Thank you, Brad, and good morning to everyone on the call today. Let's begin on Slide 4, and a review of our safety performance. For first quarter of fiscal year 2023, our total case incident rate was 1.7. While this is less than half of the metal manufacturing industry average rate, this performance is not up to the standards to which we hold ourselves. Fortunately, despite the increasing rate, the severity of injuries continues to decline. The rate increase is largely due to the increased employees undertaking new tasks, either as new hires or transfers into new roles. To address this, we have enhanced and expanded training procedures for any employee new to a job or task with frequent monitoring and follow up. Further, we continue to drive our STOP program, which enables employees to stop work whenever there is a potential issue or concern. Our ultimate goal continues to be a zero injury workplace. We believe it is possible and we will continue to work towards that goal. Now let's turn to Slide 5, and a review of the first quarter. We continue to see strong demand conditions in each of our end-use markets. Most notably, we see the aerospace and defense end-use market ramp accelerating. As a result of a strong demand environment across our end-use market, we continue to realize price gains in contract negotiations and see our backlogs increase. Notably, our backlog increased 10% sequentially and 155% year-over-year. This marks the seventh consecutive quarter of backlog growth. In order to satisfy this aggressive demand, we are focused on increasing productivity across our operations. And we are working closely with our customers as most are requesting additional volume with accelerated delivery dates. For the quarter, the SAO segment performed at the upper end of our expectations driven by the growing market demand and continued operational improvements. Our PEP segment was on pace to meet our expectations until Hurricane Ian delayed shipments for our Dynamet facility in Florida at the end of the quarter. Fortunately, no employees were injured and we were able to return safely to full operations shortly after the required evacuation orders were lifted. Finally, our liquidity remains healthy. We finished the quarter with 351 million in total liquidity. Now let's move to Slide 6, and the end-use market update. Most of our end-use markets were up year-over-year, reflecting the strong demand environment and the ongoing recovery. And as you will hear throughout my comments, our near-term and long-term outlook for each of the end-use markets remains positive. Sequentially, however, we were down across most of our end-use markets with the exception of aerospace and defense. The primary factor was the sharp ramp in aerospace, pushing out production of material in other end-use markets. In addition, Hurricane Ian delayed shipments from our Dynamet facility in Florida. Now let's review each of the end-use markets. Our aerospace and defense end-use market, sales were up 3% sequentially and 36% year-over-year. Global aerospace traffic continues its recovery driving up expected build rates. As customers across each of the aerospace submarkets work to meet build rates, demand for our materials is accelerating. The defense submarket is down sequentially, primarily driven by the combination of uncertain government budget horizon, and extended lead time. We see this as a short-term issue, as there's continued interest in our advanced alloys for next generation platforms. Excluding defense, aerospace sales were up 7% sequentially and 40% year-over-year. More specifically, sales in the aero engine submarket were up 24% sequentially and up 45% year-over-year. As a result of the continued increases in demand, lead times across the industry have extended and our backlog continues to rise. Specifically, our aerospace and defense end-use market backlog is up 11% sequentially and 190% year-over-year. Notably, the backlog value now stands at nearly 2x pre-pandemic levels, reflecting price increases and customer urgency to secure material. In the medical end-use market, sales were down 7% sequentially and up 34% compared to last year. The year-over-year results reflect ongoing recovery in elective surgeries with hospital staffing levels improving. Customers are increasing manufacturing activity and required stocking levels to meet demand. The overall outlook continues to be positive as medical procedures are expected to rise to pre-pandemic levels by the end of calendar year 2022. We are seeing replenishment in the supply chain to support the expected growth as our medical end-use market backlog is up 13% sequentially and 211% year-over-year. In the transportation end-use market, sales were down 28% sequentially and down 25% compared to last year. Light duty vehicle demand remains high, with consumers continuing to buy even as inventories are at historic lows. With strong demand and low inventory, build rates are expected to increase throughout calendar year 2023. In the energy end-use market, sales were down 13% sequentially and up 13% compared to last year. In the oil and gas submarket, demand continues to outpace supply driving growth in capital investments. The supply shortage has been further challenged by recent geopolitical disruptions. In addition, we see growing demand for advanced premium alloy solutions for drilling activities in harsh environments. In the industrial and consumer end-use market, sales were down 17% sequentially and up 3% year-over-year. We continue to see healthy demand in the electronics submarket, largely driven by customer engagement for materials from our hot strip mill in Reading, which was commissioned just over a year ago. Now, I will turn it over to Tim for the financial summary.