We look back on the past year through the lens of University Photographer Steven King and student interns Ismael De La Cruz ’27, Collin Hamilton ’27, and Natalie Hoang ’25, MBA ’26.
The events and traditions that make up our year
Held each spring, Gala is a student-run showcase of traditional and contemporary dance, music, and fashion from the many cultures represented within the Clark community.
The class of 2029 greets the day at orientation.121st CommencementGo Cougars!
Students line up at the Dels truck during Clark After Dark
August 2025: Welcome, class of 2029!
Rollarskating, the evening of Move-In Day.
October: The crowd cheers on the soccer team during Friends and Family Weekend.
Tilton Hall hums with activity during ClarkFest, our showcase of students’ academic and research excellence.
Tony Banout, the inaugural executive director for the University of Chicago Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression delivers this year’s Presidential Lecture Series.
At the Sophomore Summit, second year students deepen their career and academic action planning.
Go Cougars!
Late Night Breakfast, photo by Natalie Hoang ’25, MBA ’26
March: International Gala 2025 filled the Kneller Athletic Center with an explosion of color, movement, and fashion.
This year’s theme, “The Sound of Gala,” honored the music and sounds that shape our unique cultures and identities.
Our annual Spree Day, a tradition since 1903, gives students a day to celebrate spring and a respite from class. This year’s theme: Spree-Haw.
At two ceremonies on May 19, Clark University conferred 468 bachelor’s, 975 master’s, and 39 doctoral degrees.
A warm congratulations to all our graduates we celebrated at Clark’s 121st Commencement
A year of discovery
Students in the lab of Biology Professor Javier Tabima Restrepo ventured into local wild spaces and waterways to collect frogs for an extended study.
Their research aims to understand the diversity, genomics, evolution, and ecology of microfungal species associated with multiple hosts and ecosystems.
Visual and Performing Arts Department capstone projectsDoctoral student Lauren Parry studies how humans may be able to fend off microscopic fungi.Student performance at Friends and Family WeekendKaitlyn Mathis’ research — in which she always involves students, who often receive “first author” status on peer-reviewed journal articles — seeks to unpack how ants can impact the food we grow and the places we call home.Clark’s Mosakowski Institute for Public Enterprise and Southbridge Public Schools collaborated on an initiative to create a sensory immersion room where distressed students can decompress, calm themselves, and learn how to manage their behavior. With 2,000 feet of string and 400 nails, students in studio art Professor Toby Sisson’s course create a collaborative wall installation spanning 45 feet at the Traina Center for the Arts.Red bricks that hold a charge, tiles that kill superbugs, fabrics that quietly track your health — in Julio D’Arcy’s lab, students help invent new “smart” materials.The Interactive Theater course, a collaboration that brings together students and faculty from our game design and performing arts programs, culminates in the production and performance of a non-linear, participatory, and interactive theatre work.Clark geneticist Justin Thackeray and his students are working to discover if our genetic cousins help us understand mutations that contribute to cancer, diabetes, and other diseases.
A singular honor: members of the Nipmuc community join geography professor John Rogan to plant a Nipmuc garden at the Hadwen Arboretum — the only place they cultivate beyond their ancestral land in Grafton.
Under their guidance, students planted carefully selected varieties near the community garden.