From the Front
Friday, Nov. 9, 2007: 10:15 AM - 11:45 AM, S229
Participants
T.F. Boggs
T.F. Boggs, a: two-time Iraq war veteran, compassionate realist that wishes for world peace but sees said path to peace laden with bullets and bombs.
Ward Carroll Blog
Ward Carroll is the editor of Military.com. During his 20-year Navy career he served in four different F-14 squadrons based at NAS Oceana and was the operations officer for Carrier Air Wing One. He was editor of Approach magazine and is currently a contributing editor for Naval Aviation News. His three books about a Tomcat pilot -- Punk's War, Punk's Wing, and Punk's Fight -- have been widely praised for their realistic portrayals of a Naval Aviator's life. His latest novel, Militia Kill, was published by Signet in 2006.
i Jack ArmyCategory: Military
Jack Army is an Active Duty Soldier with over 19 years of service as an Infantryman, Special Forces Weapons Sergeant, Recruiter and he's currently back in the Infantry. Jack Army just returned from a tour of duty in Iraq. He is married and has four daughters. Hobbies include hiking, reading, and soon, sea kayaking. Jack Army blogs at http://gojackarmy.blogspot.com/ and has been blogging since February, 2005.
Michael Yon: Mike Yon, former U.S. Special Forces soldier, author of "Danger Close", independent journalist embedded with the US Military in Iraq. (Michael will be joining us at BlogWorld via live feed from Iraq.)
Chuck Ziegenfuss is an Army Brat and native of Pennsylvania. He enlisted in the Army from 1991-1993. He graduated from the Indiana University of PA with a BS of History in 1997 and was commissioned as a 2 nd Lieutenant of Armor. He has served as a Tank platoon leader, Scout platoon leader, assistant Operations officer, Battalion Maintenance Officer, Adjutant, and Company Commander in OIF III. He started his blog (“From My Position… On the Way!”) in Iraq as a way to share his experiences with friends and family. Seriously wounded in Iraq on 21 June 2005, he also helped create Project VALOur-IT with Soldiers Angels, to help service members with severe hand and eye trauma use voice-activated laptops.
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