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Medical pot zoning policy put on hold

By John Geluardi
Tuesday July 17, 2001

The City Council will likely not take any action to establish zoning policies that would limit marijuana cooperatives because of a recent Supreme Court ruling against “medical necessity” legal defenses. 

The council requested the report from City Manager Weldon Rucker on May 8, after some residents and medical marijuana patients raised concerns that there were no zoning policies governing the number or placement of cooperatives. The council asked for a report on the possibility of enacting a moratorium on new cooperatives until a zoning policy was in place. 

The council also requested Rucker study the possibility of Health and Human Services overseeing the cooperatives. Currently there is no city agency that oversees cooperative procedures and standards. 

The request for a zoning policy and oversight agency was the result of Berkeley’s medical marijuana ordinance approved in March. The ordinance allows doctor-approved patients to be in possession of 2.5 pounds of dried marijuana and as many as 10 marijuana plants. Cooperatives are allowed up to 50 plants and 12 pounds of dried marijuana. 

Once the ordinance was adopted, it became clear there were no guidelines for the planning and development department to determine where to locate cooperatives. Currently, there are four cooperatives operating in the city.  

Since the council requested the report, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of the United States v. the Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Cooperative, that “medical necessity” is not an exception to federal drug laws. 

The 8-0 decision brought aspects of the state’s medical marijuana law, Proposition 215, and the city’s ordinance into question, according to the city manager’s information report. 

“This decision is likely to limit somewhat the city’s flexibility in devising a framework for ‘permitting’ medical marijuana collectives, even if they are in compliance with the recently-adopted ordinance establishing protocols for medical cannabis,” according to the report. 

Based on the ruling, Rucker is recommending the council not develop zoning laws and suggested the moratorium on new cooperatives until an official policy is adopted isn’t necessary because there are no pending applications. In addition, Rucker suggested Health and Human Services not be assigned oversight of the cooperatives because of the murkiness surrounding medical marijuana laws. 

“It is inadvisable for the city to assume responsibility over an activity that remains illegal,” the report reads.  

Fred Medrano, director of health and human services, said managing the marijuana cooperatives would result in a significant increase in workload to a already taxed department.  

In addition, he said his staff would likely be reluctant to take the job on.  

“Especially with the Supreme Court ruling, which makes [it] technically illegal,” he said. “It wouldn’t make sense for a city department to take a regulatory position.” 

If the council agrees with Rucker’s informational report there will likely be no change in the city’s current policy. No more applications for cooperatives would be approved but the existing four cooperatives would not be effected. 

Director of the Cannabis Buyers Club, Don Duncan, said he approved of Rucker’s report.  

“We had a couple of meetings and I felt the city manager was thoughtful and careful,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any need for more cooperatives. The current proposal is the right thing to do.”


Sabrina Forkish and Guy Poole
Tuesday July 17, 2001


Tuesday, July 17

 

Intelligent Conversation  

7 - 9 p.m.  

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

A discussion group open to all, regardless of age, religion, viewpoint, etc. This time the discussion will center on best vacations, trips, and travel experiences. Informally led by Robert Berend, who founded similar groups in L.A., Menlo Park, and Prague. Bring light snacks/drinks to share. Free  

527-5332 

 

Free Early Music Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK) 

Small group sings madrigals and other voice harmony every Tuesday morning. Call Ann, 655-8863 

 

Berkeley Camera Club  

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church  

941 The Alameda  

Share your slides and learn what other photographers are doing. Monthly field trips. 

Call Don, 525-3565 

 

Berkeley School Volunteers 

10:30 a.m. - noon 

1835 Allston Way 

Orientation for volunteers interested in helping in academic and recreation programs being held in Berkeley public schools this summer. 

644-8833 

 

Writing and Resistance  

In A Culture of Amnesia 

6 - 7:45 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Classroom #2 

Part of a workshop series on concepts and strategies for resistance through the spoken and written word, taught by Joyce E. Young. $12. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2 - 7 p.m. 

Derby Street at MLK Jr. Way 

548-3333 

 

Berkeley City Council Public  

Hearing 

7 p.m. 

Council Chambers 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

The City Council will consider extending the moratorium on the installation of wireless telecommunications antennas for cellular and other personal communications systems. For information on the moratorium call 705-8108. To submit comments or for other information call 981-6900. 

 

Berkeley Fibromyalgia  

Support Group 

12 - 2 p.m. every 3rd Tuesday 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Maffly Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

“Myofascial Release” with Rachael Peizer, PT 

For more info call D.L. Malinousky: 601-0550 

 

Free Computer Class for Seniors 

9:30 - 11:30 a.m. and 1 - 3 p.m.  

South Berkeley Senior Center, 2939 Ellis St. 

This free course offers basic instruction in keyboarding, Microsoft Word, Windows 95, Excel and Internet access. Space is limited, call ahead for a reservation. 644-6109 

 


Wednesday, July 18

 

Blisters No More: Finding the  

Proper Boot Fit 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

REI footwear expert Brad Bostrom will show you how to make your feet more comfortable out on the trail. Bring your boots and socks to this interactive clinic. Free. 527-4140 

 

Berkeley Communicator  

Toastmasters Club 

7:15 a.m. 

Vault Cafe 

3250 Adeline 

Learn to speak with confidence. Ongoing first and third Wednesdays each month. 527-2337 

 

Ice Cream Day at LHS 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Make your own ice cream and compare it to a commercial brand. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

Support Group for  

Family/Friends  

Caring for Older Adults 

4 - 5:30 p.m. - 3rd Wednesday of each month 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

3rd floor, Room 3369B  

The group will focus on the needs of the older adult with serious medical problems, psychiatric illnesses, substance abuse, and their caregivers. Facilitated by Monica Nowakowski, LCSW. 

Free. 802-1725 

 

International Working Class  

Film and Video Festival 

7 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, films to be screened include “Resistance As Democracy,” “The Internationale,” “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement,” and “Zimbabwe’s New Chimurenga.” $7. 

849-256 

 


Thursday, July 19

 

LGBT Catholics Group  

7:30 p.m. 

Newman Hall  

2700 Dwight Way (at College)  

The lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender Catholics group are “a spiritual community committed to creating justice.” This meeting will be a game night.  

654-5486 

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week The Waikiki Steel Works perform vintage acoustic Hawaiian steel guitar music. 

 

Berkeley Metaphysical  

Toastmasters Club  

6:15 - 7:30 p.m.  

2515 Hillegass Ave.  

Public speaking skills and metaphysics come together. Ongoing first and third Thursdays each month.  

Call 869-2547 

 

Quit Smoking Class 

6 - 8 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis Street 

A six week quit smoking class. 

Free to Berkeley residents and employees. 644-6422 or e-mail at: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Salsa Dance Classes 

7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Classes every Thursday with live percussionists, light refreshments, DJ playing Latin music. $10 or $15 for two. 237-9874 

 

Backpacking Yosemite’s High  

Country 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide Presentation. 

Marvin Schinnerer will share highlights from two favorite trips out of Yosemite’s Tuolumne Meadows. Free. 527-4140 

 

Berkeley School Volunteers 

3 - 4:30 p.m. 

1835 Allston Way 

Orientation for volunteers interested in helping in academic and recreation programs being held in Berkeley public schools this summer. 644-8833 

 

Fair Campaign Practices  

Commission 

7:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Street 

Health Room 

Discussion and action regarding possible violations of the Berkeley Election Reform Act. 

981-6950 or 981-6903 (TDD) 

 

Free Computer Class for Seniors 

9:30 - 11:30 a.m. and 1 - 3 p.m.  

South Berkeley Senior Center, 2939 Ellis St. 

This free course offers basic instruction in keyboarding, Microsoft Word, Windows 95, Excel and Internet access. Space is limited, call ahead for a reservation. 644-6109 

 


Friday, July 20

 

Therapy for Trans Partners  

6 - 7:30 p.m.  

Pacific Center for Human Growth  

2712 Telegraph Ave. (at Derby)  

A group open to partners of those in transition or considering transition. The group is structured to be a safe place to receive support from peers and explore a variety of issues, including sexual orientation, coming out, feelings of isolation, among other topics. Intake process required. Meeting Fridays through August 17.  

$8 - $35 sliding scale per session  

Call 548-8283 x534 or x522 

 

Lives From Herstory 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave.  

Part of “Strong Women: The Arts, Herstory and Literature,” a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program taught by Helen Rippier Wheeler. This week’s focus is on Margaret Higgins Sanger.  

Call 549-2970 

 

The Art of Recycling 

2 - 8 p.m. 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 

2200 Shattuck Avenue 

A day-long celebration of the importance of recycling, the event will explore different ways to reuse -- artistic and practical. Bring your own old clothes, broken appliances, and other items or drop off in advance at the Gallery during regular hours Thursday through Sunday, noon - 8 p.m. 

486-0411 

 

Life in Cohousing 

7:30 p.m. 

International House Auditorium 

UC Berkeley 

2299 Piedmont Avenue 

The opening address for the 2001 North American Cohousing Conference, Eric Utne will speak on “Changing the World and Yourself by Creating Community.” $10. 

834-7399  

 


Saturday, July 21

 

Ohtani Bazaar 

4 p.m. - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Higashi Honganji Temple 

1524 Oregon Street 

Games, prizes and activities for children. Japanese food will be available. Free admission. 

236-2550 

 

Berkeley Farmer’s Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Milvia Street 

Regular market with a special “Sustainable Agriculture” event. Speakers will discuss “Environmental and Social Justice and the Food Supply.” Also, the Resources for Community Development will be collecting donations of household goods for Alameda Point. 

548-3333 

 

 


Forum

Tuesday July 17, 2001

Socialism may help solve power crisis 

 

Editor: 

 

A lot of people are very unclear on two important concepts: private enterprise and socialism. 

Private enterprise, or a market economy, or the profit system, is a racket, a scam, a con game. In recent months, the politicians and the power industry have combined to give us all a graphic example of how the system is used to loot and swindle all the hard-working citizens for the benefit of a greedy few. 

Authentic socialism requires three elements: a high level of industrial technology, public ownership of basic industries, and political control by the working class. Socialism has never yet existed anywhere on this planet. It is premature and immature to label a concept as dead before it has been given a fair trial. 

The socialist road may be the only rational solution to the current power crisis.  

California could take over its own power generators and transmission lines by its power of eminent domain. But in order to avoid a fiasco such as the politicians have made in San Francisco with the city-owned Hetch Hetchy power generating system, it would be necessary to put the working class firmly in control. A step in this direction would be to switch our voter registrations to help the Peace and Freedom Party to regain its ballot status. 

 

Marion Syrek 

Oakland 

 

Change orders add time  

to city projects 

The Berkeley Daily Planet received this letter addressed to City Councilmembers: 

 

Clever but anxious contractor tricks utilized for winning contracts, as old as the pyramids: 1. Make sure your bid is the lowest; 2. Later, demand “extras” to do job properly. 

This results in good work, but many create headaches and take longer; it shouldn’t be required for any public body to accept low bid[s], though good work can result even if this trick was “resorted to.” But there’s the risk of dealing with a fibbing contractor who may develop other “bad habits.” 

I’m happy with the temporary library in spite of massive construction south and east; I look to the re-opening of the main library; I cringe at possible massive construction west of old main library for apartments, etc. 

 

Terry Cochrell 

Berkeley 

 

Temple Beth El deserves city’s entire support 

 

The Berkeley Daily Planet received this letter addressed to Berkeley City Councilmembers: 

 

After reading the letter from Keith Carson, I decided to voice my strong opinion in support of Temple Beth El being able to build the new temple, parking lot, etc. in accordance with the current plans and with the approval of our boards, review of all the adjustments, corrections, provisions, etc. I thought Keith Carson addressed the same points I support. 

It is clear that the community has reconciled to the fact that the Temple will exist. Plans have been redone in accordance with legitimate concerns. There is another agenda it appears, and I don’t know what it is. I am not a member of the congregation, and I have never contributed to the building fund. You can rest assured that if any of the money that has been used for any of this came out of city of Berkeley funds this “process” would have been resolved months ago. We should not be using valuable meeting time, and our Council would be able to get back to the urgent issues facing our community and city. 

I have traveled up and down Spruce street for the last six years on a regular basis as I pick up grandchildren who go to nursery school at the top of Spruce. I am aware of other religious churches on Spruce as well as Cedar and Spruce. There are no parking lots provided that I have seen and no esthetic designs, landscaping, etc.  

Neighbors move around as needed. No one lives in Berkeley that I know of because the streets are easy to drive, parking available, traffic empty or housing on large lots. If people want that lifestyle they move to Contra Costa County or Marin County. People live in Berkeley because of the very wonderful community and university, diversity, interest in people and the many problems we face in this world today. Yes, we are concerned with environmental issues. Beth El has met that standard (in accordance with my awareness as a professional in the legal community). The burden, as it is called, has been met. It is time to start cooperating with all people in our community. The national Conference of Reform Rabbis which just took place which Beth El is a part made some significant additions that relate to Berkeley people. 

I am personally familiar with the creek that existed at Ashby and Domingo and Peet’s and Rick and Ann’s restaurant are now on that property. I must say that there is never a spot available in that lot and I doubt that people are concerned with the direction the fish go! The fish they are concerned with are the ones on the menu!! Fish don’t vote, pay taxes, drive, contribute to our housing problems, energy issues, HMOs, etc. Get real. Can you imagine all the good things that could have been done by Beth El with the thousands of dollars used on this excessive pressure by the community? 

I urge all the councilmembers — to support Beth El at this time. 

I do not believe that a continued dialogue is warranted, and I understand that more public hearings are scheduled. I hope they are canceled and other matters can be discussed that are pressing. 

 

Jae Scharlin 

Berkeley 

 

Trees should be at crosswalk 

Editor: 

 

To complete the landscape design on University Avenue, six (more trees (Acer rubrum “Red Sunset”) need to be planted in the brick median between Milvia and Shattuck Avenue. I recommend that they be placed on each side of the crosswalk at 20 feet on center both ways. It will be so nice to have trees where the people will be crossing. 

 

Richard Splenda 

Berkeley 

 

Destroy schools to save them 

Editor  

It was a pleasure to read such an informative and balanced article. You went beyond the tired cliches about stingy Prop13-oids and listened for the real reasons it's hard to get alums to contribute. I especially admire your courage to print the word “rathole.” Rathole is good. How else do you describe a system that spends $7,000 per student (plus about $1,000 more from the Feds), packs 30 kids into a classroom and still can't give them a decent education and clean toilets for $210,000 (7,000 times 30)? 

I'm afraid the only way to save public schools like these is to destroy them. Give the money back to the people — a $7,000 voucher per child. 

Then get out of the way and watch what an independent school can do with that kind of money. 

 

Theodore Sternberg 

Fremont


Staff
Tuesday July 17, 2001

MUSEUMS 

 

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  

 

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 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation on October 1. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until October 1, 2001: “Ishi and the Invention of Yahi Culture.” “Sites Along the Nile: Rescuing Ancient Egypt.” “The Art of Research: Nelson Graburn and the Aesthetics of Inuit Sculpture.” “Tzintzuntzan, Mexico: Photographs by George Foster.”  

$2 general; $1 seniors; $.50 children age 17 and under; free on Thursdays. Wednesday, Friday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kroeber Hall, Bancroft Way and College Ave. 643-7648 or www.qal.berkeley.edu/~hearst/ 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “Science in Toyland,” through Sept. 9. Exhibit uses toys to demonstrate scientific principles and to help develop children's thinking processes. Susan Cerny’s collection of over 200 tops from around the world. “Space Weather,” through Sept. 2. Learn about solar cycles, space weather, the cause of the Aurorae and recent discoveries made by leading astronomers. This interactive exhibit lets visitors access near real-time data from the Sun and space, view interactive videos and find out about a variety of solar activities. “Within the Human Brain,” ongoing. Visitors test their cranial nerves, play skeeball, master mazes, match musical tones and construct stories inside a simulated “rat cage” of learning experiments. “Saturday Night Stargazing,” First and third Saturdays each month. 8 - 10 p.m., LHS plaza. Space Weather Exhibit now - Sept. 2; now - Sept. 9 Science in Toyland; Saturdays 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. 642-5132 

 

Holt Planetarium Programs are recommended for age 8 and up; children under age 6 will not be admitted. $2 in addition to regular museum admission. “Constellations Tonight” Ongoing. Using a simple star map, learn to identify the most prominent constellations for the season in the planetarium sky. Daily, 3:30 p.m. $7 general; $5 seniors, students, disabled, and youths age 7 to 18; $3 children age 3 to 5 ; free children age 2 and younger. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu  

 

The UC Berkeley Art Museum is closed for renovations until the fall. 

 

 

MUSIC 

 

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 20: Raw Power, Decry, S.M.D., Scurvy Dogs, Blown To Bits; July 21: Babyland, 78 RPMs Derelectics, Man Alive, Philps & Reuter; July 27: Throw Down, Glood Clean Fun, Count Me Out, Time Flies, Faded Grey, Lab Rats; July 28: Over My Dead Body, Carry On, Merrick, Some Still Believe, Black Lung Patriots; Aug. 3: Sworn Vengeance, N.J. Bloodline, Settle the Score, Existence, Step; Aug. 4: Toxic Narcotic, Menstrual Tramps, Emo Summer, Four Letter Word, Shitty Wickets. $5. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

Albatross Pub Music at 9 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 18: Whiskey Brothers; July 19: Keni “El Lebrijano”; July 21: Tipsy House Irish band; July 24: Madd and Eddie Duran jazz duo. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 17: Joe Livotti Jazz Duo; July 18: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 19: Jazz Singer’s Collective; July 20: Anna & Susie Laraine, Perri Poston; 10 p.m., Bluesman Hideo Date; July 21: Jazz singers Vicki Burns & Felice York and trio; 10:30 p.m., The Ducksan Distones jazz sextet; July 22: Acoustic Soul; July 23: Renegade Sidemen; July 24: Junebug; July 25: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 26: Rich Kalman Trio & “Con Alma”; July 27: Anna & Susie Laraine, Perri Poston; 10 p.m., Hideo Date Bluesman; July 28: Marie-Louise Fiatarone Trio; 10:30 p.m., The Ducksan Distones; July 29: Panacea; July 30: Renegade Sidemen; July 31: Jason Martineau; 1801 University Ave. 849-ANNA 

 

Ashkenaz July 17: 9 p.m., Rock n’ Blues with The Jennifer Will Band. $7; July 18: 9 p.m., Swamp boogie with Tee Fee, 8 p.m. dance lesson with Diana Costillo; July 19: 10 p.m., Dead DJ Nite with Digital Dave. $5; July 20: 9:30 p.m., Steve Lucky and The Rhumba Bums play East Coast Swing and Lindy Hop. 8 p.m. dance lesson with Nick and Shanna. $11; July 21: 9:30 p.m., Balkan Night with Edessa and Anoush. Turkish dance lesson with Ahmet Luleci at 8 p.m. $12; July 22: 9 p.m., Wagogo, Heartpumping Miranda music from Zimbabwe. $10; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. July 21: Little Jonny. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. July 17: Lee Waterman and Jazz Caliente; July 19: Waikiki Steel Works with Ben Bonham and Frank Novicki; July 20: Junius Courtney and His Big Band; July 21: The Kathy Kallick Band; July 22: Blame Sally, Erin Corday; July 24: Carl Sonny Leyland, Steve Lucky; July 26: Radney Foster, Darden Smith; July 27: Otis Taylor; July 28: Street Sounds; July 29: Tish Hinojosa. $16.50 - $17.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. July 21: Orbit 4- hip-hop, drum ’n’ bass, breakbeat, jungle and jazz. July 24: Stringthoery- local jazz blues and rock. July 25: Suite 304- vocal harmany-based groove pop. July 27: Sexfresh- traditional American pop. July 28: Corner Pocket- Jazz. July 31: Basso Trio- Local sax, blues and jazz. 

All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Peña Cultural Center July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; July 21: 8:00 p.m., Family and Friends- Talent Showcase with soul, hip-hop and spoken word; July 22: 7 p.m., It Takes a Community to Raise a CD- Mary Watkins & Lisa Cohen, Gwen Avery, Avotcja, June Millington & the Slamming Babes, Blackberri and more; July 24: 7:30 p.m., Temp Slave, the Musical- Musical Satire from Madison, Wisconsin; July 27: 8:00 p.m., Raphael Manriquez- singer composer and guitar player celebrates release of new album; July 28: 8:30 p.m., Rompe y Raja- Afro-Peruvian dance and song troupe celebrates Peruvian Independence Day; July 29: 7:30 p.m., Moh Alileche- Algerian mondol player, traditional kabylian music. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group; July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung; 5:30 p.m., Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

Rose Street House of Music July 20: 8:30 p.m., “Divabands Unplugged” with Bern, Roberta Donnay, and Elin Jr. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Shattuck Down Low Lounge Every Tuesday: 9:30 p.m., Posh Tuesdays with DJ’s Yamu, Delon, Add1, and Tequila Willie. Shattuck at Allston. www.thebeatdownsound.com  

 

“Midsummer Mozart Festival” All shows at 7:30 p.m. July 20: Four pieces including the Overture to “The Abduction to the Seraglio”; July 28: Four pieces including “March in D Major”; Aug. 3: Four pieces including “Symphony in B Flat.” $32 - $40. First Congregational Church 2345 Channing Way (415) 292-9620 www.midsummermozart.org  

 

“Mostly Baroque” July 21: 8 p.m., Bach, Handel, Strozzi, and others performed by local musicians. By donation. church of Saint Mary Magdalen 2005 Berryman. 

 

“Emeryville Taiko” July 22: 2 p.m., Traditional Japanese drumming with American influence. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

THEATER 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 21-22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

 

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Weds. 7 p.m., Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (After July 8 no Wednesday performance, no Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Moises Kaufman and Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of openly gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Ave., Albany. 527-2344 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 20 - 21, 26 - 28, Aug. 2 - 4: 8 p.m. Set in the 15th century, a soldier wishes to be hanged and a witch does not want to be burned at the stake. Written by Christopher Fry, directed by Susannah Woods. $5 - $10. South Berkeley Community Church 1802 Fairview st. 464-1117 

 

“Orphan” Through Aug. 5 Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Through Aug. 11: Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. plus Thursday, Aug. 9, presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through Aug. 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

Opera 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 22 at 7 p.m. $30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; July 21: 7 p.m., “The Woman in the Window”, 9 p.m., “Scarlet Street”; July 22: 5:30 p.m., “Odd Obsession”; 7:30 p.m., “Nihonbashi”; July 24: 7:30 p.m., “In the Valley of the Wupper” and “In the Name of the Duce”; July 25: 7:30 p.m., “Spider Baby 2000”; July 29: Family Classic “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”; $4. Sundays, 3 p.m. New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

Exhibits 

 

“Ames Gallery Artists” Through July 22: Thur. - Sun. Noon - 7 p.m., Temporary gallery as part of the Berkeley Arts Festival with works from Wilbert Griffith, Dorothy Binger, Julio Garcia, and Leon Kennedy. Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 2200 Shattuck Ave. 486-0411 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31: Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734  

 

“Bernard Maisner: Illuminated Manuscripts and Paintings” Through Aug. 8 Maisner works in miniature as well as in large scales, combining his mastery of medieval illumination, gold leafing, and modern painting techniques. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 849-2541 

 

“Musee des Hommages” Masterworks by Guy Colwell Faithful copies of several artists from the pasts, including Titian’s “The Venus of Urbino,” Cezanne’s “Still Life,” Picasso’s “Woman at a Mirror,” and Boticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

“New Visions: Introductions 2001” Through August 18: Wed. - Sat.: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Juried by Artist- Curator Rene Yanez and Robbin Henderson, Executive Director of the Berkeley Art Center, the exhibition features works from some of California’s up-and-coming artists. Pro Arts 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9425 

 

“Geographies of My Heart” Collage paintings by Jennifer Colby through August 24; Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 

 

Images of Portugal Paintings by Sofia Berto Villas-Boas of her native land. Open after 5 p.m. Voulez-Vous 2930 College Ave. (at Elmwood) 

 

“Queens of Ethiopia: Intuitive Inspirations,” the exceptional art of Esete-Miriam A. Menkir. Through July 11. Women’s Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“The Decade of Change: 1900 - 1910” chronicles the transformation of the city of Berkeley in this 10 year period. Thursday through Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. Through September. Berkeley History Center, Veterans Memorial Building, 1931 Center St. Wheelchair accessible. 848-0181. Free.  

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s 2454 Telegraph Ave. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 19: Lonny Shavelson talks about “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System”; July 23: Brian Skyes reads “The Seven Daughters of Eve”; July 24: Susann Cokal reads from “Mirabilis.” $2 donation. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s 1730 Fourth St. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 20: Lynne Hinton reads from her second novel, “The Things I know Best”; July 25: Alice Randall reads from “The Wind Done Gone.” $2 donation. 559-9500 

 

Poetry Nitro Weekly poetry open mike. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. July 16: Featuring the Silicon Valley Slam Team; July 23: Featuring Jonathan Yaffe. Cafe de la Paz 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Tours 

 

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Fridays 9:30 - 11:45 a.m. or by appointment. Call ahead to make reservations. Free. University of California, Berkeley. 486-4387 

 

Golden Gate Live Steamers Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Lomas Cantadas Drive at the south end of Tilden Regional Park Small locomotives, meticulously scaled to size. Trains run Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sunday, noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623  

 


Lab cuts down Eucalyptus amid protest

By Jon Mays
Tuesday July 17, 2001

Wood chips from a cut-down grove of Eucalyptus trees contaminated with radioactive Tritium is alarming a group of concerned residents near the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.  

They say the lab should and UC Berkeley should undergo a full environmental impact review before the three yearlong project is continued in the Berkeley hills.  

“If we don’t know the levels of tritium then it is inappropriate for the lab to cut down the trees in such a cavalier way,” said L.A. Wood, who lives less than a mile away from the lab and the Lawrence Hall of Science. 

Lab and UC Berkeley officials, however, emphasize that cutting the trees is perfectly safe.  

“The trees in question are very very far away from the tritium. To have any damage you’d have to eat 3,000 pounds of chips. You’d have to eat an awful lot of chips,” said Paul Lavely, director of the UC Berkeley office of radiation safety. 

Last week, workers began cutting down trees and feeding them into a chipper next to the Hall of Science. Lavely added that there was little dust since the trees were wet. Concerns over fire safety prompted the clearing, according to lab spokesperson Ron Kolb. 

But Wood believes that the lab is fast-tracking the project to get rid of evidence that they were feeding contaminants into the air. 

In a letter to Gene Bernardi, co-chair of the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, from Richard Nolan, director of the Berkeley site office for the U.S. Department of Energy, Nolan wrote that he did not expect any tree removal until at least December 2001. 

“I was quite shocked that they were being cut,” Bernardi said.  

But Kolb moving the project faster was to the lab’s benefit because the fire season is currently in full swing. He also said the lab tested 171 trees in the area in 1998 and 1999 and said that the amount of tritium discovered was negligible.  

The tritium got into the trees from a labeling facility established in 1982. In the facility, staff “label” drugs and other material by replacing hydrogen atoms with tritium atoms. Because tritium is radioactive, it helps researchers detect a drug’s presence in the body.  

In 1998, the lab said annual dose from the facility to a person living next to the Lab was .27 millirem – far below what the average person encounters in daily living.  

However, a 1996 study conducted by Dr. Leticia Menchaca, indicated that some trees as far away as 150 meters from the labeling facility had extremely high levels of tritium.  

Kolb said that none of the trees being cut down are close to those levels. Instead, he reemphasized that the cut trees have very levels and pose no health hazard.  

“We are confident that those levels should have no concern,” he said.  

But Woods isn’t buying it. 

“Last Thursday, there were kids playing 20-30 feet away from the downed trees. There is a tremendous amount of controversy as to how hot the trees are,” he said. “The whole process has been controversial but there has been no review. They simply do not want to open the door because the door is Pandora’s box.” 


Plans for skate park finally rolling forward

By John Geluardi
Tuesday July 17, 2001

The Parks and Waterfront Department is asking the City Council to approve a environmental report that deems the Harrison Street Skate Park project is ready to continue after months of setbacks related to the discovery of a carcinogen in the groundwater below the site. 

According to Parks Department report, the city has spent about $265,000 to clean up the contaminated groundwater. The groundwater was treated and discharged into the sanitary sewer in accordance with regulatory procedures. 

In addition to the report, Parks and Waterfront is requesting the council accept a new design for the skate park and approve $410,000 for the construction of the project, which includes above-ground skate bowls. 

 

Antenna moratorium 

The council will hold a public hearing to extend an emergency moratorium on the erection of wireless communications antennas, which facilitate mobile and cellular phones. 

Residents concerned about negative health effects asked the council to enact the moratorium after two antennas were proposed near residential neighborhoods, one was near a school. 

The council first enacted a 45-day moratorium in December and renewed the January for an additional six months. The purpose of the moratorium was to allow the Planning Commission to hold hearings on revisions to the zoning ordinance that would cover the public’s health concerns about the antennas. 

The Planning Commission held a public hearing on a draft ordinance, drafted by planning department staff but has requested additional time because a sub-committee is considering issues related to the zoning amendment and will make a full report to the commission at summer’s end. 

 

Rental Housing Safety Program 

The Housing Advisory Commission recommended the council adopt an amendment to the Berkeley Municipal Code that would require landlords to self inspect their properties yearly and submit a completed checklist to the city. 

The amendment would also require city inspections of rental units each time a unit is vacated. 

The city began to consider the amendment after several deaths related to home fires and carbon monoxide poisoning. Two UC Berkeley students were among those who died. One of the key features of the landlord checklist is making sure carbon monoxide and smoke detectors are in good working order. 

The Housing Advisory Commission has held numerous public hearings and has worked with landlords, tenants and UC Berkeley representatives to develop the amendment to the Municipal Code. The inspection program is estimated to cost upwards of $400,000. UC Berkeley is contributing $65,000.


Mergers may endanger reproductive rights

By Ben Lumpkin
Tuesday July 17, 2001

If pro-choice supporters aren’t vigilant in the months and years ahead, then they could see increasing limitations on women’s access to reproductive services like artificial contraceptives, in-vitro fertilization, sterilization and abortion. 

That’s because these are the kinds of services the Catholic church’s Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services prohibits, and a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the hospital industry has seen more and more institutions fall under these directives. 

This was the message Rosemary Stasek, co-founder of California Catholics for Free Choice and a Mountain View City Councilmember, delivered at Berkeley’s Florence McDonald Community Room Monday, in a speech sponsored by the Alameda North Chapter of the National Women’s Political Caucus. 

There have been more than 150 mergers involving Catholic hospitals in the last decade. Nationally, according to Stasek, one in five people who are treated in hospitals are treated in Catholic hospitals. 

The Bay Area has 11 Catholic-affiliated hospital that fall under the directives, including San Francisco’s St. Mary’s Medical Center and St. Francis Memorial Hospital.  

Under the directives, these hospitals not only do not provide services like contraceptive and abortions, Stasek said, they also will not provide any information about those services to patients.  

In some rural areas, where the Catholic hospital is the only hospital, women’s access to these services has thus be severely impaired, she said. In Gilroy, for example, low-income women must take public transport to San Jose to learn about and receive reproductive services not offered by Gilroy’s St. Louise Regional Medical Center. 

Officials at Catholic Health Care West, California’s largest hospital operator, did not return calls for comment. 

Stasek said Monday that the Berkeley Community in particular needs to “keep an eye” on Alta Bates Medical Center, its largest health care provider, to make sure it does not come under the directives. Because of a 1999 merger with Summit Medical Center in Oakland, which does fall under the directives, Alta Bates could come under pressure to adhere or break its union with Summit, Stasek said. 

But Carolyn Kemp, spokesperson for Alta Bates Medical Center, said the Berkeley Hospital offers the full-range of reproductive services and will continue to do so. In fact, she said, the Alta Bates board of directors was very insistent that Alta Bates be allowed to provide such services under the merger agreement with Summit. 

“When [Alta Bates and Summit] merged, that was one of the things that board members were very concerned that we pay attention to,” Kemp said. 

Kemp also stressed that most reproductive services are provided at the level of a physician’s office, rather than in the hospital setting. 

“It’s between the physician and the individual,” Kemp said. “We’re here to provide the proper environment for whatever decision they make.” 

Catherine Trimbur, a Berkeley attorney and NWPC member who came to hear Stasek speak Monday, said it is sometimes difficult to get good information about the level of threat the growth of Catholic hospital systems could pose to a women’s right to choose.  

But, at least for the time being, Trimbur isn’t too worried about Berkeley. 

“At the moment, things are fine,” Trimbur said. “And it’s my personal belief that things will stay that way, because if anyone tried to impose restrictions [on reproductive care] in Berkeley the community would be in an uproar.”


UCSF suspends stem cell research

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — One of the nation’s top embryonic stem cell scientists is leaving the country to work overseas, and the university that employed him has temporarily halted new research in the area. 

Citing an increasingly hostile political climate in the United States surrounding such research, University of California, San Francisco biology professor Roger Pedersen said Monday he’s moving later this summer to Cambridge University in England. 

England publicly supports Pedersen’s research, which requires the destruction of days-old embryos, while the United States government currently does not.  

The U.S. government will not fund any research that destroys or harms an embryo, and the Bush administration is considering whether to make that ban permanent.  

Private funding of embryonic stem cell research is legal. 

“I was faced with an irresistible career opportunity, and the possibility of carrying out my research on human embryonic stem cell research with public support,” Pedersen said in a press release issued by the university. He declined further comment. Pedersen was working with excess frozen embryos destined for disposal that were obtained from fertility clinics. 

Fearing the university was running up against the federal funding ban, Pedersen and his nine stem cell research colleagues at UCSF stopped destroying embryos in April and confined their research to existing stem cells in their lab, UCSF spokeswoman Jennifer O’Brien said. On Monday, the university said it would not start any new stem cell research until the program moves off campus by Aug. 1. 

UCSF always has relied on biotechnology company Geron Inc. to pay for the equipment, materials and salaries needed for the stem cell research. But by April, Pedersen became convinced the federal ban also extended to “indirect costs” such as electricity, janitorial services and bookkeeping. 

UCSF said Geron always paid for these indirect costs, but that a National Institutes of Health policy maintains that federal and private contributions are inseparable. Haile Debas, dean of the UCSF School of Medicine, declined to comment directly, but said in a press release: 

“We strongly support work on embryonic stem cells, but are awaiting word and instruction from the National Institutes of Health and the federal government on their decision on whether they will support this work.” O’Brien said the stem cell researchers have found a new home and a new director of the program, whom she declined to identify. 

The University of Wisconsin made a similar off-campus move with its embryonic stem cell research in October 1999.  

James Thomson first extracted stem cells from fertility-clinic supplied embryos at Wisconsin in 1998, and that university continues to be the chief manufacturer and supplier of stem cells, which proponents say hold the potential to cure a wide range of diseases and ailments. 

Stem cells are formed in the first few days after an egg is fertilized with sperm.  

Stem cells are indistinguishable from one another, yet they grow into 200 different adult cells that build the human body. Researchers believe they can manipulate stem cells to grow into adult cells of their choosing, which then could be used to treat disorders in everything from the brain to the heart. 

Some U.S. supporters of the research fear a “brain drain” will occur in this country if President Bush decides to prohibit the use of public funds for embryonic stem cell research. Menlo Parkbased Geron, which funded Thomson’s research, said it is making contingency plans to move some of its stem cell research to Scotland, where it owns the company that cloned Dolly the sheep. 

“There’s a real impact here for us and for society if Bush decides not to apply NIH funding for this,” Geron CEO Michael Okarma said in an interview last week. “But the work will go on one way or another. We have an operation in the UK and that can be dramatically scaled up if we have to take this research to a more enlightened environment.” 

On the Net: 

http://www.ucsf.edu


Death penalty possible in Yosemite homicides

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

MARIPOSA — Prosecutors said Monday they will seek the death penalty against a man if he is convicted of killing three Yosemite National Park tourists. 

Cary Stayner, already serving a life sentence for killing a park naturalist, pleaded innocent Monday in Mariposa Superior Court to three counts of murder and several additional charges. 

At that arraignment, prosecutor George Williamson said he will seek the death penalty for Stayner, who allegedly killed Carole Sund, her daughter Juli, and family friend Silvina Pelosso of Argentina in February 1999. Carole Sund’s father said the death penalty would be appropriate because Stayner’s alleged crimes were so heinous. Stayner admitted he tried to rape Pelosso and repeatedly raped Juli Sund before killing her. 

“The death penalty, which I understand is administered with muscle relaxants and things that show no pain, probably is a just thing to go after,” said Francis Carrington, Carole Sund’s father. “I would have prayed and hoped our children could have gone as easy, that he could have showed some compassion himself.” 

Stayner, 39, was sentenced to life in prison last year after confessing to murdering Joie Armstrong, 26, a woman who led children on nature tours in the park. Federal prosecutors dropped their bid for execution as part of a plea bargain. 

The death penalty announcement in the tourists’ slaying was anticipated after Mariposa District Attorney Christine Johnson brought in Williamson, a Solano County prosecutor who specializes in capital punishment cases. 

Stayner admitted the killings in a six-hour taped interview with FBI agents in July 1999, shortly after Armstrong’s headless body was found in a creek near her cabin in the park.  

An excerpt of the tape was played at a preliminary hearing last month in which Stayner described how he preyed on the tourists and methodically killed them one by one. 

He said he had fantasized of killing for months, and said he turned the dream to reality when he saw “easy prey” through a window at the Cedar Lodge, where he worked as a handyman just outside the park. 

Trial was set for Feb. 25, 2002. 


Family endures ‘torturous craziness’

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

MODESTO — On many of the sleepless nights since Chandra Levy vanished, her mother slips into her daughter’s small bedroom, full of memories, and curls up in the little bed. 

She tells herself it’s so she can escape a snoring husband and a snoring dog. But she also admits its her way to feel closer to her daughter. 

In the 78 days since Chandra Levy was last seen in Washington, D.C., the room has become a sanctuary of sorts for her family, taking on a state of disorder the 24-year-old neatnik never would tolerate. 

Her younger brother, Adam, is constructing a toothpick model of the Eiffel Tower there. Her mother leaves the bed disheveled. And her father, Robert, grieves amid the diplomas, books and pictures, sometimes chanting her name and crying. 

“It’s just the most painful thing,” Susan Levy told The Associated Press in an interview. “It’s been 11 weeks of torturous craziness.” 

Since they reported their daughter missing, each day offers a range of challenges: from getting out of bed to turning over Chandra’s dental records to viewing TV footage of police dogs searching landfills and abandoned buildings. 

Anger, sadness and anxiety fill the days. Unfulfilled hope and an empty bedroom are all they have to show for it. 

“Some days I just want to collapse, just do nothing,” Susan Levy said. “I shouldn’t say some days. It’s almost every day of the week.” 

Levy, who once founded a children’s museum and involved her children in her charitable works, projects another image in public, of the vigilant mother, a crusader for justice who wants her daughter back. 

She’s stood before banks of cameras to repeat her message. She traveled to Washington and confronted her daughter’s reported paramour, Rep. Gary Condit, the 53-year-old married man who represents their district, an agricultural region in the San Joaquin Valley. 

Her husband, Robert, a well-known oncologist who has delivered more than his share of bad news to cancer patients, is often by her side, his eyes rimmed in tears or his head bowed in grief. She does most of the talking. 

Susan Levy endures occasional criticism, such as the callers to a talk radio show who questioned what they see as a lack of emotion, or complained that other cases don’t get as much attention, or questioned her daughter’s morals. 

“I’ve had to be real brave,” she said. “I’ve found I have done things that I never thought I would do.” 

But behind the doors of her house, she struggles to get dressed and comb her hair each day. 

One day last week, she spread photos of happier times on the dining room table in the large, open room that is the heart of their spacious contemporary home. 

In one, a scowling little girl sits in a mess of shredded paper from one of her classic childhood tantrums. In another, a young woman stands with a squad of fighter pilots she befriended at an air show. And there’s one of the whole family, all smiles, shot in April, the last time they were together, just weeks before Chandra disappeared. 

Her father can only take so much of this talk. 

“Don’t go too much in the past,” he implores and then walks away from the table. 

But with an uncertain future and a present that is nearly unbearable, the past at least provides a comforting distraction. 

A ringing phone keeps them coming back. Their two phone lines ring as many as 50 times a day. 

“But not the one call we want, saying that ’I’m OK, I’m alive,”’ Robert Levy said. “That’s the only one we want. You don’t get that one.” 

Neighbors deliver food. Strangers from across the country send letters of support. Believers of many faiths – Jews, Buddhists and Catholics, to name a few – are saying prayers. 

Francis and Carole Carrington, whose daughter and granddaughter went missing for weeks before their bodies were found near Yosemite National Park, have helped the Levys manage a reward fund. On Monday, they also stopped by the Levys’ house on their way home from a court hearing for the women’s accused killer. 

The Carringtons didn’t have that much advice to give. Every grieving couple discovers their own ways to cope in such situations, Francis Carrington said. 

“I still want to have that flame of hope,” Susan Levy said last week. 

“Yeah, you should,” her husband said in a weak voice. 

“That flame of hope she’s alive and miracles can happen,” Susan Levy added. “I’ve been saying that the whole time.” 


Indian tribes left out of tobacco accord

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

Twenty Indian tribes have no right to any of the $200 billion the tobacco industry agreed to pay under the landmark 1998 accord between cigarette makers and 46 states, a federal appeals court ruled Monday. 

A suit filed by the tribes in San Francisco in 1999 claimed that American Indians were counted for census data used to determine how the settlement money would be distributed in the states, but that the Indian nations were not given any payments. 

That amounted to racial discrimination and a breach of Indian sovereignty, according to the suit, which sought $1 billion in compensation and punitive damages from several tobacco companies. 

The case stemmed from a 1998 deal between the tobacco industry and 46 states in which the industry agreed to pay the states more than $200 billion. The payments, to recoup the states’ costs to treat ill smokers, were in exchange for the states dropping any legal claims against cigarette makers. 

The suit said Indians were left out of negotiations for the settlement, although U.S. territories were included. 

“It was an exclusion by the states and the tobacco industry,” said the tribes’ attorney, Joseph Russell.  

He said the decision was disappointing and would not say whether the Indians would seek a rehearing or ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision. 

The 46 attorneys general and the tobacco companies did not include the Indians because they were not a party to the original suits against the industry that were settled under the agreement. 

“I’m sympathetic to them wanting to get a share of the revenue,” said Kristen Grainger of the Oregon attorney general’s office.  

“They couldn’t be included in a settlement. It only involved everybody who was a party to the lawsuits.” 

The suit also noted that tobacco companies raised their prices to fund the settlement, a hike Indian smokers have had to pay. 

But a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the Indians had no legal standing to sue the tobacco companies, because they have not “suffered injury” by being excluded. 

The panel said that the Indian tribes had not proven that they have paid to treat ill smokers. The court noted that the states, unlike the Indians, submitted legal claims to the tobacco companies that were rejected. 

The case is Table Bluff Reservation v. Philip Morris Inc., 00-15080. 

——— 

On the Net: 

9th Circuit: http://www.ce9.uscourts.gov/ 


Abortion opponents begin weeklong series of protests

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

WICHITA, Kan. — Tense moments unfolded when anti-abortion protesters descended on a church attended by an abortion provider – only to be met by churchgoers less than pleased by the disruption. 

As part of the first full day of the weeklong Summer of Mercy Renewal demonstrations, nearly 30 protesters went to Reformation Lutheran Church, where Dr. George Tiller, one of the few physicians in the country who still performs late-term abortions, is a parishioner. Tiller wasn’t there. 

The demonstration upset many church members, particularly children who saw the protesters’ bloody photographs of fetuses. 

Keith Martin said children in his Sunday School class were “crying like crazy” after passing the demonstrators to get to church. “I don’t think any First Amendment idea is being conveyed to them,” he said. 

“I think what they would like us to do is ask the Tiller family to leave our church – that is hardly Christian,” said church member David Johnson. “To put those signs out there is to frighten God’s children.” 

Troy Newman, director of Los Angeles-based Operation Rescue West, said it was not the demonstrators’ intention to upset children. “Every one of these children understand abortion is murder – that is why they are upset,” he said. 

Tiller’s clinic was bombed in 1985 and he was shot and wounded two years after the first Summer of Mercy was staged in Wichita 10 years ago. Demonstrations also are planned near his clinic this week. 

The protesters had wanted to parade past Tiller’s clinic twice daily from Tuesday through Saturday. But city officials denied the request and closed the streets around the clinic. 

On Monday, anti-abortion activists planned to march several blocks through downtown Wichita to City Hall. 

“I don’t think we need to have a civil war over this,” said Wes Wolken, associate pastor of Word of Life Church where some 1,000 abortion opponents gathered Sunday. 

But he added, “I think there will be a lot of patience tried before this is over with – city police, us, them.” 

Protesters gathered Sunday on the sidewalk in front Tiller’s clinic to pray and preach. Nearby were abortion rights supporters. A snow fence was erected along the property and the curb to keep demonstrators off the streets and off the clinic property. 

There were no arrests. 

By sundown, the sidewalk was deserted. A city order last month imposes higher minimum bails for people who live outside Sedgwick County than for county residents. 

In 1991, the Summer of Mercy ended with 2,700 arrested after more than 45 days of protests and city officials want to avoid a repeat of that. 

At the Sunday night worship service, the mood was more about conciliation than confrontation. 

Talking to reporters, the Rev. Flip Benham, director of Operation Save America, said, “Our mission hasn’t changed. Our strategy has.” 

Asked if protesters planned to block the clinic, Benham said, “That’s not a planned strategy. Ours is wider in scope and we are winning the battle.” 

Demonstrators also targeted Metropolitan Church because of its support of homosexuals, and marched at two churches that have supported abortion rights. 

On the Net: 

National Abortion Federation at http://www.prochoice.org 

National Right to Life: http://www.nrlc.org 


Police recommend steps to combat racial bias practices

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

WASHINGTON — Law enforcement agencies should review the way they recruit, train and supervise their officers to combat practices that unfairly target minorities, a group of police officials said Monday. 

While some police departments have enacted policies against racial profiling, and most forbid stopping people solely because of their race, most overlook more subtle problems of racial bias, a report by the Police Executive Research Forum, an organization of police chiefs studying new law enforcement techniques, said. 

“It’s not just simply stopping people in cars, it’s how you interact with people, it’s how you take calls over the phone. This is a broader issue,” said Chuck Wexler, director of the research group. The report, funded by the Justice Department, contains nearly 50 recommendations for police agencies ranging from recruiting more minority officers to working with community groups and teaching police about human rights. 

