Charleston City Paper Vol. 23 Issue 35

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For Charleston, outbreaks and epidemics are a key part of history


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Past Panic For Charleston, outbreaks and epidemics are a key part of history BY SKYLER BALDWIN harleston’s long history of infectious disease outbreaks and epidemics has given local historians and epidemiologists a point of reference when examining responses to the coronavirus pandemic across the globe and closer to home. From the first major outbreak of yellow fever in the American colonies in 1699 to the influenza epidemic in 1918, officials in Charleston and ordinary people alike have kept detailed records and notes of many individuals who were ill, where in the city they lived, and other statistical information.

Diseases in Colonial Charleston Yellow fever was a frequent visitor Charles Town throughout the 18th century, with epidemics ravaging the city like clockwork. Commercial shipping traffic, including the buying and selling of enslaved Africans, meant frequent outbreaks in the Holy City and other ports, the first of which, in 1699, killed hundreds, wiping out 15 percent of the city’s comparatively small population. Dealing with diseases became part of regular life in colonial cities through the early 19th century, specifically in cities like Boston, Philadelphia, and Charles Town, because so many people from around the world frequently

met, congregated, dealt in business, and attended cultural events in these cities. Few sources of information exist that documented specific impacts of disease on the enslaved people of early Charleston, who made up a significant portion of its population. Yet, a few specific outbreaks stand out, with help from records that let historians see through the eyes of these past residents. With every case, medical professionals and trained physicians attempted to treat the sick and to determine the source of the disease to prevent the spread. In many cases, the efforts only made matters worse, according to Brian Fors, curator of the Waring Historical Library at the Medical University of FORS South Carolina. A common treatment by the late 1700s, Fors explains, was bleeding patients — draining blood from their bodies — in an attempt to restore some balance and rid them of illness. “We now know, of course, this tended to weaken the individuals and hastened their deaths.” Even before the doctors began bleeding their patients, the number of deaths in each outbreak were high. “In the 1732 outbreak, for example,” continued on page 4

Courtesy National Library of Medicine

Courtesy Waring Historical Library, MUSC

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Panic continued from page 3 Fors says, “Deaths became so frequent that they stopped ringing the church bells that had become a common practice when someone in the city died.” By the 1800s, sources began to indicate that rest and proper food and drink helped the sick. Alexander Hamilton and his wife took that approach when they contracted yellow fever in Philadelphia in 1793 and recovered, according to Fors, unlike many others. This knowledge didn’t lower the death toll in most cases, however, as another yellow fever outbreak in 1858 killed more than 800 of the city’s roughly 40,000 people. What made this epidemic stand out further was that it seemed to affect everyone, regardless of class, wealth, or age, instead of the common victims — children, visitors, and immigrants. Once physicians were able to draw proper conclusions, records showing patterns that accompanied the development of epidemics in various cities became clearer. “There would be a realization that there is a disease ravaging the city and panic as residents left or kept themselves isolated, usually those who could afford to do so,” Fors explains. “As the initial panic subsided, government and health care officials developed strategies to slow the spread of the disease, discover the source and eliminate it, and treat those who were ill.” In the case of yellow fever and other mosquito-borne illnesses, people discovered efforts to drain standing water and improve sanitation generally slowed infection, but officials didn’t draw the connection directly to mosquitos until the late 19th century.

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

Disease during the Revolution

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Yellow fever and other diseases in particular were given partial credit for keeping British invaders at bay long enough to give the new American republic a fighting chance in the Carolinas. Conflicts during the hot seasons of the Revolutionary War were challenging due to constant threat of infection from yellow fever, smallpox, and malaria, particularly around coastal areas. In 1779, the British were preparing a siege of Charles Town, and due to a rumored smallpox epidemic in the backcountry, militia were slow in getting to the city to back up the Continental Army. Disease worked against both sides of the conflict. “You may have heard this before, ‘Charleston in the spring is a paradise; in the summer, it’s hell; and in the fall, it’s a graveyard,’” says Charleston Museum director Carl Borick. “You have mosquitos being more active, and malaria breaking out among the troops.” During the conflict, roughly 2,400 enlisted men were captured by the British and allowed to go back to their BORICK homes as prisoners of war on parole. In 1780, about 1,000 escaped British-occupied areas. The British responded by capturing a number of others and put them on prison ships in the harbor. “The British commander said they lost more men from the diseases on the prison ships than they did the escapes,” Borick says. In the summer of 1782, the British still occupied Charles Town, the American forces were camped out, and Continental Army General Nathanael Greene was recording the number of men they had lost to a malaria outbreak, and the British the same thing. Before the season changed, the Americans found out the British were planning to evacuate the city. Even

Courtesy Waring Historical Library, MUSC

THE PEST HOUSE ON SULLIVAN’S ISLAND WAS BUILT IN THE EARLY 1700S AS A QUARANTINE OPTION

without scientific backing, the soldiers did make a connection between disease and swamp-ridden areas of the Lowcountry — of course, where mosquito populations were highest. By November and December, malaria cases usually fell off. “There is definitely some seasonality with the flu,” Borick explains. “That was certainly the case with malaria as well, as it started cooling off, the mosquitos would be less active.” Ultimately, the British wanted to push on into North Carolina in the heat of summer, but disease slowed their advance, giving militia and the Continental Army a chance to prepare, making the British campaign north that much more difficult.

Apathy and hysteria Port cities like Charleston are global hubs for trade, business, culture, as well as the diseases that come with each. Even in the 1700s, the role of government in helping to stop the spread of harmful disease was hotly debated. “It’s a parallel to what we’re dealing with right now and these issues of quarantine,” says Jacob Steere-Williams, a College of Charleston professor and author of the forthcoming book, The Filth Disease: Typhoid Fever and Epidemiology in Victorian Britain. “These are the issues that 18th century Americans and Charlestonians had to grapple with as well.” Steere-Williams teaches epidemics and revolutions at CofC, taking a broad, global look at disease and its impact in world history with a focus on Charleston. “One of the things that’s so fascinating to me about the way America is responding to COVID-19, one of the reasons there is both a certain apathy happening and a certain hysteria, STEERE-WILLIAMS is because everyday Americans are struggling to find a kind of analogy to this,” he explains. Steere-Williams says the 1918 flu outbreak is a suitable parallel to the coronavirus of today. Americans have seen more of the same old responses, and officials still struggle to respond in moments like these. “This is what I teach my students throughout the semester,” he says. “These are the ways we respond to disease.” Charleston’s early 20th century pandemic was more comparable to the Black Plague of the 14th century than some of the city’s earlier outbreaks, affecting 10 percent of South Carolina’s population, about 150,000-170,000 at the time, killing 4,000-5,000. While we aren’t seeing those numbers in 2020, we have seen toilet paper hoarding and panic buying of supplies. In 1918, people ran to stock up on liquor, read about the panic in the news, and at times distrusted government officials.

“Most Americans don’t have the kind of depth of knowledge to think back to an analogy to yellow fever or to smallpox,” Steere-Williams says. “But, there is a builtin historical memory, even if people don’t have an actual memory of those things.” In his class, Steere-Williams tells students he’s hopeful that at some point leaders will see epidemics like these in a different way, using the tools of history to see the difference between panic and preparedness. It’s a more structured way of viewing the world, he says. Steere-Williams says he saw the reflection of the past as he spoke about the virus with strangers around town in mid March. “Ninety percent of the people thought this was overblown,” he says. “They didn’t see the need for any of this. It wasn’t affecting them, and that kind of apathy is dangerous. I was thinking about it like a historian, and this is exactly how people in the past thought too, until it reached a tipping point.”

Looking to the past and future Even as the clock ticks and governments flail to address the coronavirus pandemic, they are not flying completely blind. History can be a patient zero of sorts. Steere-Williams says the response in 2020 pales compared to actions of past outbreaks. “In 1918, schools closed down, public gatherings stopped, there was a complete lockdown of Charleston in the fall. That is, in some ways, more than what we’ve seen right now. “If we see an explosion of cases in Charleston, I expect to see more of an intrusive government action,” SteereWilliams said. “But, what we’re doing now is not unprecedented. In some ways, looking at the past, we’ve even been a little lethargic in responding to this.” Whatever the level of intervention, without public support there will be less impact, according to SteereWilliams. Only recently have we started to see that change, to where more Americans are believing the scope of the problem, that it will affect them and their loved ones. But without that cultural buy-in, government help simply won’t work, the professor says. Of course, public skepticism is nothing new. In 1832, newspapers reported about cholera, a new disease that had been tied to India and began to spread pandemically. Americans doubted it would affect them like it did for those in far-off lands. “There’s this simultaneous arrogance and denialism,” Steere-Williams explains, “the exact thing we saw at the start of the spread of COVID-19. “Public health has never been and isn’t now as easy as hearing the scientific facts and putting them into place,” Steere-Williams says. “This is our reality — COVID-19 is not going to be the last epidemic in our country, probably in our lifetimes,” he concludes. “How we respond to it now has an impact on how future generations will respond to these things in the future.”

THE 1918 FLU EPIDEMIC SAW HUGE TEMPORARY HOSPITALS NATIONWIDE TO CARE FOR THE ILL


—As the possibility of a shortage due to COVID-19, MUSC researchers are prototyping respirator masks that can be made using consumer-grade 3D printers. Source: Medical University of South Carolina

CofC ALLOWING GENEROUS PASS/ FAIL OPTIONS FOR SPRING CLASSES UPENDED BY PANDEMIC

A new grading policy will give College of Charleston students latitude to make sure the impact of a semester wracked by campus closures and COVID-19 precautions is noted on their transcripts. Monday morning, CofC notified students of the addition of a new pass-fail grade for classes and a course withdrawal extension for the Spring 2020 semester. Under the new system, referred to as PS/NS, grades between A and D- will be considered a pass (PS), while withdrawals from absences and Fs will be considered a fail (NS). Incomplete courses are not available for the PS/NS option. PS/NS grades will not count toward GPA scores, so students are encouraged to be smart about which classes they choose to grade in the new system. All courses passed with a PS will still provide their original credit hours. Students may choose to wait until 48 hours after they know their final grade to decide what classes they will grade as PS/NS. “In general, it is likely that most students will chose to take the letter grade of C or better,” the school recommends on their website. “For a C- grade, students should check their program requirements. Students who receive a D+, D, or D- grade may want to consider the PS grade.” If students still want to withdraw from a course, despite the new grading system giving them every advantage, the new deadline for withdrawal is April 22. This new policy is in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The outbreak has already made significant interruptions to the education system in South Carolina, forcing schools to shift to online classes. The College is still encouraging students to stay away from facilities unless its necessary to enter them. —Heath Ellison

8,053

The number of cases of COVID-19 projected in South Carolina by May 2, according to state epidemiologists. Source: S.C. DHEC

Courtesy MUSC

PROTECTIVE MASKS UNDER DEVELOPMENT BY MUSC RESEARCHERS USE 3D PRINTERS AND ARE DESIGNED TO REPURPOSE COMMON MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, LIKE A FILTER THAT CAN BE ADDED TO A MASK USED TO ADMINISTER ANESTHESIA

CHARLESTON MOVING AHEAD WITH STAY-HOME ORDER DESPITE OPINION FROM ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE One of South Carolina’s top prosecutors says that emergency orders adopted by local governments last week are likely illegal, but Charleston’s mayor argues Home Rule extends to emergencies. Days after two of South Carolina’s largest cities ordered their residents to stay at home to prevent the spread of COVID-19, South Carolina’s Solicitor General Robert D. Cook issued an opinion on March 27 noting that local governments’ powers are limited in times of emergency. Charleston and Columbia both enacted emergency “stay at home” orders last week, asking residents to remain in their homes to prevent one-on-one contact that could spread the highly contagious and deadly COVID-19 disease. Other cities have considered similar measures, and the Friday opinion was in response to a letter from a Lowcountry lawmaker asking if the orders were allowable. Citing a 1980 opinion from the Attorney General’s Office looking at the governor’s powers in emergency situations, the

opinion goes out of its way to concede localities’ Home Rule powers under state law. Stopping short of calling the orders unconstitutional, the order reiterates the governor’s “extraordinary powers” during times of emergency. “The city appreciates the strong support for the principle of Home Rule voiced in today’s AG Office’s opinion, and believes that principle extends to emergency ordinances to protect the health and safety of our citizens,” Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg said in a statement on Friday afternoon. “In addition, city leaders and staff have worked diligently to ensure that our current emergency ordinances directly support and codify the orders issued by Governor McMaster during this crisis,” the mayor added. During a press conference on Friday, Tecklenburg said that if Gov. Henry McMasters asked the city to lift its order, he would follow the governor’s instructions. —Sam Spence

SIDELINED BY CORONAVIRUS PRECAUTIONS, SC LAWMAKERS STILL PUSH FOR CHANGES

The 170 members of the S.C. House and Senate are home until at least the week of April 7 as infections accelerate across the state. State-level response to the coronavirus pandemic rests in the executive office under a declared state of emergency. Lexington Republican Sen. Katrina Shealy said Gov. Henry McMaster is staying in touch with her and many of her Statehouse colleagues during the coronavirus pandemic. “I’ve talked to him several times. He will just call and say, ‘What are you hearing?’” Shealy said. With the legislature on hold, one of the “checks” on the executive branch is unable to weigh in via legislation as executive orders are announced nearly biweekly, worrying some social justice advocates. McMaster’s spokesman Brian Symmes and Chief of Staff Trey Walker did not respond to several requests to comment for this story. “It’s really actually not safe for the House and Senate to meet right now,” Lancaster Democratic Rep. Mandy Powers Norrell said. “I have been so against legislating by executive order, but in this situation, we really, really need to.” Beaufort Republican Sen. Tom Davis said the General Assembly’s role is “to be responsive to what the governor requests.” He called it “the appropriate response” to let the executive office call the shots during the crisis. “You always have as a backstop the General Assembly and that is the ultimate guardrail,” he said. “We have a system that is designed to have those checks.” But as executive orders mount, some civil liberties’ advocates have raised an alarm, particularly in light of the legislature not meeting. McMaster’s March 23 executive order banning groups of three or more is flawed and threatens civil rights due to giving police discretion in enforcement, according to Frank Knaack, director of the American Civil Liberties Union of South Carolina. The group has called on the governor to rescind the order. S.C. Appleseed Legal Justice Center Director Sue Berkowitz said overarching executive orders “can be pretty dicey,” especially since it is unsure when the legislature will reconvene. However, she said courts are still functioning in the state, so a case challenging an executive order could always be filed. “These are such extraordinary times,” Berkowitz said. “There clearly needs to be a balance of public health but without it totally infringing on civil liberties of people.” Orangeburg Democratic Sen. Brad Hutto said South Carolina’s executive branch is the appropriate place to handle the unfolding coronavirus crisis but, “I disagree it is like a hurricane.” “We need to revisit how we are managing this,” Hutto said. “It isn’t just going to (go on) for three days and gone ... It’s multifaceted. So I think the governor should task a czar or somebody who’s got a more comprehensive background in all of state government to manage us through the pandemic. He can’t micromanage all of this himself.” —Lindsay Street

“While my symptoms have begun to improve, I will remain at home until I know it is safe to leave selfquarantine.” —U.S. Rep. Joe Cunningham said in a press release on March 27 that he tested positive for COVID-19 and has been in isolation since March 19 after coming into contact with a member of Congress who also tested positive for the disease.

