Coronavirus Heroes

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CORONAVIRUS HEROES

THE OXFORD EAGLE

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

1B

CORONAVIRUS HEROES

The LOU Community is full of everyday heroes By JAKE THOMPSON The Coronavirus, COVID-19. The entire world has been brought to its knees because of the first pandemic since 1918. The United States is known for its resilience. Whether it was the response after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941 or after the World Trade Center towers fell on Sept. 11, 2001, the country got off the mat and answered the bell. The result will be no different in 2020, and this is because of people throughout communities across the nation that opened up their heart and showed the ultimate act of kindness – sacrifice. From those on the front lines in hospitals and urgent care centers, to food banks, to knitting groups, the LafayetteOxford-University Community is full of Coronavirus Heroes. Sacrifice can be shown in different ways. One way is risking one’s health by taking the fight to COVID-19, as healthcare workers are tirelessly combating the deadly virus and working nearly 24-hour shifts so those outside the hospital walls can remain safe. Doctors and nurses are risking their lives to protect your loved ones who may have contracted this awful disease. Spending time with them when you are not able to, providing care and being there for them. Yes, some may say, “Well, this is what they signed up for. What they went to all those years of school for,” and you are right. They did sign up to be those who take care of the sick. But nobody enters medical school knowing one day a pandemic will strike, crippling the healthcare system and rending them nearly useless, yet never giving up to keep your mother, father, brother, sister, aunt, uncle or grandparents safe.

For that, they are the true heroes. Then, there are the everyday heroes who are doing their part to help people get by and get through this world crisis until it passes. Grocery stores have remained open, providing a food supply on a daily basis and taking a risk of potentially contracting the virus just to make sure you are able to put food on the dinner table for your family. It is the local grocers, like Larson’s CashSaver, that are having to stay open, mostly to keep their business afloat, but also because they know those people who might be struggling. They could be neighbors or friends of their kids. All local businesses are the lifeblood of a community, and the ones that have been able to stay open, due to being labeled “essential” by local, state and federal leaders, are doing their best to keep the heart of each community pumping until cities are reopened once again. Then, there are the residents of the LOU Community who are doing their part in helping to flatten the curve or make this “new normal” as normal as possible until we can return to the old normal. Personal protective equipment (PPE) became a valuable resource for healthcare workers, and the need for them to have as many of the N95 masks as possible was priority number one. Knowing the search for proper masks would be as daunting as trying to find rolls of toilet paper, community members came together to provide their own masks. Members of an Oxford knitting group began making masks for vulnerable members of the community who were not able to venture outside to stores and purchase their own.

Local leaders came together to make sure those residents who could not purchase hand sanitizer or were unable find any on store shelves were covered by providing free bottles thanks to Jackson-based Cathead Vodka. Taylor-based gin distillery Wonderbird Spirits also turned to the hand sanitizer business and manufactured their own to provide to local healthcare facilities and other first responders. With schools closed and social distancing guidelines keeping children from seeing their friends on a daily basis for the first time in their lives, finding ways to lift their spirits has also become a goal. Parents, who in turn have become homeschool teachers by default, have come up with creative ideas, such as a neighborhood social distance zoo or placing bears in their windows for kids to find as they drive by. Even though the world is at a proverbial standstill, the calendar has not stopped. Every day, people are still having birthdays, but the traditional birthday party has been replaced with car parades. Friends, family and even local law enforcement line up and drive by the person’s home in cars decorated with signs, streamers and balloons, honking and shouting to provide some happiness on the special day. These are strange and unprecedented times, but people have adapted and overcome. The crisis will pass, events will resume again and the streets of the Downtown Square will be filled with people on Friday nights. When that day comes, the people who helped get us there should not be forgotten. We are doing our part in making sure that does not happen with this special look at the Coronavirus Heroes.


