The Secretary of the Navy, Richard V. Spencer, has been fired. What is revelatory is what he was fired for.
As we posted last month, in January, Spencer made a promise to President Trump that the advanced weapons elevators on the new carrier USS Gerald R. Ford would be operational by the end of the summer or the president should fire him. The elevators are not operational and without them, as one critic has noted the most expensive warship in history is little more than a “$13-billion nuclear-powered floating berthing barge.” Nevertheless, that was not what Secretary Spencer was fired for.
Lucy Hughes, a 24-year-old recent engineering graduate of the University of Sussex has won this year’s
One hundred and seven years ago today, the three-masted schooner 
Last March,
When I bought my new-to-me old boat, I bought several booklets of paper charts covering the waters from the Chesapeake to Maine. Over the last few years, I have never used them. Never, not once. Instead, I have chart plotters on a laptop, two tablets, and my phone. My paper charts have stayed buried at the bottom of the cabinet beneath the chart table. Nevertheless, I still had mixed feelings when I read that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA ) is phasing out the production of traditional paper nautical charts.
Friday night I had the great pleasure to meet
The
A year ago,
On November 14, 1910, one hundred and nine years ago today, pilot
After several near boom years, the Maine lobster fishery is being slammed by the current trade war between the United States and China. From June 2018 to June 2019, after the duties were in place, l
In recent weeks there been considerable interest generated by an application for a 