UF Supreme Court passes amended Reitz Union referendum
The UF Supreme Court voted Friday that a referendum asking students if they want to rename the Reitz Union will appear on the October Student Government elections ballot.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Independent Florida Alligator's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
806 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The UF Supreme Court voted Friday that a referendum asking students if they want to rename the Reitz Union will appear on the October Student Government elections ballot.
The UF Supreme Court voted Friday that a referendum asking students if they want to rename the Reitz Union would go on the Student Government elections ballot next month.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas will speak at UF’s Levin College of Law Friday.
The UF Supreme Court met Friday and ruled that two referendums passed the necessary technical procedures to be placed on the October elections ballot.
The UF Supreme Court of the Student Body met today to rule that two referendums regarding newspaper racks and a name change for the Reitz Union passed the necessary technical aspects to be placed on the ballot.
UF Supreme Court Chief Justice Matt Michel announced to the Student Senate on Tuesday that both referendums previously presented received the 500 signatures needed to be on October’s election ballot.
The UF Supreme Court unanimously approved a referendum that would ask students whether or not they think UF should move forward in forcing publications to be distributed out of university-owned racks.
Some people brag about owning iPads or scooters, but UF freshman Adam Samei impresses peers with a different fact — he owns his own Super Political Action Committee.
The UF Supreme Court unanimously approved a nonbinding referendum Friday asking students if the Reitz Union should be renamed.
Before you decide you want to be a student leader, or before you decide that you want nothing to do with Student Government, hear the facts.
Recently, our nation came to an impasse over where we stand on the intentions and consequences of allowing citizens to possess firearms. The tragedy at Aurora, Colo., resulted from a mentally unstable individual gradually building up an arsenal of grenades, explosives and several high-powered guns. How did James Holmes even manage to acquire such a large arsenal, and what does it say about our gun control? More importantly, this tragedy, following the massacre at Columbine, the attempted assassination of Congresswoman Gifford, Virginia Tech, etc., must raise questions about what we are doing wrong as a society.
Welcome back for Summer B!
In a statement released after the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Affordable Care Act, President Obama’s signature health reform legislation, Republican South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint said, “The Supreme Court may have failed to stop this government takeover of health care, but the American people will not.”
On June 28, everyone on Facebook suddenly became U.S. Constitution wizards. Experts from the far right to the extreme left spouted their professional opinions and quoted the document like a Shakespearean scholar quotes Hamlet.
In a close decision, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the national health care plan pushed by President Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats.
In a close decision with an unexpected tiebreaker, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the national health care plan pushed by President Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats.
UF’s Student Senate meeting started Tuesday night with 66 senators present but ended with 47.
Student Body President Tj Villamil addresses Senate about new Supreme Court Justices for the upcoming year Tuesday.
The Student Senate passed a bill at Tuesday night’s meeting to limit when candidates and political parties can campaign for Student Government elections. It also redefined campaigning.
The Student Senate passed a bill at Tuesday night’s meeting that would put parameters on when candidates and political parties could campaign for Student Government elections.