President Obama Calls Station, Shuttle Crews

U.S. President Barack Obama, accompanied by White House Science Adviser John Holdren on the left, and middle school children, talks on the phone from the Roosevelt Room of the White House to astronauts on the International Space StationThe 11 astronauts aboard the International Space Station and Space Shuttle Endeavour chatted with President Barack Obama Wednesday at 5:14 p.m. EST -- along with Maryland Democratic Congressional member Dutch Ruppersberger and 12 middle school students from Michigan, Florida, North Carolina and Nebraska.

Calling from the Roosevelt Room in the White House, the President congratulated the two crews on their continuing successful mission, saying the work on board is a testimony to why exploration is so important and that his commitment to NASA is unwavering.

Endeavour and its crew launched Feb. 8 on the STS-130 mission to the space station. During the mission, astronauts installed the Tranquility node and a cupola with seven windows that provide a panoramic view of Earth, celestial objects and visiting spacecraft. Tranquility and its cupola are the final major U.S. portions of the station.

President Obama also told the crew that his administration is “very excited about putting research dollars into the technologies” that will get humans to Mars and beyond.

The President also asked the crew about the experiments being performed on the space station saying that some of the experiments are in line with where his administration wants to see NASA go.

At the conclusion of the event, the President repeated that he is proud and excited about the work being done on the space station and told the crew that he is committed to continuing human space exploration and complimented the crew on being “great role models.”

The STS-130 and Expedition 22 crews aboard the International Space Station speak with President Barack Obama“Be sure and tell your families that we appreciate them letting you float up in space like this,” said Obama.

The students participating in the event were in Washington D.C. as part of 39 teams competing for the “Future City” engineering competition hosted by National Engineers Week that builds on the President’s "Educate to Innovate" campaign that emphasizes inspiring students to pursue excellence in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

The schools represented were Birney Middle School in Detroit, Elkhorn Middle School in Omaha, Neb., St. Thomas the Apostle in Miami, and Davidson IB Middle School in Davidson, N.C. The North Carolina team was the overall winner of the competition.

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