Hall of Fame

 
 
 

COL Charles C. Smith

MIT – 1927, Inducted 2002

Colonel Charles Clement Smith graduated from MIT in 1927 and began working for the General Electric Company, where he is credited with three inventions and patents for the company.  In 1934, he joined the U.S. Army Ordnance Department Reserve and was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant.  In November 1939, he entered into active duty service at the Springfield Armory as a 1st Lieutenant. 

In 1940, Charles C. Smith was promoted to Captain and was reassigned to the District Control Division in Washington, D.C., working to rearm European nations through President Roosevelt’s “lend-lease” program. His specific assignment was to organize training courses for civilian inspectors in the various Ordnance Districts to ensure the quality of armed forces materiel.  He was promoted to Major in 1942.  In the spring of that year, he was ordered to field training at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland where he took courses in light and heavy artillery equipment.  Before completion of his coursework, he was reassigned to the 2nd Battalion of the 252nd Ordnance Regiment at Atlanta Motor Base as Battalion Executive Officer.  In February 1943, he began the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.  After graduating, he and his family moved to Camp Flora, Mississippi where he would command the 140th Ordnance Base Auto Maintenance Battalion.  He would move his unit to the Texarkana Ordnance Depot later that year for final training and certification.  By Thanksgiving 1943, his unit was aboard troop ships in the Boston Harbor, headed to support the U.S. war effort in Great Britain.

His battalion’s first mission was to receive by rail and unload, uncrate, and assemble Jeeps, Command Cars and trucks for the U.S. Army in the European Theater of Operations.  He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in early 1944.  On April 15, he received a telephone call ordering him to a “new and dangerous” assignment as part of what turned out to be the largest military operation in history.  Lieutenant Colonel Smith was assigned as Executive Officer of Marshalling Area M, with its headquarters at the south coastal British Naval Base in Torpoint, Cornwall.  The unit’s mission was to receive Army units, house and feed them, and move them into troop ships and landing craft for the Invasion of France. 

By June 9th, only three days after the beginning of the “Overlord Plan”, Marshalling Area M had loaded over 35,000 troops and equipment including the entire 29th Infantry Division.  As a result of that resounding success, Lieutenant Colonel Smith and several other key members of his unit were reassigned to a port that had not done as well -- Marshalling Area C at the Port of Southampton. 

Within only ten days, Lieutenant Colonel Smith had spearheaded a reorganization effort that increased throughput from two to fifteen Liberty Ships and the housing and feeding of 52,000 troops per day.  In August 1944, he was put into command of Marshalling Area C, an area that included twenty-six camps and four sub-area headquarters, an Engineer Regiment, a Quartermaster Battalion, a base hospital, and an Ordnance Depot Company.  He was later made Director of Port Services for the 14th Major Port – the largest U.S. Army Port Operation in World War II.  In May 1945, he was promoted to the rank of Colonel.  In July 1945, Colonel Smith volunteered to transfer to the Pacific Theater of Operations to command an Ordnance Regiment during the planned final assault on Japan.  However, by August 10th, the atomic bombs had been dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the war was over.  He received an honorable discharge from the Army in June 1946 and transferred to the U.S. Army Reserves. 

He worked at several different jobs after the war: Ebasco Services as a Management Consultant; the General Electric Company as a Superintendent of Manufacturing; and for Barlow Brooks Rollforming Manufacturing as a Production Manager.  In 1956, Colonel Smith resigned from the U.S. Army after twenty-two years of service.  After his resignation he joined the investment company, Growth Capital, Inc. in Cleveland, OH.  In January 1954, Colonel Smith realized the dream to own his own business when he and his sons purchased the Bertram Company, a company that specialized in industrial fans.  In July 1969, they opened a new plant in Amelia, OH under a new name: Industrial Air, Incorporated.

               In May of 1979, Colonel Smith was invited to present an award to the MIT Army ROTC honor graduate.  It was the first Colonel Charles C. Smith award, a result of his 50th reunion gift to MIT.  Colonel Smith passed away in 1980.  The Charles C. Smith Award has lived on to this day as an award honoring our distinguished military graduates. 

 

Colonel (Ret) William J. Cavanaugh

MIT – 1951, Inducted 2002

 

Colonel William J. Cavanaugh was commissioned in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from ROTC in June 1951 following receipt of his professional degree in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  He was ordered to active duty in July 1951, at the 6th Armored (Training) Division, Ft. Leonard, MO where he served as Unit Training Officer, regimental S3, plans and training staff officer, and divisional G3 staff training inspector for two years during the Korean conflict. 

