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New library director honored

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet correspondent
Saturday September 08, 2001

The Berkeley Public Library system and its friends and supporters marked the beginning of a new era Friday afternoon in an official reception to welcome its new Director of Library Services, Jackie Y. Griffin. 

“We’ve been sort of marking time until we could get the new library renovation done and until we could get a new director,” said Gabrielle Morris, a Friends of the Berkeley Public Library board member. “We’re glad to have a new head in office so all these ideas that have been around for the last six months can get going.” 

Griffin replaces Adelia Lines, who died Dec. 7 after a long career distinguished by the founding of the Berkeley Public Library Foundation and a successful campaign to win public support for the Central Library restoration. 

“Jackie Griffin seems like the same kind of person, someone with experience in outreach in a library in a college town,” Morris said. 

Griffin, who started work Aug. 6, had spent two years as director of the Eugene Public Library in Eugene, Ore. 

“Eugene’s kind of like a training ground for Berkeley,” she said in an interview. 

Griffin started her career as a head librarian in Illinois, then spent six years with the King County, Washington library system, in the Seattle area before moving to Eugene. She came to Berkeley with her partner and two sons, aged 4 and 13. A daughter, aged 19, is a student at the University of Oregon. 

Griffin will oversee one of the most vibrant and beloved library systems in the country, with more than 420,000 books and 152,000 library card holders (in a city with just over 100,000 residents). 

“We get people from all over the East Bay, we get people from San Francisco, from Sacramento, from San Jose,” said reference specialist Anne-Marie Miller. “People call from all over the world. Some say they lived here and they know it’s a good library. Some people call from the East Coast because of the time difference. They pick Berkeley because it has a good reputation.” 

“One of the things that was attractive to me about coming here was just the support of the community, the willingness to pass bond measures to support the library, the involvement,” Griffin said. 

“Right now my number one mission is to continue that, to strengthen our ties to the community, and make sure we continue to be a good resource. I’m not going to start messing with things when they’re going so well.” 


Out and About

Compiled by Greg Poole
Saturday September 08, 2001


Saturday, Sept. 8

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Civic Center Park 

Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street 

A free environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Youth Arts Studio 

2 - 5 p.m. 

All Souls Episcopal Parish 

2220 Cedar St. 

Demonstration classes for after school program in visual arts, creative writing and dramatic arts for students ages 10 - 15. Free. 848-1755 

 

Luna Kids Dance Open House 

10 - 11 a.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar 

Free open house and parent/ child classes. Designed to give families a shared dance experience that connects body, mind, and soul. Children will have a chance to play fun dance games, refreshments and register for fall session. 525-4339 www.lunakidsdnace.com 

 

Pack Right, Travel Smart 

1 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Eagle Creek Rep will give you tips on how to best organize your gear and clothing for your next adventure. Free. 527-4140 

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

Earthquake retrofitting class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley. 644-8736 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire.oes.html 

 


Sunday, Sept. 9

 

Solano Stroll 2001 

8 a.m. - 7 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

27th Annual Berkeley / Albany Festival. 11 a.m. Parade; 8 a.m. pancake breakfast; merchants, entertainers, food, craft alley, game booths, silent auction, climbing wall, bicycle stunt show, ponyrides, giant slide, dunk tank, hot air balloon rides. Free. 527-5358 www.solanostroll.org 

 

Salsa Lesson and Dance Party 

6 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Salsa lesson and dance party with professional instructors. Israeli food. Novices welcome and no partner required. $12. RSVP 237-9874 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Avenue between 3rd and 4th streets  

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

654-6346  

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

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

527-4140 

 

International House featured in documentary 

1:30 p.m. 

KQED-TV Ch. 9 

Hosted by Sam Waterson, The International House feature is part of the Visionaries Documentary series about the positive impact of inspiring nonprofit organizations.  

 

Buddhism 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

“The Heart Sutra” Bob Byrne will discuss the deep impact this important teaching of the Buddha has had on his life. 843-6812 

 


Monday, Sept. 10

 

Jazzschool in Berkeley fall quarter 

Jazzschool 

2375 Shattuck Ave. 

Applications are currently being accepted for the fall 2001 quarter. Auditions and consultations scheduled through Sept. 14. 845-5373 www.jazzschool.com 

 

FTM Book and Discussion Group 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

“The Lieutenant Nun: Transgenderism, Lesbian Desire and Catalina DeErauso,” by Sherry M. Velasco. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Cub Scout Information Night 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Epworth Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

A program that offers outdoor and leadership skills. First through fifth grade boys and parents. Free. 525-6058 

Jewish Genealogy: Finding Your Jewish Family History 

7:30 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Learn basic techniques and resources to trace your family history. 848-0237 

 

Section 8 Resident Council First Annual Speak Up: Part 2  

5:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. 

East Bay Community Law Center 

3122 Shattuck Ave. 

You can effect change, but you must speak up! Refreshments provided. 

 

Berkeley Folk Dancers 

7:45 p.m. - 9:45 p.m. 

Live Oak Park 

1301 Shattuck 

New fall classes starts. Mondays through Oct. 29; $20 

http://geocities.com/bdancers 

 

Compiled by Guy Poole


5 & 10-cent stores once essential features of American main streets

By Susan Cerny
Saturday September 08, 2001

The Kress building represents the almost vanished variety store which once dominated American main streets. Until the 1960s Shattuck Avenue had three five-and-dime stores: Kress, Woolworth’s, and National Dollar Stores, all within four blocks of one another.  

The S.H. Kress & Co. chain of five-and-dimes was one of the most successful retail businesses of the 20th century. The company opened its first store in 1896 and the Berkeley store was built in 1932. It was designed by Kress’ architectural staff headed by Edward F. Sibbert. The exterior walls are light brown brick decorated with polychrome terra-cotta ornament in what is commonly referred to as “zig-zag modern.”  

Unlike other variety stores, Kress built, rather than leased his stores. Kress even established an architectural division in 1900, and created a basic style that set his stores apart from his competitors. There were once 264 stores across the country.  

In 1997-1998 The Building Museum in Washington D.C. had an exhibit entitled “Main Street Five-and Dimes: The Architectural Heritage of S.H. Kress & Co. On the cover of the museum brochure was the photograph reproduced here of the Berkeley store. The January/February 1993 issue of Historic Preservation, the magazine of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, devoted eight pages to the story of Samuel H. Kress and the design of his five-and-dime stores. The article notes that “Kress dime stores constitute a remarkable architectural heritage…they are reminders of the role that retailing played in shaping the American experience.” 

Samuel Kress also became a major Renaissance art collector, established the Kress Foundation in 1929, and donated approximately 400 works to the National Gallery in 1939. After World War II the Kress Foundation gave paintings and sculptures to many museums around the country. The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco are among the museums that benefited from the Kress Foundation generosity. 

Susan Cerney writes “Berkeley Observed” in conjunction with the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association.


Idealism: a viable alternative in today’s media world?

By Norman Solomon Creators Syndicate
Saturday September 08, 2001

In this era of conglomerate mergers and bottom-line obsessions, it’s easy to believe that the media industry requires yielding to expediency. Like most people, media employees want job security. Few are inclined to risk their livelihoods and careers for matters of principle. 

For more than two years now, a real-life media drama involving the noncommercial Pacifica radio network has put a national spotlight on tensions between divergent options – taking the path of least resistance and taking an idealistic stand. 

Under escalating pressure in early 1999, news reporters and public affairs producers at Northern California’s 50-year-old KPFA Radio – the first listener-supported station in the country – refused to be censored or intimidated by firings, threats and armed guards posted in the studios by Pacifica management. 

Pacifica executives figured that if they tightened the screws, KPFA’s staff would opt for personal self-interest rather than solidarity based on idealism. And in the early summer of 1999 – minutes after KPFA aired excerpts from a press conference that indicated Pacifica was considering sale of the nonprofit station – management cut off a live news broadcast, then locked out the staff and volunteers. Longtime KPFA journalists were arrested in the station’s newsroom. 

It didn’t work. Massive community support for KPFA, with several weeks of protests including a march of more than 10,000 people past the station’s studios in Berkeley, forced Pacifica to allow the station to resume its treasured broadcasting role. 

Today, out of the five Pacifica-owned stations, KPFA is the only one where a climate of fear doesn’t reign. And not coincidentally, when this month began, KPFA was the only one of those stations airing “Democracy Now!” – the award-winning and pathbreaking daily public-affairs program that Pacifica stopped broadcasting in mid-August, after many months of mounting harassment aimed at host Amy Goodman. 

As part of the continuing legacy of gutsy actions by KPFA supporters, the station’s listeners were able to hear “Democracy Now!” coverage from South Africa of the recent World Conference Against Racism. 

Those broadcasts were blocked at the other Pacifica stations – in Los Angeles, Houston, New York City and Washington, D.C. – where reliance on threats now flourishes as a standard instrument of management. 

Founded as an alternative to mainstream media conformity a half-century ago, Pacifica has descended into a censorious maelstrom during the past few years. Ever since late December 2000, New York’s WBAI Radio (where “Democracy Now!” was long based) has been in the hands of an autocratic regime, fixated on banishing reporters, producers and others with progressive politics and the gumption to stand up for their beliefs. 

After eight months of repressive actions at WBAI, an important national magazine on the political left, The Nation, published a Sept. 3 editorial that didn’t come close to the denunciation of Pacifica management that would seem to be in line with the magazine’s pronouncements on journalistic integrity elsewhere. 

Along the way, in the editorial, The Nation made no mention of the fact that its weekly national program “RadioNation” is co-produced by Pacifica’s Los Angeles outlet KPFK, where the station’s management has been rigorous about preventing criticism of Pacifica from getting onto its airwaves. A forthright disclaimer, accompanying the editorial, would have let readers know that The Nation might have something appreciable to gain by remaining on the good side of often-retaliatory Pacifica management. 

By not acknowledging that reality, the magazine withheld relevant information in an unsigned editorial – rendered as the voice of The Nation. I asked editors about the magazine’s working relationship with Pacifica and why the editorial made no mention of that relationship. The top editor responded by describing the magazine’s ties with Pacifica’s KPFK but offered no explanation about the absence of a disclaimer in the editorial. 

For years now, from coast to coast, some of the best journalists in Pacifica’s history have been subjected to a de facto blacklist. Pacifica management and the administrators now running four of its stations have been vengeful to an extreme in retaliating against those who voice strong criticisms. 

Ironically, The Nation has published many eloquent pieces over the years decrying the pernicious blacklisting of the McCarthy Era. The magazine’s current editorial director may be the country’s leading authority on the subject. But The Nation’s editorial did not challenge the ongoing pattern of harassment, intimidation and firings by Pacifica managers. 

In a corporate media tradition, while calculating how to deal with personnel, the executives in charge of media outlets do not consider hunger for social justice. Hopes and dreams do not show up on a spreadsheet. But they can have tangible and profound effects on history in the making. 

The past few years have seen a growing national movement to “save Pacifica” (www.savepacifica.net). This movement represents grassroots media activism – researching, organizing and agitating to reclaim the largest progressive radio network in the United States while prying it loose from the hands of a mostly self-selected corporate-oriented national board. 

Meanwhile, for now anyway, KPFA is notable as the only Pacifica station free of the network’s censorship mentality. Why do KPFA’s broadcasters and listeners get to enjoy such freedom every day? They struggled for it. 

And the struggle continues. 

 

Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist on media and politics. His latest book is “The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media.” 

 

 

 


Ensemble uses stories to bring town to life

By Maryann Maslan Daily Planet Correspondent
Saturday September 08, 2001

With tongues clicking and rumors circulating, words were picked up, repeated and echoed in whispers amongst the townspeople of Winesburg, Ohio, defining the conformity of small town life in rural America.  

The collaboration of Word for Word theater company and Shotgun Players has created one of those rare occasions when the sum of the parts is greater than the whole with their production of “Winesburg, Ohio: Tales of the Grotesques” at the Julia Morgan Theatre in Berkeley. 

When Sherwood Anderson published his novel of 24 short stories in 1919, small town life was no longer romanticized in the literature of the time. The hopes, dreams, desires and disillusionments of the individual were being expressed with a frank reality that disturbed readers.  

The ensemble selected four stories from Anderson’s novel weaving the life of a town into a patchwork quilt telling each person’s truth. Delia MacDougall, director of Word for Word, has delivered this production with compassion and humor. 

In “A Man of Ideas,” Joe Welling, played with uncompromising clarity by Clive Worsley, harangues the town with his eccentric ideas, keeping them on edge as to what he will come up with next. He is indulged, then applauded, when his unorthodox coaching methods lead the local baseball team to victory. But when he starts to court a shy woman from a questionable family new to town, raised eyebrows anticipate confrontation and disaster.  

A local newspaperman, George Willard (Patrick Dooley), appears in more than one of the stories recording the events of the town. He sometimes has an ear at a parlor door or sometimes becomes the object of a lonely soul he has befriended, drawing the audience into the various tales. 

In another story “Paper Pills,” there were moments of pure artistry when choreographed words and movement combined to create a chorus of twisted, bent apple trees that are a visual metaphor for the relationship between Dr. Reefy (David Cramer) and the ‘tall dark girl’ (Amaya Alonso Hallifax).  

Throughout the production the lighting by Jim Cave molded and supported the various moods as did the music and sound design by David Reyes. The details of Valera Coble’s period costumes and the flexible set by Alex Nichols added to the tightness of the show.  

Each of the four vignettes ended with a tableau that served to expose another level of the character’s motivation or revealed another corner of a tormented soul.  

Louise Bentley (Beth Donohue) is an emotionally confused young woman in “Surrender.” She is trapped and isolated longing for love and someone to listen to her dreams. The solution becomes worse than the fear of her unfulfilled dreams. 

The final story of the quartet is about a former teacher, powerfully played by Adrian Elfenbaum, who lives on the outskirts of town. “Hands” painfully demonstrates the effect of rumor and small town intolerance of anyone who is different.  

The 10-member ensemble has crafted an elegant slice of Anderson’s America. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Arts and Entertainment Calender

Staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

 

924 Gilman Sept. 8: Lab Rats, Relative; Most shows $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless noted. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Albatross Pub Sept. 11: Mad & Eddie Duran Jazz Duo; Sept. 13: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 19: Whiskey Brothers; Sept. 20: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 22: Larry Stefl Jazz Quartet; Sept. 27: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Free. All shows begin at 9 p.m. 1822 San Pablo Ave. 843-2473 albatrosspub@mindspring.com  

 

Ashkenaz Sept. 9: 9 p.m. El Leo, The Jarican Express, $10; 1317 San Pablo 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Café Eclectica Sept. 8: 8 p.m. SF Improv, Free. 1309 Solano Ave. 326-6124 www.sfimprov.com 

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. Sept. 10: Lucy Lang Day; Sept. 17: Marc Hofstadter (book party); Sept. 24: Jim Watson-Gove; All shows free, 7 - 10 p.m. 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Tania Libertad, $18 - $30; Sept. 30: 7 p.m. Kronos Quartet, David Barron, $30; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Splif Skankin and Funky Man. $10; Sept. 3: 2 - 8 p.m. Big West Coast Harmonica Bash, afternoon benefit for Red Archibald. $10 donation; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 8: The House Jacks, $17.50; Sept. 9: Erika Luckett, $16.50; Sept. 11: Don Walser, Slaid Cleaves, $16.50; Sept. 12: Andy Irvine, $17.50; Sept. 13: Piper Heisig birthday revue and fund raiser w/ Kate Brislin, Sylvia Herold, Tony Marcus, Carlos Reyes, and Radim Zenkl, $16.50; Sept. 14: Ray Wylie Hubbard, $16.50; Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jupiter Sept. 10: Ben Graves Trio; Sept. 11: Len Patterson Trio; Sept. 12: Bitches Brew; Sept. 13: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 14: Carlos Washington & Giant People Ensemble; Sept. 15: Kooken & Hoomen; Sept. 18: The Goodbye Flowers; Sept. 19: New Monsoon; Sept. 20: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 21: Netwerk: Electric; Sept. 22: New Garde Philosophers; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

La Peña Cultural Center Sept. 11 & 12: 8 p.m. Irakere, $22; In the Cafe, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Alice Arts Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Benefit concert for freedom of U.S. political prisoners featuring Fred Ho (solo) and The Eddie Gale Unit. $12; 1428 Alice, Oakland, 539-0050 www.thejerichomovement.com/teardownthewalls 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church Sept. 15: George Brooks and Shweta Jhaveri with Uttam Chakraborty on drums. $18 - $25; 2727 College Ave. 843-9600 www.harmoniventures.com 

 

Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live Radio Show Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave.; Sept. 29: Nancy Miford, author of “Savage Beauty.” West African folk music with The Nigerian Brothers. Blues roots piano by Caroline Dahl. The Freight and Salvage, 1111 Addison St. All shows 10 a.m. - noon. 252-9214 www.wcl.org 

 

Lerner and Loewe’s “My Fair Lady” Sept. 7, 8, 9. All shows 8 p.m. Adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s and Gabrial Pascal’s “Pygmalion.” Directed by James Schlader, choreographed by Harriet Schlader, under the musical 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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 foot 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. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until Oct. 1 : “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 Avenue. 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  

 

Oakland Museum of California “After the Storm: Bob Walker and the Art of Environmental Photography,” through Sept. 16; “Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks,” through Sept. 23; Wednesday - Saturday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sunday, noon - 5 p.m., Closed Monday and Tuesday. $6 general; $4 youths (6-17), seniors and students with ID. Free for museum members and children 5 and under. Free admission the second Sunday of the month. 10th & Oak streets, Oakland. 238-2200 www.museum.org 

 

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

 

Send arts events two weeks in advance to Calendar@berkeleydailyplanet.net, 2076 University, Berkeley 94704 or fax to 841-5694.


Tough overtime loss for Bears 924 Gilman Sept. 8: Lab Rats, Relative; Most shows $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless noted. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 Albatross Pub Sept. 11: Mad & Eddie Duran Jazz Duo; Sept. 13: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 19

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

Fullerton wins on penalty kick in 110th minute  

For 109 minutes, the Cal men’s soccer team seemed in control of their match against CSU Fullerton on Friday. But one controversial mistake gave the game to the Titans, as a foul in the Cal box led to a Hector Orellana penalty kick in the second overtime period. 

As Fullerton’s Cameron McKinnon sped into the penalty area, Cal midfielder Chris Roner made contact with him, sending the Titan player to the ground. The referee awarded the penalty kick, and Orellana slammed it home past Cal goalkeeper Josh Saunders to win the game. 

Cal head coach Kevin Grimes was incensed by the call, as an earlier incident involving Cal forward Austin Ripmaster and Fullerton goalkeeper Jaff McKeever went uncalled. 

“For the referee not to call it when Rip was taken down in the box with 10 minutes left, then call a shoulder-to-shoulder tackle on us, it just doesn’t make sense,” Grimes said. 

But he didn’t blame the loss on the officiating. 

“In a game that goes for 110 minutes, you can’t blame one play,” he said. “We have to finish our chances.” 

While the number of shots for each team was tied at 10 apiece, most of the Fullerton shots were from outside and posed little threat. The Bears, on the other hand, had several good chances to score, including three resulting from defender Mike Hickman’s monstrous throw-ins. 

The game was a contrast in attack styles. The Bears were effective swinging the ball around the back and playing up the flanks, while Fullerton was more direct, putting the ball up the middle of the field, often through diminutive midfielder Jason Clifford. 

The loss drops Cal to 1-2 on the season, while the Titans improved to 2-0-1. 

The Bears play Loyola Marymount on Sunday at 2 p.m., while CSU Fullerton takes on Stanford at 1130 a.m.


Attorney files suit against Eviction Defense Center

By Hank SimsDaily Planet correspondent
Saturday September 08, 2001

An El Cerrito attorney has filed suit against a non-profit organization that provides legal assistance to low-income Berkeley residents, and promises a large campaign against what he claims is a conspiracy to defraud poor citizens by offering shoddy legal services. 

The attorney, Andrew Shalaby, charges Oakland’s Eviction Defense Center with “ghostwriting,” or anonymously preparing documents for parties who act as their own lawyers in court. He believes that the process was made illegal last year, when the California legislature instituted a system to regulate the independent paralegal industry. 

His opponents, though, argue that lawyers are perfectly within their rights to write cases for “pro per” parties – people who represent themselves in legal cases. They believe that Shalaby’s true motive is to harass the EDC, and ultimately to limit the kinds of services that places like it provide. 

“What Mr. Shalaby is trying to do is prevent poor tenants from getting any help at all,” said Robert Salinas, the attorney representing Ira Jacobowitz, a member of the EDC’s board of directors. “It is disgusting.” 

So far, the courts have agreed with the EDC, but Shalaby has persisted in his claim and threatens to take the case to the California Supreme Court and to the federal court system. 

The city’s Rent Stabilization Board grants the EDC $52,000 per year in exchange for counseling provided to low-income Berkeley citizens who find themselves in legal disputes with their landlords. The rent board also funds two other organizations – the East Bay Community Law Center and Housing Rights, Inc. – for similar services. 

According to Shalaby, the Eviction Defense Center illegally acts as a “legal document assistant (LDA),” or an independent paralegal. 

The California Business and Professions Code requires LDA’s to register and, in the county in which they operate, post a bond and put their names and addresses on all documents they prepare. They are not allowed to dispense legal advice. The majority of LDA’s work in fields like divorce, bankruptcy and estate planning. 

The whole matter began last year, when Shalaby was retained by a Berkeley landlord when he began eviction proceedings against a tenant. The tenant decided to fight the eviction, and to act as her own attorney.  

The Superior Court heard the case on Oct. 27, 2000. The tenant showed up in court with a demurrer – a request for the court to dismiss a suit – which argued that the eviction order did not comply with Berkeley’s Rent Stabilization and Eviction for Good Cause Ordinance. The document was written by the EDC. Shalaby held that it was “frivolous,” and that that the tenant and the EDC should be held responsible for his attorney fees. 

The court ruled for Shalaby in the case, but did not award him his fees. However, it denied the motion to recover fees “without prejudice,” a standard legal ruling meaning that Shalaby could take up the matter later if he so chose. 

He then sued the EDC and Anne Omura, an attorney and EDC employee, to recover the $5,000 his client spent on the case. Shalaby held that the EDC was operating as LDA’s, despite being attorneys, and should be held accountable for work they did.  

“They misrepresented the law, they misrepresented the facts, and they deserve sanctions,” he said in an interview. 

Instead, a judge ruled that his case constituted a SLAPP suit – one that sought to deny the defendants their constitutional rights – and awarded $31,000 to the EDC. Shalaby has since re-filed the case with Jacobowitz as an additional defendant, and asked the court to stay payment of the $31,000. He has been unsuccessful on all counts.  

Shalaby alleged that the various judges who have heard motions and previous incarnations of his claim have been biased by their connections to the defendants. One judge, he claimed, has been Jacobowitz’ friend for many years, and another communicated privately with Jacobowitz about the case before ruling in Jacobowitz’ favor. 

Shalaby has asked the California Supreme Court to hear the case because it is a “case of first impression” – one dealing with a matter that has not been decided before in the courts. What is the difference between an LDA and an attorney who writes documents? 

“The trouble with Mr. Shalaby’s suggestion that it is a matter of first impression is that there are a number of things that have not been ruled on in the courts,” said Jacobowitz. “For instance, the sun comes up, the sun goes back down. The reason that these things are not ruled on is that they are a matter of common sense.” 

“Mr. Shalaby has every right to ask the Supreme Court to review what has happened. To me, it does not seem likely that he will get a review, except the review by the (state’s) First District Court of Appeals that he is legally entitled to.” 

Asked to comment, Tiela Chalmers, managing attorney the San Francisco Bar Association’s Volunteer Legal Services Program, said that her impression was that Shalaby’s intention was to hinder the ability of low-income residents to defend themselves. 

“Generally, lawyers who represent landlords hate places like the EDC,” she said. “They’d prefer tenants to have no legal representation whatsoever.” 


People, not guns, are responsible

Romila Khanna
Saturday September 08, 2001

Editor, 

I was really surprised to read in the Berkeley Daily Planet about the call for gun manufacturers’ to be held responsible for irresponsible design and marketing of their product, which is a nuisance the community. 

I feel that persons who use a gun to kill should be held 100 percent responsible for their acts of shooting and killing others. Any rational person would think twice about the use of a gun in harming others. I sometimes wonder, if we transfer the civic duties and responsibilities to others and blame and punish them, we will never be able to stop such unkind and cruel acts as shooting and killing others. By blaming the manufacturer, we are transferring the blame of a criminal act of one person (who is a killer) to the whole company. It will not stop this kind of cruelty in the future. 

We must revise our method of imparting civic education to all public agencies, colleges, schools, to let everyone remember, we don’t have any right to take away someone’s life or hurt someone. Guns are for protection. They are to be used for protection only. They should not be used to kill or hurt others. There should be very strict laws. Local, state or federal laws can only be respected by people of any land if children, youth and adults understand that each one of us is a member of society, and we must follow the existing laws for peace and safety. Value-oriented education is the answer to improve irresponsible behavior. 

I feel that no company or gun manufacturer is responsible for any shooting. If anyone in a fit of anger or under the influence of a mind altering drug, shoots or kills others and commits a crime, that person should be held responsible because that person made a personal decision to shoot or kill. 

In order to change the prevailing attitudes of those who use guns to kill others, law enforcement agencies should be more strict. They should get involved in public education systems and impart civic education to children and to young adults in the schools. 

Preventive programs such as anger management skills to teach them how to reduce tension and settle disputes, without using guns can help. Guns are a means for protection and should be only used sparingly by law enforcement agencies. 

Romila Khanna 

Albany


Foothill blasts ’Jackets 37-0

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

The Berkeley High football team was hoping to avoid a slow start this season, as last year’s 0-4 pre-league results cost them a berth in the North Coast Section playoffs. But the Yellowjackets ran right into a disaster in their first game on Friday night, failing in nearly every phase of the game and losing, 37-0, to Foothill High. 

The ’Jackets had few bright spots on Friday. They gave up long plays in both the passing game and running game, and were unable to sustain a drive long enough to score. The closest they came was in the second half with the game already decided, but quarterback Raymond Pinkston threw an interception to kill the team’s final drive. 

“A few bad things happen, and they just steamroll on you,” Berkeley head coach Matt Bissell said after the game. “We’d do three good things, then one bad thing would stop a drive.” 

Running back Germaine Baird looked like a good replacement for departed star Ramone Reed, if he could just hold onto the football. Baird ran for several big gains, showing speed and power, picking up 76 yards on just eight carries. But he showed a lack of concern for the football the very first time he touched it. After the Berkeley defense stopped the opening Foothill drive in just three plays, Baird coughed up the ball after a long gain, and Foothill’s Ryan Howe recovered it to give the ball back to his offense. 

The Falcons took to the air after the turnover, as quarterback Brett Andrade found wideout Scott Cooper for gains of 13 and 15 yards to drive down the field. Inside the Berkeley 20, the defense stiffened, but a 4th-and-5 for the Falcons turned into a first down when Andrade threw a quick pass to Joey Munn for eight yards. Matt Hoefs ran for a nine-yard touchdown on the next play, and the rout was on. 

Berkeley went three-and-out the next series, and Jason Goodwin’s punt was blocked, giving Foothill the ball at the seven-yard line. It took the Falcons just two plays to score, with Andrade hitting a diving Chris Reeves in the end zone for a 13-0 lead. 

Andrade carved up the Berkeley secondary, partly due to the fact that the ’Jacket defensive line couldn’t get any pressure on the senior signal-caller. Andrade was 9-of-15 on pass attempts in the first half, throwing for 132 yards and two touchdowns. The Foothill coaches called off the dogs in the second half, allowing Andrade to throw just one pass before pulling him in the fourth quarter. 

“We gave up some big plays tonight,” Bissell said. “One guy would have a breakdown in the secondary, and everyone gets confused.” 

Foothill scored twice more in the first half, both on short drives. A Berkeley personal foul on a Foothill punt return put the ball at the 29-yard line, and Munn blasted a 27-yard field goal for a 16-0 lead. A botched handoff from Pinkston to Baird killed the next Berkeley drive, and Andrade found Howe wide open in the end zone for a 23-0 halftime lead. 

The second half consisted mostly of Foothill killing the clock while the ’Jackets tried to work on their offense, but the Falcons still managed to put the ball in the end zone twice. Another blocked Berkeley punt gave them the ball 30 yards out, and Hoefs took it to the house on the first play, bursting through the line and dodging a dive by Berkeley safety Craig Hollis on his way to a score. 

The next Falcon drive was even more painful for Berkeley, as several Foothill overcame several penalties and long yardage situations, including a 52-yard run by Brandon Croker on a 2nd-and-25, to score on an 11-yard run by Matt Farrington to cap the scoring at 37-0.


Recycled water may be used in west Berkeley parks, businesses

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

West Berkeley parks and large businesses may soon be required to use recycled water in an attempt to conserve northern California’s water supply, which is becoming increasingly strained by rapid population growth. 

At Tuesday’s City Council meeting, Mayor Shirley Dean will ask her colleagues to support a recommendation asking staff to look at establishing an ordinance requiring the use of recycled water where possible in new construction and open space, including parks.  

Dean said the state’s population is expected to significantly increase by 2020 and that will put a huge strain on the existing water supply, unless something is done.  

“This is really serious stuff,” she said. “The state’s population is growing and the water supply is not. At some point we’re going to get hit and hit hard with a water shortage.” 

Grey water comes from used home, garden and industry water. The recycled water is taken from sewage treatment plants and put through three phases of treatment and then sanitized before being made available for reuse, according to Laura Johnson, the supervisor of the East Bay Municipal Utilities District’s Office of Water Recycling.  

Recycled water is for nonpotable uses only, such as landscaping and industrial water cooling systems. It is not considered safe to drink. 

The ordinance will be designed to take advantage of EBMUD’s $20 million program to create a recycled water infrastructure. The project will supply large water users with recycled water in Berkeley, Oakland, Alameda and Albany. 

The goal is to increase EBMUD’s recycled water use from 14.5 million gallons per day to 24 million gallons per day by 2020, thereby creating an annual savings of 9 billion gallons of high quality water - or drinking water - per year. That’s enough to supply 83,000 households, according to Johnson. 

A recycled water mainline, known as a “purple pipe,” has already been put in place along Interstate 80 from EBMUD’s water recycling plant in Oakland to the Albany border. According to Johnson, the system will be ready to start supplying recycled water within the next two years. 

Until the purple pipe infrastructure expands, only businesses and parks within a few blocks of the pipe will be able to access the recycled water supply. 

If Berkeley approves the ordinance, at least three city parks, Aquatic Park, Harrison Field and the Berkeley Marina, including Cesar Chavez Park, will begin using recycled water for landscaping purposes.  

“We’re really excited about the possibility of using recycled water,” said Parks and Waterfront Director Lisa Caronna. “We hope to get more parks, and other areas like the median on University Avenue, hooked up as well.” 

Caronna said there are some concerns about using the recycled water in the three west Berkeley parks because they are all close to natural water sources. 

“We asked EBMUD a lot of questions because all those parks are adjacent to a creek, an estuary and the Bay,” Caronna said. 

She added that if there are environmental concerns, the Parks and Waterfront Department will take whatever measures are necessary to protect the waterways. 

Dean said no businesses have been identified in west Berkeley that may be affected by the ordinance.  

Oakland is a step ahead of Berkeley – under construction is the first high-rise in the country to be outfitted with a dual water supply. All of the toilets in the 20-story City Center Building will be flushed by recycled water. 


Cal women hold on to early lead, beat No. 17 Longhorns

Daily Planet Wire Services
Saturday September 08, 2001

Schott, Doubrava score for Bears 

 

AUSTIN, Texas - Fifth-ranked California improved to 3-0 on the season with a 2-1 road victory over 17th-ranked Texas (0-2) Friday night in front of 2137 fans at Myers Stadium and Soccer Field.  

The Golden Bears led 2-0 at the half on goals by junior All-American forward Laura Schott and sophomore forward Kassie Doubrava.  

Schott netted Cal’s first goal in the 17th minute on a penalty kick, which was awarded after she was pulled down in the box. She now has seven points on the season with an assist and a goal in each one of Cal’s victories.  

Doubrava posted what would eventually be her second game-winning goal this season in the 38th minute. Freshman midfielder Kacy Hornor dribbled a couple of players and set up Doubrava with a perfect pass.  

After not tallying a point as a freshman, Doubrava is tied with Schott and the Bears other frontrunner, Kyla Sabo, for the team lead in points. Doubrava also has scored in each of the Bears three matches.  

Cal outshot Texas in the first half 7-4, but the Longhorns were the offensive aggressor after halftime, outshooting the Bears 16-3. Luckily for Cal, only four of Texas’ second-half shots were on goal.  

“We were up 2-0 at the half and outplayed them,” Cal coach Kevin Boyd said. “In the second half, we just let them come at us, which is not a good way to defend a lead. We actually had a few chances we didn’t put away, but for the most part we just sat in. I wasn’t thrilled with that, but I was happy with the road win over a nationally-ranked opponent.”  

With six seconds remaining in the game, freshman forward Kelly Wilson kept her team from being shut out by collecting a loose ball in the box and putting it away.  

The Bears continue their five-game road trip at 10th-ranked Texas A&M on Sunday. The game has been moved to Southwest Texas State due to the Aggies’ field being unplayable from too much rain.


CHP car chase ends in gunfire

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

A police chase that began in San Francisco ended in gunfire Friday afternoon when a man suspected of car theft allegedly threatened CHP officers with gun after abandoning a truck in Berkeley. 

According to CHP Public Affairs Officer Sean Chase, at least one CHP officer fired an unknown number of rounds at 30-year-old Lamont Austin when he abandoned the truck on Ashby Avenue at Sacramento Street. 

Police said no one was injured in the shooting. 

According to Chase, Austin threatened two officers with a handgun as he fled on foot between two homes after abandoning the light-blue Dodge truck he was suspected of stealing. But as of 6 p.m. Friday, both the CHP and the Berkeley Police Department, which is investigating the case, could not say they found the suspect’s weapon. 

Chase said Austin initially alluded police on foot by jumping over a series of backyard fences in the residential district. Because the suspect was reported to be armed, Oakland, Berkeley and CHP officers closed off several blocks of traffic while a block by block search was conducted.  

Austin was found hiding in a dumpster behind a home on Ashby Avenue shortly after he abandoned the truck. He was taken into custody by Berkeley police and is expected to be charged with auto theft, hit and run and felony reckless driving, according to Berkeley police Lt. Cynthia Harris. 

“The case is still under investigation and we can’t say for sure if the suspect has any other arrest warrants out,” she said.  

CHP officer Annie Greenfield said the pursuit began in San Francisco when a man reported that his truck had been stolen and that the suspect was heading toward the Bay Bridge. Officers chased Austin at speeds above 80 mph across the Bay Bridge and then north on Interstate 80 to the Powell Street exit. 

The pursuit continued on surface streets until Austin abandoned the truck. 

Kandy Mann, owner of Kandy Mann’s Detail Center at the corner of Ashby Avenue and Sacramento Street, said he saw the CHP chasing the truck but didn’t pay much attention until he heard a shot. 

“That’s when things got interesting and I thought I’d better take a second look,” he said. “I only heard one shot but it was a loud one.” 


Robert McAfee Brown, leader of liberation theology movement dead at 81

Associated Press
Saturday September 08, 2001

PALO ALTO, (AP) — Robert McAfee Brown, a Presbyterian theologian who bridged tensions between Protestants and Catholics and became one of the best-known advocates of the liberation theology movement, has died. He was 81. 

Brown, who lived in Palo Alto, died at a nursing home Tuesday in Greenfield, Mass., where he kept a summer home. His wife, Sydney Thomson Brown, said he never fully recovered from a broken hip three weeks earlier. 

Born May 28, 1920, in Carthage, Ill., Brown was the son of a clergyman. He graduated from Amherst College in 1943, was ordained a Presbyterian minister the next year and in 1945 earned a bachelor of divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary. 

He married in 1944 and had four children. Brown served as a chaplain in the U.S. Navy during WWII, studied at Columbia University and won a Fulbright grant to study at Oxford for two years. 

Brown wrote 28 books, spent decades teaching religion at such schools as St. Paul’s Macalester College, New York’s Union Theological Seminary, Stanford University and the Pacific School of Religion at Berkeley. He also was known for his sly wit, once writing an essay called “Six Elegant Proofs for the Existence of Santa Claus.” 

He moved his family to California in 1962, where he protested the Vietnam War and co-founded the group Clergy and Laity Concerned About Vietnam. 

Brown was jailed as a Freedom Rider during the civil rights movement, and later emerged as an advocate of Latin America’s liberation theology movement, advancing the idea that Christians should help emancipate oppressed people from unjust political, economic or social subjection. 

“He was a giant. Always on the cutting edge,” said Paul Masquelier, executive presbyter for the Presbytery of San Jose. 

In 1962, Time magazine called Brown “Catholics’ favorite Protestant,” after he rebutted Protestants concerned about John F. Kennedy’s religion and served as an official Protestant observer to the Vatican Council II at the invitation of Pope John XXIII. 

In the mid 1990s, Brown joined three other religious leaders for a week-long hunger strike outside the United Nations. Brown wanted to protest the American position on nuclear arms control, against his doctor’s advice. 

“He was a rare person,” said the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, who co-founded the anti-war group. “All the trumpets have sounded on the other side.” 


Activists seeking apologies for Japanese wartime atrocities

By Justin Pritchard Associated Press Writer
Saturday September 08, 2001

 

 

SAN FRANCISCO — Fifty years after Japan and the United States formally ended World War II, the peace that built Japan into an industrial powerhouse has eluded thousands of American POWs forced to labor for Japanese companies. 

No less bitter are the estimated 200,000 women, many from Korea, who Japanese soldiers held as sex slaves. China still seethes over the massacre of up to 300,000 people in the Rape of Nanking. 

The lingering unease that Japan will not face atrocities it committed during its march across Asia has clouded celebrations that commemorate the 50th anniversary of the San Francisco Peace Treaty. Those celebrations culminate Saturday, when Secretary of State Colin Powell and Japanese Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka will honor cooperation between the two allies. 

The Japanese newspaper Asahi reported Friday that during the ceremony, Tanaka will apologize for the suffering of American prisoners of war. There was no immediate confirmation from the Japanese government. 

“The only way this treaty’s  

 


Mexican laborers hope Fox, Bush summit yields tangible results

Malcolm Gay Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday September 08, 2001

Salvador waited Wednesday morning among a knot of mustachioed men, in a black Giants’ baseball hat and paint-spattered work boots. He waited for work, but his mind was on the summit between President Bush and the man he still considers his leader – Mexican President Vincente Fox. “We want to be paid better in the United States,” said Salvador, 30, who declined to give his last name.  

It’s an opinion that was repeated often today by the 20 or so men who hustle work from the barren parking lot at the corner of Fourth Street. “The most important thing at the summit is that we have the same rights when we work in the United States,” said Gonsalo, who also declined to give his last name. “We don’t have the same rights now, and it shows in our wages.”  

They agreed that the issue most directly affecting them is Fox’s proposal to give legal status to Mexican laborers working in the United States. “(Without papers) we’re always on the bottom here,” Salvador said in Spanish. “The companies pay us the minimum and rents are always increasing.” The laborers, many of whom said they send 20 percent of each paycheck to families they’ve left in Mexico, said they are paid $9-$10 an hour on average. But because the work is unsteady, they said, their real hourly wage is closer to around $7. “I would like to know that I can always work,” said Jose Giron, 21, before excusing himself to run with four others to a car that had just pulled to the curb.  

While most of the men agreed that the summit could better their situations, many said they doubted the two presidents’ motives. “Bush has always been anti-Latino,” said Lucian, a 21-year-old who only recently arrived in the United States. “But I think now he could help us – because it will benefit him with the Latino vote.” Fox fared little better in their estimation. “It’s certain that Fox hasn’t done what he promised he’d do in Mexico,” Jose Robles, 65, said. “I don’t think he does anything in Mexico. But I think he’s going to do something here.” 

Fox, the first Mexican President to be elected from an opposition party in over 70 years, arrived in Washington Wednesday night. The two presidents are expected to discuss Fox’s proposal which would grant legal status to Mexican nationals currently working in the United States. Fox has also proposed relaxed border relations and easing of restrictions for Mexicans wishing to receive guest worker status in the United States. Fox has stated his desire to implement these changes as early as next year.  

Despite the summit’s ambitious agenda, however, some of the workers on Fourth Street remain unconvinced. “Mexicans need to educate their own people,” said a Venezuelan who identified himself only as Roberto. “They can’t look to the U.S. to fix their country. They must clean their own home first.” Silvio, a 22-year-old from Veracruz, was more severe in his distrust of the summit. “I think that what Fox and Bush say are pure lies, pure politics. In truth they won’t fix anything,” he said.  

But these voices formed the minority, and most said they were optimistic about the future of Mexico and its relation to the United States. “Fox has done a lot for his country,” said Fernando Perez, 19, who works at a gas station nearby. “He is the first president to overcome a regime of 75 years, and he has done a lot for democracy. You can’t change 75 years of PRI (the traditional ruling party of Mexico) in one year. It’s a process that takes many years.” 

 

 

 


Chevron, Texaco merger awaits shareholders’ approval

By Jennifer Loven Associated Press Writer
Saturday September 08, 2001

WASHINGTON — The only remaining barriers to Chevron Corp.’s $39 billion acquisition of fellow oil titan Texaco Inc. is a nod from shareholders — and a hefty sale of assets that federal regulators made a condition of their approval Friday. 

The Federal Trade Commission voted 4-0 to approve the merger, which would create the second-largest oil company in the nation and the world’s fourth-largest. Chairman Timothy J. Muris recused himself from the vote. 

