900 SHERWOOD FOREST $235,000 COLLEGE HEIGHTS $232,000 MOSS CREEK $230,000 AUGUSTA RD HILLS $228,000 ANNANDALE ESTATES $225,745 SHADOW CREEK $224,900 WILLOW GROVE $222,990 DEL NORTE $218,000 IVYBROOKE $215,000 THE VILLAGE AT ADAMS MILL $213,755 OLD MILL ESTATES $213,000 HAMMETT GROVE $212,500 GRANDVIEW TOWNES $212,500 EASTGATE VILLAGE $210,000 PEBBLECREEK $210,000 ORCHARD CREST $209,900 SUMMER WOOD $208,000 SEVEN OAKS@BLUE RIDGE PLANTATION $207,853 AUTUMN TRACE $205,000 LAKEVIEW FARMS $205,000 LONG CREEK PLANTATION $203,000 FOWLER CHASE $202,300 EAST LYNNE $201,500 CASTLEBROOK $201,485 $200,000 WOODLANDS AT WALNUT COVE $200,000 NICHOLTOWN HEIGHTS $200,000 CYPRESS LANDING $199,900 COLONIAL HILLS $199,000 HERITAGE CLUB VILLAS $196,500 THE LENNOX $195,000 CANEBRAKE $193,000 ANNANDALE ESTATES $191,980 $190,000 TOWNES AT BROOKWOOD II $188,875 ANNACEY PARK $188,000 INDIAN HILLS $187,500 GRAY FOX RUN $186,000 COOPERS LAKE $185,000 CLUB VIEW HEIGHTS $185,000 $184,900 FAIRVIEW LAKE $183,250 CAVALIER WOODS $183,000 MORNING MIST FARM $181,000 CHARTWELL ESTATES $180,000 SUMMERWALK $180,000 $180,000 WATERMILL $180,000 MORNING MIST FARM $179,867 CASTLEBROOK $178,985 OAKMONTE $176,000 EDWARDS FOREST HEIGHTS $174,742 GREENBRIER $172,000 STANDING SPRINGS ESTATES $171,900 DEVENGER WOODS $171,500 CHARTWELL ESTATES $170,500 SWANSGATE $170,000 MARTINDALE $170,000 $170,000 $170,000

| HOMES

BUYER

COLLINS COREY LINIER D R HORTON INC CHRISTY RUSSELL M JONES ASHLEY J (JTWROS) HEMM KENNETH B LOVELACE BRIAN R NVR INC SHERMAN TIMOTHY A (JTWRO D R HORTON INC KINGPRIEST HOLDINGS LLC MCLEAN JOYCE D EASTWOOD CONSTRUCTION LL TA DAO H BRANDEIS BRENDA J ESSEX HOMES SOUTHEAST IN MCCULLOUGH JONATHAN W CJ HOLDINGS LLC ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION L RAYBURN ENTERPRISES LLC SK BUILDERS INC HICE DANA LEIGH TOWN & COUNTRY PROPERTIE CHESEK AMY (JTWROS) SK BUILDERS INC FOX LENDING LLC NVR INC PAVLUK FAMILY REVOCABLE STYERS ERIC A NEWCOMB JANET D R HORTON INC VO TAI CRUMLEY EVELYN P HIPPS C SHANE SMITH JENNIFER E NVR INC REVIVAL PROPERTIES LLC BROOKWOOD TOWNES LLC CRAFT JEFFREY SCOTT ORIOLE PROPERTIES LLC FRISH HILA RANDOLPH MARY E MANN EDWARD OLD WYNN LLC LIGHT CALEB J AL-RAWI MONIQUE BELANGER SCOTT A LIBERATOR ANGELA M MALPHRUS PHILLIP W JR TUCKER MIRANDA JILL MARTINEZ YVONNE MORRIS MACDONALD G NVR INC SMZ INVESTMENTS INC SLACK BETTY K MOORE EVELYN ARNOLD BETANCOURT LAUREN (JTWRO PERRY COLE B HEATH JEFFREY S (JTWROS) BODMAN RICHARD B BENNETT ROBERT R JR FOWLER PATSY LEE PALMETTO SELF STORAGE SO

ADDRESS

LENT ALYSON ELIZABETH (J SIEG CAROLYN ANN HOLMES BENJAMIN J (JTWRO HILDEBRAND ELIZABETH GRA BRANDEIS BRENDA JEAN BROWN SARAH A (JTWROS) TOSCANO DEBRA COLEMAN DONNA REAVES (JT FRIPP KARLA (JTWROS) MOORER NIGEL W ETZLER BRUCE A (JTWROS) KNIGHT CATHERINE (JTWROS AIRD AIMEE L SIMONONIS JOSEPH RYAN (J ARNOLD RODERICK D (JTWRO MICKEL TINA M SMITH RANCE D PORTER ANDREW T (JTWROS) SNOW STACY L CARRANZA OSCAR O (JTWROS SNM BUILDERS LLC MOBLEY ALEKSEIS L (JTWRO PRUNEAU MAURICE P (JTWRO SULLIVAN MELISSA L SENECAL HALEE BETH (JTWR STRONG ALEXUS MONIQUE (J PACKFOREST LLC COLLINS MARK S MCCORMICK IAN (JTWROS) FRATACCIA DEANO (JTWROS) GUEVARA MARTA ALEIDA MOR MOORE GRETA BETH MCCALLUM MICHELLE S JONES JEAN (JTWROS) COOK CHRIS WILKIE NADRA A LEE BUM HO CMG REAL ESTATE INVESTME PARKER KRISTIN SCHULZE KRISTIN A SWARINGEN ANN STONE ELLIOT BIAJ DORINA (JTWROS) JO-AN PROPERTIES LLC BALSIGER JESSE A (JTWROS MORRIS MILBURN MAJOR JACQUELYN ELIZABET ARMSTRONG CHARLES A II HITT NATHAN THOMPSON RAY ANTHONY JR SUNTRUST MORTGAGE INC THOMPSON DAVID DOUGLAS HAYLEY J NATIONSTAR HECM ACQUISIT CABRERA NORMA PATRICIA R FREI-HAMMOND PARIS MAE ( MCCRARY MEGAN NICOLE JO-AN PROPERTIES LLC FELDMAN BRYAN (JTWROS) PRICE STACI WILSON (JTWR KEY TWO INVESTMENTS LLC PRD PROPERTIES LLC

SUBD.

129 RAVEN FALLS LN 38 NOBLE WING LN 10 NOTTINGHAM RD 4 ERSKINE ST 418 BELGRAY CT 11 LOW HILL ST 209 FAIRMEADOW WAY 263 APPLEHILL WAY 304 WILLOW GROVE WAY 210 NEWTONMORE RD 1407 SHINGLE OAK POINTE 824 APPLEBY DR 218 EDWARDS MILL RD 16 KNOLL RIDGE DR 119 HARTLAND PL 6 PRITCHARD LN 710 STALLINGS RD 303 MEADOWMOOR RD 9 RUSTCRAFT DR 121 BUR OAK DR 153 CREEK SHOALS DR 526 KEELER MILL RD 201 COLTSFOOT CT 7 IVYBERRY RD 319 SYCAMORE DR 109 DUNBARTIN DR 7015 WELLS HWY STE D 2 MINERT CT PO BOX 927852 18 SPYGLEN WAY 8 ARDMORE DR 701 HERITAGE CLUB DR 56 MAYDELL AVE 109 DAWES DR 202 FAIRMEADOW WAY 14 CARTER ST 803 STONEBRIAR ST 102 CHALET PL 9 SAPONEE DR 114 CROWNDALE DR 146 DOVE HAVEN DR 208 TRAYNHAM BLVD 302 MCCARTER AVE PO BOX 912 32 HUNTSFIELD DR 6099 SC HWY 395 609 CHARTWELL DR 25 SUMMER GLEN DR 701 N MAIN ST 132 PORTLAND FALLS DR 1001 SEMMES AVE 4TH FL 104 DUNBARTIN DR 103 OAKLAND AVE 8950 CYPRESS WATERS BLVD 108 HOLLIBROOK CT 131 W LONG CREEK CT 1123 DEVENGER RD PO BOX 912 327 MOCKINGBIRD HL 4614 OLD SPARTANBURG RD APT 33 400 S MAIN ST STE A 235 BANNERBROOK DR

H

PRICE SELLER

RIVERBEND $170,000 COUNTRY GARDENS $169,500 $168,000 STANDING SPRINGS ESTATES $167,500 RUSSTON PLACE CONDOS $157,000 WOODLAND HEIGHTS $157,000 IDLEWILD $156,800 EAGLEWATCH $155,000 CHESTNUT HILLS $155,000 MAYFIELD ESTATES $151,000 H G STEVENS $150,000 PALMETTO DOWNS $149,000 SPRING CROSSING $147,500 MAPLE GROVE $140,000 WESTWOOD $140,000 $137,500 BELLA GROVE AT HOLLINGSWORTH PARK $134,500 GREEN PASTURES $133,000 SHILOH ESTATES $130,100 $130,000 JAMES M. EDWARDS $130,000 COMMONS AT BUTLER $130,000 GRAND VIEW HILLS $125,000 $125,000 CHESTNUT POND $125,000 PIEDMONT ESTATES $123,000 THORNWOOD ACRES $120,024 MCSWAIN GARDENS $120,000 YORKTOWN CONDOS $120,000 ROBERT J. EDWARDS $119,500 DUNWOODY OAKS $118,700 EAGLES GLEN AT KIMBRELL $117,000 $117,000 CANTERBURY $115,000 PARIS MOUNTAIN GARDENS $114,500 WELLINGTON GREEN $112,000 SHILOH ESTATES $108,163 ABLES & RASOR $108,000 YORKTOWN CONDOS $106,000 $106,000 LONGLEAF $105,930 TOWNES AT EDWARDS MILL $101,000 PARKDALE $100,566 $100,000 MILLER’S POND $95,000 WOODFIELDS $92,300 PARAMOUNT PARK $92,000 THOUSANDHILLS $90,000 SOUTH FOREST ESTATES $86,500 PLEASANT VALLEY $85,000 HOLLY TOWNE $84,000 OGDEN ACRES $80,000 VICTOR MONAGHAN $80,000 ACADIA $80,000 E.A. WOOD $76,015 OAKVIEW $75,000 RIVERBREEZE $75,000 WOODSIDE MILLS $75,000 VERDIN ESTATES $75,000 $70,000 WHIPPORWILL HILLS $67,000 $66,400

