U.S. Army Operational Test
Command to host Operational Testers' Hall of Fame induction ceremony
by U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs
The U.S. Army
Operational Test Command will host its
24th annual Operational Testers' Hall of
Fame Induction Ceremony — honoring two
new inductees — at 10 a.m. Sept. 22 at
its West Fort Hood, Texas headquarters.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army)
Michael B.
Nott of Harker Heights, Texas, enters
the U.S. Army Operational Test Command's
Operational Testers' Hall of Fame as the
program's 38th inductee in a ceremony
scheduled for 10 a.m. Sept. 22 at West
Fort Hood, Texas.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army file photo)
Gayle S.
Shull of Belton, Texas, enters the U.S.
Army Operational Test Command's
Operational Testers' Hall of Fame as the
program's 39th inductee in a ceremony
scheduled for 10 a.m. Sept. 22 at West
Fort Hood, Texas.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army file photo)
WEST FORT HOOD, Texas -- The U.S.
Army Operational Test Command will host its 24th annual
Operational Testers' Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony --
honoring two new inductees -- at 10 a.m. Sept. 22 at its
headquarters here.
Michael B. Nott of Harker Heights, Texas, will be the
38th HOF inductee, and Gayle S. Shull of Belton, Texas,
enters the HOF as the program's 39th inductee.
Nott served his nation for more than 45 years, retiring
in 1992 as an Army officer after 24 years, then serving
another 21 years as a Department of the Army Civilian.
He began supporting operational tests while on active
duty from the late-1970s to mid-1980s with assignments
as a test officer for the Communications Electronics
Test Board (CETD) at Fort Gordon, Georgia, and a test
officer for the Battlefield Automation Test Directorate
(BATD), TRADOC Combined Arms Test Activity (TCATA), Fort
Hood, Texas.
Over a 15-year period, Nott worked his way from a test
officer in 1992 to Deputy Director, Mission Command Test
Directorate; and also served as the Director from 2008
to 2011. He remained the Deputy Director until his
retirement on Dec. 14, 2012.
Highlights of his career include working on systems such
the Brigade Subscriber Node and Joint Network Node,
which eventually led to the current Army communications
backbone -- the Warfighter Information Network --
Tactical (WIN-T).
He was also instrumental in helping build the Army's
Network Integration Evaluation (NIE) in 2011, which just
finished its 17th iteration in July.
Shull served in support of operational testing for more
than 39 years, becoming an early leader and innovator in
the areas of information technology and test technology.
During the 13-year period between 1975 to 1988, Shull
progressed from GS-5 computer intern to the GS-15
Director of Information Systems for the Training and
Doctrine Command's new Test and Experimentation Command
(TEXCOM).
During 2002, Shull was re-assigned to what is now the
U.S. Army Operational Test Command, when the OTC
Commander asked her to design and implement a technology
planning and support directorate using personnel assets
from three different organizations.
She managed an annual technology budget of $20 million,
and led an organization of 26 military and civil service
engineers and simulation specialists augmented by more
than 50 contractors.
Shull's passion for science, technology, engineering and
math (STEM) and robotics programs at local schools
contributed to a generation of local school children
being encouraged to pursue STEM educations.
She remained Director of OTC's Test Technology
Directorate until her retirement on June 1, 2014.
The Hall of Fame, which inducted its first class in
October 1994, has served to honor Soldiers and Civilians
for their commitment to putting the best possible
equipment and systems into the hands of Soldiers in both
training and combat conditions.
As the Army's only independent operational tester, OTC
tests and assesses Army, joint, and multi-service
warfighting systems in realistic operational
environments, using typical Soldiers to determine
whether the systems are effective, suitable, and
survivable. OTC is required by public law to test major
systems before they are fielded to its ultimate customer
-- the American Soldier.