Thanks, Max. Yes. Our teams are having great fun. I must admit, I wish we can enjoy a few moments of boring and repetitive. Before I get into the segments, let me provide some insights into our tariff exposure. Overall, about 7% to 8% of our cost of goods sold consists of materials and components that are directly imported into the United States, another 3% to 4% of cost of goods sold are intercompany sales into United States, a portion of which is exempt from tariffs. Our direct imports into the United States are skewed somewhat towards Process Flow Technologies with Aerospace & Electronics relying more heavily on a U.S. supply base. For Process Flow Technologies, the largest exposure is China where we procure bio valves, pumps, castings and motors. However, our total China exposure is well below 3% of Crane's total cost of goods. The other notable exposures for PFT are India, primarily related to castings and Thailand, primarily for machine parts. Neither of those exposures reaches 1% of Crane's total cost of sales. At Aerospace & Electronics, the primary source of import is Malaysia, largely related to printed circuit boards and only 1% to 2% of total cost of sales for Crane overall. While much smaller, A&E does also import wire harnesses, machine parts and power sources from a number of countries, none of which is particularly material. We expect to offset the majority of the potential tariff impact through price and productivity. We have demonstrated consistently differentiated execution through cycles with this leadership team. The cadence and discipline of the Crane business system, our machine, along with our performance based culture are even more valuable in times like these as they enable us to make data-driven decisions quickly with flexibility to adapt as conditions change and with accountability. We will manage through this dislocation and expect to emerge even stronger. Now some thoughts on the segments. Starting with Aerospace & Electronics. There is no material change in end market conditions relative to our prior expectations. Aerospace remains a very strong demand environment. On the commercial side of the business, activity remains healthy with Boeing continuing to ramp up production and aftermarket activity continuing at elevated levels. On the defense side, we continue to see solid procurement spending and a continued focus on reinforcing the broader defense industrial base given heightened global uncertainties today. Looking ahead to the balance of 2025, we continue to anticipate core sales growth for the year to be up mid to high-single digits, with that growth leveraging that 35% to 40%. That guidance assumes continued strong sales with the ramp-up of Boeing, offset by decelerating year-over-year growth rate in commercial aftermarket that we have previously highlighted. As the comparisons become more challenging, pointing out that this is our 16th quarter of double-digit commercial aftermarket growth. That, as we talked about when we last reported, will naturally moderate over time. We continue to see above cycle growth for this segment for the remainder of this decade. We also continue to pursue new opportunities and win new business across the segment. For example, in the quarter, we won additional new content on the XM30 optionally manned fighting vehicle demonstrator programs with our defense power solution. As we have discussed in the past, we are very well-positioned regardless of which of the defense firms is awarded the program and we are further improving our position. In our Sensing and Power Systems business, we were recently awarded contracts and funded engineering development work on the Bell V-280, those C328 Echo and an unmanned aviation platform, all great programs where we see significant growth over the next decade. While still early in the development process, we remain actively engaged with engineering teams at our key customers on the technical architecture for the next-generation single aisle aircraft to ensure that our technology road maps and development plans are aligned with our customer needs. And really impressive performance by our landing solution team that completed flight tests hardware for a leading unmanned fighter aircraft program in a record six month timeframe. It's unprecedented for an antiskid brake system to be developed that quickly, positioning us well for future opportunities. A perfect example of the machine at work in engineering. Outstanding work by our team. Very confident for yet another outstanding year at Aerospace & Electronics. At Process Flow Technologies, we remain well positioned to outgrow our markets across cycles. We have systematically repositioned our portfolio around our core end markets, including chemical, pharmaceuticals, water and wastewater, cryogenics and industrial automation. These are higher growth end markets, and these are the markets where we have the strongest competitive position and the most differentiation, enabling sustainable market outlook. We remain focused on investing for growth over the long term with continued execution against our multiyear technology and new product development roadmap, as well as commercial excellence initiatives, all enabled by a consistent operational execution. Tactically, we are proving our ability to react to any changes in demand quickly and we will remain nimble during this period, taking any necessary and appropriate price cost measures. However, our strategy is unchanged, and we will manage through any potential demand fluctuations without losing focus on our longer-term goals and objectives. Looking ahead to the balance of 2025, given our line of sight today, we still anticipate positive core growth sales for the year. A few notable wins in the quarter included significant customer approval for one of our new Saunders pharmaceutical valves with a key target customer. This approval was a critical step for the business and we continue to drive share gains with new product development, and we are seeing great progress. We were awarded a $5.7 million project for line pipes and line valves for a Saudi Arabian mining company, that is working to develop a third complex in Saudi Arabia for fertilizer production capacity. Our localized site was key to secure this order. We continue to build out our capabilities in cryogenic space including both the CryoWorks and Technifab acquisition from last year, which are now working closely with our organic initiatives to expand our portfolio of cryogenic valves and vacuum-jacketed pipes. Our combined platform is continuing to grow at a strong pace. And in the quarter, we had some significant wins, particularly with space launch customers. So our businesses remain well positioned to continue to deliver great results. We still expect to significantly add -- to add to those results with acquisitions. We have a very strong balance sheet today with at least $1.5 billion of M&A capacity. We also have a robust pipeline of potential acquisitions. M&A activity has not slowed down at all. The deals we are working on today include a number of opportunities in both aerospace and electronics as well as process flow technologies. And they range from the small sub-$100 million deals like those we completed last year to many times that size. We mentioned our rigorous process, the machine for acquisition integration and creating value from any business. We have just as robust a process for M&A opportunity identification and due diligence and I'm optimistic about our prospects of deploying capital this year on some great opportunities. I also wanted to share some takeaways from our recent annual Senior Leadership Conference. About 200 of Crane's most senior associates spent three days at GE’s Old Crotonville training facility to share best practices and to keep our global teams around the world connected. Three days to focus on reinforcing the machine that delivers results at Crane. I remember my first senior leadership meeting shortly after I joined Crane in 2013. A great three days, but heavily focused on operational execution only, which was needed and the focus in those days. We were very good then, but so much better today. Last month, however, the focus was everything we are doing to drive growth and commercial execution, sharing the best past examples across Crane, our long-term technology and product road maps, commercial excellence tools, simplification initiatives and strategic pricing. It was followed by training on new enhancements to our process for strategy development led by Shangaza Dasent, who joined Crane last year to lead our Process Flow Technologies segment. A powerful few days, and I'm incredibly proud of our teams around the world who have made so much progress and have the momentum to continue to do so. Taking all this together, just a lot of really exciting initiatives at Crane. It all reinforces our confidence that regardless of the current environment, over the long term, we will deliver a 4% to 6% long-term core sales growth rate through cycles from resilient and durable businesses with solid aftermarket. Substantial operating leverage on top of our already solid margins today, that should lead to double-digit average annual core profit growth with potential upside from capital deployment. And with virtually no net debt, the capital deployment opportunity is significant. Now let me turn the call over to our CFO, Mr. Rich Maue for more specifics on the quarter.