November 1, 2007

Page 1

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Study measures cost ofN.C.students dropping out of public schools, RAGE 5

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The Tower of Campus Thought and Action

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Believers seek rain from above

Committee

considers 7 for LDOC

Worshippers pray for end to drought by

Tj

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by

Kristen Davis THE CHRONICLE

Religious community members literally thank heaven for the rain last weekend. Church-, synagogue- and mass-goers alike have voiced their concern for North Carolina’s dwindling water supply in the form of prayer. “God teaches that when his people call on him, he responds,” said Stelle Snyder, communications consultant for Christ Covenant Church in Matthews, N.C. “All is under his control—all day, every day.” Two Sundays ago, the church held a special prayer service for both its Presbyterian congregation and people from the community to ask God for relief from the Southern Piedmont’s current drought—one of the four worst recorded in the area’s history. Snyder said hundreds of people attended the service, where they sang hymns and listened to the pastor read scriptures about God responding to his followers’ concerns. The recent rainfall, however, was not enough to alleviate the drought, so the prayers will persist until it does. “[Last weekend’s rainfall] was exactly the kind ofrain you need when everything SEE RAIN ON PAGE

Nate Freeman THE CHRONICLE

6

GLEN GUTTERSON/THE CHRONICLE

Students try to'fit in'as Tetrisblocks among the crowded Franklin Street Halloween-goers Wednesday night.

Ghoulish festivities fill Main West, Franklin St. by

Emmeline Zhao THE CHRONICLE

CHAPEL HlLL—Multiple Soulja Boys escorted scantily clad Playboy Bunnies up and down a flooded Franklin Street as inebriated sumo wrestlers thrust their chests in the air above the numerous cowgirls at their feet. Between 50,000 and 75,000 other costumed partygoers joined in the annual Halloween celebration—the so-called “biggest party in the state,” an event that has grown increasingly more popular since its launch in the 1980s.

The chairs of Last Day of Classes Committee have named seven artists that they are seeking to book for the end-of-semester concert April 23. In an e-mail obtained by The Chronicle, LDOC Co-chair Chamindra Goonewardene, a junior, wrote that the committee is pursuing artists including Third Eye Blind, The Roots, T-Pain, Jimmy Eat World, Lupe Fiasco, OK Go and O.A.R. The bands were placed in seven paired combinations, suggesting potential LDOC lineups. In an interview with The Chronicle, Goonewardene stressed that this is a rough list, and that they cannot begin to negotiate contracts until after the budget is finalized. SEE LDOC ON PAGE 4

Festivities for Duke students, however, started earlier in the evening on the West

Campus Quadrangle. Duke University Union and Campus Council joined forces to plan the firstever Devil’s Eve, an evening of free kegs, T-shirts, food, music and transportation to and from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Campus CouncilPresident Ryan Todd, a senior, said he believes the effort was a success.

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

SEE HALLOWEEN ON PAGE 7

The Roots are one of several acts being considered as possible performers for theLast Day ofClasses.

Council considers new cable, land-line bundle by

Sara Park

THE CHRONICLE

Undergraduates living on campus may no longer have to cram in commons rooms to watch their favorite TV shows. Campus Council and the Office of Information Technology are discussing the possibility of including cable and land telephone-line fees in undergraduate’s housing fees to lower the prices of the services for all students. “If the students respond in favor ofrolling the cost into the residential contract, then Campus Council would suggest to OIT and [Residence Life and Housing Services] that the price of cable be included in the contract,” said Campus Council

President Ryan Todd, a senior. Wireless Internet and wired Internet are already included in students’ housing fees for a little more than $lO per semester but students must order cable and landline services separately for $32 and $22.80, respectively, per month Only aboutSO percent of students currently subscribe to the cable service,

quadrangle council SEE CABLE ON PAGE 6


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November 1, 2007 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu