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		Trump talks about Mars mission on call 
		with record-breaking astronaut 
		
		 
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		 [April 25, 2017] 
		By Irene Klotz 
		 
		(Reuters) - U.S. astronaut Peggy Whitson 
		broke the 534-day U.S. record for cumulative time in space on Monday and 
		marked the occasion by speaking with President Donald Trump about plans 
		for human trips to Mars. 
		 
		Whitson, 57, turned a zero-gravity summersault during the video call 
		from the International Space Station, where she serves as station 
		commander. She is midway through a planned 9-1/2-month mission. 
		 
		By the time Whitson returns to Earth on Sept. 3, she will have racked up 
		a career total 666 days in orbit. Only six Russian men have logged more 
		time. 
		 
		"What an amazing thing you've done," said Trump, speaking from the Oval 
		Office on his first call with an astronaut serving aboard the $100 
		billion orbital outpost. 
		 
		"It's a huge honor to break a record like this," Whitson said with a 
		beaming smile. "It's an honor for me, basically, to be representing all 
		the folks at NASA who make this spaceflight possible and who make me 
		setting this record feasible." 
		
		
		  
		
		Whitson, a soft-spoken Iowa native, also holds the record for the most 
		time spent spacewalking by a woman. In 2008, she became the first woman 
		to command the space station about 250 miles (400 km) above Earth. 
		 
		She and newly arrived rookie crewmate Jack Fischer, 43, both spoke with 
		the president, who was joined on the call by his daughter Ivanka Trump 
		and NASA astronaut Kate Rubins. 
		 
		Trump, who has proposed keeping the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space 
		Administration's annual $19.5 billion budget roughly unchanged next 
		fiscal year, asked about plans for human trips to Mars, tentatively to 
		start in the 2030s. 
		 
		"Well, we want to try to do that during my first term, or at worst 
		during my second term, so we’ll have to speed that up a little bit, OK? 
		" Trump quipped. 
		 
		
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			 President Donald Trump 
			and his daughter Ivanka hold a video conference call with Commander 
			Peggy Whitson and Flight Engineer Jack Fischer of NASA on the 
			International Space Station from the Oval Office of the White House 
			in Washington, U.S., April 24, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
            
              
			"We'll do our best,” Whitson said. 
			 
			Whitson, who holds a doctorate in biochemistry, grew up on a farm 
			and enjoys gardening. She said she was inspired by the U.S. Apollo 
			program that first brought man to the moon, but it was not until 
			later, when the first women become astronauts, that she set her 
			sights on joining them. 
			 
			She joined the U.S. astronaut corps in 1996, becoming the space 
			station's first dedicated science officer six years later. Her 
			current and third mission began on Nov. 17, 2016. 
			 
			While she has surpassed the 534-day career record of U.S. astronaut 
			Jeff Williams, Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka is the world 
			record-holder with 878 days in orbit. 
			 
			A banner flying behind her read: "Congrats Peggy!! New U.S. 
			high-time space ninja." 
			 
			(Irene Klotz in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Editing by Letitia Stein and 
			Tom Brown) 
			
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