понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

Myrtle Beach, S.C.-Area Car Dealers Report Below-Normal Sales.(Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News) - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Dec. 30--The waning days of 2000 are quiet ones in the showrooms of local car dealers.

Despite a frenzy of ads on radio and in newspapers hawking bargains, end-of-the-year sales are running below normal, according to some local dealers.

'Business is off compared to what it was last year,' said Dan Leighton, a salesman at Grand Strand Nissan near Myrtle Beach.

A mix of bad weather and economic uncertainty has kept many car shoppers home during what is typically one of the busiest car-buying weeks of the year, said Rick Sparks, president of Sparks Toyota.

Some manufacturers are offering their cars at cost, while others are pushing big rebates. But December sales remain 15 to 20 percent down from the same time last year, both salesmen said.

'There is a conservative atmosphere out there,' Sparks said. 'But with an interest rate cut and some sunshine, you'd see a different world here.'

The end of the year traditionally has been a big time for car sales, especially among buyers angling to deduct the vehicle from their taxes, dealers said. This year, though, sales aren't what they used to be.

Optimism among car dealers nationwide has been on the decline all year, said Paul Taylor, chief economist for the National Automobile Dealers Association.

That means lower sales in 2001, he said.

NADA expected 2000 sales to reach 17.5 million nationwide, eclipsing 1999's record by half a million or more.

That prediction is shaping up to look more like 17.4 million sales still a record, but also the peak before a downward trend, Taylor said. Next year's sales are likely to be closer to 1999's total, he said.

'The means remain for consumers to spend strongly, but the will is waning,' Taylor said.

Jeff Stathes, general sales manager for Fowler Motors Inc. in Conway, shares the outlook that 2001 will be less productive than the last six years.

He said sales at the dealership, which boasts high-end automobiles such as BMWs, has been slow the past 60 days. But he has noticed an increase in sales this past week.

Shoppers at his dealership are more affected by dives in the stock market than by high gas prices or increases in interest rates, Stathes said.

Conway Ford has pumped up its inventory to attract more buyers.

As the clock ticked toward Jan. 1, Conway Ford sales manager Mike Upton remained enthusiastic.

'We are here to make a little bit of money and sell a lot of vehicles,' he said.

At Grand Strand Nissan on Friday morning, Stephen Sweetnam of Surfside Beach was the lone customer in the quiet showroom.

Sweetnam, 22, was on the hunt for a new car after his regular car died. But with little credit history, he was having a tough time finding someone to sell him a car.

'I'm hoping to get a deal,' he said, admiring a new sports-utility vehicle.

NADA and local dealers think things will turn around in January, when the Federal Reserve is expected to lower interest rates.

'That is always a positive sign for us,' Sparks said. 'I think things will level out, and we'll be OK.'

Staff writer Natalie Burrowes contributed to this report.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.myrtlebeachaccess.com

воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

Development Plan Blocks Completion of Myrtle Beach, S.C.-Area Highway. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Tonya Root, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Oct. 23--No available money now for the third leg of the Carolina Bays Parkway could mean a showdown later between Burroughs and Chapin Co. Inc. and state Department of Transportation officials.

And the cost of S.C. 31 could increase considerably because of a planned development in the pathway of the final connection from S.C. 544 to U.S. 17 Bypass near Glenns Bay Road.

At issue is a 1,092-acre tract of land owned by B&C and Myrtle Beach Farms, where officials are poised to build a single- and multifamily housing community with a neighborhood shopping center on the south side of U.S. 17 Bypass. But transportation officials have planned the final connection of the road to go down the middle of the land.

Horry County Council conceded it didn't have the funding Tuesday night to purchase any rights of way for the parkway and in a 9-2 vote passed a resolution clearing the way for the property to be developed by B&C.

State law requires any property owner to seek an exemption from local government before developing the land once a highway or street is proposed. Tuesday's resolution allows the land to be developed as if there were no plans to build a road through it.

'This ends it,' said Pat Dowling, B&C spokesman. 'They either buy the property or they don't.'

B&C is working with another developer to build the community on the land, and Dowling said they think a better road for officials to focus on would be a U.S. 701 connection.

But transportation officials have planned the road and think its route will not change, said Berry Still, manager of the state Department of Transportation Road Improvement Development Effort.

'It all hinges on funding,' Still said. 'There's no money to do anything. It all boils down to having the money to buy now or buy later. We don't have the funding, and neither does the county right now.'

If B&C builds the community and funding comes through for the highway later and the proposed route remains unchanged, the scenario could mirror what happened with the second phase of Carolina Bays, which passes through the northern edge of the Hunter's Ridge subdivision and displaced 14 families.

Currently, the land has an assessed value of $14.2 million, Councilman Mike Ryan said. But B&C officials estimate after development its value could reach $54 million.

Such a high price tag would be out of Horry County's range, and buying the land didn't make sense to Councilman Harold Worley, who said the county already provides about three-fourths of the money for road projects from a hospitality tax.

The state Infrastructure Bank, which finances road projects through bonds, already is supporting $1.2 billion in Horry County road projects and has reached its limit.

Currently, the bank cannot sell any more bonds to raise money to lend to local major road projects.

Contact TONYA ROOT at 248-2149 or troot@thesunnews.com.

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суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

County Music's Crook and Chase Show Moves to Myrtle Beach, S.C.(Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News) - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Feb. 2--Add country talk-show hosts Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase to the list of celebrities who have made a go at a theater-style variety show on the Grand Strand.

The duo, known for their long-running, self-named talk show on The Nashville Network that came to an end last year, announced Tuesday the purchase of Crook and Chase Theater for $4 million. The new owners, Crook and her husband, Jim Owens, unveiled plans to turn 'Crook and Chase' into a daily morning show and to broadcast several live 'Crook and Chase' primetime specials from Myrtle Beach.

'We really, really wanted to come back here,' Crook told press conference attendees of the reason for the pair's return even though TNN didn't renew 'Crook and Chase' for another season. 'It's disappointing we're not broadcasting from Myrtle Beach, but our deal is we want to entertain people, and we wanted to come back here and do that.'

TNN, under the direction of CBS Cable, announced in August that four of its flagship country music shows, 'Prime Time Country,' 'This Week In Country Music,' 'Crook and Chase' and 'Crook and Chase Tonight' -- the last three created by Owens -- would not be renewed for the new television season.

Crook and Chase broadcast their final season from the Crook and Chase Theater at Fantasy Harbour, previously known as the Gatlin Brothers Theatre. The cancellation by TNN marked the end of the pair's 17 years as a part of the TNN network. Owens, who has since formed Grand Strand Theater Productions in his successful effort to acquire the theater, indicated his disappointment with the network during the press conference.

'TNN has totally abandoned country,' Owens said. 'They've gone to sports programming to target the young male audience.'

Despite TNN's withdrawal of support for a daily 'Crook and Chase' show, the duo will appear on the network again March 18, when the first of several scheduled primetime specials will air. According to Owens, the special will originate from the Fantasy Harbour theater that bears the duo's name.

'We'll focus on our inaugural season at Myrtle Beach and all the fun we had last summer,' Owens said. 'It will air at 9 p.m. Eastern on March 18, after the `Grand Ole Opry.''

After the press conference, Owens said negotiations are still ongoing to find an outlet for subsequent primetime 'Crook and Chase' specials. The first special, Owens said, is designed to coincide with the the new 'Crook and Chase' morning stage show, which debut at 10 a.m. March 20.

'Unless something is planned I'm not aware of, this will be the only morning [stage] show on the Grand Strand,' Owens said.

The show will include a live band, featuring country entertainers Tareva Henderson and Ronnie McDowell, as well as games, prizes and the hosts' signature talk-show style banter with audience members and guests.

After the press conference, Chase said transforming the show's format from a television program to a stage show will actually give the two more flexibility.

'I don't see a lot of difference,' he said. 'It'll be a little more relaxed. If we're doing a game and we're doing it for television, we've got to do it in six-and-a-half minutes. We're not under those restraints here. It's a TV show without the cameras in your face.'

In addition, Chase said, the two hope to continue the tradition began during their TNN show's 15-year run of showcasing guest stars and entertainers in the country music industry.

'You never know who might stop in,' he said, referring to the marquee country entertainers that play rival theaters along the Strand, including The Palace Theatre and The Alabama Theatre. 'We've built up a lot of connections in the industry and entertainment contacts over the years. You don't have to have TV cameras to stop by.'

And if Crook and Owens have their way, the Crook and Chase Theater may offer The Palace and Alabama theaters a little competition. Although no contracts have been signed as yet, the new owners plan for live entertainment on the Crook and Chase Theater stage, possibly as early as the fall.

'My husband is very creative, and he has all sorts of plans for musicals and theater productions, as well as plans for design and lighting and all sorts of things,' Crook said.

The production that filled seats at the theater last summer, 'Summer of '66,' returns to the Crook and Chase stage March 2. The show's success, Owens said, is one reason for his investment in the theater. Cast members of 'Summer of '66' were on hand for Tuesday's press conference.

'We hope this purchase ... will demonstrate to the Grand Strand area and to South Carolina that we are committed to expanding stage productions here,' Owens said.

Venues in Las Vegas and Orlando, Fla., have indicated an interest in taking a closer look at the 'Summer of '66' production, Owens said, and talks are in the works to put together a road show of the beach-style musical.

However, one of the stars of the show last year and one of the theater's former owners, Steve Gatlin -- a country legend in his own right -- won't be returning to this year's production. Gatlin is

promoting two musical variety shows, 'Big Band Swing' and 'Celebrate America,' which will debut March 3 at Fantasy Harbour's Forum Theatre.

