Stories
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Clark University student creates mural for food bank
For Clark University junior Katlyn A. Greger, artistic interests transcended into effective practice when she was given the opportunity to create a mural for the Worcester County Food Bank. The biology and studio art double-major was initially recognized for her creative abilities while interning with North Grafton-based Community Harvest Project over the past summer. As a sustainable farming intern, Greger…
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Third Culture Kids Conference: Redefining home, evolving identities in a global world
Navigating the being of being more than one particular thing. For Teja Arboleda ’85, keynote speaker of the annual Third Culture Kids/Global Nomads Conference held on Feb 27 at Clark University, these words described his own journey through multi-national, multiracial, multiethnic and multicultural identities. As one of several conference speakers, Arboleda presented a talk titled “Proof that…
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Clark University to hold 112th Commencement, May 22
Speaker is Colombian health care champion, globally recognized social entrepreneur and Clark alumna Catalina Escobar
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6 Signs That You’re Management Material
Some people are born leaders, but that doesn’t mean they want to step into management roles at work. Just one-third of employees believe becoming a manager will advance their career, according to a survey by staffing consultants Addison Group. … “You cannot be a leader unless people are willing to follow you,” says Laura M. Graves,…
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Helping Muslim women find their voices
MuslimGirl.net founder Amani Al-Khatahtbeh speaks at Clark
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A world of difference
Clark’s Marsh Institute looks to forge a lasting relationship between humans and their planet, while there’s still time
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What motivates managers? Money, yes, but so much more
Clark University and Center for Creative Leadership publish research on workplace motivation
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Life in the fast lane
Clark's supercomputer cluster key to researchers' work
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Supercomputers power a biology revolution at Clark
To hear John Gibbons talk about bioinformatics, you’d think this trend in the sciences is relatively straightforward. “Historically, if you used a computer to analyze biological data, it was considered bioinformatics,” he says. But Gibbons, an assistant professor of biology at Clark University, admits that description undersells the benefits. With science and technology meshing at an incredible pace, scientists…
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Pint-Sized Players, Texas-Sized Dreams
“Friday Night Tykes” producer Matt Maranz ’87 peers into the troubled soul of youth sports