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blotter

BY HEATH ELLISON AND SKYLER BALDWIN ILLUSTRATION BY STEVE STEGELIN

BLOTTER O’ THE WEEK

A man was observed walking down Savannah Highway, naked, covered in cooking oil, apparently suffering a breakdown. When police arrived, the man began shouting and requesting help “from otherworldly entities.” COVID-19 anxiety is hitting hard.

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

The Blotter is taken from reports filed with Charleston Police Department between March 13 and March 23. No one described in this section has been found guilty, just unlucky.

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Two reporters approached the police headquarters lobby last Wednesday. Finding it locked, they were greeted by a begloved officer who handed them a clipboard holding a stack of the week’s police reports. Resigned to their fate, they sat on a soggy picnic table outside to bring you the following Blotter.

During a traffic stop, a driver told the officer that he had less than an ounce of marijuana in the car, which doesn’t sound like a lot. He then gave the officer several glass pipes packed with marijuana and a black bag which contained several other bags of marijuana ... and a vape pen containing THC oil.

Two Louis Vuitton purses, one Gucci purse, and 13 Burberry scarves were stolen from the back seat of a 2018 Mercedes which was parked on the upper levels of a downtown parking garage. With that expensive of taste, you would think the owner would have kept the doors locked.

While dealing with a minor car accident in a parking lot, responding officer noticed one of the vehicles smelled strongly of marijuana. The driver admitted he kept a small amount in the closed compartment protecting the car’s gas cap. Was he so worried about people breaking into his car and taking his weed that he didn’t just keep it in the glovebox like everyone else?

When officers attempted to pull over a car for changing lanes without signaling, the car darted into oncoming traffic and tried to outrun officers. When they finally caught up to the car and stopped him, they discovered only one gram of marijuana in the vehicle and no other contraband. Come on guys, it was probably his last bit, and under social distancing rules, he won’t be able to meet with his dealer for a while.

While prepping a Daniel Island golf course for its morning “t-times,” police wrote, the director found a diesel utility vehicle tipped over on its side and nearly $1,000 worth of damage to the turf. Apparently, someone had driven the vehicle out onto the grounds, did a bunch of donuts and flipped the cart. Dope.

A white moped was stolen from a busy downtown street by an unknown party. The victim says the vehicle had three necklaces and a .40 caliber handgun inside of its storage compartment. The moped was recovered shortly after it was reported stolen, but the items inside were not. If you had the choice between three necklaces and a handgun or a moped, you would choose the jewelry and the gun too. An empty gun case was stolen from a car downtown. The rear driver’s side window had been smashed and the center console and glove box had been rummaged through. With the rate guns are reported stolen in police reports, we can only assume the gun case was empty because the firearm had already been taken by another thief. An officer was sitting in a downtown gas station parking lot when an individual with superficial cuts on their wrist approached him. The victim advised he is a Satanist, and he cut his wrists to drink the blood “in order to ward off demons.” If those demons could bring band-aids and peroxide, they might be useful.


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V VIEWS

OUR VIEW

A Coronavirus Test Without leaders to prevent a pandemic, government steps in to respond

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

s a public health crisis threatened to overwhelm our hospitals last month, Americans were just coming to realize it could empty our offices and pocketbooks, too. What was also coming, besides COVID-19, was a financial support framework the likes of which this nation has never seen, to keep our economy from collapsing. Seemingly faced with the choice of closing and suffering massive economic losses or forging ahead knowing that they or their workers could get sick, business owners were left with no good options while President Donald Trump and others stubbornly refused to acknowledge the threat of what would soon be declared a pandemic. Flippantly dismissing the pandemic to cameras in March, Trump’s White House ineptly laid the groundwork for a fumbled response for years. “I just think this is something ... that you can never really think is going to happen,” Trump said March 7. According to Politico, a 69-page playbook from the National Security Council was just one mechanism that went unheeded in the White House. It was even color-coded. In South Carolina, our own leaders have fouled up as well. As politicians, TV hosts, and the president shrugged off the dangers, Gov. Henry McMaster and state officials with the Department of Health and Environmental Control repeatedly insisted large public events and school should continue as planned. That left local leaders and business owners holding the bag, making hard decisions the governor should be making as a public health emergency turns into a crisis.

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Thankfully, there is a sliver of functioning government in Washington that has yet to be gutted, or at least there was over the past couple weeks. Sensing a massive economic upheaval completely unlike the 2008 downturn, Congress passed three separate bills over two weeks to help fight the epidemic and soften job losses and business closures. The massive rush of cash to replace losses in the American economy for months is unprecedented. Twelve years removed from the recession, cushioned by its own stimulus bills that drew criticism from government-cutting Republicans, payouts to every American worker and his or her family were added during negotiations to get the bill through the GOP-led Senate. But even in the details of the latest recovery bill, conflicting approaches to help nurse the economy are visible. Aside from the one-time payouts, the bill’s remedies remain centered around employers, rather than workers themselves. U.S. Sen. Tim Scott romanticized the sanctity of the “employer-employee relationship” to the point of the absurd in criticizing proposals that failed to fluff the mythology of the American Dream. Nonetheless, Scott and every single other senator voted in favor. This is what our government is for. This is why we elect our leaders: to conduct the business of the state fairly and respond quickly and decisively in moments of crisis. South Carolinians should take note, since we know many are not very familiar with the concept of government working for them.

Serving Charleston, North Charleston, Mount Pleasant, Summerville, and every place in between.

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EDITORIAL

Editor: Sam Spence Staff: Skyler Baldwin, Heath Ellison, Connelly Hardaway, Lauren Hurlock, Parker Milner, Lindsay Street Cartoonist: Steve Stegelin Photographer: Rūta Smith Contributors: Gabriella Capestany, Vincent Harris, Melissa Hayes, Stephanie Hunt, D.R.E. James, Stratton Lawrence, Robert Moss, Alex Peeples, Kyle Peterson, Michael Pham, Chase Quinn, Jeremy Rutledge, Michael Smallwood, Rex Stickel, Rouzy Vafaie, Dustin Waters, Kevin Wilson, Vanessa Wolf, Kevin Young Interns: Eliana Katz, Shannon Murray, Christian Robinson

Published by City Paper Publishing, LLC Members: J. Edward Bell | Andrew C. Brack

Views expressed in Charleston City Paper cover the spectrum and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. Charleston City Paper takes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts. © 2020. All content is copyrighted and the property of City Paper Publishing, LLC. Material may not be reproduced without permission. Proud member of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia and the South Carolina Press Association.

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A FEW WORDS | BY ANDY BRACK

Take Action Issue stay-at-home order for South Carolina now, governor Gov. Henry McMaster must issue a tough stay-in-place order now to keep the coronavirus from spreading more in South Carolina. He can’t wait any longer. Such an order will cause huge economic ripples throughout the state’s economy. But school isn’t open for another month. More people are getting sick. If we don’t nip this mess in the bud as much as possible now, the damage will be far, far worse when he is forced to issue an order later. “I have great faith in the people of South Carolina,” the governor said Thursday. “They follow rules. They’re respectful. They’re courteous. They’re gentle. They’re smart. They’re resilient. The things we have asked them to do, they are doing and doing very well.” Yes, most South Carolinians are like that. Unfortunately, governor, responding to this disease isn’t about faith. It’s about science. It’s about listening to public health authorities and keeping people apart. A lot of South Carolinians are staying at home voluntarily, but there are far too many still in close contact. Continuing with a voluntary approach won’t chill the clusters that are developing. Our state needs to go into time-out for two weeks to allow the virus to die down. To do otherwise will create more opportunities for the virus to spread. We don’t want 8,000 infected

people in May, as predicted, who infect even more. “Health over wealth needs to be the focus, in my opinion,” Greenville political analyst Chip Felkel observed. “We can recover financially. It won’t be easy. It will cause a lot of anxiety and, yes, people will be severely and adversely affected. But they won’t be dead.” To respond to the crisis, the state legislature should redirect the bulk of a $2 billion surplus into programs to help small businesses stay afloat and hospitals to deal with the caring crisis ahead. “Small businesses are the backbone of the country, and especially South Carolina,” Felkel said. “A program to help companies meet payroll and stay afloat, not necessarily flourish, would go a long way.” Frank Knapp, head of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce, suggests the state augment a federal infusion of money into small businesses by delaying the filing of state employer payroll taxes. “There should not be any refund checks sent to taxpayers this year,” he said. “We should be putting every state tax dollar we can into our hospitals to cover their COVID-19 operational costs. We should do this because of the health care needs but also because it will help keep health insurance rates from rising next year.” Knapp also suggested using federal dollars to expand

Medicaid, even if only for a year, because tens of thousands of newly laid-off workers won’t have health insurance or meet federal levels to qualify for health insurance subsidies. “Lack of health insurance results in unhealthy citizens, which threatens all of us,” Knapp said. State Sen. Vincent Sheheen, a Camden Democrat whose home area has been hammered by the virus, urged increased testing and called for “effective selfquarantine procedures for confirmed cases with minor symptoms supervised by local law enforcement.” If you want to better understand the toll of the coronavirus, I suggest you read the terrifying story of a New York City woman who has been caring for her husband, wracked by the disease. “Our world became one of isolation, round-the-clock care, panic, and uncertainty — even as society carried on around us with all too few changes,” Jessica Lustig wrote March 24 in The New York Times. As of Tuesday, 27 states had stay-at-home orders. Sooner or later, South Carolina will likely have one too. Let’s do it now so we can move beyond this disease’s crippling health and economic impacts sooner. Andy Brack is the publisher of Charleston City Paper.

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VIEWS | charlestoncitypaper.com

ANTI-BACTERIAL • ANTI-VIR AL

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CITY PICKS

D A I LY

Streaming Workouts and Meditations D A I LY

Bulldog Virtual Tours Bulldog Tours is currently unable to take Charlestonians and visitors on real-life tours of Charleston, but that doesn’t mean they can’t still take us on virtual tours of the city. Every day at 2 p.m. head to Bulldog Tours’ Facebook page for a family-friendly tour of a different historic Charleston location. In addition to their daily tours, Bulldog will host ghost story tours (rated PG-13) on Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. bulldogtours.com

Local yoga studios, instructors, and boutique gyms are offering a ton of classes, from 20 minute high intensity workouts to 75-minute yoga flows. From free to cheap to donations (please donate!) these workouts will get your mind and body through coronavirus quarantine. Check out our full list online at charlestoncitypaper.com/coronavirus.

T H U R S D AY

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

On Love & Other Connections

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Columbia’s annual Indie Grits Film Fest is being presented as a free, livestreamed pop-up event through April 5. The annual festival, now in its 14th year, celebrates the visionary, experimental culture of the Southeast through film, art, and music. On Thurs. April 2 catch a block of shorts, “On Love & Other Connections,” that serve as an antidote to mass-market romance. In these short films love is almost always an action, not just a feeling. Thurs. April 2 at 8 p.m. indiegrits.org/festival/livestream

W E D N E S D AY

Plugged In To History: On The Farm Middleton Place has launched a new digital content portal called “Plugged In To History.” Digital programming will be streamed online over the coming weeks while the property is closed due to the COVID-19 outbreak. On Wed. April 1 catch a program called “On The Farm,” where you’ll learn about the heritage breed animals that live at Middleton Place. Wed. April 1 at 11 a.m. middletonplace.org

D A I LY

D A I LY

Museum from Home with the Charleston Museum Tune into the Charleston Museum’s Facebook page for talks with museum curators and directors about everything from the Revolutionary War to fossils. It’s all happening, y’all. facebook.com/charlestonmuseum

Avian Conservation Center The Avian Conservation Center has implemented a temporary learning program, which will allow students to connect to educational content remotely. Check out livestreaming presentations on Facebook and educational videos on the center’s YouTube channel. Our favorite? The “vulture restaurant,” where the vultures at the Center for Birds of Prey, well, chow down. facebook.com/scbirdsofprey


A ARTS

Photo by Serena Munro/courtesy Bruce Munro Ltd.

