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Obama said Merkel deserved the presidential medal because of her remarkable career. Merkel grew up in communist East Germany, living a life devoid of many freedoms until the Berlin Wall that divided her country was brought down in 1989. She was in her 30s. Six years ago, she became the first woman and first East German to become chancellor of a unified Germany. "She represents the unification of Europe through her own life story and the capacity to overcome the past and point towards a brighter future," Obama said at a joint news conference with Merkel at his side.
There was very little color among the dark-clad dinner guests. Like Mrs. Obama, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., stood out in white, with a two-piece outfit by Thierry Mugler. "Very old," she pronounced it. The black-tie dinner for Merkel capped a day of all-out diplomatic outreach that was carefully orchestrated to highlight Germany's growing role in world affairs and its importance as a U.S. partner. It began with a 19-gun salute on the South Lawn and included meetings with Obama and his advisers, the news conference in the East Room and a State Department lunch. Merkel was the first European leader to receive such treatment from Obama. Amid all of the evening's finery, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., offered a reality check when reporters asked who made her gown. "This would be ..." she began, then confessed: "OK, it cost $170. And the shoes, $29." And she kicked up her heels to show off her bargain find. ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
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