THE MICHIGAN 'DILY Paae Eiaht THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 2.6, 1956 Pleasure-Loving Miami DAIQURIS & TROPICAL FISH (Continued from Page* ' of July and the latest De Mille epic. Not even in his wildest dreams could the most talented of the Cinemascope set designers have given birth to this monstr- ous cancer that is a final, damn- ingl testmn t hepleasure-iseek-f afemel afeter h otifte motel. 'The hotels are palaces, and the motels are second-rate if they don't have more than one swim- ming pool and a golf course. Each neon sign is bigger and flashier than the next and they glare with dizzying persistence. The interior of these 'tourist th t eri rs A he ab ul u FLouifcs, thalbb resebles epttat litl isa sorwe thtr paaal ltloea o hrty doras M IAMI In the winter Is for the rich man or the spendthrift. But Miami in the summer provides the same facilities at greatly re- duced prices that make it within the reach of almost anyone who can afford to take a vacation; and temperatures are usually lower 'than those in other U.S. metro- Thse wo knohth cubityel not asll to ur thtity has itsei- touittra and the fashy And it wants to be. Sporting look from State & Liberty - Seen in o ur turi g I'..* Ne SA CONY By JANE HOWARD TRAVEL GUIDES on Cuba rhap- sodize about H2,vana's grandi- ose palm-lined boulevards, twisting world's gaes hand costlest niht spots Cued in by one ardent Cuban- by-adoption, Ernest Hemingway, the ook be th viao nto nantrofte Saisthe colonalera.nd Theyubastoh ht ad agoTand evna of humid Caag- southern Cubans agree that commercialization would rob their domain, of its unique- appeal. If they want occasional proof of President Batista's noble inten- tions, they can fly in a couple of hours to Havana, where some cam- paign promises have been fulfilled. But southern Cuba has unher- alded attractions of its own. Some bf it is picturesque, but not so pretty--the naked children playing in the filth of the unpaved streets, and an economic status making senoras glad to get jobs as maids for "nearly nothing" per month. However, the area has features no other section can duplicate. From the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, an oasis of stateside routine and custom, the tourist can sidestrip his way to any number of places the travel books forget, He can drive over thirty miles of rough and sometimes nonexist- ent roads to Guantanamo or "Git- mo City," as local jargon has ab- breviated it. IN "Gitmo City," the tourist can1 provide business for the customs offices in dark shops where alli- gator and mahogany goods tempt his pocketbook. He can eat lon- gusta and other seafoods he's never heard of before, in restaurants specializing in the exotic. He can sip memorable frozen daiquiris in sidewalk cafes, accept-. ing the commnon Cuban maxim that rum is cheaper than water. Cer-- tainly it's more popular. If his Spanish is limited to "hasta Ia vista"-whlch is some- thing of a handicap--he can play charades with liquid-eyed shop- keepers until they understand that he's interested in their perfumes, liquors, cigars. He must make clear to them, too, that he's not intrigued by the shops' pride: racks of drab dresses and suits said to represent "latest styles" in stateside wear. , THE PROBLEM of transporta- tion In and around Gitmo City can be solved-colorfully. There are rickety cabs, rivalling their Pari- sian counterparts for reckless speed. More picturesque wagons, drawn by ancient burros barely able to walk, attract other patrons. And there are awkward straws covere as o ft e t ris , hg - gin astalt flantsad herd ofy anaoHers Jt ad fromi work. ,eseial b aios Fordstherpedestran th aerae the unsicieoere of littl eu dEgl i an who arue moesthan willo tmraiisitor. in the hop- ofansray coin osed sthrs wary leads across theiba og Cimesa,u whoe veso mote uior ague scorching sun retire, electricity blazes. The Naval Base itself, a sprawl- ing and orderly community mark- ed of f by radio towers and piers named alphabetically, offers its attractions. In a song he calls "Calypso Gitmo" one naval officer has immortalized the life there with the line "it's the only base in the whole darn fleet--where inspections are held to a mambo beat." THE VISITOR can see the song's point. Dances, almost daily crowding the base's packed social schedule, make good use of native bands adept at the cha-cha-cha routines. This, under fabled palms and fantastically full moons, makes for evenings nobody on Guantanamo can forget, For a change of pace Guanta- namo people can pack up a lunch and spend a day a few miles over he purple mountains on the Carib- bean beach. By holding their noses and diving under they find that the water's incredible royal blue is only half the sea's color scheme: Beneath the surface are schools of wierdly-colored tropical fish, fearlessly brushing by swimmer's feet. This doesn't annoy even the squeamish, because Caribbean swimming calls for shoes as pro. tection against jagged and Un- expected coral reefs. That's not all. There are the birds, leading inquisitive minds to ornithology books. There are the wild fuchsia zhrubs of bougain- villea, starkly contrasted against the blue of sky and water. And there is the unmistakable attitude of "manana." The People--- The Fce of A PHTOGRAPHER' VIEW NUNS QN BEDLOE'S ISLAND, NEW I 11 Sports Shop tower level Playcloth-es and swimsuits in unforgettable painters' COlors. SERVANT (*IRLDALEXANDR1A ...........................S.. F.. ...~ - N, .5-. (5 -A TRAVE rr~rg -t with a PUSH-BUTTON FOCUSING Only the Graphic 35 has modern, easy-to-use Push-Button Focusing. Squeeze the buttons to bring the picture into accurate focus. For flash COMPLETE OUTFIT: pictures just match the color bands on the Visi-. camera, case Ready footage scale and exposure scale to get and flash correct setting. These exclusive features, along 50 with other built-in advantages, help you get O superlative travel pictures you'll be proud to 8 5 show, whether you're a beginner or a past mas- ter of travel and camera. Ask for a demonstra- ONLY 1 0% DOWN tion of the Graphic 35. on our payment plan BJJ E -. 0P - iiiii1116 SOUTH UNIVERSITY NO 8-6972 AND NORTHERN EUROPE Departure July 30, 1956 . . . 58 days Killarney, Cork, Dublin, Belfast, Turnberry, Burns country, the Trossachs, Edinburgh, Bergen, M.S. "Meteor" cruise to Hardongerfjord, Oslo, Visby, Stockholm Helsinki, Len'"g'ad' Moscow Baltic Sea, Copenhagen, Hamburg, London, Deauville, Bciyeox, Mont St. Michel, Dinard, Morloix, Quimper, Vonnes, Angers, Tours of the chateau country, Paris. Arrive New York September 25, 1956 T RAVEL BUREAU INC. 1313 S. University NO 2-5587 HARLEM STREET SHOT I, exp& orts a~greel AL~ BY PRIVATE CAR is the BEST way STOP Tours makes it the REASONABLE way ~ Choose from 35 all expense Departures April through September BOERSMA TRAVEL SERViCE C 1I J.fe TOURS 5dE - es rca OW MN AND THE RWVER, PARIS .4 Li ~.. .)..