This week in Gainesville
By Kat Bein | Mar. 20, 2011March 21, 1966: John Due becomes the first African-American to run for state Senate since the days of Reconstruction when he announces his candidacy for the District 6 seat in Gainesville.
March 21, 1966: John Due becomes the first African-American to run for state Senate since the days of Reconstruction when he announces his candidacy for the District 6 seat in Gainesville.
The Harn Museum of Art will open an expanded 26,000-square-foot Asian art wing to the public in spring 2012.
UF junior Courtney Read said almost all she can recall from her hypnosis was riding a motorcycle in a sandy, cactus-filled desert in Arizona.
As the sun set over the Plaza of the Americas on Saturday night, three women with dirt-smudged faces, torn clothes and leaves in their tangled hair gathered around a tire.
The 2010 census results show that the county grew by 29,381 people since 2000, putting the latest population count at 247,336.
The scene at Kanapaha Park had all the symptoms of a typical Sunday afternoon.
Day two at the Schenkel Invitational followed a similar script as
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In the UCF Black and Gold Challenge, two Gators claimed the
TAMPA— After a year filled with clutch shots in big moments, there
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The Florida men’s golf team came into this weekends Schenkel
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After relief pitcher Tommy Toledo surrendered the go-ahead run in
The
By STEPHEN SHEEHAN