 We have four different graduate schools here. It's applied science, it's information science, business and public policy and international graduate education. Officers are sent here under orders because their communities, surface, submarine, aviation, engineer and duty, their communities think that they need this education to take with them throughout their career to help advance whatever the Navy is doing. Naval postgraduate school is demanding. The student wants to come here, they better be ready to work. It's not a golf vacation. There's a lot of study, there's a lot of learning. You have to be inquisitive, you have to be thinking, you have to want to succeed and everybody will bend over backwards to help. This is a great opportunity for you to basically give back to the fleet or address problems that you've seen while you're out there. You can come here and like, hey, we have this problem with our ship or on our shore command and you could come here and study it and find a way to solve it and then apply it back to the fleet. That's what NPS is about. How do we ask hard questions? Ask them with our experienced students who know so much about what the fleet is because they just came and they're going right back. How do we work on the right problems and hopefully help everybody else piece these parts together to get to a more effective future for our Navy?