 My name is Edwin Rasmussen, and this is my wife, Mary Lou Rasmussen, and we live in Niles, Illinois. I'm north side of Chicago, and we're here to tell our story about being a cancer survivor. So I understand you folks out there have serenal cell cancer, and that's what we're going to talk about. Ed was diagnosed in 1998 with kidney and bladder cancer, and we had the kidney removed. We thought that was the end of that, and we were just going to deal with the bladder cancer, but that wasn't the case. The renal cell came up in 2004, and he's been in treatment since then for cancer in various locations, and it's been a long journey and a difficult journey. So dealing with renal cell cancer is not the kiss of death, because I've been here since 1998, and there is a survivability chance for everybody. But you have to have a positive attitude, stay focused, good doctors, make sure you find the right hospital that treats renal cell cancer, and they'll have the doctors, the surgeons to give you the care that's necessary, and the treatment that is necessary for the cancer. The thing is, as soon as you have an inkling that you have cancer, you have to get in to see the doctor right away, because the earlier cancer is detected, the more likelihood is that they can take care of you. So if you falter like friends of ours have, they didn't make it. That's paramount. And we'd like to thank all of our family for all of their support, because without them, we would have not gotten to first base. And you have to stay positive and pray a lot, because it's our faith that has kept us to where we are today.