^age 4 The Pendulum Thursday, April 5, 1984 Features Voter sign-up set today By Jo Craven Editor “If you vote this country be longs to you, if you don’t, it be longs to someone else,” Will Migniuolo, instructor in En glish, says. When you turn 18, you are old enough to “drive and get killed in the Army,” Migniuolo said, and now 18-year-olds have the right to vote. It hasn’t always been this way, but now that 18-year-olds do have the opportunity to vote, they “have to prove their re sponsibility” and their “in terest in what’s going on,” Mig niuolo, a member of the Demo cratic Committee of the North Boone Precinct, said. Students can register to vote in the upcoming North Caroli na primary and in the Novem ber election at the voter reg istration table to be set up in Scott Plaza during today’s Col lege Coffee from 9:30 a.m. and continuing until 11 a.m. In order to participate in the May 8 Primary Election, a voter must be registered by April 9. “It is going to be an exciting year” politically, Migniuolo said. The committee is en couraging Elon College stu dents to register and vote. “Now is the time to register to vote,” Migniuolo said. “If stu dents are not registered by the DISTRICT AND COUNTY OFFICES $ FOR STRAIGHT TICKET PULL ^■1 THIS I.RVF.R COUNTY BALLOT FOR STRAIGHT TICKET PULL ^ THIS LEVER COUNTY BALLOT 1 1 NON-PARTISAN end of the week, they will not be eligible to vote in the North Carolina primary, and it is turning out to be a very impor tant primary. “Even if they’re not involved in local issues, they don’t have to vote on these slates, but they should be interested in who will be their next senator,” Migniuolo said. Students interested in reg istering to vote in Alamance County must list their perma nent residences in Alamance County, but information on reg istration will be available for others at today’s voter drive. Even if students are not eligi ble to vote in North Carolina, they should vote in their own precincts by absentee ballot. This will also be discussed dur ing voter drive. “The big thing is that students should exer cise their right to vote,” Mig niuolo said. Anyone intending to register should bring some form of offi cial identification like driver’s license or social security card. Bill Long, director of founda tions, government and church relations, will serve as reg istrar. He will have forms avail able to determine a student’s eligibility to vote in Alamance County. This voter registration drive is sponsored by the Democratic Committee of the North Boone Precinct. Com mittee members Migniuolo, Professor Martha Smith and Assistant Professor Bruce Wal ler will assist registrants and answers questions about reg istering and voting. Economic aid needed in Central America Focus” to feature talks on careers By Barbie Callahan Staff Writer Seniors, are you concerned ibout being limited in your ■areer choices because of your najor? Don’t be. Susan Phil ips, director of Career Plan- ling and Placement, said that Cion has begun to do a study on he graduates who have been )ut on the job market for the jast five years. Phillips added that “Elon las been collecting informa- ion on the graduates and is rying to keep it updated. We ike to know what they are ioing and what career they lave chosen.” She cited some examples of people who have found jobs ;hat have had little or nothing to do with their major. Phillips said that there are so many jobs that it doesn’t really matter if they are not in your major. She said that “the best thing to do is to have a background in sever al different|SKbijqFlp;|it,n}akef you a well rounded person, and it is better to know a little ab out many subjects, rather than be well-educated in only one subject.” This isn’t saying that a hu man services major can be a brain surgeon- but a human services major can find a career in marketing. As a mat ter of fact, anyone can have a career in marketing, if you can organize, plan and work with people. Phillips said that she knew “of a stockbroker who had ma jored in history, a sales repre sentative who had majored in English and a paramedic who had majored in history.” According to Phillips, “many people either went out of their major, or into something that was related to it.” So, if you are not sure about the major that you have chosen, and you are not certain that you want to have a career in that particular field, then “Focus” j i^ f)>r1yi>4 “’Fpcus” is a Careers Conference for Liberal Arts Students. It is a careers work shop that will be held on second floor, Long Student Center, on Thursday April 12 at 1 p.m. “Focus” will be featur ing guest speakers who are Elon College alumni and other local businessmen and businesswomen. The careers that they will be discussing are: sales, airlines, government, communications, marketing, advertising, invest ments, banking, media, travel, insurance and public rela tions. The keynote speaker will be Sherrill Hall, who is the execu tive vice-president of Jefferson Standard Life Insurance. He graduated from Elon in 1955 and majored in Math and En glish. He will be speaking about his career and how he chose it. This workshop is open to any one in any class. By Vicky Jiggetts Staff Writer “Half of the kids died before they were five years old. I’ve held them and have been asked to bless them minutes before they died.” That was only one of Joseph Moran’s descriptions of life to day in Central America. With the aid of slides from a recent trip to the country, he gave a lecture in Mooney Theatre, on that troubled region last Wednesday night, by the Liber al Arts Forum. Moran’s topic, “Central America (The Church and Hu man Rights),” centered around his/attempts to help gain hu- m^ rights in the region. He spoke of his many efforts to help the poverty-stricken peo ple and to inform the United States of the crisis in Central America. He spent 10 years in Central America and five years as a Catholic priest in Honduras. Moran also spent four years as a rural development advisor with the Academy for Educa tional Development, under a contract for the United States Agency for International De velopment of Guatemala. Moran later served as a con sultant to the Congressionally established Inter-American Foundation. In 1976, he wrote on Latin American affairs for presidential candidate Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz. “The poverty crisis is very important,” said Moran. “Our country is pouring millions of dollars to aid people in Central America. We know that we have technology to help our brothers who are such a short distance away.” He said however, that the Un ited States is offering the wrong type of assistance to the country. “We’re sending milit ary aid instead of economic aid. I think that is wrong,” he said. When he first arrived in Hon duras, Moran was warned by the military that “we like for our priests to stay in the church.” Several threats were made on his life. Moran recalled that, “One lieutenant was drunk and started shooting around the vil lage. I reported him to the offi cials. He later threatened to kill me and told me that if I stepped out of my house, 1 would be a deadman.” Moran said that the villagers did not want him to leave his home because of the threats on his life. “I couldn’t stay in my house and when I went out, no thing happened.” The lecture by Moran was arranged by George Lashley, a junior religion major here at Elon. Lashley said that Moran traveled to Central America to obtain information on human rights. “He passed that information to federal people in the United States, especially during Jim my Carter’s presidency. Carter was supposedly interested in human rights,” said Lashley. He said that Moran’s main purpose was “for us to make our own decision on human rights, investigate it, read pap ers and use sources that are not biased so that we can use good judgement.” Eleonore’s Hair Design “Great Cuts and Great Perms at Great Prices.” 102 N. Williamson Ave. beside Elon Town Hall Call 584-4211 For Appointment