SCHULZE KRISTIN A BOOTH CHRISTOPHER (JTWRO HALE SONYA SNYDER CASEY ELIZABETH MAHARAJ LINDSEY GROOMS MAGEE STEPHEN JAMES BRAD HOUSING AUTH CITY OF GVI SMITH JACOB HARRISON CARLTON ROBERT E JR RAST AVA C (SURV) SMITH MELISSA R M&T RESTORATION PROPERTI BOOZER MCKENZIE D (JTWRO JONES DEBORAH T TUCKER CHRISTINA A PITTMAN B A VERDAE DEVELOPMENT INC FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAG EAGLE’S NEST MANAGEMENT OTT LINDA FLEMING MCCALL VALERIE ANN KNIGHT JEFFREY M FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAG ELLENBURG MARTHA WOODLAND BUILDERS INC CWCMR HOLDINGS LLC WILSON WANDA SMITH ROMANSTINE CINDY G (LIFE DAVENPORT FAMILY TRUST ALEWINE ROBERT D HENDON REBECCA L SOUTHERN STATES RESOURCE NICE GUYS BUYING HOUSES HIGH HILDA IMOGEN PARRIS PORTER ANDREW T (JTWROS) LADD AARON TOPLOVICH ANGELA D SOUTH J W (SURV) LOVALLO MARC JAMES HAYNES ROBERT G MARK III PROPERTIES INC WILKINS DONNA G SEPULVEDA BENJAMIN F SR SHAW RAY AYERS BLAKE ASHTON (JTWR BOOKER YVONNE SNOSRAP LLC MARCH EIMY PROPERTY MORTGAGE SERVIC MCCULLOUGH HENRY HOLLY TOWNE HORIZONTAL P CASE DEBORAH E BOWERS PHYLLIS CHILDRESS ACADIA LLC JAB INVESTMENTS LLC MMC HOME SOLUTIONS LLC MTGLO INVESTORS L P LOCKRIDGE ENTERPRISES IN THOMPSON VICKI S BALL DARRLY GORDON HOUSING AUTH CITY OF GVI FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAG

BUYER

ADDRESS

RIVERBEND RENTALS LLC LUDEL AKEEM DEAN OWENS CHARLOTTE ELIZABET VENNER MARITZA E BARNES MIMI L RUSSELL FAITH A BLUDOT LLC BROOKS BERNETTA (JTWROS) MACDONALD JONATHAN B (JT TUCKER CHRISTINA A POSCHEL JOSEPH MICHAEL WHITE ALANNA GAILLARD JULIANNE RMAC TRUST SERIES 2016-C SCHWALBE JONATHAN LEE FUENTES JULIAN MARTINEZ GBUREK JAMES B (JTWROS) HYBRID PROPERTIES LLC TRI-L PROPERTIES LLC CARRILHO VIRGO (JTWROS) JOY PROPERTY INVESTMENTS DAVIS RACHEL NICOLE LOBO FERNANDO PORTER GREGORY A DUNN CUSTOM BUILDERS LLC SHERMAN SHANEKQUA J NGUYEN JENNY H ORIOLE PROPERTIES LLC CORNERSTONE PROPERTIES A JOY PROPERTY INVESTMENTS A-1 PROPERTIES LLC D R HORTON INC LORENTZEN LISA R WATCHER JOSEPH SFR3 LLC COUNTRY CREEK LLC EAGLE’S NEST MANAGEMENT KEYSTONE PROPERTY GROUP BARNETT NANCY HILL’S SIDE PROPERTIES L D R HORTON INC ATKINS JESSICA L BLUEWATER INVESTMENT TRU ACENTUS LLC CHEVALIER CHRISTINE J IACOVELLI DAVID P APEX PROPERTY GROUP LLC SMITH DAVID L (JTWROS) LUDLOW KENNETH (JTWROS) HEYWARD MITCHELL HOLDERS OF CWABS INC GONZALEZ-TINAJERO VICTOR BROWN PATRICK FONTALVO OSCAR NICOLAS ( FROGGER HOUSE LLC MARTIN ROBERT BRIAN BLASCH BERNARD RIVERA ELVIN PADGETT BRYAN C MURPHY JESSICA (JTWROS) BOCI HAZBI BECERRIL QUADALUPE

Ronda & Chris Holder Let Us Help Find Your Way Home

34 SIRRINE DR 901 VERYFINE DR 109 ASHMORE ST 312 S SANDY BROOK WAY 1345 CREEK VISTA DR 116 BUDDY AVE PO BOX 80463 301 FLANNERY CT 104 RIVER WAY DR 402 REEVES DR PO BOX 1398 405 HUNTERS TRL 120 SPRING CROSSING CIR 15480 LAGUNA CANYON RD STE 100 110 PINONWOOD CT 15 E BLUE RIDGE DR 1109 AZALEA HILL DR 168 DUFF DR PO BOX 504 381 BEECHWOOD DR 16 TRAXLER ST 419 E BUTLER RD UNIT 13 7 ARRINGTON AVE 3630 CALHOUN MEMORIAL HWY 125 WOODRUFF PLACE CIR 307 DAYTONA LN 3 DREXMOORE DR PO BOX 4068 PO BOX 818 16 TRAXLER ST PO BOX 25804 100 VERDAE BLVD STE 104 117 MOUNTAIN VIEW AVE 109 SHEFFIELD DR 2927 DEVINE ST PO BOX 1340 103 SHILOH LN 103 SEWANEE AVE 2530 E NORTH ST UNIT 13-C 600 PINE LOG FORD RD 100 VERDAE BLVD STE 401 812 REID SCHOOL RD UNIT 60 106 PARKDALE DR 550 S MAIN ST STE 300 912 MCELHANEY RD 24 FOXHALL RD 102 CROSBY CIR 5 BARK CT 242 SASSAFRAS DR 16 PINE CREEK CT 1600 S DOUGLASS RD STE 200-A 17 HODGENS DR 513 SPAULDING LAKE DR 2844 COBBLESTONE DR 106 S CALHOUN ST 118 OSMOND DR 121 BALDWIN CIR 420 W CURTIS ST 2 EDGE CT UNIT A 222 GEORGES HIDEAWAY 200 WILLIAMS ST 239 PINEY RD

President’s Circle #1 Team 2017 & 2018 Garlington Road Office

Selling or Buying? Now is the Perfect Time! Call Us Today! Providing Comprehensive Real Estate Services to Home Buyers and Sellers

#1 Team

Ronda Holder 864.430.0242 Chris Holder 864.430.1968 www.rondaandchrisholder.com M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

23


PERSONS OF INTEREST.

Ben Shahn, 1898-1969 Three Senators, 1940

Featuring new acquisitions that depict some of the South’s most intriguing subjects from the late 1700s to the early twentieth century, Persons of Interest continues on view through September 15. To learn more about 2019 Art for Greenville, visit gcma.org. 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

Journal AFG fr TOWN Ad.indd 2

admission free

3/5/19 11:42 AM


ARTS & CULTURE

ARTS CALENDAR MAR. 15-21 Peace Center

CELTIC WOMAN

Mar. 15 ~ 467-3000 The Warehouse Theatre

POWER OF SAIL

Mar. 15-31 ~ 235-6948 Peace Center

DANCE THEATRE OF GREENVILLE Mar. 16-17 ~ 467-3000 Carolina Music Museum

THE ADVENTURE OF A MEDIEVAL WARRIOR WOMAN Mar. 17 ~ 520-8807 Coffee Underground

CAROLINA POETRY SLAM TOUR Mar. 17 ~ 298-0494 Greenville Theatre

OLIVER

Through Mar. 17 ~ 233-6238 Centre Stage

ASHLAND CRAFT LIVE!

Mar. 19 ~ 233-6733 Greenville Chautauqua Society

CHAUTAUQUA TALK: MALCOLM X Mar. 19 ~ 244-1499 Peace Center

STEVE MILLER BAND

Mar. 20 ~ 467-3000 Peace Center

IMPRESSIONISM–RAVEL & RIESLING Mar. 21 ~ 467-3000

Greenville Center for Creative Arts

FLIGHT PATTERN

Through Mar. 27 ~ 735-3948 Main Street Real Estate Gallery

WORKS BY LIZ RUNDORFF SMITH

Through Mar. 31 ~ 250-2850

Michael McDunn MASTER WOODWORKER story by MELODY CUENCA | photos by WILL CROOKS

Centre Stage

INTO THE WOODS

Through Apr. 7 ~ 233-6733 Metropolitan Arts Council

RECENT WORKS BY BLAKE SMITH AND JO CAROL MITCHELL-ROGERS Through Apr. 12 ~ 467-3132

Greenville County Museum of Art

MIKE SOLOMON: SENTIENT

Through Apr. 7 ~ 271-7570

JASPER JOHNS

Through Jun. 9 ~ 271-7570

KEEPING OUR ARTBEAT STRONG www.greenvillearts.com

16 Augusta Street

864.467.3132


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

“ T O H AV E P E O P L E [ I N M Y CLASSES] FROM THEIR L AT E 2 0 s T O T H E I R 70 s , D E M O C R ATS , R E P U B L I C A N S , A N D T H E N E V E RY B O D Y ’ S H AV I N G A G O O D T I M E HELPING EACH OTHER OUT AND DOING THEIR P R O J E C TS . T H AT ’ S J U ST S O M E T H I N G I F I N D T H AT ’ S E X T R E M E L Y S A T I S F Y I N G .”

