MONDAY, MARCH 9, 2020 VOLUME 94 ■ ISSUE 45
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SPORTS
OPINIONS
ONLINE
INDEX
‘Land Arts of the American West’ utilizes landscape as classroom.
Student, fan support fuels team success.
P i x a r ’s ‘ O n w a r d ’ h i g h l i g h t s importance of family bonds.
Today is the last day to cast your vote for Raider’s Choice, so use the QR Code below or check out our website to vote.
PG 3
PG 5
PG 4
ONLINE
SPORTS OPINIONS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS SUDOKU
5 4 2 5 3
BASEBALL
Pitchers Beeter, Dallas shine in series opener By MAX HENGST Sports Editor
The No. 2 Texas Tech baseball team swept Rice 3-0 in its three-game series over the weekend, but the strong start at the mound for Clayton Beeter in the first game set the tone for the series. This marked Beeter ’s, a redshirt sophomore, fourth start of the season after coming out of the bullpen last season. Before Friday’s game, Beeter was 1-1 at the mound, recording 21 strikeouts in 15.0 innings pitched. In the series opener against Rice, Beeter set a new c a r e e r- h i g h i n strikeouts, recording 12 in 6.0 innings of work. His previous careerhigh was eight strikeouts in the Red Raiders’ only loss of the season to Tennessee at the Round Rock Classic. “Pretty good stuff, huh?” head coach Tim Tadlock said. “He’s a treat. He’s just got great
makeup, great composure, great stuff. He’s got some pitchability about him too. I mean, it’s not just about stuff he’s trying to execute pitches, and I think you’re just seeing the start of it. He’s got a chance to be special.” In his first season at Tech, Beeter redshirted after having Tommy John surgery. Tadlock and Beeter used last season as a year to help him recover from his surgery as he came out of the bullpen in all 21 of his appearances. Tadlock said he was trying to be conservative with Beeter because he always knew he had the capability to be a starter. When it was announced that Beeter would be the Friday night starter for the Red Raiders, fellow pitcher, junior Kurt Wilson, said he was proud of him. He continued to say Beeter worked on his command, delivery and stuff over the offseason.
“Not a lot of people know, but I had Tommy John as well,” Wilson said. “I know what he’s been through, and the way he’s been about it brings good energy. He always works hard and never complains. I just love that about him.” Despite his battle with Tommy John surgery, a surgery that is hard for a pitcher to recover from, Tadlock knew what Beeter was capable of since he first saw him play. “He’s a guy in high school that when we saw him pitch, had a lot of pitchability about him,” Tadlock said. “He went through the deal where he had an increase in velocity and usually when you have that increase in velocity, you have some rhythm and timing you go through. He went through it, and now he’s on the right side of it.” Beeter’s strikeouts to open the series against Rice made him the first Red Raider since Corey Taylor to record 12 strikeouts in a single game.
Taylor ‘s 12 strikeouts were recorded in 2013. “That guy is one of the all-time great players that’s played here,” Tadlock said regarding Taylor. “He’s a great teammate, he’s a great man, I think he set the record for ERA in a season here his senior year, he commanded the fastball as good as anybody I’ve ever coached. He’s just a special guy.” Despite having a strong outing, giving up just six hits and no earned runs, Beeter was relieved by sophomore RHP Micah Dallas after throwing 92 pitches. Beeter said he felt like he could have pitched longer, but Tadlock said it is his responsibility to take care of his players. He continued to add that the amount of Red Raiders who have thrown over 100 pitches at Tech could probably be counted on both hands.
SEE PITCHERS PG. 5
LEFT: Redshirt sophomore pitcher Clayton Beeter throws a pitch during the Texas Tech baseball game against Rice on March 6, 2020, at Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park. The Red Raiders defeated the Owls, 7-1. RIGHT: Sophomore pitcher Micah Dallas pitches during the Texas Tech baseball game against Rice on March 6, 2020, at Dan Law Field at Rip Griffin Park. AUTUMN BIPPERT/The Daily Toreador
NATIONAL
2020 Census warrants participation from Lubbockites, Tech students By ADÁN RUBIO
News & L a Vida Editor The year 2020 marks many milestones for people. But one some tend to forget is the national census that takes place every 10 years. People will soon be expected to complete the 2020 Census. As the first counting day, March 12, approaches, people may wonder why the 2020 Census and the information it reports is important to them. By law, a person living in the United States or any of its five territories is required to complete the 2020 Census questionnaire, which will consist of counting themselves and everyone living in their household, according to the U.S. Census Bureau website. Dwight McDonald, chairperson for Lubbock’s Complete Count Committee for the 2020 Census and professor at the Texas Tech School of Law, said the purpose of the census is to take count of everyone in the U.S. in order to properly apportion representatives for national and state governments. “Currently, it’s also used to apportion about $675 billion to the different states, counties and cities,” he said. This $675 billion in federal funding goes to supporting projects, such as highways, Pell Grants, Medicaid and Medicare, McDonald said.
“The reality is if you are a college student, and you’re attending Texas Tech University, you’re driving on Lubbock County highways, you’re accessing medical care in Lubbock County, Pell Grants,” he said. “So, it’s important that you’re counted here where you’re attending school even though it may not be your quote-on-quote permanent residence. It is where you are spending a majority of your time.” The census wants to know where one is located on April 1 of this year, McDonald said. If a person is attending Tech, whether they are living on- or offcampus, they need to be counted in Lubbock. The first census took place in 1790, McDonald said. The requirement for the census to be taken every 10 years was stated in Article 1, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution. “This year is the first year that you can actually respond electronically,” he said. “So, there are three ways you can respond to the census: you can do it electronically on the Internet, you can do it by phone or you can do it with the paper census that will be mailed out.” Responding to the census will take about seven to eight minutes to complete, McDonald said. Bryson Carroll, partnership specialist with the U.S. Census Bureau, said everyone will get
an invitation to respond starting March 12. The letter one gets will explain how and when one needs to complete the census. “The online system will go live that day as well as the phone system,” he said. “Census Day is actually April 1, and most of those operations will run, again, from the middle of March all the way to the end of July.” After April 1, which is a symbolic day that typically acts as a snapshot of where people are in completing the census, U.S. Census Bureau workers will go door-to-door to addresses that have not responded to the census in order to get those members of the household to respond, Carroll said. July 31 is the last day people can self-respond. “It’s really imperative for Tech students to respond as quickly as possible because, as you know, Tech students might leave as early as the end of April,” he said, “and so, we don’t have a whole lot of time to make sure that their information is collected appropriately for Lubbock. Even though people can respond till the end of July, we want to make sure that we respond early and accurately to make sure all that information is there. That way, they can think about finals and going home for the summer instead of worrying about filling out the census form.”
SEE CENSUS PG. 2