<p>Where can students register to vote on campus?</p>
<p>Is it best to put down home address or school address?
How does this impact call for jury duty?</p>
<p>Where can students register to vote on campus?</p>
<p>Is it best to put down home address or school address?
How does this impact call for jury duty?</p>
<p>They have had a table out in front of Tommy Trojan all week with voter registration forms. Hopefully it will be out there this week as well. I'm not sure about the others.</p>
<p>If you get a jury duty summons and you are a student, you can get a reprieve until the school holidays.</p>
<p>Make sure whatever you do, you get an absentee voter ballot or go to the polls on election day, if you register with your school address. </p>
<p>My son has requested absentee ballots online through the registrar-recorder for the county, and then has a chance to vote on community issues, but also gets his absentee sent to his school address. It works out pretty well.</p>
<p>I believe that you need to register to vote by the 29th day before the election. Even if your birthday is after the 29 days, then you can still register. My son's 18th birthday is actually election day, so he can turn in his voter register now for the election.</p>
<p>in CA, jury duty is pulled from both driver's license and voter registration, so if you have a driver's license, then you're already in the pool anyways.</p>
<p>So can out of state students register to vote in California? I feel like that's not legitimate, lol.</p>
<p>Yes, students can register either in their home state or where they go to school. I don't really see how that's illegitimate - if you're spending the majority of your time somewhere, you may feel more connected to that state's politics.</p>
<p>(Although, if you live in a swing state, I'd recommend you register there and vote absentee, as California is pretty clearly going Democratic.)</p>
<p>As far as I know, there are still voter registration tables out at Trousdale.</p>