Downtown festival draws flood of artwork, visitors
The sounds of eclectic music and smells of frying food drifted among droves of art lovers through the brick streets of downtown Gainesville Sunday.
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.
132 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The sounds of eclectic music and smells of frying food drifted among droves of art lovers through the brick streets of downtown Gainesville Sunday.
Drinking in Gainesville may feel a little less scientific by the end of the month.
Debbie Wasserman Schultz took one for the team.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reached a tally Monday of more than 100 people infected with fungal meningitis, though Florida has remained relatively unaffected.
Chipotle agreed to pay a penny more per pound of tomatoes as part of an initiative led by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers.
Gainesville tow-truck companies are frustrated, but not with angry drivers.
Some leafy greens at Publix may put more than a bad taste in your mouth.
Gary Simpson makes it out on the water, rod in hand, about 40 days a year.
It looked more like a cardboard convention than a political forum. Cars were lined with posters supporting their candidate of choice, and more signs lined the church lobby.
Drunk munchies may take on a new meaning Friday.
In the early weeks of Occupy Wall Street, movements popped up across the nation and the world. Occupy Gainesville soon followed suit.
The Gators baseball cap fit snugly around his salted black hair.
Jessica Nascimento went to McDonald’s for her favorite frappe, but she soon realized it would cost her more than she expected.
Amy Rigby found a lifelong love as a freshman.
Editor's Note: This article has been changed to reflect corrections.
There may be fewer tents up on football game days this year.
It was a typical sweltering Sunday night in Midtown: People wiped sweat from their foreheads and fanned themselves with any flat object they could find.
Visitors could hear the laughter before they saw the 25-foot-tall climbing wall towering over the downtown plaza.
There was a Black Hawk down on Flavet Field on Thursday afternoon.
In the weeks after Panhellenic sorority recruitment, an alternative group is hoping to attract women who are looking for a different sisterhood experience.