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Jun 6 D-Day. American, British, Canadian forces invade France at the beaches of Normandy

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Why did Bernstein feel a sunburst of deliverance when the atomic bomb was dropped out of Hiroshima?

-It was a sunburst of deliverance. "Lester Bernstein, New York Times, 10/24/65"- When he said he felt an "a sunburst of deliverance" he meant he felt a sense of freedom. As in, the war is over, I can go home, and a big stress has just been lifted off my shoulders.


The 1944 Allied invasion in France was known as?

D-day.The "D" does not stand for "Deliverance", "Doom", "Debarkation" or similar words. In fact, it does not stand for anything. The "D" is derived from the word "Day". "D-Day" means the day on which a military operation begins. The term "D-Day" has been used for many different operations, but it is now generally only used to refer to the Allied landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944.


Early life about Deliverance hobbs Salem witch trials?

We don't know much other than that she was from Maine.


How do you find out the worth of 1300 shares that were issued to you in 1961?

Contact the issuers of the stock and ask them to put a tracer on them. Stock shares are (should) be sent by certified mail with a receipt of deliverance returned to the sender.


What does the D stand for in D-Day?

Although there are a lot of interesting theories (“departure,” “deliverance,” and “doom,” to name a few), it doesn't really stand for anything. The term "D-Day" has been used by the U.S. military since at least 1918 as an “alliterative placeholder” for the day an operation is supposed to take place. This means that although we use it to refer to the invasion of Normandy in World War II, there's actually been a lot of D-Days.The term was part of a larger system for keeping track of dates: D-3, for example, means three days before D-Day, and D+3 means three days after.