keady - speaking of  daring aviation pursuits during wartime, none i think will 
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Homesick Angel: Last Flight From Da Nang
World Airways CEO Ed Daly defied U.S. authorities and led a daring mission to 
rescue women and children as the South Vietnamese army collapsed in 1975by 
Larry Engelmann8/17/2021A Vietnamese orphan is carried off a flight from World 
Airways, April 1975. (Ted Streshinsky/Corbis/ Getty Images)Share This Article   
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World Airways CEO Ed Daly defied U.S. authorities and led a daring mission to 
rescue women and children as the South Vietnamese army collapsed in 1975.

A tsunami of more than a million refugees swept over the coastal city of Da 
Nang in early March 1975, desperately fleeing the rapidly advancing North 
Vietnamese Army as South Vietnam’s crumbling armed forces fell back. With chaos 
looming, the U.S. Embassy stepped in to coordinate the evacuation, asking 
civilian-owned airlines to join an around-the-clock ferrying operation to move 
refugees to Saigon, about 500 miles away. American civilians, consulate staff, 
contractors, businessmen and their families and employees of civilian airlines 
were the first priority.

Edward J. Daly, the owner and CEO of World Airways, Inc., put the company’s 
three Boeing 727-100s at the government’s disposal. Aboard World’s first rescue 
flight to Da Nang on the morning of March 26, Daly, accompanied by two U.S. 
Embassy security guards, found the situation nearly out of control. As the 
plane dropped its rear air stair and security guards went down to supervise an 
orderly boarding, people rushed and quickly filled the aircraft. When hundreds 
more pushed to get aboard, the guards used mace to turn them back. Though 
dangerously overcrowded beyond its 131-passenger capacity, the 727 made it back 
to Saigon. Later flights that day experienced little disorder or panic.

Again the next morning, Daly flew on World’s first flight, and again it was 
mobbed. But the flights continued. After two days, World Airways had evacuated 
nearly 2,000 civilians from Da Nang. Hundreds of thousands still awaited rescue.

On March 28, citing the increasing danger, the embassy suspended flights in 
favor of an international seaborne rescue operation. Daly objected. He met with 
South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu, who convinced him that the South 
Vietnamese forces at Da Nang would fight to the last if they were certain their 
families and relatives were safe. Daly appealed to the embassy to reinstate the 
air rescue but was turned down.

Daly decided to continue the flights without embassy authorization. He gathered 
his flight crews and staff at Saigon’s Caravelle Hotel that night, telling them 
all three 727s were going to Da Nang the next morning. Daly intended this 
flight for women and children only, leaving the South Vietnamese Army of the 
Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) to fight against the enemy. Once the flight 
succeeded, Daly assured his people, the embassy would send other aircraft to 
help.

The often-flamboyant Daly wanted his heroic efforts to be publicized, so he 
invited the press along, including Tom Aspell of Visnews, Paul Vogle of UPI and 
a film crew headed by Bruce Dunning and Mike Marriott from CBS. The crew 
included pilot Ken Healy, co-pilot Glen Flansaas and flight engineer Charles 
Stewart. Three flight attendants were on board: Jan Wollett, Valerie 
Witherspoon and, on her first flight for World, 21-year-old Atsako Okuba.

As Healy guided the aircraft to the end of the runway in Saigon, an air traffic 
controller ordered the pilot to stop and return to the hangar. But Daly told 
his pilot to “experience radio failure,” and Healy sped past the main terminal 
and lifted off.

After 50 minutes, the 727 approached Da Nang and made its descent. Two Air 
America helicopters were flying low searching for stranded Western diplomats 
who had radioed for help. Both chopper pilots knew that the situation at the 
airport was completely out of hand. One of them, Marius Burke, saw the 727 
descending and radioed to warn it away, but there was no response.

North Vietnamese troops who occupied part of Da Nang had been firing rockets 
and artillery shells on the airport, and the second chopper pilot, Tony 
Coalson, could see clouds of black smoke rising from burning vehicles and 
buildings. As he flew over the beach near the airport, Coalson thought there 
was a bug on the inside of his windscreen. “I reached out to swat it, but it 
was not a bug; it was an aircraft in the distance,” he said. “My first thought 
was that it was a MiG coming down from Hanoi. But as the spot grew larger I 
could see it was a 727, which was a real surprise, consider ing that Da Nang 
was already lost.”

