Clay's cousin, transferag05, reminded us about Clay today on AO.
A little background on Clay.
Clay looked the part of a model Aggie cadet and a USMC Officer. Around 6'3", in great shape...you know the drill. Great smile that could put anyone at ease (and didn't hurt with the ladies).
I first got to know Clay during my head year (his junior year). We are in an audit course call Perspective: The Worldwide Christian Movement. Clay was a man of faith, and was committed to learning more even though he had a crazy schedule in the Corps and normal school.
His senior year, Clay was the Combined Band Staff Commander (one of the top 6 jobs in the Corps). He was a Ross Volunteer, and selected as one of the 8 senior "red-sash" leaders of the Company. He had the distinguished pleasure of helping a certain young tall uncoordinated TexAgs poster (who shall remain nameless ) learn how to drill....and never lost patience.
He and group of buddies, who weren't military scholarship cadets, decided during their senior years that they needed to serve their country to a great degree and went through the Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Course and commissioned as USMC officers after graduating.
Clay was an infantry commander, a Marine's marine. On April 8, 2000, he had his platoon on a test flight of an Osprey aircraft in Arizona. It crashed. 19 dead. No survivors.
Clay left a wife of ~ 1 year, a sister, a brother (who was a young E-1 Jock at the time), his parents, tons of family, and a huge network of friends and admirers.
Semper Fi...and here.
A little background on Clay.
Clay looked the part of a model Aggie cadet and a USMC Officer. Around 6'3", in great shape...you know the drill. Great smile that could put anyone at ease (and didn't hurt with the ladies).
I first got to know Clay during my head year (his junior year). We are in an audit course call Perspective: The Worldwide Christian Movement. Clay was a man of faith, and was committed to learning more even though he had a crazy schedule in the Corps and normal school.
His senior year, Clay was the Combined Band Staff Commander (one of the top 6 jobs in the Corps). He was a Ross Volunteer, and selected as one of the 8 senior "red-sash" leaders of the Company. He had the distinguished pleasure of helping a certain young tall uncoordinated TexAgs poster (who shall remain nameless ) learn how to drill....and never lost patience.
He and group of buddies, who weren't military scholarship cadets, decided during their senior years that they needed to serve their country to a great degree and went through the Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Course and commissioned as USMC officers after graduating.
Clay was an infantry commander, a Marine's marine. On April 8, 2000, he had his platoon on a test flight of an Osprey aircraft in Arizona. It crashed. 19 dead. No survivors.
Clay left a wife of ~ 1 year, a sister, a brother (who was a young E-1 Jock at the time), his parents, tons of family, and a huge network of friends and admirers.
Semper Fi...and here.