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.
When a couple “has chemistry,” you can tell—by the chemicals.
An immensely complex transplant operation gives a soldier two new limbs. On the team that made it happen: a husband and wife, both Kenyon grads.
Dogs do laugh, kind of, says neuroscientist Andy Niemiec, whose research addresses the larger question of how humans and animals perceive their world.
In the evolving world of personal technology, do you feel left to your own devices? Surrounded by a dizzying array of iWants and iNeeds, are you wondering which technology is worth the investment? Help is on the way
Religious Studies professor Royal Rhodes ponders the "Meanings of Death" in the classroom and in the Alumni Bulletin.
Literary and online virtuosity bring young-adult author John Green '00 fans of all ages.
Faculty and student researchers set out to study the retail trend of sexualized clothing for children, and published a journal article that drew worldwide media attention
Were the Neanderthals savvy big-game hunters or more simple-minded scavengers? A Kenyon duo took that question into their own hands—literally.
The art of rhetoric proves to be timeless when you learn it as the ancients did--through theory, imitation, and practice.
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.
When a Latin American poet asked me to look over some recent translations of his work into English, I critiqued them as only an inexperienced yet ambitious beginning grad student would. "These are all right, but I could do better."
Carl Djerassi, a scientist and an artist, portrays himself in one of his poems as a “master of chemical transmutation.”