Volume 119 Issue 23
The Record Horace Mann’s Weekly Newspaper Since 1903
April 8th, 2022
Greene philosophizes on physics at assembly
Courtesy of Emily Salzhauer
Emily Salzhauer Staff Writer
STAR OF THE SHOW Jordan Roth poses with former classmates.
Roth ’93 receives Alumni Award for Distinguished Achievement Josh Shuster and Hanzhang Swen Staff Writers
record.horacemann.org
Jordan Roth ’93 was awarded the school’s Award for Distinguished Achievement on Tuesday, April 5. Roth is a six-time Tony award-winning theater producer who manages and oversees five Broadway theaters. The theaters have featured several hit shows, including “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” “Kinky Boots,” and “The Book of Mormon.” After attending the school, Roth graduated Summa Cum Laude from Princeton University, where he received degrees in philosophy and theater. He also holds a Masters of Business Administration from Columbia Business School. Roth serves on multiple Boards of Trustees, including The Broadway League, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, and the Times Square Alliance. In 2019, Roth received the Human Rights Campaign Legacy Award at the organization’s gala. His influence and activism in the LGBTQ community earned him The Trevor Project Hero Award in 2016. The ceremony, which took place at the Tribeca Rooftop + 360º in downtown Manhattan, was the first time the award ceremony was held in person since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. President of the Alumni Council Samantha Cooper Brand ’01 P’26 ’29 and Head of School Dr. Thomas Kelly introduced Roth at the awards. “Since my arrival at HM 17 years ago, Jordan has served as a member of the Board of Trustees, passionate about the arts at HM, Student Assistance, diversity and access,” Kelly said. The alumni council unanimously decided to give Jordan the award because he best represents the highest aspirations and values of the school, Brand said. “He has an illustrious career, he gives selflessly, he mentors students and young people, and is a role model for everyone,” she said. Roth spoke at career opportunity events for students and made trips to the
theater possible for a plethora of students and classes in the Department of Theater and Dance Studies, Kelly said. Roth has also consulted and supported students on their theater performances at the school. “On top of it all, he has supported multiple campaigns, giving faculty members and students the necessary spaces to grow and thrive,” Kelly said. Roth was the first candidate to receive the Award for Distinguished Achievement who graduated in the 1990s, Secretary of the Alumni Council and Committee Co-Chair Ephram Lustgarten ’96 P’30 ’33 said. Roth was involved in many different ways in the school, the theater world, and the business community, making a real difference in peoples’ lives, Lustgarten said. Roth was honored that several of his former teachers came to see him receive the award, he said. “This has been an extraordinary night, and I’m so moved that so many of my friends came back to share this with me, and so many of my teachers.” Roth specifically mentioned former history teacher Mr. DeVito, his fifth grade teacher Ms. Cannon, and his English teacher and the creator of the Independent Studies program, Geraldine Woods. As a fellow classmate of Roth’s, Dr. Jessica Gordon ’93 P’23 ’25 ’25 was very happy for Roth because the award was such a huge honor and he has achieved so much, she said. “It was exciting to see him with this accomplishment,” she said. Kelly was humbled and delighted to see Roth accept the award, he said. “Jordan represents all that is good about the entrepreneurial spirit and, on top of that, he’s an alumnus who has remained consistently involved with the students each year.” To select a candidate for the Award for Distinguished Achievement, the committee solicits suggestions from the entire school community, looks at the biographies of the nominees, and sits through several committee sessions, Brand said. “The committee is comprised of three alumni from the
council and some volunteers, and we vote on who we believe serves the greater good with their gifts, who embodies the values and the spirit of Horace Mann,” she said. Roth has been interested in theater since he was in fifth grade. The school was profoundly formative in stoking his love of theater and giving him lots of opportunities to explore theater, music, and performance, he said. “True to Horace Mann form, everything we did, we did with rigor, and commitment, and ambition, and that has absolutely served me in my career, and in my life.” The committee made the decision to honor Roth with the award in 2020, but they wanted to throw him a proper party in person, Brand said. “That’s what he deserved, and I think he’s the perfect person to reunite our community and bring us back to life,” she said. Kelly was impressed that the attendees of the event took necessary precautions to keep everybody around them safe, he said. “If not for the joyful and pandemicaware crowd that Jordan brought out, I think I would have been worried.” Furthermore, all attendees had to show proof of vaccination before entering the venue, he said. The event was exciting and beautiful, Gordon said. “Everything was really tasteful, and done in a style that befits Jordan.” After many in-person alumni events were postponed due to the pandemic, Gordon said that it was nice to see everybody from her grade at the event. “A lot of individuals from my class came, and so it was like a mini reunion for us,” she said. Roth has already been back on campus to see shows and talk to students, he said. One piece of advice he has for students is that the things that make you different are the things to run towards, cultivate, celebrate, and breathe into, he said. Roth makes the world a better place for those around him and he has the unique ability to do it with permanence, Kelly said. “It’s an honor to know a human being like Jordan Roth ’93.”
