Museum to open in memory of accomplished black educator
By Meryl Kornfield | Feb. 27, 2017When A. Quinn Jones Sr. moved into his Gainesville home in 1925, the U.S. was still 29 years away from the birth of the civil rights movement.
When A. Quinn Jones Sr. moved into his Gainesville home in 1925, the U.S. was still 29 years away from the birth of the civil rights movement.
Grace Shan wrote “loved” in green ink on a paper outline of a person’s body.
Anushka Gupta can still hear Karan Khullar’s voice in her head.
The Citrus County Sheriff’s Office on Monday identified the man who was shot and killed by deputies after allegedly firing a rifle at the Sabal Trail Transmission pipeline and leading a car chase.
One in five people will experience mental illness while in middle or high school.
The past two months have exhausted Ana Guevara.
Craig Carter is afraid of needles.
To Nam Diep, adding new and innovative choices to a menu is just another day at work.
Students in Karen Melvin’s kindergarten class cracked open brown and white eggs on Monday. Much to the surprise of some, the contents of the eggs were all the same color.
With the help of a new app, UF employees are using cartoon characters to guide children with cancer through their treatment.
That headline was intentional, Mike Foley. Don’t get your wrap-around glasses in a bunch.
To my readers who may not be athletic or interested in sports, I apologize to you for my incoming analogies which may be lacking in relevance to you. For the rest of you, have you ever noticed how you must change the way you maneuver when you play on a different court or field? For those who have ever played tennis, football or volleyball, you are probably saying to yourself right now, “Yes, idiot. That’s obvious.” Right now, I’m also telling myself that same message because, at least instinctively, you’d catch me dead before you’d catch me taking a charge on a concrete basketball court.
We will take a bit of an esoteric approach today, instead of launching into a commentary on the Oscar picks. We’re sure the events of the Oscars are plastered all across social media. There’s a lot we could talk about: the political overtones of the night, the
Chase Perez-Blanco served the ball on a critical deuce point. He was serving for match point against the third-ranked player nationally, Ohio State’s Hugo Di Feo.
After winning the draw control to open the second half, Southern California’s Kerrigan Miller rushed down the field.
Andres Arroyo led the pack after 400 meters.
Over the weekend, several UF swimmers competed in the Last Chance Meet in Gainesville for a chance to earn qualifying times for the NCAA Championships in Indianapolis.
Freshman Jaimie Hoover was the leadoff hitter in the top of the fourth inning for Florida.
As the game’s remaining seconds ticked away at the O’Connell Center, Amanda Butler motioned toward referee Kelly Johnson and asked for a 30-second timeout.
To Gators fans, Florida’s 76-66 loss to Kentucky probably felt like a slap in the face.