Organizations giving students free rides for early voting
By Adrianna Paidas | Jan. 23, 2012Early voting for the Republican Presidential Preference Primary and Gainesville city elections will continue today and run until Saturday.
Early voting for the Republican Presidential Preference Primary and Gainesville city elections will continue today and run until Saturday.
Thanks to a UF freshman, 500 students will receive blue gloves when the doors open at 11 a.m. for Saturday's men's basketball game against Mississippi State University.
When Florida defeated Baylor on Sunday, there was plenty of praise to go around.
Two suspects in the home invasion and killing of a 78-year-old Gainesville man are on suicide watch.
Florida added to its 2012 class Monday with the commitment of three-star defensive end Alex McCalister.
Some students and Gainesville residents could pay a little more for apartment living next year.
From 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., visitors can walk through Monsanto's America's Farmers Mobile Experience, an exhibit explaining today's farming practices and technology.
UF researchers have developed a new gene therapy that could be used to treat a form of blindness.
UF's College of Journalism and Communications announced Thursday that a new master's program will start taking students during Summer B.
Gov. Rick Scott questioned in October why taxpayers' money should go to educate anthropologists when no jobs are available for them.
The Florida Museum of Natural History has a new triceratops horridus skeleton cast.
The Alachua County Coalition for the Homeless and Hungry Inc. will conduct its annual homeless survey today and Wednesday.
A UF student recovered his stolen bike Sunday night after coordinating a sting operation with Gainesville Police.
The Transportation Security Administration might as well be a four-letter word for people who have ever made a trip through the airport.
On Jan. 28, UF alumnus Barrett Keene will start walking, stopping in major cities to spread awareness about and raise funds for orphaned and abandoned children.
Families and students from different cultures celebrated the Chinese New Year with singing, dancing and music on Sunday night.
While I couldn't really figure out exactly what Travis Hornsby was advocating for or complaining about, the main thrust of his column on Monday — that poor people would be just fine if only the rich were allowed to hang onto their assets in totality — is just plain wrong.
Despite former President John F. Kennedy's adage, the sole justification for laws is to benefit and protect the citizens they govern.
Although UF's Engineers Week has been around for 60 years, this year it will make history as the first to be green-certified by UF's Office of Sustainability.
Bicyclists' wallets may be getting a little lighter, and not just because they're saving on gas.