Legacy allowing students to sell art in backyard
From Staff During the First Friday Art Walk in February, Flagler’s Legacy is allowing students to display and sell their artwork in the area behind the store.
From Staff During the First Friday Art Walk in February, Flagler’s Legacy is allowing students to display and sell their artwork in the area behind the store.
From Staff Flagler’s Legacy is accepting entries for a T-shirt design to be sold in the retail shops. Entries from students, faculty, staff and alumni can be submitted Feb. 1 to 28.
By Rich Harris
While Flagler College is still discussing how the Florida East Coast office buildings will be used, a recent gift to the college has provided the expanding campus with another new building.
The gift, made by Robert and JoAnn Ellert, will provide for art gallery space. Their home at 48 Sevilla St., located between the Proctor Library and the new student center, will eventually become home to the college president, and an adjoining studio space already there will be expanded to become a college art gallery. The space may also be used for special functions and receptions.
By Alicia Nierenstein
For junior Alisa Castagna, her workload as a fine arts major consumes most of her time.
“Anything I see can turn into an idea or can be used for something else,” she said. “A single painting can take four to 10 hours to complete.”
Students majoring in art have their work cut out for them when they enter the program, but design instructor Donald Martin says it’s not too much to handle.
By Jennifer Ware
Those of you who are fans of McKnight’s Irish Pub on Cathedral Place downtown should check out owner Roy Lumke’s newest restaurant, McKnight’s Little Ireland that just opened on the island a few weeks ago.
It is a very charming and casual restaurant just off Anastasia Boulevard right after you cross the Bridge of Lions. They serve Irish-American cuisine and have a full-service dinner theater which makes dining a fun experience to enjoy with the crowd.
By Julia Redemske
When the Internet goes down, a cell phone is lost or the cable is blitzed out, most people can continue on with their day without problems. But as technology becomes more prevalent in our lives, new troubling studies are showing that dependence on the Internet and other forms of technology is becoming a form of addiction.
According to a study on Internet use among college students conducted by Keith J. Anderson, a staff psychologist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, “approximately 10 percent of Internet-using students have used the Internet to the degree that their usage meets the criteria that are parallel to those of other forms of dependence.” In other words, one out of every ten college students might show the signs of addiction to the Internet.
By Carmen Richter
Given that I go to the Southeast Branch of the St. Johns County Public Library for my movie supply, sometimes I end up watching some pretty obscure movies.
By Brittany Hackett
The “Happy Talk” premiere is over, but that is just the beginning for the film written and directed by two Flagler faculty members.
“We have submitted the film to about 20 film festivals already,” said professor Nadia Ramoutar, the film’s screenwriter and co-producer. “And we’re looking at submitting it to a number of other ones.”