 The Miracle League of Columbia, and this will be our fourth year administering it, the City of Columbia and some partners, some local partners, combined their efforts years ago to establish an official Miracle League field here. So we've partnered with the National Miracle League program and we conduct that program throughout this facility. The City of Columbia and through the Parks and Rec Department and specifically through Athletics. We can take registration, prepare volunteers, we conduct the games on Saturday mornings. We get other volunteers from the community to come out and support. We have pelicans that will come out and provide free snow cones for the kids. At the end of the season we'll have donations for our banquet trophies given out. We have a local DJ that comes, DJs the game, calls every kid's name out every time they come up and bat, there's music in between games. So it's a real family affair and it's very inspiring to see some of those athletes perform in that part of the game. The directive for the Miracle League is to support athletes with disabilities, especially needs athletes, and really what the community can get out of it regardless of if you are in that community or in that niche or not is an opportunity to see another athlete performed by considerable athletes who may not be left out of the normal, as we would consider probably the normal landscape of athletics. There are also opportunities to volunteer with these kids. We get a plethora of students from USC, from Benedict College, from local high schools, local travel baseball teams, local companies who support us as well. So if there's an outlet for anybody in the community, it doesn't necessarily have to be directly involved with the athletic program itself. And so the bottom line I would have the community probably get out of the more is that there's an opportunity for everybody to have a hand in the growth of these athletes and just to have them experience the level of play and the enjoyment that we all get out of sports.