Raytheon
 
For an extensive dossier on the company and its various activies, this webpage create by “Corporate Watch” is an excellent resource:
 
http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/profiles/raytheon/raytheon.htm
 
 
 
Board of 
Directors
 
 
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Chairman and Chief Executive Officer since July 31, 
1999.  
 
Daniel P. Burnham 
 
is chairman and 
chief executive officer of Raytheon Company, Lexington, Mass. He joined Raytheon 
on July 1, 1998 and was appointed president and chief operating officer. Burnham 
joined Raytheon from AlliedSignal, Inc. where he most recently served as vice 
chairman and a member of the board of directors.  
 
Burnham joined 
AlliedSignal in 1982 as vice president and controller. He then served two years 
as vice president and general manager of the Engineered Plastics Division in 
AlliedSignal’s Engineered Materials sector. In 1986, he was named president of 
the sector’s Plastics and Performance Materials Group. Two years later he was 
named president of its Fibers Group. In 1990, Burnham joined the company’s 
Aerospace sector and served as president of its AiResearch Group. From 1992 to 
1997 he served as president of AlliedSignal Aerospace, AlliedSignal’s largest 
business and the world’s largest supplier of equipment and subsystems to the 
aerospace industry.
 
Prior to joining 
AlliedSignal, Burnham held positions of increasing responsibility with The 
Carborundum Company from 1971 to 1982. Burnham was born in Pontiac,Mich., in 
November 1946. He received a bachelor’s degree in economics from Xavier 
University in 1968 and a master’s of business administration from the University 
of New Hampshire in 1970. In 1999, Burnham was presented with an honorary Doctor 
of Laws degree from Pepperdine University. Burnham is chairman of the National Minority Supplier Development 
Council (NMSDC), a member and past chairman 
of the President’s National 
Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee (NSTAC), a member and past 
chairman of the Aerospace Industries 
Association (AIA) executive committee, and a member of The Business Council, 
the FleetBoston Financial Corporation board of 
directors, and the board of the Congressional Medal of Honor 
Foundation.
 
He also serves on the executive 
committee of Aerospace Industries 
Association.
 
**
 
 
William H. Swanson 
is president of Raytheon Company, reporting to chairman and chief executive 
officer Daniel P. Burnham. In this role, Swanson leads Raytheon’s government and 
defense businesses. Before assuming this position, he was a Raytheon executive 
vice president and president of Electronic Systems, a multi-billion dollar 
business employing more than 36,000 people, with pre-eminent capabilities in 
radar and electro-optics in space, airborne and ground applications, world 
leadership in missiles, and naval systems and integration expertise; with six 
major business units: Surveillance & Reconnaissance Systems, Tactical 
Systems, Air Combat and Strike Systems, Naval & Maritime Integrated Systems, 
Missile Systems and Air/Missile Defense Systems.
 
Swanson joined 
Raytheon Company in 1972 and has held a wide range of challenging positions, 
including manufacturing manager of the company’s Equipment Division, senior vice 
president and general manager of the Missile Systems Division, general manager 
of Raytheon Electronic Systems and chairman and chief executive officer of 
Raytheon Systems Company. In addition to his professional accomplishments, 
Swanson serves on the California Polytechnic State University School of 
Engineering Advisory Council, the Pepperdine University board of regents, and on 
the board of visitors of the Graziadio School of Business and Management at 
Pepperdine University. He is also a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of 
The Journal of Electronic Defense. Swanson is a trustee of the 
Association of the U.S. Army and serves as a member of the National Defense 
Industrial Association, the Navy League and the Air Force 
Association.
 
A native of 
California, Swanson graduated magna cum laude from California Polytechnic State 
University with a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering. His graduate work 
was performed in business administration at Golden Gate University. He was 
selected as the Outstanding Industrial Engineering Graduate in 1972, and in 1991 
was recognized as the Honored Alumnus from California Polytechnic State 
University School of Engineering. Swanson is a member of Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Pi 
Mu and Blue Key Honor Societies.
 
 
**
 
 
Barbara Barrett is president and CEO of Triple Creek Ranch, a luxury resort 
in Montana’s Bitterroot Mountains, ranked one of the best winter resorts in 
North America. She also is chairman of the Board of Valley Bank of Arizona, and 
serves on the Company Board of Directors of Raytheon, as well as Exponent, Inc. 
In 1999 Barbara completed a teaching Fellowship at Harvard University and served 
on a UN fact-finding mission to evaluate the aftermath of unrest in Kosovo. In 
2001 she completed a two-year term as President of the International Women’s 
Forum.  
 
As a private practice attorney since 1976, Ms. 
Barrett has specialized in international trade, aviation law, corporate law, and 
federal and state government regulations. Ms. Barrett has been involved in 
international business and aviation for nearly 30 years. yAfter a stint with the 
Greyhound Corporation in the 1970s, Barrett joined the Reagan Administration as 
vice chairman of the U.S. Civil Aeronautics Board in 1981. She was the first 
woman named deputy administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration in 1988, 
making her the only person to serve at the top level of both the technical 
aviation agency and aviation’s economic regulator. An instrument rated pilot, 
Barrett also was the first civilian woman to land aboard an F/A-18 Hornet on an 
aircraft carrier.  
 
 
Barrett served on the President’s Advisory Committee 
on Trade Negotiations, advising both Presidents Reagan and Bush on trade policy 
and Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and General Colin Powell on defense issues and 
she was past chairman of the Arizona District Export Council. She was a 
Republican candidate for governor of Arizona in 1994. She is the 1999 recipient 
of the Horatio Alger Award, and the 1998 Network of Executive Women in 
Hospitality “Woman of the Year.”
 
Ms. Barrett earned her Bachelor, Master and Law 
degrees at Arizona State University. She lives in Paradise Valley, Arizona with 
her husband, Craig.
 
She is also currently the chairman of the board of trustees of Thunderbird, The American Graduate School of International Management. She is also a director at Raytheon, a director of Exponent, Inc.and a director of Valley Bank of Arizona. She also serves as a councillor to the Atlantic Council of the United States, a director of the Center for International Private Enterprise, and serves the council of the American Management Association.
 
**
 
 
Franklyn A. Caine
 
is a senior vice 
president and chief financial officer of Raytheon Company, Lexington, Mass. 
Caine joined Raytheon in April 1999 from Wang Global, where he served as 
executive vice president and chief financial officer. He joined Wang Global in 
1994 and assumed responsibility for all of the company’s financial activities, 
management information systems and a significant portion of the company’s 
strategic business planning.  
 
Previously, Caine 
was senior vice president, Strategic Business Planning and Corporate Development 
for United Technologies Corp., Hartford, Conn. During his eight years at UTC, he 
also served as senior vice president and controller, senior vice president in 
charge of Human Resources, vice president and treasurer, and director of 
Corporate Development. Earlier in his career, Caine held positions at RCA Corp., 
Penn Central Corp., Exxon Corp., and the former New Jersey 
Bell.
 
Caine was born in 
Plainfield, N.J., in March 1950. He received a bachelor’s degree in chemical 
engineering from Princeton University in 1971 and a master’s of business 
administration in finance and international business from the University of 
Chicago in 1976.
 
 
**
 
 
John Deutch is an Institute Professor at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Mr. Deutch has been a member of the MIT 
faculty since 1970, and has served as Chairman of the Department of Chemistry, 
Dean of Science and Provost. Mr. Deutch has published over 140 technical 
publications in physical chemistry, as well as numerous publications on 
technology, energy, international security, and public policy 
issues.
 
John Deutch has served in significant government and 
academic posts throughout his career. In May 1995, he was sworn in as Director 
of Central Intelligence following a unanimous vote in the Senate, and served as 
DCI until December 1996. In this position, he was head of the Intelligence 
Community (all foreign intelligence agencies of the United States) and directed 
the Central Intelligence Agency. From March 1994 to May 1995, he served as the 
Deputy Secretary of Defense. From March 1993 to March 1994, Dr. Deutch served as 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisitions and 
Technology.
 
From 1977 to 1980, John Deutch served in a number of 
positions for the U.S. Department of Energy: as Director of Energy Research, 
Acting Assistant Secretary for Energy Technology, and Undersecretary of the 
Department.
 
