Clark University Magazine
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Rich Buyer ’84 discovers a new passion in film
‘The Networker’ debuts on streaming platforms
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Srinivasan Sitaraman is Clark’s summit pundit
Media turn to Political Science Professor Srinivasan Sitaraman for commentary on U.S.-North Korea meeting
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‘We were here because we wanted a good education’
In 1942, the first women undergraduates arrived at Clark. The university would never be the same.
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Lucian Kim ’92 is NPR’s man in Moscow
Lucian Kim ’92 calls himself a wanderer. The summer before his first semester at Clark University, he backpacked his way around Eastern Europe. He did it again two summers later — then spent his junior year studying abroad in Germany. He made his first trip to Russia that year as well. All that roaming has…
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Lucian Kim ’92 answers the Russia question
What do the Russian people think about alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election?
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Frank Abell has his radar out for chemical dangers
Frank Abell remembers the day his son visited his office on the first floor of the Arthur M. Sackler Sciences Center. Abell, Clark University’s laboratory manager/chemical safety officer, sat at his desk amid filing cabinets and boxes of supplies as students and professors rotated through. Undergraduates sought to buy white lab coats. Faculty researchers asked…
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Can we reform the lawn?
HERO students uncover homeowners' attitudes about their yards
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Clark researchers investigate our fascination with lawns
What does the pursuit of the perfect yard say about us?
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Michelle Cove ’91 creates nonprofit to help girls fight back against sexist media
Too fat. Too skinny. Too short. Too tall. Dumb. Slow. Bad hair. Bad skin. No style. The insults are like darts that land precisely where a girl might feel most vulnerable. They may be launched by a classmate, a teammate, or even a “friend.” More insidiously, the messages are reinforced on television, in music and…
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For 46 years, Rudolph Nunnemacher taught biology at Clark with rare style
Professor Rudolph Nunnemacher emerged from his office carrying the lens of a whale’s eye. The electricity to the biology building was temporarily out of service, and he had just the remedy to brighten the darkness. He said to me, ‘Come watch this,’ remembers Michael Rosenzweig ’85, who followed obediently to the door of the…