Michael McDunn Michael McDunn, owner of the Michael McDunn Studio in Greenville, crafts unique wood furniture for clients all over the eastern U.S. and even Europe. But before he established his showroom and connecting studio in 1981, McDunn had an interesting beginning in South Carolina. Pennsylvania native McDunn moved to Greenville in the early ‘70s in search of a higher-paying job. “Probably the first two weeks I lived in my car,” McDunn says. Ensuring that he would never be in that predicament again, McDunn bought a school bus to convert into a camper. After a construction accident, McDunn was out of work and lived in the bus for about four months. “That was kind of an interesting episode of life — it was kind of fun,” he says. During that time, McDunn and a friend would do relief carvings of birds and animals. He and his friend had both done woodcarving in Boy Scouts and bonded over the shared experience. Despite having asthma and a wood allergy, McDunn began woodworking 26

M A R C H 15 / / G R E E N V I L L E J O U R N A L . C O M

in a serious way and discovered his passion for the craft. He learned much about his craft during his five years as the resident woodworker at the Greenville County Museum of Art. “It gave me … a better-than-average foundation to get started on — both as to what good design was, and what it was not, and not to get caught in little trends and fads of what people are doing,” he says. His work is constantly evolving, but tables remain his favorite projects. “Right now, rustic, natural-edge furniture and stuff is the trend, and I’ve been oddly enough making that for almost 40 years,” McDunn says. “But it was much harder to sell years ago.” Today, with tastes varying from person to person, McDunn feels stretched with each project. “[My favorite process] is designing the pieces and coming up with a piece that’s going to fit in a particular environment, which can be challenging,” he says. McDunn, along with four others, established the Greenville Woodworkers

Guild in 1981, which now includes over 700 members. “I like sharing my information that I’ve acquired over the years from woodworking,” McDunn says. He’s taught woodworking classes at his studio since the late ‘90s and enjoys seeing classmates become friends. “To have people from their late 20s to their 70s, Democrats, Republicans, and then everybody’s having a good time helping each other out and doing their projects,” he says. “That’s just something I find that’s extremely satisfying.” While some may consider handmade furniture expensive, McDunn thinks of furniture as one of three big purchases in life. “One is your house, the other’s your car, the other’s your furniture,” he says. “Your furniture is something that, if you shop wisely, is going to be around for the rest of your life, and you’ll probably give it to somebody down the road.” McDunn’s work can be seen at his showroom on 741 Rutherford Road in Greenville.


LIFE CAN BE HARD WITHOUT THE CARD The Warehouse Theatre

The MAC ArtCard

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.

*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 E R

POWER OF SAIL

presents battle for power, opens controversial dialogue n story by MELODY CUENCA | photos by WILL CROOKS

‘Power of Sail’

Inside Scoop

MARCH 15­ - 31

The Warehouse Theatre, 37 Augusta St. $ 3 5 - $ 4 0 | W W W. W A R E H O U S E T H E AT R E . C O M Harvard professor Charles Nichols is afraid that the younger generation of college professors is passing him by, so he takes a calculated risk in inviting an incredibly controversial White Nationalist speaker to campus.

“It’s funny. It’s shocking. It’s chilling. It’s thrilling. It’ll be a roller coaster,” leading actor Rob Kahn says of the new thriller “Power of Sail.” Written by Paul Grellong, co-executive producer of CBS’ “Hawaii Five-O,” “Power of Sail” is making its world premiere at The Warehouse Theatre in Greenville. Kahn plays the role of Harvard professor Charles Nichols, who stirs controversy upon inviting a young white nationalist to speak at an annual lecture series. After the list of speakers leaks to the student body and the public, chaos ensues. “The students go into full protest,” Kahn says. His dean, former and current students, and others try changing Nichols’ mind. 28

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A self-proclaimed free-speech absolutist, Nichols strongly believes all people should have the right to speak their mind, including hate speech. “There are a lot of surprising discoveries and realizations that make you suddenly look at a character in a completely different way once you discover what they have done, or what they have fallen into,” Kahn says. The play draws lines and aims to force people to evaluate their own stances on issues. “I love the fact that I don’t think you can see this play and not be affected,” he says. “Power of sail” is a nautical term re-

“IT ALSO DEALS WITH A LOT OF ISSUES IN OUR WORLD TODAY: SEXISM, ANTI-SEMITIC BEHAVIOR, RACISM, AND CLASS. IT EXPOSES ALL OF THAT.”

JACKSON GAY director

ferring to motorboats yielding to sailboats that are dependent on the wind. “The more powerful boat must give way to the less powerful,” Kahn says. The name, in many ways, serves as a metaphor for the opposing groups represented in the play, such as a rich white male establishment versus a minority establishment, Kahn explains. “This big part of the play has to do with white nationalists and the power they are trying to push forward,” Kahn says. Director Jackson Gay, who was asked by Grellong to direct, says “Power of Sail” is about the downfall of a man through his own actions due to hubris and ambition.

“It also deals with a lot of issues in our world today: sexism, anti-Semitic behavior, racism, and class,” Gay says. “It exposes all of that.” Despite covering heavy issues, “Power of Sail” offers an edge-of-your-seat experience. “It’s the perfect combination of meaningful and important topics of everyone’s day-to-day life and pure entertainment,” she says. The structure of the play takes the audience on a journey moving forward to a certain point and then back. “It’s like taking a day trip on a sailboat,” Gay says. “You spend the whole time getting out there, it’s unfamiliar and all that, but then on your way back you have a completely different perspective.”


SPEND AN EVENING WITH

GARTH FAGAN The SC Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities’ Presidential Guest Artist Series presents Tony-winning choreographer Garth Fagan. Well known for his choreography of Disney’s musical The Lion King, Fagan has been called “a true original,” “a genuine leader,” and “one of the great reformers of modern dance.” Fagan is the founder and artistic director of the award-winning and internationally acclaimed Garth Fagan Dance, now celebrating its 48th season.

Tony Award-winning choreographer of Disney’s musical

The Lion King

An Evening with

GARTH FAGAN

7:30 p.m. | April 4, 2019 Governor’s School campus

Free to attend

www.scgsah.org/pgas This event is sponsored by

Photo: Rosalie O’Connor

The Governor’s School’s Presidential Guest Artist Series presents internationally renowned artists each year to educate and inspire students and the Greenville community through master classes, group discussions, free public performances, and more. Previous guest artists include former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove; Grammy Award-winning, multi-media artist Laurie Anderson; and LINES Ballet founder and visionary choreographer Alonzo King.

15 University Street, Greenville, SC 29601

Garth Fagan b-w ad - full page.indd 1

3/8/19 2:08 PM


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

#LOVE YOUR COMEDY OF ERRORS SUMMER JOB COMEDY

Comedian Hunter Gardner offers dating advice in new show n story by MELODY CUENCA | photo PROVIDED

‘Dating Symposium Live’

MARCH 16, 9 P.M.

Alchemy Comedy at Coffee Underground, 1 E. Coffee St. $10 | W W W . B I T. LY / 2 T I A P S F Hunter Gardner’s Dating Symposium Live! is an interactive comedy show performed by Hunter Gardner, a dating expert who has only had one girlfriend his entire life (and that one doesn’t even really count).

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APPLY NOW AT GREENVILLEREC.COM Before someone else gets your job.

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When it comes to relationships, we’re all in this together. “Hunter Gardner’s Dating Symposium Live” is here to offer an interactive comedic experience for all those who have experienced the “comedy of errors” called love. Gardner’s second solo show comes to Greenville’s Alchemy Comedy Theater on March 16. “Drinking With Jesus,” his first show, came to Greenville in 2016. Gardner says he wants audience members, whether married, dating, or single, to feel better about themselves and others after watching his latest show. “I have pretty much been a single person my entire life but for some reason HUNTER GARDNER love to give dating comedian advice,” Gardner says. “So, what happens when this outside observer of love declares himself a dating expert and relays those observations? Turns out, it is pretty funny stuff.” If you’re imagining sitting and listening to jokes all night, think again. Gardner’s show involves the audience. “I see it more as a mashup of jokes, stories, and audience interaction — you probably won’t know what to expect next,” he says. A live script-reading, a flirting re-enactment, and reading icebreaker ideas off index cards are some of the ways Gard-

ner plans to keep the audience engaged and entertained. A fan of comedy since his childhood days listening to Kermit the Frog’s “It’s Not Easy Being Green,” Gardner had his first open-mic experience in his early 20s in Charleston. Later, Gardner moved to New York after touring “Drinking With Jesus,” and there he began writing what would become his second solo show. “After a few months, I had all these new character pieces, audience bits, and standup jokes,” he says. “That became the material of the show, but what inspired me to dive in on another solo show is the opportunity to create a shared connection with audience members.” Hearing feedback from audiences of his first show, Gardner learned that the show made them feel understood. “That’s what I’m chasing: to let people know that they are not alone and everything is going to be OK,” he says. Gardner creates a live experience that can’t be replicated on a screen. “What I aim to do on stage is to mix comedy with heart, which also makes it different from what you might see in a traditional comedy club,” he says.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

BOOKS

THE GOOD DETECTIVE

TRIPLE THE LAUGHS

Judge, jury, executioner? Lead character in “The Good Detective” doesn’t know n story by CINDY LANDRUM | photo PROVIDED

“The Good Detective” Book Talk MARCH 19, 6:30 P.M.

