University Police urge students to stay safe tonight
By Laura Gutsche | Oct. 30, 2012Pirates, princesses and patrol cars will set the scene in Gainesville tonight.
Pirates, princesses and patrol cars will set the scene in Gainesville tonight.
For Annie Speese, 13 is a lucky number.
Offensive coordinator Brent Pease said the Trey Burton wildcat — or WildBurton, as it will henceforth be called — is here to stay.
UF students stumbled on the North Lawn at the Reitz Union Tuesday wearing beer goggles, but they were completely sober.
Some people who came to Gainesville to attend Fest 11 and who traveled to Jacksonville to root for the Gators at the Florida-Georgia game are still trying to get home.
Think the Pokemon craze is a thing of the past?
Trick-or-treating isn’t the only way to get candy today. Biking, busing, walking or carpooling to and from campus can earn UF community members treats for their transportation choices.
Leather pants, black tank top, high heels, ears and a tail — Ariel Angelico is ready for Halloween.
Spooky sounds will come from Century Tower tonight at 9 p.m. when the UF Carillon Studio performs its first-ever Halloween-themed concert.
From a young age, Michael Frazier II reveled in the thought of attending UF.
Taylor Swift released her fourth studio album, “Red,” last week.
Why does social media have to ruin everything?
At an off-campus Halloween party with the theme of “rappers and rockers,” two white students covered their faces and bodies with black makeup and dressed as black rappers.
A Michigan State University study called “Twitteracy: Tweeting as a New Literary Practice,” found that students who tweet as part of their instruction are more engaged in the course content and have higher grades.
Liz Morris, a 2008 UF alumna, came up with the idea of creating a cheaper, cleaner, odorless and waterless portable toilet. She named it the Dungaroo.
Gator basketball fans hugged their favorite stars, got signed posters and posed for pictures next to their supersized heroes.
A new tutoring company is using one-on-one instruction to help students with their STEM classes.
Kenrick Watkins usually hands out chips, chicken tenders or miniburgers, but on Monday, the samples were cups of tomato soup.
The Daily Hundred is an iPhone app based in Gainesville that challenges users to compete in daily photo-voting contests for a chance to win $100 and sometimes additional prizes.
About a half-dozen second-year law students peered through a crowd of balding and silver-haired heads to get a look at the past and their futures Monday night.