It's official: The so-called "beer summit" between President Obama, African-American professor Henry Louis Gates and white police Sgt. James Crowley will be held 6 p.m. Thursday at the White House.
"Weather permitting, they'll probably sit out at the picnic table behind the Oval Office," said Obama press secretary Robert Gibbs, confirming the time.
The meeting is "a chance to step back a bit" from the flap surrounding Crowley's disorderly conduct arrest of Gates at the professor's home near Harvard University. Gates called the charges -- since dropped -- racially motivated.
There is no formal agenda for the president's meeting, Gibbs said, but rather "a chance to talk and a chance to have a dialogue."
The idea for a White House meeting surfaced during Obama's phone conversation Friday with Crowley. The president later spoke with reporters and expressed regret for his comment that the Cambridge, Mass., police had acted "stupidly" in arresting Gates, saying it only ratcheted up the controversy.
At the time, Obama said: "The fact that this has become such a big issue I think is indicative of the fact that race is still a troubling aspect of our society."
There will be beer at Thursday's meeting, Gibbs said. The menu is still being worked out, but the spokesman said Crowley told the president "he likes Blue Moon." Gates, meanwhile, has expressed a linking for Beck's and Red Stripe. Obama threw back a Budweiser at a ball game two weeks ago.
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