 This is for Alicia. I understand that the UT libraries and other libraries in the country are gathering and archiving our community's experiences of the pandemic. How does that fit within the archives' mission? Well, yeah, what I like to say is that we don't wait until history is made to record it and archive it. And so things that are happening today are historical. And so that we have to make sure that we're gathering that information from, like Laura was saying, that microcosm of history. Well, for me, it's our campus. We didn't have that many letters in student responses to the Spanish flu. So I knew at the onset of this pandemic that I really wanted to make an effort to capture the campus community's feelings and viewpoints about what was happening so that people could look at this down the road and say, oh, well, I really have a really good perspective on that. And so what we did was create an easy form, a couple of questions that ask the students, staff and faculty how they feel, how they're coping, how their home life is, how is it to take all your classes online? Are you going to take a gap here? And things like that. And they can also submit their creative work. So we've had students submit artwork and poems that help them kind of navigate what they're feeling during this time. And so I think that is going to be very important for us to have 100 years from now. And so we have a couple hundred responses so far. And we're still collecting them and we will continue to collect them. And then you can also donate multiple times. We asked, we started that last semester in the spring, right on the onset of sending that spring break when most of our campus community students were asked to stay home with the shelter in place order. So and we're going to continue to collect that through the next year. Yeah, it's an important project. And we very much encourage everybody to do their experience if you can. Right. And your unique individual experience is important. So a lot of people think like nobody cares what I'm doing at home during quarantine, but people want to know. And that's the thing that I was asked frequently. What were people doing during the Spanish flu? And so I really only had the larger newspaper articles and public notices that were happening at the time other than the few letters we had from our students. We only had about 500 students on campus at that point. So it was a little bit tougher. So that's why I wanted to make sure that we have this to preserve on into the future. So if you're staying at home, you're learning how to bake sourdough or you're doing things like that, that's a trend. People are going to want to know that and see how we're making it through.