Tower Issue #5 (2021-2022)

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49 Clinton Avenue Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. 10522

ROBERT FISH

VOLUME 78, NUMBER 5

Read more on tower.mastersny.org PHOEBE RADKE/TOWER

TOWER The Masters School

MASTERS DRESS CODES COFFEY ‘17 PREPARES THROUGH THE DECADES FOR PRO SOCCER DEBUT PAGE 9

PAGE 12 @masterstower

MARCH 11, 2022

Masters unmasks, students react

Gisele Cestaro & Maia Barantsevitch

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News Editor & Features Editor

fter two long years of masks, dividers, and Zoom, The Masters School has officially gone mask optional. Since the beginning of the pandemic in March of 2020, students, faculty, and staff have all been required to wear a mask in order to protect themselves and others, but now people can make their own choice. This groundbreaking news has prompted various student opinions regarding this new decree. Laura Danforth, head of school, sent a schoolwide email explaining the new guidelines. As of March 3 2022, Masters now has a mask optional policy. In addition to that, pooled testing will be stopped after this week [March 1st], and if cases go up the mask mandate can be reinstated. Danforth also called an all school meeting to discuss the importance of respecting one another’s choices of wearing or not wearing a mask, as not everyone knows the reasoning behind such personal choices. Masters latest pool testing results have declared over 873 testing samples to all be negative, completing the now 6 week streak of all negative testing results. Senior Clyde Lederman, is in agreement with the administration’s choice to lift the mask mandate. Lederman said, “It makes sense that they [Masters] are aligning themselves with CDC guidelines. We’re in a position where we have most of our students and faculty and staff vaccinated which protects us.” While the mask optional guideline

has been widely accepted, reaction to ending weekly PCR testing has not been as favorable. “That protocol in particular [PCR testing] to me, seems like the one that they [Masters] should maintain. Not the virtual aspect, but rather the testing after spring break because of a lot of travel.” Junior Eleanor Dundas, is still chosing to actively wear a mask with the new mask-optional decision in place. Dundas believes that the administration should have waited longer to get rid of the mask mandate, especially without the pooled testing in place. “I was hoping they would wait a bit longer. We’ve always had so many different protection methods, and instead of repealing them one at a time, the fact that they got rid of both at once makes me nervous,” Dundas said. Dundas also maintains that when it comes to the pandemic, our school has responded really well when it comes to mandating vaccinations and masks, which she believes is the smartest decision to keep the community safe. With the mask-optional decision, Dundas was hoping that the school would still recommend a facial covering, instead of sending a message to not make fun of those who choose to wear a mask. “All it does is effectively alienate those who still choose to wear masks and tell the student body that those people are different,” Dundas said. Sue Adams, the director of health services, and the healthcare team have worked diligently to make this important decision for the community. Most of the decision making process involved following the CDC, who changed their guidelines last week due to low infection rates and hospital activity. “I feel confident at this point that we can do this safe-

SUNNY SHI/TOWER

JOSIE LEFF ‘25, AMONG others, chose to remain masked, despite the Masters community becoming mask optional on March 3. This change was made to align with the CDC’s decision to remove the mask mandate in New York schools. ly. If we have individuals who are concerned, and they want others around them to wear a mask, we’ve asked people to be respectful and considerate of that,” Adams said. Adams said that the administration has not received much backlash while making this decision. It has been a tough two years with this pandemic, but she recognizes that this shift is a big

deal for the community since COVID is going from a school organization responsibility to a personal one. “I think we are just going to take it one step at a time. We just had five weeks of negative pooled testing results, so that was a really good condition to go into all of this because it’s reassuring,” Adams said. Both the healthcare team and she

acknowledge that it is possible modifications may have to be made as the virus could possibly start spreading again, which means back to masking up. Junior class president, Tyler Hack, has taken advantage of the mask optional policy but still chooses to continue wearing a mask during certain classes Hack said, “I want to respect all my

teachers in any way I can, and if that means wearing a mask in their class then I am completely okay with that.” Hack believes that Masters has been following enough safety protocols to be able to make the decree of optional masks. He said, “Based on our current case counts, it seems to make sense, but after wearing a mask for two years, it feels super weird to take it off.”

