Latest News
Find News
Active Filters
- Arts & Sciences
Lea Pascotto's calling: Helping families find life in grief
Lea Pascotto, BA’99, serves others when they’re experiencing their darkest days. It’s a noble calling. Her experiences, especially at Creighton, set the stage for this important work.
Creighton’s only Oscar nominee
With the Academy Awards on the horizon, we got to thinking: Has a Creighton alumnus ever been nominated for an Oscar? As it turns out, yes. But just one.
Creighton Jesuit in Apple ad with Hall of Fame rock star
That time the Rev. Don Doll, SJ, and Todd Rundgren met in California for an Apple PowerBook advertisement that ran in Rolling Stone and Spin magazines.
From the Heartland to Hollywood
Creighton alumna and aspiring writer/director Megan Carroll is finding success behind the camera, including working on the award-winning television show Abbott Elementary.
The history of Creighton's Haunted Physics Lab
In the mid-1970s, Professor Tom Zepf created a spooky maze of physics exhibits that turned into a Creighton Halloween tradition of more than 40 years.
From science to seminary: A Creighton graduate’s unexpected path
After obtaining biology and entomology degrees, Lee Noel changed course and changed his life.
Caniglia brings light and darkness to explore the human condition
As an illustrator and film concept artist with a global following, Caniglia’s work has been featured in more than 100 novels, and numerous magazines, movies, albums and comic books.
Creighton leadership and lead donors celebrate opening of Graves Hall
A few days before 400 freshman students moved into Graves Hall, a few hundred alumni, faculty, staff and friends joined Creighton leadership and the families of the project's lead donors for a grand opening.
New residence hall and courtyard built on a lifetime of friendship
The namesakes (and lead donors) of the new hall and courtyard are Lee C. Graves, BSBA’80, JD’83, and his wife, Judy Graves, and their close friends Kathy and Jim Simpson, BA’80.
Creighton's role in the case of the greatest book thief in American history
Here’s the story of the Iowa man who swiped somewhere between 23,000 and 26,000 rare books and papers from at least 300 university libraries across the U.S. (and Canada), and the FBI investigation (code name: “The Omaha Project”) that turned 10 Creighton librarians into a makeshift team of academic detectives