Anonymous wrote:It's blue collar rich. Lots of shiny Ram 2500's and people have elaborate billiard rooms (read Florida rooms with pool tables in them). Isn't it on some swampy river?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, I went to college in Baltimore. In the late 90's Severna Park was a slight step above Glen Burnie...comparable to maybe Laurel. Yuck, it's probably the next closest area where all the white people who lived in Laurel wanted to get away from the black people who were moving in.
Anonymous wrote:It's blue collar rich. Lots of shiny Ram 2500's and people have elaborate billiard rooms (read Florida rooms with pool tables in them). Isn't it on some swampy river?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, I went to college in Baltimore. In the late 90's Severna Park was a slight step above Glen Burnie...comparable to maybe Laurel. Yuck, it's probably the next closest area where all the white people who lived in Laurel wanted to get away from the black people who were moving in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, I went to college in Baltimore. In the late 90's Severna Park was a slight step above Glen Burnie...comparable to maybe Laurel. Yuck, it's probably the next closest area where all the white people who lived in Laurel wanted to get away from the black people who were moving in.
I grew up in AA county and graduated in the late 90s. That couldn't be further from the truth. Severna Park is like AAs version of Bethesda/McLean.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, I went to college in Baltimore. In the late 90's Severna Park was a slight step above Glen Burnie...comparable to maybe Laurel. Yuck, it's probably the next closest area where all the white people who lived in Laurel wanted to get away from the black people who were moving in.
Hahaha, really?! Apparently, since you went to college in Baltimore, you know all about Maryland.Anonymous wrote:Wow, I went to college in Baltimore. In the late 90's Severna Park was a slight step above Glen Burnie...comparable to maybe Laurel. Yuck, it's probably the next closest area where all the white people who lived in Laurel wanted to get away from the black people who were moving in.