In addition John Deutch has served on many 
commissions during several presidential administrations. has served on the 
President¹s Nuclear Safety Oversight Committee (1980-81); the President¹s 
Commission on Strategic Forces (1983); the White House Science Council 
(1985-89); the President¹s Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology 
(1997-2001), the President¹s Intelligence Advisory Board (1990-93); the 
President¹s Commission on Aviation Safety and Security (1996); the Commission on 
Reducing and Protecting Government Secrecy (1996); and as Chairman of the 
Commission to Assess the Organization of the Federal Government to Combat the 
Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction (1998-99).
 
John Deutch has received fellowships and honors from 
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1978) and Alfred P. Sloan (Research 
Fellow 1967-69), and John Simon Guggenheim (Memorial Fellow 1974-1975) Public 
Service Medals have been awarded him from the Department of Energy (1980), the 
Department of State (1980), the Department of Defense (1994 and 1995), the 
Department of the Army (1995), the Department of the Navy (1995), the Department 
of the Air Force (1995), the Coast Guard (1995), the Central Intelligence 
Distinguished Intelligence Medal (1996) and the Intelligence Community 
Distinguished Intelligence Medal (1996).
 
John Deutch earned a B.A. in history and economics 
from Amherst College, and both the B.S. in chemical engineering and Ph.D. in 
physical chemistry from M.I.T. He holds honorary degrees from Amherst College, 
University of Lowell, and Northeastern University.  
 
He was found guilty of having 
17,000 
confidential 
files on a home laptop – a serious breach of national security - but was pardoned by Clinton when he 
left office. We may never know if Deutch was spying for anybody. 
 
 
Director of  
Ariad Pharmaceutical
Director of  
Raytheon
Director of  
Frontera 
Resources
Director of  
iNetworks 
Corporation
 
And he is a Director of the 
 Council on Foreign 
Relations
Member of the 
Trilateral Commission
And member of the Bilderberg Conference, confirmed 
as attendee 
for 1998, 2000 and 2002
Trustee of the  
Urban Institute
Director of  
Resources for the Future
 
**
 
 
Dr. Thomas E. Everhart has served as President, 
California Institute of Technology, and concurrently held the position of 
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics since 1987. From 1984 to 
1987, Dr. Everhart was Chancellor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 
Champaign, Illinois, and concurrently Professor of Electrical and Computer 
Engineering. Prior to joining the University of Illinois, he was Dean of the 
College of Engineering and Professor of Electrical Engineering at Cornell 
University from 1979 to 1984. Dr. Everhart has served as a consultant to such 
companies as Westinghouse Electric Corporation, IBM Research Laboratories, Bell 
Laboratories, and ETEC Corporation. He is also a director of Reveo, Inc., director 
of General Motors Corporation, director of Raytheon and a director 
of  Agilent Technologies Inc., director 
of Hughes Electronics Corporation; director of Saint-Gobain 
Corporation;
 
Dr. Everhart is a member of the National Academy of 
Engineering, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Council of 
Competitiveness, American Association for the Advancement of Science, the World 
Economic Forum Council, and The Royal Academy of Engineering. Dr. Everhart 
received his AB in Physics from Harvard College, a MS in Applied Physics from 
the University of California at Los Angeles, and a Ph.D. in Engineering from 
Clare College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, England. In addition, he has 
received numerous honorary degrees and distinguished 
awards.
 
**
 
 
Mr. 
Kozlowski has served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Tyco 
International Ltd., a multinational company involved in manufacturing, 
distribution, and servicing fire protection and security systems, disposable 
medical products, flow control and electronic products worldwide, since 1993 and 
1992, respectively. Prior to that, he was President and Chief Operating Officer. 
He has been with Tyco since 1989 and has been a Director of Tyco since 1987. He 
serves as a Director of Applied Power Inc.; Raytheon Company; Starwood Resort 
& Hotel and U.S. Office Products Co.
 
“Chief 
Executive L. Dennis Kozlowski resigned from Tyco International Ltd in June 
2002.” (source)
 
“L. 
Dennis Kozlowski, former chief executive of Tyco International, was indicted in 
June on charges that he avoided more than $1 million in sales taxes on six 
pieces of art he purchased in 2001 for $13.1 million. He was indicted later in 
the month on charges of tampering with evidence in the first indictment. The 
charges allege that Kozlowski bought the art, including works by Monet and 
Renoir, for his Manhattan apartment and claimed the pieces were being sent to 
Tyco's New Hampshire headquarters in order to elude New York sales tax. 
Prosecutors are also looking into Tyco, a $36-billion company, to determine if 
Kozlowski used corporate funds for private purposes.” (source) (see 
also)
 
