nothing that we could have done,' page 2

1
He didn’t just play well. He looked the part, too. Before each game, the sandy- haired, blue-eyed boy put on his uniform and stood on the tub in his parent’s bathroom so he could get a full- length look at his uniformed self in the mirror. He’d complete his conversion to ballplayer with a pack of Big League Chew bubble gum. He’d stick a big wad in his mouth and then share the rest with his teammates. He was terri- fied of Chuck E Cheese and the Easter Bunny; he loved trains and family and music and watching planes land at Huntsville International Air- port. He loved the Blue Angels, too. On a recent visit to Orange Beach, his parents drove him to Pensacola’s National Aviation Museum so he could look at the display of the Navy’s precision flight squadron. When his parents told him they were taking him to the air show Sunday – which was their sixth wedding anniversary – to see the Blue Angels in flight, he reached that rung of excite- ment achievable only by 5-year- old boys en route to see their he- roes. And then, the unthinkable. “His dad tried to catch it,” said Josiah’s “Mamaw.” But a man can’t catch something that weighs 5,000 pounds, no mat- ter how hard he tries, no matter how much he’d rather it was him beneath the ma- chinery. And that’s when Josiah Miller became part of a sad his- tory, though his celebrity should have been for something else. Like how he could sit rapt through an entire Braves games on television or how he knew all of the words to “Folsom Prison Blues” or how he could exist al- most solely on McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets. Anything but what it is. Son Continued from page A1 The Huntsville Times, Tuesday, July 1, 2008 A5 0000009571-01 TRAGEDY AT AIRSHOW 2008 The Associated Press Capt. Ivan Castro runs alongside Spc. Robert Garner, left, while holding a tether with Sgt. Zane Platt for guidance during morning physical training in Fort Bragg, N.C. up to it. “I am going to push the lim- its,” the 40-year-old said. “I don’t want to go to Fort Bragg and show up and sit in an office. I want to work every day and have a mission.” Since the war began in Iraq, more than 100 troops have been blinded and 247 others have lost sight in one eye. Only two other blind officers serve in the active- duty Army: one a captain study- ing to be an instructor at West Point, the other an instructor at the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. An 18-year Army veteran, Castro was a Ranger before completing Special Forces train- ing, the grueling yearlong course many soldiers fail to finish. He joined the Special Forces as a weapons sergeant, earned an of- ficer’s commission and moved on to the 82nd – hoping to re- turn one day to the Special Forces as a team leader. Then life changed on a rooftop outside Youssifiyah, Iraq, in September 2006. Castro had relieved other paratroopers atop a house after a night of fighting. He never heard the incoming mortar round. There was just a flash of light, then darkness. Shrapnel tore through his body, breaking his arm and shoulder and shredding the left side of his face. Two other paratroopers died. When Castro awoke six weeks later at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethes- da, Md., his right eye was gone. Doctors were unable to save his left. The Blinded Veterans Asso- ciation estimates 13 percent of all combat hospital emergency procedures in Iraq have involved eye injuries and more than half of the soldiers with traumatic brain injuries also suffer some visual impairment. That makes them the third most common injury – behind post traumatic stress disorder and brain in- juries – in Iraq. “What he is doing is a strong example that blind individuals can lead exciting and mean- ingful careers,” said Thomas Zampieri, director of govern- ment relations for the associa- tion. After 17 months in recovery, Castro sought a permanent as- signment in the service’s Special Operations Command, landing duty with the 7th Special Forces Group. He focuses on mana- gerial tasks while honing the group’s Spanish training, a use- ful language for a unit that de- ploys regularly to train South American troops. Though not fully independ- ent, he spent a weekend before starting his job walking around the Group area at Fort Bragg to know just where he was going. He carefully measured the steps from car to office. “Obviously, he cannot do some things that a sighted per- son can do. But Ivan will find a way to get done whatever he needs to get done,” Col. Sean Mulholland said. “What I am most impressed with, though, is his determination to contin- ue to serve his country after all that he’s been through.” Castro works out regularly at the gym and runs, his legs pow- erful and muscular. And though he has a prosthetic right eye and his arms are scarred by shrap- nel, his outsized personality overshadows his war wounds: Nobody escapes his booming hellos, friendly banter and lim- itless drive. He ran the Boston marathon this year with Adm. Eric T. Olson, commander of the U.S. Special Operations Command. Last year it was the Marine Corps Marathon. He wants to compete in the Ironman triathlon in Hawaii and gradu- ate from the Army’s officer ad- vanced course, which