Owens' and Crook's acquisition of the theater includes eight acres of Fantasy Harbour property surrounding the building, as well as an option on an additional two and a half acres, on which the couple hopes to build a cafeteria to provide show attendees a chance to buy breakfast before the show.

The Crook and Chase Theater has served as home for everything from Russian circuses to Broadway musicals since its opening in 1994.

The building was originally The Gatlin Brothers Theatre. Brothers Steve, Larry and Rudy Gatlin performed there from September 1994 until December 1998, when they decided to leave the theater to pursue separate projects.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.myrtlebeachaccess.com

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

Hooters Air Debuts with Flight from Myrtle Beach, S.C, to Atlanta. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Dahleen Glanton, Chicago Tribune Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Mar. 7--MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.--Adding a new dimension to the old concept of niche marketing, the Hooters restaurant chain made its debut in the airline industry Thursday, seeking to prove that young women in low-cut tank tops and orange hot pants can keep its planes flying while others are struggling to stay in the air.

Hooters Air, which is starting out with one daily round-trip flight from the golf resort city of Myrtle Beach to Atlanta, is the latest in a wave of start-up airlines trying to capitalize on the faltering airline industry by capturing specific customers with lower prices, comfortable seating and entertainment.

But while airlines such as the successful New York-based Jet Blue entice business travelers with leather seats and personal satellite TVs, Hooters is aimed at fun-loving golfers who enjoy a game of trivia led by a smiling Hooters girl.

Though it is a risky concept in this politically correct era, the idea of using sex appeal as a lure has generated a loyal following of men who flock to the sports theme restaurants to munch on hot wings while ogling the scantily clad waitresses.

Bob Brooks, chairman of Hooters of America Inc., which owns the restaurants and the airline, offers no apologies for the sexual themes that have turned the restaurant chain into a profitable empire and the subject of sexual discrimination controversies in its 20-year history.

'We've heard the comments about Hooters girls and sex, but Hooters has a certain demographics that is good for us,' said Brooks, who purchased a fleet of 17 aircraft from North Carolina-based Pace Airlines last year. 'We don't expect to appeal to everyone, but we think we can get a good number of golfers to try us. With everything going on in the world, our goal is to make people smile. We know how to do that.'

Hooters is not the first airline to use sex appeal to sell tickets. That honor goes to Southwest Airlines, which grew from a small carrier serving Dallas, Houston and San Antonio in 1971 to the nation's only profitable major carrier, serving 59 airports.

'When we started, the majority of people traveling with us were men on expense accounts. We made no secret about playing into that. We had very attractive flight attendants in hot pants and go-go boots,' said Southwest spokeswoman Beth Harbin. 'Today, there are more people able to travel because of the low fares, and our uniforms have been modified. Now they wear khaki walking shorts and polo shirts in the summer.'

While the hot paints may have helped to get Southwest off the ground, it kept flying because it diversified to the point where it no longer is a niche airline, analysts said.

'There are precedents that suggest that women being exploited does sell tickets. But Pacific Southwest Airlines tried the same thing and was bought out by U.S. Air,' said Aaron Gellman, a professor at Northwestern University's Transportation Center in the Kellogg School of Management. 'You can't survive being a small carrier. The economy demands that you grow to a certain size to be successful.'

Even the larger carriers are getting on the niche bandwagon. Delta Airlines next month will launch a new low-fare subsidiary called Song, designed to compete with Southwest, Air Train and Jet Blue. Other major airlines, including United, are considering similar ventures.

While Hooters' prices are comparable to those offered by Delta and Air Tran in its market, it has a policy that all seats cost the same, no matter where they are on the plane or when they were purchased. On major airlines, prices tend to be higher the closer they are purchased to departure. Hooters plans to add a round-trip flight between Atlanta and Newark, N.J., in two weeks and another round trip between Myrtle Beach and Atlanta next month. Terry Tripper, an airline analyst at Cheapseats.com, said making the airline work would be difficult.

'Everything is like show business now, you've got to have a gimmick,' Tripper said. 'The chicken wings could be the type of gimmick that would catch on, but not the girls. Maybe the girls will fall along the wayside.'

The problem is that hot wings aren't served on the planes because the airline hasn't figured out a way to keep them warm during the flight.

To see more of the Chicago Tribune, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.chicago.tribune.com/

(c) 2003, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

Discounts Are Plentiful for Senior Consumers in Myrtle Beach, S.C., Area. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Kathleen Dayton, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Sep. 10--Getting older might not be fun, but you sure can't beat the discounts.

From grocery stores to hotels to restaurants, senior citizens often get a price break, whether it be on a particular day or with a particular discount card, or just because they sport the necessary gray hairs.

Charlotte Ciappetta, a 64-year-old member and employee of the Grand Strand Senior Center, said she has shopped at Belk for the senior discounts and other services the department store offers on Tuesdays.

'I live on a budget, and it's kind of tough,' Ciappetta said. 'Any type of discount is greatly appreciated. When I go to a restaurant, I always mention I'm a senior.'

So do a lot of other older Americans, and as the 50-plus crowd grows, some businesses are trimming senior perks or getting rid of them altogether.

Delta Air Lines Inc. recently eliminated its senior club, which gave travelers 62 and older cut-rate fares if they paid an annual membership fee. Delta said it has replaced the club with discounts available to all age groups.

General Cinema Theatres Inc. recently left the senior-heavy market in Florida, where one official said profits suffered because of a large amount of discounted tickets.

On the Grand Strand, however, it appears senior discounts are here to stay.

'It's what seniors expect, it's part of our industry,' said Debbie Braden, manager of The Firebird Motor Inn.

Braden said The Firebird has always offered a 10 percent discount to seniors, who ask for it even during the off-season when rates already are low.

'We have $38 rooms on the oceanfront and they ask for a discount and we give it to them,' Braden said. 'I wouldn't [want to] be the first to not accommodate that discount when all my competitors do the same thing. It's what seniors expect.'

At The Hanser House, a family-owned restaurant in Pawleys Island, seniors can order from a specially priced menu without having to prove their age. The restaurant also offers an early bird special to diners of all ages.

'We get a lot of seniors, so we like to keep them happy,' said Geneva McKenzie, daughter of restaurant owner Nita Hanser. 'There's a lot of retirees down here in Litchfield. Basically [the discount] is 55 and up, but anyone that wants it gets it.'

Nationally, however, the swelling senior population has businesses worried.

One in every five Americans is 55 or older, and some feel the new senior generation is not as strapped for cash.

'This is the most advantaged, entitled group in America,' said Ken Dychtwald, a 51-year-old gerontologist in San Francisco, who worked as a consultant to the health care industry in the 1980s and helped establish some of the discounts he now questions.

Dychtwald said he recently watched two older couples get out of a new Mercedes in the parking lot of a movie theater, where they all got senior discounts.

'You can dig yourself a hole ... if you give stuff away to people over 50,' Dychtwald said.

But Myrtle Beach restaurant owner Constantine Leftis believes the large population of seniors in the Grand Strand makes the area a bit unique.

'We have so many senior citizens down here that we cannot afford to not accommodate them,' Leftis said.

Leftis offers a senior value menu at his Plantation House of Pancakes and a 10 percent discount to seniors at the Pan American Pancake House.

'It's expected, it's standard,' Leftis said. 'Some of the senior citizens, if we do not discount ... would be offended.'

Debra Bramlett, marketing manager for the Myrtle Beach Factory Shoppes, said the outlet center installed its Club Platinum program for seniors just a year ago and plans to expand it.

The free club for shoppers ages 50 and older entitles them to a 10 percent discount on Tuesdays at participating stores.

Other area businesses that honor the Club Platinum card are The Ice Castle Theatre and Beach Bums Car Wash. Bramlett said the Crook & Chase Theater also is interested in participating.

Bramlett advertises the Club Platinum card on WEZV-FM.

'We're getting about 200 new people a month signing up for this program,' Bramlett said.

The Original Benjamin's Calabash restaurant offers its Platinum 55 Club at the restaurant and through hotels and welcome centers.

Brigitte Wilson, marketing and group sales director for the restaurant, said the senior clientele is expected to grow even more this year.

Leftis believes that government programs such as Social Security and organizations such as the AARP eventually might raise the age at which a senior is considered a senior.

For now, Leftis uses the AARP's age qualification as a guideline for identifying seniors at his pancake houses.

If a customer does not have an AARP card, he determines their age another way.

'You look at how many gray hairs they have,' Leftis said. 'But I'm getting some too, so I shouldn't say too much.'

The Wall Street Journal contributed to this report.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://web.thesunnews.com

(c) 2001, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

New outdoor store in Myrtle Beach, S.C., gets general manager with local roots. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Kathleen Vereen Dayton, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Sep. 1--Greg Martin is about to step into the position of general manager for the Grand Strand's newest mega-retailer, Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World.

The mammoth outdoor retailer, which features an 11,000-gallon saltwater aquarium and restaurant, holds its grand opening tomorrow.

For Martin, a 14-year employee of Wal-Mart, the position is a dream job and a chance to come home.

Martin grew up hunting and fishing in Georgetown County, where his father, Milton Martin, ran a hunting lodge for International Paper Co.

'It was just a part of life for me. That's how I grew up,' Martin said. 'It was school, church, ball practice and the outdoors. It prepared me for what I do now.'

Martin's experience with Wal-Mart and his background as a hunter and fisherman in the Grand Strand-Pee Dee region helps him to look at his new job both as a retailer and a sports man, he said.

