Morning thunderstorms cause tornado, flood warnings
By Max Chesnes | Apr. 4, 2017Alachua County residents woke up to thunderstorms, flooding and a tornado warning on Tuesday.
Alachua County residents woke up to thunderstorms, flooding and a tornado warning on Tuesday.
The Gators women’s golf team was housed by a local family — the Bryants — during the second annual Clemson Invitational over the weekend. However, that was the extent of all hospitality expressed toward UF during its stay.
Gordon Neale stepped up to a 25-foot putt on the 18th hole.
Nineteen games into the season, Roland Thornqvist doesn’t have his lineup figured out.
Usually the NBA’s annual MVP race is fairly clear cut.
There was nothing Alicia Boren could do but watch.
In the late 1980s, Jim McElwain was starting to get his feet wet by coaching as an assistant at Eastern Washington. Around the same time, he was approached with an opportunity that could have altered the course of his career.
After a months-long search, UF’s Multicultural and Diversity Affairs officials have chosen Will Atkins as the new executive director.
After two weeks of not having bargaining meetings, UF negotiators came forward without a counteroffer to Graduate Assistants United.
Seventy-five years after enlisting in the U.S. Army, Charles Moloney Sr. was honored for his service on Friday.
Clarification: About 750 supporters and 25 protestors were at the University Auditorium
Gainesville-area residents will soon have a second chance to voice concerns to Rep. Ted Yoho after months of protests.
Contact Molly Vossler at mvossler@alligator.org and follow her on Twitter at @molly_vossler
A man asleep behind the wheel of his car on Sunday made matters worse after his foot slipped off the brake, causing his car to collide with an Alachua County Sheriff’s Office patrol car.
Fans of fried chicken and biscuits have a reason to wake up today.
Comic book and anime fans can cosplay their favorite characters this weekend.
Cars, trucks and motorcycles will line the streets of downtown this Saturday during the first Great Gainesville Car show.
On Monday night, a small group of UF students carried signs and yelled into megaphones in protest of Ben Shapiro’s appearance on campus. Remarkably outnumbered by students waiting in a snaking line to see the controversial conservative talking head, the protesters stood in the name of morality, for the sake of letting UF know that they wouldn’t stand for Shapiro’s anti-LGBTQ+ stances.
Passion. What a word. As college students, this word probably means a lot to a good number of us. We’re told time and time again to major in something we love and to join organizations centered around ideas we’re passionate about. The funny thing about this is that when we first arrived on campus armed with twin XL sheets and a shower caddy, a lot of us may have thought we knew what we were passionate about, only to change our minds a little further down the road.
The other week in my English theory course, we were talking about sexuality, feminism and the issues of gender. Specifically, we were dissecting works like Michel Foucault’s “The History of Sexuality,” Donna Haraway’s “A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s” and Judith Butler’s “Gender Trouble.” If you know any of the three of these works, then you’d know they all share one thing in common: density. These works are all so dense that it takes a significant amount of poise to parse through them, though even at times, I find the lazier side of myself resorting to calling their arguments “wack” and closing the book.