Full Text

 

News

Out & About

By Kenyatte Davis Daily Planet staff
Monday July 30, 2001


Monday, July 30

 

State Wide Alliance of Tenants 

5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. 

Harriet Tubman Terrace 

2870 Adeline Street 

A monthly open forum of the Affordable Housing Advocacy Project. This month meet members of the State Wide Alliance of Tenants as they discuss their successes in improving living conditions in their housing developments. (800) 773-2110 

 

Seeking Peace: Voices from  

the Israeli Peace Camp 

8:30 p.m. 

Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley 

Event / Panel Discussion. A screening of The Jahalin, a video about a Bedouin clan evicted from their tent encampment; and Street Under Fire, about the Jerusalem neighborhood of Gilo. After screenings a discussion with representatives from four Israeli peace organizations: The Parents’ Circle, Bat Shalom, New Profile, and Peace Now.  

$6.50 - $8.50; For ticket information call 925-866-9559 

 


Tuesday, July 31

 

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 

 

Wild Women Travel Writers 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

An evening with members of the Wild Women Travel Writers’ Group, authors of “Wild Writing Women: Stories of World Travel,” will read from their book and conduct a panel discussion on the “Art of Travel Writing.” Free. 

843-3533 

 

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 

 

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 

 

Free Computer Class for  

Seniors 

9 - 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 - 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, Aug. 1

 

The LHS 500: Virtual Racecars 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Build and test drive a virtual racecar to find out what makes an efficient vehicle. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

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 

 

Extreme Pizza’s Grand  

Opening 

5:30 p.m. 

2352 Shattuck Ave. 

Mayor Shirley Dean will be cutting the ribbon with her Golden Shears to welcome Extreme Pizza to Berkeley. There will be a comedy show at 8:30 p.m. featuring 10 local comedians including Tommy Devine and Leslie Choler. The evening will be hosted by Tony Sparks.  

486-0770 

 

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 email at: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

Ancient Native Sites of the East Bay 

7:30 p.m. 

Room 160 Kroeber Hall, University of California Campus 

A panel discussion on ancient sites featuring Sandra Sher, freelance historian and author of The Native Legacy of Emeryville; Richard Schwartz, author of Circle of Stones and Berkeley 1900; Perry Matlock, native advocate and volunteer with the International Indian Treaty Council; and Randy Grandin, explorer of West Contra Costa County native sites. Stephanie Manning, moderator. $10 

841-2242 

 

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 

 

Adventuring With Kids 

7 p.m. 

REI 

1338 San Pablo Avenue 

Karen and Paul Amstutz share stories and slides of family adventures with their one- and three-year-old daughters. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Free Computer Class for Seniors 

9 - 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 - 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 

 


Thursday, August 2

 

Free Computer Class for Seniors 

9 - 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 - 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, August 3

 

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, this is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. This week view the 1985 film “Desert Hearts.” Free.  

Call 549-2970 

 


Saturday, August 4

 

Free Sailboat Rides  

1 - 4 p.m. 

Cal Sailing Club 

Berkeley Marina 

The Cal Sailing Club, a non-profit sailing and windsurfing cooperative, give free rides on a first come, first served bases on the first full weekend of each month. Wear warm clothes and bring a change of clothes in case you get wet. Children must be at least five years old and must be accompanies by an adult.  

Visit www.cal-sailing.org


Letters to the Editor

Monday July 30, 2001

Council approved visionary development 

 

Editor: 

Thanks to the City Council for unanimously approving the Planning Commission’s recomendation to develop the Oxford Street parking lot as a five-story building with housing (at least 50 percent affordable), the David Brower environmental center, community arts space, retail shops and two floors of underground parking. Thanks especially to councilmembers Linda Maio and Dona Spring, who took the lead on this ambitious project, and to Planning Commission Chair Rob Wrenn, who guided it through the initial conceptual stages. 

I am puzzled, however, by the remark your reporter attributed to the chair of Civic Arts Commissioner Sherry Smith: “We pencil it out, it will be expensive and some of these Christmas tree ornaments will have to fall away.” It is hard to reconcile this sneer at supposed extravagance with the Civic Arts Commission’s unanimous June 27 endorsement of 27,300 square feet of arts space for the site – well over twice as much as the maximum 10,000 square feet recommended by the Planning Commission and approved by the Council. Perhaps Smith would like to explain. 

The now-official Oxford lot proposal is both visionary and pragmatic – an intricate balance of imagination and practicality that emerged out of seven months of intensive public meetings held earlier this year (thanks, too, to all who participated). The council’s approval moves it to the next stage: selecting a developer who can help the city and the Brower Center make it real. 

Not since the days of Loni Hancock’s mayoralty has the City embarked on such a bold undertaking. It would be nice to think that a new age of progressive civic endeavor is about to dawn in Berkeley. 

 

Zelda Bronstein,  

Vice Chair Planning Commission 

 

 

 

Planning, zoning commissions need more power 

 

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to the mayor and City Council: 

It seems to me you should give more power to zoning and building departments to resolve design and planning problems on private property. The public including me becomes overwhelmed with mounds and hours of minutely detailed testimony, opinion, appeals, unintelligible sound system transmission, conflicts, obscure legalisms, and fragmented information and communication that characterize hearings before the council on real estate matters. That may be fascinating in a way, but the public deserves more attention to pressing social and environmental problems too numerous to list here.  

 

Terry Cochrell 

Berkeley 

 

Event ordinance will criminalize innocent 

 

Editor: 

During the Tuesday, July 24 City Council meeting, Berkeley city councilmembers voted to pass a law which interferes with our First Amendment right to freedom of assembly. The law makes it a misdemeanor (punishable by up to one year in jail) to organize an event on city property which draws more than 500 people without first notifying the police department. The chief of police can require the event organizers to provide security guards at a ratio of one security guard for every 25 attendees. The city manager will maintain a list of the people who do organizing in the City of Berkeley.  

This ordinance was a reaction to two events in Berkeley: one was a political protest at the Berkeley Community Theater and another was a party at UC Berkeley. What the Council really wanted was for the School District and the University of California to notify the City of upcoming events. What the City ended up doing was criminalizing yet another group of people - people who organize political and other types of events in Berkeley. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington was the only councilmember to vote against the item, but he failed to pull it from the consent calendar, which would have prohibited a vote at Tuesday’s meeting. Copwatch had come to an agreement with the City Attorney’s Office and Worthington on revisions which would have changed the ordinance so that it would only applied to the School District and UC Berkeley. But when the unrevised ordinance appeared on the calendar, the ouncil voted for unrevised ordinance, making it law. 

Is the City of Berkeley positioning itself to host the next international trade meeting? All we need are some barricades and more pepper spray! 

 

Karla James 

Oakland 

 

 

Library colors reflect original green 

Editor:  

This is in response to the letter from Phil Allen (July 19) regarding the “two-tone institutional green” of the Central Library exterior. Some clarification: 

1. Painting was done five years ago, not 10 years ago, as Mr. Allen suggests. 

2. It is a three-tone paint scheme, not two-tone. Look closely. 

3. Most importantly, the “misbegotten genius” who suggested green was original architect James Plachek. Our library staff worked extensively with representatives from the landmarks preservation community to find a historically accurate yet pleasing color scheme, and we kept coming back to Plachek’s choice, the color the building was when it opened in 1931. We get about as many compliments as we do complaints color-wise, and the latter only remind us, with Kermit the Frog, “It isn’t easy being green.” 

 

Sayre Van Young 

Berkeley History Room 

Berkeley Public Library 

 


‘The Lady’s Not for Burning’ closes theater’s season

By John Angell Grant Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday July 30, 2001

Staged Hereafter – Berkeley’s newest theater company to complete a full season of plays – is closing out its first year at South Berkeley Community Church with a very strong grassroots production of English playwright Christopher Fry’s dark, fascinating 1948 philosophical comedy “The Lady’s Not for Burning.” 

Although “The Lady’s Not for Burning” is set in a small English town in the 15th century, the play was obviously written in the shadow of World War II. It tells a vicious satirical story about comfortable middle class people living in a world of easy moral compromise – and how this compromise brings violence and absurdity into the lives of others. 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” combines three story strands. On the eve of a wedding, two testosterone-crazed brothers of privilege (Brooks Ralston and Matthew Travisano) physically battle for the affection of a woman (Alizon Eliot) that one of them is about to marry. 

Into this odd, pre-nuptial conflict wanders an enigmatic stranger (‘vid [sic] Buttaro), who demands to be hanged for committing two murders. Soon after, panicked rumors on the street generate the arrest and imprisonment of an intelligent and independent local townswoman (Jennifer Le Blanc) on charges that she is a witch. 

The play’s first act is largely a comedy of the absurd as this odd mix of people, along with relatives and city officials, sort through an almost slapstick round-robin of conflict and misunderstanding. The play turns dark, however, when town officials opt for torture as a means of finding out exactly what happened. 

Fry’s play is an unusual hybrid. Written in very poetical language, it is a mix of absurd comedy and more serious existential philosophical debate on justice and morality. Additional themes are love, and the power of female perspective to transform decayed and bitter male social and political systems. 

For me, there is also a judgmental, puritanical strain by the author that runs through the play, which is tricky to address in a staging, since the play itself is an indictment of puritanical morality. 

But director Susannah Woods and her Staged Hereafter cast have put together a very good production of the show. At one end of the scale, it has almost a Marx Brothers feel to it. The feuding brothers rolling around on the ground wrestling say a lot about the basic problem-solving skills of human beings. 

At the other end of the style scale, mysterious stranger Thomas and accused witch Jennet engage in lengthy, fascinating philosophical debate on the dark capacities of human behavior, and the ultimate meaning of life. 

Thomas intriguingly wanders the stage, part chorus and part narrator, walking among the other characters and making commentary, often going largely unnoticed by them. 

In a wonderful, hilariously emotionally near-sighted performance, Mary Ann Rodgers stands out as the imperious but dizzy and controlling mother of the two feuding brothers. Tom Juarez is a fussy Mayor Tyson. Malcolm Rodgers is his evil political associate, the affable torturing judge. 

Gregg Le Blanc is a humorously oblivious and ineffectual chaplain, blind to everything going on around him. In a small but very effective role, a housemaid (Iliza Abbe) hurries across the stage from time to time, busying herself with tidying, and providing striking moments of contrast and perspective to the obsessive and often blind actions of her “betters.” 

Director Woods has done some really first rate period costume design – from brother Humphrey’s tangerine bloomers, to the best selection of stage hats I’ve seen in a long time. 

Sightline problems are the production’s one minus. In the South Berkeley Community Church performance space, two wooden columns right at the front of the stage can block some of the audience’s view.  

But basically this is a very good grassroots staging. Because it is such an unorthodox hybrid of styles, “The Lady’s not for Burning” is an easy play to mess up in production. To the contrary in this Berkeley presentation, however, Staged Hereafter has mounted a delightful evening in the theater. This is definitely a play for thinking people. If that appeals to you, don’t miss this show. It runs one more week. 

The Lady’s Not for Burning,” presented by Staged Hereafter at South Berkeley Community Church, 1902 Fairview St., Berkeley, Thursday through Saturday through August 4. Call (510) 464-1117 or visit www.stagedhereafter.org. 

 

Daily Planet theater reviewer John Angell Grant has written for “American Theater,” “Backstage West,” “Callboard” and other publications. E-mail him at jagplays@yahoo.com.


Summer Recreation Calendar

Staff
Monday July 30, 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 

Session begins 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. 

 

Boys’ Twilight basketball 

Through 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. 

 

Girls’ Twilight basketball 

Starts August 17 

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. Games at MLK Youth Services Center. For more information call Renda Davis or Alex Williams at 845-9066. 

 

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: August 9-10, 16-17 and 23-24. $20 per voyage. Call 845-7193 for more information. 

 

 

 

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.


Nonprofit to lead city-wide initiatives

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Monday July 30, 2001

To get to the new office of the Berkeley Alliance, make your way to the second floor of the Berkeley Adult School, turn right at the old computer key boards and monitors – piled up against a wall like so many dislodged boulders at the base of a cliff – and then right again, into the windowless, L-shaped room at the end of the hallway. 

In may look like the ideal spot for a Xerox machine and recycling bins, but if Berkeley Alliance Executive Director Toni Tullys has her way, it will become one of the most important meeting rooms in the city. 

After years of hearing remarks like, “If only the university and the city could work together on this;” or, “If only the public schools had more support from the university,” some prominent Berkeley officials decided it was time to create one centralized entity whose mission would be to identify opportunities for collaboration – and make it happen. A little more than four years ago, this discussion resulted in the creation of the Berkeley Alliance. 

It has taken time for the Alliance to get off the ground. In its early years it convened task forces and organized public meetings around the issue of the achievement gap at Berkeley High. Some of the research and expert testimony it provided helped to set the tone for public discussion around this issue, which has thrived ever since.  

But the Alliance was manifestly not living up to its potential to leverage the resources of its three member institutions to “improve the quality of life for all of Berkeley,” said Tullys and others. So the decision was made to transform the group into an independent nonprofit, with a leadership board made up officials from its three member institutions and respected community leaders. 

The nonprofit board has been meeting each month since January, hashing out its “mission statement” and creating a preliminary “to do” list for the years ahead.  

“It’s a very action oriented group of people,” Tullys said. “I think it represents just enormous potential for the community.” 

Chaired by Father George Crespin, Pastor of St. Joseph the Worker church, the board includes Pamela Doolan, a former school board member; Jabari Mahiri, an associate professor at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Education; Fred Medrano, director of Health and Human Services for Berkeley; Alex Palau, principal of Berkeley’s Alternative High School; and Shirley Richardson-Brower, executive director of Berkeley YMCA South Branch.  

Board members said last week it was still too early to discuss any specific initiatives the Alliance plans to tackle, but they and Tullys discussed their broad vision for the Alliance.  

While youth education issues will always be a key part of the Alliance focus, board members said they hope to see the group launch innovative collaborative projects in other areas of importance to the Berkeley community as well, including housing, transportation and health services. 

The Alliance, they said, will serve as a resource clearinghouse. Too often in the past, said Roberta Brooks, board member and former district director for Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, people have had great ideas but no idea where to turn for help transforming a plan into reality. 

“Even in its short life people have said, ‘Oh, gee, that might be a good project for the Alliance,’ because there was no place to go before,” Brooks said.  

“Almost any topic that you could mention, there could be better coordination between the university, the city and the school district,” Brooks added. “Sometimes it’s just a question of one part knowing what the other is doing.” 

Tullys has spent much of the last year pulling together what she hopes will be the mother of all Berkeley rolodexes. 

“That’s what we do. We make connections,” Tullys said. “For me it’s usually two contacts away to find who the contact would be” to get something done. 

The Alliance has already played this role in some important ways. When Berkeley High needed a “Guide to Student Life” that would list phone numbers and extracurricular activities and give helpful advice about maintaining good grades and getting into college, it was the Alliance that secured funding from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory for the project. The Alliance even lent a staffer, Kimberly Willis-Starbuck, to the high school for the monumental task of editing the first few editions.  

The Guide to Student Life provides a model for the work the Alliance hopes to do in the future, Tullys said: the work of helping good projects get off the ground and become self-sufficient.  

Summing up the Berkeley Alliance message to new school superintendent Michelle Lawrence, who attended an Alliance board meeting last week, Tullys said: 

“We’ve put this together. We have resources; we have university experts; we have community contacts. We’re here to support you in any way that we can.” 

Julie Sinai, manager of school-linked programs for the school district and vice chair of the Alliance board, said having the Alliance database to draw on has already may it more practical than ever before for her to team up with UC Berkeley experts. 

When she thought of turning to the university for help in the past, “there were so many different points of entry I didn’t have any idea where to begin,” Sinai said. But recently, when she approached Tullys looking for someone to brainstorm with her about better ways to evaluate school programs, she found herself sitting down with a UC Berkeley School of Education expert in a matter of weeks.  

“It’s one of the most exciting institutional partnerships in the Bay Area, because it’s got all of the players and they’re all willing to be there,” Sinai said of the Alliance.  

Now, said Sinai, is the time for the Alliance to prove its value to the larger community by launching some ambitious initiatives and following through with them. 

“Now we’re at the point of saying, ‘Okay, we’ve got all this stuff. What do we do?’” Sinai said. “The Alliance has to do something.” 

Sitting beneath a flickering fluorescent light in her new office last Friday, Tullys said the movers were supposed to deliver chairs to go around her conference table that morning but hadn’t shown up. She said she was thinking about bringing some chairs from home. 

The key, said Tullys, will be bringing “the right people to the right table.”  

 

Photo Caption: Toni Tullys, executive director of a new non-profit that unites the university, city and school district in efforts to tackle tough community problems, is still waiting for chairs to go around her conference table.


Coughlin adds to Cal’s medal count at Worlds

Daily Planet Wire Services
Monday July 30, 2001

FUKOUKA, JAPAN - On the final day of the 2001 World Swimming Championships in Fukouka, Japan, Cal’s Natalie Coughlin had an impressive lead-off butterfly leg on the United State’s 400-meter medley relay that placed second to Australia.  

The U.S. put a strong medley relay lineup together, but a phenomenal fly leg by Petria Thomas of Australia allowed them to edge the U.S. for gold, 4:01.50 to 4:01.81. Coughlin nearly broke the world record in her lead-off swim (100-meter back), posting a 1:00.18, just .02 off the mark set at the 1994 World Championships by a Chinese swimmer that was part of a delegation that later had several positive drug tests for performance enhancing drugs. Megan Quann swam her leg in 1:07.67, followed by Mary DeScenza (59.59) and Erin Phenix (54.37). Thomas split 57.65 on her fly leg for the Aussies, the only one of the four to swim faster than her American counterpart. 

“I’m very proud of how our entire team swam this week in spite of the difficulties,” Coughlin said. “We really picked it up in the last few days and I’m proud of how we handled ourselves.”  

Another swimmer with Cal ties, Haley Cope (1998-2001), placed sixth in the 50-meter free on Sunday with a time of 25.25.  

In a credit to Cal’s men’s and women’s swim programs, three different Bears won gold medals at the World Championships. Anthony Ervin, who will be a junior this collegiate season, won world titles in the 50 (22.09) and 100 free (American record 48.33). Cope placed first in the 50-meter back (28.51) and Coughlin, who will be a sophomore this upcoming school year, was the world champion in the 100-meter back (American record 1:00.37).


Hundreds rally to protest new youth jail

By Kenyatte Davis Daily Planet staff
Monday July 30, 2001

OAKLAND – Hundreds of teens, artists and social activists gathered in Frank Ogawa Plaza Saturday to protest Alameda County’s plan to replace the 299-bed juvenile detention facility in San Leandro with a 450-bed facility in Dublin. 

The rally, called “The Summer Jam to Stop the Super Jail” was scheduled to last from noon to 5 p.m., but the event’s political poetry, hip-hop, song and speech lasted into the evening. 

The activists’ works covered a wide range of topics including police brutality, environmental racism, the controversial court case of Mumia Abu-Jamal and of course the “Super Jail,” but all depicted a general dislike for the police and the American judicial system. 

“The reason so many people have come together on this fight, is because freedom is everybody’s issue, exploitation is everybody’s issue,” said one of the event’s emcees. “If you’re fighting for liberation, cops ain’t gonna see your race or your age, they know that no matter who you are, that you are a threat.” 

The main problem that most people had with the new facility was that it was simply too big. 

“People aren’t saying that we shouldn’t build the new facility,” said Supervisor Keith Carson who represents Berkeley, “people are just saying they don’t want to build the largest per capita facility in the nation.” 

“We’re here to stop this madness right now,” said Ruthie Gilmore of Critical Resistance, “because we know that if they build it, they will fill it, every time.” 

The facility’s maximum occupancy, which was originally planned to be 540 beds, was reduced to 450 by the Board of Supervisors on July 24, but it seemed that no one at the rally was satisfied with that cutback. 

“Just the other day they cut the facility back by 90 beds, and they think that’s going to subdue us,” said Rachel Jackson of Books not Bars, one of the organizations which organized the event. “If they drop the number of beds by a couple more hundred, then maybe we’ll agree with the plan.” 

Another major issue that many of the protesters had with the new facility was its cost. According to the Board of Supervisors constructing the new facility will cost Alameda County $175 million, $33.2 million of which will be covered by a construction grant from the Board of Corrections. 

“Spending this much money on a jail is ridiculous,” said Julia (Butterfly) Hill, who sat in a redwood tree for two years, to protest unsustainable logging. “It’s like spending millions on radiation research, when they could just as easily spend the money figuring out what it is that is causing cancer.” 

In a phone interview Sunday, Carson said he favors preventative measures for youth as opposed to building a larger detention facility. He has proposed that the county create a task force to make sure only criminals are being sent to juvenile hall. 

“We need to maximize our resources to prevent people from going into the system at an early age, “ he said. “We don’t know how many young people are being put in jail because of truancy, mental problems, or psychological issues.” 

Many people also feared that the county won’t close the San Leandro facility when the new one is completed. 

“Alameda county we’re watching you and we don’t believe for an instant that you won’t keep the old juvi hall open when you finish the new one,” Gilmore said. 

Councilmember Kriss Worthington attended the rally and was impressed by the youth turnout. “It’s great that a lot of young people are concerned and active. We have an entire new generation of people who are being more active on issues than their parents were,” he said Sunday. “This issue especially affects young people because if they spend these millions on incarcerating youth, it means more of them will find themselves in jail for a longer period of time.” 

Alameda County has been trying to replace the San Leandro site for ten years as it is built on portions of the Hayward Fault. Supervisors voting last week in favor of the new, larger site – Alice Lai-Bitker, Gail Steele, and Scott Haggerty – argued that the old site has insufficient space for many services and is frequently filled beyond capacity. 

The proposal to build the new facility was essentially given the final OK at the meeting on July 24, as a proposal by Carson to conduct a new study of the detention population was voted down 3-2. 

The protesters didn't lose motivation over this decision, however, as Jackson says they have much more fighting to do before the new facility is built. “If (the supervisors) think we have been to rude, too rowdy and too roughneck up to now,” she said, “then they must not know how much more we have in store for them.” 


Berkeley lab retracts discovery of elements

The Associated Press
Monday July 30, 2001

Physicists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are retracting a 1999 claim of having discovered two “superheavy” elements in a fusion of lead and krypton. 

The researchers announced the reversal, possibly the first made by the Berkeley lab, in a formal statement to Physical Review Letters, a scientific journal that carried the original results. 

“The evidence wasn’t there,” Ken Gregorich, a nuclear chemist at the lab and leader of the research group, said. 

In 1999, then-Energy Secretary Bill Richardson called the discovery “stunning.” He said then the findings were of international importance, since, besides team members from Oregon State University and the University of California at Berkeley Chemistry Department, four researchers were German. 

Gregorich had initially called the findings an “unexpected success (that) opens up a whole world of possibilities.” 

But the interpretation of experiments conducted using the lab’s 88-inch cyclotron, a powerful particle accelerator, was flawed. 

The Berkeley team had hoped to briefly fuse krypton and lead. They focused beams of high-energy krypton ions at lead targets, and thought they had produced a fragile element — Element 118, which would have been the heaviest element ever seen in a lab. 

The scientists also believed then that they had made Element 116, a decay product of 118, which would have been another important find. 

However, subsequent independent laboratory studies were not able to reproduce the 1999 findings. The troubled Berkeley team later reviewed their original data using refined computer programs. They found nothing. 

“The truth is we don’t really understand how it happened,” Gregorich said.  

“We’re still working on it.” 

A group of senior lab managers is now being assembled to review the way scientists conduct experiments and handle data at the Berkeley lab, according to Pier Oddone, the Berkeley lab’s deputy director in charge of scientific research. 

Though the error is embarrassing, the Berkeley scientists aren’t the first to have to correct their findings. 

“Things like this happen in science,” said Witold Nazarewicz, a physics professor at the University of Tennessee and an investigator at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.  

“It’s a sad day. But even though it’s painful . . . this is the way scientists should behave. So at the end of the day there is a mechanism for self-correction.”


Berkeley man found shot to death in yard

The Associated Press
Monday July 30, 2001

RICHMOND – Police say a 43-year-old Berkeley man was shot dead in the back yard of a Richmond apartment complex yesterday afternoon. 

Police began receiving 911 calls around 3 p.m. Saturday from residents who said they heard gunfire and saw a man lying on the ground. When police arrived they found the body of Ernest Milton McKinney II in a back yard. 

Police say the man had multiple gunshot wounds to his upper body and head. They do not have a motive and say no witnesses have come forward. 

McKinney was pronounced dead at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek. A coroner’s deputy says the man lived with his mother in Berkeley. Residents said they did not know why he was in the area.


Governor puts his weight behind renewable energy

By Ben Lumpkin
Saturday July 28, 2001

Gov. Gray Davis made a brief appearance in Berkeley Friday to pledge his support for renewable energy sources as a way to stabilize California’s electricity prices and protect the environment.  

Davis told a a crowd of local environmental experts and advocates gathered at west Berkeley’s PowerLight Corporation – the nation’s leading manufacturer of commercial solar electric systems – that he is committed to seeing California increase the percent of its electricity derived from renewable sources (solar, wind, biomass and geothermal) from the current 12 percent to 17 percent by 2006.  

“What you see around you,” Davis said, gesturing at a number of PowerLight rooftop solar panels on display, “is green power. It is power generated by the environment that does not harm the environment. 

“I want to encourage all of you to put solar power on your house, on your office,” Davis added, pointing out that rebates available from the California Energy Commission will cover as much as 50 percent of the cost for installing a residential or commercial solar power system. 

Most in the crowd seemed encouraged by the governor’s apparent commitment to renewable energy Friday. 

“We’re glad that he’s here to back solar power, and we hope that it’s a step to making solar power possible in every city in the state of California,” said Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean. 

“We have big hopes. We’re glad to have him on board as a supporter of renewable energy,” said Peter Miller, a senior scientist for the Natural Resource Defense Council and a Berkeley resident. 

“This is the industry of the 21st century,” Miller said. “Global warming is real, and this is the solution right here.” 

Some, however, were disappointed that the governor did not make a stronger commitment to renewable energy sources like solar power. 

“The governor really had an opportunity today to show that he was leading the fight to create a clean energy future for the state of California. And I think, to a certain extent, he missed that opportunity,” said Robert A. Pérez, communications director for the California League of Conservation Voters. 

Pérez and others asked the governor Friday to make a commitment to support a bill being sponsored by state Sen. Byron Sher, D-Palo Alto, that would mandate that the state rely on renewable energy sources for 20 percent of its power needs by 2010. 

“Without a mandate, we’re never going to get there,” Pérez said. 

Davis seemed reluctant to embrace the idea of a mandate Friday, but told the environmentalists that he would get back to them with an answer within 30 days. 

“California has definitely been a leader in the nation as it relates to renewable energy sources,” Pérez said. “But, based on what’s been happening in the last 6 months to a year, it’s clear that we need to take bigger steps.” 

To date, nine states have passed legislation mandating specific increases in the use of renewable energy. Nevada approved a law last month requiring that renewable energy sales in the state increase from 2 percent of all energy sales (the current rate) to 15 percent of all energy sales by 2013. 

PowerLight officials had hoped to hear the governor pledge Friday to make more money available for a rebate program that partially reimburses private companies for large investments in solar power. While there is still state money available to subsidize residential installation of solar power systems, the money set aside to subsidize larger commercial investments in solar power was recently exhausted, said PowerLight Manager of Regulatory Affairs Kari Smith. 

IKEA, Hewlett-Packard and Alameda County are just a few of the entities who have put plans for major investments in solar power systems on hold until the state makes more money available to subsidize those investments, according to a statement released by PowerLight. 

Still, PowerLight CEO Tom Dinwoodie said Friday that, were it not for the approximately $2 million in California Energy Commission dollars invested in the company over the years, PowerLight might not exist today. 

“PowerLight is really a child of the California Energy Commission and the state of California,” Dinwoodie said. 


Elite 8x2 Tournament hosts nation’s best

By Jared Green
Saturday July 28, 2001

Stars include Ohio star LeBron James, Oakland Tech’s Leon Powe 

 

Early next week, local basketball fans are in for a real treat. Sixteen of the best summer teams in the country will be playing each other right here in Berkeley, and the nation’s top player will be there. 

The Slam ‘n Jam Elite 8x2 Tournament kicks off on Monday on the UC Berkeley campus. With teams from as far away as Houston and Michigan, the competition will be tough, and summer basketball is some of the most spectacular a fan is likely to see from high school players. 

Hosted by the Oakland Soldiers, the top team in the Slam ‘n Jam family, the tournament will feature some of the best prep players in the country. The biggest names include Florida signee Anthony Roberson, Duke signee Sean Dockery, and the precocious Sebastian Telfair, a sophomore point guard who just happens to be the cousin of NBA star Stephon Marbury. 

Perhaps the biggest star to take the stage will be Slam ‘n Jam’s own LeBron James. But any Cal fans that may dream of seeing James in the blue and gold should beware: widely considered the best player in the nation, the 6-foot-7 James has talked of being the first high school junior to enter the NBA Draft. Although that may be a pipe dream (James would have to head to court to challenge an NBA rule that a player’s high school class must graduate before he can enter the draft), the 16-year-old Ohio prepster should provide some highlights at the tournament. 

James’ teammates include Oakland Tech junior Leon “The Show” Powe and Riordan (San Francisco) senior Marquis Kately, who are two of the top players in California, as well as local boys John Sharper and DeShawn Freeman, the St. Mary’s backcourt duo that led the Panthers to a state championship last season. 

Other California teams include Elite Basketball Organization, which stars Modesto Christian point guard and Cal recruit Richard Midgely, Bay Area Ballers and 805. 

The Slam ‘n Jam Elite 8x2 Tournament will be hald Monday through Wednesday at the RSF Fieldhouse at UC Berkeley. Games will run from 3:30 p.m. until 9:30.


Forum

Saturday July 28, 2001

 

Please cut your trees for my solar power 

Editor: 

 

I’ve been trying since March to get Berkeley to cut its trees that interfere with my energy independence. East Bay Regional Park cut its seven trees, at its expense, east of me but those 20 south and southwest owned by Berkeley are the problem now.  

One of you advises patience. Another says its a money problem. As I spoke to you some months ago you can save $300,000 by converting to Instant Run off Voting. And I understand the city budget is $440,000,000. The work of cutting your trees is estimated to cost $30,000 I can’t afford. Solar conversion for my home itself will cost $30,000. Your trees are 150 feet high and some five feet diameter. Heavy equipment will be required.  

Your progressive position relative to the energy crisis put on us by the energy corporations and the government they own is laudable. While we all wait for municipalization of energy city by city without trust the state will do what we elect them to do, you can financially support those of us willing to solve the problem on our own by cutting your trees.  

I know Green Party Councilmember Dona Spring advocates you provide incentives property owners become contributors not just consumers of energy.  

I’ve done what I can by converting to solar water heating and reducing my energy use 60 percent over all.  

 

Jack Shonkwiler 

Kensington 

 

 

Improper ramps aside, Joyce event was great 

 

Editor: 

 

We really enjoyed the James Joyce conference, Extreme Joyce/ Reading on The Edge, held on the Clark Kerr campus July 2-6 and which we learned about from your salubrious paper. It was a truly outstanding gathering of scholars. 

Our interest in Joyce is current as we moderate and attend a Ulysses Reading at 1 p.m. on Fridays at the North Berkeley Senior Center (all are welcome). The best paper we heard was called My Adventures as a Literary/ Music Detective by Myra Russell. There were delegates from all over and around the globe.  

The papers we heard were excellent and exciting. Some were absolute stunners. The last scholarly event of the conference was Adam Harvey’s performance of “Shem the Penman” from The Wake. He took three years to memorize the passage, and did a dynamite job. The only thing that might have been improved would have been to have done it in an Irish baroque. 

At our table at the elegant feast which ended the conference to my left (Hulse) were an engaging couple from Massachusetts. To my right (Gertrude) was the Chief Information Officer of the BBC in London and a charming gentleman. Next to him was a Hungarian Bolivian woman who had delivered a paper on Tuesday which unfortunately, we had missed. The couple across the table were a bit too far to converse with. The food — stuffed chicken breast. Yum. 

One of us uses a walker. This proved to be difficult as the building we were in didn’t have proper ramps. All they need is a ramp for four steps up and four steps down, and the conference would have been perfect. This is something that should be taken care of as soon as possible.  

 

Hulse Rauh 

Gertrude Diamond 

Berkeley 

 

Local architect should have been hired for Beth El project 

 

Editor: 

 

Throughout the Beth El process one claim has often been repeated: the congregation is a steadfastly community-minded organization. This cannot be disputed, but I wish that the idea of community extended to the choice of the architect for the project. There are many extremely talented local architects (many of them Jewish) who would consider the new Beth El project to be the commission of a lifetime. That the chosen architect is an L.A. based outfit is really unfortunate; there is no doubt that this a top-notch firm, but there is also no doubt in my mind that there a great lack of regional and even Berkeley-specific sensitivity evident in the design. 

Unfortunately Beth El has made the same mistake that the City itself made when it forsook local designers for an east coaster who produced an embarrassing cartoon solution for the new Public Safety Building in the civic center. The L.A. firm is producing work in the image of its great and recently deceased architect-founder Charles Moore. When looking at the Beth El design it’s possible to believe that you are looking at any number of other projects produced by this firm for other clients throughout the western states, the U.S and even abroad. 

While the recent school construction in town points to the fact that local architects can hit home runs (Cragmont), infield singles (Columbus), and sacrifice bunts (Thousand Oaks) — let’s not mention the base-running error that is the King project — there is certainly no guarantee that a local firm will necessarily produce an exemplary building, but I feel that it is the responsibility of an organization that values the welfare of the community to exhaust all local possibilities before looking out of town. 

Perhaps a bone will be thrown to a local architect who will take on the liability of overseeing the construction of the Beth El building, but this is cold comfort. The Bay Area is one of the birthplaces of regionalism as a way of architectural thinking; it’s a shame that a local firm with an innate and intimate understanding of all things local couldn’t have been hired to do the work. Wendell Berry’s writings on the importance of local economy should be of interest to the congregation as well as to the City. Too bad it’s too late in this case. 

 

Gary Earl Parsons 

Berkeley 

 

City library  

provides a host of public  

documents 

 

Editor: 

 

Our library staff appreciated Charles L. Smith’s letter of July 20, 2001, suggesting that there be a strengthening of local government information and communication by having local government documents and reports in public libraries. 

We are pleased to have the opportunity to remind our community that the Berkeley Public Library’s central library does have city documents, city council packets, agendas and minutes of commissions and committees, and other regularly produced Berkeley city reports. We also have special reports, EIRs, and project proposals from the city of Berkeley, Alameda County, AC Transit, UC Berkeley and other governmental agencies as appropriate for issues under current discussion. The City Council packets are also available at all our branch libraries: Claremont, North, South and West. 

For more information, please call our central library’s reference department at 644-6648. 

 

MaryLou Mull 

Acting Director 

Berkeley Public Library 

 


Staff
Saturday July 28, 2001


Saturday, July 28

 

 

Residential Solar Electricity 

1 p.m. - 3 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

The workshop will introduce participants to residential solar electricity: how solar cells work, how to size a system, participants will also get to produce electricity using photovoltaic panels and power a range of appliances (weather permitting). $15. Call 548-2220 x233 to reserve a space.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Arrowcopter Play Day 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

For ages 9 and up. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

16th Annual Berkeley Kite  

Festival and West Coast Kite  

Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. kite making lessons; 2:30 p.m. Candy Drops for the kids; 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. kite flying lessons. Free Event. For more information: 235-5483 or www.highlinekites.com. 

 


Sunday, July 29

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair  

Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn how to adjust your brakes from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Free  

527-4140 

 

Buddhist Teacher 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Eva Casey on “The Life of Padmasambhava.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

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 

 

16th Annual Berkeley Kite  

Festival and West Coast Kite  

Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. kite making lessons; 2:30 p.m. Candy Drops for the kids; 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. kite flying lessons. Free Event. For more information: 235-5483 or www.highlinekites.com. 

 

Making Music 

1 - 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, Fran Holland will demonstrate how to make and play musical instruments. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

 

International Working Class 

Film and Video Festival 

2 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, a screening of “Not In My Garden,” a documentary about a Palestinian village in Israel. $7. 

849-2568 

 

Maybeck Homes 

1 - 4:30 p.m. 

#1 Maybeck Twin Drive 

Open house of four nearby homes accompanied by short talks on the character of Maybeck’s homes. A reception, raffle, and silent auction will be part of the afternoon activities. Limited space, call 845-7714 for registration. 

 


Monday, July 30

 

State Wide Alliance of Tenants 

5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m. 

Harriet Tubman Terrace 

2870 Adeline Street 

A monthly open forum of the Affordable Housing Advocacy Project. This month meet members of the State Wide Alliance of Tenants as they discuss their successes in improving living conditions in their housing developments. (800) 773-2110 

 

Seeking Peace: Voices from  

the Israeli Peace Camp 

8:30 p.m. 

Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley 

Event / Panel Discussion. A screening of The Jahalin, a video about a Bedouin clan evicted from their tent encampment; and Street Under Fire, about the Jerusalem neighborhood of Gilo. After screenings a discussion with representatives from four Israeli peace organizations: The Parents’ Circle, Bat Shalom, New Profile, and Peace Now.  