BRUCE MUNRO SAYS BROOKGREEN GARDENS REMINDS HIM MORE OF A SERIES OF ROOMS THAN A TYPICAL FORMAL GARDEN

Field of Light English artist Bruce Munro creates a magical lightscape at Brookgreen Gardens Hemingway famously said, “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.” English artist Bruce Munro takes a similar view with his art: coalescing the whole of our shared human experience into something as simple as pixels of light. Creating art seems as natural to Munro as bleeding or breathing. As you’ll see at the artist’s upcoming exhibit at Brookgreen Gardens in Murrells Inlet, he can transform simple light beams — sometimes strung along fishing rods, reflecting off thousands of compact discs or planted in flower beds — into much more. The upcoming installation at Brookgreen Gardens is a version of Munro’s most famous piece, “Field of Light,” customized to fit the particular landscape of the South Carolina garden. Using a seemingly endless series of oscillating lights incorporated throughout the fauna, Munro creates an otherworldly, immersive landscape where the trees and grasses seem to come alive. It’s as if a million stars fell out of the sky and landed inside every flower. “Botanical gardens are all different and completely beautiful,” says Munro, who has exhibited his light installations across the globe — Japan, Philadelphia, Arizona, Australia. “They all have something unique about them.” Brookgreen, says Munro, reminds him more than any other garden he’s been to of a series of rooms.

“It’s really like a huge gallery. You can place a piece of work in a different room and it has its own context and atmosphere. I was intrigued by this exterior space that has a kind of interior architecture,” he explains. “Because the landscape is quite flat, they use the flora and these architectural features to make you discover in a way how you walk from one room to another. It’s magical. It’s almost as if the garden is floating above the wildness. There is a wall when you get to the end of the garden and you look over it to all these wild grasses and swampland where the trees have got this magical cobweb-y covering. I got the feeling that we were on this sort of island outside reality.” Munro has had the exploratory mind of an artist for as long as he can remember, finding a way to make art with recycled materials like used compact discs when he didn’t have the money for expensive art supplies, a practice he says opened his eyes to “the beauty of the everyday object.” “I am one of these people who my mind is whirring around at 100 miles an hour still and there are a lot of things that catch my eye ... or catch my imagination,” he says. A world traveller now at age 60, Munro made his first trip to America around 1978: “My grandfather had given all his grandchildren 500 pounds, which was quite a lot in those days. All my cousins and siblings put their money to good use, squirreled it away for a down deposit on a car. But I took

Photo by Mark Pickthall, Courtesy of Bruce Munro Ltd.

myself off to Florida and then hitchhiking around America.” The inspiration for “Field of Light” came to him on a trip through the Red Desert in central Australia. Far from his first epiphany moment, Munro was often inspired by the natural elements while he lived in Australia — rock formations, sky, water. In this particular moment, Munro had the idea to create a field of illuminated stems, which would ripple to life under the stars at dusk. “It came from the ground in a very visceral experience. I never would have imagined that it would make the journey it has. I think maybe I was lucky to be in the right place at the right time and maybe the antenna was

working because I picked up on this feeling. It became an obsession to make it ... It became something that continued nagging at me and I knew it had to be done.” Munro took 12 years to bring the first iteration of “Field of Light” to fruition, and it’s changed slightly to fit the environment of each subsequent show. What you’ll see at Brookgreen is a unique display of nearly 60,000 lights sitting atop flower-like stems, oscillating between blues, pinks, greens, and yellows in a wave of color. Munro’s advice for viewing the exhibit? Keep an open mind and an open heart. Feel something when you go to the garden, he says, less concerned with what you feel and more concerned that you do take a moment to feel it viscerally. It’s an experience much less to do with Instagram photos than something less tangible and much more meaningful. “This work is a journey, and now that I’m just 60 I realize that life is short and sweet and we have a responsibility to really make the most of our short life,” he says, “but also to communicate with our fellow human beings and to make the world a little bit kinder and a safer place for the people who inherit the future of this world. I say that in all seriousness, because we are all connected whether we like it or not.” As of press time, the exhibition’s opening is scheduled for May 1. It will remain open through Sept. 12, 2020.

ARTS | charlestoncitypaper.com

BY ENID BRENIZE

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A

BYE SOCIAL LIFE, HELLO MOVIES | BY KEVIN YOUNG

ARTIST KRISTI RYBA RECEIVES $ 5K FELLOWSHIP

Out For Blood Grady Hendrix’s latest novel is an Old Village vampire thriller

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

Former Mt. Pleasant madman Grady Hendrix, the author of My Best Friend’s Exorcism, We Sold Our Souls, and Horrorstor, is releasing a new book, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires on Tues. April 7. The book was recently picked up by Amazon for series development. In Guide to Slaying Vampires, Mt. Pleasant housewife Patricia Campbell suspects her neighbor, James Harris, may very well be a creature of the night. Unfortunately, no one, including the members of her book club, believes her. What follows is funny, heartbreaking, scary, and fun as h-e-double hockey sticks. Here’s what Hendrix had to say about his latest foray into Old Village darkness.

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artifacts

roots. He needs a bank account. He needs all these things to survive, because you can’t just wander around anymore if you want to live within this system. He decides that the perfect place to do that would be a small southern town where as long as you’re white, seem to have money, and are the right kind of person, they’ll take you for who you say you are. As long as you’re a praying man and not marginalized (people you don’t think we’d miss,) then that seems like a pretty viable long-term solution. CP: Speaking of James, was there a particular vampire you had in mind when writing him? GH: With James, there were a couple people I had most in mind. One was a friend’s ex-boyfriend who was very, very charming and a super nice guy. He had a lot of darkness below the surface. The other one was Ted Bundy. Ann Rule’s first book The Stranger Beside Me is about how when she got hired, she was a crime reporter. Ted Bundy was her really good friend who worked next to her at a suicide hotline. Reading her book and talking about turning a blind eye, it took her a really long time to process this because he acted all the right ways and said all the right things.

City Paper: How would you describe Patricia? Grady Hendrix: She’s very much like the moms I grew up seeing in Charleston. A lot of the ones I knew didn’t work. They really seemed to be caught up in a lot of stuff that I thought was pretty irrelevant … the manners, the thank you notes, and all that stuff. Then as I’ve gotten older, I realized they’d done a tremendous amount of work that I’d never seen. They took all these hits so we didn’t have to. They were navigating divorces, alcoholic spouses, friends in divorces with alcoholic spouses, domestic violence, real-world violence, aging parents — all this stuff CP: Aside from Lowcountry moms, that they didn’t have a lot of resources for, were there any particular inspirations except for their support staff for them. for James’ motives? For a lot of these women, their support GH: Around the time I was writing network came in their social work, their this book, I was flying into Charleston, church, their church choir, their book club, I was looking out the window. I realized Images provided their bunko club, their sewing circle, their all the rivers and the marshes looked carpool group. My grandmother, my dad’s GRADY HENDRIX’S CHARLESTON like a circulation system, the Cooper mother, lived with us towards the end of CHILDHOOD INSPIRES A LOT OF HIS River, the Wando and everything ... her life for several years. At the time, we LITERATURE they look like arteries and veins and just thought she was old. We know now the capillaries and these branching she probably had Alzheimer’s. The toll it networks. There were some big develtook on our family was intense. My mom naviopments we flew over, they were being built. It gated that and she didn’t have much in the way was like this giant dead patch of dirt reaching of resources. There’s a lot more to these women right into the marsh. It looked like something than meets the naked eye and certainly appears to that was rotting and a pair of fangs biting you when you’re growing up. into this blood supply system. That’s when I realized that the ’90s, (when this book takes CP: Would you say that turning a blind eye place) is when Charleston began to sell off to things is a running theme in the book? so much of its legacy that made it what it GH: In terms of turning a blind eye, it certainly is to where it began to overdevelop and is the operative mode. Look at the American overbuild. Sell off the wetlands, sell off gymnastics team, the Catholic church, old sports the marshes. Anyone who has sat in traffic associations ... turning a blind eye to children in on Coleman Boulevard for more than 20 minutes has to peril has been a running theme in almost every institution wonder — how long can this last? On one hand you want in America. I grew up in Charleston. You see it everywhere to see the tourism industry thrive and bring money to the but to me it was apparent here: As long as your neighbors region, but on the other hand you’re looking at someone are sticking to architectural board-approved things, they cannibalizing themselves … and just to see Charleston that could be an alcoholic, they could beat their wife — and that way had a huge impact on the book. Just this idea of this was none of your business. city starting to suck on its own blood. Charleston hasn’t That was when I grew up. I think things have changed. reconciled with the fact that it happens everywhere. The The vampire in this book, James Harris, realizes that idea is this sickness — when you get this sickness you’re the ’90s are here and he’s entering a time where keeping gonna need everything. You’re going to need and need and records seems more common, where everyone’s going to need. You just consume. It’s a hunger that’s never satisfied. need photo ID. He needs to settle down and put down This could be set anywhere.

Last week South Arts, the nonprofit regional arts service organization that seeks to advance Southern vitality through the arts announced the recipients of $5,000 state fellowships. Nine visual artists, including Charleston’s Kristi Ryba, were awarded $5,000 and are now in competition for the $25,000 Southern Prize with a residency at The Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences as well as the $10,000 Southern Prize Finalist awards. In a press release executive director of South Arts, Susie Surkamer, said: “South Arts is immensely proud to support every one of these artists, craftspeople, and traditionbearers. Especially as our country enters the economic disruption caused by COVID-19, artists are among those most vulnerable to losing income. Yet their creativity, work, and stories are what carry us forward and will be integral to rebuilding our communities.” This isn’t Ryba’s first time taking home cash for her artistic talents. In 2018 she won $25,000 at Lake City’s ArtFields for her mixed-media piece, “Chapel of Perpetual Adoration.” Ryba uses her family’s vintage photographs to make paintings based on the iconography and ideals of Medieval and Renaissance altarpieces and manuscripts. Since the November 2016 election she has been substituting photographs of Trump and his administration into existing manuscripts that depict what Ryba believes is the “shallow and corrupt nature of this government.” Learn more about Ryba online. —Connelly Hardaway

REDUX GETS CREATIVE WITH ONLINE OFFERINGS

While Redux Contemporary Art Center is temporarily closed for the foreseeable future, the nonprofit is ramping up its online offerings. As executive director Cara Leepson says, “Our aim is to keep you inspired and fulfilled with the arts, even from a distance.” Redux is rolling out these new options on Instagram — be sure to check in with their stories to stay the most up-to-date. You can follow along as studio artists, like Anne Abueva, take over the Instagram account and walk you through their days. Hey, maybe you’ll get inspired to pick up an easel, eh? In addition to seeing what studio artists are up to, you can also get a little art for yourself. Show your new, four-legged coworker(s) some love with coloring page pet portraits from Redux artist Julia Deckman. Email a PDF photo of your pet to tai@ reduxstudios.org to get yours for $50. If you want to help Redux, a nonprofit organization, you can always donate online, or become a member. —CH


C CUISINE

New Normal

Charleston restaurants forced to weigh realities of coronavirus closures Charleston ordered non-essential businesses coffee, meals, and pantry staples. to shut their doors on March 26, the latest “We have changed so many of our procecollateral damage from efforts to contain the dures,” explains co-owner Marie Stitt. “The deadly coronavirus. Local restaurant dining space is totally different. Customers can rooms had been closed for a week by that only access the restaurant through the front, time, forced to reinterpret their menus for and we have timers set so we make sure take-away service. everyone washes their hands every 15 minAs one of the “essential services” on the utes.” The restaurant is disinfected every 30 city’s expansive list, many restaurants have minutes by the Babas staff. continued under The Babas mobile the new normal. app has also helped “We have changed so many Others decided it was the cafe function of our procedures,” explains time to stop serving with contact-free co-owner Marie Stitt. “The customers for the service. “We had the foreseeable future. app before all this space is totally different. As Charlestonians started, but only a Customers can only access the handful of people attempt to navigate these murky waters, were using it,” says restaurant through the front, we decided to speak Stitt. “Now, 95 and we have timers set so we with some of the percent of our orders make sure everyone washes restaurant owners come in through the and chefs who are their hands every 15 minutes.” app.” In addition, piecing together how all payments can be — Marie Stitt, co-owner of Babas on Cannon to respond during a made through the pandemic. app, eliminating the Jackrabbit Filly closed on Sun. March 22, a exchange of credit cards or cash. move that co-owner Corrie Wang says came Brown’s Court Bakery shut their doors as a response to increased awareness nationback on March 16 but restarted wholewide. “We don’t know who has this, and we sale services on March 26 to support can’t really police who everyone comes into some of the restaurants offering take out. contact with,” says Wang. “It just didn’t feel “Normally, we sell wholesale to about 75 worth it anymore.” Kenyatta O’Neill, coplaces in town, and we have shrunk that to owner of Nana’s Seafood & Soul and Nana’s around five to eight,” says head baker David Uptown, echoes a similar sentiment. “Most Schnell. “We’re leaving the bread out on of our employees are family members, so we the porch to eliminate all human interacthought a lot about the risks of continuing tion.” Despite the restart of his wholesale to operate. The most important thing is the operations, Schnell still feels there is too health of all of our families.” much uncertainty associated with the The Harbinger Cafe and Bakery is trying coronavirus to reopen the retail store. to send a similar message to their employees, “Looking at the numbers and data, I’m just saying in a statement, “We can’t ask our staff not comfortable until I know what we are to leave their homes if the mayor is telling confronted with here.” them not to. It seems like it’s our responsiRestaurants have also been forced to bility to close for these next 14 days and be decide whether take out and delivery services an example to our community that we take create enough cash flow to make it worth the this virus seriously.” Cru Cafe, Purlieu, Poe’s extra time and energy required to retune the Tavern, and all the restaurants under the business model. “We were still doing pretty Brooks Reitz-Tim Mink empire — Leon’s well, which is the crazy thing,” says Wang. Oyster Shop, Melfi’s, Little Jack’s Tavern, “That said, we only did take out service for and Monza Pizza Bar — are other notable one week, and everyone was being overly eateries that have suspended take-out service generous with tips. We didn’t feel it was right within the last 10 days. to have people coming in and overspending.” For those who have decided to push ahead, At Nana’s, the overhead associated with health is the top priority. Enhanced safety running a restaurant makes take out-only precautions are the name of the game for service unrealistic for him and his mother, Babas on Cannon, which has added addiO’Neill says. “The economy is already tional menu options for guests in need of slow, and it just wasn’t panning out for us

financially,” he says. “We were only making enough to buy the supplies we needed to cook the meals.” Over at Babas, Stitt and husband Edward Crouse are doing their best to keep their team employed. “Our size gives us agility and allows us to be more nimble, but it hasn’t been easy at all. The time and labor hours are just crazy. A task that used to take 60 seconds to complete now takes five minutes.” Open or closed, owners say the local community has been an essential part of assisting their small, local restaurants. “We’ve had a ton of support locally. People are ordering take out and telling us how much they want to help out,” says Stitt. “It’s clear that our community values local business.” Whether your favorite neighborhood spots have decided to close or remain open, continue to support these small businesses owners who are doing the very best they can during this difficult time. Find restaurants offering takeout and delivery online at charlestoncitypaper.com/goodtogo

