Improv comedy groups prepare for annual festival
By Miguel Chateloin | Jan. 18, 2011Luke Sipka enters from stage right portraying a member of a marching band, based on a situation suggested by the audience.
Luke Sipka enters from stage right portraying a member of a marching band, based on a situation suggested by the audience.
“There is no cheat sheet for life…”.
Laura Ellermeyer, author of Tuesday’s tutoring column, could have gone to TA sessions for free to prepare for the exam. ECO 2013 has TAs available seven periods a day, five days a week. I’m not sure if practice tests were made available last semester. They usually are and are by far the best way to prepare for an exam.
A mohawk never stopped Chuck Hurley from working.
Ever notice how you have all the right opinions? Why don’t more people think like you? Think back to when you were young, and imagine a situation where you and your fellow classmates were all “competing” to be the best at something. How about the most interesting show-and-tell piece? We’ll go with that.
One City Commission candidate is voicing her opposition to the idea of merging the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office and the Gainesville Police Department.
Sales of UF’s discounted Microsoft Office discs have been bringing business to both the UF Bookstore and the Computer Help Desk.
Everyone has someone they’d love to bring down a notch. There’s always that guy in class who’s a little too smug in his answers, that coworker with her holier-than-thou attitude.
When state Rep. Kelli Stargel filed a bill that would require elementary school teachers to grade not only students’ progress but parents’ participation, we rejoiced a little.
In “Teenage pregnancy not so glamorous,” Anita Babbitt argues that abstinence-only sex education is to blame for higher teen pregnancy rates.
With the exception of Gators football, I have not seen anything in my years at UF that has united the student body quite like block tuition.
Alachua County Commissioners debated Tuesday how more than $1 million meant for charities should be allocated.
People used to find out what happened in their city hall by a bellman who, after every meeting, rang his bell and announced the news to the passing people. Our cities have expanded, and newspapers have taken up the role of informer.
The running support of UF students for the people of Haiti warmed up a particularly cold morning Saturday.
After finding out about the zodiac change, Dana Orlando logged on to Facebook and posted, “What is an Ophiuchus, and why am I now one of these?”
Timothy Miles aspires to study electrical engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology, but right now he is just trying to turn in his homework on time.
In the winter of 2009, Ben Meyers needed to get his drunk friend home. As they came out of a midtown bar, they spotted a taxi parked on the street. This would be a great way, Meyers thought, to get a lift for the mile walk back to Fraternity Row.
The race for one of Florida’s U.S. Senate seats is officially under way, and UF has one of its own professors in the political battle.
As Erving Walker stood at the free-throw line for a one-and-one with his team down by a point and 1:09 left, Gators fans looked on with bated breath.
Following the Florida gymnastics squad’s first meet Jan. 7, coach Rhonda Faehn said the team would be playing around with its lineups this season, allowing some athletes to rest while others gain exposure in new events.