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Skriven 2006-06-29 23:37:12 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0606299) for Thu, 2006 Jun 29
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Mrs. Bush's Remarks at a Media Preview of the Official Dinner with the
Prime Minister of Japan
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For Immediate Release
Office of the First Lady
June 29, 2006
Mrs. Bush's Remarks at a Media Preview of the Official Dinner with the
Prime Minister of Japan
State Dining Room
2:56 P.M. EDT
MRS. BUSH: President Bush and I are so excited to be able to host Prime
Minister Koizumi tonight and the rest of the Japanese delegation. And we've
chosen a look and food that we hope will suit the tastes of our Japanese
guests.
I think the flowers, as usual, are fabulous. Nancy Clarke is our florist
here, and she had previewed several choices for me, and this is the one we
thought was the prettiest for a summer evening. I like that it's clean and
minimal, and I think it's perfect -- suitable for Japanese taste and
American taste, and of course, looks especially beautiful in the middle of
the summer in this dining room. The green silk cloths with the green
cymbidium orchids and then the clear glass cylinders that we'll be able to
see who's across the table from us through the glass.
As your press packet tells you, we're using the Clinton china, the gold
china that's so pretty in here, and the gold service, as well, that all
belong to the White House. And I think it will make a really beautiful
green and gold-looking evening.
The menu card, if you've seen it, has a rendering of a cherry blossom on
it, which is a symbol of Japan, but also a symbol of the friendship between
the United States and Japan, because, of course, the Japanese gave us the
cherry blossom trees that decorate Washington so beautifully in the spring
every spring.
So I'm excited about having this dinner. I'm thrilled about the chance to
go to Graceland tomorrow with Prime Minister Koizumi. I think we'll have a
really good time. We have a really fun lunch scheduled at a Memphis
institution, a restaurant that's a long-time restaurant in Memphis that I
think it will be really fun to take Prime Minister Koizumi to.
Daniel Shanks is here at the end. He picked wines that he can tell you
about in a minute, but that have some relationship to Japan. Nancy Clarke
-- let's see, Lea Berman is next. She's the Social Secretary, and, of
course, she is the one who orchestrates all of this, the whole evening,
and, in fact, the whole event, starting with the arrival ceremony this
morning, and then going to the dancing, the final dancing tonight after the
end of the state dinner.
And then Nancy Clarke is the florist, and Cris Comerford is our new chef.
She's been here, been our chef since early last summer, but this might be
her -- I guess the Christmas menu was the first time that you had talked to
the press. And we had a tasting of this menu upstairs a couple of weeks ago
to make sure we liked all the dishes, and we did. And then, of course, our
dessert, once again, will be spectacular, like it always is. It's chocolate
bonsai trees, and if you noticed in the foyer when you came in, we have
three bonsai trees that are on loan from the American -- from the
arboretum, the National Arboretum, from their beautiful collection of
bonsai, especially for this visit of the Japanese Prime Minister.
So, welcome, everyone. I think you're going to get to taste one of the
things that we're going to have tonight for dinner. And I don't know if you
have any questions for Cris or Nancy or Lea or Daniel.
Q Mrs. Bush, could talk about the decision to have a state dinner tonight?
This has become rare in this administration.
MRS. BUSH: Well, I wouldn't say it's really rare. We've hosted nine or 10
state leaders at Camp David. We've hosted at least 10 state leaders,
including Prime Minister Koizumi, at the ranch. Those have been
opportunities to get to know world leaders in a more relaxed and private
setting, especially at the ranch, where it's our own home and they can see
what our life is like. We have had a number of state dinners, but this one
is not actually a state dinner, because the head of state, of course, would
be the Emperor of Japan. But this is an official dinner, just like a state
dinner, for a Prime Minister.
And we're thrilled to have the opportunity to host Prime Minister Koizumi.
We actually had scheduled a state dinner earlier for him. I don't know if
we'd announced it, but we'd scheduled it before he called for the last
elections, his last elections.
So anyway, now we're glad to get to have him. And as it turned out, the
weather was perfect. We were afraid it would be really too hot for the
arrival ceremony in June in Washington, but it was just right.
Q Mrs. Bush, could you talk a little bit about the jukebox that the
President presented to the Prime Minister, and his reaction?
MRS. BUSH: Well, we have -- we found a really great jukebox from the '50s
-- refurbished, obviously, and filled with 45 songs, including 25 of Elvis
Presley's. So it was in the Red Room when we came in from the arrival
ceremony this morning. And Prime Minister Koizumi searched the keys and
found, "I want you, need you, and love you," and played that first.
(Laughter.) So he and the President sang a duet. (Laughter.)
Q Since you are going to be in Graceland, and of course, you'll be
surrounded by Elvis Presley music, are you going to do any jiggling?
(Laughter.)
MRS. BUSH: I hope so.
Q Mrs. Bush, in tonight's dinner, is there any food which includes U.S.
beef? Since the --
MRS. BUSH: Absolutely. If you have the menu card, or they'll give you the
menu card, but the -- it is Texas Kobe beef.
Q Produced in the U.S.
MRS. BUSH: Yes, produced in Texas. So we'll be enjoying that. Okay, I'm
going to leave it to the other people, if you have any questions for them.
Q Actually, Mrs. Bush, one more question for you. You gave an Elvis-themed
present to the Prime Minister. Did he give any Elvis-themed presents to you
and the President?
MRS. BUSH: No, he gave a bicycle to the President, and then he gave a
baseball-themed present, which was a big reproduction of the Babe Ruth --
Japanese Babe Ruth postage stamp, and a big photo of Babe Ruth in Japan. So
that's fun to have.
Q Could I ask one more follow-up question? Do you have any special plans
for the President's birthday coming up? Because that's the next big event.
MRS. BUSH: Just a friends and family party. It will be fun.
Q Have fun tonight.
MRS. BUSH: Thank you very much. We will have fun. I think it's going to be
a very fun evening. Our orchestra is the Brian Setzer Orchestra. He'll play
a lot of both the President's and Prime Minister Koizumi's favorites, and
he's especially known for his guitar. So I think that will be terrific.
Q Mrs. Bush, can the President keep these presents that he gets, and can
the Prime Minister take the jukebox with him --
MRS. BUSH: Yes, the Prime Minister -- there's a crate for the Prime
Minister to take the jukebox with him on his plane tomorrow when he leaves
to go home.
Q Does he have to give it back to --
MRS. BUSH: I don't know what the laws are in Japan, but, in fact, gifts
from heads of state to the President of the United States go to the
American people, they go to the archives, belong to the government. Well,
they'll go to the Bush library, wherever it's going to be at some point.
But no, he can't use them personally. So that's too bad.
Okay, thanks, everybody.
END 3:04 P.M. EDT
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