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Britain
Bush Fails to Embarrass the Queen!
2007-05-08
WASHINGTON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II, once known in the British military as Second Subaltern Elizabeth Windsor, was to honor American soldiers with a visit Tuesday to the National World War II Memorial.

After a day of pomp Monday, capped by a white-tie state dinner hosted by President Bush, the British monarch and her husband, Prince Philip, were to join first lady Laura Bush in a tour of Children's National Medical Center. The visitors also were to visit NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

It will be the queen's first visit to the war memorial, which was dedicated in 2004. The queen, a teenage princess during World War II, won permission in 1945 from her father, King George VI, to join the war effort as a driver in the Women's Auxiliary Territorial Service, the women's branch of the British Army. She became No. 230873 Second Subaltern Elizabeth Windsor.

Following the daytime tours, in the final event of the six-day visit, the royal couple will host the Bushes at the British Embassy for dinner before departing for a flight back to England.

On Monday morning, the Bushes waited on a near-perfect spring day as the queen and Prince Philip arrived by limousine for their official welcome at the White House. The two couples briefly shook hands in spite of the New York Time prohibition of same before moving on to the formal welcome, which included trumpet fanfares and a 21-gun salute.

The day ended with a second visit to the White House for the administration's first white-tie state dinner. It was designed to showcase American culture and cuisine. But the hosts didn't forget to include special touches designed to honor its British ally and make the queen feel welcome.

The centuries-old vermeil flatware and candelabras came from a London silversmith. A made-of-sugar replica of the queen's 1953 coronation rose graced the cake.

English farmhouse cheeses accompanied the salad course. And the traditional "special guest" invited only at the last minute was sure to be of interest to a horse enthusiast such as the queen: Calvin Borel, the jockey who rode Street Sense to victory in the Kentucky Derby on Saturday with the royals in attendance.

For the sixth state dinner of Bush's presidency, the State Dining Room was decked out in white and gold. Among the 134 guests were scores of diplomats, business men and women and members of Congress. Other than American football star Peyton Manning and golfer Arnold Palmer, the celebrity quotient was low.

In the leaders' toasts at dinner, they took opposite tacks. Bush praised the queen for a reign that has "deepened our friendship and strengthened our alliance," while the British monarch talked of the threat of terror, problems like climate change and the likelihood of occasional disagreement between allies.

"Ours is a partnership always to be reckoned with in the defense of freedom and the spread of prosperity," she said.

Virtuoso violinist Itzhak Perlman performed what he called "musical bonbons" as an after-dinner treat. The evening was capped with songs from the U.S. Army Chorus.

It was a day of high pomp and pageantry from a president known for his informality. It also was an uplifting event for a White House at a time when Bush's approval rating has dropped near all-time lows and he battles a Democratic Congress over funding for the unpopular Iraq war.
Almost the whole article without the obligatory gratuitous slap... But the author was DESMOND BUTLER - sounds English - so it could've been the AP's New York editor that added the slap.

The queen's visit is her fifth to the United States in 50 years and her first since 1991.

Posted by:Bobby

#6  The 1776 thing was hilarious.
President Bush caught the error but not before the queen gave him a withering "we are not amused" stare. He said that "that was a look that only a mother could give to a child".
Posted by: John Frum   2007-05-08 16:46  

#5  did they count the silver?
Posted by: USN. Ret.   2007-05-08 14:31  

#4  What is with all this huge banquet crap? The President and First Lady needed to invite a few guests and have the Queen and Prince Phillip over. Having this huge fancy feast is not the way of Americans. That would be appropriate. We left Europe years ago because of all this consumptive excess at the expense of the public and class stuff. That is not who we are.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2007-05-08 14:21  

#3  I saw the video of Bush's reference to 1776. Funny and touching, if you don't suffer from BDS.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2007-05-08 13:27  

#2  Not so fast. This story suggests that Bush almost suggested that the Queen was around in 1776, and worse, that that was the Bicentennial.

To the right of the story, under the picture of the queen, is a link to a slideshow of pics. "A royal dinner."

George looks goofy in number 3. Laura has a glassy stare in all of them. Lynne Cheney is wearing something godawful in number 6. Colin Powell looks handsome in number 8. Nancy Kissinger came dressed as Ambassador Kosh from Babylon 5 (no. 9). And poor Kathleen Palmer (Arnold's wife) turns up dressed down, in something I would wear (10).
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2007-05-08 12:51  

#1  Bush Fails to Embarrass the Queen!

Dang, I was hoping he'd barf in her lap or something like that.
Posted by: xbalanke   2007-05-08 11:51  

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