[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book I)]
[February 7, 1994]
[Pages 199-201]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Telephone Conversation With the Space Shuttle Discovery Astronauts From 
Houston
February 7, 1994

    The President. This is the President.
    Cmdr. Charles Bolden. Yes, sir. We can hear you very much. Welcome 
aboard.
    The President. How are you, Commander Bolden?
    Commander Bolden. I'm doing very fine. Our crew is hanging in there, 
and we're having a good time, enjoying it.
    The President. Well, you seem to be having a good time. You've had a 
perfect launch and an exciting mission. And I want to congratulate you.
    I've just been in the simulator, and I've applied to be an 
astronaut, but I haven't been accepted yet. [Laughter]
    Commander Bolden. I'm certain if you pull a few strings there, you 
might be able to make it. [Laughter]
    The President. You're the only person who has invited me to abuse my 
power since I've been President. [Laughter] I want to----
    Commander Bolden. While we have a second, may I introduce you to my 
crew?
    The President. Please do.
    Commander Bolden. At my right is my pilot, Ken Reightler, who is in 
the United States Navy. Behind him is Dr. Ron Sega, who is mission 
specialist number two on the crew, like our flight engineer, and he's 
also one of the coprincipal investigators for the Wake Shield, one of 
the experiments we have on board.
    Right over my head here is our guest from Russia, Sergei Krikalev, 
who right now is the second longest person to ever be in space and has 
spent 5 months and 10 months on two different flights on Mir.
    To Sergei's left is Dr. Franklin Chang-Diaz, originally from Costa 
Rica and now a full-fledged citizen of the United States, who is on his 
fourth flight.
    To my left is Dr. N. Jan Davis, who has been a prime op, our mess 
operator working

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the arm for this flight. I'm really fortunate to have a great crew with 
me here, sir.
    The President. I want to say especially how proud we are to have 
Sergei up there, the first Russian cosmonaut on the space shuttle. You 
ought to know that Yuri Koptev, who is the head of the Russian Space 
Agency, is here with me at Mission Control as we're speaking. So we're 
all looking at all of you, Russians and Americans together, and we like 
what we see.
    Commander Bolden. Well, we appreciate that, sir. And we've had a 
great time. In fact, I think many of the things that we've done have 
given us an opportunity to demonstrate that if people decide to put 
their minds toward a common goal there's no limit to what can be done. 
And we've done a little bit of that on this flight, although it's been 
frustrating to people on the ground and up here. I think we've done a 
very good job, and everybody on the ground and here is really benefiting 
from what we're doing.
    The President. Well, I agree with that. And I think we'll look back 
on this as the first step toward the kind of international cooperation 
we need to build the whole space station, with Russia and Canada and 
Europe and Japan.
    I keep coming in and out. Can you hear me now? Can you hear me?
    Commander Bolden. Yes, sir. It keeps going in and out, but we are 
getting the gist of your conversation.
    The President. The American people would be happy if they only had 
to listen to every third word, too, I think. [Laughter] Sometimes the 
truth is funnier than fiction, huh?
    I love Dr. Davis' hairdo. I think it will be a rage back in America 
when she comes--[Laughter].
    Commander Bolden. Well, let me allow Sergei to say a few words to 
you, first in Russian, and then he'll do the translating after that.
    The President. Thank you.

[At this point, Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev spoke in Russian.]

    The President. Somebody has got to translate.
    Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev. I just am glad for the program. I said, 
``I welcome aboard space shuttle.''
    The President. Thank you very much. You know, I have here--he just 
gave me the translation. He translated his own Russian. One of my goals 
is to have someday most Americans be able to do that in another 
language, too. I hope we can do that.
    I want to say, you know, we have the head of NASA, Dan Goldin, here. 
We have Congressman Brooks, Congressman Brown, Congressman Walker here. 
And we're all watching you with great pride.
    And I also want to say, we followed a lot of the scientific purposes 
that are associated with your mission. And I'm especially interested in 
the whole issue of superconductivity, which I think has enormous 
potential for drastically changing the way we do things down here on 
Earth, and a lot of the other things you're doing.
    I just want to congratulate you for being up there and for--as I 
said, I think this is the first step in what will become the norm of 
global cooperation in space. And when we get this space station 
finished, with the contributions of Russia, Canada, Japan, Europe, and 
the United States, it's going to be a force for peace and progress that 
will be truly historic, and you will have played a major role in that.
    Commander Bolden. Mr. President, we just want to thank you again for 
joining us here on Discovery. And we're really proud to be able to serve 
the American people up here and show what happens when you can work 
peacefully together.
    The President. Thank you very much. I also want to say before I sign 
off how much I appreciate all the crew down here, the men and women who 
have worked to make your mission a success. And again, I think I can 
speak for all of us, we're going to do everything we can to keep 
supporting the space program and the space station. And I hope what 
America is seeing of you today, particularly the cooperation between the 
United States and Russia in space, which is a reflection of what we're 
trying to do here on Earth, I hope that will strengthen the support 
among the American people for the space program and the space station in 
particular.
    Thank you so much. We're all very, very proud of you.
    Jack, do you want to say anything?
    Representative Jack Brooks. I want to just tell them that we're 
awfully grateful to have them----
    The President. You can only talk on this one? Here.
    Representative Brooks. Well, as a Congressman from this district, 
I'm just delighted to wel-


[[Page 201]]

come you all and congratulate you on your achievements up there and wish 
you a safe return home.
    The President. George, do you want to say anything?
    Commander Bolden. We thank you very much.
    The President. I want George Brown from California to talk. He's 
been working for this space program for years.
    Representative George Brown. Hi. It's a great pleasure for me to be 
able to personally communicate with you. I told the President that I had 
communicated with Russian astronauts several years ago and I wanted a 
chance to talk to some American astronauts in space. And this is the 
opportunity. We'll keep working for you.
    The President. Do you want to say anything?
    Commander Bolden. Well, thank you very much, sir. And we appreciate 
all of your support and hope that all of you will--[inaudible]--just by 
showing your interest by being there, I'm certain that that sends a very 
strong message. We appreciate it.
    The President. Well, we want this to be bipartisan so I've got to 
get Congressman Walker on the phone here. We can prove that Republicans 
can talk in space. [Laughter]
    Representative Robert Walker. Well, thank you, Mr. President, I 
think.
    I'm delighted, too, to congratulate you on your mission. You're 
helping us as a nation to understand what we can achieve in space, and I 
think that that's going to do well for the space program in the future. 
So thanks very much for all you are doing.
    Administrator Daniel Goldin. Hello. I just want to tell how proud I 
am. I mean, this is the best day of my life, having the President of the 
United States in our control room. Mr. President, on behalf of NASA, its 
employees, the people in space, we love you to be here, and we're so 
proud.
    The President. Thank you.
    Goodbye, folks. Come home to us. Bring that hairdo home, Jan. I love 
it.
    Mission Specialist N. Jan Davis. I'll do my best.
    The President. You're being in a photo-op now. You can't see that.

Note: The President spoke at 4:06 p.m. from Mission Control at the 
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center.