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UC pays tribute to victims

By Jeffrey Obser Daily Planet staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Campus officials and luminaries addressed about 12,000 students and faculty at UC Berkeley’s Memorial Glade Monday, in a solemn tribute to the victims of last week’s attacks in New York and Washington. 

Classes were suspended from noon to 2 p.m. as students and faculty packed the bowl-shaped lawn, the north terraces of the main library, and the top-floor balconies of Evans Hall for songs and brief speeches. 

The central campus, normally noisy and ebullient with a fraction as many people on the lawn, was eerily silent but for the occasional tinkle of a cell phone. The expressions on the multitudes’ faces were both sad and angry. 

“We are a different people than we were a week ago,” said Chancellor Robert M. Berdahl. He called on the university to respond by recommitting itself to openness and honest inquiry. “We have been scarred by this tragedy and we have been changed, but let us resolve here today not to change too much. We are a community of learners committed to unchanging principles. We are here because we believe that education is the basis for both freedom and civilization.” 

Berdahl borrowed H.G. Wells’ maxim that history is “a race between education and catastrophe.” 

“History,” said Staff Ombudsperson Anita Madrid, “summons our generation not only to reject barbarism but to overcome it.” She called upon those gathered “to stand up for the innocent and vulnerable in our communities who may be targets of misdirected rage.” Author Maxine Hong Kingston and former U.S. poet laureate Robert Hass, both English department professors, also made urgent appeals for peace among the widely diverse peoples of the world, and of America. 

“Terrorism does not have national characteristics,” Hass said, and portrayed the heroism of the rescue workers in New York and Washington, the small acts of coming together in times of crisis, as a universal phenomenon. “We see images of Palestinians doing the same when struck on the West Bank, images of Israelis doing the same when struck in Jerusalem,” he said. “Human beings are sometimes able to turn to one another with courage.” 

“What makes this so terrible is that these were each individual lives,” he went on. He recounted the story of a businessman who survived the Twin Towers attack only because he had delayed his arrival at a business meeting to go downstairs and fortify himself with a salmon bun. 

“If somehow the mystery of the value of each individual life is not at the center of our teaching and learning, then we have failed,” Hass said. 

Academic Senate Chair David Dowall told the story of a former urban planning student at the university who he said was among the missing at the World Trade Center. (The Daily Planet could not confirm her name by press time). At his enthusiastic recommendation, Dowall said, she had taken a job there last year with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, after working on the design for a new airport in Berlin. 

Wally Adeyemo, president of the Associated Students of the University of California, remarked that the victims had “no choice of the hour of their deaths” and encouraged the contemplative crowd not to let days or even moments slip away. Unlike the victims, he said, “You have a choice... what you’ll do, what you’ll build.” 

Several small groups in the crowd clearly intended to build a campus movement against the Bush Administration’s call for open-ended war. One group, the Berkeley Stop The War Coalition, which has announced a peace rally at Sproul Plaza on Thursday at noon, handed out lapel ribbons cut from green cloth – a color signifying peace in Islam. Lindsay LaSalle, a social welfare sophomore, and Candy Tischer, a senior in French, solicited Red Cross donations in a paper Uncle Sam hat. 

Most students, however, looked on somberly or chewed sandwiches contemplatively. A young woman wiped away tears when Joanne Liu, an ASUC senator, sang “Imagine” by John Lennon. 

After the ceremony ended, the Campanile carillon bells began pealing elegiacally and conversations resumed, mundane as what to do for lunch and weighty as whether there are things worth fighting for. 

Students had passed out scores of purple irises at the ceremony’s beginning, and attendees lay them one by one along the edges of the Reflecting Pool, which is dedicated to Cal alumni who died in World War II. (Memorial Glade is dedicated to all those who served). A campus police officer strode up slowly and made a formal salute. 

“It’s so amazing to see everybody all together,” said Mike Wilson, a public health graduate student. “I can’t remember the last time this happened.” 

Wilson said he had previously served 13 years as a fireman and paramedic, spending 56 hours a week cheek-by-jowl with his colleagues, and knew of the special mourning now being endured by so many emergency workers. 

A university staff member who asked to remain anonymous commented that Hong Kingston, the author and professor, “said ‘breathe in anger and breathe out loving happiness – kind love, peaceful love or something – and it wasn’t working for me. I was breathing in peace and breathing out anger.” 

Kingston later told a reporter that her actual words were: “Breathe in the world’s pain, and breathe out the world’s love.” 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001


Tuesday, Sept. 18

 

Safe Routes to Schools Forum 

6:30 - 8:30 p.m. 

BUSD Administration Building, 2nd Floor 

2134 MLK Jr. Way 

Bicycle Friendly Berkeley Coalition’s Safe Routes to Schools Program kicks off with an open forum attended by principals, teachers, parents and administrators from all twelve BUSD public schools participating in the program, plus School Board members, City Councilmembers, city planning, and traffic engineering staff. Light dinner and childcare will be provided. 548-RIDE 

 

Berkeley Fibromyalgia Support Group 

12 - 2 p.m. every third Tuesday 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Maffly Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

“Natural approaches to FM” with Dr. Julie Orman, network chiropractor. 601-0550 www.arthritis.org 

 

Crime Prevention 

11:50 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

A Police Department representative will provide crime prevention literature on fraud, burglaries and other public safety matters.  

644-6107 

 

Lead-Safe Painting and  

Remodeling Class 

6 p.m. - 8 p.m. 

Claremont Branch, Public Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave.  

How to paint and remodel your older house without disturbing the lead-paint. Sponsored by Alameda County Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. Free. 567-8280 www.aclppp.org 

 

Wings in the Night— 

A Celebration of Bats 

2:15 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

The Berkeley Garden Club with Rehab Education Director for the California Bat Conservation Fund, Patricia Winters. 524-4374 

 

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 

 


Wednesday, Sept. 19

 

Free Prostate Cancer Screening 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Alta Bates Medical Center 

Markstein Cancer Education & Prevention Center 

At-risk men may obtain a free prostate cancer screening by appointment. 

869-8833  

 

Fire Hill Station Neighborhood Meeting 

7 p.m. 

Martin Luther King Jr. Civic  

Center Building 

2180 Milvia St.  

Sixth Floor Conference Room 

Hill Fire Station meeting to review plans. 981-6341 

 

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 

 

Baby Bounce and Toddler Tales 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Central Library 

2090 Kittredge St. 

This participatory program for families with children up to age 3 presents multicultural stories, songs and fingerplays as entertainment. 644-6095 

 

Support Group for Family/Friends  

Caring for Older Adults 

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

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

Third floor, Room 3369B (elevator B) 

The group will focus on the needs of the older adult with serious medical problems, psychiatric illnesses, substance abuse, and their caregivers. Free. 802-1725 

Commission on Aging 

1:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. 

Open to the public.  

644-6050 

 

Gay/ Bi Men’s Book Group 

7:30 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Will discuss “Bastard Out of Carolina” by Dorothy Allison.  

559-9184  

www.bookpride.com 

 

Socratic Circle Discussions 

5 - 6 p.m. 

1309 Solano Ave. 

Cafe Eclectica 

Does your brain need a workout? All ages welcome.  

527-2344 

 

What You Need to Know Before You Build or Remodel 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Preview of the Homeowner’s Essential Course – learn to solder pipe and more. By Glen Kitzenberger. Free. 525-7610 

 

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 

 

 

 

–compiled by Guy Poole 

 

Graduate Theological Union Fall Convocation 

3:30 p.m. 

Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary Chapel 

2770 Marin Ave. 

Annual GTU gathering which celebrates the beginning of the academic year. This year’s speaker is William M. Sullivan, Senior Scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. 649-2464 

 

Natural History of East Bay Hill Paths 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Hillside Club 

2286 Cedar St. 

Panelists will be Malcom Margolin, publisher of Heyday Books; Richard Schwartz, author of Berkeley 1900, a portrait of the city drawn from Century-old newspaper stories; Steve Edwards, director of the East Bay Regional Parks Botanic Garden. 524-4715 www.internettime.com/bpwa 

 


Thursday, Sept. 20

 

Free Prostate Cancer Screening 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Alta Bates Medical Center 

Markstein Cancer Education & Prevention Center 

At-risk men may obtain a free prostate cancer screening by appointment. 

869-8833 

 

Trekking and Travel in the Himalayas 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Arlene Blum presents slides from her recent traverse through the Himalayas and provides guidance on selecting and preparing for trekking adventures. Free. 527-4140 

 

AC Transit: Short Range Transit Plan 

7 - 9:30 p.m. 

Albany City Council Chambers 

100 San Pablo Ave. 

An extensive outreach campaign to find out what you think regarding AC Transit policies. 891-4860 www.actransit.org 

 

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. 869-2547 

 

Women’s Consciousness-Raising Group for the New Century 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Cross-generational group and discussions of everything from race, age, class, and sexism to the various waves of feminism in the past.  

559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Berkeley Youth Alternatives 30th Anniversary Dinner 

6 p.m. 

Radisson Hotel, Berkeley Marina 

This event will celebrate the history and accomplishments of BYA’s service to the community. It will feature performances by youths in the Performing Arts program and Video Production program. Reservations, 845-9010. 

 

Simplicity Forum 

7 - 8:30 p.m. 

Claremont Branch Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave. 

Monthly meeting that features finding ways to work less, consume less, rush less, and have more time to build community with friends and family, as well as live more lightly upon the planet. 549-3509 www.seedsofsimplicity.org  

 


Friday, Sept. 21

 

Dancing The Dark 

8 p.m. 

First Congregational Church 

2345 Channing Way 

An evening of spirtual-political strategy to celebrate the autumnal equinox. $15. 848-6767 x609 www.kpfa.org 

 

Center of Elders Independence 

11:30 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

A representative of this organization will discuss its services. 644-6107 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

“The Promises and Problems of Stem Cell Research” with Grange Coffin, M.D., retired Physician. 848-3533 

 

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: movie, “Beloved,” followed by discussion of author Toni Morrison. 549-1879 

 

Nuclear Secrecy, Human Rights, and Mordechai Vanunu: Voices of Witness from the Bay Area and Israel/Palestine 

6:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists 

1924 Cedar St. 

Speakers will be Maurice Campbell of the Hunters Point Community First Coalition, Robert Lipton of A Jewish Voice for Peace, and Jeanie Shaterian of the Campaign to Free Vanunu. Supper will be served. 548-3048 

 


Saturday, Sept. 22

 

1st Annual Guinness & Oyster Festival 

11 a.m. - 6 p.m.  

MLK Jr. Civic Center Park 

Cake, Mingus Amungus, Ponticello, Stolen Bibles, Alamo 66 w/ Destani Wolf, The Culann’s Hounds. Free.  

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

9 a.m. - noon 

997 Cedar St. 

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

 

What You Need to Know Before You Build or Remodel 

10 a.m. - noon 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Preview of the Homeowner’s Essential Course – learn to solder pipe and more. By Glen Kitzenberger. Free. 525-7610 

 

Choosing to Add On: The Pros and Cons of Building an Addition 

noon - 2 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

By author and instructor Skip Wenz. Free. 525-7610 

 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts Open House 

1 -4 p.m. 

Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 

2640 College Ave. 

Free family friendly Open House and community celebration. Entertainment by Shotgun Players, Berkeley Ballet, and Berkeley Opera. Newcomers are encouraged to drop by and get to know the JMCA. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org 

 

Life from a Spiritual Perspective  

5 p.m. 

St. John’s Presbyterian Church 

2727 College Avenue 

Free talk by Dr. Richard Seader, vegetarian reception to follow, childcare, free parking under church. 707-226-7703 sfsos@aol.com. 

 


Sunday, Sept. 23

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Ave., between 3rd and 4th streets  

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

654-6346 

 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute Open House 

3 - 5 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Free introduction to Tibetan Buddhist Culture. Free. 843-6812 

 

Tibetan Buddhism 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Sylvia Gretchen on “Bringing the Tibetan Wisdom Tradition into our Lives Today.” Free. 843-6812 

 

Hands-On Bicycle Repair Clinics  

11 a.m. - noon  

Recreational Equipment Inc.  

1338 San Pablo Ave.  

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


Standing together

By Judith Scherr Daily Planet editor
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Since the initial horror of Sept. 11, the drumbeat of war – on TV and in the halls of congress – grows louder by the day, as we search for quick answers and a target for our grief. 

As many of us cling to our families, our friends and our faiths, our fears grow. How many mid-eastern-looking persons who fit the “profile” of the assumed mastermind of the horrific criminal acts will be harassed, jailed, or killed in the search for revenge? How many innocent people in Afghanistan will die under our fire power? How many Afghanis will become permanently displaced persons, moving to refugee camps across borders to escape our wrath? Will civil war erupt in Pakistan, as the U.S. government pressures the Pakistani government into submission?  

Will the true criminals be uncovered, tried in courts, then punished according to law? or will we react as in the “wild” west and distribute “cowboy” justice outside the court system? 

While our questions are steeped in gloom, there are bright rays of humanity that pierce the darkness: young people of various faiths are training to help protect targeted local communities; neighborhoods are organizing marches for peace and gatherings for reflection. Mosques, churches, temples, parks and university assemblages overflow with people searching for peaceful and meaningful ways to respond to the deadly crime committed last week. 

And among the bright spots, special mention must be made of the courageous act of U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee who stood alone, deserted by the Progressive Caucus and the Black Caucus, when she said a bold “no” to open-ended funding of a war against we know not whom. 

Thanks, Barbara.


Arts

Staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001

924 Gilman Street Sept. 21: Slow Gherkin, 78 RPMS, Enemy You, Wisecracker; Sept. 23: 5 p.m. Subtonix, Running Ragged, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 28: Erase Errata, The Intima, Ibobuki, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 29: DS-13, Beware, Blown To Bits, (+t.b.a.); Most shows are $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 

 

Albatross Pub 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 Music & Dance Community Center Sept. 18: 9 p.m. Tarika, $10; Sept. 19: 9 p.m. Andrew Carrier and Cajun Classics, $8; Sept. 20: 10 p.m. Grateful Dead DJ Nite, $5; Sept. 21: 9:30 p.m. Hip Hop Party: Emphatics, Self Jupitor, Professor Whaley, Bas 1, DJ Riddim and DJ Malik. $10; Sept. 22: 9:30 p.m. Don Carlos and Reggae Angels, $15; Sept. 23: 8 p.m. Funky Nixons, Mokai, Green & Root’s Womyn’s Music and more, $8 - $15. 1317 San Pablo 525-5054 www.ashkenaz.com  

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. Sept. 24: Jim Watson-Gove; All shows free, 7 - 10 p.m. 

 

Cal Performances 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 

 

Crowden School Sept. 23: 4 p.m. “Sundays at Four Concert” Jeremy Cohen’s jazz violin. Admission $10 (free if under 18) 1475 Rose 559-6910 

 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 18: Spencer Bohren, $16.50, Sept. 19: David Tanenbaum & Peppino D’Agostino, $16.50, Sept. 20: Steve Tilston & Danny Carnahan, $16.50; Sept. 21: The Waybacks, $17.50; Sept. 22: The Bluerass Intentions, $17.50; Sept. 23 Tony Marcus & Patrice Haan, $16.50; Sept. 24: April Verch, $16.50; Sept. 26: Clive Gregson, $16.50; Sept. 27: Dick Gaughan, $18.50; Sept 28: Jenna Mammina, $16.50; Sept. 29: The Nigerian Brothers, $16.50; Sept. 30: Vasen, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jack’s Bistro Sept. 22 & Sept. 28: 9 p.m. Tomas Michaud’s New World Flamenco Quartet, Jack London Square. 444-7171 www.starland-music.com 

 

Jupiter 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; Sept. 25: Craig Graham Trio; Sept. 26: Starvin Like Marvin; Sept. 28 Anton Schwartz Quartet; Sept 29: Modern Gypsies; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

La Peña Cultural Center Sept. 27: 7:30 p.m. The local Friends of the MST will host a screening of the new documentary “Raiz Forte” or “Strong Roots” to present our community with a vision of their work and struggle. A discussion will follow. $5-$10; In the Cafe, 3105 Shattuck Ave. 849-2568 www.lapena.org 

 

Music Sources Sept. 30: 5 p.m. Ole Scarlatta! Portuguese and French keyboards and fortepiano joined by Jason McGuire on flamenco guitar, $18 General, $15 members, seniors, students. 1000 The Alameda 528-1685 

 

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 

 

The 1st Annual Guinness & Oyster Festival 2001 Sept. 22: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Free. Cake, Mingus Amungus, Ponticello, Stolen Bibles, Alamo 66 w/ Destani Wolf, The Culann’s Hounds. MLK Jr. Civic Center Park 

 

13th Annual Blues ‘n Jazz Festival Sept. 23: noon - 6 p.m. Jeffrey Osborne Jazz Crusaders with Ronnie Laws, Ricardo Scales, Sonata Pi (and more). $35, Lawn $25, Child $6 (6-12 years, lawn only). Dunsmuir House & Gardens Historic Estate, 2960 Peralta Oaks Court, Oakland. 583-1160 

 

“The Complete Shostakovich String Quartets--Part One” Sept. 29: 10 a.m. Quartets III & IV; Oct. 20: 10 a.m. Quartets V & VI. Performed by the prize-winning Alexander String Quartet with Robert Greenberg. $30, $84 for the Trio of concerts. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 College Ave. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Magnificat Sept. 29: 8 p.m. First Congregational Church. The San Francisco early music ensemble of voices and period instruments present their tenth anniversary season with music of seventeenth century composers. Tickets $12-$45 (415) 979-4500 

 

American Ballet Theatre Sept. 19, 20: 8 p.m.: Mark Morris, Paul Taylor and Natalie Weir; Sept. 21, 22: 8 p.m., Sept 22: 2 p.m., Sept 23: 3 p.m.: David Briskin conducts Berkeley Symphony Orchestra. Zellerbach Hall Tickets $36, $48 and $64. 

“Hecho En Califas Chicano-Latino Teatro Festival” Sept. 21, 22: 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 

 

“Le Cirque des Animaux” Sept. 29: 8 p.m. Hausmusik presents a wacky baroque musical cabaret on the subject of animals. Parish Hall of St. Alban’s Espiscopal Church, 1501 Washington St. (not wheelchair accessible). $18 general admission, $15 seniors, students and SFEMS members. 527-9029 

 

“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 

 

“Twelfth Night” Sept. 18 - 23, 25 - 30, Oct. 2 - 7, Tue. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m., Student Matinees: Sept. 18, 20, 25, Oct. 2, @ 1 p.m. California Shakespeare Festival presents William Shakespeare’s comic tale of romance, loneliness, love and glory. Directed by Jonathan Moscone. $12 - $41. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, Highway 24, Gateway Exit, one mile east of the Caldecott Tunnel. 548-9666 www.calshakes.org. Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave., 849-2568, www.lapena.org  

 

“36 Views” 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 

 

Cal Performances 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 

Pacific Film Archive Sept. 18: 7:30 p.m. “Mike Kuchar’s Feverish Spell”; Sept. 19: 7:30 p.m. “What About Me: The Rise of the Nihilist Spasm Band”; Sept. 20: 7, 8:30 p.m. “Exilée”; Sept. 21: 7 p.m. Films of Fritz Lang: Tom Gunning Lecture, 8 p.m. Metropolis, Joel Adlen on piano; Sept. 22: 2:30 p.m. Donald Richie Reading and Booksigning, 4 p.m. An Actor’s Revenge, 7 p.m. Bad Company, 9:05 p.m. Unchain; Sept. 23: 5:30 p.m. Last Year at Marienbad; Sept. 24: 7 p.m. Chile, Obstinate Memory and For These Eyes; Sept. 25: 7:30 p.m. Alternative Requirements 2001, Artists in Person; Sept. 26: 7:30 p.m. Touch Tones; Sept. 28: 7 p.m. Ugetsu, 8:55 Sansho the Bailiff; Sept. 29: 7 p.m. Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, Part I, Joel Adlen on piano; Sept. 30: Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, Part II, Joel Adlen on piano; general admission $7, The New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

The Pyramid Alehouse Outdoor Cinema 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 

 

 

Send arts events two weeks in advance to  

Calendar@berkeleydailyplanet.net, 2076 University, Berkeley 94704 or fax to 841-5694. 

 

Exhibits 

 

Nexus Gallery Sept. 26-30: noon - 6 p.m. Jan Eldridge- Large charcoal drawings and acrylic collages; Tricia Grame- visual and textural autobiography of her spiritual evolution; Tanya Wilkinson- A sensuous exploration of the possibilities inherent in the medium of handmade paper. 

 

“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” Through Sept. 26; Tues. - Thurs. 1 - 7 p.m., Sat. 12 - 4 p.m. 3023 Shattuck Ave. 548-9286 x307 www.wcrc.org 

 

Bahman Navaee is exhibiting his Mix Media paintings. Through Sept. 29: Persian Center, 2029 Durant Ave.  

 

“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. 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 

 

Boadecia’s Books Sept. 21: Deborah Kesten, “The Healing Secrets of Food;” Sept. 22: A special All Poetry Dyke Open Myke, to participate call 655-1015 or feroniawolf@yahoo.com; Sept 28: The Return of Gaymes Night; Sept 29: Ellen Samuels and other contributors to “Out of the Ordinary: Essays on Growing Up with Gay, Lesbian & Transgender Parents. All events start at 7:30 p.m. unless noted otherwise. All events are free. 398 Colusa Ave. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Cody’s on 4th Street 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. 17: Aldo Alvarez describes “Interesting Monsters”; Sept. 18: Clarence Walker discusses “We Can’t Go Home Again: An Argument About Afrocentrism; Sept. 19: 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”; Oct 1: Urdsula K. Le guin reads from “The Other Wind”; All shows at 7:30 p.m. 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.  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series Sept. 18: Ben Brose and Jen Iby followed by open mike reading. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-3935 ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

Easy Going Travel Shop & Bookstore Sept. 20: 7:30 p.m. Antarctica & The Nature of Penguins, An evening with Jonathan Chester. 1385 Shattuck Ave. 843-3533 

 

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/ 

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summer-long seismic retrofit. “Martin Puryear: Sculpture of the 1990s” through Jan. 13; “The Dream of the Audience: Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951 - 1982)” through Dec. 16; “Face of Buddha: Sculpture from India, China, Japan, and Southeast Asia” ongoing rotation through 2003; “Matrix 194: Jessica Bronson, Heaps, layers, and curls” Sept. 16 through Nov. 11; “Matrix 192: Ceal Floyer 37’4”” Sept. 16 through Nov. 11; Wed., Fri., Sat., Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m., PFA Theater, 2575 Bancroft Way; Museum Galleries 2626 Bancroft Way; 642-0808 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

Lawrence Hall of Science “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 “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 

 

 

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


City helps small businesses with $2 million energy boost

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001

The City Council approved a $2 million contract Thursday with a nonprofit community energy company that is expected to install high-efficiency lighting equipment in 1,000 small businesses in Berkeley and Oakland.  

The program, funded by a grant from the California Public Utilities Commission, will be administered by the Community Energy Services Corporation, which has operated out of the city’s Housing Department since 1986. CESC will be expected to retrofit 700 small businesses in Berkeley and another 300 in Oakland with high efficiency lighting equipment by June 30, 2003. Businesses that take advantage of the program could save as much as 40 percent on their electricity bills. 

Currently CESC is assembling a group of technical experts and lighting design professionals to develop the program, which is expected to be available in January. 

“We’re going after non-residential and non-governmental businesses,” said city Energy Officer Neil De Snoo. “The ones that will benefit the most are the businesses that have long hours like book stores, some schools and laundromats.” 

He added that offices and restaurants could also benefit from the program. 

De Snoo said CESC will take a “one-stop shopping” approach to the program. The service will include a briefing on the potential savings, a cost analysis and installation of the equipment. 

“This will be designed to be as smooth and seamless as possible from the initial consultation to development of the businesses’ specifications to installation,” De Snoo said.  

The lighting retrofits are being aimed at businesses that are less than 10,000 square feet and use less than 20 kilowatts. De Snoo said the initial cost to business owners will be about 60 cents a square foot and that the typical business will recoup its investment in two years depending on energy rates.  

De Snoo said many businesses will be interested because they are using lighting systems that were installed years ago and are now outdated.  

CESC Director Nancy Hoeffer said business owners will be offered lighting schemes specifically designed to improve lighting for their businesses.  

“Retail businesses will have different needs than an office,” Hoeffer said. “We’ll look at what they have now and examine how we can provide them with the most efficiency, and the most savings.” 

Hoeffer said options for business owners will include daylight harvesting techniques which will take advantage of natural lighting as well as installation of technical equipment such as light sensors that can adjust electrical light according the amount of available natural light.  

“These lighting techniques not only save money but can improve worker productivity in offices and make products look better in retail outlets,” Hoeffer said.  

Councilmember Linda Maio said Berkeley was lucky to get such a large grant and she expects businesses to make use of the program: “I think businesses will feel well-served by the saving they will get in the long run, and it will save energy, which will help to reduce global warming. It’s a perfectly wonderful thing.” 

Mayor Shirley Dean said she expects the program to be popular with small business owners despite the widespread worries about the downturn in the economy.  

“This is a great program,” Dean said. “I think business owners are going to be careful because of the current economic environment, but the fact remains that anything that saves money in the current economic environment is a good thing to do.” 

Downtown Business Association Director Deborah Bahdia agreed. “We think there will be a lot of businesses interested in this program,” Bahdia said. “I have already spoken with at least two business owners that are very interested.” 

Bahdia said that the length of a business owners lease will be a key factor is selling the high-efficiency lighting systems. She said there will be little incentive for business owners who are unsure if they will be in the same location for less than two years. 

Hoeffer said that businesses which are secure in their leases can’t go wrong with investing in energy-efficient lighting. She said that after two years, businesses will recoup their investment and begin to see a return. 

“There are so many ways that businesses have to shell out capital, but this is one of the best ways because where else can you get a 40 percent return on your money?” Hoffer said.  

Marc Weinstein, owner of Amoeba Records said he installed what was considered high-efficiency lighting in his Telegraph Avenue record store 10 years ago. 

“I don’t know if they can reduce my electrical output but it they say they can save me money I’m willing to listen,” he said.


Don’t let this horror be like the last

Diane A. Tokugawa
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Editor: 

I wish to express my shock and deep sorrow at the needless deaths of the people in New York City and Washington D.C., those on the doomed airlines and the brave rescue workers. 

My parents are both gone now. And, when the horrific events of September 11th transpired, I asked myself, Is this what is it was like? Is this what my parents as Japanese-Americans went through after Dec. 7, 1941? I’ve heard the stories where friends and neighbors suddenly changed their opinion of you even though you had lived and worked with them for years. I’ve heard stories of vandalism, physical threats, and taunts of “why don’t you go back to your own country,” when this was your country. My aunt said that you really knew who were your true friends during that time. My parents were both interned in concentration camps in Poston, Arizona and Tule Lake, California. I have had uncles who were drafted and served in the U.S. Army. I have had relatives killed in Hiroshima after the atomic bomb was dropped.  

When I hear and read examples of ignorant people who are making attacks on innocent Arab-Americans and Muslims, I become dismayed and concerned for their welfare as a misguided few take out their frustrations.  

It is in times of crisis that our values are truly tested. I am heartened by the statements of our national and local leaders asking all Americans not to judge a people by their ethnicity or religion. We need to be reminded of this more than ever. We do not want to walk down that road again with our eyes wide open. I am hoping that Americans will not succumb to hysteria and “military necessity” in the days to follow. We have a big enough job to do as it is. 

Diane A. Tokugawa 

Berkeley 


Accreditation may be less important than school officials think

Tuesday September 18, 2001

Kimberlee Bortfeld, Carole-Anne Elliott, Bruce Gerstman, Hadas Ragolsky and Rachel Searles 

Special to the Daily Planet 

 

For months, Berkeley High School administrators and board members have warned that if they are unable to make the Western Association of Schools and Colleges happy, the school would lose its accreditation and its diplomas would be worthless.  

But college admissions officials from Harvard, Brown, Dartmouth and both California public university systems said that high school accreditation has no bearing on admissions decisions.  

“The fact that the school might lose its accreditation would not affect an individual student’s chances for admission,” explained Michael Goldberger, director of admissions at Brown University. “We evaluate students, not high schools. In fact, we often do not know the accreditation status of the school.”  

For the University of California, which conducts its own yearly evaluation of each California public high school, it is the school’s curriculum that matters, not its accreditation status. “The university has a long-standing history with Berkeley High and its curriculum,” said Carla Ferri, Director of Undergraduate Admissions. Ferri said she was unaware of Berkeley High’s accreditation problems.  

This spring, the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, one of six regional accrediting associations in the United States, gave Berkeley High School a one-year out of a possible six-year accreditation. The decision served as a warning to many worried faculty, staff and parents that if the school does not make significant changes within the year it could lose accreditation altogether. 

“Every high school and college goes through the accreditation process,” said Principal Frank Lynch. “If you don’t have accreditation, it means that your diploma isn’t worth anything.” 

When told that college admissions directors said students would have no trouble with Berkeley High diplomas, Lynch was resolute. “Until you call every school in the country and ask them what they think, I will hold on to what the association has told me – that accreditation is important.”  

Berkeley Board of Education Director John T. Selawsky was surprised by what college officials had said. “Everybody told me that accreditation would affect students applying for college,” he said. “I didn’t question it. Now, I’m going to check it out.” 

According to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, accreditation indicates that a school has met the association’s standards and is achieving its own stated objectives. But while a loss of accreditation would undoubtedly tarnish Berkeley High’s reputation (the school has been accredited since 1967), its impact on students appears vague at best. And, most importantly, while there is concern about losing accreditation, Berkeley High has failed to make great strides in resolving problems – an achievement gap between white and minority students and a lack of school-wide vision – that the association has been pointing out since the mid-1990s. 

Dr. George Bronson, associate executive director of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, maintained that a loss of accreditation would hurt students – at least in terms of financial aid.  

“When you fill out the form for your Cal Grant, they ask you right on the form if your transcript is from a WASC-accredited school,” he said. “If it isn’t, you’re either refused the funds or you’re bumped way down the list.”  

Carole Solov, Communications Specialist at the California Student Aid Commission, however, said that students from unaccredited high schools are still eligible for Cal Grants, though the process is slightly different.  

In place of the required “verified GPA” from an accredited high school, students from unaccredited schools may “provide a test score from one of the commission's approved test alternatives.” Among the tests are the SAT and ACT, which are already required by most colleges. 

Bronson also said that the military looks unfavorably at students from unaccredited schools. However, Gil Hogue, public affairs officer with the U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion in Sacramento, said that an unaccredited diploma would not necessarily be a disadvantage for recruits. In such a case, the army would most likely visit the high school and determine the quality of its curriculum. Thus, a recruit could still be accepted into the army even if his diploma was not from an accredited school 

Statewide, there are approximately 900 public high schools (including K-12 schools), of which 872 are accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. While accreditation is voluntary, it is not free. Schools must pay $575 a year to maintain membership with the nonprofit, non-governmental association. In addition, they pay for site visits, a required part of the three-year accreditation process. A school with a student population of 3,400 like Berkeley High pays $4,000 ($500 per visitor) for an eight-member team. The association is exclusively funded through these fees. 

Despite the costs, though, Berkeley High wants to retain its accreditation. “We’re going for a multi-year accreditation this time,” Selawsky said.  

Parents are also taking it seriously. Kristin Shepard, co-president of the Parent Teacher Student Association, said that the group mailed out copies of the last visiting report from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges to every Berkeley High household last April.  

However, it is still not clear how the accreditation process improves a school. Berkeley High has been under the association’s scrutiny since 1996 when it first lost the maximum six-year accreditation and instead received only three years. Since then, the achievement gap between students of different racial groups, one of the key issues brought up during the 1996 visit, has not narrowed, according to the 2001 Western Association of Schools and Colleges report. And since then, the association has made several trips to the school at a cost of thousands of dollars.  

For Lincoln College Prep High School, which along with the entire Kansas City School District was stripped of its Missouri state accreditation in 1999, loss of accreditation had little impact on students. Gwen Grant, President and CEO of the Urban League in Kansas City, said that there were few consequences for students, except that it might have “impacted the psyche of students who felt they were associated with being under a negative cloud.” Grant’s daughter, Lincoln class of 2000, applied to about 15 colleges and was accepted to every single one. When Grant heard about Berkeley High’s situation, she exclaimed, “That sounds so familiar!” and laughed. 

Grant said that when the district lost accreditation “lots of parents jumped ship” and sent their children to charter schools. But many ended up sending their kids right back to public schools. “They were looking for a panacea that did not exist,” she said. Later, the school got accreditation through the Northern Central Association of Schools and Colleges, the region’s counterpart to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. The district must still regain its state accreditation by 2002 though, or the Missouri Department of Education will come in and take administrative control.  

California does not have a similar law that would have the state take control of a district, nor is accreditation required. Instead, the state requires that schools undergo self-conducted Program Quality Reviews at least once every three years to help them analyze student achievement and build action plans to improve performance. Schools with accreditation, however, do not have to go through the review as they already implement self-study reports through the accreditation process. 

Among the problems the Western Association of Schools and Colleges 2001 report faulted Berkeley High on was the absence of a single school-wide vision plan, a lack of collaboration among faculty and staff, and an achievement gap between white and minority students. The school has also had frequent changes in its formal leadership, with five principals in the last six years and three superintendents in the last nine months, one of whom was interim superintendent.  

The association plans to revisit the school in October 2002, and it is uncertain how the school will measure up. Administration officials, however, continue to stress the importance of having accreditation from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the only accreditation agency in the region that the U.S. Department of Education recognizes.  

When asked how the association acquired its lofty position, Executive Director Dr. Donald G. Haught said that it is largely because it was the first professional organization in the region that encompassed high schools, junior colleges and colleges. The association was established in 1962, and as an agency, gained recognition throughout its years.  

“WASC exists for a reason,” maintained Lynch. “We all pay good money for them to visit and accredit us. Accreditation validates what we are doing. It’s a good housekeeping seal of approval.” 


Proud of Lee’s vote

Juliet Lamont
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Editor: 

The Daily Planet received the following letter addressed to Rep. Barbara Lee: 

As one of your constituents in Berkeley, I was proud and grateful for your vote against giving Bush sweeping “war powers” at this time. It must have been a difficult decision in some ways (though in my mind, a very clear one in others), given the great pain and anger that all of us feel over the terrorist tragedy last week. 

But I - and I know many, many others - do NOT believe that this tragedy should be reciprocated with vengeance and more anger and blind aggression. That will never solve the terrorist problems we face, nor is it the path a civilized, compassionate nation should take. 

I appreciate your wanting us to take time to assess what has happened, and to devise a reasoned response. I wish more of your colleagues had done the same. 

Again, thank you for your vote. We will remember it. 

Juliet Lamont 

Berkele


Plans for apartment building hindered by ‘Structure of Merit’

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001

A proposal to build a 44-unit residential building in the city’s Southside neighborhood is making its way through the city’s planning process. 

If approved, the project would entail moving one of the city’s designated “Structures of Merit” – the Ellen Blood House, a single-family “Queen Anne” Victorian home at 2526 Durant Ave. between Telegraph Avenue and Bowditch Street -- to another location in the city. 

David C. Ruegg and Robert A. Ellsworth, current owners of the site, applied for permission to build a five-story apartment building in June 2000. In their application, they say that the proposed building, which would include retail space at ground level, would help solve the city’s housing crunch and contribute to the Southside economy. 

The Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the Blood House a “structure of merit” in September 1999. Ruegg and Ellsworth unsuccessfully appealed the decision to the City Council in October 1999. 

Carrie Olson, a member of the Landmarks Preservation Commission, remembered the thinking that went into the designation. 

“It’s one of the few single-family homes remaining from the College Homestead Tract,” she said. The College Homestead Tract was a subdivision of land owned by the College of California (later the University of California), which sold parcels to people eager to build a community around the nascent college. It comprises much of today’s Southside neighborhood. 

“The university has really flattened all the old houses to build parking lots and student housing,” said Olson.  

A study commissioned by the Landmarks Preservation Commission said the building “recalls (Southside’s) early character as one of Berkeley’s substantial family residential districts, where the streets were lined with the homes of prominent citizens.” 

The Ellen Blood House was built in 1891 by Gary Frise, a popular 19th century East Bay architect. 

For most of its 110-year history, the house was owned by individuals or families. The family of Perry Tompkins, an early Berkeley realtor, lived in the house for many years, as did Ruth Alice Greer, who for many years was in charge of finding jobs around the state for teachers newly graduated from the College of Education. 

Ownership of the home passed to Ruegg and Ellsworth in the 1980’s. 

The city has hired an outside consultant to perform an Environmental Impact Report on Ruegg and Ellsworth’s proposed building. The California Environmental Quality Act requires the city to consider such factors as “cultural resources” and “aesthetics” in determining a development’s environmental impact.


U.S.A.: a beacon

James Tamietti
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Editor, 

The events of 9/11 has shown the world that the fundamental religious beliefs of certain people in other countries are the exact reasons why the United States needs to stay the shining beacon of freedom for the world. 

I am totally dismayed at the letters which are published on your website. I have not been able to read your physical papers due to my present geographical location, so maybe the situation is different from my perception, but where is the condemnation of the absolutely evil act?  

It was sad enough that your congresswoman, Barbara Lee was the only person to vote against the House vote to give permission to the president for a military option, but are Berkeley and Oakland residents so far gone that you have lost any sense of right and wrong? I don’t want to believe that. 

The United States may not always be right, but no country deserved what has happened to us. I hope that the people who perpetrated these horrifying act will be found and sent to hell, which they deserve to be a permanent fixture of.  

James Tamietti 

Bellevue, WA  


Firefighters ‘fill boot’ for families of fallen New York colleagues

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Twenty members of the Berkeley Fire Department took to the streets Monday, rubber boots in hand, to ask citizens to contribute to the families of their fallen colleagues in New York City. 

The “Fill the Boot” campaign is a project of the Berkeley Fire Fighters Association Local 1227. 

“Collectively, we have lost possibly 400 firefighting brothers and sisters,” said Marc Mestrovich, BFFA Local 1227 secretary. “Even though the tragedy took place in New York, we feel it here.” 

Mestrovich said that the donations collected will be sent back with a BFD delegation that will attend the funeral for their colleagues in New York. 

Three firefighters from Station 2, 2029 Berkeley Way, stood outside the downtown Berkeley BART station Monday morning taking contributions.  

One of the firefighters, Mike Posadas, described the strain that the tragedy has placed on Berkeley’s fire department. He described a shift meeting held on Sunday, during which the normally stolid firefighters struggled to keep their feelings in check. 

“Some people were very emotional, others were keeping it inside,” he said. “Everyone’s dealing with it in a different way.” 

Mestorvich said that the executive board of the union planned the campaign early last week, shortly after it learned of the fates of those firefighters first dispatched to the World Trade Center. 

“We’re a helping group, and this is our way of helping New York through this,” he said. “If this happened in the city of Berkeley, the nation would do exactly the same for us.” 

Firefighters will be collecting at various locations around the city today: at the Berkeley BART station, Fourth Street, Solano Avenue, Bancroft Avenue at the corners of College and Telegraph avenues and at the corner of College and Ashby avenues. 

Donations can also be mailed to the California Fire Foundation, care of California Professional Firefighters, 1780 Creekside Oaks, Suite 200, Sacramento CA, 95833.  

There will be a blood drive at Fire Station 2 on Sept. 28.


March in peace

Thomas de Lackner
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Editor: 

We merely saw a small poster about a peace march Sunday at 7 p.m., starting at Russell Street and College Avenue, just three blocks from our house, so I was surprised that so many people kept joining the march. I couldn’t help but reflect on other peace marches and the atmosphere of marches in the early 1960s when we really thought our peace and love marches would touch the soul of America and help us find an early way out of the Vietnam War. Then I remembered how those marches, which started so peacefully, became violent at the time when marchers began to stop troop trains, and I felt I could no longer participate in something which would only serve to polarize public opinion. 

