The Week

 

News

Holiday festivities attract thousands

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 05, 2001

Families from all over the East Bay joined Berkeley residents for a daylong Fourth of July celebration at the Marina Wednesday. -more-


Calendar of Events & Activities

Thursday July 05, 2001


Thursday, July 5

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Forum

Thursday July 05, 2001

Waving the flag no simple matter for Asian Americans -more-


Arts & Entertainment

Thursday July 05, 2001

UC Berkeley Museum of Paleontology Lobby, Valley Life Sciences Building, UC Berkeley “Tyrannosaurus Rex,” ongoing. A 20 by 40-foot replica of the fearsome dinosaur made from casts of bones of the most complete T. Rex skeleton yet excavated. When unearthed in Montana, the bones were all lying in place with only a small piece of the tailbone missing. “Pteranodon” A suspended skeleton of a flying reptile with a wingspan of 22-23 feet. The Pteranodon lived at the same time as the dinosaurs. Free. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 642-1821 -more-


School Board considers use of biodiesel fuel

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 05, 2001

The Board of Education will consider a resolution to investigate the use of biodiesel fuel for its school buses tonight, at the last regular meeting before the board’s one month summer recess. -more-


Berkeley plays host to James Joyce scholars

Matt Lorenz Daily Planet correspondent
Thursday July 05, 2001

No self-respecting James Joyce scholar would fail to be in Dublin on June 16, 2004; but this year, anyway, Berkeley is the place to be. -more-


Walnut Creek pharmacy shut down possible

The Associated Press
Thursday July 05, 2001

WALNUT CREEK — State officials say they will attempt to shut down a pharmacy believed to be the source of cortisone shots tainted by meningitis that caused three deaths. -more-


Birth of aviation could have brought death

The Associated Press
Thursday July 05, 2001

EL SEGUNDO — Aviation experts building a flying replica of the world’s first airplane have found the Wright stuff was a little wrong. -more-


OPEC decision leaves little hope for lower oil prices

The Associated Press
Thursday July 05, 2001

OPEC’s decision not to increase oil output beyond current levels offered little to cheer consumers, but some energy analysts suggested that motorists and buyers of home heating oil might still benefit if Iraq moves quickly to resume its crude exports. -more-


China still waiting for WTO OK

The Associated Press
Thursday July 05, 2001

GENEVA — After 15 years of knocking at the door of the World Trade Organization, China is finally on the verge of entering the global trade forum. -more-


Foundation helps fund summer programs

By Ben Lumpkin
Tuesday July 03, 2001

“Discretionary” money is a rare bird these days in the jungle of school finances. -more-


Sabrina Forkish and Guy Poole
Tuesday July 03, 2001


Tuesday, July 3


Staff
Tuesday July 03, 2001

Throw the rascals out; vote third party in


Staff
Tuesday July 03, 2001

Editor:


Recovering addicts step up for new life

By Matt Lorenz
Tuesday July 03, 2001

The residents of the 19th century Victorian at 1545 Dwight Way would be the first to admit how spacious and attractive their front porch is, but they tend not to sit out on it too much. -more-


Good deeds don’t go unnoticed

By Judith Scherr
Tuesday July 03, 2001

Berkeley Lite’s an occasional column of commentary, illuminating those who’d like to shine us on. -more-


AT&T claims Pac Bell overcharges for network costs

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

AT&T Communications of California Inc. is accusing Pacific Bell Telephone Co. of overcharging for access to its local telephone infrastructure to keep competition at bay, according to suit filed Monday in U.S. District Court. -more-


State budget remains at an impasse

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

SACRAMENTO — California enters the third day of the new fiscal year Tuesday without a state budget, while Democrats are faced with rounding up an additional Republican vote because a lawmaker left for a trip abroad. -more-


Recession may be avoided in 2001

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

WASHINGTON — Consumers, a key force keeping the economy afloat, continued their vigorous spending in May. That, along with improvements in manufacturing and solid construction activity, made economists more hopeful the country will be able to skirt a recession this year. -more-


Bush proposes offshore drilling in Gulf of Mexico

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration is proposing the first new offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in more than a decade with plans to offer new oil and gas leases in an area covering 1.47 million acres, Interior Secretary Gale Norton announced Monday. -more-


Separatists investigate claim American hostage may be alive

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

ZAMBOANGA, Philippines — A Muslim separatist group said Monday it was looking into an unconfirmed report that its rebels saw members of the extremist Abu Sayyaf moving hostages, including an American the abductors say they beheaded. -more-


Police Briefs

Kenyatte Davis
Tuesday July 03, 2001

A 78-year-old woman was nearly killed Saturday afternoon when an attempted purse snatch escalated on the 2300 block of McGee Avenue. -more-


