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"Photos courtesy U.S. Marine Corps"
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darkblueworld > Marines photos >  U S  Marine Corps Sgt  Travis Borgialli, from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, prepares an American child for her flight from the U S  Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, to Cyprus July 24, 2006
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  U S  Marines from 4th Provisional Security Company carry a small boat given to them by the Djiboutian navy July 24, 2006
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  U S  Marines stand in formation with soldiers from Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya during the opening ceremony for exercise Natural Fire 2006 in Nginyang, Kenya, Aug  8, 2006
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  USMC M1A1 settles a firefight in Fallujah
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Marine Gen  Peter Pace speaks to more than 1,300 military members about the importance of their service during a visit to Fallujah, Iraq, Aug  13, 2006
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  Jake Bolin held son Caden, 7 months, as wife Crystal stood by prior to Bolin's deployment with 100 other Marines from the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment
darkblueworld > view an update &#43; recap at (next photo): http://darkblueworld.smugmug.com/gallery/998451/30/119732251
darkblueworld > SLUG: me_MCCLOUD, 2
DATE:  12/15/2006 Neg number:  186716
PHOTOGRAPHER:  SARAH L. VOISIN  
LOCATION:   Arlington National Cemetery
CAPTION:    Arlington funeral for Maj. Joseph T.
McCloud.  McCloud, 39, of Grosse Pointe Park,
Mich. died Dec. 3 when the CH-46 helicopter they were in crashed in Al Anbar province, Iraq.
PICTURED:  The cassion with Maj. Joseph T. McCloud arrives at the burial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
 StaffPhoto imported to Merlin on  Fri Dec 15 15:48:05 2006

Mourners Honor Selfless Marine

By Leef Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 16, 2006; B03



In the photograph, Maj. Joseph T. McCloud is standing at the crest of a hydroelectric dam on the Euphrates River. The picture, e-mailed last month to family and friends, captured a brief moment during McCloud's tour of duty in Iraq, where the Marine served as an operations officer.

While the snapshot revealed little about McCloud's mission, his broad, picture-postcard smile telegraphed home a sense of calm.

A few weeks later, on Dec. 3, McCloud, 39, who considered Alexandria home, was killed when the CH-46 helicopter he was traveling in malfunctioned and was forced to make an emergency landing on Lake Qadisiyah -- behind the dam where the photograph was taken, friends said.

Twelve service members survived the crash; McCloud and three other men, including Marine Cpl. Joshua C. Sticklen, 24, of Virginia Beach, were killed.

Yesterday, hundreds of mourners gathered at Arlington National Cemetery to honor the career Marine they hailed as a man proud to wear the uniform.

"He was fully committed and believed whole-heartedly in what he was doing," said Wade Hutchens, who has been friends with McCloud, known by his middle name, "Trane," since they both pledged a fraternity in 1985 at the University of Tennessee. "There was never a shred of doubt with anything he did, going all the way back to college."

During yesterday's full-honors service, McCloud's flag-draped coffin was delivered to the grave site by a horse-drawn caisson, and the Marine Corps Band played a slow, mournful version of the Marine Corps Hymn.

McCloud was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, where he reported in April. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1990 and was commissioned in April 1992. He was promoted posthumously to lieutenant colonel.

Thursday would have been McCloud's 40th birthday. He leaves behind his wife, Maggie McCloud, and three young children.

"He was the love of my life," Maggie McCloud told The Washington Post shortly after her husband's death. "I'm so devastated that my children are not going to grow up with him, because he was a man of character and honor."

McCloud attended high school in Grosse Pointe, Mich., outside Detroit, and later graduated from the University of Tennessee, where he studied liberal arts and history. According to news reports, he enlisted in the Marine Corps just in time for Desert Storm and served on the USS Missouri. It was the ship's captain who encouraged him to attend Officer Candidate School.

During his career, McCloud worked at the Pentagon, did a fellowship on Capitol Hill and served as an instructor at the Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in Quantico. He and his wife moved from Alexandria to Hawaii this year.

Marine Maj. Pat Zaleski first met McCloud 13 years ago when they served together at Camp Lejeune. They later served together on the staff at Officer Candidate School and remained close friends. Yesterday, he escorted McCloud's remains to Arlington National Cemetery.

"There were very few things he loved more than the Marines, but things he did love more were his wife and children," Zaleski said. "As good a Marine as he was, he was a much better husband and father. . . . He was an absolutely selfless and humble man. Those are the best kind."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
darkblueworld > Marines photos >  Master Sergeant Timothy W  Brown and his wife, Mary, watched their son, Lcpl Timothy W  Brown Jr , board a bus filled with 100 Marines from the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment at the Marine Corps Base Hawaii
SLUG: me_MCCLOUD, 2
DATE: 12/15/2006 Neg number: 186716
PHOTOGRAPHER: SARAH L. VOISIN
LOCATION: Arlington National Cemetery
CAPTION: Arlington funeral for Maj. Joseph T.
McCloud. McCloud, 39, of Grosse Pointe Park,
Mich. died Dec. 3 when the CH-46 helicopter they were in crashed in Al Anbar province, Iraq.
PICTURED: The cassion with Maj. Joseph T. McCloud arrives at the burial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
StaffPhoto imported to Merlin on Fri Dec 15 15:48:05 2006

Mourners Honor Selfless Marine

By Leef Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 16, 2006; B03



In the photograph, Maj. Joseph T. McCloud is standing at the crest of a hydroelectric dam on the Euphrates River. The picture, e-mailed last month to family and friends, captured a brief moment during McCloud's tour of duty in Iraq, where the Marine served as an operations officer.

While the snapshot revealed little about McCloud's mission, his broad, picture-postcard smile telegraphed home a sense of calm.

A few weeks later, on Dec. 3, McCloud, 39, who considered Alexandria home, was killed when the CH-46 helicopter he was traveling in malfunctioned and was forced to make an emergency landing on Lake Qadisiyah -- behind the dam where the photograph was taken, friends said.

Twelve service members survived the crash; McCloud and three other men, including Marine Cpl. Joshua C. Sticklen, 24, of Virginia Beach, were killed.

Yesterday, hundreds of mourners gathered at Arlington National Cemetery to honor the career Marine they hailed as a man proud to wear the uniform.

"He was fully committed and believed whole-heartedly in what he was doing," said Wade Hutchens, who has been friends with McCloud, known by his middle name, "Trane," since they both pledged a fraternity in 1985 at the University of Tennessee. "There was never a shred of doubt with anything he did, going all the way back to college."

During yesterday's full-honors service, McCloud's flag-draped coffin was delivered to the grave site by a horse-drawn caisson, and the Marine Corps Band played a slow, mournful version of the Marine Corps Hymn.

McCloud was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, where he reported in April. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1990 and was commissioned in April 1992. He was promoted posthumously to lieutenant colonel.

Thursday would have been McCloud's 40th birthday. He leaves behind his wife, Maggie McCloud, and three young children.

"He was the love of my life," Maggie McCloud told The Washington Post shortly after her husband's death. "I'm so devastated that my children are not going to grow up with him, because he was a man of character and honor."

McCloud attended high school in Grosse Pointe, Mich., outside Detroit, and later graduated from the University of Tennessee, where he studied liberal arts and history. According to news reports, he enlisted in the Marine Corps just in time for Desert Storm and served on the USS Missouri. It was the ship's captain who encouraged him to attend Officer Candidate School.

During his career, McCloud worked at the Pentagon, did a fellowship on Capitol Hill and served as an instructor at the Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in Quantico. He and his wife moved from Alexandria to Hawaii this year.

Marine Maj. Pat Zaleski first met McCloud 13 years ago when they served together at Camp Lejeune. They later served together on the staff at Officer Candidate School and remained close friends. Yesterday, he escorted McCloud's remains to Arlington National Cemetery.

"There were very few things he loved more than the Marines, but things he did love more were his wife and children," Zaleski said. "As good a Marine as he was, he was a much better husband and father. . . . He was an absolutely selfless and humble man. Those are the best kind."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
 > SLUG: me_MCCLOUD, 2
DATE:  12/15/2006 Neg number:  186716
PHOTOGRAPHER:  SARAH L. VOISIN  
LOCATION:   Arlington National Cemetery
CAPTION:    Arlington funeral for Maj. Joseph T.
McCloud.  McCloud, 39, of Grosse Pointe Park,
Mich. died Dec. 3 when the CH-46 helicopter they were in crashed in Al Anbar province, Iraq.
PICTURED:  The cassion with Maj. Joseph T. McCloud arrives at the burial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
 StaffPhoto imported to Merlin on  Fri Dec 15 15:48:05 2006

Mourners Honor Selfless Marine

By Leef Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 16, 2006; B03



In the photograph, Maj. Joseph T. McCloud is standing at the crest of a hydroelectric dam on the Euphrates River. The picture, e-mailed last month to family and friends, captured a brief moment during McCloud's tour of duty in Iraq, where the Marine served as an operations officer.

While the snapshot revealed little about McCloud's mission, his broad, picture-postcard smile telegraphed home a sense of calm.

A few weeks later, on Dec. 3, McCloud, 39, who considered Alexandria home, was killed when the CH-46 helicopter he was traveling in malfunctioned and was forced to make an emergency landing on Lake Qadisiyah -- behind the dam where the photograph was taken, friends said.

Twelve service members survived the crash; McCloud and three other men, including Marine Cpl. Joshua C. Sticklen, 24, of Virginia Beach, were killed.

Yesterday, hundreds of mourners gathered at Arlington National Cemetery to honor the career Marine they hailed as a man proud to wear the uniform.

"He was fully committed and believed whole-heartedly in what he was doing," said Wade Hutchens, who has been friends with McCloud, known by his middle name, "Trane," since they both pledged a fraternity in 1985 at the University of Tennessee. "There was never a shred of doubt with anything he did, going all the way back to college."

