At about 9:30 a.m., Obama
-- accompanied by her daughters, Malia and Sasha, and her mother,
Marian Robinson -- stepped from a black SUV onto a red carpet leading
from the street to the entrance of Beijing Normal School, where they
were greeted by China's first lady, Peng Liyuan, and ushered inside for a
tour.
Michelle Obama is on an official visit to expand relations between the United States and China.
"Warmly Welcome to Our School," read a sign on the digital aboard in front of the complex.
A stop in a robotics lab
included a look at a station holding a metal, snowflake-shaped,
remote-controlled robot. "It can go over obstacles," a student said,
demonstrating as it moved along a white strip over cardboard and plastic
yellow bricks.
'Bad Boy' robot 'is really naughty'
When the robot got stuck,
its student operator said something to the effect that it was nervous.
"Don't be nervous," Obama said. "It's pretty impressive," she added as
the robot was operating.
At another station, a
young man showed Obama "Bad Boy," so named because the robot "is really
naughty," he said, according to a pool reporter.
Obama agreed to try it, but could not get the remote control to work and handed it to Malia, who had better luck.
The first lady spoke
with a number of students, asking a 16-year-old what she wanted to do
after high school. "I want to turn mathematics into reality," the
student answered.
When they arrived at a
pingpong practice room containing six tables, an instructor asked Obama
if she wanted to try her hand at it, and she quickly assumed the role of
student.
"All right, wait," she said, taking off her vest. "How do I hold the paddle properly?"
"This is the angle," the instructor responded, holding it vertically.
"OK, we're going to get this," Obama said. "Let's go."
Armed with a paddle, she
volleyed for about five minutes -- first with the instructor, then with
a young woman, as students looked on. "Nice," she said occasionally
after her opponent returned her shot.
But Obama acknowledged
that she had little experience with the game. "My husband plays," she
said. "He thinks he's better than he really is. I could stay here all
day."
1971 pingpong match proved key
The 50-year-old first
lady was in grade school when a chance meeting by a Chinese pingpong
player with a U.S. player led to Beijing's decision to invite the
American table tennis team for an exhibition match in 1971.
That match laid the
groundwork for the visit of U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1972 and
paved the way for the establishment of diplomatic ties in 1979, ending
China's isolation from the outside world.
As the members of the
first family departed the school, 33 American exchange students -- one
of them from Sidwell Friends, the Washington school attended by Malia --
lined up in front of the red carpet and across from their Chinese
counterparts to shake hands with the family before they left for their
next stop, the Forbidden City.
Michelle Obama's schedule does not include a news conference, and she is not expected to answer questions from professional reporters during the trip. But on Saturday, she is planning to answer several of the more than 300 questions filed by CNN iReporters about studying abroad and international travel.
And on Tuesday, she will answer questions submitted by U.S. classrooms as part of a webinar series by Discovery Education and the White House.
The three generations of
girls and women flew from Washington on Wednesday for what is to be a
weeklong trip to three Chinese cities, where Obama is expected to speak
with children at schools about education and youth empowerment.
Official: U.S.-China relationship is 'between peoples'
"Her visit and her
agenda sends a message that the relationship between the United States
and China is not just between leaders, it's a relationship between
peoples," said Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes.
"That's critically
important, given the roles that our two countries are going to play in
the 21st century, that we maintain the very regular contacts that we
have at the leader-to-leader level, but that we're also reaching out and
building relationships with people, particularly young people."
U.S. President Barack
Obama is expected to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping at next
week's Nuclear Security Summit at The Hague, Netherlands.
White House officials
told reporters this week that the two leaders will discuss issues on
which the United States and China differ, such as human rights and
trade.
"We don't expect the
people of China to agree with all of our policy positions at any given
moment, but the more they understand the United States -- the more they
understand the President and the first lady and their values and their
priorities -- we think the better it is for both of our countries,"
Rhodes added.
China is the fifth most
popular country for U.S. students studying abroad, and more students
from China study in the United States than from any other country.
Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2014/03/21/politics/michelle-obama-china/
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