'I'm able to bring the culture and vision of Bass Pro and combine it with retail experience,' Martin said.

As a child, Martin worked alongside his father, Milton Martin, on Waddell Ranch, now called Black River Plantation.

At the time, the wildlife preserve was used by International Paper Co.

Martin helped on the plantation by washing out dog pens, and he and his father fished and hunted for quail and deer.

'I had a wonderful upbringing and childhood,' Martin said. 'The experiences I had out there with him are once-in-a-lifetime opportunities.'

After graduating from Winyah High School, Martin took classes at Coastal Carolina University and began working in construction for his uncle. He later worked for extra money at Wal-Mart by putting bicycles together.

'I just pursued it, and it grew into a career,' Martin said.

Martin and his family have spent the past twelve years living in Savannah, Ga., where they visited Bass Pro Shops for the first time.

'My wife said, 'Greg, you've got to work here.' She kind of broke the ice, ' Martin said.

The couple both have family in Georgetown.

'It was a great opportunity to move back home. That was the sealer on the deal,' Martin said.

His challenge in Myrtle Beach, he said, will be keeping things new and exciting within the store and making the store a destination not only for tourists, but for locals.

'Along with our visitors, it's important that local folks know we're here,' Martin said. 'It's a fairly new retail company.'

The Grand Strand's nearly 13 million annual tourists means he will also have new customers nearly every week.

'That gives us a great opportunity in merchandising and introducing people to the outdoors,' Martin said. 'It's like taking a kid fishing.'

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

(c) 2004, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail reprints@krtinfo.com.

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: MYRTLE BEACH HALF MARATHON - US Fed News Service, Including US State News

ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 22 -- The trademark MYRTLE BEACH HALF MARATHON (Reg. No. 3820846) was issued on July 20 by the USPTO.

Owner: Myrtle Beach Marathon, Inc. non-profit corporation SOUTH CAROLINA P.

O. Box 8780 Myrtle Beach SOUTH CAROLINA 29578.

The trademark application serial number 77847382 was filed on Oct. 13, 2009 and was registered on July 20.

Goods and Services: Athletic and sports event services, namely, arranging, organizing, operating and conducting marathon races. FIRST USE: 20000201. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20000201

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: MYRTLE BEACH MARATHON - US Fed News Service, Including US State News

ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 22 -- The trademark MYRTLE BEACH MARATHON (Reg. No. 3820845) was issued on July 20 by the USPTO.

Owner: Myrtle Beach Marathon, Inc. non-profit corporation SOUTH CAROLINA PO Box 8780 Myrtle Beach SOUTH CAROLINA 29578.

The trademark application serial number 77847331 was filed on Oct. 13, 2009 and was registered on July 20.

Goods and Services: Athletic and sports event services, namely, arranging, organizing, operating and conducting marathon races. FIRST USE: 19980201. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19980201

понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

NASCAR Uses Myrtle Beach, S.C., Taxicabs for Publicity. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Dec. 1 -- A prototype of a new taxicab has attracted stares -- and even a few obscene gestures -- from motorists along the Grand Strand.

Officials at Coastal Cab in Myrtle Beach have signed a franchise agreement with a Florida-based company that specializes in cabs that resemble NASCAR race cars.

A multicolored look-alike of Jeff Gordon's Chevrolet has drawn cheers from the Winston Cup champion's fans and jeers from his detractors ever since the cab arrived in Myrtle Beach last weekend.

All the attention -- good and bad -- is an excellent marketing ploy, which is what convinced Coastal Cab to sign up as the 17th franchisee with the Racecab taxi company in Tallahassee, Fla. Racecab is owned by Rick Heuser, a former NASCAR Busch Series and ARCA driver.

The Florida company's fleets will feature cars bearing the marking and color schemes of various professional racers. Cab drivers also will wear clothing resembling race car driver uniforms.

Racecab has advertising contracts with national and worldwide companies such as soft drink and beer distributors, tire manufacturers and paint suppliers that will have their logos placed on the cabs.

The cabs also feature a computerized tracking system that helps dispatchers pinpoint a cab's specific location when customers request their favorite driver's car.

An internal camera also allows franchise owners to monitor the speed, behavior and location of each driver.

This feature, which also serves as a theft deterrent, is designed to discourage drivers from mimicking professional racers.

'[The] only drivers we'll have in the cars are the best of the best of the best,' said David Welles of Surfside Software Systems, a Clearwater, Fla.-based company that supplies the technology for the fleets.

On Monday, Welles was at Coastal Cab completing computer upgrades on the cabs.

Curtis Fredericks, public relations manager for Coastal Cab, said the company is in the process of awaiting certification from city officials for 10 taxicabs.

'This fits very well with Horry County and businesses in the area,' Fredericks said. 'We got Busch [circuit] races on U.S. 501, four different tracks and NASCAR Cafe. [Auto racing] is the fastest-growing spectator sport in the United States.'

Racecab's target markets are the cities where NASCAR has races and where racing is very popular.

'Myrtle Beach is one of these unique 17 cities that showed interest,' Welles said. 'Growth is here and a fan base is here.'

Within the next six months, the company wants to be in 47 cities across the country.

воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

Golfers try to stay red hot in ice-cold Myrtle Beach - AP Online

PETE IACOBELLI AP Sports Writer
AP Online
11-06-1998
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) _ On a frigid day, Hale Irwin got hot.

Gray clouds and 25 mph wind gusts made the Grand Strand feel a little like the North Pole. Ray Floyd and Jim Dent wore wool caps. Tom Wargo had a turtleneck beneath his short-sleeve shirt, and Bob Murphy wrapped a sweater around his neck.

``The best day we've had has been one-sweater weather rather than two sweaters and windbreakers and parkas and gloves and hand warmers,'' said Irwin, who burned up The Dunes Golf & Beach Club course Thursday with a 6-under-par 66.

That gave Irwin a two-stroke lead over Bob Duval in the Senior Tour Championships, the season finale on the Senior PGA Tour.

``Nobody on this tour likes bad conditions,'' said Floyd, the 1994 champion who is three shots behind Irwin. ``You'd like to think about golf, heat, being loose and warm, and it's just the reverse.''

Irwin said he had trouble warming up, a problem that quickly disappeared once the round began. He surged in front with birdie putts of 25 feet on No. 3, 10 feet on No. 4 and 20 feet on No. 5. He pitched to 2 feet on the eighth hole for his fourth birdie.

He got to 6-under with a birdie on No. 13, the Dunes' par-5 signature hole. He had his lone bogey on the 16th hole when he drove into a divot, then slashed a 9-iron within 6 feet for a closing birdie on No. 18.

``A lot of control shots. A lot of good putting. Just the kind of game I'd hope to have starting out,'' Irwin said.

In his fourth Senior season, Irwin has turned the circuit into his personal cash machine, amassing more than half his career earnings of $13.2 million on the senior tour.

But at The Dunes Golf & Beach Club, Irwin often has been no better than a club pro. He was eighth in his first try in 1995 and 10th a year later.

Last year, despite 11 victories and a pro record $2.3 million won, Irwin watched Gil Morgan blow by him for a two-stroke victory.

``If I happen to be lucky enough to win this, I'd have to say that 1998, if not the best year ever, is certainly one of the best years that I've had in professional golf,'' said Irwin, the U.S. Senior Open champion and again the tour's top money-man at more than $2.5 million.

Whoever wins the $2 million tournament will receive $347,000, the biggest prize in Senior PGA Tour history.

Bruce Summerhays and Floyd were at 69. Defending champion Morgan, who has tracked Irwin almost step for step the past two seasons, was at 2-under with Larry Nelson.

Duval holed a 97-yard sand wedge for an eagle-2 on the par-4 seventh and crept to a stroke of Irwin after his 6-foot birdie on No. 17. But then he rolled his second shot on the 18th into some deep rough in front of the pond and took bogey.

Duval, the father of PGA Tour star David, said the beach courses near his home in north Florida often frost up like Myrtle Beach through late fall and winter. ``I enjoy playing in this kind of weather because it's a challenge,'' he said. ``If you hit the ball well, you get rewarded.''

Summerhays was at 1-over through 13, then birdied the next four holes. Divots: The Tournament Players Club of Myrtle Beach, which will become the home course of next year's Senior Tour Championship, is expected to open Feb. 2. ... Dunes Club director of golf Cliff Mann says a site selection group from the United States Golf Association will visit the historic course, which played host to the past five Senior Tour Championships. ... Don Bies' 71 took the first-round lead of the MasterCard Champions, the 60-and-older competition. Charles Coody was a stroke behind. ... Temperatures for today's second round were expected in the mid-50s, but the wind was not supposed to gust as much.


Copyright 1998 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved.

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

Religious-Themed Show Hopes to Occupy Myrtle Beach, S.C., Theater. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Dawn Bryant, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

May 1--A religious-themed show from Fort Mill will move into the troubled Crook & Chase Theater in June, and the show's owners hope to buy the theater if the summer is successful.

'Twenty Years Ago,' a production of nonprofit group NarroWay, will start June 3, opening the theater's closed doors at Fantasy Harbour for the first time since a special holiday show.

Carolina Capital Investment Corp. of Columbia has foreclosed on the Crook & Chase Theater's $3.2 million mortgage. The 1,900-seat theater opened in 1999 and has been the home of the nationally televised 'Crook & Chase Show' and a local production of the musical 'Summer of '66.' The availability of the theater combined with Myrtle Beach's repu tation as a vacation destination led the nonprofit to this area, said NarroWay general manager Michael Kimble.

