Federationists Work Hard and Play Hard
Federationists Work Hard and Play Hard
The Braille Monitor
March,
2004
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Federationists Work
Hard and Play Hard
by
Anil Lewis
From the Editor: It's
time again to think about convention tours. The Georgia affiliate has been hard
at work planning to fill your free time at convention. This is what President
Anil Lewis has to say about your choices this year:
Anil
Lewis
The annual convention of
the National Federation of the Blind requires a lot of planning by our national
office staff, the host affiliate, and every Federationist committed to achieving
the goals of the NFB. The national convention is our time to mark milestones,
celebrate accomplishments, plan for our future, train Federationists, educate
society, and reenergize ourselves. As I say, it requires a lot of hard work
by everyone who attends. And we all know the old adage about all work and no
play. For this reason many Federationists build in a little time to vacation
during convention.
Because
our convention hotels, the Marriott Marquis and the Hilton, are conveniently
located near Atlanta's public transportation system, MARTA, many conventioneers
will probably choose to explore our lovely city on their own. Underground Atlanta,
Centennial Park, and the World of Coca-Cola are a simple train or bus ride away.
But for those who would appreciate a more structured exposure to some of Atlanta's
attractions and would like to venture a little farther from the convention site,
the Georgia affiliate has developed several tours for your enjoyment. Tour day
this year is Saturday, July 3. All tours will depart from the hotel in the afternoon
or evening of Saturday, the third.
Gone
with the Wind
($25 adults, $15 children)
The Margaret Mitchell House
was built in 1899 by Cornelius J. Sheehan. The two-story, single-family home
on fashionable Peachtree Street was converted in 1919 into a ten-unit apartment
building. It was here, from 1925 until 1932, that Margaret Mitchell lived in
apartment no. 1 and wrote her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Gone with the
Wind.
This
is a docent-led tour lasting one to one-and-a-half-hours with exclusive photographs
and archival exhibits that begin to tell the story of Margaret Mitchell beyond
Gone with the Wind. The tour starts in the Visitors' Center with "A
Woman in a Man's World: Margaret Mitchell, Reporter," an exhibit of Jazz
Age journalism that explores the popular weekly columns Mitchell wrote for the
Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine. The tour continues into the house, through
the apartment where she wrote Gone with the Wind, and finally to the
new Gone with the Wind Movie Museum. This museum, which opened on December
15, 1999--the sixtieth anniversary of the movie premiere in Atlanta--illuminates
the making of the movie, the premiere, and legacy with memorabilia from the
Herb Bridges collection and the doorway of Tara from the movie set. Your experience
at this historic site ends with an opportunity to enjoy the Museum Shop, complete
with unique gifts, souvenirs, and Gone with the Wind collectibles and
memorabilia.
For
specific information about this tour, call (404) 249-7015 or visit <http://www.gwtw.org/>.
Civil
War
($25 adults, $15 children under thirteen)
The Gone with the Wind
tour can be complemented with a tour of Atlanta by Peter Bonner with an emphasis
on the Civil War. Peter Bonner's Historical and Hysterical Tours began as a
dream back in 1996. The tour company combines Peter's two great loves--history
and entertainment. His programs have delighted people of all ages, from the
school children who marvel at the heaviness of the black powder gun to the senior
citizens who remember similar stories told to them by their grandparents. Peter's
emphasis is always on the human side of the story, which is often as hysterical
as it is historical.
This
well-orated bus tour of Atlanta's historic sites will be both educational and
entertaining. The tour will last approximately three hours. For specific information
about this tour, call 770-477-8864 or visit <http://www.peterbonner.com/>.
Civil
Rights
($25 adults, $15 children under thirteen)
Atlanta is home to the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King. No civil rights tour can compare to a visit to
the birth home of Dr. King, a gospel concert at the celebrated Ebenezer Baptist
Church, a tour of the Martin Luther King historic site and visitors center,
and a stroll down historic Auburn Avenue.
Just
past noon on January 15, 1929, a son was born to the Reverend and Mrs. Martin
Luther King in an upstairs bedroom of 501 Auburn Avenue, in Atlanta, Georgia.
The couple named their first son after the Rev. King, but he was simply called
M.L. by the family. During the next twelve years this fine, two-story Victorian
home is where M.L. would live with his parents, grandparents, siblings, aunts,
uncles, and their boarders. The home is located in the residential section of
Sweet Auburn, the center of black Atlanta. Two blocks west of the home is Ebenezer
Baptist Church, the pastorate of Martin's grandfather and father. It was in
these surroundings of home, church, and neighborhood that M.L. experienced his
childhood. Here M.L. learned about family and Christian love, segregation in
the days of Jim Crow laws, diligence, and tolerance. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. returned to Ebenezer Baptist Church in 1960. As co-pastor with his father,
Daddy King, Dr. King Jr. would preach about love, equality, and nonviolence.
For
specific information about this tour, call 404-526-8900 or visit <http://www.nps.gov/malu/>.
Touch
the Future
($25 adults, $15 children under thirteen)
The
NFB of Georgia is working with the National Organization of Parents of Blind
Children to develop a tour beyond this world. The NFB, with the cooperation
of the Fernbank Science Center, will enhance the visual experience of the Fernbank
Planetarium with tactile and audible information that will allow blind children
and adults to experience outer space more fully. The planetarium is a celestial
theater in the round, using the complex Zeiss Mark V planetarium projector and
a variety of special-effects projectors to guide the audience through the wonders
of the universe. At seventy feet in diameter, the planetarium is one of the
largest in the United States, and is dedicated to teaching and public enrichment.
For specific information about this tour, call (678) 874-7102 or visit <http://fsc.fernbank.edu/>.
Stone
Mountain National Park
($25 adults, $15 children under thirteen)
The high-relief carvings on the side of Stone Mountain.
On 3,200 gorgeous acres
just sixteen miles east of downtown Atlanta, the stories of the South come to
life at Stone Mountain Park. The mountain itself is the world's largest mass
of exposed granite. The centerpiece of the park--and one of the true marvels
of western engineering--is found on the mountain's north side, where you'll
see the world's largest high-relief carving, depicting three heroes of the American
Confederacy.
We
plan to have one bus leave in the afternoon so that you can enjoy the park's
breathtaking scenery, pristine lakes, forestland, beautiful gardens, and miles
of nature trails. The park also features an enormous variety of recreational
and entertainment facilities, including family-oriented attractions, tennis,
golf, fishing, hiking, and camping. Another bus will leave in the evening, just
in time for those interested only in enjoying the spectacular laser show at
the mountain. For more information about this marvelous park, visit <http://www.stonemountainpark.com/>.
Agatha's
Dinner Theater
($45 adults, no children)
Agatha's is a comedy murder
mystery dinner theater with audience participation. All shows are original comedy
murder mystery plays that take place in the dining room between the courses
of the meal. The show currently scheduled for July is Law and Odor: O.P.U.
There is no stage; the actors move throughout the audience, so you can see and
hear from all seats. Two professional actors carry the show, and the rest is
up to the audience. Participation is encouraged but not required.
Agatha's
serves a five-course meal of appetizers, soup, salad, choice of entree, and
dessert. Once audience members are seated, the waiters review the entrees, and
you make your choices at that time. Wine is served with dinner, beginning with
the soup course.
For
specific information about this tour, call (404) 875-4321, or visit <http://www.agathas.com>.
Braves
Baseball
($25 adults, $15 children under thirteen)
Of course we will have
tickets to the Atlanta Braves game on July 3. It's a night game against Boston,
with fireworks on the field and in the air. For specific information about this
tour, call (404) 522-7630, or visit <http://www.atlantabraves.com.>
If
you are interested in any of the tours described here, please sign up early.
Checks or money orders made out to the NFB of Georgia should be mailed to the
Georgia affiliate at NFB of Georgia, P.O. Box 6859, Atlanta, Georgia 30343.
Payment should include a note listing the tour and number of adult and children's
tickets being ordered.
An
adult must accompany all children. Be sure to note that the deadline for preregistration
and cancellations is June 18, 2004. Any remaining tickets will be available
for sale during convention at the Georgia information table. Also keep in mind
that the prices quoted are dependent on guaranteed minimum attendance. The prices
for tours include buses, experienced guides, and sales tax and admissions where
applicable. Tours leave from the Courtland Street entrance of the Marriott Marquis,
which is just across the street from the Hilton.
These are simply the preliminary
tours that the Georgia affiliate is coordinating; watch for additional tours
in future issues of the Monitor. We continue to work toward more tours,
like Six Flags Over Georgia and Cyclorama/Zoo Atlanta. If you have any questions,
suggestions, or special requests for places you would like to visit while you
are here, please call the affiliate line (866) 316-3242, and let us know.
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