Fall Wellness Fair to discuss mental health and wellness
By Kelly Daly | Oct. 22, 2017UF’s Student Government Cabinet is working with the UF Counseling & Wellness Center student ambassador program, AWARE, to destigmatize mental illness.
UF’s Student Government Cabinet is working with the UF Counseling & Wellness Center student ambassador program, AWARE, to destigmatize mental illness.
In the back of the red Kodiak plane and more than 12,000 feet in the sky, the red light flashes, signalling the open door.
Gustav Paulay is used to finding new species every day in the field.
As thousands of protesters gathered around the Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, Rabbi Berl Goldman asked students on a quiet campus if they’d like to do a good deed.
Heather Monae Jackson wants Richard Spencer to know she is not afraid.
Syleena Powell went to bed listening to whirring police helicopters flying overhead.
The Department of Defense awarded two UF cardiovascular researchers nearly a $15 million grant to study heart disease in women.
After helping Nobel Prize in Physics-winning scientists discover gravitational waves, UF’s design helped observe a newly observed gravitational wave.
As Rosana Resende grew up under Brazil’s military dictatorship, she was forced to put her head down and abide by the rules, regardless of her own beliefs.
In a chaotic and emotional Student Senate meeting Tuesday, 43 students signed up for public debate, asking senators to work toward canceling classes Thursday ahead of Richard Spencer’s speech and to increase funding for the Counseling & Wellness Center.
Carey Minteer hopes to inspire a classroom of Egyptian students to become scientists.
UF researchers led the state in grant funding from the National Institutes of Health for 2017.
Outside of Library West, some of UF’s 5,000 scooters stack on top of one another as students try to squeeze them into the lines outlining the parking area.
Hundreds of students crowded into Gator Wesley to grab free Asian cuisine like bulgogi and kampoogi for the 25th annual food festival Monday night.
Gov. Rick Scott signed a seven-page executive order Monday declaring a state of emergency for Alachua County ahead of avowed white nationalist Richard Spencer’s UF speaking event Thursday.
There appears to be a collective angst looming over campus as preparation continues for Richard Spencer’s arrival on campus Thursday. I’ve already witnessed students discussing the notion of skipping class, fearing some faceless, nameless harm will do them injury. I empathize with this concern, especially for first-year students new to campus life.
As David Fisher counted down the seconds to 11:20 a.m., a crowd of about 1,000 students inched closer to the rows of plants at his feet.
UF Health Shands Hospital will begin a new program in early 2018 to provide clinical and educational expertise to patients with smell disorders.
UF researchers are working on literally planting seeds of change for the future of sustainable energy.
“Goosebumps” author R.L. Stine will visit UF on Oct. 24 in celebration of Halloween.