$6.50 - 8.50; For ticket information call 925-866-9559 

 


Tuesday, July 31

 

 

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


Jewish Film Festival brings stories to Berkeley

By Peter Crimmins
Saturday July 28, 2001

In a fictitiously constructed 1937 newsreel, footage of the 10th annual Academy Awards featuring the brand-new category of Best Actress in a Supporting Role is placed alongside footage of a military rally of Germany’s Third Reich overseen by Adolf Hitler, not yet perceived as a global threat. 

Watching this opening sequence in “One of the Hollywood Ten,” featured this weekend in the Jewish Film Festival, one is struck by the contrast of the American film industry’s self-congratulatory glamour and Europe’s approaching genocide. With 64 years of hindsight, how can we relate these two news items? And placed, here, in a based-on-a-true-story fiction movie?  

“One of the Hollywood Ten” is not alone at this year’s Jewish Film Festival in trying to make “soft” issues – like storytelling and art – significant among international threats to life and country, and meaningful in the face of a storyteller’s worst enemy: disinterest. 

The Jewish Film Festival, having completed its weeklong run at San Francisco’s Castro Theater, is coming to Berkeley for 6 days beginning today. Because the festival’s traditional East Bay home had been the dearly departed UC Theater, it has moved to Wheeler Auditorium on the UC Campus – a proper screening venue frequently used by campus groups to show first-run movies for cash-strapped students. 

“One of the Hollywood Ten” will be presented on the festival’s first Berkeley date. It is the story of Herbert Biberman (played by Jeff Goldblum), a Hollywood director married to Gale Sondergaard (Greta Scachi), winner of the 1937 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Like Marlon Brando and Richard Gere after her, Sondergaard used her moment at the podium for political activism, delivering a speech denouncing fascism in Europe. 

Ten years later both husband and wife were targeted by the HUAC communist hunts, a political melee whose Red Scare hysteria was tinged with anti-Semitism. The film, however, still feels labored in its post-war context in that what’s being fought for are some abstract ideas of liberty and the careers of a few over-paid Hollywood elitists. 

The movie finds its dramatic punch in its second half, when the black-listed Biberman sets out to make “Salt of the Earth,” a movie about the labor struggles of a community of Hispanic miners (Goldblum has the misfortune of delivering the film’s most politically precious line, “This film…is freedom”). To halt production, a HUAC agent threatens the film crew with gunfire. It’s a real shoot-‘em-up standoff, giving "One of the Hollywood Ten" the dramatically grand conflict it was looking for all along. 

Black-listed or not, Hollywood likes a big finish no matter where it comes from. A young Israeli filmmaker Gur Bentwich has made a surprisingly compelling movie, “Total Love,” out of a loose, meandering story that has little in the way of political agendas or climactic shootouts. It screens Sunday. Bentwich directs with easy graceful this story of a small group of friends who concoct a recreational drug, a la Ecstasy, they call TLV, or Total Love. The surprise ingredient, one they cannot duplicate, is – perhaps like real love – a happy accident. The batch of TLV is divided among the friends and they split off to different parts of the world. 

The film’s action is never hurried but there is constant movement from Israel to Amsterdam to India as the boys try to find the remaining doses of TLV, the next international trance-rave party, and an evasive, globe-trotting girl who inspires their ardor. The liquid drug is smuggled, fittingly, in the soles of a pair of Nikes.  

What’s refreshing about this quiet gem of a movie is the absence of heavy pontificating or cinematic grandstanding. Recreational drug use is regarded as no more than that – recreational. And Bentwich even playfully diffuses the tension of a nighttime raid on an Indian prison. The energy is low-key but constant, happy but unsatisfied, and in love but rarely loved. As such it poignantly portrays young adults simultaneously jaded and hopeful. 

The festival is honoring filmmaker Alan Berliner with a three-part retrospective of his hourlong personal documentaries, “Intimate Stranger,” “Nobody’s Business” (both screening on Sunday), and “The Sweetest Sound” (July 30). The challenge Berliner assumed in making these films is turning very personal material – his grandfather, his father, and an investigation of his own name – into films interesting and accessible to anyone outside his immediate family. But even inside his immediately family he is not guaranteed an audience. When Berliner interviews his own father, Oscar, about the history of their family’s Polish roots he is met with cranky disinterest.  

“Just because it’s interesting to you,” Oscar tells his son in “Nobody’s Business, it doesn’t mean it’s interesting to anyone else. I don’t care about this.” 

Berliner’s brilliant editorial touch turns the ornery lemon into funny, ironic lemonade that transforms Berliner-specific trivia into subtle insights to very basic aspects of the human condition. 

“The specificity in the film is really a Trojan Horse within which all this range of issue about what it means to be family,” said Berliner from his home in New York City. “What it means to be a child, to be a parent, a cousin, what’s the contract we have with each other, the meaning of a life lived. Love, hate, sex…all that stuff is swirling through this ostensible portrait of this man.” 

Berliner’s newest film, “The Sweetest Sound,” is about a subject even more personal: his own name, which he discovered is personal but hardly private. He found 12 other men named Alan Berliner and invited them over for dinner and through intelligent musings, a sense of humor, and a bag of editing tricks he is able to make the subject of ‘Alan Berliner’ both appealing and revelatory. 

“I’m committed to reinventing the wheel every time,” he said. “It makes it harder to make these films, because I’m trying to give the viewer something fresh. Something that they can feel the energy of the storytelling and feel the energy of the filmic vocabulary at the same time they are following the story.” For more information on these and the 20 other Jewish Film Festival programs at Wheeler Auditorium, the festival can be reached online at www.sfijff.org. 

Similarly looking for a big climax is “Blue and White in Red Square,” a documentary about the journey of the Young Isreali Philharmonic to Moscow, being screened free of charge on Wednesday.  

Many of the orchestra’s young musicians were born in Moscow, and this is not only their first opportunity to return (somewhat apprehensively for their unhappy memories of being Jewish in Moscow), but also a once in a lifetime chance to perform in the Grand Hall, the site of Russia’s renowned musical heritage. 

But the grand finale of the film isn’t their tentative homecoming. It is eleven youth orchestras from around the world – hundreds of musicians – coming together on an enormous stage constructed in historic Red Square under the baton of Russian Maestro Valerie Gergeyev to perform Tchaikowsky’s “1812 Overture” and Mussoreky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition.” There was much pre-concert fretting about how Gergeyev would mold the massive assembly of musicians into a respectable performance. We can’t judge from the brief music selections the film offers, but the dramatic aerial camera shots certainly make it look good.


Staff
Saturday July 28, 2001

 

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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; Aug 10: 90 Day Men, Assembly of God, Strong Intention, Under a Dying Sun; Aug 11: Toys That Kill, Scared of Chakra, Soophie Nun Squad, Debris; Aug 12: 5 p.m. Citizen Fish, J-Church, Eleventeen. $5. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926. 

 

Albatross Pub Music at 9 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Aug 1: Whiskey Brothers. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 29: 9:00 p.m. El Hadj N’ Diaye $10; July 31: 8:00 p.m. dance lesson with Dana DeSimone, 9:00 p.m. Steve Riley and Mamou Playboys $12; Aug. 5: 9 p.m. Roots Reggae featuring Groundation and Tchiya Amet. $10. 11317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Split Shankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. July 28: Street Sounds; July 29: Tish Hinojosa; Aug 1: Distant Oaks; Aug 2: George Kuo, Narin Pahinui & Aaron Mahi; Aug 3: Wylie & the Wild West, the Waller Brothers, Aug 4: Adam Levy, Will Bernard; Aug 5: MonTango; Aug 6: Frank Yamma; Aug 8: San Francisco Klezmer Experience; Aug 9: John Renbourn; Aug 10: Jody Stecher, Kate Brislin; Aug 11: Al Stewart. $16.50 - $19.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter 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 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; Aug 3: 8 p.m. Los Delicados, Aya de Leon $10; Aug 4: 8 p.m. Grito Serpentino, Small Axe Project, Jime Salcedo-Malo & Leticia Hernandez $10; Aug 5: 7 p.m. Insight in concert $10; Aug 10: 8:30 p.m. Ire $8; Aug 11: 9:30 p.m. Fito Reynoso’s Ritmo y Armonia. $10, $13 for dance class starting at 8:15; Aug 12: 5, 7:30 p.m. “Say Yo Business” Linda Tillery & The Cultural Heritage Chior. $18 in advance, $20 at the door. In the Cafe 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung, 5:30 p.m. Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5; Aug 5: 4:30 p.m. Vocaists’ Series (Denine Monet), 5:30 p.m. Instrumentalists’ Series (Pelo Mar); Aug 12: 4:30 p.m. The Freedom Project, 5:30 Eli Sundelson Trio. 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

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 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  

 

“Downtown” Restaurant and Bar August 6: 7 p.m. Jesse Colin Young of the sixties hit group, The Youngbloods, will be performing at a No Nukes evening, sponsored by Greenpeace. The evening commemorates the 56th anniversary of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The proceeds go to Tri-Valley CAREs and Citizen Alert. Tickets are $100. 2102 Shattuck Ave. 800-728-6223 

 

The Greek Theatre Aug. 3 and Aug. 4, 7 p.m. The String Cheese Incident, $29.75. Hearst Avenue and Gayley Road 444-TIXS, or (415) 421-TIXS www.sfx.com 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts July 29: 2:00 p.m. “Into the Eye of Magic! An Asian Folk Tale” interactive musical and thearical production for families. Adults $10 Children $5; Aug 4: 8 p.m. “Cuatro maestros Touring Festival” two-hour theatrical event of music and dance performed by four elder folk artists and their talented young counterparts. Adults $18 Children $12; Aug. 10: 7:30 p.m. & Aug. 11, 12, 5 p.m. Campers from Stage Door Conservatory’s “On Broadway” program for grades 5-9 will perform Fiddler on the Roof, Jr. $12 adults, $8 kids. (For info call 527-5939); 2640 College Avenue 845-8542 ext. 302 

 

“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 

 

“Human Nature” July 28: 8:30 p.m. The X-Plicit Players explore intimate but un-named ways of being together, awaken senses old and new and participate in Group Body. $15 Metaversal Lightcraft 1708 University 848-1985 

 

“Iphegenia in Aulis” Through Aug. 12: Sat. and Sun. 5 p.m. 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 

 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 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 

 

“Loot” Through Aug 25, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7 p.m. Special Performance Aug 20, 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15, Students / Seniors: $10 La Val’s 1834 Euclid Avenue 655-0813 

 

“Orphans” 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 

 

“Reefer Madness” Aug 8, 9, Aug 22,23: 9 p.m. A new one-act theatre piece adapted from a 1936 government-funded film opens a critical eye to the control of our society. Performed by The Elemental Theatre Group La Pena Cultural Center 3105 Shattuck Avenue. Wednesdays “pay what you can”, thursdays $5 - $10. Fri Aug 10,17: 7 p.m. People’s Park Free. Contact Zachary Rouse or Tisha Sloan for more info at 655-4150 

 

“Romeo & Juliet” Aug 11 - Sep 2, Tuesdays - Thursdays. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater. Shakespeare’s classic about a young couple that meets, falls in love and dies in just five days. Adults: $22 - $41 youth (under 16): $12 - $41. 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Avenue. 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 

 

Films 

 

La Peña Cultural Center 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 28: 7:00 The Big Heat, 8:30 Kippur, 8:50 Clash by Night; July 29: 3:00 A Boy named Charlie Brown, 5:30 Mr. Pu, 7:30 A Billionaire; July 31: 7:30 The Arena of Murder; Aug 1: 7:30 Two Thousand Maniacs!, 9:15 Manos, the Hands of Fate; Aug 2: 7:30 Kadosh; Aug 3: 7:00 A Full-Up Train, 9:00 The Men of Tohoku; Aug 4: 7:00 Human Desire, 8:50 Hangmen Also Die; Aug 5: 3 p.m. The Yearling, 5:30 p.m The Woman Who Touched Legs; Aug 7: 7:30 p.m. Figures of Motion; Aug 8: 7:30 p.m. Confessions of an Opium Eater; Aug 9: 7:30 p.m. The Return of Frank James; Aug 10: 7 p.m. Alone on the Pacific, 9:05 p.m. Her Brother; Aug 11: 7 p.m. While the City Sleeps, 9 p.m. Beyong a Reasonable Doubt; Aug 12: 3 p.m. Charlotte’s Web, 5:30 p.m. Tokyo Olympiad. New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival July 28: 1 p.m. The Optimists: the story of the rescue of the Jews of Bulgaria, 3:30 p.m. “Louba’s Ghosts”, 6:15 p.m. “One of the Hollywood Ten”, 8:30 p.m. “Kippur”; July 29: 11 a.m. “Keys from Spain”, “The Cross Inscribed in the Star of David”, 1 p.m. “Intimate Stranger”, “Nobody’s Business”, 4 p.m. “The Sweetest Sound”, 6 p.m. “Once We Grow Up”, 8:30 p.m. “Total Love”, “Moses vs. Godzilla”; July 30: 2 p.m. “Circumcision”, “Abe’s Manhood”, 4 p.m. “Terrorists in Retirement”, 6 p.m. “Disparus”, 8:30 p.m. “Street Under Fire”, “The Jahalin”; Juy 31: 3 pm. “Family Secret”, “Still (Stille)”, 5:30 p.m. “Love Inventory”, “The Bicycle”, 8:30 p.m. “Time of Favor (Hahesder)”; Aug 1: 2 p.m. “Blue and White in Red Square”, “Tsipa and Volf”, 4 p.m. “Shorts on Love and War”, 6 p.m. “Jewish Girls in Shorts”, 8:15 p.m. “waiting for the Messiah”, “The Seventh Day”; Aug 2: 1 p.m. “Fighter”, 3:15 “Brownsville Black and White”, 5:15 “Inside Out”, “Grrly Show”, 8:45 p.m. “Jewish Luck”, “SF Klezmer Experience”. General admission: $8.50, Matinees (up to and including 4 p.m.): $7, Students/Seniors/Groups: $6.50. Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley. (925)866-9559 http://www.sfjff.org 

 

“7th annual Brainwash Movie Festival” Aug 3- 5: (bring a chair) at the Pyramid Ale brewery, 901 Gilman Street 527-9090 ext. 218. Festival Pass: $30, Individual tickets: online: $8, door: $10 

 

“Lumumba” Aug 10 at Shattuck Cinemas. Biogrophy of the slain African political figure Patrice Lumumba. In French with English subtitles. 

 

“Roommates” Aug 12. Max Apple’s true story of his immigrany grandfather who moved in with him when he was in college (in the 60’s). Peer led discussion following movie. $2 Suggested donation. Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 1414 Walnut Street 848-0237 

 

Exhibits 

 

“BACA National Juried Exhibition: Works on Paper” Through August 31: Wed. - Sun. Noon - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“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 Road 849-2541 

 

“Debbie Moore’s Autobiographical Paintings” Through Sep 30 at Good Vibrations. Portraits of the artist’s sensual explorations spanning 25 years and reflecting changing ways of intimacy and body play. 2504 San Pablo Avenue 848-1985 

 

“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.  

 

“A Fine Line” Through August 24, Tuesday - Friday, noon - 5 p.m. or by appointment. An exhibition works by Kala Fellowship winners for the years 2000 and 2001. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Avenue 549-2977 

 

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

 

“MFA Survey Exhibition 2001” third annual exhibition of works of recent graduates from Bay Area master of Fine Art programs. This year featuring artists working in three-dimentional media. now - Aug 18 tuesday - saturday, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth Street 527-1214 

 

“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 Aug. 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 

 

“The Saints Are Coming... To Bring Hope” Through July 30: Tue., Wed., Sat. 12 - 5, p.m., Fri. 1 - 5 p.m., An art installation featuring Fred DeWitt, Leon Kennedy, Josie Madero, Esete Menkir, Belinda Osborn, Arline Lucia Rodini, April Watkins, and Carla Woshone. The Art of Living Center 2905 Shattuck Ave. 848-3736  

 

“Sistahs: Ethnofraphic Ceramics” through Aug. 22, Reception July 29 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Womens Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Avenue 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“Ten Years Here” Exhibit celebrating the 10 year anniversary of Turn of the Century Fine Arts. Aug. 4 - Sept. 14, Sat & Sun 1-5 p.m. Reception Aug 4 2:00 - 7:00 p.m. 2510 San Pablo Avenue 849-0950 

 

“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  

 

 

Readings 

 

Boadecia’s Books Aug 3: Mabel Maney (author of the Nancy Clue/ Cherry Aimless and Hardly Boys mysteries) reads from her new book “Kiss the Girls and Make them Spy” featuring Jane Bond, James’ lesbian twin sister; Aug 4: Dyke Open Myke! Coffeehouse-style open mike night featuring both established and emerging talent; Aug 10 Susann Cokal reads from her novel “Mirabilis” set in 14th-century France; Aug 11: Trina Robbins discusses her latest work “Eternally Bad: Goddesses with Attitute”. All events start at 7:30 p.m. and are free. 398 Colusa Avenue 559-9184 

 

Cody’s Books Aug 5: Justin Chin, Gerry Gomez Pearlberg; Aug 8: Jane Mead, Mark Turpin. $2 donation. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-0837 

 

Cafe de la Paz “Poetry Nitro” Weekly poetry open mike. July 30: Featuring Lisa Sikie; Aug 6: featuring Andrena zawinski. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series August 7: Featured readers JC and Bert Glick. 7-9 p.m.; August 21: Featured Readers: Victoria Joyce and Therese Bamberger; Both 7-9 p.m. Free. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland for info. (510)465-3935 or (510)526-5985, or Email: ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

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  

 

 

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. “How Big Is the Universe?” Aug. 1 through Aug. 24. Learn how to determine the distance of celestial objects, one of the purposes of the Hubble Space Telescope. Daily, 2:15 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, 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu 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. 

 


After years of promise, UA Homes slips

By Jon Mays
Saturday July 28, 2001

It was once a place where formerly homeless men and women could get back on their feet. It was a place where residents held poetry readings, took art classes, ate free cake on their birthdays and enjoyed donated gourmet meals from restaurants such as Chez Panisse once a month. Now, UA Homes at 1040 University Ave. is riddled with complaints. Both tenants and neighbors have complained about garbage, problems with the bathrooms, lack of building security and overt drug dealing.  

Police visited more than 200 times last year.  

“The calls were for everything. Warrants, restraining orders, drugs, noise ... . For one property to have that many calls is fairly substantial,” said Michael Caplain, west Berkeley neighborhood services liaison. 

City, state and federal money helped transform the building from, as Housing Director Stephen Barton put it, a “sleazy” 75-unit resident hotel into a single-room occupancy apartment building that provides social services to tenants with special needs. 

Although drug use is common, residents can access medical clinics, vocational training and alcohol and drug rehabilitation counseling while paying very low rent provided by Section 8 housing vouchers. The plan was to give people who are trying to get back on their feet a sense of stability.  

 

Drug raids rattle residents 

Until recently, the plan was working.  

“Something happened in the last year. There was an influx of garbage, trashed furniture, dumping, loitering ... There was a lot of coming and going and overt drug dealing,” said Susan Black, who lives three houses away from the building on 10th Street.  

In May, five residents were subjected to police raids for drugs. Two were arrested for drug possession – although the amount of drugs found were small.  

The residents who had their rooms raided wish to remain anonymous, but said the raids were heavy-handed and hurt their struggle to remain clean and sober and off the streets.  

Bill Decker, president of the tenants association, said the building’s reduced number of group activities and social services – combined with a new night time security team – is creating an atmosphere of fear and hostility.  

“We have no advocates. All the things that were helping people take control of their lives were taken away,” Decker said. 

Having the police break down residents’ doors and tear apart their rooms didn’t help either, he said. 

“It was a complete violation of anything appropriate,” one woman whose apartment was raided in May said. “They ripped pictures off the walls. It was insane. It was like they were on drugs. They went nuts.” 

 

Police Review Commission investigating 

Police Chief Dash Butler maintains that some allegations are simply not true. But he added there is no way of knowing if the officers’ actions were inappropriate unless there is an investigation.  

The residents brought their complaints to the Police Review Commission Wednesday night and secretary Barbara Arttard said the commission is aiming to review the warrants and videotape of the raids in September.  

The warrants were served, Butler said, because of the combination of resident complaints and the number of calls for service. 

“Like any development, you have people who are involved, you have people who are deeply involved and you have those that fall in the middle – and those people are entitled to the same rights as everyone else,” Butler said.  

There has not been any raids since May and Butler refused to say if there were any more in the works.  

The building has been owned by nonprofit affordable housing developer Resources for Community Development for the past 18 months, according company Assets Manager Kerry Williams. Although Williams does not agree with the raids, he said he is in a tenuous situation because he relies on the city for a lot of support.  

 

‘No witch hunt’ 

“I’m in a catch-22,” Williams said. “I don’t want to alienate the city or the people at UA Homes.” 

Still, Williams said he is trying to address the issues with the building in a sensitive manner. 

“There’s no witch hunt. No one is going to be a scapegoat. We’re not going to violate anyone’s civil rights. We’ll follow the law and we’ll investigate,” he said. 

The problems stemmed, Williams said, from the building’s management by the John Stewart Company. Although John Stewart has a good reputation throughout the Bay Area for managing low-income properties – neither Ned York, the company’s contact person for UA Homes or Vice President Loren Sanborn returned several calls for comment.  

Others – including city officials – pointed fingers at the property’s management as well.  

Mayor Shirley Dean said she received complaints about maintenance problems with shared bathrooms and laundry rooms and that drug dealers were coming into the building through emergency exits. But she said the John Stewart Company was responsive to her phone call requesting that some of the more pressing safety issues be taken care of.  

All but two front desk clerks have been replaced and a security firm keeps tabs on all visitors after 4 p.m., according to Williams. The property supervisor has also resigned as of August 3, Williams said.  

“We’ve had good results. The only complaint is that the tenants wish they were notified sooner rather than later,” Williams said.  

Tenants held a meeting Thursday about the changes and Williams said he will do his best to keep them in the loop. 

“My sense is that it has calmed down since the police raids when all of us were extraordinarily upset,” he said. 

Since some of the social services seems to be waning, Dean expressed an interest in maintaining on-site social services for the residents. 

“We can’t make it mandatory. But there has to be some aggression to aggressively contact people so there aren’t any more problems,” Dean said.  

 

Light at the end of the tunnel? 

This week, boona cheema, executive director of Building Opportunities for Self-Sufficiency, said there is a concerted effort to increase the number of on-site services. BOSS is a non-profit that helps homeless, poor and disabled people achieve independence by helping remove the causes of poverty. 

Once the security issues are taken care of, cheema believes that real progress can begin. 

“Look, s— happens. Let it go and let’s move on. There were problems with the management and the safety and security of residents in the building,” she said. “As soon as that improves, then things are going to turn around.” 

BOSS and Lifelong have created a partnership with Bonita House and the tenants to provide clinics, drug and alcohol counseling, case management and community building.  

Community building, cheema said, includes activities such as writer’s workshops, movie night, game night and HIV/AIDS intervention. 

“We need a number of bodies engaging people. People didn’t have anything to do – they were bored,” she said.  

 

Community involvement 

If those services get back on track, it will be reminiscent of when the building was first rehabilitated after the Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989. 

Under the direction of Susan Felix from 1993-99, UA Homes went through both good and bad times, Barton said. Barton was interim housing director for three years before being named director July 24. 

“The residents needs are always so much greater than the money available,” Barton said. “When you are helping people who are dealing with substance abuse or mental illness, you are always running from one thing to another,” Barton said.  

Felix was pretty much a one-woman show, Barton said, who poured her time into the building to make it work.  

She left the building two years ago to help create a transitional housing development in Alameda. Before that, Felix said much of her time was taken up pursuing arts and community grants for a wide range of programs at UA Homes. She even convinced retail stores to donate high-quality sheets and towels.  

“We had game night and cake for birthdays. There was a lot of involvement in the community before,” she said. “I don’t know what’s happening now.” 


Sports Shorts

Staff
Saturday July 28, 2001

Prep hoops star de-commits 

 

Derek Burditt, a New Orleans prep basketball star who verbally committed to Cal earlier this year, has rescinded his decision, bluchiphoops.com reported this week. 

Burditt, rated as a top-50 player by several recruiting services, is a 6-foot-6 small forward from John Ehret High in Marrero, La. 

“You could say I’m de-committing,” Burditt said. “I talked to one of the assistants and told them that. He was telling me to think about it. It’s a done deal; I’m not going to Cal.” 

 

Echema to skip next season 

 

In a surprise move, Cal tailback Joe Echema will redshirt the upcoming season. No reason has been given yet for the decision by the player or the university. 

Echema was expected to be the main backup to starter Joe Igber. Fellow senior-to-be Saleem Muhammed transferred to Portland State when it became apparent after spring practice that he would be third on the depth chart. 

Echema’s absence leaves no experienced backup to Igber on the team. Senior Marcus Fields was the starting tailback as a freshman, but is now a utility back who will see time at several positions.


Click and Clack

By Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Saturday July 28, 2001

Dear Tom and Ray: 

Back in the 1980s, I drove a huge Chevy van. The steering wheel was so loose that I could turn corners using only a pinkie (of course, the steering wheel wobbled a little on straightaways, too). Now my wife has acute arm-muscle pain and needs a car with very easy steering. None of the new cars we’ve tested are easy to steer. If I want that same old-fashioned, easy steering, do I need to buy an old car? — David 

RAY: You might. You're referring to the old GM power steering of the ’70s and ’80s. The “slosh” that they worked decades to perfect. 

TOM: It’s hard to find that now. These days, customers prefer to have a better feel for the road. So manufacturers have reduced the amount of steering boost they put in their cars. And you’re right, almost all American cars now have more resistance in the steering wheel than they did 20 years ago. 

RAY: So what to do? Well, first of all, you should really ask yourself – and answer honestly – whether your wife SHOULD be driving anymore. If she’s got severe arm pain, will she be able to react and steer fast enough to get out of the way in an emergency? Will she put herself or other families in danger on the road because she can't swerve when necessary? If she has trouble steering an average, power-steering-equipped car, it might be time to give up the keys. 

TOM: If you decide that she is well enough to handle emergencies as well as normal driving, then I’d look at the most traditional American cars you can find – cars like the Mercury Grand Marquis, the Ford Crown Victoria, the Lincoln Town Car and the Buick LeSabre. T 

RAY: If none of those does the trick, you certainly can look for an older used car. Or you can consider handicap controls. We have an area of our Web site dedicated to drivers with special needs. It’s at the Car Talk section of www.cars.com. Good luck, David.  

Dear Tom and Ray: 

Please help me settle an ongoing dispute I’m having with my four best friends. After discussing the new elephant arrival at our city zoo, we contemplated how much the elephant might weigh at birth. I stated that it would be somewhat like delivering a small car. Half of the group is certain that a car weighs more than a ton. Those of us who are more reasonable know that a car could not possibly weigh a ton. Please help us resolve this matter – it's driving us crazy. — Seattle Girls 

TOM: Well, you’ve come to the right place, girls. In addition to our extensive knowledge of cars, we also happen to be elephant experts. 

RAY: You might be surprised to learn that a newborn pachyderm only weighs between 200 and 300 pounds. About the same as a mother-in-law! 

TOM: Whereas the average car weighs about a ton and a half – or in the neighborhood of 3,000 pounds. These days, the lightest cars on the road weigh just a little bit less than a ton, and the heaviest passenger cars are in the 2-ton range. 

RAY: So, as you can see, birthing an elephant is nothing at all like birthing a car. It's more like, well, birthing a 250cc motorcycle. Which, when you think about it, is probably no walk in the park, either!  

Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack by e-mail at the Car Talk section of cars.com


Filling up naturally

By John Geluardi
Saturday July 28, 2001

City finds new way to pump gas  

 

When politicians and city officials gather for a ribbon cutting ceremony there’s usually enough hot air generated to inflate a fleet of air balloons ... or, in this case, fuel a few city vehicles. 

Deputy Director of Public Works Patrick Keilch emceed the grand opening of Berkeley’s first compressed natural gas station. About 25 people attended the ceremony including Mayor Shirley Dean and a cadre of city and state officials.  

The new CNG station, located at the end of Second Street near Harrison Street, will pump compressed gas vapors into the fuel tanks of vehicles owned by the city, state and local businesses. 

City officials said CNG burns 75 percent cleaner and increases the longevity of engines by about 50 percent as a result of reduced carbon buildup common in vehicles that use liquid gas or diesel fuels. 

“These vehicles are much cleaner burning and much longer lasting,” said Department of Public Works Fleet Manager Bill Ivie.  

Keilch said the CNG fuel costs about five to 10 percent less per mile than liquid gas. 

Environmental Planner Matthew Nichols, of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, estimated that one Berkeley refuse program, which will use seven CNG-fueled garbage trucks, will reduce 4,600 pounds of pollutants that would otherwise be emitted into the atmosphere every year.  

The facility, which compresses the same natural gas used for residential heaters and stoves, costs nearly $500,000. At the site, natural gas will be drawn from PG&E lines and then compressed before being pumped into vehicles. 

The project was funded by the BAAQMD, the California Energy Commission and Trillium USA, a privately-owned company that will operate the facility. The city of Berkeley contributed administrative support and about $25,000. 

The fuel station will be used by a variety of public agencies including the city of Berkeley, the city of Albany and UC Berkeley. Some of the businesses that will use the station are American Soil, Acme Bread Company and the San Francisco International Airport Shuttle Service. 

Currently, the department of public works uses six CNG Pickup trucks and the police department uses four CNG patrol cars.  

“We have the seven garbage trucks on order as well as three other vehicles on the way,” said DPW Fleet Manager Bill Ivie. “Now that we have the infrastructure the number of CNG vehicles will snowball.” 

Dean said the project is the type of public-private association she would like to see more of.  

“This is wonderful,” she said. “We’re getting cleaner and this fuel is [not as] hard on the engines.” 

Peter Ward, a fuel manager for the California Energy Commission, said CNG fuel stations are becoming popular. “There are about 100 public CNG fuel stations throughout the state and another 100 stations for private use,” he said. “That’s compared to 10,500 gas stations, so we have a long way to go.” 

The CNG vehicles are purchased with stock vapor-burning fuel systems and, in the case of the new Ford trucks used by the DPW, cost about $4,500 more than a regular vehicle. The additional cost is paid with grant money from the BAAQMD, which distributes about $20 million annually for projects that reduce pollution emissions. 

Community Environmental Advisory Commissioner L.A. Wood attended the ceremony and said he has supported the CNG fuel station for years and was glad it finally opened with one reservation. 

“The city should of done the minimum environmental review,” he said. “Vehicles will be coming all the way across town from the university to fuel up and there’s other contaminants that automobiles put in the air besides fuel emissions.” 


Rallygoers mark ADA anniversary

By Daniela Mohor
Saturday July 28, 2001

Standing on the steps of Sproul Hall stairs, Andrew Imparato, president of the American Association of People with Disabilities wanted to make sure that his peers would be heard Friday. 

“What do we want?” he yelled in his microphone while a sign language interpreter translated his question. 

“Civil rights,” the crowd answered. 

“When do we want it?” 

“Now.” 

Nearly 100 people gathered on upper Sproul Plaza on the UC Berkeley campus Friday at noon to celebrate the 11th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, a legislation that ensures equal opportunity for people with disabilities in employment, public services and accommodations, commercial facilities and transportation. 

“We are here to celebrate us, what we’ve accomplished and how far we’ve come, said Paul Longmore, a disabled professor at San Francisco State University. “Four decades ago on this campus, nobody thought about disability issues. Disability issues are now unavoidable.” 

To the speakers, however, the ADA’s anniversary was above all a chance to call the local community to keep with a struggle that has just begun. 

“We have more rights than we once did,” said Jan Garrett, director of the Center for Independent Living. “But the truth is that we still need to have many more and we need to be vigilant about keeping the ones we had.” 

Despite the ADA, participants said disabled people’s right for equality is often not respected. Accessibility is still not systematic and issues such as equal access to education and employment remain poorly addressed, they said. 

“I would like to think that we’ve made some progress,” said Walter Park, director of the San Francisco Mayor’s office on disability. “We have got fewer people in the workforce with severe disabilities now than we had 11 years ago.” 

Full access to employment is currently one of the most sensitive issues for the disabled community. Last February, the Supreme Court ruled to limit the enforcement of the ADA ‘s Title I, which guarantees equal access to employment for all disabled people. The ruling was made in the scope of the so-called Garrett case, which involved two state employees discriminated against in their jobs because of their disabilities.  

“It’s outrageous that the highest court in our land is so ignorant and never understood the point and the process of ADA,” said Larry Paradis, director of Disability Rights Advocates. “The court needs to understand that ADA is a promise of equality that benefits everybody.” 

According to Park, the government’s lack of commitment in the protection of disability rights is not limited to federal institutions. Locally, he said, there are barriers too. 

“Way too many people in the government do not know how to implement the ADA; they don’t know that they’re not doing it,” he said, referring to the situation in San Francisco. 

One of the main problems, he said, is the staff’s lack of training. While 85 percent of the clients of San Francisco’s shelters have some kind of mental health disability, he said, many of the people working there haven’t been adequately prepared to address their needs. 

Greater awareness on the challenges they face every day, respect and inclusion, several speakers said, is what disabled people ultimately seek. 

“The access ramp, the Braille markers, the interpreters and all the other infrastructures of freedom that we campaign for are just pieces of what is an extraordinary vision of a different kind of society,” said Longmore. “We are the ultimate test of America’s commitment to diversity.” 


Center Street retains early 20th century character

By Susan Cerny
Saturday July 28, 2001

In the early 1890s the city and UC Berkeley began to grow rapidly with growth accelerating after 1900.  

Several factors converged to cause the population boom: the introduction of a direct electric streetcar line to the campus in 1892, and along College Avenue in 1903; the increasing reputation and quality of the university, which received international attention with the Phoebe Apperson Hearst Campus Design Competition announced in 1896; and the population boom after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire when the city grew by 30,000 within a few years.  

Beginning in 1902 and continuing until the 1930s, downtown was transformed. The mostly single-story or two-story wood-framed buildings were removed and, in their place, more substantial masonry buildings were constructed. Many of these buildings are still standing and give downtown Berkeley its distinctive early 20th century character.  

The south side of Center Street, is a good, representative example of early 20th century design. The street today looks very much like this 1908 picture. The majority of the block is original. But the building on the left side of the picture was demolished for a gas station. 

Almost 50 years later the site was again redeveloped. The new building, the one standing today, was designed to echo the style of the original building using photographs such as this one for inspiration.  

From 1876, when the first steam train began operating on Shattuck Avenue, Center Street has served continuously as the pedestrian link from downtown Berkeley to the university.  

 

Susan Cerny writes Berkeley Observed in conjunction with the Berkeley Historical Association.


Judge rules in favor of partner of woman killed by dogs

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — The lesbian partner of a woman mauled to death by dogs earlier this year scored a surprising court victory Friday as a judge allowed her wrongful death suit to proceed to trial. 

Judge A. James Robertson II agreed with the arguments of Sharon Smith’s attorney that California state law has created a barrier for her by not allowing same-sex couples to marry, thus precluding them from seeking benefits available to married couples, such as the right to sue when someone’s negligence has allegedly deprived them of companionship. 

However, the equal protection provision of the state Constitution prevents such exclusions, the judge ruled. Smith’s attorney, Shannon Minter of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, was elated with the ruling. 

“This is a remarkable day. This is the first decision of this kind, not just in California but anywhere in the country,” Minter said. “It’s a tremendous victory for lesbian and gay people in the United States.” 

Smith sued Robert Noel and Marjorie Knoller, the caretakers of two large presa canario dogs that killed her partner, Diane Whipple, Jan. 26 as she stood in her apartment hallway. 

Marriage for heterosexual couples, Minter argued, is proof of a legal union. “But for same-sex couples it is no test at all,” Minter said. ”(Marriage) is not anything available to them in the first instance ... There is literally nothing Sharon and Dianne could have done to formalize their relationship,” Minter said. 

Smith choked back tears after the hearing and said it was an emotional moment for her. 

A vice president at an investment firm who was thrust into the public eye by her partner’s death, Smith went to the state Capitol to lobby for a bill addressing the issue of same-sex benefits. Proposed bill AB25, sponsored by Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, passed the Assembly with a 43-21 vote, and is in the Appropriations Committee awaiting action. 

The bill would allow same-sex partners to get the same health benefits, disability and unemployment coverage and retirement pensions as married men and women. It would also allow domestic partners to seek economic and emotional damages in such wrongful-death lawsuits. 

Judge Robertson’s decision sets no legal precedent, but the unique case will test the California courts if appealed, said Jon Davidson, senior counsel for Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. Lambda is the nation’s oldest civil rights organization for lesbians and gays. 

“In this case the plaintiff not only was arguing about the wording of the statute, but also said there would be these constitutional problems if Sharon Smith wasn’t allowed to sue,” Davidson said. “If Sharon Smith would have been Steve Smith, this couple would have been married.” 

No trial date has been set. Noel and Knoller, both lawyers themselves, are representing themselves in the case but did not appear in court Friday and remain behind bars on charges of involuntary manslaughter and keeping a mischievous dog that killed a human being. Knoller, who was with the dogs at the time, also faces a felony charge of second-degree murder. 

The last time the state’s high court dealt with a similar issue was in 1988. The California Supreme Court ruled that unmarried lovers, whether heterosexual or homosexual, could not sue for emotional distress suffered from seeing the other partner injured. 

The reasoning behind the court’s ruling was society’s support for the institution of marriage. 

“The state has a strong interest in the marriage relationship,” the late Justice Stanley Mosk wrote for the majority. Mosk added that the legal consequences of a wrongdoer’s negligent act “must be limited in order to avoid an intolerable burden on society.” 

