 Sister-in-arms, let us pause to reflect Lord Patriot, Submariner, and Superintendent Barb as a shipmate during my war patrols. All right, I'll meet you in that parking lot. That's when we decided I'm right. Lieutenant McFadden, now inherent. I now recognize our new brother and sister-in-arms. Let us pause to reflect King's Great Days. Yes, it's Marquette Lavec, and Marquette M-A-R-Q-U-E-T-T-E, Lavec L-E-V, as in Victor, E-Q-U-E. Definitely, it's such an honor to join such a long tradition of Submariners finally. I think finally when you get wearing the dolphins, it's such a long tradition of amazing men that have fought in the submarine world. So finally getting to join those ranks just feels incredible. Obviously it's a huge honor, but quite honestly I just go to work every day and do my job just like my male counterparts have. So it's a huge honor, but at the same time it feels good to finally be a Submariner. Definitely, so in order to qualify for our dolphins as officers on board, we go through about a year and a half of training before we show up at the boat, and then when we show up on our boat, we're required to qualify both in the engineering field as engineering officer watch as well as all the forward qualifications. So we're pretty much required to know all the systems on the entire boat in order for the captain to certify that we are qualified to stand officer of the deck. Right, I mean the whole process of getting the dolphins is incredibly rigorous. There's so much information that you have to learn and know, and just really being in it every single day and working and a couple hours every single day learning all the systems and the qualifying. So it's definitely a very rigorous process. Right, so one thing I love about the submarine force is that immediately when you get on board you're given a division. So I was given a division of about 12 guys, and I love the fact that I get on board and I can just start leading right away. So now that I'm qualified, I'm definitely qualified to stay on the watch, but I've been doing, you know, all the hard work since day one's getting on board, so. Mr. U.S. Spalman Gold, Chris Nash, H-R-I-S, N-A-S-H. Yeah, so Lieutenant Lavec worked for about a year, a little over a year to get that submarine qualification. As they progress through their qualifications, they'll begin with engineering officer of the watch, engineering duty officer, where they'll qualify in the propulsion plant as supervisors. Once that is done, then they'll work forward. They'll qualify a contact coordinator, surfaced off to the deck, submerged off to the deck, and then finally once they've demonstrated they can operate the ship forward and aft, and also understand the war-fighting aspects, then they'll get qualified in submarines, which is what we celebrate today. The significance of this event is really a culmination of her apprenticeship program onboard the submarine. The expectations are today much higher for Lieutenant Lavec than they were yesterday, because over that period of year, she has demonstrated not only technical knowledge, but also technical competence and leadership competence. So the expectations are no longer that she'd be an apprentice, but that she'd be a leader, and so I have great expectations that she'll do a great job in that role. The junior officer tour, initial tour is about a three-year tour, a little less than 32 months, and so what this means is for the remainder of the next two years roughly onboard, she'll take ever-increasing positions of responsibility. She'll take a greater and greater role in the planning and execution of the war-fighting of the ship, and we have great expectations for her in terms of taking that next step and have, based on her talents and technical competence, placing her in some fairly substantial positions over the next couple of years. Yeah, to me the significance of this event is, you know, every time we qualify an officer or an enlisted person in submarines, that's significant, because as I mentioned earlier, it is a testament both their individual hard work, but also the hard work of the crew to get them to that point. This is significant specifically for Lieutenant Lavec, because it represents an opening of the aperture for technical talent coming into the Navy. So for officers, we now have twice the number of people that we can select from to take those positions of leadership, having now females qualified. For me, it's also a great thing, because I think, and I look at my daughter, and I say, you know what, honey, you can look at Lieutenant Lavec, and one day you could be a submarine or two, just like Daddy. Well, to me this was a great day at a great location. The weather was perfect. We were able to do it here at World War II Memorial, which I think is appropriate, because any time that we do one of these ceremonies, we look back on our past, because it helps to find who we are today. So it's appropriate, because not only does it show that she has taken those steps and talks about what we did in the past, but it also shows what the future of the submarine force is going to be and how wide that aperture is for anyone. Fair and equal treatment for all is part of our Navy ethos, and I think that Lieutenant Lavec represents that well for the Navy and for the USS Wyoming. Is there anything you would like to add, sir? That's it.