Fiction Addiction $10 | W W W . F I C T I O N - A D D I C T I O N . C O M Come meet author John McMahon for his “The Good Detective” book launch event at Fiction Addiction.

Author John McMahon was born in the Bronx, lived in the Catskills and Yuma, Arizona, and now calls Southern California home. So naturally, he set his debut mystery, “The Good Detective,” in the South. “I wanted to write a contemporary detective story, but with southern gothic elements such as a looming sense of place, and a contrast between urban and rural, rich and poor,” said McMahon, an advertising agency creative director who has written a Super Bowl spot for Alfa Romeo. “I knew it had to be set in the South.” McMahon, who said he spent weekends in Atlanta for business and explored the area during his free time, will be at Fiction Addiction in Greenville for a book launch event on March 19 at 6:30 p.m. “The Good Detective” tells the story of P.T. Marsh, a rising star on the Mason Falls, Georgia police force until his wife and young son died in an accident. Now he’s a cop on the edge, making sloppy mistakes when he should know better, such as when he agrees to help a woman out by confronting her abusive boyfriend. When he’s called to the scene of his latest murder case the next morning, he’s stunned to arrive at the house of the very man he beat up the night before. Marsh knows he was one of the last people to see this man alive, but he can’t reveal his involvement. “He’s driven by justice,” McMahon said, “but feels he’s been a part of the process

where real justice is not often found because compromises are made along the way. Now, he has nothing to use. He was judge and jury, and we don’t know if he was the executioner.” But the trouble is only beginning. Marsh and his partner, Remy Morgan, have another murder to investigate — the body of a black teenager was found in a burned-out field with a portion of a blackened rope around his neck — and the man he beat up is the prime suspect. Marsh discovers a conspiracy that goes all the way back to the time of the Civil War. “The Good Detective” tells the story of P.T. Marsh, a rising star on the Mason Falls, Georgia police force until his wife and young son died in an accident. Now he’s a cop on the edge, making sloppy mistakes when he should know better.

“America is so young that its history is so recent,” said McMahon, who has been compared to Greg Iles McMahon said worked on “The Good Detective” for two years. He’s working on the second book of what he sees as a series of three to four books minimum.

Jeanne Robertson Friday, May 17

FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!

GROUPS

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ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

U P STAT E WITH VINCENT HARRIS A few years back, Greenville’s Ash FosterLee was making home recordings of electronic music in his living room. It took him a while to work up the courage to take what he was doing public, but he eventually formed a project called The Parlor Pinks with singer, producer, and visual artist Rachel Clark. The average Parlor Pinks song sounds like it’s echoing down from a mountaintop, raining electronically treated vocals, icy waves of synths, and thunderous, complex beats. It’s compelling music, but as a relative novice to the Upstate scene, Foster-Lee initially had trouble getting attention from concert bookers. He slowly built up a network of friends, getting the occasional show booked, but eventually he and Clark decided to do it themselves.

U P S TAT E B E AT

ANATOMY OF A CONCERT SERIES

How TPP Events is bringing genre-bending shows to the Upstate Clark and Foster-Lee formed their own event-booking agency, TPP Events. The initial plan was simply to find places for Parlor Pinks’ shows, but it quickly expanded into something more. “We were trying to produce shows on the fly, and we decided to create our own lane,” Foster-Lee says. “We figured since we were going to have to do all the work anyway, we should bring some more people in.” Foster-Lee is underselling this a bit. He and Clark have created an ambitious series of genre-blending shows throughout the Upstate, but most notably at The Eighth State Brewing Co. on Augusta Street in Greenville. Over the next few months, TPP’s weekly Friday- and Saturday-night concert series will feature a healthy mix of heavy guitar-rock bands, acoustic folk, Latin pop, electronic pop, and more, and all of the shows are free. The partnership with Eighth State began after The Parlor Pinks played a Halloween show at the brewery. “I saw where they were coming from and that they had a general vision,” Foster-Lee says. “They understand that it’s a business, but they genuinely care about the community

I WANT TO GET PEOPLE FROM THE BREWERY SCENE TO OPEN UP TO MORE GENRES OF MUSIC, AND I WANT PEOPLE TO SEE THE FREE-SHOW MODEL AS A VIABLE MODEL.

ASH FOSTER-LEE musician

and about putting music and art out there.” Putting on concerts at a brewery was a challenge at first, but Foster-Lee says TPP Events has managed to hone its craft since the series began late last year. “They gave me a budget to work with, and the more we build business and bring more people in, the more we can provide the brewery with the business it needs to pay out so I can go out and promise artists what they

Sudoku puzzle: Page 41

Crossword puzzle: Page 41

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THE PARLOR PINKS. PHOTO BY AJ SAVEREIGN

need to survive and create a fun, inclusive, safe environment,” Foster-Lee says. As for how TPP Events picks the bands, Foster-Lee again sells himself a bit short. At first, he says he creates the schedule simply by researching and contacting bands that he likes, but there’s more to it than that. “We can approach this with a format that takes advantage of the fact that people mill in and out,” he says. “You can catch 20 minutes of a band you weren’t expecting, then you see who you actually came to see. I want to get people from the brewery scene to open up to more genres of music, and I want people to see the free-show model as a viable model.” But because Foster-Lee also wants to help the entire Upstate music scene grow, he keeps an eye on what other venues are doing so his shows don’t conflict with theirs. “If the Radio Room’s got something folky going on, I might do something more electronic,” he says. “We’re trying to direct traffic until the scene grows, and not step on each other’s toes. It should be about getting as many people as possible to see live music.”


TH A NK YOU TO ALL OF OUR INCREDIBLE CHEFS, JUDGES, SPONSORS, SUPPORTERS, AND GUESTS OF THE 4th ANNUAL CHOP! CANCER CULINARY COMPETITION. IT WAS A SPECIAL EVENING FOR ALL!

Photo courtesy of Stacey Krall

Congratulations to this year’s CHOP! Champions! Top Individual Fundraiser: Tammy Barber Top Culinary Team: Blue Flame For Cancer For other winning categories, please visit ChopCancerUpstate.com

Reception Sponsor

Blue Flame For Cancer Melissa Morrell Madina Cauthen Charles Brewer Tammy Barber Dr. Chip Wiper Dorothy Shain

Crush Cancer Heather Welch Kristen Welch Nick Carlson Mary Alice Ferguson Dr. Amanda “Mandy” Hathaway Neil Cochran

A Salt On Cancer Dr. Joanna “Asia” Grabska Jim Killion Robert Tiffin Chuck Floyd Sarah Beattie Curt Hall

Clement’s Kindness Ambassador: Jack Williams

Clement’s Kindness Ambassador: Myleigh McDowell

Clement’s Kindness Ambassador: Clara Lawrence

Emcees: Jane Robelot and Mary Freeman Crowd-Pleasers: Lynda Leventis-Wells, Jamarcus Gaston, and Jackie S. Brooker Judges: Chef Francis Turck, Bob Munnich, Beth Bradley and Bill Ellis Additional Clement’s Kindess Ambassador: Colt Becker CSPA Board President: Tom Bates

Foundation Sponsors

Celebrity Chef Sponsors Gibbs Cancer Center & Research Insitute Charleston Associates, Inc. Carolina Moves Greater Greenville Association of Realtors

Benefits in a Card YellaSoft Jones Home Improvements Greenville Journal

Professional Chef Mentors: Chef Victor Singleton, Seasons Cafe and Catering; Chef Micheal Granata, Culinary Institute of the Carolinas, Greenville Tech, Chef Justin Mazell, Culinary Institute of the Carolinas, Greenville Tech

Thank you CHOP! 2019 Committee members: Fritzi Barbour | Wilson Eidson | Ashley Bates | Rhett Brown | Susan Christian | Phil Canale | Patti Crawford Cancer Survivors Park Alliance | Jenn Chew – K2 Productions | and thank you to all our wonderful volunteers! Visit cancersurvivorspark.org to learn more about the Cancer Survivors Park Alliance and CHOP! Cancer.


ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

IT’S A GREAT DAY TO

BE A CAVALIER MUSIC

ON THE ROAD AGAIN

Chicago marks more than 50 years on the road n story by SHERRY JACKSON | photo PROVIDED

Find out why at our

OPEN HOUSE March 21 at 9:30 am & 6:00 pm Register at www.cces.org or 864.331.4223 CHRIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL SCHOOL CCES is a college preparatory school serving students in K5-12th grade in Greenville, SC. Christ Church Episcopal School admits students of any race, color, and national or ethnic origin.

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When iconic rock band Chicago brings its 2019 “An Evening With Chicago” tour to Greenville later this month, it’ll mark 52 years of nonstop touring for one of the most successful rock groups in history. Best known for its classic horns and vocalists, the band will be playing some of its greatest hits in a 2.5-hour show at the 2,000-plusseat concert hall at the Peace Center. Chicago is a powerhouse of a band, selling more than 100 million records in its 52 years with thousands of concerts, 36 albums (25 of them platinum), and a documentary film. Surprisingly, the band has never missed a concert date in those 52 years. “We have a reputation for showing up,” says Lee Loughnane, one of the band’s founding members. Loughnane says the band’s longevity is due to the “commitment of its members and that they just like playing music. It’s a cooperative effort,” he says. “We try to make each night an event and make every show the best it can be so that way people remember it. We would probably play if the places were empty, but thank God the places are still filling up.” The band was formed in 1967, originally going by the name Chicago Transit Authority. In 1970, the band’s members shortened

their name to Chicago. Chicago’s success is partly due to the band’s tenacity. “We keep our nose to the grindstone,” says Loughnane. “No matter what you’ve done, it’s what are you doing next.” Loughnane refers to himself as a “utility guy” with the band. While his main job is to play trumpet, he says he has been fortunate to do “pretty much everything I want to do and much more than I ever thought I’d be able to or allowed to do.” As Loughnane looks back, he says he’s most proud of “the legacy we have put together and continue to play for people.” “I love being able to do what we do and what I do with it,” he says. “I tell people all the time I could think of a lot worse thing to do with my life than what I’m doing.” What’s next for the band? “Right now, we’re powering through the touring season,” Loughnane says. “We hope our second album will be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame [Chicago’s first album, “Chicago Transit Authority,” was inducted in 2014]. There really hasn’t been time for anything else. We’re chomping at the bit to play and we’re looking forward to having some fun -so be ready.”

