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Monday, April 3, 2023

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MONDAY, APRIL 3, 2023

VOLUME 117 ISSUE 28 Not officially associated with the University of Florida

Published by Campus Communications, Inc. of Gainesville, Florida

4Most Gallery fields smashed windows, pressure from UF FLORIDA PRISONER SOLIDARITY CONTRIBUTED ARTWORK

By Allessandra Inzinna Alligator Staff Writer

Alex Winn // Alligator Staff

About 100 people gathered at the 4Most Gallery to condemn the vandalization of the gallery’s exhibit “Burn It Down: Communications of Resistance” Wednesday, March 29, 2023. “F-CK OFF FASCISTS” was spray-painted on the wall prior to the event.

Changes to House Bill 999, explained

Women’s studies might be safe By Alissa Gary Alligator Staff Writer

The newest version of House Bill 999 may elicit a sigh of relief from UF’s department of gender, sexuality and women’s studies. Under the March 15 version, UF’s women’s studies major and minor seems to no longer be at risk of elimination, Provost Joe Glover said at a Faculty Senate meeting March 23. The Florida Legislature has made significant edits to the sweeping higher education reform bill between its original filing Feb.

21 and its most recent update March 15 — notably concerning majors and minors that will be removed if the bill becomes law. The UF Foundation, the fundraising and gift management arm of UF, contracted lobbyists on HB 999 and its counterpart, Senate Bill 266, according to state lobbying records. UF spokesperson Steve Orlando didn’t specify the nature of the lobbying but said the lobbyists are working in the best interest of the university. While the original bill

SPORTS/SPECIAL/CUTOUT Nina Rickards honors background during Story description finish with comma, pg# time with Gators Rickards remembers former mentors as she leads Florida’s team. Read more on pg. 11.

SEE HB 999, PAGE 4

Broken glass littered the sidewalk outside 4Most Gallery March 27 after someone threw rocks through the window. Inside, a painting of a blazing jailhouse set against a natural scene showcased the exhibition’s goal: a society without prisons. Kayla Burnett has a one year fellowship with UF teaching art students, curating exhibitions, using studio space as the 4Most artist-in-residence. The attacks felt personal, they said. “Students should be allowed to speak on whatever beliefs that they have,” Burnett said. Florida Prisoner Solidarity announced on Instagram March 28 the windows had been smashed. The vandalism came about two weeks after UF took down banners that hung on the outside of 4Most Gallery as

part of the exhibit. The banners were bed sheets painted with “ALACHUA JAIL HAS BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS,” “ABOLISH GPD” and “ABOLISH PRISONS.” The 4Most Gallery, located on Southwest 4th Avenue, operates as an off-campus UF space for the artist in residence — now Burnett — to curate art shows. Burnett has complete autonomy over the artists they choose to showcase. They also teach a class to 30 to 40 freshmen in the attached WARPhaus as a part of the fellowship. The gallery housed an art exhibit called “Burn It Down: Communications of Resistance,” by Florida Prisoner Solidarity, a prison abolitionist group, March 10 to 29. The exhibit featured artwork by prisoners, letters from inmates detailing the conditions of Florida prisons and artwork by members of the organization. Alex Greene, an organizer with Florida Prisoner Solidarity, said she believes rightwing activists are behind the vandalism. “We have political messages that a lot

SEE VANDALISM, PAGE 5

UF Housing ends 273 housing agreements for Honors Village STUDENTS SCRAMBLING FOR ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS

By Sophia Bailly Alligator Staff Writer

The day after Mallory Tyler registered to live in the new Honors Village beginning Fall 2023, she rode her scooter to the UF housing office to confirm her spot was reserved. The 19-year-old UF data science freshman was nervous

there was a processing issue when she submitted her housing agreement in the housing portal Nov. 3. Housing staff reassured her, and she rode back to her dorm. Almost five months later, she received an email saying she no longer had a room. “I had to take a few moments to process it more,” she said. UF Housing sent an email out to 273 UF Honors students at 5:30 p.m. March 29 with

Gainesville celebrates Transgender Day of Visibility Anti-trans legislation persists in Florida, United States,, pg. 6

news that their reserved spot for residence in the Honors Village has been removed due to construction delays. Tyler works as a desk assistant for the housing office and tried working out a plan that evening. The housing office closed 30 minutes before the email was sent out, which Tyler said caused her to spend the next night worrying about her future. The next morning, other

SEE HONORS, PAGE 4

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UF hosts summit on Florida springs

Leaders discuss the best plan forward to save water bodies, pg. 7

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