Full-time student, part-time aerialist
Miami senior Nikki McGlosson seems to be at ease anywhere: from the printmaking studio in Hiestand Hall where she spends most of her time, to dozens of feet in the air on a ribbon attached to the ceiling.
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Miami senior Nikki McGlosson seems to be at ease anywhere: from the printmaking studio in Hiestand Hall where she spends most of her time, to dozens of feet in the air on a ribbon attached to the ceiling.
In an unexpected move, Miami University's Associated Student Government (ASG) elected a first-year to its leadership, confirming political science major Benjamin Mitsch as Speaker Pro Tempore at its meeting Tuesday, Feb. 12. Senators also rejected ASG's Red Brick Rewards funding system at the meeting.
Miami University's Associated Student Government (ASG) filled eight of its 11 open seats, swearing in seven new senators and a new Secretary for On-Campus Affairs, at its meeting Tuesday, Feb. 5.
In 1983, Miami University created DARs, the Degree Audit Reporting System, to help students keep track of the classes they needed to take in order to graduate. The university developed the technology and began licensing software to other colleges two years later.
Miami University's Associated Student Government (ASG) heard from University President Greg Crawford and passed two bills, establishing a Secretary of Safety and supporting a more flexible swipe meal plan at their meeting Tuesday, Jan. 29.
The Miami Art Museum kicked off the new semester by opening three new exhibitions: "Outside the Box," "More Than an Object" and "40 at 40."
Phyllis Callahan, Miami University's provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, will retire by the end of 2019.
Puerto Rico's struggle began long before Hurricane Maria, and has not disappeared since.
A black-belt member of Miami's martial arts club took to the Uptown Park stage and threw her partner on the mat for a taekwondo demonstration. Another club member broke a thick wooden board with her elbow. K-pop and American hits alternated from speakers as crowds of students, faculty and Oxford residents roamed booths lining the park. They were all there on a Friday afternoon to celebrate Miami's fourth annual Asian Cultural Festival.
All eyes turned to the front as D. Eric Ohlsson took the stage of Souers Recital Hall and moved into the center of the warm spotlights. Clear, bright-sounding trills from his instrument fluttered out through the intimate space of the recital hall.
On Wednesday morning, over 1,000 miles away from Parkland, Florida, roughly 50 Oxford residents and Miami students gathered in Uptown Park for a vigil to mark the losses of 17 students killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last month.
Lent, the 40 days between Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday, is a time for fasting, abstaining from meat on Fridays and reflection. This introspection is supposed to come from giving up one thing you enjoy doing. This year, instead of my usual cop-out of giving up soda, I decided to tackle my worst millennial vice: social media addiction.
For fans of rebellion, sexual liberation and general debauchery (basically the 1920s as an era), the Miami University Department of Theatre's production of "The Wild Party" is a thought-provoking feast for the senses that should not be missed.
When a show starts with three princesses gyrating and swearing at their princes, it becomes immediately clear that Disney had no hand in this version of the company's beloved "Princess Line" franchise.
Rather than the beaches of Florida or Cancun, I spent my spring break in the legislative offices of Washington, D.C. and Columbus with a group of 55 other Miami students.
Doo-wop meets amphetamines meets Greek tragedy. The Miami Department of Theatre's production of "BLISS (or, Emily Post is Dead!)" by award-winning playwright Jami Brandli explored the heroines' journey in a thought-provoking way that didn't fail to keep the audience laughing.