‘An Evening with Chicago’

MARCH 27

Peace Concert Hall $ 6 5 - $ 9 5 | W W W. P E A C E C E N T E R . O R G Best known for its classic horns and vocalists, the band will be playing some of its greatest hits in a 2.5 hour show at the 2,000+ seat Concert Hall at the Peace Center.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

THE GUILD OF THE GREENVILLE SYMPHONY THANKS OUR SPONSORS, GUILD MEMBERS AND DONORS FOR THEIR PARTICIPATION

MUSIC

ALBUM RELEASE

Seth Walker performing in Greenville n story by CINDY LANDRUM | photo PROVIDED

EVENT BENEFACTOR ZEN

Seth Walker Album Release

GOLD LEVEL SPONSOR Wyche Law Firm

MARCH 16, NOON

Horizon Records, 2-A W. Stone Ave., Greenville F R E E | 8 6 4 - 2 3 5 -79 2 2 A showcase of Seth Walker featuring “Are You Open?” — Walker’s just-out album that was once again made in collaboration with Jano Rix.

When we last heard from singer/songwriter Seth Walker, it was on 2016’s “Gotta Get Back,” an album that rose to No. 6 on Billboard’s blues charts and found the North Carolina-born songsmith delving into his own family ties along with the jazz and blues of New Orleans. The “Gotta Get Back” album was Walker’s ninth, and some critics said it was also his best. But as successful as the album was, both he and producer/multi-instrumentalist Jano Rix (best known for his work with The Wood Brothers) felt that it was a little too -- in Walker’s words -- “buttoned up.” “‘Gotta Get Back’ was a pretty ‘arranged’ record,” he says, adding that the album left him longing to do something different and less formal the next time. Which brings us to “Are You Open?” -- Walker’s just-out album that was once again made in collaboration with Rix. The production and instrumentation are far sparer this time, and every track, even the solo acoustic ballads, has an infectious, propulsive groove that some of the songs on “Gotta Get Back” didn’t have. That’s largely because Walker changed up his songwriting approach for his 10th album and based the tracks on grooves instead of chord patterns or lyrics. “I did some things for this record that I’d never done before,” he says. “I just

holed up and created all kinds of rhythms and layered things. In fact, ‘Inside’ [the album’s second track] came from a sound check that I recorded on my phone, just to save for later thinking it might be good for a song.” Walker says his new rhythm-based songwriting method was part organic and part intentional. “I do vividly remember asking myself questions like, ‘What are you going to do this time? Can you think outside of your norm and challenge yourself and your listeners?’” he says. “It was a mindset, and the songs stemmed from that.” As for the lyrics, Walker, who will play an in-store album-release show with his band at Horizon Records in Greenville on Saturday, says that as he wrote them, a concept emerged. Most of the words on “Are You Open?” take their cue from the title, exploring themes of artistic and personal receptiveness and vulnerability. “I didn’t plan it at all,” he says. “I just wrote the tunes and they came out that way and I was like, ‘Man, I guess I’m doing some introspection these days.’ The album deals with the idea of, ‘Are you open to what’s inside of you?’ I don’t know exactly how to sum it up, but I guess it’s finding and speaking your truth.”

SILVER LEVEL SPONSORS Fairway Ford The Capital Corporation BRONZE LEVEL SPONSORS Family Legacy Michelin North America Roz & Stan Smith Steve Borklund-State Farm RINGMASTER SPONSORS Betsy & Kenneth Cates Julianne Fish Sue & Daryl Fisher Peggy Hill & Margaret Wasson Libby & Bill Kehl Beth Lee Sharon Kelley & Bruce Braun Pat & Dick McDonald Ellie & John Mioduski Phyllis & Robert Schrage Nancy Stanton Luba & Edvard Tchivzhel Pam & Terry Weaver MEDIA SPONSOR Greenville Journal

M A R C H 15 / / 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 |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

FEAST

TUK TUK THAI & VIETNAMESE KITCHEN New restaurant opens in Taylors with authentic menu n story by ARIEL TURNER | photos by WILL CROOKS

The Asian fusion fast casual restaurant concept has been done, and overdone, yet will continue to exist in a variety of combinations because the typical American palate isn’t offended by bulgogi (Korean) and pad Thai gracing the same menu, or even the same dish. The many amalgamations, merging various Asian cuisines, appeal

to our salty and sweet-loving sensibilities – authentic or not. At the newly opened Tuk Tuk Thai and Vietnamese Kitchen in Taylors, however, the term “fusion” applies only to the co-owners’ business and personal plans, and less to the menu itself. Bill Lam, the son of Vietnamese restaurant owners in Ithaca, New

CRISPY SQUID

battered in lotus flour and fried for $8. (This dish alone is worth the drive from anywhere in the region.)

PHO

House Special, beef broth, rare eye round steak, brisket, tendon, meatballs, and tripe, for $11.

STIR FRIED NOODLES THAI CURRY

Green Curry, red and green bell peppers, bamboo shoots, eggplant, green peas, and basil, with choice of protein for $12-14.

VERMICELLI

See our ‘Dish to Die For’ on page 37

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Pad Kee Mow (Drunken Noodles), flat rice noodles stir-fried with a choice of meat, basil, red & green bell peppers, tomatoes, garlic and fresh chili, for $12-14.


THINGS TO SEE & DO

York, and Nattha “Apple” Waiyawut, the granddaughter of one of the first Thai restaurant owners in Greenville, have joined their culinary backgrounds and love of their families’ authentic recipes to open a restaurant that represents both cuisines as they were intended.

DISH TO DIE FOR VERMICELLI $12-$14

Grilled Honey Lemongrass Vermicelli, choice of grilled chicken, pork or beef marinated with honey and lemongrass for $11.

Lam is quick to say their menu is not, in fact, fusion, but rather both gastronomies are featured proudly side-byside, flavors distinct and intact. To reinforce Lam’s chops (pun intended), two of his families’ recipes from their New York restaurant, Saigon Kitchen, were chosen for inclusion in “The World’s Best Asian Noodle Recipes: 125 Great Recipes from Top

TUK TUK THAI & VIETNAMESE KITCHEN

Chefs” with a foreword by Iron Chef Thailand chef Ian Kittichai. Both of them – chicken vermicelli and Saigon hot and sour soup – are family recipes and on the menu at the new restaurant. After 15 years’ worth of experience, six of those in the kitchen at Saigon Kitchen, Lam decided to move south for a change of pace and landed in the kitchen at Basil Thai, downtown Greenville. There, he met Waiyawut, who immigrated to the United States from Thailand about two years ago with a brand new engineering degree. Without a year of work experience on the resume, she wasn’t eligible for any open positions, so she took her first kitchen job working at Lemongrass Thai Restaurant and eventually Basil Thai. “It opened another world I didn’t have before,” she says. Once the two met, they began dating, and Waiyawut expressed her desire to open a restaurant, as her grandmother had done with King & I Thai in Greenville years ago. Having plenty of experience in both restaurant operations and the kitchen, Lam was game. “I kinda had it in my mind but didn’t think it would come to fruition,” Lam says of his plan to open his own restaurant before meeting his partner. Lam says in the first two weeks open, they were pleasantly surprised by the number of repeat customers and how many of them were Vietnamese. That’s the vote of confidence they were looking for.

5010 Old Spartanburg Road Closed Tuesday Monday, Wednesday Thursday: 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; 4:30-9 p.m. Friday: 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; 4:30-9:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday: 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m. TUKTUKTHAIANDVIETNAMESE.COM

| ARTS & CULTURE

small P L AT E S n by ARIEL TURNER

NEW TO THE SCENE

East meets West cocktails

Bacon Brothers Public House bartenders have switched up the cocktail menu with a surprising-for-the-location twist: Asian-inspired beverages. Fans of the former Dive ‘n’ Boar Gastropub where LTO Burger Bar is now may remember the “Shut Up & Drink Your Peas” from mixologist Chase Orsini-Liberatore in 2016. Chase and many of his memorable cocktails have found their way to Bacon Bros., and this is one of the newest additions. Creating the perfect shade of green, the ingredients are Hat Trick Botanical Gin, St. Germain, sugar snap peas, wasabi cordial, lemon. Don’t let the idea of drinking peas scare you – one taste and you’ll agree we should have been doing it all along. Also new to the menu via bartender Matt Flowers are Antiku (Kaiyō Japanese Whisky, Macallan 12, Giffard Lichi-Li, Salers Aperitif, lychee gummy) and the Darjeeling Limited (Plantation XO 20th Anniversary Rum, Rammazzotti, garam masala cordial, pineapple, lime). The menu even includes an Indian-inspired mocktail from Chase called Rama Sita (curried mango shrub, spicy ginger beer, candied mango).

T R I F E C TA

Bourbon, beef, and bacon Now that’s a trifecta worth noting. Rick Erwin’s West End Grille is hosting Woodford in the Wild, a five-course dinner with bourbon pairings on March 26, 6:30 p.m. Cost is $85++ per person. On the menu you’ll find Linz tenderloin, crispy pork belly, a burger with pimento cheese a side-by-side wet and dry-aged Linz Heritage Angus, and a Woodford soaked cherry bread pudding. Woodford pairings by course will be Woodford Reserve Select, Woodford Reserve Double Oaked, Woodford Reserve Rye & Thomas Creek Trifecta, Woodford Reserve Straight Malt, and Woodford Oat Grain. To reserve your spot, call 864-479-8983. The restaurant is located at 648 S. Main St. and offers valet parking.

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ARTS & CULTURE |

THINGS TO SEE & DO

COMING UP

SEE MORE EVENTS AT O U R W E B S I T E GREENVILLEJOURNAL.COM

THE L ATEST CAN’T-MISS EVENTS

n CREW UPSTATE AWARDS

n ‘CHAMPIONS OF HOPE’ BREAKFAST

n THE PIANO GUYS

n TESLA STRING QUARTET

www.crewupstate.org

www.cancersocietygc.org/coh

www.peacecenter.org

www.cmscarolina.com

110 E. Court St. #600 March 21 | 5:30 - 7:30 pm | $30-40 CREW Upstate is hosting a special event to honor the CREW Upstate Award recipients who’ve succeeded in the commercial real estate industry.

Feat. Dabo Swinney at Hyatt Regency April 2 | 7-9am | $125

The “Champions of Hope” breakfast will raise funds to support the work of the Cancer Society of Greenville County and Cancer Association of Pickens County. The event’s goal is to help create new hope and improve the quality of life for local cancer patients. Guests will hear from Clemson coaching legend Dabo Swinney.

Peace Concert Hall March 15 | 8pm | $70-$90 The Piano Guys became an internet sensation by way of their immensely successful series of strikingly original self-made music videos. The group is made up of one piano player, Jon Schmidt, and one other instrumentalist, Steven Sharp Nelson.

Bon Secours Wellness Arena March 16 | 7:30-9pm | Free The Tesla Quartet was formed at The Juilliard School in 2008 and quickly established itself as one of the most promising young ensembles in New York. This spring concert with Tesla String Quartet will introduce the Summer Chamber Music Festival.

Choose Your Adventure! Adventure TECH 2019 at Greenville Tech

Summer day camps in STEM, culinary & more for 11-14 year olds Learn. Discover. Experiment. Rising 6th through 8th graders are invited to explore career pathways at Greenville Technical College’s Adventure Tech day camps June 3 – August 1. Fun, handson learning experiences are taught by leaders in their fields at three GTC campuses across Greenville County. Register today.

2019 camp offerings include: • 3D printing & design • CNC • Coding, gaming & app design • Culinary Academy

• Drones • Garden design & sustainability • Personal radio • Virtual & robotic welding

Visit www.gvltec.edu/summer-camps/ for more information.

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

FRIDAY | MARCH 15 Ides of March Happy Hour ■■ 5:00 - 7:30 p.m. ■■ M. Judson Booksellers ■■ Free Friends, book lovers, countrymen: lend me your ears! The only person who was supposed to beware the Ides of March was Julius Caesar (RIP, King Jules). The rest of us can make of them what we will, and this year we decree that will make of them a Happy Hour, replete with special M.Judson discounts and free samples of Italian wine. Join us to celebrate the Ides of March together in our store on Friday, March 15 (of course!) from 5-7:30 pm. No toga required. ‘Sesame Street Live: Let’s Party’ ■■ 6:00 - 8:30 p.m. ■■ Bon Secours Wellness Arena ■■ $20 – $55

Guests can join the fun with an interactive show that unfolds on one of the world’s most famous streets at the funniest, furriest party in the neighborhood. Audiences will learn new songs and sing along to familiar favorites with Oscar and Cookie Monster; build a snowman with Elmo; flap their wings with Big Bird; marvel at Abby’s magic; be amazed when Super Grover flies, and move to the rhythm with Rosito.

Mutts Gone Nuts ■■ 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. ■■ Broad River Electric Auditorium ■■ $10 - $15 Canines and comedy collide in a smash hit performance that’s leaving audiences everywhere howling for more. From shelters to showbiz, these amazing mutts unleash havoc and hilarity in a breathtaking, actionpacked, comedy dog spectacular, featuring some of the world’s most talented four-legged performers. Celtic Woman ■■ 8:00 p.m. ■■ Peace Concert Hall ■■ $55 - $85 Both an accomplished recording ensemble and a world-class performing collective, Celtic Woman celebrates Ireland’s rich musical and cultural heritage, while continuing a remarkable legacy of introducing some of Ireland’s most talented singers and musicians onto the world stage. ‘Power of Sail’ ■■ 8:00 p.m. ■■ The Warehouse Theatre ■■ 35 - $40 From the co-executive producer of “Hawaii Five-O,” Paul Grellong, comes an exciting world premiere thriller called “Power of Sail.” Harvard professor Charles Nichols is afraid that the younger generation of college professors is passing him by,

STRINGS GALORE

so he takes a calculated risk in inviting an incredibly controversial White Nationalist speaker to campus. The student body immediately protests, but Charles will not be outdone as he takes the interview process into his own hands, with disastrous results. Furman Symphonic Winds concert ■■ 8:00 - 9:30 p.m. ■■ Furman University, McAlister Auditorium ■■ $5 Furman Symphonic Winds will perform “New York, New York.” The concert is held in conjunction with the South Carolina Band Directors Association All State Band Clinic, which takes place on the Furman campus March 15-17. Under the direction of Furman director of bands Les Hicken, the program includes works by John Mackey, David Maslanka, a Consortium World Premiere by Aaron Perrine, and music by Leonard Bernstein and John Philip Sousa.

SATURDAY | MARCH 9 M. Judson Booksellers ‘Story Time’ ■■ 10:30 – 11:00 a.m. ■■ M. Judson Booksellers ■■ Free 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. Upstate National College Fair ■■ 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. ■■ Furman University, Timmons Arena ■■ Free NACAC’s National College Fairs allow students to interact with admission representatives from a wide range of

| ARTS & CULTURE

postsecondary institutions to discuss course offerings, admission and financial aid requirements, college life in general, and other information pertinent to the college selection process.

SUNDAY | MARCH 17 ‘Return to the Green Irish Cultural Festival’ ■■ 2:00 – 7:00 p.m. ■■ Fluor Field at the West End ■■ Free The 24th annual “Return to the Green Irish Cultural Festival” takes place on St. Patrick’s Day. The Upstate’s longest running Irish festival, this is a great afternoon of entertainment featuring the City of Greenville Pipes and Drums, live music from Georgiabased Keltic Kudzu, Irish step dance, free children’s activities, and a $500 cash prize for one lucky attendee. There will also be Irish themed vendors on site. Sundays at 2: Family Art Adventure ■■ 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. ■■ Greenville County Museum of Art ■■ Free In celebration of St. Patrick’s Day, this fun painting activity will explore the concept of color, focusing on color mixing and monochromatic painting. All Sundays at 2 are free and sponsored by Duke Energy.

AN ORCHESTRA OF VOICES

Friday, April 12, 2019 - 8PM • First Baptist Church, Greenville

From Rossini’s bombastic Third Sonata to one of the most familiar works in the classical repertoire, Barber’s Adagio for Strings, this spectacular concert is one you won’t want to miss!

March 22 & 23 at 8:00 pm and March 24 at 3:00 pm Gunter Theatre / Edvard Tchivzhel, Conductor / Kevin Lyons, Trumpet

Funded in part by

For tickets visit www.greenvillesymphony.org or call 864.467.3000 Journal Print 1/4 pg Strings Galore.indd 1

The Chorale will spread their wings in a performance of well-known orchestral works, “Largo”, “Nimrod” and “Adagio for Strings” and a little choral humor by various composers. The Rushing Brook Choir will join the Chorale as we celebrate the next generation of choral musicians.

For tickets call 864-467-3000

3/11/19 4:09 PM

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THINGS TO SEE & DO

Silence: The Adventure of a Medieval Warrior Woman ■■ 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. ■■ Carolina Music Museum ■■ $5 - $15 One of America’s great storytellers, Dolores Hydock, recounts the wickedly funny, plot-twisting tale of greed, lust, deceit, and revenge based on story written in the 13th century but adapted for 21st century audiences. It’s the story of a girl raised as a boy to protect her inheritance--women weren’t allowed to inherit property in the 13th century, so what weapon should she choose to face the world, the jeweled sword or a sewing needle? A great story told by great storyteller.

MONDAY | MARCH 18 The Family Effect at Willy Taco ■■ 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. ■■ Willy Taco ■■ $12 Guests may join The Family Effect for tacos and treats benefiting families in treatment for substance use. The price includes an all-you-can-eat buffet and non-alcoholic drinks.

TUESDAY | MARCH 19 Jerry Blassingame’s ‘Reclaimed: A Story of Second Chances’ ■■ 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. ■■ Furman Univ. Bookstore, Trone Student Center ■■ Free Jerry Blassingame, author, company founder, and

criminal justice reform advocate, will speak about his book “Reclaimed: A Story of Second Chances.” The author will be available to sign books following his presentation. Blassingame was a self-described child of poverty who witnessed the fall of friends and family before getting ensnared in a life of crime. Now he is executive director of a community development corporation. John McMahon Book Launch ■■ 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. ■■ Fiction Addiction ■■ $10 Author John McMahon’s Southern-set mystery, “The Good Detective,” introduces Detective P.T. Marsh in a swift and bruising debut where Elmore Leonard’s staccato prose meets Greg Iles’ Southern settings. McMahon will be giving a talk and then will be available to sign books afterwards. The $10 ticket will admit one, and will be redeemable for $10 off a purchase the day of the event. Tickets can be purchased online, in store, or by calling Fiction Addiction at 864-675-0540. ‘Malcolm X’ Chautauqua talk ■■ 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. ■■ Hughes Main Library ■■ Free Join an audience that loves talking back to history to discuss American Revolutionary Malcolm X led by Cynthia King, Furman University Communications Department Chair.

