Two of the athletes selected to participate in the program are 2008 Olympic fencing silver medalist Tim Morehouse and 2009 US National Team member Daria Schneider.
{sidebar id=1}Two small groups of Olympic and Paralympic athletes will visit DC area schools in the morning and travel back to the White House to join the President and First Lady, who will make remarks in the afternoon. These school visits are part of Athlete Ambassador, a service program set up by Chicago 2016 and World Sport Chicago where Olympians’ and Paralympians from across the country promote the values of the Olympic Movement by engaging youth in sport activities. Tim Morehouse will be one of the athletes participating in the school visits during the morning.
This will be the second time that Morehouse has visited the White House since winning his Olympic silver medal in Beijing, China last August. He was among the Olympic athletes to meet with then-president George Bush on October 7, 2008 as part of the Olympic team visit.
The group of Olympians and Paralympians participating in tomorrow’s event are below:
Olympians
Tim Morehouse – Fencing
Jackie Joyner Kersee – Track and Field
Dominique Dawes – Gymnastics
Arlene Limas – Taekwondo
Henry Cejudo – Wrestling
Ryan Reiser – Judo
Michael Conley – Track and Field
Bob Ctvrtlik – Volleyball
Anita Defranz (US IOC member) – Rowing
Jair Lynch – Men’s gymnastics
Bob Pickens – Wrestling
Paralympians involved with Chicago 2016
Linda Mastendrea – Track Field
Hope Lewellen – Sitting Volleyball and Wheelchair tennis
April Holmes – Track and Field
Jerrod Fields – Track and Field
Myles Porter- Judo
After the President and First Lady’s remarks at the White House, Chicago2016 representatives and the Olympic and Paralympic athletes will conduct sports demonstrations at the White House.
Last week, the Obama administration announced that the First Lady will lead the delegation to support Chicago’s bid at the host city election in Copenhagen on October 2, 2009. She will travel with Valerie Jarrett, senior advisor to President Obama and Chair of the White House Office of Olympic, Paralympic and Youth Sport. In her role as First Lady, Mrs. Obama, who was born and raised on the South Side of Chicago, has been committed to bridging the gap between the White House and underserved communities around DC and across the country, and her trip to Copenhagen is an opportunity for the First Lady to carry this commitment to the international stage.