Following relief from active duty in July 1953, he organized and served as Company Commander of Company A, 319 Engineer Combat Battalion, 94th Infantry Division (Reserve), and later in battalion operations and intelligence staff assignments with the 319th.  Upon deactivation of the 319th, he organized and served as Commander of the 424th Engineer Construction Company, XIII Corps, made up of HQ Company and two line companies of the 319th.

Following the aforementioned engineer unit command and staff assignments, Colonel Cavanaugh served in mobilization assignments with the New York and Chicago Districts of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.  From 1972 to 1982, he served as Admissions Liaison Officer and Massachusetts State Program Coordinator for the U. S. Military Academy Admissions Program.

Colonel Cavanaugh is a graduate of the U.S. Army Engineer School Basic and Advanced Engineer Officer Courses, Fort Belvoir, VA, the Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, KS, and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces Fort Leslie McNair, VA.  In December of 1982, Colonel Cavanaugh was retired from the active U.S. Army Reserve with 31 1/2 years continuous service since he received his original ROTC commission. 

 

Colonel Cavanaugh was the Charter President of the Colonel Richard Gridley Regional Chapter of the Army Engineer Association for which he was awarded an AEA Bronze DeFleury Medal.  He was awarded the U.S. Army Meritorious Service Medal upon his retirement from active reserve service, primarily for his work in building the U.S. Military Academy admissions liaison program in Massachusetts.  He holds the North American Defense Service Medal and the U.S. Army Reserve Medal with two bronze attachments for 30 years of Reserve Service.

Colonel Cavanaugh is a founding partner and senior principal consultant of Cavanaugh Tocci Associates, Inc. of Sudbury, MA, which provides consulting services to clients around the world in architectural, mechanical, structural and environmental acoustics.  He is a member of the Audio Engineering Society, a fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, a member and past president of the National Council of Acoustical Consultants, and a board certified member and 1993 president of the Institute of Noise Control Engineering.  He has served on the adjunct faculties of the Division of Architectural Studies, at the Rhode Island School of Design, the schools of architecture at the Boston Architectural Center, Roger Williams University and Cornell University. 

 

Dr. Paul E. Gray

MIT – 1954, Inducted 2003

Dr. Paul E. Gray, former chairman of the MIT Corporation (1990-1997), served as president of MIT for 10 years from 1980 to 1990. As a member of both the faculty and the administration of the Institute, Dr. Gray served as associate provost, dean of engineering, and chancellor prior to becoming president.

He earned B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from MIT from 1950-1955. In 1952, he attended a six-week ROTC summer camp, and continued with ROTC until he was commissioned in 1955. While in ROTC, he developed skills in leadership, communication, and time-management. Further experience in ROTC taught the value of discipline, maturity, and responsibility. In 1955, 2LT Gray moved to Fort Devens, MA, where he instructed officers and enlisted soldiers in radio intelligence, military messages, codes, and telecommunications equipment repair. Realizing his love and skill for teaching, 1LT Gray left the Army in 1955 to return to MIT where he earned his Sc.D degree in electrical engineering. His areas of specialization are semiconductor electronics and circuit theory, and he has participated in the development of courses in electronics devices, models, and circuits, as well as core courses. At present, he teaches and advises undergraduates as Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

Dr. Gray was involved in the establishment of the Institute’s Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program in which undergraduate students become working participants in research projects. For four years. Dr. Gray served as a member of the White House Science Council, also serving as a member of the Council’s Panel on the Health of Universities. He held the position of Vice Chairman of the Council on Competitiveness, a Washington-based organization that includes representatives from business, labor and academia. As part of his long-standing interest in improving educational opportunities for minorities and women, he served on the Committee on Minorities in Engineering of the National Research Council.

He is director of Boeing Company and Eastman Kodak Company, and a Life Trustee of the Boston Museum of Science. He is trustee emeritus at Wheaton College (MA), where he was active as a trustee from 1971 to 1997 and was chairman from 1976 to 1987. Dr. Gray has been awarded honorary degrees from Wheaton College, Northeastern University, the Technical University of Nova Scotia, Cairo University, and Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute. Dr. Gray is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a life fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, a member since 1975 of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), where he served as treasurer from October 1994 to June 2001. He is a member of Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi, and Sigma Xi.