I began to feel a fear that this march also might be the beginning of a series of marches which would also lead to further violence, and that so few of us can imagine the ominous dangers which lie ahead for this country. However, I couldn’t help but notice that many of the cars honking as they went by were holding up a V for peace sign, and I didn’t hear any shouts of derision. How can this be, I thought. To listen to the news one would think that a person opposed to “bombing Afghanistan into oblivion if necessary” might subject himself or herself to violent retaliation. Perhaps people in general realize after all that we need to get a better perspective on terrorism before we start down a road which will lead to far worse than the road in Vietnam. Now at least we understand what could be worse than Vietnam, for after all, in the 1960s the country was not subject to terrorism on a large scale. 

Surely we must separate our sense of grief, our experience of tragedy, and all the accompanying emotions, from our determination to find appropriate responses, both in the interests of justice and in the interest of the country at large. 

Thomas de Lackner 

Berkeley


California woman charged with intimidating Sikhs in Oregon

By Steven Du Bois Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

EUGENE, Ore. — A California woman was arrested after attempting to pull a turban off the head of a Sikh, police said. 

Shari Mitchell, 54, of San Rafael, reportedly approached two men Sunday at an Interstate 5 rest stop near Eugene. Believing them to be Islamic fundamentalists, she blamed them for terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. 

The arrest is the second in Oregon involving a backlash against Muslims and those who are mistaken for them. A 33-year-old man was arrested last week after making a threatening phone call to the Islamic Cultural Center in Eugene. 

Sikhism is a sect of Hinduism from India and is distinct from Islam, but some members are being mistaken for Muslims because they wear turbans and have facial hair. 

In the most prominent case, a Sikh in Arizona was killed Saturday, reportedly because he was dark-skinned and wore a turban. The FBI also announced Monday that they are investigating the shooting death Saturday of an Egyptian grocery store owner in San Gabriel as a hate crime. 

Reached on his cell phone Monday, Jagjit Gill, 41, of Kent, Wash., said he and his father-in-law Santokh Sing, 60, stopped at the rest area for a snack. 

When they saw Mitchell coming their way, they waved to her, Gill said. But Mitchell responded with curse words and racist remarks. 

An old man at the rest area attempted to intervene, telling Mitchell that the men had nothing to do with the attacks. 

She told the man “to shut up, these guys are murderers,” Gill said. 

She then slapped one of the men and attempted to remove Sing’s turban. 

“I told her ‘don’t touch the turban,’ ” Gill said. 

Mitchell eventually left. Police caught up to her on Interstate 5 and charged her with intimidation and harassment. She could get more than a year in jail. 

“Physically we’re fine, mentally we’re very upset,” Gill said. “We’re scared; it gets into your mind.” 


No plans yet to abandon search for survivors of attack

By Richard Pyle Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

NEW YORK (AP) — A week after the horrifying fall of the World Trade Center, officials faced a crucial decision: When should they concede that rescue efforts are futile and move full-time into the grimmer task of recovering the dead? 

With only five survivors pulled from the smoking ruins — and none since Wednesday, the day after the disaster — the decision, when it comes, will be more symbolic than real. 

But freed of the responsibility of moving gingerly so that lives might be saved, heavy equipment operators and bucket brigades will be able to step up the pace of clearing a seven-story pyramid of debris. 

It will also mean that thousands of relatives and friends will have to move on, and accept that their loved ones are dead. 

The debris is being hauled by dump trucks to an area near the recently closed Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island. There it is spread out and sifted by FBI agents and detectives for airplane pieces and other evidence that could help explain what occurred aboard the jetliners and help build a criminal case. 

While recognizing that the odds on finding people alive are “very slim,” as Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen said, city officials declined to say when the change in mission might occur, or even whether it would be announced. 

Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Monday he is not yet ready to abandon the search for survivors. 

“I’ve been told by experts that people survive for longer periods than the six days that have gone by since the attack,” Giuliani said. “The simple reality is that we’re not going to be able to recover significant numbers of people, but we will continue to try.” 

On Sunday, workers reached the deepest part of the trade center’s underground complex, the PATH commuter train station 80 feet down. 

Allen Morrison, a spokesman for the Port Authority that operated the Trade Center complex, said it appears no one was in the station when the towers collapsed. 

“After the first plane hit, we ordered all the trains with passengers on board to return to New Jersey, then we swept the entire station for any people still there, and stationed police at the entrances to keep anyone else out,” Morrison said. 

It was not clear whether the same actions were taken at the shopping concourse just above the station. 

There are still some levels to be searched and “we need a better handle on what the conditions are within those levels,” said Peter Bakersky, the on-scene search and rescue coordinator for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. 

The search went on Monday without any good news. Giuliani said 5,422 people were still missing, and just 201 deaths had been confirmed. Much of downtown Manhattan, including the financial markets, reopened just blocks from the smoking ruins of the Trade Center. 

While the move from rescue to recovery is seldom sharply defined, “the political leadership has to make that determination,” Bakersky said. 

“Have we had any live victims that were pulled out? Were there any areas that they could survive in? Just because there have been none, there is still a sense of a possibility,” he said. 

A forensic pathologist who worked on the 1993 Trade Center bombing that killed six people said there was no doubt that everyone aboard the two Boeing 767 jetliners perished. But building collapses often offer hope that people found shelter in protected spaces. 

In the Trade Center’s underground passages, “it would be possible for someone to live for some time, even weeks, if they had water — rainwater or firefighters’ water — and there was no pressure on their bodies,” said the pathologist, who asked not to be identified by name. 

Many victims probably were incinerated in the fireballs of jet fuel that roared through upper floors of the towers. Many others were dismembered in the crashes or the collapses that followed. Firefighters and others at the scene have reported finding few intact bodies. 

The heat of the fire — estimated by FEMA at 1,700 degrees — would make identification difficult because it consumed smaller body parts, said Dr. Steven Symes, a professor of forensic pathology at the University of Tennessee. 

 


Prosecutor: Cincinnati officer failed to follow procedures in shooting that triggered riots

By John Nolan Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

CINCINNATI — A white police officer was not following proper procedures when he shot a fleeing, unarmed black man to death, a killing that led to riots this spring, a prosecutor said Monday. 

Officer Stephen Roach, 27, was indicted in May on misdemeanor charges of negligent homicide and obstruction of official business in the April 7 shooting death of Timothy Thomas, 19. 

If convicted of both charges, he could face up to nine months in jail. 

Roach agreed to have the trial heard without a jury. After hearing testimony, Municipal Court Judge Ralph E. Winkler may take the case under review and issue his verdict later. 

The death touched off the city’s worst racial violence since the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination in 1968, and prompted a citywide dusk-to-dawn curfew to restore order. Dozens of people were injured and more than 800 were arrested. 

Roach was the only one of at least five officers pursuing Thomas who took his revolver out of his holster, prosecutor Michael Prisley told the judge. 

Before firing, Roach should have used other methods to stop Thomas, who was wanted on traffic violations and charges of fleeing police, Prisley said. He also should not have put his finger on the trigger before he intended to use the gun, Prisley said. 

The obstruction charge stems from the differing accounts of what happened that Roach gave to detectives investigating the shooting, Prisley said. 

Defense lawyer Merlin Shiverdecker said that in all of Roach’s accounts of what happened, he repeated his assertion that Thomas made a move to his waistband. 

“He perceived that move to the waist and feared it as a threat to his safety,” Shiverdecker told the judge. 

Testimony also got under way Monday. Three officers involved in chasing Thomas testified for the prosecution that they did not take out their guns. 

When officer Thaddeus Steele was asked how often suspects flee police in the area, Steele replied, “Every night.” 

Shiverdecker said defense witnesses, including police supervisors, would testify that Roach is a mature, dedicated officer. Other testimony would be about the poor lighting in the alley where the shooting took place. 

Thomas was the 15th black male to die at the hands of Cincinnati police since 1995. Police union officials have said 10 of those men fired or pointed guns at police officers, and two drove at or dragged officers from cars. 

The shooting led the mayor to request a federal investigation of the city’s police department, which is under way. 

Two other Cincinnati officers await trial in October in the case of another black man, Roger Owensby Jr., who died in November when police took him into custody. The coroner concluded that Owensby died of suffocation. 


Falwell apologizes for ‘insensitive’ remarks

By Kevin Hall Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

RICHMOND, Va. — The Rev. Jerry Falwell apologized Monday for saying God had allowed terrorists to attack America because of the work of civil liberties groups, abortion rights supporters and feminists. 

Falwell said his comments were ill-timed, insensitive and divisive at a time of national mourning. President Bush had called the minister’s statement inappropriate. 

“In the midst of the shock and mourning of a dark week for America, I made a statement that I should not have made and which I sincerely regret,” Falwell said. 

He added: “I want to apologize to every American, including those I named.” 

In an interview Thursday during religious broadcaster Pat Robertson’s TV program “The 700 Club,” Falwell blamed the devastation on pagans, abortionists, feminists, homosexuals, the American Civil Liberties Union and the People for the American Way. 

“All of them who have tried to secularize America, I point the finger in their face and say, ’You helped this happen,”’ he said. 

Falwell, a Baptist minister and chancellor of Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., also expressed a belief shared by other evangelicals that divine protection is withdrawn from nations that violate God’s will. 

However, some Christian thinkers warned there was no way to know which sin led to which punishment. On Monday, Falwell agreed. 

“When I talked about God lifting the curtain of protection on our nation, I should have made it very clear that no one on this earth knows whether or not that occurred or did not occur,” he said. 

He said if the destruction was a judgment from God it was a judgment on all sinners, including himself. 

Falwell told The Associated Press that no one from the evangelical community or the White House pressured him to apologize. 

However, he said a White House representative called him Friday while he was driving to the National Cathedral memorial service in Washington, and told him the president disapproved. 

Falwell said he told the White House that he also felt he had misspoken. 

Falwell made his apology minutes after Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network released its own statement calling Falwell’s on-air remarks “severe and harsh in tone and, frankly, not fully understood” by Robertson and his two co-hosts. 

———— 

On the Net: 

Jerry Falwell Ministries: http://www.falwell.com 

Christian Broadcasting Network: http://www.cbn.org 


Prosecutor sues attorney general over assault weapon law

By Brian Melley Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

SACRAMENTO — The Fresno County district attorney and firearms advocates sued the state attorney general Monday for ambiguous language in the state’s landmark assault weapons law. 

District Attorney Ed Hunt said an amendment to the 1989 Assault Weapon Control Act was incomprehensible and created confusion for gun owners and law enforcement officials. 

“Without clarification, it’s impossible to know what is legal and what isn’t,” Hunt said in a written statement. “I simply can’t do my job, and I can’t do justice under these confusing circumstances.” 

The rare suit, pitting one prosecutor against another, seeks an injunction preventing the law from going into effect and asks for an extension for gun owners to register until the law is clarified. 

The suit was filed in Fresno Superior Court by Hunt, Fresno gun shop owner Barry Bauer, the Law Enforcement Alliance of America and the California Sporting Goods Association. 

Attorney General Bill Lockyer, who heads the state’s Department of Justice, was surprised by the lawsuit, said spokeswoman Hallye Jordan. She said she never heard of a prosecutor suing another prosecutor. 

Under the 1999 amendment, Lockyer set regulations last year requiring registration of guns with military-style characteristics such as a pistol grip, folding stock, or flash suppressor. 

But gun advocacy lawyer Chuck Michel, who filed the suit, said there are inconsistencies in the law and that vague language leaves gun owners unwittingly open to prosecution. 

The Department of Justice’s definition of a flash suppressor, for example, includes weapons that don’t have the devices designed to dull the blaze of gunfire, Michel said. 

“Nobody knew what these things are,” said Michel of Los Angeles. “It’s something beyond the ken of the usual law abiding gun owner.” 

Jordan said the regulations are clear and Hunt and Fresno County law enforcement officials have never taken part in Department of Justice assault weapon training sessions. 

The department ran newspaper and radio ads, notified gun dealers and organizations, and set up a Web site and toll-free number to publicize the law, in addition to a series of public hearings on the regulations. 

Gun owners who didn’t register their weapons by the end of last year are subject to prosecution and could face a $500 fine and a jail or prison term. 

The state Department of Justice has registered 150,400 assault weapons in the last decade since passing the Roberti-Roos Assault Weapons Control Act of 1989, the nation’s first assault weapon law. 

State legislators put the law on the books after a gunman, Patrick Purdy, fired a semiautomatic weapon into a Stockton school yard, killing five children and injuring 30. 


Airport traffic light across state as nation attempts to recover from attacks

By Gary Gentile Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

LOS ANGELES — Airport traffic throughout California remained well below normal Monday as the nation tried to get back to business after last week’s terrorist attacks. 

Flights were expected to be about 70 percent of normal at San Francisco International and 60 percent of normal at Los Angeles and San Diego airports, where passengers arrived hours early for flights amid concerns over security delays. 

Investment banker Robert Hammer, 52, of Thousand Oaks arrived at the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport two hours early for a 9 a.m. flight to San Francisco. He found the terminal nearly empty. 

“I thought there would be no lines here, and I was right,” he said. 

At Los Angeles International Airport, all travelers with cars were required to park in remote lots and take shuttles to and from the terminals. 

Lines snaked out of sight at some San Francisco International ticket counters. 

“The biggest problem we’re having is people not taking small items, small knives, scissors, fingernail files, out of their carry-on bags,” Duty Manager Dennis Neves said. 

Officials at San Diego’s Lindbergh Field expected far fewer travelers than normal for weeks to come as businesses and vacationers assess the situation. 

“What I would guess is, people have been canceling their plans,” said Rita Vandergaw, spokeswoman for the San Diego Unified Port District, which manages the airport. 

An expected drop in air travel battered the stocks of major airlines, which have lost some $1 billion in the past week. 

The slide in airline and tourism-related stocks contributed to an early sell-off on Wall Street that had many — but not all — California investors nervous. 

Khajag Vosgueritchian, a Pasadena mortgage broker, was confident enough in the economy’s future that he was buying stock at a Charles Schwab office in Los Angeles. 

“I’m pretty optimistic. I’m buying today, and I’m thinking long-term,” said Vosgueritchian, who was focusing on big companies such as General Electric and Intel. 

Over the weekend, Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta appointed two task forces of nongovernment experts to examine improving security aboard airliners and at airports. They are due to issue a report by Oct. 1. 

“Try to check everything at the ticket counter and not carry anything onto the airplanes,” Los Angeles World Airports spokesman Harold Johnson said. 

Waits for everything — from checking in to catching a shuttle bus — were long. Most seemed to take the delays in stride. 

Arun Gollaputi, 41, of Glendale arrived at the Burbank airport at 8:45 a.m. for a 10:45 a.m. Southwest Airlines flight to Oakland. 

His wife was in tears as she dropped him off, he said. Gollaputi said he told her: “We’ve got to show these bastards we’ve got to do business.” 

All of his baggage was searched thoroughly. Security personnel even asked permission to open a sealed legal-size envelope in his luggage. 

“I want them to check. This ensures they are checking everybody else,” he said. 

Some passengers admitted to concerns about flying. 

“People were looking around and everybody was nervous,” Caner Diniz, a 37-year-old Turkish businessman, said of his fellow passengers during the 45-minute flight from Las Vegas to Los Angeles. 

Others believed the worst was over. 

Doug Brown, 32, of Pasadena arrived from San Francisco at Burbank on a United flight about 8:30 a.m. 

“It was pretty smooth,” he said. 

His wife, Christina, 21, was waiting. 

“It’s already happened. They already did what they wanted to do. I don’t want to think about it too much. That would be over-worrying,” she said. 


Market resumes trading, Dow tumbles more than 680

By Amy Baldwin AP Business Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

NEW YORK — The losers included airline, insurance and entertainment stocks while defense issues were among the few winners when prices tumbled on Wall Street Monday, the first day of trading after last week’s terrorist attacks. 

The selling, in record volume on the New York Stock Exchange, gave the Dow Jones industrials their biggest one-day point drop, 684.81, and left them below 9,000 for the first time in more than 2 1/2 years. 

“To buy stocks you need some kind of clarity and confidence, and right now you’ve got neither,” said Bill Barker, investment consultant at Dain Rauscher in Dallas. “The buying public is sitting on its hands. The sellers are obviously in control now.” 

Analysts were unsure how long the selling would last or how intense if might become. Following last week’s attacks, investors have more reason to worry about shrinking profits, not to mention national security. 

Monday’s selling could have been worse, something that was apparent in the number of stocks that fell vs. those that rose. The ratio of decliners to advancers was close to 6 to 1, typical of the Wall Street’s recent selloffs; in the Oct. 19, 1987 crash, the ratio was 50 to 1. 

“This is about what we could have expected,” said Todd Clark, co-head of listed trading at WR Hambrecht. 

Still, he said, “I think traders are disappointed we didn’t rally a bit in the afternoon. There was some thinking that we would do that,” Clark said. 

The Dow closed at 8,920.70, having suffered a 7.1 percent decline. Its nearly 685-point loss surpassed the previous record one-day point drop of 617.78, set on April 14, 2000. The last time the blue chips were below 9,000 was Dec. 3, 1998. 

The Dow also set a record for an intraday point decline, 721.56, beating the previous record of 721.32, also set on April 14, 2000. 

By percentage, however, the Dow’s loss was less severe, ranking 14th and equaling less than a third of the biggest-ever percentage drop of 22.6 percent in the 1987 crash. 

The Nasdaq composite index fell 115.83, or 6.8 percent, to 1,579.55, a level not seen since Oct. 14, 1998 when it closed at 1,540.97. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index, the broadest measure of Wall Street, declined 53.77, or 4.9 percent, to 1,038.77. 

Some market watchers said there are several reasons, including deeply discounted stock prices and patriotism, to hope for a rally. 

“I have heard brokers say their clients are saying, ‘I want to buy something to show my support in our economic systems,”’ said Larry Wachtel, market analyst at Prudential Securities. 

Investors had to digest a great deal of news Monday, including a half-point interest rate reduction — the eighth cut this year — by the Federal Reserve before the market reopened, along with a litany of companies announcing stock buybacks to boost their share prices. 

Analysts said U.S. investors were ready to get back to trading after a four-day shutdown, anxious to adjust their portfolios amid the uncertainty about the market, the economy and the overall market. 

The stock market’s closure, necessary as damaged utility services were restored and investment firms scrambled to find alternate places to do business, was also needed to give investors some time to separate their emotions from their investments, analysts said. 

“There has been a four-day hiatus, which takes a little bit of the panic out of it. ...Of course, the Fed cutting rates, while it wasn’t unexpected, it was helpful,” Wachtel said. “It’s not going to be a disaster.” 

Analysts noted that high-tech shares fared relatively well. 

“It’s certainly a positive that what’s holding up best is the Nasdaq. If you were thinking there was panic, you would see more dumping there,” said Richard A. Dickson, technical analyst for Hilliard Lyons in Louisville, Ky. 

Airline stocks traded lower after all the major U.S. carriers, expecting a drop in business, announced reduced flight schedules. UAL, the parent of United Airlines, fell nearly 43 percent, down $13.32 at $17.50, and AMR, the parent of American Airlines, plunged $11.70, or 39 percent, to $18. 

Airlines weighed on the Dow Jones transportation index, which fell 15 percent, down 404.81 at 2,271.68. 

Other travel and leisure services suffered, including online travel agent Expedia, down $12.25 at $24. Marriott International fell $8.60 to $32.25. 

Insurers were weak as the industry faces steep losses following last week’s attacks. American International Group fell $3.26 to $71 after saying last week it expects its pretax losses from the attack to total $500 million. 

Financial companies also traded lower on the expectation that investors and consumers will invest, spend and borrow less amid greater uncertainty about the economy. Dow industrial American Express sank $4.76 to $30.25. AmEx fell further in the extended-hours session, down $1.25, after issuing a third-quarter profit warning. 

Entertainment stocks were weak as investors expect business to suffer if the economy goes into recession. Disney, also a Dow stock, fell $4.33 to $19.25. 

There were some winners, chiefly in defense and security, which could see an uptick in government spending following the attacks. Defense contractor Lockheed Martin rose $5.63 to $43.95. InVision Technologies, which makes systems used in detecting bombs, surged 165 percent, rising $5.14 to $8.25. 

Following the devastation in the Financial District, the NYSE and the Nasdaq tested their trading systems and those of their member firms to ensure they were operating properly and would be able to process trades. It was not immediately clear if there were any glitches that prevented investment firms from executing trades, although some smaller companies were still without phone service. 

In a move to support the market, the Securities and Exchange Commission eased rules governing stock buybacks by companies. Several firms announced plans to repurchase their stock as a signal of their confidence in their own shares, as well as the market and the country. 

Companies that announced buybacks included networker Cisco Systems, which fell 47 cents to $14, and Starbucks, down 94 cents at $15.51. 

NYSE volume came to a record 2.33 billion shares, nearly doubling the 1.24 billion that were traded the previous Monday and surpassing the previous volume record of 2.13 billion on Jan. 4. Consolidated volume, which includes trades made on and off the NYSE floor, totaled 2.73 billion shares, well ahead of 1.5 billion last Monday. 

The Russell 2000 index, the barometer of smaller company stocks, fell 21.69 to 417.67. 

Overseas markets were mixed Monday. Japan’s Nikkei stock, which had closed before the U.S. markets reopened, average tumbled 5 percent. European stocks rose strongly with Britain’s FT-SE 100 rising 3.0 percent, France’s CAC-40 climbing 2.7 percent, and Germany’s DAX index gaining 2.9 percent. 

 


eBay hopes to facilitate $100 million in donations

Associated Press
Tuesday September 18, 2001

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — EBay Inc. is using its auction Web site to facilitate donations to terrorist-attack relief efforts and has set a bold goal for the program — to raise $100 million in 100 days. 

The Internet company set up an “Auction for America” category Monday for people who want to sell items and donate the proceeds to victims of the terrorist attacks and their families. Items earmarked for attack relief will be free of the fees eBay normally collects from sellers. 

People also can use the category to make a cash donation without buying anything. In hopes of kick-starting the drive toward generating $100 million in donations in the next 100 days, eBay contributed $1 million of its own money. 

New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani urged all Americans to buy and sell at least one item through the program. 

“This is something we have to do,” said eBay chief executive Meg Whitman. “The creative and entrepreneurial spirit of eBay’s community is unstoppable and can do tremendous good in this time of great need.” 

EBay, the world’s biggest Internet auction site, counts 34 million registered users. Within hours of the Auction for America launch, users were offering several thousand products in the category. 

Shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, eBay began taking down listings for debris, videos and other items purportedly from the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. EBay eventually banned the sale of all memorabilia relating to the buildings at least until Oct. 1. 

 


City leaders react to Lee’s vote against war

By Jon Mays Daily Planet staff
Monday September 17, 2001

Reaction to U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee’s lone Congressional vote against the use of force against terror in the wake of the Sept. 11 tradedy was swift this week.  

Lee has a history of supporting peace and said she based the decision to vote against the on her conscience, moral compass and God. 

Mayor Shirley Dean said she respects Lee’s sincere conviction but added that she disagrees with it. 

“It appears as if this country is taking its time to establish who did this and those people need to be brought to justice,” Dean said. “I don’t think we should be bombing the heck out of another country and I don’t think that’s on the table. But terrorism has got to be stopped.” 

However, Councilmember Kriss Worthington said stopping terrorism should not come at the expense of civil liberties. He also said America needs to proceed cautiously and not get caught up in pro-war sentiment. Worthington agreed with Lee’s vote.  

“It was a courageous display of leadership to raise concerns about how the U.S. responds,” Worthington said. “It’s very easy to jump into the hysteria, to be gung-ho for any war, anywhere.” 

Dean said that she has been moved by the amount of patriotism and emotional outpouring throughout the city and believes that the people of Berkeley are most likely talking about the Sept. 11 tragedy more than other communities. 

“Two things struck me today – The number of flags and the number of people who stood hugging,” she said. “The hugging really really struck me hard. People are hurting and they want justice. They do not want revenge. There is a difference


Out and About

Compiled by Guy Poole
Monday September 17, 2001


Monday, Sept. 17

 

Women’s Classics Book Group 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

A new group will discuss “The Golden Notebook,” by Doris Lessing. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Rite of Christian Initiation for  

Adults Inquiry Program 

7:30 p.m. 

St. Mary Magdalen Parish 

2005 Berryman St. 

A program to learn everything you wanted to know about the Catholic Church but never had the chance to ask. 526-4811 

 

Dancing 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Seniors citizens can practice social dancing to taped music. 644-6107 

 

The Alternative Lifelong  

Learning Book Club 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Tracy Chevalier’s “The Girl with the Pearl Earring” will be discussed. Readers with limited vision are encouraged to attend. 644-6107 

 


Tuesday, Sept. 18

 

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 Fibromyalgia  

Support Group 

12 - 2 p.m. every third Tuesday 

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Maffly Auditorium - Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

“Natural approaches to FM” with Dr. Julie Orman, network chiropractor. 

601-0550 www.arthritis.org 

 

Crime Prevention 

11:50 a.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

A Police Department representative will provide crime prevention literature on fraud, burglaries and other public safety matters. 644-6107 

 

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 

 

Lead-Safe Painting and  

Remodeling Class 

6 p.m. - 8 p.m. 

Claremont Branch, Public Library 

2940 Benvenue Ave.  

How to paint and remodel your older house without disturbing the lead-paint. Sponsored by Alameda County Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. Free. 567-8280 www.aclppp.org 

 

Wings in the Night—A  

Celebration of Bats 

2:15 p.m. 

Epworth United Methodist Church 

1953 Hopkins St. 

The Berkeley Garden Club with Rehab Education Director for the California Bat Conservation Fund, Patricia Winters. 524-4374 

 


Wednesday, Sept. 19

 

Free Prostate Cancer  

Screening 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Alta Bates Medical Center 

Markstein Cancer Education & Prevention Center 

At-risk men may obtain a free prostate cancer screening by appointment. 

869-8833  

 

Fire Hill Station  

Neighborhood Meeting 

7 p.m. 

Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Building 

2180 Milvia St.  

6th Floor Conference Room 

Hill Fire Station meeting to review plans. 981-6341 

 

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 

 

Baby Bounce and Toddler  

Tales 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Central Library 

2090 Kittredge St. 

This participatory program for families with children up to age 3 presents multicultural stories, songs and fingerplays as entertainment. 644-6095 

 

Support Group for  

Family/Friends  

Caring for Older Adults 

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

Alta Bates Medical Center  

Herrick Campus 

2001 Dwight Way 

Third floor, Room 3369B (elevator B) 

The group will focus on the needs of the older adult with serious medical problems, psychiatric illnesses, substance abuse, and their caregivers. Free. 802-1725 

 

Gay/ Bi Men’s Book Group 

7:30 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Will discuss “Bastard Out of Carolina” by Dorothy Allison. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Socratic Circle Discussions 

5 - 6 p.m. 

1309 Solano Ave. 

Cafe Eclectica 

Does your brain need a workout? All ages welcome. 527-2344 

 

What You Need to Know  

Before You Build or Remodel 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Preview of the Homeowner’s Essential Course – learn to solder pipe and more. By Glen Kitzenberger. Free. 525-7610 

 

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 

 

Graduate Theological Union  

Fall Convocation 

3:30 p.m. 

Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary Chapel 

2770 Marin Ave. 

Annual GTU gathering which celebrates the beginning of the academic year. This year’s speaker is William M. Sullivan, Senior Scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. 649-2464 

 

Natural History of East Bay  

Hill Paths 

7 - 9 p.m. 

Hillside Club 

2286 Cedar St. 

Panelists will be Malcom Margolin, publisher of Heyday Books; Richard Schwartz, author of Berkeley 1900, a portrait of the city drawn from Century-old newspaper stories; Steve Edwards, director of the East Bay Regional Parks Botanic Garden. 524-4715 www.internettime.com/bpwa 

 


Thursday, Sept. 20

 

Free Prostate Cancer  

Screening 

9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 

Alta Bates Medical Center 

Markstein Cancer Education & Prevention Center 

At-risk men may obtain a free prostate cancer screening by appointment. 

869-8833 

Trekking and Travel in the  

Himalayas 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Arlene Blum presents slides from her recent traverse through the Himalayas and provides guidance on selecting and preparing for trekking adventures. Free. 527-4140 

 

AC Transit: Short Range  

Transit Plan 

7 - 9:30 p.m. 

Albany City Council Chambers 

100 San Pablo Ave. 

An extensive outreach campaign to find out what you think regarding AC Transit policies. 891-4860 www.actransit.org 

 

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. 869-2547 

 

Women’s Consciousness- 

Raising Group for the New  

Century 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

Cross-generational group and discussions of everything from race, age, class, and sexism to the various waves of feminism in the past.  

559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 


School districts, auditors, and accountability

By Ann-Marie Hogan
Monday September 17, 2001

Berkeley’s school district is threatened with “negative certification” because of budget inaccuracies; Emeryville School Board directors are recalled, after reports of deficit spending and inappropriate expenditures by the Superintendent; Peralta District students start school without textbooks. Students, parents, teachers and taxpayers can’t help wondering “why can’t they get it right?”  

As the daughter of a California elementary school teacher, I’ve watched the damage that’s been done to our state’s educational system by inadequate funding, the increasing challenges of educating today’s students, and state and federal “unfunded mandates.” 

As a city department director and elected official, I’ve learned that accomplishing the most basic tasks of administration in a public sector environment requires a struggle with forces, systems, and policies that appear mysterious if not downright irrational from a business perspective. As a member of the National Association of Local Government Auditors, I’ll state the obvious, from the auditors’ perspective: local school systems need an independent performance audit function.  

Most cities of Berkeley’s size and larger, and many school districts, include a performance audit function, according to Mark Funkhouser, city auditor for Kansas City, in “The Spread of Performance Auditing in American Cities.” This internal performance audit function is in addition to undergoing an annual financial audit from an outside contractor/accounting firm. The annual financial audits take a broad look at whether the numbers in the financial statements are accurate. Performance auditing, in contrast, speaks to classic problems in public administration: efficiency, effectiveness, and equity in the delivery and administration of programs and services.  

An independent performance audit provides an objective and systematic examination of evidence in order to prepare an independent assessment of management’s performance. By audit standards (set by the U.S. Comptroller General), the agency’s auditor must be independent of the administration, reporting to the legislative body (city council or school board) or directly to the public (elected). This ensures that honest and forthright reports are provided to the public, and to those with the authority to implement the changes.  

How can an independent performance audit function improve a school district’s efficiency and accountability? By identifying problems and making recommendations resulting in improvement in service delivery, cost savings, and improved accountability.  

BUSD: A performance auditor could review budget estimates, follow up reports on systems weaknesses identified in the annual financial audit, evaluate the computer systems, and examine recruiting and retention of qualified staff. (See Departmental Budget Monitoring report on the City Auditor’s website)  

Emeryville: Not only budget deficits but reports of inappropriate expenditures were discovered too late. An annual financial audit can’t be expected to uncover details about expenses, and is typically completed substantially after the end of the fiscal year. An independent internal reviewer was clearly needed to surface the problems without censorship before it was too late to take action.  

Peralta: Delays in obtaining textbooks and supplies are a chronic problem in schools. Independent performance audits of purchasing practices are the best solutions.  

A competent and independent audit function in every school district won’t solve all the school district’s problems. But, without an objective and careful ongoing evaluation of an organization’s internal controls and operational effectiveness, school boards will not have the information they need to make the difficult decisions needed for real improvement.  

The key to a successful audit program is the willingness and capacity of responsible officials to support ongoing independent evaluation, and to take action to make agreed-upon changes. Auditors, elected officials, and operating management can work together to address problems before they become crises in our school districts, just as they do in cities and other districts.  

Questions? Comments? Ideas for the Audit Plan? Please e-mail the City Auditor at hogan@ci.berkely.ca.us, mail to 12180 Milvia Street, 3rd floor, 94704. Audit reports available on line at Ci.berkeley.ca.us/Auditor.  

Ann-Marie Hogan is the city auditor for the city of Berkeley. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Arts and Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

924 Gilman Street Sept. 21: Slow Gherkin, 78 RPMS, Enemy You, Wisecracker; Sept. 23: 5 p.m. Subtonix, Running Ragged, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 28: Erase Errata, The Intima, Ibobuki, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 29: DS-13, Beware, Blown To Bits, (+t.b.a.); Most shows are $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 

 

Albatross Pub 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  

 

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

 

Cal Performances 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 

 

Crowden School Sept. 23: 4 p.m. “Sundays at Four Concert” Jeremy Cohen’s jazz violin. Admission $10 (free if under 18) 1475 Rose 559-6910 

 

Eli’s Mile High Club Every Friday, 10 p.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. 18 Spencer Bohren, $16.50, Sept. 19: David Tanenbaum & Peppino D’Agostino, $16.50, Sept. 20: Steve Tilston & Danny Carnahan, $16.50; Sept. 21: The Waybacks, $17.50; Sept. 22: The Bluerass Intentions, $17.50; Sept. 23 Tony Marcus & Patrice Haan, $16.50; Sept. 24: April Verch, $16.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

Jack’s Bistro Sept. 22 & Sept. 28: 9 p.m. Tomas Michaud’s New World Flamenco Quartet, Jack London Square. 444-7171 www.starland-music.com 

 

Jupiter 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; Sept. 25: Craig Graham Trio; Sept. 26: Starvin Like Marvin; Sept. 28 Anton Schwartz Quartet; Sept 29: Modern Gypsies; 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 

 

Music Sources Sept. 30: 5 p.m. Ole Scarlatta! Portuguese and French keyboards and fortepiano joined by Jason McGuire on flamenco guitar, $18 General, $15 members, seniors, students. 1000 The Alameda 528-1685 

 

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 

 

"A Benefit Concert for Devi-ja"  

Sept. 16: 4 p.m. Proceeds of this concert will help Violinist Devi-ja Delgado Croll and her family. Performers will include: Ali Jihad Racy, Zakir Hussain, Vince Delgado, Mimi Spencer, Shirley Muramoto, Matt Eakle, Dahlena, Carnaval Spirit and others. $20 Donation. St. John's Presbyterian Church 2727 College Ave. 415-457-8427 vince@vincedelgado.com 

 

The 1st Annual Guinness & Oyster Festival 2001 Sept. 22: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Free. Cake, Mingus Amungus, Ponticello, Stolen Bibles, Alamo 66 w/ Destani Wolf, The Culann’s Hounds. MLK Jr. Civic Center Park 

 

 

“The Complete Shostakovich String Quartets--Part One” Sept. 29: 10 a.m. Quartets III & IV; Oct. 20: 10 a.m. Quartets V & VI. Performed by the prize-winning Alexander String Quartet with Robert Greenberg. $ 30, $84 for the Trio of concerts. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 College Ave. 845-8542 www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

Berkeley Symphony Orchestra Sept. 17, 24: Hertz Hall 

 

Magnificat Sept. 29: 8 p.m. First Congregational Church. The San Francisco early music ensemble of voices and period instruments present their thenth anniversary season with music of seventeenth century composers. Tickets $12-$45 (415) 979-4500 for more info 

 

 

American Ballet Theatre Sept. 19, 20: 8 p.m.: Mark Morris, Paul Taylor and Natalie Weir; Sept. 21, 22 8 p.m., Sept 22 2 p.m., Sept 23 3 p.m.: David Briskin conducts Berkeley Symphony Orchestra. Zellerbach Hall Tickets $36, $48 and $64. 

 

“Hecho En Califas Chicano-Latino Teatro Festival” Sept. 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 

 

“Le Cirque des Animaux” Sept. 29: 8 p.m. Hausmusik presents a wacky baroque musical cabaret on the subject of animals. Parish Hall of St. Alban’s Espiscopal Church, 1501 Washington St. (not wheelchair accessible). $18 general admission, $15 seniors, students and SFEMS members) 527-9029 

 

“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 

 

“Twelfth Night” Sept. 18 - 23, 25 - 30, Oct. 2 - 7, Tue. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m., Student Matinees: Sept. 18, 20, 25, Oct. 2, @ 1 p.m. California Shakespeare Festival presents William Shakespeare’s comic tale of romance, loneliness, love and glory. Directed by Jonathan Moscone. $12 - $41. Bruns Memorial Amphitheater, Highway 24, Gateway Exit, one mile east of the Caldecott Tunnel. 548-9666 www.calshakes.org


Panthers win a squeaker over El Cerrito

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

Tailback George scores three TDs for St. Mary’s 

Minutes after getting his first win as a head coach, St. Mary’s Jay Lawson had a huge grin on his face. 

The first words out of his mouth were, “I’ll take it.” 

Lawson’s team had just wriggled out of a tight spot thanks to a sloppy play by their opponent, El Cerrito, at just the right time. After Gaucho running back Jamonte Cox scored his third touchdown of the day with 3:12 left in the game to pull his team to within one point at 28-27, El Cerrito holder Greg Murray let the point-after snap slip through his fingers, pretty much handing the game to the Panthers. 

Lawson, who took over the head job at St. Mary’s this season after 12 years under former head coach Dan Shaughnessy, knew his team had narrowly avoided a second-half collapse that could have cost them the victory. 

“When they scored, we were concentrating on getting our offense ready, figuring out how to score and get ahead again,” Lawson said of the fateful PAT attempt. 

The Panthers were ahead 28-14 at halftime thanks to some brilliant running by tailback Trestin George and a repeat performance on special teams by Courtney Brown. George scored three touchdowns in the first half, including a 71-yard run to give the Panthers their first offensive score of the season near the end of the first quarter.  

That run, on which George was freed by a spectacular block by offensive lineman Julian Taylor, tied the game at 7-7 after Cox had put the Gauchos up with a 5-yard touchdown run. The showdown between George and Cox, both considered among the top backs in California, was one-sided in favor of George, who ended the day with 161 yards on 23 carries and a 35-yard touchdown catch off of a screen from quarterback Steve Murphy.  

Cox had a subpar game despite his three rushing scores, gaining just 62 yards on 21 carries. His longest run was for 10 yards, and he only his only big play was a 56-yard catch. Cox also fumbled the ball four times, although only one resulted in a turnover. It was a key blunder, however, as the senior fumbled the ball just before crossing the goal line, and the ball was recovered by St. Mary’s defensive lineman Jonathon Tarranto in the end zone. 

“We were looking for Cox to get the ball off tackle and on screens, and we geared our defense to stop him,” Lawson said. 

The Panthers used solid support from their outside linebackers to contain Cox, forcing him into the teeth of their huge defensive line. Linebacker Omarr Flood was impressive, making three tackles for loss on Cox. 

George, on the other hand, seemed unstoppable for much of the game. He took the opening kickoff 89 yards for an apparent touchdown, but the run was called back on a clipping penalty. His most spectacular score was his shortest, as the senior took a handoff from 10 yards out and was met by two El Cerrito defenders in the backfield. George took the hit and spun away to the left, then weaved his way through several more Gauchos before crossing the goal line. 

“I had to make some big plays today after what happened last week,” said George, who was held to 59 yards by Bishop O’Dowd in the season opener. “Big players make big plays, and we’ve got a lot of big players here.” 

Falling precisely into that category is Brown. A week after scoring the lone St. Mary’s touchdown in the loss to O’Dowd on a kickoff return, Brown made a repeat performance. After the Gauchos had pulled to within 21-14 late in the second quarter, he took the kickoff at the 10 and burst through the first wave of defenders, then broke to the left sideline and out-ran everyone to the end zone. 

“I told (Brown) he’d better not let me down next week,” Lawson joked. “Touchdown returns are part of the game plan now.” 

Although the Gauchos looked thoroughly deflated by Brown’s quick strike, they came out of halftime with renewed fire. They buckled down on defense to stop the Panthers’ big plays and didn’t allow a score in the second half. And one breakdown by the St. Mary’s special teams was all they needed to get right back in the game. 

After a Gaucho drive stalled at midfield, the punting team came on. A St. Mary’s player tipped the punt, which quickly died on the ground. St. Mary’s defensive back Kenny Griffin unwisely tried to pick the ball up and fumbled it on the 15-yard line, where it was recovered by a pile of Gauchos. 

