•Impulse ist and innovator, John Coltrane, as 3736 Germantown Avenue well as the history oí African- 215 226-6888 American music in Philadelphia. •Morgan’s RESTAURANTS 17 East Pnce Street •The Caribbean Cafe 215 848-2640 1811 N. 54th Street 215 473-0347 •The Red Snapper 46th 8 Lancaster Avenue •Charley’s Open Pit 5917 N. Broad Street •Third World Lounge 215 549-7550 49th 8 Baltimore Avenue 215 476-1515 •Cornucopia 4942 Parkside Avenue 215 177-442« Afro-American Historical and Cultural Museum •Top Shelf 56th 8 Market Streets 215 748-4245 •Delilah’s Reading Terminal Market •Lakey’s 8215 Stenton Avenue 1627 South Street 12th 8 Arch Streets 215 247-5354 •Zanzibar Blue 215 545-9160 301-305 S. I Ith Street •Ron’s Ribs 215 574-0929 215 829-0300 •Moody’s On The Pike •Dwight’s Southern Barbecue Haines St. 8 Limekiln Pike 215 927-5055 3734 Germantown Avenue 215 225-6030 •The Red Sea 229 S. 45th Street •Ferrell’s Franks E N T E R T A IN M E N T / N IG H T L IF E S H O P P IN G •Atibas African Room •Chosen Image Black Art Gallery 52nd 8 Walnut Streets 215 726-58 26/4 72-8724 215 276-3200 215 387-2424 Gallery II, Market East •Borgia Cafe I Oth 8 Market Streets 406 S. 2nd Street 215 238-9963 6521 N. Broad Street •The Rib Crib 6333 Germantown Avenue 215 222-4250 •Heritage Gallery 51 North 3rd Street 215 923-7713 215 438-6793 •The Lucien Crump Art Gallery SUMMER '94 FEATURES NEW DISNEY SHOWS, PARADES. HOTELS Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Disney-MGM Studios plunges into Summer ’94 with the chill-thrilling Twilight Zone Tower of Terror heading a host of all-new Walt Disney World attractions, musical shows and parades, plus grand opening of the awe-inspiring 728- room Wilderness Lodge. Epcot ’94 transforms Future World into a true World’s Fair with innovation and excitement, Mickey Mania creates a madcap new parade for the Magic Kingdom and Epcot’s Splashtacular musical fountain fills the sky. New for Sum m er ’94 is the Terror Zone Tower of Terror—dar­ ing guests ascend a shadowy lift-shaft past ghostly corridors in Hollywood Tower Hotel until lightning strikes; their lift-vehicle plum­ mets 13 floors—faster th an free-fall— in a breathtaking Twighlight Zone thrill of a lifetime. 6380 Germantown Avenue 215 843-8788 •Afro-American Historical and Cultural Museum Bookstore 7 th 8 Arch Streets 215 574-3139 •Hakim ’s Books 210 S. 52nd Street 215 474-9495 •Bintamani 603 S. 47th Street •Naana Kitoe 511 S. 4th Street 215 627-9251 •Silk Tent 4308 Pine Street 802 South Street 215 925-1667 •October 31, 1954 The Supreme Court bans segregated Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. installed seating on Montgomery buses •Stiltwalker ■* Where European horns met African drums, and American music was born. Call 1-800-429-2008 for a free guide to New Orleans, or NCW flDI write Post Office Box 61023, New Orleans, LA 70161-1023- Comejttn The Parade M ontgom ery’s Black H eritage is A m erica’s Heritage. Museums, churches, schools, and his­ toric sites all over this city attest to the important contributions of African-Americans. Here in M ontgom ery famous A frican- A m ericans, such as W.C. Handy, Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver, Jesse Owens, M arva C o llin s, G en eral D aniel “Chappie” James, Rosa Parks, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and countless others lived, worked and dream ed. It was here th a t th e C ivil Rights Movement was born and grew to change the shape of world history. H IS T O R IC F A C T S O F T H E C IV IL R IG H T S M O V E ­ M ENTS 215 386-1915 W here E ven T he S hioows P m Music. M u NTCOMERY, ALABAMA Montgomery Bus Boycott begins •November 13, 1956 as the 20th minister of Montgomery’s Dexter Avenue Baptist •August 29, 1957 Church Congress passes the Tint Civil Rights Act since Reconstruction •December I, 1955 Uosa Parks arrested for refusing to 10 •December 5th •December 5, 1959 give up her seat to a white man on United States Supreme Court outlaws a Montgomery bus segregation in bus terminals continued on page 1 2 The Walt Disney Company music and memory oí jazz saxophon­