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Op-Eds

What I would tell my freshman-year self

If I could sit down with my freshman-year self, I would probably start by telling him to breathe. You do n...

I lost the Lakeside battle, but won on the other side

9:40 A.M. That was the earliest time among the four of us in our Lakeside roommate group.   “Well, I mean i...

The study abroad bubble

I arrived in Rome a couple months ago believing I would be fully immersed in a new culture. This expectation h...

Editorials

We need 100 more years of The Miami Hurricane

More than 3,200 newspapers in the United States have closed since 2005, leaving only about 5,600. Newsroom em...

We need to change, but so do you

The Miami Hurricane has survived at UM for almost 100 years, but with print media dying, the traditional news...

Left on read: The barriers to reporting on UM’s campus...

Editor's Note: The Miami Hurricane has been an important part of the University of Miami community since the b...

Letters to the Editor

The Miami heat requires more cooling centers 

As a third-year medical student at the Miller School of Medicine, I had the opportunity to participate in our school’s Street Medicine rotation this past March. It is a month-long rotation aimed at providing multidisciplinary care and support to our unhoused and/or uninsured population through a variety of different medical and social service initiatives.  During my time there, I made a comment about the gloomy weather and how we hadn’t seen the sun for...

We need to talk

Attending the University of Miami for the past three and a half years as a student, I can honestly say that FIRE’s 2026 College Free Speech ranking was more validating than damning.  I thought my anxiety about speaking on certain sociopolitical issues was a personal flaw or journey that I needed to address alone. I assumed my thoughts of self-preservation were normal and pragmatic. I thought, if I want to become successful, self-censorship was simply th...

Thinking like an engineer

I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t “thinking like an engineer,” even before I had the words to explain it. I was known for asking a lot of questions – how things worked, why they were built that way and how solutions were interconnected. I was the kind of kid who could spend hours watching videos about how everyday products were made and manufactured. That curiosity only grew with time. During the COVID-19 pandemic, I came across a story about eng...