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- <text id=89TT1981>
- <title>
- July 31, 1989: Brace! Brace! Brace!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 31, 1989 Doctors And Patients
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 12
- Brace! Brace! Brace!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Thanks to a heroic pilot, 186 survive the tenth worst U.S. air
- crash
- </p>
- <p>By Ed Magnuson
- </p>
- <p> What if a less skilled captain had been at the controls of
- that jumbo jet, struggling under emergency conditions that no
- pilot had ever faced? Or if an off-duty airline pilot, who
- happened to be on board, had not rushed to the cockpit to assist
- him? Or if the 181-ft.-long aircraft had ripped apart in even
- a slightly different way? Or if that Sioux City cornfield had
- been drought baked and hard instead of rain soaked and soft?
- </p>
- <p> It took a unique combination of fate and circumstance last
- week to produce a near miracle of survival in the midst of a
- horrible tragedy. When a stricken United Airlines DC-10 failed
- by seconds to achieve a level emergency landing and plowed into
- the earth only yards short of a runway at Sioux Gateway Airport,
- 110 passengers and crew members died, the tenth highest airplane
- toll in U.S. history. But, astonishingly, 186 lived through the
- crash and its fiery aftermath. Some even walked away. Never
- before had selecting a seat been such a fateful decision. Almost
- every passenger in the plane's 32-seat first-class compartment
- was killed. Virtually all the 117 travelers in an economy-class
- section behind them survived.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing seemed amiss when Captain Alfred Haynes, 59, a
- 33-year United Airlines veteran, lifted the three-engine DC-10
- into sunny skies over Denver for a two-hour flight to Chicago.
- The airliner, configured to hold 287 passengers, had only five
- vacant seats. Since United had designated July as "picnic
- month," the eight flight attendants served mini-baskets of
- chicken sticks, crackers and cheese.
- </p>
- <p> But at 3:16 p.m. (central daylight time), as the DC-10
- cruised at 33,000 ft. above the tiny town of Alta, Iowa (pop.
- 1,720), it was jolted. Passengers heard an explosion at the
- plane's rear, then felt the huge craft shake and pitch downward.
- In Row 11 of the economy section in front of the wings, Lori
- Michaelson was traveling with her husband and three children.
- "I could see the stewardesses looked kind of panicky," she
- recalled later. That was understandable. One of them had been
- knocked to the floor.
- </p>
- <p> Then came a calming voice from the flight deck. "We have
- lost the No. 2 engine," it announced. "We will be a little late
- arriving in Chicago." Engine No. 2 sits high on the tail and is
- identical to the two turbofan jets under the wings. Any one of
- the three engines is capable of powering the plane in an
- emergency. As the aircraft seemed to steady, passengers relaxed,
- turning back to their books or drinks.
- </p>
- <p> In the cockpit, however, Haynes was describing a far more
- dangerous situation to regional air-traffic controllers at the
- Minneapolis-St. Paul airport. One minute after the explosion,
- he radioed that his craft had developed "complete hydraulic
- failure." That meant the crew could no longer control the
- rudder, elevators, wing flaps and ailerons that steer the jet.
- Too massive to be manually manipulated, these control surfaces
- are normally powered by fluid pumped by pressure from the jet
- engines through a series of stainless-steel tubes that snake
- throughout the aircraft. Since each of the plane's three
- redundant hydraulic systems is powered by a separate engine, the
- loss of power from the No. 2 engine should have left two of them
- intact. No complete failure had ever been reported.
- </p>
- <p> Responding to Haynes' distress call, air controllers
- directed the plane to continue eastward for an emergency landing
- at Dubuque, Iowa, 240 miles away. The pilot sensed a momentary
- regaining of some control. But then he lost it again. At 3:20
- he declared that he faced an "emergency" and had to find the
- nearest landing spot. Controllers suggested he turn back to the
- west to reach Sioux City, a Missouri River town where one of the
- airport's runways is 9,000 ft. long. That could easily handle
- a DC-10. But Sioux City was 70 miles away.
- </p>
- <p> Back in the passenger areas, the mood remained relaxed.
