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Astronauts Hail Successes and Bid Teary Farewells

Current Headlines

Astronauts Hail Successes and Bid Teary Farewells

Nov 05, 06:44 AM

Current Headlines: By MARCIA DUNN

By Marcia Dunn

The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.

Still on "a major high" from their successful solar wing repair, the 10 astronauts aboard the linked shuttle Discovery and international space station cried as they hugged goodbye Sunday and closed the door between them.

The most tears came from the two men who traded places on the space station: Clayton Anderson, who is headed home after five months in orbit, and Daniel Tani, who is starting a two-month mission.

They repeatedly wiped their eyes during the farewell ceremony, held a day before Discovery undocks for its return to Earth.

Anderson was so choked up that he had to pause a few times while talking. He played recordings of "Danny Boy" for Tani, whose wife is Irish, and Collective Soul's "Reunion" with the refrain "I'm coming home" for his flight controllers, his family and himself.

"As my time draws to a close here, I'm filled with a lot of different emotions and I have a lot of blood, sweat and tears that I've left on board the international space station. It's a very wonderful place," Anderson said.

The two commanders, the shuttle's Pamela Melroy and the station's Peggy Whitson, also were teary-eyed as they hugged one another.

Just before the hatches between the spacecraft closed, station flight director Derek Hassmann thanked the astronauts for their hard work, noting that the past four or five days were "a complete blur." That's how much time passed from the moment a solar energy panel on a newly installed beam ripped while being unfurled until it was fixed during an unprecedented spacewalk Saturday by astronaut Scott Parazynski.

After pulling away this morning, the shuttle will fly a full lap around the station, primarily for picture-taking. Engineers are particularly interested in seeing how the newly mended solar wing is affected by the vibrations of undocking.

Discovery's 15-day mission will end with a Wednesday touchdown.

(c) 2007 Virginian - Pilot. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Astronauts Hail Successes and Bid Teary Farewells
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