UF student plans to create new Student Government party in Fall
By Paige Fry | Mar. 1, 2017Disillusioned with a UF Student Government dominated by a single majority party, one student plans to create his own.
Disillusioned with a UF Student Government dominated by a single majority party, one student plans to create his own.
After Student Government elections, parties and independent candidates submitted their final campaign finance reports Monday.
A UF Health physician will visit high-school baseball games in Alachua County this year, but he’ll only be watching the pitchers.
A UF alumnus is one of 36 U.S. citizens to earn a prestigious University of Cambridge scholarship.
UF’s Student Senate unanimously elected Jackie Phillips as the new Senate president Tuesday night.
Two and a half hours before Michael Huang’s online calculus 3 exam, the website on which he would take it crashed.
By Spring 2019, high-school football recruits touring UF’s campus will likely have their attention directed to the university’s new $60 million football facility, slated to begin construction in January.
Recently installed scanners at UF’s libraries will help visually impaired students translate words into sound.
Oral histories about the Women’s March on Washington, collected by UF students, will soon be available to the public.
Two Cuban-born UF graduates hope their artwork can help bring financial relief to a Cuban city still recovering from Hurricane Matthew.
Anushka Gupta can still hear Karan Khullar’s voice in her head.
Grace Shan wrote “loved” in green ink on a paper outline of a person’s body.
With the help of a new app, UF employees are using cartoon characters to guide children with cancer through their treatment.
Following news that the Asian Pacific Islander American Affairs director would resign in March, allegations have surfaced detailing potential abuses of power.
The star of an upcoming WE TV soap opera, a cosmetic surgeon named “Dr. Miami” spoke to students Friday about how he finds compatibility between Judaism and plastic surgery.
Two UF students are planning to make 100 prosthetic arms by August to give to children in less developed countries.
Saige Drecksler asked James Patterson if his teen novels are a break from his usual crime and terror stories during Patterson’s first UF visit Friday.
With two outs in the top of the sixth inning, Delanie Gourley delivered her pitch.
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.