Attacks on Ukraine strike close to home Oliver Kreeger & Alexa Murphy

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Contributing Writers

he ongoing war in Ukraine is the largest armed conflict in Europe since World War II. What has been oddly shocking is the slow yet unstoppable feeling of escalation, as Russia had begun to make demands over Ukraine’s territory earlier this year. Conflict in Ukraine has been ongoing since 2014, when Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the annexation of the Crimean Peninsula, the sovereign territory of Ukraine. Additionally, conflict

in the largely Russian-speaking Donbas region of eastern Ukraine erupted between separatist militias and the Ukrainian military. Since, there have been thousands of casualties on both sides. “I was a refugee eight years ago because there was a war in my region before,” said junior Nataliia Kulieshova. She is from a small town on the outskirts of Donetsk. “By saying that these regions were independent, Putin said that all the cities that are controlled by Ukraine right now, including my city, would be attacked by Russian troops to ‘denazify’ and things like this. I was extremely anxious. I thought my town would be one of the first to be attacked.”

“Russia uses a lot of weapons that are banned from the Geneva Convention, and I think that people don’t know this in the U.S., but Russia used vacuum bombs, which is like one step away from the nuclear bombs. They have vacuum bombs that have a bigger impact than some nuclear bombs; the fact that they’ve used it already in civilian cities—it’s just… It’s terrible,” Kulieshova said. Kulieshova and junior Viktoriia Sokolenko, who comes from Kyiv, are both Ukrainian students who attend The Masters School. From different regions of Ukraine, both have families currently sheltering every day from Russian aggression. “I was sitting and people said they were hearing the explosions in

CARLOS HEREDIA/TOWER

ENGLISH TEACHER PAUL WEST lights a candle around the labyrinth during the Candlelight Vigil for Peace in Ukraine on March 6. There were about 60 people in attendance.

Kyiv, and I was checking in on my family. It was kind of scary because it was the morning and we were calling them on all different messengers to see if they’re okay and where they are,” Sokolenko said. Vladimir Putin cites Russia’s recent recognition of the “Donetsk People’s Republic” and the “Luhansk People’s Republic” as independent, largely Russian speaking, nations as one of the reasons for the invasion. Putin has used this language divide – along with unfounded allegations of genocide at the hands of the Ukrainian government – to justify supporting the Donetsk and Luhansk separatists. Kulieshova, who hails from the Donbas region, completely rejected the notion that the Donbas is rightfully Russian because of language. Both Kulieshova and Sokolenko mentioned that the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky grew up in a Russian-speaking family. “Especially after eight years of war, I feel like every Ukrainian has some sort of skepticism about Russia, and especially right now, people actually go out, they go unarmed, and go out on major highways of their cities to block the tanks of Russian people. Some people block the tanks of Russians with tractors. We don’t want you [the Russians] to save us.” Putin’s decision to invade remains largely incomprehensible to many experts in the West. Dr. Robert Fish, who teaches international relations at Masters said,“I don’t know why Putin is pursuing this. I don’t know. I don’t see, strategically, why this was so important to him. I just don’t. I don’t see Ukraine as an intensely important strategic location.” Olga Tymchenko, a violin instructor at Masters, grew up in

CARLOS HEREDIA/TOWER

MISH SELLS UKRAINIAN CANDIES in the Dining Hall during lunch to raise money for Razom, a organization aiding Ukraine. Soviet-era Kyiv before emigrating to the U.S. in 2000. Many of her family and friends still live in the Kyiv area. Tymchenko also emphasized how crucial it is to remember that there are millions of people seeking safety at this very moment. “Every single moment, it’s heartbreaking. During the night, I’m picking up the phone, I’m checking on my friends, and during the day, getting the urgent calls, saying a prayer, or the bomb is right near our house. Sunday morning I received a picture from the city of Irpin, which is in the outskirts of Kyiv. My parents’ church was there; I would go there every Sunday. And right now it’s under siege, and on Sunday I received a picture of a family trying to escape. And they were just shooting. A friend of mine also wrote ‘we are under siege, there is no water, no electricity, no heat, no food, nothing. They are shooting at everything that is moving,’” she said. Most of Tymchenko’s family escaped to Poland days before the war

broke out. “But then my brother came back to Ukraine to help the war effort, so he was trying to escape, and then he brought his niece to Poland, and then he came back to Ukraine to bring more people to escape. My nephew is now in the hospital and the patients of that hospital are taken as hostages.” Sokolenko and Kulieshova have taken fundraising into their own hands, selling Ukrainian candy during lunch, the proceeds of which go to Razom, a lauded aid charity currently working in Ukraine. Tymchenko placed a particular emphasis on reaching out to those in power and with high influence. “If everyone could do what they possibly could - calling their representative, and calling to their senator, asking to close the skies...Ukraine is fighting for democracy, Ukraine is fighting for freedom, and for every citizen of every free country - I think it’s our right to help. It’s our responsibility to help in the way we can.”


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