THURSDAY, JAN. 27, 2021 VOLUME 96 ■ ISSUE 18
LA VIDA
NEWS
Foreign exchange students share their experiences in a new country and at Texas Tech .
Around campus, several construction projects can be seen. Read about the investments Tech is making to campus.
Read what students around campus have to say about Tech’s upcoming men’s basketball game against Texas.
OPINIONS
SPORTS
INDEX
Tech and Longhorns face off with a current 5-3 conference record on Feb. 1. Read about how the teams play in the Big 12.
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LA VIDA SPORTS OPINIONS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS SUDOKU
BURNT
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Businesses reflect on promises to Beard, moving on By ARIANNA FLORES
I
Editor-in-Chief
n March, local businesses were treating one man to many gifts. Gifts he did not receive and instead left for the capital of Texas. The owner of J’s Salsa company, Kelsey Johnson said he did not think the former head coach of the men’s basketball team, Chris Beard, would leave for his alma mater. “I feel like he just kind of stabbed us in the back a little bit,” Johnson said. “But at this point that seems like forever ago now.” Local restaurant Evie Mae’s BBQ offered Beard free barbecue for life before his departure and one of the owners, Mallory Robbins, said she and other businesses collected the former offerings and wanted to gift the items to a Tech basketball fan.
“We collected all sorts of crazy things from a Yeti cooler to a pair of cowboy boots, to gift cards,” Robbins said. “This was not for Chris Beard, it was for a Tech basketball fan.” Robbins said she is excited to see head coach Mark Adams and the team play against the Longhorns and she is expecting students and other fans to be loud. “I think it is exciting that (Beard’s) coming back.” Robbins said. “I think I would be kind of intimidating if I was Chris Beard to come back to Lubbock.” Micah Sparks, the owner and operator of Beef ‘O’ Brady’s said, he is ready to watch the Red Raiders play and show the nation that the grass is not greener in Austin. “We felt a little betrayed by his decision to go to Austin,” Sparks said. “I respect that he wanted to follow his dreams there but I feel
like Austin would have never appreciated Beard in the same manner Lubbock (did).” Sparks said he saw the amount of drive that went into the Kansas game and that team is in good hands with Adams. Eric Washington, the managing partner at Two Docs Brewing Company said the establishment offered Beard free beer for life. “Everybody’s a little angry about how things ended with him but I think at this point, rather than being angry, everyone’s really just more excited with the way our team is looking,” Washington said. “And this is going to be a great chance for him to see what kind of crowd we have and what kind of team Mark (Adams) put together. So I think it’ll just be a chance for Lubbock to show that the team was bigger and more than just Chris Beard.” @AriannaFloresDT
“Everybody’s a little angry about how things ended with him but I think at this point, rather than being angry, everyone’s really just more excited with the way our team is looking.” Eric Washington, managing partner, Two Docs Brewing Company
TOP: PHOTO BY KHLOE SCOTT/The Daily Toreador ABOVE: PHOTO BY EMILY KNEPP/The Daily Toreador
TOP: After announcing the 79-70 Texas loss against Iowa State, a Red Raider fan throws a horns down sign on Jan. 18, 2022, at the United Supermarkets Arena. The Longhorns hold a 5-3 conference record with Tech’s former head coach Chris Beard. ABOVE: The Texas Tech student section cheers after the Red Raiders score against Kansas at the United Supermarkets Arena on Jan. 8, 2022. Tech defeated the Jayhawks 75-67 for its second conference win this season. Tech now has a 5-3 overall conference record.
Scout Sonnenberg explores beauty through art By STEPHANIE GHANDOUR Staff Writer
Many people use art as an outlet or therapy in their lives. By creating art, they are able to make something beautiful out of personal issues or pain that they otherwise may not be able to express to others. For Scout Sonnenberg, art is not only an outlet but a way of life. When Scout was born, she was diagnosed as legally blind in addition to other conditions. “I was born completely blind. I went through a series of surgeries until I was 3 to restore my vision. And it wasn’t until I was three that I did get eventually some of that site back,” Scout Sonnenberg, a second-year studio art student from Lubbock, said. “When I was born, I was born with white eyes, which meant that it was like the visible sign of glaucoma. So, my eyes clouded over.” Scout Sonnenberg said she has had around 47 surgeries throughout her life 43 of which were performed on her eyes. Despite the multitude of surgeries, she has had in her life, she remembers using art as a form of therapy far before she could even see, Scout Sonnenberg said.
EMILY KNEPP/The Daily Toreador
Scout Sonnenberg poses with several pieces of artwork she created. Despite having 43 surgeries on her eyes the Lubbock native describes art as a way of life. “So, there’s like pictures of me when I was little, even before those surgeries, where I couldn’t see,” Scout Sonnenberg said. “And I was feeling the edge of the paper and I was scribbling on it
with a marker. Like I’ve always loved art.” Lee and Paula Sonnenberg, Scout’s parents, said the problems with Scout’s eyes were caused by a genetic anomaly that caused a
tweak in the fourth chromosome. “ S h e c o u l d n ’t r e a l l y p l a y sports, but she was pretty athletic, so she found swimming after the Olympics one summer,” Paula Sonnenberg said. “So, she was a competitive swimmer for probably close to 10 years, she was a recruit for the Paralympics. She stumbled on to Color Guard.” Paula Sonnenberg said the hardest part about Scout’s situation for them as parents was watching their daughter go through chronic pain. “I think it’s really so much of what we have tried to do as parents, especially for Scout, is just make sure that she had that level playing field and then we let her do what she wanted to do and could do and then we were just available to support you know, cheer from the sides,” Lee Sonnenberg said. Paula Sonnenberg said that Lee is working with political leaders and implementing laws for children across Texas for those who are visually impaired. Lee is now on the board for the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired and has helped over 11,000 blind/visually impaired children ranging from the ages of 3 to 18. Despite the adversity that
Scout has overcome she has still made it her dream to continue a career in the arts regardless of her abilities to see. “For a long time, I thought it was very stupid that I wanted to do art. I was like why would I do art if one day I’m not going to be able to see anymore?” Scout Sonnenberg said. “Then, finally, I realized that I was like if I’m not able to see anymore, at least I can give people a glimpse of what I used to see and what I saw and how I experienced the world. I think art and artist they challenge you to see things differently.” Scout Sonnenberg said she is deciding between pursuing art therapy and becoming an art professor, but she will find a way to utilize art in her career. It is a dream of hers to create a book about the way she sees the world and what sighted people may take for granted. “Some people might think it’s funny for a blind kid to study studio art but I’m just incredibly thankful because it’s just built into like my DNA,” Scout Sonnenberg said. “I used to say that I have I have acrylic paint running through my veins and blood.” @StephanieGhandourDT