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===Command assignments=== Zumwalt next served as [[executive officer]] of the destroyer {{USS|Saufley|DD-465|6}}, and in March 1946, was transferred to the destroyer {{USS|Zellars|DD-777|6}}, as executive officer and navigator. In January 1948, Zumwalt was assigned to the [[Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps]] unit of the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|University of North Carolina]], where he remained until June 1950. That same month, he assumed command of {{USS|Tills|DE-748|6}}, a destroyer escort that was commissioned in a reserve status. The ''Tills'' was placed in full active commission at [[Charleston Naval Shipyard]] on November 21, 1950, and he continued to command her until March 1951, when he joined the battleship {{USS|Wisconsin|BB-64|6}} as navigator and served with the ship in operations in Korea. Detached from USS ''Wisconsin'' in June 1952, he attended the [[Naval War College]], [[Newport, Rhode Island]], and in June 1953, he reported as head of the Shore and Overseas Bases Section, [[Bureau of Naval Personnel]], Navy Department, [[Washington, D.C.]] He also served as officer and enlisted requirements officer, and as action officer on Medicare legislation. Completing that tour of duty in July 1955, he assumed command of the destroyer {{USS|Arnold J. Isbell|DD-869|6}}, participating in two deployments with the [[United States Seventh Fleet]]. In this assignment, he was commended by the Commander, Cruiser-Destroyer Forces, [[United States Pacific Fleet]], for winning the Battle Efficiency Competition for his ship and for winning Excellence Awards in Engineering, Gunnery, Anti-Submarine Warfare, and Operations. In July 1957, he returned to the Bureau of Naval Personnel for further duty. In December 1957, he was transferred to the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Personnel and Reserve Forces), and served as special assistant for naval personnel until November 1958, then as special assistant and naval aide until August 1959. Ordered to the first ship built from the keel up as a [[guided missile frigate]], {{USS|Dewey|DLG-14|6}}, built at the [[Bath Iron Works|Bath (Maine) Iron Works]], he assumed command of that frigate at her commissioning in December 1959, and commanded it until June 1961. During the period of his command, ''Dewey'' earned the Excellence Award in Engineering, Supply, Weapons, and was runner-up in the Battle Efficiency Competition. He was a student at the [[National War College]], Washington, D.C., during the 1961β1962 class year. In June 1962, he was assigned to the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs), Washington, D.C., where he served first as desk officer for France, Spain, and Portugal, then as director of arms control and contingency planning for Cuba. From December 1963 until June 21, 1965, he served as executive assistant and senior aide to the Honorable [[Paul Nitze|Paul H. Nitze]], [[Secretary of the Navy]]. For duty in his tour in the offices of the [[United States Secretary of Defense|Secretary of Defense]] and the Secretary of the Navy, he was awarded the [[Legion of Merit]].
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