Embrace the unfamiliar
By JD Leverette | May 11, 2024To the reader, I urge every one of you to jump out of your comfort zone and take classes that you think you won’t find interesting.
To the reader, I urge every one of you to jump out of your comfort zone and take classes that you think you won’t find interesting.
Despite all of the non-political noise surrounding the 2024 presidential election cycle, opinion writer Olivia Kerben encourages college students to continue engaging in democracy.
Staff writer Taylor Power examines how her relationship with fangirl culture has changed from middle school to college, but how it refuses to go away entirely.
Miami University professor Daniel E. Hall calls upon the leaders at Miami to foster an atmosphere of political neutrality amidst the protests happening on other universities across the country.
Contributing writer Frankie McKnight examines what "my Miami" means after an alumnus claims Miami is no longer what they knew.
Should out-of-state students vote in local and state elections? Contrinuting writer Harry Hittle examines the moral dilemnas that come with this decision.
Opinion writer Molly Francis urges college students to consider how a gap year may be more beneficial than getting a job right after graduation.
Amidst all this chaos of student life, opinion writer Halle Grant has come to the realization that nothing is really that deep in college.
While routines aren't necessarily a bad thing, it's important we make an effort to switch things up now and then to keep life feeling new, exciting and fresh. Staff writer Taylor Powers has found this avenue through music.
Still, we don’t understand the importance of a tool, especially social media in today’s world, until we feel its existence is threatened. Now, the U.S. government wants to tell my friends that they are not going to have access to the platform anymore because TikTok is a national security issue.
Opinion writer Lilly McClelland explores why when a man laughed at her joke, it made her feel more special than when a woman does.
Columnist Meredith Perkins ranks the New York Times games after playing them all each day for a week.
The solar eclipse was a momentous event, but for some students with disabilities it posed unique, and possiby dangerous, situations.
You are not a trailblazer for taking desire paths. You are not staging a silent rebellion. Rather, these pathways, more strongly than sidewalks, represent the absence of freedom from industrial control.
Is it possible that online platforms can corrupt content creators? Staff Writer Taylor Powers examines the psychological effects of fame on content creators.
Newly elected editor-in-chief Kasey Turman reflects on what draws him to The Miami Student.
In the moment, the days feel long and the weeks are stretched, but when we reminisce, it is as if time can’t seem to slow down. Unbeknownst to my first-year self, the next four years would fly by.
While obtaining a state ID seems to be a simple process, for many citizens, age, marital status, disability or gender identity can become yet another barrier to securing the state-issued ID that Americans increasingly need to vote.
Miami University will be in the path of totality for the solar eclipse, but students still have class. Opinion editor Sam Norton explains why Miami should cancel classes April 8 for this historic event.
Social media platforms promoting unrealistic beauty standards are not unheard of. But today’s social media environment has taken it a step further with harmful terminology and beauty filters that subtly alter your appearance.