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On Monday, she had the stitches removed from the skull reconstruction that she underwent just two days into his flight. Kelly said he'll call her as soon as he lands -- he expects his first words to be "I'm back"
-- and embrace her once he returns to Houston the day after touchdown. Kelly said he has no regrets about having made the flight. He took a leave from NASA when the shooting occurred Jan. 8 in Tucson, Ariz., and for a while thought he might have to quit. But Giffords improved so much that when Kelly moved her to Houston for rehabilitation, he resumed flight training. "In hindsight, it was absolutely the right decision," Kelly said. That's evidenced by the fact that the crew met all of its objectives in orbit: installing the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, carrying out four spacewalks, wrapping up the U.S. portion of space station construction. "Being away from her, to be honest, it's difficult," he said. But it was "really, really special" that she was able to recover to the point that she could make the trip to Cape Canaveral
-- twice -- given everything that happened to her. ___ Online: NASA:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/
shuttle/main/index.html
[Associated
Press;
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