 

BG (Ret) Rogers B. Finch

MIT – 1941, Inducted 2005

Rogers Finch earned his Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, and Doctor of Science degrees at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He majored in the fields of mechanical engineering, textile technology, mathematical statistics, and high polymer mechanics

Having been a cadet in the M.I.T. Army ROTC program, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Quartermaster Corps in 1941. During his active duty in World War II from 1941 to 1946, he served with the Quartermaster Corps as Chief of Heavy Textile Research and Development. In 1946 he transferred in the rank of Major to the Army Reserve and in 1975 retired in the rank of Brigadier General after 34 years of wartime and reserve service.

General Finch is a graduate of the Army Air Corps Meteorology School, Army Command and General Staff College, Army War College, and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. During his years as a reservist, he has held mobilization assignments in the Army Research Office, the Office of the Chief of Research and Development, and the Army Materiel Command as Deputy Director of Maintenance. He has received the designation of Logistician and has been awarded the Army Commendation Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal and the Legion of Merit.

During his civilian career, Dr. Finch has served as:

  • Assistant Professor in the M.I.T. Department of Mechanical Engineering

  • Chief of the U.S. Scientific, Technical, and Economic Mission in Rangoon, Burma

  • Director of Research at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York

  • Chief of University Relations of the Peace Corps in Washington D.C. during its first two years

  • Associate Dean of the R.P.I. Hartford Connecticut Graduate Center

  • Dean of the R.P.I. School of Science in Troy

  • Vice President for Planning at R.P.I..in Troy

  • Executive Vice President of the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America

  • Executive Director of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 

Dr. Finch was a past President of the Council of Engineering and Scientific Executives and a past Vice President of the World Federation of Engineering Organizations. He was a Certified Association Executive and a past Vice President of the American Society of Association Executives. That Society has awarded him its highest national honor, the Key Award. He was also a member of many military, professional, historical, patriotic, and genealogical societies.

 

Mr. Larry Castro

National Security Agency

MIT – 1964, Inducted 2005

 

Mr. Castro, a member of the Defense Intelligence Senior Executive Service, led the planning and coordination of NSA’s considerable efforts in support of Homeland Security.  In this capacity, Lt Gen Michael Hayden, Director NSA/CSS, directed Mr. Castro to develop an NSA Homeland Security Support (HSS) strategy and to create an NSA Homeland Security Support Office (HSSO). The NSA HSS strategy complements and fully supports the national Homeland Security strategy, and addresses a framework for the delivery of NSA products, services, and capabilities to the various organizations involved in the security of our homeland.

Mr. Castro was initially assigned to NSA in 1965 as a 2LT serving with the Army Security Agency.  He converted to civilian status in 1967.  During his career at NSA, he has served in the Research and Engineering, the Signals Intelligence, and the Information Assurance Organizations.  His assignments have included serving as Chief of Research and Development in the National Computer Security Center as well as a development tour within the office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Communications, Command, and Control, and Intelligence, ASD (C3I). 

Mr. Castro earned Bachelors and Masters degrees in Electrical Engineering from MIT and the Degree of Engineer from George Washington University.  He is a graduate of the Infantry Basic Officers Course, the Army Security Agency Basic Officers Course, the National War College, and the MIT Seminar XXI program in Foreign Politics and National Interest.  Mr. Castro was designated as an Intelligence Fellow in 1994 and has been awarded the NSA Meritorious Civilian Service Award, the NSA Exceptional Civilian Service Award, and the Meritorious Executive Presidential Rank Award (in 1997 and 2002).

 

COL (Ret) Judith Lemire

MIT – 1981, Inducted 2005

 

COL Lemire graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a BS in Chemistry and was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the US Army Ordnance Corps in 1981.

During her military career, she has served across the country and in Germany, and participated in deployments to Bosnia, Hungary, and Kuwait.  Her leadership positions include command at the Platoon and Company level in the 24th Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Georgia, and she commanded the 215th Forward Support Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas.  She has served in logistics support roles as a maintenance control officer and as a support operations officer at the Brigade, Division, and Theater levels and as a Division logistics planner in the 3rd Infantry Division, Würzburg, Germany, where she participated in the first combined training exercise conducted by US forces in Russia.

