2013
DISTINGUISHED GRADUATE AWARD MEDAL CEREMONY 15th Anniversary
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2013
AWARD RECIPIENTS
TETRAULT
REDD
ARMITAGE
FARGO
Mr. Roger E. Tetrault ’63 The Honorable John Scott Redd ’66 Ambassador Richard L. Armitage ’67 Admiral Thomas B. Fargo ’70, USN (Ret.)
he 2013 Distinguished Graduate Award medal ceremony marks the 15th year of honoring and celebrating the lives of alumni through the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association Distinguished Graduate Award program. Each year, distinguished graduates are honored because of their demonstrated and unselfish commitment to a lifetime of service, their personal character and the significant contributions they have made to the Navy and Marine Corps or as leaders in industry or government. They are the living embodiment of the Academy’s mission to develop leaders to “assume the highest responsibilities of command, citizenship and government.” We honor these four individuals for the principles they stand for—today and always.
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MESSAGE
FROM THE CHAIRMAN e gather at today’s ceremony to honor the 2013 U.S. Naval Academy Distinguished Graduates.This is our 15th such annual selection.Those chosen have contributed greatly to our nation in the crucibles of public and private life: military, government and corporate. Representing the best from among many USNA alumni who have served so well, they are proudly welcomed by our selection committee, and you, to this ceremony. The 2013 Distinguished Graduates epitomize, for the Brigade, and indeed for all of us, achieving the Academy’s goal of service to our nation.You selected band with the many, both those acknowledged and those who quietly serve, who have given the bulk of their lives and energies to the preservation and betterment of our nation. As beacons for our families, for the Brigade, for your classmates and for your alumni comrades, you garner our manifest congratulations. This ceremony is a pivotal event of the Academy year. Many hands have pulled on the oars to effect this wonderful, personal, yet humbling gathering. Our selection committee has been privileged to take on the challenge of picking these four Distinguished Graduates from among so many alumni of such great accomplishment. I thank the members of the committee for their integrity and judgment. Please celebrate with us today the life’s accomplishments of our dear friends and colleagues spawned from the long line of USNA graduates.
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Admiral Joseph W. Prueher ’64, USN (Ret.) Chairman, U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association Distinguished Graduate Award Selection Committee 2009 Distinguished Graduate Award recipient
2013 U.S. NAVAL ACADEMY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION DISTINGUISHED GRADUATE AWARD SELECTION COMMITTEE Admiral Joseph Prueher ’64, USN (Ret.), Chairman Colonel Arthur Athens ’78, USMCR (Ret.) The Honorable Maureen Cragin ’85 Vice Admiral Cutler Dawson Jr. ’70, USN (Ret.) Rear Admiral Thomas Lynch ’64, USN (Ret.)
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Mr. Byron Marchant ’78 General Peter Pace ’67, USMC (Ret.) Rear Admiral John B. Padgett ’69, USN (Ret.) Vice Admiral Norbert Ryan Jr. ’67, USN (Ret.)
PROGRAM
22 MARCH 2013 MEDAL PRESENTATION 4:30 p.m.
INTRODUCTION OF DISTINGUISHED GRADUATES FOR 2013 INVOCATION Lieutenant Madison Carter, USN 5th Battalion Chaplain
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM WELCOME AND REMARKS Vice Admiral Michael H. Miller ’74, USN Superintendent, U.S. Naval Academy
PRESENTATION OF DISTINGUISHED GRADUATE AWARD MEDALS Admiral Robert J. Natter ’67, USN (Ret.) Chairman, U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association Board of Trustees and Midshipman Jennifer L. Jones ’13 Brigade Commander
REMARKS Distinguished Graduate Award Recipients
NAVY BLUE & GOLD DEPARTURE OF THE OFFICIAL PARTY 3
MR.
