Humans vs. Zombies takes bite out of University of Florida
By Wade Millward | Apr. 10, 2012About 400 students are ready for Humans vs. Zombies, the five-day, apocalyptic game of tag played across campus that begins today.
About 400 students are ready for Humans vs. Zombies, the five-day, apocalyptic game of tag played across campus that begins today.
Student Senate President Aundre Price announced at Tuesday’s meeting that he is forming a temporary committee to take action against hate crimes at UF.
The annual event, hosted by members of the UF chapters of Gamma Eta sorority and Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, gave guests a second chance at a high school prom.
David Denslow, a professor in the Warrington College of Business Administration, will retire during the summer after more than 40 years at UF.
Facebook expanded its network and dominance over social media Monday by purchasing mobile photo-sharing app Instagram for about $1 billion.
Organizers suggest bringing a fire extinguisher to Pride Awareness Month’s annual drag show — it’s going to get hot.
A national organization will honor Innovation Square for its project to develop Gainesville’s economy.
A car fire next to Southwest Recreation Center and the Harn Museum left one man in jail and another without a ride.
The UF School of Theatre and Dance has gone Gaga.
When Ronald Powell left the field with a knee injury in Saturday’s spring game, coach Will Muschamp hardly seemed worried.
The lion changing colors almost every week isn’t the only special thing about UF’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house.
Students can experience Ron Swanson’s Pyramid of Greatness for themselves when Nick Offerman, the actor who plays him on “Parks and Recreation,” performs at the Reitz Union’s Rion Ballroom Wednesday night.
For the first time this season, Florida isn’t considered the best team in college baseball.
JOHN: All of the offseason signals pointed to the belief that Ronald Powell was finally becoming the elite playmaker on defense he was recruited to be.
Some Gainesville residents are concerned about drivers whizzing through their neighborhoods.
Florida’s fall from the top of the college baseball polls was a swift one — one that surely has people questioning if this team is as good as it was advertised to be entering the season.
As the semester comes to an end, an inconvenient reality kicks in: moving day.
Handcuffed inside a police car, a Gainesville man kicked through a back seat window Easter morning.
A shot sails past the baseline. A backhand slams into the net. A second serve lands just out for a double fault.
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.