WEDNESDAY | MARCH 20 CDS Community Tours ■■ 9:00 – 10:00 a.m. ■■ Center for Developmental Services ■■ Free The Center for Developmental Services invites the public to come see firsthand all of the wonderful work for over 8,000 children and their families each year. The tour lasts for one hour. A light breakfast will be served, and there is no charge to attend. A reservation is required by contacting Joy Blue at (864) 331-1314 or Joy. Blue@CDServices.org. ‘Environmentally Responsible Beer 3.0’ ■■ 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. ■■ Growler Hous of West Greenville ■■ Free Sierra Club Upstate’s “Environmentally Responsible Beer 3.0” will center around the Upstate’s craft beer scene. The annual event is an opportunity for local Sierrans to meet and mingle in a lively atmosphere. As in years past, there will be complimentary snacks and giveaway door prizes. Guest speaker Michael Corley, SCELP’s attorney in Greenville, will give an update on the Southernside Coal Tar Environmental Justice issue, a topic he is working on closely.

THURSDAY | MARCH 21 Brunch & Learn: blog posts ■■ 8:30 – 9:30 a.m. ■■ Engenius, 24 Vardry St. ■■ $5 This month’s Brunch & Learn where will cover

all the main ingredients for not just writing a great blog post, but actionable to-do items to increase chances of ranking well on search engines like Google. From picking out keywords to writing headlines, the event will give an outline to start writing amazing content. Rose Ball Celebrity Guest Designer Luncheon

■■ 11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. ■■ The Poinsett Club ■■ $50 Guests are cordially invited to a meet and shop with Rose Ball celebrity guest designer Emily McCarthy, small town girl turned coastal living designer. The pop-up shop will open at 10 a.m. Lunch will be served at 11 a.m., and then the pop-up shop will continue after lunch until 3 p.m.

save the date Your favorite weekly events are back! Piedmont Natural Gas

DOWNTOWN ALIVE

presented by Clemson MBA

THE CITY OF FOUNTAIN INN PRESENTS:

St. Patrick’s Day CELEBRATION MUSIC / COLD BEVERAGES / FOOD / KIDS ENTERTAINMENT / FACE PAINT

Thursdays at 5:30 pm beginning March 21

— FREE ADMISSION —

MARCH 16 / 1 PM - 4 PM 110 Depot Street, Fountain Inn SC, 29644 Commerce Park

Greenville Heritage FCU

MAIN STREET FRIDAYS presented by Pepsi

Fridays at 5:30 pm beginning March 22 presented by

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For more information: WWW.FOUNTAININNEVENTS.COM 864-724-8044


THINGS TO SEE & DO

| ARTS & CULTURE

PUZZLES

RIDING ON EMPTY ACROSS 1 Veg-o- — (Ronco product) 6 Cesar who played the Joker 12 Stocking material 16 Counterpart of a column 19 Neighbor of Minneapolis 20 Hybrid ride 21 Falco of “Outside In” 22 Dramatist Levin 23 Start of a riddle 26 Engage in, as a trade 27 Chilling Chaney 28 English actress Diana 29 Astronaut Grissom 30 Charisma 32 Like a triangle with three unequal sides 34 Respected 38 Fashion’s Wintour 39 Riddle, part 2 43 Emotes, e.g. 46 Pupil locale 47 Young tiger 48 Tijuana “two” 49 Riddle, part 3 57 Earthy hue 58 Chaperones, typically 59 Hot dog roll 60 Part of SWAK 64 Work unit 65 It often follows “Co.” 66 Use a kayak 68 Like snakes 69 Untidy type

By Frank Longo

71 Riddle, part 4 76 Parallel (with) 77 Cake layers 79 “To clarify ...” 80 Suffix with Taiwan 82 TV’s Longoria 83 Calm 85 Backwoods denial 86 Inventive Edison 89 Male sheep 90 Riddle, part 5 94 Toothpaste box org. 97 Memento of Molokai 98 Haughtiness 99 Spots 100 End of the riddle 108 Roll-call call 109 “30 Rock” star 110 Seasons of falling leaves 114 Sneakers brand 117 Hwy. offense 118 Part of SWAK 119 Roll-call call 120 Fellow 121 Riddle’s answer 127 LGA info 128 German Mr. 129 Join a class 130 Rebound on a pool table 131 Comfy room 132 Female sheep 133 Entertainer Charles Nelson — 134 Revival shouts

DOWN 1 Whimpers 2 Specially formed, as a committee 3 Disney princess from “The Princess and the Frog” 4 Bank acct. accrual 5 — Yards (Orioles’ stadium) 6 Got long again, as a mown lawn 7 Phil of protest songs 8 Bon — (witticism) 9 Outer: Prefix 10 Match cheer 11 Salem locale 12 Teacher of martial arts 13 Boise locale: Abbr. 14 Peruvian capital 15 Maintain 16 Matured 17 City near Epcot 18 Attacks from ambush 24 Skye of the screen 25 Mongolian tent 31 Shriver of tennis 33 Final 34 Actor Buchholz 35 Overlooks 36 Humorist Ogden 37 Cato’s 750 40 Small brook 41 Actors’ aids 42 Melancholy instruments 43 Certifies (to) 44 Actor Sheen 45 Did a slowish ballroom dance — chi ch’uan Novelist O’Brien Emmy winner Susan Internet auction site StarKist fish In a little bit Confront Shirley’s TV roommate 62 Give a lift to 63 Balls of fire 66 Hoodwink 67 Pathological plant swelling 70 Bric-a- — 72 Prefix with potent 73 Tire (out) 74 Cry buckets 75 “Pronto” 78 Swiped 81 Special ability, for short 84 Fancy pourer 86 Yours, in the King James Bible 87 Equine, in tot-speak 88 Really, really 91 Special ability 92 Street stray 93 Biblical brother of Jacob 94 Humiliated 95 When delivery is expected 96 Nigerian, e.g. 101 Nurtured 102 Bill tack-ons 103 “Movin’ —” (“The Jeffersons” theme song) 104 Shipping container Easy 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 61

105 106 107 111 112 113 115 116

Chiefly Cashews and pecans Cornell’s city Mother, in Spain Stocking material Appears Tennis star Arthur Whole bunch

118 122 123 124 125 126

Actor Ferrell Sooner than, to bards Ending for butyl — Lanka Fa-la linkup Water flow stopper

Crossword answers: Page 32

SUDOKU

Crossword answers: Page 32

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THE DESIGNATED LEGAL PUBLICATION FOR GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD ON TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2019, AT 6:00 p.m. (or at such time thereafter as other public hearings may be concluded), IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, GREENVILLE, SC 29601, FOR THE PURPOSE OF RECEIVING COMMENTS FROM THE PUBLIC REGARDING THE PROPOSED MAINTENANCE RELINQUISHMENT OF A PORTION OF MCLINDA STREET (D0166) TO THE ADJACENT PROPERTY OWNER (TMS# 0663010101601) FOR USE AS PRIVATE PROPERTY. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept responses for the following: • Environmental Engineering Services RFP #64-04/01/19, due at 3:00 P.M., E.S.T., April 1, 2019. • Travel Trailer RFP #6504/04/19, due at 3:00 P.M., E.S.T., April 4, 2019 Solicitations can be found at https://www. greenvillecounty.org/ Procurement/ or by calling 864-467-7200. SOLICITATION NOTICE Greenville County, 301 University Ridge, Suite 100, Greenville, SC 29601, will accept bids for the following: Oak Grove Lake Dam Repair and Improvements, IFB #6104/10/19, until 3:30 PM, EDT, Wednesday, April 10, 2019; a Mandatory Pre-Bid Meeting will be held 2:00 PM, EDT, Tuesday, March 19, 2019 at #101 Oak Grove Lake Road; Greenville, SC 29615. This property is referenced as TMS #0540040101501. Solicitations may be found at http://www.greenvillecounty. org/procurement/ or by calling (864) 467-7200. PUBLIC NOTICE THIS NOTICE IS PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION 6-11470 OF THE CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, AS AMENDED. ON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2019, GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTED A RESOLUTION, WHICH ADJUSTED THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION BOUNDARIES BY INCLUDING THAT CERTAIN PROPERTY LOCATED AT 2 CUNNINGHAM ROAD, TAYLORS, SOUTH CAORLINA. THE NEW BOUNDARY LINES TO RESULT FOR THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT WILL INCLUDE TAX MAP NUMBER 0538010120400. A MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARIES AND LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. THE REASON FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL OF REFUSE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGES IN THE COMMISSION OR THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. HERMAN G. KIRVEN JR., CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

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GREENVILLE COUNTY ZONING AND PLANNING PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE There will be a public hearing before County Council on Monday, April 15, 2019 at 6:00 p.m. in County Council Chambers, County Square, 301 University Ridge, Greenville, SC 29601, for the purpose of hearing those persons interested in the following item: DOCKET NUMBER: CP-2019-03 APPLICANT: Greenville County Planning Department CONTACT INFORMATION: astone@greenvillecounty.org or 864-467-7279 www.gcplanning.org TEXT AMENDMENT: The proposed amendment would revise the Imagine Greenville County Comprehensive Plan to include the RiverdaleTanglewood Community Plan, which is a statement of the community’s vision, and seeks to address both the immediate concerns and long-term goals of the community. All persons interested in this proposed amendment to the Greenville County Comprehensive Plan are invited to attend this meeting. At subsequent meetings, Greenville County Council may approve or deny the proposed amendment. SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO.: 2018-CP-23-03450 Madeline Rehm, Plaintiff, vs. Nick Lippuner, any heirs, devisees, legatees, distributees, assignees, or any party claiming any interest in the Subject Property through Marianne Lippuner (deceased), Joel Douglas Chapman, Virginia Elizabeth Howard Engelking a/k/a Virginia Elizabeth Howard, and party claiming any interest in real property having Greenville County Tax Map Numbers 0671.03-01-045.00 and 0671.03-01-047.00, including any unknown parties who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as John Doe, and any minors or persons under legal disability, being a class designated as Richard Roe, and the Greenville County Tax Collector, Defendants. To the Defendants abovenamed: you are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer to the said Complaint on the subscriber at his office at 513 Zanark Dr., Columbia, SC, within 30 days after the service thereof, exclusive of the date of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for a default judgment which will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. The Complaint in this action was filed on June 20, 2018 in the Greenville County Clerk of Court’s Office under Common Pleas Case