ROGER E. TETRAULT ’63 oger E. Tetrault ’63 never forgot that the Elks Club in his hometown of Huntington, NY, made it possible for him to afford the Academy’s initial uniform cost with a $600 scholarship. “In the late 1990s, I was able to repay this enormous debt to the Elks Club,” Tetrault said. “My wife and I went on to endow the Huntington Elks Club’s entire scholarship program. Since that time, our scholarships have helped more than 50 needy kids graduate from college. I am very proud that we have been able to touch the lives of those young people, just as the Elks Club touched mine so many years ago.” Tetrault, who earned his wings in 1966, served two tours of duty in Vietnam aboard TURNER JOY. He joined the Naval Reserve in 1970 and retired as a captain in 1985. He is the former chairman of the board and CEO of McDermott International, a world leader in the construction of offshore platforms and the laying of pipelines for the oil and gas industries. McDermott also was the parent of the Babcock and Wilcox companies. Previously he was a vice president at Babcock and Wilcox, responsible for the diversified government business segment that included nuclear reactors and other heavy equipment for nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers. Early in his career he was responsible for the development of nuclear reactors that would last the lifetime of a ship. As president of General Dynamics’ Electric Board Division, Tetrault was responsible for the construction and overhaul of nuclear-powered submarines. And as president of General Dynamics’ Land Systems, he led the armored vehicle programs. “Clearly the Academy provided me with the fundamental technical and leadership skills necessary to succeed,” Tetrault said. “Without those basic skills I would never have been able to progress to manage very large organizations.” NASA appointed Tetrault to committees reviewing the International Space Station and the Hubble Space Telescope. He also served on the NASA Advisory Council and the COLUMBIA Accident Investigation Board.Tetrault was awarded the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal. He is a director of the U.S. Naval Academy Foundation Board and a member of the Joint Alumni Association and Foundation Finance and Audit Committee. Tetrault’s generous contribution to the Naval Academy via the Foundation in 1998 supported the hiring of the founding director of the Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership. He lives in Punta Gorda, FL, with his wife, Dr. Linda Tetrault. He has three children and two grandchildren.
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THE HONORABLE
JOHN SCOTT REDD ’66 he Honorable John Scott Redd ’66 is a leader of military organizations, private industry and federal government. Perhaps Redd’s greatest contributions have been standing up and leading two organizations central to national security—the Fifth Fleet and the National Counterterrorism Center. As commander of Naval Forces, Central Command and the Fifth Fleet, the Navy’s first new fleet since World War II, Vice Admiral Redd commanded forces involved in seven real world operations involving Iraq, Iran and Somalia. As the first Senate-confirmed director of the National Counterterrorism Center in Washington, DC, from 2005 to 2007, Redd regularly briefed President George W. Bush and participated in National Security Council meetings. He led efforts in integrating and analyzing foreign and domestic terrorism intelligence and developed the nation’s first war plan for the global war on terror. “I am deeply grateful to God for the opportunity to serve and lead the men and women who protect our country,” Redd said. At the Naval Academy, Redd was a Trident Scholar, graduating second in his class. After graduation, he continued his studies as a Fulbright and Burke scholar and earned a master of science degree in operations analysis with highest honors. He also attended the program for senior executives at MIT. During his 36 years of active duty service, Vice Admiral Redd commanded eight organizations at sea. His first command, KING, was honored as the top cruiser/destroyer in the Atlantic Fleet. Other commands included Destroyer Squadron Thirty-six, the Standing Naval Force Atlantic and EISENHOWER Carrier Battle Group. Shore tours in the Pentagon included service as military assistant/chief of staff to two Under Secretaries of Defense and, from 1996 to 1998, as director of Strategic Plans and Policy on the Joint Staff. In 1999, Redd took over the NetSchools Corporation, serving as CEO, president and ultimately chairman. He transformed the education technology startup’s business model, raised $55 million in venture capital funding and managed its successful sale in 2002. He served as deputy administrator and COO of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq in 2004 and then as executive director of the presidential commission on weapons of mass destruction, which drafted the President’s blueprint for intelligence community reform. In 2009, Redd was presented the Presidential National Security Medal by President Bush as one of his last official acts in office. Other awards include five Distinguished Service Medals and the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal. He has served as his USNA class president, an Alumni Association Trustee, a Distinguished Graduate Award selection committee member and a Forrestal lecturer. Redd and his wife, Donna, of McLean,VA, have three married children and nine grandchildren.