Noel and Knoller were taking care of the dogs Bane and Hera for two Pelican Bay State Prison inmates who were allegedly having them trained to guard drug labs in California. 

In a strange twist, the jailed couple adopted one of the inmates, avowed white supremacist Paul “Cornfed” Schneider. Schneider and the other inmate, Dale Bretches, are seeking to have themselves named as co-defendants in the civil suit. 

The case is Smith v. Knoller 19-SCV-319532. 


Energy-efficient appliances selling well

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Californians are buying more energy efficient refrigerators and washing machines than salespeople can ever remember, despite a blackout-free summer and assurance from state officials that electric rates should stay put or drop. 

The rebates are so popular that California’s three largest utilities expect to run out of rebate money by the end of summer. The funds usually stretch until after Christmas or roll over into the following year. 

Golden State residents also are burning their free time taking energy conservation classes at home improvement stores such as The Home Depot, which cover topics from installing more efficient air conditioners to properly sealing ducts that could leak hot or cold air. 

“I think people are still pretty interested in being efficient for energy,” said Mike Gibbon, store manager at The Home Depot in Santa Clarita. “I don’t think anybody wants to see those blackouts.” 

Replacing an old refrigerator with an energy efficient model – which can cost $550 on the low end – can net ratepayers rebate of $125 or even $200. Southern California Edison Co. even pays an extra $35 for the privilege of hauling away the old fridge for recycling. 

State officials point to June’s 12 percent drop in power demand as a major reason the state has thus far evaded rolling blackouts. Cooler weather also has decreased energy usage to the point that the state has had to sell off excess power for a fraction of what it paid. 

Many Californians now leave laundry and other electricity-thirsty activities for the evening hours, when big businesses are shuttered for the night and the state’s power supply is more stable. But they still pay more for power than last year, despite using less electricity. 

“Everything is turned off when I’m not utilizing a room; we don’t use the microwave,” said Denise Jones, a Pinole resident who works for the San Francisco health department. “We wash dishes and use the clothes drier after 7 o’clock.” 

Customers of public utilities can even plant trees to cut costs and save electricity. Sacramento has a 10-year-old program called Sacramento Shade that has distributed more than 300,000 free trees. Anaheim Public Utilities has its Tree Power Program, started in 1992, which has given away 16,000 free shade trees to help people cool their homes during the scorching summer months. It also offers a $20 rebate for trees people buy at nurseries to shade their homes. 

Flip on the radio or open a newspaper. Appliance stores advertise a small fortune available in energy rebates for those who are willing to spend more money now to save money on future power bills. 

“People are getting that bill each month reminding them they’re spending a lot on their electricity use and they have found that the refrigerator is the biggest electricity user in the standard home,” said Reece Williams, a salesman at Cherin’s Appliance in San Francisco. 

“It’s like giving yourself a perpetual rebate because you’re saving money on power,” Williams said. Cherin’s delivers around 15 energy efficient refrigerators a day, he said. 

Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Southern California Edison Co. and San Diego Gas and Electric Co. offer rebates on dozens of energy efficient appliances, insulation and gadgets. Just make sure to call ahead to reserve a rebate – some of the utilities say they won’t pay after the fact. PG&E has applications in the store that customers can fill out and mail in with a receipt, and for some appliances, rebate applications can be downloaded from the Internet and sent in after the purchase. 

 

Ratepayers themselves pay for appliance rebates, low-income power bill discounts and other programs with a small percentage of each month’s payment. Lawmakers also kicked in several million more for each utility earlier this year. 

Staci Homrig, a PG&E spokeswoman, said the utility has received rebate applications for 21,200 refrigerators alone, plus thousands more for other major appliances including dishwashers and washing machines. 

“We’ve been trying to convey the message that if you thought about replacing your appliances, now is the time to do it,” Homrig said. PG&E plans to spend more than $50 million on rebates. 

Edison customers have reserved more than half of the $7 million the utility budgeted for rebates, said Gil Alexander, a spokesman for the utility. 

SDG&E already has committed about $30 million of the more than $35 million it plans to spend this year, said spokeswoman Jennifer Andrews. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.pge.com/123 

http://www.sce.com/002—save—energy/002a—rebates.shtml 

http://www.sdge.com/efficiency/ee—programrebates.html 

http://www.energystar.gov 


Scientist claims old data show life signs on Mars

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Data collected 25 years ago on the surface of Mars by NASA’s twin Viking landers show evidence of life, a scientist claimed Friday. 

Other scientists quickly cast doubt on the claim by Joseph Miller, citing a variety of other explanations for the data radioed back to Earth from the landers as they performed experiments on Martian soil in an effort to find any trace of life on the Red Planet. 

Miller, an associate professor in the Department of Cell and Neurobiology at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, said he detected distinct rhythms in the levels of gas given off during the range of experiments that sought to prompt the growth of microbial life in samples of Martian soil doused with water and nutrients. 

The experiments were conducted aboard the robotic Viking landers, which set down on the surface of Mars 25 years ago this month. 

If any living organisms were present in the samples, they were expected to process the nutrients and release the carbon they contained in a gas form, which could then be detected. 

Gas was released during the experiments, but a majority of scientists have long held it was the result of chemical reactions within the newly moistened – and highly corrosive – soil found on the planet’s surface. 

But Miller said the fluctuations were so regular they resembled the natural day-night, or circadian, rhythms found in terrestrial life forms, including bacteria. 

 

“The most likely explanation is biology,” Miller said. 

Other scientists regarded the announcement with skepticism. 

“The explanation is that there were peroxides that formed in soil, and these are ultimately responsible for reactions, the results of which he saw,” said Arden Albee, project scientist on NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor mission. 

Miller, an expert in circadian rhythms, said he has analyzed about 30 percent of the Viking data. So far, he said, he has found that gas levels produced during the various experiments varied as much as 3 percent during regular periods that matched the length of a Martian day, slightly longer than an Earth day. He said he is ”90 percent” sure the results point to the existence of life. 

Bruce Jakosky, a professor of geological sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said the regularity could be explained by a number of other reasons, including regular fluctuations in the spacecraft’s temperature, the atmospheric pressure on Mars or activity aboard the robotic lander itself. 

Miller will present his results on Sunday at an astrobiology symposium held during the International Society for Optical Engineering’s 46th annual meeting in San Diego. 


14-year-old gets 28 years for shooting teacher

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A judge sentenced 14-year-old Nathaniel Brazill to 28 years in prison Friday for fatally shooting his favorite teacher between the eyes on the last day of school – far less than the maximum he could have received of life without parole. 

Brazill, who was tried as an adult, had faced a minimum of 25 years behind bars for killing Barry Grunow at Lake Worth Middle School more than a year ago. 

Wearing a bright red jumpsuit and shackles, the boy said nothing and his face conveyed the same blank expression it bore throughout his trial as Circuit Judge Richard Wennet handed down the sentence, which carries no possibility of parole or time off for good behavior. 

“I can tell you he’s pleased. Nathaniel just wanted to know if there is a light at the end of the tunnel,” defense attorney Robert Udell said. 

The sentence shocked some relatives of the victim, who had warned that the boy is a danger to society and should be put away for the rest of his life. 

The case – along with the life sentence given earlier this year to 14-year-old Lionel Tate, who said he was imitating pro wrestlers when he beat a 6-year-old girl to death — has renewed criticism of a tough-on-crime Florida law that allows prosecutors to try juveniles as adults and subject them to mandatory prison sentences. 

Brazill’s lawyer said the boy will appeal and, after the process is complete, ask the governor for clemency if necessary. 

“I think the sentence was fair,” Gov. Jeb Bush said in Jacksonville. “It really doesn’t matter what I think so much as there is an appeals process. Lawyers for the boy will be able to make that appeal and the process will go forward as it normally does.” 

In imposing the sentence, the judge had to decide whether the teen could be rehabilitated. But he offered no explanation for how he arrived at the 28-year sentence. 

The judge ordered the teen to take an anger management course and spend two years in a form of house arrest after doing his time in prison. He also received five years’ probation. 

Brazill was convicted in May of second-degree murder for killing the 35-year-old English teacher he called a “great man and a great teacher.” The boy was 13 when he committed the crime. 

The boy had returned to school after being suspended by a counselor earlier that day for throwing water balloons. He shot Grunow after the teacher refused to let the seventh-grader talk to two girls in his class. 

At his trial, Brazill had insisted that he only meant to scare the teacher and that the gun went off accidentally. 

Prosecutor Marc Shiner had asked for a life sentence without parole Friday, saying, “That’s the only way we can be sure he won’t hurt someone again.” 

Kay Grunow, the victim’s sister, said she was “extremely disappointed” with the sentence, calling it “an insult to Barry’s memory.” 

Grunow’s widow, Pam, was not there Friday. On Thursday, she told the judge “I do not have the wisdom” to decide what price the boy should pay. 

At the same hearing, Brazill apologized for the crime, saying: “Words cannot really explain how sorry I am, but they’re all I have.” 

His mother, Polly Powell, sobbed as she pleaded for mercy Thursday. “Nathaniel is my first born and I love him like nobody else can,” she said. Before the trial, she had rejected a plea bargain of 25 years offered by prosecutors. 

Florida is one of 15 states that give prosecutors the discretion to send juveniles to adult court, according to the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice. 

James Alan Fox, a criminal justice professor at Northeastern University, called Brazill’s sentence excessive but said it reflects the public’s mood. “Americans do not want to diminish criminal responsibility because the criminals are teens,” he said. 


Signs for recession ease despite anemic economy

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

WASHINGTON — The economy endured its weakest growth rate in eight years in the spring as American companies cut back on investment spending by the biggest amount in two decades. 

Resilient consumers kept the economy afloat, although just barely, as the gross domestic product – the country’s total output of goods and services – eked out a tiny 0.7 percent growth rate in the April-June quarter. 

Looking for glimmers of hope in the midst of a slowdown that began last summer, many analysts said they believed the country has now passed the maximum danger point for a recession. They forecast steady improvement for the rest of this year. 

“I think we have seen the bottom for this economic cycle,” said Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at Wells Fargo in Minneapolis. “Consumers have prevented the economy from sliding off a cliff and now they will be getting some help.” 

Sohn and other analysts pointed to falling interest rates, lower energy prices and the $40 billion in tax rebate checks taxpayers have started to receive as positive developments. 

“While we’re still skating on the edge of a recession, I think the outlook for the economy is now quite encouraging,” said Bill Cheney, chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services in Boston. The current economic expansion is now in a record 11th year. 

President Bush, who was accused by Democrats of talking down the economy as a way to sell his tax cut program, said that Friday’s GDP report showed how important it was that Congress approved a package including rebate checks to get relief into consumers’ hands quickly. 

“The economy is puttering along. It is not nearly as strong as it should be,” Bush told members of the Future Farmers of America at the White House. 

Wall Street saw the weak GDP report as confirmation of the string of dismal second quarter earnings reports it has been seeing. Lawrence Lindsey, the president’s chief economist, said in a CNN interview that “we have seen the worst of times already.” He predicted the economy would return to robust growth in 2002. 

Many analysts said they looked for growth to rebound to around 2 percent in the current quarter and 3.5 percent in the fourth quarter. They predicted the Federal Reserve would cut rates for a seventh time at its Aug. 21 meeting to help the recovery along. The Fed would have room to cut rates further because of an absence of inflation. An inflation gauge tied to the GDP showed prices rising by just 1.7 percent in the second quarter, the best performance since early 1999. 

 

The 0.7 percent GDP increase, the fourth straight quarter of sub-par activity, was the poorest showing since GDP actually shrank by 0.1 percent in the first quarter of 1993. The GDP for the first quarter of this year was revised to a rate of 1.3 percent. 

The slowdown that started in the summer of 2000 was the result of a campaign by the Fed to raise interest rates in an effort to keep tight labor markets from making inflation worse. When the severity of the downturn became evident, the Fed reversed course in January and began cutting interest rates. 

While most economists were optimistic that the nation will be able to avoid a recession, some worried that the unrelenting problems in manufacturing, which has lost 785,000 jobs in the last year, could spill over to the rest of the economy if consumers suddenly stopped spending because of fears about their own jobs. There were also fears of spreading weakness overseas. 

“A sharp deterioration in growth overseas and the continuing impact of an overvalued dollar are wreaking havoc on companies’ ability to export,” said Jerry Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. 

Battered by weak sales and plunging profits, companies reduced investment spending for new plants and equipment by 13.6 percent in the second quarter, the sharpest dropoff since the severe recession of 1982, with big cutbacks in spending for computers and software as well as new factories and office buildings. 

However, consumer spending helped offset this weakness, although the 2.1 percent second quarter gain was the slowest in four years. 

Spending on residential construction, which has been bolstered by falling interest rates, climbed at a healthy annual rate of 7.4 percent in the second quarter. In a second report Friday, the government said that new home sales rose by 1.7 percent in June to a strong seasonally adjusted rate of 922,000 homes. 

In addition to the sharp cutback in business investment, the other big negative factor in the second quarter was a 9.9 percent drop in U.S. exports. Businesses continued struggling to reduce a huge backlog of unsold goods, cutting inventories by $26.9 billion in the second quarter following a decline of $27.1 billion in the first quarter. 

Analysts said this sizable inventory reduction should set the stage for a rebound in production in coming months. 

In addition to releasing the new GDP report, the government revised past GDP figures. The biggest change trimmed GDP growth for all of 2000 to 4.1 percent, instead of the previously reported 5 percent. 


Deflated advice leaves poor investors on their own

By John Cunniff
Saturday July 28, 2001

Six months ago, the sages of Wall Street were advising that things couldn’t get much worse, and investors listened. 

Things got worse. And now the advice itself is as deflated as stock prices. 

After viewing the earnings reports of major corporations last week, nobody is sure where the bottom of the current business slump lies. Even company officers, who should know their own markets, concede their puzzlement. 

Those certified accounting statements don’t always help, either. Often they leave you searching through a maze of exceptions to find meaningful figures. It is hardly praise to say that accounting today is creative. 

The situation leaves investors fishing, hoping for indications that there is a future, but they’re getting little guidance. After many misses, corporate chiefs are demurring about making sales and earnings forecasts. 

Some of the other reliable old signs can’t be depended on either, or are meaningless under the circumstances. How do you calculate the price-earnings ratio of a stock without earnings? How do you assess a company’s value when the market it used to lead has just about evaporated? As a result, a good earnings report these days may be one that beats the consensus forecast by a cent or two – even if it loses money, and loses it big, like Corning, the big fiber optics producer. 

Corning’s shares rose last week immediately after it reported a second-quarter loss of $4.7 billion, equal to $5.13 a share. Rose, but on what guidance? There was no worn path of experience to follow as a guide. Significantly, the company declined to offer excuses that executives once routinely offered about the past, and equally routine promises they once made about the future being brighter, etc. After all the failed forecasts, few investors are now inclined to listen to such promises. Instead, many of them are falling back on the same alibi they conned themselves with six months ago — that share prices of major companies are now so low that they can’t dig themselves lower without an excavator. 

To an extent that may be true. Corning fell to under $15 from more than $113 in the past 52 weeks, but it has had plenty of company. Price collapses have been so common they’ve lost their shock effect. While shares of some of the companies with the worst declines are now above their 52-week lows, the dimensions of their dizzying fall are still similar to those you read about in a history of the Great Depression. 

To illustrate, in the same one-year period as Corning’s, Nortel collapsed to just over $7 from nearly $84, JDS Uniphase fell to a low of $8.50 from more than $136, Lucent sank to $5.04 from a 52-week high of nearly $49, and Priceline shriveled to $1.06 from nearly $30. 

But unlike fragile, poorly conceived dot-coms that sank from sight altogether, these are substantial companies of a sort that few investors – and chief executives and option holders – could ever have imagined suffering such a fate. Wary of advisers, having listened to guidance of corporate officials absurdly off the mark, having seen entire markets shrink, and having little direction from history, investors are fishing. 

John Cunniff is a business analyst for The Associated Press


Police briefs

Kenyatta Davis
Saturday July 28, 2001

A 54-year-old woman was the victim of a robbery on Wednesday, said Berkeley Police Sgt. Kay Lantou. A young man allegedly confronted the woman on the corner of Fifth Street and Allston Way at 10:40 p.m.  

The suspect then told the victim that he had to talk to her and walked her to a side, according to Lantou. The man allegedly put his arm around the victims shoulder, grabbed her purse and ran off. The victim was not injured and there are no suspects. 

••• 

A 49-year-old man was assaulted with a statuette by a casual acquaintance on the 1900 block of Alcatraz Avenue early in the morning on Monday, Lantou said.  

The suspect, a 40- to 45-year-old woman, allegedly approached the victim’s house with a man at 5:30 a.m. When the victim answered the door the suspect demanded he give her a statuette and a vase that she had left there, Lantou said.  

The victim retrieved the statuette and when he went to retrieve the vase the suspect allegedly hit him in the back of the head with the statuette. The victim declined medical attention. 

••• 

A 50-year-old man was knocked to the ground causing head injuries on the 2800 block of Sacramento Street on July 24, according to Lantou.  

The victim, who was slightly intoxicated at the time of the incident, reportedly got into a conversation with a group of 10 young men. According to Lantou, one of the men punched the victim causing him to fall and hit his head on the cement. The assailants allegedly ran off immediately. The victim was treated at Highland Hospital and released. There are no suspects. 

 


Cal’s Schott scores a goal in U.S. win over Iceland

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday July 27, 2001

GJOVIK, Norway - California’s Laura Schott scored the opening goal and forward Abby Wambach contributed two goals for the U.S. Under-21 Women’s National Team in a totally one-sided affair to record a 3-0 victory Wednesday over an out-gunned Iceland team in the opening game of the 2001 Nordic Cup Championships.  

The Americans out-shot the gritty Icelanders 31-1 for the match and could have racked up several more goals if not for some poor U.S. finishing and some great goalkeeping from Thora Helgadottir, who plays her college soccer at Duke University.  

Iceland played a highly defensive 5-4-1 formation, but the Americans laid waste to the bunker tactics early, with Schott scoring in just the 7th minute. The goal was created by U.S. captain Cat Reddick after she intercepted a pass in the midfield and took off on a slashing run through the entire Iceland team. She got to the end line on the left side of the goal and played a cross on the ground to the far post for Schott, who slid and pounded her shot into the net from a sharp angle, five yards outside the post and just two yards from the edge of the field.  

The USA made it 2-0 in the 31st minute on a beautiful goal that started in midfield as Schott and Lori Lindsey played a quick wall-pass to carve through several Iceland defenders. Lindsey then played a brilliant weak-side pass to Katie Barnes on the right flank. Barnes ran the ball down and took her time before chipping a perfect cross to the far post where Wambach slotted a header into the net from inside the six-yard box.  

The USA added its third goal just three minutes into the second half after Devvyn Hawkins played a throw-in to Wambach deep in the left corner. She posted up her defender and then rolled inside, making some space for her shot before absolutely scorching the ball into the upper left corner from 12 yards out. The ball ricocheted off the crossbar on its way into the net, giving Helgadottir no chance.  

In the other Group A match, Germany defeated Denmark 3-0 and sites atop the group tied with the U.S. In the Group B matches, Finland upset Sweden, 2-1 and Norway tied and up-and-coming Canadian team, 1-1, after University of Portland-bound Christine Sinclair tied the game in the 87th minute. The USA will face Denmark in its next Group A match on Friday. Kickoff is at 7 p.m. local/10 a.m. PST.


Forum

Friday July 27, 2001

Dilapidated house a symbol of nimbyism 

 

Editor: 

What Mr. (Ms.) Broudy suggests (Forum July 7) actually happened in Berkeley a few years ago.  

There is a dilapidated one story structure on Rose Street. between Oxford and Spruce on the north side of the street. It was to be replaced by a halfway house. The neighbors bought the property and it remains the same, only more dilapidated, unkempt and overgrown, unloved — a symbol of nimby-ism.  

 

R. Hall 

Berkeley 

 

 

What have the studies of the tritium lab shown us? 

 

In a recent letter to the Planet ( June 11), I reviewed the results of six studies of the Tritium lab at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The physicists and health scientists who were responsible for these investigations all agreed that the risk from tritium emissions to the lab workers, visitors, and the nearby residents was infinitesimally low. One risk analysis scientist commented that he had never seen a situation with so little risk and so much anxiety. Despite the unanimity of these findings, certain opponents of the lab continue to press for the closure of the tritium lab. In a letter (June 27) one of them took vigorous issue, calling me a snake-oil salesman who was trying to bamboozle the public. However, he failed to challenge the scientists’ unanimous conclusion that the tritiumlab is not poisoning anybody. 

Many of the statements in his letter deserve comment, but space limitations require me to limit my responses to the following claims: 

•“Alarming levels of contamination are locked up in the vegetation, water, and air at the site; including the air inside the Lawrence Hall of Science immediately downwind from the tritium stack.” In fact, Mr. Franke’s recent study found that the “overall tritium inventory in trees and also groundwater is small…” How air can trap tritium is a puzzle. 

•He says LBNL reduced the tritium lab’s activities three years agobecause of contamination, and he believes they are keeping activity down to lull the public. In fact, the lab had a single year of decreased work in 1996-7 while new equipment was being built and installed. The number of tritiations have gradually decreased from about 100 per year in the early 1990s to about 60 per year since 1998, according to Dr. Philip G. Williams,the lab’s manager. There has been no abrupt change. 

•“Mr. Franke stands by his conclusion that a catastrophic release (of tritium) due to earthquake, fire or accident would subject the next-door children visitors (at the Lawrence Hall of Science) to much more radiation than LBNL’s cooked calculations.” In fact, Mr. Franke reached no such conclusions. He quoted without comment or criticism the safety study’s statement that an earthquake would release an unimportant quantity of tritium. Regarding fire, he questioned the calculations of the risk to a jogger at the LBNL fence line if she stayed there for 30 minutes while the tritium lab was being destroyed by a massive fire. He suggested that a further study of this unlikely eventuality be undertaken. The lab has already hired an independent risk analysis group to do this. 

•“The Straume report actually says that LBNL minimizes the danger from tritium and that tritium is more bio-effective (harmful) than gamma radiation.” In fact, the recent safety studies by the SENES group and by Franke agree with Straume about the possibly increased bio-effectiveness of tritium. This was factored into their analyses, and Straume, SENES and Franke all agreed that the risk from the tritium lab was exceedingly small. 

The SENES report concludes that even for full-time workers at the Lawrence Hall of Science “ Because of this small risk value…no additional excess cases of cancer would be expected due to tritium releases from the NTLF.” 

ª“ The U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances…later showed a higher than expected breast cancer occurrence in the already high incidence area in the Panoramic Hill area.” In fact, they agreed with the California Department of Health Services Cancer Surveillance Section that “the cancer rates in the area surrounding LBNL were no different from other areas in the San Francisco Bay.” 

•The lab’s scientists are guilty of “sleazy secret activities” and “cooked calculations.” In fact, after all these years of attacks, the lab’s critics are reduced to name-calling, slandering the work of serious scientists, and misquotations. It is time for them to read the six reports, two of which have been paid for by the city of Berkeley, and all of which tell the same story: tritium emissions at the Lawrence Berkeley lab do not add significantly to the background radiation we all receive from cosmic rays, radon gas, and other natural sources of radiation. There are plenty of real environmental problems in Berkeley; the tritium lab is not one of them. 

 

Elmer R. Grossman, M.D. 

Professor of Pediatrics,  

Emeritus  

UCSF School of Medicine 

 

Everyone has a right to travel safely in Berkeley 

 

Editor: 

I was happy to read Bill Trampleasure's letter (July 25) about creating a Personal Pedestrian Pledge to safely share the streets with vehicles. I do not have a car, so I walk everywhere. I think the growing problem is that drivers who are in a hurry resent having to share the street with pedestrians. And, if I'm truthful, I admit I resent having to share the streets with drivers! (After all, for most of human history, vehicles did not exist.) 

So here's my pledge: I'll stop resenting drivers and will respect their rights, and I pray that they will stop resenting pedestrians and will respect my rights. Everyone has a right to travel safely through Berkeley — everyone, whether you're a pedestrian, a driver, or a cyclist. Can we all take this pledge? 

 

Deborah Houy 

Berkeley 

 

Remove poverty to remove exploitation 

 

Editor: 

The continuing publicity about the local sex-labor Lakireddy case revives questions as to the causes of the shameful traffic in young females, sometimes males. One of the proffered opinions comes from the feminists who claim that men all through the ages have abused women in one way or another, regarding them as inferior beings. 

To some extent only I agree. Far more cogent a reason in my view is the abject poverty in a number of Third World countries which forces parents to sell their daughters, either for direct cash or for promised services in order to eke out their minuscule incomes and to feed their remaining children.  

Only when societies in both undeveloped and developed countries such as ours have pressured their governments to remove the abject poverty upon which the wealthy prey, will there be an end to sex/labor traffic.  

The rich will have to relinquish some of their wealth. Will it not be a worthy sacrifice if parents are no longer forced to see their loved ones carried away to foreign lands? 

 

Iris M. Cavagnaro 

Berkeley 

 


Friday July 27, 2001


Friday, July 27

 

11th Anniversary of  

Americans with Disabilities  

Act (ADA) 

11 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Campus, Upper Sproul Plaza 

Celebration and Call to Action Disability Rights. Sutton nomination, Olmstead implementation, Medicaid buy-in legislation for California, 

grass roots activism, voting and MORE…. Confirmed Speakers: Paul Longmore: Professor San Francisco State University; Andy Imparato: President & CEO, American Association of People with Disabilities; Daniel Davis: National Disabled Students Union Co-Founder; Sarah Triano: National Disabled Students Union Co-Founder; Larissa Cummings, DREDF Staff Attorney; Jan Garrett: CIL, Berkeley Executive Director; Walter Park: SF Mayor's Office on Disability Director; Mark Beckwith, Northern California ADAPT; For more information: Jessa Steinbeck, AAPD, 800/840-8844, Andy Imparato, AAPD, 443/386-2935 or, Daniel Davis: Disabled Students Union of UC Berkeley, 510/898-3531 

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 

Saturday, July 28 

Residential Solar Electricity 

1 p.m. - 3 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

The workshop will introduce participants to residential solar electricity: how solar cells work, how to size a system, participants will also get to produce electricity using photovoltaic panels and power a range of appliances (weather permitting). $15. Call 548-2220 x233 to reserve a space.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

 

Arrowcopter Play Day 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

For ages 9 and up. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

16th Annual Berkeley Kite  

Festival and West Coast Kite  

Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

Free Event. For more information: 235-5483


Web site teaches science of evolution

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Friday July 27, 2001

UC Berkeley’s Museum of Paleontology, home to one of the largest collections of fossils in the world, will use two major grants to create Internet content that teaches students, teachers and the general public about evolution. 

The National Science Foundation gave the museum a $452,000 grant to launch the project this May, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute announced last month that it would contribute an additional $390,000 to the project this fall. 

The museum’s Web site – one of the first Web sites ever created – is extremely popular. More than two million people visit the site each week to check out its rich mix of photos and clear writing on the history of life on earth. Pages dealing with dinosaurs are particularly popular. 

“We have an edge: People love fossils,” said Judy Scotchmoor, director of education and public programs for the Museum of Paleontology. “We want to use that to our advantage.” 

The museum has more than 900,000 plant, vertebrate and invertebrate fossils, drawn from some 60,000 locations around the world. But, other than a Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton, a giant flying reptile and some dinosaur skulls on display in UC Berkeley’s Valley Life Sciences building, the museum has no exhibition space. 

Thus the emphasis on Web site development. 

For the new project, museum staff will create an online course of evolution for K-12 science teachers everywhere. The course will examine the evidence supporting the theory of evolution; the different levels of evolution; case studies in how the theory impacts everything from HIV to agriculture; a history of how the theory was developed and a detailed examination – and rebuttal – of common arguments against the theory. 

The museums Web site, www.ucmp.berkeley.edu, already has some basic background information on evolution, Scotchmoor said. But this new project will give teachers looking for ways to enrich their teaching of evolution “one stop shopping,” Scotchmore said. 

“That doesn’t really exist anywhere in a format that’s really easy for teachers to explore,” she added. 

When completed four years from now, the site will include an array of lesson plans that teachers can use in the classroom to drive home what most scientists consider one of the most important concepts underlying modern science. 

The project comes at a time when the teaching of evolution is still routinely challenged by some parents and teachers, and many K-12 science teachers are ill-equipped to teach the subject to their students, experts said Thursday.  

In 1999, the Kansas Board of Education adopted standards that sought to de-emphasize the teacher of evolution in public schools (a decision that has since been rescinded). Last year, Pennsylvania proposed science standards for its public schools that would have required students to study data that “supports and does not support” the theory of evolution. The standards were revised after over 100 scientists addressed letters of protest to the Pennsylvania Board of Education. 

California’s state science standards — approved in 1997 — focus strongly on the theory of evolution and make no mention of any alternative theories, Scotchmoor said. Still, there are some vocal opponents of evolution as it is currently taught in the state. 

Fazale Rana is vice president of “science apologetics” for Pasadena-based Reasons to Believe, a group of religious scientists who believe the Bible offered the final word on all scientific questions, and who are working to martial scientific evidence for the theory of creation as it is presented in Genesis. 

“We are not anti-evolution,” Rana said Thursday. “There is evidence that could be viewed as supporting the evolution paradigm. But there is also evidence that, in my view, calls into question whether or not we can declare evolution to be a fact.” 

Rana, a biochemist by profession, said California schools should at least present creationist arguments against evolution to students for their consideration. 

Scotchmoor disagreed. 

“That’s like saying we should give equal time to people who believe the earth is flat,” she said. 

Nevertheless, science teachers throughout the state must often contend with the skepticism students from religious backgrounds bring to the study of evolution, according to Christine Bertrand, executive director of the California Science Teachers Association.  

“A lot of people – and students in particular perhaps – don’t understand how evolution and religion coexist,” Bertrand said. “There is a misconception that if you believe in evolution you cannot believe in God. That’s certainly far from the truth, but I think teachers grapple with that issue.” 

And for teachers who in some cases are not well-versed in evolution themselves, the controversy around the issue can be enough to keep them from giving the attention it deserves in the classroom, according to Scotchmoor.  

As Bertrand put it, “There’s no question that a lot of teacher don’t have a solid science background.” 

Scotchmoor said she hopes the Museum of Paleontology’s Web site will give teachers the confidence and factual ammunition to give evolution the attention it deserves. 

“If you take a look back you realize that the majority of people who were coming up with these ideas were deeply religious,” Scotchmoor said. “It’s a debate that won’t go away, but what we are trying to do is make sure what happens in our science classrooms is reflective of good science.” 


Arts & Entertainment

Friday July 27, 2001

 

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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. Aug 1: Whiskey Brothers. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 27: 8:00 p.m. Ali Khan Band $15; July 28: 9:30 p.m. Motordude Zydeco and Brass Monkey $11; July 29: 9:00 p.m. El Hadj N’ Diaye $10; July 31: 8:00 p.m. dance lesson with Dana DeSimone, 9:00 p.m. Steve Riley and Mamou Playboys $12; Aug. 5: 9 p.m. Roots Reggae featuring Groundation and Tchiya Amet. $10. 11317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Split Shankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. July 27: Otis Taylor; July 28: Street Sounds; July 29: Tish Hinojosa; Aug 1: Distant Oaks; Aug 2: George Kuo, Narin Pahinui & Aaron Mahi; Aug 3: Wylie & the Wild West, the Waller Brothers, Aug 4: Adam Levy, Will Bernard; Aug 5: MonTango; Aug 6: Frank Yamma; Aug 8: San Francisco Klezmer Experience; Aug 9: John Renbourn . $16.50 - $19.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter 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 Pena Cultural Center 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; Aug 3: 8 p.m. Los Delicados, Aya de Leon $10; Aug 4: 8 p.m. Grito Serpentino, Small Axe Project, Jime Salcedo-Malo & Leticia Hernandez $10; Aug 5: 7 p.m. Insight in concert $10. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung, 5:30 p.m. Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5; Aug 5: 4:30 p.m. Vocaists’ Series (Denine Monet), 5:30 p.m. Instrumentalists’ Series (Pelo Mar). 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

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 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  

 

“Downtown” Restaurant and BarAugust 6: 7 p.m. Jesse Colin Young of the sixties hit group, The Youngbloods, will be performing at a No Nukes evening, sponsored by Greenpeace. The evening commemorates the 56th anniversary of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The proceeds go to Tri-Valley CAREs and Citizen Alert. Tickets are $100. 2102 Shattuck Ave. 800-728-6223 

 

The Greek Theatre Aug. 3 and Aug. 4, 7 p.m. The String Cheese Incident, $29.75. Hearst Avenue and Gayley Road 444-TIXS, or (415) 421-TIXS www.sfx.com 

 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts July 29: 2:00 p.m. “Into the Eye of Magic! An Asian Folk Tale” interactive musical and thearical production for families. Adults $10 Children $5; Aug 4: 8 p.m. “Cuatro maestros Touring Festival” two-hour theatrical event of music and dance performed by four elder folk artists and their talented young counterparts. Adults $18 Children $12; Aug. 10: 7:30 p.m. & Aug. 11, 12, 5 p.m. Campers from Stage Door Conservatory’s “On Broadway” program for grades 5-9 will perform Fiddler on the Roof, Jr. $12 adults, $8 kids. (For info call 527-5939); 2640 College Avenue 845-8542 ext. 302 

 

“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 

 

“Human Nature” July 28: 8:30 p.m. The X-Plicit Players explore intimate but un-named ways of being together, awaken senses old and new and participate in Group Body. $15 Metaversal Lightcraft 1708 University 848-1985 

 

“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 

 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 27 - 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 

 

“Loot” Through Aug 25, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7:00 p.m. Special Performance Aug 20, 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15, Students / Seniors: $10 La Val’s 1834 Euclid Avenue 655-0813 

 

“Orphans” 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 

 

“Reefer Madness” Wed Aug 8,22, Thu Aug 9,23: 9 p.m. A new one-act theatre piece adapted from a 1936 government-funded film opens a critical eye to the control of our society. Performed by The Elemental Theatre Group La Pena Cultural Center 3105 Shattuck Avenue. Wednesdays “pay what you can”, thursdays $5 - $10. Fri Aug 10,17: 7 p.m. People’s Park Free. Contact Zachary Rouse or Tisha Sloan for more info at 655-4150 

 

“Romeo & Juliet” Aug 11 - Sep 2, Tuesdays - Thursdays. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater. Shakespeare’s classic about a young couple that meets, falls in love and dies in just five days. Adults: $22 - $41 youth (under 16): $12 - $41. 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Avenue. 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 

 

Films 

 

La Pena Cultural Center 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 27: 7:00 Punishment Room, 8:55 Ten Dark Women; July 28: 7:00 The Big Heat, 8:30 Kippur, 8:50 Clash by Night; July 29: 3:00 A Boy named Charlie Brown, 5:30 Mr. Pu, 7:30 A Billionaire; July 31: 7:30 The Arena of Murder; Aug 1: 7:30 Two Thousand Maniacs!, 9:15 Manos, the Hands of Fate; Aug 2: 7:30 Kadosh; Aug 3: 7:00 A Full-Up Train, 9:00 The Men of Tohoku; Aug 4: 7:00 Human Desire, 8:50 Hangmen Also Die; Aug 5: 3 p.m. The Yearling, 5:30 p.m The Woman Who Touched Legs; Aug 7: 7:30 p.m. Figures of Motion; Aug 8: 7:30 p.m. Confessions of an Opium Eater; Aug 9: 7:30 p.m. The Return of Frank James; Aug 10: 7 p.m. Alone on the Pacific, 9:05 p.m. Her Brother; Aug 11: 7 p.m. While the City Sleeps, 9 p.m. Beyong a Reasonable Doubt. New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival July 28: 1 p.m. The Optimists: the story of the rescue of the Jews of Bulgaria, 3:30 p.m. “Louba’s Ghosts”, 6:15 p.m. “One of the Hollywood Ten”, 8:30 p.m. “Kippur”; July 29: 11 a.m. “Keys from Spain”, “The Cross Inscribed in the Star of David”, 1 p.m. “Intimate Stranger”, “Nobody’s Business”, 4 p.m. “The Sweetest Sound”, 6 p.m. “Once We Grow Up”, 8:30 p.m. “Total Love”, “Moses vs. Godzilla”; July 30: 2 p.m. “Circumcision”, “Abe’s Manhood”, 4 p.m. “Terrorists in Retirement”, 6 p.m. “Disparus”, 8:30 p.m. “Street Under Fire”, “The Jahalin”; Juy 31: 3 pm. “Family Secret”, “Still (Stille)”, 5:30 p.m. “Love Inventory”, “The Bicycle”, 8:30 p.m. “Time of Favor (Hahesder)”; Aug 1: 2 p.m. “Blue and White in Red Square”, “Tsipa and Volf”, 4 p.m. “Shorts on Love and War”, 6 p.m. “Jewish Girls in Shorts”, 8:15 p.m. “waiting for the Messiah”, “The Seventh Day”; Aug 2: 1 p.m. “Fighter”, 3:15 “Brownsville Black and White”, 5:15 “Inside Out”, “Grrly Show”, 8:45 p.m. “Jewish Luck”, “SF Klezmer Experience”. General admission: $8.50, Matinees (up to and including 4 p.m.): $7, Students/Seniors/Groups: $6.50. Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley. (925)866-9559 http://www.sfjff.org 

 

“7th annual Brainwash Movie Festival” Aug 3,4,5: (bring a chair) at the Pyramid Ale brewery, 901 Gilman Street 527-9090 ext. 218. Festival Pass: $30, Individual tickets: online: $8, door: $10 

 

“Lumumba” Aug 10 at Shattuck Cinemas. Biogrophy of the slain African political figure Patrice Lumumba. In French with English subtitles. 