El Cerrito nearly failed to capitalize, as two successive penalties put them in a 4th-and-14 situation, but quarterback Randy Gatewood found James Cannon for 19 yards and first down. Two plays later Cox rumbled for a score from a yard out, cutting the deficit to 28-21. 

“That fumble really gave them new life,” said Lawson, whose team struggled on special teams most of the game. “We had started shooting ourselves in the foot, and (El Cerrito) got it going in the third quarter.” 

After a St. Mary’s turnover on downs with 8:17 left in the game, the Gauchos put together their most impressive drive of the day, running the ball 10 times for 62 yards and Cox’s final touchdown. But after the mishandled snap kept the lead in St. Mary’s hands, George conjured up one final burst of brilliance, taking the kickoff back 49 yards to the El Cerrito 38. He then got a key first down with a three-yard run on 4th-and-1, allowing the Panthers to run the clock out. 

NOTES: George, who is being recruited by most of the Pac-10, said he is currently favoring the Washington Huskies and USC Trojans. He said he will make a decision by early February... After fumbling the ball seven times against O’Dowd, the Panthers forced seven fumbles by the Gauchos. They only recovered one, however... St. Mary’s quarterback Murphy completed just four of 12 pass attempts, but made them count, averaging 31 yards per completion. Receiver Chase Moore had three catches for 93 yards.


What Lee said on house floor

Barbara Lee
Monday September 17, 2001

“Mr. Speaker, I rise today with a heavy heart, one that is filled with sorrow for the families and loved ones who were killed and injured in New York, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Only the most foolish or the most callous would not understand the grief that has gripped the American people and millions across the world. 

This unspeakable attack on the United States has forced me to rely on my moral compass, my conscience, and my God for direction. 

September 11 changed the world. Our deepest fears now haunt us. Yet I am convinced that military action will not prevent further acts of international terrorism against the United States. 

I know that this use-of-force resolution will pass although we all know that the President can wage a war even without this resolution. However difficult this vote may be, some of us must urge the use of restraint. There must be some of us who say, let’s step back for a moment and think through the implications of our actions today — let us more fully understand its consequences. 

We are not dealing with a conventional war. We cannot respond in a conventional manner. I do not want to see this spiral out of control. This crisis involves issues of national security, foreign policy, public safety, intelligence gathering, economics, and murder. Our response must be equally multifaceted. 

We must not rush to judgment. Far too many innocent people have already died. Our country is in mourning. If we rush to launch a counterattack, we run too great a risk that women, children, and other noncombatants will be caught in the crossfire. 

Nor can we let our justified anger over these outrageous acts by vicious murderers inflame prejudice against all Arab Americans, Muslims, Southeast Asians, or any other people because of their race, religion, or ethnicity. 

Finally, we must be careful not to embark on an open-ended war with neither an exit strategy nor a focused target. We cannot repeat past mistakes. 

In 1964, Congress gave President Lyndon Johnson the power to “take all necessary measures” to repel attacks and prevent further aggression. In so doing, this House abandoned its own constitutional responsibilities and launched our country into years of undeclared war in Vietnam. 

At that time, Sen. Wayne Morse, one of two lonely votes against the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, declared, “I believe that history will record that we have made a grave mistake in subverting and circumventing the Constitution of the United States ... I believe that within the next century, future generations will look with dismay and great disappointment upon a Congress which is now about to make such a historic mistake.” 

Sen. Morse was correct, and I fear we make the same mistake today. And I fear the consequences. 

I have agonized over this vote. But I came to grips with it in the very painful yet beautiful memorial service today at the National Cathedral. As a member of the clergy so eloquently said, “As we act, let us not become the evil that we deplore.” 


Compelling reason to revert to elections based on geography

Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

Editor: 

Of the 58 counties in the state of California, only five counties (Los Angeles, Orange, Sacramento, San Diego and Santa Clara) contain “whole” senate districts (19). Those exact same five counties, also contain (41) whole state assembly districts. Combined with partial districts that is a “”majority” of the state legislature in 5 counties. 

The properties taxes raised in all the other fifty-three counties can be easily-raided (i.e. ERAF/Edison bailout) if and when those state legislators, of the above five counties, precisely legislate for their respective populations. 

The above is compelling reason to reverting back to having “one” of California’s legislative bodies elected, on the basis of geogrophy, not population, similar to the U.S. Senate election process. 

Thank you for allowing me to correct my earlier misstatement. 

 

John Bauer,Martinez


Shore clean-up nets an odd bounty

By Jennifer Dix Daily Planet Correspondent
Monday September 17, 2001

“This is a life-changing activity you’re doing today,” Patty Donald told volunteers assembled near the Berkeley Marina Saturday, as they prepared to spread out and pick up garbage along the coastline. 

Donald, a naturalist and coordinator at the Shorebird Nature Center, warned volunteers the experience might be “sometimes horrifying,” as they encountered tons of plastic litter, garbage and other debris that collects along the East Bay shoreline.  

Still, she assured them, “It’s amazing what a group of people can do in three hours.” 

And for many of those people, there was nowhere they would rather have been on Saturday morning. In the wake of the terrorist attacks that shook the nation last Tuesday, many volunteers were anxious to undertake any activity that made them feel useful and took their minds off the horror.  

“I bet many people are happy to be out here today,” said Oakland resident Bob Moorehead, who joined his friend, Berkeley retiree Walt Rowson as they headed out over the area known


Conservatism is for heroes’

Tim Plume
Monday September 17, 2001

Editor: 

As our US population races toward the half gig goal, we may need more natural resources now in reserve in forests and parts. Shall we put off that day or shall we start reckoning now? 

China cut their forests centuries ago and they don’t seem to miss them so much. Maybe we too can go on without such distracting, dreamy luxuries. Deserts can seem beautiful if that’s all you’ve got. We’re behind China and India in population; don’t we want to win the race? If we wait too long, China may grow sronger. Will we then lose our place in the world order? 

Do we want to stay on top or can we be happy as number two, three or four? When you’ve seen one tree that’s the whole scene. 

We need many mega-suburbs or consumers and their cars. Only with cavernous homes can consumers surge and swell toward the half gig goal. Two by four farms look lovely on the books. Roadless wilderness can only attract outlaws and our enemies. 

Soon, the decision must be made; leave them roadless or demolish the devil’s wilds. 

Worshiping trees is like worshiping earthworms. Just remember, conservationism is for wimps. Conservatism is for heroes. A gig is young hero talk for a billion. 

After achieving half a gig in our US, there’s the whole gig goal for the 21st century. 

Tim Plume 

Berkeley 


Rep. Lee has history of opposing the use of force

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

WASHINGTON — The only member of Congress to vote against using force against terrorists was also the lone House opponent of using U.S. troops against Serbia three years ago. 

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., came to Congress in 1998 promising to trim defense spending. She said Friday that she opposed the measure backing the use of military force by President Bush after relying on her “moral compass, my conscience and my God for direction.” 

“Our deepest fears now haunt us,” Lee said, referring to the hijacked planes that terrorists plunged into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, leaving thousands missing. “Yet I am convinced that military action will not prevent further acts of international terrorism against the United States.” 

The resolution was approved Friday 98-0 by the Senate and 420-1 in the House. 

When Lee voted against the use of American troops in Serbia in 1998, she argued that the measure gave President Clinton too much authority without congressional approval. 

Lee, 55, represents Oakland and Berkeley, Calif., an overwhelmingly Democratic district. 

A former social worker, she served in the California Assembly and Senate after working for Rep. Ron Dellums, D-Calif. She replaced him when he retired. 

 

 


Star fire 100 percent contained

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – The El Dorado and Tahoe National Forests fire has been 100 percent contained. The fire had been burning on 16,761 acres and cost a total of $26.5 million. 

“This does not mean that the fire is out,” said Karen Durand, a spokeswoman for the Foresthill Fire Information Center. “It means we’ve got good control of the fire.” 

About 622 firefighting personnel have been working on the fire, which also is known as the Star fire. Durand said she expects the fire will be controlled by Sept. 19. 

The Fire Information Center reported that fire behavior on Saturday was minimal and that efforts to stabilize soil conditions and improve roads continue. 

All restrictions and closures in the area remain, however some may change in the next week, Durand said.


Alleged drug den bursts into flames

Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

SAN JOSE – A couple allegedly cooking methamphetamine in a San Jose motel room were burned as the chemicals burst into flames. 

Chad Gulmon, 28, threw the chemicals and the beakers out the second-story window of the Extended Stay America motel on San Ignacio Avenue. Gulmon tried to swallow a bag of methamphetamine. Police struggled with him to retrieve them. 

Gulmon was hospitalized with second and third-degree burns. Karin Burns, 32, was booked after being treated for burns to her hands. 

Two San Jose police officers and a sergeant who struggled with Gulmon were also released from a local hospital after being treated for chemical exposure.


Richmond prep school opening delayed

Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

 

RICHMOND – The grand opening for Towers Prepatory School, a charter school, has been delayed because of a lack of construction fund and a place to build. 

Charter schools such as Alternative Education Learning Center and Towers Prepatory School are started by parents, teachers or community groups who want an alternative to traditional public schools. 

To operate, they must have the endorsement of a school district to operate but are not required to follow most education codes. They receive state funding based on attendance, just like traditional public schools. 

However, they do not receive extra money for facilities and cannot use the state and local bonds that fund most school construction projects. 

The school’s directors have had real estate deals fall through, and hope the West Contra Costa school board will grant an exemption. The school’s charter was approved last year with the condition the school find a site by Sept. 1, 2001. 


Pacifica fined for environmental violations

Staff
Monday September 17, 2001

 

PACIFICA – The state is fining the city $209,000 for five years of environmental violations at the now-closed Sharp Park wastewater treatment plant and the year-old Calera Creek plant. 

Pacifica will receive a mix of mandatory and civil penalties for 623 violations of water quality standards from 1996 to 2000. Calera Creek has committed at least 24 additional violations the first six months of this year. 

The city has agreed to pay the money, which waives its right to a hearing before the California Regional Water Quality Control Board that was scheduled for Wednesday, said City Manager David Carmany. 

According to state records, there were 579 days between October 1996 and December 1999 when the Sharp Park plant dumped water that contained excess pollutants or was not treated properly into the Pacific Ocean. 

The pollutants included total coliform, which indicates fecal bacteria, ammonia and chlorine residue. 

The state says the Calera Creek plant has dispensed effluent to a man-made wetlands for the past year.


Report says FBI was warned two hijackers were already in U.S.

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

LOS ANGELES – The FBI was warned three weeks before the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington that two suspected Osama bin Laden associates, who later turned out to be among the suicide hijackers, were in the United States, according to a report Sunday. 

The FBI began to search on Aug. 21 for Khalid Al-Midhar and Nawaq Alhamzi, who authorities believe helped hijack American Airlines Flight 77 and crash it into the Pentagon, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday, citing intelligence and law enforcement sources. 

But the FBI did not ask for help from the field office in San Diego, where the men had been living, until a day or two before Tuesday’s infernos in Washington and New York, FBI sources told the Times. 

The failed manhunt began after the CIA warned that Al-Midhar might have a link to the terrorist bombing of the U.S. destroyer Cole last October in Yemen. Bin Laden is the prime suspect in the Cole bombing and in Tuesday’s attacks. 

Al-Midhar appears in a secret videotape made last year at a meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, with a suspect in the Cole bombing. The CIA on Aug. 21 asked the FBI to find Al-Midhar and an associate, Alhamzi. 

There was no indication from the CIA or elsewhere that Al-Midhar and Alhamzi were planning the hijackings. 

“We videotaped the meeting,” a U.S. intelligence official told the Times. “Afterwards, they split up and went their way.” 

Asked why no one was apprehended after the meeting, the official said, “Here was a bunch of guys who we believed were dirty, but we didn’t have anything on them.” 

U.S. authorities later determined that Al-Midhar and Alhamzi had flown into Los Angeles International Airport early last year, and into the New York area earlier this year. The FBI checked hotel records in Los Angeles and New York but found no trace of either man, the Times said. 

A law enforcement source told the Times on Saturday that the CIA first contacted the FBI’s New York City office. FBI agents in New York gave the two names to the bureau’s Los Angeles office only days before the attacks, and the San Diego office received the names a day after that. 

The law enforcement official portrayed the information as sketchy and “very, very late.” 

Both men were placed on a U.S. immigration “watch list” in late August, but immigration officials quickly determined that they already had entered the United States. At various times in the past year, both men have lived in San Diego and Phoenix. 

Alhamzi was renting a room in San Diego at the time of the Cole attack. It is unclear whether Al-Midhar was living there then or had just moved out. Abdussattar Shaikh, who said he rented rooms to Alhamzi and Al-Midhar, said the two had told him they were friends from Saudi Arabia. 

Despite what the FBI called an “aggressive” effort, the bureau failed to find the men until their names surfaced on the passenger manifest of American Flight 77, which killed at least 190 people when it rammed the Pentagon. 

“When you have somebody who comes into this country without any information to go on as to where they were going, who they’re staying with or anything — when you have none of that and, as it turns out you only have two weeks to work with, the likelihood of finding him was very small,” a government official who asked not to be identified told the Times.


Muslim store owner killed after confronting customers

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

SAN GABRIEL – A grocery store owner was shot and killed after an apparent confrontation with customers escalated into violence, officials said. 

The shooting took place at 3:15 p.m. Saturday when the victim, Adel Karas, 48, of Arcadia, confronted two unidentified men as they picked up several unknown items from the store. Karas suffered gunshot wounds to the upper torso when gunfire erupted as the suspects approached the counter, said Deputy Ronald Bottomley of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. 

The two suspects fled in a copper-colored Honda driven by a third person, Bottomley said. 

Karas was taken to Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena where he was pronounced dead at 3:26 p.m. 

Family members of Karas, who is a Coptic Christian from Egypt, believe the killing took place because the suspects assumed Karas was Muslim. They believe he was a victim of a backlash attack motivated by Tuesday’s terror attacks in the East Coast. 

Several apparent backlash assaults and threats have been reported across the country against people of Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian descent. 

“When we went to the store ... we saw all the cash in the register,” said Karas’ cousin, Nash Eskander. 

There was nothing of value in the store that would push someone to killing, Eskander said. 

Police officials, however, said the shooting is being investigated as a robbery. 

“Right now the homicide detectives are investigating the case,” said sheriff’s Deputy Brian Lendman. “It appears to be a robbery that had tragic results. We have no information to the contrary.”


Terrorist attack spurred decrease in crime statewide

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

Crime rates, traffic levels drop after Tuesday’s events 

LOS ANGELES – The terrorist attacks that devastated the nation’s largest city sent California residents scurrying home, cleared the region’s congested freeways for a time and, apparently, even prompted crime rates to plummet. 

The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department estimated crime has fallen some 50 percent below normal rates for this time of year since Tuesday’s tragedies. 

“People are coming together, and the bad guys don’t seem to be doing bad things,” Deputy David Cervantes said, noting that statistics are similar to lower winter rates. 

“I believe that it could be one of two things, it could be that people are staying home and watching their TV,” he said. “There’s (also) a sense of unity and something to look forward to and people are setting aside there difference and getting together.” 

Most precincts in the Los Angeles Police Department reported criminal activity has remained normal since Tuesday, but some stations have noted a slight decrease. 

Things have been “slower than usual” at the Police Department’s West Los Angeles station, said Sgt. Ron Bremer, who noticed that there were “fewer bodies being booked.” 

“Most of the bad guys are probably too scared to do anything with the police presence out there,” he said. 

The North Hollywood area has also been quiet since Tuesday, said Sgt. Gary Patton, who attributed the reduction to the city’s state of tactical alert. 

“Everybody seemed to be outside waving flags,” he said. “Everybody’s emotionally drain.” 

In neighboring Ventura, Kern, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, law enforcement officials say the number of reported crimes has remained the same. 

In San Francisco, complaint calls to the police were about the same as usual for a Saturday night. 

There had been 2,620 calls to the San Francisco Police Department by 7:50 p.m. Saturday, down only slightly from 2,692 calls by the same time a week earlier. 

But Sgt. Peter Thoshinski, working the phones at the city’s Southern Station, said things appeared more subdued than usual for his nightclub and warehouse district. 

“It’s a little bit slow for a Saturday evening,” Thoshinski said. 

He did mention a disconcerting incident involving one of his Pakistani officers that occurred in the days following the terrorist attack. As the officer drove to work, a fellow motorist made an obscene gesture to him and swerved to run him off the road, Thoshinski said. 

The Pakistani officer, not in his police uniform at the time, was able to avoid being hit by the irate motorist and was not injured.


Thousands of reservists prepare for call up

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

Volunteer Californians could be headed to East Coast for aftermath 

SACRAMENTO – A contingent of mortuary specialists and chaplains left Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield early Saturday for the East Coast, the first of thousands of California reservists expecting to begin military duty in days and weeks ahead. 

Thirty two specialists in the grim, but necessary job of identifying human remains flew to Delaware’s Dover Air Force Base, preparing to meet up with counterparts from 10 other units around the nation. 

Their task: to help with what’s expected to be several thousand deaths from Tuesday’s terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington, D.C. 

As they departed, thousands of other Californians were packing, spending time with their loved ones and preparing to follow President Bush’s call for up to 50,000 military reservists. 

“We’re all volunteers and we love our country,” said Lt. Col. William Conrad, a Modesto City Council Member and father of two who has already reported to the California National Guard’s 129th Rescue Wing at Moffett Field in Mountain View. 

Conrad is one of 21,000 California reservists attached to the state’s Army and Air Force National Guard. Another 7,500 belong to the U.S. Navy Reserves. 

In San Bruno, reservist and single mother Kate MacKay recounted a conversation with her 11-year-old son, saying, “I told him I had to do it for him because this has to stop.” 

President Bush is mobilizing reservists for the first time since the 1991 Gulf War, for medical support, communications, transportation and civil protection while the regular military fulfills his promise of a war against terrorists. 

Military officials say it will be several days before they know who will be called up. 

In Simi Valley, Steve Timbol, a police officer and National Guardsman called his commanding officer at Channel Islands Air Force Base near Oxnard on Tuesday, asking “What do you need me to do?” 

Timbol is already serving as a military policeman on the base, leaving his wife, Dorina, with two children and anxieties about the future. 

“Everything in my life is on hold,” she said. “You are dealing with the fear that if something happens, your kids will be without a father. To me that’s the most frightening part of it, not knowing what to expect.” 

Los Angeles police officer Ken Williams, one of 663 reservists in the Los Angeles Police Department, said, “After 12 years in the military I know what it’s about. When the country needs us we gotta go. I feel bad for all the families that had people killed. It was a sad situation.” 

Employers are legally bound to hold jobs open for reservists until they come home. Some companies, such as United Parcel Service and Colton-based Slater Bros. make up the difference between their workers’ military and civilian pay and continue full benefits for their families. 

Slater Bros. chief Jack Brown, who counts about 200 reservists among his 13,000 employees, said, “I think the most important thing an employer can do right now is to reassure their reservists that if they are called their families will be able to maintain their lifestyle.” 

In San Diego, Bill Butler a veteran of four tours in Vietnam and 30 years as a U.S. Navy reservist, said he’s ready for another assignment. “All of us have volunteered; some of us more than once. We know what is necessary, to go in harm’s way. We know our jobs. We know the risk.” 

Scott McMillan of San Jose said the same before shipping out of Travis Air Force Base Saturday with his fellow mortuary specialists. McMillan, who helped after the 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, said, “You get images back. Smells will trigger things that will make you go back...I’m not looking forward to it, but because I’ve done it already I’m not as anxious as I was the first time.” 

In Pittsburg, Air Force reservist Sean Poynter doesn’t know if he’ll be called up. But he said he hopes the American flags he sees flying stay up for a long time. 

“It’s nice to know if I get called up that all Americans are out there and that all Americans support what we’re doing.”


Apple fights to regain ground in education market

By May Wong AP Technology Writer
Monday September 17, 2001

SAN JOSE – In education, ’A’ has long stood for Apple. But nowadays, ’B’ is for the big school battle with ’C’ the competition — Dell Computer Corp. 

With technology boot camps for teachers and computer-leasing programs for parents, Apple Computer Inc. has been fighting hard to regain ground after losing its lead in education sales to Dell two years ago. 

It’s had some success: Apple boosted its market share from a low of 19 percent in the fourth quarter of 2000 to more than 23 percent in the second quarter of this year, according to International Data Corp. 

Still, Dell had 37.5 percent in the second quarter. 

Apple, the first computer maker to focus on the education market, gets an estimated 40 percent of its revenue from schools. But it has had trouble fighting Dell’s knack for keeping prices low and shipping supplies fast — the same advantages that give Dell the overall crown in worldwide PC sales. 

And in an increasingly un-Apple world in and outside of schools, even Mac loyalists in the education community are skeptical Apple will ever reach the 45 percent market share it enjoyed in 1996 — before Dell and other Microsoft Windows-based PC companies revved up their school marketing initiatives. 

“It’s incredible they’re still alive and kicking in the schools at all, considering that 95 percent of the world is behind Bill Gates,” said Christopher Werler, founder and president of Teacher Street, an education software publisher. 

Today, 75 percent of the software Teacher Street sells to schools is for Windows users — a complete reversal from when most developers wrote educational programs for Macs only, Werler said. 

Apple officials know they face an uphill battle. 

“We hear from educators and parents — ‘I want my student to be trained on computers that they’ll be using at work,”’ said Cheryl Vedoe, hired last year as Apple’s vice president of education marketing to bolster school sales. 

Apple has largely become a niche provider catering to graphics professionals, with less than 5 percent of the overall domestic PC market — compared to 24 percent for Dell and 13 percent for Compaq Computer Corp., according to Gartner Dataquest. 

PC makers are increasingly going after sales to schools because education is one of the few market segments still growing despite the computer industry slump. 

“It’s not necessarily an Apple issue: it’s that the competition has grown,” said David Daoud, a PC-education analyst for IDC. 

Apple must also contend with the marketing muscle of Microsoft, which last month kicked off a 30-city tour to promote learning tools it has developed that include its new Encarta Class Server, lesson-management software that runs only on Windows operating systems. The Redmond, Wash.-based giant also is talking up multimedia applications like movie editing — an area in which Apple remains strong in classrooms with its popular iMovie software. 

In the past year, Apple has lowered its prices to compete better and launched a program for parents to lease laptops for eventual purchase through schools. In March, Apple acquired PowerSchool, a maker of Web-based software that automates administrative tasks like grading and attendance. 

In hopes of showing that its computers provide the better learning platform for students, Cupertino-based Apple held a three-day meeting with a national school superintendents’ group and eight technology boot camps for teachers around the country this summer. 

“We try to convince schools that the highest rule for technology should be as a tool for teaching and learning ... and that’s not necessarily the best tool for accountants and aerospace engineers,” Vedoe said. 

Apple needs more customers like the Englewood School District in Colorado, which has 1,500 computers — 70 percent are Apple and 30 percent Windows-based. 

Two years ago, when technology director Dale Stout started to upgrade the district’s computer systems, some teachers, parents, and technology consultants tried to pressure him to convert entirely to Windows PCs. 

“They were saying we should prepare our students for what’s being used in the real world,” Stout said. “In reality, the two systems are so close together, it really doesn’t matter which one you use.” 

So he decided to get Apple computers for use where they work best — with easy-to-use learning and graphics tools — and Windows-based PCs for science and engineering. 

But more often than not, school districts are choosing one platform over another — and migrating away from Apple. 

Michigan’s Rochester Community Schools decided to switch this school year to Dell, buying $8 million worth of equipment upgrades and services for its 14,000 students. School officials cited cost as a reason. 

At California’s San Lorenzo Unified School District, officials last year looked only at non-Apple systems for a $25 million project to equip its students with wireless laptops. The district chose Dell after the company agreed to subsidize one-fifth of the project’s cost and “sat at the table” with the district from the beginning of the planning process, said assistant superintendent Arnie Glassberg.


City copes with tragedy

By Hank SimsDaily Planet staff
Saturday September 15, 2001

With attacks in mind, city searches for normalcy 

 

On the streets, in the schools and in its civic buildings, Berkeley marked the end of an extraordinary week and tried to find a way back into daily routines Friday. 

A small fire broke out in a dumpster at John Muir Elementary School on Claremont Avenue, but teachers and principal Nancy D. Waters were able to bring it under control before the fire department arrived. 

Children spent the day writing their hopes on strips of white cloth, then hanging them on the school’s fence.  

“I wish the world were peaceful again,” wrote fourth-grader Maya Franklin. “I wish that the crash would never happen again.” “I wish people would stop fighting with other people,” said others. 

“We wanted to get them thinking about a calm, safe world,” said teacher Sally Lappen, who thought of the idea after she remembered a similar Japanese ceremony she had seen on television.  

The son of Carol Hathaway, a John Muir art teacher, is a student at Hunter College in Manhattan; several people laboring at the site of the World Trade Center are sleeping in empty rooms at his dormitory. Hathaway and her students spent the day painting thank-you cards to send to the rescue workers. 

“I think we all kind of feel like we wish we could help, but we can’t,” Hathaway told her class. “So what we can do is thank the people who are helping.” 

Children sketched the vases of flowers that had been placed on their tables. They folded their drawings over to make cards and wrote messages inside: “Thank you.” “We love you.” 

Principal Waters spent a lot of time in classrooms, checking in on teachers and students. 

“We haven’t talked about how tragic it was,” she said. “We’ve just tried to rekindle a sense of pride in America and put the children’s thoughts in a direction of hope.” 

At the end of the day, Waters sent a note home with John Muir students, telling them about the fire and assuring them that it was handled without incident.  

Meanwhile, across town in north west Berkeley, neighbors of the city’s Fire Station 6, decorated the bell outside the station with candles, flowers and messages of gratitude. 

“We, your community, suffer with you the loss of your fellow firefighters in New York, Washington and around the country,” said one. “We grieve with you and honor you daily. We walk in respect for your fallen comrades. God Bless America, and you.” 

And around noon, the city’s civil servants gathered to share a moment of silence at the Peace Wall in Martin Luther King Civic Center Park. For 15 minutes or so, they wandered about, looking at the thousands of tiles on the wall, painted by people around the world, each offering a vision of peace. 

Workers from the city attorney’s office wore red, white and blue ribbons. Others wore the American flag on their lapels, or on their shirts and sweaters. 

City Manager Weldon Rucker, one of the organizers of the ceremony, said that he was gladdened to see so many city staff members come out of their offices.  

“I thought it was important,” he said. “It’s nothing spectacular, but it’s something.” 

Councilmember Linda Maio, a native New Yorker, praised the people around her. 

“The city has been terrific,” she said. “We are a wonderful city. Everyone has been very kind to one another.” 

“We need to make sure that we continue to hold life sacred, even if others don’t.” 

At 12:15 p.m., Rucker, Maio, Mayor Shirley Dean and Councilmember Kriss Worthington stood together in front of city staff. Rucker addressed the crowd. 

“I think that we, as an organization, have really suffered this week,” he said. “Yet we have continued to run the city.” 

“Let us have a moment of solidarity, and unity.” 

Around 200 city employees joined hands and bowed their heads.  

After a few minutes, Rucker looked up and waited for others to finish their thoughts. 

“Thank you all for coming,” he said.


Calendar of Events & Activities

Staff
Saturday September 15, 2001


Saturday, Sept. 15

 

The 2001 International Coastal Cleanup 

9 a.m. - noon 

Sea Breeze Market and Deli 

Corner of West Frontage Road and University Avenue 

Last year, more than 1,030 volunteers picked up 30 tons of garbage in the Berkeley area. Nation-wide over 850,000 volunteers hauled in more than 13.5 million pounds of trash. Please arrive promptly at 9 a.m. to sign appropriate waivers, free cup of coffee and safety talk. 644-8623  

www.oceanconservancy.org 

 

Free Emergency Preparedness Class 

9 a.m. - 11 a.m. 

997 Cedar St. 

Basic personal preparedness class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley.  

644-8736 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire.oes.html 

 

Berkeley Historical Society Walking Tour 

10 a.m. - noon 

“Art on the UC Campus,” the campus contains more than a century of outdoor sculpture. Tours are restricted to 30 participants and require prepaid reservations. $10. 848-0181 www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/histsoc/ 

 

Bonfire of Reflection 

6:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Marina  

An evening of reflection by the fire. Come for Havdalah. Bring something to burn as a way of letting it go. Share your voice as we sing of seasons, remembering and change. Come with food, drink, and musical instruments. 

Follow signs to the Olympic Circle Sailing Club on Spinnaker Way. At the sign of the Sailing Club, turn left into the parking lot and look for a fish wind sock. 848-0237 

 

Vocal Jazz Workshop and Jazz Jam 

9:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

Albany Adult School 

601 San Gabriel St., Albany 

Workshops introduce beginning and intermediate jazz singers to solo jazz repertoire and vocal jazz harmonies. 524-6797 richkalman@aol.com 

 


Sunday, Sept. 16

 

Peace Walk 

6 p.m. 

Meet at Russell Street and College Avenue 

Neighborhood walk for peace. Bring peace signs and musical instruments.  

665-1933 

 

West Berkeley Market 

11 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

University Avenue between Third and Fourth streets  

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

specialty foods.  

654-6346 

 

K’tanim, A Celebration of  

Jewish Learning for Families with Young Children - Birth to 3 Years Old 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Nurture your child’s joy of Jewish learning. Learn about Jewish ritual and celebration through family activities, songs, stories, crafts and discussion. $10 per session.  

549-9447 x104 

 

Time, Space, and Knowledge 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Ken McKeon on “Activating Vision.” Free.  

843-6812 

Healing Into the New Year: An Experiential Workshop on the Psychological and Mystical Dimensions of the High Holidays 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish  

Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Using Hasidic teachings and stories, music, and guided meditation, participants will be guided through an inner journey of healing and renewal in preparation for the High Holidays. 848-0237 www.lehrhaus.org 

 


Monday, Sept. 17

 

Women’s Classics Book Group 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

A new group will discuss “The Golden Notebook,” by Doris Lessing. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults Inquiry Program 

7:30 p.m. 

St. Mary Magdalen Parish 

2005 Berryman St. 

A program to learn everything you wanted to know about the Catholic Church but never had the chance to ask. 526-4811 

 

Dancing 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Senior citizens can practice social dancing to taped music. 644-6107 

 

–compiled by Guy Poole 

 

 

The Alternative Lifelong Learning Book Club 

1:15 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Tracy Chevalier’s “The Girl with the Pearl Earring” will be discussed. Readers with limited vision are encouraged to attend. 644-6107 


Fly a flag, Berkeley

David Gee
Saturday September 15, 2001

Editor: 

I think that I am now past the shock and horror of Tuesday's events. Now I am mad. I ask that each and every single one of you Berkeley residents put up a flag on your car, your house, your shopping cart, or whatever, and support our country in getting through this difficult time. It was sure nice to see that flag hang off the construction of the new bridge over I-80 as I was heading home from work.  

The time has come to support our leaders and our nation regardless of our political beliefs and factions. Support your country by raising that American flag. 

 

David Gee 

Alameda 


ArtsWeekend

Saturday September 15, 2001

924 Gilman Street Sept. 15: Tragedy, Run For Your Fucking Life, Funeral, plus assorted punk rock movies: Behind the Screams, Brainbox, Kamala’s Revenge and others; Sept. 16: 5 p.m. The Influents, The Thumbs, One Time Angels, Agent 51; Sept. 21: Slow Gherkin, 78 RPMS, Enemy You, Wisecracker; Sept. 23: 5 p.m. Subtonix, Running Ragged, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 28: Erase Errata, The Intima, Ibobuki, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 29: DS-13, Beware, Blown To Bits, (+t.b.a.); Most shows are $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 

 

Albatross Pub 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. 15 9:30 p.m. African Rhythm Messengers and Victor Sila, $11; Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Mexican IndepenDance Celebration with Grupo Tamunal and Mariachi Las Palomas, $8; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 594-1400 www.ashkenaz.com  

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. 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 

 

Crowden School Sept. 23: 4 p.m. “Sundays at Four Concert” Jeremy Cohen’s jazz violin. Admission $10 (free if under 18) 1475 Rose 559-6910 

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

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; Sept. 16 Rani Arbo & Daisy Mayhem, $16.50; Sept. 18 Spencer Bohren, $16.50, Sept. 19: David Tanenbaum & Peppino D’Agostino, $16.50, Sept. 20: Steve Tilston & Danny Carnahan, $16.50; Sept. 21: The Waybacks, $17.50; Sept. 22: The Bluerass Intentions, $17.50; Sept. 23 Tony Marcus & Patrice Haan, $16.50; Sept. 24: April Verch, $16.50; Sept. 26: Clive Gregson, $16.50; Sept. 27: Dick Gaughan, $18.50; Sept 28: Jenna Mammina, $16.50; Sept. 29: The Nigerian Brothers, $16.50; Sept. 30: Vasen, $17.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jack’s Bistro Sept. 22 & Sept. 28: 9 p.m. Tomas Michaud’s New World Flamenco Quartet, Jack London Square. 444-7171 www.starland-music.com 

 

Jupiter 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; Sept. 25: Craig Graham Trio; Sept. 26: Starvin Like Marvin; Sept. 28 Anton Schwartz Quartet; Sept 29: Modern Gypsies; All music starts at 8:00 p.m. 2181 Shattuck Ave. 843-7625 www.jupiterbeer.com  

 

Music Sources Sept. 30: 5 p.m. Ole Scarlatta! Portuguese and French keyboards and fortepiano joined by Jason McGuire on flamenco guitar, $18 General, $15 members, seniors, students. 1000 The Alameda 528-1685 

 

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 

 

Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra presents “Handel’s Acis and Galatea” Music Director, Nicholas McGegan. Sept. 15: 8 p.m.; Sept. 16: 7:30 p.m. $34 - $49 First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, 415-392-4400 www.philharmonia.org 

 

"A Benefit Concert for Devi-ja" Sept. 16: 4 p.m. Proceeds of this concert 

will help Violinist Devi-ja Delgado Croll and her family. Performers will include: Ali Jihad Racy, Zakir Hussain, Vince Delgado, Mimi Spencer, Shirley Muramoto, Matt Eakle, Dahlena, Carnaval Spirit and others. $20 Donation. St. John's Presbyterian Church 2727 College Ave. 415-457-8427 vince@vincedelgado.com 

 

 

 

 


Message of cancellation from the Arab Film Festival

Saturday September 15, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO - The organizers of the Arab Film Festival would like to express their sadness around Tuesday’s tragic events in New York, Washington, D.C. and Pittsburgh. These tragic events affect all Americans, including Arab-Americans. The Arab Film Festival extends its deepest sympathies to the families and friends of the victims. It is very regrettable that so many innocent individuals have lost their lives or have been injured. 

The Arab Film Festival decided to cancel the second half of its 2001 event, which was to open in Berkeley, Sept. 12, in sympathy with the victims of Tuesday’s tragic event and for the safety of the audience and volunteers in the event of possible hate crimes. 

The Arab Film Festival strives to educate the Bay Area community by enhancing public understanding of Arab culture and heritage, therefore providing alternative representations of Arabs that contradict the stereotypical images frequently encountered in the American mass media. 

Perhaps, at a moment like this, the need for such an educational forum is even more necessary. 

The Arab Film Festival urges the mass media not to rush to judgment, for whoever committed these acts does not represent its community. The Festival hopes that the communities in the Bay Area and elsewhere will not fall victim to the general stereotypical thinking and assume that all Arabs and Muslims are terrorists. 


Logan piles on big plays to beat ’Jackets

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Saturday September 15, 2001

Berkeley scores first touchdown of season in loss 

 

The Berkeley Yellowjackets went into Friday night’s football game against James Logan hoping to pull an upset. But halfway into the first quarter, they were just hoping not to get embarrassed. 

The visiting Colts scored touchdowns on three of their first eight offensive plays to pull out to a 22-0 lead with just six minutes gone in the game, and didn’t let up until the final whistle, winning by an eventual score of 42-6. 

Logan scored on plays of 70, 62, 51 and 44 yards in the game, killing the ’Jackets with their big-play ability. Those four plays represented 227 of Logan’s 332 total yards, and Colt quarterback Brandon Ting threw for only 162 yards in the game, but they came on just four completions. 

On the opening drive of the game, Ting found his twin brother Ryan behind the Berkeley defense for a 62-yard touchdown pass on the second play, and the Colts made the two-point conversion for a 8-0 lead before the fans were even settled into their seats. 

The ’Jackets couldn’t get a first down on the ensuing drive, and punter Curtis Goodwin watched the ball sail over his head on the snap. Goodwin recovered the ball, but was smothered on the 5-yard line, and Logan running back Johnathan Ugay plowed through the middle for a touchdown seconds later. 

Disaster hit Berkeley again on the next drive. Germaine Baird had a nice return to midfield, but fullback Nick Schooler fumbled a pitch from quarterback Raymond Pinkston on the first play, and Joshua Mayfield recovered the ball for Logan. Ugay found a seam and rumbled for a 44-yard touchdown soon after, and Logan was up by 22 points and looked to be on the way to completely dominating the ’Jackets. 

“Big plays killed us today, but we didn’t let down today. That’s a positive sign,” Berkeley head coach Matt Bissell said after the game. 

Berkeley finally found the end zone for the first time this season, taking advantage of three Colt penalties and some nice passing by Pinkston to drive the ball inside the 10. Pinkston finally dove into the end zone on a sweep from three yards out. 

The ’Jackets finally caught a break when Logan’s Ernesto Munoz fumbled the following kickoff, and Robert Hunter-Ford recovered for Berkeley on the Logan 37. Momentum seemed to be swinging the home team’s way, but it quickly went back to the other side. Pinkston lofted a long pass that wideout Lee Franklin came down with in a crowd in the end zone, but the officials called the play back for offensive pass interference. The ’Jackets sagged after losing that score, and didn’t mount another serious drive until the game was nearly over. 

“Looking back, that call was huge,” Bissell said. “It was a big momentum switch. That’s a tough play to call back.” 

Berkeley ended up punting the ball away, and the Colts put on their first long drive of the game, covering 64 yards in 10 plays and ending with Ryan Ting finding the end zone on a nine-yard sweep, making the score 28-6 at halftime. 

Last week, Foothill High decided to take it easy in the second half with a big lead on the ’Jackets. Not so for Logan. They kept on going for the big play, and they got two more in the second half. The twins hooked up again early in the third quarter, this time for a 70-yard touchdown, then running back Rodney Roy broke loose for a 51-yard run for the final score of the game. 

“Our defense was good except for a few plays,” Berkeley defensive end Akeem Brown said. “We just had guys making mental mistakes, being in the wrong place.” 

Berkeley’s pain only got worse as the game went on. Several starters went down in the second half, including Baird, who hurt his leg early in the third quarter. Without their best ground threat and behind by a bunch, the ’Jackets were forced to go to the air. Pinkston played bravely, completing 15 of 32 for 159 yards, but was forced to scramble around a lot by the Logan defensive line. He ended the game by twisting his ankle on the final play. 

“It hurts when you see your starters go down,” Bissell said, noting that Baird is expected to be ready for next week’s game. “It limits what you can do out there.” 

Things don’t get any easier next week for the ’Jackets, as they head down to Dos Palos, yet another team that beat them last season and will be heavily favored against Berkeley. 

“Such a tough pre-season schedule can be demoralizing,” Bissell said. “But hopefully the tough games will bring our level up.”


Community claims victory in tritium facility closure

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday September 15, 2001

Causing a citywide sigh of relief, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory officials announced Friday that the lab’s radioactive tritium facility has lost funding and will close by early December. 

According to a joint press release from LBNL and the National Institutes of Health, the NIH has withdrawn the facility’s $1 million annual funding because of a shortage of physicists, too few tritium-related research projects and the NIH’s intention to invest in other forms of cell-imaging techniques.  