**
 
 
Ferdinand Colloredo-Mansfeld has served as Chairman 
of the Board of Trustees and Chief Executive Officer of Cabot Industrial Trust 
since its formation in October 1997. Mr. Colloredo- Mansfeld also serves as the 
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Cabot Advisors. Mr. Colloredo-Mansfeld 
served as Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer of 
Cabot Partners Limited Partnership from 1990 to 1997, having previously served 
in the same positions with Cabot, Cabot & Forbes Realty Advisors, Inc., an 
affiliate of Cabot, Cabot & Forbes, since its formation in 1986. Mr. 
Colloredo- Mansfeld began his real estate career in 1970 when he joined Cabot, 
Cabot & Forbes, a national real estate development, management and 
construction firm, becoming its Chief Financial Officer in 1973, Chief Operating 
Officer in 1974 and Chief Executive Officer in 1976, a position he held until 
his retirement from that company in 1989. As Chief Executive Officer, Mr. 
Colloredo- Mansfeld oversaw the development and management of approximately $4 
billion of commercial properties in twenty states, including 35 master planned 
suburban business and industrial parks. Mr. Colloredo- Mansfeld is a graduate of 
Harvard College and Harvard Business School. He is a former limited partner in 
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., having withdrawn from the partnership as of 
December 31, 2000.  
 
**
 
 
Henrique de Campos 
Meirelles is President 
of BankBoston and FleetBoston's Global Bank 
and leads Fleet's strategic efforts in the New York metropolitan market as the 
senior executive in the region. Mr. Meirelles is also a member of the Office of 
the Chairman, FleetBoston Financial's top management group, responsible for 
helping set strategy and policy.
 
Mr. Meirelles joined the 
company in 1974 as managing director of BankBoston Leasing. In 1978, he became 
vice president in São Paulo, Brazil, and in 1980 was appointed head of the 
Commercial Bank in Brazil, responsible for Marketing, Credit, and Operations. 
Mr. Meirelles was promoted to deputy country manager in 1981 and became 
president and regional manager in Brazil in 1984. Mr. Meirelles was appointed 
president and COO of BankBoston Corporation in 1996. He was named President of 
FleetBoston's Global and Wholesale Bank in October 1999, following the merger of 
BankBoston and Fleet Financial Group. Mr. Meirelles currently oversees the 
company's businesses in Asia and Europe and in Latin America, where the 
franchise name is BankBoston.
 
Mr. Meirelles is a member 
of the Board of 
Directors of FleetBoston Financial, 
director of the Raytheon Corporation, director of the New York City Investment Fund, a trustee 
of the New England 
Conservatory, the Institute of Contemporary Art, and director of Accion International. His is also a director of the Council of the Americas. He is also a 
member of the Advisory Council of the Sloan School of Management of the MIT, the 
Harvard Business School Initiative on Global Corporate Governance, the Boston 
College Carroll School of Management, the Center for Latin American Issues of 
the George Washington University, the advisory 
council to the Brazilian-American 
Chamber of Commerce in New York and the Adolfo Ibañez University in 
Santiago, Chile. He is the founding President of the Latin American Leasing 
Federation, Chairman 
Emeritus of the Brazilian Association of 
International Banks, Chairman of the Society for the Revitalization of the 
City of São Paulo, and Chairman of the Travessia Foundation. In addition, Mr. 
Meirelles is an Executive 
Committee Member of the U.S. 
Brazilian Business Council and of the American Chamber of Commerce in São 
Paulo, Brazil. In April 2002 
he was honoured by the Brazillian American Chamber of Commerce in 
Florida.
 
Mr. Meirelles received his 
degree in civil engineering from the University of São Paulo and his M.B.A. from 
the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, and has completed the Advanced 
Management Program at Harvard Business School.
 
**
 
 
Frederic M. Poses is the Chairman and Chief Executive 
Officer of American Standard 
Companies Inc.
 
Prior to joining American Standard, Fred was 
President and Chief Operating Officer of AlliedSignal Inc. He joined 
AlliedSignal as a financial analyst in 1969 and was named General Manager of the 
company's Home Furnishings Division in 1977. From 1977 - 1988 he held several 
positions of increasing responsibility until 1988 when he was appointed 
President of the Engineered Materials Sector and Executive Vice President of the 
corporation. In October 1997, he was elected to the Board of Directors and named 
Vice Chairman of AlliedSignal Inc. and was appointed President and COO in June 
1998.
 
