Bob Dole’s Incredible Story of Survival in World War II

In April 1945 the war in Europe was nearing its end. But battles were still raging, And on April 14 one such battle left a young American 2nd Lieutenant gravely wounded.

His name was Bob Dole, a 21-year-old from Kansas who had joined the Army in 1942.

The German shell that hit him that day in Italy in 1945 was nearly fatal. Miraculously Dole survived, but it would be another three years before he was out of the hospital.

Dole, of course, went on to a long, illustrious, and successful political career, culminating with the 1996 Republican nomination for president.

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Get your copy of Bob Dole’s book

In 2005 Dole wrote a memoir of his World War II experience, a book called One Soldier’s Story. I met with him in his Washington DC office one day that spring to talk about it, some 60 years after he nearly died on that battlefield in Italy.

So here now, from 2005, Bob Dole.

Bob Dole died in 2021 – he was 98.

How Cutting-Edge Science Hss Changed Homicide Investigations

Crime-solving in the 21st century is all about science.

Simply dusting for fingerprints and taking a few crime scene photos just isn’t enough anymore. Police and prosecutors today have a wide array of sophisticated technology.

Forensic pathologist Michael Baden has been around long enough to see that evolution, and to be an active participant in it.

Whether in official roles or as a private consultant, Baden has been involved in many high-profile homicide investigations, including very notably the OJ Simpson case.

In 2001 Baden wrote a book called Dead Reckoning, detailing his findings in some of those high-profile cases.

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When I met him to talk about that book, it was less than 2 months after the September 11th attacks, which you will hear referenced in this interview.

Get your copy of Michael Baden’s book

So here now, from 2001, Michael Baden.

But You Knew What I Meant: Lynne Truss On The Degradation of Language

Does it drive you crazy when people can’t tell the difference between their, there, and they’re?

Do you do a slow burn when someone puts an apostrophe where it doesn’t belong?

If you’re a Millennial or Gen Z, are you offended when your parents put a period at the end of their text?

Punctuation, grammar, and spelling matter a lot to many people, maybe moreso than they will admit. In fact, some proudly wear the mantle of “stickler.”

British author and journalist Lynne Truss is a stickler, and proud of it. And about 20 years ago she tapped into a whole vein of sticklers, first in Great Britain, then in the US, with her book Eats, Shoots & Leaves.

And suddenly people were openly expressing their disdain at misspelled signs, badly punctuated emails, and the general lack of literacy.

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I met Lynne in 2004 when she was on a US book tour.

Get your copy of Lynne Truss’s book

so here now, from 2004, Lynne Truss.

Lynne Truss will be 70 in May. And yes, I ran AI punctuation, spelling and grammar checks on this script.