UF in India program gives UF students rural experience
By ALYSSA LaRENZIE | Aug. 4, 2008Sitting outside of a coffee shop, Hanna Moerland sipped from a cup of tea and reflected on her state of reverse culture shock.
Sitting outside of a coffee shop, Hanna Moerland sipped from a cup of tea and reflected on her state of reverse culture shock.
This story is the first in a three-part series on the trend of "going green."
He started in elementary school with fist fights and marijuana joints.
A city with no "help wanted" signs, zero classified ads and no applications. A desk covered in backed-up bills and a car with an empty tank of gas. A passing dream of a loyal paycheck.
Some people watch TV as a way to rest their minds and avoid meaningful conversations after a hard day.
Benjamin Hebblethwaite stared at Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous words from his "I Have a Dream" speech displayed on the computer screen.
Josh Kaplan waited in line for six hours when the iPhone came out in June 2007 and was able to get one the same day.
If subleasing in Gainesville was a club, it would be the type of club where you have to know someone to get in.
Putting pain into words can be difficult.
The night ended with a rhythmic reggae beat pulsing through thick, humid Florida air.
Most people have to get oil changes every three months.
Stephen Cypen said it took him about 30 seconds after seeing a letter from UF\'s Documentary Institute to make the decision to donate $200,000 for an upcoming film about a Holocaust victim.
When it comes to filming documentaries, Boaz Dvir and Rebecca Goldman are fast learners -as fast as 60 mph.
Patty Dingman and Anuk do not miss an episode of "Grey's Anatomy."
Beetles about the size of Abraham Lincoln's nose on the penny are swiftly eliminating trees across the southeastern U.S.
Miami-Dade County followed the lead of other Florida counties and cities, enacting domestic partnership benefits for non-married couples regardless of sexual orientation Tuesday.
Martin McBriarty, a UF materials science and engineering senior, is calling all Gainesville residents to donate scraps and junk for his personal summer project: creating a nearly 40-pound robot costume.
When Stephanie Yelverton woke up after the first one, she couldn't remember her own name. The seizure had scrambled her mind so thoroughly that she didn't recognize the face of her worried mother waving to her as the doors of the ambulance closed her inside.
Andrew Enriquez, a third-year history student, had 212 friends, pumped iron whenever he could and loved listening to Tupac - according to his Facebook profile.
With the whip of a colorful sari, the beat of an African drum and the fluttering wave of a fan, UF dancers held their audience spellbound with every kick, twirl and back flip.