Thanks, Gar. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Our first quarter net sales and pretax operating results were both within our estimated outlook ranges provided during our March earnings call. After a tough start to the first quarter, our comp sales results remain negative each month, but improved on a relative basis in both March and April, with March being the stronger of the two, benefiting from the earlier Easter this year. Like certain others in our competitive space, we continue to face headwinds from macro consumer environment, yet we were able to generate 130 basis points of product margin improvement relative to last year's first quarter despite our decline in net sales. As we discussed during our last earnings call, we have been challenging every aspect of our business as we work toward improving our operating results. For example, we continue to evaluate initial pricing decisions to better align ourselves with our competition in certain product categories. We have reconsidered certain of our promotional pricing and markdown practices to drive improved average unit retail values. We believe that we are beginning to see the impact of these efforts based on the improvement in our first quarter product margins compared to last year's first quarter. However, while we believe our efforts have the right focus to lead us toward making more meaningful improvements over the longer term, in light of the current environment, we caution that there can be no guarantee that we can continue to produce this kind of improvement in the short-term. From a marketing perspective, we have been testing new ideas to focus on creating greater connectivity with our existing customer base and to attract new customers. We believe these new efforts give us a chance to build greater customer following and generate a positive business impact over time. We believe that it may take six to nine months before we were able to truly see and understand how these new efforts are impacting our business, but we believe they are the right efforts to help us improve over the longer term. Despite short-term challenges, we continue to invest in our business for the longer term. We implemented a new merchandise planning and allocation tool in early April, followed by the implementation of our new warehouse management software for our stores distribution center in early May. We experienced some complications in the immediate aftermath of these implementations that slowed product replenishment to stores during May, but we believe we are now starting to get back towards a normal level of distribution productivity for our stores. We plan to complete the implementation of this same warehouse management software in our e-com distribution center this month. Additionally, we plan to implement new markdown optimization software and improve search engine optimization capabilities ahead of the holiday season. We believe these new tools are important to help generate greater operational efficiencies and improve our business over time. Over the short term, we continue to believe it will be challenging for us to improve our sales results amid the reported weakening consumer environment. it will likely take time for this cycle to pass before we see a bounce back in consumer activity among our core customer demographic. In the meantime, we continue to make every effort to seek improvements in our business and make changes that we believe can lead to better results. Our focus remains steadfast on improving our business for the long-term. Now turning to our operating results for the first quarter of fiscal 2024, compared to last year's first quarter. Results were as follows: total net sales were $115.9 million, a decrease of 6.3%; total comparable net sales, including e-commerce, decreased by 9.4% with an 8.6% decrease from physical stores and a 10.8% decrease from e-commerce relative to the comparable 13-week period last year; net sales from physical stores represented 80.1% of total net sales compared to 79.1% last year, while e-commerce net sales represented 19.9% of total net sales compared to 20.9% last year. We ended the first quarter with 246 total stores, a net decrease of two stores compared to last year. Gross margin, including buying, distribution and occupancy expenses, was flat to last year at 21% of net sales. Product margins improved by 130 basis points compared to last year, primarily due to the combination of a lower total markdown rate and improved initial markups. This improvement was offset by deleverage of buying, distribution and occupancy costs despite these costs being $800,000 below last year in the aggregate due to carrying these costs against lower total net sales. Total SG&A expenses were $45.1 million, an increase of $1.9 million, primarily due to increased non-cash store asset impairment charges of $1.5 million and increased store payroll and related benefits costs of $1 million. Our average hourly rate per store payroll rose 5% over last year and was 31% higher than in pre-pandemic 2019. A variety of smaller expense reductions partially offset these two primary expense increases. SG&A deleveraged by 400 basis points as a result of carrying these costs against lower total net sales. Pretax loss was $19.6 million or 16.9% of net sales compared to $16.2 million or 13.1% of net sales last year as a result of the combined factors just noted. Income tax benefit was negligible at $13,000, essentially a 0% tax rate due to the continuing impact of a full, non-cash deferred tax asset valuation allowance. This compares to income tax benefit of $4.2 million or 26.1% of pretax loss last year. On a non-GAAP basis, in the absence of the valuation allowance, our income tax benefit would otherwise have been approximately $5.2 million. Net loss was $19.6 million or $0.65 per share compared to $12 million or $0.40 per share last year. On a non-GAAP basis, assuming a normalized effective income tax rate of 26.3% in the absence of a valuation allowance, net loss would have been $14.5 million or $0.48 per share, the exact middle of our original outlook range for the first quarter. Turning to our balance sheet. We ended the first quarter with total cash and marketable securities of $68 million and no debt outstanding under our $65 million asset-backed credit facility compared to $93 million and no debt at the end of the first quarter last year. Total inventories were up 1.8% at the end of the first quarter this year compared to the end of the first quarter last year. We ended this week with total inventories down 3% versus the comparable week last year. Turning to our outlook for the second quarter of fiscal 2024. Total comparable net sales for fiscal May ended June 1, 2024 decreased by 8.4% relative to the comparable 4-week period last year. Based on current and historical trends, we currently estimate that our total net sales for the second quarter of fiscal 2024 will be in the range of approximately $160 million to $165 million, translating to a comparable net sales decline in the range of approximately 10% to 7%, respectively, for the comparable 13-week period last year. We expect our SG&A to be in the range of approximately $48 million to $49 million in the absence of any non-cash store asset impairment charges and our effective income tax rate to be near 0% due to the continuing impact of a full, non-cash valuation allowance on our deferred tax assets. We estimate our after-tax results to be in the range of a net loss of approximately $3.9 million to $0.9 million, respectively, and per share results to be in the range of a net loss of $0.13 to $0.03, respectively. We currently expect to have 247 total stores at the end of the second quarter compared to 246 at the end of last year's second quarter. One additional note, while we are not providing any specific outlook for the third quarter today, it should be noted, as I mentioned during our last earnings call, that due to the impact of the 53rd week in fiscal 2023, there will be a meaningful shift in net sales into the second quarter from the third quarter when comparing to last year. Using last year's weekly net sales results, what was a $26.2 million back-to-school net sales week for the first week of last year's third quarter will now become the comparable week for the final week of this year's second quarter. The first week of last year's fourth quarter, which was a $7.8 million net sales week, becomes the final comparable week of the third quarter this year, creating a $18.4 million net sales decline for the third quarter of this year relative to last year's third quarter before consideration of any comp sales assumption. Operator, we'll now go to our Q&A session.