Top 15 V D Day 1945 Quotes
#2. Your life is much more important that you can imagine ... it is your first treasure.
Maya Angelou
#3. I'm so hot that I'm willingly get with myself, I just don't know how. What do you say to do that for me?
Rick Riordan
#4. I guess so," Sophia shrugged, "but he wasn't the only one who learned something on that day. I learned I don't need to break bad men to make a better world. I just need to inspire good ones.
Kipjo Kenyatta Ewers
#5. Until spring training in 1946, the only time I pitched was in 1945 in the GI World Series.
Leon Day
#6. Beyond the ocean and the world and the stars. You're mine beyond that, baby, and I'm yours.
Karina Halle
#7. Lily kept her smile. She knew a little something about loss and what it was all about in the end. She searched for her answers in those items left behind.
Jack Bates
#8. It delights me to find something that kids are doing that surprises me that seems new. That's the best feeling you can have.
John Waters
#9. ...August 6, 1945, the first day of the countdown to what may be the inglorious end of this strange species, which attained the intelligence to discover the effective means to destroy itself, but - so the evidence suggests - not the moral and intellectual capacity to control its worst instincts
Noam Chomsky
#10. The things she truly loved,
& only those things,
were like a beautiful
metronome
of her heart
as was she,
only for them,
the same
rhythm.
Cheri Bauer
#11. Ah! What would the world be to us If the children were no more? We should dread the desert behind us Worse than the dark before.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
#12. I'm not the savior of men's tennis in America. I'm just a kid trying to win a few matches.
Andy Roddick
#13. To reporters the day after his accession to the presidency, April 13, 1945: When they told me yesterday what had happened, I felt like the moon, the stars and all the planets had fallen on me.
Harry S. Truman
#14. The anniversary of Hiroshima, should be a day of somber reflection, not only on the terrible events of that day in 1945, but also on what they revealed: that humans, in their dedicated quest to extend their capacities for destruction, had finally found a way to approach the ultimate limit.
Noam Chomsky
#15. Dresden was destroyed on the night of February 13, 1945," Billy Pilgrim began. "We came out of our shelter the next day." He told Montana about the four guards who, in their astonishment and grief, resembled a barbershop quartet. He told her about the stockyards with all the fenceposts gone,
Kurt Vonnegut