2B

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

CORONAVIRUS HEROES

THE OXFORD EAGLE

OXCM provides safe service By JAKE THOMPSON Before the COVID-19 crisis struck Mississippi, market director Betsy Chapman was already prepared for what it might do to the Oxford Community Market. During the first week of March, Chapman said she began implementing social distancing and safety measures at the market. “Before the official orders went into place, we wanted to make sure we had assessed our own capacity to operate safely and minimize risk for our customers and farmers,” Chapman said. “My first concern was, all this is happening right as we’re about to have our spring grand opening and all the spring crops are about to start coming in.” Some of those guidelines and rules Chapman put into place consisted of allowing only a certain number of customers into the pavilion at a time, and doing a one-in-one-out system with people lined up outside. Flags are marked six feet apart for people to practice social distancing while waiting. Other rules included asking customers to not handle the items at each booth, instead allowing the vendor to bag any purchased items for them and practicing good hygiene with handwashing, gloves and masks as needed. Vendors are also asked to thoroughly wash all agricultural products before consumption and use practices to allow for safe handling of food. According to the Centers for Disease Control, there has not been any evidence to support the transmission of COVID-19 through food.

JAKE THOMPSON | OXFORD EAGLE

Quinoa Soedsauer manages his booth at the Oxford Community Market. Soedsauer, like all booth vendors, wears a mask as part of the safety measures implmenented to combat COVID-19. Luckily for all the local farmers, the market was allowed to stay open and was deemed an essential business once the City of Oxford implemented its own resolutions and when Governor Tate Reeves implemented the statewide shelter-in place. Every Tuesday afternoon at the Old Armory Pavilion, the market opens for three and-a-half hours and provides farm to table food options that are grown in Lafayette County and surrounding areas. The ability to continue to provide that service was vital for the local farmers and for Chapman herself. “We were hoping that markets would be declared essential services and we knew that was happening in other states,” Chapman said. “We were following guidelines from the Farmers Market Coalition. We were studying and researching what other markets were doing. … After a couple weeks of

kind of practicing we felt like, ‘Yeah, okay, we can do this.’ We can be sure everyone’s safe. We can minimize these risks as much as we possibly can and feel comfortable staying open.” Grocery stores have also been deemed essential businesses since the beginning of the pandemic. The ability to provide food and keep supplies on the shelves at grocery stores has been tough. Keeping stores safe by enacting social distancing measures and asking employees to implement safe practices has also been a struggle. With the community market, it is in an openair venue and Chapman allows only a certain number of vendors, which are lined up against the edges of the space. Providing food that customers know has come straight from the farm to the vendor’s tables is another positive aspect to choosing to shop at the market instead of a grocery story, according to Chapman.

“This was the first time most of us have experienced seeing empty shelves at the grocery stores,” Chapman said. “With all of these things happening, there is a natural interest in food safety and where your food is coming from. Who all has touched it before it gets to your table and how far it traveled to get to you? We saw an incredible response from people shopping at the market; people seriously shopping for their families like they would at a grocery store.” There was an initial fear that people may not come to the market during this crisis, but Chapman said there has been a steady flow of customers every week. Having to alter and tailor how the market is run during this time, Chapman said she had to take away some of the things that make the market unique. For example, live music performances and cooking classes and exhibitions have been canceled until it is safe to bring them back. “We shifted from being a community gathering place to strictly becoming a place to get local food,” Chapman said. It has been a family effort to continue to safely provide local food to members of the community on a weekly basis. Chapman’s daughter, Lilly, has been helping put the market on each week. Lilly is a sophomore at Ole Miss, but with the campus closed for the remainder of the spring semester, she has had more time to help her mother. For more information, visit Oxford Community Market’s Facebook page. It is open from 3 to 6:30 p.m. every Tuesday.


THE OXFORD EAGLE

CORONAVIRUS HEROES

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

3B

CORONAVIRUS HEROES The faces in these pages were nominated by their peers and loved ones – people who see what they do in the LOU Community each day. These are people who work without expecting a “Thank You,� but deserve all the thanks and praise in the world. This is merely a snapshot of the countless essential workers who keep the LOU Community running. We salute you, Coronavirus Heroes! Carlyn Mitchell

Jennifer Gardner

Betsy Chapman

Financial Consultant Regions Bank

Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi Pulmonologist

Oxford Community Market Director

“My wife, Carlyn, goes to work Monday through Friday all day risking exposure. She is also 7 months pregnant and a type 1 diabetic. She’s double high-risk and still goes in everyday to help people with their finances.�

Dr. Jason Waller Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi Director of Emergency Medicine "Dr. Waller's leadership during this pandemic is unmatched on many levels. He is always eager to share with the community, and explains the coronavirus crisis in a way all can understand. Thank you, Dr. Waller!"

