Stories

Top-10 holiday movies

By Kelsey Mayid | gargoyle@flagler.edu

Whether you’re planning a holiday movie marathon, or just want to watch your favorite cold-weather classic, these movies are sure to put you in the holiday spirit!

  1. “It’s A Wonderful Life”– The 1946 Frank Capra classic.
  2. “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” – Who doesn’t love the green meanie with a heart that’s two sizes too small? The 1966 animated classic is the only version that does justice to Dr. Suess.
  3. “A Christmas Story” – All Ralphie Parker wants for Christmas is a Red Ryder Carbine Action 200 Shot Range Model Air Rifle. ‘Nuf said.

With NCAA, Flagler looks at adding new sports

By Lindsey Williams | gargoyle@flagler.edu

We’ve got basketball, baseball, volleyball, golf, tennis, soccer and cross country, but apparently that’s not enough.

The construction of a new student center, among other projects, is one physical sign that Flagler College is undergoing change.

Speculation of giving Flagler’s athletic department a facelift would create another entirely new look for the college. This might also include programs such as a women’s fast pitch softball team, crew and even a swim team, if rumors are to be believed.



DOW Advantage to hold Tailgate for Troops fundraiser

Contributed | gargoyle@flagler.edu

The student run Dow Advantage Public Relations Group at Flagler College is holding a Tailgate for Troops fundraiser to raise money for U.S. troops in Kuwait to have a super bowl party.

Tailgate for Troops will be held on Thursday, Nov. 15, 2007 at the Flagler College Gymnasium from 5 p.m. – 8 p.m., during the women’s and men’s basketball games. Woody’s BBQ is donating food, which will be available for a minimum $2 donation. Larger donations are welcome and encouraged.


Shop profile – The Surf Station

By Derek Westfield | gargoyle@flagler.edu

“We used to have gas,” is a familiar t-shirt slogan around The Surf-Station. The building used to be a fully functional Amoco gas station and surf shop back in 1984.

Fast-forward to 2007 and things have certainly changed around ‘Station.’ For one, the quality of surfboards and other products have been drastically upgraded. The shop is now the Channel Islands East Coast Warehouse, something to be very proud of. According to Flagler Alumni and shop manager Matt Ollis, “We carry 1,000 boards from 40 different brands as well as at least 300 used boards at Surf-Station II.”


Dr. Dog has prescription for fun

Innovative indie-rock group takes St. Augustine by storm at Café Eleven

By Ben McLeod | gargoyle@flagler.edu

Sixties-style harmonies, cheerful music, scruffy beards, Ray Ban Wayfarers — these are words that describe the Philadelphia rock group Dr. Dog. According to Esquire magazine, “Dr. Dog is the kind of group that other bands stand around and watch, slack-jawed, blown away by performances that are equal parts of rock spectacle and jam session.”

As I was standing in the crowd at Café Eleven watching Dr. Dog perform, I realized that traveling back in time was possible, and listening to this band’s music was the trick. Dr. Dog’s new release, We All Belong, is in the same neighborhood of music by The Beatles and The Beach Boys, sounding as though it came out in the late 60s.


Saints sting back, take down Bees


By Devon Jeffreys | djeffreys@flagler.edu

For the Flagler College volleyball team, there will be no trophy, no regional or national tournament but don’t tell them they didn’t win a championship on Friday night because as much as they could, they did.

A team still in its NCAA infancy, with no postseason light at the end of the tunnel, had just one game to look forward to at the end of the year, another match with rival SCAD.

With emotions running high, the Saints managed to overcome their demons, and a 2-1 SCAD lead, to bring home a 3-2 victory and their own little championship.


Overmatched Saints fall to Gators


By Devon Jeffreys | djeffreys@flagler.edu

Golitah 97, David 51

It didn’t end the way that head coach Bo Clark and the Saints had dreamed, no one dreams about losing by 46, but for one night, Flagler College basketball was on the big stage.

“This was an exciting thing for Flagler College,” Clark said. “I wish I could say we won the ballgame 88-84 but I’d probably be dreaming.”

The Saints, playing the role of David, entered the O’Connell Center in Gainesville, Florida last Thursday as a severe underdog and when it came down to it, Goliath, the two-time defending national champion Florida Gators, was just too big and too strong.


Flagler basketball at the next level

Photo by Tad Mask

By Devon Jeffreys | gargoyle@flagler.edu

With what may be the biggest game — in terms of hype — in school history behind them, the Flagler Saints men’s basketball team now focuses on what’s in front of them: the 2007-2008 season.

The Saints lost their first exhibition game of the season to the Florida Gators 97-51, but the regular season starts Nov. 15 against Trinity College at Flagler Gym.

“Florida is not going to be a true gauge of how good we are,” Coach Bo Clark said. “It’ll be the Rollins and Florida Southern and Saint Leo games, and that’ll be a transition, too.”


Offensive power fuels women’s soccer

By Ryan Day and Will Sandberg | gargoyle@flagler.edu

The Flagler women’s soccer team may be in transition to Div. II, but Coach Teddy Meyer hopes the offensive explosion the Saints had in the 2007 season is permanent.

In 2006 the Saints scored 15 goals all season in 17 matches, less than one goal per game. Flagler forward Annika Hogberg has already scored 17 goals by herself, breaking the college’s single-season record for goals.

“Her [Hogberg’s] impact this year has been a bright spot,” Meyer said. “Last year we had struggled scoring goals.”

Through 18 games so far, the Saints have scored 42 goals, being shut out only twice all year. Compare that to last year when the 2006 Saints scored 15 goals all season and were shut out nine times.

And it’s not just Hogberg and her 17 goals that have been putting the Saints on the scoreboard. Seven players on the team have at least two goals. Freshman midfielder Caleigh Hodgkins and sophomore midfielder Meredith Marshall have scored their first ever collegiate goals this year. Midfielder Tiffany Urquhart, the Saints leading scorer of 2006, has had the pressure taken off in 2007 and is tied for second on the team in assists with midfielder Pam Quimby with four.

Typically when a team improves on one side of the ball, the other side suffers. In 2006, the Saints gave up 51 goals in 17 games, an average of three goals a game. In 2007, goalkeeper Hope McArthur leads a defense that has recorded eight shutouts and given up only 29 goals in 18 games, a 1.63 GAA. She’s faced 152 shots on goal and saved 123 of them, making for a .809 save percentage.

The improvement between last year and this year can be found in their attention to detail and the minor components of the game: