Alcohol debuts at festival
By Kelcee Griffis | Apr. 2, 2013The Santa Fe College Spring Arts Festival will offer alcohol for the first time at its 44th annual event this weekend.
The Santa Fe College Spring Arts Festival will offer alcohol for the first time at its 44th annual event this weekend.
The Aspen Institute has ranked Santa Fe College as one of the top 10 community colleges in the country.
When students got their admission notification from UF on Feb. 8, 150 of them got an unexpected message.
Country music artist Lee Greenwood will perform tonight during the annual President’s Gala at Santa Fe College.
A panel discussed the politics and history of Gainesville’s Cabot-Koppers Superfund site Tuesday afternoon during a public meeting at Santa Fe College.
Many people might not know who helped discover the North Pole or when Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech.
Gov. Rick Scott announced Tuesday that 11 state colleges have accepted a four-year, $10,000 tuition plan, which brings the total to 23 schools.
World-renowned peace activist the Rev. Joan Campbell spoke to about 100 students, faculty members and Gainesville residents at Santa Fe College’s Fine Arts Hall on Friday night.
World-renowned peace activist the Rev. Joan Brown Campbell will talk about religious tolerance and her life as an activist tonight at Santa Fe College.
Michael William Kriesel dreamed of saving the wolves out west.
Lennie Kesl could find art in almost anything.
A Santa Fe College cultural organization will host an awareness event today to highlight the dire circumstances affecting Syria.
On Friday, Santa Fe College biology professor Jerry Johnston and three other researchers sat on a dock, their legs dipped in Hornsby Spring.
As a nursing student at Santa Fe College, Cori Kate learns modern medicine. But as a designer, she’s inspired by the past.
Louis Sacco is used to high-pressure environments. After all, she worked as a nurse for 30 years.
Gainesville Police confirmed Monday that the human remains discovered by hunters Friday in Levy County are those of Christian Aguilar, the 18-year-old UF student who went missing nearly a month ago.
Erica Merrell opened an envelope and found a blessing.
Chip Skinner, RTS spokesman, said more people are riding the bus now because of the economy. He said it’s simply more expensive to own a car.
As Pedro Bravo remained in Alachua County Jail, accused of a murder in connection to Christian Aguilar’s disappearance, court documents released Saturday shed more light into what happened on Sept. 20.
A pile of damp checks and cash sat on the ground on the parking lot. Hallie Peterson, a 19-year-old Santa Fe College nursing sophomore, scooped up the $2,655 bundle Sept. 18 and immediately started looking for its owners.