Chomp the Flu event attracts about 900 people and offers new vaccine
By Adam Turner | Sep. 11, 2018For the first time, the meningitis B vaccine was offered along with flu vaccines
For the first time, the meningitis B vaccine was offered along with flu vaccines
After a $4.5 million construction and six years of planning, UF's honeybee lab is operational.
UF researchers created a device capable of capturing airborne strains of the flu virus to help prevent outbreaks for next flu season, which runs October to February.
Cynthia Kathir immediately ran to her adviser when she discovered she won a national veterinary business contest.
UF football great John Reaves passed away in his Tampa home Tuesday at 67 years old.
The brothers of Alpha Phi Alpha’s Theta Sigma chapter don’t do their work with the intention of winning awards.
Sketching a mural on a wall is a long and difficult process, but UF alumna Liza Kholodkova found a way to save both the effort and time: get a robot to do it.
Last Summer, four UF students logged onto Google Hangouts to discuss a seemingly ambitious, even far fetched goal: to create a solar-powered car and race it in Austin, Texas.
By early 2018, Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) will have almost doubled its use of clean solar energy through the construction of eight new solar parks, including one in Hawthorne on the border of Alachua and Putnam county.
When retired UF College of Dentistry professor Marc Gale heard about the Pulse nightclub shooting, the scholarship he wanted to create in his parents’ name changed.
Construction workers from Newberry utilities pour concrete to fill a 20-foot deep sinkhole that opened on West Newberry Road on Wednesday morning.
Construction workers from Newberry utilities pour concrete to fill a 20-foot deep sinkhole that opened on West Newberry Road on Wednesday morning.
As a way of protesting the American Health Care Act, a group of about 30 local activists staged a die-in at congressman Ted Yoho’s office in Gainesville Tuesday.
As a way of protesting the American Health Care Act, a group of about 30 local activists staged a die-in at congressman Ted Yoho’s office in Gainesville Tuesday.
One protester spoke at the die-in about an accident that resulted in a hip fracture. Under the American Health Care Act, she said she would be denied coverage since the fracture could be considered a pre-existing condition.
As a way of protesting the American Health Care Act, a group of about 30 local activists staged a die-in at congressman Ted Yoho’s office in Gainesville Tuesday.