COL Lemire served as the senior logistics trainer at the National Training Center, Fort Irwin, California, providing combat training to over 40 support battalions during her two-year tenure.   More recently, COL Lemire trained logistics operations in the urban environment to deploying Divisions and Corps as a member of Battle Command Training Program’s Urban Operations Training Team, in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

COL Lemire’s military schooling includes the Ordnance Officer Basic and Advanced Courses, the US Army Command and General Staff College, the School of Advanced Military Studies, and the US Army War College.  She holds a Masters of Science in Engineering from the University of California at Berkeley and two Masters in Military Arts and Science.  COL Lemire has published articles on logistics support issues in both the Ordnance Magazine and Army Logistician

COL Lemire’s current assignment is with Headquarters, US Army Training and Doctrine Command, where she serves as the Division Chief for Science and Technology in the newly designated Futures Center.  Her organization translates Warfighter concepts into technology requirements for the Army, Joint, Industry, and Academia science and technology communities to ensure that the Army’s science and technology portfolio will mature the technologies needed for the Future Warfighter.  Her follow on assignment will be working logistics support issues as a member of the Department of the Army staff.

 

COL (Ret) F. Gorham Brigham

Field Artillery Officer

Harvard, 1937 – Inducted 2006

 

COL F. Gorham Brigham was admitted into Harvard University in the fall of 1933.  He became a Cadet in Harvard’s ROTC, program and upon graduation was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant in the Field Artillery Corps.  During the summers of 1937 – 1940, he did active duty training with the 7th Field Artillery as well as the 101st and the 102nd Field Artillery Regiments in the 26th Division of the Massachusetts National Guard.

COL Brigham was promoted to 1st Lieutenant in June 1940.  On 15 September 1940, his ROTC instructor, then Major Edward H. Brooks, and later LTG Brooks, had him called to active duty on 48 hours notice.  He served in the office of the Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall until November 1945 having been promoted to Captain, Major and Lieutenant Colonel.  At the end of this tour, LTC Brigham received the Legion of Merit from General Marshall himself.

Beginning in 1947, LTC Brigham served every summer on active duty at such stations as Ft. Dix, Ft. Benning, and the Army War College.  Most of his tours of active duty were in the Logistics Division of the Army General Staff.

In 1957, he was promoted to Colonel and served until 1967 when he retired after completing 30 years of service.

COL Brigham’s career included service as a public accountant, chief financial officer with two manufacturing firms, and many years as a banker.  His last twelve years were with Citizen’s Financial Group where he retired as Senior Vice President in 2005. 

 

Dr. Eliot A Cohen

Harvard 1977 - Inducted 2017

Eliot Cohen is Robert E. Osgood Professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). He directs the strategic studies program at SAIS and the Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Studies, which he founded.  He has twice won the SAIS Excellence in Teaching Award and has extensive experience in executive education, including serving as an adjunct professor at the US Army War College.

A 1977 graduate of Harvard College he received his Ph.D. there in political science in 1982.  From 1982 to 1985 he was Assistant Professor of Government at Harvard, and Assistant Dean of Harvard College. In 1985 he became a member of the Strategy Department of the United States Naval War College.  In February 1990 he joined the Policy Planning Staff of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and in July of that year he was appointed professor of strategic studies at SAIS.

From April 2007 through January 2009 he served as Counselor of the Department of State.  A principal officer of the Department, he had special responsibility for advising the Secretary on Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, and Russia, as well as general strategic issues.  He represented the Department of State in interagency coordination with senior National Security Council staff, Department of Defense, and intelligence community officials on a number of issues, including the Syrian/North Korean reactor crisis of 2007.

Eliot Cohen is the author of  The Big Stick: The Limits of Soft Power and the Necessity of Military Force (2017), Conquered into Liberty: Two Centuries of Battles along the Great Warpath that made the American Way of War (2011), Supreme Command:  Soldiers, Statesmen, and Leadership in Wartime  (2002).  His other books are Commandos and Politicians  (1978) and Citizens and Soldiers (1985).  He is, as well, co-author of Military Misfortunes: The Anatomy of Failure in War (1990), Revolution in Warfare? Air Power in the Persian Gulf (1995), and Knives, Tanks, and Missiles:  Israel’s Security Revolution (1998), and co-editor of Strategy in the Contemporary World (2002) and  War over Kosovo  (2001).  In 1991-1993 he directed and edited the official study of air power in the 1991 war with Iraq.  For his leadership of  The Gulf War Air Power Survey, which included eleven book-length reports, he received the Air Force’s decoration for exceptional civilian service.  His articles have appeared in numerous scholarly and popular journals, he publishes often in national newspapers such as the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, and New York Times.

