To
some outsiders, it looks firmly stuck in the 1950s. Vintage cars roam
the streets, the landscape is absent of strip malls and global chains,
and the buildings -- though crumbling -- hark back to a grander time.
It
is these throwbacks that lend Havana, the country's capital, an
undeniable charm. A charm that, some worry, is in peril once the U.S.
embargo lifts.
"We're still in 1959,
that's the beauty of the city, and eventually all of this is going to
change," says Hugo Cancio, a Cuban-American entrepreneur and president
of Fuego Media Group.
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