In the two official proms I've attended (Chicago and LA), there was lots to do for shy people too; the party is mobile and frequently subdivides.
This was true in DC, as well. There was even a knitting/crocheting corner.
Plan what to do, what to wear (you can never go wrong with a corset), and get ready for the next BuffistaCon: San Francisco, May 19-21, 2006! Everything else, go here! Swag!
In the two official proms I've attended (Chicago and LA), there was lots to do for shy people too; the party is mobile and frequently subdivides.
This was true in DC, as well. There was even a knitting/crocheting corner.
I'm with Kristin,
First Class on Amtrak is a whole 'nuther train. Much with the comfy and actually good food.
Brenda, are we talking about the same first class? The business class is the one I found to be similar to the coach except for nicer seats and outlets.
Yeah, I think you must be right. The other sounds even better.
Business class gets the nice seats and power. First class gives you food and booze service that looks like it's complimentary, and you get hot towel service.
Oo, yeah. I had forgotten the hot towels. That was GREAT. It was like being in a time warp back to a time when flying somewhere was an event and the airlines pampered you.
Okay, I need to ride in Acela first class now. (The last Amtrak train I took was a "Holiday Special" that turned out to be a NJ Transit train that they'd hauled down to DC to handle the extra Thanksgiving traffic. No cafe car, very few bathrooms. It completely sucked in every way.)
I'd like to mention that this isn't always the main event. If you are a party person (and many Buffistas are), the Prom is the centerpiece of the weekend. If you are a shy person who freezes up in crowds (and many Buffistas are), the centerpiece of the weekend is all the small outings.
True. I meant "main" only in the sense that it's the one thing that's been at every F2F, and (so far) the only event which everyone can reasonably be expected to attend.
It's no lap of luxury, but the smaller number of stops alone can make a big difference,
Really? I've usually found that the Acela is just barely faster than the Northeast Regional or Metroliner -- maybe shaving half an hour off the DC-NY route. It only makes one or two fewer stops.
Question for the eastern folks. Is it going to be pretty simple to take a train from the Raleigh/Durham area to DC?
I'm pretty sure there's a direct line there. The Carolinian or something like that.
There's a train, it's fairly cheap (I looked into it once) but the times are kinda random. (Edit: But you could also look into Independence Air, which at least round trip isn't always more expensive...)