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Shareware Supreme Volume 6 #1
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009
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P085.ZIP
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1989-11-11
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POWERS, LOWELL STEPHEN
Name: Lowell Stephen Powers
Rank/Branch: W1/US Army
Unit: Company A, 159th Aviation Battalion, 101st Airborne Division
Date of Birth: 25 September 1946 (Oakland CA)
Home City of Record: Scottsdale AZ
Date of Loss: 02 April 1969
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 162903N 1064717E (XD908232)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 4
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: CH47
Other Personnel In Incident: (none missing)
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: At 1240 hours on April 2, 1969, WO1 Lowell Powers was the pilot of a
CH47 helicopter (serial #67-18523). He landed at an LZ in Quang Tri Province,
South Vietnam, near Khe Sanh, where about 73 members of the ARVN 9th Popular
Forces Company were loaded onto his aircraft.
Powers left the LZ, the aircraft lost power, settled to earth, but touched down
on the side of a ravine and then rolled down to the bottom of the ravine,
coming to rest on its left side. Upon landing, Maj. Butler, the aircraft
commander, asked WO1 Powers if he was all right, and received a positive
response. Maj. Butler later reported that WO Powers released his harness and
called back through the companionway to the passenger compartment. Maj. Butler
left the aircraft through the left window, but never saw WO1 Powers again.
A short time later, the aircraft began to explode. The area was reached quickly
by a Republic of Vietnam Popular Forces and their American/Australian advisors
from Advisory Team 19. A series of searches was undertaken in the immediate
area for any survivors. Later, it was determined that WO1 Powers was missing.
Search efforts were made for him. The other members of the flight crew were
able to reach safety.
The result of the crash was one American missing in action, 23 ARVN killed in
action, and 50 ARVN wounded. That night, the area was secured by an ARVN
company, and the next morning an ARVN and 3rd Marine Division Graves
Registration team started the recovery of the remains.
The ARVN team recovered what was thought to be 17 bodies, and the Marine team
recovered 3 bodies. At Quang Tri on April 4, it was found that the ARVN had
taken what they recovered and divided it into 21 caskets, which were turned
over to the next of kin. The ARVN believed that Americans could keep one of the
bodies they had recovered and turn the other 2 over to the ARVN. The ARVN would
then have accounted for all their known losses.
It was later determined that all 3 of the remains recovered by the Marines were
Vietnamese. Efforts were made by the U.S. Army mortuary officer to exhume the
ARVN remains to determine if WO1 Powers was among those remains turned over to
the Vietnamese next of kin, but his efforts were unsuccessful because of
Vietnamese religious restraints.
Although most observers believe that WO1 Powers died in the explosion of the
aircraft following its crippled landing, no one saw him die, and no one saw his
body. Iris Powers, Lowell's mother, haunted by an ever-increasing flow of
reports that Americans were still in captivity after the war was over, never
gave up hope that her son could be alive, or if dead, that she would finally
know for sure. For years, she actively sought information on him and the nearly
3000 others missing in Southeast Asia. Most of those 3000 men are still
unaccounted for, and the reports continue to flow in. It's time our men came
home.