Articles by
By Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh talk about the NFL draft in the fourth and final part of this Sports Podcast.

By Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh talk about the NFL draft. Part three of four part episode.

By Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Sports Editor Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh talk about the NFL Draft. Part 2 of 4 segment episode.
St. Augustine resident copes with poverty, fighting disabilities and living life

By Ben McLeod | bmcleod@flagler.edu
On a rainy Thursday morning, I slammed on my brakes, almost causing the car behind me to smash into me. I was driving on West King Street, one of the poorest areas in St. Augustine, and I was looking for junk. It was for St. Augustine resident Jerome Richardson so that he could earn a few dollars to buy some food for the week.
The rain drops were flopping up the mud in front of Jerome’s shack, which is made up of four walls of plywood and sheet metal for a roof. He was nowhere to be seen and the lot was quiet. I began to worry, as surprising as it sounds, that this 47-year-old man was in danger somewhere. Why wasn’t he here? Jerome told me he would always be here.

By Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Sports Editor Clayton Coffman and Mike McHugh analyze the upcoming NFL draft in the first part of a four-piece podcast.
By Holly Elliott | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Illustration by Matthew Boyle
I regret the day I caved into family pressures on Facebook. It was just my stepmother and me, face to face, or should I say, profile picture to profile picture. A bizarre sense of curiosity from her friend request reached me from hundreds of miles away and made me disregard the potential problems that family and Facebook would most certainly cause me. I recklessly hit accept. In one single click, I opened a virtual nightmare on my social life.
By Matthew Boyle and Sarah Locke | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Co-hosts Matthew Boyle and Sarah Locke interview local band Only After Disaster, winner of the on campus Battle of the Bands on March 13.
By Katy Bass | gargoyle@flagler.edu
I made the mistake of letting my roommate pick out the movie for the evening. She had one thing – or should I say person – on her mind when deciding: …
By Gabrielle McCaffrey | gargoyle@flagler.edu
“I hope to use education to increase leverage of understanding in environmental issues, conservation and biodiversity.”
Six years ago, Professor Barbara Blonder found herself applying to a teaching job at Flagler College …
Thoughts from a punk rocker
By Cal Colgan | gargoyle@flagler.edu
“Creep into town and it’s not long before I start to roam.
Seek out the patches on the punks—maybe a band I know.
I betcha in five minutes time …

By Matthew Boyle and Cal Colgan | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Online Editor Matthew Boyle and Opinion Writer Cal Colgan discuss the United States military’s use of torture during the ongoing “War on Terror.”

By Michael Mandaro | gargoyle@flagler.edu
CHECK THE VIDEO OUT here.
Junior Communication major Bailey Latham won the $450 dollar plane ticket after completing the President’s Survey.
Latham was selected randomly from a pool of 973 Flagler College students who had completed either the National Survey of Student Engagement or the Student Satisfaction Inventory.
By Matthew Boyle and Michael Mandaro | gargoyle@flagler.edu
For the full story, click here.
By Haley M. Walker | hwalker@flagler.edu
Photo illustration by Hahau Yisrael
Student Mallory McCagg recently began cleaning locals’ houses in her spare time. She does it not only to earn money, but for the benefit of the world.
McCagg owns Squeaky Green Cleaning, a business specializing in the national trend of “green cleaning.” According to the Green Cleaning Network, the process can be defined as a way to clean by using natural alternatives to chemically based products and other sustainable supplies and equipment.

By Matthew Boyle, Rory Fish and Michael Newberger| gargoyle@flagler.edu
Would you rather live on or off campus and why?
St. Augustine hopes to attract vistors to celebrate 450 years
By Erica Eding | eeding@flagler.edu
Photo by Erica Eding
PHOTO CAPTION: The statue of Pedro Menendez, the founder of St. Augustine, stands outside the Lightner Museum downtown.
A party is rarely serious business. St. Augustine’s 450th anniversary, on the other hand, could bring millions of dollars in revenue to a city that is suffering from the decline in tourism.
The city is hoping to attract national and even international visitors to the event. But during an economic downturn, tourists will need an incentive to travel and spend money. For this reason, city officials have begun planning for a state of the art experience.