Like Burke, Coalson radioed the aircraft, warning that the airport was under 
attack and the runways were littered with debris and vehicles damaged by mortar 
and rocket fire. “But they paid no attention to me,” he recalled.

In disbelief, Coalson watched the plane land, turn off the runway and taxi to 
about midfield near the tower. When it proceeded onto the taxiway, it was 
pursued by a mob of soldiers and civilians on foot, in cars and trucks and 
astride motorbikes.

The 727 slowed almost to a stop, and the rear air stair came down. Tom Aspell, 
with a 16mm camera on his shoulder, stepped to the ground, followed by Joe 
Hrezo, one of World’s station managers. Aspell and Hrezo were enveloped by the 
crowd and pulled away from the 727 as it continued to roll down the runway. 
Hundreds of South Vietnamese soldiers— some shooting at the aircraft—surged 
toward the air stair.

Daly’s plan called for Hrezo to get off the aircraft first, go to the control 
tower and have his employees escort passengers, primarily and perhaps 
exclusively women and children, to the plane. He would also take over the air 
traffic control for Healy and the other jets as they landed, loaded and took 
off. The TV crews were to disembark and film the loading. Once Marriott and 
Dunning saw how Hrezo and Aspell were mobbed, however, they decided to film 
from inside the plane.

In the cockpit doorway, senior flight attendant Wollett watched in horror as 
thousands of people, pouring from the hangars and other buildings, chased the 
aircraft. A shiny sports car bounced across the infield, pulled into the path 
of the 727 and stopped. A soldier jumped out, drew a pistol and aimed it 
directly at the cockpit. Nobody said a word as the plane steadily bore down on 
the man and the car. Healy glared into the eyes of the soldier holding the 
pistol. “I wasn’t worried,” he recalled, “because that windshield was 
bulletproof.”

The soldier with the pistol was 19-year-old Tran Dinh Truc, a Vietnamese Air 
Force military policeman from Saigon who had been assigned to the airport’s 
main gate that morning. Left alone there, deserted by his commanding officer 
and fellow MPs, he stopped some friends passing through in a new Ford Mustang 
they were to deliver to the military police’s chief commander. At the wheel was 
19-year-old Nguyen Tuan, who had his 16-year-old girlfriend, Tam, with him. 
Also in the car was a male student Truc knew only as Long. Truc’s friends told 
him that the roads to the port were blocked and the North Vietnamese occupied 
much of Da Nang.

Truc climbed into the car and told Tuan to drive to the Air America terminal. 
When they spotted the World Airways 727, Truc recalled, “We were like drowning 
people suddenly sighting a nearby lifeboat.”

As Tuan raced the Mustang down the runway, Truc could see in the rearview 
mirror thousands of people pursuing the plane while mortar shells were falling 
on the infield. When the aircraft slowed, Truc told Tuan to block the runway. 
“We drove across the infield—swerving to miss people and motorbikes—and pulled 
up onto the runway and used the car as a barricade,” Truc said. “I jumped out 
and raised my pistol and fired several times into the air just above the 
cockpit. I did not intend to harm anyone. I wanted the pilot to stop. I 
remember looking directly into his eyes and also seeing the flight attendant 
standing behind him looking down at me.”

But the plane did not stop. Truc screamed at Tuan to get the car out of the way 
fast. Tires spinning and smoking, the Mustang sped back into the infield. “The 
plane passed us, followed by all of those desperate people,” Truc recalled.

Tuan pulled the Mustang back on the runway, chasing the 727 until it slowed to 
turn onto the taxiway, where he stopped the car and all four passengers jumped 
out and ran to the air stair. “We were in the middle of the mob,” Truc 
remembered. “Sometimes I was carried along and my feet were not even touching 
the ground.” Pushed away from the air stair, he spotted people climbing into an 
open slit in the body of the plane. Thinking it was a “secret entrance” into 
the passenger cabin, Truc pulled himself up inside and helped pull Tuan and Tam 
in after him. “It was pitch black inside,” he remembered, “and there were a 
dozen people in there. They were screaming and crying and feeling around in the 
darkness for the doorway to the main cabin.”

An explosion shook the compartment as a grenade detonated under the plane.

Wollett remembers a rush of hysterical people at the rear air star. “They were 
just wild-eyed. And they were all soldiers,” armed and desperate. As flight 
engineer Stewart and attendant Witherspoon were pulling people through the 
entrance, they kept screaming, “Where are the women and children?”