Karen VanWinkle Oxford Health & Rehab Activities Director “Although Karen, as Activities Director, is not in a high-profile position, she is nevertheless on the front lines serving some of our most vulnerable citizens. No longer able to do group activities, she goes room-toroom, to chat with the residents. On her daily visits she provides or brings with her a variety of things they may want or need: manicures, reading materials, puzzles, and a few days ago, even a visit from the Easter Bunny. She puts her own health at risk by staying on the job in order to help keep the residents’ spirits up. Her cheerful, upbeat personality is what they need most now.�

Myron Simmons Larson’s CashSaver Cart Wrangler & Grocery Bagger “This young man is hard worker. He goes above and beyond to help customers and is constantly working hard day and night. With him putting himself and his family at risk for customers, it is amazing.�

Orlando Calomese Larson’s CashSaver Dairy Products Stocker

“Always maintaining a positive attitude during this time. And as her child’s teacher, she even got my family dinner when she is the one working the front lines. She is working hard each day to save lives. She is the best! And so humble.�

Rachel Sledge Urgent Care Registered Nurse “She is working round the clock while still checking in on people who can’t get help from other medical professionals with or without COVID issues. Her grace under fire is something that needs to be recognized.�

Onice Faye Carter Mississippi Federal Credit Union VP of Oxford Branches “Onice Carter has diligently worked to ensure all of our members are served financial during this pandemic. She has made sure her and her staff keep surfaces sanitized, ATM’s stocked, and phone lines open and available to help members with questions and concerns. She took the initiative to add equipment and a second full time teller at the drive through windows. She has worked long days and nights to ensure no document goes unattended and implementing the emergency skip a payment for members that have been negatively impacted by COVID-19. She has served the Oxford Mississippi Federal Credit Union for 15 years and in the midst of a pandemic, the love for her community, staff, and members only grows stronger. She is a true coronavirus hero.�

Katie Soldevila Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi ER Nurse Practitioner “Katie is undoubtedly the most selfless individual I’ve ever known. In addition to being very smart, Katie is very compassionate and thorough as a medical professional. Not only do her patients like her but her coworkers as well. I can think of no one more deserving of being called out as a hero than Katie.� “She always has a smile and a good attitude even in the toughest times. You can tell she loves her job and cares deeply for her patients.�

“Orlando has worked at Larson’s for over 10 years and has never missed a day to illness to the best of my knowledge, the current crisis no exception. He is always cheerful and has never hesitated to help me find things in the store. His section in the store is always neat and well-maintained, especially in so far as product rotation is concerned. In the attached photo the is G&M Pharmacy center, in the red shirt.� Pharmacist

Andy Douglas SoLa Bartender & Dinosaur Delivery Guy “Since the coronavirus pandemic has closed the doors to bars and dining rooms, many bartenders have thrown in the towel and are doing their part by starting at home and hoping and praying for this to pass. That’s a fine and an honorable thing. Andy is different because the small family restaurant for which he works has needed his help in many ways, and he is always readily available to help. Andy’s claim to fame is delivering food curbside to customers in giant inflatable dinosaur suits. Sometimes he parades around the square in them, to lighten the mood of things. Andy is quite the renaissance man, as he has been the chef of his own restaurant, holds a PhD in botany, conducts research for a federally contracted company, and is a massively creative bartender. He has stepped up to help in every way possible at the restaurant by planting an herb garden, working in the kitchen, sanitizing cash, helping craft to-go cocktail mixes, and filming instructional how-to videos for viewers at home. Andy may not be in the hospitals or grocery stores, but he is using all his talents to make sure his industry, which is in dire straits, is safely ticking on, and for that, he is a hero.�

Karen Mixon Internal Medicine Associates Laboratory Director “Karen is on the front line taking good care of all the patients who visit Internal Medicine, with her expertise in medical laboratory testing. She’s the best in her field and exhibits care and compassion for all of her patients!�

