Best of the Best
The annual Honors Day Convocation celebrated the academic accomplishments of students and faculty on Tuesday in Rosse Hall, highlighted by teaching awards for Professor of Political Science Pamela Jensen…
The annual Honors Day Convocation celebrated the academic accomplishments of students and faculty on Tuesday in Rosse Hall, highlighted by teaching awards for Professor of Political Science Pamela Jensen…
Carl Djerassi, a scientist and an artist, portrays himself in one of his poems as a “master of chemical transmutation.”
Kenyon’s chemistry faculty takes on the complexity of solar-energy research.
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.
Three Kenyon student-athletes earn NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships for athletic and academic excellence.
Three alumnae advance graduate careers with NSF fellowships.
Summer Science Scholars are conducting research in anthropology, biology, chemistry, mathematics, neuroscience, physics and psychology.
Andrew Chevalier '14 wins the 2014 Don Hunsinger Award, the North Coast Athletic Conference's (NCAC) top honor for male student-athletes.
The Graham Gund Gallery Strategic Plan focuses on collaborative learning and a creative campus.
“Dancing with the Kenyon Stars” raises money for a local cause.
An array of events expands Martin Luther King Jr. Day from remembrance to action.
Carl Djerassi ’43 H’58, a creator of the pill, died on Friday. Read a 2012 Alumni Bulletin interview with the famed scientist and artist.
Runners and walkers will celebrate Earth Day on their feet with a half marathon and a four-mile race.
National Endowment for Humanities professorship awarded to Lobanov-Rostovsky for interdisciplinary project.
Professor of Mathematics Carol Schumacher has been elected faculty chair starting July 1.
The Gund Gallery receives a Mellon grant to pilot an artist residency program.
Edna Kemboi ’16 earned a cellular research internship at a graduate institute for life sciences.
Two Kenyon students win the prestigious Goldwater Scholarship for high-impact research.
The National Science Foundation awards Kenyon nearly $1 million to study high-impact practices for STEM students.
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.
Students share expertise on the Zika virus in a recent panel discussion.
MacArthur Fellow Lauren Redniss speaks about her innovative work in visual nonfiction.
Elizabeth Boon '97 shares her transformative research on nitric oxide's link to the formation of antibiotic-resistant bacterial communities.
Kenyon will receive a $1 million grant to engage underrepresented students in the natural sciences.
Eight recent Kenyon alumni, the most in Kenyon history, win competitive NSF graduate fellowships.
Max Smith ’18 and Toneisha Stubbs ’18 win this semester’s Franklin Miller Awards for their contributions to Kenyon’s academic environment.
A chemistry course taught by President Sean Decatur sheds light on the wonder of bioluminescence.
Two Kenyon students win Goldwater Scholarships, the most prestigious undergraduate award in STEM fields.
Kenyon’s president addresses Stanford University chemistry graduates and shares lessons on science in the liberal arts.
Associate Professor of Chemistry Sheryl Hemkin replaces Jan Thomas as associate provost, as Thomas steps in to lead Kenyon’s Office for Community Partnerships.
Two Kenyon swimming alumnae are honored with major NCAA awards.
As Kenyon marks 50 years of coeducation, alumnae share how Kenyon has shaped their lives and careers.
Three Kenyon math and physics majors win prestigious Goldwater Scholarships.