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The Bell Tolls for The Know

The Know Bookstore and Restaurant, long a hotspot for fried chicken, books and jazz just off the N.C. Central University campus, is closing its doors.

Yes, you read that last sentence correctly. It was a restaurant and a bookstore, and a place where fledgling jazz artists could pound out some notes.

It was an eclectic place, for sure, and a deep-rooted piece of the university community for 19 years.

But The Know is shutting down, at least for now, forced out by a landlord who wants to use the building for another purpose.

Owner Bruce Bridges says it may re-open in another spot, hopefully nearby, but he isn't sure yet.

 Virginia Bridges has the story here.

Council delays vote on jazz center money

After more than two hours' testimony and deliberation, the City Council voted Monday night to put off a decision on granting $175,000 for the Mok'e Jazz Cultural Center.

Mayor Bill Bell raised a concern about the center's estimated cash flow. Also, Know Book Store owner Bruce Bridges, who has said the Mok'e project will hurt his store, asked for city help to stay in business.

“I don't think we're prepared to make a decision tonight,” said Councilman Howard Clement.
 
The Know Book Store leases a building at 2520 Fayetteville St..  The owner, Mozella McLaughlin, has sought the city's help to renovate and enlarge the building to house the proposed Jazz Cultural Center.
 
In a letter presented to council members just before the meeting began,  McLaughlin asked the council:
 

  •  To help assure he could remain in his location for six more months.
  •  To provide money for relocation expenses.
  •  To compensate him for six to eight months' income lost during the renovation work.

McLaughlin has invited Bridges to lease space in her renovated building, but Bridges has said the terms she offered are unacceptable, and he has been unable to find space elsewhere.

Council member Cora Cole-McFadden said she had favored the grant for McLaughlin. “But I am concerned now,” she said, “and I need to hear more about Bruce Bridges and the plight of the Know Book Store.”

Bridges said his is “the oldest African-American-owned bookstore in North Carolina ... as well as a local institution.”

Besides books on black history and culture, the Know includes a restaurant and holds a weekly jazz night. More than 20 citizens spoke to support Bridges and his store. Some complained that, in funding the McLaughlin project, the city would be using taxpayers' money to displace one business in favor of another.

Chris Tiffany, who said he had been a Know Book Store customer for more than 20 years, compared the city's subsidy for the Mok'e Center to “helping Rupert Murdoch take over the Carolina Times” — a long-established black newspaper in Durham.

Mangum opus announcement Thursday

Crystal Mangum (at left), the stripper at the heart of the Duke lacrosse case, and publisher Vincent Clark are holding a press conference to say Mangum's story is coming out in book form.

Title is "The Last Dance for Grace: The Crystal Mangum Story."

Thursday's event is not open to the public. Owner Bruce Bridges confirmed this afternoon that it will be held at his Know Bookstore, 2520 Fayetteville St., Thursday morning.

Clark runs a documentary-film company called fire! Studios (www.firefilmz.com).

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