Column: We don't need He-Men; we need serious politicians
Donald Trump is not the disease — he is the symptom.
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Donald Trump is not the disease — he is the symptom.
Good coaching changes everything.
The chapel went silent Saturday morning as a single candle was lit.
Jared Gaylord said he wasn’t scared by the ghost tour he and his girlfriend took in Savannah over Spring Break. He thought the tour itself was cheesy.
Student Government wants students to know pain can’t always be seen.
This editorial isn’t going to be about the need for greater gun control, seeing as it is redundant, worn and torn territory. You, the readers, already know the details: a white, male gunman on the fringes of society. A specifically chosen location. Innocent lives lost and wounded. A mass shooting in Colorado.
The Member Leadership Program, the Hispanic Student Association and the Rural Women's Health Project held a food drive on the Plaza of the Americas on Nov. 17, 2015. They collected food to give 20 migrant farmworker families a happy Thanksgiving.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case on Texas’ House Bill 2 — a bill that resulted in half of the state’s abortion clinics being closed. The law is a threat to the rights of low-income women in Texas. As the Supreme Court prepares to hear one of its first abortion cases in a while, it must consider the motivations behind such restrictions. Given abortion is a low-complication procedure, many of the restrictions are unnecessary and serve only to make it difficult for women to get an abortion.
Earlier last month, the first of the Democratic Party debates for the 2016 U.S. presidential election commenced in Las Vegas, Nevada, broadcast on CNN with Anderson Cooper as the moderator.
Joseph Briggs has considered quitting the sport he loves more than once.
HealthQueer Alliance at UF is educating the medical community about transgender health concerns.
In May 2014, the Alachua County Girl Scout Troop 733 received thank you letters from teenage girls in Kenya.
Abby Wambach’s retirement concludes the career of the most significant soccer player in U.S. history.
Rachel Wayne stood in front of a microphone on Saturday and spoke about bullying.
Santa Fe College liberal arts graduate Juliana Richards, 22, balances on top of Cassie Catania, a 25-year-old UF clinical and health psychology research coordinator, during Active Streets Gainesville. Both women practice their acroyoga with S-Connection Aerial Arts five days a week. “I just wanted to dress up and be a Tigger flyer,” Richards said.
Santa Fe College liberal arts graduate Juliana Richards, 22, balances on top of Cassie Catania, a 25-year-old UF clinical and health psychology research coordinator, during Active Streets Gainesville. Both women practice their acroyoga with S-Connection Aerial Arts five days a week. “I just wanted to dress up and be a Tigger flyer,” Richards said.
What do you know? It’s already Oct. 16. One moment you’re a beaming freshman full of life, optimism and drive, and with the blink of an eye, you’re already a jaded, sleep-deprived, nerve-ridden upperclassman waiting to get your next coffee fix. Be careful in these upcoming weeks, and don’t let time slip through your fingers too easily. With that said, it’s time for …
Growing up on the eastern shore of Maryland, Julie Meyer was always around water.
Harvey’s heartbeat thumped through a speaker as a stethoscope lay on his bare chest. The patient simulator’s blue eyes stared up at the ceiling above his head.
Another one bites the dust.