LaVera Hodges

Lynda Huggins

Hayley Miller

“Betsy has worked tirelessly to keep the nonprofit market open and safe through the crisis to keep providing income to the local farmers and vendors who sell, and fresh produce, eggs, bread and more to the community. The market’s mission is “to make healthy, local food more accessible to all people in our community, especially those facing barriers of cost and transportation,� and Betsy works tirelessly to make that happen. She has developed way for the market to match SNAP dollars, to accept WIC vouchers, and to make weekly donations to the Pantry. All those programs have continued uninterrupted in the crisis, and she has also instituted a very successful curbside pickup service that has brought new customers to the market safely.�

L. Hodges Funeral Services Owner & Funeral Director

“Lynda continues to work tirelessly Baptist Memorial Hospital-North during the COVID-19 pandemic at the Mississippi pharmacy her father, Bill McLellan, ICU Nurse, RN BSN started in 1978 and sold in 2018. Lynda continues to be the “go to� “She goes to work day in and day for many long-time customers of the business. Many out relentlessly taking care of her of G&M’s customers rely on her and trust her with patients and making sure no matter the medications they need to treat acute illnesses or what they need they are taken care chronic diseases. Lynda has been on the front line as an of. She does this without question essential worker during this difficult time. It’s great to and I see her leave us every night she works ready to have the opportunity to recognize her hard work, care tackle the task at hand.� and professionalism. Thank you, Lynda.�

“The reason(s) that make this nominee a Coronavirus hero, is because even though the world is in this pandemic, she is still diligently serving the community and make sure that all of their needs are met. This nominee is a cancer survivor, so that means that her immune system is low. Technically she should not be around other people, due to her immune system but of course, her being the selfless person that she is, she continues to serve others.�

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4B

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

CORONAVIRUS HEROES

THE OXFORD EAGLE

Brent Larson

Austin Dennis

Dave Jones

Larson’s CashSaver Co-Owner & Manager

Dennis & Sons Electric and Oxford Fire Department Electrician, Firefighter

G&M Pharmacy Delivery Technician

“When the COVID-19 crisis became evident locally, Brent and his team at Cash Saver responded by upping their orders so people could have what they needed to begin a shelter-in-place effort. He began to order daily deliveries of food and essential items in an organized and helpful way. Brent was one of the first local businesses to take the situation seriously, and the Cash Saver family provided its customers the products needed in a speedy and friendly manner. Brent is a great steward of the community, not just as a Lafayette County Supervisor, but also as a business owner who regularly supports local efforts in donations and discounts for organizations such as Love Packs and Commodores Care. Thank you, Brent, and the Cash Saver Team, for all you do for the LOU community.”

“Austin’s jobs require him to serve the LOU community amid the COVID19 pandemic. Austin is nothing short of brave and helpful to those in need. He’s a hard worker and does it all with a huge smile on his face! Thank you for all you do!”

Alexis Williams Elmcroft of Oxford LPN “Alexis is a very loving and sweet nurse. She is always willing to help those in need.”

Leigh Latham Keyshawn Williams Walmart Online Grocery Pickup

Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi RN

“Dave works for G&M Pharmacy as a Delivery Technician. He delivers medicine to customers of G&M throughout the city of Oxford, including individuals and nursing care facilities; often driving over 100 miles a day. He is always kind, encouraging, and helpful. He will pray for anyone who is hurting due to sickness or emotional stress. Although he isn’t able to interact now, he is dedicated to serving “his” G&M customers to the very best of his ability!”

Joseph Johnson Oxford Health & Rehab Administrator “Joseph Johnson, our administrator, works tirelessly ensuring we have the staff, supplies, information, encouragement and support we need to care for our residents. He goes out of way to meet the needs of the residents and staff. His calm demeanor, desire to put others before himself and team approach to delivering care to our residents gives his staff much to strive for. Thank you, Joseph Johnson for all you do!”

