 Welcome to channel 17 Stump the Chumps. It's the Burlington area program where we think about the days gone by. Days when milk was 19 cents a quart and pot, well that was a container that contained many plants. My name is Bill Keough who was born and brought up in Burlington and attended some long-gone schools like Mount St. Mary's, like Cathedral Grammar School, Cathedral High School. So Michael's College is still standing and providing a great deal of education for people. This is my last stump the chumps. I'm moving on to a new chapter in my life. This program started back in 1990, about then when Herb Blumenthal and Albert Nadina captured channel 17 viewers with their antics. I was flattered when I invited to take over the program five years ago. My co-host Joey Donovan was a natural to the program. We were an interesting team to say the least. We had so many outstanding guests to share old-time Burlington with. There were Mayor's Frank Cain and Peter Clavel and city attorney Joe McNeill and there was Charlie Hour. You remember Charlie Hour of Hours Boathouse out in the mouth of the river? Of course we had Sheriff Kevin McLaughlin. The McLaughlin family grew up with the sheriff in the jail on Main Street. Kevin had a lot of stories about family bringing up there in the local jail and there was baseball pitcher Dick Smullen, the Notre Dame graduate and pitcher of the Burlington Cardinals. And Sue Crowley, she was the wife of then Senator Tom Crowley. She was of the McBride family in the islands. She would take the train from Grand Isle to Burlington, attend a movie and take the train back to Grand Isle. I hope we keep alive all these fond memories of Burlington back in the day. Things seemed different and more fun and great memories. Thank you Channel 17 and Lauren Glendividian for nurturing this kind of entertainment, local entertainment here on Channel 17. Thank you and goodbye.