The Vista February 2, 2021

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the

Volume 118, Issue 14

INSIDE

VISTA “Our Words, Your Voice.”

See Pg.5

Bryce McKinnis @McKinnisBryce

A volunteer heath worker receives a COVID-19 vaccine at the Ayeyarwaddy COVID treatment center, Jan.27, 2021, in Yangon, Myanmar. (AP Photo/Thein Zaw)

International students in OK eligible to receive vaccine Amanda Siew

@amandasiewyk Contributing Writer

Broncho sports recap Sports editor Tanner Johnson and writer Rudy Barnes break down the recent UCO baskebtall games. See Pg.6

UCentral Media For more stories from the editors and contributing writers of The Vista, visit UCentralmedia.com See Pg. 2

Apply online to be a Vista reporter or photographer at jobs.uco.edu

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

UCOSA not meeting while off-campus

Reddit vs. Wall Street President of esports at UCO, Ty Wallace, breaks down the events surrounding reddit and GME.

vistanews1903 @thevista1903 @thevista1903 The Vista ucentralmedia.com

International students in Oklahoma will be eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines free of charge when it becomes available, according to the Oklahoma State Department of Health. “Yes, if they are living here for the purposes of school, we will vaccinate,” said Keith Reed, the health department’s deputy commissioner. “That helps break transmission of COVID in the state.” According to Reed, international students will receive vaccines in Phase 3 of the state’s vaccine priority population framework, which includes “teachers, students, residents and administrative staff in educational set-

tings outside Pre K-12.” However, the health department currently does not have an estimate of when Phase 3 will begin. “Oklahoma’s progress through the priority phase plan for vaccine distribution depends on two things: vaccine supply from the federal governContinued on Pg. 2

"With the past administration, it was up in the air if international students would get the vaccine or not."

-Han Seth Lu, UCO student

Managing Editor

The UCO Student Association operated under a temporary amendment to the Oklahoma Meetings Act that allowed it to vote virtually to pass legislation during the fall semester. That amendment, OK-SB661, was terminated Nov. 15. UCOSA can not vote on any legislation under UCO’s off-campus status, which is set to be lifted Feb. 8, without an extension to that amendment. The date for which UCO is set to hold on-campus classes was pushed back from its original start date on Feb. 2 when UCO President Patti Nuehold-Ravikumar announced the extended restrictions on Jan. 26. “At some point in the semester, as a recommending body, we need to have some say,” said UCOSA Chair De Shannon, “we need to hold votes that are influential for students.” The possibility of an extension to the amendment is on the horizon, Continued on Pg. 3

Bronchos basketball sweep previous week Rudy Barnes

@RudyBarnes15 Contributing Writer

Isaiah Wade made a short layup with three seconds remaining to help the University of Central Oklahoma Bronchos beat the Washburn Icahbods 74-72. Wade, a senior forward, finished the game with 21 points, 18 rebounds with 11 second-half points. This is his first playing season in two years since transferring from Washington State. “He was big time tonight, he’s capable of anything and can finish multiple plays,” Bronchos coach Bob Hoffman said. “He’s finally getting his legs underneath him after not playing

any significant minutes the past two years.” The Bronchos Callen Haydon added 14 points and Cam Givens contributed 10 points, shooting 2-3 from downtown. The Ichabods Tyler Geiman had a career-high night as he scored 32 points to lead his team. He also had help from teammate Levi Braun who scored 15 points, with all of them coming from beyond the 3-point line. The game started rough with both teams missing multiple shots and with four teams fouls each, both teams quickly approached the foul bonus with 14 minutes left in the half, 9-8 Ichabods.

Freshman guard Taylor Dement shoots against the opposing team. The Broncho’s are 9-4. (Provided/Broncho Sports)

“They’re young, but they’re smart,” Hoffman said. “They just have to hang in there and things will go their way.”


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