Campaign Conundrum: How SG election codes can be fixed
[Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a clarification.]
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[Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a clarification.]
The semester is slowly (or quickly, depending on your situation) coming to an end, and it’s been an interesting one for sure.
In Wednesday’s editorial, we discussed some potential problems with the language of Student Government election codes.
Politicians, especially those who have been in office for a while, often talk a lot about reforming the “system.”
As the end of the semester draws near and everyone is making summer plans, we wanted to throw something out there for those who will be sticking around in Gainesville for the next few months.
This week, students and residents of Gainesville will be able to have a discussion about capital punishment.
It’s that time of the week again! It’s the end ...
A report by the Florida Department of Corrections showed that 26.1 percent of all prisoners admitted for the fiscal year 2010-2011 were incarcerated for non-violent drug offenses, the most common type of offense for the year. As of June 30, 2011, non-violent drug offenders made up 18.4 percent of the total inmate population, still the most of any crime.
Last week, the leader of a neo-Nazi group claimed its members were conducting armed patrols of Sanford, Fla., where Trayvon Martin was shot.
On Monday, former Sen. Bob Graham encouraged students at Florida universities to speak out and make their voices heard to the state legislature and governor.
To celebrate Easter weekend, police in West Palm Beach dressed up as Easter bunnies.
Only a few more weeks of the semester left, and it’s getting close to crunch time on papers, projects and finals.
In 1907, Charles Evans Hughes, New York governor and eventual chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, said, “The judiciary is the safeguard of liberty ... under the Constitution.”
Have you ever been annoyed by something that someone posted on your Facebook wall?
A new proposal by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has many people scratching their heads, and rightly so.
A new poll by Harris Interactive/HealthDay presents some pretty troubling findings.
This week can definitely be summed up in one word: controversy.
In February, an African-American teenage boy was killed.
Facebook is essentially about two fundamental things: jealousy and exhibition.
This election season has definitely had its fair share of odd and unusual campaign advertisements.