Touring IT AMERICA Amalgamated Publishers, Inc. is proud to present the 2nd Annual louring Black America Travel and Tourism Guide. The response to the 1993 API Travel Guide was trem endous. This y ear’s guide will take you through six new and exciting LJ.S. cities—Baltimore, Detroit, Kansas City, M emphis, Montgomery, and P h ilad el­ phia. We re sure African-Americans across the country will be looking forward to vis­ iting and exploring our African-American heritage via historical landmarks, cultural sites, fea sts at the m ost sc ru m p tio u s restaurants, and entertainment at the most happening nightspots in town! Learning about our African-American history, we discover the achievements and contributions our ancestors have m ade, that type of knowledge is everlasting and im m easurable. Monuments and heritage sites provide some evidence of trium ph over adversity, while celebrating the legacy of an unconquerable spirit. While in the city of choice, pick up a copy of its African-American newspaper to keep you abreast of w hat’s happening in an d a ro u n d th e city. B altim o re: T he B altim ore T im es; D etroit: M ichigan Chronicle; Kansas City: The Kansas City C all; M em phis: T r i-S ta te D efen d er: M ontgom ery: M ontgom ery T u sk egee l imes; and Philadelphia: P hiladelphia ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ >3 T r ib u n e an d P h ila d e lp h ia New O b serv er. Also, c o n ta c t th e c ity 's Convention and Visitors Bureau for further inform ation on African-Am erican sites, tours, and attractions. We will continue to select and feature innovative and exciting cities each year. We urge you to support those advertisers who have chosen the supplement to convex their invitation to visit their city or use their products and services. Remember, if vou drive, wearing your seat belt is the law— BUCKLE UP and never DRINK AND DRIVE! Hare a safe, educational, and won­ derful racation experience. ▲ from the days of slavery and the abolitionist struggle; photographs, manuscripts and artifacts touching upon the post-Civil War world of emancipation; and oral history tapes, works of art and everyday items that detail the lives of individual Black Marylanders and of a community segregated because of race are on view in a museum that repeatedly repays exploration. Maryland provides a perspective on African and s African-American history/achievement. From ancient “ Africa through the Middle Passage, from slavery | through the Civil War and Reconstruction, from the “ Harlem Renaissance to the Civil Rights era, the Black Baltimore is famed for its Inner Harbor impact on world and American history is traced at the Great Blacks in Wax Museum in Baltimore. More than 100 life-size and lifelike wax figures of prominent I^ALTIMORE, MARYLAND African and African-American personages dramatize the trials and triumphs of a people. The museum emphasizes Black scientist, inventors, social activists, From Africa to bondage to resistance to the perils and and statesmen. Black men and women of outstanding lim itations of freedom , the story of M aryland’s achievement are both celebrated and held up for emu­ African-Americans is interpreted at the Banneker- lation at the Great Blacks in Wax Museum. The fig­ Douglass Museum, in Annapolis. African art and utili­ ures may be in wax, but the achievements celebrated tarian objects of the Dogon, Malinke, Bambara, Baule are immortal. and Guro cultures; documents, books and artifacts ITr. Carter G. Woodson welcomes you to Great Blacks In Wax Great Blacks In Wax Museum tell the stories of our struggle continued on page 1 4 7’ « t I T