 Good evening, thank you. What are the big problems facing us today? Think about it for a second. You all have you could come up with your own lists. What makes these problems big? Is it the number of people affected? Is it the harm or the benefit that it brings? Is it the cost of solving the problem? In all of these cases, we're talking about numbers. I'm Art Steinmetz, the CEO of Oppenheimer Funds. I got involved with MoMAF because of the work that it does in helping to get kids excited about math. But I believe MoMAF has an even bigger role to play in our national discussion. These days, we are all too quick to let our emotions guide us to a position on issues. Emotion, intuition, and our sense of what is right certainly are important, but not to the exclusion of actual critical analysis and the numbers. Take-school shootings. Is this a big problem? Horrifying and tragic, but does the analysis ever go any further than emotions? There have been 40 school children murdered in the United States so far this year. But there are 70 million kids in school. This year, there will be about 11,000 people overall who are murdered by guns in the United States. But even more, there will be another 20,000 people killed by guns by suicide. Now, if we seek to reduce gun deaths with only finite resources, we have to look at all of these numbers. Only with numeracy can we come closer to outcome-based policy. Another example, we have hundreds of thousands of opioid overdoses in this country every year, and it's getting worse. Policy today is centered around feelings, not math. Opioid addiction is still treated as a law enforcement problem and a moral failing. Yet most addiction today starts with doctor-prescribed meds. Opioid addiction takes over your brain, robbing you of free will. Very few can choose to quit. There are medical approaches to treat addiction. You would never deny retroviral meds to HIV positive, even though they are, of course, hooked on those meds for life. Treating this problem as a health issue would save thousands of lives and billions of dollars. Until our policy makers can speak credibly to the math, the rest of the country will not appreciate the truth of these issues. These are emotional issues that tug at our heartstrings, but only by quantifying them and measuring them can we have an intelligent discussion about how to actually make our country and the world better. So let's now bring it back to why we are here tonight. At Oppenheimer Funds, we have an interest in creating a workforce that has the baseline skills needed in our industry. Further, we are working at all levels to increase the diversity of our workforce. The work MoMAF does to create excitement around math for schoolchildren, especially in disadvantaged schools, aligns precisely with our goals. I know MoMAF aligns with your goals as well. The work with adults, as I'm pointing out, is nearly as important. The board, the MoMAF board of trustees, often has discussions over whether we are a children's museum or an adult museum that has children's programs. The answer, of course, is we are both. Maybe, maybe, if Americans were more comfortable with numbers, we would make more decisions based on facts, not emotions. MoMAF can play a role in elevating the level of discourse by increasing numeracy for all ages. I'm very proud of Oppenheimer Funds Association with MoMAF. We have been a staunch supporter of many of the programs here. This year, Oppenheimer Funds is celebrating its 60th anniversary, and I have been here for a little more than half of that time. Indeed, the company was formed the year I was born, so do the math. So, tonight, in honor of our anniversary, my colleagues at Oppenheimer and I would like to present the museum with an additional gift of $1 million. Thank you all very much, and thank you all to the many Oppenheimer colleagues that I have that are here today and who I've worked with for so many years. You know, it is our hope that this helps MoMAF on the way to being around for at least 60 years as well. In just a few minutes, there will be an opportunity for you to also help the museum on that path. Please give generously. Now, let me introduce our next speaker and my board colleagues, Sandy Leong, who will tell you a little bit about what you can do to help us out here at the museum. Thanks so much. Enjoy the rest of the evening.