Wollett saw Daly “at the bottom of the air stair being mauled by soldiers 
trying to get onto the plane. His clothes were in tatters and his trousers had 
been pulled down around his knees. He was waving his pistol in the air with his 
left hand, now and then bringing it down on the heads or arms of men pulling at 
him, and swinging his right hand wildly to knock men off the stairs.”

Marriott, the CBS cameraman, stood just behind Stewart at the top of the 
stairs. “As I was filming, [people] started shooting each other,” he recalls. 
“They were shooting each other in the back to get closer to the aircraft.”

Wollett tried to help Witherspoon pull a woman over the side of the air stair. 
“But the man behind her grabbed her and jerked her out of my arms, and as she 
fell away he stepped on her back and on her head to get up over the railing,” 
Wollett said. “Mr. Daly saw that happen and just as the man swung his leg over 
the railing, Mr. Daly smashed him in the head with his pistol.” Wollett watched 
the man fall off and disappear under the feet of the mob.

In his helicopter above, Burke heard a panicked American voice over the radio. 
It was Hrezo, pleading from the tower for someone to save Aspell and him. Healy 
called back from the 727, “I’ll swing by and pick you up, but I won’t be 
stopping.” The two bolted down the stairs and sprinted to the taxiway as Healy 
rolled toward the tower. Running behind the plane and attempting to jump onto 
it, Hrezo made it aboard, but Aspell lost his grip and fell.

Burke recalled, “About 20 to 30 seconds passed at which time I informed them 
that both runways were now unusable and their only chance was to take off on 
the taxiway from where they were.” Burke asked Healy if he could take off from 
the taxiway. “Hell yes I can,” Healy responded, but he recalled later, “I was 
not at all sure that our airplane was going to fly. I figured if I try to take 
off and fail, I’ll live for approximately 30 seconds longer than if I stay here 
on the ground.”

In the 727, UPI reporter Vogle shouted into his recorder: “The crew is scared. 
The mob is panic-stricken. There’s a man with an M-16 pointed at us, trying to 
get us to stop…. A jeep, a pick-up truck, just crumbled under an engine.” As 
Healy began to pick up speed, Vogle roared, “People are storming aboard, 
shouting, pushing, soldiers, civilians. People are climbing up on the wings 
now…they’re falling off. Soldiers are firing into the air to scare others 
away…women and children are lying on the ground. Some are trying to lie in 
front of the wheels.”

Still on the taxiway, Healy saw a flash of light and heard an explosion under 
his left wing. A grenade had gone off and destroyed the aileron controls on 
that side. Burke watched the aircraft as a half-dozen mortar rounds exploded in 
rapid succession along the infield. “About this time,” he remembers, “I really 
didn’t think they had a chance of getting off the ground.”

Healy knew the taxiway was as long as the runway and there was a chance he 
could gain enough speed to take off. “For a 727 that’s normally plenty of room, 
but we didn’t know that we were grossly overloaded by about 20,000 pounds.” He 
also misjudged the distance between the taxiway and several small 
communications sheds alongside it. His left wing hit one, two, three sheds, 
each exploding as the wing sliced through it. Healy ignored the wildly flashing 
control panel. “I was too busy looking outside trying to miss things,” he said. 
“I was committed to the takeoff. Everything forward!”

As he struggled to point the nose up, Healy discovered something deeply 
disconcerting—when he pulled on the controls, they pulled back. He figured the 
hydraulic system had been damaged and he would probably have to make a water 
landing in Da Nang Bay. Healy was unaware that the wheel wells were filled with 
people, clinging to the cables. It was the pull of those people he was feeling.

Burke and Coalson watched anxiously as the 727 neared the end of the taxiway. 
Burke warned Healy about a 6-foot rock pile just beyond the tarmac. If Healy 
could get over the rocks, he might be able to make a water landing in the bay. 
He knew the taxiway was 20 feet above sea level, and beyond the rock pile it 
was 150 yards to the sea. The plane slowly lifted off and made it just over the 
rock pile. But as it did, Healy felt the stick shake—an indication the plane 
was in a stall. “I held it steady,” he said, “and we dropped a few feet toward 
the water.” But a moment later he was able to tease the nose up a bit and the 
727 started to climb. “All of a sudden there we were,” Healy remembered, 
“coming up out of Da Nang like a homesick angel!”

