Columns

Buenos Aires, Argentina, is a city of many faces. Among them is the brash neighborhood called La Boca, with the tourist-filled, colorful promenade El Caminito; the upscale section called Recoleta, centered on the mausoleum-laden cemetery where Evita Perón lies buried in a much-visited tomb; the Palermo neighborhood, with its many parks, restaurants and tall apartment buildings, and the old neighborhood of San Telmo, a mix of picturesque dilapidated houses and those now in the process of...

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When you've traveled in Europe as long as I have, you experience changes, big and small. And more and more, I've been noticing that traditional local businesses are being pushed out by the playground economy that comes with modern affluence.

It's one thing to see hotels, restaurants and shops come and go in the normal course of business. But I've also seen the slow churning of local traditions and lifestyles as unique family-run enterprises have given way to...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 472nd issue of your monthly foreign travel magazine.

Those of you who are seeing ITN for the first time, come on in and take a look around. We’ve got articles and letters written by our subscribers, frequent travelers like you, providing recommendations — and candid opinions — about tours, flights, destinations, etc.

Travel news that could affect your plans, positively or negatively, is prominently displayed.

On...

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Saigon, or Ho Chi Minh City as it’s been called since 1975 (though both names are used throughout Vietnam), is a bustling city. 

During our January 2015 trip, my husband, John, and I visited the War Remnants Museum (28 Vo Van Tan, Ward 6, District 3, HCMC; http://warremnantsmuseum.com), which chronicles the Vietnamese people’s struggles against invading forces.

While a visit to this museum can be distressing for Americans, we remembered a comment made by our...

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(Second of two parts)

Last month I related the first part of my experiences during a 6-month European tour in 2014. Today I am continuing my story.

Ireland Road Scholar tour

Next on my program was a tour of Ireland, a country through which my late wife, Flory, and I had bicycled by ourselves many years ago. 

On the 2014 tour, the 18-day “Ireland’s Coasts from North to South,” June 23-July 9, offered by Road Scholar (Boston, MA; 800/454-5768, www.roadscholar.org),...

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Mastery of Europe’s major cities — Rome, Paris, London, Vienna — is the mark of a good traveler. Teeming with color, energy and cultural vibrancy, these places, while expensive, richly reward the thoughtful traveler.

There are plenty of ways to thrive in big European cities without going broke. And the good news is that, in so many ways, the less you spend, the more you’ll engage in the life around you. 

So stow your camera, roll up your sleeves and enjoy the real thing. Here...

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Patio and residence of Alta Gracia estancia, near Córdoba, Argentina. Photos by Julie Skurdenis

(Second of two parts)

The Jesuits arrived in the New World in the late 16th century. In the newly founded city of Córdoba in north-central Argentina, they were granted a manzana, or land parcel, in 1599, where they built a complex that eventually included a church, a university, a residence for Jesuit priests and a collegium, or secondary school. To finance the complex, the Jesuits established large estancias, or ranches, in the countryside surrounding Córdoba.

These estancias...

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In 2005 I made a vow that in 10 years I would revisit a topic of increasing concern at that time: “Is the US airline industry moving in the direction of becoming a monopoly?”  Forty-seven years ago, in 1968, Simon and Garfunkel lamented to a war-weary American public, in the famous line from the hit song “Mrs. Robinson,” “Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?” Today a reeling American travel public can ask, “Where have you gone, Continental, Northwest, TWA, US Air (now American Airlines) and...

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