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NEWS: Airman attends
presidential address |
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January 29, 2008 |
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Washington, DC. |
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An
Air Force Reserve Airman attended President George W. Bush's
final state of the union address here Jan. 28. |
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Senior Airman Diane Lopes represented the service, sitting in
the audience with the first lady and other special guests. |
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Airman Lopes, a security forces specialist with the 920th Rescue
Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, Fla., was selected to attend the
address through a nomination process. |
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"It's
a tremendous honor to have been selected to attend this," she
said. "It's exciting to be able to experience history up close
and personal." |
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(Photo: SRA
Lopes) |
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Airman Lopes was injured in a rocket attack Sept. 21 while
deployed to Kirkuk Air Base, Iraq. |
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(click
to enlarge photo) |
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Air Force Reserve Senior Airman
Diane Lopes was chosen to attend President Bush's State of the
Union address Jan. 28 as one of the military representatives.
Airman Lopes was wounded during a rocket attack Sept. 21 while
deployed to Kirkuk Air Base, Iraq. She is a security forces
specialist with the 920th Rescue Wing at Patrick Air Force Base,
Fla. |
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Those
who work with Airman Lopes are not surprised she was selected to
represent the Air Force for the president's speech. |
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"We
are very proud," said Col. Steve Kirkpatrick, 920th commander.
"Diane's courage, sense of humor and sheer will to overcome a
devastating injury have been an inspiration to all who know her.
She is a great Airman and American. We are all privileged to
serve alongside her." |
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Airman Lopes recounted the
incident in Iraq. |
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"I
can picture it like it was yesterday," she said about the
attack. "I remember I started to turn, then I heard the blast on
my right side. It was the loudest thing I've ever heard. All I
saw were sparks and a flash. The flash went through me. I
thought I was on fire." |
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The 'flash' she saw was a blast
wave, a wall of high pressure that radiates outward at high
speed from a powerful explosion. In Airman Lopes' case, the wave
that passed through her contained a hail of razor-sharp
shrapnel. |
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Though she initially felt no pain, her wounds were substantial.
The massive explosion and resulting shrapnel snapped the tibia
and fibula of her left leg, slashed through 80 percent of the
tendons in her right wrist, collapsed one of her lungs, burned
the backs of her legs, perforated her right eardrum and peppered
her body with shrapnel. |
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She
was immediately flown to Baghdad for treatment, then on to
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, and finally to
Walter Reed Medical Center, where she currently is receiving
out-patient therapy for her wounds. |
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