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Sunday, July 13, 2025

El Caimán

Florida Alligator
OPINION  |  EDITORIALS

A Senseless Death

Only a few hours after a UF student died, presumably in an alcohol-related car accident, UF President Bernie Machen used the news to fuel the fire against underage drinking.


Florida Alligator
SPORTS  |  FOOTBALL

Men's hoops receives championship rings

The 2006-07 UF men's basketball team may have received its national championship rings Saturday at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, but former UF forward Chris Richard got a sneak peak at the piece of jewelry in an unlikely location.


SPORTS  |  FOOTBALL

Blue-Out Blowout

It happened quietly in a split second by UF's bench, but safety Tony Joiner might as well have shouted his message over The Swamp's loudspeakers Saturday.


Florida Alligator
OPINION  |  LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Sports writer made UF proud on ESPN

I just wanted to congratulate Mike McCall on a completely enjoyable 10 minutes of ripping into the University of Tennessee on ESPN on Thursday. He started off a little weak, saying Rocky Top was one of the great traditions in college football, but recouped with a dig about being surprised that 100,000 people from Tennessee are able to memorize anything at all, and it all went uphill from there.


NEWS  |  FEATURES

Looking for Red amongst the Orange and Blue.

(Scott Robertson / Alligator Staff) Fred Thompson (third from left), who is running on the Republican ticket for the 2008 presidential election, talks to a fan before the University of Tennessee game outside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on Saturday. Fred Thompson, who formally announced his bid for the Republican ticket on Sept. 5, stopped in Gainesville during his campaign to accept an invitation to sit with UF President Bernie Machen in the president's box during the game.


Florida Alligator
OPINION  |  LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Bright Futures' requirements too low

I am writing in response to Daniel Burroughs's guest column in Thursday's Alligator, "Florida must keep Bright Futures Scholarship Program." The assertion that Florida must maintain the Bright Futures program unchanged is, at best, misguided. The state cannot sustain the financial burden of maintaining Bright Futures' low standards indefinitely. Bright Futures pays 75 percent tuition for a mediocre 3.0 weighted high school grade point average and an SAT score of 970 - 51 points below the national average.


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