 Brad, as president of the Main Charitable Mechanics Association, you must be so excited about this big anniversary coming up and all the changes that are taking place here at the Main Charitable Mechanics. Tell us a little bit about it. Well, you're referring to the 200th anniversary coming up? Yes. That'll be coming up in 2015, but obviously it was an event like that, you start preparing for it now. Probably the greatest preparation we're doing is a strategic plan, which as far as we know is the first time that the association in its nearly 200-year history has undergone a strategic plan. So that's our big event for 2014, and then obviously whatever comes back from that plan will be enacting beginning in 2014, we hope, and then into the next 200 years. And with that anniversary coming up, you want people to know what you're doing here and what the association is all about. And a big part of it are the travel lectures. That's right. That's probably another anniversary that we should mention. This is the 101st season of a year of doing travel lectures here in Portland. Main Charitable Mechanics Association has been doing them here. These travel lectures are really, really interesting. These involve people who go around the world and shoot professional film footage of various places anywhere from Italy to France to Africa. Right here in the United States, like Yellowstone Park, we have a lecture coming up later this next year actually on San Francisco. My favorite is coming up here though in another couple of weeks or coming up shortly. And that'll be on Eastern Canada, be the maritime provinces and Newfoundland. We have a couple of professional lectures that are coming in to give that tour. What's nice about that is it's an easy one that almost anybody in Maine can take afterwards if they're interested. If you've been there already, you might want to come up and see some familiar sites that are on it. That's coming up on Monday the 18th of November. Well that one sounds especially exciting to me. I lived in Nova Scotia many years ago and had my first child there. But you're right. You can drive to those locations from Maine very easily. And the other big thing is we may be having the ferry again. Okay, there you go Leslie. And so the people who haven't been able to go for a long time, it will open up the world to them. So tell us a little bit about some of the things they'll be talking about in that lecture. It'll be the typical all the prime scenery of the maritime provinces, PEI, part of Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and New Brunswick. And as you know, there's everything from the reversing falls to the highest tides in the world, highest tide change in the world. The beautiful Cape Breton Islands, Prince Edward Island, which is probably best known for Anne of Green Gables, and of course Newfoundland. The Vikings game to Lancer Meadow. There you go. And people go to Catherine Macaulay to see these. Great point. That lecture takes place at the auditorium at Catherine Macaulay High School on Stevens Avenue. Lectures start at 7.30. If you're a member of Maine Charitable Mechanic Association, the lecture is free. If you're not, it's only $5 per person to attend. These are great lectures. They start at 7.30, we'll have an intermission after about 45 minutes or an hour, and then continue after that. But when you think about where can you go anywhere for $5 today for that kind of entertainment, you can take your family. If you are a senior, you can get in actually for $4. And the seats are comfortable. Oh, they're very comfortable and beautiful. You can't miss. I mean, it's all auditorium style. So there are no bad seats in the auditorium at all, Leslie. Well, I'm looking forward to going if I can. And I know that our viewers will want to go. And there'll be information there about the upcoming films. Thank you. And again, it's an opportunity to see an area that's drivable. A lot of people, a lot of our people from Maine have been there. But to hear some real professionals narrate the film footage. Well, thank you, and look forward to seeing this. Thank you, Leslie. All right.