For a moment Coalson lost sight of the 727 because of the smoke and debris from 
the exploding communications sheds and from artillery rounds that appeared to 
be chasing the 727 down the taxiway. He thought that Healy had hit the rock 
pile. “Then I saw them over Da Nang Bay climbing out with the landing gear down 
and the air stair extended, with several people still clinging to it.” He heard 
Healy call over the radio, “See you in Saigon!’”

As his eyes adjusted to the darkness inside the aircraft, Truc realized he was 
not in an entryway to the main cabin. The space, full of mostly women and 
children, seemed to be a cube of no more than 6 feet on each side. He and the 
others were in the 727 wheel well. As the sound of the engines changed and they 
sensed the acceleration of the aircraft, people were screaming. “I knew that 
when this plane took off and the wheels retracted they would come into this 
space and all of us would be crushed to death,” Truc recalled. He looked down 
through the slit beside the door and saw the tarmac rushing by. He also saw 
men, women and children for a few seconds as they were run over by the 
aircraft’s tires. As the plane lifted off he saw water below.

“The cold wind became very powerful,” he recalled. “I felt that everybody with 
me in the wheel well was so lucky to be leaving on this plane. But our luck did 
not last for long. People tried to grasp the cables and pipes in the wheel well 
in the dark, and children hugged their parents’ legs in the roaring wind. 
Suddenly the bottom of the wheel well opened and people dropped out, like 
little bombs falling from a plane, and disappeared.” When the wheels began to 
retract toward the well, one of the soldiers slipped and got caught in the 
hydraulic mechanism. His body, squeezed tightly around the waist, ended up half 
in the wheel well and half out. Only Truc, Tuan and his girlfriend Tam and a 
soldier remained in the well, unable to communicate, with the roar of the air 
around them.

Truc stood clinging to the cables at the front side of the wheel well next to 
the trapped soldier while Tuan and Tam were perched on the thin lip of the well 
across from him. Truc saw his friends weakening after 30 minutes in the cold 
wind. “Tam looked at me for a long time,” he recalled. “I could see in her eyes 
that she was trying to tell me something….I tried to tell her to hang on, just 
hang on.” Tuan’s back was to Truc as he pressed tightly against Tam to hold her 
to the wall of the wheel well. The wind was slowly sucking Tuan down. Tam 
hooked one arm around the cables and held her other arm around Tuan’s neck. 
“They kept trying to help each other struggle to get a footing in the wind,” 
Truc recalled. Tam whispered something into Tuan’s ear and kissed the side of 
his face. She released her grip from the cable and put her other arm around 
Tuan’s neck, and Tuan let go of the cable. “I closed my eyes, turned my face to 
the wall. It was too painful,” Truc remembered. “I never knew that Tam’s gentle 
glance at me was her way of saying goodbye.”

As Tran Dinh Truc’s grip weakened, he began to pray: “I put all my faith in 
God. May God save me, I prayed.”

Healy cautiously climbed to 10,000 feet over the Gulf of Tonkin. Unable to 
pressurize the main cabin, he could go no higher. He radioed the other two 
World 727s. Pilot Dave Wainio, who had just taken off from Saigon in the third 
727 of Daly’s operation, was ordered to return to Saigon and supervise 
preparations for a crash landing or a water landing in the Saigon River.

The second 727, piloted by Don McDaniel, was nearing Nha Trang, about 300 miles 
south of Da Nang. Healy told him to hold over the city, wait for his damaged 
727 and give him a report on the outside condition of the aircraft. Healy 
needed to know why the wheels would not retract and if the nose wheel was still 
down. McDaniel circled over Nha Trang at 30,000 feet until he finally noticed a 
speck far below and dropped. Peering out a window, Wollett spotted “one of the 
most beautiful things I have ever seen in my life— another World 727 flying 
next to us.”

McDaniel assessed the damaged 727 and gave Healy a running report. The left 
wing was very badly damaged. The nose wheel had retracted, but the hydraulic 
sequencing system for retracting the other wheels had stopped working. McDaniel 
reported the reason: “There is a body hanging out of the wheel well.” He also 
said the cargo hold door was open and the hold was filled with people. The 
plane was leaking fuel badly, and Healy did not know if he could make it all 
the way to Saigon. If he got to Saigon and the nose wheel did not come down, he 
planned to land in the Saigon River.

McDaniel guided Healy by radio as the 727 descended into Saigon airspace. In 
his final communication to Healy, he said that the nose gear had come down. 
Healy was not sure if it or the other wheels would hold, but he decided to try 
to land on the runway.

