US | Discovery space shuttle Discovery Blasts Off Carrying 7 Astronauts Mission heads to International Space Station By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Apr 5, 2010 6:16 AM CDT Copied From left, Mission Specialists Clayton Anderson, Naoko Yamazaki, Stephanie Wilson, Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger, and Rick Mastracchio, Pilot James P. Dutton Jr., and Commander Alan G. Poindexter. (Wilfredo Lee) See 4 more photos Discovery and seven astronauts rocketed into orbit today on one of NASA's final stockpiling missions to the International Space Station, its liftoff flames bringing an early dawn to the coast with this last scheduled shuttle launch in darkness. The pre-dawn launch helped clinch a record for the most women in space at the same time. Three women are aboard Discovery, and another is already at the space station. The shuttle should arrive at the orbiting outpost Wednesday. In a rare treat, the space station passed over the launch site 15 minutes before Discovery blasted off and was easily visible, resembling a star in the morning sky with the moon as a dramatic backdrop. Read These Next One wrong step costs teen at Yellowstone. A Virginia politician was set on fire at his office. This Fed decision was unlike any other in decades. Delta sued after masturbation videos end up on child's lost iPad. See 4 more photos Report an error