Florida fails to clinch SEC East title
By GREG LUCA | Feb. 27, 2011LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Gators will need at least one more game to clinch the Southeastern Conference East crown.
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Gators will need at least one more game to clinch the Southeastern Conference East crown.
A gem, two more quality starts and a hidden-ball trick later, top-ranked Florida exited the weekend with a series sweep over Boston College.
The defending national champions can finally call the Southeastern Conference their own.
To lure offensive coordinator Charlie Weis away from the NFL, Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley made him the highest paid assistant in school history.
The Gators were untouched all season.
Labeling the final chapter to a tough season for Florida, only one word seems to fit.
Florida seniors Logan Storie and Alex Martin improved their chances of ending their careers at Florida with titles at the NCAA Championships by posting qualifying times at the at the Bulldog Last Chance Meet this weekend in Athens, Ga.
It seems no one has an answer to the No. 4 Florida softball team.
Without two of their top five golfers in the John Hayt Invitational, the onus would be on the Gators’ three remaining regulars to lead the team.
The idea of students sporting holsters does not appeal to Ben Meyers.
A crowd of Planned Parenthood supporters paraded down Northwest 10th Ave. on Saturday, toting pink signs and celebrating when cars honked their horns.
March 3, 1974: Gainesville is hit hard by the national energy crisis, despite news that the problem is abating.
Though more than 1,000 people applied to attend, about 400 were invited to take part in Saturday’s second-annual TEDxUF, an independently organized event featuring local speakers from miscellaneous backgrounds working on the theme “Challenging the Unknown.”
That name inevitably evokes a knee-jerk reaction from all who hear it. For some, it is an organization providing needed health services to men and women, while to others it is a force perpetuating one of the greatest moral crises of our time.
A new generation of science whizzes competed Saturday in the New Physics Building, where some of those students will have classes in a year or two, for the chance to go to the National Science Bowl.
He takes corners like he’s in a go-kart, stops like he’s in a Miata and edges curbs like he’s in a street-sweeper.
After 27 hours of labor from 1,200 volunteers, 50 gallons of paint and 15 giant citrus trees, Duval Elementary School got a makeover this past weekend.
After the pitch pipe buzzed, toes tapped to the sound of harmonious voices that carried new renditions of well-known melodies.
Hold on to your wallets, Gators.
It takes almost-superhuman strength to crush steel.