But several city officials said the announced closure was the result of intense public pressure put on the lab by the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, an organization spawned from a Berkeley neighborhood group.  

LBNL spokesperson Ron Kolb said the facility will close in December after which a six-month dismantling of tritium labeling equipment, much of it radioactive, will begin.  

“It will take another year after that to decontaminate the place before the building can be used again,” Kolb said. 

He added the facility’s four employees have been given their severance notices and that the laboratory is trying to place them in other laboratory departments.  

The National Tritium Labeling Facility, which is managed by LBNL, provides medical researchers with the radioactive isotope tritium. The lab attaches the tritium to pharmaceuticals and other medical compounds, in a process known as labeling, so they can be accurately traced as they course through the human body. 

The facility, which opened in 1982, has been controversial since 1996 when a neighborhood group, the Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste, began asking questions about how LBNL stores and disposes of tritium. The group was also concerned about the labeling process which requires the release of varying amounts of tritium through an emissions stack. The stack is located 500 feet from the Lawrence Hall of Science, which is visited by an average of 150,000 children each year. 

Last year the City Council commissioned a study of the tritium facility by the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research, in Heidelberg, Germany. The $33,000, 53-page report, evaluated the level of public exposure to tritium and assessed potential health risks. The final version of the report was released on Aug. 23. 

Dr. Bernd Franke, who prepared the report, concluded that data, provided by the facility, showed tritium emissions were lower than the Environmental Protection Agency’s recommended exposure levels. But Franke suggested the laboratory deploy more tritium air monitoring equipment around the facility. 

Franke also challenged an LBNL report that claimed the labeling facility posed no, or very little, risk in the event of a fire, earthquake or other disaster. 

The City Council unanimously approved a resolution calling for the closure of the tritium facility in 1996 and again in 1998.  

“I’m really greatly relieved that we will have this potential danger closed down,” said Councilmember Polly Armstrong, who represents District 8 where the facility is located. “Nobody doubts the good work being done with tritium, but it doesn’t belong in a dense urban area known for fires, earthquakes and landslides. It belongs in the desert where less damage is possible.” 

Mayor Shirley Dean also expressed relief. “I can’t help but feel relieved by (the news),” she said. “I had been reassured by recent studies that the facility wasn’t a huge threat, but the City Council took the stance that the facility should be closed.” 

Councilmembers Kriss Worthington and Dona Spring said the closure is a victory for the neighbors who were tireless in their efforts to close the facility. 

“The Committee to Minimize Toxic Waste wrote countless letters, visited congresspeople, senators and lobbied and lobbied and lobbied,” Spring said. “This is just a tremendous victory for the community.” 

CMTW member Gene Bernardi, who began challenging LBNL activities in 1992 over hazardous waste storage, said the news was stunning. “I’m incredulous, but delighted if it’s true,” she said. “I think they must have finally come to their senses.” 

Pam Sihvola said the committee has been working day and night to close the facility since 1996. She said she was very grateful to the City Council and all the other organizations that have lent their support.  

“Victory, victory for the community,” Sihvola said. “The message here is that great things can be accomplished when the community holds together.” 

Sihvola added that the dismantling process will be closely monitored by the CMTW. 

Community Environmental Advisory Commissioner L.A. Wood, who has worked for the closure of the facility, said at first it was difficult just learning about the complexities of tritium and the procedures involved with the labeling process.  

“In 1996 no one understood anything about tritium,” Wood said. “But all the work over the years finally reached a critical mass and closed the facility.” 

Both Dean and Armstrong said the closure of the tritium facility will allow the good work the LBNL does to be put in the spotlight. Armstrong commended the lab’s breast cancer research and its development of energy efficient technology.  

“There are a lot of good people there who are doing a lot of good work,” she said.  


Letter from Bhutan

Tshewang Dendup Thimphu, Bhutan,
Saturday September 15, 2001

Editor: 

The phone rings every now and then. My digital answering machine has run out of memory. I spent Tuesday night answering numerous calls from family, friends and strangers. They wanted me to put into perspective what they were seeing on cable television. They thought I was the person to ask for. After all I had spent two years studying broadcast journalism in a reputed American university (UC Berkeley). The live coverage from Fox TV, CNN and the BBC had half of Bhutan glued to the sets. They could not figure out what they were seeing on the monitors. My father who takes care of a temple could not believe in the first place, that a building 110 stories high, existed. I did a terrible job explaining the tragedy to him. New York, Manhattan, Wall Street, the Pentagon, hijacking, jumbo jets, terrorism, Air Force One and a host of other terms were beyond his comprehension. My dad has never set foot inside an aircraft.  

On Wednesday morning, the streets of the capital city of Bhutan, Thimphu wore a deserted look. School children were returning from their schools. The morning rush hour traffic was gone because the offices were closed for the day. The national flag flew at half-mast. The local soccer match was postponed. The government had declared a national day of mourning. 

In the afternoon, I went with my crew to cover a somber and solemn ceremony at the inner sanctum of a temple located in the building of the central government. His Majesty the King and the government had invited all Americans living in Bhutan to light butter lamps for the souls of the victims of the terrorist attacks. 

On the hand polished floors of the temple, monks in their maroon robes chanted prayers in their sonorous voices. 

Most of the Americans I spoke to after the ceremony were moved by the gesture of the Bhutanese people. We talked about the core of the Buddha’s teachings; ahimsa, non-violence. In prayer and in shock, the Bhutanese are trying to understand the enormity of the terrorist attack. For many Bhutanese, the scale of the crime and the intentions of the perpetrators of Tuesday’s horrible attack, will continue to remain beyond the grasp of their imagination. 

Hundreds of years ago, many Bhutanese used to trek for months to go to Tibet and India to study in the renowned Buddhist universities. A sizeable number of Bhutanese study in the United States. From Berkeley in the West Coast to Columbia in the east, the United States has provided numerous citadels of learning to Bhutanese scholars. Today, they lead the country as ministers, doctors, engineers and computer programmers. 

Many of them, including myself were beneficiaries of the generosity and friendship of the American people. I also remember the time when East Timor became an independent sovereign nation. I met a woman from Oakland who had left the confines of her cushy life in America to help the East Timorese resistance. 

Yes, there are Americans who care about peace in world, the greenhouse gas effects and the upsurge in violence at home and abroad. 

Today I work as head of the news division in my station. My two years in America gave me invaluable insights into my own culture and the global one. It also allowed me to accept the world’s only superpower as an imperfect entity. Humane too, with the ability and the capacity to do more in the fight against hunger and poverty in the world. And last but not the least, I also saw in the eyes and the faces, in the convictions and actions of my friends, the will and resolve to do good. In these trying times, for both the people of the United States and the world, the only solace that I seek is in the words of my son; “I hope God forgives whoever committed these terrible crimes.” 

 

Tshewang Dendup 

Thimphu, Bhutan,  

UC Berkeley, class of 2001 

 


Cal soccer games set for Monday

Daily Planet Wire Services
Saturday September 15, 2001

Both California soccer teams were scheduled to play Bay Area teams on the road Sunday. Due to Tuesday’s national tragedy, both games have been rescheduled for Monday, Sept. 17.  

The Cal women’s team travels to Santa Clara for a 7:30 p.m. tilt at Buck Shaw Stadium. The Cal men’s squad plays San Jose State at Spartan Stadium, also at 7:30 p.m.


Campus stands with Muslims

By Chris O'Connell Special to the Daily Planet
Saturday September 15, 2001

While there have been many reports of insults and crimes against Muslims in the wake of Tuesday’s terrorist attacks, members of the UC Berkeley community stood in solidarity with the Muslim community Friday afternoon. 

Six hundred people gathered to take part in an open campus Jumaa – a Friday prayer ceremony – in the Pauley Ballroom of the Martin Luther King building on campus. They came both in a show of unity against recent attacks on Muslims, and in remembrance for the those killed in New York and Washington D.C.  

Citing “many, many instances of harassment” that have occurred against Muslims across the country since Tuesday, Hatem Baziah, a lecturer at U.C. Berkeley who gave the sermon, said the ceremony was intended as spiritual refuge for the community as a whole. 

“In times of crisis and tragedy, people need a place where they can process and deal with complex emotions.”  

Non-Muslims outnumbered Muslims two-to-one at the afternoon event which was sponsored by the Muslim Students Association and the student government.  

For many, it was a new experience. 

Patricia Mueller-Moule, a doctoral student at UC Berkeley who has never attended a prayer ceremony before, said she wanted Muslims to know that they are respected members of the community.  

“By coming here we are showing solidarity with a group that has been wrongly equated with terrorists.”  

UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert M. Berdahl, who spoke before the prayer ceremony, stressed the need for unity in the wake of Tuesday’s events. 

Berdahl said he attended the community prayer sessions, “for the same reason everyone else did. Out of a need to feel a part of a very diverse human family that’s been vastly injured this week.” 

Recitations of the Qu’ran were in Arabic, and translated into English. 

In his sermon, Baziah stressed that while the suspects in Tuesday’s attacks may be Muslim, their political views are in the minority. 

“If the reports are accurate, some Muslims have committed this act. It doesn’t represent Muslims in general, rather it was isolated individuals.” 

Likewise, he added that the recent acts of harassment against Muslims have been perpetrated by isolated individuals.  

“These people who committed these acts are in the minority, similar to those who committed the attacks in New York and Washington.” 

Muslims attending the event said they were overwhelmed by the tremendous support from the campus community. 

“Berkeley has taken the initiative to involve and invite everyone in prayer. Hopefully, this forum and this event will set a precedent for the rest of the country,” said Muslim Student Association member Wajahat Ali. 

 

 


A Sikh mourns the tragedy, fears blind hate

Narinder Singh
Saturday September 15, 2001

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to friends and fellow Americans: 

The wake of Tuesday’s terror has left me, as it has many of you, shocked and stunned. Upon seeing the World Trade Center collapse, I sat in disbelief and numbly tried to find and locate all of my friends and loved ones in New York. My mind searched for an alternative that was less horrible that what was unfolding before us. 

As an American, I mourn for all of those effected by this horror. I am also anxious for justice to swiftly reign upon those who have perpetrated this horrific act. 

Yet I find myself distracted from this purpose. As all of you know I am a Sikh. My faith preaches central tenants similar to all of your faiths: remembrance of God, the virtues of honest living, and necessity of sharing with others. It is separate and distinct from other faiths of the region including Hinduism and Islam. 

My religion also requires that I wear a turban and keep my hair and beard unshorn. Given the images of the suspected terrorists that have been shown and the rage our nation is feeling, I find myself and many people I care for at risk in the only country I have ever known and loved. Acts of violence have erupted against Muslims and people like the Sikhs, who are confused as such, across our country. This blind expression of hate sows the same seeds from which grow the acts of madmen. They represent individual acts of terrorism. 

It is as I hear repeatedly of these acts of violence that I am distracted from remembering those who have truly suffered. With each incident I feel robbed of my right to grieve over our loss. As one who has seen in my parents’ country the alternative to the precious freedom of America, I cherish what we have in America, and I struggle fearing that that may be in jeopardy. 

I ask that all of you spread to your friends, the media and others around you, the very values that America holds dear. It is through these values that we will prevail over even these difficult times. I ask that each of you help me guard these values so that we do not become that which we guard against. 

May God guide our spirit and actions, 

Narinder Singh 

Vice President, webMethods Inc. 

Berkeley 

 


Beth El synagogue-school compromise called ‘miraculous’

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Saturday September 15, 2001

After a contentious two-year land-use battle, the City Council approved a “miraculous” compromise between a coalition of environmentalists and a group of neighbors that opposed a proposal to build a synagogue, school and social hall at 1301 Oxford St. 

In one vote Thursday evening the council certified the Beth El Congregation project’s Environmental Impact Report, overturned the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s vote against an alteration permit and approved the project’s use permit. The actions clear the way for groundbreaking on the 30,000-square-foot project, which Beth El members say will likely take place next year. 

The City Council was minutes away from voting on the divisive issue at its July 24 meeting when mediator Peter Bluhon, of the Bluhon Planning Group, presented the council with a single, well-worn, piece of paper which contained a tentative compromise and the still-drying signatures of the opposing sides. 

The mayor and each of the councilmembers said they were relieved they did not have to settle the issue that had engendered such strong feelings on both sides and threatened to divide the community for years to come.  

Both sides agreed to finalize the language of the compromise and return after the council’s summer recess for formal approval. 

The council agreed to the formal compromise Thursday by an 8 - 1 vote with Councilmember Kriss Worthington voting in opposition. Worthington said he wanted to support the compromise but could not because he still has reservations about the EIR.  

“I thought the mediator did a phenomenal job and the two sides deserve enormous praise for being able to come together on an agreement, but unfortunately the city process for Environmental Impact Reports is not adequate,” he said.  

The Live Oak Codornices Creek Neighborhood Association opposed the project, which will be built on an unoccupied two-acre lot in a quiet residential neighborhood. They argued that it was too large and would permanently preclude the possibility of daylighting Codornices Creek, which runs across the north side of the property, partially through a culvert. 

Because of concerns about the creek, LOCCNA garnered the support of local and regional environmental groups.  

Beth El members argued the project was taking up even less space than zoning laws permitted and that they needed all of the proposed square footage to accommodate a congregation that had grown out of its present site at 2301 Vine St. 

Since July 24, the two sides reached a compromise, which includes an overall reduction to the size of the project by 2,000 square feet, the inclusion of a public overlook near the creek and a change in the location of the main gate. 

Because of Beth El’s long history of local community involvement, the congregation was widely supported by a number of local religious organizations. 

LOCCNA representative Alan Gould and Beth El member Harry Pollack each addressed the council.  

Gould said LOCCNA was still concerned about issues related to parking, hours of operation, lighting and some details about the creek.  

“We have worked hard on this agreement,” Gould said. “But it is not the end yet.” 

Pollack said part of the negotiations included the establishment of joint committees that have developed a good working relationship.  

“We will continue to work together and that’s one of the most important parts of this agreement.” 

After the council approved the permit, Mayor Shirley Dean called Bluhon’s success in facilitating a compromise “miraculous” and called on him to stand in the council chambers for a round of applause.  

 

 


GTU community searches for answers

Saturday September 15, 2001

The Daily Planet received this letter addressed to members of the Graduate Theological Union Community: 

The tragic events of the last few days have made an indelible imprint on each of our lives. We are living through a time when our beliefs and assumptions about our personal and collective lives have been challenged and perhaps forever altered. The different faith communities and traditions that make up the Graduate Theological Union are each dedicated to finding ways to understand the meaning and significance of these horrific events and to respond. It is a time for those of us here at GTU to gather to mourn and grieve the loss of precious human lives, to support one another at this time of great crisis, and to affirm our common commitment to find the grounds for hope and the courage to act that will carry us into a future filled with God's promise.  

The seminaries and faith communities that comprise the GTU will be gathering in the next days and weeks for shared worship. The dates and schedule of these services are attached to this e-mail. All are invited to attend these events. In addition, as part of the GTU Convocation next Wednesday, Sept. 19 at 3:30 p.m. in the PLTS Chapel, there will be an opportunity to reflect on the issues of this past week. In the coming weeks we will also begin a series of focused discussions among the member schools as to how to best develop our scholarly and pastoral academic programs and resources in light of our world situation.  

In the days to come the public discourse and conversations about present events will be challenging and pointed. As theological institutions, we are uniquely suited to help shape and inform the way we as a community talk and think about the issues at hand. It is important that we spend our time together in the next weeks and months to reflect on what we are going through as a community, and develop ways of thinking about how we will respond in our future work together.  

As the presidents of the GTU Consortium, we invite the entire GTU community to extend prayers to those who have experienced the loss of loved ones. To this end, we ask that any GTU community member who has lost a close friend or relative in these tragedies to notify his or her school so that we can let the entire GTU community know whom to pray for in these days. We also lift our prayers for all those killed or injured, for their families and friends, for those who perpetrated the attacks, and for those who are most vulnerable at the present time. We are dedicated to ensuring that our work together reflects the hope we all share for a future filled with hope and promise. 

 

James A. Donahue, president, Graduate Theological Union 

William Cieslak, president, Franciscan School of Theology: Joseph P. Daoust, president, Jesuit School of Theology; James Emerson, president, San Francisco Theological seminary; Timothy F. Lull, president, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary; William McKinney, president, Pacific School of Religion; Donn F. Morgan, president, Church Divinity School of the Pacific; Rebecca Parker President, Starr King School for the Ministry; Keith A. Russell, president, American Baptist Seminary of the West; Antonius Wall, president, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology 

 


Old City Hall a symbol of Berkeley’s essence

By Susan Cerny
Saturday September 15, 2001

Historians, preservationists, urban planners, and tourist boards search for symbols to identify the essence of a built environment. In Paris it is the Eiffel Tower, in San Francisco it is the Transamerica pyramid, for the Bay Area it is the Golden Gate Bridge.  

A symbol of a place may be buildings or objects, man-made or natural features. They often “tower” above the rest of the landscape. Across the nation, city halls were deliberately intended to be symbols of place with a dome or cupola rising above all the surrounding buildings.  

Berkeley’s “Old” City Hall was completed in 1909. (Sather Tower was not built until 1914.) When City Hall was completed, its design, scale and elegant silhouette reflected Berkeley’s growth from a town to a city. It set the stage and became the keystone for the future civic center. 

It is an example of Beaux-Arts Classicism, using decoration derived from Greek and Roman sources in a symmetrical arrangement. It was designed by John Bakewell and Arthur Brown, Jr. who studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, after graduating from the University of California in the 1890s. They established a partnership in 1906 and the Berkeley City Hall was one of their earliest commissions. Other works by the firm include the more elaborate San Francisco City Hall (1912-1916), and the San Francisco Opera House (1932).  

Bakewell and Brown’s design was selected as the winner of a 1907 competition to replace the original Town Hall (Samuel and J.C. Newsom, 1884) which had burned in 1904. The new town hall was begun in June of 1908 and dedicated in August, 1909, as City Hall.  

As the keystone to the future Civic Center and in anticipation of a larger complex, the “new” City Hall was constructed a few feet to the north of the previous building so that it was on axis with the block to the east. Thirty-three years later Civic Center Park would finally be built on this block. 

“Old” City Hall remains a source of great civic pride and continues to be identified as the symbol of the City of Berkeley, even though city offices are now located in the former Federal Land Bank Building on the east side of Civic Center Park. The building served as the home of Berkeley city government from 1909 to 1977, and City Council meetings are still held here.  

The City Hall cupola and spire, like the university’s Campanile, is a landmark visible from great distances. The building looks east toward downtown Berkeley and to the university and hills beyond.  

It is now used by the Berkeley Unified School District as its main administration building. The cupola was restored in 1991. City Hall was, appropriately, the first building to be designated a city landmark in 1975.  

 

 


Judge OKs venue change

By Kim Curtis Associated Press Writer
Saturday September 15, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Acknowledging it would be “extremely difficult” to find a fair and impartial jury here, a judge agreed Friday to move the trial of Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel outside San Francisco. 

The couple face manslaughter charges in the January dog-mauling death of a neighbor, 33-year-old Diane Whipple. Knoller also faces second-degree murder charges because she was in the apartment hallway with the two dogs when they attacked. 

Judge James L. Warren, who said extensive publicity most likely would force the trial to Southern California, also pushed back the trial’s start date, from Oct. 22 to Jan. 21, to accommodate the change. 

Prosecutors did not object to the change of venue. Lawyers were expected to meet next week to discuss possible counties where the trial could be held. 

The judge also granted the media’s request to release most of the grand jury transcript, which had previously been sealed. 

Roger Myers, the lawyer representing several media organizations including The Associated Press, said he was pleased the nearly 1,000-page transcript would finally be released to the public, but was disappointed it took nearly five months. 

Warren decided to keep about a dozen pages sealed, saying that material was “inflammatory and inappropriate.” 

“The damage to the defense and the ability to have a fair trial would be immense,” he said. The court is expected to release the transcript next Thursday. 

Also Friday, the judge denied the media’s request to lift a gag order in the case, saying the “spin conferences” often held by lawyers in the court’s hallway would “poison the jury pool.”


Frantic final day for 2001 legislative session

By Jennifer Kerr Associated Press Writer
Saturday September 15, 2001

SACRAMENTO – A $200 million program to help the state’s neediest schools won approval Friday as the California Legislature rushed to pass hundreds of bills. 

Lawmakers also gave driver’s licenses to immigrants seeking citizenship, state identification cards to medical-marijuana patients and rest breaks to shepherds. Also awaiting votes before adjournment, likely to be in the middle of the night, was a rescue plan for Southern California Edison. 

However, a proposed $12 billion school and college construction bond, which lawmakers had resurrected the night before, was apparently being shelved until lawmakers return in January. That means it cannot make the March ballot, but could be put on the November 2002 ballot. 

While legislators toiled, Tuesday’s terrorist attacks were never far from their minds. 

Gov. Gray Davis joined the Assembly for a brief memorial service that included a procession of lawmakers handing in letters they had written expressing their feeling about the attacks. The letters will be printed in a special Assembly Journal. 

“Here in California, our job is to keep the peace and preach tolerance,” said Davis, adding everyone should “stand behind the president” as he weighs future actions. 

The Senate, decked with 40 large flags at each senator’s desk, observed a minute of silence and sang “God Bless America.” 

Lawmakers approved a bill to send $1 million from the California Victim Compensation fund to a similar program in New York to help victims of terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center. 

The new school-improvement program, supported by Davis, would provide grants of $400 per student to schools with the state’s lowest test scores. They will have nearly four years to improve scores or face sanctions as severe as closing the school. 

It also expands the state’s current improvement program for schools with scores in the bottom half of the state, doubling funding for those at the very bottom. 

The author, Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said the schools would focus on proven strategies: reading, parent involvement and hiring and keeping of qualified teachers and principals. 

“We have an unprecedented opportunity here to invest $200 million in helping our neediest children,” he said. 

The Senate approved the program 27-8 and the Assembly 76-0. 

The Legislature approved a bill that would let an estimated 1.5 million immigrants apply for California driver’s licenses. The bill partly reverses a 1993 bill that blocks non-citizens from getting licenses. 

Immigrants would be allowed to submit their application for citizenship as proof of residence in the country and substitute a taxpayer identification number for the required Social Security number. Sen. Martha Escutia, D-Commerce, said licensed drivers are more likely to be insured drivers. “It’s an issue of safety, and at the same time, it’s the right thing to do.” 

However, Assemblyman Bill Campbell, R-Villa Park, said Tuesday’s events show it should be more difficult to get a license now because “I do believe we are at war; we should not be facilitating anybody to be coming at us from any direction.” 

The bill passed the Senate 22-7 and the Assembly 51-19. 

People certified by their doctors as needing marijuana for medical reasons could get a new state identification card under a bill approved by a 41-28 vote of the Assembly. It was returned to the Senate. 

The purpose, explained Assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg, D-Los Angeles, is so police will know the person qualifies under Proposition 215, the initiative approved by voters, to use medical marijuana. 

The cards would be voluntary. Any unauthorized person using such a card to get pot could face a fine of up to $1,000 and up to one year in jail. 

Passed by a 41-28 Assembly vote, the shepherd bill would give people who watch sheep some of the basic working conditions that other workers have in state law. 

 

 


Pros and cons of front wheel drive

By Tom and Ray Magliozzi
Saturday September 15, 2001

Dear Tom and Ray: 

Except for the most expensive cars these days, almost all cars are front-wheel drive. But unless one lives in a snowy or icy climate, I can't see any advantage to front-wheel drive -- except to the repair people, who get to charge more to fix them. Am I missing something? If one lives in a warm-weather climate, is there any reason to buy a front-wheel-drive car? -- Roger 

TOM: Not really, Roger. As long as you can afford the payments on a Mercedes S430. 

RAY: As you say, most reasonably priced cars ARE front-wheel drive. So if you choose not to buy a front-wheel-drive car, you pretty much limit your choices to little sports cars, trucks and expensive sedans. 

TOM: But you're right about front-wheel drive. It has only a few real advantages. Its primary advantage is that it provides better traction in rain and snow, since the weight of the engine presses down right over the driven wheels. 

RAY: And, since the front-wheel-drive design crunches all the mechanical parts up front, it also allows the overall size of a car to be smaller, which usually means improved fuel economy. Plus, placing the transmission up front leaves more room in the passenger compartment, since it eliminates the "hump" that covers the drive shaft. So front-wheel drive does have a few pluses. 

RAY: But it also has one significant disadvantage: It's harder to work on. Since everything is jammed up front, you have to be Houdini to reach certain things, like water pumps, cylinder-head bolts and sometimes even spark plugs! And the longer it takes to reach things (i.e., the more parts that have to removed first to get there), the more you pay your mechanic in labor charges. 

TOM: In contrast, we had a rear-wheel-drive '79 Caprice in the shop the other day. And there was so much room up front that I was able to climb into the engine compartment, close the hood and take a nap. 

RAY: Oh, is THAT where you were on Tuesday? 

TOM: Yeah, until about 4 o'clock, when Craig started it up and the fan blade turned my coveralls into shorts. 

RAY: Well, for that reason -- among others -- we don't recommend sleeping in the engine compartments of rear-wheel-drive cars. But they're great as long as rain -- and more importantly, snow -- is not a big issue for you, Roger.  

 

 

 

 

Got a question about cars? E-mail Click and Clack by visiting the Car Talk section of cars.com on the World Wide Web. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*** 

Dear Tom and Ray: 

I recently bought a new 2001 Jetta GLX and drove it at 80 mph for the first 700 miles. I was told that this was not good for my new engine. Is this true? And if so, what damage have I done to my new car's engine? -- Oliver 

TOM: I wouldn't give it a second thought, Oliver. Just forget all about it. It's not even worth worrying about. 

RAY: I mean, if you're really interested, you can read the owner's manual, where it specifically warns you not to do this because it prevents the piston rings from seating correctly and leads to oil consumption. 

TOM: In case you haven't run across it yet, the owner's manual is a little book about half an inch thick -- with large print -- and it's probably sitting at the bottom of your glove compartment. Lots of new cars come with them. 

RAY: But don't go through any trouble to read it, Oliver. It's not really important. When your Jetta is burning a quart of oil every 400 miles and your dealer says he doesn't know why, you will.  

*** 

Keep your car on the road and out of the repair shop by ordering Tom and Ray's pamphlet "Ten Ways You May Be Ruining Your Car Without Even Knowing It!" Send $3 (check or money order) and a stamped (57 cents), self-addressed, No. 10 envelope to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. 

*** 

Got a question about cars? E-mail Click and Clack by visiting the Car Talk section of cars.com on the World Wide Web. 

(c) 2001 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman 

Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. 


Wall Street faces uncertainty when trading resumes

By Amy Baldwin AP Business Writer
Saturday September 15, 2001

NEW YORK — When Wall Street resumes trading — presumably on Monday — the stock market will face extraordinary circumstances and even greater uncertainty than usual. 

The market is on edge as it waits to see how investors react on the first day of trading following Tuesday’s terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. 

Analysts said traders might refrain from making any major moves, mindful that thousands of people are believed dead. However, many investors, worried about the future of the market, the economy and the country, probably want to adjust their portfolios. 

Federal regulators, cognizant of the anxiety, announced steps Friday aimed at stabilizing the market. 

“The fear factor right now is extremely high. Many people are of a mind to just get out of the market while they can,” said Alan Ackerman, executive vice president of Fahnestock & Co. “Conversely, professionals and experienced investors know that patience pays off. So, hopefully the fear factor could be somewhat limited.” 

The market has been closed since the attacks as the exchanges, big investment firms and Securities and Exchange Commission dealt with how to resume trading in an orderly fashion. Equipment had to be repaired before the New York Stock Exchange, located in the heart of the financial district near the World Trade Center site, could be reopened. 

And brokers and investment bankers whose offices were destroyed or damaged had to scramble to find temporary space to do business. 

Perhaps the market’s biggest unknown is whether fearful investors will rush to dump shares. 

“How bad is it going to be? Will there be a big selloff?” are the questions on Wall Street, said Arthur Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co. 

Hogan said he doubts there will be a selling frenzy, calling it inappropriate in light of the tragedy. 

“Everyone is going to sort of keep their head down, be careful and not make big bets,” Hogan said. He also said that with the market having been closed since Monday, investors might be less likely to make emotional decisions. 

“There has been time to let calmer heads prevail,” Hogan said. “We are going to get back to business as usual to the best we can, and I think that will sort of put a floor in the marketplace.” 

The SEC, trying to ensure that trading will be as orderly as possible, said Friday it was relaxing some trading rules to make it easier for companies to buy back their own shares. When firms repurchase stock — which many did after the 1987 crash — investors are often reassured, believing that the nation’s companies are expressing confidence in themselves, the market and the economy. 

Some companies have already announced plans to buy back their stock, including Cisco Systems, which said Thursday it will repurchase up to $3 billion worth during the next two years. 

Analysts also pointed out that the market has other safeguards to keep it from falling too sharply, the circuit breakers that halt trading after the Dow Jones industrials fall 850 points, 1,750 points and 2,600 points. 

History also seems to be on the side of the market. 

While the Dow typically dropped about 2 percent in the first session and first week following major tragedies in the past — from the sinking of the USS Maine in 1898 to the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center — it turned higher in subsequent months and years, according to Markehistory.com, an Internet firm that sells market research to institutional investors. 

“Short-term, there is uncertainty, pessimism, and worry as we emotionally rally out of the tragedy,” said Gibbons Burke, editor of Markethistory.com. 

An indication of investors’ nervousness came from overseas trading. Stock prices fell initially after the attacks and then rebounded. But Friday, with the resumption of New York trading approaching, prices were down sharply in Europe. 

But analysts believe national pride might help support the market. 

“There seem to be a lot of patriots who are determined to make sure that these terrorists are not successful in shutting down our capitalist markets,” said James O. Collins, chief executive officer of Insight Capital Research and Management in Walnut Creek, Calif. 

Some individual investors also say patriotism will move them to buy stocks. 

“What better way to respond to this terroristic attack?,” asked Jim Lawrence, a networking equipment salesman in San Francisco, who has $2,000 to invest and planned to spend the weekend researching stocks he’ll buy. 

“These terrorists were trying to destroy our economic system, as well as break our spirits. I think we can make our country stronger by investing in the stock market right now. It will show the world that we are resilient.” 

The stock market ended this past week mixed after trading only Monday. 

The Dow was essentially unchanged Monday when it slipped 0.34 percent to 9,605.51. But the Nasdaq composite index rose 7.68 to 1,695.38, a gain of nearly 0.5 percent. 

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 20.62, or 1.9 percent, to 1,085.78. 

The Russell 2000 Index, the barometer of smaller company stocks, fell 4.46, or 1.0 percent, to 440.73. 

The Wilshire Associates Equity Index, the market value of New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq issues, was $10.10 trillion Monday, up $37.96 billion from the previous Friday. A year ago the index was nearly $14 trillion., 

——— 

Business Writer Michael Liedtke contributed to this report 


Kennedy plans new project

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Friday September 14, 2001

Prolific downtown developer Patrick Kennedy submitted plans this week for one more five-story, mixed-use building. This one is proposed for the site of Darling Flower Shop on University Avenue. 

If approved, the Touriel Building, at 2008 University Ave., will have 32 units of one and two-bedroom apartments, 17 parking spaces and 1,630 square feet of commercial space on the ground floor. The commercial space will be occupied by the family-run Darling Flower Shop, which has operated out of the site’s existing buildings for more than 60 years. 

“This is the archetypal infill housing project,” said Kennedy, who is the president of the real estate development company Panoramic Interests. “It’s right in the thick of things and will appeal to people who work in downtown Berkeley, and students.” 

City Planning Manager Mark Rhodes, said the project was just submitted and won’t begin to work its way through the city’s approval process for another two months. He said the project will be considered first by the Landmarks Preservation Commission because of the age of the existing building, which will have to be razed to make room for the new one.  

According to a historical study prepared for the project by San Francisco company Page and Turnbull, the site is


Out & About

Staff
Friday September 14, 2001


Friday, Sept. 14

 

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: women’s humor. 549-1879 

 

Yiddish Conversation Group 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

644-6107 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

“The Way We See the Media” with Arnold Lee, Publisher and Co-Founder of The Berkeley Daily Planet. 848-3533 

 

Mexican Independence  

Celebration 

12:30 p.m. 

West Berkeley Senior Center 

1900 6th St. 

Mexican Folklore senior singer, Ruben Martin, Pianist Sra. Ruth Batres, Marcos Gutierrez, Anthropologist Sonia Garcia. 644-6037 

 

Scottish Dancing 

8 p.m. 

Grace North Church 

2138 Cedar St. 

Free introductory party with live music. 653-7507 

Celebrating Our Power 

7:30 p.m. 

Ecology Center 

2530 San Pablo Ave. 

An evening of music and inspiration co-sponsored by the Ecology Center and Plight of the Redwoods Campaign. Performers Hali Hammer, Green and Making Waves will join Activist Redwood Mary and special guests. 548-2220 

 


Saturday, Sept. 15

 

The 2001 International  

Coastal Cleanup 

9 a.m. - noon 

Sea Breeze Market and Deli 

Corner of W. Frontage Road and University Avenue 

Last year, more than 1,030 volunteers picked up 30 tons of garbage in the Berkeley area. Nation-wide over 850,000 volunteers hauled in more than 13.5 million pounds of trash. Please arrive promptly at 9 a.m. to sign appropriate waivers, free cup of coffee and safety talk. 644-8623 www.oceanconservancy.org 

Free Emergency Preparedness  

Class 

9 a.m. - 11 a.m. 

997 Cedar St. 

Basic personal preparedness class. Free to anyone 18 or older who lives or works in Berkeley.  

644-8736  

www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/fire.oes.html 

 

Berkeley Historical Society  

Walking Tour 

10 a.m. - noon 

“Art on the UC Campus,” the campus contains more than a century of outdoor sculpture. Tours are restricted to 30 participants and require prepaid reservations. $10. 848-0181  

www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/histsoc/ 

 

Bonfire of Reflection 

6:30 p.m. 

Berkeley Marina  

An evening of reflection by the fire. Come for Havdalah. Bring something to burn as a way of letting it go. Share your voice as we sing of seasons, remembering and change. Come with food, drink, and musical instruments. 

Follow signs to the Olympic Circle Sailing Club on Spinnaker Way. At the sign of the Sailing Club, turn left into the parking lot and look for a fish wind sock. 848-0237 

 

Vocal Jazz Workshop and Jazz  

Jam 

9:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. 

Albany Adult School 

601 San Gabriel St., Albany 

Workshops introduce beginning and intermediate jazz singers to solo jazz repertoire and vocal jazz  

harmonies. 524-6797  

richkalman@aol.com 

 


Sunday, Sept. 16

 

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 

K’tanim, A Celebration of Jewish Learning for Families with Young Children - Birth to 3 Years Old 

10 a.m. - noon 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Nurture your child’s joy of Jewish learning. Learn about Jewish ritual and celebration through family activities, songs, stories, crafts and discussion. $10 per session.  

549-9447 x104 

 

Time, Space, and Knowledge 

6 p.m. 

Tibetan Nyingma Institute 

1815 Highland Place 

Ken McKeon on “Activating Vision.” Free. 843-6812 

 

 

–compiled by Guy Poole 


Beyond bin Laden – why are we so hated?

William O. Beeman Pacific News Service
Friday September 14, 2001

PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island – The United States risks a severe miscalculation in dealing with the destruction of the World Trade Center and the attack on the Pentagon on Tuesday. This event is not an isolated instance of violence. This is not an “act of war.” It is one symptom of a cancer that threatens to metastasize. 

The root cause is not terrorist activity, as has been widely stated. It is the relationship between the United States and the Islamic world. Until this central cancerous problem is treated, Americans will never be free from fear. 

Merely locating and hunting down a single “guilty party” in this case will not stop future violence: such an action will not destroy the organization of terrorist cells already established throughout the world. Of greater importance, it will do nothing to alleviate the residual enmity against America. 

The perpetrators of the original attack on the World Trade Center in 1993 were caught and convicted. This did not stop the attack on Tuesday. 

The chief suspect is the Saudi Arabian Osama bin Laden, or his surrogates. He has been mischaracterized as an anti-American terrorist. He should rather be thought of as someone who would do anything to protect Islam. 

Bin Laden began his career fighting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in 1979, when he was 22 years old. He has not only resisted the Soviets, but also the Serbians in Yugoslavia. His anger was directed against the United States primarily because of the U.S. presence in the Gulf region, more particularly in Saudi Arabia itself – the site of the most sacred Islamic religious sites. 

According to bin Laden, during the Gulf War America co-opted the rulers of Saudi Arabia to establish a military presence in order to kill Muslims in Iraq. In a religious decree issued in 1998, he gave religious legitimacy to attacks on Americans in order to stop the United States from “occupying the lands of Islam in the holiest of places.” His decree also extends to Jerusalem, home of the sacred Muslim site the al-Aqsa Mosque. 

Bin Laden will not cease his opposition until the United States leaves the region. Paradoxically, his strategy for convincing the United States to do so seems drawn from the American foreign policy playbook. When the United States disapproves of the behavior of another nation, it “turns up the heat” on that nation through embargoes, economic sanctions or withdrawal of diplomatic representation. In the case of Iraq following the Gulf War, America employed military action, resulting in the loss of civilian life. 

The State Department has theorized that if the people of a rogue nation experience enough suffering, they will overthrow their rulers, or compel them to adopt more sensible behavior. 

The terrorist actions in New York and Washington are a clear and ironic implementation of this strategy against the United States. 

Bin Laden takes no credit for actions emanating from his training camps in Afghanistan. A true ideologue, he believes that his mission is sacred, and he wants only to see clear results. For this reason, the structure of his organization is essentially tribal, or cellular, in modern political terms. His followers are as fervent and intense in their belief as he is. 

They carry out their actions because they believe in the rightness of their cause, not because of bin Laden’s orders or approval. 

Groups are trained in Afghanistan, and then establish their own centers in places as far-flung as Canada, Africa and Europe. Each cell is technologically sophisticated, and may have a different set of motivations for attacking the United States. 

Palestinian members of his group see Americans as supporters of Israel in the current conflict between the two nations. In the Palestinian view, Ariel Sharon’s ascendancy to leadership of Israel has triggered a new era, with U.S. government officials failing to pressure the Israeli government to end violence against Palestinians. Palestinian cell members will not cease their opposition until the United States changes its relationship with the Israeli state. 

Above all, Americans need to remember that the rest of the world has an absolute right to self-determination that is as defensible as our own. A despicable act of terror such as that committed in New York and Washington is a measure of the revulsion that others feel at U.S. actions that seemingly limit those rights. If we perpetuate a cycle of hate and revenge, this conflict will escalate into a war that our great-grandchildren will be fighting. 

 

This is the first in a series by PNS contributor William O. Beeman, a specialist on Middle East culture at Brown University who has written extensively on Iran, where the Islamic Revolution began in November, 1978. Beeman has worked for the past four years in Tajikistan, where he has monitored developments in Afghanistan. 


’Jackets’ tough preseason continues against Logan

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday September 14, 2001

Berkeley High hosts Colts in rematch 

A week after taking a 37-0 beating at the hands of Foothill High, the Berkeley High varsity football team will try to regroup this Friday for their second game of the season. It won’t be easy, however, as the ’Jackets play host to South Bay power James Logan, a team that beat them 52-27 last season. 

Logan runs Neal Fromson’s fly option offense, an attack based on misdirection that thrives with quick backs. The Colts have a tremendously deep offense, led by quarterback Brandon Ting and running back Rodney Roy. Those two gave Berkeley fits last year, and could thrive again this season against the inexperienced ’Jacket defense. 

Most of Berkeley’s offense against the Colts last year came from star running back Ramone Reed, since graduated. Berkeley has an explosive replacement in Germaine Baird, but Baird had a disappointing debut against Foothill, carrying just eight times for 76 yards and fumbling the ball away on his first carry. Head coach Matt Bissell will likely give the ball to Baird more this week, as a big day from the senior is probably the team’s best hope for an upset win. 

Quarterback Raymond Pinkston had a fairly impressive debut, completing half of his passes against Foothill and hitting five different receivers. But the offense lacked the threat of the long ball, as Pinkston’s longest completion went for 15 yards. Wide receiver Lee Franklin, the team’s best deep threat, had an off day, with just one catch for positive yardage and two drops. As with Baird, Franklin needs to have a big day on offense for Berkeley to threaten Logan. 

For a defense that gave up 37 points, the Yellowjackets didn’t actually have that bad a day against Foothill. Other than two runs for 52 and 30 yards, they were good against the ground game, as huge tackles Jamal Johnson and Juleen Jacobs clogged the middle. Defensive end Greg Mitchell also had a solid day, but the other end, Akeem Brown, went down with an injury early in the game and wasn’t a factor. Against Logan, it will be imperative that the linemen fill their holes to let the linebackers roam free of blockers to decipher the complex Colt offense. 

The Berkeley secondary came out slowly last week and it cost them, as Foothill quarterback Billy Andrade piled up 132 first-half passing yards. Cornerbacks Justin Cain and Shawn Brown looked hesitant to play press coverage, instead backing off and allowing easy completions that turned into long gains.  

Franklin had a solid game at safety when he played, but will be needed to expend more energy on offense this week, while partner Craig Hollis looked tentative, completely missing an open-field tackle on a 30-yard Foothill touchdown run. The entire secondary will be counted on to help out stopping the run against the Colts.


Berkeley comic shows the lighter side of temping

By Peter Crimmins Daily Planet Correspondent
Friday September 14, 2001

When big business discovered the financial potential in hiring a temporary workforce, the march of organized labor was set back a few steps. In “Haiku Tunnel,” comedian Josh Kornbluth grasps that the thwarted professional ambitions in the temp market, the denied employee benefits with no investment in the process of production, is a boon for artistic temperaments.  

The son of communist parents and long-time Berkeley comic monologist developed his one-man show “Haiku Tunnel” 10 years ago at the Marsh in San Francisco. He has since performed it in many venues across the country and included it in his published collection of writings “Red Diaper Baby.” It’s the story of a man who champions the detached freedom of being a temp. 

Trotsky should be rolling in his grave.  

Kornbluth and his brother Jacob have padded the one-man show with a supporting cast, stretched out a few subplots, and brought “Haiku Tunnel” to the big screen. Their first film (and they hope not their last) opened in San Francisco Thursday and will come to Berkeley Sept. 21. 

Sitting in a production office at the bottom of Potrero Hill in San Francisco, Josh and Jacob reminisce about the days, not so long ago, when they were toiling as temps and writing on the side, and hearing of other temp slaves using this disassociated employment phase to pursue personal ambitions. 

“There’s something about being a temp and not really connecting to your work,” said Jacob. “You have the possibility, at least in your own mind, that tomorrow or the next day or whenever you are going to be the thing you are actually going to be, that thing is going to be amazing.” 

The name of the film comes from a job the main character, called “Josh Kornbluth,” had in his temp past. During a stint entering specs for a Hawaiian engineering project he discovered the Zen of temping: with no connection to anyone in the office, free to come and go, not worried about the past or future while jacked into his Walkman doing data entry, the world became weightless and nothing mattered to him. 

“We sometimes refer to the period of time he spends there as the unbearable lightness of temping,” said Josh. “He was totally temp and he realizes later that he was miserable when he was totally temp. So if he thinks in his mind that that’s what he wanted, maybe now he has to rethink things.” 

When “Josh Kornbluth” takes a temp job at a law firm called Skyler and Mitchel (S&M) he is offered to go “perm.” A long-term job forces him to actually get to know his eccentric co-workers personally and to become intimate with the Xerox machine and developing a late-night, confessional relationship with a voicemail system.  

The mole hills-into-mountains squabbles with people and machines at S&M are the stuff of comic pot shots and there is an implied class struggle of the haves (lawyers) and the have-nots (their secretaries) but it isn’t given a dramatic punch because the bosses are not painted as belligerent ogres.  

The real enemy in “Haiku Tunnel” is “Josh Kornbluth,” himself, struggling to adjust his disaffiliated worldview to the idea of permanence. Josh and Jacob’s story of a man overcoming temping and its psychological consequences is a personal revolution instead of a social one.  

“We’re political people fundamentally. We’re not anti-politics,” explained Jacob. “But the thing we wanted to do with this story is focus the narrative very much on the secretaries. To tell the story as honestly as possible from what we felt was, and when you’re honest about it very little of your life intersects with the boss.” 

There are letters that stack up 17 high on the corner of “Josh’s” desk. They go unmailed for a week, and are the proverbial monkey on the secretarial back. Obsessively neurotic that they have not been mailed out and yet perversely comforted by their presence, Josh’s unnatural relationship with the letters propels the character through increasingly absurd antics. As a plot device, the innocuous envelopes’ refusal to be posted evokes a visceral sinking feeling that is both comic and dreadful. 

The real Josh wants to make it abundantly clear to potential future employers that this is not typical behavior for the once (and future?) office worker. 

“That’s the kind thing that if they ever do need to re-enter the secretarial market, which could happen within weeks since the opening is imminent, I just want people to know that that is not something I would actually do. I would not do something bad like that.” 


Arts and Entertainment Calendar

Staff
Friday September 14, 2001

 

924 Gilman Street Sept. 14: Groovie Ghoulies, Kevin Seconds, Sidekicks, Secretions, Miso Militia; Sept. 15: Tragedy, Run For Your Fucking Life, Funeral, plus assorted punk rock movies: Behind the Screams, Brainbox, Kamala’s Revenge and others; Sept. 16: 5 p.m. The Influents, The Thumbs, One Time Angels, Agent 51; Sept. 21: Slow Gherkin, 78 RPMS, Enemy You, Wisecracker; Sept. 23: 5 p.m. Subtonix, Running Ragged, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 28: Erase Errata, The Intima, Ibobuki, (+t.b.a.); Sept. 29: DS-13, Beware, Blown To Bits, (+t.b.a.); Most shows are $5 and start at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 

 

Albatross Pub 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. 14: 9:30 p.m. Zigaboo Modeliste & The New Aahkesstra, $10; Sept. 15 9:30 p.m. African Rhythm Messengers and Victor Sila, $11; Sept. 16: 7 p.m. Mexican IndepenDance Celebration with Grupo Tamunal and Mariachi Las Palomas, $8; 1317 San Pablo Ave. 594-1400 www.ashkenaz.com  

 

Café de la Paz Poetry Nitro, performance showcase with open mike. 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. Funky Fridays Conscious Dance Party with KPFA DJs Splif Skankin and Funky Man. $10; 3629 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland. 655-6661 

 

Freight & Salvage Sept. 14: Ray Wylie Hubbard, $16.50; Sept. 15: Vocolot, $17.50; Sept. 16 Rani Arbo & Daisy Mayhem, $16.50; Sept. 18 Spencer Bohren, $16.50, Sept. 19: David Tanenbaum & Peppino D’Agostino, $16.50, Sept. 20: Steve Tilston & Danny Carnahan, $16.50; Sept. 21: The Waybacks, $17.50; Sept. 22: The Bluerass Intentions, $17.50; Sept. 23 Tony Marcus & Patrice Haan, $16.50; Sept. 24: April Verch, $16.50; Sept. 26: Clive Gregson, $16.50; Sept. 27: Dick Gaughan, $18.50; Sept 28: Jenna Mammina, $16.50; All shows start at 8 p.m. 1111 Addison St. 548-1761 www.freightandsalvage.com 

 

Jack’s Bistro Sept. 22 & Sept. 28: 9 p.m. Tomas Michaud’s New World Flamenco Quartet, Jack London Square. 444-7171 www.starland-music.com 

 

Jupiter 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  

 

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 

 

Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra presents “Handel’s Acis and Galatea” Music Director, Nicholas McGegan. Sept. 15: 8 p.m.; Sept. 16: 7:30 p.m. $34 - $49 First Congregational Church, Dana & Durant, 415-392-4400 www.philharmonia.org 

 

"A Benefit Concert for Devi-ja" Sept. 16: 4 p.m. Proceeds of this concert will help Violinist Devi-ja Delgado Croll and her family. Performers will include: Ali Jihad Racy, Zakir Hussain, Vince Delgado, Mimi Spencer, Shirley Muramoto, Matt Eakle, Dahlena, Carnaval Spirit and others. $20 Donation. St. John's Presbyterian Church 2727 College Ave. 415-457-8427 vince@vincedelgado.com 

 

The 1st Annual Guinness & Oyster Festival 2001 Sept. 22: 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. Free. Cake, Mingus Amungus, Ponticello, Stolen Bibles, Alamo 66 w/ Destani Wolf, The Culann’s Hounds. MLK Jr. Civic Center Park 

 

“The Complete Shostakovich String Quartets--Part One” Sept. 15: 10 a.m. Quartets I & II; Sept. 29: 10 a.m. Quartets III & IV; Oct. 20: 10 a.m. Quartets V & VI. Performed by the prize-winning Alexander String Quartet with Robert Greenberg. $ 30, $84 for the Trio of concerts. Julia Morgan Center for the Arts 2640 College Ave. 845-8542  

www.juliamorgan.org. 

 

“Hecho En Califas Chicano-Latino Teatro Festival” Sept. 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. 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 

 

“Twelfth Night” Sept. 15 & 16, 18 - 23, 25 - 30, Oct. 2 - 7, Tue. - Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m., Student 


No new fast food on San Pablo Avenue, commission advises

By Hank Sims Daily Planet Staff
Friday September 14, 2001

The city’s Planning Commission advised the City Council to ban further drive-through restaurants on San Pablo Avenue Wednesday. 

At its regular meeting, the nine-person commission unanimously approved a measure that would ask the council to ban new drive-throughs and change the permitting process for quick-service restaurants on San Pablo. 

The proposal originated almost a year ago, when a group of residents along the San Pablo corridor successfully defeated a proposed development at the corner of San Pablo and Ashby avenues that included a Carl’s Jr. restaurant. Councilmember Margaret Breland, whose West Berkeley district includes the corner of San Pablo and Ashby avenues, supported the drive-through ban.  

The Planning Commission’s action Wednesday is in keeping with the larger plan to revitalize San Pablo by encouraging pedestrian traffic and mass transit through the corridor. 

Ted Burton, project coordinator for the city’s Office of Economic Development, has been closely involved with the effort to improve San Pablo Avenue. He commended the Planning Commission’s action.  

“(Drive-through restaurants) make a break in the streetscape, increase traffic and aren’t that nice to look at,” he said. 

The commission also voted to impose new restrictions on new “quick-service” and “carry-out” restaurants on San Pablo. In the future, such establishments will have to demonstrate that they are designed on a “pedestrian scale,” and are congruent with the residential character of the neighborhood. 

In addition, the commission recommended that proposals for new “quick-service” restaurants – which, unlike “carry-outs,” have tables – will have to be approved by the Zoning Adjustment Board, rather than city staff.  

Rob Wrenn, a member of the Planning Commission, said that the proposed rules will enhance the character of the neighborhood. 

“It allows greater scrutiny of design-related things,” he said. “People can open new restaurants, but if something like a McDonald’s or Jack-in-the-Box comes along, it would be difficult to get that approved.” 

“Drive-throughs are inherently detrimental to the kind of development we are trying to do on San Pablo. We don’t want to see it become more of a suburban, strip-mall, car-oriented area.” 

John McBride, a member of a Delaware Street community group that supported the proposal, said he was “very pleased” by the commission’s action.  

 


Call for help in promoting peace

Suzan Bollich
Friday September 14, 2001

Editor: 

This is a call in response to my fear, my sadness, that the United States President, and his many supporters, locally and globally (the United Nations) will commit obligatory military retaliation, possibly with nuclear weaponry. I fear that a gravely enormous, overarching deadly means of misguided aggressive retaliation is immanently probable. To this end, I ask your help now in promoting community peace before the United States and other countries commit war on soon to be identified targets. Acting now for peace on the community level will create more peaceful communities in times of near-future aggression. 

Please join me and others in a counter response to violence by promoting deep peace in your local communities and neighborhoods. Today, I heard accounts of local aggression on people of color, and those appearing Mid Eastern. I heartily believe that the promotion of strong peace efforts now will deter future community separation, such as acts of aggression due to misguided hatred, and people fighting people out of fear.  

I ask you now to plant seeds of peace, for peace in your local communities. This can be done through loving actions such as organized peace walks, community prayer circles, looking into other's eyes--really seeing others, going gently, and directly speaking kind words of peace. We must plant seeds of peace. Do so in the checkout lines, in your workplace, with people on the streets, with your neighbors. Please act boldly for peace now. Peace begets peace. Please devote your every mindful action to the cultivation of other's and Earth's peace.  

Please join with family, friends, with the person next to you in the cafe, offering intentional words and prayer for deep peace. Please be with deep peace, carry peace on your shoulders, practice peace in your words and actions, touch peace with your delicate finger tips, hold peace in your eyes, listen to Earth's peace. Please stand, sit, walk, talk, and make love unabashedly in peace, for peace. 

Join me and other Peace Walkers Sunday the 16th at 6 p.m. for a peace walk commencing and ending in the Elmwood district at the corners of College and Russell. 

May all act in Peace, 

Suzan Bollich 

Berkeley


Panthers look to fix problems, rebound against El Cerrito

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Friday September 14, 2001

When the final whistle blew at the St. Mary’s-Bishop O’Dowd varsity football game last Saturday, the Panthers were on the losing end of a 27-6 score. They had been dominated on defense and self-destructed on offense, out-gained by nearly 200 yards on the day. 

But with just a few fixes, the Panthers could get right back on track this weekend against El Cerrito. 

The most obvious area for St. Mary’s to improve is holding onto the ball. Seven fumbles, including four botched snaps, helped kill any offensive momentum the Panthers managed to build against O’Dowd. Tailback Trestin George, expected to lead the team after a breakout junior year, put the ball on the ground twice, losing one, and the only option play the St. Mary’s coaches called resulted in another turnover after quarterback Steve Murphy threw a blind pitch while being hit. All seven of the mishaps were preventable. 

One can count on George to tighten his grip on the ball. One of the most highly-regarded backs in California, he certainly realizes that no college wants to give the ball to a running back who can’t hang on to it. Last week will likely serve as a motivator for George to have a big game against the Gauchos on Saturday. 

Another certainty is that the Panthers spent a lot of time in practice this week working on the exchange from center Rodny Acda to Murphy. The two have never worked together before this season, with Murphy playing quarterback full-time for the first time, so only a lot of snaps will smooth out the timing between them. 

Another key to the Panthers getting into the end zone, which to offense failed to do against the Dragons, is getting the ball into Chase Moore’s hands. The senior tight end/receiver has the potential to be a game-breaker with his combination of size and speed. He had a 62-yard touchdown catch called back on Saturday on a questionable offensive pass-interference call, the only big play the Panthers mustered on offense against O’Dowd. If Murphy can find Moore matched up against a smaller defensive back, all he has to do is put the ball up for grabs and let Moore use his rebounding skills, developed during his time with the St. Mary’s state championship basketball team last season. 

On defense, St. Mary’s must improve against the run. St. Mary’s gave up 250 yards on the ground to O’Dowd, most of them coming behind massive right tackle Michael Gray, so they appear to be vulnerable to strong rushing attacks. The Panthers are fortunate that El Cerrito doesn’t have Chijioke Onyenegecha to run the ball again this year. The tailback scored four touchdowns against them as a senior last year, but the Gauchos don’t have anyone at that level this season.  

The Gauchos linemen don’t pose nearly the threat that Gray did. Look for the St. Mary’s defensive line to perform much better against El Cerrito behind the play of juniors Leon Drummer and Julian Taylor. If those two can plug holes in the middle, it will allow the Panthers’ fast linebackers, such as Omarr Flood and Sean Rogan, to run sideline-to-sideline and make plays.


Muslims cautious despite positive UC reaction

By Sasha Khokha Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 14, 2001

UC student Hooma Multani ignored her family’s warnings Thursday morning to stay home because they feared her headscarf might make her a target for anti-Muslim sentiment. 

As Multani walked across the UC Berkeley campus, a stranger rushed toward her. And hugged her. “She thanked me for coming to class,” Multani said, obviously relieved.  

“We’re fortunate to be in a community like this,” she said. “People at Berkeley are generally more supportive, not closed-minded. Of course, a few people continue to talk out of ignorance, with hateful thoughts or words.” 

Some of those hateful words were directed at Multani and others during an interview as they sat at the Muslim Students Association table in UC Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza on Thursday. “We should kill the Muslims with a nuclear bomb,” said an elderly man walking by.  

“Thanks for your comment,” Multani and another woman said, explaining that the same man had made a similar remark on Wednesday. For the most part, Muslim students said they feel safe on campus, thanks to a supportive response by administrators, faculty, and students. Concern over violence against Muslims has intensified since U.S. officials named Muslim leaders as prime suspects in Tuesday’s terrorist attacks against the United States.  

The Muslim Students Association addressed their main concern – attacks against Muslim women wearing headscarves – by setting up an escort service with Muslim men accompanying women between campus and their apartments and to grocery stores. 

For its part, the university administration is creating a hotline for students, faculty, and  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Motivations are comprehensible

George Palen
Friday September 14, 2001

Editor, 

The tragic loss of life Tuesday in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania is numbing. One cannot begin to understand the hurt that the terrorist attack brings upon people of America and the world.  

One can understand, though, the motivations behind the attack. And while I was truly saddened by the tragedy that occurred in the planes and the Pentagon and World Trade Center, I was also, once again, disappointed at the reactions by both the White House and the mainstream press. In painting this tragedy as a story of good against evil, we in America refuse to own up to the destruction that we are causing the rest of the world. We are refusing to take on the responsibilities incumbent of the most powerful nation in the world.  

While the party directly responsible for the hijackings has not come forth, we must in America bear some of the responsibility. We are a country, especially since George W. Bush moved into the White House, that refuses to make compromises with anyone. We have pulled out of middle east peace talks. We have backed out of the Kyoto protocols. We refused to discuss racial equity issues in South Africa. The Bush administration has insisted that the world play by our rules, no matter how unjust.  

Today”s society is one of oppressors and the oppressed. Those with power in America are using that power to gain more power and are doing so with little regard for any lives that get in the way. We should not be surprised at the violence that happened on Tuesday. In fact that violence is no different than the destruction that the United States has visited upon Nicaragua, upon Iraq, upon the Palestinian state, upon the rainforests in the Americas, upon countless societies and environments of the world plundered in the name of economic growth. Tuesday”s violence is no different than the oppression that we visit upon the poor in our own country when we deprive them of health care, environmental safety, welfare and indeed dignity with which to run their lives. Tuesday’s violence is no different with one exception: those in power in America control the media. They control the message. They get to say who is right and who is wrong. 

Let us learn a lesson from Tuesday’s tragedy. Let us realize that every person in this world deserves power over his or her own life, and that a healthy society allows for mechanisms in which that power can be expressed. Let us stop relying on military answers to human problems. Let us stop insisting that the winners are those with the most power and money. Let us stop pretending that the ends justify the means. Let us start to build a world where justice is universal, where human life is valued over corporate profit, where reason and compassion take the place of death and destruction.  

As we saw Tuesday, global power exercised in the absence of global responsibility brings about violent retribution. Let us not kid ourselves into thinking that increased security will provide us with a safe country in which to live. Only when we allow for justice in the world, when we allow for human concerns to be addressed with honor, dignity and respect, will we live in a world where people do not see the need to resort to terrorism. 

Let us find safety in justice, not in oppression. 

George Palen 

Berkeley 

 


Cal-Rutgers football game rescheduled for Nov. 23

Daily Planet Wire Services
Friday September 14, 2001

The University of California and Rutgers University have reached agreement to play their postponed football game on Friday, Nov. 23, at 1 p.m. EST (10 a.m. PST) at Rutgers Stadium, the two schools announced jointly today.  

The game was originally scheduled for this Saturday, Sept. 15, but was postponed due to the terrorist attacks on the East Coast this past week.  

“The tragic events of this week have dictated that we play this game during the Thanksgiving weekend,” said Cal athletic director Steve Gladstone. “We felt strongly that our student-athletes deserve the opportunity to play their full schedule.”  

“We are very pleased that we were able to find a date that accommodates both institutions,” said Rutgers AD Robert E. Mulcahy III. “I want to thank California for their sensitivity in this process. The California officials have been extremely cooperative, particularly in this trying time.”  

All tickets for the originally scheduled Cal-Rutgers game will be honored on Nov. 23. Cal fans who cannot attend the rescheduled game can obtain a full refund by calling the California ticket office at 1-800-GO BEARS.


Motivations are comprehensible

By Kimberlee Keala Bortfield Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 14, 2001

Two weeks ago, Carl Rosato's booth at the Berkeley Farmers' Market was filled with peaches. By last Saturday, Rosato had pruned his peach trees, and the trimmings were stacked next to a sign that read: “Great wood for barbecues, the fireplace, and for warming your heart with the memories of the summertime.” 

September is the beginning of the end for Rosato and others who sell their fruit at the more than 350 farmers' markets across the state. 

While it is peak season with both summer and fall fruit vendors crowding into the open markets, the number of farmers will soon fall off and the produce will change. Berkeley’s market has about 50 vendors and 3,800 people a day during the summer months, but by December the numbers drop. 

For Rosato, who attends 12 markets a week from June to September earning at least $20,000, the winter brings plenty of work. Once the market circuit is over, his projects begin. 

“There's a zillion projects to do,” Rosato said. “I have to fix the tractor and set up a new cold-storage system.” 

When Rosato is not working on his 15-acre, Woodleaf Farm in Oroville, he is consulting or teaching organic farming at Butte College. He also supplements his income by growing persimmons and mandarin oranges, and is interested in starting apples and pears. 

This winter, Rosato will plant 12 acres of cacao in Ecuador, which will be made into chocolate. 

“I do okay,” Rosato said of his various jobs. “It's not an easy way to get a retirement plan.” 

At the Star Valley Farm booth on Saturday, Kyra Brown had crates of sugarplums, dried apricots and bottles of apricot juice. Brown said she sells peaches, plums and apricots at four or five markets a week during the summer. Unsold fruit is then taken back to the Solano farm, dried in the sun or turned into juice, and resold. 

While the dried fruits and juice provide her with a year-round income, she said that she makes more money from the fresh fruit, especially from the apricots which peak in June. By November, she will be going to the market just once every other week. 

For Amy Foster of Gabriel Farm in Sebastopol, however, September marked not the end but the beginning of her market circuit. Every Saturday from Labor Day weekend through December, she comes to the Berkeley Farmers’ Market to sell a variety of Asian pears and apples. Her method of generating interested customers – let them sample everything. 

“Some people never had Asian pears and apples before,” Foster stated. “And some people are always coming back, especially when the summer fruits are tapering off.” 

Once her off-season begins in January, Foster will prune trees, maintain the orchard floor, and ward off frost and insects. 

“There’s not much income in the winter except for juices and dried fruits,” she said. “Hopefully, it’s enough.”


Enron Corp. agrees to turn over documents to Senate investigators

By Jennifer Coleman Associated Press Writer
Friday September 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Enron Corp. agreed Thursday to release company documents to a Senate committee investigating possible price manipulation, ending the committee’s quest to cite the energy company for contempt for not complying with a subpoena. 

The Senate Rules Committee heard arguments from Enron and the Senate Select Committee to Investigate Price Manipulation of the Wholesale Energy Market over whether the energy company should be found in contempt. 

In June, the select committee subpoenaed Enron files as part of its investigation into record-high prices in the state’s wholesale electricity market. Enron sued to quash the subpoena, a motion a judge rejected. 

The judge agreed, however, that Enron was entitled to a protective order for documents revealing sensitive trading and financial information. 

Sen. Joe Dunn, D-Santa Ana, chairman of the select committee, said late Thursday that Enron agreed to the same confidentiality agreement accepted by several other generators. With that agreement, Dunn said, the committee would withdraw a report that recommended Enron be found in contempt. 

He said he expects documents to be transferred immediately. 

Dunn had argued the subpoena also covered nonconfidential documents, and since the energy company also refused to release those papers to the committee, it was in contempt. 

He asked Sen. John Burton, D-San Francisco, chairman of the rules committee, to approve fines against Enron for each day they didn’t comply with the subpoena. The daily fines would start at $1,000, doubling each day for 10 days. Then the company would be fined $1 million a day. 

Enron lawyer Michael Kirby said the company had put 49,000 nonconfidential documents in a depository in Sacramento so committee investigators could review them. 

But Dennis Murphy, a lawyer for the select committee, said Enron didn’t tell investigators where the depository was located. The committee discovered the address in documents filed by Enron for the court case, he said. 

“We’ve been trying to get into the depository for a week. They have not allowed our people in there to verify what documents are in there,” he said. 

Kirby disputed that, and blamed the committee for delays in turning over the balance of the documents. The two parties haven’t met since the judge ordered the protective order, and Kirby said it was the committee that refused to work out the order’s details. 

Dunn said the law requires Enron to produce the documents before it was entitled to a protective order. 

Sen. Ross Johnson, R-Irvine, said Dunn’s push to have Enron found in contempt “smacks at this point of Enron being punished for exercising their right to go to court.” 

A contempt report on Reliant Energy has also been sent to the Senate. A contempt finding against Mirant Corp. was later reversed when the company opened a document depository in Sacramento for the committee’s investigators. 

If the full Senate imposes sanctions against Reliant or Enron, it will be the first time since 1929, when the Senate voted to jail reluctant witnesses during a committee investigation of price fixing and price gouging involving cement sales to the state. 


Campus Muslim students braced for backlash

By Malcolm Gay and Turaya Bryant Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 14, 2001

There was only one topic of conversation in a swarming Sproul Plaza Tuesday morning: the terrorist attacks on some of the country’s most symbolic buildings. People spoke to family members through cell phones, pairs of students quietly wept, hands flew and words were fast as emotion-laden arguments erupted throughout the crowd.  

But as the initial horror turns to grief, UC Berkeley’s Muslim community has an added concern: fear of a violent backlash to media portrayals of Muslims as irrational zealots. “Every time something like this happens they pin it on Muslims,” said Nadia Yousef, her head covered in a traditional Islamic scarf. “I was told to be careful on campus.”  

Yousef, 19, is one of about 500 Muslim students on the Berkeley campus. “I’m concerned about attacks on the Muslim community,” she said, adding, however, “I’m not that worried about my own personal safety.”  

But leaders of the Muslim Student Association said they see harassment as a real threat. “Most of our concern is for our Muslim sisters,” said Basin Elkarra, 21, association president. Anticipating intimidation, the MSA has set up a network of members to escort Muslim women walking alone. In an attempt to bridge the prejudicial gap they say the attacks have formed, the MSA and other campus groups are also planning an inter-faith prayer session for today. They are also planning a blood drive with the student government for next week.  

Elkarra said these activities are to build solidarity between Muslims and non-Muslims.  

Nonetheless, the group is planning for the worst. A few people have approached the MSA’s information table on campus angrily blaming them for Tuesday’s tragedies, he said. “We’re staying in groups right now.”  

But these instances are rare, he said, noting that people have approached him expressing remorse and compassion.  

University officials said there are systems in place to aid students who are victims of harassment. But in light of Tuesday’s tragedies the university has stepped up its efforts. “We’re going to set up a seminar on safety tips for Muslim women,” said Dean of Students Karen Kenney. “We would do the same for any community that expressed the need.” Kenney also said that the university is in the process of enhancing its system for reporting and responding to harassment claims. Efforts include a 24-hour harassment report line, as well as on-site counseling services in residence halls.  

Campus police said they have also stepped up security in light of Tuesday’s events. “We have extra officers on the campus,” said UC Police Captain Bill Cooper. Cooper added that the campus police are always prepared for incidents of harassment, though they are now on heightened alert.  

The students emphasized that the alleged acts of isolated Muslim terrorists do not reflect the ideas of the majority of Muslims. “Islam condemns the loss of innocent life at any time,” said Elkarra, adding that any attack upon a non-occupying force is not justified within the teachings of the Koran. 

Many students expressed a sense of injustice as well as concern. “As an American citizen they should investigate and bring the culprits to justice,” said Aadil Khan, 18. “If it’s government-sponsored, I’m a proponent for an eye for an eye. That military action should take place. But if it’s individuals they can’t take action against the country.”  

Khan added that American foreign policy is often perceived by other cultures as arrogant and meddling.  

“I can understand why other countries would have animosity toward the U.S., but I don’t think that justifies this type of attack,” he said. 


Berkeley High teens sorting out emotions after attack

By Carole-Anne Elliott Special to the Daily Planet
Friday September 14, 2001

Two days after the worst terrorist attack to ever strike Americans, students at Berkeley High School were still working through their thoughts about how Tuesday’s events will change their lives. 

Like generations of Americans who look back to the Challenger explosion, the Kennedy assassination and Pearl Harbor as pivotal events, today’s students have had television images of commercial airliners slicing into New York’s World Trade Center forever seared into their consciousness. 

“This is our war,” said sophomore class president Bradley Johnson.  

Though Berkeley High appeared very much as usual Thursday, with students filing to class and laughing with friends over lunch, Tuesday’s events were still on their minds. A memorial altar went up outside the Community Theater, where students could donate money, leave flowers and write their thoughts on huge sheets of paper. 

“The Gulf War wasn’t a big thing for us,” said Johnson. His generation was “too young, and it was ‘push-button.’ This is our first look at what terror is … We know now what it is to be afraid.” 

Freshman class president Lawrence Taylor said, “People were ignorant to the fact of what really happens out there and now, people will be opening up. Kids are going to start saying how it was great when we didn’t have to worry about this.” 

Freshman Geoff Shames is convinced “this country’s going to war.” Senior Vasya Fukson is bound for the U.S. Marine Corps after a recruiter called Tuesday to ask if he wanted to reconsider his decision not to enlist. 

Student Activities Director Christine Nyanda said some of her students have asked, “If the war happens today, are we going to perish?” 

The concerns on Tuesday were more immediate and being in school was rough, said sophomore Claudia Hernandez. “When you think about it, an airplane could fly really fast from there to here,” she said. “It was hard. You couldn’t concentrate because you (wondered), is anything else going to happen?”  

“A lot of people (were) thinking, ‘Are we going to have the Transamerica building bombed? The Golden Gate Bridge? The San Francisco financial district – will it be hit?’” Johnson said. 

Still other students seemed unfazed. 

“OK, it happened, but it can’t happen to me,” is how School Safety Officer Billy Keyes interpreted the reactions of some teens. “Because this is a television age and to a certain extent, it’s still television. 

“Visually, they’ve seen this before,” Keyes said. “That’s why I think the kids are handling it OK.” When they start hearing body counts, he said, “that’s when the kids’ll say, ‘Oh, this is serious.’” 

Most students in Joanna Sapir’s social studies classes haven’t shared their thoughts, she said, but some are coming around. “One talked about (the realization process being) slow for him – he only just realized there were people in the planes,’” she said. 

Others are further along. 

“I want to go to college in New York,” Hawkins said. “I want to travel the world and now it’s going to be so hard to travel anywhere.” 

“It’s terrifying,” she said. “It just really gets you thinking about what you want to do with your life … It’s going to be in everybody’s mind. It’s going to be something that we know for the rest of our lives.” 

 


Critics call redistricting plans too pro-incumbent

By Steve Lawrence Associated Press Writer
Friday September 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO — Lawmakers approved redistricting plans for the Legislature and California’s congressional delegation Thursday, sweeping aside complaints they would help incumbents at the expense of other interests. 

“I suspect that most of these districts have been designed so we won’t have to worry about elections for the next six to eight years,” Assemblyman Tim Leslie, R-Tahoe City, said as lawmakers debated new lines for the Assembly. “Everybody wins.” 

Assembly members voted 65-8 Thursday to approve new lines for their house and a state tax board, and a few hours later adopted new state Senate and congressional districts, 58-10. 

The Senate passed the Senate and congressional plans Wednesday night 38-2, and approved the new Assembly and Board of Equalization districts Thursday 40-0 without debate. 

The votes sent the proposals to Gov. Gray Davis, who is expected to sign them into law. 

The plans will probably help Democrats maintain their big majorities in the Legislature and the congressional delegation for the next decade while allowing Republicans to tighten their hold on the seats they have now. 

Democrats currently have 26 of the Senate’s 40 seats, 50 of the Assembly’s 80 seats and 32 of the state’s 52 seats in the House of Representatives. 

California will get a 53rd congressional seat starting in 2003 because of the population growth revealed by last year’s census. That new district, in the Los Angeles area, is also expected to go to a Democrat. 

There seemed to be some chance early in the week that legislative leaders wouldn’t be able to agree on new lines because of a dispute over how to draw a few Senate and congressional districts. 

But Senate leaders removed a major stumbling block when they agreed to redraw a San Diego-area district in a way that could help one of Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg’s lieutenants win a congressional seat. 

Critics charged that the new districts — particularly the Senate and congressional lines — would go too far to promote the political ambitions of most incumbents at the expense of regional and ethnic interests. 

“What happened to drawing lines for the people of the state rather than ourselves?” Leslie said. 

He said the state should create a nonpartisan commission to draw new districts after each federal census instead of leaving the task to lawmakers. 

“I think the process brings out the worst in the Legislature,” said Assemblywoman Helen Thomson, D-Davis, saying the lines would protect “most of us from the challenge of a competitive election.” 

But Assemblyman Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, defended the plans. 

“This is a political process, a political process that has a legal right and obligation and imperative to protect incumbency,” he said. 

Much of the opposition, Cedillo implied, came from Assembly members disappointed they didn’t have a clear shot at a Senate or congressional seat. 

“There are 80 people who should aspire to hold 40 seats on the other side of the building,” he said. 

Assemblyman Rod Wright, D-Los Angeles, said the Senate and congressional plans were “the best legal compromise that we are going to be able to achieve.” 

He said legislators critical of the plans would be more unhappy if the state Supreme Court took over redistricting. 

Thomson and Assembly members Fred Keeley, D-Boulder Creek, and Hannah-Beth Jackson, D-Santa Barbara, said the Senate plan unnecessarily cut up their parts of the state to provide populations for inland seats. 

“The central coast should not be an organ donor for the rest of the state,” said Jackson. 

“This is not about me; this is about process and outcome,” said Keeley, whose interest in a Senate seat could be thwarted by the new lines. 

Cedillo said the plans would increase the number of seats held by women and Hispanics in the Senate and Congress while going a long way to protect so-called communities of interest, but other lawmakers said they didn’t go far enough. 

Jackson said the Senate plan could actually result in fewer women winning legislative seats. 

Alan Clayton, research chairman for the California Latino Redistricting Coalition, said his organization would ask the U.S. Justice Department to go to court to challenge several districts in the legislative and congressional plans on the grounds that they weaken Hispanic political clout. 

Kathay Feng, an attorney at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center in Los Angeles, praised some parts of the Assembly plan for its impact on Asian and Pacific Island voters but criticized others. 

She said her organization hadn’t decided to take any legal action. 

 


U.S. response to terror attacks raises legal issues

By Martha Mendoza AP National Writer
Friday September 14, 2001

Amid calls for a swift and powerful retaliation to the terrorist attacks, legal scholars say complex issues are at stake: Must Congress declare war? Should the United Nations be involved? And perhaps most importantly, how does a democratic nation respond justly to such an inhumane attack? 

“If we were to bomb civilian targets deliberately, which is what they did to us, that would be an unjust response. It would be illegal and a crime against humanity and we’re not going to do that,” said law professor Abraham Sofaer, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. 

President Bush called the attacks “the first war of the 21st century” on Thursday and his administration labeled fugitive Osama bin Laden a prime suspect. The United States promised to wage all-out retaliation against those responsible and any regime that protects them. 

Congress will take up separate legislation next week to support Bush’s use of force against those responsible. 

Legal analysts said they hope politicians are careful with their rhetoric, and their actions. 

“I certainly hope we don’t get into this whole declaring war business,” said Sofaer. “It’s a rallying call politically, but under the United Nations charter, there’s not supposed to be anything like war anymore,” he said. 

The notion of war, said Sofaer, entails taking over another country. Self defense, on the other hand, is simply protecting one’s own interests. 

“We’ve been attacked. We have the legal authority to act in self defense. And we must act,” he said. 

But there are striking issues about what that action should be. 

“There is no doubt that the people who did this are war criminals, but if it turns out they were acting largely in an isolated fashion, it might be more appropriate to capture them and try them than to bomb a country,” said Harold Hongju Koh, a professor of International Law at Yale University who served as an assistant secretary of human rights under the Clinton Administration. 

“This is a challenge to our open society,” he said. “Will we respond within the framework of law or will we respond within the framework of vengeance?” 

Amnesty International on Thursday called for “justice, not revenge” to prevail. The organization reiterated its deepest sympathy for the victims of the heinous attacks and called upon the leaders of governments and community groups around the world to ensure respect for human rights in their wake. 

“It is important for us all to see that hatred does not become the order of the day; that fear does not become an excuse for the violation of rights and that we all remember our common humanity,” Amnesty’s statement said. “We must be compassionate in our support for the victims, determined in our search for justice and vigilant about the rights of all people.” 

The 19-nation NATO alliance declared Wednesday that the attack can be considered an attack on the alliance as a whole. This could mean NATO support for future U.S. military action against those responsible, but the level of that support must be negotiated. 

Legal experts lauded the NATO move as well, and said it would behoove the Bush administration to involve the United Nations Security Council as well. 

But Michael lgnatieff, a professor of human rights policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, said the United States is fully within its rights, according to United Nations charter, to take unilateral military action in self defense without U.N. Security Council approval. 

“Involving the U.N. is useful to building international support and legitimacy for American military action,” he said, “but the U.S. can and should go it alone if it needs to.” 

Jonathan Greenberg, Academic Director of Stanford Law School’s Program in International Legal Studies, said civilized nations fighting terrorists face a daunting challenge. 

“Terrorism is the deliberate attacking of civilian targets. That’s what happened yesterday, with the most horrifying results. But we can’t retaliate against civilian targets under international law,” he said. “If we decide to retaliate, it must be against the people or organizations responsible for committing or organizing these acts of terror, and that’s going to be very difficult.” 


Lawsuits targeting airline industry expected over terrorist hijackings

By David Kravets Associated Press Writer
Friday September 14, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — With so many unanswered questions about the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history, one fact is clear: There will be lawsuits targeting the airline industry following Tuesday’s hijacking of four passenger flights. 

Terrorism attacks have led to protracted legal action against airlines in the past. One example is the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. 

The suits from Tuesday’s hijackings may not come immediately as lawyers could decide to wait for the government’s investigation. But what the government learns, including who was behind the hijackings, will set the legal stage. 

“The critical issue is how these weapons got on the flight,” said Frank Pitre, a Burlingame attorney and aviation law expert. “Legally, security is a combined venture between the airport, security screening company at the airport and the airlines.” 

The four hijacked planes, two of which slammed into the World Trade Center in New York, one at the Pentagon and the fourth in a remote field outside Pittsburgh, carried 266 people. In all, thousands were feared dead. 

The lawsuits would most likely target American Airlines and United Airlines, the two carriers whose planes were hijacked, experts said. The airports and the security teams at Logan International Airport in Boston, Dulles International Airport in Washington and Newark International Airport in New Jersey may also be sued because that is where the ill-fated flights departed, these experts said. 

Other potential litigation targets include those who are found responsible. If they are associated with a government, that government could be sued and its assets that are in the United States could be frozen. 

That was the case in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, where a luggage bomb killed 270 people. Family members of the victims are seeking $2 billion from Libya for its alleged role in the plane’s explosion. Lawsuits against Pan Am led to its bankruptcy. 


Don’t let sprinkler systems leave you high and dry

Associated Press report
Friday September 14, 2001

There’s no watering down the popularity of home lawn sprinkler systems, but homeowners can oversee installation without getting financially soaked.  