'It was something that we couldn't resist,' he said. 'The three months are going to be a very good test for what can happen long term.' NarroWay Productions, which is starting its sixth season in Fort Mill, will bring a new mix of drama, music and a religious message to the lineup of show offerings on the Grand Strand.

The family show is based on the 20-year class reunion for 1973 gradu ates, tracking the group from kindergarten to 1993 as they prepare for the event.

'It's a good, clean show with a good, clean message,' Kimble said. Leg 1

The expansion to Myrtle Beach marks NarroWay's first venture out of Fort Mill, where it has a 3,000-seat outdoor arena and a 500-seat dinner theater. The 325 cast members for NarroWay's several shows are volunteers.

The addition is the latest lineup change at Fantasy Harbour, a strug gling area once envisioned as a hub of a dozen theaters. Since the first theater opened about seven years ago, more than a half-dozen celeb rities and shows have taken the stages at five locations there.

Crook & Chase's neighbors at Fantasy Harbour said they welcome the summer action, which they hope will bring more exposure to the area.

'From what I've seen, it looks like a decent show,' said David Lindsey, marketing manager for Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament, one of the Grand Strand's more successful shows. 'Like everything else that comes in, we will just have to wait and see.' Fantasy Harbour's tarnished reputation concerns Kimble, but he is optimistic for success.

'We are not fly-by-night,' he said.

'We come in with the intention to do it right and do it good.' During 1999, NarroWay's revenues were $240,895 while expenses ran at $192,111, according to the nonprofit's most recent IRS filings. The company received nearly $86,500 in contributions that year.

The show, popular with traveling church groups, is catching on in the Fort Mill area with its uniqueness and religious message, said Bennish Brown, executive director of the York County Tourism and Sports Commission. NarroWay is a member of the commission's 'Part ners in Tourism' group.

'They are certainly a major part of the products we promote here,' Brown said. 'It is becoming more and more recognized.'

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

Associates Offer Many Stories about Myrtle Beach, S.C.'s Best-Known Lawyer. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By David Klepper, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jan. 25--Harry Pavilack wears two watches. One on each wrist. He says he needs them both.

'Well, you know, I don't know.

I'm looking around, trying to figure out what time it is. How am I going to know what time it is?' he says as he glances from wrist to wrist, flashing the Pavilack smile, his way of responding to a question without really answering it.

He's the Strand's most recognized attorney, whose billboards and commercials -- 'Call Pavilack!' act as both calling card and pennant. He parlayed a football scholarship to Clemson University into the legal equivalent of a household brand.

Call Pavilack, and call him showman, real estate maven, godfather to felines of every stripe. Defender of injured workers and prospective divorcees. Even call him an ambulance chaser -- he'll just flash that furtive smile.

If he is, he's also a lot more. In addition to the law firm, now there's Pavilack Industries, Pavilack Mortgage, Pavilack Finance Corporation, Pavilack Insurance Agency, Pavilack Rental and Realty and Pavilack Worldwide Companies. There's even Pavilack.com.

The people who know him have a million stories about Pavilack. About how he made a small fortune selling study guides in law school. Or how he bought his million-dollar home in Myrtle Beach at a tax sale.

There's the story about how he once bought 150 purple ties because they were on sale. Or how he drank pickle juice to improve his tennis game.

Pavilack has a need, say those who know him, to excel at whatever he tries. He liked football, so he played at Clemson. He liked the law, so he built one of the Strand's most recognized firms. He likes cats, so he formed Sav-R-Cats International. He liked tennis, and now he's consistently ranked in the state's top 10 for his age bracket.

'Harry has a tremendously high energy level,' said his wife, Mary Jane Pavilack.

'When he does something, he does it 100 percent. He's very excited about everything.' Pavilack, 63, mixes an easy cheerfulness with the calculating eye of a man who owns more land -- much of it bought out of foreclosure -- than most developers.

'It's amazing how well he's done,' said Jim Irvin, a Myrtle Beach attorney who met Pavilack in law school at the University of South Carolina.

'He came here as a sole practitioner, a Yankee who didn't know anybody, and now he's made himself a fortune. I've never seen him in a courtroom.

That's not his bailiwick. His bailiwick is being an entrepren eur.' Pavilack was born in West Virginia and grew up in Pitt sburgh. His father owned an auto parts store.

He learned how to make a buck peddling newspapers before he could read the headlines.

That entrepreneurial streak grew, and soon Pavilack was going door to door to ask for donations to buy equipment to play baseball and football.

'I'm always thinking about deals,' Pavilack said. 'About different ways to make money.' He went to Clemson on a foot ball scholarship, and in 1959 became a footnote in the school's football annals when he intercepted a pass in a game against Furman University and ran 26 yards to score a touch down. In the spring and summer, he played baseball.

As professional teams courted other players, Pavilack started to think beyond college sports. He dismissed medical school because, 'I just don't like blood.

'I was a hungry kid, looking to do something,' he said. 'I didn't know anything about the law, but it seemed like a way to get ahead.' Jim Irvin met Pavilack in law school at USC and said Pavilack was known as friendly, popular and a little strange.

Pavilack sold copies of old tests and transcripts of professor's lectures, called 'Skinnies,' for $3. They were perfectly legal, and all the students bought them, even honors students, even though Pavilack himself made mostly Bs. The skinnies were perfectly legal, and, Irvin said, usually correct. 'Nobody else could get away with that; but everybody loved Harry, so it made sense,' he said.

After graduating, Pavilack attended a one-year course in tax law in Miami before opening his office in Myrtle Beach. He had visited before, and he saw the beach's growth coming.

As a start-up attorney, and a Yankee, Pavilack wasn't an overnight success. But he was hungry, and he kept at it until the clients came. He set himself apart as a low-cost attorney specializing in the everyday tedium of the law: wills; drunk driving arrests; divorces; and injuries.

In 1977, the U.S. Supreme Court lifted the ban on attorney advertisements, and Pavilack pounced. He saw the advantage of advertising for his type of firm, targeted at average citizens who only need an attorney in times of legal crisis.

A veritable P.T. Barnum of the law, Pavilack clearly enjoyed the commercials almost as much as he enjoyed the clients they brought him.

Many featured the hapless victims of fake car accidents.

One was a commercial-within-a-commercial, in which Pavilack pretended to be hit by a car while filming a commercial about responding to a car accident.

The ads furthered Pavilack's reputation as an ambulance chaser.

'A lot of people question his ethics because of all the ads,' said local attorney Fred Harris, who got his first law job at Pavilack's office in the '70s.

'Harry knows people say those things, and I think it bothers him. But he is honestly a very ethical lawyer,' Harris said.

One commercial landed Pavilack in trouble with the S.C. Bar Association. The bar reprimanded him in 1997 for a commercial featuring a charac ter dressed in police uniform who called Pavilack for help in deciding who was at fault. Bar officials said the ad suggested Pavilack could influence the police.

'I thought it was funny,' Pavilack said. 'But somebody took it very seriously.' As the Strand's population grew, so did Pavilack's client list. Northern transplants knew nothing about Horry County's attorneys, but they saw his smiling face on billboards.

Pavilack's practice gave him an insider's view of the Strand's burgeoning real estate market.

He learned to buy at auction and resell to make a handsome profit. In the meantime, each parcel became the site for another billboard.

'He's a classic opportunist,' said Irvin, Pavilack's law school classmate. 'He is a wheeler-dealer in real estate.' Pavilack has bought and sold everything from bare lots to office buildings to apartments.

Back in the '70s, Harris recalled a time when Pavilack rented office space as low-cost residential units, a practice now banned by zoning rules. The only problem: no showers, so Pavilack had one installed on the exterior of the building.

He's made deals with scores of local developers and business owners. The state lists him as the agent for more than three-dozen companies.

He's also the only lawyer in town who advertises on the sides of moving trucks -- his own moving trucks.

Pavilack's next big deal may be China. He said he is fascinated with the country's economy, marked by high productivity, low prices and cheap labor. He has considered importing Chinese goods for sale in the U.S. if the price is right.

'The first thing they teach you in economics is: 'The people who can make [something] the cheapest should make all of them.' Pavilack lives in one of Myrtle Beach's largest homes, which overlooks the Intracoastal Waterway.

Like his house, his 17-foot-long dining room table also bought at an auction. It once served as the conference table at Waccamaw Pottery's executive office.

Pavilack admits he watches his money closely, but he's not adverse to luxury. His home has a massage room, seven chandeliers, a swimming pool and several bedrooms for his three dogs and eight cats. (Or is it nine? Ten? Even Pavilack isn't sure.) Five personal watercraft are parked at his dock on the Intracoastal Waterway. He also owns a home on Ocean Boule vard and a small apartment in New York, where he stays when visiting his daughters.

Another attraction in New York: the shopping. Pavilack, his wife said, is a chronic shop per.

'He'll go shopping, and he'll be so excited and delighted with what he gets,' Mary Jane Pavilack said. 'He can put any woman to shame when it comes to shopping.' Pavilack seldom loses his cool. Attorneys who have worked with him, family and friends say he almost never shows his temper.

'He can't stand to hurt peoples' feelings,' Harris said.

'He's a marshmallow.' But Mary Jane Pavilack said her husband's attitude toward others shouldn't be mistaken.

'Don't see his niceness as weakness,' she said. 'If he wants something, he'll get it.' Pavilack takes in occasional strays, and feeds any creature that comes looking.

He started Sav-R-Cats in 2002 after some strays in his neighborhood were killed and tested for rabies by local authorities. He said his intention was to save as many unwanted cats as possible.

It's turned into a crusade.

