“During the time I was still on patrol they came and got me one night and I went with a Force Recon team because their corpsman had gotten killed. Those Force Recon guys were tough! My buddy and I both volunteered to go but they took me because he was the senior corpsman. I was a 3rd class petty officer and he was a 2nd, so I guess they figured I was expendable,” chuckled Larry. “The Amtrac is a vehicle that can go in the water, it’s like an armored tank and when you’re in it you’re well protected, but once you get out you were a-foot. I went out there with a Marine Lieutenant and five Marines to get their point man, they didn’t know if he was dead or alive. The Amtrac has a red light in it, that’s one thing that stuck in my mind for some reason, and it’s almost like a tank. There was a bench in the middle and I put Ford, the point man there. He had gotten shot through the head and the side of his head was pretty much gone. I put battle dressing on his wounds but there was nothing I could do for him, he was already dead when we got there. I had him covered up so the Marines couldn’t see him and they were saying, ‘Doc, is he going to be alright is Ford going to be alright?’ and I just said, ‘we’ll see,’ I didn’t want to aggravate the situation. I couldn’t save him because he had been hit so bad. We got back to our post where we slept in half shelters; we put two of them together and they make a tent, a small one. I had to put Ford next to me in my half shelter, in a body bag that night, that memory kind of sticks. He was Lance Corporal Victor J. Ford, I know where his name is on the Vietnam Memorial wall. That was the scariest operation I was on as there were only six of us, seven counting the Lieutenant. It was scary because other than the guy running the Amtrac we were just out there in the middle of the night.”
“The other thing that bothered me was the kids. I had a young girl the Viet Cong had beaten. They flew her in on a chopper to the med-battalion at Chu Lai. We didn’t have any nurses there, just doctors, surgeons and corpsmen, at least at that med-battalion. I know a lot of them came in later like at Da Nang and the hospitals but out in the field we didn’t have them. The corpsmen were pretty much the nurses or medics and we did pretty much everything an RN would do. We went down with the ambulance to meet the chopper and pick up the wounded and that little girl was pretty much dead. That little girl, even though I’d been there seven months, that really bothered me. The Viet Cong thought her father was a sympathizer with the US forces so they beat her to death. When we brought her up to the med-battalion there was nothing we could do, I tried to perform CPR on her, but she was gone. The doctor looked at me and said, ‘Doc, go to your quarters and take a break,’ because he could tell the effect it had on me, even though I’d been there, seasoned you might say. Stuff like that sticks in your mind forever, you never forget that. At the med-battalion we’d get guys in with legs gone, arms gone, sometimes unrecognizable. It was a very traumatic experience in my life and I think it’s affected me a lot,” he confessed.