Thank you, Ryan. Good morning, everybody, and thanks for joining us today. On today's call, I'll begin with some perspective on our recent performance and our longer term outlook. I'll then provide color on the current environment. Kristen will provide more specifics on our fiscal third quarter mission critical accomplishments, our financial performance and updated expectations for the balance of the fiscal year. I'll then wrap things up before we open up the line for questions. Before I dig into our performance, though, I'd like to discuss two topics. The first is to welcome Ryan Mills, our new Head of Investor Relations, who joined us earlier this month. He brings several years of Investor Relations and sell-side experience, including the coverage of MSC and our peers. We're thrilled to have Ryan on the MSC team as we continue striving to increase shareholder value. The second topic is the recent agreement with the Jacobson and Gershwind family to eliminate the company's high voting Class B shares. The details of the agreement and the associated shareholder benefits are outlined in the press release that we issued last week. And more information will be provided in a proxy statement that will be filed with the SEC later on this summer. At a high level, though, we're confident that this will make MSC a more attractive investment and broaden its scope of investors through several aspects, such as replacing the two-thirds voting rule to approve mergers, asset sales and other significant transactions to instead a simple majority of votes outstanding standard. Limiting the family's voting to 15% of shares outstanding. Adding a new independent director and exploring share repurchases to offset dilution from the transaction. I'd also note that our families receipt of the premium in shares increases our economic ownership position and reinforces our belief in the long-term outlook of this business. The reclassification is subject to a number of closing conditions. Most importantly, the approval of the transaction by the company's shareholders. We look forward to completing the process and successfully closing the transaction. I'll now move on to our quarterly performance. Ongoing share gains and successful execution of our mission critical initiatives with the primary drivers behind our strong growth. They resulted in fiscal third quarter sales growth of approximately 10%, despite one less selling day or nearly 12% on an average daily sales basis. This continues the trend of outgrowing the IP or Industrial Production Index in excess of our long-term target. As a reminder, our five growth priorities include metalworking, solutions, digital, selling the portfolio and diversified end markets with an emphasis on the public sector. Today, I'll highlight a few of these beginning with the public sector. We've described for the past several quarters now that we see a building momentum in our public sector business. And this quarter was particularly strong with public sector growth of more than 80% year-over-year. That was driven by penetration of existing contracts along with the addition of some significant wins. In particular, approximately two-thirds of the public sector growth this quarter benefited from a large number of small capital purchases from a recent contract win. While winds of this nature are below company average margins. They provide near and long-term benefits. Starting with the near term, these wins require modest investments in working capital and they bolster our cash flow. And this allows us to accelerate investments in other areas to further strengthen our market position. And I'll touch on that momentarily. Over the longer term, we believe these wins improve our position for additional share gains and higher margin opportunities across the sector, which helps to diversify our business. Looking forward, we expect revenues from the recent contract win to continue in Q4 and into fiscal 2024, albeit at a lesser pace. On the solutions front, we continue to achieve strong growth across our in-plant vending and vendor managed inventory offerings. These high touch, high retention solutions continue to grow double-digits. And we see plenty of runway for future share gains given the market size and the customers appetite for value add solutions. In fact, our fiscal third quarter represented our high water mark in terms of new in-plant signings. And that bodes well for continued sales growth in the future. Moving to e-commerce, we strengthened our position for future growth through an exclusive agreement with machining cloud, which was announced earlier this quarter. This partnership brings a great deal of excitement to MSC to machining cloud and to the end user community. It gets MSC closer to the early stages of the manufacturing process, which expands MSC's reach to new decision makers such as engineers and programmers who are key influencers in the procurement process. The customer will benefit from MSC's brand offering, which will save time and money when selecting the ideal tools needed for their jobs. And while we're still in the integration process, the end user community's excitement is building as visits to machining cloud site have increased significantly since the announcement. I'll now turn to the external environment. As expected when we outlined our framework for the fiscal year, conditions have moderated as we moved through the quarters. This is consistent with contractionary readings from the sentiment indices such as the metalworking business index and declining IP index readings. We have seen some more softening across some areas of the business during the fiscal third quarter. But the tone on the ground is one of leveling rather than significant declines. We're seeing stable volume and customer activity levels. In addition, we see favorable conditions in several end markets such as automotive and aerospace. On the pricing front, conditions have also moderated as expected. We continue to achieve benefits from pricing, but this is narrowed as we lap high price increases in the prior year. While higher product costs continue to work through our P&L. As supply chains have normalized, customers are increasing their focus on achieving competitive prices, just as we are doing with our suppliers. Overall, we would describe the environment both on the demand and the pricing fronts as levelling. Regardless of the environment, I remain confident about our prospects for continued growth. In the near term, as I described earlier, many of our growth drivers are just starting to hit their stride. Our value proposition, which is anchored in our technical and high touch approach, is yielding customer wins at a higher rate than we've seen in the past. Many of these wins are not close to full maturity or revenue run rate. But we're not yet seeing the full benefits in our numbers. This has given us confidence to accelerate strategic investments despite market uncertainty and further strengthen our position. For example, we're accelerating investments in our e-commerce platform, including an advanced search and product discovery function. We expect these enhancements to increase future growth, particularly with smaller customers and spot buys. Looking beyond the near term, there are several dynamics that we believe will benefit MSC over the longer term. First, the reshoring trend continues as we see an increased number of new plant construction projects that will drive incremental domestic manufacturing activity. Second, elongated production backlogs in commercial aerospace, driven by increased post-COVID demand, provide a long runway of growth in that end market. And third, we see opportunities to further penetrate new higher growth end markets such as medical and electric vehicles by leveraging our technical expertise and new capabilities from recent acquisitions. Moving onto productivity, I'm also encouraged by the outlook for continued progress, which we believe will be driven by several factors. First, as I mentioned before, our mission critical program is transitioning to a continuous improvement mindset and initiative under the leadership of our COO, Martina McIsaac and Kristen. Second and related, we'll continue evaluating our business for structural cost opportunities. And lastly, we're making nice progress on our category line reviews. We're now winding down the first two waves of product categories, and we're pleased with supplier responses. In some cases, we're getting cost reductions on the heels of market indices pulling back. And in others we're having exciting growth discussions. For example, we're seeing early success with consolidation of suppliers and SKUs where a broad assortment isn't as necessary through the eyes of our customer. This approach will simplify our search, find and buy experience, increase engagement and share gain with the select suppliers who partner with us. Streamline our DC operations and should also drive meaningful savings in fiscal '24. In summary, I'm excited to see MSC becoming the mission critical partner on the plant floor that we envisioned years ago. We're gaining momentum on growth above the IP index and we're translating that growth into profitability improvements. I'll now turn things over to Kristen.