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image Correction: The online version of the New Yorkk Times was not as clear as it could have been, thanks to rather confusing layout.  Prof. Boskin correctly says the dog quote actually came from then-Sen. Nancy Kassebaum—with whom I’ll check. – D.R., Oct. 23, 2008 (headline changed).

New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd still hasn’t explained how she picked up an iffy quote on March 10, 1989: “If you want a friend in Washington, buy a dog.” I queried her twice via a Times e-mail form and find her silence rather disappointing. Ah! But there’s a happy twist suggesting that, as I’d hoped, she published the quote in good faith.

Thanks to Garson O’Toole, the nom de plume of a TeleBlog regular, we now know that the quote appeared in the Times at least as early as June 7, 1987. In dispensing advice for Alan Greenspan, then about to chair the Federal Reserve, a Stanford economist used the above quote word for word. I’m going to write Prof. Michael J. Boskin and see where he got the quote. Yet another mention in the Times appeared on October 15, 1987, in a letter from Timothy Norbeck, executive director of the Connecticut State Medical Society, in New Haven, Connecticut.

Quote still iffy—but you never know

image image The quote and a predecessor are still problematic—the Harry S. Truman library couldn’t find anything before playwright Samuel Gallu used, “You want a friend in life, get a DOG!” in 1975 play. Dramatic license? But who knows? Maybe we can surprise the Truman Library and find that the quote is authentic. If not, might the Times want to do a retraction? At least as recently as last year, the line was still popping up there. Both the library and Ralph Keyes, author of The Quote Verifier, mentioned Ms. Dowd’s 1989 use of the quote, also cited by Bill Clinton.

Related: Earlier TeleBlog items on the quote, which I wanted to confirm for use in a forthcoming  newspaper novel.

 
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