Baby Boomers See Europe on $5 a Day

Posted on October 29th, 2012 in 1950s,1960s,Pop Culture by Terry Hamburg



It was the early baby boomer tourist bible.

The hotel is a charming three story in the trendy, artsy Monmartre section of Paris, the location of so many movies of the times: An American in Paris, Gigi, Funny Face, Charade. Arthur Frommer highly recommended the residence. The 1965 edition warned that prices had risen a bit from his 1957 pop culture best seller. and the new one had to be titled Europe on $5 and $10 a day. This destination, as usual in his listings, didn’t have private conveniences. At $6.50, it was one of the higher picks. You’d have to eat frugally, do a lot of walking and go to free museums to sneak in under $10 a day.


Obviously, the concept was geared to the younger generation, baby boomers who didn’t mind roughing it a bit on trips: cramped trains, cheap food, basic rooms—it was almost romantic.

A line started in the small lobby and snaked out to the street, everyone clutching the  bible. “We have un chambre left,” the hostess informed me.

“I’ll take it,” I chirped.

“Sans bain et toilet, tois floors, sans elevator.”

“C’est bon,” I said, practicing my French.

“Est petite.”

“C’est la vie,” I smiled with a wave of the hand.

“Le chambre est separated from the other chambres by les couvetures.”

I had to look up “couvetures.” It meant blankets. Twenty eager people stood behind me. There was a long line at my second choice across the street. The girl who just rented a room was awful cute.

“I’ll take it,” I said.

“45 francs, sil vous plait.”

I did a fast calculation. It was $9. “What about the $6.50 rate mentioned in the book?”

“Ah, oui, le livre. Well, you see we have much business from le livre, so we raise prices.”

The last edition in 2004 was entitled Europe on $85 a Day. Perhaps from nostalgia or limited means, aging baby boomers still buy it. Like its predecessors, le livre was obsolete soon after publication. What was intended to disclose little known bargains eliminated them as fast a speeding tourist.


Baby Boomer Trivia Questions


One of these was not a foreign movie hit in the U.S. during the 1950s and 1960s:

Wild Strawberries
And God Created Woman
Two Women
Eve and Eve
The Virgin Spring


What did French President Charles de Galle do in 1966?

• Ordered all American troops out of France.

• Temporarily broke off diplomatic relations with U.S. over the bombing of North Vietnam.

• For the first time, publically criticized U.S. for not urging the invasion of Nazi-held France earlier.

• Prohibited Gunsmoke from French television.


Answers at end of post




Answers


In 1966, the French government withdrew from the NATO command structure and “requested” that all American troops stationed on French soil depart tout suite. Merci, et au revoir.


Eve and Eve was never a film.


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