In 1982 he was commissioned as a military intelligence officer in the United States Army Reserve. He has served as a member of the Defense Policy Advisory Board and the National Security Advisory Panel of the National Intelligence Council, and of the Council of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and of the Committee on Studies of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is an Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security. He is a co-founder of the John Hay Initiative, a volunteer network of conservative foreign policy experts.

 
 
 

LTC Jay Zeamer Jr.

MIT 1940 - Inducted 2017

Lt. Col. Zeamer was originally commissioned in the Army Reserves, but was discharged to join the Regular Army as a flying cadet. He was re-commissioned in the US Army Air Corps in March 1941, and was assigned to the 22nd Bombardment Group (Medium) at Langley Field, Virginia. His Group deployed to Australia in April 1942, where 1st. Lt. Zeamer was transferred to the 43rd Bombardment Group (Heavy) and assigned as a B-17 co-pilot. He was promoted to Captain in April 1943.

 On June 16, 1943,  Captain Zeamer volunteered to fly an unescorted B-17 nick-named 'Old 666' to Buka, a small island off the north coast of Bougainville, a 1200-mile round-trip mission, to photograph Japanese installations and map the west coast of Bougainville as far south as Empress Augusta Bay in preparation for Allied landings scheduled for early November. Apparently unbeknownst to Allied intelligence, the Japanese had moved about 400 fighters into the Solomon Islands on June 15. The photo reconnaissance mission was without incident, although Zeamer's crew reported observing 20 fighters taking off from Buka airfield. Zeamer continued south to the mapping run and shortly before its completion, his B-17 was intercepted by five Japanese fighters attacking from the front. Though wounded in the attack, bombardier 2nd Lt. Joseph Sarnoski continued to fire his nose gun, shooting down two fighters. Zeamer also destroyed one of the attackers using a nose gun fired remotely by a switch on the flight control column. A 20-millimeter cannon shell exploded in the nose of the B-17, severely wounding Sarnoski and knocking him out of the compartment. Sarnoski dragged himself back to his station and continued to fire until he died at his position.

Zeamer, injured with a broken leg and numerous fragment wounds, dove the bomber steeply from its assigned mission altitude of 25,000 feet to approximately 10,000 feet (where the crew could survive without use of the oxygen system), estimating the altitude by an increase in engine manifold pressure. An estimated 17 fighters began a series of attacks after the bomber leveled off, waging a 45-minute battle until low on fuel. Zeamer saved the B-17 by taking evasive action to disrupt their deflection, and the crew of the B-17 shot down at least two additional fighters.

Zeamer refused first aid for his wounds and flew the B-17 until the fighters broke off the engagement. Lapsing in and out of consciousness, he assessed the battle damage to the bomber, and concluded they would be unable to climb over the Owen Stanley Mountains, instructing the copilot, who was unwounded, to make an emergency landing at an Allied fighter airstrip at Dobodura, New Guinea. Without operable brakes or flaps because of the destroyed hydraulic system, the B-17 was ground-looped by the co-pilot. Of the crew, one was killed-in-action (Sarnoski) and six others wounded-in-action.

At first thought dead from a massive loss of blood, Zeamer survived the ordeal, although nearly losing his injured leg during recovery. Major General Ennis Whitehead recommended Zeamer be awarded the Medal of Honor, to which Fifth Air Force commander General George Kenney concurred. Zeamer received the award from Chief of the Army Air Forces General Henry H. Arnold on January 16, 1944, at the Pentagon.

Captain Zeamer was promoted to Major in July 1943, and Lieutenant Colonel in April 1944. He was medically retired from the U.S. Army Air Corps in January 1945. He returned to MIT where he received a Master’s Degree in Aeronautical Engineering. For his heroism in combat, Lt. Col. Zeamer is absolutely deserving of being honored in the MIT Army ROTC Hall of Fame

 

 
 
 

MG (Ret) Robert C. Davenport

Harvard 1943 - Inducted 2017

MAJ GEN (Retired) Robert C. Davenport is the son of an 1890 Harvard College graduate and the grandson of the inventor of the furniture piece still called the “Davenport.” He joined the Enlisted Reserve Corps at Harvard in June 1942, and thirteen months later, entered the Army on active duty. MG Davenport served as an Army officer in World War II. He was in the Pacific Theater with the 27th Infantry Division preparing for the invasion of Japan when the war ended with the atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. While stationed in the Philippines, he assisted in the development of Rocket Artillery and became Commander of U.S. Army Force Fuel Depot at Clark Field after WWII. In 1946, he joined the 94th Infantry Division in the active Army Reserve where he held various battery commands. In 1978, MG Davenport retired from the Reserves as a colonel and subsequently joined the Massachusetts Army National Guard as the commander of the 3rd Military Police Brigade where he served for 5 1/2 years before retiring with the rank of Major General.