The group has paid for cats to be neutered, and has found homes for many unwanted felines. They paid hundreds to a veterinarian to amputate a cat's mangled leg, and hundreds more for the care of a cat found poisoned by oil. The group has also popularized the term 'feral cat' as an alternative to stray, which the group considers pejorative.

Now Sav-R-Cats is working to convince local leaders to allow feral cats to be neutered and then returned to their habitat.

'Their heart is definitely in the right place,' said Cindy Ott, executive director of the Grand Strand Humane Society. 'We have the same mission. We respect Sav-R-Cats for what they've done. They've shed a lot of light on the problem of feral cats in Myrtle Beach.

Most days start with tennis.

For Pavilack, the game does much the same thing as football and baseball did in his younger years. It allows him to compete, to exercise, and to win.

He has repeatedly ranked in the top 10 players in the state for men in his age bracket.

'He's incredibly tenacious,' said Dennis Hardin of Longs, now tied for the ranking with Pavilack. The two have traded off in the rankings for years.

Pavilack's success at tennis also reflects his life-long devotion to fitness. He has a massage table in his home, and works out with professional trainers. He took ginseng long before it became a popular supplement, and he doesn't drink or smoke.

'Sometimes he'll pretend he's having a glass of wine, or a screwdriver or something,' Mary Jane Pavilack said. 'But that's to make other people comfortable when they're drinking. He's really just carry ing it around.' A few years ago, Pavilack heard that all the best Australian tennis pros drank pickle juice during matches. So he bought the largest pickle jars sold and drained the juice.

He drank it during breaks in play to restore fluids lost in sweat. He's not sure whether it improved his performance, but he suspects it was responsible for kidney stones he had removed a few years ago.

'I don't know if it helped,' he said with his characteristic grin.

'But it freaked out a lot of opponents.'

HARRY PAVILACK

Age: 63

Hometown: Born in Wheeling, W.Va.; raised in Pittsburgh

Family: Married to Mary Jane Pavilack since 1981; two grown daughters, Carolyn Cibelli and Deborah Hidy, who live in New York City; three grandchildren

Occupation: Attorney, entrepreneur

Education: Bachelor's degree, Clemson University; law degree, University of South Carolina School of Law

Favorite activities: Tennis, traveling, playing with pets, shopping

Favorite book: Couldn't say; subscribes to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Barron's and The Sun News

Typical meal: Salad with boiled shrimp

Vehicles: A Hummer, a Rolls-Royce and a Bentley

Pets: Three dogs and at least eight cats

Sav-R-Cats will host a fund-raising Cat Ball on Feb. 7 at the Dunes Club in Myrtle Beach. Tickets are $65 per person, $120 per couple. For reservations, call 448-9471.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

Hilton Myrtle Beach Resort Sees Improvements.(Hilton Myrtle Beach Resort)(Sage Hospitality Resources)(Omni Fort Worth convention center)(Brief article) - Hotels

By Staff

MYRTLE BEACH, SOUTH CAROLINA--Major renovations, including the construction of a new 12,500-sq. ft. (1,161 sq. m) conference center, are currently under way at the Hilton Myrtle Beach Resort. Total project costs are estimated at US$14.7 million.

Adding to the existing 34,000 sq. ft. (3,159 sq. m) of on-site meeting space, which includes an 18,000-sq. ft. (1,672 sq. m) exhibition hall, the new conference center space will be divisible into 9 smaller meeting rooms. The facility is expected to be ready for business in January 2008.

Following exterior renovations to the 82,000-gallon (310,404-liter) oceanfront pool complex, the area now includes connecting pools, a whirlpool spa and fire pit, all surrounded by lush landscaping and an array of palm trees. Other amenities include cabanas with televisions, Internet access and wet bars. Also newly renovated is the Wet Whistle poolside bar.

Sage To Open Department Store Hotel In Portland

Staff

PORTLAND, OREGON Sage Hospitality Resources is renovating the nine upper floors of the historic Meier & Frank department store in downtown Portland into a hotel to be called The Nines. The 330-room Starwood Luxury Collection property, which Sage will manage, is scheduled to open in 2008.

Key components of the US$118 million renovation include a glass-covered atrium encircled by the guestrooms, a restaurant and lounge on the eighth floor, a ballroom on the sixth floor, plus conference rooms and banquet facilities.

In addition, a new elevator lobby on the street level will provide guests dedicated access up to the hotel lobby on the eighth floor. The lower five floors of the historic building will be consolidated and retained as a Macy department store.

Omni Building Convention Center Hotel In Texas

Staff

FORTWORTH, TEXAS Sculpted from native stone, rich hardwoods and wrapped in glass, the 604-room Omni Fort Worth convention center hotel will debut in late 2008. With artwork adorning the hotel walls, the unique life-as-gallery display will be part of the finishing touches.

The 34-story structure will be large, even by Texas standards, offering nearly 40,000 sq. ft. (3,716 sq. m) of meeting room space, plus 10,000 sq. ft. (929 sq. m) of additional outdoor meeting space. The project also includes plans for 97 luxury condominiums.

Amenities will include a full-service spa and fitness center, Bob's Steak and Chophouse, a full-service Starbucks, a sports bar, a wine bar and a museum store.

Casino Hotel Coming To California

Staff

RANCHO MIRAGE, CALIFORNIA A new 14-story, 344-room luxury casino hotel is planned for Rancho Mirage, with completion scheduled for December 2007. The Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians will own and operate the Agua Caliente Spa Resort Casino Hotel.

An existing casino property will be renovated and the new hotel will include a spa with pool and cabanas, an ultra-modern business center, conference amenities, restaurants and a parking garage.

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

Sporting goods retail chain anchors Myrtle Beach, S.C., mall. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Kathleen Vereen Dayton, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Sep. 2--Fish hang from the ceiling and swim in a tank, while the image of a prehistoric sea turtle is stamped onto the floor of the Grand Strand's newest large-space retailer, Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World.

The giant sporting goods store officially opens today at Colonial Mall, filling an expanded and rebuilt space formerly occupied by Kmart.

It is Bass Pro's first South Carolina location and the latest big-box store to shake up the Grand Strand's dynamic retail market, which welcomed 100 new stores at Coastal Grand-Myrtle Beach in March.

Bass Pro is a very different type of anchor for Colonial Mall, which was built in 1986.

'This will make us at Colonial Mall a destination,' said Colonial Mall's general manager, Joe Perl.

Perl said the addition of Bass Pro is good for the area's retail mix, overall.

'Here at the intersection of [U.S.] 17 and [S.C.] 22, it will make this the crossroads or focal point of the north end,' Perl said.

Perl said the new anchor will benefit the mall, which has to cope with Coastal Grand, which plans to have nine new stores by the end of the year.

'For retailers looking to put in one store in the market or a second location in the market, Colonial Mall certainly will be on top of their radar screen,' Perl said.

Bass Pro's concept of incorporating merchandise with entertainment is a good indication that cash registers and price tags are no longer enough in today's retail world.

Bass Pro Shops is almost twice the size of other large sporting goods stores in the area and will contain a restaurant, Islamorada Fish Co., which opens in October. The store and restaurant together will employ more than 400 people, making it among the area's largest private employers. Visitors can gawk at the store's 11,000-gallon indoor aquarium and approach the store's entrance by crossing a bridge over a moat.

Only time will tell how the massive and lavishly decorated retailer will impact other area sporting goods stores.

Managers of several local sporting goods stores, including Dick's Sporting Goods, Sports Authority and Boaters World, declined comment on the opening of Bass Pro Shops.

Existing retailers should survive, said Ellen Tolley, spokeswoman for the National Retail Federation.

Destination retailers like Bass Pro attract visitors who are likely to shop and eat out at other venues as well, she said.

'It's not always bad news when a new retailer moves in,' Tolley said. 'In fact, new retailers can draw from a larger geographic range and can help out everyone. Sometimes existing retailers get a little nervous when a new player comes to town, but they might find it helps their sales.' Nathan Kelly, vice president and general manager of Savannah Mall in Savannah, Ga., said that happened when Bass Pro Shops anchored there last summer.

'They've had really a fantastic effect on our entire property, because of their drawing power,' Kelly said. 'They've increased the market for us from the typical 30-mile market area to at least 50 miles and probably further than that.' Before Bass Pro opened, Savannah Mall was down to one anchor from four. The mall is only four miles from Oglethorpe Mall, which was more established, Kelly said. After Bass Pro opened, small shop sales at Savannah Mall increased 29 percent.

'Since [it opened], we've also secured a deal with Target,' Kelly said. 'This is going to be the first Target in the market.

That's causing quite a stir.

Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World at Colonial Mall joins a retail cluster that has emerged over the past few years around the intersection of U.S. 17 and S.C. 22, a route completed in May 2001.

The shopping hub includes Wal-Mart and Tanger Factory Outlet Centers. A new strip center, Arcadian Shores Commons, is under construction.

Earlier this year, Dick's Sporting Goods at Coastal Grand became the latest addition to the area's sporting goods scene. The 55,000 square-foot store opened in March.

Coastal Grand's general manager, Steve McGhee, thinks the 11-mile distance between the two malls assures plenty of customers for both.

'We're more centrally located on the main artery of [U.S.] 501 coming into Myrtle Beach,' McGhee said. 'We tend to get more tourist traffic, being in the location we're in.' McGhee was formerly general manager of Colonial Mall and helped secure Bass Pro as a tenant.

'Bass Pro is a good tenant. I think they'll do well there and we wish them luck,' he said.

'As far as the market goes, there's plenty of room in the market for them.'

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

(c) 2004, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail reprints@krtinfo.com.

