Stories

MOVIE REVIEW: From Paris With Love

By Liliana Cerquozzi | gargoyle@flagler.edu

Put aside your ideas about John Travolta after seeing him dress up as an obnoxious mother in “Hairspray” and go see “From Paris With Love.” Your entire view on him will change as you watch him be a trigger-happy, wise-cracking loose cannon who gets rid of terrorists.


Students take interest in skydiving

By Jaclyn Miklos | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Photo by Lindsay Widdell

Flagler College Senior Kory Duffy faced fear head-on, jumping out of a plane at 14,000 feet plummeting toward Earth.

“Skydiving is unbelievable,” Duffy said. “There are no other words to describe it. I think every college student should experience this while their young.”


‘3D Guy’ visits Flagler

By Lawrence Griffin | gargoyle@flagler.edu

Greg Dinkins’s pride was evident in during his recent visit to Flagler College’s Crisp-Ellert Art Museum, at which he demonstrated how 3D imagery worked.

During his presentation, Dinkins said to create 3D imagery, artists don’t need an Avatar-like budget. He said that it all came down to the distance between the foreground of the image and its background, and also the layering of multiple images over one to add more depth.


Students thread campus fabric with personal fashion, style

By Bailey Latham | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Photos by Adam Fratus

Just because New York Fashion Week is over, doesn’t mean that the fashion stops. Is it possible for a college to have a certain fashion “look?” Everyone has his or her own style, and that’s what makes up the fabric of a campus’s individuality.

Flagler College has a unique style on campus, and students from the University of Central Florida and Florida State University agree that their campuses have a certain style look.


St. Augustine local shuns technology

By Cal Colgan | jcolgan@flagler.edu
Photo by Cal Colgan

St. Augustine local Sumner Gray would rather live in a makeshift shelter in the mountains than have the latest technological gizmo.

Last November, I interviewed Gray at his West Augustine home. Sitting out by his patio in front of a burned-out fire pit, Gray, 34, said he is interested in getting to the root of social problems, and he is not new to grassroots politics. He is the co-founder of People United to Stop Homelessness and a former co-owner of Loose Screws, the now-defunct independent music and bookstore that also served as an activist meeting center.





Flavors adds some flavor

By Liliana Cerquozzi | gargoyle@flagler.edu
Photo by Phil Sunkel

Walking into a low lit room filled with paper lanterns hanging from the ceiling and Christmas lights hanging from the walls, Flavors Eatery has the right ambiance for a night filled with Indie-acoustic sounds.

Sitting at a small table next to the stage set up in the corner, I watch two musicians doing what they love. Mandy Sloan, a 20-year-old musician, plays acoustic guitar and adds her raspy vocals to her set. Sloan plays her own music well as some well-known favorites such as Coldplay’s “Yellow.”