It takes understanding of watering system options and a rational approach to dealing with installation contractors. "If homeowners would take the time to look at the fundamental aspects of the job, the installation would go smoother, they’d spend less money and conserve water," says Sharon Mertins, a watering system expert for the Home Service Store.  

Mertins says automatic spray systems are by far the most popular. Water pressure forces sprinkler heads to pop up to spray a 17-foot- diameter section or full circle for a preset time. Rotary and drip systems are other, lesser-used options.  

"Rotary systems are great if you have a large unobstructed yard," says Mertins. Rotary heads provide a mammoth 70-foot swath of coverage. Drip systems conserve water although these are limited to reaching root systems in flower beds.  

The one system Mertins steers clients away from is a manual system which is more expensive to install. Whatever system fits the bill, says Mertins, "It all depends on water pressure. If you don’t have adequate pressure, you’re sunk."  

The main water line in a home creates more pressure than systems connected to a sewer meter. Spray systems boost pressure through a sequence of smaller and smaller diameter pipes as water nears the sprinkler head.  

Contractors bid installation several ways. Most charge by the station the area covered by a spray head – rather than running foot of pipe. Some installers bid on yard size or by materials and labor multiplied by a profit margin. Typical installation time for an average yard is 140 hours. Any bid will include variables unique to each yard. Water-blocking obstructions, soil, slope of lot or labor-intensive work to run pipe beneath or around objects can increase your costs.  

Mertins advises homeowners to ask for all-inclusive bids. "Make sure everything is included so you won’t have surprises at the end," she says.  

A turnkey bid isn’t the only thing homeowners should demand from contractors. In a move to manage water resources, more than 30 states require that irrigation installation be done by licensed contractors. Homeowners should ask to see the installer’s license. References and experience also count, says Mertins.  

The homeowner also should insist that installers assume responsibility if utilities such as phone, gas and electricity lines are severed.  

Contractors should also perform a back-flow inspection as part of their bid. Back-flow devices, also known as double checks, keep water flowing in one direction and stop the return of water into a city water system.  

Mertins says homeowners should stipulate contractor grade materials be used throughout, especially if the installer must make a sudden trip to a home store for additional parts. Most home stores sell homeowner-grade materials that last one to three years. Contractor grade materials of neoprene cost no more but will last the typical life of a watering system, 12 to 15 years.


Sweeheart deal for San Francisco Barbie

The Associated Press
Friday September 14, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco’s estimated $7.6 billion tourism machine has a new ambassador. She is 11 inches tall, doesn’t speak a word and is hardly a symbol of social progression. 

But the “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” Barbie — all dolled up for the job of marketing tool and collectible plaything — looks unfailingly confident in her high-society fashions despite the troubled economy and the downturn in visitor spending. 

The San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau hopes to make about $100,000 during the next few months from trademark-licensing rights on the doll’s name while also tapping legions of future visitors. 

Tourism Barbie wears an impressively detailed, tailored cinched-waist jacket in satiny gold with faux-fur cuffs, a full black skirt, and seams on the back of her hose. She is made to look as if she’s off to afternoon tea circa 1940. 

Never mind that her heels would make a trek up Nob Hill treacherous in any era. 

This limited-edition Barbie is the product of brainstorming by San Francisco’s imagemakers at the visitors bureau and top executives at the $4.7 billion-per-year Mattel Corp. and South San Francisco’s See’s Candies. 

One of the world’s top destinations, San Francisco gets showered with nearly continuous publicity within the travel world. Still, the visitors bureau is always coming up with its next packageable attention-grabber, from embossed San Francisco pens to “I Love San Francisco” plush toys. 

The joint-venture Barbie doll is carrying a See’s shopping bag in one hand and a black purse in the other. She will be priced at $28 starting this month at See’s Candies’ 200-plus stores and airport chocolate kiosks in 14 states including California, Washington, Oregon, Utah and New Mexico. 

She also will be available for the same price at San Francisco’s Hallidie Plaza visitors center and is already advertised on the visitor’s bureau Web site (www.sfvisitor.org) alongside an “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” camera ($19.50) and wristwatch ($44.50). 

Mattel doesn’t disclose production details, but the doll’s handlers at See’s and the convention bureau say 100,000 “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” Barbies will be available. 

Last year, See’s and Mattel sold a special See’s-design Barbie dressed in the company’s trademark women’s uniform, a white dress with black trim and bow tie. It was the first cooperative venture by the two companies. 

“We didn’t advertise it. We just had it” in stores, said Richard Van Doren, marketing vice president at See’s, which tallied about $330 million in overall sales last year. 

Van Doren was skeptical at first when Mattel approached him: “I said, ’Look, I’m in the candy business.”’ 

He acquiesced and was dumbfounded when nearly 100,000 See’s Barbies, priced at $26 each, disappeared from See’s store shelves within just a few months. 

See’s had to have tapped new customers by luring them into its stores to buy the doll, Van Doren said. “It might have brought the collector in who never had been in a See’s Candies shop.” 

Mattel has struggled in recent years to re-energize the flagging sales growth of its most famous doll. As Barbie turned 40 in 1999, Mattel was fighting near-stagnation of sales, even after Barbie’s popularity had climbed dramatically from the 1980s. 

While 100,000 Barbies register only a blip on Mattel’s screen, the company was looking for new outlets and jumped at the chance to market a second See’s San Francisco doll. 

“This enables us to distribute Barbie Dolls in locations where one would not normally expect to find Barbies,” said Suzanne Schlundt, Mattel’s director of Barbie marketing. 

The visitors bureau wasn’t in on last year’s See’s Barbie experiment. But See’s and the bureau are veteran marketing partners, and the idea of tourists returning home to far-flung locales with San Francisco Barbies in their suitcases was an enticing public-relations opportunity. 

Last year, Brian Baker, the bureau’s marketing vice president, looked into how the agency could tap into the Barbie action by licensing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” to See’s and Mattel. The bureau owns trademark rights to the phrase (though not to the song by the same name). 

The bureau could make close to $100,000 on the licensing rights, said John Marks, bureau president. 

That could buy a few full-page national ads selling the city, he said. But the bigger payoff would be the lasting impression of the dolls themselves, which could become collectors’ items or be cherished for years by children, also known as future tourists. 

“It’s never too early to start building brand awareness,” Marks said. 

The Barbie packaging itself is an advertisement for the city and See’s. It comes with postcards of the Golden Gate Bridge and a cable car. 

Just how collectible the doll will be is largely a matter of guesswork, said Barbie aficionado Patrice Krems Walcoff, a San Rafael insurance broker and Barbie collector. She owns 1,500 Barbies and is the immediate past president of the San Francisco Fashion Doll Club. 

Value to collectors depends on, among other factors, the sale price, production volume, quality, packaging and pure luck, Walcoff said. 

“The face, believe it or not, has a lot to do with how much it appeals to collectors. There are certain collectors who absolutely refuse to buy anything contemporary.” 

This doll’s face is contemporary though her clothes have a retro look. She will come in two versions that Mattel describes as Caucasian and ethnic, which in Barbie’s world means light-brown skin with black hair. 


Officials silent on building delays

By John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

The $30 million Central Library renovation, which was originally scheduled to be completed by January, is now millions over budget, eight months overdue and library officials are not saying why. 

Despite the uncertainties surrounding the project, the new director of the Berkeley Public Library, Jackie Griffin, will ask the City Council tonight to authorize a $1 million increase to a line of credit for the project raising the city’s liability to $1.2 million. 

“The big deal is that it appears there’s no completion date,” said Mayor Shirley Dean. “I was assured there would be city oversight of this project and now I’m told there is no officially-scheduled completion date and I want to know why.” 

Deputy City Manager Phil Kamlarz said library officials have not given the city a status report since early July.  

Griffin did not return calls to the Daily Planet on Wednesday and renovation project manager, Elena Engel, did not keep a scheduled telephone interview to discuss the long construction delays or the millions in budget overruns. 

Tom Arntz, of Novato-based Arntz Builders, said completion delays were the result of unforeseen construction problems and an unusually high number of changes to project plans by the library. Arntz Builders also has a $29 million contract with the Berkeley Unified School District for a construction project at Berkeley High School. 

The main funding source for the Central Library project, at 2090 Kittredge St., came from $49 million in Measure S bond money, approved by voters in 1996. Measure S funds also helped pay for the renovation of the recently-completed Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center building and other improvements downtown. 

Originally, when the project was being promoted to city voters, the total cost of the library renovation and expansion was $30 million. Last July in a presentation to the City Council, Engel estimated the construction phase of the project was $2 million over budget.  

According to a renovation timeline published in March, 1997, a month before construction began, the project was scheduled to be completed as early as last January. But Arntz said they will not be finished until November at the earliest, making the project 10 months overdue. 

“It’s very difficult to estimate when a construction project will be finished,” said John Rosenbrock, the city’s manager of capital projects. 

Rosenbrock said it is common in renovation projects, especially projects like the Central Library, which require a lot of detailed finish work, that small projects pile up and cause completion delays. 

He added that there were unforeseen delays during the early and middle phases of construction including a structural problem with the foundation of the building adjacent to the library and a plasterers’ strike followed by a painters’ strike.  

But Rosenbrock said despite unforeseen problems, there have been issues with Arntz Builders, which may have added to project delays. “I can’t get into them now because they are the subject of negotiations,” he said. 

Arntz said there are always problems with renovation projects but the Central Library renovation was additionally burdened by an unusually high number of plan changes. 

“We have 460 change order items on this job,” he said. “Each of these changes has to be addressed.” 

Arntz said the city’s unwillingness to pay overtime to the construction workers has added to the project delays.


Cal cancels all games through weekend

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

Cal Chancellor announced the cancellation of all of the school’s athletic contests through the upcoming weekend due to Tuesday’s national tragedy. 

“I am shocked and greatly saddened by the tragic events today in New York and Washington, D.C.,” Berdahl said. “There may be no day in our recent history in which this nation has felt a greater loss. At this moment, we must come together to provide each other with comfort and caring support.” 

Affected Cal teams are football, women’s volleyball, cross country, men’s water polo and men’s and women’s soccer. 

The Bears’ football team was scheduled to board a charter flight from Oakland Airport Thursday morning, bound for Newark, N.J., in preparation for Saturday night’s game against Rutgers. Cal Athletic Director Steve Gladstone said the school intends to re-schedule the game if at all possible, but the schools do not share an open date before each team ends its season on Nov. 17. 

Cal head coach Tom Holmoe had a voluntary practice on Tuesday, with regular practice resuming Wednesday. 

“I think that for us to go out and practice today would be a little too much,” Holmoe said Tuesday. “The kids are a little sensitive. Some of the kids are sensitive to this issue and are scared and nervous and in their lifetime, in my lifetime, in all of your lifetimes, we’ve never seen this. So to go about business as usual today is not appropriate, I don’t believe.” 

Holmoe also said he had talked to many of his players about the situation. 

“A lot of the players have come by, all day long, all morning long,” he said. “Players have been in the office and we’ve have had the news on and we’ve followed the reports closely. Players are talking about it like everyone else.”  

Besides football, other Cal sports affected by these cancellations are: women’s volleyball, which was slated to host Arizona State Friday and Arizona Saturday at Haas Pavilion on campus, cross country, which was to compete in the Fresno Invitational Saturday, men’s water polo, scheduled to play at the Southern California Tournament in Los Angeles Saturday and Sunday, men’s soccer, slated to play at San Jose State Sunday, and women’s soccer, scheduled to play at Santa Clara on Sunday. 

The Cal Athletic Ticket Office will make refunds to fans who purchased advance tickets to the Cal-Rutgers football game. Call 1-800-GO BEARS for more information.


Guy Poole
Thursday September 13, 2001


Thursday, Sept. 13

 

 

Help Save the West Berkeley Shellmound 

2 p.m. 

U.S. Post Office Building 

201 - 13th St., Oakland 

Bring as many people as possible to make a statement before the Court in Oakland in defense of protective landmark status to the oldest dated mound site in the Bay Area. Landmark status is currently being contested by the industrial property owners who originated this lawsuit against the city of Berkeley. Time and place may change, call ahead to confirm: 841-8562  

 

Joint Design Review Board and Zoning Adjustment Board Meeting 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

6:30 p.m. 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Public Comment on Green Building Initiatives, Workshop on Green Building and follow-up  

discussion and introduction of draft revision to incorporate green design guidelines. 

 

Special City Council Meeting 

City Council Chambers 

7 p.m. 

The City Council holds a meeting rescheduled from Tuesday. 

 

Orangutans in the Wild: Travel in Borneo 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Photographer and writer Christine Krieg will give a slide show of her travels to the Tanjung Puting National Park on the south coast of Central Kalimantan. Free.  

527-4140 

 

Zen master Thich Nhat Hahn 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Community Theater 

1930 Allston Way 

Renowned Vietnamese poet, peace activist and Zen master Thich Nhat Hahn will give a public lecture. 433-9928 

 

People's Park Community  

Advisory Board 

7:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Unit 1 Residence Hall Rec. Room  

2650 Durant Ave. 

Monthly meeting, community invited. 642-7860  

 

CLGS Lavender Lunch: Uncovering Early Queer Religious History 

12:30 - 1:30 p.m. 

Pacific School of Religion 

Mudd 100 

Jim Mitulski of the San Francisco Public Library speaks on “Uncovering Early Queer Religious History: The council on Religion and the Homosexual.” Informal brown bag lunch. 849-8206 www.psr.edu 

 


Friday, Sept. 14

 

 

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: women’s humor.  

549-1879 

 

Yiddish Conversation Group 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

644-6107 

 

City Commons Club 

12:30 p.m. 

Berkeley City Club 

2315 Durant Ave. 

“The Way We See the Media” with Arnold Lee, Publisher and Co-Founder of The Berkeley Daily Planet. 848-3533 

 

Mexican Independence  

Celebration 

12:30 p.m. 

West Berkeley Senior Center 

1900 6th St. 

Mexican Folklore senior singer, Ruben Martin, 644-6037 

 

 

 


Nightmare begins for American Arabs

Corey Wade
Thursday September 13, 2001

The phone invaded my sleep like a nasty alarm clock expediting the end of my dream. Mom told me planes were crashing in huge explosions that had devastated the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. My great aunt believed it the beginning of an all-out war. 

I rushed into the family room and turned on the TV to the repetitive horror of a commercial airplane bursting into one of the almighty Twin Towers. America was under attack. 

I rang Mom back. Word was out that the assailant was probably Arabic, a reaction we knew to be grounded more in hysteria than fact. She confided, “I hate being Middle Eastern today,” six words that made me realize how serious the backlash was to come.  

Flipping the TV back on, I saw kids waving Palestinian flags wildly while cheering with their parents. Interviewed experts said Arabic terrorist groups were the only known organizations to use suicide bombers. Small headlines ran on the bottom of a screen about a Palestinian Liberation Democracy group claiming responsibility. Photos of Osama bin Laden, the Islamic fundamentalist held accountable for the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, flashed before us. The face, religion and ethnicity of the enemy was unveiled.  

My roommate returned home from a shortened workday and asked what I thought of the celebrations in the Middle East. I told him they made me disgusted and unnerved, while coming to the realization that they were no different from anyone else. Explaining similarities between them and us threw him off balance. I had to defend my comment by noting the jovial attitude of too many Americans after we had taken innocent lives in Iraq, Kosovo and Afghanistan. Wrinkles expanded on his forehead. To avoid further conflict, I explained how their psyche was different than ours, how when a powerful country which continually oppresses another finally takes a blow, cheers are for the symbol of the loss of invincibility, not the toll of the dead. 

With all becoming heated, I left to meet my partner, an African American, to play tennis for a breather. After five minutes of mutual venting in the car, she told me I had better watch myself, scolding that I had better sympathize with the victims. I told her I did, but since I couldn’t do anything to bring back their lives, my efforts were more focused on innocent Arab-Americans whose safety was now at risk.  

She glared in disbelief. Ugly words filled her mouth, and retaliatory words mine, hurling back and forth until four in the morning when sleep overcame us.  

I awoke the next day, fearing the worst. A calm reverberated on TV for most of America. There weren’t more attacks, the country was coming back to normalcy, extra precautions were taken to ensure national security. For Arab-Americans, it was only the beginning. 

Phone calls, chat lines, and racial slurs called for the boycott of Arabic owned businesses, the burning of mosques and death to all Arabs. Someone who looked Arabic was refused a bathroom key by a guest-services manager. The windows were shot out of a Texas mosque, and in Dearborn, Mich., two men were arrested for reportedly assaulting an Arab-American man. Police protection was beefed up in New York and Detroit to protect large Arabic neighborhoods. And the fear of concentration camps, in memory of Pearl Harbor, became embedded in us all.  

It was time to move on. I couldn’t wallow in uncertainty. Knowing I had to pretend all was well, I biked to my office eyeing subdued faces in cars, wondering if my appearance fit their vision of the enemy. Was my beard long enough for my Arabic roots to shine through or was my skin still white enough to escape their gaze? And what of the dark-skinned Arab-Americans being sneered at in restaurants; what of the innocent Arabs in countries now threatened to be bombed?  

On Sept. 11, 2001, International Peace Day, a nightmare occurred that no one will ever forget. But the daymares that Arab-Americans are living, and the aftershocks to come, will only be resolved and overcome by the efforts of us all.  

 

Corey Wade lives in Oakland.


Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

Dance 

 

Cal Performances 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. 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. “What About Me: The Rise of the Nihilist Spasm Band”; Sept. 20: 7, 8:30 p.m. “Exilée; Sept. 21: 7 p.m. Films of Fritz Lang: Tom Gunning Lecture, 8 p.m. Metropolis, Joel Adlen on piano; Sept. 22: 2:30 p.m. Donald Richie Reading and Booksigning, 4 p.m. An Actor’s Revenge, 7 p.m. Bad Company, 9:05 p.m. Unchain; Sept. 23: 5:30 p.m. Last Year at Marienbad; Sept. 24: 7 p.m. Chile, Obstinate Memory and For These Eyes; Sept. 25: 7:30 p.m. Alternative Requirements 2001, Artists in Person; Sept. 26: 7:30 p.m. Touch Tones; Sept. 28: 7 p.m. Ugetsu, 8:55 Sansho the Bailiff; Sept. 29: 7 p.m. Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, Part I, Joel Adlen on piano; Sept. 30: Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, Part II, Joel Adlen on piano; general admission $7, The New PFA Theatre 2575 Bancroft Way 642-1412 

 

The Pyramid Alehouse Outdoor Cinema 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 

 

Bahman Navaee is exhibiting his Mix Media paintings. Sept. 15 through Sept. 29: Persian Center, 2029 Durant Ave.  

“Debbie Moore’s Autobiographical Paintings” Through Sept. 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 Ave. 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 

Boadecia’s Books 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.  

 

Coffee Mill Poetry Series Sept. 18: Ben Brose and Jen Iby followed by open mike reading. 3363 Grand Ave., Oakland 465-3935 ksdgk@earthlink.net 

 

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. 

 

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 

 

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/ 

 

University of California Berkeley Art Museum Pacific Film Archive has reopened after its summer-long seismic retrofit. “Martin Puryear: Sculpture of the 1990s” through Jan. 13; “The Dream of the Audience: Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951 - 1982)” through Dec. 16; “Face of Buddha: Sculpture from India, China, Japan, and Southeast Asia” ongoing rotation through 2003; “Matrix 194: Jessica Bronson, Heaps, layers, and curls” Sept. 16 through Nov. 11; “Matrix 192: Ceal Floyer 37’4”” Sept. 16 through Nov. 11; Wed., Fri., Sat., Sun. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., Thur. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m., PFA Theater, 2575 Bancroft Way; Museum Galleries 2626 Bancroft Way; 642-0808 www.bampfa.berkeley.edu 

 

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 


Alta Bates Summit plan to consolidate meets opposition

Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

Alta Bates Summit Medical Center, the largest hospital system in northern Alameda County, announced Wednesday that it would seek to consolidate services at its two facilities in order to reduce financial losses. 

The former Alta Bates hospital’s main campus is located in Berkeley at 2450 Ashby Ave., and the former Summit Hospital’s campus is at 350 Hawthorne Ave. in Oakland. 

The consolidation plan – details of which have been the subject of rumor and speculation – would create “Centers of Excellence” that specialize in cancer, heart disease and obstetrics, among others, in one of the two hospitals, while discontinuing care in the other. 

Alta Bates Summit CEO Warren Kirk said that the hospitals have lost $25 million so far this year. 

Meanwhile, opposition to the plan has been mounting, as East Bay elected officials take their concerns public and the union representing service workers at the hospitals plan a campaign against the proposal. 

“It’s outrageous that a non-profit organization of this scale can discontinue services like this without any public consultation,” said Fred Seavey, research director for the Service Employees International Union Local 250, which represents 1,100 Alta Bates Summit workers. 

“We’re concerned not only about the impact on jobs, but because we have tens of thousands of members who are consumers of health care services.” 

Under the plan, child delivery and cancer treatment wards would be located exclusively at Alta Bates, while heart disease treatment and orthopedics would be treated at Summit. 

Critics of consolidation say that the plan breaks a number of promises made to the community when Alta Bates Summit was created, and predicted that the quality of care would deteriorate. 

Berkeley’s Alta Bates Medical Center merged with Oakland’s Summit Medical Center in December 1999. At that time, Summit joined Alta Bates as an affiliate of the Sacramento-based Sutter Health Network. 

The merger was opposed by a number of labor and community-based organizations, which feared that it would lead to a reduction in service at both hospitals, and possibly, the eventual closure of one or the other of them. State Attorney General Bill Lockyer filed a federal suit to block the deal, but was unsuccessful. 

A brochure that was distributed by both hospitals as part of a public relations campaign in 1999 promised East Bay residents that “both hospitals would continue to provide emergency, critical care... and maternity services.” The announcement on Wednesday said that Summit Alta Bates would close Summit’s maternity ward. 

Supervisor Keith Carson attended a conference between Alta Bates Summit management and East Bay lawmakers a few weeks ago. According to Carson, the meeting was called by Sen. Don Perata, D-Oakland, to address changes in management at the hospital. 

Carson said he pressed Sutter CEO Van Johnson to address consolidation at the hospital, but received what he called a “non-answer.”  

“I really feel that they had some idea about what was going to happen, and unfortunately they chose not to share it,” he said. “That doesn’t make me feel that we’ve gotten a good start as honest partners.” 

“True partnership means both sides have co-equal parts in the process – and this has been a one-sided process.” 

Carson said that he received a fax from Alta Bates Summit management on Tuesday – “interesting timing,” he said – that outlined the consolidation plan. 

“(It) became all too clear by Tuesday’s situation in New York, if something happens to the Bay Bridge, or if we have an earthquake or fire, we have a responsibility to be sure that all people receive care,” he said. “That responsibility must be carried by public clinics, non-profit clinics and all the hospitals.” 

Carolyn Kemp, Alta Bates Summit spokesperson said the hospital made the decision to consolidate services after reading the recommendations of The Hunter Group, an independent consultant it hired to study its operations. The hospital has declined to release the Hunter report. 

City Councilmember Kriss Worthington, one of the leaders in the opposition to the merger in 1999, decried Alta Bates Summit’s decision not to make the report public. 

“They say that they’re going to make all these decisions that affect all these people, and you’re going to have to take their word for it,” he said. 

Alta Bates Summit officials contend that the combined facilities would mean a higher quality of care for patients. 

“I think that this is an incredible opportunity for the East Bay,” Kemp said. “Our goal is to provide services that are second to none in the Bay Area, and I think this is definitely something we should be looking at.” 

Supervisor Carson said that the public needed to have a bigger voice in decisions like these, which affect public health and government services.  

“For the good of all people in the East Bay – whether they go to Alta Bates or Summit, or Highland or Kaiser or Children’s – we have to sit down and see how this is all going to work out,” he said. 

SEIU Local 250 will demonstrate outside Summit Medical Center Monday at noon. Community representatives and elected officials, in addition to union leaders, are expected to speak. 


Cal golf finishes fourth in North Carolina

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

SOUTHERN PINES, N.C. – Led by Top-10 finishes from Walter Chun and Peter Tomasulo, the Cal men’s golf team placed fourth at the Mid Pines Intercollegiate hosted by UNC Greensboro, its first tournament of the 2001-02 season.  

Chun shot rounds of 72, 67 and 70 to place sixth with a 7-under-par total of 209. Tomasulo was just a shot back at 210. In addition, Scott Carlysle came in below par with a 1-under 214.  

Texas Tech’s Kyle Willmann won the tournament at 10-under 206, defeating Geoffrey Harris of Old Dominion in a playoff.  

As a team, the Bears ended the 54-hole event at 6-under-par 858. Texas Tech claimed top honors at 844, followed by San Diego State (847) and Coastal Carolina (856).  


Change is up to us

Redwood Mary Berkeley
Thursday September 13, 2001

Editor: 

We all have the power and responsibility in our hands to stop the perpetuation of the cycles of violence and the economics of exploitation that create unspeakable suffering or we can continue on with the politics and economics that lessen and cheapen our human condition. Our political agenda from local to global, must move from provocation and the hubris that our fast track corporate globalization is the way to go with its extracting the energy and even blood of many to keep an economic machine going that few are actually benefiting from. Too many are being pushed to the edge along with the very ecosystems of life that support us. Financially and emotionally there is suffering as people have to keep cutting back – financially and in time we spend in building a supportive community while corporate profits obscenely rise.  

We here in the industrialized north live a lifestyle that has become the anomaly in a world where three quarters of the world’s population do not get enough to eat. We live in a world where corporate dream schemes are forcing people off their land and have the gall to patent the genes of plants, seeds and life itself. 

I still hold the vision that we can turn this around peacefully and not fall into the divisions caused by blaming and hate that comes after tragedy. I deeply hold the hope that we do not go along with the fear that is being generated to continue down the same path of bullying be it with words, economic or with nuclear threats. I hold a prayer that we can each look deeply into our own hearts, whether we are a governmental employee or work in the trades, whether we are a bus driver, a deli clerk, student or in scientific research – no matter what we do for a living – and ask what are we willing to do to take the higher ground, and to use our precious words to speak and teach a new vision that holds the value of the humans spirit and the earth as a sacred trust and not a commodity of economic profit schemes. How can we bring honor back to our daily relationships with each other? 

Instead of taking part in speculations about today's horrible tragedy (where terrorism is daily life for many around the world) I found a quiet space and turned to some readings that I found solace from including: 

“The only way to have peace is to teach peace. By teaching peace you must learn it yourself, because you cannot teach what you still dissociate from. You can’t teach peace with a barrel of a gun.” As Gandhi said an eye for an eye and we all become blind. Gandhi also said “We must be the change we wish to see in the world.” 

 

Redwood Mary 

Berkeley 


Therapists offer free help for stress

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

Persons experiencing stressful reactions in the aftermath of Tuesday’s attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., can have a free session with a local psychotherapist. 

The best reaction to the events is talking about it, said Ernest Isaacs, of the East Bay Chapter of the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists. 

“My clients in the last two days have told the story over and over of how they first learned about it,” he said. “It is important to come to terms with what is happening.” 

People should be talking to their friends, neighbors or families. 

If, by next week, people continue crying a lot, have irrational fears for their personal safety, or have nightmares, they should consider taking advantage of the offer to “debrief” with one of the therapists who have volunteered their services, he said. 

To make an appointment, call 433-9499. 

 

(SIDE) 

The city has produced two informational sheets on coping with stress in the aftermath of Tuesday’s violence, one deals with children’s reactions and the other with those of adults. 

 

Talking to children about Tuesday’s events: 

Most if not all of your children will have heard about the events of Tuesday morning in New York City, Washington D.C. and the East Coast. Children will have many questions, as these events are difficult for children as well as 

adults to understand. They also may show signs of being frightened and upset. 

You may notice the following normal reactions in your children. 

• Reluctance to be separated from you.  

• Problems going to sleep.  

• Increased fears that may not appear to be related to national events.  

• Stomachaches or headaches.  

The following may be helpful in talking to your child about the events. 

• Children need to be reassured about their immediate safety. Remind them that you and the other adults who take care of them put children’s safety first. 

• Reassure children about your own safety at work. Also address their safety at school. Younger children may not understand that these events are far away. Try to give them a sense of the distances involved. (For example, explain that it would take many days to drive to New York or Washington, D.C.)  

• Provide a simple explanation of events. Younger children in particular may not be able understand what has happened or may have an inaccurate understanding. It is helpful to ask what they were told or heard on TV.  

• Ask children what they have heard or what they think about events. Being able to talk to adults about what is on their mind will have a comforting effect. If you cannot answer a question it is OK to say you don’t know.  

• Allow children to talk about the feelings they have and other people have about what happened.  

• Limit or eliminate children’s exposure to television and radio coverage of the news. Graphic images are upsetting and scary.  

 

 

Coping with critical incident stress 

People can take steps to help themselves; family members, and each other cope with critical incident related stress 

• Within the first 24 to 48 hours periods of strenuous physical exercise alternated with periods of relaxation will alleviate some of the physical reactions to a stressful situation.  

• Structure your time by keeping busy.  

• Remind yourself that you are normal and having normal reactions. Don’t label yourself as “crazy,” “wacko,” “weak” or “unfit.”  

• Talk is one of the most healing medicines. Talk to people you know care about you. People do care.  

• Be aware of numbing the pain with overuse of drugs or alcohol. Don’t complicate things further with substance abuse problems.  

• Keep your life as normal as possible.  

• It is all right to spend time by yourself.  

• Help your co-workers as much as possible by sharing feelings and checking out how they’re doing. (Respect their feelings of not wanting to talk about the incident)  

• Do things that make you feel good.  

• Realize that those around you are also under stress and may not act or react in a manner you would normally expect.  

• Keep a journal. Writing during sleepless hours may help.  

• Don’t make any big life changes, buying that Ferrari or house you’ve always wanted, going to Reno to get married suddenly, etc.  

• Do make as many daily decisions as possible, which will give you the feeling of control over your life.  

• Consult a mental health professional if you need assistance.  

Contact the city’s Mobile Crisis Team at 644-8566 for additional information.  

 


Berkeley high school games on schedule

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

Neither Berkeley High nor St. Mary’s College High will postpone or cancel any athletic events this week, according to athletic department sources. 

“As far as I know, we’re still playing all of our games,” Berkeley High Athletic Director Robert Traum said Wednesday. “We played a volleyball game here yesterday with the principal’s knowledge and good wishes.” 

The decision to play Friday night’s football game against James Logan was made by principal Frank Lynch. 

St. Mary’s High will also play their full schedule of games this week, including a Saturday football game at home against El Cerrito, according to the school’s athetic director, Jay Lawson.


Reflections on a day of great tragedy

Tom Lent Berkeley
Thursday September 13, 2001

Editor: 

What goes around comes back around. Let us think and reflect deeply before we react.  

Why did this happen? 

What goes around comes back around.  

What have we done to help create a world where people can feel so desperately impassioned to carry out such horrific acts? 

What can we do so that thousands of innocent people did not die today in vain? 

What goes around comes back around.  

What kind of world do we want to create? 

What can we do to stop the cycles of violence - from our communities to our country”s foreign policy?  

How can our reaction to this unspeakable tragedy help bring us closer to a peaceful world? How can we respond with love? 

We will all face choices in the coming days in how we handle this tragedy. How we talk about this with our family, friends and neighbors is important. Whether we choose to shut down in agony, or to breed disempowerment through cynicism, or to promote retribution in anger, or to struggle to reflect creatively on how we can create a different world is important. Collectively our choices in how we interact with those around us will have an impact that will spread and create the world that will follow today.  

Tom Lent 

Berkeley 


Lawrence Livermore Labs beef up security after terror attacks

By Bruce Gerstman Special to the Daily Planet
Thursday September 13, 2001

LIVERMORE – Guarded by University of California Protection Service officers wielding M16 rifles and wearing bullet-proof vests, all gates of the one-square-mile facility known as the Lawrence Livermore Laboratories were moved to the outer perimeter of the property. The lab was closed to visitors, permitting truck deliveries only after the vehicles had been searched. 

In addition, more than two-thirds of the 7,800 workforce at the labs was given the option of staying at home Tuesday after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. 

Managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy, the Labs are one of the principal development and research centers for nuclear weapons in the United States. 

Despite the heightened security, the Labs and the Department of Energy consider the response Tuesday lower than the lowest state of emergency. “There is no direct threat against the lab, and these are just precautionary measures,” said John Belluardo, spokesperson for the National Nuclear Security Administration. 

However, the Laboratories activated the Emergency Management Center, a small cement building, which acts as central control for communications and security activities for the entire facility. Full of computers and a wall-sized screen showing the day’s schedule, representatives from each division – Plant Engineering, Hazard Control, National Security, and more – create strategies for the Labs and communicate with each office on the premises.  

“We chose to activate (it),” Belluardo said. “We were not directed to activate the center.” 

Representatives from the Labs and the Department of Energy hesitated to discuss possible scenarios in the case of a terrorist threat. “We feel confident that we can protect our employees,” said Dick Van Slyke, the Labs’ Safeguards and Security Division leader. 

The last time the Labs activated the command center was Dec. 31, 1999 in anticipation of problems associated with Y2K. Prior to that, it was activated more than 10 years before on Thanksgiving in 1988 after a car bomb exploded in a parking lot on the premises.  


Tragic event no reason for more military dollars

Bruce Joffe Oakland
Thursday September 13, 2001

Editor: 

In the aftermath of this unspeakable tragedy, literally before the dust settles in New York, Senators and Congress are rallying to support the Pentagon. “More money for defense” is their slogan. But in our haste to do something, let’s not leave reason behind. Let us ask why, with close to $300 billion a year, our intelligence and defense agencies could neither know about nor prevent this terrorism.  

Why should those who waste taxpayer money on $ 900 toilet seats and phony interceptor missile tests be given even more money? Effective defense requires competence and integrity. 

 

Bruce Joffe 

Oakland 


Police Briefs

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

A man is suspected of hitting a clerk with a tire iron at the Beacon Gas Station at 450 University Ave. Monday at about 11:30 p.m. 

The attack allegedly took place after an altercation at the gas station between the two suspects and the victim. The victim was transported to Alta Bates Medical Center, according to Lt. Cynthia Harris, police spokesperson.  

*** 

Police are looking for a man suspected of attempting to carjack a vehicle on the 800 block of Shattuck Avenue at 12:30 a.m. on Saturday. 

When the victim stopped the car at her home, she noticed a car behind hers, Harris said. Its occupant came over to the car and unsuccessfully attempted to take the keys, Harris reported. Police are looking for a suspect. 

*** 

On Sept. 5, a suspect entered the Wilderness Exchange at 1407 San Pablo Ave. at about 5 p.m. and was making small talk with the clerk while looking at jackets, according to Harris. At one point he allegedly showed the clerk he had a gun in his waistband and walked out with the jacket. 

 


Authorities focus on several terrorist groups

By Karen Gullo Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 13, 2001

WASHINGTON — Federal authorities investigating Tuesday’s devastating attacks are focusing on multiple separate terrorist groups, some tied to Osama bin Laden, law enforcement officials said Wednesday. 

Members of one organization may have entered the United States through Canada, authorities said. 

The FBI has identified most of the hijackers who commandeered and crashed four airliners, and suspected accomplices, officials said. At least five people were detained; others were interviewed in the hunt for accomplices. No one has been arrested. 

A number of the suspected hijackers were trained as pilots in the United States. Their names were not immediately disclosed by authorities. 

Intelligence officials are pursuing “numerous credible leads,” Attorney General John Ashcroft said. 

“The Department of Justice has undertaken perhaps the most massive and intensive investigation ever conducted in this country,” he said. 

FBI agents obtained information from Internet providers, conducted searches, and questioned people in Florida and Massachusetts. Early evidence, including communications among bin Laden supporters, indicated the attacks were tied to the wealthy Arab and accused terrorist. 

Ashcroft said authorities were conducting interviews and reviewing airline manifests, rental car records and pay phone records. He said between three and six hijackers, armed with knives and box cutters, seized control of the four commercial jets. Two hit New York’s World Trade Center, a third smashed into the Pentagon and a fourth crashed in Pennsylvania. 

For some of the suspected accomplices, “we have information as to involvement with individual terrorist groups,” FBI Director Robert Mueller said. He declined to say which groups or whether they were connected to bin Laden. 

Officials said authorities were gathering evidence that the terrorist cells may have had prior involvement in earlier plots against the United States. That includes the USS Cole bombing in Yemen and the foiled attack on U.S. soil during the millennium celebrations. 

“This could have been the result of several terrorist kingpins working together. We’re investigating that possibility,” one law enforcement official speaking on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press. 

Mueller said agents have followed leads that the hijackers or their associates had been in Florida, Boston and Providence, R.I. He said authorities are “attempting to recreate the travels” of the suspected attackers. 

Some 4,000 special agents and 3,000 support personnel are assisting in the investigation, and 400 FBI laboratory specialists are at the crime scenes in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania. 

Evidence has been collected at the Pentagon and Pennsylvania site, but investigators have not yet been able to start work at the World Trade Center, where the search for survivors continued. 

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they were investigating whether one group of hijackers crossed the Canadian border at a checkpoint and made their way to Boston, where an American Airlines flight was hijacked and flown into the World Trade Center. 

The officials confirmed a car believed to belong to the hijackers was confiscated in Boston and contained an Arabic language flight manual. 

Abu Dhabi Television in the United Arab Emirates reported that two men with Saudi Arabian passports and international drivers licenses issued in the UAE were linked to the Mitsubishi sedan found at the Boston airport. 

Law enforcement officials said that the FBI on Wednesday afternoon searched two hotel rooms in the Boston area believed to have been used by the hijackers. The officials found information linked to a name on the manifest of one of the hijacked flights. They declined to identify the man. 

A Venice, Fla., man said FBI agents told him that two men who stayed in his home while training at a local flight school were the hijackers. Charlie Voss said the agents identified the men as Mohamed Atta and one known as Marwan. 

The FBI in Miami issued a national bulletin for law enforcement agencies to look out for two cars. Records with the Florida Division of Motor Vehicles show that one of the vehicles the FBI was pursuing — a 1989 red Pontiac — was registered to Atta. 

The FBI has already received more than 700 tips from a special Web site seeking information on the attacks. 

Agents served search warrants on major Internet service providers in order to get information about an e-mail address that may be connected to the attacks. 


Help for kid and adult stress stress

Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

The city has produced two informational guides on coping with stress in the aftermath of Tuesday’s violence, one deals with children’s reactions and the other with those of adults. 

 

Talking to children about Tuesday’s events 

Most if not all of your children will have heard about the events of Tuesday morning in New York City, Washington D.C. and the East Coast. Children will have many questions, as these events are difficult for children as well as adults to understand They also may show signs of being frightened and upset. 

You may notice the following normal reactions in your children. 

• Reluctance to be separated from you.  

• Problems going to sleep.  

• Increased fears that may not appear to be related to national events.  

• Stomachaches or headaches.  

The following may be helpful in talking to your child about the events: 

• Children need to be reassured about their immediate safety. Remind them that you and the other adults who take care of them put children’s safety first. 

• Reassure children about your own safety at work. Also address their safety at school. Younger children may not understand that these events are far away. Try to give them a sense of the distances involved. (For example, explain that it would take many days to drive to New York or Washington, D.C.)  

• Provide a simple explanation of events. Younger children in particular may not be able understand what has happened or may have an inaccurate understanding. It is helpful to ask what they were told or heard on TV.  

• Ask children what they have heard or what they think about the events. Being able to talk to adults about what is on their minds will have a comforting effect. If you cannot answer a question it is OK to say you don’t know.  

• Allow children to talk about the feelings they have and other people have about what happened.  

• Limit or eliminate children’s exposure to television and radio coverage of the news. Graphic images are upsetting and scary.  

 

 

Adults coping with critical  

incident stress 

People can take steps to help themselves, family members, and each other cope with critical incident related stress. 

• Within the first 24 to 48 hours periods of strenuous physical exercise alternated with periods of relaxation will alleviate some of the physical reactions to a stressful situation.  

• Structure your time by keeping busy.  

• Remind yourself that you are normal and having normal reactions. Don’t label yourself as “crazy,” “wacko,” “weak” or “unfit.”  

• Talk is one of the most healing medicines. Talk to people you know care about you. People do care.  

• Be aware of numbing the pain with overuse of drugs or alcohol. Don’t complicate things further with substance abuse problems.  

• Keep your life as normal as possible.  

• It is all right to spend time by yourself.  

• Help your co-workers as much as possible by sharing feelings and checking out how they’re doing. (Respect their feelings of not wanting to talk about the incident)  

• Do things that make you feel good.  

• Realize that those around you are also under stress and may not act or react in a manner you would normally expect.  

• Keep a journal. Writing during sleepless hours may help.  

• Don’t make any big life changes, buying that Ferrari or house you’ve always wanted, going to Reno to get married suddenly, etc.  

• Do make as many daily decisions as possible, which will give you the feeling of control over your life.  

• Consult a mental health professional if you need assistance.  

Contact the city’s Mobile Crisis Team at 644-8566 for additional information.


State lawmakers begin final days with memorial service

By Jennifer Kerr Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 13, 2001

SACRAMENTO — The California Legislature, its schedule shaken by the terrorist attacks, opened its three final frantic days Wednesday with a memorial service and a promise to “go on with the business of the people.” 

Lawmakers quickly approved a bill to allow people annoyed by telephone solicitors to put their names on a new state “do-not-call” list. 

The Senate and Assembly had canceled sessions Tuesday because of the attacks, despite facing a Friday deadline to pass hundreds of bills on subjects ranging from redistricting to energy. 

Lawmakers opened Wednesday’s floor sessions with a 30-minute joint memorial service featuring prayers by religious leaders from a dozen diverse faiths and the singing of “America the Beautiful” 

“We will not let these acts of terrorism bring our country to a halt,” said Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys. 

“We will go on with the business of the people. That is what we were elected to do. That is what our democracy calls on us to do,” he said. 

Dr. Irfan Haq of the Sacramento Area League of Associated Muslims said he wanted to share the grief of the Muslim community. 

“As Muslims we do not condone violence,” he said. “What has happened has happened to members of our human family.” 

“Those who have done it must suffer and are going to suffer,” said Darshan Singh Mundi of the Sikh Temple of West Sacramento. 

“To not become like the enemy we despise, that’s part of the challenge now; to not become consumed by hatred,” said the Rev. Dexter McNamara, director of the Interfaith Service Bureau. 

The Assembly also plans to publish a special publication with letters written by lawmakers expressing their feelings and will put letters from constituents in the state archives and possibly on the Assembly’s Internet site. 

The “do-not-call” list bill was approved by a 59-12 vote of the Assembly and returned to the Senate for a final vote on amendments. Gov. Gray Davis has said he will sign it. 

The attorney general would create the new list by January 2003 and residential and cellphone customers could pay $1 to be put on it for three years. Telephone solicitors would be required to buy copies of the list; those who called people on it could face fines of $500 for the first violation and $1,000 for subsequent ones. 

Companies would be allowed to call people on the list if they had an “established business relationship” with them. 

“This is an invasion of people’s homes,” said a supporter, Assemblyman John Campbell, R-Irvine. 

An opponent, Minority Leader David Cox, R-Fair Oaks, said people can put themselves on existing industry-run lists and can just say “no, I’m not interested” when solicitors call. 

Friday is the scheduled end of the 2001 session. However, it can be extended with a vote of both houses. The special session called by Gov. Gray Davis last winter to consider energy measures does not have to end Friday. 

Other issues before lawmakers include a rescue plan for Southern California Edison, redrawing the Assembly, Senate and congressional districts to reflect the census population changes, restoration of community-college budget cuts, school bonds and a $200 million program to help the lowest-performing schools. 


Major bill action by California Legislature

Associated Press
Thursday September 13, 2001

Here are some major bills considered Wednesday by the Legislature: Bills Passed 

— Allows people who don’t want to receive calls from telephone solicitors to pay $1 to put their names on a state “do-not-call” list; SB771; 59-12 in Assembly; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Requires credit card issuers to tell cardholders cost and time to pay off balance if they make minimum payments; AB 865; 24-12 in Senate; to Assembly for vote on amendments. 

- Provides $11,000 for law students who practice public-interest law to pay off college loans; AB 935; 23-12 in Senate; to Assembly for vote on amendments. 

- Allows Department of Correction to move up to 15 death-row prisoners to California State Prison, Sacramento, in Folsom to relieve overcrowding and curb institutional violence at San Quentin; AB 1460; 29-3 in Senate; to Assembly for vote on amendments. 

— Delays the date for the requirement that new school buses have seat belts from 2002 to 2004 or 2005, depending on type of bus; SB569 in Assembly; 56-5; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Abolishes the current Dental Board of California and creates a new one on Jan. 1, 2002, with new regulatory duties; SB134; 74-0 in Assembly; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Requires property owners who are selling to disclose any large releases of chemicals used to make methamphetamine on the property; SB189; 46-18 in Assembly; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Requires state education officials to write content standards for physical education, outlining what children in each grade should learn; AB367; 77-0 in Assembly; to governor. 

— Creates a new Asian Pacific Islander Anti-Hate Crimes Program within the state Department of Justice; AB1312; 70-1 in Assembly; to governor. 

— Requires the state to develop new standards for how much arsenic can be in drinking water; SB463; 47-19 in Assembly; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Gives Los Angeles Unified School District $2 million to try giving new teachers with emergency permits a 30-day training program before school starts; SB321; 44-25 in Assembly; to Senate for vote on amendments. 

— Requires principals to provide missed homework assignments to students who are suspended for more than five days and allows school districts to include in their school reports a breakdown of suspensions and expulsions by gender, age, race, primary language and learning disability; SB320; 56-18; to Senate for vote on amendments. 


State economy will suffer from attacks, economists say

By Gary Gentile AP Business Writer
Thursday September 13, 2001

LOS ANGELES — The terrorist attacks that brought down the World Trade Center could hurt the already fragile state and national economy by dampening consumer confidence and business travel, top economists said Wednesday. 

But it remained unclear whether the attacks would drag California and the nation into a full-blown recession. 

“The human loss is catastrophic. The economic impact is harder to assess,” said Tom Lieser, senior economist of the Anderson Forecast at the University of California, Los Angeles — a leading economic barometer. 

Lieser and Edward Leamer, who were presenting the quarterly forecast at a UCLA conference, said the state and nation are already in the beginning stages of a recession and that Tuesday’s attacks could hurt the state’s strong tourism industry, which has helped the state weather the current downturn, they said. 

Economists say they will be watching consumers in the coming months to see if they resume spending or pull back and deal a crippling blow to the economy. 

“So much hinged on consumer confidence and what you have today is an unknown villain and a very high level of uncertainty and I think most people are going to put away their wallets for a while,” said Jack Kyser, chief economist for the Los Angeles Economic Development Corp. “The state is on a knife’s edge. It depends on what consumers do.” 

Foreign investment in the United States could also suffer if the dollar becomes weak and investors seek safer havens, Anderson economists said. 

“A lot of our expansion in recent years has been funded by the investments of foreigners who have willingly held our dollar-denominated securities when they might have gotten a better return elsewhere,” Lieser said. “It was an intangible perception that the dollar was the safest place to park your money. There are fewer guarantees going forward that that will stay the case.” 

Lieser and Leamer join other prominent economists who worry that the attack could cause a ripple through the economy as foreign tourists stay home, hurting amusement parks, car rental agencies and hotels. State residents could also stop spending and the state’s technology companies, already reeling from declining stock values, could be further hurt if investors flee for safer investments. 

“If this was the event that tipped global investors back toward Europe or emerging markets and it does this rapidly, we could have a rapid depreciation of the dollar and the Federal Reserve would be caught between a rock and a hard place, wanting to raise interest rates to defend the dollar, which could cause inflation,” Leamer said Tuesday. 

In the Anderson Report, which was released Wednesday and prepared before Tuesday’s attack, both Lieser and Leamer predicted a mild and brief recession for the state and nation. 

In his report on the state’s economy, Lieser said higher power costs would lead to reduced business investment and significantly reduced consumer spending. That, combined with a housing crisis throughout the state, will lead to a mild recession that should last no longer than early 2002, Lieser said. 

 


Attacks could trigger temporary energy price hikes

By Karen Gaudette Associated Press Writer
Thursday September 13, 2001

Energy analysts say California utility customers could see a temporary boost in their natural gas bills in the wake of Tuesday’s terrorist attacks after a summer of low prices. 

Though the nation’s power grid and pipeline distribution system were not disrupted, the possibility that the United States will retaliate sent prices for crude oil up $2 to $3 on European futures markets Wednesday morning. U.S. markets remained closed. 

But, even if prices rise, analysts expect the hikes to be short-lived. 

“I personally think any kind of run-up in oil prices or natural gas prices here domestically would just be in the short term, unless there was an extended retaliation in a Middle Eastern country,” said Mark Easterbrook, an energy analyst for Dain Rauscher Wessels in Dallas. 

Easterbrook predicted any rise in energy prices could return to previous levels within a week because the vast majority of the nation’s natural gas supply is produced domestically. 

The Independent System Operator, which manages California’s power grid, has been checking in with oil refineries, energy sellers, hydroelectric dams and power distributors to ensure operations were running smoothly. 

The ISO had not reported any problems, said California Energy Commission spokeswoman Claudia Chandler. 

The state’s largest utility, Pacific Gas and Electric Co., had not yet noticed price spikes for natural gas or electricity, spokeswoman Christy Dennis said Wednesday. 

Natural gas is the primary fuel for most of California’s hundreds of power plants. Soaring fuel prices last winter drove electricity prices to more than nine times their previous levels. 

Prices have fallen steadily over the summer as conservation and cool weather lowered demand and natural gas sellers boosted supply with increased drilling and underground storage. 

Chandler said natural gas sellers around the state have stowed away 10 percent more supply in underground storage facilities than at this point last year, which would help guard against price shocks. 

Easterbrook said electricity costs also should remain stable because the country generates most of its electricity from domestically produced fields such as natural gas, coal and renewable energy. 


Former Cal rugby player among hijacking victims

By Jared Green Daily Planet Staff
Thursday September 13, 2001

One of the passengers on United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed near Pittsburgh after being hijacked in Tuesday’s tragedy, was a former Cal rugby player, and both his mother and former coach believe he may have been part of an effort against the terrorists. 

Mark Bingham, 31, was a member of the Cal rugby team from 1988 to 1991, and last spring attended a reunion of the 1991 national championship team on the UC Berkeley campus. 

“It was great to see Mark again, to renew my friendship with him,” said Cal rugby head coach Jack Clark, who coached Bingham during his Cal career. 

Clark said Bingham, a public relations executive who lived in San Francisco, did a lot of traveling back and forth from the East Coast for business. 

Bingham called his mother, Alice Hoglan, from the plane early Tuesday morning. Hoglan, a United flight attendant, said her son told her the plane had been taken over by three men who said they had a bomb. Hoglan believes her son may have made an effort to foil the hijackers’ plot. 

“He was probably close to where the hijackers did their thing,” Hoglan said. “It gives me a great deal of comfort to know my son may have been able to avert the killing of many, many innocent people.” 

A phone call by another passenger shortly before the plane crashed indicated that there may indeed have been a group of passengers who were readying to attack the terrorists. 

Thomas E. Burnett, Jr., 38, called his wife moments before the hijacked plane crashed in rural western Pennsylvania with 45 people aboard. 

“He said, ‘I know we’re all going to die – there’s three of us who are going to do something about it,”’ Burnett told his wife, Deena, according to a reverend at the family’s church who counseled the wife. “He then said, ‘I love you, honey,’ and that was the end of conversation.” 

Clark said it wouldn’t surprise him if Bingham had been part of the group. 

“That would be consistent with my memory of Mark,” Clark said. “He was a brave young man. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if he put up some resistance.” 

Hoglan spoke from her home on Wednesday, where friends and family had gathered to mourn Bingham’s death. 

“(Mark) had friends who were Islamic, friends who were Jewish. He was just a man of the world. This house is full of his friends here now,” Hoglan said. “We loved him very much. He was just the light in our lives. I’m very proud he was my son.”  

– The Associated Press  

contributed to this report.


Mourners gather at vigil

By John Geluardi and Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

The Berkeley community came together at churches, Civic Center Park and Sproul Plaza to express grief and gain strength in the face of Tuesday’s brutal attacks in New York and Washington, D.C. 

About 300 people gathered at the Peace Wall steps in Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park for a multi-faith prayer vigil, which organizers said would begin the healing process in the aftermath of a series of devastating terrorist attacks. 

Those who attended the early evening vigil, many clutching candles, joined hands in prayer and sang spiritual songs. Several city officials, including Mayor Shirley Dean, City Manager Weldon Rucker and councilmembers Linda Maio, Polly Armstrong and Kriss Worthington were present at the event.  

The vigil was led by 20 religious leaders from the Jewish, Christian, Muslim and Buddhist faiths. Prior to the vigil, Pastor Kim Smith of the Trinity United Methodist Church, said the show of solidarity among the faiths was important to bring the community together in a time of spiritual and emotional suffering. 

“The full faith community has much in common and what we have in common is that we pray for peace,” said Smith, who was an organizer of the event. “We believe prayer is action and we’re going to take action here tonight.” 

Many of those in attendance said they were left feeling confused by the attacks and came looking for understanding and support. 

“I felt so helpless at home and wanted to be with other people, to have a community to share this tragedy with,” said Nadja Lazansky, who attended the vigil with her 9-year-old daughter Rachel. “It was very uplifting and personally I feel better.” 

Prior to the vigil, religious leaders offered a special welcome to Iftekhara A. Hai, director of the United Muslims of America. They said his presence was especially significant because of media speculation that the perpetrators of the attack were members of a radical Muslim group.  

Hai, who denounced the attacks as a crime against humanity, said one reason he came to the vigil was to reach out to the larger community because he is concerned that Muslim Americans, who he said are horrified by the attacks, may feel isolated. 

“I as a Muslim American am with you,” Hai said. “Even if it is my Muslim brothers who are responsible.”  

Pastor Marvis Peoples of the Liberty Hill Baptist Church said it is critical for all religious faiths to join in praying for the nation. Peoples said he is concerned about how the United States will respond to the attacks.  

“There will be turbulent days ahead and whatever action is taken it has to be with humanity,” he said. “You can’t fight evil with evil.” 

The Rabbi Ferenc Raj, of Congregation Beth El, said a multi-faith demonstration of peace is critical after a tragedy of such a large scope. “Our prayers are stronger than the bombs and stronger than any terrorist attack,” he said. “We are indeed united and this is the most important thing.”  

*** 

As the Civic Center vigil came to a close, over at Sproul Hall more than 2,000 UC Berkeley students and members of the community gathered for an 8 p.m. candlelight vigil in Sproul Plaza. A series of speakers at the open-mic event mourned the victims, cautioned against the urge to retaliate and asked Americans to consider their own government’s responsibility for the tragedy. 

Mostly, though, they simply and movingly expressed their grief.  

“It says something about us that we can come together and mourn, despite our differences, together as the campus community,” said Wally Adameyo, president of the Associated Students of the University of California. 

Counselors were placed throughout the crowd to speak with people who felt overwhelmed by events. The crowd was told that volunteers with green armbands were there to keep the peace, and to try and mediate any disputes between people that might erupt from the vigil. In the end, there was no need.  

“We’re just trying to provide a forum for people to speak, peacefully,” said Hanna Song, a representative of student government, which had sponsored the vigil. Speakers were told that “profanity, personal attacks and racist remarks would not be allowed.” 

Adayemo was one of the first to speak.  

“This is probably the worst event of our generation, and how we respond to it will define how we are looked at in the future,” said Adameyo. 

“It says something about our generation that we would rather mourn than be violent; we would rather have peace than war.”  

Robert M. Berdahl, chancellor of the UC, read the first stanza of the “Second Coming,” a poem by William Butler Yeats: 

The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere  

The ceremony of innocence is drowned;  

The best lack all conviction, while the worst  

Are full of passionate intensity.  

He then read from messages left by mourners on Sproul Plaza Tuesday, and concluded that “Yeats was wrong. The best do not lack conviction, and they are full of passionate intensity.” 

“Let us light these candles tonight with resolve that we will illuminate the ignorance with intelligence, hatred with love. Fiat lux.” 

Other speakers received loud cheers when they denounced the U.S. government for creating an atmosphere of violence in the world. 

“The little terrorists are sick people, and they take their cues from the big terrorists – like the ones that live in the White House,” said a student. 

A man on vacation from New York City said that he had spent the day in shock, but despite his horror he felt he had to put the attack into perspective. 

“Sometimes you forget that this happens every day in other parts of the world,” he said. “It’s what the U.S. government calls ‘state-sponsored terrorism. Well, the chickens have come home to roost.” 

“We need to look around here, where the problem originated.”  

“There was nothing accomplished by the violence today, and there will be nothing accomplished by the state-sponsored violence that is being urged on us.” 

A member of the Students for Justice in Palestine read a statement prepared by the organization today. The SJP, it said, condemned the attacks and stood in solidarity with the victims of violence in New York, Washington, Pennsylvania and Kabul. It also said that “no student of Arab or Middle Eastern dissent should be subjected to harassment because of this.” The SJP member said that she knew that two students wearing head scarves were verbally assaulted on Sproul Plaza Tuesday, and that other students had received “racist and threatening phonecalls.” 

A man who identified himself by saying that he worked in Sproul Hall and was “almost as old as your parents” delivered an apology to the students on behalf of people his age. 

“I’m sorry that my generation gave yours such a violent world,” he said. “You deserve better. Hopefully you’ll be able to do better.” 

 

 


Calendar of Events & Activities

Staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

Wednesday, Sept. 12 

Police Review Commission 

7:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. 

Among other items, the commission will evaluate charges of discrimination and talk about recruitment efforts. 644-6716 

 

Women’s Group 

7 p.m. 

Boadecia’s Books 

398 Colusa Ave. 

“In the Name of Salome” by Julia Alvarez. New members welcome. 559-9184 www.bookpride.com 

 

Commission on Disability Meeting 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

6:30 p.m. 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Promoting the total integration and participation of persons with disabilities into all areas of economic, political, and community life. 

 

Homeless Commission Meeting 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

7 p.m. 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Discussion regarding enforcement of the Lodging Law, status of UA Homes and the Commission’s work plan for the remainder of the year. 

 

Waterfront Commission Meeting 

Marina Office Conference Room 

7 p.m. 

201 University Ave. 

Discussing Boating and Waterways Loan as well as Water Transit Authority and Prospects for a Berkeley Ferry. 

 

Baby Bounce and Toddler Tales 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Central Library 

2090 Kittredge St. 

This participatory program for families with children up to age 3 presents multicultural stories, songs and fingerplays as entertainment. 644-6095 

 

Fishbowl: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Opposite Sex, but Were Afraid to Ask 

Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 

1414 Walnut St. 

Dating, relationships, religions, sexuality and values. An opportunity to ask anonymous questions in a confidential and supportive environment. Social and Single. $8. 848-0237 

 

Housing Summit 

1 - 4:30 p.m. 

South Berkeley Senior Center 

2939 Ellis St. 

A panel discusses creative housing solutions for seniors and persons with disabilities. 841-4776 

 

Summit On Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities 

7 - 9:30 p.m.  

St. Paul’s AME Church 

2024 Ashby Ave. 

Community Action Team invites members of the Berkeley community to participate with elected officials in this working meeting on racial and ethnic health disparities in Berkeley. 665-6809 

 

Socratic Circle Discussions 

5 - 6 p.m. 

Cafe Eclectica 

1309 Solano Ave. 

Does your brain need a workout? All ages welcome. 527-2344 

 

Topher Delaney: Ten Landscapes 

7:30 p.m. 

Builder’s Booksource 

1817 Fourth St. 

An exploration of her art of gardening and landscape architecture. 

845-6874 www.buildersbooksite.com 

 

Making Additions Match - Avoiding the Tacked-On Look 

7 - 10 p.m. 

Building Education Center 

812 Page St.  

Seminar taught by architect/ columnist Arrol Gellner. $35. 

525-7610 

 

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 

 

Planning Commission 

7 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Zoning ordinance amendments re: Prohibitions and restrictions related to carry-out or quick service restaurants on San Pablo Ave. Public Hearing. 

981-6900 

Thursday, Sept. 13 

Help Save the West Berkeley Shellmound 

2 p.m. 

U.S. Post Office Building 

201 - 13th St., Oakland 

Bring as many people as possible to make a statement before the Court in Oakland in defense of protective landmark status to the oldest dated mound site in the Bay Area. Landmark status is currently being contested by the industrial property owners who originated this lawsuit against the city of Berkeley. Time and place may change, call ahead to confirm. 841-8562  

 

Joint Design Review Board and Zoning Adjustment Board Meeting 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

6:30 p.m. 

1901 Hearst Ave. 

Public Comment on Green Building Initiatives, Workshop on Green Building and follow-up discussion and introduction of draft revision to incorporate green design guidelines. 

Special City Council Meeting 

City Council Chambers 

7 p.m. 

2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way 

The first of two public hearings to consider proposals to amend Council District boundaries based on the 2000 census figures. This meeting will replace the regular Tuesday night City Council meeting. 

 

Orangutans in the Wild: Travel in Borneo 

7 p.m. 

Recreational Equipment 

1338 San Pablo Ave. 

Professional photographer and writer Christine Krieg will give a slide show of her travels to the Tanjung Puting National Park on the south coast of Central Kalimantan. Free. 527-4140 

 

Zen master Thich Nhat Hahn 

7 p.m. 

Berkeley Community Theater 

1930 Allston Way 

Renowned Vietnamese poet, peace activist and Zen master Thich Nhat Hahn will give a public lecture. 433-9928 

People's Park Community  

Advisory Board 

7:30 p.m. 

UC Berkeley 

Unit 1 Residence Hall Rec. Room  

2650 Durant Ave. 

Monthly meeting, community invited. The PP CAB reviews and makes recommendations on park policies, programs, and improvements. 642-7860  

 

Friday, Sept. 14 

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: women’s humor. 549-1879 

 

Yiddish Conversation Group 

1 p.m. 

North Berkeley Senior Center 

1901 Hearst Ave. 644-6107 

 

–Compiled by Guy Poole 

 

 


City, schools, university react quickly to attacks

By Judith Scherr, Hank Sims and John Geluardi Daily Planet staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

City officials held what City Manager Weldon Rucker characterized as a mini-Emergency Services meeting Tuesday morning to plan the city response to the attacks in New York and Washington.  

“Operations are open,” Rucker said. “There’s a heightened sense of security.” 

More police officers than usual would be in uniform, Rucker said. Police were preparing for possible local reactions, such as a vigil, which did take place, or a demonstration, which did not. Morning shift police officers came in earlier than usual. 

Additional police patrolled Berkeley High and the middle schools.  

Public works and parks officials were assigned to work around city buildings to be “our eyes and ears,” Rucker said. 

The scheduled City Council meeting was postponed until Thursday. “That would (have been) another area that we would have to secure,” Rucker said. 

The city manager described the situation as an “almost psychological event,” with people possibly reacting in fear. The city’s mental health workers were put on alert. 

City staff reported to work as usual, but Rucker said if any felt they “couldn’t handle it, they can go home.” 

Firefighters were also put on alert, but not on the highest stages of alert. The extra engines were on the ready with nine additional firefighters and additional managers, according to Assistant Fire Chief David Orth. 

A bomb scare at Fourth Street and Virginia Avenue was a false alarm, according to police. 

 

Schools stay open 

City schools remained open. Berkeley Unified School District Superintendent Michele Lawrence, said they were operating as usual, although all out-of-town field trips were canceled.  

Psychologists were on call in case students needed to talk about the day’s events.  

By 11 a.m., fewer than 10 students had been taken out of school by their parents, Lawrence said.  

Calls to a number of elementary schools revealed that at Berkeley Arts Magnet Elementary School the attendance was below normal levels and that some parents had taken their children out of classes. A school secretary said that upper-grade students – those in fifth and sixth grades – were given time in the morning to ask their teachers questions about the attack. 

John Muir, Jefferson and Emerson Primary Schools reported that attendance was at usual levels and classes were being conducted as normal. 

Lawrence said school staff has been thoroughly trained in emergency procedures and that an evacuation plan for each of the schools is in place should it be necessary.  

Matthew Mock, director of children’s mental health services for the city, was out taking the pulse of the schools. And distributing a piece his staff had written on how parents can talk to their children about the events of the day – that includes limiting television-watching, he said. 

“My own (9-year-old) daughter asked if they were going to come and hurt our school,” he said. 

Mock said his child understood that the buildings bombed were very important ones and “for her, (her school is) a very important building.” 

He said he explained to her that it was far away. 

Mock’s hand-out explains that normal reactions to the event in children might be problems going to sleep, reluctance to separate from parents and stomachaches or headaches. 

Children need to be assured about their own safety and that of their parents, the paper advises. Explain the events in a simple way and allow children to talk about what they are feeling about the event. 

 

University closes Sather Tower 

The UC Berkeley campus stayed open on Tuesday, but according to campus spokeswoman Maria Felde professors were given the option of cancelling their classes. 

Captain Bill Cooper of the UC Police Department, said that the campus police had called in eight off-duty officers to work Tuesday, and had increased foot patrols of the campus. 

Only one building on the campus was closed: Sather Tower, popularly known as the Campanile. According to Felde, the tower was closed as a preventative safety measure. 

“Of all the places on campus, the Campanile was the one place that could be a target for someone who wanted to make a statement,” she said. 

Cooper agreed, and said that closing the tower cost the campus little. “It’s a high-profile landmark that’s not used for any academic or administrative functions,” he said. 

 

State shuts down services 

State services were shut down. Workers at the California Department of Health Services on Berkeley Way began leaving the building around 10:30 a.m., as word began to spread that Governor Davis had ordered all “non-essential” state facilities closed. 

Security in the building had been tightened as early as 9 a.m. Two entries in the building were closed, and extra security personnel were posted in the lobby. They were “checking and re-checking everyone coming through,” according to one DHS employee. 

The DHS Berkeley office is home to the agency’s “bioterrorism specialists,” among other functions. Lea Brooks, spokesperson for the department, said that the bioterrorism unit would remain on duty throughout the day, either in the field or at the agency’s new Richmond building, which Brooks described as “super-secure.” 

Outside the Berkeley Way office, Fern Orenstein, a DHS trainer and consultant, met with people from around Northern California who were scheduled to participate in a workshop on AIDS and domestic violence. Orenstein and her partner had decided to cancel the workshop even before she had heard the Berkeley Way building would be closed. 

“We had scheduled a workshop on domestic violence today – I’ll remember that for a long time,” said Orenstein. 

A delivery truck parked outside the south entrance to the building elicited a series of nervous jokes from conference attendees, who stood around outside talking about the crisis before going home. 

 

Hospital is prepared 

Alta Bates/Summit Medical Center was operating Tuesday on “heightened awareness,” with security personnel particularly vigilant – watching “suspicious” people and looking at unusual packages, according to hospital spokesperson Carolyn Kemp.  

Kemp said the day shift was present at the hospital as usual, but staff was anticipating that there may be evening personnel who would not be able to get to the hospital or those who wanted to stay at home with their families.  

 

Hanging out with friends 

Berkeley residents Jason and T.J. Angell, brothers originally from New York, went to the Triple Rock Brewery on Shattuck Avenue to sit with about 20 others who sipped beer and watched news reports on the attacks.  

“We came down here so we could talk to people,” said Jason. “It was very helpful to be with people who were equally anxious and frustrated about this whole thing.” 

The brothers said they were able to verify the whereabouts of almost all of their friends and family except one friend who worked in the World Trade Center. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Bush says terrorists will be brought to justice

Staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

By Tom Raum 

Associated Press Writer 

 

WASHINGTON — President Bush and congressional leaders sought to calm a shaken nation and show the government was functioning and determined after Tuesday’s deadly terrorist attacks. From the Oval Office, Bush pledged to “find those responsible and bring them to justice.” 

As fires still smoldered at the Pentagon less than a mile away, Bush told the nation, “Our way of life, our very freedom, came under attack” when highjacked planes destroyed the World Trade Center in New York and severely damaged the Pentagon. 

Administration officials and members of Congress said early evidence pointed to suspected fugitive terrorist Osama bin Laden, who has been sheltered in Afghanistan. Afghanistan’s hardline Taliban rulers denied such suggestions. 

A senior administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, cited “strong information” implicating bin Laden. The official said Bush is considering a wide range of military options targeting bin Laden and, perhaps, Afghanistan. 

Retaliation is not imminent, but Bush is determined to act as swiftly as possible, the official said. 

Law enforcement officials trying to piece together a case linking bin Laden to the attacks were focusing some of their efforts on possible bin Laden supporters in Florida. They were aided by an intercept of communications between his supporters and harrowing cell phone calls from victims aboard the jetliners before they crashed. 

“The pictures of airplanes flying into buildings, fires burning, huge structures collapsing have filled us with disbelief, terrible sadness and a quiet, unyielding anger,” Bush said in his Oval Office address. 

Thousands died in the attacks, he said. 

“We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them,” Bush said without elaboration. 

As the president spoke, military police in combat fatigues guarded streets in the center of Washington and patrolled in armored vehicles. Major thoroughfares that normally have a steady flow of cars were almost empty. 

Bush began the day in Florida. For security reasons, he was taken to air bases in Louisiana and Nebraska before returning to Washington at dusk. 

Bush and other top administration officials and congressional leaders of both parties presented a united front in the face of what Attorney General John Ashcroft called “one of the greatest tragedies ever witnessed on our soil.” 

Across the Potomac at the Pentagon, which was still partly ablaze, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said, “The Pentagon is functioning. It will be in business tomorrow.” Officials put the number of dead and wounded at the Pentagon at about 100 or more, with some news reports suggesting it could rise to as many as 800. 

“Make no mistake about it, your armed forces are ready,” said Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 

House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., standing at twilight with dozens of other lawmakers on the steps of the Capitol, said it was still not clear who was responsible “but we have our suspicions.” 

“And when that is justified ... we will act. We will stand with this president ... and we will stand as Americans together throughout this time.” 

The lawmakers then sang, “God Bless America.” 

The plane that hit the Pentagon tore through at least three of the rings of the five-ring Pentagon, hitting Navy and Army portions of the building, according to Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee. 

“Pieces of the airplane were all over. I can’t see how there would be anything left of the people on the plan, given the crash site, with the fireball and all,” Skelton said after a briefing at the Pentagon. 

Other lawmakers were briefed by law enforcement officials late Tuesday said that knives seemed to be the weapons by the hijackers in three of the four planes, based on cell phone calls. 

Rep. Allen Boyd, D-Fla., said law enforcement officials estimated three to five terrorists were on each plane. 

The fourth hijacked plane crashed in rural Pennsylvania about 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, after making a U-turn toward Washington. 

A senior administration official said the plane that crashed near Pittsburgh was viewed at the time as a potential threat to the White House and was a major reason for the evacuation of the presidential mansion shortly before the plane crashed. It was not known whether the White House, or perhaps Camp David in the Maryland mountains near the Pennsylvania border, was indeed the target. 

Hastert and other top congressional leaders were taken to the safety of a government bunker in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, about 75 miles west of Washington. Once the military and the Secret Service issued a green light, the congressional leaders and the president headed back to town. 

“None of us will ever forget this day,” a solemn Bush said in his Oval Office address, which lasted about five minutes. 

Among foreign leaders expressing support and sympathy was Russian President Vladimir Putin, U.S. officials said. Putin sent Bush “a powerfully friendly communication,” said one official. 

Israel offered a special emergency force designed to deal with the aftermath of a terrorist attack. The unit includes doctors, special technicians and trained dogs. But the administration did not take Israel up on the offer immediately, said Israeli Embassy spokesman Mark Regev. 

Earlier, Bush told his national security advisers in a telephone conference, according to spokesman Ari Fleischer, “We will find these people and they will suffer the consequences of taking on this nation. We will do what it takes. No one is going to diminish the spirit of this country.” 

Explosions were heard Tuesday night near Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, but U.S. officials denied any responsibility. “In no way is the U.S. government connected,” Rumsfeld said. 

Meanwhile, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah., senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, suggested U.S. officials had knowledge of an interception of a telephone conversation with two affiliates of bin Laden “who acknowledged a couple of targets were hit.” 

In an interview with The Associated Press, he declined to be more specific about the nature of the interception. 

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said the federal government was making emergency medical supplies available in both New York and Washington, and sending “disaster mortuary response teams” to both scenes. 

The government ordered all civilian air traffic halted until noon Wednesday, at the earliest, after directing all planes in the air to land after the attacks. 

Roads leading out of Washington became clogged with commuters as the government sent home all nonessential workers. Inbound lanes on bridges leading into Washington were closed. Workers traveling out of the city over the Potomac River could see dark plumes of smoke still rising from the Pentagon. 

States of emergency were declared in the District of Columbia and in neighboring Maryland and Virginia. 

The White House was evacuated, as had other top federal buildings, including the Capitol, the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency. 

Bush was in Sarasota promoting his education program at the time of the attacks. He took part in telephone conferences with his national security team during the day, and called New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani from his plane. 

Cheney remained in a nearly deserted White House, in a secure basement bunker, with a few other top aides, including National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice. 

Black-uniformed Secret Service agents with machine guns patrolled the White House grounds. Fighter jets circled over the city. 

Bush ordered the nation’s military to “high-alert status.” 

Rumsfeld, in his Pentagon office when a jetliner blasted a gaping hole in the west side of the building, rushed to the scene and helped injured co-workers before seeking the security of a basement command center. 

The plane took out a huge section of one of the Pentagon’s five sides, sending up plumes of black acrid smoke and hampering rescue efforts. 

At the first reports of attacks on New York’s World Trade Center, Bush told his school audience that “we’ve had a national tragedy” and said he had to hurry back to Washington. 

However, he first went to the air base in Louisiana, then to Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, headquarters of the U.S. Strategic Command. Military fighter jets escorted the presidential aircraft. 

Several lawmakers compared the attacks to the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that brought the United States into World War II. 

The tragedy reached inside the Justice Department, where Solicitor General Theodore Olson learned his wife was aboard the American Airlines jetliner that crashed into the Pentagon. 

Barbara Olson, a former congressional staffer and Republican activist, was headed to Los Angeles and called her husband as her plane was being hijacked, officials said. 

Responding to criticism of the intelligence community for failing to predict the attacks, CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield said, “The CIA has worked diligently and relentlessly to try to counter terrorism.” 

“Our resources are being devoted to determining who was responsible for these horrendous attacks,” Mansfield said. 


Professors warn against drawing early conclusions

By Rachel Searles and Jason Allen Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 12, 2001

As government officials and media pundits scrambled to determine who was behind Tuesday’s attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, many Berkeley-based professors said they were reluctant to draw conclusions, and expressed anger that Arab groups were immediately considered suspect. 

Afghanistan expert Shahwali Ahmadi, Professor in UC Berkeley’s Department of Near Eastern Studies, declined to comment on the allegations, angrily slamming the phone down after saying, “You’re automatically assuming that there is a Middle Eastern connection. Call me back when you verify it.” 

“Everybody is in shock,” said Rutie Adler, professor of Hebrew in the Department of Near Eastern Studies. “Because the first thing the American media says is that it’s Palestinians.” 

“It’s like what happened with Oklahoma,” said Adler. Following the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, rumors were quick to fly that Arab terrorists were behind the attacks. These early allegations later proved unfounded with the arrest of Timothy McVeigh. 

Early Tuesday, Reuters reported that two Arab satellites had received anonymous claims of responsibility from the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical PLO faction. The group’s leader quickly denied any involvement. 

“It’s unlikely” they were involved, said Robert Blecher, a Berkeley resident who is a lecturer in the History Department at Stanford and an expert on the Middle East. The Democratic Front split from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and then distanced itself from the Popular Front after a series of hijackings in the 1970s, he said.  

“I suppose it would be fairly easy to concoct the idea that the Palestinians would want to retaliate for the murder of Abu Ali Mustafa,” said Blecher, referring to a leader of the Popular Front killed last month. However, given their size and profile, its unlikely that either Palestinian group would have been able to execute such a complicated attack, Blecher said. 

By Tuesday afternoon, NBC and CNN reported that government officials had focused speculation on Osama bin Laden because of his role in the 1993 bombing on the World Trade Center. Bin Laden’s group denied the accusations. 

“As an Arab living in this country, I resent that one is always asked to condemn Arab nations,” said Asad Abu Khalil, a fellow at the UC Berkeley Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and Associate Professor at Cal State Stanislaus. “There are always assumptions that Arabs did the deed. They don’t ask Presbyterians to take responsibilities for the actions of all Christians.” 

Abu Khalil said he was reluctant to speculate who might be behind the attacks, but he mentioned that when Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, was arrested, he said he had a plan that entailed hijacking five planes. 

“It’s a horrible tragedy,” said Adler. “But as Americans, maybe it will make us look at ourselves. We should realize that this is happening to people other places in the world all the time.” 

“Are we so arrogant as a country that we can’t think what we have done for years and years to make other individuals hate us so much?” added Adler. 

UC Berkeley’s Near Eastern Studies Department was practically deserted, although radios and TVs tuned into the news blared from a few faculty offices. “We aren’t ready to speculate,” said Professor John Hayes. “We’ve all been hassled by the media today.” Department manager Yvonne Rosby said many faculty members had not shown up Tuesday. 

Faculty at UC Berkeley’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies refused interviews, and said that it was too early to issue a statement of response. 

 

 

 

 


Mother of San Francisco victim believes son died a hero

By Michelle R. Smith Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 12, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO — The mother of a San Francisco man believes her son died a hero aboard one of the airplanes hijacked and destroyed by terrorists. 

Mark Bingham, 31, was sitting in seat 4D in the rear of First Class on United Airlines Flight 93 from Newark to San Francisco. The plane crashed into a grassy field outside Pittsburgh, and Bingham’s mother believes he helped prevent the hijackers from reaching their intended target. 

“The fact that he was so close to the action, it is likely that he was able to get at these guys,” Alice Hoglan said. “He was probably close to where the hijackers did their thing. 

“It gives me a great deal of comfort to know my son may have been able to avert the killing of many, many innocent people.” 

Hoglan, a flight attendant for United, described her son as cerebral and sensitive, but also athletic. He attended the University of California, Berkeley, and was on the rugby team the year it won a national title, she said. 

He was once attacked on the street in San Francisco and wrestled his attackers to the ground, Hoglan said. 

Federal officials have said the intended target of the plane may have been Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland. Flight 93 was the only one of the four planes that missed its target Tuesday. 

Bingham called his mother early Tuesday morning from an airphone on the plane. He began their conversation with the words, “Hi Mom. This is Mark Bingham,” providing a clue to his state of mind as he spoke. 

Hoglan said her son told her the aircraft had been taken over by three men, who said they had a bomb. He mentioned no other weapons. 

She believes the call was made 10 to 15 minutes before the plane crashed. 

Bingham owned a public relations firm, The Bingham Group, with offices in New York and San Francisco. He was splitting his time between the two cities. 

“He was coming home,” Hoglan said. 

Hoglan was surrounded by her son’s friends Tuesday at a relative’s home in Saratoga. 

“He’s a very delightful man,” she said. “I’m pleased that he was my son, and the last thoughts were of his family.” 


Tragedy hits close to home for many of city’s residents

Staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

By Carlos Cruz and Hadas Ragolsky 

Special to the Daily Planet 

 

When her mom woke her up yesterday morning Trish Plunkett feared for the worst. 

“You never want to wake up to your mom crying on the phone,” said the UC Berkeley lecturer. “When I heard her voice I knew something bad had happened. So I prepared myself for bad news.” 

Plunkett’s brother, Rob, works at the World Financial Center connected via a walkway to the World Trade Center’s two towers, which were destroyed Tuesday morning at about 6 a.m. Pacific Standard Time. Rob was at work when two hijacked airplanes crashed and demolished the towers in what seems to be a terrorist attack. 