We enjoyed putting together last week’s humor issue and are happy that the community seems to have appreciated our silly quips about the school. However, a few articles that we had initially intended to publish in that issue never made it to print. After careful reflection, we regret that we did not publish those pieces. Specifically, we did not publish a satirical piece poking fun at white savior mentality, nor did we publish a piece mocking student ambassadors’ ultrapositive presentation of the school. Both pieces were cut out of concern for how readers might respond. We worried that
the administration and a small portion of the community may misinterpret the intent of our jokes and take offense. To be clear: the articles intended to use comedy to criticize the school and to criticize racial stereotypes, not to perpetuate those harmful narratives. It is unfortunate that we were afraid to make jokes about such important issues as casual racism within our community — even jokes that have positive intentions. Part of our concern was that the administration would hypothetically reprimand us for writing about serious issues in a comedic manner. By extension, we fear that
our self-censorship allows our school’s power structures to protect themselves against potential criticism. We have offended (or at least irritated) members of the administration before in features and other critical pieces, and they usually take it in stride. An administration should try to be receptive to the criticism it receives — not just reject it out of hand, or potentially censor it. We believe that regardless of the administration’s potential response, we were mistaken to censor ourselves and shy away from angering them. To be clear, we were not censored outright. We even spoke to the ICIE
“I think that the assembly was one of the best we’ve had this year,” Kat Benton (10) said. “[Greene] was really engaging and got a lot of people’s attention.” Brian Greene P’23 is a professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University and the director of Columbia’s Center for Theoretical Physics, according to his website. However, Greene’s work extends far beyond the classroom. He is known for groundbreaking discoveries in the field of superstring theory and is the co-discoverer of mirror symmetry and spatial topology change, the website said. Greene is also a New York Times
not only because of the topic, Bondor said. “It was interesting to hear from somebody who is at the forefront of these discoveries speak to us in language that was both scientifically accurate and super easy to understand,” she said. Myra Singh (12) also loved the assembly, she said. “It’s one of my favorite assemblies that we’ve ever had at HM,” she said. “I thought it was so interesting and informative.” Although Singh herself is fascinated with science and physics, she thought that Greene’s assembly was meant for all students, she said. “If someone didn’t find the science interesting, the way he presented it would have been super entertaining.” Diya Chawla (9) learned a lot at the assembly, she said. “I thought it was
“It’s a bit dark, the notion that we’re all going to disintegrate into oblivion, but at the same time, it makes you look at life in a different way. [It makes you] start to notice things that are really beautiful. I thought that was really profound.” - Clementine Bondor (11) bestselling author of “The Elegant Universe” as well as “Until the End of Time,” “The Fabric of the Cosmos,” “The Hidden Reality,” and “Icarus at the Edge of Time.” All of his books relate to the field of physics. He has also made many appearances on television including “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and “Charlie Rose.” Greene has made cameo appearances in many Hollywood films as well, including “Frequency,” “Maze,” and “The Last Mimzy,” the website said. Greene is the co-founder of the World Science Festival. The Washington Post called him “the single best explainer of abstruse concepts in the world today.” Greene used all of his experience to create an interactive and engaging assembly. “I’m not a “science guy”, but I really enjoyed hearing about his work,” Manager of the Department of Theater and Dance Jonathan Nye said. “I appreciated his presentation and how accessible it was. I know others did too.” Clementine Bondor (11) was glad to see how engaged the community was with Greene’s assembly, she said. “I have never seen the student body so enraptured by any assembly in my entire time at Horace Mann. When I went to the talkback with my physics class, I had never seen that many people attend a talkback either.” Greene’s assembly was unique
Editorial: On the use of humor for critical discourse
to discuss whether the articles could be viewed as genuinely offensive or harmful to members of the student body. We were told that although the article condemned, rather than enforced, harmful stereotypes, there was no way to predict every person’s reaction when using comedy as a means through which to address sensitive issues. Our faculty adviser, Mr. Berenson, seconded ICIE’s advice; thus we were discouraged from addressing the topics through our comedy issue. Such discouragement operates on an assumption that our average reader cannot think critically about the
a really insightful and educational assembly,” she said. “I thought that Brian Greene did an excellent job of explaining space to us.” Nye was especially impressed by Greene’s analogy of the Empire State Building, he said. In the analogy, Greene compared the timeline of the universe’s existence to the floors of the Empire State Building, where each building represents a power of ten as well as the future of the universe. “That timeline kind of blew my mind,” Nye said. “It was really fascinating when he was explaining what the universe was potentially going to do.” Max Feng (10) also enjoyed Greene’s analogy to the Empire State Building floors, he said. “It was really interesting that there is an end to the universe,” he said. “I didn’t know the exact process about how everything would die out. I just thought it would be constant expansion, but I learned a lot more about it at the assembly.” Beyond talking about science, Green spoke about philosophical concepts through a scientific lens. Braden Queen (11) liked Greene’s presentation, but disagreed with him on free will. Greene believes that people do not have free will, while Queen believes the opposite, he said. “I do not think that physicists have the authority to definitively say that free will is non-existent,” Queen
see Assembly on pg. 8
pieces we print in our paper. This idea is incorrect — satire can, and should, be thought-provoking. Choosing only to publish writing that cannot be interpreted in more than one way does not give enough credit to our readership. The members of our school community are intelligent enough to come to their own conclusions, positive or negative, about the content we publish. We had intended to write humorous pieces that would criticize sincere issues in our community and potentially further positive change. Instead, we were encouraged — and agreed to — stay silent. We believe you deserve better.