このドメイン購入希望の方
このドメイン購入希望の方 - Welcome to Japanese Content - Nihongo
Tant: Remembering Daddy's war: D-Day in a B-17
June 6, 1944. D-Day. Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Europe that would topple Hitler's Third Reich, had begun. The D-Day assault on Nazi-occupied France by tens of thousands of soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen that was launched 65 years ago today, has been the fodder for scores of books and Hollywood films such as "The Longest Day" and "Saving Private Ryan."
A New Story from the Greatest Generation
How a Jewish American war hero falls in love with a german nurse while a prisoner of the nazis - and lives a changed, but wanting life.
Thousands turn out for Kennedy viewing
BOSTON - The last time Ginger Romano saw Sen. Edward Kennedy, she wasn't at her best. As she took clothing, blankets and other supplies to a high school for people whose homes had been damaged in Boston's great blizzard of 1978, she tripped over a snow bank. A pair of hands helped her to her feet. It was Kennedy, who had been walking behind her.
このドメイン購入希望の方
このドメイン購入希望の方 - Welcome to Japanese Content - Nihongo
Tant: Remembering Daddy's war: D-Day in a B-17
June 6, 1944. D-Day. Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Europe that would topple Hitler's Third Reich, had begun. The D-Day assault on Nazi-occupied France by tens of thousands of soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen that was launched 65 years ago today, has been the fodder for scores of books and Hollywood films such as "The Longest Day" and "Saving Private Ryan."
A New Story from the Greatest Generation
How a Jewish American war hero falls in love with a german nurse while a prisoner of the nazis - and lives a changed, but wanting life.
Thousands turn out for Kennedy viewing
BOSTON - The last time Ginger Romano saw Sen. Edward Kennedy, she wasn't at her best. As she took clothing, blankets and other supplies to a high school for people whose homes had been damaged in Boston's great blizzard of 1978, she tripped over a snow bank. A pair of hands helped her to her feet. It was Kennedy, who had been walking behind her.