San Francisco-based Chevron agreed to buy Texaco in October 2000 in a stock deal now valued at $39.3 billion, plus the assumption of about $6 billion in debt. Chevron will be renamed ChevronTexaco Corp. and will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the new ticker symbol CVX. 

Holders of Texaco stock will receive 0.77 shares of ChevronTexaco for each share of Texaco they own. 

Chevron shares closed Friday up 65 cents to $92.40 on the NYSE, where shares of Texaco rose 58 cents to $70.68. 

Now-No. 3 Chevron had $48 billion in revenue last year. The No. 2 White Plains, N.Y.-based Texaco posted revenue of $51 billion last year. 

Still, the combined company will lag far behind the so-called “super” majors — Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch/Shell Group and BP PLC, which have muscled up through huge mergers in recent years. 

Chevron plans to take control of Texaco Oct. 9, the same day the two companies’ shareholders are to vote on the deal. The FTC also will decide on that day, after receiving public comment, whether to make its merger approval final. 

European regulators have already granted approval, and the companies announced in a statement they also have negotiated a consent decree with the attorneys general of 12 states. 

“Today marks a critically important milestone as we move to establish a premier energy company with the world-class assets, talent, financial strength and technology to achieve superior results,” said Chevron Chairman and Chief Executive David J. O’Reilly, who will lead the new company in the same capacity. 

To satisfy the FTC’s concerns that the merger, as originally proposed, would violate antitrust law, Texaco agreed to divest its U.S. refining and marketing affiliates. Texaco refines crude oil in the United States under two separate affiliates, Equilon Enterprises and Motiva Enterprises. The company owns a 44 percent interest in Equilon, with the rest belonging to Shell Oil Co. Texaco and Saudi Refining Co. each own 35 percent of Motiva; the rest is owned by Shell. 

Texaco also will sell its one-third interest in the Discovery natural gas pipeline system in the Gulf of Mexico, a Texas plant, and its general aviation businesses in 14 states, the FTC said. 

“In markets where competitive concerns were identified, those problems have been addressed, with the result being a continuation of the competitive balance that existed in the pre-merger environment,” said Sean Royall, the FTC Bureau of Competition Deputy Director. 

Texaco Chairman and Chief Executive Glenn F. Tilton said the companies will comply with all the conditions of the consent order with the FTC. Tilton, along with Richard H. Matzke, vice chairman of Chevron, will serve as vice chairman of ChevronTexaco. 

Though the divestiture requirements were expected from Day One, they threaten to drag the company down by forcing it to focus on completing the deal while it needs to put all its energy toward succeeding in a cutthroat competitive environment, analyst Fadel Gheit, with Fahnestock and Co. in New York, said. 

“They are getting married. The wedding date has not changed. But now unfortunately it is cloudy, it is not as sunny as everyone would have liked,” Gheit said. 

However, consumers will benefit from the new company’s economies of scale and strengthened ability to compete, he said. 

Analysts regard Chevron and Texaco as a good fit because they have many complementary operations internationally, including in West Africa and Brazil, home to some of the world’s largest new oil fields. 

Although rivals, the two companies have a long business relationship. For the past 65 years, they have co-owned a joint venture called Caltex Corp., which sells 1.8 million barrels of crude oil and petroleum products per day and operates in 55 countries. 

Chevron tried to buy Texaco in 1999, but those talks unraveled over disagreements about price and issues of control. 

When Chevron’s then-CEO, the often acerbic Kenneth Derr, retired at the end of 1999, O’Reilly took over, paving the way to reopen talks with Texaco. Texaco’s stock also had been lackluster since breaking off its talks with Chevron. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Federal Trade Commission: http://www.ftc.gov 

Chevron: http://www.chevron.com 

Texaco: http://www.texaco.com 


Panel finds no evidence that substance causes cancer

Associated Press
Saturday September 08, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — A scientific panel convened by the University of California has found no link between swallowing chromium 6 and cancer, state officials said Friday. 

But the Chromate Toxicity Review Committee said that a major study planned by the National Toxicology Project is needed to provide definitive information on the cancer risks of chromium 6 in drinking water. 

Chromium is a natural element that has two basic forms: chromium 3, an essential nutrient, and chromium 6, a carcinogen when inhaled. 

Public health agencies have not yet determined if chromium 6 is a carcinogen when ingested, but the Department of Health Services and Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment announced in March that they would evaluate whether chromium 6 should be regulated as a drinking water contaminant. 

The review committee was formed at the request of Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment to provide guidance in setting a public health standard for chromium 6 in drinking water. 

The committee said in its report that it found “no basis in either the epidemiological or animal data published in the literature for concluding that orally ingested chromium 6 is a carcinogen.” 

The report said that until the national study is finished the state should continue to maintain its current standard for the total amount of chromium 3 and chromium 6 in drinking water: 50 parts per billion. 

A bill awaiting action by Gov. Gray Davis would require the Department of Health Services to adopt a separate drinking water standard for chromium 6 by 2004. 

The health threat posed by chromium 6 was the subject of the movie “Erin Brockovich,” which was based on a 1996 case in which residents of the California desert town of Hinkley won a $333 million settlement from Pacific Gas & Electric when the utility company’s tanks leaked high concentrations of chromium 6 into ground water. 

Actress Julia Roberts won an Oscar for her portrayal of a law firm assistant whose curiosity about illnesses in Hinkley led to the settlement. 

 


Malfunctioning elevators worry elderly residents

By Hank Sims Daily Planet correspondent
Friday September 07, 2001

Last Saturday, the doors closed behind 88-year old Bea Geller, but the little elevator didn’t budge. And the doors wouldn’t open again. None of the buttons responded.  

“Nothing was working,” she said. “It was an awful feeling.” 

Thankfully, when she picked up the emergency phone she heard a voice on the other end of the line. Since the elevator wasn’t between floors, the man at the front desk could open the doors by activating an emergency system.  

“If Bob weren’t there, I could have been trapped for hours,” Geller said. “I felt scared... and angry.” 

Many of the other 160 tenants at Strawberry Creek Lodge, a residential facility for elderly people on Addison Street near Bonar Street, were angry too. The primary elevator in the four-story building had been out of service for almost nine weeks. When that elevator went out, a resident was trapped inside for almost two hours. So when the small elevator that nearly stranded Geller went out again on Sunday evening – leaving mobility-impaired residents stranded until Monday morning – the tenants’ association decided it was time to take action. 

Several suggestions were made at the tenants’ association meeting Tuesday. Some people thought the association should hire an attorney. Others thought that residents most endangered by faulty elevator services – people in wheelchairs, or those too frail to negotiate the stairs – should be moved into hotels. Still others thought that tenants should go to Oakland and picket the Otis Elevator Company. 

According to tenants, it is Otis that should carry most of the blame for a summer’s worth of broken elevators. In 1994, the company replaced the jacks – the large hydraulic devices that move the elevators up and down – on Strawberry Creek Lodge’s main elevator. They did not, however, install a double-bottomed hydraulic cylinder, which would have prevented the leaks in the system that caused the main elevator’s failure. The smaller elevator’s service interruptions were due to an electronic failure. 

Otis Elevator has now begun the work to replace the jacks on both elevators, and is scheduled to complete the job by Sept. 11. The company has offered its services free of charge. But there is some question as to whether the company was, in 1994, contracted to install the double-bottomed jacks. Lois O’Connell, Strawberry Creek Lodge manager, said that Otis’ policy at the time was to phase out single-bottomed jacks – the implication being that they probably should have installed the double-bottomed ones. O’Connell said that Otis has lost the paperwork on the 1994 job, a fact which in part led the company to do the repair work without charge.  

Otis Elevator could not be reached for comment. 

Though the work is underway, resentment lingers at Strawberry Creek Lodge – and some of it is directed at the people who run the building. 

“Had I been in management’s seat, I might have hollered a little more than they did,” said Sidney Efross, the president of the tenants’ association. Efross is upset that the problem has taken so long to resolve. 

“On the whole, they are not treating this as an emergency,” said Saeeda Khan, a 22-year resident. “For us it is an emergency.” 

“One day I was climbing up the stairs. In front of me was a woman who was really gasping, holding her hand to her chest. I was afraid that she would have a heart attack.” 

O’Connell said that she is aware of the tenants’ concerns, and that her staff is doing everything it can to get the job completed and to help tenants during the crisis. When both elevators were out of service Sunday night, staff called all the mobility-impaired residents in the building to let them know that they would be on hand to assist them. 

“I think the tenants think that we and Otis are not taking this very seriously,” she said. “I don’t know how we could take it any more seriously.” 

“My impression is that Otis is really dealing with us in good faith. I think they definitely take this as an emergency.” 

Still, tenants charge that if Otis and Strawberry Creek management truly considered the situation an emergency, it would not have taken so long to resolve. 

“You kind of get the feeling that since Otis is doing it all for nothing – and not out of the goodness of their hearts, but under duress – that it’s not at the top of their list,” said Efross. 

O’Connell said that several factors, including initial uncertainty about what was causing the problem, where to lay blame for the jack failure and the difficulty of quickly obtaining the 40-foot jacks, have all contributed to the delay. She said that she and her staff, and Otis, have been working on this problem continuously. 

“But for the tenants, there is only one variable,” said O’Connell. “They’re stuck. I don’t blame them for being angry.”


Calendar of Events & Activities

Staff
Friday September 07, 2001


Friday, Sept. 7

 

Even Stronger Women 

1:15 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Free weekly cultural discussion class. This week: Haiku poetry. 549-1879 

 

East Bay Recorder Society 

7:15 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church, Choral Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Monthly meetings, professional conductors, all playing levels welcome. Music provided, bring music stand and pencil. 525-1249 

 

Law and Technology Forum 

2 - 5 p.m. 

U. C. Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Goldberg Room 

Representatives will discuss pending legal cases and technological innovations that may threaten civil liberties and new challenges for consumer protection. Free and open to the public. 642-0499 

 

Berkeley/ Albany Chapter of Church Women United 

9:30 a.m. 

Berkeley Chinese Community Church 

2117 Acton St. 

A report on the Milwaukee conference. 526-4303  

 

Rally and Ride to the State Capitol 

8 a.m. - sharp 

City Hall steps 

2180 Milvia 

Take BART with bikes to Pittsburgh/Bay Point BART 

Ride bikes to Sacramento with Councilmember Kriss Worthington to support alternative transportation. 720-2818 jmeggs@bclu.org 

 


Saturday, Sept. 8

 

Watershed Environmental 

Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Civic Center Park 

Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street 

A free environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Youth Arts Studio 

2 - 5 p.m. 

All Souls Episcopal Parish 

2220 Cedar St. 

Demonstration classes for after school program in visual arts, creative writing and dramatic arts for students ages 10 - 15. Free. 848-1755 

 

Luna Kids Dance Open House 

10 - 11 a.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar 

Free open house and parent/ child classes. Designed to give families a shared dance experience that connects body, mind, and soul. Children will have a chance to play fun dance games, refreshments and register for fall session. 525-4339 www.lunakidsdnace.com 

 

Pack Right, Travel Smart 

1 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Eagle Creek Rep will give you tips on how to best organize your gear and clothing for your next adventure. Free. 527-4140 

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

Earthquake retrofitting class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley. 644-8736 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire.oes.html 

 


Sunday, Sept. 9

 

Solano Stroll 2001 

8 a.m. - 7 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

27th Annual Berkeley / Albany Festival. 11 a.m. Parade; 8 a.m. pancake breakfast; merchants, entertainers, food, craft alley, game booths, silent auction, climbing wall, bicycle stunt show, ponyrides, giant slide, dunk tank, hot air balloon rides. Free. 527-5358 www.solanostroll.org 

 

Salsa Lesson and Dance Party 

6 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Salsa lesson and dance party with professional instructors. Israeli food. Novices welcome and no partner required. $12. RSVP 237-9874 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Avenue between 3rd and 4th streets  

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

654-6346  

Hands-On Bicycle Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - noon  

Recreational Equipment, Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

Learn drive train maintenance and chain repair from one of REI’s bike technicians. All you need to bring is your bike. Tools are provided. Free 527-4140 

– compiled by Guy Poole 

 

International House featured in documentary 

1:30 p.m. 

KQED-TV Ch. 9 

Hosted by Sam Waterson, The International House feature is part of the Visionaries Documentary series about the positive impact of inspiring nonprofit organizations.  

 

Buddhism 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

“The Heart Sutra” Bob Byrne will discuss the deep impact this important teaching of the Buddha has had on his life. 843-6812 


NGO activist finds frustration and inspiration at conference on racism

By Lillian Galedo Pacific News Service
Friday September 07, 2001

DURBAN, South Africa – I’m halfway around the globe, in the midst of an exhausting, inspiring culture shock. 

I’m working in the NGO Forum, a collection of non-governmental organizations, and trying to influence the U.N. World Conference on Racism. Gathered here is an awesome mix of races and nationalities, groups we scarcely hear about in the United States, like the Travelers, Tamil, Roma and Dalit. 

The Travelers, for instance, are a nomadic group in Ireland of approximately 25,000. The Dalits are an Indian minority group, blocked by the caste system from economic mobility and political, educational and religious freedoms. A woman named Mangala is a one-person delegation for refugees from Bhutan, a tiny country in the Himalayas. 

All seek to be included in both NGO Forum and U.N. documents against racism that will stand for another decade. 

Like thousands of others, I naively expected an orderly forum for the exchange of ideas, only to find disorganization, finger-pointing, and disappointment among participants by the second day of our six-day NGO meeting. Workshops are a 10 to 20 minute taxi ride away, difficult to find, and nearly impossible to understand when translation is not provided. Documents are hard to come by. Our accommodations are 30 kilometers outside of town, requiring a 30-minute bus ride there and back. Compared to the U.N. conference, the NGO Forum is underfunded and understaffed. 

But amazing things are happening here. The grassroots work is inspiring, and well worth the scrimping and saving, begging and borrowing it took to get here. In spite of all the logistical challenges, a document is being hammered out through hours of discussion, daily demonstrations, nightly vigils and passionate, nose-to-nose debate. 

Issues that receive only marginal exposure in the United States are center stage at the NGO Forum: racism against Palestinians, the lingering impact of the “historical past” (a U.N. euphemism for imperialism, colonialism and slavery), equal rights for the 150 million people in migration, and reparations for the victims of slavery and colonialism. At home, globalization is cast as exciting new trade opportunities for U.S. businesses. Here, it’s called Westernization, an undermining of non-Western social structures and cultures. 

The NGO document we seek is now three days overdue. We all await the outcome, hoping for a text containing language that we can leverage in the many battles against racism waiting for us at home. 

Influencing the U.N. conference’s work on racism is another matter entirely. We NGOs are mutually marginalized by limited passes and little access to voting delegates. First we stood in the NGO line for over six hours to get our photo IDs. When some people cut in line, a mini-riot was averted by a courageous individual who stepped in to personally issue hundreds of hand-written numbers so the queue could proceed with dignity. 

Then we waited another hour or two for another pass to the actual proceedings. 

Inside the U.N. conference, the color and exuberance of the NGO Forum is replaced by slow, somber proceedings conducted mostly by men in dark suits. Corporate sponsorship is evident, and the work of the World Bank is promoted from the plenary podium. The real work goes on in the committee meetings, where our participation is restricted. Veterans of these conferences tell us to corner delegates in the halls, cafes, and even the bathrooms. 

When we do get into committee meetings, a year’s worth of preparation is vulnerable to the complexities of regional politics, national interests, and the influence of a few powerful nations like the United States. We are winning minor concessions on key migrant and refugee issues, but most of it remains unresolved. 

The U.S. delegation left yesterday. Reaction is a mix of anger, shame and indifference. It was obvious the United States was never serious about this conference; its delegates came late, never took their seats and left early. U.S. taxpayers should be refunded the cost of their fancy hotels and business class tickets. 

We may not be able to change world politics this year, but we ourselves have been changed. We have been inspired and strengthened by our international counterparts. Our databases and e-mail lists have been enriched. We know better who our allies are in the fight against racism, xenophobia and other forms of intolerance. 

Our delegation will return to press the United States to finally ratify the U.N. Convention for the Rights of Migrant Workers and their families. 

Our struggle continues. 

 

 

Berkeley resident and Filipino activist Lillian Galedo is a non governmental delegate to the conference as chair of the Filipino Civil Rights Advocates. She is also a member of the Immigrant Rights Working Group. 


A Holocaust survivor returns to the scene of her horrors

By Peter Crimmins Daily Planet correspondent
Friday September 07, 2001

When speaking about the Holocaust there are many levels that might be difficult to fathom: the cunning political maneuverings, the cultural devastation, the cold ingenuity of the concentration camp’s engineering and the deep, almost inhuman hatred humans are capable of.  

In a documentary by Berkeley filmmaker Jonathan Gruber, “Pola’s March,” the Nazi horror is seen through the eyes of his grandmother. The film follows the aging Holocaust survivor’s journey back to her ordeal in the concentration camps to trace the process of remembering, and recalling it for the benefit of future generations. 

In 1995 Pola Susswein traveled back to Poland, the childhood home she had not seen in over 50 years, with a busload of young students as part of an international group called March of the Living. Her grandson Gruber went along with video equipment and a small crew.  

Beginning in Tel Aviv, where she cares for the elderly in a community home, the warm and upbeat Susswein admits to the camera she has reservations about returning to a place of both happy childhood memories and great suffering. The twofold reason for her return is to submerge herself in a chapter of her life she had heretofore never spoken of, and to share it with a younger generation. 

Because Susswein had not spoken openly with her family about her experiences in the concentration camp, Gruber did not know what to expect during the trip and was caught between being a filmmaker and being a grandson. All the on-camera interviews seen in the film were not conducted by Gruber, but by the film’s producer, Amy Cairns. 

“She had an easier time discussing things with people she doesn’t know very well,” said Gruber, wanting to avoid the familial shorthand and evasions which would have undoubtedly tainted the interviews had he done them himself.  

Susswein acted as a living resource for the teen-agers traveling as March of the Living, who, wearing matching blue windbreakers underneath Star of David flags, retraced the death march from Auschwitz to Birkenau. The goal of the journey was to sharply instill the history of the Holocaust in youth such that it might not happen again.  

While Pola’s recovering memories told over the tour bus public address system provided the young people with a tangible lifeline to the atrocities soaked in the stones and monuments of Poland, a historian also came along to give the march its factual historical context.  

For a dramatic metaphor – and a bizarre teaching – Rabbi Micah Halpern describes the concentration camps as if it were a different planet. “The laws, the physics, the chemistry of the normal world doesn’t work there,” he says in the film. 

The lasting message of the Holocaust is that the laws, physics and chemistry of the normal world did, in fact, create genocide. That real people were able to slaughter real people by the hundreds of thousands is the implied lesson of Pola Susswein’s presence. The Holocaust did not happen in history books, instigated by an alien race, but was committed in the hometown of that warm, upbeat woman speaking on the bus public address system. 

The focus of Pola’s March, ultimately, is not rediscovering the Holocaust, but the way by which Pola reclaimed her own past. After Gruber had collected an enormous amount of video footage of the trip, the story of his grandmother started to emerge. 

“Part of the enjoyment comes out in the editing room,” Gruber said about the filmmaking process, and some of what came out was his grandmother’s realization of her own memories. In an extended sequence visiting her former home – now converted into modern apartments – Gruber’s camera stays with Susswein as she slowly pieces together the details of her childhood. 

Those details, however, have either disappeared, been reconstructed, or – as she looks at sepia-toned photos of unrelated faces – the recovered details sometimes aren’t hers at all. The film gets sidetracked with Pola’s eddying memories while she seeks the familiar in a city that has been almost completely overhauled. 

As the young people in the March of the Living try to know the Nazi terror vicariously through Pola, the stronger lesson she embodies is the bravery of remembering the past, and the blessing to be able to share it. 

The film was screened Thursday at Congregation Beth Israel in Berkeley and is available for future screenings. Call 848-1124 or view the Web site at www.polasmarch.org


Staff
Friday September 07, 2001

924 Gilman Sept. 7: Carry On, Champion, Breaker Breaker, Saturday Supercade, Fields of Fire; Sept. 8: Lab Rats, Relative; Most shows $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless noted. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Albatross Pub Sept. 11: Mad & Eddie Duran Jazz Duo; Sept. 13: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 19: Whiskey Brothers; Sept. 20: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 22: Larry Stefl Jazz Quartet; Sept. 27: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Free. All shows begin at 9 p.m. 1822 San Pablo Ave. 843-2473 albatrosspub@mindspring.com  

 

Ashkenaz Sept. 7: 9:30 p.m. Amandla Poets and Umlilo, $10; Sept. 8: 9:30 p.m. Charivari, $12; Sept. 9: 9 p.m. El Leo, The Jarican Express, $10; 1317 San Pablo 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Café Eclectica Sept. 8: 8 p.m. SF Improv, Free. 1309 Solano Ave. 326-6124 www.sfimprov.com 

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. Sept. 10: Lucy Lang Day; Sept. 17: Marc Hofstadter (book party); Sept. 24: Jim Watson-Gove; All shows free, 7 - 10 p.m. 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Tania Libertad, $18 - $30; Sept. 30: 7 p.m. Kronos Quartet, David Barron, $30; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Splif Skankin and Funky Man. $10; Sept. 3: 2 - 8 p.m. Big West Coast Harmonica Bash, afternoon benefit for Red Archibald. $10 donation; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 7: Tom Russell w/ Andrew Hardin, $16.50; Sept. 8: The House Jacks, $17.50; Sept. 9: Erika Luckett, $16.50; Sept. 11: Don Walser, Slaid Cleaves, $16.50; Sept. 12: Andy Irvine, $17.50; Sept. 13: Piper Heisig birthday revue and fund raiser w/ Kate Brislin, Sylvia Herold, Tony Marcus, Carlos Reyes, and Radim Zenkl, $16.50; Sept. 14: Ray Wylie Hubbard, $16.50; Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jupiter Sept. 7: Crater; Sept. 10: Ben Graves Trio; Sept. 11: Len Patterson Trio; Sept. 12: Bitches Brew; Sept. 13: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 14: Carlos Washington & Giant People Ensemble; Sept. 15: Kooken & Hoomen; Sept. 18: The Goodbye Flowers; Sept. 19: New Monsoon; Sept. 20: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 21: Netwerk: Electric; Sept. 22: New Garde Philosophers; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

La Peña Cultural Center Sept. 11 & 12: 8 p.m. Irakere, $22; In the Cafe, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Alice Arts Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Benefit concert for freedom of U.S. political prisoners featuring Fred Ho (solo) and The Eddie Gale Unit. $12; 1428 Alice, Oakland, 539-0050 www.thejerichomovement.com/teardownthewalls 

 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church Sept. 15: George Brooks and Shweta Jhaveri with Uttam Chakraborty on drums. $18 - $25; 2727 College Ave. 843-9600 www.harmoniventures.com 

 

Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live Radio Show Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave.; Sept. 29: Nancy Miford, author of “Savage Beauty.” West African folk music with The Nigerian Brothers. Blues roots piano by Caroline Dahl. The Freight and Salvage, 1111 Addison St. All shows 10 a.m. - noon. 252-9214 www.wcl.org 

Lerner and Loewe’s “My Fair Lady” Sept. 7, 8, 9. All shows 8 p.m. Adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s and Gabrial Pascal’s “Pygmalion.” Directed by James Schlader, choreographed by Harriet Schlader, under the musical direction of Mark Hanson. $15 - $27. 3300 Joaquin Miller Road, Oakland. 531-9597 www.woodminster.com 

 

Squelched.com Presents “Jim Short” Sept. 11: 8 p.m. Jim Short is an Australian expatriate who grew up in Texas. Also appearing: Rob Cantrell, Luke Filose and Sean Keane. Blake’s on Telegraph, 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 show@squelched.com 

 

“Hecho En Califas Chicano-Latino Teatro Festival” Sept. 6 - 9, 14 - 15; 8 p.m. Original members of El Teatro de La Esperanza. Chicano Theater began out of the need to express the realities of the fields and barrios of Aztlán in the Chicano-Latino community. $10 - $20 La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck, 849-2568, www.lapena.org  

 

“Winesburg, Ohio: Tales of the Grotesque” through Sept. 16, Wed. - Sat. 8:30 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. The Shotgun Players and Word For Word team up for a production of Sherwood Anderson’s deceptively simple tale of neglected souls who fade into the shadows around us. $22, Wednesdays are “Pay What You Can.” Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.org 

 

“The Secret Garden” Sept. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21, 22, at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 & 23 matinees. The Alameda Civic Light Opera’s fifth summer season ends with the musical of Frances Hodson Burnett’s classic story of life, death, purpose and hope. Adults $22, Students 18 and under $14. Kofman Auditorium, 2200 Central Ave., Alameda. www.aclo.com 

 

“36 Views” Sept. 12 through Oct. 28: Tues. 8 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m., Thu. 8 p.m. w/ 2 p.m. matinee every other Thu., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 8 p.m. w/ 2 p.m. matinee every other Sat., Sun. 2 p.m., 8 p.m. Written by Naomi Lizuka, Directed by Mark Wing-Davey. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Roda Theatre, 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Murder Dressed in Satin” by Victor Lawhorn, ongoing. A mystery-comedy dinner show at The Madison about a murder at the home of Satin Moray, a club owner and self-proclaimed socialite with a scarlet past. Dinner is included in the price of the theater ticket. $47.50 Lake Merritt Hotel, 1800 Madison St., Oakland. 239-2252 www.acteva.com/go/havefun 

 

Dance 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 8: 8 p.m. & Sept. 9: 3 p.m. - Dance, the Spirit of Cambodia, $20 - $32; Sept. 19 - 20: 8 p.m. American Ballet, “Bruch Violin Concerto,” “Jabula,” “Gong,” and “Black Tuesday.”; Sept. 21: 8 p.m., Sept. 22: 2 p.m. & 8 p.m., Sept. 23: 3 p.m. American Ballet, the full-length 19th Century “Giselle” $36 - $64; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

Films 

 

Pacific Film Archive Sept. 7: 7 p.m. “Rebels with a Cause,” 9 p.m. “Is This Desire?”; Sept. 8: 7 p.m. “Rendan: Quartet for Two,” Sept. 9:10 p.m. “Unloved”; Sept. 9: 7 p.m. “In Search of Home”; Sept. 10: 7 p.m. “Orfeu”, Sept. 11: 7:30 p.m. “The Film of Maya Deren”; Sept. 12 7:30 p.m. “Autrian AudioVisions”; Sept. 14: 7:30 “Eyes of the Spider”, 9:20 “Serpent’s Path”; Sept. 15: 4:30 p.m. “The New God”, 7:00 p.m. “Seance”, 9:05 p.m. “Looking for Angel”; Sept. 16: 3:30 p.m. “Alphaville”, 5:30 p.m. “Solaris”; Sept. 17: 7 p.m. “Charcoal People”; Sept. 18: 7:30 p.m. “Mike Kuchar’s Feverish Spell”; Sept. 19: 7:30 p.m. “Wht About Me: The Rise of the Nihilist Spasm Band”; general admission $7, The New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

The Pyramid Alehouse Outdoor Cinema Sept. 8: “Dr. No” (come as your favorite Bond character); Sept. 15: “Harold and Maude”; Sept. 22: “Airplane”; The Outdoor Cinema features cult classics projected on a large screen in the open-air brewery parking lot. $5 donation. Movies start at 7 p.m. 901 Gilman St. 206-682-8322 x237 www.pyramidbrew.com 

 

Exhibits 

 

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

 

“The Political Art of: Diego Marcial Rios” Through Sept. 20, Addison Street Window Gallery, 2018 Addison St. hdrios@msn.com 

 

Women’s Cancer Resource Gallery “Catastrophe, Crisis, and Other Family Traditions” The photography of Jessamyn Lovell. Through Sept. 26; “The Arthur Wright and Gerald Parker” Reception Sept. 8. Through Sept. 26; Tues. - Thurs. 1 - 7 p.m., Sat. 12 - 4 p.m. 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 x307 www.wcrc.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Squared Triangle” Through Oct. 5: noon - 6 p.m. A minimalist art exhibit featuring three Bay Area artists working in different mediums while achieving the same elegant simplicity. The Crucible, 1036 Ashby Ave. 843-5511 www.thecrucible.com 

 

“Inside Editions” through Oct. 12: Nine printmakers exhibit their work. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Tue. - Fri. Free. Kala Art Insitute, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 kala@kala.org 

 

“Census 2000: Asian Pacific Islander Americans” through Oct. 13; Wed. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Asian Pacific Islander American artists in roughly the demographic proportions indicated by the recent census. Free. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9470  

 

“MWP Perspectives” Jon Orvik: One artist’s journey. Sept. 8 through Oct. 27 Tues. - Fri. 12 - 5 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 12 - 4 p.m. Solo artist exhibiting his journey through metal, wood and paint. Adapt Gallery and Design, 2834 College Ave. 649-8501 www.adaptgallery.com  

 

“50 Years of Photography in Japan 1951 - 2001” through Nov. 5: An exhibition from The Yomiuri Shimbun, the world’s largest daily newspaper with a national morning circulation of 10,300,000. Photographs of work, love, community, culture and disasters of Japan as seen by Japanese news photographers. Opening Reception Sept. 5: 6 - 8 p.m. open to the public; Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” Sept. 15 through Nov. 17: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Oakland photographer Cathy Cade, who captured the interrelationships of the different struggles for justice and social change. Opening reception Sept. 15, 5 - 8 p.m. Gallery Hours, Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St. Free. 644-1400 cathycade@mindspring.com 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960s and 1970s” Sept. 16 through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960’s and 1970’s. Wed. - Sun., noon - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St., Live Oak Park. Free. 644-6893 

 

“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 Botticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours. Atelier 9 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

Readings 

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival Sept. 8: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. An environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. Festival at Civic Center Park, Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street. Free. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Boadecia’s Books Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Simone Martel reads from “The Expectant Gardner,” Joan Drummond Miller, Julie Houy, and Carolyn Livingston, “Beyond Bingo;” Sept. 14: 7:30 p.m. Marny Hall, “Queer Blues: The Lesbian and Gay Guide to Overcoming Depression;” Sept. 15: 2 p.m. Kimeron Hardin, “Queer Blues: The Lesbian and Gay Guide to Overcoming Depression;” Sept. 15: 7:30 p.m. Kathleen Jacoby, “Vision of the Grail;” Sept. 21: 7:30 p.m. Deborah Kesten, “The Healing Secrets of Food;” Sept. 22: 7:30 p.m. A special All Poetry Dyke Open Myke, to participate call 655-1015 or feroniawolf@yahoo.com; All events are free. 398 Colusa Ave. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Cody’s on 4th Street Sept. 13: Kenneth C. Davis, “Don’t Know Much About...”; Sept. 20: 7 p.m. Jamie Oliver, The Naked Chef, “The Naked Chef Takes Off”; Sept. 22: 10:30 a.m. Cody’s for Kids, Walter the Giant Storyteller; Sept. 25: 7 p.m. Nancy London looks at “Hot Flashes, Warm Bottles: First-Time Mothers Over Forty”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Dave Eggers talks about “A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius”; Sept. 10: 7:30 p.m. Peggy Orenstein talks about “FLUX: Women on Sex, Work, Love, Kids, and Life in a Half-Changed World”; Sept. 11: 7:30 p.m. Simon Winchester discusses “The Map That Changed The World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology”; Sept. 13: 7:30 p.m. Geraldine Brooks reads from “A Year of Wonder: A Novel of the Plague”; Sept. 16: 7:30 p.m. David Bank looks at “Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumble the Future of Microsoft”; Sept. 17: 7:30 p.m. Aldo Alvarez describes “Interesting Monsters”; Sept. 18: 7:30 p.m. Clarence Walker discusses “We Can’t Go Home Again: An Argument About Afrocentrism; Sept. 19: 7:30 p.m. Douglas Coupland reads “All Families Are Psychotic”; Sept. 24: Theodore Roszak discusses “Longevity Revolution: As Boomers Become Elders”; Sept. 25: Ken Croswell discusses “The Universe At Midnight: New Discoveries Illuminate the Hidden Cosmos” with a slide show presentation; Sept. 27: Bill Ayers talks about “Fugitive Days”; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Cody’s Other Venues - Sept. 20: 7:30 p.m. Cody’s presents an evening with Margaret Atwood in conversation with professor Robert Alter. $12. First Congregational Church 2345 Channing Way. Sept. 28: 7:30 p.m. Cody’s presents a Community Forum on Race and the Achievement Gap at Berkeley High School. Little Theater, Berkeley High School.  

 

Lunch Poems Series Kick-Off Sept. 6: 12:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. UC Berkeley campus figures from a wide variety of fields read and discuss their favorite poems. Free. In the Morrison Library in the Doe Library at UC Berkeley. 642-0137 www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems/ 

 

Spasso Sept. 10: Sharron Jones-Reid, Fruit of the Spirit poets, acoustic musicians, comedians, rappers, performance artists, writers. All welcome. 6021 College Ave. Free admission. 

 

 

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 foot 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. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until Oct. 1 : “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 Avenue. 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  

 

Oakland Museum of California “After the Storm: Bob Walker and the Art of Environmental Photography,” through Sept. 16; “Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks,” through Sept. 23; Wednesday - Saturday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sunday, noon - 5 p.m., Closed Monday and Tuesday. $6 general; $4 youths (6-17), seniors and students with ID. Free for museum members and children 5 and under. Free admission the second Sunday of the month. 10th & Oak streets, Oakland. 238-2200 www.museum.org 

 

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

 

Send arts events two weeks in advance to Calendar@berkeleydailyplanet.net, 2076 University, Berkeley 94704 or fax to 841-5694.


Cal men face Fullerton, LMU

Staff Report
Friday September 07, 2001

The Cal men’s soccer team will host the fifth-annual adidas-Legacy Classic this weekend, as Stanford, Loyola Marymount and CSU Fullerton visit Edwards Stadium. 

The Bears earned a split last weekend at the FILA Classic at CSU Fullerton, beating Loyola (Maryland), 4-0, before falling 2-1 to No. 8 Clemson. 

Cal starts the 2001 season without their two top scorers from last season, forward Kendall Simmonds and midfielder Ramiro Arredondo. The duo scored nine of Cal’s 20 goals last season, leaving the Bears with limited firepower this year. 

Forward Chris Roner is the top returning scorer, having racked up four goals and three assists last year while starting all 20 games. Roner is a solid forward with limited speed. Forward Austin Ripmaster played well at the end of last season, but scored just one goal and must be more productive this season. Ripmaster, a senior, is a tall target on crosses and corner kicks and scored the Bears’ only goal against Clemson last weekend. 

Defender Robbie Aylsworth showed a nice scoring touch last year with three goals, and scored in the Bears’ opener this year. Aylsworth has a cannon leg and is a threat coming out of the defense to hit long shots. 

Head coach Kevin Grimes has upped the recruiting efforts, and was rewarded last year with 10 freshman. This year, he pulled in 12 new players, so the infusion of talent should help the team’s competitiveness by quantity, if not quality. Freshman Calen Carr has made an immediate impact with a goal and an assist last weekend, and new goalkeeper Josh Saunders has apparently won the starting job over Marco Palmieri, last year’s backup. 

The Bears switched conferences last season, joining Oregon State, UCLA, Washington and Stanford in forming the ill-named Pac-10 Soccer. Being a small league, the Pac-10 doesn’t get an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament, but three teams were chosen for at-large bids last year (Stanford, UCLA and Washington). That means the Bears have to make the most of their non-league games, so a strong showing this weekend is important to any post-season hopes they may have.


Lukewarm response to new Berkeley High accreditation goals

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet correspondent
Friday September 07, 2001

The Berkeley School Board on Wednesday adopted a new set of educational goals for Berkeley High, intended to buttress the school’s beleaguered accreditation standing – even as some board members and parents expressed disappointment and warned the new Expected Schoolwide Learning Results (ESLRs) may still be insufficient. 

“I feel these goals are very weak and don’t represent what any parent wants their children to achieve,” said Shirley Issel, the board’s vice president. “I would like these ESLRs to state very clearly that upon graduation from high school, our students will be able to undertake post-secondary education without remediation.” 

“There’s not one thing in these ESLRs about sending students to college,” said Terry Doran, the board president. 

“They’re probably, in my view, a little too general,” said Berkeley Schools Superintendent Michele Lawrence on Thursday. “In some instances they’re a little difficult to measure. But I think they’re a healthy and productive start.” 

Under the direction of Vice Principal Mary Ann Valles, the school developed the new ESLRs with input from an October, 2000 school-community forum and a workshop last April that she said included “parents, staff, and a few students.” 

“We looked at some examples, we looked at a few articles, we looked at some essential school information and we looked at some basic educational research,” said Valles. “(The ESLRs) are fine statements that give a good description of what a well-rounded person should look like when they exit high school.” 

“I am satisfied ,” said Lawrence, “that people had an opportunity at the local site, with input from parents and staff, to make a determination on what the ESLRs should look like.” 

Valles said that at a staff development day before the first day of school, individual school departments had already started work on ways to measure student progress in the new ESLRs. 

“The ESLRs themselves are general statements, but the application comes in the curriculum area,” said Berkeley High Principal Frank Lynch. Each department, he said, would now “take maybe one, two, or three of those ESLRs and say, ‘What does being a good communicator mean in terms of math or science?’” 

The Western Association of Schools and Colleges granted Berkeley High a relatively short one-and-a-half-year accreditation this spring after a highly critical review that cited “strong evidence... of no overall plan or will to develop overall school standards.” 

In its previous review, two years before, WASC had reported that the school’s ESLRs needed “to include meaningful and authentic examples or benchmarks for assuring successful completion by students” and that their attainment required more collaboration between the various subject departments trying to implement them. 

A lengthy pause ensued at Wednesday’s board meeting after Terry Doran, the board president, introduced the ESLR adoption measure. Nobody seconded it, Doran suggested it might die, and then Issel said, “Oh, okay, I’ll second it.” 

In a brief ensuing discussion, director John T. Selawsky took issue with the statement that Berkeley High graduates should be effective communicators who “write coherent essays and reports relatively free of grammatical errors.” 

“The word “relatively” jumped out at me,” Selawsky said. “It’s a very relative term.” 

“It reminds me of what we expect in a president,” said Doran. “All of our students can get C’s at Yale.” 

Doran suggested removing the entire clause, leaving “write coherent essays and reports.” Issel objected to the word “basic” in the statement calling for “masters of fundamental skills who integrate the basic skills of reading, writing, and arithmetic into meaningful activities and projects.” 

“Is that what we’re aspiring to?” Issel said. “Don’t we want proficiency?” 

The measure passed unanimously, with only the word “relatively” deleted. 

In public comment at the end of the meeting, Berkeley High parent Iris Starr chastised the board. 

“I think you will be embarrassed to have adopted these,” she said. “WASC will not accept these.” 

In a later interview, Starr questioned whether math teachers had been present at the April 2000 drafting meeting. “If you look at ‘arithmetic,’ you know,” she said. “Arithmetic is what you do in second grade.” 

Board directors Issel and Selawsky both asserted Thursday that the ESLRs could be revised before the next WASC committee visit, in October, 2002. “If it needs revision, we can revise it,” Selawsky said. “It was my understanding that there were staff and administrators involved. Now if that’s inaccurate, then we have to take a look again at the document and perhaps recreate it in some way.” 

Lawrence, however, said the new ESLRs could be revised, but “probably not until after the visiting committee makes their assessment.”


A view with some room downtown

Merrilie Mitchell
Friday September 07, 2001

Editor: 

On Aug. 24, you printed two different views on developing the Oxford parking lot located near the Gaia building. There is another very important view. I call it “a view with some room;” the no-development scenario. 

Big development is occurring all over town, and we need to save a few of our almost extinct, easy-in and out, open parking lots. Without them folks circle around in traffic, polluting the air, distracted, frustrated, and endangering pedestrians and bicyclers. That plus the fact that many people will not use underground or elevated parking because of the dangers and pollution within, hurts our city. The Oxford lot is easy to get to and should be kept as is, providing access to our downtown, and view corridors near intensive development. 

The city owns the Oxford parking lot, so we don’t have to give it away. Those that would, are the same folks planning to develop the city’s other open, easy-access parking lot on Berkeley Way, northwest of Shattuck and University. This lot would become high-density very-low-income housing with little or no parking. And so would the Kragen/(Grand Auto) site, and the Kelly-Moore Paint site, and so on. 

Guess what? I hate cars, but I have trouble walking or waiting for a bus downtown or on the major corridors of this city because the pollution, especially diesel, I find is intolerable. 

Traffic is getting worse, and high density “carfree” housing will make it still worse because there is yet no way to prevent car ownership. In Germany, where “carfree” housing has been built, people have devised ways to keep cars outside the project, even at great trouble and cost. 

Additionally, low-income people usually need cars more than middle income people who can rent or lease. 

My insatiable curiosity makes me wonder what Ecocity guru Richard Register does with his truck since he’s moved into the Gaia building. 

And how does Becky O’Malley gets around when she is not taking the bus to the opera? Does Planning Commission Chair Rob Wren have a family car to pick up groceries or take the kids to Tilden? 

Could we consider alternatives to what Planning Commissioners are recommending for the new General Plan, to guide development in Berkeley for the next 20 years? Sure we can! Why not? Send in your ideas. 

Here’s mine for downtown: 

Imagine breathing clean air, having only electric, solar and non-polluting vehicles permitted in the heart of the city. By some miracle we have saved our downtown city parking lots like Oxford and Berkeley Way, and use them for satellite parking, “car sharing,” and openspace for emergencies like earthquakes. Species of trees and plants which help clean the air and reduce global warming are planted in and around parking areas and in small spaces between and behind buildings, wherever possible. Developers must provide the required landscaping, quality openspace for tenants, and well designed areas for children living in family apartments. Just enough of Shirley Dean’s “Free Transit for Berkeley” proposal has survived obstruction by Kriss Worthington, for a nonpolluting “little green engine that could” shuttle, to run a loop downtown and to all three BART stations.  

