‘One of a kind’: Gainesville reacts to Sen. John McCain’s passing
By Jessica Giles | Aug. 26, 2018People from all political spectrums felt connected to the late Senator, who died on Saturday.
People from all political spectrums felt connected to the late Senator, who died on Saturday.
Michael Cohen, science nerds, freshman and more all earn some recognition in the Fall's first Darts and Laurels
The nomination of Kavanaugh puts Roe V. Wade in danger.
President Donald Trump has denigrated the press. As student journalists, and as readers, we must denounce it.
“Our destiny beyond the Earth is not only a matter of national identity but a matter of national security.”
When the panel left and the chairs were folded, a 3-year-old girl danced about the room in her sandals and pink dress.
National politics in the U.S. tend to drive people to different ends of the political spectrum. We can’t help but be drawn into the cyclone of outrage. It draws in everyone with a connection to TV or Twitter with a siren song — the talking heads on cable news essentially say, “Don’t worry. Don’t re-examine your position on immigration. Your instincts are right. Instead, get mad at these other guys.” What you may realize is that your associates and loved ones have radically different views. Stick to your position, but know that making a political point isn’t worth a ruined friendship.
It’s a recurring nightmare.
On Monday, President Donald Trump denied that Russia interfered with the 2016 election. What Trump did Monday flies in the face of U.S. intelligence agencies. Trump went against the CIA, FBI and NSA to side with the authoritarian ruler of a geopolitical foe. This begs the question: Is he really still acting like our president?
Activism combined with music Tuesday night after a weekend of nationwide protests against President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigration policies.
President Donald Trump, as you undoubtedly know, constantly reveals fissures in the American public. He has shown, time and again, where the faults and cracks run through our shared ideologies — where they break, at times being separated by wide chasms, and where they meet.
By enticing them with food, UF President Kent Fuchs convinced seven students to register to vote Monday.
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School senior Taryn Hibshman would’ve been in the Holocaust study class that Nikolas Cruz shot into on Valentine’s Day had she not left school early that day.
A professor who claims to be one of the few to have foreseen President Donald Trump would win the 2016 presidential election visited UF.
Dr. Francis Collins remembers playing guitar and singing Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are a-Changin’” at a dinner party in front of three U.S. Supreme Court chief justices — not long after the landmark 2015 decision to allow same-sex marriage nationwide.
Gail Johnson walked into First Magnitude Brewing Company with her arms raised to silence the crowd of about 60 supporters who were still watching voter results pour in.
An online panel of Alachua County and Gainesville politicians and political experts predicted City Commissioners Charles Goston and Harvey Budd will be re-elected in Tuesday’s municipal election.
For 17 minutes, about 100 Eastside High School students, arms linked, stood silent in their school courtyard Wednesday morning. Catherine Sarosi, 18, had never heard her classmates so quiet.
Charles Goston doesn’t care if you remember his name in ten years — so long as the effect he had in Gainesville is everlasting.