Photos by Ruta Smith

BABAS ON CANNON SAYS 95 PERCENT OF THEIR ORDERS ARE PLACED USING THEIR MOBILE APP

CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com

BY PARKER MILNER

13


a la carte

Now Running Errands

HERE’S WHERE TO GET YOUR TAKE OUT SOFTIES

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During these take-out times, local restaurants are finding ways to get creative with their take-away and delivery offerings. It’s not quite the same, but soft-shell crab season is upon us, meaning Charleston restaurants have even more inspiration for jazzing things up. Don’t let the haters tell you soft-shell crabs don’t belong in a to-go box. These are the Charleston establishments making softies on the couch the next big thing. The Grocery has softies in stock as part of their new “To Go-cery” menu. The cornmealcrusted crab is joined by a vinegar slaw and remoulade on a brioche bun. “Our approach is to do the most minimal preparation as possible so we can let the crab shine,” says executive chef Kevin Johnson. “Typically, we wouldn’t serve a sandwich, but we feel that’s the best vehicle for take out.” These puppies are made-to-order, so Johnson is asking guests to call or text when they get to the parking lot in order to guarantee a crispy crab. The Glass Onion isn’t letting COVID-19 stop them from serving up softies. The crispy crustaceans come on a po’ boy with Bibb lettuce and house-made tartar sauce or on a platter with two sides. Both options are $15. “The crabs are from McClellanville and will be

a slow but steady source of fresh fish for us,” says owner Chris Stewart. The American cheese-topped soft-shell “Big Mac” is officially back on the menu at Edmund’s Oast Brewing Company. As of Fri. March 27, guests can order a single ($18) or double ($33), which can be paired with a side of crispy potatoes ($3) or coleslaw ($4). Order by dialing (843) 718-3224. Pier 41’s menu items are available for take out at The Basement, the arcade bar located at the Mt. Pleasant eatery. They’re dishing out two options for soft-shell crab-lovers. Opt for their fried softie sandwich ($15) or a platter with two sides featuring one ($20) or two ($30) crabs. Place your order by phone at (843) 352-9235. Dockery’s on Daniel Island has a softshell crab sandwich ($18) on their take out menu. Bacon, Vertical Roots lettuce, tomato, and a preserved lemon aioli join the softie, which is served with a side of your choosing. Chubby Fish isn’t jumping into the softshell crab game just yet but say they plan to once the crustaceans are more prevalent in South Carolina waters. We’ll let you know. This list will be updated as the soft-shell season continues — if you’ve got crabs, email parker@charlestoncitypaper.com. —Parker Milner

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

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MT. PLEASANT Amalfi’s Italian • 843.793-4265 • 664 Long Point Rd. Art’s Bar and Grill • 843.849-3040 • 413 Coleman Blvd. Bacon Station • 843.225-5797 • 454 Shipping Lane Baroni’s New York Pizza • 843.388.3382 • 1220 Ben Sawyer Blvd. Benny Palmetto’s • 843.388.4332 • 433 W Coleman Blvd. Bistro Toulouse • 843.216.3434 • 1220 Ben Sawyer Blvd. Butcher & the Boar • 843.868.8000 • 730 Coleman Blvd. Cantina 76 • 843.388.7717 • 819 Coleman Blvd. Coastal Crust • 843.936.3199 • 219 Simmons St. Cuoco Pazzo • 843.971.9034 • 1035 Johnnie Dodds Blvd. Dog & Duck • 843.881.3056 • 624 Long Point Rd. Five Loaves • 843.849.1043 • 1055 Johnnie Dodds Blvd. Graze • 843.606.2493 • 863 Houston Northcutt Blvd. Grimaldi’s • 843.971.9368 • 1244 Belk Dr. Handcraft Kitchen & Cocktails • 843.972.8060 • 735 Coleman Blvd.

Jack’s Cosmic Dogs • 843.884.7677 • 2805 N. Hwy. 17 Kudzu Bakery • 843.284.8847 • 794 Coleman Blvd. La Pizzeria • 843.375.4607 • 976 Houston Northcutt Blvd. Little Miss Ha • 843.388.7251 • 915 Houston Northcutt Blvd. Mario’s Peruvian Chicken • 843.936.3265 • 1909 N. Hwy. 17 Mellow Mushroom Mt. P • 843.881.4743 • 3110 N. Hwy. 17 Mex 1 Coastal Cantina • 843.352.9699 • 1109 Park W. Blvd. Page’s Okra Grill • 843.881.3333 • 302 Coleman Blvd. Primo Hoagies • 843.606.2636 • 2755 N Hwy. 17. Red Drum • 843.849.0313 • 803 Coleman Blvd. Red’s Ice House • 843.388.0003 • 98 Church St. Saveurs du Monde Cafe • 843.352.7498 • 1960 Long Grove Dr. Savi Cucina + Wine Bar • 843.375.8433 • 1324 Theater Dr. Sena Cafe • 314.680.9889 • 2170 Snyder Cir. Sesame Burgers & Beer • 843.884.5553 • 675 Johnnie Dodds Blvd. Sol Southwest Kitchen • 843.388.4302 • 1101 Stockade Ln. Tavern & Table • 843.352.9510 • 100 Church St. Toast • 843.806.3081 • 1150 Hungry Neck Blvd. Vickery’s Bar & Grill • 843.884.4440 • 1313 Shrimp Boat Ln. Wasabi of Mt. Pleasant • 843.284.8337 • 1121 Oakland Market Rd. JAMES ISLAND/FOLLY BEACH Aji Asian Bistro • 843.300.1500 • 1011 Harbor View Rd. Alfredo’s • 843.633.0225 • 106 W. Hudson Athens Restaurant • 843.795.0957 • 1939 Maybank Hwy. Baguette Magic • 843.471.5941 • 792 Folly Rd. Black Magic Cafe • 843.576.4868 • 1130 Folly Rd. Bohemian Bull • 843.225.1817 • 1531 Folly Rd. Coastal Crust • 843.576.4562 • 979 Harbor View Rd. Crust Wood Fire Pizza • 843.762.5500 • 1956 B Maybank Hwy. Dukes BBQ • 843.789.4801 • 331 Folly Rd. Ellis Creek Fish Camp • 843.297.8878 • 1243 Harbor View Rd. Garage 75 • 843.225.4030 • 1175 Folly Rd. Grumpy Goat Cantina • 843.872.6521 • 1023 Harbor View Rd. Kwei Fei • 843.225.0094 • 1977 Maybank Hwy. Maple Street Biscuits • 843.203.3889 • 1739 Maybank Hwy. Martin’s Bar-B-Que • 843.790.0838 • 1622 Highland Ave. Melvin’s • 843.762.0511 • 538 Folly Rd. Mondo’s • 843.795.8400 • 915 Folly Rd. Smoky Oak Taproom • 843.762.6268 • 1234 Camp Rd. Sweetwater Cafe • 843.762.2622 • 801 Folly Rd. Rita’s • 843.588.2525 • 2 Center St. Taco Boy • 843.588.9761 • 15 Center St. WEST ASHLEY Andolini’s • 843.225.4743 • 1940 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Baroni’s Pizza • 843.573.0100 • 1975 Magwood Dr. Black Magic Cafe • 843.718.3534 • 1716 Ashley River Rd. Boxcar Betty’s • 843.225.7470 • 1922 Savannah Hwy. Broom Wagon Coffee • 1630 Ashley Hall Rd. California Dreaming • 843.766.1644 • 1 Ashley Point Dr. DB’s Cheesesteaks • 843.225.3231 • 2 Avondale Ave. Duck Donuts • 843.724.9917 • 1812 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Famulari’s Pizza • 843.571.0555 • 2408 Ashley River Rd.

Frothy Beard Brewing • 843.872.1075 • 1401 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Ichiban Steakhouse • 843.641.0066 • 1716 Old Towne Rd. King Claw Juicy Seafood • 843.868.6288 • 1734 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. 3 Matadors Tequileria • 843.414-7894 • 2447 Ashley River Rd. Mex 1 Coastal Cantina • 843.751.4001 • 817 Saint Andrews Blvd. Ms. Rose’s • 843.766.0223 • 1090 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Red Orchids China Bistro • 843.573.8787 • 1401 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Sesame Burgers & Beer • 843.766.7770 • 2070 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. Slice Co. • 843.343.5827 • 1662 Savannah Hwy., Ste 202 Spanglish • 843.724.9484 • 652 St Andrews Blvd. The Crabshack • 843.763.4494 • 1901 Ashley River Rd. The Glass Onion • 843.225.1717 • 1219 Savannah Hwy. Triangle Char and Bar • 843.377.1300 • 828 Savannah Hwy. East Bay Deli • 843.571.2244 • 858 Savannah Hwy. NORTH CHARLESTON 843 Korean BBQ • 843.764.9578 • 6601 Rivers Ave. Azul Mexicano • 843.203.3754 • 1078 E Montague Ave. Big Billy’s Burger Joint • 843.747-4949 • 5070 international blvd Boxcar Betty’s • 843.990.9804 • 7800 Rivers Ave. Commonhouse Ale Works • 843.471.1400 • 4831 O’Hear Ave. Cuban Gypsy Pantry • 843.872.5487 • 5060 Dorchester Rd. East Bay Deli • 843.747.1235 • 4405 Dorchester Rd. East Bay Deli • 843.553.7374 • 9135 University Blvd. EVO Pizzeria & Bakery • 843.225.1796 • 1075 E Montague Ave. Jim N Nick’s Bar-B-Que • 854.999.9132 • 4964 Center Pointe Rd. Mellow Mushroom • 843.790.9000 • 4855 Tanger Outlet Blvd. Orange Spot Coffee • 843.637.4504 • 1011 E Montague Ave. Park Pizza • 843.225.7275 • 1028 E Montague Ave. Rusty Bull Brewing • 843.225.8600 • 3005 W Montague Ave. Sesame Burgers and Beer • 843.554.4903 • 4726 Spruill Ave. Stems & Skins • 843.805.4809 • 1070 E Montague Ave. The CODfather • 843.789.4649 • 4254 Spruill Ave. Wild Wing Cafe • 843.818.9464 • 7618 Rivers Ave. Yo Bo Park Circle • 843.203.3381 • 1067 E Montague Ave. SUMMERVILLE/LADSON Antica Napoli Pizzeria • 843.900-8604 • 4560 Ladson Road Suite 210 Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar • 843.285.5123 • 200 Front Street Crust Wood Fired Pizza • 843.285.8819 • 1097 N Main St. Gilligan’s Seafood • 843.821.2244 • 3852 Ladson Rd. Madra Rua Summerville • 843.821.9434 • 2066 N Main St. Palmetto Flat’s • 843.419.6430 • 975 Bacons Bridge Rd. Sol Southwest Kitchen • 843.875.7090 • 1651 N. Main St. Taco Boy • 843.851.8226 • 106 Front St. JOHN’S ISLAND/KIAWAH ISLAND Angel Oak Restaurant • 843.556.7525 • 3669 Savannah Hwy Fat Hen • 843.559.9090 • 3140 Maybank Hwy. Gilligan’s Seafood • 843.766.2244 • 160 Main Rd. Krazy Owls • 843.640.3844 • 3157 A Maybank Hwy. Seanachai • 843.737.4221 • 3157 Maybank Hwy. Wild Olive • 843.737.4177 • 2867 Maybank Hwy.

CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com

DOWNTOWN Daps Breakfast & Imbibe • 843.718.1098 • 280 Ashley Ave. Xiao Bao Biscuit • 843.743.3486 • 224 Rutledge Ave. Renzo • 843.952.7864 • 384 Huger St. Felix Cocktails et Cuisine • 843.203.6297 • 550 King St. Hustle Smoothie Bar • 601 Meeting St. Gnome Cafe • 843.793.4931 • 109 President St. Ted’s Butcher Block • 843.577.0094 • 334 East Bay St. Huriyali • 843.207.4436 • 401 Huger St. East Bay Deli • 843.723.1234 • 334 E Bay St. Babas on Cannon • 843.284.6260 • 11 Cannon St. Basil • 843.724-3490 • 460 King Street BEECH • 843.212-5414 • 315 King Street Big Bad Breakfast • 843.459-1800 • 456 Meeting St Bon Banh Mi • 843.414.7320 • 162 Spring St. The Daily • 843.619.0151 • 652 B King St. Carmella’s • 843.722.5893 • 198 E Bay St. Circe’s Grotto • 843.203.4073 • 85 Wentworth St. Eli’s Table • 843.806.3053 • 129 Meeting St. Tabbuli Grill • 843.308.1313 • 541 King St. John King Grill & Bar • 843.965.5252 • 428 King St. Glazed Gourmet Donuts • 843.577.5557 • 481 King St. Gnome Cafe • 843.793.4931 • 109 President St. Queology • 843.958.8500 • 6 N Market St. Saffron Cafe & Bakery • 843.722.5588 • 333 E Bay St. Kickin Chicken • 843.805.5020 • 337 King St. D’Allesandro’s Pizza • 843.853.6337 • 229 Saint Philip St. Benny Ravello’s • 843.414.7143 • 520 King St. 167 Raw • 843.579.4997 • 193 King St. Roti Rolls • 843.735-9664 • Food Truck The Royal American • 843.817.6925 970 • Morrison Dr Monza Pizza Bar • 843.720.8787 • 451 King St. Oak Steakhouse • 843.722.4220 • 17 Broad St. Edmund’s Oast • 843.727.1145 • 1081 Morrison Dr. Baker & Brewer • 843.297.8233 • 94 Stuart St. Lewis Barbecue • 843.805.9500 • 464 North Nassau St. Herd Provisions • 843.637.4145 • 106 Grove St.