“Protecting individual rights is not an inconvenience for modern police, it is the foundation of policing in a democratic society,” Wexler said, adding that notices will be sent to police departments encouraging them to adopt the recommendations. 

The report urges police to only consider race and ethnicity when dealing with reliable descriptions of specific suspects and never as the sole reason for suspicion. Police should also be more courteous when stopping people and apologize if they make a mistake, it said. 

Police Chief Jerry Oliver of Richmond, Va., said that a bigger problem than stopping people because of their race – an action he has endured as a black officer when off-duty – is making people feel powerless. 

“A police officer has the power to interrupt your life, to pull you to the curb, to search you,” he said. “We have not taught them how to send you on your way feeling that you’ve got your dignity back.” 

The report’s recommendations for police agencies also include: 

• Recruiting more police from traditionally black colleges and universities and from the military. 

• Monitoring patrol car videotapes and radio communications to ensure that conversations are professional and free from racist comments. 

 

— Conducting regular reviews of the complaint process to make sure people aren’t being discouraged from reporting problems. 

A separate study published last month found that about half of all black men report that they have been victims of racial profiling. One in five Latino and Asian men also reported they had been victims of racially motivated police stops, according to the poll by The Washington Post, the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Racial Profiling report: http://www.policeforum.org/racial.html 


Goverment looks like America – at the bottom

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

WASHINGTON — When it comes to minorities and women, the face of the federal government looks more and more like America. When it comes to promotions, it’s a different story. 

While their numbers are rising at entry-level positions, the percentage of blacks, Hispanics and women in federal service drops dramatically – at times almost by half – at crucial mid-management levels where many decisions are made. 

Presidents Bush and Clinton have set good examples at the top, civil rights advocates say – Bush leads all presidents except Clinton in naming women and minorities to political appointments. But that progress has not trickled down evenly. 

“When the decision-makers are white males, they pick those close to them,” says Avis Buchanan, an attorney with the Washington Lawyers’ Committee, which has handled many class-action personnel suits against the government. “Call it the ‘similar to me’ phenomenon.” 

After a wave of lawsuits, settled in the past few years but dating back through the administrations of Clinton, George Bush and Ronald Reagan, some agencies have taken action. 

The Secret Service, for example, appointed its first black woman supervisor this month. Last year, the Agriculture Department – already accused of favoring white farmers in its subsidy policies – introduced staff minority advisory councils. 

Colin Powell, the first black secretary of state, recently called attention to the place of minorities in the government when he pledged to raise the numbers of Hispanics working at the State Department. 

“There will come a day when a future secretary of state will be able to stand up here proudly and look at a more diverse work force than we have now,” he told Hispanic interns last month. 

The government acknowledges that the numbers of Hispanics in its ranks are low. But overall, an Office of Personnel Management report describes the government as the pacesetter in employing minorities. 

Indeed, the government is ahead of the private sector in employing minorities, and is about level in employing women. 

Blacks, 12.9 percent of the U.S. population, make up 17.6 percent of the federal work force, ahead of the 11.2 percent in the private sector. Women, just over half the population, comprise 43.8 percent of federal workers, not far behind the 46.6 percent in the private sector. 

But blacks are just 9.7 percent of mid-managers and 7.1 percent of senior managers. Women hold 30.7 percent of mid-management jobs and 24.2 percent of senior management positions. 

Why the gap? Minority advocates say promotion incentives meant to reward ambitious workers are sometimes abused by managers to favor white men. 

Some recent examples: 

• In December, a judge approved a $4 million settlement that said Education Department managers had abused a system designed to give promotions to those who assumed extra responsibilities. Those responsibilities were assigned almost exclusively to whites, the settlement said. 

• At the FBI, service in tough, SWAT-like teams was often a prerequisite for moving up the ladder — but women were discouraged and even blocked from joining such units, according to class action lawsuits brought by women agents in the early 1990s. The agency headed off the lawsuits by changing its promotion practices, said Robert Shaffer, a lawyer for the women. FBI spokeswoman Charlene Sloan said SWAT team experience was never a prerequisite for promotion. 

• In a 1997 settlement, the Library of Congress acknowledged that a broad exemption to standard promotions procedures introduced by Congress to attract talented outsiders had been grossly abused to favor whites. 

Mid-managers are important because they decide how to fill the gaps in broadly written legislation and where to spend money. 

“Political people come and go, but those people make real decisions,” said William Kennard, Federal Communications Commission director under Clinton. 

During his term, Kennard told his executives that their own careers would be assessed by how equitably they promoted women and minorities. He said his was a lone voice, even in the relatively liberal Clinton administration. 

“The civil service is hierarchical, it perpetuates systematic racism,” said Kennard, who is black. “You’re not promoted on merit. You have an old boys’ network.” 

 

 

 

Valerie Grant spent the last 16 years of her 30 years at the Education Department just below the managerial level. She was rejected for promotion more than 30 times, despite her consistent “most qualified” rating in internal department reviews. 

“I wanted to do something different, exercise my abilities, develop things,” said Grant, who is black. “I wanted to be creative.” 

Larry Bussey, a colleague at the department who joined Grant in the class action suit settled in December, said managers never trusted blacks. 

“It became clear there were no opportunities beyond the journeyman level,” he said. “We were the worker bees, we carried the water.” 

On the Net: 

Washington Lawyers’ Committee: http://www.washlaw.org 

Education Department’s settlement agreement: http://www.ed.gov/class—action 

OPM report to Congress: http://www.opm.gov/feorp 


Bush puts cleanup plans for rivers, lakes put on hold

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration wants to put on hold and re-examine a Clinton-era program spelling out federally required state cleanup plans for thousands of lakes and rivers around the nation, two administration officials said Monday. 

The broad cleanup plans issued last year were intended to reduce storm water and agriculture runoff polluting about 21,000 lakes, ponds, streams and rivers across the country. 

A National Academy of Sciences panel said last month the Clinton administration had put the program into place without enough evidence to assure the right bodies of water were being targeted. 

The Environmental Protection Agency planned to ask the U.S. Court of Appeals in a filing late Monday to delay deciding on a legal challenge to the program and to put off its implementation for 18 months, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

Environmentalists said Monday they were alarmed by the action. Under the program, states would have eight to 13 years to develop plans and start cleanup and water quality restoration programs. 

“They’re going to try to roll back this entire program,” said Joan Mulhern, a Washington attorney for the San Francisco-based Earthjustice law firm. 

The appeals court has before it a suit by the American Farm Bureau challenging the cleanup program, alleging that the EPA overreached its authority under the Clean Water Act in halting a California family from harvesting timber from their land. 

Farm Bureau spokesman Dave Salmonsen had no comment on the filing Monday but said the group was encouraged by the National Academy panel’s report last month. 

“Those are some the changes we’re looking for, a lot better emphasis on monitoring and better data collection to see exactly what’s going on in these water bodies before they’re put on lists,” he said. 

The National Academy panel said water pollution from agriculture and storm water runoff remains a serious problem in the United States. But it said EPA’s selection of contaminated rivers, streams and lakes lacked sufficient scientific basis. 

The scientists also criticized using the suitability of a lake or river for swimming or fishing as the criteria for deciding if it should be put on the cleanup list.


Prospectors spot a few bright specks of paydirt

By John Cunniff
Tuesday July 17, 2001

NEW YORK — Along with the tailings and other debris of the recent stock market debacle, some bright specks of pay dirt are filtering into the news of late. Not many, but enough to excite prospectors. 

Prospectors, to be sure, are optimists who see gold in lead, so those who listen to them may do so with condescension. It was, after all, the prospector mentality that led investors astray over the past two years. 

But this is what they see: A rosier consumer outlook, a pickup in manufacturing, a decline in business inventories, a few reports of higher corporate earnings, and even some positive stock recommendations. 

The prospectors have been bored by inaction. And so, as the analysts at Standard & Poor’s weekly, “The Outlook,” put it: “The market doesn’t need a lot of good news at this stage, just relief from the pervasive gloom and doom of recent months.” 

But the danger, then, might be in reading too much into the evidence. 

While The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index rose for a second straight month in June, the director of its Consumer Research Center cautioned about expecting consumers to go on a shopping binge. 

While manufacturing activity has almost leveled off after a steep slide to its lowest point in nearly three decades, the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI warned that a rebound, at least for now, isn’t a certainty. 

While there have been some healthy earnings increases, they stand out in rarity, not strength. Some companies have beaten their lowered forecasts. And some have surprised by losing less than anticipated. But there are few indications of a quick end to the tech-company slump. 

As they say, much depends on how you look at the evidence. These are special times. What once would have caused barely a lifted eyebrow is now treasured for its sparkle and is seen as auguring better times. 

The latest small-business economic report from the National Federation of Independent Business is an example. 

It shows hiring plans at the lowest reading since 1994, and capital spending expectations declining. Sales were the poorest in survey history. The frequency of profit declines was the most pervasive since 1990. 

But Prof. William Dunkelberg, an experienced economist who has seen worse, points out that “compared to last year, it’s not a party, but historically, it’s not so bad.” 

The key to understanding the prospector mind is the word “comparison.” Americans had become accustomed to strong economies and rising stocks year after year. Today, anything less is jolting. It can’t be true. 

Dunkelberg admits “The road ahead looks pretty flat – no serious dips, but no elevation either.” But looking at the brighter side of things, he points out that “a recession is not in our forecast.” 

 

John Cunniff is a business analyst for The Associated Press


Consumer watchdog charges search engines of deception

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Attacking an increasingly popular Internet business practice, a consumer watchdog group Monday filed a Federal Trade Commission complaint alleging that many online search engines are concealing the impact that special fees have on their results. 

Commercial Alert, a 3-year-old group founded by consumer activist Ralph Nader, asked the FTC to investigate whether eight of the Web’s largest search engines are violating federal laws against deceptive advertising. 

The group alleges that the search engines are abandoning objective formulas to determine the order of their listed results, and selling the top spots to the highest bidders without making adequate disclosures to Web surfers. 

The complaint touches a hot-button issue affecting tens of millions of people who submit search queries each day. With more than 2 billion pages and more than 14 billion hyperlinks on the Web, search requests rank as the second most popular online activity after e-mail. 

The eight search engines named in Commercial Alert’s complaint are: MSN, owned by Microsoft Corp.; Netscape, owned by AOL Time Warner Inc.; Directhit, owned by Ask Jeeves Inc.; HotBot, owned by Terra Lycos; Lycos, also owned by Terra Lycos; Altavista, owned by CMGI Inc.; LookSmart, owned by LookSmart Ltd.; and iWon, owned by a privately held company operating under the same name. 

Portland, Ore.-based Commercial Alert could have named even more search engines in its complaint, but focused on the biggest sites that are auctioning off spots in their results, said Gary Ruskin, the group’s executive director. 

“Search engines have become central in the quest for learning and knowledge in our society. The ability to skew the results in favor of hucksters without telling consumers is a serious problem,” Ruskin said. 

By late Monday afternoon, three of the search engines had responded to The Associated Press’ inquiries about the complaint. Two, LookSmart and AltaVista, denied the charges. Microsoft spokesman Matt Pilla said MSN is delivering “compelling search results that people want.” The FTC had no comment about the complaint Monday. 

The complaint takes aim at the new business plans embraced by more search engines as they try to cash in on their pivotal role as Web guides and reverse a steady stream of losses. 

To boost revenue, search engines over the past year have been accepting payments from businesses interested in receiving a higher ranking in certain categories or ensuring that their sites are reviewed more frequently. 

Basing a search engine’s rankings on the amount of money paid by a business is known as “pay for placement.” Accepting a fee from a business that wants a search engine’s automated “crawlers” to review sites more frequently is known as “pay for inclusion.” 

Commercial Alert alleges the search engines are breaking the law by not making it clear that their results “are paid ads in disguise.” The managers of the search engines contend that results swayed by fees are clearly labeled. The search engines typically show the fee-paying sites under headings such as “Featured” or “Partner” sites. The results retrieved using objective formulas generally are listed under a separate heading. 

“Based on the feedback we have received, our users are very clear about the distinctions. We feel very good about our service,” said AltaVista spokeswoman Kristi Kaspar. AltaVista launched its pay-for-placement service earlier this year. 

Monday’s complaint marks the first time federal regulators have been asked to look into the pay-for-placement and pay-for-inclusion movement, said Danny Sullivan, who has closely watched the growth of the practices as an analyst for Searchenginewatch.com. 

“It’s becoming so widespread that it was probably only a matter of time before something like this happened,” Sullivan said. 

In its complaint, Commercial Alert alleges that the search engines’ misleading paid listings are equivalent to television informercials masquerading as independent programming. In the past, the FTC has cracked down on informercials that weren’t adequately labeled as advertising. 

Because the search engines used to base their results exclusively on objective criteria, most Web surfers depend on the “editorial integrity” of search engines, Commercial Alert said in its complaint. The group called the change to pay-for-placement “a high-tech case of bait-and-switch.” 

But Sullivan said the growing emphasis on pay-for-placement hasn’t been much of a shock to many Web surfers. 

“There are a lot of people who have always assumed that businesses are paying money to be included in a search engine’s results,” Sullivan said.


Group claims rocket fuel marred water

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — The tap water of at least 7 million Californians is contaminated with a chemical from rocket fuel, a problem that affects people in at least 17 other states, according to an environmental group’s study. 

After collecting data from the federal and local governments, the Environmental Working Group has found that perchlorate, a chemical that affects the thyroid, has tainted wells and river water that feeds California, and contends that suggested acceptable levels are far above where they should be. 

The group suggests an enforceable limit on the amount of perchlorate allowed in water. Currently, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has an advisory level of 4 parts to 18 parts per billion, and the group suggests a 4.3 parts per billion limit. California has a level that recommends that a water source be closely monitored if the perchlorate level reaches 18 parts per billion. 

The EPA completed a review in February 1999, and is now refining it for greater accuracy. 

Too much perchlorate can damage the thyroid gland, which controls growth, development and metabolism. Fetuses and children with damage to their thyroids could suffer retardation, hearing or speech loss and motor skill problems. The chemical also can cause cancer at high levels. 

Perchlorate is a salt made of ammonia and chlorine that is one of the explosive components of rocket fuel. It affects areas where rocket construction or testing have taken place. 

Places in California being cleaned up include the Baldwin Park Superfund site in the San Gabriel Valley and an Aerojet Corp. Superfund site in Rancho Cordova, near Sacramento. At both places, the cleanup goal is to get down to 4 parts per billion. 

Because there is no set regulatory level, the EPA decides on a case-by-case basis what the acceptable level of cleanup should be, according to Kevin Mayer, Region 9 perchlorate coordinator. 

The EPA is currently doing studies and testing water sources around the country to establish a basis for regulatory decisions for drinking water and Superfund sites, Mayer said. 

While at least 7 million Californians could be affected by perchlorate, the number of people around the country who could be affected is unknown because little testing has been done, the EWG reported. 

The chemical has been measured in the Colorado River and Lake Mead; in Phoenix, Tucson and other areas in Arizona; as well as cities in Indiana, Iowa and Kansas. 

Perchlorate can be cleaned up using bacteria that use the chemical to breathe when there’s no oxygen in the water, by using a resin designed to absorb the salts, or by using ions to take out charged particles. A type of filter also can be used to filter out the molecules. 

But the treatments are expensive, and EWG estimates that just for a part of cleanup at the Rancho Cordova site the cost could be $50 million and last more than 200 years. 

Perchlorate is still made and used, but disposal has improved since workers used to hose the stale perchlorate out of rockets and replace it with the fresh chemical. The result of that was to have the chemical leeching into the ground, said Bill Walker, California director of the Environmental Working Group. 

“Even in the name of national defense or the space race, we just can’t afford to be this cavalier about what we do with waste,” he said. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.ewg.org 

http://www.epa.gov 


Free bus passes pushed to reduce truancy

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 16, 2001

The Berkeley City Council unanimously approved a resolution calling on the Metropolitan Transportation Commission to set aside $11.9 million for a three-year program to provide free bus passes for low-income middle and high school students last week. 

Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson and Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia are trying to drum up support for the plan, which will come before the MTC July 25. 

The MTC is the transportation planning, coordinating and financing agency for the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area. 

The three-year pilot program would provide free bus passes to more than 33,000 middle and high school students who participate in free or reduced lunch programs in Alameda and West Contra Costa Counties. It would also reduce the $95 rate all students must pay for a one-year AC Transit bus pass by 65 percent.  

According to a study of student transit needs by AC Transit last year, many low-income families find it difficult to afford $27 monthly bus passes for their children and instead opt to pay as they go.  

As a result, the study found, the school attendance rate of low-income children tends to drop towards the end of the month as the money runs out, particularly in areas where walking to school simply isn’t an option. 

In Sacramento, where teen activists recently convinced the transit operator to reduce high school and middle school students’ fare by more than half for a three-month test period, a recent student found that 52 percent of students missed school because of the cost of the bus. 

With a free bus pass program in place, said Lara Bice, a legislative aide to Supervisor Carson, “there will be reduced absenteeism at schools because families won’t have to choose between paying bus fare and paying for rent.”  

Since school districts receive state education dollars based on their “average daily attendance” rates, they could stand to gain millions in additional education funding under the plan as well, Carson and Gioia argued in a recent letter to MTC commissioners. 

In approving the resolution in support of the program last week, Berkeley city councilmembers said providing free bus passes for low-income families is a matter of social justice. 

“In Berkeley we don’t have that kind of documentation (of students missing school because they can’t afford bus fare), but we can only assume that there are low-income people who have a hard time buying bus passes,” said Berkeley City Councilmember Miriam Hawley. 

“If a low-income family has two to three kids, it could be a huge drain on the family budget,” Hawley added. 

Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean said of the absenteeism traced to students’ inability to pay bus fare, “If it happens in Richmond, I’m sure it happens in Berkeley.” 

Hawley said Friday that access to free bus passes would also make it easier for more Berkeley students to take advantage of after-school programs which are offered all over the city but are sometimes difficult for students to reach. 

In their letter to the MTC, Carson and Gioia cite studies that suggest the after-school hours of 3 to 6 p.m. are “peak hours” for teens to commit crimes, smoke, drink, use drugs or have sex. 

Carson and Gioia hope to have as many cities as possible pass resolutions in support of the free bus pass program before the MTC’s July 25 meeting, Bice said. The idea is to have the pilot program included in the MTC’s $80 billion Regional Transportation Plan, which outlines regional transportation improvement plans for the next 25 years. 

In 30 public outreach workshops conducted by the MTC to help formulate the RTP, citizens consistently asked that the plan include measures for making transit more affordable to low-income families, Carson and Gioia observed in their letter to the MTC. And yet, to date, the MTC has committed to no such measures, they said. 

“In response to public comment, community needs, and environmental justice issues, we believe that it is imperative that MTC consider – and fund – this pilot project,” Carson and Gioia wrote. 

The MTC is expected to finalize the RTP sometime this fall. If the free bus pass pilot program is approved, Carson and Bice hope that it’s impact over three years could persuade the state to pick up the tab for continuing the program in the future.


Calendar of Events & Activities

Monday July 16, 2001


Monday, July 16

 

National Women’s Political Caucus 

5:30 - 7 p.m. 

Florence McDonald Community Room 

Savo Island Cooperative Housing 

2017 Stuart Street 

Special guest Rosemary Stasek of Catholics for Free Choice addresses: Catholic Hospitals and Restrictions on Women’s Health Care. Ms. Stasek is a highly regarded expert on the subject of women’s reproductive rights. Everyone is welcome. Free. For more info and RSVP call Cynthia Wooten at 559-8707. 

 


Tuesday, July 17

 

Intelligent Conversation  

7 - 9 p.m.  

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

A discussion group open to all, regardless of age, religion, viewpoint, etc. This time the discussion will center on best vacations, trips, and travel experiences. Informally led by Robert Berend, who founded similar groups in L.A., Menlo Park, and Prague. Bring light snacks/drinks to share. Free  

527-5332 

 

Free Early Music Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK) 

Small group sings madrigals and other voice harmony every Tuesday morning. Call Ann, 655-8863 

 

Berkeley Camera Club  

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church  

941 The Alameda  

Share your slides and learn what other photographers are doing. Monthly field trips. 

Call Don, 525-3565 

 

Berkeley School Volunteers 

10:30 a.m. - noon 

1835 Allston Way 

Orientation for volunteers interested in helping in academic and recreation programs being held in Berkeley public schools this summer. 

644-8833 

 

Writing and Resistance  

In A Culture of Amnesia 

6 - 7:45 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Classroom #2 

Part of a workshop series on concepts and strategies for resistance through the spoken and written word, taught by Joyce E. Young. $12. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2 - 7 p.m. 

Derby Street at MLK Jr. Way 

548-3333 

 

Berkeley City Council Public  

Hearing 

7 p.m. 

Council Chambers 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

The City Council will consider extending the moratorium on the installation of wireless telecommunications antennas for cellular and other personal communications systems. For information on the moratorium call 705-8108. To submit comments or for other information call 981-6900. 

 

Berkeley Fibromyalgia  

Support Group 

12 - 2 p.m. every 3rd Tuesday 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Maffly Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

“Myofascial Release” with Rachael Peizer, PT 

For more info call D.L. Malinousky: 601-0550 

 


Wednesday, July 18

 

Blisters No More: Finding the  

Proper Boot Fit 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

REI footwear expert Brad Bostrom will show you how to make your feet more comfortable out on the trail. Bring your boots and socks to this interactive clinic. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Berkeley Communicator  

Toastmasters Club 

7:15 a.m. 

Vault Cafe 

3250 Adeline 

Learn to speak with confidence. Ongoing first and third Wednesdays each month. 

527-2337 

 

Ice Cream Day at LHS 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Make your own ice cream and compare it to a commercial brand. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

Support Group for  

Family/Friends  

Caring for Older Adults 

4 - 5:30 p.m. - 3rd Wednesday of each month 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

3rd floor, Room 3369B (elevator B) 

The group will focus on the needs of the older adult with serious medical problems, psychiatric illnesses, substance abuse, and their caregivers. Facilitated by Monica Nowakowski, LCSW. 

Free. For more information call 802-1725 

 

International Working Class  

Film and Video Festival 

7 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, films to be screened include “Resistance As Democracy,” “The Internationale,” “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement,” and “Zimbabwe’s New Chimurenga.” $7. 

849-2568 

 


Thursday, July 19

 

LGBT Catholics Group  

7:30 p.m. 

Newman Hall  

2700 Dwight Way (at College)  

The lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender Catholics group are “a spiritual community committed to creating justice.” This meeting will be a game night.  

654-5486 

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week The Waikiki Steel Works perform vintage acoustic Hawaiian steel guitar music. 

 

 

Berkeley Metaphysical  

Toastmasters Club  

6:15 - 7:30 p.m.  

2515 Hillegass Ave.  

Public speaking skills and metaphysics come together. Ongoing first and third Thursdays each month.  

Call 869-2547 

 

Quit Smoking Class 

6 - 8 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis Street 

A six week quit smoking class. 

Free to Berkeley residents and employees. 

Call 644-6422 or e-mail at: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Salsa Dance Classes 

7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Classes every Thursday with live percussionists, light refreshments, DJ playing Latin music. $10 or $15 for two. 

237-9874 

 

Backpacking Yosemite’s High  

Country 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide Presentation. 

Marvin Schinnerer will share highlights from two favorite trips out of Yosemite’s Tuolumne Meadows. Free. 

527-4140


Letters to the Editor

Monday July 16, 2001

United States makes Japan vulnerable 

Editor: 

 

Although the movie Pearl Harbor’s domestic box office was $186,600,000 as of July 8, 2001, the Bush administration continues to reinforce the shibboleths of U.S. policy vis a vis Japan of the past 55 years. Fear of resurgent Japanese militarism lead to the drafting of a Constitution which now makes it impossible to ward off or even acknowledge the missiles fired into Okinawa Prefecture waters by the People’s Liberation Army. In their concentration on Japanese militarism, the leaders of the Occupation overlooked the communist trade unions and teachers’ organizations. The left has seized upon an ingenious theory that the Pacific War was an imperialist war insofar as it was directed at other Asians, but an anti-imperialist war insofar as it was directed against the U.S. The Crown Prince presided over Bomb Day, August 6, 1960 in Hiroshima. 

Since then, opposition to imperialism has coincided with “peace and Socialism.” The April election of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi does not portend that the Japanese people are “weary of their country’s colorless political class and its reluctance to buck the influence of the United States (Reese Erlich).” Just as the People’s Liberation Army has won increased support from the Chinese people by delaying the release of the crew of the U.S. surveillance aircraft, the “political class” in Japan can always drip into the friction caused by its status of forces agreement with the U.S. as the readiest way of increasing support for unpopular policies, e.g. raising taxes during a recession.  

 

Richard Thompson 

Berkeley 

 

City could be more helpful with recycling 

 

The Berkeley Daily Planet received this letter addressed to City Councilmember Maio: 

Reports of rat infestation at public housing should make us all shudder and express interest to councilmembers to remedy the situation, immediately. 

At my apartment, recycling bins recently disappeared; the city does a good recycling job with private residences but not with “commercial” users, according to the manager. 

I store wet garbage in my freezer rather than leave it outside in the monster, often overflowing trash bin overnight where flies and vermin have free access; but flies seem more frequent than ever this year. I doubt if everyone is able to avoid attracting pests with my technique. Our landlord may be “penny-wise and pound foolish,” regarding cutting back on recycling, but maybe the city could be more helpful with fee structures, number of pickups, tidiness, etc. 

 

Terry Cochrell 

Berkeley 

 

City officials need a lesson in urban planning 

 

The Berkeley Daily Planet received this letter addressed to the Berkeley City Council and Planning Commission: 

This whole review, comments, responses and comments process is basically flawed. The flaws should have been recognized and corrected right at the beginning by staff, the planning commission, and the politicians — if they wanted the citizens to fully participate and to make appropriate suggestions which could be used to improve the resulting documents. 

The proposed General Plan and the draft EIR should have had summaries at particular points where the intent of the document and the form of the comments was adequately and fully presented. And then the descriptions of the kinds of appropriate responses and comments of citizens should have been outlined so that those comments would be fully and directly to the point. 

Thus the continually repeated responses by the LSA consultant “that the comments do not relate to the adequacy of the Draft EIR” are cop-outs that are deliberately avoiding an answer to the points being made, which are in fact appropriate and deserve a detailed response. 

Note that many of those comments are made by professional planners and experts who know full well what they are discussing which should have had full responses by the LSA consultant. 

All of this goes back to the basic intent of the General Plan which is thoroughly discussed in the book: 

The Urban General Plan, by T. J. Kent, American Planning Association, Chicago, 1990. 

The late Professor Kent was planning director of both Berkeley and San Francisco, member of the Berkeley City Council, and eminent professor of city and regional planning at the University of California. His detailed concept of the basic role of the General Plan should be understood by Berkeley city staff and citizens, of all places. 

 

Charles L. Smith 

Berkeley 

Information is hard to come by from the city 

 

Editor: 

 

I am writing as a member of the working group attempting to forge an ordinance for the siting of RF radiation emitting antennas. 

On June 17 the City Council will be considering an extension on the antenna siting moratorium which it passed six months ago. I have been informed by a city official that the original moratorium and two extensions are permitted by state law for a total of 24 months. The city staff is recommending an extension of five months, which according to Vivian Kahn is based on a recommendation by the City Attorney’s office.  

In my opinion, based on past performance by city staff, the complexity of the issues and the nature of the work remaining to create a reasonable ordinance, which considers both the needs of the community and the cellular industry, a five month extension will create inordinate pressure on an orderly process, and will then require a thirteen month extension to permit the full use of available time, if needed. 

It would seem reasonable to extend the moratorium for half the remaining permitted time, which is nine months, to allow for less pressure. If we are able to get the work done in less time, all to the good. 

I have asked Ms. Kahn what the rational is behind the recommendation of five months, and I wonder what the rush is. As is usually the case, such inquiries seem to fall into a black hole and remain unanswered. This typical disrespect of city staff toward a reasonable request from an involved citizen strikes me as a problem for the council and city manager to look into. I have experienced similar difficulty from the Manager’s office as well, in requesting a copy of his report on the original moratorium. That report was not available until the actual council meeting on the moratorium. At that time the change to the definition of the word “incidental” was slipped in. This change substantially weakened the ability of neighborhoods to exercise the right of a public hearing in applications for antenna siting. I never did get a response to my request for a copy of his report from his office, and several weeks after the fact obtained one from the city clerks office. The city clerks office is thankfully, one department of city government that is responsive to citizens. 

The people of Berkeley need a sunshine ordinance. 

 

Leonard Schwartzburd, Ph.D. 

Charles and Anne Smith 

Berkeley 


Arts & Entertainment

Monday July 16, 2001

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 20: Raw Power, Decry, S.M.D., Scurvy Dogs, Blown To Bits; July 21: Babyland, 78 RPMs Derelectics, Man Alive, Philps & Reuter; July 27: Throw Down, Glood Clean Fun, Count Me Out, Time Flies, Faded Grey, Lab Rats; July 28: Over My Dead Body, Carry On, Merrick, Some Still Believe, Black Lung Patriots; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

Albatross Pub Music at 9 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 18: Whiskey Brothers; July 19: Keni “El Lebrijano”; July 21: Tipsy House Irish band; July 24: Madd and Eddie Duran jazz duo. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 16: Renegade Sidemen; July 17: Joe Livotti Jazz Duo; July 18: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 19: Jazz Singer’s Collective; July 20: Anna & Susie Laraine, Perri Poston; 10 p.m., Bluesman Hideo Date; July 21: Jazz singers Vicki Burns & Felice York and trio; 10:30 p.m., The Ducksan Distones jazz sextet; July 22: Acoustic Soul; July 23: Renegade Sidemen; July 24: Junebug; July 25: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 26: Rich Kalman Trio & “Con Alma”; July 27: Anna & Susie Laraine, Perri Poston; 10 p.m., Hideo Date Bluesman; July 28: Marie-Louise Fiatarone Trio; 10:30 p.m., The Ducksan Distones; 1801 University Ave. 849-ANNA 

 

Ashkenaz July 17: 9 p.m., Rock n’ Blues with The Jennifer Will Band. $7; July 18: 9 p.m., Swamp boogie with Tee Fee, 8 p.m. dance lesson with Diana Costillo; July 19: 10 p.m., Dead DJ Nite with Digital Dave. $5; July 20: 9:30 p.m., Steve Lucky and The Rhumba Bums play East Coast Swing and Lindy Hop. 8 p.m. dance lesson with Nick and Shanna. $11; July 21: 9:30 p.m., Balkan Night with Edessa and Anoush. Turkish dance lesson with Ahmet Luleci at 8 p.m. $12; July 22: 9 p.m., Wagogo, Heartpumping Miranda music from Zimbabwe. $10; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. July 21: Little Jonny. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Jupiter July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. July 21: Orbit 4- hip-hop, drum ’n’ bass, breakbeat, jungle and jazz. July 24: Stringthoery- local jazz blues and rock. July 25: Suite 304- vocal harmany-based groove pop. July 27: Sexfresh- traditional American pop. All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; July 21: 8:00 p.m., Family and Friends- Talent Showcase with soul, hip-hop and spoken word; July 22: 7 p.m., It Takes a Community to Raise a CD- Mary Watkins & Lisa Cohen, Gwen Avery, Avotcja, June Millington & the Slamming Babes, Blackberri and more; July 24: 7:30 p.m., Temp Slave, the Musical- Musical Satire from Madison, Wisconsin; July 27: 8:00 p.m., Raphael Manriquez- singer composer and guitar player celebrates release of new album; July 28: 8:30 p.m., Rompe y Raja- Afro-Peruvian dance and song troupe celebrates Peruvian Independence Day; July 29: 7:30 p.m., Moh Alileche- Algerian mondol player, traditional kabylian music. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group; July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung; 5:30 p.m., Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 20: 8:30 p.m., “Divabands Unplugged” with Bern, Roberta Donnay, and Elin Jr. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Shattuck Down Low Lounge Every Tuesday: 9:30 p.m., Posh Tuesdays with DJ’s Yamu, Delon, Add1, and Tequila Willie. Shattuck at Allston. www.thebeatdownsound.com  

 

Starry Plough Pub Sunday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 9:45 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Drums and Tuba, Mega Mousse, $7; July 14: Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons, The John Shipe Band $7 3101 Shattuck Ave. 841-2082. 

 

“Midsummer Mozart Festival” All shows at 7:30 p.m. July 20: Four pieces including the Overture to “The Abduction to the Seraglio”; July 28: Four pieces including “March in D Major”; Aug. 3: Four pieces including “Symphony in B Flat.” $32 - $40. First Congregational Church 2345 Channing Way (415) 292-9620 www.midsummermozart.org  

 

“Emeryville Taiko” June 22: 2 p.m., Traditional Japanese drumming with American influence. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 21-22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

 

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Weds. 7 p.m., Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (After July 8 no Wednesday performance, no Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Moises Kaufman and Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of openly gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“Orphan” July 13 through August 5 (no show on July 20): Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Opens July 13, 8 p.m., presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. through August 11, plus Thursday, Aug. 9. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through August 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 22 at 7 p.m. $30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; July 21: 7 p.m., “The Woman in the Window”, 9 p.m., “Scarlet Street”; July 22: 5:30 p.m., “Odd Obsession”; 7:30 p.m., “Nihonbashi”; July 24: 7:30 p.m., “In the Valley of the Wupper” and “In the Name of the Duce”; July 25: 7:30 p.m., “Spider Baby 2000”; July 29: Family Classic “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”; $4. Sundays, 3 p.m. New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

 

“Ames Gallery Artists” Through July 22: Thur. - Sun. Noon - 7 p.m., Temporary gallery as part of the Berkeley Arts Festival with works from Wilbert Griffith, Dorothy Binger, Julio Garcia, and Leon Kennedy. Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 2200 Shattuck Ave. 486-0411 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31: Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734.


Berkeley Legion collapses in extra innings

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 16, 2001

Missed opportunities, wild pitches spell disaster for Legion squad 

 

In a game filled with seeing-eye groundballs and Texas-League bloopers, it only took one big blow for the Danville Black Sox to pull a game out against Berkeley Legion on Sunday at San Pablo Park. 

For six innings, neither team had a single extra-base hit. Berkeley had touched Danville starter Adam Brisentine for eight singles, resulting in five runs, and Berkeley High rising sophomore Walker Toma had limited the visitors to just five singles and four runs, not to mention driving in two runs to help his own cause. But while seemingly every break had been going Berkeley’s way early, the late innings belonged to the Black Sox. 

It looked as if Toma would put Danville away, as he struck out the first two batters of the seventh. But a sudden spurt of wildness resulted in a walk for Jack Harris, only the second issued by Toma. That brought to the plate left fielder Shane Buschini, who was hitless on the day. But Buschini came through with a ringing triple to right-center, scoring Harris to knot the score at 5-5. Toma narrowly avoided further harm when the next Danville hitter, cleanup man Moose Worswick, hit a shot right at Berkeley second baseman Chris Wilson, who took the ball off of his chest but recovered in time to get Worswick at first to preserve the tie. 

The momentum swung back to Berkeley in the bottom half of the inning, as Bennie Goldenberg drew a leadoff walk. Toma, little brother to Berkeley High cleanup hitter Matt Toma, followed with a perfect hit-and-run single through the vacant second base hole, his third hit of the day. Jack MckSweeney dropped a nice sacrifice bunt down the third base line, and Worswick tried unsuccessfully to nail Goldenberg at third and everyone was safe. With the bases loaded and no outs, all Berkeley needed to do was hit a flyball or get a grounder through the drawn-in Danville infield. But they could only manage two strikeouts sandwiched around a pop foul, and the game headed to extra innings. 

Having thrown seven innings, Toma moved to third base as Jason Nealy came in to pitch the eighth. But Nealy was very wild, hitting Mike Bloom with his first pitch and walking the next batter on four pitches. A wild pitch moved the runners up before Nealy struck out shortstop Scott Nielson, and two more wild pitches cleared the bases. One out later, Nealy walked nine-hitter Ben Heyna and wild-pitched him to second. George Tucker hit a grounder into the hole, and Berkeley shortstop Jason Moore threw late the third trying to get Heyna. Nealy threw yet another wild pitch, scoring Heyna, and Harris knocked a double to left, Danville’s first hit of the inning, to plate Tucker. After another walk, Worswick popped out to Toma, ending the painful inning. Berkeley couldn’t muster the energy to answer the bizarre rally in the bottom of the inning, ending the game at 9-5 in Danville’s favor.


Living with your neighbors

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Monday July 16, 2001

Dressed in shorts, sneakers and a large blue apron, David Dobkin is getting ready for a big meal. He is marinating a salmon, cooking greens and cutting bread. It’s Friday night, and as they do three times a week, Dobkin and his neighbors are about to have dinner together in the common area of their cohousing development on Sacramento Street. 

Deborah Goldberg Gray, a single mother of two, is cooking with him while her 4-year-old son plays outside with a neighbor. As dinnertime approaches people stop by, asking if they can bring a guest, checking what’s on the menu, or simply greeting Dobkin, who is in charge of a common meal for the first time since his wife died of cancer a few months ago.  

They are households who jointly own a property and are willing to live in a friendly and safe environment – that’s what cohousing is about.  

“Cohousing is a social structure,” said Goldberg, a member of Berkeley’s cohousing since 1995. “It’s a support system that is a step away and anybody here can yell out their window and get somebody to help them… That’s maybe more the way neighborhoods used to be.” 

Sometimes called “intentional neighborhood,” cohousing is a relatively new form of cooperative living. Born in Denmark in the 1960s, the concept was imported to the United States by architects Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett, who published a book on the topic in 1988. Quite soon, the idea caught the public’s interest and led them to create the Berkeley-based Cohousing Company, a redevelopment company. All over the country the movement progressively grew into a wide network that now has about 60 completed cohousing communities and more than 100 projects in development. Members of the network meet for conferences every two years. This year, the conference will take place in Berkeley from July 20-23 and will celebrate the 10 years of cohousing communities in the United States. 

Cohousing communities are entirely designed to encourage neighborliness. The houses are situated in clusters and face a common garden instead of the street. The cars are parked as far as possible from the residential area, and the development of the land is usually sustainable. Individuals own their homes, but share the common grounds and facilities, where they can gather socially. To participate in a cohousing project, members must pay an equity investment later credited toward the price of their house and be part of a development process that often requires numerous meetings. 

Created in 1994, Berkeley’s cohousing perfectly illustrates the concept. In addition to a kitchen and dining room, the common house, a turn of the century farmhouse, hosts a guest room, a playroom for the children, a small office and a laundry room. This common house, residents say, is what makes the coexistence of the 30 individuals of all ages and backgrounds who live there, harmonious. 

“There is a nice balance between being very sociable and having your own privacy. There are understandings about what’s common space and what’s private space,” said Juliet Lee, an anthropologist who recently moved in. 

All the common activities, except for the meetings related to the management of the property, she added, are voluntary. 

Still, for those who chose to live in cohousing, the social activities are precious moments.  

“We celebrate all kinds of events in people’s life. It’s nice to share it all together,” said Nina Falk, the eldest resident. “We really pay attention to each other.” 

Dobkin knows it better than anyone. The presence of his neighbors during his wife’s last months of life was critical to him.  

“It helped us both. She didn’t have only me. There were a lot of people who came to take care of her,” he said.  

The support of the cohousing residents, Dobkin said, allowed him to not quit his job and keep living a relatively regular life. People helped in many ways, some doing his laundry, other staying with his wife while he was out.  

“Although it was very hard and stressful we did it all together,” he said. “I don’t know how people do it otherwise. I just can’t imagine.” 

To register for the four-day cohousing conference, which will take place from Friday July 20, to Monday July 23, call (510) 486-2656. The conference features a tour of California’s cohousing communities, a workshop by architects McCamant and Durrett and a series of sessions looking at the first ten years of cohousing in the United States. The registration fee for all the conference events is $295, but there is a $150 special one day rate for people wanting to attend only Saturday’s event and a free open house on Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. For more information on the conference visit the web site: http://www.cohousing.org/conf/ca2001/ 


Cal crew hires new women’s novice coach

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday July 16, 2001

The University of California women’s head crew coach Dave O’Neill announced Friday the hiring of Sara Nevin as the school’s women’s novice crew coach. She will begin her duties on August 15.  

Nevin comes to Cal after serving as the executive director and head coach at the Lake Lanier Rowing Club in Gainesville, Georgia. During her six years in Georgia, Nevin coached all levels of rowers from beginners to athletes training for the U.S. National team. In addition to her coaching, Nevin acted as the full-time boathouse and rowing club director as well as Regatta Director for the NCAA Women’s Rowing Championships in 1998 and 2001.  

Before arriving at Lake Lanier, Nevin spent seven years coaching in the Seattle, Wash.. Between 1989-92 Nevin headed the Seattle Training Center, coaching a group of elite and pre-elite rowers. Her stint culminated with all eight women earning spots on the ‘92 Olympic team. From 1990-96 Nevin also coached the varsity boys rowing team at the Mount Baker Rowing Club. There, Nevin grew a program of 16 athletes to over 50 and won four U.S. Rowing Junior National Championships including the school-boys eight in 1993.  

Nevin earned a B.A. in political science with a minor in pre-medicine from the University of Washington in 1985. During her rowing career at UW, Nevin won three varsity eight national championships between 1983-85.  

“Sara is a women of tremendous integrity and is a very talented coach,” said O’Neill. “She will do a terrific job with the incoming class of recruits and the entire program will benefit from her ability. I am thrilled she is coming to Cal and excited to be working with her.”


Enlightenment is the goal of torture exhibit seeks to

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Monday July 16, 2001

The Berkeley City Council voted on Tuesday to support a museum exhibition that primarily features 15th- and 16th-Century European instruments of torture and death. 

But while the ghoulish exhibits in the Historical Torture Museum might appeal to our darker curiosities, exhibitors say their message is anti-torture and anti-capital punishment.  

The exhibit, which is sponsored by an array of humans rights organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Center for Justice and Accountability, is currently showing at the Herbst International Exhibit Hall in San Francisco’s Presidio. 

The council endorsed the exhibit, which includes Inquisitorial chairs, garrotes and an iron maiden, by a vote of 7-2, with Mayor Shirley Dean and Councilmember Polly Armstrong voting no. 

“I understand the reason for the exhibit but I just can’t bring myself to support it,” Dean said. “I can face a lot of stuff but not that. The whole thing gives me the willies.” 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington, who sponsored the recommendation, said he was surprised the endorsement did not get a unanimous vote.  

“I guess some people reacted to the recommendation like these instruments of torture are throwbacks to another century, like they’re ancient history,” he said. “But torture still goes on today and education leads to prevention.” 

Worthington said capital punishment is a good example of torture that causes human suffering to the condemned and their families. 

In a letter of support posted on the Historical Torture Museum’s Website, the president of Amnesty International’s Spanish Section, Manuel Corroza Muro, agrees. 

“If we do not provoke decided and tenacious indignation against this barbarism, the coming century will bring, without a doubt, a rich harvest of devices, monstrosities of torture and death.” his letter reads. 

The exhibit, which opened on July 7, coincides with a series of lectures and roundtables that will also take place at the Herbst International Exhibit Hall on Wednesday and Thursday evenings through October 10. Lectures and roundtables are free and will cover national and international events such as, “The Death Penalty and the Case of Mumia Abu Jamal,” “Death www.torturamuseum.com.Row in Texas” and “Torture in Chile During the Pinochet years.”  

According to the exhibit’s Website, the torture instruments are owned by Italian scholars who have made the diabolical equipment available for exhibitions throughout Europe and South America. 

The show includes the Maiden of Nuremberg, a standing sarcophagus that was fitted with spikes to pierce its victims when the lid was closed. The spikes were arranged as not to pierce any vital organs so the victim could be kept alive but in excruciating pain. The thick container was designed so screams could not be heard outside. The image of a young maiden was carved on the door of the container, which scholars guess was added to improve the device’s image. 

There is also a series of inquisition chairs, which have spikes designed to pierce the skin when sat upon. One chair has the capacity to be heated with coals to cause additional discomfort.  

Other instruments include a garrote used to slowly choke its victims. According to the museum Website, the garrote was used as the official means of capitol punishment in Spain until 1975. There is also a heretics fork, an especially nasty little tool for forcing victims to keep their heads erect.  

Marianne Graham, a Berkeley resident who attended the exhibit’s opening, said she was disturbed by the show but also inspired to become active with Amnesty International.  

Graham said she finally had her home computer hooked up to the Internet so she could receive notices from Amnesty International about human rights violations all over the world.  

“This is a powerful mechanism,” she said. “It just grabs you and makes you think seriously.” 

Despite the stated good intentions of the exhibit, some are skeptical of its impact. 

“I think it panders to a base curiosity,” Councilmember Armstrong said. “There’s so much meanness and cruelty around today we don’t need to be sponsoring it.” 

For more information about the exhibit call (415) 646-0606 or see the Website www.torturamuseum.com


Activists held in failed attempt to halt missile launch

The Associated Press
Monday July 16, 2001

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — Sixteen Greenpeace activists were being held Sunday on suspicion of domestic terrorism following an unsuccessful attempt to halt a test of a ballistic missile defense system, officials said. 

Four activists were arrested Saturday after swimming ashore from inflatable rafts moored off the California coast, said Air Force Master Sgt. Lloyd Conley. 

Fourteen other people were arrested by the FBI in cooperation with the U.S. Coast Guard, which chased the rafts — known as Zodiacs — up the coast toward San Luis Obispo, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Foree Cooley. The Coast Guard captured three rafts Saturday night and a fourth Sunday morning around 8 a.m., Cooley said. 

The arrests caused about a two-minute delay to the launch of the unarmed Minuteman II intercontinental ballistic missile, said Air Force Sgt. Rebecca Bonilla. The missile, equipped with a mock nuclear warhead, was shot down at 8:09 p.m. by an interceptor rocket launched from a tiny Pacific island. 

The purpose of the protest was to stop the test by entering the “exclusion zone” and show opposition to President Bush’s proposed missile defense network, said Greenpeace spokeswoman Carol Gregory. 

“Greenpeace feels there will be no success until Star Wars is stopped,” Gregory said. 

The activists were arrested on suspicion of domestic terrorism but it was not immediately clear what they would be charged with, said Cheryl Mimura, a spokeswoman with the FBI. 

