Elon businesses brace for North Carolina’s modified stay-at-home order
Businesses in Elon face new challenges following the modified stay-at-home order in North Carolina announced by Gov. Roy Cooper that will go into effect Dec. 11 at 5 p.m..
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Businesses in Elon face new challenges following the modified stay-at-home order in North Carolina announced by Gov. Roy Cooper that will go into effect Dec. 11 at 5 p.m..
Former Vice President Joe Biden — a Democrat — is the projected 46th president of the United States, winning the election after four days of ballot counting in key battleground states. Kamala Harris, a senator from California, was elected the vice president — the first woman, first Black person and the first South Asian American to hold this position.
Walking around campus, the effect of the pandemic on environmental waste is evident. Trash cans and compost bins outside of dining halls overflow with coffee cups and to-go boxes.
Across Elon University, signs of the upcoming presidential election are everywhere — literally. Instructions on how to request an absentee ballot can be found in most academic buildings, and students receive regular emails from administrators encouraging them to vote.
Elodia Castillo visited Elon University Feb. 25 for her speaker tour La Lucha Sigue, or “The Struggle Continues,” to talk about the struggles of indigenous Mayan communities being erased in Guatemala, and their efforts to reclaim the land and ancestral practices that were once theirs. She and Roderico Diaz, a photojournalist who focuses on images of migration and indigenous struggle, gave a presentation followed by a question and answer session and reception.
Senior Caroline Redd did not have an interest in politics until she arrived at Elon University. She saw the outcomes of elections around her and realized the importance of voting and its effect on her home community in Georgia. Because of this, Redd decided to vote via absentee ballot in order to make her voice heard in her home state.