THURSDAY, OCT. 7, 2021 VOLUME 96 ■ ISSUE 8
LA VIDA
SPORTS
Read mo r e vi gn et t es abo ut notable figures on game day in “What time does their game day starts?”
ESports is coming to Texas Tech as a partnership with the College of Media & Communication. Read about what is to come.
Read about how there is a need for self-responsibility when it comes to bathroom etiquette.
OPINIONS
ONLINE Be on the look out for the publication’s coverage of Homecoming parade, pep rally and game.
PG 2
PG 5
PG 4
ONLINE
PROFILE
Mason on being 2020 Miss Black Texas Tech reign, future plans
INDEX LA VIDA SPORTS OPINIONS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS SUDOKU
2 5 4 6 7 7
SPIRIT
Football asking fans to blackout the Jones stadium By ARIANNA FLORES Sports Editor
KATIE PERKINS/The Daily Toreador
Third-year biochemistry major from Houston, Aleeza Mason was awarded the title of Miss Black Texas Tech in April of 2021. She will now represent Black Student Association as their homecoming queen nominee. After a thorough selection process, the 2021 queen will be announced at the game on Saturday, Oct. 9 versus Texas Christian University.
By TOLUWANI OSIBAMOWO Copy Editor
In her first year at Texas Tech, Aleeza Mason said she lived under a rock. She was a biochemistry student and a cello player in the orchestra, but she felt isolated from the Black community at Tech in her largely white friend group. Over a year later, she found herself on stage with four other women competing to represent the Black Student Association at Homecoming and in the Tech community. Mason said on the day of the pageant, she freaked out. “I’m very, like, into my studies, I don’t really put myself out there a lot, and so it was just really taking me out of my comfort zone,” Mason said. “And, yeah, I cried. A good, like — I was shaking the whole time, shaking.” Mason won the 2020 Miss Black Texas Tech pageant this past April after the competition was postponed due to COVID-19. According to BSA, the Miss Black Texas Tech pageant began decades ago when women of color were not allowed to serve on the Homecoming court, leading BSA to form its own pageant for the Black community. To this day, only two Black women have been crowned as homecoming queen in Tech history: Sharon Moultrie Bruner in 1981 and Dr. Sonya Miles Sloan in 1992, according to BSA records. “And I think a lot of people think that it’s, like, it’s not going
on anymore (discrimination), like it’s just, ‘Oh, this is normal, this is a colorblind campus,’ but it’s not, like, we experienced things, (no matter) how minuscule they are, we experienced them,” Mason said.
I’m very, like, into my studies, I don’t really put myself out there a lot, and so it was just really taking me out of my comfort zone. ALEEZA MASON MISS BLACK TEXAS TECH The pageant was discontinued for some time until its revival in 2015. Categories include a group dance, a walk showcasing the contestants’ future careers, a talent showcase and evening gown walks with a question and answer segment. But winning the title is not just about pageant performance. The winner is awarded a $1,000 scholarship and must serve a key role in the Black community at Tech. After the Black Lives Matter movement came to a head in 2020, Mason said she felt she had to take a stand and make a name for herself in the Tech community. After some convincing from her friend Zaria, she decided to join the running for the pageant.
“It was so informal, like, legit, Zaria was like, ‘Do you want to join?’ And I was like, ‘OK, fine,’” Mason said. Zaria Sumling is the BSA event coordinator and this year’s director of the Miss Black TTU pageant. Sumling and Mason met when they were 12 years old at the church they attended in their hometown of Houston. Sumling said Mason was always outgoing and outspoken. “We knew each other through our church’s huddle groups, and every time we were in our huddle group or whatever, she would always just talk about — she would always — if there was no one speaking in the room or whatever, when we were talking about something, she was always the person that would speak up and put her idea, or her mind, whatever’s going on in her head, up forward first to get the conversation started,” said Sumling, a third-year interior design student. Malcom Montgomery, a thirdyear political science and sociology student from Houston and the membership chair for BSA, met Mason through a high school friend and said he immediately clicked with her. He said he immediately picked up on her caring nature. Montgomery was not yet on the BSA executive board when he tuned into the pageant, but he already knew several of the other competitors personally.
