Thanks, Howard. I'll begin on slide six with a review of key financial results for the second quarter. Please note, that all results discussed will be adjusted and all growth metrics will be on a year-over-year basis, unless otherwise stated. The GAAP to non-GAAP EPS reconciliation can be found in the appendix of this presentation as well as in the press release. As Howard said, the second quarter financial results Sonoco's ability to deliver strong results despite a low-volume environment. We continue to achieve strong results in most businesses in the portfolio, including meaningful improvement in rigid paper containers and all other, and record results in flexible. A few businesses were below expectations and meaningfully impacted the consolidated results, mainly metal packaging and consumer, and industrial North America. Consolidated sales decreased to $1.7 billion. This sales decrease was primarily driven by lower volumes due to inflationary pricing and destocking at our customers in retail, as well as index-based price decreases in metal packaging and industrial. Adjusted operating profit decreased to $211 million, and adjusted EBITDA decreased to $275 million. Importantly, we maintained an above 16% adjusted EBITDA margin through continued focus on commercial and operational excellence, as well as long-term cost controls associated with our business transformation program. Adjusted earnings per share decreased to $1.38. Non-operating factors impacted EPS negative $0.07 due to higher interest rates on floating rate debt. The sales bridge, on slide seven, provides the primary drivers for revenue growth in the quarter. Volume/mix was negative $190 million or negative 9.9%. This volume decrease was anticipated and was in the low-to-mid-single digits in most businesses. We continue to have active dialogue with customers, and have been able to mitigate low volumes with operational and cost actions in most businesses. Two notable exceptions to this were the disrupted demand in a handful of customers in metal packaging, and lower than anticipated demand in industrial North America. The fixed cost structures of these businesses make them more sensitive to volume uncertainty, and this had a meaningful impact on the consolidated results. Acquisitions/divestitures also had a minor negative impact on sales, and were accounted for in volume on the bridge. Excluding acquisitions and divestitures, volume/mix was negative 9.7%; price was negative $15 million. Our pricing performance continues to reflect strategic pricing efforts associated with our commercial excellence strategy, manage [down the value] (ph) and managing contracts to recover inflation. Most businesses achieved marginally positive price performance in the quarter. This was offset by meaningful index-based price decreases in metal packaging and consumer, and the paper businesses globally in industrial. The adjusted operating profit bridge illustrates the year-over-year change in greater detail. Volume/mix was negative $65 million as operations were impacted by the previously discussed impact of inflationary pricing and destocking at our customers and retail. Price/cost was positive $12 million in the quarter as strategic pricing and purchasing offset the predicted impact of $27 million of metal price overlap. Other included higher depreciation and positive [FX] (ph) and improved operating profit $4 million in the quarter. Slide eight has an overview of our segment performance for the quarter. Consumer sales decreased to $924 million. Flexible sales grew mid-single digits, and rigid paper container sales grew low single digits due to strong price and generally resilient volume mix. Sales in Metal Packaging decreased due to tinplate-based price pass-throughs and inventory management-driven volume decreases at a handful of customers in both food and aerosol. Consumer operating profit decreased to $95 million due primarily to lower volume and negative price/cost. Flexibles had record operating profit, and rigid paper containers grew operating profit more than 15%. Consumer operating profit margin decreased to 10.3%. Consumer price/cost was negative $20 million. The strong price/cost in rigid paper containers and flexibles was offset by the impact of metal price overlap. Excluding Metal Packaging, the Consumer segment would have grown operating profit over 30%, and operating profit margins would have been 15%. Metal Packaging is performing well in a disrupted demand environment, and has improved results from the year we purchased the business when adjusted for metal price overlap. We're ahead of plan on our synergy projects, and we believe we've improved the competitive position of the business as we continue to invest in higher-return projects. Turning to Industrial, Industrial sales decreased to $585 million, Industrial volumes decreased 15% due to lower demand in all key markets and geographies. This decrease was most acute in North America and Europe, though all regions were impacted. Operating profit decreased to $87 million as positive price cost was offset by lower volumes and negative productivity from deleveraging. Notably, this was only $7 million less than the record results in the first quarter of 2023. The Industrial segment achieved positive price cost of $21 million as commercial excellence activities continue to align price with the value our products create. Operating profit margin increased to 14.9%, a meaningful improvement from previous cyclical lows. All Other sales were flat, at $197 million, and operating profit increased 73%, to $29 million. Moving to slide nine, our capital allocation framework is aligned with our business strategy to drive value creation for our shareholders. Our priority is to allocate capital to high-return investments in our core businesses to drive growth and improve efficiency. We remain focused on increasing the dividend, which at present is $0.51 per share on a quarterly basis or greater than 3% average yield over the past 12 months. After capital investments and the dividend, we prioritize investments in accretive M&A aligned with our long-term strategy balanced against our strategic priority of maintaining strong liquidity and [accelerate] (ph) the capital. We ended the second quarter with over $1 billion in total liquidity. In the second quarter, we generated $251 million operating cash flow and invested $78 million in capital expenditures. On slide 10, we have our guidance update. Our Q3 EPS guidance is $1.25 to $1.35. We are revising our full-year 2023 EPS guidance to $5.10 to $5.40. We are also revising our full-year 2023 adjusted EBITDA guidance to $1.02 billion to $1.07 billion. We are affirming our full-year 2023 operating cash flow guidance to $925 million to $975 million. We anticipate closing the RTS and WestRock paper mill acquisition this year, and this is not in our forecast. Now, Rodger will discuss the 2023 outlook.