To be able to take a ship from new construction and watch it be built together by the ship yard, train with our team and bring into Boston Harbor for the first time, it's very amazing. I looked at the history books. I don't think we've had a submarine in Boston Harbor since sometime in the late '80s or early '90s.
I have much more power in my second term I'm going to sign an executive order to ensure that the second Saturday in December, is preserved exclusively nobody is playing football, not Ohio State against Notre Dame, not LSU against Alabama.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is reportedly considering severing ties with Scouting America, which could mean a consequential break with an organization that has long been closely associated with military service and leadership development. Public data from two prominentmilitary schools, West Point and the Naval Academy, shows that Scouting is common among future officers - more than one in ten cadets and about 10% of midshipmen in recent years have a Scouting background.
In the latest episode of IPWatchdog Unleashed, I had the opportunity to sit down with Ted Wood-a unique figure whose career spans military service, engineering and patent law. After spending time both in-house and at Am Law 100 firms, today Ted is Managing Partner of Wood IP. Our conversation, which took place August 8, was not only interesting and fun but a testament to the diverse pathways one can take to success, both in life and, specifically, in the engineering and patent law fields.
Combat rarely unfolds as a sequence of clean, deliberate actions. For Navy SEALs, engagements are defined by seconds-long windows where decisions about movement, fire, and restraint must be made instantly and under extreme pressure. These choices are not improvised in the moment, but trained relentlessly until judgment becomes automatic. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at the split-second decisions that Navy SEALs have to make.