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Volume 63 Issue 18
Thursday, March 26, 2026
THE USD VISTA VISTA
The Official Student Newspaper of the University of San Diego since 1968
Professors rethink teaching Chávez César Chávez under scrutiny after NYT investigation
INSIDE
Iran war after three weeks See News, Page 2
2016 coming back See A&C, Page 4
Toreros’ guide to surfing
See Feature, Pages 6-7
The San Diego Community College District is reviewing the possibility of renaming its César E. Chávez campus.
CADEN HAYNOR NEWS EDITOR On March 18, an investigation accused César Chávez of sexual abuse. The New York Times published the article accusing United Farm Workers co-founder
Chávez as a sexual abuser. The New York Times investigation reported that Chávez sexually abused multiple women and girls in the 1960s and 70s, including United Farm Workers’ cofounder Dolores Huerta. Chávez was a central labor
leader in the farmworkers rights movement, organizing multiple strikes, boycotts and other nonviolent protests. His actions helped win union contracts, better wages and increased basic protections for farmworkers from the 1950s, peaking around the 1970s with
Caden Haynor/The USD Vista
union contracts covering tens of thousands of farmworkers. Following this activism over multiple decades and his death in 1993, the investigation tainted the world’s image of Chávez, alarming some USD faculty and students.
See Chávez, Page 2
The Duke men’s basketball team is a one-seed favorite in the 2026 tournament. Photo courtesy of @dukembb/Instagram
MAXIMILIANO ACOSTA ASST. SPORTS EDITOR Every March, 68 teams are announced to compete up to seven rounds of single elimination games for a chance to win a national championship. Last Sunday night, the NCAA announced this year’s teams. The UConn women’s team and Duke men’s team both earned the top overall seeds in their respective brackets going
See Madness, Page 12
Facing your rational fears
See Opinion, Page 9
MLB season starts
See Sports, Page 11
Over 140 films celebrate the Latino community
March Madness enters Sweet 16
into this year’s tournament. In USD’s history, Toreros have been selected a total of four times, with the most recent appearance in 2008. USD beat UConn’s men’s team and lost in the second round to Western Kentucky. Last year, during the first rounds, No.14 Oakland stunned fans by winning against No. 3 Kentucky. A 12-member NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball committee consists of directors from many teams. The committee reviews games through the season, looking at individual
See Feature, Page 8
SD Latino Film Festival opens
Breaking brackets
PRIYA COOPER SPORTS EDITOR
Letters to farmworkers
Axel Arevalo signing his winning flyer for the 2026 Latino Film Festival. Photo courtesy of @sdlatinofilmfestival/Instagram
RILEY RAINS ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Film enthusiasts gathered at various San Diego screening locations to watch the fiveday streaming of over 145 documentaries, shorts and feature films from around the globe. The San Diego Latino Film Festival (SDLFF) is a nationally acclaimed event that draws the attention of producers and
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fans from around the country. The nonprofit Media Arts Center San Diego has hosted the event every year since 1994. This year SDLFF was held at AMC Mission Valley, Digital Gym Cinema and Southwestern College Performing Arts Center. The five-day festival began on March 18, with an opening ceremony featuring the Grammywinning band Quetzal. Fans had the opportunity to pick from the
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25 plus films screened each day with a filter on the SDLFF official website. Films were categorized by venue and theme. Options included anything from “Somos Cine LGBTQIA+! Showcase” to a Bolivian “Narrative Feature.” Ethan Van Thillo founded the festival in 1993 with hopes to bring communities together and celebrate upcoming filmmakers. Van Thillo was forced to cut back on the usual 11-day festival because of budget — however, the limitation didn’t seem to hinder fan’s enjoyment. “We actually found that we had the same amount of people come and the same wonderful energy,” Van Thillo said in an interview with KPBS. “That’s what I love about the festival. I want people to come and just experience different things, and you feel that energy in the theatre.” SDLFF works in parallel with the San Diego International Film Festival — a fall event that funds an intense competition, rewarding over $12,000 of champion money for films who earn “Best Narrative Feature
See Film, Page 5