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We Honor Those Who
Serve For Us

If you have a friend or family member who is fighting for freedom in Iraq, or somewhere else in the world, please send us their name, rank, and a picture and we will post it on this web page to honor their efforts. You can send their information to our offices at:

WGUL Radio
35048 US 19 N
Palm Harbor, FL   34684
or email us

We would love to post a picture of your soldier.
Please include a self addressed stamped envelope for it
to be returned to you. Or if you send a picture on email, 
it must be in a .jpg format.

If you have any questions, please call our offices at:
727-442-4027   to   1-800-332-WGUL

 


From the WGUL family, our receptionist Hillary, has a brother currently serving in the Air Force. This is

Elijah Turner, Senior Airman.

Elijah is 22 years old. He has served in the Air Force since 2000
He is receiving the 
Airman of the Quarter Award from Base Commander, General Folkerts & Chief Master Sergeant France. He is now stationed at
Moody Air Force Base, 
Valdosta, GA

Please meet 

Lt. Gregory R. Cooke, Navy Pilot serving on the USS Nimitz in the Persian Gulf. 

Greg is a 1998 Naval Graduate of the 
Aviation Officer Candidate Program
in Pensacola, Fl.  He received his 
Naval Aviator Wings in October 2001, 
qualifying after landing on the 
USS Enterprise. He deployed to the
Persian Gulf on March 3, 2003.  
He is assigned to the aircraft carrier
USS Nimitz ported in San Diego, Ca.  

Since he spent most of his childhood in the south; he considers Biloxi, Mississippi his hometown. He is the son of Diana & Garry Cooke, who now live in Spring Hill, Fl.

 

Please meet

Keith Lee Fisher
US Army M.P. Specialist

Keith is 21 years old

Keith entered Kuwait two weeks prior to Iraqi freedom starting.  

He entered Iraq after the war started and fought his way to Bagdad airport. 

 He was involved in the take over at the airport and was in one of the first groups to search one of Sadaam's Palaces.  

He is currently stationed in Tikrit.

Keith's family would like to share an experience with you about Keith and about how God works through all of us to pray for those in need when we are no where near them.

Last week, we traveled back to Texas for a visit with our children.  We had been on the road for about an hour, when Doyla started crying and said that we needed to pray for Keith, because he must have been having a hard day.  She said that she could not stop thinking about him and praying for him.  For some reason God was keeping him the center of her thoughts.

The next day, I got a phone call from Keith.  The first words he told me was "I wanted to let you know that I am Okay".  He then told us this," Yesterday, we were in a convoy and I was the second vehicle in line (he is the gunner of a hum v).  We came under attack by ambush, they were shooting flares at us from the right and rocket propelled grenades at us from the left.  It was a big ambush and my driver was driving like crazy to get out of it, I was shooting back with my M60 (mounted on the hum v and sticks out the top of the hum v).  It jammed after about 15 rounds, so my driver handed me my M16.  I emptied about two magazines when my driver hit a bump or something and I fell into the hum v, flat on my back.  At the same time, the mount that holds the machine gun broke (all weighs about 50lbs) broke and fell on top of me and it was hurting me.  I did not know if I was hit or not and I was yelling.  I heard my driver on the radio yelling that his gunner had been hit, so I did not know what was happening.  As suddenly as we were in the ambush, we were out of it.  My driver stopped the hum v and the next thing I knew there were fellow soldiers all around me asking me if I was hit.  I told them to just get the gun off of me, and they were feeling me and looking all over me for wounds, but I was okay.  It was just all the confusion and then me falling and the gun falling on top of me, I just did not know what was happening".  He further said that he could hear and feel the grenades as they passed over him and they were impacting about 50 feet on the other side of the road.  He said that those people were terrible shots because they did not have any hits or injuries.  I asked Keith when this happened.  He said that it had happened the day before at around 10pm their time.  When we started calculating the time difference, the ambush was happening at the same time God put Keith in Doyla's heart.

When we trust in God and give our lives to him, he will protect us.  These guys were not terrible shots, they were probably very well trained, but because of all of our prayers and Keith's faith in God, God deflected those grenades harmlessly passing the convoy.  Keith said he did not know how his driver was able to get out of the ambush.  I reminded him who was in control of his life and he agreed that his driver had to have been lead out of there.

Remember our soldiers who are fighting for freedom.  Pray for them everyday. You never know whose life you may change.

 

An American Military Man 

The average age of the military man is 19 years.
He is a short haired, tight-muscled kid who, under normal circumstances
is considered by society as half man, half boy. Not yet dry behind the
ears, not old enough to buy a beer, but old enough to die for his country.

He never really cared much for work and he would rather wax his own car
than wash his father's; but he has never collected unemployment either.

He's a recent High School graduate; he was probably an average student,
pursued some form of sport activities, drives a ten year old jalopy, and
has a steady girlfriend that either broke up with him when he left, or
swears to be waiting when he returns from half a world away.

He listens to rock and roll or hip-hop or rap or jazz or swing and 
155mm Howitzers.

He is 10 or 15 pounds lighter now than when he was at home because he is
working or fighting from before dawn to well after dusk.

He has trouble spelling, thus letter writing is a pain for him, but he
can field strip a rifle in 30 seconds and reassemble it in less time in
the dark.

He can recite to you the nomenclature of a machine gun or grenade
launcher and use either one effectively if he must.

He digs foxholes and latrines and can apply first aid like a
professional.

He can march until he is told to stop or stop until he is told to march.

He obeys orders instantly and without hesitation, but he is not without
spirit or individual dignity.

He is self-sufficient. He has two sets of fatigues: he washes one and
wears the other. He keeps his canteens full and his feet dry.

He sometimes forgets to brush his teeth, but never to clean his rifle.

He can cook his own meals, mend his own clothes, and fix his own hurts.
If you're thirsty, he'll share his water with you; 
if you are hungry, his food.

He'll even split his ammunition with you in the midst of battle when you
run low.

He has learned to use his hands like weapons and weapons like they were
his hands. He can save your life - or take it, because that is his job.

He will often do twice the work of a civilian, draw half the pay and
still find ironic humor in it all. He has seen more suffering and death
then he should have in his short lifetime.

He has stood atop mountains of dead bodies, and helped to create them.

He has wept in public and in private, for friends who have fallen in
combat and is unashamed.

He feels every note of the National Anthem vibrate through his body
while at rigid attention, while tempering the burning desire to
'square-away' those around him who haven't bothered to stand, 
remove their hat, or even stop talking. 
In an odd twist, day in and day out, far from
home, he defends their right to be disrespectful.

Just as did his Father, Grandfather, and Great-grandfather, 
he is paying the price for our freedom.

Beardless or not, he is not a boy.

He is the American Fighting Man that has kept this country free 
for over 200 years.

He has asked nothing in return, except our friendship and understanding.

Remember him, always, for he has earned our respect 
and admiration with his blood.

 

We believe in our soldiers, and their cause for freedom throughout the world.

"We sleep safely in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would harm us."                                                  ---George Orwell

WGUL was a strong supporter in the