 My name is Frank Kennedy and I have my biggest supporter with me, my wife Pat, and I was diagnosed with kidney cancer in 1998. And after review, I had no knowledge at all of no pain, anything that pre-looted the diagnosis and then I went to my doctor and my doctor said, well, we're going to do some tests just to see what's going on. After some testing, they determined I had a tumor in my right kidney and during the operation, they took it out, they also found that I had another tumor in my right adrenal gland. And after that, about three weeks after I had that happened, I had a heart attack and then they did a quadruple bypass. And after that, my doctor said, we're going to have to do some follow-up with the cancer tumors. So he made arrangements for me to go see another doctor in Cleveland. I went to the Cleveland Clinic, of which I was going there for about a year and a half until like late 2000, in late 2000, another kidney, another tumor showed up in my left kidney. And they made a determination that I was going to need some more follow-up treatments, start some drug therapy, and they decided that I should come back to the city of Chicago where I lived and have the therapy done there because it would be a long time going back and forth to the Cleveland Clinic if I was going to use a therapy program there. So I started on a therapy program in about 2001, early 2001, at the University of Chicago and I had been on that program on and off through three or four different particular drugs until like in 19, or in 2005, I had a stroke and a stroke they blamed on the particular or they thought was related to the particular drug I was on at that time. And then they decided to take me off of that drug and I was consequently on a couple of other drugs in the meantime. And after that I had a tumor show up in my collar bone and then they put me on a drug called Avastin and I was on that drug for about two years until actually until just about six months ago, or two months ago. And then after that then they decided they had to do more therapy and when these other tumors showed up in my collar bone they decided radiation was the best way to handle them. So I went through some radiation and then after the radiation they did another CAT scan and they said because of the situation I most likely should stay on some kind of a drug therapy. I was put on another new drug called Votrient, of which I'm still on Votrient today. It's still being monitored by the city of Chicago. Have a great program over there, what do I say, University of Chicago. They have a great program over there. I've been in several clinical studies there and it's a good thing for anybody who's going into problems to see if you can get some clinical studies because you get a lot of research that backs these all up and your condition gets handled very well through all the drug therapy that they go through with you and all the tests they go. I've been very satisfied with them.