Lacroix closes in on record, men's team sweeps UCF
By THOMAS NASSIFF< | Feb. 4, 2011When any team is getting ready to play its biggest rival, it can be
When any team is getting ready to play its biggest rival, it can be
We were in the car about to leave as a group of around 15 guys walked past us. One of them thought it was perfectly appropriate to come up and physically open the driver’s door of our car to inquire if we wanted to accompany them to a bar.
Like the old adage says, “Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.”
Thursday's City Commission meeting was animated to say the least.
Game journalists should share their thoughts. If stories are the bridge between writers and their audience, opinions are the truss that strengthens it.
Kenny Boynton will once again be face-to-face with an old friend and bitter rival Saturday.
Two old-school franchises promise a captivating clash in Dallas.
Despite losing its star player in the second half, Ole Miss still found a way to beat Florida on Thursday night in the O’Connell Center.
When the No. 7 Florida men’s tennis team takes on two of its in-state rivals this weekend, it will be led by the reigning Southeastern Conference Player of the Week.
Florida became the second school since 2008 to win all four weekly Southeastern Conference awards after a stellar meet against Tennessee on Saturday and a sweep of Indian River State College on Sunday.
The women’s track and field team is not ranked like the No. 1 men, but it is motivated to change that.
Both squads will roll into the O’Connell Center with unshaken records.
Mike Antheil has three goals in mind when he comes to Gainesville: solar panels on every rooftop, biomass energy from every farm and renewable energy on every property.
A UF professor was arrested Jan. 27 by University Police on charges of funding trips to Malaysia on a UF credit card as far back as 2008, according to the police report.
After years of debate, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has finally released an official cleanup plan that will eliminate the Cabot-Koppers Superfund site pollution that has plagued Alachua County for decades.
The City Commission overturned an earlier ruling Thursday that allowed Bruce Baber to run his dog-walking business from his house.
Finding a new planet isn’t the kind of thing that’s traditionally on a scientist’s daily itinerary. In the realm of science, it’s like winning a Super Bowl, meeting the pope and finding an extra $10 in your jeans all wrapped into one.
Growing up, Bobby Kelley didn’t come from money. When back-to-school shopping season came, he was forced to choose five outfits and keep them nice all year.
In response to Wednesday’s “Two to Tango,” I wanted to address your levity in what should be a grave issue: Abortion and prostitution should never be joking matters. First, your semantics are deceptive because after watching Live Action’s 11-minute “conversation, ” it is clear Live Action’s intent is not as “anti-abortion” as it is “pro-life” and pro-law (unlike Planned Parenthood’s foul employee who dropped the f-bomb at least six times). The behavior of this worker is morally reprehensible by both our federal government and the state of New Jersey. Certainly, the ex-employee in the video “went against company policy,” but if you dig a little deeper into Live Action’s work throughout the past three years, you realize that this is not an isolated incident in the company, which the video pointed out received more than $300 million per year in federal funding. It seems that if an organization is unable to monitor employees who are consistently breaking federal and state statutes, perhaps tax dollars should be steered away from supporting potential company hazards. It seems Planned Parenthood has gotten itself in a tight spot, and Lila Rose’s incredible initiative to utilize social media is finally forcing them to reconsider their inability to smooth out what is rightfully the most controversial issue on our nation’s conscience.
In response to Wednesday’s letter, “Second Amendment needs another look,” I feel like re-examining the Second Amendment is old hat. Grundy stated the age-old anti-gun activists argument of the “conditional clause.” Sir, the Second Amendment has had another look. In fact, the Supreme Court has directly ruled “no” on it fewer than five times, plus four indirect rulings. Each word has been broken down and clearly defined. I’m happy to say that the Supreme Court has not taken the same view as you. I think the issue was settled a long time ago.