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Excellence and Expertise

Miami Media Highlights Aug. 19-25

Excellence and Expertise

Miami Media Highlights Aug. 19-25

The Colorado Springs Gazette, August 25: Fifty years on, Nixon’s impact on the presidency and political landscape lives on
Christopher Kelley, assistant teaching professor of Political Science, provides insight on the presidency of Richard Nixon.

Journal-News, Aug. 23: Excitement mixes with tears as families help Miami U freshmen move in
This article highlights move-in day at Miami University. President Gregory Crawford is shown in photographs with students and family members. Additional coverage appeared on CBS-WKRC Ch. 12, Dayton Daily News, and FOX WXIX Ch. 19

700WLW, Ch. 700, Aug. 23: Supply chain issues
Yao “Henry” Jin, associate professor of Management, is a guest on the Scott Sloan morning show discussing issues of supply chain and trade with Canada.

NPR-WVXU, Ch. 91.7, Aug. 20: Tri-State college students are returning to campus (so be prepared for traffic)
This news story highlights the return dates of students to college campuses. Miami University is noted as anticipating nearly 4,330 first-year students to arrive on campus Friday.

NPR-WVXU, Ch. 91.7, Aug. 20: For Trump, Project 2025 just won't seem to go away
Anne Whitesell, assistant professor of Political Science and associate director of the Menard Family Center for Democracy, discusses the upcoming presidential race and how ties to Project 2025 and the Heritage Foundation could impact Trump and Vance.

NPR-WOUB, The Ohio Newsroom, Aug. 19: Amid youth mental health crisis, Ohio school-based behavioral health services grow
Cricket Meehan, director of the Center for School-Based Mental Health Programs at Miami, discusses statewide K-12 mental health initiatives.

Inside Higher Ed, Aug. 19: SATs Have Never Been About Equity
Pepper Stetler, professor of Art History, wrote this opinion piece on the return of standardized testing for college admissions.

ABC-WCPO Ch. 9Cincinnati Open survived Charlotte threat. Could Saudi Arabia be next?
Adam Beissel, associate professor of Sport Leadership and Management, is quoted in this story about the future of the Cincinnati Open tennis tournament.