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By Mary Lou Pickel The Atlanta Journal-Constitution /
Monday, April 17, 2000
Amanda Roberts sailed across home plate in her
electric wheelchair Sunday all smiles, and it's no surprise. Unlike last
year, her wheelchair didn't sink into the sand by second base and require
three people to pull her around the bases.
The new Astroturf McMiracle Field in Conyers
was also a huge hit for the other 133 disabled children who played on it
Sunday during opening ceremonies.
"I think it's fantastic, it really is," said
Versie Slay-Strong of Stockbridge. Her son, Robert Solomon, 16, is
autistic and used to tire his parents out playing ball in the back
yard.
"We were at the first meeting when it got
started" three years ago, she said of the Rockdale Miracle League. "It's
amazing how big it's gotten. . . . These people came all the way from
Marietta," she said, pointing to parents behind her.
Now the league has a field of its own.
"There's no obstructions. The pitchers mound
and the bases are flat," said Dean Alford, president of the Rotary Miracle
League Fund, which raised $750,000 to build the special field and three
surrounding dirt and grass fields. The Atlanta Ronald McDonald House
Charity gave $350,000. Everything at the complex is wheelchair-accessible,
including the low-lying snack bar counter, Alford said.
An estimated 50,000 children in the Atlanta
area could benefit from the type of field built in Conyers, he said. The
group hopes other communities will use their field as a model.
Andrea Mosley of Tucker wants the same
opportunity for her son, Wesley, 8, who has Down syndrome, that the kids
in the Rockdale league have.
"With as many baseball fields as there are in
DeKalb County, why wouldn't we be able to get something through parks and
recreation?" she asked. DeKalb recently formed a special needs league
called DeKalb Challenger, but finding a home has been hard. A church has
donated a field but limits play to two hours, she said.
"Seeing this -- I stood up there and cried
like a baby," said Wesley's grandmother, Linda Moss. "Kids with special
needs are a treat. . . . You learn from them -- compassion,
patience. It just makes me appreciate life and the gifts we are given.
They may not be perfect, but they're gifts, every one of them."
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