Before joining AlliedSignal, Fred spent two years on 
assignment in Peru with the Peace Corps. Born in 1942, he holds a B.B.A. from 
New York University.
 
Fred serves as a director of Centex Corporation, a director of Raytheon Company, a director of the National Center for Learning Disabilities, the 
Eagle Hill School, and as a director of the 
92nd Street Y. He is also a member of the 
Duke University Board of Visitors. Mr. Poses 
resides in Manhattan with his wife and two children.
 
**
 
 
Partner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
His name is most known as the co-chair of the `US Commission on National Security/21st Century (aka The Hart-Rudman Commission)
Warren B. Rudman became a partner of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in 1993 after serving two terms in the U.S. Senate representing New Hampshire. He provides clients with strategic advice regarding commercial and legislative matters. He concentrates on corporate and international law with a focus on corporate investigations. He has been retained by major international corporations and other institutions to conduct internal investigations and provide independent assessments of the organizations' business practices, governance structure or major initiatives. In 1993, he was asked by the board of directors of Thorn EMI plc to investigate allegations regarding the business practices of its U.S. rent-to-own subsidiary. In 1994-95, Rudman chaired a Select Committee appointed by the board of governors of the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) to review the NASD governance and oversight of the NASDAQ Stock Market. Between 2000 and 2001 he served on the Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee (aka The Mitchell Report) which looked at the conflict between Israel and Palestinians.
While in the Senate, Rudman served on the Ethics Committee from 1985 until he left the Senate. As its chairman and vice chairman, he presided over numerous investigations including the Keating Five and was active in fashioning ethics legislation. In addition, he served on the Impeachment Panel for Judge Harry E. Claiborne and Judge Alycee Hastings.
In December 1986, Sen. Rudman was appointed vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee investigating arms transfers to Iran where he was instrumental in organizing and directing the investigation of the Iran-Contra affair. Sen. Rudman served on the Senate Appropriations Committee, the Intelligence Committee, the Governmental Affairs Committee and the well-known Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.
Prior to serving in the Senate, he served as attorney general of the State of New Hampshire from 1970 to 1976.
Currently, Sen. Rudman is a member of the board of directors of the Chubb Corporation, Allied Waste, Boston Scientific, Collins & Aikman and the Raytheon Company, and a trustee of several funds of the Dreyfus Corporation. In addition, President Clinton appointed him chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board where he served from 1993 to 2001. He serves on the Advisory Board of Stonebridge International. He is very active as co-chairman of the Concord Coalition, a non-profit organization which he founded and set up as a grass-roots movement to awaken the American people to the gravity of our nation's fiscal crisis. Sen. Rudman also serves on the board of trustees of Valley Forge Military Academy, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Brookings Institution. He is a member of the Senior Advisory Committee of the Institute of Politics of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
He also serves on the Advisory Board to The O’Gara Company.
Sen. Rudman received his B.S. from Syracuse University in 1952 and served in the U.S. Army as a combat platoon leader and company commander during the Korean War. In 1960, he received his law degree from Boston College Law School.
http://www.paulweiss.com/frames/frameset.asp?url=/lawyers/bio.asp?employeeid=R477753401
Other 
activities inc. media appearances
 
**
 
 
Mike Ruettgers is Executive 
Chairman of EMC's Board of Directors, a position he has held since January 
2001. In this role, he is able to focus even more of his attention on strategic 
business and technology directions while shaping the composition and expertise 
of EMC's independent and fully engaged Board.
 
EMC is the world 
leader in computer information storage systems, software, and services, and the 
only company in the world dedicating itself 100% to comprehensive, automated 
networked storage solutions. These solutions simplify and automate the 
management of customers' entire computer storage environments, raising their 
productivity and lowering their total cost of ownership. EMC has approximately 
19,000 employees worldwide and finished 2001 with revenues of $7 
billion.
 
Ruettgers has been with EMC since 1988, and served 
as CEO from 1992 until January 2001, leading the company in a decade-long 
trajectory of accelerating profitable growth. From his arrival through year-end 
2000, EMC's revenues grew more than 74-fold. During the 10-year bull market from 
October 1990 to October 2000, EMC achieved the highest single-decade performance 
of any listed stock in the history of the New York Stock 
Exchange.
 
