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IOWA CITY
, on I-80 55 miles west of the Mississippi, is refreshingly young at heart. The restored gold-domed
Old Capitol
is a reminder of its days as state capital, before government was transferred to the more central Des Moines. Residents were placated by getting the University of Iowa instead. The arty shops and sidewalk cafs of the compact downtown touch the east end of campus, but its red and gray buildings, closeted by tall dark trees, remain aloof from the rest of the town. About 12 miles east of Iowa City, the tiny Quaker town of West Branch attracts a steady stream of traffic from I-80 for its
Herbert Hoover Library & Museum
(daily 9am5pm; $2). Informative exhibits and a documentary film cover Hoover's youthful adventures in China, his presidential victory and subsequent disgrace when the nation blamed him for the Great Depression, and his comeback after WWII as the leader of the European humanitarian relief effort. A walking tour includes Hoover's birthplace, a replica of his father's blacksmith shop and the Friends Meetinghouse where he attended Sunday services.
Greyhound stops at 404 E College St, just off downtown. The
CVB
is at 408 First Ave in Coralville, a mile northeast of downtown (tel 319/337-6592 or 1-800/283-6592,
www.icccvb.org
). The Iowa City Public Library, 123 S Linn St. has
internet
access.
The Coralville Park, three miles north of I-80 at exit 244 (tel 319/338-3543), is a good place to cast a fishing line, has a Devonian-era fossil bed and offers grassy
tent sites
for $8. Bargain
food
is easy to find, be it soup in a sourbread bowl at
Quinton's
, 215 E Washington St (tel 319/354-7074); the pastries and espressos served on long comfortable sofas at
Java House
, nearby at 211 E Washington St; or the burgers at
Micky's
, 11 S Dubuque St (tel 319/338-6860), a friendly, dimly lit Irish bar.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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