
Designating May 29, 1995, through June 6, 1995, as a 'Time for the National Observance of the Fiftieth Anniversary of World War II'
Topic · on the record
Every quote the archive has tagged history.

Designating May 29, 1995, through June 6, 1995, as a 'Time for the National Observance of the Fiftieth Anniversary of World War II'

The courage and hope that carried their parents and grandparents through the darkest days of the 1944 uprising remain.

On this day of remembrance, we pause together to recall the brutal path that has led to the triumph of freedom in Poland.

Fifty years later, the weapons of Nazi terror are lost to history.

We remember the brave men and women of the Polish Home Army who stood on the front lines of combat as their city was destroyed.

History has been made in Washington, and a brighter future has been built.

History is made when brave leaders find the power to escape the past and create a new future.

Our deficit will go down 3 years in a row for the first time since Harry Truman was President.

We honor all those who reclaimed Europe's freedom half a century ago.

World War II was an era of sacrifice unequalled in our own history.

To designate June 6, 1994, as 'D-Day National Remembrance Day.'

The great thing about the United States is that all the history of our country lives in the present.

Democracy's triumph in that distant land owes much to our own history and our own people.

It's a city of the future as well as a city with a past.

America has maintained its unique position in the history of nations because we have not forgotten the teachings of our forebears.

I would say that the 200 years that the Coast Guard has been there for America and her people have been well rewarded by the work that has been done for America in these last few days.

Rejecting NAFTA would, quite simply, put us on the wrong side of history.

We're at a moment in our history when we have to increase the educational ability of all Americans.