Gregory identified those arrested after swimming ashore as Jon Aguilar, 31, of Carpinteria; Brent Hanssen, 22, of Columbia, Mo.; Kelly Osborne, 32, of Littleton, Colo.; and John Wills, 27, of Great Britain. 

She identified the other activists arrested as Nic Clyde, 31, of Sydney, Australia; Patrick Eriksson, 32, of Oja, Sweden; Katie Flynn-Jambeck, 29, of Minneapolis; Bill Hebert, 31, of Oceanside; Tom Knappe, 33, of Germany; Guy Levecher, 33, of Greenfield Park, Quebec; Steve Morgan, 45, of Cottingham, United Kingdom; Bill Nandris, 31, of London; Samir Nazareth, 29, of Nagpur, India; Mathias Pendzialek, 34, of Hamburg, Germany; Dan Rudie, 36, of Minnesota; and Jorge C. Torres, 33, of Mexico City. 

A British news agency reported that an independent photographer from the U.K. and a videographer were also arrested. 


Dead man found hanging from freeway overpass

Staff
Monday July 16, 2001

Oakland police say the body of a man was found swinging from a freeway overpass near the Grand Lake Theater early this morning. 

According to a police spokeswoman, at approximately 7 a.m. a man tied a rope around his neck and jumped from the overpass on the 300 block of MacArthur Blvd.  

An Alameda County Coroner official said the body has not been identified. 


Eight companies plan to build gas pipelines in state

The Associated Press
Monday July 16, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – At least eight energy companies have plans to build natural gas pipelines, which could lead to cheaper prices for consumers. 

“The California economy is very strong, and it’s going to continue to grow and expand,” said Jim Macias of Calpine Corp., which is developing plans for a pipeline that would run from the Southwest to Antioch. “We have adequate pipeline capacity for today, but we have to build capacity for the future.” 

The prospect of vastly increased pipeline space for natural gas, coupled with a building boom in California of gas-powered electricity plants, could head off crises such as the one that beset the state last winter. 

Gov. Gray Davis also has touted new plants as California’s insurance against blackout threats and price increases. Just in the past month, Davis has thrown the ceremonial switches on three new power plants in California, all of which run on natural gas. 

“California is building its way to total energy self-sufficiency,” Davis said Monday at opening ceremonies for Calpine’s Los Medanos Energy Center in Pittsburg. 

But there’s a risk to putting so many eggs in one basket, say some industry experts. California’s rush to construct the new gas turbines — at least 16 will come online by 2004 — is being repeated across the nation by states equally attracted by the environmental benefits and potential cost savings of gas. 

Those states will want to tap into pipelines being built across their territory for their own needs, said Joe Benneche, a forecasting expert with the U.S. Energy Department. Coastal states such as California and Florida might not get their fill from the leftovers.


Statewide budget proposal fails a fourth time in state Assembly

By Jim Wasserman Associated Press Writer
Monday July 16, 2001

SACRAMENTO – A $101 billion state budget failed to pass the state Assembly for the fourth time as Republicans on Saturday continued their opposition to a sales tax hike. 

Following hours of fiery debate on the Assembly floor, Democrats fell two votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to pass the budget. But a Republican opposition, unanimous until now, revealed its first cracks with two members voting with Democrats. 

Republicans Dave Kelley of Palm Desert and Anthony Pescetti of Sacramento abandoned their party and voted for the budget. 

Democrats on Saturday sweetened the budget package to lure defectors with nearly $80 million in special incentives for rural counties. 

Those extras included 36 individual $500,000 grants for police and sheriff departments and $8 million for Klamath River Basin farmers facing drought along the California-Oregon border. They also would waive sales taxes on farm tractors and diesel fuel used in agriculture. 

Modoc County Sheriff Bruce Mix, one of eight sheriffs who came to the Capitol to plead for a budget, said his $1.5 million a year operation has no 24-hour patrols or detectives. 

“Five hundred thousand to me is extremely meaningful,” he said during a news conference held by Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys. 

Republican leaders called the rural incentives “bribes” and continued to paint the budget as out-of-control government spending. 

“We have a budget that’s growing at twice the rate of inflation and it’s growing on the backs of taxpayers,” said Assemblyman George Runner, R-Lancaster. Added Assemblyman Tony Strickland, R-Thousand Oaks, “What is it about no new taxes that you don’t understand?” 

Hertzberg responded that this year’s budget is $1.2 billion less than last year. 

“We have shrunk government,” he said. 

The major sticking point to the state budget, now more than two weeks overdue, is an automatic quarter-cent sales tax increase starting in January. The tax, which kicks in when revenues slow and budget reserves fall below 4 percent, will add nearly $2 billion to the state treasury during the next two years. 

Republicans want to scrap the tax, which passed in 1991 during the administration of Gov. Pete Wilson with Republican support. Democrats say it’s necessary to avoid budget cuts in health, law enforcement and schools. 

“This state is reeling from energy costs,” said Assemblyman Kevin Shelley, D-San Francisco. “This state and many other states are moving into downturns and perhaps recession.” 

The state Friday stopped paying 2,000 legislative employees for lack of a state budget. Businesses that deal with the state will start going unpaid this Monday. 

The Senate, one vote shy of a two-thirds majority for the budget, is on a weekend recess and returns to the Capitol on Monday.


Depressed dot-commers try to celebrate at Webbies

By Michael Liedtke AP Business Writer
Monday July 16, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – The Internet economy is nursing a hangover, but the industry intends to party on this week at the Webby Awards — the dot-com version of the Oscars. 

A sense of melancholy hangs over the 5th annual bash — an off-the-wall ceremony that started at a small nightclub in 1996 and evolved into a glitzy extravaganza that showcases the Internet community’s innovation, irreverence, hucksterism and hubris. 

The organizers of the awards show Wednesday are trying hard to keep the spotlight on the achievements of the 150 nominees in 30 categories, but all the dead and decaying Web sites that have stacked up in the past year make it tough to ignore the odor of failure permeating the industry. 

“It’s certainly a bittersweet thing,” said entrepreneur Marc Hedlund, whose nominated Web site, Popularpower.com, failed four months ago. “Winning the award would be an honor, but I’m sure I will be thinking about what might have been.” 

Since the Webbys handed out their last awards 14 months ago near the height of the dot-com boom, 534 Web sites have shut down, according to Webmergers.com, which tracks the industry’s ups and downs. To make things even more macabre, 52 of the failed sites were based in the Webbys’ hometown of San Francisco. 

The list of casualties includes at least 25 of the 135 nominees from last year’s Webbys. Another jarring reminder of how much has changed since the last Webbys came earlier this month with the failure of Webvan.com, a nominee for the “services” award in 2000, and the shutdown of Napster.com, the winner of last year’s music award. 

“It sort of makes you wonder if the qualifying criteria for getting nominated this year was just being alive,” said San Francisco resident Brian McConnell, a telecommunications engineer who has never been a Webby fan, even when times were good. 

Popularpower.com’s demise notwithstanding, most of this year’s nominees are alive. Not all are doing well. Salon.com, Marketwatch.com, The Motley Fool, Sonicnet.com and Chickclick.com are just a few of the more well-known nominees that have had to fire workers this year to ward off extinction. 

Webbys founder Tiffany Shlain says the finances of the nominees are immaterial, just like other awards shows celebrating the arts. 

“There have been TV shows that have been canceled that have won Emmys and movies that haven’t done well at the box office that have won Oscars,” Shlain said. “Things got a little out of control during the last two years, but what we have always been trying to do is say ’Good job!’ in a fun, creative way.” 

Despite the dot-com downturn, many nominees still feel like celebrating this week. Google.com co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who rollerskated to the stage last year to pick up an award for technical innovation, “are as excited about this year’s awards as they were last year,” said Google spokeswoman Cindy McCaffrey. “It’s quite an honor.” 

Google, one of the Web’s most popular search engines, is nominated for a new all-around award, called “best practices,” this year. 

Like many hard-core engineers around the Silicon Valley, McConnell doubts the Webby’s judges, the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, are particularly interested in technical innovation. 

“It always seemed like the Webbys was more about awarding what looked pretty and seemed cool instead of trying to find things truly on the cutting edge,” he said. 

The Webbys judges include rock star David Bowie, movie director Francis Ford Coppola and actress Gillian Anderson who all seem better suited to vote on the Grammys, Oscars and Emmys than the Webbys. 

The Webbys never looked more like a marketing vehicle than last year, when the event became a stage for zany stunts. Wiredplanet.com’s representatives wore space suits to last year’s ceremonies while the CEO of Intellihealth.com staged a traffic accident to draw attention to the site. 

Shlain believes this year’s awards will be more in step with the austere times, noting that the dress code for the ceremony is “gutsy.” 

The dot-com comedown still hasn’t touched the Webbys, which is bigger than ever. There are so many nominees this year that the awards will be distributed over two nights. 

After 10 categories will be recognized at a San Francisco restaurant Tuesday, the main event will be held Wednesday at San Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House, where a sold-out crowd of 3,000 is anticipated. About 400 tickets, ranging in price from $90 to $150, are being sold to the general public, marking the first time that industry outsiders have been allowed to attend the show. 

New York Web site developer Philip Kaplan is traveling from New York to find out whether he will win an award in the humor category. His site, which has a profane domain name, has become hugely popular for its acerbic commentary about failing dot-coms. 

Like many others in the industry, Kaplan has mixed emotions about this year’s Webbys, but for different reasons than most entrepreneurs. 

“My business is going great, but I seriously think I got nominated in the wrong category,” Kaplan said. “With everything that has happened in the past year, I’m pretty sure I could have won the news category.”


Proposed state legislation aims to stop patient pain

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

Medical experts, patients and legislators are supporting a bill by state Assemblywoman Dion Aroner, D-Berkeley, that addresses under-prescribed pain medication. 

Assembly bill 487, introduced by Aroner in February, would require the Medical Board of California to develop a protocol that investigates complaints of undertreatment of pain and tracks the disciplinary actions taken. It would also make it mandatory for new physicians to take courses on pain management. It passed the state senate appropriations committee July 9. 

At a public forum at the North Berkeley Senior Center Wednesday, participants said the under-presciption of pain medication has been an ongoing issue for decades and affects a large number of people in California. 

“The numbers are striking,” said Dr. Robert V. Brody, chief of San Francisco’s General’s Pain Consultation Clinic, referring to a 1997 study of the undertreatment of terminal patients. “Way more than half of the patients who were dying did not have their pain managed in the last period of their lives.” 

One of the main reasons for the persistence of this issue is cultural, Brody and other panelists said. Many in the medical community and the public, they said, tend to confuse pain management with drug abuse.  

“The reality is that the patient who needs the medication will not become addictive,” said Dr. Diana Sullivan Everstine, a clinical psychologist who calls for better education on the psychological consequences of pain. “People who are prescription-drug-seeking are trying to feel a little better. They’re not trying to get high.” 

Sue Hodges, chair of the Oakland Commission on Persons with Disabilities, emphasized how critical the treatment of pain is for the psychological well-being of those, like her, who experience it on a daily basis. 

Hodges used an analogy to explain how depressed and socially isolated individuals with severe pain can feel when they’re undertreated. 

“Visualize the lens of a camera, the lens that you use to focus to take a picture of life, and look at that lens closing and the light getting darker and darker,” she told the audience. “For those of us who live in chronic acute pain for which there is no relief, there is no resting, there is no day off ... pain management can relax the lens of that camera, and allow it to open up again.” 

Sleep depravation, lack of joy, inability to focus and decreased sexuality are only some of the symptoms of untreated pain that affects its chronic victims, Hodges said. 

Dr. Sharon Drager, a local surgeon and president of the Alameda Contra Costa Medical Association, said that one of the difficulties in treating severe pain is the fact that there is no concrete way to measure it. Physicians can only rely on what patients tell them.  

“Pain is not a real vital sign,” she said. “It’s not the same as temperature or blood pressure because you can’t get an independent verification.” 

The best way to address that problem, she added, is to take into consideration all the aspects of pain, including anxiety, and to give patients autonomy.  

“Pain is such a complicated issue,” she said. “It has to be addressed in a global fashion and not only with opiates.” 

Contra Costa County Supervisor Donna Gerber, also a member of the medical board, said that the bill will be reviewed by the board sometime this month. She anticipates that the board will approve it and that the legislation will soon reach the Senate for a vote.  

For additional information on California’s Medical Board visit the web site http://www.medbd.ca.gov/ 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Saturday July 14, 2001


Saturday, July 14

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street at Martin Luther King Jr. Way  

Regular market plus annual peach tastings and compost give away. Free. 

548-3333 

 


Sunday, July 15

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair  

Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn drive train maintenance and chain repair from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Free  

527-4140 

 

Buddhist Practice 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Mark Henderson on “Fearlessness on the Bodhisattva Path.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

Second Annual Wobbly High  

Mass 

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck (@ Prince St.) 

Presented by Folk This! and friends, an evening of musical satire, subversion and sacrilege. This year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow,” a historical journey toward a future society without classes or bosses. 

$8 

849-2568 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Ave., between 3rd and 4th Streets  

Family-oriented weekly market. Crafts, music, produce, and specialty foods. 

654-6346 

 

Skronkathon BBQ 

1 - 11 p.m. 

Tuva Space 

3192 Adeline 

The First Annual Transbay Skronkathon Barbecue. Dozens of Bay Area musicians will play “multi-conceptual-deconstructed-creative-music.” Charcoal provided, bring your own items to barbecue. Free. 

649-8744 

 

The Wizard School of Magic 

1:30 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, “Benny and Bebe and The Wizard School of Magic” is inspired by the Harry Potter stories. Learn what it takes to become a real wizard. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

PedalPower 

8:30 a.m. 

Lake Merritt Garden Center 

666 Bellevue Avenue, Oakland 

Bike ride and pancake brunch fundraiser for the Asian Domestic Violence Clinic which provides free or low-cost legal services for abused women and children in the East Bay. Fourteen mile ride from Lake Merritt to Portview Park and back. $5 - $25. 

415-567-6255 

Berkeley Town Hall Meeting 

7 p.m. 

Unitarian Hall 

Cedar at Bonita Street 

Meeting to update listeners about the lawsuits against the Pacifica Board of Directors. 

658-1512 

 


Monday, July 16

 

National Women’s Political Caucus 

5:30 - 7 p.m. 

Florence McDonald Community Room 

Savo Island Cooperative Housing 

2017 Stuart Street 

Special guest Rosemary Stasek of Catholics for Free Choice addresses: Catholic Hospitals and Restrictions on Women’s Health Care. Ms. Stasek is a highly regarded expert on the subject of women’s reproductive rights. Everyone is welcome. Free. For more info and RSVP call Cynthia Wooten at 559-8707. 

 


Tuesday, July 17

 

Intelligent Conversation  

7 - 9 p.m.  

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

A discussion group open to all, regardless of age, religion, viewpoint, etc. This time the discussion will center on best vacations, trips, and travel experiences. Informally led by Robert Berend, who founded similar groups in L.A., Menlo Park, and Prague. Bring light snacks/drinks to share. Free  

527-5332 

 

Free Early Music Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK) 

Small group sings madrigals and other voice harmony every Tuesday morning. Call Ann, 655-8863 

 

Berkeley Camera Club  

7:30 p.m. 

Northbrae Community Church  

941 The Alameda  

Share your slides and learn what other photographers are doing. Monthly field trips. 

Call Don, 525-3565 

 

Berkeley School Volunteers 

10:30 a.m. - noon 

1835 Allston Way 

Orientation for volunteers interested in helping in academic and recreation programs being held in Berkeley public schools this summer. 

644-8833 

 

Writing and Resistance  

In A Culture of Amnesia 

6 - 7:45 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Classroom #2 

Part of a workshop series on concepts and strategies for resistance through the spoken and written word, taught by Joyce E. Young. $12. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Berkeley City Council Public  

Hearing 

7 p.m. 

Council Chambers 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

The City Council will consider extending the moratorium on the installation of wireless telecommunications antennas for cellular and other personal communications systems. For information on the moratorium call 705-8108. To submit comments or for other information call 981-6900.


Letters to the Editor

Saturday July 14, 2001

 

NIMBYs are  

taking over the city we all love 

 

Editor: 

 

In over 12 hours of testimony on the Beth El project, of those in opposition, only five did not live within two blocks.  

We are now a town where NIMBYs are taking over.  

•We cannot implement a four-story housing project with 20 percent of the units at below market prices, on a transportation corridor zoned for four stories. 

•We cannot upgrade a long abandoned shop to support people with AIDS. 

•We cannot implement a softball field on existing open ground. 

What has happened to Berkeley? How can a city that professes to admire progress become so reactionary? 

 

We lampoon ourselves in the “How Berkeley Can We Be parade.” Lets examine this self-mocking as we look at the Beth El project: 

•It has been four years now.  

•It has been insufferable post midnight meetings. 

•It has been commissioners suing the city. 

•One commissioner actually bragged about “breaking into the site,” asking, “Why can’t we move them out of town?” 

How Berkeley Can We Be? 

 

They want to save the fish that can never reach the Beth El site. 

They say we should not pave over the creek. 

But every street in Berkeley paves over every creek it meets. 

They want a park to themselves. 

They want no change, no how, never, never, never. Not In My Back Yard!!! 

How Berkeley Can We Be? 

 

Beth El holds multiple workshops 

Initial concepts are changed & change again. 

Beth El, at its own expense, hires traffic, parking, creek, fish, tree experts, soil, structural and landscape experts. 

How Reasonable Can We Be? 

 

Beth El comes to the city with a project that is  

below the height, below the building footprint, beyond the setback, in excess of the parking requirements and in tune with the neighborhood. 

How Reasonable Can We Be? 

 

We lampoon our city because we all see how ridiculous it all is.  

Now is the time for the city council to declare, loud and clear: NIMBYs shall not rule.  

Now is the time to bring reasonableness back to the city, the city that we all love. 

 

Lloyd Morgan 

Berkeley 

 

 

School officials compromise  

student rights 

Editor: 

 

Thank you for your article covering the issues around Special Education. It will not be “okay to be a student with a disability” in Berkeley as long as it is okay for BUSD's special education administrators to compromise civil rights. 

Joann Biondi is quoted in your article as saying that disputes are resolved in mediation rather that formal hearing. Mediation is the first step in due process. That most issues are resolved there is because students can't wait to have the educational services and hearings take more time. Although services are compromised, at least they can begin to be provided if resolved in mediation. Also, despite what Biondi says, special education administrators DO take the adversarial approach to IEPs. If they didn't, parents and administrators would be working together rather than against each other. 

There are good things happening in Special Education. In particular, some full inclusion programs at the elementary level are very effective and professional despite lack of resources. Many of Berkeley's regular education teachers, principals and parents are smart and supportive. Special Education leadership should mirror their dedication, uncompromising respect for civil rights, and the appreciation for diversity. 

 

name withheld  

 

Cops who stop pedestrians for violations unfair 

 

Editor: 

 

On March 20 this year, I was stopped by a Berkeley police officer for walking across the street. It was at 3:15 p.m. Not a car was in sight in either direction. I was within the crosswalk. The problem,according to Hester, was that I was in violation of Berkeley municipal code 14.32.050. I had failed to pay attention to the signal. Indeed, the little red hand had begun to blink. 

I was stunned when the officer ordered me to stop and produce identification It doesn't help matters that when cars are around, I am often nearly run over by motorists when I am paying attention to the signals, whenever I wrongfully assume that they are too. Shortly after my incident, I even witnessed a car running onto a sidewalk and crashing into the restaurant where I was dining at, on University Avenue! 

Around about that time, I also spent a week vacationing in Tokyo. I was simply amazed at how polite the majority of the people were there. I was in the heart of Tokyo, all day every day, and I never saw a single auto accident. Just while walking to and from work along University Avenue in our little Berkeley, I see a vehicular mishap or near-miss (usually involving speeding) almost every day. 

It seems to me that the priorities of the police in this town are misguided. 

According to the Berkeley Police website, out of 29 beats, the area where I was cited accounts for about 10 percent of violent crime in Berkeley. It seems that the judgement of at least one officer is seriously in question. In this case, I was the victim. This citation may have been nothing more than a $103 nuisance, but it feels like the time that I was mugged in Chicago. 

In both cases, I was in the wrong place at the wrong time and was preyed upon by someone who did not have my best interests at heart. Are pedestrians and bicyclists being targeted as they are easier to stop than a speeding car? Perhaps. 

 

Martin Lane 

Berkeley 

 

 

Progressives can put their muscle behind Kriss 

Editor: 

At a time when so many politicians let their egos dictate their actions it is heartening to see Kriss Worthington put his constituencies interests first. Rather than engage in a divisive Assembly primary, Worthington willingly and openly deferred to such potential progressive candidates as June Jordan, Nancy Skinner, and Mark Friedman. Now that these leaders have bypassed the race, the progressive community can unite behind Worthington and avoid the divisive battles of the past. Voters will no doubt recall Worthington’s display of conscience and integrity in the selection process when considering their choice in the March 2002 election. 

 

Randy Shaw 

Berkeley 

 

Editor’s note: Nancy Skinner may, in fact, run for the office. 

 

 


Another Mommy-Track mystery comes to Berkeley

By Sari Friedman Daily Planet Correspondent
Saturday July 14, 2001

Imagine a mystery novel sans middle aged lonely guy, hyper-femme perp or insanely effacing schoolmarm. In “The Big Nap”, the second novel in the “Mommy-Track Series” by Ayelet Waldman, we don’t even get a self-respecting set of four inch pumps. Don’t even think of asking for generic blood n’ guts n’ guns n’ cigarette smoke swirling into the blue. 

Here’s what you do get in “The Big Nap”: crackling sarcastic monologue, a breast-feeding instruction, an impressive South Park-like number of belches, a peek at the rarefied world of an ultra-orthodox Jewish community, and a sustained moment-by-moment travelogue of the privileged though stressful experience of a former Harvard Law School graduate named Juliet Applebaum, turned part-time sleuth and full-time mommy... Volvo station wagon and all.  

Berkeley resident Ayelet Waldman, whose first book, “Nursery Crimes”, launched the Mommy-Track Mystery Series, is herself a former Harvard Law School Graduate turned full-time mommy. She is married to Michael Chabon, winner of this year’s Pulitzer Prize in fiction.  

The postman does not ring twice in The Big Nap. The novel opens with the Fed Ex man at the door, delivering “yet another sterling silver rattle from Tiffany (that made seven),” and a bare-breasted Juliet Applebaum explaining the finer points of nipple care. Immediately we’re drawn into drama: Four month old “mutant vampire” Isaac won’t sleep and his mother is half out of her mind from fatigue.  

A solution presents itself in the form of gorgeous though virginal Fraydle Finklestein, a young ultra-Orthodox woman with baby-sitting prowess and the ability to drive handsome flat-stomached non-Orthodox 20-something former Israeli paratroopers wild. Fraydle baby-sits for Juliet one time... during which Juliet enjoys an entire two hours of sleep.  

Almost immediately the luminous Fraydle vanishes, her parents are unwilling to file a missing persons report with the police and exhausted heroine Juliet Applebaum is out of a baby-sitter and may never have the opportunity to nap again.  

Where is Fraydle? Was she kidnapped? Did she run off with the cute paratrooper? Could her disappearance have something to do with the fact that she’s just gotten engaged? (You know how dangerous marriage can be.) Juliet Applebaum’s curiosity is piqued. Or maybe it’s just that you don’t find baby-sitters like Fraydle growing on trees.  

Juliet Applebaum may go quite mad if she doesn’t get another shot at a nap … and so the race to find Fraydle is on. With her two kids in tow, Juliet Applebaum takes on the investigation, while in the background her workaholic husband, Peter Wyeth, seems to be spending entirely too much time with his lovely assistant, nicknamed “Maximum Mindy,” and the protagonist’s parents step in, here and there, to add touches of color.  

Like its namesake, The Big Sleep, a novel by Raymond Chandler which was turned into the classic film starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, directed by Howard Hawkes, The Big Nap contains some stunning way-bigger- than-life Hollywood action, plenty of sizzling double entendre, and a vision of parenthood that is on the radical end of extreme. 

 

Ayelet Waldman will read from The Big Nap on Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 7:30 p.m. at Black Oak Books in Berkeley.


Art & Entertainment

Saturday July 14, 2001

 

Ashkenaz July 14: 9:30 p.m., Paul Pena, Zulu Exiles, Tuvan throat singing and township jive. $12; July 15: 6 p.m., Food and Funk, Salsa dance and beginning Salsa lesson, Israeli food; July 17: 9 p.m., Rock n’ Blues with The Jennifer Will Band. $7; July 18: 9 p.m., Swamp boogie with Tee Fee, 8 p.m. dance lesson with Diana Costillo; July 19: 10 p.m., Dead DJ Nite with Digital Dave. $5; July 20: 9:30 p.m., Steve Lucky and The Rhumba Bums play East Coast Swing and Lindy Hop. 8 p.m. dance lesson with Nick and Shanna. $11; July 21: 9:30 p.m., Balkan Night with Edessa and Anoush. Turkish dance lesson with Ahmet Luleci at 8 p.m. $12; July 22: 9 p.m., Wagogo, Heartpumping Miranda music from Zimbabwe. $10; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Berkeley Art Center July 14: 7 p.m., Rhythm and Muse featuring Adelle and Jack Foley, open mike sign up at 6:30; July 15: Live Oak Concert with David Cheng, Marvin Sanders, Ari Hsu. 1275 Walnut Street 352-6643 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. July 14: Mark Hummel; July 21: Little Jonny. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage July 13: Jeremy Cohen's Violinjazz Vintage string swing $16.50; July 14: 10 a.m. - noon, Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live featuring author Walter Mosely, Ray’s Vast Basement, The Waikiki Steel Works, hyperventilation by monologist and movie star Josh Kornbluth, pianist Gini Wilson, plus other surprise guests and audience true stories. $12; July 15: Carol McComb, Sterling originals $17.50 Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 or 762-BASS or www.thefreight.org 

 

Jupiter July 13: UHF- Mod Rock from Portland. July 14: Fred Zimmerman Quartet- Local Piano and Jazz. July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. July 21: Orbit 4- hip-hop, drum ’n’ bass, breakbeat, jungle and jazz. July 24: Stringthoery- local jazz blues and rock. July 25: Suite 304- vocal harmany-based groove pop. July 27: Sexfresh- traditional American pop. All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8 p.m., Word Descara Series with Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell, Elmaz Abindader, and others; July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descara Series with Mingus Amungus, Seeking, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino, and others; July 15: 3:30 p.m., Domingo do Rumba- Local aces of Rumba, Cuban rhythm and dance; 7:30 p.m., Laborfest- this year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow” a historical journey towards a future society without classes or bosses; July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; July 21: 8:00 p.m., Family and Friends- Talent Showcase with soul, hip-hop and spoken word; July 22: 7 p.m., It Takes a Community to Raise a CD- Mary Watkins & Lisa Cohen, Gwen Avery, Avotcja, June Millington & the Slamming Babes, Blackberri and more; July 24: 7:30 p.m., Temp Slave, the Musical- Musical Satire from Madison, Wisconsin; July 27: 8:00 p.m., Raphael Manriquez- singer composer and guitar player celebrates release of new album; ; 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 15: 4:30 p.m., vocalist W. Allen Taylor; 5:30 p.m., jazz trio Michael Hauser Group; July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group; July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung; 5:30 p.m., Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 13: 8 p.m. “Doria Roberts & Making Waves” Featuring special guest slam poet Aya de Leon; July 20: 8:30 p.m., “Divabands Unplugged” with Bern, Roberta Donnay, and Elin Jr. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Shattuck Down Low Lounge Every Tuesday: 9:30 p.m., Posh Tuesdays with DJ’s Yamu, Delon, Add1, and Tequila Willie. Shattuck at Allston. www.thebeatdownsound.com  

 

Starry Plough Pub Sunday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 9:45 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Drums and Tuba, Mega Mousse, $7; July 14: Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons, The John Shipe Band $7 3101 Shattuck Ave. 841-2082. 

 

“Joanne D. Carey and Brendan Carey” July 15: 4 p.m., A benefit for the Berkeley Arts Festival, the Carey’s perform original work. 2200 Shattuck Avenue 486-0411 

 

“Midsummer Mozart Festival” All shows at 7:30 p.m. July 20: Four pieces including the Overture to “The Abduction to the Seraglio”; July 28: Four pieces including “March in D Major”; . First Congregational Church 2345 Channing Way (415) 292-9620 www.midsummermozart.org  

 

“Emeryville Taiko” June 22: 2 p.m., Traditional Japanese drumming with American influence. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Opens July 13, 8 p.m., presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. through August 11, plus Thursday, Aug. 9. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Romeo and Juliet” Through July 14, Thurs. - Sat. 8 p.m. Set in early 1930s just before the rise of Hitler in the Kit Kat Klub, Juliet is torn between ties to the Nazi party and Romeo’s Jewish heritage. $8 - $10. La Val’s Subterranean Theater 1834 Euclid 234-6046 

 

“A Life In the Theatre” Runs through July 15. Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. David Mamet play about the lives of two actors, considered a metaphor for life itself. Directed by Nancy Carlin. $30-$35. $26 preview nights. Berkeley City Club 2315 Durant 843-4822 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 14 - 15, 21- 22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

 

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Weds. 7 p.m., Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (After July 8 no Wednesday performance, no Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Moises Kaufman and Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of openly gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“Orphan” July 13 through August 5 (no show on July 20): Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through August 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

Opera 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 13, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 15 and 22 at 7 p.m. July 14 at 2 p.m.  

$30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 14: 7 p.m., “You and Me,” 8:50 p.m., “Man Hunt”; July 15: 3 p.m., Family Classic “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”; 5:30 p.m., “The Hand Behind the Mouse: The Ub Iwerks Story”; July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; July 21: 7 p.m., “The Woman in the Window”, 9 p.m., “Scarlet Street”; July 22: 5:30 p.m., “Odd Obsession”; 7:30 p.m., “Nihonbashi”; July 24: 7:30 p.m., “In the Valley of the Wupper” and “In the Name of the Duce”; July 25: 7:30 p.m., “Spider Baby 2000”; July 29: Family Classic “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”; $4. Sundays, 3 p.m. New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

“Street Scene” July 15: 2 p.m., This 1931 film explores themes of antisemitism and identity in New York tenements. $2 donation. Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 1414 Walnut Street 848-0237 

 

Exhibits 

 

“Watershed 2001” Through July 14: Wednesday - Sunday Noon - 5 p.m. Exhibition of painting, drawing, sculpture and installation that explore images and issues about our watershed. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“Rachel Davis and Benicia Gantner Works on Paper” Through July 14: Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Watercolors by Davis, mixed-media by Gantner. Opening reception June 13, 6 - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth St. 527-1214 www.traywick.com 

 

“Ames Gallery Artists” Through July 22: Thur. - Sun. Noon - 7 p.m., Temporary gallery as part of the Berkeley Arts Festival with works from Wilbert Griffith, Dorothy Binger, Julio Garcia, and Leon Kennedy. Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 2200 Shattuck Ave. 486-0411 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31: Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734  

 

“Bernard Maisner: Illuminated Manuscripts and Paintings” Through Aug. 8 Maisner works in miniature as well as in large scales, combining his mastery of medieval illumination, gold leafing, and modern painting techniques. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 849-2541 

 

“Musee des Hommages” Masterworks by Guy Colwell Faithful copies of several artists from the pasts, including Titian’s “The Venus of Urbino,” Cezanne’s “Still Life,” Picasso’s “Woman at a Mirror,” and Boticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

“New Visions: Introductions 2001” Through August 18: Wed. - Sat.: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Juried by Artist- Curator Rene Yanez and Robbin Henderson, Executive Director of the Berkeley Art Center, the exhibition features works from some of California’s up-and-coming artists. Pro Arts 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9425 

 

“Geographies of My Heart” Collage paintings by Jennifer Colby through August 24; Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 

 

Images of Portugal Paintings by Sofia Berto Villas-Boas of her native land. Open after 5 p.m. Voulez-Vous 2930 College Ave. (at Elmwood) 

 

“Queens of Ethiopia: Intuitive Inspirations,” the exceptional art of Esete-Miriam A. Menkir. Through July 11. Women’s Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“The Decade of Change: 1900 - 1910” chronicles the transformation of the city of Berkeley in this 10 year period. Thursday through Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. Through September. Berkeley History Center, Veterans Memorial Building, 1931 Center St. Wheelchair accessible. 848-0181. Free.  

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s 2454 Telegraph Ave. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 14: Alexander Cockburn and John Strausbaugh discuss Cockburn’s book “Five Days That Shook the World” and Strausbaugh’s “Rock ‘Til You Drop” ; July 15: Jimmy Santiago Baca discusses “A Place to Stand”; July 16: “Critical Resistance to the Prison-Industrial Complex,” a panel discussion; July 17: Ralph Berberich, MD, discusses his memoir “Hit Below the Belt: Facing up to Prostate Cancer”; July 19: Lonny Shavelson talks about “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System”; July 23: Brian Skyes reads “The Seven Daughters of Eve”; July 24: Susann Cokal reads from “Mirabilis.” $2 donation. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s 1730 Fourth St. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Joe Di Prisco reading “Confessions of Brother Eli”; July 20: Lynne Hinton reads from her second novel, “The Things I know Best”; July 25: Alice Randall reads from “The Wind Done Gone.” $2 donation. 559-9500 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8:00 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Poets and musicians collaborate across cultures. Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell and more. $10. July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Mingus Amungus, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino and more. $12. 2105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Poetry Nitro Weekly poetry open mike. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. July 16: Featuring the Silicon Valley Slam Team; July 23: Featuring Jonathan Yaffe. Cafe de la Paz 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Tours 

 

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Free. University of California, Berkeley. 486-4387 

 

Berkeley City Club Tours 2315 Durant Ave., Berkeley. The fourth Sunday of every month, Noon - 4 p.m. $2 848-7800  

 

Golden Gate Live Steamers Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Lomas Cantadas Drive at the south end of Tilden Regional Park Small locomotives, meticulously scaled to size. Trains run Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sunday, noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623  

 

 

Dance 

“Ganga-Ashtakam” July 15: 2 p.m., Indian Bharata Natyam classical dance celebrating the Indian river and goddess Ganga. Dancers Anuradha Murali, Shilpa Sejpal, and Gopitha Tharmalingam. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

 

Museums 

 

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  

 

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 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation on October 1. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until October 1, 2001: “Ishi and the Invention of Yahi Culture.” “Sites Along the Nile: Rescuing Ancient Egypt.” “The Art of Research: Nelson Graburn and the Aesthetics of Inuit Sculpture.” “Tzintzuntzan, Mexico: Photographs by George Foster.”  

$2 general; $1 seniors; $.50 children age 17 and under; free on Thursdays. Wednesday, Friday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kroeber Hall, Bancroft Way and College Ave. 643-7648 or www.qal.berkeley.edu/~hearst/ 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “Science in Toyland,” through Sept. 9. Exhibit uses toys to demonstrate scientific principles and to help develop children's thinking processes. Susan Cerny’s collection of over 200 tops from around the world. “Space Weather,” through Sept. 2. Learn about solar cycles, space weather, the cause of the Aurorae and recent discoveries made by leading astronomers. This interactive exhibit lets visitors access near real-time data from the Sun and space, view interactive videos and find out about a variety of solar activities. “Within the Human Brain,” ongoing. Visitors test their cranial nerves, play skeeball, master mazes, match musical tones and construct stories inside a simulated “rat cage” of learning experiments. “Saturday Night Stargazing,” First and third Saturdays each month. 8 - 10 p.m., LHS plaza. Space Weather Exhibit now - Sept. 2; now - Sept. 9 Science in Toyland; Saturdays 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. 642-5132 

 

Holt Planetarium Programs are recommended for age 8 and up; children under age 6 will not be admitted. $2 in addition to regular museum admission. “Constellations Tonight” Ongoing. Using a simple star map, learn to identify the most prominent constellations for the season in the planetarium sky. Daily, 3:30 p.m. $7 general; $5 seniors, students, disabled, and youths age 7 to 18; $3 children age 3 to 5 ; free children age 2 and younger. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu  

 

The UC Berkeley Art Museum is closed for renovations until the fall.


Twilight basketball mixes education with sport

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

Players attend workshops before every league game 

 

Before players start their first session of Twilight Basketball, they might think the summer league is a time to relax and goof around with their friends. But one meeting with Ginsi Bryant fixes that right away. 

Bryant, the program’s director, gives each team an orientation before its first game at James Kenney Park. With 14 rules written down and her forceful personality on display, she lets each and every kid know that she means business. 

“You should treat this league like a job,” Bryant says to a room full of 14- and 15-year-olds. “You get here on time, or you don’t play. That’s it. Don’t come crying to me with excuses if you’re not here.” 

Players don’t just have to be on time for their games. They must attend a “rap session” during the hour before their weekly game, with guest speakers expounding on topics such as drug use, street violence and study habits. Only then will they be allowed to play in a game with their team. 

Other rules include no loitering outside the gym, no food in the gym and absolutely no fighting. Bryant said that any fight would result in all three levels of the league being suspended for one week. The age groups are 11-13, 14-15 and 16-18. 

“People around here have been trying to shut this program down. We can’t give them any reason to complain,” she said. “So don’t be yelling down the street to Joe Blow just because you see him.” 

Bryant’s rules came into focus right away on Thursday, the league’s opening night. Only four members of Student Athletes showed up for the orientation meeting, so they were forced to play their game short-handed. One team member showed up at game time, but spent the game on the bench in street clothes, proving that Bryant means business. 

“Ginsi is a great coordinator, and we all respect her rules in this league,” said Sam Robinson, the coach of Student Athletes. “She teaches the kids to keep a schedule, that they are students first and athletes second.” 

Robinson, who is retired, said he put his team in the league for both the educational and athletic opportunities it provides. 

“It gives the guys a chance to continue to work out during the summer, which is good for their games,” he said. “But the workshops can be helpful if the kids will pay attention.” 

One of Robinson’s players, Marcel Edwards-Gray, played in the league last summer. He said the rap sessions were hit and miss. 

“We really only had one guest speaker last year, just some guy talking about his choices in life,” Edwards-Gray, 15, said. “Hopefully it’ll be more fun and more helpful this year.” 

Robinson’s team didn’t suffer too much being down to four players. They still managed to beat their opening night opponents, EODYC Hoyas, by six points. The basketball was hard and clean, with two officials keeping things fair. 

“It’s a good league, a competitive league,” Edwards-Gray said. “It’s a lot of fun to play here.”


And he’s off ...

John Geluardi/Planet staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

Councilmember Kriss Worthington mailed his Candidate Intention Statement to the Secretary of State and officially threw his hat — or bicycle helmet — into the ring for the 14th state assembly seat. Worthington, a progressive member of the City Council, said he will launch his bid for the Assembly by conducting a bicycle campaign through the district which includes North Oakland, Emeryville, Berkeley, Albany, Richmond and El Cerrito.  

 


City focuses on west Berkeley day laborers

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

By John Geluardi 

Daily Planet staff 

 

The City Council has requested a report suggesting possible solutions to business owners’ complaints about the growing number of day laborers who gather looking for work in west Berkeley.  

The council voted unanimously Tuesday to have the city manager prepare the report, which will analyze the situation and propose possible solutions based on successful programs in other Californian cities. The council specified that the proposed solutions should address both the needs of business owners and day laborers.  

One business, Truitt and White Lumber Company, has complained to the mayor’s office that the labors are too aggressive in soliciting work from the contractors and homeowners who shop at the building supply store. 

Mayor Shirley Dean and other councilmembers have expressed concern that there are no accommodations such as a shelter or bathrooms for the workers who sometimes wait for hours in the area. 

According to the recommendation submitted by Mayor Shirley Dean, the numbers of day laborers has grown in recent months. Dean’s report estimates there are as many as 150 laborers at any given time in the vicinity of Hearst Avenue near Fourth Street. There are a number of upscale businesses near the area. 

The recommendation was first put on the council’s agenda on June 19 but was pulled by Councilmember Kriss Worthington who said he was concerned possible actions might be unfair to the laborers because the mayor’s recommendation was initiated by complaining businesses. 

Dean withdrew her original recommendation and resubmitted another clarifying her expectations that the laborers’ needs be taken into consideration. 

“In undertaking this request, the manager is specifically asked to meet with the day laborers, affected businesses, social agencies and to gather information from other cities with the same problem regarding what has worked and what has not worked,” the recommendation read. 

Despite Dean’s clarifications, Worthington asked the recommendation be further amended during Tuesday’s council meeting prior to approving the item. 

“I would like to add a section that makes it clear the City Council is in no way sending a message that we want a crackdown of any kind on day laborers. And also that the study be culturally sensitive and works with day laborers to empower them and improve their position in the community,” he said. 

Dean agreed to add the language to the amendment but quipped, “That’s exactly what’s in there anyway.” 

Dean said many cities have had to deal with the issue of day laborers and some have been more successful than others. She said San Rafael had as many as 300 laborers gathering at an intersection in the city’s Canal District.  

“San Rafael opened up a hiring hall that didn’t work so well because the laborers had little or no hand in organizing themselves,” she said.  

She added that the city of Concord instituted a successful program. Concord, she said, provided shelter for the laborers and they were able to organize their own hiring system, which outlined hiring order according to the types of jobs came available. She said if the laborers are able to organize themselves, they are more confident in the fairness of the system and thereby be more likely to participate in the program.


Class of ’51 raises $70K in student scholarships

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

In what appears to be the most successful fundraising effort ever among a single graduating class of Berkeley High School alumni, the class of 1951 has raised $70,000 to endow a scholarship fund for graduates. 

The group hopes to raise $100,000 by the time its 50th reunion rolls around this September – enough to provide college scholarship money for one or two students a year.  

Tom Taylor, a co-chair of the class of 1951’s reunion committee, said the class has held together over the years. They used an annual letter circulated among the more than 400 members of the class to ask people to contribute to the scholarship fund. 

Taylor said many of the 1951 graduates have reached that stage in their life where they want to give away money. It’s just a matter of finding a good local cause to which to direct their money. 

“You either do it this way or you give it to Uncle Sam,” Taylor said. “Why send it back to Washington when you can do probably better in your own home environment?” 

Getting alumni of public high schools to contribute money to their alma maters is often difficult work, even for the most prestigious of institutions.  

San Francisco’s Lowell High School circulates a newsletter among 29,000 alumni.  

“We mail the news letter for every living alumni for whom we have a valid address,” said Lowell Alumni Association Secretary Terry Abad. 

But the Lowell Alumni Association only raises about $30,000 a year in donations for the school. Around 9 percent of alumni respond to the association’s annual giving request, Abad said, mailing in an average of $50 each.  

Lowell has other fundraising groups. The schools Parent Teacher Student Association pulls in about $100,000 a year. The Lowell Sports Foundation brought in $40,000-$50,000 with it’s first annual celebrity athlete banquet (a similar banquet run by Berkeley High supporters raised around $12,000 this spring). 

“As much as this sounds like a lot of money, its really just a drop in the bucket. The needs are just enormous,” said Abad. 

One obstacle to getting alumni to give more, Abad said, is the level of pessimism about public school funding in general. People might gladly give money to add an thrilling new program or a facility to the school, Abad said, but it is harder for them to get excited when they realize the money they give is more likely to be spent on, say, text books. 

“Too much of [the money people give] has to go to what most people see as basic,” Abad said. “People ask things like, ‘Gee, why is it that we’re being asked by the math department to pay for a dry erase board. Isn’t that what the school district is supposed to do?’ And we say, yeah, you’re right. The school district should pay for a lot of things. But the money isn’t there to do it.” 

In Berkeley, fundraising among the high school’s alumni is even harder. The Berkeley schools alumni association only have around 600 members. And other than reunions, the groups activities have been limited in recent years.  

Fundraising among Berkeley High has been limited to the occasional small gift given by one graduating class or another on their occasional reunion. But nothing is on the level of the class of 1951’s proposed gift. 

Of course, Berkeley High has long enjoyed broad community support: From the voters who approve bond measures by overwhelming margins; from the parents who give up hours of free time to clean the grounds, tutor students in need, and raise money for extra activities; and from numerous individual donors who’ve given donations of $10 to $1000 to the Berkeley High School Development Group. That group gave $221,754 to the school in 1999-2000 which was directed to the health center, the school library, academic department and arts programs, among other things. 

Some observers said they hoped the class of 1951s generosity could act as a model to get other alumni groups to join in giving to the school. Toni Sweet, Berkeley High class of 1954, is already working to get her class to commit to giving the school a gift on the occasion of their 50th reunion. 

“The most important things I learned in my life I learned at Berkeley High School,” Sweet said. 

Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean, who also graduated from Berkeley High in the ’50s, said she though alumni could be persuaded to give more if they were presented with concrete and appealing proposals for how the money would be spent at the school. 

“People like to donate to a specific thing,” Dean said. “Citizens, when informed about a school need, will generally step up to it. But we don’t know exactly what we need to rally around.” 

Berkeley High principal Frank Lynch said scholarship money is a great place to start.  

“That has the greatest impact, scholarship money, because it goes directly into the hands of students,” Lynch said.  

Lynch also said he’s like to see “as much money as possible” directed towards the school’s new library, which will be completed in the next couple years as part of a $30 million construction project at the school. 

“When you go to a school, the first thing you want to do is go to the library and see what it’s like,” Lynch said. “because it’s usually a pretty good indication of what’s going on the rest of the campus.” 

 


Busy Telegraph Avenue was once lined with imposing homes

By Susan Cerny
Saturday July 14, 2001

In the early years of the 20th Century, Telegraph Avenue was a grand residential street lined with elegant homes. The two residences at 2740 and 2744 Telegraph Avenue were built by John Albert Marshall. They are the houses on the right side of the picture.  

Marshall was a building contractor who got his start as a cement contractor in the 1890s, and many of Berkeley’s sidewalks bear his imprint. Between 1895 and 1915 Marshall built at least six homes as his personal residences, each one more imposing and substantial than the last. 

2744 Telegraph Avenue 1900 was designed and built by John Marshall and the Cunningham Bros. construction company in 1900. It is a two-story shingle Colonial Revival house, which has rustic stonework on the first floor and two rustic stone chimneys. The hipped roof contains several hip-roofed dormers. There is a rounded bay at the southeast corner and several impressive stained glass windows. The covered front porch has square Ionic columns, turned balusters, and a mahogany door.  

