Student organizations band together to get students to vote
By Catherine Dickson | Nov. 2, 2016Five student organizations are working together to get UF students to the polls today.
Five student organizations are working together to get UF students to the polls today.
Get to know the Republican and Democrat candidates for the Florida Senate.
A UF alumnus running for U.S. Congress met with UF students Wednesday to encourage them to vote.
When Maya Punjwani, 19, spotted Aja Naomi King on the Plaza of the Americas on Tuesday afternoon, she ran up to the actress.
Get to know the candidates before you vote for them on November 8.
There’s more than enough chatter going on in the country about Hillary Clinton’s emails. Like Bernie Sanders said months ago, nobody wants to hear about these damn emails anymore. Even with the FBI re-opening the case in the wake of ex-congressman Anthony Weiner’s premature evacuation, voters seem to be over Clinton’s email fiasco. As FBI Director James B. Comey said, we agree that Clinton’s handling of the emails was irresponsible, but it was by no means illegal. Like Clinton, we’re confident her political enemies will, once again, be disappointed when the newest batch of emails really contains nothing controversial.
A UF student said she was turned away from voting Thursday for wearing a sweatshirt.
Julianna Johnson, 18, emailed her professor Wednesday asking if she could turn in her assignment by email.
Halloween is a time for goblins, ghosts, witches, wizards and other spooky creatures to come out. But still the scariest thing is voter suppression.
The day after the general election, Ronnie Sartain will remove the 5-foot purple swastika spray-painted on his garage door.
A crowd of about 500 people filled the Reitz Union Rion Ballroom Tuesday to hear two prospective Florida state senators face off to represent Alachua County.
Side by side, Gainesville Mayor Lauren Poe and Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine did the Gator Chomp on Sunday afternoon.
Update: Tim Kaine will be speaking at the Reitz Union on UF's campus at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
Hours before the final presidential debate began, Gainesville resident Kyle Young made his stance known, painting “Trump is Revolution” and “Hillary for Prison” on the graffiti-filled 34th Street Wall.
With no protesters in sight, thousands of eager voters snaked their way through a parking lot before packing into a raucous Ocala stadium Wednesday to hear Donald Trump speak.
Aqueela Khuddus refused to say Donald Trump’s name Monday night, insisting she wanted to keep her mouth clean.
Following a weekend of unflattering revelations for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, students on both sides of the political aisle gathered Sunday to listen to the presidential candidates debate for a second time.
Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate, will hold a campaign rally Oct. 12 in Ocala.
About a week after the first presidential debate, students and Gainesville residents came together Tuesday night to watch U.S. vice presidential candidates Sen. Tim Kaine and Gov. Mike Pence debate.
Jared Lamberg and his family were the first ones to greet Jason Collins on Turlington Plaza on Friday morning.