Thank you, Ken, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased with our first quarter performance in which we registered an improved top line trends by delivering a positive comp store sales increase of 3.1%. The quarter was further highlighted by gross margin expansion of 160 basis points compared to last year. Both of these Q1 wins were assisted by our inventory rebuilds and targeted product categories, combined with our buy team's continued focus on making wise inventory investments, maximizing markup, while also providing incredible values for our customers. Early in the quarter, we felt the impact from the slower start to the tax refund season as well as unfavorable spring weather pattern. However, we posted positive comps in each month of the quarter. We also experienced an improved trend in store traffic with basket size similar to last year and continued healthy in-store conversion. These key performance indicators are proof-points that our unique assortment curated specifically for our African American and multi-cultural customers resonated. As mentioned on recent earnings calls, our teams remain committed to setting up key selling moments earlier, and it paid-off in the first quarter. Our Q1 product offering included a healthy balance of exclusive trends, leading brands, year-end fashion and, of course, basics for spring selling, the tax refund season and the Easter holiday. From a category perspective, our performance was broad-based with particular strength in home and lifestyle, impulse also referred to as our Q Line, Big Men's and ladies plus, all areas positively impacted by our inventory rebuild efforts. Across our largest categories, ladies, men's and kids apparel, quarterly comp sales were all positive, driven by trend right values and incredible brands that met the needs and wants of our customers for the spring season. We exited the first quarter with total inventory dollars up 4%, in line with our expectations. We feel good about the quality, mix and value proposition across our inventory as we enter the second quarter. We are positioned to capitalize on late spring and peak summer selling weeks with a robust assortment of made for Citi Trends coordinating short and tee-sets, plenty of tees for the whole family, fresh takes on Americana and June tees, and all the goodies for summer barbecues from outfits to audio. With a large portion of our fleet in areas that go back to school by mid-August, we will also be well-positioned to capture demand in July, with a heightened focus on kids apparel, accessories and footwear. Lastly, our value proposition is showing up loudly on the sales floor with many new deal priced offers that are driving strong sell-through. In addition to the inventory rebuilds and targeted product categories that we've been discussing for the past several quarters, in Q1, we leveraged our new ERP system to optimize assortments in key African American neighborhoods, where we've identified significant sales opportunity. This initiative, using our improved planning and allocation methods is impacting about 20% of the chain and had encouraging results in the quarter. We'll continue to monitor results and refine our approach based on what we learn with the potential to expand this effort as we move through the year. In the quarter, we continued testing radio and paid social marketing, turning the dials on market size, repeat markets, frequency of messaging and combinations with other initiatives. We've seen particularly strong results with the combination of remodels and marketing. To date, we've touched about 140 stores with our marketing efforts, and we'll increase that number throughout the year with back to school and holiday campaigns. We remodeled 20 stores in the first quarter and an additional 15 locations in May, quickly closing in on our fiscal year goal of 40 remodels. As we've discussed in prior calls, these refreshed stores see positive results with mid to high-single digit sales lift and at half the prior cost. Including the May remodel, CTS stores represent approximately 21% of our fleet. Turning to the details of gross margin. Our first quarter adjusted gross margin expansion of 160 basis points was driven by the focus on markup I described earlier, significant freight expense improvement and effective markdown management. Partially offsetting the gross margin benefits in the quarter was an unexpected shrink headwind as a result of physical inventory count. As we've discussed on prior calls, we count a portion of our store fleet each month and continue to see issues in very specific stores and very specific categories. We do not believe that this is a chain wide problem. At Citi Trends, we are accustomed to managing shrink, and although, a headwind this year, it remains a very small component of our margin structure. Internally, we have engaged cross functional experts reduce the impact of shrink with particular focus on internal theft. We are ensuring that stores have well placed cameras and are leveraging recently improved exception reporting to quickly identify root causes and to take appropriate action. We're updating key loss prevention policies and are establishing a more robust restitution program. And key to all of this, we've been working to upgrade our store talent and our training programs. Next, we'll turn our attention to our supply chain, tightening controls and reporting to identify and resolve any additional causes of shrink. Importantly, we will continue to place the safety and well-being of our employees and customers at the center of our operational decisions to stem this headwind. Despite pressure from shrink, we remain confident in our ability to deliver continued gross margin expansion for the balance of 2024, driven by incremental markup improvement and reduced freight rates. Moving to SG&A. Adjusted SG&A expenses increased about $3 million in the quarter compared to last year, in line with our expectations and reflecting our previously discussed reset of the SG&A base. The increase, as expected, was driven by merit increases in stores and corporate and a modest increase in advertising spend. During the quarter, we closed three stores as part of our ongoing suite optimization effort, ending the period with 599 locations. Now turning to the balance sheet. At the end of the quarter, we remained in a healthy financial position with a strong balance sheet, including no debt, no drawings on our $75 million revolver and $58 million in cash. With liquidity of approximately $133 million, we can more than sufficiently fund our business initiatives, building on our foundational strength for future profitable growth. Before I turn the call back to Ken, I want to reiterate that we are encouraged by our first quarter results. Our strategic initiatives are driving improved performance, and we are playing offense, while controlling what we can control. This approach is particularly important as our customer continues to face inflationary pressures and is carefully managing their discretionary spend. We still believe in the overall approach to the annual outlook we shared in March. However, with one quarter under our belt, we felt it was prudent to make a few adjustments to our 2024 outlook as follows. Full year comp store sales are expected to grow by low to mid-single digits compared to fiscal 2023, a range slightly below our previous outlook. We expect full year gross margin to expand by approximately 75 basis points to 100 basis points, consistent with previous outlook. We are now planning an SG&A dollar increase of 1.5% to 2.5% over 2023, slightly better than what we discussed during our last earnings call, driven by streamlining costs in a variety of areas. Consistent with our previous outlook, resulting full year EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $4 million to $10 million. As we shared in March, we plan to open up to five new stores, remodel approximately 40 locations and close 10 to 15 underperforming stores, ending fiscal 2024 with approximately 595 stores. Finally, we continue to expect full year capital expenditures to be approximately $20 million. With that, I will turn the call back to Ken. Ken?