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

MYRTLE BEACH GOLF CONFERENCE OPENS NOV. 13 - US Fed News Service, Including US State News

Coastal Carolina University issued the following press release:

The first Myrtle Beach Golf Conference, featuring academic research on the sport and presentations by industry experts, opened today, Nov. 13 and continues on Friday, Nov.14 at the Holiday Inn Hard Rock Parkway in Myrtle Beach.

The conference began at 8:45 a.m. with welcoming remarks by Brad Dean, CEO of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce. Today's program concludes at 6 p.m. with presentation of an award honoring Dr. Frank Sheid, also known as Professor Golf, who was instrumental in development of the USGA Handicap System in the late 1960s.

The conference continues Friday at 9 a.m. with round table discussions for golf course managers and professionals at the Holiday Inn. A 'Corporate Boot Camp for PGM Program Participants' is scheduled for 9 a.m. in the E. Craig Wall Sr. College of Business Administration, room 318, at Coastal Carolina University.

A complete schedule is available online at www.myrtlebeachgolfconference.com.

Keynote speakers will include:

* David Downing, president of the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America (GCSAA)

* Dalton Floyd Jr., an attorney who has represented both the PGA of America and the Carolinas Section of the PGA

* Golf course architect Craig Schreiner, who recently redesigned the greens at Firestone South (site of the World Golf Championship-Bridgestone Classic) and Pine Lakes International

* Walker Taylor IV, past president of the Donald Ross Society

* Andrew Tiger of Southeastern Oklahoma State University, the leading golf management science researcher in the field

Research papers will be presented in a variety of subject areas including golf economics, management science and golf, and applications of information technology to golf. Educational programming will be provided for collegiate PGA-PGM program participants. An academics journal devoted to the golf industry, The Journal of Golf, will be launched at the conference. Tiger, chair of the Department of Management and Marketing at Southeastern Oklahoma State, will edit the bi-annual publication.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

Myrtle Beach, S.C.-area real estate brings in buyers. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Jenny Burns, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Dec. 12--Beaches and warm weather are not the only attractions luring new residents to the Grand Strand.

People like Steven and Doris McCarthy are settling here to take advantage of one of the best real estate markets on the East Coast -- one that is booming faster than any of its neighbor cities in Georgia and the Carolinas, even as those markets also see rapid growth.

'They have so much construction going on [here],' Steven McCarthy said.

The area's new-home market is undergoing unprecedented growth, making area real estate more valuable, while also making homes less affordable for some area residents.

Much of that growth was in the new condominium market in Horry County, which almost tripled this year through the third quarter compared with the same time last year, according to Market Opportunity Research Enterprises, a real estate analysis firm.

That more than completes a rebound from a period a few years ago when several condo complexes failed because demand slowed.

The single-family market also is rapidly expanding, with new sales jumping 80 percent in Brunswick County, N.C., and 55 percent in Horry County. The Wilmington, N.C., market saw such sales increase 39 percent.

They increased 16.7 percent in Charlotte, 27 percent in Columbia and 30 percent in Charleston, according to Market Opportunity Research Enterprises.

The local market doesn't seem to be slowing, as immediate indicators point to more growth, even while analysts say such tremendous spikes can't continue forever, particularly with mortgage rates forecast to rise next year. Condo building permits have almost tripled, and there has been more than a 40 percent increase of single-family home permits in Horry County.

The healthy and still-emerging market is expected to increase homeowner wealth through home equity, while continuing to squeeze middle- and low-income home buyers as prices push upward.

The squeeze is a problem city and county officials have spent years trying to combat because of the Grand Strand's heavy reliance on low-wage workers.

The average cost of new single-family homes in Horry County has jumped about $23,000 since last year to $204,656, a 12.6 percent increase.

Even as some potential homeowners may face challenges, the recent rapid sales growth has created a more stable market that lures investors.

Investors like the McCarthys.

The winters in Cape Cod, Mass., weren't enough to drive them away. But the Grand Strand's host of new homes and rising home values got them to pack their bags.

They've been settling into their 1,500-square-foot home at Barefoot Resort for the past three months and already have decided upon a few investments -- new homes in Carolina Forest and North Myrtle Beach. And although they're happy their kids, Lucas, 12, and Lauren, 10, will get to play more sports, they've got something else on their minds: a higher return on investments.

'We really saw the opportunity down here,' Steven McCarthy said.

What is fueling the growth?

Several factors are fueling new-home sales, and those sales are affecting prices.

The sale of existing homes, although still experiencing rapid growth, isn't growing as fast as new sales because people want to hold onto their investment. That has caused a drop in inventory and continued to drive up new-home sales, said Lawrence Langdale, president of the Horry-Georgetown Homebuilders Association.

'It's a good sign when a resort market is growing. It means people have faith that the economy is strong,' said Carl Van Horn, research analyst for Market Opportunity Research Enterprises.

The Grand Strand's real estate market has been driven by population increases, wealth creation, low interest rates and the increase of national builders, said Al Parish, Charleston Southern University economist.

Since 1997, the number of permits to number of closings ratio has steadily declined, showing that production builders -- such as Centex Homes, D.R. Horton and Beazer Homes -- are capturing a larger share of what used to be the custom-home market, Van Horn said.

Small builders also are doing well even as they try to absorb the cost of rising land prices and supply costs. The lumber buyer at Myrtle Beach Building Supply, which sells to custom builders and small developers, said there's a backlog of homes waiting to be built.

That demand, construction costs that have added roughly $8,000 to a new home's cost this year, and skyrocketing land values are making homeownership unaffordable for some in the work force.

Just three years ago, half of all homes cost $130,000 or less, barely affordable then to those with good credit and earning the median household income of about $45,000 in Horry County. But today, half of all homes cost at least $160,000 -- and the upper half of the housing market is growing faster than the less expensive half.

'Land prices are growing really fast,' said local builder Will Rabon with Rabon Construction. 'I've heard rumors that ... tracts not far from us have sold for twice what we paid for them three years ago.'

A restrengthening new condo market is providing less-expensive housing options. Half of all new condo sales in Horry County cost at least $141,000 -- $19,000 less than the median price for new single-family homes. The area's high percentage of manufactured housing and numerous first-time home-buyer mortgages also are serving as buffers against the rapidly rising cost of new single-family homes.

Horry County's condo market, which almost tripled this year, represents a return to 1999 sales levels, before the market went sour, analysts said.

Several off-beach condo complexes, including projects by defunct builder Heritage Communities, ran into trouble after 1999.

Bankruptcies and foreclosures ensued. Planned amenities went unbuilt. A long list of home buyers, subcontractors, builders, banks and others scrambled to salvage investments.

Condo building was outpacing demand, leading to the failures. But now the reverse seems to be true, even though some of those failed projects remain unfinished.

New condo sales in Horry County increased 171 percent during the first nine months of this year compared with the same period of 2003, according to the Rocky Mount real estate analysis firm.

'That ... growth is a rebound from the previous four years, when the market peaked in 1999,' Van Horn said.

The condo market lost 50 percent of its share after 1999 meaning that, even with this year's increases, it is only 9.25 percent higher than it was five years ago, Van Horn said.

'This means people are putting their money in the real estate market,' Van Horn said.

Buying at the right time Bryan Fulton and his family decided six months ago to leave Las Vegas for Myrtle Beach. One big draw was real estate.

He and his wife wanted better schools for their daughters, a friendlier environment, and a chance to invest in a new home.

'You can get a lot more house for your money here,' Fulton said after leaving Las Vegas, where home prices rose faster in the past year than any other metro area in the county. 'We really wanted to get something that was ours and we could build from the ground up.'

Fulton said he's getting in the Grand Strand market at the right time.

'If we're getting in now when we're a little lower on the peak, we'll be able to make more money when we sell in five or 10 years,' he said.

Experts caution that, while rising prices may benefit homeowners, it'll be a different story when it's time to shop for a home.

'You'll get more for your house, but you'll pay more for the house you buy,' Maeser said.

A look into the future Meanwhile, the area housing market will grow in 2005, but not at the breakneck pace of this year, said economist Al Parish.

'Horry County is a hot market, but it will cool off some,' Parish said.

'I don't think you can expect growth at this rate to continue.'

Building permits, which are a good gauge of current and pending housing activity, show the growth will continue for at least the immediate future. Permits for condos in Horry County have jumped 175 percent during the first nine months of this year compared with last year, while permits for single-family homes have increased by 43 percent, according to the real estate analysis firm's figures. A similar increase also occurred in Brunswick County, N.C., and for single-family home permits in Georgetown County.

Parish also expects interest rates to rise. Freddie Mac's weekly survey released Thursday showed that rates on 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages stood at 5.71 percent, the lowest since early November. Forecasts have it reaching about 6.5 percent sometime next year, which is still low by historical standards.

Whether the rates rise won't matter to Fulton and his family. They are scheduled to have their new home in Carolina Forest's BelleGrove completed in February.

'It'll be a better investment for the long term,' he said. 'And they are constantly building here, so we can upsize.'

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

Time Warner to raise cable TV rates in Myrtle Beach, S.C. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Jenny Burns, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Dec. 2--Time Warner will be raising rates on this month's cable bill, although the increase is slightly less than those of the past three years.

Expanded basic service in the Myrtle Beach area will cost 4.7 percent more than it did in Novem ber. Last year's increase was 5.5 percent. For example, expanded basic cable service from Time Warner will go from $36.25 to $37.95 a month.

Adelphia Communications, which serves Browns Ferry, Sampit and DeBordieu, also is raising rates.

Other cable companies on the Grand Strand do not have rate increases planned, but some say they may come later in 2005.

