 On a Friday evening, we're looking at the evening before our 4th of July celebration and have we got something lined up for you this evening. On behalf of Sheboygan's, the Mayor's Special International Committee, it is my pleasure to welcome all of you here this evening on a wonderful, delightful summer's evening to give you something special. And we do not give it to you this evening as a collective group, but a group of citizens. Our sister city of Sabami, Japan is well represented this evening. I am very grateful to see so many people here this evening to honor this special occasion. And let's first of all put our hands together and welcome the group from Sabami, members of the International Committee and everyone who was connected to bringing you this program. We are just delighted to have people coming for one special for actually two special vocations, performances to Sheboygan. They came 60, 500 miles to be with you this evening to perform for you and to be in the Sheboygan parade tomorrow. I think that is just fantastic. There are some of us who enjoyed the practice this afternoon and most of you, I think, will walk away and say this was once in a lifetime. So here we're going to go into a program about an hour long you'll enjoy. Let me first introduce a person we all know in Sheboygan. I would like to introduce our Honorable Mayor James Schramm and his wife Sharon. To introduce and welcome the Chairman of the Subami Council and the leader of this evening's or this weekend's delegation from Subami, Mr. Jiro Oyama. We are very delighted to have this opportunity to present to between two cities. We are very delighted to have this opportunity to present to between two cities. I extend from the bottom, from my heart, our heartfelt thanks to this opportunity. And we are really inspired with hospitality shown by great mayor of your city, international committee members, citizens of the great city of Sheboygan. I sincerely hope that this event will be one of the stepping stone to further expand our sister city relationship in the field of cultural exchange, educational exchange. And I hope that we like to reciprocate your hospitality. So you please visit our city, Subame, Japan. This evening, I have a special note to you that is, among our drum team members, we have two excellent players, your city, Nathan, and another player is from the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, not from Los Angeles, not from New York, but they are all related with the great state of Wisconsin. I thank you very much for your attendance today. This will be one of the milestone of our two sister cities, Subame and Sheboygan. Thank you very much. I present his thoughts on this evening. I would like to thank our interpreter, Mr. Miyazaki from Madison, who again made this trip to Sheboygan worthwhile to us. He was here last year and we appreciate his great help. Thank you so much. Something different in a band concert stone here. Well, this evening, we're going to try something different. First of all, I'd like to say welcome, Subame. Thank you for coming. It's just one Monday morning. I'd really like to thank Junior International Committee. It isn't the mayor's office who puts this together. It's an international committee. And this committee has around 18 or 20 families working together who put this event together. They do an excellent job, as you can see, and also for the home stays. They are putting these people up for the weekend for two, three, four days. And I thank them for that. It is a challenge, but they do a very good job. So, International Committee, thank you. If you'd like to scan, please, who's around the International Committee. I'd like to give you a round of applause. Thank you to the Sheboygan press and Mr. Decker. He did an excellent job of advertising this for the last few weeks in the Sheboygan press. Not only that, he really chaired this and got it moving. And also, his wife, Carrie, is on the International Committee. Dave, Carrie, thank you. Enjoying this evening? It's going to be a lot of fun, and I'm looking forward to it. And hopefully, we can have the Diego drum team back again in the near future to entertain us. Now I will turn it over to Angelo. He will introduce you to the drum team. For two years, I've been working as an English teacher in Japan, and I'm really glad to be here, you know, in America, in Wisconsin, and in Sheboygan. I'd like to present my drum team, which I am honored to be a member of. They've been a team since 18 years ago, and they've been fantastic. They've traveled to Korea, and this is their first time to America. I'm glad that there's been such a great turnout for them. We'd like to begin with our first song, and as you know, Nathan Rivera is a native of Sheboygan. And unfortunately, he won't be in the first song, but he'll be in the second one, right? So let's begin with an Irish story. And this is a performance that will be played by only the women and the women members. The music speaks for itself, but this is a song for, like, spring. It's highly endowed with many rituals. You'll see a lot of the performances, the strong stroking, and the actions of, like, maybe harvesting, or planting. It's an excellent song, so please pay attention and enjoy it. Thank you. By two people, so by myself, a song will be performed by myself, and then the other will be by your native son, Nathan Rivera. On the drums is Kenji Ashira, and the man playing rhythms on the cymbals is my friend, who I forgot his name, Yoji Tamaki. But he created the team that you're seeing right now.