A pressing issue of dinner-party etiquette is vexing Washington, according to a story now making the D.C. rounds: How should you react when your guest, in this case national-security adviser Condoleezza Rice, makes a poignant faux pas? At a recent dinner party hosted by New York Times D.C. bureau chief Philip Taubman and his wife, Times reporter Felicity Barringer, and attended by Arthur Sulzberger Jr., Maureen Dowd, Steven Weisman, and Elisabeth Bumiller, Rice was reportedly overheard saying, “As I was telling my husb—� and then stopping herself abruptly, before saying, “As I was telling President Bush.� Jaws dropped, but a guest says the slip by the unmarried politician, who spends weekends with the president and his wife, seemed more psychologically telling than incriminating. Nobody thinks Bush and Rice are actually an item. A National Security Council spokesman laughed and said, “No comment.�
From New York Metro
1 comment:
I heard that story a little while ago and it made me so happy.
That almost certainly makes me a vicious anti-feminist. BUT OKAY.
Yesterday in his speech nominating (appointing?) her Bush said, "We are a nation of war...." when presumably he meant "at war." Even my dogs were like, "Oh, that's JUST GREAT."
Em
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