Space shuttle Discovery and its crew of six returned to Earth through
overcast skies Monday, ending a successful mission that put NASA back in the
space station construction business.

Discovery glided down through an overcast sky onto the Kennedy Space Center
runway at 9:14 a.m., allowing NASA to declare total victory for the first
time since before the 2003 Columbia disaster.

It was so cloudy, shuttle commander Steven Lindsey couldn't spot the runway
until about a minute before landing.

"Welcome back Discovery and congratulations on a great mission," Mission
Control told Lindsey after Discovery rolled to a stop.

"It was a great mission. A really great mission," Lindsey replied.

The shuttle came in from the south, swooping over the Pacific, Yucatan
Peninsula, Gulf of Mexico and across Florida to cap a 5.3 million-mile
journey that began on the Fourth of July. A last-minute buildup of clouds
prompted NASA to switch the shuttle's direction for landing.

At touchdown, hoots and whistles came from the few hundred astronaut
relatives and space center workers watching the landing.

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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