“The Rebirth of Cool” a party to celebrate Clay Street!!! 10/17

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It starting to seem like we can predict rain on the last Friday of every month! It is though another rainout. We will resume again on the last Friday of October aka HALLOWEEN!!!
Nevertheless, we press…
We will do it big next month to make up for the last 2 months of rainy days!
Peace
Grins
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In case you are like me and don’t read the newspaper on a regular basis…

Inside the narrow, 1,200-square-foot space, the boutique is loaded with carefully coordinated displays of men’s and women’s clothing and accessories. Display fixtures spill with merchandise. Patrons who stop by often do so just to chat and eye the new fashions.
Lonnie Brown and Gloria “Glo” Williams Brown are the proprietors. They own the building and, for two decades from the late 1970s through most of the 90s, Mr. Brown first ran a private billiard club there, and later, a public pool hall.
He closed it down in 1997 and it stayed vacant until 2003, when, Mrs. Brown said, she decided to open the boutique.
The L&G Boutique has a Web site, www.landgboutique.com, but Mrs. Brown said first-time customers drop in after hearing about it by word of mouth, or after one of several fashion shows the couple produces each year.
The boutique has become a place to shop and to socialize.
For retired state worker Mary Green, the boutique is just across the street, and she visits several times a week. “If they don’t have what I want, they’ll go through catalogs and order it for me and I’ll have it within a week. I like to shop in a neighborhood store and be greeted by a friendly face. I can socialize. Chat. Look around. … They aim to please and they make sure I’m happy.”
The boutique is open from noon to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, and is closed on Sunday and Monday.
When the Browns go on vacation, the shop is shuttered, unless one of their daughters is available.
Longtime customer Tershia Smith said if there’s something she’s looking for, “I’ll go to L&G every week. It has a nice selection of jewelry and I like the styles there.”
Mrs. Smith is owner of J. Smith Bus located near the entrance to the Chesapeake Harbour community and built atop the old Carr’s Beach. “I especially like the hats. I’ve gotten six church hats. I like that you don’t see your outfit on someone else. I don’t see my hats at all at church.”
Mrs. Green said the merchandise is unique, and draws people into the boutique. “People look at this area and think ‘I’m not shopping on Clay Street!’ But, they have to come in and look at Lonnie and Gloria’s merchandise.”
Bowie residents now, both Browns grew up in the Annapolis and Parole communities, attended segregated local schools and graduated from the old Bates High School.
Mrs. Brown, who earned her bachelor of arts degree by attending night school at the University of Maryland, worked for the federal government for 42 years, including the last 12 years with the Department of the Interior.
In addition to running the billiards parlor, Mr. Green, 70, was a supervisory engineer for 32 years with the county Board of Education and is a professional pianist. He was an original member of the Van Dykes band, a local favorite, which performed at Carr’s Beach and at African-American proms and college dances throughout the region.
They have two daughters, Velvet Brungo, 41, a professor at Penn State; and Kristal Brown, 38, a federal employee who lives in Chantilly, Va.
The Clay Street area used to be compared with Harlem in its heyday. It was buzzing with businesses and activities, day and night. “When I was a little girl, I went to the school in what is now the Stanton Center,” Mrs. Brown recalled. “Across the street from here was another pool hall. There were social clubs, funeral parlors, diners and homes where that parking deck stands now.
The nightclubs were up another street. During the day, when I walked to school, all the nightclubs were closed. By the time I was tucked into bed, they opened.”
When she worked for the government, Mrs. Brown often traveled out of town for meetings and conferences, and during her downtime she would go to malls and shop. “I liked going to the boutiques. I was fascinated by unique clothing you wouldn’t see in other places,” she said.
Confined at home for several weeks after foot surgery, she decided it was time to retire and open her dream business.
Her target customer at the boutique is a mature churchgoer. “Our customer is more traditional. My customers are business folks, very conservative. Teachers, retired educators, church folks.” They cater to people ages 40 to 75, although younger ones do come in.