 

Exhibits 

 

“BACA National Juried Exhibition: Works on Paper” Through August 31: Wed. - Sun. Noon - 5 p.m. Reception, Sun. July 22, 2 - 4 p.m., Featuring 33 artists from across the United States, including 17 Bay Area representatives. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“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 Road 849-2541 

 

“Debbie Moore’s Autobiographical Paintings” Through Sep 30 at Good Vibrations. Portraits of the artist’s sensual explorations spanning 25 years and reflecting changing ways of intimacy and body play. 2504 San Pablo Avenue 848-1985 

 

“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.  

 

“A Fine Line” Reception July 26, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. July 26 - August 24, Tuesday - Friday, noon - 5 p.m. or by appointment. An exhibition works by Kala Fellowship winners for the years 2000 and 2001. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Avenue 549-2977 

 

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

 

“MFA Survey Exhibition 2001” third annual exhibition of works of recent graduates from Bay Area master of Fine Art programs. This year featuring artists working in three-dimentional media. now - Aug 18 tuesday - saturday, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., reception July 21 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth Street 527-1214 

 

“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 

 

“The Saints Are Coming... To Bring Hope” Through July 30: Tue., Wed., Sat. 12 - 5, p.m., Fri. 1 - 5 p.m., An art installation featuring Fred DeWitt, Leon Kennedy, Josie Madero, Esete Menkir, Belinda Osborn, Arline Lucia Rodini, April Watkins, and Carla Woshone. The Art of Living Center 2905 Shattuck Ave. 848-3736  

 

“Sistahs: Ethnofraphic Ceramics” through August 22, Reception July 29 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Womens Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Avenue 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“Ten Years Here” Exhibit celebrating the 10 year anniversary of Turn of the Century Fine Arts. Aug 4 - Sept 14, Sat & Sun 1-5 p.m. Reception Aug 4 2:00 - 7:00 p.m. 2510 San Pablo Avenue 849-0950 

 

“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  

 

 

Readings 

 

Boadecia’s Books Aug 3: Mabel Maney (author of the Nancy Clue/ Cherry Aimless and Hardly Boys mysteries) reads from her new book “Kiss the Girls and Make them Spy” featuring Jane Bond, James’ lesbian twin sister; Aug 4: Dyke Open Myke! Coffeehouse-style open mike night featuring both established and emerging talent. All events start at 7:30 p.m. and are free. 398 Colusa Avenue 559-9184 

 

Cody’s Books July 26: Dave Egger’s presentation has been canceled; Aug 5: Justin Chin, Gerry Gomez Pearlberg; Aug 8: Jane Mead, Mark Turpin. $2 donation. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-0837 

 

Cafe de la Paz  

 

“Poetry Nitro” Weekly poetry open mike. July 30: Featuring Lisa Sikie; Aug 6: featuring Andrena zawinski. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series August 7: Featured readers JC and Bert Glick. 7-9 p.m.; August 21: Featured Readers: Victoria Joyce and Therese Bamberger; Both 7-9 p.m. Free. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland for info. (510)465-3935 or (510)526-5985, or Email: ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

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  

 

 

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.  

“How Big Is the Universe?” Aug. 1 through Aug. 24. Learn how to determine the distance of celestial objects, one of the purposes of the Hubble Space Telescope. Daily, 2:15 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, 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu 

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. 

 


Neighbors upset over council OK of townhouses

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Friday July 27, 2001

In an unusual move Tuesday, the City Council approved the construction of three townhouses in north Berkeley immediately after closing a public hearing on the issue. 

Neighbors of the project are crying foul over the council’s quick approval of what they describe as luxury townhouses in their modest north Berkeley neighborhood.  

After the hearing was closed, the council denied the neighbors’ appeal of the project. The council’s denial automatically approved the project at 2025 Rose St. by a 6-1-2 vote with Councilmember Dona Spring voting no and Councilmembers Linda Maio and Kriss Worthington abstaining.  

Mayor Shirley Dean said the City Council took the vote immediately after hearing from both sides of the issue because it was the final opportunity before Council’s summer recess. The Council doesn’t meet again until September 11. 

Neighbors are upset about the addition of 2,000 square feet in the building. In 1997, the site was approved for four units at a total of 3,300 square feet. Though the four units were approved, they were never built. 

Four years later, the site was sold and the new owner, Bob Richerson, sought approval for a design that included one less unit but a larger overall project at 5,500 square feet.  

The larger units riled neighbors who fought hard in 1997 to keep the square footage as low as possible and thought they were protected by the original Use Permit. 

“The General Plan calls for the building of more affordable housing,” said neighbor Dana Wahlberg who said she opposes the project because it will gentrify the neighborhood. “Why would the City Council act like it’s in everybody’s best interest to build larger, more expensive townhouses?” 

Richerson said he originally intended to build the four units that the city approved in 1997 but changed his mind because the units were too small, and he didn’t feel comfortable building the project. Instead he made the decision to go through Berkeley’s difficult planning process. 

“I did not lightly decide to scrap the original plan and try to a get new one approved,” Richerson said. 

Richerson’s attorney, Rena Rickles, said the process took 10 months and six hearings before the Zoning Adjustments Board, which ultimately could not make a decision on the new design. ZAB’s inability to make a decision resulted in automatic approval of the new plan under the State Permit Streamlining Act that requires action on a proposed projects within 60 days of submission of a complete application. 

Neighbors appealed the default approval to the City Council. They said the council’s decision has raised concerns that they’re issues with the new design were not fully heard. 

Normally the Council will wait to the next meeting after a public hearing is closed before voting in order that public testimony can be verified, and factual errors corrected.  

Dean said she felt comfortable voting on the issue because she had gone by and looked at the site and carefully studied the staff reports on the project. 

“Well, we don’t normally vote after a public hearing but there’s no rule against it,” she said. “And it was clear the proposal was pretty innocuous.” 

Worthington said he was surprised the council took action on the issue.  

“I thought we should of noticed the public we were going to vote,” he said. “It doesn’t appear to be illegal but it’s confusing to the public.” 

Wahlberg said she was disappointed with the vote and felt as though she had been manipulated by the political process. She said the townhouses will alter the quality of life in her neighborhood. 

“When I work in my garden I look to the east and I see blue sky,” she said. “Now I’m going to see a building.”


International class focuses on environmental issues

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Friday July 27, 2001

A group of 37 people from 20 different countries sat at tables and on the lawn around Pat Brown’s Grill on campus yesterday, to share their last lunch together. The group is the very first class of a new UC Berkeley international program. 

Launched by the university’s Center for Sustainable Resource Development, the new Beahrs Environmental Leadership Program started at the beginning of July thanks to a generous donation from UC Berkeley alumni, Carolyn and Richard Beahrs. 

Designed to foster collaboration between countries in environmental management issues, it brings outstanding environmental experts from around the world to Berkeley for a three-week summer course. It is conceived as the starting block of a long-term cooperation. 

“Practically every environmental issue we’re looking at goes beyond the national borders,” said ELP co-director Robin Marsh. “We are convinced that the only way to achieve progress and environmental protection and at the same time social equity is by working in a global manner.” 

The $7,000 course combines workshops on topics such as water management, or population poverty and the environment. The group takes field trips to places like Napa Valley, the Central Valley and the Sierra Nevada. It also includes a number of special sessions on timely issues. 

The possibility of interacting with a diverse group of specialists attracted Carmen Guerrero-Perez, a natural resource specialist in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Through the program, she said, she sought exposure to the environmental issues her country is not familiar with. 

“I’m from Puerto Rico and I have the island’s prospective,” she said. “I wanted to get an up-to-date version of what is going on in the world and how these issues are being managed in different locations.” 

To many of the participants, the opportunity to compare policies was indeed one of the most valuable elements of the course. Alejandro Guevara, a researcher in environmental policy and economics at the Iberian American University in Mexico City, said that he mostly learned from his classmate. One of them, for instance, told him about a successful management plan used in Africa that could work in Mexico. 

“He gave a good example of how reforestation can help reduce climate change and at the same time increase productivity in very poor villages,” he said referring to a Kenyan student. “It’s very relevant to us because I think Mexico’s minister of environment is very much concerned about the issues of poverty relief and environmental preservation and how to make these two objectives compatible.” 

One of the highlights of the summer course was a simulation of the negotiations of the Kyoto Pact, which aims to curb global warming. Each participant represented a country and after hours of negotiations, the group reached an agreement. Part of the excitement came from the fact that it happened only a few days before 178 countries signed the treaty in real life. 

Another strength of the program, students said, is that it goes beyond the summer course. 

“We have to sign a contract of a future project that we are going to conduct after the workshop is over,” said Guerrero-Perez. “We have to provide a timeline of when this is going to be completed, how we are going to measure the desired outcomes, and who within the program we would like to have more direct contact with.” 

The program will also rely on an alumni network to continue fostering cooperation among participants. If everything goes well, the network will even create satellite centers in foreign countries. A steering committee is already in place and program coordinators hope the first centers will open by 2003. The centers would sponsor conferences, collaborative research with UC Berkeley and opportunities for training.  

“The idea is that some organizations in other countries would like to have a more permanent presence of the environmental leadership program that is geared toward the particular issue of their country,” Marsh said. 

For additional information on the ELP visit the following Web Site: http://www.CNR.Berkeley.EDU/BeahrsELP/


Credit union opening doors at new location

Staff
Friday July 27, 2001

By Matt Lorenz 

Special to the Daily Planet 

 

Its got a long name and a longer history in Berkeley.  

The Cooperative Center Federal Credit Union was chartered in 1942 to serve employees and customers of the Consumer’s Cooperative of Berkeley and the rest of the Co-op Market Chain. Though the market went out of business in 1988, Berkeley’s CCFCU has flourished and is about to re-assert its presence in Berkeley at a new location, 2001 Ashby Ave. 

For about 10 years, CCFCU has been renting a space in the large office building at 2855 Telegraph Ave. The credit union decided it would avoid some long-term costs if it owned its space instead of renting it.  

CCFCU President Gary Bell sees this move as a lot more important than mere logistics. 

“It gives us a chance to make a better presence to the community,” Bell said. “In the next six months to a year, when you drive past the corner of Adeline and Ashby, people will give directions by saying, ‘You drive two blocks past the coop and make a right.’” 

“It gives us a chance to have an actual footprint – to become a landmark, in a sense,” Bell said. 

In most ways, a credit union is no different from any other financial institution. Customers make the same transactions that they would at a bank: They open savings or checking accounts, and they take out loans.  

But the small ways that credit unions are different are of no small importance.  

A federal credit union is a cooperative financial institution, which means it’s owned and operated by all its members. There are over 12,000 credit unions nationwide.  

Like any representative democracy, the full membership votes to elect a board of volunteers, said Dorie Walters, a CCFCU loan manager. The board members of CCFCU serve three-year terms, and it is their duty to find ways to provide members with reasonable rates and a safe environment to save and borrow.  

It’s not often that a customer has this much say about the kinds of services and options available, and credit-union members do. Yet even aside from that, there’s still another important way that credit unions differ from the average bank.  

“The biggest difference is that our money’s not being sent overseas to invest in some foreign company,” Bell said. “We’re not even sending money out of the state.  

“We’re investing in the people of Berkeley to get them a return on their investments.” 

To be a member of CCFCU, one’s employer must be among its list of sponsors, said Vicki Fong, a branch manager. Two of the largest sponsors on CCFCU’s list are Alta Bates Hospital and UC Berkeley students.  

The credit union is always looking to forge new relationships with employers, and people can push this process along by contacting the credit union with the authorization of their employers.  

Fong thinks the move may introduce them to some new members. 

“Hopefully the merchants in that area will open accounts with us because we’re there,” Fong said. “We’re convenient.” 

The official move-in date is today, and Berkeley’s cooperative credit union hopes to be open for business Monday morning, July 30. 

More accessible than it has ever been – beside Ashby BART and bearing its own parking – the new location seems to be working out pretty well already, even before the move-in. 

“We’re already hearing from people who live in the area saying, ‘When are you guys gonna open?’” Bell said. “Because ever since Bank of America and Wells Fargo left the area there’s been nothing for a mile or so at least.”  

Bell is confident that Berkeley residents will see the value in CCFCU’s effort to become more visible and accessible. And that they’ll see the difference that a community, financial institution can make in people’s lives. 

“We’re not some corporation from another city that’s putting a branch in here,” he said.  

“We can be better neighbors to the community and have a better understanding of what the Berkeley communities needs are when it comes to their financial decisions.” 

 


Still no ID on woman found in car

Staff, wire reports
Friday July 27, 2001

 

 

The Alameda County Coroner’s Office reported Thursday that the identification of a woman found dead in a burning car near the Berkeley Marina early Wednesday has been deferred pending the results of toxicology tests. 

Despite a report Wednesday from the East Bay Regional Park Police that said the woman’s body was found in a severe state of decomposition, it actually had been burned beyond recognition.  

Spokesman Mike Yost said the woman’s body was found at about midnight Wednesday near University Avenue and West Frontage Road in a car that was engulfed in flames.  

Yost said that the corpse had been so severely burned that identifying the woman based on her fingerprints is impossible. 

Yost said the woman’s car apparently left the freeway, struck some rocks and ignited. He said that toxicology tests will now be performed to determine whether drugs or alcohol were a factor in the woman’s death.


Board to vote on air cleanup plan for Bay Area

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — The state Air Resources Board was set to vote on an air pollution cleanup plan for the Bay Area that federal clean air officials already have said isn’t adequate to address smog problems. 

San Joaquin Valley officials also were expected to urge the board to impose stricter requirements to curb the smog that blows into the valley. 

A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency official sent a letter to the executive officer of the board last week saying the agency had concerns about the plan that Bay Area air specialists and transportation officials approved last week. The EPA rejected a version of the plan in March. 

The plan includes programs to reduce emissions from vehicles and industries. 

The problem with the plan is that the three agencies that prepared it didn’t rely on the best information available, said Jack Broadbent, director of the EPA’s regional air division. 

He also said the other issues that need to be addressed in the plan are having the agencies conduct a more thorough modeling of whether proposed cleanup methods would be effective, and completing a better estimate of how different sources are contributing to pollution. 

“We remain optimistic that the agencies will meet our needs,” Broadbent said. 

The Air Resources Board has been working with the EPA to find out what the plan needs to get approved, said spokesman Jerry Martin. The Bay Area Air Quality Management District, the Association of Bay Area Governments and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission put it together. 

“We’re going to do everything we can to make the EPA feel comfortable in adopting the plan,” Martin said. 

The EPA will then get the plan and begin reviewing it. If it rejects the next version, that could lead to a freeze on funding for transportation projects, Broadbent said. 

San Joaquin Valley officials were hoping the resources board would request more stringent regulations, including bumping up vehicle smog checks to a more thorough level, because they want less pollution to blow into the valley. 

A 1993 study measured the pollution that blew into the valley from the Bay Area for one hour on one day. That study found that during that hour, 27 percent of Modesto’s pollution came from the Bay Area, 11 percent of Fresno’s pollution was from the Bay Area and about 7 percent of Bakersfield’s pollution came from the Bay Area. 

Officials in those areas blame the pollution from the Bay Area for contributing to violations of air standards, but that depends on wind, temperature and location, Martin said.  

And those areas can generate enough pollution to be able to violate the standards on their own, and the pollution they generate is blown into other areas, he said. 


Nurse staffing could cost hospitals millions

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — An analysis of proposed staffing ratios of nurses to patients determined the changes could cost California hospitals millions of dollars, according to a study released Thursday. 

The Public Policy Institute of California analyzed three proposed staffing ratios.  

In main medical and surgical wards, a ratio of one nurse to 10 patients is supported by hospitals, while a ratio of 1-to-4 is backed by the Service Employees International Union and Kaiser Permanente, the state’s largest private health care system. A third proposal from the California Nurses Association suggests a 1-to-3 ratio. 

The ratios could send hospital costs up for RNs by between 5 percent and 41 percent, according to the institute’s review. 

The hospital-backed ratio could result in an average annual increase of $200,000 per hospital, while the SEIU ratio could cost more than $1.3 million per hospital, the study found.  

And the CNA-supported ratio could cost as much as $2.3 million per hospital. 

At least 50 percent of hospitals in California would have to make changes to conform to the new regulations, according to the analysis. 

“The Department of Health Services has a very tough task on their hands,” said Joanne Spetz, a research fellow with PPIC.  

“Science can’t tell them what the answer is at this point; I don’t think there’s any study that can really tell you that. I think it’s fundamentally a value decision – how much are you willing to pay for how much care?” 

The state must set a nurse staffing ratio for registered nurses and licensed vocational nurses by January 2002, according to a law written by the California Nurses Association and signed by Gov. Gray Davis in 1999. 

The PPIC estimates that the average nurse staffing ratio in the state is 1-to-7, but the actual ratios vary greatly from hospital to hospital, Spetz said.


Gov. Davis trims $600 million from budget

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

 

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gray Davis signed an overdue, $103 billion state budget Thursday after vetoing $600 million in projects and saying it’s “a little late, but it’s a good document.” 

The budget, which was supposed to kick in nearly a month ago, includes less overall spending than last year but increases spending for education and health care for the poor. It includes a $2.6 billion “rainy day” fund; state revenues have been sagging and may decline even more next year. 

“It hopes for the best but prepares for the worst,” Davis said before signing the budget in a ceremony at a local elementary school. 

This is Davis’ first late budget and comes after a three-week partisan standoff in the Legislature over an automatically triggered sales tax increase that could start in January. 

Davis and legislators call this a lean budget plan. It includes a handful of targeted tax breaks, many of which were part of a last-minute deal to lure Republican votes, but it has no new across-the-board tax relief. It increases K-12 education by $2.5 billion, to $45.5 billion, and includes money for higher energy bills, teacher training, before- and after-school programs and grants for low-performing schools. It also includes more money for health clinics and expands eligibility for the state’s Healthy Family program. 

Overall, however, the budget is less than what Davis outlined in January, because revenues have dropped and the state has spent $8 billion to buy energy for three cash-strapped utilities. 

 

 

 

Still, the budget signed buy Davis totals $103 billion, although lawmakers estimated the legislature’s budget at $101 billion. Sandy Harrison, a Finance Department spokesman, said the larger figure includes bond and special funds. 

A slowing economy, the energy crisis and a faltering stock market meant less money and some painful budget decisions, said Assembly Budget Chairman Tony Cardenas, D-Arleta. 

It took the standoff between Republican lawmakers, who refused to support the budget, Davis and legislative Democrats to finally get the two-thirds approval for the budget that was signed Thursday. 

In the end, Democrats — who control the Legislature — offered tax breaks to farmers and senior citizens to attract enough Republican votes. Democrats also agree to place on a March ballot a constitutional amendment requiring that gasoline tax money be spent on transportation projects. 

On the sales tax issue, a quarter-cent tax increase will be triggered in January if the reserves fall below 3 percent of the budget for one year. 

That means about $50 more in sales tax for a $20,000 car and about 5 cents on a compact disc. Government officials estimate will cost a family of four an average of $120 a year. 

“Gray Davis’ irresponsible budget raises taxes and threatens to harm our already struggling economy,” said Assembly Republican leader Dave Cox of Fair Oaks in a statement Thursday. 

Democrats say the sales-tax trigger, signed into law by Republican former Gov. Pete Wilson, is meant to funnel dollars back to taxpayers when the economy soars and reserves swell. 

The budget Davis signed was missing $600 million worth of items on which he used his line-item veto power. Those cuts included money for community colleges, an AIDS prevention program, state funding for a host of local programs such as light poles in Brea, research on sudden oak death and $5.7 million for youth drug and alcohol treatment. 

Also getting the “blue pencil” treatment was a $10 million request by Republican Secretary of State Bill Jones to pay to train people how to properly use voting equipment. Jones is a Republican candidate to oppose Davis next year. 

On the Net: 

The governor’s budget is available at www.dof.ca.gov and more budget analysis at www.lao.ca.gov. 


State to audit foster agencies

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Prompted by problems in the foster care system, the state controller announced Thursday that programs in Los Angeles and Sacramento counties will be audited. 

The audits will track local, state and federal funding to determine whether the money is reaching the children it is intended to benefit. 

“Our concern is that the dollars are being effectively utilized, that they aren’t being misspent or being unnecessarily utilized for bureaucratic expenditures,” Controller Kathleen Connell said. 

Connell said that she hopes the audit will strengthen the programs, which both recently received “very negative grand jury reports about the quality of foster care.” 

“There is concern whether the agencies are effective in providing the quality of services needed to these families,” she said. 

Los Angeles County officials said they will cooperate fully with the audit. 

“We see this as an opportunity to improve our services for children, which is always the department’s priority,” said Anita Bock, director of the Department of Children and Family Services. “I think audits are a good way to see if the taxpayers money is being wisely spent.” 

In Sacramento County, the audit will begin with the Department of Human Assistance, which handles the foster care payment system, and may then move into the Department of Health and Human Services, which supervises child protective services. DHHS director Jim Hunt said he was concerned about the audit’s impact. 

“This is going to hurt our foster care recruitment because foster families are being subjected to this type of scrutiny for being a service to our society,” he said. 

Hunt said a foster parent of an infant gets $405 a month and “to question how that money is spent is inappropriate.” 

For the 1999-2000 fiscal year, the Los Angeles County department received $446 million and Sacramento received $93 million. 

The controller’s office, which has authority to audit any agency receiving state funding, has requested access to the agencies’ records. The audits will be conducted simultaneously beginning next week. 


As U.S.-Europe tensions grow, talk of isolationism increases

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

WASHINGTON — As the U.S.-European rift widens, from missile defense and nuclear testing to land mines and global warming, some European leaders and U.S. Democrats suggest President Bush is drawing America into a new era of isolationism. 

The Bush administration calls it “a la carte multinationalism” – joining allies when it suits U.S. interests. 

“I think when the heat is off on those (issues), people will see that we do want to participate in the larger world community,” Secretary of State Colin Powell said Thursday while traveling in Asia. 

However, two trips to Europe by Bush have failed to ease concerns on the part of top allies that the president is charting a go-it-alone course in foreign policy. 

“There is this occasional tendency toward unilateralism. There always was that. But it has now increased,” said Karsten Voigt, coordinator for German-American relations in the German Foreign Ministry. Still, Voigt added, “These things will sort themselves out.” 

“There is no doubt about it, Bush has made the Europeans feel uneasy,” said Menzies Campbell, foreign affairs spokesman for Britain’s Liberal Democrat party. 

After six months in office, the administration’s differences with European allies are stark. 

Most prominent among them: Bush’s thumbing his nose at the Kyoto climate-change treaty, which has wide support throughout the rest of the world. A United Nations commission last week approved rules for implementing the pact, designed to combat global warming. The United States was the only holdout. 

Bush’s determination to proceed with a missile-defense shield continues to alarm European allies – a concern only mildly eased by his agreement with Russian President Vladimir Putin to link talks about such a system to arms cuts. 

The system would violate the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. Bush would like to see that pact ditched; Putin and many European leaders see it as a bedrock arms agreement. 

And just Wednesday, the Bush administration abandoned talks on enforcing a 1972 treaty against germ warfare, further fueling criticism. 

The administration also opposes treaties to ban land mines and nuclear-weapons tests, and one for an international criminal court. And it balked at a proposed 189-nation pact against small-arms trafficking, supporting only a watered-down version. 

The trans-Atlantic relationship bristles with trade disputes, ranging from duties on bananas to tax rates. The U.S. death penalty, strongly supported by Bush, is scorned in Europe. And the hard-line American policy toward both Iran and Iraq has been dropped by all European allies save Britain. 

European governments underestimated Bush’s tenacity, suggests Petra Holtrup, senior researcher at the German Council of Foreign Relations in Berlin. “This massive retreat on all multilateral issues (is) nothing new, but Bush is the one who is articulating it most directly,” she said. 

Richard Haass, the State Department’s director of policy planning, argues that the administration is working alongside allies on many issues, including efforts to start a new round of World Trade Organization talks. But he said the United States would oppose measures deemed to work against its interests. 

“What you’re going to get from this administration is a la carte multilateralism,” Haass said. 

Criticism of Bush from abroad is echoed by congressional Democrats at home. 

Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle accused him of fostering isolationism. Administration officials were quick to jump on the South Dakota Democrat for criticizing the president while he was overseas. Bush himself fired back, “We’re not retreating within our border.” 

Daschle apologized for his timing but stuck to the criticism, which he repeated this week, accusing Bush of a “dictatorial approach” in foreign relations. 

Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, an Indiana Democrat who directs the Woodrow Wilson Center, a foreign policy think tank, said he does not believe Bush is an isolationist but “I see strong elements of unilateralism.” 

Defenders suggest that many of the treaties that Bush opposes could never be ratified by the U.S. Senate anyway. Some, in fact, appear deliberately designed to tweak or embarrass the United States, administration allies suggest. 

Furthermore, many European countries, including France and Germany, have left-of-center governments at odds with Bush’s conservatism. 

Philippe Morau Defarges, an analyst at the French Institute for International Relations in Paris, said he expects Bush and his team to moderate over time. “If they are negative about everything, they cannot expect cooperation from their allies,” he said. 

British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown advises against reading too much into frayed relations. The disputes, he says, should not “obscure the scale of two-way trade and investment across the Atlantic that amounts to more than $2 billion every day.” 


50 cents is all it takes for toilet fix

By Morris and James Carey The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

Q. I have a humming noise in my water lines, caused by a vibration that results when the tank float valve in my toilet nears shutoff. Is there a way to fix it other than by replacing the float and shut-off valve assembly? 

A. Your question contains the answer. Almost. No, you don’t have to replace the entire valve. All you need to do is to replace the gasket within it. It truly is a 50-cent repair. Turn off the water to the toilet and flush it. Next, remove the shut-off valve cover. How you do this will depend on the brand. However, most have four screws on top. Carefully remove the screws and then the top, locate and remove the gasket and use disassembly as a guide for replacement and reassembly. By the way, it is almost always easier to replace the entire unit. The humming? That’s the ballcock assembly telling you it has a gasket that is almost completely worn out. 

Q: My husband and I recently bought a 100-year-old home. In the process of painting the plaster-walled library we’re running into some bizarre paint problems. The walls were triple painted in a brush pattern when we bought the home – we think within the last 10 years. We bought Olympic flat paint and proceeded to apply two coats. After letting them dry we noticed dark stripes down the walls and the whole surface is crackling in 1/8th-inch sizes. We bought a new primer and primed the entire room. Now the primer is doing the same thing as the other coats What can we do now? 

A. We have to assume that the three-color painting detail to which you refer is sponge or splatter paint. We assume this because the glaze that is used with sponge or splatter paint – once painted – will render the crackling effect you are experiencing. Now that you know the cause of the problem, all you have to do is eliminate it – the cause, that is. The problem will then go away. 

There are several ways to do this: You can sand – very messy. Or, you can use paint remover – even messier. Or, you can try to encapsulate the problem by painting it with a material that will not be affected by the existing glaze. This we think would be the easiest. Try using a coat of oil-base primer. Do a 2-square-foot area. Water-base primer will simply not work.  

nce sealed with the oil-base primer, any kind of finish coat can be used. If the oil-base primer doesn’t work, you probably would be best off covering the walls with a quarter-inch thick layer of gyp board. We hope the primer does the job. 

 

 

James and Morris Carey are feature writers for The Associated Press


‘Temp Slaves’ sweat their stuff in Berkeley

By Sari Friedman Daily Planet Correspondent
Friday July 27, 2001

I’ll take it, oh yes, I’ll take it! 

I’ll never write my novel, just show me where to grovel-- 

I’ll take it, oh yes, I’ll take it! 

I’ve left my pride behind, along with half my mind…. 

From “Temp Slaves”  

 

“Temp Slaves,” a butt-kickingly bitter musical satire by playwriting team Catherine Capellaro and Andrew Rohn made its West Coast debut in the La Peña Cultural Center in Berkeley last Tuesday, July 24 on its way to several performances this coming weekend at the SoMa Cultural Center in San Francisco.  

The 20 person troupe was invited from Madison, Wisconsin to be the centerpiece of the LaborFest 2001 Conference. 

The phrase “Temp Slave” refers to “disposable workers” who are hired and fired frequently to suit the immediate needs of their employers. According to Capellaro and Rohn, increasing numbers of American workers are hired without knowing whether their jobs will continue to the next day — and temps earn 40 percent less per hour than permanent employees. Paying temps a reduced wage means there’s more money for full-time employees and the employer.  

This grimly sparkling and professionally staged play opens with a chorus line of unhappy temp workers such as the “willing to work” single mother kicked off welfare and fearful of losing her kids, and a depressed Ph.D sucker-punched by lack of opportunity. Many of the characters are in danger of defaulting on their student loans. All are desperate to pay their rent. Soon, the evil “PeoplePower Temporary Agency” has them all in its asphyxiating grip. 

One temp, Alexis, played by Shani Stewart, an African-American Lauren Bacall, is a word processing expert who – because her employer is racist – is tracked into working as an angry singing (”cock-a-fucking-doodle-do”) chicken. 

Two temps: Steve, played by the born-to-act Robert J. Moccero, and Eddie, played by that capable multi-tasker Andrew Rohn, perform a droll and brilliantly goofy song and dance wearing bedpans for hats and using walking sticks for canes. Moccero and Rohn — hired to serve as guinea pigs for doctors-in-training who are learning how to perform rectal exams — explain “turning the other cheek.” 

Interestingly, Cappellero and Rohn say they met while on temp jobs in which they sold their bodies for medical research. According to Cappellero, the worst aspect of temping your body for medical research is the desperation that makes workers feel that they have no other choice.  

PeoplePower’s daft and uncaring Violet, well-acted by Marcy Weiland, sends each temp to a horrible first day of work. The harassed Melissa, sensitively portrayed by SaRa Schabach, manages to explode a computer and break up a marriage. Maggie, poignantly played by Nikki Andrews, taste-tests 360 batches of cookies.  

The Machiavellian senator Hartman, played by the glinty Bob Moore; and the grinning bad guy “Dick” Solomon, Manager of People Power, acted by the effervescent Jake Jacobson, fulfill every worker’s most paranoid expectation. But never fear — the workers will want to exact their revenge, assisted by Capellero’s deliciously wicked portrayal of a dominatrix.  

The hard core rage, scorpionic acting, and stark workplace realities make “Temp Slaves” a must-see. Somewhat jarring is that the “greedy” character is given an obviously Jewish sounding name — No other ethnicity is attacked. The inspiration for this play, the anthology “Temp Slaves” by Jeff Kelly, additionally contains a series of cartoons about oppressed workers labeled “Christian Angst” which leave this reviewer, at least, wondering why it was felt necessary for non-Christians to be singled out in this way. 

“Temp Slaves” will be showing at the South of Market Cultural Center, in San Francisco, for evening performances (and some matinees) on 7/22, 7/27, 7/28, and 7/29. For more information and tickets call 415.642.8066.  

 

Sari Friedman’s work appears in literary magazines and anthologies. She is the recipient of the New Voice Award in Fiction from the Writer’s Voice.


Hewlett-Packard cuts 6,000 more jobs

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

SAN JOSE — Computer and printer giant Hewlett-Packard Co. lowered its revenue forecasts again Thursday and said it is slashing an additional 6,000 jobs, more than 6 percent of its work force, because consumer spending worldwide on technology has only gotten worse. 

The job cuts come on top of 4,700 already announced this year and follow several warnings that results would be worse than previously thought. The news sent HP stock down 6.5 percent. 

“Economies around the world continue to weaken and our consumer business is being hit particularly hard,” HP’s chairwoman, president and chief executive, Carly Fiorina, said on a conference call with financial analysts before the stock market opened. 

HP now expects revenue in the third quarter, which ends July 31, to decline 14 percent to 16 percent from last year. That would translate into revenue between $9.9 billion and $10.1 billion. Analysts had been expecting $11.1 billion, according to Thomson Financial/First Call. 

Sales to consumers are expected to fall 24 percent, she said. And the sales the company can make are becoming less profitable because of a price war among makers of computers and printers. HP’s gross margins are expected to be only about 25 percent. “I do not expect a second-half recovery in 2001,” Fiorina said. “I have not expected that for some time.” 

The Palo Alto-based company didn’t address its third-quarter earnings estimates; analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call had been expecting 19 cents per share, down from 49 cents a year ago. 

HP shares fell $1.68 to $24 in heavy trading Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. 

One big problem is that HP generates most of its profits from selling high-margin ink cartridges for its printers. So weak sales of printers now can translate into reduced profits down the road. 

Merrill Lynch analyst Thomas Kraemer said he expects analysts’ estimates for HP will be lowered for not only this quarter, but the rest of this year and 2002. He also said HP’s woes could increase as two key rivals, IBM Corp. and Sun Microsystems Inc., launch high-end products around the end of this quarter. 

“That’s not going to be pretty,” he said. 

A.G. Edwards & Sons analyst Shebly Seyrafi, who lowered his third-quarter earnings estimate to 4 cents a share, said many of HP’s troubles can be traced to external conditions. But he also believes Fiorina took on HP’s massive reorganization plan, in which 83 business units were combined into four, much too quickly for a company that large. 

“That was a little bit too much, too soon,” he said. “It seems to me that was the wrong move and they’re paying the price for it.” 

While HP has traditionally avoided layoffs in its 63-year history, it’s not the only computer maker cutting jobs because of the slumping PC market. Compaq Computer Corp. is laying off 8,500 people, and Dell Computer Corp. is cutting 5,000 jobs. 

HP’s layoffs, which will start at the beginning of August, are expected to save the company $500 million annually. Fiorina would not specify the restructuring charge the company would need to take as it pays severance to employees let go. 

Though HP has eliminated 4,700 positions recently, many of the affected employees have found other jobs at HP, and the company also has been hiring in key areas such as consulting. Consequently, the company’s work force has actually grown from 90,000 at the beginning of the year to nearly 93,000 now. With the new cuts, the work force will drop to about 86,000, or 4.4 percent below what it was at the beginning of the year, spokesman Dave Berman said. 

More employees might also be lost as the company moves to outsource more of its non-manufacturing operations, such as some accounting tasks. 

HP said it has taken additional short-term steps, such as a voluntary payroll saving program that is expected to save about $130 million for the rest of the year. More than 80,000 employees offered to take pay cuts or use up more vacation days in an effort to trim costs. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.hp.com 


Minority homeownership at all-time high

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

WASHINGTON — The minority homeownership rate climbed to a record-high 48.8 percent in the second quarter of 2001, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Mel Martinez said Thursday. 

About 13.2 million minority families owned homes in this period, up from 47.6 percent in the same quarter last year, HUD said. 

But the rate for minorities still lagged behind the overall homeownership rate in the second quarter this year, which, at 67.7 percent, tied a high first set in the third quarter of 2000. Nationally, 72.3 million American families owned their homes. 

Martinez said the administration is committed to narrowing racial disparities. 

“Homeownership is a powerful tool in building pride in our communities,” Martinez said. “We must continue to work with our local communities to make the American Dream a reality for all who seek it.” 

Among specific minority groups, the 48.6 percent rate for non-Hispanic blacks, and the 55.2 percent rate for a category that included non-Hispanic Asians, Native Americans, and Pacific Islanders, were also highs. 

Data from the 2000 census showed a similar trend, with gains for minorities especially in states with large urban centers and established minority communities. In most states, the rate for non-Hispanic whites was higher than for minority groups. 

Watchdog groups have called for tougher monitoring of fair housing violations and predatory lending to help close the gap. 

Among other initiatives, the Bush administration has proposed $1 billion over the next five years for a fund earmarked to help 650,000 low-income families buy homes. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Department of Housing and Urban Development: http://www.hud.gov/


Foods can contain many hidden allergy triggers

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

Learn to look for clues of food allergens where you might not expect them, counsels a New York University Medical Center specialist. 

The recent FDA report that many allergens cross over into supposedly allergen-free foods – often in the manufacturing or handling process – means that people with allergies have to know more than what the labels or menus say, according to Dr. Clifford W. Bassett, an allergist at the NYU center. 

Think about it the next time you step up to a salad bar or visit a deli or ice cream parlor. Cross-contamination occurs easily through traces of allergens retained on containers, servers and equipment. 

Any food can cause an allergic reaction in someone,  

Bassett says, but the most common culprits are eggs, milk, peanuts and other nuts, soy, seafood, corn and wheat. 

Those vulnerable to allergens can experience vomiting, nausea, stomach cramps, indigestion, diarrhea, hives, skin rashes, headaches, asthma, earaches and respiratory problems. An infant’s colic may be caused by an allergic reaction to milk or soy products. 

“Peanuts are the number one cause of severe or fatal allergic reactions in children and adults in the United States,” Bassett says.  

“One five-thousandth of a teaspoon of a food containing peanuts is enough to cause a severe or even fatal reaction.  

Some people are so allergic that they may react to minute quantities in cooking fumes.” 

He lists some clues to  

watch for: 

• If you’re allergic to milk, look out for milk-related “whey proteins” in a food product which may not list cow’s milk. They show up in baked goods, hot dogs, canned tuna, and as caseinates that are used in preparation and as preservatives.  

If a food label lists “casein,” that means it contains milk. Non-dairy creamers sometimes contain skim milk, and some margarine made from corn oil may contain skim milk powder. 

• Nut allergens often are in candies or cookies made on baking sheets or with utensils that were shared in making products with nuts.  

