Más de 200 republicanos del condado de Alachua abandonaron el partido desde la semana del ataque al Capitolio de los Estados Unidos
Traducido por Valeria Pagnani
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Traducido por Valeria Pagnani
YouTube personalities Cody Ko, Noel Miller and David Dobrik will speak Feb. 3 at 6 and 8 p.m. in a virtual event for UF students.
More than two weeks ago, UF administrators rolled out a COVID-19 report form in the GATORSAFE app, a public safety collaboration overseen by 33 assistant vice presidents, directors, and managers of Student Affairs’ departments.
Alabama-born artist Azazus grew up surrounded by music.
Florida’s student-athletes will now have more personal branding resources.
Drums beat and dancers energetically jump in the warm Gainesville air at Depot Park.
Vanessa Villarreal cried when she read the email.
With another semester of Zoom fatigue and pandemic paranoia looming over their heads, students and faculty fear they won’t have enough time to recharge their academic batteries in a term with only one official day off.
Mason Pitts grew up embracing the Republican Party. Donald Trump’s attacks on the 2020 election led him to abandon it.
Margaret “Maggie” Paxton often went out of her way to brighten the days of those who crossed her path.
Traducido por Valeria Pagnani
Traducido por Valeria Pagnani
In honor of MLK Day of Service, UF Student Government is partnering with the Brown Center of Leadership and Service to hold a donation drive for Grace Marketplace, a non-profit organization with a mission to end homelessness in Alachua County.
Four organizations are taking a stand against UF’s official food service provider to protest its use of prison labor.
Lacey Korver, a 28-year-old artist and delivery driver, was forced to leave her home Oct. 31.
My stomach dropped when President Kent Fuchs declared that spring semester of 2021 would be in-person, since “the full experience of a residential university includes in-person instruction...Our students deserve this opportunity.” As a UF graduate instructor, I disagreed with this policy for many reasons—primarily fear for student and staff safety as COVID-19 case numbers continued to (and still do) climb.
Escrito por Kristine Villarroel
Three days ago, the University of South Carolina unveiled a statue of Gamecocks legend A’ja Wilson in front of its basketball court, Colonial Life Arena.
When Berthina McGill noticed a need for minority clinicians in the Gainesville community, she immediately got to work on filling in the gaps.
Between lesson plans, new technology and added pressure from UF students and administrators, instructors are stretched thin.