Time Warner says its rate increases are necessary because of rising programming costs, especially from sports networks.

'We pay ESPN for every customer that we have,' said Mary Anne Jacobs, director of public affairs for the S.C. division of Time Warner Cable. 'ESPN is one of the most expensive programs and the most viewed. It trickles down to the consumer.'

The National Cable & Tele communications Association listed the average monthly price for expanded basic cable as $36.59 in December 2003, the most recent average avail able.

Cable companies are no longer regulated on the federal level but can be subject to some regulation by local county and city councils, said Ron Wilder, a University of South Carolina economist.

Wilder said it's hard to know if rising cable rates are really related to cost increases or just the ability of the company to raise prices.

But cable companies, which now face increasing compe tition from satellite TV oper ators, are no longer the quasi monopolies they once were.

Time Warner's broadcast tier will increase from $8.47 per month to $9.32 per month, and the tier will increase from $27.78 to $28.63.

Those two services together add up to expanded basic cable.

Customers in Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach, Briarcliffe, Atlantic Beach, Surfside Beach, Georgetown and others will now be charged $37.95 a month for basic cable, up from $36.25.

Time Warner Cable has about 107,000 customers along the Grand Strand, serving the coastal area from Little River to Georgetown and inland to Andrews, Kingstree and west of Conway.

Adelphia Communications will raise rates in Browns Ferry and Sampit from $34.53 to $36.25 a month. The company also added two channels, spokesman Paul Jacobson said.

Customers in DeBordieu get about 30 channels and will see rates increase from $18.87 to $19.80.

Jacobson said the increases also are due to increased programming costs.

Atlantic Telephone, which provides cable services for most of Brunswick County, N.C., has no plans to raise rates now or in 2005, said Pat Olsen, vice president of marketing and customer service.

The company raised rates in early 2003 by $3 on basic cable but did not raise rates in 2004.

Atlantic's customers pay $35.95 a month for expanded basic cable.

Horry Telephone Cooperative, which serves customers in western Horry County, does not have a rate increase plan ned, but the company may raise rates in 2005 if programming costs continue to increase, said Cricket Alcorn, HTC communications supervisor.

HTC's basic cable costs $33.45, Alcorn said.

Time Warner's 2005 cable price is now more than the December 2003 national aver age.

Some new services will be added this month to Time Warner cable. Discovery Health will now be on the basic tier channel 69 instead of the digital tier. Style also will move to the basic tier channel 68 from the digital tier. And MTV Hits will be added to digital tier channel 134.

CNNfn will be going off the air because the network is not producing it anymore, Jacobs said.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

(c) 2004, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail reprints@krtinfo.com.

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

Writing the book on Myrtle Beach golf - again - The Charleston Gazette (Charleston, WV)

STAFF WRITER

The fact that a Charleston native is the golfing guru of MyrtleBeach, S.C., should come as no surprise when one considers thenumbers of West Virginians who flock to the area each summer.

And Tommy Woodrum can tell them just where to tee up. Woodrum,who used to write a golf column for the Gazette, has written hissecond book describing golf courses along the Grand Strand in SouthCarolina.The 332-page publication, 'Golfing the Carolina Grand Strand,' isan expansion of a 1993 Woodrum book that included detailedinformation and pictures of 81 courses in the Myrtle Beach area.His latest book includes more than 100 pages of full-colorphotographs. There are scorecards, layouts and other information on29 additional courses that have been built in the area since 1993along with the courses he previously wrote about.'We're known as the golfing capital of the world,' Woodrum said ina phone interview. 'And it keeps exploding. Nine more courses areunder construction.'The book, published by Pelican, is priced at $39.95. Woodrum willreturn to his hometown for a book-signing session from 11 a.m. to 2p.m. Saturday at Waldenbooks in the Charleston Town Center.'I'm looking forward to seeing my friends in Charleston,' said the72-year-old Woodrum. 'I remember writing a golf column, 'On theGreen' for Shorty Hardman at the Gazette.'Woodrum also worked at various radio stations in Charleston anddid play-by-play of sporting events.His family owned Woodrums', a home furnishing store on VirginiaStreet where he was general manager for many years. Woodrum leftCharleston to operate Shoney's restaurants, a career that eventuallyled him to Myrtle Beach.Woodrum owned 14 Shoney's in South Carolina. He has turned themover to two of his sons. He also became involved in raising andracing thoroughbred horses after his move to Myrtle Beach.Woodrum is married to the former Barbara Hancock of Charleston.The Woodrums have five children and 12 grandchildren. They willleave later this month on an African safari, a trip they have madeseveral times.Woodrum hosted a television golf show until last September when hesuffered two minor strokes just 10 days apart.'I got the idea for the book after I started doing the televisionshow,' he said. 'I decided since I was visiting all the courses, Imay as well take notes and put it in a book.'His main passion remains golf.'I've always been an avid golfer,' he said. 'And this is theperfect place for the sport. It's getting to be that nearly as manypeople come to the beach to golf as they do to enjoy the beach.'To contact staff writer Danny Wells, call 348-5122.

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

Myrtle Beach spring migration will include nine area baseball teams - The Charleston Gazette (Charleston, WV)

State teams' tourney schedules, 2B

rickryan@wvgazette.com

For Kanawha Valley baseball teams, all roads will lead to MyrtleBeach next week.

Nine area teams and 14 West Virginia schools will be competingMonday through Saturday in the 44-team Mingo Bay Baseball Classic inthe greater Myrtle Beach, S.C., area.

All teams are guaranteed at least four games (weather permitting)and could play as many as six depending on how far they advance inthe single-elimination portion of the event.

Kanawha Valley schools scheduled to appear in the tournament areBuffalo, Capital, Charleston Catholic, George Washington, Nitro,Sissonville, South Charleston, St. Albans and Winfield. Other stateschools in the field are Logan, Jefferson, Martinsburg, Morgantownand University.

Teams will be placed in pools of four or six teams for theirfirst three games Monday through Wednesday, then will be seeded forthe championship brackets that begin Thursday. Seeds will bedetermined primarily by won-lost records and runs allowed.

Games are scheduled to start as early as 10 a.m. and as late as 7p.m.

Nitro may get a head start on its trip Saturday, as it has a 1p.m. game scheduled at Princeton. Some coaches and players maycontinue to South Carolina after that game.

The Wildcats are scheduled to play Daniel Boone at 4:30 p.m.Monday at Conway, S.C. Other games in the Mingo Bay Classic are setfor the nearby towns of Aynor, Carolina Forest, Georgetown, Loris,Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach, Socastee, St. James and Waccamaw.

On Tuesday, Nitro (1-0) meets one of South Carolina's top teams,Conway, which is ranked No. 3 in 4-A.

Nitro coach Steve Pritchard, whose team has played only once sofar this season, realizes the challenge of the trip, going againstsouthern teams that have played many more games so far.

'We've got one game in,' Pritchard said, 'and teams down thereare 12-to-15 games deep into their seasons. It's going to be alearning experience. They've found their tempo and went through theearly season blues, which is what we're starting to do.

'We like to go down there because we can learn, and the games goa little faster because they play on Bermuda grass.'

четверг, 20 сентября 2012 г.

Green Wins Myrtle Beach 250 - AP Online

PETE IACOBELLI, AP Sports Writer
AP Online
06-18-2000
Green Wins Myrtle Beach 250

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) -- Jeff Green won the Myrtle Beach 250 on Saturday night, completing a dominating day at one of his favorite tracks with a 1.029-second victory over Kevin Harvick.

It was Green's second straight win at the tricky half-mile oval and his second consecutive Busch Grand National victory this year. He extended his series points lead to 299 over Todd Bodine.

``We're always trying to get top fives. As good as this car was tonight, top five wasn't going to be nearly good enough,'' said Green, who started from the pole for the second time at the track.

Green, from Owensboro, Ky., learned to drive on the smallish track at Nashville, so he quickly came to love Myrtle Beach's tight corners. He and wife Michelle took their honeymoon here in 1991 and get to the area a few days early each year for ``a mini-vacation.''

Harvick, a rookie on the Busch series, tried to ruin Green's getaway, battling him tight through the first 50 laps -- including nearly spinning him out on lap 40 -- then sticking with the veteran on two restarts the final 44 laps.

Green blocked Harvick every time and gradually pulled away for his third victory this season and seventh of his career.

``I guess he was mad,'' Green said of Harvick. ``He kind of made me mad with what he did. But he's a rookie, we all make mistakes. He raced us clean at the end.''

Green led 198 laps, including the final 103.

Elton Sawyer was third, followed by Green's teammate, Jason Keller,

No one was stopping Green, who came from 29th to win last year.

This time, he made sure he wouldn't have the same struggles.

Keller, who lost this race to Green a year ago when his tire went flat while leading three laps from the end, was Green's stiffest challenge the second half of the event on the .538-mile course.

But after Green gave way to Keller on lap 147 so his teammate could gain lap-leader points, Green took the lead for good on the next lap and was never pushed.

He led Keller by more than a quarter of the track with 60 laps to go.

About the only things that slowed Green were the final two of seven cautions, which gave Harvick his last chances for his first victory.

He nosed his car underneath Green and looked like he had a passing lane. But Green blocked him.

Harvick tried the same move on the final restart on lap 215 and again Green stopped him.

``This car took off and it was pretty awesome,'' said Harvick, who had his career best finish. ``Maybe soon, we'll figure it out.''

Green won with an average speed of 69.399 mph.

