 Keeping current of all that is happening in aeronautics in space is very difficult indeed. In order to help educators get the results of NASA activities as soon as possible after they occur, NASA has created a teacher resource center network to provide educators with educational materials to use in their instruction, as you will see. The teacher resource center network consists of three parts. Teacher resource centers, regional teacher resource centers, and the central operations of resources for educators. Established in 1976, the teacher resource centers serve all grade levels from kindergarten to college level by having a variety of materials and services available for the educators used. Teacher resource centers, or TRCs, are located on each of the nine NASA centers throughout the United States. We were established to provide materials for the teacher for the classroom use. Materials such as slides, videotapes, film strips, slide programs, activities. Each NASA center has the teacher resource center, and they provide the same types of services this one does. We also have regional teacher resource centers that are putting colleges and universities, and they have a starter kit. They don't have everything that we have, but they have a nice selection of videotapes and slides and film strips. There are 20 of these regional teacher resource centers, or RTRCs located at universities, colleges, and museums, so that teachers and other educators who are not located near a NASA center can have access to NASA materials. But even these RTRCs are not easily visited by some educators. So in 1986, NASA established the central operations of resources for educators. We also have an organization called CORE, which is the Central Distribution Center, and for teachers who are not able to come in to the center or other NASA centers, they can purchase the NASA materials through CORE. NASA decided that there was a need to provide a mail order service for teachers wanting their educational materials on a national and worldwide basis. As you probably know, or many people know, at each of the nine NASA facilities, there are teacher resource centers, and at 20 universities and museums throughout the United States, there are regional teacher resource centers. But for the most part, they just serve a certain locale, and if it's not convenient for a teacher to get to one of those places, they now have the opportunity to come to us to get those same materials. Located near Cleveland, Ohio, at the Lorraine County Joint Vocational School, CORE provides the same materials that are available through the TRCs and RTRCs. These materials include computer programs, slide packages, and videotapes. By using CORE, an educator who cannot easily get to a teacher resource center or a regional teacher resource center has access to these materials in a pre-packaged, ready-to-use format. CORE's business continues to grow as more and more educators find out about the organization and request the CORE catalog. Presently, we receive between 300 and 500 requests for CORE catalogs every month. We have serviced educators in every state and over 50 countries throughout the world, and our business is growing steadily. As more people find out about us, the orders keep increasing. Educators can find out about us quite a few different ways. One is from our news release being printed in educational publications where they can send in on stationery, requesting our catalog, or else sometimes they call us and we send our catalog out. Also, we receive a lot of referrals from the Teacher Resource Center Network where they may have our brochure available in the Teacher Resource Center and the teacher sends our detach and mail requesting our catalog, which we send out to them. And we also receive a lot of referrals from NASA headquarters. Most of those referrals are from overseas. We get a substantial amount of overseas requests because, first of all, it seems like people in other countries are very interested in this United States space program and secondly, they really don't have anywhere to go. They're obvious in the United States. There are many sources of aerospace information, NASA being one of the primary ones, so we are just one of many. We're in the other countries. It seems, by their interest, one of very few sources open to them. CORE is a two-person operation but utilizes the resources of the Lorraine County Joint Vocational School. This helps keep the cost of the materials at a minimum and at the same time helps the students get training. NASA formed a partnership with Lorraine County JVS to set up CORE at this site. The reason we were selected is because we are able to pull from the school's resources to run the center. Primarily, we're able to use many of the students to help us run our operation. At this time, CORE is just a two-person office, myself and my secretary, and it would be impossible for us to handle the amount of requests we get for materials and for information without heavy support staff. For example, one of the programs that we utilize heavily is the Work Adjustment Program. It's a special ed class located at the school. They do all of our assembly for our catalogs and all of our envelopes stuffing for all of the promotional materials that we distribute. Basically, they handle that for us totally, so we just simply have to put the materials in the mail once they're done doing that assembly work for us.