Shuttle Heads To ISS For Extended Mission
UPDATE 03.11.08 0230 EDT: "Konichiwa, domo
arigato and banzai!" Those were the words of STS-123 Commander
Dominic Gorie, after NASA mission controllers announced everything
was ready for the nighttime launch of the shuttle Endeavour... and
moments ago, the orbiter rode a blazing trail through the dark
Florida skies towards a rendezvous with the International Space
Station.

Gorie's comments were in reference to one of two prime
objectives for the 16-day mission: to deliver and attach the first
of three components of Japan's new massive "Kibo" laboratory.
Spacewalkers will also attach a new Canadian robotic tool -- the
Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator, or Dextre -- to the
station.
Tuesday's launch was the 30th nighttime liftoff of a shuttle in
the program's nearly 27-year history... and proceeded with little
drama, and no significant technical glitches. That came as welcome
relief to NASA, following the two-month delay to the launch of the
preceding mission onboard Atlantis... and hopefully bodes well for
the remainder of the mission.
Previous Reports
03.11.08 0045 EDT: The Closeout Crew members
wished the STS-123 astronauts good luck and best wishes as they
secured Endeavour's hatch for launch. The astronauts now are going
through final checks inside the orbiter to prepare for their
journey to the International Space Station.

During the last few minutes of the countdown, the access arm on
the rotating service structure will swing away from the shuttle and
a device known as the "beanie cap" covering the top of the external
tank will lift up and move away.
Liftoff remains on schedule for 0228 EDT.
Original Report
0001
EST: With full cups of coffee in-hand, ANN is monitoring
the final two hours of NASA's countdown towards sending the space
shuttle Endeavour on its latest mission to the International Space
Station.
At this time, all remains "go" for liftoff at 0228 EDT. There
are no significant technical issues to report, and the 'starry'
skies over Kennedy Space Center are clear, despite very minor
concerns about a forecasted 10 percent chance of low-cloud
cover.
The forecast is also favorable at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility
and at least one of the Trans-Atlantic sites, should an abort
landing be necessary.
NASA astronaut Dominic Gorie commands a crew of six on STS-123,
including Pilot Gregory H. Johnson and Mission Specialists Rick
Linnehan, Robert L. Behnken, Mike Foreman, Garrett Reisman and
Japanese astronaut Takao Doi. Johnson, Behnken and Foreman will be
making their first spaceflight.
During the 16-day mission -- the 25th mission to the ISS, and
longest-ever visit by a shuttle to the station -- the crew's two
prime objectives are to deliver and attach the first component of
Japan's new "Kibo" laboratory, as well as Canada's new robotics
system, the Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator, or Dextre.
Expedition 16 Flight Engineer Leopold Eyharts, who arrived at
the station aboard Atlantis in February, will return to Earth with
the Endeavour crew as Reisman takes his place on the station.

There's a chance NASA will opt to extend STS-123 by two
additional days, giving the mission bragging rights for the
longest-ever shuttle flight, as well -- surpassing the previous
record, set by the STS-80 mission onboard Columbia, of 17 days, 15
hours, 53 minutes, 18 seconds.
Tonight's scheduled lifoff is also the second nighttime launch
since the shuttle fleet's Return to Flight, following the February
2003 loss of Columbia. The shuttle Discovery launched at night in
December 2006.