“My husband, Leigh, is a hero because even though things are wild right now, he is doing whatever he can to make sure his family is taken care of. Leigh is an RN and the hospital and usually works in surgery. Since COVID-19 came around there has been a restriction on surgeries and only absolutely necessary cases Elmcroft Senior Living are being done (so no work for him). He has stepped up LPN & Health and Wellness Coordinator and has been working in all parts of the hospital to be a Oxford Health & Rehab helping hand where one is needed. He has worked nights QA Infection Control Nurse “Cara is a hero because she conand days without the first complaint. These nurses are “Tammy Hervey, QA-infection tinues to serve one of the most vuldoing an amazing job and I’m proud to call one of them control nurse is one of our leadnerable communities that could be my husband!” ing forces in preventing covid19 affected by COVID-19. She puts others from entering our facility. Tammy before herself and does everything leads with her heart and mind. She she can to keep the residents, herself, has a true heart for her residents and her family safe. Thank you for protecting those who North Mississippi Regional Center Direct Care Supervisor and uses her knowledge to the best of her abilities need it most!” for their wellbeing. She is both a cheerleader and “LaShawn loves the people she enforcer for the staff. As the staff works day in and serves. She works countless hours. day out taking care of the residents’ daily needs with Senatobia Healthcare & Rehab She puts the needs of those she serves the added stress covid-19 has brought, she celebrates Staff Development Coordinator, RN before her own. She is dedicated and accomplishments and aids in enforcement of new loyal.” policies and procedures. Thank you for all you do!” “Barbara drives back and forth from Oxford to Senatobia every day to make sure not only the patients Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi Oxford Health & Rehab and residents at her facility are well Food Service RN, BSN taken care of but also all the RNs, LPNs, CNAs, and all of the staff there “My name is Ashanti Smith, and “Kelsey Todd, RN/BSN, DON for are taken care of as well. She makes sure that during her tireless leadership during the this COVID-19 crisis, all are following safe procedures, I would like to nominate my mom most trying of times. She is dedicattraining them all on the procedures and providing care Carla Little as a coronavirus hero. ed to keeping her residents and staff and comfort to the residents and patients at all times. My mom works at Baptist Memorial safe. Her calm demeanor during When she comes home, she is tired, worn and weary yet here in Oxford. She makes sure that this most unnerving time brings she gets up the next day to do it all over again. Smiling. the patients on her floor have food She may not be the kind of hero people place that title on throughout the day. No matter what is going on she still peace to her staff. She leads by example. Thank you, and she doesn’t think of herself as one but she is a hero gets up and go to work. She is so brave. I pray that she is Kelsey Todd for all you do!” safe and healthy throughout this pandemic.” to me and to our little Nathaniel.” “Keyshawn is always willing to work and goes in whenever he is asked. Keyshawn is a team player and always willing to help when needed.”

Cara Pollan

Tammy Hervey

LaShawn Polk

Barbara M. Arbuckle

Carla Little

Kelsey Todd


CORONAVIRUS HEROES

THE OXFORD EAGLE

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

5B

Not all heroes wear capes – some work here The Blake at Oxford goes above and beyond to serve residents during crisis By NATHANAEL GABLER How does one protect the most defenseless people while not making their lives meaningless and dull? How do those inexperienced with technology interact with their families when they can’t physically see their families? Those are the questions the crew at The Blake at Oxford have been working to answer over the past month during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Everything is different than normal,” said Morgan Walter, executive director of The Blake at Oxford. “We have a fantastic team and really, really good residents and fam-

ilies as well. Everybody comes to work with the same goal in mind: to make the residents enjoy that they live here.” Families can no longer visit their loved ones at the Blake. What’s also been cut is gatherings within the building. Groups of residents no longer gather for activities or exercise classes, and even meal dynamics have changed. “We took advantage of getting to see each other every day, at mealtime and activities and such,” Walter said. “And that’s not happening very much anymore. I’m very lucky that all of the staff has embraced this as much as they have.” The most popular activ-

ity week-to-week among residents at the Blake is Happy Hour. Now, staffers decorate a rolling cart with individual charcuterie plates for the residents. They take the rolling cart door to door, handing out the dishes and pouring a glass of wine for residents at their door. Last weekend, the rolling cart became an impromptu Jimmy Buffett concert, going through the halls playing music while staff distributed margaritas. The other part of the dilemma is, how are they bringing residents and their families together? The Blake purchased an iPad to allow residents to video chat with their

