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- WORLD, Page 47Grapevine
-
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- GEORGE AND NOBORU. Japanese Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita
- went out of his way to get himself invited to Washington this week.
- Why? By being the first foreign leader to meet President Bush, he
- hopes to boost his stature at home. Takeshita frets that his
- personal relations with U.S. Presidents fall short of those enjoyed
- by his predecessor, the globetrotting Yasuhiro Nakasone. Because
- President Reagan and Nakasone were known as simply Ron and Yasu in
- the Tokyo press, Takeshita once asked that Reagan address him as
- Noboru for the benefit of Japanese reporters at a White House photo
- session.
-
- ONE ON ONE. Britain's glamorous Princess Diana is scheduled to
- visit New York City this week -- alone -- to attend the opening
- performance of the Welsh National Opera at the Brooklyn Academy of
- Music. Two weeks later, Prince Charles is due to arrive in
- Washington -- alone -- to act as host at a ceremony honoring
- winners of the British Marshall Scholarship. Fearful that the solo
- drop-ins will fan gossip about the royal couple's differences,
- British embassy officials in Washington have sent delicately worded
- cables to Buckingham Palace suggesting that the heir apparent
- should bring along the missus. The Prince of Wales reportedly was
- not amused.
-
- DIPLOMATIC IMPORTUNITY. Why did President Bush appoint U.S.
- ambassadors to the United Nations and Britain so quickly? According
- to a senior U.S. diplomat, Maureen Reagan, the ambitious daughter
- of Bush's predecessor, was angling for one of the two prestigious
- posts. "She is the ashtray-throwing type -- loud, uncouth,
- undisciplined and vicious -- everything that goes against Bush's
- grain," says the official. The former First Daughter hasn't given
- up; she apparently has her eye on two other highly desirable posts,
- Paris and Tokyo. But, adds the diplomat, "I don't think she'll even
- get Togo."
-
- UNHAPPY TRAILS. When Mikhail Gorbachev visits the U.S. in the
- future, he is not likely to pack his cowboy boots for a gallop at
- Ronald Reagan's California ranch. The former President no sooner
- rode off into the sunset than a Soviet Foreign Ministry official
- privately told TIME correspondents last week, "There was no
- chemistry between them. Nothing clicked."