- Frustrated with their single status, Mary and Rhoda invite dates to a "little gathering" at Mary's apartment.
- Mary is starting to feel old when she learns at work that at age thirty she is no longer in the young adult demographic, and when a young twenty-something messenger calls her "ma'am", the first time ever she's ever been referred to as such. Mary and Rhoda commiserate about being old and being single and what they should do to progress into married status. Rhoda suggests they each contact someone from their past with whom to connect or reconnect in a relationship-minded pursuit. Rhoda's unconventional choice, Armond Lynton, is a man she just met when she ran over him with her car. On Phyllis' recommendation, Mary's choice is Howard Arnell, a man she dated four years earlier, and who she hasn't thought about in years. Mary and Rhoda decide they will have an after dinner drinks party at Mary's place for the four of them. When Rhoda calls Armond, who accepts the invitation, she knows he won't be the future "Mr. Rhoda Morgenstern" because of some excess baggage he will be bringing to the party. And when Mary calls Howard, she remembers why she broke it off with him: he was too smothering in his affection for her. Beyond the disaster of the party itself, Mary will have to figure out how to get through it without ever having to see Howard again and how to tell him that she doesn't want to get into a relationship again with him without hurting his feelings.—Huggo
- In a newsroom meeting about low ratings, Murray Slaughter persecutes Ted Baxter in a feud that spans the show. The mail boy at WJM-TV calls Mary "ma'am." and not being from the South, her happy-peppy sails deflate. Mary and Rhoda campaign to meet interesting new men. So, Mary decides to hold a small gathering at the iconic 119 North Wetherley.—LA-Lawyer
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