UF’s Board of Trustees receives two new members
By CAROLYN TILLO | Oct. 22, 2009The Florida Board of Governors appointed two members to UF's Board of Trustees, UF's highest governing body, in a meeting Thursday.
The Florida Board of Governors appointed two members to UF's Board of Trustees, UF's highest governing body, in a meeting Thursday.
As part of a national event, UF students will volunteer at a local elementary school and food bank.
The American Red Cross of North Central Florida is providing food and housing to more than 20 people affected by a fire Thursday in southwest Gainesville.
This classic Italian soup could make a hearty fall meal without the hassle.
In our second part of our series on the new X-Men movies, we take a look at two spinoffs from "Wolverine."
A producer for yet-to-be-released X-Men films discusses "Wolverine 2" and "X-Men Origins:Magneto."
Warner Bros. is being forced to relocate from Australia due to the rising Australian dollar.
Things are starting to get a little tight around the Florida football program following Saturday's 23-20 victory over Arkansas.
Amazon began shipping its latest electronic book-reading device, Kindle 2, on Monday.
Florida's running game seems to be living by the motto, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
The view is unfamiliar, and it doesn't seem right.
Despite all the talk about Florida's offense not clicking, receivers coach Billy Gonzales isn't worried.
A technology strategist for Microsoft presented its latest operating system to a crowd of 35 at UF's Hilton.
Few breakups are this nice.
A professor charged with cocaine possession has entered an agreement to perform community service in exchange for the charges being dropped.
A Georgia man was arrested after stealing cigarettes and beer from a local gas station. Police found him hiding in a nearby CVS construction site.
Reader Ben Volin continues to lead the way with a 6-1 record, but writer Mike McCall is only one game back.
A comedian with Tourette syndrome shared how he channels struggling with the disorder into being an entertainer.
Amid a thorny nest of substantive issues and thoughtful debate about human agency, America proved last week that our real gift to the world is a bountiful supply of vaguely Asian, dysfunctional families ready to claw their way onto television. Our nation owes you a great deal of gratitude, Heene and Gosselin clans, for too many seem to have forgotten that our country was built on a burning desire to have one's own reality television show.