 Hi, everybody, Mitch Daniels here. I'm talking to you without any script today. And I guess that's fitting, because there's no script for any of us in the changed environment that Purdue and this nation, the whole world, finds itself in after the events of the last few months. And on Monday, a new world comes to Purdue and to schools like ours all over the country. A world of so-called remote learning, new ways to try to teach and for you to learn and to meet our goal of you advancing toward your chosen degree on exactly the timetable that you had set out for yourselves. I don't know where you've been over spring break, but I can tell you your faculty has been working probably harder than they did the rest of the year, trying to get ready for that new world, trying to adapt their courses to new modes that will enable you to keep learning and keep progressing toward the great achievement that is a Purdue degree. Thanks likewise to the graduate students, the TAs who have been part of that preparation and will be a part of attempting to deliver. A great Boilermaker education in this new fashion. You'll have to help us with this. We know it will be far from perfect. Your constructive suggestions and constructive criticism, especially in the early days of remote learning, could be essential to our making it as good as it can be. I know, of course, you do have and you will have a myriad of questions about how to deal with this new environment. We've done all we can to create resources where you can get those questions answered or ask the new ones that will send us looking for new answers. We know that no amount of thought and preparation and hard work this week will suffice. There will be problems next week. There will be difficulties, new questions that you bring to our attention. And any way we cut it, this whole process will be hard. I'll tell you something else that's hard, and that's looking out these windows and not seeing all of you there. Purdue University has never thought of itself as just another school. There's absolutely a special character and special set of qualities to Boilermakers. When Boilermakers see a problem, they go to work solving it. When they encounter adversity, they try to face it maybe a little better than most people. We do have a chance in the weeks and maybe months ahead to add another chapter to that tradition and another set of examples for that reputation. I can't wait to see you all back here and Purdue back to the thriving place of intellectual progress and excitement that it's always been. Until then, let's work together as best we can under very unique circumstances to show that Purdue is that special place that you chose and that the world looks at to solve its problems and set an example of how to deal with them. Until then, be safe. Be strong for yourselves and your families and your friends. Boiler up.