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Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
b5581c1 | free." On the edge of town, Fitzgerald saw a sight "that has never left my memory. It was a picture story of the death of one 82nd Airborne trooper. He had occupied a German foxhole and made it his personal Alamo. In a half circle around the hole lay the bodies of nine German soldiers. The body closest to the hole was only three feet away, a potato masher [grenade] in its fist.II The other distorted forms lay where they had fallen, testimon.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
0d4e654 | without | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
ef3ac7c | as Lewis saw it. The White Cliffs can be seen only from small boat or canoe. Put in at Fort Benton and take out three or four days later at Judith Landing. Missouri River Outfitters at Fort Benton, Montana, rents canoes or provides a guided tour by pontoon boat. Of all the historic and/or scenic sights we have visited in the world, this is number one. We have made the trip ten times. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
3d4b5c6 | Discipline is what makes an army--and civilization. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
77102b8 | Both Custer and Crazy Horse, in short, still had much to learn about each other. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
6f89ca0 | Lieutenant Edward S. Godfrey, who was present at the meeting and who later became the authority on the battle of the Little Bighorn, recorded the aftermath. "This 'talk' of his [Custer's] was considered at the time as something extraordinary for General Custer, for it was not his habit to unbosom himself to his officers. In it he showed concessions and a reliance on others; there was an indefinable something that was not Custer. His manner .. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
b5c1f3a | IV. It is today as Lewis saw it. The White Cliffs can be seen only from small boat or canoe. Put in at Fort Benton and take out three or four days later at Judith Landing. Missouri River Outfitters at Fort Benton, Montana, rents canoes or provides a guided tour by pontoon boat. Of all the historic and/or scenic sights we have visited in the world, this is number one. We have made the trip ten times. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
819d102 | The myths emphasized the relatedness of life, for in them plants and animals talked and exhibited other human characteristics. The myths taught young Curly that everything had its place and function and that all things and animals were important The stories also gave him a feeling of balance; one, for example, told how the animals got together one day and decided to get back at mankind for killing and eating them. Each animal decided on a d.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
ec35f71 | It is perhaps the consummate irony," Arthur Moore writes, "that at each step up from savagery the human race has regarded the fruits of progress with a degree of misgiving and often longed against reason for a return to a simpler condition." | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
b18d0d7 | Third, the Sioux did not delegate real power to an individual, be he a head of an akicita society, tribal chief, or simply a brave individual. As Lowie puts it, "in normal times the chief was not a supreme executive, but a peacemaker and an orator." Chiefs--all chiefs--were titular, "and any power exercised within the tribe was exercised by the total body of responsible men who had qualified for social eminence by their war record and their.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
fc9d187 | Ethnic Germans also surrendered. Even veterans of the Eastern Front. Corp. Friedrich Bertenrath of the 2nd Panzer Division explained, "In Russia, I could imagine nothing but fighting to the last man. We knew that going into a prison camp in Russia meant you were dead. In Normandy, one always had in the back of his mind, 'Well, if everything goes to hell, the Americans are human enough that the prospect of becoming their prisoner was attract.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
56b8cbd | At the supreme moment of his career, Crazy Horse took in the situation with a glance, then acted with great decisiveness. He fought with his usual reckless bravery on Custer Hill, providing as always an example for the other warriors to admire, draw courage from, and emulate, but his real contribution to this greatest of all Indian victories was mental, not physical. For the first time in his life, Crazy Horse's presence was decisive on the.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
21e6299 | In thinking back on the days of Easy Company, I'm treasuring my remark to a grandson who asked, 'Grandpa, were you a hero in the war?' " 'No,' I answered, 'but I served in a company of heroes.' " | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
7b48c92 | Daddy, were you a hero?" And he answered, "No, but I served with heroes." | Stephen E Ambrose | ||
6777bb4 | Winters and Welsh simply walked toward the man, who took off. The Americans split the silverware between them. Forty-five years later, both men were still using the Berchtesgaden Hof's silverware in their homes. After getting what he most wanted out of the place, Winters then | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
6521744 | Of the tens of thousands of men who died in combat in the war, possibly as many as half lost their lives in vain. Lee's charges at Malvern Hill and Gettysburg, Burnside's at Fredericksburg, Grant's at Vicksburg, and many others left the dead strewn everywhere for no discernible military gain. The Sioux would never have followed men who led such bloody, futile assaults, but the Americans made heroes out of these generals--and the higher a ge.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
81513f8 | Arthur Moore describes the results: "Whole forests of oak, beech, poplar, maple, and walnut, standing since Columbus, collapsed ... from girdling and deadening with fire. There was in the heart of the new race no more consideration for the trees than for the game until the best of both were gone; steel conquered the West but chilled the soul of the conqueror. This assault on nature, than which few more frightful spectacles could be imagined.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
686e334 | As I have always held it a crime to anticipate evils I will believe it a good comfortable road untill I am conpelled to beleive differently. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
3659d84 | Like so many of his fellow Americans, Cooper was drawn to the ideas of a primitive, free access to the bounty of nature, the rough equality of all men in a society, and of a natural, intuitive theology. These themes enjoyed something of a vogue in the America of Custer's youth, especially among intellectuals and reformers, who were disappointed at (or resentful of) America's failure to become a "new society" in a New World. In their eyes, t.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
931a2fd | Crazy Horse called to his men, "Ho-ka hey! It is a good day to fight! It is a good day to die! Strong hearts, brave hearts, to the front! Weak hearts and cowards to the rear." | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
c506db1 | The answer was simple and direct, as it had been throughout the period of white contact with the red men. First, make them dependent. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark saw this in a flash after their initial encounter with the Sioux, of whom they said, "These are the vilest miscreants of the savage race, and must ever remain the pirates of the Missouri, until such measures are pursued, by our government, as will make them feel a dependence.. | Stephen E. Ambrose | ||
f5c9072 | I do tasks for the gods, usually things like tracking down rare items or taking someone safely to a destination." D'Molay the Freeman Tracker" | mystery-novels mythology | M.Scott Verne | |
e8601a0 | I once read that Martha Stewart never wears a bathrobe. Not that I like Martha Stewart, nobody likes Martha Stewart, I don't think even Martha Stewart likes Martha Stewart. | Elizabeth Berg | ||
9501397 | Ultimately, to get better, I simply made a choice. | Elizabeth Smart with Chris Stewart | ||
24245be | Lise was on only the first day of what would be a three-day bicycle ride over small back roads "through thick enemy formations" to the combat zone. She slept in ditches when she tired, then picked up her velo and began traveling again to her headquarters. She was nowhere near a radio when the communique from General Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme commander of Allied forces, aired for the people of Normandy: The lives of many of you depend on.. | Sarah Rose | ||
6a38670 | Without confidence, enthusiasm, and optimism in the command, victory would scarcely be obtainable." ~ Dwight D. Eisenhower" | George Ilian | ||
253d722 | It is our reaction to tragedy, our resolution in the storm, that defines a lifetime. We can carry heavy burdens without complaints. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named Gallup's most admired man of his generation twelve times. He was the leader of the Allied forces in Europe during World War II; he became president of Columbia University; he was the supreme commander of NATO; he was a two-term US president who ended the Korean War, initiated the .. | John Soforic | ||
295456c | General Dwight D. Eisenhower ordered the global media to film the unspeakable hell of the Holocaust. General Eisenhower feared there would come a day when there would be "Holocaust deniers" who would declare it never happened.5 Today, Iran's radical Islamic leaders, who have promised to wipe the Jews off the face of the map, are indeed Holocaust deniers.6 Sadly, their venom is gathering international support. From the tears and tragedy of W.. | John Hagee | ||
6cadf9f | According to Gallup, church attendance hovered around 39 percent in the 1930s and 1940s.7 It increased in the 1950s, when Dwight D. Eisenhower encouraged Americans everywhere to go to services. This was the sales pitch: America was now at war with communism, which was perpetuated by atheism. Americans could differentiate themselves from the godless hordes by exercising their freedom of religion. The call was taken up by religious leaders su.. | Lyz Lenz | ||
db682ba | and approved for sale. Dr John Rock, champion of the pill, rejoiced that humanity's rampant sex drive would finally be stripped of its consequences: 'The greatest menace to world peace and decent standards of life today is not atomic energy but sexual energy.' The Cold War resumed at full intensity after an American U-2 spy plane was shot down over the Soviet Union. War hero Dwight D. Eisenhower was still president; it was his last year in .. | Geert Mak | ||
34facba | So the world is again faced with the problem of armed aggression. Powerful dictatorships are attacking an exposed, but free, area. What should we do? Shall we take the position that, submitting to threat, it is better to surrender pieces of free territory in the hope that this will satisfy the appetite of the aggressor and we shall have peace? | Dwight D. Eisenhower | ||
ab87820 | a top hat--a deliberate act of rebellion on Ike's part that shocked the protocol mavens. For their part, the Eisenhowers had refused to enter the White House for a pre-inauguration cup of coffee, choosing instead to wait in the car that would take both the president and president-elect to the ceremony. At least Ike didn't meet Truman at the Capitol steps, as he'd threatened. But it was a very uncomfortable car ride. "I'm glad I wasn't in th.. | Bret Baier | ||
e102c14 | Farming looks mighty easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a thousand miles from the corn field." --Dwight D. Eisenhower" | Hourly History | ||
e8e701a | shot through the heart, and you're to blame! you give love, a bad name. | Dwight D. Eisenhower | ||
8bc2a17 | I became convinced that noncooperation with evil is as much a moral obligation as is cooperation with good. | Clayborne Carson | ||
14f260a | The ultimate tragedy of Birmingham was not the brutality of the bad people, but the silence of the good people. | Clayborne Carson | ||
8dc8505 | I often say that if we , as a people, had as much religion in our hearts and souls as we have in our legs and feet, we could change the world. (p.15) It is my opinion that sincerity is not enough for preaching ministry. The minister must be both sincere and intelligent. (p.18) | Clayborne Carson | ||
61cd166 | We led strange, hidden lives. We were advocating one thing: that this country rid itself of the racism that prevented some citizens from living as fully functioning men and as a result dehumanized all men. We were advocating only that this country live up to its promises to all citizens. But since racism always hides under a respectable guise - usually the guise of patriotism and religion - a great many people loathed us for knocking holes .. | John Howard Griffin | ||
53b0e54 | Eventually, some black thinkers believe, this "separation" may be the shortest route to an authentic communication at some future date when blacks and whites can enter into encounters in which they truly speak as equals and in which the white man will no longer load every phrase with unconscious suggestions that he has something to "concede" to black men or that he wants to help black men "overcome" their blackness." | racism negro racist white race separation justice | John Howard Griffin | |
13ca0fb | I must have had a dozen rides that evening. They blear into a nightmare, the one scarcely distinguishable from the other. It quickly became obvious why they picked me up. All but two picked me up the way they would pick up a pornographic photograph or book - except that this was verbal pornography. With a Negro, they assumed they need give no semblance of self-respect or respectability. The visual element entered into it. In a car at night .. | racial-discrimination us-history | John Howard Griffin | |
60f767c | After the first difficulties in Rochester, New York, I was asked to consult with community leaders. I went and spoke for quite a long time. The leaders were concerned and sincere men. The first question one of them asked after I talked was: "Well, Mr. Griffin, what is the first thing we should do now?" I told him that I had been asked to come and consult with community leaders, and yet I was sitting in a room full of white men. The white ma.. | racial-discrimination us-history | John Howard Griffin | |
26856b3 | Many otherwise decent men and women could find no other solution. They are willing to degrade themselves to their basest levels to prevent the traditional laborer from rising in status or, to put it bluntly, from "winning," even though what he wins has been rightfully his from the moment he was born into the human race. I" | John Howard Griffin | ||
3a7fba4 | Didn't Shakespeare say something about 'every fool in error can find a passage of Scripture to back him up'? He knew his religious bigots. | John Howard Griffin | ||
c894da9 | We shall remain prisoners of culture unless we become aware of the process and force ourselves to confront it and to deprogram it. | John Howard Griffin |