Heroic corpsman saves lives on the 'Ice'

    At 8:30 that morning, a National  Science Foundation LC-130 Hercules airplane,   by a U.S.  Navy crew from VXE 6, was on a routine resupply flight from McMurdo  Station. It crashed while attempting  to land near Card's isolated outpost  750 miles northwest of McMurdo  Station.
 

  Heroism didn't even cross Card's   
mind when he heard the shouts of
"crash!" He grabbed his parka and
gloves and jumped on a snowmobile
to get down to the landing strip. All
that could be seen was smoke and
twisted metal. With two Navy civil-
ians from the camp, Brad Honeycutt
and Johnny Howard, Card ran to the
cockpit of the plane The three   searched  for a way into  the plane.
 

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 In the cockpit, the trapped crew  members were also looking for a way  out. There was   no time to waste - fuel was leaking into the cockpit and  electrical power could ignite it.  The  rescuers found a small hole in the  cockpit fuselage, enlarged it, then  one by one, the victims were carefully pulled out. Fires trom JP-5 aircraft fuel burned all around the
wreckage. The danger of explosion  made the extrication harrowing.
 

"I was scared," said Card. I knew
 that it could blow at any minute and
 I just wanted to get everyone away             
 from the plane."
 

  "One of the first people I re-
 member seeing was Card," said one
 survivor.  "He literally gave me the
 shirt off his back,he also gave me his
 parka and gloves, and continued to work
 in just his thermal undershirt." After
 all the victims were removed from the                         
 wreckage, they were loaded onto sleds                                       HM2 Barney Card
 for the mile-long trek to shelter.


  The sleds were only 15 feet from  the wreckage when the first of several explosions rocked the aircraft.  Back at the camp, Card used the  barracks tent as a makeshift emer-
gency room. "I assigned a person  from camp to each one of the victims  , to sit with them," said Card.  "They kept an eye on them and let  me know what was going on, and I
could move from one to another."  "Petty Officer Card was evaluating injuries, trying to figure out who  was the most serious and get them  stabilized," said one survivor. "He
would hover around one person, find  out the extent of his injuries - do  the minimum he needed to, then  move on to the next person. The guy  was just superb. He was like the
calm in the eye of the storm."
 
  While Card was administering  emergency care, a medical evacuation flight with a surgeon and other  corpsmen had been launched from  McMurdo Station. Constant radio 
contact was kept during the operation between Card and McMurdo  medical personnel.


   Because of bad weather, it was approximately eight hours before the  rescue flight arrived. Two VXE 6 personnel had been  killed instantly in the crash. Nine injured personnel were returned to  McMurdo for evaluation. Four survivors were sent to New Zealand for  further treatment.
  

  "This was a situation that would  have tasked a hospital emergency  room," said Lt. David S. Kermode, a  Navy doctor who cared for the survivors in McMurdo. "Card had nine
cases - four of them serious. One  would have died without him. He  really kept his wits about him."
  

"The job was incredible," said  Robert Johnson, a corpsman who  was on the medevac flight. "We got there to find a really professional  set-up. He is definitely a hero."
  

  "I don't know if 'hero' can be  used," said Card. "Everyone had a  part in this - I can't say enough for  the help given by the doctors and  everyone involved. I've never seen a
group mesh and work together as we  did here at the McMurdo dispensary.
I won't deny we all did a heck of a good job, but we're not heroes." "All I can say is, that if I had been in that situation," said Johnson, "I  hope that I would have acted like  Barney Card.
 
                                           Story by J02 David Melancon 
                                                    Published  1988