Chocolate candy is a particular problem, since it is often made with such shared equipment, so people with severe peanut allergies should avoid chocolates. 

Nuts also often turn up in Worcestershire sauce and bouillon. Shaving creams, moisturizers, shampoos and lipsticks may contain nuts, which can be transmitted through hand contact or kissing. 

• Eggs may be in or on foods with a shiny appearance – such as the egg washes used on baked products and noodles. Look for the word “albumin” or “albumen” on the label, which means that the product contains eggs. Processed foods with labels that list binders, proteins or emulsifiers often contain eggs. 

• Soybeans are used in the manufacture of many cereals, baked goods, baby food, processed meats, hamburgers and other meat products.  

Soy protein is often used to emulsify fat, and it can be found in ice cream, mayonnaise, products that contain oil, and salad dressings. 

• Those with seafood allergies should be leery of fried foods, since these may have been prepared in the same oils as fish. They also should skip Caesar salad dressing, which may include anchovies. 

People allergic to either of the two shellfish categories – mollusks (clams) or crustaceans (lobsters) – should avoid both. They also should be careful when buying other types of fish at the market or ordering in a restaurant because of the possibility of cross-contamination with shellfish. According to Bassett, people with shellfish allergies have them for life. 

• Wheat is an allergen that may be hidden in alcoholic beverages, hot dogs, ice cream cones, licorice, and soup mixes. People allergic to wheat should avoid products containing any kind of flour, including gluten-free and spelt. Hydrolyzed wheat protein is often used in processing, flavoring, and binding food products; it’s also often included in pharmaceutical products such as over-the-counter cold preparations. 

• Allergic reactions to corn are less common and less severe, says Bassett. But they may be found in pediatric foods.


Last-minute compromise on Beth El plan

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

The City Council was poised early Wednesday morning to render a decision on a land use issue that had bitterly divided two communities in north Berkeley when the opposing sides announced a last-minute compromise.  

At issue was a proposal by the Beth El congregation to build a 32,000-square-foot synagogue, school and social hall on a two-acre site at 1301 Oxford St. The size of the project was bitterly opposed by neighbors and environmentalists who argued it would damage Codornices Creek, neighborhood tranquility and historical elements of the property. 

After the compromise was announced, Beth El member Harry Pollack drew laughter from councilmembers and from the approximately 100 people packed into the council chambers by quipping “Nothing to it.” Pollack was understating the laborious planning process that included hundreds of hours of commission meetings, public hearings and a marathon mediation process that was ongoing right up to midnight Tuesday when the council was prepared to settle the controversial issue by vote. 

Mediator Peter Bluhon said the negotiations took place in several rooms in the Old City Hall while the council was considering other items on its agenda. He said he received approval from the two opposing parties just minutes before he was to address the council. 

“After eight weeks of diligent, hard work on the part of all the parties, the mediation has successfully yielded an agreement,” Bluhon read from a one-page, handwritten agreement upon which the ink was still drying. “The parties concur that this design, if implemented and managed properly, can create an attractive, functional facility for Beth El, ensure managed parking and leave open the possibility for future creek daylighting.” 

When Bluhon announced the compromise, the council, which had heard an estimated 18 hours of comments during two public hearings, seemed relived they would not have to decide the controversial issue. 

The council contracted the services of Bluhon in early April in the hopes of finding resolution prior to having to vote on the issue. Bluhon said this was one of the tougher mediations he has worked on. 

“For me, at the outset, I found there was a significant level of distrust, greater than most projects I’ve ever worked on,” he said. 

But he said over 300 hours of meetings in the last few weeks and the good will of both parties resulted in a compromise. 

The relieved Council thanked the mediator and praised the efforts of the opposing sides for working to reach an agreement. Councilmember Miriam Hawley, who represents the proposed project’s district, said the compromise was “a testament of the good will of everybody involved.” 

Vice Mayor Maudelle Shirek thanked both sides for working so hard and said she thought of the two groups when she read an article about military spending, which was justified by bitter, unresolved conflicts around the world. 

“They are going to spend $345 billion on the military and such a small amount on education and real social needs,” she said. “It made me think of you working so hard to make a community and this is what you call community.” 

The changes to the project include a reduction in the social hall and other sections of the building of approximately 1,500-square feet, a rearranging of parking places to ensure the possibility of daylighting the culverted section of Codornices Creek and a shift of structures away from Oxford Street. The congregation also agreed to limit the attendance of social hall functions to 180 people instead of 200. 

Neighbor Philip Price cautioned the council that the agreement was conditional and there were still issues to be worked out. But he said he was heartened by the results of the mediation.  

“I’m somewhat astonished we have an agreement we can all endorse,” he said. “We had to find an area of agreement the size of a dime and we found that dime.” 

Pollack said the new design would not put a crimp in temple, social and school functions. “But on the other hand, it does allow for a reorganization of the traffic flow and more open area on the north side.” 

The council approved the newly forged agreement contingent on review by planning staff and the continued agreement of the two parties. 

Bluhon said the neighbors and environmentalists want further assurances the creek will be restored for possible re-establishment of steelhead migration and Beth El wants protection from future lawsuits. 

Councilmember Polly Armstrong said she hadn’t sleep well the night before in anticipation of voting on an issue with such strong feelings on both sides. But she said she appreciated the unique regional nature of the disagreement. 

“No one moves to Berkeley by accident. We didn’t come here for the domestic tranquility,” she said. “I won’t soon forget the rational, sensible people who came to Council meetings dressed as fish.”


Calendar of Events & Activities

Thursday July 26, 2001


Thursday, July 26

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week The Brazilian Workshop under the direction of Marcos Silva, Jazzschool students perform traditional Brazilian music. 

 

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: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Wilderness First Aid 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Jim Morrisey, senior instructor at Wilderness Medical Associates, will teach you the basics of field repair for the human body: Blisters, wounds, fractures, lightning strikes, snake bites and more. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Ancient Native Sites of the  

East Bay 

7:30 p.m. 

Room 160 Kroeber Hall, University of California Campus 

Andrew Galvan, an Ohlone Indian and co-owner of Archaeor, will discuss and share the benefits of osteological studies of prehistoric human skeletal remains. Prof. Ed Luby, research archaeologist for the Berkeley Natural History Museums, will discuss his work on mortuary feasting practices. $10 841-2242 

 

Southeast Asia and Japan 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

William Ford, author of “Southeast Asia and Japan: Unusual Travel,” will present a talk and slide show of his adventure travels. Free. 

843-3533 

 

Return of the Zapatour 

7 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Members of the Chiapas Support Committee report on their trip to Chiapas, including slides and videos. $8 - $15. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Business Information and 

Networking Event 

6:30 - 9:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis (corner of Ashby) 

Sponsored by the City of Berkeley in partnership with the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, and both the South and West Berkeley Neighborhood Development Corporations. The event will include such topics as “Starting a Business,” “Legal Issues,” “Planning for Growth,” “Financing,” and “Permitting.” The event is free to all who register. Refreshments and door prizes. To register call 549-7003 (English or Spanish).  

 

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 

 

Women, Menopause, and  

Change 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

YWCA 

2600 Bancroft Way 

Learn how other women manage the changes menopause brings to their lives. Free yoga demonstration. 233-6484 

 

Cuban Workers and Trade Unions Today 

6 - 8:30 p.m. 

Director’s Lounge 

Institute of Industrial Relations 

2521 Channing Way 

Speakers Kamran Nayeri and Bobbie Rabinowitz, sponsored by University and Technical Employees. Music, photo exhibit and literature. 

 

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 27

 

11th Anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) 

11 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley Campus, Upper Sproul Plaza 

Celebration and Call to Action Disability Rights. Sutton nomination, Olmstead implementation, Medicaid buy-in legislation for California, 

grass roots activism, voting .  

For more information: Jessa Steinbeck, AAPD, 800/840-8844, Andy Imparato, AAPD, 443/386-2935 or, Daniel Davis: Disabled Students Union of UC Berkeley, 510/898-3531 

 

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. This is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. Free. 

Call 549-2970 


Saturday, July 28

 

Residential Solar Electricity 

1 p.m. - 3 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

The workshop will introduce participants to residential solar electricity: how solar cells work, how to size a system, participants will also get to produce electricity using photovoltaic panels and power a range of appliances (weather permitting). $15. Call 548-2220 x233 to reserve a space.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Center Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Way and Milvia Street 548-3333 

 

Arrowcopter Play Day 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

For ages 9 and up. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

16th Annual Berkeley Kite  

Festival and West Coast Kite Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Through Sunday. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. kite making lessons; 2:30 p.m. Candy Drops for the kids; 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. kite flying lessons. Free Event. For more information: 235-5483 or www.highlinekites.com. 


Sunday, July 29

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn how to adjust your brakes from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Free 527-4140 

 

Buddhist Teacher 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Eva Casey on “The Life of Padmasambhava.” Free. 

843-6812 

 

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 

 

— compiled by Guy Poole 

 

16th Annual Berkeley Kite Festival  

and West Coast Kite Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. kite making lessons; 2:30 p.m. Candy Drops for the kids; 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. kite flying lessons. Free Event. For more information: 235-5483 or www.highlinekites.com. 

 

Making Music 

1 - 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, Fran Holland will demonstrate how to make and play musical instruments. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

International Working Class 

Film and Video Festival 

2 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, a screening of “Not In My Garden,” a documentary about a Palestinian village in Israel. $7. 

849-2568 

 

Maybeck Homes 

1 - 4:30 p.m. 

#1 Maybeck Twin Drive 

Open house of four nearby homes accompanied by short talks on the character of Maybeck’s homes. A reception, raffle, and silent auction will be part of the afternoon activities. Limited space, call 845-7714 for registration.


Letters to the Editor

Thursday July 26, 2001

Black teachers can wipe out racial prejudice 

 

Editor: 

 

The best way to recompense the descendants of American slaves for the sufferings of their forebears and the present educational and occupational disabilities many endure because of their ancestry would be to eliminate racial (which is to say chiefly color) discrimination from our social outlook.  

This could be accomplished in one generation by insuring that the public school teachers K-12 be overwhelmingly excellent well-qualified instructors — and black. Children of all colors look up to good teachers. If white kids have mainly black teachers as their everyday role models they are not going to be prejudiced against blacks.  

Our bigots to the contrary, blacks on average can be as capable as whites at any task, intellectual or physical. So, rather than an ill-considered Bush handout like the tax cut, let there be established an impeccable government foundation, to finance from its outset the best education available for all blacks who want to be public school teachers and to make and keep a promise to pay, throughout their teaching years, to only black teachers so fostered, a considerable bonus — such a bonus as will financially maintain them in the upper middle class, well above today’s average teacher’s pay. Young blacks would come flocking. 

Such a plan should gain wide acceptance among the more thoughtful proponents of recompense for slavery. If honestly and earnestly carried out, black dominance of K-12 faculties could in one generation wipe out the shame of American life — color prejudice.  

 

Judith Segard Hunt 

Berkeley  

 

A very odd Olympic dream 

 

Editor: 

 

I had a very odd dream the other night: I saw tens of thousands of people singing a strange song and wearing a red shirt with some strange symbol on it. Were they from another planet, or were they getting ready for the Olympics? 

 

George Kauffman 

Berkeley 

 

 

 

Bush tax relief is just not enough 

 

Editor: 

 

Various letters to the editor have suggested what to do with the Bush tax refund. 

July 19, I received IRS Notice 1275. In big red letters is titled “Notice of Status and Amount of Immediate Tax Relief.” Then it says, “Dear Taxpayer:, blah, blah, blah. ... As part of immediate tax relief, you will be receiving a check in the amount of $13.50 during the week of 07/30/2001.” Then there is more information. 

I do not know if I received the “incorrect” IRS notice or the “correct” IRS notice. In either case, I will have to think long and hard what to do with my $13.50. Lets see, it will not pay my PG&E bill; or Pacific Telephone; or EBMUD. I suppose I could go to Starbucks and buy a pound of coffee. But since I am disabled, I guess I better apply the money toward a prescription. It might be nice to not have to make the decision of whether or not I eat or get my medication. 

If I really do get check for $13.50, the federal government has probably spent more than that in getting it out to me. 

What kind of logic is that? That is a waste of taxpayer’s money. 

 

John G. Cakars 

Berkeley  

 

Taking SATs in native language is a huge boost 

 

Editor: 

 

Susan Bonoff, a college counselor at North Hollywood High School, says that native Spanish speakers bolster their overall SAT II test scores by taking the Spanish language SAT II tests. In a recent year, two of the top three North Hollywood High students were admitted to UC Berkeley while the other was admitted to Stanford. What distinguished their applications were their Advanced Placement test scores.  

Each had taken 22 or more of the tests, and had qualified for college credit on each. Any Spanish speaker in previous years could have taken the SAT II Spanish language test since it’s up to the applicant to choose the third test under current procedures, so in no way does a future language testing requirement account for the upsurge in Latinos having already been accepted at the university. In recommending that UC require only those tests that assess mastery of specific subject areas rather than undefined notions of “aptitude” or “intelligence.”  

Atkinson seeks to reverse a trend started by Harvard President James Conant in the 1930s. 

Conant had college boards that were so nearly a test of mastery of New England boarding school curricula that they couldn't be used to size up the applicants to Harvard from public schools in the Mid-West. 

“All too often,” said Atkinson, “universities use SAT scores to rank order applicants in determining who should be admitted. This use of the SAT is not compatible with the American view on how merit should be defined and opportunities distributed. The strength of American society has been its belief that actual achievement should be what matters most. Students should be judged on the basis of what they have made of the opportunities available to them.” 

Atkinson is right to reverse a trend which resulted in drafting low I.Q. fathers to fight for their country in Korea and Vietnam while exempting single college men. 

But, if too much emphasis is placed on the SAT I in UC freshman admissions, why retain the SAT IIs, while eliminating the only rival test currently available (the ACT)? Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo recently announced that it would prefer the ACT from now on. 

Atkinson, 71, a cognitive psychologist, has been a visiting Distinguished Scholar at the company which administers the SATs (both I and II). He witnessed his grandchildren, at the ages of 10 and 12, enrolled in an upscale private school studying verbal analogies. 

“I learned that they spend hours each month — directly and indirectly — preparing for the SAT,” Atkinson said, “studying long lists of verbal analogies such as ‘truthful is to mendaciousness’ as ‘circumspect is to caution.’” 

Mathematics is one of the three SAT IIs already required of prospective UC freshman (91,904 applied for the Class of 2004 on the campuses throughout the state). Kate Millet, the author of the classic Sexual Politics, says that “the independence and ego-strength necessary for first-rate achievement necessary in certain analytic fields [has been] completely absent from the cultural experience of nearly every girl child.”  

The effect of Atkinson’s SAT II reform will be to reduce the number of women at the campuses, the most competitive in particular (UCLA, UC San Diego and UC Berkeley). 

Zero point four percent of 91,904 UC applicants statewide took the Japanese language test. It’s a gross overstatement to say that SAT II language tests have given anyone an advantage in UC admissions up to now. Their high scores on Advanced Placement tests, on the other hand, have given North Hollywood High students an enormous advantage. 

 

 

Richard Thompson 

Berkeley  

 


Arts & Entertainment

Thursday July 26, 2001

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 26: Keni “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Aug 1: Whiskey Brothers. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 25: 8:00 p.m. perfect Strangers $10; July 26: 9:00 p.m. Super Rail band $16; July 27: 8:00 p.m. Ali Khan Band $15; July 28: 9:30 p.m. Motordude Zydeco and Brass Monkey $11; July 29: 9:00 p.m. El Hadj N’ Diaye $10; July 31: 8:00 p.m. dance lesson with Dana DeSimone, 9:00 p.m. Steve Riley and Mamou Playboys $12; Aug. 5: 9 p.m. Roots Reggae featuring Groundation and Tchiya Amet. $10. 11317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Split Shankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. July 26: Radney Foster, Darden Smith; July 27: Otis Taylor; July 28: Street Sounds; July 29: Tish Hinojosa; Aug 1: Distant Oaks; Aug 2: George Kuo, Narin Pahinui & Aaron Mahi; Aug 3: Wylie & the Wild West, the Waller Brothers, Aug 4: Adam Levy, Will Bernard; Aug 5: MonTango; Aug 6: Frank Yamma; Aug 8: San Francisco Klezmer Experience; Aug 9: John Renbourn . $16.50 - $19.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter 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 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; Aug 3: 8 p.m. Los Delicados, Aya de Leon $10; Aug 4: 8 p.m. Grito Serpentino, Small Axe Project, Jime Salcedo-Malo & Leticia Hernandez $10; Aug 5: 7 p.m. Insight in concert $10. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool July 29: 4:30 p.m., vocalist Lily Tung, 5:30 p.m. Jazzschool Advanced Jazz Workshop. $5; Aug 5: 4:30 p.m. Vocaists’ Series (Denine Monet), 5:30 p.m. Instrumentalists’ Series (Pelo Mar). 2377 Shattuck Avenue 845-5373. 

 

Rose Street House of Music July 26: 7:30 p.m. Christie McCarthy, Liz Pisco, Antara and Delilah, Amber Jade. $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 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  

 

“Downtown” restaurant and bar August 6: 7 p.m. Jesse Colin Young of the sixties hit group, The Youngbloods, will be performing at a No Nukes evening, sponsored by Greenpeace. The evening commemorates the 56th anniversary of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The proceeds go to Tri-Valley CAREs and Citizen Alert. Tickets are $100. 2102 Shattuck Ave. 800-728-6223 

 

The Greek Theatre Aug. 3 and Aug. 4, 7 p.m. The String Cheese Incident, $29.75. Hearst Avenue and Gayley Road 444-TIXS, or (415) 421-TIXS www.sfx.com 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts July 29: 2:00 p.m. “Into the Eye of Magic! An Asian Folk Tale” interactive musical and theatrical production for families. Adults $10 Children $5; Aug 4: 8 p.m. “Cuatro maestros Touring Festival” two-hour theatrical event of music and dance performed by four elder folk artists and their talented young counterparts. Adults $18 Children $12; Aug. 10: 7:30 p.m. & Aug. 11, 12, 5 p.m. Campers from Stage Door Conservatory’s “On Broadway” program for grades 5-9 will perform Fiddler on the Roof, Jr. $12 adults, $8 kids. (For info call 527-5939); 2640 College Avenue 845-8542 ext. 302 

 

“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 

 

“Human Nature” the X-Plicit Players explore intimate but un-named ways of being together, awaken senses old and new and participate in Group Body. July 28: 8:30 p.m. $15 Metaversal Lightcraft 1708 University 848-1985 

 

“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 655-0813 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 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. $5 - $10. South Berkeley Community Church 1802 Fairview st. 464-1117 

 

“Loot” Through Aug 25, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7:00 p.m. Special Performance Aug 20, 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15, Students / Seniors: $10 La Val’s 1834 Euclid Avenue 655-0813 

 

“Orphans” 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 

 

“Reefer Madness” a new one-act theatre piece adapted from a 1936 government-funded film opens a critical eye to the control of our society. Performed by The Elemental Theatre Group Wed Aug 8,22, Thu Aug 9,23: 9 p.m. La Pena Cultural Center 3105 Shattuck Avenue. Wednesdays “pay what you can”, thursdays $5 - $10. Fri Aug 10,17: 7 p.m. People’s Park Free. Contact Zachary Rouse or Tisha Sloan for more info at 655-4150 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Avenue. 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 

La Peña Cultural Center 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 26: 7:00 Devarim, 9:10 Yom Yom; July 27: 7:00 Punishment Room, 8:55 Ten Dark Women; July 28: 7:00 The Big Heat, 8:30 Kippur, 8:50 Clash by Night; July 29: 3:00 A Boy named Charlie Brown, 5:30 Mr. Pu, 7:30 A Billionaire; New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley July 28: 1 p.m. “The Optimists” 3:30 p.m. “Louba’s Ghosts”, 6:15 p.m. “One of the Hollywood Ten”, 8:30 p.m. “Kippur”; July 29: 11 a.m. “Keys from Spain”, “The Cross Inscribed in the Star of David”, 1 p.m. “Intimate Stranger”, “Nobody’s Business”, 4 p.m. “The Sweetest Sound”, 6 p.m. “Once We Grow Up”, 8:30 p.m. “Total Love”, “Moses vs. Godzilla” General admission: $8.50, Matinees (until4p.m.): $7, Students/Seniors/Groups: $6.50. (925)866-9559 http://www.sfjff.org 

 

“7th annual Brainwash Movie Festival” outdoors Aug 3,4,5: (bring a chair) at the Pyramid Ale brewery, 901 Gilman Street 527-9090 ext. 218. Festival Pass: $30, Individual tickets: online: $8, door: $10 

 

 

Exhibits 

 

“BACA National Juried Exhibition: Works on Paper” Through August 31: Wed. - Sun. Noon - 5 p.m. Reception, Sun. July 22, 2 - 4 p.m., Featuring 33 artists from across the United States, including 17 Bay Area representatives. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“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 Road 849-2541 

 

“Debbie Moore’s Autobiographical Paintings” Through Sep 30 at Good Vibrations. Portraits of the artist’s sensual explorations spanning 25 years and reflecting changing ways of intimacy and body play. 2504 San Pablo Avenue 848-1985 

 

“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.  

 

“A Fine Line” is an exhibition works by Kala Fellowship winners for the years 2000 and 2001. Reception July 26, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. July 26 - August 24, Tuesday - Friday, noon - 5 p.m. or by appointment. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Avenue 549-2977 

 

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

 

“MFA Survey Exhibition 2001” third annual exhibition of works of recent graduates from Bay Area master of Fine Art programs. This year featuring artists working in three-dimentional media. now - Aug 18 tuesday - saturday, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., reception July 21 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth Street 527-1214 

 

“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 

 

“The Saints Are Coming... To Bring Hope” Through July 30: Tue., Wed., Sat. 12 - 5, p.m., Fri. 1 - 5 p.m., An art installation featuring Fred DeWitt, Leon Kennedy, Josie Madero, Esete Menkir, Belinda Osborn, Arline Lucia Rodini, April Watkins, and Carla Woshone. The Art of Living Center 2905 Shattuck Ave. 848-3736  

 

“Sistahs: Ethnofraphic Ceramics” through August 22, Reception July 29 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Womens Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Avenue 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“Ten Years Here” Exhibit celebrating the 10 year anniversary of Turn of the Century Fine Arts. Aug 4 - Sept 14, Sat & Sun 1-5 p.m. Reception Aug 4 2:00 - 7:00 p.m. 2510 San Pablo Avenue 849-0950 

 

“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  

 

 

Readings 

 

Boadecia’s Books Aug 3: Mabel Maney (author of the Nancy Clue/ Cherry Aimless and Hardly Boys mysteries) reads from her new book “Kiss the Girls and Make them Spy” featuring Jane Bond, James’ lesbian twin sister; Aug 4: Dyke Open Myke! Coffeehouse-style open mike night featuring both established and emerging talent. All events start at 7:30 p.m. and are free. 398 Colusa Avenue 559-9184 

 

Cody’s Books July 26: Dave Egger’s presentation has been canceled; Aug 5: Justin Chin, Gerry Gomez Pearlberg; Aug 8: Jane Mead, Mark Turpin. $2 donation. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-0837 

 

Cafe de la Paz “Poetry Nitro” Weekly poetry open mike. July 30: Featuring Lisa Sikie; Aug 6: featuring Andrena zawinski. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series August 7: Featured readers JC and Bert Glick. 7-9 p.m.; August 21: Featured Readers: Victoria Joyce and Therese Bamberger; Both 7-9 p.m. Free. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland for info. (510)465-3935 or (510)526-5985, or Email: ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

 

 

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  

 

 

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.  

“How Big Is the Universe?” Aug. 1 through Aug. 24. Learn how to determine the distance of celestial objects, one of the purposes of the Hubble Space Telescope. Daily, 2:15 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, 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu 

 

 

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. 

 


Berkeley Legion finally wins a close one

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

Barons get some clutch hits, take advantage of Clayton Valley miscues 

 

For the third time in 11 days, the Berkeley Legion baseball team was involved in an extra-inning game in which one team blew a lead late in the game. But for the first time, the Berkeley team was the one that came back to tie the game in the seventh inning and win it in the eighth at Clayton Valley High on Wednesday. 

Trailing 5-1 heading into their last at-bats, the Barons used patience and some timely hitting. With one out, Clayton Valley reliever Barry Zenuk hit Matt Sylvester with a pitch, then walked Jack MckSweeney and Foster Goree to load the bases. Walker Toma then hit a line drive to center field that skipped under the Clayton Valley defender’s glove, scoring two runs and putting runners on second and third. Bennie Goldenberg bounced a single over third base, which plated Goree and Toma to knot the score at 5-5. 

Toma then came in to relieve in the bottom of the inning after Jason Nealy beaned Clayton Valley’s Rick Byrnes with one out, which appeared to shake up the Berkeley hurler. Although Byrnes stole second and took third on a passed ball, Toma induced a short flyball to right by the next batter, then struck out Chris Hurd to strand him 90 feet short of the winning run. 

Clayton Valley proceeded to pretty much hand the Barons the game in the eighth. Third baseman Matt Mazzei muffed a grounder by Berkeley’s Jason Haller, then Zenuk kicked away a sacrifice bunt by Jabri Gilreath. Sylvester popped up his own bunt, which Mazzei caught for the out, but Mazzei then threw the ball away trying to double up Gilbreath at first, sending the runners to second and third.  

MckSweeney struck out for the second out, but Chris Wilson hit a pop-up into no-man’s land in center, scoring the runners. Toma and Goldenberg both hit RBI singles to give the Barons some insurance, and Toma shut down the home side in the bottom of the inning to earn the 9-5 win. 

Strangely enough, the Berkeley outburst of eight runs in the final two innings came after head coach Josh Flushman was tossed from the game for arguing balls and strikes with the home plate umpire. 

“I’d say that was definitely the key to our victory today,” Flushman joked after the game, noting that he had clashed with the same umpire in a previous game this summer. 

Clayton Valley looked to have the Barons’ number early in the game, scoring five runs in two innings off of Berkeley starter Gilbreath. But Nealy shut them down for almost the rest of regulation.


Gaining a new reputation

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

YMCA isn’t just for excercise anymore 

 

When Shirley Richardson-Brower took over as executive director of the Berkeley YMCA South Branch four years ago, the building had more basketballs than books. 

“Its reputation was as a nice little Y for recreation,” Richardson-Brower said. 

Sweeping her arm over a room with bookshelves running the length of one wall, office-like cubicles aglow with Apple computers, and a group of kindergarteners huddled in front of a dry-erase board, sounding out the letters of the alphabet with aid of a college-aged volunteer, she said: 

“This was a weight room.” 

The transformation began back in 1997, when the South Branch YMCA convened a focus group to assess how well the facility was meeting the needs of the surrounding community. What they discovered was a large group of  

parents wondering if it would be possible to mix some academics into the traditional YMCA menu of recreational services.  

In response to the community’s “shift in focus,” the YMCA set out to institute afterschool and summer programs that would offer fun and games with strong emphasis on learning, Richardson-Brower said. 

Today, where once there were a couple dozen youth – mostly boys – pumping iron and shooting hoops, there are now more than 100 children from kindergarten all the way up to seventh grade, learning their ABCs, practicing reading and writing, conducting scientific experiments, playing instructional computer games among other activities. 

So many signed up for the center’s nine-week Summer Learning, Summer Fun program this summer that Richardson-Brower had to create a “wait list.”  

The program runs from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. five days a week and costs parents – most of whom are low-income – an average of only $25 a week. The fee is negotiable, and no one is turned away for inability to pay. 

During the program’s infancy, youth would sometimes come for a few weeks and disappear, Richardson-Brower said. But parents have developed an increasing loyalty to the program over the years, and most now stick it out for the full nine weeks. 

Parent Kathy Russell gave the program a try for the first time this summer, signing up her kindergarten-aged son, Alexander. Russell said she planned to let Alexander stay home and play during the summer but changed her mind when she heard about the program. At the South Branch YMCA, Russell said, her son manages the rare feat of having fun and learning at the same time. 

“I thought it was going to be a kind of fun day camp for him, but it’s really been an educational experience,” Russell said. “They’re not just hanging out.” 

Richardson-Brower attributes the program’s success, in part, to the practice of dividing the students into small groups, with a volunteer tutor serving as the leader of the group all summer long. Because the students are asked to take on academic challenges as a group, there are less likely to feel overwhelmed and discouraged, she said. 

“Isolated, they feel inferior; they feel like something is wrong with them,” Richardson-Brower said. 

Sandra Gutierrez, who will be a seventh grader at Willard Middle School next year, seemed to agree with this analysis. Asked why she enjoyed the program, she said: “If you don’t know something, you can ask somebody and they’ll tell you the answer. And we have more attention from the leaders because we’re in smaller groups.” 

There is also a big emphasis on presenting academic challenges in a fun format. For a first science experiment, students shoveled spoonfuls of ice cream into root beer to observe how the steady streams of bubbles would keep it afloat.  

On Tuesday, as part of a summerlong course in basic geology, the students scraped away at mineral samples with fingernails, pennies and steel nails to test their hardness. They practiced some basic arithmetic as they worked to rate the minerals on a hardness scale of one to 10.  

Writing is emphasized in all activities to help improve the student’s literacy (many are first generation Mexican- and Asian-Americans who are not yet fluent in English). Students are asked to write as complete a description of possible of their mineral samples, using color, hardness, surface texture and more. Spelling doesn’t count so much as the number of words students manage to get down on the page. 

“It gets them comfortable,” said YMCA volunteer tutor Jennifer Larsh. “It reminds them that learning can be fun.”  

“For some students, by the third grade, they’ve completely lost the will to learn; the joy of it,” Larsh said.  

The South Branch YMCA is located at 2901 California St. in South Berkeley. For more information about the branch’s programs, contact Shirley Richardson-Brower at (510)-843-4280. 


Cal’s Cope gives mother best present at Worlds

Daily Planet Wire Services
Thursday July 26, 2001

FUKUOKA, Japan – One of the big downsides of going to the World Swimming Championships for Haley Cope was that she had to miss her mother’s 40th birthday. 

On Tuesday, the University of California communications major gave her mother a fitting present, surprising herself by winning the 50-meter backstroke gold medal. 

“I cannot believe that I am the world champion,” Cope said after finishing in 28.51 seconds, .02 seconds ahead of Germany’s Antje Buschschulte. 

“I thought I was dying. I was just trying to keep up with the girl next to me.” 

Cope didn’t realize it at the time, but she had to worry about more than Buschschulte. Third place was only a tick away as well, with Cope’s American teammate and former U.S. record-holder Natalie Coughlin taking the bronze at 28.54. 

When Cope packed her bags for Fukuoka, she knew she’d miss a big family gathering in Chico for her mother Regina’s birthday July 21. 

“My mom was a bit upset that I had to leave them,” Cope said. “But now she knows it was definitely worth it. This is my present to her.” 

Cope, who set an American record in qualifying Monday, will swim the 100-meter backstroke Friday and the 50-meter freestyle qualifying Saturday. She might also be used on a relay team. 

Coughlin again will be among her competitors — and the favorite — in the 100-meter backstroke. Coughlin has the best time this year over that distance (1:01.27), just ahead of the 1:01.28 by Japan’s Mai Nakamura, an Olympic silver medalist who also is competing in the championships. 

Cope is used to a heavy workload, having finished second in the 50-yard freestyle, third in the 100-yard backstroke and seventh in the 100-yard freestyle at the NCAA Championships this year. 

Earlier in the week, California’s male swimming standout, Anthony Ervin, continued to excel as he captured the first gold medal for the United States on Monday.  

Ervin, the 2000 Olympic gold medallist in the 50-meter freestyle, won the 50 free at the 2001 World Championships in a time of 22.09 over Pieter van den Hoogenband of the Netherlands (22.16).  

“My time was good, but I’ve been faster,” said Ervin. “I’m happy with the win. I have more pressure on me here (Fukuoka) than I did in Sydney. Here, people have been expecting me to win, but I never thought like that coming in to the meet.”  

In other action at the 2001 World Championships, former Cal swimmer Gordan Kozulj (1996-99) placed seventh for his native Croatia in the 100-meter back final with a time of 55.60.


Activists targeting sales of cigarettes

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

As part of a statewide campaign to get pharmacies to stop selling tobacco products, members of the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Coalition are pressuring local “chain” pharmacies to remove cigarettes from their shelves. 

While some area residents support the move, others doubt it will have much of an impact. 

“We never have (sold cigarettes) and we never would,” said Barryl Glover, a pharmacist at the Milvia Prescription Pharmacy in Berkeley. “It sends a negative health message (that’s) counter to what we’re trying to do, which is promote health.” 

Ron Freund, a member of the Berkeley Tobacco Prevention Coalition, said pharmacies have a “social responsibility” to send a message that tobacco products are harmful by refusing to sell them in the same setting as products that are supposed to promote good health. 

Pharmacies selling cigarettes “leaves an impression that legitimizes tobacco and the selling of tobacco,” especially with youth, Freund said. 

“The more institutions and organizations begin to say tobacco is unhealthy and basically a bad product, the less opportunity there will be to buy it,” he added. 

The California group Prescription for Change, a coalition of pharmacists, physicians, health care professionals and consumers, has worked with local anti-tobacco groups since 1995 to convince pharmacies that there is a profound contradiction in selling cigarettes and health care products in the same store. 

But, while most independent pharmacies in the state either never carried tobacco products or have stopped carrying them in recent years, almost all chain pharmacies continue to sell cigarettes and cigars. 

None of Berkeley’s 11 independent pharmacies sell tobacco, but all of its five chain stores (four Walgreens and one Longs Drug) do, according to Prescription for Change spokesperson Sue Noseworthy. 

Prescriptions for Change launched a “media blitz” this spring – including a prominent advertisement in this newspaper and half-a-dozen other Bay Area publications – to bring attention to the discrepancy between independent and chain store policies regarding tobacco. 

“Our campaign is raising awareness with consumers to really even think about the issue,” Noseworthy said. “With the independents maintaining their clients and customer satisfaction, it seems like there really isn’t any reason that the chains wouldn’t be able to do the same.” 

In 1998, cigarettes, cigars and matches accounted for only 2.6 percent of all products sold in on an average day in a chain pharmacy, according to Prescription for Change. 

Ed Fernandes is manager of a Walgreens store on South San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley which does sell cigarettes. He said the store sells maybe 20 cartons of cigarettes a month, at the same time that it’s selling Nicorette – a product that helps smokers break the habit – like hot cakes. 

“There’s a ton of people trying to quit,” Fernandes said. 

Fernandes said the decision to sell or not to sell cigarettes is made at the corporate rather than the local level. Officials at Walgreen’s West Coast corporate offices did not return calls asking for comment Wednesday.  

In a February e-mail addressed to Freund, one Walgreens official pointed out that 25 percent of the U.S. population smokes, adding: “Walgreens sells tobacco products as a convenience to our customers.” 

Customers leaving the San Pablo Avenue Walgreens Wednesday had mixed views on whether the store ought to sell tobacco. Emeryville resident Paul Castleman said it’s a no-brainer that a place known for health care products should stop selling cigarettes. 

“Police don’t sell guns,” Castleman said.  

If a pharmacy chose to stop selling cigarettes, he said, “It would increase the professional stature of the pharmacy, I think, as well as send a subtle message.” 

But Berkeley resident Gretta Fletcher disagreed. 

“If you’re talking about Walgreens, Walgreens is more of a variety store, like Target,” Fletcher said. “If it were strictly a pharmacy selling medicine, then I would have a problem with it.”  

Fletcher, a 30-year smoker who resorted to hypnotism to quit, was also skeptical that persuading pharmacy chains to stop selling cigarettes would help cut back on the smoking rate. 

“It’s a terrible addiction,” she said. “You have to be able to face it wherever it’s at to quit.” 

Oakland resident Abe Kirschenbaum, 28, agreed that pharmacy stores should stop selling cigarettes, but he wouldn’t stop there. 

“A cigarette is probably one of the worst things you can do for you’re health,” Kirschenbaum said. “If it were up to me they would get cigarettes off the street completely. But in a free country, that’s a pretty strong opinion.”


Berkeley arts groups push for dream center

By Jon Mays Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

By approving a design scheme for a proposed mixed-use retail, housing, and art space to take the place of a parking lot on Oxford Street, the City Council provided a wish list for the community.  

Now, it seems the challenge is to make it happen. 

“That’s the big question. What can be done?” said Mayor Shirley Dean. “[City Manager Weldon Rucker] really has his work cut out for him as far as the feasibility.” 

The City Council approved the concept of a five-story building on top of two levels of underground parking – with 150-200 spaces. The building’s top three floors would include at least 90 units of affordable and market rate housing. The first and second floor would house a community theater and gallery space as well as the David Brower Center, which is named for the environmentalist who died last November.  

At Tuesday’s meeting, arts groups pushed for more space while councilmembers provided their own wish list for the project. 

They included solar panels, a public plaza with a fountain, a café that sells natural food, housing for people who work for nonprofit organizations and an expanded arts center. 

Rucker will now have to sort out the ideas and shop around a project to various developers to see if there is an interest. So far, two affordable housing developers – Affordable Housing Associates and Resources for Community Development – have expressed interest, said Councilmember Linda Maio. 

The Council will look at the proposal again by the end of this year, according to Maio. 

Maio said she has been instrumental in getting the project to this point and emphasized that it is not a pie in the sky idea. She explained that the Brower component will have its own financing, the affordable housing will be financed through grants and loans made available by nonprofit developers and the city will provide the parking. The only component currently without funding, she said, is the community arts component.  

