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Shuttle Discovery Comes Home For Last Time

CAPE CANAVERAL (CBS4) – Under partly cloudy skies, the space shuttle Discovery performed a picture perfect landing at Cape Canaveral just before noon Wednesday, the final homecoming of the world's most-traveled spaceship.

Commander Steven Lindsey and his crew spent the early morning hours readying Discovery for its last ride home from space. NASA's oldest shuttle has flown 39 missions over nearly 27 years. It's being retired after this voyage.

Discovery is headed back from the International Space Station. Its crew delivered and installed a new storage compartment, complete with a humanoid robot.

The mission added 13 days to Discovery's lifetime total of 365 days in space. Its total mileage is 148 million miles.

Once back at Kennedy Space Center, Discovery will be decommissioned over the next several months and sent to the Smithsonian Institution for display. Endeavour and then Atlantis will fly once more each in the next few months. Then they, too, will be retired. Their final resting places have yet to be chosen.

Endeavour -- scheduled to blast off in less than six weeks -- will be moved out to the launch pad Wednesday night.

NASA is under presidential direction to spread its wings beyond low-Earth orbit. The goal is to send astronauts to an asteroid and then Mars in the decades ahead. There is not enough money for NASA to achieve that and maintain the shuttle program at the same time. As a result, the shuttles will stop flying this summer after 30 years.

American astronauts will keep hitching rides to the space station on Russian Soyuz capsules, until private companies are able to provide taxi service to and from orbit. NASA expects to get another nine years out of the space station.

(© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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