Willa Mae Day, a retired county teacher who taught second grade at Central Elementary School for 45 years, needs lots of good-looking outfits.
Her son is a producer for CBS Paramount Network Television and she occasionally walks the red carpet in Hollywood with him. “Gloria takes her time with me. She will tell me if an outfit is appropriate. She checks the fit and can get things hemmed for me at a minimal price,” Mrs. Day said.
“They go above and beyond to see that I’m satisfied.”
The Browns encouraged various church and club groups to place orders for the special outfits they need for church performances, as communion stewards and for the choirs.
“We have outfitted Eastern Star ladies, church ushers – male and female, and the Elks Club members,” she said. “To keep prices reasonable, we do not charge a full markup on our merchandise.”
“While I’m sitting in church,” Mrs. Brown said with a smile, “ladies lean over and whisper ‘I need a white suit. Can you get me a white suit?’ ”
Wendi Winters is a freelance writer living on the Broadneck Peninsula.
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Clay Street is a neighborhood that creates a host of fascinating world-views. You will find a diverse range of opinions in its alleyways and corner stores; all of them highly articulate and passionate.
Listening to the young black males down here one common thing that comes out is a deep anger. This anger is real and must not be dismissed, for that energy, which here created inspirational words and music, can easily be diverted towards less constructive goals.
This anger calls for a dual change in the current society: external and internal. Externally the young African Americans feel out of place, unwelcome, and even despised. Internally they see their community destroying itself by forgetting its history, succumbing to the illusion of crime, and not fathering its children.
One of the purest expressions of that anger is through hip-hop, which by nature refuses to tone down any message (it often does the opposite to call attention). On Clay there are two exceptional wordsmiths, J-Roc and Q, who have a song entitled “Freedom or Hell” which channels this anger into a call to end the drug war the black community is waging on itself. In this video they are performing at a Block Party they helped organize on a hot Saturday this past June (more videos of this event coming soon). They are introduced by the always-provocative words of Amaro, another omnipresent Clay street figure.
[Note: explicit lyrics]
Shot and Edited by Fabio Lomelino
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A few weeks ago we organized a meeting at the Parrish House on Duke of Gloucester to talk about race. In simplest terms, our panel consisted of 3 black people and 3 white people and was diversified based on age and gender, equally representative of generations (ages of 19 to the late side of 50’s). It was a private conversation and at the request of the panelists was closed to any media. We gathered around 7pm and at 8pm we began filming. What follows is some of the more pertinent points that were made. This was an exercise in true expression; the panelists should all be commended for their bravery and honesty. We believe you will be left wanting more and that was the goal.
As you watch these clips we ask you to log on and add your input and let us know how these points make you feel.
Here is a brief bio for the panelists in order of appearance:
-Native Annapolitan, career prosecutor (Chief of the Violent Crimes Unit), Alderman from Ward2, Visiting Professor at AACC, community volunteer, husband and father.
-Director at the Annapolis Community Action Agency, a former Alderman City Council member, active in all facets of youth development in the Annapolis area
-MC at the forefront of the Baltimore Hip Hop movement, works aggressively with at risk youth both on the streets and behind bars, his music and work has been featured prominently on area radio stations like 92Q and 95.5 WPGC.
-Native of Anne Arundel County, a former Marine who spent extensive time overseas in places like Somalia, lives in the Clay Street area on West Washington Street since 2002.
-Junior at St. John’s College, is a director of a youth-leadership program called Epigenesis, which works to empower youth from the Annapolis area.
-President and CEO of the Washington Linkage Group, Inc. – a government relations and strategic consulting firm based in Washington, DC. WLG represents municipal and international governments, corporations and non-profits in the areas of lobbying, advocacy, grant writing, public relations, international trade. She is an ordained minister and was the first woman licensed to preach in the history of the First Baptist Church of Annapolis.
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