No. 10 Gators go ‘back to work’ vs No. 2 Ohio State
By Mark Stine | Feb. 23, 2017Jordan Belga stood on the baseline awaiting his opponent’s serve during the first round of the ITA National Team Indoor Championship.
Jordan Belga stood on the baseline awaiting his opponent’s serve during the first round of the ITA National Team Indoor Championship.
After a turnover by North Carolina, sophomore midfielder Sydney Pirreca received a pass on a clear.
Maegan Chant was ready.
I have to admit, I was slightly surprised at the outcome of Tuesday night’s game between No. 13 Florida and South Carolina.
Jim McElwain knows what he wants.
After Andrew Baker notched the first strikeout of his college career, the freshman danced on the mound. The game was over, and he’d preserved his team’s 8-1 win over William and Mary on Saturday. But in his one inning of work, the game wasn’t really in doubt.
After nine years of freelancing and working with Univision and CNN en Español, reporter Dania Alexandrino will come teach at UF.
Despite what some wish to think, it is possible to believe in both science and religion.
Two Marion County Public Schools teachers were arrested this week for inappropriately touching students, the sheriff’s office said.
Scott Powers said he doesn’t consider himself a great teacher — but UF President Kent Fuchs does.
Despite the revocation of a memorandum allowing transgender students in public schools to use the bathroom of their choice, Gainesville remains a sanctuary, Mayor Lauren Poe said Thursday.
Andrea Berteit felt more comfortable growing up in East Berlin in the ’80s than she does living under President Donald Trump’s administration.
Last week, Austin Ward had five exams over an eight-day stretch.
A UF fraternity will play games, grill food and collect clothing Saturday for Gainesville’s homeless community.
Aliya Miranda remembers standing in a sea of people as hundreds of thousands marched on Washington, D.C. in January.
UF’s Interfraternity Council was recognized for their academic success Saturday.
In Anderson Hall, a group of 54 undergraduate UF students spend 15 to 20 hours a week working late into the night to prepare for fake court cases.
UF researchers have participated in a National Institute on Aging study that discovered testosterone treatments can improve anemia in older men.
A significant part of every American’s upbringing is the instillation of American values and norms. Ambition, self-efficacy, confidence, individualism and a work-horse attitude are all traits taught in classrooms. We are a culture centered about the individual, each one of us acting as the captain for our own life, told since kindergarten that we could do whatever we set our minds to. If you can dream it, you can achieve it. Hidden underneath all of our lessons was a separate curriculum set by culture and society, a curriculum with no assignments or progress reports, but instead a prep course for the long and daunting stretch ahead.
It’s tempting to dismiss human trafficking as the shooting star of the criminal underworld — a series of one-off stories that evince a problem afflicting only a handful of the unluckiest people, inevitable tragedies like Ariel Castro’s decadelong capture of three young women. But the reality is that human trafficking is a global, multibillion dollar industry with branches that twist and burrow in our own communities, around our own friends, siblings and children.