2740 Telegraph Avenue was designed by architect C.M. Cook in 1903 and is a large Tudor Revival style house with two prominent gables on the street facade that are decorated with barge-boards, finials, and pendants. Rustic stonework is used for the siding on the first floor and entry, while on the second floor the house is half-timbered. The second story overhangs the first with projecting beam ends and the arched entrance is recessed. 

Surrounding both Marshall houses is a low concrete wall with posts and decorative concrete garden walkways. Both these houses are now used as an inn.  

On the far left of the picture is a large home designed by Julia Morgan for Joseph Mason, of the Mason-McDuffie Company. Like most of the homes on Telegraph Avenue it is no longer standing.  

 

Susan Cerny writes Berkeley Observed in conjunction with Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association.  


Feinstein asks airlines to set alcohol limits

Bay City News Service
Saturday July 14, 2001

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., today began pushing for a limit on the amount of alcohol airline passengers can consume in an effort to halt the rise of so-called air rage incidents. 

“In view of the 5,000 air rage incidents each year, I believe it is time for the airline industry to set standards voluntarily, or else congress may well step in. To that end, I am in the process of writing legislation that would limit each passenger to two drinks on domestic flights, regardless of the type of alcoholic beverage served,” Feinstein wrote in a letter to CEOs of the seven major domestic air carriers. 

Feinstein said she hoped the airlines would set in-air limits voluntarily, but added if they were unwilling, she would introduce legislation to limit alcohol consumption. 

“According to the Federal Aviation Administration, there is at least one occurrence of air rage each day and evidence suggests a majority of these incidents involve alcohol,'' said Feinstein. She said the Federal Aviation Administration prohibits the serving of alcohol to passengers who appear intoxicated, but have never set a drink limit.


Historic cutter returns to Alameda

Bay City News Service
Saturday July 14, 2001

After spending six months in precarious Middle Eastern waters, the Coast Guard Cutter Sherman – the first U.S. Coast Guard vessel to circumnavigate the world – will dock in tranquil Alameda today. 

The cutter and its crew were deployed to the Arabian Gulf to participate in a Middle East Forces Deployment that included the destroyers USS Paul F. Foster and USS Stetham. 

While it was there, the ship helped to enforce United Nations sanctions against Iraq, and tallied 219 queries, 115 boardings and five diverts in the dangerous waters. 

The Sherman was also involved in other missions, including a ship rescue that occurred off the eastern coast of South Africa.


Bay Briefs

Staff
Saturday July 14, 2001

Oakland racks up year’s 42nd homicide 

Oakland police have no suspects or witnesses in the city’s 41st and 42nd homicides, which took place Thursday evening, a result of two unrelated shootings. 

Police are revealing few details on the killings, which left two people – described only as black men – dead. Both were shot numerous times, police spokeswoman Cynthia Perkins said. 

Thursday’s first killing took place at about 6:30 p.m. at the intersection of Harmon and 62nd Avenue in East Oakland. 

Perkins said the victim, who died at Highland Hospital in Oakland, is approximately 22 years old. She added that his identity has not been released pending notification of the next of kin. 

Available information is also scant about the second homicide, which was reported at about 9:30 p.m. at the West Oakland intersection of 10th and Center streets, Perkins said. Police are investigating. 

 

Expert says 

BART riders can use buses 

OAKLAND – There’s a lot of interest in late-night service on BART. 

Rebecca Kaplan of the Bay Area Transportation and Land Use Coalition said BART must have time to maintain trains. But that doesn’t mean buses couldn’t fill the role of trains during the wee hours. 

Kaplan said riders could take the train into San Francisco. When they are ready to go home, they could return to that same station to find buses outside to take them across the bay to the station they used earlier in the day. 

The idea is to cut down on the number of cars being used. 

 

Oakland to pay $50K to slain man’s family 

OAKLAND – The city of Oakland has agreed to pay $50,000 to the family of a man who was shot to death by police after allegedly trying to run an officer down with his car. 

The payment brings the total the city has paid this year to settle suits against the police to $1.6 million. 

Nathan Hornes was shot once in the chest on Dec. 5, 1999, by Officer Steven Nowak after Hornes allegedly swung the wheel of his car to the left and stepped on the gas. 

The Hornes family sued in federal court in Oakland, accusing Nowak of using excessive force and making up the story he was in danger to justify the shooting. 

The City Council is expected to approve the settlement this month without admitting any wrongdoing by the officer. 

 

Listeners donate $303,000 to mauled boy 

SAN FRANCISCO – The family of the 10-year-old Richmond boy who was mauled by three pit bulls will receive a check for $303,000, donated by listeners to KGO radio. 

Shawn Jones, who earlier this week spoke his first words since the June 18 attack, has had his condition upgraded from critical to serious. 

The boy lost his ears and the muscles and skin on his face were shredded during the attack. He also suffered deep bite wounds on his arms. He was attacked as he was riding the bicycle his mother gave him for getting good grades. 

Shortly after the mauling, Shawn’s family was forced to move from their home because the owner wished to move in. 

Shawn still faces months of medical treatment, and plastic surgery that could go on for years. 

Two of the pit bulls have been found and are in custody in Martinez. 

The owner of the dogs, Benjamin Moore, faces trial on two misdemeanor counts of withholding evidence in the case. His trial has been postponed until July 30. 

If found guilty, Moore could face up to two years in jail. He is free on $30,000 bail. 

 

San Mateo Co. Supervisor gives karate lesson 

SAN MATEO – A teen-ager got a lesson in the martial arts when he allegedly broke into San Mateo County Supervisor Jerry Hill’s garage. 

It was like a scene from a Chuck Norris movie – and 18-year-old Mark Harvin was on the losing end. 

Hill said he was walking out to his detached garage when he noticed a broken window and then spotted somebody inside rifling through a duffle bag. 

Hill, who has earned a black belt in karate, grabbed Harvin, spun him around and held him in an armlock until police arrived. 

Harvin was booked for investigation of burglary and vandalism after the Wednesday incident. 

 

East Palo Alto school finances under scrutiny 

PALO ALTO – The state superintendent of schools has ordered an investigation of an East Palo Alto school district’s finances. 

The superintendent of the Ravenswood City School District, Charlie Mae Knight, is already facing 19 felony conflict-of-interest charges. 

Prosecutors say that Knight stood to benefit when the school district gave loans to employees who rented from her or who owed her money. 

The San Jose Mercury News reported that the district spent extravagantly for travel, submitted fraudulent claims after a school fire, and inadequately documented the spending of millions in federal and state aid. 

Investigators are expected to begin in about a month. 

 

Smog levels down a bit 

SAN FRANCISCO – Smog levels in the San Francisco Bay area improved slightly over the first half of the year, despite being worse in California and the nation overall. 

The number of smog violations in Bay Area fell from two to one, but went up 36 percent in California as a whole. Los Angeles had a 31 percent increase, and the San Joaquin Valley had a 60 percent increase. 

A run of cooler weather helped the Bay Area keep its smog down. 

Experts say the dirtier air nationwide is a combination of higher temperatures, increased coal use for electric power and numerous sport-utility vehicles on the roads. 

The state Air Resources Control Board said smog in California exceeded federal limits for a one-hour period on 60 occasions, up from 16 for the same period last year. 

Smog, formed when nitrogen oxides, mostly from car and power plant emissions, mix with organic compounds, such as gasoline fumes and are heated by the sun.


Absent federal oversight, stem cell companies police themselves

By Paul EliasAP Biotechnology Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

MENLO PARK – Since there is no federal oversight of human embryonic stem cell research, the three U.S. companies working in the field are left to police themselves. 

Geron Inc., Advanced Cell Technologies and the Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine have formed so-called ethics advisory boards comprised of religion professors and bioethicists. 

The boards are designed to help the companies establish policies such as how to recruit egg and sperm donors and how to dispose of embryos destroyed during research. 

The companies point to these advisers as proof they are operating above board in this highly polarized field. Critics of the research, who argue that destroying an embryo is akin to murder, say the boards are nothing but public relations fig leaves. 

Even some proponents of the research question the quality of the ethics advice. 

“There are lots of reasons to be concerned,” said Ronald Cole-Turner, a religion professor at the Pittsburgh Theological Center who supports stem-cell research, but believes it should be government regulated. 

“There’s at least the appearance that the companies are buying their ethics,” Cole-Turner said. 

Geron and Advanced Cell pay their board members a small per diem and expenses for each meeting. 

The companies aren’t bound by any of the recommendations, and only Advanced Cell’s board has written ethical guidelines. Chief executive Michael West said his shareholders would consider him irresponsible if he gave Advanced Cell’s 11-member board veto power over research. 

“It’s a matter of trust,” said Ronald Green, chairman of Dartmouth University’s religion department and the chairman of Advanced Cell’s ethics advisory board. He said his power is his ability to publicly protest if Advanced Cell breeches any of the board’s guidelines. 

Green wouldn’t provide The Associated Press with a copy of the guidelines. However, according to a brief synopsis he shared, the guidelines don’t provide answers to fundamental moral and metaphysical questions about the research. Instead, they appear quite specific, and mostly involve the handling of embryos. 

For example, they forbid using eggs bought from women for reproductive purposes, and say that embryos should be destroyed before they reach 15 days old. (Geron has a similar time limit). The timing is a matter of practicality as well as ethics: embryonic stem cells begin to grow into one of 200 specific human cells after two weeks, and are no longer as valuable to scientists. 

 

The chairman of Advanced Cell Technology’s ethics advisory board, Dartmouth University religion professor Ronald Green, summarized the board’s ethical guidelines for embryonic stem cell research: 

• Collection: Eggs are recovered at clinic by the medical and scientific team. Eggs are counted and numbered according to ovary of recovery. Eggs are transferred immediately to scientists from Advanced Cell Technology with documentation listing egg number and an initial estimate of maturity. 

• Security: Once the eggs arrive in the ACT laboratory, they are taken to a secure location and kept in this location at all times.• Tracking: Eggs are repeatedly counted, photographed and videotaped as they proceed through the research procedure. An exclusive laboratory notebook is used to record all steps. 

• Disposal: Starting six days after activation, the oocyte – an egg that has not yet undergone maturation – is monitored every 12 hours for signs of growth. By day 13, following any research activities, activated oocyte is properly disposed of and the experiment ended. Two researchers other than the one performing the protocol must witness disposal of the eggs and sign the laboratory notebook accordingly.


State surprised at number of customers conserving for cash

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO – About 30 percent of customers of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern California Edison qualified for rebates on their power bills in June – surprising state officials who thought only a fraction of the utilities’ customers would cut their energy use to get a rebate. 

In San Diego, 38 percent of San Diego Gas and Electric Co. customers qualified for Gov. Gray Davis’ 20/20 rebate program, which gives a 20 percent rebate to customers of the three utilities who cut their power use by 20 percent over last year. 

“We were hopeful that we would get between 10 percent and 20 percent participation. From the looks of it, Californians are exceeding those expectations,” said Roger Salazar, spokesman for the governor. 

Of the 1.5 million electric bills processed by PG&E so far this month, nearly 30 percent qualify for the rebate, said Staci Homrig, a PG&E spokeswoman. Early forecasts set that number at 10 or 20 percent. 

Conserving electricity saved residential, commercial, industrial and agricultural customers of PG&E $7.6 million in credits. Residential users earned $3.7 million; the others $3.9. 

Edison customers saw rebates totaling $5.4 million. Residential users earned $2.5 million, commercial customers saw rebates totaling $2.8 million and agricultural customers earned $101,798. 

SDG&E customers saw $1.5 million in rebates on their statements – $1.1 million to residents and $400,000 to others. 

Salazar said the conservation efforts were higher, even though June temperatures were hotter this year. 

“There were 10 days last year where electricity load was over 40,000 megawatts. This year, we had zero days, even though it was hotter,” Salazar said. 

SDG&E customers had to trim their use by only 15 percent to qualify, because of high electric bills and conservation efforts from the previous summer. 

The rebates compare electric use from this summer to last summer, and are available to about 10 million homes and businesses who receive their electricity from PG&E, SDG&E or Edison. The rebate was intended to arrive at summer’s end but now appears on each monthly bill. 

“We continue to be impressed by the herculean efforts of Californians when it comes to conservation,” said Salazar. “But we need them to continue to save energy if we’re going to get through the summer.”


Budget impasse stops the buck — $2 million in paychecks are withheld

By Jim Wasserman Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO – State Controller Kathleen Connell canceled a $2 million payroll Friday for 2,000 legislative employees as the state budget stalemate reached its 13th day. 

Checks also stop next week for vendors who do business with the state, Connell said. Legislators, unable to pass a budget by a July 1 deadline, will have their pay stopped on July 31. The governor and other elected state officers, including Connell, will also find themselves docked at the end of the month. 

Connell said state law prevents her from writing payroll checks to these groups without a state budget. Legislative staffers are paid twice a month while the governor and legislators are paid monthly. 

“Each day the budget stalemate continues, more people, businesses and local programs are affected,” Connell said. 

Friday marked the fourth time since 1995 that Connell has withheld employee checks over a budget showdown. The legislature has passed only three budgets by July 1 since 1990. 

At least 262,0000 state employees will continue to be paid. 

Gov. Gray Davis, who signed the first two budgets of his administration on time, attacked Connell’s announcement as a “publicity stunt.” 

Davis spokesman Steve Maviglio said, “It’s unfortunate that the state controller wants to create a sideshow when she should be helping the governor and the Legislature come to agreement on a budget.” 

A Republican legislative minority, opposing a planned quarter-cent sales tax hike this January, is blocking the budget in the state Assembly and Senate. The tax adopted in 1991 goes into effect automatically when state revenues fall. Republicans want to ax the tax hike permanently. 

Democrats say it will raise $1.8 billion desperately needed during the next two years if the economy continues to slow. 

Despite the standoff, Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys, scheduled a session on the budget for 4 p.m. Saturday. 

Jamie Fisfis, spokesman for Assembly Republicans, scoffed at Hertzberg’s plan, saying, “The speaker’s going to put us through a bunch of budget drills. We’d be better off negotiating.” 

The Senate is off until 3 p.m. Monday. 

Efforts all week to find a solution to the political entanglement proved unsuccessful. Davis met Wednesday with four legislative leaders to break the impasse. His office also held numerous conference calls where school, health, law enforcement officials argued to pass the budget. 

Despite Connell’s announcement Friday, most legislative staffers will not suffer any sudden lack of cash.


GOP leaders criticize “utterly inconsistent” campaign ruling

The Associated Press
Saturday July 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO – The Legislature’s top Republicans on Friday sharply criticized a state commission ruling creating an exception to campaign contribution limits approved by voters last November. 

Minority leaders Jim Brulte, R-Rancho Cucamonga, and Dave Cox, R-Fair Oaks, said the decision “creates the absurd result that current officeholders ... can raise unlimited amounts for any purpose other than their own future election campaign.” 

“This will allow officeholders to raise money in excess of the Proposition 34 limits and transfer it to members of their own caucuses for candidate support, political parties for party building activities, ... other campaigns and ballot measures, or use it for general officeholder expenses,” they said. 

“We find this to be utterly inconsistent with the will of the Legislature that placed Proposition 34 on the ballot and the will of the voters who overwhelmingly approved it.” 

Proposition 34 put a $3,000-per-election limit on donations to legislators from most sources. There are higher limits for candidates for governor and other statewide offices. 

The state Fair Political Practices Commission said Monday that the limits don’t apply to donations raised by candidates’ campaign committees formed before the proposition took effect on Jan. 1. 

FPPC chairwoman Karen Getman said the commission decided the proposition’s fund-raising restrictions didn’t cover campaign committees set up for previous elections, “because those elections did not have any contribution limits.” 

But she said candidates who raised unlimited donations through pre-2001 committees could only spend as much of that money on their future campaigns as they could raise under Proposition 34. 

Getman also said the commission will be considering a regulation that would require candidates to phase out their pre-2001 committees after a reasonable period of time. 

Brulte, who heads Senate Republicans, and Cox, who leads Assembly Republicans, sent a letter to Democratic Gov. Gray Davis asking him to join them in urging the FPPC to reverse its decision. 

Davis’ spokesman, Steve Maviglio, did not have an immediate response.


Click & Clack: Blown seal and hot ignition sparks

By Tom and Ray Magliozzi King Features Syndicate
Saturday July 14, 2001

Dear Tom and Ray: 

Is my mechanic a crook? I had the timing belt replaced on my 1990 Mitsubishi Eclipse. The morning after I drove it home from the mechanic, I noticed oil pouring out of the car. It turns out that the rear main seal was blown. Is it possible that my mechanic did this while replacing the timing belt, or is it just a coincidence? He says he was working on the opposite side of the engine, and there was no way he could have done this. But I've heard that if you tap too hard on the front, you can blow the rear seal. What's your opinion? — Jennifer 

TOM: It sounds like just an unhappy coincidence, Jennifer. There's really no way he could have blown your rear main seal by changing the timing belt. 

RAY: He's right that they're on opposite sides of the engine. The only thing that links the two is the crankshaft, and it's not supposed to move longitudinally more than a fraction of a millimeter. If it does, and tapping it in front pushes out the rear main seal, then your engine was in terrible shape to begin with (not an impossibility on an 11-year-old car). 

TOM: So you really can't blame this guy, Jennifer. It's like going to the doctor for a hemorrhoid treatment and complaining later that the doctor gave you a headache. Wait – that's a bad analogy. That actually happened to my brother once.  

••• 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

Can one have too hot an ignition spark? There are several aftermarket ignition systems available for older car engines, most claiming to produce more voltage than stock systems. But can you overdo it? Will too hot a spark wear out the spark plugs faster or cause any other problems? — Clyde 

RAY: It will wear out your spark plugs faster, Clyde. It'll also wear out the other parts of the secondary ignition system faster – the plug wires, rotor, distributor, etc. So you'll be buying new ignition parts more often, but it won't do any permanent damage to your engine. 

TOM: The idea is that a higher-voltage (or “hotter”) spark will do a better job of burning all of the fuel in the cylinders. And technically, that's true. But in reality, it only really helps if you suffer from excessive turbulence in your combustion chambers. 

RAY: My brother suffers from that, and we've been trying antacids ... with no luck so far. 

TOM: Turbulence inside the cylinders increases as the engine speed increases. And if your spark is not hot enough, the swirling gasoline-and-air mixture can blow out a weak spark, causing an occasional "miss" or "stutter" at high speeds. 

RAY: But if you're not experiencing that problem, you probably won't notice the difference a hotter spark makes. 

TOM: Of course, you're welcome to install a hotter ignition system anyway, Clyde. You won't do any harm. But let us know in advance so we can invest in some auto-parts stocks.  

••• 

Got a question about cars? E-mail Click and Clack by visiting the Car Talk section of cars.com on the World Wide Web.


BMW unveils cars that run on hydrogen, cut emissions

By Andrew Bridges Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

LOS ANGELES – BMW officials traveled to one of the nation’s smoggiest cities this week to show off a fleet of luxury cars that run on rocket fuel but belch virtually nothing but water and steam from their tailpipes. 

Company officials said the hydrogen-powered cars are an important step in weaning the automotive industry from the oil that has nurtured it since the internal combustion engine first powered automobiles in the late 1800s. 

The silver 740hL sedans sport a new type of internal combustion engine that runs on clean-burning hydrogen — the most abundant element — instead of gasoline. 

“It’s the cleanest fuel there is,” said Burkhard Goschel, a member of the BMW Group board, during a news conference at Paramount studios. 

BMW has hauled the 10 cars from United Arab Emirates to Europe to Japan and now California to tout the benefits of hydrogen as a fuel source. 

The company will now continue to test the cars at its new research and engineering center, which opens Friday in Oxnard, Calif. Already, the fleet has covered more than 80,000 miles during tests. 

When burned, hydrogen packs a powerful punch — it helps propel the space shuttle to orbit. In the BMW models, it cuts tailpipe emissions by 99.5 percent. 

The 750hL features a 12-cylinder engine and can hit 141 mph. 

Running on hydrogen, stored in a liquid form in a pressurized tank, the car can travel about 200 miles — more if an auxiliary gasoline tank is tapped to fuel the car. 

But concerns about storing liquid hydrogen under high pressure have stymied its use in automobiles because of the risk of explosions and fire, experts said. A lack of a cheap and reliable means of producing hydrogen — and distributing it to consumers — has also hurt the marketing of such cars. 

Widescale commercial production may still be a decade or more away, although BMW hopes to introduce hydrogen-powered 7-Series models before then. The Ford Motor Co. is not far behind: it plans to unveil its own prototype hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine vehicle next month, spokeswoman Sara Tatchio said. 

“The challenge will be to create infrastructure and devise a way to store hydrogen on board,” said John Boesel, president of Calstart, a nonprofit group that develops clean transportation technologies. 

Hydrogen can be produced from water through electrolysis or, more commonly, from natural gas generated during the oil refining process. 

The methods are either energy-intensive or costly — or both — at present. 

“Hydrogen cannot compete with gasoline on a cost basis ... (but) we believe as usage increases, it can become competitive,” said Bob Malone, a regional president of oil company BP Corp. 

Goschel said the company has not calculated how much a hydrogen-fueled BMW 750 would cost compared to a conventional version, which sells for about $93,000. And hydrogen service stations may be still a decade away. 

“We’re a long way from putting hydrogen out there,” said Alan Lloyd, chairman of the California Air Resources Board. 

The automotive industry has yet to latch on to hydrogen or any other alternative to gasoline or diesel fuel. 

Many manufacturers, including General Motors, are looking at hydrogen, but only to power fuel cells to produce electricity. Honda and Toyota have both introduced hybrid models that pair gasoline engines with electric motors to boost fuel efficiency and cut emissions. Ford, GM and DaimlerChrysler AG plan to introduce their own versions in 2003. 

California — where 40 percent of all air pollution is produced by tailpipe emissions — has mandated strict standards that should make the exotic vehicles more common. By 2003, for instance, 2 percent of all vehicles sold in the state by major manufacturers must be zero emissions. 

“We have a variety of fuels that can steer us on the road ahead,” Lloyd said.


Condit takes lie-detector test in Levy case

By Mark Sherman Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

WASHINGTON – Rep. Gary Condit took a lie-detector test arranged by his lawyer, and it showed he “was not deceptive in any way” in denying knowledge of what happened to missing intern Chandra Levy, the lawyer said Friday. 

But Assistant Police Chief Terrance Gainer called the test “self-serving.” He said the lawyer, Abbe Lowell, had not worked with police to come up with questions and agree on an expert to administer the test. 

Lowell said the test was administered by Barry D. Colvert, a polygraph expert who Lowell said teaches FBI officials how to administer the tests. 

Lowell declined to identify all the questions that were asked, but said Condit was deemed to have answered truthfully when he said “no” to the three most important questions: 

—Did the congressman have anything at all to do with Miss Levy’s disappearance? 

—Did he harm her or cause anyone else to harm her in any way? 

—Does he know where she can be located? 

“Congressman Condit has exhausted all the information he can provide, and the spotlight on his should be turned elsewhere,” said Lowell, who noted the congressman has given three interviews to police, allowed a search of his apartment and submitted a DNA sample. 

Washington police had wanted Condit to submit to a test given by someone from the FBI and with questions they supplied. 

Lowell declined to provide any more details about Condit’s relationship with Levy, a 24-year-old federal intern from Modesto, Calif., last seen April 30, including when he last saw and spoke to her. 

Levy’s mother first suggested Condit take a lie-detector test, saying she did not believe he had shared with police all he knows about her daughter. 

A police source has said the congressman acknowledged a romantic relationship with the former Bureau of Prisons intern, despite denials from his office. 

Meantime, police said they had searched more than 70 vacant buildings in the nation’s capital looking for Levy. 

Capt. Willie Smith said officers under his command were trying to get through 100 buildings in the neighborhoods near Levy’s apartment. “We just want to make sure all the bases are covered,” he said. 

Police conceded it was a lack of good leads, rather than specific information, that led them to look at abandoned properties as places where someone could have left a body. 

Police say they are pursuing four theories about Levy, either that was murdered, that she killed herself, that she went into hiding or that she has amnesia. However, police say they have all but ruled out suicide since so much time has passed and no body has been found. 

Authorities planned Friday to release simulated images of Levy with different hair styles.


Judge: Coastal Commission violated law

The Associated Press
Saturday July 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO – The California Coastal Commission, a state agency that regulates coastal development, is appealing a Sacramento Superior Court judge’s ruling that it violated the state constitution. 

The appeal was filed in the Third District Court of Appeal this week. 

The original ruling was handed down in April in a suit filed by the Marine Forests Society, which has experimented with artificial reefs off Newport Beach in an effort to attract sea life. The Coastal Commission ordered the group to halt the project in 1999 because it had not been issued a permit. 

In his ruling, Judge Charles Kobayashi said the commission is in violation of the principle of checks and balances because it performs legislative, executive and judicial duties. Because the state Legislature appoints two-thirds of the commission, it should only have legislative powers, Kobayashi ruled. 

Commission opponents say it must be reorganized to answer to voters, while supporters say its political freedom has helped it protect the coast. 

If the decision is upheld, the commission would be forced to alter its powers to meet constitutional requirements.


Maximum three-year sentence for dog killer

By Ron Harris Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

SAN JOSE – Andrew Burnett apologized for the death of a small dog he threw into traffic in a fit of road rage. But a judge called him a liar, and sentenced Burnett to the maximum three-year prison term. 

The courtroom erupted in applause Friday as Judge Kevin J. Murphy, who accused Burnett of a lack of remorse, imposed the sentence after saying the 28-year-old man was a danger to the community. 

Burnett, convicted June 20 of tossing a fluffy white bichon frise named Leo to his death following a fender bender with Leo’s owner, asked the judge for leniency. 

“What the defendant said is he was sorry. It was an accident,” Murphy said. “It wasn’t an accident.” 

The judge said Burnett lied about the events that occurred the rainy night of Feb. 11, 2000, when Sara McBurnett’s car lightly tapped the bumper of Burnett’s car at the San Jose airport. 

Witnesses testified during the felony animal cruelty trial that Burnett snatched the dog from McBurnett’s lap and tossed him to his death in busy lanes of traffic. Burnett’s attorney maintained his client merely acted reflexively after Leo bit him. 

“To describe his story as unbelievable is being polite,” Murphy said. 

Burnett’s attorney, Marc Garcia, said he expects his client to appeal the sentence within the next 60 days. 

“I can’t imagine that somebody who for 28 years had led a crime-free life, has been productive, has been responsible, could receive three years in prison on a first-time offense,” Garcia said. “It’s just something that is unprecedented.” 

Murphy seemed particularly troubled by Burnett’s lack of outward remorse, though he apologized to the court and the McBurnett family at sentencing. 

“I’m really sorry for what happened,” Burnett testified. “I’d like to say I’m sorry to the McBurnett family. If there’s anything I could ever say or do to bring back Leo, I would.” 

Burnett also expressed remorse for the incident when he was interviewed recently by Jennifer Daughenbaugh, the probation department worker who drafted a report recommending a one-year county jail sentence followed by probation. 

McBurnett and her husband both asked the judge to impose the maximum penalty allowable for Burnett. Patrick McBurnett said the defendant’s actions had taken the gravest emotional toll on his wife. 

“Words can never convey the depth of love I had for my dog Leo,” Sara McBurnett testified at the sentencing hearing. “His clear intent was to terrorize me in the fastest and clearest way he could under the circumstances.” 

The couple from Incline Village, Nev., clutched each other in the front row as Murphy imposed the sentence. Burnett’s mother and fiance looked on from across the aisle. 

Outside the courtroom, Sara McBurnett applauded the judge’s sentence and questioned the sincerity of Burnett’s apologies. 

“Statements made by a pathological liar mean nothing. Absolutely nothing,” she said. 

If Burnett is forced to serve his sentence on the felony animal cruelty conviction, he would be eligible for parole in July 2002. 

Burnett has been in jail since Jan. 4 and faces criminal theft charges for allegedly stealing equipment from his van when he worked as a telephone repairman. He faces trial on those charges next week. 

Judy Nemzoff, a spokeswoman for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in San Francisco, said the case sends a strong message that society will not tolerate the wanton mistreatment of animals. 

“We anticipate that society will demand that more and more offenders will be prosecuted to the extent of the law,” Nemzhoff said.


McGuckin children to remain in foster care

By Chad Dundas Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

SANDPOINT – Six children who staged a days-long standoff with authorities following their mother’s arrest on child-neglect charges will remain in a foster home indefinitely, a judge ruled Friday. 

In an hour-long closed hearing, Bonner County Magistrate Judge Debra Heise decided not to allow JoAnn McGuckin to regain custody of her six minor children. 

A gag order prevented lawyers from either side to comment on specifics from the hearing. In the past, attorneys have said JoAnn McGuckin has medical problems, and also has no income and no home to take care of the children. 

Prosecutor Phil Robinson said the outcome of the hearing was exactly what he wanted. There is no timeline for reuniting the McGuckins, Robinson said. An automatic review will be held in 60 days. 

The six McGuckin children — ages 8 to 16 — have been temporary wards of the state since they surrendered June 2 after a standoff with police at their Garfield Bay home. 

When deputies went to collect the children after arresting their mother, the kids turned their pack of dogs on officers and holed up with five weapons inside the rural house. The standoff ended peacefully five days later and they have been in foster care since then. 

“We’re not trying to tell her how to raise her children or what her beliefs should be,” Robinson said. “But there should be some basic education. They shouldn’t be living in filth.” 

After the hearing, McGuckin said she was “hanging in there.” Earlier Friday, she had said her medical condition might prevent her from regaining custody of her children. 

“I’m too sick to physically take care of them anyway,” she said. 

JoAnn McGuckin has pleaded innocent to the misdemeanor neglect charge, which carries a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $300 fine. 

Family attorney Bryce Powell, who wouldn’t comment on McGuckin’s medical condition, was disappointed with the judge’s decision. 

“The state has a legal obligation to reunite this family as quickly as possible,” he said. 

The family has been apart — able to see each other only in court or foster homes — since McGuckin’s May 29 arrest on a charge of felony injury to children. The charge was reduced to a misdemeanor last month and she was released from jail without conditions. 

The six children are Kathryn, 16; Ben, 15; Mary, 13; James, 11; Fred,9; and Jane, 8. 

Kathryn and Ben McGuckin testified Monday at a closed custody hearing. Afterward, Heise ruled the children were covered by the state’s child protection act, giving her the power to decide their custody. 

Prosecutors said McGuckin, 46, is an unfit mother because she was raising her children in a filthy home that lacked basic utilities such as running water. Dog feces littered the house. 

They have also suggested that McGuckin has a drinking problem that contributed to the family’s troubles. 

Negotiations toward a custody agreement failed, Robinson said, because prosecutors insisted on some form of state oversight, while McGuckin wanted a guardian of her own choosing, with no oversight other than by the court system. 

The oldest daughter, 19-year-old Erina, left home last year to join the Navy. She returned in April and her complaints to Robinson initiated the arrest and subsequent standoff. 

Erina testified that family members ate rodent-infested food in a feces-covered house that had no running water and little heat. She said her mother spent much of the family’s scarce money on alcohol and instilled bizarre, paranoid notions in the children. 

Her testimony countered earlier testimony by Kathryn McGuckin, who acknowledged many of the problems, but attributed them to the poverty brought on by the illness of both parents. 

The children’s father, Michael McGuckin, died in May after a lengthy bout with multiple sclerosis.


Group again tries to open irrigation canal head gate

By Amalie Young Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

KLAMATH FALLS – About 10 men used a crowbar to partially open a canal head gate at the Klamath irrigation project on Friday, the fourth time someone has tried to release water that is being held back by federal officials to protect endangered and threatened fish. 

A police car drove up to the head gate, but the officers took no immediate action against the men who had pried open a door of the head gate — even though those men were breaking federal law. 

“The only thing that we are going to investigate is any kind of violence. Outside of that, we won’t do anything. I’m just here to take a look,” said Sgt. James Hunter. 

A spokesman for the Bureau of Reclamation indicated that federal officials worry that moving against anyone who tries to force open the head gate could lead to violence. 

“Once we feel we can send our bureau employees there without any potential concerns for their safety, we will move ahead” and close the partially opened head gate, said Jeff McCracken, public affairs spokesman for the BLM, which has authority over the head gate. 

He said the BLM had been in close contact with local, state and federal law enforcement about how to respond to Friday’s protest — which had been announced earlier in the week. 

In a sign of a split between the farmers, some had said they would protect the gate to conserve water for next year rather than waste it now on a symbolic act. 

Klamath Sheriff Tim Evinger said he had recommended federal authorities help these farmers protect the head gate. When no officials arrived, the farmers protecting the gate left, he said. 

“I am frustrated with federal officials who didn’t act as I had recommended,” Evinger said. 

Other farmers said they had planned to open the gate all along. Bennie Diaz, an 81-year-old alfalfa farmer, explained: “I was protecting it so I could open it later.” 

On Friday afternoon, people in the group near the head gate said a brief prayer, and then announced they were going to open the gates. 

One man walked behind a shack and picked up a crowbar. Then he and some others took turns using it to turn gears on one of six doors on the head gate. 

They were able to open the head gate door, and some water flowed through, but not enough to be of any relief to farmers’ fields.


Even more health reasons to stop smoking

The Associated Press
Saturday July 14, 2001

If the potential for heart attacks and lung cancer doesn’t scare you off your cigarette habit (you may think those things just happen to other people), consider these other risks: 

• Young women who smoke are at risk for brain aneurysms, according to Dr. Thomas Kopitnik, professor of neurological surgery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. “Nicotine attacks the cerebral blood vessels,” he said. “This is really a silent killer.” 

• “There’s definitely an increasing body of evidence that smoking is bad for you from a bone point of view,” said Dr. Michael McKee, assistant professor of surgery-orthopedics at St. Michael’s Hospital and the University of Toronto, in presenting research that found patients who smoked had less favorable outcomes after reconstructive surgery on their shinbones. “We found that the people who are smokers had a much worse outcome in a variety of different parameters, including the overall outcome, the quality of bone formed and the complication rate, compared to nonsmokers.” 

• The habit makes recovery and successful results from cosmetic surgery more problematical, says Dr. Rod Rohrich, chairman of plastic surgery at UT-Southwestern. “I won’t operate on patients who smoke because the procedure and the result will be compromised,” he says. 

Kopitnik says that the aneurysm risk is too little known, and he urges any young woman who smokes to check with her doctor about being screened for the condition. “The screening involves doing an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) of the brain, and it could save your life if an aneurysm is detected.” 

The challenge for a doctor is to surgically clip the aneurysm before it bursts, and the MRI can detect it before it reaches the average size of a burst aneurysm – about 7 millimeters. An aneurysm that ruptures requires longer and more dangerous surgery and longer recovery time and higher medical costs. 

Kopitnik and Dr. Duke Samson, neurological surgery chairman, have operated on about 1,800 patients with aneurysms over the past decade. About 70 percent of them were women. 

The patients studied for McKee’s orthopedic research had undergone Ilizarov reconstruction, a procedure in which a circular frame is put around the leg allowing the bone to be held rigidly without having to implant hardware. “The new formation of bone depends on an adequate supply of blood and oxygen reaching that area,” he said in reporting his research at a recent meeting of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons. 

The negative effects of smoking following Ilizarov reconstruction are so significant, he said, that he now insists candidates for the surgery must stop smoking first. “When someone comes to my office a needs a complex reconstruction of the tibia and they smoke, I tell them flat out, ’You need to stop smoking, and when you do, we will do your operation.” 

And in a recent edition of the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, Dr. Scott E. Porter and Edward N. Hanley provided an overview of articles published about the relationship between smoking and musculoskeletal diseases. 

Smoking has been shown to affect bone mineral density, lumbar disc health, the risk of hip or wrist fractures, and the dynamics of bone and wound healing, according to Porter, a research fellow in orthopedic surgery at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, N.C., and Hanley, chairman of the orthopedic surgery department at the center. 

Perhaps not as frightening but still frightful is a less than wonderful result from a facelift or other cosmetic surgery. 

If you can’t part with your cigarettes, you might as well skip it, says Rohrich. 

“By now everyone understands how the use of tobacco can adversely affect all aspects of an individual’s health. But smoking can be problematic in plastic surgery as well,” he says. 

Nicotine gets in the way of healing because it constricts blood vessels that supply oxygen to the skin – and this can result in loss of skin as well. Patients should consider if they’d be willing to give up smoking for at least four weeks, he says. 

“I encourage them to seek a healthier lifestyle prior to proceeding or in conjunction with an elective surgical procedure, especially cosmetic plastic surgery.” 


Details make the difference in interior design

The Associated Press
Saturday July 14, 2001

Ideas for spicing up your home 

 

Details count when making your house your home. They could be bibelots to excite the eye and imagination, or they could be the pretty things you use every day: 

• An important, big bowl is often the centerpiece for a table or mantel. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Lismore, its most popular stemware pattern on both sides of the Atlantic, Waterford has introduced a series of Lismore centerpiece bowls of Irish cut crystal. The stemmed 13-inch Scalloped Boat Bowl ($1,500) is an light-catching gem; a slightly simpler design is the 13-inch Statement Centerpiece ($595), which is footed but without the stem. 

• Another spectacular centerpiece bowl, called Amazonia ($3,400), comes from Scottish glassmaker Caithness. This limited edition is handmade, standing 12 1/4 inches high on a graduated stem with a multicolor tropical orchid design within; the bowl is fluted with cut facets and a subtle cobalt blue edging. 

• The London Desk Clock ($750), designed by Pam Waters for Staffordshire Enamels, is both decorative and functional. London landmark scenes are enameled on each panel of this hexagonal piece, with a round clockface on top. There’s also a Golfing Desk Clock ($750) version, showing scenes from famous golf courses around the world. 

• At the table, the choice of fine china can be a treat for visitors or an everyday pleasure for yourself. Pagoda, a new pattern from Tiffany & Co. (September introduction), is hand-painted blue on creamy white French faience, reminiscent of a classic chinoiserie willow design. The line is variable, with simple blue rims or decorated styles, ranging in price from $15 for a bread and butter plate to $175 for a set of four decorated dinner plates. 

• Tiffany Moderne is another new introduction, scheduled for October. This Limoges porcelain is cleanly shaped and bordered with geometrically shaded rectangles in platinum or gold. Estimated price will be about $200 for a five-piece place setting. 

• It’s functional, an eye-catching museum copy — and a tad expensive ($7,200) — but the Gigogne Coffee Service from Christofle makes the after-dinner cup pretty memorable. An art deco design created by Christian Fjerdingstad in 1926 for the French silversmith, the stackable service of coffee pot, creamer and sugar bowl is in sleek polished sterling with round wood handles and lid knob. The original is in the company’s Paris museum; the copies are a limited edition available only in Pavillon Christofle stores. 

• A very different approach to the coffee and tea service is offered by Bulgari for Rosenthal, with its new Concerto and Le Rose patterns in pastel colors. A six-cup Concerto espresso set ($125) depicts various musical instruments on the cups, and the saucers are decorated with musical notations. Single-file blossoms peek over basketwork in the Le Rose pattern (also $125 for six espresso cups). 

• Something new for traditionalists is Wedgwood’s new Rococo pattern ($185 per five-piece place setting), a white bone china embellished with blue bands and gold scrollwork. Another introduction is Traditions ($105 per five piece place setting), a homey bone china entirely in white with embossed swirling scrolls; it’s a new take on Wedgwood’s classic Queens Ware. Both patterns are due this fall. 

• The new Cocoa casual dinnerware ($35.75 for a four-piece place setting) from Pfaltzgraff is like its name — dark and complex. The shapes are simple, but the light plays against alternating matte and gloss finishes. 

• The handpainted casual pottery pattern, Four Sisters (each piece priced separately, but expect to pay around $115 for five pieces) is a breezy design filled with blue-on-white sketches of hens punctuated by polka dots, daisies and the like. Created by Elizabeth Roache for Present Tense, it goes from oven to table. 

• Designer Anne McCracken pays homage to the tradition of saying grace at the table with Gracewords stainless flatware ($320 for eight place settings and four serving pieces). Inscribed on the handle of each piece is a different word meant to inspire prayer or conversation.


Home gardeners should think before growing wisteria

By George Bria
Saturday July 14, 2001

Wisteria, one of the most beautiful plants on earth, can last for 50 years and more. It can also, and has a reputation for doing so, drive you and your heirs nuts. 

To begin with, after you plant wisteria, years and years may go by before you see a first bloom. 

Also, unless you’re prepared to watch closely and prune ruthlessly, wisteria vines will take over whatever they cling to. If it’s the side of your house or a porch railing, beware. In some settings, wisteria gets treated as an environmental pest requiring rigorous measures of eradication. 

If you’re lucky to own a fieldstone fence, that’s a good place to grow wisteria because you don’t have to worry about it getting into woodwork. 

All this aside, a gardener with patience, determination and the skills to erect trellises, arbors or pergolas, can get to enjoy one of springtime’s loveliest sights — vines bearing large, hanging flower clusters that come in white and shades of pink, lilac blue and purple, and smell sweet. Lengths of rust-free copper or aluminum wire attached four inches from the wall make good supports. 

I bought a 5-foot-tall wisteria this spring planning to raise it as a small tree near a shed. I chose the site because I wanted to try a free-standing wisteria variety, needing no supports, that would still serve as an ornamental plant to hide the shed. The plant was healthy, not to say bursting with potential energy, and its sunny and sheltered location looked good. 

After planting, I noticed that some of the tendrils were really too close to the side of the shed. That prompted a vision of tentacles reaching out and strangling the shed. So I dug it up and planted it farther away. 

Growing it as a tree doesn’t mean I won’t have work to train it. The plant came already staked upright and with its top cut off. I must now allow side shoots to develop on the upper part but remove any lower down. Then I have to follow strict regimes of winter and summer pruning. 

At the end of all this I hope the tree will live up to the nursery tag on my plant which promises 8- to 12-inch grapelike bunches of white flowers in mid-May. 

I won’t be holding my breath for it to bloom next spring. That would be phenomenally fast for it to happen, and I’m resigned to waiting longer. Many reasons are given for delay or failure to bloom. To begin with, wisterias have a longer than average period of acclimatization. Plants that have been grown from seed may take as long as 15 years. Grafts or plants grown from cuttings will usually bloom earlier. 

Also, the site may not be sunny enough. Or, the nursery where you bought it may have given it too much nitrogen fertilizer, stimulating leafy growth but not blooms. Poor pruning is another factor. A harsh winter may have injured or killed flower buds. 

My daughter, who gardens in Maryland, says the only way she can get her wisteria to flower is to dig a trench near the roots each spring and fertilize with phosphate. 

Clearly, there are a lot of “ifs” to wisteria, but the plant is so good-looking that many gardeners are tempted at one time or another to try their luck with it. 

Two renowned kinds for the garden are Japanese (Wisteria floribunda) and Chinese (Wisteria sinensis). There is also a native American (Wisteria frutescens) once known as Kentucky kidney bean. 

For what it may be worth, vines of the Japanese variety twine clockwise around their host while the Chinese twine counterclockwise. Both varieties can reach heights of 25 feet and more. The Chinese flowers bloom before the foliage expands while the Japanese bloom and leaf out simultaneously. 

A Chinese cultivar named Alba produces fragrant white bloom. Two other featured Chinese cultivars are Black Dragon, with dark purple flowers, and Plena with rosette-shaped lilac flowers. A lovely Japanese cultivar is Longissima Alba with clusters of white flowers 15 inches long. Pale rose Rosea has purple tips and grows 18 inches long. 

Wisteria was named in honor of Caspar Wistar, a distinguished 18th century botanist who was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, president of the Philosophical Society and a friend of Thomas Jefferson. The plant had flourished earlier in England.


Companies compete to create, market stem cells

By Paul Elias AP Biotechnology Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

As Bush ponders issue, three companies begin farming cells 

 

MENLO PARK – At least three for-profit companies are racing to develop large amounts of embryonic stem cells even as President Bush struggles to decide whether the government should foster or hinder such research. 

The stem cells hold the potential to cure diseases and ailments from cancer to spinal cord injuries. If this dream can be realized, these companies stand to reap millions – if not billions – in profits. 

Each company employs different but still controversial techniques to harvest embryonic stem cells. One buys leftover embryos from fertility clinics. Another is working to create embryos by way of a cloning method similar to the one used to make Dolly the sheep. The third pays men and women for their sperm and eggs, then creates embryos in the laboratory. 

Each company’s research involves plucking the coveted stem cells from 4- or 5-day-old human embryos, which must be destroyed in the process. 

Anti-abortion activists and others consider all three techniques unethical, saying they result in the destruction of human life. 

Proponents of such research argue that these days-old, undifferentiated cells cannot be viewed as human, and they stress that they have no intention of implanting them in a womb and producing babies. 

Since 1996, federal law has banned the use of tax dollars for research that destroys embryos. The Clinton administration decided federal money could pay for research as long as the stem cells were extracted with private money. 

Bush, who has come under pressure to reverse the Clinton policy and disallow any federal money for human embryonic stem cell research, appears to be searching for a compromise – possibly adopting a middle ground that imposes new restrictions but allows the research to move forward. 

“The work will go on, one way or another,” said Thomas Okarma, chief executive of Menlo Park-based Geron Inc., which funded the two scientists who first isolated human stem cells in 1998 and still dominates the field. 

Geron buys leftover frozen embryos from fertility clinics and cracks them open to obtain the stem cells. Geron owns the worldwide rights to this process and has filed about 30 new patent applications for the various techniques and technology it uses. 

Chief executive Thomas Okarma said he considers Geron’s technique ethically sound. 

“These things aren’t people,” he said. “These are all frozen excess and no longer needed by the couple. And they are either going to be thrown away or stored forever.” 

Eventually, Geron hopes to get stem cells without having to use embryos at all. It hopes to do this by finding and cloning the proteins in eggs that lead to the creation of stem cells. Then, Okarma said, “living cells will be tomorrow’s pharmaceuticals.” 

Across the country in Worcester, Mass., Advanced Cell Technology is working on another technique that it hopes will enable it to generate stem cells by growing human embryos without the use of sperm. 

Advanced Cell’s plan is to pay women to take fertility drugs to produce excess eggs. Researchers would then take an egg, remove its nucleus and genetic material and fuse it with a skin cell containing adult genetic material. With a jolt of electricity, the researchers then would coax the egg to replicate as if it had been fertilized with sperm. After a few days, stem cells would be ready for harvesting. 

So far, Advanced Cell has yet to obtain a stem cell with this technique. Chief executive Michael West, a Geron co-founder who left for Advanced Cell last year, said the company has not yet created embryos. 

