Secretary of the Navy Gordon R. England will name the Navy's
tenth Nimitz class aircraft carrier in honor of World War II
Naval Aviator and former President of the United States George
Herbert Walker Bush during a ceremony today at 3 p.m. EDT in the
Pentagon Auditorium, room 5A1070.

Senator John Warner of Virginia, a former secretary of the Navy
himself, will join England and the former president for the
event. The future USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) is presently
under construction at Northrop Grumman's Newport News in
Virginia.

Bush's lifetime of service to American began when he joined the
Navy on his 18th birthday in 1942 as a seaman. He became the
youngest pilot in the Navy at the time when he received his
commission and designated a Naval Aviator before his 19th
birthday.

Serving in the Navy from August 1942 to September 1945 Bush flew
the Avenger Torpedo Bomber in combat from the carrier USS San
Jacinto. During an attack on enemy installations near Chichi
Jima in September 1944 his plane was hit by enemy fire while
making a bombing run. Although the plane was on fire and heavily
damaged, he completed a strafing run on the target before
bailing out of the doomed aircraft. Bush parachuted into the
sea and was soon rescued by a Navy submarine, the USS Finback.
Tragically, his two-crew members were killed. During his Navy
service in the Pacific during World War II, he earned the
Distinguished Flying Cross and three Air Medals.

Bush later served in a number of roles for America including the
United States Congress, Ambassador to the United Nations, Chief
of the U.S. Liaison Office to China, director of the Central
Intelligence Agency and later as vice president and president of
the United States. As commander-in-chief he led the United
States and a coalition of 30 nations during the Gulf War that
ended Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and liberated the people of the
small Persian Gulf nation.

At 1,092 feet in length and 97,000 tons, Nimitz class aircraft
carriers are the largest warships in the world. They have a
flight deck of 4.5 acres and carry an air wing of approximately
75 aircraft and can travel at speeds in excess of 30 knots.
America's carriers deploy around the globe in support of U.S.
interests and commitments and can respond to crises in ways
ranging from peacetime presence to full-scale war serving a
vital role in the defense of the American people.

England has also designated Bush's daughter, Mrs. Doro B. Koch
for the traditional role of ship's sponsor. USS George H.W.
Bush is expected to join the fleet in 2009.