Broncos prepare for biggest-home game in school history
Sep. 2, 2009THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The fate of freshman wide receiver Andre Debose will not be decided this week.
A huge battle was won at Tuesday night's Senate meeting in the war of Student Government transparency. The Progress Party's leading example of having voting records made public was echoed by President Jordan Johnson and the Unite Party.
Bivens Arm is getting a makeover.
Though 90,000 cheering fans will fill the Swamp on Saturday, one thing will be missing: carbon emissions.
At the political circus that unfolded on the lawn of the North Florida Regional Medical Center Wednesday, Hope Kelly played the role of a clown who lost her smile a long time ago.
Student Government's political parties will interview potential Senate candidates at the Reitz Union today, Friday and Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Florida started fall practice hoping to have one of the wide receivers emerge as the likely candidate to replace Percy Harvin.
Editor's Note:The five reader contestants in the alligatorSports Fantasy Challenge have been selected. Read each challenger's 100-word entry below and check back from time to time for updates on the league's progress.
The biggest buzz about Saturday's Charleston Southern game may have been a point spread that never was.
The word was all over the white board in Florida's practice facility Wednesday - the area coach Mary Wise thinks her team needs to improve the most before the next match: blocking.
UF students can add another company to their list of textbook providers.
Changing the world starts one sole at a time. No - that's not a typo. It's a revolutionary philosophy that former "The Amazing Race" reality star Blake Mycoskie lives by. When he started Toms Shoes three years ago, he promised that with every shoe purchased another would be donated to a developing nation.
Only at Mamaw Menagerie can $5 make your heart content.
Tuesday's letters to the editor by Nina Martinez and Mark Jaskowski are both misleading and unjustly give credit to the Progress Party. It wasn't Progress that initiated discussions to save The New York Times on campus. Instead it was the Orange and Blue Party that repeatedly questioned the Budget Committee for the past month and brought the issue to the student body.
To the oblivious masses of pedestrians:
City Commissioner Craig Lowe is moving on up - or at least he hopes to.
Students may have the chance to catch a better glimpse of what their elected representatives are up to after Student Body President Jordan Johnson revealed a new policy in Tuesday night's Student Senate meeting.