Many scientists consider the results of Advanced Cell’s technique to be human embryos, since theoretically, they could be implanted into a womb and grown into a fetus. West himself has used the term “embryo.” However, his ethical advisers prefer terms such as “ovumsum.” 

“These are not embryos,” said the chairman of Advanced Cell’s ethics advisory board, Dartmouth University religion professor Ronald Green. “They are not the result of fertilization and there is no intent to implant these in women and grow them.” 

A third effort was announced this week by the Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine, a private fertility clinic in Norfolk, Va., that was responsible for the birth in 1981 of the nation’s first test-tube baby. 

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine said it believes the researchers there are the first in the United States to have created embryos expressly for stem cell research, using eggs and sperm from paid, consenting adults. 

“At one level, it’s cleaner” ethically than using leftover embryos, society spokesman Sean Tipton said. “There’s no question what you’re going to do with these embryos. You’re going to the individuals up front.” 

Only the Geron-generated cells would be eligible for federally funded research dollars under the Clinton administration guidelines, which called for using only surplus embryos from fertility clinics. The Advanced Cell and Jones Institute embryos would not pass this federal test.


Arsenic in play equipment angers preschool students’ parents

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Parents and administrators of a nonprofit Berkeley school are mobilizing against a play-equipment manufacturer, that allegedly failed to properly inform them about the risk of arsenic contamination of the play structure they acquired. 

New School, an environmentally conscious institution offering preschool and after-school day care to approximately 80 children at 1606 Bonita Ave., bought the structure in mid-May as part of a renovation project aimed at making its playground comply with recent safety laws.  

But only a few days after installing the play structure, the parents and school staff - alerted by a national report on the health risks that some wooden structures present – found out that the new toy was treated with a preservative made of chromium, copper and arsenic, commonly called CCA. According to a report by the Environmental Working Group and the Healthy Building Network, made public at the end of May, exposure to such chemicals can cause a number of diseases, including cancer.  

“We were really shocked and dismayed to find out that it was treated with this,” said Merlyn Katechis, New School’s administrative assistant. “It took us days to find in the catalogue any mention at all of this.” Katechis said that only one line printed in the manufacturer’s catalogue mentioned that its wooden structures were pressure treated with CCA. She added that when the school called the manufacturing company, Kompan, it was told that the equipment did not present any danger as long as it was coated with a sealant. 

But that was not enough to reassure the parents. 

“We are outraged,” said Joanne Welch, whose 5-year-old daughter is enrolled in the school. “Even if we seal the structure, the sand naturally rubs the sealant off. We have children constantly climbing on the structure so we would constantly be worried about arsenic (exposure).” 

The structure was immediately fenced off and after a series of meetings, parents and administrators decided to return the structure. The manufacturer, however refused to take it back, although it offered to help New School sell it to another institution, Katechis said. 

The management of Kompan was not available for comment on Thursday. 

The school community is now talking about more radical solutions. It recently uninstalled the play structure and is planning to put it on a truck and drop it off at the company’s distribution site in Forestville, Calif. Additionally, the school is working on solutions that would benefit the other institutions across the country that worry about the health risks of CCA-treated wooden playgrounds.  

The school administration has contacted several environmental groups to get advice and intends to initiate legal action against Kompan on the basis of California’s Proposition 65, legislation designed to limit public exposure to possibly hazardous chemicals by mandating consumer-product warning labels. 

The school may file a lawsuit independently, but it is more likely to join the effort of the Center for Environmental Health, an organization that recently filed a legal notice of its intent to sue 11 manufacturers of arsenic-treated wooden playground. 

“I think we should be part of the CEH lawsuit” said Welch, one of the parents. “There are a lot of other people involved and as a small preschool we don’t have the resources (to fight against that).”


Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Friday, July 13 

Therapy for Trans Partners  

6 - 7:30 p.m.  

Pacific Center for Human Growth  

2712 Telegraph Ave. (at Derby)  

A group open to partners of those in transition or considering transition. The group is structured to be a safe place to receive support from peers and explore a variety of issues, including sexual orientation, coming out, feelings of isolation, among other topics. Intake process required. Meeting Fridays through August 17.  

$8 - $35 sliding scale per session  

Call 548-8283 x534 or x522 

 

Strong Women; The Arts,  

Herstory and Literature 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK Jr. Way) 

Taught by Dr. Helen Rippier Wheeler, author of “Women and Aging: A Guide to Literature,” this is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. Free.  

Call 549-2970 

 

Friday the 13th Dance 

7:30 - 10 p.m. 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 

2200 Shattuck Avenue 

Celebrating the success of this years Berkeley Arts Festival, supporters can dance to jazz, swing and slow songs at this Friday the 13th Dance: The post hoc ergo propter hoc Hop. “Just Friends” will provide the music. Admission by donation, to benefit the Festival. 

486-0411 

 

Community Environmental  

Advisory Committee 

9:30 a.m.  

Planning and Development 

First Floor Conference Room 

2118 Milvia Street 

An Ad-Hoc Subcommittee on Environmental Enforcement will meet today and discuss TMD codes and enforcement procedures. 

705-8150 or 644-6915 (TDD) 

 

Saturday, July 14 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street at Martin Luther King Jr. Way  

Regular market plus annual peach tastings. Free. 

548-3333 

 

Sunday, July 15 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair  

Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn drive train maintenance and chain repair from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Free  

527-4140 

 

Buddhist Practice 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Mark Henderson on “Fearlessness on the Bodhisattva Path.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

Second Annual Wobbly High  

Mass 

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck (@ Prince St.) 

Presented by Folk This! and friends, an evening of musical satire, subversion and sacrilege. This year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow,” a historical journey toward a future society without classes or bosses. 

$8 

849-2568 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Ave., between 3rd and 4th Streets  

Family-oriented weekly market. Crafts, music, produce, and specialty foods. 

654-6346 

 

Skronkathon BBQ 

1 - 11 p.m. 

Tuva Space 

3192 Adeline 

The First Annual Transbay Skronkathon Barbecue. Dozens of Bay Area musicians will play “multi-conceptual-deconstructed-creative-music.” Charcoal provided, bring your own items to barbecue. Free. 

649-8744 

 

The Wizard School of Magic 

1:30 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, “Benny and Bebe and The Wizard School of Magic” is inspired by the Harry Potter stories. Learn what it takes to become a real wizard. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

PedalPower 

8:30 a.m. 

Lake Merritt Garden Center 

666 Bellevue Avenue, Oakland 

Bike ride and pancake brunch fundraiser for the Asian Domestic Violence Clinic which provides free or low-cost legal services for abused women and children in the East Bay. Fourteen mile ride from Lake Merritt to Portview Park and back. $5 - $25. 

415-567-6255


Marching for cancellation of poor countries’ debts

By A. Jean Lesher
Friday July 13, 2001

You’d think that at the age of 68 I’d have something better to do than march in the streets of Genoa facing menacing Italian polizie armed with gas masks and truncheons and the even more menacing anarchists and revolutionaries seeking opportunities to destroy property before the cameras. 

But no, this time I don’t have anything better to do.  

Occasionally I am moved to use my body to stand for more justice in this world – to march arm in arm with like-minded, non-violent folks. That can happen when my outrage at official abuses and the financial means mesh into a trip someplace to demonstrate for right and against wrong. I don’t do this often, you know, especially where violence may be a part of the picture. (We did march in Selma and Montegomery with Martin Luther King, Jr. nearly 40 years ago and had some scary times.)  

The leaders of the wealthy G-7 nations meeting in Genoa this July will face thousands of demonstrators from many countries demanding that these powerful leaders change the world so peace and justice can prevail. Among these thousands will be those of us from the international Jubilee movement focusing on the cancellation of external debts of the world’s most impoverished countries. Under monitoring from international organizations and local civic groups, the money saved on debt servicing must be spent on education, health, and the environment.  

My husband Bill and I are active in our Bay Area chapter of Jubilee USA Network, the American expression of the international movement with groups in 60 countries. (The Jubilee name comes from the biblical injunction in Leviticus to cancel the debts of all every 50 years and give a fresh start to those enslaved because of it.) These groups from the North and the South are committed to getting the crushing debt of poor countries cancelled. What is exciting about this movement is that it has caused substantive changes to be made by nations and international financial agencies. Public credit for this has been given to the pressure on politicians and decision-makers from ordinary folks and a few world figures, like the Irish rock star Bono and Pope John Paul II. We can make a difference – and have done so. In the U.S., it was a cliffhanging bipartisan effort to get the initial funding approved for debt relief last November with support from Bill Clinton and a campaign pledge from George W. Bush. There’s lots more to be done, of course. 

Another incentive for involvement in this movement is a recognition that all our American generosity in sending tons of food and clothing and disaster relief funds and toilet kits to people in poor countries through local charitable organizations is offset by the millions and even billions of dollars their governments are required to send back to wealthy nations in debt payments.  

For every dollar sent to the poorest countries in aid, $1.30 flows back to rich lenders in debt service payments. With incentives, their governments could put these payments into medicines, textbooks, clean water and HIV/AIDS prevention programs for their own citizens. We can change this by lobbying our legislators to do more than take just the first step approved last year.  

California Congresswomen Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters with more than a dozen other co-sponsors have a bill before Congress now, H.R. 1642, “The Debt Cancellation for the New Millennium Act.” It urges the President to negotiate with the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to make several changes to improve the HIPC (Heavily Indebted Poor Countries) Initiative – an Initiative that all knowledgeable experts agree badly needs changes before it continues to worsen economic conditions in eligible countries.  

The more we learn from Jubilee and the United Nations about the unjust way debts were incurred generations ago in dictator-led countries and the onerous and dehumanizing conditions that are enforced today for debt payments by financial institutions on subsequent generations, the more outraged fair-minded people must become. None of the so-called industrialized countries followed these conditions during their years of economic development. Countries like Zambia, where life expectancy is now falling below 30 years old, cannot afford to spend $3.4 million each week repaying debts – and that is after receiving all the debt relief on offer from the wealthy nations. Nearly all the HIPC countries are expected to pay nearly a third of their annual revenues in debt servicing. Most of the time they borrow more money to meet the payments and with compounded interest, their burden increases beyond payable levels. If they do not also borrow capital, they cannot develop industries or maintain infrastructures in their countries. The financial picture for most of these economies has rightly been called a form of debt slavery. The powerful symbol Jubilee uses to identify this is an iron chain with a broken link; its slogan is to “Break the Chains of Debt.”  

So Bill and I will be marching in Genoa on July 21, adding our bodies to the masses equally incensed at the arrogance of powerful countries (especially our own) acting like Scrooges in the world. We’ll be wearing our black tee-shirts with “Drop the Debt” on the front and, on the back, a quote from the former President of Tanzania, the late and much revered Julius Nyerere: “Must we starve our children to pay our debts?”  

 

A. Jean Lesher is a Berkeley resident 


Music

Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Special Duties, Oppressed Logic, Violent Society, Zero Bullsh*t, Born Dead; July 14: Lonely Kings, Onetime Angels, Stay Gold, Thought Riot, Youth Gone Wild; July 15, 5 p.m.: Bobbyteens, Los Rabbis, Finky Binks, Off Balance; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

Albatross Pub Music at 9 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 18: Whiskey Brothers; July 19: Keni “El Lebrijano.” 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Anna and Susie Laraine; 10 p.m., Bluesman Hideo Date; July 14: Ed Reed; 10:30 p.m., Ducksan Distones; July 15: Tina Marzelle; July 16: Renegade Sidemen; July 17: Joe Livotti Jazz Duo; July 18: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 19: Jazz Singer’s Collective; 1801 University Ave. 849-ANNA 

 

Ashkenaz July 13: 9:30 p.m., Tamazgha, lyrical North African guitar and Berber vocals. $10; July 14: 9:30 p.m., Paul Pena, Zulu Exiles, Tuvan throat singing and township jive. $12; July 15: 6 p.m., Food and Funk, Salsa dance and beginning Salsa lesson, Israeli food; July 17: 9 p.m., Rock n’ Blues with The Jennifer Will Band. $7; July 18: 9 p.m., Swamp boogie with Tee Fee, 8 p.m. dance lesson with Diana Costillo; July 19: 10 p.m., Dead DJ Nite with Digital Dave. $5; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Berkeley Art Center July 14: 7 p.m., Rhythm and Muse featuring Adelle and Jack Foley, open mike sign up at 6:30; July 15: Live Oak Concert with David Cheng, Marvin Sanders, Ari Hsu. 1275 Walnut Street 352-6643 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Freight & Salvage July 13: Jeremy Cohen's Violinjazz Vintage string swing $16.50; July 14: 10 a.m. - noon, Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live featuring author Walter Mosely, Ray’s Vast Basement, The Waikiki Steel Works, hyperventilation by monologist and movie star Josh Kornbluth, pianist Gini Wilson, plus other surprise guests and audience true stories. $12; July 15: Carol McComb, Sterling originals $17.50 Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 or 762-BASS or www.thefreight.org 

 

Jupiter July 13: UHF- Mod Rock from Portland. July 14: Fred Zimmerman Quartet- Local Piano and Jazz. July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8 p.m., Word Descara Series with Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell, Elmaz Abindader, and others; July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descara Series with Mingus Amungus, Seeking, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino, and others; July 15: 3:30 p.m., Domingo do Rumba- Local aces of Rumba, Cuban rhythm and dance; 7:30 p.m., Laborfest- this year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow” a historical journey towards a future society without classes or bosses; July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 15: 4:30 p.m., vocalist W. Allen Taylor; 5:30 p.m., jazz trio Michael Hauser Group. $5; July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 13: 8 p.m. “Doria Roberts & Making Waves” Featuring special guest slam poet Aya de Leon. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Starry Plough Pub Sunday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 9:45 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Drums and Tuba, Mega Mousse, $7; July 14: Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons, The John Shipe Band $7 3101 Shattuck Ave. 841-2082. 

 

“Opus Q” The East Bay Men’s Chorale premiere concert, July 13, 8:07 p.m. Under the direction of Jerry “J. R.” Foust and a repertoire including Copland, Bach, Handel, Bernstien, some Estonian, Latin and French. $11 general admission at University Lutheran Chapel (College and Haste), 664-0260 or www.opus-q.com 

 

“Joanne D. Carey and Brendan Carey” July 15: 4 p.m., A benefit for the Berkeley Arts Festival, the Carey’s perform original work. 2200 Shattuck Avenue 486-0411 

 

Theater 

 

“Romeo and Juliet” Through July 14, Thurs. - Sat. 8 p.m. Set in early 1930s just before the rise of Hitler in the Kit Kat Klub, Juliet is torn between ties to the Nazi party and Romeo’s Jewish heritage. $8 - $10. La Val’s Subterranean Theater 1834 Euclid 234-6046 

 

“A Life In the Theatre” Runs through July 15. Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. David Mamet play about the lives of two actors, considered a metaphor for life itself. Directed by Nancy Carlin. $30-$35. $26 preview nights. Berkeley City Club 2315 Durant 843-4822 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 14 - 15, 21- 22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

 

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Weds. 7 p.m., Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (After July 8 no Wednesday performance, no Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Moises Kaufman and Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of openly gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“Orphan” July 13 through August 5 (no show on July 20): Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Opens July 13, 8 p.m., presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. through August 11, plus Thursday, Aug. 9. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through August 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

Opera 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 13, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 15 and 22 at 7 p.m. July 14 at 2 p.m.  

$30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 13: 7 p.m., “An Actor’s Revenge,” 9:15 p.m., “Conflagration”; July 14: 7 p.m., “You and Me,” 8:50 p.m., “Man Hunt”; July 15: Family Classic “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”; July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

“Street Scene” July 15: 2 p.m., This 1931 film explores themes of antisemitism and identity in New York tenements. $2 donation. Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 1414 Walnut Street 848-0237 

 

Exhibits 

 

“Constitutional Shift” Through July 13, Tuesdays - Fridays, noon - 5 p.m. Permanence and personal journey link Hee Jae Suh, Ursula Neubauer and Marci Tackett. Korean-born Suh explores an inner psychological world with a dramatic series of self-portraits. Neubauer explores self-portraiture as a travel map of identity with multiple points of view. Tackett explores Antarctica’s other-worldly landscape in a series of stunning digital photographs. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 

 

“Watershed 2001” Through July 14, Wednesday - Sunday Noon - 5 p.m. Exhibition of painting, drawing, sculpture and installation that explore images and issues about our watershed. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“Rachel Davis and Benicia Gantner Works on Paper” Through July 14, Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Watercolors by Davis, mixed-media by Gantner. Opening reception June 13, 6 - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth St. 527-1214 www.traywick.com 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31, Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734  

 

“Bernard Maisner: Illuminated Manuscripts and Paintings” Through Aug. 8 Maisner works in miniature as well as in large scales, combining his mastery of medieval illumination, gold leafing, and modern painting techniques. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 849-2541 

 

“Musee des Hommages” Masterworks by Guy Colwell Faithful copies of several artists from the pasts, including Titian’s “The Venus of Urbino,” Cezanne’s “Still Life,” Picasso’s “Woman at a Mirror,” and Boticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

“New Visions: Introductions 2001” Through August 18, Wed. - Sat.: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Juried by Artist- Curator Rene Yanez and Robbin Henderson, Executive Director of the Berkeley Art Center, the exhibition features works from some of California’s up-and-coming artists. Reception July 12 from 6 - 8 p.m. Pro Arts 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9425 

 

“Geographies of My Heart” Collage paintings by Jennifer Colby through August 24; Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 

 

Images of Portugal Paintings by Sofia Berto Villas-Boas of her native land. Open after 5 p.m. Voulez-Vous 2930 College Ave. (at Elmwood) 

 

“Queens of Ethiopia: Intuitive Inspirations,” the exceptional art of Esete-Miriam A. Menkir. Through July 11. Women’s Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“The Decade of Change: 1900 - 1910” chronicles the transformation of the city of Berkeley in this 10 year period. Thursday through Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. Through September. Berkeley History Center, Veterans Memorial Building, 1931 Center St. Wheelchair accessible. 848-0181. Free.  

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s 2454 Telegraph Ave. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 14: Alexander Cockburn and John Strausbaugh discuss Cockburn’s book “Five Days That Shook the World” and Strausbaugh’s “Rock ‘Til You Drop” ; July 15: Jimmy Santiago Baca discusses “A Place to Stand”; July 16: “Critical Resistance to the Prison-Industrial Complex,” a panel discussion; July 17: Ralph Berberich, MD, discusses his memoir “Hit Below the Belt: Facing up to Prostate Cancer.”; Lonny Shavelson talks about the inadequacies of our current drug rehabilitation policies with “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System.” $2 donation. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s 1730 Fourth St. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Joe Di Prisco reading “Confessions of Brother Eli”; July 20: Lynne Hinton reads from her second novel, “The Things I know Best.” $2 donation. 559-9500 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8:00 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Poets and musicians collaborate across cultures. Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell and more. $10. July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Mingus Amungus, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino and more. $12. 2105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Poetry Nitro Weekly poetry open mike. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. July 16: Featuring the Silicon Valley Slam Team. Cafe de la Paz 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Tours 

 

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Free. University of California, Berkeley. 486-4387 

 

Berkeley City Club Tours 2315 Durant Ave., Berkeley. The fourth Sunday of every month, Noon - 4 p.m. $2 848-7800  

 

Golden Gate Live Steamers Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Lomas Cantadas Drive at the south end of Tilden Regional Park Small locomotives, meticulously scaled to size. Trains run Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sunday, noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623  

 

 

Dance 

“Ganga-Ashtakam” July 15: 2 p.m., Indian Bharata Natyam classical dance celebrating the Indian river and goddess Ganga. Dancers Anuradha Murali, Shilpa Sejpal, and Gopitha Tharmalingam. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

 

Museums 

 

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  

 

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 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation on October 1. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until October 1, 2001: “Ishi and the Invention of Yahi Culture.” “Sites Along the Nile: Rescuing Ancient Egypt.” “The Art of Research: Nelson Graburn and the Aesthetics of Inuit Sculpture.” “Tzintzuntzan, Mexico: Photographs by George Foster.”  

$2 general; $1 seniors; $.50 children age 17 and under; free on Thursdays. Wednesday, Friday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kroeber Hall, Bancroft Way and College Ave. 643-7648 or www.qal.berkeley.edu/~hearst/ 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “Science in Toyland,” through Sept. 9. Exhibit uses toys to demonstrate scientific principles and to help develop children's thinking processes. Susan Cerny’s collection of over 200 tops from around the world. “Space Weather,” through Sept. 2. Learn about solar cycles, space weather, the cause of the Aurorae and recent discoveries made by leading astronomers. This interactive exhibit lets visitors access near real-time data from the Sun and space, view interactive videos and find out about a variety of solar activities. “Within the Human Brain,” ongoing. Visitors test their cranial nerves, play skeeball, master mazes, match musical tones and construct stories inside a simulated “rat cage” of learning experiments. “Saturday Night Stargazing,” First and third Saturdays each month. 8 - 10 p.m., LHS plaza. Space Weather Exhibit now - Sept. 2; now - Sept. 9 Science in Toyland; Saturdays 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. 642-5132 

 

Holt Planetarium Programs are recommended for age 8 and up; children under age 6 will not be admitted. $2 in addition to regular museum admission. “Constellations Tonight” Ongoing. Using a simple star map, learn to identify the most prominent constellations for the season in the planetarium sky. Daily, 3:30 p.m. $7 general; $5 seniors, students, disabled, and youths age 7 to 18; $3 children age 3 to 5 ; free children age 2 and younger. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu  

 

The UC Berkeley Art Museum is closed for renovations until the fall.


Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Special Duties, Oppressed Logic, Violent Society, Zero Bullsh*t, Born Dead; July 14: Lonely Kings, Onetime Angels, Stay Gold, Thought Riot, Youth Gone Wild; July 15, 5 p.m.: Bobbyteens, Los Rabbis, Finky Binks, Off Balance; 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

Albatross Pub Music at 9 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 18: Whiskey Brothers; July 19: Keni “El Lebrijano.” 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Anna and Susie Laraine; 10 p.m., Bluesman Hideo Date; July 14: Ed Reed; 10:30 p.m., Ducksan Distones; July 15: Tina Marzelle; July 16: Renegade Sidemen; July 17: Joe Livotti Jazz Duo; July 18: Bob Schoen Jazz Quartet; July 19: Jazz Singer’s Collective; 1801 University Ave. 849-ANNA 

 

Ashkenaz July 13: 9:30 p.m., Tamazgha, lyrical North African guitar and Berber vocals. $10; July 14: 9:30 p.m., Paul Pena, Zulu Exiles, Tuvan throat singing and township jive. $12; July 15: 6 p.m., Food and Funk, Salsa dance and beginning Salsa lesson, Israeli food; July 17: 9 p.m., Rock n’ Blues with The Jennifer Will Band. $7; July 18: 9 p.m., Swamp boogie with Tee Fee, 8 p.m. dance lesson with Diana Costillo; July 19: 10 p.m., Dead DJ Nite with Digital Dave. $5; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Berkeley Art Center July 14: 7 p.m., Rhythm and Muse featuring Adelle and Jack Foley, open mike sign up at 6:30; July 15: Live Oak Concert with David Cheng, Marvin Sanders, Ari Hsu. 1275 Walnut Street 352-6643 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Freight & Salvage July 13: Jeremy Cohen's Violinjazz Vintage string swing $16.50; July 14: 10 a.m. - noon, Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live featuring author Walter Mosely, Ray’s Vast Basement, The Waikiki Steel Works, hyperventilation by monologist and movie star Josh Kornbluth, pianist Gini Wilson, plus other surprise guests and audience true stories. $12; July 15: Carol McComb, Sterling originals $17.50 Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 or 762-BASS or www.thefreight.org 

 

Jupiter July 13: UHF- Mod Rock from Portland. July 14: Fred Zimmerman Quartet- Local Piano and Jazz. July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8 p.m., Word Descara Series with Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell, Elmaz Abindader, and others; July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descara Series with Mingus Amungus, Seeking, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino, and others; July 15: 3:30 p.m., Domingo do Rumba- Local aces of Rumba, Cuban rhythm and dance; 7:30 p.m., Laborfest- this year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow” a historical journey towards a future society without classes or bosses; July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 15: 4:30 p.m., vocalist W. Allen Taylor; 5:30 p.m., jazz trio Michael Hauser Group. $5; July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 13: 8 p.m. “Doria Roberts & Making Waves” Featuring special guest slam poet Aya de Leon. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Starry Plough Pub Sunday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 9:45 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Drums and Tuba, Mega Mousse, $7; July 14: Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons, The John Shipe Band $7 3101 Shattuck Ave. 841-2082. 

 

“Opus Q” The East Bay Men’s Chorale premiere concert, July 13, 8:07 p.m. Under the direction of Jerry “J. R.” Foust and a repertoire including Copland, Bach, Handel, Bernstien, some Estonian, Latin and French. $11 general admission at University Lutheran Chapel (College and Haste), 664-0260 or www.opus-q.com 

 

“Joanne D. Carey and Brendan Carey” July 15: 4 p.m., A benefit for the Berkeley Arts Festival, the Carey’s perform original work. 2200 Shattuck Avenue 486-0411 

 

Theater 

 

“Romeo and Juliet” Through July 14, Thurs. - Sat. 8 p.m. Set in early 1930s just before the rise of Hitler in the Kit Kat Klub, Juliet is torn between ties to the Nazi party and Romeo’s Jewish heritage. $8 - $10. La Val’s Subterranean Theater 1834 Euclid 234-6046 

 

“A Life In the Theatre” Runs through July 15. Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. David Mamet play about the lives of two actors, considered a metaphor for life itself. Directed by Nancy Carlin. $30-$35. $26 preview nights. Berkeley City Club 2315 Durant 843-4822 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 14 - 15, 21- 22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

 

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Weds. 7 p.m., Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (After July 8 no Wednesday performance, no Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Moises Kaufman and Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of openly gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“Orphan” July 13 through August 5 (no show on July 20): Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Opens July 13, 8 p.m., presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. through August 11, plus Thursday, Aug. 9. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through August 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

Opera 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 13, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 15 and 22 at 7 p.m. July 14 at 2 p.m.  

$30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 13: 7 p.m., “An Actor’s Revenge,” 9:15 p.m., “Conflagration”; July 14: 7 p.m., “You and Me,” 8:50 p.m., “Man Hunt”; July 15: Family Classic “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”; July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

“Street Scene” July 15: 2 p.m., This 1931 film explores themes of antisemitism and identity in New York tenements. $2 donation. Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 1414 Walnut Street 848-0237 

 

Exhibits 

 

“Constitutional Shift” Through July 13, Tuesdays - Fridays, noon - 5 p.m. Permanence and personal journey link Hee Jae Suh, Ursula Neubauer and Marci Tackett. Korean-born Suh explores an inner psychological world with a dramatic series of self-portraits. Neubauer explores self-portraiture as a travel map of identity with multiple points of view. Tackett explores Antarctica’s other-worldly landscape in a series of stunning digital photographs. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 

 

“Watershed 2001” Through July 14, Wednesday - Sunday Noon - 5 p.m. Exhibition of painting, drawing, sculpture and installation that explore images and issues about our watershed. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“Rachel Davis and Benicia Gantner Works on Paper” Through July 14, Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Watercolors by Davis, mixed-media by Gantner. Opening reception June 13, 6 - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth St. 527-1214 www.traywick.com 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31, Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734  

 

“Bernard Maisner: Illuminated Manuscripts and Paintings” Through Aug. 8 Maisner works in miniature as well as in large scales, combining his mastery of medieval illumination, gold leafing, and modern painting techniques. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 849-2541 

 

“Musee des Hommages” Masterworks by Guy Colwell Faithful copies of several artists from the pasts, including Titian’s “The Venus of Urbino,” Cezanne’s “Still Life,” Picasso’s “Woman at a Mirror,” and Boticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

“New Visions: Introductions 2001” Through August 18, Wed. - Sat.: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Juried by Artist- Curator Rene Yanez and Robbin Henderson, Executive Director of the Berkeley Art Center, the exhibition features works from some of California’s up-and-coming artists. Reception July 12 from 6 - 8 p.m. Pro Arts 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9425 

 

“Geographies of My Heart” Collage paintings by Jennifer Colby through August 24; Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 

 

Images of Portugal Paintings by Sofia Berto Villas-Boas of her native land. Open after 5 p.m. Voulez-Vous 2930 College Ave. (at Elmwood) 

 

“Queens of Ethiopia: Intuitive Inspirations,” the exceptional art of Esete-Miriam A. Menkir. Through July 11. Women’s Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“The Decade of Change: 1900 - 1910” chronicles the transformation of the city of Berkeley in this 10 year period. Thursday through Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. Through September. Berkeley History Center, Veterans Memorial Building, 1931 Center St. Wheelchair accessible. 848-0181. Free.  

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s 2454 Telegraph Ave. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 14: Alexander Cockburn and John Strausbaugh discuss Cockburn’s book “Five Days That Shook the World” and Strausbaugh’s “Rock ‘Til You Drop” ; July 15: Jimmy Santiago Baca discusses “A Place to Stand”; July 16: “Critical Resistance to the Prison-Industrial Complex,” a panel discussion; July 17: Ralph Berberich, MD, discusses his memoir “Hit Below the Belt: Facing up to Prostate Cancer.”; Lonny Shavelson talks about the inadequacies of our current drug rehabilitation policies with “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System.” $2 donation. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s 1730 Fourth St. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Joe Di Prisco reading “Confessions of Brother Eli”; July 20: Lynne Hinton reads from her second novel, “The Things I know Best.” $2 donation. 559-9500 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8:00 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Poets and musicians collaborate across cultures. Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell and more. $10. July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Mingus Amungus, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino and more. $12. 2105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Poetry Nitro Weekly poetry open mike. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. July 16: Featuring the Silicon Valley Slam Team. Cafe de la Paz 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Tours 

 

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Free. University of California, Berkeley. 486-4387 

 

Berkeley City Club Tours 2315 Durant Ave., Berkeley. The fourth Sunday of every month, Noon - 4 p.m. $2 848-7800  

 

Golden Gate Live Steamers Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Lomas Cantadas Drive at the south end of Tilden Regional Park Small locomotives, meticulously scaled to size. Trains run Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sunday, noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623  

 

 

Dance 

“Ganga-Ashtakam” July 15: 2 p.m., Indian Bharata Natyam classical dance celebrating the Indian river and goddess Ganga. Dancers Anuradha Murali, Shilpa Sejpal, and Gopitha Tharmalingam. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

 

Museums 

 

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  

 

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 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation on October 1. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until October 1, 2001: “Ishi and the Invention of Yahi Culture.” “Sites Along the Nile: Rescuing Ancient Egypt.” “The Art of Research: Nelson Graburn and the Aesthetics of Inuit Sculpture.” “Tzintzuntzan, Mexico: Photographs by George Foster.”  

$2 general; $1 seniors; $.50 children age 17 and under; free on Thursdays. Wednesday, Friday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kroeber Hall, Bancroft Way and College Ave. 643-7648 or www.qal.berkeley.edu/~hearst/ 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “Science in Toyland,” through Sept. 9. Exhibit uses toys to demonstrate scientific principles and to help develop children's thinking processes. Susan Cerny’s collection of over 200 tops from around the world. “Space Weather,” through Sept. 2. Learn about solar cycles, space weather, the cause of the Aurorae and recent discoveries made by leading astronomers. This interactive exhibit lets visitors access near real-time data from the Sun and space, view interactive videos and find out about a variety of solar activities. “Within the Human Brain,” ongoing. Visitors test their cranial nerves, play skeeball, master mazes, match musical tones and construct stories inside a simulated “rat cage” of learning experiments. “Saturday Night Stargazing,” First and third Saturdays each month. 8 - 10 p.m., LHS plaza. Space Weather Exhibit now - Sept. 2; now - Sept. 9 Science in Toyland; Saturdays 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. 642-5132 

 

Holt Planetarium Programs are recommended for age 8 and up; children under age 6 will not be admitted. $2 in addition to regular museum admission. “Constellations Tonight” Ongoing. Using a simple star map, learn to identify the most prominent constellations for the season in the planetarium sky. Daily, 3:30 p.m. $7 general; $5 seniors, students, disabled, and youths age 7 to 18; $3 children age 3 to 5 ; free children age 2 and younger. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu  

 

The UC Berkeley Art Museum is closed for renovations until the fall.


Summer Sports Calendar

Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Camps 

 

City of Berkeley Summer Fun Camps 

Through August 17 

Summer Fun Camps for children feature sports, games, arts and crafts and special events. Events and trips will be planned in and out of the Berkeley area. Supervised play and activities held Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. for kids 5-12 years of age. Before and after care will be available at additional cost. Fees on a sliding scale. 

Sites: Frances Albrier, Southwest Berkeley – 644-8515; James Kenney, West Berkeley – 644-8511; Live Oak Park, North Berkeley – 644-8513; Willard Club House, Southeast Berkeley – 644-8517; MLK Youth Services Center, South Berkeley – 644-6226. 

 

P.A.L. Adventure Camp 3 

August 6-24 

Camp for ages 11-17. Three week camp will provide skills for overnight and wilderness camping. First two weeks include instruction on cooking, first aid, cleanup and low impact camping. Rafting, ropes course and daily hikes. Week three is five days in a California wilderness area using newly-learned skills. $180, limited scholarships available. Call 845-7193 for more information. 

 

Berkeley Tennis Club Kids  

Camp 

Sessions begin July 23 and August 6 

These camps are designed for the beginner to low advanced player aged 7-14. Each session is two weeks long. The first week emphasizes proper stroke and footwork techniques, conditioning and game play. The second week concentrates on competition on both an individual and team level. Students will be divided according to ability, so they progress at their own pace. Student-intructor ratio of 6/1. Clinics are 9 a.m. to noon. $250 for B.T.C. members, $300 for non-members. Call 841-9023 for information. 

 

Sports 

 

City youth Baseball 

Summer baseball program for boys and girls ages 5-15. The focus is on developing skills, sportsmanship and enjoyment rather than competitiveness. Leagues are structured to address both skill level and age group. Players are assigned to teams on a city-wide basis. Beginner teams (5-6 years) meet weekdays from noon to 2 p.m. All other teams meet from 3:30 to 7 p.m. weekdays or 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. All players must participate. Playoffs and awards will follow the regular season in older leagues. Fees: $34 ages 5-8 ($70 non-resident), $40 ages 9-15($86 non-resident). For more information call 981-5153. 

 

City adult softball 

Leagues available for men, women and co-rec. Three levels of competition. Games played weekday evenings, Saturday afternoons and evenings. 10 games plus playoffs. $561 per team. Call 981-5150 for more information. 

 

City tennis lessons 

Three sessions throughout summer. 

Youth and adult lessons available for beginner, advanced beginner and intermediate. 10 one-hour lessons. $45 for youth ages 8-15, $65 for adults. Call 981-5150 for more information. 

Twilight basketball 

July 13-August 25 

The City of Berkeley Twilight Basketball Program is an educational sports program which offers youths ages 11-18 the opportunity to play in the competitive league and be exposed to educational workshops. Subjects include tobacco prevention, HIV/STD prevention, domestic violence prevention, academic improvement and youth violence prevention. All participants must attend a one-hour workshop before each game in order to play. Free, players recieve a jersey. Ten game season with playoffs at MLK Youth Services Center. For more information call Ginsi Bryant at 644-6226. 

 

City adult basketball 

Summer league 

Open, competitive league with games on Monday and Wednesday evenings at the MLK Youth Services Center. All games officicated by certified referees. Awards for top three teams. Teams already formed for summer, but some have openings. Interested players should show up and talk to coaches about playing. 

 

 

Programs 

 

City-Wide Playground  

Programs 

Through August 17 

Free supervised activities include arts and crafts, games, sports, special event days and local trips. Program hours are noon to 5 p.m. Proof of Berkeley residency required at registration. 

Sites: All Play Together – 981-5150; Rosa Parks – 981-5150; Malcolm X School – 644-6226. 

 

Summer Teen Program 

Through August 27 

Events include adventure trips, swimming, sports, games, cooking, educational workshops and special local events. Call your local center for details, registration and costs. Sliding scale. 

Sites: Frances Albrier, Southwest Berkeley – 644-8515; James Kenney, West Berkeley – 644-8511; Live Oak Park, North Berkeley – 644-8513; Willard Park Club House, Southeast Berkeley – 644-8517; MLK Youth Services Center, South Berkeley – 644-6226. 

 

 

 

P.A.L. Adventures in Sailing 

Overnight sails tour the San Francisco Bay. Visit the Bay Model, Angel Island, Treasure Island and Sausalito. Voyage dates: July 13-14 and 28-29, August 9-10, 16-17 and 23-24. $20 per voyage. Call 845-7193 for more information. 

 

Adult Tennis Workshops 

Session begins July 23 

These four-day sessions at the Berkeley Tennis Club are designed to five adults a chance to improve their game in just one concentrated week. Two levels offered – NTPR rating between 4.0-4.5 and 3.5-below. Both sessions will have a doubles strategy emphasis. $110 per session. Call 841-9023 for more details. 

 

P.A.L. Fishing Trips 

July 26, August 20, August 30 

Hands Extended will be having three fishing outings this summer for kids ages 7-15. The first one is at San Pablo Dam. Transportation, food and rods, reels and bait will be provided. Registration is required. Deadline to register is 07/12/01. Please call 845-3161. 

 

To submit information for the Berkeley Daily Planet Summer Sports Calendar, please e-mail information to sports@berkeleydailyplanet.net or send to Sports, 2076 University Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704.


City moves quickly to evict rats

By John Geluardi Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

A group of public housing residents complained to the City Council Tuesday of a rat infestation they said is threatening their children and keeping them up at night. 

“It’s appalling that this is going on,” Mayor Shirley Dean responded and asked City Manager Weldon Rucker what he could do to remedy the situation. 

The city had already been notified of the rat infestation, Rucker said, and had immediately dispatched the Environmental Health Division to assess the situation in the area of the 11 units of public housing on Ward Street at Martin Luther King Jr. Way. 

“We’re on top of the problem as we speak,” Rucker said Tuesday. 

Some of the residents who attended the council meeting carried handwritten signs, including one that read: “Public housing residents on Ward Street deserve to live in a community that is not infested with rats.” 

Four residents addressed the council during the public comment portion of the meeting. 

“I’m afraid and there are other single mothers with children who are afraid, too,” said tearful resident Lynetta Taylor, who shares a unit with three of her children and her one-year-old grandson. “Something has to be done before a child or an adult is injured.” 

Taylor added that she often stays up late into the night making sure her children are not bothered by the rats. 

Only one resident, Rose Flippin, who attended the meeting with her 3-year-old daughter, said she has seen evidence of rats inside her unit. Other residents said they have heard rats in the walls or have seen them in their backyards. “I can hardly sleep at night because I can hear the rats scratching and scurrying around,” Flippin said. 

Arrietta Chakos, the city manager’s chief of staff, said on Thursday the problem is primarily the result of two conditions, improperly contained debris and refuse in front and back of the housing units and overgrown grass and weeds on Berkeley Unified School District property to the north and east of the housing. 

The Berkeley Alternative High School and the King Early Childhood Development Center are adjacent to the Ward Street housing. 

Alex Schnieder, director of the Environmental Health Division, said those conditions have led to a “significant” rat problem in the vicinity of the townhouse-styled homes. “Our inspectors saw rats in the area during daylight,” he said. “That’s a sign of a significant problem because rats are usually night creatures.” 

Chakos said the city has put together an action plan that includes a coordinated effort with the school district to clean up debris and keep the school district’s lawns trimmed and weeded.  

Simultaneously Western Exterminator, a private company that contracts with the city, will strategically deploy rodent poison contained in food around the units and on the school district property. Chakos said rats that ingest the poison will usually die within 48 hours. 

“We have to make sure no tenants are hurt, so we are being rather assertive with the rodent extermination,” Chakos said. 

In addition, all of the units will be inspected to make sure any possible openings accessible by rodents are sealed.  

To avoid future problems, residents will be provided with additional containers for storing garbage and recycling until it can be hauled away, Chakos said. 

Taylor said the city has taken quick action on the rat problem and that she was pleased the city manager called her personally and asked her to call him if she felt the problem wasn’t being addressed. 

But Taylor said she has reported other maintenance problems in her unit to the Berkeley Housing Authority and it has sometimes taken months for a response. 

“I had a leak in my kitchen sink that was flooding the floor to the point of where we put a blanket on the floor and had to wring it out every morning,” she said. “I called the Housing Authority at least 11 times before I could get them to do anything.” 

Interim Housing Director Stephen Barton said a backlog of repair work was created because the maintenance company, hired by the city to take care of BHA housing, was irresponsible and that a new company was hired within the last two months. “At last the log jam is breaking up and we’re starting to get to some of these problems,” he said.


Responsible owner ship, not new laws, will curb dangerous pit bulls

Friday July 13, 2001

Editor: 

Unbelievable, just plain unbelievable! I never thought I’d read such idiocy as was penned in your “Letters to the Editor” on Monday, July 9th. The headline “Walking pit bulls off-leash is like carrying around a loaded gun” belies the thinking of the feeble minded. I’d have to add this phrase to MY collection of self canceling phrases. 

Why is the concept of animate objects (a dog) versus inanimate objects (a gun) so terribly hard to comprehend? Guns simply cannot shoot themselves. Yeah, okay, a dog can bite you without help from a human. The dog/loaded gun comparison is totally bogus and most simply isn’t the point. The point IS responsibility. 

When was the last time anyone ever thought to assume a modicum of personal responsibility. Oh no, that’s too hard! Let’s have the government pass another law. If we could just have one more law, we could all live in harmony and bliss. Hello! Just who do you think will be there to enforce the law? The police would be much obliged, however they can’t be everywhere, all the time. A watchful neighborhood could have been more though. 

The only thing that will save you and your precious need for security is accepting responsibility and helping others to do the same. Another state dog law would not have saved Shawn Jones from the horror he experienced and the paid he suffers now. A responsible dog owner obeying the existing leash law would have. 

If you want a safer more harmonious neighborhood; Stand up, step up, and be responsible. Above all stop whining for the government to solve all your problems. 

 

G. Seegmiller 

Berkeley


Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Music 

 

Berkeley Art Center July 14: 7 p.m., Rhythm and Muse featuring Adelle and Jack Foley, open mike sign up at 6:30; July 15: Live Oak Concert with David Cheng, Marvin Sanders, Ari Hsu. 1275 Walnut Street 352-6643 

 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery July 22: 4 p.m., Pianist Jerry Kuderna performs the complete piano music of Arnold Schönberg. Suggested donation $10; 2200 Shattuck Ave. 665-9496 

 

Freight & Salvage July 13: Jeremy Cohen's Violinjazz Vintage string swing $16.50; July 14: 10 a.m. - noon, Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live featuring author Walter Mosely, Ray’s Vast Basement, The Waikiki Steel Works, hyperventilation by monologist and movie star Josh Kornbluth, pianist Gini Wilson, plus other surprise guests and audience true stories. $12; July 15: Carol McComb, Sterling originals $17.50 Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 or 762-BASS or www.thefreight.org 

 

Jupiter July 13: UHF- Mod Rock from Portland. July 14: Fred Zimmerman Quartet- Local Piano and Jazz. July 17: Amaldecor- Combination of traditional Eastern European and French Swing. July 18: Cannonball w/ DJ Aspect- “hiphop-groove-latin-jazz-funk”. July 20: Koochen & Hoomen- local electronic. All music starts at 8:00 p.m.www.jupiterbeer.com; or call the hotline: THE-ROCK (843-7625)  

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8 p.m., Word Descara Series with Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell, Elmaz Abindader, and others; July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descara Series with Mingus Amungus, Seeking, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino, and others; July 15: 3:30 p.m., Domingo do Rumba- Local aces of Rumba, Cuban rhythm and dance; 7:30 p.m., Laborfest- this year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow” a historical journey towards a future society without classes or bosses; July 19: 8:00 p.m., Rebecca Riots with Kim & Krista- Singer/songwriters from Berkeley; July 20: 8 p.m., Collective Soul- hip-hop, spoken word, 9:30 p.m., Mermelada’s Latin American music jam with Quique Cruz; 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 15: 4:30 p.m., vocalist W. Allen Taylor; 5:30 p.m., jazz trio Michael Hauser Group. $5; July 22: 4:30 p.m. Vocalist Nanda Berman; 5:30 p.m., David McGee Group. $5. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 13: 8 p.m. “Doria Roberts & Making Waves” Featuring special guest slam poet Aya de Leon. $8-20 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds. 594-4000 ext. 687 

 

Starry Plough Pub Sunday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 9:45 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Drums and Tuba, Mega Mousse, $7; July 14: Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons, The John Shipe Band $7 3101 Shattuck Ave. 841-2082. 

 

“Opus Q” The East Bay Men’s Chorale premiere concert, July 13, 8:07 p.m. Under the direction of Jerry “J. R.” Foust and a repertoire including Copland, Bach, Handel, Bernstien, some Estonian, Latin and French. $11 general admission at University Lutheran Chapel (College and Haste), 664-0260 or www.opus-q.com 

 

“Joanne D. Carey and Brendan Carey” July 15: 4 p.m., A benefit for the Berkeley Arts Festival, the Carey’s perform original work. 2200 Shattuck Avenue 486-0411 

 

 

 

“Romeo and Juliet” Through July 14, Thurs. - Sat. 8 p.m. Set in early 1930s just before the rise of Hitler in the Kit Kat Klub, Juliet is torn between ties to the Nazi party and Romeo’s Jewish heritage. $8 - $10. La Val’s Subterranean Theater 1834 Euclid 234-6046 

 

“A Life In the Theatre” Runs through July 15. Wed. - Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. David Mamet play about the lives of two actors, considered a metaphor for life itself. Directed by Nancy Carlin. $30-$35. $26 preview nights. Berkeley City Club 2315 Durant 843-4822 

 

“Comedy of Errors” July 14 - 15, 21- 22: 1 p.m.: Free park performance of this Shakespeare comedy by Women’s Will, the Bay Area’s all-female Shakespeare company. July 14 and 15 at John Hinkel Park, Southampton at Somerset Place, July 21 and 22 at Live Oak Park, 1301 Shattuck Avenue at Berryman. 415-567-1758  

“The Laramie Project” Extended through July 22: Tues. and Thur. -Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (No Sunday matinee on July 22.) Written by Moises Kaufmen and members of Tectonic Theater Project, directed by Moises Kaufman. Tectonic members traveled to Laramie, Wyo., after the murder of gay student Matthew Shepherd. The play is about the community and the impact Shepherd’s death had on its members. $10 - $50. The Roda Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“The Skin of Our Teeth” Through July 29: Tues. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m. Part of the California Shakespeare Festival, a Thorton Wilder play about a typical family enduring various catastrophes. $10 - $146. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, off Highway 24 at the Shakespeare Festival Way/Gateway Exit. 548-9666 

 

“Orphan” July 13 through August 5 (no show on July 20): Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m. Lyle Kessler’s dark comedy about a mysterious stranger invading the home of two orphaned brothers. $15. The Speakeasy Theater, 2016 Seventh St. 326-8493 

 

“The Great Sebastians” Opens July 13, 8 p.m., presented by Actors Ensemble of Berkeley. Friday and Saturday evenings 8 p.m. through August 11, plus Thursday, Aug. 9. A tale about a mind-reading act touring behind the Iron Curtain. A communist general believes the act and “invites” the Sebastians to his villa where the humor and excitement follows. $10. Live Oak Theatre, 1301 Shattuck (at Berryman). For reservations call 528-5620 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through August 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. No performances July 14 and 15, special dawn performance on August 12 at 7 a.m. A free park performance by the Shotgun Players of Euripides’ play about choices and priorities. With a masked chorus, singing, dancing, and live music. Feel free to bring food and something soft to sit on. John Hinkel Park, Southhampton Place at Arlington Avenue (different locations July 7 and 8). 655-0813 

 

Opera 

 

“Carmen” Berkeley Opera takes a fresh look at George Bizet’s popular opera with a new English-language adaptation by David Scott Marley. Marley’s version restores many lines that had been cut from the familiar version, and includes additional material from the 1846 French novella the opera is based on. “It’s a little darker and sexier than the opera most people think they know,” says Marley. July 13, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. July 15 and 22 at 7 p.m. July 14 at 2 p.m.  

