.. .... ...... .... .......... : . . 4 . ... ..... ...... . ... Page Fourteen THE MICIAIGAN DAILY. Sundav, Februarv 26, 1 95& Sunday,. 'ebruary 26, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pag Forten HE ICHGA DALY unay. Fur yr 9 1 90 F Sunday, February 26, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY~ TRANSPORTATION: air and sea. 9 LONDON Black-aCketed, stiff white-collar . ._____ ; 1JRANSPORTATION to Europe runs the gamut from orchids, perfume and portal to portal car- peting to the eight-day student steamship. Airline and steamship companies both .offer a variety of accomoda- tions to satisfy both the highly discriminate and the more budget- minded foreign adventurers. F OR THE complete red carpet treatment, a tr-vveler might take Trans World Airline's "Am- bassador," Air France's "Golden Parisian" or a- plane like Pan American's "President's Special." First class round-trip air serv- ice from New York City to Shan- non, Ireland the nearest European point runs $667.80 and more in season, however, as contrasted to $469.80 round-trip tourist class. THE MAIN differences between tourist and first class are the number of stops, seating arrange- ments and types of mels. The same aircraft is used in both, classes. Although steamships offer no reduction on a round-trip ticket, air line service is about 10-per cent' less on a round trip basis. Air tickets can also be bought on a time-payment plan.- Off-season tickets are available from Nov. 1 through March 31, KENTUCKY DERBY FRENCH LICK Departing May 4 ... from $84.50 TRAVEL BUEU INC. 1313 S. University NO 2-5587 but travelers must leave and re- turn within that period and must purchase a round-trip ticket. The off-season tourist rate is $429.80 round-trip, New York City to Shannon. STEAMSHIP travel generally in- cludes three classes on the same ship, although there are some student ships that run almost en- tirely tourist class. First class steamship-style places the same emphasis on luxury as first class via air. One way passage on the Queen Elizabeth, the largest commercial steamer (83,673 tons, with the Queen Mary second at 81,235 and the United States third at 53,300) runs $380 from New York to South- hampton during the summer sea- son. FACILITIES and prices become less in the lower classes, with cabin class running at $235 and tourist at $187 on the same sailing. The summer travel season runs from April 16 through August 4, and from July 2 through October 20. During the off-season, or "thrift season," rates run 10 to 15 dollars less. and the legacy of i f i By GEOFFREY DE DENEY UNLIKE any other city in she world London is, two cities. Centered round St. Paul's Cathed- ral, the Mansion House (residence of the Lord Mayor), the Bank of England,the Royal Exchange, the Stock Exchange and Lloyd's, and close to the great dock area is the City of London. Port, centre of , commerce and finance, "the City" is the equiva- lent of Wall Street with a life and organization all of its own and a mysterious informality familiar only to those who work there, black-jacketed, bowler-hatted, stiff white-collared men who carry tightly rolled umbrellas; a square mile more densely inhabited and busy by day than any other in Europe, and by night a deserted area peopled only by night watch- men. BUT three miles up the Thames harrassed Members of Parlia- ment give tea to troublesome con- stituents on the terrace of the Houses of Parliament overlooking the river, in the shadow of Big Ben and Westminister Abbey. Here is the City of Westminister, the governmental centre of the coun- try. Whitehall, with its administra- tive offices, the Admiralty and Horse Guards is here, opposite the banqueting hall, all that re- mains of the old palace of White- hall, and from the windows of which Charles I stepped out onto the scaffold. Close by is the palace of St. James, successor to Whitehall as a royal residence and centre of the brilliant English society of the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Violent and extravagant, yet of great intellect and consummate taste, the lords and commoners who made up this assemblage were no decadent aristocracy marking out the vpassing of their age with the steps of a careful gavotte or minuet like their confreres at Versailles. These were men, and women too, who were the leadcrs- of their country in government, in ideas and taste, in wealth and estates, and in vice and scandal. History shows their achieve- ments, the Restoration drama, their wit and licentiousness, and London is their monument. TRETC Regen