During yesterday's full-honors service, McCloud's flag-draped coffin was delivered to the grave site by a horse-drawn caisson, and the Marine Corps Band played a slow, mournful version of the Marine Corps Hymn.

McCloud was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, where he reported in April. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1990 and was commissioned in April 1992. He was promoted posthumously to lieutenant colonel.

Thursday would have been McCloud's 40th birthday. He leaves behind his wife, Maggie McCloud, and three young children.

"He was the love of my life," Maggie McCloud told The Washington Post shortly after her husband's death. "I'm so devastated that my children are not going to grow up with him, because he was a man of character and honor."

McCloud attended high school in Grosse Pointe, Mich., outside Detroit, and later graduated from the University of Tennessee, where he studied liberal arts and history. According to news reports, he enlisted in the Marine Corps just in time for Desert Storm and served on the USS Missouri. It was the ship's captain who encouraged him to attend Officer Candidate School.

During his career, McCloud worked at the Pentagon, did a fellowship on Capitol Hill and served as an instructor at the Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in Quantico. He and his wife moved from Alexandria to Hawaii this year.

Marine Maj. Pat Zaleski first met McCloud 13 years ago when they served together at Camp Lejeune. They later served together on the staff at Officer Candidate School and remained close friends. Yesterday, he escorted McCloud's remains to Arlington National Cemetery.

"There were very few things he loved more than the Marines, but things he did love more were his wife and children," Zaleski said. "As good a Marine as he was, he was a much better husband and father. . . . He was an absolutely selfless and humble man. Those are the best kind."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
SLUG: me_MCCLOUD, 2
DATE: 12/15/2006 Neg number: 186716
PHOTOGRAPHER: SARAH L. VOISIN
LOCATION: Arlington National Cemetery
CAPTION: Arlington funeral for Maj. Joseph T.
McCloud. McCloud, 39, of Grosse Pointe Park,
Mich. died Dec. 3 when the CH-46 helicopter they were in crashed in Al Anbar province, Iraq.
PICTURED: The cassion with Maj. Joseph T. McCloud arrives at the burial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
StaffPhoto imported to Merlin on Fri Dec 15 15:48:05 2006

Mourners Honor Selfless Marine

By Leef Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 16, 2006; B03



In the photograph, Maj. Joseph T. McCloud is standing at the crest of a hydroelectric dam on the Euphrates River. The picture, e-mailed last month to family and friends, captured a brief moment during McCloud's tour of duty in Iraq, where the Marine served as an operations officer.

While the snapshot revealed little about McCloud's mission, his broad, picture-postcard smile telegraphed home a sense of calm.

A few weeks later, on Dec. 3, McCloud, 39, who considered Alexandria home, was killed when the CH-46 helicopter he was traveling in malfunctioned and was forced to make an emergency landing on Lake Qadisiyah -- behind the dam where the photograph was taken, friends said.

Twelve service members survived the crash; McCloud and three other men, including Marine Cpl. Joshua C. Sticklen, 24, of Virginia Beach, were killed.

Yesterday, hundreds of mourners gathered at Arlington National Cemetery to honor the career Marine they hailed as a man proud to wear the uniform.

"He was fully committed and believed whole-heartedly in what he was doing," said Wade Hutchens, who has been friends with McCloud, known by his middle name, "Trane," since they both pledged a fraternity in 1985 at the University of Tennessee. "There was never a shred of doubt with anything he did, going all the way back to college."

During yesterday's full-honors service, McCloud's flag-draped coffin was delivered to the grave site by a horse-drawn caisson, and the Marine Corps Band played a slow, mournful version of the Marine Corps Hymn.

McCloud was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, where he reported in April. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1990 and was commissioned in April 1992. He was promoted posthumously to lieutenant colonel.

Thursday would have been McCloud's 40th birthday. He leaves behind his wife, Maggie McCloud, and three young children.

"He was the love of my life," Maggie McCloud told The Washington Post shortly after her husband's death. "I'm so devastated that my children are not going to grow up with him, because he was a man of character and honor."

McCloud attended high school in Grosse Pointe, Mich., outside Detroit, and later graduated from the University of Tennessee, where he studied liberal arts and history. According to news reports, he enlisted in the Marine Corps just in time for Desert Storm and served on the USS Missouri. It was the ship's captain who encouraged him to attend Officer Candidate School.

During his career, McCloud worked at the Pentagon, did a fellowship on Capitol Hill and served as an instructor at the Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in Quantico. He and his wife moved from Alexandria to Hawaii this year.

Marine Maj. Pat Zaleski first met McCloud 13 years ago when they served together at Camp Lejeune. They later served together on the staff at Officer Candidate School and remained close friends. Yesterday, he escorted McCloud's remains to Arlington National Cemetery.

"There were very few things he loved more than the Marines, but things he did love more were his wife and children," Zaleski said. "As good a Marine as he was, he was a much better husband and father. . . . He was an absolutely selfless and humble man. Those are the best kind."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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filename: The caisson bearing Maj Joseph T McCloud is escorted to the burial site at Arlington National Cemetery |
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Keywords: metro staff pictopia
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