Surrounded by Italian news hens in Rome last week, Pat Nixon almost got her pasta caught in some really hot water. Italian food was her favorite, she said, and she made good spaghetti. "How long do you cook it?" asked a reporter. "A long time," said the First Lady. Noting the black looks at the thought of a White House full of pasty pasta, Pat made a remarkable recovery. "I cook my meat sauce a long timeI simmer it," she explained. "But the spaghetti: eight minutes." Smiles. Al dente!
One of the boutiques in the basement of the Tokyo Prince Hotel hired a hand last week whose references needed no checking. Mrs. Takako Shimazu, 31, the new "salon adviser," traces her lineage to no less a luminary than a sun; her father is Japan's Emperor Hirohito. The pretty ex-princess (who lost her title when she married a commoner) is not exactly a newcomer to the rat race. Ten years ago, she turned a fast yen as star of a deejay show on Tokyo radio callednot surprisinglyPrincess Time.
Up to the door of Hickory Hill drove Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr. and her secretary, invited to a party for the new Robert F. Kennedy Fellows. POW! A water bomb, tossed by small Kennedys, sprayed them with disastrous accuracy. "I'm mortifiedand on Coretta King of all people," clucked Mother Ethel Kennedy, as she helped to mop up. "They thought you were some other friends they were expecting." Then maternal pride asserted itself. "Their aim was really good, wasn't it?" Speaking of aimand of the Kennedy watersLee Udall, the lively wife of R.F.K. Trustee Stewart Udall, suddenly blurted a confession about the celebrated dunking of Arthur Schlesinger Jr. in the Kennedy pool. "All these years, Ethel has been taking the rap for me," she said. "I'm the one who pushed Arthur into the pool. I was dancing by and he was standing there holding forth and looking so Arthurish, and something came over me. I just stuck out my arm and pushed him in and danced away. He never knew."
Britain's Royal Family continues to be as hippophile as ever. Princess Anne recently took time off from the family holiday at Balmoral to compete in a series of equestrian events. She trains so assiduously that friends are speculating that she has her eye on the Olympics. Mrs. Alan Oliver, who has instructed Anne since childhood, notes that "the competition is much tougher now that she is in the open class. But she is a very determined girl." Says Sir Michael Ansell, chairman of the British Show Jumping Association: "She would be most welcome in the international field."
At a Republican fund-raising dinner in Philadelphia, Shirley Temple Black, deputy chairman of the U.S. delegation to the U.N. Conference on Human Development, made it perfectly clear that there is at least one human development that displeases her. "I don't care for Women's Lib," she said. "I prefer the strong arms of my husband around me."
