Criser Crisis: Lightning strikes UF building
By Lisandranette Rios | July 8, 2015Lightning hit Criser Hall and caused a pipe to burst Wednesday evening. Water flooded the carpets of the first and second floor.
Lightning hit Criser Hall and caused a pipe to burst Wednesday evening. Water flooded the carpets of the first and second floor.
Alexis Cruz drops her iPhone about four times a week.
Student Body Treasurer Nicholas Carre is not shy about his desire to make needed cuts to the Student Government budgets.
Two giant ants have taken over UF, and artist Susan P. Cochran thinks it’s wonderful.
As the sport of soccer continues to grow in the United States, there’s been an organization at the forefront of that trend: The American Outlaws.
Susan Webster has wanted to see the historic Newell Hall renovated since her sophomore year at UF.
Between eight shark attacks occurring on the North Carolina coast over the past month and the Discovery Channel’s “Shark Week” kicking off Sunday, the big creatures of the sea have been a talking point this summer.
UF researchers created a pesticide that saved the Statue of Liberty from termites and a drug that treats people losing their vision.
A new organic and natural food store is opening near Southwest Archer Road, joining about six grocery stores in the area.
After going through a test run in April, the UF Safe Ride program, a partnership between UF Student Government and Uber, has returned for Summer B.
Bursts of color and patriotism will once again speckle the night sky over UF’s Flavet Field.
Campus safety was a focal point at Tuesday’s Student Senate meeting, with the chambers unanimously approving a resolution encouraging scooter safety and University Police Department Operations Deputy Chief Darren Baxley giving an update on the TapShield app.
Twelve sunflowers, an orchid, a potted plant and a box.
If Bill Overholt doesn’t find $900,000 by July 1, he’ll be out of a job.
The loblolly pines in the Bat House Woods conservation area are surrounded by smaller trees, shrubs, critters and a growing army of support.
While studies have shown over the years that genetically modified organisms are safe to consume, the public’s opinion on them is still skeptical.
Ed Jennings, Jr., a regional administrator in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, has been listed as a defendant in a complaint filed by the Heritage Bank of the South, a successor of Alarion Bank, over an unpaid loan valued at $100,000.
With more than 13,000 members, the Gainesville Word of Mouth Facebook page has a strong impact on the community.
In January 2016, finding a seat in the Reitz Union food court will be slightly easier.
Abandoned bicycles chained with a U-Lock outside the Reitz Union and Rawlings Hall faced their biggest enemy on Wednesday: a blow torch.