“My brother called my mom and she called me to relay the message,” said Plunkett. “It was early in the morning and I didn’t know what had happened so the whole thing was news to me. He called to tell us not to worry about him.” 

Their relief was short lived. The twin towers collapsed. Plunkett and her mom did not hear from her brother for another 30 minutes. Again, he was okay.  

Thousands of others, however, were not so lucky. It became clear that although the terrorist hits were against buildings in New York and Washington, D.C., the tragedy would spread to Berkeley and the Bay Area as residents here tried to find out what had happened to family and friends who lived or worked in or near the site of the terrorist attacks.  

Employees at the Berkeley office of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter located on Shattuck Avenue were in a state of shock.  

“We don’t have a branch of Morgan Stanley in New York any more, it was blown up,” said one cashier at the Berkeley office. Morgan Stanley’s home base is located at the World Trade Center and Berkeley’s management tried all morning to get in touch with employees, colleagues and customers there.  

“Our headquarters was destroyed,” said Krittibs Ray who works at the Berkeley Morgan Stanley. “It’s extremely evil. All morning long I was on the phone with people from New York. I believe a client of mine died but I don’t know for sure. I tried to call his wife, his son, his daughter but I couldn’t reach anyone.”  

Ray said that he knew of no one from the Berkeley branch that was visiting the New York office.  

“I’ve been in this building so many times,” he said referring to the World Trade Center. “I could have been there myself. It’s extremely depressing.” 

Frankie Ross, financial advisor from the Berkeley branch of Merrill Lynch, said their main office in New York was also destroyed in the attacks.  

“I have friends who work in that building,” he said. “Our chairman, our president, all those people … I’m not sure what the situation is.”  

Kristen Ziazie, a UC Berkeley junior, found out about the attack when her mother called her after her first morning class. 

“When I got home this morning I didn’t know what had happened so when my roommate told me my mom had tried calling all morning I became very scared,” she said. But she too got good news by the end of the morning. Her sister, Sarah, who works five blocks from the World Trade Center, had been spared.  

 

 

 

 

 


Fireman, canine companion flying east to assist in rescue

By Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

Two members of the Berkeley Fire Department are about to fly east to assist in search and rescue operations in either New York or Washington, D.C. 

The two are Darren Bobrosky, an apparatus operator at Fire Station 5 on Shattuck Avenue, and Bobrosky’s partner, a 6-year old, highly-trained German Shephard named Dylan. 

Bobrosky and Dylan are both members of an Urban Search and Rescue team based in Oakland. The team, which works with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, has been placed on alert and is expected to fly out of Travis Air Force Base today. 

Reached at his home Tuesday evening, Bobrosky said that he has been on the phone all day, talking with other members of his team and trying to get solid information about when and where they would be traveling. 

Bobrosky said that while there was no time certain for his departure, all indications were that they would be leaving within 24 hours. 

“I’m nervous, but this is what we’ve been trained to do,” he said. “I just wish we were going right now.” 

Throughout Bobrosky’s conversation with the Daily Planet, Dylan could be heard woofing in the background. 

“He’s ready to roll,” Bobrosky said. 

USAR teams are special task forces organized by FEMA to assist in rescue operations when a major emergency – an earthquake or other natural catastrophe, or a terrorist attack – strikes an American city. Each team has 56 members, which include structural engineers, paramedics and radio operators as well as dog handlers. Every member of a USAR team has been certified by FEMA as an emergency response specialist.  

Bobrosky said that there are only 100 dogs in the country to have undergone the rigorous training – which can take several years – that urban search dogs receive. He said that Dylan has been trained specifically to “recognize the scent of live human beings” through as much as 100 feet of rubble, and to give a distinctive bark when he does.  

“The dogs do this job better than any kind of machinery, or technology,” Bobrosky said. “They’re as close to 100 percent accurate as you can get.” 

Though they have been certified USAR specialists for three and one-half years, this will be the first emergency that Bobrosky and Dylan will have worked on. Bobrosky said that Dylan didn’t require much equipment – a harness to lower him into broken concrete, a blanket to keep him warm – but that what he needed was packed and ready to go. 

“We’re as prepared as we can get, and we are ready to help,” he said. 

Bobrosky credited the Berkeley Fire Department for its support of his emergency rescue work. He approached the BFD about developing a canine search capability several years ago and he said that the department has supported him throughout his training.  

“I appreciate all the support that he BFD has given to me and to the USAR,” he said.


Pearl Harbor comparisons may be off base

By Chris O’Connell Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 12, 2001

Early reports of casualties resulting from Tuesday’s attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon brought quick comparisons to the attack on Pearl Harbor that thrust the United States into World War II.  

Historians and public policy experts, however, say the attacks differ in many ways. Most notably, they say, there is no immediate and apparent enemy to retaliate against.  

Early reports suggesting more than 10,000 dead as a result of the attacks also exceed the 2,390 people who died at Pearl Harbor. 

One thing that is apparent, however, is the momentum building for reprisals against those who perpetrated the acts. 

“If there have been 10,000 people killed, the response is going to be ‘let’s find the guys and clobber them,’” said Michael Nacht, dean of the UC Berkeley School of Public Policy and a former member of the National Security Council under the Clinton Administration. 

President Bush’s statement proved Nacht correct. “(We’ll) hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts,” Bush said. 

Diane Clemens, UC Berkeley professor of history, compared Pearl Harbor to Tuesday’s attack. Pearl Harbor “was the attack of an organized government under the regular rules of war,” she said. 

However, the attacks Tuesday morning were by an “unseen, unknown, undeclared enemy on American soil against American citizens,” Clemens said. It was “much more heinous than traditional warfare.”  

This, she said, makes swift action similar to President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s request for a declaration of war against the Japanese the day after Pearl Harbor almost impossible. 

“Immediately after Pearl Harbor, a state of war was in existence, much like now. Then, the day after, Congress simply declared war. A de facto state of war was brought into existence, but it’s not locatable.” 

On the other hand, speaking to CNN, Senator Chuck Hagel, of Nebraska, underscored what he saw as the similarities between Tuesday’s events and the attack on the U.S. Naval base the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, calling them a “second Pearl Harbor.” 

Nacht thought that such comparisons with Pearl Harbor are mistaken. 

“It’s not a very good analogy,” he said. “This is different. We are not at war with any sovereign government. It may take forever,” to find the party responsible for the actions. 

“This is a highly diversified and fractional threat, and it’s here.” 

Because the group or groups which perpetrated the hijackings of the four planes are probably loosely organized, Nacht said any future attempts to prosecute them in an international tribunal will be very difficult. 

“You’d be very hard pressed to find the evidence you need to say ‘We’ve got it, let’s go get them.’” 

Barbara Metcalf, professor of history at UC Davis, said that the instinct to blame and vilify must be avoided. “We should be cautious about pointing fingers, not the least because we don’t know who the enemy was.” 

Metcalf, who teaches Muslim studies said that she most feared reprisals against certain communities similar to Japanese Americans interred during World War II. 

“The worst thing that could happen is that everybody assumes this is an Islamic group.” 


Airport screeners on the bottom of the employment heap

Gina Comparini Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 12, 2001

The terrorist attacks that closed airports here and across the nation came at a time when the Service Employees International Union has a major drive underway to organize luggage screeners at Oakland, Seattle-Tacoma and Los Angeles International Airports. 

“It’s hard to comment right now, this is such a tragedy,” said SEIU organizer Andrea Dehlendorf as she watched the news of the explosions from her home in the East Bay. 

Screeners are the first line of resistance against terrorist attacks that originate at airports. From 1990 to 1999, screeners located nearly 23,000 firearms and explosive devices, resulting in more than 9,400 arrests, according to a June 2000 U.S. General Accounting Office report to Congress on airport security. 

An estimated 18,000 screeners work at the nation’s airports, employed by almost 100 different security companies, according to the GAO. 

SEIU is targeting approximately 400 workers on the West Coast employed by Huntleigh USA, a subcontractor of Southwest Airlines. About 100 of those workers are at Oakland Airport, Dehlendorf said. 

Many of Huntleigh’s security employees, who make as little as $7 an hour and do not receive benefits, are responsible for everything from detecting explosives in luggage to screening boarding passengers for hand weapons, according to the union. 

The Federal Aviation Administration and airlines share the responsibility of screening passengers and carry-on baggage and the agency has long expressed concerns about the screeners’ ability to detect dangerous objects. In a June 2000 report to Congress on airport security, the GAO noted serious concerns by airline regulators about the impact of low pay, poor training and high turnover on this workforce.  

“Not only has turnover been an historical problem, but it is worse today than it was in the past,” the GAO said, noting that in 1994 the turnover at some U.S. airports was 100 percent in a 10-month period. The federal watchdog agency said high turnover rates mean that “checkpoints are rarely staffed by screeners with much experience,” reflecting both the low pay and monotony of the job. Screeners “who do not have the necessary knowledge, skills, or abilities to perform the work effectively” are often expected to work for wages lower than those paid in some airport fast food restaurants, the GAO said. 

Over the past three years, the SEIU has successfully organized Globe and Argenbright employees at Los Angeles International Airport, Dehlendorf said, adding that those workers now earn $9 an hour and receive benefits. She said Huntleigh is resisting the union and has refused to speak to SEIU officials. 

Officials at Huntleigh USA could not be reached immediately for comment, and Brandi King a spokeswoman for Southwest Airlines headquarters in Dallas said the carrier could not comment about the wages Huntleigh pays security workers. 

But SEIU officials have maintained that the carriers themselves do have responsibility for how their subcontracted employees are paid. “Those workers are providing a service to Southwest,” Dehlendorf said following a Labor Day weekend rally at Oakland Airport that drew more than 100 picketers. “Working conditions directly affect Southwest, so they should care.” 

“Our position all along has been that wage and benefit standards for the workers who are responsible for security at airports are substandard,” Dehlendorf said. “We just hope that there are people who will listen to the screeners, who have a lot of suggestions about how they can do their job better.”


Former Secretary of State Shultz: ‘retaliate vigorously’

Staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

STANFORD (AP) — Former Secretary of State George Shultz said the United States should respond aggressively to Tuesday’s terrorist attacks and must not let them change the nation’s way of life. 

“This is an act of war by somebody,” said Shultz, who was President Reagan’s secretary of state from 1982 to 1989 and now is a fellow at the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford University. 

Shultz said he expected the nation will find out soon who was responsible for organizing the attack. 

“I think we should retailiate vigorously ... making it as clear as possible to the people who do this the cost is going to be very high,” he said. 

Shultz also said the United States needs to strengthen its intelligence-gathering abilities overseas. 

“We have to look to the quality of our human intelligence. An awful lot of terrorist incidents don’t take place because of intelligence that allows you to do something about it,” he said. 

“Human intelligence is hard, it’s something that doesn’t come easily for us. You find yourself associating with some unseemly characters. It’s a tough kind of business.” 

Shultz said that while he was in office, national security experts were more concerned about terrorist acts against Americans overseas than on U.S. soil. But while Tuesday’s attackers “did something that was unexpected, turning commercial airplanes into bombs, I and many others have been saying it’s a tough world out there.” 

Even so, he added: “It’s important that we not allow this to disrupt our lives unnecessarily. And I don’t think it will. We’re resourceful, dynamic people.” 


Arab-Americans report threats in wake of attacks

Staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

By Erica Werner  

Associated Press Writer 

 

LOS ANGELES – Arab- and Muslim-American groups in California reported threats and outbursts of hatred on Tuesday in response to the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. 

“We have been receiving very intense threats on our answering machines at our offices,” said Michel Shehadeh, West Coast regional director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. “It’s from people we don’t know. They don’t know who we are. They just targeted us because we are an American-Arab organization, and that is the scary part. 

“We feel very vulnerable right now.” 

California is home to an estimated 750,000 to 1 million Arab-Americans, more than any other state, though Michigan has a higher concentration, Arab-American groups say. There are 5 million to 6 million Arab-Americans in the country. 

No one claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Bush administration officials said Saudi exile Osama bin Laden was their top suspect. Arab- and Muslim-American groups in California unanimously condemned the attacks, but feared they would be targeted in reprisal. 

The Council on American-Islamic Relations says more than 200 Arab- and Muslim-Americans were victimized after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing by Army veteran Timothy McVeigh. 

Shehadeh said his group had received dozens of messages containing death threats, obscenities and racial slurs. The Muslim Public Affairs Council in Los Angeles, the Islamic Networks Group in San Jose and other groups reported similar calls. 

Gov. Gray Davis cautioned against such a response, saying, “We do not want Americans turning on Americans. We do not want reprisals within our borders.” 

FBI spokesman Matthew McLaughlin said the agency was not investigating any specific incidents but that threats against the Arab-American community had been foreseen. 

Southern California’s oldest mosque, the Islamic Center of Southern California in Los Angeles, shut its doors Tuesday morning for everything but prayers and requested police protection. 

The center also closed its four elementary and middle schools in Southern California, sending 500 students home until Thursday at the earliest, said Omar Ricci, spokesman for the Muslim Public Affairs Council. 

“We don’t know what’s going to happen. It may be under the cover of darkness that someone’s going to try and come and do something,” Ricci said. 

In Northern California, Santa Clara County officials were investigating a series of threats against a Pakistani market, said Jim McEntee, director of human relations. 

The Arab-American Congress of Silicon Valley condemned the attacks in a statement and called for a swift government response. 

“Finally, the Arab-American Congress of Silicon Valley is calling upon all media to please refrain from speculation about who may be responsible, and to remind their audiences that the victims of today’s action, in all likelihood, include Americans of Arab descent,” the statement said. 


Attacks send wave of fear through California

By Chelsea J. Carter Associated Press Writer
Wednesday September 12, 2001

Californians abandoned offices, raced home to families and prayed for victims in a wave of fear, anxiety and grief after four airliners bound for the state were hijacked Tuesday and turned into devastating terrorist weapons in attacks in the East. 

Landmarks from San Francisco’s Transamerica Pyramid to Disneyland were shuttered, and security was heightened from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Mexican border. Airports were closed and evacuated, stranding travelers. 

The San Ysidro port of entry east of San Diego, the world’s busiest land border crossing, was closed for nearly two hours Tuesday night following a bomb threat, said Lauren Mack a spokeswoman for the Immigration and Naturalization Service office in San Diego. It was reopened after a sweep by bomb-sniffing dogs turned up nothing. 

Traffic at the crossing backed up into Tijuana, Mexico, earlier Tuesday as federal agents carefully searched each northbound vehicle before letting it through. 

The state remained free of attacks, but an emotional wound was opened as the enormity of the destruction at New York City’s World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and the vulnerability of the nation became apparent. 

“They brought America to our knees and it scares the hell out of me,” traveler Beth Tabler of San Diego said at Lindbergh Field, where her flight to Cleveland was canceled. 

“It’s beyond comprehension,” said George Straight, a loan officer in Tustin. “The actual effect of the attack, the loss of life is beyond comprehension.” 

Three of the hijacked flights were bound for Los Angeles and one was headed to San Francisco. Officials expected the passenger lists would show many Californians. 

“This is a time for prayer and for coming together as a country,” Gov. Gray Davis told a press conference in West Sacramento. 

Richard Garcia, special agent in charge of the Los Angeles FBI office, said the agency did not know who was involved in the attacks but had collected a “massive” amount of information. 

“We did not have any specific information on any threats dealing with the West Coast, but we also didn’t have any information about the East Coast,” Garcia said. 

The daily hum of California life came to an abrupt halt: Theme parks closed down and planned public gatherings such as the Latin Grammys, scheduled Tuesday night in Inglewood, next Sunday’s Emmy Awards and sporting events were postponed. 

Local military bases were under heightened alert. Special measures were taken to protect California’s electrical grid, water distribution system and key bridges, Davis said. 

California Highway Patrol Commissioner D.O. “Spike” Helmick said authorities had received threats in the state “but none of them have been verified so we are not aware of any real threat to our people.” 

Los Angeles International Airport and San Francisco’s Transamerica Pyramid were among facilities and buildings closed as the attacks sent shock waves the length of the state. Both were among sites mentioned as possible targets in a recent terrorism trial in Los Angeles. The roads and terminals of Los Angeles International, which handles more than 67 million passengers a year, were eerily silent after the morning evacuation. 

Only two or three families of crash victims came to Red Cross grievance counselors, spokeswoman Lourdes del Rio Valdes said. Red Cross officials also said they were setting up a shelter for stranded travelers who didn’t have hotel rooms. 

Los Angeles City Council President Alex Padilla, speaking for the city leadership because Mayor James Hahn was stranded in Washington, said authorities had received “no credible threats” against the city. Police Chief Bernard Parks sought to reassure citizens but he had to concede uncertainty. 

“We certainly have no guarantees, but we’re certainly looking at all of the precautionary measures to ensure that the community is as safe as possible,” Parks said. 

Security cordons were established around federal, state and local government buildings. Coast Guard vessels escorted ships entering California ports. Landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge remained open but security was heightened. 

“It’s unbelievable, it’s like a movie,” sheriff’s Deputy Mazen Barbari said while standing guard in front of San Francisco City Hall. 

California Highway Patrol officers, sheriff’s deputies and heavily armed FBI agents wearing bullet proof vests dotted the perimeter of the Federal Building in the Westwood section of Los Angeles. A police helicopter circled overhead. 

Norma Gonzales, a UCLA Medical Center worker, waited anxiously for her car pool back to her home in San Bernardino. 

“I want to go home and be with my baby. It’s like Pearl Harbor,” she said. 

The pandemonium at ground zero of the attacks was more than 40-year-old Virginia Roberts could take as she stared, transfixed, at a TV at an Irvine gas station. 

“I just want to go home,” she said. “I’m scared. I’m scared for everybody,” Roberts said. 

“I just want to go home because I don’t feel safe here,” Elaine Galicia, office assistant for state Sen. Martha Escutia, D-Commerce, said as officer workers filed out of the Capitol in Sacramento. 

Downtown Los Angeles’ business core emptied rapidly, leaving few people other than security guards by late morning. A recorded phone message at the Building Owners and Managers Association said that by 10:30 a.m. more than 60 Los Angeles-area buildings had closed. 

“It’s a ghost town, man,” cab driver Adrian Escalante said as he waited in vain with other cabbies for fares on Grand Avenue. 

“There’s so many ways we’re vulnerable; that’s what’s frightening,” guitarist Eric Henderson said as he waited at Los Angeles’ Union Station for a train home to Laguna Beach. 

Californians also responded to a call for blood donations, with hundreds lining up at a San Francisco center. 

As phalanxes of television sets broadcast terrible scenes into an Orange County electronics store, Dennis Loi, 35, could only shake his head. 

“I’m nervous. What’s next? What is going to happen next?” he said. “That’s all I can think about.” 


Attacks may push teetering U.S. economy into recession

By Martin Crutsinger AP Economics Writer
Wednesday September 12, 2001

WASHINGTON — The terror attacks in the nation’s business and government capitals may well push the teetering economy into recession, analysts suggested. The Federal Reserve said it stood ready to pump extra money into the economy if needed to try to avert such a development. 

The Fed’s promise to supply additional money to the banking system was similar to a pledge it issued on the morning after the October 1987 stock market crash. That action, only two months into Alan Greenspan’s tenure as chairman, was credited with keeping the economy out of recession. 

However, private analysts said the Fed’s magic of lower interest rates and ample supplies of cash to the banking system may not be enough to overcome Tuesday’s series of attacks, which occurred at a time when the economy was already struggling and consumer confidence was faltering. 

“The economy has been on a high-wire act straddling between a recession and anemic growth. Now the terrorists have cut the wire underneath our feet,” said Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at Wells Fargo in Minneapolis. “The United States and the rest of the world are likely to experience a full-blown recession now.” 

The concern is that consumers will cut back further on their spending. 

Consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of the nation’s economic activity. Even before Tuesday’s attacks, signs of trouble were evident as Americans grew more worried about their jobs with each new rash of layoff announcements. 

The government had reported last Friday that the unemployment rate shot up to 4.9 percent in August as job losses in manufacturing climbed above 1 million. 

The overall economy grew by just 0.2 percent in the April-June quarter, the poorest showing in eight years. Before the terrorist attacks, many analysts had been forecasting a rebound to around 1.5 percent growth in the gross domestic product for the current quarter, helped by seven interest rate cuts from the Fed and nearly $40 billion in tax rebate money being mailed to Americans. 

But economists said the terror attacks, in addition to hurting consumer confidence, could disrupt the economy in a variety of ways, including severely curtailing air travel, which especially would harm areas that depend on tourism. 

“There is no economic good that comes out of this. It is just a question of how bad will it be,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com. “It is now likely we will get a negative GDP number for the third quarter, given all of the economic disruptions that this is creating with a shutdown of the transportation system and the financial markets.” 

The Fed’s promise to supply extra money to the banking system is an attempt to assure depositors that no bank will get caught without adequate resources to meet its normal operating needs. 

Zandi predicted the Fed would follow that with further cuts in interest rates. 

The Fed already had reduced its key benchmark rate, the federal funds rate, seven times so far this year, the last cut occurring at its Aug. 21 meeting. 

The Fed next meets on Oct. 2 although some analysts said the central bank may feel a need to deliver a positive jolt to markets with an intermeeting rate cut, something it has already done twice this year. 

Greenspan, who had been attending a banking conference in Basel, Switzerland, was on a plane returning to the United States when the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center occurred. His commercial flight, along with other international flights to the United States, was diverted. A Basel police official said Greenspan’s flight had returned to Switzerland. 

Fed spokesman Dave Skidmore said Greenspan was on the ground at a location he refused to disclose for security reasons. Skidmore said Greenspan was being kept fully apprised of developments through a monitoring team assembled at Fed headquarters in Washington operating under the direction of Fed Vice Chairman Roger Ferguson. 

William McDonough, president of the Fed’s New York regional bank, who was with Greenspan at the Switzerland conference of the Bank for International Settlements, said Fed officials were striving to make sure essential banking operations were not disrupted. 

“The New York Fed will make every effort to conduct business as normal,” McDonough said in a telephone interview with Dow Jones Newswires. “I am sure that central bankers everywhere will do everything possible to maintain calm and seek to ensure the world economy functions smoothly in the face of this horrendous deed.” 

As the Fed sought to reassure the country that the nation’s banking system was safe, Harvey Pitt, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, issued a statement saying that the closing of financial markets on Tuesday was a “temporary phenomenon. Trading will resume as soon as it is practicable to do so.” 

Officials said late Tuesday that the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq Stock Market and the American Stock Exchange would remain closed at least through Wednesday. 

 


Attacks could have long-term impact on world markets

By Carole-Anne Elliott Special to the Daily Planet
Wednesday September 12, 2001

While most people are thinking about the tragic loss of life during the events Tuesday, some are looking at what the loss will mean to the U.S. economy. 

It will take generations to replace skills lost of workers killed Tuesday, one expert said. “Those are very specialized people,” said Richard K. Lyons, professor of finance and economics at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. 

The Berkeley offices of Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley had major offices at the World Trade Center. Other financial corporations among the 63 registered security brokers at the World Trade Center include Charles Schwab, Raymond James and Dean Witter Reynolds. 

“Even if we get the stock exchange up and running,” said Lyons, “building up that stock of people and skills is a generational thing. That’s the longer term impact.” 

The American Stock Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market all closed Tuesday after the tragedy. Markets were to remain closed for a second day today, an occurrence not seen since President Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, said Andrew Leckey, director of the business reporting program at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. Officials “didn’t want to start up the other markets with just chaos reigning,” Leckey said. 

According to CNN’s Financial Network, futures of Standard & Poor’s 500 index, Nasdaq and the Dow Jones Industrial Average all fell just before the markets were closed. Abroad, markets plunged in Frankfurt, Milan, Paris and London; stocks in Brazil, Argentina, Canada and Mexico also fell, the network reported. 

What the effect of the attacks will be on the markets, said Alan Auerbach, chair of UC Berkeley’s economics department, is “hard to know.” 

“If we got into a phase of having substantially reduced international trade because there’s a lot of pressure to protect international shipping and international flights,” then the markets could be harmed for some time Auerbach said. 

But some experts think the markets will be able to rebound. “The market always surprises you,” Leckey said. “It’s something that people will work very hard to get up and running again.” 


Opinion

Editorials

School bonds won’t be on March ballot, but could go in November

By Jennifer Kerr Associated Press Writer
Tuesday September 18, 2001

SACRAMENTO — California school districts that hoped for more money to build new schools will now have to wait until at least early 2003 for any new money. 

Lawmakers adjourned their annual session early Saturday morning without putting a new bond issue on the March ballot, because Gov. Gray Davis and the state’s largest teachers’ union believed the bonds would have a better chance of passing in November 2002 than in March. 

“The presumption is that the chances of passage are significantly better in a general election because of a larger turnout than in a primary,” Sandy Harrison, spokesman for Davis’ Department of Finance, said Monday. 

Legislators will return next month, but only in a special session to deal with energy issues. Other topics will have to wait until January, including the at least $11 billion bond issue. 

Dozens of districts have projects already approved by the state Allocations Board, but the state has run out of money from the record $9.2 billion bond measure voters passed in 1998. The waiting list is expected to reach almost $5 billion. 

Lawmakers are particularly concerned about the districts with crowded year-round schools and the state’s lowest test scores. 

Of the 662 schools with the lowest performance ranking in the state, 260, 39 percent, are on year-round schedules, according to a state analysis of school ratings. 

Many of the schools have more than 900 students, and almost half of the 260 schools on year-round schedules are in Los Angeles. 

Statewide, 1,492 schools in 200 districts with a total of 1.3 million students were on year-round schedules in the 2000-2001 school year, according to the Department of Education. More than 1,000 of those schools, with a total of 1 million students, were on multitrack programs that experts consider detrimental to educational improvements. 

And 239 schools were using a year-round plan called “Concept 6” where students only attend school 167 days a year, instead of the 180 days of other schools. 

These factors led lawmakers to push for another bond issue to pay more school construction. They formed a six-legislator committee to consider the bond. State education officials said in hearings that California needs at least $27 billion in new money for schools. 

After their hearings, committee members waited for guidance from Davis, which they got last Thursday, one day before the end of the 2001 legislative session. 

The Democratic governor said he would support up to $12 billion on 2002 ballots and up to $7 billion for the 2004 ballot. However, Davis wanted the 2002 measure on the November ballot instead of the March primary. 

Committee members, however, thought they had a deal to go for $11.4 billion in March 2002 and the same amount in 2004. 

Without Davis and the California Teachers Association, a major supplier of campaign money for education issues, on board for a March vote, committee members decided to wait, said state Sen. Dede Alpert, a Coronado Democrat and committee co-chairwoman. 

Also, a school bond issue in March would compete against a $2.6 billion bond proposal for parks, said Assemblywoman Virginia Strom-Martin, D-Duncans Mills, the other committee co-chairwoman. 

“Nobody wants to be on the same ballot with a $11.4 billion school facilities bond,” she said. 

 


Different response

Rev. Sister Rosemarie, DSM
Tuesday September 18, 2001

Editor: 

We have the opportunity to turn a very negative series of occurances into something very positive and beautiful...a chance to insure that victims of the Sept. 11 attacks didn’t die in vain. It’s a very simple thing, really. Focus one moment on peace. We’re unfortunately getting accustomed to stopping and devoting a minute or two of silence to mourn, why can’t we do something a little constructive with our grief?  

Yes, we are beyond angry and yes, we are beyond sad. The offenses we are feeling as a nation are still being analyzed, let alone described.  

But here is where we can have our finest hour. While the ruins still smolder and even as the death tolls rise, we can lead this world in an outpouring of something other than vengeance and bloodlust. A desire for true peace.  

These events speak of something more than racial or political blind hatred. Like all wars, they begin with a severe breakdown in communication, a loss of intent to be in coexistence with one another.  

We need a true dialog between all people about all things. We as a world need to grow up and take an honest look around. We’ve made a collective mess of it. Time to clean up our rooms and put up our toys for a while. There is only one planet that we can live upon in this galaxy that we know of...without a lot of technical mumbo jumbo, and this is it.  

Talk of war, vengeance, violence and hatred may feel good for us right now. We need to lick our wounds, we need to not feel powerless. But war is not television or the movies. Real people die. Most treaties are unstable at best when wrought by force. Economies suffer long term when stuck in war-time modes as, after a while, the war must continue in order to feed the nation’s people.  

This is not why we have children. It is good to have national pride, and a healthy sense of survival. It’s perfectly normal to feel anger and the desire to respond in kind. These are very basic, instinctual responses. But they are short term goal oriented, without consideration for long range influences.  

We can learn to do something creative instead of destructive with this complex combination of emotions. Treat the crimes as crimes, seeking the criminals and proving the actions and intents in the World Court. Let a global consensus occur that shows that as a planet, terrorism is an unacceptable form of behavior. But then, do more. Sit down at the table with those who have issues. Listen to one another as human beings, not enemies. See the commonalities beyond the differences. Learn to co-exist. We have the opportunity to transcend...to turn negativity and destruction into a positive outcome. We can move on to global cooperation. Focus on peace, just a few minutes a day.  

 

Rev. Sister Rosemarie, DSM  

Third Order Disciples of St. Martin de Porres  

San Francisco  

 

 


Legislators settle on Bay Bridge retrofitting deal

The Associated Press
Monday September 17, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO – Lawmakers in Sacramento have decided on a Bay Bridge earthquake retrofitting deal that requires the state to pay about 40 percent of the $1.46 billion needed for the project. 

The state will also need to cover up to $448 million in unanticipated expenses. 

“This is the best deal we could arrive at to move forward,” said Sen. Tom Torlakson, D-Walnut Creek. 

The deal follows weeks fraught with debate, as well as a standoff that might have put an end to the legislation entirely. Southern California representatives tried to insert amendments into AB 1171, Assemblyman John Dutra’s (D-Fremont) bill. The bill proposed paying for $2 billion in costs to retrofit seven state toll bridges, including the Bay Bridge. 

Dutra threatened to withdraw the measure after Southern California representatives attempted to put in amendments. Southern California representatives said they were concerned the bill would hurt projects in their areas. 

This agreement outlined that the state would use $642 million in federal bridge funds and rely on revenue bonds from bridge tolls. Bay Area representatives prevailed on the means of funding unanticipated expenses, but they didn’t get as much state funding for the project as they wanted. 

Also, under the new agreement, the state can raise tolls if the bridge is damaged from an earthquake or another unforeseen event. 

Bay Area legislators were pleased they had come to an agreement. 

“We’re going to have a bridge,” Sen. Don Perata, D-Oakland, said. “We had to get this thing built. We were teetering on the edge of another delay.”


Unknown number of FBI agents to protect airports

Bay City News Service
Saturday September 15, 2001

The San Francisco division of the FBI said today that agents will be placed at all three major Bay Area airports as a precaution. 

Spokeswoman Patti Hansen said an undisclosed number of agents will be present at San Francisco International Airport, San Jose International Airport and Oakland International Airport as commercial air traffic resumes following Tuesday's terrorist attacks on the East Coast. 

“They are just going to be there, just in case there's a need,” she said. “The FBI is there to assist in investigation of any suspicious activity that might occur.” 

She said the decision to post agents was not triggered by any particular incident at the airports. “We just want to be prepared,” she said. 

Hansen said the Federal Bureau of Investigation will work with officers from the San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland police departments, as well as the Federal Aviation Administration and the airlines. 

Hansen would not disclose how many agents will be posted at the airport, whether they will be identifiable through uniforms or badges, or what exactly they will be looking for. 

“The are trained to handle any kind of federal violation,”she said. “If there were an incident at the airport, they are right there, if there is a suspicious activity, they will be right there.” 

If a suspicious package were to be found inside someone's luggage, for example, FBI agents could respond immediately instead of making a 20-minute or longer trip to the airport from their downtown offices in San Francisco and Oakland, she said. 

Hansen said she was not aware of any plans for agents to board planes. 

“They are just going to be at the airport,”she said. 


Handgun safety bill sent to governor

Associated Press
Friday September 14, 2001

SACRAMENTO (AP) — State lawmakers sent to the governor Thursday a sweeping handgun bill that would require gun buyers to pass a written test and demonstrate to a safety instructor that they know how to operate the gun. 

The Senate bill by Sen. Jack Scott, D-Altadena, also would require handgun buyers to provide a thumb print, proof of residency, identification and a handgun safety certificate. 

The bill’s requirements would take effect Jan. 1, 2003. 

A second, identical bill was approved Wednesday by the Senate and is awaiting approval in the Assembly. Scott’s bill, which passed on a 23-13 vote in the Senate, was approved in the Assembly late Wednesday night by a 41-31 vote. 

The bill, supported by state sheriffs, police chiefs and the Police Officers Research Association, also requires handgun owners to renew the certificates after five years if they want to buy another handgun. 

“One of the requirements is you have to have the proficiency to handle these firearms,” Scott said. 

Sen. Maurice Johannessen, R-Redding, ridiculed the bill as he did an identical Assembly bill on Wednesday. 

Earlier in the week, he called the bills “foolishness,” and asked supporters if they “really believe this will stop criminals.” 

Gov. Gray Davis now has until Oct. 14 to sign the bill. 

He has vetoed gun bills in the past, saying he opposes new gun control laws until the impact of existing measures is studied by law enforcement. 

However, he strayed from that policy in July, signing legislation expanding prosecution of adult gun owners if children bring their weapons to school. He said at the time he made the exception in the wake of two school shootings this year in Southern California. 

Davis spokeswoman Hilary McLean said Davis has no formal position on the current legislation “but he’s definitely looking at them with an open mind.” 

 


President Bush brands attacks ‘acts of war’

By Ron Fournier AP White House Correspondent
Thursday September 13, 2001

WASHINGTON — President Bush branded the attacks in New York and Washington “acts of war” on Wednesday and braced a shaken nation for a long fight against the terrorists who orchestrated them. The manhunt took investigators from Florida to Canada and along the Internet. 

“This will be a monumental struggle of good versus evil,” said Bush, as officials revealed that the White House, Air Force One and the president himself were targeted a day earlier. “Good will prevail.” 

The known toll rose amid the rubble at the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, where rescue teams searched for survivors. A few were found in New York, but thousands of people were believed killed. 

Bush asked Congress to provide billions of dollars for rescue and for national security needs, promising to spend “whatever it takes.” He mulled a range of military options to punish the terrorists and any nation harboring them, while officials pointed preliminarily to Saudi exile Osama bin Laden and a deadly coalition of groups. 

America’s NATO allies bolstered Bush’s case for military action, declaring the terrorist attacks an assault on the alliance itself. Bush sought to build a global alliance with phone calls to leaders of France, Germany, Canada, Britain and Russia; he talked twice to Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

“An attack on one is an attack on all,” said NATO Secretary-General Lord Robertson. “The parties will take such action as it deems necessary, including armed force.” 

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld predicted “a sustained and broadly based effort” against the terrorists when they’re identified. Secretary of State Colin Powell said Bush will oversee “a long-term conflict.” 

Bush said: “This battle will take time and resolve.” 

Attorney General John Ashcroft said teams of three to six terrorists hijacked four planes and, using pilots trained in the United States, put the aircraft on their deadly courses. 

Two struck the World Trade Center, one hit the Pentagon and a fourth crashed short of its target in Pennsylvania. 

Ashcroft said the White House and Bush’s plane also were targeted by terrorists, offering the theory as others raised questions about Bush’s actions Tuesday. The president zigzagged around the country aboard Air Force One — from Florida to a Louisiana military base and then a base in Nebraska — before returning to the White House in early evening. 

Officials did not detail the “specific and credible evidence” they said they had of the intended targets. 

Twenty-four hours after the attacks, the fire was finally out at the nation’s military headquarters in Arlington, Va., where 100 or more were believed to have been killed. In New York, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said 359 police and firefighters were unaccounted for, a tiny fraction of the total presumed dead there. 

In support, Bush toured the smoldering Pentagon, saying the devastation made him sad and angry. “The nation mourns,” he said, “but we must go on.” First lady Laura Bush visited victims in an area hospital. 

“I pray a lot,” said Betty Smith of La Crosse, Wis., who hadn’t heard from her son stationed at the Pentagon. 

“I talk to friends when it gets real bad, and sometimes I cry,” she said. 

Fingers were pointed at U.S. intelligence efforts. 

“It’s an indictment of our intelligence system that we had no forewarning,” said Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa., chairman of the House Armed Services subcommittee on readiness. 

Defending his agency, CIA Director George J. Tenet said that while U.S. intelligence didn’t stop the “latest, terrible assaults,” it had stopped others. 

The nation struggled to return to normal. 

Government offices reopened and a bipartisan group of lawmakers joined Bush at the White House in a display of national unity. Limited air travel was restored to allow stranded tourists to return home, but regular flights were still banned. 

After jacking up their prices Tuesday, several gas stations lowered their rates after federal officials threatened to take action. 

Most schools and many businesses were closed in Washington. The nation’s stock markets were to remain closed until at least Friday. 

“The America in which we woke today is far different from the one in which we woke yesterday,” said Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D. 

Episodes of patriotism punctuated a day of high security and tension. 

As National Guard troops patrolled the nation’s capital in camouflage-colored Humvees, a McDonald’s restaurant near the White House lined its counters with American flags poked through paper cups. 

Switzerland lowered its flags to half-staff in a show of support as leaders across the globe raised their voices against terrorism. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, often at odds with the administration, donated blood for the victims. 

Fear spread beyond America’s borders. Threats of terrorism emptied skyscrapers in Malaysia and the Culture Ministry in Romania. 

On Capitol Hill, Congress passed a resolution declaring the country was “entitled to respond under international law.” 

Bush himself talked of war, though he did not seek a declaration from Congress. That would leave the question: Who is the United States at war with? 

The attacks “were more than acts of terror,” Bush said. “They were acts of war.” 

White House officials suggested it was premature to say whether Bush would seek a declaration of war. “We will continue to work with the Congress on the appropriate language at the appropriate time,” spokesman Ari Fleischer said. 

Bush said he would ask Congress for an undetermined amount of money to rescue victims and “respond to this tragedy.” 

In a sign of how suddenly the political winds had shifted, aides suggested the Social Security surplus — politically untouchable just a few days ago — could be tapped to get Bush the money he needs. 


Red Cross Blood Bank overloaded with eager donors

Hank Sims Daily Planet staff
Wednesday September 12, 2001

OAKLAND – The American Red Cross Blood Bank on Claremont Avenue was mobbed Tuesday afternoon, as concerned and grief-stricken East Bay residents showed up to offer their help in the only way they knew how. 

At 2 p.m., around 250 people were waiting their turn for an appointment with one of the 12 Red Cross workers on hand to take blood donations. Some stood in a line that ran out the door and around the corner onto College Avenue, while others sat in the lobby watching the news.  

Michelle Joyce, a Berkeley social worker, waited in the donors’ line for over two hours before dashing across the street for a moment to pick up a newspaper.  

“I saw on the TV that there was a blood shortage, so I thought I’d come down,” said Joyce. “It seemed more useful than sitting at home.” 

Cynthia Carlson, the Claremont office’s supervisor of donor recruitment, welcomed the attention that the crisis brought to blood donation, but doubted that her office would be able to process everyone who came Tuesday. 

“Lots of people came in today, but we need people all the time,” she said. “We’d like people to hold off and come in a week or so from now.”  

Carlson said that it is usually difficult to arrange blood drives at places of business, but that a number of companies have faxed and e-mailed her today offering to host a mobile Red Cross unit.  

“Unfortunately, it takes a crisis like this for the message to hit home with people,” she said. 

The Red Cross will hold blood drives at various locations on the UC Berkeley campus next week. People who can donate are urged to register for an appointment on the Red Cross’ Web site, www.beadonor.com.  

Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean said Tuesday that she is trying to organize a drive at Alta Bates Hospital next week. A scheduled drive will be held at Berkeley Firehouse No. 2, 2029 Berkeley Way, Sept. 28.