• Sot Opimon/f oruni pages on \o*x • See Sports on page HI* Vt?' ”v ". ^ ^ S-. c > WINSTON-SALEM, N.C THURSDAY, July S, 2018 Volume 44, Number 44 WSSU to regain early voting? BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE Will early voting return to Winston Salem State University and what will be the hours for weekend voting? Those are among the questions still being considered by the Forsyth County Board of Elections (BOE) as they develop an early voting plan. BOE Chairwoman Susan Campbell, a Democrat, asked to have the Anderson Center at WSSU as a site at the BOE’s meeting on Monday, July 2. Anderson had been an early voting site from 2000-2012 until a Republican majority BOE chaired by Ken Raymond stopped using it. BOE Vice Chairman Stuart Russell,. a Republican, said he needed to think about it. He felt the Anderson Center is too close to the early voting site at the BOE office in the Forsyth County Government Center. “Why would we pick one that’s within a mile of the Govermiient Cdnter?” said Russell. The traveling distance between CAMPAIGN Anderson Center and the BOE office is just under two miles, which can be a six minute drive but, for the many students who don't have cars on campus, it would be an approximately 40 minute walk. Campbell said encouraging students to vote was important and the center’s loca tion on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive made it convenient to the surrounding communi ty, especially if Business 40 closes for con struction during early voting. “It’s a corridor, to all these neighbor hoods that everyone knows where the Anderson Center is,” said Campbell. “That really works well, not just for the students, but for the community.” -i In previous years, dozens of residents have requested during BOE meetings for Anderson to be an early voting site. Two petitions in 2015 garnered more than 1,000 signatures asking for the site. There were numerous potential sites that Russell suggested that Campbell did agree with like the BOE office, Mazie Woodruff Center and the Southside, Rural Hall, Clemmons and Lewisville Libraries. They agreed to use the VFW Post In Kemersville, in leu of the library there, and Campbell wanted to use Polo Park Recreation Center instead of Old Town Recreation Center. See Voting on A2 Thousands of residents gathered at Quarry Park last weekend for live Photos by Tevin Stinson music, food, and fireworks. Thousands ‘Rock Out the Quarry ’ over the weekend Quarry Park provides a one-of-a-kind view of the city's skyline. Thousands got to witness that view last weekend during the Rock Out the Quarry celebration. BY TEVIN STINSON THE CHRONICLE For over a decade, chil dren and residents in the Southeast Ward have known about the beauty of the 200-acre quarry neatly tucked away in the woods off Reynolds Park Road. Many have taken the nearly one mile hike through dirt and rough ter rain as children just to admire the beauty of the natural wonder. "For me and other peo ple from my neighborhood, the quarry has always been See Rock on A2 Protesters call for family reunification, ending ICE BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE_ About 1,000 protesters took to the streets of down town Winston-Salem to call for the reunification of migrant children with their parents and to denounce long standing U.S. immigration policy. It was a national day of action against the Trump administration’s policy that’s resulted in children being separated from parents who entered the country illegally. Btffthe local protest - sponsored by Indivisible Piedmont, Sanctuary City Coalition, Winston-Salem Democratic Socialists and Winston-Salem Socialists — also addressed broader issues, with many protests calling for an end to Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Immigration movie screening “Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America” will be screened at a/perture cinema on July 8 at 5:30 p.m. The free screening is sponsored by Sanctuary City Coalition Win ston-Salem, which will be holding a discussion on next steps in local immigration activism during the event. Photo by Todd Luck Protesters march on Fourth Street on Saturday, June 30, to protest ICE and family separation. an agency, created by the 2002 Homeland Security Act during the post-9/11 Bush administration. ICE has long been criticized for its immigration raids, immigration detention centers and other tactics. Before the march, several protesters spoke at Merschel Plaza on the policies of past administrations that led the country to this point. “This didn’t just happen overnight, this administration didn’t just wake up and make this decision,” said John Thornton. “This power was built over time.” The 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Responsibility Act under President Bill Clinton greatly See Protest on A8 lliliiiHi,liilhiiliiV|lliah,iilllllll'iiil,i'liilili'MiJI 003*008**********FIRM CRLOT 0054A**C00 ADMINSTRATION FORSYTH CNTY PUB LIB 660 W5THST WINSTON SALEM. NC 27101-2705 60 Urban League meeting full of surprises BY TEVIN STINSON THE CHRONICLE More than three dozen residents with invested interest in the Winston-Salem Urban League (WSUL) came together last week to find out what the future holds for the nonprofit organization geared towards empowering African Americans and other disenfranchised communities. While many in attendance during the annual meeting held on Thursday, June 28, were there to hear pres ident and CEO James Perry give his report on the financial status and the state of the many programs offered by the WSUL, the most shocking news of the evening may have come at the end of the meeting, when Perry announced the retire ment of Patricia Sadler. For the past 15 years Sadler has served as the WSUL's director of workforce develop ment. During her tenure with the Urban League, Sadler was responsible for manag ing the Senior Community Service Employment Program, a work-based job train ing program for older Americans, which operates in 11 counties across the state. "The one thing you have to know about See Surprises on A2 Professional self-storage. (336) 924-7000 www.assuretistoragews.coir’ ■;,ate Hours. 3aiv' •1 )om II Setnama Station Road • «Vinston-Sa