- Some travelers noticed the wide turn to the southwest and heard
- the thrust in the two wing engines change, alternately
- increasing and decreasing. Haynes was apparently relying on a
- technique that pilots call "porpoising," adjusting the thrust
- of his two remaining engines in a desperate effort to control
- the plane. Passenger Kathleen Batson joked that the engine
- problem would get them priority-landing rights in Chicago. "We
- won't be circling O'Hare," she quipped.
- </p>
- <p> But far below, near Alta, 60 miles from Sioux City, workers
- in a seed-corn company's research field returned from a lunch
- break to a startling discovery. In the midst of the corn stood
- a cone-shaped piece of wreckage, 12 ft. long and 8 ft. high. On
- one scrap, an inscription clearly read ENG. 2. Some five miles
- away, other pieces, including sections of the multiple blades
- of a turbofan engine, were found.
- </p>
- <p> Something unprecedented had happened. Not only had the
- plane's tail engine lost its cone, but its fan had literally
- shattered. The disintegrating engine somehow flung shrapnel-like
- chunks of hot metal past the chamber designed to contain any
- such breakup. The pieces apparently ripped into all three
- hydraulic lines that converge at the tail, killing or at least
- vastly reducing hydraulic pressure.
- </p>
- <p> As the aircraft rolled drunkenly from side to side,
- off-duty United Captain Dennis Fitch rushed to the cockpit to
- help Haynes and First Officer William Records, getting down on
- his knees to gingerly manipulate the throttles. Second Officer
- Dudley Dvorak walked to the back of the plane, trying to assess
- the damage. Haynes told controllers he could only make wide
- turns to the right and was worried about whether he could reach
- the airport. Alerted to the emergency, the tower at Sioux City
- informed local police and rescue units to prepare for either a
- crash landing on the runway or one on nearby Highway 20.
- </p>
- <p> Rescue agencies in Sioux City and surrounding Woodbury
- County had run through a drill two years ago in which a large
- plane was assumed to have crashed at the airport and 150
- survivors needed immediate help. Even before Flight 232 was in
- sight, Dr. David Greco, heading the medical disaster teams, was
- hovering in a helicopter. A dozen ambulances and four other
- choppers were ready to speed survivors to the two local
- hospitals, and police, fire and National Guard units were
- rushing to assist.
- </p>
- <p> By then Haynes had managed to guide his disabled craft
- toward Sioux City in a wide descending spiral of right turns.
- "We're going to make an emergency landing in Sioux City," he
- warned passengers over the intercom. "It's going to be rough."
- He paused. "As a matter of fact, it's going to be more than
- rough."
- </p>
- <p> While passengers studied emergency landing cards, flight
- attendants demonstrated the emergency "brace" position: heads
- down, hands grasping ankles. Some passengers sought diversion
- from the gathering tension. Steve Willuweit, 46, seated in Row
- 16, went back to reading an Arthur C. Clarke science-fiction
- novel: "I didn't want to think about anything except getting up
- and walking off the plane." Lori Michaelson was instructed to
- place her year-old baby Sabrina on the floor near her seat.
- </p>
- <p> Haynes radioed the tower that he thought he could reach the
- airport. But he was unable to line up the plane for a landing
- on Runway 31 (on a northwest bearing of 310 degrees), where most
- of the emergency crews were waiting. He told the tower that he
- would aim instead for Runway 22 (southwest at 220 degrees),
- which was 6,880 ft. long -- just enough to handle a DC-10 under
- normal circumstances. When the jet appeared headed toward Runway
- 22 on a surprisingly level and steady approach, anxious ground
- observers were elated. Haynes radioed the tower, "I think I'm
- going to make it."
- </p>
- <p> At 3:53 p.m. the voice on the intercom shouted, "Brace!
- Brace! Brace!" Four minutes later, some ten seconds short of the
- runway, the DC-10's right wing dipped, slicing into the dirt to
- the left of the asphalt. The plane plowed into the ground and
- flipped over twice before finally landing on its back. In a
- cloud of dirt, smoke and flying metal, the plane broke into ever
- smaller pieces as parts of its fuselage hurtled across the
- runway and into a cornfield.
- </p>
- <p> Only three sections came to rest intact enough to be
- recognizable: the nose and flight deck; a passenger area,
- containing Rows 9 to 19, that had been attached to the now
- severed wings; the tail, including a few rear seats. As rescue
- crews swung into action, they were startled by the sight of
- passengers emerging from the smoking rubble and walking away
- from the wreck into the field of 7-ft.-tall corn.
