Professor discusses criminal-identification technology
Scientists will never have spidey senses.
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Scientists will never have spidey senses.
One of UF’s newest organizations welcomed students to discuss issues of clean energy, global warming and carbon emissions with four local experts Thursday.
Two hundred people died trying to escape.
Joe Browder may have talked about the Florida's history of environmental activism, but he warned his audience not to take history too seriously.
One of Florida's most politically powerful men drew only five students to the second floor of Pugh Hall Tuesday afternoon, where he fielded questions about the upcoming legislative session.
Students listened to fiery arguments surrounding national health-care reform Monday night.
UF students absent because of the swine flu may soon be able to watch lectures over chicken noodle soup.
If "you are what you eat" were really true, thousands of freshmen would turn into slices of pizza after a few weeks at UF.
Surrounded by moths and butterflies, Student Government senators passed a bill allocating $60,000 for an upcoming bug exhibit at Tuesday's meeting, held in the Florida Museum of Natural History.
More than 100 people have felt up Amanda Jones.
Bob Graham may have been the governor of Florida and a U.S. Senator, but he was a Florida Gator first.
Dear Jordan Johnson, aka student body president-elect:
UF administrators and student leaders spoke about preserving quality in the midst of sweeping budget cuts Tuesday.
Future health care reform in the United States will emphasize cost-effective treatment, upping health insurance requirements and healthy habits for citizens, according to Kristine Blackwood.
A poet takes the stage. She is nervous, and her pages tremble in her hand as she reads. She pauses and admits her nerves are getting the best of her. The audience applauds in support.
Two editors with about 65 years of combined journalism experience took the stage at Pugh Hall Wednesday night to describe the media's influence on President Barack Obama's campaign and the Internet's impact on print journalism.
Posters proclaiming "300,000 Dead 2.5 million displaced" and "It's not about our people or their people. It's about people" decorated Pugh Hall during a video and panel discussion about the genocide in Darfur Monday night.
About 90 people packed into Pugh Hall on Thursday night to hear three former U.S. ambassadors speak on America's foreign policies and what changes President Barack Obama's administration might bring.
National Public Radio weekly commentator and author Diane Roberts spoke about America's obsession with President Barack Obama's racial identity Wednesday night. About 100 people attended the lecture, entitled "The Blackness of Barack Obama," filled with sarcasm and historical anecdotes in Pugh Hall.
Stores on the UF campus stopped selling peanut butter products listed on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's voluntary recall list in connection with the salmonella outbreak caused by Peanut Corporation of America's tainted peanut butter and peanut paste, according to Lionel Dubay, UF's director of business services division.