STANLEY J YUREWICZ
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HONORED ON PANEL 31E, LINE 20 OF THE WALL

STANLEY JOSEPH YUREWICZ

WALL NAME

STANLEY J YUREWICZ

PANEL / LINE

31E/20

DATE OF BIRTH

03/22/1945

CASUALTY PROVINCE

BINH DINH

DATE OF CASUALTY

11/30/1967

HOME OF RECORD

FRAMINGHAM

COUNTY OF RECORD

Middlesex County

STATE

MA

BRANCH OF SERVICE

AIR FORCE

RANK

SGT

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR STANLEY JOSEPH YUREWICZ
POSTED ON 3.9.2024
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you......

Remember to save for them a place inside of you, and save one backward glance when you are leaving, for the places they can no longer go...
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POSTED ON 3.15.2023
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear Sgt Stanley Yurewicz, Thank you for your service with the 483rd C.A. Maintenance Squadron. Your 78th birthday is in 7 days, happy birthday. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. It is Lent. Time passes quickly. Please watch over America, it stills needs your strength, courage, guidance, and faithfulness, especially now. Rest in peace with the angels.
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POSTED ON 3.16.2021
POSTED BY: ANON

Never forgotten

SGT Stanley Joseph Yurewicz is buried in St. Stephen Section, Row 2, Lot 17 Yurewicz of the St. Stephens Cemetery in Framingham, MA.

Your sacrifice is not forgotten.

HOOAH
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POSTED ON 11.7.2017
POSTED BY: Michael Terry Blake

We served together

Stanley and I were stationed together at Keesler AFB from 1964 to 1965.
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POSTED ON 3.12.2016

Final Mission of SSGT Stanley J. Yurewicz

On November 30, 1967, a U.S. Air Force C-7B (#62-4175) from the 458th Tactical Airlift Squadron (TAS), 483rd Tactical Airlift Wing (TAW) at Cam Ranh Air Base, hit a mountain about 5 miles south of Qui Nhon after a bad weather missed approach. On the initial approach to Qui Nhon, the pilot was advised that the weather at the airfield had fallen below safety minimal. He replied that he would to proceed to Nha Trang where the weather conditions were better. Enroute to Nha Trang the aircraft hit a mountain at 1,850 feet. The presence of low clouds and rain had reduced visibility to about two miles. It took search and rescue teams five days to locate the crash site in the dense jungle. Twenty-six people were killed in the crash. The four lost crewmen included MAJ Thomas D. Moore Jr., MAJ William J. Clark III, SSGT Arturo Delgado-Marin, and SSGT Stanley J. Yurewicz. Two Air Force passengers and 18 U.S. Army personnel, including two U.S. civilians, were also killed in the accident. Five of passengers were medical personnel. They had been temporarily assigned to a Pleiku hospital and were returning to Qui Nhon. They included CAPT Eleanor G. Alexander, 1LT Jerome E. Olmsted, 1LT Hedwig D. Orlowski, 1LT Kenneth R. Shoemaker, and SP5 Phillip A. Ogas. Other lost personnel included SSGT Edward O. Bilsie, SP4 Bobby G. Brown, A1C Daryl L. Davis, PFC William R. Godwin, SGT William E. Groves, SGT Whyley E. Josh, SFC Bobby D. Likens, 1LT Norman F. Loeffler Jr., SSGT Jose L. Miranda-Ortiz, SSGT Clarence L. Palmer, CPL Jack Rogers, SP4 Lawrence D. Snyder, SGT Teddy Waxman, PFC Libert J. Weldon Jr., and PFC Edward J. Williamson. [Taken from forest-lawn.com, coffeltdatabase.org, and findagrave.com]
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