NATHANAEL GABLER | OXFORD EAGLE

Blake employees Catherine Harris (left), Morgan Walter (middle) and Wendy Terry (right) pose in from of their “Not all super heroes wear capes” sign. families, and some have also come by and drawn pictures or taped notes on the outside of resident’s windows. They’ve also managed a way for a more intimate interaction. “We’ve even done what I call window visits,” Walter said. “Essentially, families arrange a time they can come, and there’s a special sitting area outside the therapy gym which has glass windows. So, we’ll put the residents on the inside and family members on the outside, and you can usually hear pretty well through that glass.” One particularly vulnerable population is those in the Blake’s memory care wing. For those suffering from neurological issues, not seeing their loved ones for extended

stretches – the people with whom they’re most familiar – can be especially detrimental. “It can wear on that population even more, which is why we’ve put so much energy into making sure these families still get to visit each other. It can’t be that face-to-face, sitting beside each other, but you can still communicate through one of these methods we’ve been talking about,” Walter said. “For them, we try and plan and schedule things out a little bit more, just because that planning is even more important for the memory care population, for sure.” A combination of ensuring safety of the residents while making their lives still exciting is something that has caught the eye of upper management.

The tactics employed in Oxford have drawn notice from the property’s parent company as a whole. “Morgan and her whole team that leads that community has done a tremendous job, just in communication to the family and keeping the residents and the staff engaged,” said Scott Hames, the Senior Vice President of Operations at the Blake Management Group. “The entire Blake at Oxford team, really, has just gone above and beyond in the past few weeks. “None of us know where the virus might be lurking. There is that fear of coming to work, especially if you’re working amongst other people,” Walter said. “But my staff has just been so dedicated. I couldn’t ask for a better staff.”

Hospital staff on front lines By ANNA GUIZERIX

Thank you healthcare heroes.

We recognize your important contributions to keeping us all well. This battle could not be fought without you. We thank you for your compassionate service to our community and your unwavering dedication to the mission of defeating this virus. You are our heroes.

RightTrack

MEDICAL GROUP

®

Outpatient Mental Healthcare in Oxford Care For: Anxiety, Depression, Stress, PTSD, OCD, Mood Disorders Medication Management & Therapy • Adults, Children and Teens

Accepting patients via telepsychiatry View expert tips for managing stress during COVID-19: righttrackmedical.com/ covid-stress 1203 Medical Park Drive Learn more at RightTrackMedical.com

(662) 234-7601

Baptist Memorial H o s p i t a l - N o r t h Mississippi has taken its response to the coronavirus pandemic to a new level, thanks to the hard work of its personnel. Prior to the onset of the pandemic, the team at BMHNM was prepared to handle communal viruses, but never had they seen such a widespread and highly contagious enemy. Doctors, nurses and support staff found themselves on the front lines, which meant new procedures had to be implemented, and quickly. “During this crisis, new protocols have been put into place to include increased safety measures, reinforced training of staff on how to properly put on and remove personal protective equipment, and monitoring the CDC recommendations to ensure we have the latest, most updated information,” a

statement from Baptist said. “Of course, many changes have occurred that are quite different than health care pre COVID-19, but our staff is adapting and know that the changes we are making are in the best interest of our community and our fellow colleagues.” As restrictions have been put into place regarding visitors and support persons for patients at the hospital, the level of comfort and care patients need has only increased. Regardless of the reason for admission, being alone at the hospital can be scary for some. However, CEO of Baptist Hospital-North Mississippi Bill Henning said all staff members are doing their part to provide exceptional care for patients. “It would be unfair to recognize only a few as heroes because, in our eyes, everyone that works at Baptist

is a hero. It takes our entire team to care for patients,” Henning said. “Everyone in this building plays a major role in operating a safe and fully functional hospital. Our team members that clean the hospital from top to bottom are as important as the next. Our team members that make sure everything is operating – from the heating and air to medical equipment – are as essential as those who directly care for our patients. Just as our physicians and nurses, our security, admissions, food and nutrition, and all the other departments play a vital role in keeping this hospital going and we are very grateful for each and every one.” The fight against COVID-19 is far from over. For more information on Baptist’s response to the pandemic, visit baptistonline.org/coronavirus or check out the hospital’s social media pages.


6

Weekend Edition, April 25-26, 2020

CORONAVIRUS HEROES

THE OXFORD EAGLE


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