Page- Two tHE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, August 13, 1977 Slovik's widow loses case WAyIHINCTON /V - Army ecretary Clifford Alexander today upheld the World War It conviction and execution of Pvt. Caddie Slovik, the only Ameri- an scldier put to death for de- sertion since the Civil War. Alexander's ruling prevents 3lovik's crippled and destitute rvdosz 62-year-old Mrs. An- lcine'te Slovik, from collecting en e't:imated $70,000, including interest, on her husband's war- lime government life insurance 7ollcy "THIS IS TERRTRLE, just terrible," she said, dabbing tears from her eyes. Hew attorney, Bernard Edel- tin, said he would advise her to make a personal appeal to President Carter to reverse the Ar my's decision. The Army announcement said that 'the record clearly reflects that Private Slovik deserted to avoid combat duty" and that the l.w "precludes payment in the case of individuals who are conv-ted of desertion." IN A BRIEF statement, the Am ' said that Alexander had t'tfirted the recommendations of an all-civilian review board, "A'hough the report of the board expressed sympathy and compassion for Mrs. Slovik," the statement said, "it found no Lasis for changing Private Slo- v-k's military records." Therefore, the statement said, the board unanimously recommended rejection of Mrs. Slovik's bid. She learned of the Army's decision an hour before the of- f.cial announcement. ROGERT DE FINIS of Lans- dale, Pa., a friend of Mrs. Slo- v;k, told a reporter the Army hod notified them at a Wash- ington hotel that "we lost" and that -'nothing will be done" to g've Mrs. Slovik the benefits she his been denied for over 32 years because her husband was found guilty of desertion. "They feel the trial was fair and that the law is very clear that Mrs. Slovik is not entitled to anything," De Finis said. Mrs. Slovik was notified an hour before the Army planned to make an official announce- ment of the decision of an all- c-vili-n review board and Alex- ander's action following that decision. MRS SLOVIK sat in a Wash- ington hotel room dabbing tears from her eyes after learning of ;he decision. The embittered widow said, "This is terrible, just terrible. I feel badly enough to die right now." Wi'h the wife of her attorney holding her hand, the gray- I-irea Mrs. Slovik sat in a wheel chair and poured out her grief. "Ttey (the Army) refused to admic error when Eisenhower was in there because they didn't want to embarrass him." "But Eisenhower now is gone - and so is Nixon," she said. HE WAS SHOT as a deter- rent. Why was nobody notified - net even me - until nine years later?" she said. As reporters stood in the room, she thanked them for ex- p'essing concern and told them to "splash it all over. Let the people know what kind of Army we've got." De Finis said the five-man. board was "unanimous against us.' Alexander could have over- ruled the board but he appar- ently agreed with its decision. SEMI-ANNUAL TECH NICAL BOOK SALE Art, psychology, mathematics, chemistry, automobiles, religion, music and finance, to name a few of the many, many cate- gories. See them all at savings in Hudson's Books. 2. POETRY PACKAGE: 5different hard cover 1st editions. Genuine collector's items. Eagh package values at $30 or more. Se 99* 3. CONTEMPORARY CHORAL YEARBOOK OF FAITH, JOY AND BROTHERHOOD. I'd Uke To Teach the World To Sing, I's A Small World, Give Me Love, etc. Pub. at 4.50...-............ 99' 10. READINGS IN PSYCHOLO- GY. 56 thought provoking articles on learning, parapsychology, hypnosis, depression, heredity and more. Pub. at 5.50, Sale 99 19. INTRODUCTION TO PSY- CHOLOGY, by Haber. Massive, 850 page encyclopedic work Behavior, cognition, learning, memory, motivation, personality, maladjustment, therapy, etc. Pro- fusely ilus. 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Snipers kill 1 trooper, wound 3 in N. Ireland. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (A') - Irish Republican Army (IRA) guerrillas killed a British marine and wounded three other soldiers yesterday. The outbreak appeared to be a bid to restore IRA credibility after its failure to carry out a threat to disrupt Queen Elizabeth It's visit. A military spokesman report- ed gun battles between troops and snipers crackled around the Belfast's Turf Lodge district, a stronghold of the IRA's Provi- sional Wing. THE VIOLENCE was trigger- ed by a guerrilla bomb attack on an Army foot patrol in which two troopers were wounded. As troops flooded into the area, snipers opened up. They fatally wounded the marine and hit another trooper in the chest. Gunfire was heard in the Ro- msa Catholic area for some time. Turf Lodge has been the scene of much of the violence totched off by the monarch's visit this week. The queen sailed Thursday night from Northern Ireland in the royal yacht Bri- tannia for a vacation cruise off western Scotland. The ambush came on the eighth anniversary of the erup- tion of sectarian strife between militant Protestants and Roman Catholics in Northern Ireland. Since then at least 1,774 persons have died in the fighting. THE FAILURE of the outlaw- ed IRA's Provisional wing to unleash its threatened "blit to fenheber" while the queen was here badly damaged the guerrillas' credibility as a fight- ing force among its Catholic sup- porters. TI also boosted alaims by Bri- tish authorities in recent weeks that troops and police are beat- ing the marIy Catholic guerril- las fighting to end British rule and Protestant domination of Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland has been torn by sectarian feuding since Attgust, 1969. The IRA seeks to unite the province with the neighboring Insh Republic, which is over- whelmingly Catholic. They con- sidered the queen's visit as rein- forcing British sovereignty in the province. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 65-s Saturday, August 13, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April 2 semes- ters; $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning, Subscription rates: $6.50 in An Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. BACK-TO-SCHOOL SAVINGS ON HANDY REFERENCE BOOKS 200. Webster's Dictionary, sale 12.99 201. Roget's Thesaurus, sale 4.99 202. Complete Sherlock Holmes, sale 4.99 203. Library of World Poetry, sale 4.99 204. World of Great Stories, sale 4.99 205. Gray's Anatomy, sale 7.99 206. Merriam Webster Elementary Dictionary, sale 2.49 207. 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