When Love Meets Hate
Making a film about the gay-marriage debate, Becca Roth '10 tackles a larger issue: the need for people to talk.
Making a film about the gay-marriage debate, Becca Roth '10 tackles a larger issue: the need for people to talk.
Get the social recap of Green's Kenyon College talk called "Thoughts on How to Make Things and Why." Photo by: Kathryn Krinsman
New York Times best-selling author John Green ’00 returned to Kenyon to present, "Thoughts on How to Make Things and Why."
Alex O’Flinn ’03 edits feature-length film that garners buzz at Sundance.
Justin Roberts ’92 nominated for second Grammy award for children’s album.
Andrew Tint ’13 uses persistence to start his career in radio.
Timeless places. Life-changing opportunities. Enduring bonds. The Kenyon experience matters. And it doesn't happen by accident.
Her college education makes Brittney Miles ’13 stand out in her inner-city Chicago neighborhood, where she is often called “college girl.” “That makes no sense,” Miles said. “There should be a lot of college girls and guys.”
Literary and online virtuosity bring young-adult author John Green '00 fans of all ages.
Call it Kenyon’s very own pipeline into the art world. Alumni holding key posts at Christie’s have offered internships, externships, and guidance to dozens of students.
He's a 1976 theater major who has won seventeen emmys. His work has appeared on major television networks from ABC to VH1. President Obama complimented his work on-air. And you've probably never heard his name.
If the twenty-first century Kenyon campus can be seen as a canvas, then Graham Gund is the artist.
A gem-like little college way out in Ohio sets the romance in motion.
Carl Djerassi, a scientist and an artist, portrays himself in one of his poems as a “master of chemical transmutation.”