teaches captains how to lead troops and plan operations. “I want to be treated the same way as other officers,” Castro said. “I don’t want them to take pity over me or give me some- thing I’ve not earned.” Castro is married and the fa- ther of a 14-year-old son. Blind Continued from page A1 The weather forecast on the day of the SciTanic called for partly cloudy skies with a 30 percent chance of showers, a high near 90 and clear and cool- er that evening with tempera- tures in the lower 60s. The Sci- Tanic accident is one of several destructive incidents in the Huntsville area attributed to a microburst, a weather phe- nomenon characterized by ex- treme wind shifts and unpre- dictability. A 250-ton crane at the in- termodal facility at Huntsville International Airport was top- pled by a microburst in July 1993. Violent winds pushed the giant wheeled crane down a track at 30 mph until it col- lapsed when striking a bumper stop. The roof of a south Huntsville apartment complex was ripped apart by a microburst in July 2003, displacing 38 residents. Local author Homer Hickam well remembers that July day in 1984 when the SciTanic was blown over in the Tennessee River near Hobbs Island. Hickam was at Ditto getting ready to go water-skiing when the weather suddenly turned wicked. He was flying earlier in a Cessna and returned to the Redstone Arsenal Airfield be- cause of a sudden wall cloud. The threatening weather quick- ly dissipated so he kept his river- outing plans for the afternoon. “When I got down to Ditto, I was there only a few minutes when there was this sudden tor- rential downpour and high winds,” Hickam said Monday. Hickam reflected on the or- deal along with City Recreation Services worker Mick Roney, who helped Hickam that day diving for victims. The storm “went away just as quickly as it came in,” Hickam said. “Someone started scream- ing that there was a passenger boat that had overturned on the river. My friends with the speed- boat – we raced out of there and found the SciTanic upside down.” Roney was also at the mari- na tending to his boat. “It start- ed out nice and pleasant and it just blew in real quick before you knew it,” he said. Roney took shelter in his car, emerging min- utes later after the squall had passed. That’s when he noticed several boats racing out of the marina ignoring the no-wake zone. A marine police officer asked him to hop in the patrol boat after Roney told him he had lifeguard credentials and had medic training in the Army. Hickam, then a NASA em- ployee and scuba diving in- structor, and Roney, then a life- guard and swim coach, were among the first to arrive at the capsized SciTanic. Acquaintances through swimming circles, they soon found themselves tag-teaming in the water in a frantic hunt for survivors. With Hickam in scuba gear and Roney using goggles and free diving, the pair swam in and out of the darkened riverboat to free bodies and look for mira- cles. Hickam kicked out a window and severely cut his arm while clearing out the broken glass for access. Together, they began pulling out victims and swimming them topside to rescue workers on the overturned keel. Roney said Hickam soon warned him not to enter the up- side down boat. “He said the floors weren’t made to be ceilings,” Roney said. Roney said the SciTanic ac- cident and his having seen two microburst-like events make him keenly aware of the danger of microbursts. “They can come up with no warning,” he said. “You wonder, sometimes. When I find myself out on the river or in an open area and a storm blows in, you wonder if it will be right on you.” Capsizing Continued from page A1 Mick Roney, left, and Homer Hickam helped recover bodies. Photos courtesy of the family Josiah Miller visiting the Blue Angels display at the Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Fla. as Panoply and the Black Arts Festival. He’s put up hundreds of tents during his 9 1 2 years in the business but has never seen an ac- cident like this, he said. Within seconds, about 400 linear feet of tents had fallen. Just 40 feet down, the wind loosened the stakes on another set of tents but they held fast, he said. The air-conditioning units were sitting on the ground outside the tents, but the powerful wind managed to blow one unit on top of 5-year-old Josiah Miller, killing him at the scene. Whitman said his thoughts are prayers are with Miller’s family, and de- scribed Friday’s accident as one of the “most tragic mo- ments” of his life. “I keep going back and thinking, ‘What could I have done? What could I have done?’ And there’s nothing.” Nothing Continued from page A1 From staff reports A seven-year-old Madison boy injured at Airshow 2008 was in serious condition Mon- day night at Huntsville Hospital. Matthew Pepper was injured when a mi- croburst damaged a tent Sunday at the show at Huntsville International Airport. He was among 12 people hospitalized with injuries from the incident; the 11 other victims have been released, according to hospital spokeswoman Sue Esslinger. Boy, 7, hurt at show in serious condition “They (Josiah and his mother) were attached at the hip. Oh, she is going to miss him so much. They did everything together. And Jason, (his dad) too.” Marta Newby Josiah’s grandmother