15


Real Estate Vacation Rentals

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JUST REDUCED. Ocean Club, 3 BR, 3 BA condo w/ 1965 sf. Great location & potential rental, 1st floor condo overlooks pool, large screend porch, master bath has jetted tub, walk-in closets & large tile shower, gated community w/ pool, $749,900. Call (843) 810-0403. Lisa Richart-Hernandez, View Properties. http://bit.ly/2n8TBbh

MASONBOROUGH! 1860 W Canning Dr, 3772 sf, pond view, screened-porch, 3+ car garage & flex room. High-end finishes! $789,500. Call (843) 210-3034. Peter Kouten, Carolina One RE. MLS 20007892, https://bit.ly/3aq94XY

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1267 Wespanne Place Court. 4 BR, 2.5 BA w/ 2301 sf, renovated, updated, upgraded, privacy fence, work shed, cul-de-sac, no HOA, $475,000. Call Susan Arrington, (843) 324-6165. Carolina One RE, MLS# 20004896. http://bit.ly/39X8yAk

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Pets

Jonesin’

“BOWL GAMES”

By Matt Jones

--I’m busy reading the back.

Cats MOTLEY COW

This 5 y/o female will moooove you. Sweet girl. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org

READY TO JOIN YOUR CRUE! 3 y/o male with a great disposition. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org

Dogs

DIXIE

8 y/o female, super sweet girl that still likes to play. Call (843) 871-3820, www.dorchesterpaws.org

NELSON

1 y/o male, calm & loving He just enjoys being taken on walks & having his head scratched. Call (843) 871-3820, www.dorchesterpaws.org

Veterinarian HARRIER HOUND-LADYBUG Super sweet 8 y/o female. Come meet this great pooch. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org

8-TIME BEST OF WINNER

AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD

PUPPIES. Olde world, long coat, ready to go in April. First shots, compete vet check. Raised with family for families. Gentle giants, great with kids! Puppy Health Passport, 2 yr. guarantee. I have been raising these magnificent dogs for 25 plus years. A+ rating w/BBB since 2008. Look for Bouchard’s Best Shepherds videos on Youtube. You have to see to believe, $2,100. Located in Charleston, SC. Call (978) 257-0353.

OHLANDT VET CLINIC IS NOW OCEANSIDE VET CLINIC. Same great 8-time, Best of Charleston award winning staff & service. The highest standard for your pets! Call 795-7574. www.oceansidevets.com

HOUND MIX-SAMMY

8 y/o female, sweet & spunky girl. Call (843) 795-1110, www.pethelpers.org

KIDNEY BEAN

3 m/o male, picture says it all for this little guy. Call (843) 871-3820, www.dorchesterpaws.org

MICKEY

8 y/o male boxer/ lab mix. Sweet boy that looks like a teddy bear. Call (843) 747-4849, www.charlestonanimalsociety.org

KORY

8 m/o female, sweet little kitty. Loves to play. Call (843) 795-1110, www.pethelpers.org

LUCKY

1 y/o female, spunky, cuddly & sweet. Call (843) 795-1110, www.pethelpers.org

AKC MINI AMERICAN

SHEPHERDS AKA: Mini Aussies. All health testing & OFA on both parents. Female Blue Merle. ALL shots completed, complete vet checks, AKC papers, 2 yr. guarantee. Raised in our home w/family, for families. See us on FB, Bouchard’s Best Shepherds. 10-15#’s when mature. A ton of fun, great with kids! A+ rating w/BBB since 2008. Located in Charleston, SC, $900. Ready to go. Call (978) 257-0353.

MIX-DEXTER

2 y/o male, goofy boy w/ an infectious smile, fantastic house manners, and I’m even crate trained! Call (843) 795-1110, www.pethelpers.org

MISSING PET? PLACE AN AD IN THE CHARLESTON CITY PAPER

CALL CRIS 577-5304 X127

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more classifieds online

charlestoncitypaper.com

Across 1 Meat in a can 5 Satirical internet comedy group since 2002 10 Media monitor, briefly 13 Bones beside radiuses 15 Former capital of Japan (and anagram of the current capital) 16 Pie ___ mode 17 Type of information listed on 62-Across 19 Former “Great British Bake Off” cohost Giedroyc 20 Mingle amongst 21 “That was my best effort” 23 Lumberjack, colloquially 25 “Who ___ is going?” 26 “___ additional cost!” 30 “Atlas Shrugged” author Rand 31 Hybrid lemon variety 32 Moisturizer stick that Kellogg’s once actually sold, based on retro 62-Across 35 “Take ___ Train” (Duke Ellington song) 37 Passionate 38 Completely absorbed 42 Perry Mason creator ___ Stanley Gardner 44 “It stays ___, even in milk!” (claim for some contents of 62-Across) 45 Actor Colm of “Chicago” and “Thor” 48 New, to Beethoven 50 Risque message 51 NYPD alerts 52 Showtime series about a killer of killers 55 Burger topping 57 Did some indoor housework 61 Make mistakes 62 Containers at the breakfast table (represented by the circled letters) 65 Apple’s mobile devices run on it 66 Golf course hazards 67 Authoritative decree 68 Explosive letters 69 Air ducts 70 “Quit it!” Down 1 Grapefruit, in school solar system models 2 “Clue” Professor 3 Against 4 Groucho of comedy 5 Winter Olympics squad 6 “Goodness gracious!” 7 Ending for ball or buff 8 Laundry mark 9 “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” captain Raymond

10 Target of a G rating 11 “A Fish Called Wanda” star 12 Mobile artist Alexander 14 Dancer and YouTube star JoJo 18 Box office buys, briefly 22 Gains again, as trust 24 Six-legged colony member 26 Furry TV alien 27 “Formal Friday” wear 28 “All Songs Considered” broadcaster 29 “Heads” side of a coin 31 List of options 33 Frigid ending? 34 “Bad” cholesterol letters (I have trouble remembering which is which) 36 “Tell ___ About It” (Billy Joel hit) 39 Deck member 40 Code for Arizona’s Sky Harbor Airport 41 News program created by Cenk Uygur, for short 43 Dir. from Denver to Chicago 44 Pirate’s sword 45 “Look at the facts!” 46 “Julie & Julia” director Nora 47 Singer-songwriter Conor 49 Word after “I before E” 52 Tractor manufacturer John 53 Finless fish 54 “Sticks and Bones” playwright David 56 Sketch show with Bob and Doug McKenzie 58 Shows approval 59 Door sign 60 Art ___ (style from 100 years ago) 63 Went on the ballot 64 Engine additive brand

CLASSIFIEDS | charlestoncitypaper.com

6 y/o female, loves to lie and take cat naps as well as enjoy the occasional kitty treat & mouse toy. Call (843) 871-3820, www.dorchesterpaws.org

Last Week's Solution

JINGLES

17


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Electronics

DRIVER JOBS

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NO W

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U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for GSAA Home Equity Trust 2007-1, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-1, PLAINTIFF, VS. Frank L. Brigman, III; Deborah M. Brigman; South State Bank; and Dunes West Property Owners Association, Inc., DEFENDANT(S).

HAVE YOU BEEN SERVED? Search the State Database for legal notices: HTTP://SCPUBLICNOTICES.COM

TO THE DEFENDANT(S) FRANK L. BRIGMAN, III AND DEBORAH M. BRIGMAN ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action, copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve copy of your answer upon the undersigned at their offices, 2712 Middleburg Drive, Suite 200, P.O. Box 2065, Columbia, South Carolina 29202, within thirty (30) days after service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day 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 the relief demanded in the Complaint, 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 a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master in Equity for Charleston County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(e) 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 cause. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND/OR 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 to represent said minor(s) 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. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the original Complaint in the above entitled action was filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on February 25, 2020. NOTICE OF MORTGAGOR’S RIGHT TO FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION TO THE DEFENDANT(S) DEBORAH M. BRIGMAN AND FRANK L. BRIGMAN, III: PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to the Supreme Court of South Carolina Administrative Order 2011-05-02-01, you may be eligible for foreclosure intervention programs for the purpose of resolving the abovereferenced foreclosure action. If you wish to be considered for a foreclosure intervention program, you must contact Scott and Corley, P.A., 2712 Middleburg Drive, Suite 200, Columbia, South Carolina 29204 or call (803) 252-3340 within thirty (30) days after being served with this notice. Scott and Corley, P.A. represents the Plaintiff in this action. We do not represent you. The South Carolina Rules of Professional Conduct prohibit our firm from giving you any legal advice.


NOTICE: THIS IS A COMMUNICATION FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING 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. SCOTT AND CORLEY, P.A. By: Ronald C. Scott (rons@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #4996 Reginald P. Corley (reggiec@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #69453 Angelia J. Grant (angig@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #78334 Allison E. Heffernan (allisonh@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #68530 Matthew E. Rupert (matthewr@scottandcorley. com), SC Bar #100740 Louise M. Johnson (ceasiej@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #16586 H. Guyton Murrell (guytonm@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #64134 Craig T. Smith (craigs@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #102831 Jordan D. Beumer (jordanb@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #104074 ATTORNEYS FOR THE PLAINTIFF 2712 Middleburg Drive, Suite 200 Columbia, SC 29204 803-252-3340

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS CASE NO. 2020-CP-10-01244 Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper, PLAINTIFF, VS. Marvetta Polgreen; Earl Sparkman, Jr. a/k/a Earl Sparkman, individually; Earl Sparkman, Jr. a/k/a Earl Sparkman, individually, and as Legal Heir or Devisee of the Estate of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, Deceased; Nathaniel Mozzee a/k/a Nathaniel Samuel Mozee a/k/a Nathaniel S. Mozzee, individually; Nathaniel Mozzee a/k/a Nathaniel Samuel Mozee a/k/a Nathaniel S. Mozzee, individually, and as Legal Heir or Devisee of the Estate of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, Deceased; Denise White a/k/a Denise Sparkman a/k/a Denise S. White a/k/a Denise Sparkman White, individually; Denise White a/k/a Denise Sparkman a/k/a Denise S. White a/k/a Denise Sparkman White, individually, and as Legal Heir or Devisee of the Estate of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, Deceased; Corey L. Sparkman a/k/a Corey Sparkman, individually; Corey L. Sparkman a/k/a Corey Sparkman, individually, and as Legal Heir or Devisee of the Estate of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, Deceased; Any Heirsat-Law or Devisees of the Estate of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, Deceased, their heirs or devisees, successors and assigns, and all other persons entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons with any

right, title or interest in the real estate described herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class designated as Richard Roe and Sara Lacavera, DEFENDANT(S). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (201070.00043) TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVENAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices, 2712 Middleburg Drive, Suite 200, Columbia, Post Office Box 2065, Columbia, South Carolina, 29202-2065, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, 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 a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master-In-Equity or Special Referee for Charleston County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53 (e) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedures, specifically provide that the said Master-In-Equity or Special Master is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this cause. TO MINOR(S) OVER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND/OR 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, Plaintiff will apply to have the appointment of the Guardian ad Litem Nisi, Kelley Yarborough Woody, made absolute. NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANTS: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Summons and Complaint, of which the foregoing is a copy of the Summons, were filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County, South Carolina on March 5, 2020. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the order appointing Kelley Yarborough Woody, whose address is PO Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260, as Guardian Ad Litem Nisi for all persons whomsoever herein collectively designated as Richard Roe, defendants herein whose names and addresses are unknown, including any thereof who may be minors, incapacitated, or under other legal disability, whether residents or non-residents of South Carolina; for all named Defendants, addresses unknown, who may be infants, incapacitated, or under a legal disability; for any unknown heirs-at-law of Alice Sparkman a/k/a Alice M. Sparkman, including their heirs, personal representatives, successors and assigns, and all other persons entitled to claim through them; and for all other unknown persons with any right, title, or interest in and to the real estate that is the subject of this foreclosure action, was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on the 11th day of March, 2020.

YOU WILL FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that unless the said Defendants, or someone in their behalf or in behalf of any of them, shall within thirty (30) days after service of notice of this order upon them by publication, exclusive of the day of such service, procure to be appointed for them, or any of them, a Guardian Ad Litem to represent them or any of them for the purposes of this action, the Plaintiff will apply for an order making the appointment of said Guardian Ad Litem Nisi absolute. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an action has been commenced by the Plaintiff above named against the Defendant(s) above named for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage given by Earl Sparkman and Alice M. Sparkman to CitiMortgage, Inc., dated January 24, 2003, recorded February 7, 2003, in the office of the Clerk of Court/Register of Deeds for Charleston County, in Book A436 at Page 805; thereafter, said Mortgage was assigned to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Federal National Mortgage Association by assignment instrument dated November 23, 2010 and recorded December 9, 2010 in Book 0159 at Page 891; thereafter, said Mortgage was assigned to Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper by assignment instrument dated February 18, 2020 and attached hereto as Exhibit “A”. The description of the premises is as follows: ALL that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in North Charleston Consolidated Public Service District, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as LOT 18, BLOCK D, Covington Hills, as shown on a plat of “COVINGTON HILLS” made by John Martin Saboe, dated December 13, 1971, and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book AA, Page 199, which plat is made a part thereof by reference thereto. Plaintiff has contemporaneously filed a Complaint herein, which includes a cause of action to reform the legal description of the mortgage to be as follows: ALL that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in North Charleston Consolidated Public Service District, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as LOT 18, BLOCK D, Covington Hills, as shown on a plat of “COVINGTON HILLS” made by John Martin Saboe, dated December 13, 1971, and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book AA, Page 119, which plat is made a part thereof by reference thereto. This being the same property conveyed to Earl Sparkman and Alice M. Sparkman by deed of Offie L. Strickland and Sarah H. Strickland, dated January 24, 2003 and recorded February 7, 2003 in Book Z435 at Page 44 in the Office of the Register of Mesne Conveyance. Thereafter, Earl Sparkman a/k/a Earl Sparkman, Sr. died intestate on September 3, 2007, leaving the subject property to his heirs, namely, Alice Sparkman, Marvetta Polgreen, Earl Sparkman, Jr., Nathaniel Mozzee, Denise White and Corey L. Sparkman, as is more fully preserved in the Probate records for Charleston County in Case No. 2008-ES10-01278; also by that Deed of Distribution dated October 2, 2009 and recorded November 18, 2009 in Book 0092 at Page 565.

TMS No. 4061400018 Property address: 5819 Saint Angela Drive North Charleston, SC 29418 SCOTT AND CORLEY, P.A. By: Ronald C. Scott (rons@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #4996 Reginald P. Corley (reggiec@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #69453 Angelia J. Grant (angig@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #78334 Allison E. Heffernan (allisonh@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #68530 Matthew E. Rupert (matthewr@scottandcorley. com), SC Bar #100740 Louise M. Johnson (ceasiej@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #16586 H. Guyton Murrell (guytonm@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #64134 Craig T. Smith (craigs@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #102831 Jordan D. Beumer (jordanb@scottandcorley.com), SC Bar #104074 ATTORNEYS FOR THE PLAINTIFF 2712 Middleburg Drive, Suite 200 Columbia, SC 29204 803-252-3340

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2019-CP-10-04785 782A RUTLEDGE, LLC, Plaintiff, v. Andrew Ewanus, Jr., and if the be deceased, his heirs, Personal Representatives, Successors, and Assigns and Spouses if any they have and all other Persons with any right, title or interest in and to the real estate described in the Complaint, commonly known as: Lot 17, Block N Glyn Terrace 5302 McRoy Street North Charleston, South Carolina TMS Number: 408-08-00-155 and also any unknown adults and those persons as who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, all of them being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class Designated as Richard Roe, and CITY OF NORTH CHARLESTON, Defendants. SUMMONS AND NOTICE To the Defendants above-named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the undersigned at his office at: 1721 Ashley River Road, Charleston, South Carolina 29407, within thirty (30) days, after service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive if the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to answer the foregoing summons, the Plaintiffs will move for a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master-in-Equity or Special Referee for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(e) of the South Carolina Rule of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Masterin-Equity or Special Referee is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case. NOTICE OF FILING

Free Will Astrology ARIES (March 21-April 19): “If all the world’s a stage, where the hell is the teleprompter,” asks aphorist Sami Feiring. In my astrological opinion, you Aries are the least likely of all the signs to identify with that perspective. While everyone else might wish they could be better prepared for the nonstop improvisational tests of everyday life, most of you tend to prefer what I call the “naked spontaneity” approach. If you were indeed given the chance to use a teleprompter, you’d probably ignore it. Everything I just said is especially and intensely true for you right now. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When Nobel Prizewinning Norwegian author Knut Hamsun was 25 years old, a doctor told him that the tuberculosis he had contracted would kill him within three months. But in fact, Hamsun lived 67 more years, till the age of 92. I suspect there’s an equally erroneous prophecy or unwarranted expectation impacting your life right now. A certain process or phenomenon that seems to be nearing an end may in fact reinvent or resurrect itself, going on to last for quite some time. I suggest you clear away any misapprehensions you or others might have about it. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I invite you to remember what you were thinking and feeling around your birthday in 2019. Were there specific goals you hoped to accomplish between then and your birthday in 2020? Were there bad old habits you aimed to dissolve and good new habits you proposed to instigate? Was there a lingering wound you aspired to heal or a debilitating memory you longed to conquer? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to take inventory of your progress in projects like those. And if you find that you have achieved less than you had hoped, I trust you will dedicate yourself to playing catch-up in the weeks between now and your birthday. You may be amazed at how much ground you can cover. CANCER (June 21-July 22): I can’t swim. Why? There was a good reason when I was a kid: I’m allergic to chlorine, and my mom wouldn’t let me take swimming lessons at the local chlorine-treated pool. Since then, the failure to learn is inexcusable, and I’m embarrassed about it. Is there an equivalent phenomenon in your life, my fellow Cancerian? The coming weeks might be an excellent time to meditate on how to correct the problem. Now excuse me while I head out to my solo self-administered swim lesson at Bass Lake, buoyed by the instructions I got from a Youtube video. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Is William Shakespeare the greatest author who ever lived? French philosopher Voltaire didn’t think so, calling him “an amiable barbarian.” Russian superstar author Leo Tolstoy claimed The Bard had “a complete absence of aesthetic feeling.” England’s first Poet Laureate John Dryden called Shakespeare’s language “scarcely intelligible.” T. E. Lawrence, a.k.a Lawrence of Arabia, declared The Bard had a second-rate mind. Lord Byron said, “Shakespeare’s name stands too absurdly high and will go down.” His contemporary, the poet and playwright Ben Johnson, asserted that he “never had six lines together without a fault.” I offer these cheeky views to encourage you Leos to enjoy your own idol-toppling and authority-questioning activities in the coming weeks. You have license to be an irrepressible iconoclast. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo-born Jack Ma is China’s richest person and one of the world’s most powerful businessmen. He co-founded Alibaba, the Chinese version of Amazon.com. He likes his employees to work hard, but also thinks they should cultivate a healthy balance between work and life. In his opinion, they should have sex six times a week, or 312 times a year. Some observers have suggested that’s too much — especially if you labor 12 hours a day, six days a week, as Jack Ma prefers — but it may not be excessive for you Virgos. The coming months could be a very erotic time. But please practice safe sex in every way imaginable. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): How hard are you willing to work on your most important relationships? How might your life change for the better if you gave them your most potent resourcefulness

By Rob Brezsny

and panache? The next eight weeks will be a favorable time for you to attend to these matters, Libra. During this fertile time, you will have unprecedented power to reinvigorate togetherness with imaginative innovations. I propose you undertake the following task: Treat your intimate alliances as creative art projects that warrant your supreme ingenuity. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I make mistakes,” confessed author Jean Kerr. “I’ll be the second to admit it.” She was making a joke, contrasting her tepid sense of responsibility with the humbler and more common version of the idiom, which is “I make mistakes; I’ll be the first to admit it.” In the coming weeks, I’ll be fine if you merely match her mild level of apology — just as long as you do indeed acknowledge some culpability in what has gone amiss or awry or off-kilter. One way or another, you need to be involved in atonement and correction — for your own sake. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): If you have been thinking of adopting a child or getting pregnant with a new child, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to enter a new phase of rumination about that possibility. If you’ve been dreaming off and on about a big project that could activate your dormant creative powers and captivate your imagination for a long time to come, now would be a perfect moment to get more practical about it. If you have fantasized about finding a new role that would allow you to express even more of your beauty and intelligence, you have arrived at a fertile phase to move to the next stage of that fantasy. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I suggest you make room in your life for a time of sacred rejuvenation. Here are activities you might try: Recall your favorite events of the past. Reconnect with your roots. Research your genetic heritage. Send prayers to your ancestors, and ask them to converse with you in your dreams. Have fun feeling what it must have been like when you were in your mother’s womb. Get a phone consultation with a past life regression therapist who can help you recover scenes from your previous incarnations. Feel reverence and gratitude for traditions that are still meaningful to you. Reaffirm your core values—the principles that serve as your lodestar. And here’s the number one task I recommend: Find a place of refuge in your imagination and memories; use your power of visualization to create an inner sanctuary. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Are we just being poetic and fanciful when we say that wonder is a survival skill? Not according to the editors who assembled the collection of essays gathered in a book called Wonder and Other Survival Skills. They propose that a capacity to feel awe and reverence can help us to be vital and vigorous; that an appreciation for marvelous things makes us smart and resilient; that it’s in our selfish interests to develop a humble longing for sublime beauty and an attraction to sacred experiences. The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to dive deep into these healing pleasures, dear Aquarius. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): For decades, the city of Sacramento, California suffered from severe floods when the Sacramento and American Rivers overflowed their banks. Residents authorized a series of measures to prevent these disasters, culminating in the construction of a 59,000-acre floodplain that solved the problem. According to my analysis, the coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to plan an equally systematic transformation. It could address a big ongoing problem like Sacramento’s floods, or it could be a strategy for reorganizing and recreating your life so as to gloriously serve your long-term dreams. Homework: It’s a good time to think about Shadow Blessings: https://tinyurl.com/ ShadowBlessings

CLASSIFIEDS | charlestoncitypaper.com

IF YOU FAIL, REFUSE, OR VOLUNTARILY ELECT NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION PROCESS, THE FORECLOSURE ACTION MAY PROCEED.

19


PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Lis Pendens, Summons and Notice, and Complaint, were filed on September 17, 2019, the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem was filed on December 30, 2019 and the Order of Publication was filed on March 18, 2020 in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County, State of South Carolina. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Carl B Hubbard, Esquire of 2201 Middle Street, Box 15, Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina 29482 has been designated as Guardian ad Litem for all Defendants who may be incompetent, under age, or under any other disability or in the Service of the Military by Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Charleston County, dated December 30, 2019 and the said appointment shall become absolute 30 days after the final publication of this Notice, unless such Defendants, or anyone in their behalf shall procure a proper person to be appointed Guardian ad Litem of them within 30 days after the final publication of this Notice. THE PURPOSE of this action is to clear the title to the subject real property described as follows: ALL that lot, piece or parcel of land with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in Charleston County, South Carolina, known and designated as Lot No. 17, Block N, Glyn Terrace Subdivision, as shown on a plat made by W. H, Matheny, Surveyor, dated August 2, 1965 and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book T at Page 88; said lot having size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. TMS#: 408-08-00-155 s/Jeffrey T. Spell Jeffrey T. Spell 1721 Ashley River Road Charleston, South Carolina 29407 (843) 452-3553 Attorney for Plaintiff Date: March 18, 2020

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2019-CP-10-04784

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782A RUTLEDGE, LLC, Plaintiff, v. Shawn D. King and Elke B. King, and if they be deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Successors, and Assigns and Spouses if any they have and all other Persons with any right, title or interest in and to the real estate described in the Complaint, commonly known as: Lot 9, Block F Woodside Manor 4435 Donwood Drive Ladson, South Carolina TMS Number: 388-06-00-024 and also any unknown adults and those persons as who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, all of them being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class Designated as Richard Roe, Defendants. SUMMONS AND NOTICE To the Defendants abovenamed: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the undersigned at his office at: 1721 Ashley

River Road, Charleston, South Carolina 29407, within thirty (30) days, after service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive if the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to answer the foregoing summons, the Plaintiffs will move for a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master-inEquity or Special Referee for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(e) of the South Carolina Rule of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity or Special Referee is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case. NOTICE OF FILING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Lis Pendens, Summons and Notice, and Complaint, were filed on September 17, 2019, the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem was filed on December 30, 2019 and the Order of Publication was filed on March 18, 2020 in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County, State of South Carolina. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Carl B Hubbard, Esquire of 2201 Middle Street, Box 15, Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina 29482 has been designated as Guardian ad Litem for all Defendants who may be incompetent, under age, or under any other disability or in the Service of the Military by Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Charleston County, dated December 30, 2019 and the said appointment shall become absolute 30 days after the final publication of this Notice, unless such Defendants, or anyone in their behalf shall procure a proper person to be appointed Guardian ad Litem of them within 30 days after the final publication of this Notice. THE PURPOSE of this action is to clear the title to the subject real property described as follows: ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land with the improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in Charleston County, South Carolina, known and designated as Lot 9, Block F, in Woodside Manor Subdivision, as shown on a plat made by E.M. Seabrook, Jr., Inc., dated January 26, 1970 and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book Z at Page 74; said lot having size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. TMS#: 388-06-00-024 s/Jeffrey T. Spell Jeffrey T. Spell 1721 Ashley River Road Charleston, South Carolina 29407 (843) 452-3553 Attorney for Plaintiff Date: March 18, 2020

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2019-CP-10-1835 VOX USA, LLC, Plaintiff, v. Ruth Fludd, a deceased person, her heirs and assigns, if any they have and all Personal Representatives, Successors, and Spouses, if any; Eddie Smith, Michael Smith, Reggie Smith,

Sherry Collins and Eloise Blair and any other persons with any right, title or interest in and to the real estate described in the Complaint, commonly known as: Lot 6 & 7 in Block 22 1918 Harper Street Charleston County North Charleston, South Carolina TMS Number: 472-16-00275 and also any unknown adults and those persons as who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, all of them being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class Designated as Richard Roe, and Carolina National Mortgage Investment Co., Inc. its Successors and/or assigns, Defendants.

Seven (7) in Block Twenty Two (22) on a Plat made by W.L. Gaillard, Surveyor, dated October 1941, and recorded in the Charleston County RMC Office in Plat Book F at Page 98 on October 30, 1941, and having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings, and boundings as are shown on said plat, reference to which is hereby made for a more complete description thereof.