Truc saw that the floor of the wheel well was starting to close again. But the 
body of the soldier prevented it from closing completely. Truc watched as the 
hydraulic system crushed the man’s chest and blood began pouring from his mouth 
and nose. Staring helplessly down at the man, Truc noticed that the aircraft 
was descending over green land. “I am still alive,” he whispered to himself. 
“Thank you, God!”

Tension in the cabin grew as the aircraft descended. Daly remained in the jump 
seat in the cockpit. “We were coming in much faster than we should have,” 
Wollett said, “because Healy could not adjust the flaps or anything.” Her jump 
seat was directly over the nose gear. “I kept waiting for that nose gear to 
touch down,” she said, “and then all of a sudden I looked at the buildings 
flying by outside and we were running level and I knew that the nose gear was 
down and it was holding.”

Healy said: “We raced along the runway because we could not stop real well. 
Thank God they had a 14,000- foot runway. Wainio had done his job well—there 
were fire trucks racing right along beside us. We stopped and had no visible 
sign of an emergency.”

As the plane rolled to a stop, Truc could hear the sirens of the ambulances and 
fire trucks. He slowly lowered his body past the dead man in the hydraulic 
system and touched the ground and collapsed. “For a moment everything went 
black,” he said. “I was in a dazed state and I heard many voices around me. 
When I opened my eyes, finally, two medics were helping me stand and there were 
many journalists watching me. I was still not sure if I was alive or dead.” 
Getting to his feet, he assured the medics that he was all right and walked 
away from the aircraft, across the taxiway and through the terminal. Outside, 
he hitched a ride into Saigon from a boy on a motorbike.

The flight attendants tried to tally those who had been on the flight. They 
counted 250 in the main cabin, estimated that 80 people had packed themselves 
into the baggage compartment and an additional 24 people had been in the two 
wheel wells (although all but seven had fallen out when the bottom of the wheel 
wells opened after takeoff). There were four men in the cockpit, including 
Daly, three flight attendants, five journalists and Hrezo, for a total of 367 
people on board—nearly three times the capacity. When Healy later gave Boeing 
his estimated weight and number of passengers, a group of engineers assured him 
it was impossible for a 727 so overloaded to take off. He didn’t argue with 
them. He merely replied, “You build one hell of an airplane!”

Back in Da Nang, Burke contacted lost journalist Aspell in the tower of the 
airport. Burke told Aspell to make his way to the end of the runway, where he 
would land and pick him up. Aspell was pursued by half a dozen armed South 
Vietnamese soldiers who insisted on getting on the helicopter with him. Burke 
flew them all to Nha Trang. Aspell’s film of the last flight was lost. Tony 
Coalson landed near the runway and picked up the wife and children of the 
Vietnamese air traffic controller and transported them to Nha Trang.

Marriott’s film with Dunning’s narration was broadcast Easter Sunday on the CBS 
Evening News. “As calm fell on the smug men who had managed to fight off their 
friends and relatives to get on, the hardworking cabin crew took a count,” 
Dunning says. “Among [the people on board were] five women and two or three 
children. The rest were some of the men whom President Thieu said would defend 
Da Nang. They had no apparent feelings about leaving others behind; only 
gratitude that World Airways had saved their lives with a flight that Ed Daly 
intended for refugee women and children.”

On April 2, Healy piloted a DC-8 Daly had transformed into a “flying crib” to 
bring 57 orphans from Saigon to Oakland, Calif. Healy mysteriously experienced 
radio failure again before flying out of Saigon and could not respond to orders 
from the tower, which had turned off the runway lights and ordered him to abort 
his takeoff.

Truc was reunited with his parents in Saigon after the World flight landed. 
When the city fell to the North Vietnamese, he was sent to a reeducation camp 
and then returned to Saigon. Truc left Vietnam in 1982 aboard a refugee-packed 
boat and fell in love with a young fellow refugee. After five days at sea, the 
boat came ashore in Galang, Indonesia, where the couple married before 
eventually settling in Australia.

Daly ordered and supervised the evacuation of orphans from Saigon in April 
1975, subsidizing the mission with some $2 million out of his own pocket. He 
also paid $243,000 in fines to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service 
for bringing his first group of orphans to Oakland. “I’m not a hero,” Daly said 
of his activities in Vietnam in 1975. “I’m a catalyst. None of those 
bureaucratic bums in Saigon or Washington would have gotten off their butts if 
someone hadn’t defied them and gone in after the refugees and orphans.”

 

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