Pet Project
Julie Barton ’95 returns to Kenyon to read from her bestselling memoir “Dog Medicine.”
Julie Barton ’95 returns to Kenyon to read from her bestselling memoir “Dog Medicine.”
Dozens of Kenyon students board a bus and head to Washington, D.C., to meet alumni, discuss politics, and find their futures.
Last weekend, nearly 1,000 parents, siblings and other family members visited their students in Gambier and took part in a wide array of activities.
Just in time for Family Weekend, the Brown Family Environmental Center hosts a Harvest Festival to celebrate fall.
New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd will visit campus to discuss the election and sign copies of her new book, “The Year of Voting Dangerously.”
Sadiq Jiwa ’18 overcomes arthritic condition to excel on the golf course.
A sculpture titled “Pore” by the acclaimed British artist will add to Kenyon’s impressive collection of public art.
Two Kenyon professors number among the more than 1,000 contributors to the Nobel Prize-winning LIGO Scientific Collaboration.
A recent gift from the estate of Robert P. Hubbard ’53 is one of the largest bequests Kenyon has received in its history.
Kenyon's Class of 2020 includes many talented first-year students, including jump rope champion Anushka Patel '20.
Kenyon is named a top contributor of corps members to Teach For America.
The Center for the Study of American Democracy presented a panel examining how populist movements can lead to the rise of authoritarianism.
Jon Lorsch, the director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, shares insight into the state of biomedical research funding in the U.S.
The cultural organization for Latino/a students celebrates 30 years and leads Kenyon’s Latinx Heritage Month festivities.
Scott A. Layson, director of Kenyon’s Career Development Office, died Sept. 20, 2016. He was 48.