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...Three of New York's four winners of the coveted three-star status turned out to be French: Alain Ducasse, Eric Ripert and Jean-Georges Vongerichten. (American Thomas Keller, who trained in France, also won three stars for Per Se.). In the two-star category, there's Frenchman Daniel Boulud and French-trained David Bouley. The only non-Frenchie with a pair of stars: Masayishi Takayama, whose Japanese restaurant Masa may also win the award for priciest menu in America ($350, prix fixe, not including drinks...
...contributes anywhere from five to 10 pieces of writing to journals and publications per year, and says that he currently responds to between 20 and 40 e-mails...
...18/14 general; $9/7 students/senior citizens. (LAM)The Ying Quartet. The award-winning professional Ying Quartet mixes its violin and cello skills with the music of pianist Bob Levin. Paine Hall. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, free with a limit of two tickets per person. (LAM)Saturday, Nov. 5Dins & LowKeys Concert. Check out the fall concert festivities at Keylime, where the two Harvard a capella groups will jam for the night. Sanders Theatre. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, $12 general, $8 students. (LAM)Brattle Street Chamber Players...
...isn’t even a music video per se, but more of an off-kilter home video in which David Berman, his wife Cassie, and couple of their buddies goof about while intermittently lip-syncing the lyrics to the band’s single...
...been strange. New England’s great hurricane of 1938 uprooted 750 million trees, killed 620 people, and killed 750,000 chickens, among other casualties, Emanuel said. He also noted a variety of other peculiarities in Boston’s weather. The world record windspeed of 234 miles per hour was set at Mount Washington, which is about 100 miles from Boston. A tornado that hit Worcester, Mass. in 1953 killed 70 people in one minute. And in the year 1816, there was no summer. Given New England’s history, a day of snow followed...