Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Eddie Slovik" ¶ 27
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Slovik and also
In 1974, the book was adapted for a TV movie starring Martin Sheen and also called The Execution of Private Slovik.
The British rock band IQ also mentioned Slovik in their song " For the Taking ".
Cota also reviewed and approved the death sentence handed down by a court martial on Eddie Slovik.

Slovik and novel
In 1974, he appeared in the television miniseries The Execution of Private Slovik ( 1974 ), based on a novel of William Bradford Huie, directed by Lamont Johnson and starring Martin Sheen.

Slovik and War
* 1945 – US Army private Eddie Slovik is executed for desertion, the first such execution of an American soldier since the Civil War.
* January 31 – Eddie Slovik is executed by firing squad for desertion, the first American soldier since the American Civil War, and last to date to be executed for this offense.
Edward Donald Slovik ( February 18, 1920 – January 31, 1945 ) was a private in the United States Army during World War II and the only American soldier to be court-martialled and executed for desertion since the American Civil War.
Slovik's case was taken up in 1981 by former Macomb County Commissioner Bernard V. Calka, a Polish-American World War II veteran, who continued to petition the Army to return Slovik ’ s remains.
During World War II in all theaters of the war, the United States military executed 102 soldiers for rape and / or murder of civilians, but only Slovik was executed for the military offense of desertion.
Eddie Slovik, the only American soldier to be executed for desertion since the American Civil War.
It contains the graves of 6, 012 American soldiers who died while fighting in this vicinity during World War I including the poet, Joyce Kilmer and, until 1987, Eddie Slovik, a deserter and the first American soldier to be executed for desertion since the American Civil War.
Private Eddie Slovik, the only American soldier executed for desertion during World War II, was buried there until 1987.
The second repatriation occurred much later and concerned the remains of Private Eddie Slovik, the only US serviceman executed for desertion in World War II and the only man buried in Plot E who was not convicted of rape or murder.
Following her death in 1981, World War II veteran Bernard V. Calka took up Slovik's case, but Slovik remained buried in Grave # 65 of Plot E until 1987, when the Army finally granted permission for his remains to be exhumed and repatriated to the United States for honorable burial next to his wife.
* In 1993, United States novelist Kurt Vonnegut reworked the libretto into a tale about World War II Private Eddie Slovik, the first soldier in the United States military to be executed for desertion since the Civil War.
The book and the film tell the story of Private Eddie Slovik, the only American soldier to be executed for desertion since the American Civil War.
Huie's book The Execution of Private Slovik related the true story of World War II G. I.
Eddie Slovik, the only soldier since the American Civil War to be executed for desertion, a fate kept so quiet by the government that even Slovik's widow did not know how that her husband had died.

Slovik and which
This was the point at which Slovik later stated he found he " wasn't cut out for combat.
Slovik walked several miles to the rear and approached an enlisted cook at a headquarters detachment, presenting him with a note which stated:
The cook summoned his company commander and an MP, who read the note and urged Slovik to destroy it before he was taken into custody, which Slovik refused.
Slovik, convinced that he would face only jail time, with which he had experience and found preferable to combat, declined these offers, saying, " I've made up my mind.
The sentence came as a shock to Slovik, who had expected a dishonorable discharge and a jail term ( the latter of which he assumed would be commuted once the war was over ), the same punishment he had seen meted out to other deserters from the division while he was confined to the stockade.
The military service record of Eddie Slovik, which is now a public archival record available from the Military Personnel Records Center, provides a detailed account of the actual execution of Slovik which took place in 1945 and it was upon this that most of the film The Execution of Private Slovik was based.
The film starred Martin Sheen as Private Slovik, a performance for which he received an Emmy Award nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Drama.

Slovik and Private
* The Execution of Private Slovik ( 1974 )
Private Edward Donald Slovik — assigned to the 28th Division — chose a court martial rather than fight in the Hürtgen Forest.
While en route to his assigned unit, Slovik and a friend he met during basic training, Private John Tankey, took cover during an artillery attack and became separated from their replacement detachment.
But before the reloading of the rifles was complete, Private Slovik died.
In 1960, Frank Sinatra announced his plan to produce a movie titled The Execution of Private Slovik, to be written by blacklisted Hollywood 10 screenwriter Albert Maltz.
Eddie Slovik in the television film The Execution of Private Slovik.
* March 13 – The Execution of Private Slovik airs on NBC.
Sheen's first movie appearance was at age nine in his father ’ s 1974 film The Execution of Private Slovik.
He appeared in the TV movie The Execution of Private Slovik ( 1974 ), while guest-starring on such television shows as
The Execution of Private Slovik is a nonfiction book by William Bradford Huie, published in 1954, and an American made-for-television movie that aired on NBC on March 13, 1974.
In 1960 Frank Sinatra announced that he would produce a film adaptation of The Execution of Private Slovik, to be written by blacklisted Hollywood 10 screenwriter Albert Maltz.
According to one website, The Execution of Private Slovik was the highest rated made-for-TV special until Roots.
pt: The Execution of Private Slovik

Slovik and is
There is no evidence, for example, that the priest attending Slovik's execution shouted " Give it another volley if you like it so much " after the doctor indicated Slovik was still alive.
The story of ne ’ er-do-well Eddie Slovik is an example of Huie ’ s masterful reporting and his tendency to anger the mighty.

Slovik and one
After Slovik again refused, Henbest ordered Slovik to write another note on the back of the first one stating that he fully understood the legal consequences of deliberately incriminating himself with the note, and that it would be used as evidence against him in a court martial.
He offered to transfer Slovik to a different infantry regiment where no one would know of his past and he could start with a " clean slate ".

0.681 seconds.