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AMBASSADOR
RICHARD L. ARMITAGE ’67 eneral Colin Powell said he has never met anyone more dedicated to the Navy, to the Academy or to the nation than Ambassador Richard L. Armitage ’67. Confirmed by the Senate, Armitage served as the 13th Deputy Secretary of State from 2001 to 2005. Early in his military career, he volunteered as a naval advisor and became fluent in Vietnamese. Armitage served three tours with Vietnamese troops, often wearing native clothing, sharing rations and telling jokes in perfect Vietnamese. He joined the U.S. Defense Attache in Saigon in 1973. Immediately prior to the fall of Saigon, Armitage organized and led the removal of more than 30,000 South Vietnamese. With KIRK escorting, he led a flotilla to the Philippines aboard a Vietnamese warship. He arranged for food and water to be delivered before negotiating with the U.S. and Philippine governments for permission to dock in Subic Bay. Armitage was a foreign policy advisor to President-elect Ronald Reagan, then the deputy assistant secretary of defense for East Asia and Pacific Affairs. In 1983, he became assistant secretary of defense for International Security Policy. In 1991, Armitage was appointed as a special emissary to King Hussein of Jordan. He then was sent to Europe as an ambassador to the states that had been formed out of the fallen Soviet Union. He remained in that post until 1993. He has served two terms as a member of the U.S. Naval Academy Board of Visitors, which created the Armitage Committee to review the Honor Concept. Armitage also served on the Distinguished Graduate Award selection committee and delivered two Forrestal lectures. Armitage is the recipient of several military decorations, including a Bronze Star with Combat V, Navy Commendation Medal with Combat V and Navy Achievement Medal with Combat V. He also received the Department of State Distinguished Service Award, Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Award for Outstanding Public Service and the Presidential Citizens Medal. He also has received decorations from the governments of Thailand, the Republic of Korea, Bahrain, Pakistan, the Russian Federation and Vietnam. He was awarded a KBE from Great Britain and became a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. George and was given similar decorations from the governments of Australia and New Zealand. In 2009, Congress appointed him to the Quadrennial Defense Review Panel. Armitage currently chairs the American-Turkish Council. Armitage serves on the board of directors at ConocoPhillips, ManTech International Corporation and Transcu Ltd. He and his wife, Laura, live in Vienna, VA. They have eight children and five grandchildren and have served as foster parents for dozens of children.
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ADMIRAL
THOMAS B. FARGO ’70, USN (RET.) he distinguished naval career of Admiral Thomas B. Fargo ’70, USN (Ret.), culminated with his assignment as commander of the U.S. Pacific Command. As the senior U.S. military commander in East Asia and the Pacific, Fargo led the largest unified command while directing the joint operations of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force. Within 24 hours of the Christmas 2004 tsunami in Southeast Asia, Fargo stood up a multinational task force and directed the ABRAHAM LINCOLN Strike Group from Hong Kong along with expeditionary forces to provide relief and support to the governments of Indonesia, Thailand and Sri Lanka. His 35 years of Navy service included five commands in the Pacific and Indian oceans and the Middle East as well as six tours in Washington. He formulated a new force posture and footprint strategy for U.S. Pacific Forces in the post-Cold War era as commander of the U.S. Pacific Command; maintained the nation’s strong relationship with Japan and confidence in the Navy and Submarine Force after a tragic collision involving GREENVILLE; and conducted sensitive submarine operations at the height of the Cold War while in command of SALT LAKE CITY. Fargo said his greatest achievement was “developing and motivating young officers and enlisted men to reach their full potential and continue to make a contribution to their country either within or outside the Navy. I’m probably most proud that significant numbers went on to very meaningful careers in the Navy, including command at sea. Eight officers from my command tour of SALT LAKE CITY went on to command.” Fargo received the Vice Admiral James Bond Stockdale Award for Inspirational Leadership and is a multiple recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal, Defense Superior Service Medal and Legion of Merit. He became president of the high-tech company Trex Enterprises in 2005. In 2008, he was named a managing director of J.F. Lehman and Co., serving as president and CEO of HSF Holdings/Hawaii Superferry. He was appointed chairman of Huntington Ingalls Industries in 2011. Fargo holds the John M. Shalikashvili Chair in National Security Studies at the National Bureau of Asian Research. He also serves as a director on the Naval Academy Foundation Board, co-chaired the 2012 Medal of Honor convention in Hawaii, served as the national vice chairman of the Pearl Harbor Memorial Fund. Raised in Navy family, his father Commander Thomas A. Boulton ’43, USN and step-father Captain William B. Fargo ’39, USN (Ret.), were both Naval Academy graduates. His mother was a Navy Nurse in World War II. The father of two grown sons, he and his wife Sarah, live in Honolulu, HI.
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1999-2012
PAST RECIPIENTS 1999
2003
Admiral Thomas H. Moorer ’33, USN (Ret.)
Ambassador William H.G. FitzGerald ’31
(1912-2004)
(1909-2006)
Rear Admiral Eugene B. Fluckey ’35, USN (Ret.)
2000 Dr. John J. McMullen ’40
(1913-2007)
Rear Admiral Robert W. McNitt ’38, USN (Ret.) (1915-2012)
(1918-2005)
Vice Admiral William D. Houser ’42, USN (Ret.) Admiral James L. Holloway III ’43, USN (Ret.)
(1921-2012)
Vice Admiral William P. Lawrence ’51, USN (Ret.) (1930-2005)
Major General William A. Anders ’55, USAFR (Ret.)
2004 Lieutenant General Victor H. Krulak ’34, USMC (Ret.)
Mr. Roger T. Staubach ’65
(1913-2008)
Vice Admiral Gerald E. Miller ’42, USN (Ret.)