SUMMONS AND NOTICE To the Defendants abovenamed: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the undersigned at his office at: 1721 Ashley River Road, Charleston, South Carolina 29407, within thirty (30) days, after service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive if the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to answer the foregoing summons, the Plaintiffs will move for a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master-in-Equity or Special Referee for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(e) of the South Carolina Rule of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity or Special Referee is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS IN THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-06346

NOTICE OF FILING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Lis Pendens, Summons and Notice, and Complaint, were filed on April 10, 2019, the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem was filed on April 24, 2019 and the Order of Publication was filed on March 18, 2020 in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County, State of South Carolina. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Carl B Hubbard, Esquire of 2201 Middle Street, Box 15, Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina 29482 has been designated as Guardian ad Litem for all Defendants who may be incompetent, under age, or under any other disability or in the Service of the Military by Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Charleston County, dated April 24, 2019 and the said appointment shall become absolute 30 days after the final publication of this Notice, unless such Defendants, or anyone in their behalf shall procure a proper person to be appointed Guardian ad Litem of them within 30 days after the final publication of this Notice. THE PURPOSE of this action is to clear the title to the subject real property described as follows: ALL THOSE CERTAIN PIECES, parcels or lots of land, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, if any, situate, lying and being in the Subdivision of Ferndale County of Charleston, in the State of South Carolina, and designated as Lot Numbers Six (6) and

TMS#: 472-16-00-275 s/Jeffrey T. Spell Jeffrey T. Spell 1721 Ashley River Road Charleston, South Carolina 29407 (843) 452-3553 Attorney for Plaintiff Date: March 18, 2020

EAST ATLANTIC TRUST, LLC, Plaintiff, v. Henry Aiken, Mary Alice Norwood a/k/a Mae Alice Norwood, Henry J. Aiken, Jr., and Moses Norwood, all being deceased persons and their Heirs, Personal Representatives, Successors and Assigns and Spouses, if any they have and all other persons entitled to claim under them or through them and any and all unknown persons with any right, title or interest in and to the real estate described in the Complaint and commonly known as: 42 Poinsett Street, Charleston, SC TMS # 463-12-03-040 and also any unknown adults and those persons as who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, all of them being a class designated as John Doe; and any unknown minors or persons under a disability being a class designated as Richard Roe. Defendants. SUMMONS AND NOTICE To the Defendants abovenamed: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the undersigned at his office at: 1721 Ashley River Road, Charleston, South Carolina 29407, within thirty (30) days, after service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, except as to the United States of America, which shall have sixty (60) days, exclusive if the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that should you fail to answer the foregoing summons, the Plaintiffs will move for a general Order of Reference of this cause to the Master-inEquity or Special Referee for this County, which Order shall, pursuant to Rule 53(e) of the South Carolina Rule of Civil Procedure, specifically provide that the said Master-in-Equity or Special Referee is authorized and empowered to enter a final judgment in this case. NOTICE OF FILING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Lis Pendens, Summons and Notice, and Complaint, were filed on December 9, 2019, the Order Appointing Guardian ad Litem was filed on December 30, 2019 and the Order of Publication was filed on February 18, 2020 in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Berkeley County, State of South Carolina.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that Carl B Hubbard, Esquire of 2201 Middle Street, Box 15, Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina 29482 has been designated as Guardian ad Litem for all Defendants who may be incompetent, under age, or under any other disability or in the Service of the Military by Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Berkeley County, dated December 30, 2019 and the said appointment shall become absolute 30 days after the final publication of this Notice, unless such Defendants, or anyone in their behalf shall procure a proper person to be appointed Guardian ad Litem of them within 30 days after the final publication of this Notice. THE PURPOSE of this action is to clear the title to the subject real property described as follows: All that lot, piece or parcel of land with buildings, thereon situate, lying and being on the North side of Poinsette Street is the City of Charleston, State aforesaid, and known on a plat made by McCrady Bros. & Cheves in August 1919, as Lot 8, said plat being of record in the Office aforesaid in Plat Book C, Page100. Butting and Bounding and Measuring and Containing as follows, to wit: North on lands now or formerly of _________ thirty-eight and 9/10ths (feet 38.9), East by Lot No. 9 on said Plat ninety (90) feet, South on Poinsette Street forty-eight and 6/10ths (48.6) feet and West on lands now or formerly of _____ eighty-eight and 4/10ths (88.4) feet. Being the property conveyed to the said Henry Aiken by Naomi P. McGill, by Deed dated the 28th day of April, 1944 and recorded in the R.M.C. Office for Charleston County in Book P-44, Page 309. TMS # 463-12-03-040 s/Jeffrey T. Spell Jeffrey T. Spell 1721 Ashley River Road Charleston, South Carolina 29407 (843) 452-3553 Attorney for Plaintiff Date: March 16, 2020

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2020-CP-10-00286 The Bank of New York Mellon as Trustee for NovaStar Mortgage Funding Trust, Series 2005-1, NovaStar Home Equity Loan Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-1, Plaintiff, v. Flossie Elmore a/k/a Flossie L. Elmore; Theresa M. Matthews; Westchester Civic Association; Any heirs-at-law or devisees of Edith A. Matthews, deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Administrators, Successors and Assigns, and all other persons or entities entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons or entities with any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as Richard Roe; and any unknown minors, incompetent or imprisoned person, or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe.; Any heirs-at-law or devisees of Johnson J. Matthews, deceased, their heirs, Personal Representatives, Administrators, Successors and Assigns, and all other persons or entities entitled to claim through them; all unknown persons or entities

with any right, title, estate, interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint herein; also any persons who may be in the military service of the United States of America, being a class designated as Richard Roe; and any unknown minors, incompetent or imprisoned person, or persons under a disability being a class designated as John Doe., Defendant(s). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury) FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. 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 Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-in-Equity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto. LIS PENDENS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT an action has been or will be commenced in this Court upon complaint of the above-named Plaintiff against the abovenamed Defendant(s) for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage of real estate given by Flossie Elmore and Theresa M. Matthews to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for NovaStar Mortgage, Inc. dated January 18, 2005 and recorded on January 20, 2005 in Book C523 at Page 785, in the Charleston County Registry (hereinafter, “Mortgage”). Thereafter, the Mortgage was transferred to the Plaintiff herein by assignment and/or corporate merger. The premises covered and

affected by the said Mortgage and by the foreclosure thereof were, at the time of the making thereof and at the time of the filing of this notice, more particularly described in the said Mortgage and are more commonly described as: All that lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, in Charleston County, South Carolina, and known and designated as Lot No. 5, Block 4, as shown on a Plat of Westchester III, recorded in Plat Book Z, page 89, in the RMC Office for Charleston County. This being the same property conveyed to Flossie L. Elmore and Theresa M. Matthews by Deed of Edith A. Matthews dated April 24, 2003 and recorded April 28, 2003 in Book B446 at Page 888 in the records for Charleston County, South Carolina. TMS No. 427-05-00-185 Property Address: 1445 Westwood Drive Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on January 15, 2020. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office. ORDER APPOINTING GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Guardian ad Litem for unknown minors, and persons who may be under a disability, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to said appointment. FURTHER upon reading the filed Petition for Appointment of Kelley Woody, Esquire as Attorney for any unknown Defendants who may be in the Military Service of the United States of America, and may be, as such, entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act, and any amendments thereto, and it appearing that Kelley Woody, Esquire has consented to act for and represent said Defendants, it is ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Guardian ad Litem on behalf of all unknown minors and all unknown persons who may be under a disability, all of whom may have or claim to have some interest or claim to the real property commonly known as 1445 Westwood Drive, Charleston, SC 29412; that he is empowered and directed to appear on behalf of and represent said Defendants, unless said Defendants, or someone on their behalf, shall within thirty (30) days after service of a copy hereof as directed, procure the appointment of Guardian or Guardians ad Litem for said Defendants. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Kelley Woody, P.O. Box 6432, Columbia, SC 29260 phone (803) 787-9678, be and hereby is appointed Attorney for any unknown Defendants who are, or may be, in the Military Service of the United States of America and as such are entitled to the benefits of the Servicemember’s Civil Relief Act aka Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940, and any amendments thereto, to represent and protect the interest of said Defendants, AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED That a copy of this Order shall be forth with served upon said

Defendants by publication in Charleston City Paper, a newspaper of general circulation published in the County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks, together with the Summons and Notice of Filing of Complaint in the above entitled action. Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2020-CP-10-00829 U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Residential Asset Securities Corporation, Home Equity Mortgage Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-KS2, Plaintiff, v. Robert L. Hosey, Defendant(s). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury) FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. 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 Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-in-Equity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto.


NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT

TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on February 14, 2020. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office.

TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Complaint, Cover Sheet for Civil Actions and Certificate of Exemption from ADR in the above entitled action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on July 17, 2019. A Notice of Foreclosure Intervention was also filed in the Clerk of Court’s Office.

Brock & Scott PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803-454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff

Brock & Scott, PLLC 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110 Columbia, SC 29210 Phone 844-856-6646 Fax 803454-3451 Attorneys for Plaintiff

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS C/A NO.: 2019-CP-10-03790 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff, v. Marvin T. Green; Republic Finance, LLC, Defendant(s). SUMMONS AND NOTICES (Non-Jury) FORECLOSURE OF REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE TO THE DEFENDANT(S) ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to appear and defend by answering the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer on the subscribers at their offices at 3800 Fernandina Road, Suite 110, Columbia, SC 29210, within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; except that the United States of America, if named, shall have sixty (60) days to answer after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to do so, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. 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 Attorney for Plaintiff. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that Plaintiff will move for an Order of Reference or the Court may issue a general Order of Reference of this action to a Master-in-Equity/Special Referee, pursuant to Rule 53 of the South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. YOU WILL ALSO TAKE NOTICE that under the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. § 29-3-100, effective June 16, 1993, any collateral assignment of rents contained in the referenced Mortgage is perfected and Attorney for Plaintiff hereby gives notice that all rents shall be payable directly to it by delivery to its undersigned attorneys from the date of default. In the alternative, Plaintiff will move before a judge of this Circuit on the 10th day after service hereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, for an Order enforcing the assignment of rents, if any, and compelling payment of all rents covered by such assignment directly to the Plaintiff, which motion is to be based upon the original Note and Mortgage herein and the Complaint attached hereto.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT NINTH TIJDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2020-DR-10-801 KATHLEEN DOLLOFF, Plaintiff, vs. MOLLY DOLLOFF, JOSHUA HASELDEN and JOHN DOE, Defendants. SUMMONS 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, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint upon the subscribers, Bleecker Law Firm, LLC, at their offices at 561 Savannah Highway, Charleston, South Carolina, 29407, within thirty (30) days of the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service. YOU ARE HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE FURTHER that, if you fail to appear and defend and fail to answer the Complaint as required by this Summons within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. By order of the Chief Justice of the SC Supreme Court, all domestic relations cases shall be disposed of within 365 days of their filing. Failure to request a final hearing within this time may result in administrative dismissal of this case. Melissa E. Simondi ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFFS The Bleecker Law Firm 561 Savannah Highway Charleston, SC 29407 843-571-2725 (telephone) 843-571-2750 (fax) msimondi@bleeckerlawfirm.com March 9, 2020 Charleston South Carolina

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-CP-10-06642 BGE 2014, LLC, Plaintiff, vs. VERONICA L. STEPHENS, ALBERT HENDERSON AND FRED J. POWELL, and if any of them be deceased, then JOHN DOE, adults, and RICHARD ROE, infants, insane persons, incompetents, and persons in the Military of The United States of America, being fictitious names designating as a class any unknown person or persons who may be an heir, distributee, devisee, legatee, widower, widow, assign, administrator, executor, creditor, successor, personal representative, issue or alienee of VERONICA L. STEPHENS, ALBERT HENDERSON AND/

OR FRED J. POWELL, if any of them be deceased, and LUCILLE KINLOCH, ALETHIA HENDERSON AND ALFONZA KINLOCH, also known as Alphonso Kinloch, all deceased, any and all other persons or entities entitled to claim under any of them or through them, and any and all other persons or legal entities, known and unknown, claiming any right, title, interest or estate in or lien upon the parcel of real estate described in the Lis Pendens and Complaint herein filed, Defendants. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF FILING 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 upon the subscribers at their office located at 858 Lowcountry Blvd., Suite 101, Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina, 29464, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the certificate of Exemption, Summons, Lis Pendens, Notice and Complaint in the above entitled action were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on December 27, 2019. CISA & DODDS, LLP By: s/John J. Dodds, III 858 Lowcountry Blvd., Suite 101 Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464 (P) (843) 881-6530 (F) (843) 881-5433 SC Bar No.: 1707 john@cisadodds.com ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF March 25, 2020. Mount Pleasant, SC

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO. 2018-CP-10-3121 YACHT HARBOR OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. Plaintiff, vs. GREG A. SWINDELL, GLORIA A. SHIVELER, JOHN DOE, adults, and RICHARD ROE, infants, insane persons, incompetents, and persons in the Military of The United States of America, being fictitious names designating as a class any unknown person or persons who may be an heir, distributee, devisee, legatee, widower, widow, assign, administrator, executor, creditor, successor, personal representative, issue or alienee of JACOB H.SHIVELER, deceased, and any or all other persons or legal entities, known and unknown, claiming any right, title, interest or estate in or lien upon the parcel of real estate described in the Amended Lis Pendens and Amended Complaint herein filed, Defendants. NOTICE OF FILING AND AMENDED SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Amended Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon the subscribers at their office

located at 858 Lowcountry Boulevard, Suite 101, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina 29464, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service; and if you fail to answer the Amended Complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for judgment by default for the relief demanded in the Amended Complaint. Your Answer must be in writing and signed by you or your attorney and must state your address or the address of your attorney, if signed by your attorney. YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Amended Summons and Amended Complaint, Amended Lis Pendens, Amended Notice and Amended Certificate of Exemption were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on October 1, 2019. CISA & DODDS, LLP By:s/John J. Dodds, III 858 Lowcountry Blvd. Suite 101 Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464 (P) (843) 881-6530 (F) (843) 881-5433 SC Bar No.: 1707 john@cisadodds.com ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina March 24, 2020.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2019-DR-10-3506 TONI ELIZABETH PRESIDENT, Plaintiff, vs. CHARLES LINWOOD BRITT, Defendant. SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: 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, D. Allen Badger, at the address below, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service. That Defendant may be served by law enforcement, by private process server and/or by any other means permitted by Rules of Court or by law. YOU ARE HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE FURTHER that if you fail to appear and defend and fail to answer the Complaint as required by this Summons within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, judgment by default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CASE NO.: 2020-CP-10-108 MOISES GONZALEZ RIVERA, Plaintiff, v. ANTOINE DARNELLE MAXWELL, Defendant. TO: THE DEFENDANT ABOVENAMED YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint, herein, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint upon the subscriber, Keith Robinson, Esquire, at his office located at 3511 Rivers Avenue, North Charleston, South Carolina 29415, within thirty (30) days of the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service. YOU ARE HEREBY GIVEN FURTHER NOTICE, that if you fail to appear and defend and fail to answer the complaint as required by this summons, within thirty (30) days after service hereof, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the original Summons and Complaint, of which the foregoing is a copy of the Summons, were filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County, South Carolina on January 14, 2020. Green Law Firm, LLC. s/ Keith Robinson Keith Robinson Attorney for Plaintiff 3511 Rivers Avenue P.O. Box 70306 Charleston, SC 29415 (843) 747-2455 North Charleston, South Carolina March 23, 2020

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STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON Court of Common Pleas Ninth Judicial Circuit Case No.: 2019-CP-10-6597

upon you, not counting the day of service, or thirty-five (35) days if you were served by certified mail, restricted delivery, return receipt requested.