Views have improved because the earthquake unsafe tallest building in the city, the Great Western Building, which hovers next to the Berkeley BART station, has been removed! In its place, sunshine streams down upon a lovely plaza with bicycle-friendly amenities.  

A monorail runs from this central spot straight up across Shattuck to UC Berkeley where it continues up the center of campus to the top. The air is clean, there is room to “breathe,” and you can even see the stars at night. 

 

Merrilie Mitchell 

Berkeley


Bob Hope released from hospital

Associated Press
Friday September 07, 2001

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Comedian Bob Hope was released Thursday from a hospital where he had been treated for pneumonia since late last month. 

“He’s home,” publicist Ward Grant said. 

The 98-year-old entertainer was discharged from Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank by Dr. Lee Kagan, at 9:45 a.m. and departed with his wife, Dolores, to their home in the Toluca Lake district of Los Angeles. 

Kagan said in a statement that Hope was “doing fine and eating well.” 

“However, it will be several more weeks before he is fully recovered from his illness,” he said. 

Grant said that when the comedian was asked what he wanted for dessert for his first lunch back home, Hope answered, “I don’t care ... as long as it’s coffee ice cream.” 

“He loves ice cream,” Grant said. 

Hope was originally expected to be released by Labor Day but a slight rise in his temperature scuttled that plan. 

Hope entered the hospital Aug. 26 because of trouble breathing. He was later diagnosed with mild pneumonia. He received antibiotics, intravenous fluids and respiratory therapy. 


’Jackets look to excel in wide-open ACCAL

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday September 07, 2001

New coach, QB hoping to get Berkeley off to a quick start 

 

Last year, the Berkeley Yellowjackets rode on the back of superstar Ramone Reed. This year, it’s going to have to be a group effort. 

With Reed having moved on to become an Oregon Duck, the ’Jackets will count on a combination of their usual running attack with a rejuvenated passing game. Senior Germaine Baird will fill Reed’s spot at tailback, while senior quarterback Raymond Pinkston will lead the air attack. 

“There’s no replacing Ramone Reed. He was probably the best player I’ve seen come out of Berkeley High,” first-year head coach Matt Bissell says. “But Germaine has done nothing to make us lose confidence in him. He’s the type of player this team can ride.” 

Bissell doesn’t expect Baird to duplicate Reed’s 1,189 yard, 15 touchdown season. But that’s mostly because the Berkeley passing game is much improved, at least in practice. Pinkston, who played at Berkeley as a freshman before moving to Detroit, is a better passer than either of last year’s signal-callers, Leon Ireland and Mohammed Nitoto. The key will be how fast Pinkston and his receivers can master the ’Jackets’ new offense, the brainchild of new offensive coordinator Clarence Johnson. Expect a lot of misdirection and play-action passes to keep opposing defenses on their toes. 

Pinkston will likely count heavily on deep threat wideout Lee Franklin. Franklin has the speed to stretch defenses and good hands, evidenced by his place as kick and punt returner, as well as a starting safety.  

“Lee plays a position in our offense where it will be easy to get him the ball,” Bissell says. “We want to get the ball in his hands in different ways.” 

The other receiver position is a battle between three candidates. 

“All three guys who are competing for that spot do different things well,” Bissell says. “It’ll depend on the situation to see which guy plays.” 

Pinkston will also use fullback Nick Schooler as a receiver out of the backfield. Schooler is the backup quarterback, and as Bissell says, “knows the offense better than the coaches.” 

The offensive line should be solid if not spectacular. Returning starters Matt Toma and Zack Cohen are technically sound, if a bit undersized. Brian Hickman has looked very good in practice at right guard, but the center and right tackle spots are questionmarks heading into Berkeley’s first game against Foothill tonight. 

The defense will revolve around a mammoth line. Nose guard Jamal Johnson is nearly a defensive line all by himself at more than 300 pounds. Johnson should be a force if he can get over some nagging injuries. Surrounding him at the tackles will be Robert Hunter-Ford and Juleen Jacobs, both of whom weigh in at more than 250 pounds. 

“If we have everyone healthy, there’s no reason any team should be able to run up the middle on us,” Bissell says. 

The ends will be Greg Mitchell and Akeem Brown, who has the potential to be an impact pass rusher off the edge. 

With five linemen, the ’Jackets will use just two linebackers, Owen Goldstrom and Demetrius Summers. Both are a bit undersized, so it will be up to the line to keep blockers from getting down the field if the linebackers are to make plays. 

The Berkeley secondary is a highly fluid situation, as the coaching staff tries to keep Baird and Franklin fresh for offense. Baird is a lockdown cornerback, but he will come off the bench to start the season. The starters will be Justin Cain and sophomore Shawn Brown, but Bissell says he will use Baird if he needs him. 

Franklin, on the other hand, will be needed right away, as one projected starter at safety is injured. Franklin will start the Foothill game alongside Craig Hollis, but Bissell would like to minimize his playing time. 

“We’re trying to alleviate the pressure on Germaine and Lee,” Bissell says. “We don’t want them too tired to make plays on offense.” 

Bissell inherited a killer schedule from last year’s head coach, Gary Weaver. All three teams the ’Jackets will face before starting league play, Foothill, James Logan and Dos Palos, beat them last year, and there is little reason to believe that will change this season. 

Last year’s team lost four straight before going 5-1 in the ACCAL, which probably lost the school a North Coast Section playoff spot when they ended up in a three-way tie for the league title. Bissell hopes to avoid such a disastrous start this year, but it will be a tough road. 

“It’s very possible that we will have a repeat of last year,” he says. “I’m not sure we know what it takes to win just yet. But hopefully we’ll figure it out pretty fast.”


Child hit by mom’s car dies

By Mary Spicuzza Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 07, 2001

EMERYVILLE – Prithviraj Singh said his 3-year-old son cannot understand what happened to the boy’s only sister, Eveneet Deol. The 5-year-old Deol, who was struck by her mother’s car last Friday morning after being dropped off for school at Anna Yates Elementary, died at Childrens’ Hospital Oakland Wednesday afternoon 

“When we tell him what happened, he says that she’s still in the hospital,” Singh said. “I tell him that she’s gone to God now. But he says no, no, she’s at the hospital.” 

The Singh family decided to remove Deol from life support on Wednesday, after test results showed she had suffered severe brain damage from the accident. She died at 3 p.m., on what should have been her third day of school.  

The accident occurred in front of the school’s 41st Street entrance at 8:30 a.m. just after Deol left her mother’s car and started to run around in front of it. Her mom got out of the car to give her a hug, not realizing she hadn’t shifted the vehicle into park. When the car rolled forward and hit the girl, her mother panicked and rushed back into the car to put it in park. Instead, she accidentally shifted it into reverse and it rolled into Deol a second time, trapping her head and shoulder between a front tire and the road. Parents dropping off their children and other witnesses tried to help by lifting the car, pulling Deol out from under the tire, and performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation. 

“It was pretty traumatic for everybody that was involved to see somebody so small in that kind of condition,” Officer Michael Allen, who arrived at the scene shortly after hearing the 911 call, said. “And then to find out that her mother was the one that accidentally ran her over.” 

Yesterday Allen was guiding traffic on 43rd Street in front of the 450-student elementary school. He sat in the center of the road on his motorcycle, making sure motorists stopped before driving through the large crosswalk. 

At the orientation held before the first day of school, Anna Yates staff members told families to drop their children off only at the 43rd Street entrance because it has a large crosswalk and is safer for children. Principal Anakarita Allen said that she sent out reminder letters after Friday’s accident and again this week. She said that because Deol was hit on 41st Street, most of the students did not see the accident. 

“As a staff, we didn’t want to upset the students. But we had a crisis intervention unit that went around to the classrooms,” Allen said. “We talked mostly about traffic safety.”  

Allen said many of the parents are more traumatized than the kids, and that counseling is still available for them and for students. 

“Because of the way it happened, this is very sensitive to parents,” she said. “We’re going to let them decide what they want for their kids.” 

Prithviraj Singh said that other families have been extremely supportive. He said that when his daughter was in the hospital the family was surrounded by friends, well-wishers, and those who had helped in rescue attempts. Singh, a UNIX systems administrator, said that he is taking a break from work to help plan his daughter’s prayer service and cremation. 

“That’s the only daughter I had,” he said. 


Fine Arts building proposed for downtownFine Arts building proposed for downtown

By John GeluardiDaily Planet staff
Friday September 07, 2001

Downtown developer Patrick Kennedy submitted plans last month to develop a five-story, mixed-use building on Shattuck Avenue at the location of the Fine Arts Cinema. 

Kennedy, president of the development company, Panoramic Interests, has proposed a project called the Fine Arts Building at 2471 Shattuck Ave. at Haste Street, which includes a café, movie theater, retail store and 100 residential apartments, 20 of which will be set aside for low-income and very low-income tenants. The 85,000-square-foot project also includes 64 parking spaces. 

“We’d like to make that end of downtown a destination corner,” said Chris Hudson, who will be managing the project for Panoramic Interests. “We expect it will create a synergy between the restaurant and the cinema that will draw more people to the southern end of downtown.” 

The development would require razing of the Fine Arts Cinema, a 275-seat alternative theater, which has operated at the site since 1997. Two adjacent buildings, one occupied by an annex office of Youth Radio and the other vacant, will also be demolished. 

The Fine Art Cinema, operated by partners Keith Arnold, Josephine Scherer and Emily Charles, is a small theater that presents a variety of art house and “community-based” films.  

Kennedy has offered to lease the new theater space back to Fine Arts Cinema once the project is completed, although there is no official agreement yet. 

“We have to sit down and deal with all the minutia, but the economics of the deal are fairly well defined,” Kennedy said. “The important thing is the chemistry and we really like what Keith, Josephine and Emily are doing there.” 

Arnold said the Fine Arts Theater has developed a good following since it opened, but nonetheless the owners are looking forward to reopening in the new theater. 

“We like the idea of the café and that the theater will be outfitted with state-of-the-art technology,” he said. “We’re excited about development in this area.” 

Arnold said the Fine Arts Cinema will continue to present films at a variety of Bay Area locations while the project is under construction. 

According to city Planning Manager Mark Rhodes, the project will be considered by the Design Review Committee within the next two months and, because the project includes the total demolition of three buildings over 40 years old, the plans will have to get a stamp of approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission before going to the Zoning Adjustments Board for a use permit. 

Rhodes added that the art deco-styled project was designed by prominent architect Dan Solomon of Solomon Architecture and Urban Design, who is known for his work on the Strategic Downtown Plan in Los Angeles, the Downtown Revitalization Program and Civic Center in Hayward and the Bauer Schweitzer Historical site in San Francisco.  

If the building is approved, it will be Kennedy’s sixth multistoried building that has been completed or is currently under construction in the downtown area. Some other Kennedy downtown projects include the Gaia Cultural Center on Allston Way, the ARTech Building on Milvia Street and the Shattuck Avenue Lofts on Shattuck Avenue. 

The design of the Fine Arts Building is similar in use to other Kennedy developments in the downtown area. Typically, Panoramic specializes in multistoried, mixed-use and mixed-income developments. 

Kennedy said he has faced stiff opposition to some of his projects in the past, but did not expect much difficulty with this project. 

“We’re hopeful it will go smoothly, we aren’t asking for a density bonus or any variances,” he said. “Besides it will make possible the continuation of the last remaining repertory theater in Berkeley and everybody wants that.”


Census: Blacks leaving San Francisco in droves

By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ Associated Press Writer
Friday September 07, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Bobbie Webb considers himself a survivor of a seismic shift in San Francisco’s population. 

Blacks abandoned San Francisco faster than any other major U.S. city in the last decade, according to 2000 census data. More than 18,500 have left since 1990, a 23 percent decline that extends a trend that began a generation ago when urban renewal forced many to relocate. 

The main reason for the decline, according to population experts: Blacks are moving out to the suburbs in search of more affordable housing and the opportunity to be with their own. 

Webb, a blues musician who still lives in the Fillmore District, remembers the late-night talent shows at the Ellis Theater and the shops and jazz clubs along Fillmore Street that gave blacks a sense of community. 

“We have lost it as far as black people are concerned,” he said. “The Fillmore is gone.” 

In the 1970s, there were 96,000 blacks in San Francisco, accounting for about 13 percent of the population. There are now 60,500, just 8 percent of a city that has grown steadily since the 1970s and prides itself on its diversity. 

“There are better options for people in the suburbs,” said William Banks, a black studies professor at the University of California at Berkeley. “Black middle-class parents would prefer to get a larger house they could never afford in San Francisco.” 

Many move to be closer to family or because they want their children to experience a predominantly black community, Banks said. 

“People will move where they can feel at home,” said Banks, who himself lives in Hayward, a San Francisco suburb whose black population has soared 40 percent since 1990. “There you have the institutions intact.” 

Similarly, Miami lost 21.5 percent of its blacks during the 1990s, and Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles also had striking declines. 

San Francisco’s blacks were hit particularly hard during the 1990s, when hundreds of poor families were displaced as federally subsidized housing was torn down. The dot-com boom then attracted thousands of new residents, mainly young professionals able to pay rents that became the highest in the nation. 

Webb, 62, pays $576 a month for a rent-controlled, two-bedroom apartment where he raised his four children. He knows plenty of people are willing to pay the $2,400 his landlords want. 

“The people who own the building are just waiting to kick us out,” said Webb, who is fighting a 15 percent rent increase in court. “I can’t afford to move any place right now.” 

The city’s first large, visible black community emerged between 1940 and 1950, with a boom in shipbuilding and other war-related jobs. Many blacks arrived in the Fillmore; others settled in the Bayview-Hunters Point area, closer to the Navy yards. 

Then came the urban renewal projects to make room for six-lane Geary Boulevard and a shopping mall now at the center of Japantown. By the time the projects were finished in the 1970s, 20,000 blacks had been displaced. And as they left, so did the businesses. 

Reggie Pettus’ family has owned Chicago Barbershop on Fillmore Street since 1952. It remains a landmark of sorts for the black community, drawing the city’s best-known black resident, Mayor Willie Brown. 

But the shop is one of only about five black-owned businesses left on Fillmore. Said Pettus: “I call it the No More.” 

Aside from churches, blacks have few major cultural institutions to call their own in San Francisco. A black cultural center, promised a decade ago as part of a redevelopment project, will not open until 2003. Organizers are still working on the concept. 

Bayview-Hunters Point, which is isolated by freeways and long bus rides from other neighborhoods, remains the only solidly black area of town. Even there, Asians and Hispanics have been moving in. 

Some have tried to revive the Fillmore District’s jazz clubs, and a proposed commuter rail extension will eventually connect Hunters Point directly to downtown. But many feel the black exodus is irreversible. 

“The city of San Francisco is becoming an upper-class neighborhood of the Bay Area,” said Gary Orfield, co-director of Harvard’s Civil Rights Project. 


POLICE NEWS

compiled by Kenyatte Davis
Friday September 07, 2001

Two bank robberies over the past week have brought the Berkeley total since Aug. 27 to four, according to police Lt. Cynthia Harris. 

On Aug. 30 at around 2 p.m., a 29-year-old suspect, apparently unarmed, walked into the Washington Mutual Bank at 2150 Shattuck Ave. and allegedly produced a note demanding that the teller give him money. The teller gave up an undisclosed amount of money and the suspect walked out, according to Harris. The suspect was apprehended 15 minutes later. 

Limited information is available about a Wednesday robbery of Bank of the West. That robbery however, was the second time the bank at 1480 Shattuck Ave. has been robbed in eight days. That suspect is still at large. 

The Wells Fargo Bank at 2959 College Ave. was the victim of an attempted robbery on Aug. 27 at the hands of a suspect with a note demanding money. That suspect has been apprehended. 

 

* * * 

 

Two of three males caught in the process of robbing a man at 2:30 a.m. Saturday were apprehended after the three suspects fled on bikes. 

According to Lt. Harris, the suspects approached the 25-year-old victim from behind, near the corner of Regent and Parker streets, and demanded his wallet. When the victim obliged, the suspects allegedly demanded his backpack as well, but the victim refused to give it to them. At that point, patrolling Berkeley police officers approached and the suspects fled, according to Harris. The apprehended suspects were 19 and 20 years old; no information is available on the third suspect. The victim was not injured. 


Small theater a unique downtown Berkeley gem

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Friday September 07, 2001

The Fine Arts Cinema may soon find itself without a home when the building it occupies is razed to make way for a five-story, mixed-use building. 

But this doesn’t mean the big “fin” for the 275-seat art house theater, which has presented a mixed bag of foreign films, American classics and Independent films since it began threading film into its rare carbon arc Peerless Magnarc projectors in 1997. 

The developer of the proposed 85,000-square-foot Fine Arts Building, Patrick Kennedy of Panoramic Interests is currently in negotiations with the owners of FAC, Keith Arnold, Josephine Scherer and Emily Charles, for a new lease for theater space in the new building. The deal has not been finalized yet, but both sides said there is a meeting of the minds. 

Since the UC Theater closed its doors six months ago, the FAC has been one of the few places in Berkeley where moviegoers can find non-mainstream films. 

“We like to present films that represent the community,” said Arnold. “And we feel very lucky that Berkeley has a community that is very diverse in culture and interests and so many people come to the theater to engage their curiosities with films that don’t necessarily have glowing reviews.” 

Arnold said a good example of the theater’s commitment to the community is its presentation of “Mavericks,” a documentary about surfing on the northern California coast. A subject of the film, well-known surfer Jay Moriarity, recently died in a diving accident. 

Arnold said he called the filmmakers and offered to present the film as a tribute to Moriarity and as a benefit for his family.  

“Who would have known that there’s a rather large surfing community in Berkeley,” Arnold said pointing out that there are two surf shops in town. 

Arnold said the theater has an interesting and somewhat “colorful” history. The first theater was opened in the building by world-renowned film critic Pauline Kael, who was credited with changing the way movies were reviewed in the 1960s and 1970s. Kael opened the theater with her then-husband, Ed Landberg in the late 1950s. She died on Sept. 3 at the age of 82. 

Shortly after the couple opened the theater, they divorced and Landberg got control of theater. He later married and divorced another women, who won the theater in a divorce settlement. 

This woman then leased the theater to the Mitchell Brothers in 1977 and the theater ran pornographic films until 1983. Until the Fine Arts Cinema opened in 1997, the theater showed Indian productions. 

Arnold said while the new Fine Arts Building is under construction, the theater’s owners will continue to show films “on the road at a variety of theaters around the East Bay.”


All Bay Bridge lanes to get Fastrak

Bay City News
Friday September 07, 2001

OAKLAND – Caltrans plans to equip all lanes of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge with Fastrak lanes this fall, a spokesman announced Thursday.  

Fastrak, an electronic payment system that allows subscribed motorists to prepay bridge tolls, eliminating the need to stop at the toll plaza, is currently installed in six of the 20 toll lanes at the bridge. Soon, all Bay Bridge lanes will be Fastrak friendly, just like all toll lanes at the other six state-owned bridges in the Bay area, according to Caltrans spokesman Colin Jones. Each lane also accepts cash payments, and every bridge also has one "Fastrak-only'' lane. 

Since last fall, Jones says, Caltrans has issued more than 160,000 transponders with new Fastrak applications averaging 2,000 per week. 

To sign up for Fastrak, call (888) 725-8725 or visit the Caltrans  

Web site at www.dot.ca.gov.


Garden decorations growing in popularity

By Dave Carpenter Associated Press Writer
Friday September 07, 2001

CHICAGO — How does your garden grow? 

If you’re like many Americans, it’s dotted by decorative items ranging from wind chimes to sundials to fancy birdhouses. Garden decor sales are flourishing, helping to keep the $85 billion lawn and garden industry from withering in a weakened economy. 

Instant gratification helps explain the rapid growth of garden gift and decor, says one expert at the National Hardware Show, home to thousands of the latest garden embellishments. 

“It takes a little ability to buy a plant and keep it alive,” said Jeff Morey, publisher of the trade publication Nursery Retailer. “But if you buy a sundial and stick it out in the middle of your garden, it looks great and it doesn’t die.” 

U.S. sales of lawn and garden accessories are projected to reach $6.3 billion this year, up nearly 9 percent in two years despite the economic downturn. 

The increase seems to confirm the old adage that come good times or bad, Americans will spend to maintain their yards and gardens. 

“People will forgo their vacation or postpone buying the new car, but they’re still willing to make a $200 to $500 investment in their garden,” said Robert Borta, vice president of Henri Studio Inc., a leading maker of fountains and lawn statues. 

Garden sculptures, torches and oil lamps, arbor arches, hummingbird feeders and birdbaths all are part of the craze. 

“It’s a feel-good thing, it’s a fashion thing,” said Rick Cohen, president of Ann Arbor, Mich.-based RSR Industries, maker of Echo Valley home and garden accessories. “They create a look.” 

What’s so gratifying about a gazing globe — the shiny reflective sphere that is bouncing back, so to speak, after first mirroring popular tastes a few years back? 

It’s all in the eyes of the beholder; one man’s gazing globe may be another’s pink flamingo. But testifying to its hypnotic appeal, a half-dozen companies displayed competing models of the glass or mirrored ball at the hardware show, North America’s largest lawn, garden and home improvement event. 

The spend-happy gardener can also buy wind chimes that range up to the size of an NBA point guard. One popular item: 74-inch-tall chimes that retail for $150 to $175. 

“Wind chimes fit in well with this relaxation mode everybody’s in,” said Arnold Rossi, a sales representative for QMT Associates, a Manassas Park, Va.-based firm that makes and distributes wind chimes. 

The garden accessories boom hasn’t escaped the attention of the Walt Disney Co., which contracted with Wauconda, Ill.-based Henri Studio to come out with garden statues and fountains featuring the Disney characters. 

Two-tiered fountains with classical or nature themes remain the 40-year-old company’s biggest sellers. But they’re fast being gained on by the Mickey and Minnie water fountain ($149) and statues of a daydreaming Winnie the Pooh or a gardening Mickey ($40 to $50). 

Sales since last year have exceeded expectations, according to Borta. 

“A lot of people have a soft spot for these characters from their childhood,” he said. “A lot of women will come up and say, ’Oh — Pooh! That’s so cute!”’ he said. 

The same lighthearted tone applies throughout much of the garden accessory business. 

Garden stakes with humorous sayings punctuate that point in another aisle of the vast hardware show. Instead of a serious or scientific label for a plant or flower, one says simply: “Grow, dammit!”


Israeli ‘new’ historian startles audience

By Sasha Khokha Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 07, 2001

An Israeli historian known for being critical of Israeli policy surprised his audience Wednesday night by focusing on the “repeated blunders” that, he says, Palestinians have made in handling negotiations over land.  

Professor Benny Morris has been criticized for his suggestion that Israeli leaders bear substantial responsibility for conflict with their Arab neighbors. In 1999, the Jerusalem Post expressed concern that Morris and other “new historians” would “undermine the moral case for Israeli Zionism.” Yet, at the lecture at the Graduate Theological Union Wednesday, Morris said that Arabs’ historical reluctance to negotiate with Israel had cost the region its ability to win peace.  

Many in the audience of some 100 scholars and community members had read Morris’ work, and expressed disbelief, even anger, at the tone of his lecture. “His talk seemed to be a complete contradiction with his earlier work,” said Robert Blecher, who teaches Modern Middle Eastern History at Stanford. “Morris has made a case against Central Israeli myths. But this talk was just a long repetition of those myths.” 

“The deal didn’t fall because Barak didn’t shake Arafat’s hand nicely, it fell because the deal was rejected by the Palestinian side,” said Morris, pointing to the failure of 2000 negotiations at Camp David between then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yassar Arafat. This critique from Morris comes at a time when many who originally blamed Arafat for the failure of Camp David are taking a second look at the talks. In July, for example, a New York Times special report asserted that Barak shared the blame by not making it clear how far he was willing to negotiate. 

Morris also said that Palestinians’ refusal to accept a divided state had historically led to other missed opportunities, including an offer of 80 percent of the land in Palestine under a 1937 British peace settlement.  

Morris’ books, with titles such as “The Palestinian Refugee Problem,” and “Israel’s Border Wars,” have been considered key texts among a new generation of Israeli historians. In “Righteous Victims,” Morris argues that Zionism was, from its beginnings, “a colonizing and expansionist ideology and movement” influenced by “the European colonists’ mental obliteration of the natives.” 

The question and answer period following the talk erupted into controversy when audience members repeatedly confronted Morris about the contradiction they perceived.  

“I definitely think that you are singing a different song,” said Rutie Adler, an Israeli who coordinates the Hebrew Language Program at UC Berkeley’s Near Eastern Studies Department.  

“As a Palestinian, I saw a light at the end of the tunnel with your work - I thought here was an Israeli who can finally understand our plight,” Hatem Bazian, a Palestinian doctoral candidate in Near Eastern Studies, told Morris in the discussion period. “I wish I had not come to this lecture to hear you in person. It’s a clean-up job for the history of Israel.” 

Morris defended himself in what became a heated dialogue with audience members who repeatedly interrupted him. “There is no contradiction,” he said. “My work deals with what happened in the past. I’ve never said that Israel was the only aggressor. Both sides are victims and occasionally both sides are aggressors.”  

Some Jewish members of the audience had come to request signatures for a New York Times ad sponsored by a group known as Jewish Voices Against the Occupation. Bluma Goldstein, professor emerita of German at UC Berkeley, had hoped that Morris would appreciate their efforts.  

“I was surprised at almost everything he said,” Goldstein remarked in an interview. “I thought his talk was disastrous. He said Palestinians should accept a deal offering 95 percent of East Jerusalem. Well, (Israeli) Professor Jeffrey Halper has a good metaphor for that: it’s like a prison, where 95 percent are inmates, but the guards are 5 percent and they have all the power.”  

“I’m a Christian, and it raised my blood pressure,” said Palestinian-born Samir Nassar, owner of Brewed Awakenings Coffee Shop in Berkeley. “I was insulted when he called the followers of Mohammed ‘cronies’.” 

Professor Naomi Seidman of the GTU Richard S. Dinner Center for Jewish Studies introduced Morris’ talk by saying that his scholarship is “cosmic” and that “reading his work – as a Jew – is like having your molecules rearranged.”  

But after the talk, Seidman was disappointed. “He is a well known, important figure, who really (challenged) the Zionist narrative,” she said. “But you wouldn’t know that from having heard him today.” 

Morris said he had not expected such a response. “It’s left-wing, politically correct, Berkeley intolerance,” he said in an interview following the talk. “I’ve lectured at Dartmouth and Middlebury and I didn’t encounter such a uniformity of intolerance.” 


Senate passes bill boosting workers’ compensation benefits

By Jim Wasserman Associated Press Writer
Friday September 07, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Setting up a possible showdown between a Democratic Legislature and governor who’s twice vetoed similar bills, the state Senate voted Thursday to boost benefits for injured workers in California. 

Senate Democrats, saying that California pays some of the lowest injury benefits in the country, prevailed in a 25-13 party line vote to increase payments to workers by up to $2.4 billion across five years. 

They also maintained that their reforms, proposed by Senate Democratic Leader John Burton of San Francisco, will save employers up to $1 billion a year and cost only 2.3 percent of their annual payroll. 

But opponents to the bill, including major insurance companies and the California Chamber of Commerce, believe the cost increases could range from $3.6 billion to $4.2 billion a year. They’re hoping for a compromise in days ahead between Burton’s bill, also approved Wednesday by the Assembly, and a rival plan floated by Gov. Gray Davis. 

Davis proposes to hike payments by about $1.2 billion and cut costs by about $800 million over the same time, said Steve Smith, director of the state’s Department of Industrial Relations. 

After Thursday’s vote, insurance industry spokeswoman Nicole Mahrt, said, “We’d like the Senate to slow down a little bit and take some time and look at the package the governor has put together. 

“We’d like to see a benefits increase for injured workers,” said Mahrt, a Sacramento-based representative for the American Insurance Association. “But we’d like to see it offset by reforms.” 

California’s 88-year-old system for paying injured workers has reached center stage in recent days as powerful campaign contributors including lawyers, unions, insurance companies and businesses compete for the hearts of legislators and the governor. Attempts during the last two years to change workers’ compensation have failed for lack of agreement over higher payments to workers versus cutting costs in the system. 

Senate Republicans, voicing support for thousands of California’s small businesses, said the proposed higher costs would hurt firms already threatened by recession and higher power bills. 

Leading the arguments against the bill, Riverside Republican Ray Haynes said it’s not the reform the system needs. Instead, it will raise costs and send businesses to Arizona and Nevada, which have lower costs. 

“We are repeating all the mistakes we have made in the past,” Haynes said. “Yet having made those mistakes and sending the state into recession in the early 1990s, we want to repeat those mistakes again and send our state into recession in the first decade of the 21st Century.” 

After the vote, Burton, who carried the legislation on behalf of the California Labor Federation and the California Applicants Attorneys Association, said he doesn’t believe Davis will veto it this year. 

“When it’s all over, he will see the merit of the bill. The governor never told me he’s going to veto the bill,” said Burton, a longtime ally of organized labor. 

Davis doesn’t have a formal position on the bill now, Smith said, but the fact he’s floating an alternative “is a strong indication he is not completely comfortable with what’s in the bill.” 

The administration, Smith said, is promoting several inducements, including more money for workplace modifications to encourage employers to get workers back to work. The best solution, he said, “is to get healthy people back to work as soon as possible.” 

Davis vetoed the Legislature’s payment-boosting bills in 1999 and 2000, saying higher payments weren’t adequately offset by cost reductions in the workers’ compensation system. 

Burton’s 2001 bill is virtually the same as the two Davis has vetoed, said Michael McClain of the Oakland-based California Workers Compensation Institute, a research arm of insurance companies and self-insured employees, including Safeway, Walt Disney Co. and Pacific Gas and Electric Co. 

If Davis vetoes the bill for the third straight year, Burton said, he’ll take the issue to the voters. He promised a ballot measure that’s “more costly to employers,” one that will raise their costs to the national average or higher. 

The Senate bill, Burton said before Thursday’s vote, “does little to bring people up to the national average. But at least it’s a measure of help for people working on their job to make California great.” 

Democrats cited major disparities between other states and California for the same injuries. Michigan pays $86,000 for the loss of a toe, they said, while California pays $4,000. Pennsylvanians who lose an eye at work are paid $149,000.  

 

 

 

Californians who lose an eye receive $21,000. 


Assembly OKs bill requiring energy hearings

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Friday September 07, 2001

SACRAMENTO — A bill that would require California’s power-buying agency to hold public hearings on billions of dollars worth of long-term energy contracts passed a key Assembly committee Thursday. 

The bill, by Sen. John Burton, D-San Francisco, would set aside part of existing consumer electricity rates to guarantee the state has enough money to pay off bonds issued by the Department of Water Resources. 

It also limits the use of the bond money to cover electricity purchases and legislatively approved administrative costs. Power-buying expenses and administrative costs would be reviewed by the Public Utilities Commission and the public to determine if it is appropriate to raise electric rates to pay for them. 

The changes will save ratepayers about $1 billion, Burton said, because it separates the bond repayment from other DWR activities “which under existing language could include everything and anything DWR does.” 

The Assembly Appropriations Committee approved the bill and sent it to the full Assembly. 

The PUC plans to vote Sept. 20 on whether to cede its ratemaking authority to the DWR. The proposed agreement would let DWR pass on all power costs to customers without oversight by state regulators to ensure those costs are fair and reasonable. 

DWR officials said they need that guarantee to attract investors when they sell $12.5 billion in revenue bonds this fall. Ratepayers will pay off those bonds over 15 years, and state officials say a solid revenue stream could help keep interest low. 

State Treasurer Phil Angelides said Wednesday that state regulators have to approve several measures, including the rate agreement for DWR, before it can issue the bonds. Angelides had planned to issue the bonds by October, but that date could be pushed back. 

PUC President Loretta Lynch supported Burton’s bill, testifying in an Assembly committee on Tuesday that it was a “clean and efficient way to make sure we get the bonds issued.” 

But Steve Maviglio, Gov. Gray Davis’ press secretary, said Davis had “a number of concerns” about the bill and wanted it amended. The bill’s ceding of some revenue authority to the PUC could make investors nervous about buying the bonds. 

Since January, DWR has spent more than $9 billion buying electricity for the customers of three financially ailing utilities. It will likely spend $43 billion to supply Californians with electricity over the next 20 years. 

The state is buying electricity for the customers of Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Southern California Edison Co. and San Diego Gas & Electric Co. The utilities amassed billions of debt by January due to high wholesale prices last year, preventing them from buying electricity for their customers. 

——— 

On the Net: 

Read the bill, SB18xx, at http://www.senate.ca.gov 

Read the DWR draft rate agreement at the California Public Utilities Commission Web site http://www.cpuc.ca.gov 


No BART strike – for now

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet correspondent
Thursday September 06, 2001

A San Francisco Superior Court judge extended a strike injunction on one of BART’s three unions Wednesday morning, easing the specter of a Bay Area transit crisis for at least another six weeks. 

The transit agency and its two other employee unions had already reached a tentative four-year contract on Tuesday, after days of tense negotiation, threatened strike deadlines and intervention by elected officials.  

“It gives us a little breathing room,” said BART spokesman Mike Healy. 

However, if negotiations fail and one BART union eventually strikes, the remaining two are likely to follow suit. 

Judge James Robertson extended a restraining order against the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3993 until Oct. 15. AFSCME, which represents BART’s middle-management and supervisory positions, is negotiating over issues such as pay parity and the protection of union members. 

The Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555 and the Service Employees International Union Local 790 sought pay increases for BART employees totaling 20.5 percent over three years, while BART had offered 18.5 percent over four years. The settlement, which will be put to a union membership vote Tuesday, calls for a total of 22 percent in wage and pension raises over four years, with 6 percent the first, 5 percent in the second and third, and 6 percent in the fourth year. 

At a press conference in downtown Oakland Wednesday, Larry Hendel, East Bay staff director for SEIU Local 790, said the tentative contract will grant employees a holiday on Martin Luther King Jr. Day starting in the second year. 

Hendel expressed confidence that the membership would approve the contract. “The feedback I’m getting is really positive,” he said. 

However, Hendel and Bob Smith, the SEIU local president, also at the conference, affirmed solidarity with AFSCME in its own negotiating efforts. 

“If any AFl-CIO union is going on strike, we’ll honor their picket lines,” Hendel said. 

“We’ll be back at the table with AFSCME and working hard to get an agreement between now and the new deadline,” said Healy, the BART spokesperson. Asked if BART riders were out of the woods, he said: “Not until we get an agreement.”


Panthers looking to open up offense

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday September 06, 2001

The 2001 St. Mary’s varsity football team will have to cope with the loss of one of the best players in school history, along with the retirement of its coach of 16 years. The Panthers also lost a star they never really had this summer. But with some big weapons on offense and an infusion of new talent on defense, the Panthers should be back in the hunt for the Bay Shore Athletic League title this season. 

“A lot has changed since last year,” Jay Lawson admits. Lawson is the new head coach at St. Mary’s after 15 years with the school. Lawson, who is also the new athletic director, knows there will be a period of adjustment for his players. 

“The hardest thing so far has been putting my own mark and personality on the program,” he says. “We’re changing things that the coaches and players are used to around here.” 

Lorenzo Alexander, the mammoth lineman who was a four-year starter and Parade All-America for the Panthers, is now tearing things up at Cal. Dan Shaughnessy, who had guided the program since 1985, is helping his son coach the football team at Mt. Tamalpais High. And sophomore DeMarcus Nelson, who committed to transfer to St. Mary’s this summer and was projected as the starting quarterback, is back at Vallejo High after deciding to stay close to home. 

But despite those losses, St. Mary’s has its biggest threat back on the field this year: tailback Trestin George. The 6-foot-1, 185-pound senior carried the offense on his back last year, running for 1,164 yards and 20 touchdowns. George, who is being courted by most of the Pac-10 Conference schools, is bigger and faster than last season, so expect even more impressive numbers this year. 

“Trestin worked very hard this summer, and he’s put on some good weight,” Lawson says. “He’s probably one of the most dedicated athletes on our team, and he’s really stepped up into a leadership role.” 

George will be joined in the backfield by fullback Phil Weatheroy, a huge back who can open up holes for George or carry the ball himself on occasion. 

The best news for George is that Lawson plans to open up the St. Mary’s offense. The passing game was nearly non-existent last year, but Lawson feels he has some playmakers to split wide and attack defensive secondaries.  

Senior Courtney Brown returns to his wideout spot, giving the Panthers a deep threat. Brown was the team’s leading receiver last season, but was mostly a decoy in the run-happy offense.  

Junior Ryan Coogler will be the other wide receiver, but a bigger factor will be tight end Chase Moore, back from taking a year off of football. Moore, a starter for the school’s basketball and baseball teams, should give the offense a huge boost with his combination of size, hands and running ability. In last week’s scrimmage at Acalanes, the 6-foot-3, 220-pound senior was a terror, scoring on several long receptions, including a short pass over the middle that he turned into a 50-yard rumble over four defenders before outrunning a safety to the end zone. 

“Chase is the most exciting player we’ve added this year,” Lawson says. “We’re going to make sure he’s involved in the offense. We’re going to get him the ball and let him use his athletic ability.” 

Getting the receivers the ball will be up to Steve Murphy, who was a starting safety last season. When Nelson decided not to attend St. Mary’s, coaches were left scrambling to find a starter to take snaps at summer practice. Murphy showed a nice arm and surprising poise, and has looked solid in fall scrimmages.  

Murphy is only 5-foot-10; expect to see a lot of rollout passes from the Panthers. That’s because the linemen that will protect the passer include 6-foot-4, 290-pound Leon Drummer and 6-foot-3, 270-pound Jerrell Booker. Both juniors, Drummer and Booker will look to replace Alexander’s dominance on offense. They lead a line that has 11 experienced players, unusual depth for a team with 25 players on the roster. 

One up-and-comer is center Rodney Acda. A junior, Acda was the school’s best center last year, but was ineligible to play on varsity because he wasn’t 15 years old yet. 

“We don’t have anyone who is as good as Lorenzo, but we feel like the line will be better this year,” Lawson says. “We think the line will be the key to success, and the biggest strength on the team.” 

Drummer will also lead the defensive line, with Nick Osborne and Julian Taylor the other starters. Drummer’s size makes him an obvious candidate to take the mantle from Alexander, but Lawson says he will have to match Alexander’s work ethic to reach the same level. 

“Leon has the potential because of his agility and quickness, but it will depend on whether he is willing to put in the work,” he says. “’Zo was a special kid. We just want Leon to work hard to be the best player he can be.” 

The only other returning starter on defense is inside linebacker Omarr Flood. With Murphy and George running the offense, both will play only spot duty in the secondary. Brown will start at free safety, with Jason Bolden-Anderson filling Murphy’s shoes at strong safety. The starting cornerbacks will be senior Rob Leray and junior Kenny Griffin. Both have good speed, but could struggle in one-on-one coverage. 

“The defense is a question-mark going into the season,” says Lawson, who ran the unit last year with Steve Moore. “But we have the players, and we’re capable of having a solid defense.” 

As always, depth is an issue for a school with a small enrollment. With just 25 varsity players, the Panthers can’t afford injuries to starters. 

“If someone gets hurt and guys like Steve or Trestin have to play both ways full-time, it could be a problem,” Lawson says. “But we deal with that every year.”


Guy Poole
Thursday September 06, 2001


Thursday, Sept. 6

 

 

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 

 

Butch Time 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

A discussion/ social/ support/ activity group for self-defined butches. Tonight: Butches grow older. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Sahara Sojourn: Following the Ancient Routes of the Salt Caravans of Niger 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide presentation from the heart of the Sahara along the ancient routes of the salt caravans of the Tuareg. Free. 527-4140 

 

Women’s Health Issues 

10:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Two nurses from the city will launch a series of talks on women’s health issues, beginning with the bladder. 644-6107 

 

Rent Stabilization Board 

7 p.m. 

Council Chambers, Second Floor 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

Appeals, action items from committees, board members, and executive director. 644-6128 

 

Community Environmental Advisory Commission 

6 p.m. 

Planning and Development 

First Floor Conference Room 

2118 Milvia St. 

Presentation from Lawrence Berkeley Lab on site restoration.  

7 p.m. regular agenda meeting: Toxics management division report; residential woodburning; Heavy metals and creosote in city playgrounds; Battery recycling; and more. 705-8150 

 

Housing Advisory Commission 

7:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. 

Predatory lending practices for home loans; Housing Authority’s Section 8 program. 981-5410 

 


Friday, Sept. 7

 

 

Even Stronger Women 

1:15 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Free weekly cultural discussion class. This week: Haiku poetry. Discussion and examples. 549-1879 

 

East Bay Recorder Society 

7:15 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church, Choral Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Monthly meetings, professional conductors, all playing levels welcome. Music provided, bring music stand and pencil. 525-1249 

 

Reception for Jackie Y. Griffin, director of library services 

4:30 p.m. - 6 p.m. 

City Council Chambers 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, second floor 

Community Leader reception. Reservations requested, 644-6095 x 10; yvg2@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Law and Technology Forum 

2 - 5 p.m. 

U. C. Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Goldberg Room 

Representatives will discuss pending legal cases and technological innovations that may threaten civil liberties and new challenges for consumer protection. Free and open to the public. 642-0499 

 

Berkeley/ Albany Chapter of Church Women United 

9:30 a.m. 

Berkeley Chinese Community Church 

2117 Acton St. 

A report of the Milwaukee conference. 526-4303  

 

Rally and Ride to the State Capitol 

8 a.m. - sharp 

City Hall steps 

2180 Milvia 

Regroup Pittsburgh/Bay Point BART 9:15 a.m. 

Ride to Sacramento with Councilmember Kriss Worthington to support alternative transportation. 720-2818  

 


Saturday, Sept. 8

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Civic Center Park 

Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street 

A free environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Youth Arts Studio 

2 - 5 p.m. 

