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Obama honors train heroes

WASHINGTON - This time, they suited up. The three young Americans who thwarted a gunman on a Paris-bound passenger train last month got their moment in the Oval Office on Thursday - and they dressed for it.

President Obama prepares to shake hands with Anthony Sadler while honoring him, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos, and Airman First Class Spencer Stone in the Oval Office.
President Obama prepares to shake hands with Anthony Sadler while honoring him, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos, and Airman First Class Spencer Stone in the Oval Office.Read moreANDREW HARNIK / Associated Press

WASHINGTON - This time, they suited up.

The three young Americans who thwarted a gunman on a Paris-bound passenger train last month got their moment in the Oval Office on Thursday - and they dressed for it.

President Obama praised Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone, and Anthony Sadler for teamwork, courage, and quick-thinking actions that averted "a real calamity."

He celebrated them as three friends who had been headed for a fun reunion in Paris when they "ended up engaging a potential catastrophic situation and pinning down someone who clearly was intent on doing a lot of harm to a lot of people, inflicting terror on the French people."

The three sat attentively on an Oval Office couch and chair as Obama praised them as "the very best of America."

They had previously been awarded France's highest honor by President Francois Hollande. They showed up for that hastily scheduled ceremony at the ornate Elysee Palace a little underdressed, in polo shirts and khakis.

This time, Oregon National Guardsman Skarlatos and Airman First Class Stone were in military uniform, and Sadler, a senior at Sacramento State University, wore a sport coat and open-collared dress shirt.

The three last month subdued a man with ties to radical Islam who boarded the train with a Kalashnikov rifle, a pistol, and a box cutter. A British businessman and a French American also have been praised for their efforts to stop the gunman.

As for what the future holds, Obama said Stone, whose hand was injured in the attack, is "making real progress" and intends to pursue work in medicine, Sadler is studying sports medicine and therapy, and Skarlatos, "as soon as he's finished on Dancing With the Stars, plans to get into law enforcement."

After visiting the White House, the three were off to the Pentagon to pick up more honors.

Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James presented Stone with the Purple Heart in recognition of the injuries he suffered, and he also received the Airman's Medal. Skarlatos was awarded the Soldier's Medal, and Sadler was given the Secretary of Defense's Medal of Valor.