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Tuesday October 17, 2000

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Astronauts attach port to station

By The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Two spacewalking astronauts working with a crewmate inside shuttle Discovery attached a new docking port to the international space station yesterday.

The clearances were tight, and Jeff Wisoff and Michael Lopez-Alegria floated alongside the space station, calling out instructions, as Koichi Wakata gently nudged the docking port into place with the space shuttle's robot arm.

"Wow. This is just outstanding," one of the spacewalkers said when it was over.

"Definitely," was the reply.

It was the second and final space station piece to be installed during the 240-mile-high construction mission. An aluminum framework holding antennas and motion-control devices was attached to the station on Saturday and wired up by another pair of spacewalkers on Sunday.

Wisoff and Lopez-Alegria encountered problems as soon as they floated out the hatch. At first, their power drills wouldn't loosen the four latches holding down the docking port in Discovery's cargo bay.

"Who's scripting this, anyway?" one of them asked.

Once the latches were freed, Japanese astronaut Wakata lifted the 2,700-pound docking port on the end of Discovery's robot arm and positioned it on the space station. The spacewalkers, one on each side, sounded like moving men as they advised Wakata during the final 1 1/2 feet: Go in 3 inches, pitch up 1 degree, turn one-quarter of a degree to the left.

"OK, coming in," Wakata finally called out.

The spacewalkers' eyes proved invaluable. A short circuit knocked out a camera on the end of the robot arm Saturday.

The docking port will be used by space shuttle Endeavour when it delivers huge solar panels in December and by Atlantis when it carries up the American lab Destiny in January.

The spacewalk ended up lasting seven hours, a half-hour longer than planned.

"Fantastic job today, guys," astronaut Leroy Chiao said from the cockpit.

Two more spacewalks are planned, today and tomorrow. The astronauts will depart from the space station on Friday. And if all goes well, the next crew to dock, on Nov. 1, will be the station's first residents.