Alachua County hopes vote-by-mail will protect voters and poll workers
By Tien Le | June 19, 2020Voters can request ballots online, through mail, phone or in-person
Voters can request ballots online, through mail, phone or in-person
Universities will be able to dismiss complaints that do not meet the new definition of sexual harassment.
Transgender students who do not use their legal names will be able to change the way it appears on Canvas this Spring.
English-speaking children in U.S. hospitals may take Harry Potter and National Geographic Kids for granted. But for Spanish-speaking patients at UF Health Shands Hospital, a book in their native language is hard to come by.
In her three years as an engineering student, Lauren Wonicker-Cook barely had female professors.
They are known as “ghost passengers.”
Students of all cultures are united by one thing: coffee.
Gainesville residents will soon put their best guesses forward during a live show of “The Price is Right.”
Schuyler Bailar thought he lost his Harvard acceptance before he even started college.
Between seemingly impossible frisbee trick shots, beating cancer and paragliding down a 7,000 foot tall mountain, Brodie Smith and Kurt Gibson know all about beating the odds.
Student Government’s multicultural affairs cabinet director Robyn Louis wanted to hear from students about what UF and SG could do better. So she hosted a “culture and coffee” event.
Student Government’s multicultural affairs cabinet director Robyn Louis wanted to hear from students about what UF and SG could do better. So she hosted a “culture and coffee” event.
The first of four planned community meetings for public comment about the Proposed Annual Action Plan (AAP) was held at 6pm at the Thelma A. Boltin Center on Monday. The next meetings are on June 4 at the Senior Recreation Center (5701 NW 34th Blvd.), June 5 at the Millhopper Library (3145 NW 43rd St.) and June 6 at the Gainesville Technology Entrepreneurship Center (2153 SE Hawthorne Rd.). They will all be held at 6pm.
The first of four planned community meetings for public comment about the Proposed Annual Action Plan (AAP) was held at 6pm at the Thelma A. Boltin Center on Monday. The next meetings are on June 4 at the Senior Recreation Center (5701 NW 34th Blvd.), June 5 at the Millhopper Library (3145 NW 43rd St.) and June 6 at the Gainesville Technology Entrepreneurship Center (2153 SE Hawthorne Rd.). They will all be held at 6pm.