Thank you, Nazzic and good morning everyone. I am proud of the financial results we delivered in the second quarter as we continue to execute with focus and intent. I’ll discuss our results in greater detail and then discuss our improved outlook for the year. We reported strong fiscal second quarter results with revenue of $1.78 billion, an increase of 8.3%, when excluding revenue related to our Logistics and Supply Chain Management business and FSA joint venture from the prior year. Revenue growth in the quarter was driven primarily by the ramp up of work on new and existing programs, improved labor productivity, and favorable timing of materials sales. We had minimal contribution from our $900 million DCSA One IT program in the quarter, whose ramp is expected to begin predominantly in the second-half of the year. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter was 9.8%, an increase of 70 basis points year-over-year driven by strong program performance, cost efficiency initiatives, and the timing of certain planned strategic investments shifting to later in the year. Adjusted diluted EPS of $2.05 represents an increase of 17% year-over-year, driven primarily by the strong operating performance in the quarter and a roughly 4% decline in our diluted weighted average share count. Free cash flow, adjusted for transaction fees and other costs related to the sale of our supply chain business was $143 million in the quarter and $219 million year-to-date as we continue to see good traction on our working capital improvement efforts. Net bookings of $700 million resulted in a book-to-bill of 0.4 times in the quarter and 0.8 times on a trailing twelve month basis. Due primarily to the timing of expected awards, our bookings and book-to-bill are below where we had planned to be at the beginning of the year. As a reminder, our net bookings in the second quarter do not include any value from our $1.3 billion T-Cloud program, which cleared protest in the second quarter. Consistent with our practice, we expect to book awards as we receive task orders under this important program. In fact, over the past three years, we have been awarded approximately $8 billion in single award IDIQ work of which 40% is new business. This is not reflected in our backlog beyond the task orders funded in any given year. Given that approximately 50% of our annual revenue comes from these IDIQ contracts, our practice tends to understate bookings and backlog versus one which recognizes the full or partial value of an IDIQ at time of award. None of this is to take away from the fact that we need to continue to sequentially build our backlog. As we show on slide 10 of our earnings presentation, we continue to see a strong and growing pipeline of opportunities and expect the value of both award activity and award submissions to improve materially in the second-half of the year. In fact, since the beginning of the third quarter, we have won approximately $1.1 billion of work, roughly 60% of which is for new business across multiple domains. Included within these awards are a Hypersonics Advanced Concepts program, the MultiVehicle Fielding program in support of the Navy, and the Ground Based Radar Maintenance and Sustainment Service contract, known as GMASS, in support of the Space Force. These wins need to clear the customary protest window, but I want to highlight the important role that the solutions developed within our Engineering Innovation Factory played in these captures. Favorable customer feedback related to these programs reinforces our view that the returns we generate from our internal investments drive long-term shareholder value. I’ll now discuss our updated outlook for fiscal year 2024. Please note that we have provided additional directional guidance for our fiscal third and fourth quarters to assist with your modeling. We are increasing our revenue guidance at the midpoint by $50 million to a range of $7.2 billion to $7.25 billion, which represents pro-forma organic growth of approximately 4.5% and our highest growth rate since the separation in 2013. We are reaffirming our revenue plans for FY ‘25 and FY ‘26 and are encouraged by our strong start thus far against meeting our three-year targets. While we continue to have strong visibility into our FY ‘25 revenue plan, the impacts from previously discussed contract transitions and assumed delays in award timing are likely to make the cadence of revenue growth weighted to the second-half of fiscal year 2025. Currently, we expect the first-half FY ‘25 revenues to be roughly flat year-over-year pro-forma for our Logistics & Supply Chain Management divestiture before inflecting to more meaningful growth in the second-half of FY ‘25. We have visibility into this growth given recent wins and opportunities in our pipeline. Of course, we will provide a more detailed update on our FY ‘25 outlook during our third quarter earnings call. As a result of strong performance year-to-date, we are increasing our adjusted EBITDA margin guidance to a range of 9.3% to 9.4%. We have provided additional detail regarding the drivers of first-half to second-half margins on slide 11 of the presentation. While our plan for FY ‘24 calls for low-9% margins in the second-half, our performance to start the year both in terms of program execution and the impact of other margin improvement initiatives drive increased confidence in our ability to reach our FY ‘26 margin target of 9.5% to 9.7%. As we have communicated, our objective is to consistently and profitably grow the company and balance near-term margin improvement against our objective to invest and drive long-term value. We are increasing FY ‘24 adjusted EPS guidance to a range of $7.20 to $7.40 driven mainly by improved operating results and a lower planned effective tax rate. We are maintaining our free cash flow guidance at a range of $460 million to $480 million and our performance year to date has put us in a good position to grow our transaction adjusted FCF by approximately 10% for a third consecutive year. Finally, we continue to expect share repurchases of $350 million to $400 million this year with similar levels in FY ‘25 and FY ‘26. Before turning the call over to Nazzic, I want to thank her for her leadership in recent years. Nazzic’s ability to create an inclusive culture and opportunities for all our stakeholders, employees, customers, and shareholders is unmatched across the industry. With that, I will turn the call over to Nazzic.