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32nd Armor Regiment - Victory or Death [2] 33rd Armor Regiment - Men of War [2] 35th Armor Regiment - Vincere Vel Mori (To Conquer or Die) [2] 36th Brigade, 50th Armored Division - I'll Lead You (quotation attributed to John Bell Hood) [2] 37th Armor Regiment - Courage Conquers [2] 40th Armor Regiment - By Force and Valor [2]
The letter written by commander William Barret Travis "To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World" during the Battle of the Alamo (1836), ends with "Victory or Death!". Adolf Hitler gave the order "Victory or Death" twice: to Erwin Rommel at the Second Battle of El Alamein (1942); to Friedrich Paulus at the Battle of Stalingrad (1942–3).
To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World, commonly referred to as the Victory or Death letter, [1] is an open letter written on February 24, 1836, by William B. Travis, commander of the Texian forces at the Battle of the Alamo, to settlers in Mexican Texas.
"Say victory to India" Jammu & Kashmir Rifles "Prashata ranvirta" Sanskrit "Valour in battle is praiseworthy" "Durga Mata ki jai!" "Victory to Goddess Durga!" Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry "Balidanam vir lakshanam" Sanskrit "Sacrifice is a characteristic of the brave" "Bharat Mata ki jai" "Victory to Mother India" Ladakh Scouts
The Jolly Roger is the name given to any of various flags flown to identify a ship's crew as pirates. Since the decline of piracy, various military units have used the Jolly Roger, usually in skull-and-crossbones design, as a unit identification insignia or a victory flag to ascribe to themselves the proverbial ferocity and toughness of pirates.
A gunman who murdered eight people in a mass shooting at a Texas outlet mall wore a “Right Wing Death Squad” patch on his chest and may have held white supremacist beliefs, says a report ...
Robin Williams In 'Patch Adams' 6.) 1998 Academy Awards acceptance speech %shareLinks-quote="And most of all, I want to thank my father, up there," he said, gesturing up. "The man who, when I said ...
They had the following mottos: Vaincre ou mourir, La liberté ou la mort and Vivre libre ou mourir – Victory or death; Freedom or death; and Live free or die. [16] [17] [18] Although not exactly a Totenkopf per se, the Chilean guerrilla leader Manuel Rodríguez used the symbol on his elite forces called Husares de la muerte ("Hussars of death").