09/13/12

Page 9

PIQUA DAILY CALL • WWW.DAILYCALL.COM

Thursday, September 13, 2012

9

CHEVY TRUCK MONTH

STATE/NATION

at Ron Garrett AL BEHRMAN/AP PHOTO

Astronaut Gene Cernan, right, pats Shane DiGiovanna on the back in this photo taken Aug. 31 during a news conference at Children's Hospital in Cincinnati. DiGiovanna, who has a rare connective disease, is a patient at the hospital. Astronauts Cernan and Jim Lovell were launching the Neil Armstrong New Frontiers Initiative being put in place at the hospital.

Youth fighting disease inspired by first man to walk on moon BY LISA CORNWELL Associated Press CINCINNATI — Shane DiGiovanna has spent every one of his 14 years grappling with an incurable skin disease and hearing loss. And for almost that long, the Ohio teen has looked to Neil Armstrong the first man who walked on the moon as his hero and an inspiration for becoming an aerospace engineer. Armstrong’s death last month at the age of 82 means Shane will never realize his dream of meeting his idol and fellow Cincinnatian. But he will attend Armstrong’s national memorial service in Washington on Thursday at the invitation of the astronaut’s family. They learned about the teen after he spoke to Apollo astronauts Eugene Cernan and James Lovell and others at an event last month announcing the Neil Armstrong New Frontiers Initiative memorial fund at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The eighth-grader a patient treated there most of his life told the audience he realized at the age of 5 that he probably couldn’t “withstand the rigors of launch and re-entry and stuff like that like Neil Armstrong because of my skin condition” and decided that designing spacecraft for astronauts would be “the next best

thing.” Shane was born with a rare skin condition called epidermolysis bullosa, which creates abnormally fragile skin that constantly blisters and tears. The condition requires him to have large parts of his body bandaged to cover the wounds and painful surgeries on his hands because his fingers web and curl inward. Some hearing his remarks at the hospital event told Armstrong’s family that the teen seemed to embody part of a statement released at Armstrong’s death, family spokesman Rick Miller said. The statement said the family hoped Armstrong’s life “serves as an example to young people around the world to work hard to make their dreams come true” and “to be willing to explore and push the limits.” Those who have met Shane don’t doubt he fits the bill. Lovell, who along with Cernan was quizzed by Shane about details of their missions and the future of the space program, told the audience he was a little embarrassed because he thought Shane probably knew more than he did. The Apollo 13 commander added that if the teen and he had competed for flights “way back then, I’m sure that I’d still be sitting down watching him fly.” Shane, who was going to the service with his mother, said Tuesday that he is proud to have a chance to honor the man “whose courage and skills I’ve admired since I was really little.” He also hoped to meet some of

Armstrong’s colleagues and family. “I want to tell them how sad his death is for all of America,” Shane said. “And I would like to ask them more about him.” Shane’s mother said he has been fascinated by space since he was 4 not long after he got his first cochlear implant and began to hear for the first time and speak. “His first word was airplane,” Patsy DiGiovanna said. While he is independent attending school and absorbing everything possible on space and physics toward his goals of becoming an aerospace engineer and an astrophysicist he has trouble using his hands and cannot open a heavy door because the friction would tear his skin. “I think my focus on achieving my goal to work for NASA helps me deal with the pain,” he said. He has been impressed by how “down to earth” the astronauts he met have been. He said Cernan “loved it when I asked him what he thought when Jack Schmitt told him as they walked on the moon that he had found orange soil. He was funny. He said he first thought Schmitt had been sucking in too much oxygen.” Shane wishes he could have questioned Armstrong. “I really would have liked to have asked him about the challenge of landing the lunar module on the moon with less than 30 seconds of fuel left,” Shane said. “That was impressive.”

Report: U.S. poverty rate remains at record level BY HOPE YEN Associated Press WASHINGTON — The nation’s poverty rate remained stuck at a record level last year, while household income dropped and the number of people who don’t have health insurance declined. A Census Bureau report released Wednesday provided a mixed picture of the economic well-being of U.S. households for 2011 as the nation enters the final phase of a presidential election campaign in which the economy is the No. 1 issue. The overall poverty rate stood at 15 percent, statistically unchanged from the 15.1 percent rate in the previous year. Experts had expected a rise in the

poverty rate for the fourth straight year, but unemployment benefits and modest job gains helped stave that off, the bureau reported. For last year, the official poverty line was an annual income of $23,021 for a family of four. While unemployment eased slightly from 2010 to 2011, the gap between rich and poor increased. The median, or midpoint, household income was $50,054, 1.5 percent lower than 2010 and a second straight annual decline. In a blog post, the White House said the latest figures show that government policies can help the poor, middle class and uninsured, while more work remains to be done. “While we have made

progress digging our way out of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, too many families are still struggling and Congress must act on the policies President Obama has put forward to strengthen the middle class and those trying to get into it,” the White House post said. At a fundraising event in Jacksonville, Fla., Obama’s GOP rival for the White House, Mitt Romney, said the president “is the candidate that’s pushed the middle class into poverty. We’re the party of those who want a brighter, prosperous future for themselves and for their kids. We’re not the party of the rich. We’re the party of the people who want to get rich.”

Greg Rawers

Brian Lloyd

2012 CHEVY TRAVERSE

2000 REBATE OR 0% FOR 72 MO. $

QUALIFIED BUYERS

2012 SILVERADO REG CAB 2000 REBATE OR 0% FOR 60 MO. $

QUALIFIED BUYERS

2012 SILVERADO EXT CAB 3500 REBATE OR 0% FOR 60 MO. $

QUALIFIED BUYERS

2013 SILVERADO CREW CAB

3000 REBATE OR 0% FOR 60 MO. $

QUALIFIED BUYERS

2012 EQUINOX (2) LEFT TO CHOOSE FROM 750.00 DISCOUNT OFF M.S.R.P & 2.9% FOR 60 MO.

2012 TAHOE $

2000 REBATE OR 0.9% for 60 MO.

*all prices are plus tax, titles & fee’s

in liew of rebate MSRP.................49,965 R.G. Discount......2,765 Rebate.................1,500 Your Price..........45,700

PRE-OWNED 2012 CHEVY CAPTIVA SPORT SUV, (2) to choose from ..........$22,500 2011 TRAVERSE FWD LT, steel green.......................................$25,900 2011 AVEO ZLT, 4dr, P.W., P.L., cruise........................................$14,900 2011 MALIBU LS, sunroof, black, GM Certified.........................$17,250 2011 CRUZE LT, 4dr, 12,000 miles, 1-owner ..............................$17,700 2010 SILVERADO 1500 LT, crew cab, 28,000 mi, loaded w/acc$29,500 2010 PONTIAC G6, V6, GT Pkg, red, 27,000 miles...................$16,900 2010 IMPALA LT, full power, 19,000 miles.................................$17,250 2010 CAMARO LT, RS Pkg, 1-owner .........................................$19,900 2008 LANDROVER LR2, loaded, sunroof...................................$21,500 2007 AVALANCHE, 1-owner, Lt. black........................................$22,900 2005 GMC 2500 EXT CAB, 4x4, 59,000 miles..........................$16,900

Ron Garrett Chevrolet 1225 East Russ Rd., Greenville, OH 800-272-3688 • 937-548-7643

www.rongarrettchevrolet.com SEE YOUR LOCAL CHEVY DEALER, RON GARRETT CHEVROLET TODAY! NEW SALES HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY 9-8 • FRIDAY 9-6 • SATURDAY 9-4

2317353

Ohio teen invited to Armstrong memorial

Bill England


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.