$30 general, $25 seniors, $15 youth & handicapped, $10 student rush. Julia Morgan Theater 2640 College Ave. 841-1903 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 18: 7 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Resistance as Democracy” by Larry Mosque, “The International” by Peter Miller, “Songs of the Thai Labor Movement” by Wayne. $7 donation. July 29: 2:00 p.m., Laborfest- International Working Class Film & Video Festival. “Not in my Garden” by Video 48. $7. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Pacific Film Archive July 13: 7 p.m., “An Actor’s Revenge,” 9:15 p.m., “Conflagration”; July 14: 7 p.m., “You and Me,” 8:50 p.m., “Man Hunt”; July 15: Family Classic “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”; July 17: 7:30 p.m., “Bangkok Bahrain”; July 18: 7:30 p.m., “Kiss Me Quick” , 9 p.m., “The Flesh Eaters”; July 19: 7:30 p.m., “Golem -- The Spirit of Exile”; July 20: 7 p.m., “Fires on the Plain”, 9:05 p.m., “Harp of Burma”; New PFA Theatre, 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

“Street Scene” July 15: 2 p.m., This 1931 film explores themes of antisemitism and identity in New York tenements. $2 donation. Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 1414 Walnut Street 848-0237 

 

Exhibits 

 

“Constitutional Shift” Through July 13, Tuesdays - Fridays, noon - 5 p.m. Permanence and personal journey link Hee Jae Suh, Ursula Neubauer and Marci Tackett. Korean-born Suh explores an inner psychological world with a dramatic series of self-portraits. Neubauer explores self-portraiture as a travel map of identity with multiple points of view. Tackett explores Antarctica’s other-worldly landscape in a series of stunning digital photographs. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 

 

“Watershed 2001” Through July 14, Wednesday - Sunday Noon - 5 p.m. Exhibition of painting, drawing, sculpture and installation that explore images and issues about our watershed. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“Rachel Davis and Benicia Gantner Works on Paper” Through July 14, Tues. - Sat., 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Watercolors by Davis, mixed-media by Gantner. Opening reception June 13, 6 - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth St. 527-1214 www.traywick.com 

 

“The Trip to Here: Paintings and Ghosts by Marty Brooks” Through July 31, Tues. - Sun. 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. View Brooks’ first California show at Bison Brewing Company 2598 Telegraph Ave. 841-7734  

 

“Bernard Maisner: Illuminated Manuscripts and Paintings” Through Aug. 8 Maisner works in miniature as well as in large scales, combining his mastery of medieval illumination, gold leafing, and modern painting techniques. Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 849-2541 

 

“Musee des Hommages” Masterworks by Guy Colwell Faithful copies of several artists from the pasts, including Titian’s “The Venus of Urbino,” Cezanne’s “Still Life,” Picasso’s “Woman at a Mirror,” and Boticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

“New Visions: Introductions 2001” Through August 18, Wed. - Sat.: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Juried by Artist- Curator Rene Yanez and Robbin Henderson, Executive Director of the Berkeley Art Center, the exhibition features works from some of California’s up-and-coming artists. Reception July 12 from 6 - 8 p.m. Pro Arts 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9425 

 

“Geographies of My Heart” Collage paintings by Jennifer Colby through August 24; Flora Lamson Hewlett Library 2400 Ridge Rd. 649-2541 

 

Images of Portugal Paintings by Sofia Berto Villas-Boas of her native land. Open after 5 p.m. Voulez-Vous 2930 College Ave. (at Elmwood) 

 

“Queens of Ethiopia: Intuitive Inspirations,” the exceptional art of Esete-Miriam A. Menkir. Through July 11. Women’s Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“The Decade of Change: 1900 - 1910” chronicles the transformation of the city of Berkeley in this 10 year period. Thursday through Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. Through September. Berkeley History Center, Veterans Memorial Building, 1931 Center St. Wheelchair accessible. 848-0181. Free.  

 

Readings 

 

Cody’s 2454 Telegraph Ave. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 14: Alexander Cockburn and John Strausbaugh discuss Cockburn’s book “Five Days That Shook the World” and Strausbaugh’s “Rock ‘Til You Drop” ; July 15: Jimmy Santiago Baca discusses “A Place to Stand”; July 16: “Critical Resistance to the Prison-Industrial Complex,” a panel discussion; July 17: Ralph Berberich, MD, discusses his memoir “Hit Below the Belt: Facing up to Prostate Cancer.”; Lonny Shavelson talks about the inadequacies of our current drug rehabilitation policies with “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System.” $2 donation. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s 1730 Fourth St. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. July 13: Joe Di Prisco reading “Confessions of Brother Eli”; July 20: Lynne Hinton reads from her second novel, “The Things I know Best.” $2 donation. 559-9500 

 

La Pena Cultural Center July 13: 8:00 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Poets and musicians collaborate across cultures. Devorah Major, Babatunde Lea, Kash Killian, Richard Howell and more. $10. July 14: 8:30 p.m., Word Descarga Series- Mingus Amungus, Melissa Lozano, Grito Serpertino and more. $12. 2105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

Poetry Nitro Weekly poetry open mike. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. July 16: Featuring the Silicon Valley Slam Team. Cafe de la Paz 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Tours 

 

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Free. University of California, Berkeley. 486-4387 

 

Berkeley City Club Tours 2315 Durant Ave., Berkeley. The fourth Sunday of every month, Noon - 4 p.m. $2 848-7800  

 

Golden Gate Live Steamers Grizzly Peak Boulevard and Lomas Cantadas Drive at the south end of Tilden Regional Park Small locomotives, meticulously scaled to size. Trains run Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rides: Sunday, noon to 3 p.m., weather permitting. 486-0623  

 

 

Dance 

“Ganga-Ashtakam” July 15: 2 p.m., Indian Bharata Natyam classical dance celebrating the Indian river and goddess Ganga. Dancers Anuradha Murali, Shilpa Sejpal, and Gopitha Tharmalingam. $5 - $10. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 Collage Ave. 925-798-1300 

 

 

Museums 

 

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  

 

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 

 

UC Berkeley Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology will close its exhibition galleries for renovation on October 1. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until October 1, 2001: “Ishi and the Invention of Yahi Culture.” “Sites Along the Nile: Rescuing Ancient Egypt.” “The Art of Research: Nelson Graburn and the Aesthetics of Inuit Sculpture.” “Tzintzuntzan, Mexico: Photographs by George Foster.”  

$2 general; $1 seniors; $.50 children age 17 and under; free on Thursdays. Wednesday, Friday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kroeber Hall, Bancroft Way and College Ave. 643-7648 or www.qal.berkeley.edu/~hearst/ 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “Science in Toyland,” through Sept. 9. Exhibit uses toys to demonstrate scientific principles and to help develop children's thinking processes. Susan Cerny’s collection of over 200 tops from around the world. “Space Weather,” through Sept. 2. Learn about solar cycles, space weather, the cause of the Aurorae and recent discoveries made by leading astronomers. This interactive exhibit lets visitors access near real-time data from the Sun and space, view interactive videos and find out about a variety of solar activities. “Within the Human Brain,” ongoing. Visitors test their cranial nerves, play skeeball, master mazes, match musical tones and construct stories inside a simulated “rat cage” of learning experiments. “Saturday Night Stargazing,” First and third Saturdays each month. 8 - 10 p.m., LHS plaza. Space Weather Exhibit now - Sept. 2; now - Sept. 9 Science in Toyland; Saturdays 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. $7 for adults; $5 for children 5-18; $3 for children 3-4. 642-5132 

 

Holt Planetarium Programs are recommended for age 8 and up; children under age 6 will not be admitted. $2 in addition to regular museum admission. “Constellations Tonight” Ongoing. Using a simple star map, learn to identify the most prominent constellations for the season in the planetarium sky. Daily, 3:30 p.m. $7 general; $5 seniors, students, disabled, and youths age 7 to 18; $3 children age 3 to 5 ; free children age 2 and younger. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Centennial Drive, UC Berkeley 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu  

 

The UC Berkeley Art Museum is closed for renovations until the fall.


Fund raising lags at Berkeley High

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Every wonder why Berkeley High – with all the graduates it sends to top notch universities, with its incredible roster of illustrious alumni – doesn’t have an endowment to rival that of a small liberal arts college? 

It sure isn’t because they don’t need one.  

The budget cuts have come in one disheartening wave after another in recent years, as the California legislators have failed to increase education funding to anywhere near the levels of other states. 

Whereas New York State funds its school at the rate of $10,000 per student per year, California antes up less that $7,000 per student per year, according to Berkeley School Board President Terry Doran. 

Just this spring the Berkeley Board of Education voted to cut a quarter of a million dollars out of Berkeley High’s budget, forcing the school to do without its on-campus suspension manager and the equivalent of 3.6 teachers. 

Berkeley High’s lack of funds has become something of a local legend, with parents pointing in disgust at the fact that the school can only afford one guidance counselor for each 500 students, or at the fact that in some classes the student/teacher ration tops 35-to-1. 

It’s not that Berkeley taxpayers haven’t been generous in their efforts to make up for the lack of state funding. Two big bond measures have passed with overwhelming support in the last decade alone, providing the dollars for the remodeling of the “G” and “H” classroom buildings, and the $30 million construction project underway today at the high school (adding a new library and media center, administrative offices, a student union, a cafeteria, and other much-needed facilities.) 

The Berkeley Public Schools Educational Excellence Project (BSEP) parcel tax, which provides millions each year to reduce class sizes by paying for more teachers, and to fund other enrichment programs at various school sites, has been approved by voters repeatedly since 1987. 

And Berkeley High parents, current and past, are doing their part to raise money for athletic teams, field trips, arts programs and more, through bake sales, car washes, etc.  

Those involved in more formal and significant fundraising efforts for Berkeley High, however, say its an uphill battle at best. No matter how many doctors, lawyers and CEOs there are among Berkeley High alumni – and there are many – either the leadership has been lacking to get a full-fledged fundraising campaign off the ground, or those who would lead have grown weary of fighting a losing battle. 

Unlike Schools like San Francisco’s Lowell High School or Santa Barbara High school, the Berkeley schools Alumni Association (which includes graduates from any Berkeley school, although it’s made up mostly of Berkeley High graduates) is not a particularly well-organized concern to begin with, alumni say.  

Of the 600 or so members in the group today, around two-thirds of them graduated prior to 1960, said Bill Bailey, former president of the Alumni Association and Berkeley High class of 1945. Of these, the vast majority no longer live in Berkeley – Bailey now lives in Orinda. The quarterly newsletter hasn’t been published for the last 10 months.  

For the “ol’ timers,” there is a perception that Berkeley High today is not the school they remember, Bailey said. Part of this might stem from policies that have become more “lenient” since the ’60s and ’70s, he speculated. But more than that, Bailey said, there is a negative image of public schools in general these days that makes people hesitant to donate money.  

For this, Bailey places much of the blame on a sensational media. 

“Newspapers don’t help the school situation because all they write about is the bad things,” Bailey said, recalling how much coverage a shooting at the alternative high school received, compared to the rare mention of Berkeley High’s world-renowned jazz ensemble in local papers. 

When people try to raise money for Berkeley High, they first have to overcome negative stereotypes of people may have of the school, Bailey said – which makes for a lot of work. 

“We have to get the word out on a personal basis instead of just letters,” Bailey said. 

Negative media coverage aside, some argue that Berkeley High administrators themselves haven’t made it easy to sell the school to would-be contributors over the years. 

Since it was formed by concerned parents in 1990, the Berkeley High School Development Group has lead the way in fundraising efforts for the school. In the 1999-2000 school year the group raised $221,754 to support the Berkeley High health center, library, arts programs and athletic programs. 

But the development group has stopped short of attempting to spearhead a larger fundraising campaign, said the group’s president Terry Bloomsburgh, in part because there is a perception that Berkeley High can’t take good care of the things it already has.  

Lack of funding from the school district has prevented the school from receiving adequate maintenance in recent years, whether it be keeping bathrooms clean or keeping electrical equipment functioning, Bloomsburgh said. Four years ago, the development group volunteers had to spend a Saturday at the school just creating an inventory of existing electronic equipment, because no such inventory existed, Bloomsburgh added. 

“There isn’t a sense, like you have at a university, that physical things count for anything. We’ve replaced VCR’s like hot cakes at times,” Bloomsburgh said, concluding, “People are not going to come forth with significant money unless you’re going to take care of the property.” 

Or as Bailey put it, there are people who “Don’t want to give money directly to the high school because it goes down the rat hole.” 

Still, Bailey and others said Berkeley High alumni, by and large, feel strongly connected to their alma mater and are more than willing to help with fundraising efforts, if someone would just take the time to show them the way. 

For the last four years Bailey and other prominent alumni have helped organize a “celebrity waiter luncheon”, where Berkeley High Alumni who went on to be notable athletes in the NFL, NBA, or Major League Baseball were invited to “wait” on local business people who paid $500 per table. The profits – more than $10,000 at the luncheon this March – going into a discretionary fund presided over by Berkeley High’s athletic director. 

“(The athletes) have been more than willing to participate,” said alumni Wayne Tarr, Berkeley High class of 1957. “But that’s not enough money.” 

Asked whether an effort could be launched to get alumni to contribute to an endowment for Berkeley High, Bailey expressed what seems to be a common sentiment: “I think that would be a great idea, but I don’t have the time to do it.” 

Berkeley High Principal Frank Lynch said an endowment “would make a huge difference” for the school. But, he added, the school doesn’t currently have the “luxury” of paying someone to organize an endowment fundraising campaign. 

“You’ve got to go out and court people,” Lynch said. 

 

For more information about Berkeley High fundraising contact the Berkeley High School Development Group at 649-1544 or e-mail bhsdgroup@aol.com.


BTV Schedule

Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Monday, July 16 

8 a.m. Sword of Fire, Armour of Light 

9 a.m. NASA TV NTV Video File & Television Gallery 

11 a.m. On the Move Dave Barr Follow Dre a.m.s 

11:30 a.m. Bible Reading 

Noon: The Sheila O Show #24 

12:30 p.m. Bay Area Musicians Showcase Jazz D' Elegance 

1 p.m. Gospel Search Studio A Replay from SATURDAY 

1:30 p.m. Wee Poets Supervising Jon Gioia 

2 p.m. NASA TV -Education File 

3 p.m. Magic Mouse Magazine #1 

4 p.m. A Boy and His Dog Video Central 

5 p.m. Live with Rick Sylvain 

5:30 p.m. Watch This! (previous week) 

6 p.m. Alexander Haig's World Business Review A 

6:30 p.m. Kaleidoscope #36 - Guest Chad Hanson 

7 p.m. Willard vs. Longfellow Basketball 

8 p.m. First a.m.endment Center - The Freedom Rides Revisited 

9 p.m. Lannan Literary Series Thom Gunn 

10 p.m. San Francisco Classical Guitar Society #53 

10:30 p.m. B-TV's Dating G a.m.e (2/01) 

11:30 p.m. Thrush TV - Finger Alive 

Midnight: The Dr. Susan Block Show - Orgasmic Ventures 

12:30 a.m. Frank Moore's Unlimited Possibilities #9 

 

Tuesday, July 17 

8 a.m. NASA TV - NTV Video File & Television Gallery 

10 a.m. Lannan Literary Series -Thom Gunn 

11 a.m. First a.m.endment Center The Freedom Rides Revisited  

Noon: Watch This! (previous week) 

12:30 p.m. People's Video Network -Moratorium for Texas 

1 p.m. Willard vs. Longfellow Basketball 

2 p.m. A Boy and His Dog Video Central 

3 p.m. Live with Rick Sylvain 

3:30 p.m. B-TV Dating G a.m.e (2/01) 

4:30 p.m. Trailer Trash Series #2 

5 p.m. San Francisco Classical Guitar Society #53 

5:30 p.m. Poetry Festival 2000 #11 

6 p.m. Universe of Yahweh #226 

6:30 p.m. Bay Area Musicians Showcase Jazz D' Elegance 

7 p.m. City Council Meeting LIVE 

 

Wednesday, July 18 

8 a.m. City Council Meeting Replay from TUESDAY 

1:30 p.m. Poetry Festival 2000 #11 

2 p.m. Who’s In My Kitchen BBQ with the Police Chief 

2:30 p.m. Universe of Yahweh #226 

3 p.m. Bay Area Musicians Showcase Jazz D' Elegance 

3:30 p.m. Free Speech TV #1 

5:30 p.m. Great Pets (previous week) 

6 p.m. It's Healing Time #14 

6:30 p.m. The Visitors - BCM Intern Show Express Studio 

7 p.m. First a.m.endment Center - The Freedom Rides Revisited 

8 p.m. Dominican University Festival of One Act Plays - Part One 

9:30 p.m. Berkeley High Track Te a.m. 

10:30 p.m. Frank Moore's Unlimited Possibilities #9 

1 a.m. Analog Rhythms 

 

Thursday, July 19 

8 a.m. Public Hearing -Mtg from Monday 7/16 @ North Berkeley Senior Center 

12:30 p.m. Dominican University Festival of One Act Plays - Part One 

2 p.m. Great Pets (previous week) 

2:30 p.m. It's Healing Time #14 

3 p.m. On The Move - Dave Barr- Follow Dre a.m.s 

3:30 p.m. Berkeley High Track Te a.m. 

4:30 p.m. Intrepid Berkeley Explorer - Kangaroo from Kakadu 

5:30 p.m. Boredom Theater - Bay Bridge Natural 

6 p.m. Alexander Haig's World Business Review B 

6:30 p.m. The Chat Room 

7 p.m. Gospel Search - Express Studio Live 

8 p.m. The Sheila O Show #24 

8:30 p.m. Video Feedback Hepatitis C 

9 p.m. Kaleidoscope #36 - Guest Chad Hanson 

9:30 p.m. Celebrate Life - Healing Hidden Hurts 

10 p.m. Sound Gallery 

10:30 p.m. Reality Check #227 

11 p.m. IVTV #9 

11:30 p.m. The Blue Lew Show - Invisible Green 

Midnight: Frank Moore's Unlimited Possibilities #9 

 

Friday, July 20 

8 a.m. Leela Foundation Find Out Who You Are  

9 a.m. Intrepid Berkeley Explorer - Kangaroo from Kakadu 

10 a.m. San Francisco Classical Guitar Society #53 

10:30 a.m. The Visitors - BCM Intern Show  

11 a.m. Celebrate Life - Healing Hidden Hurts 

11:30 a.m. Gospel Search Express Studio Replay from Thurs 7 p.m. 

12:30 p.m. The Sheila O Show #24 

1 p.m. Video Feedback Hepatitus C 

1:30 p.m. It's Healing Time #14 

2 p.m. On The Move Dave Barr- Follow Dre a.m.s  

2:30 p.m. Sound Gallery 

3 p.m. Magic Mouse Magazine #1 

4 p.m. NASA TV Education File 

5 p.m. Free Speech TV #2 

7 p.m. Who's In My Kitchen BBQ with the Police Chief 

7:30 p.m. Wee Poets Supervising John Gioia 

8 p.m. Boredom Theater Bay Bridge Natural 

8:30 p.m. Trailer Trash #2 

9 p.m. Alexander Haig's World Business Review A 

9:30 p.m. Alexander Haig's World Business Review B 

10 p.m. The Blue Lew Show Invisible Green 

10:30 p.m. The Dr. Susan Block Show - Orgasmic Ventures 

11 p.m. Thrush TV - Finger Alive 

11:30 p.m. IVTV #9 

Midnight: Reality Check #227 

12:30 a.m. Analog Rhythms 

 

Saturday, July 21 

8 a.m. Leela Foundation Find Out Who You Are  

9 a.m. Bible Reading 

9:30 a.m. Wee Poets Supervising John Gioia 

10 a.m. Trailer Trash #2 

10:30 a.m. NASA TV Education File 

11:30 a.m. Boredom Theater Bay Bridge Natural 

Noon: People's Video Network Moratorium for Texas 

12:30 p.m. Gospel Search Express Studio Replay from Thurs 7 p.m. 

1:30 p.m. The Chat Room 

2 p.m. Willard vs. Longfellow Basketball 

3 p.m. Berkeley High Track Te a.m. 

4 p.m. Magic Mouse Magazine #1 

5 p.m. Great Pets (previous week) 

5:30 p.m. Who's In My Kitchen BBQ with the Police Chief 

6 p.m. Video Feedback Hepatitus C 

6:30 p.m. Watch This (previous week) 

7 p.m. Universe of Yahweh #226 

7:30 p.m. The Visitors - BCM Intern Show  

8 p.m. Analog Rhythms 

9 p.m. Sword of Fire, Armour of Light 

10 p.m. A Boy and His Dog Video Central 

11p.m. Live with Rick Sylvain 

11:30 p.m. Reality Check #227 

Midnight: The Dr. Susan Block Show 

12:30 a.m. Thrush TV - Finger Alive 

1 a.m. NASA TV LIVE - Earth views till 3:00 a.m. 

 

Sunday, July 22 

8 a.m. Bible Reading  

8:30 a.m. City Council Meeting Replay from TUESDAY 

2 p.m. City Council Meeting Play from THURSDAY 7/19 

6 p.m. Intrepid Berkeley Explorer - Kangaroo from Kakadu 

7 p.m. Dominican University Festival of One Act Plays - Part One 

8:30 p.m. Celebrate Life Healing Hidden Hurts 

9 p.m. Leela Foundation Find Out Who You Are  

10 p.m. Sound Gallery 

10:30 p.m. The Chat Room 

11 p.m. Free Speech TV #2 

1 a.m. NASA TV LIVE - Earth views till 3:00 a.m.


Briefs

Staff
Friday July 13, 2001

Lee supports Department of Peace 

U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland announced Wednesday that she is joining other members of Congress to introduce legislation to develop a U.S. Department of Peace dedicated to domestic and international peacemaking. 

A Lee spokesperson said the proposed department would promote democratic principles, strengthen non-military means of peacemaking and develop nonviolent dispute resolution.  

In a statement issued Wednesday, Lee said, “Just as we have trained soldiers to wage war in the past, we must begin to raise up a new generation of leaders committed to peace and justice.”  

The proposed Department of Peace would be a cabinet-level department in the executive branch of the federal government, the representative said, and would have a Peace Academy modeled after the military service academies. People attending the academy would receive a four-year concentrated peace education and would be required to serve a minimum of five years in public service programs dedicated to domestic or international nonviolent conflict resolution. 

“We confront new challenges every day in the quest for peace,” Lee said. “This proposal places that quest on an equal footing with the weapons of war.” 

 

Free compost at farmers’ market 

The Berkeley Community Gardening Collaborative will be giving away compost on Saturday at the Berkeley Farmer’s Market as part of “Sustainable Agriculture “ Day. Berkeley residents can bring a bag or bucket to Center Street and Milvia to be filled with compost from their own yard debris that is collected by the city every other week. 

The compost is made in Modesto by Grover Compost Company. Most is sold, but by request of the city, 15 percent is returned to Berkeley. In past years the compost has been delivered to school and community gardens but will be offered to individuals for the second time this year. 

 

Wing makes dean’s list 

Teresa Wing of Berkeley was placed on the dean’s list at Tufts University in Massachusetts. Students must have a grade point average of 3.4 or higher to receive this academic honor. 

 

UCB scientists find new traces of ancient human life 

Scientists working in Ethiopia have found what may be the oldest known traces of human-like life – teeth and bones from up to 5.8 million years ago – in a discovery that challenges the long-held belief that man's earliest ancestors first emerged on the grassy plains. 

The remains are believed to be those of forest-dwelling creatures that walked upright. They are about million years older than any other known fossils definitively identified as those of hominids, the group that includes humans, the researchers said. 

The fossils come from a point in time tantalizingly close to the evolutionary split between the lineage leading to humans and the one that produced chimpanzees. Scientists believe that split took place between 5 million and 8 million years ago. 

“This evidence appears to be on the human line – one of the earliest human ancestors. Not only is the dating very solid, but what the report tells us about the environments of the time is really critical,” said Brian Richmond, an anthropologist at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, who was not connected to the study. “This is a windfall of information compared to what we've had.” 

The bones were found in a remote Ethiopian desert that was wet and forested – and rattled by volcanic eruptions – when the creatures lived there, the researchers reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. 

That discovery clashes with the widely held theory that the drying up of forests millions of years ago was critical to human evolution. This theory holds that early human ancestors learned to walk upright, and diverged forever from their apelike cousins, because their forests were gone and they had to survive on the treeless plains. 

Bernard Wood, a human origins professor at George Washington University, said it is not entirely proven that the creatures were hominids or that their habitat was really a forest. “But that doesn't diminish the importance of what they've found,” he said. 

The research team, led by Yohannes Haile-Selassie of UC Berkeley, made the discovery 140 miles northeast of Addis Ababa, and about 50 miles south of where the fossil “Lucy” was found about three decades ago. Lucy is some 3.2 million years old and is believed to be a member of the species from which all modern humans are descended. 

Haile-Selassie and his colleagues found 11 specimens, including a jawbone with teeth, hand and foot bones, fragmentary arm bones and a piece of collarbone. They represent at least five individuals, Haile-Selassie said. 

Dating was done by measuring trapped argon gas in volcanic ash that had been mixed in with the bones. It found the fossils to be between 5.2 million and 5.8 million years old. 

Haile-Selassie said the specimens revealed a primitive version of Ardipithecus ramidus, an early hominid species whose oldest known fossils were previously found in 4.4-million-year-old sediment in Ethiopia. 

He said with further research, the bones might turn out be a new species altogether. 

 

Civic Center Building wins award 

The Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Building at 2180 Milvia Street won this year’s Savings By Design Energy Efficient Integration award. The building, which was recently renovated by the ELS architectural firm, was honored for having the most energy efficient building design reviewed by the awards jury. The award is co-sponsored by the American Institute of Architects California Council and California’s four largest utility companies – Pacific Gas and Electric, San Diego Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, and Southern California Gas Company.


Bulky waste pick-up great excuse to get neighbors’ stuff

By Nancy Silver Alvarez Special to the Daily Planet
Friday July 13, 2001

The flier said “in seven days”… I felt the excitement of the seventh-day itch. The six other itches intensified my state of utter turbulence. I was a little out of control, moving around my attic and basement creating more storage space. I dreamed of a warehouse, or an abandoned lot. 

I needed to explain my change in behavior to Martine, my very square guest from Buenos Aires, whom I was hosting on various local travels. I also wanted an accomplice. It makes life easier in the crime world. There’s a greater adrenaline rush when two bodies and minds are working on covert strategies and maneuvers. 

I showed Martine the brochure, when it came through the mail slot. It blared broadly across the top: 

2001 CITY OF BERKELEY  

ANNUAL CLEAN UP 

REUSABLE ITEM & BULKY WASTE PICKUP 

I didn’t know which word I liked the best. Was it “CLEAN UP” or “BULKY”? Somehow the words sounded like poetry to me. I felt a bulky, cleanup song spill out from my heart. Yes! this wonderful, glorious, generous, bountiful city would clean itself up in a most unique and fanciful way.  

Martine did not know what the heck I was talking about. But, he was my guest. If this was a tourist attraction, he was ready to partake.  

We prepared. We would take my car and his rental. We would approach the scene of the crime after the last rays of sun passed the Lawrence Labs. We would dress for BULKY – sure grip gardening gloves and rope and bungy cords around our waists. I dug out two high-powered flashlights from my earthquake kit. Too bad my neighbors did not list the items they were discarding. The hunting required discernment.  

We started out from College Avenue heading east on Webster Street. The blessing of the traffic barrier by the Elmwood Post Office permitted us to drive side by side. Martine’s territory was the south side of the street. I focused on the north. We would roll down our windows and discuss questionable items. 

Martine beamed his flashlight on a mundane white box. 

Que te parece la Chia Pet kit? Que es? 

That’s non-bulky waste! Forget that! Look at the cross-country skis up the street. Now that’s what I call reusable. Grab those, and throw them in. 

Look at that Thule shell. Let’s try to get THAT on top of the car. Martine can you give me a hand?  

Martine threw the gears into park, popped out, and ran over to help me lift the heavy shell, great for all the stuff I’d ever want to bring on car trips. As we were strapping down the last corner, the owner came storming out of his house hollering, “Hey buddy! That’s the Thule I just picked up on Oakvale! Get your own junk!” We all laughed while tossing the shell off the car to its “rightful owner.” 

Our cars became fuller. I found an old Brothers typewriter, a Blaupunct radio, a small kitchenette refrigerator, and an espresso machine. Martine chose a surfboard and a wetsuit, a CD of the Grateful Dead, (who he never heard of before), and a three-string banjo. Neighbors were out right and left rummaging. Molly had a shovel, pick, and rake, attached to the back of her “new” Schwinn circa 1936 2 1/2 speed lady’s bike. Carol had her body wrapped in throw rugs, curtains draped over her arms, and a Guatemalan basket on her head. The judge was out “window shopping” the left-out loot. It was carnival time and everyone was gleeful with their new freebies.  

It was junk exchanging at its best, organized by the brilliant folks in the recycling department of the city. Somehow my neighbors’ castaways became gems, at least for the time being. I wonder how much of it I’ll see at the white elephant sale for the Alta Bates Thrift Store.  

As the clock struck midnight, I remembered I had a paid job to go to in the morning. We headed towards home, sleepy and totally satisfied. 

Before he said buenas noches, Martine told me he was going to organize a bulky, reusable item pick up day in Buenos Aires. I fell off to sleep, planning future travels and travails with Martine. Maybe next, we will go to the Marin flea market.


Judge: California likely owed ‘hundreds of millions of dollars’

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SACRAMENTO – An administrative law judge mediating talks between the state of California and energy companies says the state is likely owed “hundreds of millions of dollars” in refunds, much less than the $8.9 billion the state wants. 

Judge Curtis L. Wagner Jr., in a recommendation released Thursday, said that while there are “vast sums” due for overcharges, California utilities, grid managers and the state agency purchasing power owe generators even more. 

Gov. Gray Davis and California officials who attended the 15-day talks held out for $8.9 billion in refunds, but Wagner said that amount “has not and cannot be substantiated. 

“That very large refunds are due is clear,” Wagner wrote, likely amounting to “hundreds of million of dollars, probably more than a billion dollars in an aggregate sum.” 

Davis said he hoped the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission would reject the recommendation. 

“Californians have, by and large, gotten a raw deal from FERC during the past year,” he said in a statement. “Now the day of reckoning for the new FERC has come. I would like to believe the commission, with two new commissioners, will be more sensitive to California consumers and order all the refunds that are due.” 

U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said the recommendation “undermines the consumer protections that FERC is supposed to safeguard by law.” 

The differences between what the state wants and what the sellers believe they owe should be decided in a “trial-type, evidentiary hearing” that should be held in 60 days, Wagner said. 

The judge recommended a method for calculating refunds back to October. California’s estimate is based on figures from May 1, 2000. 

Peter Navarro, a University of California, Irvine economist who works on energy issues, called the recommendation “insulting” to California. 

The refund order should reach back until at least July, he said, when energy prices had spiraled to record levels and utilities were accruing billions of dollars in debts. 

“Setting it arbitrarily from October keeps billions and billions of dollars more in refunds from the state of California,” he said. 

In calculating costs, the judge recommends using the “heat rate” for the least efficient plant that sold power into the California market on each day. That plant’s costs to produce power will be the basis for setting a benchmark prices that day. 

Navarro said that’s unfair to California and basing refunds on each individual plant’s costs would be the best way to calculate what was overcharged. 

“By choosing that methodology, the judge limits the ability of California to recover what’s really owed to it,” Navarro said. “It reduces the total judgment by as much as 80 percent.” 

Officials with Reliant Energy, which participated in the negotiations, were still reviewing the order, but Melissa Kinch, a company spokeswoman, said they were “hopeful that with the formula, all the correct data will come out.”


Rookie’s testimony offers window into police scandal

By Kim Curtis Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

OAKLAND – It was Keith Batt’s childhood dream to become a police officer. But after just nine nights patrolling the tough streets of west Oakland, his dream was shattered. 

What the 24-year-old saw last summer so shocked and frightened him that he quit the Oakland Police Department and complained to superiors, launching one of the biggest police scandal probes in recent years. 

Four officers were fired and now face multiple felony charges, and more than 70 cases have been dismissed as a result of their tactics. 

Judge Leo Dorado ruled Thursday that prosecutors presented enough evidence during a preliminary hearing to send the case to trial. Dorado also found three additional charges against two of the defendants. They are set to be arraigned July 26. 

Chuck Mabanag, Jude Siapno and Matthew Hornung are charged with more than 60 felony and misdemeanor counts ranging from assault and kidnapping to falsifying police reports and overtime slips. 

Hornung now faces charges of writing a false police report and conspiracy to false arrest. Siapno faces a charge of assault under color of authority. 

Frank Vazquez, the alleged ringleader of the group, is believed to have fled the country. 

The department insists the accused officers, who called themselves “The Riders,” were renegades. 

At the officers’ preliminary hearing in Alameda County Superior Court, Batt painted a disturbing picture of the officers’ “stop and grab” tactics in which suspects randomly were accosted on the street, handcuffed and put in the patrol car before they were questioned about their activities. 

Batt also hinted at a conspiracy of silence among the police brass who supervised “The Riders.” 

Batt, who’s now a Pleasanton police officer, was the prosecution’s key witness. He was calm and composed as he spent five days answering four lawyers’ often tedious questions. He showed only occasional flashes of emotion — mostly blushing and some eye-rolling when he admitted he cried or acknowledged he was teased because of his small size. 

All in all, Batt provided a rare glimpse into police culture. He talked about early morning breakfasts at the end of each shift, chats in the patrol car at the “light cave,” or parking lot where officers gathered, and hanging out in the locker room before work. 

He said he was taught to disregard lessons learned at the police academy about subduing suspects, to ignore probable cause requirements for searches and to make up facts to fit each case. 

“I didn’t want to go on doing the things we were doing,” Batt testified. “It was illegal. It was immoral. It was contrary to what I had been trained and what I believed was right.” 

But defense lawyers suggested that training inadequacies at Oakland’s police academy or a lack of clear guidelines or standard procedures may be responsible for the officers’ behavior. Oakland streets are tough and officers need to act aggressively to stay alive, they said. Batt also may have exaggerated his claims because he simply couldn’t hack it on Oakland’s streets, they claimed. 

“This field training process is designed to get them beyond the controlled environment of the academy... and start to expand their peripheral vision and see beyond the hood of the car,” said William Rapoport, Siapno’s lawyer. “The (training) program is designed to toughen you up a little bit and make sure you’re not going to get killed out there.” 

Michael Rains represents Mabanag, the rookie’s field training officer. He acknowledged his client was tough on Batt. 

“Chuck had his own brand of breaking in recruits and that could be likened to some sort of hazing,” he said. “The department didn’t have a set way for how (training officers) should treat new recruits. I think they tell them to train them in particular areas, but they allow them a great deal of latitude in how they do that.” 

But prosecutor David Hollister says the officers’ behavior was inexcusable. 

“I don’t recall martial law being declared in west Oakland,” he said. “A lot of Oakland police officers have tough jobs and do their jobs in compliance with the Constitution and penal code. I don’t think this ’whatever-it-takes’ attitude works.” 

Oakland Police spokesman George Phillips refused to answer questions directly related to the case, but City Attorney John Russo agreed that behavior described by Batt was unacceptable. 

“It’s not authorized,” Russo said. “It’s not within the course and scope of their work as officers. There’s nothing that says we’d like you very much to violate people’s Constitutional rights any more than running a household involves beating your kids.”


State board approves charter for school run by for-profit company

By Jennifer Kerr Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SACRAMENTO – A San Francisco charter school run by a for-profit company will reopen next month under state charter, ending three years of bickering with the local school board. 

The state Board of Education voted unanimously Thursday to give a state charter to the Edison Charter Academy, a 500-student elementary school run since 1998 by Edison Schools Inc. of New York. 

While approving that school’s for-profit operators, the board unanimously rejected a Santa Cruz County district’s attempt to become the state’s largest all-charter district because of the district’s financial motives. 

Both votes show the state’s increasing involvement in overseeing charter schools. In 1992, California became the nation’s second state to allow local districts to approve charters schools, public schools allowed to operate largely free of most state regulations. Thirty-seven states now allow charters. 

California has about 300 charters out of 8,000 public schools with total enrollment of less than 3 percent of the state’s students. They are seen as a popular alternative to conventional schools for parents who want something different for their children. 

Edison Charter Academy parents told the state board Thursday the school had made a big difference for their children. 

“Edison’s charter breathed new life into a school that had previously known only failure and despair,” said parent Lupe Hernandez. 

Parents also said told the board that the company turned Edison Charter Academy, in San Francisco’s Noe Valley area, from one of the city’s worst schools to one of its best. 

The school is 40 percent black and 39 percent Hispanic, with 70 percent of its students qualifying for free or reduced-price lunches. Its Academic Performance Index, consisting of state test scores, improved from 465 in 1999 to 552 in 2000, according to state records. 

The San Francisco Unified School District board granted Edison’s original charter in 1998. The board had been trying to revoke it because several board members oppose private corporations running public schools. 

The San Francisco board and school officials agreed last month to end the dispute by asking the state to take over the charter. 

A 1999 law allows backers who are rejected by the local boards to ask the state Board of Education to grant a state charter. The state board last December approved its first two charter schools; Edison is the first state charter that is essentially a renewal of an existing local charter. 

In approving Edison’s charter, the board ordered the company to submit detailed financial information and budgets before school opens in August. 

State school Superintendent Delaine Eastin, saying she was “not a big fan of for-profit charters,” said that requirement was essential because the company is getting taxpayer money. 

Edison vice president Gaynor McCown agreed to provide the information. 

The schools in the 4,200-student San Lorenzo Valley Unified School District, which sought to become an all-charter district, are very different. That valley, between Santa Cruz and San Jose, is home to many Silicon Valley workers and the schools all scored high on state tests. 

State law allows districts to seek board approval to make all of their schools charters. But they must have the backing of more than half their teachers and provide alternatives for students who don’t want to attend charters. The state’s seven current charter districts are all small ones in the Central Valley and serve only a few hundred students. 

San Lorenzo officials said they wanted to turn all-charter to improve educational programs by making them more flexible. The acknowledged they would received $700,000 in extra state money because of the structure of the funding formulas. 

Board members disliked that reasoning, and executive director John Mockler said the district couldn’t balance its budget and just wanted a “financial bailout,” not to devise new or improved learning programs. 

Eastin’s staff recommended approving the San Lorenzo plan, saying the district could sue if denied. A San Lorenzo official said district officials are now considering their options.


Senate gives $135 million for water

The Associated Press
Friday July 13, 2001

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee approved $135 million for California water projects Thursday. 

That includes $40 million for projects related to CalFed, the joint federal-state effort to protect the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta east of San Francisco that is the core of the state’s water system. 

In addition to CalFed, the appropriation includes $22 million for Oakland Harbor renovation and dredging and $22.5 million for Sacramento flood control.


Criminal inquiry into obstruction of justice by Condit

By Mark Sherman Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

WASHINGTON – Federal authorities have opened an initial criminal inquiry into whether Rep. Gary Condit obstructed justice or encouraged perjury in the investigation of Chandra Levy’s disappearance, law enforcement officials said Thursday. 

Authorities specifically are looking at a flight attendant’s claim that Condit urged her to sign a statement denying a 10-month affair she says they had. Anne Marie Smith also said Condit told her she did not have to cooperate with FBI agents who questioned her. 

“It is in the preliminary stages, talking to witnesses and trying to determine if we should proceed further,” said one law enforcement official familiar with the matter, who spoke only on condition of anonymity. 

Condit has denied asking anyone to lie or not cooperate with investigators who are trying to figure out what happened to Levy, a former federal intern who was last seen April 30. He has not commented on any relationship with Smith. 

Marina Ein, a spokeswoman for Condit, repeated Thursday that he is cooperating with police in all aspects of the investigation. 

Smith, 39, was interviewed Wednesday and again Thursday by FBI agents and prosecutors from the U.S. attorney’s office. 

Law enforcement officials said the preliminary inquiry is routine when such allegations surface but prosecutors decided to join FBI agents in the initial interview of Smith because of the congressman’s profile. “What is on the plate is perjury and obstructing justice, and we must decide if these allegations have merit,” one official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

The search for Levy was proceeding on several fronts Thursday, including a search of vacant buildings in the nation’s capital. 

“We have to explore the possibility that she may be dead and we’re looking for the remains,” said Terrance Gainer, the city’s No. 2 police official, said on CBS’ “The Early Show.” “So we’re looking at about one-seventh of the District of Columbia right now, at abandoned buildings. 

Gainer said investigators still are working on four theories in Levy’s disappearance: that she was a victim of foul play, committed suicide, walked away voluntarily or is wandering around not knowing who she is. 

Police also are negotiating with Condit’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, to set conditions under which the California Democrat would submit to a lie detector test. Condit, who police say is not a suspect in Levy’s disappearance, told authorities last week that he had a romantic relationship with the 24-year-old woman, police sources say. 

“The congressman’s attorney has suggested we can get to a polygraph” test, Gainer said. 

The Washington Post and CNN, citing police sources, reported police have asked three other men to take polygraph tests. One said he occasionally socialized with Levy, but the connection of the other two to Levy was not immediately clear. 

Several items taken from Condit’s apartment during a search that ended at 3 a.m. Wednesday were being turned over to the FBI crime lab in Quantico, Va., said Sgt. Joe Gentile, a police spokesman. 

Condit voluntarily allowed the search to show his cooperation in the search for Levy, a constituent from Modesto, Calif., whom he has described publicly as a good friend. 

Meantime, the Post reported in Thursday’s editions that FBI agents have interviewed a Pentecostal minister who described an affair between his then-18-year-old daughter and Condit, who is 53 and married with two grown children. 

The minister, Otis Thomas, was quoted by the Post as saying Condit had told his daughter never to speak of the relationship. 

On Thursday morning, a handwritten note was posted on the door of Thomas’ home in Ceres, Calif. It was signed “Jennifer Thomas” and said, “I never met that congressman who’s involved in all this. ... I don’t even know how both me and my father got mixed up in this, we don’t know anything.” 

Betty Hoffman, who lives in an apartment below the Thomases, confirmed Jennifer Thomas is Otis Thomas’ daughter. Hoffman said she last saw Otis Thomas three days ago, and he told her the FBI suggested he leave town to avoid the media. 

Thomas told the Post his daughter is afraid to talk with the FBI and has gone into hiding, but Hoffman said Jennifer Thomas works at a local fast food restaurant and was home Wednesday. 

Thomas told the Post that his daughter met Condit at a political rally and ended the relationship about seven years ago. Thomas, whose church is in Modesto, did gardening work at the Levy home in Modesto, the Post said. 

Dr. Robert and Susan Levy, Levy’s parents, confirmed Thursday that they know Thomas, but declined to comment on the Post report. “We do appreciate his concern,” Dr. Levy said. 

Asked about that report, Gainer would say only that “the names and stories aren’t unfamiliar to us.” 

Ein said the Post report was “discountable – there’s no confirmation from the principal,” referring to the daughter.


Sunday’s Arts Festival concert will be a Carey family affair

By Miko Sloper Special to the Daily Planet
Friday July 13, 2001

If you thought the Berkeley Arts Festival was over, and that the busy schedule of musical events was burned out, flown by, finished, think again.  

There’s more to come, including a short but sweet concert Sunday afternoon. It will be a family affair, featuring compositions by Joanne D. Carey and her son, Brendan Carey.  

And one of Joanne Carey’s songs is based on a text written by her father-in-law, the painter Paul Carey, so three generations of the Carey family will be represented.  

The poem which provides the lyrics for the song “The Wetlands at Dusk” displays a painter’s eye for visual detail before giving way to meditative speculation and a tactile image in conclusion: When daylight softens gently into dusk/ and dusk is lost in shadowed night/ the stand of weeds that fence the trail/comes threateningly near. 

Joanne Carey’s rich harmonic palette paints a scene which glows in twilight serenity with light tints of clear insight. She does this with only a solo soprano and a piano. 

Her other two songs use an exotic synthesizer controller called a “radio baton.” This allows the performer in real time to alter the tempo and relative balance of the various parts of the score. Carey has created a complex soundscape of new sounds and emulations which adds up so that the whole is more than the sum of its parts. The Spanish texts are from poems by Pablo Neruda. 

Carey has set these poems to luscious scores to express the poem’s contrasting moods. 

This concert would be worthwhile simply for the chance to see Joanne Carey manipulate the radio baton, yet we also get to hear these beautiful compositions.  

And there is another reason to be at this event – a chance to hear the compositions of mother and son on the same program. 

Brendan Carey composed his two pieces under the heavy influence of J.S. Bach. They both display mastery of the forms of Baroque counterpoint and a delightful sense of melodic development.  

