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THE WHITE HOUSE

                    Office of the Press Secretary
                          (Houston, Texas)   
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                     April 14, 1998
                      REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                    IN TELEPHONE CONVERSATION TO 
                     ASTRONAUTS ON SPACE SHUTTLE
                   Call From Johnson Space Center
                           Houston, Texas         

12:25 P.M. CDT

THE PRESIDENT: Are you ready?

COMMANDER SEARFOSS: Yes.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, you're looking good. I hope you find out a lot of things about the human neurological system to help me, because I'm moving into those years where I'm getting dizzy and I'm having all these problems -- (laughter) -- and I expect you to come back with all the answers.

COMMANDER SEARFOSS: Well, thank you, Mr. President. We'll take that on board as one of the challenges that we'll try to meet. (Laughter.)

If you'd like, Mr. President, I'll introduce my crew to you.

THE PRESIDENT: I'd like that, and anything you want to tell me about the mission I'd be glad to hear it.

COMMANDER SEARFOSS: My name is Rick Searfoss. I'm the Commander of the flight. It will be my third shuttle mission. Right next to me, my immediate right, is Scott Altman. He will be the pilot on the flight. Next to him, Kay Hire, our flight engineer. Our payload crew consists of four doctors -- right next to me, Rick Linnehan, who is a DVM, veterinarian. And behind us, Drs. Buckey and Williams are medical doctors; and Jim Pawelczyk is a physiologist, a PHD research. So, as you can see, we've got some great science expertise to do the on-board portion of this mission.

THE PRESIDENT: Just very briefly -- you know, I've got the whole national press here with me, so why don't you briefly describe what the purpose of the mission is and what some of the things you're going to be exploring are.

COMMANDER SEARFOSS: Absolutely. The fundamental, overriding question that is consistent across all 26 of our experiments, Mr. President, is that what happens in a very detailed sort of way that we want to understand to nervous and neurological processes and systems when you take the certain variable away that we just can't take away on Earth, and that's, of course, gravity.

I'm going to turn it over just for a minute or two to Dr. Linnehan, who is our Payload Commander, and he can give you a few more details on that.

Rick?

DR. LINNEHAN: Yes, sir, Mr. President, we have 26 major experiments that deal all the way from the -- system which is the inner ear, how we interpret balance on Earth as opposed to in space -- up to neuronal plasticity, which really is just another way of saying how the brain heals or rewires itself in terms of damage or new adaptations in space.

THE PRESIDENT: That's great. Well, we're all excited about it. We're anxious to see you get off and anxious to see you come home safely full of information.

One of the general points that I want to make with all of you here, that I have tried to make both to the Congress and to the nation, is that the space program has enormous potential to change life here on Earth for the better -- in a health way, in a way that you're exploring, in environmental ways, and in other ways as well. So this is a particularly exciting mission to me because I believe it will help to strengthen the support of the rank and file Americans for our NASA operations, generally. And I'm very grateful to you.

Good luck and have a great time out there. Thank you.

COMMANDER SEARFOSS: Thank you very much, Mr. President Appreciate it.

THE PRESIDENT: Bye. Thank you.

END 12:26 P.M. CDT