Shorthanded Panthers limp through tourney

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 02, 2001

Coming off of a rousing victory over Modesto Christian on Friday, the St. Mary’s boys’ basketball team went into the weekend portion of the Cal Basketball Team Camp with hig spirits. But after an easy win over outmanned Mater Dei, the Panthers came crashing back down to earth. -more-


Arts & Entertainment

Monday July 02, 2001

Letters to the Editor

Monday July 02, 2001

1-2-3-What are we fighting for? -more-


Calendar of Events & Activities

Monday July 02, 2001


Monday, July 2

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The first David Brower Day

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 02, 2001

Forum

By Jo Ann B. Price
Monday July 02, 2001

Campaign finance reform will be taken up by the House of Representatives just after returning from the Fourth of July recess, sometime during the week of July 9. The League of Women Voters warns that now is the critical time for concerned citizens to mobilize to get Congress to pass no bill other than the ”real reform bill,” the Shays-Meehan Campaign Finance Reform Bill. -more-


Council campaign finance reform proposal delayed

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Monday July 02, 2001

The City Council decided not to include a campaign finance reform program as part of the $524 million budget approved last week because the city manager’s office decided the proposed program had not been thoroughly studied. -more-


Telegraph Avenue gets help lighting up

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 02, 2001

Philips Lighting Company, one of the world’s largest lighting company’s with 10,000 employees in North America alone, has chosen Berkeley as the place to show the nation how its energy efficient light bulbs can help ease the growing energy crisis. -more-


Berkeley residents share their unique stories

By Matt Lorenz Special to the Daily Planet
Monday July 02, 2001

A night of stories was the idea, and a lot of people seemed to have it Friday night as an eclectic group of writers, scholars and performers assembled for a panel discussion at the Julia Morgan Theater. -more-


Davis convenes panel to aid BART negotiations

By Karen A. Davis Associated Press Writer
Monday July 02, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – News that Gov. Gray Davis intervened in contract negotiations between Bay Area Rapid Transit and several unions has cooled most BART employees, delaying a possible strike that was scheduled to begin at midnight Saturday. -more-


No suspects in Richmond double teen slaying

The Associated Press
Monday July 02, 2001

RICHMOND – Unidentified attackers killed two young men on a residential street shortly before midnight Friday, police said. -more-


Talks between actors, producers intensifying

By Mason Stockstill Associated Press Writer
Monday July 02, 2001

LOS ANGELES – A laid-back but focused attitude prevailed Sunday morning among representatives of movie and television actors and producers negotiating to avoid an industry-crippling strike. -more-


City manager brings council together on budget

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

The City Council unanimously approved the city’s $524 million two-year budget Tuesday with a unanimous vote and many are saying the rare council consensus is an endorsement of City Manager Weldon Rucker. -more-


Calendar of Events & Activities

Saturday June 30, 2001


Saturday, June 30

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Letters to the Editor

Saturday June 30, 2001

Let The Sales Tax Yo-Yo -more-


Arts & Entertainment

Staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

Habitot Children’s Museum “Back to the Farm” An interactive exhibit gives children the chance to wiggle through tunnels, look into a mirrored fish pond, don farm animal costumes, ride on a John Deere tractor and more. “Recycling Center” Lets the kids crank the conveyor belt to sort cans, plastic bottles and newspaper bundles into dumpster bins. $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Monday and Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tuesday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Sundays, Memorial Day through Labor Day) Kittredge Street and Shattuck Avenue 647-1111 or www.habitot.org -more-


Panthers serve notice with win over Modesto Christian

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

St. Mary’s shines at Cal team camp -more-


Group discussion centers on infant hearing tests

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

About 30 representatives of local and state health-care institutions met to discuss California’s inadequate hearing screenings for newborns at the Berkeley-based Center for the Education of the Infant Deaf Friday. -more-


Strategies sought to reduce greenhouse gases

By Ben LumpkinDaily Planet staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

At a time when commentators around the world are still taking turns lambasting President George Bush’s decision to withdraw from the 1997 Kyoto agreements for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by industrialized nations, representatives from India, Indonesia, South African and the Philippines have been in Berkeley this week studying strategies for reducing such emissions in their own cities. -more-


Hillside club promoted idea of simple and healthy living

By Susan Cerny
Saturday June 30, 2001

Berkeley Observed -more-


Irish chess champs face Berkeley team

By Guy Poole Daily Planet staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

Last summer, eight members of the Berkeley Bishops Chess Team traveled to Straffen, Ireland, to compete with the top-rated European Junior Champion Chess Team. -more-


BART officials ask governor for help

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

OAKLAND — Unions representing BART employees have asked Gov. Gray Davis to help avert a strike on the commuter train network. -more-


Friends say lotto prize went to great manv

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

SAN JOSE — The nation’s largest state lottery prize, a record $141 million, couldn’t have gone to a more deserving man, according to friends and neighbors of Alcario “Al” Castellano, a retired grocery store clerk who volunteered often to help Mexican-American groups. -more-


Hispanics see new political clout at conference

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

With shouts of “Arriba!” whistles and thunderous applause, Los Angeles mayoral candidate Antonio Villaraigosa was greeted like a conquering hero here at a gathering of Hispanic officials. -more-


Immigrant workers seek crack down on labor laws

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Frustrated by the postponement of a state hearing on workers’ rights, dozens of immigrant workers rallied outside Gov. Gray Davis’ local office Friday and urged full enforcement of labor laws. -more-


Some want to evict ‘worst of the worst’ from San Quentin

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

SAN QUENTIN — They call them the “worst of the worst” – death row inmates who spend hours fashioning weapons out of unlikely materials and hurl filthy concoctions at passing guards. -more-


California nearing recession

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

LOS ANGELES — California’s power crisis and the struggling technology market will keep the state’s economy teetering on the edge of recession for at least the rest of the year, economic forecasters say. -more-


Doctor agrees not to try human cloning for now

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

WASHINGTON — A researcher who had been preparing to work on human cloning has agreed not to attempt an experiment or research until the legality of the effort is determined, the Food and Drug Administration reported. -more-


Medicare expands services

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

WASHINGTON — Screening tests for breast cancer, cervical cancer and colorectal cancer will be covered by Medicare beginning on July 1, the Department of Health and Human Services announced Friday. -more-


Senate passes patients’ rights bill

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

WASHINGTON — Defying a veto threat, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed sweeping patients’ rights legislation Friday night, promising millions of Americans new health care protections and the ability to sue their HMOs. -more-


Vice President Cheney headed back to hospital

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

WASHINGTON — Vice President Dick Cheney, experiencing heart problems for the third time since last November’s election, expected doctors to implant a pacemaker Saturday to even out a rapid heartbeat. Declaring himself otherwise fit, he said he would resign if ill health began hindering his work. -more-


Russia opposed to Iraqi sanction plans

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

PARIS — Secretary of State Colin Powell voiced doubt Friday that a U.S.-British plan to overhaul sanctions on Iraq would be approved soon by the U.N. Security Council. The problem is Russia, which is holding out. -more-


U.S. Navy bombing exercises near end on Vieques island amid protests

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

VIEQUES, Puerto Rico — Fighter jets dropped dummy bombs on the U.S. Navy’s firing range on the island of Vieques on Friday, while security officers detained five protesters who invaded Navy lands. -more-


Dealerships seem to wait people out

By Tom and Ray Magliozzi King Features Syndicate
Saturday June 30, 2001

Dear Tom and Ray: -more-


Reaction to rate cut reminder of market’s woes

By Lisa Singahina The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

NEW YORK — An interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve is usually cause for celebration on Wall Street. But investors had to sleep on it before rallying the day after the Fed’s sixth such move of the year. -more-


HP asks workers to take cuts

The Associated Press
Saturday June 30, 2001

PALO ALTO — Computer and printer giant Hewlett-Packard Co. has asked its 45,000 U.S. employees to take pay cuts or use additional vacation days in an effort to trim costs. -more-


Panthers get their first shot at the big boys at Cal camp

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday June 29, 2001

By Jared Green -more-


Entertainment Calendar

Friday June 29, 2001

Habitot Children’s Museum “Back to the Farm” An interactive exhibit gives children the chance to wiggle through tunnels, look into a mirrored fish pond, don farm animal costumes, ride on a John Deere tractor and more. “Recycling Center” Lets the kids crank the conveyor belt to sort cans, plastic bottles and newspaper bundles into dumpster bins. $4 adults; $6 children age 7 and under; $3 for each additional child age 7 and under. Monday and Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Tuesday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Sundays, Memorial Day through Labor Day) Kittredge Street and Shattuck Avenue 647-1111 or www.habitot.org -more-


Forum

Friday June 29, 2001

Dog rage case captures headlines -more-


Out & About

Friday June 29, 2001


Friday, June 29

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Allegations of roaming pit bulls

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Friday June 29, 2001

If Planning Commissioners have their way, the city-owned parking lot on Oxford Street (between Allston Way and Kittridge Street) may one day be home to a world class environmental education center, a community theater and the largest single concentration of affordable housing built in the city in the last -more-


Lampley headed home to Chicago

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday June 29, 2001

Cal forward Sean Lampley, the 2001 Pac-10 Player of the Year, was drafted in the second round of the NBA Draft Wednesday by his hometown Chicago Bulls. -more-


Commission OKs plan for Oxford Street lot

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Friday June 29, 2001

If Planning Commissioners have their way, the city-owned parking lot on Oxford Street (between Allston Way and Kittridge Street) may one day be home to a world class environmental education center, a community theater and the largest single concentration of affordable housing built in the city in the last -more-


