Thanks, Chris, and good morning, everyone. I appreciate everyone being on the call this morning with us. We know it's a busy morning out there in earnings land. It was a successful quarter, given our earnings beat, but also an interesting quarter, given the unusual and difficult comps created by the substantial cancellation of the 2023 tech intern programs, as we have talked about numerous times in Silicon Valley, Bellevue, Washington and Austin, Texas. In the third quarter alone, the loss of intern business meant we were missing approximately $8 million of room revenue and $5 million of operating profit. As we all know, starting about this time last year, tech companies started announcing massive layoffs, hiring freezes and cost cutting initiatives. Less than six months later, those same companies were announced significant investments in artificial intelligence, chip manufacturing, and reshoring of technology manufacturing back to the U.S. As previously noted, Applied Materials, which has forever been one of our top five accounts in Sunnyvale announced plans to build a $4 billion 180,000 square foot R&D facility in Sunnyvale just blocks from our two Sunnyvale Residence Inn. The facility will be a state-of-the-art facility for collaborative innovation with chip makers, universities, and ecosystem partners. Some of those partners include AMD, NVIDIA and Western Digital, all customers of ours. Today, general business travel demand trends remain encouraging in Silicon Valley and Bellevue. Passenger traffic into San Jose has leveled up versus last year, while domestic and international travel continues to improve at SFO and SeaTac, Seattle. At SFO, domestic deployments are down 17% still to 2019, gross down 26% last year with international travel much improved, only down 6% to 2019 versus down 26% last Q3. At SeaTac domestic passengers are down only 1% to 2019, versus down 10% last year, and international passengers are up 2% to 2019 versus down 16% last year. When you look at international occupancy at our two Sunnyvale hotels, those are the two big hotels, was 25% in the third quarter versus 20% in 2019, so good improvement there. After getting through the year-over-year intern tough comps, demand has been encouraging. At the five primarily tech-driven hotels, RevPAR was up approximately 11% in October, mostly due to demand or occupancy and we are forecasting RevPAR to grow about that same amount for the entirety of the fourth quarter. Market demand growth is pivotal of course for lodging owners and operators to be able to drive rate higher as we move into next year. We have owned these hotels, as for many years, and we know that the intern programs will come back and that these companies are continually evolving investing and developing the world's greatest technologies, that certainly isn't going to change. At some point, we will get back to 2019 levels and ultimately exceed those levels. And of course, that just means our internal growth prospects continue to be very strong. For 2023, we are projecting just over $19 million of hotel EBITDA from these five hotels, and as a reminder that $16 million short of 2019 levels still. That $16 million of incremental hotel EBITDA equate to $0.32 of FFO per share, a massive increase over our current FFO per share run rate, so that shows you, where the upside is. Switching gears back to our third quarter performance, relative to 2019, RevPAR was down less than 2% though ADR was up 5% to 2019 and occupancy was impacted, of course, down by the tech hotels. Excluding those five hotels, RevPAR would have been up 7% versus the 2019 third quarter. Encouragingly, this 7% increase accelerated from last quarter's growth of 5% versus '19. Portfolio occupancy was a strong 80% in the quarter, down from 81% last year and 85% in 2019. And within weekday occupancy was 78% in the quarter, and June weekday occupancy of 81.3% was the highest level since the pandemic. ADR was up $3 over last year, but up $9 or 5% over 2019. Given our reliance on the business traveler here, I want to compare performance versus 2019 when we had a lower concentration of intern business, weekday occupancy was 78% in the quarter and weekend occupancy was 82%, both measures down to 2019. Weekday ADR was $181 and weekend ADR was $192, which represented increases of 2% and 15% over 2029 levels. And weekday RevPAR was a $142 and weekend RevPAR was a $158 versus 2019, so weekday RevPAR was up about 5%, which is the lowest quarterly variance this year. And additionally, as we have noted, October performance has been quite strong with portfolio RevPAR growth of 2% and about 1% over last year and 2019. Operationally, we were able to generate margins of 45%, down 50% from last year. But bunch of that loss as we have discussed before was due to our five technology driven hotels, which again shows you the upside as those hotels recover, with the intern business, specifically last year. And the requirement to clean rooms plus once a week, if that, the margin differential should definitely abate as we move forward. We continue to generate significant cash flow over $20 million in the quarter and have been utilizing the excess cash flow after dividends and CapEx to repay a portion of our maturing debt. During 2023, we have repaid $155 million of maturing or amortizing debt. Our balance sheet is strong and with approximately $332 million of liquidity, we are well-positioned to address all remaining debt maturities next year and 2025. We continue to pursue external growth opportunities, though of course we must be mindful of our cost of capital, while assessing in place cash flow yield and growth projections on potential acquisitions with a significant rise in interest rates, brands becoming more focused on renovation requirements and a bunch of maturing debt occurring throughout the industry. As we look forward, we believe there will be some opportunities to acquire hotels that fit into our portfolio. We will continue to seek investments that allow us to add some external growth to supplement the massive internal growth that will come from the continued recovery of our hotels in Silicon Valley and Bellevue. As you know, we don't provide forward-looking guidance, but I do want to address our dividends. We currently pay $0.07 a quarter, and stated upon reinstatement of the dividend last year that we would make a fourth quarter true up dividend payment based on our operating results for 2023 and our expected usage of our NOLs. Based on our internal projections, we expect our fourth quarter dividend will remain at $0.07 and we will continue to evaluate our dividend, of course, on a quarterly basis. With that, I would like to turn it over to Dennis.