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Page 1: Nothing that we could have done,' page 2

He didn’t just play well. Helooked the part, too.Beforeeachgame,thesandy-

haired,blue-eyedboyputonhisuniformandstoodonthetubinhis parent’s bathroom so hecould get a full-length look at hisuniformed self inthemirror.

He’d completehis conversion toballplayer with apack of BigLeague Chewbubblegum.He’dstick abigwad inhis mouth andthen share therest with histeammates.He was terri-

fied of Chuck ECheese and theEasterBunny;heloved trains andfamilyandmusicand watching planes land atHuntsville International Air-port.HelovedtheBlueAngels,too.On a recent visit to Orange

Beach,hisparentsdrovehimtoPensacola’s National AviationMuseumsohecouldlookatthedisplay of the Navy’s precision

flight squadron.When his parents told him

theywere taking him to the airshowSunday–whichwastheirsixth wedding anniversary – tosee theBlueAngels in flight, hereached that rung of excite-mentachievableonlyby5-year-oldboysenroutetoseetheirhe-roes.

And then, the unthinkable.“His dad tried

to catch it,” saidJosiah’s“Mamaw.”Butamancan’t

catch somethingthatweighs5,000pounds, no mat-ter how hard hetries, no matterhow much he’drather it was himbeneath the ma-chinery.

And that’swhen JosiahMiller becamepart of a sad his-tory, though hiscelebrity shouldhave been forsomething else.

Like how he could sit raptthroughanentireBravesgamesontelevisionorhowheknewallof thewords to “FolsomPrisonBlues” or howhe could exist al-most solely on McDonald’sChickenMcNuggets.Anything butwhat it is.

SonContinued frompage A1

The Huntsville Times, Tuesday, July 1, 2008 A5

0000009571-01

TRAGEDY AT AIRSHOW 2008

The Associated Press

Capt. Ivan Castro runs alongside Spc. Robert Garner, left, while holding a tether with Sgt. ZanePlatt for guidance during morning physical training in Fort Bragg, N.C.

up to it.“I amgoing topush the lim-

its,”the40-year-oldsaid.“Idon’twant to go to Fort Bragg andshow up and sit in an office. Iwant to work every day andhave amission.”Since thewar began in Iraq,

morethan100troopshavebeenblindedand247othershavelostsightinoneeye.Onlytwootherblindofficersserveintheactive-dutyArmy:oneacaptainstudy-ing to be an instructor atWestPoint,theotheraninstructoratthe CombinedArmsCenter atFort Leavenworth, Kan.An 18-year Army veteran,

Castro was a Ranger beforecompletingSpecialForcestrain-ing,thegruelingyearlongcoursemany soldiers fail to finish.Hejoined the Special Forces as aweaponssergeant,earnedanof-ficer’s commission andmovedon to the 82nd – hoping to re-turn one day to the SpecialForces as a team leader.Then life changed on a

rooftop outside Youssifiyah,Iraq, in September 2006.Castro had relieved other

paratroopersatopahouseaftera night of fighting. He neverheard the incoming mortarround.Therewasjustaflashoflight, then darkness.Shrapnel tore through his

body, breaking his arm andshoulder and shredding theleft side of his face. Two otherparatroopers died.When Castro awoke six

weeks later at the NationalNavalMedicalCenterinBethes-da,Md.,hisrighteyewasgone.Doctorswereunabletosavehisleft.TheBlindedVeteransAsso-

ciation estimates 13 percent ofall combathospital emergencyproceduresinIraqhaveinvolvedeyeinjuriesandmorethanhalfof the soldiers with traumaticbrain injuries also suffer somevisualimpairment.Thatmakesthem the third most commoninjury–behindpost traumaticstress disorder and brain in-juries – in Iraq.“Whathe isdoing isastrong

example that blind individualscan lead exciting and mean-ingful careers,” said ThomasZampieri, director of govern-ment relations for the associa-tion.After 17months in recovery,

Castrosoughtapermanentas-signmentintheservice’sSpecialOperationsCommand,landingdutywiththe7thSpecialForcesGroup. He focuses on mana-gerial tasks while honing thegroup’sSpanishtraining,ause-ful language for a unit that de-ploys regularly to train SouthAmerican troops.Though not fully independ-

ent,hespentaweekendbeforestartinghisjobwalkingaround

theGroupareaatFortBraggtoknow justwherehewasgoing.Hecarefullymeasuredthestepsfrom car to office.“Obviously, he cannot do

somethings thatasightedper-soncando.But Ivanwill findaway to get done whatever heneeds to get done,” Col. SeanMulholland said. “What I ammost impressed with, though,is his determination to contin-ue to serve his country after allthat he’s been through.”Castroworksoutregularlyat

thegymandruns,hislegspow-erfulandmuscular.Andthoughhehasaprostheticrighteyeandhis arms are scarred by shrap-nel, his outsized personalityovershadows his war wounds:Nobody escapes his boominghellos, friendlybanterandlim-itless drive.HerantheBostonmarathon

this year with Adm. Eric T.Olson, commander of theU.S.SpecialOperationsCommand.Last year it was the MarineCorpsMarathon. He wants tocompete in the IronmantriathloninHawaiiandgradu-ate from theArmy’s officer ad-vanced course, which teachescaptainshowtoleadtroopsandplan operations.“Iwanttobetreatedthesame

way as other officers,” Castrosaid. “Idon’twantthemtotakepity overme or giveme some-thing I’ve not earned.”Castroismarriedandthefa-

ther of a 14-year-old son.

BlindContinued frompage A1

Theweather forecast on theday of the SciTanic called forpartly cloudy skies with a 30percent chance of showers, ahighnear90andclearandcool-er that evening with tempera-tures inthe lower60s.TheSci-Tanic accident is oneof severaldestructive incidents in theHuntsville area attributed to amicroburst, a weather phe-nomenon characterized by ex-treme wind shifts and unpre-dictability.A 250-ton crane at the in-

termodal facility at HuntsvilleInternational Airportwas top-

pled by a microburst in July1993.Violentwindspushedthegiant wheeled crane down atrack at 30 mph until it col-lapsedwhenstrikingabumperstop.TheroofofasouthHuntsville

apartmentcomplexwasrippedapart by a microburst in July2003, displacing 38 residents.LocalauthorHomerHickam

wellremembersthatJulydayin1984 when the SciTanic wasblown over in the TennesseeRiver nearHobbs Island.HickamwasatDittogetting

ready to gowater-skiingwhenthe weather suddenly turnedwicked.Hewasflyingearlier ina Cessna and returned to theRedstone Arsenal Airfield be-cause of a sudden wall cloud.Thethreateningweatherquick-lydissipatedsohekepthisriver-outingplans for the afternoon.“When I got down to Ditto,

Iwas there only a fewminuteswhentherewasthissuddentor-rential downpour and highwinds,”Hickam saidMonday.Hickam reflected on the or-

dealalongwithCityRecreationServices worker Mick Roney,who helped Hickam that day

diving for victims.Thestorm“wentawayjustas

quickly as it came in,” Hickamsaid.“Someonestartedscream-ing that there was a passengerboatthathadoverturnedontheriver.Myfriendswiththespeed-boat–weracedoutofthereandfound the SciTanic upsidedown.”Roneywas also at themari-

natendingtohisboat. “Itstart-edoutnice andpleasant and itjustblewinrealquickbeforeyouknew it,” he said. Roney tookshelterinhiscar,emergingmin-utes later after the squall hadpassed.That’swhenhenoticedseveral boats racing out of themarina ignoring the no-wakezone. A marine police officerasked him to hop in the patrolboat after Roney told him he

had lifeguard credentials andhadmedictrainingintheArmy.Hickam, then a NASA em-

ployee and scuba diving in-structor,andRoney,thenalife-guard and swim coach, wereamong the first to arrive at thecapsized SciTanic.Acquaintances through

swimming circles, they soonfound themselves tag-teaminginthewaterinafrantichuntforsurvivors.WithHickam in scuba gear

and Roney using goggles andfreediving,thepairswaminandoutofthedarkenedriverboattofree bodies and look for mira-cles.Hickamkickedoutawindow

and severely cut his armwhileclearingoutthebrokenglassforaccess.

Together, theybeganpullingout victims and swimmingthemtopsidetorescueworkerson the overturned keel.Roney said Hickam soon

warnedhimnottoentertheup-side down boat.“He said the floors weren’t

madetobeceilings,”Roneysaid.Roney said the SciTanic ac-

cident andhishaving seen twomicroburst-like events makehimkeenlyawareofthedangerofmicrobursts.“They can come up with no

warning,”hesaid.“Youwonder,sometimes.WhenIfindmyselfout on the river or in an openarea and a stormblows in, youwonderifitwillberightonyou.”

CapsizingContinued frompage A1

Mick Roney, left, and HomerHickam helped recover bodies.

Photos courtesy of the family

Josiah Miller visiting the Blue Angels display at the Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Fla.

as Panoply and the BlackArts Festival. He’s put uphundreds of tents duringhis91⁄2yearsinthebusinessbut has never seen an ac-cident like this, he said.Within seconds, about

400linearfeetoftentshadfallen. Just 40 feet down,the wind loosened thestakes on another set oftentsbut theyheld fast, hesaid.The air-conditioning

units were sitting on theground outside the tents,but the powerful windmanaged toblowoneunitontopof5-year-oldJosiahMiller, killing him at thescene.Whitman said his

thoughts are prayers arewithMiller’sfamily,andde-scribedFriday’saccidentasoneofthe“mosttragicmo-ments” of his life.“I keep going back and

thinking, ‘What could Ihave done? What could Ihave done?’ And there’snothing.”

NothingContinued frompage A1

From staff reports

A seven-year-old Madison boy injured atAirshow2008wasinseriousconditionMon-day night atHuntsvilleHospital.Matthew Pepper was injured when a mi-

croburst damaged a tent Sunday at the showatHuntsville International Airport.Hewasamong12peoplehospitalizedwith

injuriesfromtheincident;the11othervictimshave been released, according to hospitalspokeswoman SueEsslinger.

Boy, 7, hurt at show in serious condition

“They (Josiah andhis mother) wereattached at the hip.Oh, she is going tomiss him so much.They did everythingtogether. And Jason,(his dad) too.”

Marta NewbyJosiah’s grandmother