 

Upon leaving the service in 1983, MG (Ret.) Davenport continued to support the Army. He served on the Alumni Advisory Committee for the Advocates for Harvard ROTC which was instrumental to the reestablishment of the ROTC program at Harvard in 2012.

 

MG Davenport passed away in February 2017 at the age of 95. 

 
 
 

Dr. Michael B. Yaffe

MIT since 2000 - Inducted 2021

Michael B. Yaffe is the David H. Koch Professor of Science and Professor of Biology and Biological Engineering at MIT, where he has been a member of the faculty since 2000. He is also an attending surgeon and intensivist at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center where he specializes in injury and surgical oncology. He has been the Director of the MIT Center for Precision Cancer Medicine since its inception. Yaffe earned his MD-PhD degree from Case Western Reserve University. He then completed a residency in General Surgery at University Hospitals of Cleveland and New England Deaconess Hospital, and a fellowship in Surgical Critical Care, Trauma and Burns at Harvard Medical School's Harvard-Longwood Critical Care Program. He was a post-doctoral fellow with Lewis Cantley in the Department of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School where he was supported by a Physician-Scientist Fellowship from the HHMI, and a Physician-Scientist Award from the Burroughs-Wellcome Fund. Yaffe is the Scientific Editor-in-Chief of Science Signaling and a member of the Editorial Boards of Molecular & Cellular Proteomics and Cell Cycle. In 2021, Professor Yaffe was elected to the Association of American Physicians and was named a MacVicar Faculty Fellow. He is a decorated veteran of the war in Afghanistan and retired as a Colonel from the U.S. Army Reserve Medical Corps in 2021. Yaffe is a co-founder of Consensus Pharmaceuticals, the DNA Repair Company, On-Q-ity, and Merrimack Pharmaceuticals. He is also a co-founder and a member of the scientific advisory board of Applied Biomath and Thrombo-Therapeutics, and a clinical advisor to Cardiff Oncology.

 
 
 

LTG MARIA B. BARRETT

Commanding General

U.S. Army Cyber Command

Tufts 1988 - Inducted 2024

Lt. Gen. Maria B. Barrett assumed command of U.S. Army Cyber Command (ARCYBER) on May 3, 2022.

A Massachusetts native, Barrett was commissioned as an Army second lieutenant via the Reserve Officers Training Corps program in 1988 after graduating from Tufts University with a bachelor's degree in International Relations.

Barrett’s previous assignments include tours as Deputy Director of Current Operations, J-3, United States Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM); Deputy Commanding General, Joint Force Headquarters—Cyber, ARCYBER; and Deputy Commander (Operations), Cyber National Mission Force, USCYBERCOM.

She has commanded units at the company, battalion, brigade and command level, including service as Commander, 160th Signal Brigade, Third United States Army, and Commander, U.S. Army Network Enterprise Technology Command, the position she held prior to commanding ARCYBER.

Her joint assignments include service as Chief Information Officer/Director, J-6, United States Southern Command and Director, J-3, White House Communications Agency. She has served in Army assignments in the United States, Kuwait, the Republic of Korea, Germany and Saudi Arabia. She is a veteran of Operation New Dawn, Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm.

Barrett has also earned master's degrees in National Resource Strategy from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces (Eisenhower School), and in Telecommunications Management from Webster University.

Her awards and decorations include the Distinguished Service Medal; Defense Superior Service Medal; Legion of Merit; Bronze Star Medal; Defense Meritorious Service Medal (one oak leaf cluster); Meritorious Service Medal (three oak leaf clusters); Army Commendation Medal (one oak leaf cluster); Joint Service Achievement Medal; Army Achievement Medal; Joint Meritorious Unit Award; and the Signal Regiment’s Bronze Order of Mercury.