Palm Springs
Sitting in lush farming land, replete with manicured golf
courses, condominiums and millionaires, PALM SPRINGS does
not conform to any typical image of the desert, embodying a strange
mix of Spanish Colonial and mid-century modern styling. The massive
bulk of Mount San Jacinto looms over its low-slung buildings,
casting a welcome shadow over the town in the late afternoon. Ever
since Hollywood stars first came here in the 1930s, laying claim to
ranch-style estates and holing up in elite hotels, the clean dry
air and sunshine, just 120 miles east of LA, have made Palm Springs
irresistible. For years, high-school kids arrived in their
thousands for Spring Break, until civic zeal ran them out of town,
while others come specifically to sober up: the Betty Ford
Center in nearby Rancho Mirage draws a star-studded patient
list to its booze- and drug-free environment, attempting to undo a
lifetime's worth of behavioral disorders in an $11,000 28-day
stay.
Palm Springs wasn't always like this. Once it was the domain of
the Cahuillan Indians ; they were allocated this land in the
1890s, but exact zoning wasn't settled until the 1940s, by which
time the development of hotels and leisure complexes was well under
way. Under an odd checkerboard system, every other square mile of
Palm Springs forms part of the Agua Caliente (Spanish for
"hot water") Indian Reservation , and high rents have made
this the second richest tribe in America, worth more than $2
billion wealth that's been increasing with the new Casino Morongo,
right in the heart of town.
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