All Souls Episcopal Parish 

2220 Cedar St. 

Demonstration classes for after school program in visual arts, creative writing and dramatic arts for students ages 10 - 15. Free. 848-1755 

 

Luna Kids Dance Open House 

10 - 11 a.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar 

Free open house and parent/ child classes. Designed to give families a shared dance experience that connects body, mind, and soul. Children will have a chance to play fun dance games, refreshments and register for Fall Session. 525-4339 www.lunakidsdnace.com 

 

Pack Right, Travel Smart 

1 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Eagle Creek Rep will give you tips on how to best organize your gear and clothing for your next adventure. Free. 527-4140 

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

Earthquake retrofitting class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley. 644-8736 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire. 

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Sunday, Sept. 9

 

 

Solano Stroll 2001 

8 a.m. - 7 p.m. 

Solano Avenue 

27th Annual Berkeley / Albany Festival. 11 a.m. Parade; 8 a.m. pancake breakfast; merchants, entertainers, food, craft alley, game booths, silent auction, climbing wall, bicycle stunt show, ponyrides, giant slide, dunk tank, hot air balloon rides. Free. 527-5358 www.solanostroll.org 

 

Salsa Lesson and Dance Party 

6 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Salsa lesson and dance party with professional instructors. Israeli food. Novices welcome and no partner required. $12. RSVP 237-9874 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Avenue between 3rd and 4th streets  

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

654-6346  

 


That surplus belongs to Social Security

Theodore Roszak
Thursday September 06, 2001

Is it possible that the Democrats are overlooking President Bush’s real game plan for Social Security? Not that they’re wrong in charging him with fiscal recklessness.  

As the economy weakens, the president’s $1.3 billion tax cut is bound to erode the budget surplus that is intended to cover the retirement of the baby boom generation. But that may be exactly what the president is out to do. Why should he seek to bust Social Security? Because he and his new Social Security commission have their sights set on privatizing the system.  

If they succeed, they will divert billions of dollars into the flagging stock market. The first step toward doing that is to drain the surplus so they can claim the system is insolvent. 

Everything we’ve heard about the impending bankruptcy of Social Security has been skewed to serve the interests of the brokerage industry and such right-wing sources as the Cato Institute and the Concord Coalition. How do anti-entitlements conservatives make their case against Social Security?  

By selecting growth and discount rates that are meant to panic the public into entrusting retirement money to the same Wall Street culprits who gave us the dot-com debacle.  

Most frighteningly, they warn that the United States government will be unable to redeem the treasury bonds in the Social Security trust fund – “mere pieces of paper,” as some critics call them. One is left to wonder how the treasury would find a way to default on just those bonds and not all of its bonds in private portfolios, a catastrophe that would create global chaos.  

Far right forces have been flooding the press with ideologically-biased projections about Social Security since the days of the Reagan administration. Helped by media always in search of “sky-is-falling” sensationalism, they have done a superb job of obfuscating the issue. It takes a bit of a history lesson to undo the confusion. 

Social Security underwent its last major adjustment in 1982 when Alan Greenspan designed a formula to earmark funds for the retirement of the baby boomers through about 2030.  

The budget surplus that is now such a political football was largely generated by that fix. Of course, no fix lasts forever. As boomers retire, a new demographic contingency emerges: increasing life expectancy. Current levels of taxation won’t cover the entire life expectancy of baby boomers, which may reach age 90. But there are several conventional ways to adjust for that.  

As financial columnist Jane Bryant Quinn observes, “Contrary to popular belief, Social Security isn’t going bankrupt. ... The problems are fixable, with incremental changes in benefits, taxes and, eventually, borrowing.”  

Scores of experts have reached the same conclusion. (See, for example, “Social Security: The Phony Crisis,” a superbly competent study by Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot.)  

We might raise the 12.4 percent Social Security payroll tax (paid half-and-half by employers and employees) to about 14 percent. We could do that gradually by raising the tax by one-tenth of one percent over a period of several years.  

Or we could combine that with lifting the $80,400 cap on earnings taxable for Social Security and perhaps with making capital gains taxable for Social Security.  

Whenever you hear how “painful” it will be to save Social Security, note the extent of that pain: an imperceptible rise in the payroll tax to pay for the many extra years of life modern medicine has given us. That’s all it takes.  

Only those who oppose any increase in taxes can see that as intolerable. 

But by opting for tax cuts and star-wars spending that will devour the surplus, the Bush administration could be angling to make all these fixes impossible.  

The phony Social Security crisis would then become a real one – especially if the economy continues to falter and unemployment mounts.  

The president likes to say the surplus belongs to the people. That’s true.  

And so do obligations like the national debt and the cost of entitlements. The surplus is the nest egg Americans have quite responsibly set aside over the past 20 years to provide for the Social Security costs of the boomer generation. Squander that money, and dire predictions about the future of the system could come true. 

 

Theodore Roszak is a professor in the History Department at Cal State Hayward. His latest book is “Longevity Revolution: As Boomers Become Elders” (Berkeley Hills Books.)  


Radicals and radio rebels highlight MadCat

By Peter Crimmins Daily Planet Correspondent
Thursday September 06, 2001

A former Bay Area filmmaker has made a new documentary about a group of Vietnam War protesters who embodied a maxim deeply rooted in American free speech: “If we’re about bringing change through nonviolence,” says a lifelong activist in the film, “then we should think seriously about being free enough to go to jail.” 

Lynne Sachs’ 45-minute film about Vietnam protesters in Catonsville, Md., is coming to Berkeley’s Pacific Film Archive on Sept. 7 as part of the MadCat Film Festival, a series of mostly experimental films made by women. Three programs are planned: on Sept. 7, “Rebels With a Cause,” at 7 p.m. and “Is This Desire?” at 9 p.m.; and on Sept. 9, “In Search Of Home.” 

The festival also plays for several dates at San Francisco’s Artists’ Television Access and a bar in the Mission called El Rio.  

Nominally a presentation of women filmmakers and their compelling subjects, the festival, now in its fifth year, has proven itself to be less gender-centric than it is a playground of film aesthetics.  

The underlying point of “Investigation of a Flame” is the limits of civil disobedience, however spiritually fueled. In the face of sober political activism and religious motivation, it asks, how effective is man’s law in serving the citizens under its protection. 

When a group of nine activists – including a nurse, an artist, and three priests – publicly burned draft files with homemade napalm in May 1968, such acts of protest had not yet taken hold of the imagination of young America as they would a year later. The nine grappled with fervid political convictions and a solid religious backbone in their decision to make a symbolic anti-war statement as a kind of ideological publicity stunt. Their original plan to stain draft files with blood was deemed too lightweight in favor of a demonstration by fire that would make a stronger impact on the American conversation about its presence in Vietnam. 

Sachs had a whimsical hand on the camera while shooting the story of the Catonsville 9. Interviews might trail off out the window or move to a speaker’s fingers turning a small stone. Often the tight depth-of-field shifts the object – be it a bouquet of flowers sent by the Catonsville 9 from prison, or an anti-war newspaper ad – out of focus. Her stammering editing pace and hand-held camerawork is more avant-garde than MTV as the film moves apace with its idea that the history of Vietnam protests is more than simply a battle of hawks and doves. 

“Investigation of a Flame” is part of the “Rebels With a Cause” program, which also includes “The Magic of Radio,” a 23-minute documentary by longtime Bay Area filmmaker Greta Snider. In keeping with her punk-rock and counterculture roots (“Hardcore Home Movie,” “Portland”), Snider’s three-part film is a meditation on the phenomenon of remote signs of life moving invisibly through the air on carrier waves. 

A benign radio “pirate” bicycles a micro-transmitter through the streets of Portland, Ore., transmitting a cassette Walkman to anybody who happens to be tuned into her 30-yard reach while she pedals past. The process of putting out signal with a hands-on approach is its own quiet reward, because odds are very few people, if any, hear it. Not even we, the viewers, are allowed to hear whatever it is she’s broadcasting. 

A group of underground radio broadcasters called “Free Radio Austin” talk and play music out of a shack in Austin, Texas. Snider joins DJs Grinder Bitch and Feral as they rant and reminisce over the air about their crazy times spent in the shack and the other DJs they meet while doing their show. We never know who’s listening. The third subject is an amateur ham radio operator who seems most enthusiastic about building his own equipment to bounce signals off the moon than he is the content of the signal being bounced. 

The “Magic of Radio” visits three places in which an alternative space is being carved out of the airwaves, whether or not they have anything to say. Sinder’s grass-roots filmmaking, with montage sequences of sound and image pulled out of a night sky alive with signal, is less a call for communication than a need to stake a claim in the crowded ether. 

The films of MadCat have a drive to communicate, but often what is strongest is the filmmakers’ enthusiasm for their craft. Marketing and finding a niche audience is clearly not as important as getting their hands dirty with cutting and pasting celluloid, shooting and lighting sets, and with pushing ideas around a frame.


Music

Staff
Thursday September 06, 2001

 

924 Gilman Sept. 7: Carry On, Champion, Breaker Breaker, Saturday Supercade, Fields of Fire; Sept. 8: Lab Rats, Relative; Most shows $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless noted. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Albatross Pub Sept. 6: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 11: Mad & Eddie Duran Jazz Duo; Sept. 13: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 19: Whiskey Brothers; Sept. 20: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 22: Larry Stefl Jazz Quartet; Sept. 27: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Free. All shows begin at 9 p.m. 1822 San Pablo Ave. 843-2473 albatrosspub@mindspring.com  

 

Ashkenaz Sept. 6: 10 p.m. Grateful Dead DJ Nite, $5; Sept. 7: 9:30 p.m. Amandla Poets and Umlilo, $10; Sept. 8: 9:30 p.m. Charivari, $12; Sept. 9: 9 p.m. El Leo, The Jarican Express, $10; 1317 San Pablo 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com 

 

Café Eclectica Sept. 8: 8 p.m. SF Improv, Free. 1309 Solano Ave. 326-6124 www.sfimprov.com 

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. Sept. 10: Lucy Lang Day; Sept. 17: Marc Hofstadter (book party); Sept. 24: Jim Watson-Gove; All shows free, 7 - 10 p.m. 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 6: 8 p.m. King Sunny Ade & His African Beats, $20 - $32; Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Tania Libertad, $18 - $30; Sept. 30: 7 p.m. Kronos Quartet, David Barron, $30; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

Eli’s Mile High Club Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Splif Skankin and Funky Man. $10; Sept. 3: 2 - 8 p.m. Big West Coast Harmonica Bash, afternoon benefit for Red Archibald. $10 donation; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 7: Tom Russell w/ Andrew Hardin, $16.50; Sept. 8: The House Jacks, $17.50; Sept. 9: Erika Luckett, $16.50; Sept. 11: Don Walser, Slaid Cleaves, $16.50; Sept. 12: Andy Irvine, $17.50; Sept. 13: Piper Heisig birthday revue and fund raiser w/ Kate Brislin, Sylvia Herold, Tony Marcus, Carlos Reyes, and Radim Zenkl, $16.50; Sept. 14: Ray Wylie Hubbard, $16.50; Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jupiter Sept. 6 Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 7: Crater; Sept. 10: Ben Graves Trio; Sept. 11: Len Patterson Trio; Sept. 12: Bitches Brew; Sept. 13: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 14: Carlos Washington & Giant People Ensemble; Sept. 15: Kooken & Hoomen; Sept. 18: The Goodbye Flowers; Sept. 19: New Monsoon; Sept. 20: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 21: Netwerk: Electric; Sept. 22: New Garde Philosophers; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

La Peña Cultural Center Sept. 11 & 12: 8 p.m. Irakere, $22; In the Cafe, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Alice Arts Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Benefit concert for freedom of U.S. political prisoners featuring Fred Ho (solo) and The Eddie Gale Unit. $12; 1428 Alice, Oakland, 539-0050 www.thejerichomovement.com/teardownthewalls 

 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church Sept. 15: George Brooks and Shweta Jhaveri with Uttam Chakraborty on drums. $18 - $25; 2727 College Ave. 843-9600 www.harmoniventures.com 

 

Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live Radio Show Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave.; Sept. 29: Nancy Miford, author of “Savage Beauty.” West African folk music with The Nigerian Brothers. Blues roots piano by Caroline Dahl. The Freight and Salvage, 1111 Addison St. All shows 10 a.m. - noon. 252-9214 www.wcl.org 

 

Theater 

 

Lerner and Loewe’s “My Fair Lady” Sept. 6, 7, 8, 9. All shows 8 p.m. Adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s and Gabrial Pascal’s “Pygmalion.” Directed by James Schlader, choreographed by Harriet Schlader, under the musical direction of Mark Hanson. $15 - $27. 3300 Joaquin Miller Road, Oakland. 531-9597 www.woodminster.com 

 

Squelched.com Presents “Jim Short” Sept. 11: 8 p.m. Jim Short is an Australian expatriate who grew up in Texas. Also appearing: Rob Cantrell, Luke Filose and Sean Keane. Blake’s on Telegraph, 2367 Telegraph Ave. 848-0886 show@squelched.com 

 

“Hecho En Califas Chicano-Latino Teatro Festival” Sept. 6 - 9, 14 - 15; 8 p.m. Original members of El Teatro de La Esperanza. Chicano Theater began out of the need to express the realities of the fields and barrios of Aztlán in the Chicano-Latino community. $10 - $20 La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck, 849-2568, www.lapena.org  

 

“Winesburg, Ohio: Tales of the Grotesque” Sept. 6 through Sept. 16, Wed. - Sat. 8:30 p.m., Sun. 5 p.m. The Shotgun Players and Word For Word team up for a production of Sherwood Anderson’s deceptively simple tale of neglected souls who fade into the shadows around us. $22, Wednesdays are “Pay What You Can.” Julia Morgan Theatre, 2640 College Ave. 655-0813 www.shotgunplayers.org 

 

“The Secret Garden” Sept. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21, 22, at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 & 23 matinees. The Alameda Civic Light Opera’s fifth summer season ends with the musical of Frances Hodson Burnett’s classic story of life, death, purpose and hope. Adults $22, Students 18 and under $14. Kofman Auditorium, 2200 Central Ave., Alameda. www.aclo.com 

 

“36 Views” Sept. 12 through Oct. 28: Tues. 8 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m., Thu. 8 p.m. w/ 2 p.m. matinee every other Thu., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 8 p.m. w/ 2 p.m. matinee every other Sat., Sun. 2 p.m., 8 p.m. Written by Naomi Lizuka, Directed by Mark Wing-Davey. $10 - $54. Berkeley Repertory’s Roda Theatre, 2015 Addison St. 647-2949 www.berkeleyrep.org 

 

“Murder Dressed in Satin” by Victor Lawhorn, ongoing. A mystery-comedy dinner show at The Madison about a murder at the home of Satin Moray, a club owner and self-proclaimed socialite with a scarlet past. Dinner is included in the price of the theater ticket. $47.50 Lake Merritt Hotel, 1800 Madison St., Oakland. 239-2252 www.acteva.com/go/havefun 

 

Dance 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 8: 8 p.m. & Sept. 9: 3 p.m. - Dance, the Spirit of Cambodia, $20 - $32; Sept. 19 - 20: 8 p.m. American Ballet, “Bruch Violin Concerto,” “Jabula,” “Gong,” and “Black Tuesday.”; Sept. 21: 8 p.m., Sept. 22: 2 p.m. & 8 p.m., Sept. 23: 3 p.m. American Ballet, the full-length 19th Century “Giselle” $36 - $64; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

Films 

 

Pacific Film Archive Sept. 8: 7 p.m. “Rendan: Quartet for Two,” Sept. 9:10 p.m. “Unloved”; Sept. 9: 7 p.m. “In Search of Home”; Sept. 10: 7 p.m. “Orfeu,” Sept. 11: 7:30 p.m. “The Film of Maya Deren”; Sept. 12 7:30 p.m. “Autrian AudioVisions”; Sept. 14: 7:30 “Eyes of the Spider”, 9:20 “Serpent’s Path”; Sept. 15: 4:30 p.m. “The New God”, 7:00 p.m. “Seance”, 9:05 p.m. “Looking for Angel”; Sept. 16: 3:30 p.m. “Alphaville”, 5:30 p.m. “Solaris”; Sept. 17: 7 p.m. “Charcoal People”; Sept. 18: 7:30 p.m. “Mike Kuchar’s Feverish Spell”; Sept. 19: 7:30 p.m. “Wht About Me: The Rise of the Nihilist Spasm Band”; general admission $7, The New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

The Pyramid Alehouse Outdoor Cinema Sept. 8: “Dr. No” (come as your favorite Bond character); Sept. 15: “Harold and Maude”; Sept. 22: “Airplane”; The Outdoor Cinema features cult classics projected on a large screen in the open-air brewery parking lot. $5 donation. Movies start at 7 p.m. 901 Gilman St. 206-682-8322 x237 www.pyramidbrew.com 

 

Exhibits 

 

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

 

“The Political Art of: Diego Marcial Rios” Through Sept. 20, Addison Street Window Gallery, 2018 Addison St. hdrios@msn.com 

 

Women’s Cancer Resource Gallery “Catastrophe, Crisis, and Other Family Traditions” The photography of Jessamyn Lovell. Aug. 25 through Sept. 26; “The Arthur Wright and Gerald Parker” Reception Sept. 8, Aug. 25 through Sept. 26; Tues. - Thurs. 1 - 7 p.m., Sat. 12 - 4 p.m. 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 x307 www.wcrc.org 

 

“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.  

 

“Squared Triangle” Through Oct. 5: noon - 6 p.m. A minimalist art exhibit featuring three Bay Area artists working in different mediums while achieving the same elegant simplicity. The Crucible, 1036 Ashby Ave. 843-5511 www.thecrucible.com 

 

“Inside Editions” Sept. 6 - Oct. 12: Nine printmakers exhibit their work. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Tue. - Fri. Free. Kala Art Insitute, 1060 Heinz Ave. 549-2977 kala@kala.org 

 

“Census 2000: Asian Pacific Islander Americans” through Oct. 13, reception Sept. 6, 6 - 8 p.m.; Wed. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Asian Pacific Islander American artists in roughly the demographic proportions indicated by the recent census. Free. Pro Arts, 461 Ninth St., Oakland 763-9470  

 

“MWP Perspectives” Jon Orvik: One artist’s journey. Sept. 8 through Oct. 27 Tues. - Fri. 12 - 5 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 12 - 4 p.m. Solo artist exhibiting his journey through metal, wood and paint. Adapt Gallery and Design, 2834 College Ave. 649-8501 www.adaptgallery.com  

 

“50 Years of Photography in Japan 1951 - 2001” through Nov. 5: An exhibition from The Yomiuri Shimbun, the world’s largest daily newspaper with a national morning circulation of 10,300,000. Photographs of work, love, community, culture and disasters of Japan as seen by Japanese news photographers. Opening Reception Sept. 5: 6 - 8 p.m. open to the public; Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. U.C. Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism, North Gate Hall, Hearst and Euclid. Free. 642-3383 

 

“Changing the World, Building New Lives: 1970s Photographs of Lesbians, Feminists, Union Women, Disability Activists and their Supporters” Sept. 15 through Nov. 17: An exhibit of black and white photographs by Oakland photographer Cathy Cade, who captured the interrelationships of the different struggles for justice and social change. Opening reception Sept. 15, 5 - 8 p.m. Gallery Hours, Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Photolab Gallery, 2235 Fifth St. Free. 644-1400 cathycade@mindspring.com 

 

“The Whole World’s Watching: Peace and Social Justice Movements of the 1960’s and 1970’s” Sept. 16 through Dec. 16: A documentary photo exhibition which examines the rich history of the social movements of the 1960’s and 1970’s. Wed. - Sun., noon - 5 p.m. Berkeley Art Center, 1275 Walnut St., Live Oak Park. Free. 644-6893 

 

“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 Botticelli’s “Primavera” Ongoing. Call ahead for hours. Atelier 9 2028 Ninth St. (at Addison) 841-4210 or visit www.atelier9.com 

 

Readings 

 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival Sept. 8: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. An environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. Festival at Civic Center Park, Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street. Free. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Boadecia’s Books Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Simone Martel reads from “The Expectant Gardner,” Joan Drummond Miller, Julie Houy, and Carolyn Livingston, “Beyond Bingo;” Sept. 14: 7:30 p.m. Marny Hall, “Queer Blues: The Lesbian and Gay Guide to Overcoming Depression;” Sept. 15: 2 p.m. Kimeron Hardin, “Queer Blues: The Lesbian and Gay Guide to Overcoming Depression;” Sept. 15: 7:30 p.m. Kathleen Jacoby, “Vision of the Grail;” Sept. 21: 7:30 p.m. Deborah Kesten, “The Healing Secrets of Food;” Sept. 22: 7:30 p.m. A special All Poetry Dyke Open Myke, to participate call 655-1015 or feroniawolf@yahoo.com; All events are free. 398 Colusa Ave. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Cody’s on 4th Street Sept. 7: 7 p.m. Amy Bloom reads from “A Bind Man Can See How Much I Love You”; Sept. 13: Kenneth C. Davis, “Don’t Know Much About...”; Sept. 20: 7 p.m. Jamie Oliver, The Naked Chef, “The Naked Chef Takes Off”; Sept. 22: 10:30 a.m. Cody’s for Kids, Walter the Giant Storyteller; Sept. 25: 7 p.m. Nancy London looks at “Hot Flashes, Warm Bottles: First-Time Mothers Over Forty”; 1730 Fourth St. 559-9500 

 

 

Cody’s on Telegraph Ave. Sept. 7: 7:30 p.m. “A Cold Case” by Philip Gourevitch; Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Dave Eggers talks about “A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius”; Sept. 10: 7:30 p.m. Peggy Orenstein talks about “FLUX: Women on Sex, Work, Love, Kids, and Life in a Half-Changed World”; Sept. 11: 7:30 p.m. Simon Winchester discusses “The Map That Changed The World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology”; Sept. 13: 7:30 p.m. Geraldine Brooks reads from “A Year of Wonder: A Novel of the Plague”; Sept. 16: 7:30 p.m. David Bank looks at “Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumble the Future of Microsoft”; Sept. 17: 7:30 p.m. Aldo Alvarez describes “Interesting Monsters”; Sept. 18: 7:30 p.m. Clarence Walker discusses “We Can’t Go Home Again: An Argument About Afrocentrism; Sept. 19: 7:30 p.m. Douglas Coupland reads “All Families Are Psychotic”; Sept. 24: Theodore Roszak discusses “Longevity Revolution: As Boomers Become Elders”; Sept. 25: Ken Croswell discusses “The Universe At Midnight: New Discoveries Illuminate the Hidden Cosmos” with a slide show presentation; Sept. 27: Bill Ayers talks about “Fugitive Days”; 2454 Telegraph Ave. 845-7852 

 

Cody’s Other Venues - Sept. 20: 7:30 p.m. Cody’s presents an evening with Margaret Atwood in conversation with professor Robert Alter. $12. First Congregational Church 2345 Channing Way. Sept. 28: 7:30 p.m. Cody’s presents a Community Forum on Race and the Achievement Gap at Berkeley High School. Little Theater, Berkeley High School.  

 

Lunch Poems Series Kick-Off Sept. 6: 12:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. UC Berkeley campus figures from a wide variety of fields read and discuss their favorite poems. Free. In the Morrison Library in the Doe Library at UC Berkeley. 642-0137 www.berkeley.edu/calendar/events/poems/ 

 

Spasso Sept. 10: Sharron Jones-Reid, Fruit of the Spirit poets, acoustic musicians, comedians, rappers, performance artists, writers. All welcome. 6021 College Ave. Free admission. 

 

 

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-foot 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. It will reopen in early 2002. On View until Oct. 1 : “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 Avenue. 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  

 

Oakland Museum of California “After the Storm: Bob Walker and the Art of Environmental Photography,” through Sept. 16; “Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks,” through Sept. 23; Wednesday - Saturday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sunday, noon - 5 p.m., Closed Monday and Tuesday. $6 general; $4 youths (6-17), seniors and students with ID. Free for museum members and children 5 and under. Free admission the second Sunday of the month. 10th & Oak streets, Oakland. 238-2200 www.museum.org 

 

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

 

Send arts events two weeks in advance to Calendar@berkeleydailyplanet.net, 2076 University, Berkeley 94704 or fax to 841-5694.


Report challenges lab’s assessment of tritium safety

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday September 06, 2001

The final risk-assessment report for Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s tritium facility was released last month and indicates the largest danger of exposure to radioactive material would be during a fire or other disaster.  

The report, prepared by Dr. Bernd Franke of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research, in Heidelberg, Germany, was requested by the City Council after aggressive lobbying by the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, which largely consists of neighbors of the LBNL facility.  

The report will be discussed at the Community Environmental Advisory Commission meeting tonight. 

The $33,000, 53-page report, assessed possible public exposure to tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen used primarily as a marker in medical research. The National Tritium Labeling Facility, which is managed by LBNL, has special clearance from the Department of Energy to warehouse large quantities of the radioactive material. 

In the report, Franke challenged LBNL’s 1996 hazard assessment, known as the Safety Analysis Document, that claimed a “full release” of the facility’s tritium inventory during a fire would not have “significant localized consequences.” The SAD approximated a total inventory of 15,000 curries of tritium, according to the report. 

The SAD estimated that exposure to members of the public within 125 feet of the facility’s tritium stack would be 4.8 millirems, which is far below the Environmental Protection Agency’s limit of 10 millirems per year. 

“The preliminary review indicates that this claim may be incorrect,” Franke wrote in the report.  

Franke suggested that under a variety of scenarios the exposure could be as high as 2,900 to 18,000 millirems or 600 to 3,700 times higher than LBNL’s estimate. Franke reached similar conclusions in his initial draft report, which was released in March.  

Franke said in the report that his estimate of potential exposure should be further studied by an independent consulting firm. 

The LBNL Community Relations Office defended the 1996 findings in a press release Wednesday. “The high dose postulated by (Franke) is based upon flawed assumptions,” the statement said. 

Nevertheless, LBNL’s group leader for environmental services, Ron Pauer, said the lab plans to comply with Franke’s recommendation and contract with an outside company to conduct another hazard study some time in approximately one year. He said the report would be made available to the public once completed.  

The Franke report also stated that annual tritium releases, based on 1998 data, were well below the EPA standard of 10 millirems. According to the report, the facility released 115 curries of tritium in 1998 which would have resulted in .28 millirems of exposure to a person standing at the Lawrence Hall of Science, located about 500 feet from the tritium emissions stack. The hall sponsors a variety of youth workshops and exhibits, visited by nearly 150,000 children each year. 

Despite Franke’s low-risk assessment, LBNL has announced plans to move the stack farther away from LHS about a year. 

Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste member Gene Bernardi was quick to point out the 1998 data was collected with only six ambient air monitoring sites and that Franke recommended at least 16 in his draft report.  

LBNL has deployed another eight air monitoring sites for a total of 14. Most of the recent sites were put into place in response to Franke’s recommendation. 

But Bernardi questioned the locations of the monitors. “While LBNL has increased its sampling locations from six to 14, the present locations seem to bear little relation to the expected tritium concentrations in the air,” she said. 

Another CMTW member Pam Sihvola said she reviewed the proposed locations of the air monitors and said there are no monitors in areas where there have been traditionally high measurements of tritium. She said LBNL did not place a monitor in the Corporation Yard, which has a history of high levels of tritium. 

“This is a place where lab employees park their cars and wait for buses,” Sihvola said.  

The Community Advisory Environmental Commission will discuss the results of the final report at its meeting tonight at 6 p.m. in the First Floor Conference Room in the Planning and Development Department at 2118 Milvia St.


Cal’s Sabo honored for weekend performance

Staff
Thursday September 06, 2001

Cal forward Kyla Sabo was named to Soccer Buzz’s first-ever National Elite Team of the Week on Tuesday. 

Sabo, a senior, scored three goals and had an assist in Cal’s first two games last weekend at the California Invitational. 

Sabo was one of four Bears to score a goal in Friday’s 4-0 win over Pacific, then scored two goals and had an assist in her team’s 4-2 comeback win over No. 24 Michigan. Sabo scored the game-winner in the second half with a header off of a corner kick, and assisted on the final goal of the game. 

Sabo leads the team with seven points after the first weekend of play. The Fremont product scored six goals last season and led the team with eight assists. 

Soccer Buzz is a website covering women’s college soccer. Each week during the season, Buzz selects a team of elite players based on performances during games that week.


With Democrats like these, we don’t need Republicans

Bruce Joffe Piedmont
Thursday September 06, 2001

 

Editor: 

George Bush’s administration would have money available to spend on education, or to waste on Star Wars, without taking from Social Security, if the Senate had rejected his tax cut for the rich. But 12 Democratic senators voted for Bush’s tax cut, including our own Sen. Diane Feinstein. Now we see that the vote of those dozen Democrats takes $9 billion from Social Security in order to pay tax rebates to the richest 1percent. 

Bush has called the vanished budget surplus “incredibly positive news,” making it clear that he thinks Congress should not fund social programs, like health care, rebuilding schools, and of course, Social Security. But what about those dastardly dozen Senators? With Democrats like them, we don’t need Republicans. 

The only way Sen. Feinstein can regain legitimacy as a Democrat is to rescind Bush’s tax give-away and restore fiscal security to the Social Security trust fund. Year by year, we are all getting closer to the time when we expect to withdraw the hard-earned money we put into that trust fund. And year by year, Bush’s Republican tax scheme brings us closer to the time where there won’t be any money there when we need it. 

I never thought a Democrat would have ever forgotten the importance of Social Security. 

 

Bruce Joffe 

Piedmont


Cuts could hurt city health programs for moms, kids

By Judith Scherr Daily Planet staff
Thursday September 06, 2001

Unless the Legislature and governor restore health care funds Gov. Gray Davis slashed from the state budget in July, Berkeley will have to cut about $100,000 from its maternal and child health programs. 

“This will have a tremendous impact on our ability to provide services,” said Dr. Poki Namkung, who heads the city’s Health Department. 

The $2.6 million in cuts statewide for maternal and child health programs actually translates into a loss of about $7 million, since the state money leverages federal health dollars. 

Locally, there could be less funding for prenatal visits at Berkeley’s Sixth Street Clinic and “cutting the outreach that brings the community in,” said Assemblymember Dion Aroner, D-Berkeley, who is among those working to restore the funding.  

In addition, the budget cuts could affect funding for immunizations, family planning and the Berkeley High Health Clinic, said Fred Madrano, director of the city’s Health and Human Services Department.  

The cuts could also affect the new Black Infant Health program, established specifically to combat the “huge disparity” between the birth weight of African-American and white babies in Berkeley. The program includes a peer prenatal component in which women support each other through their pregnancies and beyond, as well as access to good prenatal care and substance abuse prevention.  

“We take these funds and make the most of them,” Dr. Namkung said. 

Funds spent in prenatal care is good fiscal policy, Aroner noted. “It can save money down the road.”  

The governor, however, had to look at the state budget overall, explained Sandy Harrison of the state Department of Finance. The cuts were necessary to maintain a “prudent General Fund reserve,” Harrison said, pointing out that there remains $66.1 million in the budget dedicated to maternal and child health. 

Aroner said restoration of the $2.6 million tops the agenda of the Women’s Caucus. The Caucus is supporting the bill which would restore the funding, AB1147, authored by Helen Thomson, D-Davis. 

But it’s not clear at this point whether the governor will veto the bill, if approved by the Legislature. Davis’ spokesperson, Roger Salazar, said he did not know where the governor stands on AB1147, but noted that the budget conditions have not changed since the governor vetoed the item earlier. “Where is the money going to come from?” he asked. 

Locally, Health Department officials are watching the matter carefully. “We’re not going to let the state get away with this one,” Madrano said.


‘Clean Air Champions’ honored

Bay City News
Thursday September 06, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – An activist, a weather anchor, a teen-ager, a car fleet manager and an electric vehicle enthusiast were all honored Wednesday as Bay Area Air Quality Management District's 2001 Clean Air “champions.” 

The five Bay Area residents were honored with plaques and $300 gift certificates at the district's board meeting. 

This year's winners include Jami Caseber of Berkeley, who worked with the community advisory commission on the environment to develop a city ordinance designed to prevent air pollution from wood burning fireplaces. Also on the list is KPIX weather anchor Roberta Gonzales, who promotes clean air on air and is one of the few weather anchors who uses a regional Air Quality Index map on television, and Aaron Mihaly, 18, who works with environmental organizations in Marin County and organized Bike to School Day at his high school. In addition, San Francisco resident Elizabeth Sullivan was honored for starting the City CarShare program, and Mike Thompson was honored for promoting electric cars in San Jose. 

Members of the district board, the American Lung Association, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency selected the “Clean Air Champions.” 

Air District Executive Officer Ellen Garvey said, “Clean Air Champions are all exceptional individuals who are recognized because of their efforts to keep Bay area air


St. Joseph’s gives workers the pulpit

By Sasha Khokha Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday September 06, 2001

On Sunday morning, a preacher of a different sort took the podium at St. Joseph the Worker Church in central Berkeley. 

“Every day, I ask God to help me to know my rights at work,” Marta Jimenez told the Roman Catholic congregation in Spanish. 

Jimenez, a Mexican immigrant, has labored for 14 years as a home health care aide. To her elderly clients, she is something of a godsend: she cooks, cleans, bathes and feeds them, and drives them to doctor’s appointments. Thanks to her union card, she said, she earns $8.50 an hour with medical benefits. 

In honor of Labor Day, workers like Jimenez took the pulpit at some 50 churches in the Bay Area to talk about how union membership has improved their lives. 

The sermons, a joint effort between labor and religious leaders nationally, are part of an effort to improve union membership, which has declined sharply in recent decades. 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that today only one in seven workers is a union member, compared to nearly one in three 50 years ago. In response, unions are reaching out to sectors that they have traditionally alienated, including community groups, women and immigrants. Churches, synagogues, and mosques often serve as a gathering place for these groups. 

“Many times, the people that could be on the picket line are the same people going to church on Sunday,” said Amaha Kassa of the East Bay chapter of the Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice. “But we haven’t yet come together on issues of common concern. When we do, like in the Civil Rights movement, it gets results.” 

“When I pray, I give thanks to the union,” said a teary-eyed Jimenez in an interview. “When I lived in Los Angeles, I used to work from 6:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and I earned $125 a week. I ironed, I washed, I did everything. 

“With the union, I have health benefits,” Jimenez said. “As a diabetic, that’s critical.” 

Immigrant workers like Jimenez face obstacles to union membership. They are often isolated from each other, and fear retribution from an employer if they demand a wage increase. 

Five years ago, Jimenez might not have even been able to sign a union card. Historically, home health care workers have not had the legal right to organize. 

Classified as domestic workers working in individual homes, they were exempt from the National Labor Relations Act. In response, the Service Employees International Union waged an arduous campaign to create a public authority within Alameda County, an entity that would give home health care workers status as county employees. 

Once the county agreed, labor organizers made individual house visits to thousands of workers, encouraging them to join the union. As of 2001, 7,000 home health care workers in Alameda County were unionized. In July, they won a wage increase from $7.82 to $8.50 an hour. An increase to $9 takes effect in January. 

An Associated Press poll released last week found that the U.S. public sides with unions in contract disputes by a 2-1 margin over companies. At St. Joseph the Worker, about a fifth of the congregation heeded Jimenez’s call to sign postcards in support of a living wage for Port of Oakland workers. 

Francisco Ramos, 36, a construction worker from Guatemala, said he had never really heard any talk about a union on his job, but that Jimenez had inspired him. He earns $12 an hour, and pays $1,300 for an apartment in South Berkeley to house his family of four. “Of course it would be better to earn more money,” he said. “Maybe a union could help.” 

Father William O’Donnell, pastor at St. Joseph the Worker, has always been active in the labor movement. “It’s part of my faith to support organized workers,” said Father Bill, who was a farmworker as a child. Cesar Chavez often stayed at the church while visiting Berkeley. Today, O’Donnell regularly incorporates workers’ issues into the service. 

“There is a strong body of documents in the church’s history that show support for workers and those who are exploited,” added Father George Crespin. 

How do the priests think Jimenez’s talk influenced the congregation? “She got applause,” said O’Donnell. “That’s very unusual in a Catholic church.”


Group bids to head waterfront development

Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

OAKLAND (AP) — A team of East Bay developers has been selected for a $500 million, 60-acre deal to transform an industrial neighborhood into a thriving waterfront district and a possible future home for the Oakland Athletics. 

The Port of Oakland announced Tuesday that it had picked the Oakland Harbor Partners, led by Concord-based Reynolds & Brown and Pleasanton-based Signature Properties, as the master developer for its Oak to Ninth Street project. 

In its proposal, Oakland Harbor Partners drew emphasis on a residential village with both rental and for-sale housing. 

Past projects for Signature Properties include Ruby Hill, a gated, exclusive Pleasanton neighborhood.  

 

Reynolds and Brown developed Pleasanton Park and Marina Square in San Leandro and the Concord Airport Plaza, among others. 

With the exception of Commissioner Frank Kiang, who abstained, the port’s board of commissioners unanimously approved the selection Tuesday. 

The port will now enter a 60-day period of negotiations over details and terms of the project with Oakland Harbor Partners. Construction is not expected to begin until 2004 or 2005.


Lawyer: More abuse suits against LDS church likely

By Andrew Kramer Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 06, 2001

PORTLAND, Ore. — Lawyers for an Oregon man who claims the Mormon church is responsible for sexual abuse he suffered as a child said Wednesday a $3 million settlement will open the way for other child-abuse lawsuits against the church. 

David Slader, who represents 22-year-old Jeremiah Scott, said the Salt Lake City-based church settled to avoid publicity. 

“The settlement provides some measure of compensation but not the complete accountability that we have discovered is so necessary,” he said in Portland on Wednesday. 

The group also held an afternoon news conference in Salt Lake City on the plaza in front of the Salt Lake City Mormon Temple. 

“This is not a safe church for your children. This is a safe haven for pedophiles,” attorney Jeffrey Anderson of St. Paul, Minn., told reporters. 

The church’s attorney, Von Keetch, quickly responded to the allegations, calling them baseless. 

“Plaintiff’s counsel are clearly out of control here,” he said. “They’ve made some outrageous, defamatory and possibly even legally actionable statements which do not contain one ounce of truth.” 

Under the agreement reached Friday, the religion’s officials do not accept any blame for abuse that occurred when Scott was 11. 

Scott sued The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in an Oregon court after a fellow ward member was convicted of repeatedly sexually abusing him in Portland. The suit claims church officials knew Franklin Richard Curtis was a pedophile but did not warn Scott’s mother before she took Curtis into their home. 

Curtis, who died in 1995, was 87 at the time of the abuse. He was arrested and convicted of sex abuse and given probation in 1994. 

The case against the church was scheduled to go to trial this fall. 

Jeremiah’s mother Sandra Scott said she accepted the settlement to protect the privacy of her son. 

“I will spend my dying days, my last breath, warning Mormon parents” about child abuse in the church, she said in an emotional statement at a Portland news conference Wednesday. 

Slader and attorneys Anderson and Timothy Kosnoff, of Bellevue, Wash., say they have identified 21 other victims abused by Curtis throughout the country, including 11 in Oregon. Others were in Grand Rapids, Mich., Harrisburg, Pa., and Sheridan, Wyo. 

Kosnoff said other lawsuits involving these cases and others will likely be forthcoming, and that the Mormon church has the potential to be “far worse than the Catholic church” for abuse. 

“I think this is going to be on the radar screen for a lot of attorneys,” Kosnoff said. 

Church attorney Keetch said Tuesday said the settlement was simply less expensive than taking the case through the courts and an appeals process. 

In addition to the financial considerations of continuing the legal battle, the church decided to settle because of what they described as several bad rulings by Multnomah County Circuit Judge Ellen F. Rosenblum. 

Keetch had said Rosenblum had allowed the Mormon church to be held liable for the conduct of one member against another when the abuse did not occur as part of a church activity or on church property. Keetch said Rosenblum was the first judge in the country to make such a ruling. 

The ruling is important because the Mormon church has a collective clergy, in which many older men in the congregation are designated as high priests. Keetch said the church confers the title on most men in their 40s and carries no particular leadership responsibility. 

The attorneys’ Salt Lake City news conference also drew the attention of police, who were called after the attorneys said they would not move from the church plaza. 

The group was told they would receive trespassing citations by mail. 

The plaza, formerly a part of Main Street, was declared private church property after the American Civil Liberties Union sued to stop the sale of the block to the church. 

Stephen Clark, an attorney for ACLU’s Utah chapter, said it would be the first time that he’s heard of that someone was cited for trespassing on the plaza. 


Immigrant groups urge governor to ease 1994 restrictions on driver’s licenses

Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

LOS ANGELES (AP) — An immigrant rights group urged Gov. Gray Davis on Wednesday to support a change in state law that restricts illegal immigrants from obtaining driver’s licenses. 

Members of Hermandad Mexicana Nacional marched outside the governor’s local office and national co-director Nativo Lopez delivered boxes of supporting letters. 

The organization wants the governor to sign into law Assembly Bill 60, which the group says would enable qualified drivers to obtain California driver’s licenses regardless of immigration status. 

The bill, authored by Assemblyman Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, would lift requirements for Social Security numbers and proof of legal status from the application process. 

“That was basically an anti-immigrant measure that was passed under the (Gov. Pete) Wilson administration,” Lopez said. 

The bill is under review by the Senate Appropriations Committee. If signed by Davis, the proposal would return the process to pre-1994 law, when the only identification needed to obtain a license was a birth certificate or a passport, he said. 

The group has delivered thousands of letters to governor during its campaign. 

“They’ve been making their voices heard,” governor’s spokesman Roger Salazar said. 

Davis vetoed a similar bill last year, citing concerns over fraud if identification requirements were loosened, Salazar said. 

Lopez suggested that the Internal Revenue Service’s identification number be used instead. 