Still, she said the project is a good example of complementary uses working together. 

“It’s just been excellent. It’s a wonderful marriage between the arts, the environment and affordable housing,” she said, adding that Brower used photographs to illustrate the beauty of the environment. “He really understood how art is instrumental in raising environmental awareness.” 

Gary Graves, co-director of Central Works, a small theater group, said there is a definite need for 10,000-square-feet of theater space rather than the proposed 5,000-square-feet currently proposed.  

Graves is part of a consortium of six small theater groups that could use the space to put on their productions. The city of Berkeley, he said, has been supportive of upper end theater groups Aurora (to be opened this Fall) and the Berkeley Repertory Theater. By providing theater space for grass-roots groups, Graves said the city could have a more diverse representation of the arts downtown. 

“We’re trying to complete the entire spectrum in what’s called the downtown arts district,” he said.  

Providing that space may bump the project to seven floors – two above the current proposal. That, Arts Commission Chair Sherry Smith said, may be too much.  

Although Smith likes the idea of having a large collection of public arts facilities under one roof, she said she isn’t sure if it can actually happen. 

“If we pencil it out, it will be expensive and some of these Christmas tree ornaments will have to fall away,” she said.  


Manufacturer refuses refund of arsenic-laced playground

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Thursday July 26, 2001

A local environmental group recently filed a notice of violation against a playground manufacturer who sold an arsenic-treated playstructure to a Berkeley school.  

The group says the company did not appropriately warn the school about the health risks its products present. 

Exposure to arsenic can cause cancer, heart problems, diabetes, and endocrine system problems. 

The Center for Environmental Health, a nonprofit environmental protection organization, took similar legal action against 11 companies in June after a national report told of the serious health risks that wooden structures treated with a preservative made of chromium, copper and arsenic present.  

Further investigation led the CEH to send notices of violation to five other manufacturers earlier this month. 

One of them, Kompan Inc., was brought to the organization’s attention by a group of parents and administrators of New School, a nonprofit institution located on Bonita Avenue in Berkeley.  

After discovering that its new play structure was treated with CCA, the school unsuccessfully tried to return the product to its manufacturer. 

But Kompan refused any refund for the $2,700 structure. 

“I declined to do that because the product that we sold fully complies with all the safety regulations,” said Tim Madeley, Kompan’s general manager.  

Kompan’s products, Madeley said, are approved by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Environmental Protection Agency and the California Department of Health. 

Outraged, New School turned to the CEH for advice. 

The CEH notices were both filed on the basis of Proposition 65, a law designed to limit public exposure to possibly hazardous chemicals by mandating consumer-product warning labels.  

The organization’s notice of violation states that “no clear and reasonable warning is provided with these products regarding the carcinogenic or reproductive hazards of [arsenic and chromium].” 

CEH said Kompan reacted positively to the notice.  

“They contacted our lawyers immediately and they have decided to completely stop using CCA in their structures,” said CEH toxics researcher, Alise Cappel. Kompan, Cappel said, offered to start using a type of wood manufactured by Arch Chemicals and sold under the trade name “Wolman E.” That product is free of CCA. 

Madeley, however, said Kompan’s decision to use an alternative material was not the result of the CEH violation, but to reassure concerned customers. 

“It’s not because we think that CCA is unsafe in any way,” said Madeley. “But since people have concerns about it, we would like to use something different.” 

Eric Somers, legal counsel for CEH, said New School did not come up in the conversation he had with Kompan. But the CEH, he said, hopes to negotiate with Kompan to find a solution for the school. 

“One of the goals of CEH would be to replace the play structure and take the CCA-treated one to a landfill,” said Somers. 

New School administrators, however, said the CEH has not contacted them about that possibility.  

They are sticking with their initial plans to drop the structure, with a letter of complaint, at Kompan’s distribution center in Forestville as soon as next week, said New School administrative assistant Merlyn Katechis. 

The controversy surrounding the safety of wooden play structures has been an ongoing issue nationally and locally.  

In Berkeley, the playgrounds of Cedar and Rose , King Middle School and Codornices parks were recently coated with a sealant to avoid risks of arsenic contamination.  

The Parks and Waterfront Department plans to replace them within five years.


A tale of two markets, two contrasting results

By John Cunniff The Associated Press
Thursday July 26, 2001

Among investments, there is probably no greater performance contrast over the past year than that between housing and stocks. 

It isn’t solely that the first is up and the second is down. 

The housing market has been a model of stability, with existing home prices rising relentlessly through the year for a net gain through June of 8.8 percent — impressive to be sure, though it’s only part of the story. 

The rest of the story multiplies that 8.8 percent. Assuming the house was purchased for $120,000, with $20,000 down, and rose 8.8 percent, its market value would now be more than $130,500. 

The gain from your original investment would be nearly 53 percent, less the cost of mortgage, tax and insurance payments. You could also buy stocks with only a down payment, i.e. on margin, but your down payment would probably be at least 50 percent rather than 16 percent or 17 percent. And your interest rate would be a lot higher. 

That’s for starters. The stock market, measured by the Dow Jones industrial average, fell 4.3 percent between July 24, 2000 and July 24, 2001. 

Though hard to measure in dollars and cents, the stock market also took a toll on nerves. Rather than a clean line slanting in one direction, as in housing, it traced a nerve-racking, saw-toothed pattern. 

In housing, you don’t have to put up more money if the market price falls, like you might if you face a margin call.  

And you get tax benefits along the way – income tax deductions for the interest and taxes you pay. 

You might get tax deductions in stocks too, but they’re not nearly as generous.  

If you sell at a loss, you might be able to deduct the loss from gains. But note, you have to have gains to benefit that way. And you might be able to deduct margin interest costs, but again, if you have gains. Meanwhile, as a homeowner you stay in the home and enjoy tax benefits whether the price rises or falls. Generally speaking, if you chose your neighborhood well and otherwise bought wisely, you investment will grow. 

The ultimate advantage, as every homeowner is well aware, is that the investment in housing puts a roof over one’s head, a benefit that is not in the slightest enjoyed when owning stocks. At least in the past year. 

True, a wise investment in the stock market rises over time – if you’re especially lucky or prescient it might rise at a far greater rate than in housing – and perhaps afford you a bigger roof on a better house. 

But again, the taxman expects to be paid. If stock investors sell at a profit they enjoy a relatively low capital gains tax rate. A homeowner couple pays such taxes too, but often only if profits exceed $500,000. 

That said, it’s an unfair comparison to pick a very good year in home appreciation with a very poor year in stocks. Over the past six decades, annual stock market returns have averaged in the low double digits. 

While that record demonstrates that it’s wise to own securities if you can afford them, are knowledgeable, and have the guts to survive terribly tense times, they are a test millions of people don’t want to take.  

For them, just owning a house is a very wise investment and, to boot, offers a wonderful sense of security, the like of which cannot be matched by the stock market. 

 

John Cunniff is a business analyst for The Associated Press


Housing sales remains steady despite an unstable economy

The Associated Press
Thursday July 26, 2001

WASHINGTON — Even though Americans bought fewer previously occupied homes in June, sales were at near record levels, suggesting that this main pillar of the economy remains sturdy. 

The National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that existing home-sales dipped by 0.6 percent in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.33 million, matching the fifth-highest level on record registered in December 1998. 

“This is the housing boom that just won’t go away,” said economist Ken Mayland of ClearView Economics. “Housing is providing a firm foundation for sustaining the surprisingly robust trend of consumer buying, and the tax rebate checks, some of which are now in taxpayers’ hands, are the icing on the cake.” 

Economists said that consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of all economic activity, and the housing market, have held up well during the yearlong economic slowdown and have been forces preventing the economy from tipping into recession. 

“No matter what is happening around them, households remain so confident that they are still buying homes at a near-record pace,” said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors. 

June’s existing-home sales performance was better than many economists were predicting. They had forecast a 1.5 percent drop in sales because of the weak labor market, volatile stock market and the fact that mortgage rates rose slightly from May to June. 

The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage in June was 7.16 percent, up from 7.15 percent in May, but well below the 8.29 percent posted in June 2000. 

“With mortgage interest rates projected to rise slightly to around 7.3 percent during the second half of the year, and some expected sluggishness in the general economy, month-to-month homes sales should trend down from these high marks,” said David Lereah, the association’s chief economist. 

“However, we expect a total of 5.15 million existing-home sales in 2001, making this year the second highest on record,” he added. In May, sales jumped by 2.7 percent to a rate of 5.36 million, the third highest level on record. Even with the decline, June’s rate of 5.33 million was close to that mark. 

Used-home sales reached an all-time high of 5.45 million in June 1999, when the economy was booming. 

In an effort to avert the first recession in the United States in 11 years, the Federal Reserve has slashed interest rates six times this year, totaling 2.75 percentage points. 

Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress Tuesday that the economy remains weak and another interest rate cut may be needed if the situation doesn’t improve. 

Economists are predicting the Fed will cut rates by a quarter-point at its next meeting on Aug. 21. 

In Wednesday’s report, sales of previously owned homes were down in all regions of the country except in the West. 

In the Midwest, sales last month fell by 4.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.14 million; in the South, they were down by 2.3 percent to a rate of 2.11 million; and in the Northeast, sales declined by 1.6 percent to a rate of 630,000. But in the West, sales rose 6.6 percent to a rate of 1.46 million. 

The drop in overall sales in June didn’t hurt home prices. 

The median existing-home sales price, meaning half sold for more and half for less, rose to a record $152,600 in June, up 8.8 percent from the median price for the same month a year ago. Home prices have remained strong throughout the economic slowdown. 

“The higher home price in June partially reflects the trade-up buyers’ preference for larger homes,” Lereah said. 

———— 

On the Net: 

The report: http://nar.realtor.com/ 


Late night with Council

By Jon Mays and John Geluardi Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 25, 2001

Hours of input heard before votes 

 

Because of an unusually hefty agenda, the City Council put off a vote on the controversial Beth El project – called Berkeley’s biggest planning decision in 10 years – into the wee hours this morning. 

Because it is the last meeting before the Council’s six-week summer break, councilmembers decided to keep the meeting going until all 66 items on its agenda were heard.  

Although the City Council was expected to approve the Beth El project – a 32,000-square-foot synagogue, school and social hall at 1301 Oxford St – as of press time, it was placed after two other agenda items, and no vote had been taken.  

A back room mediation session between Beth El members and representatives from the Live Oak Codornices Creek Neighborhood Association – who oppose the project – was on-going close to midnight. If the mediation is successful, it may mean the project will be reduced in size.  

The council vote would end two years of a contentious planning process, which included three commissions, numerous public hearings, hundreds of hours of staff time, a professional mediator and hearings on two appeals before the City Council.  

The process created a city document, containing staff reports, consultant studies and hundreds of letters expressing opinions about the project. The report, nearly 18 inches high, cost the city $3,500 to make 35 copies. One City Clerk employee dubbed the unwieldy, 20 -pound document, “the ugly thing.”  

The vote however may not be the end of the conflict because both sides have threatened to take the council’s decision to court.  

The City Council did approve a three-unit townhome development at 2025 Rose St. despite nearby resident’s concerns that it would cause traffic and parking problems in their neighborhood.  

The City Council normally holds a vote two weeks after a public hearing to give opposing sides an opportunity to dispel misinformation.  

Mayor Shirley Dean said she wanted to vote on the project because of the summer break.  

The vote was 6-1-2 in favor of the 5,509-square-foot  

development with a 810-square-foot garage. Councilmember Dona Spring voted against the project, while councilmembers Kriss Worthington and Linda Maio abstained. 

The Council denied a plan to redevelop a parking lot on Oxford Street at Allston Way into a five-story mixed-use art, retail, housing development that would also be home to the David Brower Center.  

Because some arts groups said they wanted more space in the facility, councilmembers said they wanted to discuss it again before making a decision. 

The City Council also appointed Stephen Barton as director of housing and Carol Barrett as director of planning and development. 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Wednesday July 25, 2001


Wednesday, July 25

 

Toymaker Day 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Make toys out of recycled materials with artists from the East Bay Depot for Creative Reuse. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 


Thursday, July 26

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week The Brazilian Workshop under the direction of Marcos Silva, Jazzschool students perform traditional Brazilian music. 

 

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: quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Wilderness First Aid 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Jim Morrisey, senior instructor at Wilderness Medical Associates, will teach you the basics of field repair for the human body: Blisters, wounds, fractures, lightning strikes, snake bites and more. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Ancient Native Sites of the  

East Bay 

7:30 p.m. 

Room 160 Kroeber Hall, University of California Campus 

Andrew Galvan, an Ohlone Indian and co-owner of Archaeor, will discuss and share the benefits of osteological studies of prehistoric human skeletal remains. Prof. Ed Luby, research archaeologist for the Berkeley Natural History Museums, will discuss his work on mortuary feasting practices. $10 

841-2242 

 

Southeast Asia and Japan 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

William Ford, author of “Southeast Asia and Japan: Unusual Travel,” will present a talk and slide show of his adventure travels. Free. 

843-3533 

 

Return of the Zapatour 

7 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Members of the Chiapas Support Committee report on their trip to Chiapas, including slides and videos. $8 - $15. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Business Information and 

Networking Event 

6:30 - 9:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis (corner of Ashby) 

Sponsored by the City of Berkeley in partnership with the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, and both the South and West Berkeley Neighborhood Development Corporations. The event will include such topics as “Starting a Business,” “Legal Issues,” “Planning for Growth,” “Financing,” and “Permitting.” The event is free to all who register. Refreshments and door prizes. To register call 549-7003 (English or Spanish).  

 

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 

 

Women, Menopause, and  

Change 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

YWCA 

2600 Bancroft Way 

Learn how other women manage the changes menopause brings to their lives. Free yoga demonstration. 

233-6484 

 

Cuban Workers and Trade Unions Today 

6 - 8:30 p.m. 

Director’s Lounge 

Institute of Industrial Relations 

2521 Channing Way 

Speakers Kamran Nayeri and Bobbie Rabinowitz, sponsored by University and Technical Employees. Music, photo exhibit and literature. 

 

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 27

 

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 

 


Saturday, July 28

 

Residential Solar Electricity 

1 p.m. - 3 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

The workshop will introduce participants to residential solar electricity: how solar cells work, how to size a system, participants will also get to produce electricity using photovoltaic panels and power a range of appliances (weather permitting). $15. Call 548-2220 x233 to reserve a space.  

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Arrowcopter Play Day 

1 - 4 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

For ages 9 and up. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 

16th annual Berkeley  

Kite Festival and West Coast Kite Championship 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Through Sunday. 

Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina 

Giant creature kites from New Zealand, Team Kite Ballet, Japanese-Style Rokaku Kite Battle for the skies, plus great food and live music.  

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. kite making lessons; 2:30 p.m. Candy Drops for the kids; 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. kite flying lessons. Free Event. For more information: 235-5483 or www.highlinekites.com. 

 


Sunday, July 29

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - Noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn how to adjust your brakes from one of REI’s bike technicians. Bring your bike. 527-4140 

 

Buddhist Teacher 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Eva Casey on “The Life of Padmasambhava.” Free. 843-6812 

 

Making Music 

1 - 3 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the LHS Top of the Bay Family Sundays, Fran Holland will demonstrate how to make and play musical instruments. Museum admission $3 - $7. 642-5132 

 

International Working Class 

Film and Video Festival 

2 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, a screening of “Not In My Garden,” a documentary about a Palestinian village in Israel. $7. 849-2568 

— compiled by Guy Poole  

 

Maybeck Homes 

1 - 4:30 p.m. 

#1 Maybeck Twin Drive 

Open house of four nearby homes accompanied by short talks on the character of Maybeck’s homes. A reception, raffle, and silent auction will be part of the afternoon activities. Limited space, call 845-7714 for registration. 


Letters to the Editor

Wednesday July 25, 2001

Bush tax relief is just not enough 

 

Dear Editor: 

 

Various letters to the editor have suggested what to do with the Bush tax refund. 

July 19, I received IRS Notice 1275. In big red letters is titled “Notice of Status and Amount of Immediate Tax Relief.” Then it says, “Dear Taxpayer:, blah, blah, blah. ... As part of immediate tax relief, you will be receiving a check in the amount of $13.50 during the week of 07/30/2001.” Then there is more information. 

I do not know if I received the “incorrect” IRS notice or the “correct” IRS notice. In either case, I will have to think long and hard what to do with my $13.50. Lets see, it will not pay my PG&E bill; or Pacific Telephone; or EBMUD. I suppose I could go to Starbucks and buy a pound of coffee. But since I am disabled, I guess I better apply the money toward a prescription. It might be nice to not have to make the decision of whether or not I eat or get my medication. 

If I really do get check for $13.50, the federal government has probably spent more than that in getting it out to me. 

What kind of logic is that? That is a waste of taxpayer’s money. 

 

John G. Cakars 

Berkeley  

 

Worthington could do two jobs if elected to state Assembly 

 

The Daily Planet received this lettter addressed to Councilmember Kriss Worthington: 

 

It’s great that you’re looking at a run at a state legislative seat, and you can definitely count on my enthusiastic if mostly symbolic support, (Can I send a few local faxes to help your prospective campaign?). 

The council would suffer from your absence, and the warm pool remodel may fall into a slough of despond. The only practical solution may be to pass an emergency measure so you can hold both posts simultaneously. I know it means extra work for you, but I’ve full confidence you can swing it! 

Meantime, keep up the good work.  

 

Terry Cochrell 

Berkeley 

City Manager did a good job 

 

Editor: 

 

I recently wrote a letter to the Daily Planet which I regret in part because I was critical of the City Manager based on my expectation that past behavior predicted future behavior. I am both happy and embarrassed to say that in this case I was wrong.  

I have been quite critical of city staff, and I feel it has been constructive. But, when someone does something good I think it’s important to recognize it.  

Mr. Rucker, our city manager, got his report on the cellular moratorium out about four days before the hearing on the 17th. It helped to have the information as it corrected a misconception I had and which found its way into my last letter to the Planet. So, though I am only in partial agreement with the recommendations, I want to thank Rucker for the good work on this report. We need the information to be good citizens, and we need it in time to digest it and to respond before things are acted on.  

 

Leonard Schwartzburd 

Berkeley 

 

 

Let’s create our own personal pedestrian pledge 

 

Editor: 

 

I believe Harlan Head (in his July 18 Planet letter) hit the nail on the head as far as community use of Berkeley’s limited resource of streets and sidewalks. We all share those resources whether we are traveling by foot or by various configurations of wheels and/or power.  

My wife and I have many years experience as car-less pedestrians, bicyclists and public transit users. Till now I have all too often decided the “to cross or not to cross” question by my interpretation of traffic patterns rather than by signs and lights.  

No more, Harlan. I pledge to join my wife in her habit of observing and respecting all traffic signs and lights whether I think I have a “good reason” for ignoring them or not. I shall have to struggle with two places on my morning newspaper route where I think middle-of-the-block crossing is almost required.  

Here is my Personal Berkeley Pedestrian Pledge: I pledge to be courteous and respectful to my sister and brother pedestrians and wheeled friends and to obey all traffic laws and regulations. If I find myself forgetting this pledge, I shall begin again.  

Please, Berkeleyans, and other folks passing through, feel free to create your own Personal Berkeley Pedestrian Pledge. The lives we save and the damages we avoid may be our own.  

 

Bill Trampleasure 

Berkeley 

 

Do not give any support to Reddy’s Pasand  

Editor: 

 

We support the letter written to Daily Planet by Dr. Diana Russell about the outrageously minimal sentence received by Lakireddy Reddy as a result of his guilty plea bargain. He should have received the maximum of 38 years as punishment for his crimes of sex trafficking of young girls for 15 years, enslaving and raping them.  

What is not known by the general public, but discussed by the Judge at the court sentencing, is that Reddy engaged also in attempts to obstruct justice. He attempted to bribe the young women he had raped (who had returned to India) not to return to testify against him. The young women told U.S. Department of Justice that they feared that their relatives would be killed if they testified. Department of Justice arranged for the women and their close relatives to return to U.S. into protective custody. They will be available to testify at the court trials of Reddy’s sons and for the civil trial that many of the women will bring against Reddy and the sons. During the sentencing hearing, the Judge also spoke of the tremendous harm which the raped women had endured and the psychological help they will need.  

As for the so-called “innocent” workers at Pasand Restaurant, if the police had done an adequate investigation at the scene on night of Nov. 24, 1999 when Reddy and others from Pasand Restaurant were interrupted in their get-away by Marcia Poole, the “innocent” workers from the restaurant could have been indicted for their part in attempting to cover up negligent homicide or as accessories to a murder conspiracy. The workers a Pasand’s, on call to Reddy, who ran to help Reddy cover up his plot to carry away the women, should have been indicted.  

In May, 2001, the Berkeley City Council voted to support, and to ask all citizens of Berkeley, to support the boycott of Pasand Restaurant.  

We ask you not to give your money to support the Reddys.  

 

BJ Miller 

Marcia Poole 

Grace Christie 

Jill Hutchby 

Charlotte Collins 

Carol De Witt 

 

Berkeley 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Arts & Entertainment

Wednesday July 25, 2001

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 26: Keni “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Aug 1: Whiskey Brothers. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 25: 8:00 p.m. perfect Strangers $10; July 26: 9:00 p.m. Super Rail band $16; July 27: 8:00 p.m. Ali Khan Band $15; July 28: 9:30 p.m. Motordude Zydeco and Brass Monkey $11; July 29: 9:00 p.m. El Hadj N’ Diaye $10; July 31: 8:00 p.m. dance lesson with Dana DeSimone, 9:00 p.m. Steve Riley and Mamou Playboys $12; Aug. 5: 9 p.m. Roots Reggae featuring Groundation and Tchiya Amet. $10. 11317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Split Shankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. July 26: Radney Foster, Darden Smith; July 27: Otis Taylor; July 28: Street Sounds; July 29: Tish Hinojosa; Aug 1: Distant Oaks; Aug 2: George Kuo, Narin Pahinui & Aaron Mahi; Aug 3: Wylie & the Wild West, the Waller Brothers, Aug 4: Adam Levy, Will Bernard. $16.50 - $17.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter July 25: Suite 304- vocal harmony-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 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; Aug 3: 8 p.m. Los Delicados, Aya de Leon $10; Aug 4: 8 p.m. Grito Serpentino, Small Axe Project, Jime Salcedo-Malo & Leticia Hernandez $10; Aug 5: 7 p.m. Insight in concert $10. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool 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 26: 7:30 p.m. Christie McCarthy, Liz Pisco, Antara and Delilah, Amber Jade. $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 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  

 

“Downtown” restaurant and bar August 6: 7 p.m. Jesse Colin Young of the sixties hit group, The Youngbloods, will be performing at a No Nukes evening, sponsored by Greenpeace. The evening commemorates the 56th anniversary of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The proceeds go to Tri-Valley CAREs and Citizen Alert. Tickets are $100. 2102 Shattuck Ave. 800-728-6223 

 

The Greek Theatre Aug. 3 and Aug. 4, 7 p.m. The String Cheese Incident, $29.75. Hearst Avenue and Gayley Road 444-TIXS, or (415) 421-TIXS www.sfx.com 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts July 29: 2:00 p.m. “Into the Eye of Magic! An Asian Folk Tale” interactive musical and theatrical production for families. Adults $10 Children $5; Aug 4: 8 p.m. “Cuatro maestros Touring Festival” two-hour theatrical event of music and dance performed by four elder folk artists and their talented young counterparts. Adults $18 Children $12; Aug. 10: 7:30 p.m. & Aug. 11, 12, 5 p.m. Campers from Stage Door Conservatory’s “On Broadway” program for grades 5-9 will perform Fiddler on the Roof, Jr. $12 adults, $8 kids. (For info call 527-5939); 2640 College Avenue 845-8542 ext. 302 

 

“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 

 

“Human Nature” the X-Plicit Players explore intimate but un-named ways of being together, awaken senses old and new and participate in Group Body. July 28: 8:30 p.m. $15 Metaversal Lightcraft 1708 University 848-1985 

 

“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 

 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 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 

 

“Loot” Through Aug 25, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7:00 p.m. Special Performance Aug 20, 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15, Students / Seniors: $10 La Val’s 1834 Euclid Avenue 655-0813 

 

“Orphans” Through Aug. 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 

 

“Reefer Madness” a new one-act theatre piece adapted from a 1936 government-funded film opens a critical eye to the control of our society. Performed by The Elemental Theatre Group Wed Aug 8,22, Thu Aug 9,23: 9 p.m. La Peña Cultural Center 3105 Shattuck Avenue. Wednesdays “pay what you can”, thursdays $5 - $10. Fri Aug 10,17: 7 p.m. People’s Park Free. Contact Zachary Rouse or Tisha Sloan for more info at 655-4150 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Avenue. 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 

 

La Peña Cultural Center 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 25: 7:30 p.m., “Spider Baby 2000”; July 29: Family Classic “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”; $4. Sundays, 3 p.m.; July 26: 7:00 Devarim, 9:10 Yom Yom; July 27: 7:00 Punishment Room, 8:55 Ten Dark Women; July 28: 7:00 The Big Heat, 8:30 Kippur, 8:50 Clash by Night; July 29: 3:00 A Boy named Charlie Brown, 5:30 Mr. Pu, 7:30 A Billionaire; July 31: 7:30 The Arena of Murder; Aug 1: 7:30 Two Thousand Maniacs!, 9:15 Manos, the Hands of Fate 8:50 Hangmen Also Die New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival at Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley July 28: 1 p.m. The Optimists: the story of the rescue of the Jews of Bulgaria, 3:30 p.m. “Louba’s Ghosts”, 6:15 p.m. “One of the Hollywood Ten”, 8:30 p.m. “Kippur”; July 29: 11 a.m. “Keys from Spain”, “The Cross Inscribed in the Star of David”, 1 p.m. “Intimate Stranger”, “Nobody’s Business”, 4 p.m. “The Sweetest Sound”, 6 p.m. “Once We Grow Up”, 8:30 p.m. “Total Love”, “Moses vs. Godzilla”;General admission: $8.50, Matinees (up to and including 4 p.m.): $7, Students/Seniors/Groups: $6.50. (925)866-9559 http://www.sfjff.org 

 

“7th annual Brainwash Movie Festival” outdoors Aug 3,4,5: (bring a chair) at the Pyramid Ale brewery, 901 Gilman Street 527-9090 ext. 218. Festival Pass: $30, Individual tickets: online: $8, door: $10 

 

Cody’s Books July 26: Dave Egger’s presentation has been canceled. $2 donation. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s Books July 25: Alice Randall reads from “The Wind Done Gone.” $2 donation. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cafe de la Paz “Poetry Nitro” Weekly poetry open mike. July 30: Featuring Lisa Sikie. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series August 7: Featured readers JC and Bert Glick. 7-9 p.m.; August 21: Featured Readers: Victoria Joyce and Therese Bamberger; Both 7-9 p.m. Free. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland for info. (510)465-3935 or (510)526-5985, or Email: ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

 

 

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  

 

 

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.  

“How Big Is the Universe?” Aug. 1 through Aug. 24. Learn how to determine the distance of celestial objects, one of the purposes of the Hubble Space Telescope. Daily, 2:15 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, 642-5132 or www.lhs.berkeley.edu 

 

 

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. 

 


Juvenile Hall decision disrupted

By Jon Mays Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 25, 2001

Nine protesters chanting “Books not bars, schools not jails” were arrested Tuesday for disrupting a public hearing in front of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors on whether a 450-bed Juvenile Hall should be built in Dublin.  

After a vote that essentially gave the new Juvenile Hall the green light, the nine broke through a hip-level wooden gate that separates the county staff from the audience and laid down on the floor with their arms entwined. About 30 supporters chanted in front of them – separated by the gate and 11 Sheriff deputies.  

After 20 minutes, a few of the 11 Sheriff’s deputies present pulled up the protesters – who did not resist – one by one and arrested them behind the chamber’s closed doors.  

The group was arrested for unlawful assembly, County Undersheriff Curtis Watson said. 

The arrests came at the end of an emotional four and half hour debate between those who said that the new facility is long overdue and much needed and those who say bigger jails would mean more youth incarceration.  

Supervisors voted 3-2 against a proposal by Supervisor Keith Carson to study the issue for an additional 90 days. During the study, Carson suggested that the county look at the need for additional juvenile facilities as opposed to intervention and prevention services.  

They also voted 4-1 to reduce the capacity of the new hall from 540 to 450 beds and conduct a review of the county’s juvenile justice system to identify alternatives to incarceration. 

Although the county has wanted to replace the aging 299-bed Juvenile Hall in San Leandro for ten years, Carson’s proposal suggested they try to squeeze in the additional study without losing $33 million in state grant money. The grant requires that the new facility be constructed by 2005.  

A needs assessment study using data from 1992 to 1997 was conducted by a firm that county officials admitted will also take part of the facility’s construction. County officials also included four additional years of data on the average daily population. That data indicated that a 450-bed facility would meet the county’s needs, according to a county report.  

Moving and expanding the facility would impact Berkeley residents in several ways. Without question, parents of incarcerated youth would have to travel farther for visits. Opponents of the facility also say that instead of using scarce resources for jail construction, the money would be better spent on schools or intervention programs throughout the county.  

“Youth need programs. We need recreation centers. We need affordable places to live and good schools. I don’t think the board is setting a very good example. If people need help, you don’t build a bigger box to put them in,” said Claire Tran, of Asian Pacific Islander Youth Promoting Advocacy and Leadership. 

At Berkeley High School, for instance, officials say there’s room for the county to play a bigger role in providing mental health services on campus.  

Others said that there has been sufficient study and that it would be paid for with state money specifically for this type of construction. Not building the facility, they said, would be equal to throwing the money away. 

“This is single-source money. If it’s not being used to build a juvenile facility, it’s simply going to go back,” said James Sweeney, of the Juvenile Justice Coordinating Council. “They use statistics the way a drunk man uses a lamp post – for support. We’ve been studying the problem to death. S—, make a decision. We’ve been hemming and hawing.” 

Opponents of the project said the larger facility would mean more aggressive police activity towards young people. 

“450 beds is still too big for this community. Other communities this size have much smaller facilities. It’s extreme, it’s unnecessary and it’s ridiculous,” said Michael Molina, who was later one of the group arrested. “If they build it, they will fill it. No way should we give them more reason to be more aggressive than they already are.” 

However, Brenda Harbin-Forte, presiding judge of the Alameda County Juvenile Court, said the notion the rhetoric about the hall being the largest per capita facility of its kind is false.  

“Let’s stop, build a 440-bed facility and let’s spend the rest of the time looking at our services,” she said. “Let’s take a courageous step and plan for the future.” 

Van Jones, national executive director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, organized the public opposition to the larger facility and said the decision to move forward with the, as he put it, “the Super Jail” will not be ignored. 

“We’re disappointed. Every one of those supervisors said they would have a study,” Jones said. “This is the first sit-in of many over the over-incarceration of young people in general.” 


Disabled traveler lodges complaint against airline

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday July 25, 2001

Air travel for the average person has become increasingly inconvenient with the rising number of reported complaints against airlines for overbooked flights, delayed departures and lost luggage. 

But for Berkeley resident Michai Freeman, who has muscular dystrophy and relies on a wheelchair and ventilator, poor service can quickly turn from inconvenience to a major disruption in her life. 

When Freeman and her  

husband Nicolas Wagele arrived at San Francisco International Airport for their 3 p.m., TWA flight to Milwaukee, she was told she couldn’t board the plane because no qualified personnel was available to inspect her ventilator equipment before take-off. 

Freeman was forced to cancel her journey to a three-day conference at which she was to be certified as a doula, an emotional support counselor for pregnant families. 

“I have been training to become a doula, and this trip was to be the last leg of the certification process,” Freeman said. “Which is of course out of the question now.” 

Freeman said her next opportunity for certification will be in October. 

TWA spokesperson Chris Kelly said airline employees tried to accommodate Freeman by arranging a later flight but she refused. Kelly said if she had boarded the plane without the ventilator being inspected, the airline would of been in violation of Federal Aviation Administration regulations, which requires that ventilators and respirators be inspected because of safety concerns during flight. 

Kelly said there was no record of Freeman giving the airline advance notice about her ventilator use. That notice would of given the airline time to arrange for an engineer to be present and approve the breathing device for air travel, according to Kelly. 

Freeman insists that when she made the reservations three weeks before, she informed TWA, which was recently purchased by American Airlines, that she need assistance boarding and that she would be traveling with her PVO 100 ventilator. She said she was assured there should be no problem. 

“I don’t see how they could say I did not tell them,” Freeman said. “I booked the flight with the longest layover available so I would have time between flights to get organized and was very specific about bringing the ventilator.” 

Sherri Rita, an attorney with the Disability Rights, Education and Defense Fund said she hears a great many complaints about airlines not complying with the Air Carrier Access Act of 1986, which is the FAA version of the American With Disabilities Act. 

“There’s a whole spectrum of problems. For instance, passengers tell airlines they require assistance planing and deplaning and when they arrive at the airport they discover there’s no one available to help them.” Rita said. “There are also many complaints specifically with about wheelchair damage.”  

According to the Department of Transportation’s most recent Air Travel Consumer Report, there were a total of 215 disability complaints against American air carriers from January through March. 

United Airlines has the greatest number of complaints at 24, US Airways has 20. TWA is low on the list with six disability-related complaints. American Airlines, the company that just purchased TWA, is third on the list with 18 complaints. 

Rita said those numbers represent a small percentage of violations of the Air Carrier Access Act.  

“Many people aren’t sure where to complain or don’t think it’s worth the effort,” she said. 

The airlines, she said, have demonstrated an unwillingness to provide quality service to the disabled. 

“There seems the airlines don’t take their obligation seriously,” she said. “The fact that people consistently complain that they call and ask for boarding assistance and then when they arrive there’s no one to help them and no record of the request, is a sign that there’s a total lack of communication.” 

Kelly said TWA personal did what they could to get Freeman to her destination, and her passenger record shows the airlines even bent the rules a bit to get an engineer to the terminal to inspect her ventilator so she could get on the red-eye flight to Milwaukee. 

Kelly said the ADA prevents airlines from asking passengers the nature of their disability when making reservations and that all Freeman’s passenger record shows is that she requested assistance boarding and deplaning, which left the airline unprepared for Freeman’s arrival. 

“She didn’t tell us anything about a wheelchair or about her ventilator,” she said. 

Freeman said she is considering a law suit against TWA. 

“I’m definitely going to pursue this incident in the courts,” she said. “People have been compromising for too long.” 

For more information about the Air Carriers Access Act of 1986 and your rights while traveling go to www.dot.gov or call the Department of Transportation at 202-366-4000, hearing Impaired TTD: 202-755-7687.


Alta Bates says it will cut 300 jobs

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Wednesday July 25, 2001

Alta Bates Summit Medical Center announced last week it will cut about 300 jobs throughout California by the end of the summer to stop their on-going financial hemorrhage. 

“The medical center continues to experience major financial losses every month,” said Irwin Hansen, president and CEO of the Alta Bates Summit Medical Center. “The magnitude of our shortfall is far beyond what we expected. We must immediately address this critical situation.” 

Health care workers worry that this decision may put the hospital’s services under strain. 

“There is not a decline in their census,” said John Borsos, hospital division director of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). “The hospital is already short of staff. We have strong concerns about who is going to do the work.” 

In the past year, Alta Bates Summit Medical Center, which was formed when Alta Bates and Summit merged in December 1999, has lost $19 million. Hansen said it could lose as much as $40 million in 2001 if it does not take quick measures. Sutter Health, a company that runs 33 hospitals in Northern California, took over the hospital after the merger. 

The labor reduction, Hansen said, is expected to allow the company to save $15 million. To cut expenses, Alta Bates Summit will also re-evaluate open positions, and adopt a series of management changes. 

“We are also doing some changes looking at supply, standardization and bad debt,” said Jill Gruen, a spokesperson for the hospital.  

The financial loss is the result of a combination of factors, according to Gruen. A few months ago, Alta Bates experienced unexpected expenses when employees went on a series of one-day strikes. As a result, the company agreed to raise the wage of 60 percent of its employees within four years. Additionally, a nursing shortage forced the hospital to bring in expensive temporary nurses. Finally, Gruen said, the company lost a large amount of money due to the unpaid patient bills. 

It is not clear how many jobs will be lost at Berkeley’s Alta Bates Medical Center. But Gruen said the action plan to be implemented by mid-August will try to avoid the lay-off of full-time employees.  

“We’re trying to look into registry nurses and replacement,” she said. “Eligible employees will be offered early retirement.” 

SEIU Local 250 immediately reacted to Hansen’s announcement, denying the hospital’s claims that the lay-off was the result of unpredicted financial losses. 

“Executives’ claims that these cuts were caused by recent financial shortfalls are merely a smokescreen – part of an effort to try to win the public acceptance of [the] cutbacks,” said Sal Rosselli, president of SEIU Local 250 last Friday in a prepared statement. 

According to Rosselli, this is just another example of Sutter Health’s policy of slashing services. 

“When they take over one hospital and merge it, they eliminate services and reduce access to care just to take dollars out of the health care system to fill their corporate expenses,” Rosselli said in a telephone interview.  

Sutter Health, union leaders say, had planned job cuts for more than two years. They base their accusation on a Sutter Health planning document from June 1999. The document includes an action plan proposal that would cut 5.67 of the Medical Records Department positions. 

To Gruen, however, that document does not prove anything.  

“The document was never a management plan. It was never used to make a decision,” said Gruen. 

SEIU Local 250 hasn’t been notified of any lay-offs yet, but some are meeting to discuss strategies in fighting the cutbacks. 

