What a way to celebrate the anniversary!
Hundreds kiss in NYC in honor of end of WWII
     NEW YORK     (AP)  -- Hundreds of couples donned sailor hats and nurse's caps and smooched  in Times Square on Saturday to celebrate the 65th anniversary of the  end of World War II.
The couples were  re-enacting the famous Life magazine photograph of a nurse being  passionately kissed by a sailor at the end of the war. A 26-foot statue  replicating the original photo was also erected for the celebration.
World  War II veterans and their children on hand for the kiss said they want  today's generation to remember the sacrifices of those who fought in the  war.
"I want to keep that day alive," said Rocco Moretto, 86, a retired infantry staff sergeant now living in Queens.
Moretto,  who stormed Omaha Beach on D-Day and arrived in Times Square in his  uniform, kissed his friend Margie Zwick, who served in the Women's Army  Corps.
"It was terrific," he said of the kiss. "It's been a long time coming."
The Keep the Spirit of '45 Alive! grass roots campaign was holding a series of events around the country marking the day.
Edith Shain, who said she was the nurse in the original photo, died in June at the age of 91.