And why shouldn’t young Brendan Carey utilize pre-Classical style in this post-modern age? If poets can still write Shakespearean sonnets, why shouldn’t Carey write flashy contrapuntal pieces with fugues? Bach is a great river who continues to inspire concert-goers, singers, instrumentalists and even composers. 

Several of Paul Carey’s paintings of wetlands will be on display during the concert.


Avoiding the ’While you’re at it’ syndrome

The Associated Press
Friday July 13, 2001

Here’s a malady homeowners want to avoid: The “while you’re at it syndrome.” 

It refers to the propensity to cast budget aside during major home remodeling and improvements. The result is sharply higher costs, leaving homeowners to ask themselves, “What happened?” 

What happens is a faulty budget process, inadequate bid review, and a lack of budgetary restraint, according to a project expert for the Home Service Store (HSS), a home maintenance, repair and improvement provider. 

To upgrade and add on after the project is started is often a big temptation. The additional cost of upgrading a faucet might not be much in the context of a $10,000 project, so it’s easy to say, “While we’re at it we might as well...” 

“Let’s say a contractor is remodeling a bathroom, he’s installing a vanity, and the budget is $12,000,” says Rod O’Dell, a construction expert. “Many times the homeowner will tell the contractor ’While you’re at it, why don’t you install a marble vanity in place of a porcelain model?’ They have just added hundreds of dollars to the costs. When you total the add-ons, the mid-job upgrades are budget-killers.” 

To building professionals, these requests are called “change orders” – midstream amendments often made at the whim of the homeowner. Item by item, change orders beef up the cost of the job. O’Dell recounts a bathroom project that went $3,200 over budget on hardware alone. The homeowner was stunned at the self-inflicted cost overrun. Most remodeling and improvement budgets exceed the intended amount by around 10 percent, with 30 percent to 60 percent overruns not unheard of. 

The problem, according to O’Dell, is that homeowners meander through home store aisles noting the cost of materials. Those cursory visits serve as budget guidelines but they miss key cost elements a contractor includes in bids. 

“Budgets frequently don’t meet with reality,” says O’Dell. “Homeowners don’t take into consideration what the contractor would take into account.” For instance, the homeowner sees a bathroom with sparkling new fixtures and features. The contractor sees a wall that needs to be moved 3 feet, a floor that needs reinforcement to hold a whirlpool tub, and wiring a 220-watt electrical circuit to handle the tub heater. O’Dell says a good way to get a general idea about the cost of a remodeling job is by using an online home-improvement cost calculator. 

Homeowners who automatically accept the lowest bid also invite a different kind of trouble, says O’Dell. 

“If there is a big disparity between bids, there has to be a reason,” says O’Dell. “Usually, the contractor is not including something, such as using lower grade materials or skipping inspections. It’s up to the homeowner to ask those questions. It’s not always a matter of the lowest price. Labor and material costs won’t vary widely enough to be the cause of most disparities if the scope of work and materials are the same. You have to ask, ’What’s missing here?”’ 

O’Dell counsels HSS customers to insist contractor bids be very specific in terms of materials used and construction steps to be taken. Better contractors will also include a detailed, written description of the job to include functions such as removing walls, reinforcing floors and other factors the homeowner might not be aware of. 

He also urges homeowners to set realistic budgets. “It’s fine to walk home stores to check material prices,” says O’Dell, “but if you do, be sure to account for all items. That’s what a good contractor will do.” Most budgets should include a 15 percent to 20 percent overage contingency for the unexpected – unseen damage or other conditions and change orders. 

“The more detail the homeowner knows, the better,” says O’Dell. “They need to watch out for all the little changes that can balloon costs. The only way to cure the ’while you’re at it syndrome’ is to make sure you set a realistic budget and stick to it.”


Some new looks for country-style homes

The Associated Press
Friday July 13, 2001

Comfort and ease evoke the spirit of today’s country look. Americans, spurred on by the nation’s bicentennial 25 years ago, continue to look to a simpler time to reduce stress on their daily lives. 

A book, “New Country Style” (Meredith Books, $39.95) by the editors of Country Home magazine, showcases 14 homes with that spirit. From city loft and renovated farmhouse to Southwestern adobe, today’s homes reflect the ingenuity of times past and of being able to mix old and new in today’s fresh approach. 

No longer cluttered in its approach, the new look of country allows for airy space to showcase heirlooms. It also encourages the mixing of vintage fabrics, flea market finds, wicker and painted furniture as cottage-style essentials. 

How do you put all these items together in your own space? In this case, it really is “all about you.” 

If you like several things, they play off your personality and, therefore, probably “go together.” It’s all about mixing items you collected on a recent trip with old family photos. It’s about draping vintage hand towels as cafe curtains. 

Or, perhaps it means mixing several styles of chairs but tying them together by similar shades of the same color. In another setting, it may be about pairing 1940s-style barstools with a 19th-century French whitewashed walnut table. 

For a truly eclectic mix of favorite pieces from parts of former lives, textures, colors and shapes play off a simple neutral adobe backdrop. In that setting, regional art, religious icons and flea market finds seem to harmonize. 

It’s an effortless blend of favorite collections that somehow fit together. These design strategies will help get you started: 

• Instead of placing two or three plates on a shelf, fill each shelf with a different set of dishes. 

• Anything of beauty is worthy of display, including wardrobe accessories, such as silver and turquoise jewelry on a gold tray. 

• Line up cowboy boots in a hallway, not at the back of a closet. 

• Use an old dough bough or a punch bowl to put photos or magazines on the floor, even under the coffee table. 

• Color can be the great unifier to visually tie items together. 

• Don’t be shy about mixing. It’s OK to mix animal prints and gingham, and an old table with a modern lamp. 

• Distinctive architectural salvage pieces can act as decorative elements. 

• Use framed black-and-white photographs as a sophisticated contrast to the warm tones of leather and leopard skin. 

• Mix Grandma’s glassware, silver and china with tag sale finds to set a table or create a display. 

• Use mismatched utensils or dishes just for fun. 

• Like the idea of a kitchen island, but don’t want to add something permanent? Use an old work table instead as a preparation area. 

• Use historic paint colors and milk paints to achieve authenticity, along with reproduction lighting fixtures. 

• Rely on painted pieces to warm a room. 

• Incorporate floral touches for a fresh look throughout the house.


Oakland takes potshots at San Francisco in ad campaign

By Olga R. Rodriguez Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Oakland is a city on the rise and it just won’t take any more slights. No more references to it having “no there there.” No more stereotypes as a crime-plagued city. And, please, stop the unflattering comparisons to its famous neighbor across the Bay. 

San Francisco is not all that, after all. And to prove it, the city of Oakland has launched an ad campaign that points out the “ills” of its friendly rival. 

“Tired of living where the sun don’t shine?” asks an ad displaying the city of Oakland symbol atop a San Francisco cab. 

“San Francisco is the place to be ... overcharged for rent,” reads another ad at the Oakland airport. 

“It’s a tongue-in-cheek campaign that brings to light the virtues of Oakland,” said Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown. “San Francisco takes itself very seriously. We in Oakland don’t.” 

“San Francisco is a great city, I grew up there,” he added. “But they are the first to get the fog and the last one to get the sun.” 

Launched in March, the advertising campaign is expected to last a year. The ads are being published in local newspapers, spread throughout Oakland and displayed around San Francisco on taxi cabs. 

Oakland officials see the campaign as a way to compete for business, and as an opportunity to narrow the gap between how the city is perceived and its reality. 

“We hope to demonstrate to folks that Oakland has a lot to offer as a place to live, work and do business,” said Samee Roberts, Oakland’s marketing manager. 

In the past, Oakland has been identified as a city with high crime rates and unemployment. Author Gertrude Stein once said that Oakland — where she spent her childhood — was a city with “no there there.” 

Oakland has taken steps to become a bustling business center. 

The advertising campaign is part of a larger development plan the city put in motion in 1999 to attract investment, Roberts said. 

Among other things, Oakland is investing $1.2 billion in port development projects, $1.5 billion to expand its airport and an estimated $250 million to further revamp its waterfront. 

Oakland’s efforts are paying off. 

Census figures show its population grew by 7 percent in the 1990s, making Oakland the eighth-largest city in California. 

Its port is now the nation’s fourth busiest and, in the last couple of years, some 300 new companies moved to Oakland, bringing along 10,000 jobs. Forbes magazine this year ranked Oakland as the nation’s 10th-best place for “business and careers.” 

“Any time you are in the shadow of a bigger city you struggle to find your own identity,” Roberts said. “Sometimes you have to be a little bold to get your point across.” 

This time the boldness came courtesy of Young and Rubicam, a San Francisco advertising firm that is working for the city of Oakland pro bono. 

“We wanted to bring attention to the misperception that Oakland is a place to avoid,” said Stephen Creet, Young and Rubicam’s executive creative director. “We were not trying to be mean-spirited. It just seemed logical to get the attention of people who live in San Francisco first.” 

The next step will be to get the attention of a national audience. In October, the ads will appear in business magazines throughout the country. 

For their part, San Francisco officials are not worried and have not paid much attention to the sassy ad campaign. 

“We have not seen the ads,” said P.J. Johnson, spokesman for Mayor Willie Brown. “When another city has to point to your city to draw comparison, it’s really a form of flattery more than anything.”


Judge orders Napster offline; company to appeal

By Ron Harris Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Napster escaped a legal mess Thursday when it settled a suit filed by heavy metal band Metallica, but the embattled song-swapping company still faces a federal judge’s order demanding the service remain offline until it prevents all unauthorized song trading. 

Napster promised to seek a stay from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel told the company to stay offline until its file-sharing software is perfected. 

Napster CEO Hank Barry called Patel’s edict from the bench out of step with an earlier appeals court ruling. 

“Napster will obey this order, as we have every order that the court has issued. We believe the judge’s order is inconsistent with the 9th Circuit’s decision and wrong on a variety of other grounds,” Barry said shortly after a closed door hearing before Judge Patel. “We will appeal to the 9th Circuit on an expedited basis.” 

“We will continue to work with the technical expert and explore other options for resuming transfers as soon as possible.” 

Metallica and rap artist Dr. Dre settled their copyright suits against Napster. Financial terms were not disclosed, but as part of the agreement Metallica will allow some of the band’s songs to be traded on Napster’s new system once a legal business model has been launched. 

“I think we’ve resolved this in a way that works for fans, recording artists and songwriters alike,” said Lars Ulrich, Metallica’s drummer. 

Napster has been offline since July 2, when the Redwood City-based company took down its computer servers after its upgraded audio fingerprinting technology failed to catch all of the copyright music being traded by online users. 

Napster was ready to restart its service, claiming it had retooled the screening software to block more than 99 percent of unauthorized song files. 

However, Judge Patel shot down the notion that Napster could quietly come back online without 100 percent effectiveness. She told the company not to restart the service until it could prove to her that no unauthorized song files would get through the system. 

It means a further delay for Napster’s return. Napster’s user numbers had already been in decline since it began employing strict song-sharing guidelines earlier this year to block access to prevent copyright songs. 

The number of Napster users and the songs shared among them fell drastically between February and June of this year. Many disgruntled former Napster fans have migrated to decentralized file-sharing networks made popular by software called Gnutella. 

Gnutella and other similar programs like LimeWire and BearShare allow users to access an ever-changing network of servers and download image files and software programs in addition to MP3 song files. 

As Napster users flock to alternative programs, the company has been buying time until it can launch its much anticipated paid subscription service, due this summer along with two similar services by the major record labels. 

The recording industry, which sued Napster in 1999 for copyright infringement, was elated with Patel’s words from the bench. 

Hilary Rosen, president of the Recording Industry Association of America, issued a statement late Wednesday in response to Patel’s order. 

“While we appreciate that Napster is attempting to migrate to a legitimate business model, its inability to prevent copyright infringement from occurring on its system has only hampered the development of the marketplace in which it now hopes to compete. It is difficult for the legitimate online marketplace to compete with free,” Rosen said.


Profits fall 92 percent for AMD

By Brian Bergstein AP Business Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SAN JOSE – Computer chip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. barely beat Wall Street’s dramatically lowered expectations for its second-quarter earnings Thursday and gave a grim outlook for the current quarter. 

In the three-month period that ended July 1, AMD had a net profit of $17.4 million, or 5 cents a share, 92 percent lower than the earnings of $207.1 million, or 60 cents a share, in the comparable period of 2000. Sales slipped 16 percent, to $985 million from $1.17 billion. 

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call were expecting AMD to earn 4 cents a share this quarter. 

That estimate was 27 cents a share before AMD warned last week that it was being squeezed far more than expected by the weak demand for flash memory — used in devices like digital cameras and cell phones — and a price war with Intel Corp. in the market for personal-computer microprocessors. 

Perhaps believing that AMD had no more bad news to give, investors pushed its shares up $1.58, more than 7 percent, to close at $22.70 on the New York Stock Exchange before the earnings announcement. The stock was up another 55 cents in the extending trading session. 

Sunnyvale-based AMD found encouraging signs in the second quarter, including its record sales of 7.7 million PC processors. But AMD added that “PC industry unit growth for 2001 is less than previously forecasted, and the company now believes that industry unit shipments will be approximately flat for the year.” 

With demand also weak for AMD’s flash memory products in the communications and networking sectors, the company projects that sales could decline in the current quarter between 10 and 15 percent, leading to an operating loss. A return to “solid profitablity” should come in the fourth quarter, AMD said. 

Analysts were expecting earnings of 11 cents a share in the current quarter, down from 64 cents in the same period of 2000. 

For the first six months of 2001, AMD posted a net profit of $142.2 million, or 43 cents a share, on sales of $2.17 billion. That was off from last year’s marks of $396.5 million, or $1.17 cents a share, on revenue of $2.26 billion.


Downtown library project late and over budget

John Geluardi
Thursday July 12, 2001

The City Council increased a loan Tuesday for the downtown library renovation project, which is four months behind schedule and an estimated $2 million over budget. 

At the request of the library board, the council voted unanimously to increase the original loan, approved in 1999, from $1.1 million to $1.3 million.  

According to Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz, the library has not yet used any of the city’s loan funds.  

He said the loan was originally approved as a backup in case the renovation and expansion project went beyond the original estimate of $30 million. 

The main source of funds for the Central Library, at 2090 Kittredge St., came from $49 million in Measure S bond money, approved by voters in 1996. Measure S funds also paid for the renovation of the recently completed Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center building and other improvements downtown. 

Despite delays and overruns, Public Works Director Rene Cardinaux said the project is going well and delays are, in part, expected because of unknown structural conditions that are usually discovered during a large renovation.  

But questions about project contractor Novato-based Arntz Builders’ ability to meet deadlines have spurred the council to ask the city attorney to review the competitive bidding clause in the City Charter, which compels the city to accept the lowest responsible bid for capital projects. 

Arntz Builders is also contracted for the $29 million project currently underway on Milvia Street at Berkeley High School. 

“We have a responsibility to spend the taxpayers’ money as frugally as possible and going with the lowest bidder does not always make the best economic sense,” said Councilmember Dona Spring, who added that she is worried that similar delays might occur at the high school. 

City Attorney Manuela Albuquerque said that when the city’s Capital Projects Division investigated Arntz Builders prior to entering into the contracts, they were unable to find any evidence of failure to complete contractual responsibilities on the company’s other projects. 

Cardinaux defended the contractor to the council saying there are too many unforeseen problems that arise in large renovation projects to accurately predict completion dates and cost overruns. 

According to library project manager, Elena Engle, the project, which began in April, 1999, is now expected to be completed by Nov. 3, about four months after the agreed-upon completion date. 

Engle said the Central Library, once completed, will have twice as much space as the original library. “The old library was about 50,000 square feet,” she said, “and the renovated library will have a total 100,000 square feet of additional space.” 

It will have a new community meeting room, a new Berkeley History Room, and three times more space for the children’s section and the art and music sections. The building will also be seismically upgraded. “The list goes on and on,” she said. 

Engle said the cost overruns were not unusually high for a renovation project and that the industry standard for calculating budget overruns is about 15 percent of the estimated cost, which in this case would be $4.5 million. 

“At an estimated overrun of $2 million, we’re in pretty good shape,” she said. 

But she said that some of the delays could possibly be the result of Arntz poor staffing of site managers. 

Cardinaux said the renovation experienced several unavoidable delays such as the discovery of inadequate foundations in adjacent buildings. “They had to put in extra underpinnings on the neighboring buildings and by the time that project was completed we were into winter, which caused additional, weather-related delays,” he said. “Then there were a series of smaller problems such as some asbestos removal and they had to take out some oil-contaminated soil where an old elevator was. These kinds of small things happen and they add up to weeks.” 

In addition there has been a painter and plasterers strike that has yet to be resolved. Cardinaux said that the labor issue may cause another delay of about a week.  

But Board of Library Trustees President Kevin James said the project completion date was moved back to June 25 to accommodate unexpected delays related to structural and weather conditions. 

“That date has passed and we think there have been times when management of the project has been understaffed and lax,” he said.  

Arntz Building Superintendent Brian Proteau said delays were unavoidable. “There’s always going to be problems on a remodel project like this and especially when the building is 75 years old,” he said, “For example it was a rough winter and we were trying to pour the new foundation and you just can’t do that in the mud.” 

On a lighter note, Engle told the council that fundraising for some of the interior amenities for the newly renovated building such as the library’s refurbished original furniture and computer equipment was going well. “The Library Foundation has been wildly successful in raising money,” she said, “thanks to the citizens of Berkeley.”


Cal’s Schott headed to national camp

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday July 12, 2001

All-American will get a shot at more caps in Nordic Cup 

 

CHICAGO - All-American forward Laura Schott, who will be a junior on the Cal soccer team this fall, is one of 20 players selected to attend a three-day U.S. under-21 training camp in Rhode Island, July 17-19. Head coach Jerry Smith will then select 18 of those players to represent the United States at the 2001 Women’s U-21 Nordic Cup Championships, being contested in Norway from July 25-31.  

Schott has already made two trips with the under-21 national team this year. Representing the full national team, she played in a friendly against Italy and in the Algarve Cup in March and in May traveled to Mexico to play two exhibitions against the country’s full national team. 

Without a sanctioned FIFA championship for U-21 women, the Nordic Cup serves at the top competition in the world for this age group.  

The eight competing teams are divided into two groups of four, with first-round play consisting of round-robin matches within the group. The group winners will then play for the championship. The two second-place group finishers will play for third place, the third-place finishers for fifth and the last-place finishers will play for seventh. The USA will play in Group A with Iceland, Denmark and Germany while Group B features host Norway, Sweden, Canada and Finland. All the matches will be contested in and around the city of Gjovik, which is approximately 100 kilometers from Oslo.  

Last year, Jillian Ellis led the USA to a 1-0 victory over host Germany to capture the USA’s third Nordic Cup title in the last four years.


Staff
Thursday July 12, 2001


Thursday, July 12

 

Salsa Dance Classes 

7:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Classes every Thursday with live percussionists, light refreshments, DJ playing Latin music. $10 or $15 for two. 

237-9874 

 

Faith and Public Life 

Reception, 6:30 p.m., event at 7. 

Pacific School of Religion chapel 

1798 Scenic Ave. 

Conversations with Jim Wallis, editor of Sojourns magizine and Wilson Riles, candidate for mayor of Oakland 

849-8268 

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week East Bay Science and Arts Middle School evoke the sounds of Trinidadian Carnival with a steel drum performance. 

 

Hiking the Tahoe Rim Trail 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide Presentation. 

Twenty years in the making, the 150-mile Tahoe Rim Trail is now complete. Tahoe Rim Trail Association board member Trena Bristol joins TRT through-hikers Steve Andersen and Art Presser for a slide presentation on great day hikes and backpacking trips on the TRT. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Quit Smoking Class 

6 - 8 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis Street 

A six week quit smoking class. 

Free to Berkeley residents and employees. 

Call 644-6422 or e-mail at: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Pain: The Fifth Vital Sign 

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1902 Hearst Avenue 

A public hearing on AB 487, Remediation of Under Prescribing Pain Medication, with Assemblywoman Dion Aroner, medical experts, and patients. 

540-3660 

 

art.SITES SPAIN 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

Sidra Stitch, author of “art.SITES SPAIN: Contemporary Art and Architecture Handbook,” will present a slide show and talk on the most recent trends in art and architecture in Spain. Free. 

843-3533 

 


Friday, July 13

 

Therapy for Trans Partners  

6 - 7:30 p.m.  

Pacific Center for Human Growth  

2712 Telegraph Ave. (at Derby)  

A group open to partners of those in transition or considering transition. The group is structured to be a safe place to receive support from peers and explore a variety of issues, including sexual orientation, coming out, feelings of isolation, among other topics. Intake process required. Meeting Fridays through August 17.  

$8 - $35 sliding scale per session  

Call 548-8283 x534 or x522 

 

Strong Women; The Arts,  

Herstory and Literature 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK Jr. Way) 

Taught by Dr. Helen Rippier Wheeler, author of “Women and Aging: A Guide to Literature,” this is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. Free.  

Call 549-2970 

 

Friday the 13th Dance 

7:30 - 10 p.m. 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 

2200 Shattuck Avenue 

Celebrating the success of this years Berkeley Arts Festival, supporters can dance to jazz, swing and slow songs at this Friday the 13th Dance: The post hoc ergo propter hoc Hop. “Just Friends” will provide the music. Admission by donation, to benefit the Festival. 

486-0411 

 


Saturday, July 14

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street at Martin Luther King Jr. Way  

Regular market plus annual peach tastings. Free. 

548-3333 

 


Sunday, July 15

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair  

Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn drive train maintenance and chain repair from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Free  

527-4140 

 

Buddhist Practice 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Mark Henderson on “Fearlessness on the Bodhisattva Path.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

Second Annual Wobbly High  

Mass 

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck (@ Prince St.) 

Presented by Folk This! and friends, an evening of musical satire, subversion and sacrilege. This year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow,” a historical journey toward a future society without classes or bosses. 

$8 

849-2568 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Ave., between 3rd and 4th Streets  

Family-oriented weekly market. Crafts, music, produce, and specialty foods. 

654-6346 


Despite big spending, new meters a bust

Thursday July 12, 2001

Editor: 

 

There is a big problem with parking meters in Berkeley. A large number of the new “foolproof” meters the city installed with great fanfare in recent years are now perennially broken. 

I’ve noticed this in particular walking through the Southside / Telegraph Avenue area. On one block, 17 out of 29 meters are broken. On another block, 17 out of 21. On the south side of Bancroft Way, from Telegraph to Shattuck Avenue, a whopping 38 out of 57 meters aren’t functional. 

You can easily identify the broken meters because they flash “FAIL” (or, occasionally, “DEAD”). Working meters either display the amount of time remaining, or flash “0.00” indicating that time has expired. 

I would not be surprised if a comprehensive survey showed that in some neighborhoods such as the Southside fifty percent or more of the meters are persistently non-functional. 

The city is losing considerable amounts of revenue every day. In a busy neighborhood where every street parking space is used during the business day, every 100 meters produce some $75 per hour in revenue. If 100 meters are broken, the city is losing up to $675 per day, or more than $4,000 per week. 

Many meters have been broken, or re-broken, since mid-2000. I remember seeing dozens of broken meters along Bancroft Avenue last August and September, and they’re still broken. I know of people who parked at those broken meters all day for weeks and months, without ever receiving tickets. 

I haven’t seen or heard of any comprehensive city response. The city has almost literally been putting a bandaid on the problem by affixing stickers to the broken meters. The stickers admonish people that parking time limits are still enforced, whether or not the meter is broken. This is akin to reminding criminals in crime-ridden neighborhoods that laws are still enforced. One appreciates the helpful information, but would rather have more police around and more active law enforcement. 

Last year, readers may remember that the city declared victory over the previous meter problem (an epidemic of vandalized and stolen meters) with its purchase of new meters. If this is victory, I’d like to know what city officials think defeat would be like. In some respects the situation is worse than before because we’ve spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on new equipment that apparently does not function well. 

We’re all owed some answers to some basic questions. 

Why are so many meters out of service? How long does it take to repair them (and why), and how many have actually been repaired? How much was actually spent on “solving” the problem last year? How much revenue is being lost because of broken meters on a daily and annual basis? 

Why are so many of the new meters broken? Was there a flaw in their design? If so, does the City have any recourse with the manufacturer? Finally, how have the City staff who spend their days collecting meter revenue and issue tickets for expired meters been spending their time in neighborhoods where a majority of the meters don’t receive revenue and have permanently “expired”? 

The situation also has import for transportation policy. The city is ceaseless in its advocacy of alternatives to cars. However, by having so many broken meters, the city is also de facto providing a considerable amount of free on-street parking in business districts and around major commute destinations such as the university. 

This has broad repercussions beyond the financial. For example, Telegraph Avenue merchants struggle with a lack of short-term shopper parking. No wonder, when many of the meter spaces in front of their businesses are occupied every day by commuters taking advantage of the free meters. 

 

Steven Finacom 

Berkeley


Cab company sued for refusing service to blind with guide dogs

By Daniela Mohor
Thursday July 12, 2001

The Berkeley-based Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund filed a lawsuit in Alameda County Superior Court Wednesday morning against taxi services provider Friendly Cab Company, alleging that it discriminates against passengers who use guide dogs. 

DREDF, a national non-profit law and policy center protecting disability rights, filed the suit on behalf of two blind Oakland residents, Claude Everett and Constance Kelley, who claim that Friendly Cabs have repeatedly refused to serve them because they have guide dogs. 

According to DREDF, by doing so, Friendly Cab drivers violated the California Unruh Civil Rights Act, which requires all businesses to be fully accessible to people with disabilities, and the Public Accommodations Law that explicitly guarantees the right of people with guide dogs to take any kind of public transportation, including taxis. 

“Guide dogs are specifically authorized to accompany Mr. Everett and Ms. Kelley by California law, and Friendly as a California business should be very aware of the obligation,” said DREDF attorney Sherri L. Rita at a press conference Wednesday afternoon. 

Kelley and Everett said they complained to Friendly Cab on several occasions before turning to DREDF for legal assistance. But they said Friendly Cab, which is one of the largest taxi services providers in the East Bay, never responded to their complaints.  

Everett, who works in a nonprofit organization in Berkeley, said he decided to bring the issue to court in August, 2000, after he spent 45 minutes waiting for a Friendly Cab to pick him and his dog up in downtown Oakland. Everett said he had to call the company several times to ask when the taxi would arrive, until the dispatcher finally told him that the driver had refused to stop because he had a guide dog. 

“I felt so frustrated, humiliated about the situation and I tried to resolve it in other ways,” said Everett. “But I didn’t feel that it was being taken care of, so I decided to contact DREDF.” 

Kelley experienced the same kind of feelings. She used cabs three to four times a month to do grocery shopping, but endless waits for taxis often forced her and her dog to walk the two miles between the store and her house, carrying all the grocery bags in her only available hand.  

One of the reasons drivers refuse to take the plaintiffs and their service animals in their cars, a Friendly employee once explained to Everett, is that they are allergic to animals. But to the DREDF attorneys this is not a valid justification. 

“It is a personnel issue they have to work out among themselves to find out how they are going to comply with the law,” said attorney Rita, adding that her clients would be open to working with the company on a solution that takes into consideration this kind of concrete problem. 

The administration of Friendly Cab Company refused to comment on the dispute Wednesday afternoon. 

According to advocates for disability rights, Everett and Kelley are only two of the many people in California who are discriminated against because of their guide dogs. 

“This is a chronic problem,” said Thom Ainsworth, graduate services specialist of Guide Dogs for the Blind, a San Rafael-based organization. “There doesn’t seem to be a compassion or sensitivity toward people who have a disability and use guide dogs.” Part of the issue, Ainsworth added, comes from the general lack of awareness of the state legislation. 

Berkeley itself is no stranger to the problem. The Commission on Aging brought a recommendation to the City Council Tuesday that asks the city administration to adopt a Bill of Rights guaranteeing a number of rights to the senior and disabled citizens who benefit from a local taxi subsidy program. One of these rights is the obligation for the taxi companies participating in the program to take pets in carriers, guide dogs and service animals in the cabs. 

Through the lawsuit the plaintiffs seek damages for violations of their civil rights and a revision of the defendant’s policy, which they hope will contribute to the protection of disabled people’s rights. “The primary motivation is not to get a lot of money, it’s to get a systemic change,” said Rita. “We would like Friendly to change its policy and practices in order to comply with the laws.”


BHS stars Nitoto and Patterson will transfer to McClymonds

By Jared Green
Thursday July 12, 2001

With Berkeley High headed for rebuilding seasons in both football and boys’ basketball, the last thing the Yellowjackets needed was to lose two veteran players. But that’s exactly what has happened, as rising seniors Mohammed Nitoto and Chevallier Patterson will transfer to McClymonds for the next school year. 

Both Nitoto and Patterson were expected to play key roles on both the football and basketball teams next season. Nitoto was the returning starter at quarterback on the gridiron and was in the running for the point guard’s slot on the court, while Patterson was the ’Jackets’ number-one receiving threat and a key wingman, respectively. 

According to Nitoto, changes in the athletic department and football staff were the impetus for his move, which he has planned since before the school year ended. He hopes to earn a college scholarship, and feels the program at McClymonds will help him get there. 

“The football coach at Mack (Alonzo Carter) has a lot of pull with scouts,” he said. “He sent like 10 kids to college on scholarship last year. That’s more than Berkeley has had in the last five years put together.” 

Several of the veteran players on the Berkeley football team were unhappy with the selection of former junior varsity coach Matt Bissell as next year’s head coach. Gary Weaver decided not to return next year after two years of coaching the ’Jackets. 

“My father felt like Bissell didn’t know what he was doing, especially when he hired a bunch of science teachers as assistants at first,” Nitoto said. 

Bissell did not return the Daily Planet’s phone calls yesterday. 

Nitoto said his father actually wanted to send him to McClymonds since his freshman year, but “I didn’t want to lose my friends at Berkeley.” But when it was apparent that Bissell was going to be the head coach next season, Mohammed finally agreed that transferring would be the best thing. 

“It’s a smaller school, so the teachers will be able to give me more help to get my grades squared away,” he said. 

Patterson said smaller classes was the biggest reason he will move to Mack. He said he had trouble getting into advanced placement classes at Berkeley, which has been a common complaint among minority students at BHS. 

“If it was just about sports, I probably would have stayed,” Patterson said. “If you compare Mack and Berkeley, Mack is better for getting into college, sports or not.”


Young writers spread their wings

Thursday July 12, 2001

Examples of work from the Young Writers’ Camp; see story on p. 1 

 

Ode to My Shoes  

By Terry Xiao, sixth grade, San Leandro 

 

Faint smelly odor drifts from you 

the creek on the tongue, 

downtown all over the heels 

Worn shoelaces that are so short 

we never worry about tying 

Splashes of rainbow colors 

jump out from the ankles from art class 

Dull brown and smug green 

caked on the bottoms from camp 

How can plain white tennis shoes bring out so much? 

O shoes, where art thou? 

 

 

Ode to my Bed 

by Michael Pruess, sixth grade, Berkeley 

 

Oh soft cotton, or so they said 

100% cotton covers my bed 

A feather pillow, blue pillow case 

Blue sheets to match the azure sky 

The bottomless lake on which I lie 

It makes me soar, it makes me swim 

The pattern of a road ploughs 

never ending route on the surface of 

My dark blue comforter, in blue and white, 

The sky, the clouds, as I take flight. 

 

 

Ode to letters 

By Ashly Graves, sixth grade, Oakland 

 

Ode to letters 

squiggly, shapely 

make me talk 

on a paper 

so blank until 

I blob some letters on it 

and I talk to my friends 

without using electricity 

without wasting my breath 

and all I need is a stamp 

Ode to letters 

squiggly and shapely.  

 

 

Ode to My Tennis Racket 

By Philip Chang, seventh grade, Albany 

 

Oh racket glittering in the sun 

slowly getting weaker 

Watching your strings crack 

You used to make a sharp sound but now you just make a thud 

You were patched up again and again 

Each time getting weaker 

You broke one day but you were too good to waste 

So now you act like a mirror reflecting my hobbies 

And the memories still linger with you 

Remember the time we came back in a game 

that our opponent thought he had won? 

Oh racket glittering in the sun. 

 

 

 

Colors 

By Naima T. Smith, fifth grade, Oakland 

 

Purple, a slit of royalty waiting to be crowned 

Orange, a show of dazzling performances 

Red, a life of danger, excitement and anger 

Green, a hunk of nature waiting to be grown 

White, a thin line of pureness 

Black, a breeze of mystery 

Yellow, a piece of happiness 

Blue, water rolling down cheeks 

Pink, just as sweet as candy. 

 

 

 


Ninth-grade reform plans get good grades

Ben Lumpkin
Thursday July 12, 2001

Some school officials are cautiously optimistic that the latest round of reforms proposed for Berkeley High’s ninth-grade curriculum will make being a freshman less overwhelming than it has been in years past – particularly for students who arrive at the school at risk of failing. 

Nearly 200 freshman were failing two or more classes at the end of the first semester this year. 

Under the curriculum change, world history, traditionally a ninth-grade class at Berkeley High, would move to the 10th grade. This would free up staff to create a new “freshman seminar” combining elements of the traditional ethnic studies and social living curriculums. 

While both ethnic studies and social living are part of the ninth grade curriculum under California’s statewide academic standards, world history is considered part of the 10th grade curriculum under those standards. 

But the shift proposed by Berkeley High School Principal Frank Lynch last week does more than bring the school into better alignment with state standards, said Berkeley school board president and former Berkeley High teacher Terry Doran. It allows ninth-grade teachers to redesign the freshman curriculum in a way that makes it easier for them to work together as a team. 

Under the new plan, the freshman seminar will be held back-to-back with a freshman English class. The classes’ curriculums will be made compatible, so that the study topics in one class relate to the study topics in the other during any given week.  

The hybrid formed by the blending of these two classes will be known as a freshman “core,” and each core will consist of 40 students (since the English and freshman seminar classes, at 20-to-1, will have lower student to teacher ratios than other freshman classes.) 

Within the core, it is hoped, teachers will work together more closely than ever before, assessing the progress of students on an ongoing basis, and hashing out strategies to help those students who are struggling.  

It is further hoped that students will come to relate to their freshman “core” as a kind of “home room” – a place where the teachers are looking out for them and working to ensure their overall success at the school. 

“It’s being designed almost like a homeroom, to allow teachers to play a role of mentoring and working with the students,” Doran said. “I see it as complimenting what (the school guidance counselors) are supposed to do.” 

Doran and others said the freshman cores, by creating a place where specific groups of students are closely monitored by specific teachers, goes a long way toward creating the more “personalized” education experience found in Berkeley High’s small learning communities, such as Common Ground and Communication Arts and Sciences. 

Plans for how the cores will work are not completely finalized, but Doran said it was his expectation that, if a student gets in trouble, academically or otherwise, core teachers would intervene immediately. They would work to improve a student’s study skills and refer the student to tutoring and mentoring services at the school for extra help. They might even hash out something like an “individual learning plan” for each of the kids in their core, spelling out clearly what they need to do to graduate, or what they need to do to be prepared for a specific career after graduation. 

Mary Lee Cole, the educational programs’ expert who launched the popular Writer’s Room volunteer tutoring program at the high school this year, said the opportunities for teachers to collaborate under the “core” system could make a significant difference in the way freshman experience Berkeley High School. 

Core teachers are already meeting over the summer, designing their core curriculums for next year, Cole said. This means “teachers will have a good working relationship” from the get-go next fall, Cole said, “which is vital if you’re going to identify kids who need help.” 

Also new at the high school next year, all English teachers will be trained in the latest techniques for teaching reading to teen-aged students, based on the assumption that 200 or more of 800 freshman who enter Berkeley High next year could arrive with reading skills far below grade level.  

“At risk” students will attend a second, “back-up” English class focused exclusively on racheting up their reading skills as quickly as possible, so they can engage more successfully in the rest of the freshman curriculum. 

Cole, who provided dozens of trained writing tutors to work one-on-one with Berkeley High students this year, said in many cases the tutors helped students complete assignments they simply could not do on their own because their reading and writing skills were insufficient. 

“I think this is really facing reality and seeing the problem clearly and beginning to respond to it,” Cole said of the school’s decision to make literacy a integral part of the freshman curriculum for many students next year. 

Taken together, Doran said the reforms Berkeley High Principal Lynch and his staff have proposed for next year are very substantial steps towards combating the racial “achievement gap” so often criticized at Berkeley High. 

“There are members of the community who say we are doing nothing, and it bothers me, because I think the professionals at the high school are really trying to do something,” Doran said.  

“Whether it’s enough is another question.”


Kuzminskas leaves Bears, will play pro league in Lithuania

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday July 12, 2001

Saulius Kuzminskas, 6-foot-11 forward, has elected not to return to the Cal basketball team, deciding instead to play professionally in his native Lithuania.  

Kuzminskas saw action in 14 games as a freshman last season, scoring six points in 23 minutes of action. He missed the first six games of the year with a knee injury.  

“We wish Saulius well,” said head coach Ben Braun. “We appreciate his contributions to our program, but certainly understand his desire to be closer to his family.”  

A native of Vilnius, Lithuania, Kuzminskas is training with the Under-20 Lithuanian National team this summer. 

Kuzminskas’ decision leaves the Bears with just three big men for next season. Center Nick Vander Laan decided to transfer for his senior season shortly after Cal’s first-round NCAA loss to Fresno State in March. Solomon Hughes will be the starter, with talented recruit Jamal Sampson and Hughes’ brother Gabriel vying for playing time off of the bench.


Young poets bloom at writers’ camp

By Mary Barrett
Thursday July 12, 2001

Teresa is reading her piece about her grandmother, Baby, who tries to ride a scooter but falls instead, head over heels; eight stitches are required to close up her burst-open chin. The audience cracks up when Teresa rolls her eyes and tells us this grandmother is a judge! 

Teresa’s a Berkeley student who asked that her last name not be used in this story to protect her grandmother. 

“Read another story,” the children beg when she’s done. And Teresa obliges. “Do you want the story about a flying headless chicken or the one about the woman in Ecuador who was buried alive?” The chicken story wins the vote and Teresa reads again from her collection of family stories. 

For the fourth summer, I’m teaching at the Young Writers’ Camp under the auspices of the Bay Area Writing Project at UC Berkeley. This summer is my favorite – every child but one really likes to write. It takes no urging from me to get them started.  

Michael Pruess, is writing a medieval fantasy that he’s decided to turn into an epic poem with rhyming couplets. A girl from San Leandro is composing riddles, and another student is working on a disparaging letter to President Bush. There’s a spate of ill feeling toward Bush, but that erupts into hilarity when someone brings in Bushisms found in a book at Pegasus Fine Books on Solano Avenue. “Rarely is the question asked, ‘Is our children learning?’” the student quotes from an alleged campaign speech.  

“We Is,” we reply. 

We’re meeting this year at Oxford school in the north hills area where I teach reading during the regular school year. Ashly Graves is a student here. She takes the bus from Oakland each day and walks up the Eunice Street hill to come to class. Her remembrance of a childhood game when she pretends to be a baker is the piece she reads aloud today. Then another child reads her account of being stuck in an elevator, with a voice on the intercom offering reassurances as she hangs between floors. Her real life account eases my claustrophobic horror. 

Forty six campers come each morning to write for three hours. The teachers, Grace Morizawa, Peggy Heathcock and I, are consultants for the Writing Project and credentialed classroom teachers. We present writing strategies and see our ideas put into immediate creative use by these fourth through eighth grade students. 

This morning we talk about character development. Terry Xiao has worn her pajamas to class and brought a pillow. She tells us of the character she invented after reading “Captain Underpants.” It’s “Pajama Kid”, a super kid who climbs into children’s dreams at night with Good Dream Tablets, Bad Dream Zappers and a Nightmare Shield to deliver satisfying dreams. 

Once a week we gather in a whole group for a round of Author’s Chair. Children clamor to read aloud. One boy reads a list poem of things he likes which goes from abstract – peace, hope – to concrete, skate boarding. Another boy reads a description of the emotion hatred. His just dyed hot red hair flames above his notebook that he holds shielding his face to combat a touch of embarrassment. Campers read past dismissal time and still the audience sits and listens. 

My students say they love this Young Writers’ Camp because the writing does not have to fit an assignment like it does at school. Here there is plenty of time to write about whatever is intriguing. Only rarely do they get to read aloud to an appreciative audience at school; here it’s a daily experience. And at school, though no one says it, I believe their interest and facility with writing can’t be so deeply shared. Here we understand each other; to us there’s nothing juicier than writing. 

 

Parents who’d like their children to attend next year’s Young Writers’ Camp can contact the Writing Project at 642-0971 and ask for Paul Cunningham who will put them on a mailing list. 

 

Mary Barrett is a freelance writer and teacher in the Berkeley Unified School District.


Enron Corp. sues to block document’s release

By Don Thompson
Thursday July 12, 2001

Senate subpoenas energy provider’s financial records for investigation 

 

SACRAMENTO – Enron Corp. is suing state officials to stop a Senate subpoena of its financial records in a dispute over alleged overcharges for its electricity sales to California. 

“They’ve sent two things to Texas — our money and these documents, and they’re saying we can’t get either one back,” said Laurence Drivon, special legal counsel to the Senate Select Committee to Investigate Market Manipulation. 

The suit came hours before the committee will consider asking the full Senate to cite the Houston-based company for contempt Wednesday. The other subject of possible sanctions, Atlanta-based Mirant Inc., appears to be cooperating, Drivon said. 

Committee chairman Joe Dunn, a Santa Ana Democrat, said the committee’s investigation will continue despite Enron’s “pure act of intimidation. We’re not going to back down.” 

Enron’s suit, filed in Sacramento Superior Court, said the company’s financial papers are outside the committee’s jurisdiction because most of its operations and paperwork are outside California. 

That shouldn’t matter, Drivon said, citing last year’s successful subpoena of out-of-state documents during the investigation into the activities of former Insurance Commissioner Chuck Quackenbush. Previous investigations have included documents subpoenaed from other nations, he said. 

Companies doing business in California cannot claim immunity from its laws or oversight, Drivon and Dunn said. Houston-based Reliant Energy made the same argument but then agreed to turn over 1,800 documents. 

Enron’s suit also says Dunn’s committee has not given the company a fair hearing, and the committee has not followed due-process protections before seeking sanctions. 

Not so, said Dunn and Drivon, adding that they negotiated with generators to give them time to comply with the subpoenas. Proof of that, they said, comes in the decision to give Williams, AES, Reliant, Dynegy, Duke and NRG an extra week past Tuesday’s deadline to turn over documents subpoenaed last month. 

In a letter to Dunn, Steven J. Kean, an Enron executive vice president, said several municipal districts were profiting from the power crisis. “Yet, remarkably, the committee has inexplicably chosen not to include these market participants in its investigations.” 

Enron officials are concerned the purpose of the investigation, Kean said, is to “create a convenient political scapegoat to shoulder the blame for California’s policy mistakes and changes in market fundamentals.” 

However, Enron has agreed to turn over some “non-confidential” documents at the Wednesday hearing, Kean said. 

The committee is on the verge of asking the full Senate to impose sanctions for the first time since 1929, when the Senate briefly jailed a reluctant witness during a committee investigation of price fixing and price gouging allegations involving cement sales to the state. 

There are no set penalties, Drivon said — by law, “the Senate can take such action as it deems necessary and appropriate.” 

Enron is one of the world’s leading electricity, natural gas and communications companies, with $101 billion in revenues in 2000. It owns 30,000 miles of pipeline, has 20,000 employees and is active in 40 countries. During the first quarter of this year, Enron’s revenues increased 281 percent to $50.1 billion. 

It is well connected politically. It has supported both President Bush and his father, President George H.W. Bush. 

Last month the firm was a corporate sponsor at a congressional fund-raiser featuring the president, where contributors in tuxedos and gowns dined and drank around a giant gold “W” that reached to the rafters at the Washington Convention Center ballroom. 

Enron has also been tied to President Bush’s approach to the energy crisis. Company chairman Kenneth Lay is a friend and one of the largest campaign contributors to Bush and the GOP. Several prominent members of the Bush administration hold stock in the company. 

The company is one of several major GOP donors accused of meeting secretly with Vice President Dick Cheney as he drafted the Bush administration’s energy plan. 

Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling was hit in the face by with a pie last month before speaking at the Commonwealth Club of California in San Francisco.


Opus-Q shows a range of seriousness, silliness

By Miko Sloper
Thursday July 12, 2001

Gay and lesbian chorus sings music for social causes 

 

The premiere concert series of the men’s chorus Opus-Q will feature a wide array of musical styles, each handled with appropriate shifts of singing technique and tone.  

This well-trained and finely honed chorus presents great delights for any music fan.  

Their voices blend impeccably, meshing consonants cleanly to clearly express the songs’ texts while richly resonating vowels in service of the lush harmonies. The singers control dynamics keenly, rising and falling as a unit when that is called for, and clearly delineating contrapuntal lines when that is appropriate. These boys can sing! 

The most moving number, “For Brandon Teena” by Timothy Snyder, reflects on the post mortem fate of a woman brutally murdered for posing as a man. The story was the basis for the film “Boys Don’t Cry.” 

The homophonic passages unfold with dramatic urgency which is boldly shattered by an occasional stab of polyphony. The thick dissonant chords create a mood which is at once electrifying and chilling. Bring a handkerchief: you’ll need it. 

This overwhelmingly sad piece is thankfully flanked by silliness. Aaron Copland’s “I Bought Me a Cat” features singers in sodbusters’ straw hats strolling through the audience singing a cumulative rustic refrain which is sure to delight children of all ages. The pop classic tune “Up, Up and Away” concludes the first half on a bouncy note. This programming works well both to highlight and dispel the emotional charge of Snyder’s composition. 

The chorus shows it has mastered the Masters by presenting a piece each from Handel and Bach. This is not merely tokenism, for these pieces add a sense of breadth and create a serious context for some of the other lighter works. The chorus sings a snappy tune from the Estonian composer Alo Ritsling. So what if you can’t understand Estonian? You will be amused anyway.  

The concert also includes two of Copland’s arrangements of early American hymns, two songs from Leonard Bernstein (one of which features the chorus whistling a catchy tune), a well-known round and a romantic ballad Bing Crosby recorded during the ’40s.  

The evening concludes with the uplifting song “Something Inside So Strong” from the South African composer Labi Sassri. This incredible variety of songs offers something for everyone. 

