Kenyon in the World
Indefatigable volunteer Phoebe Roe '16 sparks Kenyon efforts to aid an underfunded local school.
Middle Path awaits the return of students in the fall.
The Lords took top honors for their third straight and thirty-fourth overall NCAA Division III Swimming and Diving Championship in March in Shenandoah, Texas. A total of 468 points put them 85 points ahead of runner-up Denison.
Student Life
Alumni News
Alumni News
Atlanta playwright Lee Nowell '92 tackles tough topics in comedies, dramas and experimental theater.
Kenyon in Quotes
"Plundering continues despite the resulting loss of vital, contextual history."
—Associate Professor of Classics Zoe Kontes, promoting repatriation of classical antiquities.
The Kenyon College Bookstore pitched a "Blind Date with a Bookseller" by wrapping staff-selected favorites in plain brown paper with a few words of description to capture each book’s essence and seduce a reader into a good read. With about 12,000 trade books in the store, there is plenty of love to go around.
Founded in 1969 as a way of making Kenyon less elitist and more "relevant," the Gambier Experimental College drew on the talents of students, faculty and staff. Until it petered out in 1993, the school offered courses such as Consciousness Raising, Ethnic Militancy, Folk Guitar, Needlepoint, Tightrope Walking and Scottish Sword Dancing.
The teachers included Kenyon luminaries including Peter Woytuk ’80, who would become a noted sculptor (he did the crows on Ransom Hall), Harry Clor of the political science faculty and Joyce Klein and Peggy Turgeon of Friday Café fame.
Scott Thielke has accumulated twenty-two years of experience in two stints as coach of the Lords and Ladies tennis programs. His career includes a dozen North Coast Athletic Conference coach of the year awards (six with the men, six with the women), two Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Central Region coach of the year honors, and the distinction of being named the 2012 ITA national coach of the year. He counts more than 600 match victories with the two programs, and his teams consistently rank among the best in the country.
"The Pain," acrylic and paper on wood by Klara Auerbach '18.
The artist writes, "'The Pain' is the physical expression of my ongoing emotional progression in coping with chronic pain, a process not unlike the stages of grief. It is the process of having an unwanted spike intrude into your life and the stubborn, entirely human response of not wanting to accept its existence."
Volume 45.3
Summer 2024
Volume 45.2
Spring 2024
Volume 45.1
Fall 2023
Volume 44.3
Spring 2023
Volume 44.2
Fall 2022
Volume 44.1
Summer 2022
Volume 43.3
Spring 2022
Volume 43.2
Fall 2021
Volume 43.1
Spring 2021
Volume 42.3
Fall 2020
Volume 42.2
Summer 2020
Volume 42.1
Winter 2020
Volume 41.3
Summer 2019
Volume 41.2
Winter 2019
Volume 41.1
Fall 2018
Volume 40.3
Summer 2018
Volume 40.2
Winter 2018
Volume 40.1
Fall 2017
Volume 39.3
Summer 2017
Volume 39.2
Winter 2017
Volume 39.1
Fall 2016
Volume 38.3
Summer 2016
Volume 38.2
Winter 2016
Volume 38.1
Fall 2015
Volume 37.2
Winter 2015
Volume 37.1
Fall 2014
Volume 36.4
Summer 2014
Volume 36.3
Spring 2014
Volume 36.2
Winter 2014
Volume 36.1
Fall 2013
Volume 35.3
Summer 2013
Volume 35.2
Winter 2013
Volume 35.1
Fall 2012
Volume 34.3
Summer 2012
Volume 34.2
Winter 2012
Volume 34.1
Fall 2011
Volume 33.3
Summer 2011
Volume 33.2
Winter 2011
Volume 33.1
Fall 2010
Volume 32.3
Summer 2010
Volume 32.2
Winter 2010
Volume 32.1
Fall 2009
Volume 31.4
Summer 2009
Volume 31.3
Winter 2009
Volume 31.1
Fall 2008
Volume 30.4
Summer 2008
Volume 30.3
Winter 2008
Volume 30.1
Fall 2007
Volume 29.4
Summer 2007
Volume 29.3
Winter 2007
Volume 29.1
Fall 2006
Volume 28.4
Summer 2006
Volume 28.3
Winter 2006
Volume 28.1
Fall 2005
Volume 27.4
Summer 2005
Volume 27.3
Winter 2005
Volume 27.1
Summer 2004
Volume 26.4
Spring 2004
Volume 26.3
Winter 2004
Volume 26.1
Summer 2003
Volume 25.4
Spring 2003
Volume 25.3
Winter 2003
Volume 25.1
Summer 2002
Volume 23.1
2001-2002
Volume 22.4
2001
Volume 22.3
2000-2001
Volume 22.1
Spring 2000
Volume 22.1
2000
Volume 21.4
1999
Volume 21.3
1999
Volume 21.1
1998
Volume 20.4
1998
Volume 20.3
1998
Volume 20.1
1997
Volume 19.4
1997
Volume 17.3
Spring 1995