The York of Yore

By Ted Heck We Americans can boast with equanimity about our English heritage that was recently celebrated with the 400th anniversary of the settling of Jamestown. Citizens of the walled city of York in northeast England wouldn’t be impressed. They can go back in time 20 centuries and more, with a rich history that transcends […]
The Edifices of Edinburgh

By Ted Heck It had been 62 years since I first visited Edinburgh. The Scottish capital had gotten younger, with more spiked hair, face jewelry and tight jeans on the streets than we would see at a Britney Spears concert—if we were silly enough to attend one. Perhaps older folks among the city’s nearly five […]
Bed and Breakfast and Beyond Smiling Service in the English Countryside

By Ted Heck Richard Stewart of Keswick, a charming village in England’s famed Lake District, is more gregarious than a gaggle of geese. He has the right temperament to be host of a bed and breakfast with his significant other Linda Williamson. Connie and I found their Dunsford guest house in Rick Steves’ excellent guide […]
Switzerland Revisited

By Ted Heck Connie and I spent two weeks in Switzerland this spring, where I spent a couple of days on the slopes of Meiringen and a week in the gigantic Jungfrau Region. It was a trip I organized myself, showing that I sometimes fail to practice what I preach. In touting merits of membership […]
The White Jump Suit

By Ted Heck Here glides the bride, all dressed in white. Liz Langsfeld is being escorted down the slope by her father Mickey. Smiling midway on the slope is her soon-to-be-husband Ben Bachrach. He’s on skis, too. So are some of the 24 other family members in the small wedding party atop Elk Mountain in […]
What Would Avery Brundage Say?

By Ted Heck The Olympics in China are about to distract me from nightly fixes of Law and Order and print media is awash with more information about athletes than I can absorb. NBA basketball star LeBron James, destined to become a legend, is on the cover of TIME magazine, which highlights 100 American sport […]
Skiing Along the Nile

By Ted Heck Reprinted from Harrisburg Patriot News Tutankhamun did not ski and probably never saw snow, according to Achmed, our guide during a recent trip to Egypt. Teenage King Tut might have tried sandboarding, if the sport had been invented back in 1331 B.C. and if his advisors had allowed him to. Egyptians do […]
Cézanne’s Mountain Revisited

By Ted Heck It was a lot more comfortable seeing paintings of Mont St. Victoire this time than when I first saw the real thing 64 years ago. This time it was in a special exhibition of Paul Cézanne’s work and his influence on later painters, a show that attracts crowds to Philadelphia’s Museum of […]
Fighting World War II with Family

Southern California 25, Tennessee 0. This summer I finally learned the score of the 1945 Rose Bowl. My nephew Doug plugged in his laptop and Googled the result as we sat in a restaurant recently in the village of Philippsbourg in Alsace Lorraine. We were in France during a family visit to my old battlegrounds. […]
San Diego…Sea and See Worthy

By Ted Heck It took me only 88 years and $3,000 to get from Philadelphia to San Diego. Long ago I wanted to visit the seaport in Southern California, after watching movies of World War II sailors and soldiers moving in and out of the harbor, kissing wives and girlfriends on the dock. Years later […]