Thank you, Alex. Net sales for the second quarter of fiscal year 2024 were $8 million or 6% lower when compared to the same quarter a year ago, with $4.5 million for Ranor and $3.5 million for Stadco. Cost of sales were $6.9 million or 2% higher than the prior year period, due primarily to a less favorable project mix at Ranor, offset in part by better throughput at Stadco. Due to the higher costs, gross profit was $1 million or 41% lower, compared to the same quarter a year ago. SG&A expense decreased by $200,000 and or 11%, primarily due to cost reductions at Stadco. Operating loss was $597,000 and compared to an operating loss of $87,000 in the same quarter a year ago. Interest expense for the second quarter increased by $46,000 due to more borrowing under our revolver loan higher interest rates and higher loan cost amortization. We ended the quarter with $1.9 million outstanding under the revolver loan. Net loss for the second quarter was $528,000 compared to net income of $390,000 the prior year -- the prior year period included a one year -- sorry, the prior year period included a onetime gain of $624,000 from an employer tax credit refund. Net sales for the first six months of fiscal year 2024 were $15.3 million or 2% lower when compared to the same period a year ago, with $9 million for Ranor and $6.3 million for Stadco. Cost of sales were $13.6 million or 4% higher than the prior year period due primarily to less favorable project mix at Ranor. Due to the higher cost gross profit was $1.7 million or 32% lower compared to last year. SG&A expense decreased by $300,000 or 9% primarily due to cost reductions at Stadco. Operating loss was $1.2 million or $532,000 higher than the same quarter a year ago. Interest expense increased by $65,000 due to more borrowing under the revolver loan and higher interest rates. Loan cost amortization increased by $11,000. Net loss for the first six months of fiscal 2024 was $1.1 million compared to a net loss of $110,000 the prior year period included a one-time gain of $624,000 from an employer tax credit refund. Moving on to our financial position. Cash provided by operating activities was $1.3 million, cash used for capital expenditures was $2.6 million. Financing activities provided net cash of $0.9 million. Our total debt was $7.1 million on September 30, 2023, compared to $6.1 million at the end of March 31, 2023, as we borrowed an additional $1.3 million under the revolver loan. Cash balance at March 31, 2023, was -- cash balance at September 30, 2023, was $138,000 compared to $535,000 at March 31, 2023. Working capital was negative at September 30, 2023, as we reclassified all of our long-term debt to current because of certain debt covenant violations. We have requested a waiver from our lender. With that, I will now turn the call back to Alex.