Lincoln eighth-grader Pilot for a Day at air base



Javionte Allen, 13, of Warren, accepts his certificate from Air Force Col. James Dignan after the eighth-grader was sworn in Wednesday as an honorary second lieutenant and 910th Pilot for a Day at the Youngstown Reserve Air Station in Vienna.
Javionte Allen sworn in as honorary Air Force Reserve 2nd Lt.
VIENNA
Thirteen-year-old Javionte Allen of Warren took Wednesday off from classes at Lincoln Elementary School in Warren to be sworn in as an honorary Air Force Reserve second lieutenant and become Pilot for a Day for the 910th Airlift Wing at Youngstown Air Reserve Station.
Javionte, an eighth-grader, is the son of Tia Allen of Warren and grandson of Lorayn Hughley, Stephanie Jordan and Ricky Hughley.
The purpose of the “Pilot for a Day” program is to reach out to the community by providing a fun-filled day of activities to children who live with a chronic or life-threatening disease or illness.
Javionte has sickle-cell anemia, which requires periodic treatments at Akron Children’s Hospital Mahoning Valley in Boardman and medication to reduce the pain associated with the condition.
Sickle-cell disease, most common in people of African descent, is an inherited blood disorder that affects red blood cells. People with the disease have red blood cells that contain an abnormal type of hemoglobin. Sometimes these red blood cells become sickle-shaped (crescent shaped) and have difficulty passing through small blood vessels.
Sickle cells are destroyed rapidly in the body of people with the disease causing anemia, jaundice and the formation of gallstones, according to the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America.
Also, according to SCDAA, the sickle cells also block the flow of blood through vessels resulting in lung-tissue damage (acute chest syndrome), pain episodes (arms, legs, chest and abdomen) and stroke. It also causes damage to most organs, including the spleen, kidneys and liver.
Damage to the spleen makes sickle-cell-disease patients,
especially young children, easily overwhelmed by certain bacterial infections.
After donning his genuine flight suit, Javionte — who was so excited he could not sleep Tuesday night — was sworn in as an honorary second lieutenant by Col. James D. Dignan, 910th commander.
Proudly watching Javionte were his mother and grandmother, Lorayn Hughley, and siblings, Aniyah, Jushyia and King Allen. His mother and grandmother placed his lieutenant’s bars on his uniform.
Also as part of his experience, Javionte received a model of the C-130 Hercules cargo plane flown by the 910th and rode in the multimillion-dollar plane as it taxied down the main runway.
The Youngstown Air Reserve Station Base-Community Council is the program’s financial co-sponsor.