2001 from pa Re AI the District Court bench. With the three new judges, the court grew to 15 members. Biggs became the third African Ameri can on the court and the fourth woman. "It was tut honor to he select ed by former Gov. Hunt, and I look forw ard to serving as long as the law and the people of North Carolina allow me to do so." Biggs said in February. In 21X12. Biggs will have to not only win over voters in Forsyth County but residents all over the state in order to keep her spot on the court. An ambitious group of mostly religious and community leaders unveiled a new group that would work on ways to jolt economic and residential development in East Winston. In a symbolic move. The Nehemiah Initiative held a coming-out party on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. The group let the city know that it too has a dteam. a grand vision for East Winston that includes revital ization and financial empower ment. Members of the group vowed to work with the pro ate sector to secure sound invest ments for East Winston and solid partnerships that would benefit all parties involved. Months before he would become the center of a debate that would engulf the black communi ty for weeks, political commenta tor Tavis Smiley returned to Win ston-Salem to promote his latest book. During a stop at Special Occasions. Sntiley. known for his strong political views, was in rare form. He criticized black leader ship and raised doubts about the nation's soon-to-be president. "Some of us still do not want to call him the president-elect." Smiley said about George W. Bush to a crowd of more than l(X). "but the president-select because he was selected by the Supreme Court." A few months later Smiley was axed from his talk show-host ing duties on Black Entertainment his wallet to many worthy organi zations and causes over the years, including the Winston-Salem Slate University Foundation and the YMCA. February ,_The Ministers Conference of Winston-Salem and Vicinity came to the defense of William Bran don. the owner of the Eastway Pla/a Shopping Center.yafter hanks threatened to foreclose on the property. Brandon's center had been a crown jewel in East Winston when he first opened it He received funds from the city and a loan front a consortium of 12 banks in 1993 to open the shop ping center. But times got tough. He lost a major clothing store and struggled to find new tenants. Brandon and the ministers claimed they did not know why the banks moved to foreclose on the property. Brandon said he had made regular payments on his loan. The ministers helped to broker a temporary fix for Brandon. The foreclosure w as pushed back for a short time, but Brandon's tight to keep the shopping center played out throughout 2(X)I. Brandon prevailed, though, and is now one of several owners of the plu/.a. Mayor Jack Cavanagh also found himself in a familiar place - in hot water with the African American community. Cavanagh added his two cents to the contro versy snrrounding Brandon by telling a reporter that black entre preneurs seek City Hall financing for business ventures that are not fully thought out. The ministers demanded an apology; they got one. The city spent thousands of dollars to create a new logo for the city and thousands more on a mass marketing campaign to make city residents aware of the logo. "O! Winston-Salem, Now that's Living" w as selected by res idents as the city's logo after a series of focus groups. The logo was to be used to help market the city to outsiders. The logo and its cost became a running joke Hie Photo Fans waif to get their books signed by Tavis Smiley. Television, reportedly because he was a bit too outspoken for BET chief Robert Johnson. Smiley's friends on the "Tom Joyner Morn ing Show." where he is a frequent guest, urged blacks to voice their displeasure over Smiley's dis missal. Special Occasions started a petition drive locally and gar nered the names of dozens of peo ple. In the end. though. Johnson did not budge and Smiley found bigger mountains to scale at net works such as ABC. Well-known local philanthro pist Marshall Bass started out the year by lending a helping hand to parents who want to enroll their children in the highly acclaimed Best Choice Center. Bass started a $50,000 endowment for grdnts to help parents pay tuition at the cen ter. which runs an after-school and summer program that gives youngsters lessons in everything from computers to math Bass made the decision to start the endowment after the cen ter's board of directors raised tuition. A retired R.J. Reynolds executive and head of his own consulting firm, Bass has opened ? _ among some aldermen and resi dents. though. Some claimed it was a waste of money: others said it was simply tacky. The nephew of School Board member Geneva Brown came to town to take part in a fund-raiser held by his aunt. Thomas Brown was seeking the most visible sher iff's job in the country at the time. In November 2(XX). the last man elected sheriff of De Kalb County. Ga.. was shot down as he walked from his driveway to his home. Brown had added his name to a packed field of candidates seek ing to replace the murdered sher iff. Brown, who was serv ing as interim sheriff as he ran for the office, said during his visit that there were suspects in the murder but he could not reveal informa tion about, leads because the investigation was ongoing at the time. Brown won the election in a landslide a few weeks later, and later in the year a prominent offi cial in the IX' Kalb County Sher iff's Department was charged with the murder of the former sheriff. He will stand trial soon. News broke that some African-American police officers File Photo The Rev. James Sloan and the Rev. Micheal Williams hold a news conference at Eastway Plaza Shopping Center. I ilc Photo Dan Besse addresses a crowd at Miller Park on the day he announced that he would run for Southwest Ward alderman. About 100 people were on hand for the announcement. iii Winston-Salem were livid at Chief Linda Davis for leaving a captain in charge while she was away from the department. At the time, the depart ment had one assis tant chief, African American Mike McCoy. Many people thought he Davis should naturally be in charge in lieu of the chief. The perceived slight did not come long after Davis demoted three African-American sergeants for what she called failing to control a rowdy concert at Joel Coliseum. McCoy had publicly cried foul when Davis was named chief in 1999. He was a top contender for the job. Later in the year. McCoy applied for the chief's position in Wilson but did not get the post. March The city got its second African-American assistant police in Patricia Norris. a 24-year veter an who had run the department's professional standards division before being promoted. With Nor ris' appointment, the hierarchy of the city's Police Department bucked tradition, with a female chief and two black assistant chiefs. Norris. at the time, said being a woman is not important in her line of work. Being at the top of one's game, she said, is very important, however. "I think we have gotten to a point where it doesn't matter what sex a person is as long as they can do the job," Norris said. The results of a nationwide survey that gauged the level of social interaction among residents in a variety of cities found that folks in Winston-Salem do not mind digging deep into their pockets to give to charities but avoid interaction with neighbors. The local survey was conduct ed by the Winston-Salem Founda tion. which months earlier had started a special fund to help bring residents closer together through a variety of initia tives. Among the results of the sur vey were thai most Green ?? whites in the city have at least one black friend and most blacks have at least one white friend. The survey also revealed that Hispanics in the city were slow to trust non-Hispanics. Members of the Black Lead ership Roundtable and the Win ston-Salem BaO Association protested in front of the Forsyth County Courthouse to try to save the life of Willie Fisher, a Win ston-Salem man on death row. Local opponents of the death penalty had won a big victory a few months earlier when the city's Board of Aldermen voted to sup port a death penalty moratorium. "I believe that there are alter natives of punishment." said Todd Mclver, the then-president of the ?Winston-Salem Bar Association, which is made up of local African American lawyers. "Life in prison will have as much effect, plus it will keep them from committing other crimes in society." But the momentum the anti-death penalty movement was gaining came too late for Fisher, w ho was convicted in 1993 of stabbing to death his girlfriend. Fie was put to death a few days after the protest. Forsyth Technical Communi ty College announced that" it had found a new president after an exhaustive search. Gary Green came to the school from Calhoun Community College in Decatur, Ala., where he served as executive vice president. Green officially tixik over the reins of the retiring Desna Wallin in July. The Rev. Sun Myung Moon came to Winston-Salem, not to perform one of his infamous mass weddings hut to lead a national tour for world peace and religious solidarity . The "We Stand Togeth er Tour" reportedly visited all 50 states, with Mixin. the founder of the controversial Unification Church, calling for people of \ ar ious faiths to come together. Moon's appearance drew hun dreds. although the 80-something Moon did not do much talking during his stop here. For a quick second. CIAA officials considered bringing the popular basketball tournament back to Winston-Salem. A city delegation had put together a decent package to try to lure the tourney back to the city, where it was staged for six years in the 1990s. But the CIAA announced that the grass in Raleigh was much loo green to leave the capi tal city. In making its decision to extend its stay in Raleigh, the CIAA cited that a record 75.000 fans attended the February 2(X)I tournament, an all-time record. The last year the toumey was in Winston-Salem, about 42.000 people attended. has been much more successful than her brief career in music. Her latest novel. "The Coldest Winter Ever.*' was a best seller and is being made into a cable movie. Souljah. known for shooting from the hip. gained national recognition after then-presidential hopeful Bill Clinton criticized her for comments she made about the Los Angeles riots. A $ 13,000 check was present ed to Cook Elementary School Principal Pamela Pelc by a group of African-American churches that collected the money* during their revival services. "We are thrilled to pieces. It means that we can get things for the children that otherwise we would have to do without. It is a blessing," Pelc said during a spe cial assembly at the school where the check presentation took place. The school planned to use the money to buy classroom comput ers. books and new chairs for the gymnasium. Officials from the churches said they wanted to help the school because it is located near the churches and most of the students who attend the school come from low-income families. The Rev. Joseph Parks, pastor of Grace United Community Church, told students and the staff of the school. "We pray that all of you know today that all seven of these pastors, who represent probably more than K).(KK) other people, are concerned about you and you are great in all of our lives." The other churches involved were Mount Pleas ant Baptist, Philips Chapel Baptist. Saint Mark Baptist, Saints Home United Methodist and Union Chapel Baptist. Maxwell Christine Banks Grier ., VI ov April The school system began to tout initial plans for a multimillion sch