Vintage Auto Racing
I would like to attend the Vintage Car Racing in Paris/Montmartre I’m told is held in May. Would anyone know the Date in May it is held on???
Read MoreI would like to attend the Vintage Car Racing in Paris/Montmartre I’m told is held in May. Would anyone know the Date in May it is held on???
Read MoreThree restaurants have joined the Hall of Fame of French gastronomy by winning three stars in the latest Michelin Red Guide — a reward one chef found easy to describe: “This is joy.”
Jean-Michel Lorain, 45, said Thursday he regards his three stars as a vindication for his family-owned restaurant on the edge of the Burgundy region southeast of Paris.
The restaurant, La Cote Saint Jacques, was demoted to two-star status in 2001 during a major renovation program that forced the chef to spend too many hours out of the kitchen.
The other two restaurants to move into the three-star club are L’Esperance in Saint Pere-sous-Vezelay and Loges de l’Augergade in southwestern Puymerol.
Read MoreHello,
I’m going to Paris the first week of March. I will be staying there for 10 days and I won’t be going to any other countries except for two day visit to London. (which I already got a train ticket for)
I was thinking about buying the France Eurail Select Pass but now I’m having my doubts. It seems like even Pass holders have to pay for riding certain trains, then what it’s the point of buying the pass here if I’ll still have to pay overthere. I’m only planning to travel to Riems, St Malo, and maybe Bordeaux. If so, would you recommend to buy the pass here or just buy each ticket when in France. The Pass the I was going to buy is priced at $215 (1st class).
What would you recommend?
Hi from Georgia. Does any one know the population of Laval or how big a city it is compared to Rennes? I would like to pick up a rental car in Laval rather than Rennes as Rennes is so big to drive to the American Brittany Cemetery in St. james. Do you know how far it is from Laval to St. James? Thanks ya’ll.
Read MoreOn the surface, the new law is aimed at protecting France’s secular culture and the strict division between church and state. But the public debate has spread to much broader issues including immigration, women’s rights, education and concerns about Islamic fundamentalism. “This issue over the veil has become a flash point for so many tensions,” said Sharon Gracen, head of the Office of the Congregation at the American Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in Paris.
Read MoreIn an effort to crack down on governments that hand lucrative contracts to domestic companies, the European Commission is about to take France to the European Court of Justice for failing to apply EU laws ensuring transparency and fair competition for all government contracts.
According to a copy of a statement due for release on Wednesday, the commission will also formally warn Italy that it may face similar legal action unless it stops handing helicopter contracts to the local manufacturer Agusta without inviting competitors to bid.
Read Morehey me and my m8 r goin 2 paris 2mora 4 4 days+we’re jus wonderin if ne1s from there who wants 2 chat do any of you have msn messenger. if you do add me or email me wotzitgottadowifuanyway@hotmail.com
Read MoreWith France on the verge of passing a law that would prevent Muslim girls from wearing their head scarves in class, Americans are asking why the French are so attached to secularism.
I always want to respond to this question by asking another, a version of one asked by Montesquieu nearly three centuries ago: How can one be French?
Our uneasiness about head scarves and other religious symbols in schools is a result of our long, often painful history. If we bow to demands to allow the practice of religion in state institutions, we will put France’s identity in peril.
Read MorePresident Jacques Chirac was fighting last night to regain control of a fast unravelling scandal encircling his political power base.
M Chirac seized charge of an inquiry into alleged telephone taps, break-ins and violent threats against judges investigating Alain Juppé, the former prime minister and his heir apparent, convicted on Friday of organising illegal party funding.
The extraordinary intervention came the day after the justice ministry announced it would investigate the allegations.
His gazumping of his own ministry indicates the seriousness with which he is taking the insinuation that he or his allies tried to pressure the judges in the Juppé case.
Read MoreFollowing Friday’s guilty verdict against former French Prime Minister Alain Juppe, France’s Le Monde has no doubt about the ruling’s wider political implications.
The paper concedes that Juppe was sentenced for his own role in the illegal funding of the RPR party in the 1980s and 1990s.
“But beyond the man,” it says, “it is a system that was condemned. A system from which Jacques Chirac – then RPR president and mayor of Paris – benefited.”
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