- </p>
- <p> The survivors could scarcely contain their stunned
- amazement at being alive. "The plane bounced twice, flipped into
- the air, and we wound up sitting there upside down as the cabin
- began to fill with smoke," recalled Cliff Marshall, of
- Ostrander, Ohio. "God opened a hole, and I pushed a little girl
- out." Sister Viannea, a Felician nun, said the crash "was like
- a cyclone. Everything was flying all over the plane. I could
- feel people walking over me to get out. Finally, three men
- dragged me out."
- </p>
- <p> The smoke and fire were heavy at one end of this
- upside-down cabin section, but the breakup opened a wide escape
- avenue at the other end. "I looked for where the emergency exit
- used to be," said David Landsberger, a New Jersey businessman
- who had been in Seat 13B. "But it wasn't there. Then I looked
- toward the front of the plane, and I saw daylight. Then I saw
- green stuff beyond the mud, and when I got out I found myself
- in a cornfield."
- </p>
- <p> Two rows ahead of Landsberger, Mark Michaelson and his wife
- Lori unbuckled their seat belts and dropped to what is normally
- the ceiling of the DC-10. Separately, they hustled two of their
- three children out of the wreckage. But each thought the other
- had baby Sabrina. The father ran back to the fuselage. "I could
- hear her crying, but I couldn't see her." There was too much
- smoke, then flames. But passenger Jerry Schemmel had heard the
- cries first. He plunged into the fiery fuselage, found the baby
- in an upside-down overhead bin, ran into the cornfield and
- thrust the infant into a woman's arms. That is where the
- overjoyed Michaelsons found their daughter.
- </p>
- <p> Rescuers marveled at finding two rows of three seats each
- that had been flung from the aircraft. A woman in the middle of
- one row was barely bruised. Her husband, seated beside her, and
- two passengers in the row behind her were dead. Along with most
- passengers in the rows near the wing, a handful of those at the
- rear were also alive. The three-man cockpit crew had to be cut
- free of the tangled and wrecked flight deck, but all survived.
- Of the eight attendants, only one died.
- </p>
- <p> Safety experts attributed the high survival rate most of
- all to the heroics of Captain Haynes in leveling off the DC-10
- until the final seconds. "He belongs in the pilots' hall of
- fame," declared Joe Sullivan, a retired flight engineer for
- American Airlines. The landing gear, dropped by gravity because
- of the hydraulics failure, helped support the part of the cabin
- where most survivors had been seated. The dampness of the
- cornfield from recent rains cushioned the crash impact.
- Fire-resistant seat upholstery installed at the insistence of
- the National Transportation Safety Board was also credited. So
- too were the rescue and medical efforts of the Sioux City area.
- So many doctors responded that there were two on hand for each
- hospitalized passenger. Local volunteers lined up for more than
- a block to donate 300 pints of blood, far more than was needed.
- </p>
- <p> It will be months before the NTSB reports on the cause of
- the crash. Two questions undoubtedly will be deeply probed. Why
- did the turbofan engine, built by General Electric and used on
- DC-10s, break up in flight? Were all three hydraulic systems
- knocked out, and if so, can they be better protected?
- </p>
- <p> During the 1970s, DC-10s were involved in two major crashes
- in which the hydraulic lines were implicated. The world's worst
- single-plane accident occurred in 1974, when a Turkish Airlines
- DC-10 lost an improperly secured cargo door as the plane left
- Paris. The resulting pressure change buckled the cabin floor
- and broke the hydraulic tubes passing under it. All 346
- occupants died. In a 1979 crash in Chicago, 279 were killed
- after an improperly installed wing engine on an American
- Airlines DC-10 tore away on takeoff, ripping hydraulic lines and
- causing the pilot to lose control.
- </p>
- <p> For the past ten years, the DC-10 has had a safety record
- that compares favorably with those of other wide-bodied jets.
- That is cold comfort to the families of the 110 passengers and
- crew who did not share in the miracle in that Iowa cornfield.
- </p>
- <p>--Lee Griggs/Chicago and Elizabeth Taylor/Sioux City
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-