The Opus-Q chorus is the newest member of the Gay and Lesbian Association of Choruses (GALA) which includes over 190 groups worldwide. They are also the newest group of singers performing this segment of the vocal repertory in this area. They are a welcome addition to the East Bay’s thriving music scene. The director J.R. Foust understands that a little bit of staging and thoughtful programming can go a long way in creating an experience which is more than just a vocal concert. Yet the music is still the basic reason to go to a chorus concert. Foust draws high levels of musicality from his singers. Opus-Q makes beautiful and touching music. 

 

Opus-Q:The East Bay Men’s Chorale – ‘Something Inside So Strong.’ 

University Lutheran Chapel at Haste Street & College Avenue. 

8:07 pm on Thursday & Friday, July 12 & 13. 

$11, $9 for members of other GALA Choruses.


Farmers find urbanites like picking in their fields

The Associated Press
Thursday July 12, 2001

CORNELIUS, Ore. – Turn left at the American flag. Follow the dirt road lined with yellow dandelions. Pass the old house with the wooden porch and the dark brown llama in the front corral. Park in the back, where the rooster is crowing and the air is rich with a mixture of animal dung and ripening fruit. 

This is Duyck’s Peachy-Pig Farm. Twenty years ago, this was just a typical pig farm. But then hog prices started falling, and farmer Gary Duyck got, as he says, “crippled up.” 

“It was pure economics,” Duyck said of his choice to open his Washington County farm to outsiders. And it has proved a profitable choice. 

On a recent Saturday, the rolling hills behind Duyck’s home and barn were dotted with folks who held white plastic buckets in one hand and plucked garnet-red raspberries with the other. 

Beginning next month, customers will be back to pick beans, peppers and yellow raspberries. Fall brings pumpkins and a miniature corn maze for the kids. Next year, Duyck plans a bigger maze as well as hay rides. 

With food processors closing and increased competition from growers outside the United States, Northwest farmers have turned to roadside stands, u-pick fields and farmers markets as a way to boost profits and, in some cases, simply to stay in business. 

They’ve discovered that urban dwellers are eager to spend an afternoon picking berries or pumpkins. And some parents are even willing to pay a few dollars so their city-bred child can feed a pig. 

In 1992, 4,263 Oregon farms sold at least a portion of their crops at roadside stands, farmer’s markets or u-pick fields. Five years later, the number had grown to 4,594 farms with more than $14 million in sales. 

When the Oregon agricultural census is taken again next year, Homer Rowley, a statistician with the National Agricultural Statistics Service, bets the number will have grown yet again. 

“Farmers are being squeezed,” Rowley said. “Many are either getting out of the business” or marketing their products directly to their customers. 

Chris Olson remembers picking berries as a kid and decided on a recent Saturday that it was time for her 3-year-old daughter, Amanda, to know the pleasure of popping a ripe raspberry right into her mouth. 

“We want her to know that they come from a bush and not a store,” Olson said at a field outside Sherwood. “It’s also just good to spend the day with the kids outdoors,” she said. 

With strawberry season nearly finished, most pickers had raspberry jam on their mind. At 90 to 95 cents a pound, they agreed picking the fruit themselves was far better than buying berries at the store. 

Farm visits have become popular for myriad reasons. 

“Some people like to talk to the farmer, that’s important to them. For retired or semiretired people, getting back onto a farm is a big deal,” said Don Bradshaw, who owns the Seven Oaks Farm and serves as president of the Pacific Northwest Farm Direct Marketing Association. 

Bradshaw farms 200 acres in Central Point, just north of Medford. He had a strawberry stand about 20 years ago but dropped it because it was too much trouble. And then came bigger trouble in the form of the North American Free Trade Agreement and other international trade treaties that opened the door to crops grown outside the United States. 

To survive a changing marketplace, Bradshaw said he reopened his farm stand a few years ago. He’s been surprised by sales that are growing 20 percent a year. 

“We’re quite enthusiastic about it,” he said. “We feel there’s growth there yet.” 

The Koch Family Farm in Tualatin started selling u-pick pumpkins in 1983. They opened u-pick strawberry fields five summers ago. Depending on the season, there’s u-pick beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, corn and other crops. Children also come for school field trips and birthday parties. 

“This has been our busiest year,” Kay Koch said as customers crowded around her fruit stand. 

The Koch family first plowed this ground in 1938. Population growth has since brought housing subdivisions and a seemingly endless line of cars to the Tualatin-Sherwood Road, which passes by the farm. There are days, especially when her husband crosses traffic in his tractor, that Kay Koch wonders whether it would be best to sell out to a developer. 

But then come days with perfect weather and laughter coming from the u-pick fields. Then Koch thinks of what her husband always says: “This dirt is too good to cover up.”


Compaq ‘restructuring’ means layoffs for 4,000 workers

By Mark Babineck
Thursday July 12, 2001

HOUSTON – When Compaq Computer Corp. announced earlier this year it was restructuring, the company hoped natural attrition would allow it to shave thousands of jobs. 

But a sour economy, particularly in the tech sector, meant Compaq workers had no place to go. As a result, the Houston-based computer maker said Tuesday it plans to lay off 4,000 workers. 

“Given the weak worldwide economy, our attrition has been lower than expected, so we have accelerated the process by including these positions in the latest charge,” said Jeff Clarke, Compaq’s chief financial officer. 

The staffing cuts bring the total number of jobs Compaq plans to terminate this year to 8,500, or about 12 percent of its work force. 

Compaq had said earlier this year it planned to eliminate 7,000 jobs, with 4,500 coming through layoffs and the rest through attrition. On Tuesday, it said all cuts will be through layoffs. 

The announcement, made after trading closed on the New York Stock Exchange, came as the computer maker said second-quarter revenue would be down 17 percent from the year-ago period, to $8.4 billion. 

The computer maker blamed worsening economic conditions and intensifying price wars in Europe. 

Lehman Brothers analyst Daniel Niles called Compaq’s news, following warnings from chip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and storage giant EMC, is troubling. 

“You hear from EMC, AMD and now Compaq, and it starts to call into question a second-half (economic) recovery,” Niles said. 

Compaq’s announcement boded much worse for the overall economy, and tech companies in particular, than for the company itself, Niles said. 

“In some senses Compaq’s results aren’t so bad, and the bottom line is coming in pretty much where it was guided to,” Niles said. 

Like the previous cuts, Clarke said the additional terminations are expected in Compaq’s personal computer business, supply chain operations and administration. 

Shares of Compaq rose 33 cents to $14.09 on Wednesday in midday trading on the New York Stock Exchange.


University construction project faces its critics

By Matt Lorenz Daily Planet correspondent
Wednesday July 11, 2001

More than 70 people showed up at North Gate Hall for a public hearing Monday night, to challenge UC Berkeley’s Northeast Quadrant Science and Safety Project.  

The precise subject of the hearing was the university’s recently-completed Draft Environmental Impact Report on the project, a document required by the California Environmental Quality Act.  

While the university asserts the NEQSS Project is necessary to satisfy its space and earthquake retrofit needs, many city residents at the hearing said the project was too large and would increase traffic and noise in the area. 

The project would: 

• Demolish and reconstruct two buildings, Stanley Hall and Davis Hall North 

• Add a new building next to Soda Hall 

• Remove the tennis and skateboard recreational space atop the Lower Hearst Parking Building, to add more parking spaces 

With this project, the university will seismically retrofit its science facilities, and in the process, it will also add 244,000 square feet and 400 new employees to these buildings. The opinions of the 25 or so people who spoke at the hearing were strong and unequivocal in their opposition.  

“I think those were great comments,” said Jennifer Lawrence, UC Berkeley’s principal planner for the project, in a telephone interview Tuesday. “I think the campus needed to hear them.”  

There were many challenges leveled against the way the NEQSS project has been carried out until now, from its publicity down to the timing of the hearing.  

“Is NEQSS or is it not the biggest-ever set of projects – in real dollars, or gross square feet – ever launched by the university under a single construction initiative?” asked Jim Sharp, who lives near the proposed project. “I think the public should know that it’s such a big to do,” he said. 

Community activist Clifford Fred suggested that the reason the NEQSS project seems so large is that it’s not, indeed, one project.  

“Allowing the bare minimum of only 45 days to comment on an EIR that encompasses four major projects is unfair to Berkeley residents,” he said. “We should be given ample time to review and comment on this very large and complex draft EIR.” 

Along with many others, Fred urged UC to grant an extended public comment period – something more than the 45-day-minimum required by CEQA. Karen Mena, who graduated from UC in May, argued that the student population is tremendously ignorant of the NEQSS project. 

“I urge that the comment period be extended to include the comments of those students and community members that are away during the summer period,” Mena said.  

Pamela Sihvola, co-chair of the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, rang the alarm on how these new science buildings – combined with the Hayward fault and the other buildings in the vicinity – may have a potentially-hazardous, radioactive effect on the surrounding neighborhood.  

“We feel that such an immense project – which has great potential to release hazardous and radioactive materials routinely, accidentally or as a result of a major earthquake on the Hayward fault – would be much more appropriate if located in a less populated area, away from this active, earthquake fault,” Sihvola said. 

L.A. Wood agreed. 

“We’re going to have to decide whether we’re going to let bio-radiation/bio-tech dominate the campus or whether we’re going to scale it down and allow students to educate themselves there safely,” Wood said. 

There was also a very pronounced turn-out by those concerned over the demise of the tennis courts and skateboard recreational facilities on the Lower Hearst Parking Building. 

City Councilmember Betty Olds spoke on their behalf. 

“People may not know that the university decided not to build 200 parking spots in the (new Seismic Replacement Building at Oxford Street and Hearst Avenue) because it would cost so much money,” Olds said. “That alone means that, since you don’t have that added expense, you certainly should seriously consider replacing the tennis courts on top of the next floor of the parking structure of Scenic Avenue and Hearst.” 

Rob Lipton said he felt the tennis courts are representative of larger tensions between UC and the Berkeley community. 

“The tennis courts lead the way as one of the ‘canary indicators’ of what the university thinks of the public,” he said. “It’s not just a trivial, my-personal-issue-with-tennis situation. It’s the larger issue of how this can be generalized to all the other aspects of what these projects are doing and what UC generally is doing.” 

Luis Borrero spoke on behalf of the Newbridge house for recovering drug addicts, arguing that removal of the tennis courts is not just a statement about recreation, but a negative public health statement. 

Lawrence said the university is considering the residents’ comments. There’s a good possibility that replacement courts will be placed atop the new floor of parking, she said, noting that a study is already underway to help make the final decision about any replacements. It will be completed by end of summer. 

Greg Smith spoke from experience about how little he’s looking forward to the construction noise, noting in particular the use of truck backup beepers, jackhammers and delivery trucks. Even when the EIR designates quiet hours, the construction workers don’t seem to follow the rules, he said. 

He suggested 24-hour noise monitors, while Lara Bice, of Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson’s office, asked: 

“If a significant but unavoidable impact is the potential city of Berkeley noise violation,” Bice said, “what is the expectation that you will be granted permits by the city if even before construction you presume that you will violate (these conditions)?” 

Others pointed to the need for studying cumulative impacts: 

“This EIR is very deficient in terms of measuring cumulative impacts, especially with parking and transportation,” City Councilmember Dona Spring said. “You need to do more with your staff to use public transit. The students are paying for a transit pass; the university employees (should too).” 

But it’s not just sitting in traffic or waiting for a parking space, others added. The traffic construction these projects create can kill, and may again, as the death of pedestrian Jayne Ash a few months ago.  

“The university is very concerned about jaywalking, but as a fact we know that a woman lost her life,” Nancy Holland said. “It’s strange to have such a renowned university justifying it’s extension plans without being able to recognize a fact that we all know from the newspapers.” 

Final comments on he NEQSS project are due at the UC Planning Office by Aug. 1. 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Wednesday July 11, 2001


Wednesday, July 11

 

What’s Cooking? 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Fun experiments you can do in your own kitchen. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

“Global Banquet”  

7:30 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of the Anti-Globalization series. Tonight a presentation of “Global Banquet,” a look at farmers both local and in developing countries trying to survive in the global economy. Discussion led by Anuradha Mittal. Small donation requested. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Board of Library Trustees 

7 p.m. 

South Branch Library 

1901 Russell Street 

Regular meeting. Among items to be discussed are the ADA Renovation and Building/Expansion. 

644-6095 or 548-1240 (TDD) 

 

Police Review Commission 

7:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis Street 

Regular meeting with continued discussion on Marijuana Arrests. 

644-6480 pr 644-6915 (TDD) 


Thursday, July 12

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week East Bay Science and Arts Middle School evoke the sounds of Trinidadian Carnival with a steel drum performance. 

 

Hiking the Tahoe Rim Trail 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide Presentation. 

Twenty years in the making, the 150-mile Tahoe Rim Trail is now complete. Tahoe Rim Trail Association board member Trena Bristol joins TRT through-hikers Steve Andersen and Art Presser for a slide presentation on great day hikes and backpacking trips on the TRT. Free. 527-4140 

 

Quit Smoking Class 

6 - 8 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis Street 

A six week quit smoking class. 

Free to Berkeley residents and employees. 

Call 644-6422 or e-mail at: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Pain: The Fifth Vital Sign 

5:30 - 7:30 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1902 Hearst Avenue 

A public hearing on AB 487, Remediation of Under Prescribing Pain Medication, with Assemblywoman Dion Aroner, medical experts, and patients. 540-3660 

 

art.SITES SPAIN 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

Sidra Stitch, author of “art.SITES SPAIN: Contemporary Art and Architecture Handbook,” will present a slide show and talk on the most recent trends in art and architecture in Spain. Free. 843-3533 


Friday, July 13

 

Therapy for Trans Partners  

6 - 7:30 p.m.  

Pacific Center for Human Growth  

2712 Telegraph Ave. (at Derby)  

A group open to partners of those in transition or considering transition. The group is structured to be a safe place to receive support from peers and explore a variety of issues, including sexual orientation, coming out, feelings of isolation, among other topics. Intake process required. Meeting Fridays through August 17.  

$8 - $35 sliding scale per session  

Call 548-8283 x534 or x522 

 

Strong Women; The Arts,  

Herstory and Literature 

1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. (at MLK Jr. Way) 

Taught by Dr. Helen Rippier Wheeler, author of “Women and Aging: A Guide to Literature,” this is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. Free. Call 549-2970 

 

Friday the 13th Dance 

7:30 - 10 p.m. 

Berkeley Arts Festival Gallery 

2200 Shattuck Avenue 

Celebrating the success of this years Berkeley Arts Festival, supporters can dance to jazz, swing and slow songs at this Friday the 13th Dance: The post hoc ergo propter hoc Hop. “Just Friends” will provide the music. Admission by donation, to benefit the Festival. 486-0411 


Saturday, July 14

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street at Martin Luther King Jr. Way  

Regular market plus annual peach tastings. Free. 

548-3333 


Sunday, July 15

 

Hands-On Bicycle  

Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn drive train maintenance and chain repair from one of REI’s bike technicians. Bring your bike. Free 527-4140 

Buddhist Practice 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Mark Henderson on “Fearlessness on the Bodhisattva Path.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

Second Annual  

Wobbly High Mass 

7:30 p.m. 

La Pena Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck (@ Prince St.) 

Presented by Folk This! and friends, an evening of musical satire, subversion and sacrilege. This year’s theme is “Reclaiming Tomorrow,” a historical journey toward a future society without classes or bosses. $8 849-2568 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Ave., between 3rd and 4th Streets  

Family-oriented weekly market. Crafts, music, produce, and specialty foods. 654-6346 

 

Skronkathon BBQ 

1 - 11 p.m. 

Tuva Space 

3192 Adeline 

The First Annual Transbay Skronkathon Barbecue. Dozens of Bay Area musicians will play “multi-conceptual-deconstructed-creative-music.” Charcoal provided, bring your own items to barbecue. Free. 649-8744 

 

The Wizard School of Magic 

1:30 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, “Benny and Bebe and The Wizard School of Magic” is inspired by the Harry Potter stories. Learn what it takes to become a real wizard. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

— compiled by Sabrina Forkish and Guy Poole 

dalPower 

8:30 a.m. 

Lake Merritt Garden Center 

666 Bellevue Avenue, Oakland 

Bike ride and pancake brunch fundraiser for the Asian Domestic Violence Clinic which provides free or low-cost legal services for abused women and children in the East Bay. Fourteen mile ride from Lake Merritt to Portview Park and back. $5 - $25. 

415-567-6255 


Forum

Wednesday July 11, 2001

Voter-mandated drug diversion plan shortchanged, may fail 

 

Last Nov. 7, California voters approved the “Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act of 2000,” which requires probation and drug treatment – not incarceration – “for those convicted of possession, use, transportation for personal use, or being under the influence of a controlled substance.” The act went into effect on July 1, but a survey of California counties shows little concern with just where and how these people are to be treated. 

 

By Lonny Shavelson 

Pacific News Service 

 

Starting July 1, California courts must direct those convicted of certain drug offenses to drug rehabilitation programs instead of jail. 

Counties have had seven months to prepare since the state's voters made this the law – as Proposition 36 – in last November's election. But across the state, their efforts have more often concerned booking and arraignment than treatment. 

It's time for our officials to pay attention to the rehab system where the addicts are heading – not the court system where they're coming from. 

My own two-year long investigation of that system shows that there is much to be worried about. 

If addicts are to stay free of drugs, they need help with more than drug issues alone. As Dr. Alan Marlatt, director of the Addictive Behaviors Research Center at the University of Washington, says, “Putting people into drug programs without dealing with housing, education, job training, health problems, family and marital problems, and mental health issues, won't work any better than putting them in prison, where they didn't get those things either.” 

Yet in San Francisco, which is considered one of the better-prepared counties, there is no concrete plan for crucial services to aid addicts in anything other than getting off drugs. 

Not one of the 200 or so addicts I interviewed here could name his or her assigned case manager, and there is no plan on the table that would improve this. 

Other California cities and counties, financially strained even with additional Proposition 36 funds, are not likely to do better. 

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Tynan says that paying for comprehensive services for the 17,000 people predicted to be eligible for the program would drive the county into debt. 

Consider, for example, mental health needs. At least 50 percent of drug addicts have problems with clinical depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (often from childhood sex abuse), and other emotional illnesses. 

The standard “treatment” of such addicts is simple. Anyone appearing at a substance abuse treatment intake center with a “dual diagnosis” (substance abuse plus mental health disorders) is told to go to mental health services. 

“We can't get you off drugs,” the intake counselors say, “until you get your mental health problems under control.” 

At the mental health centers, they were told, “We can't deal with your mental health issues, until you're off drugs.” 

This will not change unless we train drug counselors and mental health workers to provide skilled care to people suffering from addictions and mental illnesses – and no such training is offered by Prop 36. 

Moreover, the majority of drug counselors now working in rehab programs lack significant experience and training, and there is no state licensing requirement. Most are ex-addicts whose predominant method is to repeat for others what worked for them. 

The vast majority of these ex-addicts-now-counselors came up through a system based on humiliation and abuse to shame and punish addicts until they give up drugs. 

“Many techniques are used to break through an addict's armor of defenses, including some that embarrass,” says Dr. Brian Greenberg of Walden House, which treats 10,000 addicts annually. 

But he readily agrees that such techniques can do more harm than good. 

“Some who have serious mental illnesses are as fragile as eggs, and may emotionally crack,” he says. “These individuals should never be engaged in a way that embarrasses or humiliates.” 

Yet these are the predominant therapeutic techniques, and counselors have virtually no education in distinguishing who might crack from an in-your-face boot camp approach. 

“Moving drug rehab programs from addiction into mental health issues has created a lot of anxiety for the counseling staff,” says Dave Seymour, a licensed therapist who worked at Walden House. “They're not ready for it, and they're not trained for it.” 

Is Prop 36 doomed to fail? Not necessarily. 

Proper drug treatment is highly effective in getting addicts off drugs, or substantially reducing drug use – and even more effective at decreasing the rate of robberies and mayhem attributable to drugs. 

Californians have to realize that they must augment Prop. 36 with resources for counselor training, mental health and case management In the end, this will save the state money – money now spent on robbery, child abuse, foster care, HIV disease, and more. 

Only if we succeed in changing the programs can we achieve what the voters demanded at the polls last November: that we rehabilitate addicts and help them stay drug free. 

 

Lonny Shavelson, a Berkeley physician and journalist, is the author of “Hooked: Five Addicts Challenge Our Misguided Drug Rehab System.” 

 

Reddy’s paying, must his workers suffer too? 

 

Editor: 

Mr. Reddy has been sentenced. He's going to jail for a long time, and he will pay a big fine.  

I think it's time to stop punishing the Pasand restaurant and the innocent people who work there. It should now be OK for righteous residents of Berkeley to resume patronage. 

With the many restaurant choices in our town, it's a cheap shot to boycott one of them. Have people been vacating the Reddy apartments in droves?  

 

Steve Geller 

Berkeley 

 

Forget the stadium, retrofit the labs 

Editor: 

The ongoing activity to spend one hundred million dollars to “retrofit” the UC Stadium on the Hayward Fault exposes the poverty of the think class. 

Less than two minutes up the hill, the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs exist; thus, if one needs fixing doesn’t the other? 

My solution is this: play the first half at Berkeley and the second half at Golden Gate Fields, with University Avenue one-way to the bay at half time.  

Retrofit the Labs instead. 

 

George Kauffman  

Berkeley  


Tobacco ordinance may go up in smoke

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 11, 2001

A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision could make a Berkeley ordinance restricting tobacco advertisements near schools unenforceable, legal experts say. 

The Berkeley ordinance became vulnerable to legal challenge last month when the nation’s highest court struck down Massachusetts regulations that would have limited tobacco advertising inside or outside retail stores within 1,000 feet of schools, said Marice Ashe, program director of the Oakland-based Technical Assistance Legal Center.  

In a 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court ruled June 28 that a 1969 federal law requiring warning labels on cigarette packages also contained language prohibiting local and state governments from passing legislation that limits tobacco ads on billboards and in stores. 

“(The ruling) seems to be a devastating blow to all the community activists who’ve been working so hard to try to pass local ordinances that restrict tobacco advertising in areas where youth are present,” said Marcia Brown-Machen, project director for the city’s Tobacco Prevention Program.  

“My prediction is that it will not take long before we start seeing once again in Berkeley a lot more outdoor (tobacco) ads in areas where youth congregate,” Brown-Machen said. 

A spokesperson for the City Attorney’s Office declined to comment on the ruling Tuesday, other than to say the office is reviewing the Supreme Court decision and will bring its conclusions and recommendations to the City Council soon. 

After more than a year of advocacy by the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Coalition, an ordinance prohibiting outdoor or storefront tobacco ads within 1,400 feet of schools went into effect in Berkeley in the summer of 1999. 

Similar laws have been passed in more than 30 California cities and counties in recent years, in a movement that gained momentum after internal tobacco industry documents released in 1998 (under court order) revealed that that tobacco industry advertisements have long targeted teenagers. 

According to a 1994 Surgeon General report, more than half of all smokers begin smoking before the age of 14, and 90 percent begin by the age of 19.  

“The fewer times that (youth) are told that smoking is great and wonderful, the better the chance that they won’t start in the first place,” said Tim Moder, a member of the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Coalition who helped push for the advertising ordinance. 

Ashe said Tuesday storefront tobacco ads around Berkeley schools are likely to proliferate in the months ahead as a result of the ruling, although she pointed out that the ban on billboard advertisements of cigarette brands established by a 1998 settlement between tobacco companies and state governments is not affected by the ruling and will continue. 

A number of other local ordinances restricting tobacco sales are not impacted by last month’s ruling, Ashe said. These include bans on the use of vending machines, “self-service” displays and free samples to promote tobacco products. 

Furthermore, the city can do more, legally, to restrict tobacco advertising, Ashe said. An ordinance in Los Angeles says no more than 10 percent of a storefront can be covered with advertisements of any kind – in order to allow police and others a clear view into the building in case of an emergency. 

Because that law targets all advertisements, and not just tobacco advertisements, it is not impacted by the recent Supreme Court ruling, Ashe said. 

“We’re still assessing the impact of this (ruling),” Ashe said. “It is significant, but the primary message we want to give people is that there is still a lot that can be done.” 

Grassroots groups have been successful in persuading some Berkeley merchants to take down some of their indoor tobacco ads voluntarily, according to Brown-Machen. So, law or no law, some merchants could be persuaded to keep tobacco ads out of their store fronts, Brown-Machen said. 

Kamal Ayyad, owner of Fred’s Market on Telegraph Avenue – just blocks away from Willard Middle School – is one of those merchants.  

Ayyad said he used to make about $1,500 a year through contracts with tobacco sales people where he agreed to advertise their products inside and outside his store. 

“They’re constantly pushing you, you know,” Ayyad said of the tobacco sales people, recalling how they would sometimes visit his store twice a week just to make sure he had their advertisements in place.  

But about four years ago, Ayyad said no more. And after a plea from Willard Middle-schoolers this spring he took down his last tobacco ad – a Camel sign mounted on the wall above his cash register. 

“I can do without the incentive, you know,” Ayyad said Tuesday. “I sympathize with the kids more than the tobacco companies.”


Keeping their skills sharp

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 11, 2001

Class helps older adults stay on their toes 

 

In the warmly lit ceramics classroom at the North Berkeley Senior Center, a group of older adults attentively watch as the instructor starts off a memory improvement class by writing three words and an abbreviation with no apparent association on the board. 

“SWIMS, NOON, MOW, SIS.”  

As soon as instructor Phyllis Pacin turns to the eight students and asks what the four words have in common, she is pelted with possible solutions to the riddle.  

“There are vowels in the middle of each word,” one person says. 

“Each word begins and ends with a consonant and the same letter...” another starts to say and then realizes she is almost right. 

Then after a short silence, and a bit of coaxing from Pacin, student Jeremy Batkin, 80, hits the nail on the head: “They spell the same words upside down as right side up.” 

The class is called Playing With Our Minds and is designed to keep older adults mentally active by increasing memory, verbal expression and visual awareness, according to a flier for the class that meets every Tuesday. 

According to the American Society on Aging, adults who are otherwise healthy can begin to experience memory lapses after the age of 50.  

Connie Lynch, a former microbiologist, who has instructed a mental exercise class at the El Cerrito Senior Center for the last 15 years, said that seniors who occasionally forget where they put the car keys or their best friend’s name while making an introduction can lose confidence.  

She said often their confidence is further eroded by younger adults who “treat them like they’ve lost it because they have a few gray hairs.” 

Lynch said that by staying mentally active, older adults can improve they memories. “Just like your muscles, you can make your brain better by working hard and solving problems and trying new things,” she said. 

Lynch said she was inspired to organize her class in 1986 when she read a UC Berkeley study that examined brain development in lab rats. The study compared rats who were kept in a stimulating environment that included ladders and tunnels to explore, and other rats to socialize with to rats who were merely fed and watered.  

The study showed the mentally stimulated rats not only had more developed brains, compared to the “couch potato” rats but they lived longer as well. 

Lynch said mental stimulation can include simple things like having to describe a paper clip using all five senses but without describing what its purpose is. “An exercise like that forces you to think in detail and in a different way than most of us are used to,” she said. “And the more detail you know about something the more you’ll remember about it.” 

She said these exercises help to heighten awareness which can be important to the safety of many seniors. “It helps you to pay attention to your environment which makes you less likely to trip on a crack in the sidewalk or over child’s toy tricycle or walk into the street against a traffic light.” 

Pacin said she engages her North Berkeley Senior Center class with creative projects designed to focus their attention, senses and creativity. “We will listen to music and discuss what the melody evokes or I’ll have them write about a place they’ve been that they liked or didn’t like,” she said. “And instead of simply saying ‘I just loved going there’ they’ll describe the place in a way that will bring the reader there.” 

On Tuesday the students were instructed to pair off and describe what they did on the Fourth of July. After about five minutes each student recounted to the class what their partner did. The exercise helped students listen actively and focus and remember details in order to communicate to the rest of the class.  

The exercise also appeared to stimulate a lively and interesting conversation. The group quickly covered a variety of topics that ranged from their Fourth experiences to Baptist weddings vs. non-traditional weddings on hippie communes to whether there is a God to a anecdote about a senior (who was not present in the class) smuggling a snake across the Canadian border in her hat. 

Pacin, who has taught ceramics to seniors for the last 10 years at Pleasant Valley Adult School in Oakland, said that part of the class is the social aspect.  

Marilyn Kessinger, 73, who was attending the class for the first time, said she really enjoyed the class. “It’s a very stimulating class,” she said. “I like the problem solving and Phyllis has a lot of energy and a good sense of humor.” 

For more information about the Playing With Our Minds class call the North Berkeley Senior Center at 510-644-6107. Classes are free and meet at 1 p.m. on Tuesdays. 

 


Bill would cut funding for charter schools

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 11, 2001

Teachers and parents of the Berkeley site of Hickman Charter School are increasingly concerned about the impact a state Senate bill restricting home-school funding could have on their children’s education. 

SB 740, which was introduced by State Sen. Jack O’Connell, D-Santa Barbara, and approved by the majority of the Assembly Education Committee at a hearing Tuesday, would cut state money for nonclassroom-based instruction by charter schools by 30 percent over the next three years. It would also require home-schooling charter schools to apply every fiscal year to the State Board of Education for the funding. Until now, these autonomously-run public schools received the same amount of state money as regular schools, regardless of whether they only provided resources to parents to teach their children at home, or whether they offered classroom instruction. 

This could directly affect Hickman Charter School. Based in the central valley, the school has a satellite office on Gilman Street, that serves about 100 students from kindergarten to eighth grade in the area. The office works mainly as a resource center for parents who teach their children at home. Parents and students must meet with the school’s teachers on a regular basis to work together on curricular goals, and the children can also benefit from special education services, such as speech therapy or psychological testing.  

O’Connell said he sponsored the bill to fight against charter schools that illegally keep state money meant for children’s instruction. “This bill is designed to eliminate the few bad charter school operators who are knocking the system,” the senator told the Daily Planet Tuesday afternoon. “We are aware of numerous situations where as much as $5,000 per student is going to creative entrepreneurs to run schools that do not exist.”  

O’Connell said the bill wouldn’t penalize schools not involved in fraudulent activities, since the State Board of Education would continue assigning them full funding as long as they prove to be efficient. But like many charter school advocates who attended Tuesday’s hearing, the administrator and teachers of Hickman Charter School say the legislation’s intent to fight the school operators abusing the system would discriminate against institutions providing quality education.  

“I would hope that (the Assembly Education Committee) would look for other ways, and if there are concerns with a few schools come out with solutions that will not negatively affect the schools that are doing a good job,” said Hickman Director Pat Golding in an interview before the bill was brought to the Assembly Education Committee. 

The main worry for educators at Hickman Charter School is that the state funding restrictions would force them to cut special education programs.  

“In our school many families that have students with special needs are looking for an alternative like ours,” said Golding. “You have to have money for all the special education services.” 

Another source of concern for charter school educators is the requirement to annually reapply for funding to the State Board of Education.  

“I find this especially frightening,” said Jane Stenmark, a teacher at the Berkeley site. “(The schools) wouldn’t know if they can stay at the same site. They would have to find a lease on a new site every year and teachers wouldn’t know from year to year if they would be working or not.” But more than about the uncertainty the legislation would bring to schools such as Hickman, Stenmark said she is worried about letting the Board of Education, an entity that does not necessarily support the charter schools, assess the quality of the education they provide. 

Parents are skeptical too. They feel that cutting the funding of nonclasroom-based charter schools may reduce the chance for their children to find the educational alternative that better fits them. 

“I think it’s really sad,” said Tina Rosselle, a mother of three. “Everybody has different needs and charter schools allow us to do what’s better for children on a daily basis.”  

Roselle’s eldest child has been a student at Berkeley’s Hickman Charter School for two years and her second child will be registered next fall. A former teacher, Rosselle wanted her children to be able to learn at their own pace and style and to have a say in their education. To her, home-schooling was the answer. 

“Every child learns in different ways at different times and you can’t accommodate all that in a classroom,” she said. 

The Legislative Assembly will have the final say. The Education Committee voted 10-1 Tuesday to send the bill to the Assembly members, who could vote on it as early as next month. 


Car catches fire in garage

Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 11, 2001

A car fire atop a three-story parking building was extinguished by the Berkeley Fire Department in less than half an hour on Tuesday. 

Because the parking garage at 2999 Regent St. borders a seven-story medical building, the department reacted in force, calling out 24 fire fighters, five engines, two ladder trucks, an ambulance and a chief. 

The blaze was reported at about 2:40 p.m. and extinguished by about 3:15 p.m. 

Assistant chief David Orth said cars can catch fire without incident. 

He said, for example, it’s not that unusual for a fire to break out in a vehicle that has recently had mechanical work done to it. “When a carburetor is rebuilt (for example), that happens,” he said.


Opinion

Editorials

Plan sparks hope for end to underground life

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 17, 2001

SAN DIEGO — Like many of his countrymen, Adrian Duran came to the United States from Mexico and lived a typically furtive existence: He worked off-the-books in low-paying jobs and always kept a nervous watch for immigration inspectors. 

“Life here is really hard for people who don’t have papers ... You’re always hiding,” Duran, 53, said Monday as he waited for work at a day laborer’s center in San Diego. 

He no longer has to hide. Duran received legal residency through a 1986 amnesty program that allowed some 3 million foreign citizens in the United States to fully join American society. 

Now, many more illegal immigrants may be able to follow that path under a new amnesty proposal being considered by the Bush administration. 

Although the details haven’t been worked out, the administration is weighing a plan that would grant legal status to the estimated 3 million undocumented Mexicans living in the United States. 

As members of Congress expressed opposition, news of the proposal spread through immigrant communities in California, where more than a third of the Mexicans in this country live.  

Among many, the news sparked hope for an end to an underground existence that leaves people with few opportunities and the constant fear of deportation. 

“We were talking about it here this morning,” said Alfonso Hurtado, a construction worker who was also at the San Diego day laborer center. “It’s a good idea. Immigrants should be able to participate in society like everyone else.” 

Amnesty opponents say such programs reward illegal immigration, inspire more people to come, and drive down wages in the United States. Even supporters say rumors of such a program are likely to spark a wave of fraud against migrants seeking to legalize their status. 

Central Americans also complain about the fact that the Bush administration is considering the amnesty only for Mexicans as part of a broader immigration agreement with Mexico’s President Vicente Fox. 

“It’s not right,” said Job Siciliano, a resident of Los Angeles who came to this country from El Salvador in 1991. “It should be for all Hispanics. I don’t understand why it’s only for them.” 

But for Mexican illegal immigrants, the news couldn’t be more welcome. 

“I think it is terrific to have that opportunity,” said a 34-year-old immigrant from Mexico who gave only his first name, Daniel, as he waited for work with other laborers along San Francisco’s Cesar Chavez Street in San Francisco.  

“I think it will be something very good for my friends.” 

“It would be marvelous,” a 32-year-old single mother of two in San Diego who entered the United States illegally from Mexico six years ago, said of the amnesty proposal. 

The woman, who asked that her name not be used, works nights as a janitor and described a life tightly constrained by the need to keep a low profile.  

She cannot get a driver’s license or a bank account and is afraid to visit relatives in Los Angeles for fear of Border Patrol checkpoints. 

 

“There’s a constant fear,” said another illegal immigrant, a 35-year-old woman who lives in El Cajon and who also spoke on condition of anonymity. “At any minute you can be picked up and deported.” 

The threat of deportation also prevents illegal immigrants from reporting crimes, workplace abuses or consumer rip-offs and substandard housing, said Leticia Jimenez, a spokeswoman for the American Friends Service Committee, an advocacy group in San Diego. 

If the amnesty is approved, Jimenez said, “they won’t have to suffer in silence.” 


Administration weighs residency for illegal Mexicans

By Scott Lindlaw Associated Press Writer
Monday July 16, 2001

WASHINGTON – The Bush administration is considering granting legal residency to millions of undocumented Mexican immigrants living in the United States. 

Such amnesty would give a permanent reprieve to certain Mexicans living undercover in this country, largely in the border states. It also could be a political boon to the Republican president as he seeks Hispanic support. 

There are 3 million Mexican-born people living illegally in the United States, according to a report last week by Mexico’s National Population Council. 

An immigration task force of top Justice and State Department officials planned to send President Bush a report Monday on the broad outlines of U.S.-Mexico border issues. It will recommend that the United States take action to address illegal immigration, but will stop short of offering concrete proposals, a Justice Department official said Sunday. 

The task force is considering several options, including a proposal to give the illegal Mexican immigrants permanent residency, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity. That is what Mexican President Vicente Fox has been pressing Bush for. 

Major questions remain unanswered about how the administration would administer such a program. The official said issues under consideration include how quickly the immigrants could earn legal status, and whether they would gain such status based on date of entry into the United States, or by occupation, such as farm worker. 

The working group was formed after Bush and Fox met in February. Attorney General John Ashcroft and Secretary of State Colin Powell head the task force, which hopes to have recommendations for the two presidents by September, when Fox visits Bush in Washington. 

Ashcroft is meeting with Mexican officials in California and Arizona later this month to discuss border issues. He and Powell also will meet with their Mexican counterparts in early August. 

The preliminary report will be presented to Bush as Fox completes a five-day visit to the United States this week. On Monday, Fox planned to meet in Detroit with auto executives and union officials. 

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said he would back the kind of amnesty move now under consideration. 

“I believe that these people are living here, and it’s a recognition of reality. They are working here,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” 

But Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., sounded a more cautious note. 

“Just to summarily grant legal status to 3 million people, many of them that got here illegally and have violated the law while they’re here — I’d want to make sure we do this carefully,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.” 

Any guest-worker or amnesty program proposed by Bush would require approval by Congress. Some Democrats also object, mindful of union fears that guest-worker and amnesty programs could drive down wages and decrease job opportunities for Americans. 

Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, introduced legislation last week to create a program that lets farm workers now working in the United States become permanent residents after working 150 days a year for four years. 

Bush drew 35 percent of the Hispanic vote in November, and has continued to woo them since then. Recent Census figures indicate the number of Americans of Mexican ancestry has grown 53 percent over the last decade.


Assembly introduces counter to Davis’ Edison deal

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Saturday July 14, 2001

Plan would trim hundreds of millions from price 

 

SACRAMENTO – A new plan to rescue Southern California Edison unveiled by several lawmakers Friday would trim several hundred millions dollars from the price Gov. Gray Davis has proposed paying for the utility’s transmission lines. 

The bill significantly alters the rescue deal Davis crafted to keep the embattled utility out of bankruptcy. 

Davis offered $2.76 billion, or 2.3 times book value for the 6,000 miles of transmission lines. The bill, by Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys, and three other lawmakers, would offer Edison twice book value for the lines. 

“That’s less than market value for the transmission lines,” said Paul Hefner, spokesman for Hertzberg. 

Brian Bennett, Edison vice president of external affairs, estimated that would be $2.4 billion, of which $1.2 billion would go to retire the utility’s debts against the transmission system. 

Despite the changes, Davis said he was glad to see the “flurry of activity” in the Legislature concerning a proposal many consider politically dangerous. 

“I am optimistic that some modifications to the Edison Memorandum of Understanding will be approved, perhaps as early as next week,” he said. 

The bill’s other authors are Democratic Assembly members Fred Keeley of Boulder Creek, John Dutra of Fremont and Jackie Goldberg of Los Angeles. 

The plan costs much less than the governor’s plan, Keeley said. 

“It proposes to buy the transmission system for less money and it creates a mechanism for reducing the amount that’s paid to generators,” Keeley said. 

The bill uses Davis’ deal with Edison as a framework, but alters it in several ways, including creating a trust that would pay Edison’s power debts at 70 cents on the dollar. 

Money in the trust would come from a loan Edison would take out against the transmission lines, while the sale to the state was pending. The trust to repay the generators would be operated by the state and the Public Utilities Commission, which will review all claims by generators and then offer them 70 percent, Keeley said. 

The bill would also: 

— Establish an account to allow consumers to benefit as power costs fall. The governor’s plan has a similar account, but Keeley says this bill would require that any surplus be returned to utility customers. 

— Require power suppliers selling into California’s market to increase their “green” energy profile. Keeley says this will lessen the state’s dependence on natural gas. 

— Let the state retain long-term oversight of electricity rates for residential and small-business customers. 

— Allow commercial users to buy power in a competitive market, and bypass utilities if they can get lower rates. In return, those customers repay “the preponderance” of Edison’s debts if they leave the system. 

“Our proposal protects those who deregulation has hurt most — consumers — and ensures that California never sees a crisis like this again,” Hertzberg said. “It holds accountable those who have taken advantage of us.” 

Assembly Republican Caucus spokesman Jamie Fisfis said the Democrat’s plan wouldn’t gain needed bipartisan support because of the direct access clause. 

“How can you shift the entire load to big business?” he said, adding that business will “flee the state” if that is approved. 

Bennett said there are still additional details the utility would want to see before endorsing the plan, including how much the company could issue in bonds to repay the rest of their debts. Those bonds, which are also included in Davis’ plan, would be repaid by consumers over a decade. 

Consumer advocate Harvey Rosenfield said “not one more penny” should be charged to residential consumers. 

“Residential users have been the piggy bank for the utilities for five years,” Rosenfield said. 

If lawmakers approve a plan that further hikes rates, “there’ll be hell to pay on election day,” he said. “Voters will hold accountable individual lawmakers who vote to make ratepayers pay more so Edison executives and shareholders can enjoy their summer vacations.”


Power regulators hold off on energy-savings plan

By Justin Pritchard Associated Press Writer
Friday July 13, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – State power regulators are poised to protect consumers from a problem they don’t yet confront — phone companies trying to shut down their service because they haven’t paid for all the sodas, pizzas, and lattes they used their cell phones to buy. 

Cellular service providers in other countries — notably Japan — have rigged their phones to bill some goods, and U.S. companies are eager to catch up. 

But once they get around to offering such services, cellular providers in California won’t be able to disconnect subscribers whose fast-food gluttony lands them with fat bills they can’t pay. Not if the state Public Utilities Commission has its way. 

The PUC is scheduled to pass that “first-in-the-nation” consumer protection at its Thursday meeting. 

What the PUC will not be addressing is a plan to save much-needed electricity by slightly reducing the juice to common household appliances. That plan was shelved by a misunderstanding between the PUC and Pacific Gas and Electric Co. 

Lynch said the PUC was set to approve the conservation measure at Thursday’s meeting, but will postpone action due to PG&E’s “last-minute concerns” that make the plan less attractive than advertised. 

Under the proposal, the state’s three largest utilities would reduce the voltage from 120 volts to about 117 volts. While that would have little effect on individual lights and appliances, bundled together the savings would reach hundreds of megawatts — in a pinch, enough to avert rolling blackouts. 

PG&E officials said they think the plan is a good one and were baffled why the PUC postponed debating it. 

PG&E promised hundreds of megawatts in savings within a month, but in papers submitted late Tuesday reduced those expectations to 40 megawatts over a three-month span, said Robert Kinosian, energy adviser to PUC President Loretta Lynch. 

“Every sort of thing in implementing this was more problematic than before,” Kinosian told reporters Wednesday. “I thought that everybody was working on the same page, until yesterday.” 

Lynch blamed PG&E for taking the shine off what appeared to be a sparkling way to reduce electricity demand with little downside. 

But Lynch misunderstood PG&E’s comments, according to Les Guliasi, the utility’s director of regulatory relations. He said PG&E would happily reduce voltage to save the 40 megawatts — enough to power about 30,000 homes. 

“I think she should read over the comments,” Guliasi said. “We’ve been very up front and forthcoming in these discussions.”


Critics say loophole opened in campaign finance initiative

The Associated Press
Thursday July 12, 2001

Proposition 34’s contribution limits effectively waived by new regulation, reform advocates say 

 

SACRAMENTO – Campaign finance reform advocates charged Tuesday that state regulators have opened a loophole in voter-approved Proposition 34 by allowing incumbents to raise as much money as they want. 

In unanimously adopting a regulation Monday, the Fair Political Practices Commission in effect waived the initiative’s contribution limits for legislators and other state officeholders who established fund-raising panels by Jan. 1. 

The ballot measure voters approved in November limited the amount a single contributor could give to a candidate. Donations were capped at $3,000 per election for legislative candidates, $5,000 for statewide office and $20,000 for gubernatorial candidates. The measure made an exception for candidates who had debt left from the 2000 election, putting no limits on the amount of money they could raise to retire the debt. 

But the commission said the contribution limits should not go into effect until after the 2002 elections, drawing criticism from reformers. 

“This is just an astounding interpretation that makes no sense at all,” said Jim Knox, executive director of California Common Cause. “Proposition 34 is riddled with loopholes, and I think the public may have been sold a bill of goods.” 

Commission Chairwoman Karen Getman defended the action as a reasonable way to shift from the previous unlimited-contribution system to the restrictions of Proposition 34. 

Because the measure allowed incumbents to raise unlimited amounts of money for two months between the election and Jan. 1, when the initiative took effect, they decided to allow unlimited fund-raising for campaign committees that related to the 2000 election. 

While incumbents face no contribution caps, they will still be restricted in how they can spend the money in the 2002 election under the regulation. A legislator, for instance, could raise $50,000 from a single contributor, but could only spend $3,000 on his or her 2002 primary campaign and $3,000 on the general election campaign. The rest would have to be transferred to other candidates or parties within applicable contribution limits.


UC professor dies

By Guy Poole Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 11, 2001

Herbert George Baker, a professor of Botany and Integrative Biology at UC Berkeley for 33 years, died July 2, at Piedmont Gardens in Oakland after a long illness. He was 81.  

A pioneer in the field of ecology, he authored numerous articles and books, including four editions of “Plants and Civilization,” which was translated into at least five languages. 

Those who knew him will remember the Sunday salons, during which, for at least two decades on the last Sunday of every month, he and his wife opened their home to students, faculty and friends for informal discussions. He was a friend to several generations of students. 

From 1957 to 1969 he was director of UC Berkeley’s Botanical Gardens. He was a recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award and when he retired in 1990 he received the University Citation.  

He was a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Association for Tropical Biology, the American Institute for Biological Science, the International Association of Botanic Gardens, the Society for the Study of Evolution (former President), and the Botanical Society of America (former president).  

Born in Brighton, England in 1920, Baker received a bachelor’s degree from the University of London in 1941 and his doctorate in 1945. He came to the United States in 1957. 

He was preceded in death by Irene, his wife of 44 years, in 1989. He is survived by his daughter Ruth Grimes of Berkeley; his grandson Michael Grimes of Houston, Texas; and his sister Evelyn Baker of Brighton, England.  

At his request no funeral services will be held.