Gainesville noise leaves moths disoriented, study shows
By Priya Dames | Nov. 7, 2019After almost seven years of research, UF scientists are beginning to understand Gainesville’s nocturnal residents a little better.
After almost seven years of research, UF scientists are beginning to understand Gainesville’s nocturnal residents a little better.
They are in your backyard and at the border of your fence, dangerously taking over.
We’ve all heard the phrase “Education is the key to success,” and it’s especially thrown in the face of college students. Choosing a major during freshman orientation can seem like a monumental decision that dictates the trajectory of the rest of your life. I’m here to attest to the fact that it’s a lie.
You’ve spent an hour jogging on this nature trail, but you’ve already started regretting coming into existence. Walking along a bustling stream seems like a nice idea on paper, but no one ever talks about the mosquitoes in their poems.
According to the American Psychiatric Association (APA), ethnic and racial minorities often bear a disproportionately high burden of disability resulting from mental disorders. Yet, by 2044, models show more than half of all Americans will belong to a minority group. Taken altogether, this seems to indicate troubled waters on our horizons, and it should speak to the importance of cultural sensitivity in mental health training.
When Florida lawmakers postponed a bill to arm teachers back in April, March for Our Lives activists vowed to return to the Florida State Capitol to carry on their fight to end gun violence.
Their last Gainesville show was in August
3,000 tickets were sold for the festival
Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe go toe-to-toe in Robert Egger’s new film
Aram Han Sifuentes showed students how to make art political
There’s a hat rack just outside of the dark wooden doors that open up to the College Football Playoff selection room at the Gaylord Texan Resort.
Florida’s women’s basketball team was engaged in a back-and-forth battle with Grambling State on Tuesday night.
Coach Becky Burleigh looked intense as ever in her classic black Gators jacket. Her eyes had a slight squint as she watched her team barely hang on to a one-goal lead.
Silence spread throughout the O’Connell Center.
The Freshman Leadership Council, a UF Student Government agency that has existed for 15 years, never commenced this semester. The person in charge says it is “intact.”
After 12-hour work days for her architecture class, Grace Gallagher’s favorite thing to do during the late nights is go out and take a breath of fresh air — an option she may not have for much longer.
Students took to the Student Government Senate chamber Tuesday night to demand the resignation of the Student Body President from his office after emails were released last week between him and a President Donald Trump reelection campaign official.
Graduate Assistants United released a press release Tuesday morning demanding UF revise its research and competition prize policy and give a UF engineering team the $2 million prize it won.
Stress is hard to handle when you first experience it. As college students, we are constantly thrown into situations that test our mental and physical capabilities. But it turns out we might actually enjoy it.
On Oct. 24, The New York Times reported that the Department of Justice raised U.S. Attorney General John Durham’s probe into the origins of the Mueller investigation to a criminal inquiry. What does all this mean? And why is this concerning for our democracy?