Friday, December 18, 2020
just a shot away When will the COVID-19 vaccine will arrive in Stillwater?
By Jared AâLatorre Americans might soon be hearing a most unexpected, but much needed holiday gift: the COVID-19 vaccine. An ICU nurse, Sandra Lindsay became the first person in the U.S. to take the coronavirus vaccine in New York last week. The COVID-19 vaccine is making its way around the United States, and came to Oklahoma on Monday. But now the question locally is when can we start to see vaccines arriving in Stillwater? Mayor Will Joyce of Stillwater said Wednesday that vaccines were expected to be administered for their frontline personnel at Stillwater Medical Center as early as that afternoon. âA lot of folks have been involved to get us to this point,â Joyce said. âItâs great, itâs a really positive development and hopefully we can get it out and administer as many people as possible.â
While very few can see the future and what it can look like, Joyce said that the citizens of Stillwater canât all expect to be guaranteed COVID-19 free until at least the middle of 2021. âFrom what I hear, I donât expect that we would see much vaccine available here until late spring, early summer at the earliest,â Joyce said. âWeâll have to probably go through this next semester without having a widespread vaccine available.â Now, with the vaccines very close to controlling a pandemic thatâs changed American history, Joyce said that people should not let their guards down just yet. âWhere we are right now in the vaccine distribution doesnât change anything about the additional measures that weâve been taking and that we continue to take to reduce the spread of COVID,â Joyce said. âWe donât have anywhere near enough vaccines out there at this point to really affect our need to continue to take those steps.â In a news conference Monday, Gov. Kevin Stitt said that the public still needs to do their job to stop the spread. See Shot on pg. 2
Unsplash The COVID-19 vaccine arrived to healthcare workers at Stillwater medical this week.
The Man with the Pan how stillwaterâs china wok was born
Joshua Cleary China Wok aims to blend the tastes of American and Chinese cuisine with its dishes
By Robert Owens Michael Zhu came from China to America at 13 years old with a vision: merging the two taste buds of China and America into something new. This is how Stillwaterâs China Wok was born. The small but mighty restaurant serves healthy portions of Chinese and American food favorites: General Tsoâs chicken,
sweet and sour pork, and the chefâs favorite, beef Lo-mein. After coming from China, Zhu would spend about 10 years in Fort Worth, Texas; at the time his parents Bijin Chen and Zong Zhu were working at a Chinese restaurant. âRestaurant life was always busy, cooking was the one of the first things Iâve learned,â Zhu said âI cooked beef, chicken, shrimp, pork, everything.â âI never heard
of ground beef until I got here, but over here everyone loves beef and chickenâ Zhu said. âMost of our ingredients come from the downtown local Asian market.â It was busy every day, but eventually the Zhu family knew it was time to make a path of their own. âAbout five years ago, thatâs when we bought our restaurant in Stillwater,â Zhu said. âWe had talent and it was time for us to be our own bossesâ. With time, it seemed that Zhu and the Stillwater community have both embraced each other. âI love the Stillwater community, Iâm pretty happy here and the people are nice,â Zhu said. âWe opened up shop so fast, people still called and asked âis this Happy Moon Grillââ Zhu said. The restaurant has been going strong ever since the family came here, serving hundreds every day and cooking dishes that bring
the taste of China to America. âItâs hard sometimes, the food smells so good but itâs not for me,â Zhu laughed. âI canât believe it when people say they havenât had Asian food before, like where have you been? Youâre missing out.â He has even told stories about daring customers trying spicy Chinese food for the first time. Zhu is a man of spicy food, but will always accommodate to please his customers. âThey enjoy it, but some people arenât expecting that much spice,â Zhu said. âThe next time they order, they usually ask if we can turn down the heatâ. China Wok, like most restaurants, was impacted by the COVID-19 Pandemic. âIt really slowed us down, we can only do deliveries right now,â Zhu said. âDuring our lunch and dinner rush, many would decide to dine-inâ. With dine-in no
longer an option, Zhu has moved to popular food platforms like Grubhub to keep the business alive. He warns that even if youâre OK, you could end up infecting someone else. The restaurant life isnât easy, most restaurants close in the same year they open. However, this wonât stop Zhu from becoming a restaurateur in the future. âI want to open my own Asian restaurant,â Zhu says, âIâll start with one and see how that goes.â In any kitchen or restaurant Zhu owns, all he needs is a knife, knife sharpener, cutting board, and a wok, to make delicious recipes As someone who is on the right track, Zhu offered advice for anyone working towards their goals in life. âGo for it,â Zhu said. âYou canât be afraid of the first step.â News.ed@ocolly.com