Comienza la votación temprana para las elecciones regulares de Gainesville de 2021
Traducido por Melissa Hernandez de la Cruz
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Traducido por Melissa Hernandez de la Cruz
Eleven months and nine days. That’s how long Florida’s baseball bats lay dormant.
Joe Harris, a 91-year-old Gainesville resident experiencing homelessness, believes if he got COVID-19, he would have died.
A year after UF shut down on-campus activity because of COVID-19, students and residents are still dealing with the saliva tests, Zoom lectures and homemade cloth masks that disrupted daily life.
After more than a year of quarantining, testing and masking up, Gainesville has had enough of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Fifteen-year-old Ella Prine and her rabbit, Harry, waited all year for the Alachua County Youth Fair and Livestock Show. On Saturday morning, they won a blue ribbon for Best in Class, a prize awarded to the best rabbit of its breed.
An Alachua County ordinance that prohibits pedestrians from standing in road medians less than 6 feet wide passed Tuesday mirrors a law passed by Gainesville City Commission a month ago.
Twelve months. Three semesters. One atypical year.
For 22-year-old UF graduates Ashayla Blakely and Alena Drake, what started as creating reel content for future employers in October 2020 is now an ongoing web series on YouTube.
Black students at UF have the opportunity to share their stories through a research project funded by UF’s Racial Justice Research Fund.
The COVID-19 pandemic has been a force of change across the globe, bringing about new health standards, new work atmospheres and new hobbies.
Junior Trinity Thomas completed her split leaps to perfection. She then tumbled diagonally across the floor but stayed in control.
Today, I sit outside my apartment. On a lemon-colored chair as I drink black tea, wear sweats because they’re cozy and write on my laptop.
Early voting in Gainesville for the 2021 Regular Election began March 5 and runs until March 13.
A second lawsuit was filed against Uber and the drivers involved in the fatal pedestrian crash that killed one UF student and injured four others.
Gainesville residents can watch a unique musical and acrobatic performance this weekend — all from the comfort of their cars.
Joyce Powell didn’t always love to read. But since she’s been behind bars, the 58-year-old Lowell Correctional Institution prisoner has become an avid science fiction fan.
Mia Thomas loves to feel beautiful in bright, expensive wigs. She wants college students in Gainesville to feel the same at an affordable price.
Sweat rained from pores as riders pedaled to their commands.
Trinity Thomas flipped and twisted through the air during an electric uneven bars routine that ended in an eruption of applause by fans in attendance.