The Daily Aztec 10/20/2021

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Weds. Oct. 20 - Tues., Oct. 26, 2021 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 108, Issue 10 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

OPINION

Grad student petitions for more housing accessibility

Media literacy is essential for this generation.

by Katelynn NEWS EDITOR

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

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SPORTS No. 22 Aztecs move to 6-0 after defeating San Jose State in double overtime. PAGE 5

MUNDO AZTECA $15 millones otorgados a la universidad para investigación de las disparidades en la comunidad latinx. PAGE 7

ARTS & CULTURE San Diego State ‘Fight Song’ turns 85 years old in 2021. PAGE 8

Robinson

Doing laundry, swimming in a pool and taking the shuttle to school are everyday tasks many students partake in. While these tasks are second nature to most, they can come with many obstacles for others. San Diego State geography graduate student Elizabeth Bushnell is a tenant at Blvd 63 Apartments located on 6345 El Cajon Blvd. These off-campus apartments are not affiliated with SDSU housing; however, many students live there. She said her views on the situation at Blvd 63 are hers and hers alone as she is not affiliated with the complex other than being a tenant. Bushnell has a disability that requires a wheelchair. She has leased her apartment at Blvd 63 for almost two months and so far she said she has struggled with laundry, transportation and using the pool. Bushnell said she took a tour of the apartments over the summer. She did not see the pool or the shuttles on this tour. She did see the washers and dryers and said she was assured Blvd 63 would work with her to meet her needs. She stated this has not been the case, however. “An amenity of the complex is in-unit laundry but it is a

Photo courtesy of Elizabeth Bushnell

Elizabeth Bushnell is using her voice to fight for more accessibility at Blvd 63 apartments.

very narrow laundry closet with stacking units,” Bushnell said. “So, a side-by-side frontloading [unit], which is what I would typically use, is not available. And that poses a real hygiene issue for me personally because I have medical issues that are apparent in my laundry and it is very personally and professionally embarrassing. So, the apartment’s original solution was to have a staff member come here on Fridays

for Latinx Resource Center Pachanga

/dailyaztec @TheDailyAztec @thedailyaztec /TheDailyAztec The student union was filled with music, lights and dancing.

News............................... 2-3 Opinion..............................4 Sports.............................. 5-6 Mundo .............................. 7 The Back Page, Arts............ 8

SEE ACCESSIBILITY, PAGE 2

Student union filled with music, dancing

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INDEX

and I have been paying them $20 a week to do one load of laundry.” Bushnell explained one of her concerns with having a staff member do her laundry once a week was the laundry being left to sit for a week. She said it would make her apartment smell sometimes and when she brought this up to management they suggested she pay a staff member to come two or three times a week which would cost

$40 or $60. She said it was even suggested to her that she get her friends or parents to do her laundry instead. “It is not my parents’ job to handle how I do my laundry and it is certainly not my friend’s,” Bushnell said. “I am 23 and a free-living adult and I have been since age 18. The problem is not with my independence but rather the accommodations here.” The second issue she faced in the complex is the lack of lifts to the two pools and hot tub in the complex. “That is another reason I moved here because I have a lot of joint pain so low impact exercise options are very beneficial to me and I would like the same access to amenities as other residents have,” Bushnell said. The third issue is that only one of the three shuttles running between the apartments and SDSU’s main campus has a wheelchair lift. So, she has to wait much longer for that particular shuttle to be available. “...I take the shuttle and there is a girl in a wheelchair there and she’ll wait at the shuttle stop and then they’ll be like

by Lucelis Martínez STAFF WRITER

The Latinx Resource Center (LRC) had a closing ceremony and Pachanga on Thursday, Oct. 14. According to their official Instagram page, the ceremony

Photo by Lucelis Martínez

came about due to the Celebrando Nuestra Raices Committee, the LRC, the office of Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) and Regional Affairs in collaboration with ONE SDSU. To get into the event, students registered for free within just a few minutes. The use of masks was mandatory.

The word pachanga has many origin stories but, according to diccionario libre it means a “party where dance is never lacking.” Psychology third year, Adamari Cardenas attended the event. Cardenas is Mexican and from Cualiacán, Sinaloa, specifically. “My parents moved here when I was born,” Cardenas said. Cardinas said the music associated with Sinaloa with the most frequency is Banda, but she liked the mariachi music playing in the middle of the Conrad Prebys Aztec Student Union, in the background as she talked. “I think everyone is here for the tacos and the food in general, but I’m really enjoying the music,” Cardenas said. Andrew Rodriguez is a San Diego State alumni, holding a

degree in music education. He was one of the mariachis at the pachanga. Rodriguez said the university invited him to play because they know his history with music, which he’s been playing since he was 13 years old. Rodriguez now teaches at Bell Middle School and started a mariachi program there. “I was recommended through my professors to perform for this event,” Rodriguez said. Rodriguez said he got involved with mariachi since he grew up in San Diego and interacted with mariachi in middle school. He has directed the mariachi at St. Paul’s cathedral in downtown San Diego, according to villa musica’s website. SEE PACHANGA PAGE 2


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