Russell Inslee "Inky" Clark Jr. (1935 – August 3, 1999) was an educator, administrator, and a key player in the transition of the Ivy League into co-education in the 1960s and diversified student bodies to the present from the 1960s.
[1] Clark earned a master's degree from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University.
For decades prestigious northeastern colleges had used "character" as a code word to limit the number of acceptances afforded to secondary school students with Jewish and working class Catholic backgrounds to colleges traditionally defined by an Episcopalian or WASP social standard.
A cover feature was published in The New York Times Sunday magazine, datelined 6 June 2012,[2] that reports on many years that faculty members practiced pedophilia among the Horace Mann School student body while Clark was Headmaster and President.
The New Yorker, datelined April 1, 2013, presented further reportage on pedophilia at Horace Mann School during Clark's tenure.