2001 Captain John W. Crawford Jr. ’42, USN (Ret.) Admiral William J. Crowe Jr. ’47, USN (Ret.)
Vice Admiral James F. Calvert ’43, USN (Ret.) (1920-2009)
Lieutenant General Charles G. Cooper ’50, USMC (Ret.) (1927-2009)
(1925-2007)
Rear Admiral Ronald F. Marryott ’57, USN (Ret.) Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale ’47, USN (Ret.)
(1934-2005)
(1923-2005)
Admiral James D. Watkins ’49, USN (Ret.) (1927-2012)
2005
Captain James A. Lovell ’52, USN (Ret.)
Captain Slade D. Cutter ’35, USN (Ret.) (1911-2005)
2002 Vice Admiral Charles S. Minter Jr. ’37, USN (Ret.) (1915-2008)
The Honorable James E. Carter Jr. ’47 Admiral Carlisle A.H. Trost ’53, USN (Ret.) Colonel John W. Ripley ’62, USMC (Ret.) (1939-2008)
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Rear Admiral Robert H. Wertheim ’46, USN (Ret.) Admiral Ronald J. Hays ’50, USN (Ret.) Mr. H. Ross Perot ’53
2006
2010
Captain Thomas J. Hudner ’47, USN (Ret.)
Mr. David J. Dunn ’55
Admiral Kinnaird R. McKee ’51, USN (Ret.)
Admiral Leon A. Edney ’57, USN (Ret.)
General Robert T. Herres ’54, USAF (Ret.)
Rear Admiral Thomas C. Lynch ’64, USN (Ret.)
(1932-2008)
Admiral Joseph Paul Reason ’65, USN (Ret.) Admiral Charles R. Larson ’58, USN (Ret.) General Carlton W. Fulford Jr. ’66, USMC (Ret.)
2007 Rear Admiral Maurice H. Rindskopf ’38, USN (Ret.)
2011
(1917-2011)
Rear Admiral Robert H. Shumaker ’56, USN (Ret.)
Admiral Thomas B. Hayward ’48, USN (Ret.)
Dr. Bradford N. Parkinson ’57
Mr. Ralph W. Hooper ’51
Lieutenant General Matthew T. Cooper ’58, USMC (Ret.)
Admiral Leighton W. Smith Jr. ’62, USN (Ret.)
Mr. Corbin A. McNeill Jr. ’62
2008
2012
Mr. James W. Kinnear III ’50
Admiral Sylvester R. Foley Jr. ’50, USN (Ret.)
Admiral Frank B. Kelso II ’56, USN (Ret.)
The Honorable Daniel L. Cooper ’57
Rear Admiral Benjamin F. Montoya ’58, CEC, USN (Ret.)
Captain Bruce McCandless II ’58, USN (Ret.)
Lieutenant General William M. Keys ’60, USMC (Ret.)
Vice Admiral John R. Ryan ’67, USN (Ret.)
Admiral Henry G. Chiles Jr. ’60, USN (Ret.)
Mr. Daniel F. Akerson ’70
2009 Mr. John E. Nolan ’50 Admiral Bruce DeMars ’57, USN (Ret.) Mr. J. Ronald Terwilliger ’63 Admiral Joseph W. Prueher ’64, USN (Ret.) General Peter Pace ’67, USMC (Ret.)
For more information on the U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association’s Distinguished Graduate Award program and recipients, visit www.usna.com/dga.
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MISSIONS UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION To serve and support the United States, the Naval Service, the Naval Academy and its Alumni; By furthering the highest standards at the Naval Academy; By seeking out, informing, encouraging and assisting outstanding, qualified young men and women to pursue careers as officers in the Navy and Marine Corps through the Naval Academy; and, By initiating and sponsoring activities which will perpetuate the history, traditions, memories and growth of the Naval Academy and bind Alumni together in support of the highest ideals of command, citizenship and government.
Serving the Alma Mater and its Alumni since 1886
UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY To develop Midshipmen morally, mentally and physically and to imbue them with the highest ideals of duty, honor and loyalty in order to graduate leaders who are dedicated to a career of naval service and have potential for future development in mind and character to assume the highest responsibilities of command, citizenship and government.
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ALMA MATER NAVY BLUE AND GOLD Now colleges from sea to sea, may sing of colors true, But who has better right than we, to hoist a symbol hue? For Sailors brave in battle fair, since fighting days of old Have proved the Sailor’s right to wear, the Navy Blue and Gold.
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Thank you to the Annapolis Bus Company for generously providing transportation for the 2013 Distinguished Graduate Award Recipients.
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