Octagon 2018-19 Issue 3

Page 1

THE

OCTAGON

Non-Profit Organization U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sacramento, CA Permit No. 1668

@scdsoctagon

VOL.42 NO.3 • Sacramento Country Day School • 2636 Latham Drive, Sacramento • December 4, 2018 Smoke prompts closures of college campuses BY CHARDONNAY NEEDLER While fires were raging at the northern and southern ends of California, the middle was blanketed by smoke, with air quality indices (AQI) rising into the 200s and 300s in areas hundreds of miles away from the Butte County blazes. One such area was Berkeley. On Friday, Nov. 16, students at the University of California, Berkeley unknowingly started their Thanksgiving breaks early. According to Cal senior Emma Brown, ’15, students didn’t realize the smoke had caused an extended break until Nov. 18, when Berkeley announced class cancellations for Nov. 19 and 20. As students stayed, stores sold out of N95 respirator masks, Brown said. “They ran out in the stores and health centers — and people were getting very mad,” Brown said. “It was intense.” According to PE director Michelle Myers, N95 respirator masks work via a filter that keeps the fine particulate matter (of either 2.5 or 10 nanometers) from getting through to the lungs. This fine particulate matter includes not only the remains of trees and grassy fields but also metal, tin, aluminum, plastic, cars, fuel and gas lines. “It’s everything that burned,” she said. “Until (firemen) got the gas shut off, a lot of homes had gas flames going out with natural gas leaking everywhere.” But the same smoke, as well as the subsequent class cancellations that affected Berkeley students, wasn’t really a surprise to students at the University of California, Davis, according to Davis freshman Pria Nijhar, ’18. “Literally everyone rides bikes,” Nijhar said. “Since everyone predominantly uses bikes to get around, the smoke had a huge impact on everyone’s health. “Everyone could feel it. The air outside was so bad.”

SMOKE page 4 >>

Alumnus endures ‘craziest five days Thousand Oaks has ever been through’ in devastating Woolsey Fire

GOLDEN STATE TURNED RED Woolsey Fire flames destroy Malibu buildings on Nov. 9. PHOTO RETRIEVED FROM PBS

BY CHARDONNAY NEEDLER

I

t was 3 a.m on Nov. 8. Johann Dias, ’15, a junior and physics major at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, woke up to multiple notifications: the Apple News application’s breaking story, “Shooting at Borderline Bar & Grill”; texts from friends asking if he was all right, knowing he’d been there three times before; and stories with Justin Meek, a Cal Lutheran alumnus whom Dias said he remembered working at the student union building, being dubbed “a hero” for confronting the shooter who killed him and 11 others. Only one thought went through Dias’ mind: “What the hell is going on?” He didn’t sleep the rest of that night, the start of what he called “the craziest five days Thousand Oaks has ever been through.” Hours earlier at 11:29 p.m., his brother, former Country Day stu-

dent and current Thousand Oaks “wanted people around him to chat High School senior Tristann Dias, with,” so he went over to his friend’s had been at the gym M6 Fitness, house the following morning. a mere 15-åminute walk from the That afternoon, Tristann Dias bar in which shots were simultane- said he noticed smoke in the sky; ously being fired from a .45-caliber the Woolsey Fire had spread near Glock. the Diases’ Santa Rosa Valley home, Not even 15 hours later, the then- and smoke engulfed the area. new Woolsey Fire But that didn’t would blast through stop him from trying I saw the not a bar, but cities to go to a ceremony entire and towns — Oak for those affected by Park, Los Angeles, hillside on fire — the shooting at a loSanta Barbara, Ca- everything was in cal park. marillo, Oxnard flames.” “It took me 45 Shores and Thouminutes to move 30 —Johann Dias sand Oaks. feet down the road,” With classes canTristann Dias said. celed due to the “Traffic was so awful; shooting, Tristann Dias was at his no one could go anywhere.” friend’s house. His friend was one And for those who’d been told to of the first to escape the shooting evacuate, leaving Thousand Oaks — the one whose Instagram video was a challenge. of gunshots followed by his gasping “They had shut down all the freefor breath while running went viral ways and big roads,” Tristann Dias said. “I’m honestly surprised anyon the internet. Tristann Dias said his friend one was evacuated.”

Because of the “insane” traffic, Tristann Dias missed the ceremony. At 2 a.m. the following day, Nov. 9, Johann Dias was up, sleepless again. “I was chilling with my friends over at their house — on the evacuation line,” he said. “Then winds suddenly changed, and they were in a mandatory evacuation zone.” After going outside, Johann Dias said he witnessed the inferno. “I saw the entire hillside on fire — everything was in flames,” he said. “I remember thinking, ‘Well, I guess Thousand Oaks is gonna go bye bye.’” After attempting to sleep for an hour and a half, Johann Dias drove through the “awful-smelling” smoke back to his house. Nonetheless, as the fires were just beginning two days after the shooting, Tristann Dias’ high school classes were still in session.

CALIFORNIA page 4 >>

Staff adjusts to sudden change in newspaper adviser from The Bee BY ANNA FRANKEL Country Day’s award-winning newspaper underwent a massive change this fall due to an impromptu switch in the staff’s adviser. After becoming the Octagon’s adviser this year, middle school English teacher Emily Eustace stepped down from the job in November. Paul Bauman, 11th-grade English teacher Jane Bauman’s husband and a former copy editor at The Sacramento Bee, took Eustace’s place. Bauman said he did not pursue the job after former adviser Patricia Fels retired last spring because the school

had Eustace in mind as a replacement at the time. However, when the school needed a new adviser, he was available and thought he would enjoy working with the Octagon staff. Head of high school Brooke Wells said that once he realized a shift in adviser was necessary, the solution fell into place “pretty fast.” “From early on (Eustace) was the answer,” Wells said. “She was interested, on campus, a very strong middle school teacher and trained in journalism. “Unfortunately, it was just too much (for her).” Wells said Bauman was a perfect solution.

“The whole (process) only ment. took about two days,” Wells “Copy editors edit wire and said. staff stories, trim them to fit “He was absolutely quali- in the print edition and write fied for the job.” headlines and captions,” Bauman worked as a jour- Bauman said. nalist in the U.S. and Japan Along with this journalfor 38 years before retiring ism experience, Bauman was this May, and he has deeditor-in-chief of the Rio sign, writing and editMirada newspaper at ing experience. Rio Americano High For the past 18 School when he was a years, Bauman student there and, latworked at The Sacer, the co-sports editor ramento Bee and was of the Stanford Daily. the sports copy desk Bauman worked chief from 2001 to at the Stanford 2007, superDaily at the vising copy same time editors in as Fels, the sports w h o Paul Bauman departstarted

the Octagon in 1977. However, Bauman said he and Fels did not know each other at the time, as they worked in different departments, and Fels was two grades above Bauman. At Stanford, Bauman majored in communications, specializing in print journalism. “I debated between journalism and law school after college and ultimately decided that my heart was in journalism,” Bauman said. This love for journalism encompasses all sections, according to Bauman; however, he prefers news, sports and opinion pieces. “I like profiles because

people are interesting — everyone is different and has a story to tell,” Bauman said. “I also like opinion columns because some people deserve to be skewered.”

CHANGE page 2 >>

INSIDE News.........................1-2 Sports...........................3 Centerpoint..............4-5 Editorial........................6 Feature ........................7 Backpage ....................8


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