Student Senate offers solutions for COVID-19, health concerns By BENJAMIN DWORIN News Reporter
Mason’s passion and detail-oriented nature, Montgomery said, made her stick out as a winner. “I think sometimes Aleeza just have that aura that just comes with her that is sort of like, you see the passion that she wanna make, you see the change, the passion behind the change that she wanna make,” Montgomery said. Though Mason’s reign as Miss Black Texas Tech was shortened because of the pandemic, she said she has several plans for how BSA can increase its outreach to the community.
SEE PROFILE, PG. 3
What time does the Voice of the Goin’ Band from Raiderland start his game day? Opinions Editor
A professor of vocal music during weekdays, Gerald Dolter is the voice of the Goin’ Band From Raiderland announcer on game days. His schedule depends on the bands schedule, he said. “If it’s an 11 am game, my day will begin. I’ll probably wake up around at six in the morning. But I wake up at six in the morning, everyday anyways,” he said. “We have to be there about two and half hours before kickoff.” Dolter said there is other preparation that goes into the performance of the band before game
days. Dolter attends rehearsals along with the Goin’ Band. He said
With the voice that I have, I could have easily gone into multimedia, but I love music way too much.
GERALD DOLTER
VOICE OF THE GOIN’ BAND while he does not rehearse as much as the students do, it is still important for Dolter to work alongside the band to ensure a successful halftime show.
Dolter said he has a script given to him prior to the game. Allowing him to rehearse the lines. However, it does not always remain GERALD DOLTER the same on game days, as he can get switch ups in the press box. “Sometimes the script changes,” he said. “There’s some last-minute thing that needs to get inserted and they’ll hand it to me and I’ll need to read it or figure it out where it should it go in the announcement.” Dolter said this is his 27th year teaching at Texas Tech and what
SEE SPIRIT, PG. 5
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
VIGNETTE
By CHYNA VARGAS
At Jones AT&T Stadium, the Texas Tech football team will face Texas Christian at 6 p.m. for its homecoming and “blackout the Jones Stadium” event. Fans are asked to wear black during the evening game to support the football team in hopes for a second conference win. “The challenge for us this week is to come out and prepare and practice with the same amount of urgency and determination as we did last week so we can go out Saturday night in the Jones at six o’clock … wearing throwback uniforms,” head coach Matt Wells said. “All our fans wearing black will create that magic.” Players will wear the throwback uniforms for the homecoming game, Wells said. Senior defensive back Adrian Frye said he remembers his first time participating in the blackout the Jones tradition during his freshman redshirt season at Tech.
would have been his fourth year announcing for the band if COVID-19 had not permitted the band from performing a halftime show. Dolter said that this role was brought to him by his collogues as it seemed to be a great fit for him. With his experience projecting his voice in opera, Dolter has had more than enough experience telling a story through his voice. “I’ve done these kinds of things before,”Dolter said. “With the voice that I have, I could have easily gone into multimedia, but I love music way too much.” @ChynaVargasDT
SEE MORE VIGNETTES, PG. 2
Senators Junia Lee and Ahmad Altabaa from Student Government Association Student Senate authored Senate Resolution 56.14 regarding the need for further collaboration between Texas Tech, the Texas Tech System Health Policy and the Public Health Think Tank. Senator Lee, a second-year business management and premed double major from Flower Mound, said there is a need for continued collaboration between Texas Tech and public health think tanks. “Since the Tech University System is one of the largest systems in the state, that brings a lot of responsibility,” Lee said. “Because the campus and the system is so diverse, it would be ideal to bring in a public health think tank.”
And I think they need to take it much more seriously to even get back to the point where things can be normal again. HALEY OTT THIRD-YEAR POLITICAL SCIENCE MAJOR The Tech Health Sciences Centers in Lubbock and El Paso both serve underrepresented and underserved groups, Lee said. The pandemic enlightened a lot of issues, such as not having infrastructure for easy access to personal protective equipment. This think tank would bring conversation and connection between local leaders and healthcare providers and keep students in the loop on what happens, Lee said.
SEE SENATE, PG. 7