yenne, Laval, Le Mans, Reims, and Chlons. They did not         stop until they hurtled against the strong German defenses at         Nancy and Metz in November. In December his forces played         a strategic role in defending Bastogne in the massive Battle of         the Bulge. By the end of January 1945 Patton's forces had         reached the German frontier; on March 1 they took Trier, and         in the next 10 days they cleared the entire region north of the         Moselle River, trapping thousands of Germans. They then         joined the 7th Army in sweeping the Saar and the Palatinate,         taking 100,000 prisoners. Patton's military achievements         caused authorities to overlook strong civilian criticism of some         of his methods, including his widely reported striking of a         hospitalized, shell-shocked soldier in August 1943. (Patton         publicly apologized for the incident.) His public criticisms of         the Allied postwar denazification policy in Germany led to his         removal from the command of the 3rd Army in October 1945.         The controversial general died in a Heidelberg hospital after         an automobile accident near Mannheim. ...