No. 2018CP2303450. To such defendants as may be incompetent, unknown heirs, in the military service of the United States, minors, or persons under a legal disability: an Order has been filed in this action on February 13, 2019, appointing M Brooks Derrick, Esq., whose business address is 224 NE Main St., Simpsonville, SC 29681, as Guardian ad Litem NISI for you, This appointment shall become absolute upon the expiration of 30 days following the last date of publication of the Summons herein, unless you or someone in your behalf, on or before the last mentioned date, shall procure someone else to be appointed as the Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action. LIS PENDENS Notice is hereby given that an action has been commenced and is pending in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, South Carolina (reference made to the Lis Pendens filed on June 20, 2018 in this action), upon the Complaint of the Plaintiff against the above-named Defendants for the purposes of seeking to quiet title to and to confirm the Plaintiff’s tax title to the property described below: All those certain pieces, parcels, or lots of land with all improvements thereon, or to be constructed thereon situate, lying and being in Gantt Township, in the County of Greenville, State of South Carolina and being known and designated as Lots 24-26, Section I, Blue Mountain Estates as shown on a plat recorded in the Register of Deeds Office for Greenville County in Plat Book RR at Page 17. Reference to said plat is made for a more complete metes and bounds description. TMS No.: 0671.03-01-045.00 and 0671.03-01-047 Property address: Bailey Creek Rd., Marietta, SC 29661 David F Sullivan, Esq. 513 Zanark Dr., Columbia, SC 29212 (803) 795-3694 (office) 866-276-0750 (fax) title@davidfsullivanlaw.com Attorney for Plaintiff

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SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 2018-CP-23-06147 (Jury Trial Demanded) Jason T.H. Lancaster and Michelle Lancaster, Plaintiffs, v. Randy D. Freeman, Defendant. TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscriber at this office at Post Office Box 35, Anderson, South Carolina, 29622, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff(s) in this action will apply to the Court for the said relief demanded in the Complaint. TO INFANT(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (AN IMPRISONED PERSON): You are further summoned and notified to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent you in this action within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. TO INFANT(S) UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (INCOMPETENT OR INSANE) AND TO, (GENERAL OR TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN) (COMMITTEE) WITH WHOM (S) HE/(THEY) RESIDE(S): You are further summoned and notified to apply for the appointment of a Guardian ad Litem to represent said infant(s) under fourteen years of age (said incompetent or insane person) within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons and Notice upon you. If you fail to do so, application for such appointment will be made by the Plaintiff(s) herein. s/ T. Matthew Bradley T. Matthew Bradley, SC Bar # 73689 HARBIN & BURNETT, LLP Post Office Box 35 Anderson, SC 29622 (864) 964-0333 Anderson, South Carolina (864) 964-0930 Facsimile December 6, 2018 Attorney for Plaintiffs

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Carolina Bauernhaus, LLC intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON AND OFF premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 556 Perry Ave, Suite H, Greenville, SC 29611. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 17, 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

GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION COMMISSION Notice of Public Hearing ADOPTION OF ANNUAL BUDGET 1 JULY 2019 THRU 30 JUNE 2020 FIRST READING Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, March 26th, 2019, at 4:00 p.m. in the Education Room of the Greater Greenville Sanitation District Headquarters located at 1600 West Washington Street, Greenville, South Carolina 29601, a public hearing will be held for a first reading of the 2019/2020 Annual Budget for the Sanitation District. The public is invited to attend. 2018/2019 Annual Operating Budget .......... 11,723,613 2018/2019 Annual Capital Budget ............... 1,745,000 Anticipated 2018/2019 Revenue ................. 17,750,000 Anticipated 2018/2019 Expenses ............... 17,800,000 <> 2018/2019 Proposed Operating Budget ..... 14,054,000 2018/2019 Proposed Capital Budget ............ 2,320,000 Projected 2018/2019 Revenue .................. 16,526,000 Projected 2018/2019 Expenses ................... 16,424,000 <> The percentage of change in the Operating Budgets from 2018/2019 and the Proposed 2019/2020 Budget is: 21.6% Increase 2018/2019 Tax Millage (14.80) ................ $4,600,000.00 2019/2020 Tax Millage (14.80) ................ $4,600,000.00 2019/2020 Sanitation Fee – Requesting Increase as Follows: Residential Fees – Current Fee $150 – Proposed Fee - $210 Commercial Fees – Current Fee $250 – Proposed Fee - $325 Apartment Fees – Current Fee $75 – Proposed Fee - $85 No Change in Vacant Lot Fees This Notice is given in lieu of the requirements of Section 4-9-130. Anyone wishing to be placed on the Agenda for Public Comment is asked to call the District at 232-6721 extension 220 between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Public comments will be limited based on the number of persons addressing the Commission. Public comment can also be posted on the website. www.ggsc.gov

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD ON TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 2019, AT 6:00 p.m. (or as soon thereafter as other public hearings are concluded), IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, GREENVILLE, SC, 29601, FOR THE PURPOSE OF DETERMINING WHETHER THE BOUNDARIES OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT SHOULD BE ENLARGED TO INCLUDE THAT CERTAIN PROPERTY LOCATED AT 1090 ALTAMONT ROAD, GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA FOR THE PURPOSE OF COLLECTING AND DISPOSING OF REFUSE, GARBAGE AND TRASH WITHIN GREENVILLE COUNTY. THE NEW BOUNDARY LINES TO RESULT FOR THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT WOULD INCLUDE GREENVILLE COUNTY TAX MAP NUMBER (“TMS#”) 0462000100804. A MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARIES AND LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. THE REASON FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL OF REFUSE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGE IN THE COMMISSION OR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD ON TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 2019, AT 6:00 p.m. (or as soon thereafter as other public hearings are concluded), IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS, 301 UNIVERSITY RIDGE, GREENVILLE, SC, 29601, FOR THE PURPOSE OF DETERMINING WHETHER THE BOUNDARIES OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT SHOULD BE ENLARGED TO INCLUDE THAT CERTAIN PROPERTY LOCATED AT 3 CUNNINGHAM ROAD, TAYLORS, SOUTH CAROLINA FOR THE PURPOSE OF COLLECTING AND DISPOSING OF REFUSE, GARBAGE AND TRASH WITHIN GREENVILLE COUNTY. THE NEW BOUNDARY LINES TO RESULT FOR THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT WOULD INCLUDE GREENVILLE COUNTY TAX MAP NUMBER (“TMS#”) 0538010110200. A MAP OF THE NEW BOUNDARIES AND LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY COUNCIL OFFICE. THE REASON FOR THE PROPOSED ENLARGEMENT IS TO PROVIDE FOR THE ORDERLY COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL OF REFUSE. NO ADDITIONAL BONDS WILL BE ISSUED BY THE DISTRICT, NOR WILL THERE BE ANY CHANGE IN THE COMMISSION OR IN THE PERSONNEL OF THE PRESENT COMMISSION OF THE GREATER GREENVILLE SANITATION DISTRICT. BUTCH KIRVEN, CHAIRMAN GREENVILLE COUNTY COUNCIL

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Apple Ten Hospitality Management, 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 at 120 Milestone Way, Greenville, SC 29615. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 24, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that The Whale GVL intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON & OFF premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 1108 S. Main St., Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 24, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Cravings Bark LLC dba Sweet Sippin’ intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and ON AND OFF premises consumption of BEER & WINE at 126 Augusta Street, Unit #3, Greenville, SC 29601. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 31, 2019. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: (1) the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; (2) the specific reasons why the application should be denied; (3) that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); (4) that the person protesting resides in the county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, (5) the name of the applicant and the address of the premises to be licensed. Protest must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue ATTN: ABL; P. O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214 or faxed to: (803) 896-0110

NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that ACE’s Bar and Grill 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 3326 New Easley Hwy., Greenville, SC 29611. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than March 31, 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

SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING OF COMPLAINT AND NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENT (NON-JURY MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO: 2019-CP-23-00770 DEFICIENCY WAIVED U.S. Bank National Association, PLAINTIFF, vs. William H. Hudson; 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, 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 SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the foregoing Summons, along with the Complaint, was filed with the Clerk of Court for Greenville County, South Carolina, on February 15, 2019. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the South Carolina Supreme Court Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, (hereinafter “Order”), you may have a right to Foreclosure Intervention. To be considered for any available Foreclosure Intervention, you may communicate with and otherwise deal with the Plaintiff through its law firm, Hutchens Law Firm, P.O. Box 8237, Columbia, SC 29202 or call 803726-2700. Hutchens Law Firm, represents the Plaintiff in this action and does not represent you. Under our ethical rules, we are prohibited from giving you any legal advice. You must submit any requests for Foreclosure Intervention consideration within 30 days from the date of this Notice. 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.

LEGAL NOTICE RATES ABC Notices $165

Summons, Notices, Foreclosures, etc. $1.20 per line

864.679.1205


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