Student Senate appointment calls classification into question
By Colleen Wright | Sep. 3, 2013One senator’s appointment at Tuesday night’s Student Senate meeting grew into a greater discussion about academic classification.
One senator’s appointment at Tuesday night’s Student Senate meeting grew into a greater discussion about academic classification.
While UF students are gearing back up for school, the Student Senate is already prepared to take on the Fall 2013 Student Government elections.
Welcome to the Fall 2013 semester!
Student Body President Christina Bonarrigo and her administration — Vice President Joselyn Rivas and Treasurer Jayce Victor — celebrated 100 days in office last week.
UF students won’t be voting in Student Government elections from their smartphones or off-campus apartments anytime soon.
In keeping with her campaign platform, UF Student Body President Christina Bonarrigo kicked off her first Lunch on the Lawn with Bon event Tuesday on the Plaza of the Americas.
UF Student Body President Christina Bonarrigo has on campus covered. Now, she’s going online.
Due to an outstanding debt of almost $30,000, delivery of both The New York Times and USA Today to the UF campus has been suspended.
At the final Student Senate meeting of the semester, senators’ goodbye speeches were overshadowed by one Replacement and Agenda Committee recommendation Tuesday night.
I was raised on the notion that with hard work, qualifications and passion, no job or goal is out of reach.
Forty-six out of the 50 Student Government executive committee nominations sailed through unanimous Student Senate approval Tuesday night.
If there’s one lesson I learned this week, it’s that hard work can make anything possible.
The UF Supreme Court ruled the Student Body president may fire members at his or her own discretion under the Student Body Constitution.
The UF Student Senate unanimously passed a resolution Tuesday thanking President Barack Obama for visiting Israel.
Nationally renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson will speak at UF on April 3.
Newly elected and re-elected student senators raised their right hands and pledged as their victories were approved Tuesday night.
The UF Supreme Court did not come to a conclusion Sunday night regarding the constitutionality of UF’s Student Government executive branch’s power to remove directors.
Last night, the Swamp Party took the available UF Student Government seats by storm.
You should care about your Student Government because you pay $16.06 per credit hour, about $385 a year if you are a full-time undergraduate or $289 if you are a graduate student.
A new website — which claims to have been made by the “silent majority” — criticizes the Swamp Party and its presidential candidate.