“If you’re good enough to pay taxes, you’re good enough to drive,” he said. 

An estimated 2 million people have been denied driver’s licenses under current regulations, but most still end up on the road regardless, Lopez said. 

“You have individuals that are driving without a driver’s license,” he said. “They haven’t passed the DMV exam, they haven’t studied the driving. They’re ineligible for insurance. You and I are sacrificed by a policy that puts untrained, uninsured drivers on the road.” 


Protections for hate crime victims signed into law

The Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

 

 

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation Wednesday that prohibits insurers from canceling policies because of claims from hate-crime damages. 

Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, introduced the bill when one of the three Sacramento synagogues hit by arson fires two years ago had its insurance canceled because of its claims. 

“We are insuring that victims are not victimized twice, first by a perpetrator of hate and, second, by their own insurance company,” Davis said, signing the measure at Temple B’Nai Israel in Sacramento, whose insurance policy was canceled after an arson attack. 

The new law bars insurers from canceling or refusing to renew a policy of a religious or other nonprofit organization solely because it has filed claims stemming from a hate crime. 

The legislation is part of a batch of bills being sent to the governor as the Legislature wraps up its session this week and next. 

Two Shasta County brothers face federal charges in the arson attacks. James Tyler Williams, 31, and Benjamin Matthew Williams, 33, are also charged with the shooting deaths of two gay men in Happy Valley. 

 

Also signed by Davis Wednesday: 

• SB34, a bill that would force candidates and ballot measure committees to immediately disclose large campaign contributions. The measure, by Sen. John Burton, D-San Francisco, requires campaign contributions of $5,000 or more to be reported within 10 working days outside the 90-day election cycle. 

Current law requires candidates to file contribution reports every six months in non-election years and only slightly more frequently in election years. 

• AB78, A bill making it easier to prosecute old child sexual abuse cases. The bill relaxes the standard of proof in such cases to a preponderance of the evidence. 

The measure, by Assemblywoman Elaine Alquist, D-Santa Clara, stems from the case of a girl who said she was repeatedly raped by her mother’s boyfriend when she was 7 years old. 

The girl didn’t make the accusation until she was 15, saying the man threatened to kill her mother if she told anyone what had happened. 

Last summer a judge dismissed charges against the boyfriend, saying medical evidence supporting the girl’s story did not meet the clear-and-convincing standard required to extend the statute of limitations. 

•ß AB 488, by Assemblywoman Christine Kehoe, D-San Diego, that permits consumers to find out who has been inquiring about their credit history. The bill was sponsored by the California Public Interest Research Group.


Talks intensify as European delegates ready to walk out of racism conference

By Chris Tomlinson Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 06, 2001

DURBAN, South Africa — Under threat of a devastating European walkout, the World Conference Against Racism held closed-door meetings Wednesday to try to find compromise language on the Israel-Palestinian conflict and reparations for slavery. 

France warned that it and the European Union could follow the United States and Israel by walking out on the U.N. meeting, which was meant to highlight discrimination around the world, but has been marred by discord over efforts to condemn Israel for “racist policies.” 

“If comparisons between Zionism and racism remain, the question of France’s and the European Union delegations’ departure would be posed immediately,” French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin told a Cabinet meeting, according to spokesman Jean-Jack Queyranne. “France and the European Union would seek a departure from this conference, which would mark a failure.” 

An EU deadline on the issue set for Wednesday night was reached without a compromise, said Koen Vervaeke, spokesman for Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel. He said a special drafting committee had finished its work Wednesday night without an accord. 

Vervaeke said the EU had given South African mediators its position and would now wait to see what kind of text they come up with. It wasn’t immediately clear if that would occur during Thursday’s session. 

Earlier Wednesday, in an effort to save the conference, Norwegian Foreign Minister Thorbjoern Jagland sent his deputy, Raymond Johansen, to Durban to take over leadership of the Norwegian delegation. 

“The racism conference is in danger of completely breaking down. I am going to Durban to try to contribute to it reaching a result that does not damage the international battle against racism,” Johansen said. 

Norway had tried unsuccessfully earlier in the week to broker a deal between the United States, Israel and the Arab states. 

Delegates from the 15 EU countries said they would act as a bloc along with 13 nations that are candidates for EU membership. 

In the original draft text, Israel is the only nation singled out for condemnation. Among the sticking points were references to the “racist practice of Zionism,” and description of the movement to establish and maintain a Jewish state as an ideology “based on racial superiority.” 

Amr Moussa, Arab League secretary-general, has said if there were no specific references to Israeli policies toward the Palestinians a final declaration would be “meaningless.” 

The United States and Israel left the conference Monday when talks with the Arab League over removing the anti-Israel language broke down. 

The dispute over the wording of the Mideast section has diverted attention from other issues, but the issue of how to deal with the legacy of slavery also have been contentious. 

Many African delegations want the U.N. meeting’s final declaration to include a mechanism for reparations for the trans-Atlantic slave trade. 

Throughout the conference’s planning stages, the United States opposed putting reparations on the agenda, and the U.S. departure appeared to harden some positions. 

African nations that had reportedly promised to drop demands for reparations suddenly put them back on the table this week. African-American groups have lobbied hard for reparations to be included in conference documents. 

The EU on Wednesday was in talks with African delegations over the issue. It has offered a limited apology for colonialism and slavery, but does not want reparations mentioned. 

Africans led by Zimbabwe and Namibia are demanding specific apologies from the countries involved in the slave trade and colonialism, reparations, cancellation of African debt and more investment in the continent, said Marcus Gama, assistant to the head of the Brazilian delegation. 

“For the moment ... it’s hard to be optimistic,” Gama said. “I think (all sides) will have to make concessions before the end of the conference or there will be no conference.” 

The conference’s draft document calls for “an explicit apology by the former colonial powers,” and requires “substantial national and international efforts be made for reparations” to Africans, African descendants and indigenous peoples. 

Ivory Coast’s justice minister, Siene Oulai, said his delegation was not interested in being paid reparations, but believed Western nations should forgive the huge debt owed by African nations to international financial institutions. 

“What is necessary is that the slave trade be recognized as a crime against humanity and recognition that Africa suffered a lot from the trans-Atlantic slave trade,” Oulai said. “What is important is to create a partnership between those who have suffered and those who profited from the slave trade to cooperate better.” 

The conference’s final declaration and program of action is not legally binding, but represents a pledge by governments to carry it out. If a country is opposed to specific language, they can still sign the documents while rejecting specific paragraphs. 

European newspapers said the efforts to condemn Israel threatened to scuttle the conference. 

“In Durban it’s clear that several governments are using the U.N. for their own purposes. They are holding the U.N. as hostage,” the Swedish paper Dagens Nyheter said in an editorial Wednesday. 

The conference, which began Aug. 31, is scheduled to end Friday. 


Where slump stops, nobody knows

By John Cunniff AP Business Analyst
Thursday September 06, 2001

NEW YORK — The reality is that nobody really knows when the economic slump will end and the upturn begin. Not Alan Greenspan, nor corporate chiefs, nor those oft-quoted “experts.” 

It may disappoint to hear such a judgment, but it will do little to diminish the game or silence its participants because claiming to know when the upturn begins is now the biggest media game in town. 

And losing credibility day by day. 

While the Federal Reserve, of which Greenspan is chairman, declines to be specific, it is safe to assume its member-bank governors and executives are disappointed with their efforts, having hoped for a revival by now. 

For their part, the corporate CEOs have conceded their bafflement, having issued misleading forecasts too many times. An ever-growing number now admit they haven’t a clear view even for their own companies. 

You can sense frustration and modesty at the Fed and among CEOs, but the experts — well, they just go on forecasting, never apologizing. It’s what they get paid for doing, so they do it. But does anyone listen? 

The dwindling audience for the traditional good-times-ahead news provides an opportunity to view other aspects of the economy, such as the growing corporate trend of hiring coaches for their chief executives. 

John Budd, a former high-level officer at a multibillion-dollar public company, asks “By what tortured rationalizing do boards of directors choose someone who immediately needs coaching?” 

Calling the practice a “strange phenomenon,” Budd asks in his “plain talk” newsletter: “Is this faddism run amuck or are all the stories hokum that say the board’s most important decision is to pick the right CEO?” 

Budd, who can be acerbic in the cause of clear communications, also snaps at the “turkey neck” corporate chiefs who, seeking to be hip and “with it,” disdain ties and jackets, thus displaying their sagging flesh. 

“Dressing down is out; dressing up is in,” he says, adding that if you want to be serious about business, credibility is a suit and tie. 

David Hirshleifer offers a different sort of advice, but just as practical. Hirshleifer, who teaches finance at Ohio State University, has determined that a sunshiny morning brightens the returns on stocks. 

Sunshine tends to make people optimistic, he says, something most of the alleged Wall Street experts overlook in their pursuit of more complex, numerical answers, some of which are far less credible. 

Stock traders, he explains, may attribute their optimism to factors other than the weather, such as economic conditions or news about a company. As is well known, stock analysts can rationalize almost anything. 

But what if the weather is cloudy on Wall Street or Chicago or wherever trading takes place, but bright and clear at the investor’s house? The overhead conditions apply mainly to the stock exchange site. 

Hirshleifer offers at least a partial explanation for this behavior: Many of the large institutional investors that drive the markets are headquartered in the same cities as the stock exchanges. 

The effect is nothing to discount. Hirshleifer’s study, which encompassed 26 stock exchanges around the world, including the New York Stock Exchange, found the difference between a completely overcast day and a sunny day produced an excess return of 24.8 percent! 

John Samples, Christopher Yablonski and Ivan Osorio had another matter in mind when they studied the sources of funding for the ad hoc Fair Taxes for All Coalition, an advocacy group of non-profit organizations. 

In a paper for the Cato Institution, a Libertarian think tank, they describe the membership of the coalition as united in opposition to the original $1.6 trillion tax cut proposed by President George W. Bush. 

Their reason, according to the paper: It would jeopardize the nation’s ability to meet domestic and foreign responsibilities, threaten fiscal stability and security, and inequitably distribute benefits. 

But the Cato researchers say they found coalition members have a considerable interest in keeping money in the government’s hands — those non-profit groups received $618 million of taxpayer money in recent years. 


Chevron Oil announces move from SF

The Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Oil giant Chevron Corp. announced Wednesday that it will end its 122-year history as a San Francisco company by moving its headquarters to a suburban campus in San Ramon, 40 miles east of its current home. 

The move, expected to be completed by the end of next year, represents a bigger blow to San Francisco’s pride than its economic vitality. 

Formerly one of the city’s largest employers, Chevron has just 200 workers left at its San Francisco headquarters. To save money, Chevron opened a 92-acre campus in San Ramon in 1985 and began transferring thousands of administrative workers to the 13-building complex. 

The most recent wave of transfers occurred after Chevron sold its San Francisco headquarters in 1999 and moved 900 workers from San Francisco to San Ramon. After selling its offices, Chevron leased 10 floors of its old headquarters to preserve its San Francisco heritage. 


Investors aren’t buying HP’s Compaq plan

Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

SAN JOSE (AP) — Investors pounded the stocks of Hewlett-Packard Co. and Compaq Computer Corp. to 52-week lows Wednesday, showing that Wall Street has yet to be convinced HP’s acquisition of Compaq is a good idea. 

HP shares lost 4 percent, or 79 cents, to $18.21 on the New York Stock Exchange. The price has fallen 22 percent since its stock swap with Compaq was announced, dropping the value of the deal from $25 billion on Monday night to $19.5 billion now. 

Compaq’s stock, down 16 percent since the deal was announced, fell 67 cents Wednesday to $10.41. 

The acquisition still must be approved by regulators, and shareholders of both companies. But Bear Stearns analyst Andrew Neff said Wall Street’s initial reaction to the deal in no way means shareholders are likely to shoot it down. 

“I would say the chance of Compaq shareholders vetoing this is low,” he said. “They needed to do something.” But he added that HP and Compaq still need to “go out and try and sell this.” 


On 50th anniversary of peace, opinions divided on need for Japan war apology

By Justin Pritchard Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 06, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — More Californians think Japan should atone for atrocities its troops committed during World War II than believe the United States should apologize for the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, according to a new survey. 

State residents hailed the important connections — political and economic — between the two countries, though by a small margin said America’s relationship with China is “more important” than ties to Japan. 

The survey’s release comes as the city prepares to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the treaty that officially ended hostilities between two countries that are now close allies. Those festivities culminate Saturday with meetings between Secretary of State Colin Powell and Japanese Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka. 

In anticipation of the anniversary, on Wednesday the San Francisco-based Public Policy Institute of California released its survey, which was based on telephone interviews of 2,007 state residents. 

On Sept. 8, 1951, Japan signed the San Francisco Peace Treaty. It ended the American occupation of Japan, which enjoyed a hasty postwar recovery. 

Since then, Japan and the United States have grown steadily closer. 

The poll reflected that cultural bond in California, the state with the largest Japanese American population. Nearly three quarters of respondents reported a favorable opinion of Japan and 65 percent said Japan has a “major influence” on the United States. 

But the poll also reflected what critics decry as the treaty’s weakness — it never forced Japan to apologize for wartime atrocities, much less help repair countries it attacked. Still simmering are questions over how Japan should answer for the forced labor of American POWs, the sexual enslavement of Korean women, and massacres and alleged germ warfare in China. 

Just over 50 percent of respondents said they thought Japan should apologize for war crimes, while 41 percent said Japan should not apologize. 

So fresh is the issue that Japan critics have organized a conference to parallel this week’s treaty signing celebrations. 

“The Japanese government has been invoking the U.S.-Japan San Francisco treaty signed 50 years ago as the proof of having settled its obligations to the invaded countries,” said conference organizer L. Ling-chi Wang, a professor of Asian American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. “Fifty years of denial must end.” 

Despite believing Japan should repent, 59 percent of respondents said the United States should not apologize for dropping atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. That is down from the 73 percent of people who rejected such an apology in a 1995 national poll. 

“It is a contradiction that Californians would be asking Japan to think about its role in World War II and apologize while at the same time not having the same point of view on the U.S. activities,” said survey director Mark Baldassare. 

Among Baldassare’s other findings: 

• 43 percent of respondents said the United States’ relationship with China was more important than its relationship with Japan; 40 percent thought Japan was more important. 

• 47 percent of respondents said the United States should withdraw troops stationed in Japan since the war’s end; 45 percent said the troops should stay. 

• Only 13 percent of respondents said they thought the two countries had “not much” in common. 

California adults were interviewed from July 1 to July 10, 2001 and the survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.


Commission eyes salaries, training in effort to recruit good teachers

The Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

SACRAMENTO – California needs to try new ways to find and keep great teachers in public schools, such as creating a world-class teacher academy or a special credential for teachers who succeed in poor schools, says a new state commission report. 

The state’s recent expensive efforts to find and keep qualified teachers in public schools are starting to work but more efforts are needed, Michael Alpert, chairman of the Little Hoover Commission, said Wednesday in releasing the report. 

“We are far short of the mark and not enough teachers have the skills and abilities needed for success,” said Alpert, a retired Coronado attorney who is married to state Sen. Dede Alpert. 

California public schools are facing a shortage of qualified teachers due to population increases, retirement of veteran teachers and class-size reduction. Several previous reports have documented that nearly 40,000 of the state’s nearly 300,000 teachers do not have full state credentials. That usually means they have not taken all the required teacher-preparation courses. 

Even worse, the distribution of those less-than-fully qualified teachers is very uneven, with students in schools with high poverty levels and low test scores more likely to have them. 

The 1,337 public schools with the lowest 20 percent of 2000 test scores had an average of 21 percent of teachers on emergency permits; 113 of those schools had 40 percent or more unqualified teachers, according to Department of Education records. 

Lawmakers and Gov. Gray Davis have in recent years approved billions of dollars to raise teacher salaries, increase teacher training and allow school districts to offer incentives such as signing bonuses and home-buying assistance to attract teachers. 

Lawmakers are currently working on how to spend $200 million in this year’s state budget aimed at low-performing schools and say that attracting qualified teachers will be part of that new program. 

The commission’s suggestions, sent to the Legislature and governor, include: 

• Creating “a premier teacher academy” to recruit and train the best teachers to be assigned to low-performing schools. The academy could try out new techniques in teaching. 

• Streamlining the state’s process of getting a teaching credential, “a complex labyrinth that tests persistence and endurance as much as the ability to teach.” 

• Creating a special credential that recognizes teachers who raise student achievement in low-performing schools. 

• Fast-tracking credentials for teachers with experience in other states and in private schools. 

• Conducting a state labor market study to determine how much teachers would have to be paid to work in low-performing schools. 

• Spending money to make hard-to-staff schools more attractive workplaces. 

• Evaluating the administrative practices of low-performing schools and identifying weaknesses in management practices. 

• Coordinating the current efforts of dozens of state agencies working on the problem. 

The Little Hoover Commission, created in 1962, is an independent state agency that reviews state programs and policies and recommends ways to make them more efficient.


Assembly OKs bill imposing fine for leaving child alone in car

Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — People who leave small children alone in cars could face $100 fines under a bill approved Wednesday by the state Assembly. 

The bill, sent to the Senate by a 48-12 vote, would make it an infraction to leave a child under the age of 6 in a motor vehicle without being supervised by someone at least 12 years old. 

“Many people are unaware of the danger associated with leaving a young child alone in an automobile,” said Assemblyman John Dutra, D-Fremont, a backer of the bill. 

In 10 minutes, the temperature in a car left in the sun on a 72-degree day can reach 108 degrees, he said. A child can die or suffer brain damage if his or her brain reaches 106 degrees, he said. 

Lawmakers opposing the bill said such a fine would do no good. 

“I don’t know how this cures the behavior of irresponsibility,” said Assemblyman David Cox, R-Fair Oaks. 

Supporters noted that misdemeanor or felony charges, with larger fines and jail or prison time, can be filed if a child is injured. The infraction was meant “to provide awareness” of the problem, Dutra said.


Women employees at LBNL charge sex discrimination

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

Six female employees filed a grievance in late July with the director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory charging that female administrative specialists are underpaid and underpromoted, compared to their male counterparts. 

“I’m very disappointed, that with an institution of this stature, we would have these kind of problems in the new millennium,” said procurement specialist Julie Rodriguez Jones, who has worked for LBNL since 1971. 

Jones, along with five other female administrative specialists in the LBNL Procurement Department, has filed a grievance with the labs claiming they have been overlooked for promotions and are earning far less than recently-hired male employees whom the women often train to do the same work they do.  

In addition the women claim that men receive promotions over women who have seniority. 

The women are being represented by the University Professional and Technical Employees Union, which represents technical workers, researchers and administrative personal. 

According to a fact sheet compiled by the six women, there are 22 procurement specialists; 12 are women. But according to LBNL salary records, seven of the eight lowest-paid employees in the department are women. In addition, four of the five highest-paid Procurement Department employees are men.  

On average, women are paid $650 a month less than male employees. In one case a woman who has 23 years experience on the job is being paid $24,000 a year less than a man who was recently hired. 

LBNL spokesperson Ron Kolb said he could not comment on the specific grievances, but did say LBNL does not have discriminatory employment policies.  

“We don’t believe we discriminate,” he said. “Our pay policies are established based on market averages, the responsibilities of the task and the individual’s work performance.” 

The six women first filed a grievance with their direct manager, Bill Wasson, last June. According to an Aug. 29 union press release, Wasson agreed salary inequities existed, but said he was unable to do anything about the problem, because pay raises had already been scheduled. Wasson rejected the grievance and the administrative specialists took the grievance to the Director’s Office. 

According to union steward Matt Kolowski, the issue will now go to arbitration as soon as a third-party arbitrator can be agreed upon, which should be by next week. Kolowski said arbitration is generally used in union-management disputes to avoid costly court cases. He said the arbitration system generally works well if both sides agree to abide by the arbitrator’s decision.  

“This is the standard operating procedure,” Kolowski said. “The manager of a department denies a grievance and then the laboratory throws all of its resources behind the manager without determining whether the manager or the employees are right. It seems like there should be a better, less expensive way.” 

UPTE Co-director Daniel Martin said LBNL has in-house attorneys and it usually benefits them to put up as many procedural obstacles as possible in the hope the employees will wear out. 

“Essentially, they lead their opponents through lots of procedural maneuvers so the party suing essentially gives up because it costs these folks more money and more time than they have available to them,” he said. 

Martin said the union is solidly behind the women. He said the union represents 11,000 UC employees and gender discrimination is an important issue to all of them.  

“Honestly I think this is just the tip of the iceberg and this issue will likely bring a lot more employees forward who have experienced the same thing,” he said.  

Jean Lawther, a 23-year employee who joined in filing the grievance, said she complained about the pay discrepancies to Wasson, her department manager, a year ago. She said she was disappointed nothing had been done despite assurances the situation would be corrected.  

“I don’t know where this goes from here,” she said, “but I’m hopeful they’ll see the light and do what’s right.”


Calendar of Events & Activities

Wednesday September 05, 2001

Wednesday, Sept. 5 

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 

 

Advisory Council Agenda 

10 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Arts Access, Commission on Aging. 644-6107 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/seniors/NBSC/NBSC.htm 

 

Birthday Party 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

The center will host a birthday party for elderly people whose birthdays fall in September. Belly dancer Carrie Schwalbe will perform. 644-6107 

 

A Taste of the World: Cultural Understanding Through Food 

6 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Enhance your cooking skills and experience the cuisines of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Morocco and Israel with Chef Daniel Herskovic. All classes are “hands on.” Class includes meal and cooking lesson. $25. Every Wednesday through Nov. 1. 655-8487 

 

Socratic Circle Discussions 

5 - 6 p.m. 

1309 Solano Ave. 

Cafe Eclectica 

Does your brain need a workout? All ages welcome. 527-2344 

 

Femme Rising 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Ongoing discussion on sex, gender identity, politics, nail polish, and other weighty matters. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Timber Framing, Ancient and Modern 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Seminar presented by contractor/ Timber Framer Guild Member Doug Eaton. $35. 525-7610 

 

Thursday, Sept. 6 

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 

 

Butch Time 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

A discussion/ social/ support/ activity group for self-defined butches. Tonight: Butches grow older. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Sahara Sojourn: Following the Ancient Routes of the Salt Caravans of Niger 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide presentation from the heart of the Sahara along the ancient routes of the salt caravans of the Tuareg. Free. 527-4140 

 

Women’s Health Issues 

10:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Two nurses from the city will launch a series of talks on women’s health issues, beginning with the bladder. 644-6107 

 

Rent Stabilization Board 

7 p.m. 

Council Chambers, Second Floor 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

Appeals, action items from committees, board members, and executive director. 644-6128 

 

Community Environmental Advisory Commission 

2118 Milvia St. 

First Floor Conference Room 

6 p.m. 

Presentation from Lawrence Berkeley Lab on site restoration.  

7 p.m.  

Regular agenda which includes residential woodburning, creosote in city playgrounds 

705-8150 

 

Housing Advisory Commission 

7:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. 

Predatory lending practices for home loans; Housing Authority’s Section 8 program.  

981-5410 

 

Friday, Sept. 7 

Even Stronger Women 

1:15 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Free weekly cultural discussion class. This week: Haiku poetry. Discussion and examples. 549-1879 

 

East Bay Recorder Society 

7:15 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church, Choral Room 

2727 College Ave. 

Monthly meetings, professional conductors, all playing levels welcome. Music provided, bring music stand and pencil. 525-1249 

 

Reception for Jackie Y. Griffin, director of library services 

4:30 p.m. - 6 p.m. 

City Council Chambers 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, second floor 

Community Leader reception. Reservations requested, 644-6095 x 10; yvg2@ci.berkeley.ca.us 

 

Law and Technology Forum 

2 - 5 p.m. 

U. C. Berkeley 

Boalt Hall, Goldberg Room 

Representatives will discuss pending legal cases and technological innovations that may threaten civil liberties and new challenges for consumer protection. Free and open to the public. 642-0499 

 

Berkeley/ Albany Chapter of Church Women United 

9:30 a.m. 

Berkeley Chinese Community Church 

2117 Acton St. 

A report of the Milwaukee conference. 526-4303  

 

Saturday, Sept. 8 

Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Civic Center Park 

Martin Luther King Jr. Way at Center Street 

A free environmental poetry festival with a day of poetry, music and environmental activism featuring Gary Snyder, Maxine Hong Kingston, Robert Haas, Francisco X. Alarcon, and Earll Kingston as John Wesley Powell. Strawberry Creek Walk at 10 a.m. Oxford and Center. 526-9105 www.poetryflash.org 

 

Youth Arts Studio 

2 - 5 p.m. 

All Souls Episcopal Parish 

2220 Cedar St. 

Demonstration classes for after school program in visual arts, creative writing and dramatic arts for students ages 10 - 15. Free. 848-1755 

 

Luna Kids Dance Open House 

10 - 11 a.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar 

Free open house and parent/ child classes. Designed to give families a shared dance experience that connects body, mind, and soul. Children will have a chance to play fun dance games, refreshments and register for Fall Session. 525-4339 www.lunakidsdnace.com 

 

Pack Right, Travel Smart 

1 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Eagle Creek Rep will give you tips on how to best organize your gear and clothing for your next adventure. Free. 527-4140 

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

812 Page St. 

Earthquake retrofitting class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley. 644-8736 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire.oes.html 

 

— compiled by Guy Poole 

 


Support increased funding for sustainable agriculture

By Emily Franciskovich
Wednesday September 05, 2001

The languishing farm economy in California has taken its toll on many family farmers. As California’s agricultural sector continues to struggle through a year plagued with energy crisis, low prices and water shortages, sustainable agriculture and organic farming offer realistic, viable solutions. 

Investing today’s federal tax dollars in programs that support organic and/or sustainable agricultural production systems will enhance marketing options and provide much needed flexibility for farmers in the future. Farmers as well as entire communities stand to benefit greatly from federal sustainable agriculture programs. 

Although severely under-funded, the Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program, SARE, has worked to strengthen farmer income, enhance consumer trust, increase community involvement and encourage environmental stewardship. The recent successes of AMO Organics, a producer co-op located on the California’s Central Coast, illuminate how SARE funding not only strengthens and enhances agricultural operations but also revitalizes rural and urban communities. 

In 1998, a group of Mexican immigrant organic farmers recognized that relying on intermediary distributors caused a significant decrease in their profits. With the aid of a SARE grant, these farmers, now known as AMO Organics, researched and found viable ways to directly market their goods.  

By creating Community Supported Agriculture programs, or CSA’s, AMO developed new, alternative channels of distribution. As a result of their SARE grant, AMO has significantly expanded their operations at both the local and regional levels. 

According to Diego Vasquez, a founding member of AMO Organics, “Community Supported Agriculture programs, or CSA’s, have allowed us to cater our business to local low-income communities while staying afloat financially.” By signing up to a CSA program, customers receive weekly deliveries of locally grown AMO Organic produce. AMO has gained access to various consumer networks through their special CSA arrangements with local schools and churches. Vasquez notes, “Now we sell our produce to the friends and families of our regular CSA members in nearby school and church parking lots.” 

Due to its success in local neighborhoods, AMO now contracts with programs in neighboring urban regions. Recently, the Farm Fresh Choice program in Berkeley began selling AMO crops “produce stand” style at school-age programs in West and South Berkeley, the city’s lowest per-capita income neighborhoods.  

Consumers become “members” of Farm Fresh Choice and agree to purchase at least $7 worth of produce per week, similar to the purchase of a weekly box of produce through CSA. However, members are able to select anything they’d like from the Farm Fresh Choice “produce stand,” which has a wide variety of seasonally available produce purchased from AMO Organics and other farmers at the Berkeley Farmers’ Market. 

“Farm Fresh Choice was designed to accomplish two goals simultaneously,” notes Josh Miner, co-coordinator of the Berkeley Farm Fresh Choice program. “First, to make fresh, nutritious, locally grown and either organic or sustainably-grown produce more easily accessible and attractive to lower-income families living in the urban Bay Area. Second, to establish direct links between these urban families and farmers of color in Northern California. Farmers like the AMO cooperative can play a critical role in strengthening community food security here in Berkeley.” 

As AMO Organics’ success reflects, programs like SARE boost farm profit by securing distribution outlets previously only available to larger conglomerated co-ops, and corporate operations. By lending marketing heft to small, organic growers like AMO, SARE funding also works to increase rural-urban networks and strengthen food security. Although corporate farming remains critically important to this country, we must continue to explore and support methods for nourishing our citizens that include experimentation with local and regional growers, like AMO. SARE is both an effective and efficient vehicle for accomplishing goals. 

Unfortunately, last year SARE received less than 1 percent of USDA research and outreach funding. This month a congressional conference committee from both houses will determine the final level of federal agricultural program funding for the upcoming year. It is imperative that our representatives grant SARE and other sustainable agriculture programs budgetary priority. 

 

Emily Franciskovich works with the California Sustainable Agriculture Working Group


Sculptor revels in freedom to create

Maryann Maslan Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 05, 2001

From a land where time had more value than money and dreams were haunted by mysterious creatures called djinns came artist, philosopher and pacifist Khalil Bendib. 

Today, sitting in the living room of his Berkeley home and studio, Bendib is surrounded by bronze sculptures, colorful mosaics and carefully stacked ceramics that will be on view at the Alliance Francaise Art Gallery in San Francisco, beginning Thursday.  

The works reflect his philosophy and the culture of the Maghreb, that part of the North African coast that includes Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. The centerpiece of the exhibit is a bronze sculpture commemorating El Kahina, a Jewish Berber queen. 

“She is still revered in Algeria, a mostly Arab country, as a major national symbol for her fight in the resistance,” said Bendib. 

“I learned politics in my mother's milk,” he continued, “and an awareness of a world deeply divided between ‘them and us’.” 

Targeted for execution in 1957 by paramilitary French colonialists, Bendib’s parents escaped from Algeria to Morocco, where their son was born.  

When as a child Bendib complained to his mother of being bored, she suggested he draw something. His first pictures were a boy’s rendition of soldiers saluting the Algerian flag. Years later, after returning to Algeria, Bendib learned that “good guys and bad guys came in all shapes and colors, from every walk of life.”  

He traveled and lived in many countries, learning eight languages along the way and developing his pacifist philosophy. 

Inspired by North African cafes, public squares and the seductively slow-paced lifestyle, Bendib creates bronze figurines of reclining or contemplative old men and veiled women.  

From childhood memories, such as the legendary djinns, spirits who lived at the bottom of the well in the center of the family courtyard, he has created a whimsical telephone stand supported by a series of djinn heads, each with a different character and facial expression.  

He begins each bronze figure by sketching what he calls “an observed attitude,” then watches as it evolves. 

“Each character reminds me of someone after I have finished it, not before,” he said looking at the bronze figure of the Berber queen. “Her face is my grandmother.” 

Picking up a preliminary model of the figure, he cradles the rich brown wax, working his fingertips into the malleable surface as he describes the complexities of the multistep lost-wax process and the hours spent in a local foundry where the bronze is poured and refined.  

It was with a group of artists in Los Angeles that he developed his skills in bronze. Simultaneously, he began studying Japanese at the University of Southern California because he liked the “fluidity of the calligraphy.” While at the university he started work with the student newspaper as a political cartoonist. He learned that people could have differences of opinion and express them freely. 

“It was incredible. They let me, a foreign student, make strong political statements in cartoons, without censorship,” he said. Something, he added, that was not possible in “despot-ruled” Algeria. 

In 1986 Bendib received death threats in response to his political cartoons after Palestinian Alex M. Odeh, Western regional coordinator of the Anti-Discrimination Committee, was killed as a result of a terrorist action in a suburb of Los Angeles. With his belief in the freedom of the press unshaken, Bendib went to work for a local newspaper for eight years as a cartoonist. The paper gradually developed what he called a “tabloid bias” and became less supportive of his political point of view. 

While in Los Angeles he won two public commissions for bronze sculptures. The first was an environmental piece commemorating the loss of habitat of the cougar in the community of Diamond Bar, a few miles east of Los Angeles. The second piece was a commemorative sculpture of Alex M. Odeh. His third commission from the city, to be completed in 2002, is a 13-foot bronze of Cesar Chavez, whom he has admired since his childhood in Algiers. 

Looking for a place to live that was reminiscent of his Mediterranean roots, Bendib settled in Berkeley three and a half years ago. 

“Fantastic physical beauty was my first impression. I am where I belong,” he said. “There are intellectuals here who question things and think. Being different is not a crime.” 

Since coming to Berkeley Bendib has added ceramics to his oeuvre. The bright colors and playful themes of his large display plates feature dancing women, elegant cougars, coffee images and the stylized ‘evil eye’ that wards off misfortune.  

“I am passionate about actions that are close to my heart,” he said. “There is a sense of brotherhood and community in Berkeley. I am free.”


Proposed district boundary would exclude candidate

By Hank Sims Daily Planet Correspondent
Wednesday September 05, 2001

The race to succeed state Assemblymember Dion Aroner in 2002 was thrown into chaos on Friday, when an Assembly committee released its statewide proposal for new district boundaries.  

So far, Berkeley City Councilmember Kriss Worthington, Oakland Vice Mayor Jane Brunner and West Contra Costa School Board member Charles Ramsey have declared their candidacies for Aroner’s 14th District seat. But the proposed Assembly Redistricting Plan dramatically changes the dynamics of the race – it adds a large, traditionally conservative block to the district and it bumps the home of one current candidate out of the district entirely. 

The plan, which may still be revised, but whose broad recommendations are expected to be approved by the Assembly, calls for the 14th District – which already includes Berkeley, Richmond and parts of Oakland – to incorporate the communities of Pleasant Hill, Lafayette, Orinda and Moraga. And unless a complaint by Brunner is acted upon, the new district will not include her Rockridge home. 

The new plan proposes that the boundary between the 14th and 16th districts be drawn down Woolsey Street, a block and a half to the north of her residence.  

Brunner appeared before the Assembly’s Committee on Elections, Reapportionment and Constitutional Amendments Tuesday to ask that the proposed district line near the Oakland-Berkeley border be moved north two blocks. 

“A week ago, I was told that my house would be in (the district),” said Brunner in a telephone interview from Sacramento. “Then the map came out, and it wasn’t in.” 

“It shocked me. I’ve lived in the same house for 25 years, and it’s always been part of the 14th district.”  

Brunner said that over the weekend, members of state Sen. John Burton’s office told her that the line had been drawn specifically to exclude her. However, she says, she doesn’t know who on the committee would wish to harm her political career. 

“I think the circumstantial evidence would lead to the conclusion that someone wanted to keep her out,” said Bruce Cain, director of the Institute at Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley. “However, the committee has to make hundreds of these little decisions about where to place a line, and it’s possible that it wasn’t done on purpose.” 

Kam Kuwata, the spokesperson for the committee and for the entire state redistricting process, said that given the openness of the redistricting process, he did not believe that crass political moves were possible. 

“This has been the most open political process in California history,” he said. “The committee put in many, many hours on this. We have been working on it for months. We’ve been taking public testimony, we’ve gotten hundreds of comments over the Internet.” 

“It is still a work in progress, but in any redistricting process, you can never meet the expectations of every aspiring political candidate.”  

Brunner said that whether or not the committee acts on her request, she will live in the 14th District at the next Assembly elections in 2002. 

“If I can’t get the line moved, I will move myself,” she said. “My son is looking for a place right now. Either I will move in with him, or we will trade houses.” 

Over 90,000 people in the new 14th District – around a quarter of the total – will live east of the hills. According to Cain, that will hurt progressive candidates – especially since the newcomers have typically turned out at the polls in greater numbers.  

“It’s still an overwhelmingly Democratic district, but these new lines will help the moderates,” he said. “It’s a blow to Kriss Worthington.” 

Cain said that it was too early to prognosticate about the case, but that he expected that the more mainstream candidate Charles Ramsey, would benefit most by the redistricting plan.“Of course, you may see people from (east of the hills) jump in now,” he added. The deadline for candidates to declare their candidacy in time for the state primary election is Dec. 7. 

Worthington denied that his campaign would be hindered by the new boundaries. 

“I really think the idea that the Orinda-Moraga-Lafayette area is a bastion of conservatism is decades out of date,” he said. “I don’t think the people out there are living in some medieval fortress of right-wing ideals. They are actually far more intelligent and sophisticated than some people who live in Berkeley.” 

Asked to comment about his opponent’s dilemma, Worthington said: “That’s a non-issue. When corporations have contributed tens of thousands of dollars to your campaign, you can always get a new house.”  

“When you’re the corporate candidate, it doesn’t really matter where you live,” he added.  

Every 10 years, government bodies at the local, state and federal level must redraw their political maps in response to new census data. Since the population of the East Bay grew less than the state as a whole over the last decade, its state-level offices must cover a larger area.


Letter to the Editor

Wednesday September 05, 2001

Berkeley High, pixie dust and staggered lunch 

 

Editor, 

When my children used to go to LeConte Elementary School, it was such a happy place that I jokingly accused its principal, Barbara Penny-James, of coming early each morning and sprinkling the school with pixie dust! 

Now my daughter is at Berkeley High and, frankly, I was expecting the worst! To my surprise and delight, however, Berkeley High is also a happy place. 

The staff, the counselors, the teachers – they are all positive and helpful and out to do a good job. They are professionals and seem to really care about their students. 

On the first day of school, I noticed that wherever glitches arose – and there were a lot of them – there was Principal Frank Lynch, out in the thick of things, trying to help out each individual student.  

Lynch was not back in his office hiding behind a desk. He was out taking positive measures to get things headed in a productive direction. 

Yes, there is pixie dust present at Berkeley High School. 

BHS has the capacity to become one our community’s greatest assets and is heading in that direction with or without us. Let’s stand behind BHS – the better it serves its students, the more the city of Berkeley benefits by having a factory of excellence pouring quality citizens into our town so that we too can continue to blossom and shine. 

There is only one correction I would like to suggest at Berkeley High: Staggered lunch periods would be nice. Then our very own Factory of Excellence wouldn’t be pouring quality citizens into our community all at once every day at noon. Plus the students wouldn’t have to wait in line forever to get dollar Chinese!  

 

Jane Stillwater 

Berkeley


First novel sheds light on grief, survival and family secrets

Sari Friedman Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 05, 2001

Elizabeth Rosner says she was “the child who asked a lot of questions, always trying to fill in the gaps and mystery” of her parents’ experiences during the Holocaust.  

Rosner’s first novel, “The Speed of Light,” is the result of having had such an abundance of grief and scarcity of answers.  

Calling her book an “emotional autobiography,” Rosner put into prose what has always before, for her, existed either in silence or in poetry.  

Rosner’s last publication was “Gravity,” an autobiographical poetry chapbook. 

In “The Speed of Light,” three characters are haunted by the tragedies of the past. Julian and Paula Perel, the orphaned children of a Holocaust survivor, live in contiguous apartments. But while Julian is a recluse with 11 televisions who does everything in his power not to “feel,” using concepts from Newtonian physics to calm himself and to keep his world feeling controlled and predictable, his sister Paula takes off to sing opera.  

Following the command of her singing teacher to “never look back,” and believing that “only one of us could make it out alive,” Paula leaves Julian behind. Do not be misled, though, for Paula feels just as much fear as Julian. In evocative prose Rosner describes Paula’s state of mind:  

“Here is what I know how to do: How to get away. How to save myself by taking flight, by vanishing. My voice was a ticket of escape, one way to be anywhere but where I was.” 

Stepping in as Julian’s only source of human warmth while Paula is gone is a “cola-skinned” cleaning woman named Sola, who is herself a survivor of trauma caused by the political situation in Central America. At first Sola doesn’t want to take on the disorder of Paula’s existence. Like many “first generation” survivors, Sola does not consciously dwell on the past, and she does not become introspective about the present. In fact, she has trouble feeling emotions at all. Even so, Sola’s thoughts filter through the narrative like a cleansing rain. Sola’s quick-witted and grounded state of mind is an excellent portrayal of the kind of single-minded and one-dimensional sense of purpose that can help a person to survive. Sola stays in the moment as much as possible:  

“I want to clean myself like the window of a house, make myself clean for things to pass through ... Flat and quiet.”  

For both Paula and Julian, though, there is no beginning and no end to their sense of hurt, and no way to feel that they’ve survived trauma. Their father’s experience as a sonderkommando (his job was to take the dead from the concentration camp ovens) fill them like blood, and are a nightmare they can’t escape. 

Talking about family secrets and inherited grief can be excruciating.  

But, apparently, not talking is worse. 

In “The Speed of Light,” every sensation and every realization of each of the characters is talked about at length, laid bare, put into “stop time” and under a microscope – as though such intensity could have the power to restore life, to fix the broken violins of their souls.  

This story is not linear, but it does brilliantly express what it feels like to live in a glass bubble filled with a boundless grief. Helpless to change the past, these “second generation” characters spend their entire lives afraid to feel, unable to trust, every action an impotent and insatiable keening. They are going nowhere, as Rosner describes moving through the infinity of space and loss at the speed of light.  

 

Sari Friedman teaches writing at local colleges, is at work on a novel, and can be reached at literate2@yahoo.com. 


Area nurses to join rally at Capitol Thursday

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

By Jeffrey Obser 

Daily Planet correspondent 

 

Busloads of East Bay nurses will join an estimated 2,000 colleagues from around the state at a rally in Sacramento Thursday to demand that the state sharply limit the number of patients assigned to them. 

Under a 1999 state law intended to improve nurses’ working conditions, the State Department of Health Services must establish maximum ratios of patients to nurses in over a dozen categories of hospital care by Jan. 1, 2002. The DHS, which was to issue preliminary guidelines last spring under the law’s terms, has yet to announce a plan or schedule public hearings. As the clock winds down, nurses’ unions and the health care industry are vying fiercely to persuade the agency – and Gov. Gray Davis, who must sign off on a final plan – to adopt widely divergent schemes. 

“The nurses, who have the most direct experience with how many patients at what degree of seriousness can actually be served by a nurse without compromising their safety, would want the ratios to be as low as possible,” said state Sen. Sheila Kuehl, D-Los Angeles, who sponsored the legislation. 

