Volume 56, Issue 19

Page 1

TheUSDVISTA

Volume 56 Issue 19

Thursday, April 4, 2019

On Newsstands Weekly

◆ The Official Student Newspaper of the University of San Diego since 1968 ◆

Saints Tekakwitha and Serra Hall

After a change of heart and much student-faculty dialogue, Pres. Harris approves renaming of Serra Hall Celina Tebor Contributor The University of San Diego announced on April 4, 2019 that it will change the name of Serra Hall to Saints Tekakwitha and Serra Hall during the Fall 2019 semester. This name change follows on-campus opposition and pressures to change the name of the building over the past two years, most notably from students in the American Indian Student Organization (AISO). The building will now have two names: adding the name of St. Kateri Tekakwitha, the first Native American Catholic Saint, and keeping St. Serra’s name, according to USD President James T. Harris III, D.Ed. Many of those who advocated for changing the name of Serra Hall argued that St. Junípero Serra’s participation in the California Mission Systems destroyed and negatively impacted indigenous people’s community and culture, and still impacts indigenous students today. With USD’s campus being on native Kumeyaay land, this discussion is especially relevant. Senior Patrick Murphy, President of AISO, explained in an interview with The USD Vista in September 2018 why the club took the official

Serra Hall has been the subject of controversy on the USD campus. President Harris announced that the building’s name will be changed.

stance of wanting to remove Serra’s name from the building. “We, as a group, see him as a figure who was detrimental to the Native American population here

in Southern California,” Murphy said. “(Serra) was being idolized for basically doing wrong things to the community here.” The university faced a dilemma

when deciding whether to change the name of Serra Hall when considering its fundamental values. The two competing narratives between indigenous students’

Luke Garrett/The USD Vista

wants and the university’s Catholic identity were difficult to navigate, and Harris acknowledged that. “You have these two competing

See Serra, Page 3

Toreros get “Down” to Jay Sean and Marc E. Bassy USD students filled the Missions B parking lot for Torero Program Board’s annual spring concert

Danielle Angello A&C Editor This past Friday, March 29, University of San Diego’s Missions B Parking Lot was flooded with students of all years, eager to kick off their night with Olé Music Fest’s featured act, Jay Sean. The English Songwriter who has worked with performers including Sean Paul, Lil Wayne, and Lil Jon, prepped the USD students for the San Franciscobased headliner Marc E. Bassy. The singer-songwriter Bassy, who was formally the lead singer for the L.A.based pop band, 2AM Club is known for his collaborations with American rapper G-Eazy. Junior Nina Tabrizi attended Olé Music Fest and enjoyed Bassy’s performance. “The DJ before Bassy did a solid job of getting the students’ energy up,” Tabrizi said. “But once Bassy started performing, everyone went wild, literally the minute he went onto the stage.” When it comes to songwriting, Bassy has written songs for artists

Campus Update

See News, page 2

including, CeeLo Green, Sean Kingston, Wiz Khalifa, and Ty Dolla Sign, but clearly he can still put on a good solo performance. However, Bassy has a stronger presence as a songwriter and a feature in songs. First year Colton Landaiche also had a solid Friday night thanks to the concert held at USD. “It was a lot more fun than I expected it to be,” Landaiche said. “Nobody really knows much of Jay Sean’s music and I had never even heard of Marc E. Bassy, but it was actually still super fun.” The students of USD danced along to Jay Sean’s hit “Down” taking them back to the early 2000s with this oldie, but a goodie. Though the throwback hit song was a crowd pleaser some said, it definitely wasn’t worthy of being performed more than once. Sophomore Tiffany Elamparo had a lot to say in regard to Jay Sean’s redundant performance. “I liked Jay Sean the first time he performed ‘Down,’” Elamparo said. “Not going to lie, it was very

See Olé, Page 2

Marc E. Bassy performed for a crowd of USD students at Olé Music Fest.

Zoé Morales Martinez/The USD Vista

Op-Ed: Beauty at a cost

Female entrepreneurs

Women in Hollywood

Ten straight for women’s tennis

See Opinion, page 5

See Feature, pages 6-7

See A&C, page 9

See Sports, page 11

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