During his term as CEO, Ruettgers was named one of 
the "World's Top 25 Executives" by BusinessWeek; one of the "Best CEOs in 
America" by Worth magazine; one of the "25 Most Powerful People in Networking" 
in 2000 by Network World; and "CEO of the Year" for 2000 by Massachusetts 
Investor's Digest. In 2001, the Harvard Business Review carried an extensive 
interview with Ruettgers entitled "Managing for the Next Big Thing," detailing 
how EMC has successfully anticipated one new technology after another. That same 
year, Fast Company magazine named EMC "The World's Most Customer- Centric 
Company," based on EMC's fanatical devotion to customer 
service.
 
Ruettgers has been a frequent speaker at influential 
venues around the world, including the World Economic Forum, the Economic Club 
of Detroit, the Executives' Club of Chicago, Harvard University Nieman Fellows 
seminars, numerous graduate schools of management, and major IT industry 
conferences. He is also a frequent contributor of articles on key policy issues, 
including the urgent need to reform math and science education, the use of 
digital technologies to improve health care, and the responsibility all 
organizations have to protect and preserve their 
information.
 
Ruettgers spent much of his early career with 
Raytheon, where he played a key role in the Patriot Missile Program. In 1999, 
Babson College recognized Ruettgers for being an "information age visionary" and 
presented him with the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. He holds a BS from 
Idaho State University and an MBA from Harvard Business 
School.
 
He is also a director of Raytheon and a director of PerkinElmer.
 
**
 
 
Spivey was group vice president of the Network 
Products Group at Lucent from 1997 to September 2001. Prior to the formation of 
Lucent Technologies, Spivey was vice president of the Systems and Components 
Group for AT&T's Microelectronics business unit.
 
Prior to joining AT&T in 1994, Spivey was employed by Tektronix, Inc, based in Wilsonville, Oregon, from 1991-94, and by Honeywell, Inc. from 1978-91, and by General Electric Co. from 1970-78. He holds a doctorate degree in administration management from Walden University, Minneapolis, Minn., (1990), a master of science degree in physics from Indiana University, Indiana, Penn., (1969), and a bachelor of science degree in physics from Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Penn., (1968).
 
Director at Raytheon, director at Lyondell Chemical Company, director at Novellus Systems, Inc, director 
at  
Cascade 
Microsystems
 