“The hospitals, which maintain that they cannot afford the very lowest ratios and also maintain that there are not sufficient nurses to meet low ratios, are requesting higher ratios,” she said. “The administration, including the DHS, has the unenviable task of establishing ratios that are both safe and affordable.” 

The law, signed by Gov. Gray Davis on Oct. 10, 1999, also restricts nurses from wards for which they are not properly trained, and prohibits using unlicensed personnel for sensitive tasks such as medicating and patient education. 

State health care regulations in place for over 20 years already require one nurse for every two patients in intensive care. The California Nurses’ Association, one of two unions advocating low ratios, wants a three-patient limit for nurses in emergency, pediatrics and telemetry (remote monitoring of vital signs, mainly for cardiac conditions ), and one patient per nurse during labor and delivery. 

By contrast, the California Healthcare Association, a medical industry group, advocates an upper limit of six patients per nurse in emergency and pediatrics, and 10 per patient in telemetry. Under the DHS guidelines, three mothers giving birth would share one nurse, and up to 12 mental health patients could be assigned to one nurse, compared to four under the CNA’s proposal. 

In pediatric intermediate care, the union envisions a maximum of three children per nurse. The industry association calls for six. 

“Now how would you like your brand new baby to be taken care of, if there was something a little bit wrong that required a critical care nursery, by a nurse who had five other people?” said Sharon Blaschka, a nurse at Alta Bates Hospital in Berkeley who said she would attend the rally along with about 80 others from the area. 

“Setting up ratios like this that are so huge is just going to destroy an already unstable health care system, and it’s going to run the nurses into the ground,” Blaschka said. 

“I think the greater issues here are working with the nursing schools and making sure that more nurses enter the field,” said Carolyn Kemp, spokesperson for Alta Bates-Summit Medical Center. “The graying of the profession is what we’re all dealing with right now.” 

Jan Emerson, spokesperson for the California Healthcare Association, a medical industry group, cited Department of Labor statistics that California has only 566 nurses per 100,000 inhabitants, compared to a national average of 798. The industry, she said, is supporting a Senate bill that would allocate $120 million annually to help train 4,000 more nurses per year throughout the state. 

Emerson warned that the law could result in curtailed patient access to health care. 

“If CNA’s ratios were adopted, 95 percent of hospitals in California would not be in compliance,” she said. “If a hospital cannot meet (the requirements), the only enforcement mechanism the state has is to close it down” if repeated citations produced no result, she said.  

Kay McVay, president of the California Nurses Association, said that lowering nurse-to-patient ratios would help the industry to save money and provide better care by reducing both turnover and costly temporary workers.  

“I believe that if we get the ratios we’re requesting we’ll be able to provide more access than we’re providing now,” McVay said. 

“The hospital industry needs to realize they would have better outcomes, their costs would be cut and they would probably experience better financial gains if they adopted a richer RN-to-patient ratio.” 

Both sides agree that the current crisis stems from cost-cutting measures implemented in the early 1990s at the advent of managed care. 

“The nursing shortage is a direct result of that initial activity by HMOs to get business by reducing prices,” said Carol Wallisch, chief of staff to state Sen. Sheila Kuehl. “So now they’re stuck with nurses not wanting to be nurses anymore and having huge workloads, and it’s really tough. (HMOs have) gotten themselves in a terrible position now. Nurses are just exhausted.” 

Emerson, the California Healthcare Association spokesperson, said that about 10 years ago, when insurers began implementing a monthly flat-fee system called “capitation,” hospitals had to cut back to a “bare minimum” of staff or face going out of business. 

“So, 20-20 hindsight. If we could do things differently we would, but that’s not about today.” 

The California Nurses Association rally will take place at the State Capitol Thursday from noon to 2 p.m.


Fairfield teachers reach contract accord

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

FAIRFIELD (AP) — Teachers were back in class after a tentative two-year contract agreement was reached over the Labor Day weekend. 

Details of the agreement, struck Monday, were to be presented to the 1,300 Fairfield-Suisun school district teachers at an informational meeting Tuesday afternoon. Both sides declined to discuss the details until after that meeting. 

The teachers will vote on the contract Friday.  

 

If they ratify it, the school board will vote on the contract Sept. 13. 

Going into the weekend negotiations, the Fairfield district had been offering teachers a 10 percent increase retroactive to the beginning of last year, and a 5.3 percent increase this year. Teachers wanted 6.4 percent for this year. 

Tuesday was the first day of school for two-thirds to three-quarters of the district’s 22,500 students, while the rest have already been attending classes in year-round schools. A nine-day walkout in May disrupted the last two weeks of school last year. 


Police news

Kenyatte Davis
Wednesday September 05, 2001

A shooting near the corner of King and Harmon streets sent a 16-year-old male to Children’s Hospital in Oakland, according to Berkeley Police Lt. Cynthia Harris. 

The Police Department received numerous phone calls just before midnight on Friday evening, reporting gunshots in South Berkeley.  

According to Lt. Harris, when officers responded to the calls they did not find any victims, but did find four bullet casings. Saturday morning police received a call from Children’s Hospital notifying them that the gunshot victim was in their care. 

There are no suspects at this time, but an investigation is under way. 

No further information about the case has been released. 

 


Third BART union holds Wednesday strike option

By Ritu Bhatnagar Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — The threat of a BART strike may not be over, as a third union awaits a court decision to either extend or revoke a restraining order that prevents it from striking. 

If the San Francisco Superior Court judge releases the union from the order, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Local 3993 could still strike on Wednesday. The two unions that reached a tentative agreement Tuesday with BART have pledged to honor AFSCME’s picket lines, which would leave BART commuters to find alternatives. 

James Bunker, an executive board member of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555, said his union and the Service Employees International Union Local 790 would have to meet among themselves to decide further action if AFSCME strikes. AFSCME represents BART’s 240 managers and supervisors. 

Norma Del Mercado, president of AFSCME, said BART placed a restraining order on the union to prevent them from striking while the negotiations with ATU and SEIU were ongoing. She said she expected the judge to extend the restraining order to either Oct. 5 or Oct. 15. 

“But if we’re released from the order, that would put us in a position where we could strike,” she said. 

Del Mercado said she was frustrated with BART’s hold on negotiations with AFSCME. 

“We’ve been trying to negotiate with them since May,” Del Mercado said. “They’ve put us on a holding period, and we have issues that are very different (from the other two unions) that we need to discuss.” 

Del Mercado said her union’s concerns include the right to protect their jobs and to establish pay parity. 

“We’re on salary, not an hourly rate,” she said. “If you look at our pay scales, only seven people in our union fall under the acceptable range of what they should be earning.” 

If the restraining order is extended, Del Mercado said the union would be prepared to strike in October if an agreement with BART isn’t reached by then. 

BART spokesman Mike Healy wasn’t immediately available for comment on Tuesday. 

The tentative agreement between BART and ATU and SEIU officials may include wage and pension increases of more than 20.5 percent over four years, according to Bob Smith, president of the ATU. 

“It’s not an overly generous proposal by the district,” he said, “but we’re satisfied.” 

Union members, who were prepared to walk off the job at midnight Wednesday, now are expected to vote on the new contract Sunday or Monday. 

The unions were seeking a 20.5 percent wage increase over three years, and BART was offering an 18.5 percent raise over four years. Smith would not say exactly how much higher than 20.5 percent the agreed-upon raise would be.


Trial Opens in Suit against Bay Area Biotech firm

By Gary Gentile Associated Press writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

LOS ANGELES — A contract signed before anyone knew billions would be made selling bioengineered drugs is at the heart of a $400 million legal dispute between a pharmaceutical company and the research center whose work led to several key patents. 

The 1976 contract, between South San Francisco-based Genentech Inc. and the City of Hope National Medical Center in Duarte, provided that Genentech would fund research at the City of Hope’s Beckman Research Institute. In return, Genentech would own whatever patents would be issued and would pay the hospital a 2 percent royalty on the sales of certain drugs resulting from the research. 

During opening arguments Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court, the lead attorney from City of Hope alleged Genentech concealed licenses with drug companies over the 25 years of the deal to avoid paying about $340 million in royalties. Genentech owes the hospital more than $400 million, including interest, the hospital argued. 

Lawyer Morgan Chu, who represents the hospital, said he would present evidence of “a string of broken promises by the defendant, Genentech.” 

Genentech’s lead attorney, Susan Harriman, said City of Hope only brought the lawsuit when it became worried because royalties from Genentech would stop when the patents expired in a few years. 

“Genentech has paid City of Hope every penny it was owed ... ,” Harriman said. “City of Hope was extremely well compensated for its work.” 

At issue are drugs involved in the production of human insulin and growth hormones made possible in part by work done by City of Hope researchers Arthur Riggs and Keiichi Itakura. 

Many credit them as the first to synthesize human insulin through techniques that since have been used to create some of the building blocks of biotech, including a hepatitis B vaccine. 

Chu said Genentech hid 27 licensing agreements it made with pharmaceutical companies to make drugs based on City of Hope’s research. When hospital officials discovered the problem in 1998, Genentech tried to reinterpret the 1976 agreement to limit when royalties would have to be paid, Chu said. 

The key dispute is whether DNA actually made in City of Hope laboratories must be used in the creation of drugs in order to trigger royalty payments to the hospital. 

City of Hope argued Tuesday that Genentech is profiting from patents based on its discoveries and must pay royalties anytime Genentech licenses those patents to a drug company. 

Genentech, which posted sales of $1.7 billion last year, argued that City of Hope was an independent contractor hired to produce strands of DNA as well as research. Therefore, the company only owes royalties on drugs made possible both by the patents and the DNA made by City of Hope. 

Harriman said she would show during the trial that City of Hope should have known about the “concealed” licenses because they were mentioned in company documents, including press releases, annual reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Among those receiving reports from the company, which went public in 1980, were two of its largest shareholders — City of Hope scientists Riggs and Itakura. 


San Jose may rename airport to honor Mineta

The Associated Press
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SAN JOSE — The lyrical pop-song question “Do You Know the Way To San Jose,” may soon have a new answer — the Norman Y. Mineta Airport. 

San Jose City Council members voted unanimously on Tuesday to name the city’s international airport after U.S. Secretary of Transportation Norm Mineta, who also served as mayor of San Jose from 1971 to 1974. 

Mineta was the first Asian American to serve on the U.S. cabinet when he was named secretary of commerce by President Bill Clinton. 

“Norm Mineta has provided exemplary service to San Jose, and this (dedication) is to respect his many years of work for the city,” said David Vossprink, of the San Jose Mayor Ron Gonzales’ office. “As a Japanese-American, he has broken many race barriers at every level of public office he has held.” 

Vossprink added that Mineta has a strong interest in aviation and has several years of experience as a pilot. 

Gonzales announced the name proposal two weeks ago, when Mineta was visiting San Jose International Airport for a runway dedication. The city council’s staff will take over procedures regarding the renaming with the Federal Aviation Administration and the San Jose Airport Commission. That process could take about a month, Vossprink said. 

The city council will take a final vote to grant approval for the change. 


Sen. Gramm announces retirement plans

By David Espo AP Special Correspondent
Wednesday September 05, 2001

WASHINGTON — Texas Republican Phil Gramm said Tuesday he will leave the Senate at the end of his third term next year, following fellow conservatives Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond into retirement and closing out a career as an unflinching advocate of lower taxes and less government. 

“I have always been happy with the tax cuts I’ve supported,” Gramm said at a news conference where he sometimes grew emotional. He quickly added, “I still believe that government is too big, too powerful and too expensive and too intrusive,” and he urged a capital gains tax cut this fall. 

Gramm, 59, said he has made no plans for life after politics. A former economics professor at Texas A&M, he sidestepped questions about the school’s presidency, which is vacant. 

Gramm is the third Republican senator to disclose plans to retire in 2002. Helms, 79, of North Carolina, announced last month that his fifth term would be his last. Thurmond, of South Carolina, is 98 and near the end of a remarkable career in politics that spans more than seven decades. 

A fourth Republican, Sen. Fred Thompson of Tennessee, has yet to declare his intentions, raising the possibility that Republicans may have to defend four open seats next year, at a time when they are trying to regain the majority. In all, there are 21 Republican seats on the ballot in 2002, compared to 14 for the Democrats, all of whose incumbents are expected to seek new terms. 

Democrats currently control the Senate, 50-49, with one independent, Sen. James Jeffords of Vermont, who caucuses with them. 

“It’s really the end of an era with Thurmond and Helms and Gramm leaving,” said Charles Black, a Republican political consultant close to the Texan. 

Together, the three men have nearly a century of service in the Senate, and Black added, “They all played a key role in the Reagan revolution and what Reagan was able to accomplish.” 

Gramm was elected to the House in 1978 as a Democrat. Appointed to the House Budget Committee by fellow Democrats in 1981, he worked secretly with Republicans to pass then-President Reagan’s budget, with tax and spending cuts and a big increase in the Pentagon’s budget. The landmark spending-cut legislation carries his name. 

Later stripped of his committee assignment, he resigned his House seat following re-election. He promptly won it back as a Republican in a special election in 1983, then used it as a springboard to the Senate in 1984. He has been easily elected ever since, and was a safe bet for re-election next year. 

But his brand of politics proved unsuccessful outside the state. A run for the GOP presidential nomination collapsed in 1996 when he finished fifth in the leadoff Iowa caucuses. 

At the same time, Gramm steadily gathered influence inside the Senate GOP. As chairman of the Senate campaign committee, he helped usher in the GOP majority in the 1994 elections. A few months later, he helped Sen. Trent Lott — now the GOP leader, but then a back bencher — challenge successfully for a leadership post. He and Lott have been close allies since. 

Gramm has been a relentless foe of big government, willing to clash with Democrats and Republicans alike on the subject. Last year, he roiled Republican waters by insisting on additional spending cuts before signing on to a GOP budget blueprint. 

Chairman of the Banking Committee until Democrats gained a Senate majority this year, he also played important roles in passing comprehensive banking legislation, which President Clinton signed into law, as well as a bankruptcy bill still pending. 

At his news conference, Gramm made use of his trademark folksy rhetoric and biting partisanship. He said he had called Dicky Flatt — a Mexia, Texas, printer whom he frequently cites as an example of the voters who “do the work, pay the taxes and pull the wagon” in Texas. 

As for the Democrats, he dismissed their criticism that President Bush’s tax cut was eroding federal surpluses. “I mean, these are the same people that for the next three months are going to be screaming for more spending. I don’t understand how politically they can possibly gain from what they’re doing,” he said. 

He also allowed another side of his personality to show, pausing repeatedly, his eyes red-rimmed, as he reflected on the toll a quarter-century in public life had taken on his family. 

Gramm said he was leaving because he had helped accomplish all that he had set out to do. He mentioned balancing the budget, cutting taxes, reforming welfare, rolling back Communism. “I am proud to be able to say today that not only did I fight for these things, not only did I play a leadership role in each and every one, but that in a very real sense, 25 years later these goals have been achieved.” 

Gramm said he was completely confident his successor would be a Republican, but Democrats hastened to dispute that. “The Texas Senate race, until this morning considered to be a seat safely in Republican hands, has now become a battleground state,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, head of the Democratic campaign committee. 

Several names surfaced as potential candidates. 

Among Republicans, they included Rep. Henry Bonilla and three statewide elected officials, John Cornyn, the attorney general; Tony Garza, railroad commissioner, and David Dewhurst, land commissioner. Potential Democratic contenders included Rep. Ken Bentsen; former Rep. John Bryant; Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk and former state Attorney General Dan Morales. 


Mint warns collectors: Don’t get buffaloed

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Mint warned collectors of its new American buffalo commemorative silver dollars Tuesday to make sure they bought the real thing. 

As replicas of the popular silver dollars have been made by private companies, confusion among collectors has arose, the Mint said. 

The buffalo coin made by the Mint and authorized by Congress contains a number of features collectors should look for, the Mint said. They are: the year 2001 and the artist’s initial “F” for James Earle Fraser on the front of the coin, which features the face of an American Indian. On the back is an image of a buffalo, the one dollar denomination and the mark “P” for Philadelphia, where the coin was made. 

Images on the Mint’s buffalo silver dollars are not protected by copyright, and therefore are susceptible to copying by private mints, the Mint said. 

All 500,000 of the Mint’s coins quickly sold out.  

 

 

A decision hasn’t been made on whether another 500,000 should be made. The Mint sold the coins for as much as $33 a piece, with $10 from each sale going to the Smithsonian Institution to build a National Museum of the American Indian. 

People generally buy such coins to collect them. However, the Mint’s commemorative coins also are legal tender, meaning people could choose to spend them. 

In one instance, an owner of a Mint-made buffalo silver dollar returned it to the Mint, claiming that a private company, the National Collector’s Mint, sold the same item for $9.95, the Mint said. 

The Mint said the majority of consumer inquiries it has received involving replicas of the buffalo silver dollars stem from advertisements made by the National Collector’s Mint. 

——— 

On the Net: 

U.S. Mint: http://www.usmint.gov/ 


Environmentalists say free speech rights were violated

The Associated Press
Wednesday September 05, 2001

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — Claiming their civil rights were violated by a policeman warning of violence over shutting off water to farmers, two environmentalists filed claims Tuesday against the city for $100,000 each. 

Because Lt. Jack Redfield was in uniform and backed by other police officers when he mentioned Andy Kerr and Wendell Wood by name, it appeared he had the backing of the city when he made the July 25 speech, attorney Gary K. Kahn wrote in a letter to the city. 

“In the course of my actions as an environmentalist, I have received death threats on a regular basis, but never by someone in a police officer’s uniform,” Kerr said. 

Wood is a field representative of the Oregon Natural Resources Council, which has been working on behalf of fish and wildlife in the Klamath Basin. Kerr is a consultant working with ONRC to develop support for a federal buyout of basin farmers to reduce water demand. 

If the claim is not resolved satisfactorily, a lawsuit may be filed, Kerr said. Any money from the claim would be given to Indian and commercial fishermen hurt by diversion of water from the Klamath River to irrigate farms on the Klamath Project. 

“The city needs to be accountable for actions of its employees. (Redfield) was on city time, in a city uniform and escorted by other city employees,” Kerr said. 

City Attorney Rick Whitlock said the city will refer the claim to its insurance carrier. 

Faced with a severe drought, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation shut off water to most of the Klamath Project irrigation system last April to meet water levels set by federal biologists in Upper Klamath Lake for endangered suckers and flows down the Klamath River for threatened coho salmon. 

Redfield and a retinue of Klamath Falls police officers were delivering a beef raised on Redfield’s ranch to a barbecue celebrating a limited release of water to farmers on the Klamath Project irrigation system when he put on a white cowboy hat and read his speech. 

“It won’t take much from Andy Kerr or Wendell Wood or their like to spark an extremely violent response,” Redfield said in the speech. “I am talking about rioting, homicides, destruction of property like dams that hold the precious water from the agricultural community.” 

Police officers with Redfield said they had not been aware he intended to make the speech. Redfield was put on paid administrative leave until last week, when he returned to duty. 

Though confrontations have been tense at times between protesters and federal police guarding headgates controlling releases from Upper Klamath Lake, there have been no arrests directly related to the irrigation situation. 


Assembly OKs bill giving nursing mothers a break

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — Breast-feeding mothers would get breaks and an appropriate room to express milk at work for their infants at home under a bill sent to the governor Tuesday. 

“This bill declares that mothers who are breast-feeding will not be denied break time nor be forced to express breast milk in a bathroom stall or supply closet,” said the author, Assemblyman Dario Frommer, D-Los Angeles. 

The bill would require employers to give lactating mothers break time and provide an appropriate room so they can express their breast milk. The break could be unpaid if it does not coincide with regular rest periods. 

The Assembly approved the bill by a 55-6 vote.


Bill would allow overnight visits with inmate mothers

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — Female inmates serving life sentences could get overnight visits with their children under a bill approved Tuesday by the California Assembly. 

Currently, the state Department of Corrections allows overnight family visits inside prison walls for inmates who have been given parole dates. 

The bill would also allow women serving life terms with possibility of parole but without release dates to have the overnight visits with their children under 21. 

A backer, Assemblywoman Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, said the bill would strengthen families, reduce recidivism and allow children to interact with their mothers. 

Opponents said it would cause security problems at prisons. 

And Assemblyman Phil Wyman, R-Tehachapi, said the visits would be bad for “children who do not want to see their mother who might have killed their father or several other persons.”


Law urges free legal help for poor

Staff
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — Law firms that work for the state would have to attempt to provide a certain amount of free legal services to the poor under a bill approved Tuesday by the Senate. 

The measure would require that when the state pays a firm more than $50,000 for legal services the firm would have to a “good faith effort” to do a minimum amount of pro bono work for the indigent or certain types of organizations. 

Failure to make that effort could result in non-renewal of the state contract. 

Other factors being equal, law firms with a history of doing pro bono work would have an edge in obtaining a state contract, according to a Senate analysis of the bill by Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento. 

Sen. Sheila Kuehl, D-Santa Monica, said the bill was an attempt to encourage law firms to provide more pro-bono services. 

According to a recent magazine survey, the number of hours of pro-bono work done by lawyers at the nation’s largest law firms has declined since 1992. 

Sen. Ray Haynes, a Riverside Republican and an attorney, complained there was too narrow a limit on the type of pro-bono services that would qualify under the bill, saying the work he used to do for a soccer organization wouldn’t be covered by the measure. 

“You ought to be allowed to pursue pro bono as you see fit, not as the Legislature sees fit, in order to qualify for state contracts,” he said. 

But Kuehl said the bill’s definition of pro bono was “broad enough to include all communities and groups.” 

A 21-12 vote returned the bill to the Assembly for a vote on Senate amendments. 

———— 

On the Net: 

Read the bill, AB913, at http://www.senate.ca.gov 


Appeals court guts state’s affirmative action programs

By David Kravets Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Nearly five years after California voters approved Proposition 209 banning affirmative action, a state appeals court Tuesday declared invalid a host of race- and gender-based government hiring programs. 

The decision by the Sacramento-based 3rd District Court of Appeal came as little surprise, as voters in 1996 passed Proposition 209 demanding a color-blind state government. Voters said California should not consider race, gender and economic background when deciding who to hire or to award contracts. 

“We are heartened by this strong ruling for equal rights,” said Anthony T. Caso, vice president of the Pacific Legal Foundation, which brought the suit. 

The three-judge panel voided race-based “goals and timetables” for hiring minorities and women at the California Community College District and among the state’s civil service work force. The panel also nullified a state lottery and a treasury office rule demanding that some contracts be awarded to the “socially and economically disadvantaged.” 

“By any reckoning, this constitutes the use of hiring preferences,” Justice Arthur G. Scotland wrote in the 3-0 opinion. 

The attorney general’s office, which argued on behalf of the state’s programs, was mulling its next move, spokesman Nathan Barankin said. 

If the state takes its case to the California Supreme Court, it may get the cold shoulder. The high court in November invalidated a San Jose ordinance requiring government contractors to solicit bids from companies owned by women and minorities. 

The state Supreme Court said San Jose’s ordinance violated Proposition 209, which bans state government from discriminating against or granting “preferential treatment to any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education or public contracting.” 

The case decided Tuesday was Connerly v. State Personnel Board, C032042. 


Idle hands have an opportunity to help

By Karen A. Davis Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

SAN JOSE — About 80 of the 6,000 employees Cisco Systems laid off in April have found a good reason to hold their heads high at a time when many suddenly unemployed tech workers are having a tough time coping. 

In lieu of severance, they agreed to work for a year at homeless shelters, food banks and other charities, earning just a third of their Cisco salaries but keeping their benefits and stock plans. 

It doesn’t cost the nonprofits anything and the workers get an inside shot if Cisco starts hiring again. 

“When I go to parties I don’t hang my head in shame. People are actually interested in what I’m doing,” said Evan Miller, a database engineer installing a fund-raising database at Second Harvest Food Bank in San Jose. “It feels a lot like a good high-tech job.” 

Database engineer Tam Do, 45, is teaching the homeless computer and resume-writing skills at a San Jose shelter through the Cisco Community Fellowship Program, a pilot project the company started this year. 

“The reason I took this opportunity is ... I got a lot of help from the government in the beginning,” said Do, who came to the United States as a Vietnamese refugee in 1979. “So I think this is a good time for me to pay back the community.” 

National experts on nonprofits say Cisco is the first major company they know of to pay laid-off employees partial salaries while they work for charities. 

“It certainly sets an example for other companies and we hope others pick up on it,” said Pat Reed, spokesperson for Washington, D.C.-based Independent Sector, which tracks nonprofit groups and trends in giving and volunteering. 

Other corporations help non-profits through “loaned executive” programs at no cost to the agencies. In the Bay Area, Microsoft, IBM, Federal Express, and the city of San Jose have all loaned at least one employee at full salary to United Way and its member agencies for two months to one year, said Greg Larson, United Way of Silicon Valley president. 

At Second Harvest, Miller will earn one-third of his former salary — about $34,000 — through next July. But Miller and his family get to keep Cisco’s benefits and his stock will remain fully vested during that time. 

When the year elapses, the employees will receive an additional two months of salary at the one-third rate and will be considered internal candidates for any jobs that become available, though there are no guarantees they will be rehired. 

“This allows us to go in and bring a level of Internet usage to non-profits that (previously only) corporate America has enjoyed,” said Mike Yutrzenka, who directs the Cisco fellowship program. 

About 20 nonprofit groups in the Bay Area and elsewhere are now hosting several former Cisco employees each. About 40 percent are in northern California; the rest are scattered across the country, Yutrzenka said. 

He said participants were chosen who had “a passion to benefit others in their own community and represent Cisco well.” The program also sought employees with a developed set of computer skills that could meet the needs of a particular nonprofit. 

The day after accountant Sandra Hodgin, 26, was laid-off, she went to Cisco’s Career Action Center, which offers counseling and outplacement services. 

She could have taken the severance package, which included 60-day notice pay and four months’ salary — an amount equal to what the program’s participants will earn working full-time at the nonprofits for the year. 

Hodgin had to rent out her condo, move back in with her parents and take a second job on weekends to afford the program, which has her implementing a new online accounting database for InnVision, a group of shelters. 

“I figured this was the perfect time for me to do something like this,” she said, “since I’m not married and I don’t have any kids.” 

Many laid-off tech workers have had tough luck finding new jobs — a prospect these volunteers have put off, for a year at least. 

“I haven’t thought about what happens after this whole thing is over — not yet,” Miller said. “It’s a little early and I’m enjoying myself a little too much. Besides, he said, “the economy could change.’


Talks under way to salvage racism conference

By Dina Kraft Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

DURBAN, South Africa — Desperate to save the U.N. racism conference, the European Union and South Africa joined forces Tuesday to try resolving the language dispute that prompted a walkout by the United States and Israel. 

References to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were temporarily removed from a draft declaration while the South Africans formulated substitute language, said Mary Robinson, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights. 

She insisted Tuesday that the dispute has not derailed the World Conference Against Racism. 

“There is a good sense that we are back on course,” said Robinson, who organized the gathering. 

The South Africans, the European Union and the Arab League met throughout the day Tuesday and were expected to continue talks until as late as Friday, the last day of the conference. 

In the original text, Israel is the only nation singled out for condemnation. Among the sticking points were references to the “racist practice of Zionism,” and description of the movement to establish and maintain a Jewish state as an ideology “based on racial superiority.” 

The United States and Israel — which boycotted racism conferences in 1978 and 1983 — had warned they would pull out if language in the proposed final declaration singled out Israel for criticism. 

The Europeans sought swift drafting of a brief text that voiced support for both sides in the Mideast conflict, said Olivier Alsteens, spokesman for Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel, the EU representative. 

He said the European Union said it had no current plans to leave the conference. But if it did, it would do so as a bloc, along with the union’s 13 candidate states, Alsteens said. 

The EU said it was committed to making progress on the Mideast section of the declaration but if no headway is made, countries disagreeing with the language could reject particular sections while accepting the rest. 

“We are not starting the negotiations with an eye on their failure. Europe really wants success even if we think that it will be very, very difficult,” Alsteens said. 

Amr Moussa, secretary-general of the Arab League, said a final declaration would be “meaningless” if there are no specific references to Israeli policies toward the Palestinians. 

Nearly a year of Mideast fighting has left peace efforts in shambles. 

Moussa denied American accounts that it was Arab inflexibility that broke down efforts to find a new compromise text in initial attempts led by Norway. 

“No, no, no. I believe the inflexibility was shown by the withdrawal (of the U.S. and Israel) 31/2 days before the end of the conference,” he said. 

South African Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who is writing the compromise draft, said discussions were on track and that she did not think other countries would leave. 

“I’m not going to be pushed into ultimatums and all that because it is not conducive to negotiations,” Dlamini-Zuma said. 

In a statement released in Durban on Monday, Secretary of State Colin Powell, who had stayed on Washington, denounced “hateful language” in the draft declaration and announced he was recalling the delegation. 

Jewish delegations at the conference announced Tuesday they were pulling out as well. 

And a coalition of Jewish groups also was among non-governmental organizations that refused to sign a final statement from NGOs. 

Anti-Israel language in the declaration of the NGO conference on racism included references to genocide and ethnic cleansing by the Jewish state. 

According to an eastern European bloc of non-governmental organizations, 57 of 166 NGOs rejected the text. 

Robinson told a news conference Tuesday that because of the text’s “hurtful” language, this was the first time she was not recommending the NGO document as a model to the coinciding U.N. meeting. 


Poets’ potluck celebrates joys of creativity in verse

By Alex I. Halperin Special to the Daily Planet
Tuesday September 04, 2001

“Is this the home of the sordid and sundry poets?” asked Julian Waller upon arriving at the Bay Area Poets Coalition’s seventh annual Labor Day potluck picnic and reading. Held in Live Oak Park, the cozy gathering was a way for an eclectic group of local poets and poetry aficionados to bond over poetry, food and conversation. 

John Rowe, BAPC president, said, “we try to support community poetry and welcome everyone to our events.” In addition to the Labor Day party, BAPC hosts monthly readings and publishes “Poetalk,” a quarterly magazine that accepts submissions, as well as an annual anthology in which every member gets a page. 

Rowe first joined BAPC in 1988 when he won third prize in the contest. “It was my first recognition,” Rowe said. “It was a big thing for me.”  

Since then “I always enjoyed getting ‘Poetalk’ in my mailbox and feeling like a part of a community of poets,” Rowe said. On Saturday, BAPC elected Rowe president for the fourth consecutive year, “our Franklin Roosevelt,” one member called him.  

The group also holds an annual poetry contest with cash prizes. “They’re not big prizes, but we’ve hung in a lot longer than a lot of other organizations,” said treasurer Maggi Meyer.  

Meyer first began taking poetry classes at age 60. Twenty-five years later, she has self-published six books of her poetry. “Once I got started, I really rolled in,” she said. 

She published her most recent book, “Come Along,” several years ago. “I write them. I type them. I print them. I collate them. I sell them,” Meyer said.  

For many of the poets the social aspect of BAPC is as important as its literary elements. Mark States is a longtime coalition member. He also works for the Berkeley Poetry Festival, an unaffiliated event. “A lot of poets here are alone,” States said. “They don’t have families around and this is a way to break bread on a holiday.” 

BAPC was the first poetry organization States joined after seven years of frequent coffeehouse and open mike appearances. He joined because meeting at a “library was more relaxed than the coffeehouse scene.” 

In shows he has produced since, “I’ve tried to duplicate that (BAPC) sense of everyone is here to share together as a community,” States said.  

States’ poem “Me and the Mayor,” which condemns Oakland’s bureaucracy, opened the reading. Following States, Walter Liggett, a former painter from New York and self-proclaimed “haiku-master of Berkeley” recited his haiku “Besides the stormy bay / Pines sway, luminous and large / Logging starts Tuesday” 

Liggett sold copies of his new book “The Legend of Brenda Sue,” which includes poems by many BAPC members as well as drawings by Oakland artist Gail Margaret. 

While many of the poets are retired, several hold jobs unrelated to poetry. Roopa Ramamoorthi holds a doctorate in chemical engineering and works in biotechnology. She read environmentally-themed poems. 

Lisa Miller, who serves as BAPC’s publicist, teaches math and yoga. She sees a connection between math and poetry. In both “you have to try things out until something fits,” Miller said.  

Miller also sees parallels in their mental rigor. “If you don’t have problems with your poetry, you’re not trying hard enough,” she said. The poets prepared themselves for the reading with a mix of tasty food and heady conversation. A woman wearing a Mumia Abu-Jamal shirt explained the prisoner’s situation to an inquirer.  

“One day someone will decide that as poets we’re no good and we oughta be shot, too.” Liggett replied. 

Tom Dunphy, who originated the “General Waste-More-Land” guerrilla theater act in Berkeley during the Vietnam War also read from his work. He estimates writing the poem “Unpresent Daffodils” in 1973. It contained allusions to news of the time like “thanks to nixon all our taxes go to ‘watergate.’”  

Before the reading he announced the donation of General Waste-More Land’s uniform to UC’s Bancroft Library. Well fed and eagerly anticipating the reading, everyone seemed to approve. 

 

The BAPC will hold its next reading on Saturday, Oct. 6, from 3-5 p.m. at the South Branch of the Berkeley Library. The reading is free and all are welcome. An annual membership costs $15 and includes a subscription to Poetalk, the anthology and reduced fees for submitting contest entries. An annual subscription to Poetalk costs $6. For additional information contact Poetalk@aol.com.


Guy Poole
Tuesday September 04, 2001


Tuesday, Sept. 4

 

Intelligent Conversation  

7 - 9 p.m.  

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

A discussion group open to all, regardless of age, religion, viewpoint, etc. This time the discussion will center on friendships: deep, superficial, and what their obligations are. Informally led by Robert Berend, who founded similar groups in L.A., Menlo Park and Prague. Bring light snacks/drinks to share. Free. 527-5332 

 

Free 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 

 

HVAC for Beginners 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Heating, ventilation and air conditioning seminar taught by contractor/ engineer Eric Burtt. $35. 525-7610 

 

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. 525-3565 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

 

Free Early Music Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Small group sings madrigals and other voice harmony every Tuesday. 655-8863 

 

ILGA Global Gay Summit - Pride Brunch 

11 a.m. 

Cafe de La Paz 

1600 Shattuck Ave. 

Pride Brunch, $10 - $15 donation. 663-3980 www.eastbaypride.org 

 


Wednesday, Sept. 5

 

 

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 

 

Advisory Council Agenda 

10 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Arts Access, Commission on Aging. 644-6107 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/seniors/NBSC/NBSC.htm 

 

 

Birthday Party 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

The center will host a birthday party for elderly people whose birthdays fall in September. Belly dancer Carrie Schwalbe will perform. 644-6107 

 


Don’t debate whether Zionism equals racism

Mark Tarses Berkeley
Tuesday September 04, 2001

Editor: 

The question “Is Zionism racist?” is itself a racist question. 

Judaism is a religion, not a race. Jews have never claimed to be a distinct, much less a superior, race. Jews of many races live together in Israel. 

Palestinians are not all members of a single race either. There are people of many races living in and around Israel who identify themselves as Palestinians. 

We should not forget that the idea that Judaism is a race and not a religion was the core idea that supported the entire Nazi racial theory.  

The Nazis held the view that there are only two “pure races” in the world: Germans and Jews. As the Nazis saw it, Germans are pure goodness, and Jews are pure evil. All the other races fit in between. 

Now today, we see this evil and erroneous Nazi racial theory being revived again, here in Berkeley, and by people who call themselves “progressives” and “liberals.” 

Decent people should refuse to debate the question “Is Zionism racist?” and should denounce it for what it is – a racist and anti-Semitic question. 

Mark Tarses 

Berkeley 


Reading program set to catch problems early

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Tuesday September 04, 2001

It’s been common knowledge in the school district for years that certain students – a high percentage of them minority students – were not learning to read in the critical early grades of elementary school. 

It was an alarming trend because in the teaching world, it is generally understood that third grade is the time when students go from learning to read to reading to learn. Those students who had not learned to read by third grade thus faced dim prospects in the years ahead. 

And, indeed, there are countless stories of students beginning to lose their self-esteem around fifth grade, and arriving at middle school the following year with a sickening sense that they cannot possibly succeed in school, no matter how hard they try. 

By the time students reach Berkeley High, scores on standardized tests have shown for years that they are divided into two groups: those who achieve way above the state average and those who achieve way below it. Again, the division more often than not happens along racial and economic lines. 

Chris Lim, a middle school principal in Berkeley for 12 years, was named the Berkeley Unified School District’s associate superintendent of instruction in 1998. She knew that all principals were concerned by the problems with literacy instruction in the early grades, so she immediately began looking around to see what the district was doing to address the problem. 

To her dismay, she found BUSD was doing very little. What efforts were being made to address the problem were being driven by individual principals, with the result that each school site had different systems in place – of varying quality and intensity. 

“I said, ‘OK, where’s the plan for this? How are we meeting this goal?’ And I realized there wasn’t a plan,” Lim said. 

So, in 1998, with the enthusiastic support of principals from 11 elementary schools, Lim launched a three-year plan to put a battery of literacy programs in place at every school site. A districtwide assessment tool would be developed to evaluate how well the program, known as the Early Literacy Program, was meeting its goal of having all students reading at or above grade level by the third grade. 

Last year was the first time that all of the city’s elementary schools reached full implementation. In October, Lim will present to the Board of Education for the first time a report showing the year-to-year changes in student literacy accomplished through the program. 

Anecdotal reports indicate that the program has been a tremendous success. Teachers and administrators report fewer students beginning second and third grades with the severe literacy deficits that had been all too common before. 

Under the project, students’ literacy is assessed in the first grade to determine those most at risk. The 20 percent who score lowest are then given intensive, one-on-one instruction every day from a Reading Recovery teacher with extensive training in literacy instruction – training above and beyond that of the average teacher. 

The Reading Recovery students’ progress is assessed every single day. Those who are deemed to have reached grade level are “graduated.” Those who fail to make progress are referred to special education. Those who have poor attendance are dropped from the project. 

If a student who did not test in the bottom 20 percent at the beginning of first grade seems to be slipping behind in the regular classroom, he or she might be placed in Reading Recovery at any time during the year. 

Far from focusing only on the lowest-scoring 20 percent of first graders, the district’s Early Literacy Program is a plan to improve literacy instruction for all students in grades K-3. All students are assessed for their literacy level at least twice a year at every grade. There is a weekly intervention program, similar to reading recovery but less intensive, for second- and third-graders who seem to be falling behind their classmates.  

Furthermore, aside from the so-called “intervention” programs for the students most in need, the new literacy program has appointed “literacy leaders” at each elementary school site. These teachers are trained extensively in the latest literacy instruction techniques and then given time during the school year to train all the teachers at their school. 

Whereas in the past, Berkeley, like other school districts, tended to adopt one literacy instruction technique and run with it, today the district has integrated nine techniques into a comprehensive plan for teaching students to read. 

They include:  

• Reading aloud to children, a technique believed to motivate children to read, develop their sense of story and increase their vocabulary. 

• Shared Reading, which involves rereading texts with students to build their confidence and comfort with reading. 

• Guided Reading, in which students are divided into small groups based on their reading levels. 

• Independent Reading, in which children are encouraged to read on their own. 

• Shared Writing, in which the teacher acts as a scribe as students compose messages and stories. 

• Interactive Writing, which provide opportunities to plan and construct text. 

• Guided Writing, in which teachers and volunteers work closely with students to help them complete a written document and perform edits of their work. 

• Independent Writing, in which students are encourage to experiment with different forms of written expression. 

• And a technique called Letters, Words, and How They Work. 

The new approach to literacy may not be universally popular with all teachers. But, under the new plan, teachers are discussing their successes and failures in literacy instruction more than every before at site staff meetings, Lim said. 

Said Oxford school literacy leader Mary Barrett: “Berkeley has one of the more balanced approaches around. We have a very solid reading program now.”


Palestinian activists are diverse

Greg Hoadley Oakland
Tuesday September 04, 2001

ditor: 

When will the Daily Planet realize that Americans who work to express solidarity with the Palestinian people are not “Palestinian activists,” but rather a very diverse movement of individuals of all faiths and ethnicities who are appalled by the ongoing Israeli abuses of Palestinian rights and America’s generous support of Israel’s crimes? One need not be Palestinian to realize that Palestinians are suffering under Israel’s domination. 

Furthermore, why do you continue to treat the question of Apartheid against Palestinians as though it were a subjective matter of interpretation?  

The question is simple: either Palestinians suffer under Apartheid-like conditions or they do not – but how can you expect interviews with activists in Berkeley to decide this matter? Why don’t you seek the first-hand sources that document Israel’s crimes against Palestinians from international human rights organizations, the United Nations, and the dozens of Israeli and Palestinian human rights organizations? You might also examine the testimony of actual Palestinians living under Israeli rule and occupation, who will relate their decades-long – and continuing – experience of dispossession, colonization, land confiscation, murder, and repression at the hands of their Israeli colonizers. 

On a trip to Palestine in 1989 Archbishop Desmond Tutu said, “I am a black South African, and if I were to change the names, a description of what is happening in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank could describe events in South Africa.” 

 

Greg Hoadley 

Oakland


Talks to avert BART strike span long holiday weekend

By Ritu Bhatnagar Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 04, 2001

OAKLAND — BART unions say they’re much closer to an agreement, but management says they’re still far apart, as negotiations continued through the Labor Day holiday. 

Mike Healy, a BART spokesman, said the unions would need to move more on the issue of wages before they reach a settlement. 

On Saturday, the train services’ largest workers’ unions issued a 72-hour strike notice. The deadline is midnight Tuesday, but workers said they would postpone a strike if they receive a suitable offer. 

BART’s latest offer is an 18.5 percent increase over four years, and the unions countered this weekend with a 20.5 percent increase. The unions are waiting to hear back from BART. 