South Carolina Federal Credit Union, Plaintiff, versus David Tristan Balfour a/k/a

If you wish to retain an attorney to represent you in this matter, it is advisable to do so before submitting your Answer to the Plaintiff.

PO BOX 31312 CHARLESTON, SC 29417 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DORCHESTER IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO.: 2019-DR-18-1563 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSES

If you do not answer the Complaint within the required thirty (30) days, the Court may grant a DIVORCE and grant the Plaintiff the relief requested in the Complaint.

David T. Balfour a/k/a David Balfour, Defendant. SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANT NAMED ABOVE: YOU ARE SUMMONED AND REQUIRED to answer the Complaint in the foregoing action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your said Answer on the undersigned attorney within thirty (30) days of the service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE OF FILING Please take notice that the Summons and Complaint in the foregoing action were filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Charleston, 100 Broad Street, Charleston, SC on December 22, 2019. KATHLEEN M. FERRI Attorney for Plaintiff, SCFCU P.O. Box 31776 Charleston, SC 29417-1776 (843) 557-9775 kmferri@ferrilaw.net

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT 9TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT Docket No. 2017-DR-10-2786 Anthony Rivers, Plaintiff Vs. Sharon L. Rivers, Defendant. --------------------------SUMMONS FOR DIVORCE (One Year Continuous Separation) To the DEFENDANT Above-Named: YOU ARE HERBY NOTIFIED that you have been sued by the Plaintiff for DIVORCE in the Court indicated above. You must respond in writing to the attached Complain for Divorce and serve a copy of your Answer on the Plaintiff at the address below within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons

Marietta Simmons; Jonathan Simmons

August 1, 2017 Charleston, S.C.

ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: RAY WARD AYDLETT 2020-ES-10-0217 DOD: 12/07/19 Pers. Rep: STEVEN E. TARKINGTON 9460 HIGHWOOD HILL RD. BRENTWOOD, TN 37027 ************ Estate of: ELLEN LYNCH HAYNES 2020-ES-10-0291 DOD: 12/19/19 Pers. Rep: THERESE H. ORLANDO 1517 GATOR TRAK CHARLESTON, SC 29414 ************ Estate of: PATRICIA WARREN RISER 2020-ES-10-0347 DOD: 01/28/20 Pers. Rep: GEORGE PETTIS RISER 160 POPLAR WOODS DR. CONCORD, NC 28027 ************ Estate of: KATHLEEN O. SLATER 2020-ES-10-0361 DOD: 01/20/20 Pers. Rep: REBECCA G. MCCAULEY 1809 ORIOLE DR. MUNSTER, IN 46321 Atty: SHIRRESE B. BROCKINGTON, ESQ.

NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Dorchester County on November 7, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Dorchester, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Dorchester County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Dorchester County Department of Social Service, 216 Orangeburg Road, Summerville, South Carolina 29483, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

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NOTICE OF FILING COMPLAINT

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M MUSIC

pulse SUSTO TO LIVESTREAM FOUR SHOWS OVER TWO WEEKS

Photos courtesy CJO via YouTube; King and Fields Studios

MANNY HOUSTON AND THE CHARLESTON JAZZ ORCHESTRA’S TRIBUTE TO RAY CHARLES WAS THE FIRST ARCHIVED CONCERT IN THE SERIES

The Next Best Thing The Charleston Jazz Orchestra digs into the archives for a new online concert series

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 04.01.2020

BY VINCENT HARRIS

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We may not be able to go to concerts for the foreseeable future, but in the online world, the Charleston Jazz Orchestra is still providing music. Charleston Jazz has posted portions of their concerts on YouTube and Facebook, but began publishing entire concerts online on March 26 as part of a weekly series called “From the Archives.” The first posted concert was from April 2019, a program called “Mess Around: A Tribute To Ray Charles featuring Manny Houston.” New concerts from the archives will be posted on Facebook and YouTube every Thursday evening for as long as necessary. “It’s an interesting time for performing arts organizations that typically perform onstage with hundreds and hundreds of people around them,” says Tatjana Beylotte, the executive director of Charleston Jazz. “So the next best thing is to perform online.” Luckily, the orchestra has a large catalog of performances to choose from; more than 11 years, as it turns out. “The good thing is that we have recordings of all of our performances,” Beylotte says. “We record all of them and edit a couple of the songs to add them to our YouTube page, but in this case, we’re going to have the entire performance, which we don’t usually do.” Beylotte recently re-watched the Ray Charles program and she says she found the experience exhilarating. “‘Mess Around’ with Manny Houston was such a great upbeat performance,” she says. “It’s fun, and it’s positive, so we wanted to use that as the first one to lift everyone’s spirits and make them smile. Art, especially in difficult times, has that power to make

you feel. It’s a good way to process what’s going on, and it’s a great way to make you feel good, at least that’s what it does for me.” Of course, it was a bittersweet experience for Beylotte, as well. “It was really emotional to watch it,” she says, “because you don’t know when we can experience it again live.” Rather than simply moving backwards chronologically, the performances will be curated based on the material and how the audience reacted. “We have a pretty good idea what was on all of them to begin with, which ones got a good response from the audiences, and so on,” says the CJO’s music director, Robert Lewis. “So when we had this idea of having the watch party on Thursdays, we kicked LEWIS around a few ideas of what we wanted to start with, and we settled on the Ray Charles tribute. It was a fun show, people liked it, they know the tunes.” “We like to think they’re all entertaining,” Lewis adds with a laugh, “but it certainly seemed like one that people would enjoy seeing.” The online concerts are free to watch but there will be options for tips and donations, which will be used both to help Charleston Jazz and a lot of musicians. “Our organization is suffering,” Beylotte says. “There are resources that we would normally receive through ticket sales for our performances, but we’ve obviously had to

postpone our performances in March and in April, which means that ticket revenue is no longer coming in during those months. So we hope that we will encourage people to donate to CJO if they enjoy these full performances. The funds will be used not only to continue this series, but we’ll also be sharing the donations we receive with the members of the orchestra itself.” Beylotte stresses that the people who we enjoy hearing on these archival performances need our help right now more than ever. “It’s incredibly difficult for them because they were relying on these performances in addition to the other gigs they do,” she says. “If everyone who enjoyed the show donated $10, that would be incredible, and you could never see the CJO for $10 live. So I really hope that we can both bring joy to the community by releasing these performances and raise a little money to get us through these months until we’re able to get back on stage again, which we hope will be July 25.” Lewis adds that in addition to potentially helping Charleston Jazz and the musicians, the process of putting these performances online is a good way of keeping the creative juices flowing at a time when there are few other ways to do so. “We’re trying to find a way to stay active,” he says. “There’s obviously that aspect of, we’re trying to support the guys in the band, but we’re also trying to keep things together, keep moving forward, and keep being creative. We’re trying a whole bunch of things and seeing what works and doesn’t work, which is how the creative process always goes.”

Bummed you have to stay indoors and can’t see SUSTO in concert this spring? Well turn that quarantined frown upside down because SUSTO is teaming up with Stageit to livestream four shows between now and Easter. Each show will have a different theme and set list. It all started March 27, with more shows on April 4 and April 9. It will culminate in an “Easter Brunch” show at 10 a.m. on April 12. Tickets for the livestream are donationbased. Viewers can pay what they want, but the suggested price is $15. SUSTO songwriter Justin Osborne thanks his fans for their continued support during these crazy times we’ve been living in. “It’s gonna be fun to connect with y’all and I’m excited to make the most of these strange circumstances,” Osborne notes in an Instagram post announcing the shows. —Eliana Katz

NEVER BETTER POURS OUT THEIR HEAV Y HEART ON DEBUT EP

Charleston emo band Never Better released their debut EP Heavy Heart last week, striking a chord of emotional intensity and anger that feels right at this moment. The four track album, available now on Spotify, is a smattering of grunge, alt, and punk rock, with each track delivering a jarringly passionate experience, both musically and lyrically. “Each of these songs embodies a deep feeling of regret and personal discontent tied to a specific moment in my life,” says songwriter and frontman DJ Edwards. He uses adversity as a tool in his music. “Turning these dark moments into songs is both a coping mechanism for me and a way to relate to my peers,” he notes. “Oil,” the second song on the EP, employs an explosive build while still grounding itself to the classic grunge rock arrangement of the guitar and drums. “On one level, that song is about the time I let my car run out of oil on the Ravenel Bridge during rush hour on a Friday,” Edwards recalls. “On a deeper level it was even worse, because my dad has been a mechanic for decades. I had failed at the most basic maintenance task, and ruined an entire vehicle with my negligence. I had let down my father.” Heavy Heart dwells in past sadness, but remains an avenue of growth for Edwards and for his audience. It urges listeners to ask how they can change their responses to negative situations. “While most of these moments really suck, the things that we learn from them help us make better decisions,” he says. “Turning those moments into bangers, well ... that’s what Never Better is all about.” EDITOR’S NOTE: Music Editor Heath Ellison is playing guitar for Never Better’s current season of live shows. —EK


HIGH FIDELITY: Your Top 5 Scott Poole is a professor at CofC and an author whose works discuss the correlations between horror and history. In the academic world, he teaches courses like “Monsters in America,” while his books include Vampira: Dark Goddess of Horror and Satan in America: the Devil We Know. Poole seemed like the perfect person to ask: Who are your top five favorite artists that deal in the macabre?

SUPPORT LOCAL JOURNALISM SUPPORT CHARLESTON CITY PAPER The mission of Charleston City Paper is to bring the best of Charleston to you. But we need your help. Like most area businesses, the coronavirus pandemic has affected our ability to bring you the free, independent journalism you enjoy every week.

NICK CAVE (AND THE BAD SEEDS) TOM WAITS THE MISFITS THE CRAMPS ROCKET FROM THE CRYPT

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Via YouTube

ART ROCK | Happy Sandman

Courtesy Sarah Summer

FOLK | Sarah Summer Lowcountry native Sarah Summer started dabbling in video production about three years ago as a way of showcasing her exquisite original tunes. “As I was on pace to release my first EP, I wanted to be heard, which meant that I had to be seen,” she says. “I am introverted to the core but I do love the opportunity to deliver my poetry from a vantage point. Film has given me such liberty.” Though she now calls Arizona home, Summer credits her upbringing in South Carolina for her boldly creative spirit. “The culture in which I grew up was, you make the most with what you’ve got, even if it’s next to nothing, and if you don’t know how, you try until you figure out a way that works. That’s my nature.” As it happens, Summer’s new single, “Jollymonster,” holds extra-special meaning for the earthy and eclectic artist. “I was playing ukulele for my baby and sang it freestyle, exactly the way I later recorded it.” The lyrics illustrate her belief that whatever is in your heart will “stew and spill out.” This song, in particular, is “a reminder to take care with what you let in,” she says. Additionally, Summer has prepared yet another release in her stunning video series to accompany her other new song, “Side Six & Five.” The piece features Summer performing for a miniature audience of one. “It is a sweet time capsule and a very real look at my daily life in music-making. It took five takes and two naps to edit.” Summer’s latest single, “Jollymonster,” can be heard at charlestoncitypaper.com. —Kevin Wilson

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“Bizzare” is probably the way one would describe Happy Sandman’s new single and music video, “Lovers Ladder.” The song emits a disturbing sound, with distorted vocals and intense guitar riffs. The video matches the song, flashing through clips of Happy Sandman, covered in clay with bright red lips and black eyes that roll back in his head as he climbs up a ladder, or lies on a pile of clay scraps. It’s unsettling to say the least. Its inspiration and meaning aren’t, however. Outside of music, Happy Sandman is a ceramicist and works on his tunes and art simultaneously at his pottery studio in Summerville. “I wanted to explore the concept of human and clay becoming one,” Sandman explains, giving the video a bit of clarity. Going into some of the artistic choices of the video, Sandman notes “the opening sequence of the music video shows me entering a machine that fires and entwines the ingredients to complete the final stage of the process.” The video, while still eerie, explores the ceramic process in a new way, with the human as the clay to be manipulated. To watch and to listen to this unique experience, look for the video on YouTube or at facebook.com/happysandman. —Eliana Katz

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