ham Pals+ the hear society le squares, by Adam and parki great way could bet Dr. John were valt Much o sult in p is a man street are ed men's promineni eyes of w Close b the shoe to be fou that com their ow: papers to them or. and swim over five years an have the Tire s windows a great way II BOERSMA TRAVEL SERVICE advises: Now is the time to apply for steamship accommodations for the summer of 1957. -Photo--Robert F. Jones THE PARIS BUM ... paid for by the Chamber of Commerce .the real and the fake I I SIi Brief at the knee- (Continued from Page 2) tourists. They paint rapidly and with a degree of architectural skill, rendering the church, the shops, the roof-tops; in watercolored splendor. In one block, you count seven art shops. Herein are offered the completed works of Montmartre's artists. Prices are cheap. YOU STEP into a cafe for a beer. One of the painters, a squat little man with stained clothes and brownish teeth, leaves his easel and walks into the cafe. "Rustic, isn't it?" he asks in good English. "Yes, I suppose so." "You suppose so!" His eyes widen. They too are brown- stained. "This place is so rustic it stinks." He wipes his mouth with a pin-striped sleeve. "Buy me a beer," he says. "Okay." "You see that bum on the steps down the street?" he asks. d "No." "Well, then you're blind. You're supposed to see him. Go look." He's right. A grizzled old man, wrapped in a dirty poplin rain- coat, sleeps on the stoop of a stuc- coed building down the street. He snoozes on, impervious to the cov- ert clicking of camera-shutters. You go back to the cafe. "Yeah, I saw him. He looks like a bum all right." "Well, he's not," says the stained man. "He's getting paid for sleeping there. By the Cham- ber of, Commerce." The stained man rubs, his chin with the glass, then drinks off his beer. "You want to see the real France?" "Well," you say, "I'd sort of planned on something along those lines." "Then get the hell out of Paris. You could live here for years and never see the i eal thing. "GET OUT into the provinces. Walk, or ride a bike. Let your hair grow and buy a cheap suit. Don't ever open your mouth. With the first word of American, the real Europe withers and dies. "And in dying it stretches out its hand. Not for comfort, my friend. Never for comfort or pity. For money." The stained man turns his stained gaze down into the glass. From the street comes the sound of clicking shutters, the rustle of many-zeroed bills, and one high, eager voice. "Gee whiz, Mommer. La vie boheme, hey?" ":vr":vli"vq};"v,""i." "."{.n..."fi. }{. ;>",, :"nsy }:a .a¢ i"iir e.r ,ai:vk: r ° OWNED AND OPERATED f BY STUDENTS FashIoned in the Van Boven tradition . . our walk shorts are as comfortable as they are smart looking. Distinctively designed in a variety of patterns and fabrics. Available in our plain top model with backstrap. Both men's and women's sizes l r Blessed are they who run around in circles, for theis shall- be known as wheels. o- I., i i 1 t i h r t { r a r 7 k f f i E i F .OWN= El BOERSMA TRAVEL SERVICE is the ONLY AUTHOf ticket holding agent in Ann Arbor for all steamship airlines and tour operators, domestic and foreign. our appointments include: A pa: S'TEAMSHIP LINES: CUNARD LINE UNITED STATES LINES FRENCH LINES HOLLAND AMERICA LINE SWEDISH AMERICA LINE AMERICAN EXPORT LINE HOME LINES GREEK LINE GRACE LINE UNITED FRUIT LINE MATSON LINES NORTH GERMAN LLOYD AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES ,NORWEGIANAMERICA LINE CLIPPER LINE GEORGIAN BAY LINE TOUR OPERATORS: AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY THOMAS COOK & SON BROWNELL TOURS CARTAN TOURS OLSON TOURS UNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANY STOP TOURS HILTON TOURS, HAPPINESS TOURS SITA TOURS TREASURE TOURS MARSH TOURS BOKESMa AIRLINES: AMERICAN AIRLINES CAPITAL AIRLINES DELTA & C&S AIRLINE BRANIFF AIRLINES UNITED AIRLINES PAN AMERICAN AIRV TRANS WORLD AIRLit NORTHWEST AIRLINE EASTERN AIRLINES AIR FRANCE LUFTHANSA SCANDINAVIAN AIRLI BRITISH OVERSEAS Al KLM ROYAL DUTCH / SABENA AIRLINES SWISSAIR SERVICES: TRAVELERS CHECKS TRAVEL INSURANCE HOTEL RESERVATIONS GIFT SERVICE THEATRE TICKETS CAR RENTALS CAR PURCHASES ABR4 TRAVEL FILM SERVICE GROUP TRAVEL CONVENTION TRAVEL VISA SERVICE PASSPORT ASSISTANC Y BERMUDA HOSE from $1. 50 pan 1301)w frOmZ .93 rEAVEL SER STUDENT BICYCLE 12-14Nickels ArcadeAnn Arr Mich. r y Domestic Air Reservations-NO 2-3155 Foreign & Tour Dept.- A. Da S AT! IUJR.RY COATS SHOP Sm39 ith ! ;Unii ..NO 8=427 N* iAHF1N CEANGES II .. r.- JAL -. -S - .- . . -. - . 4- ~ .. -. --r