3 15 2018

Page 1

The Pitt News

The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | March 15, 2018 | Volume 108 | Issue 127

TAKE A LOAD OFF

FORBES QDOBA PERMANENTLY CLOSED Janine Faust

Assistant News Editor

but also for so many people around the country, is, ‘How do we create equitable, inclusive and welcoming communities and campuses that also acknowledge and address racial realities?’” Iyer said. She argued that the United States has faced racial anxiety as a result of changing demographics, xenophobia and Islamophobia, resulting in an overall climate of fear and hate. Iyer said these feelings have always been present, but have become more visible with vandalization of Islamic or other religious spaces. “We see it in the form of hate violence,” Iyer said. “We see it when mosques are not allowed to be constructed in lots of areas around the country, from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, to Sterling Heights, Michigan.” Iyer offered several ways to improve

The Qdoba restaurant on Forbes Avenue has drizzled its last queso and handed out its final free student drink. “This Qdoba location has closed permanently,” a sign posted Wednesday at the restaurant reads. “Thank you for 16 great years!!” The owner, Chad Brooks, said the closure was a corporate decision. He said a new restaurant called Crave-A-Bowl will open a test location at the storefront on Forbes between Oakland Avenue and Atwood Street. Brooks added that he is just as sad to see it close as students are. “This was not our plan. We had 16 great years,” Brooks said. “We have been a good piece of the fabric of Oakland for all that time.” Olivia Phillips, an undeclared first year, was furious when she saw the sign Wednesday night. “What the hell, this is not OK. What’s wrong with them?” she said. Colin Woodruff, a first-year chemical engineering major, pointed out there was a Chipotle across the street. “Yeah, but it’s not the same,” she said. “I know,” he replied. Other students had reactions similar to Philips and Woodruff upon seeing the closing sign in Qdoba’s window. Friends Julia Hartigan, a junior math major, and Erica Fan, a junior philosophy major, both stopped and gasped upon seeing the sign. Fan said she was shocked since she had heard the venue was closing but thought “it was just a rumor.” Hartigan

See Deepa Iyer on page 2

See Qdoba on page 3

Students of the South Hills Beauty Academy offered free beauty services at the Day at the Spa event hosted by Pitt Program Council in the William Pitt Union Wednesday afternoon. Elise Lavallee CONTRIBUTING EDITOR

Activist, students discuss race relations Zane Crowell Staff Writer Deepa Iyer was working in the Civil Rights division of the Department of Justice when two planes crashed into the World Trade Center September 11, 2001. She immediately thought about two different groups of people — those killed in the attacks and those in the South Asian community she belonged to. “I remember … grieving for what I knew would be the inevitability that people who looked like the communities that I’m from would immediately be seen as the scapegoats for what had happened on that day,” Iyer said. Iyer recounted her experiences to about 45 people in attendance at the Asian Studies Center’s event “A Conversation with Deepa Iyer” Wednesday night in the William Pitt

Union. Iyer, an author, professor and activist, discussed her recent book, “We Too Sing America: South Asian, Arab, and Sikh Immigrants Shape our Multiracial Future,” which is about solidarity of communities of color and the future of race relations in the United States. Affected by the rising paranoia caused by 9/11, Iyer left the Justice Department to work for South Asian Americans Leading Together — a nonprofit that advocates for civil rights of South Asians in the United States. Through serving as executive director for 10 years, she learned about how the post-9/11 climate impacted South Asian communities, especially young people. Her experience led her to ask how the future of racial relations could be shaped. “I think the collective inquiry for us here,


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