Ralph D. Turlington: The plaza, the building, the man
By Paige Fry | Apr. 23, 2019Turlington Hall received name in ’80s
Turlington Hall received name in ’80s
A Gainesville businessman and Florida’s first black representative
A 23-year-old died in the crash
He led officers on a chase, according to police
Zach Huang planned to ask one of his best friends and on-and-off crush Carmen Schentrup to senior prom, but not before texting her to see if she was OK with it.
Richard Doan didn’t think much of the blare of the fire alarm when it went off Wednesday afternoon.
UPDATE 6:40 p.m.: The Associated Press reported at least 17 people are dead after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
A Gainesville man was convicted Monday for killing a retired UF professor and lighting his house on fire in 2015.
Two Gainesville teens who were accused of breaking into a smartphone repair store to steal thousands of dollars worth of phones and then selling them to another phone-repair store have been identified by police.
Overnight, Gainesville Police responded to two armed robberies, one of a pizza delivery driver and another at a Waffle House.
From Left: Analesa Clarke, Ronit Dastidar, Nyasha Joseph, John Kim, Ian Green, Robert Lemus and Alex Chaves discuss mental health in a panel on Tuesday. The event was during the first day of Student Government's annual Mental Health Awareness Week.
Members of the Police Advisory Council talk about increased gang violence in Gainesville.
From left: Gainesville residents Erich Marzolf, 55, and Michael Haynes, 26, help each other make sandbags at the Alachua County Public Works Department's sandbag location, located at 11855 NW U.S. Highway 441, on Thursday morning. The men are strangers, but they are both working to prepare for possible Hurricane Matthew water buildup. “See if I can protect the front of my house," Marzolf said. "We don’t have gutters.”
From left: Gainesville residents Erich Marzolf, 55, and Michael Haynes, 26, help each other make sandbags at the Alachua County Public Works Department's sandbag location, located at 11855 NW U.S. Highway 441, on Thursday morning. The men are strangers, but they are both working to prepare for possible Hurricane Matthew water buildup. “See if I can protect the front of my house," Marzolf said. "We don’t have gutters.”