Over Easy Creative to leave Gainesville after final show
By Gabriella Paul | Apr. 3, 2018Creator of Over Easy Creative, Les Voss, is “big easy” bound the first week of May.
Creator of Over Easy Creative, Les Voss, is “big easy” bound the first week of May.
With leather and lipstick galore, High Dive is traveling back in time to the Rockabilly era with the help of Gainesville’s Eclectic Electric.
The next three days are jam-packed with unique local events. From markets to music to food and beer, Gainesville has something for everyone.
There are two types of seniors at UF, and you’re either one or the other.
We talked about juggling school and producing, how he tackles being one of the youngest producers out there, progressive house and music in general.
Rick Pitino is not a happy man right now.
Jonathan India gets most of the fanfare. And for good reason.
Gainesville Police is investigating the immigration status of the Guatemalan nationals involved in an arrest Sunday.
A UF researcher is breeding pumpkins to make one that has good flesh and good seeds. Normally, the fruit only has one or the other.
Doctors now have a quick way to identify patients with traumatic brain injuries while avoiding radiation and reducing costs.
When Nicole Beisel talks about her research, some people think she’s studying science fiction.
Ariana Burga used to study at table by a window on the third-floor of Marston Science Library almost every day — including weekends — to study for organic chemistry I, biology and calculus II.
Dr. Francis Collins remembers playing guitar and singing Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are a-Changin’” at a dinner party in front of three U.S. Supreme Court chief justices — not long after the landmark 2015 decision to allow same-sex marriage nationwide.
Fuchs announced that UF would have an amnesty program for parking tickets.
Lauren Waidner prepared to tee off at the 11th hole of the Mark Bostick Golf Course on March 10.
It’s cliché to say that in most college athletic programs, your teammates become your family. But for Florida’s softball team, it’s exactly that kind of mentality that helps its program succeed when it faces long road-game stretches.
If the Florida women’s tennis team was expecting an ordinary contest walking into its match against Texas at the USTA Campus on Easter Sunday, it was sorely mistaken.
David Horne said a rock thrown at Tigert Hall in the ‘70s sent things out of control.
Lloydricia Cameron waited four years to hear her name called over the speakers at James G. Pressly Stadium.
The Gators have every reason to be happy. The team remains undefeated in conference play, and its only three losses of the season came against ranked opponents.