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Watch List: Australian Santa Surfing

(11/26/13 10:30am)

____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>There are some weird holiday traditions that take place all over the world, but one of the most notable is Santa Surfing at Sydney, Australia’s Bondi Beach. Since Christmas is in the middle of the summer in Australia, people lounge on the beach rather than hitting the slopes for the holidays.“Christmas stereotypically is snowmen and sledding, but I’m used to waking up and it being sunny and wearing T-shirts, having a barbecue and eating seafood,” senior Lewis McLeod said. “It’s a completely different feel, but you get used to it.”Although Bondi Beach is populated by people wearing Santa hats on Christmas day, there are a few people who dress in complete Santa regalia and head out into the water for the enjoyment of all the spectators—Bondi Beach veterans and tourists alike. Some people dress up as the world's most famous white-bearded man, grab their surf boards and head out to hit the waves. The surfing Santas are well known symbols of Christmas and indicators that the Holiday season is upon Australia. "It's the complete opposite of a New York Christmas," McLeod said.No one knows officially when the tradition started, but more and more people have begun to participate. Some people view the tradition as a way to show that Christmas does not always have to be a snow covered affair to be fun. Santa Surfing is a notable and remarkable way to commemorate the holiday in a fashion that is uniquely Australian.



Watch List: The Crypt

(10/30/13 8:30am)

____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>If you take a left when you enter the Chapel, then a right and keep walking until you reach the thick brown door at the back of the Chapel, you have reached the entrance to the Crypt. Looking to the left before opening the door, you'll see Memorial Chapel, where Washington Duke and his two sons, Benjamin N. Duke and James B. Duke, are entombed in three large marble sarcophagi. Now open the door and head down the dark steps to the bottom. Take another left and you have reached the burial place of William Preston Few, the last president of Trinity College and the first president of Duke, and Nanaline Holt Duke, wife of James B. Duke. Also buried in the Crypt is Terry Sanford, Duke's sixth president, former N.C. governor and former U.S. Senator. These are just three of the six people who are interred under the stone floor of the Crypt. The ashes of three former University leaders are also hidden in the walls—those of James A. Thomas, former chairman of the Duke Memorial Association, former Dean of Duke Chapel James T. Cleland and Cleland’s wife, Alice.“High school kids don’t like going to the Crypt because there’s actual people and they get freaked out and leave,” Visitor Relations Specialist Daniel Reeves said.There are 27 other plaques scattered around the floor of the Crypt denoting places where people can still be buried. Pieces of the wall can also be removed to make space for more ashes.