**
 
 
General John H. Tilelli, Jr., retired on January 31, 2000 from the United States Army after over 30 years of service. He is currently employed with Cypress International Inc. in Alexandria, Virginia, as President and Chief Operating Officer.
General Tilelli was raised in Holmdel, New Jersey. A 1963 graduate of Pennsylvania Military College, now Widener University, he received a degree in Economics and was commissioned as an Armor Officer. He attended the Armor Officer Basic and Advance Courses and Airborne School. He was awarded a Master's Degree in Administration from Lehigh University in 1972 and graduated from the United States Army War College in 1983. General Tilelli is the recipient of an honorary doctorate in Business Management from Widener University in May 1996, and an honorary doctorate of law from the University of Maryland.
During General Tilelli's last active duty assignment as Commander-in-Chief of the United Nations Command, Republic of Korea/United States Combined Forces Command/United States Forces Korea, he commanded the largest standing joint and coalition force in the world comprising of over 650,000 soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines who led to the theater's campaign strategy and revitalized Korea's automated command and control and equipment modernization. During his tour in Korea, General Tilelli advised and made recommendations to foreign heads of state, Ministers of Defense and Foreign Affairs and United Nations leadership regarding national security, regional policy and planning.
Upon his retirement from the United States Army as Commander-in-Chief of the United Nations Command, Republic of Korea/United States Combined Forces/United States Forces Korea, General Tilelli was appointed as President and Chief Executive Officer of the USO Worldwide Operations. He had the responsibility for the operation of over 122 USO operations around the world in support of our servicemen and women and their families, raising the donor funds to allow continued support by the American people of over $20 million/year; building a $100 million endowment and managing and leading 600 employees and 12,000 volunteers. He did all this in close coordination with the senior leadership of the Department of Defense. General Tilelli also participated and led many senior panels related to defense issues since his retirement.
General Tilelli's military career includes serving as the Vice Chief of Staff of the Army and the Army's Deputy Chief of Operations during which he led the Army's vision to the Army of the 21st Century and implemented reforms in acquisition and procurement. His career included many command assignments including Commander of United States Army Forces Command where he improved readiness of all United States Army Forces (active and reserve) and was responsible for the Army's homeland security function. As the Commander, Seventh Army Training Command and Combat Maneuver Training Center, he revolutionized training in Europe. As Commander of the 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas, he trained, deployed and fought the Division in Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm.
General Tilelli's staff assignments include three tours at the Pentagon: Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Research, Development and Acquisition; the Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans in the Office of the Chief of Staff of the Army; and later promoted to Lieutenant General as the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans, Department of the Army. His responsibilities in all assignments spanned geopolitics, programming and budgeting, congressional affairs, organizational design, development of training methodologies and, of course, leadership and management of large organizations with multiple functions and missions.
General Tilelli's military career includes two tours in Vietnam and four tours in Germany. His combat tours include assignments as a Company Commander and District Senior Advisor in Vietnam and Commanding General of 1st Cavalry Division during Desert Shield and Desert Storm. In Germany, he served as a Troop Commander and S-1 in the 2d Squadron, 2d Armored Cavalry Regiment; Chief of Staff, 1st Armored Division in Ansbach; Regimental Commander, 2d Armored Cavalry Regiment in Nuremberg; and Chief of Staff, VII (U.S.) Corps in Stuttgart.
General Tilelli's awards and decorations include The Defense Distinguished Service Medal, The Army's Distinguished Service Medal (with three Oak Leaf Clusters), The Navy's Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal with "V" Device, Bronze Star Medal (with Oak Leaf Cluster), Meritorious Service Medal (with three Oak Leaf Clusters), Air Medal, Army Commendation Medal (with two Oak Leaf Clusters), Combat Infantryman Badge, Parachutist Badge, Office of the Secretary of Defense Identification Badge, Joint Chiefs of Staff Identification Badge and Army Staff Identification Badge.
http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/BCSIA/BCSIA.nsf/bios/TilelliJrJohn
 
 
He is also a director of the 
 Aerospace 
Corporation
 
 
Retired as directors on April 24, 2002
 
 
Retired Dean, The 
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
 
John R. Galvin 
served as NATO’s top military commander in Europe during the five years that 
ended the Cold War. More recently, he was temporarily an envoy of the U.S. State 
Department with the rank of Ambassador in assisting with negotiations in 
Bosnia.
 
A graduate of West 
Point, Galvin holds a master’s degree in English from Columbia University, and 
continued his military education at the Army Command and General Staff College 
and the Army War College. He also did postgraduate study at the University of 
Pennsylvania and attended the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy on a 
fellowship in 1972-73. He spent most of his early career in parachute and light 
infantry units, with command at all levels.
 
Galvin served two 
years in the Vietnam War as a staff officer in plans and operations as a 
commander of First Battalion, Eighth Cavalry. He also served 15 years in Europe 
and 5 years in Latin America. In June 1987, he was appointed Supreme Allied 
Commander, Europe (NATO), and the Commander-in- Chief of U.S. Army, Naval, and 
Air Forces in Europe.
 
He is board member 
of the Institute for Defense Analysis, the National Defense University, the 
Atlantic Council of the United States, J.&W. Seligman &Co., former 
director of USLife, and chairman emeritus of the American Council on 
Germany.
 
Galvin’s published 
books include The Minute Men, a study of the first battle of the American 
Revolution; Air Assault, an analysis of the development of air mobility in 
twentieth century warfare; and Three Men of Boston, a study of the political 
events leading to the American Revolution.
 
He was also a member 
of the  US Commission 
on National Security/21st Century (aka the Hart-Rudman Committee)
 
**
 
 
Retired Chairman and 
Chief Executive Officer, The Gillette Company
 
Alfred M. Zeien is the former Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of The Gillette Company, a consumer products company. He is also a Director of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, a financial services company, Polaroid Corporation, and Inverness Medical Innovations, which develops, manufacturers, and markets self-test diagnostic products. He is a member of EMC's Audit Committee and Executive Compensation and Stock Option Committee. Mr. Zeien became an EMC Director in December 1999.