PITTSBURGH -- (AP) -- A boatload of college students will sail the Caribbean
this month, but not to party.
About 700 students from the Semester at Sea, a shipboard program for U.S.
collegians run by the University of Pittsburgh, will dock in Havana on
Feb. 19 in
what is believed to be the largest college visit to Cuba in 40 years.
``There hasn't been anything like this. There have been small groups of
perhaps 10
to 20 students going to Cuba, but not a group this large,'' said Jose Moreno,
68, a
Pitt professor of sociology and Latin American studies.
The Semester at Sea got approval for its three-day visit on Thursday. Educators
had to satisfy both the Cuban government and the U.S. Treasury Department,
which allowed an exception to the U.S. trade ban.
If the visit goes well, larger trips could be scheduled in coming years,
said Billie
DeWalt, director of the university's Latin Studies program.
The students will live with Cuban college students and learn about Cuban
health
care, education, music and architecture.
``One of the goals we have is that our students will befriend a Cuban student
and
spend the three days with that individual, seeing Havana, learning about
their life,
their family, their city and their culture,'' said Les McCabe, a Semester
at Sea
administrator.
Educators have been trying to make the trip apolitical. The Semester at
Sea has
docked previously in South Africa, China, the Soviet Union -- and in Vietnam
for
the first large-scale college mission since the Vietnam War.
Cuba's 11 million residents live just 90 miles from Florida in a space
roughly the
size of Pennsylvania. The country has been under Fidel Castro's rule since
the
1959 revolution.
President Clinton's administration has been easing restrictions on exchanges
with
Cuba. For example, the Baltimore Orioles may play an exhibition game against
Cuban players this year.
The Semester at Sea's 650-foot S.S. Universe Explorer -- complete with
a library
and computer lab -- leaves Bermuda for Cuba on Feb. 17 and will eventually
reach Seattle on May 28.
Moreno, who left Cuba before the revolution to study in Europe, will lecture
to
college sophomores and juniors about his homeland.
``The average undergraduate doesn't know anything about Cuba,'' he told
The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald