First day of SG elections has high turnout
By Caitlin Ostroff | Sep. 29, 2015The first day of voting for the Fall Student Government elections saw 6,427 students voting.
The first day of voting for the Fall Student Government elections saw 6,427 students voting.
UF animal sciences freshman Kristen Lyons walked barefoot up Museum Road, high heels and resumes in hand.
Tables in the Reitz Union glittered with sterling silver necklaces and bracelets.
Despite being in a state where the average temperature doesn’t dip below 65 degrees, UF is labeled a "cool school."
More research is in UF’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences’ future.
After taking a UF engineering entrepreneurship class, three UF alumni knew they wanted to use the skills they were learning in school to help people.
What was meant to be an open dialogue for students to learn more about Student Government turned into a debate.
After two weeks of heavy campaigning from Access Party and Impact Party, the Fall 2015 Student Government elections start today.
At Saturday’s UF vs. University of Tennessee football game, Gators cheered "It’s great to be a Florida Gator," but the band didn’t initiate the penalty chant, "Move back, you suck."
When Brittany Ferguson painted her childhood hero, Malcolm X, in July, she had no idea his daughter would be holding the painting two months later.
UF sociology senior Gigi Bermudez said there are standards that define how Americans see beauty: blonde hair, blue eyes, fair skin and a slim figure.
UF engineering students hope to welcome the future with a new club.
Last year, Natalie McGriff hated her hair.
Heaven gained an angel. That was the consensus at a memorial service Friday morning.
In between student-organization tables on Turlington Plaza, UF senior Manny Rutinel shed his polo shirt for a pink pig onesie.
UF soil and water science professor Sabine Grunwald practices mindfulness everywhere, even in her office. She keeps her yoga mat stashed underneath her desk.
Friday’s temperature reached 88 degrees, but to one student, it was sweater weather.
When Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art partygoers walked through its doors, they were greeted by giant colorful candles and silver balloons with tinsel strings.