“Workers of Alta Bates and Summit Medical Center are in a strategy planning session to make sure that the interest of patients and workers come before profits,” said union spokesperson Dave Bates yesterday afternoon. 

The union, Bates said, may avoid lay-offs by documenting the hospital’s shortstaffing. It is also looking at ways to make Sutter avoid lay-offs by retraining workers for other jobs, he added.


Oakland cuts allowable medical pot plant gardens by 50 percent

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 25, 2001

OAKLAND — The City Council voted Tuesday night cut in half the number of plants a medical marijuana grower can cultivate – but left the limit at a still sizable garden of up to 72 plants. 

The vote cuts the legal limit from its current 144 plants. 

Council President Ignacio De La Fuente wanted to chop the crop to 10 plants, but hashed out a compromise with local medical marijuana advocates. The new rules passed on a 6-0 vote, with two members abstaining. 

Medical marijuana advocates said the stricter limits mean about 20 percent of local medical marijuana users will not be able to grow enough pot to meet their needs. 

“The reason we agreed is because we were forced to,” Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative, told the Oakland Tribune. 

Oakland approved the 144 plant limit in 1998. With the changes, people who get a doctor’s recommendation to use marijuana for their illnesses can grow 20 plants outdoors. Alternatively, they could grow on up to 32 square feet of inside space — enough for about 72 small plants or around 60 mature plants. 

Outdoor marijuana plants produce an average yield around 5 ounces in California annually, according to a city staff report. The report said indoor plants can produce up to 3 ounces and be harvested three times a year.


Jury blasts school district

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 25, 2001

OAKLAND — The Alameda County grand jury has recommended that the county board of education be eliminated or run by a financial expert after officials in one school district mishandled money. 

In its annual report released Monday, the 20-member panel said the Emeryville Unified School District’s former superintendent, J.L. Handy, should have been stopped sooner by the board after they discovered he charged nearly $65,000 in personal airline tickets, hotel rooms and other gifts on the district’s credit card. 

Handy resigned last fall and pleaded guilty last month to charges of felony public theft and conflict of interest. 

The panel criticized the school board for continuing to loan money to the district after discovering the credit card expenses. 

County’s schools superintendent, Sheila Jordan, said she thought the panel’s assessment was unfair. 

“I really think the grand jury didn’t do their homework,” Jordan said. “As soon as it became evident there was potential fraud in Emeryville, we brought in the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team. But until that point, I can’t go in and fire someone based on allegations.” 

The grand jury has recommended that the state legislature eliminate the Alameda County Board of Education or require that the board elect a county superintendent who’s a fiscal and management expert. 


Stocks tumble, Dow drops on bad earnings news

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 25, 2001

NEW YORK — Stock prices dropped sharply Tuesday with the Dow industrials tumbling by triple digits for a second day on a spate of bad news – a wider-than-expected loss from Lucent Technologies, lower profits from Exxon Mobil and revenue warnings from Amazon.com and AT&T. 

“Pretty much all of Corporate America has said the same thing: Second quarter was bad and we don’t know what to say about the future,” said Arthur Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co. 

Investors have been unable to justify buying stocks while most companies say business isn’t improving. A long list of firms have warned of shrinking profits and slumping sales, and others have said they cannot make accurate projections amid uncertainty about the economy. 

“No one feels they are going to miss a raging bull market if they wait another few weeks for signs of a recovery,” Hogan said. 

Even the prospect of another interest rate cut failed to boost stocks because investors now believe further cuts mean the economy is worse off than they thought. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who testified before the Senate Banking Committee Tuesday, said another rate reduction might be made if the economy doesn’t improve. 

“It is going to take a while to bottom,” said Barry Berman, head trader for Robert W. Baird & Co. in Milwaukee.  

“The market was also hoping that as the second-quarter earnings were reported that there would be more guidance (for the future) and that things are starting to pick up.” 

Investors have been hoping in vain for an economic turnaround since late last year. They believed a recovery would happen in the first three months of 2001, and when that didn’t happen, they focused on the second quarter. Now, hopes for improvement by yearend have waned as companies have slashed revenue and earnings outlooks. 

“The timing is anybody’s guess,” said A.C. Moore, chief investment strategist at Dunvegan Associates in Santa Barbara,.  

Among Tuesday’s losers were companies whose earnings disappointed Wall Street. Lucent slid nearly 19 percent, down $1.47 at $6.43, after announcing it lost 35 cents a share in its fiscal third quarter, wider than the 21 cents analysts expected. The struggling telecom firm also announced plans to cut another 15,000 to 20,000 jobs and eliminate its dividend in an effort to return to profitability. 

Dow industrial Exxon Mobil fell $1.53 at $40.97 on earnings that missed Wall Street’s expectations by 2 cents a share. 

While past earnings are important, analysts say investors are more concerned with what companies have to say about the future – the market’s real weak spot. 

A bleak outlook from Amazon caused the Internet retailer to plunge nearly 25 percent, down $3.97 at $12.06. Amazon, which announced earnings late Monday ahead of expectations, projected 2001 revenue growth of 11 percent to 16 percent, down from previous estimates of 20 percent to 30 percent. AT&T, a Dow component, fell 59 cents to $19.46, after also issuing a revenue warning. 

Losses were sizable and spread across an array of sectors Tuesday. About half of the Dow’s 30 stocks lost more than $1. There were few gainers, another sign that investors believe the economy has hurt most businesses. 

Among the advancers was McDonald’s, which issued bullish statements about growth for the remainder of the year and rose 62 cents to $28.39. Honeywell, which surpassed earnings estimates by 2 cents a share, inched up 4 cents to $36.21. Only two other Dow stocks moved higher — Procter & Gamble advanced 29 cents to $68.09, while Wal-Mart eked out 7 cents to close at $53.10. 

Declining issues outnumbered advancers more than 7 to 3 on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume came to 1.41 billion shares, ahead of the 1.17 billion shares traded Monday. 

The Russell 2000 index, the gauge of smaller company stocks, fell 8.44, or 1.8 percent, to 474.26. 

Overseas markets were mixed Tuesday. Japan’s Nikkei stock average finished the day up 2.4 percent. In Europe, however, Germany’s DAX index fell 2.0 percent, France’s CAC-40 declined 1.2 percent and Britain’s FT-SE 100 lost 1.6 percent. 

——— 

On the Net: 

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com 

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com 


Senate schedules new hearings for Microsoft monopoly probe

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 25, 2001

WASHINGTON — The Senate Judiciary Committee will examine whether Microsoft is improperly shutting out rivals and hurting consumers, wading into an antitrust dispute as the company prepares to the new version of its Windows operating system. 

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the committee chairman, announced Tuesday that he will hold investigatory hearings in the fall, spurning a request from the software giant to keep Congress out of the dispute. 

Meanwhile, another Democrat stepped up pressure to stop Microsoft’s release of Windows XP, slated for October. 

“I hope (Windows XP) will be delayed by Microsoft’s own doing, and if not, by law,” said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., a member of the Judiciary Committee. 

Schumer wrote to Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer, asking him to delay the release until the company changes Windows XP to make it easier for rivals to compete against it. 

If Microsoft won’t cooperate, Schumer said, he wants some of the 18 states that have sued the software giant to go to court to force a delay. 

At issue is Microsoft’s decision to bundle several new features with Windows XP that can replace software made by rivals, including programs for digital photography, instant messaging and streaming media. 

Critics, including some state attorneys general, suggest the strategy might lessen consumers’ choices and thwart free competition. 

Schumer said he’ll use the hearing this fall to ask Ballmer why the company won’t “let consumers choose the best application, rather than letting Microsoft choose Microsoft applications for them.” 

Microsoft has said it is simply trying to add features that consumers want. 

But Anthony Sanzio, spokesman for Rochester, N.Y.-based Eastman Kodak, said an early version of Windows XP forced Kodak camera owners to run Microsoft’s photo software. Sanzio also protested that Windows XP doesn’t point consumers to Kodak’s photo printing services. Schumer said his concern was sparked by Kodak’s troubles. 

Microsoft spokesman Vivek Varma said it has addressed Kodak’s concerns. Kodak’s software now appears on Windows XP, he said, and the companies are close to finalizing a photo printing deal. 

Microsoft associate general counsel Jack Krumholtz dismissed Schumer’s criticism, saying the long-awaited release of Windows XP is important to spurring a sluggish economy. 

“The timely launch of Windows XP is critical to re-ignite the PC industry in the United States,” Krumholtz wrote in a letter to the New York senator. 

Microsoft also complained that Schumer’s office canceled a Tuesday demonstration in which Microsoft was going to show him how Windows XP works. Krumholtz said Schumer canceled the meeting Monday evening and held a press conference instead. Schumer blamed the cancellation on a schedule conflict. 

Windows XP is slated to reach stores in October, but will be sent to computer manufacturers as early as August so it can be installed on new computers. 

Last week, Microsoft tried to dissuade Leahy from holding hearings. In a letter to Leahy obtained by The Associated Press, Microsoft lobbyist Jack Quinn blamed the states, saying, “The committee should not sit in judgment of particular matters or entertain hearings that promote the biases of particular litigants.” 

In June, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled Microsoft had operated as an illegal monopoly that harmed consumers, but reversed U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson’s order that the company be broken into two parts. 

Since then, Microsoft and the Justice Department have met to discuss possible guidelines for settlement talks. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Microsoft: http://www.microsoft.com 

Sen. Charles Schumer: http://schumer.senate.gov 

Eastman Kodak: http://www.kodak.com 


Retirement program could drain police department

By John Geluardi
Tuesday July 24, 2001

The City Council is expected to approve a new police retirement package tonight that might entice veteran officers to leave the department – forcing the city into a competitive job market for new recruits. 

The retirement program, approved by the state assembly in 1999, will allow police officers to retire on their 50th birthday with 3 percent of their salary for every year they have worked. Though the program is state approved, each municipality must negotiate the program individually. According to the office of Peace Officer Standards and Training, only 40 out of 500 police departments have so far negotiated the retirement package. 

Berkeley police officials said 40 percent of the force could possibly retire over the next three years. 

“ There could be as many as 10 to 12 the first year with an accelerated retirement rate in the following two years,” said Capt. Doug Hambleton, who has been spent much of his career recruiting police officers.  

Currently the Berkeley Police Department has 194 sworn officers and is considered a full capacity at 204.  

If the council approves the retirement plan as expected, it won’t go into effect until the city reaches agreement with the Berkeley Police Association on an entire union package, which has been presented to the BPA and will be voted on Thursday. 

BPA President Randolph Files said there is a good chance the police union won’t approve the union agreement as a whole.  

“ I think it’s safe to say the current package is not looked upon favorably by the union membership,” Files said. 

If they chose not to accept the current offer, the earliest the 3 Percent at Fifty program could go into effect is late September when the City Council, which has to approve the plan, reconvenes after its summer recess. 

But there is no doubt that once the package is approved the retirement plan will be a part of it. 

If there is a large exodus of veteran officers from the force, Berkeley will be in position of having to recruit new officers from a “shallowing pool” of potential officers statewide. 

In fact, departments throughout the state have been having so much trouble recruiting officers that the state office of Peace Officer Standards and Training has studied the issue and is holding a symposium in Bakersfield today and Wednesday. The symposium will offer advice on how to identify, attract and retain law enforcement officers. 

POST Commissioner Lori Lee, who will be presenting information at the symposium, said law enforcement recruiters will get advice on everything from creating web sites to learning how to promote the individual culture of their agencies. 

Lee said people are choosing law enforcement jobs for a variety of reasons that are not always related to salary.  

“ Some people want to work for a busy department where they go from call to call to call,” she said. “ others will chose based on commute time or the area’s cost of living.” 

Hambleton said keeping the Berkeley Police Department fully staffed even in a noncompetitive job market is a tough job. He said retirement, resignation or officers taking other jobs with other departments is a common occurrence. 

“ Keeping the department fully staffed is like trying to hit a moving target,” he said. “ As long as I’ve been recruiting I’ve only seen the department fully staffed once.” 

Hambleton said Berkeley has joined other police departments in the Bay Area such as Oakland and San Francisco in taking a more aggressive approach to recruiting such as marching in the Pride parade and advertising in a wider variety of newspapers.  

“ Before we only used to advertise in the Chronicle, now we advertise in Sacramento, San Jose and Fresno,” he said.  

He said they have also started advertising in Spanish speaking and Asian community papers. 

Hambleton said they had experimented by handing out recruitment flyers at sporting events such as Cal basketball games.  

Hambleton said Berkeley police officers are required to have special skills that aren’t necessarily taught in a police academy. He said Berkeley is a very diverse community that is known for political unrest and police officers have to be able to deal with a great variety of situations. 

One technique the department has used, according to Hambleton, is to advertise in the teacher and nurse sections of the want ads.  

“ Teachers and nurses are more likely to be professional, care about people and be interested in public service,” Hambleton said. 

In addition, Berkeley police officers start at $57,000 a year compared to the average teachers’ salary, which starts at an average of $37,000. 

Hambleton said the Berkeley Police Department people from as many different backgrounds as possible with two years of college study and some work experience. 

“We want to hire caring people with good person to person skills and good solid working experience but not from any particular field,” he said.  

For more information about how to become a Berkeley police officer call 981-5977 and to apply, call the city Personnel Department at 981-6888. 

 


Guy Poole and Sabrina Forkish
Tuesday July 24, 2001


Tuesday, July 24

 

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 

 

Round-the-World Journey 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

Brad Newsham, author of “Take Me With You: A Round-the-World Journey to Invite a Stranger Home,” will present a talk and slide show. Newsham took a 100-day trip through the Philippines, India, Egypt, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa looking for a stranger to bring to America. Free. 843-3533 

 

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 

 

“Temp Slave, The Musical” 

7:30 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Part of LaborFest 2001, a musical about the lives of temps. $12. 

849-2568 

 

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 

 

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 25

 

Toymaker Day 

Noon - 2 p.m. 

Lawrence Hall of Science 

UC Berkeley 

Part of the Lawrence Hall of Science Wednesday FUN-days. Make toys out of recycled materials with artists from the East Bay Depot for Creative Reuse. Museum admission $3 - $7. 

642-5132 

 


Thursday, July 26

 

Summer Noon Concerts 2001 

Noon - 1 p.m. 

Downtown Berkeley BART Plaza 

Shattuck at Center St. 

Weekly concert series. This week The Brazilian Workshop under the direction of Marcos Silva, Jazzschool students perform traditional Brazilian music. 

 

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:  

quitnow@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Wilderness First Aid 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment, Inc. 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Jim Morrisey, senior instructor at Wilderness Medical Associates, will teach you the basics of field repair for the human body: Blisters, wounds, fractures, lightning strikes, snake bites and more. Free. 

527-4140 

 

Ancient Native Sites of the  

East Bay 

7:30 p.m. 

Room 160 Kroeber Hall, University of California Campus 

Andrew Galvan, an Ohlone Indian and co-owner of Archaeor, will discuss and share the benefits of osteological studies of prehistoric human skeletal remains. Prof. Ed Luby, research archaeologist for the Berkeley Natural History Museums, will discuss his work on mortuary feasting practices. $10 

841-2242 

 

Southeast Asia and Japan 

7:30 p.m. 

Easy Going Travel Shop and Bookstore 

1385 Shattuck Avenue 

William Ford, author of “Southeast Asia and Japan: Unusual Travel,” will present a talk and slide show of his adventure travels. Free. 

843-3533 

 

Return of the Zapatour 

7 p.m. 

La Peña Cultural Center 

3105 Shattuck Avenue 

Members of the Chiapas Support Committee report on their trip to Chiapas, including slides and videos. $8 - $15. 

849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Business Information and 

Networking Event 

6:30 - 9:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis (corner of Ashby) 

Sponsored by the City of Berkeley in partnership with the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, and both the South and West Berkeley Neighborhood Development Corporations. The event will include such topics as “Starting a Business,” “Legal Issues,” “Planning for Growth,” “Financing,” and “Permitting.” The event is free to all who register. Refreshments and door prizes. To register call 549-7003 (English or Spanish).  

 

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 

 

Women, Menopause, and  

Change 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

YWCA 

2600 Bancroft Way 

Learn how other women manage the changes menopause brings to their lives. Free yoga demonstration. 233-6484 

 

Cuban Workers and Trade Unions Today 

6 - 8:30 p.m. 

Director’s Lounge 

Institute of Industrial Relations 

2521 Channing Way 

Speakers Kamran Nayeri and Bobbie Rabinowitz, sponsored by University and Technical Employees. Music, photo exhibit and literature. 

 

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 27

 

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. This is a free weekly cultural studies course in the Berkeley Adult School’s Older Adults Program. Free. 

Call 549-2970 

 


Saturday, July 28

 

Residential Solar Electricity 

1 p.m. - 3 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

This workshop will introduce participants to residential solar electricity. How solar cells work, how to size a system, participants will also get to produce electricity using photovoltaic panels and power a range of appliances (weather permitting). $15. Call 548-2220 x233 to reserve a space.  

 


Brower Building proposal is a real opportunity for the arts

George Coates By George Coates By George Coates By George Coates
Tuesday July 24, 2001

The Berkeley City Council can rightly be applauded for the effort it has made to help fund the expansion of some local arts groups seeking to locate new facilities downtown to develop their audiences.  

But when the bulk of city arts funding is limited to only a few single occupant buildings that cannot be shared with other arts groups, an alternative downtown site is sorely needed to ensure that equal opportunities for audience development are available for all of Berkeley’s deserving arts organizations. 

Berkeley, so often called the Athens of the West, has an opportunity to prove itself worthy of such hyperbole when the City Council meets to consider a proposal advanced by the Planning Commission that will do little for arts groups currently shut out of downtown for lack of space. An alternative plan, rejected by the commission, would include; a civic art gallery, a 420-seat theater, a 100-seat theater, a smaller rehearsal/performance space and a cabaret café on the ground floor of the new David Brower building currently under review for construction on the Oxford street parking lot at Allston Way. 

Hopefully, the City Council will not accept the Planning Commission’s shortsighted recommendation without further study. 

As currently recommended by the Planning Commission, the Brower building would not include the proposed 420-seat theater required to help finance the arts center’s operations through membership fees and ticket sales. Instead the commission recommends only a token gesture toward solving the city’s arts space crisis by proposing a woefully inadequate 100-seat stage space and an exhibition gallery only.  

Other recommendations for the building’s other floors include; office space for environmental groups, market-rate and low-income housing, two levels of underground parking and commercial retail space. These can all co-exist easily with an arts center anchored by a 420-seat theater by raising the planning commission’s building height recommendation by only two floors. 

At issue is an opportunity to address the serious lack of downtown arts facilities desperately needed by a growing number of local arts organizations by developing an exciting center for the arts that will present and produce arts events from across the disciplines. The Planning Commission’s disappointing low ball proposal for a 100-seat theater effectively restricts audience development opportunities downtown to only those few private non-profits on Addison Street’s so called ‘Arts District.’ This is unfair to organizations that cannot accommodate their growing audiences in a 100-seat venue and places undue hardships on arts organizations forced to pay production fees and advertising costs for four times as many performances to accommodate the same number of patrons that could otherwise be served in a larger facility. 

The Planning Commission’s proposal for a five story building limit doesn’t make sense for other reasons as well. Green buildings need sun. A five-story Brower building will be forever in the shadow of the two adjacent buildings; the California movie theater and the Gaia building. The City Council can seize an exciting opportunity to make a significant cultural contribution to the city by moving to amend the Planning Commission recommendation allowing for a slightly taller building to make the art center possible. At seven floors the building will still be lower than the two nearest neighboring structures. 

To finance a wide range of arts events, a downtown art center must be large enough to enable non-profit arts groups to match grants with earned income through box office admissions. A small exhibition and theater space limited to 100 seats will be hard pressed to cover operational costs without a larger anchor facility from which to draw audiences and raise funds. By thinning the mix with its recommendation for a 100-seat theater, the Planning Commission dooms the theater to an impossibly small earned income capacity making it dependent on corporate support and/or city funds to survive. And without a larger facility in which to grow the viability of a stand alone 100-seat theater is bleak indeed. To make such a recommendation without a management study showing how such a facility would cover its operating costs could actually jeopardize more credible strategies for developing a 100-seat theater option as part of a larger arts center complex. 

By anchoring the art center with a 420-seat theater, however, many things become fiscally feasible. The Berkeley Art Center, now housed in Live Oak Park and eager to expand downtown, and a proposed cabaret café intended to serve serious Jazz aficionados and other musical enthusiasts, will develop audiences by leveraging other events taking place in the larger venues through joint marketing efforts. Those efforts will increase each group’s income and reduce costs through cooperative programming synergy.  

One central event calendar can replace six organizational newsletters and special discounts for different performances or exhibitions taking place throughout the arts center encourages audiences to attend art events they might not otherwise consider; like attending a series of solo performances in the smaller 100-seat theater.  

Listing just a few of the many local arts organizations, performing ensembles, and virtuoso soloists in need of a downtown facility to further develop their audiences would include: the Berkeley Art Center, the Berkeley Arts Festival, Central Works, George Coates Performance Works, Mal Sharpes’ Jazz Band, The Berkeley Opera, Nightletter Theater, Beanbenders, The Paul Dresher Ensemble, movement master Leonard Pitt, Berkeley Filmmakers, Brookside Actors Repertory Theater, The Jewish Music Festival, Berkeley City Ballet, Berkeley Chamber Arts and numerous others that would benefit. Visiting touring groups from other cities would round out an exciting mix of offerings helping to make downtown Berkeley a destination for local residents and visitors throughout the year. 

By raising the Brower building height limit recommendation by only two floors the City Council has an opportunity to show that it values its citizens ahead of its bureaucracy while at the same time helping to insure that city supported cultural equity is not something reserved for an exclusive trust of downtown establishments.  

 

 

George Coates is the artistic director of George Coates Performance Works 

 

 

 

 


Staff
Tuesday July 24, 2001

MUSIC 

 

924 Gilman St. Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 24: Madd and Eddie Duran jazz duo; July 26: Keni “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Aug 1: Whiskey Brothers. 1822 San Pablo 843-2473 

 

Anna’s Bistro Music at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 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 24: 9:00 p.m. Sawt El Atlas $10; July 25: 8:00 p.m. perfect Strangers $10; July 26: 9:00 p.m. Super Rail band $16; July 27: 8:00 p.m. Ali Khan Band $15; July 28: 9:30 p.m. Motordude Zydeco and Brass Monkey $11; July 29: 9:00 p.m. El Hadj N’ Diaye $10; July 31: 8:00 p.m. dance lesson with Dana DeSimone, 9:00 p.m. Steve Riley and Mamou Playboys $12. 11317 San Pablo Ave. 525-5099 www.ashkenaz.com 

Eli’s Mile High Club Doors open at 8 p.m. Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Split Shankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland 655-6661 

 

Freight and Salvage Coffee House All music at 8 p.m. 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; Aug 1: Distant Oaks; Aug 2: George Kuo, Narin Pahinui & Aaron Mahi; Aug 3: Wylie & the Wild West, the Waller Brothers, Aug 4: Adam Levy, Will Bernard. $16.50 - $17.50. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.org 

 

Jupiter 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 Pena Cultural Center 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; Aug 3: 8 p.m. Los Delicados, Aya de Leon $10; Aug 4: 8 p.m. Grito Serpentino, Small Axe Project, Jime Salcedo-Malo & Leticia Hernandez $10; Aug 5: 7 p.m. Insight in concert $10. 3105 Shattuck Avenue 849-2568 

 

La Note/Jazzschool 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 26: 7:30 p.m. Christie McCarthy, Liz Pisco, Antara and Delilah, Amber Jade. $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 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  

 

 

THEATER 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts July 29: 2 p.m. “Into the Eye of Magic! An Asian Folk Tale” interactive musical and thearical production for families. Adults $10 Children $5; Aug 4: 8 p.m. “Cuatro maestros Touring Festival” two-hour theatrical event of music and dance performed by four elder folk artists and their talented young counterparts. Adults $18 Children $12. 2640 College Avenue 845-8542 ext. 302 

“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 

 

“Human Nature” the X-Plicit Players explore intimate but un-named ways of being together, awaken senses old and new and participate in Group Body. July 28: 8:30 p.m. $15 Metaversal Lightcraft 1708 University 848-1985 

 

“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 655-0813 

 

“The Lady’s Not for Burning” July 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 

 

“Loot” Through Aug 25, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7:00 p.m. Special Performance Aug 20, 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15, Students / Seniors: $10 La Val’s 1834 Euclid Avenue 655-0813 

 

“Orphans” Through Aug. 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 

 

“Reefer Madness” a new one-act theatre piece adapted from a 1936 government-funded film opens a critical eye to the control of our society. Performed by The Elemental Theatre Group Wed Aug 8,22, Thu Aug 9,23: 9 p.m. La Pena Cultural Center 3105 Shattuck Avenue. Wednesdays “pay what you can”, thursdays $5 - $10. Fri Aug 10,17: 7 p.m. People’s Park Free. Contact Zachary Rouse or Tisha Sloan for more info at 655-4150 

 

“San Francisco Improv” July 28: 8 p.m., Free show at Cafe Electica 1309 Solano Avenue. 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 

 

 

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 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 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.; July 26: 7:00 Devarim, 9:10 Yom Yom; July 27: 7:00 Punishment Room, 8:55 Ten Dark Women; July 28: 7:00 The Big Heat, 8:30 Kippur, 8:50 Clash by Night; July 29: 3:00 A Boy named Charlie Brown, 5:30 Mr. Pu, 7:30 A Billionaire; July 31: 7:30 The Arena of Murder; Aug 1: 7:30 Two Thousand Maniacs!, 9:15 Manos, the Hands of Fate; Aug 2: 7:30 Kadosh; Aug 3: 7:00 A Full-Up Train, 9:00 The Men of Tohoku; Aug 4: 7:00 Human Desire, 8:50 Hangmen Also Die New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival at Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley July 28: 1 p.m. The Optimists: the story of the rescue of the Jews of Bulgaria, 3:30 p.m. “Louba’s Ghosts”, 6:15 p.m. “One of the Hollywood Ten”, 8:30 p.m. “Kippur”; July 29: 11 a.m. “Keys from Spain”, “The Cross Inscribed in the Star of David”, 1 p.m. “Intimate Stranger”, “Nobody’s Business”, 4 p.m. “The Sweetest Sound”, 6 p.m. “Once We Grow Up”, 8:30 p.m. “Total Love”, “Moses vs. Godzilla”; July 30: 2 p.m. “Circumcision”, “Abe’s Manhood”, 4 p.m. “Terrorists in Retirement”, 6 p.m. “Disparus”, 8:30 p.m. “Street Under Fire”, “The Jahalin”; Juy 31: 3 pm. “Family Secret”, “Still (Stille)”, 5:30 p.m. “Love Inventory”, “The Bicycle”, 8:30 p.m. “Time of Favor (Hahesder)”; Aug 1: 2 p.m. “Blue and White in Red Square”, “Tsipa and Volf”, 4 p.m. “Shorts on Love and War”, 6 p.m. “Jewish Girls in Shorts”, 8:15 p.m. “waiting for the Messiah”, “The Seventh Day”; Aug 2: 1 p.m. “Fighter”, 3:15 “Brownsville Black and White”, 5:15 “Inside Out”, “Grrly Show”, 8:45 p.m. “Jewish Luck”, “SF Klezmer Experience”. General admission: $8.50, Matinees (up to and including 4 p.m.): $7, Students/Seniors/Groups: $6.50. (925)866-9559 http://www.sfjff.org 

 

“7th annual Brainwash Movie Festival” outdoors Aug 3,4,5 (bring a chair) at the Pyramid Ale brewery, 901 Gilman Street 527-9090 ext. 218. Festival Pass: $30, Individual tickets: online: $8, door: $10 

 

 

Exhibits 

 

“BACA National Juried Exhibition: Works on Paper” Through August 31: Wed. - Sun. Noon - 5 p.m. Reception, Sun. July 22, 2 - 4 p.m., Featuring 33 artists from across the United States, including 17 Bay Area representatives. Berkeley Art Center 1275 Walnut St. 644-6893 

 

“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 Road 849-2541 

 

“Debbie Moore’s Autobiographical Paintings” Through Sep 30 at Good Vibrations. Portraits of the artist’s sensual explorations spanning 25 years and reflecting changing ways of intimacy and body play. 2504 San Pablo Avenue 848-1985 

 

“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.  

 

“A Fine Line” is an exhibition works by Kala Fellowship winners for the years 2000 and 2001. Reception July 26, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. July 26 - August 24, Tuesday - Friday, noon - 5 p.m. or by appointment. Kala Art Institute 1060 Heinz Avenue 549-2977 

 

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

 

“MFA Survey Exhibition 2001” third annual exhibition of works of recent graduates from Bay Area master of Fine Art programs. This year featuring artists working in three-dimentional media. now - Aug 18 tuesday - saturday, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., reception July 21 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Traywick Gallery 1316 Tenth Street 527-1214 

 

“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 

 

“The Saints Are Coming... To Bring Hope” Through July 30: Tue., Wed., Sat. 12 - 5, p.m., Fri. 1 - 5 p.m., An art installation featuring Fred DeWitt, Leon Kennedy, Josie Madero, Esete Menkir, Belinda Osborn, Arline Lucia Rodini, April Watkins, and Carla Woshone. The Art of Living Center 2905 Shattuck Ave. 848-3736  

 

“Sistahs: Ethnofraphic Ceramics” through August 22, Reception July 29 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Womens Cancer Resource Center Gallery 3023 Shattuck Avenue 548-9286 ext. 307 

 

“Ten Years Here” Exhibit celebrating the 10 year anniversary of Turn of the Century Fine Arts. Aug 4 - Sept 14, Sat & Sun 1-5 p.m. Reception Aug 4 2:00 - 7:00 p.m. 2510 San Pablo Avenue 849-0950 

 

“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  

 

 

Readings 

 

Boadecia’s Books Aug 3: Mabel Maney (author of the Nancy Clue/ Cherry Aimless and Hardly Boys mysteries) reads from her new book “Kiss the Girls and Make them Spy” featuring Jane Bond, James’ lesbian twin sister; Aug 4: Dyke Open Myke! Coffeehouse-style open mike night featuring both established and emerging talent. All events start at 7:30 p.m. and are free. 398 Colusa Avenue 559-9184 

 

Cody’s Books July 24: Susann Cokal reads from “Mirabilis.”; July 26: Dave Egger’s presentation has been canceled. $2 donation. Readings at 7:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-0837 

 

Cody’s Books July 25: Alice Randall reads from “The Wind Done Gone.” $2 donation. Readings at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cafe de la Paz “Poetry Nitro” Weekly poetry open mike. July 30: Featuring Lisa Sikie. 6:30 p.m. sign-up, 7 p.m. reading. 1600 Shattuck Ave. 843-0662  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series August 7: Featured readers JC and Bert Glick. 7-9 p.m.; August 21: Featured Readers: Victoria Joyce and 

Therese Bamberger; Both 7-9 p.m. Free. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland for info. (510)465-3935 or (510)526-5985, or Email: ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

 

 

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  

 

 

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. 

 


Support growing for small learning communities

By Ben Lumpkin
Tuesday July 24, 2001

Supporters of sweeping reforms for Berkeley High School say they are building a broad base of support over the summer and will make a strong case to the Berkeley School Board in September, calling on board members to give their unequivocal support to the effort. 

“We feel that we have strong community support – stronger than there has ever been for this kind of major reform at Berkeley High school,” said Berkeley High English teacher Rick Ayers, who was tapped to lead the reform planning process earlier this year. 

The Berkeley school district was one of 19 California High Schools to receive a $50,000 planning grant from the U.S. Department of Education. A growing core of teachers and concerned parents have met to explore how to divide over 3000 students at the school into several “small learning communities” could help engage students, particularly African American and Latino students, who historically have a high rate of truancy and failure at Berkeley High. 

A large body of research suggests that students develop stronger relationships with teachers and with each other in a “small school” – say 600 students instead of 3,000 – and are thus less likely to become alienated either socially or academically. 

If Berkeley school reform supporters come up with a comprehensive plan to divide Berkeley High into a number of small schools by Oct. 1, the district could apply for an implementation grant from the U.S. Department of Education that would amount to $500,000 a year over three years. 

But three out of five of Berkeley school board members have been lukewarm about small learning community reform to date, and Berkeley High principal Frank Lynch has committed only to oversee a prolonged discussion about the pros and cons of the plan in the fall.  

School board members say there are simply too many unanswered questions about what the small learning communities would look like at Berkeley High. Would they all coexist on one campus? Would they have complete budgeting and governing autonomy? Would students attend the small learning community of their choice for part of the day and the “comprehensive” high school for the rest of the day? Would some of the strong programs that exist at Berkeley High today be threatened by such an arrangement? 

These are just a few of the questions raised by board members and some skeptical Berkeley High teachers. Such reluctance on the part of school administrators has lead to some concern about whether the Oct. 1 deadline can be met. 

That’s why small learning community supporters like Ayers have been working hard over the summer to assemble what they hope will be irrefutable proof that the Berkeley community is fed up with the status quo and ready to support radical reforms at the school.  

They’re holding weekly planning meetings, going door-to-door asking people to sign a petition, and recruiting well-known leaders in the parent, teacher, student and other communities to join in the crusade. 

“If the school board sees that the community is really committed, it will push them to do something,” said Marissa Saunders, who chairs the League of Women Voters education committee, Berkeley/Albany/Emeryville chapter.  

Saunders, who is also co-chair of the City of Franklin Elementary School PTA, joined the campaign for small learning community reforms in June. 

“Out of everything that’s happening in the district, Berkeley High School is the most dysfunctional, and it’s the most dysfunctional for children of color,” said Saunders, an African American. 

Saunders said she would not send her daughter – who’s entering the fifth grade at Franklin this fall – to Berkeley High unless the school has been radically reformed.  

“I’d be concerned for her safety, for her academic achievement, for her self-esteem,” Saunders said. “I’d be one of those parents up there every single day. And who has the time to be doing that?” 

Ayers emphasized Monday that small learning community supporters will not give up if the school board proves unwilling to sign on to the project by September – in time for a concrete plan for small learning communities to be submitted to the U.S. Department of Education by the Oct. 1 deadline.  

If the Berkeley district fails to get the department of education grant, they could still apply for an even bigger grant ($650,000 a year over three years) at a later date from the Bay Area Coalition for Equitable Schools (BayCES) – an organization whose small school experts are already deeply involved in the small learning community planning effort in Berkeley. 

Ayers and others said they will put up a fight to meet the Oct. 1 deadline. The are working to win the support of Parents of Children of African Descent (PCAD), a outspoken group of African American parents at Berkeley High who managed to launch their own kind of small learning community at the school last winter, winning city and school board approval for a program that placed failing students in smaller classes. 

Katrina Scott-George, a member of the PCAD Steering Committee, said the group still has reservations about joining the school-wide reform effort. She said PCAD members are narrowly focused on the issue of institutional racism at Berkeley High and their belief that the prevailing mentality of teachers and administrators causes the school to take special care of white students while allowing blacks and Latinos to fall through the cracks. 

It is not clear to PCAD members, Scott-George said, that the move to small learning communities would address this issue. 

“We’ve been reforming constantly at Berkeley High, but we haven’t made a whole lot of progress, certainly not when we’re talking about African American students,” she said.


Beth El votes comes to head at meeting

By John Geluardi
Tuesday July 24, 2001

The City Council is expected to vote tonight on the controversial proposal by the Beth El congregation to build a synagogue, school and social hall at 1301 Oxford St.  

In addition to the City Council, the proposal has been considered by three commissions and been the subject of multiple public hearings including two at the council level during which 170 people spoke. The Live  

Oak Codornices Creek  

Neighborhood Association, who oppose the size, say the 32,000 square-foot project will adversely affect parking, traffic and a section of Codornices Creek, which runs along the northern section of the  

site. 

They also say the project will obscure historical resources on the property, which is a Berkeley historical landmark. LOCCNA has asked Beth El to compromise by scaling back the size of the project. 

Beth El argues the congregation has grown out of its current facility two blocks away and needs the space. Members also point out the design of the project will allow for future restoration of the creek and that the remaining 11 historical elements on the property which include a entrance gate, a Monkey Puzzle tree and a section of wrought work will be maintained.  

Both sides of the issue have threatened court actions if they do not prevail in tonight’s council vote. 

 

Director appointments 

The council is expected to announce the appointments of two department heads. One is Stephen Barton as Director of Housing. Barton has been acting director of that department for three years. The council will also announce the new director of Planning and Development, Carol Barrett, who is currently the Planning Manager in Austin, Texas. Barrett will take the place of Interim Director Wendy Cosin. 

 

Water transit appointee 

Mayor Shirley Dean and Councilmember Kriss Worthington will try and work out their differences over who should be appointed to the Water Transit Community Advisory Board. On July 10, the council was able to appoint councilmembers to seven committees and task forces. But they were unable to agree on who should take the seat on the WTCAB. Both Dean and Worthington have been active on transportation issues and both wanted to sit on that commission which is studying a possible bay ferry station in Berkeley. 

Dean’s recommendation requests that she be appointed to the board, because of her efforts during the last 10 years to bring a ferry service to Berkeley and Worthington be named as alternate because of his recent appointment to the Congestion Management Agency, which deals with transportation funding issues.  

 

Pedestrian flags 

The council will hear an information report on a program to provide pedestrians with flags to reduce the number of injuries while crossing certain Berkeley streets. The program is modeled after a similar programs in Cambridge, Mass., Kirkland, Wash. and Salt Lake City, Utah. 

