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‘Final exam’ has new meaning in ‘doomsday’ classes

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And if nothing happens on Dec. 21, “people will immediately begin to move to the next date,” Restall said, or philosophize that Dec. 21 is the beginning of a seven-year period that will bring about the end.

Students and faculty are making lighthearted plans for the fateful day. Several said they were attending “end of the world” parties.

“I’ll probably call some friends and laugh with them,” said Temple junior Samira Ford, 20, a broadcast major from Washington.

Gayle Cutler, who is auditing the Rutgers-Camden class, is booked on a flight to Israel – a ticket she bought before the semester started and she learned the significance of the date.

“If they’re flying and there’s no war, I will be going,” said Cutler, a retired Cherry Hill, N.J., English teacher.

Charmé said that whether people believe is the least important issue.

“What’s more interesting to me is what are the reasons why people take on certain beliefs that may or may not be unusual,” he said.

Every day, there’s fresh material on the Internet, Charmé said.

In class recently, he shared the latest: The “rapture index” had reached its highest level – 186. Billed as “the prophetic speedometer of end-time activity,” the index considers 45 factors, such as moral standards, unemployment, drug abuse, earthquakes, and “liberalism.”

The Israeli conflict tipped up the anti-Semitism metric.

“What 186 really means we don’t really know,” Charmé said, tongue-in-cheek, “other than that it’s way, way, way worse than it’s ever been before.”

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