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Monday, December 23, 2024

U.S. Marine Corps commandant commissions 18 officers at joint ceremony

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Forty-one years after he took the U.S. Marine Corps Oath of Office at  Tulane, Gen. David H. Berger, engineering alumnus and 38th commandant  of the U.S. Marine Corps, returned to the university’s uptown campus as a  guest of honor at the Tulane Reserve Officers Training Corps’ Joint  Commissioning Ceremony.

Berger gave the keynote address and commissioned 18 new officers at  Avron B. Fogelman Arena in the Devlin Fieldhouse on May 21. Earlier that  day, Berger received a Doctor of Humane Letters at Tulane’s Unified Commencement Ceremony, which was held in Yulman Stadium.

The new officers represented four branches of the U.S. military —  Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force and Army — and three additional New  Orleans universities, which each have an affiliation with one or more of  Tulane’s ROTC units. This year, the graduates came from Tulane, Xavier  and Dillard universities and the University of New Orleans.

“When you wake up tomorrow, you will have the values of the nation on your shoulders ... you will be ready for it.”

Gen. David H. Berger, U.S. Marine Corps commandant

President Michael A. Fitts reminded the audience that Tulane’s NROTC  history dates to 1938 and that the university has graduated more than  2,000 officers from the program.

Fitts said the Class of 2022 officers are following in the footsteps of notable alumni such as Berger (Class of 1981); Col. Doug Hurley (Class of 1988), who delivered the keynote address at the 2020 Tulane Commencement; and Ensign Richard O. Werlein (NROTC  Class of 1945), whose prowess as a hydrographer prompted the U.S.  government to name one of the Windmill Islands after him.

“Whether you plan to lead, command, discover or explore, know that  your legacy includes your alma mater, your classmates, and the friends  and family who supported you along the way,” Fitts said. “Thank you for  connecting your passion with something bigger than yourselves.”

Berger challenged the newly commissioned officers to always consider  their fellow Marines, airmen, sailors and soldiers first. “That is what  it means to be an officer,” he said. “You must give them your best self  every day. They deserve nothing less.”

“When you wake up tomorrow, you will have the values of the nation on  your shoulders. Like your predecessors, because you were so well  prepared, you will be ready for it. You will do us all proud,” he  continued.

“Personal conviction, courage, integrity and ingrained sense of  service to your nation: Those are the traits that distinguish you from  all others.”

Mark Shreve, a Mandeville, Louisiana, native who was sworn in as a  second lieutenant in the Marine Corps, said he was honored to be in  Berger’s presence.

“To have somebody of (Berger’s) stature to come down here to  commission us was truly humbling, because it just showed us the  dedication and the honor that he gives towards even the … newest  officers,” Shreve said.

Shreve, who graduated this year with a history degree, will move on  to an officer’s training school in Quantico, Virginia, before he  receives an official military occupational specialty.

         

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    Catherine Grimm  

   

Catherine  Grimm takes the Oath of Office. A 2022 graduate of Tulane Law School,  Grimm is now a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force. (Photo by Rusty  Costanza)

         

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    Newly commissioned officers at Tulane NROTC ceremony  

   

New officers  in the Marine Corps, Army, Navy and Air Force stand at attention during  the ceremony. Mark Shreve, far left, received a history degree from  Tulane and is now a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps. Second from  left, Jason Florentino of Dillard University is also a new Marine Corps  Officer. Tulane’s NROTC program has an agreement with ROTC students at  several universities around New Orleans. (Photo by Rusty Costanza)

Original source can be found here.

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