Salt Lake has used the pedestrian flags since August, 2000 and it is estimated that 11 - 14 percent of the city’s residents use the flags to cross the street. 

The flags are being proposed for Shattuck and Cedar streets, Shattuck Street at University Avenue and Ashby and Piedmont avenues, among other locations. 

This is the last City Council meeting before its summer recess. The next meeting will be held Sept. 11. 

 


Firefighter takes discrimination case to council

By Jon Mays
Tuesday July 24, 2001

The African American firefighter suing the city and California OSHA because he believes a state regulation regarding fire masks is discriminatory, is now asking the City Council for support. 

At tonight’s City Council meeting, Harry Vernon, a Berkeley firefighter for 24 years is planning on asking the city to join him in his lawsuit against the California Occupational Health and Safety Administration.  

Vernon, 47, has a skin condition common in many African American males that prohibits him from shaving. An OSHA ruling forbids firefighters from having facial hair because they say it interferes with respirators. 

In October 1999, Vernon was given a desk job after he protested the city’s compliance with the new regulation. 

Although the city attorney’s office is sympathetic to Vernon’s situation, they have said they must comply with state law.  

But Lawrence Murray, Vernon’s attorney, said it’s time to put up or shut up. 

“The [City Attorney] admitted it was  

discriminatory but they said their hands are tied,” he said. “But it’s time to get up there, put on the gloves and say, ‘Let’s go find these bullies and stop this crap.’” 

OSHA officials have said that they are simply complying with federal safety and health laws and that their rule is not discriminatory.  

Although Councilmember Kriss Worthington requested the city look at the OSHA regulation at tonight’s meeting, he emphasized that there will not be a specific discussion of Vernon’s case. Any discussion of a lawsuit must take place in closed session. 

“It’s to take action to strengthen the city’s appeal to Cal OSHA so together as a council we can more aggressively lobby the state to make reasonable accommodations for people of different races, religions and disabilities,” Worthington said. 

Mayor Shirley Dean did not return a call for comment. 


Berkeley resident finds magazine work takes ‘Moxie’

By Matt Lorenz
Tuesday July 24, 2001

To do some things, Emily Hancock thinks, a woman’s got to have moxie. 

Hancock does, in part, mean “Moxie,” the Berkeley-based magazine of which she is editor and publisher. But aside from reading the magazine, she means a woman has got to have grit. 

The word “moxie” once referred to a kind of medicine. 

“It tasted terrible,” Hancock said.  

“Now that the word moxie has come to stand for courage, guts and daring, people speculate that you had to have moxie to drink it.” 

One might say, then, that “Moxie” is nectar for women wanting, with Thoreau, “to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life.”  

Produced out of the upstairs loft of Hancock’s north Berkeley home, its first print issue came out in April 1998.  

It has since become primarily an online magazine (www.moxiemag.com), registering almost 16,000 hits per week, Hancock said. 

“We’ve been featured now in Writer’s Market as one of the best magazines in print,” Hancock said. “And in Writer’s Digest, as one of the 50 best Web sites for authors.”  

Hancock began to sense the need for a magazine like “Moxie” while doing research for her book, “The Girl Within.” Interviewing young women on college campuses across the country, she said she became alarmed at the number of women who confessed they weren’t discussing any of their most pressing questions with their peers: career, marriage and having children.  

“I said, ‘How are you figuring these things out?’ They would reply, ‘Oh you know, we pick up Cosmo.’ And all we get there, is how to play into the hands of a man,” she said. 

“So it just seemed like there needed to be an alternative magazine that would help people figure out how to make a life that works,” she said. 

People need moxie to probe themselves for answers to the most overwhelming life questions.  

In short, it hasn’t been easy. Hancock and her brainchild have had a bit more than their share of setbacks. 

First, groomed with glossy pages, “Moxie” sought a large-scale publisher to share some of its financial burden, and no suitor materialized. Then, when the magazine held its grand, promotional event in April 2000 to bring together all its present and potential advertisers, the guest speaker insulted them all. Advertisers casually stepped out and did not return.  

Most recently, “Moxie” lost all the information it had stored about its readers and writers – its devoted progeny – when its hard-drive collapsed. 

Hancock admits she would love to focus solely on the magazine’s content and not worry about the publishing logistics. 

“I never have wanted to be a publisher, and I still don’t,” she said.  

“I thought that ‘Moxie’ needed a lot of muscle from a big company that could give it proper artwork, proper distribution, publicity. That kind of thing.” 

Of course, Hancock also understands that “Moxie” might not be what it is if a corporate publisher had bought in. 

“Moxie really is an alternative magazine,” Hancock said.  

“It’s not a mainstream magazine. It doesn’t have advertising anymore, it’s not glossy, and it’s full of first person accounts, which I always intended.”  

Hancock forwards the cause of first-person narration with reason.  

“It’s the subtlest level of a self-help vehicle, because people read other people’s accounts and they think about themselves,” she said.  

“They think about themselves instead of being given ten tips on how to do all those things that Cosmo tells us how to do.” 

James Schinnerer, handler of the magazine’s web work along with other editorial duties, sees the varied viewpoints as part of what makes “Moxie” deserving of its name.  

“You get a lot of diversity of opinion,” he said.  

“ ‘Moxie’ is more the forum for all the views than for one view. Some pieces you won’t agree with, and then you find another piece that’s just like your opinion.” 

And the “Moxie” identity has been affected not only by the directness and diversity of its voice, but also by where it can be heard – its medium. People will find that “Moxie” online is not the same as “Moxie” in print. 

“There are just certain things that work better in print, and certain things that work better online,” Hancock said.  

“If it’s online it better be shorter.  

“Also, there are certain things I would put online that I wouldn’t put in print because they were too brash to be in print. If it’s online you can say, ‘Ew, I don’t want to read this,’ and go somewhere else with the click of a mouse.” 

This flexibility gives “Moxie” online a different look and feel than the print version.  

It’s presently open to online advertisers and sponsors, while the printed version is less like a magazine and more like a literary journal, Hancock said.  

Despite its setbacks, “Moxie” endures.  

It endures, perhaps even as a result of them. And its persistence seems, in a way, part of the point:  

In a world in which we constantly come up with newer and better ways to divert ourselves from life’s more daunting problems, only someone with intense commitment will get around to grappling with the questions Cosmo doesn’t answer. 

It’s these people to whom Moxie speaks. 

“Originally ‘Moxie’ was aimed at people who were just getting out of college and trying to put together lives that work. But women are always processing their lives,” Hancock said.  

“No matter how old they are, they’re still figuring out the same things. Or their circumstances change and they have to figure it all out again.”


Police Briefs

Staff
Tuesday July 24, 2001

A 15-year-old girl was allegedly sexually assaulted by a pair of young men while exercising at the Downtown Berkeley YMCA at 7:30 p.m. Friday, said Berkeley Police Lt. Russell Lopes.  

While working out with a friend, the victim was allegedly approached by two men who had also been exercising in the gym. 

Lopes said the suspects engaged the girls in conversation and asked if they had boyfriends. Lopes said the men then crowded the victim into a corner and one fondled her breasts while the other fondled her buttocks. Lopes said the woman screamed for help and the assailants ran off. The suspects are described as black males, 18 to 20 years old and thin. 

••• 

Two male students in their early 20s walking near College Avenue and Channing Way were nearly robbed early Saturday morning, said Lt. Russell Lopes. 

One suspect was allegedly drunk and yelling obscenities at the two victims.  

When one of the victims asked the him whom he was talking to, the other man allegedly punched him. The punch caused one of the victims to fall to the ground, Lopes said. When the victim tried to get up, he was punched again and fell back to the ground. 

While on the ground, the suspects searched the pockets of both students, Lopes said.  

The suspects ran off without taking any of the victims possessions. The suspects are described as one white male in a cowboy hat and blue Hawaiian shirt and a black male in a red T-shirt.


Plan would relieve power bottleneck

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 24, 2001

LOS ANGELES — U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham unveiled a $300 million plan Monday to break a transmission-line bottleneck that has kept power from flowing freely through the state during times of peak usage. 

His proposal calls for expanding the state’s power grid capacity along Path 15, an 84-mile stretch of power lines running across the state’s Central Valley, by attracting private investment. 

The improvements could increase the transmission capacity there by 1,500 megawatts –enough electricity to power more than one million homes. 

“Our plan is a critical component in solving the long-term power crisis in this state,” Abraham told reporters during a news conference. 

The lines are currently the only ones connecting the northern and southern portions of the state. Abraham said 13 companies have already submitted plans for the work. He didn’t release their names. 

Federal officials plan to award a contract to one of the companies in the next 30 days, with the project likely taking at least two years to complete, he said. 

The plan contrasts with Gov. Gray Davis’ efforts to acquire the transmission lines of the state’s power companies and thus allow the state to make improvements on them.  

 

A spokesman for Davis expressed skepticism Monday that it could be implemented as successfully as Abraham envisions. 

“Given the private sector’s failure over the past 15 years to make improvements, we’ll view that with suspicion,” said Davis spokesman Steve Maviglio. 

Abraham has been making speeches around the country in recent days, coinciding with a House Republican effort to approve broad-ranging energy legislation before the end of the month when Congress leaves for its summer recess. 

Officials have said the Path 15 bottleneck was one factor behind rolling blackouts that hit Northern California earlier this year. Though excess power was available in Southern California, it could not be moved fast enough to avoid problems in the northern portion of the state. 

“The capacity in this area is simply insufficient,” Abraham said. 

He said the proposed expansion is part of a nationwide project called for by President Bush to look into problems existing throughout the country’s power grids, including both bottlenecks and gaps. 

Abraham noted that Mexico expressed interest in selling some of its excess power to California earlier this year, but the transmission lines connecting Mexico’s Baja California to California could not carry enough power to make a successful deal possible. 

“This is a challenge many places in the country face,” he said. 


AIDS-stricken Thai boy given humanitarian parole

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 24, 2001

LOS ANGELES — An AIDS-stricken Thai boy used as a prop by immigrant smugglers will stay in the country and become the first applicant for a new kind of visa for victims of trafficking and violence, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft said Monday. 

The decision blocks – at least for now – any efforts by relatives or the Immigration and Naturalization Service to return 4-year-old Phanupong “Got” Khaisri to Thailand. 

“This case presents an extremely unusual, unique and tragic circumstance,” Ashcroft said in announcing he has granted the boy humanitarian parole to keep him in the country as he awaits a visa. “Got is a confused and isolated figure adrift in a complex legal system.” 

Ashcroft said that because of the singularity of Got’s case he decided to make the boy the first candidate for the so-called T-visa created by the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000. 

Got was 2 years old, malnourished, HIV-positive and suffering from a severe ear infection when he arrived at Los Angeles International Airport in April 2000. He was accompanied by a man and woman who claimed to be his parents, but officials determined he was being used in a scheme to smuggle the woman into the country – a purpose his own mother, a heroin-addicted prostitute, had rented him out for. 

Fearing Got’s AIDS would go untreated in Thailand and he would be pulled back into immigrant trafficking if he returned, local Thai activists have been fighting to keep him in the United States. The INS denied him asylum, but his advocates won a victory last month when a federal judge refused to order his return. 

However, the judge’s order was subject to appeal and litigation was continuing, so that Got remained in limbo before Ashcroft’s announcement. 

“We’re extremely ecstatic, elated and overjoyed, because this is the day we’ve been waiting for. I think we can actually claim victory today,” said Chanchanit Martorell, one of Got’s guardians and executive director of the Thai Community Development Center. “Now Got will be able to finally be a normal 4-year-old kid.” 

But Got’s guardians and attorney had some reservations, mostly because the government has not yet finalized the regulations needed to implement the T-visas, a process that will have to be completed before Got can get one. 

Peter Schey, the attorney who is representing Got as president of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law, accused the INS and Department of Justice of foot-dragging, and called on Ashcroft to move forward immediately in issuing the regulations. 

At a press conference outside the federal courthouse where Ashcroft made his announcement, Schey said he plans to amend Got’s lawsuit against the federal government to seek class-action status on behalf of all unaccompanied minors apprehended by the INS, and to request an injunction ordering immediate implementation of the T-visas. 

Sharon A. Gavin, an INS spokeswoman, said the regulations are in development. 

“They’re being worked on even as we speak,” Gavin said. “I don’t have any time frame right now.” 

Presuming Got is granted a T-visa, it will be good for three years, after which Got will become eligible to adjust to resident status, Martorell said. 

Got’s mother has given up custody and his HIV-infected father committed suicide. His paternal grandparents say they adopted him under Thai law, and were seeking to take him back to Thailand. 

Got is healthy now, but only because he takes a three-drug “cocktail” every 12 hours. The boy splits his time between his guardians and a Silver Lake couple that is seeking to adopt him. 


Assembly approves final budget measures

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 24, 2001

SACRAMENTO — The state budget cleared its final legislative hurdle Monday night, more than three weeks after it was supposed to take effect. 

The Assembly approved a batch of bills required to enact the estimated $101 billion spending plan. It now goes to Gov. Gray Davis, who has said he will to make an expected $600 million more in cuts and sign the budget into law. 

The vote capped intense partisan standoffs and negotiations among Democrat Davis, the Legislature’s majority Democrats and minority Republicans. The budget was supposed to go into effect July 1. 

Republicans held back their votes for weeks, saying they objected to a quarter-cent sales tax increase that is automatically triggered if the state’s reserves dipped too low. 

In the Assembly, four Republicans finally broke ranks early last week, won over by projects for their districts and nearly $80 million in tax breaks for farmers and grants for rural police. 

But Assembly members, who approved the main budget bill a week ago, failed to collect the necessary votes for the accompanying legislation until Monday. 

The Monday vote followed a marathon weekend session during which state Senators approved the budget and the bills to implement it and adjourned for their summer recess. The Senate version of the budget and the legislation approved by the Assembly approved Monday included several compromises. 

They include: 

— Relaxing the required reserve level for the quarter-cent sales tax cut to take effect. Under current state law, the cut kicks in if in back-to-back years the state’s reserve fund bulges above 4 percent of the budget. Under the new measure, the cut kicks in if the reserves rise above 3 percent for one year. 

— Asking voters to approve a constitutional amendment dedicating gasoline sales tax revenues to transit and transportation projects beginning in the 2003-04 budget year. 

— Tax credits for farmers and senior citizens. 

— $40 million in school funds to balance what many call unfair school funding formulas. 


Group plans initiative to safeguard ancient trees

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 24, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Voters could decide to ban the cutting of any tree that grew before California became a state in 1850, if a coalition succeeds in putting the initiative on next year’s ballot. 

A group of social, religious, civic, business and conservation organizations on Tuesday will launch an effort to put the question on the 2002 ballot. 

The measure would apply to all state-owned forests and private land, but could not restrict logging on federal land. It is opposed by the state’s logging industry.  

The coalition estimated less than 3 percent of native forests in California are still standing, and said most of those are protected in state parks. The initiative would safeguard the remaining ancient and old growth trees. 

“Our government should be the ones protecting this international heritage, but because they’ve failed, we, the people, have decided to protect the last of this living legacy,” activist Julia “Butterfly” Hill said in a statement.  

Hill spent more than two years living in a California redwood to save it from being cut down. Logging groups said the initiative was superfluous. 

On the Net: Read the initiative at http://www.ancienttrees.org


Losing sight of the investor-consumer

By John Cunniff
Tuesday July 24, 2001

A consulting firm recently reported that a large percentage of companies it surveyed continued to give managers performance bonuses despite the company’s poor performance. 

“The boards (of the companies),” the consulting firm tried to explain, “believe that rewarding bonuses to virtually all managers, despite non-stellar company performance, is necessary to foster retention.” 

Larry Reissman of the Hay Group, which conducted the survey among 40 Massachusetts companies this past May examining bonuses given in 2000, disagreed with that explanation, one reason being that, in effect, it cheated those who really deserved a bonus. 

Viewing that situation, especially in light of the collapsed stock market, shareholders must wonder where they, the folks who risk their money in the company, stand in the order of things. 

Very low, it seems. No bonuses, of course. Perhaps a reduced dividend because of low corporate earnings. Declining value of their investments. 

It isn’t the only economic area in which consumers-investors rank low, and now that money is tight for millions of them, you can understand they might look askance at organizations that overlook their contributions. 

The securities industry had a good thing going. Ordinary Americans had bought into the idea of buying shares and, as they say, owning a piece of America. Their 401(k)s bought more shares. Mutual funds prospered. 

But now, in a time of reflection and learning, small investors are wondering what in the world they became mixed up in. For example: Brokers whose advice was suspect. Advisers who shrank customer assets. Analysts with mammoth salaries for touting companies that tanked. Mutual fund managers who failed even to keep pace with the overall market. 

They have good reason to wonder too about the integrity of some corporate managements that have deceived through creative bookkeeping, and wonder too about the accountants who certified the numbers. 

The point of these and comparable situations is that the consumer is now viewed by government and industry as the great hope of the economy, the sector that will lead the country up out of the great near-recession. 

And that leads to the big question: Will consumers, already battered by financial losses and big debts, take on the task? The answer was expected by now, but it hasn’t come. 

The Federal Reserve has lowered interest rates six times since January and may have to cut even more next month. Businesses are still burdened with unsold goods. Profit increases haven’t yet been sighted. 

The market, says Jim Griffin of Alteus Investment Management, seems to be dominated by deeply religious investors. “You know, ‘please God, if I ever get even ... .” You can finish the plea. 

John Cunniff is a business analyst for The Associated Press


Disney buys Fox children’s cable network for $3 billion

The Associated Press
Tuesday July 24, 2001

LOS ANGELES — In a deal that will give The Walt Disney Co. valuable distribution and News Corp. cash to finance an acquisition of its own, Disney is buying Fox Family Worldwide Inc. for $3 billion in cash and assuming debt of $2.3 billion. 

The deal announced Monday adds the children’s cable network to Disney’s portfolio, which already includes ESPN, the Disney Channel and stakes in A&E and Lifetime. The Fox Family Channel, which Disney plans to rename ABC Family, reaches about 81 million cable subscribers in the United States. 

Disney bought Fox Family from News Corp. and Saban Entertainment Inc., which each owned 49.5 percent of the company. The sale came about after Saban, a major children’s programmer which created the “Mighty Morphin Power Rangers,” exercised its right to have News Corp. buy out its share. 

Disney chief executive officer Michael Eisner said the deal was clinched last week in talks with News Corp. chairman Rupert Murdoch and Saban chief Haim Saban at a media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, and is something “we had been fantasizing about for maybe three years. 

“This is a perfect fit for our company,” Eisner said. “We paid appropriately for a great asset, which drives us to the No. 1 position in basic cable subscribers and gives us a greater presence and growth opportunity internationally.” 

Disney chief financial officer Thomas Staggs said Disney was in competition with other companies for the channel. It is believed Viacom Inc. and AOL Time Warner Inc. were bidders. 

“There were other folks bidding, so we sat down and said, ’What price will it take for this to be done?”’ Staggs said. 

For News Corp., the deal provides a welcome dose of cash just as the company is hoping to reach an agreement with General Motors Corp. over purchase of the DirecTV satellite broadcaster, a division of GM’s Hughes Electronics unit. 

The deal expands Disney’s programming reach worldwide with a 76 percent ownership in Fox Kids Europe, a children’s programming channel that reaches 24 million homes, and a 10-million subscriber channel in Latin America called Fox Kids. 

Disney is also getting Saban’s programming library, which contains more than 6,500 episodes of shows. 

“This really is beachfront property,” Eisner said at a news conference. “There only are about five or six strong, ubiquitous cable channels in the United States and this is one of them.” 

The deal won approval from Wall Street analysts, who have been critical of Disney for not being more aggressive while other companies, such as Viacom and AOL Time Warner consolidated and tied up vital distribution outlets for Disney’s content. 

“Investors have been concerned that they have not leveraged their franchises as well as they could,” said Jeffrey Logsdon, an analyst at Gerard Klauer Mattison. “This is a great cable network acquisition and fit relative to leveraging the programs they’re creating throughout the whole Disney empire.” 

It is the first major acquisition by Disney since it bought Capital Cities/ABC in 1996. The company’s stock price has lagged since then. 

Shares of Disney were down 12 cents to $26.88 after the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange Monday. 

Executives at Fox Family Worldwide also praised the deal, saying it has been difficult to operate as an independent company without the reach and support of a major corporate parent. News Corp. and Saban have been uneasy partners since they bought the operation five years ago. 

“I can’t think of a better home for this channel because of the core business of Walt Disney being families and kids,” said Maureen Smith, president of the Fox Family Channel. “The support they talked about over and over will just be tenfold compared to what we’ve been able to get simply because of compatibility with the other Fox brands that really weren’t family based. The access to this kind of programming is a dream come true.” 

Disney officials said the deal should increase advertising revenue for its media networks division by 50 percent within two years from the 2001 level of approximately $200 million. ABC, ESPN and other networks have suffered from an advertising slump in recent months because of the slowing economy. 

The increase in revenue should come without a significant jump in programming costs, Disney said. A new lineup for the ABC Family channel will include news programs from ABC, such as “The View,” sports programming from ESPN and comedies and dramas from ABC. 

The deal will also give Disney a wider platform to promote its other broadcast networks, major studio films and theme parks. 

Disney expects it can cut $50 million from the operating costs of the new channel immediately by consolidating back office operations and advertising sales staffs. 

The deal gives Disney the rights to air Major League Baseball games two nights a week during the regular season, plus between eight and 11 first-round playoff games. 

Disney president Robert Iger said baseball came as a condition of sale from News Corp. and Saban. The games will be produced by ESPN, Iger said. 

The channel will continue to show the 700 Club and other shows made by Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcast Network, which originally started the network. 

“I’ve talked to Pat Robertson and we happen to think he is an asset to the channel,” Eisner said. “He’s got a great following. He produces a quality program and we will build a schedule with a commitment to him.” 


Opinion

Editorials

Bay Briefs

Monday July 30, 2001

Port expansion could bring jobs 

OAKLAND – The city of Oakland’s $1.5 million expansion of its ports could create more than 5,000 new jobs. 

The news excites Oakland residents who attended a hearing yesterday on how the expansion will affect the city and surrounding environment. 

Port Executive Director Chuck Foster says the port’s expansion plan also will add nearly 3,000 spin-off jobs. 

Some of those jobs are earmarked for Oakland residents under a historic agreement. 

The city plans to build a 6,000 car parking structure at Oakland International Airport and link its two terminals. 

 

Oakland zoo hoping for smooth elephant birth 

OAKLAND – Lisa the elephant is a little cranky but her zoo keepers say that’s to be expected. 

The Oakland Zoo’s African elephant is 22 months pregnant and is carrying a 200 pound calf. She’s due to deliver anytime from now until September. 

The zoo’s elephant program has been hit with a series of tragedies over the past decade. Smokey the elephant died in March of unknown causes. He was the father of Lisa’s calf. 

Lisa and another elephant named Donna both lost their babies to a salmonella infection in 1998. And Lisa’s first baby died 11 months after her birth in 1996 after contracting the elephant herpes virus. 

 

Police to monitor cruising cars in Alameda County 

 

OAKLAND – In hopes of curbing problems caused by illegal cruising and what officials call “sideshows” in Oakland and neighboring cities, authorities in Alameda County organized a traffic enforcement crackdown along the 880 corridor south of Oakland beginning Saturday night. 

Police planned to use mobile intoxilizers, devices that detect blood alcohol levels as part of an effort aimed at reducing unlawful activity by drivers, including drinking and driving, speeding, doing “doughnuts” and operating a vehicle without a license. 

Officer said a mobile booking unit would allow them to process arrestees in the field and a bus would transport prisoners to the Santa Rita Jail as part of Saturday night’s police action. 

Besides being ticketed, unlicensed drivers could have their vehicles impounded for 30 days. An average of 60-85 vehicles are normally impounded during a typical two-day “sideshow” operation and owners of impounded cars could face tow and storage fees of more than $900, police said. 

“The sideshow constitutes a very serious and pervasive traffic safety problem both in Oakland and surrounding jurisdictions,” said Lt. David Kozicki, traffic section commander. “Collectively, we believe that heavy traffic enforcement is an appropriate means of deterring sideshow activity.” 

Besides Oakland Police, more than 50 members of the California Highway Patrol, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department and police departments in Alameda, San Leandro, Hayward, Fremont and Union City all planned to take part in the crackdown. 

 

Woman accused of locking her daughter in shed 

 

SAN JOSE – A San Jose woman is accused of locking her mentally disabled adult daughter in a wooden shed up to 12 hours a day for as long as two years. 

Maria Isabel Eugenio, 64, has been arrested on charges of abusing a dependent adult and false imprisonment. She worked at a car wash and told police she could not afford care for her daughter, Socorro Eugenio, 40. 

She is being held in jail on $50,000 bond while awaiting trial. 

“I had asked God for help, but I simply ran out of time,” Maria Eugenio said in a jail interview. “I had to do something to keep her safe.” 

Deputies from the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Department discovered Socorro Eugenio inside the small wooden trailer earlier this month. She was allegedly kept there six days a week without a toilet – police instead found a 5-gallon bucket. 

Deputies responded to a call that a woman was regularly being locked in a shed, and they used an ax to break open a padlock on the trailer. Inside, they found Socorro Eugenio dirty and unwilling to be coaxed from the building. They estimated the temperature to be above 100 degrees. 

Eugenio allegedly kept her daughter locked up because “she was very mischievous.” Officials say the mother was unfamiliar with social service programs and feared seeking help would hinder her daughter, an illegal alien from Mexico, from gaining U.S. citizenship. 

Eugenio, who was arrested July 6, told deputies her daughter “enters the shed willingly six days a week.” She said she gave Socorro water, a piece of fruit and a toy. 

Dog attacks spur patrol proposal 

CONCORD – Contra Costa County animal control officials are proposing a special enforcement team to crack down on loose dogs. 

The proposal comes after a recent rash of vicious dog maulings, including the recent attack on 10-year-old Shawn Jones of Richmond, who was pulled off his bike by three pit bulls and attacked. 

The team of four would patrol hot spots to rein in loose dogs and take action against their owners if it was deemed necessary. 

County animal services director Mike Ross says he plans to establish the special enforcement unit if the county board of supervisors gives him an extra $225,000 dollars in the upcoming budget.


Killings shatter placid area in Sierra Nevadas

The Associated Press
Saturday July 28, 2001

STIRLING CITY — Life here is like a thousand towns across the West. The landscape is green and rolling, the days are quiet, and the air smells clean. 

But that’s been shattered here with the deaths of two Butte County sheriff’s deputies and a loner who allegedly stocked his cabin with weapons. 

Motorists enter this county on Skyway Boulevard, a two-lane road through the town of Paradise, 16 miles away, where the motto is “all its name implies it to be.” 

The views reveal ramrod straight pines, a scattering of tourists’ cabins and horseback riders. It has a post office, a community center, a California Department of Forestry fire station, one hotel and a local fire department. It is, in short, a place for getaways and fun, not for murder investigations. 

Residents said they knew there was trouble Thursday night from the sirens, flashing emergency lights and three helicopters landing in their town. 

“It’s a very nice place. People are very nice up here,” said Margaret Metz, who’s called the town of 321 people home since 1994. 

Stirling City is also a town a bit defensive about outsiders pouring in after a murder. People talk, but then just as easily say they don’t want their names used. 

“It’s a freaky thing that happened,” said one, working at the Sierra Pacific Corp. lumber business. “That deal last night was totally unexpected.” 

Nestled among evergreens, mountain lakes and countryside that still produces gold, Stirling City is a century-old lumber town, an old stop on a historic stage coach line. 

The founders laid out the streets in alternate patterns of hardwoods and minerals. Today, the street names run one direction saying Diamond, Quartz, Granite, Lava, Slate, Mica and Gypsum. In the other direction, they run Manzanita, Oak, Pine and Spruce. 

It is a place, perhaps, most famous for decades as the home forest for Diamond-brand matches. 

“It’s a lumber mill town here,” said Hope Kinne. “When I lived here in the 50s the mill owned all the houses. The mill owned the store. You got all your groceries at the store. It closed in 1959. This is a mill town.” 

“The town’s name comes from the Stirling Boiler that powered the old saws,” she said. “In the 40s and 50s, there used to be 1,000 people here. We had a lot of history here.” 

Now it’s home to retirees like Kinne, employees at the local school district, lumber haulers and sand and gravel truck drivers. The big Sierra Nevada country all around it extends six miles up the road to Inskip where Rick Bracklow and two sheriff’s deputies, Larry Estes and Bill Hunter, were found dead late Thursday. The road is mostly used by lumber trucks and people fishing for mountain trout at Philbrook Lake. 

But the surface tranquility masks what some locals call an image of drugs and unemployment. Others note the marijuana farms that grow in the nearby Plumas and Lassen National Forests. 

Sharon Wagner, whose lived all her 34 years here, like her parents and grandparents, said she hears the slurs in Paradise where she commutes to work. 

“We get a bad rap, that we are a bad town, that there’s a lot of drugs,” she said. “But there’s a lot of drugs everywhere. This is a good town.” 

She called the deaths up the hill “devastating. I feel like we’re in the city.” 

The locals say it’s unusual to see so much commotion as there was Friday. 

“There are just people who stay to themselves,” said resident Michael Moore. “We kind of look out for each other. There are some people, though, who just stay to themselves.” 

Just like Bracklow, said Wagner, an acquaintance. 

“He was a quiet guy,” she said. “He came down off the mountain every couple of weeks to get his beer and stuff.” 


Labor law enforcement funds go up

The Associated Press
Friday July 27, 2001

Amid increasing attention on the plight of sweatshop workers, Gov. Gray Davis signed into law a $2 million budget increase Thursday for the California’s labor law enforcers. 

The move came as garment and janitorial workers testified at an Assembly subcommittee hearing in Los Angeles about being overworked and underpaid. They urged state lawmakers to beef up the Department of Industrial Relations so that complaints are handled more efficiently and facilities inspected more frequently. 

Sweatshop worker advocates described the increase as a drop in the bucket and lambasted Davis for not approving the more than $4 million augmentation they had hoped for. 

“We are actually very angered and surprised because from all the testimony today we have heard so much about how the DIR needs more personnel,” said Joann Lo, a representative of the Garment Worker Center. “We think it can help a little bit but not enough.” The governor’s office refused to comment on the workers’ complaints about the budget, referring all calls to the Department of Industrial Relations. Worker advocates met last month with a representative of the governor’s office to make their case. 

Workers claim they have endured work days sometimes as long as 16 hours, six to seven days a week, earning as little as $2 per hour. 

For those who file complaints, they contend they get limited or no responses. Many say they fear reprisal from their employers either by losing their job or – for many immigrant workers – being turned over the federal authorities. Others recommended to the lawmakers Thursday that the complaint forms need to be available in more languages. 

Yanny Saavedra, a Mexican woman who has worked in Los Angeles County for four years, said she filed a complaint against one sweatshop in February and even kept labels from major brand-names that she sewed on clothes as evidence, but her case remains unresolved. 

The Department of Industrial Relations spokesman, Dean Fryer, agreed with Lo that a $2 million increase would not be enough to accomplish everything his department needs. The downturn in the economy and limited general fund resources available to the governor were responsible for the reduced size of the budget augmentation, he said. According to statistics provided at the oversight hearing, the size of the Department of Industrial Relations has not kept pace with the growth of employees in the agriculture, construction, garment and restaurant industries. 

Labor Committee Chair Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, agreed that funding and staffing are partly responsible for the department’s shortcomings, but also suggested other changes within the department could help. For example, he said investigators should broaden their inquiries to include additional workers when it appears a complaint probably applies to other employees in a particular workplace. 

Fryer said his department already does that to a certain extent, but is limited by staffing and budget problems. A centralized database of all violators also would help investigators, but the department doesn’t have the funds for that system, he said, and it doesn’t appear Thursday’s new monies would be allowed to be used for that purpose. 


BRIEFS

Thursday July 26, 2001

Dead woman found found floating near Marina 

 

The East Bay Regional Park Police found a dead woman floating in the bay near the Berkeley Marina just after midnight Wednesday.  

The body was taken to the Alameda County Coroners Office. 

Sheriff officials said the woman has not been identified and that the body is in such an advanced stage of decomposition that it will be impossible to determine the cause of death or the age of the woman until results of the autopsy are finalized, which was anticipated to be sometime Thursday morning. 

 

Wilderness speaker  

at Commons Club 

 

The Berkeley City Commons Club recently had Ed Fox, regional development director for the Wilderness Society, as the speaker at their weekly luncheon.  

Fox mentioned four areas being given priority right now: The California Desert Protection Act (involving one million acres); 700,000 acres of the Inyo forests of the Eastern Sierra; the Yosemite Area Rapid Transit System, designed to reduce pollution of the valley floor; and the “Range of Light” project, which provides a foundation for future planning of management for the governments of the Sierra Nevada regions.  

The Berkeley City Commons Club meets every Friday for a luncheon buffet at 2315 Durant Ave. For more information and reservations call 848-3533.


State budget could mean tax increase for shoppers

The Associated Press
Wednesday July 25, 2001

SACRAMENTO — If you are a California farmer, you could save thousands of dollars on a new tractor and the diesel fuel to run it. 

If you are a parent, your child’s school may see an average of $8,000 more per classroom and more parents will qualify for health care assistance. And shoppers: Prepare to pay more sales taxes at the cash register starting in January. 

All of these changes are part of a $101 billion state budget that Gov. Gray Davis is scheduled to sign this week, three weeks after it was supposed to go into effect. 

Despite the handful of targeted tax breaks – many of which were part of a last-minute deal to persuade Republicans to vote for the overdue budget – the 2001-02 spending plan is being called a lean plan without any new across-the-board relief for taxpayers. 

“This year revenues are down so it really is a ’status-quo’ budget with some modest enhancements,” said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project. Both chambers of the Legislature approved the budget last week after a three-week, partisan standoff over an automatically triggered sales tax increase. 

 

Education 

 

The budget includes about an 8 percent increase in K-12 education spending that translates to more than $7,000 per pupil. 

When averaged, the increase means $8,000 more for a 22-student classroom. The budget includes spending boosts for teacher and administrator training and after-school and remedial programs. 

“These are the kinds of things that people will realize locally as the result of this year’s budget,” said education secretary Kerry Mazzoni. 

About $200 million will be funneled into low-performing schools, which primarily contain the state’s poorest children. Plus, $40 million is earmarked to help balance urban and rural school funding. Students at the state’s universities and state and community colleges will not face an increase in tuition and fees this budget year. 

Agriculture 

 

Farmers and ranchers, part of the state’s largest industry, will see long-sought tax relief on farm machinery, parts and diesel fuel. The change means a farmer could save roughly $2,000 on the purchase of a new mid-powered, $40,000 tractor. 

The legislation also includes a sales tax exemption for diesel fuel used for agriculture, which experts say will save farmers and ranchers thousands of dollars. 

 

Tax Relief 

 

A sagging economy and surplus sapped by the costs of the statewide energy crisis mean this budget includes no new across-the-board tax cuts. 

The budget, however, includes millions in tax breaks enacted last year, when unexpected revenues from income  

and capital gains taxes streamed into the state treasury. They include a 67.5 percent cut in the vehicle registration fee, a day-care credit for some parents, and an income tax credit for credentialed teachers. 

 

Sales Taxes  

 

The budget includes about $2 billion in rainy day funds – likely too small a cushion to prevent a quarter-cent sales tax increase starting in January.  

The hike would translate to about $50 more in sales tax on a $20,000 car and about 5 cents on a compact disc. Government officials estimate it will cost a family of four an average of $120 per year. 

 

Transportation 

 

Some projects planned to ease commuter woes could be delayed. The budget includes a Davis proposal to postpone a plan to direct gasoline sales tax revenues exclusively to transportation – instead using them to help pad the general fund in the face of dwindling revenues. 

However, voters will decide this budget year whether to require that gasoline tax revenues be used for roads, highways and transit projects beginning in the 2003-04 budget year. 

HEALTH CARE: 

The budget injects more money into the state’s cash-strapped trauma centers and expands Healthy Families, one of the state’s health care programs for the poor. The new budget allows parents who make 250 percent of the federal poverty level to qualify for the program. 

SENIORS: 

The budget includes $75 million in tax credits to help low-income senior citizens pay rent and property taxes. 

—— 

On the Net: Find the California Budget Project at http://www.cbp.org/ and more budget analysis at www.lao.ca.gov. The California Farm Bureau Federation’s Web site is http://www.cfbf.com/. 


Hearing set for district growth

Daily Planet staff
Tuesday July 24, 2001

The Alameda County Board of Supervisors will hold its last redistricting public hearing next Tuesday, before adopting the final plan setting the county’s new boundaries. 

The hearing will take place at at 11 a.m. at the Board Chambers, on 1221 Oak St., Fifth Floor, Oakland. It will be the last opportunity for community members and organizations to give their input on the 20 redistricting alternatives submitted for review. 

Every 10 years, when the U.S. Census information is released, supervisors must draw new borders to equalize the population of each district in the county. The new demographic data shows that district Five, which includes Berkeley, must grow by about 30, 000 people. The district is likely to expand to the south, moving farther into Oakland. 

This year, supervisors intensified their effort to make the process as open and inclusive as possible. Since April, 14 public hearings were held and the county set up a web site designed to receive and diffuse public comments on the proposed redistricting plans. 

At Tuesday’s hearing, supervisors will select one of the existing alternatives or create a new one. The final redistricting plan must be adopted by August 15. 

For Additional information on the redistricting process visit the Alameda County web site at: http://www.co.alameda.ca.us and click on “Redistricting.”