Cal AD wins Pac-10 honor

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday June 29, 2001

Cal Athletic Director and Men’s Head Crew Coach Steve Gladstone was named Pac-10 Conference Men’s Rowing Coach of the Year by Pac-10 Comissioner Tom Hansen on Thursday. -more-


Nonprofit group files suit against UC Thursday

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet staff
Friday June 29, 2001

The nonprofit organization East Bay Depot for Creative Reuse filed a lawsuit against the University of California on Tuesday morning, to contest its refusal to renew the Depot’s lease of the university-owned Marchant building at 6701 San Pablo Ave. -more-


BRIEFS

Friday June 29, 2001

Panel on infant hearing screening reconvenes -more-


Redwood grove poised for protection

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — A stand of redwoods that is the size of San Francisco and is home to 23 endangered species would be preserved in a $60 million plan between the state, a timber company and a Bay Area open-space group. -more-


Governor accused of failing state in energy crisis

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

LONG BEACH — Giving a glimpse at the hostile tone the state’s next gubernatorial contest likely will take, Secretary of State Bill Jones attacked Democratic Gov. Gray Davis on Thursday for his handling of California’s energy crisis. -more-


No word from winning lotto ticket holder

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

The person holding the winning lottery ticket from Saturday’s record-breaking $141 million jackpot is losing thousands of dollars in interest money for each day spent laying low, financial advisers say. -more-


Abduction declared a hoax

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

PETALUMA — A 17-year-old boy who said a man abducted him at gunpoint and forced him to drive fours from the North Coast to the Central Valley early Monday now says the kidnapping was a hoax. -more-


Scientist accused of poisoning husband defended

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

SAN DIEGO — An accusation that a respected lab toxicologist intentionally poisoned her husband has shocked former colleagues who recall her as a meticulous scientist with a sweet disposition. -more-


Court decision cripples assault weapons ban

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

Judges cannot declare firearms illegal under the state’s assault-weapons ban law, the California Supreme Court ruled Thursday in a decision the dissenting chief justice said created a “loophole” in the 1989 act. -more-


Bush’s timber czar loved, loathed by interests

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

WASHINGTON — Timber industry groups hope Mark Rey will champion their causes, since he once worked for them. But environmentalists see him more as Darth Vader. -more-


Campaign finance reform bills head to House floor

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

WASHINGTON — A committee on Thursday sent dueling campaign finance bills to the House floor, moving Congress a step closer to enacting the biggest changes in a quarter-century in the way the nation pays for its elections. -more-


Oscar winner Jack Lemmon dies at 76

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

Jack Lemmon, who brought a jittery intensity to his roles as finicky Felix Unger in “The Odd Couple,” the boastful Ensign Pulver in “Mr. Roberts” and a cross-dressing musician in “Some Like It Hot,” has died. He was 76. -more-


Sharpening knives can be an art form

By James and Morris Carey The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

A sharp knife can make a carving job easier and safer. -more-


Hearing a train when turning on the tap

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

Q: I open any tap in my house and I hear a train-like noise. It also feels as if air is being sucked into the tap. When we use two taps, the noise disappears. Using two taps is not a permanent solution. So tell us what kind of problem we are facing and how to fix it. -more-


Competitors shake heads at Microsoft

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

SAN JOSE — Three years after the government brought antitrust charges against Microsoft Corp., the competitors with the most to gain from the case find themselves shaking their fists at the software titan more than ever. -more-


Job cuts may be easing

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

WASHINGTON — The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for state unemployment insurance fell last week, the third drop in a row, suggesting that the flurry of job cuts this year may be easing. -more-


Author tries to teach importance of quietness

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

NEW YORK — This is about the mouse that didn’t roar. -more-


Differences are bone deep between men and women

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

ROSEMONT, Ill. — Men and women aren’t created equal, at least when it comes to problems with their bones, joints and muscles. -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Vietnam War dog tags make it back to U.S.

The Associated Press The Associated Press The Associated Press
Thursday July 05, 2001

American business men buy IDs in back-alley market -more-


United deal to by US Airways crashes

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 03, 2001

CHICAGO — United Airlines is pulling the plug on its $4.3 billion purchase of US Airways – a deal that has been in trouble for months because of a weakened economy, industry woes and antitrust concerns. -more-


Bay Briefs

Monday July 02, 2001

Mail pouring in for hospitalized boy attacked by pit bull -more-


PROPERTY TAXES FUEL CITY BUDGET

Staff
Saturday June 30, 2001

Approved by the City Council last Tuesday, the city’s budget is based on funding streams that include property taxes, parking fines and sales tax. -more-


Environmental group to sue EPA over arsenic standards

The Associated Press
Friday June 29, 2001

The Associated Press -more-