UF funds a racial justice initiative research project
Black students at UF have the opportunity to share their stories through a research project funded by UF’s Racial Justice Research Fund.
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Black students at UF have the opportunity to share their stories through a research project funded by UF’s Racial Justice Research Fund.
When Amy Williams watched meteor showers with her parents as a kid, she knew it was only a matter of time before she would begin exploring the depths of space herself.
Kimberly DiGeronimo has never met any of her classmates in person. But through virtual game nights of Pictionary and trivia coupled with the occasional pet or family member popping into the background of a Zoom call, she feels as though she knows them personally.
A hit pop track echoes in the distance. A lone plastic straw sits in the grass. Anxious students keep their heads down as they desperately search for an isolated corner to begin spitting into a vial.
Amid the dense foliage, ancient trees and rich soil that houses thousands of microbes in the McCarty Woods conservation area, Akito Kawahara sees it: a Great Purple Hairstreak butterfly.
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.
“Do good, and say ‘I love you,’” is the phrase echoing through the UF community in honor of Sophia Lambert, a first-year UF theatre and psychology major who died Jan.16 after a fatal crash on West University Avenue that sent five others to the hospital. She was 18 years old.
Paige Sam triumphs when she’s finally able to find a parking spot on campus, but she’s less than elated when she returns to find parking citations plastered onto her dashboard.
Martin Levin’s voice, slightly quivering from the remnants of tears, confidently announced to those at his father’s outdoor funeral that once the world is safe from COVID-19, a true celebration would be held for his dad.
UF alumnus Fred Levin died Tuesday afternoon of COVID-19 complications at the age of 83.
Madison Miguelez watched her laptop screen as her peers ran around their bedrooms, frantically searching for objects to recreate famous pieces of art like “The Scream” and “Girl With Pearl Earring.”
Teachers in Alachua County have struggled navigating their changing classrooms during the COVID-19 pandemic. Volunteers are now helping ensure in-person and online students don’t fall behind.
Alyssa Pearson finds that every time she’s in one of her Zoom classes, one of her family members peeks around the door, asks her about what she is doing and attempts to carry a lengthy conversation.