<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=838528320191540&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Donate

Latest Broadcast

Election 2024 - Dr. James Dobson Reflects on the Impact of Christians Going to the Polls, Part 2

Guest: Gary Bauer

Donate
Host:
Guest(s):
Dwight "Andy" Anderson, Steve Reiter, Henry "Duke" Boswell

Host: Dr. James Dobson

June 06, 2024

80 years ago today, many of the brave Allied soldiers who fought to liberate France from the axis of evil were tragically killed by German machine gunfire on the beaches of Normandy. On today’s edition of Family Talk, Dr. James Dobson continues to share personal memories from his visit to the Normandy American Cemetery in France, where 4,400 of those soldiers are buried. Listen to the inspiring story of an American soldier named Billy Harris, and hear from President Ronald Reagan in 1984, as he commemorated the 40th anniversary of D-Day.

Meet the Guest(s)

 

Dwight "Andy" Anderson, Steve Reiter, Henry "Duke" Boswell

Dwight "Andy" Anderson was the director of Normandy Visitors Service for the American Battle Monuments Commission. During the Dobson’s visit to France, Anderson served as their tour guide and provided a wealth of information.

Steve Reiter is a media production consultant and coach who has worked in internationally syndicated radio for over 22 years. He is also the founder and president of the Never Alone Project, a non-profit organization working to pass legislation that would allow at least one guest in the hospital, with no time limit, to ensure that a loved one would not have to die alone or make medical decisions without assistance. Steve was married to his wife, Elizabeth, who went home to be with the Lord in 2020. They are the parents of two sons.

Henry "Duke" Boswell was a decorated United States Army paratrooper, war veteran and a survivor of combat in World War II. He made four parachute jumps with the 82nd Airborne behind enemy lines in Sicily, Italy, Normandy, and The Netherlands. Boswell landed at Normandy with his fellow soldiers and fought valiantly throughout the D-Day invasion, beginning on June 6th,1944. He went on to serve and fight in the Korean War, where he was seriously wounded by mortar fire. After retiring from the Army as a major in 1963, Boswell moved to Colorado Springs and taught in School District 11. In November 2015, he passed away at the age of 91.