Memories of World War II: The event that sent Rod Serling into 'The Twilight Zone'




From today's Maureen Dowd
column
:




Serling also had a devastating
experience while serving in World War II. During a lull at the Battle of Leyte
Gulf in the Pacific, he was standing with his arm around a good friend and they
were having their picture taken. At that moment, an Air Force plane dropped a
box of extra ammunition that landed on Serling's friend and flattened him so
fatally that he couldn't even be seen under the box.



"Many 'Zone'
episodes are about that split-second of fate where somebody arbitrarily gets
spared or, absurdly, does not," Brode said.




Wikipedia reports
that Serling was in the 11th Airborne Division, and that the
incident he witnessed was slightly different, that a private named Melvin Levy
"was in the middle of a comic monologue as the platoon sat resting under
a palm tree when a food crate dropped from above, decapitating him as the men
watched."

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Published on July 06, 2011 03:59
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