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ROTC cadet takes pride in serving country
Tuesday, 29 May 2007
by CHRIS ZALUSKI
Associate Editor for Online Operations
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The Appalachian

At 5:30 in the morning, most Appalachian State University students are sound asleep, much less in the middle of a six-mile run.

Except for Clayton R. Quamme.

Quamme, a senior economics major, has been involved with Appalachian’s ROTC program for the past four years. Waking up early for physical training is just one aspect of the program Quamme has learned to appreciate.


 
“Eventually, what I’m doing this for is to serve the country,” Quamme said. “It’s funny because I’m getting up early to work for all the other people who are able to sleep in late.  My sacrifices are helping a lot of other people, which is nice.”

When Quamme graduates in December, he will enter the army as a second lieutenant.


However, after graduation, there is no telling where Quamme will be deployed. Though he requested Hawaii, he must be in the top 10 percent of the 3,000 graduating ROTC members nationwide in order to get his top choice.


Through a scale divided among a 30-day leadership evaluation camp, GPA and ROTC work at Appalachian, Quamme figures he is near the 10 percent border.


“My biggest fear is the fear of the unknown, and my fear of the unknown is what creates my fear of the military,” Quamme said. “I don’t know which branch I’ll be in. I don’t know where I’m going, so it’s harder for me to prepare.”


No matter where he will be stationed, he will most likely end up in Iraq – a thought that puts him in a different mindset than most seniors.


“My mind is definitely thinking a little differently than most people who are getting out of college, knowing that pretty soon I might have bullets buzzing over my head in a desert that’s 150 degrees,” he said.


This scenario, Quamme said, is something that worries his family and friends, including senior psychology major Ashley R. Banford, Quamme’s girlfriend of 15 months.


“It would be nice if he didn’t have to go, but I know, rationally, that’s not going to happen,” Banford, who is also graduating in December, said.


Amidst an America that is split at the political seams, Quamme wishes others would put themselves in a soldier’s shoes. He said he occasionally hears negative comments about the ROTC program from people who associate the soldiers with political decisions in Washington.


“It’s the whole fact that the people who are making decisions to send troops into Iraq are not going into Iraq themselves,” Quamme said. “And often times the American people who get so flustered with the whole situation and feel we shouldn’t be in there aren’t going to Iraq either.”


In terms of Banford’s opinions of the situation in Iraq, she said she supports the troops more than the war.


“I definitely support the men and women who are over there, but I wish they could come home,” she said.


Both Quamme and Banford said despite political affiliation, the Memorial Day season calls to mind how important it is to support the soldiers.


“Support from the public is what allows troops to do their job and do it with confidence and pride,” Quamme said.


Though being deployed in Iraq seems to be a very real possibility for Quamme, he said ultimately he is not worried and is looking forward to the opportunity.


“I feel if I’m going over there, I’m going to have control,” Quamme said. “To be honest, if I do get shot and end up dying over there, I truly feel like it’s a worthy thing to serve my country.”
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