“In our opinion, we have moved a lot,” said Bob Smith, president of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555. 

BART initially offered an 11.5 percent pay increase over four years, but boosted it Friday. The unions have reduced their request for improved salaries and benefits from 27 percent over three years. 

BART’s proposal would raise wages by about $10,000. “Train operators earning $48,000 would be earning over $57,000 at the end of the four years under BART’s proposal,” Healy said. 

BART expects to raise fares over the next two years to accommodate higher wages, as well as to account for increased operating expenses. Healy said it was still too early to estimate the amount of a fare increase. 

“Over 50 percent of our ridership will earn less than what our workers will earn,” said BART General Manager Thomas Margo. “What we’re asking is for the unions to also look at the needs of riders. If fares go up and people stop using BART, it won’t be a good result for both sides.” 

Smith said the unions are requesting increases in accordance with cost of living in the Bay Area and inflation. 

The unions have asked San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown, state Sen. Don Perata, D-Oakland, and state Sen. Tom Torlakson, D-Martinez to help in the negotiations. 

Union members said that a strike — in which 2,800 BART workers would head to the picket lines — would cost BART about $500,000 in lost fares a day. Smith said it would take nine days for BART to lose the amount of money that the unions are requesting. 

BART transports more than 300,000 Bay Area commuters a day, who will have to search for alternatives on Wednesday morning if there’s a strike. 

BART’s last strike in 1997 resulted in massive traffic problems. Bay Area legislators have warned that a strike this time around could create even worse traffic, as well as overcrowding of the AC Transit system. 

In anticipation of a strike, Alameda and Oakland ferry services, San Francisco’s Muni and San Mateo County’s Sam Trans will increase their services. BART will also offer a limited bus service from four stations, Pleasant Hill, El Cerrito Del Norte, Dublin/Pleasanton and Fremont.


Apartheid means segregation by skin color

David Singer Berkeley
Tuesday September 04, 2001

Editor: 

RE: “Campus activists call for end to ‘Israeli apartheid’,” Aug. 31. 

I was ecstatic to find out that The Daily Planet has taken to advertising for various political groups in the Berkeley area in the “News” section. I would like it if next you interviewed the Berkeley Communist Club; let them make as many unsubstantiated claims as they want and then rebut their argument with a few quotes from the Pro-Democracy Union on wanting dialogue.  

You also may wish to invite the West Coast Neo-Nazi organization for a “news article” since what they will have to say is I am sure no less opinionated then the “objective” piece on Students for Justice in Palestine. 

Has the Daily Planet forgotten the cardinal rule of reporting? Last time I checked, newspapers were supposed to write with objectivity – opinions are to be left for the opinions page.  

Your Aug. 31 piece reflects nothing but a desire to promote one political group and opinion over another.  

You have given SJP free advertising for their hate campaign, but have as of yet shown no intention of doing a similar piece expressing the other side of the story… truly a shame. 

Further, in the future please use the Oxford English Dictionary as your source for definitions – not Mr. Shingavi. Under his “definition” of apartheid, every Arab State, as well Afghanistan, European Countries, Iraq, and even the United States are “apartheid states” for their treatment of Jews, Kurds, Hindus, Gypsies, and Native Americans. Apartheid was the system of governing under which citizens of South Africa were confined to certain areas and subjugated to harsher laws because of the color of their skin. Not one of those characteristics applies to Israel.  

But, who knows, I could be wrong – maybe Shingavi’s definition is more correct than the OED’s. Then should we divest from the United States? It’s your call, SJP. 

 

David Singer 

Berkeley 

 


Labor Day report on wage disparity isn’t news to area’s working poor

Staff
Tuesday September 04, 2001

By Hank Sims 

Special to the Daily Planet 

 

The temperature Monday was a Labor-Day perfect 70 degrees, and plenty of people were on their way to Cesar Chavez Park with their kites and rollerblades. Or else they were headed up to Tilden to throw the Frisbee, fire up the grill and drink to the summer of 2001. 

Meanwhile, about 60 dedicated souls gathered at North Gate Hall, on the UC Berkeley campus, to talk labor issues and to hear a presentation on a major new economic survey of the East Bay. Among those giving up the peak hours of the holiday were city councilmembers Linda Maio and Kriss Worthington.  

The survey, just published by the East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy, is titled “Decade of Divide: Working Wages and Inequality in the East Bay.” With charts, statistics and first-person narratives by workers below the poverty level, it argues that the phenomenal economic boom of the last decade was actually a disaster for the East Bay’s working poor. 

Amaha Kassa, EBASE’s co-director, welcomed those who attended the discussion by congratulating them on their political involvement. 

“Today is a day that people tend to spend with their families, barbecuing or playing at the beach,” he said. “But we felt that it was important to spend at least part of the day talking about labor.” 

Howard Greenwich, EBASE’s director of research and principal author of “Decade of Divide,” presented the major points, and some of the more alarming findings, of the new study.  

“In the 1990s, overall prosperity could not bridge the gap between rich and poor,” he said. 

The top 20 per cent of East Bay workers saw their paychecks rocket up 17 percent over the last 10 years, when adjusted for inflation. Meanwhile, the bottom 20 percent saw their real wages drop by 2 percent.  

Equally disturbing, said Greenwich, was the fact that while the state of California added around 900,000 jobs to the economy in the last decade, the number of jobs that paid between $25,000 and $55,000 actually decreased by 100,000. Jobs that paid less than $25,000 increased by 700,000. 

“The days when you could find a good blue-collar job with a high-school education are gone,” Howard said. 

After the part of the presentation concerned with quantifiable data was over, Kassa invited some of the people whose personal stories appear in “Decade of Divide” to speak to the assembly. 

Han Yan Wu, of Oakland, talked about the difficulty of covering the bills and the impossibility of getting ahead on her family’s three full-time salaries. 

“Over the last three years we have shared an apartment,” she said. “Besides what we need for food, transportation and housing, there is no space to move forward in our lives.” 

Wu, who is 55, said she feels lucky to earn $7.25 per hour – minus the $81 per month she remits to her employer for health care – in an electronics assembly plant. 

The EBASE report ended with a series of recommendations, including living-wage ordinances for the Port of Oakland and the city of Richmond, affordable housing and stronger anti-discrimination workplace laws. 

During the discussion, Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson, whose district includes Berkeley, thanked the EBASE members for their work, and said that given his experience in government, he could support their recommendations “without exception.” 

“Government clearly does have a role in stepping in and dealing with these issues,” he said, and in fact has a mandate to provide essential services, including transportation, education, and food and housing assistance for the most needy of its citizens. 

“Do I pay for health care? Do I pay for child care? For transportation? For food? Those are the kind of issues that we see on the county level.” 

Carson added several recommendations of his own to the EBASE list, including the reintroduction of education in the trades at the high school level, more efficient and effective public transportation and affordable health care. 

“We’ve gotten away from universal health care in this fight, and we need to get back to it,” he said. 

Kassa ended the presentation by announcing that on Sept. 11, EBSE would appear before the Oakland city council to ask support for a “living wage” ordinance for the Port of Oakland. Three thousand of the port’s 22,000 workers are currently earning below-poverty wages. 

As the event was breaking up, Judy Goff, the executive secretary-treasurer of the Alameda County Central Labor Council offered all present $10 tickets to a Labor Day rally and a baseball game, the Oakland Athletics versus the Baltimore Orioles, at the Coliseum. The A’s were to honor nine “iron men” of the labor movement, including Elena Griffing, who has worked at Berkeley’s Alta Bates Hospital for the past 49 years. AFL-CIO president John Sweeney was to throw out the first pitch. 

The East Bay Alliance for Sustainable Democracy can be reached at 893-7106. 


SJP is a diverse group, addressing an issue of human rights

Samuel Hoffman Berkeley
Tuesday September 04, 2001

 

Editor: 

As a member of Students for Justice in Palestine at UC-Berkeley I would like to first thank you for your article “Campus Activists Call for an End to Israeli Apartheid”, in which you gave a much needed voice to a very historic conference being held here in Berkeley “Holding the University Accountable- Divesting from Israeli Apartheid.” However, I would like to voice my concern over the nature of your coverage and some very disturbing inaccuracies.  

Being Jewish and a member of SJP, I am concerned by your inaccurate portrayal of SJP as only a series of Palestinian activists, or even Arab-Americans. We are a very diverse group of individuals, Palestinian, Arab, Jewish, Asian, Hispanic, Iranian, European, Muslim, Christian, atheist, and etc, and we pride ourselves in our diversity and see it as our greatest strength.  

As exemplified by our diversity, this issue is not one of Arab/Muslim vs. Israeli/Jewish, which you seem to imply. This is a human rights issue, one in which crimes against humanity are being committed (according to the Fourth Geneva Convention) by a highly militarized occupying apartheid state (Israel) against a virtually unarmed population, which is exercising their right to defend themselves and fight for self-determination and liberation. 

SJP is a diverse coalition of UC-Berkeley students, staff, faculty, and community members, which is in solidarity with the Palestinians, and all indigenous liberation movements across the world.  

 

Samuel Hoffman 

Berkeley


An energy-efficient refrigerator can save you money

By Alice LaPierre
Tuesday September 04, 2001

Right now there are at least two programs under which Californians can save a significant amount of money by being energy efficient: the Governor’s 20/20 Rebate Program, and the 1-2-3 Cashback Program through Pacific Gas & Electric for energy-efficient appliances and fixtures. With a little up-front expense, the long-term benefits can mean more money in your wallet at the end of every month. Start by asking, “How efficient is your refrigerator?”  

A refrigerator at least 10 years old uses as much energy as two refrigerators carrying the EnergyStar label, according to PG&E and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Products with the government-backed EnergyStar label exceed energy-performance guidelines and therefore save owners money in the long run. 

A refrigerator made around 1990 uses more than 900 kilowatt-hours per year, about $125 a year at current rates of 14 cents per kilowatt-hour. The older the refrigerator the more power it burns, according to the EPA. An EnergyStar refrigerator exceeds government standards by at least 20 percent. Over the product's life span – estimated at about 20 years – it can save owners $2,200 in energy costs. If you haven’t purchased a new refrigerator in the last couple of years, you may have a “watt-hog” in your kitchen. Models that are at least 10 years old have many of the following traits: mechanical handles, magnetic strips holding the doors shut, colors of green, yellow, pink or blue, chrome handles, exposed house-door type hinges, or rounded “shoulders.” If you have one of these, you are spending more in energy than you need to. 

The payback period for a new energy-efficient refrigerator is about 2.4 years, based on electricity rates of about 14 cents per kilowatt hour. This assumes that an EnergyStar refrigerator is on average $97 more expensive than the same-sized non-EnergyStar model.  

Rebates of up to $200 for new EnergyStar efficient refrigerators available through PG&E, plus a rebate of $75 for recycling your old (but still working) refrigerator (free pickup included) through the Alameda County Waste Management Authority. Call 1-800-599-5798 for more details. 

Before shopping for a new refrigerator, go to the Department of Energy EnergyStar Website at www.ENERGYSTAR.gov to find the most efficient model for your needs. Also refer to Consumer Reports magazine for reliability and performance ratings (available in the libraries). 

Here’s what you can do in the meantime before you replace your refrigerator – or if you rent and are stuck with the refrigerator that came with your apartment. 

• Fill plastic bottles with water two inches from the top, and put them in your freezer to take up the excess space. Freezers work much harder cooling down large volumes of warm air, so keeping the refrigerator stocked with ice in between shopping trips will save energy.  

• When you need the freezer space, just move the bottles into the refrigerator section and it will keep the refrigerator from running to cool down air in there. You will now also have an emergency stock of water and ice if the power goes out! 

• Check the gasket around the door. Keep it clean and pliable, so that it makes a good seal. 

• Raise the cooling and freezing temperatures in both refrigerator and freezer sections to between two and three. Ice cream doesn’t have to be rock-hard! 

• Keep the ventilation space behind and on top of the refrigerator clear of objects. Blocking this airspace makes the refrigerator work harder and run longer to cool itself. 

• Lastly, don’t open the refrigerator door more than necessary, especially in hot weather. An open refrigerator door makes a poor air conditioner. 

 

Alice La Pierre is an energy analyst for the city’s Energy Office. Her column appears as a public service the first and third Tuesdays of the month. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


‘Noncompete’ clauses giving laid-off workers pause

By Leslie Miller Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 04, 2001

BOSTON — Two months after Patrick McCullough lost his $60,000-a-year job installing computer networks for law firms, he’s having a hard time getting work — even though he’s had job offers. 

McCullough’s former employer is threatening to enforce a so-called “noncompete” agreement that bars him from working for anyone who provides legal services within 150 miles of his home. His former boss made it clear he’d enforce the pact when he called to say McCullough had been seen attending a local law firm’s pizza party. 

“I’m basically shut out of my industry,” said McCullough, 33, of Cincinnati. “They should allow me to earn a living.” 

An increasing number of high-tech workers who signed noncompete agreements during the dot-com boom and are now finding them a barrier to getting new jobs during the dot-com bust. 

Employers say the contracts legitimately protect them from losing trade secrets, clients or money invested in training their workers. Critics say noncompete and confidentiality agreements are used unfairly to prevent people from finding better jobs. 

With the cooling of the high-tech frenzy in Massachusetts, Secretary of State William Galvin said his office is fielding an increasing number of complaints from fired workers who can’t get jobs in their professions because they signed noncompete contracts without worrying about the future implications. 

“The propensity has been to stick these agreements before anyone getting a job,” Galvin said. “People shouldn’t need to go to court just to fight to get the right to seek employment.” 

Employers, though, have good reason to fear the damage a former employee can do to their businesses, said Catherine Reuben, a Boston attorney who represents employers. 

The Internet makes it easy to download a company’s client lists or to send trade secrets across the country in an instant, Reuben said. 

Companies that once limited noncompete agreements to top executives, salesmen and research and development personnel are now asking rank-and-file workers to sign them, she said. 

“I have seen more companies saying, ‘I require it of everyone’,” Reuben said. 

More companies are also trying to make them stick. 

Telecommunications giant Sprint Corp. used a noncompete agreement last year to prevent its chief technology officer, Marty Kaplan, from taking company secrets to rival Worldcom Inc., which had offered him a job as president of operations. 

Wal-Mart sued its competitor Amazon.com in 1998 because the online bookseller had hired 15 of its inventory managers familiar with its confidential computerized merchandising and distribution systems. The case was settled out of court. 

Carl Khalil, a Virginia Beach, Va., corporate attorney, hears from about 5,000 people a month looking for ways to get out of their contracts through his Web site: www.breakyournoncompete.com. 

“They’re very prevalent in the high-tech field, a field where — until just the past few months — you had an exploding number of employees and an exploding number of noncompetes,” said Khalil, who tracks the cases on legal databases. 

Khalil peddles an outline suggesting 16 defenses against noncompetes for employees baffled by the complex web of state law and court decisions that govern the agreements. 

In Wisconsin, a noncompete agreement that’s too broad will be struck down by the court, but Michigan courts will enforce broad noncompete agreements after narrowing their scope, Khalil said. 

California, Colorado, Montana and North Dakota severely restrict the agreements. Maine and Massachusetts exempt broadcasters from them, while the rules vary for doctors from state to state. 

Only lawyers are exempt from noncompete agreements in every state, Khalil said. 

The legal patchwork and evolving case law make it hard for both employees and employers to know their rights. On June 29, the Louisiana Supreme Court effectively struck down noncompete agreements except when employees leave to run their own business. 

John Castelano, a St. Petersburg, Fla., private investigator, is trying to get out of a noncompete agreement with his former boss, who fired him. 

“They’re going to use the noncompete to make sure I don’t work for anyone else,” he said. “This is scaring the hell out of me.” 

Castelano has a wife, four kids, $500 in monthly rent and a $400 car payment to worry about. To make ends meet, he said he’s making pizzas and picking up a few freelance investigation jobs. 

“Signing a noncompete and knowing what you’re getting into are two different things,” he said. “But you want the job so bad. I’ve got four mouths to feed. I’ll sign anything.” 


Economy taking its toll on airport concessions

The Associated Press
Tuesday September 04, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — Eateries and vendors at San Francisco International Airport are watching their business slide along with the troubled high-tech economy. 

Business travel has dropped, causing restaurants such as Lori’s Diner to offer discounts to airport employees just to bring in some business. 

Allison Marble, a spokeswoman for the National Business Travel Association says corporations that spend the most on business travel are reducing their spending by 30 percent to 50 percent. More than 60 percent of the group’s members are switching to low-cost airlines, she said. 

CalStar Retail Inc. has not paid rent for three of its six stores in the complex and is being sued by the airport. San Francisco Golf has fallen behind its rent payments and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art store has asked for a rent decrease. 

From May 2000 to May 2001, total concession sales dropped 2 percent at all terminals combined. 


Governor’s race may be state’s costliest ever

The Associated Press
Tuesday September 04, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Note to potential gubernatorial candidates in California: Those without tens of millions of dollars, or the ability to raise them, need not apply. 

It’s a message shaped by recent campaigns in this sprawling state and buttressed by the massive amounts of money already being raised for the 2002 governor’s race. 

More than a year before the general election, Gov. Gray Davis has already raised close to the $35 million he spent for his entire 1998 campaign. 

Two wealthy Republican businessmen are also collecting contributions to challenge the Democratic incumbent, setting the stage for a race that could outspend the state’s previous, record-breaking gubernatorial campaign. 

“We know in order to be a viable candidate, we certainly will have to be in Gray Davis’ ballpark,” said Bob Taylor, a campaign consultant for Los Angeles businessman William E. Simon Jr., a Republican candidate for governor. 

According to recent campaign spending reports, Davis’ campaign treasury is on pace to reach more than $50 million by the November 2002 general election. 

Davis’ advisers say he’ll need millions to fight any rich potential Republican opponent and also match the millions they expect the national GOP to spend to try to retake the office they held for 16 years before Davis’ 1998 victory. 

The governor also is trying to rebuild his popularity weakened by the state’s electricity crisis. While the state has avoided rolling blackouts this summer, conflict of interest accusations have hit some of Davis’ energy advisers. 

“We make no apology for getting prepared here to run what is going to be a hell’s-a-popping race where there will be massive resources aligned against us,” said Garry South, Davis’ top campaign adviser. 

National Democrats are also expected to spend liberally in support of the top race in California, a Democratic stronghold and a cornerstone of the party’s bid to retake control of Congress. 

The biggest variable so far is whether former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, a wealthy Republican businessman able to spend millions of his own money, will run. He’s expected to decide in the fall. 

“He’ll bring a lot more money to the table,” said Jim Knox, executive director of California Common Cause, a public policy watchdog group. 

Riordan spent about $6.3 million of his own money running for mayor of Los Angeles in 1993 and 1997. He also has been courted by President Bush, who can help him secure money from national Republicans. 

With or without Riordan, the candidates in the race now have said they’ll spend tens of millions. 

Simon is the son of former Treasury Secretary William E. Simon. 

 

, who served presidents Nixon and Ford. He’s tapped into the Wall Street network both he and his father worked for years and raised $3.1 million in the first six months of the year. His goal is to collect at least $20 million. 

“If he can’t raise a significant amount of money, he’s going to take a good hard look” at whether to stay in the +race+, Taylor said. 

Secretary of State Bill Jones, also an announced GOP candidate, battled sagging support from Republicans in the first half of the year and raised less than $1 million, far less than what analysts said he’ll need. 

As Davis and others raise money for 2002, California is chasing its own record set in 1998, when four candidates spent a combined $120 million. 

That was the most expensive non-presidential race in the nation, said Ed Bender, research director for the National Institute on Money in State Politics in Helena, Mont. 

Then, Davis was outspent in the primary by two wealthy Democrats — former airline executive Al Checchi, who spent $35 million largely of his own money and Rep. Jane Harman, who spent more than $20 million. 

Since winning the primary and then beating Republican Dan Lungren in November, Davis hasn’t stopped raising money. He has won the support of a wide array of contributors including labor unions, special-interest groups and many corporate groups that traditionally support Republicans. 

Some campaign finance analysts fear his fund-raising volume has increased the influence of special interests. 

“Citizens have the perspective that elections are determined by special interest contributions and I think it is a major factor in generating voter apathy,” Knox said. 

Davis’ energetic fund-raising also has some analysts sensing he’s preparing a 2004 presidential campaign. 

“This governor’s campaign is not just about getting the gubernatorial seat again, it’s about positioning oneself for the presidential race two years after,” said DePaul University marketing professor Bruce Newman, a political marketing and campaign spending expert. 

Davis’ ambitions aside, however, California is just an expensive state in which to run a statewide campaign. The nation’s most populous state has two of its largest television markets, which makes buying TV ad time expensive. 

“A campaign for governor in this state is not unlike a campaign for president or for prime minister of a nation,” said Dave Puglia, a public relations consultant and campaign director for Lungren. 

A statewide television ad — the medium which eats up the bulk of most modern American campaigns — can cost at least $1 million a week. Radio spots run up to $150,000 a week. Meaningful polls cost about $20,000 apiece. California’s diversity also complicates a campaign and raises its costs. Its 33 million residents live in diverse pockets that include the agricultural Central Valley, high-tech Silicon Valley, the traditionally liberal Bay Area, greater Los Angeles and its entertainment industry and the rapidly growing Inland Empire. 

Campaigns in California, as well as nationwide, Newman said, have left behind the traditional volunteers networks, which have “all been taken over by the more sophisticated marketing campaign.” 

So, the state that featured 2000’s most expensive House race — the $11.1 million spent by Democrat Adam Schiff and Republican Jim Rogan — will continue as a national leader in expensive races. 

“California’s unique in a lot of respects and I think campaign spending is one of them,” Bender said. 

——— 

On the Net: 

http://www.followthemoney.org contains a database on campaign spending in state races. 


Berkeley labor unions enjoy increased numbers

By Daniela Mohor Daily Planet Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

Berkeley’s working class has much to celebrate this Labor Day. As the national percentage of unionized workers decreased in the past year, new unions have appeared in town and the membership of local labor organizations has grown. 

“There is a pretty high interest in union organizing in Berkeley, not only on campus,” said Margy Wilkinson, an administrative assistant at UC Berkeley’s Moffitt Library and the chief negotiator for the Coalition of University Employees bargaining team. “People have become aware that having a union is the only way that working people can have an effect on their working conditions.” 

Total union membership for Berkeley is not available, but experts say that the city follows the state trend. In 2001, California union membership grew by 19,000 and now represents 16 percent of the state’s workforce, according to the California Labor Federation. Nationally, the percentage of unionized workers dropped to 13.5 percent last year. 

Unlike other parts of the country, Alameda County has seen the decline of the manufacturing industry and more union members are emerging in the service industry, said Lincoln Smith of the Alameda County Center for Labor Council. 

Berkeley offers good examples of this transformation. In the past year alone, employees at the Berkeley Marina Radisson Hotel and recyclers who work at the Community Conservation Centers successfully unionized. After months fighting for a union and negotiating with the Radisson Hotel management, the hotel’s employees, represented by the Hotel Employee and Restaurant Employees Union, Local 2850, finalized a contract last December. Likewise, workers of Berkeley’s Community Conservation Centers organized a new union last February. And in June, the Industrial Workers of the World, which represented them, signed a union contract that raised recyclers’ wages by more than 20 percent.  

Meanwhile, unions on UC Berkeley’s campus are becoming more active. They are putting more resources into gaining attention and organizing the school’s workforce. 

“The labor movement in general realized that it will have to expand if it wants to survive,” said Chloe Osmer, program coordinator at the Center for Labor Research and Education. “Unions are re-invigorating. They’re organizing campaigns.” 

That’s exactly what the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees did. The union created the so-called UC contract campaign in 1999 with the purpose of mobilizing workers to defend their rights. Since the initiative was launched, AFSCME doubled its membership in Berkeley and nearly quadrupled it statewide. CUE’s membership has grown too. Between November and now, its membership expanded by 20 percent. 

Unions’ increased popularity can also be measured looking at public opinion. An Associated Press poll released Wednesday shows that Americans are more sympathetic towards unions than they used to be. Today, the poll indicates, three people out of four approve unions, while 20 years ago less than two people out of three did. 

“Unions are aligning themselves with social movements, such as the immigrant rights movement, and speaking up for the weaker members of our society,” said Osmer. “Playing a role in civil rights campaigns has put them back in the public eyes. It’s changing their image.”  

Walter Johnson, secretary treasurer of the San Francisco Labor Council, agrees that change is occurring. He says that the workforce is not the same it used to be and that unions are redefining the way they operate. 

“Labor is reaching more than it has in the past,” he said. “Now unions are working more together than before. These are a much more unified voice to give you the message of labor.”


Illini put Bears away early in season opener

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

All the talk about the Cal football team during the pre-season was focused on their new offense, which was supposed to break out of a four-year funk under new offensive coordinator Al Borges. Everyone assumed the Bears’ defense would be fine, especially the secondary with four cornerbacks who were presumed to be top caliber. 

Everyone’s presumptions were turned on their heads on Saturday as the Illinois Illini dominated the first half of both teams’ season opener at Memorial Stadium on the way to a 44-17 win. Senior quarterback Kurt Kittner threw for 237 yards and two touchdowns in the first half before Illinois head coach Ron Turner decided to take it easy on the Bears in the second half. Kittner, a Heisman candidate, ended up with 297 yards passing in the game. 

Kittner’s favorite target was wide receiver Brandon Lloyd, who missed last season, including the team’s 17-15 win over Cal, with a broken leg. Lloyd set career highs in receptions, yards and touchdowns on Saturday, catching eight balls for 178 yards and two scores. That total could have been even higher, but two catches for 70 yards and another touchdown were called back for holding on the Illini offensive line. 

“If you could script this game, that would be our nightmare script,” Cal head coach Tom Holmoe said after the game. “This might not have been a do-or-die game, but it’s not exactly what we had in mind.” 

The first half looked painfully easy for the visitors, as Kittner constantly had time to sit in the pocket and find easy targets in the Cal secondary to grab a 38-7 halftime lead. 

“We usually get more heat on the quarterback, that’s one of our trademarks,” Holmoe said. “They were just making wide-open catches.” 

The Cal cornerback quartet of Atari Callen, Jemeel Powell, LeShaun Ward and James Bethea were each the victim of at least one big play at some point in the first half. Powell was the defender on both of Lloyd’s touchdown catches; Callen gave up a 28-yard catch to Lloyd on the second play of the game and a 46-yarder during Illinois’ second drive; Ward was beaten by Lloyd on a simple post pattern for a 45-yard touchdown pass that was called back for holding; and Bethea lost wide receiver Walter Young over the middle on a 4th-and-two, a 17-yard play that extended an Illinois scoring drive. 

The Bears spent most of the game with eight men in the box in an attempt to stop the Illinois running game, but couldn’t adjust once it became obvious that their cornerbacks couldn’t handle Lloyd on their own. The Illini ended up with just 84 rushing yards, but their big plays in the air were what killed the Bears. 

Setencich said he expected his cornerbacks to play press no the Illinois wideouts for most of the game, but all four were playing well off the line of scrimmage for most snaps. That let the receivers get off the line clean, and without help from the safeties, Cal got burned repeatedly. 

“When you want to compete, you get up in the guy’s face,” Setencich said. “I don’t know if it was overconfidence or fear.” 

Along with the secondary failing to slow anyone in a blue-and-orange jersey, some old problems reared their heads in the first half. Cal’s special teams, which were supposed to be improved with the hiring of coach LeCharls McDaniel, were disastrous in the first half. After the Illini took a 10-0 lead following a 32-yard field goal by J.J. Tubbs, Callen fumbled the ensuing kickoff on the Cal 26, and Illinois’ Jamal Clark recovered. Illinois scored on an Antonio Harris seven-yard run, the first of three touchdowns by the junior tailback, and Cal was in a 17-0 hole. 

“I tried to cut and someone hit me from the side, I don’t know if it was one of them or one of us, and I wasn’t holding the ball tightly enough,” Callen said. “I was just too riled up, trying to make a big play.” 

After breakdowns in punt protection cost the Bears shots at two wins last year, McDaniel spent a lot of time in practice perfecting the blocking schemes. But on Tyler Fredrickson’s third attempt late in the second quarter, Illinois’ Dwayne Smith came through unblocked, smothering Fredrickson on the Cal 10. Another short drive later, Kittner went up top to Lloyd, who beat Powell to the left corner of the end zone by three yards for the score. 

“That should have been a very simple pickup, and someone just missed it,” Holmoe said. “We put in a ton of work on our punt protection, and one person just didn’t execute.” 

Cal’s offensive line, another presumed strength heading into the season, was also a disappointment, especially highly-touted tackles Langston Walker and Mark Wilson. Speedy Illinois defensive ends Terrell Washington and Brandon Moore terrorized Cal quarterback Kyle Boller, combining for three sacks as they ran around the mammoth Walker and Wilson.  

Washington forced a Boller fumble late in the first quarter with a blindside whack, and the Illini recovered at the Cal 7. Harris dove over the goal-line pile for another touchdown 22 seconds into the second quarter to give his team a 24-0 lead, effectively putting the game out of reach with nearly three quarters still to play. 

The offensive line’s ineffectiveness made it hard to evaluate Borges’ offense, as Boller rarely had time to set up and throw without dodging hurtling Illini defenders. Boller completed 17 of 29 passes for 184 yards before being pulled in the fourth quarter, with no touchdowns and one interception. There were positive signs, as Boller hooked up with fullback Marcus Fields for several long gains, and there were no clock management issues that plagued the offense last year. The Bears actually ended up outgaining Illinois in the game, 381 total yards to 373, but the count in the first half, when the game was being decided, was 280-125 in favor of the visitors. 

But Boller also missed several open receivers and didn’t have a completion longer than 25 yards. The tight end spot was non-existent in the passing game, as Boller threw just one pass for a tight end, an incompletion meant for Terrance Dotsy. 

Tailback Joe Igber had an excellent performance, running for 116 yards and both Cal touchdowns. The junior showed his usual happy feet, stutter-stepping and cutting back for good gains despite the swarming Illinois defenders. 

But with the secondary obviously not at the top of its form, the Bears could be in serious trouble when BYU comes calling this weekend. The pass-happy Cougars have scored 121 points in their first two games, and feature a more sophisticated passing attack than Illinois. 

“I’d have to be crazy as a coach to think it will continue this way,” Holmoe said. “There’s no way one game will ruin our entire season.” 

But it can come very close. 

NOTES: Four true freshman played their first games for the Bears on Saturday, and two, defensive tackle Lorenzo Alexander and tailback Terrell Williams, had an immediate impact. Alexander and defensive end Tully Banta-Cain teamed up to force Kittner into an intentional grounding penalty when they put him under serious pressure. Alexander played about 22 snaps in the game. Williams gained 43 yards on five carries as Igber’s backup, including a 20-yard run. 

***** 

Sophomore wide receiver Geoff McArthur will have surgery today on a lacerated tricep muscle, the team announced. The injury occurred after the game on Saturday and was non-football related, according to Holmoe. 

McArthur will miss two to three weeks because of the injury, after starting the Illinois game and catching four balls for 32 yards.


Guy Poole
Monday September 03, 2001


Monday, Sept. 3

 

 

Intensive Production Urban Gardening Training 

10 a.m. - 4 p.m. 

Santa Fe Bar & Grill 

1310 University Ave. 

Learn ways to intensively and organically grow produce for your own use or for an urban market garden. A hands-on training in the garden located behind the restaurant and potluck lunch at 1 p.m. Free community training, meets the first Monday each month. 841-1110 

 

Potluck Picnic and Poetry 

noon - 4 p.m. 

Live Oak Park 

Walnut and Rose streets 

Bay Area Poets Coalition hosts a Labor Day potluck picnic followed by an open poetry reading. All are welcome to bring food and poetry to share. 527-9905 poetalk@aol.com 

 

Rainbow Berkeley Brunch 

11 a.m. - 1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Celebrate Berkeley’s LGBHTQI community at the 3rd Annual Brunch. $10 donation. 548-9235 gspprng@tksvc.com 

 

East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy: A Labor Day Hearing 

11 a.m. 

North Gate Hall Room 105 

University of California at Berkeley 

East Bay’s crisis of working poverty to be investigated at the hearing. Featuring a panel and audience of East Bay political, religious, labor and community leaders, including: Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson and others. 893-7106  

 


Tuesday, Sept. 4

 

 

Intelligent Conversation  

7 - 9 p.m.  

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

A discussion group open to all, regardless of age, religion, viewpoint, etc. This time the discussion will center on friendships: deep, superficial, and what their obligations are. Informally led by Robert Berend, who founded similar groups in L.A., Menlo Park and Prague. Bring light snacks/drinks to share. Free. 527-5332 

 

Free 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 

 

HVAC for Beginners 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning Seminar taught by contractor/ engineer Eric Burtt. $35. 525-7610 

 

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. 525-3565 

 

Berkeley Farmers’ Market 

2-7 p.m. 

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

548-3333 

 

Free Early Music Group 

10 - 11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Small group sings madrigals and other voice harmony every Tuesday.  

655-8863 

 

ILGA Global Gay Summit - Pride Brunch 

11 a.m. 

Cafe de La Paz 

1600 Shattuck Ave. 

Pride Brunch, $10 - $15 donation. 663-3980 www.eastbaypride.org 

 


Wednesday, Sept. 5

 

 

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 

 

Advisory Council Agenda 

10 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center  

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Arts Access, Commission on Aging. 644-6107 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/seniors/NBSC/NBSC.htm 

 

Birthday Party 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

The center will host a birthday party for elderly people whose birthdays fall in September. Belly dancer Carrie Schwalbe will perform. 644-6107 

 

A Taste of the World: Cultural Understanding Through Food 

6 - 9 p.m. 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Enhance your cooking skills and experience the cuisines of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Morocco and Israel with Chef Daniel Herskovic. All classes are “hands on.” Class includes meal and cooking lesson. $25. Every Wednesday through Nov. 1. 655-8487 

 

Socratic Circle Discussions 

5 - 6 p.m. 

1309 Solano Ave. 

Cafe Eclectica 

Does your brain need a workout? All ages welcome. 527-2344 

 

Femme Rising 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Ongoing discussion on sex, gender identity, politics, nail polish, and other weighty matters. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Timber Framing, Ancient and Modern 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Seminar presented by contractor/ Timber Framer Guild Member Doug Eaton. $35. 525-7610 

 


Thursday, Sept. 6

 

 

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 

 

Butch Time 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

A discussion/ social/ support/ activity group for self-defined butches. Tonight: Butches grow older. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Sahara Sojourn: Following the Ancient Routes of the Salt Caravans of Niger 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Slide presentation from the heart of the Sahara along the ancient routes of the salt caravans of the Tuareg. Free. 527-4140 

 

Women’s Health Issues 

10:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Two nurses from the city will launch a series of talks on women’s health issues, beginning with the bladder. 644-6107 

 

 


Perspective

By Jennifer Rockne Pacific News Service
Monday September 03, 2001

The great American sell-out — GM logo could join Big Mac’s at the Smithsonian 

 

The management of one of our national treasures — the Smithsonian Museum — threatens to plumb new depths in pimping the public domain to corporate interests. A preliminary deal awaiting consideration by the Smithsonian board of regents would sell General Motors Inc. naming rights for the institute’s new hall of transportation for $10 million. 

Want fries with that? The Smithsonian’s Air and Space Museum is replacing its current food vendor, Guest Services Inc., with McDonald’s — a partnership providing the museum with a potential $34 million and McDonald’s with its projected busiest site. 

It’s easy money, but ethically troublesome when considering that two-thirds of the financial support for the Smithsonian comes from taxpayers. 

Professional sports were the proving ground for such corporate moves. 

Today, corporate financing and naming stadiums are routine. A recent addition to corporate logos on uniforms, the jumbotron and banners pulled by small planes above the game, is the corporate-sponsored play-by-play, subjecting fans to the Jiffy-Lube Double Play and the Geico Direct Call to the Bullpen. 

And let’s not forget the public schools turned into corporate marketing venues. School rooftops are the trendy locus for cell phone towers. Schools blame budget concerns as cause for signing away public property and children’s health with lucrative deals that submit children to Channel One in the classroom, Pepsi in the hallway, and McDonald’s at the lunchtable. Teachers receive free, corporate-sponsored lesson supplements (let’s learn about the environment from Exxon and Mobil!). And ads adorn buses, book covers and folders, as well as the school cafeteria. 

But across the country, there is a move to reclaim public space: 

 

•A bill pending in the Oregon legislature would prohibit naming public buildings after corporations. 

•Some school districts aren’t renewing exclusive corporate contracts and others are refusing them outright. 

•Corporate bidders for naming rights to four subway stations in Boston have been scared away by public outcry. 

• In protest of further commercialization, some people are refusing to pay new recreation fees for access to public land. 

•The Denver Post has chosen to call the Broncos’ new, publicly subsidized home “Mile-High Stadium” rather than its official, corporate moniker. 

So what about the Smithsonian? Ethical concerns about previous major donor agreements have curators and researchers waging a Dump Small sticker campaign, demanding ouster of Smithsonian Secretary Lawrence Small, a former Citibank executive. Responding to decisions such as K-Mart’s being allowed to sponsor the Smithsonian's traveling African American sacred music exhibit, The Smithsonian Congress of Scholars has weighed in against Secretary Small in a memo to the regents. 

“Of all the acquisitions made by the Smithsonian in over 150 years,æ it states, “the most significant by far is the trust of the American people ... Secretary Small’s decisions circumvent established decision-making procedures and seem certain to commit our museum to unethical relationships with private donors. These actions threaten to change fundamentally the nature of the museum, while ignoring the broad consultation and open public discussion called for by such changes.” 

According to the scholars whose work supports the Smithsonian, “responsible” practice in the past has meant that major changes undergo professional review and scrutiny. They write: “Newly adopted projects, such as the creation of a hall of fame of individual Americans, renaming the museum, and the reconfiguring of exhibition space in the museum, have not been subject to the deliberative procedures applied to all proposals, independent of the source of the ideas or the source of the financial support for the project.” 

There is still time before the regents meet on Sept. 17 to stop the General Motors agreement and send a strong public message. 

Nowhere in the U.S. Constitution are corporations mentioned, yet our Supreme Court bestowed upon them rights of persons in an 1886 decision, “Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad.” Perhaps the people behind corporations think that status justifies “corporate citizenship.” It’s time to declare our rights to the public realm and reclaim them. 

America could use another good rebellion. 

 

PNS Commentator Jennifer Rockne is assistant director of ReclaimDemocracy.org, a non-profit organization dedicated to restoring citizen authority over corporations.


S.F.’s Summer of Love lives on in new novel

By Sari Friedman Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday September 03, 2001

The differences between reality, fiction and spirit blur in “The Other Side of Haight,” the new novel by James Fadiman, the cofounder of The Institute of Transperson Psychology and director of the Institute of Noetic Sciences.  

The story takes place in a San Francisco gently but firmly exploding into the summer of love, with two very different characters. One is a groovy, achingly young runaway named Shadow Dancer; the other is one of her lovers Angelo — an ivy league straight guy who had intended to spend his time busily earning brownie points in a secret CIA-sponsored study that was being conducted on unwitting male whorehouse clientele.  

Both characters — and even the air itself — seem to shimmer with awareness, vulnerability, hope and the excitement of entering the greatest spiritual adventure of their lives. 

This book will be like floating right back to a familiar cloud if you were there at the first Be-In at Golden Gate Park, the everyday life of the street on places like Haight-Ashbury or hanging out with the likes of Ken Kesey and Alan Ginsberg and other famous explorers of the 60s at Janis Joplin concerts fragrant with pot.  

If you weren’t there, and instead, like me, reached adulthood only to find, disappointingly, that the 60s seemed smoked and gone — despite all the parents and teachers who’d gone quite gray worrying that every child who didn’t get to bed by 8 p.m. would end up pregnant or impregnating, hooked on LSD, long-haired and too-groovy-for-words — this book will be like finally getting to that elusive state of consciousness-expanding Be-In at last.  

James Fadiman aims to have captured it all, trying to be accurate with both the facts and the feelings of this exuberant, amazing and highly remarkable period. 

In fact, the most astonishing details in the book come from real events, as James Fadiman explains, “It is true that ‘The Agency’ funded and ran a whorehouse in San Francisco and that it was used as a laboratory to observe how subjects would react to being given LSD and other drugs without their knowledge.”  

And yet this book is most truly a tribute to such psychedelics, in the words of Terence McKenna, one of the great explorers of inner space: “If psychedelics don’t ready you for the great beyond, then I don’t know what really does. ... I have an absolute faith that the universe prefers joy and distills us with joy. That is what religion is trying to download to us, and this is what every moment of life is trying to do — if we can open to it.”


Music

Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

 

924 Gilman Sept. 7: Carry On, Champion, Breaker Breaker, Saturday Supercade, Fields of Fire; Sept. 8: Lab Rats, Relative; Most shows $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless noted. 924 Gilman St. 525-9926 

 

Albatross Pub Sept. 5: Whiskey Brothers; Sept. 6: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 11: Mad & Eddie Duran Jazz Duo; Sept. 13: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 19: Whiskey Brothers; Sept. 20: Kenji “El Lebrijano” Flamenco Guitar; Sept. 22: Larry Stefl Jazz Quartet; All shows begin at 9 p.m. 1822 San Pablo Ave. 843-2473  

albatrosspub@mindspring.com  

 

Café Eclectica Sept. 8: 8 p.m. SF Improv, Free. 1309 Solano Ave. 326-6124 www.sfimprov.com 

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. Sept. 10: Lucy Lang Day; Sept. 17: Marc Hofstadter (book party); Sept. 24: Jim Watson-Gove; All shows free, 7 - 10 p.m. 

 

Cal Performances Sept. 6: 8 p.m. King Sunny Ade & His African Beats, $20 - $32; Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Tania Libertad, $18 - $30; Sept. 30: 7 p.m. Kronos Quartet, David Barron, $30; Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley Campus, Bancroft Way at Telegraph, 642-0212, tickets@calperfs.berkeley.edu 

 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Every Friday, 10 p.m. - 2 a.m., Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Splif Skankin and Funky Man. $10; Sept. 3: 2 - 8 p.m. Big West Coast Harmonica Bash, afternoon benefit for Red Archibald. $10 donation; Doors open at 8 p.m. unless noted. 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 7: Tom Russell w/ Andrew Hardin, $16.50; Sept. 8: The House Jacks, $17.50; Sept. 9: Erika Luckett, $16.50; Sept. 11: Don Walser, Slaid Cleaves, $16.50; Sept. 12: Andy Irvine, $17.50; Sept. 13: Piper Heisig birthday revue and fund raiser w/ Kate Brislin, Sylvia Herold, Tony Marcus, Carlos Reyes, and Radim Zenkl, $16.50; Sept. 14: Ray Wylie Hubbard, $16.50; Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jupiter Sept. 4: Beth Waters Band; Sept. 5: Presidents Breakfast; Sept. 6 Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 7: Crater; Sept. 10: Ben Graves Trio; Sept. 11: Len Patterson Trio; Sept. 12: Bitches Brew; Sept. 13: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 14: Carlos Washington & Giant People Ensemble; Sept. 15: Kooken & Hoomen; Sept. 18: The Goodbye Flowers; Sept. 19: New Monsoon; Sept. 20: Beatdown w/ DJs Delon, Yamu, and Add1; Sept. 21: Netwerk: Electric; Sept. 22: New Garde Philosophers; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

 

La Peña Cultural Center Sept. 11 & 12: 8 p.m. Irakere, $22; In the Cafe, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Alice Arts Sept. 8: 7:30 p.m. Benefit concert for freedom of U.S. political prisoners featuring Fred Ho (solo) and The Eddie Gale Unit. $12; 1428 Alice, Oakland, 539-0050 www.thejerichomovement.com/teardownthewalls 


County school budget battle is finally over

By Ben Lumpkin Daily Planet staff
Monday September 03, 2001

After a months-long battle about budgeting priorities that seemed mired in stalemate, Alameda County Superintendent of Schools Sheila Jordan and the county Board of Education finally passed a budget Tuesday. 

“This agreement means that we can now turn all of our attention back to providing our services to the students, teachers and parents of Alameda County,” Jordan said in a statement. 

“It also suggests that we can work together, despite strong differences about our priorities.” 

Back in May, the prospect of Jordan being able to work with the board seemed so slim that state Superintendent of Education Delaine Eastin felt compelled to write a strongly worded letter, reminding the county office that its funding could be cut off if a budget was not submitted in a timely manner. 

“The consequences of not adopting and filing your budget as the law specifies are too great to disregard,” Eastin wrote at the time. 

Despite the warning, however, a majority of the board members were so disappointed with Jordan’s proposed budget, and with her alleged refusal respond to their concerns with thorough explanations, that they planned to pass their own alternative budget.  

At one point, they even threatened to cut Jordan’s salary by as much as 20 percent as a measure of their dissatisfaction. The idea was later abandoned. 

Jordan countered that the board’s complaints were politically motivated, and that, in fact, she was doing more than any county superintendent had done in years to provide accurate and detailed budget information to the board. 

The county office’s $30 million budget pays the salaries of county administrative staff who support the 18 school districts in Alameda County by providing expert budget support, data processing and training for teachers and administrators, among other things. County officials visited Berkeley Monday, providing a detailed explanation of what Berkeley school district administrators must do if they want the state to approve their budget.  

The county office is also charged with operating some small, specialized schools that serve about 600 of the most “at risk” students in the county, ranging from high school dropouts to youth incarcerated in juvenile hall. 

One of the primary issues of contention between Jordan and the board, until this week, was Jordan’s desire to provide a 10 percent raise for county office staff — something the board didn’t think was financially feasible.  

Jordan argued that her top staffers were already underpaid, compared to other county offices, and would probably leave the Alameda office for greener pastures if a raise was not forthcoming. But board members said Jordan had failed to convince them that there was money in the budget to provide the raises without detracting from the programs and county-operated schools. 

Another issue of contention came when Jordan tried to put an end to the practice in which the county office directed hundreds of thousands of dollars from its general fund to cover a continuing budget shortfall for county-operated schools. Jordan argued that the money should be directed back towards support services the county office provides to school districts – budget support, teacher training, etc. – while board members felt strongly that it should continue to be spent on school programs. 

“County schools serve kids who come from probation, foster homes and child protective services,” said Jerome Wiggins, Alameda County Board of Education vice president. Wiggins represents an area that includes Berkeley. “They bring a lot of baggage to the table, and the services [the county provides] are expensive. We felt that the superintendent’s budget was making us take a step back in those services.” 

In the end, with the mediation of individuals from the California County Superintendents Association and the Association of School Boards, the two sides reached a compromise in the budget approved Tuesday. They directed $200,000 of general fund money to school program support instead of the $850,000 originally sought by the board majority. Another $200,000 was designated for salary increases sought by Jordan. 

In interviews Friday, however, both Jordan and Wiggins agreed that the differences in budget priorities have not been completely resolved. Jordan said she would continue to push for the county office to play a greater role in supporting the county’s 18 school districts. 

“I want services that are meaningful,” Jordan said. “I’m attempting to fulfill my campaign promises and make [this office] visible and relevant.” 

Wiggins said he’s been on the board nearly 20 years. In all that time, he said, the county office has not provided much in the way of direct services to Alameda County school districts aside from the budget oversight mandated by law. 

“A lot of the services that she’s talking about providing to school districts many of these school districts already do themselves,” Wiggins said. 

Instead of trying to expand the office’s role as a service provider for other districts, Wiggins wants to see more resources directed to the schools operated directly by the county.  

The budget approved Tuesday did add 10 staff positions to bolster the county office’s student programs.


Cal women survive a scare from Michigan, win 4-2

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

In a game filled with quick momentum changes and several spectacular goals, the Cal Bears pulled out of a first-half funk to defeat Michigan, 4-2, in the final game of the Cal Invitational. 

Cal forward Kyla Sabo scored two goals, including the go-ahead score in the 69th minute, and had one assist in the game at Edwards Stadium. Forwards Laura Schott and Kassie Doubrava also scored for the Bears, while the Wolverines got both goals from Amy Sullivant. 

The Bears came out slowly to start the game, knocking the ball around the field nicely without getting into much of an attack. Sullivant gave them a jolt in the eighth minute, skipping past two Cal defenders and beating freshman goalkeeper Mallory Moser to open the scoring. The Wolverines were energized by taking the lead, and created several more opportunities in the next few minutes. Cal, on the other hand, was hitting through balls and flicking headers on to no one, sitting back on their heels. 

“Hopefully we learned a lesson in the first half today,” Cal head coach Kevin Boyd said after the game. “We need to create an atmosphere before games that gets us playing hard, and we didn’t have that today.” 

Doubrava nearly poached a goal in the 30th minute, going after a miskick by Michigan’s Vicky Whitley, but goalkeeper Bre Bennett just beat her to the ball. Schott got off a shot a minute later that Bennett saved easily, one of seven saves in the game. 

The Wolverines nearly went up two goals shortly after, as forward Abby Crumpton blew by Kathleen Cain for an open shot, but Moser dove onto the ball. 

The Bears finally broke through in the 25th minute, as midfielder Brittany Kirk put a cross high in the box. Schott took it on a bounce and volleyed it to the far post past Bennett to tie the score, and it looked like Cal was back in control. 

But Sullivant wasn’t ready to give up. She took a pass from Theresa Dwyer just outside the box and drove a spectacular shot into the top of the net just over Moser’s outstretched hands. 

Sullivant was taking advantage of a rare start up front on Sunday. The junior is usually the Wolverines’ left defender, a role in which she earned All-Big-10 honors last season. But Michigan coach Debbie Rademacher put her up front against the Bears to give her team more firepower, and it paid off. 

“We wanted to get her mobility and strength up there,” Rademacher said. “She really came through for us today.” 

Boyd’s team looked crestfallen after Sullivant’s second goal. They managed a few more shots on goal in the half, but were clearly out of kilter heading into the locker room. 

The Bears continued to possess the ball most of the time in the second half, moving the ball from side to side with ease, but it took a set play for them to tie the score again. They earned a corner kick with a quick counter-attack, and Doubrava put the ball up into the sun. Sabo appeared to be the only one to see it, and she hit a header into the net before anyone could react. 

It looked for a moment as if Sullivant had one more heroic moment up her sleeve, taking the ball past two defenders to the baseline and sliding it across the box just past Moser’s dive. But no Wolverines were in support, and the ball rolled merrily all the way through to the opposite sideline. 

Boyd brought in freshman forward Kacy Hornor to give the Bears more energy up front, but Hornor blew her first chance, hitting a Kirk cross well over an open goal from eight yards out. But the University High (San Francisco) product didn’t give up, and ended up creating the go-ahead goal a few minutes later. Taking the ball near midfield, the 5-foot-9 Hornor shed two Michigan defenders, juked past another and put Sabo through with a through pass. Sabo slid the ball just under Bennett with the outside of her right foot for her second goal of the game, and the Bears finally had a lead after 69 minutes of play. 

“Kacy has the ability to impact a game when she puts her mind to it,” Boyd said. “When she really wants a goal, she can go out and generate one.” 

Sabo nearly had a hat trick minutes later, as Hornor headed an Ashley Mueller cross to her, but Bre Bennett saved Sabo’s tepid header. 

The final nail in the Wolverines’ coffin came in the 84th minute. Schott used a nifty heel chip to blow past a defender, then slid the ball to Sabo in the left corner. When Sabo put the ball across the box, Doubrava managed to put the ball into the back of the net with a sliding shot. It was a beautiful example of what Boyd pictured when he decided to put three forwards on the field this year, using all three attackers to get an important goal. 

“The new system is more dynamic, and we create more opportunities up front,” Sabo said. “With teams concentrating on Laura so much this year, it gives the rest of us more chances to do something.”


Workshop titles are reflective of shocking racism towards Zionism

Shabnam Piryaei Berkeley
Monday September 03, 2001

Editor: 

 

Perhaps many read over the quote from Hillel member Scott Newman, (Campus activists call for end to ‘Israeli Apartheid,’Aug. 31) about the Zionist workshops recently held which left a few students feeling “a little undereducated.” However, as a member of Students for Justice in Palestine, one workshop title proved to be quite disturbing. This workshop, titled “Dealing with Muslim and Palestinian Groups on Campus” is shockingly prejudice, and simultaneously reflective of the double standard nature of media towards Zionism. Neither am I a Muslim, nor am I Palestinian, however, I sincerely take offense at the topics on which the Hillel members are being trained, and the black and white nature in which it is being presented. 

The overly simplistic view presented in the article of Jew vs. Muslim is strategically misleading from the real issues: the denial of the Right of 

Return for thousands of Palestinian refugees for over 53 years, the U.S. funded Israeli warplanes bombing Palestinian villages, hundreds of Palestinian schools being shut down. The list goes on and on. And yet the Hillel continues freely naming their workshops “Dealing with Muslim and Palestinian Groups.” Had Students for Justice in Palestine titled one of their workshops “Dealing with Jewish Groups on Campus,” what would the reaction be? Their would be a mad outcry of anti-semitism, and rightfully so. However, does that mean that prejudice and ignorant generalizations towards Muslims deserve no name? My participation in Students for Justice in Palestine is not to fight a religious battle, nor to win a battle of “how to answer” this or that organization. I am a part of this movement because I refuse to deny the rights of the blatantly oppressed society of Palestinians, as with so many other colonized societies. 

 

 

Shabnam Piryaei  

Berkeley


Senior’s home benefits from repairs

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Monday September 03, 2001

All Florence Murray, 82, wanted when she called the city three weeks ago was some help installing a new water heater she had just purchased. 

Murray, a retired day care worker, had no way of knowing the phone call would mobilize a small army of workers who would descend on her home to repair windows, replace old plumbing, weather strip doorways, seismically retrofit the walls and insulate her attic.  

In addition to the work done on her home, she also now has a new microwave oven, newly installed energy-efficient fluorescent lighting and has new refrigerator on order.  

And none of it cost Murray a cent.  

“I called and they came the very next day and didn’t stop until they had done all this work,” Murray said. “And on top of the that they were punctual, professional and very kind.” 

Murray, who has lived her Hearst Avenue home for 50 years, called a friend who works for the city and asked if there was some way she could get help installing a recently-purchased water heater to replace the one that had given out. 

Her friend gave her the number of the Low-Income Minor Home Repair Program, a nonprofit which shares offices with the city’s Household Energy Assistance Program. 

Murray explained her situation to Peter Menard Warwick of the home repair program and he sent her an application. The next day she stopped by the office for some help filling out the application form. She was assisted by Dwight Nathaniel, the weatherization supervisor for the energy assistance program. 

“While we were filling out the application, I noticed that she qualified for a number of city programs,” Nathaniel said. “I knew we could do some things for her and I made an appointment for one of my inspectors to take a look at her home.” 

Energy Officer Neil De Snoo said Murray only had to fill one application to receive the benefits of the three programs she qualified for.  

“There’s real tight network in that office so applicants don’t have to go back and apply again and again for each program,” he said. “We can provided applicants with a total package.” 

De Snoo said the city currently has a variety of programs to help seniors and low-income home owners and renters make their homes more energy efficient. He said the programs are funded by a combination of federal, state and city funds.  

The three programs Murray qualified for were the Low Income Household Energy Assistance Program, which provides payment assistance for PG&E bills, the energy office’s Free Weatherization program, which installs insulation and energy efficient devices and the Minor Home Repair Program, which primarily assists seniors with home repairs. 

Murray said she first moved into the home with her husband, Harold and their four children in the 1950s. She said her four children all went to school in Berkeley and still live in the Bay Area. Currently, she has two grandchildren living with her. Her husband, who worked at Mare Island, passed away in 1977.  

She said she had never asked the city for help and was overwhelmed with the response she received. 

“I had to call the mayor’s office and tell them how grateful I was,” she said. “I’m so happy to live in Berkeley, it’s a great city to be a senior in.” 

The mayor’s executive assistant, Jennifer Drapeau, said that Murray’s call was great to receive. “It’s so nice to hear from someone like her who has lived here for so long,” she said. “It gave us all a good feeling the city was able to help her.” 

Nathaniel said helping Murray gave everybody in the office a similar special feeling.  

“We get a lot reward from helping everybody that comes to the office,” he said. “But every now and again someone like Mrs. Murray comes along that makes you feel a little bit extra special about being able to help.” 

 

For more information about the Low-Income Household Energy Assistance Program call (510) 644-8544. For more information about the Low-Income Minor Home Repair Program call (510) 644-8546. For all other energy services call (510) 981-5434.


One dead in early morning roll-over

Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

The California Highway Patrol reports a solo vehicle accident occurred on northbound Interstate 880 at Fifth Avenue in Oakland early Sunday morning, killing one man and leaving another with major injuries. 

According to a CHP spokesman, at about 2:15 a.m., a 1995 black Chevrolet Camaro carrying two men veered off the road and rolled over several times down a right-hand shoulder embankment and across the Oak Street off-ramp before coming to rest on Sixth Street. 

The spokesman said the two victims were transported to Highland Hospital.


Workers call for legalizing immigrant laborers

By Deborah Kong AP Minority Issues Writer
Monday September 03, 2001

SAN JOSE – Union leaders and workers took to church pulpits on Labor Day weekend to demand legal status for undocumented immigrant workers. 

“The problem of legalization is a reality. Our faith tells us we have to create a more just community,” said Rosalino Pedres, a union organizer who spoke after Mass at Christ the King Catholic Church in San Jose. “We can make a difference if we decide to put our faith into action.” 

Workers and labor leaders also voiced their support for legalizing immigrant workers in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and other cities with large immigrant populations, 

Their appeals came as President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox prepared to meet later this week to discuss issues including immigration reform. 

However, a detailed plan for granting legal status to some of the 3 million Mexicans living illegally in the United States will not be announced, as some had hoped. Facing conservative opposition, Bush abandoned plans for announcing an agreement on immigration during Fox’s visit, and instead they will outline principles and a framework for immigration reform. 

Pedres asked church members to imagine being unable to buy homes, being forced by landlords to leave their apartments and losing their jobs after working for many years. Undocumented immigrants have no protections against these things, said Pedres, 36, a former janitor who came to the United States from Mexico in 1986. 

“Who would support a legalization in this room?” Pedres asked. Most of the 225 people attending the service silently raised their hands. 

The annual labor-in-the-pulpits events are organized by the AFL-CIO and the National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice. At other churches, mosques and synagogues across the country, labor and religious leaders spoke about workers’ issues including living wages and affordable housing. 

After the service in San Jose, union organizers asked church members to sign cards asking officials to support national immigration reform and legalization, affordable housing and tenants rights. 

Legalization “will help everybody that’s undocumented. I suffered a lot so I could be in this country,” said Luis Garcia, 51, who attended the services. “I needed to give a better future to my children.” 

Garcia came to the United States from Mexico in 1970 in search of job opportunities. He benefited from amnesty in 1986, when Congress granted legal status to 2.7 million illegal immigrants. 

Since then, Garcia said, “I’ve been a lot more at peace. Before then, I had that fear the INS could grab me at anytime and I could lose my dreams.” 

Others said granting undocumented immigrants legal status could make a difference for their children. Currently, undocumented students do not qualify for the lower tuition charged residents who attend in-state colleges and universities, even if they have lived there most of their lives. Instead, they must pay higher college and university tuition charged to out-of-state students. 

Maria Nunez, 42, said she can’t afford that for her 17-year-old son, Alberto Reyes. 

“He’s been a very good student and he really wants to go to college and he says ’Mom, I can’t dream because I can’t go to college,”’ said Nunez, who is undocumented. 

Nunez said she has been forced to leave janitorial jobs when employers find she is undocumented, forcing her to jump from job to job. 

“I’ve worked hard, and many times I’ve been left out of work,” she said.


Grandmother chases down carjacker, saves infant

Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – A San Francisco man was arrested in connection with a carjacking with a child in the car. 

The child’s grandmother, who was loading shopping bags into the back of the car with her husband, was hurt when she jumped in front of the car to prevent the man from driving off. The grandfather hailed another driver and followed the car onto Highway 101 and then onto side streets. 

The carjacker stopped and fled on foot, and the infant was still inside, unharmed. 

Residents of the neighborhood told the police a man matching the carjacker’s description had gotten on a Muni bus, where he was arrested. 

The grandmother suffered minor injuries.


BART unions issue a transportation strike warning

The Associated Press
Monday September 03, 2001

OAKLAND – BART’s largest workers’ unions issued a 72-hour strike notice Saturday night as negotiations over a requested salary and benefits increase continued through the long weekend. 

The unions said they gave the required notice to alert the public to the possibility of a strike, which would begin 12:01 a.m. Wednesday if workers do not receive a contract offer they find satisfactory. 

On Friday, BART’s board of directors presented a proposal to the unions offering a wage and benefits increase of about 20 percent over the next four years. 

“We feel that’s an excellent package... we feel it keeps our workers at the top of the industry,” BART General Manager Thomas Margro told KCBS Radio. “It responds to their concerns about the cost of living in the Bay area.” 

Union members have said the offer is not enough to keep them off the picket lines and have presented BART directors with a counteroffer. 

BART spokesman Mike Healy said Friday that management was prepared to negotiate through the long weekend. 

BART commuters already were searching for alternative transportation in case they return from the holiday to a silent fleet of trains.


Once off-limits, Bay Area to house power plants

The Associated Press
Monday September 03, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Thirteen new power plants are in the works for the San Francisco Bay area, a new home for the structures that was once considered off-limits to their development. 

The Bay Area often has to rely on power from other areas, but can only bring in a limited amount because of high-voltage wire constraints. The 13 proposed power plants could help alleviate that problem by offering more than 6,200 megawatts, enough to power about 4.5 million homes. 

Some of the plants may not get built, but the number is still high for the area. The only other area with so much new power proposed is the large area encompassed by Kern and San Luis Obispo counties. 

That concerns some residents, who aren’t sure there’s a need for so many new power plants, especially the 600-megawatts Metcalf Energy Center in south San Jose, that some fear will pollute the air and water. 

But California needs the electricity, including extra power during critical periods, say officials with Calpine Corp., the San Jose-based power company that hopes to build the Metcalf center. 

At least one of the proposed projects is in trouble, though. The 550-megawat plant that AES would like to build in South San Francisco has made little progress in the last three years, and a spokesman for the company said its future is unclear.


Grocery workers extend contract to discuss offers

The Associated Press
Monday September 03, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – More than 20,000 employees of Albertson’s and Safeway throughout Northern California agreed Saturday to extend their contract until midnight Sept. 8 

Nine chapters of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union are negotiating a four-year contract with the grocers, which are competitors. 

Union spokesman Daniel Beagle says the extra week gives both sides more time to look over proposed changes to health care and pension programs. 

“If there’s going to be a strike, our attitude is let’s look at every possible opportunity to avoid it,” Beagle said. 

Safeway and Albertson’s formed a so-called “mutual strike assistance agreement” to negotiate and prepare for a possible strike. 

The grocers are displaying signs looking for replacement workers if there is a strike. But union officials say no labor action is imminent. 

The union is seeking raises of between 75 cents and $1.50 per hour, depending on classification, each year of a new contract. The union also hopes to increase the current number of full-time workers.


Judge puts limits on application of pesticide near Monterey schools

The Associated Press
Monday September 03, 2001

MONTEREY – A Monterey County Superior Court judge has ordered strawberry growers near two schools to limit the amount of the pesticide methyl bromide that they apply to their fields near two schools. 

Agricultural officials complained that the ruling, which affects Pajaro Middle School and La Joya School in Salinas, could drive some growers out of business. 

The ruling was the result of a suit, brought by Sergio Carrillo who lives near the Pajaro school, against the state Department of Pesticide Regulation and the county Agricultural Commissioner’s office. The suit maintains that state and county officials have not protected people living near the schools after air quality tests showed levels of the pesticide that exceeded state guidelines. 

The state’s target threshold is 1 part per billion for children over an eight-week period and 2 parts per billion for adults. In October and November, the state Department of Pesticide Regulation tested the air at six schools in Monterey and Santa Cruz counties. The air around the Pajaro school measured 7.7 parts per billion, and 3.8 parts per billion near La Joya School.


State agencies accused of driving up power prices

By Karen Gaudette Associated Press Writer
Monday September 03, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Management of California’s energy crunch increasingly is falling under the purview of Gov. Gray Davis, which allows decisions affecting electric bills to be made in secret, a state official who opposes Davis said Friday. 

Secretary of State Bill Jones also said managers of the state’s power grid have ordered power plants to reduce their electricity output so power previously bought by the state for billions of dollars could fetch a better price. 

Jones, who plans to seek the Republican nomination to challenge Davis in the 2002 gubernatorial race, said he will ask federal energy regulators to investigate such incidents. He called on the state Democratic leadership to help maintain public scrutiny of the state’s energy decisions. 

“The charges of market manipulation deserve an answer now,” Jones said at a news conference. 

Lorie O’Donley, a spokeswoman for the Independent System Operator that manages California’s power grid, said that asking power plants to boost or reduce their output is a matter of course and necessary for balancing supply and demand. Unlike natural gas, extra electricity cannot be stored for later use. 

“Part of balancing the system is ordering plants to increase their output or ramp down their output,” O’Donley said. 

The state has accused several power companies of illegally driving up electricity prices using the same methods, and has asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to order those companies to refund the state $9 billion in overcharges. 

A FERC administrative law judge has indicated the state might see $1 billion in refunds. 

The state has committed about $43 billion to buying power over the next 15 years. Due to increased conservation, cool weather and increased output this summer, the state was forced several times to sell a sudden surplus of power for pennies on the dollar, losing millions. 

Jones accused officials with the Department of Water Resources — the agency which since January has spent more than $9 billion buying power for the customers of three ailing utilities — of urging the ISO to order power plants to produce less power so the state’s energy surplus would shrink. 

Oscar Hidalgo, a DWR spokesman, said the water department follows the ISO’s lead, and that the DWR had not asked generators to ramp their electricity output up or down. 

Jones, along with consumer advocates, utilities and business groups are protesting an upcoming decision by the Public Utilities Commission that would allow the DWR to pass rate hikes straight through to electric bills without public review. 

Davis has said such autonomy is necessary to show Wall Street the state has a dependable — and adjustable — inflow of ratepayer money. The state plans to issue some $12.5 billion in bonds to recoup some of its power expenses. 

“We need to keep oversight and accountability within the PUC,” Jones said. “Why would the people of Califorina want to lose what little oversight they have?”


Future unclear for hallowed longshore hiring halls

By Leslie Gornstein AP Business Writer
Monday September 03, 2001

WILMINGTON – Wedged into a blue-collar neighborhood by the sea and partially walled off by cinder blocks sits an unlikely memorial to one of the bloodiest labor strikes in U.S. history. 

Hiring halls like the one for International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 13 are among the most important prizes won by Depression-era dockworkers who were beaten, shot and tear-gassed while picketing for better conditions on July 5, 1934. 

Now the dockworkers’ employers at the Pacific Maritime Association want to scrap the halls in favor of a call-in or Internet-based system they hope would boost productivity by 30 percent or more. Union members say they won’t let it happen. 

The issue is expected to be a sticking point when the longshore workers’ contract with West Coast cargo carriers ends in July. 

The carriers deal with every western port between Canada and Mexico, handling cargo that represents an estimated 7 to 9 percent of the U.S. economy. Among other goals, the companies want to install equipment that would speed the movement of cargo and better track containers. 

They also hope to shorten training periods and improve safety by having dockworkers take permanent assignments from individual employers, rather than getting a new employer with each shift, as is currently done. That proposal would eliminate the need for hiring halls. 

“Our average start time on a ship is 15 minutes to half-hour late,” PMA president Joe Miniace said. “That translates into a lot of lost productivity over the course of a week, month, year.” 

Union members retort that the halls are the heart of their organization, and without a gathering place union locals would lose strength. 

“The chances of doing away with the hiring hall is absolutely zero,” said Gig Larson, a business agent for ILWU Local 32 in Everett, Wash. “The employers would have to pay us so much money it isn’t even funny.” 

Larson said he doesn’t like to imagine what labor legend Harry Bridges would think of the proposal. Bridges, who led the rank and file during the 1934 strike, is still remembered during the union’s annual Harry Bridges Day. 

“He would roll over in his grave if we gave up the hiring hall,” Larson said. 

During the pre-hiring-hall era, men stood by the waterfront for days, seeking work from foremen patrolling the area. 

The foremen, known as “little dukes” because of their influence, demanded bribes and even sexual favors from workers’ wives before offering assignments, according to historians. 

“It was almost like a slave market and was deeply resented,” said David Wellman, a sociology professor and author of the book “The Union Makes Us Strong.” 

“In modern sociological language, it would be called a ritual of humiliation. To get work, you had to humiliate yourself,” Wellman said. 

After 1934, the halls eliminated that corruption by giving the union more control over work assignments. The system grew democratic, with union members who had logged the fewest work hours getting first dibs on new assignments. 

Today roughly one-third of the nation’s unions, mostly in the building and construction trades, use hiring halls, according to the AFL-CIO. 

At Local 13, workers gather to play poker at a cafeteria-style table and smoke cigarettes under a “No Smoking” sign when not seeking work. 

Last month, the Local 13 longshore hall handed out 20,000 individual assignments, using a squadron of dispatchers on headsets to announce jobs ranging from carpentry to crane driving. 

“The system works, and it keeps everybody in a balance,” said Local 13 President Ramon Ponce de Leon Jr. 

Miniace said he respects workers’ feelings about the halls and is willing to keep them open during heavy work days. But he’s also determined to bring what he calls an out-of-date system into the new millennium. 

“As we move into a new century, we have to adapt to a new environment,” Miniace said.


California prepares for drought as water levels fall

By Don Thompson Associated Press Writer
Monday September 03, 2001

GRANITE BAY – Bony tree branches poke out of Folsom Lake now, skeletons from the forest that drowned when Folsom Dam was built east of Sacramento a half-century ago. 

Hundreds of yards of dry lake bottom lie beyond the concrete boat ramps and asphalt parking lots, miring Annette Poole and Jessie Baker of Antelope axle-deep in sand recently as they dragged Poole’s 18-foot outboard from the water. 

“It’s not as big a lake as it used to be,” said Scott Deitzel of Citrus Heights as he pulled his 24-foot inboard up a makeshift ramp. “There’s a lot of new islands now.” 

State and local water officials aren’t panicking. Not yet. 

But they’re launching a new drought-preparedness Web site this month and a series of workshops this fall just in case this winter is as dry as last. 

Another dry winter could presage a drought that could have far-reaching consequences for the state’s rapid development and the lush irrigated farmland that sends fruits and vegetables across the nation. 

“We’ve had six good years, six wet-to-average years in a row, so we haven’t had to worry in a while,” said Jeanine Jones, drought preparedness manager for the Department of Water Resources. 

Things have changed for the worse since California’s last drought, which ran six years from 1987 to 1992 and forced half the state’s counties to declare drought emergencies. 

The state has added more than 6 million people, and it’s negotiating with other states to cut its overuse of Colorado River water. And environmental concerns have moved to the forefront to protect San Francisco Bay, the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, and five fish species that have been declared endangered since the last dry spell. 

“I guess it’s too many people, not enough water and electricity,” said Mike Arcuri of Roseville, pointing across drying Folsom Lake. “I grew up water skiing out there, and it was never like this.” 

Though statewide precipitation wasn’t much below average last winter, an early snowmelt and unusually hot spring drew reservoir levels down early, said Pierre Stevens, the state’s lead water supply forecaster. 

Some relatively small coastal reservoirs actually are above average, Stevens said, but the large inland storage lakes are substantially below average. 

“The reservoir levels were dropping in early summer when they normally would have been rising,” he said. “Coming off a string of wet years before that, that’s what people are remembering. So it’s not that unusual. The big concern is what happens if it’s another dry year?” 

The state is planning five workshops in October and November for large water agencies that could be hit hard by a drought, and six seminars during the same period for rural homeowners who could see their private wells dry up during a prolonged dry spell. 

Rural residents who depend on well water, dryland ranchers and isolated North Coast and Sierra foothill communities are the first likely to be hit, according to a DWR report last year titled: “Preparing for California’s Next Drought.” 

Residents generally respond by hauling water and drilling new wells, further draining the water table. During the last drought’s peak, 25,000 new wells were drilled each year, up from fewer than 15,000 in non-drought years. 

The worst economic damage would likely affect the western San Joaquin Valley, where dry conditions are exacerbated by federal water restrictions, the report predicted. 

Already this year, many San Joaquin fields have been left unplanted. Yet the water-restricted areas of the valley are where much of the growth has occurred in orchards and vineyards that need water in good and bad years. 

The DWR already is considering whether it would operate a water purchasing program — buying water from those who have it and distributing it to those who need it — as it did during the last drought. Yet, nearly a third of California’s counties have since restricted water exports in an effort to save the increasingly scarce resource for their own needs. 

Falling lake levels and farmers’ confrontation with federal authorities over water in the Klamath Basin have rekindled the debate over California’s water supply, as some warn a water shortage could soon dwarf this year’s energy crisis. 

Sen. Maurice Johannessen, R-Redding, called the Klamath conflict along the California-Oregon border “the canary in the mine” that keeled over to warn of what he fears will be “a major water crisis.” 

The state has constructed no major reservoirs in more than 30 years, and a report last week by a Senate select committee chaired by Johannessen warned that the state isn’t building new storage fast enough. 

It is far more politically and environmentally feasible to enlarge existing reservoirs than to build new ones, said Robert Stackhouse, manager of the Central Valley Project Water Association, serving 3 million acres and several communities. 

Plans are underway to raise dams at Lake Shasta near Redding in Northern California, Millerton Lake on the San Joaquin River near Fresno, the Los Vaqueros Reservoir near Livermore, and to build a new Sites Reservoir near Williams. But those projects are five to seven years from construction. 

In addition, there are efforts to bank water underground, which brings less environmental damage but takes more energy to store and recover. 

“We wish we had more reservoirs, given the environmental needs and growing water needs throughout the state,” said California Farm Bureau spokesman David Kranz. “Even full reservoir levels don’t necessarily equate to full water supplies for farmers as they used to.”


Opinion

Editorials

Firecrackers may have caused Thursday’s blaze

By Kenyatte Davis Daily Planet staff
Saturday September 08, 2001

By Kenyatte Davis 

Daily Planet staff 

 

A fire that broke out in an apartment building at 10 p.m. Thursday, may have been the result of six youths playing with firecrackers, according to the Berkeley Fire Department. 

Firefighters thought they had the fire at 2534 Piedmont Ave. contained to the garage of the three-story building and several companies were released after 15 minutes. However, firefighters later discovered that the blaze had made its way to the center of the building within the structure’s walls and the released companies were recalled. Firefighters were forced to knock out portions of the walls, floors and ceiling on all three levels to gain access to the fire which was kept ablaze by stucco in portions of walls that were added after the original construction had been competed. Firefighters wrestled the flames well into Friday morning and maintained a fire-watch until 7 a.m. 

The youths that may be responsible for starting the fire were seen inside and around the garage, which had a non-operational door, moments before the blaze started. According to a Fire Department report, an empty “handheld fireworks candle” was found across the street from the fire and is a “strong indication” that the youths’ fireworks were the cause of the fire. 

The burnt material includes carpeting, a sofa, a chair and a car that was parked in the garage. 

The city housing and fire prevention personnel are investigating the possibility that the third floor of the building was illegally constructed.  


Citing high fire danger, rangers close Mount Diablo State Park

The Associated Press
Friday September 07, 2001

WALNUT CREEK — Rangers at Mount Diablo State Park decided Thursday to close the entire area because of high fire danger. 

Supervising Ranger Dave Matthews said that high winds and low humidity have created extremely dangerous conditions in the East Bay park, causing officials to take the precautionary measure of closing it to all visitors. 

“The closure affects all vehicles, pedestrians, bicycles, horses — everybody,” Matthews said. 

Rangers will reevaluate the situation Friday morning to determine whether the park can be reopened. 

Matthews said the 20,000-acre park usually closes several times each year in September and October as northeast winds start to blow. This is the first closure this year. 


Obituary

Associated Press
Thursday September 06, 2001

Doris Calloway, 78 

former UC Berkeley provost 

 

BERKELEY (AP) — Doris Calloway, an internationally recognized nutritional scientist and one of the first women provosts at the University of California, Berkeley, has died of Parkinson’s disease. 

Calloway, who was 78, died last Friday at a nursing home in Seattle. 

Calloway was appointed professor of nutrition at Berkeley in 1963 and shortly after started the Penthouse studies, which later became a model for dietary research. The studies recorded in detail the food and energy needs of six volunteers who lived for several weeks on campus in an isolated environment. 

Calloway became provost for UC Berkeley’s professional schools and colleges in 1981. 

In the late 1980s Calloway led a nine-university, $14 million research project in Kenya, Egypt and Mexico aimed at understanding the causes and consequences of moderate malnutrition. In 1995, she chaired a U.S. government committee that determines dietary guidelines for Americans every five years. 

Calloway is survived by her husband of 20 years, Robert Nesheim of Seattle; a son, David Calloway of Woodland Hills, Calif.; a daughter, Candace Calloway Whiting of Seattle; two stepchildren, Sandra Rankin of Danbury, Conn.; and Barbara Mowry of Denver; and nine grandchildren.


Pact would give BART workers more than 20.5 percent raises

By Ritu Bhatnagar Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 05, 2001

OAKLAND — The tentative agreement that averted a possible BART strike will give the transit system’s workers wage and pension increases of more than 20.5 percent over four years, a union leader said Tuesday. 

“It’s not an overly generous proposal by the district,” said Bob Smith, president of the Amalgamated Transit Union, ”but we’re satisfied.” 

Union members, who were prepared to walk off the job at midnight Wednesday, now are expected to vote on the new contract Sunday or Monday. 

The unions were seeking a 20.5 percent wage increase over three years, and BART was offering an 18.5 percent raise over four years. Smith would not say exactly how much higher than 20.5 percent the agreed-upon raise would be. 

“In working hard to come to an agreement to serve the public, both parties found they needed to move to come to a settlement,” said Dorothy Dugger, BART’s deputy general manager. 

BART officials would not comment on the terms of the contract. 

BART management and unions reached a tentative agreement early Tuesday morning, averting a 2,800-worker strike. 

“I’m certainly very hopeful that the members will ratify this agreement,” Smith said. 

Unions and BART officials credited the tentative settlement in large part to the intervention of Bay Area legislators. San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown and state Sens. Don Perata, D-Oakland, and Tom Torlakson, D-Martinez, stepped into negotiations Monday night in an effort to prevent a strike that could have crippled the area’s already nightmarish commute. 

“They brought a new dynamic to the table, which helped us reach the tentative framework for a settlement,” said BART spokesman Mike Healy. “We’re relieved we have come to an agreement, and we’re pleased a strike has been averted.” 

BART’s last strike was in 1997. Perata said it would have been damaging to “the public’s goodwill if there was a second strike in four years.” 

BART initially offered an 11.5 percent pay increase over four years, but boosted it on Friday to 18.5 percent. Over the weekend, the unions reduced their request for improved salaries and benefits from 27 percent over three years to 20.5 percent. 

Commuters riding BART on Tuesday morning said they are relieved they may not have to resort to such alternatives as shuttle buses, ferries and carpools, had there been a strike. About 335,000 people use BART each weekday. 

“It would have been a slow commute,” said Jack Glaser, a professor of public policy and psychology who rides BART from San Francisco to his job at University of California, Berkeley.


Unions looking for new support as labor issues come to fore

By Leigh Strope Associated Press Labor Writer
Tuesday September 04, 2001

WASHINGTON — Caught between setbacks and opportunity, union officials think aggressive politics on issues including immigration, trade, workers’ rights and the minimum wage could help build the resurgence they have sought unsuccessfully for years. 

“Unions have more relevance than ever,” said Teamsters President James P. Hoffa. “They’re playing an ever-increasing role in national elections and in directing the debate on the way this country is going.” 

But union membership has slid despite all the talk and effort toward revival. Thousands of jobs have been lost to the faltering economy. The newly installed Bush administration attacked labor’s agenda on such issues as workplace safety regulations and union partnerships with government. 

The Teamsters and some skilled-trades unions have managed to skirt the administration as an obstacle by joining forces with Republicans on some issues. 

The promise of new jobs prompted them to back President’s Bush’s plan to open Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling despite opposition from labor’s traditional Democratic and environmental allies. The coalition even managed to carry along a reluctant AFL-CIO, which had hoped to stay on the sidelines. 

Bush was the first president in 30 years to visit a steel mill. He was welcomed by the United Steelworkers of America, which praised him for launching an investigation of foreign steel imports — something the union did not get from the Clinton administration. 

Even the economic uncertainty holds opportunity for labor. An Associated Press poll last week found that Americans by a 2-1 margin have grown more sympathetic to unions over the past couple of years in labor-business disputes. 

It’s now or never for unions to boost their numbers, said Lawrence Lorber, a Washington labor lawyer who was a deputy assistant labor secretary under President Ford. 

“If people are uncertain, that is when unions get the best opportunity to make their presence felt,” he said. 

The percentage of American workers belonging to unions fell last year to 13.5 percent, the lowest in six decades, according to the Labor Department. Union officials blamed a decline in heavily unionized industries, accompanied by job growth in nonunion parts of the economy. 

Among the big issues and campaigns that unions are tackling: 

• Immigration. The AFL-CIO, eager to reverse declining membership, last year abandoned its stance that immigrants were a threat to American jobs and started reaching out to them. Unions including the Hotel and Restaurant Employees, Service Employees International and United Farm Workers are pressing for legalization of illegal immigrants. Their campaign heats up this week during Bush’s meeting with visiting Mexican President Vicente Fox. 

• Fast track. Unions have generated advertising and thousands of phone calls, letters and e-mail messages to Congress against giving Bush increased trade authority. The effort will be stepped up this week with bus tours to factories in Alabama and California, and later in Indiana and Texas. 

• Mexican trucks. Bush wants unlimited access throughout the United States by Mexican trucks beginning Jan. 1. The Teamsters and AFL-CIO have been running ads opposing an open border. The fight moves to the House. 

• Ergonomics. Unions are awaiting a decision by Labor Secretary Elaine Chao this month on whether she will pursue a new regulation aimed at reducing workplace injuries or take a voluntary approach. Congress earlier this year repealed Clinton-era regulations that unions fought to keep. 

• Scalia: Organized labor opposes the nomination of Eugene Scalia, son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, to be the Labor Department’s top lawyer because of some of his views, including support for repealing the workplace regulations. His Senate confirmation hearing is Sept. 20. 

• Right to Work: Unions have sent dozens of workers to Oklahoma to help oppose a Sept. 25 voter referendum that would ban labor contracts that require all workers of a particular company to pay union dues or their equivalent. 

• Nissan: The United Auto Workers are seeking an organization vote among workers at a Nissan factory in Smyrna, Tenn., — the first such election in a dozen years at a foreign-owned auto plant. 

• Minimum wage: With the Senate in Democratic hands, there are plans to take up a bill this fall to raise the $5.15 hourly minimum wage. 


$45-million tram system proposed for Alameda

Staff
Monday September 03, 2001

OAKLAND – A developer is proposing a $45 million tram system to connect Alameda’s former Navy base to the West Oakland BART station. 

Randy Woolwine, a vice president with Doppelmayr, the company that would build the system, said it will be faster than driving. 

The sky gondolas would go up within five years, with 200 high-speed trams. 

But the project has numerous hurdles, including approval by at least eight agencies. It must also consider how the 300-foot towers would affect birds such as peregrine falcons, red tail hawks and the protected California least tern. 

Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown has already given the idea his support.