``This just seems to suit my style,'' said Green, who won last week in South Boston, Va. ``It favors me in a race. I'm very laid back and try to conserve my equipment. I think that pays off for me here.''

It was a relatively clean race with drivers handling the expanded pit area and tighter race surface -- the retaining wall is several feet out from where it was a year ago -- well.

The craziest moment was after Jeff Purvis slammed the wall in turn 2, then waited by his wreck as cars passed. When Randy LaJoie drove low to get around clean-up crews, Purvis chased him and shouted.

Purvis was taken by NASCAR officials for a cooling off period.

``He tried to do it last week. He got me this week,'' Purvis said of LaJoie. ``I really don't understand. I just wanted to ask him about it.''

The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Copyright 2000 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved

LPGA Washed Out in Myrtle Beach - AP Online

PETE IACOBELLI, AP Sports Writer
AP Online
05-01-1999
LPGA Washed Out in Myrtle Beach

MURRELLS INLET, S.C. (AP) -- Rain flooded Wachesaw East Golf Club for the second straight day, washing out another round of the LPGA City of Hope Myrtle Beach Classic.

The tournament will finish without a cut and with a final-round shootout Sunday, cutting the 72-hole event to 36 holes.

``I think this is the first time in 20 years I remember this happening,'' Muffin Spencer-Devlin said.

Actually, it last happened in 1981 at the Olympic Gold Classic in City of Industry, Calif. Sally Little carded a one-stroke victory after the final two rounds were washed away.

It seemed unlikely Myrtle Beach would share such a distinction. It's a golfer's dream with more than 100 courses and mild, sunny South Carolina temperatures.

But a storm front stalled over the area, dumping at least an inch of rain the past two days. That's on top of the 4 inches superintendent Dean Crouch said hit the course on Tuesday.

``We're disappointed in the rain, but the course is draining well and we should have a good finish,'' tournament director Rosemary Nash said.

So it's back to the mall or the movies for most players. Spencer-Devlin went to an IMAX theatre and rented the Oscar nominated film Elizabeth.

After a brisk workout, she's going to rent ``Stepmom'' today.

On Friday, Gail Graham and Michelle Estill saw ``Entrapment,'' with Sean Connery.

Graham, who opened with a 75, said the time off lets you clear away the bad play.

``If you kind of had a rough day, it gives you chance to regroup a little bit,'' she said.

Juli Inkster and Amy Benz dealt with frozen grips and blowing hats well enough Thursday to share the lead after 4-under 68s.

Players wore layers of windshirts, sweaters and rain pants to make it through the opening round. Graham dreaded dealing with that again.

``When you heard it rain all night and you're sort of anticipating not playing, you're kind of almost glad when you're not,'' Graham said.

The field of 142 -- Laura Baugh and Lenore Rittenhouse withdrew -- was reseeded for a typical Sunday finish.

There are 18 players within two shots of the lead and 55 at even-par 72 or better.

Karrie Webb, the season's top money-winner, led a group of six at 69. She is looking for her third straight Myrtle Beach title.

The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Copyright 1999 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved

среда, 19 сентября 2012 г.

Firm Buys Myrtle Beach, S.C., Golf Resort. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By David Wren, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Dec. 18--The Grand Strand's golf industry, battered in recent years by stagnant growth and overbuilding, received a vote of confidence Tuesday with Signature Horizons Inc.'s announcement that it will buy Sea Trail Plantation & Golf Links in Sunset Beach, N.C., for $45 million.

'That area is a great destination market, not only for vacationers but for retirement-home buyers,' said John Mans field, executive vice president of Signature Horizons. 'It's an excellent project.' Sea Trail is the 2 1/2-year-old Signature's first major acquisition, and Mansfield said the company is looking to buy other golf course and retirement projects throughout the Carolinas.

Real estate experts said the purchase from the family-owned Sea Trail Corp., expected to be completed in January, is a shot in the arm to the area's struggling golf industry.

'It shows a lot of confidence in the future strength of this market,' said E. F. 'Buddy' Hucks, owner of the E. F. Hucks & Associates appraisal and real estate analysis firm.

Signature will buy Sea Trail's 2,000-acre collection of three golf courses, two clubhouses and a 32,000-square-foot conference center. Signature also is buying the land where Oyster Bay Golf Course is located, but will not operate that golf course.

In addition, Signature will get to operate Sea Trail's home rental program, which provides accommodations for vacationing golfers.

The $45 million sale price is 9 times Sea Trail's average profit of $5 million a year. Hucks said area golf courses typically sell for 8 to 10 times their annual profit figures. The sale price represents an 11.1 percent annual return on investment for Signature if profit levels remain the same.

'Real estate is a very sound investment now in view of what the stock market is doing,' said Ed Gore, one of the owners of Sea Trail Corp. 'That's why people like Signature are looking for places like Sea Trail.' Ronald Potts, Signature's chairman and chief executive, said he expects profit levels to increase significantly in coming years because of growth in the sport and future residential development of the company's Sea Trail property.

'There is excellent long-term income potential,' Potts said.

An average of 115,000 to 120,000 paid rounds of golf are played each year on Sea Trail's three 18-hole courses, Mansfield said. That is well within the range of 35,000 to 40,000 annual rounds golf experts say most newer courses need to turn a profit.

'Our operations have been very satisfactory so far,' Gore said. 'We've maintained our market share in the difficult climate we're in.' Many area courses have struggled to hit that level in recent years because a slow economy combined with stagnant growth in the number of golfers and too many new courses.

Through October, there were 2.95 million paid rounds of golf played at more than 100 Grand Strand golf courses this year. That compares with 2.98 million rounds for the same period in 2001 and 2.97 million rounds in 2000.

Despite the slowdown, the Grand Strand has fared better than many other golf resorts that have seen 10 percent to 15 percent declines in business, said Mickey McCamish, of Myrtle Beach Golf Holiday, which markets golf vacation packages.

'A soft economy and war with Iraq continue to have an influence on golfers taking a golf vacation,' McCamish said.

Among the biggest casualties of this area's golf slowdown was Myrtle Beach-based The Links Group, a golf course management company that filed for bankruptcy protection last year.

Recent transactions such as the Sea Trail sale and Burroughs & Chapin Co. Inc.'s decision this year to buy Pine Lakes International Country Club in Myrtle Beach for $10 million indicate better times might be ahead, Hucks said.

'It's a good sign for this area,' he said.

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

Magical, medieval games site to move into Myrtle Beach, S.C., development. - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

By Kathleen Vereen Dayton, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Oct. 28--Magic wands will soon replace the butterflies that once filled a major attraction at Broadway At The Beach.

The former Butterfly Pavilion, which closed in December 2002, is being transformed into a magic kingdom filled with dragons, pixies, princesses and unicorns, all brought to life by cutting-edge computer technology and, its creator says, a little magic.

The new, interactive family attraction will fill a custom-designed space left dormant at Broadway at the Beach for nearly two years.

B&C bought the Butterfly Pavilion out of foreclosure in September 2003 for $4.3 million.

The pavilion had struggled financially since its inception and only operated for 18 months.

Magically, the new attraction is expected to open in about seven months, just in time for the summer tourist season.

MagicQuest, an interactive family attraction offering games built around a medieval, magical theme, will be the first attraction of its kind and is expected to roll out to other areas of the country.

Creator Denise Weston says she chose to launch MagicQuest in Myrtle Beach because she was looking for 'the perfect family venue.' Weston is currently based in Rhode Island but is planning to move to Myrtle Beach. She has been developing toys, games and interactive children's amusements for more than 25 years.

Among her achievements are children's play and pool areas for Disney Cruise Lines, Club Disney and Disney Quest; a four-acre Loony Tunes park for Six Flags, Ohio; and The Great Barn at Stone Mountain, Ga.

Weston's company, Creative Kingdoms, began in 1999 and has won numerous awards.

Creative Kingdoms has joined with Burroughs & Chapin, Co. Inc. to form a new company, New Kingdoms, with MagicQuest as their first venture.

Tom Jones, B&C's chief of sports, recreation and entertainment, said the company was attracted by MagicQuest's focus on family interaction.

The 22,500-square foot former Butterfly Pavilion, located between the IMAX Theater and Broadway Cinema 16, is being transformed into a fairy-tale fantasy world of castles, drawbridges and a Stonehenge-like circle of stones that will conceal computers where participants will be able to choose games, or quests.

'It's a perfect building for what we're going to do,' Weston said.

Children can play the game with their friends or parents. A magic wand presented to each participant has the technology to recognize the participant individually and allows the child to command lightening bolts, open treasure boxes, control music and other feats of the imagination. More than 250 different special effects can be created with a wave of the wand, and each quest a child chooses on computer is unique.

The MagicQuest attraction plans a huge product line of costumes and interactive MagicQuest accessories.

'I think this is a winning idea. This has tremendous potential for the next new attraction, nationally,' said Myrtle Beach city spokesman Mark Kruea.

A team of 30 people are working on MagicQuest, including six computer programmers and special effects 'wizards.'

B&C declined to say how much the renovation of the former Butterfly Pavilion would cost.

'We really don't disclose that, but it's a whole lot of money,' Jones said.

Horry County Council chairwoman Liz Gilland said she is impressed by Weston and thinks the concept has brains.

'In today's Harry Potter society, magic is a popular theme,' Gilland said. 'I think, like any of the other excellent attractions here, it will be some thing new for people to get excited about who have been here, and for those who have never come before, they'll want to get to this first and then enjoy all the other attractions the Grand Strand has to offer.'

To see more of The Sun News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.MyrtleBeachOnline.com

(c) 2004, The Sun News, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail reprints@krtinfo.com.